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..
Friday, June 25, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel

'· Along the River

•

JACK STANLEY

Jack P. Stanely
Air Force Airman Jack P. Stanley
has graduated from basic military

training at
_,,i!@.,J§ ;:;':"it;;"''i~r.:-~ii,;:t;;," Ocew1s an Ara- recently completed a six-monlh
in San Antonio, Texas.
Gulf, while assigned to the 13th deployment to the Western Pacific
During the six weeks of training,
Expeditionary Unit (MEU) and Indian oceans and Arabian Gulf,
the ainnan studied the Air Force mis- eral!arked aboard the ships of the while assigned to the 13th Marine
Unit
(~EU),
sion, organization and customs and U.~.S. Boxer Amphibious Ready Expeditionary
embarked aboard the ships of ~
received special training in human Gr'dllp.
·
relations.
!l?uring the deployment, Mar'tin USS Boxer Amphibious Readf
In addition, aifmen who complete J18!1.!cipated in the exercise Eager Group.
During the deployment, Sinnett
basic training earn credits toward as Mace, an exercise conducted to
participated
in the exercise Eager.
associate degree through the Com- improve the interoperability between
munity College of the Air Force.
Kuwait and U.S. Military forces . Mace. an exercise conducted .to,
Standle is the son of Jack R., and They also participated in Edged Mal- improve the interoperability between:
stepson of Dixie Stanley of Pomeroy. let, a bilateral training exercise with Kuwait and U.S. milita!)' forces.
They also participated in Edged MalHis mother anc;l stepfather are the Kenya military.
Karen J. and John W. Johnson,
Martin conducted port visits to let, a bilateral training exercise wit~
:. ~
respectively, of Charlolle, N.C.
Australia, Hawaii, Hong Kong, the Kenya military.
SinnetL
conducted
port
visits
tO
The airman is a 1994 graduate of Kenya, Singapore, and Thailand.
Meigs High SchooL
He joined the Marine Corps in Australia, Hawaii , Hong Kong,
Kenya, Singapore, and Thailand .~
June, 1995 . .
A 1995 graduate of Federal
C harles D. Martin
Hocking High School, he joined t e
Robert Sinnett
Marine Cpl. Charles D. Martin, a .
1995 graduate of Meigs High
Marine Cpl. Robert E. Sinnett, ·Marine Corps in October, 1995. :
School, recently completed a six- son of Sandra Kirkendall of Albany
.
month deployment to the Western and R..obert E. Sinnet!, Cool ville,

Fisher graduates with Miami degree
Mason Fisher of Syracuse recently graduated Magna Cum Laude
frum .Miami University in Oxford
He received a bachelor of arts

Mason Fisher of MinetsviHe, and
Jeremy, Linda and Gordon Fisher.
Syracuse.
He will allend Ohio State Univerdegree in chemistry.
sity Medical School in the fal l.
Attending his graduation were
An open house ce lebration will
Jim and Sally Caldwell, Jodi Cald- be held at his parents' home in Syrawell. Barbara Fisher, Jackie · cuse tHis Sunday from 2-5 p.m.
Hcrkowitz. ~is grandfather, James

• Top Dollar Trade..ln Values
• On the site financing • Courteous Sales People

FRmAv'
RACINE - Make-up day for
Southern Local sports physicals Friday, 2-4 p.m. for boys and girls
grades 7- 12 at Dr. Hunter's office.

Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday at
7 p.m. llte public is invited. Evangelist Harry Wingler of Coolville
will preach.

SATURDAY
SNOWV ILLE Snowville
United · Methodist Church homecoming Saturday, II a.m. There will
be a picnic luncheon.

HENDERS ON ,
W.Va.
Descendants of Sam and Melvina
Birchfield reunion Sunday at the
Community Building in Henderson.
A basket dinn er will _be_ served. at
noon. Fam ily and friends are invit·
cd.

MIDDLEPORT Women's
ministry meeting Saturday, I p.m. at
the Ash Street· Freewill Baptist
Church. All women from all churches arc invited, to attend and participate.
POMEROY - Qospel concert,
"Gather by the River" with the
Earthen Vessels Saturday, 7-9. p.m.
·a t the Pomeroy Parking Lot. l;he
concert is sponsored by the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. In the
event of rain , the concert will be.
held at the Pomeroy United
MethodiSt Church: Second Street.

STIVERSVILLE - Stiversville
Com munity Church, community
picnic, 5 p.m. Sunday, followed by
hymn sing with Delivered at 6:30
p.m. and preaching by David Bailey,
evangelist at 8 p.m. Take lawp
chairs, covered dish.

124

at

REEDSVILLE
Annual
Biram-Hayman Reunion Sunday at
Forked Run State Park shelter ho use
no. two. A bas ket lunch ~ill be
served at 12:30. All welco me.
·
MIDDLEPORT -

Restoration

and Renewal services at Faith

Chapel in Middleport through
Wednesday. Services wi ll be held at
10 a.m, and 6 p.m. on Sunday, and

POM EROY - Meigs Local
Board of Educat ion special meeting
Monday, 7 p.m. at the district's central offi ce in Pomeroy to rank building de sign firms . .
COOLVILL E - Vacation Bible
school "The •Ultimate Ad venture
wi th Jesus" through · Jul y 2, 6:308:30 p.m. at Whites Chape l Wesleyan Church. Coolvi lle, for chil dren preschool through 13.

Revival

June 27 - July 1st
7 P.M.

Victory Baptist .Church
·

525 N. 2nd

'!Cceived.

Good Morning

Middlepm;t

.

•IJ

T~Wt11
l:buJ
16
0111 • 1 hats

An author, professor,
and additional eight
years in evangelism
helped prepare the
way for teaching.
The Messiah In The
Tabernacle. Hundreds
of hours went into the
research and production
· of the book, models,
video's, and other items
used for teaching in this
·growing worldwide
ministry.

•Pep liZ

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant · June 27, 1999

By BRIAN J~ REED
·
·
llnMI-Sentlnellltaff
.
.
. ~MEROY - A ~posed new contr~ between the .
Me1gs County &lt;;ommt:"tone~ and the Ohto ~artment
of Human Se~C:CS w!ll conli~ue programs des1gned to
put welfare rec~p~ents !nto paytng_Jobs.
.
The contract, dcscnbed by Me1gs Counly Proscc~ting .
Attorney John Lentes as ·~ery good and ':'ery crel!ive,"
was presented to tJ:~e commiSStOneiS by Michael Swtsher,
&lt;!!rector of the Met~ County Department of Human ~rVIces,_Lentes, and three other ~embe~ of a commuruty
planntng committee charged wtth drafting the contracL .

c•••·"

Racine 's eastern corporat ion ·' Drive.

- Cllllndan. I
•

Cl&amp;7 .

ClplWe

m.z ,

~-~~~

JnMrt ·
A~
I

'

f'.!lliortell

Alollllllll Blnt .
~·
Oblblarta
Af
. Soortl
- '
111:1

D 1999 Ollio \\!ley I'WIItbloa Co.

- ~CI.

