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                  <text>Page 16 • The Dally Sentinel

~

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) Some might compare a Hollywood
marriage to living in a fish bowl, but
Couneney Cox's childhood minister
believes hers will be different.·
The Rev. Douglas Carpenter,
who married Cox and David
Arquette in San Francisco last weekend, said he compared the couple to
"a light on a hill."
"One of the things I said in my
sennon is that so many people know
them and will be looking at' them,"
said Carpenter. pastor of St.
Stephen's Episcopal Ch urcb in·
Cahaba Heights.
"If they see what a great marriage they have, it will help. Holl ywood has a reputation of not taking
marriage seriously. but these two are
taking it seriously."
Ms . Cox , 35 . star of TV's
"Friends." grew up in Moun1ain
Brook. a suburb of Binningham, and
has known Carpe nter since she was
10. Arquene. 27 : is an . actor hest

Friday, Jllne 18, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

·- ·-

Names in the News",

•.

.~

show's star and executive producer,
said in a statement Thursday. "With
the addition of Heather, the hest just
got hetter. This is going to be a

used unauthorized footage of her in
a television 'commercial.
Lamarr, 84, filed the laws uit here
Wednesday in federal coun. She is
blast!"
seeking unspecified damages and an
Ms. Locklear, 37, will he intro- order to stop the company from furduced in the ABC sitcom's fall sea- ther use of her image.
son opener. She previously starred
The sultry star of such hits as the
on " Melrose Place" as the scheming 1949 film ·•samson and Delilah "
vixen Amanda.
said the advertisement for the com"Spin City" will' air Tuesdays at puny's Gossamer Bay Wines vio-.
8p.m.
lates her privacy and decei ves the
,
• public about her co nnection to the
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Reclu- . wi nery.
sive actress Hedy Lamarr has sued
Several friends and fami ly memwinemaker E&amp;J Gallo, claiming it bers alerted Lamarr to the commer.

cia! in May, said her attorney,
Michael McDonnell.
In the commercial, a young coopic is fig hting over the television
remote control. The man wants to
watch a Western or sports program
and the woman wants to watch a
movie starring Lamarr. They coin·promise by turning off the television
and drinking some wine, McDonnell
said Thursday.
Gallo spokeswoman Kimberly
Charles said com pany officials were
taken aback by the lawsui t since
they hadn' t received any complaints
or demands to stop the commercial

-

from Lamarr.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
season fina le of " Buffy the Vampire
Slayer," yanked last month by WB
because of scenes of high school
violence, will air July 13.
· The decision . to delay 1he
episode, the concl usion of a two-part
fi nale, was both praised and condemned, said Jamie Kellner, the TV
network 's chief eKec ntive.
" If we erred, it was on the side- of
caution," Kellner said Thursday.
The episode was to have been
shown May 25, a m'onth after the

shootings at Colorado's Col umbine
High School that left IS people
. dead. The " Buffy" fina le' also would
have coincided with thousands of
school graduations nationwide, WB
noted .
In the fantasy drama, a solar
· eclipse turn s a town's mayor into a
serpent who allacks students during
graduation. The youngsters defend
themselves with stakes, · bows,
arrows and other implements. •
Sarah Michelle Gellar stars as
Buffy, a teen-ager who teams with
vampire Angel (David Boreanaz) to
fight the forces of evil.

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--- -------·-··
--Southern Ohio jobless rates
--------~---

(By perce nt ogn)

.

The rate reflected May's traditional increase in
employment in summer entertainment and amusement
industries, James Mennis, administrator of the OBES.
The.national rate was 4.2 percent in May lll)d 4.3 per·
cent the month before.
The state's rate was also down from the 4.3 percent of
May 1998.
•
Over the year, the number of Ohioans working
increased by 181,000 from S.4 million.
The number unemployed dropped by 6,000 from
242,000.
Among Ohio's 88 counties, the May' jobless rates
ranged from a low of 1.7 percent in Delaware County to
a high of 12 percent in Morgan Olunty.
Eleven counties had rates at or less than 2.6 percent
in May. Ten had rates higher than 7 percent.

Among cities with populations of more than 50,000,
~~~~~i~~~i~h~ad~~the highest jobless rate, 8.6 percent,
while
the lowest at ·1.7 percent.

The county .and city rates are unadjusted, meanini
they do not take into account seasonal adjustments in·
empl~

Country music ·.
festival transforms
Portland hayfield int~
entertainment center
•
•

·~

By Jill FREEMAN
T1na11

'*'·

ty Nlldanta took
In the
Swaep IIIUrdily mot:~~Jnt- Tlla Qalllpolla

a...

=~~=[fa:trltll=~along
tha Gall a County ehoraUna.

Gallia County cleans up in River Sweep
By ANDREW CARTER
rusted boll springs to metal folding
Tlmaa-llantlnal Stiff
._';
chairs were pulled from the ·water or
GALLIPOLIS -About 70 resl- picked up along the shoreline Saturdents of Gallia County turned out day. Debris of t!lis sort poses probSaturday to participate in the annual lems not ·only for wildlife in the
Ohio River Sweep. The' Gallia area, but also fot people who enjoy
County ·sweep, sponsored by the the water.
Keep Gallia Beautiful group, was
"Environmentally, we have anijust one of ·hundreds of pimilar . mals and 6sh here and people who
c:lcan-up activities that tool~ place boat on the river," Cozza added.
along the banks of the OhiQ from ".It's important that we get some of
Pennsylvania to Illinois apd all these thinp cleaned o.ff the river
poinlll in between.
;.
banks: Some of it is really not safe.
,Chris Olzza of Keep p allia We "" see some of the things the
Beautiful said that the aw~ hu kids have picked up today. It's not
many benefilll for the local a,iinmu- only unsightly, it's not safe.•
nity, both from pro111otion and
Olzza thanked the Gallipolis
environmental standpoinlll.
Basi B,ustct's Cub, which provided·
"It's very imPortant,
. ally boats for tr1118portation up and down
this time of year, beca111e . the ·the Gallia County side of the Ohio
: Fourth of July festivities ll!l!lling yesterday. · Keep Gallla Beautiful
up,• Aid Cozza. "Many,!pany.peo- mlde a Stoo donation 10 the Bass
pic ue acing to be here; not bnly • Btil~rs, which will be used for chiJlocal residents'; bpi people from out dtens' filhlng activities during the
of town; and we need to make 111re UJKlOming River ~on Festival
that O!U'city and our river ·_,~!.-~ ; .lit 1uty1• • ,
.
.
Itcml ranging from old tires 10 .
'"ThC Blia Buatcrs have really

come out for us and s~pported us
again this year, • Olzza said.
''They're able to take.so many kids
up and down the river, which is really important, and they can bring in a
lot of trash. We appreciate their
efforts."
Brett Bostic, dit'CCI!!!..Pf the Gal·
lipolis Parks and Recreation Department, said that the Bass Busters'
help has been invaluable to the river
sweep effort. He said that without
the boats providi:d by the group, the
river sweep · would be much more
limited in its scope.
Keep Gallia Beautiful awarded
prize money to the three groups that
·picked up the most garbage•. The
Family and Friends 4-H Fann
Bureau Youth won first prize for collecting tlic· most trash. The group
receiv~ SlSO from Keep Gallia
Beautiful.
• ·
The Gallia County Children's
Home earned the $100 second prize
a~ ;St. . ~uis Catholi~ Olurch
pteked pp t()c $$0 thlld pnzc.

Seall* ....,

PORJLAND -. A
Portland-area . hay
· field was transformea
last wc~k intq ~e
Log Ja~ Entertainment Center which
hosted three country
music stars Friday
night.
By some accounts,
the event, which
showcased performers David Lee Murphy, Kenny Chesney
and Thby Keith, was
CONCERT SITE - Tile 8tage Ia ehown
Iike
a pleasant he... undlf'!IOII19 prapardOn tor Fl'ldly'a Log Jani
evening in the park. F•ltlvalln Portl8nd fNturlng country muatc atara
MCA
Records' David LM lllurplly, Kanny C~ and TobV
Murphy is promoting Keith.
his newest album, "We Can't All Be Angels.w He is perhaps betlcr known for
his song "Dust On the Bottle."
.
.
Chesney's latest record on the BNA Records label, Everywhere We Go,
features the numher one hit song "How Forever Feels."
Keith, a Mercury-Nashville Records artist, has recorded six albums
including his latest, Greatest Hits Volume I, which includes "Gel(:ha Some."
Concert-goers were greeted by unseasonably cool, but pleasant weather
with no rain clouds in sight.
·
The festival was organized by Portland's Jeff Harris and Olris Collrell; ·
the two were busy Friday getting ready for the big show.
The Log Jam Entertainment Center is in a natural, boWl-shaped valley on
property along Groundhog Creek near Portland and Ravenswood, W.Va.
The fonner haf'(icld boasted a farge lighted stage, separated from the
crowd area by:l!!Jiw bf snow fencing; ticket boollts, a mix_ing booth and tents
sheltering vendors helped complete the meadow's transfonnation into a concert venue.
·
. "Ever since my first concert, this is something! wanted to do," said Cottrell, a former employee of Hams'.
· ·
·
Cottrell said he came up with the name "Log Jam Festival" several years
ago. Plans call for holding additional concerts at the site.
Cottrell predicted late Friday morning that the event would exceed their
expectations and that ihe concert woitld be "swamped" with people.
However, an estimated 3,500 actually attended, fewer than 1111ticipated,
but those who did attend were greeted with good concert weather and
appeared to have a great time.
. •
:
Many commented on how orderly the event was,. from parking to ~ri ­
ty, from beer sales to the high number bf portable totlelll (no ltncs), and perContlnuacl on page A2

·H~rder. cabin . beg·ins yet another move th~ough Rutland·

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Good Morning

'

ship with current news, the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days from the date of
the event.
Weddings subm itted after the 60day deadli nc will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the.
Gallipolis Dail y Tribune, .
All club meetings and other news
articles in the society section must
be subm itted within 60 days of
occurrence.

-

Middlepqrt man
(lies In Gallla .
~ounty accident

th ~

•

ttdtttt

•

.'99:

S-10 2WD

Details on
pageA3

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· June 20, 1999

.

• GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia- ·
Meigs Post of the Ohio State Highway PatrOl is investigating a fatal
aCcident that occured at approximately 8:20 p~m. Friday night .on
State, Route 7, North near Big Boys
water Toys:
· ·•··
Tlie •drlver •of•41N• OII,•·~ ;ft;. ·
Griffin, 3S, 14SS Eastern Ave., Gallipolis was travelling northbound on
SR 7, when he d~ve off the riaht
side of the roadway and lost control
of the vehic:le.
The vehicle then slid off of the
left side of ·the roadway, struck an
embankment and overturned, com·
ing to test on im tOp.
A pusenger in the car, Troy .R.
· Qualls, 28, 30920 McElhinney Drive,
Middleport. was jlronounc:ed dead at
10:34 p.m., at Holzer Medieal Center.
Two other passengers, Tony C.
Armstrong, 3S, SO Westwood Dr.,
dallipolis, and Otarles P. Lewis 10,
3 J, P.O. Box 86, State Route 8SO,
Bidwell, were also transported- to
Holzer Medical Center.
Griffith was admitted with multi·
pie Injuries 1111d trauma, was stabilized and transported to Riverside
Hospital.
. Armstrong received multiple
abrasioits, was treated and released.
· Lewis rec:eiv~ multiple lacerations and trauma and is in the intensive care unit.

HI: ,._80
Low:SOa

•

tmes·

..

Metgs Co unty residents donated.
59 units of blood when· the American Red Cioss Bloodmobile visited
the Meigs CountySenior Center on
Wednesday.
Recog nized as multiple-gallon
donors were: Danny White, two gallons: Darla Thomas, seven gallons:
Albert ~arker, I0 gallons: David
King, ll 'gallon: and Virgil Windon,
12 gallon .
Kimberl y· Peavle y. Melody
Lawrence, _Kara Kin g and Phili p
Hamm were recogni zed as first-tim e
donors at the center.

to

•

GALLIPOLIS - Unemployment in the region fell in
May, as countie5 throughout southeastern Ohio reported
substantial declines in jobless rates, the Ohio Bureau of
Einployment .Se~c:es reported Friday..
.
' The Gallia County rate fell by 0.8 percent- from 8.9
1Q 8.1 - betWeen April and May.
Meigs County experienced a 1.2 percent decline, as
unemployment perl:e!ltages fell from 11 ..4 percent in
April to I 0.2 percent in May.
Other regional May jobless rates (April percentages
in parenthesis) were: Athens: 3.7 (4.4) percent; Jackson:
7.7 (8.0) percent; Lawrence: 5.3 (S.7) percent; Scioto:
7.5 (8.4) percent; Vinton: 9.5 (11 .2) percent; and, Washington: 5.3 (6.0) percent.
·
. The state's jobless rate was 4.1 percent for May,
down from 4.3 percent in April.

Bloodmobile nets
59 units during visit

an

• hgi C7

.

en.

LOS ANGELES (A P)- Heather
Lockl.ear return s to TV this fall as
the mayor's campai gn manager on
"S pi n City."
" I already fe el fortunate to work
with the fin est e~se.mbl e cast in tele·vision comedy," Mi chael J. Fox, the

. RSVP workers asssistin g in

FjlllluNCI on Pege C1

Jobless rates fall
in Galli a, .Meigs

fi lms .

bloodm obile were: Helen Bod nner.
June Ashley, Jane Brown, Ted Hatfield. Don Young , Peggy Harri s, and
Betty Spencer.
The canteen was se rved by (he
Racine Un ited Methodist Wome n.
, Donors, by community. were:
William Booth , Marvin Taylor, Vir. gil Windon, David King, Paul Marr,
Robert Smith, Patricia Barton ,
Al be rt · Parker, George Parker,
Thomas Hart, . Mary_ K. Spencer.
Anna Shrimplin , Wendy Shrimplin, ·
Debra Mora, Janet Peavley, Ki mberly Peavley, Melody Lawrence,
Loretta Brown, Janet Ambrose, Bar·
bara Crow, Linda Bates, Maureen
Hennessy, Barb ara· Smith, Cyndi
ki ng. Danny White, Raymond Landers and Dennis Gilmore, all . of
pomeroy: Harry Holter, Freddie
Simmo ~ Kenny Wiggins, Charl es
Mugrage, lil(tlyn)lugrage, Barbara
Dugan, Larry 'elrcle 1 Jimmie Freeman, Clarence Roy, Richard Dugan,
Randall Arnold, Dawna Arnold,
Kara King and Philip Hamm, all of
Racine.
Donna Hawley, P onna Daviljjon,
Cindi Stewart, Jenni fer Garey, fiatrici a Logan, · Robert Barton, Ttish
Garey and Bonni e Smith, all of Middleport : John Rice , Reedsville;
Darla Thomas and Patsy Cornell,
Syracuse: Henry Bahr, Long Bottom; Wi IIi am C. Cook, Shade; Marta
Blackwood, Ralph Bales and
Gabriella Blac kwood, Rutland ;
Charlotte Erelewine, Dexter, Joseph
Bailey, Chester, and Ron Roush, .
West Virginia.
The neKt scheduled bloodmobile
visit at the center will be August II
from I to 6 p.m.

Meigs 'Relay
for Life'
set for
July23-24

Ohi.o Vailey Publishing Co.

kno wn for his role in the " Scream"

LONDON (AP) Prince
Charles has launched a campaig n w
raise $160 mi ll ion to help young
entrepreneurs ge t start ed m business.
With Pnme Mi nister Tonv Bl air
and opposi tion Conservativ~ Party.
leader William H•!guc at thi s side.
the heir 10 the throne said Thursday
that he hoped the young could create
30.000 businesses over the n;:xt five
years.
His Prince's t rust charitv aims to
rai se $80 million fo r the program ,
with Bl air's Labor gove rn ment
promi sing to match th at anioun\.
''The Prince's Trust has bee n SC I·
ti ng young people up in business for
over 16 years," Charl es said. " We
do need to do more, which is why
we have set ourse lves a new 'challenge."

Generations
bound by love,
respect and pride

•.' •

-·

..

BY BRIAN J. REED
Jlmll 81ntlnal Stiff
· RUTLAND - From Peny Township In
Oallia County, 10 Main Street in Rudand,
and now to the Rutland Civic Center, a his·
· roric log cabin is on the road lpin,
· The 19th-century cabin, moved 1111d
reconatru~tod by the Cletus Harder family of
Rutland In 1!191;'wiS lifted from its foundaliOn and began a two-day journey across
tOwn on Friday, IS Harder and his neighbors .
wat~hed .the proares• from along Main
Street. ·
·
-• The cabin wu pun:hased from the Haid·
era by the Village of Rutland u a part of illl
FBMA flood hazard mitigation proal'lin and
will be the centerpiece for a village park area
n~ar the Civic Center. The ~alllll of the
cabin hu not been determlned;.accordlna to
Rutlan? Mayor Jo Ann ~. althouah viilage .council hu requested that the Melp
County Diatrict Publi~ Library . Board cqnaider locating a branch library In the buildina. The village hu l!lso dillCuued usina the
cabin u a public meeting c:enter.
.
The cabin was constructed sometime
· before 1&amp;54, and wu oa:upied by Mary I.
!.

and John I. Evans of ~·TOWIIIhip in OalAlong with the cabin, a 19th-century
Jia County, according ~ Harder. While the smokehouse, which Harder purchased from
exact date of construction is unknown, Southern Ohio Coal Company and relocated
records show that Mary\· Evans wu born in from Banville, was also included in the sale
a house with a view of tbe Tynrhos Cemc· to the village, and has already been .moved
tery near Rio Grande, and Harder ll&amp;ld Fri- . to the Civic Center site. .
day that the same cabin that is now being
Harder said that although flood waters.
moved is believed to bci the ~abin in whlc:ll have come IICI'OSS the field on which the
Mary I. Evans was born.
cabin sat, they have never entered the cabin
She died in 1927; John I. Evans died in . since lt was built, largely due to the fact that
19.5.5.
he placed it at a safe elevation.
Harder oversaw the disasaembly and
The cabin was raised from illl Rutland
reconstruction of the cabin next to the Hard· foundation several weeks ago, with
er home on Main Street in Rudand, 1111d hydraulic jai:ks at each of four comers, in
while it was used IS a family guesthouse for · preparation for the move up the streetiO the
several years, he and .his wife, .Nan, later. Civic Center property.
moved into the cabin, and lived there fqr a
Huston Brothers, a Wellston construction
year. .
·,
· firm in c:llarae of much o~ the mitiaation ~:
The c:abln received new windows and fix- . ject work, then placed skids under the cabin,
hires durin&amp; im first move, and although and built a trailer un.dcme1th of the struc11uw ldditions to the cabill were not brought hire. boltina the akida to the trailer frame.
to Rutland, an addition to the back, which
On Friday mornina. a slow and cautious
houaed the kitchen, wu constructed once .it trip •• taken a'few feet at a time •• began, and
ON THE MOVE- Tha pro ern ofmovtngthla hlatortc 11t1H:anlurycatlln,aoldto. .
was rebuilt on the Harder property.
should be the last trip that the well-traveled ·
Now, the entire cabin, includin&amp; illl back· cabin will take, 10 a site where it can be Vlllege of Rutland~ Clatus and Nan Hanlar,- bagun on Frldlty by HI 111 n Bculwa
room addition and Ita wide front pon:h, will enjoyed · by Rutland residents and their Conalrucllon of Weflaton. The cabin will ba moM to tha Rutland Clvlo CMtltli p11p t •
ty, whwa 11 will llkaly be uasd aa a pari&amp;-~, t bntnch library, or a IELIMII. - ·
be moyed again.
neipbors for pnerationsto'aane •

..

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�•

Sundey, June 20, 19M

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
WASHINGTON (AP) - Slcelworkers seeking relief &amp;om low-priced
imports ~setting lheir sighls on a
ale showdown next week over a controversial plan to impoo;c quot.; on foreign
shipmeniS.
The United Steelworkers of America
plans to make telephone calls and send a

Senate approves
loan guarantees
for steel, oil and gas

sen-

tOOusand workers to Capitol Hill on union IOObyist Wdliam Klinefelter llllid
Tuesday for a last-minute push on quo- ·Friday. "~'rc going to make our voiotas.
es heard here on Thesday."
·
Afew hundred steelworkers' arc leavThat is when the Senate is to~ up
ing Michigan, Indiana and Ohio by a llouse-paised bill establiWng oommotorcycle this weekend. Bikem from preher\'iivc quotas on foreign steel shipPennsylvania will join lhem on Monday.
"We're pulling out all the stops,"

Music festival·

-

rnents.

'
Iunday.
June 20

Sale of confiscated Items slated

Tall TWleter
David Ruuall

President
Jeff Fowler

LIONS
TAL·E

11!t V. Pres.
Chris Homer
2nd V. Pres.
David Diddle
3rd V. Pres;
Keith Xlrlnachs
Secretary
Tim Scltes

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-

Pelt Praa.
Charlie H11ber

Columnist remains hospitalized ·

Directors
GenaGIQII
Odie O'Donnel
Jay Caldwell . ·
BobHannasy

to close u.s.·50 on July s

:o-.at~t,.
~••••
aouctt
,_ . -

.

One of the few professionals
still making house ·calls.

French Art Cololy (scholarships for sltdH!sl-

-

~ Sunday: Partly cloudy. Hlgha around 80.
~~
.
ExiMNIId forM

fl•rlll-········..

~ Wedtlelday: Partly cloudy. Lows 60 to 6S aad higha 85 to 90.

Temperatures will ·hegin to warm up in Ohio as a high pressure system
~gins to niake its way east.
.
~. Temperatures will be in the mid 70s to lower 80s Sunday following
qyemight lows in the SOs.
..·c But clOuds will be back in the picture after a partly to mostly sunny day
""'turday with mostly cloudy skies Sunday in the western part or the state
ljjtd partly cloudy skies in the eastern pitrt:

·''

-

Storms over parts of the Plalna, Northwiat

ByTheAIIGDIIIM".
. .
·; Severe storms continued Saturday over the central and southern Plains,
V(hile spony shciwers brought only traces of nin to parts of the Northeast. ·
l!iolaled thunderstorms threatened the Gulf Coast later Saturday. ·
.
•. Showers and thunderstonns were forecast again for both the central
Plains and the Paci(IC Northwest. Storms in central and ~estern Montana
and northern and eaStCm Idaho could bring heavy downpours ·and winds
ncar 60 miles per hour.
~ F11ir and dry conditions were expected to prevail in the Northeast Satur:
df.y, while a mix of ~lauds and aun was forecast for the Sout.heaSI. t~te desert
!iouthwest was expected to endure sweltering heat. ·
(
;: Highs Saturday were f~ in the upper.70s acR!SS New England; the
: ~ppcr 80s in the Southeast; the low spa in the northern and central Plains;
"Wd- to upper 80s In the .l!'!'llhem P'ains; in the 90s in the Gulf Coaat; and
..., 110 in the desert Soulhwest.
.
·: The highest temperature in the lower 48 states on Friday was 109

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NASA satellite will study ocean winds

W~: Look Fonoard To S~roing Our Community In 2000

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behinds, lawn and garden tractors, and front mowers. So head on over to your John Deere dealer's store before
July 5 and bring home some truly remarkable family .values.

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'C ARMIC.HAEL'S FARM &amp; L4lWN, INC~
668 PINECREST DRIVE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

(740) 446·2412
1·800·594~ 1111

"
"

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.Tax~. frrighr,

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serup, and.delivery not included. Available from participa~ingdealers. :offers end july 5, 1999.
I
t

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••••1"17·

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Charter ·schools post .low scores on proficiency test~.
COLUMBUS (AP)- Educators said he believes it's unfair to meashouldn't overreact .to the dismal sure the school's success on the tests
res~ltsoffourth- andsixth•graders·at after only one year. Better to judge
Ohao's charter schools on almost all after two or three years, he said Friportions of the state proficiency day.
.
tests, the state Pepartment of Edl!ca·
"The proficiencies we would
lion said.
have given this year are not based on
But there's plenty of room for everything students learned this
improvement, said department year," Koons said. "It's kind of a
spokeswoman LeeAnne Rogers.
compilation of what they learned
Only 2 percent of fourth-graders over the past few years.''
and qnly 1 peroent of sixth-graders
State Rep. Sally Perz, Toledo
passed all five tests of writing, (Cad- Republican .and longtime supporter
ing, malh, citizenship and science.
of charter schools, said the ·low
By comparison, 32 percent of scores say as much about the stupublic school fourth-graders and 33 dents and tlicir educational backpercent". of public school sixth- ground as it does about the schools'
graders passed all five section~ .
fledgling academic efforts.
Most of the schools are in their Proficiency test results fro01
first year; have small student bodies March 1999 for Ohio's · charter
and arc still putting their curricula in sebools (by grBde aod subject):
place, Rogers said Friday.
Fourth.Gpdc
"There certainly is an adjustment Sabject
Pet. Pused
period," she said. "But I don't think Writing
30 percent
it's OK that students aren't doing : Reading
18 percent
well."
"9 percent
Math
The education department isn't Citizen
20 percent
Stepping in to improve charter Science
9 percent
schools' scores. But its resources and· All
2 percent
help are available, Rogers said.
SIJth Grade
Called community schools in Subject
Pet. Passed
Ohio, chart~r !Kihools are privately Writing
48 jlercent
run, publicly funded schools. They Reading
8 percent
arc free of some state regulations Math
2 percent
applied to regular public schools.
Citizen
25 percent
· There were 217 charter School Science
4 percent
fourth-graders and 212 sixth-graders All
1 percent
who took the proficiency teats in Sootrce: Depu1meot or Eduattloo
March. More than 129,000 public
school fourth-graders and more than
.126,000 sixth-graders took the tests.
Results were released this week ..
At Youngstown's Eagle Heights
Academy - with 6(12 pupils, the '
state's largest chart.er school - 1
percen! of fourth-graders and no
sixth-grilders passed all five subjects.
"As I told the staff, the line has
now been drawn in the sand," Principal James LaRiccia said Friday.
"This is the completion of an assess- .
merit yea~. We know what we have to
do- now we have to get there.''
At 130-student Aurora Academy
in Toledo, no sixth-graders and only
3 percent of fourth-graders passed all
five teats .
Board President Shawn Koons

___

Cleveland, Cincinnati, Dayton, Tole--"
do and Youngstown. Only nine had ·
fourth- or sixth-grade pupils eligible .
for the test this year.
';
1n April, the .state Board of Edu~.'
cation approved 37 · additional ~
schools in communities that include'
Cleveland,
Akroll,
Canton; ·
Youngstown, Columbus, Cincinnati·
and -Dayton.
·

·

1999
Dete 08/26199

~ year's fomuil

.;,;u be

"BRING YOUR OWN TEAM"
(handicap must total 40+ with only one player at I 0 or under)

·Start Tune 9:00a.m. alPine HilU GolfCoune
(Meigs Go~ Course)

W"dl'• Hill Road, Pomeroy, OH
$200.00 per team
(Includes Green Fees, Cart, Food, beverages &amp;many PRIZES)
Con~aet .Jim Andereon At 740-"992-7631

Or The .Meigo CC?unty
Chamber Of ComtQeree
At 740-992-5005 .

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
First Baptist Church ·
11 00 Fourth A"e.

EXT WEEK
(21st-25th)
9:30.·Noon
Ages
4-12
.
•

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F~r Transportation-Call

446-0324

Everyone Is.Welcome!
.
. Puppets,
Bible Studi~s, Playground,.ments!

....... ,..

Third""··

___
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.....
..............

P,'l/erg~ne

--eo.,

Is
Wefccmrel

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"I look at the first round of all
these tests as schools getting clear
on who they have," Perz said.
"Now 1 think it's absolutely their
. responsibility to"modify their teaching techniques and day-to-day procedures to match the student body
they have.''
Last fall,15 schools serving about
2,40!1 students opened in Akron,

a

..._2M2.

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.tunbav curime~ '*·· ittdbw

......... .,,... .•,......... . 4563&amp;.-....-,._,..

GALLIPOUS - Gallia Co~nty sheriff's deputies placed three indi·
viduals into the Gallia County jail Friday, including Dwayne W. Hamilton, .
29; Oakhill, driving while under the influence; Ron B. Liffick, 36, Dannville, Ill., theft; and Richard L Blankenship, 23, 40 Jericho Road,
Cheshire, aggravated trafficking.
Gallia County sheriff's deputies cited Jerry R. Clifford, 22, 34 1/2
Smithers Ave., Gallipolis, for driving while under suspension.

POMEROY- Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service

• LOS ANGELES (AP) :..... Winds blowing across whitecaps far out on
liimh's blue oceans are bringing your future weather, and, maybe, a pOrtent
of the next El Nino.
.
·
.
Scientists trying to improve forci:utin~ing will soon
begin measuring those ~ gUllS and howling furies with QuikScat, a
satellite being launched this weekend on a nearly $100 million p1ission to
study the global dance·of wind and water.
, ·
QuikScat was scheduled for launch on a litan rocket tonight from Vandenberg Air Force Baae, Calif. .
Ita ~~:ience inatrumenl,,dubbcd SeaWinds, is an antenna that will radiate
microwave pulses and gather the'·rctu"m signm, daily collecting a continuous 1,100-mile-wide band that will amount to 400,000 measurements over
90 percent of Earth's aurfii(!C.
r
The measurements of wind speeds and directions at the surf~ pf the
ocean.s will be put into the National Oceanic and Atmospheri~ Adaiinistration 's weather forecasting models. The dala will also be studied by scientista
looking for long-term trends.
,
"Especially for people along the coasl, this is very important because it
·.will give us much more accurate weather forecasting," .Ud James Graf, project manager a1 NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena.
· "If you want to track what's happening with a phenomenon like El Nino
you have to be out over the surface of the ocean measuring what's happen·
ing out there becaUIC that's whal's affecting, easentially, precipitation over
land thousands of milc:t1 away."
With the Atlanti~ already having produced its first tropical stonn of the
season, hurrieane mcteoR!logists are eager to see what the new satellite can
show them. ·
· .
.·
""
Graf said those forecasters 'l'ill begin getting data lor testin~ithin 60
days of launch.
·
· , .
QuitScat is short for Quic;k Scaneromel!:r. The satellite i a "quick"
replacement for a NASA inslrumcnt mounted on a Japanese spacecraft !hat
failed in 1997. Scatterometer refers 10 measurement of the reflected sfspals
- the scatter.
El Nino, the ocean-warming phenomenon involved in desttuctivc weath•
er changes, is linked to wind reversal in the westein Pacific. In ita shoft11fe, Winning Lottery numbers .
. the lost iristrumenl, !'l"scat, did detel;l such a reversal heralding,t~c 1996-97 · CLEVELANI&gt;- ( AP) - · .There
El Nino, Grafsald.
· .
: .•
· ·,
· ·t . was one tlclt:ct aold'Daming all five
numbers drawn in. Friday night's
Buckeye S drawing and it's worth
$,100,000, the Ohio lo.ttcry said.
The winning ticket was purchased at The llarley Bin of Dublin.
(liii'Uit_,
C.C;,.
. -llrMJ New z '"'~~INC.
Here are Friday night's Ohio LotRearlet SfJrVICL'S
tery
selections:
"""Y llooadoy, tW TtllniAw., Goltipoo
llo,
Ololo
b)'
...
Oloio
Vdoy
Nollotol
..
c..p.y.
The
Buckeye S numbers were 2·
ComctlonPolloy
O.r _ . eeaun 1111 lllt'lll II 1e M pild • Oolllpotlo,
Oloio
9-20-28-33.
m• . - •
.......,, Ololo r.. &lt;itlice.
In Pick 3 N"umbers, ·the winning
· llol)', ... doe ... C "Wi lllot " · ' 1 n.. A• 'eted , _ 11111 tilt Obio
number was 24-2.
(7&lt;10) ... 2343; ...
( 7 . , - Nw• P%1 AllodMioiL
· In Pick 4 Numbers, the winning
21SS.WowWcMdt,.rt •
n! _,.
..., , .......... 83.5
o.Jtiponumber
was 7-S-6-().
• • • Clhll : ' ttwarraMMI• .
.... otolo 45631.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
N. . . Dat*biliillt
IIUNIIAY ONLY
$331,172. Players will share
iiUIICI.noN JtATIII
GIIHpolla
$7(12,090,
llrCinioror-ne _.. ....... ,.to
DopertOoo - . ................................St.l5
'I'!Iere were 123 B~ckeye 5 tick·
.
OM - ........................ ;,........ .$65.00
eta
with four of the numbers, an\1
E.-d¥t ~ ......._,,,......_ ........ Eat. 123
liNGLE COPY NICS
each is worth $250. The 3,526 tickMo
EltL na
s.dl,......- ....- ...................,..$1.00
CIIJ
.................... _ ....:_ .. 1111. 121 No_...ioiii&gt;Y lllll ............. - .......
ets show ina t~ree of the. numhers are
lJII l)le ...........- ..........~........._Ext. Ill ................. !ltl••
each
worth $10, and the 36,080 tick·
s-11)' 'ftatu S t' I will DOl be ~~
s......., ........................................... lxt. m -,..
btolor .........., _ _ .. _
ets
showih8
two of the numbers are
pf.,.......;............':"...-·-·~-.....lat. 1.lt
each
wonh
$1.
ToSandE-111111
..., ......t
, . , _ , . .. . _ . ,
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
. . . IIN11i Ultklld
... , lftlw.
.
$728,420 to Pick 3.winners. .Pick. 3 .
sales totaled $1,397,880.SO. In the
.w..~%1C:b.
..... Daplibnant
Red Ball promotion, a white ball
13 'IIIIIIII............................ J27.30
was drawn, so. no bon.,SCs will. be
• -.a.,.,_,,,,,..... ;...........$!113.12,
ne _.. ......
;
ISS. Dopert~
awarded to Pick 3 winners.
Sl\1WIIMI.....,,_,,_,........... S10:S.56
..sateMIIatll'f'l
In Pick 4, players wagered
-~GolloC..,
Gual .... M I s: ........ - ........ .laC. Ull
13 ......... - ......- .... .$19.15
$431,971.50 and . will share
Newa. ............................................Bit. UC
............-.~
erEat.n•
n w..a.... ..- ..................Jlot.n ·
$138,000.

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Susp,cts booked Into county jail

Meigs EMS logs 7 calls Friday

temperaturea climb •• cloud• begin to move ln.

'',;;

$1,399

i(

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GALUPOUS - Gallipolis City police officers cited Joshua Venters,
7936 State Roijle 588, Bidwell, on charges of speeding.
·

GALUPOUS ·The Gallia County Health Depai"tment will have
extended hours for those who wish to obtain a food handler's card. The
TB skin tests will be administered TUesday, June 22, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
The health department will also maintain extended hours Thursday, June
24, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. to read the tests.
The TB tests are free and available for those who wish to obtain a food
handler's card in Gallia County. .
.

Partly cloudy. A chance of a thunderstorm in the afternoon.
.
.
$bs~y: Partly cloudy. Lows 60 t~ 65 and higha in the mid and upper

..~

i 143BGS SabJT0 !»Y Johri DeeJT
• 14.5/rp •38-inch mower deck
• 5speed shift-onihe-go transmission

•

~

Third ArulUal lions Golf 1burnament is'June 24 •
, Clift'side Golf Cori 12:30.p.m. ,Registration. ,
'' Call TerryrLloyd 446-:4119

EdwardJones®·

t

Police issue citation

Health Department extends hours

Inighs 80 to 85.

:»550.00
loy St01ls of Amllka-......,_,_,,,
· __,_,_____,_ _ _ _ _..,__:$280.00
Galha County Fair Uttlt Mr./Mlss ........._,..___, , , _ . _ .
$250.00
lernkeleld111 Sdtobshlp Find-........$100.00
Jolin Hillin Englsh Scholarsldp GAHS RYHS &amp; SGHS$900.00.
LCIF (Liols)...................- -..- - · · - -...,..:i.l~;.·- - · - ·- · · · - - · - -......--..-.."-·., .,._ . $100M
llals lnlertiDtlonal Relatlans._,_ ....,_,,,.. ·
$50M
Pilot Dogs....- ....- :........:.$300.01
Dido Eye Research...._ _ _ _..
..
. .
$~.00
Oltlo Eye lattl ......... _..,_......,.._. ·
$300.00
Gallla C01nty Schools (lillY. low vision)....... ·
$1715.00
Mtosc• Dystrophy Assoc.· ALS .._ _;_,·---·-----·----....,..-5100.00
PAY (ioys) ........- .............- - · · _;_
-- .
$100.00
GiaSses ........-............................_ . _..................- ................._ _ _ _....;.._ _ _ _
~ $11121.66
Ill ..,
-~~150.00
l.loas RHIIIfatlon .......,_,__ ·
~$100.00
TOTAl-$10486.66

i

too

n!Pt: Partly cloudy. lows 55 to 60.

~ .Slllldsy
J: ~o~y:

illY The Aeaoclttlld " -

----~·S:~000.00
~:::

Snow

Ohio zone forecast

YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS HAVE MADE THESE Gl~ POSSIBLE
DURING THE LIONS CLUB YEAR 1998-1898

~~;:s~~
~.~~!.~=..:-...... .. --•
llolrer Hospke ......- .....,_,.......

~

Bunny Pt.Cioudy

The Gallipolis Lions Club wlshea to take thla opportunity to thank the many fQika throughout •
our area for the fine support given to 11a through our 1998-1H911 year.
;
To the merchants ln Gallipolis tor their support In our FLAG PROJECT.
.
To the house to hOt,Jae participation throughout Gallla CourtlY for our LIGHT BULB SALE.
To everyone who aupportad our GOLF TOURNAMENT.
.
The Gallipolis Club wl.ll be celebratlnglta43rd birthday, Oct. 9, and now has 47 members.
, During the past 43 years the Galllpcilll Llana Club hal 1pent a total of $130,270.41 for glaeaaa,
exams, and alght projecta tor children of Gallla County.
·
.
. "'
Galllpolle was recently recognized ae an outtltandlng club In 13J-ZOne a. Gallla County Senior
Cltlzena also acknowledged Llon1 aa the county'l most outltandlng earvlca club ln 1918•

lntr • lu (' i n •..
EI i z a Iw l h S(' Iuu I•I

·

Free ImmunizatiOns scheduled

GALLIPOLIS LIONS CLUB
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

: · CLEVI;LAND (AP) An
II)Jpe8ls court has sided with Ford
'
Motor Corp. in a lawsuit filed by the
GETTING READY- Log Jam organizer
Cottren of PorHand, left,
illmily ·of a man severely injured Ia ahown here Friday morning helping organize parking for the country
when his car went out of control and and w..tem concert held Friday night.
slammed into a house~
. : ·The ruling by ttie 8th District
Ohio Court of Appeals overturned
H
.. l;uyahoga County Common Pleas
!""
Judge Anthony 0. Calabrese Jr.'s
decision to grant a new trial to the
family of Rev. Leon Manigault. The
74-year-old Cleveland man was
severely injured in 1993 after his
Crown Victoria roared out of control
apd crashed into a neighbor's house.
Attorneys for Manigault, who has
been in a semi-comatose state since
Elizabeth Schadd is one of several Edwmd Jones investment
the accident, say cruise control
~used the engine.s in certain models
representatives serving indivdual investors in50 states. Today, we have
to . acceleraie rapidly. Calabrese
more New York Stock I;xchailge bianch offices than anyother
ruled that Ford had intentionally
brokerage firm ·in the country, and we serve more than 2.8 million
C(&gt;vered up data about cruise control
individual investors nationwide. Elizabeth Schadd is an xious to put his
in its cars.
expertise
and the extensive resources ofEdward Jones to \I'Ork for you.
But tbe appellate judges agreed
· with Ford that the original trial
j!Jdge had been fully infonned that
He'll meet with you at home or at a·ny other '
Ford's position on sudden 3cceleraconvenient location that suits your needs.
tlon, although possibly false, made
1\0 effort to fraudulently conceal eviCall or stop by tOday.
ljence. On Friday the judges deliv- .
ered a 24-pagc opinion in favor of
740·374·6950 or 1·888·374-6954
Ford, 1hc nation's second-largest
www.edwardjones.com
l(Utomaker.
· "The statements"that Judge Cal- ·
Member SIPC .
librese made about Ford at the time
weren't tnle and were something
t~at we took offense to. We're glad
Scn'ing Individual lnvestors.Since 1871
to have this issue put hehind us," .
Ford spokesman Jim Cain said.

T

recorded seven calls for assistance Friday.
Units responding included:
POMEROY - The Meigs County Prosecutor's Office is supervising a
CENTRAL DISPATCH
four-day sale of items confiscated in April from Fred M . Priddy, Rutland,
1:11 a.m., Palmer Street, Middleport, Faye Wallace, Veterans Memorwho was the subject of a drug investigation .
ial Hospital;
Items taken from Priddy will he auctioned June 29, June 30, July 1 and
5:15 a.m., Maples Apartments, Pomeroy, Gladys Blessing, VMH;
July 10 at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds where the items have been stored
8:11 a.m., Martin Street, Rutland, Mary Hendricks, VMH;
since Priddy's arrest in late April.
.
2:26 p.m., North Second Avenue, Middleport, Dalton Hoffman, VMH,
l'riddy, 47, subsequently pleaded guilty to a felony charge of posses- Middleport squad assistell;
.
.
sion of marijuana and is now serving an·eight-year prison sentence.
· 7:26 p.m., Childrens Home Road, Pomeroy, Beny Farkas, VMH;
The auction will be conducted by auctioneers Ottie Opperman and
10:54 p.m., North Second Avenue, Middleport, Chuck McOoud,
David Flood, Logan.
··
·
VMH.
·
A 12-page bill promoting the auction is being circulated showing page
REEDSVIlLE
after page of automobiles, firearms, motorcycles an,d other items ranging·
5:50 a.m., Eden Ridge Road, Foriest Adams, Camden-Oark MemOrial
from bulldozers to jewelry.
Hospital.
The. sale.will be conducted in a secured area with entry onl~ through .
the maan gate.
·
·
.
.
Th~ gt:Ounds will be heavily .Patrolled by unifonned and plainclothes
POMEROY ~ Bob Hoeflic h, long-time writer and columnist for The
depultes and law officers.
·
Daily Sentinel and Sunday limes-Sentinel, remains hospitalized at The ·
Ohio State·University Hospitals in Columbus.
·
· · ·.
~Dot
Cards may be sent to Bob Hoeflich, Itoom 904-A, Rhodes ·Hall, Uni·
MCAKI'HUR - The Ohio Pepartment of Transportation will ~lose versity Hospitals, lOth Ave., Columbus, Ohio 43210.
U.S. SO in McArthur on 1&gt;fonday, July 5. Originally, OPOT had planned
to close the route on June 21. U.S. 50 will be closed at the old bridge that
once spanned the B &amp;: 0 Rail~" tracks on the east side of McArthur.
· GALLIPOLIS - The Health Department will also provide free immu- '
Traffic will be detoured via SOuth and.Walnut streets. The $490,000 nizations at the following locations this week: Monday, June 21, at the
project is expected to be completed by September 30 of this year.
Wal-Mart Phannacy, from 6-7 p.m.
·
OPOT has commissioned R.C. Construction Company of Cutler, Ohio,
The department advises that children in need of immunizations must be
to remove the old bridge and replace it with an earthen embankment. The accompanied by a parent or legal guardian and bring a current immuniza·
closing date was pushed back due to preparations that need to be done tion record with them.
below the bridge before the actual construction can begin.

Treasurer
Herman Dillon

r , "', .
/

· Appeals court rules
In favor of Ford
In cruise control suit

N ·o

Local briefs:

Ohio weather

ad m.try, indutliN
in Ohio, saya qw. IIIII
other • 1ioo•n nee
f ID counler
low-pria:d impma it ..... for llql.
tlllllds of layolfs and brinlf*:ice ..
three u.s. companiea.
:
~

OFFICERS AND DIREaORS, GALLIPOLIS LIONS CLUB 98·99

. Continued from 1'811• A1·
haps most important, the crowd and
perfonners (who took the stage at
their appointed times).
"It's like an evening in the park,"
said one. Another added, "I would
have felt comfortable taking .my
children,' something plenty of concert-goers .did. .
· Organizer Jeff Harris referred to
the concert as a ' learning experi. cncc' which taughi him a great deal
about the music industry.
: One lesson: "It pays to "hire the
~!est.' he said, referring to the stage
hands and other professional techniCians who·set up and take down the
s,tagc and sound equipment.
· "It hinges on "having good peo- .
pie," he said.

i

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

~·· .

·-

u.s.

The

Praident Oinlon has thl ' led a
veto. Commeroe Secretary Willi1111
Daley and other administralion·olliciah
have been COOiacling acnaton in pcraoo
and by phone, urging the biD's defeat

•

Sunday,June20,1819

..

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�.Com1nentarr,

•

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

Sundlly, June 20, 1. .

•,

I

·Fathers and sons and presidential politics

iunbae emimes· Jeadiatel

By Chrll ilohlllhan

'EstiiiGmd In 1966

WASHINGTON --The older a man grows, the
more he thinks of his father. How old Willi he at
825 Third Avenue, G•lllpolle, Ohio
thai long-ago afternoon when I graduated from
740 448 2342 • Fu: 448 3008
college? Why, that's so much younger than me!
111 Court SbMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
What age was he when I was married? That's not
7*1112·2150 • Fu: 8112-2157
much older than I am now.
For the boy-turned-mao, a father never loses
his place. He is the guy who took us to the ballpark, told us how to keep score, taught us to love.
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
the
sports page as much as the game itself. He is
ROBERT L. WINGETT
the
old movie buff who, because he'd seen and
Publl.tler
loved so many of them, told us which we~ good,
which not so good.
·
OJ-HIII
Most of all, he was the fellow who showed us
Controller ;
the game and show of life itself.
My dBI;I has employed a simple strategy in his
79 years: Work as hard and as long as you can;
give everything to your family, then go out and
enjoy yourself.
.
The d~an of Philadelphia
court
reporters,
Herbert
Matthews spent years recording
some of the ' most sordid cases
you could imagine. My brothers
and I would hear his voice .drop
· to a whisper as he dictated the
play-by-play of a domestic relations case. " Your honor, he put'
· his thing ... " Years later, we
would laugh at an ever-proper
dad trying to transcribe in standard English the swo . lies of
some street-talking adbeat.
While I'm thin . n~f Dad, I
By Sen. Mlch..t Shoemaker
can tell that two uy running .
"SJanley, this is another fine mess you've gotten .us into!" That classic for president ar d ing the
line from Oliver Hardy to tlie hapless Stan Laurel bri~gs back fond memo- same, They've bu1I
ir lives
ries of days gone by. The scary thought is this quote can be use~ almost daily using their fathers' lives .for
· to describe some .ideas that come out of Coluinbus to help make our lives blueprints. Now. they each want
better.
to win the big·one for him.
Chief Justice Tom Moyer recently appointed a S2-member commission to
AI Gore saw his father con. recommend changes in the state's legal system. The commission reported struct a 30-year record in pollback with a series of suggestions that might sound good to a big city politi- ties. Then, in 1970, he watched
tian, but they certainly raise serious concerns for those of us .in the real as the voters of Tennessee
. world of Southern Ohio.
bounced Senator Gore from
. The commission recommends the consolidating of many courthouse ser- . office without an ounce of guilt.
· )!ices into regional centers (probably Columbus, Cleveland and Cincinnati) · George W. Bush saw his
: !O improve efficiency. Anyone who has tried to get their auto license by mail · father struggle his way up the
• from the capital city within the same decade as their expiration date can presidential poll only to slide to
; probably endorse this with great enthusiasm. They want to make the courts the bottom in 1992 on one bad
- more accessible to the public by asking citizens from Lawrence County to

run of cC:onomic luck.
Both sons want to even the sco~. They want to
put a giant "W" on the column to offset the "L"
each can never forget They want to grab the family banner left fallen on the field of political combat and carry it to victory.
Ooro has been fighting this cause since his
election to Congress from Tennessee in 1976, just
six y,ears after his father'sdefeat.
Like·any smart son, the vice president has used
his father's career as his ·own first draft. If Gore
Senior spent too much time living in Washington,
Gore Junior made sure not to repeat the same mistake. Each year he would host hundreds of town
meetings . back in the district. Folks would see
with their own eyes· thl! their U.S. congressman
had not gotten Potomac fever.
The younger Gore didn 'I -stop there. He
installed the most state-of-lhe-art system on Capi' to) Hill for keeping track of voters' concerns back

home. If you cared about the abortion issue, Congressman Gore would keep you up-to-date on the
issue. The same would go for civil rights or thd
environmental advocates Send one letter !d
OQre's office and you would be guaranteed a coh'·
tinued flow of correspOndence iri the future.
'
. The younger Bush has also learned from a
father's failings. If the old man seemed. too elite
and well-born, George W. is the opposite: regular
as hell and totally connected. You had ~ drinking
problem? So did he. You want to keep politics in
perspective. So does this guy.
·'
·It appears that one of these sons is going to win
the presidency. If it's AI Gore, a very decent 'fe)!
low based upon m.y experience, he will speak on
inaugural day of the father still with him in spiriC
If it's the younger George Bush, he'll have the
older one beside hi111 in the flesh, to sec his .On
take the oath before God, and the presidency back
from ihe man who took it from him.
·

Guest column

Futures Commission
should quickly become
the Past Commission

:~:v~!~). Hillsbo~o

$unday, June 20;1999

P~ge/lf!t

• • RIO GRANDE - E1ght new
will be formed in Rio
urande this week.
, The new companies will be
funned at the American Free Enterprise and Leadershi Conference
which is held annual!~ on campus
'The University of Ri Grancle/Ri
Grande Community ~liege . .Thi~
year, a ~rd number of 165 students 'are auend'ng th J
.,.
.
.
. • . e u~e 20•...,
confe~nce, which IS organiZed as a
project by the Students In Free
E!.nterprise (SIFE) .chapter at Rio
Grande.
. . The businesses will only last for a
\yeek and they probably won't make
JI'!UCh money. They will, however,
~ring &amp;real learning opportunities
. fo! st~denta from across Ohio. They
v.;11l also encourage many of the stujlcnts· to get involved in economic
development or the business world
ig,t_he future.
: "'The students come away with
~ore . confidence, a better understanding of the business world and a
new appreciation for the free enterprise syatem," said Jerry Gust, exec:
:tJUve ~istant t~ the pr~dent for
cpmmumty relations at R1o Grande
)lnd the directm' of the Loren M.
~rry Center.
• . During the week, Gust said, the
~tudents learn from speakers from
,... business world, work together to
form businesses, take part in quiz
howl contests focusing on free
~nterprise, present speeches on the
)narket economy, gain insight on the
~.S. Congress and take part in many
other activities designed to promote
better awareness and understand-

a
~hlo

,.

:
for a court hearing (sounds like a plan for (1'avel
• : One of the extreme suggestions is to close some courthouses and study
alternate uses for the buildings. Most judicial control would then be under By WALTER R. MEARS
That was a point of rare agree- a prosecutor is on a case .-:=----:--:--:-::--:--:------,
the state's supreme court justice (remember this was his commission). AP Special Corn~apondent
ment between Starr and the Clinton involving the top officials
Another controversial recommendllion is the elimination of elected judges.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ken- administration. There were Senate of an administration. Starr's
Perhaps the brain trust on this commission could come to southern Ohio and neth W. Starr may go out with a and House hearings earlier this year volumes of evidence
visit the coffee shop where everyone knows the judges by name (Just like bang, bu,t the l~w _sent hi~ in p~~uit on rewriting and extending the law, against Clinton in the Mon. Cheers/ .) happened to the ~ght of the people to make their own choices?
o~ President Chnton IS expmng but the outcome was obvious then.
ica Lewinsky affair, aJ\c}Jiis
· Is there a hidden agenda behind this Futures Commission report?? .I don't · w1thout so much as a whimper.
Republicans were burned by the recommendations
' for
· like to .always be the skeptic when Columbus speaks, but my battle scars
The_ independent co~nsel act system in the Iran-Contra case, impeachment charges, were
(mostly in the back) remind me to be super cautious. For years our urban lapses m 10 days, unmentioned and when the independent counsel got a · sent to the ; House as the
.)
: friends have suggested a state police force to replace &lt;Xiunty sheriffs. For unmo~rned, the de!&gt;ate abo~ I former secretary of -defense indicted 1998 congressional election
$orne .reason, I still feel much safer at home _than in the big city. Local offi- extendmg_•t.over, pr?"ably before_., and issued a report damaging then- campaign season began .
. cials who are held accountable to local voters exemplify .the ideals that were began. VersiOns of 11 have been 1n President George .Bush, just before Republjcant tried to make
espoused by the framers of Ohio's constitution. Justice for all should be effect for two decades. There have · the 1992 election he lost to Clinton. Clinton an issue, but it didaffordable, convenient and expedient regardless of the traffic congestion in been at .least 21 special prosecutors
That Jed Republicans in the then- n't work. Democrats gained
the county seat. Bigger isn't. always better! In this case, bigger means less under its terms, . iln approximate · Democratic Senate to block renewal House seats despite it all.
· personal contact, more inconvenience, greater·expense to t'he citizens and in count because some cases . were of the' law for 18 months. After it
When renewal of the Jaw·
; many cases, justice denied. .
sealed and secret. .
w~nl back onto the books, with Clin- was being&gt;' debated, Starr
·: The Futures Commission should quickly become the Past Commission .
Starr's five-year investigation, ton 's backing, the president and his said that any independent
: ~nd this report'should be recycled as packing material for an overseas deliv- expanded from a failed land deal to administration became the target of counsel is subject to poljti: cry. We'll keep our courthouses and our local officials if you don't mind!
the sex scandal that Jed to the seven independent counsel investi- cal aUack,&lt;:and it would be
: : Mike Shoemaker repr1nnta lhe 17111 Dlltrlct In 1he Ohio Sallllta.
impeachment of the president, is gations.
better to pdt the responsibil•
· going to keep going, though.
And Clinton hasn't hearilthe last ity for investigating allegaThe law provides that he can con- ·of them. Starr says he isn't sure how tions of ~rongdoing by
tinue pasl its expiration, until he much longer he will need to com- people at the top of govern~
decides his tasks are done. That plete ·the investigations tjlat have · ment back in .the hands of .____a_n-,d""'h,..e_w_as_o_n--,th,..:e_pa_t""h_to_w_a(.ud
applies to four other independent embroiled the White House. His last the Justice Department, where it resigning to avoid impeachment. '
counsels as well. Another, into inOu- aci will be a final report, arid that used to be:
.
·
Clinton yielded to political p~iAs a long time resident of.Gallia County, I, along with many family mem- ence peddling in the Deparl!nent of could include assertions of wrongs
That way, the attorney general sure when he had the first Whitew•bers, local and out-of,town residents, have always attended and even partie' Housing and · Urban' Development ~thresident and First Lady would be in charge, with Congress
· ed b th
ipated in the Fouflh of July festivities. We enjoy the parade and in recent . back when Republicans ran it, shut
odham Ointon, possibly as overseeing what's done. That's the :~~/~;:~:~?t::~n:aw !as :~ti~
years have .had _someone of our. family in it.
·
.
down early this month, after nine
c paigns for the Senate in way· it f orked before 1978. When effect at the time. When it wis
This year however, we will not be able to take part because of scheduling years in operation.
New York. That could hu. rt in 2000, the- ··~- outs1'de ...,.,.,.,,to·rs they
· d
1 f•d
•
't S d
· W. do tie d Ch h
· · d fi d · de 1
·~ w!"~
.-· - - ~v1ve , a pane o .e eral Jud~s
1 on un ay evenmg. e a n
urc serv1ccs an m 11 ep y upsetDragging investigations, disputed as Bush was hurt in 1992.
were chosen · by attorneys general, installed Starr to take over the case.
ling that instead of as in the past, when the Fourth is on Sunday, you didn't findings, failed prosecutions, and
Starr said there have been no usually because of congressional
Th
h Gj.' h ·
•
..
.
.
e ·rest, as I e 1c e goes, IS
Plat\rthe parade on SaturdaY·
poht1cs all figured in the consensus decisions on what will he in his final and political pressure. ·
history. So is the Jaw. ·
·.
II seems
me that
30·
Rich"-'
dato J'k
h' you are leaving out the biggest part' of what's .impor- to led the Jaw run out June
·
~port.
.... M. N"1xon accepted one
tant on a Y • e I IS, I am truly surprised the others haYe not been more
Starr himself said it should. He
"We strive mightily while pro- as the price of getting his attorney
EDITOR'S NOTE: Walter ~. vocal. Why should citizens of the area have to choose between the two?
said it was suP,posed to take the pol- . viding public information, public gener.. confirmed by the .Seoate. MMre, vice praklent and epac"l
.
Kr1811na 8. Stout ilics out of law enforcement and education, to divorce our decisions When he fired the first Wate'rgate corrMpondent lor The ~111811
.
..
Bidwell prosecution, but "sometimes has the from politics whatsoever," Starr said proseaator for p~ssing subpoenas Pre.., h.. report.d an w..hlnt
ironic effect of further politicizing in a Fox News Sunday interview.
agains\ 'the White House, the uproar tart and nlltlolllll polltlca tar mo~
. This past Memorial Day weekend members of Gal.lia County Vieinam it."
.
There is no separating them when forced him to accept a second one, than 30 yMrl.
.;

Berry•s World

1ng of the free market system.
The keynote
for this
year's confe~nce IS rehred Army ·
Major General Raymond Edward district director for U.S. Represent&amp;·
Mason Jr. Mason served as a Ma·'or .
S
Ge ral from 1969 197S
l
ttve Ted trickland; Ohio University
ne
also ·served a~~ ~~ ~st~~:~"t~~!~.s"g~~{o"~noa"mer·,
.d
,
,
.
'd
"'
::• ~~~- ~~~ a:fd~~ VJce pres1 ent and manager of retail
lion': bein a com- ~~t~"g!~~~~nOh~~e~~\~Y ::,a;~;
. d . .g
rn11te m1 11tary and Environmental Affairs Manager
business leader he John Hollback; ·Rockwell Au lornahas
·also
been lion Operations Manager · Paul
involved in commu- Schmitd; Sally Arnett, corporate
nity 'activities serving officer and vice president of nursing
on numerous boards at the Holzer Medical Oinic; Rio
for educational institutions, histori- G.rande President Dr. Barry Dorsey;
cal societies, civic organizations and Bob Evans and Jewel Evans of
economic development groups.
Jewel Evans Orist Mill.
.
. Gust said that one thing that realPanel members leading the
ly impressed him about Mason is Careers in the 21st -Century discushow the reti~ Major General has sion will include: Dr. Denise Shockbeen· involved with businesses in ley of the Buckeye Hills Career
Europe and has a unique insight on Center, Kurt Dailey, human
the global economy.
· . resource.s manager of the AEP
Other i~Jdividual spea~ers at the Mountaineer Plant;. Mike Francis of ·
conference will include Felix Uv- Friendly Mart; Sue Ann ,Bostic, of
ingston, dean of institutional the Ohio Valley Bank; Gavin Plant
research, adult and continuing edu· Operations· Manager Dwayne
cation at Washington and Jefferson Phleger, Electro-Craft ManufacturCollege; national commentator Dolf · ing Manager Randy Finney and Sara
Droge, who served as National Evans Moore.
Security Advisor to Presidents LynPanel members for the Economic
don Johnson, Richard Nixon and Consequences of Choices and DeciRonald Reagan; Rio Grande gradu- .sions Made, Without Thinking
ate Kevin Smith, _personal invest- Through Possible Results discussion
meat consultant for National City will include: Gallia County Court of
Investments; Registered Investment Appeals Judge Joe Cain, Gallipolis
Advisor and Rio Grande Adjunct City Solicitor Doug Cowles, auorFaculty Member Jim Morrison; Rio ney Jeff Adkins and U . Dan Gibson
Grande graciuaie Masanori Mori of of the Ohio State Highway Patrol.
Manco, Inc.; Rotary District GoverGust said the students will do
nor Mel Simon; Greg Hargett, sixth much more than just listen at the

ai ·

I

Unm_·ourned··pa··$SI·ng of' th' e.l·n·depe·ndent counsella·w·

~nd

Eight new 'businesses' forming this week at Rio Grande
~IUD~
SJ?C&amp;ke~
IAn.•• •••sptr• oonltntllc:e beg/,. tocMyl ~~~ ~~~u:n=o~l~
~~~h

.

