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•

•

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

Friday, Aprll23, 1~

· Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Along the River
"D" Co. 50th Signal BN at Ft.
Bragg, N.C., in March, 1998. He
attended Jump School at Ft. Benning, Ga., and was promoted to E-4
in September, 1998.
He was then promoted to Corporal in Qct., along with the responsibility of Team Chief.
Jason Stump .
"Navy Seaman Jason D. Stump ,
son of David E. Stump and Linda J . .
Arnold, both of Albany, recent ly
completed U.S. Navy B":'ic Training
at Recruit Training Command, Great
Lakes, Ill.
During the eight -week program,
Stump completed a variety of train ing, whic h included classroom study
and practical instruction on naval
customs, fir st aid, fi re fi ghting,

treens ti ~'--drinking,

..

F..Wred on

LOW P~C~S - STRAIGHT FORWARD DEALING • CONVENIENT FINANCING

permits and cannot

be guaranteed to run a specific number of days.
FRIDAY
POMEROY
Woman's AA
meeting, 1607 Nye Ave., 7 p.m. Friday.

POMEROY
South Bethel
New Testamen t · Church , spiritual
renewal continuing through SaiUrday, 7 p.m . each evening.

1999 GMC YUKON

HARTFO RD - Gospel concert,
Saturday. 7 p.m. at Fathers House
Church, Hanford . Joe Lester Family
Builders Quarter an d Gloryland
Believers to appear.

4X4, 5 ap, air, CD, tilt, cruise,
F8ctory lilt kit WAS $21,891

N0111

Ail wheel drive, V6, auto, air,
till, cruise, towing pkg, gold
pkg, pewter MSRP $32,900

:; s28,968
USED
TRUCKS • U.SEJ)
'
'

~

1998 GMC SIERRA SLE

EXT CAB

1997 NISSAN 4 WD P/U
Ext cab, 4 Dr, V6, auto, air, till,
cruise, 4 WD, only 9,000 miles,
WAS $111,900

Now

4 cyl, 5 spd, AM/FM
WAS$13,999

~ WD, V6, auto, air, casa,
cruise, bedliner, 9500 mcon•,l VS, auto, iir, AM/FM, till,
WAS S11,900
cruise, WAS S18,el5

N0111

$

VILlAGE INCOME TAX

DEADLINE

IS

.

Onl~

I
II

'

.

Students in the Eastern Elemen- lier, Charis Collins, Andrew Francis,
tary School making a grade of B or Andre~ Grueser, Jennifer Hayman,
above in all of their subjects to qual - Joshua Hayman, Katie Hoxsie,
ify for the third nine-weeks grading Meggan Lanham, Cassandra Nutter,
period were as follows:
Jaime Reel , Debra Stek, Chnstaphor
All "A's"
Tucker, Megan Venoy.
Grade Fou•: Sa&lt;ah Boston: '
Grade&lt; Seven: Hailee· Clin'e\ ·
• 'fj&lt;ler Lee1 Enm Weber' Ambe!&lt;Wilt&lt;""" Rii!hal!l Elliott, Alri'!mtfa G're"M,Y,
barger.
.
,
, Ka~sandra Lodwick, Tia !'ratt, Stacy
Gr.ade FIVe: N1cholas Kuhn , Sm1th, Rebecca Taylor, Nicholas
Herbert Mcintyre, Shawn Reed, Weeks, William Woods.
· Grade Eight: Joshua Basham,
· Sara :Viggins, Amanda Windon.
Slxth Grade: Bnttany B~rnett, Miranda Buckley, Brent Buckley,
Derek Baum, Cody D1ll , Jon Dillard , Roger Chadwell, Sheila Cook, Car. ~Carne Elberfeld, Ross Holter.Jessi- rie Crow, Cody Faulk, Cacy Faulk,
· ea Kehl , Bryan Minear, Sara Pore, 'H1ra Fisher, Beth Gregory, Nichol
Darren Scarbrough, Casey Smith, Honaker, Erica Lemons, Leann
Morgan Weber, Kri sta White., Marcinko, Ryan Wachter, Philip
Chelsea Young.
Werry, Carrie Wiggins. Christopher
Grade. Seven: Jessica Boy les, Wilson
Brittany Hauber, Alyssa Holter. .
r-""iiiii;t'
Grade Eight: Sonya Frederick.

.·
honor roll
Grade Four: Stephanie Baker,
Brittany BisselL Jullian Brannon, .
Samaniha Brown, Justin Browning,
Danielle Carroll ; Kimberly Castor,
Kayl a Collins, Ryan Davis, Jessica
Fisher, Robert Gwinn, Georganna
Koblentz, Nathaniel McGrath
·\Villiam Owen, Jesse Price, Derek
Putman, Hollie Richard, Trista Simmons, Cheyenne Trussell, · Derek
Weber, Adam Wilson.
Grade Five: Jeremy Basham,
Brian Castor, . Cassandra Collins,
Christopher Davis, Autumn Hauber,
Bryce Honaker, Ashley McCaman,
Jesse Nutter, James WilL
'
Grade Six: Kenneth Amsbary,
Christopher Carroll, Abbie Cheva-

$

National Crime VIctims•
Rights Week observed

Eastern honor roll students announced

'~A-8"

1999 GMC SONOMA
HIGHRIDER

RACINE - Free skin testing
clinic , Connie Karsohnik , R..N., ,
Meigs County tuberculosis nurse, at
the fire stati on, Monday, 4:30 to
6:30 p.m. All individuals in food
servi ce required annual skin tests.

MA SON - Ri vers ide Ladies
. Golf Associati on, spring meeting,,
Saturday.. noon, club house. Nine
MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
hole scramble. New members wel- Coin Club ·regular meeting 7:40
come.
p.m., Riverbend Ans Council build- ·
ing, Middleport. Meetmg is free and
SUNDAY
open to the public. Open auct i ~n and
CHESHIRE - Gospel sing, I :30 refreshments. Members, visitors
p.m. Sunday, Poplar Ridge Free Will welcome.
Baptist Church off State Route 554.
The Brady Family of Parkersburg TUESDAY
and the Builders Quartet of Ripley
POMEROY - 'Meigs County
to be the singers.
Public Library Board, Tuesday, 9: 30
a.m. at library.
MIDDLEPORT - "Released" a
southern gospel men 's quartet from
RACINE - Racine Area ComGallia County, at the Middlepon munity Organization, Tuesday, Star
·Church of Christ Family Life Cen- Mill Park, 6:30p.m.
·

'

ly BRIAN J. REED
week at Meip High School, Phillis, a former state super. Tllntl Sentinel S1ltl
intendent for public instruction, criticized Rq!ublican
POMEROY - The leader of the fight for equity in leaders in the state le&amp;islaturc and the State School Board
school funding says Slate officials hav~ no intention of fix. for "llying to get around the arurt's decision."
ing • system deemed to be unflir.
'
"They have spent a lot of time condemning the
Dr, William Phillis, director of the Colllidon for Equity Supreme Court and Judge Lewis, and have made it clear
and Adequacy in Scl!ool Funding, said last week thal the that they have never intended to fix the system. Instead,
Ohio General Assembly has ignored CXlUrt orders to fix . they have done everything they can do to get around the
Jll.1bool funding; and, in lhe pi'" e , has painted a negative decision," Phillis said.
image of~~ rural schools and the coalition lllk:mpling
Phillis referml to Judge Unton Lewis of Perry County,
to repraent them in the funding dCbalc.
who ruled in favor of the coalition in a case that was evenAll dtree school districts in Meip County arc members tually aflinned by the Ohio Supreme Court, resulting in a
. of the Coalition, which sued the state in a case designed to mandate·from the CXlUrt th~t lhe state's system of school
highlight inequities in the state's school funding policies.
funding be &lt;hanged.
Spcalcing at a special Peoples Legislature event last
That decision called for a "complete systematic over-

MONDAY
CHAUNCEY - Revival Monday through May I, Redtown Free
Methodist Church, State Route 13
nonh of Chauncey, with The Mes- ·
sengers , John Elswick.

RUTLAND - Open door session with State Rep. John .Carey,
Monday, 2:30 to 3;30 p.m. at the
Rutland village hall in the Rutland
Civic Center.

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant· April25, 1999

Vol. 34, No. 10

EquitY spokesman critical of state response to court rulings

RACINE - Benefit hymn sing,
Sunday, 2 to 5 p.m: Carmel Church.'
Delivered to be featured singers.

POMEROY - Facilities committee of Athens-Meigs Educational
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Services Center, Friday, 9 ·a.m. at Plains Regional Sewer Board, Monoffices, 32-l-4iast Main, Pomeroy,' · day. 7 p.m. a~ district office building
on State Route 68 I.
SATURDAy
CLIFTON - Cl1fton Tabernacle,
ATHENS - Finance committee,
Clifton, W.Va. special services, Sat· Athens-Meigs Educational Service
urday, 7 p.m. Rev. Bob Hall, guest Center, Monday, i p.m. offices , 507
speaker.
Richland Ave., Athens. ·

• .P igeA2

Details on
pageA3

••

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

i' .

POMEROY - Veterans Service
CommiSsion, 7:30p.m. Monday, at
new location; 117 Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy.

C1

HI: 60s
Low: 40s

I

ter, Sunday, 7 p.m. Public invited.

sp~ce

Weekend
baseball
action
!'r'O:e,

tmes

. Community Calenda.--r-

pnnted as

P~~ge

$1 oo

NATO continues
strikes as
Washington
sends more
troops to Albania

GREAT SELECTION.. \VQYH·WAIT.. NOW IS THE TIMEU

JEFF HOOD
water safety and survival, a nd ship- •-"~
Jeff Hood
Jeff Hood, son of John and Crys- board and aircraft safety.An emphatal Hood. of Pomeroy and Kathy sis is also placed on phy,sical fitness.
Stump and other recruits also
·Hood of Middlepon graduated from received
instruc tion on the Navy's
·Air Assault Traming under the lOth core values - honor,' courage and
Mountain Division Supervision in
' com mi tment --: and how to apply
·February.
Hood entered the U.S. Army in them in the ir military performance
March, 1997 as a private first class, · and personal conduct. He joins
and received hi s basic training at Ft. 55,000 men and women will enter
· Stewan, S.C. He then attended AIT the Navy this year fmm all over the
traimng at Ft. Jackson, Ga., with an country.
is a 1998 grad uate of AlexanMOS of Network System Operator derHe
High School.
Maintainer. After AIT, he was sent to

The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non-profit
groups wishing to announce meetings and special eve nts. The calendar is not designed 10 promote sales
or fund raisers of any type. Items are

Inside

2 Dr, 4 WO, V6, IIIIo, air, till, .

WAll I cruise, Willie WAS S13,t15

V6, auto, air, AM/FM, CD, lilt,
cr~~ise, WAS $18,9!10

Now

Onl~

$

POMEROY - Victims· of cnmcs
and !hose who serve them will be
honored Friday at a Victims' Rights
banquet to be staged at the Family
Ufe Center in Middleport. .
The ocx:uion, sponsored by the
Meip County Victims Program, will .
mark th~ be&amp;inning of the 1999
National Crime VICtims' Rigl\tWeek
and will aury out the theme "Victims'
~a:s: Silent No More."
The bar1quct will be served at 6:30
p.m. and all victimt .re invited, to
llllcnd. Reservations are to be made
by calling !192-6371 or toll ,tiee, I·
877-4-CRIMES by Tuesday.
"The theme tmp,basilleS the power ·
of the pcnonal 11tory of victit111 and
bow their individual ll1d ool*tive
~ ~ voicea b.M iiiimbd our jllllice l.fl·
11m and mllde our cO.nmunlllea
Ilia," Mid Chrilli Lynclt and Connie
Dod.on, Meip County victlms advocates, ill announcing the observance.
The victitlll tldvocale program is
lllminiatered lhrough the office of
Mcip County Prosecutina Attorney
John R. Lenlel, who noted that just 20
yean ago, !:rime victims were afford·
. ed few ripts; 'heir voices were
muted, and limited services were
availlble to provide them with support and aaistance.
Todly over 10.000 orpnlzadons
provide strvicei and •istance to victims of crime,
Thirty thousand laws have been
. · passed al the federal and stale levels ·
that define and protect victims' rights,
incll!dlng constitutional amendments
in 32 stela including Ohio, that offer
a range of participatory rights for victima.
"When victimt speak out jn their
own ~ it reminds us of the per·
sonal, human sufferina caused by
crime,. Lcnta added.
'
•And when victims speak out for
ji.Wtice for.all, the end result is respon·
sible public policy and increased servia:a that support victims and com·
munldea who arc hurt by !:rime."

Good Morning

.

96 OIEVY S·J&amp;BWii,-Y6,-AUlOA 'IILTtCIIIISUIIJI,WS. ~ $1UOO,..., ••........,-.--,w.......... ,.,. .,...
·,~· "'~}l't ~:·~·"'"~""!' '."'14·7,858
90 CHM ASTRO CONY VANV6, lito, lllr, tlt,cnirt, AI/FI WAS Sf900-·--~~----~. 54650
88 CHM 1/2 TON LWI VI, lito, Qir, AI/FI ms WAS $6900
s5250
98 GMC SONOMA Ext C4 4WD, V6, lift, lllr,AI/fl, Ill, cnlst, ras: $19,900
IJ7,450
.
',
&amp;
98 GMC SONOMA Ext Cab 2WD, WDeor, 4cyl, 5sp, lllr, WFM, ~.WAS $13,995
i 12,600
98 GMC JIMMY 4Dr,4 WD, V6, lito, lllr, Ill, cnlst, AI/FI,·WAS $~910
121,850
97 CHM TAHOf 4Dr, 4WD, lT N VI, litO, lllr, AI/FI, CD, INtller.Jit, Ill, cnlll, $29,900-----"""''27,800
98 OLDSMOBILE BRAVADA 4 Dr, AWD, V6, ..... Ill, aM, AI/FM..., WAS $24,
,
'22,500
94 OIM 1/2TON LWB va, llto,lllr, tit, aM, AI/FI, WAS $11,995
$9650
'
94 CHEVY 1/2 LWB 4x4, V6,1111o, ai, WAS $10.900
$9200

stress. know ·
your· students'

Students learn about.
Civil war, life
from 'Honest Abe'

'

ByJIM~EiMAH

By CHUCK BAKER
Tlmte Stntlnel Steff
GALLIPOLIS - More than 1,200
Gallia County school children spe'nt part
of Friday with the President of the United
States, Abraham Lincoln.
While Uricoln has been dead since
April 15, 1865, watching actor Fritz
Klein portray the 16th president leaves
one imagining what it might have been
.like to view the late president making a
·public speech.
·' -•
The introduction of Klein as Lincoln
Wall held in. con·

this
-was made to the
children by Dr.
Richards, por·
trayed by Dr. Dan Whiteley, while all in
attendance stood.
Lincoln talked to the audience about
the state of the Civil War conflict, how
his life from childhood was marked with
being uprooted from Kentucky to Indiana, and finally Illinois.
~II.
.
.
.
He told the,audience 'how he worked .
Meigs Local Superintendent Bill Buckley said the first
alonpide hiS father on their farm from
thought to atll!ili his mind was, ·~we go again.•
the time he as 8 years old, and his limited
lb:ldey, ~ and LawRna:, who we« hota Mwed sepnte- education, Learning !low to read was
ly by telephone Thursday morning. Jqly blame today's populll'
stressed to the children attendina the per·
media and televisioo news for a'elling a culture !Jf violenoe.
1oiintiiice; with Lincoln· noting lhat his
"In the mediL .. it's all you see anytime you turn onthe
11th pr.. ldtnt of tiM
AC10R FRITZ KLEIN portiA~ Alnhlm
family lost theii homes three times
1V,"
said Buckley, who added he is oonoemed about the
Unllld 8tatM, durlflll AHriN of onHN!n " ' - It ' Ariel ThNire In G81Upothrough low-handed tactics.
possibility
of copycat massacres.
.
llll, Frl4ay. NNt1y 1,21111 Qalllll County etudllltl..,dld tiM hlllt0rleiii'ACI'N1lon.
"It never would have happened if my The pttiOoml- -Mid In conJunction wllh tl1l Ninth Annual Fecllrel Armr
He even issued a grim prediction, "It wouldn't surprise
father had a lick of education and could HOrnecomlflll.
me if there are more (m11558CrCS) before school is out. •
read," he said.,
"Our society as a whole seems to be rather sick," BuckSeveral times during the near 45- he kept traclc, he logged more than 20Q ·field, Ill., had once entertained the
ley said, "but society as a whole needs 10 continue and go
minute performance, Klein had school- appearances. While many of his perfor· thought of starting a Unc:oln theater in
on;'you can't acoept this behavior. We need to stan drawing
children laughing out loud with humor- mances are for schoolchildren, he also Springfield, but decided the economy· some lines in the sand."
ous stories from Unool'n's life; and at works conventions and Civil War re· there would not support 'iLHe cited the
Ironically, the superintendents feel the very things that
case of another man the~ who owned a people point out as "!'eaknesses in Meip County •• poverother limes held the audience in rapt enactments.
Klein, who works with the Unooln buildini where Uncoln bad ·once ·marn.o
attention as he spoke on being forthright
ty, isolation, and a largely homogeneous population in
Institute
for Education, btised in Spring· tained an office. Despite the admilaion
and honesL
which people tend to know • great deal Jlbout each othe{ •
George Washington's famous cherry
·Frlt:. Klein, who price of only $1, nearly no one went to • may help 10 p~vent these sorts of mustla'CS. .ln addition,
· -iL
tree story was an ex1111ple of doina the
li'Orb witll tiN
After nearly a quarter of a century of school administrators 5ay they tend 10 have more personal
right thing Klein utilized in his perforwith students and their parents.
Lhtcobt IIISiitute portraying Lincoln, Klein llbows no signs contact
mance. Washinaton cui down h~ father's
·~still have aomc fllTiily values," Aid Buckley.
• for &amp;lucation, of slowing down, "I like w~atl do. I feel
eherry tree, even though he !!new he
Said Well; "We t1y to take precaution., look for things
band in Spring· it's very worthwhile," Klein says.
would be In trouble for doing iL
out of the ordinary,• In addition, "Kids know what other
field, IU., luis Htn . Followina the show, membcn of Ann kids are doing."
"That takes i lot of courage," Lincoln
portTGying thelat1 Sickles' fifth &amp;rade claa at ~hinilon
told the gathering. "It's better to · ~ the
Lawrence said Columbine High School has about 1,800
pnnlnt /01' tiN Element.)' were asked if the play made students compared to 300 at Southern Hiah School. : .
music, because people are gonna find out
ltut 231ft~~". . 111 them want to learn IIIOIC about Uncoln;
uyway."·
.
"It woald !It hardforthemto know e'*)'body," heconr-,
,
""'
Klein his bc.cn · portr-rine tho; tatr~
~--·
LJ~
they
quiekfJ
said
"yet"
a
a
ptp•
.
:
•"
,
1 '."• - 111 ,,.. ' Todd Saunders enjoyed hearing "Un· mented. •our-staff knows aD diQ kic:ll.·"MM h~M~-situalions·
president for the list 23 years. In 1976,
and problems and the staff aeis truly concerned about th,e ·
IN1gllt and.out· coin~ talk about politiCI when he wa in students."
due to his height arid outward appear·
·
.
w.n~.,.,.,.c,, lu WIIS aslcild _to hi~ youth, and Amy Haffelt found it inter·
ana:, he was asked lo become Uncoln·for
· The superintendents said their StraletlY now is to closea Biee~tennial celebration. !Haught on, . ~- Li11,colll for 11 Bie~nt1n11W esting how Lincoln IIIXOmplished so
ly watch their students and look for problems and .take
Ctltbtvtioii.It Ctlllgllt 011, and much despite his formal education.
. action befo~ v.iolence erupts.
and Klein has been doing it~ver sin!le.
Kkht Ita bHII dolltf it ever sir;eB.
"H: d!d it All !)!I his own,~ Haffelt
He says he does more shows than he
"W: certainly don't wMI it to happi:n here," Bucldty
·
said.
Cll\ remember every year. The one year
COntinued on page A3

ly KEVIN KILLY
ents,• the congrasman added. "But we' abo need healthy said.
The congressman said a similar plliiOIIopity should be
l1m11 8 1111111111aft ·
communltiea, and pert of tiW is a strong edut::alional sys·
directed to new highway funding, which he Mid ii"CSICII·
RIO GRANDE - Education, highways ll1d health tern that allowl them to reach their potential, •
care, and how southern Oliio needs to beman even playStrickland said he'l diiiiWbed by the lllatUS of educa,: tial" to the.re&amp;ion and h11 always had his IUppOI1.
"It's I fact of life we need hipways, and we need to
in1 field in all three categories, was the rnaaqe U.S. lion in the U.S. and especially in southern Ohio, where
insist
on them and in getti111 our fair share." he said.
Rep. Ted,Strickl~d brouaJ!t to members
.-.1
. , 11udcnts ·.re •more worthy"
Affordable
health care for people worlcing in a lowot the Oallia County ~ber of eom.
~
of equal schooling opportunl·
.
paying
jobs
•desperiiCiy
needs attention," Strickland
rncra: who plllered for their annual
· ·
ty due !0 the liCk of adequate
added, llld he noted tiW ..-nl ~ action allows dil- ·
didner meelina Friday.
Challlber bancjuet awilrda • P-oe AO retiOIIRlel and faciHtica. •
· .
. .
.
The imlfC of pOverty con· ability bencfill recipients 10 maintain medical cover•
Strickland, 0-Lucaaville, focuSed
mon1 on the need for educatlonahllndarda and f018Jna of nected to the "gion led 10 what he called "deptldlna. for serious ill- or Injury when they 1lo find work.
Althouah ~ lhd nurDerQIIS other - . . are to be
strong adult-child relllllonshijll in the wab of Jilt week's Insensitive, billed and diaalnilnllory~ editorial cartoons
rodduacd,
Strickland "- who announced lilt week he
ldiHna III*" by two lludenll .at a Uttleton, Colo., hip In the Ocveland Plain Dealei mocldna attempliiO equalwould not run for the U.S. Senate in 2000 ~ believes
school.
·
·
·
ize fundina fouchool1 lhrouahCJut the stale.
·
"No one knows for 's..,. what hlppcned, and we may
"I point that out berlllll' we have aut 10 Insist that our "good thinas are aOina 10 hippeD" in the area.
"It will only happen if we work fllldher in a collabonever know wbat happened," he Mid. "My own penonal IIUdentl need opporlldllty. We don\ wanl more, but not
opinion is thlt youna people need to feel they are part of any lea." he Aid, addina tiW a allndard lias to ~ estlb- rative etroct," he said. "It's essential thai we Work with
~ aianifitant, to I!Jve connections ~ poeitive · !!_shed and legisllkin m...i uodenland it's a problem that yoil, be:a1ne government can\ do it without the .leadership. advice ll1d pldanQe local communities. We need
mOucncea, and It troublca me thai there arc dnldren who can be dealt with on the . . . and federal level.
have no auc:h connections,
. ·
· "It's not federal control, it's maldna the resoura:a avail· to be the instnmtenll availtlblc to you to help you solve
"YQURI people need adults, and children ~ par- flble 10 brin1school buildlllfl up 10 lllndard," Slricldin!l your problems.•

ln

APRIL 30

Ally BctuniS &amp;led after

4rd'l•ftqlllralJ*fiiiC"l'

ofi •z5.cio ftulty.

There are no exceptions to
the penalty. It must be paid

• e: .

Sl

or

..

•

''

.

.

I,

•

'

I

"

.

'TlmM-Senllnel 8tell
POMEROY
Could it happen here?
Following the massacre of 12 students and
a teacher Tuesday in a
suburban Denver, Colo.,
high school, local educators have been asking
that question.
It could ~ any. where, seems .the conseJlSUS of Meigs COunty
' superintendents who
their thoughts on
Columbi!ll
High
"The way thing:s
seem to be, it could hapTWO
a
pen anyplace," said a1n01e red roN 11ft on • ,...;..
Southern Local Superin- llhlft men101W - · Columbine
lendeqt James Lawrence. High Se'-1 In Llttltttln, Colo., .
"How can ~ say it Saturday.
woo' happen in our .
scbool?" mmmented "-'stem Local Superintendent Dcryl

Strickland focuses on school needs in chamber address

4)0,600

a negative im.,., not only of Judge Lewis and the Coalition, but of the schools that we repcesent • ·
Phillis also criticized the slatC school boaid, and its past
presiden~ Pomeroy Attorney Jennifer Sheets, for joining
the Ohio Legislature in its appeal of the a\urt decision.
"There's a certain arrogance oo tile part of all these peopic who are supposed to be leading the fight at the state
level, • Phillis said
The Coalition for Equity and Adequacy in School
Funding has proposed its own reform package, addressing
1
all four directives.
That reform package includes an increase in the minimum millage for local school districts, an in=asc in formula funds per student, a modification in the "cost-of·
Continued on page 11:1
·

Lincoln comes to life on stage A7ea~=tors

.

*'

93 CHEVY 1/2 TON Extc.b, Vl,llle,*,llt, crM,AM/flcasWAs$11,995

haid" of the state's school funding
·policy, including the elimination of
the state foundation system, which
provides funding on a per-p~pil
basis, a reduction in the emphasis
on property taxes, the elimination
of the emergency loan fund and
spending reserve, and an increase'
in funding for school facilities.
' None of th,ose ·directives have
been me~ Phillis said
"In Augus~ wllen asked, the Slate
couldn't show that any of these factOrs h.ad been 'eliminat- ·.
ed. lliey could not prove their case," Phillis said. "Instead,
they have spent their time and ener&amp;Y in llying to drum up

1.

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'

�'

Sunday, Aprll25, 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpol'a, OH • Point ~leaaant, WV

Page A2. ,tiuhav11!m--,adbcal

.NATO continues strikes.; Washington sends more troops to Al. b~·nia ·
By VESEUN TOSHKOV
said Yugoslav generals have been
Associated Press Writer
placed under house arrest. Campbell
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia .(AP) had no precise number, saying only
- NATO warplanes Saturday born- that the number detained was in
barded the home base of Yugoslav "double figures."
forces operating in Kosovo, less
Meeting with reporters, Campthan a day after the United States bell said one general was the former
announced it was sending more head of the army, fired shortly
t,roops to Albania to bolster_the ~~- before the NATO .air campaign
paign against Slobodan Mtlosev1c s began. NATO spokesman Jamie
forces in the province. .
· Shea confirmed during his briefing
Also, American diplomats began that several former generals were
drafting a ·u.N. Security Council under house arrest.
resolution Friday calling for the
· Shea also said today .that Milosedemilitarization of Kosovo and an vic is strapped for oil for his military
international mili1ary force. The and common sense dictates NATO
move appeared aimed at silencing should try to keep him from importEuropean . critics who had com- ing more. NATO defense ministers
plained that the alliance ignored the have agreed. to look at ways that
United Nations in launching its air NATO ships .might stop oil ship-.
. campaign March 24.
.
ments.
Serb TV was back on the air Fri.NATO's supreme commander in ·
day, hours after missiles slammed Europe, U.S. Gen. Wesley Clark,
into its headquarters as part of told su mmit leaders that Milosevic
NATO's pledge to silence Milose- . is " losing and he knows it." ·
vic's "propaganda mactline."
Alliance jets were in action
The Serbian Association of Jour- before dawn today over Yugoslavia,
nalists said in a statement Saturday. striking the southern city of Nis,
that IS .people had died and more which serves as the headquarters' of
than 30 were wounded in the attack the army group responsible for oper-·
on the TV station.
at ions in Kosovo.
Pentagon officials hinted that the
Serb authorities said NATO fired
station could be targeted again 26 missiles at Nis during a half-hour
despite opposition from internation- period, wounding at least one pera! journalist groups.
son, damaging the railwar, water
Milosevic met Saturday with his mains and shakang the CitY. wat?,
top aides in Belgrade. The state . "exceptionally strong detonataons,
news agency Tanjug said the offi- ' ' ·
'
' '
·
cials praised the public's "heroic
resistance against the militarily and
technically superior enemy. " ·
In Washington, Western leaders
marked the 50th anniversary of
NATO on Friday and pledged to
continue the air attacks until Milosevic accepted Western terms for a
. peace agreement in Kosovo, including the return of ethnic Albanaans
driven from their homes by Serb
forces.
Summit leaders set out conditions Milosevic must meet for
NATO to call off the airstrikes: stop
all violence, withdraw his military
and police forces, agree to the stationing of an international military
force, permit the safe return of all
refugees, and accept autonomy for
· Kosovo.
"There can be no compromise on
these conditions," a three-page
statemeni said. ·
Also in Washington, Alastair
Campbell, the press secretary for
British Prime Minister Tony Blair,

·

In Washington, Western
leaderS marked the 50th
annl'versary oifNATO on
Friday and pledged to
Conti'nue the air attacks .
until Milosevic accepted
Western terms for a
•
peace agreement In
Kosovo, including the ·
h · Alba '
return 0if et me
m-.
ans driven from their
homes by Serb forces.
Yugoslav media said. A~ office
building was destroyed, wh1le several homes and the Nis Machine
Industry complex were severely
damaged in what the Tanju~ news
agency said was the alhance s nmth
attack on the area.
·
1\vo missiles hit a fuel storage
depot at Bogutovac in central Serbia state-run media said Saturday.
NATo has targeted the depot several times in its monthlong campaign.
NATO fired missiles early today
at "the populated part" of Novi Sad
in northern Serbia, and also struck
the city'&amp; oil ·refinery, Tanjug said.
Explosions were also heard in the
region of Mt. Fruslr.a Gora; near
where a TV relay tower is located.

The news agency reported Chernomyrdin had said Belgrade
injuries but no deaths in the strikes would accept a U.N.-conttolled
in Serbia It said "sigoificant" dam- international presence in Kosovo,
age had been inflicted, but gave ~o but Yugoslav ~pu~y Fo_reign. Mini~details.
ter Nebojsa VuJOVIC said M1losev1c
In Washington Defense Secre- would only allow ail unarmed force
tary William Coh~n approved plans in Kosovo - something Western
to send 2,000 additional U.S. troops leaders have rejected.
to Albania to protect 24 u.s. Apache
Milosevic "has to be prepared to
attack helicopters sent there to strike allow a significan! ~?ternational
Yugoslav forces in Kosovo. The NATO-led force tn, Pentag~n
deployment of the new forces will spokesman Kenneth Bacon saad.
bring u.s. troop levels in the region ..The fact that he.'s prepared to allow
to s 350 the Pentagon said.
foreign troops in does not say nearly
Units' will begin deploying next enough. He has to be prepared to
week. The Apaches arrived in Alba- take his troops out and stop the
nia this week but have not yet flown _,killing."
in combat.
NATO's 19 members said in .a
statement Friday they would seek a
legally binding Security Council
resolution dema_nding the withdrawal of Serb forces, the demilitarization of Kosovo, and the deployment
of an int.ernational mititar.y foroe ·"to
safeguard the swift return of all
refugees and displaced persons."
Several Western diplomats at the
United Nations indicated that the
resolution would not be put before
the Security Council until there are
signs Milosevic might accept it and
that Russia would not veto it.
The
alliance ·
dismissed
Yugoslavia's response to a Russian
initiative to end the bombing campaign. Special Russjan envoy Viktor

Ohio weather

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lADIES CUT PIUS

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Next to Hilla - 448-7267

had receaved mv1tat1ons from ~he
leaders of several NATO countnes
to di~~ss his recent efforts to end
the.~ns ls. .
.
·
Pract1cally all leaders of NATO
countriO:S have given consent to such
a m~ehng over settlem~~t of t~e
. confliCt ID the Balkans. he said,
naming Ge~an t:;hancellor Gerhard ·
Schroeder m part1cular.
:
More than 600,000 refugees ~ave :
flpoded out of Kosovo smce :
aarstnkes began, and Western aJd :
·groups say hundreds of tho~~nds of •
othe~s are .daspla~d w1thtn the
provmce, many t~ymg to leave.

!llltmteld !34•1!13' I •

' IND.

0

0

W.VA.

0 1998 Accu'Nea!tler, Inc.

' We are just going io be more
conscious about what's going on,'
said Well.
' Adults need to talk to kids, kids
need to be heard," he said. "You can
Slress positive things for kids. We
need to remember they are young
and they make mistakes."
'Sometimes parents don't pay
attention to kids anymore,' Well
said. "If I heard someone sawing
pipe in my garage, I'd wonder what
was rgoing on," he· added. Pipe
bombs were among the weapons
used by the killers Tuesday.
While they may not have any
instant soluJions, the local superintendents don't feel additional gun
control or school uniforms would
help
·
While local students certainly
have access to firearms, teachers

..,• .,

LIITLETON, Colo.. (AP) investigating the note. He wouldn't
Police' have received what may be a say where it was found or when.
· suicide note from a teen-age gun· Kiekbusch said "12Skiito" may be
man, blaming this week's bloody a music band.
!Iunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy Shawn r..IOiml
flajn
Fklntoo
Shaw
k:o
high school · rampage on . parents,
Police also are trying to trace the
. teachers and "your children who shotguns · and
semiautomatic
have ridiculed me." It also warned weapons the teen-agers used. They
·of more death to come.
hope surveillance tapes might shed
. The note was contained in an e- light on whether Klebold, 17, and
: Sunday: Sunny. Highs in the upper 60s.
mail that was received by police Harris, 18, had any help.
Ext..ded forecall
. Thursday or Friday, days after
Investigators, meanwhile, tem·Sullday night: Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 40s.
Columbine High School became a porarily withdrew from Columbine
'·Moaday: ·Partly cloudy with a chance of showers; and, possibly a thun- killing ground. Police had not con- in order to let the bomb squad search
derstorm, mainly during the day. Highs in the mid 70s.
. · 1
firmed who wrote the note or who more efficiently today. ·
·
Thesday: Partly cloudy . Lows in the lower 50s. and highs in the lower sent the e-mail containing the .text,
On Friday, authorities released
70s.
',
.
The note was signed by Eric Har- emergency. 911 tapes that provide
WedQesday: Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 40s and highs in the lower ris and d~ted the day before he and the first real~time glimpse into what
70s.
.
.
.
.
.
Dylan Klebold stormed Columbine was happening inside the school as
High School armed with sawed-off the siege began.
'shotguns and homemade bombs; the
In one tape, a teacher, her voice
Denver Rocky Mountain News . tight with panic, implored police to
·Sundly: Sunny: Highs in the 60s.
Extended fonc.,.t
reported Saturday.
hurry and tried to..keep her students
Sunday night: Increasing cloudiness w.est and mostly clear east. Lows in
The two killed 12 students and safe as gunfire echoed in the backthe 40s.
,.
one teacher before shooting them, ground. "Kids - JUST STAY
:Mollday: A chance of showers or thunderstorms mainly west. Highs 65 selves Tuesday.
. · DOWN I" the teacher yelled; "My
to 75.
·
"By now, it's over. If you are God -the gu~ is right outside my
·Thesday and Wednesday: Fair. Lows in the 40s and highs in the 60s.
reading this, my mission is com- door I"
plete," the note says.
"He's outside in the hall," said
·
·
It warns against blaming the mas- the teacher; who was not identified.
By The AIIOCIIIed Pl'tlll
· .
sacre on the music the shooters lis- "There's alarms and things going
:The National Weather Service warned the threat of frost would return to tened· to or the clothes they wore, off.and smo(&lt;e. My God- smoke is
po,rtions of Ohio Saturday night. . .
.
·
placing the responsibility with coming into this room."
·The frost 'was forecast to be more widespread across northen\ sections of ·teachers and .parents.
From students to teachers to
the state, and snow flurries were possible. Lows were forecast from the
"Your children who 'have political leaders, the community
upper 20s to the mid 30s. .
·
.I
.·
ridiculed me, who have chosen not geared up for a weekend of funerals
A high pressure system centered across the state Saturday mght and to accept me, who have treated me and memorials, including one Vice
winds became light, especially in the north. ·
like' I am not worth their time are President AI Gore pla~ned to attend.
.Temperatures will start to rebound on Sunday as the high shifts to the east dead. THEY ARE (expletive) Many in the region still struggled to
and'the air flow once again.,J&gt;ecomes southerly. Highs will be in the 60s.
DEAD," the note says.
cope.
Skies had cleared across most of the state overnight and temperatures · "I may have taken thejr Jives and .
"As time passes, and as numbers
wore on the decline, with readi~gs helow the freezing mark in inland north- my own - but it was your doing. mount, we tend to depersonalize and
east Ohio. · ·
··
.
Teachers, parents, LET THIS MAS- , become less sensitive," said Gov.
In the southwest, readings were mostly .in the upper 30s to lower 40s. SACRE BE ON , YOUR SHOUL- . Bill Owens. "I'll never be able to
Wind.s were. slowly subsiding. but wind chill readings remained-near 20 in DERS UNTIL THf!' DA:Y YOU depersonalize this tragedy."
se erahreas.
DIE."
.
More than 900 mourners gathMore snow In Rockies, cold In New England
The note ends with a warning of ered Friday at Foothills Bible
. By The AIIOCIIIICI PrMI ,
.
more bloodshed.
Church for a memorial service for
· Snow continued to fall over the central Rocldes Saturday, while folks in .
"You may think the horror ends 16-year·old John Tomlin, who
the Northwest enjoyed sunny and mild conditions.
with the bullet in iny head, but you 'worked after school hi a gardening
. Up to 30 inches of snow 'have accumulated in portions of the Rockies wouldn't be so lucky. All that I can store and belonged to a church youth
sirice Wednesday, and another foot was possible Saturday. The snow should leave you with to decipher what group.
·
st~tch from Wyoming and Utah, south into the mountains of Arizona.
more extensive death is to come is
"Schools are disintegrating, part. Winds which gusted up to 113 inph in nonhem Utah on Friday calmed '12Skizto.' You have pntil April ly because piayer ha.S been removed
Saiurday, but unsettled conditibns and a chance of shattered showers 26th: Goodbye."
from them," said his mother, Doreen
remained. Rain was also likely in the southern Plains.
• .
Jefferson County Sheriff's U. Tomlin.
, ·In the far West, sunshine should prevail along the coast from Washington · John Kiekbusch said police were
A makeshift memorial near
down to California.
The Southeast shoutct..be generally cloudy with a chance for showers and
.
thunderstorms. To the north, New England was forecast to be clear, breezy
·
·

o•. •~~- . ~_.

Craft Show - Demonstrations
Quilt Show
Entertainment by Meigs H.S. Band
· Tours of Holly Hill Inn ·
City National Bank· Sketches of
Pomeroy Mural
Sidewalk Sales • Flower Sales
Concessions - Wmdow Displays
Barbershop Quartet
Farmers Bank- Vmtage Display film on
history of Pomeroy Mural
DowntoWn Walking Tours and to round
out evening a Community Band Concert .
beginning at.5:00. Bring your lawn chairs

Southeast Ohio zone forecast

Weather Service forecast for Ohio

Frost pOSSible in State fOreCaSt

(740) 99~-.2239 for set up information:
is FREE!!

here don't generally see the problems
with guns typically associated with
urban or suburban school di51ricts.
For some inner city youths, having a gun is considered a sort of status symbol, whereas local youths ar.e
more likely 10 have firearms in their
home and be familiar with their.use,
Buckley speculaied.
"It comes with growing up in the
country,' Buckley said.
"We had guns when we were
young, .too. We were taught to
respect them and what they could do. •
We were taught to value life.~ Well
said.
The superintendents are .also
skeptical that school uniforms would
help solve the problem of school violence.
All three districts have a dress
code . and prohibit gang-related

Columbine has continiiCd to grow,
. with hundreds of bouq~ets, stuffed
animals, signs and .cards. One sign
contained finger-painted images of
children's hands. Said another,
"SilenCe contributes to moral decay."
. As mourners grieve, a picture of
what went on during the siege's ini' tial moments was becoming clearer
with the release of the 911 tapes.
. The teacher had called from the
school library, which · became the
scene of the worst carnage.
"The school is in a panic and I'm
in the library," the teacher said.
"I've got students down, Kids under the tab\e! My kids are scream·
ing. Under .the table, kids! And my
teacherS are trying to take control of
things. We need police here."
• Another call, apparently moments
earlier, came from a female student.
"I just saw everyone running. I just
saw the smoke," the student said.
"People are 5aying there's a gun."
Police atrived to chaos outside
and inside. Tapes released Friday of
their radio communications revealed
· that one officer spotted a gunman on
the souihwest end of the school ·
almost immedia)ely. · "It's a big
gun," he said.
Also Friday, investigators said
surveillance tapes from security
cameras at Columbine may Show
whether the gunmen had accomplices. Although the library had no
· cameras, police planned to review
tapes from other cameras around the

r--~======-_::;
· MIDDLEPC)RT

VILLAGE INCO TAX
ME · ·

D'EADLJNE
JS
APRIL 30 .

and unSeasonably chilly.
·
·
·

·

,

Severe winds tip trucks, down powerllnes

.SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- Winds gusting at more than 100 mph toppled
tractor-trailers and cut power to a(lout 10,000 people in northern Utah.
A gust of 113 mph was reported Friday at the Brigham City Airport while
sustained winds of SO mph were common. Police reported more than
$7,50,000 in damage at the airport.
.
.Dave Eskelsen; spokesman for Utah Power, said as many as 10,000 custoiners were without power at some point during the day. Crews hoped to
ha,ve power restored by Saturdayday. Schools throughout northern Utah
closed because of the outages.
'In Weber County, a crane being used to renovate the Ogden Municipal
Building bucJcled and fell across the top of the nine-story building. .
The SOO-pound wrecking ball attached to the crane landed on top of the
jall, forcing some workers to evacuate for a short time. Inmates were not
injured.
·
·
·
·
.
:A northern stretch of Interstate 15, the state.'s main north-,south road, was
closed for most of the day after winds tipped over more than 20 trucks.
:william Alder, chief meteorologist with the National Weather Serv'ce in
Salt, Lake City, said the strong easterly. winds.are generally cau.sed when a
- . hi8h-pressure system in western Wyoming bumps into a low-pfCSSIIre'!ystem centered over the Great Basin.
The winds were expected to calm Saturday.

-,."1,~·

.

.'

Contlnu.t from. pege A1
doing-business" factor used to calculate formula disbursements, an increase in
unvotedinsidemillageonthe.locallevel,aqdfun.dingforconstructionbasedon
a prorated formula, based on district wealth.
Phillis was the final speaker at the Peoples Legislature event, sponsored by
the Appalachian Initiative for Scbool Funding, an Athens-based organization
which has proposed its own piiiJI for reform.
·

jurtb~ emitne~- Jentiatel
Reader Scrv1ces

(USPSW-)
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Correction Polley

PubliiiKid,every Sunday,82S Third Ave., Oallipo·
lia, O!JIQ by tbt Ohio \\lley Publllhina; Comptny.

Second ca.. paid . II Gallipolis, Ohio
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.
llaey, ..u ... ......... ... Gtlttpolll: M•ben The .t..IOCiated Pma and tha Ohio ·
(1&gt;40) 416-UG: or ,_.,..,, (740) m- N"IWiplplf Auociation,
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t''•IIO·lH OliO . 111d 001

3. Do you have school age children and if so, 1
what grade are .they in? _ _ _ _ _....__1I
I

4. What grade group do you 'feel demonstrates 1
the greatest need for an alternative?
1

Samuel.A. Eblen

1-6

•

'

&amp;Staff

I
I

5. Would you be interested in sending your
child to such a.school?...;._ _ _ _ __

"

Halesh Patel, M.Dl, F.A.C.P.

7-12
.

As the Mayor of Middleport
•

1

·

/IHHl// ()(){) ; lllCI (}()1

Please Elect··

7

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1
-~------~--~------~~---1
2~ What school district do you reside in?

Comments:
I
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.

I·Piease mall survey to Rlverbend, 1520 St. Rt..t60.Galllpo1Js,~

1Ohio 45631 or drop them at St. Peters Eplscopil Church or 1
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11. Community Schools are ,public schools that I
1
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ch
d fi
I
J are Started by tea ets, parents, an Of COm,._ free of
munity groups. They ,........
. most rules a:
regulations except health, safi.ety, and civil1
rights, and are Open tO all children WhOse pat• 1I
Th
h
I
ents.· choose thern.
ey do NOT C arge 1
·
ld
th.
ti
fl
tuition. Woo you support e crea on 0 I
sum a sdloolt in)your.&gt; community?-~,- r...;-n,:...;-

'O.r ..1• ....,. to II 1t0delto 10 be
Mnnte. U )'• bow er u error II 1

1

school.
"Ideally they would show the
movement and also the actual placement perhaps of some of the explo~
sive devices, prior to the incident,".
said sheriff's U. John Kiekbusch.
Jefferson County sheriff's
spokesman Steve Davis Saturday
said a tape from a cafeteria camera
was being reviewed by the FBI and'
local officials.

5 00

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

.

insurance protection.

Ally Returns filed after
dcadUnoe ~ JIIYIDents
of a $2 . Ft:nalty.

Eq· U 1•ty 1•n SC h00 I f Und 1•ng

(304) 675-1700
(304) 675-1701

apparel and clothing with suggestive
messages or alcohol and tobaccorelated advenisement. Hata and caps
are also prohibited inside local
school buildings.
' It would just hide the problem:
instead of dealing with it," Buckley,
said referring to school unifonn.s.
'There's not a whOle lot of differenc~
here (between students), it's still
jeans and shirts. •
.
"It's very unfortunate that it happens; we don't know how to prevel)l
it from happening," Well said.
"The kids · aren't ·.really all that
much different today, teenagers will
fly off the handle," Lawrence said.
'Maybe in the smallness of our
commuoity, our area. more people
would be aware of young peopl~
having problems."
·

Police discover possible suicide note from gunmen ·

KY.

ITY ICE &amp; FUEL CO.
,.

Conllnu.dlrom pageA1
said. "We want to be proactive rather
than reaCtive."
The biggest haza~d, Buckl~y said,
is complacency. 'I'm sure people in
Littleton, Colo., thought 'It couldn't
happen ~ere'. We become complacent; we get comfortable with our
setting."
Lawrence said school faculty
need to be alert for the warning
signs. 'It just seems like there are
things pointing to (potential violence); you need to follow up on it
and see what you can do."
"We need to ask ourselves, are we
really knowing our young people,
knowing they have problems, if they
reach out are we trying to find help
·for them?" he asked. 'If we tum our
back, we could have something like
that."

Chem?myr~m .sa•~ Saturday he

Interested Crafters, Artists, Craft Demonstrators or
school organizatio!ls may call:
Hau,.:
M-F 9-9
. s.LM

·Ar@a educators stress· 'know your students'·:·

Sunday, Apr. 25

'Enjoy a Spring Celebration
in 'Pomeroy
Saturday~ Jvfay r.J 1999

Men's Cut Plus . $795

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

Sunday, Aprll25, 1999• ·

---------

'

.J ~

.

'

�'
•

ComnJentary
junbSJI earimeJ- jentittel
'Est®fishd In 1966

P.geA4

We don't know the experience

. POI~T PLEASANT, W.Va. - Mary Louise Fos;er, 71, Point Pleasant,
died Fnday, Apnl 23, 1999 in Pleasant Valley Hospital, following a brief ill·
ness.

\

I

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publlahtr

I

DI-HIII
Controller

LanyEwlng
U.naglng EdHor

n..,_..•-6

boot.,._on•-

n '...wo""-tottwo ro!INI-.i ~rom-.

,.,..,wd

Born June 12, 1927 in Culloden, W.Va., she was the daughter oftheJate
Herc1e Foster and Lucille Jenkins Leffingwell. ·
~u~ivin~ are a sister, Martha E. Nibert of Point Plea' ol; a stepsister,
Chnsupe S1ders of Columbus; and a stepbrother, Henl) Shoemaker of
A11drews, Ind.
She- was also preceded in death by two brothers, Nonnan Foster and Thurman Foster.
~
·' .
Services. will be 2 p.m. M?nday in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point
Pleasant, wnh Marshall Bonecuuer .officiating. Burial will be in the Pleas.ant Ridge Cemetcry,.Gallipolis Ferry, W.W. Friends may call at the funeral
home on .Monday from 10 a.m. until the time of the service.
.

Earnest Gillman ·

- o f tof&gt;/oo. ,.,_ ptlO - . .,. -1 ""•• IINI
of IHing
114 tflr'Nrl. 'F)ptd ,.,.,_.,.
MKI_, mtY ,_ ~M. Etch Mould lncludtt
• . . , . _ , - , _ , .U)Iflmo pltono numl-. Spodfy • - " ltlww'o • .,_ to • ptWioue riM 01l.ct.,, IIMI to:. ~ fo U..IHM'or, l'JNI...._, 125
flflrd Aw., o.lllpolla, OIJio 41131; or. The Dally Stntlnel, 111 Cocut St, Pomwoy,
Ohio, 467ft. nr. N#IOIIIIH w.lcomN lnfMNf tM/1 from our ,...,_, Mld,..IMI
lo~.-·

.. 1Hf.!RMAN :-Earnest Gillman, 81, 1290 .Centerville Road, Thurman, .
d1ed Fnday, Apnl 23, I 999 in the Heartland of Jackson. ·
. Born Oct. 17, 1917 in Hatfield, Ky., son of the late Hi and Ellie Aldridge
G1llman, he was a coal miner.
·
·surviving are his wife, Doris Dalton Gillman; two sons, Earnest Gillman
lr.; of Thunnan, and Danny Gillman of Columbus; four daughters, Barbara
Faye Murphy and ~ther Gibson, both of Pikeville, Ky., Patricia Jean Little
of S1dn~y, Ky., and Carol Ross of Wellston; 26 grandchildren and 28 greatgr_andchlldren; two brothers ; Basil Gillman o( Winchester, Ky., and Archie
Gillman of Hamden; and four sisters, Nanny Gillman, Bertha Reed and Peggy Stratton, all of St. Albans, W Va .', and Vickie Parsons of Norfolk Va
l:le was also preceded .in death by a son, Donald .Ray Gillman; a~d thre~
brotbers, Ray G1llman, Little H1 G1llman and Jim Gillman
; Sen:ices will be II a.m ..Tuesday •in the ·Kuhncr-Lewis Fu~eral Home, Oak
H!ll, wnh the Rev. Gary Young and the Rev. Dennis Smith officiating. BurIal Will be m the Hill Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from
2-9 p.m. Monday. .