City grade school
students work on
proficiency skills

By JIM FREEMAN

l1m11 S anllnel Stall
POMEROY- Under current Ohio law, hilling a police
.By KEVIN KELLY
dog or horse is considered more serious than assaulting a
paramedic at the scene of an accident or other etliCiiCIICY·
GAUJPOUS- Tcadlen who
However, legislation deaigned to poteet emergency medworbd with CMr S(l children in lho
ical petSOII!lel is now on its way to the governor for final
Gallipolis Qty Schools' first pofi·
approval.
cicncy test skills remediation pro. The Ohio House of Representatives
gram on the elementary lcvcl hope
Thursday apprOved Senate changes to House
that ....... will rHtiiCr the ·c:llllBill137, sponsored by State Rep. John Carey
room this
with agreater enthusi· (R-Wellston~ which would inclUde emerasm for learning.
gency mediqsl petliOtlllel in the ·Offense of
A three-week sasion at 'Mishdisrupting public scrviccsCKI misconduct at
ington Elementary ·School for third,
an emergency.
·fourth lind sixth graders ended Fri·
• Current law provides protection to public
day with the chitcnn staging a
safety agencies such as police officers and
teaming fair covering topics on the
firefighters. The legisladm would alsQ offer stiffer penalties
grade school poficiency eXIIIIS,
to those disrupting emergency medical scenes and interferincluding ~na. writing. 'ecienoe,
ing !Oith the work of emergency medical personnel.
mathernaliai and citizo:nahip.
"We need 19 address this increasing oocurrenoe of people
The program was made aviil·
interfering l&gt;ith emctgett&lt;.y mediqsl perliOIIIICI and their
lble IQ shJtlents~ .........
response to en.agencies," explained Carey. "1be wlnera·
in ~litg'ihe' f..mh llll!fS!xll!,gntde
bility of EMS pmonnel as well as- EMS peticoll has
proficiency tests, and for third
become very clear. lnterferenc:e l&gt;ith theoc.activitica should
graders who undeqjo "olf·ple~ .
. not be tolerated."
testing.
'
Mei~ County Emergency ServiceS Dii"edor Robert
Six teachcn - Lori Billings,
Byer said he weloomes the legislation to protec1 his employJayne Burp, Bridget Halfelt, Judi
ees, but noied that there are relatively few situalions where
Jerome, JOyce .Preston and Julia
EM1's or paramedics need the pro!CQion of the new .taw,
Rotlerus - were invqlved in the
partly because they know their areas. .
program, providing skills intaven"They have enough experie!KlC to know they when they
tion and remediation, with the assis- ._..;;
will need law enforcement BSSistance," he said.
tancc of 1\vyllia Conilelley and
~INQ bEMON8TAATION- GJ!Hpolll City 8chool1 tMc1Mr Judi Jarome, center,
"We have good assistance from law enfou:Unwt They
Karena Pope. .
dlatX111ad 1M colllanl ·llf • dlmonltlllkwl ltlltllnta,- flom left. llmmy HoMII, Brllldon
are Ibm to assist us; we get the assistance·we need," he said.
"'ur teachers have done an out· .. . _ lnd.lolyltolmllfl;lf*l cr..- for a IMming ftdr Frldlly, ... lUI dly of 1 threa 1111111
Still, when someone is arrested for interfering with a
standing job on planning and ptOgi- to hllp flmdlt•chDDI.,. with lldlla on ... llimenlllrt' llvellbltl prollclency 1Hia.
paramedic, the charge is gcnerally for disorderly conduct or
reviewing individual needs," said Mary
"I think it's aealed a dilfcrcnt aititude OfAMp and Amaica Reads, whi!:b were some other minor misdemeanor, he said.
·
~nne Jones, who ovenecs specill pograms . towanllcaming. not just with proficiency, but involved with the city schools' poject and
"You kick a police dog and you're in big tlouble," he said.
for the city schools. "Mud! of what we've evaythiDg." added Billinp.
were recoanized for their assistance dUring
Byer recalled an incident following a bar fight in which
done. will be implemented next year."
Thn:JUihout the prognm. teachers the leaming fair.
the ambulanoe, &lt;Xllltaining one of the injured mrnbablnts,
Aside frol!l .the · standard clauroom sa 1 1d tbC importlnce of parents working
''Evaythilig says that the better a child
was surrounded by a beligerent crowd
inslrlletion, the leiiChers used newer tech· with children and in cft'ect, beComing pert.' docs in school, the IJ1Ili'C likely they are to.
"They had to lock the mors on the squad and call the
niques to stimulate learning. such as 'tnin IICIS In the .Uationalpoccs~.
continue tl!oir education,'' Bapst added. police to move the crowd away from the ambulance before
gym,'' or physical movement to help studenltl
Jones rti&lt;IOIIUi!ende that parents read With "Thai's why we're here."
they could take the peoon to the hospital," he said ·
focus on their Sllbjects.
their child for Ill ... 10 minula a day, foJ.
Pnnts of students who slaged the leam"I've been IJn 1=3lls where people get in your face and try
tell you what to do. They may have good intentions, but they
''Through Mill. Jmet~' advb and flcilitat- lowed b)t the child writing about what ing fair believed the clasiles made the educa·
ing. we've learned a lot of diffaalt things," · read. The composition wotdd then be tional proces~ more intmstlng. Among the · haven1 had the training. don\ really know what is going on,•
he said. "People sometimeS get in the way when you're trysaid Jerome. "We incorporallld movanent c:1tec1ta1 by the pnnt (or mrnlfthension, parenll on hand - Robin Johnion, wl\ose
ing to-treat somebody."
··
with the daily plan of activities. These are the _gnnunar .and mechanic:s. Such m exercise, son Jamca, who will be a fifth pader this fall,
things we used to bep the children working · llho aplained. il me way of binaing the took pert in the progl'IID.
"Most problems oome from drugs or ak:ohol where Ibm
on Sllbjecliuuch 11readlng and writing.
lclming process out of the cl 001n .
"FFmt whllmy son kJid me, he's enjoyed it
are problems with_bystanders or the person you're trying ui
IRa!," he said. .
.
"We're llyingw get the kid! excited itbout
"We need thlt kind of J11fC11111 involve- evay day, and hc'llhlnd his cxpaia~CeS with
. Flouse Bill 137 increao;es the penalty for rnisllonduct Ill
learning." she added. "'f ~ gel eXcited matt,".ljplled Jab B1pt. medi~ apocialilt at me," abc uid. '1 Ret that any time 'chikhn
about some ll!flCClolleamlng. we hope it wiD · the Uniwnity of Rio Grande/Rio Grande have a chance mrcoeiYe my ld:liliooal cWca- an emergency from a misdemeanor of the fourth degree to a ·
cany CMr."
r
'
Ccuipwtit)' Cdlep wlx) wcidia with Project · lion beymd the tKtlllol yew il very bcnelidll."
misdemcinor of the first degree if the violation c:rales a risk
of physical harm io people or ptopaty.

Tlu•l••••llt:lft

ran

Eastern summer program offers boost for elementary students

By BRIAN J. REED
.
reading compojlent o( t)le fourth
llmll Sentinel 8lall
padc proficiency ~Cit beforc they
TUPPERS PLAINS - An extra are promoted to the fifth pacte.
boost in reading and mathematics
11ie 11111 al111 -nquires school dia·
will be given to students participat· tricta to offer special summer inter·
ing in a special summer inlcrYention ventjon · programs for students in
program offered "y the Eastern . grades 1-4 w11o ~xpcrience difficu_l·
Local Sl;hool District.
ties in reading and math. '
The . program is offered to 'stu·
Ai:!:ording io Eastern Elementary .
dents ~n
1:6• a part of Sen· School Principal Molly_Jewett, the
ate Bill SS, whtch sets forth new · diltrict ~ to eltiend tile clemenstandards . for elementary students. tary ~ - to indude fifth and
Put of.that biD outlines the "Fourth sixth·iP'ttt~Jers. ne program ia strict·
. Grade Guarantee," which, beginning · ly voluntary, and atudents were
in the 2000-2001 sdlool year, will Invited to J111111cipate baled Ori their
require fourth grade11 to pua lho proficloncy test ICXIJa or I teacher's

.,adcs

.

Salil\~!1 explained that off-highway motorcy·
·cles are•. vehi~ea, suth as dirt bikes anc!

motoc((ll!l-typo vehicles, to he operated on Ianda
other lliln alireet or highway,
.
·
Ali·JIU'1JOIIC vehlclw are ilelf-propclled vehl·
ties desianed for cross &lt;:ountry 'travel on more
than one type of terrain, vehicles commonly
Jcnown as all-terrain vehiclw.
Saunders offered the. following .highlights
of
.

the new law:
• Dealers will be required to provide or renew
their APV or off·highway motorcycle within 30
clays of the purdl.-e.
,
• Before anyone ca,n regiltcr or reticw their
APV off-highway motorcycle with tho Ohio
Bureau of ~otor Velllc:lea, it mUll be titled
through the C9Wity Clerk of Courts title office.
• Fi~t time renewal of an APV or off-highway
!DQIOreycle regiatration will require ~
of an Ohio title.
• Ownen can pun:h- a 30-day tdcker from
their dealer or local deputy regillrll for $4.25 to
be used while waiting for a title to be secured.
• All registrations expire on Dec. 31 In tho
third year after the dale of IU~&amp;~~~Ce.
· • Tilling is optional for mowmobilea, unlcla

or

+
. I

-· j '' .•.

.

-·--:.: .