.

•

followed familiar pattern in deregulation

COLUMBUS (AP) -The Legis)ature took wbat good it could from
Olherstatcs-andlcftoutsomeofthe
bad - .when it fashioned a bill to
restructun: Ohio's $11 biUion electric
power industry, ll.wmakers who had a
hand in ila.conalrul:tion said.
111c Senate ia expCc:ted to agree to
the House vcmion of the bill, With a
vote mn)ing aa early aa TheSday. Sen.
~ Johnsoil, the biD's sponsor, said
l(e would recommend that the Senate
.ll(lCCpt the changes and send th~ bill to
Gov. Bob 111ft, ~ho is expected to sign
it into law.
. The bill would deregulate the sale
of electric power, while leaving the
transrniJSion and distribution of elec_tricity as regulated industries.
~ Ohio's utility companies will be
•given five years from the startup dat~
' -Jan. 1, 2001 -to devmop markets

and up to 10 years to ~p investments made decades ago, with regula- ·
tory approval, in billion-doUar projects like nuclear power plants.
Thole "stranded aists" ctimntly
are passed on to customers in their
monthly bills, but the utilities will be
unable to do so in a competitive environment.
. The utilities mUst submit plans for
that transition period to the Public
Utilities CommiSsion of Ohio by the
startup date.
.
The commission then will consider
them on a case-by-case basis and
determine how much each will be
allowed to m:over through a tax on

users.
The Legislature; which at first s'et a
schedule to determine how much utilities could claim, later decided to let
the PUCO handle that job, as well as

.

,

.

. ·

By Nat ~entatf
...,.
.
·
mitied "terrible war cri~es...
Cardmal John O'Connor of New York was a
the NATO bombing violaled
chaplain with the Marines during the Vietnam war
specific rules 'of war. Our gov-- sometimes under fire. He wrote a book, '!A
ernment has committed \Yar
Chaplain Looks at Vietnam," justifying that war.
crimes liY, bombing · civilian
Years later, he told me: "That was a bad book. J.
infrastructures.
regret having published it. I didn't lake enough
. "Things like water
account of the enormous cost in lives, resources
treatment plants, sewage treat- ·
and the brutalization of some of the American
ment plants and the electrical
troops."
·grid certainly have military
During the bombing' of Yugoslavia, the cardlcapacity, but they also have
nal, writing in his weekly column in the newspa- civilian necessity.... The United States' is respon·
per Catholic New York, questioned '!lhether this si151CI along with its NATO ' allies, for having
war has been a "just war."
deliberately chosen those targets ·· knowing what
It is not enough, O'Connor said, to argue that the effect would be on the civilian population."
"one must come to the defense of those being
But "a well-p.laccd Clinton official" has told
brutalized. But can we say with integrity that this Thomas DeFrank, Washington bureau chief of the
kind of bombing includes only 'surgical strikes,' N'ew York Daily News, "We fought a (more than)
without serious danger of indiscriminate destruc- 72-day air war and nobod,y ilied. That's the botlion, including the deaths of innocent human· -tom line Tor us."
beings?"
DeFrank noted that this Whit~ House assess·
The most remarkable source of moral objec- ment "skims over the deaths of thousands of Serb
tion to the bombing was Henry K.isainger, archi• troops, ethnic Albanians and Yugoslav civilians
T.
1
teet of the Christmas bombing of Hanoi during during the war."
,
·
--:-----·I
tbe Vietnam war -- an air auack that took place
; No American was killed, but our use of cluster
•I
during the celebration .o f Mus in the city's bombs involved not only Immediate but long:By The AMacllted PreM
Catholic cathedral.
term ·"collateral damage" below 1S,OOO feet.
Today is Sunday, June 20, the 171st day of J999. There are 1!14 days left
"Pounding away on a civilian population day
Steve Ooose, program director of ijuman
in the year. This Is Father's Day.
by day,." Kissinger recently told a forum ~~ the Righls Watch's arms division, points out that' "the
Today's Highlight In History:
.
.
New York P011t, "is, in effect, saying our moral submunitions inside cluster bombs have a high
On Jun~20, 17S6,1n India, a gro~p of British soldiers was imprisoned in prfnciplcs stop at 15,000 feet) find this very dif~ failure rate and can leave unexploded .ordnance
a suff~atmg cell that gained notonety as the " Black Hole of Calcutta." · flcult to accept"
· ·
over wide areas, ready to detonate on contact --In
Most d1ed. .
·
.
Durini a diacuasion of the bombing on Nation- effect becoming land minea and killing civilians
In 1782, CongRSS ~"'""'ed the Great Seal of the United States.
a1 Public Radio's "Talk of the Nation," Phyllis even years after the conflict has ended. Because
In 1863, West Virgm1a became the 3Sth state.
.
Bennis of the Institute for Policy Studies noted of the submunitions' appearance -- some are ·
In 1893, a jury in N'ew Bedford, Mus., found Lizzie Borden innocent of that although Milosevic has unqueslionably com· orange-yellow soda-can sized objects and green
' the ax murders of her father and stepmotl!er.

d
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baseballs -- children are particularly drawn to tJie
volatile Jive remnants.
;
"On April 24, five children playing with colorful unexploded submunitions were reported
killed, and two injured, near Doganovic in south·
em K05ovo." ·
Also not sharing the gener4l satisfaction in die
success of the bombing is Richard Haass of tile
Brookings · Institution. "It's hard to feel . goojl ·
about a humanitariap mis,sion in which (so JllanY,)
of the people you're t,Ying 19 help arc now homeless."
·
:
Dr. William Schulz, executive director qf
Amnesty International USA, alSo points ou1:
"Those who act in the name of human rights bear
a respo":'ibility to sec that \heir own actio*
scrupulously accord with human-rights stan·
~-"
.
;
. But The New York Times, in a June 41ead edl- .
torial: ~lares that ·:the most dangerous milillu}
conf11ct m Europe ·smce the Second World War
will conclude as a victory for the principles o.f
democracy and human rights." .
. · '
· Meanwhile, a federal district court has dii- .
missed I ·lawsuit by 26 members ·of. the Housl:
charging that the president has violated the w..,
Powen.· Act, Jet alone .the Constitution ("The
Congress shall have Power to d~clare War"). But
Clinton hu already shown that the Constitutio~
hu lil!le to do with him • .Having escaped CQnvj¢·
lion on, in my view, clear serial violations of the
Constitution, he has justifiable confidence in his
immunity from such serious charge~.
Nat H•ntoH le a 111tlo:::r renowned
lllltharJty on tl!. Firat Amend
and the reet
or 1he Bill or Rlahta.
·
·
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·· NOWI

. Veterans salute area .businesses

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Jd

GREAT REWARDS

Parade scheduling draws fire

·

1

1999 GRAND AM 4 DR

·
ed
Ito
r
·L etters to the

VeteransofAmericaChapter#7CYJconductedtheirfifthannualroadsiderest
coffee break project althe State Rte. 3S west roadside rest. This project has
been a great service to the holiday travelers, truckers, bikers traveling .
· through Gallia County on holiday weekends. Many of these travelers have
expressed their gratitude for the coffee, snacks, and fellowship that has been
.
provided by our chapter.
. This .project has been so successful due to the cooperation of thb Ohio
. Department of Transportation, the Ohio Highway Patrol, local businesses,
. · and the staff and personnel of the roadside rest area.
The eoffee and food supplies were generously donated this year by the
. '-..flllowing area businesses: Flowers Baking Company; Domino's Pizza; Jack· son Pike; 11\e Kroger Company, Silver Bridge Plaza; McDonalds, Rio
. Grande; McDonalds, Gallipolis; Bodim~rs Grocery; Go-mart, Gallipolis;
Super America, Pine St; Super America, JackSon -Pike; Rax :Restaurant, Gallipolis; Captain 'D's Seafood Restaurant; Foodland, Gallipolis; Bob Evans
Restaurant, Rio. Grande; Mongomery's Barber Shop; Pizza Hut, Gallipolis; ·
Robbie's 76 Station, Gallipolis; Friendly Mart, Rio Grande and The Walmart
Super Center, Gallipolis.
.
We the members of the Vietn~eterans of America salute the above
: businesses for their involvement
teran activities and their interest in
community service in Gallia County. e encouraae area residents to patron· )ze these local businesses who are a part of your c:ommunity and provide
support to the area youth and adults of this county.·
·
LArry 0. Marr, Prelldent
, Oallla County Ylelllllm Vetenlna or America,
~
·
,Chepter 1708

·
·
pnvate donations an:d
. bou h
Jd f 1·
•
· "
·
conference as they take part in the a t t e wor o po •tics and budThey earn the credtl, Gust ~td.
gets through an activity dealirig with He added that the students are giYe}l
various activities. When the students the U.S. Congress. "The students a test on free enterpnse when they
break down into groups to form the place themsel':,es in the shoes of our start th_e conference and when lh&lt;&gt;¥
eight businessea, he said, the stu- Congressmen, Gust sa1d. The stu- . fiRJsh 11. The students, on averagt,
dents do all of the work themselves dents actually cam college cre~i.ts raise their test ~ores by more thap
::~w:: ,!op~Je~s ~.h:.bu~fn.:: by attendmg the conference, wh1ch 45_ percent dunng 1he week, Gust
IS prov1ded at no cost to the stude nts
sa1d.

1585

·

oversee most of the journey from ~g­
ulation to competition.
It's a popular idea, said Channele
Carner, an industry specialist at the
Energy Information Administration in
Washington who traclcs de~gulation
In the states for the U.S. Department
of Energy.
She said that in many of the 18
. states that already have changed their
laws, their legislatures passed the
work to the public utility commissions
once lawmakers decided to allow the.
utilities to recover all or part. of their
investments.
An EIA analysis pesged the stranded costs of Ohio utilities at about $10
l;lillion .
"The Legislatures in tl1e. other
states say, 'II can be recove~. You
guys fii'!re ~ut the details,"' Ms. .
Carner said Friday. .

PRIMESTAR
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Daniel Earl Clay
· BIDWEU.. - Daniel Earl Clay, 40, of Bidwell, died Thursday, June' 17,
19'99, in a car accident on State Route 160 in Gallia County. He was a bar
tender at the DoubleD Bar in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Clay was born October
9, 1958, in Huntington, W.Va.
· Clay is survived by his mother, Mary Lou Mathews of Gallipolis; his former wife, Susie Curry of Gallipolis; four children, Brandon, Patrick and
Shasta Clay of Gallipolis, and Daniellc of Dunkirk, Ohio; one sister, Debbie
Church of Tampa, Fla.; and three brothers, Ronald Clay of Florida, Bobby
Malhews of Columbus, Ohio, and Robby Mathews of Columbus, Ohio.
Services will be held at I p.m., Monday, at the Willis Funeral Home. Visitation will be held from 11 a.m., Monday until the lime of the service. Burial will be in the Bethlehem Cemetery, located on Rocky Fork Road, just off
State Route 218. Rev. Willard Blankenship will officiate.

Margie Jeannette Lang _ .
CLEARWATER, Fla. - Margie Jeannette Lang, 50, of Clearwater, Fla.,
formerly of Gallipolis, died Wednesday, June 16, 1999, at her residence. She
was born July 19, 1948, in Williamson, W.Va. Lang was a receptionist and·a
graduate of the public schools in Matewan, W.Va.
· Lang is ·survived by her father and stepmother, Jesse and Antionette
Saunders of Gallipolis; four children, Kyle Benet Lang, Jessica Lashawn
Lang, Nakarsha Jane Lang and Rebecca Jean Lang, all of Clearwater, Fla.;
·four sisters, Annette Pauerson of Clearwater, Fla., Nyoka Hairston of Gallipolis, Cortezissa Johnson of Gallipolis, and Sierra Spicer of Gallipolis; six
brothers, Kevin Saunders of Daytona Beach, Fla., James Anderson of.Washington, D.~.• Shawn Moore of Gallipolis, Charleton Armstrong of Gallipoli~. Derrick .Armstrong of Point Pleasant, W.Va., and Jesse J. Saunders, Jr.,
of Columbus, Ohio; special friend, James Ponds of Clearwater, Fla.; and
numerous cousins, aunts, uncles and other relatives.
·
Lang was preceded in ·dealh by her mother, Jean Strother Belcher.
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m., Monday, at the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home with Rev. Eddie Buffington officiating. Burial will follow in Pine Street Cem~tery.
Visitation will be held ' for one hour prior to the service Monday at the
fu_neral home.

Kenneth Ray Allen Blazer
CROWN CITY- Kenneth Ray Allen Blazer, 11 months, of Crown City,
died Saturday, June 19, 1999, at his residence.
·
Blazer is survived by his parents, Alfonso and Amy Ritenhouse Blazer;
two brothers, Alfonso and Brandon Blazer of Crown City; two sisters,
. Emmy Blazer and Marina Ritenhouse of Crown City; paternal grandparents,
Gary and Diana f.Aimbert of Crown City; paternal grandfather, Morris Blazer, Jr., of Gallipolis; maternal grandfather, less Ritenhouse of Washington
Court House; maternal grandparents, Flo and Doug Wilkerson of Washington Court House; paternal great grandmother, Francis Blazer of Gallipolis;
and several aunts and uncles.
Visiting hours will be held 'from noon until 2 p.m., today, at. the Willis
Funeral Home. Services will be held at 2 p.m. at the funeral home.
Burial will be in the Kings Chapel Cemetery. Rev. Charles Johnson will
officiate.

Travis J. "T.J." Adams
RACINE - Travis Jeremiah "T J ." Adams, 16, Racine, passed away suddenly around 6 p.m. Thursday evening, June 17, 1999, n.ear Racine. Bum
July 31, 1982, in Parkersburg, W.Va., he
was 1he son of Bobby Joe (Jr.) and Belinda Fitch Adams, Racine.
He would have been a junior at Southern High School. Prior to . entering his
sophomore year at Southern, he ·had
attended Eastern High School. He was a
member of the Future Farmers of America
Chapter At Southern. He· played freshman
football at Eastern.
Surviving in addition to his parents are
two sisters, Monica Adams Chadwell and
Vicki Adams Price; and a niece, Brooke
Chadwell, all of Racine.
Travis is ai,so survived by his maternal
grandmo.ther and step-grandfather, Mildred Wolfe Fitch and Larry Fitch, Sr., Belpre, Ohio; and his paternal great-grandparTravle Jeremiah "T.J." Adame ents, Jack and Pearl Adams, Letart Falls.
Several aunts and uncles survive, Linda
and Denny Evans, Melanie Adams, Linda and Jim Diddle, Nancy Parker
Campbell, all of Racine; Ed and Cindy Knapp, Parkersburg; Joe Fitch and
Larry Fitch, Jr., both of Belpre.
Great aunts and uncles surviving arc Clarence Boone and Carolyn Adams
and Maxine Diddle, all of Racine; Jean and Charles Fitch, Jean Wolfe, all of
Portland; Donna and Robert Fitch ani! Mildred Krider, Long Bottom; Don
and Linda Fitch, Chester; Mae and Cecil McCloud, Bradenton, Fla., Ross
and Ann Wolfe, Logan, Ohio; Thelma and Bob Coz~rt, Gulfport, MiSs., and
Gladys Fryman, East Liverpool, Ohio. ·
He was preceded in death.by his maternal grandfather, Roy Eugene Fitch;
paternal grandparents, Bobby Joe (Sr.) and Betty June Proffitt Adams; and
. by an uncle, Roger Adams.
A private family service will be conducted at the convenience of the family. Friend&amp; may call at the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine, from noon
until 9 p.m., Sunday.

Gail Russell

'
Port Aulbority.
He retired from t~
BobBulock
AUsnN, Teus (AP) ·- Former agency in 1991.
"
Survivors include his wife, ~
U. Gov. Bob Bullock, an often gruff
and alwaya ~ing figure in Texas daughters; two soM; and eight granOpolitics for more than ·40 years, died childten.
Friday. He was 69.
UWielll:e Stoae
'
The cause of death was not
PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) released Bullock, who had suffered l.awma Stone; a social historian ~
various health problems over the years; . founding director of a historical stu~_ic;J:
most recently was hospitalized for con- center at Princeton University, died
gestive heart failure.
Wedne5day of Parkiii!IOn's disease. HG
'
:ln 1990, Bullock, a Democrat, was was 79.
elede!l lieutenant governor __ a powStone's resean:h interests spanned a
erful job in a Slate that slwply limits broad period of England history, or, iiJ.
the governor's authority. Bullock his words, "from the War of the Rao!ef
presided over the Texas Senale, made through the Tudor regime to the
committee appointments, sat on key Cromwellian Revolution and beyond
government boards and controlled the into the 18th cenlw'y."
After receiving his bachelor's an4
flow of legislation in the Senale.
•
master's
degrees from Oxford, StOne
During his tenu~ the slate ended a
court-ordered school funding crisis, remained there until 1962 as a lecturer
saw a once ~y budget balloon to a and a fellow.
$6 billion surplus, and overbauled the
· He jointd the Princeton fao:ulty in
civil justice system to impose limits on 1963 and was chairman of the hislooy
lawsqils.
department between 1967 and 19-70.1D
1968, he was named founding director
ThrryGUI
MfNNEAPOUS (AP) - Terry.· of the Shelby CUllom Davis Center for
Gill, a fanner television news producer Historical Studies.
and reporter at the Minneapolis Tri·
'•
bune, died Saturday of cancer. He was
•
67.
James Tenance "Terry" Gill most ·
recently worked for KNBC-TV in Los
Angeles. Gill worked for the station 1
from 1968 until his retirement in 1993,
and produced broadcasts for Tum
Brokaw, 1bm Snyder, Jess Marlow,
Paul Moyer and Kelly tange.
·
Prior to moving to California, Gill
wrote sports and news copy at KSTPTV in Minneapolis. He moved to
you insure
KSTP from the Tribune, where he was
home with us,
a ropy editor in the late 19Sik.
Survivors include his wife and three . through AUto-Owners
sons.
Insurance Company, we'U save
. BmMcGivem
.
MENDOTA HEIGHTS, Minn.
you money! Statistics show that
~AP) -. Bill Mc;Givem, . ~ longtime
~malist fur KSTP-~ m St. .Paul, your age group eJCPC!i.en~
.~
died Wednesday of hver cancer. He fewe~ less-cosdy
was 72. . . . .
losses,
~r "-·_,,.
~c?IVem JOIDed KSI'P·TV. ~d
,' ' \- r •'
~om 1951: ~ heljled the teleV!ston
allowing
st~1on JXllllllanze rego!arly BChed~led
daily news shows, wh1ch at the lime us to
••
••
•• •' ••
were an innovation. .
. . pass the
••
n
II
McG1ve~ also did field reportmg.
;
j
II
In_ 1957, With KSTP photographer savings
Dick Hance, he reconled the fatal con- on to you.
frontab~n ~een two bank robbers
and pollee m, an AD:!ka County game .Oln~ct our agencY •
~rve ..He also covered the stale ~g­ today' for a customized
tSlature ~~the late 1900s ~dearly 70s.
~cGivem was ~ws director of the proposal on your homeowners
station when he left m 1973 to become insumnce protection.
public relati~~directorforthe St. Paul

1(you're 50 or

·older, you're ·
·.in th~ money! .

GALUPOLIS - Marvin Boxdorfer, ·68, of Gallipolis, died Saturday,
June 19, 1999, at Holzer Medical Center. ,
.
Arrangements will be announced later by W~ugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home.

GALLIPOUS - Gail Russell, 81, Gallipolis, died Saturday, June 19,
1999, at the Holzer Medical Center. She was born September 13, 1917, at
Centenary, Ohio, daughter of the late Oscar E. Osa M. Berridge Russell. She
retired from the Fanners Home Administration in 1994 following fifty years
of service. She was a member of the Gallipolis Chapter Oraer of the #283
Eastern Star at White Shrine.
She also served as a volunteer to the Gallia County Historical Society and
the American Red Cross.
She is survived by one nephew, David (Iina) Russell, Gallipolis, Ohio;
one niece, Lisa (Scott) Reuter, Gallipolis, Ohio; sister-in-law, Barbara Russell, Gallipolis, Ohio; five great nieces and nephews, Jeffrey, Kelsey and
Courtney Reuter; and Andrea and Sarah Russell.
She was preceded in death by one b~other, 0. Wayne Russell (1994) and
one nephew,,Mark E. Russell (1979).
.
Funel'lll services will be conducted 11 a.m., Tuesday, June 22, 1999, at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home , Wetherholl Chapel, with the Rev. Richard
Maynard officiating. Intennenl will follow in the 'Moun~ Hill Cemetery,
Gallipolis Ohio. Friends may call at the funeral home Monday from 6 p.m.
to 9 p.m. '
'

Freda Mae Bing

Serb pullout ahead ·of schedule

:. MIDDLEPOKf - Freda Mae Bing, 75, of Middlepon died Saturday,
June 19, 1999, at her residence. She was born May 12, 1924, in Middleport.
She was retired from Ohio University where she was employed in food service.
Bing is survived by her husband, Guy E. Bing of Middleport; her children, Unda (Harold) Taylor of Cincinnati, Bobby (Downie) Kennedy of
Columbus, Brenda Jeffers of Portland, and Jim and Josephine Kennedy of
Portland; stepchildren, Guy (Jr.) and Linda Bing of Midd(eport, Joyce and
Iamey Ash of Pomeroy, Robena and Lee Wukelich of Belle Valley, and
Ernest and Judy Bing of Racine; sisters, Helen (William) Capehart and
Hazel Kauff, both of Middleport, Pauline (thet) Shepard of Fostoria; a
brother, Paul (Frances) Kauff of Middleport; eight grandchildren, 19 stepgrandchildren, eight great grandchildren, nine' step-great grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Bing was prec,eded in death by her parents, Cecil and Eva Foley Kauff; a
brother, James Kauff; and a sister, Margaret Kauff.
Services. will be held Monday, at 1 p.m., at the. Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport. Visitation will be held today from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the funeral home. Burial w_ill be in the Middleport Hill Cemetery.

PRISTINA, Yugosiavia (AP) Packing into armored vehicles,
trucks and buses, Serb·troops accelcrated their pullout from Kosovo on
Saturday and NATO said the soldiers may be gone well ahead .of
their Sunday midnight deadline.
Peacekeepers mel with ethnic
Albanian rebels in an attempt to prevent them from embarking on a new
reign of terror to fill the vacuum left
by th~ retreating Serbs.
On the streets of Pristina, the
Kosovo capital, the number of .
NATO security checkpoints grew
noticeably, especially in the neighborhood of the rebels' offices.
There were about 40,000
Yugoslav troops in Kosovo before
an international peace deal reached
June 9 ended NATO's78-day bombing campaign against Yugoslavia.
Only 3,000 to 5,000 remain, and "it
wou ld no1 be unreasonabl e 1o
expect" that they could· all be gone
by noon Sunday, peacekeepers •
spokesman u. Col. Robin Qifford
said Saturday.
Peacekeeping officials -talked
Saturday with the Kosovo Liberalion Army about how the ethnic
Albaniart rebels will demilitarize, as
required under the Kos6vo
plan. No details of the meeting were
available.
NATO also was making preliminary plans for the arrival of more
Russian peacekeepers as part of the
agreement reached Friday to deploy
3,600 Russian soldiers in Kosovo
under Russian command in sectors
assigned to the United States, France

Marvin Boxdorfer

Troy Ro.bl"n. Qual IS

MIDDLEPOIIT- Troy Robin Qualls, 28, of Middleport, died Friday,
June 18, 1999, at ·Holzer Medical Center. He was born July 20, 1970, in
Chesterhill, Ohio. Qualls was employed by Alan Slone Construction of
Chesterhill as .a surveyor and was currently working in Huntington, W.Va.
Qualls was a memher of the Laborers Local 1353 in Charleston, W.Va. He
attended Meigs Local Schools and graduated in 1989.
Qualls is survived by his parents, James F. and Marcia Norris Qualls of
Middleport; brother and sister-in-law, Forest Gene and Sarah Qualls of Middleport; three sisters and brothers-in-law, Tracy and Steven Skellett of Stewart; Keawana and Alex Varian of Mason, W.Va.; and ·Melanie Qualls of
Pomeroy; three brothers, James D. Qualls of Racine, and Blaine and Dwane
Qualls of Pomeroy; five nephews, two nieces and several cousins; maternal
grandparents, Gene and Edna Norris of Stewart; an aunt, Marcella David!'OR; and an uncle, Gary (Sylvia) Norris.
'
Qualls was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Carl and
Frances Qualls.
Services will be held Tuesday, at 1:30 p.m., at the Fisher Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Visitation will be held Monday, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m., at the
funeral home. Burial will be in the Meigs Memorial Gardens in Pomeroy.
Rev. Eddie .Buffington will officiate.

peace

~:--:4,:,

·-

~

,,

Gun control debate turns to House, Senate negotiators!
ly LAURIE KE' I W..N
MIOCialecl p,... Writer'
• WASHlNGTON (AP) - With the death of the
House's gun-control bill, Congress' response to a rallh of
school shootings now rests with a smell panel of ·Jawmike" whose talks will start with the stricter Senate
measure thai had been opposed by the National Rifle
Auociation.
Even as they left behind the marathon proceedings
Friday, lawmakers of both parties were girding for battle.
They immedialely began blaming each other for the
280-147 defeat of a gun-control bill only two months
lfter bloody school shootings in Colorado and OcolJ!ia.
' President Clinton, in his .weekly' radio address today,
called the situation in Congress unacceptable.
"We can't allow the gun lobby to rewrite our laws
ind undemiine our values," the president said in the
broadcaat, tajled at the summit of world leaders in
Cologne, Gennany.
·
.
Th House membens, Clinton said, "You've still got an
opponunity, and you've still gol an obligation, to do the
right thing and pass neal legislation that will strengthen
our gun laws, not weaken them."
" GOP officials noted that Democrats comprised most
of the no votes. Democrats accused Republicans of
weakening the bill at the behest of the NRA.

By JONATHAN D. SALANT
MIOCletecl Pren Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - ·Most of the 45 House Democrats who bucked
their party by voting to loosen background checlls at gun shows hail from districts with lots of hunters or other conservative voters.
They're much more likely than other Democrats to have received donationa from the National Rifle-Association •.And some had to stave off stfl)ng
Republican challenges last fall.
.
"Democrats are reflecting, in many of these cases, their constituents and
their districts;'' said Democratic p(!litical consultant feter Fenn. .
The bill that carried the divisive amendment ultimately failed in the House
on Friday, but the battle over the amendment suggests that many Democrats
learned a lesson from the 1994 election.
That year, the NRA and other gun groups helped the GOP capture the
Houae for the first time in 40 years in part by hammering Democrats for votes
to ban asaaull-slyle firearms and to give authorities up to five days to check
bactgtounds on those seeking to buy handguns.
"
At the same time, 37 of the 45 Democrats who defect'ed on the gun show
amendment later voted with their party to defeat the larger bill, which Democratic leaders said dil)n't go far enough to control guns.
The 45 party defectors were led by Rep. John Dingell of Michigan, who
spoii!IOred the amendment that wo11ld have loosened some existing restrictions on firearms sales at gun shows. An avid hunter and form.er NRA boa_rd
member, Dingell once described agents of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
. and Firearms as "jackbooted American fascists."
Although Dingell's district is mostly.suburba south of Detroit, hunting is
popular throughout the state.
•
.
.
· Most of the Democratic defectors regularly oppose gun ·control measures.
Among the diasenters were most of the House's "blue dog" group of conservative Democrats, including four of the five Democrats who voted to
impeach President Qinton last Deccmbel: Reps. Charles Stenholm and
Ralph Hall of Texas, Virgil Goode of Virginia and Gene Taylor of Mississippi. The fifth, Paul McHale of Pennsylvania, did not seek re-election in
November.
"Those of us in the South and in Texas, especially in rural areas, have a

.

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But it's not just regional. In addition to Dingell, from Michigan, the defectors included Rep. David Ol)ey of Wisconsin, who earned a ·95 percent
approval rating from the liberal Americans for Democratic Action in 1998.
Obey, who represents Wisconsin's most rural district, also voted against the
"Brady bill" background checks.on handgun buyers in 1993 and the assault·
style firearms ban in 1994. He voted for an unsuccessful GOP attempt to
repeal that ban in 1996.
·
Only one Democrat who supported the NRA-backed amendment, Rep.
James Traficanl of Ohio, voted to keep the assault-style firearms ban in 1996. r-:=-=-===,--.,:::-:::-:=-"=
The Democratic defectors include many in competitive districts, such as 1'10~
Reps. Leonard Boswell of Iowa and Ted Strickland of Ohio, as well as fresh- ._,
lf~
men Ken Lucas of Kentucky and Ronnie Shows of Mississippi.
The NRA has been generous to congressional campaigns. ln the last eleclion, its political action committee gave S1.6 million, 13th highest among all
~
I ~IWJI
PACs, and the NRAspent more than Sl million on its own efforts to support'
·
or oppose particular congressional candidates.
Of the 31 Democrats wbo received NRA contributions in the last two
years! 30 supported the . show amendment.
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Enduring Memorials Priced ·
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be silent about banning help for pean official said rebuilding roads
Milosevic because Russia refused could be covered.
to go along.
Meeting if! this af1Cient catheBerger also said it was an open · dral city, the presidents and prime
question whether restoring Bel- ministers of eight nations worked
grade's electricity might be cov- on a plan to ease the burden of $69
ered by humanitarian aid. A E"ro- billion in Soviet-era debt.

JIIUQ1~-

ry."

Two Reasons to ViJJit

- BEAUTY, QUALI1Y, CRAFTSMANSHIP

work out some compromise. Given the House's solid
rejection of the gun bills, there is some doubt about
whether _the Congress will approve any expanded guq
measures this year.
'
.
Gi:phardt decided Democrats stood more of a chance
of increasing t.he waiting period if they defeated Din,gell's amendment and tried to frame talks with the Sen-.
ale as a choice between current law's 72-hour requirement and the Senate-passed wailing period of three busi'
ness days.
" We decided we were Oetter going into. conference
with current law," Gephardt told reporters.
· He had lobbied his caucus hard to vote no, and on
final passage, only 4S of the House's 211 Democrats
voted for the bill.
By the same logic, meanwhile, Republican leaders
and the NRA launched a furious last-minute lobbying
effort to pass the bill with the Dingell amendment
attached. House ~peaker Dennis Hastert, R-111., toll!
leaders in a private meeting early Friday that passing the
bill would give the GOP a better chance at coming oui
of conference with some gun control, but not so much as
to tum off conservative campaign don9rs next year. . "You can't beat something with nothing," Majority
Leader Dick Armey, R-Texas, explained.
_
In the end, the House rejected the overall bill, and
lawmakers fled town for the weekend.

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

different perspective than those of us that come, for example, from urban
areas in the Northeast," said Rep. Max Sandlin, D-Texas, who supported the
Dingell amendment. "We see it as a heritage, a connection to family histo-

Exercise good judgment
-1•
In ·ws1nJ westherbeverages

Are "sports
drinks" Rilly beneficial when exercising? \\buldn't water do just as well?
O!ooBing wateroverolher beverages
is always agood bet, whether l'.u exercise or 001. lfs refRihing. its calorieme, it's ah!orbed quickly and it,worlcs
jUII fmc for pcoplc wbo exercise rnoderalcly, for recreation.
But for trore serious athldes -lhoae
training for marathons or other iliMie
events that will keep them going for
nm than an hour and a half or two
hours -drinking a beverage that contains
a small amount of 8Upl' while they're
exacisiJI&amp; is probtbly a good kb. If
that beverage contains the eleltrolytes
sodium and JlOII&amp;ium, as sports drinks
Ita, so much thebeticr. They help replenish body fluids quickly.
.
Getting enough fluid is important for
everyone. .Fluid in blood bMISjlOOts glucose to wooting IIIU!Iclcs and carries
away byproducts produced through
metabolism. In urine, fluid helps elimil!lllc mdabolic waste products. And
fluid in sweat dissipates heat through the
skin.
The C8!liest way to tell if you're gd·
U. enough water cr other fluid is to

••Why·

Meanwhile, both sidea huddled on strategy for loomThe issue went off the political charts after the April
in&amp; negotialions betwten a small committee of House 20 shootings at Columbine High School in Littleton,
and Senate lawmakers that will be controlled by Repub· Colo., that left lS people dead, including the two gunlicans.
men .
Minority Whip David Bonior, D-Mich., said House
With Vice President AI Gore's tie-breaking vote, the
Democrats are counting on Clinton to lead the charge for Senate last month passed a measure that would extend
the Senate's proPosed new gun control~.
required backgrou.nd checks to all sales at gun shows,
Meanwhile, Democratic lea&lt;!ers will dispatch pro- including tbose conducted by non-licensed firearms
gun-control women lawmakers to make the same pitch. dealers. In addition, it would require dealers to provide
They will be jed by Rep. Carolyn McCarthy llf New safely devices with all handguns; ban the importation of
·rk, whose husband was shot and killed on a Long certain high-capacity fire_arms clips and .impose a lifeIsland commuter train, Gephardt said.
time prohibition of gun owne111hip on any juvenile con"They're frankly more effective than we (male law- victed of a serious felony.
makers) are," Gepbardt told reporters.
The defeated House bill included the safety device
Asked why, he' replied: "Because they ' re mothers" provision. And while it would have required nonwith
ueamestness and passion" that· makes an licensed dealers to conduct background checks·on their
with voters.
customers at gun shows, an amendment by Rep. John
Althou
be voted for the Senate bill, Majority, Dingell, D-Mich., would have reduced the amount of
Leader Trent 11, R-Miss., said he hoped the final prod- time allowed for the check from ·three days to 24 hours
uct "will be something close to what the House has in all cases. In addition, it would have defined gun
done. They've done good work."
shows in a. way to exclude some events that are now
·
But the staun~hest proponents of both sides of the covered.
issue agreed the outcome was uncertain at best.
The waiting period is crucial h the gun debate
"It's very difficult to handicap," said Rep. Bob Barr, because if federal officials do not respond to the backR-Oa.
ground request in the time period allotted, the purchaser
" I dol''l think you can forecast" the outcome, may take possession of the gun.
Oephardt said.
House and Senate conferees must meet now to try t.o

Conservative Democrats go their own way on gun control

-Becky
Coline
GAUJPOUS -

and Germany.
Ko'sovo's second-largest city, found
The first group of investigators 15 Gypsies and ethnic Albanians,
for the international war crimes tri- many of them bruised and bloody
INSURANCE PLUS
bunal inspecte4 sites Saturday of a~d chained to radiators. An elderly
reported atrocities, said Paul Risley, man bound to a chair appeared to
AGENCIES, INC. '
a tribunal spokesman. He said more have died shortly before the Ger·
Pomeroy
extensive work would begin .early mans arrivtd, spokesman IJ. Col. 114 Co_u rt
next week and that "the number of Dietmar Jeserich said.
992-6677'
sites being reported to us is cenainly
larger than investigators anticipat~ ...---~~~-:--~~:"""-::".....~~--~~----.,._.
ed."
Officials have · estimated that
10,000 or more ethnic Albanians
. ,
were killed in Serb massacres; some
90 mass grave sites have been
~OKE.·
reported.
,
•~••
Serb civilians fearing ethnic
·
Albanian retaliation continued flee.
ing Kosovo. Several thousand peal&gt;r. Robert Holley has received special
pie in tractors, cars and trucks on
Saturday jammed the road across the
many risk facton!J·
border from Kosovo between Raska l'rainhag to identify and treat
and Usee, 150 miles south of Bel·
Th111t lead to a hear~ attack or stroke
gra de.
,
Call us
for a FREE initial ewluation.
.The anger that ethnic Albanians
harbor toward Serbs was dramatically evident Saturday in the devastated
village of Zlokucani, as residents
'used a tractor to smash down the
bust of 8 Serb symbol of ethnic
cooperation.
Peacekeepers continue to uncover evidence of revenge attacks by ·
ethnic Albanians. On Friday, Ger"1::~~~f~~~~·rislz ojtbe Jl~ed~
man peacekeepers taking over a
~f
Point Pleasant, WV
rebel-held police station in rrizren, L_______..;.~~:!!.:j~:!.!U:L_______

World leaders, Russia at odds over aid to Yugoslavia
: COLOGNE, Germany (AP) World leaders were blocked by
R:ussia on Saturday from adopting
a Kosovo rebuilding program that
excludes Slobodan Milosevic's
regime. They held out the possibility of filling Belgrade's ·bombed~
o~l power plants and roads for
· humanitarian reasons.
·; Though Russia's objections prev~nted a tough stand against the
Yugoslav president, the leaders
prepared to offer Russian President
!loris Yeltsin a badly needed econpmic boost.
· Yeltsin, angry over NATO's 78day bombing campaign against Belgtade, was described as "in a fighting mood." He will arrive here Sund&amp;y. .
•
: President Clinton, French Presi~
d~nt Jacques Chirac and British
P,rime Minister Tony Blair have
been the most outspoken in their .
opposition to assistance for Miloscvic. But Sandy Berger, the
nilional security adviser, said the
a~mmit's final_communique would

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

Iunday, June 20,-1999

Deaths across the nation~-

Notices
•

Sunday, June 20, 1999

1111 AIIWhiMI umtW. I IlliG

___ _. . . . _,.

UEIOII111lPWOIE (YIIIUIIIIQ
1111 IIAI! (11 A¥ACATIOII 'IWII!IlRE
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c•1t11aotM ·

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775-4t41

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The WIG' people talk around hut."

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4010 Rhodn Ave.
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1740)355-JOOt

Pitta:: aMite
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Outside consultlflll •• milabla """" raqunt.

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Offtf rtqulm 1 new one·..,lt strvlct agretmlflt. R011ming chlrgts, llxeJ, tolb 1nd nttwork surthlr~ not lntludtd.
OtMr ttU•kflonS and chlrgtS may apply. Stt store for det•lh. ~expires June 20, 1m.
.

·

001

�•

Page AB • ..l&amp;llbv Ct..-..mtbul

.

Sunday, June 20, 1999 :

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

'

The ·cicadas are leaving, and ·the beetles are arriving!'
Extlr......, Comer
ByHIIIKnMn
POMEROY - Every day there is good news and bad news. The good news is
that the periodical cicada is on its way out until it reappealli 17 years from now. The
bad news is thai the liJst Japanese beetles of the year have been sighted in the Aora
area. Unlike the declining populations of cicadas whotie damage is limited to the
female cicada laying e~ into the branches, bc?lh emerging adult male and female
Japanese beetles eat the foliage and flowers of our favorite plants. Some favorites
ioclude roses, Rose of Sharon, plums, azaleao;, mountain ash, elms, lindens, cannas
and lubiscus.
Piclc. off these initial beetles and place them into soapy water. Japanese lieetles
chemically attract each other using a self produced pheromone. Thus, once you
have one beetle, soon all the rest of their family and friends come to feast on your
favorite plants.
The adult beetles we are seeing now are just part of the life cycle of this insect.
Its life cycle begins in lateJuly andAugqst asaneggis laid in the ground and quickly becomes a tiny grub. The grub feed&lt;; on organic matter and young plant roots,
especially grass roots. This feeding continues until late fall . As the soil becomes
cold, the grubs bunow to a 4-8 inch depth. When liOiltempeiature increases to 60
degrees in April, the much larger grubs begin eating again until they transfonn
themselves into a pupa (transitional) stage. Morphologically, the grubs changes into
the adult JaJ1311= beetle below the ground in the pupa stage and emerge in a few
weeks as adults. These adults survive only a few weeks, in which time they eat,
mate and reproduce the next Cll&gt;P of e~ which begins lbe cycle again. Their ability to fly allows them to enter a yand that had no previous grub population.
Control measures include using cultural, biological, mechanical and chemical
. methods and are fully listed in Extension Fact Sheet #2001 "Japanese Beetle",
obtainable from the extension office. Foliar sprays, such as Sevin, Dursban or
Malathion may temporarily minimize damage to plant leaves, but must be reapplied
after each rain. Be sure to follow label directions. Keep lawn areas dry in August to
reduce the survivability of egg&lt;; and small grubs. Biological controls such as insect
parasites, "Milky Spore" disease and nematodes are on the market. Proper application and fresh !ilock are extremely important when using these products. Expect
more biological items to be available in future years.
The popular J3J1311= beetle trap, which attrads male beetles using
.
a sex pheromone, may quickly become a full time job as you empty the bag sc;veral times daily. Make sure you keep the trap 40-50 feet away from your susceptible
plants as you will be attracting the neighborhood's supply of male beetles.
H chemicals are being used remember that it is CMier to kill a small grub in late
July or Augu!il than a large one in April. MACH 2 and Merit are two newer chemicals that can be applied to kill young grubs. MACH2 has an advantage in .that it
can be applied in Augqst after you 5antpl~ your yard for new grub activity. Merit
must be applied to the yard before the grubs emerge from the egg !ilage. Both of
these products are considerably less toxic and have fc;wer effects on beneficial
insects than !ilandard turf inSecticides acwrding tp Dave Shetlar, Ohio State University Extension Landscape Entomology Specialist
.
. The 17th Annual Farm Ecology Tour Series is proud to include four local farm

operations in this yeaB lineup. The series of tours is held to promole the ~ ing the outOOoB.
Last reminder! Washington-Meigs 1\vilighl Vegetable Tour will be held June 23
tious connections between resources, producers and communities as key components to agriculturallilability. Equinox Botanicals (medicinal plants) located in Rut- at 6 p.m. at Witten Farm, Route 60, Lowell. This free event is open to aU inteRSled
land, Ohio will be held on July 10, 1999 from 9:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Hidden \Iil- vegetable growers. SponsoRd by Ohio State University Extension, Washington and
Iey Ranch (cattle grazing) located in Gallipolis, will be held on Saturday, July 17, Meigs Counties. Directions and further details are available at the extension office.
1999 from 1-4 p.m. Gwarnma's Farm (rotational grazing of sheep. goats, chickens) Hope to scc you there!
.
Hill ~ ,_ the Ma/g8 County Agrfcu/IJJN I Ndlral ~
located in Whipple, will be held on Saturday, July 24, 1999 from 1-4 p.m. Locust
Grove Research &amp;.Development Farm (free range chicken &amp;: turiceys and vegetable . . . .,.,. Ohio Stale llnlwtslly.
crops) located in Cm&gt;la, will be held on Sunday, Octobef 3, 1999 from 1-4 p.m.
The series is sponsored by Innovative Farmers of Ohio, The Ohio State University
Extension, Ohio Ecological Food &amp; Farm Association and Ohio Certified Organic
Association. Admission to all events is free. For a free pamphlet about the four tours
and other sponsored tours throughout Ohio, please call the extension office at 740-

$100

99U696.

.

OFI~

rl"ht• 11 ul•(•ltctSt' f)i"
'1\\'ft llt•n••ing 1\itls

Periodical Ocada Tip - Now is the time to prune away the damaged branches
caused by the cicada egg laying process. This will inWce some regrowth in 5hn!bs
and trees which will be mature enough to survive this coming winter weather. Secondly, the pruned off branches should be destroyed thus reducing local numbers of
future perindical cicadas seventeen years from now. From unpruned branches new
immature cicada nymphs O..ill be emerging and dropping to the ground to bury
underground to feed on plant root sy&amp;ems. The immature nymphs will look like
~1, white, ant size insects. They will not bite uS, but may be pesky when enjoy-

rrree J{earing rr'est
By Appointment Only

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June 11, 1999

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For The Best Wheat
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.

'

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Call 1·800·523·2217

Holzer clinic welcomes new
physician· and new service
GALLIPOUS.recently completed
Holzer Clinic wel"';fl\1&gt;1" her Fellowship in
comes·the latest addiAddiction Medicine at
tion to our medical
Case Western Reserve
staff, internist and
University in Oeveaddiction medicine
land.
'speciali&amp;, Melanie A
Prior to this, she
Stephenson, MD.
was the Assistant
·Dr. Stephenson
Director of the Emerevaluates and treats
.gency
Medicine
patients with chemical
Depanment at Jackdependencies, includson General Hospital
ing drugs and alcohol.
in Ripley, We!il VirShe also assesses
ginia. Sh.e has also
chronic pain patients
been an Emergency ·
who may be chemical- Melanie A. Stephenson Medicine physician at
ly dependent, as "well
Putnam General Hos;
as provides treatment plans and after pita! in Hurricane, We&amp; Virginia.
care. "Chemical dependency, includAvailable Monday, Wednesday,
ing alcohol, is a scientifically proven and Friday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Dr.
disease," says Dr. Stephenson. "Med- Stephenson is now accepting patients.
, ical help is available for this disease. For more ·information on addiction
You an4 your family deserve better."
medicine or to schedule an appointA member of the Physicians Ind- ment with Dr. Stephenson, call the
ership on National Drug Policy and Holzer Clinic Physical Medicine and
the American Society of Addiction Rehabilitation Depanment at 446Medicine, Dr. Stephenson .has most 5248.
J

•

B

Indians beat Mariners 10-6; Red Sox, Cardinals also win
' · CLEVELAND (AP) - Roheno Alomar and Manny
Ramirez hit back-to-hac)&lt; homers in Cleveland's five-run
fourth inning and Dave Burba pitched seven solid
innings Saturday, powering the Indtans to a 10-6 win
over the Sealtle Mariners.
David. Justice and Jacob Cruz added two-run homers
for the Indians, who have scored. IO runs or more 13
times this season and are on pace to break the 1931 New
York Yankees' record for runs in a season.
Ken "Griffey Jr."hit his 26th homer and Butch Huskey
~lso homered for the Mariners, who had their four-game
winning streak snapped.
Burba (7-2) allowed fivt runs and itine hits to wm for
tlie fifth time in-six decisions.
The Mariners loaded the bases with none out in the
ninth off reliever Paul Shuey. Mike Jackson replaced
Shuey and got Alex Rodriguez to ground into a double
play, scoring one run, and struck out Griffey for his 14th
save.
The Indians, averaging 6.7 runs per game coming in,
hardly need any help scoring. But the Mariners made two
errors and Allen Watson (0-1) threw a wild pitch in the
fourth, allowing Cleveland to score five unearned runs.
The miscues allowed the Indians to open a 7-3 lead·
ahd Alomar and Ramirez tacked on two more runs in the
inning with their homers .
Alomar's homer was his lOth of the season and first
batting ri"ght-handed. Ramirez followed with his 19th,
giving him a major league-leading 79 RBis.
. Griffey connected for his second homer in two days in
the seventh off Burba, a 462-foot shot that gave him 70
RBis - second in the majors to Ramirez.
Justice's two-run homer, hts 14th, gave the Indians a
4-3 lead in the th1rd after Seattle manager Lou Pmtella
pulled starter Mel vin Bunch foF Watson, acquired Fnday
il) a trade with the New York Mets.
With a runner at first , Bunch retired Ramirez on a fly
ball to the warning track in center when Piniella decided
to pull the right-hander, making his first major league
start since 1995.
, Watson, the 20th pitcher to appear in a game for

By ANDREW CARTER
nmea-Sentlnel Staff
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. A record crowd looked on as the
United States re•established its dom·
inance i·n the realm of women 's
international s?Ccet by dismantling
Denmark 3-0 m the opemng match
of the 1999 FIFA Women's World
Cup. A Crl!":d of 78,97~. ~e large~!
ever 1~ wttness .a women s athletiC
event m the, Untted States, was on
hand at G1ants Stad1um for the
match.
· A~er · a tentative start, the
. Amencans settled down and played
their textbook style of soccer. The
U "ted States c~pitalized ~~its rush; t'*N'h"g gaJM"Ifl the llkh
.
wlien Mia Hamm netted the
first goal ofthe 1999 tournament.
U.S. defender Brandi Chastain
sttu1ed the action with a brilliant run
through midfield before crossing the
ball from the l_eft wing to Hamm,
who was left VIrtually unmarked tn
· the right side of the Danes' penalty
area.
F~llowing a: deft touch to beat a
Dantsh defender, Hamm blasted a
left-footed shot into the roof of the
net just inside the right post past a
helpless Dorthe Larssen to give the
U.S. a 1-0 lead.
The goal was the IIOth in
Hamm's legendary international
career. Earlier this year, she set the
world sconng record with .a goal
against Brazil. Hamm has scored
more goals international play than
any other player in history, male or
female.
The United States took full control '!f the mall:h in the sec_ond half,
despt~ the conttnued phystcal chatlenge put forth by Denmark.
Midfielder Julie Foudy put the
United States ahead 2·0 wtth a 73rd
minute tally. Foudy took a cross
fr
H
. h f ._. f h
om amm '" I e 1e t st.,e 0 I e
penalty area and snapped a left-foot-

·POMEROY
.
.
investors who live
~Iizabeth A. Schadd, a
here are very imporMeigs COunty resitant to the firm, and I
·dent, has been hired as
really like that."
the invest.ment repre· Prior to joining
sentative to open a
Edward Jones, Schaad
second Marietta office
was the economic
for the financial serdevelopment represenvices firm Edward
tative for Southeastern
Jones.
Ohio, with the Ohio
"We're very proud
Depanment of Develto have Ms. Schaad on
opment.
board," said John
With more than
Bachmann, managing
4,000 offices in all 50
principal for Edward
states, the firm plans to
Jones. "She brings to Elizabeth A. Schadd expand to 10,000
Jones a level of comoffices . in the next
mitment and enthusiasm that is cer- decade. Still, Jones is the only finn .tain to benefit her clients."
that serves individual investors
Schaad said she is excited to be exclusively, offering .a variety of
opening the new office for a ·finn investments, including cenificates
that has built a reputation for serving of deposit, taxable and tax-free
individual investors.
· bonds, stocks and mutual funds. The
"Edward Jones is the largest finn traces its roots to 1871, and
financial services firm in the nation ·today serves more than three million
in terms of.offices, but it. maintains customers.
its commitment to individuals,"
Edward Jones' interactive webSchaad said. '.'J have been impressed site is located at www.edwanlwith the interest that the finn's head- jones.com.
quaners in St. Louis, Mo., has
Schaad is married to local allorshown in this new office. The ney,Steve Story.

II

Section

Seattle this season, fell behind 2-0 before Jushce home- an inning-ending double play.
red off the right-field foul pole.
·
Bunch wasn't so lucky in the second when Cruz fol The Mariners look a 3-2 lead in the top of the inning lowed a leadoff walk to Jim Thome with his second
on Rodriguez's RBI double and Edgar Martinez's bro- homer in two days, a shot to left-center.·
ken-hat single.
·
· Huskey connected for his 14th homer with two outs in
Bunch, whose last start came for
the second to give the Manners a 1-0
Kansas City 'on Aug. 9, 1995, barely
lead.
made it out of the first. He loaded the
Red Sox 7, Rangers 4 - At
Major league
bases but struck out Ramirez on three
Boston, Nomar Garciaparra hit a solo
pitches and aot Justice to ground into
baseball
homer and an RBI double, and Jm

Ho Cho got his first major league win to lead the B ~ton
Red "Sox to a 7-4 victory over the Texas Rangers on
Saturday.
Cho (1 -0) gave up five hits and four runs in six-plus
mmngs.
Tim Wakefield worked the final two innings for the
save.
The Red Sox took the lead for good and chased starter
Mark Clarl&lt; (3-7) Wtth three runs in the second. Jose
Offerman and Brian Daubach each had RBI singles
before Garciaparra's run -scoring double pushed Boston
up 4-3 and knocked Clark out of the game.
Zeile put Texas ahead 3-1 m the top of the second with
his homer following smgles by Lee Stevens and
Rodriguez.
Trot Nixon's RBI double in the sixth off reliever John
Burkett made it 5-3.
Rndnguez lead the seventh with a horner cutting it to
5-4 before Garciaparra and Mtke Stanley connected off
Danny Patterson in the bottom of the inning.
Cardinab 7, Mels 6- At St. Louts, Mark McGwire
ended a 32 at-bat home run drought with a three-run shot
In the fi rst inning as the St. Louts Cardinals beat the New
Yor~ Mets 7-6 Saturday.
McGwire had been 5-for-30 with one RBI in the first
eight games of a 13-game homestand l;lefore victimizing
Jason lsri nghausen (1·2) for hi s 20th homer on a 3-2
pitch. a towenng drive over the center-field wall. He's
exactl y one month off hts record 70-homer pace of last
season, when he htt No. 20 on May 19 and had 33
homers on June 19.
·
The Mets nearly tied the game in the fifth . Rickey
Henderson, who hit a two-run smgle, got caught in a rundown with two out. Bobby Bonilla, on third, took off for
home and second baseman Joe McEwing threw to catcher Alberto Castillo, who tagged out Bomlla.
lsn ngh ause n allowed SIX rum&gt; m 2 2/3 innings and
Cardinals starter Darren Oliver all owed six run s in fo ur
innings.
Mann y Aybar (3- l) allowed tw o hits in four scoreless
innings. Ricky Bottahco got two outs for the save.