Guest column

The ·best and worst of America
By Sen. Michael Shoem•ker
(12:30 PM. - Novemlwr 22,1963)

Were were you? Most all of us vividly recall that infamous time in histo,
ry when a news flash from Dallas shocked our, nation and the world. The
insanity of an assassin's bullet in a split second brought home the reality of
our human frailties and the extremes to which bigotry and hatred can drive
man's behavior.
.
Just recently I had the opportunity to visit the Kennedy memorial in Dal- ·
las, Texas. A small marble portico located on the controversial Grassy Knoll
and a white "X" painted on the city street were frugal reminders of this hist~c event. A sign on the nearby Texas S&lt;:hool Book Depository invited
tourists to see the "Sixth Floor Museum." A small gift shop on the lower
level was a rather inconspicuous start to an unforgettable experience. Are)a,tively bare freight elevator delivered the curious to the historic sixth floor
location.
.
: As the elevator door opened visitors were suddenly standing in a stark .
Jlortion of the watehouse that had been sectioned off for the preservation and
appreciation of the city's undesired place in history. Portable PJexiglas type
partitions guided newcomers through a maze of information about the life
a'nd administration of America's 351~ President. NeWspaper articles, carnJ!aign signs, letters · and videotapes highlighted the famous campaign of
1960. 'fl1e emergence of John Kennedy in the face of tremendous odds ·
a8ainst both his youthful age and Catholic religion had surprised most politil:al experts of the day.
.
.
· The exhibit spotlighted the uniqueness of a high profile young family in
the White House, playing on the lawn, interrupting meetings to tuck a child
i(lto bed, showing the nation the beauty o.f its most famous residence and
111•gnifying the value of intellect and the arts. The age of Camelot had truly
fascinated a nation.
. ·
; Suddenly the mood of the museum exhibits changed. People slowed
~town and. the decibel level of ordinary conversation&amp; dropped to mufned
whispers. Waller Cronkite's memorable announcement of Kennedy's death
ajlpeared on the screen with later footage of the speeding limo on a desperIOe but futile race to the hospital. As you rounded the next corner you came
face to face with a stack of boxes that formed the privacy walls and
makeshift gun rest for Lee Harvey Oswald. Viewers walked to a nearby win·
dow to afford themselves that same view the shooter experienced 25 years

' .

·Derry D. Hemphill
GALLIPOLIS - Derry D. Hemphill, 64, Gallipolis, died Saturday, April
24, 1999 m Umversity Hospital, Columbus.
He i~ survived by his wife, Connie Stanley Hemphill.
·
Serv1ces will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Providence Missionary Bap1ist
Cllurch. Burial will be in the Providence b:metery. Friends may call at the
Waugh-Halley- Wood Funeral Home from 6-9 p.m. Monday, and at the church
one hour prior to the ·services on Tuesday.
. Additional infonnation will be announced later.

1(80.

· The continuity of the traffic flow was then i~tcrrupted as visitors seemed

10 waik aimlessly from .site to site. Invariably everyone was drawn back to

¢n area that had at first received only casual attention. A full page newspaJ?Or ad in the Jocai paper condemning the President as being pro-Communist,
photo of a military general who had been. fired by Kennedy for blatant
r)K:ist behavior and a wanted poster with the President's picture and lhc word
'treason" in large letters. People hugged their friends as they ·tried to hi4&lt;'
their tears: Film clips of fire hoses and police dogs being used to keeppeo·
pie of color "in their place" took on a stronger and more profound meaning.
'!,'he bitter hatred of this period of history could actually be felt in the air
~arly a qu·arter of a century later.
.
.
. John Kennedy was a politician who generated strong feelings from both
fans and foes. However, no one deserved the death of bigotry and prejudice
t~at fueled the actions of one (or more)men on that November afternoon.
P~rhaps the whole nation that tolerated and encouraged subst!lndard treat· .
rjlent of a brother ot sister should have pleaded guilty as an accomplice to
this dastardly deed.
·
· Near the exit were located guest signature books for names and comii)ents. Through watery eyes I left this message: "You've just seen the best
O.f America... You 've just seen the worst of America." Let's hope we don't
see this part again!
:. Min Shoe11111nr rep,...ntalhe 17th Dlatrletln th• Ohio Senate.

a

ty of time afterwar&lt;ls to add up the mistakes and
who made the biggest pnes.
.
Who can even for a moment look ahead to the
gigantic task of rebuilding the homes, businesses ·.
and infrastructure of Kosovo?
· There will not be ,much farming done this
Spring by t~c Kosovars. Their cattle arc being
destroyed, their seed likely burned, and the trac,
tors and wagons· have otper uses if they _tqo ·
haven 'I been destroyed or stolen.
.
The last time anything Jike this happened on
American .Oil was 134 years ago. We don 'I know
the experience; just the stories . .
Robert Weedy 11 a columnlet for the Sunday

n-senttnet.

"''"""U c-..... lbwl • Page A5I
I

- Tri-County Briefs:-;•

'H
·'
R"
S
Ha
L
' rry . am . ICe r.
CHESAPEAKE- Harry L. ."Ham" Rice Sr., 75, Chesapeake; died Friday, April 23,1999 at his residence.
Born June 30, 1923 in Little Rock, Ark., son of the late William Robert
and Zelda Pemberton Rice, he retired as a mechanic at Chemtron, and was
a U,S. Navy veteran of World War 11 .. He was a member of the Chesapeake
Pentecostal Church.
Surviving are his wife,Ciltherine Barker Rice; two sons, Harry (Donna)
Rice Jr. and Raymond (Connie) Rice, both of Crown City; two daughters,
· Deborah (Dean) Watson of Crown City, and Doris (Carl) Mayenschein of
Proctorville; 12 grandchildren and thtee great-grandchildren; a sisier, Goldie
Barker of South Point; and a brother, Ernest Rice of Chesapeake.
He~~ also preceded in death by four brothers. James N.. Oley, Clarence
and Wilham Robert Rice Ir.; and two sisters, Vicie and Mary Webb.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday m the Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville,
with Pastor Clyde Carter officiating. Burial will be in the Highland Memorial Gardens, South Poi.nt. Vistation was held in the funeral home on Saturday.
·
Military graveside rites will be conducted by Proctorviile VFW Post6878.

Ocel Jan··e se

.

Address in citation report corrected

1

Structure fire reported to authorities

Gerald James Swisher

0

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t' 1 d
' G 11• j Tl
epU leS 0 ge area man In a 18 a1.1

Paul R. Newman

Cicada •. nfest t"
'
.
a 1on more .
likely
southern
Ohio
:
COL
·
"They would get on you and •

in

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.'!MBUS . (AP) The .crawl all ove r, but you didn't pay any· '
Cicadas are commg, and for one attention or you would go nuts "said
Athens County resident, it's time to Gloeckner, 51 . "On a bright, 's unny-:
get.o, ut of to.wn .
. •. . ., day, if they wo· uld happen to horde,.'·
Th
d '
e n~ JSe IS ea.em ng, Pa.lge they would darken things a little bi t.":
Garfield sa1d of the scratchy, gr~~I~g
Once the cicadas emerge, the
sounds made by the msects. J 11 female s sys tematically slit tender"•
have .~o move \O another pan of branch tips in which to deposit their
Oh10. . .
.
.
.
. eggs whi le the males ward off predaThe 49,year-old Oh10 Umversny tors, such as birds, with i synchto- , ~
employee has weathe':"d two cicada _ntzcd squa'!'king and buzzing.
·.
mfestauons m her hfet1me '-- in 1965
·
and 1982.
She knows it's time for a third ·
because they occur every ·17 years,
when they emerge from the soil in
mid-May to matec
Periodical cicadas will end their
most recent 17-year underground
cycle soon in eastern and southern
Ohio and parts of West Virginia.
Hundreds of millions of the
•
"
I
msects are expected to blanket parts
of more than 30 Ohio counties, said
Wade Pinkston, graduate extension
assistant in the entomology depart·
OuR CusTOMERS
ment at Ohio State University, in a
story published Saturday in The APPRECIATE THE RARfsr
Columbus .Dispatch.
· When the cicadas most recently
QUALITY OF ALL:
appeared, the tity of Athens was ·so
thick with them that it appeared the
"QUALITY THAT
sidewalks were moving. Then the
. insec1s were trampled by. passers-by,
Jeav • ~g walkways as slippery with
flattened bugs as if they were wet
One of Ohio's oldest, 1.,.... ond
'
. with snow. '
Because the insects' existence nlost rapccte~ monuhlent ~mpauia
depends on wooded habitats, areas
that have been stripped of trees to
build houses and cities will have far
fewer cicadas.
But they will be out in force in
wooded areas such as Athens, near
southern Ohio's Wayne National Forest about 75 miles south of Columbus.
Jack Gloeckner, a groundskeeper
at Ohio University . for 32 years,
520 W. Main S~. _:Pomeroy, 0
remembers how they clung to everyPhone 992·2588
Vinton - 388-8603
thing In 1982, when they most recentGallipolis- 446-0852
ly appeared. ·

1

Clifford R. Walls

ENDURES"

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BOWMAN'S
OXYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

~ ~ •
.

.

Today In History

Sheriff cited by audit plans news conference
LANCASTER (AP) - A she.riff executive committee, from which legitimate di screpancies;" 1lle state·
accused · in a stale audit of mis- DeMastry would ·seek an endorse- ment also said very few of the
spending public funds plans a news ment if he runs again, is to meet May expenses in question are in that catconference Tuesday, b)lt woh'! say 6.
egory.
what he will discuss.
Greene Counly Prosecutor .
Allentiori Kmart Sltopper~:
It will be the first public appear- William. F. Schenck ,Jr. was selected
ance for Fairfield County Sheriff as spec1al prosecutor last week to · In Kmarli April 25, 1999 '
Qary K. DeMastry since release of r~ v1ew the findmgs by state Auditor
weekly od Circular, on page
the audit. The documen,t said his , I1m Petro.
20, feolure• the comp.urer
, , office-. misspent-. $281.,251, in. public-, , . Schenck expects to complete his
•oftware Iitle "Vnreal
I -· , mone~ from.!~ to l99.7,. with somt: mvesugatron• ~nd' present-' iPo!O ·'w' TOU~~~nt '·:· Til~ iielnrioiR:
., , ,., of the, money, gom11 to~at:djnapp(Q• "' g~nd JUry ''lllhin-slx•".'onlhs, at..tlouv .
· priate travel, dining and entettain- llie same tnne a•candldate, woul.tbl!·. ,.,.. b&lt;l, ~aUttblw dull Ia tllfl'. ··~,
mcnt. · •..
geanng up for a campaign.
mor;ufocturer\.delay in
DeMastry, 43, is up for re-election
DeMastry has repaid the county
~ippi"lf. next year for a third four-year tenn in .$4, 127. Petro said DcMastry O\Yes
Weopotojize r....,
the central Ohio county southeast of about $60,~.
·
.
incun venience thi• m•y hne
Columbus.
DeMa~try ISSue~ a stalement last . c•u•ed our CUIIomert. .
The. county Republican Party week saymg he woll pay for "any

Meigs EMS runs

RUTLAND
. 6:14p.m.. witli Central Dispatch, '
Edmondson Road, Bernard Wilson, '
Pleasant Valley Hospital ,
·

Hospital news
Vetenns Memorial
. Friday admi'ssions - Juanita
Wamsley, Middleport.
·
Friday di·s charges- none.
r

"

GENERAL HEALTHCARE
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY!
• Pediatrics, family Medicine, Geriatrics •
Insurance, Medicare
. &amp; Workers' Comp. Accepted
Complete Persmiallzed Medical Care

·.r

~··

Preventi11e Medicine &amp; Paeiem care come Finet

NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS
'

.

Point Ple~sant Medicftl Center ·
(304) 675-1675
2500 JetTenon Ave.

Point Pleuant, WV

ro
Jecklon, OH ·
740-21111-7484

FOR THE KNOWLEDGE EXPERIENCE
'
AND VALUES GAllTA COVN1YNREDS
NOW!!/
I,·, I

,.

JUDGE

•'

41

MAY·4, 1999

FAMILY MEDICINE

CENTRAL DISPATCH
· 1:55 p.m. , Ole\ Portland Road, J()c
Conley, Veierans Memorial Hospital; :
' 7:46p.m., Pearllltreet, Ocie J,ane i
·Sears, dead o~ arrival. . ·
·
· 8:25 p.m., Hoyd Sears, Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
'
POMEROY
I 0:50a.m., Liberty Lane, structure
· fire, Christie.Barton residence.