~·

Bill before governor
helps·safe·guard
emergency workers

Enthusiasm fOr learni

lly MJLLL1881A RUSSELL
1111111 Bantlne18tlll
·: . GALUPOUS - Oallia COunty Clerk of
Courts Noreen Saunders announced Friday that i
now law, House Bill 611, wi.ll come into effed on
July 11 19$)9. Thb 'new law will require ill• for
-Off'highwly motorcytles and all-purpose velli·

·Welcomes The Public
Nursery .Provided

Vol. 34, No . 19

Th~ commissioners met with Swiaher,-Lentea, and chanaea the way that welfare dollars are used· It is simi· The program also requires a subsequent 24-month period
comm1!'« members Carol Brewer of the Alhctii/Meip tar to a contraa between the oommissioneiS and the Ohio of ineligibility, with additional 24-month eligibility
Educational Scrvi~:e Center, llld Donna Boyd and Cindy DHS which went into effed In January, although the new allowed only in the case of a family emergency.
·
Mills of the DHS, during a rece11ed meeting on Thunday .conlract would -be in effca for a two-year period.
The ·emphasis on the new OWF program is the pre·
llftcmoon.
.
Under federal law, the federal government's funding vention of need of assistance through a . Prevention,
Mary Hobllelter cif the DHS w11 also Ill the meeting, · source for welfare, Temporary Assistance to Needy Fam· Retention and cOntingency proar!lffi, which is desiped
although she is not a member of the commuaity planning ilies (TANF). is now diJtributed to the states in the form to prevent eligibility, retain employment for clients and
committee, which includes thole . named lind Judge of a block grant, and then funneled to individual counties, provide contingent assistance in the case of emergencies.
~rt Buck and Steve Behl of Carleton Scllool and where the funds are ltdministered by the county commis· .
Those who receive cash assistance must either be
Me1gs Indllllri,~.
,
~ioncn.
. employed, seek job training or participate in a communiThe .propoeed con~ which would go into effect on
The new legislation limits eligibility for cash assis- ty work program, similar to the old General Assistance,
July 1, tithe product of welfare refonn legisllllion which tancc to. a total of 36 months, either continuous or not
Continued on pege M

.referral.
'The setting is casual, which
Superintendent Deryl Well slid makes the experience more enjoy·
thtd the proaram for fifth and sixth able for the students.
graders, u well as a similar program
Cindy Linton, who teacheS the
for grades 7·12. to be held later this (qurth, fifth and si,xtli graders, said
summer, is funded through the Dis- tliat atiendance in her class has been
advantapd Pupil lmJ*t Aid pro- W!lsistent for the first week, and that
gram, made available to poorer studentS seem to enjoy their work.
sehool districts.
The class is also a gQOil social expe. l,'h~ elementary program has ~1 rience_flir th~ stud~nts, who have
ptlrtiCipants, all of whom arnec:ctv. forged new friendships as a res~lt of
iiiJ itlte~~SiV~ work in·lho two areu... the Integrated classroom .environThe threc~.h~ur -ions, which will me11'1.
.
continue for five .weeks, involve · Her group will use two children's
both classroom i111truction and com- novels to improve oral reading and
puler lab worL
reading comprehension skills, ·and

purdlued from a dealer or
required by the owners' ·
iiiiUI'IIIce company or finan·
cial inatitution. Proof of own·
erahip muat be calltblished at
the time of registration with ll
dealer's bill of sale or a·
anowmobile/mOped affldavit-

·ronn.

• Sales and use tax on

AYV1 and off·highway motorcycles will be collectecf Ill tho time of title iauance if purchased
afler July 1, If purchisea prior to July 1 are tax·

exempt.

.

work together on the reading projccts. Mathematics is divided into
work for each pade level.
There is no hOmework, she said.
"I have two high·schoolers at
home, and they think I'm crazy for
doing this, but I really enjoy it," Lin·
ton ~!aid. "Irs fun ."
While the atmosphere is relaxed,
the pro_gram i~ no summer vacati.on. ·
Work tS conttnuous, .and even the
break which is provided is used for
reading.
· Dixie Sayre, the school district's
Title I teacher, is in charge of the pri·
COntinued on pege M

Coast Guard OKs closing of boat launch

:New law requires titles for off-road.vehicles

Pastor James Keese

Detail• on
pageA7

New welfar~ partnership agreement presented to commission

·coiMcuon•
were

line. Cake .and icc cream will be
se rved . Al l Masoni c widows in vited.

U?.tiJ~V~I_Iey Publishing Co.

.. . :nfr'.ei!!R

RAC INE - Annual Albert and
Eliza Hi!l reunion , Star Mill Park.
Sunday. bas ket dinner at 12:30 p.m.
RACINE - Teaford reuni on Sat- . Fa1_11ily and fri ends invited.
urd';ly at Star Mill Park. A basket
lunch will begi n at I p.m., with a MONDAY
pool party at the London Pool m
RUTLAND - Rutl and Garden
s'y racusc from 6:30 to 8:30 r n1 .
Club meeting Monday, I p.m. at the
home of Ann Webster.
SUNDAY
RACINE - Pomeroy-Racine
POMEROY .- Meigs County
Lodge 164 F&amp;AM will honor its Veterans Service Commission mcciwi vcs and widows Sunday. 2:30 ing Monda y. 7:30 p.m. at the Vcter- .
p.m.. nt the lodge hall on state Route ans Service Office, 11 7 Memori al

C1

HI: 80s
Low: 70s

tmes·

• GALLIPOLIS - A McArthur
nian who filed claims for unem·
pjoyment while he had a job wu
found guilty of falsification last'
week in Oallia County Common
Pleas Court.
Judge Joseph L. Cain sentenced
47-ye..-·old Howard Coleman to
180 ¥Ys in jail and fined him $100,
plus court costs on Thursday. Cain
OBES roil· ~~·~nded the
tlnely con· Jill ~'!'e on the
ducts com- condttton that
putllr croa- Coleman make
match" of full restitution t
employer the state, . and
PttYroll also placed him
, recorc1e wllh on tw? yetiiS of
·~ of probation.
uneinj;loy~
Charges were
..JlltOt.IIPfll" flied . ag~inst
Coleman by the ...
..,.
...CJpl- Ohio Bureau 5r'
enta. Utlt ~ployment 8_cr·
yelr crlmlnll v1ees,
wh1ch
administers the
obtained state's unemployln more·th8n ment compensa480 of Whit lion pro~ ..
the 8gency
An tnVest1ga·
Clllecl "u.. tion by OBES
molt filgl'llnt revealed· . that
Col~man filed
for JObleas com·
JlCnsation while he wtis employed,
iitd had intentionally failed to report
••earned income while collecting ben.Cfits. The· court found that Coleman
was employed when he received
$3,3SS for 11 weeks between Janu~
ary and March 1997.
: An OBES spokesman said wages
earned while drawing unemploy·
ment compc111ation mU!It be report·
ed by claimants so that benefits can
be redticed or disallowed.
OBES routinely conducts computer cross-matches of employer.
payroll records with those of unemployment -compensation benefit
recipient&amp;. Last year, criminal convictions were obtained in more than
48o of what the ~&amp;ency called "the
most Daarant cases." The . agency
.al10 pursues repayment of unl'fO"·
outed fraud cases.
· In 1998, OBES ordered the repay·
ment of more than $9.1 million in
benefits that were fraudulently

RACINE - Annual Alben and
Eliza Hill reunion Sunday at Star
Mill Park. Basket· dinner at 12:30
p.m. Family and friends invi ted . ·

P~~ge

Nation's top
outdoor drivers
head to Gallipolis
for -river festival

oo

•

Area man found
guilty of OBES
(alslflcatlon charge

---Community Calendar--,---

lfs summertime
and the
cooking is easy
Fen.trwl on

-·

GRADUATES MIAMI - Mason Fisher, right, pictured with his'
. grandfather, James Mason Fisher, graduated Magna Cum Laude
from Miami University recently, with a degr.,. in chemistry.

s1

Inside

·

"Before this law, there was no way to lrace
atolcn APVs, off-highway vehicles. Now there
will be a hittory of OWIIerJhip." Saunders said.