IFA Women's World Cup kicks

Opens new investment office

tales
award - Rocky Hupp,
local agent for Amari·
can General Life
lnauranca Co., recant·
ly received the National Leaders Award,
given to top agents
acroaa the country for
outatandlng aalea and
service. Hupp and his
family recently attendad the National Lead·
e~ Conference, held
In Puerto Rico. Hupp
has bean with Amari·
can General Life for
over 19 years, and has
received numerous
awards, Including Life
Member of the Nation·
al Leaders Club snd
Life Member of the
Prssldent'a Council,
whlc Is the top honor
for American General
agsnta.

Sports

ed rocket into the upper left corner
of the goal.
The Amencans put the finishing
touches on a solid performance in
"the final minute as Kristine Lilly
outfqxed two Danish def~nders and
then fired a bullet past I.;arssen into
the upper left comer .to 'provide the
·U.S. with the final margin.of victory.
Joy Fawcett launched a 35-yard
pass to Lilly who fou~d an open
slot in the upper left corner of the
Dantsh penalty area. Lilly then took
the ball on the turn back to her left
before unleashing the textbook finish to the far post.
The U.S. players were o.verwhelmed ~y ~Jan &amp;i1J110UI, :.nd
expreue&lt;l their em~s following
the m11tch.
.·. .
"This is unbelievable," said
Hamm. "I'm so proud · everyone
involved. This is som thing you
only dream about. This is the first
step._ These fans are bsolutely
unbelievable."
In late matches Satu ay, Brazil
faced Mexico, outsid favorite
China met Sweden . d Japan
squared off with ~)ark horse Canada.
No results were available .at press
time.
_
The competition continues today
with four matches in gr.oup play.
Australia takes on Ghari at 1:30
p.m. in Foxboro, Mass. Defending
champion Norway opens defense of
its title against Russia at 4} p.m. in
Foxboro, Mass . Germat1 meets
Italy in Pasadena, &lt;::alif.. at 7 p.m.
North Korea faces Ntgeria at 9:30
p.m., also in Pasadena. BSPN2 is
broadcasting all four matches live.
Group play continues :.through
Saturday. The following is !!..listing
of the four groups and the teams in
each:
~.
Group A: United .~tales,
D
k
North Kore a': and
enmar •
N1gena.
~·,
.
, ·Group B: G~rmany, Braztl,

Mexico and Italy
Group C: Norway, Japan,
Canada and Russta.
Group D: China, Australia,
Ghana and Sweden.
The quarterfinals are set for
June 30 and July I. The semifinal
round will be played on

th1s weeke-n d

Independence Day
The FIFA Women 's World Cup
final and tht fd place match wtll
both be played in the Rose Bowl in
Pasadena on July 10 The consola·
tion match ts scheduled for I :30
p.m. (EDT) wtth the championship
slated for4 :30 p.m. (EDT).

J:Z:;.;...::;:;;:::::;;;;,..:;.;::::.:;;;:..,.;;.:;.;;..,i.:;;~--==~.;;,;,....,.,====~

CELEBRATION TIME comes lor U.S. players Kate Sobrero (far
left) Carla Overbeck (4), Mia Hamm (hugging .Overbeck) and Joy
Fawcett (14) alter Hamm's first-half goal In Saturday's FIFA
Women's World Cup opener at Giants Stadium In East Rutherford,
N.J., whera the u.s. beat Denmark won 3-0. (AP)

Sampras, Agassi,. kiraf, .young stars seek glory at Wimbledon
By STEVEN WINE

Grand Slam title since 1996, can she
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - win Wimbledon for the eighth '1111\e?
Weather aside, the outlook at
- Or will youth be served?, Wtll
Wimbledon is unusually bright.
Venus Williams bounce back ITom
Sure, there's always "the threat of disappointment in Paris to clafhi' the
;ain. And Wimbledon remains sus- family's first Grand Slam title? .0
-c-&amp;ptible to criticism that lawn +ten- How will Martina Hingis' pernis+ is duller than watching grass form following a French Open that
,courts grow, especially on the men's ended in jeers and tears? WiiFshe
side.
continue to serve underhand? Will
:: But this year the tournament coin- ~itish fans boo if she does?
~des with a sudden upswing ir(ih'e.-- - Can Boris Becker, in his last
sport's ·popularity, the result of two Wimbledon, draw inspiration from
dramatic, emotional finals at the Agassi's showing in Paris?
French Open earlier this month.
-And finally, what in the world
Wimbledon Qpens Monday with is John McEnroe doing out there with
.lhe focus on five-time champion Pete ti racket?
Sampras, who seeks a record-tying
To answer the last question first:
"12th Grand Slam title. And thanks to The 40-year-old McEnroe, who often
Andre Agassi and Steffi Graf, who leads complaints that grass-court
-staged career comebacks in Paris, +tennis+ has become boring, plans to
there will be plenty of subplots:
interject his own excitement by play. . - Can a rejovenated Agassi ing mixed doubles with Graf.
•become the first man since Bjorn
That's a sideshow, and the
Borg in 1980 to win the French Open Sampras story line will dominate
and Wimbledon in the same year?
Centre Court. He won Wimbledon in
- Now that Graf has her first 1998 for the fifth time in six years

but hasn 't reached a Grand Slam
final since. He still needs one major
title to match Roy Emerson's record
of 12.
Sampras' slumP. this spr.ing,
capped by· a second-round exit in
Paris; prompted speculation that he's
m decline at age 27. But Sampras
also struggled early in 1998 before
winning Wimbledon , and a return to
grass rejuvenated his game again last
week, when he beat Tim Henman in
the final at Queen 's.
·
''I'm trying to mentally put the
first four or five months behind me,"
Sampras said. "It's been an up-anddown·year, and I haven't played very
many•matches. I haven't felt like I've
been in a great rhythm.
"I'm pretty much in the same boat
I was last · year at "this time.
Wimbledon turned my year around,
and I hope that's the case this year."
Agassi's resurgence creates the
tantalizing prospect of a showdown .
w1th Sampras in the final . Their rival ry was once the most touted in +ten-

Inside today1s sport$:
'
Reds beat Brewers 7-1- ~2

,,

it' 1

On the women 's stde the sentimental favorite 1&gt; Oral. who wtll try
to build on her stunning performance
in Paris. The Grand Slam title was
Graf's 22nd; capping her comeback
from a series of tnjunes that ·threat•
ened. her career. .
"She surpri sed everybody and
herself with the way she played,"
defending Wimbledon champion
Jana Novotn a said. "She ,played
some of her best +tennis+ in years.
Her chances of playing well at
Wimbledon and possibly winning it
are great."
Don't count out Novotna, either.
She sprained her right' ankle playing
doubles at the French but expects to
he ready for Wtmbledon.

Novotna and Graf are among at
least seven women capable of winning the title. The others: Ltndsay
Dave nport, Monica Seles and those
brash teen-agers- Hingis. Withams
and Anna Kournikova. Williams' sister, Serena, withdrew because of the
flu .
The top-ra nked Htngts won
Wtmbledon m 1997. But she must
regroup after unravehng in the
French final , when she drew boos fol
complaining about calls and resort·
ing to underhanded serves at the enil
of the match.
.
As for the other teen queens,
they've fallen shy of expectatiOns in
major tournaments so far.
''I'm not really sure if they're
ready to do it over here at
Wimbledon," Novotna satd. "I thinlt
it will come down to experience being m the semifinals and fin.W
before and using everything yo~
kn ow to your advantage."
"But you never know. Anything
can happen at Wimbledon."

'

Sam Wilson discusses NBA, NHL title series and bashes baseball expansion
in weekly column - B·S
.
Spurs defeat Knicks 80-67, lead N8A Finals 2·0- 8-6

of suffering from ACL Injuries - B.S

U.S. Open completes second-round play with trto sharing lead- 8-7

-.
'

mqst rece ntly in 1989.
"Two or three years ago I .consid·
ered myself one of the few who had a
chance at Wtmbledon, " Becker said.
"I know I can play well on grass. I'm
goi ng to gtve a difficult match to
anybody whb is going to play me on

•
Doctors show women how f6 reduce likelihood

•

•

nis+, but they have n't met in a Grand
Slam tournament since the 1995 U S
Open final , which Sampras won.
AgasSJ's first maJor utle came at
Wimbledon in 1992, and two weeks
ago he became only the fifth man to
win all four Grand Slams. Now he'll
try to become the first man to win the
French Open and Wtmbledon m the
same year since Borg dtd 11 three
times in a row, 1978-1980.
"That would he something," the
29-year-old Agassi said. "I ccnainl y
know I have a lot more +tennis+ Ill
me. "
That's tf he 's healthy. Two days
after winning the French, Agassi
withdrew from a tournament in
Halle. Germany, complaining of· a
sore thigh, but said he expected to be
ready for Wimbledon,
Also planning to play is the 31year-old Becker, who announced his
retirement from Grand Slam competition two years ago but decided to
take one fin al bow at Wimbledon. He
won the tournament three · ttmes,

.

'

•

.

..

)

I

�•

Sunday, June 20, 1988

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

Reds get 7-1 win vs. Brewers~.
By TERRY KINNEY

CINCINNATI (AP) - Steve
/\very hadn 't won a game in nearly a
month, hadn't lasted seven innings
111 nearly two.
. He knew he was close to losing
his spot in t)le starting rotation when
he held Milwaukee to three hits in
seve n innings Friday night, and Greg
Vaughn . hit another upper-deck
homer as the Cincinnati Reds' beat
the Brewers 7-1.
"I felt like everybody was losing
patience with me, " Avery said. "I
was losing patience, but I didn 't feel
like I was too far off."
Reds manager lack McKeon was
glad to sec ·the old Avery (4-6), who
struck out six and walked three.
Scott Sullivan and Gabe White each
p~tched aperfect inning for a combmed three hitter.
"That's the Avery we saw at the
beginning of the season," McKeon
said. " Hopefully, . we can keep him
going tor the next three months or
· however long the rest of the season
is." .
. .
After pttchmg at least seven
innings in hi s first five starts, Avery
had lasted less than two innings in
two of the past four. He had three
losses. and a no-decis ion since hi s
last,_wm May 23 at San ~iego.
My whole career I ve been a

.' .

... ,

. :J I

~2

S:m Di\;)!.o ..... : . . .·.......... 26

~s
~R

Colomdo .....
Lo~

AL standings
.II' L 1!&lt;1.

!ill

.561
.456
.439

394
.672

Chicago .....·...... ,..... ............... 33

.516

10

.433
.422
.385

15'1
16

.ll

18 1/J

Texas ................. ................... 39 21
.ll

.591
.530

Oakland ...... ........... ......... .. ... 33 J.l
Anaheim ...............
....... 29 37

.500
.440

Seattle ....................... : .... ..... 35

4

6

10

Friday's scores

~

Baltimore J, Olicago 2
Teus 4, Boston I
Detroit 8, Oakland 3
Kansu City 6. Toronto 5
Seattle 9, CLEVELAND.4
New York 4, Anaheiin I
Minnesota 8, Tampa Bay 5

~.
,,.

•••
•
•

·

.. 2), I :05 p.m.

t

3

;

), ~~~~-ity (Appier 6-5) a1 Toronto (Halladay 4Oakland (Hudson 1.0) at Ddroit (N. Cruz 1-0),

5:05p.m.

' ~
Anaheim (Olivares 6-4) at New York (lrabu 3·3),
.. 7:Q5 p.m.
a
DnlliiDOI"t (Erickson 3·8) at Chicago (Snyder 7·
w. 5). 7:05p.m.
.
•·
Tampa B:a~ (Relutr 4-2) at Minnesota (Radice 5·
5), 8:05p.m.'

•

Toclay's games

at l'h&lt;U"Iuuc. 7 ..'\0 p.m

Basketball
Nattonul Husketboll Assodatlon

CLEVELAND CAVALIER S: Ex.erciscd their
option to ncquin; Boston's first-round pn:k in this
r~·ar's

clnlfl.

•

Football

Sm.: nunrn hl :11 Ut:rh. 9 [1 111

CLEVELAND at

Pho~ ni x

10 p m .

Toda} 's game

·

MilwaukFe (Abbou 1-6) at CINCINNATI
(Tomko 2-4), 1·15 p.m.
New York (Reed 4-3 ) at St. lo ui~ OimeiJCZ .l-7).
2:10p.m.
Montreal (D. Smith 1-0) at Houston (l-lolt 0-6).
2:35 p.m.
·
F-loridtt (Dempster J-2) at Colorado (Brownson Q.
1). 3:05p.m.
Pittsburgh (Ritchie 6-4) at San Diego (Clement 27). 4:05p.m.
,
Chicago (Lieber 6-2) at San Francisco (Brock 56)A05 p m.
Philadelphia _(Ogea 3·5) ·at Los Angcb (Drown
7-4), 4:10p.m
•Atlanta (Giavine 4-7) at Arizona (R. Jolms\)n 9-

Texas (Clad 3-6) at Bo~lon (Cho 0-0), I :05 p.m.
Seattle (Banch 0-0) al CLEVELAND (BUrba 6-

.._
.,

h , d •.
.
S ''litI~rs Irnm I e 1_,. ay asabled list. Opli.oned OF
..
I.J ary Mmthew~ Jr_tn Las Vt:gn~ of the PCL

Dl1 roit 79, Wushingtt~n Ml
NL'II' Ynrk ~ .t . Lo~ Ang~·lc s 72

Wn ~l ungtnn lit Orlandu. 7:JO p.rn
U uu ~tnn 011 t-.·linne.!.ula. R p 111

New York ( Jsri nghnuscn I - I f &lt;11 St . Louis (O h wr
4-S). 1:15 p.m.
Philadelphia !Person 0-0) at Los A11gclc s
!Dretfon 5-5). '4:05 p:.m.
chicago (Fnrnswonh 2-1 ) m San Frr111ciscu tEstes
3-4), 4:05 p.m.
.
_Milwaukee (Woodard 6-SJ. at CINCINNATI
!Vtllone 1- 1), 7:05p.m. .
Montreal (Povat)O 5-5-) at Housloh tHnm pton R2). 8:05p.m.
.
~orida (A. Fernandez 2-J J ot Col Clrui.lo tA .M.
Jones 2-5). 8:05p.m
Atlanta (0 . Perez 4-3) 01 Arizona (Dno.l 6-4).
10:05 p.m.
pinsburgh (Schmidt 6-4) at Slln Diego (Munay 01}, 10:05 p.m.
·

·

scores

They played Saturday

Today's games ·

They played Saturday

Frido.~fs

1."~ t\n~t'lt•,

They played Saturday

Central Diviston
CLEVELAND .................... .. 43 21

Western Division

.~
.
•

•

I ~ ··

4(){1

New York 6, St Lou is 2
Colorado II . Florida I 0
San piego .t. Pittsburgh 2
Philad~lphin 2, Lo!&lt;Angdes I
Atlanta 6. Ariz.ona 0
S&lt;'in Frandsco K Chicaj.'n .'i

.5H5

Detroit ................... ~ .............. 29 .18
Kansas City ................ .......... 27 .\?
~" Mlnnc:sou~ .............. ..... ........ .. 2S 40

~

1

CIN CINN AT I 7. Milw;111h·c I
Hou ston .:'i: Montrt•al 0

Divbit~n

.... .38 27
Poston .. ..
.. ..... ..... .n 29
. Toronto ...
.. .........3 I 37
Baltimort.....
.. .......... .29 .~?
Tampa Bny ..... ........ :........... 26 40

l

492
.46 2

Fri.day 's scores

l!;aslrrn

rwn
Nc:w York

... Jo

Aneclcs ..

2).8:05p .m.

.

IMruit at Nt·w York . _. p.m.

strut, pitcher, which. makes your gave Milwauke~ a 1-0 lead unGf
bad times look worse," Avery said. Vaughn tied it in the second. Jeffrey
"When you're good, bad, good, bad, Hammonds singled home Avery 1
it doesn 't look as bad."
with the go-ahead run in the fifth:·
Avery still doesn't have his old Cincinnati sent 10 batters to the plate .
velocity, but his fastball was clocked · in the seventh, scoring on an RBI '
around 85 mph. It had been around single l!y AI!I'On Boone, a sacrifice' ·
80 mph two starts ago, and he had flyby Hammonds, Vaughn'stwo-nlri '
belter control, too.
.
single with the bases loaded and ari ·
" I was throwing strikes," he said. RBI single by Barry Larkin.
"I walked a couple of guys, but 1
"It's important to tack on, espe~:
was getting ahead in the count, dally in the late inning~," McKeon;
whic,h helps you get them to swing at said. ,"You hate those one-run leads
the ,wrong pitch. I was able to mix in when a solo homer can tie it up." · '
more sliders tonight. "
.
Vaughn's leadoff homer iii lhC .
Milwaukee manager Phil Garner second, which was estimated at 449
was ,. frustrated by the Brewers' feet, was his sec&lt;!nd upper-de~k .
offense, which has scored only once home run in a week. He had one last;
in two games against the Reds.
Satur~ay against Cleveland. His first ·
"We didn't follow our normal, · was last July 17 whil.e with Sl(!i'
patie.nt pattern," Garner said. "Our Diego.
...
offense has gone· cold. And what
"It's just another home run;"
used to be my strength - my Vaughn said. "It's nice (to reach t!JC:
bullpen - ha.~ become my Achilles upper deck), but just as long. as ' i(
heel. " .·
: goes over the fence, that's all"_'I
Rafaei.Roque (l-6)'pitched five care."
•·
innings in his tirst start since May
There have been only 28 upper14 , fo I low·ing five relief appear- deck homers in Cinergy'Field sinc11
anccs and Milwaukee trailed by the stadium was built in 1970. Only.
jrly ·;run when he left.
George Foster, with six, has reached,
" Roque did a fine job of getti.ng the upper deck more than Vaughn. .
us where he got us," Garner said.
Notes: Belliard's homer extended
· Vaughn's 16th homer landed in his career-best hitting streak to tO
the upper deck, making him only the games. It also started a new stri'li
second player to reach the red seats for the Brewers, whose 13-gamC:
at Cinergy Field three times.
home run streak was .ended by
" The good news is it was a one- Thursday night's shutout. ... Reds
run homer," Garner. said. "The bad manager Jack McKeon returned
news 1s we keep giVIng them up.
after a one-day absence. He was wiih
" We 've given up solne dandies his wife in North Carolina· wht'le she'
,thi s year. We're throwi.ng way too had surgery for breast cancer. ·.. ,
many balls over the mtddle of the · Sean Casey was 1-for-3, whi&lt;;h
plate."· - . , _ _ .
dropped his NL-Ieading average to
Ron ,Belhard s !Jrst-mmng homer .377.
·

LICIDrt.

NEW YORK lETS: Signed LB J.J. Sywud .
RAIDERS : Wniverl RB Han·ey
Willmms: S1gncd WR Horace Copelnnd
~AKl~ND

Baseball

.'

135 Pine SI/R1e .160

Gallipolis, OH

"With Over 20 Years

"-'V~'ul

.,'
•

Kansas City (Appier 6-5)-at.Toronto (Wells

7-~J.

Oakland (Haynes 4-6) at Detroit (Moehler 5-7),
1:05 p.m.
Anaheim (Belcher 4---6) vs. at New York·(Cone 7~

• 2), US p.m.

.

NBAFinals
Friday's score
San Antonio 80. NCw Yorlc 67: Snn Anton1o leads

scriu 2-0

"
Baltimore (J. Johnson 0-1) at Chicago (Ba ldwin
, 3-6), 2:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay (Alvarez 2-5) at Minnesota {Milton 26), 2:05p.m.

•

.

Se~tl~

·.

:: NL standings
•'

~· .Ium

Ea1trrn Di~sionL.

..... ..41
New York .. _ ·-· ..... -.. .... 37
... _15
•, Philadelphia
~. Montreal... ....................... 26
:• Rorida
_., .. 24

•: Allanta
~.

..

·.

llJI

.612

.552
538

•
5

_l"}

.413
.358

13

4J

.bOO
.540
.523

.516
.485
.424 •

11

~

Wedntsdav

San Antonio at New York, ·9· p.m.
.
Friday
San Amonio l1l New York. 9 p.m.. if nct·cssary

...... 40

27

}i91

.. ...... JS

.10

559 .

fum.

Ol!twit
New York .

'

5':

7' :

II ';

2':

Eastern Conference
l! L 1!&lt;1.

Charlot!~
Orl:~ndo ...

Washington......
CLEVELANU..

~

Wrslun DMsioi-t

·: ·Arizona ........ ,..
·, San Fra111:is~:u .

Monday

WNBA standings
1!&lt;1.

26
30
_10

•
Cenlral Division
•: Houston ............................ 39 26
•.. CINCINNATI ...... :......... .. .. ,\4 29
:• _Pit!sburgh ............................ .\4 3 1
•• Chtcogo .............
.. ......... 33 J I
~. St. Louis ............
.. .... .U _14
:.. Milwaukee .....
.. ..... 28 J8

.'

ThiS ·week's slate
S:tn Antonio at New York. 911.m

(J:r. Rodriguez 2-0) at CLEVELAND
"· (Jaret WnJht ~-3), 8:05p.m.

1",

J

1

J

I

1

1

I
.I
.. .0

\
-~

4

150
750
51Xl
250
250
IKJO

!ill
I
2
2

~5 '850*

-~

Western Conferenct'
Houston .
Minnesota ..
Sncramenw ..
Los 1\nj!.eles
Uu1h .
Phot"nix

_J
. ........... J
... .. . 2

0 1 000
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1- 150
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1
0

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000

1

~7,950*
.

• Vortec 4300 V-6 Power
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Cllllltt

Brand New 1999 Chevy .
S.Seri• Ls Ext. Cab 414
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a:

(See AL on B-4)

Bonds missed seven weeks before
being activated from the disabled list
on June 9. He homered for the first

Brand New 1999 Chevy
S.S.rles Pickup

• Air Conditioning
• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock Brakll
• Power Sleerlng
• Daytime Running Ughta
• Cuatom Cloth Interior • W.. l Equipped!

slam helped
Giants take an 8-0
lead. The Cubs rallied in the eighth
inning when Sosa, Mat'lt Giace and
Henry RodrigUez connected for consecutive home iuns.
Padres 4, Pin~ 2 .
Tony Gwynn got his 2,981st hit
and Ruben Rivera hometed twice as
San Diego defeated visiting
Pittsburgh. . .
· Gwynn singled. in the first inning
anp walked twice before leaving for
a pinch-runner. Rivera had the first
multihomer game of his career.
Braves 6, Diamondbacks 0
John Smoltz pitched $ix solid
innings as Atlanta passed Arizona for
the best zt:cord in the NL.
The Braves won their fourth in a
row and stopped the Diamondbacks'
four-game_' winning streak. Chipper
JOrie~ and Ryan Klesko each drove in
two runs.
Atlanta has. pitched four shutouts
in its last five games at Bank One
Ballwk. ·
Mets 6, Cardinals :Z
Mike Piazza homered to stretch
his .career-high hitting streak to 2 I
games as New York won at St. Louis.
Piazza connected in the ninth
·inning. He is three games short of
matching the longest hitting streak in
team history, set by Hubie Brooks in
1984.
Roger Cedeno was 3-for-3 with
two w~lks and scored three times. He
stole two bases, giving him a major
league-leading 37. Ore! Hershiser(75) gave up one hit in five scoreless
innings for his I97th career win. .

: ; Jim Leyland spent !he early pan
iJf the evening shaking hands , witll
!'.e Flori&lt;la Marlins. He 'endi:d the
.!Qght congratulating Todd Helton
tmd his Colorado Rockies. ,
•• In the first meeting between the
•.
~ams since Leyland left Florida to
tAanage the Rockies, Helton homerid to cap a three-run rally in the
i9nth inning that lifted Colorado to
lin H-I 0 victory at Coors Field. ·
•:. "You know he wants to win these
&amp;!unes a little bit more. You've goc
l'&gt;· playing against your old club,"
IJelton said after his second home
lun of the game.
t~ Larry Walker led off the Rockies'
11inth with a home run, making it I0~- Dante Bichette followed with a
,Ingle and, one out later, Helton
homered off Matt Mantei.
Leyland said he took no extra sat~sfaction in beating his former club.
• "It was great to see all of those
juys," he said. "I'm happy for them .
~ey've made a lot of progress.
l.fhere is no special flavor just
llecause it was against 1he Marlins."
~. Florida led 9-4 after six innings.
~ut the Rockies came ~ack in a typi!i')il, wild finish at Coors.
!. Helton tied his career-high with
1ve RBis. He was greeted with a
orne-plate • celebration , after his
t_ame-winne!'
,
~ "When you're in a situation like
~t~at and a moment like that, it does,
(l&gt;'t happen · too many times in your
!ffe. You've ~ot to be able to enjoy
u;," Helton sa1d. ''Hopefully I'll have
Phlllles 2, Dod1ers 1
P!ore. If you could wrap ihat feeling
Cun Schilling pitched three-hit .
~. you:d be a millionaire. It's amazo.
ball f~r seven innings as Philadelphia
Ui~."
·.
won at Dodger Stadium.
•: In other NL games, San Francisco
Schilling (9-4) had allowed at
~at ·Chicago 8-S, Philft!lelphia
least five runs in four of his previous
ilpwned Los Angeles 2- I, .Atlanta five starts. Mike Lieberthal and Rico
tQpped Arizo!la 6-0, San Diego
Brogna homered .
. · 4t:feated Pittsburgh 4-2, New York
Astros 5, Expos 0
~at St. Louis 6-2 and Houston
.Shane Reynolds pitched a six-hit. ~feated .Montreal 5-0.
ter for his sixth · career shutout as
•:
Glaatl 8, Cubs 5
Houston beat Montreal at the
: · B'arry Bond's hit his first home run A•trodome.
coming back from elbow
Reynolds also hit an RBI double
~:~ and S11n Francisco overcame as Houston stopped a three-game
Sosa's Nkleading . 23rd
losing skid.
beat vlsiting·Chicago.

t:;

~

Brand New 1999 Chevy
8-Serles LS Pickup .

6.0 Uter VB with 300 HP, a~to trans, LS · pkg, Chrome wheels, pwr windows, pwr,

Toronto 6-5, Detroit downed
Oakland 8-3 , New York beat ·
Anaheim 4·1 and Minnesota defeat- ed Tampa Bay 8-5.
Orioles 3, White Sox 2
Mike Mussina (9-3) struck OUI a:
season-high nine and scattered seven
hits for his first nine-inning complete
game of ·the season in Baltimilre's.
victory at Chicagp. ·
Albert Belle and B.l. Surhoff hit·
solo home runs as the Orioles won:
for the eighth time in nine games. •
The nine strikeouts wen: a season:
high for Mussina, whose ERA'
dropped to 3.64.
Jaime ·Navarro (5-5) allowed
three runs - two earned - and
seven hits in seven innings in theloss.
.
· Royals 6, Blue Jays 5
. •
Rookie Jeremy Giambi ·hit a two-run homer and Mike Sweeney had
.two-run double as Kansas · City
snapped a five-game losing streak·
with a win at Toronto.
:
The. lllue Jays had their four-:
game winning streak stopped ..
Toronto scored three times in the
ninth, but Darrin Fletcher grounded
out with the bases loaded to end it. Jay Witasick (2-5) pi1ched six
strong innings. Matt Whisenant gav"
up one run , but got two outs for his
first save.
. Pat Hentgen (5-6) retired, 13
straight at one stretch en route. to the
victory. ·
Tigers 8, Athletics 3 ·
Dean Palmer's homer started a
tHree-run six1h inning as Detroit
defeated Oakland. ·
Damion Easley and Gabe Kapler
also homered for the Tigers, who
snapped a three-game losing streak
while handing the A's their fourth
straight loss.
John Jaha homered for Oakland,

·•""!}~~~~l\l~: lirst"~'rmr' g~~d

.

I:OS p:m.

the sixth and seventh with inningAmerican League
endin&amp; double plays, but wasn't as
'fonunate when -Cruz followed a pair
roundup
of singles with his second homer this
season.
By DENNIS WASZAK Jr.
"He did a heck of a job;"
Assoclsted Pre•• Writer
Mariners manager Loo Piniella said.
Mike Morgan returned to Fen way
"Seven good innings of baseball. He
Park for the first time in 20 years,
and he finally beat the Boston Red
got a little tired in the eighth. But he
Sox.
has ,pitched well for us every time
out. The key for John is getting
Morgan (7-5) allowed three hits in
abead of the hitters and making them ·
6 '!, innings to lead the Texas Rangers
to a 4-1 victory over the Red Sox on
hit his pitches."
Friday night.
Following the game, Halama, a
The 39-year-old Morgan .last
Brooklyn native, see_med to be more
started at Fenway on July 24, 1979,
concerned abOut how the New York
when he gave up Carl Yastrzemski's
Knicks were doing in the NBA finals
400th career homer in Boston's 7-3
than. his perfonnance against the
win against Oakland.
AL's top team.
· "I don't really get caught up in
"I went out there aild my biggest
what ballpark I pitch in," 'Morgan
thing was to throw strike one;" said
said. "I just like to give my team a
Halama: 3-0 with a 3.34 ERA in five
chance 'to win ."
starts. "f didn't always do that but I
Morg'an· beat Boston for the first
had my off-speed pitches working.
time in seven career decisions, and
They second-guessed a lot."
. now the only teams he has not beatJose Paniagua cam~ on and gave
en out of the 30 in the majors are
up two singles but got Ramirez to hit
Tampa Bay and Arizona. The only
into a double play and retired Richie
pitchers who have beaten 29· teams
Sexson on a fly ball.
are Ken Hill and AI Leiter.
Jeff Fassero made his first relief
"I guess he gets to strike another
appearance since ' Sept. ' II, 1993,
one
off that list of 30," lhas manpitching the ninth for the Mariners.
The left-hander had made 170 conTHERE rr GOES - T.h a Seattle Marinara' Ken Griffey Jr. (right) ager Johnny Oates said.
secutive starts, but was dropped to watches his solo homer leave the lleld as Cleveland catcher Einar
Thai doesn't matter much to
the. bullpen earlier ,this week after a Dlaz . watches behind him In the eighth inning ol Friday night's Morgan .
poi&gt;r outing in Detroit.
·
AA';'rlcan League game I~ Cleveland, where the Mariners won 9-4.
"I live for today, give it my best
today,"
Morga~ ·sa id . " It's no big
Charles Nagy (8-4) had won his
last fiv~ starts, but didn't get much
Notes: Seattle is four games over moving better, is eligible tp come off deal, it means nothing to me. "
Lee ~tevens had a solo homer in
help from his offense and was hurt .500 for the first time since the end of the DL on Monday.... The Mariners
· by his defense in the second when· the ' 97 season .... Griffey's homer is · acquired left-hander Allen Wats~n the sixth off Mark Portugal (3-6) and
second baseman Roberto Alomar's . the third-longest _in Jacobs Field his- and cash from the Mets for right-han- an RBI s·ingle in the eighth af(er sinerror helped the Mariners score four tory. It was the fi~sl earned run· der Mac Suzuki and a player 10 he. gles by Rusty Greer and Juan
unearned runs in a five-run inning. allowed by Indians reliever Ricky named .. ,. Griffey is one homer Gonzalez. Todd Zeile drove in anoth"Innings like that are part of the Rincon in I 8 app,earances.
behind Carlton Fisk on the career list er run .with a groundout. .
Jeff Zimmerman got his first
game," said Nagy. "I had a chance to Cleveland third baseman Travis a:nd one back of Tampa Bay's Jose
major
league save, finishing the
get out of situations and didn't make Fryman, on the 15-day disabled list Canseco for the major league lead
·
good pitches."
with back spa.sms, took pregame bat- this season . ... Colavito hit 190 of his combined three-hitter.
In other AL garnes, Baltimore
Nagy, who )llade his !65th ting practice for the second straight 374 homers for the Indians.
edged Chicago 3-2, Kansas City beat
straight start despite shoulder bursi- day. Fryman, who appears to be
· tis, allowed -three earned runs and
eight hits in 5 213 innings.

ockies top Marlins;
,...... iant-, Padres, Mets ·
lso reco·r~wins·

•
Sales &amp; Service":

Texas (Glynn 0-1) at Boston (P. Martinez 12-2).

~ I :05 p.rrt

·:fhe

1

Nalional 1-'ootball LtiiKUt
,
AR IZONA CARDINALS: Signed· DE Thumas
1\urke. FR Joel Makm·ick.a. OL Yusuf Soon, CB
( 'nhy Rhincharlmut QB Chris Greiscn. Released FB
L1rry C'l:' n ter~
· _MINN ESOTA VIKINGS: Signed OL Corbin

Major l..eague Baseball
Hockey
. ML8 : Suspended New York Yankees OF D:myl
·
National Hockey League
Strawberry 120 d:tys ret onctive to April 14 F1n .l.'iuANAHEIM MIGI-ITY lJUCKS : Trnded G
lnuug.bascball"s nnti -drug policy.
·
. Patrick Lnlime to Ottawa for LW Ted Uonato nnd D
·
Amrricsn Leilgue
.
·
·
CLEVELAND lNDIANS: Cluimed RHP Jeff Antti -Jussi 'Niemi. '
CALGARY FLAMES: Sig'ncd F Brent
Tam off waivL,-s from the New York Mets and
.
optioned him to Buffalo of the lnternmional League. Dodginghorse.
,, EDMONTON OILERS: Named Kevin Lowe
Tmdcd RHI1 Tony Dougheny to Pittsbursh -for 11
pl_uyer to be named, SiQned RI-IP Paul Me,nhan to a cOach.
NEW JERSEY DEVILS : Signed D Brian
mmor leuguC t:ontnit:t and assigned him to Buffalo.
.
KANSAS CITY ROYAlS : Traded INF Jose Rafalski .
OTrAWA SENATORS: Traded G Damian
Cepada to Atlanta for RHP Marl· Pi5ciotta.
SEATTLE MARINERS: Traded RHP Mac Rhodes to Atlanta for future considerations.
VANCOUVER CANUCKS: Named HC Jack
Suzuki and a player to be nruncd to tl1 c New York
McllhGrgey and Mike Johnston assistant coaches.
Met5 for LHP Allen Watson omd c:1sh.
of Syracuse of the AHL
TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Signed C Josh Named Stan
·
Holhdny. OF Reed l ohnw n, RHP Wayne Dreier and Si&amp;ned C
SS Douglas Roper.
,
Nation11l L~agu~
ATlANTA ~RAVES :· Signed RHP Matt
McClendon. INF David Gdsbush LHP Driutl
Hut chinson and LHP Adrian Walker.- '
CIN CINNATI REDS . Signed C R~an Lundquist.
INF Kyle Moncrie f and RHP Carlos Hines.
HOU ~TON ASTROS: Ag1eed to terms with
RHP Wilham Ferguson, C.Chri stopher Anmtrong. C
Gll!Tett Gentr~. INF Jonathan Andrianoff and OF Jon
Tn pn l ~ki
.
'
SAN DIEGO P1\0RES: Acti vated LF Reggie

'

B}! TOM WrrHERS
- .q.EVELAND (AP) - John
Halama's game plan was simpletfu-ow strikes and curveballs to the
Ipaians. The rookie stuck to it and
s111ck it to Cleveland. ·
'
' Halama took a shutout into the
ejghth inning and Ken Griffey Jr. hit
his 25th homer Friday night as the
Seattle
Mariners
snapped
Cleveland's six-game.winning streak
wilh a 9-4 victory.
: ·Halama, once known simply as
{llayer to be named later" in a
tr.,cte for Randy Johnson, . held the
Ijulians ·without a hit until the fifth
~¥ben Manny Ramirez led off with ·a
sliarp single to left. '
"I wasn't going to survive if! just
l)'~nt out there .with a fastball," said
~atama, whose sweeping curve froze
Tore than one of the Indians. "I was
.able to keep them off•stride, and that
was the key to my game."
'_-.Griffey Jr. went 3-for-4 and hit his
3TSth career homer, a 464-footer, in
~he eighth to move past Rocky
Colavito into sole possession for
f~nd place on the career list.
, ; Butch Huskey followed Griffey's
sl!ot with his 13th · this season to
make it .9-4. Griffey also had an RBI
~~·~gle '·and Alex Rodriguez drove in
tljree runs.
: ' The Indians, who hit into three
' dQuble plays, entered the game avera~ing 7.6 runs per game during their
· wmning streak and wet:e in danger of
?eing shut out for tl)e fin;i . time all
year when Jacob Cruz·hit a three-run
· homer in the eighth.
' •
"Those double plays really
·~~~:· us but give Halama credit,"
~
manager Mike Hargrove
"He kept u·s off balance."
!!_~,~:~1~~~ (5-2), used mostly in long
by t[te Mariners, was making
fifth s~ of the season. He gave
nine hits and didn'i allow a walk
the first time this year,
The 27-year-old got 'or trouble in

• 4 Whfll AntJ.lock 81'11111
• Alu!llk1um Whaela
• NI~V Equlppecll

It's the Dealer Behind The DeaJ ·
That Ma.es The BEAL DJ.rt"erenee/ ·

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1998 FORD CROWN VICTORIA

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LX, V'8, Auto, Climate Control, AM/FM Cass., Tilt, Cruise,

1997 LINCOLN MARK VIII

1998 MUSTANG

V-8, Auto, Clir:nate Control, Tilt, Crulse, Leather,

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All Power Equip., Power Seat, Etc.

V-6, Auto.•Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., co. Tilt,·Cruise,
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1995 .FORD BRONCO

351v-a.

'

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PS, PB, PW, POL, Pwr.
. Seat
.

Wahama H.S. to host Pony
League baseball tourney ln .July
'

MASON, W.Va -· The secolid · annual Mountaineer Plant C.lassic
Itl Poov· League Tournament wiU be held July ~- 10 at the Wl!hama l;ligh

11! Sc:hoot blsciball field.

·

.

The ttitimament is open to all teams whose players are 13 t.o IS old.

1616 E811er11 Ave. (740) 446- 3672

•

Qalllpolle' Hometown Deallll'

•

CaU Toll Free
1-800-521-0084

~lipolu

"~,.....- proc~i
• T..• ..;

will go to. the Wahama Hilh School Athletic Boosters.
trophies 111\d T·shirts will be awarded to the champion and runner- .

· entrY fee is $40 and two baseball~. No all-star teams are pennit·
For more infonnation, call
llt11homJpSOD at (304) 882-2247.

,

nrn Howard at (304) 882-3201 or Lou

..

•

Phone·
7 40.- 992-2196

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Ave.
Middleport
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�PageB4•~

,; :11..__,

IOC picks .

Sion, Turin
as finalists
.for 2006
Winter
Games
By STEPHEN WILSON

SEOUL, South Korea (AP)
The Swiss town of Sion and Italian
c'ity of Turin wer~ selected Saturday
as the two finalists for the 2006
Winter Games.
Four cities were eliminated from
the all-European race: .Helsinki,
Finland;
Klagenfurt,
Austria; ,
!'oprad-Tatry,
Slovakia;
and
Zakopane, Poland.
.
: Sion and Turin, who had been
considered the two main contenders,
were chosen by a special 16-member
panel of the lnternati9nal Olympic
Committee.
The winner was to be elected in ·
the next hour by a secret ballot of the
89-member general assembly - the
first selection of an Olympic host
city since the Salt La ke City bribery
scandaL
.
IOC presideo t Juan Antonio
Samaranch said the selection of'Sion
and Turin as finalists was .unani-'
mous.
The race came down to a contest
· between tw'o sharply different.candidates- Sion, a provincial capital of
26,000 in the heart of the Swiss Alps,
and Turi·n. the nonhero Italian industrial city of 2.2 million.
·Sian .was bidding for the third .
time, followi'ng failed attempts for
the 1972 and 2002 Games.
Switzerland hasn't staged the Winter
Games since 1948 in St. Moritz.
· It was the first bid from Turin,
seeking . to bring the' Winter
Olympics back to Italy for the 'first
time
since
1956 · (Cortina
D' Ampezzo ),
. .
.
The last time the roc voted on a
Winter Olympic site, in 1995, Salt
Lake City won the 2002 games in a
·landslide. As it turned out, the victo. ry was aided by more than $1 million
in inducements to IOC members.
The .scandal, which broke s\x
months ago, plunged the IOC into
th~ biggest crisis of. its 105-year .history. Ten members have resigned or
been expelled.
' As a result of the scandal, IOC.
!Dembers were banned from visiting
the 2006 bid cities, and the voting
process was changed to allow a
· ''selection college" to narrow the
field to two.
IOC officials said the new rules
were desig~ed to make the system
"fireproof" against any form of cor. ruptio~ or improper influence, . .
While Sion had been the front' runner from the stan, delegates said
· Turin made a strong impression in
Friday's . presentation to the IOC
assembly and could have a chance.
In a head-to-head final ·between
Sion and Turin, the s·wiss feared the
vote could lie swung by the strong
Italian lo6by in the IOC and possible
bloc support from other Latin coun-'
tries.
· The ban on member visits has
been seen as an ·advantage for Sion,
which played host to more than 60
roc members during the 2002 bid.
The Swiss said they had a vastly
Improved bid thi.s time.
.
Sion was worried about possible
resentment by some IOC' members .
over the role of Switzerland's Marc
Hodler in blowing th'e whistle on
Olympic corruption in December.
The "selection · college" that
chose the two finalists was coml?osed of eight members elected by
(See FINALISTS on B·S)

AL games .• ~
(Continued from B-3) .
which .has lost 14 of 16 road games. ·
Justin Thompson ((l-6) was . the
winner, whJ!e Mike Oquist (6-5) ·
took the loss. ·
·Yankees 4, Angels 1
In New York, Andy Pettitte won ·
for the first \ime .in four stans and a .
juggled lineup helped the Yankees
send An'aheim to its fifth consecutive
loss.
Yankees ma.nager Joe Torre shook
up things after watching his team
score just two runs in. its previous
two games, a pair of .losses to Texas.
Bernie Williams was moved from
cleanup to second, .Derek Jeter
· .dropped a spot to third and Chili
pavis moved up two slots to founh.
• Pettine (4-5) got relief help (rom
Mariano Rivera, who picked up his
;18th save. Chuck Finley (4· 7) fell to
.16-9 lifetime against the Y&amp;~~kees.
: · Twiu 8, De¥il Rays 5 ·
: Rookie Corey Koskie had a
pinch-hit double to stan a three-run
~igbth inning as Minnesota defeateil
'fampa Bay after blowing a five-run
lead at the Metrodome. · ·
·
; . Jose Canseco had two hits and
two RB!s for the Devil {lays, · who
have lost 20 of 24 games.
: . With the game tied at S, Koskie
hit a shot down the right-field line off
Scott Aldred (2-2) to start the eighth.
.Bob Wells (4-1) was the winner
and Mike Trombley pil\:hed a score-.
less nirith.for his ni!lth save. .. ·

•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport •

Area sports in brief

Sunday, June20, 1991

OH • Polnt·Pieasant, WV

GJ~-jfmtbul• Page

Bq

.Proper jumping
technique helps trim
women's ACL injuries

O-rORI

.DO

·.-mshq

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

RVHS cross country session Tuesday
CHESHIRE- River Valley High School will be the site of a cross
country conditioning session Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at River Valley
High School.
·
·
The session is for students in the .Gallia County Local School
· District entering grades 7-12 this fall.
For more information, call coach Ed Sayre at 441 ,9850.

Vinton Elementary open gym dates posted
VINTON -· Vinton basketball coach Harvey Brown announced
that the first open gym dates for Vinton Elementary will be on Tuesday
and Wednesday.
After this week, open gym will be held on Tuesdays and Thursdays
~tarting on Tuesday, June 29 until Thursday, 'July 22.
·· ·
· For each date, the schedule will run as follows :
. 9-10 a.n\.- Rinky-Dink basketball (boys and girls entering grades
2-6)
.
.
. .
.
10·11 a.t;n.- Junior high boys' basketball ·
· ll'a.m.•noon- Junior high girls' basketball
Noon· I p.m. -Volleyball
·. For more information, call Brown at 388-'8586.

5 sp., Air, CAss, Da:rl&lt; Green
MSRP $11,033

V6, auto, front &amp; rear A/C, Pwr sliding door, PW, PL, tilt,
e&lt;rulse, loCally owned. ·
·
·
·

I

1.998 BUICK CENTURY

Lions Club linkfest set for Thursday
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Lions Club will host its an.nual
golf tournament on Thursday at Cliffside Golf Course. The shotgun
stan. is slated for 12:30 p.m.
·
The cost for Cliffside members is $50. Non-members will be
charged $60.00. Each team will have one A player, ·one B player, one
C player and one D 'player.
·
· ·
.
·
For more information, call Terry Lloyd at 446:4119, David Russell ·
at 446-2675 or Jeff Fowler at 256-6661.

V6, loaded, Midnight
MSRP $24,605

V6, . auto, PW, PL, Air conditioning, remainder of
factory warranty.

Eastern .athletic physical's set tor Friday
POMEROY- Eas(ern High School athletic physicals for the 19992000 school year will be given on Friday at Veterans Memorial
Medical Clinic
·
The physicals for grades 7-12 will be given from 1-4 p.m. Physical
cards can be .picked up at the high school ,office from 9-2 p.m.,
Monday-Friday.
·

Meigs Chamber of Commerce·
slates golf scramble for ·saturday

1989 OLDS 98 REGENCY

Nowsl S ·763

POMEROY- The Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.will hold
its annual' golf scramble on Saturday at the Pine Hills Golf Course (formally Meigs .Golf Course).
,
'fl:lis years tournamern will be a bring your own team f9rmat, ·the
handtcap total must be 40+, with only one player 10 or under. ·
. Tee ti.me is 9 a.m. The cost per team is $200 per team, and the price
mcludes green fees, can, food, beverages and many prizes. ·
.
For more information or to register a team, call Jim Anderson ar
740-992-3671
. .

'Baby
Blue' .basketball
scheduled ·
.
. camp
.
GALL:IPOLIS -' Gallia Academy High School wilt be the site of
the Baby Blue Basketball Camp, ·a camp for youths entering grades 13 this.fall. ·
·
·
·
•. .
· .
. The camp, .which wiJ.l cosi $30 per plirticipant, will run .from
Monday, June 28 to Wednesday, June 30 from I to 2 p.m.
·
· . Each participant will receive a instruction on fundamentals, games,
camp basketball, a camjJ T-shin and refreshments.
.
·. For more information, call camp director Jim Osbome at.446-3'212
(school) or 446-9284 (home).
·.
.
..

Gallipolis P&amp;R offers swimmlng 'lessons
GALLIPOLIS ·- The Gallipolis City Parks and Recreation
Department is offering swimming lessons this summer at the Haskins
Park pool. Three sessions of instruction will be provided. The dates are
June 14-25; July 5-16 and August 9-20.
· ·
··
The cost for Level I and 2 swimming lessons is $25 per person.
Level3 and 4 swimming lessons cost $20 per person.
.
For more information, contact Robin Lane, pool manager, at 446DIVE (3483).
.

OOMPD basketball league slat~d
PATRIOT - The 0.0. Mcintyre Park District will sponsor a threeon;three basketball league for players entering grades 4-6 this faiL
The league will begin play on Tuesday and Thursday eve'nings starling on Tuesday, June 29 at Raccoon Creek County Park:
Players may. form their own teams of up to five player~.
,
The cost is $20 per player. Team registration forms,will be available'
. at the.11ark District office, which is on the Gallia County Courthouse's
first floor
·
.
' ·
·
For mo~e information, call Mark Dann~r at 446-4612,. extension
256.
.