•Cuinj) For You Uke Family"
·
Since 1984

~~~~~~58~8844~~~~~~

RO.BERT M. HOLLEY, M.D•

. POMEROY ·- Units of Meigs
Emergency Services answered five
calls for assistance on Friday. Units
responding were: ·

'

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sheriff's deputies lodged Michael E. Sta- ,
pleton, 42, 4307 Bladen Road , Gallipolis, into ihc Gallia County Jail late Fri- :
day on a charge of domestic violence, according to jail records.
:

BIDWELL - (Jer~ld J.ames Swisher, 76, Bidwell, died Saturday, April
24, 19~9 1n Hol1.er Med1cal Center, following an extended illness.
·
Born Nov. 3, 1922 in Gallia County, son of the late Ira and Nettie Roush
. CHESHIRE - Jewell ,Martin, 87, Cheshire, died Friday, April 23, 1999
Swisher, he retired as a coal miner. for the Ravens Coal Co.
m the Rockspmgs Rehabilitation Center, Pomeroy.
·
. Surviving are his wife, Fran•es I ..Rutter Swisher; three stepchildren, Vir· Born June 30, 1911 in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., daughter of the late Har·
gm•a
Weaver of New l!aven, W.Va., Ronald l,.ee Spears of Clariton, Fla., and
ry and ~nna Shahan Neville, she grllduated from Point Pleasant (W.Va.) High
School m 1930, and was a graduate of the Booth Business College in Hunt· Rodney Spears of Lockbourne; three sisters; Grace Clark of Middleport,.Daisy
1ngton, W Va.
Thomas of Cheshue, and Hazel Nyc of Carey, Ohio; and several nieces and
· She was employed by the Jaw finn of Halliday &amp; Sheets imd the Gallia · nephews.
He was also preceded in death by his first wife, Lorena Mae Hughes
County Re-employment Office in Gallipolis before joining her husband Paul
Swisher,
in 1976; and two sisters, Margaret Swisher and Virginia Clark.
i!J Martin's Standard Oil Service Station i~ Cheshire, which they o~rated
for 45 years.
Services will be 10:30 a.m. Tuesday in.the Fisher Funeral Home, Mid· She attended \he Jordan Baptist Church in Gallipolis Ferry, and w~ a dleport, with:the Rev. Paul Taylor officiating. Burial will be in the Rocksprings
member of the Cheshu:e Baptist Church and the Atath Missionary Society. Cemetery, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Monday.
She was a 43-year member of the Cheshire Gatden Club.
· She was also preceded in death on March 10, 1980 by her hu~band, Paul
E. Martm, whom she mamed Dec. 13, 1936 in Bidwell; and by twin sisters
m mfMcy.
·
Surviving are a daughter," Katie (Paul) Shoemaker of Cheshire· and a
SCOTTOWN - . ~omas F. Trantham, 52, Scottown, died Thursday, April
grandson and two great-grandchildren .
.
'
Services will be 2 p.m. :Monday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home 22, 1999 m St. Marys Hospital, Huntington, W.Va. ·
Surviving are his wife, Donna Jean Trantham; a daughter, Lynn BarranWetherholt Chapel, Gallipoli~. with the Rev. Harold Tracewell officiating.
field
of Cleveland; and two sons, David Thomas Trantham of Cleveland Md
Bunal Will be m the Gravel H11J·Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call at the
Thomas
Trantham Ir. of El Paso, Texas.
·
.
'·
. c~apel from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. Sunday.
·
·
Graveside services will be 2 p.tti. Tuesday in the Miller Memorial Gardens. Th~re will be no visitation. Arrangements are by ihe Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville.
·
GALLIPOLIS· Paul R. Newman, 65, 22 Grape St., Gallipolis, died:SaturdaY,. April 24, 1999.at his residence.
Born Sept 13, 1933 in Mason County, W.Va., soli of the late Willard P.
arid Ollie M. Wolford Newman, he retired as a truck driver from the Radar
Trucking Co.
· CROWN CITY- Clifford R. Walls. 81, Crown City, died Friday, April
A U.S. Navy veteran, he was a ·member of the Loyal Order of the Moose
23, 1999 in St. Mary's Hospital, Hunting10n, W.Va.
Lodge 731 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
He wlrl retired from General Motors in California.
HOME
Surviving are his wife, JoAnn Hess Newman, whom he married March
Surviving are his wife, Edna Mae Walls; a daughter, Audrey Louise
6, 1965 in Point Pleasant; a daughter, Kelly S. (Edward L.) Tate of Concord,
Carlysle of Lucasville; nine grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren ; and ·
N.C.; two grandsons; and a half-brother, Milton D. Holmes of Louisville,
five brothers, John Walls of Proctorville, and Mason Walls, Edward Walls,
Ky.
.
Bert Walls Jr. and Noah Browning, all of Huntington.
.
He was also preceded in 4eath by a son, Paul R. Newman Jr. , on Sept.
Services will be II a.m.. Monday in the Hall Funeral· Home, ProctorviUe.
12, 1969. .
.
.
Burial will be in the OSJiego Community Cemetery, Otway. Friends may call IGatiii~KJII•, OH
. Services will be ~onduc ted at.the convenience of the family. There will
at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
.
. . · • 740-44&amp;-7283
be no visitation. Arrangements are by the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

Thomas F. Trantham

i'
!

BIDWELL - ~ Gallia CoUJity sheriff's deputy on patrol early Friday
reported a structure fire at the residence of Jim Mitchell, 523 Mount Olive : .
1
Road, Bidwell, to authorities.
The Vinton Volunteer Fire Department was alerted and responded to the :
scene of the blaze, which the deputy reported at 2:30a.m. Details on dam· :
age were not immediately available from the VFD.
·
A neighbOr informed deputies that the Mitchells were away from home
on vacation when the fire occurred, ·

MIDDLE~Oiir~eiJan~Pose~s~! 80,Middl~pon,diedFri&lt;4y.

April 23, 1999 at her residence, followmg an extended illness.
Born Oct. 10, 191 8 in Heaters, W.Va., daughter of the late OJ a and Ollie
B
p
rown osey, she was a homemaker, and was a former cook for the Meigs
County Children's Home. She also delievered the Athens Messenger for severa) years. She attended the Wesleyan Bible Holi ness Church.
S . .
urvmng are three daughters, Ann (James) Rife of Cheshire, Betty Conkle of Middleport, and Carrie (Paui) ·Baker of Syracuse; a son, Lloyd (Juanita) Sears of Cheshire ; seven grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren ; two
brothers, Okey Posey.ofWalkersville, W.Va. and Oscar Blake of Burnsville,
W.Va.; I )YO sisters, Ocie Williams of Dover, Del., and Mable Eagle of
Burnsville.; a half-brother, Mandy Posey of Marietta; and several nieces and
nephews.
· She was also preceded in death by her husband, James Franklin Sears, in
1982; a son, Roy Sears; three brothers and two sisters· and a son-i n~law
Ray Conkle.
'
'
·
'
Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the We sleyan Bible Holiness Church,
Pearl Stre~t •. Middleport, ~ith the Rev. Odell Manley and the Rev. Douglas
Cox officiating. Bunal ":IJI be m the Meigs Memory Gardens, Pomeroy.
Fnends may call at the FISher Funeral Home, Middleport, from 2-4 and 79 p.m. Monday.

;

GALLIPOLIS - Carey Stllnley, 42, Gallipolis, cited by Gallipolis City :
Police on Wednesday for disorderly by inloxication, does not reside at665 :
Eblin Hollow Road, Crown City, as reponed in Thursday.'·s Gallipolis Dai·
ly Tribune.
:

··

Jewell Martin

,The plight of the refugees becomes even more
severe as columns are !lllacked by NATO planes
and likely Serb aircraft as well. Some have died at
the hands of Serb land mines along the border
while others are murdered and placed in mass.
graves.
.Refugee camps must be expanded to accommodate new arrivals from the second wave cve.n
as many are moved to other European countries.
Farmer's fields arc overrun by.homeless and wandering people as Spring planting time arrives.
Destabilization of Montenegro, Macedonia and
Albania rcmaiqs a distinct possibility as Milosevic """s hi.s citizens as pawns in this war. Seeing
them in the rain and cold, women •. children and

'

Pomeroy
• Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant' WV
.

Mary Louise Foster

.

825 Third Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio
740 44112342 • Fax: 4411-3008
111 COurt street, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-1102-21511 • Fax: IIG2-2157

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Sunday, April 25, 1999

sunday, April 25, 18811

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ASSISTANT Cl1Y SOUCITQR
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HAS $FRVRD ON SRVFJW BOARD OF DIBECTORS OF
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PAID FO!lBY mE BENNEIT FOR~B COMM1T1Eii, G. RICHARD BROWN 71l£.tS.
514 l1URD AVE GAUJPOUS OH. 45 1

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' Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiiiPQIIa, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Page A6 • .-wikg ~=--•mtbiel ·

Sports

Sunday, Aprll25, 1999

l

Section

B

Sundar,April25,1998

Astros defeat Reds 4-3; Red Sox down Indians 9-4
CINCINNATI (AP) Ken
Caminiti drove in two runs with his
I ,SOOth career. hit to key a three-run
eighth inning rally that gave the
Houston Astros a 4-3 victory again~t
. · u· Reds on SaturdaY·
th e Cmcmna
Craig Biggio and Derek Bell led
· off the eighth with co~secutive sin-_
_gles off Danny Graves (1-3). After ·
Jeff Bagwell walked to load ihe
bases, Caminiti singled in two runs
to tie it at 3. Houston took the lead
whcn Richard Hidalgo grounded
· a 'aorce pay
I at second.
mto
· Scott Elarton (2-0) pitched two
innings for the win, allowing one hit
and two walks while_ striking out
two. Billy Wagner pitched the ninth
.for his fifth saldve.
.
,
Barry Lar n . was m a 2-aor- 29
slump when he hit a 1hree-run ho~er
off . M1k~ Hampl?n to . gtve
Cmcmnau a 3-0 )ead m. the_thtrd. ·
1'he Astros scored m the seventh
w~en center fielde_r Mike Cameron
• miSplayed_Htdalgo s fly ball and was
c~arged Wtth a three-base error
Htdalgo scored on Chad E~erett s
mfield smgle. .
Reds starter Steve Avery allowed
one unearn~d run , ~~e htts and
three walks 10 seven mmngs. - .
HaJT_~pton allowed. three runs m
six m.nmg~ on four hils, three walks
and stx stnkeouts.
. Notes: Sean Casey was 0-for-4,
drop~tng hts a~era~e to .417. It w~
the ftrst ttme m ht~ 15 games thts
season that Casey dtd not rea~h base
safely, and ~nly the seco~d ttme he
was held httless. ·:· Rehever Stan
Behnda, trymg to come back from
treatment for multtple sclerosts, was
:duled to
and
two

COMPLETING TERMS ON BOARD .._: ThrH members of the Gellla County Chamber of Commerce Board
of Directors, from left, Marianne Campbell, DIIVId Shaffer and Kevin Eastman, wera racognlzad for their aer- ·
vice t&amp;the board at Frlday'a 11nnual chamber meeting.

Awards presented during chamber•s annual dinner
RIO GRANDE - Maintaining . In addition to hosting quarterly
involvement in the community was business exchanges, the chamber has
the primary focus of the G~llia · continued i!S- Eriday morning meetCOunty Chamber of COmmerce in ings with citizens to keep them·
the past year, and the organization informed on projects and activities.
'In the past year, the chamber has
.did so through a number of activities
ranging from making education its initiated research into the establishtop priority to gaining a "Main ment of a YMCA in the county, and
applied for and received designation
Street" designation for Gallipolis.
These and a host of other activi- of Gallipolis as a "Main Street" comties were reviewed in the annual munity. It was one of three to win the
report submitted by Chamber Presi- designation in 1999, and is only one
dent Jay Moore during the organiza- of six in the state. James Mullins was
tion's 62nd annual dinner meeting elected president of the organization.
The chamber also grew during the
· Friday at . the University of Rio
·
year,
attracting 25 more members
Grande/Rio Grande Community
through ·a drive chaired by Ryan
College.
"We are pleased with the accom- Smith, and selected education as itsplishments of last year and very opti- top priority throughout the -county,
mistic about the future of Gallia evidenced by its endorsement of the
Gallipolis City Schools' bond issue
County," Moore said in the report ..
During the year, the staffs of the for a new high school.
Those attending Friday's annual
chamber and Gallia County Co!"munity Improvement Corporation were dinner also received copies of the
restructured to provide a more effi- · chamber's first membership directocient operation, and payment for the ry, dedica_ted to the memory of Keli
renovation of the chamber offices at Dodrill, who had initiated work on
16 State St., Gallipolis, was complet· the project· during her time as an
administrative assistant with , the
ed.

chamber.

FOR SERVICE TO T14E CIC- Tom-Tope, left, and TOI!I Wleaman, right, palt prsaldantl of the Glllla Coun·
ty Community Improvement Corporation; w.,. recognized lor their years of aervlce to the CIC In a special
pr-ntatlon by Marianne Ctmpbell, center, during the Galli• County Chamber of Commerce annual meeting
Friday.
~

Several awards were presented
during the meeting, including the
McGhee Community Service Award, · r---------·---==--•·:----'::'!::-:-::-:---=~----::::--""":"---------.,
which went this year to Bob eondee,
a former electric utility and mining
executive who has twice served as
interim ,city manager o( Gallipolis
and assisted with overseeing the Registration Now Open
development of the Dan Evans
.Industrial Park. ·
Moore also presented awards to Program
Ends
Starts .
Hours
Tom Tope and Tom Wiseman for
their years of se!"ice with the CIC, Farm Business Planning and Analysis
By Arrangement
and to the commtttee chatred by Bob .
5/17/99
8
Daniel that was successful in paying Internet Usage
5/10/99
off the renovation work on the cham- IV Therapy for LPNs
5/7/99
6/4/99
50
ber offices.
4/26/99
5/19/99
Brent Eastman, who chaired the PN Pre-requisite
23
committe~ that organized the 1998 Pharmacy Technician
5/6/99
9
f/13/99
Gallipolis River Recreation Festival,
'
was also recognized, as were outgoPre-requisite
ing chamber directors Marianne Phlebotomy /EKG
By Arrangement
Campbell, Ji;evin Eastman and
Pre ~entrance Testing
David Shaffer.
T.J. Justice of the Governor's Surgical Technician
5/6/99
5!13/99
9
Office of Appalachia Y(as on hand to
Pre-requisite
present a citation letter to the cham- .
ber from Gov. Bob Taft, who congratulated the chamber oq the 50th
Call (74-0) 241S-IS334 to R ster for Classes ·
anniversa,Y ·or its charter.

Buckeye Hills Career Center
Adult Full Service Cente_r

1---------------------

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COMPLETED PAYMENT - A commlttH chaired by Bob Daniel, left,
completed payment of the renovation work on the Gallla County Cham·
bar or Commerce olllces last year. The committee's work waa recognized by the chamber at Friday's ann11al meeting. An award was pre-'
aented by Chamber President' Jay Moore, right.

Weekends
.

.

until

At New York, Chili Davis three- live pirchers currentlY on the disrun
homer in the eighth inning broke abled list. And Chkago's sch~uled
Major league baseball
a tie and carried the New York starter Sunday, Jon Lieber, wa.i hit in
first major league win in relief of solo runs set up byAI Martin's lriple Yankees to a
victoryS against the the eye by a thrown ball during bill8 1ue ays on. aturday.
Saberhagen despl'te al lowl·ng three 1·n the second and Mart'n's
s·
gl
.
Toronto
ting practice Saturday.
1
10
· fourth. ·
e 1n
Davis' homer, ht's fifth, came off
Allen Wat~on
runs in the fifth. Manny Ramirez hit the
,, (1·2) was ch••ged
a tWO-flln double to make it 4 _3 and
But Schourek couldn't hold the Dan Plesac (0-1) after Bernie with the loss.
lted Sox 9, India · ,
Jim Thome added an RBI single_10 lead -despite giving up only two Williams opened the ioning with a
Royals 4, Angels 3
At Boston Nomar Ga
arra's tie the game.
earned runs over !!eVen innings, in single and Tino Martinez walked.
At Kansas City, Mo., Mike
RBI single broke a tie ~
· n·
sixth
The Red Sox scored three runs in part because of the shaky defense. I ~miro Mendo~ (2- IJ pit~hed Sweeney's fielder's choice with the inning and the Boston R
x beat the first off Indians starter Dave Schourek has yielded two runs over the etghth for the wm and Manano bases loaded in the eighth inning
the Cleveland Indians 9-4~turday Burba on RBf singles by Stanley, 13 innings in his last starts after ~vera_e~ned ht s fourth save wtth a scored Rey Sanchez with the decidespite
losing
start
Brct O'Leary and Bu'ord.
ll o e
ns over e'ght
hitless mnth.
sive run as the Kansas City Royals
1
Sabe rhagen to as hou lder 1· ry.
'' the Red Sox lead ain~ings
wmgjn his
s ven
Trat.,.mg 2-0, New Yor k scored beat the An abe'tm A nge Is 4 -3
The Indians cut
firs.t ru
two. .
Saberhagen, who ! e d 15 to 3 _1 in the fourth when David
Bob Wickman finished up in the four unearned runs off Roy Halladay Saturday. .
months with a bad right
lder in Justice grounded into a double play ninth for his second save.
m the fourth on two-run .smgles by
Tim Salmon accoumed for
1996-97, left the gaine wi tiffness with runners on lirsrand third with
. Notes: Pirates right-handed Chuck: Kn.oblauch and Derek Jeter. Anaheim's runs with a two-run
in his shoulder after thr 'ng two no outs.
•
reliever Marc Wilkins , who has Halladay tssued _a patr of two-out homer off Jeff Suppan in the fourth
~"':"' up pitches befor$ , e fifth
The Red Sox took a 4 _1 lead in pitched in only· l 6 games in two &gt;'!a- walks, wrapped around an error by and a s~ ' o shot in the sixth. It was
mmng. ~
"'
. the bottom of the fourth on sons due to shoulder problems. is shonstop_Alex Gonzalez to fill the . Salmon's second two-homer game
. A!ter ht s last start, S,aberhallen · Valentin's RBI single.
t d t0
- - th t
bases. Knoblauch and Jeter followed of the season and 14th of his career.
swd 11. w~ the firstume ~-had felt
Burba allowed four runs and six expec e
reJmn e earn soon with their singles.
He has six homers thi s season.
no pam m the should-,p)nce .tht: 't'ts ,·n five t'nnt'ngs Wl'th et'ght strt'kc- fhrom. Doubltk-IA hAtltoona.
:-~~~ll~
Cubs
2,
Mets
0
With the game tied at 3-3,
surgery. There was no"jmm~tate ~uts
as stx mu tp e- 1 games 10 •s as
At Chicago, Terry Mulholland's Sanchez and Carlos Beltran reached
word on the severity of ~injury.
Notes: Saberhagen was 2_0 with ~~n: s~r~~~'ih~t~:s ~~:;e~la~~i~~ first start of the season was a strong on infield singles to shortstop Andy
. S~berhagen gave Up ~Ill' / un on a 0 _75 ERA in 1998 vs. Cleyeland . their first 43 games on the road .... · one Saturday JUSt w~en the Ch1cago Sheets. After a sacnlice bunt by
stx hils and Slruck out tHII':e .m four In his career, Saherhagen is 13_8 vs. Eldred, the . Brewers' opening day Cubs·' injury-ravaged pitching staff . rookie Carlos Febles. Joe Randa was
mnmgs ~ Boston snapped a three- the Indians with a 3_00 ERA. ... The starter in 1998 , spent the first three. needed a lift.
walked intentionall f . by reliever
game_losmg strea~.
, •
five runs the Red Sox scored in the weeks ·Of the season making thre e
Mulholland allowed seven hits in Shigetoshi Hasegawa ( 1-1).
Wtth one out m the g,xth, Jose fifth inning Friday night were the . rehabilitation starts in the minors. 6 113 innings, while Sammy Sosa hit
Sweeney hit a sharp grounder to
Offetp1an doubl~d offln&lt;!!_ans rehev- most the Red Sox have scored in an _- He required surgery in January to his fourth homer and made a great Sheets. who forced Randa at second.
er . RICh DeLucta (0-1), moved to inn.ing .... O'Leary has six of the Red remove bone chips from hi s elbow. rally"killing catc h in th e eighth ·But the throw to first base bounced
thtrd on _a, fl~out and~ scored on Sox AL low 11 homers, including ... Cirillo has scored live of the inning as the Cubs beat the New away from Darin Erstad, allowing
Garctaparra s sm~le. . , .
five the last seven. ... The Indians Brewers' 14 runs so far in the series. York Mets 2-0.
Sa'nchez to score.
,Boston added three ~ns tn the have won 12 of 15, outscoring thei r
Athletics l, Orioles 0
Mulholland ( 1-0), whose first
Jose Santiago (1- 1) pi tched I 113
seventh, on a solo homer by Mtke opponents in that stretch 107_67 . ...
At Baltimore, Matt Stairs broke seven appearances this season were innings of scoreless relief to pick up
Stanley, an RBI double by Darren Cleveland OF Manny Ramirez has up a scoreless duel with a three-run in relief, made his first start since · his first career victory.
Lewts and an ~BI s t~gl e b:' 25 RBis over the first 16 games to homer i·n the sixth inning as the last
for a Cubs team with
~m-·=,..,..ro:-~
Offerman. Troy 0 Leary .adde.d 3 lead the majors .... The Indians have Oakland Athletics ended an eightsolo homer tn the etghth1_-h1s stxth._ collected 10 or more hits in 12 of the game losing streak against the
Stanley, who entered the gamem first l6 games .... Indians c Sandy Baltimore Orioles with a 3-0 victory
a~ 0-for-22 slump, wenp.for-3 With Alomar has missed the past two Saturday.
hts first homer and two RBis.
. games with back spasms.
The Orioles, bidding for a second
Tim Hankkala
earned hts
Brewers s, Pirates 3
·straight win 'for the first lime this
At Pittsburgh, Jeromy Burnitz hit season. managed only four hits
a two-run homer off rookie Scott against former teal1)mate Mike
Sauerbeck to finish off a four-run Oquist and three Oakland relievers.
Milwaukee_ rally highlighted by
Baltimore was 8-0 against the
Pittsburgh errors and the Brewers Athletics since May 22, including a
beat the Pirates 5-3 Saturday.
7-4 victory Friday night that ended a
B11rnitz also hit a sacrifice fly in six-game losing streak. The Orioles'
the sixth following the first of two 4-13 record is worst in the majors. key errors by the Pirates and Jeff
After Scott E.rickson-(0-4) issued
Cirillo homered for the second day, a walk and then hit ~ batter with two
in a row.
' outs in the sixth, Stairs sent a 3-2
AI Reyes (2-0) got the victory pitch over the 25-foot scoreboard in
with two scoreless innings in relief right field. It was his fourth homer of
of Cal- Eldred, who made his first the season.
start since fracturing his right elbow·
Stairs, who also doubled, is 15July 26. Eldfed gave up three runs for-40 (.375) after starting the year
and five hits in six-innings.
1-for-14·, ·
The Brewers . trailed 3-1 until _ Oquist (2-l) allowed three singles
. Fernando Vina leaned : his right a~ four wal~ 1-i!l ~" 2/3 innings.
~~ -~nto..aiScheurelc pttch to get Btlly Tl!ylor·got lne last four outs fot
on base leading off the sixth; stole his fourth save .
White Sox 3, Tigers 1
second and third and score.d on
Burnitz's sacrifice fly. ·
At Chicago, Jaime Navarro won
Pirates starter Pete Schourek got his first _game since July 15 as the
into trouble by again letting the lead- Chicago White Sox beat the erroroff batter reach base in the· seventh. prone Detroit Tigers 3: I Saturday
David Nilsson singled, advanced to for their sixth. straight victory.
.
SCl'ond as the ball rolled by· center
.Paul Kone.rko scored the decisive
fielder Bran\ ·Brown for an error, run on a throwing error in the second
then scored an out laier on Alex inning by third baseman Dean
Ochoa's sacrifice fly.
Palmer. The Tigers, who lead lhe
Todd Ritchie (0-1) came on to get American League in fielding, comthe first bauer in the eighth, but third milled three errors Saturday, their
basellllin Ed Sprague threw away first multi-error game this y~ar.
Marquis Grissom's grounder for his · Losing pitcher Dave Mlicld (1-1)
fifth error of the se&amp;Son. After Cirillo made the other two enors.
reached on a force play grounder,
Navarro (1-1), who returned to '
Burnitz greeted Sauerbeck by hitting the rotation this spring after being
a 3-2 pitch into the right-field seats demoted to the bullpen last August,
- BACK TO SECOND- Houaton's Craig Biggio etlra up some dust for his fifth homer.
SAFE AT SECOND - Boaton's Darren Lewis (20) collides with
' scattered six hits over 6 2/3 innings
after getting btlck to second, btlaa as Clncinna~ aacond beseman
Cleveland
shortstop Enrique Wll8on on his way to a"' successful
The ~irates had taken a 3-1 -lead in his longest outing this year. He
Pokey Reeaa bobbles tha baaaballln the fourth Inning of Saturday's
steal of second base In the fourth inning of Stturday's American
National League game hi Cincinnati, whera the Astros won . 3. (AP) on Brian Giles' second homer in as walked one and struck out seven.
League game In Boston, whers the Re~ Sox won H. (AP)
many at-bats, in the first. inning, and
Yankees 7, Blue Jays 4

1999

Gray beats Scarlet 61-161n OSU spring

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-Geiger says Ohio
State football, track
stadium names stay

~ame

By ANDY RESNIK .
· ' . . according to traditional football rules.
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP) - Cte . The· Gray scored pomts a vanety of
Grant returned a fumble 42 yards for a _ways, from touchdowns to forcing
touch~own and Ohio State's offense turnovers to holding the offense withspurted to only three scorina dri.ves in out a firs! down. ,
.
.
the Gray's 61-16 victory over the
Starting quarterback candtdates
Scarlet Saturday in the 'Buckeyes' Austin Moherman and Steve Bellisari
annual spring intrasquad scrimmage. led one scoring drive ~piece, but spent
The game was pl1yed at the most of the day dodgmg the bhtz. .
Wooily Hayes Athletic Center
Bellisari completed 7-of-21 pas~
bec1use of Ohio Stadium's $ISO mil- for 142 yards, while Mohennan was
lion recons~tion. It was closed to 12-of-22 for 87. They each tossed
the public.
.
·
touchdown passes to Reggie Germany
The game pitted Ohio State's and were picked off once - neither
offensive ·team - the Scarlet - standmg out m the fight to replace~tg
aglitlst Buckeye defenders - the Ten player-of the year Joe Germame
Gray. The Scarlet squad scored in the August 29 opener with Miami
'li
in the Kickoff Classic.

14.99 pllones •nwdltluued
Rot&gt; tun ml- ..
Toll ani ...m"!!

.,

i-4

By KEN RAPPOPORT .
different te~ that finished· 15 points
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) behind the Eastern Conference lead- The Pittsburgh Penguins, playing ers and lost four of.live game!: to the
without league-leading scorer Devils during the season and five
Jaromir Jagr, put together a great all- straight counting the Game I loss.
around defensive game behind goalAleksey
Morozov, \ 'Greg
tender Tom Barrasso to beat the Ne\11 Andrusak; Martin Straka and Alexei
. Jersey Devils. 4•) Saturday and cvtfll Ko.-alev scored- f011 Fittslfutgb Bnd
their playoff series at a game apiece, , tbe Penguin&amp;simply, suJ(&lt;JCal¢ tb.c
., · ''"' Jagr, the Penguins' team captain, Devils with a tight-checking 4efense
was scratched right before game time that allowed few qualitY: chances.
·because of a groin injury suffered in
Barrasso stopped 25 shots ·ll!:fore
Thursday/ night's 3-1 loss to the Dave Andreychuk finally scor\~ for
Devils in Game I of the Eastern tht: Devils from ·in close with 8:19
left. Barrasso finished with 28 saves.
Conference qul!rlerfinal series.,
Jagr was listed as day-to-day by
The Penguins' penalty killers
.tht: Penguins, who hope their top· played a big part, ldlling ·five New
player can return for Game 3 today Jersey power plays. The Devils, No.
in Pittsburgh.
4 in the NHL on the power play durThe Penguins didn't seem to miss ing the regular season, have- yet to
tht:ir star forward, generally regarded score a goal with tbe man, advantage
as the top one-on-one player in the on nine attempts in the series.
NHL. Even without Jagr, they were a

Phones
start at

•

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Penguins notch ·4win Qver.N.J. Devils,
tie playoff series 1~·1

November
l.

innings for Triple-A Indianapolis on
Sunday. Belinda has been on the DL
all season with a straine!l, right
shoulder..th
.. B~gwehll hact i infield
single in- e aourt . 1t's
n his
·
homenng
· t
11·mes
1 smce
on IYh't
against the Cubs on Thurs

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WE SCORE! -The Pltttburgh Penguins' _AiekaaY Morozo,_.v""c'-e-11--'
bratea hia flrat-perlod goal with teammates Martin Strakland Brad
Werenlul, both of whom got credit for the aaslat on the goal, during
Saturday'• NHL Eaatern Conference first-round playoff game
against the New Jeraey O.vlla In East Rutherlord, N.J., whtrs the
Penguins won 4-1. (AP)
·

By DOUG ALDEN
COLUMBUS . Ohio (AP)
Though Ohio State pursues donations to help cover the cost of ex ten:
sive renovations within the .athletic
department. two names are not and
will never be for sale, director of atb.
lelics Andy Geiger said Saturday.
._ The Buckey~s. will coorint.ie to
play football in Ohio Stadium, no
matter how·much anybody offers to
sponsor a name change. and the new
venue for track, soccer andiacrosse
will be called Jesse Owens Stadium ,
Geiger told reporters ' during his
ann~al state of the athletic department speech.
,
As for other naming options, Ohio
State is listening.
" We 're very proud that the stadium is the Jesse Owens Stadium.
There will .be some other naming
opport~nities in and around that
because we have a fundraising goal
to complete it," Geiger said.
The sale of naming rights has
already accounted for much of funding for new basketball and baseball
stadiums and will also be an option
for certain areas inside Ohio
Stadium.
The $1 S7 million renovation of
the football stadium led to the need
for a new track venue, which Geiger
expects to cost about $10 million.
The running track named after
Owens, the former Buckeye standout
and 1936 Olympic gold medalist,
always ringed the football field but it
has been removed to clear the way
for stadium work.
Ohio State plans to lower the fie ld
next year and add about 7.000 seats

al the stadium, which had a capacity
pf 89.84 1 last season.
The three-year stadium project
also ·includes luxury sui tes at
$45,000-$70,000 per season. lllcy
and $2,000-$3,000 club scats will
help pay fo&lt; mucnof the ren0va1i0Mr
a, new press1box. and1seatino acc.esS!-. ~ ,
ble to people in wheek:bairs.
·
Geiger spoke _before Ohio State 's
annual spring football scri!llmage,
which was moved this year to the
Woo'dy Hayes Athletic -Center
because of the stadium project.
The football and track renovations come j ust months after •,Ohio
State completed construction of the
$110 · million
Schottenstein
CenterNalue City Arena, · home lo ·
the men 's and women 's basketball
team and men' s ice hockey. The
Buckeyes ' baseball team plays in the
$S million Bill Davis Stadium, .
which opened two years ago.
Also in the works are lengtheniog
the. ice surface at the old Ohio State
Ice Arena. where the Buckeyes '
women's hockey team will debut in
the fall , giving Ohio State 35 varsity
sports.
There are also plans to fix
drainage problems at the school 's
two golf courses 1nd eventually
build a ·new· aqu1tic: center. Geiger;
also wants to improve parking and
traffic conditions around . the
Schottenstein Qnter, which was tbe
site of several bottlenecks after the
first few events held there.
:•
Geiger said the departm$_
expects to spend about $270 milli11ii
over the next five or six years 6_n atl!&lt;
lctic improvements.
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�Sunday, April 25, 1999

Wellston downs Meigs diamond men 10-2
By DAVE HARRIS
T·S Corresponclenl

ROCK SPRINGS- State ranked
Wellston with help from a strong win
blowing out to left slammed six
home runs, including two each from
Stevens and Mercer to defeat Meigs
10-2 in Tri-Valley Conference baseball action Friday.
Both teams· scored sing le run s in
the first inning. Ewing walked with
two outs and came into score on a
double by Stevens. The Marauders
tied it in the bottom of the inning on
a double by Rusty Stewart, Stewart
came into score on a Well ston error.
The Golden Rockets ( 17-2 overall
and 11 -0 in the Ohio Division) went
up 3-1 in the top of the second

mning.
Ebens walked to lead off the
inning. Two outs Mercer hit the first
of two home runs. Wellston
increased the lead to 5-1 in the third
innin g, Erwin singled and Ewing hit
the first of hi s two home run .
Meigs chipped away at the lead in
the fourth inning when Ryan
Ramsburg led off the inning with a
solo home run to close to within 5-2.
Wellston blew the .game open in
the sixth. Mercer and ·fenwick hit
back-to-back solo home runs with
one one to get the scoring started.
Erwin followed With a single and
Ewing launched hi s second ro und
tripper of the game, to make it a 9-2
contest.

The Rockets closed out the scoring in the seventh when Bowman hit
a so lo home run.
Ewing, the winning pilche,r limited the Marauders to five hits , hit one
batter and struck out 10.
Stevens led Wellston at the plate
with two do4bles and two si ngles .
Erwi n added three hits, all singles.
Ewing and Mercer each added a pair
of home runs . Fenwick and Bowman
each chipped in a with hOme run .
Bentley waS the starter and loser
for Meigs with help from ·Lynch. The
two ·combined to give up 10 hits,
walk three and strike out 10. Pat
Martin had a pair of singles to lead
Meigs. Ramsburg added his homer.
Ste wart had a double, and Jeff

..-, wanted to get out as quick as posCINCINNATI (AP ) Mike sible lO give our team an opportun ity
Cameron's defense in center fie ld has to put some pressure on the defense ."
By raisi ng his batting average to
been supe rb . Now he 's also hecnming the leado ff man the Cincinna ti .32 1, Cameron has helped ease the
Reds have needed .
memory of last season, \\'hen he ba t·
"Me getting so.nie hits like th at is ted 210 with the Chicago White Sox.
" You -ca&lt;1 't be Judged on one bad
a big corifidem:e bOoster," sa id
Cameron, who had' three hit s, scored year," Cameron said. " I fee l! ca n hit.
\kree runs and stole two bases Friday I just fell &lt;nto one bad bump last
_rl)ght 10 lead the Cincinnati Reds to a year.''
Greg Vaughn, who has bee n tak-,._5 vic tory against the Houston
ing extra hauing pra&lt;.:tice in search of
Astros.
' On ly Scan Casey. who leads the hi s best swini! , drove in three runs
NL ·with a .446 average, has more wiJ h a sa&lt;.:nfi~e lly and a towering
two~ run homer as Ci nci nnati snapped
!\its on the Reds.
• "The firsr time up, I just wanted to the Astros· three-game win ning
·Put the ball in play," Cameron said. streak.

Colorado (Astac1o 0-"1) at Snn Franci~c o (Estes ].
1). 4:05p.m
Pht ladelphia (Loewer 1- 1) at Montre&lt;J I (Pavaoo 0~l . 1:05 p.m •
.
Atlan ta lMaddux 2-0J at Aorida (Sanchez 0-21.
HIS p.m
Arizona (Oa.al 2-0) at San Diego (WWilliams 0-

.

~L standings

By DAVE HARRIS

Brown had a single.
The Marauders (9-6 &amp; 7-3) will
travel to Belpre on Monday.
lnnina .l2tl!l!
Wellston ............ 122-004-1 =10-13-2
Meigs .................... 100-100-0=2-5-2
Ewing (WP) and Bowman
Bentley (LP), Lyn'ch (6) and
Humphreys·

By Andrew Carter
Times-Sentinel Staff

Eastern's Karr signs
With national champ
Shawnee State

SENDS IT HOME - The Meigs
Marauders' Jeremiah Bentley
delivers a pitch during Friday's
Ohio Division game against visit·
lng Wellston, which rolled to e
1 0·2 victory. (Times-Sentinel
photo by Dave Harris)

r

:Eastern High School basketball star Val erie Karr will continue her career
at_ Shawnee State University next fall. Kiur recently signed a letter of intent
Wl~h head coach Robin Smith and the Lady Bears.
·
.Karr led the Lady Eagles to a benh in the region semifinals this past·seasoo,. Eastern fin ished with a 21-3 record and the TVC Hocking Division title .
The Lady Eagles were.Division IV sectional and district cl\amps.
-Karr was named first team all-Ohio in Division IV, was first team allDistrict 13, first team aii -TVC Hocking Division and the TVC's player of the
year. She played in theNonh-Sou th All -Star Game and the District 13 All ·
Star Game.
'
'Karr finished her career at Eastern with 1,133 points .
·
"She has a lot of potential," said Smith, who was voted NAJA Division II
national coach of the year. "She has a lot of ability, good hands, can run the
court and can finish. With those characteristics, •he can be successful at thts
program ."
Karr joins a Shawnee State squad fresu off an NAJA Divsion II national
champi ons!lip season, the first in school history. Smith will have nine of.l2
players from this season's championship team back for the 1999-2000 campaign.
Francis inducted' into OHSBCA Hall of Fame
·Former Rio Grande College basketball phenom Clarence "Bevo" Francis
has been inducted into the Ohio High School Basketball Coaches Hall of
Faflle as an honorary member. The ceremonies were held last Saturday in
Worthington.
.
·
Francis set the college basketball .afire in the early 1950's, scoring over
3,200 points in just two seasons with the Redmen . He holds the coll egiate
si ngle-game scoring record of 113 points, which he sel on Feb. 2, 1954
against Hillsdale College. The game was played In Jackson.
A little FYI for you: the Rio Grande single-game scoring record is 116
points, which' was set by Francis against Ashland Community College.
Along with Francis, the OHSBCA inducted four legendary high school
coaches into the Hall of Fame. They are Richard Konokrax of Kalida High
School, Paul Bricker of Convoy Crestview High School, Joe Petrocelli of
Kettering Alter High School and Glenn Wyville of Chagrin Falls High
School. Petrocelli led Kettering Alter to a state title this season.
The four coaches have served a combined tot31 of 127 years as head
coaches at the prep level and have accounted for a combined total of I ,938

Richard Hidalgo went 3-for-3 stole second and scored to start'
'vith ~ homer and th ree RB!s for another three-run. inni.ng in the fifth.
H ouSLo~ .
Holt. gave up seven runs, eight hits
· Reds manager Jack. McKeon has and two walks in 4·1/3 innings.
been raving abo' ut Cam~ron ·s·defense
''He's had some tough luck up
and was glad to see that aggressive- unti l tonig ht," said Astros manager
ness on offenSe.
·
Larry Dierker. "Toni ght he just did"That 's the kind of player he can n' t pitch well. He wasn ' t wild like
be." McKeo n sa id. "He's been walkin g guys, but sometimes wi ld
exce lling, and with a little success, over the middle of ·the plate is
he 's gelling more and mOre confi - worse."
dent. He's getting bi gger and better
Scott Sull ivan (2-0) all owed one
leads at first base; and he's hitting the run and five' hits in 2 1/3 innings.
ball hard."
·
·Danny Graves pi tched the last two
.Cameron singled. stole second inn ings for hi s ':thi rd save. Reds
and scored in the first, and started a starter Jason 'Bere allowed four runs
three-run rall y in the fiflh with a dou- - two earned-- arld five· hils in fou r
ble off Chris Holt (0-3). He si ngled, innin gs.

NEW YORK KNICKS: Signed F Mlrsad
Turckan. ~ l ucetl F Ben D~vis on .1be injured lisa.

Football

NHL first-round playoffs

Nalional f ootball League
CLEVELAND BROWNS: Signed DE Tim
Eastr-rn Uh·ision
Beauchamp, TE Mark Campbell, QB Mike Cook,
Friday's scores
to,o5 p.m.
•
W L f&lt;l. lil! 01. StLouis
OT Kris Comsrock., K Jose Canez, WR Syl... ai n
lWn
Detroit S. Anahei m I, Detroit l ~ads ~ries 2-0
(Osborne
01)
at
Los
Angeles
(Valdes
ITbronto ..
.......... 12 5 .706
Buffalo 3, Ottawa 2-20T; Buffalo leads series 2- Girard, P Chris Hanson. CB Centml McOellion. LB
I
0). 10:10 p.m.
N'ew York
.. 10 5 .667
David Menard. DE Arnold Miller. WR Joseph
0
]',
limpa Bay .., .. .
.... I I
7
611
Nastasi: ·RB· WR Ronnie Powell, FB Dawud
Dallas 3. Edmon!on 2: Dallas lends series 2-0
Boston .......... .
3'~
Tod'ay's games .
......... 8
8 500
Rashe(d, LBTyrone Rogt-rs, LB Jerry R!!dzinsk.i, LB
Be.lti morc ............ .
....... 4 "12 .250
7' :
.Hou.uon (Bergman 0- 1) at CINCINNATI
Ryan lftylor, DT Darius Holland . Claimed DE lim
They played Saturday
(Harnisc h 1-2), 1:15p .m.
Baron off waivers fro m the Chicago Bears. K Danny
Pittsburgh
at
New
Jersey,
2
p.m.
Central Diviston
Phi ladel phi a (Byrd 1· 1) at Montreal &lt;Vazquez 1Knight off waivers from the Ta.mpa Bay Du ccaoeen
St.
Louis
at
Phoenix,
3
p.m.
800
'. 1), 1:35pm.
.
and TE Ed Smith off waivers from the Atlanta
Boston
at
Caroli
na
.
7:30
p.m.
.
..................
J\
Mi lwauka:: (Karl 1-1) at Piusburgh (Benson J. I),
.51 I
Faloons.
,
Phl lndelp~ia at Toronto, 7:30p.m
Detroit
' ........... .... ... :7 , 9 438
S'·r
I:35 p.m.
.
DALLAS COWBOYS: Signed S Billy Gustin.
Colorado at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.
Minnesom
.......,... .T 10 412
6
New York (Hershise r l- 1) nt Chi ~ago (Lieber 2CD Duane Hawthorne, P Gabe Li ndstrom , RB
K11nsas Ci ty ...................... .. ~5 10. .333
1
I ). 2·2.0 p.m.
Dem·i_s Manns, CB Laoou ph)'ous McCalla. TE"Ryan
This
week's
slate
Arizona lJohnso n 2-1) at San Dieso (Spencer 0Neufeld. DT Robert Newkirk., DB Zac Pai mer, S
J
Today
_J
W~stcrn Divi!lion
2). 4:05p.m.
·
Grant Pearsall, LB Joe Phipps , WR Billy Powell , RB
New Jersey at Pittsburgh. 2 p.nl.
Jrexas .......
........... 9 8 .529
'Allanta (Smeltz 2~ 0) at f--1 ori da (M~d ows J-0),
Alan Ricard. DE Snm Simmons. FB Brinn Waters.
Phoeni,; at St. Louis , 2 p.m.
2
4:05p.m.
'
.. .. 7 10 .4 12
DT 'Greg Wilkin~ and O L Brad Wipn .
'Anaheim ..
Detroh at Anaheim. 3 p.m.
•t&gt;akland
....... ... ......? 10 m
2
Colorndo (Wright 0·0 ) ill San Francisco (Brock. 2·
. DETROIT UON S: Signed DT Kelvin Pritchett,
Ouawa at Buffalo. 6:30p.m.
·~eaule ...............................6 10 .375
l' r 1). 4:05p.m.
S Nikia Codia, WR Dan-yl Daniel. DT Charles
Dallas at Edmonton, 9:30p m.
St. Louis (Bolienfield 3-0) at Los Angeles
Dorsey, WR Henry DouJ:IIlS, K Brian Gowi ns, WR
Monday
(Dreifort 3-01, 8:05 p.m.
Jay Hall. LB Joey Hull. WR Donnie Hart , CB
Friday's scores
Caro lina at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
· Deme trius John son, S Sorie Kanu, CD Phil Nash , C
... CLEVELAND 7. Boston 6
Toronto at Philadelphi a, 7:30p.m.
kremy Offutt, P Daniel Pope;· T Marek. Rubi n, TE
•· Bahimore 7, Oakland 4
Colorado at San Jose , 10:30 p.m.
Kerrv Taylor a11d lB Joe Tui_pala.
Tampa Bay S. Sea ttle 4
Tuesday
N\::W YORK GIANTS: Signed STy Ardoin , QB
.• Chi cago 5. Detroil 0
On awa at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
"Ste've. Buck., WR Kenny Cheatham, DT Greg
&lt;11
New York 6. Toronlo 4
New Jeney at Pittsburg!"!. 7:30p.m.
Derrick, DE Frank. Fenara. OL Scou Kleman, DT
~ T~ll rui 4. Minnesota 2
Phoeni11. at St Louis, 7JO p.m.
Sco11
Konopka. OT Dan Lauta, CB Bashir
4
Anaheim 4, Kansas Ci ty 2
Dallas at Edmonton, 9:.'0 p.m.
Le v1ng~ t a n , G Bryan Pukenas, LB Kenny San ders.
Detroit at Anahei m. lO:JO p.m
DE Rasheed Simmons, CB Cedric Ste phens, S
EASTERN CONFERENCE
They played Saturday
•
Wedntsday
Kelvi n Suggs 'and LB leSlie Tiirplin.
Atlanth: Division
CLEVELA ND (Burba 1-0) at Bosmn
Caro lina ~t Bo$1on, 7 p . ~n .
OAK LAND RAIDERS : Signed QB Heath
IoiJil
.1!:
L
ld.
j'Salxrhagrn 2-1 ), I :05 p.m
.. Toronto nt Philadelphia. 1 p.m.
Sh uler.
x- Mimm ,............ :.. .29 l] .690
, Toronto {Halladay 2-0) at Nt: w York (Pettillt: 0-0). x-Orlando .....
San Jo&amp;e 111 Colorado. 10 p.m.
I ·~ .
· PrrrsBURG H STEELERS : Agreed to l ~nm
..... 29 16 644
-~ : 35 p.m.
Thursday
wi th Of Anthony Brow n on a tw o-year contract.
Phil ~de l phia ...
.. ... 24 19 558
} Oakland (Oquist 1-1) at Baltimore (Erickson 0-3). New York .......
Buffalo ;i! Ottawa, 7 pm., if necessAry
SEATrLE SEAHAWK S: Signed LB Josh
.. 22 21 512
.'1 :35 p.m.
,
Anaheim' at Octroit, 7:30 p.m, if necessary
-Amundson. G Mandell Corbett. TE Rufus French,
13
.. .. 17 27 386
Boston .... ...
.,; Detroit (Mii cki 1-0) at Ch1 cago {Navarro 0-1). Washmgton ...... ..
Edmonton at Dal las, 8:30 p:m., if necessary
DT T.l Frier. RB Brian Gool sby, DB Matt Hi ck l, TE
.16 27 .372
B'n
~ ,05 p.m.
Friday
James Hill. RB Jay Hinton. DT Gary Haimes, K
New Jersey
..... 13 29 .310
t6
~ Anaheim {SJlafks 0-'31 a1 Kamas City {S uppan 0Philadelphia at Toronto, 7 p.m .• if ~K:ceuary
Jamie Kohl, QB Kevin Kremhagen, S Tod McBride.
,1 ), 2:05p.m.
Pittsburgh at New Jem:y. 7:30p.m., if neceuary P Brian Moonnan , DE Jonathan Nance, LB Brian
Centr• l Division
• Sea ttle (Henry_1-0) at Tampa Bay tArrojo 1- 1). Indiana ...
Boston a1 Carolina, 7:30 p.m., af necessMy
Ro!ers and DT Kevin Thomas.
. . , ..... 28 15 65 1
~us p.m
San JO$e ti t Colorado. 7:30p.m.
Adanta .......... .. .: ............ :, ... 27 17 .61 4
-\, Te~as (Morgan 3-0} at Minomll:a (Hawki ns 1-2). Milwaukee ......... ................. 24 19 .558
' 4
St. Louis at Phoenix., 10:30 p.m .. if necessary
..,o:05p.m.
S•lurd•J
Detroit ....
....23 20 .5J5
5
Ottawa at Buffalo, 7:30 p.m., if nl!'cessary
Toronto
. 22 21 .512
6
..,
Today's games
· San Jose a1Colorado, /:30 p.m., if 11ecenary
Char lene...
. 21 21 .500
6'&gt;
Dall as at Edmonton. 10;30 p.m., if netesS:ary
~ CLEVELAND (Co lon 1-0) ot Bo~ton (P CLEVELAND .
7
...21 22 .488
.'Maninez 3-I ), I :05 p.m
16'1
Chicago.. ......
.. .. 12 32 .27J
~ Oaklllfld (Ro gers 0-2) at B~l umore (Coppinger 0.
"'Dl. 1:35 p_. m.
WESTERN CONFERENCE
• Seaule tFassero 0-3) at Tamp-o~ Bay tS antilna 1-21.
Midwest Di"ision
"•1:35"p.m.
lY L ld.
-. Detroit (;Weaver 1-1) at Chi rngo (l~aldwin 2- 1), IoiJil
Baseball
' x-U tah.......
.... 3J 10 .161
~:05 p.m.
'
America n League
..
-.....
30
12
.114
Jt
-Sr
m
AntO
ni
O
, TeJtas (Loaiza 0-0) at Minne~ot a !Sampson 0-0).
CLEVELAND INDIA NS: Signed RHI' Stt:\'t:
...27 16 .628
Houston .
,.2 '05 p.m.
·
.
Reed to a ,t wo·yeai contrac t extension , through 2001 .
.
...
i2
"
22
.500
Mmne
sofll
'
Anaheim (Finley 1-21 ~t K n n sa~ Cuy {Wit asi,·k 0Recalled RHP Jason Rakers from Buffalo of the
15 28 .349
Dallr:~ s
~1 ). 2:05pm
International League:
Deun~
r
..
....
.
.14
29
.326
" Toronlo lEsco"bm 2- m~~ Nev. York ( Co'n~ J-01.
SEA1TLE MARINERS: Signed LHP J t~ m ie
Van cn u\'Ct
.,, .. R 36 .182
'&lt;..,_2 15 p.m.
Moyer to a two-year con tract ex teru ion, through
200 I .
Pacific Di vision
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS: Acti\'ated I 8-0 F
x- Pnn lnnd
. .. ]1 II .738
Pau l Sorremo from the 15-day d i sab~d list. Optioned
L A L1kers
_.n 17 . 614
LHP Mike Duvall to Durham 'of 1he lnternmio nol
91,
Eastern Di\·ision
Ph Dcrm.
... 22 2 1 .512
l.Li!guc.
10':
Sacramcut
o
..
21
22
.488
\\'
.L
~
f&lt;l.
Nalional l.e•gue.
~ew York ..
II
6 6-11
10':
Sca111c
..... 21 22 .481!
CHICAGO CUBS: Rl!'ll!'ased RHP Hideo Noma.
;,.,.\tlantu ..
l
J'
·
:
9 6 600
Golden St:~ tc
.. .. 18 25 .4 19
PITI'SBURGH PIRATES: Acti vated SS Pat
·1'hi ladclphla
n ', Meares
SCKI
LA Clif1 1"11!f5
.,
, M J'i . IRb
and RHP Jose Silv3 from the 1.5-day disabled
Mnnil"l!al
6
9 •no
4
·' ·cl lnd 1cU 1rlayo ff berth
ltst R enss i g n~d RHP Jim Doughert y and SS
.) :loridll, .. '
_5 I I .H J
~
Ahrahnm Nunez. to Nas hvi ll~ of the PCL.
Fr-iday's scores
SA.N FRANCISCO GIANTS: Optioned RI1P
Cfntral Division
!\ tlarlln 89. W:ls,lington 78
Miguel Del 'foro to f resno of the PCL.
-St Louis ..
. 10 5 667
J"or, llllO 95. Orinndo 88
+louston .
~ -l-'
New York 110. Charloue 105
'
l
Basketball
,'f'imburgh .
H
7 . SJJ
Mi lwaukee 79. CLEVELAN D 75
National Baskdball .-\ssodatlon
'Mil waukcl" .
,1
.7 ' 4J8
13os10n 100, Chi cago 71
NEW JEHSEY NETS : Re-signed 'F D11vid
,):INC INNA:t'l .. ,
6 q 400
4
De nver 96, Golden Stare 84
Vaughnlo a seco nd 10-day contract.
•,Chicago ...
~
9 .\~7
4
Ut:1h 96. I'&gt;J I"tland 8~
Sl'.'ittk 91 , V:mcou\'cr R"
t .,.
Western llh ision
~ ,Sat r,.n.ncnto. lQ-5.. Minnesota 97.
'ofianfrancisco ·
-:&gt;&lt; 11
I ·.611
' ' :&gt;"
L.A.' t;l•ppcrs 106. HousiOn. IOl-OT
.,
Arizuna .
10 I 588
'\..os
Arig~les
....................
8
9
471
t"
1
They played·Saturday -, ., ·
·t:olorado .......... ...........
6 I 461
-:!
New Jersey nt Charlotte, 7:}0 p.m.
Jian Oiego .............. ·
7
11 •· -lJ8
J
Ch icago at Indiana. 8 p.m.
~
L.A. Laken at San Antonio, 8:JO p.m.
...
,
Friday's scores
Dallas :u Sacramento, JO'p.m.
New"York 6. Olicaso 5
Denver 111 Golden Stale!, I i p.m.
Philadelphia 6. Montreal 2
Vancou\·er at L.A. Clippers. II' p.m.
Florida 9, Atlanta l
Mil..,':lilk-cc 9. PIH'!i-huf-g·ld
Today's gam ...
CINCINNATI 7. Houston 5
Detroit
ar
Toronto,
12:.\ 0 p.m.
"' Arizona I0, San Diego 6
Mthvaukce at Atl.anw. 12:30 p.m.
St. Louis 1•2. Los Ange les' 5
Wushingfon at Boston. 12:.' 0 p.m.
~ San Francisco 7,' Co l on~tl n "1
New York at Mi:~m i, J p.n)
'•
Hou!ilon nt Phoe nix ,~ p m.
•
They played:Saturday·
Orlando at Phil adt;lphia , 5:30 p.m,
~ Houston (Hamp1 on I ·I) at CINCINNATI (Avery
HP Tecumseh engine,
Seattle m Utah. ~ : JO p.m
.; - 1). 1. 15 p.m.
,
Indiana at Now Jersey. 8 p.m.
~
Milwaukee (E ldred 0-0 or AbbQtt 0-3) 111
5 HP am;l6 HP
Minnesota at Ponl and , 9 p.m.
'I.Pjusburgh (Schourek 1-1), 1.35 p.m.
'OJ New York (Watso n 1-1) at Chicago (Woodall 0· 1
Briggs
Stratton engines
Mulholla nd 0-0), 2:20p.m.

g-i~~g~L~~- ~

Locally .owned with low miles, 350 VB, auto, A/C, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cass, alum wheels, 285 tires end much more.

1998 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT
'. '

::.:.'.~ ~-

..

i

''

s7•'

New truck trade with tilt, cruise, A/C, AM/FM cess,

''

deluxe froni appearance pkg. Super clean truck

-·-

lpnjng .l2tl!l!

,.

Wellston ............... ! 00-000-0= 1-.3-0
·Meigs ............. 125,30 1-x=I2-13-0
Hysell (WP) , Laudermilt (6) and
Harris
'
Hi gginbothafl'\ (LP), Lambert (3)
and Huffman
·

DRIVES SHOT- The Meigs Marauders' Tangy Laudermllt drives

a line shot to third base In Friday's Ohio Division contest 1!98lnst
Wellston, In which the Marauders captured a 12-1 victory. (TimesSentinel photo by Dave Harris)

Blue Angel JV softball crew
wins two games in past week

By ANDREW CARTER

three runs. Amber Fellure scored
GALLIPOLIS - The Oal!ia twice against Meigs.
Academy High School junior varsity
Dunkle and Green each scored
softball squad posted a 2-1 reco~d four runs in Friday's 15-9 victory
this past week with wins over Athens over Marietta. Dunkle went 3-for-4
and Marietta sandwiched around a with a double and a triple. Green
loss to Meigs.
wa)kbd four times.
The Blue Angels (4-7) defeated
Katie Painter scored two runs and
Athens 9~2 on Monday then dropped finished 3-for-4. Gretchen ·Faudree
a 2 1-12 de.cision to Meigs on scoreq two runs. Missy Howell also
Tuesday. Cara Dunkle was 2-for-5 scored twice. Amber Fellure had a hit
with a home run and scored' two runs and scored one run against Marietta.
against
the Lady Marauders. Briuny
Gallia Academy plays at Jac!(son
wms .
.Green was ·J-for-4 and scored twice. on Monday and travels to' Warren on
. . . .
Rio's Casey sets new mark
.
.
Meghan Mooney was 3-for-4 with a
Former Gallia Academy thrower Jason Casey, a senior at Rio Grande, set home run and a · triple arid scored Wednesday. The Blue Angels return
liome Friday to host Point Pleasant.
a new ·school record in the hammer throw recently. Casey's throw of 140
feet, three inches surpassed the previous Rio Grande high-water mark of 134
feet, nine inches held by Travis Rambo.
Casey .accomplished his feat at.the Wheeling Jesuit Invitational on April
10. He won the event easily, outdistancing the second place competitor by
nearly 12 feel.
'
NRA banquet nets more than $10,000
. , The f?urth annual Friends of the NRA banquet brought in over $10,000
m ~onauons to suppon the ,yarious statewide projects fund ed through the
Natt?nal Rille Association. The banquet was held this past Wednesday at the
·
Galhpolis Elks Lodge.
. NRA fi~ld r~presentative Philip Gray told the audience that the organization has ra1sed m excess of $1 mJ!hon m the state of Ohio to suppon hunter .
safety programs, 4-H shooting clubs, conservation· programs and youth
de~elopment in shooting sports.
.
The NRA recently donated $2,000 to the Gallia County 4-H shooting club
and $1 ,500 to the Galha County Gun Club for improvements at its Buck
Ridge Road facility.
Hunting, fishing , archery and camping supplies were on di splay as were
numerous outdoor prints and paintings, which were sponsored by local
banks and the Gallia County Conservation Club. The prints and paintings
were auctioned off for a combined total of over $1 ,300 •
· Jlmblem Club 199 provided dinner for the banquet.
Senior Olympics coming in May
.
The Southeast OhioSenior Olympics is planned for May 21-22 at Ohi.o
.
·
Umvemty m Athens.
In order t~ be eligibl~ to compete, particiapants must be 50-years old by
May 21 of.th1s year. Regmrat1on forms and fees are due bji May 17. The regtstraUon fee IS $10.00. There are additional fees for some events such as golf
($6.00), bowling ($4.00) and eight-ball pool ($2 .00) .
All evenJs will be held at Peden Stadium and the Ping Center on the Ohio