•

GALUPOUS- The U.S. Coast Guard has given its permission for the
closure of the Gallipolis boat launch area and barring the Gallipolis area of
the Ohio River to public boll us~&amp;e on July 2·4 from II Lm. until S p.m.
The closing is for the U.S. Title Series poWerboat racing competition dur·
ing the annual River Recreation Festival.
Authorities said the public.is welcome to use the boat launch area at aH
other times, but there w,ill be no boat trailer or car parking available at any
time.Friday through Sun~y during the festival. The river area will also be
open at all other times.
The Coast Guard will be patrolling the river during the holiday weekend
to inonitor .weekend activity.
. David Bright, district fish man~&amp;ement supervisor for the Ohio Division
of Wildlife, Hid alternative boat launch areas for the Robert C. Byrd Locks · ·
and Dam JXXlj (Gallipolis) in Ohio are Pomeroy, Middleport and Cheshire.
In Wes1 VIrginia, they are .Point Pleasant and the Crab Oeek publicsite.
More infcirmation is available from the Gallia County Clamber of'Commen:c at 446-0596.
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Sunday, June 27, 1nv. -

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

peacekeepers.~:~

Plane lands in Pristina with more Russian
PRISTINA, Yugoslavia (AP)- A tiations on Rlllllia's role in the Koso· peacekeepers to Kosovo to serve would !cad to a partition of the
Russian jet carrying paratroopernnd vo peacekeepina million.
alongside a NATO·led force that province.
airport technicians touched down at
." This is all part of bringing JCoso.. eventually will include 55,000
Instead, a compromise was
Pristina's airport Saturday, the first vo back to normality and the better troops.
reached in which the Russians will be
airplane to land in Kosovo since future that we all hope for all the peoThe Russians will join a peace· deployed in. separate rones within
NATO began its peacekeeping mis- ple of Kooovo," said British Ll. Gen. keeping mission that so far has been three areas assigned to U.S., German.
sion two weeks ago.
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Mike Jackson, the NATO comman· unable to curb unrest sweeping the and French peacekeepers.
The planes that arrived today are
It was followed moments later by der in Kosovo, as he welcomed the province. Ethnic Albanians have
a French transport carrying equip- , planes.
been seeking revenge for atrocities the first of 12 flights - six .Russian
ment to help make the airport fully
Col. Gen .• Viktor Zavarzin, who . committed by Serb· led Yugoslav and six NATO - expected at Pristi·
operational.
led the Russian land convoy onto the forces since President Slobodan na's Slatina Airport over the next 10
The 21 Russian paratroopers and airfield two weeks ago, said the day Milosevic cracked down on Kooovo days, NATO spokesman Jan Joosten
18 technicians w.ill join about 200 marked "the start of the air bridge separatists in February 1998.
said. The transports will bring techniRussian troops who seized the airport which will serve in the future as a
Russia, a traditional ally of Serbia, • cians and equipment to make the air·
June 12after traveling overland from delivery point for all the things we had demanded its own zone of con· port fully operational for flights to
Bosnia, beating NATO into Kosovo need.'.'
trol within Kosovo. That was firmly ferry in humanitarian 'supplies and
by hours and forcing protracted nego·
Russia plans to send about 3,600 rejected by NATO, which worried it peacekeeping troops.
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Section ofSR218 t

be mardlen today aid they hid been
forced from tbcir homes Mil a llolpi·· · ''•
tal in the Scrb-heldiiCI. Thlci and de· , •
Mello said they hoped to ..-1¥11 the:
imJIIMC throu&amp;h negotiations.
· '•
Late Friday, JIIMICD opened fire· &gt;
on a U.S. Marine outpoll near the' •
center of Gnjilane in sowheastem
.Kosovo. The Marines returned fire. ,,'
and called for reinforcements, who ·
found one wounded gunman nearby. ,
He later died, according to the U.S; ;
European Command.
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It was the second sniper attack this
week against the Marines, who killed ·..:
one Serb and Y{oundcd two others in · 'I
a gunbattle Wednesday.
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Elawhere, potential violence was
nii'IOWly averted this morning in the
northern mining town of Kooovska
Mitrovica when the leader of the
rebel Kosovo Liberation Army,
Hashim Thaci, persuaded about 500
ethnic Albanians to call off a march
into the Serb· held plrt of town.
"We want to solve our problems
peacefully," Thaci said. He was
accompanied by the U.N. special
envoy for Kosovo, Sergio Vieiria de
Mello, who said the march "would
be a disaster" if it proceeded.
The city is divided by a bridge
between·arcas now held by Serbs and
ethnic Albanians. Some of the would·