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2 Dr, auto, air, tilt, cruise,
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much niore

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Auto, air, cass. PeWter
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91 .5·10 ExT CAlLS Was $12,999 ........................................................................... :.......:.NOW $9,950
91 ·a tm MONTE CARLO'S VB, auto, air, tilt, cruise, AMJFM cess, Was $14,995 ... 1......... : ........ , .. ~12,900
99 PONnAC MONTANA TRANSPORT Loaded, Only t5,ooo miles WAS $26,950 ,.......... :................ 22,750
95 CAD SEVIW SLS Loaded, leather int, Was $24,900 ............................ :.................................... 18,900
97 i.UMINA vs. auto. air, tilt, cruise, AMJFM !:ass, Was $13,900 ................................................. $10,400
96 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE ve, leather Int. loaded Was $24,999 ................................................ $20,800
96 CADILLAC SEVIW STS loaded, leather int, was $29,900 ................................................ ,......... $22,450
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(Continued from B-4)
cfle IOC; including former Olym.pic Samaranch, former FIFA president
cliampio~s Jean-Claude Killy of · Joao Havelange of Brazil and
F)'aqce and Valery Borzov ·of Japanese IOC member Chiharu Igaya
Ukrajne.
.
filled out the panel.
: The international federations
Hodler did not speak d!lring.
a~pointeil Joseph Fendt of l'uge, Sian's presentation Friday, wni·ch
while Spain'i Feliciano Mayoral rep- · revolved around a film featuring a
~ented t~ national Olympic cotn' "modern Heidi'.' searching for five
. nlittees.
.
·
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: three athletes' representatives
Turin made a businesslike presen- ·
were named to the panel: . Prince tation, emphasizing it Is the largest
· . A(lbert of Monaco, who competed in city in .the,.arc of the Alps. Bid lead· .
bebsled and is now an IOC member; · ers said Turin can p.rovide all the
Thmas Gustafson of Sweden, a amenities ofa big city, while offering
sgeedskater;. and cross-country skier easy access to world ·class mountain
\lladit)lir Smimov or Kazakstan.
venues.
· IOC ' president Juan Antonio

$

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Sunday, June 20, 1999

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

Spurs down Knic~s
80-67, take 2-0 lead
in NBA title series

U.S. Open to end today

~tewart,

they ' re shooting 28 percent, 30 perSAN ANI'ONIO (AP) - David cent. You feel like ,you should be up
Robinson hugged his little friend , by 15.
" You just can't press yourself.
Avery Johnson. Tim Duncan checked
.out to a· standing ovation, too, as Steady, 48 minutes, play' your
· c~ants for a sweep filled the game."
Alamodome.
. ·
The Spurs' game is one of attriDespite taking a 2-0 lead in the tion.
NBA Finals with a record-setting
Duncan wasn 't as dominant as in
victory, the San Antonio Spurs had to Game 1, when he scored at will for
admit they were just a little embar' 33 points and had 16 rebounds. The
rassed by how they got there.
Spurs also didn't get the kind of
Though they failed to dominate deadly three-point shooting they got
the hobbling, abysmally shooting from Jaren Jackson, who had 17
New York Knicks, the Spurs points and sank the Knicks with five
nonetheless heat !hem 80-67 Friday three-pointers in the first gan)e.
night to move within two games of a
San Antonio was 2-for- 12 on
sweep in the finals . They extended three~pointers , and Jackson's only
their playoff winning streak to 12 three-pointer - his only basket games, the longest in one postseason was the late one that helped avert the
in the NBA's 52-year history. The record-scoring low for two teams in ·
Los Angeles Lakers won ,II straight · the finals.
"Obviously, our offense was terrigames in the 1988 playoffs
The Spurs &amp;roke that mark wuh- ble, so defense won the game for
out much artistry, amid a clank-filled us, " said San Antonio's Steve Kerr,
shooting performance by the Knicks. · wbo played for the Bulls when they
" It was a very ugly win . No way beat Utah 96-54 in an ugly Game 3
to hide that ," said Duncan , who once of the tin~ls last year.
again led the Spurs with 25 points,
"The difference was, we actually
15 rebounds and four blocks. "But scored. some points against Utah last
we win best when 1t 's ugly. ·We can year, " Kerr said. "This game, it
pull those types of games out."
seemed like both teams were rat~ er
· Until Jaren Jackson hit a three- inept."
pointer with I 0.1 seconds left and the . The Knicks' shootin g woes were
Knicks scored a meaningless basket never worse than in the fourth quarMAKING HIS MOVE - San Antonio forward Tim Duncan (l&amp;ft) ·
anhe buzzer, the teams were on track ter, when they went nearly seve n gets ready to make his mova on New York .forward Lar.ry Johnson
to shaner the record-low of 14$ com- minutes without a field goal. The during Game 2 of the NBA Finals Friday night at the .Alamodome,
. bined points set by Syracuse and Fon drought was epitomized by a shot where the Spurs' 80-f:7 win gave them 11 2-0'Iead In the beat-of-seven
"
Wayne in 1955 .
from Houston that bounced off the aeries. (AP)
The Knicks shot 33 percent and shot clock as it expired.
score, missing both his shots, and drirted into his players' faces during
needed 82 shots to score 67 points. - · Sprewell fi"nally broke the field- had six rebounds in 13 minutes. . a timeout. ... The Spurs' 13 fouls tied
Latrell Sprewcll and Allan Houston goal drought on a jumper with I :32 Popovich screamed at a member of .a record low for a finals game. The
put up 42 of those. Sprewell had 26 left, but Duncan answered right away the arena staff after acri~-smelling Lakers also committed 13 against
points. on .8-for-22 shooting, while with an alley-.oop dunk that made tl smoke from a pyrotechnic . display 'Detroit in 1988.
Houston shot9-for-20 for 19 points. 71 -61 and led to chants of "Sweep,
Larry Johnson, playing with a Sweep" from the Alamodome crowd
sprained knee, made a three-pointer of 39;554 - the second-largest in r~;;;''OLiiSM:iHiii:Eiiiii
for. the Knicks' first basket and finals history:
h'
h
. S994
promptly made the "LJ" sign with
"Sweep IS not somet mg l at
· DELTA
88
his arms . He finished 2-for-12 with ever went through our ·m inds in -L.A.
40
five points- 1-for-7 on three-poin't- or Portland; very honestly, " Spurs
fQ:~~::~~~~.eA~~~t!reo 1
ers.
coach Gregg Popovich said. "It was
Cess., Pwr. Seats, Pwr.
"We're gening shots," Sprewell the furthest thing from our minds.
Windows, Pwr. Locks, Pwr.
said. "We're just not making them ." .
"With this group of guys, they
Mirrors, Tilt, cruise, Like New,
Knicks coach Jeff Van Gundy don't need any speeches from me.
The J~!"$o~:~tways
observed, "Obviously, I don ' t think They know what the deal is."
HeardAboutl
we're playing well offensively."
Notes:' Knicks · center Chris 1-:--_:..:::::::.:.::;;::.,,...--The· series goes. to New York's Dudley, playing for the injured
Madison Square Garden on Monday Patrick Ewing, played despite a very
with the Spurs in position to move a sore, hyperextended elbow. He didn't
step closer to the sweep. Only seven
teams have come back from a 2-0
deficit in a best-of-seven series . .It
has happened only twice in the
· finals .
"The guys are obviously disappointed," Sprewell said. "This is not
the position we wanted to be in."
If the Spurs continue their com. posed march, they have a chance to
set the record for winning percentage
in a postseason. The Spurs are 13-1 ,
their only loss collling in Game 2 of
their first-round series against
Minnesota at home.
The record ~:\&lt;longs to the 1983
Philadelphia 76ers, who were 12- I in
winning a championship, while driven by Moses Malone's rally cry of
"Fo! Fo! Fo!" The hest record since
the _league went to 15 .wins needed
for the title is shared by the 1989
Detroit Pistons and' 1991 Chicago.
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'" We are not' going to blow guys ·
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er efficient night's work with 16
points on 5-for-8 shooting, I I
rebounds and ti ve blocks. "You look
up at the clock in the first half, and

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: PINEHURST, N.C . (AP) - Phil
Mickelson clenched his teeth. The
iormally stoic David Duval thought
. fbout slamming his wedge .into the
lliddenly hard ground. Payne Stewart
altomped furiously on his gum.
; • And those were the leadctli after
second round of the U.S. Open.
· Swirling· winds sucked the joy
lht out of Pi~ehurst No. 2 on
nday and turned the U.S. Open into
~ championship it always is - a
~attl~ for survival.
• Duval, the No. I player in the
~rid, survived a meltdown in the
. ~vnker• by making a 12-foot birdie
flitt on No. 17 that gave him an
tven•par 70 and left him tied with
$iewari and Mickclcon at 137.
1 .' "It was fun w 1er. you executed a
~ and got it on the green,". Duval
flbd. "All iit all, I' m very pleased
with my score. I'm hanging right
ihtre."
. ·
Mickelson found out earlier
i:iday that his wife probably won'i
ave their first child for another few

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Shock "• Mystics 69

At Washington, D.C. , Jennifer
Azzi scored 18 points, including two
three-point plays down the stretch, to
lift the Detroit Shock to a 76-69 vic-

(See WNBA on B: 7)

'

'

enough to know what the U.S. Open

requires.
" I'm very pleased just to be under
par- very pleased," Woods said. " I
knOI\' ho.w difficult it out there, and
everyone else does, as well . But you
have to hang in there ."
That was no small task.
Only three players broke · par ...:.
Stewart, Maggert and John Huston at
69. The cqurse played ,about 2 ~
strokes higher than the first round,
and the scoring average was 5 ~,
strokes over par.
" Par is ultimately the score you
want to compare yourself to ,"
Mickelson said. "The goal is to
make pars as you stand on each lee
box. And to do th.at takes a lot of
patience." Hal Sutton, Vijay Singh and Billy
Mayfair were the only other players
in the clubhouse un~r par, all at 139.
Masters champion Jose Maria
Olazabal didn't wait for Pinehurst to
beat. him up. He slammed his fist into
the wall of his hotel room Thursday'
night after opening with a 75, broke

.
Flor&amp;da

·
State

second-seeded
(57- t 3) played top-seeded · Miami
(48-13).
"We're going to. be on time and
ANe're goin~ to tight for 27 outs,"
Fl~rida State · coach Mike,' Ma!"in
satd. "It's an uphill bailie, but thank
the ._good,Lord, we're going to play
for n all.
The matchup revolves around
rest. The Hurricanes have it and the
Seminoles·· don't.
Florida State used seven pitchers
to beat Stanford in a gan\t sure to
leave some emotional wear on the
Seminoles. The teams combined for
eight home runs, 35 hits and countless momentum swings.
"Ho-hum. Just another. day at the
yard," Martin joked.
2
_ Miami coach Jim Mocris planned
to give the ball to right-hander Alex

Woods could have gone either
way in the stiff breezes that dried up;
the course even befQre the sun had •
chance.
·
He made a bogey on the par-5
founh when his second shot hit a.
pine tree and caught a buried lie in
the bunker, then another bogey with
a three-putt on No. 6. But he never
lost his cool, and made up for the
mistakes with a.30-foot birdie on No.
9 and a beautifully played 3-woo&lt;J,
putt to within inches for birdie on the
par-5 lOth.
Here are 1he graded scores Friday
after the second round of the U.S.
Open on the 7,175-yard, par-70
No. 2 course at the Pinehutlil Reson
and Country Club (a-amateur):
flaxrr
Si:m

a bone in his right hand and had 10 -two-time Open champion Ernie Els
wi1hdraw.
and Greg Norman, who hit only two
Now, it's time to really knuckle greens on Friday in his round of 78.
" If it stays breezy like this, I
down .
The sloped edges of Donald Ross' doubt you're going to see an underdomed greens already were turning par winner, " Norman said before
yellow Friday. sending balls rolling cleaning out his locker. .
For a brief moment, Duval played
endlessly into .the. hollows . Ju st
.imagine what's in store for the week- as though he would prove Norman
end, when sunshine really stans to incorrect when he became the only
player to get to 5 under with a birdie
bake the course. · ·
"Kind of scary when you think on No . _5, the toughest hole at
Pinehurst.
about it," Corey Pavin· said.
But .after 23 holes without a
Two of the past four U.S. Opens
were won with a score of even par. bogey, Duval made a double on the
More conditions like Friday 's could par-3 sixth when he blasted out of the
lead to the first time over par has bunker, past the flag and down 'the
won the Open since Andy Nonh did back of the green . Two more birdies
·
brought him to 5 under again, but
it at Cherry Hills in 1978,.
Still in the equation is Davis Love another bunker on the par-3 ninth
III', despite a 73 that put him six staned his slow recession back to the
strokes back at 143. Justin Leonard pack.
· and Colin Montgomerie were at 144,
Mickelson made bogey from the
while Tom Lehman and . defending· bunker on No. 6, but birdies on Nos.
champion Lee Janze.n barely got in at 10 and 12 gave him the lead at 4
147.
under. He made a wild bogey on No .
Among those who missed the cut 16, . a 489-yard par-4 , and Duval
were Fred Couples, Mark 0' Meara, caught him with a birdie on· the next
·
hole.
Stewan also was at 4 under until

Santos ( 12-3, 3.00 ERA), .who has a
1.35 ERA in the series. Morris also
considered unbeaten right-hander
David Gil ( 12-0, 3.1.9).
"Yo.u can choose either of them ·
and not be wron!l," Morrissaid. .
Santos· and G1l - and the enure
Miami lineup, for that matter - are
well rested . The Hurncanes won
twice on the opening weekend of the
series, then played again Thursday.
That's the luxury of staying on the
winner's side in the two brackets.
Florida State, on the other hand, lost
early in the tournament to Stanford,
then came back to beat the Cardinal
on consecutive days.. . ,
The question· is, did Florida State ·
have enough recovery time for the
championship?
''They've beaten us five out of six
this years," first baseman Ryan

ily ELIZABETH A. DAVIS
: · FAYETI'EVILLE, N.C. (AP) foimer heavyweight ~hampion
Larry Holmes stopped James
: :.aonecrusher'' Smith in the eighth
~und Friday night as part of the
Inaugural card of the Legends of
~!ling series.
·;, Holmes, 49, used powerful jabs to
drive the 46-year-old Smith into his
corner early in the decisive round.
~mith escaped bul Holmes irapped
~im again agtlinsl the ropes _in a neu,ti:al comer before Smith motioned to
bis trainer to stop the tight.
·~ The fighters, faces swollen,
einbraced after the tight was stopped.
; · Holmes, a 49-year-old grandfatlier, stepped into the ring for the first
tiine since 1997.
· Smith, 46, hadn't fought since last
t!ovember, when he knocked out
!)avid Slaughter in Australia. In July

a

1997, Smith dislocated shoulder in
a tight with Joe Bugner.
The 12-round bout was a rematch
of their heavyweight championship ·
tight on Nov. 9, 1984, when Holmes
stopped Smith in the 12th round to
successfully defend 1$ IBF title.
Smith won the WBA title in 1986 1\y
stopping Tim WitherSJIIIOn, then lost
it to Mike Tyson the following year.
The 41-year-old
two-fime
champion, Wi.therspilon,
lost to formera
heavyweight champion Greg Page,
40, on Friday night's undercard in
the
less-than-half-full
Crown
Coliseum. Witherspoon beat Page for
the vacant WBC title on Dec. 12,
1984.
On Friday night, Page carne out
flurry
and, floored.
with
a
Witherspoon in the first round.
Witherspoon recovered but later tore
a back muscle and didn 't answer the
bell for the eighth round. '
In other bouts, middleweight
Billy Costello defeated Juan La Porte
in a 10-round split decislo~ , ,

Smith, a Nonh Carolina native,
carne up with the idea of the Legends
series after he carne out of retirement
last year. Fighters ages 35 to 50 are
eligible for the series and fans at
Friday's event didn 't seem to mind
that the boxers weren't nearly what
they used to he.
·
"I'm excited about anything,"
said 76-year-old 'samuel lndovino,

Payne Stewatt ..................................68 ~ ~137
David Ou't'al . .
.. ___ ....61· 7()::;:137
Pbil Mickel5011 ............................... 67-70=137 . ·
1icer Woods ............................ :....... 68-71•139
~al Suuon ... . . .. . .. .,..
... 69·70=139 .
VIJIY S&amp;ngh . ..
69·10:!39
Billy Ma yfai r. ...
..•......67-72=139
Jeff Maggen ....... 1........... , ............. 71·6~t4Q
John Huston...............
.. ......... 71 -69=140
Tim Hmon ............................. 69·72.=141
Rocco Mediate __ ............... ,_ .... 69-72= 141
Bob Eites.. ................................ 70..71::141
Paul Goydo&amp; ............................... :.... 67-74=141
Esteban Toledo ...
................ 70-72= 1-42
Crnig Parry ....... _.
..69- 7Jod42
Kaname Yokoo ............................... 68-74=142

- ~~ax~d~~~~~~~X\o~;:.y~a~i~':
bogeys caught up with him . He

lim Furyk ..... .. ...............

. .. , .
1mponant par-savmg putt~ on the
Barthelemy sa1d. We re exc&amp;ted and · 14th 16th and 18th holes for his 69.

.. .....69-73•142

Jcspe:r Pamevik ........................ 71 -7I =142
Brian Watu ... ,,..
.69-73= 142
Oarr'en Cfarkr ..... . .. ......
... 73-70= 14 ~
Davts l ovelll .............. .......
... 70-73=143
O.A. Wci bring .................. ........ 69-74=: 14;3
Greg Kraft ....·; ........... .,, ........ 7~ 73o:l43
Jim Carter ...................................... H-70= 143
Miguel Jimenel .............. :................ 73-70= 143
Steve Stricker .. .........
. ......... 71}.7:\o: l43 •.
Steve Elkington ........................... 71-72o:-I4J
GeuffTey Sisk .......................... ·........ 71-72~143 .

ready to play. Today took a lot out of
Stewart also was the 36 ~ hole
us, but we 've proven we can win .."
leader in 1996, when he had a 76-73
·" We're relaxed and playtng on the weekend and last year, when
well ," . shortstop Bobby Hill said. he Jed · all thred rounds but blew a
"We'_re d~ing the little things right. " ' four-stroke lead' on Sunday.
Mtanu s success agamst the
"There is some unfinished busi Se~inoles . might _stem from Morris ness," he said.
bemg famthar wnh Martm. Moms.
served . as ,pitching coach in
...
Tallahassee from 1980-81the Start of r--------~---------..;_
Martin's 19-year tenure:
" He was my first assistant back in
1980," Martin said. "You're not
going to surprise him with anything." .
.
T·SHIRTS • CAPS • JACKETS • COLLECTABLES
~orn~ satd he loves to coach
agamst hiS old boss.
Dale Earnhardt
"Being a former assistant" coach for Mike •. ~his makes .the game even
· · Jeff Gordon
more exc&amp;tmg," he sa&amp;d.
Marie

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(Continued from B-6) '
tory over the Washington Mystics on
llriday night.
·
.. It was the third straight victory for
Detroit
(3-1 ),
which
held
Washington (1 -3) to its second low~t point total of the season. The victory also spoiled a chance for the
Mystics to reach .500 for the first
tlme in their two-year history.
·" Detroit led 52-49 with 7:30 left
When Azzi, a first-team all-star in the
'funct ABL last year, came up with
c\msecutive three-point plays in an
·8-second span to make it 58-49.
lbe Mystics never got closer than six
f!ointa the rest of the way.
;'. Val Whitting added II points for
[)lftroit, while Sandy Brondello had
lb.
'
f Nikki McCray and Cha~mque
Holdsclaw led Washington wtlh 19
and 18 points, respectively.
· BrondCIIo's three-pointer capped
~7-2 run to open the second half and
l,(ve the Shock a 43-38 lead.
,• The Mystics answered with an 84hn to get within 47·46 with II :37
remaining.

JNp

.....;~-~;.,;-----.---------1

· Foster was honored as the
P!fidwestern Collegiate Conference's
· (m coach of the year · after he
directed the men's tennis team to a
t-9-11 record.
;- He semed as head tennis coach at
Sinclair Community College · in
Dayton from 1990 to 1996, after hav. i~g played tennis there as a collegian.
He is also head pro in the tennis club
. il Wright-Patterson Air Force Base .

WNBAgames ...

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

· daughter,
who sat inJudy
the front
row "This
with his
Stafford.
is . .
going to he in iny memory for ever
and ever."
"They won't have the snap and
pop they had in their youth, but
maybe it will wake .up some of the
old boxers," said Andrew VanAulen ,
who was anending the tights with his
nine-year-old son, Dewey.
Longtime ring announcer Col.
Bob Sheridan, who was handling the
blow-by-blow for the pay-per-view
audience, said promoters could've 1---------.---~:....;...;
picked a better night to launch the
enterprise and avoid competing
asainst a Friday night card on

:
: DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Herb
foster, coach of the men's tennis'
lfrogmm the past two years at Wright
. State University, will now also coach
die women's tennis progmm.
The administration announced the
plan Friday. Charlie Pointer retired
last . month as the women's tennis

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ttolmes beats 'Bonecrusher' in LOB fight

Foster to head
Wright State's
lennls programs

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weeks. Good thing, because
Pinehurst te(jUired undivided attention to keep par in the picture.
"In a major, it's very easy to get
overly excited," Mickelson said after ·
his 70. " It's very important·to try to
calm down . I'm on myself to try to
stay on ·on e_ven keel. "
Stewart had a !-under 69 - the
best score of the-day - to put himself in position.once again in the U.S.
Open. This is the third time in the
past four years that Stewart has had
at least a share of the lead after 36
holes.
"The score was a good one," said
Stewart, the only player to beat par
two days in a row at Pinehurst. "The
way I got it was. not what I envisioned, tiut it's what I c~e up with,
and that's what you have to do."
How tough was the second round?
. Tiger Woods had a l-over 71 and
actually agreed that he played well.
He was two strokes back at 139,
despite missing two good birdie
chances in the last three holes .
Woods may be only 23,' but he's old

·wl. _,,

,• OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Miami
~t Aori&lt;;!a State five out ,of six
li~s this season. The Seminol'es can
bloke up for it with one victory at the
follege Worl_d Series.
: Karl Jernigan's three-run homer
ln the bottom of the I 3th inning gave ·
~':lorida State. a 14- 11 victory over
S)anford on Friday, sending the
Seminoles to the national title game
the first time since 1986.
, • With runners on first and third and
~o outs, Jernigan said he wasn't try!Qg for dramatics when he sent a 1-0
pltcll into the left-field bleachers.
t • "All !'was trying to do was get a
~all to the outfield and bring in a run . .
lbe last thing , on my mind was a
IIOme run," he said.
•,: The victory by the Seminoles
jqade it an aii-Aorida final Saturday

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WNBA roundup
NEW YORK (AP) Vickie
Johnson scored 26 points and the
New York Libeny held Lisa Leslie
12 points below her average in an
84-72 victory over 1he Los Angeles
Sparks on Friday night.
Sophia Witherspoon scored I 3 of
her 14 points in the second half as
. New York held the Sparks to two
. field goals over a nine-minute SJian ,
in the second half. . .
·
Leslie,, who entered the game as
the leagu'e 's third leading scorer
(24.0) finished with 12 points on 4for-13 shooting and had I 0 rebounds.
Rookie Ukari Figgs led the .Sparks
with 13 points.
.
Witherspoon went on a 7-0 run
with a three-pointer, a short jumper
and two free throws to give New
York a 66-S21ead with 7:49 left.
Los Angeles, with Leslie scoring
five points, then outscored the
Liberty 18- 10 over the llext four
minutes to close within 76-70 with
3:30 left.
DeLisha Milton apd Tameka
Dixon each had I i points for the
Sparks, who shot ~6 percent.
In the other WNBA · contest,
Detroit downed Washington 76-69.

TICKETSI

tbwl • Page B't
•

Duval, Mickelson.tie for lead in second round·

., DOUG FERGUSON

By KEN BERGER

Liberty,
Shock win ·

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Sunday, June 20, 1999

Ohio River's Belleville Pool boasts smallmouths near shore
ODNR 's weekly
fishing report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Here
is the weekly fishing report provided
by the Divtsion of Wildlife of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources:
Ohio River
The Belleville Pool includes 41
.
rover miles through Meigs, Athens
and Washington counties. Fish near
stream confluences, the rocky shorelines of the main channel and grave l
bars adjacent to triblnary streams
·h
k
w en see ing smallmoulh bass. Try
usi ng buzz balls, spinner baits and
jigs in these areas. The upper pool is
the best area' 10 fish for hybrid stri ped
bass which will measure 16 10 23
inches. Anglers prefer lo use chicken
livers, gizzard shad and pencil: type
topwaler baits to ·catch these fi sh.
Whole bass, largeopo~th bass, channel catfish and flathead catfi sh also
provide good fishing opportunities in
June and July.
Southeast
LAKE SNOWDEN _ There is a

end of crappie rigs and perch spread·
ers when seeking yellow perch in
deep water. Trollining for channel
catfish is permitted in a restricted
area. Night fishing is most produc."
· ti ve for these fish which may weigh
15 pounds.
v
Central
DEER CREEK LAKE - The
Tick Ridge area is a good location to
fish for white bass. Use smal.l spinners or h ve ban. Some white bass
will measure eig ht 10 12 inches.
Crappies can be found in areas with
submerged structures such as
d~wned trees. For best results, use
monnows suspended beneath a bobber. The rocky shoreline and extend-

pounils was taken here in April.
WALBORN RESERVOIR
This 885-acre lake in Stark County
limits boaters to the use of I 0-horsepower motors. Excellent fishing
opportunities exist for largemouth
bass, with many fish exceeding 12
inches. During midday, fish with
midlevel crank baits or live bait to
take bass. During evening and early
morning use slick bails and soft plastic ba11s in shallow water areas
around vegetation and submerged

Wally Pike's

Lake Erie
Walleye fishing remains fair to
good across the western basin as the
annual mayfly hatch hits its peak.
The best areas are west of Green
Island, the reef complex west of Port
Clinton, near West Sisler Island, the
Flats area west of North Bass Island,
Ruggles Reef and the Toledo
Shipping Channel. Anglers are using
bonom bouncers with worms,
mayfly rigs and weight-forward

Outdoo~

ed deep-water points are the best
places to fish for largemouth bass.
O'SHAUGNESSY RESERVOIR
- This 920-acre reservoir just north·
west of downtown Columbus offers
good summer fishing for largemouth
bass and bluegolls. Use topwaler
baits, six-onch plastic-worms and live
bail in areas along the west shoreline
that have fallen trees and submerged
brush piles. Early morning and late
evening are the best times to ti sh.
Bass will me asure 12 10 18 inche s.
six-horsepower limn on this I50- Areas wolh shoreline cover offer
acre Athens County lake Channel
catfi sh up Ia 10 pounds have been good bluegill fishmg when using
small worms and larval baits fished
caught here on recent years. Fosh at depths of lwo 10 eight feet.
along the lake bottom at night with
Northwest
cut baols. prepared baits, ni ght
LOST c
crawlers and chicken li vers for best
REEK RESERVOIR This 120-acre Allen County reservoor.
results. Sunfish and bluegills can be offers a variety~ fishing opporlunotakcn ncar the shoreline and in deep- ties. Fish at nigl\1· along the lake botor water
when Th
usmgf' larval
baols and lorn wo'th ch·tc ken 1·overs, nog
· ht
11
h'
15
smmathwborms led f • mg for large- crawlers and prepared bails to take
ou
ass 1s ra e aor.
h
1
f' h
·
TIMBRE RIDGE LAKE _ Thos c anne cat ts . Blucgtlls can .be
100
L
C
k
. taken ncar submerged shoreline
-acre awr~nce ounty 13 ~ 15 m structures when using red worms
the Wayne Nattonal Forest and offers wax wor
d 1 1b ·
h '
mFs. an arva at 1s sue ~s
good fishing opportuniti es for
bl
·
b
d . b
maggots. tsh along the bonom 10
uegt 11 s, ass an ram ow trout. deep ·water with crappie rig
d

~~~!sbl~~f'~~nm~:s~~:~x n~a;i~~ pe~ch

structures.

spinners with worms, and are trolling
deep-diving crank baits. Smallmouth
bass fishing remains good to excellent with mas! fish measuring 12 to
17 inches.
•
In the central basin, smallmoulh
bass ,jlfe mea5uring 12 to 18 inches.
The best locations are around the
.breakwalls, the area two to five miles
off of Geneva and the area two Ia
four miles west-northwest of
Ashtabula at depths of 15 to 25 feel.
Anglers are llatline !fOiling with Hot

N'Tots and also casting lube worms.
Yellow perch fishing is good one to
two miles off of Lakewood, with
most fish measuring seven to 12
inches. Walleye fishing is fair with
the best locations northwest of
Fairport Harbor and six to eight
miles northeast of Cleveland at
depths of 50 to 60 feet. Anglers are
using dipsy divers with watermelon
stinger spoons and worm harnesses.
Central basin walleyes are measuring
·17-29 inches.

Life

MAYBE I'LL C:.tm:l{
,.,_ 81S6ER FISH 'INAK

HAIHA/ --~ rt.t.

8ET

Mf

I GUEM THE KIO JU&amp;T
OOESH'T GET VfRf
E'ICCI~P ABOUT FISHIN0,.,

PICTURE

IN THE NEVI&amp;~/

MOM OR ' " ' '

~i~n~:s

spreaders lipped with
shoreline. Trout have been stocked lo take yellow perch. Crapptes, bass
and bullheads also can be found
annually sonce 1997 and also can be
METZGER RESERVOIR _· u
taken from shore line areas when
. .
.
.
se
using kernel corn. small worms and a wetghl-forward spmner lipped Wtlh
small spinners. Channel catfish con- a ntgkhlbcr.a,wlehr or Lrolkil~ deep-dllovtng
·
rc .
d .
. · cran
at w en see ng wa eyes
unue 10 o 1er tmprove noghl fishong These fish
!6 1 24
h ·
each year.
measure
o
me es.
Southwest
Use spreaders lipped wtth mmnows
COWAN LAKE_ N' h fi h'
fished near the lake bottom Ia take
1
is best during ·summer }~r a~gl~r~ y~llow perch which will measure
seeking channel callish. Tradtlional etght Ia 10 .mches. TradtltOnal balls
baits may be used Ia catch this tasty can be fished along the bollom _at
h' h ' · h
mghllo lake channel catfish that wtll
game ·fish
1 ' w tc can wetg up 10 20 measure 13 10 22 inches
N rlh
·
pounds . When seekmg largemouth ·
bass, ~se soff p_laslic bai~. live bails
TURKEYF~OTeastLAKE
and )tg-and-ptg combmallons m
·
areas with submerged structures. Sunfish can be taken at de~ths of two
There are fair opportunities to catch to seven feel when u~mg small
worms and larval balls fiShed
muskies when trolling in the lo
half of the lake at depths of fou~~~ beneath a bo~ber around shoreline
eigb~ feet.
co.ver and aquattc vegelalton.
GRAND LAKE ST MARYS _ Largemouth \lass also can be found
The rocky areas along the east and . m _some of the~e areas. Use lopwaler
west shorelines, and the woody areas bans, small sptnners and cra~k batt~.
in the channels and tributaries are the stx-onch plasltc worms or love ban
top locations for bass fish.ing. Use whe~ seeking bass. Bass longer than
live minnow s and larval bails on the 12 mches can be found . . A slate
record toger muskie we1shmg ~ 1.5

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'99 FORD TAURUS LX

DOW says fewer hunters
pursue ruffed grouse
. By JOHN WISSE
.
1970s and increased sharply during
Ohio Division of Wildlife
the late 1970s and early 1980s. In
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Despite 1983, grouse populations in Ohio
the addolton of Sunday huntin!) last declined significantly and have
year, and a five-month season, fewer remained at lows .roughly comparapeople are pursuing ruffed grouse.
ble to those of .the mid-1970s, said
Since 1972, the Ohio Division of Dave Swanson, a wildlife biologist at
Wil~life has 111ain1ained a list of the slate's Waterloo wildlife research
grouse hunters who have kept field station in Athens County.
j&lt;,Jurnals and provided information on
"The problem IS thai Ohio is snutheir hunts. Flush rates deri'ved from ated in the southernmost range of the
these reports provide an annual index ruffed grouse and the quality of habi·
lo the sial us of the grouse population. tal has generally declined," Swanson
Among the 150 journals returned said . · "Grouse . inhabit mostly the
to the agency, hunters reported hunl- eastern half of Ohoo where we conong a total of 4,234 hours duro ng last lonue to see dechnes in high-q uality
year 's season from Oct. 10 through habitat. "
Feb. 28. Th1s is a drop of 2 1 percent
Ruffed grouse prefer a rather
compared with J997-98, des pole the immature hardwood forest full of
21 additional hunto'ng days from ·thi ck underlying brush, amp le food
Sunday hunting.
sources and good protection · from
The rangewide grouse hunter predators
flu sh rate was .80 flushes per hour, 7 ·
Unfortunately, much of Ohoo 's
percent below the previous year and forested areas arc mature woodlands
the lowest recorded since the survey !hill offer only scanered pockets of
began .. The flush rate reported last good quality grouse habitat.
season is 31 percent below the 1972Hunting appears lo be only a
1998 long-term average of 1.16 minor contributor to the small popuflushes per hour.
·
laloon of ruffed grouse, and may in
Most hunting pressure was con~ fact be of no consequence given the
'cenlraled late in the season durmg five-month long season and low harFebruary. The overall flush rate also vest rate s.
was highest during the final month of
the seaso n.
Hunting pressure and flush rates OOMPD slates
'were lowest at the start of the season day camps
in October, then gradually improved.
The overall season harvest rate of . I 0
PATRIOT - The 0.0. Mcintyre
grouse per hour meant hunters on
average kjlled one ruffed grouse' for Park District will sponsor day camps
at Raccoon Creek CountY. Park on
every I 0 hours spent hunting.
Monday, June 1 8, July 1i and July
Grouse' populations were high in 25.
'
the eorly 1970s, declined in the m1dEach camp, open Ia children four
Ia eight years old, runs from 9 a.m. Ia
3p.m.
The English soccer team
The registration ·deadline is one
_Arsenal lost its all-time leading w.eek before the day of each camp.
~corer in 1998 when Ian Wrighi
There must be at least 10 children
~ igned with London rival West
registered for the camp to be held.
.'Ham.
The cost is $I 2 for each session or
$30 for all three sessions. Each sesDespite a 12-2 record, pitch- sion will have a different theme.
Registration forms will ' be availer David Cone of the New York
able
atlhe Park District office, which
Yankees wasn't selected for the
is on the first floor of the Gallia
American League All-Star County Courthouse.
'
team in I 998.
For more information, call Mark
Danner at446-4612, extension 256.

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Being a father i~ a
beautiful role to play. Sat·
isfaclion in seeing a grow·
ing, stable family is a
reward in itself. Just to be
called "Dad" is a sound
pleasant 10 the ear. Most
Dads have a right to be
proud of how they. have
played their role and should be so honored
this day.
Times have changed over several
decades · in America, and we need to
address new issues. There was a day when
"Just wait until your father gets home"
was. a lhreaterilng response to a child's
lack of obedience to a 111other's reque~t.
Far too often today father does not ·come
home.
It is not that he is working two jobs and
the .kids never sec him; he just does not
live with the family anymore. We have
been admonished to pity the fatherless,
and rightly so. In that other day it usually
meant that the father had died and left the
mother to raise t~e children alone. Today
we have embittered teens, orphaned by a
living father. For whateve~ reason, he is
absent without leave. He may even be in
the home, but his contribution to nurturing
children into odullhood is little or nothing.
Our country, America, with all her
wealth - her prestige- her power has

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demand abstract thinking and
at learning social and moral
concepts.
• He has lessening interest
in school, teachers, and in
learning.
• His father, odather substitutc, is still absent.
• His life is now primarily
characterized by his own
aggres5ive bChavior, his
aggressive peers, and his hos·
tile home life.
Government agencies are
powerless to make men and women marry
or stay married. They are powerless 10
guarantee parents will love and care for
their children. They are powerless Ia persuade anyone to n1akc and keep promises.
Too often they enforce policies that under·
mine stable families and misdiagnose the
real root cause.
Ordinary Americans are not powerless.
They know that a family life charactcrizei:l
by affection, cohesion, and parental
involvement prevents delinquency. They
know that these elements produce well·
balanced children. They know further thai
encouraging moral development of their
children··developmenl that is best accom·
plished within the context of religious
belief and practice, constitutes a real solo·
tion to tfic root problem.
.
As fathers, we have all made mistakes.

produced this condition we all know too stages, but the first two are the most sigwell. Those who serve in the courtrooms nificant in knowing what to avoid at the
of America may rightly wonder if the outset.
entire nation is fatherless, judging by the _ · Stage One: .Parental neglect and &amp;banbackground of the . children who are donmenl of the child.in early home life.
brought there for sentencing. Violent
• When tile future violent criminal is
crime is easily ~le to the root cause, born his father hu already abandoned the
the breakdown of tile family. People with mother.
common sense know,,this to be the truth.
• 'If his parents are married, they are
Official Washinkton has orthodox likely to divorce by the third year.
thinking that materiil conditions are the
• He does not become securely attached
cause, ·such as poor employment opportu· to his mother during the critical early years
nilies or a shortage o( fully funded federal of his life.
• The adults in his life frequently quarsocial pro,grams. Thus they can justify tak·
ing more of our hard-earned lax dollars to rei and vent lheit frustrations physically.
hire more bureaucrats to solve violent
• There is much harshness in his home,
crime and build bigger government ·
and he is deprived of affection.
We can say to official Washinglori with
• Lacking his father's presence and
confidence: It is not poverty, not race, but attention, he becomes increasingly aggresthe absence of. commitment and love sive.
between adults and heiween adults and
Things just go downhill from here,
chlldren .that is the root cause of violence Stage 1\vo: The embryonic gang becomes
and crime.
,
a place for him to belong.
·
The absence of marriage and the failure
• He satisfies his needs by exploiting
to form intact families explains the present others.
• At age five or six, he hits his mother.
condition. We have had more severe
poverty in recent history, 25 percent unem·
• In first grade, his auressiye behavior
ployment, bul nothina like the violence we causes problems for other children.
• He is difficult for school officials to
are experiencing. ·
A pattern of circumstances in the life of handle.
.
• He is socially rejected at school by
a future violent criminal hll been summa·
rized by Patrick F. Faglrl, a Fellow for "normal" children.
Family and Cultural StUdies at the Her·
• He and his friends are slower at
itage Foundation. He divides this into five school. They fail at verbal tasks that

F//

I

·'

C

By CATHERINE HAMM
Tlmtos-S.ntln.. Staff
GALLIPOLIS • Gilbert Craig. Three men share the
name - and the values it imparts. A grandfather, father
and son with many of the same personality trails, yet
each making his own impression on the world. Three
generations bound by love, respect and pride (or each
other, and three generations ·with strong feelings about
what it means to be a father. .
Gilbert Craig. Sr., known as Gibby to all mOst
everyone, is a noted community leader in Gallipolis.
As a member of Paint Creek Baptist Church, he is one
of the organizers of the county-wide free Thanksgiv·
ing dinner. His cooking ability is renown; once a
riverboat cook, he now prepares meals at the Gallia
Ccunty Senior Resource Center. Soft spoken, his
warm manner and.genuine interest in people don't
keep them strangers for long. Dignified and hard
working. he's quick to downplay his accomplish·
ments, always giving credit to God {Of everything he
does.
His family provides great joy. His first wife
·Lucille, died when their children, Gail and Gilbert, Jr.,
were young. Now remarried, he and wife Charlotte
work tirelessly ·in the church, while overseeing an
active family. Gail is a schoolteacher, married to Har·
vey Brown. with a son. Gilbert Jr., and wife Patty are
parents to four children. He works at Philip Sporn and
is pastor of Mt. Moriah Church in Meigs ,Ccunty.
His son, Gilbert Craig, Jr., also known as Gibby,
sees his father as an excellent example of being a
good father.
"A lot of times I received advice not so much as
, what he said, tiut what he modeled before me," said
the younger Craig.
Gibby Jr., tries to do the same with his son •
Gilbert Craig Ill, known as Bert. As a recent graduate
of GalliaAcadcmy High School, Bert is ready 10
embark on his own journey into manhood as he pre·
pares to go to Hocking Technical Ccllege this fall.
Gibby Sr., recalls his early years as a father as ones
of separation mixed with loving homecominS"~. His
long weeks of working on the riverboats would be
punctuated with precious family times that made the
return to work difficult.
"I really wasn't home that much when they were .
young," he said. "Their mother had to be both father
CELEBRAnNG FATHER'S DAY • Gilbert Cr•lll • the I, Ill •nd II gllllier Ia upr.Ued today In cards and gifts are part of their everyday fltmlly relation·
and inother. Bu~ 1 proJodded for them and tried to
wre lhelr thought• an Fldlter'• Oily. The trio 11gre.. the aenllmenla ships.
•
teach them right.from wrong."
.
·
you can't always be sure if they share your views,"
right there with him. Saturday mornings he'd gel up at
Bert realizes his namesakes have left a huge mark,
Gibby would lake his children fishing off the
A$ a paren~ Gibby Sr., knew children had val~able
four or five in the morning and sweep the streets.
but concludes, "There 's no pressure. My dad is a great
bridge at Chickamauga Creek and attencl Gibby 'Jr.'s
- things to oonlributc to the family unit. such as pro.bHe'd buy me a peppermint stick or give me five or ten man and my grandfather is, lao·. I know people will
football and baskeiball 8ame5 and'Gail's 4-H·aclivi- - ·
solvina abilities in many different are111. · " · ·cents for helping him. I learned carpentry froni him. I say th~re's a Craig boy when they see me. And, the)'
ties. Calling them "close knit," he has fond memories
"If parents let children alone, they can usually get
learned most of all what he showed me. They've been probably do expect more from me .
of family dinners. But, as the children grew older,
. Jong with one anollter," said Craia. ,;Sure, they'll
through life they know what life is about. My grand fa·
"Bu~ I know no matter what I'll do I'll be loved,'.'
sports cut into thai time.
fight over the wagon and the ball glove. But; I alw~ys
ther would get up early and haul ice. He did a day's
added Bert. "When I was getting my graduation gif~
He remembers Gail and Gibby ·Jr., as exceptional· remember IIOI(ICthing my mother told me, if you just
work before breakfast.
·
"
the deacon said maybe we 'II see you standing up here
, ly well mannered.
leave them alone to fight II out, they're be fine. If the
"He had will power because he knew he had to
one day as a minister. Right now, I don 'I know about
"Even the baby sitters would ask my wife and me
parents gel into it they'll be enemies for the rest of
feed a family," said Craig. "The Lord gave him that
that, IM who knows in the future."
if they could watch the kids because they were so well their lives.•
strength. He enjoyed life. He 'd
His grandfather's advice is, "Love what you do and
behaved." he said. "They turned out to be lovely
He also recalls, "I remember
smoke his pipe with rough cui do it with dignity and respect. You're only going Ia
kids."
when Gibby was about five or
tobacco' and tell stories about
pass t'his way once. What you do loday,,shows ~p
However, there were typical moments of testing the six, I was working in the yard ,
what he'd done. We don't pay
tomorrow. You team it not as &amp; man, but as a child and
family rules. Once, when Gail stayed at a dance
on something, and he came up
enough attention to our older
its there on the back burner. You do not forget your
longer than her 10 p.m. curfew;mother Lucille, quiet·
to me and said, 'why don't you
people. I wish I taped or wrote raising."
ly, but firmly went inside to get her.
do it this way?' And, he was
what he said. I remember them
Gibby Jr. knows where to look for answers in
· Gibby Sr., recalls, ''There WaS no need for a spank· · right I did it his way and it
in bits and pieces. There is
being a good father, " Both our churches encourage
'ing; it was enough that she just willked in."
worked. I thought about the
never a day goes by, that I
the men. Like with the Thanksgiving dinner, we try to
Gibby Jr., understands his father's plan 'for' his fam· Bible verse that talked about
dOn't remembCr something."
get men to be seen, ryot a king selling on his throne,
ily, "I remember him as being a little more strict than
out of the mouths of babes.
As for his father, Bert
but as a loving servant. The greatest gift a man can
he does. He established boundaries, and we knew as
These parents who tell their children to shut up . how
notes, "He's been strict when he's had to be, and I
do for his children is lo love his wife. My being a man
long as we didn't stray we'd be ok. I remember a few will they ever gel to kniJW their children?"
think he's been a little easier on my sisters. He's
does not mean running rough shod over my family.
whippings, but not too many. The lessons he taught us
Grandson Bert has benefited from that his grandfa- always telling me to go read a book instead of playing
"Most important, my relationship with God allows
were to respect authority.
!her's devotion and interest.
sports all the time. But, he's probably .right because
me to have the strength, courage and faith to try and
~e rules applied not only to our {aJTiily, but to
"He has always supported me by coming to my
when I was younger alii wanted to do was play, play,
live my life by a set of standards for this nation and
other people and our neighbors," he added. "We had a football games," Bert said. "And, I like the fact that
play sports and nothing else."
my family," said Craig. "And, I try to pass it on to my
sense that the entire community was involved. Author· he's only a few blocks away and he is there for me.•
His father agrees "I want to help lh~m set bound'
children. Our nation is paying a great price for our
ity was something that went beyond our door. It was
Thai bond reminds Gibby Sr., of his childhood, "I
aries, but you need to remember that they're kids too.
families going astray. We need to correct them when
normal for our neighbors to be alike in beliefs. Today, loved my grandfalher; when he was working. I was
~can remember thalllovect to play sports too." ..
they 're wrong and affirm them when they're right." .

By ROBERT WEEDY
13011111
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Section

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96 PONT GRAND AM
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Sunday, JuM 20, 1'"

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We are not after perfection,
that does. not come in this
life. We are after accepting
responsibility, for showing
love and affection, for gelling our priorities in proper
order.
The government can not
raise our children, but we
can. That is our assignment.
This Father's Day we can
offer thanksgiving for a
renewed awareness of the
vital importance of fatherhood to healthy child development and
social well -being. We can encourage
fathers near to ·us to lake opportunities to
spend time and develop good relationships
·with each of their children.
We can encourage men to become
equipped to be male mentors in our area in
neighborhoods where there are the "fatherless."
·No one has said that rebuilding stable
.families will be easy. We know what needs
to be done, and a long journey begins with
· a single step.
·
We should do everything in our power
to apply the principles just mentioned in
our own lives, not just for the sake of the
nation, not just for our sake, but for the
· sake of our children.
·
Robert Weedy I• • columnist for the
Sund•y llme..Sentlnel,

�•
.

. P~~ge C2 •. "'""I....._.

Sunday, June 20, 1999

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

tbul

Sunday, June 20, 1999

•m~~~t~v

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

Mr. end Mrs. Leslie Small

Lisa

Hall~tnd

Shane Wells

· Cynthia Byrd and John Byers

HALL-WELLS__,.THURMAN - Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Hull of Thu'rman, announc:e
the engagement and approaching
marri age of their daughter, Lisa Kay
Minersville and Bill and Mary Rus- to Shane Andrew Well s, son of J.A.
sell of Five Points. A graduated from and Joy Wells of Huntington, W.Va.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Southern High School in 1992 and
Southwestern
High School and
Hocking College in 1997, she is
employed at Point Pleasant Medical Marshall University. She is currently employed with the Gallipolis
Center in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Her fiance is a 1989 graduate of City. Schools as a teacher at Green
Meigs High School and is employed Elementary.
The prospective gro~m· is a gradat Powell's SuperValu in Pomeroy.

Renee Russell and Todd Powell

..

RUSSELL-POWELL

·: · MINERSVILLE- ~r. and Mrs.
·lames Ted Russell of Minersville
announce the engagement and
:l\pproaching maJTiage of their daugh·
ter, Renee Dawn Russell, to Todd
keith Powell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry C. Powell of Pomeroy. ,
• The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Herbert and Mary Jane Pugh of

uate of Barboursv ille High School
and St. Mary 's School of nursing.
He is now pursuing a degree in biology from Marshall University. He is
currently employed at Saint Mary 's
Hospital in Huntington , as nn RN .
The open church ceremony will
take place on Saturday, July 31st at
2:30 p.m., at the Jefferson Avenue
Church of God, Huntington. The
reception will immediately follow
~t the Four Seasons.

--BYRD-BYERS-~
:-.:
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs .
James Byrd of Jackson, and Mr.
and Mrs. John Byers of Denver,
C:olo., announce the upcoming
mnrrnige of their children, Cyn -

thia Byrd and John Byers . · . • }
The wedding ' service will com·
mence at 4:30 p.m. on June f6,
1999 at the Presbyterian Chur~h 1
in Gallipolis.
' ,.,
I· • :,

•

1• ••

•••

.... .Sunday, June ZO

***

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va .•
.Narcotics Anonymous Tri - County
;Group meeting, 611 Viand Street,
;7:30p.m.

***

. ADDISON - Preaching service
;at Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
6 p.m., with Rick Barcus preaching.
'

'''

KANAUGA- Worship service at
Silver Memorial FWB Church, 6
p.m., to mark church anniversary . .
. Rev. Jack Parsons preaching.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - The George and
Emma Williams Swain family
reunion, 0 .0. Mcintyre Park.
Potluck lunch at I p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS- Stroud and Nel lie Swindler Houck family reunion
at Raccoon Creek Park Shelter
house #3.

. ***

CROWN CITY- Redeemed will
sing at King's Chapel Church, 7
p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Piano recital .by
the students of Allen Straight, Ariel
Theatre, 2 p.m .

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Canaday
reunion at Raccoon Park, cardinal
shelter house, dinner at noon.
.

***

GALLIPOLIS- Bailey Chapel
Church services, 10 a.m., With
Brent Unroe as guest speaker.

•••

. CENTENARY- Special services
at Centenary United Christian
Church, 10 a.m ., with Darrin Smith
singing and Jack Holley preaching.
Dtnner to follow.

•••

MERCERVILLE - South Gallia
Boosters meeting, 7:30p.m. in the
school library.

•••

•••

•••

Thesday, June Z2

GALLIPOLIS - New Life
Lutheran Church 'Hunger for Healin)!' video series, B p.m.

"**

GALLIPOLIS -Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, St.. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 8 p.m.

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Choose To Lose
Diet Group, 9 a.m. at Grace United.
Methodist Church. For information
call 256 - 1156.
*,** '
GALLIPOLIS -AI -Anon meeting at S1. Peter's Episcopal Church,
8~m
·

GALLIPOLIS - John Gee Black
Historical Center open for public
tours, IO a.m .- 2 p.m.

***

CARD SHOWER

•••

•••

Nora Soarls will celebrate her
89th birthday on June 27. Cards may
be sent to her at Arbors Nursing
Home, 170 Pinecrest Drive, Gall'ipolis, 456.31.

•••

Magdalene 'Buys' Randolph has

ENO - Eno Grange #2080 meeting, 7:30p.m. Potluck dinner to fol low.
CENTENARY- Centenary Unit ed Christian Church services. 7
p.m. Sharon Elbin singing and
Matthew Smith preaching.

•••

•••
Wednesday, June 23

***

***

Webster (DW) and Ethel
HENDERSON, W.VA. -Western · DeWhitt will celebrate their 57th
square dancing .. 7:30 - I 0 p.m., .
wedding anniversary on June 21.
Henderson Recreation Building .
Cards may be se nt to them at 292
Church Street. Bidwell. 45614 .
POMEROY - Narcotics Anonymous Living In The Solution
Esther Pierotti will celebrate her
Group, Sacred Heart Catholic
85th birthday on June 30. Cards may
Church, 7 p.m.
be sent to her at 430 First Avenue,
Gallipolis, 45631.
VINTON -Vinton Baptist
Mary Ellen Brumll~ld will celeChurch's Pastor Marvin Sallee
teaching seri.es on "Nehemiah's
brate her 98th birthday on June 21.
Cards may be sent to her .at 13315
Project", each Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Hannan Trace Road, Crown City,
Nursery provided .
45623.
I

.

•••

•••

•••

•••

•••

•••

Thursday, June 24

•••

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.Lifeline Apostolic Church, all day
servtce, beginning with Sunday ·
School at 10 a.m., {olowed by
potluck.dinner. Special services
begin at I p.m., No evening service.

••• •

•••

•••

.CHESHIRE - TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) meeting, at
.Cheshire United Methodist Church '
.10- I I a.m. Call Ann Mitchell at
· 388 • 8004 for information.

•••

GALLIPOLIS ·John Gee Black
Historical Center open for public
tours, 10 a.m.· 2 p,. m..

..,~ompamment.

'&lt;1he. dish

•••

Vacation Bible School at Gallipolis Church of Christ in Christian
Unioit, June 21 - 25, 6:30- 8:30 p.in.
Ages 2 - adults. Theme ' Son Castle
r-airc.'

- ... ,,

Call Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
Today About Their Respite Program
When a loved one at home needsfUll-time care, and you
both need a break..• then . Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center Respite Program is ·for you. Have you ever
wished you could take ·a well-deserved vacation, or.
schedule a trip to visit fa:mily or friends? If so, then the
Respite Program at Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
is. the answer.
'

.'

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Centt!r Respite Program includes:

~~~~

COMPLETE CATERING SERVICE
OFFEIUNG

IIBDDI.GS
DIJOOIRS
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....~~·~
· ~·;, ~;..!;..::;:~:;c;~·. .

CHINA/TABLE LINENS
FORMAL SERVICE
DELIVERY SERVICE

.· c
446-9319

•

dren , Jack (Vera) Small of Logaw
Maralene (Myron) Watson of Betty Lemley of Gallipolis will be
Rey snoldburg ; Eugene (Evelyn) observed·Saturday June 26. 1999. at
Small; Geraldine (Jimmie) Sheets; 6 p.m. at the Poplar Ridge Free Will
Charles (Ellen) Small; Sharon (Bill)
Barnes; Cl!rol Bailey all of Crown
City; Shelba (Bob) Lanning; Becky .
(Dwight) Lloyd both of Gallipolis;
Cathy (Tom) Pope of Patriot.
· They have twenty-three grandchildren, thirty great grandchildren ,
and one great great grandchild.

. Pour oil ~round top and sides
of p~eheated wok; _heat for about
1 mmutes at medtUm ' htgh. Add
mannated pork (uodramed) to
wok; stir-fry for 3 minutes ._ Add
carrots and red pepper; sltr·fry
for 2 mmutes. Add . yellow
squash, zucchini and green
onions;. stir-fry for 3 minutes.
Add Chmese pea pods and broc·

coli and continue stir· frying for 2 ·
minutes..
,
Comb1ne beef bouillon, wiQe, ·
I tablespoon cornstarch, remain-.
ing 1/2 tablespoon soy sauce and
sugar; pour. over vegetables and
pork. Stir-fry over medium he·at
for 3 to 5 minutes until sauce is
thickened and bubbly.
Serve immediately over hot
·

takes about 10 minGtia 1o prepare and 20 minutes to ·
eook.
.
.
.• . Vegetable Pork Stir·Fry
~ : ~ pound lea"n boneless center~
QIJ( pork loin
·
~:; ~ tt;aSp000S vegetable Oil
-~~..•. z 112 tablespoons soy .sauce
~·l dove garlic, minced
tablespoon grated fresh gin~,. JOOt
~ ~ teaspoons wine vinegar
or•l teaspoon cornstarch
~:· J/4 teaspoon pepper .
~ carrots, peeled and cut diag·
onally .into 1/2-in.ch pieces
, .J sweet red or green pepper,
~I' into 1/4-inch strips
·
2 small yellow squash, sliced
t•~ small zucchini, cut into juli·
~ne strips
: 112 cup slice\! green onions
6· ounces fresh or· thawed
O[en Chinese pea jlods
~ 2 cups broccoli nowerets
: 2/3 cup beef bouillon
• 1/3 cup dry ~hite wine
,' I tablespoon cornstarch
: .112 teaspoon sugar
• Hot cooked rice (optional)
: Freeze pork for 30 to 45 min~es for ease in slicing; cut across
g,rtrin into 1/4-inch strips.
~ Combine 2 tablespoons soy
S41UCe, garlic, ginger, vinegar, I
ttaspoon cornstarch and pepper;
mix well and pour over pork.
·LQW FAT PORK .DISH • This quick dish featuring vegetables and
dover and. marinate in refrigera- pork can be ready In 30 minutes, after pork marinates overnight.
tbr 4 hours or overnight.

.

POMEROY.
E)h""E""N""D"'Ic=-A:-::R=-=E··
Fo,lllly

join in the ce lebratiOn.
No gifts are requested, but cards
will be appreciated.
·

- Blood Drive -

cooked rice,' if desired.
Nutritional facts pers~rving:
247 cal., 3lg pro., 17 g carbo., 6
g total fat (J .g saturated fat) 66
mg chol., 903 mg sodium.
'
--- ·
Recipe from: Smithfield Lean
Generation Pork.

r.::=c==-::====----.

Pleasant Valley Wei/ness Center .
Tuesday, June 29, 7999
- Noon to 6 p.m.

+ FREE T-Shirts To All• Donors
+ Door Prizes

FREE SEMINAR
10 AVOID CARPEL

TUNNEL SURGERY

Are you e111peric~ina: numbness In your hands?
Pain in your wristll? Pins&amp;: needles or

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Call to reserve your space for a Wednesday
evening seminar at S:OO

992•2168

Meigs County Chiropractic
'36 General Hartlnger.Parkway
·
Middle rt, Ohio

Sponsored By:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Auxiliary
&amp;

American Red Cross

t

•:
!

333 Page Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760

'

. Kipling Shoe Co's
Fa,ther's Day Rockporf Sale

•

•
'

•

20'/a OFF

"The Overbrook Difference"

•

.Overbrook Cente~ was recommended to our family by my Unde's physician, who
' recommended Overbrook due to Uncle John's need for rehabilitation services.

Our Entire Stock
Thursday, June 17th
thru
Sunday, June 20th .

We.have been very happy with the services that Uncle John has received at
. Overbrook.Center and we have been relieved that Overbrook was there to provide his
care for the past two years, as taking care of Uncle John at home was just not
.practical. We ret:Ommend Overbrook!

'

KIPLING SHOE co.

-: . . . . REHABILITATION CENTER

.36759 ROCK SPRING'SRD.
740·992-6606

CALL PAM FOR YOUR CUSTOM MENu

. They are the parents of two sons
Carl .(Sherry) of Bidwell and Larry
(Carol) ofGaliipolis. They have four
grandchildren Carl, Jeremy and
Tammie of. Bidweii and Kevin of
Columbus.
·
They moved to Bidwell in 1946.
Cards may be sent to them at their
residence at 292 Church Streel, Bidwell.
·
·

&lt;:ROWN CITY- Leslie and Mil·
dred Small of Crown City, will celebrate their 70th wedding annivers~ry
on Sunday, June 27, wtth a receptton
at the French Art Colony, 530 First
Avenue, Galltpohs. The grac1ous
custom of open house will. be
observed fro~ 2 - 4 p.m:The couple
requests no gtfts:
The couple united in marriage on
June 29, 1929, by Rev. Earl Cremeans.
They are the parents of ten chi!·

:,:1

•••

Walnut Ridge Church in Lectn
will hold Vacation Bible. School,
June 21 - 25,6:30 - 845 p..m. Theme
'Fully Rely On God.' For information or transportati On call 379- 2723
or 379 - 2978.

Give yourself, your family and your loved one a break... call Karen
Johnson at ~ocksprings Rehabilitation Center today at 740-992-6606.

K &amp; L CATERING

•••

EWINGTON • Vinton American
Legion Au&lt;iliary Unit 161, 20 year
membership and installation of officers. Potluck dinner at noon, meeting at I p.m. ,

***

Vacation Bible School at Victory
Baptist Church in Crown City, June
21 - 25. 6:30 - ~:45 p.m. Classes for
ages3-18.
·

• Companionship

Monday, June 21
GALLIPOLIS - Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles In Re.covery
Gro~p. St. Peters Episcopal Church,
7:30p.m.

•••

Canaan Missionary Baptist
Church, State Route ·218, will hold
Vacation Bible School June 21 - 25,
6 - 8:30 p.in. nightly. Theme 'We .
Shine For Jesus.'.

•Furnished private or semi-private rooms
•Physicii.m directed 24-hou~ nursing care and supervision, ·including medication
administration and therapies
· • Special care for Alzheimer's and dementia patients
• Three delicious meals and snacks daily with therapeutic diets as needed
•Free in-home pre-admission nursing evaluation
•Recreational and social service programs

CROWN CITY - Rev. Junior
Birchfield p~eachirig at Dickey
Chapel Church, 7 p.m.

BIDWELL - Webster .and Ethel
J?eWitt will celebrate their 57th
wedding anniversary. They were
married Jun'e 21, 1942, in the home
of Rev. Smith at Fourth Avenue,
Gallipolis.
.;;:: Webster (DW) is the son of the
:t.!lte Daniel and Rose (Beck) DeWitt.
~the! 'is the daughter oftbe late Kerr
. !'iii~ Rose (Quickie) McClaskey.

Press
!!;:;~ servmg ~f Vegetable Pork
R"lr~ Fry contains on_ly about 6
srams of fat. The rectpe calls for
(&amp;}an pork a~d lots ~f vegetables,
~asoned wtth a spr.tghtly combt·
~~lion of soy sau~e, ~arltc and
Stl'ger, then . sttr-frted . Hot
~.ooked nee ts a compatible

been inovcd from Prov idence Hos-

pital in Washington. D.C. Cards may
be sent to her al Loricn Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center. 6334. Cedar
Lane, Room 182 - i\. Co lumbia,
Maryland, 2 1044.
'

·Qouple to note 57th anniversary

~The. Associated

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL

POINT PLEASANT,
W.VA.- Narcotics Anonymous
meeting Tri - County meeting, 611
Viand Street (use side entrance) ..
7:30p.m.

Mr; and Mrs. Webster DeWitt

~ow-Fat Cooking: Vege~able Pork Stir-Fry

Gallia Community Calendar
•••

Mr. and Mrs. Junior Lemley

Open house reception planned Couple to note anniversary
- A 50th an niver- Baptist Church and Fellow, hip Hall. :
for 70th wedding anniversary saryGALLIPOLIS
reception in honor of Junior and All family and friends are invited to·

. "

.~

c-...-adbtal •Page C3 •

THE

~HOE THAT MA---DE__,

Rt. 2 Bypass Pt. PIHsant, WY · WALKING A sPORT.
.
6·75 7170
These are the shoes that lead to the fitmss walking revolutionMoll-Sat
•
. •
the Rockport' ProWalke,. 7100's. Come in today and discover
Sun. 1-1

. bow to

more out of a walk than you ever

possible.

Rosalie Johnson
(Niece of John
Resident)
. Nelson, Overbrook
.

17 40-992-64721
"£xeelte11ee ;,. Reri4ellf C.re,
.

o,, Daitv c,,,;f,,,.,".

'•

�Page C4 • JJ• ~

u11!t--JJ

Sunday, June 20, 1999

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

I.I Nl

' •Sunday, June 20, 1999

,J.Jniversity of Rio Grande plans 'Kid's College' with variety of classes

•

.: : GA~LIPOLIS • Looking for
;somelhmg fun and educa1ional for
-jpur kids this summer?
:: Look M further !han the Kids
:Gollege at The Univershy of Rio
::Crande/Rio Grande Community
-':allege. Painting, computer applica•lions, foreign languages, Civil War
':t\istory, writing, math and science,
:;Md heal!hy living are all being
;~~ugh! at !he Kids College.
The class~ are laugh! by Rio •
·• 'Orande insttuclors, who know that
· .~ds' minds 'need'to be challenged all
~r.ear with many different activi!ies.
'Kids ' College classes are based on
subjecis kids learn about during the
;-school year, or 'they· simply seek to
enrich or to entertain by introducing
·students to new areas. Either way,
: area kids will keep on learning dur. ing !he summer, even if they don ' t
: r~alize il, whi le they are having fun .
· (\articipating. in interesting courses
:'?n the Rio Grande campus.
· ·' .. The classes are offered for area
i~udems ages 7.- 12 and will be held
; J~ June, July and August. Most are

.&gt;

·:one week sessions.