V-6 Coupe, Auto, Air Cond, AM/FM Cass., Ti~ . Cruise,
campus.
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For tnore information, call Debbie Schmieding at 740-592-5983.

Your area dealer for

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1h! W(}'fds Fastest L.BKfl MowfT

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~llipQiis, Ohio

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Locally owned, V6, P. steering, PB. This 4.wheel drive
Is In the right price range.

. 1996 FORD CONTOUR
4 Cyl., Auto,.Air Cond., AM/FM Cass. , Cruise,
PW, POL, Local Trade-In

II doesn 't happen often but in horse racing a walkover is a om!-horse
race.

'

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had singles. Tawny Jones walked '
before Wigal and Laudermilt added
si ngles.
Meigs closed out the scoring in
the sixth on singles by Price, a stolen
base and a single by Wigal.
Hysell and Laudermilt combined
to strike out 13, walk three and scat- '
ler three hits . Laudermilt had four
si ngles to lead Meigs. Price added
three, while Vining and Wigal had
two each. Williams and Harris had
doubles.'
'
Higginbothan was .the loser,
Lambert also saw mound duty. The
two combined to strike out five ,
walk six and give up 13 · hits.
Lambert had two singles for Meigs.
King added one.
This week's agenda:Meigs will
travel to Belpre on Monday.
:

It#s the Dealer Behind The Deal
That Malres T.lJe BEA.L~~sJre»;ace

'

~NL standings

and Tangy Lauderrnilt combined to a 12, I win over Wellston in TriROCK SPRINGS -Amy Hysell pitch a three hiller as Meigs rolled to Valley Conference softball action
Friday evening.
The win gives coach Darin
Logan's Marauders a 14-1 mark
overall and 9-1 in the Ohio Division.
Wellston drops to 3-1 0 overall and
2-8 in the division. r
Wellston scored in the top of the
first inning on a walk and a baSe hit
off the bat of Lambert. Meigs tied it
in the bont;&gt;m half of the inning when
Stephanie Wigal reached on a field ers choice, she moved up on a Tangy,
Laudermil1 single and scored on a
ground out.
Meigs added two more runs in ihe
bottom of the second inning on a
pair of walks and si ng'les by Amber
Vining and 'Laudermilt.
Meigs broke the game open in the
third inning with five runs. Brooke
Williams and Abby Harris had doubles in the inning for the Marauders.
Shannon Price, Laudermill and
Vining had singles to go along with
a hit batter.
·
Meigs added three more runs -in
the fourth . llethany Boyles and Price

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

NBA standings

,,

Softball Marauders whip Wellston 12-1

AC's Plug-ins

Cameron helps Reds-.defeat Astros 7-5
By TERRY KINNEY

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

·sunday, Aprll25, 1999

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

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

'

Elway to retire ·soon, sources say

By SAM WILSON
Tl_s.ntl,.. Corrwpondent
It seems that almost everywhere people are rating
the top 100 movies, athletes, teams or events of the
past century. Ken Bums. producer of those mar·
veious PBS documentaries, took this a step farther
when he slated that Thomas Jefferson was the greatBy ANDREW CARTER
Jeremy Payton started for Galli a
est individual of this past millennium. Of course,
GALLIPOLIS - A close gam~ Academy and went 2 2/3 innings
between Gallia Academy High before bei ng knocked · out by the
that decision coincided with his series on Jefferson's
School and Marietta Hi gh Schoo l Tigers ( 12·3, SEOAL 6- 1) in their
life. My problem was that I couldn't figure out how I was left off .his list.
I find it curious how these experts determined the century's 41st greatest blew up in· the . thir~ inning as the huge third inning explosion . Payton
athlete from the 42nd. Most people can•t agree on whether Miller Ute is less . Tigers scored 12 unanswered runs gave up 10 runs on three hits, seven
filling or tastes great. I can' t imagine the criteria that were used in these lists. and cruised to a 14-0 victory over the .of whi ch were earned. He · walked
I was once asked·to give my opinion on the best starting five in NBAhis- Blue Devils at Memori al Field on fi ve batters , hit two and struck out
tory. I couldn"l decided whether Russell, Chamberlain, Jabbar or George · Friday. The SEOAL contes t was two. The Blue Devils committed
three errors behind Payton.
Mikan were .better at the center position. I like Chamberlain, but Russell stopped in the fifth innin g.
,., won more championships. Is Magic Johnson the best point guard in history?
Levt Weppler blasted a three-run
Cody Lane's single .to lead off the
What about Oscar Robinson? Do you like Larry Bird or Dr. J? It was just too homer and Matt Welch followed fiv e fourth inning was Gallia Academy's
difficult, with the exception of Michael Jordan, to make a definite decision batters . later wtlh· a ~rand slam to lone hit in the contest. Lane was ton any position. There are simply too many great players from which to · bury. Galha Academy '"a _10-0 hole for-2 on the day. ·The Blue Devils
choose. Basketball was smart in honoring its 50 greatest players. It elimi· from wh1ch the Blue Devils would sent just 17.batters to the plate.
nated the difficult choice of narrowing the list to five.
never recover. Weppler nntshed ht s
Galli a Academy (3- 11 , SEOAL JSo how do we begin to compare the careers of hockey great Bobby Hull day at the plate l:for-3 With three 7) has lost eight consecutive games.
d
.
· h h · f lfi 1
· ·
-,
RBI and scored two runs. Welch The Blue Devils travel to Jackson .on
· Wtt .' at 0 g~
egen d'¥;olf P~lmer? ls_w'"~'"LLord Stan~~ s ~up~~ went 1-for'2, sco red twice and drove Monday and Warren on Wednesday
any earn spo . tt e more t tc~ t t a_n wmnmg t e a_sters or . . pen. in four runs.
before returning home to host Point
Should a goahe get more &lt;;anstderatton than a defenstve back? Was _Pete
Marietta pitcher M.J. Metts struck Pleasant on Friday.
greater 'han Muhammad Ah? Should we tnclude horses tn any of the hsts? out 10 Blue Devil s and allowed just
Injury notes: Catcher Ju stin
, When y~u find the answers to these questions please call me. Persbnally, two runners to reach base. A Cody McKinniss was scheduled to visit
I d tal\e Alt any day of the week. .
.
.
Lane sin gle and a walk by Heath doctors at Ohio University on
In many cases cl)oosmg the greatest athlete'" a sport may not be that dtf- Rothgeb were the only .blemishes on Saturday to get a diagnosis on a knee
ficult. I finally figured out why Wayn e Gretzky wore number 99 all' these -Melts' near-perfect performance.
injury he. suffered in the game at
Metts retired the side in order m Meigs last Tuesday.
years. He wanted to tell us how many followed him when we decided to
.
four of the fi ve innings he pitched. lnnjn~ t2lllb
make a lisl of hockey 's greatest hundred players.
It was a sad week for fans when "The Great One" ~etired, but it was nice He struck out the side in the third and Marietta .......... ..... 10( 12)-0 1? 14-9-0
to see hockey retire his famous number. Gretzky was a true gentleman and fifth frames. Metts had a perfec t Gallia Academy .........000-00=0-1-4
WP: Metts (5 IP, 0 R, 1 H, 10 K, ·
· a class individual. He also took hockey t&amp; new and greater heights. You game goin g until Lane broke it up in
know someone has made an impact when the game will never be the same the fourth .
. I BB) and Weddle
because of the impact they have had on their sport. 'Gretzky is one of these
Offensivel y, Metts went 1-for-4
LP: Payton (2.2 IP, 10 R, 7 ER, 3
individuals.
and drove in two runs to help his H, 2 K, S I! B. 2 HB ), Rothgeb (3rd),
When baseball retired Jackie RobinSon's number two years ago it wasn 't own cause. Kevin Limerick was 1- Merola (Sth) and Merola, Haynes
recognizing its greatest player, because that honor is reserved for Babe Ruth . for-3 and scored three runs, Larry
HR: L. Weppler (3 -RBI), Welch·
Robinson; however, was baseball's most important player.
Burke was l · fo~-3 ~nd scored. twi~ e . (4-RBl)
Is there a greater ·football player 'than Jim Brown? How does Bill Jean Andy Swaney d1dn I have an offictal
SB : Swaney, Welch, Limerick,
King rate in tennis? Now there's a game which has changed drastically over at-bat, but ~each~d base on two walks · Weddle
the years!
·
and was hll twtce. He scored three
SAC: Mincks
Unfortunately, some positions, such as a pitcher, goalie or kicker, will runs.
suffer in this fonmula. When asked about the best baseball player today the
name Ken Griffey Jr. comes to mind. But what about Greg Maddux or Roger
Clemens? Some athletes might be the best at a position thai doesn 't get lhe
proper consideration.
. ·
·.
.
were retle.ted in ·the somber service
I' m also curious how' college players rank against pro.fessiona!s. There By LAFiRY McSHANE
NEW
YORK
(AP)
His
career
at
St. Patricl&lt;'s Cathedral , where New
have been spectacular college athletes; like Arc.hie Griffin, who might not
was
the
stuff
of
story
and
song,
his
Yorkers
gave Joe D. one final standget their due because of sub-par or no professional careers.
·
accomplish1f1ents
e&lt;traordinary:
the
ing
ovation.
,
Granted, these listings are imperfect, but they spark much injerest. Per·
56-game
hitting
streak,
the
.
10
penThere
were
celebrities,
yes
sonally l enjoy them. I disagree with many of the choices and rankings, but
nants and ~ine world championships, · Woody Allen, George Steinbrenner, .
I've learned more about the history of sports in the process. ·
·the retired No. 5, the Hall of Fame.
Henry Kissinger. But the .altar .was
I was disappointed; however, to finll ali the great curlers were left off the
Yet Cardinal iohn 0 'Connor, ·sparsely de,orated, with a·few tasteful
every list. I guess their day will come in lhe next century. .
speaking Friday at a memorial service sprays of !lowers. There were ·only
for' New York Yankees great Joe two speakers, one-time teammate
DiMaggio, instead recalled what his Bobby Brown and Mayor Rudolph
father once said about the late center Giuliani.
·
fielder: "DiMaggio seems to me to be
"This will be a very simple serRIO GRANDE - Here is this in Ohio and West Virginia.
vice," O'Connor promised - and it
week's schedule for events at the
.All guests must· be accompanied a very decent fellow. "
DiMaggio's
class
and
dignity
durwas.
University . of Rio Grande's Lyne by a Lyne Center membership hold·
ing si• decades of public scrutiny
Center.
er. ($3 fee ).
Fitness center, gymasium
IIIli racquetball courts
Today - 5-9 p.m.
Monday- 6 am.- 10 p.m.
'Thesday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
Wednesday- 6 a.m.-IO p.m. .
Thursday- 6 a.m .- 10 p.m .
Friday- 6 a.m.-9 p.m. ·
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, May 2- 5-9 p.m.

:-nr

Cardinal recalls DiMagg•"o as 'very
decent fellOW' at memorial ServiCe

Lyne Center schedule

By JOHN MOSSMAN
DENVER (AP) - John Elway,
the master of the late-game rally, has
apparently run out of comebacks.
Sources who spoke on condition
of anonymity Friday told The
Associated Press the 38-year-old
Elway has told family and friend s
that he won' t be back for the 1999
season.
Eiway led the .Denve r Bro ncos to
Super Bowl victories the past two
years.
. Th e Dmver Rot ky Maullfain

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FORD TAURUS ffl48- 29,000 mlltt, Bal. ol llct. WilT., AT,
tilt, crul11, PW .....................................;,,,;............:••..•$12,115
PO~ITIAC· G'IWID

AM SE 17887-G....,, 2 dr., 27,000 mUtt,
olllct. warr., AT, AC, tilt, crul•, PW, .............~ ..... $12,997
CHRYSLER INTERPID 17850--18,000' mlltt, Bal. ol lact.
AC, tilt, cruale, PW, PL••- .............................. $16,995
r.IIJ;'IJV CAVAUER 17880-29,000 ·mlltl, Bal. ol fact. warr.,

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lislml: athletic miiY

Notes: A Lyne Center membership is required to use these facilities.
Faculty, staff, students and administrators will be admitted with their ID
card.
Racquetball cour-t. reser.vation s
cane be made one day in 'advance' by
calling 1-(740)·245·7495· or 1-801)..
282-7201 (extension 7495) 'toll free

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Broncos
spokesman
Jim
Rl W"
Bryce Davis, Brandon Chandler and
Weston Fife, Standing are Adam Pines, Josh Saccoman o sa1d he could not co nVenoy, Cody Hysell, Jake Venoy and Jordan firm the reports until he heard from
Shank. B4fhlnd them are coaches Perk Ault and Elway.
Last weekend·, during the NFL
David Fila.
·
·
draft,
Broncos coach Mike· Shanahan
--~-----------------------.
said he expected Elway to make hi s
decision known. before the team 's
minicamp, which opens April 30.

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CHEVY MAUBU 17849-AT, AC, cassette, tilt, PW, PL, •port
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SUZUKI X·90 178785-13,000 mllea, Bal. of fact warr., AT,
AMn'M CD, T·tops, sport wheels, PW, PL .................$8,995
PR.ISM 171151-34,009 t:nllll, Bal. of fact.
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POMEROY - The sixth annual
Meigs Football golf tournament will
be held on Saturday, May 8 at the. ·
Meigs County Golf Course.
1be tournament will begin with a
9 a.m. shotgun start.
The tournament will be a fourplayer scramble, . bring your own
team fonmat. The team must have a
team handicap of 40+, with only one
team member under I 0, ·
.The cost of the tournament is $45.
It includes cart, lunch and beverages.
A $kins game will also be held.
For more infonmation, call Mike
Chancey at 992' 2158 (work) or 992- ·
0064 at (hQ!ile).

• Air Conditioning
• LS Package
• AMIFM Cessette

Pt. Pleasant, WV · Ripley, WV ·
(304) 675-7254

(304) 378-5940

Is Offering A FREE .
Space Cuard Air Cleaner .(Valued At
$400.00) .·.

With Purchase Of

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There has never been a better
time to buy a Lennox
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•Be warm all winter and cool
next summer.
•Preseason savings through ·
May 15.

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PL Pseat. aport wheela......................~ .........~...........$13,995

MUSTANG 17902--32,000 miles, AT, AC, ~It, crul•,
PL. P seat. $pOrt wheels...........................................$13,995

MAZDA MIATA MX5 CONVERTIBLE 17901--34,000 miles,
AM,Ifll CD, cruln, alloy whHII, Pt .........;,,,,,.,,$14,915
ESCORT 17888-AC, casaette........:..............:..... $8,995
SATURN 17811·AC, AT, AMJFM caantte, 30,000

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Burna.
them ere coaches
Tammy McConnell.

Rebels took seeond place In the Gal!lpolla Parks &amp;
Recreation Baeketball League In the 1998-99 seaeon. From left to right are Ivy Hurt, Brittany Elliott,

Schrader wins pole for today's DieHard 500
Talladega and Daytona, Schrader was
· so we knew it would be close."
By MIKE !iARRIS
Bobby Labonte, who won this asked why the speeds keep increas;TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP)
Kenny Schrader doesn't get ex cited race from the pole a year ago. was ing.
"Everybody's just done a good
close behind in a Pontiac at 197.488,
al&gt;out winning poles.
. ·"'It's nice to start up front, but followed by the Ford of series points job of getting the cars down to th~
ground and everybody's done a good
what we really want to do is finish leader Jeff Burton at 197.252.
With the cars · nearing' 200 mph job of getting more horsepower," he
tlrere," Schrader said Friday after
leading the qualifying for the again, despite the carburetor rcstric- said .
500
at
Talladega tor plates required . by NASCAR at
UieHard
S!Jperspeedway.
Schrader now has 23 poles in hi s
Winston Cup career, but only four
victories - the first of which came
on this same 2.66-mile,.high-banked
tiJlck on July 31, 1988.
T-SHIRTS • CAPS • JAC~ETS • COLLECTABLES
'Despite that .win, though ,
Schrader's overall record in races at
Dale Earnhardt
Jr.
Talladega has not been very successJeff
. ful, with only four oth~r top-five fin, ishes in 28 starts at NASCAR's ~
Mark
lo~gest and fastest oval.
A s for winning the pole with a lap
of 197.765 mph, Schrader gave most
of the ·credit to his crew and his
~--:.,flmJmll Spencer
Chevrolet, the same car in which he
WO!l -the pole here last October, then
PWS KIDS APPAREL
qOalified third and finished sixth in
thC: Daytona 500 in February.
: "The driver didn' t do much
t~day, " he said. ·:It makes a big differ~nce what kind · of ride you have.
l11e guys at the .shop had the ·car .all ,
g~ared up. It was good in practice .
and the guy~ don't put the whole ·,
FORNASCAR
~~
(q~alifying) package on it in practice, - ·;,
"

FORD TAURUS SN/17841-AT, AC, tilt, crul•, PW,
PONTIAC. FIAEBIRD 17829-GrHn, low milts,

Gordon

leather ~~~~ -AMIFM CD..................................$19,705
I'WI:'IIV BLAZER 4x4 4 dr. f7735.20,000 miles, Bll. o1 fact

NISSAH KC 4x4m17·17,000 mllea, 1111. of fact. warr.,
mile warranty, AC, callllte, aport wheel•, rear slider,
mat ...........................;..........- ..................................... $1'4,1QS
RANGER SUPER CAB 4x4 f7855.bed Hntr, V.S

Whitis ..................:......................................... $13,173
114TOYC)TA KC 4x417905-aun root, AC, catlettt, crulee, bed

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The shortest-prieed Kentucky
Derby winners were Count Fleet in
1943 and Citation in 1948, each
returning $2'.80.

(740) 992-8614 •1-800-837·1094

---

A record field of 23 ·horses ran
in the 1974 Kentucky Derby, won
by Cannonade.

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FORD EXPLORER 4x4 4 dr. 178111·AT, AC, tiH, cruln, P'fi,

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(See ELWAY on B-6)

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LEAGUE CHAMPS - The Pomeroy
IHth·grade Panthers finished the season by winning the Big Bend Youth League and II igs High
School tournaments. The team went unr Jfeated In
)loth tournaments to ')OBI the win. In f Jnt are (L·

FORD EXPLORER 4x~ 4dr.I7882·AT, AC, IIH, CNIIt,
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that he was retiri ng foll owing the
New York Rangers' last regular-sea'S on game.
Elway considered retiring after
winning hi s first . Super Bowl in
January 1998 . Four months later, he
elected to return for another season
but said he was 99.9 percent .sure it
would be his last.
Last January, after winning a second Super Bowl as well as the

ment.

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Meigs football
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set for May 8
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*·Brand
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I

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Famous for improbable late-game
magic, Elway rallied his team with
47 game-saving drives in hiS career,
more than any quarterback eve r.
Elway 's retirement is the third in
four months of a transcendent figure
in sports, following Mi chael Jordan
and Wayne Gretzky.
Jordan retired from the Chicago
Bulls just before 'the lockout-shortened NB A season started in January,
and Gretzky announced last Wef!k

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Rebates Up To $500.00 or 6 Mo. Same A Calk

News and The Denver Post also cited
unidentified sources who said
Elway's retirement was imminent.
Elw ay co nsidered makin g an
an nouncement thi s past week, but
delayed it, sources said, first because
Broncos owner Pat Bowlen was out
of town, and then because of the
schoo l shootings in suburban Denver
onTuesday.
·
· Th e Post said Elway could
_announce his re.ti rement as early as
Monday. He was out of town Friday.
and could not be reached for c~m ­

~

Today - 6-9 p.m.
Monday- 6-9 p.m.
Thesday --'- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday - 6-9 p.m.
Friday- 6-9 p.m. ·
Saturday - 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, May 2 - 6-9 p.m.
Today - Softball doubleheader
vs. Denison ·at 2 p.m.
Thesday - Softball doubleheader vs. Mt. St. Joseph at 4 p.m.
Thursday - Softball doubleheader vs. Urbana at 3 ~:m .
Friday - Baseball vs. West
Virginia State at I :30 p.m.
Saturday - Baseball doubleheader vs. Walsh at I p.m.; track
TBA
Sunday, May 2 - JV b.aseball
· doubleheader vs. Cuyahoga C.C. at I
p.m. ·

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

Marietta baseball
team tallies 14-0
win ov'r Blue .Devils

The logic of the list

'

Sunday, Aprll25, 1999

L

·.

•

1997 SKYLARKS
V.fl, Power Windows, Cassette
Still Under Bumper To Bumper Warranty.)

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�Page 86 • Jfin hg tltt..-JI

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pteaaant, WV

GAHS tennis squad
defeats Ironton 3-2
By ANDREW CARTER

I

I

GALLIPOLIS - After back-toback losses to Athens aqd Jackson,
Gallia Academy High School
.rebounded with a victory over·
Ironton High School in non' league
tennis action on Friday at Memorial
Field. The Blue Devils outlasted the
Tigers 3-2.
This win, combined with a victory over Vinton County last Monday,
allowed GAHS to break even in four
matches on the week:
Rob Smith (8-2) overcame a steep
firs t set deficit to defeat .Derrick
Defore of Ironton, 7-5 and 6-1. The
vtctory helps Smith in the seeding
for postseason play.
Ironton's Shawn Watson blanked
Brett Sanders (5 - 5) of Gallia
Academy, 6-0, 6-0.
Mike Steinbeck ( I - I ) earned his
first si ngles win of the season,
defeating Ironton's Patrick Milleson,
6-0, 6-2.
In do\lbles action , Ryan Malura
and Josh Bryant (2-7) captured their

second victory of 1999. The pair
defeated Stephanie Martin and Aaron
Watson in straight sets, 6-1, 6-3. This
turned out to be the deciding match
of the afternoon for the Blue Devils.
The other doubles . match saw
Travis Brown and Stephanie Martm
defeat J. Kang and Micah Kolcun of
Gallia Academy. 6-2, 6-0.
Gallia ,Academy (~-7) hosts
Vinton County on Monday and
Logan on Tuesday at Memorial_
Field. The Blue Devils travel to ·
Marietta on Thursday.
·
Singles results

(IH~),;~;,t~- :GAHS)

def. Defore .
2. Watson (IHS) dcf. Sanders

&lt;G~HS&gt;st~~~-b~~~

(GAHS) def.
Milleson (!HS), 6-0, 6-2
Doubles results
I. Matura!Bryanl (GAHS) def.
Martin/Watson (IHS), 6- I, 6-3
2. Brown/Martin (IHS) def.
Kang/Kolcun (GAHS), 6-2, 6-0
Records: GAHS (3-7), IHS (2-4)

,

Sunday, Aprll25, 1999 .

Wally Pike's Outdoor Life
-::----=
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I I

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I ~

-

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"'·1'1

THE PLAINS - In Friday 's
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
Softball game at Athens High School,
the host Bulldogs scored in every
inning but the fourth and tallied a 205 mercy-rule victqry over the River
Valley Raiders.
Athens (8-4 overall ~ 4-4 in the
SEOAL) was led at the plate by
three-hit efforts from Erin Perry and
Dawna Roeder. Teammates Courtney
Kostival, Vido Kottyan, Erin Pierce

•• •

•tt Sonoma Special Savings
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SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER
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SALE ... 1

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98 AVENGER
Only rs,ooo·Miles, Sharp .

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94 RODEO 414

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99 RIGORCWt
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AIR CONDITION SERVICE
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Neal Peifer, Tim c;Jbnwell, Jamie Adamaon, Ted BJ:Oek, Joe Tillis

You'lll.f•• Out Quality Way of Doing Business!

NORRIS-NORTHUP ·DODGE, INC.
252 Upper River Rd.
(740) 446-0842 .
Approved
Auto
I

"·' ·

SOMMER FuLKS: South Gallia High School
Go to PRIDE brtd T1enlnstitut1 IVeriU, nild, 1/Jten
to til• mdlo1 tllllc 011 til• ph011e1 writ• f'O'IM rmd
CMirlHding.
.
CHELSEA DeGARMO: River Valley High School
~n lo IIIIISk, tllllc to fri•rrds, "Willi 011 •I•Vfl·
ton •. IIIIJ' involved in clubs 11rul sports 11rul 11void
w~...r,.,..,~~~eo~ro~.,.

...-. ' .

Gallipolis, Oh.
Or Toll'free 1-800-446-0842

MORE
3D t"n• and adulta from G-'lfa County altMCI«&lt; the muiU-county ,.., lnatnut. held at Cllnttra Clive In JackIQn County, Aprll11110 18.
·

Talk to frilnd~. IIIavefmruls who an drug fm
AMANDA MILLER: Meigs High School
aruls.tay involved in the co11111111nity to malu surr
SfHrul tim~ with frilnds, TI Prrsideni, and comyou an busy whln people my, "Titln is nothing
IIUinity work.
tlsr to do."
MICHELLE KENNEDY:
CELESTE HARRINGTON' River Valley High
Go to movks, witllfmruls, llave sl11povers, go
School
shopping (all with friends) malu cooldes.
Act crazy, sing, aCt in plays aiul llluff, 1/Jttn to
MATT BURNS: River Valley High School ..
music and go shopping. · .
Flin_, a lot. SfHrul a lot oftinu rrad/ltg the Blbl•, ·
TINA MOHLER: South Gallia High School ·
going to chun:ll. Drugs aren't 1111.. J jUJt nm1mlur
Talk to frilruli, boby sit /amUy 1111mlun, listen to
my friends.
·
mu..ric, and go to tltl ptUt and play IJtlsbtbllll.
NIKKJ BUTCHER:
_
CELESTE
ANGIE DeGARMO: River Valley High School
PltJy spotfs, liang our with frilnds, ride fourHARRINGTON
L«s. Clubs, sports (such as vol(eyball), preparing for colllge, wolf, wll11l1r arullht•n to m~~sic.
an pmjocts arul social ll'ents. .
. .
·
SARAH STOBAin':
NIKJ MILLS:.South Gallia High School
.
Sports,lttutg around withfrilnb, go to Tl and 4-H.
Glt lrtvolvld in positivi things liU sports rmd ajUr school activitks, .
KRISTINA BE,RENT: Christ Academy
4-H arul FCCI.A.
I don 'J llave tiiN for drugs arul alcohoi.IIum mon lmporlant things
'7AKitB!RCRFim:D: Mei High SchOOl
'
--·-to do. I'm a danc1 student, I ·-intain good grrults tlll4 wort J or 4
Go to ~ks,
aut wltffrWnds, go shopping, arullots ofan stuff. . aights a werk arul l'ni pltuiiJing.a weddiag.

"'"'II

Parents must educate themselves concerning the signs of alcohol

•

OR, Fully E~ulpl
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p.,.... wtudowo. locl&lt;ll-t,
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·

SHANNON ~KIN: River Valley High School '. 80Mfli'Ef!~Iti&lt;8

Stock#1512

Us! .. ....... ... $20,553 GM Reba1e .......-$1,500
Schey Discount ...-$1,054

·

What doyou do for fun to avoid drugs
and alco/wl? .
·

•-------------..,.;-------------------.

$8,995 List . • ... .... ... $19,022

GALLIPOLIS-.The Ohio Teen Institute, (for the Prevention of Alco.hol and Other Drug Abuse)-is an annual training proaram sponsored by the
Ohio Department of Alcohol itnd Drug Addicti011 Services. Initiated in
I 965, the Ohio TI is one of the oldest and best peer-prevention programs
in the United States and has served as a model for similar programs in
more than 35 states and abroad. The program's unequivocal stance is teen
abstinence, and its research-based philosophy is "peer prevention works" .
TI has four major goals:
·
· •Education of teens and adult advisors about alcohol, tobac.;o and other
drug abuse.
•Training of teel)s to effectively implement prevention projects. ·
•Development of teen leadership skills and personal potential.
•Training of adults to guide and support teen prevention endeavors and
to be prevention advocates.
Ohio Teen Institute Goals
The Ohio Teen institute philosophy is based upon the following:
. Teenagers are responsible people who, with proper guidance and direc, .
lion, become responsible adults.
Possible alcohol and other drugs problems can be reduced through preventive actions, especially through peer-led actjvides.
The prevention of alcohol, tobacco and other drug abuse is the responsibility of all people - teens and a.dults.
.
' ·
Wiih this in mind, Ohio TI·can provide teens and their supporters with
a systematic means to address alCohol, tobacco and other_drug problems
through peer-prevention projects in their school and communities.

._... ,....

5 Speed, AC, Cass., 4 OR,
Only 400 Mhsl

List ........... $13,941
GM Rebate ......-$1,500
Sc:hey Discount .....-$442

Gallipolis, 01 ·

. 135 Pine St./lite. 160

99 NEON

cruloo, CD player

Sunday, April 25, 1tee

OALUPOUS ..,..-Gallia County CommissioneR and other drug prOblems cost Ohioans over 8 ~illion dollars cent (73%) of twelve and thirteen year olds report hav- Retreat in Jackson, Ohio, IP involve teen leaders in peer
Commissioners of Gallipolis proclaimed April as Alc:o- each year.
·
ing tried lloohol.
.
prevention.
. hoi Awareness Month. The purpose is to call upon Ill · Alcohol and other drug related crime cost society
Alcohol abuse during pregnancy can cause Fetal
FACTS/New Alternatives is an alcohol and drug
citizens, government agencies, public and private insli- $57.3 billion in 1990. Annual arrests total nearly 3.2 Alcohol Syndrome (FAS), which is the number one pre- counseling and prevention agency located in Galli a and
tutions, business, hospitals and schools to promote million for alcohol and other drug statutory crimes. In ventable cause of death and mental retaJ:dalion in new- Jackson Counties. The agency can be contacted in Galawareness of the jltoblems associalcd with aloohol use addition, aloohol is a key factor in up to 68% of barns.
_
lia County at (740) 446-7866 and in Jackson County at
'and the opportunities and services available to establish manslaughter, 62% of assaults, 54% of murder/attemptFACTS/New Altematives is coordinating activities (740) 286-1589. The agency is fu nded in part by the
safer and healthier norms regarding the use of lilcohol ed murder, 68% of robberies and 44% of burglaries. At for Alcohol Awareness Month. A series of articles will Gallia-lackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addlefor III cilizcns, particularly our youth.
Ieast75% of inmates in Ohio prisons have an alcohol or be published to inform the public of the dangeR of llc:o- , tion and Mental Healtll' Services, Ohio Departrilent of
Alcohol or other drug abuse, although usually other drug history p(jor 1Q the oonvictions.
hoi use and/or abuse. Prevention educators are avail- Alcohol, Drug Addiction Services, The United Fund
thought of as a ~stand alone" problem oontributes sigDrinking· and driving oontinues to be the leading able to make presentations and a variety of written and United Way.
nific~~ lo health problems, crime, violence, cause of death of people under the age of 21. In 1996, material is avai.lable a1 each office. Area youth will be
Soun:ee: -~ P r - Wark, c.rter 1ar Sub·incre
costs for health care and decreased produc- 9 million alcohol drinkers were under the age of 21. Of attending the PRIDE World Drug Conference in etance Abuu Ptewentlon; ~ Alluuofend MonW
tivity fo~ business and in4ustry. Alcohol, tobacco and this,.4.4millionwcrebingedrinkers.Seventy-threeper- .Cincinnati, Ohio and a Multi-Count\ Teen Institute :::=:.===~:,::;e"'-."j""-

Students speak out

/

1999CHEVY 1999 CHEVY
-LUMINA
MONTE CARLO

...,.....

Innin; il!ll!b
River Valley .......... c.. .. 023-00=5-5-2
Athens ........ ..... .. ..... 534-08=20-16-3
WP - Mark
.
LP - Mulford

Athens ...... ;&lt;\\ ............ 201-37=1 3-9-0
River Valley ...............000-20=2-4-2
WP-Medley
LP ..:.. Jackson

Powe·-·-·-

C "'

Ohio .Teen -Institute's
.philosophy: 'Peer
_prevention works'

Inoinc QY~~ -..

row from Athens pitcher David Medley to first
1 1
sacker Nathan White (14) In the flr~i Inning ot $;!~~;~~~~c:!r· (Times-Sent nel photo by G.

-'

• w-

and Devon Walker had two hits each.
The Raiders (6-8 &amp; 4-5), who lost
four of their last five games pri'or to
Saturday's doubleheader with
Wahama, were led by · Marie
Denney's two-hit day.

only 3-2 after 3 1/2 .innings in
Friday's Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League baseball game at Kyger
Creek Middle School, scored IO runs
in its last two at-bats and recorded a
13-2 mercy-rule win over the River
Valley Raiders.
.
The Bulldogs (8-6 overall &amp; 5-2
in the SEOAL) saw Pat Looney get
two hits and four runs batted in while
teammate Andrew ·Coble joined him
by getting two hits.
David Medley limited the Raiders
(0-13 &amp; 0-6) to four hits, all singles.
No information was given as to
which Raiders got hits.
·
·
Chris Jackson, the starter and losing pitcher, vias followed on the hill
by Ben Bacon, Michael Stephens and
Jeff Gardner.

(25~!~:e!~:~:~T
Valley's
Mollohan
!=~Iday'sSchool,
SEOALwh_
baseball
game atrolled
Kyger aCreek
. o firs~lvber
ase
aheadMike
of the
pickoff Mtddle
e re the Bulld~s
1h
10 _13_2

'

e-mail: tkozlol@cet.com

Athens softbaUers roll
pa$t River Valley 20-5

Stockl3061

Section

April-recogni.zed as 'Alcohol Awareness Month'

Athens diamondmen
mercy-rule Raiders 13-2

AuiDmatlo, air,

-----

Along the River

GALLIPOLIS - Parents are an important influence on a young person's decision
NOT to lise alcohol. Parents must educate
themselves concerning the siJI!IS of alcohol.
They must also help prepare their children
for society:s mixed messages concerning
· drinking.
· Parents must provide their children with
an accurate understanding of the effects of
alcohol, they must also provide an ability to
resist the pressure they will receive from
their peers and the media
There are many things parents can do to
prevent their cbildren from using alcohol
They can'
oQpenly and clearly express concern
about and disapproval for underage drinking.
.
•Present a. positive model lhrough their ·
own responsible use of alcohol.

Sometimes even the "best efforts of par. •Pri:sent clear no-use rules and enforce . Check on your-teen from time to time in lion beca~ siJI!IS and symptoms are often ·
them!
a non threatening manner. Lei them know difficult to distinguish frolli the typical ado- ents are not enough to prevent alcohol use.
•Monitor their children's social activities. you are aw~ of what is happening aiKI that lescent behaVior.
_
Seek professional advice. if you sus~ a
•Monitor the ai_£CiJ:19l supply at home.
· you care.
Some signs that may indicate problems problem._ Sources may be your family
'
.
physician, school guidance counselor or
•Do not allow their children to host or
If your child is attending a private party, .arc:
attend parties that are not supervised by an contact the parents of the host or hostess.
•Significant drop in school performance pastor.
'Assessment and/or treatment is available
adult with simjlar standards concerning Make sure there will be an adult present and . specific to grades, behavior or attendance.
· •Withdrawal from family activities, at FACfS/New Alternatives, located in Galunderage drinking. •
that alcohol
will not be pennitted.
. -Know exactly where your child will be
Know your child's mode o'f traRSporta- incfcase in time spent J[one, unwilling to lia and Jackson Counties. Parent support
and expect him/her to call if there is a lion and be available to provide transporta- complete chores, unwillingness 1D commu- group&gt; and a mentoring program are also
change in plans. Obtain an address and lion if nteded, even at the last minute.
nicate, increased secretiveness and untruth- avaJlable.
FACfS/New Alternatives in Gallia
phone number if they allending a private
If your child is spending the night with a fulness or telling partial truth.
party.
·
friend, Obtain a name and address. \aify .
•Depression,- loss of interest in sports, County can be contacted aa'740-446-7866
Have a clear understanding of ·curfews with the parents that they will be home and hobbies or ·their usual activities, excessive and in Jackson County at 740-286-1589.
FACTS/New Alternatives is funded in part
and the consequences of being late. Stay up they have similar rules as yours. Discuss mood swings.
by
Glllia - Jackson-Meigs Board of Aloo-change in friends, reluctance to talk
and greet your child ·when he/she returns curfews and no \ISC of alcohol.. Avojd
home.
·
unplanned sleepovers.
about new friends or parents of new friends. hol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services, Ohio Department of Alcohol and
•Financial problems. .
Before y_ou leave your teen at home
Get help if needed:
. Drug Addition Service, United Way and The
alone for a week-end, make certain he/she ·
"How can I tell if my child is using alc:o•Unexplained accidents or injuries.
•Unexplained change in sleeping hal}its. United Fund.
can handle the r~JXlllSibility.
hoi "or other drugs" is a 'hallenging ques~

·consequence of. erinking and driving: sometimes death
BY CHARLENE liOEFUCH
16 to 20 year old age group.
11mM-Senllnll staff
"It is estimated that a staggering figure of h·alf of the
.POMEROY - The consequence of drinking and 20 million junior and senior high school students in
driving is sometimes death.
America drinkjhonthly," she said.
That was the message of speakers at the ~None for
The "None for Under 21" campaign was created by
Under 21" assembly held at Mci(IS High School last the Ohio Department of Public Safety in 1994 to .
week- one reinforced with skits presented by Teen rcmindstudentsnottodrinll-anddrive-if&gt; they·arc-und~~Institute.- m~mbers,, an, 11rganiza\i9J1 , wi!h;.the:_go~ &gt;-!!!~1'1 the; •SA n~ 2~ ~~s leg~ d~ns&amp;&amp;e~ .
_
.
}Vandbnj Hid !hal thn1. as a memorial&gt; week; se~
making Mergs a drug free schoot.
Simulated death scenes created by the teens, inelud- aside to remember those who have been killed in alcoing a sheet-covered.corpse, a body bag, and a grave yard, hoi-related ·accictepts. She called on the students to
emphasized the finality of death. The students stressed wear red ribbon bracelets in remembrance of tliose who
how a single personal choioe often determines one-'s fate died and as an eXJ!FCSSion of their opposition to underas well as adversely affecting the lives of otheJS.
age drinking.
·
·.
.
Julie Wandling, pr?gram specialist for Health
"You could end,up in one of these if you drink and
Recovery Services, Inc, reported that drinking and dri- drive," said Bob 'Dyer, Emergency .Medical Services
ving is the leading cause of deaths amons those in the _ director, as he displayed a body bag to the _ st~ents .
Bycr talked about the "good times of
the tetn yem" and said that Ill too
often they arc cut short in car wrecks.
"It's 1\ot a pretty sight to sec mangled
bodlcs," commented the speaker, who
cautioned the students io Jhink about
the consequences of drinklng and driving and to remember that their bodies $I'C no! indestructible.
.· .
Lois Briggs, a member of Mothers
Againsl Drunk Driving and the mother of a daughter hit by a car with a
drunk driver, related the story of a
Saturday nipt party in 1996 and a
two-vehicle -accident which killed
three members of that graduating
class.
"When you drink and drive, it affects
othen, and it takes only one accident
~Ri~~~~~~4
to alter the lives of m111y -so doo't
~~= take thai first drink.'' plead Briggs.
•
CH
In his talk to the students, Sheriff
Should Hltte Taught H/m.~, J/ICk,. Buck. poltniyl I ,.,-.on James Soulsby stressed the seriouakHI«&lt;/n 111 alcohol-reltlt«&lt; c.r acr:ldent,,. I friend, pllyed by ness of combining alcohol and speed. ·
lllciHJI,. KenMdy, •beorbl the finality of dHth.
· "This is not a 'play', this is live, this

~

FACING REAUTY- Drinking and drtv#ng can 1.-d to dHth, u tile alcn, "DHd •t 17" pointout. lo. rol" of l1f'lavl"'l claMmatN, •re from the _
,.ff, S.reh Hpuur, .,~,. Kennedy,
~ ll'cc•ll•nd Bnlndy sr.wn., ,.,,.,... of the llelp Teenlnatttute.
·
ed

is reality,'' said the sheriff, who pvc details of accidents he hod investigated where the "bodies were
unrecognizable, 1010etimes burned to a crisp."
"These are the consequences of drinking and driving," said Soulsby, who called on the students to plan
their upcoming prnm night fun with alcohol-free activities.
.•
To reinforce the sheriff's advice, Mony Wood, the
DARE officer, talked about weekend teenage parties
whiqt take place regularly in Meigs County. "It's
scary," he said, "because someday, someone here will

experience the deadly consequences of drinking and
&lt;!riving. ~

The skits by the Teen Institute members poignantly
conveyed the ''day of the dead." Julie 1!\paun narrated
"Somebody Shauld Have Taught Him" 111d Steve Beha
gave \ Dead at 17'', reflections from the dead on what
was l)!:curring and his appeal to God "for one more
chance...

A third skit, "Jlhe House that Crack Built", stressed
to students the impohance of leadiog a drug-free
lif~tyle.
·

.

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Page C2 • .-....~ sg1tt--jlmttml

Sunday, Aprll25, 1999

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

Sunday, Aprll25, 1998•

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

Caribbean Corn and Vegetable
Bake offers hearty flavors . of
summer, anytime of the year

ersary

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Woods

Golden anni~ersary to be noted

Courtney Morrison and Todd Archer

--'------'·MORRISON-ARCHERGALLIPOLIS - James and
Mary · Morrison of Gallipoli s
aijn ouncc th e engagement of their ·
daughter Mary Courtney Morrison
to Todd Alan Archer.
Kerl Matson and Jerod Moore
The bride to be is a 1986 grad~­
ate of Gallia Academy High
School. a 1991 graduate of the
SYRACUSE - Mr: and Mrs. son of Mr. and Mrs . Dennis Moore,
Miami University and West VirChristopher Matson : Zanesville, Syracuse ..
ginia Unive(s ity ' s masters pfOannounce the engagement and
The open church wedding will be
gram in 1992. She is currently a
on May 22 at 2;30 p.m. at the Faith .
~pproac hing marriage of their
Communications
Director of
daughter, Keri Ann, to Jerod Moore, United Methodist Chur&gt;h.

-MATSON-MOORE.

Atlantic
10 Conference
in
Philadelphia, Pa.
Archer is a 1987 graduate of
Medway High School and a 1992
graduate of Northeastern Universi ty, Boston·. He is currently a sports
writer for the Cincinnati Post. His
parents are George and Betty
Archer of Medway, Massachusetts.
The ceremony will be held
June 19, 1999, al the Knox Presby terian Church in Cinci.nnati.

Gallia Community
GALLIPOLIS - Knights of
Columbus monthly meetin g at Lc
Marqui s, 6 p.m. Program includes
· speaker and brief business session.

•••

...

Sunday, April 25
POINT.PLEASANT, W.Va.· Narcollcs Anonymous Tri - County
Group meeting, 611 Viand Street,
7:30p.m.

•••

ADDISON - Preaching service
at Addison Freewill Baptist Church ,
p.m., with Rick Barcus preac hing.

6..

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***.

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: KANAUGA - Worship service at
Silver Memorial FWB Church. 6
; .m.. with Rev. Billy Zuspan
P,.eaching . ·

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BIDWELL ' Hyrnn sing at
Poplar Ridge Freew ill Baptist
Church, I :30 p.m., featurin g the
Brad¥s from Parkersburg , W.Va ..
tbe Builders Quartet and Brenda
ehalin .

***

~

: inDWELL - Poplar Ridg e
Grecwill Baptist Chu(ch evening
~erv ic e , 6:30p.m , with, interim pastor John El sw ick.

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: GALLIPOLIS - Piano students
of Marion Ford w'ill appea• in
~cital althe Ariel Theatre, I :30
p.m

o

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.

•••

: GALLIPOLIS - Lo~ves and
£:ishe s free meal , open to the pub~c , noon at St. Peter's Epi scopal.
•
•
'r'**
•
•
Monday,
April 26
•

•••

•
•

• GALLIPOLIS - Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles In Recovery
t]roup, St. Peters Episcopal Church,
1:30 p.m.

•

•••

' ***

CENTERVILLE- Thurman
Grange # 1416, Drapin g.of the
Charter and community service,
7:30p.m. Potluck dinner w1th meat
furni shed.

...

GALLIPOLIS' - John Gee Black ·
Historical Center open for. public
· .
tours, 10 a . m .- ~ p.m.
.

.,.

GALLIPOLIS - Tree planting
·ceremony in honor of National
'Crime 'Victim s Rights Week , 6 p.m.
at the intersection of State Route 7
and 141 . across from Willi s Funeral
Home.

***

Tuesday, April 27

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Al co'ilolics '
An onymous meeting , St. Peter 's
Episcopal Church, 8 p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Choose To Lose
Di et Group, 9 a.m. at Grace U1iitcd
Methodist Church. For information
call 256 - 11 56.

•••

ENO - Eno Grange #2080 meeting , 7:30p.m. , with special Civil
War trave ling group. Potluck meal
with meot provided.

•••

RIO GRANDE - Open Gate
Garden Club meeting at home of
Pat Parsons. Program on· planting a
summer hanging basket.

•••

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Miracles in ·.
Recovery Group Narcotics Anonymous meeting, 9' p.m., St. Peters
Episcopal Church. ·
·

VINTON-Vinton Baptist
Church 's Pastor Mar&gt;in Sallee
teaching series on ·"The Jesus I
Never Knew" by Philip Yancey,
each Wednesday; 7 p.m. Nursery
.. provided.

MIDDLEPORT - University of
Rio Grande Civil War lecture
series, Meigs branch, 150 Mill
Street, open to p'ublic . Topic for thi s
week; Nati onal politics, 6 '9:5 0
p.m .

•••

. ***

•••
Revival

•••

GALLIPOLIS . Weekend reVIVal
at Bailey Chapel Church, 7 p.m. .
Speakers includ~ Sunday . Richard
Unroc . Special s!~~in g

;re';;~in~ightly. with

BIDWELL - Garden Of My
Heart Holy Tabernacle 'prayer service , 7 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT. W.VA .Narcotics Anonymou·s meeting Tri' County meeting. 611 Viand Street
(usc side entrance), 7:30p.m.

•••

•••
•••

Friday, April 30

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40 . . 245 _9248 .

..,

EtJrekaN"et

Larry Haley

GALLIPOLIS
Gal'lipolis
Church of Christ in Christian Union
'.will hold a revival , April 28- May 2,
7 p.m. n'ightly (except for Sunday, at
6 p.m.) Preaching hy Rev. David
Canfield .

..

• JJJ!::::riJ~tsea .,;tees •
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. GALLIPOLIS - The engagement . Methodist Church , in Masury. A
"It's up to you, genes are not
of Carrie Lynn Shively and Noel reception will take place that By PAULA STORY
Assoeiated Press Writer
your destiny," said Kahn, a psychol Banholemew Goble , ,both residing evening at DiLucia 's in Warren.
PmSBURGH (AP) - While ogy and public health professor at
in Gallipolis, is being announced by
Miss Shively holds a bachelor's
·Robert Kahn addressed a the University of Mic/tigan.
'
e
xpert
their parents, . Mr. and Mrs. Larry degree from the University of Rio
on aging, 75-year-old
.
conference
Kahn, 81 , says, while many pooMurray · of Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. Grande and is currently a commerAnthony
LaCapra
.
was
completing
ple 'blame "getting old " on fate and
James Shively of Cortland, and· Dr. cial teller for Ohio Valley Bank.
his
l
112-hour
workout
on
a
stationgenetics,
staying young is mostly a
and Mrs. Mark McAdoo of Athens .
Goble is pursuing a degree in
ary
bike
and
treadmill
.
lifestyle
choice.
·
. The. couple will be married at 3 · biology with plans of specializing in
Kahn
explained
that
much
of
Whil.e
your
cellular
·
blueprint
p:m. May I, at the Masury United
equine therapy.
what Americans believe about aging does have some . influence on how
is either myth or half-truth. well you age , ·much of that can be
LaCapra, who is retired, was follow- counteracted w.ith a lifes.tyle .thai
ing a fitnes~ . regjmen that would . includes regular exercise and
. The Community Calendar is Public Library Board, Tuesday, make many youthful weekend war- healthy eating habits .·
. riors weep.
published as a fre.e service to non - 9 :30 a.m. at library.
·
After his workout on the bike and
profit groups wishing to announce
treadmill,
he uses resistance weig~ts
meetings and special events . The
RACINE -. Racine Area Comcalendar is not designed to pro- munity Organization, Tuesday , for about "'! hour before turning to
the pool for an hour of laps .
mote sales or fund raisers of any Star Mill Park, 6:30 p.m.
And LaCapra does this three
type. Items are printed as space
.
permits and cannot be guaranteed ·
POMEROY -' Immunization ·times each week.
"I
feel
_
b
etter
today
than
I did at
to run a specific number of days .
Clinic, Meigs County Health
30,"
he
said.
Depart,ment, 9 to II a.m . and I to
He began going to the gym al the
3 p.m. Tuesday. Each child to be
SUNDAY ·
of his doctor about a
suggestion
accompanied by parents/legal
decade ago. He suffered a massive
: CHESHIRE - Gospel sing, guardian, (o present shot record ..
tear his rotator cuff while working
L30 p .m. Sunday, Poplar Ridge
as· a warehouseman. His physician
free Will Bapiist Chu,rch off State
said he could recover more quickly
· R()ute 554. The Brady Family -of WEDNESDAY
Parkersburg and the Builders
POMEROY ~ Free diabetic if he built up his strength.
".I had my ups and downs in earquartet of Ripley to be the screening, Wednesday, 8:30 t\) .11
stngers.
a.'m ., Veterans Memorial Medical lier years," · LaCapra said. "llut it
day.med on me after I retired. Instead
Clinic.
of being a couch potato,! could keep
MIDDLEPORT - "Released"
a southern gospel· men's qu~rtet ·
RUTLAND - Rutland Friend- active and live longer."
That's just what Kahn, co-author
·from Gallia County, at the Mid- ly Gardeners, open meeting, Rutthe book "Successful .Aging,"
of
dleport Church of Christ Family . land Church ·of Christ, , WednesLife Center, Sunday, 7 p.m. Pub- day, 7:30 p.m. Representative of was telling an audience April 9 at the
14th Annual Regi onal Geriatric
lic invited..
·
Waterscapes to speak.
Conference. Upstairs, in the Down- .
town Athletic Club, LaCapra was
RACINE - · Benefit hymn
working out
sing, Sunday, 2 to 5 p.m .' Carmel
Church. Delivered to be featured
singers.

Meigs Community Calendar

for

MONDAY
CHAUNCEY - Revival Monday through May I, Redtown Free
Methodist Church, State Route 13
north of Chauncey, with The Messengers, John Elswick.

•

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· · :. RUTLAND - Open door session with State Rep. John Carey,
Monday, 2:30 to 3;30 p.m. at the
Rutland village hall iri the Rut,
land Civic. Center.
RACINE - Free .skin testing
clinic , Connie Karschnik, R .N .,
Meigs Coynty· tuberculosis nurse,
at the fire station, Monday, 4,:30
to 6:30 p.m. All individuals in
food service required annual skin
tests .
'

NG

HOLZER HEALTH HOTLINE

ATHENS - Fihance committee, Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center, Monday, 2 p ..m.
offices, 507 Richland Ave.,
Athens.

WO"_!"II

Custom Catering for all Occasions

Wal 12,550.00

TUPPERS PLAINS -Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer Board ,
Monday, 7 p.m. at dis.t rict office
' building •on, S.tate&gt;RouteJ 6.11il.::t · •"'~

Oxfords&amp;
6inch boot-.

K &amp; L (;ateriug

in

POMEROY - Veterans Service Commission; 7:3Q p.m. Monday, at new location, 117'Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.·

Our Entire ·
Stock

•

Aging ·expert: Genes are no predictor of destiny .in aging process

-:---SHIVELY-GOBLE

..

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&amp;inch
boots

. USAKOCli
M.S., C.C.CiA.
COnical Audologilt

Tom and Ted Wood s, and three
.daughters, Mary Davis , Brenda
Carr, and Cheryl Mi'chaels.
They also have II . grandchi ld,en
and four great-grandchildren .

~ 50o/o

....

liplilll

Imagine the confusion of a .c hild who l!"'&lt;v-» : ·r·.::;::::::
eannot hear our world. A child', mott
crilical learning lime .il birth ll&gt; three
Hearinfi il your child's fir•l
connection _l.o Jheir 1urroundinga and U
euential in dHeloping matt;Y imporlanl
tpeech, language, learning and
okills.
early detection of a
~...arlnlf problem ""'""' your child 10ill
bett chance to 6f'OUJ with the
of the "!or/J.

'

.

Carrie Shively and Noel Goble

crumb led ·
1./2 teaspoon grou nd blac~
pepper
118 teaspoo~ g rou~d red pep per
4 ears frFsh curn , shucked anJI
halved
I pound pl um tomatoes (abo Ut
6) , c ut in halves
;
12 ounces small thin- skin n e~
potatoes (about 4): cut in quarte,.;
(about 2 1/2 cups)
•
2 medium onion s, cut in thi(l
wedges (about 2 cup s)
•
Preheat oven tu 450 F. In o
small bowl , mix oil, c umin , saiC.
sugar, thyme, black pepper an~
red pepp er until blended .
Place corn, tomatoes, potatou
and onions in a 15 by 10-incb
roasting pan. Pour the oil mixtuie
over the vegetable s; toss ge ntl y to ·
coat. Cover pan with foil. Bake.',
stirring once or twice , until veg ..
etables are tender. about 30 min utes.
Makes 4 to 6 serving s. aboui 9
cups .
Nutritional facts per serving :&lt;P&gt;
258 cal. , 6 g pro ., 45 g ca rbo .. 9 ~
fat , 576 mg sodium .

··W ann Up With Spring Savings