M

d
on BY

POMBROY - The following days jailsuspendedto threedays,90cases were settled June 9 in the Meigs day OL suspension, one year proba·
GALLIPOLIS-TheOhioDepartm,entofTransponationannounccdthat County Coun of Judge Patrick H. lion, jail and $550 suspended upon
SYRACUSE - It was decided to award scholarships totaling $3,300
State Route 218 will be closed Monday from 8 a.m. until I p.m. for culvert O'Brien.
completion of residential treatment
for
the 1999-2000 school year when the Carleton College Board of
replacement,
Fined were : Deborah L. White, prog~am; left of ce nter, costs; open
held its !34th annual meeting last week.
Trustees
The location of the replacement is one-tenth of a mile north of the.junc· Pomeroy, assured clear distance, $20 container, $30 plus costs; George
Secretary Janice Zwilling reported seven Syracuse residents submit·
lion with SR 790.
plus costs; Bonita Joanne Ywrich, Chapman, Pomeroy, speed, $23 plus
ted applications prior to the June 21 deadline to compete for higher edu·
Syracuse water .users urged to conserve
New Concord, speed; $50 plus costs; costs; Carolyn E. Hagan, Pomeroy,
cation scholarships granted annually by the board.
SYRACUSE- The Syracuse Board of Public Affairs urges all residents . Marlo L. White, Middleport, speed, no OL, S I00 plus costs, three days
A scholarship selection committee composed ofTrustees Carroll Norof Syracuse and s~bscribers to the village water system 10 ~onserve water $30 plus costs; Thomas A. Myers, jail suspended, one year probation;
ris, John Bentley, Kathryn Crow, Janice Zwilling and Bob Wingett wtll
Langsville, overload, $300 plus costs; failure to control, $25 plus costs;
usage during the current drought.
meet in July to review applications and select recipients.
A spokesman for the board said the system's pumps are working nearly Deborah A. Dailey, Langsville, seat
Richard Milard, Albany, co n·
Re-elected to the 21-member board, in which seven terms expire annu·
around the clock. Subscribers are to limit water usage to essential needs.
belt, $25 plus costs; Alvin D. Tripp, tributing, costs, six months jail susally, were Don Houdashelt, Rick Crow, Jack Williams, Larry Fields, Ernie
u
rJ
1
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; pended; Shawn Price, Jackson, pass·
Sisson, Bentley and Wingett Officers re-elected are Wingett, president;
&amp;;;·
OVern1ng 0an
S UY
Harold R. Pyle, Stoutsville, speed, in!l bad checks, $25 plus costs, resti·
Norris, vice president; Zwilling, secretary ; and Kathryn Crow, treasurer.·
RIO GRANDE- the Governing Board of the Gallia· Vinton Educational · $30 plus costs; James D. Leonard II, tution; Vicki C. Patterson, Middle·
The Investment Committee of Brooks Sayre, Norris and Wingett led
Service Center will meet in regular session on Thursday, July 1 at 8 p.m. at Gallipolis, speed, $30 plus costs; seat port, reckless operation, $tOO plus
a
discussion
of finances 'afler Treasurer Crow announced the board of
Buckeye Hills Career Center, Treasurer Deborah Ratliff announced.
belt, $25 plus costs; Paul W. George, coSts; Michael E. Morris, Racine,
"
trustees had a total funds balance of $40,366.63.
Library trustees slate July 13 meeting
Middlepon, speed, $30 plus costs; DUI, $850 plus costs, 30 days jail
It was announced that this year's awards, the amount presented for
GALLIPOLIS - .The Gallia County. District Library Board of Trustees .· David C. Calhoun, Athens, speed, suspended to 10 days, one year OL
scholarships since the program's inception in 1981 , will have surpassed
will !Jieel Tuesday, July 13 at 5 p.m. at the Dr. Samuel LBossard Memor· $30 plus costs; William P. Rizer, suspension, one year probation; dri·
$54,000.
ial l-ibrary.
Syrac use, assured clear distance, $20 ving under suspension , $200 plus
Other board members attending, in addition to those previously named,
"b
1
d
h
I'd
plus costs; Larry M. Wright, costs, 30 days jail suspended to 10
were
Emmogene Hamilton, Dana Winebrenner, Milton Varian, Larry
B OSSa~ LI rary C OSe On 0 '' ay
. Langsville, seat bell. $25 plus costs; days concurrent, one year probation, Ebersbach,
John Sauvage and John Lisle. ·
GlALLIPOLIS -The Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library will be Christopher E~gene Noell , Ozona,. 180-day vehicle immobilization;
'
cloSed Sunday, July 4 for the Independence Day holiday.
·
Fla., speed, $30 plus costs; Andy W. Jason Boggess, Pomeroy, disorderly
Hospital
sets
renovation,
expansion
.One-vehicle accident in'ui'es driver
Monk, Nelsonville, expired registra· after warning, costs, 30 day s jail SUS·
'I
tion, $20 plus costs; Gloria D. Unroe, pended, one year probation, restrai n·
DANVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Ephraim McDowell Regional Medical Center ,
RACINE- A Bowerston, Ohio, man was injured following one-vehiCle Crown City, speed, $30 plus costs; ing order issued;
is planning a multimillion dollar renovation and expansion. McDowell Healdt .
accj,jent early Saturday on SR 338, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State High· seat belt, $25 plus costs; Cynthia A.
Carole M. Arnold, Pomeroy,
President Thomas W. Smith said Friday.
way· Patrol reported.
·
Cotterill,· Pqmeroy, unreasonable speed, $30 plus costs; Gregory C.
McDowell Health, the Danville-based health care organization which
Clyde W. Thomas Jr., 41 , was transported to Jackson General Hospital in speed for road conditions, $25 plus Sheets, Hemlock Grove, failure to operates the 177-bcd hospital, is in the process of applying to the stale for a
Ripley, W.Va., by the Meigs BMS following the 3:04a.m. accident, accord· costs;
yield, $20 . plus costs; Jeffrey P.
certificate of need for 25 additional acute care beds.
ing to the patrol.
Donnie W. McCune, Parkersburg, . Molden, Newark, speed, $30 plus
The project would cost approximately $11 million, Smith said. Con·
Troqpers said Thomas was traveling on 338 when the car he'drove went W.Va., seat belt, $15 plus costs; 'Jes- costs; Clarence E. Barker, Gallipolis,
struction•would start in 2001 or 2002.
off the right side of the road and struck a large tree .
sica T. Green, Huntington, W.Va., · speed, $30 plus costs; Mark A. Rich·
·the car was ·severely damaged, and Thomas was cited for driving under failure to control, $30· plus costs; mood, Middleport, overload, $300
the influence, driving under suspension, failure to control and a seatbell vio· Kenneth E. Wiggins, Racine, failure plus costs ; Ken!'eth R. Wilt,
lation.
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to control, $20 plus costs; Kenneth Pomeroy, fishing without a license,
GALLIPOUS CAREER COLLEGE
InJuries reported In Meigs crash
w. Rife, Middleport, overload.• $300 $40 plus costs; Frank w. Houser, Rut·
Would lilul lo tla~nk rlu! fobilyl: bruine01e1 for lu!lpilyl:
ALBANY- A two-vehicle collision Friday on Meigs County Road 1 plus costs; Robert L. Petus, Grove land, disorderly, while intoxicatef~,
·
w lo fulfiU our mi.,ion of
(Safem School) left the drivers of boih vehicles injured, the Gallia-Meigs Post City, speed, $30 plus costs; Nicholas $75 plus costs; Joseph W. Davts,
"TrainJng For Careers Cloae To Ho~ "
of the State Highway Patrol reported.
W Fitch, Portland, failure to control, Middleport, fi shing without a license,
Donald K. Wooten, 42, 37791 Salem School Road, Albany, and James W. $30 plus costs; Richard L. Neal II, $40 plus costs.
OHIO YAWY fOODIAIID
0.0. MdNTYRE PAIK
Latham III, 40, Athens, were both reported injured, but information on their Bidwell , overload, $300 plus costs;
GAWPOUS CITY Tll OFFICE
OHIO YAWY lAIII
.
Wald o C. Donahue, Perrysburg,
The following cases were settled
treatment was not immediately available. ·
IOIG-WAI.I
WICil'S HAUUIIG
'trooper.; said Latham was nor1hbound at 5:10p.m. when the Jeep he drove speed, $50 plus costs; Rocky J. June 16 inMeigs County Court:
RUTH PIWIACY
TAIOI'S fUIOII CCMIIIIG
went left and collided with a southbound truck driven by Wooten. Both vehi·
Hupp, Long Bottom, speed, $30 plus
Fined were: Marisa Gray, Racine,
H&amp;H RmEADIIIG
, PIUSIUIY
cles then continued on and went off the left side of the road. Wooten's vehi· costs; ex~essive window tlnt, $20
disorderly conduct, $100 suspended,
PLEASANT YAWY HOSPITAl
~I'IWIMA&lt;Y
. plus costs; Ronald F. Taylor, Hamil·
costs, one year probation; driving
cle then struck an embankment and overturned, according to the report.
WOODLAIID WildS
WAl-lWT
Wooten's truck was severely damaged, and no damage estimate was avail· ton, speed, $30 plus costs; Heather under the influence, $1 ,000 plus
GAWA coum HEA11II om.
HOLZII QINIC
able for Latham's vehicle. Wooten was cited for DUI.
M. Humphreys, Pomeroy, speed, $30 costs, one year jail suspended to 30 HOWR .DICAL aNTER
.01. JOEY WILCOIEN
Long· Bottom man faces four charfleS
plus costs; Bradley J. Dilly, Parkers·
days, two years probation, 180.day
OI!ID SUPPOIT INFOICEMEIIT AGIIKT
GAWA COUIITY QIIIDRENS HOME
::1
burg, assu(ed clear distance, $20
vehicle immobilization, .one year
THE IMAGE GAWRY
FAMILY
HOME
H~TH
PuiS
CllESTER- Floyd Puliins, 45, Long Bottom, was lodged in the Meigs plus costs; Renee D. Geary, Athens,
operator's license suspension; driving
DI.IWICY l GUIWI &amp; ASSOC.
HOWl HOSPITAL
County Jail early Saturday on·four charges arising from a pursuit near Chester, reckless operation, $50 plus costs;
under 'financial responsibility action
Oll Hill COUIUNITY IIIDIW. CEII'Itl
IU(J(ffi HILlS ADUlT EDUCATION
according to the Gallia-Mejgs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Larry L. Cleland, Pomeroy, overload,
(no insurance) suspension, $250 plus
PIEmu an
A trooper observed Pullins allegedly driving left of center on SR 7 around $300 plus costs; Charles J. Stearns,
costs, six months jail suspended io 30 IGEIIERlL REFUSE 5IIY1CE
5aiiiC HILlS IIUISIIIG a11111
O'DEll
TRUE
VAlUE
aNTER
12:19 a.m. and attempted to stop the vehicle, a patrol spokesman said. Pullins . Rutland, speed, $30 plus costs; Rajah
days concurrent with DUI, two years
IOCIWIU AUrOMATIOII
SUPER·I MOTEL
is alleged to have turned off onto SR 248 in an attempt to flee tlle trooper s. Munisar, Mt. Pocono, Pa., seat
probation; Carrie E. Bartels ,
WluPowER IUMIIIIG
ARJA AGENCY ON AGING
and later abandoned his -.:chicle on Scout Camp Road. Pullins is then alleged belt, $25 plus costs; Charles Duffy Jr.,
Pomeroy, reckless operation, $100
to have fled into the woods, tbe spokesman said.
Bridgeport, speed, $30 plus costs;
plus costs; Timothy E. Richesson,· MASON COUIITY CROJ,Il CLERK'S OFFICE IASKET DEUGHlS
Dl. AIITIIOIIT SOIA
GAWA COIIIITY SCHOOLS
Troopers searched the area with the assistance of the Meigs County Sher·
Carrie 'Lambert, Pomeroy, speed, Columbus, speed, $20 plus costs; seat
LAII.S
WIWAMSOII PAWTS, IIC.
DR.
YllllY
YIRMAIII
·iff's Department and a K•9 unit from Athens County, the spokesman said. · $30 plus costs; Karen S. Hart, Rut· . belt, $25 plus costs; underage o.on·
.
ROIEIT
C.I'YID
LOCI$ AIID IWl
· Puliins was apprehended around 6:30 .a.m. by Meigs County ODNR Game land, failure to yield, $20 plus costs; sumption, $200 plus costs, three
DR. AURIUA J. RUSH
Warden Keith Wood, who observed Pullins walking down the rlllld./
S. A(lam Jenkins, Pomeroy, window days jail suspended , 'probation until
DELTA METALS/FAIRKATIIIG
Pllllins was charged with DUI, fleeing and eluding, left of center and a tint, $20 plus costs; William Mood·
21 years of age;
seatJ:!elt violation, the spokesman said.
ispaugh, Little Hocking, speed, $30
Jane McCio'ud , New Haven,