Golden an·niversary planned Couple to ·note anniversary
The Rev. and Mrs. Ernest r/hitehead

Golden anniversary to be noted
REEDSVILLE - Mr. and Mrs.
. Ernest E Whitehead of 65820 State
Route 124, Reedsville, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary
~und ay, June 27, at their residence.
An informal open house from 2·
to 4 p.m. will be hosted by the c.oujlle's three daughters ond spouses:
Jean Frydman· of Glen Ridge, N.J. ,
Jane and Wade Meyer of North Canton and Juli and Walt Hensch · of
Massillon. There are seven gr~nd­
childrcn , one deceased , and a stepgrandchi Id.

The former Maxine P1ckens and
her husband were married at her
family ·home by Evangelist Hubert
Showalter. They are members of the
Reed svi lle Church of Christ.
Mr. Whitehead is the owner of J.
Welherell &amp; Son Jewelers, Parkers'
burg, W.Va., and Mrs ..Whitehead is
a retired vocal muSic teacher from
the Eastern .Local School District.
Friends and fam il y are cordially
invited to join in tbe ,;elebrati on. It is
requeSied that gifts be omined, but
· cards would be appreciated. ·

Their son, Ron Smith and hi s
SYRACUSE' -;- tarry. and Sally
wife, Chris, and their family, and Ebersbac h of Syracuse, will observe
their daughter, Cathy Crow and her .their 35th wed\fing anniversary on
husban(l, Fred W. Crow III, and !heir . Sunday.
sons, invite other family members,
They 'were married on Jvnc 20,
fri ends and acquaintances to · join 1964in Sparta, N.C. ·
· ·
them in the celebralion . .

The Ebersbachs have two sons,
David of Hanover, Ind., and Chri s of
Wickliffe.
They wilfcclebrate their anniversary th1 s weekend at a get-together
on Lake Erie.

'

Couple to note silver anniversary
with song and praise service . ·
GALLIPOLIS. · Bob and Calhy
McCulty will celebrate their silver
wedding anniversary ·. on Sumlay;
June 27 . There will be a "Celebra. tion of Love" song . and praise
church service at White Oak Church
at 7 p.m.
,
The service will feature singi'ng
by the ·gospel gro11p Released. An

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open reception will follow honoring
the 25th anniversary.
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· The couple was married in Point
Pleasant, W.Va. , qn .June 28, .1974. ·
They have two daughters,. Elizabeth
and Andrea. Bob is an electrician
thru . I.B .E.W. Local #317 in Huntington .. The couple resides. in Gallipolis.

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John Calvin hailed as first truly modern theologian
By RICHARD N. OSTLING
AP Religion Writer
Before we all get impossibly fed
up with all !he anicles wrapping up
the last ·thousand years; here 's a
glimpse of one ~u ch item contending
that John Calvin, the 16th century
French Proteslant pioneer, should be
. recog nized as Christianity's first
truly modern thinker.
That claim comes !rom AliS!er
McGrath, an Ox(ord University theologian . and author of " A Life of
John Calvin," writing in the conservative i·nterfaith journal Fi.rst Things.
Though "Calvinism" is a somewhat
~npalatahle label nowadays , maybe
it 's time fonnother look.
Calvin ( 1509- 1564) attended the
University of Pari s, planning to
become a Catholi c priest. -But ·when
hi s fath er became. entangl ed in · a
finan cial scandaL Calvin switched to
law.
: There 's a b1t ofconfusion abour
what happened next, .but somehow
Calvin turned' strongly Prmcstant.
A.nd w.hen the rector of the university was forced 1o flee for his life after
suggesting that the Catholic Church
needed ·reform, both he and Calvin
ended up in Basel, Switzerland.
It was there thai Calvin produced
the original version of his "lnstitules
of the Christian ·Reljgion." No quick
read, Calvin's book · is theology as
written by a lawyer, but McG rath
says it's ''widely (egarded as the
most significant religious work of the
16th century:;' · .
, The year before the "Inslilutes"
·came out, Geneva had rebelled
against the Savoy monarchy, turning
'itself i.nto a democratic Swiss Prolestant city-state. &lt;;alvin, 27, landed in
Geneva when a war interrupted his
travels. He was asked to stay and
help consolidate !he new Protestant
fai th, ihus he never returned lo Basel.
; The ~ity council .expelled Calvin
two years later, but after three years
jn exile he was invited back to tpwn

'

(After

ful,.,.,..... of youfflnt.., . .
'

and remained, not always happily, older feudalism and the radical comR«tukwl • 1·)'811' Pl ........ c:cwiiailb&amp;&amp;IIIL
munism among some fellow ·Protesuntil his death.
Choose 11om hundreds of
optiolla, lncttHina Spotts,
Movies, Musle and lntemallonal .............,.....
Say "Calvin" and some peqple tants.
...tic PrllsMilnal I d • ......,
'
!hink immediately of predestination,
Many analysiS have written about
. Calvin's concept of God's mysterious the Calvinist ".work elhic" and thai, .
.Johnson Variety Store .
decrees of salvalion and damnation. too, was part of Calvin's !hough!.
·:::
, 21 o East Main St.
·
But McGrath emphasizes ,that Calvin Medieval . Catholicism · treated
~ORK .
Pomeroy,
OH
45769
foslered the development of modern monaSiic and elcrgy careers as supedemocracy, · market economics and rior ,to secular to) I, says ~cGrath , so
740·992·1.182 304-773-5305 M"" CbannolL.M.,. Ch&lt;lk&lt;l."
Christian involvement in so.;ial ordinary workers were considered
second -class Chri stians. Like Luiher,
reform .
On the economic front , McGrath Calvin believed all vocalions were
says Calvin understo&lt;1d the emerging equally holy. .
market forces, whereas hi s Protestant
For Calvin, "to do anything for ·
.
.
contemporary Martin Luther assai.led God, and to do it well, was the fun·
Fl1llNJTtJIIE44 DESIGN
those who were engaged in com- damental hallmark of authentic
·BRANDHAMli'URtfiTUIIElr.a.ecouNTPRtcEr
•
merce. Most Catholics of the tim-e Christian faith," McGrath writes . . l:l:~i:ill:=.!::a.=:.--....J!!Z!!~:lll
•
were also mired in a feudal, agricul- "Diligence and dedicalion in one's
•
everyday
life
arc,
Cal~in
thought,
a
tural mindset.
The hcst example was the debate proper response to God."
.
.over the Old Testament law- against
A natural outgrowlh of all thai
charging Interest on loans (Exodus was Christians' involvement in
22:25, Leviticus 25:36-37. Demeron- improving soc iety, another example
omy 23: 19-20). As late as 1745 the of Calvin 's rebellion against the
: Surrounding me ·
papacy was still proclaiming the b~n ·medieval and monastic mindset. That
· on interest as.doctrine.
aspect of Calvin 's thou ght strongl y
Witli a sturdy fence
But a centu(y before, Calvin had inlluen&lt;:cd America's founders.
Of your lol!e and affection,
dec1ded the biblical ban applied to .
Those today who scorn the relit:fnd twining my pat/is
primiti ve farmin g societies, not tolhe . gious right or liberal social-action
as a :Jioneysucfi.Le vine;
emergi ng market economies. He said preachers might·be tempted to regret
. 'I'fien stepping all ov~r my soul
in.terest is nothing rnore .!han rem, this aspect or Calvinist influence. If
With an elepfiant fi!ot
.
paid on money rather than property. so, they ' should remember those
And he figured the ethi cal ai\ns of the pesky religious agitators who helped
Of your dictating autfiority,
biblical ban
interest, for instance · bring about lhe abolition of human
. 'Distorting tfie colors of my dreams ;
concern for the poor, could be met by . slavery and the institUiion of
·
·
'Dear daJ,
·
other means.
women 's righl to· vote, child labor
:JVeverinore:. you can bind mr wings;
Calvin also defended the right ·of laws, social sec urity and civil rights.
Just see, fiow liigfi. .I wil fly . .
privale property, opposing bolh !he
'

JWCifll'l.,..

111Sll.

F.rA fK

9oodbye 'Dear 'Dad

.The Beginning Computer Capers
class, held July 19-23, will help studen!&amp; become proficient with !he
basic compmer programs.
class will also teach students
more about how compu!ers are
designed and different ways the studen!S cna use the programs. Intermediate Compuler Capers class will
build upon the skills learned in the
· basic computer capers class. Held
July 26-30, the intermediale level
class will teach students about more
· advanced programs and the Internet.
Students in the Advanced Computer Applicat!ons class will work
bmh individually and in small
groups while they learn aboul !he
more complex areas and applications of compulers. The sluden!S in
the Aug. 2-6 class wi ll devote their
, lime to specific projects and methods in order to further their knowledge.
If your child .wants to learn more
'about foreig n cultures and languages, Kids College offers a variety of cla.sses. Conversational Chinese will be taught June 21 - 25 by

The

POUND RIDGE, N.Y. (AP)- Caro l Manin' Cioppa, has a srriall ized she may have sacrificed a touch
Some people are recrealing their wooden Mouse !hal bears a brass Qf the authentic, but she sa id what
plaq ue reading 1760. What 's more, she. wanted primarily was "a .view of
yards to go back in time.
·
' It's called " period landscaping" she's a professional architec t and historical look."
also
using
hedges
and
flagShe's
likes
the
idea
&lt;if
old-looi&lt;i
ng
garand is enjoying a vogue. Books are
stones to enclose or outline an herb
'· devoted to it and classes are held in dens.
When she bought the house a few garden and other enclaves of orna' prestigious places like the New York
Botanit:al Garden. And you can find years ago, some landscape authen" mental plantings. She said whai she
ticity was already in place in · the · sought most w.as harmony.
help from landscape des igners.
''I'm trying to make the kind of
· Of course, it makes moSI sense if form of old maple trees, a stone
garden
that would have been fash·
wellhead
and
stone
fences.
you haVe an authentic old house 10
ioned
at
the time," she said.
The
gardening
needed
work.
She
g&lt;i wilh the garden or at least one
Among plants she's growing
thai was built to match a period, for · said she read books about the
restoration of Williamsburg, Va., which she linked to historical backexample, a Cape Cod house.
· That narrows the· field consider- and looked at houses the size and grounds are columbine, dianlhus,
ably. Here in my southern New York . scale of her own and lhQJJght, "Well, . clematis montana, purple echinacea,
digitalis, iris crislata, many lily varivillage we have, ·oul of a lola! of I can recreate something like that "
She started by planting boxwood eties, honeysuckle, narcissus, prim1,800 dwellings, aboUI 125 that go
,.back 10 the 181h and early 191h cen' hedges in fronl of 1he doorway. ulas and herbs like thyme, sage,
·
turies.
·
Among other things, boxwoods chives and lovage.·.
Anyone wanting good descrip·
I'm drall(n · 10 !his so'm ~w hat . enjoy a big · advanlage no&gt;l(adays:
· tions of colonial gardening can find
myself because of an 181h-century Deer don't eat them.
bam my family shares as a 'summer
They can suffer in Northern win- them in Ann Leighton's renowned
· I · hangout.
·
· ter$, so Ms. Cioppa bought !he book "Early American Gardens"
As landscapes go, ,our barnyard is hardier Korean boxwood. She real- (Houghton Mifflin, 1970).
l· bordered by a picmresque sheep pen
·· Let 111 copy your ·old family
'filnners built ages ago laboriously
· photos. Special 2-5x7'e tor
• piling stone upon · stpne. 'Thinking
$14.95. Reg. $19.95. SAVE
.o
back on tHe struggling men and oxen
S5.oci. We aleQ do peaport
·
·
slones into place,
photos, ldentmcatlon photoe
solhc....pe:rfect nostalgia.
. and on.e day arvlce on photo.
'-1.~:--"'m!a;::::iiniike a garden, our vision
. finishing. Watch Batltrlee
no mai)ltenance. ·
wl)lle you welt,
Exploring !he trerid, I talked to a
,couple of people about · their old
trees and planls and features like
, ..stonefences.
· • • In the real in of authentic old resi424 SECOND AVE., GALUPOUS
: ·dences , my neu-door neighbor,

For s!Udents interes!ed in
Dr. Jian R. Sun to teach students while Civil War II: Battles and Genexpanding
on !he classes they took
erals
Murfreesboro
to
Atlanta
will
Chinese phrases and give them sotne
during
the
school year, Kids' Colbe held July 12- 16. The courses will
in~iglu on the Chinese culture. Chinese music, videos and storybooks teach students about some of the lege is also offering courses on ..,-it•
will all be used in the class.
famous baules of the area and how in g. math and science.
Bridget Haffell will teach the
In the Spanish Fo\ Fun class. the fam ous generals planned their
children will learn basic Spanish . attacks . Students win draw maps of Enrich Your Writing class July 19vocabulary and phrases. They will some of the battles and usc molded 23 . Srudenls will develop descriQ·
also learn al&gt;oul d.ifferent aspects of plastic soldiers to stage different ti ve , narrative and expository writ·
ing skills in order to increase lhw
the Spanish culture in the class, parts of the war.
which will be held June 21-25 or
Students who want to learn more use of figurative language, story elf
June 28-July 2. Each day, instruclor about healthy li ving should lake !,he ments and sy ntax in the class.
Karen Hale Elliot will also translate Havi-ng Fun Living Healthy .class
In the: Experiements with Ma!he"
a shon Spanish story for tile stude~ts offered June 28-July 2. Taught by maries and Science class, students
in ·order lo leach them the differ- Rio Professor Don na Mitchell, will learn about astronomy, and use
ences in writing styles.
Ph.D ., the course will teach students the astonomy to learn about differenl
Held June 21-25, the Wales: about a variety of lifestyle topics areas of math and science in a fun
Counuy of the Red Dragon · class, including games on keeping · your and interesting way.
!aught by Hayden Jones, will leach hear! health y. ideas for making and
' Students
will
perforill
students about Wales and the Welsh eating heal thy snacks, and other experiemenis and enjoy finding ttie
culture using legends, music and ways for living heal thy and safel y.
answers to challenging questions.
folk tales. Jones is a native WelshThose children Interested in Charles E. Withee will teach the July
.
man.
·drama will want to cnn:ill in the 26-30 course. ·
Rio Grande history professor Expressive Drama course taught by
For more informati on on the Kids
Chris Pines, Ph.D., will teach two Sally Garrett . Held July 19-23, the College classes or to register. call
different classes on the Civil War class will encourage students to Rio Grande 's Adult and Continuing
over the summer. Civil War 1: Bat- experiment in different theatri cal Education program at 1-800- 282tl es and Generals - Bull Run to Get- ways of expression through music , 7201 extensi on 7325.
lysburg will be held JUJie 28-Juty 2, drama, skits and interpretive dance .

She lists many of the plants
favored at 1he time and says, :'The
settlers' gardens · probably looked
very like English cottage. gardens of
today.... It was both convenient and

.

'

necessary to grow as many things a.&lt; fancy roam and .ovedook such' dispossible a.ll together at (he same · tractions as a big oil truck pumping
time. "
·
fuel into an old house.
Of course, if you,wantto bask in
old vistas· you've got to lei your •

Rela for Life

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

Gallipo is City Park

7

June 2S - Noon June 26

Join us at this _y,ar'c
· .RELAY FOR LrFEI
We cing, we dance, we laugh, ·
we go home HAPPY! · · .·.
,,

~· · "Rei•( is a community event to fight cancer.

·~· Monies raised help our local community.

-lb

AU cancer survivornri inviiedl You can help open the event by leading
1
~. the first lap and enjoV a special reception just for you!

• • Lumin1ry service at 9:30 pm. Luminaries .are lit to honor and rem,ember
1
·
. friends and loved ones. Luminaries .are .$5.00 each. Contact l&lt;im Painter
\at 24.5-5993 for more information.

Come join uslff For more information call the Ametican
. .
Cancer
. at 1-888-ACS·OHI.O .
.

'

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..
'.

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,,
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.'
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I

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on

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'

Witfi tfie senseless bonds
Of tlie sacred tfireads, you .tied .
around. my_ sfioulders,
Well, I sfiall fiang a mirror;
.. and, appreciate
'I'fie refl~ctions of my .own self

'

·

Holzer Sycamore Clinic
.

'

r:r'fia.n begin a bucli.wfieat,
'Rotting in'tfie storage bin
Of )'Ou·r suffocating possession,
. I sfiall ..9row qs a gT:ee.n sfirub
Somew.fiere in a faraway .Land,
.On tfie richness of a riverbanli.;
t:fnd, ·meaningfully flower. ·

Buy 1 month membership to the
HOLZER HEALTH CENTER

cifl:J{alesfi 'Patel

· and get the·next month FREE/I

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:J{appy.CFatfier' s ·. 'Day
Halash Patal; MD, FACP

For more

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lnfornilltlon·call

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The Ohio Valley's Homecare Oxygen Specialist
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4th I Sycamore Street
Oalllpollst Ohio

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Wfiile my soul is swelling
In tfie crisp river breeze
· Of sweet fre~dom. and love, ·
. 'Dear dad, I sfiall still Love you ;
'But, fo'r now and forever, goodbye.

SUMMER SAVINGS/I

...

Students who like art will be
inlerested in the painting, sculpture
and paper art classes. The painting
class, which will be held either July
12-16 or Aug. 9-13 and taughl by
Sally Garreu, will introduce stude nts
to various· painting techniques, inlcuding oil, fresca and egg tempera,
The s!udent will focus on paintings
in acrylic or tempera paint and will
work with colors, composition and
content.
The Sculpture class, !aught by
Amber Haines, will introduce
siudnets 'to the materials and . lechniques of sculplure. Held July 6·9 or
July 26-30, the sessions will include
a tour of ti)e Rio Grande Sculpture
Park.
The Paper Art class, presented
Aug. 2-6 and taught by Amy Wilson,
will teach students the versalili ty of
paper as an arl/crafl medium
!hrough papermaking, ,paper mache,
co llage . and co nstruction, A~ea
youngsters who wa~t to learn more
about computers have lhree chisses,
taught by Carol Smith , available for
enrollment.

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Ebllrsbach

Mr. and Mrs. Oris Smith

RAC INE - Oris and Pat Smi th
will ce lebrate their 50th wedding ·
anniversary Saturday with an ope n
house celeb ration at the Racine Bap·
. tist Church· from 6-8 p.m.
.The couple was marri ed June 17,
1949, in Ashland, Ky.

Pomeroy • Mld~leport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

..

505· Mulberry
·Heights
.
'

.

Across from Holzer

'

.

......,llliiiiiiiii-.--.....c..n..n..lc....._.______..........,._ _.....,_ __._.._......__.

�Sunday, June 20, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

Sunday, June 20, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

John Kerr Powell's book gives. insight into schooling in Springfield Township
By :
James
Sands

·
John Kerr Powell grew up in
what hiter came to be known as Bidwell. His father Andrew Jackson
Powell built the home where John
Kerr Powell grew up, the date being
1860.
In his later years John Kerr Powell wrote hi s autobiography. It is
very interesti ng reading. A copy of it
is_l)cld by the Gallia County l'listoricaf Society.
.
In the early part of the book
Powell tell s about school days in hi s
Springfield Township com mu~it y.
"Our sc hool bui lding was hewn
log about 24 fee t hy 24 feet and 8
'feel higl~ . A large \llOOd stove in the
t·cn tcr of the ruorn provided heat.

The de sks were arranged along the .
three sides of !he budding. The large
pupi ls had the hack scats; we little
ones sat in fro nt wilh no place to 1ay

our books, but we learned to read,
spelf, and had ari thmetic and grammar.''
" t must telf you how we were
taught geography. We had maps on
the wall and once a week a man
would come and teach us the names
of State Capitals and rivers by
si ngi ng. One pupil would usc a
pointer while the others sang. It is
surpri sing how many I remember
today just by si nging them. We had
no. matches. If the tire went out in
the stove, some two of us were sent
to a neighbor' s to get a firebrand.
All school equipment was crude, but
we managed to get a fair education."
"We never remained at home OJl
account of the weather. We wore
cowhide boots, hQme made jeans and
flannel clothing, mittens and a cap
we could pulf over our ears. Everythi ng we wore was made at home.
We took pridcin spe lling and had a
test each week to find .the b!'SI
spe ller; then we would enter con'tcsts with other schoo ls. Sometimes
\\'C walked two or three miles in
evening to spe lling sc hool. We were
nlways ready f&lt;Jr play at recess and
noon inlcrmissions, plaYing "Base,"
"Two Old Cat." "S hoot the Buck. "
,No Day was too cold for us t.o play."

"At the close of the Civil' War, I boy."
had a chance to attend what was
Powell j~mped at the chanc~ as
known as Select School. The young he knew this might be hi s last
soldiers returqing from. war wanted chance to get an education. His
10 auend school. In the spring of room and board was furnished by
1
f 866 a good teacher taught a spring his Aunt and he Had only to pay the
term at Porter Academy for which tuition to Gallia Academy.
"As the Fall term had already
tuition was charged. A number of
soldier boys attended. lliat same started they got my clothes ready
year in the fall a similar school was and Fattier took me to school the fol taught at Westerman Church. Father lowing Monday morning. I was two
let me auend both. The next year I weeks behind on .my classes. Before
attended a similar school at· Wester- reachi11g Gallipolis, fa\her said there
man and that winter 'I attended our were two· things he wanted m~ to
district school. I was only I3 years promise him, never enter a saloon
old and was onl y a fair student. The and never enter a disorderly house. I
teachers at that time were only fair · promised and am glad today I have ,
teachers."
kept that promise sacred."
"I had completed the common
"Our professor was a man 60
schoo l course of study. I was needed years old and one of the finest men I
on the farm and considered my edu- ever met. The pupils were 60%
cati on finished . For the three years I country boys and girts . While homewas at home , Elmer (a brother) was sick at first , I soon made friends and
in Illinois; Oassius (another brother) \ound I could keep up with my classwent to Kansas; fat her was County es."
Commissioner. In 1871 Uncle Milton Walker died in Gallipolis leaving
Aunt Maria and two girls, Min~ie
and Jennie .. Fatner came home from
Gallipolis and asked if l might stay
with Aunt Maria and attend school.
She had three young people boarding with her and needed an errand

.

Videos are now avai lab le from fast year's expo which will be.
POMEROY - The monthl y
for anyone interested in used for · promoting the annual
Weber
mee ting of the Bend Area Tow n .
&amp; Cou ntry Expo Conimittce was shdw in g ·them to th eir club or eve nt . The tape will be made
ava ilable for presentati_o ns to .
held May 2 f at the Grange annex organization, it was reported .
Organizers of the free -to -the - local organizations.
·
on the Ro~k Springs Fairgro und s.
Two clo gg in g groups have
Plans are being made for the public monsier · truck show are
Squire Parson s conce'n ·robe held s till seek ing spo nsors. Pe op le been confirmed for this year's
Saturday, Sept. 17 . Letters ha ve who want to sponsor the truck expo ·a nd the Squire Parsons conbeen mai led to area churc he s show ca n also contact Weber, ~It c.ert sched ul ed for Saturday has
also been confirmed along with
seeki ng contribut io ns sup portin g was not ed.
The n~xt Bend Area Town &amp; Eugene Underwood for Sunday
the free-to-t he-publi c concert.
The conce rt wi lt cos t the com- Country Expo planning me~ting church se rvices.
· Applications are no w being
mittee $1 ,500 and it was noted will be held Thursday, 7:30 p.m.
that the group would appreciate at the Grange anne x. Anyone may taken for food vendors and dis· play spaces. Con1racts are availcontributi ons from area churches attend.
Applications are . now ti~ing · able on a first-come, first-serve
.
and orga ni zati ons.
Anyone in te rcs tca in con- taken to display quilts during the-iipsis and all contracts need to be
tributing was, asekd to con tact · expo. For more information call leturned with pay ment to insure
space reservation. Food vendors
· Dallas Weber at (740) 742-3020 Bunny Kuhl at 992-7537.
Brenda Barne tt , TV 27, iS. should contact Jim Watson at
or mail him at .33299 Malloon s
· Run Road , Langsville OH 45741. making a five-mi nute video of (740) 985-4372.

--Meigs Community ·Calendar--The Com muni ty Calendar is
published as a free se rvice to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meetin gs and special events. The
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type.
Items are printed onl y as space permils and ca nn ot be gua-ranteed to
be printed a spec ifi c number of.

days.
MONDAY
RACIN E Racine Village
Counci l mee tin g Monday; 7 p.m. at
the mun ic ipal buildin g. ·

TUESDAY
RACIN E -

The Racine Area

POMEROY - The Meigs County Chapter of the American Cancer ·
Society (ACS) is busily planning its
signature event beginning at 7 p.m.
on Friday, July 23 and ending at
·noon on Saturday, !uly 24.
It will be the Relay for Life, a
team event lo fight cancer. The relay
is truly an overnight slumber pany
under the stars. It wiff take place at
the Meigs High School and promiscs to be our way to encourage teams
of people to experience the great
outdoors at an overnight event
which will raise funds to be used for
rcsean.:h to fig ht cancer in our ~om munity and win.
Teamsof.I0-15peoplcrcprcsenting various businesses, civic groups.
. social organiwti ons, church groups ,
families and friends will take turns
"relaying" around the track throughout the entire cvcm.
One member of each team is
expected to he on the track at all
times. Eac)l team memhcr is asked
to raise a minimum of $100. T-s hirts

I

..'
•

Marshall University Mid-Ohio Valley Center

Building For.Your Future/
Graduate Couneo
Session 0.
Cl 561
EDF621'
EDF619

Return to Industry
Research and Writing
Ed. Psychology

June 14th-18th
June 14th-18th
· June 21st-25th

By SUSAN SKILES LUKE

Reed

The American Academy of Child
. Associated Press. Writer
and Adolescent Psychiatry has seen
i INDIANAPOLIS (AP) ~ Rox - calls to its referraf service- more than
ane Harcourt has seen· firsthand a double over the first five montlis of
~werful effect of the Columbine
1999 from the same period a year
. school shooting : a bump in the num - ago.
ber of requests for psychiatric help.
Magellan Behavioral Health,
: "We had to open up f 2 more which refers 64 million aduhs and
beds in the last six weeks for adoles- children -to mental-health programs
cents and children;" said Harcourt. nationwide, said its c~11s in May
chief operating officer of Charter jumped 25 percent over the same
Indianapolis Health Care System.
month the previous year.
1 The hospital has seen a 30 per" II appears that people all across
cent increase in patients u'nder 17 in the country are so sh ~ken by this
·the past six weeks, Harcourt .said. incident that they' re nqt taking any
And Charier Indianapolis isn't chances," sa id Erin . Somers, a
alone.
spokeswoman for Magellan, which
.Mental health clinics and !hera- is based in Columbia, Md.
pists across the country -say ihey've
The massacre in Liltf eton , in
seen a surge of younger patientS which tWO students ki11ed 12 classsince the April 20 shootings as con- mates, ateacher and themselves, fol.cerned parents and educators see k lowed other fatal school -re lated
help for kids whom they -suspect of shootings in recent years in Pearl,
emotional problems.
Mi ss., West Paducah, Ky., Jones-

Iddings
•Iddings

Summer 1999
7th ·

..

YOU MUST PRE·REGISTER FOR EACH CLASSIII ·

·

bor?, Ark., Edinboro , pl_ and
Sprmgfie ld, Ore.
·
' "People and sc hools have
become more aware that mental ill-'
ness is out there," said Mary, whose
12-year-old sun. thre~le ned another
student and was d1agnosed wuh
manic depression shorlly before the
Littleton shooting" The Secretary
from Alexandria, Va., asked that her
fu11 name not be used.
Her son, Danny, told a fe11ow
sixth-grader at . hi s school fast
December that he planned to "get a
gun and kilt her." That got Danny
suspended for five days. AI the t1me,
even though he was being treated for
depression, no one knew h'e suffered
from bipolar disorder, a disease that
produces extreme nlOOd SWtngs.
. " Now since Littleton, lhe school
ts more aware ~~at ~tds suffer__rro~
mental 11lness, s.atd Mary. It It
happened now, they would have

New Mexico wants an answer to its new officifil state question
POMEROY - Meigs . Local
Board of Education regular meet ~
ing Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. in the
Meigs High School Library.

SANTA FE, N .M. (AP) - Forget the state tree, the. stale bird or
even the state motto. '11ie official
state question , as of today, is "Red
or Green?"
The ·query docs. not refer to the
status of a traffic light. h 's the kind
of chili restaurant customers desire
on their New Mexico cuisine.
. " It's ali part of touri sm, It 's all .
part of the alfure of coming to New
Mexico. We think we ha ve the best
chili in the world," Richard Buratti,
executive vice pres ident of the New

Bicentenni al
RUTLAND committee 'meeting, Civic. Center,
7:30 p.m. All interested residents
invited.

Rate·Plans

15
$ 20

$

CHESTER - Windin g Trait
Garden Club meeting Tuesday,
7:30 p.m. at the ho.me of Debbie
Mohler.

Holzer Health Hotline

$

"Best Buddies= Su~me_r Fun!"

hTI~l'!i

Mexico Restaurant Association,
said.
. .. •
,
Buralti says chili is part . of at
least 25 percent of ..,lhe meals prepared at New Mexico restaurants.
It 's found on everything from
heuvos ranchero at breakfast and
burritos at dinner, but with two
kinds of chili, waitresses need ro
know which should be used.
Chili peppers are grown in New
Mexico and are one of its major
crops, valued at $58 milli on fast
year. It is also one of two offi cial

st~te vegetables, the other bei ng the

demanded Danny get a psychologi cal evaluatiOn before commg back
to sc hool. " .
And Danny would have been
helped soo ner, she believes. . .
. Henry Gaul!, a ch1ld psychwmst
m the Ch1 cago suburb. ot . Northbrook, Ill., said he has recetved 15
referrals from schools to evaluate
siudents over the past seven weeks,
compared to the one or tw o he norma11 y receiVes m the wamn g weeks
of the school year.
"I've been·doing thi s for 2_? years
and I've never had th1s many, Gault
sa1d. .
.
. .
Davtd fassfer, a child psychmtnst
in Burlington, Vt., noted that despi_tc
heightened concerns. more ne_eds !O
be done to treat mentally Ill chlld,ren.
.
"Only une clul~- In fo ~r receives
the help they need , he smd.

LIE I.ET1B ,..~, 1:15. no, 5:25. 7:30, m

· (Comedy) Kal! ~. Elen OeGe.te~, Til'~

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pinto ~ean .
·
.
·
In another designation goi ng into
effect, the state will now officia1ly
be known· as "The Land of
Enchantment." In the 1930s, New
Mexi,o's unofficial nickname was.'
the "Sun shine State." However,
Florida adopted it.
The New Mex ico tourism indu stry has used "The Land of Enchantmcnt" mon iker for years, bul
pulling it into law should di ssuade
other states from stealing it.

MITTNIIti ,..~~ 1:15, 4.._, 7:311,10:10

STAR MRS ,..,~ 1:al, ~. 7:15, 1D:I6
ISci-fil 1M Neml, Ew&lt;r~ltcGtegcx, Nalaie P&lt;rtrs1
Ill " I I Sbiiin Bt&gt;II""'"-Y
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•BACK &amp; NECK PAIN
•SHOULDEit &amp; INEE PROBLEMS
•CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDR.OME

Prepaid Cellular

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1:15, 4.-., 7:00, 8:45

(Camldy) .Ilia Rcllerl!, Hid' GIM!

JICIIIII

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125'45

70 a!llular minutes
120 digital minutes

·DREW R. WILLIAMS

!'Oil

(loliaVIIMntln) Bl!!illn Frase-,lia:llel Wlisl, .kl&lt; 1\11r.,

IHII..IC..U.I
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25

nity support. Everyone is personaffy For more information. plea'e phone
affecuid by cancer sooner or later. the co-coordinators of the relay,
Today, slightly more than half of Maxine or Karen Griflith at · 99~
.
cancer patients survive ..The survival 5782.
Come join us and get together
rate ca n be increased through more
research and greater community with family and friend s 10 talk,
awareness of health iss ues. Relay for walk, reminisce and enjoy the outLife reminds us that progress against doors. There' ll he games, prizci~ 4
cancer h'as bec.n mad~ and that music and activ iti~ s. both for c hi!~~
everyone who participates is ll)aking dren and adults, to make you r
overnight outing one of the most •
a difference .
One of the best ways to suppon unforgettable events you lw ve ever
cancer survivors and remember a experienced.
loved one is by purchasing a lumi nary cand le. h 's a vntivc cand le.
nestled in a sandhag around the
track; they will be sold at Peoples
Bank, in Pomeroy, for $5 until July
23. On that date. hundreds of lumi narics .will light up the dark sky in a
IJoot'l opn At lZ:JQ PM .
special ceremony 31 dusk during the
Relay.
Alll1lll POIIIII: 1:11, 1:311, 1:10, 3:40,
The donation en.ables you to ded "'
., ,..~ 5:21, 5:50, 7:15, 8:00,
icate the glowi ng 1ribute tn your .
Will
. . . . Ill
8:511, 10:1D
iov~d ones. Each bag is personalized
ICollldt)
Mb
~. Healhe! Gllilam,
for your loved one. If ypu su desire ,
~!eben Wwp.r,Eilabelh HUI'ey and Rclllowe
bring a photograph 10 the bank 10 be
1IRZAN ~ 1:1KJ, too,
425,
copied and added lo the luminary.
7:111,
7:31,
8:10,
8:45
·n,e luminaries have been so bcautiiftllifNinledJ
Slori&gt;l
11ems
~
r"'
!
~
~m
fuffy decorated by Joan Wolfe that
her idea is now spreading and being . t.M.;Ibi! Ollml, Gllm ~ l'lajflll!¢ ~ D liu, '
,., IWn, b llleslall Lm llniilel1
.
cop ied by other Relay s throu g~ou t
the state.
ratiWCT Ill 1:11, 1:45, 7:tl, 8:45
~lmlljflljil, CU.r.:.hJi,llnll S!lmi

Psychotherapists report surge in patients after school shootings .

Session D:
Cl653
Reading Literacy
July 19th-23rd
Turner
Cl 637"
Reading Diagnostics
July 26th-30th
Turner
SESSION C'
'requirement of the Reading and Counseling'Programs
June
July 8th
" Prerequisite of Cl 636 or Cl644
.
Grad
classes
wiff
be
for
only
one
week.
All
grad classes wiff be in room 102 of the
SESSION D
Vocational Center,
·
July 13th • August 12th ·
UndergrruJUQJe Courses
Session
C:
Ali undergraduate classes will
CRN
,Coursc/11
Room
Monday thru Thursday Evenings 281
HST 101
4:00-6:20 VC102
ISO
COM095
6:30-8:50 vc 102.
227
ENG 101
4:00-6:20 . VC.l22
HST208
6:30-8:50
' YCI22
130~1· 67~-~~ ft,•l284
11
1 I~ - SessionD:
387
CMM 103
602
4:00-6:20 VC 102
FAX (304) _,75-3727
ENG
.102
604
6:30-8:50
VC 122
185
Emaii:MOVC@zoomnet.net

POMEROY
Catholic
Club meeting Tuesday
wit h mass at 6 p.m. with covered
dish-picnic at the social hall to follow.

and goody bags are given to all team
members and incentive prize&lt; wiff
be offered for those raising more
money.
Teams need spirit, good walki-ng
shoes and the desire to stamp out
cancer. Wc' ff celebrate cancer survivors of all ages as they lead everyone in an inspirational first lap. We
wiff · be singing, laughing, talking
and eati ng under the stars.
We encourage all tea ms to bring a
camper, pup tent, lawn chair, sleeping gear, food and drinks but
refreshments will be available for a
donation. In addition. a reception for
cancer survivors will be held on the
schoo l ground s, in ·a tent , and free
refreshments will be provided .
The relay is happening in commuoities all over America, so join ill
the fun. the fitne ss ·and the fight
~~gni n s 1 cancer. Cancer never sleeps;
people with cancer arc aware of it s'
sy mptoms throughout the day and
ni ght . so .we won't slu!nbcr for a
night 10 show our spirit
and. commu,

LUMINARY CANDLE~ - Joan Wolfe of Peoples Bank, Pomeroy,
Is shOWJ'I _here decoratmg luminary candles purchased to raise
money for tf!e Meigs County Chapter of the American Cancer Society. The luminaries, sold for $5 at the bank, will be used during a
special dusk ceremony on July 23.

s.um.er~

Wom~n's

MIDDL EPORT - . Vacati on
Bible Sc hoo l, Middleport First
Bapt ist Chu rch, through Friday. 6
to 8:30 p.m. "Good Ncws@gns pclroc k.' ' .992-2755 for inform ation. ·

Re.fay for Life planned for July 23-24

This house In Bidwell was built In 1860 by Andr- Jackson Pow·•
ell. His 1on John Kerr Powell grew up here. John Kerr later became ,
one of the founders of the village of Bidwell.
·
The teacher at the academy then life.
While a student at Galli a Acade-,
was Prof. Cooley. He also taught the
yo ung men's -~unday School class at my, PoweU fell in love with Eugenia:
the Presbyterian Church. That class Langley. She later became his wife. :
was a big influence o n Powell's later

Expo '99 committee plans for Squire Parsons concert

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Farm/Business

Entertainment
Rivera declares drug wa.r lost; his own personal battles -rage on

June20,19K

By DAVID BAUDER
AP Televlal.on Wrner
NEW YORK (AP) - It's not
hard to find NBC's $5 million man,
Geraldo Rivera, on television. ,You
just have to know where to look.
· Try the "Today" show, where
Rivera's action-packed reports on
the Kosovo Liberation Army first
aired this month . Don't try the
"NBC Nrghtly News," where a
Rivera report has never been shown.
Try prime time this Sunday, when
Rivera's documentary, '' Drug Bust,
The Longest W~r. " airs at 8 p.m. But
don 't try. " Dateline NBC," where
Rivera believes he 's not welcome.
Better yet, try cable, where
MSNBC repeatedly r•n the Kosovo
reports.
A year and a half into his lucrative new contract with NBC, the f9r-

mer syndicated talk-show host still
doesn't feel completely accepted at
the Peacock Network. He may gel
more camera time than anyone else
in the company, but he yearns for the
time he doesn't get. It's ·a strange
dynamic.
First, the drug special.
It's the third special report to.
emerge from Rive.ra's documentary
unit, and he reaches the pointed conclusion that the decades-long war on
drugs was in large part a waste of
money.
"We have lost the war on drugs,"
he said. "It's like Vietnam. At some
point we' ve g0 t to say we have lost
and no one has had the courage to do
that."
Rivera talks to a veteran drug
smuggler and a U.S. Customs
inspector about efforts to stem the

·Disney ani.m ators combine .
traditional and computer
techniques for 'Tarzan'
By MALCOLM RITTER
the gorilla mother Kala (voiced by
Associated Press wrner .
Glenn Close). In childhood, his
After seeing _the ballroom whirl in gorilla pals deride him as "the hair:·aeauty and the Beast" and 2,000 less wonder" and Kala's mate makes ·
1-iuns charge on horsebac.k in it-clear Tarzan is not really part of the
"Mulan, "·moviegoers have a right to family. ·
.
expect gem's of animation from Dis"Tarzan vows to become ''the best
ney 's artists.
·
ape ever,"· but in a fast-paced mon,
In "Tarzan," they won't be disap- tage "he develops in a most humanpointed.
like way, throwing spears, tying
Watch Tarza,n whiz through the · branches, and doing ihat branchjungle canopy, surfing along branch- surfing trick.
es. Watch him save Jane from a pack
Once he's a young man (with the
of baboons, and fight a leopard to the voice of Tony Goldwyn) he meets
death. Hold orito your popcorn.
Jane (voiced by Minnie Driver). She
. . Disney's animators combined Ira- ··. arrives with her father and the
ditional and computer techniques to m~levolent guide Clayton !O study
create 'a deeply .atmospheric jungle. gqrillas.•Tarzan and Jane get mighty
You feel the humidity.
interested · in each other. But evil
It 's the setting for a story that 's intrudes as Clayton tries to capture
entertaining but not quite ~ memo- Tarzan's ape relatives to sell back in
rable as l;Ome of its scenes. An open- England.
ing sequence deftly shows how the
The movie" makes much of Tarzan
infant Tarzan comes to be adopted by having to .choose between being a

&lt;!I'""'
I ' " J(l

7

1
l

I
j

l

'"I

(FRI8/18-THURS 6124/89
lOX OFFIQ WILl OPEN AT 6:30 PM
lOR EVENING SHOWS,
t 2:30 PM 101 SAT &amp; SUN MAnNEES

· HOniNG HILL (PG13)

JU.LIA ROBERTS I HUGH GRANT ·

STAR WARS EPISODE 1PHANTOM MENACE (PG)

By Disney's count, thi~ is the 48th
movie adaptation of the Tarzan story
but the first full-length animated feaiure. It's a treat .to look at."Tarzan/' rated G, includes songs
: by Phil · Collins. It's produced · by
Bonnie Arnold ("Toy Story") and
directed by Kevin Lima and Chris
Buck.

THE LOVE LEnER (R)
7' 10 &amp; t:10 DAILY.

MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:10 &amp; 3:10

Tracking one of rock music's most tragic stories for A&amp;E ..Truth Exposed About Hiearing Aids!
NEW YORK (AP) -

A British

arid fun with his brothers and.cousin.

books. Neville plays it straight, avoid-

Knows" from Wilson's head onto

Atlanta,

~'{;':~~i~~~i~~~.: =~~Y~': ~·i:,:J:~~~~if:'}~~ ~ :~~f ~~~~~:~~~:r~~e =~~.;~.;~~~ ~~~P~~~~a~i~:n":!~~':r
albuin "Pet Sounds," as "sad songs mental illness and substance abuse.
about loneline$ and h~he. Sad
In the 30 years since, :he has
oongs, even, about happiness."
watched both his brothers' die, been
Watching A&amp;E Network's two- sued by his cousin and struggled to
hour docUmentary on Wilson (premier- · regain at least his sanity, if not his ereing Sunday at 8 p.m. E1) is like listen- ative poweJS.
..
ing to some ofthose songs.
"Brian is high tragedy," said proIt's sad, often unbearably so. While ducerMo'B30Neville. ''That's why so .
iiluminating, even entertaining with all many people are drawn to the siory. I
of the music, the documentary is a tiled to temper it with the brilliance of
melancholy account of a life filled with the inusic. It's been the one thing in life
dishannoity..
that has given him solace."
Wilson's tale is one of rock 'n' roll's
The story'sattra~iveness was also a .
mosl familiar: the California boy with challenge for Neville, since it has been
the everbearing father who sang of sun told before in docum11ntaries and .