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Taking your new home orders fo.r May &amp; June

•••

•

-.~

Hardwood
Flooring
One Room or

GA.LLr'POUS - Divorce support
GALLIPOLIS- First Ch).Jrch of
group at First Church of the ·
Nazarene, until April 29. Morning · the Nazarene spring revival , April
24 - 28. with Rev. Carlton Mills·
sess ion at II a.m., ~vening session
speaking and Doug and Jill.as music
at 7 p.m . Nursery offered for
evangelists. Potluck dinner on Saturevening session only. Call 4461772 or 446 - 3504 for information. day, 5:30 p.m. , in Family Life Center. Sunday services at 10:40 a.m.
GALLIPOLIS - John Gee Black and 6 p.m . Monday - Wednesday at
7 p.m .
Historical Center open for publi ~
tours, 10 a.m .- 2 p.m. Monthly
business meeting at 6:30 p,m. ·

GALLIPOLIS -Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, 8 p.m. St.
***
Peters Episcopal Church.
Wednesday, April 28
•••
***
PORTER - Bible study at Clark
•
***
HENDERSON, W.VA. - We stern Chapel Church, 7 p.m.
,.. ; . : GALLIOOLIS - O.vereatcr-:. •. #· · ~-square .dancing~-7.;-30 , :1.0 .p ,m.•, ' ....- ,.,~, • •
***
'' " ln0twmeus, a~ New&gt;bifo lzuth&lt;l$an • ~· Mendersonr.Rc.areation1Building.&gt;".';J ,. t;~ EVERGRI'!EN :!.. Spr.lrrgficld .~; ,,,.-~
·• (:hurch, 7 p.m. For information call
•••
.
Townhouse church service, 7 p.m.. '
~6 · 4889 or 367 • 7475.
POMEROY. Narcotics Anony •
•••
mous Living In The Solution
***

••• make

·Kau man's

***

•••

CHESHIRE - TOPS (Take
Pounds Sensibly) meeting , at
Cheshire United Methodist Church;
10 - II a.m. Call Ann Mitchell at
'88 - 8004 for information.

Your child's
hearing should be
testeet at birth.

•
. the 85th birthday · on April 30, of
Thomas Beldon Davis. Cards rna~
be sent to 1259 Safford . School
There will be a card shower for · Road, ~allipolis .
fj
j

. LECTA - Three night revival at ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:~
Walnut &amp;idge Church, April 22 - 24, ~-

Thursday, April 29

GALLIP.OLIS -American
Legion Post 161 regular meeting ,
7:30p.m.
·

a 1996 graduate of Hocking COJ;
lege . She is employed by Gallia
County Emergency Medical Set:
vices and· by Life Ambulance .
Her fiance is a 1995 graduate
of River Valley Higti School and
is employed by Cablevision of
Point Pleasant.
A fall wedding ts being
planned.

•••
Card Shower
•••

•••

•••

:

I

SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh McPhail of Syracuse
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter. Heather, to Todd Farley,
son of ,Sarah Jane Camden of Bidwell and Robert Farley of Point
Pleasant, W. Va.
The bride-elect is a 1993 graduate of Southern High School and

KANAUGA - Hoe Down at
AMVETS, 7:30- 10:30 p.m ., with
Liberty Mountaineers. ·

~ff

• •

•

MIDD.L EPORT - Keith and
Dolly Woods of Middleport will
observe their 50th wedding anniversary Tuesday.
They were married on April 2 7,
1949, at Racine and have two sons,

-MCPHAIL-FARLEY~.

Calendar~--'---'--.......,..__---+'.
Saturday, May I

Group. Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7 p.m.

Heather McPhail and Todd Farley

By The Associated Press
Both vege tarian and no'nvegetarian menu s could include this
Caribbean Co rn and . Vegetable
Bake. It can be served with other
vegetables, grains , rice or lentils
and cru sty· whole -wheal bread for
vegetarians; _or with fis h, burgers
or cho ps for othe r family preferences.
.
·
On sale in superm arkets natio'nal ly' no w is a new variety of. fresh '
corn , southern super-sweet co rn ,
grown in Alabama, Florida and
Georgi-a . It 's in season from October to Jul y, most plentiful in April
and May . California is also an
important source of corn , mu ch of
it of the super-sweet variety. from ·
April through December. Growers
o f th e hybrid say it rivals fresh
" local " late - summer corn in
sweetness and tenderness.
Caribbean Corn and Vegetable
Bake ·
·
.
2 tablespoon s ol ive oil
2 112 teaspoons ground cumin
I teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon sugar
314 teas poo n dried thyme ,

MIDDLEPORT ' - OH KAN
Coin Club. regular meeting 7:40
p.ni ., Riverbend Arts Council
building, Middleport. Meeting is
free and open to the public. Open
auction and refreshments. Members, visitors welcome .

TtlESDAY
POMERbY -

.15 DIFFERENT GROUPS IN STOCK!!

numy

. A• parent•, we ~!lear
hat• tool If you need
· . help wil#a ~~al quatiorw,' call the
.
Bolser fleolth Hotlbull ·
·
Jk&amp; RN il on duty to ar&amp;IU1er your queliions and
help direct you for the moat effective outcorrwl

Open

Dally
9:30 to 5
Friday
9:30 to 7

.I..a00-462-5255
7 days a week • 6 a.m. until 2 a.m.

M,eigs County

A 1 k your phy•ician about medication concerna

GALLIPOLIS

CORNER 3RD &amp; OLIVE

' 446-3045
·,

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Page C4 • ~· • ; Cimn-Jtadbiel

~ational

ferers for a $5 .5 million study to wax and wane with stress - getbetter understand prostatitis. "A lot ting worse when they're under
more pressure at work or there's an
of men are disabled by it."
Enter the lowly rat. It seems that illness in the family, for example.
"It does appear that men in
rats get inflamed prostates, too,
especially when they're subjected high-stress jobs, Type A personalito stress.
ties, are the ones that physicians
Why? Stress can spur excess see a lot of," agreed Nyberg .
Indeed, stress is· one characterisproduction of' a honnone called
prolactin that see ms to be involved tic the NIH 's new study will watch
in the inflammation, says North for this year · as resear~hers try to
Caro lina State University 's Dr. C. pinpoint who is at risk for prostatiLee Robinette:
·
tis , and then next year begin lookTo Robinette, a veterinarian ing for treatments.
who has spent years studying rats , Prostatitis sy mptoms include
and prostate disease, that 's a red pain in the genital area and lower
flag signaling that stress also may' back accompanied by frequent and
be behind much of the human mis- urgent urination. It can cause burn- ·
ing or pain during urination · or
ery.
Humans produce prolactin. And ejaculation, and is one cause of
while no one has yet researcheq a sexual impotence. Severe cases can
stress connectio·n, some men do be disabling. ·
. No one knows just how many
report that their prostatitis see.ms to

men have prostatitis, although . He discovered that the prostates
experts estimate that half may of agin~ rats frequently would
experience it at some point. It can · become inflamed, and that injectstrike anytime, although of the fir.st ing younger rats with certain com100 men enrolled in the NIH's pounds could induce similar prostudy, the average age is 41 , and statitis - creating an animal model
many sufferers are in their 30s, to test what causes the qisease .
)l!ybcrg said.
.
When rats' prostates are
"Acute bacterial prostatitis" is inflamed, they h~ve e~tra-high levcaused by an infection that quickly els of prolactin. Stress causes the
clears up, but it is rare. The vast body - rats' and people's - to
majority of cases are "chronic non- produce more prolactin. So Robibacterial prostatitis," w"ere symp- nelte subjected prostatitis-suffering
toms go'away and then return with- rats to stress to see if they got
out warning. Doctors cannot find worse than prostatitis -suffering
an infection, although for lack of rats left alone .
·
anything else to help they often
How do you stress a lab rat? Put
prescribe antibiotics - a therapy it in a small plastic cone for 15
that should never be used unless minutes, just small enough. that it
tests do uncover bacteria, Nyberg can't move. Restraint worries rats
said.
immensely, Robineue said.
~
It 's the mystery that drove RobiHe did this twice a day for four
neue's rat research. .
· weeks. The stressed rats produced

.

.

National Crime Victims
Rights Week to be
observed in Gallia County
'

: By Andrew Carter
- Times Sentinel Staff

.

·

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•
·
:
•
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:

A comme morative tree will be planted in Gallipolis on Mon day to honor the memory of those who ha~e been victims of
dome sti c violence and other crimes. The tree -planting_ is part of
the loca l observance of National Crime Victims Rights Week in
Gallia County. The nationwide observance is set for April 25
lhrough May I .
·
··
Amy Beth Canaday, victim assistant for Galli a County, saii:l
the memorial tree will be planted at the junction of Stale Route
7 and State Route 141 in Gallipolis ' across from the Willis
Funera l Home.
"We're going to plant a tree there in recognition of. all the
women, chldren and me.n who are victims of crime," said Can aday. "Most of these crimes, especially in this county, are violent crimes, whether they're assault or domestic."
The tree-planting ceremony is slated for 6 p.m. on Monday.
Canaday said the public is invited to attend the ceremony.
The Gallipolis Emblem Club 199 has donated $150 for the
purchase of the tree and qther items. Canaday . said that a ·
memorial sign will also be posted at the site.
.
Canaday said that assistant city solicitor Maragret Evans,
city parks and recreation director Brett Bostic and Judge_
William Medley will be i.n attendance at the tree-planting.
Davison Landscaping is providing the memorial tree ..
Canaday said that since November of 1998, she has ha s dealt
with roughly 130 cases of.domcsti&lt;: violence. In her role as victim assistant, she provides information . for victims and works
with local law enforcement officials tn domestic vio]e.nce
case:s.
"I don't necessarily advocate for the . victim; I am more of a
facilitator of information," said Canaday. ''I tell the victims
when tl'leir court dates are. I refer them to proper counseling . I
get 'the inform.ation and I send it to the places where it needs to
go."
In the future, sh~ hopes to provide child care at the victim
assistance office, located at 26 Locust Street adjacent to the
Gallia County Court Hous.e. Canaday said that having child
care available at the ofric'~ will allow her to better serve clients
who come to the office fot service.
··
Canaday said thtlt any residents interested in serving as voltlnteers for the Victim Assistance ·Program can · contact. her at
446-7933.

·"

~

·. FREE Diabetic Sueening
Wednesday, Aprd 28, 1999
8:30 am • 11 :00 a11
Screening Tesl,
Nulrilion and Med'Kalion EducalionallnfonnatfOn
Call (740) 992·3632

Jl!.[ways. &amp; ~orever

May1
9 a.m. - 3· p.m.·

••

will~Dffer this spedail'llle aM waiVe closing costs on Equilines starling

VIsion screenlnO atso available
,The York mt.W_.dty is sponsor-

ilig. ari optOI!i-~~~ in conjunction
with tlte Sbriliett~g clinic to identify and treat vision problems.

:: OAK PARK, Iii. (AP) - For .house; wants the land for an expansale: A piece of Hemingway history, sion of the village's main library.
with a hitch.
'
"The .. Hemin~way . my\!ique
A white, two-story Victorian . helps. It 's nice ma•ket1ng,' \\ said
frame home known as the "Ernest Edward Byers, the library 's director.
Hemingway Interim . H·o use" was
Prospective buyers were asked to
going on the auction block today.
have $40,000 in earnest money: The
The house was home for nearly a library is otfering a piece of land it
y.ear to the Nobel Prize-winning owns nearby as a possible relocillion
l\Uthor when he was a boy. The fam- site for an additional $110,500. ,,
ily moved to another Oak Park · The cost of moving the home is
house in 1906.
.
estimated at $75,000.
. If no buyer comes forward. the
' Whoever buys the .house is
e~pected to agree to move it. The
home could be demolished .
Oak Park Library, which owns the

'

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Shriners Hospitals treat
problems such as:
• Hand and back problems
• Bowed·legs
• Missing arm or J~g
• Dislocated hips
• Spina bifida
•Bums
~ Cerebral palsy
All care provided at Shrlners
Hospitals fs free of charge. · ·

)'OUIIIIOIII!d Ill iDfimt daughter.

As·st.
Bedding
Plants

'Flow of rr'ne
in the soul oj!J&gt;a;i$
'Flows ~e Srine 'Ri~fr,
'Reflecting
'7'/ie grace and disgraci
Oftne 'frrncfi history;
'FI~Iits and dtliglits
Of the sun ling.
and tfie ruling ilite;
'Er1msion of tfie ·
Suppressed ltHipunan mass,
. . 1/ie gUtllonnt;
'7'/ie tnumpli of Jlapoleon,
'71it !looming Lilies of ~fond,
. andvenus,
'11ie godess of low,
Jm1risioned in ~he !.ouvre.
OJ!nltsli %tel

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Blooming
Azaleas

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each

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Pine
Trees

s1nch pot
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Matured

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PENNSAUKEN, N.J. (AP) -A
woman who saw a man breaking
into her garage decided if he wanted
in that badly, he cou ld stay.
The would-be burglar was
trapped in the garage when the
woman used her remote control to
lock the door until police arrived.
The 83-year-old woman. whose
name was wi.thheld by police,
looked out a window and saw the
man going into the open garage
Wednesday morning, police said.
She quickly grabbed a remote control and pressed the button to close
the garage door from inside her
house.
"She remained a lot cooler and
probably acted a lot quicker than
people' a lot younger than her would
have," said police chief John Coffey . . ·

'

M}7v31,1999, and there is no annual feel
. '..
M.M. Ala., MD, boankertif'led Ia iater1al aedlciae, lw rece~dy
·provide cash for any plli'p08e ·a new car, aVacation, family health. And .
JoiHd tH lltdleallllfr lll'leuaat V.Uey llcilpilal.'
your Equlline may be tax deductible.
Dr. Alam has 14 yeanof experiear:e in internal medicine and was recently
checks whenever you ~o need to apply for a loan. For full disclosure,
eociated with Mll$all Univenity:spulmonary medicine feUowship progrm
EqiliiiJne•with a Peoples Bank-personal banker. If you qualify, Peoples Bank Wlll· ""' ·• ""' · ''- • ' .,., Hisexteniiveilllemahnedieiac·cxpe~inclqdesrspeilia!Jintmsltin"" 1
~JIIP &lt;~wit: of credit ofruptoJ!fl%. otthe llpl!wised.v.due of.)Bur homeles&amp;the ou1sfantllng,-•·'.
_, .. ,, ,.. , cardiology,,.l;...y.dir.i.e,eatlocliaklegyandDCurology. . ·
~ll!OP balance.
•
· Dr. Ala•'• olllee is lorabtl allll Mala Sind, New lllfet, WV ··
(lit /lllllltt ojfitt of Dr. Dllllll'tlll) nd d appoiatwab Cll be •ade •y
For exampk: ·
calliq (304) 181-JlM or (384) 181-JUS. H01ri are M01day to friday,

Tbil free sereenl1111 ell ale; 1poasored\Ly .,

, to the ehild,.

~or sale: Hemingway's house but buyer must move it

EASTMAN'S

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· No aqtJual fee. Fixed for 5 years.

..

legs, mlssln11 arm or tee, dislocated hip,
spina bifida, or rlcketB. If a child Is found
to be eligible, be or abe will receive treatment at a Sbrlaen H01pltal, including
· ti'IUllportlltioa, at no COlt to the parent or

%APR

Aunt Maude says that he who has 'little and ·want s les s · is
: • richer · than he who has much and wants more . Do keep smllmg .

r .

No appointment necessary
Free transportation available
For information call428-9721

I ••

.to a

'.

Emphasis on the high school bmid over the years will be a
part of the ~nnual Racine.-Souther,n Alumni Banquet which
has been set for Saturd.ay, May 29, at 6:30p.m., in the Charles
Hayman Auditorium . ·
.
Special recognition. will be given (o all grads who were
members of the high school band and those persons are being
asked to take photos, band letters . and other memorabilia to
the banquet.
,
Reunion classes will also be recognized and these start
with the year, 1914 , and run · through every five years there after. Members of reunion classes are also invited to t'ake
school memorabilia to the banquet. Special tables will be
available along with clear plastic covers for the meme 0 ros.
·Each reunion class is asked to have someone call Shirley
Johnson at 740-843-5279 to reserve a table.
·
· The junior class of Southern High School will serve this
year's banquet and following the banquet and business meeting , alumni are invited to visit with old friends in the auditorium.
·
·
.,
. Tickets for. the Racine-Southern event are now available
' and may be purchased at $10 each at the Racine Home National Bank, Cross .Grocery or Southern High School. Reserva' lions should all be in by 'May 21. Shirley Johnson is also handling reservations particularly for out of town alumni who
won't be able to make arrangementS locally. For those of you
who need to get ·in touch with Shirley about the banquet the
address is 55590 State Route - 123 , Portland, Oh . 45770. · Or·
you can call Shirley at the number mentioned earlier. in this
column. ·

Jtmtbq Ctau.-Jtadhld • Page CS· -.

•

Assorted Colors

. In case you're not figuring on cooki ng on Memorial Day
weekend, you'll be pleased to know that the Burlingham Modern Woodmen will again have their matching fund dinner and
bake sale on May 31 at their hall from II :30 a.m. to 6:30p .m.
The company matche s funds raised through the annual dinner up to $2500 and thi s year the Woodmen are going to give
the money to the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
f.or the purchase of an automatic defibulator. Any moneys
ra1sed over the amount needed for the equipment will g(l to
the Chester Fire Department.

VETERANS MEMORIAL MEDICAL CLINIC -

Camden-Clark
Medical Office Building

tbe Nemesis Temp" alkl tile Ohio Valley.
Shrine Club, willldeadfy ehlldru who can
benefit from the expert care provided at
. Shrlnen Hospitals. The screening is open
to all.cblldrea nl!_der qe 18 ~tb problems
associated 'with ee"'bt'al pa-.y, bana or
orthopaedle prolll~WY sileh as tluh root,
,scoliosis, lllaail aad back problems, bowed

.

.
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Sale On· Selected Items.

Woman
traps
burglar in garage

·. Meigs County certainly has made a splash in the spring editton of the magazi~c, "Ohio's Heritage" , published and distnbuted by The Ohto Department of Aging in Columbus.
, The cover of the current edition features a large photo of
Susan Oliver, dorector of the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Program, along with several in·set photos of clientele and staff
members .
!~side the publication is a detailed story · dealing with the
serv1ces and work performed at the' Meigs County Senior Citizens Center:and uses the theme, "A Home Away from Home" .
Included m the story is a: 5x7 photo of the late Lula Hampton whounfortunatcly passed .away while the pub.! ication was
bemg pnnted and prepared for distribution . So many people
kn~w Lula and especially at the center and they will be
deltghted to see the excellent photo and road about her in the
ma~azine :
The curre nt edition has certai nly stressed the
Me1gs Center with stories ·and phoios used throughout the
magazine .
Good job!

EDITOR'S NOTE - Lauran
Neergaard covers .health and
medical issues ror The Associated
Press in Washington.

By RICHARD N. OSTLING
Catholic mission of the university." more frustrated trying to figure out . David.
Similarly, Thompson laments
. AP Religion Writer
Since then, he 's been a professor at what · hard e~idence might underlie
·In recent years the media have the University of Copenhagen, Den- ·Thompson's sweeping assertions.
that specialists in ancient Egypt
lavished attention on the attempt by mark.
He deals all too abruptly with favor what he calls old-fashioned
liberal scholars to undercut the his'"
Those interested in the scriptural material that supports opposite biblical archaeology, but he fails to
torical basis of the New Testament. squabble should take a look at views, such as: ( I) The inscription in deal with the impressive arguments
For instance, PBS recently devoted Thompson's "The Mythic Past" Egypt commonly cited as evidence in James Hoffmeier's " Israel in
several hours to a series that promot- (Basic, $30). He writes 'that the the nation of Israel e~isted in the Egypt: The Evidence for the Authened such views while excluding more Bible may have "occasional· tidbits Holy Land by 1214 B.C. (2) Inscrip.. ticity of the Exodus Tradition," just
conservative opinions.
of history here and there," but it's a tions in Israel, Jordan and Egypt said reissued in . paJ)erback by Oxford
And news writers were long big mistake to read it as depicting to prove the existence of King University Press.
&lt;:;
· enticed by Roben Funk's "Jesus actual events. He. (~'eats it as an
Seminar," whose members voted inspirational work that Jews devised
among themselves and proclaimed around the third century B.C. to but·, most Gospel sayings and events to tress their national identity.
I
.
be fictional.
Thompson not only erases as
With less public notice, a similar mythological the biblical characters
fuss has been brewing over claims ' of the dim past (Adam, Noah, Abraof little or no historical basis for the ham) but also Moses, Joshua, 'Saul,
Old Testament. Such views emanate David, Solomon and the later kings
from a minority faction of scholars and prophets.
known as . "minimalists" or "reviWhat next, the King David Semsionists." ·
· inar?
·
Hershel Shanks, editor of Bibli·One minimalist leader is Thomas
L. Thompson, . a Detroit-born cal Archaeology Review · magazine ·
, Catholic who began as a true believ- in· Washington, thinks archaeology
to Pre-register
. er but developed radical doubts dur- raises problems for a literal, Fundaing graduate study in Gennany. He mentalist view of Old Testament hiss'ays his. ideas made it impossible to tory. But he says Thompson builds
complete a Ph.D. in Europe .so he his opinions "not on the basis of the
transferred te Temple University in · archaeological evidence, which real!'hiladelphia.
ly contradicts them, but on anthroBut then his first book was too pological and sociological theoskeptical for the American publish- ries."
ers, he recounts, .so he had it pubUniversity of Arizona archaeolo,
·.~
lished in Gennany. And, he says, no gist William Dever, no biblical right- .
.~"tt · ··
college would hire him because of winger either, gives Thompson's
his views so he spent a decade as a hook harsh treatment in a fonhcom·
handyman and house painter.
ing issue of Shanks ' magazine .
Career Bird Houses
That's curious, since a fellow Dever complains thai the book fails .
Hand Painted Flower Pots
minimalist, Presbytenan John Van · to offer "reasoned and well-docuSeters, had a similar book published mented · conclusions." He says
and Bird Feeders
in the ·United States .a year after Thompson and his radical allies
Thompson's tome and quickly land- assen that the Old Testament was
ed a job at the University of Nonh written very late but "significantly,
Carolina.
they never give any data to suppon
518 East Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio ·
Thompson was eventually hired this claim."
992-1161
by two universities in Wisconsin, .
Less erudite readers will be even
Lawrence and then Marquette. He
says Marquette denied him tenure in
1993 because .officials deemed his
writing "incompatible with the

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

Beat of the Bend ·

more prolactin and their prostatitis
grew worse. The unstressed rats
largely healed.
Rat studies don't always predict
what happens in humans, and '
there's no way to know if rats felt
more pain Ql' other symptoms when
they were stressed - a key question for humans, Nyberg noted.·
Still, the study suggests "that
maybe stress d'oes exacerbate
chronic prostatitis," something the
NIH's study will examine, he said.
To
enroll,
check
hllp://www.niddk.nih.gov/health/ki
dney/kuru/win99/l .htm on the
Internet.

TESTAMENTS: An Old Testament 'minimalist' attacks Bible history '

:free Orthopaedic and Burn
S'c reening C]inic

'..7;-'

Sunday, Aprll25, 1999

Institute of Health studies effect of stress on prostate disease

B~ LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP Medical Writer
·WASHINGTON
(AP)
Prostate trouble is an almost
inevitable rite of passage for aging
men . The walnut-sized gland can
enlarge or become cancerous, but
it 's not something most men think
they have to WO\fY about until at
le~st their 50s.
· · Less known is that prostates
ah:o can become inflamed. known
as; prostatitis - an extremely
p&lt;ljnful, chronic disease that often
hits younger men , in their 30s and
405. Prostatitis accounts for 2 milliqn visits to doctors a year, but
they ' re largely in vain.
"We don't know what causes it,
ariil we don ' t know how to effecti~ely treat it ," said Dr. Leroy
Nyberg of the National Institutes of
Health , which now is seeking suf-

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Sunday, Aprll25, 1999 .

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis,.OH • Point Pleasant, WV

1at.

�Page C6 • ,.,,,.II 'GJ:t.e-JJ"*dlml

Sunday, Aprll25, 1999

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

· ''

Mt. Zion Methodist Church founded in Springfield Iowns hip .in 1820s
also F.M . (1838-1915), Sylvina(l836- 1909), Col. · Daniel
(1781-1847), Sara (1793 - 1889),
John W. who died i'n 1840 and
Patsy who died in 1864.
On Patsy's stone are these
words: "Come mourning friends
now cease your grief, my pain and
trouble now have ceased, my sleeping dust lies here at rest while I
recline on Jesus' breast."
Jn the 1920s the trustees were
Ed Hawk, Harry Mills, and J.S.
Eskew. The stewards were Ed
Hawk, Carl Eskew, Charles Ward,
and J,M. Burleson. The Su nday
School officers were : Mrs . Charles
Ward, J.M . Burleson. Carl Askew,
and Alma Keith . Teachers were
Charles Ward, H~lcn Wome1dorff,
Virginia Schwartzwaldcr (also
served as organist) and Jewell Gih-

razed shortly thereafter.
The selection of a church on the
Womeldorff property was made
some years after Michael Womel Sands
dorff had established a cemetery ·
there.
Some time in the 1820s a tramp
appeared at the home of Michael
Womeldorff. He. asked for food and
work. Since it was the harvest sea. The Ml. Zion Methodist Church sun. there was much work to be
jn, Springfield Township was orga- done and Womeldorff gladly put
·
nized in the 1820s. The first church the man to work. ·
The next day whi le resting
building dates to about 1830, il
being built on land donated by under a shade tree after a long
,Michael Womeldorff. The follow - mornmg's labor in the fi eld s, the
·ing pioneer families formed the stranger commented to Womcl -nucleu s of this .church : . Hawk. dorff: "What a wonderful place this
Mills, Kerr, Gaston and Womci - would be to be buried ." During th at
same afternoon the 1ra'mp was
(Jorff.
~ The Trustees in 1865 were taken suddenly ill and before
William Wad&lt;;lell , Anderson Neal. morning he had passed away.
The tramp , whose name was
·E:E. Waddell, Josiah Hawk, and
never
learned by Womeldorf. was
:E,F. Mills. Trustees in the 1870s
on the exact spot where he
huried
:w'ere : JE. Mills, E.F. Mi lls, J.A.
:Mills, Ross Waus , and S.J . Kerr. In had rested under the tree. With that
·the. 1880s James Womeldorff and one grave as the start , Womeldorff
:Henson Williams replaced E.F. and estab lished a cemetery there. and
later the churc h. The cemetery is '
:J .'A. Mllb.
st
ill there and can be found ncar
Some time in the 1880s plan&gt;
,Holzer
Medical Center.
:were made for a new church . In
the Womeldorlfs buried
Among
: 1890 thht church was put up . Th e
: bpilding se rved the congregation here we would include : Michael
· for the remainder of the history of who died in 1865, hi s wife Jane
: Mt. Zion . The church was diSband- who died in 1856, and their son
: ec1 ~bout 1955 and the building-was James (1832 - 1902). There are

son.

Michael Womeluurff came to
Galli a County some ttmc between
1802 and 1805. He came here with
lm three brothers and his widowed
·mot her. Michael was born in 1784
in Augusta County, Virginia.
According to one early account,
Michael's land , which he began
!'arming at about the age of i O, was
"a dense forest, abounding with
gigantic poplars, the · sturdy oak,
sycamo re , walnut , buckeye arid
sugar maples.

Entertainment
~Strangers With Candy': Lessons-in laughing·
Aprll25, 1oe8

With th~ ambition and perseverance of Ajax, he began the solitary
and lonely job of making himself a
home in the wild woods. In a few
years he madCJthe wilderness blossom like a rose."
In 18i2 Michael took as his wife
Jane Waddell and the pair had several children. The Womeldorff land
became noted for its excellent fruit
trees.
· II was said by one writer of the
period that Michael, and Jane "by
joint industry and rigid economy,
became the first in their neighborhood in point of independence and
in the enjoyment of the comforts of
life."
Womeldorff was a strong advo- .
cate of universal freedom . When it
· appeared to him that slavery was
·not going to end, Michael headed
Mt. Zion Methodist Church adorned the hill west. of the Holzer
up efforts in Galli a County to raise
Medical
Center from 1890 to the 1950s. The church and cemeterY
money to send African-Am erican s
was
established
on land donated by Michael Womeldorff who setto Africa where they might enjoy
tled
hlire
almost
200 years ago,
freedom. In fact it was his idea that
Christian people across the north the news reached him that his great 15, 1865 , and just nine days later
should have set the goal to return hero Abraham Lincoln had been on April 24, 1865 , Michael Womelall African-American people. in the assassinated. Lincoln died on April dorff breathed hi s last.
United States to freedom in Africa.
When the Civil War broke out,
Womeldorff told his family that hi s
last ambition in life was 10 live
long enough to see shivery abolished in the United States.
Michael was heart-broken when

•

'-

• NEW YORK (AP)- Jerri ~lan,k
Las much to teach the natton s
~outh.
. Keep them away from her!
Then sit. back and share some
twisted wisdom with this self~
'described "boozer, iJ~er and loser"
- and_ l~ugh hel~lessly.
.
Jem IS the hard-knocks herome
of " Strangers With (;andy," a week:ly morality play meant to echo, in all
.the wot'St ways, TV's youngster-tar:geted .. Afternoon Specials." You
,.,member the drill: A complex probJl:m reduced to rite-of-passage melodrama and, at hour's end, a pat resofution.
.
·
• No 'wonder "Strangers" is on
Comedy Cent.ral, where it airs
Wednesday at 10:30 p.m. EDT.
" Jerri, our prototypical troubled
t'een, is actually.46 years old ..A runaway for 32 years (some spent in t.he
:elammer), she is now picking up
·~here she left off: as a freshman at
)iatpoint High. ·
.; "This time," declares Jerri,

: ~Election':

:BJ ANGELA K. BROWN
:ASsociated Press Writer
JOHNSON CITY, Tenn . (AP)
- You're never too young or too
. old to wear a beeper, according
tO some East Tennessee State
U niversity students .
: Babie s and the elderly may
:Soon be sportmg the ·safe DisJ~nce Locator Device, invented
by an ETSU professor an d a
group of undergraduate engineering majors.
" It 's a multi -purpose prod-ilct," said Mark Rajai , an ETSU
~ssociate professor and director
~p f manufacturing ·engineering
technology. " It can be used when

people wander off, and we hope
it will stop child abductions."
The devi ce can help c;11egivers
kee p track of patients with,
Al zheimer 's di sease and the
mentally di sabled , Rajai said.
Parents, day -care workers and
hospital nursery perso nnel can
use il to mon itor youngsters. '
· Th.e device, about the diameter
of a; quarter, ca n be. pinned to
clothes or worn like a watch. It
also has a " panic button " that
can be pressed in an emergency.
The receiver, wtiich -resembles
a baby monitor, is a hand-held
device with red blinking lights .
Parents can set it to emit a loud

beeping sound when their child is
out of a certain range, from 2 feet
to 400 feet away. One receiver
can track up 10 50 children .
The most recent national
study, publtshed in 1990, showed
that 163,200 children are abducted by relatives each year, according ·to the Center for Missing &amp;
Exploited Children.
Rajai and the students have a
one-year copyright protection on
the devi ce a nd hope 10 have a
patenl within a year: Rajai pla~s'
· t'o fine tune and then market tlie
equipment, . which he said could
·
be sold for about $40.

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elegant dining experience in a
relaxing c&lt;iwrtry atmospMre
gourmet cuisine to satisfy
meat lovers and vegetarionJ.at
affcml~tble prices

Delklow ond Cre~title
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learned nothing from life. She has
swum downstream, and not a single
barnacle on her."
If there's something discomfiting
about Jerri (especially since she's
meant to be a role model), that's
where the humor originates. So says
Paul Dinello; who plays art teacher
Mr. Jellineck.
"Uncomfortableness makes other
people weep, but it makes us
laugh," he explains. " If someo·ne on
a TV show said, • I lost the baby,' we
would probably start giggling."
"Thai's why I like Lifetime
movies," says Sedaris.
A bit giddy from fatigue, she has
joined the equally skep-deprived
Colbert and Dinello for an interview
at their Greenwich Village office.
Right I)OW, the trio goes . virtually

schlumpy social studies teacher,
doesn't like Tracy's ambition aiid
gradually grows determined to- \tosomething about it
.
So when Tracy's election as student government president appears
at hand, chiefly because she's unopposed (and ·still campaigning fien:ely), McAllister gets involved. He
recruits Paul Metzler (Chris Kltin),
a well-meaning jock, to run agllinst
her.
e
Things unravel from there. Paul's
sister, Tammy (Jessica Campbell),
gels involved in the election -with
the aim of abolishing ~tudent government. Romances and oth.er ~ntan­
glements make things comphcated.
for both Tracy and Mr. McAllister.
And •· Election" inches palhfully
toward its quietly harrowing conclusion,
•

it this week! '· I mean, you just fgrgel.
~ .
"
Forget that, maybe. But no o•ne
could forget the bracing moral of the
story : You CAN have your cake and
eat it, too ... and Amy will be happY
to serve it.
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"It's not jusl some crazy people
throwing money .down the drain
because they' re daft- which, when
you turned it on, was what it looked
•like," says Chris Home, c:o-auth0r·o£
• "L?VE 1V: Tellybrats and Topless
, Darts," the newly published history of
: the channel.
The Mirror hoped to team up with
:the wulthy cable operators lo outbid
:Sky for soccer. According 10 Horrie
; ~nd ~-author Adam Nathan, the cable
ioperdtors and Sky reached an acoom-.
t?Iodation to avert a bidding war,leavimg LIVE TV in the cold.
·
', .The channel's creators have all
:moved on, but LIVE TV survives,
;available to 2.7 million cable holbes in
;Britain.
.
{ The days of "Topless Darts" _may
•be numbered. The parent M1rror
tGroup is now the target of a takeover
(bid, and the Financial Times ~as
' reported that the group may shed its
:TV interests.
·
• LIVE 1V brought together two
:extraordinary chamcters: Janet Street~
:l'orter, a tall, toothy woman with a
,Knack· for creating programs aimed at
· ~the young adult market; and Kelvin
:MacKenzie, Barnumesque former
'editor of The Sun, Murdoch's bestselling tabloid.
·~ It was a shocking pairing.
MacKenzie, in one of his cruel jokes,
once ran pictures of Slreet·Porter and
· • horse side by side in The Sun and
Invited readels to vote on which was
hetter looking.
MacKenzie and Street-Porter hard-

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very inriocent," he says. " She's

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around the clock. Not only do they
star in "Strangers With Candy, "
which ihey created, but they also
write each episode.
How do they keep up? " It helps
that we have an improvisational
background," Dinello observes.
The three met a decade ago as
members of Chi cago's Serond City
improv troupe. Ever si nce, they have
been close friends and eager collaborators, including a stretch as members of the Exit 57 sketch-comedy
ensemble for its Comedy Central
series.
Along the way, they've done
other projects individually. Dinello
acted in several films. CQibert is a
correspondent on Comedy Central's
" Daily Show." And besides winning
awards for her stage work, Sedaris
has held on to her gig as a waitress
at an East Village diner, where currenlly she schedules other people to ·
cover her shifts.
On "Strangers, " meanwhile, it's
collegial comic bliss.
" We get to work together and say
whatever we want," Dinello sums
up.
"You even forget this is actually
gonna be on TV," says Sedaris.
'"Omigod, people are gonna watch

~ b-i t outre even by the standards of British media

clrpenter Inn

.
• · · CHICAGO (AP) - An egg a day
A spokeswoman for the Ameri- versity in Boston.
She
agreed
with
the study's
, :really is OK, according · to can Heart Association, which was
and
what
many
experts have
authors
··e searchers whO found that healthy , not involved in the st~dy, said the
said
for
a
long
time
that
it is more
~ople eating up to seven eggs. a
findin gs won't change her group 's
important
to
limit
consumption
of
eek didn 't increase their nsk for belief that Americans should limit
and
trans
fats,
the
saturated
fats
~an attacks or strokes:
their dietary cholesterol.
· ; "Our study doesn 't mean that
"These new data do not conflict processed fats that make doughnuts,
p~ople should go back to the typical
with the American Heart Associ a-. commerci~l cakes and french fries
.
:Wc&gt;tern diet - a breakfast with tw£l tion 's recommendations that healthy so deliciou s.
Hu,
whose
study
was
funded
by
j:ggs, bacon, sausage, butter and ind!v.tdual s consume no niore (han
the
National
Institutes
of
Health,
16ast. This ktnd of diet is very 300 milligrams of dietary choles- .
imhealthy," said Dr. Frank B. Hu, terol per day," said the spokes- · noted that past research has shown
}Yhose research used data from two woman, Dt. Alice H. Lichtenstein of dietary cholesterol to be less of a
long-running landmark studies.
the U.S. Department of Agricul - culprit than initially believed in rais:: "People are afraid ·of eggs
ture 's nutrition center at Tufts Uni- ing , levels of cholesterol in , the
)lecause
cholesterol
so high
11nd
their the
reputation
is so isbad,"
said
Hu, a nutritional epidemiologist al
Harvard School of Public Heallh.
: ·But eggs, per se - I don 't think
ihey deserve such a bad reputation. "
: Diabetics, . however, did face
.higher risks of ~earl attacks or
'j;trokes with increased egg con~sumption, . according 10 the study,
'which is being published in Wednes_day 's Journal of the American Med·ical Assoc iation.
: A large egg contains about 215
;milligrams of cholesterol -· far
1nore than most other foods with the
:same number of calories.

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a

reptilian teacher Mr. Noblet, bursts
out laughing.
"For all the terrible things Jerri's
been through , and all the terrible
things she's done, she'&amp; actually

Filmed with unseltling block the political version of a teen-age
camerawork and peppered with n.ar- figure-skating queen. When she fal: Think back a moment - all the
ration from many characters, "Elec- ters, she cries into her stuffed ani.&gt;Nay to h1gh sehool. There was
tion" at first has.the feel of a simple mals and you feel guilty for ever
. )lways one of 'em: the overachiever
work. But don' tlet that fool you; it's · thinking bad thoughts about her,
pbsessed with student government,
a complex, deep tale. 'Fhe narrative
Broderick-, so forgettable of late
•he guy or girl who felt as if winning
devices and filmmaking techniques in "Godzilla" (where his best line
·lhe studen(-body presidency would
that director Alexander Payne uses was "That's a Iotta fish"), is much .
l!and them the world.
only add. to the through'! he-looking- more effective here. fie's better on ·a
= Be ass~ red: They .were nothing
glass feel: This appears to be a nor- smaller, subller canvas, and his flip,compared to Tracy Flick.
mal high. school, but unseltling llop between sad-sackery and deter: Tracy (Reese Witherspoon) is a
things are happening beneath · the mination to do the right thing rings
1Jighly motivated - and dangeroussurface, And Mr. McAllister really true. He also has tbe fashion and
.~y cute - student at George Washshouldn't be turning over the rocks. , demeanor of the high-school teacher
l,ngton Carver High in Omaha. She's
Great things are in store for With- down perfectly.
Jhe aUractive female equivalent of
erspoon, who is a joy to watch on
In the end, McAllister, through a
tJax in " Rushmore " - a joiner
camera. Her blatant ambition and sequence of events ,that perfeclly
fl'lho · wants so, desperately to lead
insolence, illustrated by llaring nos- match his transgressions, falls from
J hat she has become a sad caricature.
trils; icy stares and the occasional grace and must begin a new life.
: . Just the kind of student that gets
facial tic, are perfect.
Thi~ is the message of "Election":
·finder Jim McAllister's skin. Mr.
Her Tracy is both despicable and That wrongdoing done .in the name
:t'fcAIIister (Mallhew Broderick), a
pitiable; pushed by her mother like of good is .no better than· plain,
unbridled ambition. ·
And the road to that revelation is
both entertaining and, in its Omaha
ly ROBERt BARR
ly agreed on anylhing, and LIVE TV · juvenile humor.
ordinariness, quite frightening.
,..oclllted Prua .Wrber
betrayed some confusion in t~ing to
His attention-getting · stunts at
"Election," a Paramount Pictures
• LONDON (AP)- L!VE TV often follow oonflicting leads.
. LIVE TV, conceived during what Hor- ·
release,
is co-written by Payne and
Street-Porter's world was ahout rie calls "drink-filled brainstonning
ieft its viewm to wonder whether it
Jim Taylor based on a novel by Tom
.
. fashion, dancing all night and Wild col- sessions," included the ·Nof'l'egian. was serious.
: -· The cable channel was notable for ors. For LIVE TV, she oonverted the speak.ing weather girls; the News Perrotta. The movie is· rated R for
:orange shoes, · for mixing ·sex and 24th floor of LondOn's ·tallest sky- Bqnny, which reacted to news iiems ·profanity and sexual encounters.
; baked beans, for the News Bunny, and scraper into "The Entity," o6111bining 'Yilh a thumbs up !Jr thumbs down;
! for ~ minimally attired NOi'wegian- ·' all the :Channel's opcr8tions In one' .lind B.ooxifig malch between Princess
• speaking women who took over the · wi~pen spore where talent and tecli- Diana and Queen Elizabeth II looka:weather forecasts from dwarfs who nicians roamed free in orange shoes.
. likes.
: needed a trampoline IO reach the
Tuesdays and Fridays weft!: "love
A LIVE TV reporter was induced .
·
· nights;'' with the emphasis on the to legally change his name to News
• weather map.
: .. It also pioneered "Topless Darts," physical (including the "sp~hers" Bunny so he oould run in~ Parliamen; in which young women shed their lop who heightened their desire by smear- . tary special election in 1996.
! garments to play the game. ·
ing themselves with baked beans).
• L!VE TV quickly proved ilself il Saturday night was the lime 'J!&gt;r the
: bit outre even .by the standards of remote units to shine, coveril!g the
; British media, which - with girlie action in London's clubs.
• photos in daily tabloids and a TV
Street-Porter's mantra for -&lt;L!VE
; series with explicil gay romance was "cheery, notsneery."The reviews
! are more relaxed than in the United following the channel's debut 011 June
' States.
·
12, 1995, were sneery indeed. "Can
: Nudity, simulated sex acts, gay British TV sink even lowerthan ~?"
• couples and foul language all became The Guardian asked.
•
: part of the prime-time package, and
MacKenzie got his ~hance to try
' past 10 _p.m. the channels beoome Jhree months laler, when Street-Porter ·
I more daring with' shows such as quit. Out went the jazzy graphiCS::-out
~ "Eurotrash," a half-hour obsessed went the orange shoes and out 111ent
; with bad-music, enormous breasts and quile a few employees.
·
; full-frontal views of full-gulled GerMacKenzie's :style, honed at
e
• man natunsts.
Sun, was to appeal to the lowest oom, Behind the scenes was a big- . mon denominator with naked girls and
: money battle over rights to televise
· professional soccer. Rupert Mur' doch's Sky Television had soccer on
: its satellite system, cable TV compa. ~ nie,s wanted i~ and L!VE was the · ·
' vehicle launchect by the owners of the
• tabloid Daily Mirror to gel it.
• • 3800 V-6 Power
After all, there's no point bidding
NEVER BEEN KISSED (PG13)
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Fri. &amp; Soi. 5-10

pal's mindless, groundless bigotry?
Jerri muses: "I thought she was
dangerous and different. Then I
found out, she's just like you and
me."
Never mind. Since permission for
Jerri to go on a class trip hangs in the
balance, her locker buddy plainly
must be sacrificed. Jerri has learned
valuable lesson.
"She completely lives in the
moment," says Amy Sedaris, who,
with a "fatly suit" supplementing
her.pixieish frame, plays Jerri, "For
her, no choice is informed by anything but immediate need."
· Then, switching in and out of
character as Jerri (complete with the
overbite and plaintive look), Sedaris
enacts a telling exchange:
"Jerri, what do you hope to do
with your life?"
"Uh ... go to my locker."
" No, no! I mean, what are you
gonna do, wa-a-y down the. line?"
" Open it."
Stephen Colbert, who plays the

Story of an .;Obsessed overachiever

lly TED ANTHONY

·: ETSU engineering students invent
:(;Jevi~es aiming to stop child abductions

"when I make th~ wrong choices,
I'm doing it for all the right reasons."
Recent , " Strangers" episodes
have found her grappling with drug
abuse, teen-age prePnancy and alcoholism - and ga . •ng from each
experience clearly stated (if prepos- .
terous) life lessons.
Her issue this week is prejudice.
The shiny new braces on Jerri 's
teeth make her a social pariah al
Flatpoint. She's shunned by everyone. Everyone, that · is, but Jerri's
loy .II; lovely locker pal - whom the
principal, for no sane reason, suspeels is mentally. retarded,
The principal pressures Jerri to
expose the girl.
" Why me?" asks Jerri, and the
principal replies, "You've got those
braces." Retarded people, he stales
absurdly, "tend to be drawn to shiny
objects."
·
Will Jerri, herself a victim of
prejudice, betray her only defende£7
Or will she stand up to her princl-

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�Networks ·bursting
·w_
ith May sweeps
miniseries, specials
By LYNN ELBER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - An out-of-control train loaded with nuclear
weapons speeds through the Rocky Mountains, threatening to wipe out a
huge hunk of America's West.
A disaster like that can mean only one thing: Sweeps have arrived with
the usual e•cess of mo.vies, specials and mayhem. So we get NBC's "Atomic Train" and other culturally uplifting •how• 5uch as "Teen People's 21
Hottest Stars Under 21."
. The May •weeps, one of the three key ratings-measurement periods used
to help local TV stations set ad rates, have the honor of featuring season and
series finales. Among those depaning this year: "Home Improvement" and
"Melrose ·Place."·
· Here's the lowdown (all times ED1):

Farm Business

'I'A'I'I

By REBECCA COLLINS
GALLIPOLIS - If there's one
industry that has exploded with interest and popularity this year, it has to
be herbs.
·
In fact, herbs are everywhere. We
hear about berbal remedies for everything from · depressioll to prostrate
health. CooiC.ing with herbs to reduce
sodium intake and improve flavor 1s
also quite popular. And herb gardening isn't just for those living in the
English countryside anymore. Ifyou
are planning to grow your own herbs
this year, here are a few tips to get to
most from your ''crop." '
. Like other consumables,there 's a
shelf life associated with those liule
taste-bud teasers. You can expect to
keep your home-grown dried herbs
for about a year. After that, you wi II
probably . want to · replace them,
because time takes Oavor and color
away from them.
But how the herbs were prepared
for storage and how and where they
were stored can increase or reduce

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ISN'T THAT SPECIAL:
· -

"The World 's Scariest Explosions: 'Caught on Tape!" promises
-"' -~·nc wly..lleclassified:! footage .ofblast~that dut1Q¥e9 ~ P.la~·alld:bu'ld:&lt;
j ngs. Fox, 9 p.m. Thursday, April 29.
~ - " WWF Smackd~wn! " features the top men and women of wrestling
Jn a two-hour spec1al alftng 8 p.m. Thursday, April 29, on UPN.
; - " A Celebration: 100 Years of Great Women, With Barbara Walters"
;celebrates the 20th century's most influeqtial, distinguished and interesting
.women. ABC, 9:30 p.m. Friday, April 30.
·
, - Dick Clark and Elise Neal ("The Hughleys") are the hosts of "Bioop~rs": a collection of outtakes from TV sitcoms and national and local newscasts. ABC, 10 p.m. Saturday, May I. · · ·
: . -_" World's Most Da~ger~us Magic. Il'i lets magicians face " danger,
Jugh nsk and the.threat of tmmtnent death," all for our entenainment. NBC,
~p.m. Sunday, May 2.
. .
-"Avalanche, the White Death" features interviews with e~pens, skiers
and climbers about ·understanding and surviving the phenomenon, and
,includes footage of avalanches." NBC, .8 p.m. Saturday, May 8.
· - "Dave Barlia: 'Extreme Stuntman" offers Barlia jumping from a hot
air balloon.• a cliff and a bridge, among other antics. NBC, 8 p.m. Saturday,
!&gt;fay 15.
-' - "The Nanny " ends its si&gt;X.,-ear run with a liourlong episode airing 8
p.m. Wednesday, May 19, on CBS.
. : - Actor Stacy Keach narrates " Run for QlVer," about photographers
who place themselves at 'risk to gel the shot. ABC, lO,p.m. Thursday, Ma"
~0.
1
• · - . "Teen People's 21 Hottest Stars Under 21" include Nick Caner of The
:Backstreet Boys, actress:~inger Brandy and.actresses Kirsten Dunst, Jenn1fer Love Hewitt and Katie Holmes." ABC, 8 p.m. Friday, May 21.
&gt; -Heather Locklear and the "Melrose Place" g;~ngsay goodbye with the
(tnal episode airing 8 p.m. Monday, May 24, on Fox.
·
·: - '''Mad About You" concludes with a hourlong episode airing 9 p.m.
Monday, May 24, on NBC. Janeane G~rofalo is among the guest stars. .
· · -Tim Allen closes the "Home Improvement" tool box with a 90-minule
finale on ABC, 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 25, on ABC. ·
.
.
- ·Carnage comes our way in "Train· Wrecks" on Fox, 8 p.m. Tuesday,
May 25. The special features footage of train eruhes and near-cruhes. .
:: EDITOR'S NOTE -Lynn Biber can be reached atlelber"at"ap.org

Marianna Caml!bell

Jennifer L. Sheets

Ed Vollborn

Three join Peoples': Bank's··
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CHRYSLER
· COUNTRY YAH

I 00£

Dithane imd Ferbam are the only
By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
low or white buds.
fungicides
labeled for these sys tems
Older plants and especially plugs
GALLIPOLIS- Greenhouse and
and
are
only
effective on a handful of
tobacco float system managers know may show signs of injury f1rst. Somediseases.
If
you
suspect pythium in
that producing healthy transplants limces, bleach injury Is confused with
your
fioat
systems,
please call the
means season-long problem solving. cold injury, which will also cause
extension
office
(446-7007)
for fur· There are numerous problems that puckering and rolling of ihe margins
ther
suggestions
and
obtain
a
disease ·
can plague ~ tobacco Ooat system or · and yellow and wh.ite buds. Plants
greenhouse; however, the following will typically grow out of cold injury control plan complete with application rates .
issues focus on comnlon challenges with a few days of warm weather.
and the most frequently asked ques• What's eating my transplants?
tions.
·
Insect problems are attributed to
Ag news
• Why was germination poor or very wet media and algae, which can
Blue mold report - On Apri I 14.
delayed? Poor germination can be' attract fungus gnats and shore.files. IS and 19, three suspicious weather
caused by a variety of ihings, includ- Orthene is a commonly-used insecti- trajectories originating from blue
ing high temperatures in the green- cide labeled for greenhouses and float mold-infected areas passed 1hrough
house or under the float cover. Opti- beds and can be an effective solution southern Ohio·. The sources of these