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b ticketed by Gs/llpol/s officers
Six
ALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police cited six people Friday, includ·

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ing.Matthew llommers, 18, Zanesville, temporary protection order violation;
Steven J. While, 20,71 Ripley Road, Cheshire, underage consumption; Gail
· Louise Mask, 25, Victoria, Texas, no operator's license; Douglas A. Boles,
35, 735-'112 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, disorderly conduct; Sandra Cordell, 124
Fo11rth Ave., Gallipolis, disorderly by intoxication; and Rosetta M. Patter·
son, 29, Apartment 2, 151 Upper River Road, Gallipolis, child restraint vio·
lation. · ·

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Authorities place seven in Gal/is jsil

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GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia 'County Sheriff's Department placed four
individuals into the Gallia County Jail Friday and early Saturday, including
Charles L. Riedel, 42,573 Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell , intoxicated or drugged
pe~estrian on highway; Robert Eugene Griffith, 38, 752 Tcens ·Run Road,
Crown City, domestic violence; Timothy E. Johnson, 24, 1034 Second Ave.,
GaUipolis, domestic violence; and Steven P. Wagy, 25, 1065 Mobley Road,
Pattiot, contempt of court.
~dditionally, the Gallia·Meigs Post of the State State Highway Patrol
placed Clifford.Allen Stickler, 25, Chesapeake, in the jail for OUI.
Gallipolis City Police officers placed two individuals in the jail Saturday
on outstanding warrants: Bobby Watson, 42, 750 E. Bethel Church Road, Gal·
lipolis, and David McQuaid, 21, 44 Olive St., Gallipblis.

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Theft report filed with deputies

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Malibu~

S-10~2WD

$2,000 Cash Back"
or
$163/Month 36-;Month Lease'
. $163 Due at Lease Signing

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or
$199/Month 36-Month Lease 1
$1,398 Due .at Lease Signing

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of $17,455; 36 monthly paymentS total $7,~4. Option to purchase at lease end for an amount to be deferml,ned atiiiUe signing. GMAC must approve lease. AvaUable only to
residents of FL, GA. NC, SC and select counties of AL, IL, IN, KY, MS, OH, TN, VA and WV. For more details call HHl0·950·CHEV. You must take retail delivery from participating
dealer stocK by 7/1/99 for Malibu and 7131/99 for S· 10. Mlltlll• charge of $.20 Pll' milt over 38,000 mllaa. leNH pays for maintenance, repair and excan weer. If 1.... terminates early lessee Is liable for all1,1npald r:nonthly payments. Payments may be higher In soma states. Not -liable with customer cull oflllrs.
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Cl1999 GM Corp. Buckle up, America! II'
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7Jiference.

J/ouse Pu/y·17

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pon, failureForest
to control,
$20 plus
costs; checks, $25 plus costs on each, resti·
plus
G. Qualls.
Middle·
Martycosts;
B. Dugan, Pomeroy,
scat
belt, tution.
$25 plus costs; speed, $30 plus costs; .
Candace N. Miller, Middleport, seat ·
belt, $25 plus costs; Sarah E. Bird,
New Haven, W.Va., seat belt, $15
plus costs; Steven s. Powell, Middleport, speed, $30 plus costs; John
E. Lewis, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
costs; Laura L. Roush, Mason. pass·
ing bad checks, $25 plus costs, three
days jail suspended, restitution ;
Kerry L Hetzer, Reedsville,.stop
sign, $.15 plus costs; Juanita L. Green, .
Shade, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Amber Blackwell , Pomeroy, passing
bad checks, costs only; Teresa Cook,
Cheshire, di sorderly conduct, $50
suspended, costs, three months pro·
bation; Greg T. · Satterfield, Racine,
disorderly conduct, $50 suspended,
costs, three months probation; Ricky