ion over another's.
staying in bed day after day.
lnasubtledistinction, hestartsfrOm
the beginning, instead of work\ng back .
from a picture of how Wilson changed.
"I wanted to tell the story in a way ·
that almost suspends the knowledge,"
AND.
he said. "Youcan see the changes ·hapBEEN KISSED
pen, but you don't have that sense of
~~~:.v~~~\?W~~~=:-,~o
dread. You understand how he got
there, you understand that Brian is not
some crazy nut, but that there are deepseated reasons for what happened."
· Before the fall, it feels like a race '
against time, a raee to get such Sollgs as
"Good Vibrations" and ,"God Only

GA. -FREE REPORT reveals alarming truths

about hearing aids and their aCtual capabilities. Many
have Spent thousands Of dollars on instruments that ·
do "little more than make annoying sounds louder To
·
.
·
..·
have your free copy ~ent to you today call and listen to
the free message .

.

C 11 T II F
8

(Free

0

. f88

1·888-6 5 693
"
1 -8

24 hour Recorded Message)

Monday - Friday
5:30p.m. to 10 p.m.
Saturd(l.y
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunday
Tp.m, to 7 p.m.
·'

tures. h.avc bee~ ideal. for blue mold. development · · GALLIPOLIS _
and 1t IS most hkely already present m the county. Ms. Lelia Browning
_.
Therefore, areas that were infected O)'er the past few and Mrs. . Kristie
weeks .and m~ntained low lcve!s of disease will be Kessel have successspreading rap1dly. Keep scouting your fields for fully completed and
signs of problems and REPORT any suspicious passed the examinacases to the OSU Extension office.
lion for a Certified
LF;APTRAINING: For th06C who missed Gal- Ohio Dental Assistant.
lia County's Livestock ·Environm'ental Assurance The test covered both
Program training in April, the JacksOn County didactic and clinical
Extension qffice is hostjng a meeting.on Monday; questions regarding
· June 21, 1999 beginning at 6:3!) PM at Lewis' Fam- the practice of general
ily Restaurant in JacksOn. ~rvations arc required dentistry:
to the Jackson County Extens1on office by NOON
Ms. Browning haS
on Monday (740-286-5044). The cost is $3 at the been employed by Dr.
!blr. Th06C who plan to apply for cost share through E. John Strauss, orthodontist, for over
the Soil and Water Conservation SeiVice or Natural eight year$. She resides near Rio
Resource Conservation SeiVice s~Quld ' plan to Grande.
·
·attend LEAP training.
Mrs. Kessel has been employed by
CALL OF TilE WEEK: Fruit Trees-were _the
call of the week. Some were genuine disease prob!ems, some insect damage, some pruning questions,
.
. _
.
.but mosUy drought symptoms. HOMEOWNERS:
GALLIPOLIS - On May 26, Gal.We receive numerous calls daily about a variety of
. lawn and garden topics in addition to questions (rom lipolis Career College hoSted a She!- our major agriculture program areas. Although ter-in-Place workshop.
The workshop was held In 'i&lt;'"-"
clientele seiVic:e is a priority, ansWers cannot always
junction
with Akzo Nobel Chemicals,
_ be provi&lt;!ed to everyone in the· amount of time
Inc.
desired by the inquirer.
...
.~
Akzo representatives J. Beverly
To assist us with providing answers to the public
Young,
CHMM, Manager Plant Enviis OSU's Ohioline. This web site olfeJS a wide range
of lawn and garden information that is well orga- ronmental SeiVices and William J.
Stricklen, Human Resources Managnized and user friendly.
er,
were leaders . for ' the workshop
The web site address is:
http:/IWWWJIIollhkHtate.edui..OOlollne

create~

Kyger Dental AssOciates, . Inc., for
three years. She resides in Gallipolis
with her" husband, Jeff, and two ·
daughters, Ashley .and Alyssa. ·
.

.

. .

which se!Ved over 35 GCC staff and
students.
Participants were given written
materials aild watched a video detail.ing the correct nieans of sheltering-inplace.
.
·
Details of the workshop were coordinated by David W. House, Director
of Computer Services at ('.CC ;md a
member .of the Gallia County Local
Emergency Planning Committee.

AWARD WINNERS
Foodland of Gt~lllpolla
.r8CIIntly took fl1'8t 'place In the Mitton Dlvlalon qf Supervalu, Inc.
The atore waa choaen over 81. other Foodlanda In Ohio, Weat·
VIrginia and Kentucky. Pictured from left 81'8; Ron wa,ner, Mike
Helb, Pill Gardnar; !&lt;aria Baker, Unda ·Arrowood, Sc:c:&gt;tt Womer,
Jeff. Hart and _BI'8nt Eaatman.
·

Bidwell farm
Area Angus breeders to exhibit
Champion Hill caHI_e at the 1_999 .Eastern . _ _
named premier .R!_pL~?o~~~-J~i~b~e~r ~m~c~~~ha~~~~onors:
angus breeder W1ll
E~~ns, Morgan Woodward a~d
Phil ":r.owbridgc, ~hc.nt, New
B"urlesoq, all of
· York, w1ll Judge diVISions for:

tile""'

Join Ul July 5IIJ flit
111nu1/ M1/n StrtBI RlpiBy FlrtCfiCklf 5·K RBCB. ·
Ben'"'' from thi flt:B ro to lund the downtown Rip/By rtv/lallntlon progrsm.

G~lhpolt s,

-ltOO
.

.

The Children's Clinic:
2801 jacQon Avenue

Point Pleasadt, WV 25550

.

.

.

July I • 5, 1999 Cedar
. Lakes Ripley, West Virginia
'

1111!11: Thur~dly, Jvly 1 - Sundly, JU1y4 10:oo 'anl -B:OO pm • Monday, July 5,10:00 am· s:Oo PIJl ., ·hlll11: FREE • •• ttll '"fnlllt•m.,t ssrYic• •n1 11111

FOR MORE INI OR/MIION ON THE MOUNTAIN SlAT£ ART &amp; fRMTI AIR . LODGING
CAMPGROUNOS OR CWAR lAKES (ONHRENfE ([NlfR U\ll I ROO U\11 WVA
OR VISIT OUR WEBSIT[ M WWW. msa cf .com

West
Virginia
\I
&lt;I'

I \ \

. ' "

•

PREMIER
BREEDER
.
~I exhibit Angus cattle at the •bred-and-owned heifers, bred-andChampion Hill, Bidwell, waa 19§9 Eastern . Regional Junior ·owned bulls; cow-calf pairs,.
honored I I premier brtlder at . Angus Show in Clemson, South owned heifers, and registered
the 1IMMI A~antlc National Super Carolina, June 18-20, reports -Angus steers.
·Roll of .victory (ROY) Angua Richard L. Spader, executive .vice
The Eastern Regional Junior
Show held May 30 In Tlmponl- president of the American Angus Angus Show is sponsored by !he
.um, Md. Plctuted from lift at the Association.
. American Angus Association anct
. awarda presentation -Ia Har-ry
Evans,
Woodward
and the South· Carolina Junior Angus
Bachman, · Atlantic National Burleson, junior members of the Association .
ahow manager; Jon Davia, Paul American Angus Association with
It is one of five junior Angus
Hill and Jim Baughman, all of headquarters in St. Joseph, Mis- · shows. sanctioned by the national:
Bidwell.
.
.
souri, are three "o f ~30 young organization each year for . more
(Photo COUrtHy Of the Amerf· Angus breeders from 20 states who ·. than 10,000 active junior AnguS. ·
·can AngUI Aaaoc/atlon}
have entered a total of 465 head io me111bers in the United St.tes. · .
•

\

•

,...,.,..,.·. ,~
- .......,...,,.,
·

Caree·r college ·hosts safety worksho·p

By Martt E. Smith
dividend paying stocks of emerging businesses or state income tax as well.
·
GALLIPOLIS- You're a
· companies in, the pmcess of reslructuring. Well-manMunicipal securities issued ~y the U.S. protecsf(lart investor. You takC maxiaged equitY filnds oWn many stocks, some of which torates of Puerto Rico, Guam and the Virgin Islands
mum advantage of the taxarc likely to become winners, and a1 some point the · pay interest that is exempt from taxation in all fifty
deferred retirement programs
fund wiD sell stocks which haVe appreciatecl in value. states. These exemptions. are granted to enoourage
the Federal · government
The fund then passes irs profits along to shareholders.. investments in these developing economies.
.
allows, But what about yo_ur
.who have to pay taxes on the distributiOn.
Be sure io understand the risk vs. reward equation
other investmeniS? If you're in
However, 'ellcll . fund's investment strategy has a- when pun:hasing bonds. In general, the higher the
a 36% tax bracket, you forfeit a
material elfect•on the amount of .taxable capital gains credit-quality of the issuer, the lower the rates availsignificant percentage of your
it pays. Some funds have a higher "portfolio able to bond holders. For example, a AAA-rated
unsheltered · investment
turnover," ~ing that the rnanageJS take an active municipal bond is likely to offer a significantly lower
income in federal taxes every
buy-and-sellliPJ:W'oach. Their objectiv~ is to sell sue- _yield to investors than a S.rated, or "below. investyear. And then state and local
cessful ~ks quickly and reinvest the pnx;eeds in ment grade" bond, but the latter is subject to more
income taxes take away even more.
.
others that may be futuie wimers. Individuals whO credit risk. You should do some homework before
Perhaps it's time to rethink your long-term strate- • are seeking tax savings should avoid these types of you invest or ask yoor investrneni advisor:for more
gy and make sure that you're keeping as much of your funds as they may experience sizable capital gairvt information.
investment income as you can. There are several thai arc reportable each year, regardless if you reinTax free municipal bOnd fuilds or unit investment
. ways accomplish this by becoming aware Of what vest those gains. ·
·
ttmts are . also another way you might consider
your investment Opportunities are for both equity"lllld
Other growth'Oriented equity fund;, bilweVer, addressing your tax sensitiVe needs. With bond funds
.tixedincome investments.
·
trade less mquently,lowering the polentiil for realiz- and "unit investmentttmiS, you can achieve diversifi·
Equity investmeniS.for tax-sensitive investors
ing taxable capiltil gains. Managers for these types of cation because these "pee~" investmeniS invest
Common,stocks offer investors' an opportunity for funds take a ''buy-andhold~ approach, preferring to in many issues rather than just one. But remember, as
growth, either as a result ofan increase in the value of ride out downturns in the market wi!hout selling with all mutual funds and unit .investment trusts, be
the shares, if the company is S11CQ:5Sful; or through stocks they believe con~nue to offer long-terl)l sitre to retid the prospectus thai contains more inferdividends -which ·can be reinvested to add to your growth potential.
. ·
nultion including charges and expenses.
holdings. One way to minimize income taxes is to
Still other mufual funds are "indexed," meaning
· Finally, U.S. .Treasuries and other Goveinment
invest in ~ks that pay no dividends, or very low tl!at they .are designed to mirror the IXllllposition of"an agency securities should also be considered ·for tax
dividends which reduces the amount of inoome you equity index like the Dow Jones Industrial Average or savings objectives, si~ they are usually exempt
receive that is reportable to the IRS. Even if you rein- the ~ &amp; Poor's SOO. Because rhe IU)derlying from stare and local taxes.
·
vest these dividends, you are still Hable for the receipt indexes do not trade stocks actively, the funds . Which strategy works best?
of this income before you used it to purclla!e addi- de5igned \'&gt;·mirror !llem are less likely to make large,
You IIRj the best judge of your tax and risk sensi·
tiona! shares. If you purcllase growth stocks that pay · taxable capital gaim distributions.
. · .
tivity. As a rule of thumb, consider that your invest·
little or no dividends, you will experience no tax conFixed iiiiXlllle investments .ror tax-sensitive ·ment strategies should reflect your individual toler' sequen~ even if the stOcks rises in value, as !ong as investors
anc;e for risk, your time horizon and your aclllal need
you continue to hold that stock and do not need to sell ·
For the fixed-inoome ponion of your portfolio, ror tax savings which depends on your aftluenoe. If
it for any reason. Any capital gairvt (and losses) while tax-exempt munici~ bonds are attractive to many you ~ould like to discuss any of these investment
you hold the stock are jusi "Jlllller" gains or losses investors. Interest paid by mimicipal bond! is exempt ideas, or if it's time to re~valuate your portfolio, conuntil you sell it.
..
from federal income tax and in addition, if you invest . . tae1 your investment advisor and be sure to ask about
· Yoo can also invest in a mutual fund that seeks in bonds issued by. municipalities in the state where ways that you can take maximum advantage of your
growth. Such funds generally invest primarily in non-. you live, the interest
is usually exempt from investments to minimize your tax bite.

here's truly something special about work
by h and - when ·
the ·craftsperson has put their heart and soul into creating a unique and
fascinating piece of art . Visit the oldest tn:iditional art and craft fair in
West Virginia, Experience the joy of music ;:~nd dance, the aroma of
West Virginia's finest foods, and the experience of seeing works ofhean
created by over 200 juried craftspeople. Enjoy the experience!

• Hours:

.·•

By Jennifer L Buma
·
will be wr~;d,le as well. .
. · ..
GALLIPOLIS -As of Thursday, farmers and
Ornamentals 11!1' suffenqg from a vanety of probhoroeowners alike have been concerned about the !ems including those that result from over watering
effects of drought on both commercial crops and and over mulching. All newly established omamenornamentals. Tobacco, field com, sweet com, soy- tals and trees should be,thoroughly watered onoe a
beans, peppers, and Olher commercial crops contin- week in nonn~ weather, and possibly more ol'tcn in
ue to hang on in this extremely diy weather.
times of drought, if they show signs of stress. It is
The commercial aops are of [Wticular concern very important to water these plants deeply so that
due to the economic impact of agriculture on the moisture reaches below the root line, promoting root
Gallia county community. For the first Ume in 3·- developrne~ Shallow watering in times of drought
years, producers were fortunate enough to settobac~ _resuiiS in sb&amp;llow roofS of lll&lt;)St ornamentals and
co eatly and without rain delay, however too much · lawns. Brown patches in the lawn is simply due to
of the good thing has_requir¢ some to reset tobacco · lack of moisture and .high temperatures which causthat died in the diy weather and hot temperatures. es the grasses to go dormant Tempef!1lures have
Being generally drought tolerant, oil is better for cooled considerably since last Tuesday, and we
tobacco to receive less water now, than later in the · should see donnant grasses return to a vegetative
season. However, for ·a good s1ar1, tobacco sho.uld be . state. New seedings, however; may not recover due
setinsoilthathassomemoisturepresent
immature root.systems, and may requi"" reseeding
Field corn, of course, is more sensitive to in the fall. Another cominon backyard problem is
· drqughl, since optimum growing conditions.require drought stressed fruit trees. Small fruit or fruit drop
1 inch·of rain per.week. Besides the curling and dry- is a sign of the tree conserving water. .
ilig of com leaves, purpling can also be a sign of . Some d!ying and browning of immature fruit is
moisture slre!ls as well as a phosphorus deficiency. being mistaken for blight. Disease problems are a
"hi_the case of shallow rooted oom planiS, purpling of .possibility, however the recent weather has not.been
leaves may be due to both drought stress and nutri- favorable for disease development and spread. For
ent deficieney. Past research indiCates thai drought more infonnation about
.
.
.
·stress during early vegetative growth usually has a drought stressed wmmercial aops or oroamentals
low impact on grain yield. However, If plants arc and trees,:.plcase call the OSU Extension office a1
stressed during the 3 weeks prior to silking, grain 740446-7007.
·
. '
yield loss can be 3% per day. Kernel "row numbers
on the ear are determined by the 12- collared leaf
AG NEW§
stage and the potential number of k~mels per row is
BLUE MOLD FORECAST: Even though blue
c;omplete about one week before silking, which is at mold is present in northern Kentucky; no trajectories
about the 17- collared leaf stage. Local Cf\lps v&amp;ry passed through snutl1em Ohio last week.
greatly in their growth stages, so the impact on yield .
Keep in mind that since last Tuesday, tempera-

Localwomenpassdentalassistanttesting

_
E arn more by losing less

eart.
After Hours
Pediatric Care

Sunday, JUM 20, 1088

Farmers and homeowners concerned about drought

7:00 &amp; t :40 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:40
NO PASSE$, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

gorilla or a person. Rest assured that .
And if you didn't get
he and Jane end·up happily together. Timon and Pumbaa from "The
There are some wonderfully King" and its video. sequel, you can
clever scenes in this movie, like one see · them reincarnated in two of
that shows the 5-year-old Tarzan try - Tarzan's pals, Terk the ape and Taning to snatch · a hair from an. ele- tor the elephant. Who'd have thought-'
phant's tail, and the fast-paced that Rosie O'Donnell (the voice of
sequence that takes hi111 -from child- , Terk) would sound so· much like
hood to adulthood.
Nathan Lane (who voiced.Timon)1

D

RACINE - Roy Van Meter, a longtime native of Vermeer, the person w,ho invented the big round baler
Racine (located in the Hill Country of Southeast Ohio), is back in 1971 al'tcr he was visiting with a neighbor/friend
the lucky winner of a brand new ·Vermeer Baler follow- whcr decided to get out of the cow-calf business due to
ing a recent sweepstakes drawing at Vermeer.
the hassles of punillg up hay.
• The grand prize was given away by the Pella, lA, hay
The winning entry was one of approximately 40,000
equipment manufacturer to commemorate ·. Verr11ecr's sweepstake entries submitted by individuals who _either
SOth year in business and to mark production of their wrote in, signed up at various farm shows or visited Vcr-.
I OO,OOOth Baler.
meer Hay Specialist Distributorships throughout the U.S.
Van Meter, a local Polled Hereford purebred produc-' during the ~en-month-long contest.
.
er, decided to enter the contest late hist winter after havKim Jividen, of Jivi!len's Farm Equipmenl(a Vennccr
ing read a Farm Journalll!1icle about how Gary Vermeer Retail Distributor in Gallipolis, OH, approximately 35
had invented the Big RoUJ!d Baler back In 1971.
miles from the winner) delivered the baler on June 11.
Within the article were instructions on how to write
"We're absolutely thrilled to have the wiimer from our
for the entry fonn froin Vermeer. KG wrote in ... and the area; andj.ist as -happy as Roy to be a part of it, • said Jivrest was history.
·
iden. "100,000 is a big number for anything in the ag
"I got this call in late·April from Mark Core (Market- · equipment business.
This was a great opportunity to mark major milestone
ing Director at Vermeer), telling me that I had won the
Vermeer Baler, and when you get a cal.l like that, of for Venneer in their development of hay equipment and
course, you have a tendency not to believe what you just for Jividen Fllrtn Equipment as one of the Vemieer Hay ·
heard, said Van _Meter.
·
Equipment Specialists.'.' ·
·.
. 'So, I called him back three days later! just to confirm .
The sweepstal&gt;es drawing was conducted at Venneer
it. I asked Mark, •if that baler that I won was for real1' onApril2S.
And, without even skipping a beat he says to me 'what
BALER WINNERS - Roy Van Meter, left, and
baler?'
Bonnie
Van Meter, center, of Racine, wal'8 the
Then he started laughing and told me, 'sure enough, it
.
wlnnere
of 1 .new VennMr baler, the 100,000th
was true.' What a great way to start the new hay season,"
produce
by the Pella, Iowa company. the prohe added.
Van Meter, with his wife Bonnie, farm the saine land motion wu part of VlrmMr'a 50th annl"'raery
celebration. Alao plcturtcl Ia Kim Jividen
he was _born on 58 years ago.
'
The retired Ohio Department of Transportation Deckard, a repreaentatlve of- Jividen Farm
employee also has three grown children not involved In Equipment, who ,Ia Vtrmeir'a Galllpolla area
dlatrlbtor, making the pre1111tat1on of the baler
the operation.
.
· ··
Van Meter's winning entry fonn was picked by Gary to the Van Metar'a .

flow of illegal drugs into the coun- Clinton during .the impeachment and I do what I do. There's very lit- its own- editorial decisions," said
try. " Drug·Bust" also examines why trial -probably has something to tle common ground between .us. spokeswoman Alex Constantinople.
addicts who .want help have an easi- do with the anns-length relationship That doesn't mean he doesn't have Privately, NBC executives note that
er time finding drugs than treatment. he nas with some of NBC's old the right io do what he does." "Dateline NBC" has run Rivera's
Since the war on drugs was guard.
Brokaw hasn't talked much about work in lhe past.
declared in 1971, it has cost $30ll
Rivera doesn't think his opinion- his colleague s\nce then.
Rivera Said frustration with his
billion of taxpayer money, and drugs ated nature.is all that unusual in netRivera's feelings wc:re hurt anew situation is partly why ·he's considerremain readily available, Rivera work news.
by the treatment of his· Kosovo ing a dilily radio talk show. "The
said.
"If you don 't think the reporters reports.. He hoped they were good motivation, honestly, was, 'OK, you
" A ~eneration of politicians has at NBC had opinions during the enough for "Nightly" to seek them don't want me, I know a lot of other
been corrupted," Rivera said. "This impeachment qisis, the vast majori- out.
people who do,"' he said.
.
has been a cancer on the souls of the ty of them in diametric opposition to
"The writing is on the wall, the
If his role at NBC continues to
supplier nations. America· is this mine, then I don't think you were sky and the ground,'' Rivera said. evolve, Rivera said, he'd be much
huge, voracious vacuum cleaner watching," he said.
.
'
"It's just not going to happen. I · less' ·inclined to seek out the radio
sucking up all the illicit narcotics the
Since signing his NBC deal in don't think it will ever happen. If job.
world can produce."
November 1997, Rivera has been that piece didn't get on, ldon't think
.' EDITOR'S NOTE ~ David
Unlike news reports, documen- rankled at not having any reports . they'd use anything. I know that
taries generally take a clear point of aired on "NBC Nightly News," the 'Dateline' and 'Nightly' are like the Bauder can be raachecl at dbaud'
view. "Drug Bust" is particularly network's flagship show anchored country club in my neighborhood . . er"alt"ap.org
provocative. Rivera's eagerness to by Tom Brokaw.
I'm not allowed in." ·
say how he feels - also shown in
The network's only comment: ·
In· December 1997, Brokaw said
his spirited defense of President ·of Rivera: "He does what he does, "Each NBC News program makes
IPRIIJG VAll[Y CIIHIAA
446 ·4524

Section

~·

I

,

�I '

Sunday, June

Page 02 • Jhwbau tt~mn-.-adbwl
Public

40

Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
..... PfOIIC*II• will be
Dr.

r.n elwcl 8t Office of

,._,...,. Kobl', Rio Grande

Community Coli..., 211
North College A - . Rio
GrMdoo, Oblo by: June 25,
1flll9 It 2:00

p.m. and
- - lrnmedlalafy ........
a!l.r, lor lumlehfng tho
~and parfonnlng tho
,...... for 111e execu11on and

AVONI All Aroast To Buy or Soil
Stlirtay Spea~ ~-675- t .29.

Free To A Good Home. Oach·
'""' Dog Cll 7•0. ..e-2196.

AYOR Producbi Start your own In·
Home Business Work Flexible
Houri, Enjoy Unlimited Earning&amp;
1-888-561·2866

Purebred
lemalt
German
shepherd, 1 112 years okJ no papo!l. 7.a-985-3683

, Rio Grande Community

con• a•- Fine

..: Wppdworkfna Cent•
·211 No!th College Avenue,

Ducko To Give Away (30•)&amp;7S·
23-17.

Hot Water Heater giveaway tor
...... (~)675-5073

: . Pro!-= 1110111

months Old good with kids 7&lt;40·
992·77"1

60

s-.

Blda will be recatved lor:

CONTRACT
1. o-rtl Conatructlon •
·A p,.bld conference will

295-4

hlld It tho 1111 cPine
$11'111/Richarde Avenue,
lito Grandt Community
Coli..., Rio Grande, Ohio)
on June I, 1flll9 8t 2:00 p.m.
The
lnlormaUon
lor
Blddera, Form of Propoul,
Form ol Contract, Plane,
SpeciiiCitlone, Form ol
Bond, and othor Conlrecl
Documenta may be examIned 11 the following
olftcH:
RVC, ArchHecta, Inc.
131 Wut Stilt Stroll
Athent, Ohio 45701
Alhont, Ohio 45701. All bidding documenll will be lor·
warded thlpplng chtrgea
coiJDI. . upon reco_!2! ot
$50.00 (lilly dollara) par aat
In tavor ol RVC, Archil-.

Lost Female Cocker Spaniel
Porter Area, Rewa rd, 7.40·388·
0"5, t.a-398·9.!15
lost German Shepherd Pup, 5
To 6 Months Old , Big For H•s
Size, Family Pet, VIcinity. Ever·
green Road. Bidwell . 740-4469778
70

Yard 5ala

&amp; VIcinity
All Yard S.le1 Muat Be Paid In
Advance. Detdllne: 1:OOpm the

Each bid mull be accom· dar before tha ad 11 to run,
panltd by a BID GUARAN· Sund1y &amp; Monday edition·
TY meeting the roqulrt· 1:OOpm Frldoy.
manti ol Soctlon 153.54 of
the Ohio Rtvlud Code.
NOTE: ALL CONTRAC·
TORS ARE REQUIRED TO
SUBMIT A CURRENT "EEO"
CERTIFICATE OR SHOW
PROOF FOR SUCH A CER· Two family garage sale, June
TIFICATE WITH THE FORM 25th, 9 00·1 Grace Weber res i·
OF PROPOSAL FAILURE dance, Reedsvil le, Ohio Variety
TO DO SO WILL RESULT IN ol ttems, sizes.
REJECTION OF PROPOS·
Pt. Pleasant
AL
'
&amp; VIcinity
Sldi thall bl tHitd and
addrtiHd to: Rio Grende June 18.19 20, Fairv,lew Ad ,
Community College, 218 Camp Conley, Pt Pleasant All
North College Avenue, Rio kinds ol stull, new/used what·
nots, FaxMachlnes
Grandt, Ohio 45674.

Personals

Prwyor to tho Holy Spirit
Oh Holy Spir" Thou who make me
see every'lhlng and show me the
way to reach my Ideal You who
gave me the divine gift to forg1ve
and bgtt the wrong that Is done
to me and who are In all instances or my llle with me. 1. In this
shOn (latogue, want to thank you
for everything and confirm once
more that I never want to be
seParated from You no matter
how great the material desires
may be. I want to bo with '100 and
my loved ones In your perpetual
glory Amen Person must pray
this 3 conaecutlve daya without
atatlng one's wish Aller the 3rd
day your wish wiU be granted no
matter how dllllcult It may be
Promise to publish this as soon
11 your favor has been granted
(FE.S GCS)
START DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meeting Ellg1ble Singles In Your Area Call For More
Information 1·800-ROMANCE,
Ext. 9735
·
Start Dating Tonlghll Mave tun
playing tho Ohio Dating Game. 1·
800.ROMANCE. extension 9681
30

r

Announcements

Auction

Bill MoodiSP!lUOh Auctioneering
Complete Auctioneering Servlc·
ea Consignment auction· Mill
Street, Middleport, Thursdays
Ohio License 17693 740·989·

Wanted. to Buy
:::--.---.--.---....:._;,
Complete Household Or Estates!
A.rfiJ TVpe Of' Furnlture, Appllanc·
es, Antlque'a, Etc. Also Appraisal
Avallabtel740-379-2720

FJELQ SUPEftiNIENQENJS
Central OH Recycling Co Seeks
Supra Respo('ISible For Daily
Ops 01 Job Slla Must Hava
Construction Super11lslon Bkgrd
Specifically With Material Handling Equip Con veyor Belts,
Shredders, Crushers, Etc Strong
Human Relations Skills In Addl·
lion To Problem Solving With
Governing Agencie&amp; fOEPA)
May Require :rravel Based On
Job Site For Immediate Consideration, Call 614·825·6209 Or
Fa&gt; 614-785-9464 Attn Afll:.

Antiques, top prices paid, River·
lne Antiques , Pomeroy, Ohio,
Russ Moore owner, 740·992·
2526
Clean Late Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smith Buick Pontiac, 1900 Eaat·
ern Avenue, Gall~ls
want To Sell Your Sluff? Call Riv·
erslde Auction And Let Us Sell It
ForYou, 740.2~989 .

0770 Attorney James C Ayers •

I

EMPLOYMENT
SERVI CES

Help Wanted

U,OOO WEEKLY! Mailing 400
Reward We are offering a $200.
Reward to anyone that knows
h h
w at appentd 10 a 3 place bed·
room ault taken out of our apart·
ment In Clifton, WV Th is was
taken Illegally Anyone who
bought or hao It, Is on possession
of 1tolen property. Please Call

(304)773-15G40
To Whom It May Concern Any
person objecting to the closing or

Allay btlween Smlll'l &amp; Ralrden
::,e,~ ~o ~ tact P 0 Box 25,

5 23

WEIGHT LOSS I Lost 90+
Pounda tn e Monthsll'tl Help You
React'! Your Weight Lon Goatsl
Tol frH 888-781·1824
40
Glv•-ey
......
2 Dogo t Colllo; 1 Black Mix,
740-38&amp;-97-42.

3 Ffll""' Kitten1 Good u..."'

•

ld Gror. 7-40-2e&amp;- 1793·

'~·•·

o .... _
-

3 pups, t wtca old, mother &amp;Ngte,
7-40-885-3882.
" gray &amp; whitt klttana, 2 mitten
pawo, 2 mole, 2 lt""'ie, 7-40-992·
7t4 t.
FrH Pupptoo, To G1voawoJ Good
Wllh Kldo, 7-40-245-9143.

Brochuret~l Sallatactlon Guar-

anteedl Postage &amp; Supplies Providedl Rush Sell-Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO, DEPT
5 , Box 1438 , ANTIOCH TN
•
37011 _1" 38

Needed Immediately Installers
And Service Techs With Two
Years bparience Top Wages,
Insurance, And Uniforms Prov1d·
ed Apply In Person At Comfort
Air Systems Inc 407 Third Avenue, GallipoliS
Needed
Tree Trimmers &amp;
Ground Men , Must Be Able To
Sharpen Saw! Top Climbers, Will
Start Out $850 TO $900 Hour,
7·0·339·3377
NEWSPAPER PRESS FORE·
MAN, West Point, Miss Slx·Unit
Goss Community Print Two
Morning Newspapers 7 PM Until
2 P.M Shllt Compatltive Pay &amp;
Benellts Call B11i Elderton, 662·
323-1642
NURSING LPN'o And STNA'o
Due To Staff Changes Ho lzer
Sen1or Care Center, Is Now Able
To Accept Applications From
LPN's And STNA's Who Are Ex·
perlenced And Ded•cated People
To Join Our Team Ohio License
Required. We Are Also Proud To
Announce That Apphcallons For
Future CNA Classes Are Now
Being Accepted Apply In Person
Or Send Or Fax Resume To
Rlionda Coo. RN D 0 N 380 Colo
nial Drive Bidwell OH 45614 Or
Fax 740-441-1347 EOE
Part time maintenance (man who
will do mowmg) part t1me manager
for a 20 umt apartment complex.
please send resumes or 1nquiMs
to Attention Carolyn Emmons,
801 Hawkins Dnve Mt Sterling,
Ky 40363
Person Needed to do part-t1me
and substitute newspaper route
tor Early 'Morning Paper S12 50
per hour Approx 2 Hrs Dally
(304)675·5160

SBOO

WEEKLY POTENTIAL
Complete Simple Gove'r nment
Forms At Home No Experience
Neceuary CALL TOLL FREE 1·80().966·3599 E&gt;t. 2601
All students· lUll and part ume
openings In customer service/
sales dep $10 36 per hr appt No
experience- will train Conditions
app~ Must ba 18 Call 304-485·
~300 www workforstudents.coml
Applications are being accepted
for Home Health Aides Appllc·
ants should have a high achool
diploma or G.E o. reliable trano·
portatlon, telephone In the home
and willing to work weekends &amp;
hollda~s Must be motivated and
lie xlbl e Experienc8 In providing
direct care or working with older
adults e pluo Will train Slate
tested nursing assistants encouraged to apply Applications
are avallablo al lhe Meigs Multi·
purpose Senior Center, Mulberry
Helghto, Pomeroy, OH. An EOE
~r

•

110

Help Wanted

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul vour togs to the mill Just call
304-675-1957.
~.S CONTRACTING
ProleJ.~iona/ Contractfng SsMCIIS

Remodeling, All Kinds Ot Roofing,
Sn1ngles 3-D lap Metal, Add On
Additions Painting Free Estl
mates! Reslcentlal , Cal! AUer
6 OOPm 740.44t.()653
Jlms Drywall &amp; Construcllon
New Construction &amp; Remodel!
Drvwall, Siding . 'Roofs Add l
lions, Palntlng, ele (304)674 ·
4623"' (304)674·0155
LPN Will Provide Child Care In
M)' Home CPA Current 740 245·
5664
Mother Of 2 Will Babysit In My
Home, Weekdavs. Have Excellent
Aelerencesl740·&lt;146·7519
Painting lntenor &amp; eKtenor, plumb·
1ng, hauling {trash), lawn serv1ce,
demolition low rates 740 591·
9617
Two openings for daycare for
children, Bailey Run Ad , Pomeroy,
740 992 3509
We clean homes 'or busiMsse&amp;·
no JOb too b1g or&gt; small Satisfaction guaranteed Call 740·742·
9010
W1ll Clean Houses, Referen ces
A11allable, 740·446-1834
Will Do Hotlse Cleaning Honest
Dependable (304)773·6159
Will do House Cleaning Have
References and Expenence t
(740)·388·8421 or (7 40) ·446·
2646
Will Stay With Elderly Persons In
Their Home, 741)..388-9656

FINANCIAL
210

Business
Opportunity

"A PILL TO LOSE WEIGHT"
"THERMO LIFT' tml Call For
FREE 3 Day Trial Pak 1· 886·
229·6542
INOTICEt
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bu siness with peop le you know and
NOT to send money through the
ma•l until you have ln11est•gated
the offenng

A Loca l C1gar Route Best Loca tions, No Selling Possible
$100.000 + Per Year Only Work
2 ·6 Hrs A Wk Great Pvroduct $0
Down 0 A C Call 1·800-552·
2719,24 Hours
AERD·COLOURS

Someone to spend the mght with
the elderly, m•dn•ghl·8am, ~ days
per week, $1 0 per day, 7 40 992
5039 or 740 992-4410
Vacancy tor Elementary Currlcu·
lum Superv1sor Applicant must
be able to provide own transportation Submit lener of mterest resume references and copy ol
current certifiCate to John Cos·
tanzo, Superintendent, Athens·
Meigs Educational Service Cen·
ter, 507 RIChland Avenue Suite
108, Athens. Oh1o 45701 Dead·
line IS June 30. 1999
Vacancy for Pan-lime Preschool
Aide Applicant must be able lo
provide own transportatiOn Submit letter of mterest, resume , and
references Ia John CostanzO, Su·
perlntendent. Athens Meigs Edu·
catlonal Service Center, 507
Richland Avenue. Surte 108,
Athens, Ohio 45701 Deadline Is
June 30 1999
Wanted· asbestoa worbrt,
mu1t be state certified 4
UcenHd, c:ompellllve pay, ez·
cetlent oppor1unlty, paid
motela, 513-742·1878.

FOOD CONCESSION
Ohio Fairs &amp; Fest•vals July Thru
October, Sleeping Quarter &amp;
Transportation Provided . No
Cool&lt;lng Roqulrod. 614-885 5235

Wanled Medical Oflice Recep·
tlonlst/Secretary -Experience Ae·
qu~red tnctud1ng Typing Skills 1
Basic Knowledge Of Mecucal
Coding · Able To Work FleKible
Hours Send Resume To Box
CLA 476, Gallipolis Da•ly Tribune,
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
45631

FUN IN THE SUN
Travel The U S.A. In A Rock &amp;
Roll Atmosphere. If Your Atteast
18, Free To Travel &amp; Can Leave
Immediately Call Michelle, At 1·
898·720·2127 9 To 5 Est 6/2tst
Tl'ru 6/251h, EOE.

WE NEED DRIVERS
New Equipment
Good Pay
KELLtTRUCKING, INC.
Call
740.211-0879
740.21H209

HOUSEKEEPING
SUPER·
VISOR Due To Stall Changes
Holzer SeniOr Care Center Is Now
Able To Accept Applications For
SupaMsor Of Housekeep•ng And
laundry Experience Required
We Are Looking For Dedicated
People To Join Our Team Apply
1!1 Person Or Send Or Fax Your
Resume To Roger HIUie 380 Co·
lonlal Orrve, Bidwell, OH 45614 Or
Fa&gt; 7-40·441 · 1347 EOE

Well established Building Mate·
nal D1str~buor located 10 Calum·
~us, Oh1o 1n search of Del1very
Perso nnel Must have a COL
Class A or B EndOrsement need·
ed Expenence a must Send
brief resume to t&lt;ellh Eglott,
1200 Steelwood Road, Columbus. OH or phone 1· 800·589·
4412 to set up an appointment
EOE

WILDLIFE JOBS To $21 60 /HR.
Motorcycle Mechanic Needed INC BENEFITS GAME WAR·
SECURITY,
MAIN·
InqUire At River Front Honda, Or DENS,
TENANCE, PARK RANGERS NO
can. 740·446-22'0
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO, CALL 1· 800·813·
NEEDED IMMEDIATELYIII
3585, EXT 1421 t B AM ·9 PM.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER, A 7 DAYS Ids Inc
Progressive And Growing JCA·
Buslna88
HO Accredited Organization , Lo- 140
cated In Southeastern Ohio Is
Training
Seeking Individuals To Join Our
Healthcare Team For The Follow·
Galllpolle Career COllege
(Careers Close To Home} Call
1ng Full- Time, Pari·Time And Per
Todayl 740·446-4367, 1·800.
Clem Fos~lons.
2t4.Q452, Reg fii0-05-12748
AN
150
Schools
LPN
CST
Instruction
XRAY TECH
RADIATION ONCOLOGY TECH
EARN A LEGAL CO~LEGE DE·
BOILER OPERATOR
GREE QUICKLY, Bachelors,
TRANSCRIPTIONIST
Masters. Doctorate, By Corre·
t~pondence Based Upon Prior Ed·
Compelltlwe Wage And Benefit ucatlon And Short Study Course
Package Including Health And For FREE Information Booklet
Lift Insurance, Vacation Time . Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
Flexible Spending Accounts, UNIVERSITY HI00.964·8318
Pension Plan.
180 Wanted To Do
HInterested Please COntact.
Carpentry Remodeling Additions,
Pofches, Decks, 740..44H3t6.
Rosie Ward
Director Of Human Resources
E &amp; S Lawn Service. Design, lm·
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
plementatlon, and Service.
100 Jookson Plu
Available fo,r Spring Clean up,
GaiiiH&gt;b, OH 45631-1 S&amp;3
fertilizing and planting Free estl·
mates. Sallsfacllon guaranteed.
Phone 740·446·5105
Greg Mlllioan· 3041675-4628
FaxiTDD 74o...e·5t06

ASSEMBLY AT HOME II Cralta
AKC Atglllerltd tamale German Toys, Jtwelrw. Wood , Sewing:
ahophord, 1 112 yearo old, wtth tn&gt;lng.. Groat Pay! CALL 1-800.
:...PIIl.;.'"'_;.'·-7-40-_;.911;.:5-..:3883=----·l 715-0380Ext.l20t (2• Hrs)

•

Or~vers Free 3 ·Week COL
Training Earn $26 -$32,000 f1sl
Yr W !Full Benefits No Exp.
Needed P A M Transport Spa·
clal Call Toll Free 1 877· 230 ·
6002 Sun ·Fri. 7 A.I.M _ -7 PM .
www pamtransporl coni~

Someone To Care For Elderly
Full-Time, Room &amp; Board Plus
Salary, 740-367-Q632

Experienced Timber Cutler. Ell·
pertenced Skldder Operator
Needed. t.a-682-7318

Absolute Top Dollar All U S Sll·
ver And Gold Coins, Prootsets,
Diamonds, Anllque Jewelry, Gold
Rings, Pre-1930 u.s. Currency,
Sterling, Etc Acquisitions Jewelry
• M TS Coin Shop, 151 Second
A"'nue, Gallipolis, 740·448-211-42.

DRIVERS WANTED
Earn $30,000 +1st Year. t4 Day
COl Training
C.llt-888-253-8!101 FREE TUI·
TION ava1lai:H No experience
necessary. COL Holders call
t ·Bil0-958·2353

Both Positions
Atleast 25 Years Old
Atleast 2 Years Expenence
GoodMVR

Experienced LPN In phys ian ol·
flee, drop resumes off at 3009
Jackson Ava between the hours
ot 8 3()-4 30 304-675·1637

90

Orivtfl /Independent· Flatbed
Contractors:, TIT. OTR 80% 01
Gross Free Platts, Permits, In·
aurance Paid Road &amp; Fuel Tu·
es A.vg $1 00 Per Mila Loaded &amp;
Empty Home weekends 800
621·2437
I

POSTAL JOBS To $18 35 IHA
INC BENEFITS, NO EXPERI·
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL t ·800·8 t 3·3585,
EXT &gt;4210 8 AM ·9 PM 7
DAYS fds Inc

Earn $104 ·$400 + Free Portraits,
Invite Your Friends To Your
Home For A Professional Glamour Portrait Party, 1· 800·426·
8363.

Wedemever•s Aucllon Service,
Gallj&gt;otll, Ohio 7.a-379-2720

Help Wented

ClassBOTR
Team Straight Truck. Late Model
Frelghtllners With Sleepers Must
Have Air Brake Endorsements,
800 Mile Rad•us, Home Deliverlas.

For More Information Call 800·
437·8764, Hrs. 8 30 A M.·5 PM

RIVERSIDE AUCTION BARN
Every Saturday Night 7 PM ,
Crown Clly, 7.a-256-e989

110

Pos•llons Available PT PTA,
COTA, ST. &amp; OTA. Scenic Hills
Nursmg Center 311 Buckrldge
Road Bidwell OH 45631 740·
446·7150

Pay

OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, June

Own A Mobile ·Based Franchise
That Fixes The Nicks !Scratches
On Cars Wlthoul Painting The
Whole Car Low Investment
FREE INFO PACKET! t ·800·696·
2376 X3t0
Ava•lable Local
Pepsi/Coke Route
Have 15 New Mach~nes W1th
H1gh Earning Locatio ns, 1·800·
387·9418

110

Help Wanted

Banks And Financial Institutions
Earn 80% 01 Their Prol!ts Trading
Foreign Currency For Your Free
Roport Coli t 800· 392·08•3.
$5 000 Minimum Aoqulrld.
BE FREE FROM SMOKING! In
Just 7 Dayal First Time Avallabkl
In USA. Be Smoke Frat Wllh
This 100'1'. All Natural Rellel System Call Today Toll Free 1-888·
511-4999
EARN $90,000 YEARLY Repair
lng NOT ReplaCing , Long Cr&amp;Cics
In Windshields F"ree VIdeo 1·
800 826·8523 US /Canada
www glassmech8nix com
EAR~

UP TO $510 AN HOUR
Sand Us A One Page Form We
Do The Atst No D•rect Selling
Free lnformaUon Package 1·800·
3HJ.ll745 Ext 27,24 Hrs.
For Rent Building On S R 33
New Ha\len , WVA 1,000 To
5,000 Sq FL 740-698·261 3
FRITO LAY /PEPSI /COKE
VENDING ROUTE $1 000 ..
WEEKLY
POTENTIAL
ALL
CASH QUSINESS PRIME LO·
CAL SITES ON GOING SUP·
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT I
EXCELLENT PROFITS t 800
731·7233 EXT 2503
METABOLISE INT'L, INC. Is Of
fertng Anvone Interested In
Working For Themselves A lre·
ma n ~ous Opportunlly Toll Free
877·7S2·44 18 Aller 2 EDT
Need A Loan! Try Debt Consoli·
dation. $5,000 · S2oo,ooo Bad
Credit 0 K Fee 1·800· 770·0092
Ext 215
Uh, Oh .. Better Get Ot Course •
It's MAACO The Name Synonymous W1th Auto Painting And Bo·
dyworks MAACO Is Now Award·
lng Franchise In Select Areas
Across The US . If Vou Want To
Be A Part Of The 11 Auto Paint·
lng Franchise In America. CALL
TODAY 1· 800·298· 2228 Fran·
chlse Development $65,000 Min
Cash Rectulred. www meaco oom
220

Money to Loan

$$$ OVERDUE BILLSIII Consoli·
date Debtsl Same Day Approval
NO APPLICATION FEESII 1·800·
863 9006 Ext. 936. ' Member Belter Business Bureau' www help·
pay·bllls com
... Credit Card Problems'" Debt
Consotlda on Stop Collection
.,.."1--""duce Payments &amp;
Finance Charges A\loid Bankruptcy 1·800·27o-9894
$FREE CASH NOW$ From
Wea!lhy Families, Unloading Mil·
lions To Help, Minimize Their
Taxes Wrlte Immediately WIND·
FALLS. 847· A SECOND AVE ,
SUITE 0350 NEW YORK, NEW
YORK 10017
Bad Credit? Stan Getting Ap ·
pro11ed For Credit And loans To·
morrowl MC /Visa In 7 Days 1·
800·546·8566
BANKRUPTCY $79+ Stopa Gar·
n1shmentst D1vorce $99+ Also,
Foreclosure Avoidance Program
Homeowner Loans FreshStart t .
888-395·8030 www fresh&amp;tarlu ·
sa com

AVAILABLE VENDING ROUTE
10 ·20 Locat1ons $4t&lt; ·$ 10K CONSOLIDATE DEBT. Reduced
$4,000 +/Mo Income • AU: Monthly Payments 20 50%. Save
CASH• 100% Finance Available Thousands Of Collars In lnrerest
t 800·380·26 t 5 . 24 Hrs
• Non Profit TCC B00-758·3844

110

Help Wanted

CREDIT PROBLEMS? VISA
CAFID ·Guaranteed Approve I •
No Crtdil Check • O%APR. Ro·
qulrements: 18+ us Cldzen. HIYI
Checking Account PhOne Approval t -800-737-0073 Issued By
Menict&lt; Bank, SLC, UT
FREE CASH NOW
From Wealthy FamilieS
Unioa&lt;llng Mmlonl To Help
Minimize l'hoeirTaxea
Write lrrrntdtately

Fortune
1826 North WIICOic A'lenUO
Sul18249
Hollywood CA 90028
FREE MONEYI It's True Never
Repay Guaranteed $500
$50,000 For Debt Consoll~atlon ,
Personal Needs. Medical Bills.
Education &amp; Business Call Toil·
Free 1·800.724-6047, (24 HJS),
WANT A VISA CARD?? $12,000
Plus. Unsecured Bad /No Credit
OK! No Depos1t Requ1red Every·
one Welcome I Call t·800·28!5·
3588
230

Professional
Services

The complete clean1ng s8rvlce
Carpet, Upholstery, Wells Cell·
lngs, and also Power Wash tng
For a tree estimate call Clearly
Claan at (304)675·4040 Guar·
anteed Work!
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /list?
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
t-888·582·3345

REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale
160 ACRES WYOMING tlmlied
Supply At Prices Soon Dlsap·
pearlng. Antelope , Wild Horses,
Great Speculatlonl $19!5 On I
$238/Mo .. ($23.995/9%/15 1/2
Yrs) Toll Free 1·800 945·3040
3 bedroom home for sale at 842
Pearl Street, Mlddleporl New
kitchen and bath built In 1992
Carpet, new roo! and vinyl siding
Good neighborhood licensed
residential appraiser estimated
market value on March t5, 1999
at $38,500, as~lng $36,500 No
Sunda~ calls, 740·992 ·3749
LlOyd &amp; Fern Grimm
For Sale By Owner
4 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Appliances
New Roof, New Siding. $64 500,
7.40 Fourth Avenue, 740-446·
7838, 74~1765
4 Bedrooms, 31/2 Baths formal
LR/DA. Finished Basement Custom Kltchenf Cherry Cablnetst
Sunroom overlooking small Pond!
$t89,900 {740)·441·5118or mare
lmlo , leave Message. Appt. ontvl

5 room, 2 bath brick home, appro&gt;e 300' frontage 1 112 acres
nice location, on 124 next to river
In Syracuse, Oh 740-992·3860
7 Year Old 3 Bedroom Ranch
Home. 2 Baths, 28x30 Attached
Garage, 69 112 Acres , Will Sell
All Or House And Lot Meigs
County $150,000. For lnlormailon
Call7o40·992·3537
By owner. 725 Page Street, Mid·
dleport, house &amp; 3 lots, mu&amp;t s,.
to appreciate, will seh house with·
oul lots lor $89 ,000. 740·992·
2704, 7o40·992·S&amp;96

110

Help Wented

800-313-e882

HOMES FROM U,OOO. Foroclosed And Repouesaed No Or
Low Down Payment Credll Trouble 0 t&lt;. For Current Listing CeU
I ·1100-31 t-!i()48, E&gt;d 3372.
', ,
HOMES FROM $5,000. Foro·
closed And Rep ossessed No Or
low Down Payment. Credit Trou:
ble 0 t&lt; . For Current Listing Cau
t 800·31 H5048, Ext 3a65.

'7

RENTA LS

lncludoo 8 monlhl FREE tot rent:
1
&amp; dryer. lklrUng,
delu11e steps and setup,. Only
12.00 7• per month with $1150
'~·3238.

2 Bedroom Hou11 In Eureka,
$275 00 pluo Degoolt Pluo Reier·
..._, Col. (7o40)-38+25e0
2·3 Bedroolha, S300 month Oe~
posit &amp; Ref.,.I'IC4Ia, No Pets! lincoln Ave . Homestead Really
(104)-875-55o40

Now 3BR S49t down, SUI
Month. Only Oakwood Hom..

Nllro, WV, (304)7SHIN.

'

Still Available 2BA unfurnished
house. 507 112 2nd St., New Haven . Call after 5PM (3041675·
34&amp;9

Single Parents Progrtm $499
Qown. Limited OHer Call for de·
tal~ (~)755-7191

Take Rt 3S North flom Gallipolis
For The Beat Housing Dealt tn
Southern Ohio. TECUMSEH
t-{OMES, Exclu•lve Redman
Homeo And BEST HOMES, Ex·
elUSive Dutch Are Located On At.
23, Chillicothe. Just North 01 the
At . 3!5 IRt. 23 Interchange Call
Toll Ftu Number, 888-443·7421,
And Ask For Tho CHILLICOTHE
CONNECTION lnlormation B~
~all including A $1,000 Cartlll·
etta
A New Home

Restored VIctorian home situated
on 12 acres. Village Middleport,
secluded and prtvate appoln,.
ment, ca!l740-992·5696
·
•
"

14Ft X 70Ft Nashua, 2 Bdrms,. 2
Baths, CIA, Gas Furnace. Factory
Fireplace
$8,000 00
After
5 OOPM 740·379·2366

3 Bedrooms, Central Air, UOO/
Mo, PIUI Utilities, No Pets, 7&lt;40·
44&amp;0313

1984 Carolina 2 Bedrooms .. 2
Baths, Good cond1ll0n, $5,500,
0 B 0 740·256·9123 , Ask FQr
Mary

..

1992, 14&gt;70 3 bedroom, Aedmal\j
mobile home, heat pump &amp; sklr(..
Jng lncludod, 74(),742-2795
' r
1995 Dutch Mobile Home, 14Jt7'0
Vinyl Siding Shingle Roof, Steel
Doors, 2•6 Walls, Thermopaynii '
Windows , Deck, $18 900, 740-'
2S&amp;·6980
.. 1

4BR 2BA. $499 Down Assume
Payments of $239 mo (304)7~5· :
5560

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

$499 Down All Slnglos, $9911, ·
Down Doubles, Super Low Pay~
ments, Limited Time, Oakwo9d'
Homes, Barb9ur'svllle WV, 30&lt;1·
736·3409.
•
Cl•~r•nce Sale

All Dlsptayi'
Must Go DownPayments as low,
as MH. Interest as tow a&amp; 8....
Limited time only at Oakw ....ct
Homeo, Nitro, WV. (304)755· 1
5885
Good aelectlon of uHd hom1eJ
with 2 or 3 bidrooma Start6ng it ;
$3995 Quick delivery Call 740· ,
385·9e21 .
•

Furnished , Upstairs, Second
Avenue, No Pets, Utilities Paid,
740.25&amp;·9523
Gallipolis Area 1 Bedroom. Utili·
ties Paid. Deposit References Required No Pats 740-245-5893

oanclsi1-81J0.3113-6862

~50 Lola &amp; Acreage

420

a- 5

2 Bedrooms, $325/Mo , + UtiHIIes,
No Pets, Cenlral Air, 7&lt;10-446·
'313

2 BR, Furnished, Fenced Yard wl
Garage, In Gallipolis Ferry
$300.depoolt &amp; $300 monlh rent,
2 relertnces. (:10')675-4044.
Two bedroom mobile home In
Racine, $325 month, we pay water, sewer and trash , 7&lt;40·992·

5039.

440

Apartments
for Rant

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fur.
nlahed and unfyrni&amp;hed, security
deposit required, no pets, 740·
992·2218

Melgo Co.: PICI&lt; 01 The Wttk·
llyeovltto, 10.5 Acroo With
Stream, Great Getaway Or Rem~
&lt;&gt;le Living. Just $8.5001 Rutland,
White HMI Ad., 1t Acras $1.,000
OJ 8 Acroo $12,000, PubliC WI·
tor. Donvlllo, Briar Rldgo Rd • 7
o\clta $13,000 On SR 325, Nice

~-· $18,000, Public Water.

Carpal Cleaning Frenchlsa

Twin Rivers Tower now accepting
applications for 18R HUO aub·
ald1zed apt lor eldarty and hand·
!capped EOH 30ol-675-6879.

Announcamants

110.

Ohio River rronuge. Meigs eo.. 8
acre with Older mobile home,
~.ooo OBO, 7-40-a.t:l-5'62
Onty 122.ooo Eacn Tau
Both And Get Discount. Great
Hllntlng Land, Full 01 Deer. Has
~oad Accesa To Wayne Natlcsnal
Forest. Land Contract Available.
7-40-2-1 ,_

Payments Problems with
speeding tickets, etc.

Help Wanted

Same Day SR-22's issued .
Call for a quote
Brown Insurance Agency

-r

Slap Aerobics

&amp; Tajana's
Help Wented

' ':1/c seek career oriented

ICf.Ou ha\'e 1 desire to sucxced

Immediate opening for Full-lime o

7606

Part-time

RADIOLGIC TECHNOLOGIST

ible.

Must

endently.

be

able

Will

to

work

require

inde-

rotating

hifts to include weekends, 20 min·
tes

response

time

esponsibililies.
ork

40-hour

for

on - cal

I f interested
weekend

co

shift.

1

110

Step--Monday

&amp; Wednesday

an

in

Ohio

GeriPsych
to:

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

20·Yrs. Exp.
License &amp; Bonded

Burial Insurance
Ages 50·85

740-388-9515
388-8030

$2,500·$15,000
death benefit
Premrums do not change

Homecoming for
St.

• Ronnie lynch

The Lynch Agency

Martin's Lutheran Church

336 Second Avenue •

German Ridge Road

Gallipolis, Ohio

June 27, Sunday

446·8235

Potluck Dinner 1 :00

Fully Rely On God I

Modern Office/Retail
Space for rent.
800-1600 s.f.

Vacation Brble School
Walnut Atdge Church

~CA.

Lecta, Ohio
June 21 -25

992COUNTRY
SERVICE
Big

&amp; Small

Space for rent.-

Approx. 1,000 s.f.

Jobs-

Roof Truss's,

Tutoring
Help your cliild get
ready_for next year.
Certified teacher
446·4674

ELDORADO
ADULT HOME

Roof Top-NCs,
any type of lifting needs

740·367. 7554

&amp; Tumbling

992-7953

Aerial Basket Available

&amp; Thur~day
Available at WPT Gymnastics

Pager

2212 Seventh Street
Syracuse, OH

#740-339·0206

Shape Up For
Summer at
Brenda's Kut &amp; Kurl

740·992-441 0
Long &amp; Short Term
Care Available

63 Pine St.
Gallipolis, OH

45631

Impact Computer Systems/2000
Convergence
2212 Eastem Ave, GallipoliS, Ohio
7 40·446-0998
Now offering Computer Train~ng
June 21: lntro to Computers

(740) 441-0583
With Melanie Blevins

City Limits

Pedicures $15.00

578 St Rt. 7 N Gall1polls, Ohio
Proudly Presents lhe Wo~d Famous

Manicures $12 .00

This show will sell out!!

Special Pedicure

$35.00
June 22 Windows 95198
$35.00
June 23: Surfing the Internet
$45.00

&amp;

Manicure $25.00
Manicure

&amp;Nails $35.00

Good Times

Family Hair Cuts $5.00
Perms $25 . 00

Father's Day Cookout

Attention Elks

nRRITORY: CHILUCOTHE

a

P&amp;Q currendy has openings to pro-

Qualijied candidates will have

mota pharmaceutical products and Is

BA/BS degraa and a minimum of one
year's outside sales experience,

for the

right

people to climb aboard tha last track

preferably In pharmacauticals or

to

health care. To be considered, send

success.

As a

full·tima employee of Procter

&amp;

Gamble, you will ba eligible for our
vary attractive compensation

pack·

age, Including compatittva salary,
proflt-sl:larlng,

Company Car and

the satisfaction of baing part of

a rasume to: PDI, Nat1o1111l
Recrultmant Dept GDT820, 6475

·Father's
Day
Brunch

Perimeter Dr., Suite 147, Dublin,

OH

43018,

11-1

or fax to: 814-793-1814.

..

Kyger
request the address of

'

the following' classmates

of 1989. If you

know the

whereabouts please
Wanted
contact Lisa Coughenour

DIRT OREMAN &amp;HEAVY
EQUIPMENT OPEUTORS

Help Wanted

Tackett 446-4467

if required.

Come to the Columbus area for the next

three to five months and take home EXTRA money for Christmas.

Contest

&amp; Little Miss &amp;

Mister Firecracker

available at the

Beanie Baby Sale,

Chamber of Commerce
Cost

$5.00

Deadline for entries
June

RACINE

Excavating Unlimited, Inc.
6270-A Frost Road
Westerville, Ohio 43082
Fax: 614-882-9798
EOE

PIL.~ 1

EXPRESS

Help Wanted
Apply in person only at
Third

&amp; Vine Street

After 4 pm
"REWARD"-$300.00

Joanna Lynn Hupp

Lost 2 yr. old Black
Female Toy Poodle
Nama Susie Q Sims If found .
Lost near lewis Ad 218 Bullskin
Call 256-6702

Tina Porter

Long term employment potential for exceptional individuals. Send
resume or apply in persqn to:

25

James Robert Gordon

T.onya Stewart

l;:::;:=.==:====::m;lll
Retired Longaberger
Baskets &amp;

Racine, Oh
Cherylyn Laham Fetty

2 pm Sun. June 20th

Contest applications

or 441-1376
Randall Alan Denney

Bring srde dish rf you wish.

Sparkler

of the

Only candid111es CQIISU/ered for in#rview
selectiOn will be corrtacttd. EOE. M/F!DI'I.

an established team of profe~sionals,

stay lodging

·I

an

Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E : Memorial Drive
Pomeroy _, Ohio 45769

Owner-Tom Stump

Ladies Don't Delay-

Contractor. Top Dollar and Benefits provided along with extended

•

have

preferred. Send Resume

Kardio Defense..Tuesday

Needed iml)led.iately for seasonal work with Columbus Earthwork

~·

must

has

LISW/LSW.

Experience

Backhoe &amp;
Dozer Work

July 8th 8 · 11 pm

l

CQmpany we offer:
; • Healih 1~ental, and hfe
'~
Insurance .
~.. Prescription card
1, rt
Bonus program
"' :
Paid vacations
:.: "1anagement apparel
"PAdvancement from within
"i!!&gt;ly 1n person at the Burget
ian&amp; Rc&amp;taurant located at
Oallipolis or mad resume to
lljrger King PO Box 2407
I'Q!otinaton, WV 25725. EOE.

6 .00·7:00 pm·$3.00 a class

CHIPPENDALE'S

medical/dental benefits. You will also

:

New Summer Hours

I

Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
or call
740-992-2104 ext. 237.

Christy's Family Living, apart·
menta, home I trailer rentals,
'140·992·.4514, apartments avail·
able, lurnlahed &amp; unfurnished.

SaH Defense Aerobics
*Cet1ifled Instructors•

Center
GaUipolls, Ohio

nterested please send resume to:

have

1

Kardio Defense

(Better Than Tae Bo)

Must

RT certified, Ohio License or eli·

j )with a gool dnven, team

' onented, and grow1ng

Toning

TaaKwonOo

2 bedroom Bparlment in Middle·
port, we 11&amp;'1 water. .....,. &amp; trash.
you pay o•• &amp; llectrlc. $200 per
month, $100 deposit, 740·992·

offering an opportunity

iilividuals who w11l stnve IO
aigeve the ••Best" in customer
)l.llsfacuon and aeamwort.

&amp;

1st Degree Black Belt·

Radiographer.

Unit

a

Close to Pomeroy, Middleport

· Becky's Body Sculpting

Is an Equal Opportunity Employer

; • ore available on '" equal
••
opportunity basts.

~gemeat Opportunities

Sale Price $59 00
Large Stock
Engineer. ... ....
$49.00
Wellington
.
.
.$49.00
Loggers ........................ $50' 55
Harness .......... . .
$59.00
Carolma-Georgia-H &amp; H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex

with

• lldvenlaed In this newspaper

' : BURGER KING

License.

$149.00

HEINER'S BAKERY

will not

,.

Reg.

1 Bedroom Apartment, Stove &amp;
Aagrlgerator Included, 740·44li-

k• row'..Vi accept
oldvertloomonta lor ntaloatate
• : which loin violation ot the
: ~ OUr- .... horvby
• : lnlormed thai all dwtllingl

.. ..

All Leather Western Boots

and Kick Into

• : limitation or dlicrlmlnatton.•
: This

BOOTS

SWAIN FURNITURE

: make any such preference,

.

446-1960

Gallipolis, OH

110

for

Applicants

with

Must eall due to

Auto Insurance Monthly

~

on race, color, religion,
-ux familial status or nadonal
~ origin, or any Intention to

bale

Serious Inquiries may eand n1ma and phone

740-448-2957.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
&amp; movleo Call 7•0-448·2568
Equal Houolng Opportunity.

tho F-.1 Fair Houolr1g Act
~ 111118 wntch mlkll nllttgal
• 1&lt;&gt; tdvenlae •any prelerenca,
• limitation or dtscrlmlnatton

Ohio.

Health

Hospital's

Injury. Will provide ongoing customer support.

1708 Eastarn Avanua

Apanment for rent In Mlddlapon,
no peto, 7.a-992-5858

•All ""'' """" tdvertlllng In

customer

Behavioral
opening

Southern

tremendous growth potential.

62 Olive St.

:Zbdrm. apts .• total electric, appliances furnished, laundry room
taciiiUea, e10se to achOol In town.
ApplicatiOns available at· Village
Groen ~pts 149 or call 740·992·
3711. EOH.

.lhla newspaper ts IUbjoCt to

established

In

Memorial

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

Heiner's Bakery

Heat, 7&lt;10·258-6495, Or Even,lngs. 7.a-2e6-1249

.r.r

counties

H I W
e p
anted

BULLETIN BOARD

Heiner's Bakery, Inc. is curraetn~~t~i~y;iJ~~~~~ptlf~~
applications from qualified c
sales/driver positions at the Gallipolis
Qualified candidates must have a valid driver's
license; strong work ethics; the ability to work alone
or in a team anvironment; a high school diploma or
GED; be at least 21 years of age; and be willing to
work long hours. this IS the toughast job you'll Av&lt;u 11
lovel We offer an excellent benefits package and
competitive hourly wages (based on axparlenca).
We will be accepting applications at the branch until
5:00 p.m. on Tuesday, June 22.
Women and
minorltias are encouraged to apply.

2 Bedrooms, Washer, Dryer, Gas

• ' a·20 ACRETAACTS

Strong,

Veterans

6 year, residential/commercial

4-7

Wl'llrlpoo l washer Heavy Duty ·
$95, G E Washer $15, 30• Eltc·
trlc Rango US, Dryer 175; FF
Refrigerator $150, Refrigerator
l!U New $350, 1 Year Werranty,
Washer &amp; Oryer Like New Jt50
Each, Skaggs Appliances. 78

LICENSED INDEPENDENT
SOCIAL WORKER/LICENSED
SOCIAL WORKER

number to:

SALES/DRIVER
POSITIONS

1 a.droom Upstalra Apartment In
SyrtCUIO, $250/Mo., Deposit &amp;
Ralorencaa Required. 740·892·
71 1M Altar 8 RM

Call NOW For Free Mapa +
Qwner Ftnanelng Info Take 10%
Qll ~ Price On Colli Buyal

Servicing

110

Announcements

River Bend Place accepting ap·
plication&amp; now for 1BR HUD Subsidized apt. for elderly &amp; handl·
capped EOH. (3041882·3t2t .

Successful,

GOodl

I:F..:ur:.:.nlturo.==---:~:;::=~==-~v~,no~S=t~rut~
, Galllpolto, 7o40-4-4173fHI.

1--.at tlo0128 ..

1 Bdrm , Extra Nlce, First Uonth
Free With One Year Lease
$279.00 Per Month, Plus Utilities

2S83.

orr

Gittlla Co.: Hunteral
SR 218 •
WIJtlamo Hollow Rd. 88 Wooded
Aero• With Stream, $40,000,
Cash Price, Public Wotar. Frtond1~ Ridge Rd , 15 Acrea $".000.
c~ Schools.
.

MERCHANDISE

Houeehold

---

Used Furnrture/Appll1nc11 Off
Bulav1Ue Plkt On Keeler Ao1d ,
740~446 ·4039 , 740·44&amp;-10404
Call Any Time , Johnaon's Used

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuhoro. dryoro, rolrlgerotoro ,
ranges. Skaggs Appllancea, 78
Vine Street, CaJJ 7o40·o&amp;46·7398,

7953.

your driving record; DUI's

2 Bedrooms, AI; Conditioning,
Automatic Washer, Water In·
eluded, $32~/Mo., Plus Deposit,
7-1·1238, 7-1·0000.

Mopi1-81J0.213-8365

Modern ofrlcetret~,,::-,-,p-.-c-e"'ro-r
rent, 800· 1600 sf AOA, close to
Pomeroy, Middleport, 740·992·

510

HouHhold

Good•

luslneu For Sale by Owner/Operator

Waelcday daue 810 SM·f Also avanilgs &amp; waelcands.
• &lt;lasits lvr bollt doss Aand 8 Ut1111t
• A111ndng and funding ayailable based on eligibtlily
"98" pla&lt;ttm0111 on Oass Akainlng" '
lkarMd by lfte Ohio OIIJICirtmenl al Highwtly Safety •
Mcrrlella, Ohio 4S7SO
ConllKI Ed Adams 1 -P~648-369S or (740)373-6213 Ext. 338

2 Bedrooms 2 Baths, CA. Stove.
Refrlg11ator, Water, Trash Fur·
nlshed, Very Nlcel $350/Mo,
Oeposl~ 7-40-388-9688

I&amp; ACRES
READ!' FOR HORSES
In The Count()', West Gallla
County, Loto Of Meadow, With
Nfw Barna And Fencing, Ready
For Animals. Lots 01 Road Frontage. More Land Avallabee Now
Divided Into 5 I 10 Acre Tract,
ltlke Both ·15 Acras For
$27,500 Double Wldes Are Per·
ml~ed. 5% Down Land Controct
With Approved cradll. Free

510

Air Cond•11onttt, Uttd Olftertnt
Slz11, Guarantatdl 740 -88&amp;·
00.7.
Applianctt ·
Reconditioned
Wathefl , Dryert, Ran~a. Rtfrl·
gratora, 90 Day Guarlntetl
French Clly Maytag , 740. ... •
8
7795.

ForLe11e

30

Houaehold

Goode

Warthouselatorage space lor
rent, approx t ,000 s I, 740-992·
7953

Mld..Ohlo Valley Truck Driver Training

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile homes. air
conditioned, $260-$300, sewer,
water and traah included, 740·
992-2167

510

Mobile Mme l-Ite available bet·
ween Athens and Pomeroy call
7-40-385-4387
•

490

WV

Carpet CIHIIIa~t P.O. hx 62,
Jackso11, Ohio 45640.

for Rent

Acres Frontage, Garfield
Avonuo, City Utilities, $49,000.
Send Response : CLA825. c/
otlalilpolls Dally Tribune, 825
Third Avenue , Gallipolis, OH

Space for Rent

Mobile Homes

Acres. Gallla County, Several
lllittdlng s~. Groat View,
Ft
Frontage, 39,000 Board Foot
Prime Timber, Will Split, More
Land Available. $65,000 . 740·
882·9032

aoo

Point Pleasant,

one bedroorn fumlshtd apart ·
ment In Middleport, call 740·992·
5304 affer 6pm

4 Bedrooms , All Electric, AfC,
$500/Mo, Pluo Oeposli, 740.367·
7802

BRUNER LAND
7-1-14112

.:

Now Taking Appllcallona- 35
west 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments. lncludn Waler
Sewage, Trash. $315/Mo., 740·
44&amp;-ooo8

Frenchtown Apartmel)ll , Now
Accepting Applications· For 1
Bedroom, FMHA Subsidised
Apartment For Elderly And Hand·
icapped, Equal Housing Oppor·
turity, 740.446-4639

30

45 Acrea Good Pasture, Good
For 35 Hood, 5 M~s Frcm Holzer
Hospital, Rt 160, 7.a-388-9948

1996 Clayton 14x80 A C , 3BR,
Nice Take Over Payments,
$292 (304)675-6185
•

month Includes lrnh, 740·667·
3518

Mill Crttk, GaiiiP.OIIs 740·446-

90X125 MOblleHome lot Mason,
WV $90.00 per month, Includes
-aae t~Jn:&gt;52".

1988 Skyline 14x80 3 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, AJC, Fireplace, Deck,
Building, Ranted Lot, $11 ,500,"
7-40·446-8804.
'

Firat A11enue, One And Two Bed·
rooms, From $275 ·$350/Mo .. So·
curlty Deposit, Alltrences Re·
quired, 7&lt;10-«Hl9S2

9523

45831

1988 Redmond Danville 14x70
Also, Haa Expando, very Nice,
Must SaUl Asking $14,000, 740·
398·8335

Nte:e 2 bedroom apartment In Syracuse. $200 deposll , 1285 par

3 Bedrooms. Living Room, KitchRoom, 1 Story, 65

Repo Doublewlde Save Thou·

~0

Gr1clous liVIng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartment• at VIllage Manor and
Rlveralde Apartments In Mldd"·
pori From $2•9·$373 Call 1•0·
9!12·SOO'. Equal Houolng Oppor·
tunitles

FORRENJ
All Electric, Ideal For Senior Per·
sons, No Gra11 To Mow, No
Lawn , Firat Floor, For An Ap ·
potntment To VIew Phone 740·

en, Bath, Utlllly

on

14K70 HollyPark Mobllehorr)r.
2BA. Large Bath/garden bathtub,
separate shower, large living ~
rQom wlhlgh ce~lings, new carpet;
kitchen has new lop·of·lhe·llllt
gas stove, has gas heat, centrl'l
air Installed In 1994, new steaJ
doors &amp;storm doors Asktng
$12 000 00 (304)-675·2319
•

-

OOWHJOWN A.PAR!MlNJ

OH •

460

Apartmante
for Rani

-9539

410 Houaee for Rant

- ..Colt

· 440

Apartments
for Renl

We Buy Lend. 30 ·500 Acres,
Wo Pay C..h t-800·213-1385,
Anthony Lind Co

'

New Bank repos only 2 left we
~ cah 304-722-7t.e

By Owner Ezcellent Locat1o11 :
Very Attractive Price $80'!11 .
Please Call From 6 to 11 PM.
(:10')675-41108 or 675-3991

11-L-Q.W Q.U.T

440

Wanled

New 19i9 14x70 three bedroom

By Owner 1t 1 Front Elm, New
Haven 8yr~ old 31'BR. 3 Full
Beth , Heatpump, 75% finished
lull-basement 2Car Garage, Covtrld Porth (30ol)812·32o40

for 5ala

Rul Eatete

3110

Now Bank Aepo'o On'- 3 Loll 1·

Room, A/C GerJge, Nice Yard,
$38,000, 740-367-02.,
•

Mobile Homes

Home.

Mobile
for 5ale

•

3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Laundry,

320

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis,

20, 1999
'20

ClaSsAOTA
Single Driver, Late Model Kenworths With Reefers West Coast
Carrier

Health Insurance Allallable
Work Well With The Public

Rick F&gt;earson Auct1on Company,
full time auctioneer, complete
auction
service.
Licensed
166 Ohio &amp; West VIrginia, 304·
n:l-5785 Or 304·773·S«7

11 0

CNA. LPN. needed. Good pav.
hourly, bonus lor weekend work
Must be licensed ln WV Call
Capite&gt; Nursing, 1·BQ0.576-63-18.

Week~

Wanted To Buy 1973 Meigs
"I Represent Cathy S Mathias
Year Book If Anyone Has. One Or
And Mave Lost Contact With Her
Knows Of Anyone Please Call
Anyone Knowing Cathy s
Mathias, Surviving Spouse Of 740.742·2512
Raymond Mathias, Deceased
Formerly Of 1705 Chestnut Wanted To Buy: Book Cases 1
StrNt, Galllpoll&amp;, Please CaH My Shelves That Will Stackabte With
Olllce Toll· Free At 1·888·323· Glasa Doors. 7o10-448-4623

7.a-5!12· t a.t2
Quality clothing and household
items ,, 00 bag sale every
Thuradav. Monday thru Saturday
9 (1().5.30

Certified Medical Assistant needed for local physician 's office
Send resume to P 0 Box 458 ,'
Racine, OH 45771

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

and Flea Market

New To You Thrift 511oppe
9 Waot Stimaon, Athena

Call lloyd At BQ0.220·242t
EOE

Come Grow W1th Us
HARRISTRUCKtNG
COMPANY
1-1100.929-6003
www.herrtsb1c.eom

2623

Gentleman Seeking Companion·
ship From Nice Female For Talks,
Walks &amp; Friendship. Send Re·
pile&amp; To 553 Second Avenue ,
Apanmont 1-403 Gallipolis

• Local Dispatch
• local Momt Terminal

OUR GOAL IS TO SATISFY
YOUR NEEDS. ONE PHONE
CALL CAN MAKE THE
IW,FERENCE
• Ear~p To 3Se/MIIe
• La~ver And Slop Off Pay
• Safety Bonus And Awards
• Paid Health fllfe Insurance
• 2 Wks Vac 16 Pald Holidays
• 401 K /PrOfit Sharing
• Passenger Program
IAsslgned Equip
• Satell1te Commumcat1ons
• TUitiOn Reimbursement
Available

Pomeroy,
Middleport

!

• Bener Benel1ts
• Late Model Equipment
• More Home Time

HARRIS TRUCKING CO.

Be P8ld In Adwlnce.
QEAQUNE: 2 00 p.m.
tho cloy bolorw tho od
lo to run. SUndoy
odhlon ·2:00p.m.
F~doy. Mondoy tdttlon
• 1o:ooa.m. s.tunro1.

80

eoner Pay

DRIVERS

A1J. Yard S.lla Mull

Continued on DB

FLATBED TRUCK GRIYERS
If You Are Looking For

Computer Users Needed Work
Own Hra $25K ·$80KI Yr 1·800·
476-8653 X Tin, www 1cwp.com

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Inc.

005

740·441-

"28

•

Lost· female Beagle, one eye
blind, family pel. New UmaiSmlth
Run Ad , Rutland vidnoty, 7.a-742·

1M

ANNOUNCEMENT S

Bartendet wanted

Lo1t and..Found

Found 2 Month Old Slamese ·Kit·
ten , VIcinity Route 7 South, 7o40·
446-9555

45701.

Archltecl.

Band Groups, that play Rock
and/or Modern Country Prefer
Youth Banda Must be wllllno to
pity on percentage
Call
(:10')675-6349
Needed for Friday Nights and
Oihor Spociel EvoniS &amp; Tlmos.

~w=h~I-II~G::-e-rm_a_n__&amp;_h_op_h_o-rd-.-6~-D-RI-V-ER_S_ _ _ _ _ ___

•
Rio Grande, Ohio
In ••-d•nce with the
!'lane and Spectncattone
by
RVC,
prepared
An:IIH-, Inc., 131 Wtat
11Alh-, Ohto

All que8tlona regarding
the plane and epeclllca·
tiona ehould bl addraued
to lht David Reiter,

Help wanted

110

Gotaen R1trMr puppl••· 8 wka.
old. not rogltltrtd, 7•0.985·~•
alter&amp;pm

-..atlonof:
~.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis ,

20, 1999

For More Information
446·2342 or 992·2156

600+

Baskets &amp; Pottery,
Saturday, June 26

@

Charleston Civtc Center,
Charleston,

wv

1 0:00 am to 4:00 pm,

OPEN HOUSE
Sunday, June 20

1 · 4 P.M

Spacious Home, 1 .87 acres,
Graat Locat1on! Pnvata740·245, 9448

�•

Page 04 • JIPHb

u1lt~Jimtlm1

A n tlques

530

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

540 Mlscellaneoua
Merehandlss

.

540 Mlacellaneou•
Merchandise

Antique bon Baby 8td, VIntage
tamps, Hand Crafted Shadet &amp;
Morel Collector• Cloaet, 3rd, Baby btd. Playpiln. Swlnl Car
Court, Gellipotla. Call 740·446· $tal , Stroller, 0ftsslno eblt .

9832. 1o10

~~e

4267.

Dutch lap White Vlny'l Siding 6
SQ. Ft. .. Tnm , Alum1num Facia
$250, 7&lt;40-446-6415.

(31)&amp;)87~.

Arttlqut, BoHle, Advertl•tno Salt
And AUction . 6/28th, 9·.C, Point

Pleasant Armot'y. Quality Deeter\

For Sale: Full Stze· Mattreu ,
Bunk Da.. Wood, ~. BoxSprings &amp; Frame. $26. Men's
Wllh Built-In Four Drawer Chest . Wrangler Jeans 32·32, $5 .00
And Slld tng Door Clout. Grtat pair 1304)675-6665.

COndition. $200. 7~·2109.

- · 7&lt;40-992·5018.
Buy or sell . Rivartne Antiques,

FULLY LOADED PENTIUM
COMPUTERS. Poor Credl1 O.K1

Condie CroaliOnl.

'1 12~ E. M8Jn SUHI. on Rt. 124,

636 Brick Slrot~

Pomeroy. Hours : M.T.W. 10:00
1.m. to 6:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 to

.

6 :00 p.m. 740·992·2.526, Ruu

Candles Of All Styles And l)rpes.

McjQrll owner.

1-800-J520-6364.

Rutland. Ok 45n5,
7&lt;W-7&lt;12·2512.

GOT. A CAMPGRbUND MEM·
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? We'll

Will Do Refills Over 7Q Varietiu

540 Mlacellanaous
Merchandise
",HOST FAMILIES NEEDED!!!"
E11change Students From Germa·
ny, Japan, England, France. Rus·
sla. Brazil. Students Arrl\18 In Au·
gust To Attend Local High
Schools. For Further. Information,

1·800·765-4963.

12Ft. Kitchen ·cabinets . All
Wood . Maytag Washer. 1304)675·

5162.

Take ltl "merica 's Most Sue ·
cessful Campground And Time share Resale Clearinghouse Call
Aesort Sales International. 1·800423-5967, 24 HolXS.

Of Scents. Hours : Monday ·Sat·
urday, 10·9. Sunday T·5,,Aiso ,
Making Sod~ Lotions &amp; Shower
Gels!

Gravely Wa !k Beh in d ·Wi'th
Mower And Sulky $5SO . 740·245·

Cherry Dining Room Sat,. Table, 6
Chairs, &amp; China Cabinet. $600,
74().256·1651 .

9589.

Grubb's Plano·' tu ning &amp; repairs .
· Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
piano Or. 740-446·4525

COOL DOWN
Central Air CondltiOrllng Added
To Your Furnace. Complete Duct
Systmes · &amp; Furnaces , Heat
Pumps Certllled Installer. If You
Don't Call Us We Both lose! 740·

JET

AERATION MOTORS

Deck , Low Hours , Good Cond1·
' }ion . Call afrer 5 : ~m (740)·4-46·

3430

1s• OlrecTV Satellite Syatems·
$69'.00, $100 ol free programming.
Limited t1me offer, call 1·800..779·

8194.
1976 Ford V·8.' 4 WD , 1981 K·

Car; 1973 Mavenck V·8; 500
Gallon Elevated Fuel Tan~; 5 HP
Aototlller ; Farm Wagon; Antique
Hand COrn Sneller. 740·446-7732.

Repairl!ld, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evans. 1·800·537·9528.
Kenmore Heavy Duty 90 Series
Marching' Washer, Dryer Ellcel·
lenr Condition. $300, 740-446·

Discount Mobile Home
Pans &amp; Supply
Huge Inventory
Vinyl Skirting Kits $299.95: 5 Gal·
ion Aluminum Fiber&amp;d Roof Paint
$25 .21 : 5 Gat White Roo! F.?aint
$57 69. Anc hors $5; Doors &amp;
Windows. Gas &amp; Electric Water
Heaters, Plumbing &amp; Electrical
Parts, lntertherm, Miller &amp; Cole·
man Air Conditioners &amp; Heat
Pumps. Bennett 's Moblte· Home
·Supply, 740·446·9416 Gallipolis.

AMAZING

METf.BOL1SM
Lose 10·200

Breakthroughtll
Pounds Easy, ·Quick, ' Fast
Dramatic Aesuns. 100% Natural,
Doctor Recommended . Free Sam·
pies Call 740·441·1962.

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF-TANNING BEDS
Buy Factory Direct
EKceilent SeMce
Flexible Financing Available
· Home /Commercial Units
FREE Color Catalog

Ca11Today 1·81)0.711.015a
Antique Loveseal. Very Ornate.

$500; Cl'!e\IBI Glass, Antique Full
length Floor Mirror Mahogany
.$2CIO; Roder, Sol1d Maple $150;
Cedar Chest Upholstered Top

$200, 740-446·8093.

.

110

Windows 3.1. 5 Years Old, In·

Back Chairs, $125: Daak /Chair
$50; Old ~able sso; 740·446·

eludes : Marddrlve , Keyboard I
Monitor $200. For More lnforma·

7573.

lion,

Prlmeslar- free OlrecTV Summer
Promotion . Call now 1·888·265·

2123.

RAPID WEIGHT LOSS FEN ·
PHEN A~TERNAT1VE TR1·PHEN.
GUARANTEED 100% SAFE.
JUST RELEASED TO THE PUB·
LIC. ONLY $24.95 · 1 Mon1h. Buy
2 Months Get 1 FREE I AS SEEN

ON T.V. CELLASENE, H·VIA·
GRA A\lailable . Call United Phar·
maceuticals NOW For lnforma·

Simmons Son Side King Bed With
Wate r Tubes . Good Condition,

S100. 080 74().245·0020.

Sola Queen S1ze Green Plaid
Couch ISola Bed, Two Walnut
Bassett End Tables. Cocktail
Table And Two lamps, 740·446·

4274.
'Tearing Down Older Home. An·
yone Interested + 2 Dump Truck
.Ford 1 112 Ton one 1 ton 740 -·

3ll8·847a

Waterline Special: 31" 200 PSI

$21 .95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
$3.7 .00 Per 100; All Brass Com·

presolon Flltings In Stock

RON EVf.NS ENTERPRISES

Jackson, Ohio. 1·BOQ.537-9528

Weigh I lifting Equipment · For

Sale. $2800. (304)875-7758, A~er
5PM.

What's so different about the
Happy Jack 3X Flea Collar? 11
Works! Against fleas, ticks , &amp;
mites with systemic pois lonlng .
Southern State&amp; 675·2780.
lwww.happyjacl&lt;k1c.com)
Whitfield Pellet Sto\le 5 Years
Old, Only $500 Works Greall
1985 Sulek Park Avenue , Good
Condition, Asking $1.,600 Both

4"x 8' x 3/4 O.S.B. Reg'. $17.95 now $14.95 50 pc. Full

2.

Lifts $13.95 ea.
Over 200 Commode's in stock. Color and White 539.95 to

550 .

Building
Supplies

on ·Father 'I Day
.FromSon·l).enneth Carpenter

(Churchill) 60x42x2l, 6jC1 $499.95 or 1wo for $!100.00.
Regular 1ubs 54'.and 60' $29.951o $89.95. Sleeland
Foberglass. Big, Regula! Tubs 66" and 72" $199.95. .

&amp; G~andthtlllfhter

$39.95 gal. now $9,95 gal.
6.• Acrylic Latex Interior and Exterior Gloss Enamel reg.

Emily Carpenter

$16.95 gal. now $9.95 gal.
7. High Gloss Clear Polyurethane top name brands reg.

$29.95 gal. now $12.95 gal.

In Memory

All tyPes spray paint name brand reg. $3.98 10.5 oz. can
now $1.25.
·
9. We have over 1000 pc. Louisiana-Pacific Wood (I) B'eams
from 10' to 30' long.- still in factory wrappers, Good
Condition. Mostly 9 1/2", some 12" and 14". Reg. S2.3S
lin ft., now 75~ lin. ft. Bring your uuck .or trailer. Won't
last long.
·
10. Over 5000 pes: of Woodyard Masonite Paneling and Tire Board.
Good Colors and Patterns. From $.3.99 to $29.95.
·
11 . Primed Wood Boards· l" ttlick 51/2" wide. 9ft. long Plywood.

9n Faiher'l Day

reg. $2.98 ea. now Si.9R or by lift $1.50 ea.
1i. Embossed Wood Siding. Prime&lt;! gray 8" wide 16'long. Save 1/2
now $19.95 sq. reg. $39.95
..
·

Gone Bu.l You Will
Alway• Be In My

8.

13. Over toOO 'pr. E11terior Shutters Louvered ,and Panel. Several

Loving Memory
of

Ralph Toidi
Kerwood

Heart.
From Dll'H(hter .

Colors. 24" 10 48". $10.95 pr. 50" to 80" $14.95 ,pr.
14. 26 and 29 gal. Painled Building Metal. Reg. $50.00 10 $75.00
Now

$29.95 sq. Bring your truck. · Won ' t last long.

is. Solid Oak Trim. (Casing) (Base) (Chair Rail) (Crown) (Corners)

· Athens.Galllpolls·Pomeroy Area

from SOt to 70t lin. ft.
16. Contractor's and Do· II· Yourself Metal Cap Nails. For insulation

Here's a vehicle for riding with the automotive tools and
equipmenlleader. We're offering a time·limited
employment" opportunity that could get you on the ro~d
to owning America's premier home-based franchise.

Ha\le Be•n Wormed . (304)&amp;75·

604e.
A Great Friend Toy Poodles

AKC , Vet Checked. $300, See

Kittens, Male &amp; Female, White .
Cream &amp; Blue, First Shots &amp; Vtt

Checked,

$1~0

Parents. 740-379-2639.

SoUl Only 1100, 080. 740·24&amp;9239.

AKC Lab Puppies. Per1eC1 Time
01 Year To Train And EnjOy! 740·
367·0659

CFA Reglster•d Himalayan kit·
tens. variety of colors. 740·7.42·
1019.
'

AKC Registered Yellow Lab Pups,
Shots &amp; Wormed , Ready 4th Of
Ju~.

"140·256-6338.

Beautiful Ran Tarrier Pups, $100

Eech, 740·245·5597.

Fish, Birds, Pond Supplies.
Sun . t-4PM, Mon .- Sal. 11AM·

Puppln. Tarte
Docked . 1st shots. wormed.

6PM. Fish Tank/Pet ShOp, 2413

Jackson Avenue/Point Pleasant.

0013.

•

25&lt;10.

·

1979 lnternatlonll2 Ton 18 Ftat

S~ Bed,

What's So Oltfertnt ·About The

COL·

In Memory

www.snapon.com

Snap-On Tools
KtnoshG, WI
'Arl (qual opponunity employer mlf/dlv

Card of Thanks

Special Thanlar From The MitcheU Family
We would like to thank aU the many frienth ~nd relAtive• U1ho •uppon~d tu in the d~alh of my hwband
()tho MilcheU. Alto for ,the prayer•, viliratiom, card•,
ood and flower~.
' Special lhanh to Rev. Jolm and Ruth Wood., Don
Ond Loia Denny, a Special niece M~bel Copley, a
~pedal nephew Brad FUUJ16er, the !eam of Doclor• and
l\'ur•e• in rhe Chemotherapy Department at Holur
lfotpiral, the Gallia Cou~ty EMS and · Sheriff'•
Department, a Special Nur1e U.a Caldwell, McCoy·
MooreaFuneral Home .and aU the PaU Bearer1.
Aga~n tlaanh for aU the 1uppor1. We 1ilu:er:ely appre•
ciate eVeryone.
Otho ""'' a loyal a11d didicated hrubarul of 46 year..
He wa• a wor~derfulfather, patid.pa ami a friend to ...U
rhat lmew him. He UJill be greatly rrUued.
W'rfe-lib
-Gary, Gina &amp;:

polls, 0H Wo Dellw~

Husband, Father &amp;

On Father's Day

Grandfather.

·

ltrltrance ATP 125 Bellows Drive
Irrigation Reet MaChine. Includes:
Reel , a• Intake Aluminum Pipe
4nd Coupler• ~ PTO Pump lnclud·
od. 14,000, Pleuo can 31)4.925-

MARVIN T. GRIFFIN:

Bob Gilmore

s

47~3.

Who passed away
June 18, 1998.

}u~20

18990ct. 26, 1996
Edna Rou•h

What would be her
1 OOth Birthday

Sadly Miued By
Dalllfhter SaUy
· · &amp;Family

rood,

just acluster of
beautiful memories.
Sprayed with a mllllort.
tears, wish you could :
have spared him Lord
fllsl a few more years. ·:

1970 Pontiac Laman• .With 350
Rockel Motor. $800, Call Aftor 5,
30H75-5e12.·

Chevy&amp;, Jeapis, And Sport Utlllr
tit5. aoo.n2·7470; EXT. 7a32.

1978 Chev. Corvelte , T-Top , 3

Spoad Au1o., L·48, 350·V8.
se.ooo miles. (31)&amp;)875-5195.
11111).1810 CARS FROII hOG
Pollee

Impounds,

Repo'a. For LI01lnga Call 1·800·
31 9-:)323 EX1. 4420. .
·
1981 Olds Cuuass; 19a5 Cam·
7158 after 5PM thru week; any·

lime -kind.

Sadly missed by wife

Old Motorcyclta, Motorscooters.
~otoracooter Parts (Cushman
preferred). Contact:· D. Mitchell,

and family;

LIV.•tock

falordablo Rolft. 7&lt;40-38H358.

,A.QHA yearling atud colt, sorrel,

~ blaze. ltgt, good bloodllnaa,
lt100, 740·593·2288 days or
7-40·992~7300

evenings/wee·

llando.
Outstanding Angua' And Chlan·
aue Bulla, heuonably Priced,
~tate Run Farms, Jackson, Ohio
Aegliltered Angus. eight cow &amp;
2a11 palre. alghl 1 &amp; 2 year o1G

Qlllttrt, t11Cellon1 bloodlines. 740.
102·3033.
.

6:30P.M.

~iJ:I.I·[IIil hand tools,
15" tires · &amp;

Ref111shments

n8w engine

(740~1 .

1989 Chevy Cavalier,

1988 Ch~&amp;vy van, Auto .. 6 Cyl.

s1,500.(304)675-8693.

Z·2~ .

5

Cyi, Auto./Air, No Ruat. 11.200.

(3()&amp;)n:HI282.

Public Sale and Auction

·ESTATE
·auCTION
~RNITURE

4

te~iilo:iii1si,000.- tLovety

Ukt
Lg·. living room .
BeautHul equipped kitchen·aU oak
cabinets. Cathedral ceiling family room.
3. Bedrooms 2 BA. Lg. heated 2 car
Heated workshop out back. All
. No. 2t2

I .

===--...,

I

STORY COJ,.ONIALI
OF WILD FLOWERS
AND
A BLOOM.. A serene
Count!Y setting surrounds this lovely
home. Quality Throughout A formal
entry, Lg. Be.droom su~e &amp; whi~poollub
bath.
Beautiful Custom designed
k~chen. LR w/fireplace. Upper level 3
tiedroOrns. . Full basement.
Family
Room. All o~k trim. Only 1 yr. old. No.

=======':::'!I

·

A NEW HOME SITE. Hunting ground or
just a place i~ lhe cbunt'Y tor camping ;
riding a 4·wheeler or hiking. 30+ Rolling
Acres. Privale, secluded &amp; wooded .
$38,000. No. 208

Call For An
Appointment!
LAND
5 Acrei-Fal~ield Church. Can be split-Restricted. No. 11t
Jac~n

Pike Area-Nice building lot. $14,000. No. 1t0

Four City Loti-Commercial.or home site. SU1veyeq. No. 108
Partomouth Rd.-7 112 11cres. RED.U CED IN PRICE • . No. 112
Herrloan TWp.-40Acres+. SALE PENDING. No."113 '
2.440 Acre-estricted. Flat building sne. Green Twp. No. 208
5.66 ACRES-Buhl Morton Rd. Surveyed·Wooded. No. t14

I

Henry E. Cleland Jr..992-2259

GUNS
H&amp;R 32 Pistol, Model 55 Ivory Johnson 22 Pistol,
ChiCOJl41e Atm 12 gauge shot gun, #41 Wards 22 rifle,
Stevens 194·410 shot gun, Daisy BB Pellet Comb,
pocket knives.

.

.

·BEECH GROVE
ROAD

Sherri L Hart ............ 742-2357
Kathleen M. Oe1and 992-6191

I ~!i! I

6" B&amp;D Bench Grinde~rasman wrench set, Hyd.
jacks; ·chlschels, · screw drivers, ne.w power _pat. air
comp., power saws; 3/4 H".P. router, P•oneer chain
saw, 16" bar, auto books, socket sets, pipe dies,
wrenches, RyObi sander, planes, motors, Boudoie iron
childs electrio iron, sad irons&amp;·more.

PEIIAiil

Bill Moodlapaugh-Auctloneer-Uc. No. 7893
Cash Positive ID
·
N ol. resprm•ible for accident• or lo11 of properly
·A nnouncements dlly of sale take precedence
•
. ovar printed materia_!.
• ..
Llcenaad &amp; Bonded In favor ol atata of Ohio

RT. 14t· Immaculate Kepi Home
Acres m/1. Tall Grasses lor hOrses
canle and a small shed for ·sheHer.
home is almost new. Fea111res a lg.
room, bedroom sune.
14x13
lw!Y•alk·io close! and Beautiful Bath. 2
family room 17'.5" xt4'
complele krtcl\en
and 2 sky windows.
2B'x32' 1ully insulaled.
Great
raise the kids. Shown by appt

198.&amp; Cadillac Coupe DeVIlle,

I

RUTLAND .
POST 467
STAIIURST
$1400.00
$50.00 01 MOll

and lots. of car supplies and misc.
of box lots and misc.: We are still
no1~ckina and fin!ling new and use

PHONE: (7401989·2623
MOODISPAUGH AUCTIONURING SERVICES

Office ............,••••.•,...... 992-2259 ·

G:t
tMLENOEft

OFFICE

992-2259

AUCTION O.n-i'c; Plentv
chair and spend the day.

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

SATURDAY .JUNE 2 ' 1999
10:00 A.M.

Apprentice Auctlon•r: · Greg Blain IA·1 77
304-773-5785 OR 304-773-5447
EXecutrix
Jewell
·

.Is th• uflte of Howerd Newlud louted from St;
7 htween Chesler &amp; Pomeroy, Ohio. Teke Ee!lt
R4. et Melg• Memory lhrdeft to Piu Grove Rd:
11~&lt;1205. Wetch far _
Auetlon Sigu.

acres of secluded land. plus a
Nice 2 story home with , 3
bedrooms. fireplace, FAN.G. heat, new 1975 mobile home wi~h' a deck and room
windo'Ws and vinyl siding. Some newer addition

Auctioneer: Leslie A. Lemley
740-388-0823 or 740-245-9866
"Licensed and Bonded by St. of Ohio"

•• nOTE.- no Sale friday. July Zndl
HCM a nice &amp; safe July 4thl next
sales are Tues. July 6 and Fri.
Jcily 9. Watch Pe-per for adsl
'

Free gas·, public , water

newer paint and repairs completed. This
would make a .great starter horne or rental

tana day

Happy

Realty · ..
446-3636

a

"""""""'

COME AND SEE THIS ONE!

FOUR UNrr APARTMENT HOUSE, ONE UNIT
FRAME DWELLING PLUS MOBILt; tjOME ALL
PRESENTLY OCCUPIED. LOCATED IN THE
VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE. NE)(T DOOR TO THE
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE. IF YOU HAVE
INVESTMENT IN MIND ... BETIER LO.OK AT THISI
TH.E PRICE IS RIGHT $89,900

v·

Mergs
Buffington Landrng is an
subd ivision designed ·for horse
. You won't believe the fea~ures. Access

10 tlie beaulilul Ohio for boat lovers, riding ring.
picnic· shelte1. riding 11alls and much more.
Certain reslrictions apply. Call today tor
information

Lot prices anO acreage vary

according lo lhe particular amenilies.
Sto:ry Frame· 4 . Jo . 5
It~~~~~~~~~- 2 Two
baths, 2 wood burnmg sloves

F.

Audrey Canaday, Broker .
Ronald K. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, Aaaoclate

.heal, carpet/wood flooring .
has 1/2 bath ahd 2 extra rooms.
WoulG make a good rental.
POSSESStONtl ASKING

. "Mbc."

ISltOII!Un &amp; Rifle, Fans, Speed queen washer, Double
tubs·, Rubber Maid cabinets &amp; work bench, 1rol)
IHctrse work table, Lifestyle walker, 5 hp. edger1
IHome"iillc String trimmer, Step ladders, Push plow,
shovel plow, Lot &amp; Lots of tools, (Hand saws;
Hatchet, Post hole · digger, Rakes &amp; etc.)
table, Office chair, Desk light, Hospital bed,
&amp; Walke'r.
.
~

fiii:l\iiE.W SIUBEIIVUSIOI~-

.....

b ow.r... lomd:u~ or IIJ4.

"

Ohio #1~44
W.Va. #SIS
Cash - Positive ID -. Refreshments by
Chester Fire Club

"not Responsible For Accidents.or ..
l.osl Of Property•'
:;
Announcements day of ~J,uctlon take place
predience over
material.

$89,900. 3 ~~~~~~~!f
IN VERY CONVENIENT
PRICE
REDUCED. BEITER HURRY.
ONELIT IS PRICED TO SELL FAST!
RAt~CH

Jennifer L. Shaafl • Excurtix Cate #~0960 ~

Dan Smith - Auctioneer

. RD.- Approximately 3 acres wilh
24 x 48 Modular with a 10 x 28
adclitio•n . Nice home with newer carpeting a~d
PRil:ED REDUCED· POMEROY· Mulber'Y
1flooring. 3 bedrooms; 2 baths, living room
1 A·ve.· 1 ·1/2 SIO!Y Frame Home with kilchen ,
wood burne1. di ning room . Equipped
room ~lnlng room. 3 bedrooms. 1 1/2 k itchen, total electric with central air and e.:tra
Gas fireplace, heal is F.A.N.G., lloors
space healer. Attached 2 ca1 garage, trom
and walls are panel. Full basemen! porch, rear decking. s10rage building. Paved
x 20' garage. ASKING $4t,500
road . public waier. plus 2 wells. Nice Areal
·
30 minutes !rom Pomeroy and
$75,000
.

~

~
II
f() l!ns 61~ •-~ 'fiV 2SI7i

IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A COMFORTABLE .
TWO "STORY HOME IN A BEAUTIFUL .COUNTRY .
SEniNG, WE JUST LISTED ONE! 3 BEDROOMS; 2
BATHS, FORMAL DINING ROOM . SCREENED
PbRCH ... BeTTER CALL SOoN: THE PRICE IS
$59,00011
.
TWO VACANT LOTS FOR SALE IN THE C!TY OF
GALLIPOLIS. EACH LOT IS 40' X 150'. $10,000
EACH OR PURCHASE BOTH LOTS FOR $111,500.00

...

r

. '!:'f

~ .-:;;::W,~4

ONCE
IN . A LIFETIME INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY... EIGHT RENTAL UNITS. ALL
PRESENTLY OCCUPIES ... ON SIX PARTIALLY
WOODED ACRES. CONVENIENT LOCATION
NEAR THE CITY..LIST PRICE JUST REQUCED TO
THE UNBELIEVABLE LOW PRICE OF $238,000 .

MIDDLEPORT· Walk to all amenities. This Is a
greal 3 bedroom home. Many new features ,
beautiful original woodwork, large living ruurn, 1
room, full basemen!, front slUing
you wanl a· "Classy Home", call ·TnnA'VI
Priced to oefl at $59,000
CHESTER· Gentlemans Farm· 73+ acres with 1 1/2 Story Frame Home. 3 bedrooms, room
addition. appliances. barn, fencing and chicken house. Implement shed, pole barn an&lt;;! a pond!
Acres and acres ol hay land wilh Tf'C water. This Is a perfect cattle farm, or It vou are an
lnveslor buy 11and split It up. This land lays really nice! TOTAL PACKAGE IS $152,900

I

•

I

f

Perfect

carpeling. hardwood flooring upslairs. Lot's of homes11e or hunling re1reat. ASKING $39,000

"Tractor 8 -Eq,aipmeat"

11/ftr;a.e. &amp;c.ullutiJ/e.. ,~~
i.uace.k,ulrl ti.r~ IKa.ei. #rtJn.
. ~tillDDIKtirJ' rir/

L-_;,~~~a~n~d~~!!!!!!!:~...:-~J

1984 Cadillac Seville;

1

Announcatnent•

. .. GALLIPOLIS, OH

Jolin; Grandsons
and
Bryce, .Kerl and Gary

$2,500. 7&lt;40-367.()021.

I

l.cc!-2e&amp;5395.

FRIDAY, JUNE 25, 6:JO PM
LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN
85i0 ST. RT. 588 (OLD RT. JSJ

Missy,

198!5 Olda Cultaas eupreme,
Great Shape, New 350 M.o tor.
Power Windows, Power Ooora,

crock &amp; m·l!!!!or~e::_·= .....
ANTIQUE • HOUSEHOLD rrEMS
Very old jewelry, costume jewelry, old pins, Eastern
cameo, rings, &amp; ladies Elgin gold case poqket
waorcn. oak sessions manue clock, old session antique
clock, oak kitchen clock, old silver
d?~~~~:~~~~2·~~;~~~~ &amp; 1BBB-1942 t/2 dollar Cyrus
McCormick,
I the Reape Coin. t831-t931,
1865·2 cent pc., 1880 Indian penny, sav. old coins, old
books, pretty stories, golden summer days, ration
books, antique cane celluloid top, comb case, lg.
collection of late 1800 sarly 1900 postcards, doilies,
old Admiral radio, 3 apple peelers, Bearcat scanner
like new, ceiling fan, Nesco roaster, old bike, sled, old
tr!ke, wagon, p~ch fork, post hold digger, shovels,
racks, wheelbarrow, Lawn Cart snow blade &amp; more .. .

·'

Card of Thanks

1987 Grand Am, V·6 , Air Vtry
Dependable,
A.utomalic.

dash climate control , hypertech _ linder, 4 0ooft, Automatic, looks
chip sa500.304·675·2714 or aa. &amp; Runt Goodi S1,!!00, 740·379·
25e8.
576·2092.

.

·. MON. &amp; WED.

Day. ·

GrarukhUdren

(304)8e2·334a.

S1.200.00Neg. 7&lt;40-441-1083..
$SOO.OO. Compu1er·S200.00 .
(740)' 258·1799 Evening• aller 1981 Dodge Colt, 4/door, Stan~
d1rd, 4 New Tlirts; aaklng
&amp;'00
1,800.00 Call: l7&lt;10)·367o028S a1·
11185 Slide Rega1740-2511-1831 .
ltr4:00 pm.
1985 Buick T type Rogal, digital 1986 Mercury Topb •h4, • Cy-

. I

Mares One 10 Veer
d Mare 1/2 Quarter, 1/2 Mor·
n, Installment Plan For Horses
Good Home, :25% Down, Af·

,

lb. cap.. 3 slage
• Clark propane
3 sta~e mast ·
electr~c forkllf1
mast· Model
.
lb.

rust. Vtr'f good condition. Good
work c•r. SSOO. Cen be setn,
1111 5th St, New Haven,WV.

Mah. bookcase, oak dresser,. Mission oak desk, Ginny
"Lynn bed, 2 Ea~y one drawer wash stands, oak
organ, school· desk, 3 Pc. B.A. suite, cedar chest,
grand father clock with West Minister Chimes, 'fling
back chair &amp; m;:.or:,:e::.."':":-:-::-::
.
GLASSWARE
.
Very large collection of red ruby glass-water set·
candle holders-bell-cups·plates &amp; cruet, old biscuit jar,
pattern glass, Royal Coplay, set of Hazel Atlas, green
depression sa~ &amp; pepper shakers, thimble, butter
dishes, hen on nest, carnival glass, powder dish, corn
cob salt &amp; pepJl41r sat, wall pocket plates, sev. meat
platters, collection Avon dolls, berry set, Avon bells,
collection of min. dogs, Cambria .pHcher &amp; bowl, Esso
glass bank, pottery vases, . blue &amp; white stoneware

~'Arabian

Bring a Chair ·

rear tires, good sticker, new

rear lhocks, new exhaust. no

Located at 159 Midway Dr. In New Haven, WV.
Watch for signa. ·Will be aelllng the Estate ·of
Edwin Jewell.

620 Wanted to Buy

Can he.lp to lighte,.
our daily ·load,
He left no richeo, no
wealth, no fanui;
He left ul pride in
bearing hia name,
Sadly mi.,ed
Sandy, Gail, wa,
Bill Grandchildre~t,
&amp;

Forkl/fla .t
Eqpmr.: Clark

$500.00; Firm! 11117 V~l!"J l'o!&gt;LI&gt;

MW

10;00 A.M.

f~

I~!~~

Station Wagon ; 4 ely. Automatic,

Gallia Co. Ambb Scboola
· Comlf!runent Welcome by 07/10199 c.ommlotion
· $1.00 to $99.00 25o/D
&amp;too.oo to $499.00 10%
$500.00 and np 5%
Held at the Andr!!W Troyer Farm, Richards Rd.
otT 141, Jnly 24th. Watch for later llotlng

'"

:Mat, Jolin, 'Dicli ondforn.ilies I

Tax