mum temperature for germination is to these pests.
trajectories were Corpus Christi,
70 degrees. In addition, float systems · Slugs and snails in the transplant Texas, and Moultrie, 'Ga. Surviving
sho~ld not be covered wiih clear plas- system can be It bigger problem, spores blowing on these trajectorie,o;
tic, because heat becomes trapped depending on-tt(e weather. Last year, were predicted to be washed out over
inside, raising temperature levels and tobacco seedlings were plagued with Louisiana, Tennessee and· Kentucky.
preventing ~elffiination or· burning slugs due in pan to the heavy rains ·posing only low threats to this ·area.
existing seedlings. '
•
,.. •· and ideal temperatures. Slugs will eat However, please be on the lookout
Float beds should be covered with irregular holes in the foliage, co~­ for signs of blue mold in your Ooat
a heavy (30 gram wt.) spun-~onded suming several times their body .and greenhouse systems. Remember
polypropylene .material. Spiral root weight per' day, thus Creating serious . that these warnings arc based on
usually occurs when the grow.ing damage within a short period of time. weather forecll$1$ ..Therefore. if the
media is packed too tightly. Even
Slug control consists primarily of , weather does not follow the forecast.
carefully filled trays that are bumped placing metaldedyde baits in. areas
.or jolted before or after seeding can where the slugs will find them, but
. cause compaction within the cells.
are more effective when they· are blue mold transpon may· also be
unpredictable.
·. • Ho·w·do 1 know how ·much fer- placed under a board. pot or Oat.
Call or the week - Locus con-tilizer to apply? To eliminate the
• What is causins clusters of my
guess work in fenilizing, calculate transplants to die? A variety' of dis- cerns · seems to be subsidi ng temthe number of gallons in the system eases in the greenhouse and Ooat sys- porarily, to make way for questions
ustng this formula based on the size · terns can be characterized by foliar about fniit tree Sprays. Insecticide
of the bed:
.
lestons or root and stem rot syrup- and fungicide sprays for apple, peacb,
Length (ft)'X width (ft.) X depth . toms. Reducing moisture around ttie plum, pear. cherry trees etc.. are
(inches) X 7:48, all' divided by 12 . plant is the single most im'ponant step " available at the Extension office.
For example, a bed that has a length in controlling the foliar phases of Please call 446-7007 for a spray
schedule ..
of 50 feet, a width of 16 feet, and a most lranspl~nt diseases.
depth of four inches holds 1 994 gal. It _ts also tmportant to remove ·all
tons of water.
.'
' chpptngs from. the· system. Pythium
Tobacco grants- Farm Income
• How can plants show signs of IS. a common dtsease problem recog- .
. . .
·
..
mzable by large melon-s1zed patch-. Improvement Foundation tobacco
chemtcal InJUry w~en no, pest1ctdes , es of declining or dead seedlings that . grants are due by May I . If you arc
hav~ been applied · S~edl!ngs gro~- show signs of rotting at or below the
unfamiliar wiih the program, please
tng m trays ihat were sanltlzed wuh. soil line. The few fungicides labeled call the office for more information.
chl?nne bleach are subject to toxtch for these systems are not effective
(Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallla
ty 1f the trays .Were not nosed· fol- against pythium. In the absence of County's extenllion agent for agrilowmg treatment. ~lants InJUred by blue mold, common foliar diseases culture and natural resources,
bleach may appear hght green 10 col- include target spot brown spot and Ohio State University.)
or, wiih rolled leaf margins, and yel- angular leaf spot. '
'

Answers to pond management
offered at clinic slated Tuesday

va, auto,

air, AM/FM, CD, tilt,
cruise, WAS $18,950

::;s17 45-0
96 ~~ S.lO 1~1, v~,.AUJO,AIR, OLTJIUISt:Mf/fM:CASS;.,WAi $11~-~!:~.;.:.,. ; ..-.~~·..
!l~~~~.·~.~~·::"':":':~:·:~~.~~t1,850r"'
54650
90 OIM ASDO CONY VAN V6,.,o,ai, tit, cnist, AM/FM WAS $Sto0
.
18 OIM 1/2 TON.LWB Vl,•to, ilr, AM/FM cass WAS $ 6 9 0 0 - - - - - - - - - - - -·55250
517,450
98 GMC SONOMA Ext CU,4 WD, V6,nto,ai, AM/FM,"tlt, cnlse, WAS $19,900
512,600
98 GMCSONOMA Ext CaU WD, 3rUeor,4 CJI, 5sp, ai, AM/FM, tit, cnlst, WAS $13,995
91 GMC JlfJMY 4Dr,4 WD, V6,at!t, ai, tit, cnise, AM/FM, WAS $23,900
s21,850
97 OIM TAHOE 4Dr, 4WD, LT pkg, VI,GIIo, ai, AM/FM, CD, II* Ill, tit, cnlst, WAS $29,900
s27,800
'
98 OLDSMOIILE iRAVADA 4Dr, AWD, V6, ..... ai, Ill,. AM/FM CIIS, WAS $24,901
$22,500
59650
94 CHM 1/2 TON LWB VI, Gilt, ai, Ill, cnlst, AM/FM, WAS $11,995
59200
94 CHIVY 1/2 LWB 4x4, V6,111o, ai, WAS$10,900
93 CHM 1/2 TON Ext Cab, VI, nte, ai, tit, cnlst; AM/FM 011 WAS $11,995
SJ 0,600
I ClHt _t j t

~-

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a

Uncllt~Daii:m:te::w:ood~~t;o~ln~a:u~re:-;~-pll'~cent

~aya.

a.•

)

•
~~------------~--~--~~--~

.,

-

The shop will be open Tu•daya through
FrL&lt;fR••• from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., on Saturdays
from
a.m. until&amp; p.m., and Sundays from 14 p.m. Martin Nld that the atore will be open
by appointments at other timea. The store's
telephone number is 985-4396.

.

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..._._

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•

)OINT PLEASANT, WNa. - 'ing, and is. a chaner member~( the grazing ·program for the 16-county
The Peoples Banking and Trust Co. Ohio Society for Hospital Public South Dis,trict of the Ohio State
, Peoples Bank, a subsidiary of Peo- Relations. . ·.
Extension. He has total .Qf 29 ¥.ears
pies Bancorp Inc. has announced the
She and her husband, Bjlj C. . experience in e•tension and teaching,
new appointment of Marianne Bog- Campbell-, reside in Gallipolis.
primarily in Jackson and Gallia coungs Campbell, Jennifer L. Sheets and , Jennifer Sheets is an allort;if)' at ties. . ·
Ed Vollborn to its Community Lead- lawlpanner wiih the Liute, Sh1ts &amp;
Vollborn earned both his BSIMS
ership Board, a group of residents Warner law firm in Pomeroy. 2She · degrees in agricultural education
dedicated to promoting community graduated from Pomeroy High from Ohio "State University. He is a
relationships and economic develop- · School, Ohio State University wiih a panner in a family .farm near Rio
ment in Mason . Gallia and Meigs bachelor of science summa cum Grande, found~ by his grandfather
laude and a master 's degree in home in 1900.
counties.
Mrs. Campbell is the director of economics, with a 111ajor in nutriljon.
He is a director and past president
community relations at Holzer MedIn 1982, she graduated juris cloc- of tbe Gallipolis Rotary. He was
ical Center and executive vice presi- tor summa cum laude with 'the tirst awarded ihe "Person of ihe Year" for
dent ofihe Holzer Foundation forTti- class at Capital University Lllw Gallia County by SEORC in 1995. In
State Health Care in Gallipolis. She .School.
u
1996, he received the State Award of
is a graduate ofihe Pennsylvania ColMrs. Sheets is the legislative lii\i· Meritorious Support Service by,
lege for Women in Piusburgh, now son and immediate past president i&gt;f Epsilon Sigma Phi, a national hon·
Chatham College; with a bachelor of the Ohio State Board of Educatio'*'a ., orary e.tension fraternity. Vollbom
ans In economics, history and member of the Middlepon-Pomerfty and his wife, Sue, reside in Rio
speech.
.
Rotary Club, the Pl.easant Valley Grande.
Mrs. Campbell is a communica- Hospital Foundation Board, and trenThe local Community Leadership
tions and marketing specialist by pro- surer of the Meigs County Commu- Board was formed in 1998. Other
fession and was in broadcast man- nit~provement Corporation., Iii members include Gus R. Douglass,
agemenl. Stie was the first woman' chartetj:member of the Meigs Coun' Art'E. Hanley Jr., Dorset Keefer, Dr.
elected to the board .and then presi- ty Chamber of Commerce. the Meig~ James Lockhan, Paul E. Rollins. R.
dent of the Ohio Association of County Council on Aging Board of Michael Shaw, Ty Sommerville and
Broadcasters (OAB). Mrs. Campbell Trustees, the Meigs County Bar Jimmy Joe Wedge.
also was tbe first wo\nan member of Association, secretary/treasurer, ami
Peoples Bank is a subsidiary of
•
lhe National Associfltion of Broad: past president of the Meigs Count)' Peoples Bancorp Inc., a bank holding
casters Board.
Chapter of the OSU Alumni Associ• I company headquanered in Marietta,
I with over $870 million in assets. Pea, In 1972, Mrs. Campbell became ation.
associated with the Holzer Medical
She p~viously was an attor- '1 pies Bancorp operates 35 financial
Center where she continues her ney/partner with the. Poner, Little &amp; service locations in the states of Ohio.
career. 'she is active in the Ohio Hos• Sheets law' firm. She also was a.title I . West Virginia, and ,Kentucky.
'pita! Association, serving as legisla- examiner of th~ ·Columbus City · ,. . Pe?pl~s Bancorp's banking sub- By HAL KNEEN
acreage. If you trave l through Letan at the seed head stage and beyond. the
~ive tiaisorr for the ho9pital, anol is a Schools, as Arust-ln-The-Schools std1ane~ t~cl~~ People~ Ba~k ~nh
POMEROY _ .Is your pond and Lebanon townships, you will . nutntional value declines.
'" 1 rnembec· of~ the, 0HA.' GoVemmont ' Program, &lt;and a- background ·_tn Aill .pffitDS.1n101iu\ ~d We~VIfguu· D-st~'with.~mal!'.ftsh).but no.~'kellp-:.~r nnli~tht:.1liCri!&gt;l!lfJ'Il'fi~l bpiJ,\g1fejl.d·{ · ,(, El!•~rn:;, ObW.Stat~~u n,ve&gt;si""'~ I 1
.. Relatton&amp;anoAdvocae.y.Committee. and the Oh1o Extension Serv1ce.
'The Flfsl NatiOnal Bank ?-' South- ers"''Are you. having difficult)! con- ied and planted for tomatoes. melons, ty ExtensiOn grazmg coordmator.
:She is involved in· both. stat~· ,.and
Sho and• her _husband, James R.' .. eastern Ohto wnh three Ohtooflice•; trolling filamentous algae growing peppers and sweet com.
.
_continues to point_ ~p the advantage~
:national
or~amzattons 10 the Sheets, restde m Pomeroy.
and Peoples Bank FSB, with four from the bottom of your pond? Have
Note the multitude of black plas- of rotatiOnal grazmg and integrated·
relauons and marketEd Vollborn ts a lead_e:r_fo_r-th_e,;_K-.en..t-uc_ki'y,..oO::f~fic"'lel!l's'!!!l.lllll"~~-""":::rt you ever considered building a pond, tic (tomatoes)'and clear plast•c (sweet forage management for breeder am ·area of
'but didn't know where to stan? Are corn) that has been laid down for mals and stockers. Throughout the
animals digging into the dam area? even earlier production. Plastic mulch summer, opportunities will be avail These questions and many ·others and trickle irrigation are expensive able for you to learn more about the
will be discussed and answered on up-front costs to · vegetable produc- grazmg . .
Thesday beginning at 6:30p.m. at ihe tion; however, they reduce the risk
Are you interested in helping to
Meigs County Pond Clinic being held when dry summer weather arrives
develop
a farmland preservation plan
at Hickor;y Lake on State Route 7. and reduces the weed herbicides
Thppers Plains. This program is the needing to be llJlplied.
for Meigs County? A task force is
combined effon of tbe Meigs Soil &amp;
Trickle irrigation also allows for bemg formed to develop plan to
Wltter Conservation District, the Ohio 'better nutrient distribution as fertii- · identify what soil resources we have
Depanment of Natural Resources izers can. flow through ihe irrigation and to what use they can best be uti and Ohio State University Extension. wat~r. Nutrients are placed right neKI li zed. The task force will be looking
Meigs County.
to the plants instead of being applied at current and future agricultural
All Big Bend Area citizens are to weeds between rows and being activities. What economic developinvited to attend thi s' free program to · carried below the root zone of the ment can occur that would enhance
improve their knowledge of pond vegetable plants.
the ~fforts of the agricultural comecosystems ..This program will go on
Are you looki ng for fresh home- munity' The completed plan will be
whether rain or shine, as cover is grown cabbage for ·cole slaw? Cab· presented to the commissioners and
available. Bring along folding chairs. bage plants have been planted sever- to our fellow Meigs countians before
Registration will begin at 6 p.m. al weeks and some are dinner plate · year end. The monies for this plan
Hickory Lake is located on !he norlh size in diameter. We should have cab- have been obtained l)y Jean Trussell
'
side of State Route 7, one-half mile b_age around Memorial Day or early
south of the intersection of state June.
' tlirough aS IO,OOOCommunity Block
READY FOR BUSINESSUVA
The lhop alto
Grant. Come join us Monday at 7:30
routes681 and 7. Come join the fun!
of 1\.tpPirl Plaine, above, recently opened New carrlll hlncklafted candln, and 8ei!UtY Conp.m. in the basement of the Meigs
Ohio field crop farmers are plant- County Annex. East Memorial Drive,
tdlon Tanning Salon on sn Route 7 and tro1 coemttlca, and plane art being macte In the
Local vegetable farmers are ing com and beginning to plant soyu.s. 50 In Little Hoc:klng. The Hlon 11 the third near future to add WhoiiHle gold ~lry. The
Pomeroy.
weighing
the chances of future frost beans up north. Local farmers need to
lnthelllteiooffedheSuneporthlghprneure ehop Ia open from 'I a.m.-11 p.m., Monclly
(Hal Kileen I• Meigs County's
possibilities against their ability to keep an eye out for the maturity of extension
tanning~. which Damewood liiiP Ia the 'natthrough Saturday. Appointment&amp; c_a n be
agent tor agriculture
plant in !letter field conditions. Sev- the hay crop. Generally, hay needs to and natural resources, Ohio State
urel, flater, eaaler way to achieve a greet tan echeduled by callln, 989-0234. Damewood h11
eral hundred acres of sweet corn arc be cut at bud or early Oower stage for · Unl verslty.)
that lalla longer.' The metho(l '-IUree 21 high 'tteen the ownll' 9 Llndl'l Hair Loft for 12
planted a.nd some small tomato best nutritional value. As hay matures
prneure qllllr1Z lampe with 1 filtering eyatem YNII.
.

a

1998 FORD RANGER XLT

iiir,\iil: OPIENS - Mike Martin Is
pictured outelde Redcoat Antiques, a new
antique and gift ahop on State Route 7 near
Cheater. In addition to antlquea, Redcoat
Antiques will offer Amlah-mllde lawn fumlture
and o\her ltema, glftwara and Mlected croftl,
and will provlcki furniture repair and refinish•

Troubleshooting problems
in greenhouse, float units

1999 GMC SONOMA
HIGHRIDER .

NICE OF YOU TO DROP BY:
- Writer-comedian Fannie Flagg is reunited with ;,Candid aimera"
after two decades. CBS, 8:30 p.m. Friday, April 30:
'
- Monty Hall plays himself on "Sabrina,Xhe Teenage Witch": ABC, 9 .
p.m. Friday, April 30.
- "Touched by an Angel" features civil rights legend Rosa Parks on the .
Sunday, May 2, episode and Muhammad Ali on May 9. CBS1 8 p;tn.
- Kathy Bates ·plays an alien hunter on "3rd Rock From the Sun" on
NBC, 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 4, while William Shatner is the Big Giant
ijead on the 8 p.m. Tuesday, May 25 hourlong episode. ·
. - Julia Roberts pays a visitto "Law &amp; Order" where boyfriend Benjamin Bratt works as police Detective Rey Cunis. NBC, 10 p.m. Wednesday,
·May 5.
.
, - "The Simpsons" features the voice of -physicist Stephen Hawking on
Sunday, May 9, and George Takei of "Star Trek" fame. Fox, 8 p.m: !Iunday,
·May 16.
- Paula Abdul visits "The Wayan Bros." on Thursday, May 6, followed
by boxer Roy Jones Jr. -on Thursday, May 20. The WB sitcom airs at 8 p.m.
- The rock band Barenaked Ladies sings jqb-hunting advice on ABC's
·"Two Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place" on the 8:30p.m. Wednesday, May 19,
.episode.
·

• Heat and sunlight also zap the
Oavor an~ color from your dried treasures, so be sure to keep them in a
cool,, dark cupboard or pantry.
• If your herbs begin to smell or
~en :
· look moldy, throw them out.
• For the best flavors, it is best to
Plants, taste &amp; tea
harvest your herbs in the morning •
herbal proaram
after the dew has dried an£! before tbe
To learn more about growing and
sun has warmed the plants.
' -~njoying herbs attend the Plants
• To dry. spread herbs on screens 'Taste &amp; Tea program at the French
or cheesecloth, or gather bundles of . Art Colony in Gallipolis on Saturday,
herbs and suspend from the ceiling in May 1.
The activities will take place
a warm, dark, well-ventilated.room.
Your herbs could mildew if the room ' between l 0 a.m. and 4 p.m. and are
is too cool or moist.
.
. free to the public. The Gallia Area
• Store your dried herbs in airtight ; Herb Gl!ild, the group that maintains
containers. Glass, ceramic or dark the ~dueational . herb garden at the
containers are best for keeping Oa- 1 French An Colony, is sponsori ng the
vors. Cardboard.or paper containers event, and will be'offetirig tasty treats
will absorb ihe essential oils that give and craft items made from herbs for
herbs their great Oavors and scents . .' sale to benefit the educational herb
• Check your herbs after three:, garden.
days .for signs of moisture. Jf there is
, (Rebecca Collins·Is Gallla.Counmoisture in the container or the · ty s extension agent for family and
leaves took damp, remove the herb$ consumer sciences, Ohio Stale
and dry again.
. University.)

·~

ULII;)

Su...,., April 25, 111811

that shelf life, advise honiculturists at
the Ohio State University said.
Following these basic guidet'ines
should help you ensure great tasting
and safe herbs from your home gar,

Nowsl

!.••

D

of home-grown ~erbs

air, cass, bench seat, Fire Red. V6, 5 sp, air, Anorm
IMSI~P$14,155
lwh~eells. cass MSRP $18,338

- "Dean Koontz's Mr. Murder": Stephen Baldwin, Thomas Haden
Church and James Coburn staf'in Koontz's tale of a mystery .writer stalked
by a ruthle'"l stranger. ABC, 9-11' p.m. Monday, April 26, and Thursday,
April 29.
-"Noah's Ark": Academy Award-winners all, Jon Voight is the faithful
ark builder, Mary Steenburgen plays his wife and F. Murray Abraham is Lot.
NBC, 9 p.m. Sunday and Monday, May 2-3.
- "Down Will Come Baby": A troubled family in the aftermath of a
fatal accident. Meredith Baxter and Diana Scarwid star. CBS, 9 p.m. Tuesday, May 4.
.
. .
·-"The Simple Life of Noah Dearborn": Sidney Poitier plays a carpenter who has managed to remain uncorrupted by modern life. Dianne Wiesl
and Mary-Louise Parker co-star. CBS movie, 9 p.m. Sunday, May 9.
- "l'he Hunt for the Unicorn Killer": Kevin Anderson ("JIIothing
Sacred") stars in the true story of social activist Ira Einhorn, wanted for his
girlfriend 's murder. NBC, 9-11 p.m. Sunday and Monday, May 9 and 10.
-"Our Guys": Ally Sheedy, Eric Stoltz and Heather Matarazzo in f:lm
based on Bernard Lefkowitz's nonfiction book about the sexual assault of a
mentally deficient girl by a town 's most popular boys. ABC, 9 p.m. Monday,
May 10.
.
-"Survivor": qreg Evigan is foreman of an oil rig crew that drills up
an alien in the Arctic: UPN movie, 8 p.m. Thursday, May 13.
-"Double Platinum" : Diana Ross .and Brandy as pop star and abandoned daug~ter, with Harvey Fiersiein ("Torch Song Triology"), Brian
Stoke Mitchell ("Ragtime") and Roger Rees. ABC, 9 p.m. Sunday, May 16.
. - "Atomic Tlain": A train loaded with nuclear weapons and waste
speeds out of control toward Denver. Rob Lowe, Esai Morales and Kristin
Davis star. NBC, 9 p.m. Sunday and Monday, May 16-17.
- "Joan of Arc": French teen-ager's life gets the all-startreatment with
Jacqueline Bisset, Peter O'Toole and Shirley MacLaine. Leelee ·Sobieski
plays Joan. CBS, 9 p.m. Sunday, May 16, and Tuesday, May 18.
. -"Half a Dozen Babies": Husband-and-wife soap opera stars Melissa
and Scott 'Reeves play Keith and Becki Dilley, parents of America's first surviving sextuplets. Teri Garr and Judith Ivey co-star. ABC, 8 p.m .. Monday, ·
May 17.
- "Life in a Day" : Michael Goorjian ("Party of Five") plays a scientist
whose rogue experiment creates an anificial life. UPN, 8 p.m. Thursday,
· May 20.
- Angela Lansbury is "The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax": a widow who
finds herself on a mission for the CIA in the CBS movie airing 9 p.m. Thurs.
.
·
d'ay, May, 20.
- "The Jesse Ventura Story": Former wrestler Nils Allen·Stewan plays
the wrestler who became governor of Minnesota this year. NBC, 9 p.m. Sunday, May 23,
- "Dr.. Quinn, M~dicine Woman": lane Seymour and Joe Lando reunite ·
· · in a movie based on the canceled series. CBS, 8 p.m. Saturday, May 22.
- " Michael Landon, The Father I Knew": Based on Landon's account
of his TV star dad. CBS, 9 p:m. Sunday, May 23.
- "Cleopatra": Leonor Varela, Billy Zane and Timothy Dalton star in a
Hallmark Entenainment miniseries based on Margaret George's novel, "The
Memoirs of Cleopatra." ABC, 9 p.rit. Sunday and Monday, May 23-24.

Section

Shelf lif-e impact.s taste

LOW PRICES - STRAIGHT FORWARD DEALING - CONvENIENT FINANCING
GREAT SELECTION .• WID; WAIT~. NOW IS THE .TIMEI!

MINISERIES AND MOVIES:

•

�•

••

0 •

Sund._ April 25, 1999
Page 02 •

-'!mbv ~tmo-.-~

Pomeroy • Middlep~rt • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Your Money:

Public Notice

Spouse can get.
funds tax~free
By BRUCE WILLIAMS .
Newspaper Enterprise As soc iatlon
DEAR BRUCE: I am retired, and have stock in my
name alone . I understand that when I die, my wife will
inherit the stoc k with no capiial gains tax to be paid . If Ihe
stock is worth as much as $800,000 , and most of it is gain,
is there any quest ion about federal inheritance tax? - J.N.,
Collegeville, Pa.
·
•, DEAR J.N.: You may leave unlimited amounts of n1on.
~ to a spouse with no tax . However, the lax bite will be
scgnificantly greater when the seco nd to die passes away.
II there are no children or anyone ebe you are concerned
""out prov iding for, then by all means pasj the total to the
"1v
surviving spouse - Uncle Sam will get his upon the secood person"s death . If you are co nce rned about other par· ties ...C children . nephews, nieces, grandchildren , etc. ~u should immediately contact an estate planner, who can
noake the transfer of wealth as painless as possible.
: DEAR BRUCE: I was approached my attorney, who no
l!;&gt;nger practices law. He now sells a plan for prepaid legal
""penses. Have you heard of this 7 If so, what do you know
~out it'1 Please give me your op1nion . - D.C., Ventura,

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Tho E11tarn Local
Boord ol Educetlon will
occept blda lor tho
conttructlon of two
metal/ polo
ttru ctu rt
bulldlnge located et 38900
SR 7, Re•davlllo, Ohio.
Bide will be oponod In tho
Office ol tho Tro11uror ol
tho Eastern Locol School
District Monday, May 3,
1999 at 12:90 p.m.
·.

Buildings are as follows:
1 . 40 loot by 80 loot
molal/polo structure to be
used u a multi -purpose
storage/recreational
building.
2. 40 loot by 56 foot
metal/polo structure to be
used as 1 malntenancelbul
garage.
Both buildings will hevo
concreto slabs, plumbing
and electrical work.
·Building shell Is to be by
"Golden Giant. "
HVAC
contract will .be awarded
separately on the same day.
Specifications lor building
· systel!l are available at tho
administrative olflcea ·
, located at 50008 SR 661,
Calif.
·
• DEAR D.C.: It has long been my conte ntion that pre- Reedsville, Ohio.
,}ay1ng legal expenses is an idea whose time is overdue.
!Silany people in our nation do not seek the se rvice of an
Each bid shall be
attorney because they arc either intimidated or afraid that accompanied by 8 bid bond
ii will cost th em a grem.o f mone y. Prepa id legal genera l- In an amount equal to the ·
ly run s approximately $25 a month and provides ma ny ben - total sum ol the proposal
· t;..fils,-including consultations', defense in the case o f ·~ ut o~ supported by a PoWer of
mobile violati ons, and so forrh: The most m1portant thing Attorney, lor the bonding
agent. and a certlllcatelrom
J! does is open the legal door to the average person. Unhap- the
Dapartme nt
ol
~ily, I hclieve il is sti ll an uph ill battle for !he cOttlpan ies Insurance. Bids are to be
marketing these prOducts - but lthin R prepaid legal ser- sealed and add.,ssed to
vices are a very viable acquis it ion for middle class folks. Lisa M. Ritchie, Treasurer,
Eas·t ern Local School
1\iho don 't have~ regular attorney on their list and perhaps District. 5ooo8 SR 681 ,
need legal advice infreque ntly. .
Reedsville, Ohio 45772 and
: DEAR BRUCE: I need help making a decision. Should plainly marked on the
!:convert my tax -deferred annuiries to Roth IRA s" 1 am outside "Bids lor Buildings"
and "Bids lor HVAC",
~8 years old. and work part time. Qur financial adviser Succ.esslul bidder will be
thinks I should converl. l ha ve approximately $300,000. required to acquire a
It I convert to the Roth, it will cost me atle·ast $4,000 a pertormance
bfnd
Y,ear for four years in additional taxes. I dread giving the acceptable to owner.
:the board reserves the
government thi s much extra money. My stockbroker says right to rejec.t all bids or any ·
·
.
portion or a. bid.
For
opt to do' it . ...,.- J.P., Cannichael, Calif. · ·
, DEAR J.P. : One variable you didn't address is whether additional 'Information,
•
. please contact Deryl E.
oc not you need this money. The reason I use the word Well, superintendant, at
".need " is that if thi s is money you intend to pass along to (740) 66Hi079.
t~e next generation, there would be some merit in putting Lisa M. RUehle, Treasurer
. i!jnto the Roth. To get it out of th¢ traditional investment, (4) 11, 18, 25. 3TC
tile ta~es must be paid. If it were switched over to a Roth,
tl)ere is no mandatory withdraw·al -- it can go on as an asset
passed directly to your heirs, and monies it earns from this
Public Notice .
pOint forward would be tax -free . Very ~eldom does il pay
conven to an IRA or other pension plans this late in life,
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propoaale will be
b).lt whether or not you want to pass the mone y on is a facreceived by Rio Grande
mr you should certainiy take into consideratiOn . .'"\ .
Community College, Room
. Interested in buying or selling a house" Let aruce 206 Allan Hall, 21• · N.
Williams' " House Smart" be your guide. Price : $14.95, College
Avenue,
Rio
Grande, Ohio 45674 until
p'us shipping and handling . Call : (800) 994-6733.
Friday. May 7, 1999 at 2:00
. (Send your questions to: Sma11 Mon&lt;)\ 1'.0. Box 503,
p.m., then they will be
Elfers, FL 34680. E-mail to: bethli!gt.,.net. Question.f of opened and read at Room C
g'rneral imerest will be answered in future co/unms. Owing ol the Student Center
·Annex on · Ridge Avan1.1a,
t~ the' volume of mail, personal replieJ cwmoi be provid·
promptly thereafter. The
General Contractor ahall be
roaponalble lor coordlnat-

to

ed.)

Public Notice
lng the projecl, echadullng,
end providing other lor·
vlceo epoc:Hiad In the controct documantt.
Title: Rebid ol Bob Evene
Ferm Hell
Emoroon E. Evene Collogo
ol Buolneeo ·
Owner: Unlvoralty of Rio
Grondo
Rio Grende Community
College
City, County: Rio Grenda,
Ohio
Gallla County
In eccordance with tho
Drewlna•
end
Spoclllcetlclno prepared by
Burgee &amp; Nlpla, Limited,
5085
Rood
Roed,
Columbue, Ohio 43220
(614) 45&amp;-2050. Sealed bids
wtll be racelvod for the lotlowing tradoe:
· Controct, Eetimate of Com
· 1. Gonerel Controcl·
Eetlmoto ol Coot, BIN Bid .
$2.800,000

2. Plumbing Contrect·
Eotlmata of Coot, BIN Bid
$220,000

3. . HVAC
Contrect·
Eetlmata ql Coat, Baao Bid
$792,000

4. Electrical ContractEetlmate ol Coat, Beao Bid
$535,000

And any combination Indicated on the Bid Form.
The scheduled date of
completion ol tho proleclle
Octobor 15, 2000 applicable
to all Blddero.'
Bidding documenta may
ba obtained by Prime
Contractors, from BurgeN
&amp; Nlplo, Umltld, 5065 Rlld
Road; Columbue, Ohio
43220, telephone 814-tS&amp;2050 by placing a nonrelundable depoalt of
$150.00 per 111 payeblo to
.Burgan &amp; . Nlplo, UmHad.
No mora then thrH 1111 will
ba provided to a bidder.
One copy ol all addonde,
Including rebid lntormetlon,
will ba provided to all piln'
holder• at no additional
COlt. The bidding dOCU•
mente may be ravlawad
without charge during bull·
noaa hour'a at the following
locatlona:
Unlverelty ol Rio Grande,
Rio Grande Community
Colloge
Room 206 Allan Hall
218 N. Collage Avenue
Rio Grenda, Ohio
Bulldore ,
Columbua
Eochango
Columbus, Ohio
F.W. Dodge
Colu111bua, Ohio
Allied
Construction
lnduatrlea
1010 Yale Avenue
Cincinnati, Ohio
Burgeaa &amp; Nlpla, Uinltod
5085 Rood Road
Columbue, OH
F.W. Dodge
Dayton, Ohio
F.W. Dodge
Charl11ton, Wast VIrgin~!~
Subcontractore and material ouppllere may acquire,
for their convenience,

Sunday, Aprll25, 1999

Public Notice

Public Notte.

Drewlnga
end
Spoclllcatlono by paytng lor
tho coot ol reproduction
end hendllng, tho Nmo

following
, Item:
Bruthbuotor lido rolery
mower with ettecheblo
dltcher. Number aB-10-15,
811-1018.
Tho · m-·dltchor may
bf ao,on anytime 11 tho
Springfield Townhouoo on
Evorgr11n Road.
Bide will be publicly
opened et 7 PM on Juno 2,
1- m the roguler Tru.tH
M-ng.
The Springfield Twp.
TNIIHI ........,. tho right to
reject any or 811 !llde. ·
lido may be 11nlmarl&lt;od
Mowor-ottchor on outlldl ot
envelope to:
Sprlnglleld 1Wp. TrullHarmen Sprague, Clerk
1474 Kerr Rd.
BidWell, OH 45614
April 25; 28, 1999
' Mey2,1-

non-mundablo depoelt ••

Primo Conlrletoro.
All qu..ttone regerdlng
tho
Drewlng
and
Spoclllcotlone ohould bt
addroelld to tho Alooclato,
Jim
Butz,
attontlon:
Archltoct (614) 451-1385.
Each bid mutt be eccompenlod by 1 · Bid Gueronty
mooting the roqulromontt
ol Section 153.54 ol tht
Ohio Rovlood Code. Bid
Guaronty and Controct
Bond laouod mull tho
requtromontt ol Article 2 ol
tha lnottuctlon to Blddoro.
Bldo ohall be 111lad and
addrotlld to: Rio Grondt
CommunitY Collogo, Room
206 Allen Hall, 218 fl.
College
Avonu·o, · · Rio
Grondo, Ohio 45674.
Prevailing Wogt Rot11
end Equel Employment
Opportunity Requlremonto
ere eppllcablo to lhl.l bid
Invitation par State ol Ohio
requlromontt.
·
No bidder moy withdraw
hit bid within elxty (60)
doye alter tho ectuel dolo ol
tho opening thorool. Tho
OWnor ro11rveo tho right to
waive any lnlormalltiN or
to rojoct eny or oil bldl.
April 25, 1999
Moy 2,1999
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
. STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
.TRANSPORTATION .
Columbue, Ohio
Ofltce of Contracte .
Logal Copy Number:
11811343
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Melling Olio: 04112/1999
TE21-G980 (3110)

70

Tho Bolrd of TNIIIOI ol
Springfield l'lvp. will receive
sealed bldt until 5 PM on
Juno 2, 1999 lor tho

90

Wanted to Buy

80 Lo1t and Found
lost: Cat, Black Female, Spayed,
Approx. 2 Years Old, Was Wear·
lng Red Collar, P~rpla Name Tag
"Velvet• East Bethel Churcn 1
White Road Area, 740-448-9185. '

Help Wanted

1lro!wth
OtvorWtlon Torrttoryllnotlng
MoNgar For loe.l ArNIII

• VIcinity
Antiques, top prk:es paid, RiverIne
Antiques , Pom11oy, OhiO,
4 Fomltloo: FriGay April 3011\, Sal·
urday May 111. 9-? Butavllll Run Moore owner, 740· &amp;92·

. Guara- 8alary

S2UOO To Sllrt. .

Towtlhouae, Corner Johnson
Ridge &amp; 4ddlson Plkt, House·

2531.

hold, Llnena, Clothea, Children

prices for tlmbertand re~ to cut
now or ready to cutin ~9 to 1~
yeara or timberland cut r,cenlty.

.

For more lnlormalloo call tolllrot,
without obligation: 800·3&lt;!6·8325,

' c.r.r

EYOryOnll

ALLYl"' SliM IIUot
a. Pilei In Advlnco.
Qf&amp;DL!Nf: 2:Gq p.m.
tho cloy - t h o ...
lo to run. Sundoy
odlllon . 2:00 p.m.

Frldoy. Mondly Odl1lon
• tO:OO o.m. 8aturdoy.
April 30th .' May lat. 2nd , 9~? At
152" Stale AO&lt;Jta 7 South. ClothIng, All Sizes: Videos, Books,
lloms, Too Many To Llotl

Commlsllon And Bonatll
F'topnAYalable.

Buying Tlrnbarlondt: We pay ,lo!&gt;'

Aratv..r Fottnllal or

m.ooo .$40.ooo

-lndlvlduol.

-Salt·~
~ .. Hel!&gt;llA.

1111. 366 or tJCt. 205 or wrlle to:

Degrao APU, 2 'loonJ Mtrmlm.

Box •eo, SummersviUt, wV
2665t
Clean late Model c;ars Or

"'-'ad Tomtory And
Elt8blahodAcc6unll
.w..... Do Excoadlngly W.l
. AI Thlo Opportunity.
Cai1Forl'lr1onal
And Co-.... I 1--1-1
Vlait Our Web Site 41
www.magnollograptoc.com

Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac. 1.900 East·

ern Avenue, Gaii!Jx'ls.

Want To Sell Your StUm Call Rlv·
erslae Auction And Let Us Se" It

For You, 740-256-6989.
Wanted To Buy: Used Mobile
Homes 1 Call 7-'0·U6-0175,0r
304·675-5965.
'

110

Are You Energe'tlc, Motivated ,
4nd Caring? Sconk: Hille Nuralng
Center Ia Looking For Individuals
Who Art Currently State Tested
Nursing Aaalstanta To Work In
Our ComP&lt;-slvl Care Fecllhy.
Piaase 4pply In Person To 311
Buckrldga Road, Bldwoll. OH
oGet4. .
i..re You Energetic, Moflvated,
And Car~•t Sclnk: Hilla Nursing
Center Ia ooldng For lndlvlduala
Who Art currently Stall TootOCI
Nursing Allilllnll To Work In
Our Comp!ehenoiYe Care FICIIIIy.
Pltaot 4pply In Peroon To 311
Buckrldge Road, Bidwell, OH
056 ...

4VONI All Aroaal To Buy oi Sell,
Shirley;Spaera, 304·675-t 429.'
Bates Bros. AmuMment ·co. Frn
, to traVel. Must be 18yrs. or olclar.
Call 700-268-2950 M·F, 8:00•:30.
Computer Uiera Needed. Work
OWn Hra. $2~K ·$80KI Yr. 1·100.
476-8653 X7777, www.1
DRIVING POtiiTlONII
AV41LAIILE:

""'com

Full·Time Finance Asatatant 11 1
I ~IS - A ·Community Manllt
Health Agency Serving ,A Three
County 4reo lo Stoking Candldalta Fo r The Position Of
Flnenoe Aallltanl n /MIS. Dullllltd Appllcantt Must Have A
Bechalo(o DtgrH In Accounting
Or Relatod Fla)d: 4 Minimum 01
Two Ylara Exporltnct Wllh Cornputertzect Accounts Payable And
Caah OllburHmenta Processing;
And Meet Agency'a Fleet Inouranco Carrier Prlvlng, Requiremtnts . Skills And Abllltlta That
All P -: K~ 01 HUD
·And H4P Regulallona Proferrtd;
Governmental Aocountlng, Eapeclatly Mon111 Hoenh 4genclea
With CMHC Soltworo, Medlceld
And Other Third Party Payees
And Prior Exf)trlonco With Lotus
1. 2, 3 WorttPorlect 5.1, 8.0 And
Expartence Willi! Grant Funding
Sources Ia AiiO Preremtd. SandResumes To ; Sherry Gordon,
t.iangaar Of Human Reaoufces.
Woodland Centers, 3088 State
Route 180, Galkopllo, OhiO •5631
EOEIM Employor.

General Office !Sates. Ewperienced Preferred. Full·Time, lrnmodlote Opening. Apply: Lifestyle
Furnllura, 8ile Tltlrd AYanuo, Ga~
llpol(tl. 10.2, No l'honi Colli.

.

MAINTENANCE
HEAVY
EQUIPMENT • Sonda Hill Coal
C9mpany II Sooklng ElJf)tl'fenced
Heavy Equipment Maintenance
Worker. NHdl To Have Sl:rvlce
Tr1.1ck And Tools. Experience In
Welding, Elootrlcal Troobloshool·
lng 4nd 41r Co~dltloner Servlco.
Mallo AppliCations 41 31701 s .R.
160, Hamdln, OhiO, Monday Thfu
Friday. 8 4.M. To· 4:30P.M;; Or
Call 740·384·421 I To Have Ap·
plication Mailed To You. EEOC
E~. .
.

Malntanance Worl!;er: . Appllc~
anta Must Have A Minimum Ot "J.
High School Diploma Or Equivalent Experience And Technical
K110wlodge Of Maintenance, Eil&lt;l'
trlcal ,. Plumbing And Carpentrt
RIVERSIDE AUCTION BAR~
Preferred. Must Furnish Toolt·
EverY Sltu.rday Night 7 P.M., Neceuarv . For General Main-- '
crown City, 740.~989
temmce Outlea. A Valid Drlv.r's
License
And Reliable Trahsporid~
Wedemeyer's AuCtion Ser.vlce, tk&gt;n AMust
•
·
'
Gallioalls. Ohko 74().{379·2720.
Applicants For This Position May.
Submit
Raeume To .Jeannie ·
.9ll, Wanted to Buy . Williams,AHuman
Resource Ma~­
Complete Hou&amp;ehOid Or Estates! ager, Access To Human Re· ·
Arrt Type 01 FUrniture, Applianc- source Development, P.O. Box
. .
es. Anttqua'a, Etc. Also Appraisal 3t 8, GallfPotla, OH 45e3t
4vaNablel740-379·2720..
The Deadline For Accepting ApAbsolute Top Dollar: All u.s. Sil- plications 11 Monday, May 10 ..
ver 4nd Gold Cqlns, Proofsets, 1999 ~ : oo ·P. M . For Additional In-,
·oramonds, Antique Jewelry, Gold lormalloo Caii74D-441·3010, 8:00 •
Rings, Pre-1930-U.S. Curren.cy, ·5:00 P.~ . Monday Thru Friday. •
SlerHng, Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry Acceu To Human Resource De- ;
-'M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second veJoP:tnent II An AA/EEO Em- .
player.
"
Avenue . Gallipolis. 740-446·2842.

•

Both Poa111ono:

Need 1

Now accepting applications for

"CompetitM Hclur1y Wages

~,,

-

.N

0

S599FLI7-H/B

•

T H I N G

N

s

L

I K E

•~

lr

•Manufacturer's suggested price. Texes,,rrelghl. setup. and delivery not Included. Oller ends July 5, 1999.

0

'

.

I

l

..
ur'DfJrw
..~ 'llul

ram

to everyon·e
helped celebrate my birthday.
The cards and gifts were
greatly appreciated. You truly
made my 84th birthday

1

Home Health/HOiplce • Include:ss ~~~~~:~1
In both Home Health and 11

Are you concerned that your
home IT)ay have termites?

ca11

EXTERMITAL

for a FREE inspection.

740-446-2801 '
SEirving Gallia County
'--""'"""''·over 40 years.

For Sale
The Jumbo

Now Selling Rough
Sawed Lumber

·st. At. 141

446-3500
$125,000

740-992-441 0
Long &amp; Short Term

Care Available

VFW Post
4464
No Meal
4/27/99

We ott.rr-.

-~

•

.ilm

.O ver b roo k
center'
333 Page Street,

M" ddl
t
1
epor '
has full time

·
positions for
RN Vent Nurses
.available for a

·
Anyone interest!ld
please stop by

fill out an
application.

and

STOP The
Introducing the strongest pain
relief magnets available .
Backed by research and
clinical testing. Developed by
medical doctocs to aid..
~.l: in pain managem8nt. : · ' '
100% Guaranteed

HamSunday, May 2
Southern High School
11 :00·2:00
$4.75 ~dults
$3.50 Children
Menu: Ham or Tur)(ey,
Homemade Noodles. Green
Beans.Dessert,Mashed
Potatoes, Cole Slaw, Rolls , Drink

with return of premium rider
If you .don't use your policy, .
you will receive back 80% of
your premium every 1 0 years.
15% discount for husband and
wife policies with the same
daily benefit.
Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch Agency
336 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-8235

Karen Jarrell is back
and ready to do .
new clients and
former clients.
May Specials are
Perms $30,
· Facial $20 and
Unlimited Tanning
for $30 at

LISSA'S RIVER
VIEW
.Serenity House
serves·victims of domestic
violence
' call 446-6752 or
1-800~942-9577

Turkey Season Begins
April26
Check Your Bird With

B.,..,..,.

Vine St. at Third Ave.

Gallipolis
(740) 446-1276 .
Mon-Fri 7:00 to 6:30

4~H and,rFA Glub

Lambs .For Sale ·

• 446-0226
11247 St. Rt. 7 South
Friday 4/30, Saturday 5/1
9-?
Clothing. toys, household items,
glassware, Avon collectibles
&amp; much more .

·, _lite -'!In lhlm lite
ltiWIJ at 1 olllfMOA

•

I

Us!

O'DELL LUMBER
COMPANY

•

•

lJ

d
shifts an
weekends.

.For More Information
446·2342 or 992·2156

,_,r

Llfl I

Htlp Wanted · ·

•

41: Srt&lt;lpdrepru Ia _,.,. cOlor
-Really R.d Dl4uadou.
1-ll,....rrarot .s-41 Aly••- 41: ~ s....,.
-C..OI Seaaon
Planlo.
-F.Wrully Profeoolarud adttke Oli Cofl &amp; Cuh..,..
for aU llle planlo ..,.
_p..,~a,

v.,..

110

Mizway Tavern
Euchre Tournament
Final
Tuesday April 27th .

ft.-

.'

Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems with
your driving record; DUI's
speeding tickets, etc.
Same Day SR-22's issued .
call for a quote.
.Brown Insurance Agency .
446-1960

ANGEL FOREST
. ·PRODUCTS

Syracuse, OH

·.· ;:;,-;;;r;
...ah••
ijiollii. . . . . . .

House .
Situated on 3 Acres.
Large Rooms. 3 Bay Garage .
Close to School &amp;
Buckeye Rural-$69,000.00

FREE
Termite ·Inspection

Vftrobic5

~

Fri

THE RIGHT PAW
TRAINING CENTER

2212 Seventh Street

tiJ ·

May thru.Sept.'
446-2206 Mon thru

Yard Sale:

Dog Obedisnce Classas
Now Forming

· Self . ·~·fit)
.. """" "''
'Defense j

~m1

•
•
.J.

•

·Insurance

.-

degree In Nursing Is
Bachelors Is preferred. One year of experience
an acute care setting required. home care eXJ&gt;e·l
rlence preferred.
·
·
;.

30 Announcementa

'

Buslne. .

Opportunity

Nursing Home

NURSING
POSlTIONS

Adena Regtonal Medical Center. a 238
acute care facility, Is currently lleeklng the
lowing nursing positions: .
.
Maternity ~cee - Part ttmtee,:~~~~~~
available. , One year hospital e
required.
·
MecUC81/Suratcal Deputmente- lnc:lude~sl
full ·time and part time positions available
various Med/Surg areas throughout
Hospital. New grads are welcome to apply.
&amp;uraery - Full tlme. day shift. One year
surgtcal experience preferred.
Jtmeqeaey Semces - Includes a Full
evening shift position consisting of 2 8"s
12's; an 80% position consisting of four. 8 nn''""
shifts, day end evening rotations; I 60% w•"·ll
tion conststfng of three .8 hour night shifts;
a ·casual position. We require one year of emte?:#-gency services I triage experience of 5+ years
Med-Surg experience.

.'

••

RESPIRATORY CAllE

740-388-9515
388-8030

BTAFF NURSB8

.•

-.

Interior &amp; Exterior Painting , El·
perlenced, Referen~ea, Reason·
able Ratoa For Free Eallmate,
740-386-104t .
J&amp;S Wll Do Pressure Washing &amp;

North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6, fully furnished,
near restaurant row.
Openings from

License &amp; Bonded

DADENA.
lfJ/ Heallb System . .

Tc,.......

,

FlrJANC..lAL

IIIOTlCEI
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
hllol your loge to the mill just can recommends tl'\at you do busl..
304-e75-t957.
ntll wltl'l people you know, erw{
Have 1 Opening For 24 Hour In NOT to Hnd money through ~
Homo Cart Of Elderly Or Handi· mall until you have lnvesllgated
the olferlng.
capped, 740-40H536.
ABSOLUTELY NO SELUNOI
Interior &amp;. exterior painUog, lawn
$t05KPolenliai.Jut1
service, haul trash, junk, demo.AesiOCI&lt;Ilisplayl, $11.950
tion, haull, barn, shed, 591·7617.
Jnvoa...,. For """"*"Y &amp;
- .. t-e8e •ea e57•

20 Yrs. Exp.

'5'

O'Bleneu Me~oriol Hospital hu immediate p·art·
time open ins"• in "the Cardiopulmonary Department .
Competitive ulary range . The Cardiopuh~_onary
Department p~ovide• all aepect&amp; _o~ res~tratory
th~rapy •er"¥icu.
We a,re seekm~ hcen~ed
Reepiratory Care Praetitio!Jere. For mformanon
contact: Human Reaourcu Department, O'Bieneu
Memorial Hospital, 55 Hospitai ·Dr., Athens, Ohio,
45701. -7"0'592-9227.
EOB
.

O...C. MaiDAY-IIliDAY
oo!IU~Cew f&gt;ro700f0 5'.00~ ..., .
Gllp::oll. ClJio
lardio Dc!Cnoe Tuc.dsy
.

E E

(740) 446·2412
1·800·594·1111

---

PRACTITIO~

....,.._,_&amp;I
*Cerufred ltlllructor•*

LAWN,
. INC.wwwdeere.com
CARMICH EL'S FARM &amp;
668 PINECREST DRIVE, a'lLLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

..

D

00

ELDORADO
,ADtJl:T P{OME.

••

R u

ilf ,,,,. , tilt
?f0·99.t·.t ro•

.ttJ, . rtajana's
'Becky's
Xardio rrleferrse:
'Body Scu!pting

~&lt;foning

Do

Eltetrlc Ma intenance Service.
Wiring. Breaker Boxes, light Fix· 210
turt, Heating Systemt, and Re·
modeling (7o40l" t-1401 .

CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS

bi711M4~t

•

Wanted To

Backhoe &amp;
Dozer Work

OBO

· Step•
!Aerobics

There's a lot of green out there. Get your hands on some during Deere Season, from March I through July 5, 1999. You'll find yard-sized savings on almost all
the rugged and dependable lawn and garden equipment pictured here. Visit your participating John Deere dealer's store today. And go for the green.

•

110

Profealonal

&amp;

180

BULLETIN BOARD

Wanted

,.,.,,. ,,,.rc,

GREAT JOBS AVAILAILEI

Step
a
.· .

$300.0FF

At 10 A.M.
EOE !Nf;/DN
Poslai •Jobe to $t8.35/HR . Inc.

'veterans Memorial Hospital is
looking for caring, dedicated,
Licensed Practical Nurses.
Muit have current Ohio license.

IC&lt;&gt;IDinercial Driven License (CDL) training cla11e1 held
Adult Career Center iD Nelaonville. Join••:~:-:~·3~::'~1
with Ca•el lr•nef)ortation, Inc: . CJa11room '
ltr.ainiins. Alrordoble tuition r-...Next claat beJin• aoon;

4100 Compact Utility Tractor
• :!0-hp diesel
• Gear transmission • 4WD
• Mid- and rear:Pf'Os

.$400 OFF

ForTheGallipoMI Ma
Monday261hAprllAt

Htlp Wanted

Seeking Socrtllry For School Of
Galllpotlt~ Cotiogl
Business Faculty To Provide
Etc. Call7~-69&amp;4.
Ganeral Secretarial, CleriCal ~nd
Technical Asslstanco tn~lud l ng
(Careers ClOse To Home) Call
K&amp;G Cllanlng, &amp;Painting 5ervle·
The Reglstnillon Of Students,
Today1 7~367, 1.aoo.
11 Interior Exterior. For FrM Estl·
Scheduling 01 Ctaaus And
mates. 70o-•.,·t044 , 7•0·4., 2t4-04S2, Regi90-05- 1274 B.
Malnlalnad Fiscal Records . Mull
0459..
Have High School Olplome Or 180 Wanted To Do
.
·
Equ,_,.atent, Associate Degree In
Lawn ·Mowing Service, Small
Secretarial Science Preferred. Approved Maater licensed Elec· Garden Tilling, Clean Out Garage
Knowledge 01 And Experience trlclan , WV02595e , Free Estl· and Other Odd Jobs. (304)675•
With Computtrs, Including AS· mates lor Residential Services. 3628·
,.od. Word Processing , E-Mail {304)675-79'2.7.
Painting, All Around Handy Mant
And Internet uaage Ao Well Aa
Col Bolo 740-e09-t803
Previous Olllce Experience Re· Christian Woman Will Do Child·
'
·
qulrtd. Interested Applicants care In My Home Only. $12.00 S&amp;S Lawn ca're, .Commercial 1
Must Send A. letter 01 Interest Day For 1 Child, $20.00 Day For Residential, Free 'E&amp;timate&amp;l 740.
And Updated Resume Including 2, Ect CPR Certified, EMT Cert, '44-1-()318.
Tho Names AM Mdreoses ot Pending. Roltonces . 740·2•5·
Three References Before Tne 9~ .
Will Do lawn Mowing, Gallipolis,
Oeadllna Of May 7, 1999 To Phyi· . E &amp; S Lawn Service: DeSign, lm· Spring Valley Area, Oependa.ble
lis Mason. PHR. Olrectot Of Hu·
CaNTm , 740-MH340.
man Resources, University Of Rio plemenlatlon, and Service.
Grande ,- P.O. Box F27 , Rio Available for Spring Clean up. Will sit with the elderly, by the
1
0
1
Grag Milhoan: 3001875-4e28.
25-13.

LPN

30 Announcementa

$899*

Appilcatlont WIM Be Accepted

sttpEBIOfQ!tttpQUI

110

·

sa,799*

•ProYide A Llat Of Three Per·
aonolllele...,cot Who Are Not
Rtlatlvts Wllh Their Complete
Nemes. Addrotttl, And Tolt·
phoneNurnblrt.Asw.ll.

110

RESUMES UNLIMITED 011ers
Part Tlmt Rectptlonlst Wanted Peraonal lzaa Reaumn And
For Busy Construction Olllct. Much Morel Interview Maltrlals
Must Work Wall Wltn Public ·An· To Get You Prtplrld, 7o40-388·
swer Pnones. Scheduling, Etc. 3800.
Ewperlence IN Tna Construction
Area A Plus . Please Send Rt·
sume To Chr lslian's Construe·
tion , Inc. 1.-cl3 Eastern Ave .. Gal· Total Tre• Cart Is Hiring Experi·
II polls , OH 45631 . NO PHONE oncec Grand Men &amp; Top Climb·
CALLSI'LEASE.
ora, 740-339-:J:ln.
·
Phlebotomist· lmmedlat• -open- Wildlife Jobs to $2t .eO!Hr. Inc .
lngs for e•perienced phleboto- Benefits. Game Wardtnl. Secur·
m6&amp;t, flAJ or pan lime. FlesponslbMJ- lty, Malntinance, Park Rahgars.
lies would Include collecting No Exp . Needed. For App. and
specimens !rom nurs ing home Exam Info. Call 1·800-813·3585.
palients In solllhea&amp;l Ohio. Send Ext8827, 8AM·9PM , 7 Days
resume: The Dally Sentinel, P.O. tds.lnc
Bow 729·82, Pomeroy, On to
.
45789.
140
BullnHB
Training

•

(ANYONE SPOT A TREND?)

0

~ Nu~.

~p~~·~·~·-------:::::::;J;D:~~·;'~::.H&gt;c::·::~~-----

Duro-Last Roofing by ·
'
Home Creek Enterprises

1

'lo AbloTo Provldo Compltll
Employment Hlatory For Tho
Put 10 Yoora Wllh Compllte
Namee, Addreuea) And Tele~

Wanted

1

~1 ~.n~i:~s.~ ~=1Rg; ~:~~~~~ E~~mEI~~:.r~:~f~·-a~~ ~~~~-~o~H~~~~7~,~0 .~;~4s~-~~~~~~:~~~~~n~ ~a~ rad~l:~c~ ~ ~ ~n~ ~ aF;~:-~ ~ e :~:~:~~~~u:;e~~ r=:~:e,~k~ ~r~ : ~ sc~ ~ab!e:7:•o~9~~:-=~:~=~~=E~Q~E~~~~

Coinmerical, residential
15 year guarantee

\

•Be11Y..,. Of Age OrOkttr

._A C- -Record
"lluat Bo.AbloTo Pitt

Call 740·448·5500. EOEIA4 Ern- 813·3585, Ext.8826, 84M-9PM, 7

Flat Roof Problems?

'

IMadleattnsu"'"""
To Ouotlly Appllconta Mual
-Tho Following:
.

Comepeltlva Salaries Anct.J!oene·
1111 Ollertd . Ploaae Sond
Resumes To Sherry Gordon, Hu-man Resource Man•ger, wood·

Bu1lnest

Servlceti

• I 8-inch tiller Width

ni5Uf8f'I08

"Op4. Denlll /lJie

Outpatient Ther8pl01&amp; · Pan-nme
4nd Full·Time Pos itions Avellable To Provide Outpatient Men·
lei Health Servlcll To 4dulls
And fOr Children. Must Be Ll··
oenoad (Or Llcenlure EllglbO., 11..
Psychology Assistant, Counaaror
natnoa, PC.LSW, LISW Or PCCI
In Counseling, Social Work Or
Psychology In OHIO. Preference·
Given To Candidates With Prav~ ,
ous e 11 perlence In A Mental
Health Soiling.

0

230

. • 5/lp

Am Oisrnembem1enl 1

A Drug 8crwn

1 or

518R Walk-Behind 111/er

"Paid Vacations

-ute. And Accldlntal Death

740-1112·!5039.
Now Hiring Exp&lt;~rlenced Cashllro
&amp; Dell Worlcers At The Following
Little John's Locations: Cente·
nary, Third &amp; Vlno SlrN~ Gollpo111, Vinton. Pomeroy, Apply In
Person At The AbOvt LOcatlona,
Between 8 4.M. _.P.M.

portunl1y Employor..

140

"FLiiTlrnaPolltions .

nlgltt ahlft. B Dorado AdlAI Homt.
Basic tlrsl aid I BCII required ,

.

.

425 Lawn and Garden Tractor
· • liquidwoled 20-hp \L'liuin
· ·54-inch mower deck
• Automatli: transmission

Applk:lllooa
For The GalllpoMI A....

Now AtXopllng

a.Mti1S Include:

Mtln.t•nance· . Heavy Equipnnl- Sand HHI Coat Company' Ia
Hiking experienced heavy
equipment maintenance worker.
WotlilyPoy
NHdo·to have aervlce truck and
-lnauranco Avlliabto
tools. E~~:perlanced In diesel me~
Wortt Well With Tho PUitlc·
cnanlca, welding, electrical trouFor More lntormitlon Call 800- bf11ho o tl~ and air condllloner
service. ake applloallon at
437-1714, Hra. 8:30A.M. ·5 P.M.
38701 S. R.1~. Hamden, Ohio,
E.or~ $104-UOO r,ruo rrot par· Mon~ay thru Friday, sam·
tCIIIIa. Iovitt your rlends ·lo your •:30pm.: or coli 7•0·317_.211 to
home for a profelstonal glamour have application mailed to you .
EEOC~;
.
. porlrlll party.·1100-426-1383.

OuR TRActoRs ARE GREEN.
GRAss Is· GREEN.
THE MoNEY You SAVE Is GREEN.

'

Avon, 740-

Needing Coole and Bartendar l

Call for tletallsa

JA60 Walk-Behind Mower
• 6 hp
• 2l-1nch cast-aluminum deck

Ladles To seu

Cal: (740)36Nl219

411eaol 25 YNrl Old
Alllll1 2 'loonJ ElqlerlonCO
GoodMVR

•, '

'

ue 11)1('J

PtNKEJn'ON SECURITY

Maintenance Employee." General
Maintenance Of Low -Income
Apartment COmplex. Electrical/
Rtl~eratloo /Plumbing /Carf)tn·
Corrlof.
try uatodiai/Groundakeeplng.
Computer A Plua. Good Benefits.
ClaiiBOTR:
Toa111 Straight Truck, Lito Model Appllc~arlons Available At Gall!$
Frelghlllnora Wllh Slotf)tr&amp;. Mutt .MH4, 381 Bud&lt; Ridge Road. Bid·
Have Air Brake Endor~tmenta. wall, Ohio 456t4. 740·•41·0251 .
800 Mila Radlua, Homo Dollvor- 4ppllcatlona Accepted Until May
lito.
t5, 11198: GMH4 lo An Equal Op-

·Rlek Pearson Auction Company,
full tlma auctioneer, complete
aucilon aarvloe. Llcenaed
f66,0hlo &amp; West VIrginia, '304n3-5785 or 304-n3-5447.

Help Wanted

Now taking tppUcatlona lor 011\i'·
era 11 Domino's Pizza. GotllpoHo
and Pomeroy Stores. Onty, 7,.0.

local Ttucl&lt;lng Company SHI&lt;Ing
Oulllfled Truck Drivers. Good
Pay 4nd Bonoflla. Send Roaumt
To: P.O . 801 109 JaCkson, Ohto
45600, Dr Call 1·7•0·28!-1413
To Schadult An~.

CIUIA OTR:
Single Driver, Late Model Ken·
wortht With Reafara. Wtal Colli

'2623.

110

Help Wanted

446-3351.

8Mkiog ,..ltlvo, En-tic.

Bill Bright, Brlgtu Timberlands, .

Htlp Wanted

Coometotoglot ~. Bulllneoo
Growing, Guartnlttd Wage&amp;
PUM&lt;n.740-40&amp;-72117
Orlvtrl : ,_.ltd 75 drivers Earn
$30 ,000+ 11t Year Free Tuition
Avllllbll. NO Explfltnct Nee·
1111ry. 1o4 Day COL Training,
Starl Your Trucking Career To· ·
deyl1-818-253-8901 .

NEWill I E -

Gallipoll•

And Adults! Some Treasures For

110

Of'POIITUNITY fOR THE

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
ANNOUNCEMENTS
wanted : Cars, Tnc ks Any Con•e• Mile Vellow Flag Yard Sale, dillon , 7•0·388·L'.S2. 7•o·••~·
Pomeroy-Middleport, April 30, PART.
bos , Peraonals
May 1. Register now $5.00. Pick
up nag. For more Information can
St.rt Dating Tonighl! Have. fun 740·992-4197.
playing the Ohio paling Game, 1·
EMPLOYMENT
8DO-AOMANCE , eldenslon 9681.
All Ylrd Sll11 Mu1t Be P1ld In
Advance. Detdllne: 1:OOpm the
SERVICES
30 Announcementi
II•Y before lhl' ed Ia to run,
Sundey a Mondey edltlonDIABETIC P4TIENTS: You May 1 :OOpm Frlcloy.
Be Entitled To- Receive Your Dla·
110 HelpWanted
•
betic Supplies At No Cost To April 30, May 112, Indoors, bel'lind
You. For More Information, 1-888- Meigs Fairground , colle9tor $$$Make Moneyi$SS Work Al
67H561.
Items, Home Interior, glassware . Home · Aasemble Products:
Easy Work , Excellent Pay. Free
Don't miss this one! Bam-?
Golnb Out Of Business !;ale: 30%
Details! Send S.A. S.~. To: Nal'l:
OH Store Wide, Wilton Cake Sup- April 30· May 1, 47 4 Syca,more Homeowrker's Astoclallon, P.O:
plies, Merekens Chocolate, O.J.'a Street, Mlddlaport. Ohio. 9·5.
Bo&gt; 675. Ripley, WV 25271 .
'
Craft Sho'p, 2390 Jackson Pike ,
740·446·2134.
..
'
ACCESS Head Start Is Accept·
1
ng
Applications
For