· BIDWELL - Jack Williams, 1000 Homewood Drive, Bidwell, reported days jail suspended, probation until
to the Gallia County Sheriff's Department that an unknown subject or sub- 21 years of age; littering, $100 plus
jects removed a bunk feeder and five rolls of woven wire from his bam.
costs, three days jail suspended;
'Jbe incident is under investigation.
, Chester A. Roush, Middleport, ficti·
Bilby. Olvmpics
scheduled for festival
tious registration, s2o plus costs;
I'
William C. South, Pomeroy, dri·
GALLIPOLIS - 'The annual Baby Olympics at the Gallipolis River ving under the i11fluence, $850 plus
Recreation Festival, sponsored by the Holzer Clinic Recreation Committee; costs, IOdaysjail suspended to three
days, 90-day operator's license sus·
are scheduled for noon on Saturday, July 3 in the City Park.
Registration is from 11 a.m. to noon. Age groups are 0·3 months, most pension, one year probation, jail and
hair! 4-7 months, roll over race; 8-11 inonths, crawling; 12-15 months, walk· $550 suspended upon completion of.
. ing race; 16-!9 months, blocks in· bucket race; 20-24 months, running; 25· residential treatment program; Jesse
30 months, walking; 31·36 months, running.
J. Thomas, Middleport, operating a
Organizers said it may be necessary to conduct more than one race in a motor~vehicle after underage con·
spe~ifio category. depending on the number of entrants in the race. First, sec·
sumption, $200 plus costs, 10 days ·
ond .and third place ribbons will be presented. All other children l'arlicipat· jail suspended to three days, jail and
ing will receive participation ribllons.
,
OL suspended upon completion of
residential treatment program, three
years probation; seat belt, $25 plus
costs; David R. Abbott, Reedsville,
DUI, $850 plus costs, 30 days jail
suspended
to 10 days, one year OL
c
Reader Scr v1ccs
suspension, two years probation; no
tail lights, costs; failure to transfer
ComctJon Polley
ownership, costs; failure to comply
Oar 111111 - n II Ill ......, tole ..
with a police officer, costs, 30 days.
_,1'1011.117"'-"'•ernrllo
..,.. QU . . . . . . . . . et: Glllpelll:
jail suspended to 10 days concurrent,
(140) "'-1M2; .........,. (740) m.
two years probation; resisting arrest,
2155. We wll dleck7"rll.........,• ud
costs,
30 days jail suspended to 10
.... I comdiellfWimtllod.
days concurrent, two years probation;
Cheryl T. Smith, Middleport, pass·
.
NIWI Depulment .
.
IIIJNDAY ONLY .
ing bad checks, $25 plus costs, 10
SVII8CIUPI'ION RATBII
G1IIIDOII1
days
jail suspended. restitution; Vir·
If c.,nt.ror
~~~- - ·J 1.25
an. \\llek
................................
lilt
_ ,........
· · · -ire:
· " "'-1M2. Deptut.
ginia L. Jen\dns, Pomeroy, four
an.
v
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.:-lire ~At~Dr....,.... _ ............. EIIL 111
SINGU: COPY PRICE
counts passi ng bad checks, $25 plus
.._... FAI~............... - ..... Ext.lll
- , .............:....................... Jl .00
costs
on each count, five days jail
C11J ~ ....,..,_................,_,,Eat. lZl Nor I ·~2,.-••••••••llo.,..wbeto
suspended
on eac h, restitution;
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Watergate-era
law set to
expire due to
lack of support

WASHINGTON (AP) - Side-by·
side in rare harmonious agreement,
President Clinton, Independent Coun.
sd Kenneth Starr and Congress will
watch the law that led to a presidential ·
impeachment disappear on Wednes·
day.
. The law's political and legislative
legacy will live on for years, however.
Clinton, the nation's second
impeached president, still has 18
months left in his term. Starr's investi·
.gation continues. The debate on Capi·
to! Hill over who should investigate
future charges against senior govern·
ment officials is unresolved.
After 21 years, . nearly as many
independent counsel investigations,
and white-hot hostilities over Clinton's
im~.:achment trial, lawmakers are 0ot
inclined to plunge into that debate.
Until Congress decides, Justice
Department · investigators will look
into any such charges.
"The environment is too politically
complicated," said one of the law's
original sponsors, Sen. Carl levin, D·
Mich.
He insists the government cannot
be trusted to investigate itself.
Nonetheless, he acknowledged in a
recent interview, "We need to give it a
bit of a rest."
Starr's unprecedented five:year
investigation united otheJWise fierce
political enemies in the notion that the
law that empowered Starr. is fatally
flawed.
.
Starr stunned lawmakers of both
parties in April when he adopted even
. his staunchest enemies' disdain for the
statute. He blamed public outrage over
his tactics on 'the structure of the law.
"If pollticization and the loss of
public confidence arc ipevitable, then
we should leave the full respbnsibility
where our laws and traditions place it,
on the attorney general," he said. The
. statute, he added, was "constitutional·
Iy dubious" and left room for abuse by
counsels empowered by it ..
Republicans had been making that
case for years, ' particularly during '
Lawrence .Walsh's investigation of
charges that the Reagan White House
sold arms to Iran and diverted the proceeds to the NiC8ljlguan Contras.
But it was Starr's $50 million
investigation of Clinton, which moved
from the president's land dealings to ·
his statements under oath alxiut an
affair with Monica Lewinsky, that con·
vinced Democrats, too.
" I voted for it I made a mistake,"
the Senate's top Democrat, Tom
Daschle of South Dakota, told.
reporters last' week. "I believe it was
well-intended, but misguided. I woirld
. much prefer to handle '(these) matters
in the future within the Department of
Justice."
Lawmakers complain the law does
not hold such prosecutor.; accountable
for the money they spend or the tactics
they use, providing no politically prac·
tical way to fire overzealous counsels.
· In the absence of an independent ·
counsel law, such investigations will
revert to the Justice Department, where
they were handled when the "Saturday
Night Massacre" occurred.
That night in October 1973, .Justice's top two officials lost their jobs
when they refused to carry out Presi·
dent Nixon's order to fire special prosecutor Archtbald Cox, who WIIS investigating the Watergate break-jn. Attorney General Elliot Richardson quit and
Deputy Attorney General William
Ruckelshaus was fired. Solicitor General Robert Bork fired Cox.
. Leon Jaworski was appointed Nov.
1 to replace Cox as special prosecutor,
Four months later, an indictment was
returned against seven former presi·
dential aides in connection with the
Watergate covet-up. Nixon was named
as an unindicted co-conspirator.
. Justice Department officials say
that experience shows the country does
not need the independent counsel law.
According to a lonely band of sen·
ators, that experience slxiws the gov·
emment cannot be trusted· to investigate itSelf. led by Levin, they are
searching for a way to enact another
independent counsel law that limits the
scope and budget of future prosecutors.
But the ovef')Vhelming majority of
lawmakers believes the Saturday
Night Massacre proved the system set
up by the Constitution does work;
Nixon, after all, resigned under threat
of impeachme~t.

- Tri-County Briefs:- Meigs County Court

I

�,

Sunday, June 27, 1999
Sunday, July 27, 1M

~utth~ 1t'imts• jentin:el Under the guise of prevention, decency..-.

ing certificates, conducting seminars, confer- posed standards arc so prescriptive. Those standards include a directive to implement "compreences, and workshops.
were linked together in provisions
It is important to note that the same people that hensive" health education for all studen·ts (Sec' for statehood in the Northwest Ordi.
generated the "need" for the health curriculum are tion 3301-35-04 (BXI). ·
825 Third Avenue, O.lllpolla, Ohio
Those with concern for our children face great
nance, enacted by Congress in 1787.
the same people who are charged with making
740-446-2342 • Fax: 448 3008
"Religion, morality, and knowlsure everyone is aware of that "need". They are odds in being a "barrier" to state implementation
111 CourtSbwt, Pomeroy, Ohio
edge, being necessary to good gov- .
also developing the stale's model and at the same of the Programs -That-Work. With CDC funds,
740 8112·2158 • Fax: 882·2157
ernment and the happiness of
time are charged with eliminating the "barriers" t~e ODE has prepared a three-page marketiog
mankind, schools and the means of
to implementation. This appears to be a conflict . piece-targeting churches-to equip the "sales" pe.rof interest.
education shall forever be encourag~"
son with answers to almost arty objection to the
Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
Ohio is one of the states covered b
NorthIn an openness uncharacteristic of this whole PTW. The only tool left, it seems, is representaROBERT L WINGETT
west Ordinance and the Ohio Olnsti lition, as a drama, ODE records show that Luceille Aeming, tive government If sexual role-play, gutter lanPubllah•
criteria of statehood, thus linkec! good govern- Director of Ohio Department of Alcohol &amp; Drug .guagc, and explicit discussions that' reduce modment; morality, and education. How utterly inap- Addiction Services, has conceded that the "Youth esty and self-respect to vulgar nonchalance is
propriate that for the last ten years programs have Risk Behavior Survey is a terrible survey...Ohio · what you want, then do nothing, this is what you
Diane Hill
Lany Ewing
been
proposed for implementation in our schools only uses it because we have to in order to gel will get. ·
Managing Editor
Con1rollar
that are highly immoral in nature and content
money from Atlanta." ·
If you think that morality still has a rightful
Early attempts to ignore provisions of the ConJust to get a small idea of what kind of money place in the lives of our children, then by all
stitution have been defeated, but we now face has been flowing since 1993, FY98 totaled means available contact elected officials in. ll)e
controversial disease and pregnancy prevention $751,446. An inquiry as to what schools partici- Ohio Legislall,ore and Governor Bob Taft.
behavior modification programs whose content is pated in this survey received the response that · Always be courteous. Find out if local school
unfit for a moral people. Under the guise of
prevention, decency, moratity, virtue, chastity, and self-control are being expunged from
our culture and replaced with .that which is
obscene, vulga~ and profane. The very activities .that cause pre-marital pregnancy and
spread disease are now being encouraged -in the name of prevention.
The stealth approach has been used by the
By JOHN AFFLECK
Ohio Department of Education (ODE) and .
Aaaocla1ed p,_ WrltM'
the Ohio Department of Health (ODH) to
~?BEEN IN
CLEVElAND (AP) - Gregory Olleridge knows he's not living in an write curriculum and tmin trainers to present
Hl5~ALL
episode of "The X-Files."lt just feels that way sometimes.
the content to children Pre K - 12th grade.
AFTE~ .
Olleridge is one of a handful of activists whd have been lrying for years to Parents and taxpayers are kept in the dark
STUDYII'G
HIS
find out whether radioactive waste is buried at the Industrial Excess Landfill, a about ODE and ODH plans for the children.
Superfund site in semi-iura! Uniontown about 45 miles south of Cleveland.
When their plans to phice the programs under
But every time Olleridge and his colleagues take a step toward a definitive health education ran into opposition, integra- .
answer- just like the fictional agents on the Fox television netWork's science tion into other course work where it can not
fiction program - they are left with more questions and a sense of frustration. be easily identified; is contemplated. Such a