~~~;~~~~~~i~i~~~~~~~~;

dohnay

rrunnie, 'Rosalie, 'Franli,

And

Auction

1:

1984 Fo111 Ranger. V-8. long bod,
$450.00; 19aS Plymoulh Rolltnt
Camper, Sleept 4, Stove, Sink,
Water, Heater, E.. ctrle Hockup;

ero. Both need work. Will sell toge1har wl1h...,. new parts and 1

Birthday

Sadly missed

leave met·

1986 Fo111 LTD II. 3.8Ll1er, V·6, 2

SATURDAY, JUNE 26, 1999

N Ford, 3 pt. Blade, Slip Scraper &amp; 'JWo wheel trait-

'Tiie family of .
'Fiuyd Clary
IVauld lilie to tnanft our relatives,
' fneuds, and n,elgliborJ for allllie cards,
flowers, food , and your lollin_q.wDrds of comfort
'
during nis recent deatli.
!' ·:, :speciGI tlianlis goes oulto Jfolz.er .Afedi~al Center,'
'Dr. "s :Michael O~•ens, [{li,e 9ricas~i, Snruli 'Trelian,
:Marli Cfiristoplier; tnr nursing stnff of 4·West; · ·
'Danna 9ay Watson :Massie, 'E:MS: 'Deputy Sfiqiff'David
:Marlin; Jfolur Jfospice team ofJan, ·
!Alice, 'Dana and '1'aul.
!;! very special tfian~s to Willis 'Funeral Jfome;
· '1'astor's 9eorse Jfollty and 9ary 1{!arner
for tlie btautiful services; Oliio Vallty Lodge #536
for providing :Masonic servius
and '1'allbearer's 'Fred 'Dtwis, 'Franli 'FulRs,
.t:.e.tsay, rraul 'Rossiter, 'Ron Jfayes,
'Earl 'Dillon and 'Bah Wade.
'11ianf.s for all your prayers, love and support.

~~

A. 33781' 727-4&amp;1·7408.

Hie dimming eye• had
lot !hair •igl•l,
Hu otep had slowed
where orace he ran,·
Then God called our
dnd lwme.
But tl&amp;e eeeds lw
planled along,
life~

1971 Opel GT. Grett Condition.
Chevy Chovtllo Suptr $2
. ~00. 1971 Chtvollt, Good
Sport 350, 4 opaed, lair &amp; drlv· Project
obit condition . 32.000 mlloo, 1038. Car, $1 . ~00 . (304)e7&amp;·

$3 ,600 firm, call

I

710 Autoa for Sale

t 9U

15e8 80th P1.No. Pinellas Perk,

~~:~~di~lo~ white,

In

In Memory On

'94 white Grand Prix SE Coupe,
$6700, 740-.1192·2939. ·

Months, Carmichael'• Farm &amp;
t;awp. Inc.
4.75%
4a1-80Q.594·1111,
Mon1hl. 5.5%Ga111·
60

. In Loving Memory of

of Our Dad "

AUIOI for Sale

710 Auta. for Sale

.

NHa51, Round Bolora, Now John CARS 11tKJ, $500 &amp; U~ POLICE
oearo Round Bolt&lt;$, Mower Con· .IMPOUNI&gt;S. Honda'.l Toyola'1, gellon of paln1 $2150. (304)675·

In Memory

In Memo,Y

Aula. for Sale·

NGO

IN LOVING MEMORY OF
FOREST J. "BILL" STEWART
WHO PASSED AWAY JUNE 18, 1998
· To some he may be forgotten, To others just a
part of the past. But to the ones who IOVf1d and .
lost him, His memory will always last. Just a cluster of beautiful memories, Sprayed with a million
tears, Wishing God could ha.ve spared him, A few
more years. A million times we've needed·him, A
million times we've cried. If love alone could have
saved him, He never would have died." God saw
him as he suffered, And He knew he had his
share; He gently closed his weary eyes, And took
him in His care. His memory is or keepsake, With
that we'll never part; God has him in His keeping.
We .have him always in oi.Jrheart.
Sadly missed by Family &amp; Friends

Snap·on Tools Company, Bob De·Laurentis,
67 MelrQse Ave., Bergenfield, NJ 07611;
Phone: (800) 376-0965;
· Fax (800)376-0967.

Credit Approval, J0t219, JD720,

24· Mon1hs, 3.7&amp;% 38 Monlhs.

In Memory

· ·

710

dltlonlfs, 0% 12 Months, 2.75%

$21.95 325 Bundles Only
.
Open 8 to S • Closed Thurs. and Sun.
740-384-3 5

If you qualify as an entrepreneur, seeking ll self-directed

June Used Hay Equipment Sale:
4.9% Financing Wl1h John Deere
NH&lt;l74, NH4e9, NH4aa Hayblne,

19. 2 sq. bundles of Fanfold for under v.i nyl siding: R~g. S:Z6,95 now

In less than a year-based on your successful performance
·you will be eligible for generous financial assistance in
converting to a franchised Snap-on Dealer. You 'II be in
business for yourself, but not be yourself. ··

$5,000, 740-~n-2427.

J0335, NH630, NH6!SO, MF1560,

oi wha1-have-you. 50 lb. Box $25.00 or five boxes $100.00 7/8"
and 1 1/14" long.
·
17. 8 and 16 Penny Nails, 50 lb. $18.95, or 1wo for $35.00
18. 15 lb. w1. Black Fell Paper, $7.95 roll or two for $14.00 Reg.
$12.95 roll.
.

As a short-term employee, you will earn a salary;
c.ommission and benefits. In addition, you will receive
top~drawer training and coaching, plus personalized field
support. ·
·

Square Bolos o1 Hay For Sale.
(31)&amp;)875-5072.

610 Farm Equipment

Wanted to buy· canary or cana·"'

Full BloOded Beagte Pups, Shots
'&amp; Worm•d. $50 Each, 740-388·

1304)ti75·2063.

$20.00 ou1 of tne 110ld. (304)782·

$75 .00 each. Cell before 9PM ,

Father's Day Special: AKC Mal&amp;.
Vorkle Puppy, 1St Shots , &amp;
Wormed, Al$0 Siamese &amp; Htma·
layan &amp; Persian Kittens, Wormed
&amp; LilltrTJalned, 740.3ll7-7705.

Large Round Bale\ S20 A Salt,
740-245-9(M7.

Round Bales of hay for sale,

1304)675-7948.

rles, 740-742·2545.

na-52e8.

710

sage, 7&lt;W-992·247a.

FAHI1I SUPPLIES
1&lt;. IIVES10C K

Rat· Terrier

Hay 6: Grain

Hay for sa'-, aquere b411el, 304·

~.

shepherd, S&amp;O; 3 1omalt reQifltl't&lt;l German s1109nttll pupp~
$75; 740-1185-:J683.
••

'

Jlunbv Gltmu-Jiudbvl • Page OS •

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

&amp;40

Exetllenl Condition. 1350, 740.

Malt AKC registered German.

CFA Persians 1 Male, 1· Female,
Both Spade &amp; Neutered . Must

Muelcal
. lnltrument•

Bak1wln Snare Drum Wl1h Stand
&amp; Cue, Stlckl &amp; Pad Included.

9505.

Each, 740·25a·

1311 .

Larry D.
Carpenter

l:;olor and While.
·
Over 100 Whirlpool and tubs in stock. Example·

sq.

~egislered Black Labs.

570

Pete lor Sale

Fuii·BIOodtG Ron Puppltl. 8
Weaks Old, $100 EIOh, 740-«e·

CFA Boautilul Porslan Regllttrod

ln Loving Memory
of

5. Automobile and tiJlctor paint. Real good name brands reg.

SALES REPRESENTATI

5 AKC

.

In Memory

3. Acrylic ami Fiberglass tub showers $59.95 to $199.95.

Help Wanted

career, not just a job·call, fax, or write;

(304)675-8807.

740-992·54tl5.

560

Pete lor Sale

Rio G&lt;ande, OH Coli 740·245·
5121.

I.

4.

Washer, Dresser, Couch &amp; Chair,

Block, brick, sewer pip'!LS, wind·
ows, lintels, etc. Claude Winters,

$199.95

During tire loss &lt;;&gt;f
my husband, Otho
. Mitchell, I would
like to take the
tr:m~ to give a
special tlranks to
my son Gary /or
helping me make
all the funeral
arrangements aud
ispecia!ly /or his
support.
Love, .
Mom

eo• 304·na-5841.

' 560

1 male EBI&lt;lmo spill .._. sh01S,
$50, ready tor good home, call

MuS! Se111740-379·2136.

PENN'S WAREHOUSE
WELLSTON, OHIO
BUYOUTS • CLOSEOUTS • SURPLUS •
.
BUILDING SUPPLIES

Ohk&gt;.

.. _

Knony P ine Table W11n Ladder

Announcement

1994 20: Ft. Gooseneck 'Tra iler,

740·379·2351 .

-- -

Used Dell Computer For Sale ,

2586.

Card of Thanks .

.

i

.

560 .Pets for Sale

540 Mlscellanaous
Merehandlss

lion, 1·800·733·3288 COO 'S I
.
30• "PRE·PAY /CREDIT CARDS.

446·630a. 1·80Q.291-oo98:

16 HP Simplicity Lawn Mower. 44 '

I

540 Miscellaneous
Merehandlss

.Sunday, June 20, 1999

Sunday, June 20, 1991

I

'

.•

�'

Sunday, June 20,1999

Pom~r51)' • r-'lddleP?rt • ~alllpolls, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
11 o Autot for

sale

710

tll8 OodQo [)vnaaty 3 0 V-6 automaUC e4ectrtc windOw&amp; electric
11111 txctlltnt condl1ion runs
good IUt wheel CfUIH control o4
good- lt050

Autos for

sate

1989 Toyota Supr1 Turbo 81K

17 000 Exctl~nt Condition
(304)675 1183 Aller 5PM

M&amp;JAulo
740-38Me83 Of740-7C!~t0

t992 Dodge Spirit M NC rww
ur.. good conditiOn 12 500 740.

t989 GrandAm 2DR 5 Spood
(30')67!HIII07
t9119 Mazda 628 LX 4Dr 4 cyl
2 2L Automalt&lt; AC PW POL
4MIFM Canettt w/equaliztr
Sunrool 204 000 milts good
condrtlon 12 500 (304 )67 5 7t22

992-e833

t992 Goo Storm Good Condilfon

AJC Tinted WlndOWI 740 24~

1990 Grand Am 78

ooo

SE Loodod $2 195 t990 Ply
mouth Accellm S I 495 1992
Chev Cav S t 595 1988 Cha'l
BereUa $1 395 1990 Dodge 3/4

Ton PU $1 695 t99t Dodge 3/4

M1les

1990 Mercury Sable GS Sedan 6
Cylinder Automatic 4\ Speed
Transmission AMIFM Stereo
Tape Air Bag A1r Cond1Uon ng
Anlllock Brakes Power Door
Locks Windows Drivers Seat
Cruise Control Till Steenng Ga
rage Kept With 80 000 Miles

Asking $4 295 Call 740 446
4223

1995 Pontiac Flreblrd A/C Au

tomallc v 6 T Topa 50000
Milts
Elctllent Condition
$11 000 7-2300
t 995 Z 28 Camarro

T Tops

Loaded Ask ng l t2 000 00 Call
After 4 00 PM 740-44 t -09M
t 996 Ford Taurut

Full~

lOidtd

(30')67~t

1994 Grand Cherokee Limited

1990 Cougar high m les runs
great looks good V 6 $2100

Good Cond"""' 74o-~79-262ll

74~-7!12

1996 Monll Carlo LS Tinted
Win dows
Spoiler
Alum

1993 Mere Capr1 Convertable
$2 995 1991 Pontiac Grand Am
St 495 1990 Pontiac Grand Am

742-2444 Mme740-742-6004

Doors loaded

St2 000

Alt0r6PM

1990 Ford Taurus SHO s SP.
good ooniiH"n S3 500 work 740

t 995 Sulek La$abrtCustom '

5t58
Loaded 4x4 Black /Gold Leather
l ntftlor CD Player Good Prlcel
740-245 9143

74o-llo&amp;9-2836 or 740-949-2045

71 0 Autos for sale

710 Autoa for sate

Ton PU

t991 Pontiac Trana Am Fully
Loaded! PriCe Reduced to
$22 500 00 Great Graduatlon
GltHI (7&lt;10) Ul t5a

New Tires Brakes
Nice $t2 000 (304)682 2542 AI
ter6PM
1997 Cougar runs &amp; looks good
$1495 74().992 2854

Factory Wheels Alloy Aally
St"l Buy Sell Acker Wheel 1

Whee ls

1997 Eagle Talon 28 000 Miles
Air Cruise Power Windows Sunroot Call After 5 PM 740 448
7411

800 994 33!7

Wortda

Complete Inventory

To Sale Ttrma Of Salt CASH

OR CERTIFIED CHECK.

720

GVW air brakll 9 dump bod

Jnow plow braekatl gOOd conc:U
lion 18.500 740-992 2478

tll80 F 350 cr.., ,;i, dully (XLT
Lorltt) dlonl auto goon neck
hitch bodllnor t23 000 milta. bll
- sa ooo 740-11112 1soe diYI
7-2644-

winter ti&lt;H 'veri well kopl Muat
aotto appraclttt S6 500 Firm
can bo aHn at t Itt 5th Str111
--.wv(30')8U33oll
1992 Dodge Dakota 4 Whoer
Ortve 4 N"" Tlroa Good Condi
tlon 16 ooo OBO (304)875
~133

t987 Ford F 250 4a4 6 t dleaet
Good Shapol $5 000 080 (740)
368-6743 Aller 5;00 pm

s-.do

sale

Windows Topper 2 e11ra reer

Spfod Good Tlru Good Run
nlnQ Dependable Truck 11 000
740-379-2586

11190 CPro¥y

Trucks for

tll80 Ford XLT 1hH:tr Llriot 302
VB Englnt AC/Powor Door/

19115 Ford Ranger Pick-lip V-6 5

1111 Ford

350 1 Ton Flatbed Very Good

Seized C1r1 From $500 Sport
Luxury &amp; Economy Cart iructca
4x4 a Utility a More For Current
LIStings Call HIOO 311 5048 Ext
1183

Shape 740-446 8t89

t994 Silverado Ellendtd Cab
4•4 Auto 350 83 OOOmlloa
$18 500 (304)8U 20t2

730
1i9! GMC Jimmy 4a4, Loll 01
Eltntll Exceillnr COndlll9nl Ratoll
Value 118 800 A&amp;~tng $14 SOO
1oo--.12111
t t95

S r0 LS Extended Cab 4 '

CyllnGor 5 Spood Air $6 SOO '
7oo--.tlll8 740-31H837
ttt7 Dodgo Dlout I Ton 4x4
Rom 3tiOO Aaklng $25 000 Call
4;00pm 1740)~1-otiM
730 Vensi4-WDa
1·1:..,:.7:.,-C..:J7;,..:.J:..H.:...P_,H-ar"'d'"to_p__,S
Sp11d Phone (304)175 203t
S2ll00080

!=r3~~ 8S';~~:.a::.
Tlr:n
Good
3 lncft Uft Kit Runs
$3 000 080 740-36WOM

'

-com

Reel Eltlte General

DIPLOMA COURSE ~ ASSOCIATE DEGREI!
• Jtllllor Accoualllla
• Accoullr&gt;a
• Seattarlal Diploma
~ • Bualntss Admlnklrodon
, Data ElllfY Spcdallst
• EuadiYe SetRWIII

Top SoU
For Sale

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101
e-mail

1885 Bronco II .tx.• Runs Good!
Cell Allar 8 PM 740-256-1287

1985 Chevy Van 350 Auloma11c
74().256-1831

Value 113800 Asking Sit 900

Satisfy

Accredited

MemberACICS-

Charlie Miller

~~ q{ Q/m;d

446-6806~~ 44

Package Runs Greati $15 500

080 740-245-5100

tq.No

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

*

acres of vacant land soma
aKcavatlon hal bean completed

Located cloee In on Slafeher Rd
11085 DO YOU HAVE BUILOtNG
IN MIND? Oon1 overlook ttreae

~S,too

·~;~~~~~i:t 3 bedroom
ell
"'

home living room kitchen
bath Newer roo! Quick
possession!
Walking
distance to a1area achool
ChurCh etc 11080

9515

e

SAY "HELLO"

buyl All brick ranch 3 br!r:~mr1 ..
formal Uvlng &amp; dining rm
rr11 w/WOodbumer kit mud rm
polio full basement 2 car garage

205 North Second Ave.
OH

Great yard Goa heat Pul lhla
home on your wish llat Call
V1rg nta 4411-8606/448-41102
13021
Bprlng
Brlngo
Opportunltlot That Ia why we

ROOMY HOME WITH
CONVENIENCES try thrs 4
bedroom home on for size
2 Story home with lots of
updates such as roof siding
Foyer, formal
&amp; more
dining kitchen living room
detached gar,ge covered
front porch Prices so you
can afford It $6t,too 00

11085

acres close to new Fwy hospital
shop ctr Water gat sewer
Adjoining Pinecrest Nurelng

UNBEUEVABLE VIEW-Srttrng atop R verv ew Dnve rs this
one story home that has a sunken ltvlng room with a big
beautiful wMe stone frreplace and glass all the way to the top
of the cathedral celtng Has 5 bedrooms 3 baths famtly
room dining area and a beaut lui krtchen there ts lots or
storage a 2 car garage and
a secur ty system
A MUST SEE at $199,900 00

$41PQO

Located on Kemper

Hollow Rd 1996 Mobile home 3
berms 2 baths Heat Pump &amp;
C A Good windows and many
eKtras on thla custom built unit

PANTRY
In tho LaFAYmE

... 000 VLS 448-886
1173 Old Houaa ond Bulldlngt

Own an established
Buy all the Inventory &amp;
Owner will pro11lde

loceted on 117 ~tern more or
Ieee
Water Sewer &amp; Gas
Can be used for

buying aklllo
TIME TO
MOVE FASTDN

12,1&amp; YOU MIGHT BE
OVERLOOKING THE BESTI All
brick ranch 3/4 badrms

baths formal LR &amp; DR lam rm
2/lg wlnclowa Loado ol cablnett
&amp; storage
Full divided

LOT FOR SALE IN POMEROY OLDER BUILDING ON
PROPERTY POSSIBLE LAND CONTRACT IN NEED OF
REPAIRS
$4,500 00

I Crrow•'o Subdlvlalan-5 Pornts Are~A spilt entry home wllh
3 baths famtly room wtth f replace d mng room
a beaut ful 1n ground sw mm1ng pool

1 acres

all on

Reduced $80,000 00

Country Living-Thai s Cor youl S tttng on approx 1 25
acres we have a beauttlul 1997 doublewtde wllh 3
bedrooms 2 baths cathedral ce lrngs and tots of closet
Add an aHached carport a 3 bay tractor shed and

rural water on Property 1/2 acre
stocked pond

lronlago

Plenty of road

pa;aoo 00

f3017 A HOME WITH ELIIOW
ROOM Located In the city on a
quiet dead end Sl 4 bedrma 2

POMEROY-Un on Avenue Has had lots of Updates Heres a
$12,500 00

and acreage? Then this It For
You 5 acree mil With electric and

2 1/2

basement
2 woodburnlng
fireplaces fenced yard gar &amp;
carport attic storage 1 ~ mJI
fronting on the beautiful Ohio

River City achaolt &amp; very close
to town VLS 44e-esoe
133H RANCH HOME-Located
s2o Africa Rd 3 Bedrooms 2

112 baths

8 rooma very lg LA
This home can accomn1odate 2
families E~~:tra large lot VLS

448-6806
12111 Chaahlro area old atrtp
mine land

$800 00 per acre

182 N! Groat lor Huntlhg or
Recreation Aloo t4 At: m/1
COfRmen:ialonSR 7
WtOBS WHITE RD toto Rodtlcecl
lor Spring Sale 8 I Ac m/1
Rolling counlryotde to buUd a now
VIew

bathe LA kitchen wjdlnlng area
new eun room added to the rear

LOOK HERE AT THIS ONE I
Asking price Is can you
believe $38 900 001 Ranch
style home with attached
garage family room large
kitchen and living room
basement
Excellent
location nex1 to town Let us
show tt to you 11037
cabin 7 garage mostly all
wooded with approx 15
llllabla acres Private good
hunting areal $65,000 00

11093

r

1 DO ACRES MIL CITY
SCHOOLS financing to
qualified buyerl Several fiMII
of road frontage Acreage
borders Raccoon Creek
approx 50 acres tillable
good fencing mineral rights
nice cleared wooded area
that would make a perfect
spot to build that new home
HURRYI 11012

MEl

ol the homo w/1011 of wln&lt;lowo 3
buildings t AC MIL Call VLS
$110,00000

..
~
. I •

,.