The
Folio~·
Now To You ThrHI Shoppe
lngPos~ :
•.
9 West Stimson. Athena
Pt. Pleasant
740-592·1842
&amp; VI CIn lty
Cemmunlty Partnerahlp Coor·
Quality ClOthing and houaehold
Applicant• Muat Havt
Items. $1.0,0 bag sale ever)J- MoVIng Sale: All Types of dln1tor:
A
Minimum
01 A High Schoai · D~
Thursday. Monday lhru Saturday . Household . Furniture. CaU ploma. Previous
Experience in
9:00.5:30.
(3G4)882·2D89, For More lnforma· Policy Council And Organlladona
lion.
Ser~lng Children And Famllle,
Preferred. Rate 01 Pay Is $11 .00 I
40
Giveaway
hr.
·'
3 Colllco Kmens, 740-256-6806.
.80
Auction
Houaekeeper: Applicarits MuM
and Fleit Market
5 Ft. Bathtub, 2 Ft. Gold LavraHave A Minimum Or A High
lory. To Give Away. (304)895· Bill Moodlspaugh,Auctloneering . School Diploma. Experience In 41)
3972.
C~mplite Auctioneering Servlc- Areas Of Housekeeping Practlc·
·aa.
Consignment auction- Mill eo Preferred . Must Maintain A
8' Month Old t.1ala Puppy(wlll be
Driver's License And Havt"
big dogl. to a good home to run Street, Middleport, Thursdays . Valid
Reliable
Transportation. R'ate df
Ohio
license
17693.
7o40-989·
I0011.(3G4)675·1907.
Pay Is 15.!50 llir.
'
· '·

Seelad propOIIII wUI bl
eccaptad from ell pre-quellfled blddora et tha omce or
contracts ot the Ohio
Department
of
Treneportlllon, Columbue,
Ohio, until 10:00 a.m.
Wodneeday, May 18, 1999
7 Month Old Australian
For Improving Section
sp·ayed, 7•0·256GAL-35-0.00, U.S. Routt 35, Shepherd,
6284.
.
Gallla County, Ohio, In
accordlnce with plana a.nd
Gas cook a1ove~ does not work,
apeclflcatlona by Gredlng, you pk:IJ up, 740-992-7841.
Plenlng and R01urtac1ng
Free puppies to a good hOme ,
with Aephllt Concrete
Retriever/Cocker Spaniel
"The dele ell lor compl• Golden
mix,
ready
to give away. Call·
tlon of thla work ehall bl 11 Christi or Josh
at 7•0·992-5035
ell forth In the bidding proalter6pm.
·
poaal.':
Plana
and
Sptclltcetlona are on 1111 In Silver Sable Mixed Breed Mala
the
Department
ol Long Haired Dog, Really Pretty
Outdoor Dog, llkos Children, 7ol0Transportation.
388·0221 .
Gordon Proctor
Director 01 Traneporllllon · To Good Home: 112 lnsh Setter &amp;
Aprli 25, 1999
112 Rottweller Pups; e Weeki Otd,
Ready To Gol740-.o874.
May2, 1999
Public Notice

YlrdSale

110

-'!mbv ~..,._.,mtbul• Page D3

Pomeroy e Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

•

�$unday, Aprll .25,

iP~ag~e~D4~•~~~··~·'~•;uC~~;~~-;'~'"~'=~~~~~~Po~m~er~o~y;•~M~Id~d:lepo::~rt~·~G~a~l~llpo~ll~a~,O~H~·~P;o~ln~t;PI~e;aa~a~nt, WV
1

210

Bualnen

310 Home• for Slle

310 Homea for "-le

0 pportunIty

,..

. ... . .

, ..

~

1·801).387·9&lt;18.

Awtl. VENDING Rio • loti ey II
t tO ·20 Locatlono. $4K ·$10K.
$4,000 +/Mo. Income. Finance
Avail.Toll Free o-888-538·9508.
For Salol Tho Jurrbol Stale Routo
t&lt;t. $12MOO.OO 080 HD-«8·

3500 . .

VJNDIHO: Lazy Pertons Dream.
Few Houra • Good S. Price To
Sell . Free Btocl"lure. 800·82061:82.

Profe11lonal
Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!

1·888-582·33ol5
REAL ES TA TE
31

large Aoom1, 3 Say Garage,
Cloat To School And Bud;ayt
....... $68,000.00. 740-37fl-2tt2.

3 BR, 2BA, 2 Car Garogo. t Al:lo.
A Mull Sot. Letart. (304)882·
:1518.
4 8odtvom ti&lt;&gt;IM 1 1/2 Bathl. LR,

HOME FOR IAI.E
WALNUT PLACE
SUBDIVISION,
SYRACUSE, OHIO I
Now 1200 oquare loot onirgy oiii-

OA, Kitchen, Utlllty Room, CIA.
Heat Pump, Fenced/ Yard , 2/3
Acre, 1S Mklutes From Gallipolis,

clel\t. Three btdroom, two full
baths, twO cat garage, tivtr vtew.
dock nearby. Ready now! 740·

$58,500 7-40-379-26611.

992·7953, H0·992·540• or HO.

Beautllul StOne Houle Eat· In

992-6810 BYenlngs

Kltchon , l1iand Rango, Trash

HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNER:

Compactor, 2 In Wall Oven1.
Spice Cablnol. All Appllancu
S•~ 3 0 • •••
0R R

Located Near Oowntown on Bth

o Homes for Sale

3 Bedroom Home 1· Acre Lot, RIO

Grande Aroa, $3,,QOO, 740·245-,
9667.

.

3 Bedroom Home, 2906 Meadow·

brook Drive. Call (304)675-4360,
;a1ter&lt;PM

::t

st. 2 slory

C~NrootnS. · ·• L. ·
Fireplace, 2 ~pes Of Heat. lola
Of Clostlt, 2 112 Baths, Hot Wa-

-r·

230

For Salt By Owner : 4BR, 3000
Squirt Foot Hou11. 4 Car Ga·
rag1, !5 Acrn, ':/try Stcludtd .
St99,999 (803)--.

r

w1th L,R., an d D,R.

wttn Flraplacea; 38R, 1 112

Baths; Kitchen wltl'l Appliances;
Utility Rm .,' Enclottd Front

s G F
orch; "'um. ld.; II urnace

ter &amp; Heat Pump, 1 112 Acres M/

p

740-445..,.

w/O.A.: Carport Anach . to hou..:
I·C Detached Garage: Sm . Stor.
Bldg . with Elee. C.ll onty from 1
to H PM. (304)e75-4808 or

L. AJC. Shown By Appointment,

559

_

By owner, 725 Page Street. Mid·
dl&amp;port, house &amp; 3 toea. must set
to appreciate, will sell house without tots lor $89,000, 740·992·

'I

{304)675-3991 :

Ranch Houae, 314 Acre i..oi, ~BA ,

on 12 ecrea, VIllage Middleport,
atcludtd and prlvtll, appoint•
ment. cal 740-llt2·5eel.

Spring Volloy. 2 11ory toml1y
homo. 4 Bedroom, 2 t/2 Botho,
LMng Room. Dining Room. EoHn
Kllchon. Lg Foml1y Room. 7&lt;0·
2&lt;5-1337
ThrH.bedroom homo with lo!J ot
tiOSII lpaCII, ClaM to tchoOI, on
cornlf' tot, s1oraoe buHdlng, oM
bedroom rental home lncludea.

..

740-992-el~

Thret bedroom, hllf buamenl

homo, counb'y utttng In Pomoroy,
newly Nmodolod, aoldng

740-992· n45.

$37,500,

320 Mobile Homes
for Slle
1Z&gt;te5 Muter Croll. two bedroom,
ono baltl, oo• hHI. 14500 nogotlabto. 7.00.9112·1042.
1973 HIIICfllt two bedroom mo·

270., 740.992-5696.

2 112BA, Don, LlvlngRoom w/

By Owner: Well Ml!llntalned 4eA
Bi·Level, 38A, Large Family
Room w/Fireplace. L!vlngroom.
Kitch
(All A 11
S
en
PP ances tay),
OtnlngRoom, Utility Room, Cen·
tral AlriHeat Pump. Large lot at
corner of Belle &amp; .SandHill, 3.5
miles out. 2 Car ·Aitacl'led Garage, separate garage, 20X60,
3doors, paint room. Lots of stor·
age . $160,000 shown by appt.

Fireplace. OlningRoom, Kitchen/
ully Equip., Basement w/Ppol· · 1974 Froodom 12ies 3 Bod·
Table, Deck wi27Ft . Above - rooms, 1 Bath, Remodeled,
QfOUnd Pool, 3 Car Altatl'led Ga· Throughout, New Hot Water
ragt : In Good Neighborhood In Tank, 50 Ganon Porch, Fridge,
New Haven, WIJ. Call For Appt . Store, Air, Underpinning, &amp; Watt

(304)67!Hi403.

bile home, 740-992·50311.

Hoaltr, Coii740-ZS8-6871.

{304)882·3652.

110

Help wanted

HEAD NURSE

.

For Sate By Owner; 3BR, 1 t1
28A. , large family room &amp; orttce,

Responsible for 24-hour administration of
nursing services on Skilled Nursing Facility.
Must be an Ohio Licensed RN, prefer BSN .
Administrative and Clinical,experience in
gel,"iatrics preferred but not required.
Contact Human Resources ,
US E. Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio' 45769,
740-992-2104.

Bedrooms, 2 Bath Ranch House upatalfs totally remodeled . new
. 7 Years Old. 28•30 Anached Ga· roof, guttering, water aottner &amp;
· rjlge , 12x24 Building, Barn &amp; lois ot utras . 2912 Anniston
·Tractor Shad, 69 112 Aeras Or Drive, Pt. Pleasant. (304)675·
:wut Sell Hcuse &amp; Loti Meigs Co. 2808 . Leave Message on Machine.
· · :
. 740.992·3537.

6i\\
---

REGISTERED NURSES

\::5'

Veterans Memorial Hospital is
looking for caring, dedicated
Registered Nurses. Contact
Human Resources; ll5 E.

110

HeJpWanted

ADENA_

Sunday, April

for ,._le

,..
199• texBO Sunohlno Mobile

Restored VM:to(lln hOine altullltd

3 Bedrooms, Set On 3 Acret,

AREA PEPSI !COKE ROUTE
30 New Machlnll With High
Profit LOCIUonsl Earn 1001&lt; \Ur·

3:320ZOaMobli:b~le~H~ome.~:"'i~320~~~~~:=:ob:;l;:le~H~o::m:::--~~=~~~H~:;:~

320 Mobl'- HomM
,.
for Slle

•

16xl0' Vinyl Shii'IQII, A11ume
Loon. t-801).383-N$2.

1982 Floolwood ,.F, x 70Ft,
$9.100.00. 2' BdrrN, 2 Batltl. CIA.
All Eteel., 2 Porchia. Very GOOd

Condition. 740·448·81 57 Allor

Home, Three Bedrooms, Two
Bathrooms, Walc:-ln CloNts. Utlll-

ty Room, Eloclric Hnl Purrc&gt;, Ro-

frlgeralor And Stove Included ,

C.! After 4 P.M.740-2&lt;5-t302.

low Interest Ratts For 1st Time
Buyers, Limited Time Available.

•:ooPm.

800-38»882.

1992 14x70 Oakwood 2 Btd ·
rooms, 2 Full Beth&amp;, A.ll Electric

Good ulectlon of used bomea

With Hoot Pump. 740-441-o959:
-740-37$-2798
1892 14170 flledman trailer, 3

bedroom, t beth, tully carpeted,
otorm wl"""'"', $12,500, 7-40-742·
2795'altor 3pm.

with 2 or 3 bodroomo. Stirling at
$3995. Quick dtilvary. Call 7•0·
385-9621.
' Make 2 Payments No Paymant
Aflar 4 'Mara, ~73&amp;-7295.
·
New 1999 141170 three bedroom,

1992, 28X52 Ooul!ltWido In
Aahton Area. 3BR, 28A. on 1f2
Acre lot. Price Reduced .

(304)578-2993.

Includes 6 mcntho FREE tot rent

Includes washer &amp; dryer. aklnlng,
deluxe ateps and utup. Only

$200.74 por

monl~

with $1150

for Slle

-

25, 19".

Area , 740-388·8338, 740·256·

6783.
Nice Home ·set Up On Lot. Makl
2 Payments, Move In, • Years

l.ell On Loan. (304)722-ltCO.

Older 2BA TraKtr on Rented Lot,
Wayne County,. Perfect for
Marshall Studentaf1 5mlnutes
tram Campus. New Carpet/New

Fumlturo.$6,000. (301)675·1651 .

Price Reduced , 1998, Skyline,
Mobile Home. 14X70. Total Electric, 28ft Shingle Aoof. Excel·

lent COnclltlon. (304)e7!5-70.5.

1 Plus Acre, 2 Bdrm . Trailer, WeH
&amp; C. Water, 2 Stor B. $24,500.00

· Apptegrovt, w. va. 304·578·
2557 Makt Appt.

~

Bualneel and
Buildings

350 Lota &amp; Acreage

Commerdat Building In Hendtr·
aon For Sate or Lease . Call
(803)381·8o43e,

Very NICol Rtmc&lt;lelod 3 Bdrmo.,
1987 ClAyton Mobile Homo 14Ft .
x 70Ft. $10,500.00. Sertouo In· ,
QUirlol Only.7 - 1.
.

350 Lola

&amp; Acreage

DB Gereoo. Beoemont (304)875•575.

wv. $499 Oown Stnoto Wldo,

$999 Down Ooubll Wldt, 30•·

736-3ol09.

1J . 75 Acre a In Cabell County on

Rt. 2 North, across from Green·

330 Farm• for Slle ,.
26 Atrtl Mi\., e Stall Hot11 Bam, ·

bQttom Wildlife Reserve. The
wm be responsible for all
cotta. There 11 a minimum ~ of
b~er

3 Bedroom Hdust . Fence, 740.'
3a8 8~.
·•

It .000. This properly would be
suited b a hunUng relreat. Owner
r11erves the rlghl to reject blda.
All bids must be received by

50 Acre Farm, 3 Bedroom HouN,
2 lull Baths, 321t . x lOft . B1rri,
Black To.p Orlveway. Swimming ·

May 15, t999 . Send otaltd bids

Pool , Wu $205,000.00 Now
$175,000.001 (7C0)987-0219
·

It Jotlnny May11, 3850 Muon

80 Rd.. Aohlon. WV 25503.
5 Acru Blacktop Frontage

110

"ELP

WflrtTED

Sltas. Electrle &amp;· Water Available,

Restricted RtlldenUal Lots Lo·
cated A. ·Comfortable Distance

From G.alllpollo. ooubto Wldeo

Are Permitted . "Leave All Your

baros tn Town. Buy Yourult A
Piece Of Ground" Lots Start At

18,750. 5'&gt;'. Down Land contraot
Now Available . Call For Fret
Mapa. HIQ0.213-8365.
In

Memory

tK tlfur61'! Of
{/al(ee If. o~P.f
86/'1( f-25-23
!Jrt.rl-1-25-97

Plet(I(H.
111(1!/rJ&gt;&amp;- ~«.

Lemley's Auction Barn

(/pW.,C;,,~

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28, 1999
10:00 A.M.
Located
Maeon,

at the Auction Center on Rt. 33 In

w.v.

0

FURNITURE
Beautiful 9 pc. mah. DR suite· tab!e &amp; 8 shield back
chairs, lg. curved glass hutch &amp; comer curved g!&amp;SII
china, one o,f the best 1920's !g. poster BR suite we've
ever had, Haywood Wakefield vanity No. M·148
dresser w/m!rror No. M·144 chest No. 142, nlte eland
No. M·148 &amp; full s!za Qed No. M-140, fancy carved
flatwall cupboard beautiful 48" high top roll top des.k,
man. china mirrored back w/strlng Inlay walnut raised
Public: Sale and Auction
panel bHnd door corner cupboard, walnut Viet. dresser
&amp; marble top window bench, oak 3 drawer hotel
washstand, Birdseye Maple Princess dresser- &amp;
matching High Boy, cherry· PA. Houa&amp; twin BR suite,
~mah, genuaman's waniFObe, Viet. drop front.~ary,
2 mission oak rockers signed "Oak Craft" Mich.,
Secretary, . 5 l&gt;r. Oak Chest, country 2 drawer &amp; door jelly cupboard, oak secretary
bookcase, lg. mission oak desk, .VIet &amp; oak wash
1c~;er Love Seat W/2 Chairs, o.Jmrmu"l stands, Viet. love seat ig. wooden tack box stenciled
..._,.,,. ... _ Desk Chairs, Wicker Mirror &amp; mounted escort Pittsburgh Commandery No. 1 K. T.
Pittsburg PA.- 3 quarter aaw oak tack boxes stenciled
'id;er Shelves, Large Desk; Tables
Duquesne Commandery 72 KT Pitta burg~ PA., w!ckBr
Stand11, Stools, Large Mirrors
sola-cha!r &amp; baby sca11111, nard .roOk maple table &amp; 2
Chairs, Haywood Wakefield oak office chairs, mih.
Hi&lt;ckc&gt;rv Bottom. Chairs,
I claw coffaa table, set prase back chairs, 2 auper
Ve1~etab.le Bin, 4'x5! Painting :Si!p~e:dll ball
mah. rockers &amp; much more.
·
·
Peterson, Cast Iron, Lamps,
GLASSWARE &amp; STONEWARE
, Cambridge, lg. Flow Blue cup I saucer,
'Do•mesti'(" Bible, Broad Axe
I cookie jar, 4 German Beer steins, Viet oil lampe, am~
Vase 1921 ~ 10" - Gin
glass lainp, rare Weller pottery chicken &amp; WeUilr
1
dtJCK,
2 pea. Indian pottery, Haml~on &amp; Jones ·stone Jar
-McCoy- Cookie Jars
plus more.

FUR T ·R~p; --:;&lt;

Private Col. of Coins - Mint.· Sets Etc.

GLASSWARE
Beer {Un.~ opened) ~Old

Ma,. s, St99 • 7&amp;00 P.M.
This is a part1a111sttng more
comtnsm daily.

9990
DOO·D
ODDo
ODD

·oooo

DODO
DDO
DUO
DDO
ODD
ODo
ODO
DD
DOD
DOD

, ...,,.2720

•11•• Lli1 . 7740

l•r•••• ......, ....

•

740.~1..ltlt

.

Not Nlpontlb~~accld.nl• or

· lou ofp"' rly
. .,
Rlvnlcle Auction, 1111 IIY Saturday
Night at7:00 P. •

Finis

Isaac

Not

\

I

neighborhood, all ulillllea avail·

obit. $t3,900. call7-40-992·772'1.

Mol~o Co.: Pick Ot Tho Wookl
Dyoovlllo, 10.5 Acres· .With

Taka over payments on 17 acr11,
low down payment. call 740·992·
2!529 and loavo mossago.

SUeam 18,5001 Danvlllt, 8rlar
Ridge ~d . ·1 Acres 113.000. On
SR 325,' Nico 9 Acroo $17,000.
Pubflc Water. Rutland, Whites Hin

360

Rd .. 11 Acreo S 14.000 Or 9 Acr·
.. $12.000, Po.l&gt;tic Wator.

Call NOW For Fr11 Maps +
Owner Financing Info. Take t 0%
Off Ust Prtca On CUlt Buyst

Real Estate
Wanted

We Buy lend: 30 · 500 Acres .
we Pay caah . 1~800·213·8365 ,
Anthony Land Co.

.

'

RENTALS

This

newspaper will not

koowlngly accept .
advertl!llmenta tor real estate
which Is in vtolalloo ot the
law. Our readers are hereby

Informed that all dweiMOQ!I
advlltlsed In thl!l newspaPer
are avaKable on an equal 1
opportunity basl,s.

410 Houua for Rent
2 Bdrma, Water And Treeh Paid,

No POls. Bulavltle Plko. 7&lt;0·388·
1100

'

~Bedrooms, Relrlgarator, Stove

CLEAN

HOUSE
WITH THE

Furnished, $150 Deposit. !58 Mill"

P.M.

312 Wotzgol St. Pomeroy. 3 Bdrm
HOUH. 1350.00 Month , Deposit
Raquitod. , ·1188·114().0521 '

751 First A.ve., t Bdrm ., 1 Bath ,
Newly Renovated, WasMr Dryer

420 Mobile HOilltlli
for Rent
Bldwoff IPortor Aroa. $37!\oMo., All
Utilitlts

lnciUdld. 740-«Hl720.

12x6S trailer In Tuppers Pla ins ,
Ohlo. thrM beoroom, air, washer
&amp; dryer hook up, no peta . good
references , deposit &amp; e month
lease requlrltd, 740·985·3522 af·
tar 8:00pm.

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobUe homes, air
conditioned, $280·$300 , 11w1r,
water and tfllh included , 740·
992·2167.

Large White Colon ial House At
Tara 4pt&amp;., 3 Bdrms., 2 Full
Baths, A/C, Acceaa To PooL 740448-3481 Or 740-446·0101 Afttr

2 Bdrm Mobile Home . Al e,
$300 .00 Month Plus Oepostt And
Utilities. Rafrencea Required. No

5.162..

Ono Bodroom Hcult In

Gtiiipo&lt;~.

Reference• Required, No Pel t,

l350/Mo.,
441-1308.

Pets, eau 740-992-54n.

2 bectroom mobile hOme In Mid·

Clean. Efficient. 28R. Reltrtnc11, Deposit, No Pet1. (304)675-

+

$300 Depoolt, 74().
.

Three bedroom hOuootn Middle·

port, nopo~. 740-992•7B!I3.

Vour Home Ia Just A PhOne CaJI

.::.c~r
..:;.;k:.:·G~••::::'po:;.;''::.'·:740-::44::6:38:7o:.=J..bC;;U\;;S;S;;OF.~lS~DS;;~'~C·w:ay~.304-=7=36-1'29!1.

tor Rent

1 hdroom Trelltr Stclu&lt;itld lot ,

Hookup. $275.00 Ronl With Do·
polK. 7&lt;0·«8-3&lt;81 Or 7•0.4CI·
OtOI Aftor 5:ooPM.

5'0CPM.

440

420 Mobile Homes

dleport, Oh ., no peta , 740·99Z·

5«3.
3BA TrailfM' For Rent In Pt. ·Pleasant on Prl-.ate Lot. $250 .00 a
month+
Utllltiii+Oeposll.

(304)67&amp;-1651.

New Mobile Home Park at Galli·
polls Ferry. Now accepting appll·

cottons lor loti on otto. (30()815·
6908.

Nice 2 Bdrm CIA, Hwy 110, 4
MHOS N 0t Holzer. 1300.00 Month
Plus .Deposit, Refrencea. Available May 151.74().4.16.6189.
Nlc8 3 bedroom mobile hOme. In

MiddlepOrt, on., no poll. 740-992·

6858 . . .

Trailer For Rent &amp; Lot For Ren t.
7.tQ-4.t6.1279
Two Otdroom. all electric, In
country, 1325 per month plus st·
curl!y deposit and teferences,

740.992·7201.

440

Apartments
· for Rent

2 ~•dro o m Apa rtmen t. Rio
Gr1nde Aru . Cloae To Coll•ge ,
$3!50/Mo., Includes All Ulili!ltl .
Depos it Aequ tr td. 1·888·840·

~· ·

2bdrm. aptt , tota l el&amp;etrlc, appUances turnJsl"lld , laundry foo~
facilities . ck&gt;se to IChoOI In lowrt
Appllcatlona evallablt u VlllaQt
Green Apts. U9 or call 740·9923711 . EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTI.IENTS AT.

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished , security
deposit requ ired. no peta , 740·

992·2211.

1 Bdrm ., Extra Nice, First Month
Free With One . Year Lean.
$279 .00 Per Month, Plus Utilltlls.

7-40-«8-2957.

1 Bedroom. Partly Furnished
Apartment. Lower Ma in Street.
Refarences &amp; Oepoalt. (740)4-' 1.

om.

Ap!lrlments
for Rent

.

2 Bdrms:, CIA, Gas Heat. Wasl'lar
Dryer Hookup, 1 Mile From Town,
No Pell. After 5:00Pm 740-446·
7ot58.

2 bedroom apartment In MldOiepon., we pey water, sewer &amp; trash .
you pay gas &amp; electric:, $200 per
month. $100 depos it, 740· 992·

78Ce.
2 Bedroom Apartment, Adjacent
To University Of Rio Grande

c.,.,.. ,7C0·245-5858.

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, '2 We1 1wood On ve

from S279 10 $358 . Walk 10 sMp ·
&amp; moviu . Ca ll 740· 446 ·256&amp;..
Equat Houslng Opporlunity.
'
Cl'lr laty's Family Uvrng , apart! .
me nta , ho me &amp; tra 1ler' rentals ;
74 0·992·4514, apartments avail·
at:Me . furnished &amp; unfurnlWd.
Deluxe One Bedroom Apt . Con·
ven lent , Privett Entrance . Centr al Air and Heal Dishwasher
plus Washe r ll Dryer. $350 . per
month. Non -Smoking . Phone

(304)675-5733.

.

~.

•
I~

Furnished Upstairs 2 Rooms
Bath, Clean, Releren ces. &amp; Oe ..
posit Required, Utilities Paid , 74-Q.o-

.-

1519.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroon) ·
apa rtments at Village Manor and'
Rlve rskle Aparlments in Middle port. From $249 -5373. Cal l 740·
992 -5064. Equal Housing Oppor·
tunittes.
:

Real Estate .General

5 year old, 2,000 sq. ft. three bedroom ranch home
w/walk-in ·closet, formal DR&amp;. LR, 15 x 24 great room,
modern &amp; very conveniem kitchen with plenty of extras,
foyer w/ceramic tile floor, mud room, 24 x 38 two·car
garage, 2,000 sq. ft. basement, heat pump, 120 gal. hot
water tank. Over 2 1/2 acres located within 1/4 mi. of
Meigs High, 20 min- Gallipolis, 25 min- Athens, 40 min
Pkbg. A deal at $120,000

AND
TREES A BLOOM.
sere(le County
sening. Surrounds this lovely home.
Quality ThroughoUt. A formal entry, .Lg.
Bedroom suite &amp; whirlpool tub bath.
Beautiful Custom designed kitchen . LR
w/Fireplace. Upper level 3 bedrooms.
Full basement. Family Room. All oak
trim. Only 1 yr. old. $175,000

Call 304-882-3465

LET THE BEAUTY SHINE THROUGH.
This home just sparkles w/skyllght
wfndows that ~how. thedral
ceilln!Pl""
natural
Deco
;!WIIn
om, Lg. Custom
desig e ltchen. 3 BR, 2 Bath. full
basement. Lg. finished garage. 2 Plus
acres.
MtLUON DOLLAR RIVER VIEW! Just
a peek. You 'll tall in love w"h lhls home.
LOTS OF DECKING. Formal LR, DR,
Lg. Family. 4 Bedrooms. 2. 112 BA.
Breaktast room w/skyllghts. Basement.
Shown by appt.

• LAND LOTS
.
5 AcretH'alrfield Church. Can ba. spmRestrlcted.

Lots of floWering
Beautitut Crystal clear

j-.on Pike Arn-Nice building tot.

$14,000.
11
HYDRAULIC
SHOP-Racine, OH-2 Lg.
Bldgs w/lotal pf 7 overhead
doors. Mlltlng . Machines.
lathe. Wetder&amp;-'-MIG, TIG &amp;
Portable. Cor!oplvle Hydraulic
Capabilities. 120,240,480
with 1rlple phase electric.
·More Info for the serious
buyer. Everything you'll needl
r

124,
I Oh. This building wu
set up for a pharmacy but
cou!d havo a lot of .u'seal
'Large display area w/blg
counter area, offiCe, restroom,
furnace room. Ce!llral Alr. FA
Gaa Furnace.
Dropped
ceiling &amp; finished dryWall, Ule
noor. .:-,;;.1ri11s
&amp; brick.
Paved po

.

waiting for summer.

re•nur•as LA., Dining room, 3 bedlrOO&lt;'IIS, I
kitchen w/Oak Cabinets. Lg.
tooklng out and across pool &amp; snacic
area. Full basemenl. F.R. w/w.b.
fi~~~~~~~· Finished · garage. Storage
b1
Detached garage. approx.
on 3.75 , Ac. MIL. Sel l by
appointment.

Four City l,Dta-Commercial
site.
Rd.-7 . 1/2
Porbmouth
REDUCED IN PRICE.
Harrleon TWp.-40 Acres+ .
PENDING.

·~

13 Tuppera Plaine, OhLocaled just o1f SR 7, this
homo Is located on 8 acres
m~ wms Owo;l pond. House
has 2 BR, LR; Bath, Equipped
klt:/DR . Central AJr. FREE
In upper

Henry E. Cleland Jr..992-2259

tires, FarmeR Cub No. Hyd. Serial #40401
new tires 1: side Mt. mower, ~ub cadet 126·

Kathleen M, Cleland 992-6191

cub, anvil, power tools, belt sander, elec.
lnpack,· jig, drills .&amp; ets., tool boxes,
trimmer, welder 30·20, drill press, lawn bag
propeHed mower, simplify roto tmer, ·
mO\Vers, 8hp ·craftsman mower, Garden
cultlwte , wheelbarrow, alum. la!lder, turf tln:sl'
cub cadet, window fan, large utility trail~~
~:ull~1ugh chain saw, Misc. lawn tools, chlc:k- J.;
en ladder, air compressor, powef Washer, nice,
grinder, acetylene outfit 1: more.
. ·

"Antique or Collector's Items"

Watering can, pie safe ;rough, com jabber,
tongs, milk cans, large kettle, broad ax, trelldlc: I:
sewing machine, stooe ~kS, wood riunks

Ownon • R•IIMrt &amp; lottr lwlck
Dan lmlth • Raclno, o-.lo
Auctlonoor Ohio # 13ill4

•

,.

• Page 05.

Sherri l:. Hart .... ;....... 742-2357

Ca•h
Posltlvo ID
Rofroahmonts lty Star Gran1•
Not Ro•ponsllll• Por Aftltlonr.
or J.ou of Proporty

(Audloneer)

~unbau tlt--~mfuul

"TRACTORS"·
A.C. Dl7 w/3 pt. bitch, VAC case w/ new mu~j:

w.va #s'ls

Royle 7, South, 8 mila btl low the dam.

·St.ooo Down+ $132/Mo,

arrangements, food ..
cards, at tfie recent ·
,/
ifo
passing OJ our wi '
motlitr andgrandmotlier.
also tlianRs to all tfit
! tfi
J
-peop t at visitt ilit
·fiamJI.. a) tliefuneral
'T
fiome, 'Rev$ £ori
Wliitney, Jolin 'flswicli,
'Bill 0 'llritrt. &lt;11ie pall
btarm, 'Ewing 'Funeral.
&lt;11ianis to tlie :Mtigs Co.
Slieriff, 'Dr. &amp;&gt; :Nurses at
Veterans JlospitJJI, Life
'Fiigfit :Medical 'ltam.
Jlusband William
Son, 'Daugfittr-ln-Lilw
'Reid Go Juanita
9randcliildren,
9reat 9randcfiildren

this newspaper Is subject to
tl1e F-al Fair Hcostng Ac1
of 1968 wblc11 makeo ~ lltogal
to advertise ~any prefer8f'l(;8,
limitation or discrimination
based on race, color, rellgkm,
sex fam ilial status Of' national
Ofilin, or any !memlon 10
make any such preference,
fimitatkJn Of' discrfmlnatlon:

Building lot In Syracuse· nice

'

1•

squirrel nut erac:ker, Montgomery Watd
microwave, ctocka, watt ware lxMI, AosavKia green
bow!o, misc. dishes, Prince Albe~ tobacco cans and
IJillOr&amp;, "Cwwval chaulk, !lneni, Echo harmonica, Avon
bottles, • HP laWil mower, misc. hand \ODS, tishlng rods &amp;
reels, 6 ft. &amp; 5 ft. S1ep ladders, metal laWil ~
aluminum laddsr, Torro 'laWn mower block and ~~
auto. Glbaon lleavy duty washer, Lawn Chief lawn m
metal 1001 boxtll, one man crosa cut eaw, caat Iron lead
tldlt, lklm. weattter 'llrtl, tree trimmer, piCnic Iallie,
porch awing, concrete flogl, concrete chicken &amp; Cllcka,
conctll8 deer,. mllk can, &amp;!rd bath, &lt;;oca Cola wooden
cue, laW11 tartltlzar apreadlr, pf111111c lawn cow, galvan!zad
tub ·l tiucket, owt outdoor thermometer. 78 'recorda,
jewelry box, and rmte11 muCh more. Lots ~ems not llsled.
Auctioneer NDiel: This ule Is excellent to
purchase. Very good furniture, hand tools &amp;
etc. ·
Eatl
Caah
PoiiUva ID
..........,.,, ....- - Uct 1514

Rldgo Rd., 15 Acroo•lt4,000.

...

Ohio
'
DODD Satanlay, MarGaltlpolls.
.1, 1999, at 10100 A.M.
mower deck.
DDD
l'eroontJI properi:Y of the late
. · "EQUIPMENT"
Kei"'IOod
DOD Take Rt. 7 NorthAnna
To Rod Light , Tum ld't Onto
3 pt. plow for AC, 5• AC pull type brush cutter, 1:
Smithers St. In Front OfWalmart, Tum Ri&amp;ht
DDo Onto
cultmitor for cub, 3 pt. blade, case cultbator,
Smitheri St. Goins Soutli On Rt. 7, At Red
DDO J.isbo In Front Of Wabnart . Watch For Sign• wood cut off saw for Farmall cub, Single shcr~el r
. IDUIDILIMD MIIC. .
plow, single marking out plow,·1: case plow.
ODD Broy·l:tlll
2 pc. sofa &amp; chair W/oal&lt; lr!m, Navy, 3 recllneta,
"HOUSEHOLD" .
drum tabla, oa1&lt; collee table &amp; 2 malchlng end tables,
ODD oak
15.5
craft
westinghouse
chest freezer, table 1:
::My 'deepest appreciation
oak hal' tree, love 'ieat beige witt oai&lt; trim, lamp end
DDO Iallie, electric fireplaCe un~. booli case head bOard bed chain, Gibson refrigerator, M11.ytag washer
: go out to my Cfiildren,
oomp!et•. very nice 3 pc. bedroom llllltlrall wood, drfer, Sharp microwave, recliners, love
:granddii/drtn, wlio stood
ODD watelfalt chest of dra~, Tapptl/1 double oven gas
range, G.E. dryer, heavy duty hot point auto, washer, 23 Zenith T.V., end 1: coffee tables, three ;jpc.btciJ.I
by mi'wlien I
DDO cu.;
ft. frost !rae Cl!bson ref. oak tab!e wJ• chairs and !eat,
room suites, baby bed, deck, office chair,
needed tlieln .
oolor TV, Coo-Coo C!ock, Arthur Gocttrey goklen trumpet,
ODD pipes
drawer file cab~ts,. stands, lamps, fisher vn;~.•·
'10 all my ne(IJiibors,
&amp; humidor, comer what-not she~es. touCh lamps,
plelurea, l8(ephont S1and, Home Interior, fireplace
DO.o lamps,
gas
range, metal wardrobe, Gibson refngcntor,l
·-· • friends , and Jfome · ·
aocesaory, John F. Kennedy plates, wall lapestry, file
Maytag wringer .washer, Redwood lawn ruroi-1
; .Jfwltfi Care wlio were
DODO calllnet,
• I ~ tab!e, records &amp; tapes, Zenith
raconl player; brass spittoon &amp; taapot, CIWI!otsr set,
ture, Uring rocim suite, sewing machine, ;misc..
. . : tfiere to lielp. and to do
DDO stereo
ama11 e1actr1c orvan. po1e lampe, poltab!t Hoover I diShc~, pots 1: pans, eledrical· appUanCCS;I cn'l·'l · '· _, ,, .., "' ,'Jfiing&amp;-for~me w~en L was
me1at Shelf, Hoover upright '" slper, white
ODD SWMJ*,
callln8!, SiiV8f plate teapot wteurgsr &amp; creamer, roynd
of Po~e
ftguAnel; basket
.
;· , ·. . j unable fo,do:fo!; myself
diSh, German laed crys1al dish . w,1td, 50th
DODO Mer
DehumldltJd,
hearer, and ttad mill.
l'10 'Ron JfamllllJRd and
Annlvaraary. dishes, amber dish, Indiana glass, McCoy
"
S &amp; MISC." , .
j all tfie members of
DODD cooltte jar, kitchen electric appl~. condiment dish ·
w/apoon, dish towels, wooden lra8h bin matcltlng tatsr &amp; Loi'c~, cub cadet. blade, wheel weights
ttJulafiville Cliurcli, offered
DODO bread bo~. pots and pans, 11181&gt; ladder, la81 Supper wall
lapestry,

Required. 7C0·4•oeu Attor 5

'·

Robert 1: Betty Swick 33455 Swick Rd. approxi·l·
aiately .03 nilles West of Rutlattd, Obio on St.
124 to Lasher Rd. approximately 11/2 mile
Swick Rd. then approximately l mile to rarm.J
IWJltch for a!lction signs.
' ·

AucUon

3 Bedrooms Near Hetzer MediUI
Cent.t, No Pets, S&amp;OO/Mo., Plus
Utilltlet, &amp; Depos it, AetereneM

All real estate actvertlllng In

Public W1ter, City Schools!
Teens Run Rd. 10 Acrll 110,000

HouNI for Rent
•

highway. $25,000 1301)675-508C.

On WIHiamo Hcllow 540,000 Cash

Happy
.,,8£!th ,
Birthday!

SATURDAY
MAY 10, 1999.
10:00 A.M.

ANTIQUE &amp;
COLLECTIBLE
AUCTION

Gelll• Co.: 18 +Wooded Acres

If you've had
this lady as
a teacher, .
Give her a caU
&amp;wish hera

paper for ad.

. -

wv

Ad

·We wtll have an antique sale on
Tuesday May 4th watch this,

oooo
oooo
ooo

40-44,., 412

·

"llaere WID Be lo Side
Friday .AprU 30111"

DO

410

4.20 Acres Appro11. . 4 milts North
of Pt .Pieannt, on ~oute 62.
Good bUilding litl , ICCIII IO
city water, 2 ttnths mfla oft main

i

Call Alter 4:30Pm. 7•0.448-7565.
·
BEAUTIFUL
,

Help Wanted

8580 State Route 588
(Old Route 35)
Gallipolis, OH

7

Lokt Vtow, Gatllo County,
Card of Thanks
J32,000 Moro Acreage Available, jjii~~~·iiji~iiiij
740-388·8878.
iPPit Grove Memorial Gordon to
mit family of
now offering a t!mttld time spa·
rr:tfie{· nfart
ctal on Ctmtttry Loto, from April
L
Jlf
). 1999; to July 1, 1919. Buy 3
· ld I"
lott, got tho 4th tree. Spoclol
wou il&lt;e to express our
lalo: Companion and tndlvtdutl
sptt:ial tfianis to all tfie .
Gravt Maotcaro. (304)578-2n9.
~pproxlmately 30 Acres, 5 Mllu
family Go friends for,
rrom Gatnpotts: Beautiful Building
prayers, beautiful flower

Help Wanted '

FOBKIJFT MECHANIC

350 Lots '&amp; Acreage

Price. Just OH SR 218 , Friendly

10 112 Acrll, 3BR, C.A., 2BA ,

Oakwood Homes Sarbournltlt,

r

•
IIIIUfiER LAND

CEllULARONE, a proven leader in the ceUu·
lar industry, is seeking a Retail. Sales
Associate for the Gallipolis, OH area whose
primary ·function will be to make effective
. sales presentations of equipment, services
and products in the retail store. ·
The suceessful .Candidate will possess excel· Now accepting applications for
lent interpersonal skills, be motivated, cus· experienced Grocery Clerks/Personal
tomer-oriented and have 1·2. years previous and experienced Department Heads, ·
retail experience.
Store Management, Meat Cutte~s/Mgrs,
W!! offer a competitive salary, benefits and and Deli Personnel. Also experienced
commission package designed to reward entry level management positions. L9cal ·
outstanding achievement Please apply in opportunities, excellent benefit pkg!
person at CELWLARONE, 1502 Eastern Vacations, health insurance, competitive
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH.
pay, profit sharing program, etc.
.Applications will be accepted through
Ohio Valley Supermarkets, Inc.
April 30th, 1999
P.O. Box 772, Gallpolls, Ohio 45631
CEllULARONE is an
or Cidl (740) 446·9312
EOE!M/F/D/F Com an.
An
.1 10

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

'

320 Mobile omet
for Sale

MObil Home , . 3 Aerts In Porter

down. Colll-800-837·3238.

110

:

-·

1999

j prayers, lielp and visits.

: '11iest tfiings meant so
:·mucfi during my recent
·!

: .Surgery and recovery. ,
l :Mary£. 'Drummond

Office .............. :.. :........ 992-2259
'

Real Eetate General

Canaday
Realty
446-3636

£it

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iWIIoln::&gt;,

·, ( &lt; :'&gt;--"•

FOUR UNIT APARTMENT HOUSE, ONE UNIT
FRAME DWELLING PLUS MOBILE HOME ALL
LOCATED IN THE
PRESENTLY OCCUPIED.
VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE. NEXT DOOR TO THE
UNIVERSIII'Y OF- RIO' GRANDE. IF YOU HAVE
•. , ,. INVESTMENf. II* MINDl.;BIWTER •LOOI&lt;JAT. ii'HISit
THE .PRICE IS RIGHT~·!!::~

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Ronald K. Canaday, Broker

I

1 112 Story Frame Home with :t~':;{',~~r~;
.room, dining room. 3 bedrooms, 1 112 natrls . •
Gas Fireplace, heat is. F.A.N.G., tloors
earpet and walls are p;~nel. Full basement
12' K20' garage. ASKING 141,500

Mary P. Floy~. Aaaoc:late ·
HANDY WITH A HAMMER? THIS COULC
A
GOOC PROPERTY FOR YOU. HAS NEW ROOF
AND FOUNDATION REPAIR. LOCATED NEAR THE
CITY OF GALLIPOLIS ON ROUTE S88. CAll FOR
AN APPOINTMENT SOON.

~ · Announcements

PRICE REDUCEO.. RACINE• Good Condition·
This 1 ·112 Story Stone Home has 3 to 4
~rooms ,

iBINGO
•

: MON. &amp; WED.
6a30 P.M. ,
lUILAND
.· POSI467
SIAl lUlSI
' $600.00
: $50.00 0111011

......

living room, buill-in kitchen,

room, front slUing porch. Rear enclosed
.
Shed, c~tlar, F.A.N.G. heat. carpet. roof is 4
years old. Large lot on a good slreelll ASK!Njl

.

lEECH GROVE
ROAD

$43,000

'

IN.,.,.,_,~·~~~~~~~~~~~
B

BRICK RANCH
PRICE JUST REDUCED.
ONE... IT IS PRICED TO SELL

NEW USTINGI TWO STORY COLONIAL HOME
LOCATED ON LOWER ROUTE 7. FANTASTIC VIEW
OF THE BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVEA..$38,000. GREAT
BUY!
STORY FRAME HOME· 3 BEDROOMS, ONE
FULL BASEMENT,
. 22' X' 24' GARAGE. ONE

,.,.dt4

NEW ON THE MARKET! BEAUTIFUL RAMBLING
FEATURES OPEN
BRICK . TWO STORY.
STAIRCASE. 5 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, 2 CAR
GARAGE. ONE ACRE I.OT. A GREAT PLACE TO
LIVEANO SHOW OI'F YOUR ANTIQUES . .

I

NEW USTING RACINE· SA 124· Cute
home that has been remodeled Inside and out.
Newer carpel, paint, vinyl siding," thermo payne·windows. 1 1/2 story on levello1
1hree bedrooms, new F.A.N .G. turnace.
building: Perfect for young c~~r~:~n~.~~~~
retirement hOme. This Is virtually '
tree. ASKING $34,000

......~:~~~~~

ENJOY THE CONVENIENCE Of' I RENTAL UNITS
IN ONE· LOCATION, NEAR . THE CITY. SIX
BEAUTIFUL · PARTIALLY WOODED ACRES,
CONCRETE DRIVE. THIS IS A PROPERTY YOU
WILL BE PROUD TO OWN. PRESENTLY FULLY
OCCUPIED. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY.
NEW LOW PRICE MAKES THIS INVESTMENT
PROPERTY EVEN BETTERI

•

an ••ecutlve subdivision
horse lovers. You won't believe
Access to the baautlful Ohio for
lOvers, riding ring, Pl!:nic she~er, riding
and much more. Certain restrictions
I:~;. Call TOday for more Information·. Lot
It
and acreage vary accordlgn tothe POMEROY· GARAGE· ApproKimately
acre with blOck garage. Could have se,•era·il
I P,articular amenllies.
uses. Electric heat: Water and sower. depos"
needs paid . You could b~ In business for
.
.
$11 .000. PRICE REDUCED
NEW USTING· R/'CINE· Here Is good remodeled home In town. Level lot wllh a block
garage, 2·3 bedrooms, bath, new kitchen, dining area, living room. basement area, central air,
f.A.N.G. heat, newer root and oth8r teatures. Prtcecl10 StUll $39,500 .
1. . . .-~---------..;.;..;;........;._ __ .,

a

•

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I
'

'I

�•

•
sunday, Aprll25, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
440

Aplrtmenta
for

510

Rent

540 Ml1cellaneoua

HouHhold

Gooda

MerchandiH

Btauuful Modern t Bedroom
Apartfr'w.nt Rent &amp; U1Utti11 ln,er-

-•ncoa. No l'&lt;lts,

Yiow,

Modern 1BA All Utilities Paid
Except Electrle Gallipolis Ferry
Aru S250 month + Otpoalt

1304)675-13711675-3230

Newly Aemodtled 1 BA Apt
Prime Downtown Gallipolis Loca11on No Peta S300 + UUlltles

Reference Required 74.0 4.41!1
0008

North 3rd Ave Middleport 2
bedroom unfurnl&amp;hed apartment
ctepoalt &amp; references 740 992-

0185

BidS Full SIZI And Twin Com
ploll CO&lt;Jeh &amp; Dtlk Dryer EIO&lt;:

trk: Stow Recl iner • Tabtt 7.40
-97&lt;2
For Sate Recond illon ed wash
trl dryera and retrlgerators
Thomptona Appliance 3~07

"""""" 130&lt;)675-7388
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washer• dr-.'tfl refrigerators
ranges Skaggs 4ppllances 76
VIne Street Call 740-448 7398

HIB8-S18-0128

New And Used Furniture Store

Now Taking Applications- 35
W111 2 Bedroom Townhouae
Apartments
Include&amp; Water
Sewage Trash. $315/Mo 740

«&amp;&lt;ll08
One Bedroom Apartment In Pt
Plea&amp;ant Furnished Very Nice
and Clean No Pets PhOne

(30&lt;)675-1386

Below Holiday Inn Kanauga St09
And Sol Us 710-448-4782
530

$385/Mo 1 Deposit &amp; Good Refer·
ences 740-446--2801

Townhouse Apartments
Vtry Spacious 2 Bedrooms 2

Tara

541)

Buy or &amp;ell Riverine Ant i(lues
n24 E Main Street on Rt 124
Pomeroy Hours M T
10 00
am to600pm Sunclay100to

w

8 00 p m 740 992·2526 Russ
Oak Buffet Fal.(lling Couch
Dresser Etc No Dealers Please

74o-«6 3664
540

Exctlltnl
Condition
7•o-2.5-5575

Cub Cadet 185 Low Boy 80"
Deck New Engine Clutch PP

Clutdl Shift (7&lt;0)367-7128
For sale · used Snapper ridi ng
mower 26" graaa pick up avail
abtt May be aeen at 20.&amp; COndor
Street Pomeroy Phone 740-992
2975 Brand new deCk

Nordic Track Ltg Shaper New

560

Mlacella-•
Me:chandlee

Cond1Uon11200 7&lt;o-379-2218

}'latoriiM Special 314 200 PSI
Owner Moving New Queen Size $21 95 Por 100 1" 200 PSI
4 Piece Whitt Wicker Bedroom $37 00 Por 100, All Bra11 Com
prlllkln ~In 6loclt
Sol $600 00 7&lt;0-4&gt;46-aeM
RON EVANl ENTERPRISES
Otio, 1-too-837-l1521

Rl~ers

Upped EOH 30U75-U79

5 Person Hot Tub With Cover

bedroom apartment In Po
moray no pets 7&lt;o-992·5858

And Cabinet 8 Months Old Teal
Colored After 5 OOPM 740 446·

460 Space lor Rent
Mobile hOme site available bet
: wetn .Athens and Pomeroy call

740.385-&lt;387

• House Wllhin 15 M1les Of Borg
Nice
Warner Fen ce d Yard
Kllchen, 513 851·0100 Or 740·

«13896
• 490

24 Fl Round Above

Office building M•nersv1lle 600
square foal air conditioned very
nice $350 per month plus depos·

! 740-949-2093

MERCHANDISE
Household
Goods

Harvest Gold Sida By S1da·$IOO
Whirlpool Washer $85 00

AI

Excellen1 Servk:e
Ae•lble Financing Available

Home /Commercial Units
FREE Color Catalog
Sed

Dressing

Table

Stroller HighChair and Car Seal
7
(304)6 5-&lt;S&lt;B
Beanie Babies For Sale 740-245·
5443.
Beaullful Wedding Dress, Worn
Unalterld Decorated With Beads Soqulns Laca 740-..e 7142
Blua Couch &amp; Lovosoat $400
CaliAfter5PM 740367-o880
Complete RCA Satellite Olsh Systarn 740-4467055

$1 ,250, The Above Includes Nor
mal500
Installation
Don 2t Call
$1
2 1/2 TonIf You
$1 350
Ton

Us Wo Borh LoHI 740.446-6308,

~n=o=5================~~==1·=Boo-==~==1~==e=========
Real Estate General

WOOD BE.tLTY, INt:
32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Allen C Wood, Btoker · 446·4523
Ken Morgan, Broker· 446·0971
Jeanelle Moore,· 256-1745
Patnc1a Ross
740 446 1066 or 1-IIOQ.894.1066
NEW USTINGI NMd city
canventenceo?
Thrs
remodeled two story home
has 3 bedrooms, 1 5 baths,
lull basement lnground
pool and 1s equ1pped with
central air
Located 1n
Gallipolis Call for more
lnlorma11on 1188

Looking lor 1 greet pleco
to relae a lamljy? Five
year old home w1th 3
bedrooms
2 bathe,
fireplace Yard Is approx
59 acres for lela ol funl Let
us shew It to you 11&amp;9

Aro you looking lor
11p1ce? We have a home
In Bidwell that 1s nestled on
25 acres M or L, 3
bedrooms
w/walk·ln
closets, 2 5 baths, 2
llreplaces an oHice, sun
room, 2 car garage &amp; an
lnground pool w/a deck &amp;
pool house
w/,cellar
underneath
Don I miss
your opportunity to see this
home Ask tor 1165

thla nice home located In
I aubdiYittor.. Gallipolis
C1ty Schools. 3 bedrooms,
1 1/2 bath, 2 car garage
Aboul1 acre 11158

Located In beautiful
downtown Gelllpotle. -G
bedrooms , 1 5 balhs,
fireplace, lull basemen! &amp; 2
car garage Call about this
home 1odayl 1164

Enjoy your nelghbore with

Dollghtlut 3 bedroom
homo In a country setting
Gallipolis City Schools
Located on approx 1 acre
Call for lnlormallon We
would like to show ~ to you
11515
Wont to Ill In-n? Briel&lt;,
ranch with 3 bedrooms, lull
basement and carport In
Gallipolis
Immediate
possession
Call for an

PRICE
REDUCED- appt to see 1153
Getaway located In the
rolling hillo ol Rio
0ntnc1t.
19941&gt; frama;
ralich c home w&lt;th 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, garage,
approx 2 acres. Wlth1n
GalllpoHs City Schools and
best of all ~ 1s reasonably
.
priced Let us show lh1s lnvell now In commercl•t
one to you 1110
property t0C81ed In VInton
lor 1 profttlble return.
end Two one family dwellings
and one two family dwelling
'15010

9,

Blchon Friat AKC 1 Fem111 1

JaCk RUIS8U fttnale puppv btown
and white ahor1 hair sm111 breed,

1250 740-7&lt;2 2050

CFA Fllgisttrtd HlmaiiYin Stat

,=.:..:.:...~~~"':"""":
Pel Sitting In Your Home! Aunt
iiY'I Creat!Jrea 740-:245-5599

Wormed , Lltttr
Malo, Poulblo Delivery 7&lt;o-37fl.
Troinld ?&lt;o-367-7705
2e99 7&lt;o-379-90e1
Point Kltttna

Registered Puppies Pekenese
.llack&amp;Whlte, S250aa Shltzu
~ ~old&amp;Siac:k $300ea Minia ture
.., Shauzers, Black&amp;S IIver Salt&amp;
• Pepper S250aa Unregistered
01
Sheltese Black&amp; White Sable&amp;
: Wtllte
S150ea Peek A Poo
.,f!Uack&amp;~hlte
Gold&amp;Wh1te

• 387.0188
: ~Te-,-:-,18-r-:P:-up-p-:-18-,-.-:-8-:-W:::k-s-:W:::o-r_m_ed-:
• Weaned Tail&amp; Docked Asking

Must sell membership at Royal
Qak hall pr,ICe 304 273-3301

: $100 00 Each 7&lt;o-379-2586

•••
•
•

New chest of drawers new vanity
dresser wllh mirror, all mahogany
Banlecreek Trlmcycle like new
Paula L Sayre Portland Ohio

RIO GRANDE-country ilvmg alii's best A 12 year old ranch home with
bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with fireplace • .dining room, and a pretty
kitchen Has a mce front and rear porch, above ground pool, &amp; a 2
garage. Some new carpet, freshly painted &amp; decorated mterlor. Alllhls
Sitting on a big cotner lot thai IS level to rolling Just step right In One mtle
I frnm college, on State Route 325.

Nood a reofdentlet tot In
Gallipolis?
We have
something for you 12017
Broker OWned
Woodland In Morg•n
Twp., B 4 acres more or
less Call lor Information
12018 •
For Sale: Six lol8 In
Waltef'a Hill Subdivision
Call today and ask lor
12011

We IN llwlyegllrl to help you 1111 or buy property.
Renbll property II atao IVIIIIbll. Give Ul I Cllllt
4411-1088.

610

Farm Equipment

Ford Dyna Balance Mowing Ma
chine Series 515 7 Foot Cut
Maule Ferguson Model 12

Square Bailor 7&lt;o-2~

(:ll4)675-5373
630

Livestock

2 yearling Charla is buill, 740·

742·1903

Angus Bull
of48..98!18 7&lt;()-&lt;.8-7&lt;21
3 Y11r O ld Chi

excellenl
• c.ondiUon nice size lor youth
: $1950 OBO c:au 740·742 2367

:717 N H Silage Chopper With 2
.. Row Corn Head, $1 600 00 Also
., N H Silage Blower $1 000 00

• 74()-643 22S5
• For Sale IH/12" Disk Brl111on/1 2
: Culllpacker Both E•cellent .eh
• I 920 Forage Wago n Tim hock

• Farm 1304)675-&lt;308

205 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760
992·2886

•

1988, Cellbrity Auns Good Nice
Work Car 158 000 m1lta, V

Two Young Poll Bulla One &amp;lack

1990 GEO Priam $2 500 00 17&lt;0)

640

Hay

Grasa Hay At Delano JacktOn
Farm 740..a.46 1104. Or 740·441 ·
0450
Large S(luare Bales Of Good Hay

For Sale 740 379-2639

71 0

258-1330

okf Gelling Part Wallmg
Horse 1304)576-33&lt;3
7 year

2 Year·

Autos lor Sale

1948 Ford 2 Doors Sedln 305
Ch evy Engine Standard Shltt
Needs Work! t1 850 740 256
1203 Anytmo.
\

I~O•)S75

Angus Bull for Sale! (740) 245·
50
" .:.:84
:.._____-::'___ ~

l304}b•~3515

•

1995 Neon Hlghtlne 4 Doors Au·
toma11&lt;: .A/C Tilt Cassella Blue
Well Maintained Great Gat Mile·

7481
Pollc:e tmpounas, And Tax
Repo'a For Listings Call 1·80&lt;r

::.:..:.:._--.,.-....,...
Fair Pigs For s J 9 wks old
35 4r b rear
to go $50

7&lt;0-« 1..0564

agel Only $6 900, OBO 740 367-

1810·1990CARS FROth&amp;OO

0583

55 000

Miles Black Excellent Condition
SB 500 7&lt;0
8172 740 25S
6251

1995 Neon Hig hhne 4 Doors
Loaded Cold Air S3 500 080

Reasonable 74Q-245-0485

7

'IJ 6 T

740.379-9141

1979 Camaro Auto 350 Good
Engine!&amp; Body Interior needs
work Ellterlor needs painted

have pelnl $1500
3882

1995 Chevy Camara

Tops All Power Auto

1995 Chevy Corsica, Autom
Trans A/C Antllock Brakes
Good Condition $4 500 00 OBO

Alpine Goats 1 Nanny &amp; 2 Klda

Fair P9s lor Salel Excellent Blood
Lineal For mora Info -nation Call

1992 Pon11ac Granda Prl• Call
:Jti15055

••a

TRAN SPORTAT •U N

Bales 01 Hay For Sale 740-366-

reasonaly Prlcedl Phone (740)

oeo. 74o-3ee 81178

75t2

+H &amp; FFA Club Pigs And Round

4·H/FFA Fair Lambs QualifY and

1992 tionda AccordJ LX 2 Door
Coupe, 5 Spead 215K $3 750

1995 Buick LeSabre Custom 4
Doors Blue Loaded 740 682

7&lt;o-38H221

9033

Auto, Alr - 11 !00 I304)S75-50&amp;4

319-3323 EM1 4420
1985 Pontiac Trans Am 305 PS
PB New Tires New Brakes Real

Nicol $2 BOO 1304}875·3824
1987 Chevelle Needs A Lltlte
Work 740..379-2462
1 988 Bereua, V 6 5 Speed Has
Ground Effects Mag_ Wheel
$1 500 Firm 1304)675-5091

1995 Toyota Tercel Automallc,
New Tires 33 000 Miles 42 Milas

Per Gallon $5 700 OBO 740·
.. 1-0118

1996 Dodge Intrepid 3 5 liter engine A C Pwr Lock Windows,
AMIFM CD Pl aye r 56 000 miles

$10,800 Calll304)675·7119
1997 Ford A.sptre 4 cylinder, air,
dual airbags e•cellent condlllon
m~sl sell! $6900 080 7 40 949

1014

Owner
Motivated Green School District
out this 3
bedrooms, 2 bath home. Oversized living room,
formal dlmng area The k1ds Will e~joy keeping cool
In the above ground pool
deiached garage
Shaded 1 acre lawn and
11078

QPf:NHOUSE

bdtind )1111. M"'' :
L'

t ..

........
lm:flllftllllry

o;·

.

•;:·~·:&gt;!:!J'J

Joe A. Moor•-Brclkor
Sllr111 L Even•Moore
Petrtcte Hey•
Care

Di«c11ow: State Rt 588 to Rodney Turn left on
Cora Mill Rd Approx 2 Miles out on the left
Winding Cross Development -1631 Cora Mill Road

lot •

..

liOme )til roUnd '
CAll li&gt;r OUI6u ljlodiu .. ~r 104-.
_ SIO rolo•a"t... wtd!lloor
r-o~
-,
plans li&gt;r- 60 rnod&lt;l hom"

Russell D. Wood,

:DAI AICUHM
CllLll ~lll'U,

Auto Ptlrl1 &amp;
Acce11orlea

760

1994 4X4 Gao THICker 48 000
M1iet 4 Wheel Or Great Condl
lion S&lt; 200 oo 7&lt;0.;o.oa-8172 0&lt;
740-256-6251
1995 For~ Windlllr van 3 8L V
8 automatK:, alf, crulat tltt wheef
e•cellenl condition asking

Budget Priced Trensml11ion•
and Engln11 At! Typu Aceesa
To Over 10 000 Tranamiulona

eve Jolnil 740-245-sen

810

Appliance Partl And

720 Trucks for Sale

740

780

1985 S T Extend Cab 4. Wheel
Drive 2 8 5 Speed Good Sl'lape
1999 Rockwood Pop up Camper

1981 Harley Low Alder Too Much
To Lrsll E•celltnl Cond,llon!
S10 500 00 , 7&lt;o-« t-0872

1988 Dodge Dakota Pickup 5
Spd Charcoal Grey With Red
Shipe And ~ed Topper N1ce!
$1 BOO 00 740-379 2566
1989 Chevrolet TrUde Low Mites

740-448-1788

1304)a82 2218
1995 Harley Dav idson 1200
Sportater Excellent Cond•llon

ss 000 1304)675-3824

1993 Ford E•tended Cab 250

Turbo Diesel S15 BOO 7&lt;0 446
9317
1993 XLT Ford Camper Special
Loaded 302 Double Gas Tank
Running Boars Bumper Rods
Club Cab Full Seat E)(cenent
Condition $11 000 740 379

23t2
730

1982 Harley Davidson Sponster
1000 CC Rebuilt Engine~ New
Transm1sslon S S Carburator
too many extras to 1111 $5 500

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

90 Chevy Astro van all whee l·
drive PW POL good condition
$5500 72 Mack truck 237 en·
glne runs good good tires
$2000 740 74.2 2675
1978 Fon:t Bronco 740 ~6 6566
1992 DOdge Caravan 4. CytiMer

Auto /o/0, 108 000 Ml S2 750 00
1990 Dodge Cargo Van
$900 00 080 l&lt;Q-256-1233
OBO

1993 Chevy Conversion van v
8 Rear Air $12 000 (304)675

General Home Main·
tenenc:e Pa lnllng v inyl aldtnt
carpentry, doors windows bath • •

Camping
Equipment

mobtll home fepaJ and more Far
flee 11t1mate call Chet 74.0 99.2

1997 28Ft Terry Camper Air
Heat Awning Electric Jack Ex
cettent Condition Stored Inside

Dunng Winter $11 500 (304}576
23&lt;5
790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1988 Paoo """"

8323.

'

Ltv lngston s Basement Watff
Prootlng
basement repaW,s
done rree estlmales Hletirfte
guarantee 12yrs on job experi'-

au

ence (304)895-3887

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Molof Home 32

1995 Harley Davidson Uttra Cl11

(30&lt;)675-3787

EM1raol $18500 7&lt;o-367·n55

Chllp. 7&lt;Q-256-857&lt;

Artfc Cat 454 Bearcat Sought
new In Oecember '98 Excellent
CondJfiOn (304)895-3185

Truck Camper
Ft Sleeps 4
Stove Aetdg Furnace Dlnene
Toilet All Around Good Condition

ale Elecrra Gilda Loaded Lots Of

Honda Helix Motor Sc:ooter
250cc Slereo &amp; Trunk All Or•o•·
nal Very Few Made Preler To
Trade For 4 Wheeler Of E(lual
Value 740 245-048S

23 Ft Witderneu

a

$250 00 740-245-9858

SERVICES

1788

Larry'• Lawn "
Care

Mamtenance and Manicunng

Improvements
BASEMENT

"Reslden11al &amp; Commerdal
•shrubbery Maintenance ..
'Solving Me1gs and Gallla Counties
111 OhiO ana Mason County '" WoJ

1991 Stratos with 120 hp Evlnrude loaded eJ~:cetlenl con~ltion
asking $S500 740-14.2 2101

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional !llellme guaranree
local references furn ished Es

•o.r .............. Leoel .....

1994 Four Wlnns Fling 14 115
hp , $5500 Fyn boat See at 399

446 0870 1 eoo 281 0576 Rog
ers Waterproofing

1·740-742-2803 or •
1·7 40-446-3622

South
7
4.0 992Third
7727

labllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)

Stree.t,~M=Id=d:la=p=or~ll===:::==:::==:::~=====-...-----'
-

3787

Real Eatate General

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
e-mail

ue for Information on our llatlnga:

RUSSELLD WOOD, BROKER ,
446-4618
Judy DeWitt
l MerrtU Caner
Tamm1e OeWllt..........,............ .

740-446-0008
Restdence 740-441·1111
evansmoo@zoomnet net

11020 Watch 1ne roll by In a newly bulh
home on the Ohio River LOOated In
ralaxlng community of Syracuseth
c 's,delrtull
2·3 BR, 2 bath home cHars w01
extras Including approximately 700
wrap around deckmg With Hoi Tub to
six A alone hearth fireplace accents
grea1 room wrth a loft day bed room ovet
lOOking Ita baauty Don t m1ss owmng your
own p1ece of the Oh10 call today for
additional de1a11s

ro er

~l~===~l"'~r·~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~=:::::

.

Free E•tmude•
'Protessiooal Rou11ne Lawn

Home

810

750 Boals &amp; Motors
lor Sale

Will Sell

Residential or commercial wtn'!P.
new serv10e or repairs Master ~i­
c:ensed electrician Ridenour
Electrica l WV000306 304 61-5

blgbend@eurekanet.com

B k

:

II Loaded Like New 128 ooo

514 Second Avenue

~

E~·

perience All Work Guaranteed..
Franeh City Maytag 740 448

ItO 500 7&lt;o-7&lt;2·3013

E&gt;&lt;cellent Shape 130&lt;)675 5137

SerVICe •11

Name Brtrtdt Over 25 Years

4.784 $1200 00

Molorcyclea

Home
Improvements

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

510 2nd Ave., Gallipolis
(740) A A6 7101

lOG llt"CTURfS
•
1'0 &amp;.61~, Ri.J..., wv !5!71

Van• &amp; 4-WC&gt;a

Blackburn Realty

BIG BEND REAI.;"'Y
•.1
' INC

""P11"""''f'PioFm

~.,.lopH&lt;iqnt&lt;..,

730

Jfunbv 'Cittm..-Jfadb~l • Page 07

Now gao llnk.o &amp; body porto D &amp;
R AUIO, Ripley WV 130.)372· 7795
3933 0&lt; 1·800 273-9329
C&amp;C

r.;:. (B

April 25, 1999
Time: 2:00 PM to 4:00PM
Sunday,

1-800-458-$&gt;,90

84 Monte Carlo 305 VB 80 00
miles Ca II afurr 5 30 (304) 875

Galllpolla, OH 45631

lt:11uho -htdt ~·

awaytoyourvay '

1998 Pontiac Trans .Am Na\'y
Blue Metallic 5 7 Liter LS 1 Er
Qine Leather tntenor 10 Speaker
Monsoon Stereo 12 ~ D lsc CO
Changer Fully Loadecl! Will Take
Pay Off 7&lt;o-..-548

Real Eatate General

'

titebmilfands«'

e

~794

&amp; Grain

Autoa for Sale

Autoe for Sale

Outstanding Angua And Chran·
gus Bu lla Reasonably Priced,
Slate Run Farms Jackson, Ohkt
740.2811 S3115

Oekalb Sttd Corn &amp; Soy Bean&amp;
4 Year Old Paint Gelding, $1,000.' For Sale 130&lt;)675 150e 'v

1740} 245 5672 0 1740) 3S7·

•

710

740~

A PH A Yearling Filly 2 Y1 ar Old

! 1939 John Deere ·w

710

610 Farm Equipment

One Rad 7&lt;0 25H510

Oak Cattle Rackl Painted Black
Fits '87/&amp; okfer Chev 8 Bed EX
cellant
CondUJon
ltOO

: - - - - - - - - - ' " - · 1 FMiy Excellent Btoodllnes
:610 Farm Equipment
ling Pony 7&lt;o-38B.0321

Dottie S. Turner, Broker

The Moment

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

•

DOTTIE TURNER REALTY

Owne11 dropped prlco
$5,000.001 This new price
makes this home even more
entlcl~gl Well decorated 3
bedroom, 2 ba1h home with
oversized

1 + acre

lawn

Large hvlng room open 1o
formal dining &amp; kitchen
French doors lead to rear
covered patiO Front porch
Detached 2 car garage &amp;

NICE &amp; DIFFERENT best
descrobes this livable !
bedroom. 2 bath home, llvtng
room d1mng, k1lchen Large
wrap around deck All lhls
and more s11uated at 270:
Debbto OliVe close &amp;
convenient 10 shopping &amp;
schoolal Let us show It to.
you
11088

Eatate

1:UTE AS A BUTTON•••Musl

rl~~ a~. t"r/ .JJJ.

.._.,~1---~- ~· '\:!11111Pl-

*

~~ta4
6806
446•
Branch Office
23 LocuS1 St
I Ohio

Main Office • 388·BS26
958 Clark Chapel Ad

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

see 1ns1de rhts almost new-

VIRGINIA SMITH, eROKER, '"' "'""' 441 eeoe

1100t
LET
THE
WHISPERING PINES CALM
your senses with this 3
bedroom
2
bath
unlbuiiVmodular
home
Bathe In the master bath s
garden tub overlooktng your
own private pool A 4 car
de1achlld
garage
and
altached 24x24 shop offers
the handy , man plenty of
working room Bask In the
warmth of thf sun room year
round
overlooking
a
manicured lawn Cell today
lor location and add~ronal
details
11008 18 ACRES MIL
READY FOR BUILDING!
This property located In
3 GENERATION
Morgan
Townshtp
has 11007
several feel of road lron1age SER~E
OARAQE
with
utilltfH
avatlable OPeRATION READY FOR
YOUI Several extras Include
$tUOO.
hOISts, lifts, air compressor
and tools 3 bay eervlce area
with large parts and re1ail
floor room Cal) for delalls

EUNICE NIEHM.
QAIL BELVILLE ..

,, ,....,... .... Ulllflll

t~~~~~o~h~,o~4:58~14tt~~~~~ ~E¥~~UK~«X;;n;~r;~:;:;:;~
13017 A HOME WITH ELIIOW OUR

va11'0 101 someone needing plenty

apace 4 large BRa 3 baths
LA, formal OR, kit wlbullt In BBQ
full basement, w!dlv!dad rma , 2
wood burning FPs central ai r
large ,garage
36 acres m/1

ROOM Located In the city on a
(IUiat dead and St 4 bedrma 2
1/2 baths, 8 rooms, very lg LA

Heat Pump &amp;
windows and many

baths

unit

~~~~~~~f.:~~~~~~LD~G

overlook these
Iota at a surprisingly low

for a SPRING SALE
L~~~~~~~on Lakeview Drive off
Cl
Lake Dr 2 3 Ac mil
111,100 00. Also 5 AC for
13,900110 VLS
12004 Very Nice 1 ac tot w{2
road frontages Acceaa to boat
ramp Very nice tot to build or to
aet your mobile home on Close
to town

13021 IT'S A PERSONALITY
PLACE WITH AN AWESOME
VIEW OF THE OHIO RIVER
1791 SR 7 SOUTH ON THE
RIVER EDGE

Spring Summar,
Winter or Fall will be most
enjoyable ~ living here
26'x28'
Great Am
Formal Entry
w/Parquet floore, l1vlng rm , dining

Equipped lcll 1It floor balh &amp;
I beG"''· Oeck.w/HOI.Tub Carport.
entertainment 3 bedrms up
Baoemont Wrap tronl pore~.
anac:tted 2 car garage Plus a

24'•« garage aportment 3 277
Acres more or less Aoatlng dock
akl ramp Satellite MAKE

WORTH LIVING Call
L SMITH •46·880S

GREAT

1n,ooo.

Shining &amp; Spot1eaa 3 Bedroom
ranch Charming kit w/appllancea
&amp; beautiful cabinets w/bar

Carpon, dock cemenl drive
Green Twp 1 1500 Acres m.ll
CaliVLS
13330 Raccoon TWp 19 5 AC
Wooded &amp; Rolling Located

on

SA 325 Very Pnvate-City schoola
&amp; close to the freeway 44.8 8808

12837 BIG REDUCTION
EXTRAORDINAR't Located In
Green Twp

2 story wtmany

amenlllos lnslanliy appealing for
a growing 1amily 2 1/2 bllho,
formal DR, LR, fireplace In LR,
lull divided &amp; finis hid basement
Vacant Priced 10 aall coil VLS
399 8828 1108,1100 110
LOTS, LAND,
COMMERCIAL PROPEFI11ES
1873 REDUCED PRICE·t17
acres close to new Fwy hospital
shop ctr water gas sewer
Ad1oming Pinecrest Nursing

Home
1302'7' NAlURE'Sr PARAOISE.l
Are you eearch1ng for Tranquility

artd Acreage? Than lh1o lo for
You 5 acres m/1 wllh olectrle ana
rural wafer orr~ 1/2 Slockod pond Plenty ol road
fronlago 122,5110.110
f1 081 WHITE AD Lolo·Riduced

~:-·'

• ..

.l'"f"J, '

~

' ';I ;

stone WBFP:

,.

'l.i ,,...
, , , ..

leVeiMtOruoirirrr8ni

IMMEDIATE

car garage
POSSESSION!

Just one of our

t)(Ciualve

I 1
bo·•
offerings May lol you a ••
others too? VI!'Gfnla t t8 8806
13012 RIO GIQNDE VICINITY.
Hug~ 2 atory home w/4
bedrooma. 2 112 baths

extra

tg

kit Forma[ dining room &amp; LA,
Fam Am Aloo floc Rm , lOlBI
rms Patio &amp;
AC, mJI
10
2 112
Olal .. 8·8808 Rl~hl Now-tho
~
mol1 Important cal you'll mako
lhle y..r VLS 448 8808
12tll YOU MIGHT eE
OVERLOOKING ')111 BESTI All
brick ranch 314 bldrms , 2 1/2
bathS, formal LR &amp; OR, lam nn,
2i1g windOWS l.oldl of cablne1B
&amp; storage. Full divided basement,
2 wooctbuming flrtplacel, fenced
yard, gar &amp; Ql'port attic lto!liQI
1 Ac m/11ron1tng on the beautiful
' OhiitRiv.- CflyJICitooill•vety
dole to town. V\,S 448 8808
12181 PEACEFUL, AEITfVI..
SECLUSION. Thlo gracious
home IS Inviting you In 3 BR, 111·
level, 2 112 bllhl, LR, OR, eat-In
kll FR w/Wbfp 1n11~ 2 car
altaohed 9111111 &amp; rm lboYO.
Fenced atll ·&amp; bam, atocke(t

+46-6800

.-

the

lake, 5 AC mil 2 miiH from
tr_.y prt SR 3211 N \ILS
13001 DELUXI ELEGANT 2
STORY HOMI, 3 Bldrooma, 2
112 bOihs ig LA formel lrtfiY ond
dining rni , with' oryslll lighting
Sunken family rm w/WOQdbomer
New carpet, new kit w/..t·ln
area 2 car attached garage Only
the blst 11 offered ln thil
attractive hom. The many eldral
will al&amp;allhl ai10W Tills Ia your
chance to own a lovtly
Immaculata hol'ne VIrginia &lt;448

vJttwing wllh VIrginia L Smllh

.•

D~~r~ll~;::

windows from the
ceiling Lower
rm, 3 decks, 2

Roll1ng countryside to biJikla new
homo wllh a Greal Vlow
S2•,1100 00 VLS «8-88011
12111 CHARMING VICTORIAN
HOME &lt;1-5 bedrrna , 3 bl1ho kll •
formal DR &amp; LA crystal
chandoMorolhroughout full be!l'l
BA w!gaa fireplace Garage
Landscaped lot E)(clualve

(,l ;

living too "jii;Jlin,~~bititlng~
skatfng &amp; 1 ,.,;..:,•. _
IMngflropiac8,
nn
wfth

1or Spring Sale e 8 Ac mJI

with compete kit

:At

205 North Second Ave.
Mldd
OH

This home can accommodate 2
fa"dlles. Extra large klt VLS 448

Mineral rights
PRIVATE
LOCATION Approx. 2 500 aq ft
'131;!00 VIrginia «613806
12011 WOODED 11 Ac. mA.
Located on Kemper
1998 Mol&gt;lle home, 3

home· aaay to rent

I We OWNER MAY FINANCE.
tour on 11110011

Ct•nlc, ranch •tyte, tov
h - thlt hll • touch 01
1n Interior decorator iiiiCI
tand8clper. A retreat With
a Iorge stone fireplace, 3·4
bedrooms, 3 baths, 2
kftchena, finished buement
lor entertaining Approx 5
acres with a view of the
countryside
10 minutes
from Holzer Clinic 1181

each 1hot1, 8 months old, r•o -

&amp;96-1085

malton

Like New Spalding Pool Tab let
$500 00 Phone 1740) «t-oB86

Be eggre111ve end' let
your monoy work lor you
with
thlle
rental
propertleet 1 1/2 atory
burldlng contalmng 3 apta
also 12 x60'- 2 bedroom

' ~::'~d tn mobile

ePM Floh Tank/POl Sh09 2•13
JaCkson Avenue/Point Pltallnt
130&lt;)675-2083

• f'eglster•d Wolf Pup 4 Months
:old $150 Call After 7 PM 740

Pounds Easy Qu ick
Fast
Dramatic Results 100% Natural
Doctor Recommended Free Sam
pies Call 74.0-44 t 1982

mond Kenmore Washer $75
White Whirlpool Dryer S60 AI
mona Kenmore Dryer sao Call
COOLQOWN
Alter 500 7olll...s-906E
Central Air Condllionlng Ad dod
=::..::.:::.:..:::..:..~=~:::---:1 To Your Furnace 3 Ton lnslallod
Washers Dryers Ranges Retrl
gratora 90 Day
Guarantee!
Appliances
Recondolioned
French City Maytag 740 448·

Blrdo, Pood Suppll ..

Sun '·-'PM Mon Sat 11AM·

oaoh AKC Colllll lhr11 mo111
ublll whill eyoo D111J1111 $200

At&lt;C Siblriln Huaky Puppill~
Blue EYII $150 00 To $200 00
Adult Ftmale Or Milt Puppy
$50 00 7-8627

Dag Obtdlenc:t ClaUII Now
l'ormlng The Right Paw Train ing
Center 740 446 1864 For lnlor

Call Ron Evans 1-8CJ0..537 9528

AMAZING
METABOLISM
Breaklhroughlll Lose 10·200

Onc:e Size 20 Completely

510

Filh

Pela for Sale

• $200111 1304)675-1073
·r-~~~--~--~-­

5x8 tilt bed u1111ty trailer Wlih sides
740 992 4144 after 6pm

Baby

ma111 ehota, champion blood
inn, 3 monlhl &amp; 5 monlhl 1200

AERATION MOrORS
Repaired New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock

7458

CaiiTOday1-BOQ.711.Q15e

For Lease

560

.

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

Sale

JET

Ground Pool

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
EUJy Factory Direct

470 Wanted lo Rent

Pete lor

Rio Granda OH Coil 700·2•5·
5121

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Good Shape 740-446·8189

Upstairs Three Room Apartment
At 651 Second Avenutt Galllpo
lis, Next To library $350/Mo
Plus Deposit No Pets Call Cab• tHe Or Juct; At740-.W&amp;-7323

560

Block brick, stwer piptl windows. lintels etc. Claude Wlnten

Grubb a Plano- tuning &amp; repairs
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
p18no Dr 740-446-4525

55645 S R 12• 740.8&lt;3-5132

Tower now accepting
•ppliGations tor 1BR HUD sub
aldlzed apt for elderly and hand
Two

Sale

Building
Suppllea

Floors CA 1 112 Bath Fully Car·
pelld, Patio No Pets Lease Plus
~ Security Deposit Required 740·
«S--3&lt;8 1 740.446-0 101

'TWin

Pet• lor

AKC Shollloo, nblol whlto fouo

Wanttd· good used futon with
bfad( CUihlon, 74C)-892 !1053

550

560

Pall lor Sale

Antiques

Moore owner

Roomy 2 Bedrooms With At·
tached Garage Rodney Area

Miscellaneous
MerchandiH

Crallsman Riding Mower te
Horst l(ohler Engine 46 lneh

L....

Deposit, Non Smokers, Avatllblt,
~1 Mill In Cll)', 7olll...s-3664

540

'"Sunday, Aprll25, 1999

RACINE-A very mce mobile home wllh a heat pump 2
·~=~~~~:n~.e"r:.;t bath, large attached storage building and
for that bus1ness at home. Has a large lot
very near boat ramp
120,000.00

1:
•

adjoining land being 57 acres

more or leiS $188,000 00 or
land being 52 acroo mora or loll

IK'un·• 33-Here's a home that Is walling for a family It has

bedroom•&amp;,, large living room, lull basement older gerege,
a1r Has a front porch and rear deoto w1th approxAekfng $56,000.00

11017 NEW&lt; LISTING-The.
bHt' fiiiPI' NCr•l' Ill' two•
counttM. Located on the
border of Gallla al\d Meigs
County this 50 Acre MiL
Gentleman's farm offers t 0
Acres of pesture with 40
Acres of rolling ~land as
a backdrop The Ire• lined
drlv.eway bnngs ydu to a
home w1th 4 BR. 2 bath, LR.
DR. FA
Situated In a
secluded valley Where cool
winding eprlngs run the
length ol the proparty A 2
car detached garage with
8118Ched carport and 24&gt;&lt;28
Horae barn and root ce11at lor
canned goods grown ln. your
garden spot awa~ you, Call
lor directions and book your
appolnlment soon .$82,100.

1\BifAJliY COVE RO , MIODt.EPORT'"I!ooklng r.w hunting land
a secluded homesite 36 acres of wooded property
a former homesne
$22,000.00
l010KiiNG FOR A MOBILE HOME? Here's a 1964 Mansion
and has 2 bedrooms with lots of space Comes
I =~~~::~r~f~;a stove and relngeralor Also has a heat pump
I
$8,5110.00

~~~E:STER&gt;-An older 2 story home with 3 bedrooms 2 baths,
family room, huge living room , part
be&lt;trilo.ms, attic, nice appearance, Jut step right
$88,800.00
bedrOom 2 •tory 'home

ouburllan living al an afforUoblo
COlonial homo with M&amp;IIH
formal living room, formal

eaoe

13029 OWNER ANXIOUS TO
SELL HOME &amp; 5 acrH moft or
Ina $150 000 00 or with all the

11001 STOP' RIN11NO
NOWI Check out this 1991
I 4x72 Mansion !IIIIa mobile
home offering 2 ~*!rooms, 2
baths, and centr~ heat Lot
not lncludeq , Call for
additional delalls

MIDDLEPORT-Rutland St - Approx 2 25 acres of ground
with a 3 bedroom ranch and a full basement Has a
de1ached 1 1/2 story garage, v1ny1 siding front porch &amp; deck
$47,000.00

dining room and eat In kitchen

13020 Llrgo •lck Aporln10nt
building &amp; 2 aj)l~ment Conoga
480 181 Ava Gr- In
Galilpolla camar 101 overloolllng
the Ohio River Uve here and
have onllMIIIImililtoo VLS ....
I13Uoo.

leading Into comfortable family
room wtlh flroplaco 2 112 balt)l, 2
car garage alao 2 tltr deck,

11021 River Loti River
Loti River Loll A River Lot
is Impossible lo find UNTIL
NOWI
1 75 Acres m/1
located In Syracuse, Ohio
Municipal sewage and water
available
Priced NOW at
138.000.

partially covtr«&lt; enhance~ your
~r

onjoymort. 1119,900 S2IIS

eaoe

WoOded and lovel~ with tralla

MAKE OFFER Oollghllul 4
bedroom homo, 2 ba1hl 2•'1128'
family rm , lnground pool,
BIIIOktOP driveway, 1110 tldfl lot
wKh ,_ oopllc ayorom, wa1orllp
&amp;electrio CoiiVLS 448e808
-~ OXVER RD. COTTAGE.
NHt lot' a retreat 2 beefnTII, 1 1!2
bolha, full dlv balomenl carpo~
l pool FrN gas 1 "" m/1 VLS
+IH808 145,000.
- H VACANT LAND-t2 Ac.
MIL 141,000 Lovely localion
iond Land 18 wooded ond may bl
aome tlmbtt Ctoae to freeway

til

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(740) 446-3644
E-Mail Address wlseman@zoomnet.nel

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Sonny Garnes

446-2707

....
-

Commercial PropeJty •
Commercial Property. 1 8
~res MJL
LOOated at the
junction of SR 35 and SR
325 near Rio Grande, Ohio

11017 NEW USTING-lel
the sweet sound of a
whiSpering brook relax you In
th1s 3-4 BR, 2 BA Home
Extras 1nclude central air,
newer roof, large back yard
with 16lC32 lnground Pool
All Wllhln minutes of town
Located on Bittersweet Dnve
near
Its a must

11014 Traditional 2
Offers 3 BR one
Complete
Kilchen
wllh
dishwasher
stove~
refrigerator, washer &amp; dryer
Wilh recent updates lo
l\lmace and wrndows
All
located on a double tot well
above Raccoon Creek In
Vinton Attordabty Prtced at

WANTS AN

• OFFER! on thiS 4 BR, 1 1/2
CONVENIENT

11013
MART-PRIME LOCATIONLocated ln the VIllage of
VInton 1hls C·Malt offers a
pnme corner lol at the
JUnction of SR 325 and SR
160 wrth manr extra"'
Established over a decade:
the bual118811 haa a Class 2
food preparation permh with
eat m capabilities
The
General Store atmosphere
tends Itself to hometown
charm with the conveyance
o1 oeootlne, Grocerleo end
oarego Focllltlet
Cell
lor
1 details

story home 1n Addison Twp
New roof In 95
Kitchen
equipped
w/stove
and
refrigerator Enclosed front
porch and large wood deck
House In process of being
remodelo.d·materlaL fher~ 1o
help
finish

Hlllortcel
Home can eaSily become
your dream home
3
spacious BR's large LR
pa~or.
4 gas fireplaces
random width hardwood
floors
Kilchan equipped
w/new
stove
&amp;
new
11028
retrlgeralor
Covered front
LOCATION,
POTENTIAL, POTENTIAL, porch Wtld flower garden
1n
a
small
PDTENTIALII One look Will Situated
convmce youl This hlstortc 2 community on a large lot
slory homo located In the Priced to sellll
hean of Gallipolis offers 3 4
bedrooms 1 bath 10 fool 11 Q1 2 Four City Loll noar
ceilings, and hardwood Downtown Gelllpolt• New
floors The unique hardwood Lllltnga Tho former Miller
fneplace mantles and large Funeral Home offers lronlage
•ttachlrl storage area make on Second Avo. as well as
this home a must see Step Third Ave all conslst1ng of 4+
C1ty Lola Cell lor Map and
Into tho pest at $85,000.
detailed Information

home
933
AVENUE ...$89,900.00. All
the Clly conven~ences
comes wl1h this home
L1v1ng room dlmng room,
k1lchen, 2 baths, 3 bedr~
&amp; more Detached 1 c
garage

wlth

carper

Excellent cond1t1on Don 1
this one pass you byi 11088

with
23+ acres Acreage flat to
sllghlly rolling Great tor
pasture or crops Fencmg,
pond large 75'x7B barn 3
Bedroom ranch home Call
lo
080
'

Ll
SOME EXTRA
INCOME TO HELP MAKE
YOUR MTG. PAYMENT?
Then pick up the poone and
call 10 see thiS almost new
home fUSI a few minutes of
town You w1ll ba Impressed
wtth this home Large family
room, living room, dlmng,
kitchen, 3 bedrooms 2 full
baths &amp; lots of extras
mcluded Collact the renlal
1ncome off the garage
apa~ment Included Call for

deiSIISi 11065

.

"" ~ .,..,
. ....,·, ... I

LOOK HERE AT THIS ONEI
Asking prrce Is, can you
believe $36,900 001 Ranch
style home w1th attached
garage, family room, large
k1tchen and llvl~g room,
basement
Excellent
location next to town Lei us
show It to you 11037

Larger than appears.

from the extenor
3
Bedrooms 2 full baths ntcs

kitchen wrlh oak caOilnoliSJ•·J
llv1ng room

dmlng

attaohed 1 car naraoe
plenty of extenor room being·:
approx 1 6 acres Let

I

ch,.,w

it,,.. HJ"I!I l

MINI-FARM. Silualed at a
low 1raffrc road apprax
acres that has som,e paollu.rti
land for some cattle or
horses
N1ce s1zed bnc~
homelhat has a lull walk·oul

;i

basement

T
Well
constructed 3 bedroom
home Irving room, kllchen
bath Newer roof Ou1ck
possessron I
Walking
d istance to stores

school

Church etc 11 OliO
$4,500.00 Is 1ho ask1ng proce
for lhis 59x114 tipprox lot

$45,000 00 OR BEST that 1s s•tuated along
OFFER tor this 2 lam1ly Raccoon Creek Ideal spot
residence, that has been to place a camper G1ve us a
recently
remodeled
calllodayl 11075
Upstairs apartment cons1sts
of 2 bedrooms, hvtng room, TUDOR STYLE RANCH
kitchen, bath and downstairs made with lhe tam1ty tn m1nd •
has bedroom, bath llv1ng , La~g~ , hvmQ, rqom &amp; family
room ,. kltcberv &amp;.{ mor:8'J room w1th formal dln1ng area:
2:)'x173 tot wllh 2 extra
Eat-1n k~cllen 3 bedrooma,
parcela
Broker owned
WANTS SOLD NOW II 2 full baths Resting on a
MAKE HIM AN OFFER YOU few easy to matnta1n acres
1978
MIGHT BE SURPRISEO

UVABLE ... S19,900.00
Small one story home 2
bedrooms, llvtng room ~
kitchen ba1h Allhe edge or
1own Nol a 101 still available
1n thiS priCe rengel 11038
NO WAmNG HERE vnti:l
CAN
MOVE
I
IMMEDIATELY ,.and best
ail owner IS w1lhng to deall
Wants sold nowi N1ce rancl(
w1th beauttful red oaf+
hardwood flooring 3 Baths;
lull wallt.oul . basement.

co
SR 124....$56,000.00
Supar comer lOt over 6
acres plus one story home
wrth partial basement, living
room dining I'O&lt;lm, knchen,
rec room &amp; more
Lot
would make an excellent
commercial site t1 oee
REDUCED 185,000 00 IS
THE NEW PRICE FOR
THIS NEAT HOUSE that le
lull at history
Lots ol
updating, Ioyer, living room,
d1nlng, kttchen den
B
bedrooms 2 lull baths All
cedar lined closets 2 car
garage &amp; loads 1110re
11049

BUILDING
SITE IN
CHESTER VILLAGE
2
tots combined lor one s11o
Won11as11ong $13,000 00
11077
35051 BALL RUN ROAD
Super nice ranch home that
Is 2 years young
3
Bedrooms 2 full baths, full
buement, 2 car attached
garage, sacurlty system 9
acres more or less of land
Very nlcel 11070

COMMERCIAL
aUILDING... 112 Wesl
1
Street
Pomeroy
$45,000 00 2 Large sales
area off1ce area, restroom ,
lots of storage area upstairs,
and on main level Call lor •

YOUR OFFER JUST
MIGHT BUY THIS super
nice cape cod style All
American Home
3·4
bedrooms , 2 lull baths,
family room w1th French
doors on dln1ng area that
leads 10 super nice deck
Over 2 acres Make your
appo1ntmenl at oncel WMO

NEW USTINGt
CONVENIENCE
COUNTRY CHARM ...
large 2 'tory home has 3·4
bedrooms 1 1/2 baths '
basement and detached ,
garage
wllh
overhead •
workshop Theres a

.
IN TOWN •

more tnformat1on 110&amp;4

f

front:

enclosed sun room w•lh

Sidewalk llow1ng to a gazebo
lor larn1ty entertaining Just
call to seeI 11078
LOOKING FOR A LOT? Consider any or alllhreel Lots stalt at appro• 1 6 acres to over
Public water seMCe available ReS1riCted for your prQtectlon $12 000 00 &amp;

Carolyn Wascll· 441·1007

Robert Bruce 446-0621

I,

'

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�Page

;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;P;;omeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

Benefits make UITs popular with.investors
by professional analysts who perform thorough analyses of each security
_UITs (unit investment trusts)
before it makes it into the UITs portfolio.
·
are gamtng m populanty as more and more investors
• Some investors may think that since securities in a urrs portfolio arc
become familiar with the benefits they offer.
fixed, !hey are left to the wills of the markets. Actually, they are actively
First appearing in 1923 as "fixed trusts, • the numsupervised and a se&lt;:urity may be removed for credit reasons so investors are
ber of ~nit investment t.rusls in the market increased
not stuck with a 'time bomb.'
substantially in the 1930s, partly in response to the
• Some investors may view um as not very liquid. The truth is that urn
1929 stock market crash.
have immediate liquidity and proceeds are available e~h and every business
Declining in number over the next two de&lt;:ades,
~y although, as stated above, the value may fluctuate with market condi· .·
they regained popularity in the 1960s as a means for
!tons and may be worth more or less than the original cost.
investors to participate in the tax-exempt municipal .
• Some investors may be skeptical of UITs because they don 't publish ·
bond market. With stock and corporate bond um
their net asset values daily in newspapers like mutual funds. However, urn
conceptualized in the 1970s, this little ·known invest·
must calculate their values daily and provide regular statements to unit-hold ..
ing concept continues to achieve acceptance today.
ers, just like mutual funds. They do not publish their daily net asset values '
, . Unit investment !rusts re~mble. ,mutual fu_nds in several way's. Both are because there ale so many thousands of different series of UITs that active-·
mvestment compames that mvest m portfohos of se&lt;:urilies on behalf of ly trade, no newsp.~per can use up the space to publish these.
·
investors who share a common financial objective and 'both are sold with •
Daily unit values are simply a phone call away. Last, some investors may .
prospe&lt;:lus. om, however, also liave some important differences.
!hink um are ~rely concoctions to make the people who sell them prof-:
. The primary difference is that a urrs portfolio holdings are fixed - ' ·•table. The truth 15, UIT expense ratios for bond portfolios on average are t~ere i~ no shifting around of securities as opposed to a mutual fund portfo. less than one-fifth those of mutual funds- about 0.3 percent of assets annu·
ho, wh1ch can change as the fund manager buys and sells its holdings. That's ally. And, they can be purchased with a low minimum investment, usually
the ~eauty of a UIT. No shifting means fewer management fees which $1,000.
.
.
•mph~ that UITS can be great loc;'ls to diversify a portfolio in a very cost
The fi~ step in purchasing a urr is.to determine your investment objeceffective manner. Of course, as With mutual funds, UriS fluctuate in value tives a~d nsll tole':"nce. Once you and your investment professional have ·
Winners of
cake ba·klng contast held during the Gallla Counmay be worth more"or less.than your original purchase price at maturi- detennmed that un1ts of a UIT fit into your investing picture, he or she can "
.tv Farm Bureau's "Fun Night" held recentrly al Bidwell-Porter Ele- and
ty or sale.
~elp you find the one that's right for you. All investments, um included,
mentary School included, top photo, from left, Fun Night Chair· /
UITs may not be as popular as mutual funds be&lt;:ause investdrs either sim- mvolve some type of risk, some UriS more than others, so he sure to read .
man Pat Parsons; Stephanie Daines, first place winner; Jan 1
ply have misconceptions about them or they do not know they exist:
the urrs prospectus carefully before investing.
.
Burleson, second place winner; Bill Howard, standing In for hla
. • Som~ investors may view portfolios of UITs as securities haphazardly '
wife, Jackie Howard, the tl'!ird place winner; and local Farm Bureau
(K. Ryln Smith Ia an lnvaatmant exacutlva with AdvHt Inc. In ita
l,undled together. In reahty, they are not bundled but rather hand-picked ~lllpqlla otnce.l
'
:
President Vickie Powell, In the bottom photo are winners.of the
event's pie baking contest, from left, Fun Night Chairman Pat Par·.
sons; Jackie Graham, first place winner; Elizabeth Butler, aecond
place winner; Ann Baker, third place winner; and local Farm
&gt;
Bureau .President Vickie Powell. Not pictured was. Farm Bureau
, MARIETTA - The Board of ing commitment to enhancing sharePeoples Bancorp operates 35 Ohio and West Virginia: The First;
Organizational Director Jill Smith. The following businesses and
Dh
1recadotors
oedf
Peop1
es
Bancohrp.
Inc.
holder
vatu~
and
effectively
managfinancial
service locations ·in the National Bank of Southeastern Ohio,:
.
individuals donated door prizea to the Fun Night, Including
1 a reso1u110n aut onzmg •ng o.u~ capuallevels. Under current states Of Ohio, West Virginia, and
ave
P
wiih three Ohio.offices: and Peoples·
Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn, Jim Fratey'a Firm Equipment, Carter
the
repurchase
of
up
to
290,000
conditiOns,
the
purchase
of
our
outKentucky'.
Peoples
Bancorp's
b.
a
nkBank
FSB with four Kentucky;
l:!t:~.t,:'j~;s::h~l n~rn's Tractor Sales, Altizer Farl)'1 Supply, Au.to Zone,
shares,
or
approximately.
5
percent
of
standmg
shares
IS
an
attractive
invest·
ing
subsidiaries
include·
The
Peoples
offi
es.
'
•.
0
I·Bob's .
Pat's Posie Patch, Kroger, Bob Evans Restaurant
the
company's
~utstandmg
common
ment
for
the
company."
.
.
Bankinj_
&amp;
Trust
c
..
with
offices
in
IC
;:
at Rio Grande, Parson&amp; &amp; Parsons Hog and Tobacco Farm, Mil·i
shares, from lime to lime m open
In addition, the company intends · - ·
·
:·
:dred Donahue,.Jackle Graham, VIckie Powell, and Jean Ann Vance/
market
or
privately
negotiated
transto
continue
the
previously
aimounced
:
l ·and Ruth Roes for entertainment.
act10ns.
purchase
of
approximately
15,000
•
The .timing of the purchases an&lt;) treasury shares per quarter for
.Q
the actual number of common shares issuance in connection ')'ith Peoples
~
purchased will depend on market Bancorp 's stock option plans. The
~
- I:
conditions. This stock repurchase continuation of this 15.000 share
program, effective immediately, will . quarterly repurchase program may be
.c::J
ctmtinue through Dec. 31, 1999.
amended or eliminated in the future.
E
:I 0
Robert E. Evans, Peoples Ban- · Peoples Bancorp Inc. is a bank
'0:2
corp's president and chief executive holding company headquartered in
00
officer said that the action is "refle&lt;:· Marietta, with over $870 million in
tive ofPeoples Bancorp's long-stand- assetc.
G~P~US -

the

..

Peoples Bancorp board authorizes stock repurchase

Joint

Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

.

COLUMBUS - Producers Live- marketing agreemcms, packer cons·t?ck Association re&lt;:ently unveiled tr~cts, alliances with providers, marProducers Technologies Inc·., a new keting planning services, crop insur~
service subsidiary, at the coopera- ance and lives10ck mortality insurtive's annual meeting.
ance.
This new ·company will. be a cat•.
alyst for the region to coordinate risk
Financial risk. management ser·
management and production man- · vices such as insurance products and
agement services, said Dennis Boil- financial planning products
also
ing, president and chief executive be offered through Producers Techofficer of PLA.
nologies Inc . Services that are being
One of the subsidiary's primary · considered include life · insurance,
focuses will. be on risk management' property and casualty products, estate
services. These services will include planning, financial and retirement
marketing risk management services, planning, and investmem services.
Another major focus of Producers
insurance services and financial plan- .
ning services. The marketing,services Technologies Inc. will be on producwill include futures and hedging ser- tion management programs.
vices for both li vestock and grain, ·

g:B

.For initial.evaluations or follow-up visits;
we offer monthly office hours.

APRIL 23, 1999

TAWNEY STUDIO .

New PLA-based service
.tackles risk management

5i

Specialized Care for Total Jo~r1/ Replacement

us copy your old family
pho•IOI. Special 2~'1 for
s1&amp;.!1s_ Reg. $19.95. SAVE $$.00.
also do pueport photot,
ldentHicatlon photoe and one day
Hrvlca on photo finishing. Witch
Satterlee while

•

•

. .•
•

,&gt;

_(614).221-6331 for Appointment Times

424 SECOND AVE. , GAWPOUS, OH.

Member, Ohio Orthopaedic Institute
/

•

------------------------~ :

•

will

a· a~onth for only

Appointments made at 84 Lumber
. GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. L111T)' Lowe has been appointed manager of the 84 Lumber Co. store in
Gallipolis Ferry.

~,~

.

• 1.'

Meigs County's

........
.

By BRIAN J. REED

~nel

,

r..w. Staff

What happened in Littleton, Colo., last week coulll happen just as easily
in Meigs County, according to Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes. .
Speaking to approximllely 125 Democrats at Saturday night's Jeffersofl/JacksonDinner, Lentes said that children everywhere today are troubled,
ahd'th~t parents and the community must gefi nvolved in an attempt to curb
teen VIolence.
·
· "Parents must take responsibility for their children. How does a child build
30 bombs and his parents not know about it," Lentes said, referring to last
~~k's incident in Colorado, where l5 people were killed in a school shoot·
mg.
. "Our first lady is right," Lentes said.
, ~'It takes a community to raise a child."
, Lentes said that he encounters many school-aged children through the.
work of his office who would be capable of committing a similar crime, and
said that while his office has been criticized for being 'involved in non-traditionai areas, such ·as abstinence education programs, all work with school
children is important.
Lentes' remarks were part of an introduction of State Senator Mike Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, the keynote speaker for the evening.
·: Shoe!llaker, himself a former school teacher, said that a "lack of communications" between children and adults, particularly parents, is partly to
blame for the increasing IJIOblems of school violence.

acne

~

.'

"I'

Qinton adminitllratioo iQSist they have no intention of
livlng 1up on the air campaign. At the three-day NATO
il!mmit that ended Su,ilday, the ll!ministra~on's op~­
tiollto committing combat troops remained finn.
· Harry Sum111~rs. a retired Army colonel who writes
about military affairs, said NATO's high-end estimlle of
200,000 troops is lik'ely to become its low-end estimate
once it takes into ac:count .the . threshold for. pain the

"· ··~, "-- ~. ~ .. '

WIRELESS COMMUNIQAT/ONS

·. The way people talle
around here~·
·

'·

10
·· .'guelftMe

St\otl Uni1H Statn CfWII- on tlw Mlftrltt 11 WWW,IIS((,(OIII
I
. GALLIPOLIS - Lois Breech
Ofltr rwqulm 1 nww -WUI' MfYke 'llNimtl'll. _..,lng diiiVft, c.s, tolls lnlil Mlwork lliMIItB
not hv:lucltd. Qhr mtrictlont .,._, tpPI)'. Sit ltln for details. Otltr tJCpllft ~110, 1199.
•
from Gallipolis was among 80 trav- ·.
el professionals from the U.S. and
Plrtl I Ill
Canada who toured Colonial
JIn Touch Celulor
Cioalc PIIZI
Hilltat&gt; Centll
WilliamsbJrg, Va., and surrounding
32 E. Wotor St.
408 E. HUIIIfl
2475 Scioto T01U
sites in March to familiarize them
(7401 779-6919
285-600t
285-5000
with local lodging, restaurants, recre. WMI!Iy
ation and attractions.
Unltod Sllttl Ctlutor
usee Wol-Man )Qolk .
Unltod • , The tour was scheduled to give the
Zone l'loD Shopping Con1or
~ W.t Enmlt A..,ue
8ollDn
Shot&gt;l'
l
ntl
Centll
t 1114 N. Brklgl St.
·
941-4)069
professionals, who represented the
771-4t4t
' :~=t=il24·7771
American and Canadian automobile
associations, information theY. could
SALESMAN OF THE MONTH
a..plle
pass along to their clients who plan · - Rocky "RJ" Hupp of Long
usee we~Men Kiosk
,
to visit the area.
Bottom hal beel'1 nlmed aalea2t45 Eattem Aveooo
AIM,a1 "' ~r11ooltloM: Now aOtion, Jecklon. ·
Tanya Williamson from Hillsboro m1n of. thl month for Mlrcll at 1---..;.~~~~740
~1•;•~•·:t06:6;__ _ _ _.,._ _ _ _~---.;·~F«:,:yo~W:,:c..:m:..=•=ICI~wo:::-:.ovor::!80~11U111orizod==:.=•::,-:locatl;:ona:.·________
and Lois Walls ofChillico'the accom· South1aat Import• Inc. In .
panied Breech on the tour.
Athen1.
·

.I ._

~Comlp

_....., c- .

1111--

J

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.

ADDRESSES DEMOCRATS - State
maker Wll ' the keynote apeakar . at · Saturday nlght'a
Jatfliraon/Jackaon Dinner. Ha Ia pictured with Proaacutlng Attornay John Lentee, Party Ch1lrman Sue Ml!laon, Sheriff Jam..
Soulaby and Malga County Commlaalonera Janet Howard and
Jeffrey Thornton,
In his remarks, Shoemaker also discussed the selection of a Brown County site last week for a new.veterans home.

Meigs, Gallia, lind several other Southern ~hio counties had bl~ for the
proje&lt;:t, which Shoemaker said was first the vision or former State Rep. Mark
Malone.
·
Shoemaker noted that the S.iected site was close to Cincinnati , the home
of Gov. Bob Taft.
"This was supposed to be a Southeastern Ohio facility," Shoemaker said.
"Our veterans got cheated.
The govemor and the selection committee need to look at the people of
Southeastern Ohio and·explain to us why that home went to Brown County,"
Henry Hunter, vice chairman of the Party's Executive Committee, presen ted information about proposed legislation addressing redistricting of
· House districts and reapportionment of Congressional districts, which takes
place every ten years after a U.S. Census is conducted.
, . According to Hunter, the legislation is designed to avoid "gerrymandering," the division of political districts in a way that would give one political
party an advantage over the other.
The legislation has been proposed by the League of Women Voters, and
Hunter distributed petitions in favor of the legislation, which would abolish
the state apportionment board and allo~ the Secretary of state to redraw districtli~es using a list of strict guidelines.
Meigs County Commissioners Janet Howard and Jeffrey Thornton and
Sheriff James M. Soulsby were also recognized, as were visitors from Athens,
Gallia, Washington, Perry, and Vinton Counties.
Party Chairman Sue Maison served as the emcee foi the evening.

Yugoslavs ·have shown during the air war.. NATO ling peacekeeping ground troops. The official NATO
thought Siobodan Milosevic "would fold at the first position is that it won't do that until Milosevic bows to
NATO's demands, which include pulling oul of Kosovo
push," he said.
James Anderson, a. national security analyst at the and ai'CCpting a NATO-led peace force.
conservative Heritage ·Foundation, says it may take
"As much as I wish he would stop the fighting, the
500,000 NATO ground troops to conquer Kosovo'if the killing, and take all his troops out tomorrow, we don' t
·mission requires seizing Belgrade and fighting through· have any evidence th~t's about to happen," Bacon said.
out the country. To seize Belgrade but not occupy the "Should it happen it would take him '!Orne time to get
entire country would take up to 200,000 troops, he says. the troops out, and I think we would have plenty of time
It would '-'ke many weeks to build up 10 that level. · to mobilize" a peacekeeping force.'
· .
NATO has fewer than 20,000 troops in the region now.
It remains possible, however, that NATO leaders will
Solana also warits a fresh assessment of how many change their minds and decide to launch a ground war or
!t00J1S might be· required if their mission were to keep a use lj'oops to resellle Kosoyar Albanians without a peace
negotiated peace in Kosovo rathe• than to impose a agreement. It is that possibility, remote as it seen\s now,
peace by enaaging in a ground war. The estimate last that motivated Solana to order a reassessment of what it
summer was 25,000 to 30,000 troops for a peacekeeping would take to enter Kosovo, either in peace or in commission. ,
·
.
hat.
As Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon sajd. I@St . Pentagon officials said they were 'not sure whether
wee~!, current conditions are a long way from the "per· Solana also asked for an estimate of NATO casualties.
· mis5il(e envlronment"that NATO wants before commit·
. The new NATO assessment will not he a war plan.

Nor will it commit NATO to using ground troops. The
idea is to review all ground options in light of new cir·
cumstances in Kosovo, ·so that if NATO leaders were to
decide that their strategy of limiting the war to airstrikes
was not enough, they could weigh the alternatives.
Unless' Solana decides otherwise, the new assessment
will not include such details as what propo(lion of any
ground forces would be American or whether they
would enter Serbia from Hungary, Albania or Macedo·
nia.
·
·
Much has changed sinc.e NATO military authorities
made their first assessment of ground options:
- Four weeks of allied bombing has largely isolat~
the Yugoslav army and spe&lt;:ial pb!ice forces in Kosovo
by destioyingammu nition, fuel and other war resources
and knocking out many of the bridges, roads, airfields
and raillin.S needed to resupply the troops inside Koso·
vo. NATO also claims to have hit several dozen Serb
tanks and other armored vehicles and severed many
communication links.
.

~!~~5' 0 stro~~ 0~~ v~!!~d~~! :~ac,~!~~!! .~~~~a~~~

.,,'.

c-.

.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Sentinel New• Stefl
. Saturday's sunny and warm weather contributed to the success of the
Sixth Annual Flower Festival of the Racine Area Community Organization staged at Star Mill Park.
Several local growers were on hand to display and sell flowers, master
gardeners were .there to distribute materials on growing plants and con·
trolling insects, ~nd crafters' came with assortments including markers
and accessories for enhancing flower gardens.
The ali-day event kicked off at 10 a.m. with a parade through town ,
Prizes went to the Meigs County Democrat Club pulling Antiquity's
"tanker" complete with buckets and step ladders, first, ·for a $50 prize;
Hou;t's Country Kitchen, second, $30; and·AB&amp;T Auto, third, $20, both
floats featuring floral displays.
·
Others participating in the parade were the .Racine and Syracuse emergency squads and fire trucks,. antique tractors, a horse; state legislators
Mike Shoemaker .and John C~rey, and one of lh~ "hot-s~ot". home deliv.
THEME_ Taking aacond pl10eln Jllrade entrlel at
ered meal trucks from th~ Me1p Cou~ty Council on Agmg.
. tha- Racine Flowll' Fntlvll Slturda,y Wll the AB6T Auto ftOit
1'!-e 1998 Flo~~~ Fesuval Que~~ H1lary Turl~y,a~d cll!!did~~ for Ih.'s ...featurfng ti .ftoww·fllled trailer, -~-With .a ' glrtih-planter,
year 1 ~ueen rode 10 open convertibles~ and making 1.ts fi~t appearance '" Allen Moonf Wll the drlvar.
the fesl!val parade wu the Southern H1gh School marchmg band, reorga·
nized this yeou: under the dfrection of Greg Vance.
.
In ceremonies at noon Jody Hupp; daughter of Steven Hupp of Winfield, W. Va, and Laura Hupp, R~ine, was crowned 1999 Flower Festival
Queen. She is a senior at Southem High School.
,
Other candidates were Christa Circle, Janey Hill, Sarah Roels, and
Jenni Howerton.
Entertainment included a performance by the Midnight Cloggers,
Steve and Beverly Pottmeyer of Marietta doing country and gospel music,
the Backporch Swing Band and Mel Hemmelgarn in a comedy routine
· using puppets and balloons.
· . Baseball and other games took place throughout the day, some under .
the direction of the Carmel United Methodist Church.
,
·; There was also a kiddie tractor pull sponsored by. AI Country Crafts
of Syracuse.
·
The winners receiving $7 for first, $5 for second and $3 for third were:
io tile 35 to 55 pound class, Stephanie aark, Racine, first; Bobb.ie RifOe,
FIRST APPEARANCE :- Southarn High School'a marcl!lng
Racine, second; Breanna Manuel, Mason, W. Va., third; and 56 to 75 band waa a naw addition to tha Flower FeaUvll Jllrede. Reorgapounds, Megan Williams, ~ine, first; Brillany Young, Racin.e, second; nized thla ynr under the dlractlon of Grag VanCil, the band doing country and goapel, ware among
and Dustyn Johnson, Portland.
made Ita ftrat 1ppearance In a community avent.
Racine Flower Faltlval. ·

1

Travel professional
takes Virginia tour .

.

ower es va a success

~lana, has asked the military to reassess what it would
~to win al111d war in Kosovo, even as NATO and the

.

-OR.get 300 minutes -a month
· for $32.95 ·a month.

Single Copy. 35 Cents

Democrats hear about ·school v·iolence issue

UNITED STATES

'

announce retir-ement
from Broncos today
..;_page 4

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vo lu m e 49, Num be r 248

. : NATO's civilian chief, Secretary-General Javier

Lots Breech

IJ

Tomorrow: Rain
High: eoa; Low: 50s

BY ROBERT BURNS
AP "llltary w.-r
WASHINGTON (AP)- Last summer, when NATO
saw a chance it might send ground troops into Kosovo,
allied mili~ authoritiea estimated it woul.d take up to.
200,000 sold1ers to defeat the Yugoslav army. Now, after
a month of allied· bombing 111d the depopulation of
· =~o, no .. one knows whether that estilll&amp;le is sti II

•

·'

Baby naming causes problems, Page 10
Pet Adoptathon this weekend, Page 10

NATO seeks better estimate of ·ground force needed in Kosovo

S20.95 a month.

The sonof Larry and Ruth Lowe
of West Liberty, Ky., Lowe is a 1983
gradua(~ of Morgan County High
School. He started with the 84 Lumber chain in January 1995 at its Morehead, Ky., store.
He and his children, Macie and
Justin, reside in Gallipolis Ferry.
Additionally, Earl Hall has been ·
· named co-manager of the 84 Lumber
store in Jackson, Ohio.
The Delbarton', W.Va·,, natiYe.' is.
the· so~ of Earl and Brenda· Han of
York, S.C. He is a 19\l() graduate of
Birch High School and served four
years with the U.S. Marine Corps.
He began his career with 84 Lum. ber in March' 1998 at its Millon,
W.Va., store. He is currently residing
in Jackson.

(J Southern splits games, Page 4

Tocley: R81n
High: lOs; Low: 50s

's

180 minutes
'

April 211, 111110

Weather

By K. RYAN SMITH

.

Monday

Sunday, April 25, 1999

•

0-1-9; Dally 4: 9·0-3-8
CII9990Wo \Wioy M&gt;lloloi11Co.

By BARRY SCHWliD
AP Diplomatic Writer
WASlliNGTON (AP) - As NATO celebrat·
ed its 50th birthday and brandished its might
over Yugoslavia, cracks &lt;showed through the
brave front.
In a polyglot alliance that no longer con·
fronts the Soviet bear, unity does n_ol ~me easily.
"This·summit was an impressive demonstra·
lion of unity despite the fact Utat some skeptics
feared it would 1101 he wise td' h.old a summit in
times of \"&amp;r," said German Chancellor Gerhard
Schroeder, 'elected 9nly last year and hence new
to the bloc.
But even Schroeder, like French President
and
Belley Wife Clowned Prom J-:= Chirac, who is more vocal in his inde·
Queen and King at Ealtarn High pc
views, did not yield submissively to the ,
School on Saturday night. Slit 11 the nanl-1111\1: leadership of President Ointon and his
daughter of Wlllla •nd .,lana Burk' of
British Prime Mi~isler Thny Blair.
. Tuppers Plalnllo he,lhe aon of Joa and
Mfliitary inlerventions must be legalized by
Kly . Ballay, Ch....r. 1111 thlme for
mandate as a rule," the German leader
the evening wee "Love Between Two
reflecting a widespread view that NATO
Stlra."
- ---1-t...•h the authority to stop merchant vessels car-

peacekeeping troops to Kosovo without at least U.N Security Council for peacekeeping opera·
the.approval of the United Nations.
. lions, Chirac said: "NATO cannot and will not
Where a smaller NATO could close ranks be able to act without the authorization of this
easily to confrontthe Soviet Union, the now 19- international organization."
meml!er alliance, with its door open 1Q even
The United States contends .the authority to
more members, lias to ·struggle to work ldgether intercept oil tankers at soa and to deploy NATO
when the issues nQ longer are black and white. peacekeeping troops in Kosovo is derived from
Even the otherwise airtight bonds between f' U.N. embargo aqd other Security Council resthe United Stales and Britain were loosened ~utions .
·
over the questio~ of whether NATO should send ·
Asked at a news conference whether NATO
combat troops to Yug&lt;&gt;slavia to try to deliver a wo ld need a new resolution to intervene outknockout punch after more than a month of side the territory of its members, NATO SecreNATO bombardment.
tary-General Javier Solana said, " No."
France and Britai" had signaled before the
Basically, the U.S. view on peacekeepers
summit that they favored using grou"d troops in prevailed, but the communiques and other state·
the inconclusive conflict, bot Ointon much ments NATO issued at the summit reflected
prefers depending for now on an air campaign; some of the divergence that marked the private
so the contentious issue was shelved.
deliberations of the leaders.
There was no way, though, to disguise the
Initially, the Ointon administration had in
fissures over the American initiative to mount a mind a NATO force, supplemented by troops
blockade to keep oil shipments from getting to from Russia and sdme other non-members.
Yugoslavia. Stopping neutral vessels normally
This was transformed at the summit .to a
is an act of war, and Chirac registered his reser- statement that " NATO remains ready to form
vations.
the core of an international military force."

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