_4

~

v

,,

'

r some remodeling already done and 2
In the basement you have plenty of room Also a
$20 000 00
a porch and a nJCe deck
A 11n1e bit of country-Not tar from town This 2 bedroom 1
bath home sitting on 2 62 acres MIL rs completely remodeled
wllh nice big rooms An attached 2 car c~rport and an older
1 bay garage with an anactted workahop make II complete
$60,000 00
Free Gasl
White Hill Ro•d Apprax 20 acres with water and electric
available e.auttful ftal to rollrng land perfect for that house
you want to build or could put a mobile home there Call us
$25 000 00
today for your appointment to seel
DOTTIE

1192·5892
.................................... 948-2131

Broker

1302&amp; IT I A PIRIONALITY
PLACE WITH AN AWIIOMI
VIEW OF THE OHIO RIVIR
t7tl 8R 7 SOUTH ON THI
RIVER IDOE Sprtng Summer
Winter or Fell will be mo11

enJoyable living horo
Great

Am

Formal

28 x2B
Entry

w/Parquet ftoora living rm dining

mt Equipped kft tat naor bath &amp;
bedrm Deck w/Hot Tub Carpon
fOf entertainment 3 bedrma up
ea..ment Wrap front porch
attached 2 car
Plus a

24 x44 garage

3 277

I I

'

'

A\.

'

Unc:ond1t onat f1fettme guaranret
Local references furnished Es
tebllshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs (740)

:Joe. A /Moore.

J S Marine 11 l oaded Up On

514

Thll ranch homo lltuattd
an lpprax 8 75 ICI'. . has
had Iota of care and Is ready
to move Into The home has
a carport aa weU as a large
The comer
pole garage
location would make a great
commercial site Owner will
consider your offerl Call to
see this one today I 11 oae

-~

Second

REDUCED tu,OOO 00 IS
THE NEW PRICE FOR
THIS NEAT HOUSE that Is
full of history
Lots of
updat ng foy11r Irving room
dining krlchen den
B
bedrooms 2 full baths All
cedar lined closets 2 car
8i toads more

63:?3

Electric Carpentry Po rche&amp;
Trailer Sit Ups And Air Condl
tton1ng Also Maintenance 7'0
~1 t...a1

RI-Bulldtrt

Bu td new ar repair old no job
too small or ltrge Major cred i t
card&amp;
tWV029582
Call
(3041-158 1049 BP 1528-8092

840

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Fltsidentlal or comtn6rclat wiring
new serVtCe or repairs Master Li
censed electrician Ridenour
Eltctncal WV00030e 304 675

1786

tht dty to turround yourHH with
the eoundt of ntlure and
bteuty? Located on 3 8 acres nv1
m the A10 Grande area th s newly
constructed 2 story offers 1ormal
1vmg room and d n.ng room elrtra
large kitchen with custom made
Smith cabinets open to large family
room 3 bed ooms and 2 1/2 baths
(Including a get away from t all
master bedroom su te) plus a full
unf1mshed basement Sound good?
Then call Carolyn today fo you
I
viewing Priced at S199 900

740 441 1111

evansmoo@zoomnet net
~

Tra iler $3 500 1977 21 Ft
Checkmate 4 Cylinder &amp; Trailer

$3 000 1990 18 Playtime With BB

Stop Throwing Your
Awty On Rent Bu ld equi1y I
th1s 3 bedroom 1 l&gt;alh remodeledhome 1n town House has tots of
built n shelVes and c oboards
eat n k lchen and an 11 x 30
outbu fd ng
wtth
e ec tr c
Convenrent local on n c ty school
d str ct $39 900 1301

HP Ev nrude With Trailer S3 500

1978 Stingray 18Ft I Cylinder
With Trailer S2 50 740 258
6t60

and

rich warmth
ou r native
hardwoods In lhis 4 BR 2 BA 3
ca r professional masterp1ece
Upon entering thiS custom built
log home you re mstantly
surrounded in polished authentic
oak With an enormous custom
entertainment e;urround in the
elegant great room to a custom
designed oak kitchen with built in
corner cabinets that rest on
polished hard wood floor ng
nature surrounds you You will
e~ance accents ot natiVe bOrn
oak groomed throughout each of
the o~ers l zed rooms while
wandering on O'ler 7 acres on
th s hill top hideaway
Th s
brea thtaking view of the Ohio
Vellay Is bound to spo1l any city
dweller Cell tQday for a prMite

I

.
Land Listings

Diamond In The Roughlt
lnveeiQfl
Entrepreneura
ot
hore•
All
Butlneta Hunlera
H1r1 a 1
Wetklnd EntOY the be3uty and
golden opportunitw-1 Motel
luxury of th s cozy new horne
located on SA 160 between
located at 246 Ann Dr ve B ng
Holzer and town Is pe lee! for
the fam ly together aJOund !tie
several different uses Aevllal zeit Cheahlre/Kygtr er11 on Aou1h fireplace n the g eat room open to
and continue us ng 1 as a motel Line ModesUy pt~ced ranch w1th the kitchen wtth oak cab nets 3 4
make i1 Into a mlm mall or con~en nice yard offers 3 bedrooms I 1/2 generous bed ooms 3 baths &amp; 2
Is into apart menta A.pprox 4 baths eat In k tchen hv ng room car garage supply any fami y s
acres are Included so you can and fam 1ly room Detached 2 car needs Profess1ona 1~ landscaped
EMcellent buy for a starter grounds and all decked out for
expand 14 rooms plus large I v ng
quarters In the m dd e P ced to,,....... , ,..
1205
summer I v ng or enfoy the
mo~eat$199000 1231
neighborhood .pen c a ea and
access to Raccoon Creek All th s
pnced at S132 500 yes new
construct on and over 2 000 sq f1
of 1vmg space !Of under $1 50 000
Get excited and ca I Ieday befo1e
11 s too late! 1627
~._.-::-" 1 Betutlrul New 4 Bedroom Home

Trldhlon81 Delight!! You 11 really
appreciate 1he work the owners
have put Into th s beautiful 2 story
home
With
almost
a
con1amporary feel th1s 4 5
bedroom home still malnta ns a
traditional floor plan hvmg room
and dining room (both separate)
large family room a 1ght
drenched kitchen and breakfast
nook Also features a large
master bedroom on the ground
floor with a vaulted cell ng and
gas tog fireplace Hard wood
floors accent several rooms 3 1/2
baths n all Large basement
(unfinished) 2 car garage 2 348
acres mil $t99 900 lt22

For Sale l ocated n Green Twp
close to Green Elementary th s
outstandmg home s perfect for the
growing fam1ly who demands
qual ty S tvated on apprmc 4 acres
th s home offers a very useab e
floor plan w th lots of amen I as
Beaut lfu
ash
wo od work
throughout along with custom oak
kitchen will enhance your
antoyment 4 BAs lamlly room
den large upstairs rec room
formal d mng room 3 112 baths
overs zed 3 car garage concrete
drive and much much mo e The
owners spared no expense dunng
cons1ruction Come see for
yourself $265 000 1208

New Uetlng 121 Gr1h1m StrHt
Very reasonably priced and In a
nice con'lement neighborhood
Attached gara ge and large
concrete patio makes th s 3
bedroom 1 bath a g eat deal
$49 9001305

lit\~;!fS'··,~·

11027 The beat kepi 18cret In
two countlee Gentleman 1 farm
offert10 Acres of paet:ure wth 40
Acres of rolling woodland as a

--- -

-n

Log Homt In tht Country! II We I
c ared to
home oilers 3
bedrooms I 112 baths eat n
• kitchen w th Smith custom
cab ne'ts
I~ ng room with
cathearal ce hng and enc osed
sun porch Situated on a n ce y
landscaped 1 acre lot m/ w th a
spht rail fence Ove s zed :2 ca
garage and a 12 11 16 pay house
Priced at $99 900 Ca I fo you
private v ewmg 1500

Tare Thia beautiful hOme Doasta nearly 3 000 sq tt of very nice
living space 3 4 bedrooms 2 full
and 2 half baths oak kitchen
large deck part1ally cove ed

182100.

Outstanding lamlly room (26 x 36)
with cathedra! ceil ng wet bar
built In entertainment center and
bu~t1n computer/office area Also
Must
lot and 4

~~Tiiiii£~~~f.

ltD26
LOCATiON II Doi'\TO'NTliAL II
POTENTIAL,
Th s

I
away
have
call first
Priced at $31 900 Broker
owned Aak for 1118
~ou

NOW
GREEN

floors
porch One acre
New Ulllng thlll 1e Priced more or leas located In
lo Sell I In the 30 s home Gallipolis Crty Schools We
has 3 bedrooms 1 bath full can give you a tour on
&amp; central air request W182
Clly Schools
could be yoursl Clalllc, ranch 1tyle, log
home thet haa 1 touch at
1n Interior decorator ond
landacaper A retreat with
stone
34

historic 2 story home located In
the heart of Gallipolis offers 3 4
bed!oome 1 bath to fool
ceilingi and hardwood floors 11034 Live In One And Rent
lila Othorl Wrth this 3 BR 2 SA
Step lmo the paat at SIS 000
two story home the convenience
ol In town liv n is hard to beat
Located next d9or Is a cute 1 2
bedroom rental home that can
help pa~ the mortgage Priced in
the 50s Call today lor additional

data Is

2

IDEALLY LOCATED &amp;
EASY
ON
THE
POCKETBOOK Neat &amp;
ranch altuated within a
of Holzer Hospital
lawn ;l bedrooms
batha l11ge living
attached one car
Electrtc heat

I

s co

looking lor
We have a home
on St Rt 1eo that Is
nesllad on 25 acres M or L,
3 bedrooms w/walk In
closets 2 5 baths 2
llreplacas an office sun
room 2 car garage &amp; an
lnground pool w/deck &amp;
poothauae
w/cellar
underneath
Don t miss
your opportunity 10 see lhls
home Asl&lt; for 1185

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY-Large
commercial building with
loads of office apace
downstairs
Lata of
potential for this building as
It Ia located In the heart of
downtown Pomeroy
The
upatalre haa large storage
area that could be flnllhecl
and utilized for a buel""'
Do
need more apace or
juat awtlng out? So much
can ba dQne wilh thla rtac1y
to
move Into 11!*»1
Offered at a recklced prtce'
tool Now only $4.2,1100.00.
Call to see this onel 11084

. . . . 11081

home could be your dream home!

INVITING
TWO·STORY
COLONIAL NESTLED IN THE
ROLLING HILLS OF SPRING
IE YOURS TODA't
Looking lor a g,.at place
to ra111 a family? Ftve
year old home with 3
bedrooms
2 baths
fireplace Yard Is apprax
5 9 acres for lots of funl Let
us show It to you 1159

Ownere Want an Offer on
thll Delightful 3 bedroom
home In a
I
Gallipolis Clly
Located on approx 1 acre
Call far Information
We
boaulllul would like to show lito you
1155

Remodeled In 1996 th1s 4 BA 2
1/2 BA features a formal
eat In kitchen and
::;:;;~~ room with hardwood

II

$30S

11045 Ovor 2 5 AC MIL on tho
wlttr 11 herd to find
anywhere but we have it and
much mor1l With nearly 2000

square feet this 3 BR t t/2 BA

A NEWLY
AdJacent to tho Khchen contemporary is built with en HOME LET US HELP YDUI

room with e cozy OII&amp;TSIZed 2 car garage with a 24
for thoao chilly x 28 fmlshed great room abOve
mornings New aiding roof and Th s Captains Quarters Includes
lnaulatod wl~wa In 19M keep an oversized dock on the rhter
offering you your own private
maintenance costa low A quiet manna Wooden decks with river
back yard offers the perfect place view~ on two tevels heighten yoUr
fOr relplng picnics by ~our own enJoyment of the water
private water garden
Handcrafted oak woodwork with
solid 6 panel doors Inside fin ish
out this gem on the river Don I
pass on your dream seas the
I

lttrOIII8CiO

momontl 1131,000

Be aggrt. . lvo and lot
your money work far you
with
then
rental
pro~rtiMI
1 1/2 alory
building containing 3 apll
also 12 x80 - 2 bedroom
mobile home easy to rent
OWNER MAY FINANCE

vou

LOOKING FOR A LOT?
Consider any or all lhreel
Lota start at apprax 1 8
acres to aver 2 acraa
water
HIYice
Public
available
Restricted for
your protection S12,000 00

easy '~j;~a~·;~ij"';.j;;'~~;..~-i~ri9_a;
New carpet wall covering
high efficiency heat and air

OFFER!
ayitem IN ALL A SHORT WALK Owner wants this sotd now! If
TD CITY POOL &amp; PARK CALL you are handy With flx1ng th ings
CALL CALLI ..e 1100 00
up then th1s 4 BR t 1/2 story

This
two story
home has 3 bedrooms 1.5
ba1hs full basement
lnground pool and Is
equrpped with central air
Located In Gallipolis Call
lor more Information 1188

In

11077

C&amp;C General Hom• Main
tenenct Painting vinyl tiding
carpentry ctoors wlnc:tows bath&amp;
mobile home repair and mort For
frst tst1ma11 call Chet 740 992

With Troller $6 800 080 1966
18 Ft Beta With 4 Cylinder &amp;

WOOllliEJILTY, INC

LISTEN OWNERS SAID
THEY ARE MOVING I,
WANT THIS HDME SOLD
UKE NOWI One look at !his
ranclt style home and this
large well manicured ldt will
eell yaul 3 Bedrooms 2 full
baths large living room
dining area &amp; l&lt;ltchen combo
Detached garages
Too
much to mention Call at
ancel Your offer might buy
this one 11oe9

BUILDING
SITE
IN
CHESTER VILLAGE 2 Iota
combined tor one o sne
Won tlastlong 113,000 00

M&amp;R Gentral ConHacllng &amp;

740 •.tt6

Ave Golhpohs, Ohw 45631 0994

bact&lt;drap With 4 BR 2 bath LR
DR fR Baolr your appointment

lowered
Owner wants to
now ageleBB 3 4
bedrooms (2 3 bedrooms on
main level) living room
dining kitchen 2 baths &amp;
laundry Detached garage
City lot being approx 40x150
&amp; more Call tq view this
one todayl 111N18

SUPER
NJCIUI
YOUR
OFFI!R MIGHT BUY THIS
HOME 3-4 bedrooms 2 full
baths tamuy room with
French doors that lead to
multi level dack perfect lor
entertaining thlo aumm&amp;r
09er 2 acres Call to view
this quality All Amerlcrin
Home situated at Crew
Road 11040

French City Msytag

8ro~.d OwVIH

740 446- 0008

Mariner With Trailer $5 500 1988
17 Ft Stretos Fish &amp; Ski With
115 Suzuki &amp; Trailer $4 000 1984
Wellcrall 18 Ft With 4 Cylinder

992·2886

Call today! 11083

35051 BALL RUN ROAD
Super nice ranch home that
ts 2 years young
3
Bedrooms 2 full baths full
basement 2 car attached
garage security system 9
acres more or len ol land
Very nle&amp;l fl070

...... (304)6115-3887

"PIPE" DAYLIGHT INOOOA$1
Br ighten Any Sell ng Naturally
Kitchens Hallwa~s 8athroomll
LJke A Br ght C.tlng Fl.:ture But
wnnout Elecmc:ltyl The Oog nel
SUN PIPE
S nee 1991 Free
Brochure t BOO 844--47H x25

205 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760

LIKE YOUR PRIVACY?
Then lhls Is a definite
find apprax 25 acres come
with this brick 1 1/2 story
home wrth full basement with
extra space 2 Full beth&amp; 3·
4 bedrooms large detaclted
garagt._ plys mise sheds
Pasture land that Is fenced

NEW LISTING! RUSTIC
STYLED RANCH HOME
neetlld on a private 4 5 plus
acres 3 Bedrooms 2 full
baths oversized ••t In
kltcl111n. covered front porch
Still like new,
yaara young
It to you

Appliance Parts And SetvJCI AU
Name Brands Over 25 Years E•
per ence All Work Guaranteed

Home
Improvement•

Blackburn Realty

(304)875-65t5

DOTTIE TURNER
REALTY
Dottie S. Turner, Broker

742·3171

.

SASEMEHT

WATERPROOFING

NOW$110,00000

Cheryl Lemley

.

Home
Improvements

L111 ng11on 1 Buemen1 Water
Proofing all bu1ment repatu
done free est mates life! me
guarantee 12yr1 on job ••per

810

ttFt Sunblrd 170HP 4 3LPR

V6 Chev~ Eng ine Good Cond1
tlon In Board w/Ropes l fe
Jackals &amp; Tube $6 000 080

Ken MorgaP Broker 446 0971
Jeanette Moore 256-1745
Patrtcla Ross ~
740-448-1066 or HIOO-&amp;M-1066
-

84 ACRES M/L with hunting

3 bedroom home with newer roof and vinyl s ding Would
make a great rental or starter home

Home
13027 NATURE S PARADISE
Are you oeatchtng lor Tranquil~

810

Improvement•

Rell Eatete General

GRANDE-Country living attt's best A 12
'year old ranch home wHh 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
family room with fireplace dining room and a
pretty kitchen Has a nrce lront and rear porch
above ground pool, &amp; a 2 car garage Some
new carpet, freshly parnted &amp; decorated
Interior All this s1tttng on a btg corner lot that
ts level to roll1ng Just step r1ght rn One m1le
from college on State Route 325

take 33 acrH mil Comlortable

buslneOI VLS 448-6806
LOTS, LAND
COMMERCIAl. PROPERTIES
1173 REOUCED PRICE 117

Home
Improvements

7795

32LOCUSTSTREE! GALUPOUS OHI045631
Allan C Wood Broker 446-4523

23+ acres Acreage nat to
sllghlly rolling
Great tor
pasture or crops Fenctng
I!Qnd large 75 x78 barn 3
Bedroom ranch home Call
for complete listing 11080

810

Home

273-.~93=29:.:_._ _;_.!~------_;--....,::...,=:o=,-------

a King spacious lola w lh an In ground
can with th1s pool protected by a privacy fence
two storv 20 room w1th tastefully landscaped
home Built wllh tho surroundings
An oversized
of our settlers thiS attached two car garage with a
bedroom 4 bath home builtin spac1ous 30x3B frame metal
oprlng of t853 offe"' beautiful building rounds out the features
hand crafted fireplaces A large
comer tot ln walking distance of
downtown Gallipolis Taka a step
back In time and call 1oday for

CHECK OUT THIS PRICE
$47,100 001 Hard to beNeve
this terrific buyl Ranch with
3 bedrooms nice lawn that
has fencing Living room
with L shaped dlnii)Q area &amp;
kitchen comblnallon Super
starter home 11111

SERVICES

=:;:;:::::;:::::;:~810

446 0870 t 600 287 0576 Rag
era Waterproor ng

roc•ltd In 1 ptuoh
•nd Hltlng. This home resides on 4

offer this large stocked f ishing
mobile home parte like area May
be uaed as a camp ground build
new homaa or commercial

388-11801

found In

Close

IS wooded and may be some

3133 or t BOO

0899

(leo cold) Ml

t 996 Patomlno Colt Camper At
frlgerator Stove Awning Elllcel
lent Condilion Evenlnga 740

Can bt

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Stsrcrelt 8 Pop Up Camper
$t 200 Good Cond lion 740-448

$7500 (304)675-890 1

Flberglalt Covtr Sets on t988
1996 Chevy Longbed or G M C
$~0

~C

crowavt lull kitchen color TV
Bath1oom Shower 5 beds Vtry
good condition dtptndeblt

Hours 740 388 9991 740 388-

DON T LET FINANCING
STOP YOU ON THIS ONEt
Let the owner help yqu out
A beautHul 7 room tag home
situated at Raccoon Creek
2 Full baths 3 bedrooms
county water heat pump ancl
large 2 car garage Nice
place to llva Please call tor
more details Make owner
an offerl 1108t

Try this home
an tor slzel 3 Bath&amp; 4
bedrooms family room
kitchen living room 20 ll25
living room with 1 ceiling
Full walk aut basement
double deck on front needs
some finishing work to suite
your taste 2 Plus acres
garage barn and morel

Double Root

740-245-!1677

Slight Damage

790

1978 3211 MotorHomt 37 DOD
original miles Onen Generator

Budget Prlc1d Transmtsalons
and Engines All Typea Access
To O~er 10 000 Transmlaalons

bird With Tra iler $12 500 1984
t9 Ft Concoro With 91 200 HP

looks Good Runs Good

road frontegee. Access to boat
ramp Very nlce kJt to build or to
1302S VACANT LANO.&amp;a Ac
Mn Lovely location land Land

terHM

Used Trade Ins Ready For Sale
1979 26 It Twin Engine Thunder

Motorcycles

1978 Dodge motor hom• 20
good condition $3!500 call 7•o
992 5024

Car Trailer Loaded Whlta With
Hitch S5 400 740 446-3005 AI

eve Jotn~

Campers &amp;
Motor Homea

R Auto Ripley WV (3041372

1994 GMC Jimmy SLS Loaded
40R Excellent Condition High
Mlltl $9 400 Call before 9PM

f1CI88

00 VLS

vary Nice 1 Ac lot W/2

set your mobile home on
to town

E-

~;;:)~~;:~~~:

Located on Lakeview Drive off
Charolaia Lake Dr 2 3 Ac m/1
S1 g eoo 00
alao s AC lor

12004

t 999 Cargo Mallo 24 Ft

7ecl

New gas taMs &amp; body parts 0 &amp;

t 992 Sea ray 220 Mint Cond tton
Cuddy Cabin &amp; Many Extras! low

NUnor Work S1 200 080 740
318-9823 Aller 4 ~M

~ll7ol8

750 Boats &amp; Motors

( WO Pick Up Excellent Condl
tkln $12000 740-379-2880

!t"rtrax Good Cond1llon Needs

OWNERS SAID REDUCE
PRICE TO $50,500 001
They really want this neat &amp;
tidy home aoldl 3 Bedrooms
2 full baths living room
formal dining area newer
carpeting Large detached
garage with plenty of space
Nice level lawnl Immediate
posaeBBtonl 11051

Auto Parte &amp;
Accea1orlea

seen at 11 11 51h Street New Ha
ven WV (304)8U 3348

lor Sala

1994 Ford Ranger Exte,...ded Cab

$8• 080 And t 986 Honda 250

VIRGJNLA SMITH BROKER ............... UIID
Branch Office
... 446-11117
EUNICE NtEHMI •.....,........... ..
23 Locust St
Gallipolis Ohio GAIL BELVILLE
4tl 12011
45631
13028 OWNER MAY TRADE. 17

(740) 446-4042

tom down but stHing on a lot approxtmatety 50x100 A place
for your mobrle home
$6,000 00

1450 call 740-843-5450

1994 Explorer 6 C~Under •
Doors 4x4 Air Brand Ne'IJ Tow

't*'

1176)-Pike
GaWpollo

pull behind llniSh mowt~r 4.t cur

740-446-7289

maha 850 Fully Dressed 28 000
MIIH sr 200 74o-44t-oo29

fi00.214-045Z

1997 Honda CR 80 StBOO 1994
Kawasaki Bayou 300 4l4 13200
FZR 50cc sport bike StOOO 8 hp

.td ExctHtnt Condlllon R1tall

19BO Suzuki 750 t 6 000 Miles
Good Condition $600 t98t Va

74~367

nroal2ooo (304)682 38t2

tt93 Chev Pick Up Short Bed

t982 Suzuki RSt75 2 Stroke Din

Dump Truck Lm1dll
$85 00

760

t99fli 350 Banshee Runs GOOd
hcelltnt Shape Needs New

Uti&amp; GMC Satan Van Runs

740

RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER
446 4618

Motorcycles

1t89 Harley Davidson 1200
Sportater S7000 cell 1•0 992
4572 evening&amp; or 740 992 3812
days

Good St t95 080 740 441
0950 740-44HltlB

blgbend@eurekanet.com

prtoe lor a SPRING SALE

IMIDilLI:PtlR'T-l~n older one story home that needs to be

740

740-379-2995

ua tor Information on our llallnga.

great lots at a surprisingly low

CREEK RD -Just off Rt 7 &amp; 33 close to Pamlda
ranch style home with 2 baths equ pped
heat pump newer carpet and a detached 2 car
$50,000 00
s Hlng on approx 2 acres

&amp; 4-WDs

1996 Ford E350 Cargo Van
47 000 Miles 16' Box With Aluml
num Ramp Air Cassette 460 V
8 Excellent Cond Uon $15 850

• Medlcal SetRtaty
• Micra Caaputer

• Medkal OOkc Setrelary

Van•

(~)875-7946

"CA REERS CLOSE TO HOME"

20Jn $5995 oao

Call Vtckie Hauldren at
Five Star Mortgage
10 Myrtle Avenue
Galhpohs, Oh1o 45631

Withdraw ilema From Salt Prtor

GALUPOUS CAREER cou EGE

1994 Geo Pri.zm Au to PS PB
Sunroot 70 000 miles (304)675

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Ohio Vallty Bank Will Ofltr For

1114 lnt1rnatlonel dump truck
DT 466 A~aon automolk:, 33 ood

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

720 Truc:b tor Slit

Announcement

vw Goll St 495 B&amp;D Auto Sales
Hwy 160 N Gallipolis 740 446
6 t 69 740 ... 6 6665

Announcement

Moor

www acker

Auto Air $3 295 1991

1994 GL Taurus 59 6"79 m1les
s1111er w/maroon Interior ale ami
fm caua tte cruise good ures
asking $5 200 740 992 1506
days 740.949-2644 eves

720 Truck• for sale

1967 Dodge Dt50 Pill 1~444t
88 Ford Aeoratar Van $2000 00 I. A I M5 Mercury L1ftl 1620017
Automatic Good Stropol 93- Gao At 10 00 A M On 7/31ti At Tho
Metro 90 000 m1111 Factory OVB Anne• t43 Third Avenue
Warrant! 11700 00 Firm I 1M Gao Galllpollo OH Sold To Hlghoat
"Alia Whera ro• Wttnout
Metro- 120 000 mBIJ Good WOfk Errpr•- Or lmpNod warranty a
Car St.OOO 00 (740)-44Hl583
1.41¥ Be 5Mn By Cding Tho Col80 Dodge Splrir greal cond At ltctlon Dtpt At 740 44t t036
M:. CoJise Tln St 600 call a11tr OVB ROIOIYH Tho Right To Ac
capt /Ro)oct Any &amp; All Bldl &amp;
6pm 304-576-4047
CARS FROM $500111 Pollet lm
pounds Flepos &amp; Tu Selzurea
For Lllllngs CALL NOWI t BOO
3t9-3323112t56

Sunday, June 20, 1999

710 AutOI for Sale
Salt By Public Auction A 1995
Chevrolet CIMifO 1112830 A

•

m•-• In tffitrolling
3 Bfl I
Experience

country

Let the large open rooms m this 3
BA 2 BA newly bulh ranch etyle
home spoil you wllh comfort
Accented whh oak trim 6 panel
solid doors and tastefu lly
decorated thlt home Is the
epitome of quality and class The
oversized k tchen with tree I ned
view keeps the country tlawor
with solid oak cabinets and
hunter green accents $81800

11037 A Gr11t Location low
M1lntenanc1 tnd e Menlcured
Setting all compl ment 1hls 3 BR
1 1/2 BA bnck anch Located on
a level corner lot JUSt minute•
from Holzer Medical Center This
home ottera a quiet country
aentng close to work shopping
tehOOl &amp; p a~ It a a must tee' 11
t 33 AC $92 000
Call tor additional
Contract. details and loce:llon

BA ranch style hOme alluated on
2 Acres MI L
Located just
minutes from Holzer Medical
Center thll well maintained home
hit open porchea and 1 one car
garage
Priced 10 move at

18008

1751100

Need a reeldentlol lot(l) In
Gallipolis?
We have
something for you 12017
lrokerOwned

fQIIIb!l
·-00

11047 Morgan Rd

Lmt

11020 PEACEFUL PARADISE- Watch life roll by In a newly built
1og home on 1he Ohio River This rustle 2 3 BR 2 balh home
olfare wondlrful eldras Including 700 feet of wrap around decking
Hot Tub to aeat six A atone hea~h ltreplace accenls the
room with a loft day bed room overtookrng Its beauty Over
l oor feot of River Frontage $150,000

Worlldlllnd tn Morgan Twp , 8 4 acres more or leas Call
Information 12018

Onve thiS hOme
shape Ins de and
1nclude 3 bedrooms
baths I v ng room
family room and 3
enclosed porch Eat m
also Newer windows new
2 car garage plus

I orJtbtJIIdlng. Nlco

lot Sl 09 900

Dre1m Home Owners hate to
relocate end leawe this gorgeous
custom buill home Ollar 5500 sq
tt of very nice ll11lng .space plus
e acres and a pond for
allayment e bed ooms •
'ull and 2 halt baths 2 fully
equ pped very n1ca kitchens and
much more Qual ty construct on
Country atmosphere on ly 5
minutes from the hosp tal and
shopp ng 3 car garaQe lnground
pool Many more amenit es Cal
lor mora informatiOn 1227

to town Lot5

Not Too EKpens vel
Located at 16 Evans
He ghts lh1!1 hOme offers largfj
hv ng room with t1 reptace large
ki tchen w th d nlng area 3
bedrooms 2 baths full basement
small garage and large deck
overlooking nice IIZ8 yard Pr1ced
at $52 000 Hurry &amp; call toelay
1123

al.'ery
hOme lor the ,fleet and t ely 3 4
bedrooms ellow plenty ol oom
plus ful basement for e11en more
space Uvmg room eat m kltctten
d n ng a ea 2 baths Walk oul
basement leads to n ce yard
Located on St At 588 JUSt
outs de the city l1mils Pr ced a1
77 Ctdar StrHt Thill affordable 3
bedroom nome on Cedar Slreet IS
spacious and with a Itt e elbow
grease w II make a great buy I
112 baths 11vlng room d n ng
com k tchen Hardwood too s
Nr;tw wmdows $4 7 900 1213

[B
IU.-. OR

1il:

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(7 40) 446-3644
OPPORIUN 'Y
E Ma11 Address

Sonny Garnes 446-2707
Robert Bruce 446 0621

I

wlseman@zoomnet net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555

Sale Six tole In Wallar a HIM Subdivision Call today
ask lor 12018
•
We .,. atwaya glad to help you Mil or buy property
R_. praparty Ia 1110 avolllrble GIVI Ul I call lit

I

Call
for
appointment

\

'

Carolyn Wasch 441· 1007
Rna W1seman 446-9555

•

�Page 08 • Jtllllbav 111-.-Jtmlbwl
Public Notice
Pu bile Notice
M1tn StrHt, Pomeroy, OH
457Q, on or bolo.. 1:00
Continued from 02
., Mond1y, July 21, 1M.
Prevailing Wage Ratea, P.M
The Molge locllllolrd ol
Equal .
Employment Educ11ton rtle&lt;Vtt tht
Opportunity
1nd
to reJect eny or all
Govtrnor'a Executive Order right
bide,
end
the aubmlltlng ol
ol Januery 27, 1972, and •ny bid thllt
lmpoH no litamended
Governor's bUlly or obllgetlon upon 1111
Executive Order 114-9 are
llotrd.
applicable to this bid lnvna- llld
All
envelope• muat bl
tlon.
CLEARLY MARKED tccordNo bidder may withdraw lng to the type ol bid.
h.la bid within alxty (60) Cindy
• J. Rhonemua,
days altar tho actual date or Tre1aurer
tho opening thereol. Rio MEIGS LOCAL BOARD OF
Grande College reserves
EDUCATION
the right to wolve any lnfor- P.O.
Box 272
malltlea or to reject any or Pomeroy,
OH 45769
all blda.
.
PH
(740) 992· 5650
END OF NOTICE TO.
(6) 20, 27
.BIDDERS
(7) 4, 11 4TC
May30
June 6, 13, 20

Preparing for bagworm season
Itt SWI C'-lbeon

GAll.JPOUS -In our area, we are seeing a
large emergence of~ It is. important to
check your sluub6 aro trees for these damaging
pests. The arult bagworm is enclo6ed in a bag
ranging from 1 1!2 to 2 1(2 inches long. The bag
isrovcred with small bits of the shrub leaves, needles or bad&lt; and oo an excellent job of camoutlaging the i!Rd.
The bag; fromlast years bagworms are easy to
see right now because they are brown aro shoW
up in the new green growth. However, the small
larvae are erupting fromthe bag and ballooning to
other brnnches of the luit tn:e or shrub. These
ne..ily hatched larvae are very small and hard to
spot.
As soon as they reach a new leaf or needle,
they begin to develop a bag and cover it with tiny

bits of leaves. As they rnalun; they cortinue to
feed on the host plant particularly arllolvitac,
juniper, cedar, pine aro spruce, although they will
a1oo anack many otber types oftn:es and shrubs.
Control measures for the bagworm include
mechanically picking the bag off the ~ and
squashing i~ biological OOfllrol aro chemical con·
the baclerial
1 1 B'10 logical oontrol
~II th . . .
"""y
. It .us ti':Dgl~ ·. the ·
larvae
.IS e_ • ve 1
ag;unsl young
·
Applications should be made al the end of June
after all the eggs have hat~ and the e~ are
through ~~~g. Oiemical control mel~
stomach ~ICldes ·~ oo Orthene, Sevin,
Durs\l3R. diazmon, mal.athion aro others.
. Fo~more complete inf~n~ these damagmg ~~ contact the Galha Soil and Water
office 31446-6173.

(Pl.)

qt.,c em/cal plan
uctlon Increase
~N,
(AP) She~l
Chern~ Co. 1n Pmnt Pleasant says 11

.w.v...

Wllitnple product1on of a polymer fiber
by July 1· .
Productmn ~f Conerra, t)1e trade
name for polytnmethylene terephthalate
{YIT), will increase from 15 million
pounds annually to 45 million pounds,
company officials said Thursday.
.
Corterra is a tbermoplastic product
that is spun into fibers and yams.
·
Shell Chemicals also h!lli announced
plans to build a plant in Altamira, MeKi·
co, that is expected to produce 250 mil:
lion pouqds of P'IT annually. The plant,
near Thmpico is expected to operate by

200f.

'

·

The expansion of the Shell plant in
Point Pleasant will help fi ll orders for a
manufacturer in Spain that has
annou nced it will begin delivering
Omerra fibers to customers in Europe
beginning in October.
A spokeswoman for Shell Chemicals
in Houston said the company will not
disclose how much is being invested to
boost production of Corterra. Its propor. tion of total pro&lt;)uction at the plant was
not immediately available Thursday.
Shell Chemicals is a part of West Vir-·
giniaUs Polymer Al liance Zone, an area
in Wood, Jackson and Mason counties
designated to boost production of plas·
tics and plastics-related products.

NOTICE OF SECOND
PUBLIC HEARING
· The
Melga
County

•

Commlselonera Intend to

apply to the Ohio
Department
of
Development, lor funding.
under FY' 99 Community
Development Block Grant
·(CDBG) Formula ·AIIocatlon
Program, e federally funded
program administered by
the State. Melga County Is
eligible lor up to $160,000
ol Fiscal Year '99 COBG
tundlng, provided the
County meets applicable
requirements. Oil May 17,

1999 the County conducted
Its flrsf public hearing to
lntorm citizens about the
CDBG program, how II may
be used, what activities are
eligible, and other lmpor·

'

tant ,program requirements.

A second public hearing
will be held on June 29,
1999 at 3:00 P.M. at tho
Meigs
County.

.

assessment of the County's

neer!_s, 1tho County Is
proposing to undertake the
following CDBG activities
lor Fiscal Year '99.
ACTIVITY: Fire Protection
Facilities and Equipment:
Syracuse VIllage Volu~teer
Fire Department. Purchase
of Pumper Truck ·
COBG Funding: $35,000
Other Funds: $120,000
(Other Funds (Syracuse
VIllage, Syracuse Fire
Department, Local Bank)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE:
AREALMI
streei
ACTIVITY:
Rutland
Improvements:
Township-Noble Summit
Road
CDBG Funding: $12,412
other Funds: $3,000
(Rutland Townships)
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE:
AREA LMI
ACTIVITY:
Street

*

Check out·the other

Sutton / Lebanon
Run

Road
CDBG Funalng: $41 ,118
Other Funds: None
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE: ·
AREALMI .
ACTIVITY: ·Fire Protection
Facilities and Equipment:
Middleport Fire Department
Purchase of Fire Equipment
CDBG Funding: $30,067
Other Funds: None
NATiONAL OBJECTIVE:
LMI
ACTIVITY: Fire Protection
Facilities and Equipment:
Orange Township-Tuppers
Plains Volunteer Fire
Department-Purchase ol
Fire Equipment
CDBG Funding: $19,360
Other Funds: None
NATIONAL OBJECTIVE :
AREA LMI
ACTIVITY: Fire Protection
Facilities and Equipment:
Scipio Township-scipio
Volunteer
DepartmentPurchase ol Fire Eq1Jipment
CDBG Funding: $16,629
Other Funds: None
ACTIVITY:' Administration
and Fair Housing
CDBG Funding: $25,414
(Admin: $15,000 · Fair
Housing: $1Q,414)
Citizens are encouraged
to attend lhla meeting on
June 29, 1999 to express

I
I

iI

I

Meigs County's

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 50. Number 11

Single Copy· 35 Cents

DeLay, appearing on ABC's "This
included in the final package, although r----::
By JIM ABRAMS
Republicans· control both' the House and
Week," said the 24 hours allowed for
. Auoclated p;eaa Writer
background checks in the House bill ,
. WASHINGTON (AP) - .Despite a major defeat in Senate negotiating teams. :
instead of the three days in the Senate
" We still have some hope," Daschle,
· the House last week, there 's still some hope that
bill, was sufficient, patticularl y if the
House and S.enate negotiators will include meaning· D-S.D., said Sunday on CBS' "Face the
FBI agreed to stay open on weekends;
ful gun control measures in a juvenile crime l&gt;ill, Nation. " " We're going to fight as hard
when most gun shows are held.
as we possibly can to ensure that they
Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle says.
" I did what I thought was right, "
· President Clinton continued to press the House to are included in a final bill."
said Dingell, the senior House Democrat
But House Majority Whip Tom
reverse its position and accept tougher controls on
who has long had close ties to the NRA.
DeLay, R· Texas, a fierce · opponent of
sales at gun shows.
gun
control,
said
the
House-passed
mea"
If you really want to deal with the
But Democrats were also 'looking beyond the vote
problem
of kids I dc;m't think it begins
to how the gun control issue could play for them in sure, which responds to the spate of
with harassing law-abiding citizens, " he
shootings in American schools by
next year's election.
said on " Fox News Sunday."
·
• House Democrats last w.eek led the effort to defeat imposing tougher penalties for youth
Dingell said he thought it was a " disthe gun control portion of a juvenile crime package crimes and encouraging character-build·
after Republicans pushed through a prqvision, writ- 'ing in schools, was a " wonderful bill."
")i~~je' tinct possibil ity" that the final House-r-.- L
Senate bill would have some gun conten by Democratic Rep. John Dingell of Michigan . He said Democrats, in order ·to score
trol language.
and ,backed by the . National Rifle Association, that political points, reje ~ ted the .legislation
The administration argues that while instant checks
Democrats charged would make gun-show back- even though it would liave required gun manufacturground checks ineffective.
·,
·
ers to include safety locks, banned some ammunition can be used in most cases, t11ere should be a "'aiting
. The Senate version includes the background check clips and made it unlawful for children under 18 to period when such checks can't be done, as in the case.
with .the Brady law enacted for gun store handgun
and other gun control measures, and could still be possess assault weapons.

~ll~hools
S-10.2WD
$2,000 Cash Back'
or .·
$163/Month 36-Month Lease1
$163 Due at Lease Signing

on lhe county's proposed
CDBG FY '99 Formula
Allocation
Application
Written comments will be
accepted until 1:00 P.M.
June 29, 1999, and may be
mailed to the Meigs County ·
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
II s participant will need
auxiliary aida (Interpreter,
brallled or taped material,
aaslstlve listening device,
other) due to a disability,
pleat&lt;&gt; contact Gloria
Kloaa, Clerk, prior to June
29, 1999 at (614) 992·28951n
order to enaure that your
needs wilt be accommodated.
Janet Howard, President
Meigs
County

purchases in 1993.
Clinton, interviewed on CNN, said the Brady law
has bl ocked 400,000 unqualified buyers from getting
guns. " Do I think violent crime would go down any
more" by closi ng the gun show loopholes?
" Absolute) y I do."
.
' House Democratic Leader Dick Gepbardt of Missouri told ABC that the gun issue could work to his
party's advantage next year.
He said a small part of the electorate probably
· were single- interest voters who would oppose gun
control advocates.
·
" The problem is the 80 pe rcent who arc for gu n
safety just aren't for it very much, they are not
intense," he said .

,

Appealing to thi s maj ority is crucial, Gephardt
said, because gun control " can be run on and it can

be won on in any district in this country."
But Dingell said support' for the Brady law and
other gun-control legislation hurt Democrats in some
districts around the country in 1994 and " probably
· did cost us (control of) the Congress;"

(Tax, title, license and registration are extra. )

(Tax, title, license and registration are extra.)

It's a great time to buy or lease the Chevy ofyour dream$!

(6) 20 1TC

· For more details call 1-800-9S0-2438 or visit www.c:hevrdet.axn.
*Cash Back offers available only 10 resident!! of FL, GA, NC, SC and select cOunties of AL, IL, IN, KY, MS, OH, TN, VA and WV. For more details caii1 ·800·950-CHEV. You must
take retail delivery from participating dealer stock 'by 9/30/99. Not available with special GMAC finance or lease offers.
tS-10 payments based on 1999 Chevrolet S-1 0 2WD and MSRP of $14,273; 36 mollltlly payments total $5,888. Malibu payments based on 1999 Chevrolet Malibu and MSRP
of $17,455; 36 monthly payments total $7,884. OpJion to.purchase at lease end for an amount to be determined at 1.... signing. GMAC fllUSt approve lease. Available only to
residents of FL. GA, NC, SC a~d select counties ofAL, IL, IN, KY. MS. OH, TN, VA and WV. For more details call t-800-950-CHEV. You musttake retail delivery from participating
dealer stock by 7/1/99 for Maltbu and 7/31/99 lor S-10. MIINge ch•rg• of $.20 per mile ovw 30,000 miiN. L..... pay's for maintenance, repair and excess wear. If lease
terminates early lessee Is liable for all unpaid monthly payments. Payments may be higher In some. stain. Not available with customer cash offers.
Q1999 GM Corp. Buckle up, Amerlcallil'
•

· WINCHFSfER (AP) - A group of ministers generate a re-examination of the 'ICn Command·
The Americtn Jewish Committee lobbied
~Jto plac.ed the Ten Commandments at four Adams · ments' moral teachings.
against the legislative vote, saying that it violates
County.public high schools say they feel vindicated
MI look on this legislation not as a conc:lusioil, the separation of church and state.
by the U.S. House 9f Representatives vote to pennit but as the beginning ofa poocess by which together
"We arc very opposed to this," said Qarbara
the religious texts to be posted in schools and state all the cid:uns of this country might begin to look dluc:ck, director of the American Jewish Commit. P!;tblic ficilides.
much more closely at the ways we might best pro- tee's Onclnnad cltlptu.
: "We know what kind ot support there is in the vide guidance and direction for our children and O!lr
Lawyen for the Americtn Civil Liberties Union,
wmmunity out liere but it's nice to hear something society," he said.
which has filed suit against .the Adams County/Ohio
:(rpm futhc:r'out and farther away," said Tom QaiDan AndriallCO, spokesman for the Archdiocese Valley School District over the tJ¥llluments there,
.bourne, minister at the Bethlehem Church .of Otrist of Cincinnati, said posting the Ten Comm..dments say the othel' branches of pemmcnt will not agree
in Winchester,lbout SO miles east of Oncinnati.
is 1101 going to hum anyone and may do a lot of to pllllC the relisious texts back in schools.
: Thtu'lday's vole by the U.S. House of Rejnsen- IJOOd.
..
. · "The fact that 95 percent of the people in Adlms
"The 'ICn Commtndments arc 1101 only the foun· County arc in favor of the Ten Commandments
·1111ves to pennit schools nationwide to display the
wmmandments followed alimilu resolution in the dational moral guidelines for Jews, Otristians and does not mean they Clll write their beliefs into law,"
Ohio Legislature in support of the Ten Command- Muslims, they also arc the buis for a just and order· said Scott Greenwood, In AO.U lawyer in Onclnments.
ly society," he said.
nati..
. Bishop Herbert Thompson Jr. of the Episcopal
Still, some scholars and community and reli·
But lawyers for the Adams County ministers
Diocese of Southern Ohio said that even ifothe Con- gious leaders fear outbursts of discrimination believe the vote slgnals growing public support to
pasional action docs not lead to new laws, it could toward minority religions.
brins religion back to lc:hools.

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OOLUMBUS (AP) - The coali·
tion of school districts that successfully challenged the state's schacil-fund- ·
ing system has asked the Ohio
Supreme Court to speed up a decision
obout whether the problem has been
corrected.
The Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy for School . Funding filed a
motion Thursday With · the Supreme ·
Court asking for a shorter schedule to
file briefs and for eliminating oral
arguments.
.
Under the coalition's plan, the state
would have 30 days to file a brief
detailing it$ arguments and then the
coalition would have 30 days to file its

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spokcsmtn for Ohio Altomey General
Betty Montgomery.
" Regardless of one's views on

school funding, this should strike tny
reasonlbtc person as '" unfair attempt
to chitnge the process to benefit one
side over another,'~ Davey said.
Justices have sel no schedule for
the cese. But under normal guidelines,
90 days is set eside for filing briefs,
followed by . oral arguments IIKI a
decision.
.
In 1m, the Supreme Court ruled
the funding syslem w11 IUICOfiSiitu·
tional . because of discnopanciea
between poor tllld wealthy distrids.
The state responded by increMing lid.
reply.
as well as enacting a ncw system and
The state plans to oppose the laws designed to inaell9C tcademic
motion, slid Chris Davey, a · perfonnance and fiscal managemcnL

'
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more would make it their career choice if they felt they
The administration has pro~sed that within four
The school officials who hire .teachers also said that
were treated like professionals," said Sandra Feldman, years, 95 percent of all teachers·in a state would have districts had more trouble this year than four years ago
president of the country's second-largest teachers to be fully certified or working toward obtaining cer' in attracting qualified teachers. Shortages were most
union.
tification within three years.
severe for special education, math' and bilingual
Feldman said districts wanting to attract and retain
The salary reports comes as the Education Depart- instructors.
teachers must also reduce class sizes, enforce strict ment estimates schools will need to hire 2.2 mil!ion , The five states with the highest averege teacher
discipline polic;ies, modernize .school buildings and teachers over the next decade.
salaries were Conn.ecticut ($51, 727), ·New Jersey
make other improvements.
The union also surveyed personnel 'officcrs in the ($50,284), New York ($48,712), Michigan ($48,361)
Districts have begun offering signing bonuses and nation's 200 largest school districts, and found that and Alaska ($48,275).
housing allowances, as well u issuing e111ergency low saluies, an aging teacher force and rising enrollThe bottom five states in 1997-98 were New Mex·
teaching credentials, the survey found. It said 8.5 per· · mcnts were the leading reasons for the teacher shon- · ico . ($30,309), Louisiana ($30,090), Mississippi
cent of teachers taught under temporary or emergency age.
($28,691 ), North Dakota ($28,231) and South Dakota
credentials in 1998-~, up from 8 percent in 1997-98.
School officials reported teacher shortages, espe-. ($27,839) . .
.The AFT and the Clinton administration have cially .in large urban districts. More than two-thirds of · Sources for the union's report included state educapushe~ states and districts to end emergency teacher respondents said they did not have enough teacher lion departments and the Education ~partment's sur·
credentials.
applicants for the 1998,99 school year.
vey of teacher salaries.

;Legislative actions ·d raw ·pra·i se and criticism

See Your Local Chevrolef_Dealer Today!

Public Notice

competing with better-paying fields, union says

:: WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's schools,
.relying more and more .on uncertified instructors, are
hJving a tough time recruiting teachers these days
· because of competition from higher-paying industries
more attractive to college graduates.
A survey released today by the American Federaii.on of Teachers found that beginning teachers made
$25,735 on average in 1997-98, compared with
$'42,862 for new engineering graduates and $40,920
~Or new computer scientists.
. The national average salary ·for all teachers in the
1997-.98 school year was $39,347, according to the
union. In other professional ·fields, lawyers earned
$71.,530, enginee!'S made $64,489 and computer syst~ms analysts drew an average paycheck of $63,072.
· " Teaching is onorniously gratifying, and many

Malibu•
$l,500 Cash Back'
or
$199/Month 36-Month Lease 1
$1,398 Dtie at Lease Signing

Commissioners

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Melgl Locll Botrd or
Education wtthla to
roelovt blda for the follow·
lng:
Propotala
for
Depoeltory of Active,
lnactlvo
and
Interim
Dopoalla, Braad/Btkery
Product• and Mille/Dairy
Producto.
All bld1 thatl be recteved
In and tpeclflcatlont may
be obtalnad rrom,. TREA·
SURER'S OFFICE, 320 E.

Hometown Newspaper

'

their views and comments

i

•

. Good Afternoon

Road Show offers
atyour Chevyw Dealer!

Improvements :

I

-Page4

From AP, OVP reports
Portions of the Ohio River bank are a little cleaner following
Saturday morning's 11th annual Ohio River Sweep which took
in sites from Pittsburgh to.Cairo, Ill.
1\vo of
largest
were Thousands of volunteers donned rubber gloves and set out with
among the worst in
appeals over treatment that they denied to their · plastic bags to clean up the shorelines of the entire 3,000-mile
members last year,
to federal d:&gt;cuments.
length of the Ohio River and its tributaries in the annual Ohio
. Anthem Blue Cross and
Shield was ordered to pay for services in River Sweep.
'
·
40 percent of the cases in which it refused to provide or pay for care to memVolunteers at sites in Middleport, Pqmeroy, Racine and
bers of its Medicare· health maintenance organization, more than ally other
Reedsville donned gloves and, anned with plastic bags, set out
Ohio health plan, The cOlumbus Dispatch reported Sa!tJrday.
to clean debris from river bank in what has become an annual
· United Healih Cue of Ol)io was reversed a third of the time.
ritual. For their effortS, they were rewarded with T·shirts and
. Medicare, the federal health care program for those 6S 'and older and the ~~
.
.
disabled, contracts with 400 Medica" HMOs nationwide to provide policies
According to Kenny Wiggins, director of the Meigs County
ihat supplement the regular Medicare program.
Litter Control office, over 120 people from Middleport,
. When a Medicare HMO denies care or refuses to pay, a member, Pomeroy and Racine volunteered at three sites, collecting over
provider or medical supplier can appeal to the insurance company. If the four tons of trash from the river 's banks.
eompany denies the tppcal, an independent board selected by the federal
Results of the River Sweep, the amounts of trash collected and
govenunent reviews each case to determine whether the correct decision the number of volunteers who participated, was not available as
was made.
of press time this morning.
Medicare overturned 53 of .the 138 cases Anthem denied last year and
The River Sweep is sponsored by the Ohio River Valley Water
revc:raed 29 of the 87 cases United denied last year. The national average is Stnitation Commission in an.cinnati in ptrtn~p wittfseveralabllut 20 percent.
.
industries and businesses throughout the Ohio River Valley.
Most of the Anthem cases that were reversed involved reimbursements
In the Cincinnati and nortltem Kentucky area, volunteers on
sought by doctors and other health care workers, and claims for medical
Saturday gathered a variety of garbage tnd junk, including a toi·
equipment and supplies.
'
let, a shopping cart and Otristmas decorations.
l ·c'''''~:'.i
" We're commined to the senior
"This
is
probably
going
to
go
on
record
as
one
of
the
best
market," said Lynne Gross, , vice
president for government programs ,years," said Jeanne !son, programs manager for the. Ohio River
Valley Water Sanitation Commission.
for Anthem.
''Probably the weather and the river level played an important
She said Anthem is working to
part.
Both were good."
reduce the number of.denials by eduOne
group of about 70 people gathered at George Rogers
.eating docton and members on how
Quk
Park
in Covington, Ky., across the river from Oncinnati.
managed cue works, tightening the
bond between patients and doctors, The group worked all morning to pick up glass, candy wnippcrs
and having the plan's medical direc- and cigarette butts along a quarter mile stretch of the river to the
tor work more closely with mouth of the Licking River. They then moved to another part of
Covington and covered another mile of the Licking River.
Medicare's external review board.
2
By noon, the group had collected lbout 575 bags of trash plus I•Qi&gt;1'1
Many claims denied by United
Healthcarc were cases where it was- larger items like tires, roofing shingles and rusted gas tanks.
soorts
4&amp;!
Ms. lson said the annual cleanup has raised an awareness of
n't·cleu as to who wa5. responsible
the
riv~tself and the importance of keeping it clean.
for paying a bill, said Dr. 8ruoe
• •
I
"If
we can touch just one person like that, it's good," she
Wall, medical director of the insurLotteries
said.
er's Columbus HMO.
The progrllll was started in 1989.
The
HMO
also
relies
on
the
owo
appeals as a way to look at areas that
RIVER SWEEP - Memberw of Hemlock Grove Boy
Plck3i 4-8-41; Pkk4: 1-3-3-9
need
improvement,.said
Dave
AmerScout
Troop 2ft among thole participating· In
S.per Lotio: 12-I.S-29-34-36-37
ine,
United
Healthcare
of
Ohio's
this
yur's
annual
River
Sweep saturday inOnllng.
JQcker: 8-2-3-~
director
of
Medicare
programS.
He
Here,
Boy
Scouts
Grwnt
Arnold,
Mike Wam-'ey and
WJ'A,
.
also saicj there is no recourse once an Derwk Grimm conalcler 1 courae of action for their
DIUy 3: 7-4-7; 01111)' 4: 1·1·6~
appeal reaches Medicare's review· large find; a discarded berrel found along the river·
o am 01olo ~o~~ttor Putolllloloa eo.
process.
bank In Pomeroy.

or

County•s· proposed CDBG
FY' 99 Formula Allocation
projects.
Baaed on both . citizen
Input and local officials'

I

Tomorrow: Sunny
High: 80s; Low: eos

Milwaukee overco~
Reds bullpen for 7-4
n Sunda~

Riverbank cleaner following annual River Sweep

review and comment an the

Townships· Tanners

. Meigs beats Belpre 12-1, Page 5 .
Rude sibling needs to apologize, Page 6
Humane society: Your first bird, Page 6

Today: Sunny
High: 808; Low: eos

office,

Meigs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio to give to
citizens an opportunity to

'

Sports

June 21 , 111118

Weather

Daschle sees some hope for gun control measures

Public Notice

Commissioners

Monday

Sunday, June 20, 1999

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

,.

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