In his latest effort, Olleridge has received answers from federal agencies to move mak~s opting out difficult, if not
several Freedom of Information Act requests that suggest to him the landfill impossible if those courses are required for
does contain radioactive material, despite the U.S. Environmental Protection graduation .
· Agency's repeated claims to the contrary and inconclusive testing done in the
The planning for the institutionalization of
· early 1990s.
.
Comprehensive School Health Education
· "We have a right to know what's in there," said Coleridge, director of the (CSHE) began in 1993. Their plan is to have
Northeast Ohio American Friends Service Olmmittce, a Quaker social action it in all Ohio schools by 2000. For six years,
group.
key participants (including Ohio-based, fedThe closed, 30-acre IEL landfill is near housing tracts for commuters to erally-paid Centers for Disease Control
Akron and Canton.
agents) have directly, and consistently, been ,
The former sand and gravel pit absorbed 780,000 tons of solid waste and 1 working in a coordinated manner;
ODE and CDC guarantee all parents, sdlools, and board members are aware of events. For the "rest of
million gallons of liquid waste from 1966to 1980.IEL was named a Superfund
• Conducting the Youth Risk Behavior Survey · students that their participation is confidential;
the story", get a copy of the excellent detailed report
site four years later.
to generate baseline data with which to demon.Since the Model has been completed and the · on Olmprehensive School Health Education: ConWhile no comPrehensive medical study has been done to determine any strate need to change student behaviors;
· Framework was developed in 1993, there is little troversial disease and pregnancy prevention behavhealth effects from the landfill, some residents' are worried there is a link to mis- ·
•.Pushing for the adoption of a health model;
if anything left for local school boards but to ior modification progmms by Diana Fessler.
carriages, birth defects and
in the area. Many nearby homes depended
• Serving as. members or consultants on the choose which Programs-That-Work (PTW) to use ·
If you are not connected to the internet, get a
. until a few years ago on well water that activists fear was conliminated by toxic . Model Health Advisory Olmmittee;
and how to implement the program. Even this will fr.iend to download it for you at
waste.
• Writing Ohio's contracts/agreements with the not rest with a local board if Olunty Education . http://Www.fessler.com for the 27 page document.
In January, the EPA proposed downgrading 1989 cleanup plan for the Centers for Disease Control;
Service Centers have already made the decision.
Offer them a few dollars for their help, you'll be
· tandfill by scraping a system to pump and treat contaminated water. The site
• Using federally-funded contracts to instituHowever, if/when lawmakers adopt the state glad you invested in our kids. Local control will
should be cleansed through natural processes and monitored instead, the tionalize the "condoms and contraceptives" pro- · standards for schools proposed by the State Board be a non-event if ODE &amp; ODH have their way.
agency said.
grams, that is ''Programs-That-Work" (PTW).
of Education, school boards will lose their authorRobert Weedy Ia a r:olumnlat lor the Sund-v
If approved, the changes would save Goodyear lire &amp; Rubber OJ., B.F.
• Approving materials, training trainers, issu- ity to make ,curricular decisions because the pro- Tlme•S.n11nel.
.&lt; .
.
.
Goodrich 01., GenCorp and Bridgestonc-Firestone, Inc. - the siie's docu•'
mented primary polluters- about $12.3 million in cleanup costs.
The EPA is reviewing the public's comments before deciding whether to
change the plan, agency spokesman Mick Hans said An EPA ombudsman is By WALTER R. MEARS
Organizations bent on pruning Olhen said there will be television ads live budget th!U would cut Pentagqn
also examining the agency's handling of the IEL.
AP Special Correaponden1
defense spending are nothing new. comparable to those of the candidates . spending by $48 billion withou~ he
The activists, who have a long history of mistrust and poor relations with the
WASillNGTON (AP)- Blending And the debate about budget priorities competing for the opening caucuses of says, diminishing needed capabilities.
EPA, don't want the landfill cleaned up until they know whether radioactive die tactics of a presidential campaign between military and domeStic needs the 2000 campaign next winter. The
Congress, and the administration,
material was dumped there.
with a marketing pitch out of corpo- has .been going on for decades, espe- group plans to spend about $800,000 are going in the opposite directm,
Much of their suspicion arises from witnesses who say they saw military rate America, an alliance of business cially the last one, since the fall of t~e to make its issue seen and heard there. increasing defense spending. The
trucks bearing radiation insignias driving into the dump at night.
leaders is lrying to reorder the federal Soviet t.Jni.on and the end of the Olld
Olhen said t)le organization has six House has just approved nearly $290
James Shover, a Navy veteran originally from Uniontown who gained expe- bul!get to cut defense spending in War.
staffers in the state now. It also is billion for defense next year. That's
rience working with radioactive materia! 'in the service, said he remembers the favor of education, health care and
This debate claiins to be different going to be the scene of a showy bus $1.4 billion more than the increased
vehicles driving in frequently between 1966 and 1971. ·
··
.other needs.
because it isn't coming at the issue tour, with street theater, music and budget President Clinton remmmend"There was a steady roll of trucks," said Shover, who now lives in CaliforIt is an unlikely mission for big from the left, although there certainly giant, inflatable visual aids on the way ed. There's more to come for peacenia.
•
business executives, easily labeled as arc liberals on its roster. Leaders of the federal money is being spent And as keeping forces in Kosovo- $1.5 bilAgainstll1at backdrop, Coleridge has asked federal agencies for information part of the military-indusbial compl~x group say that its members and sup- an added attraction, free ice cream.
lion to $2 billion a year by administraabout whether radioactive waste was 4umped at the IEL.
that pushes defense budgets and bene- port come from acroSs the political '
Essentially, the organization is lry· lion estimate, twice that according to
In on~ case, he said, the EPA sent him back material related to the handling fits frpm weapons contracts.
spectrum, that even boardroom con- ing to market an issue instead of a · outside analysts.
of radioactive material at Ravenna Arsenal. But the documents didn't say
More than 400 corporate leaders, servatives want to do something about. product or a candidate.
Clinton's defense budget seeks an
whether waste from Ravenna went into the IEL.
retired military officers and former defense spending they consider waste-Their case is that without a Olld increase of $112 billion over the next
. The U.S. Department of Energy answered a request with information about government official.s have signed on ful.
War, the United States still has a Olld five years, to $319 billion in 2005.
radioactive material generated by Goodyear, Olleridge said. Again there was . with Business Leaders for Sensible
It also is different forthe way it is War defense budget. "We are now, lit- Republicans in Olngress said it wasn't
no mention of the IEL.
Priorities,
lrying to change minds, not by lobby- erally, in an arms. race with our- enough.
.
The Inspector General's office of the DOE sent'Olleiidge another response
"We're not pea~niks," says Ben ing inside the Beltway but by cam- selves," Olhen said.
· And that was before the bombing
in May.
Olhen, the Ben &amp; Jerry's ice cream paigning outside. Olhen said the budTheir blueprint for changing that campaign against Yugoslavia.
It included a heavily edited report of a 1992 hot line complaint taken by the man who ·is the president and the get for that campaign will be $3 mil- was drawn by Lawrence Korb, an
That is not a promising setting for
DOE in which a caller said plutonium leaked into a stream by the DOE's major donor to the organization. "We lion this year, $6 million next
assistant secretary of defense in the another effort to reduce Pentagon
Mound·site in Dayton, where nuclear weapons triggers were once made..The are businessmen and military types."
And the first target is Iowa, where Reagan administration, in an altema-· spending.
.
caller said contaminated solid was being deposited "in a landfill somewhere
near the facility." IEL again was not mentioned.
.
.
Olleridge is puzzled. He specifically asked for information about IEL.
"We asked specifically for 'a' and got 'z,"' he said. "Is the implication that
there is a connection between the waste produced at these sites and IEL?"
By Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
labs.
Contractor... may subject the Olntractor... to
Longtime landfill activist Olris Borello thinks so. .The information "does
WASHINGTON -- For the second time in as
"I hope the regents criminal liability under the laws of the United
have a connect-the-dots feel to it," she said.
many months, a blue-ribbon report on espionage
will not forget how impor- States."
'
.
and lax security at America's weapons labs failed
tant it is that an institution
Between 1995 and 1997, Los Alamos averaged
. to finger a· likely culprit: the University of Caliof your reputation, tradi- 20 "classified maller compromises an(l infracfornia.
·
tions and values runs these tions" a year. In 1998, the lab racked up 45. In the
Three months ago, respondi'ng to press reports
laboratories," Drell gushed early 1990s, more than 10,000 classified docuof leaked nuclear secrets at Los Alamos National
at a February Regents ments were "lost" at Lawrence Livermore.
Laboratory,
President
Ointon
asked
former
Sen.
·
meeting. "I don't believe
.But instead of punishing poor performance,
I would personally like to 'thank all who helped to make this year's Ohio
Warren.
Rudman,
R-N.H.
-head
of
the
Foreign
these
laboratories
would
be
DOE
rewarded 'it. While rating security at both
River Sweep at the Forked Run site a success.
Intelligence
Advisory
Board
·
to
look
into
the
anywhere
as
great
as
they
arc
wi\hout
your
runLos
Alamos
and Lawrence Uvcrmore in 1997
Several sites were worked this year from Athens County south to Tanners
mat.ter.
ning
them."
and
1998
as
"marginal,"
DOE forked over milRun approximately 17 miles of Ohio Rive.r bank. This year you collected
The findings were. released earlier this month:
When we asked Rudman about the hole in his lions in bonuses to UC and renewed the contract. .
approximately six and a half tons of trash and debris.
·
Rudman's
team
concluded
that
security
at
the
labs
.report;
he said the group's mandate bact limited
Members of the Senalc and House arc now
Those that donated food and material were Vaughan's IGA, Kroger, Five
was
abysmal,
the
result
of
long-standing
resentthem
to
looking
at
security
and
counterintellielbowing
for the spotlight, holding a flurry of
Points Express, Dale Barr Service Station, Summerfield's, Reed's Oluntry
ment
of
authority
among
peevish
Department
of
gence
operations,
and
not
lab
management
generhearings
to
publicize what mo:it already kncvt:
Store, Athens Pepsi Olmpany, Bill Pooler's and Tye Brinager and Sons.
Energy
bureaucmts.
ally.
A
White
House
spokesman
declined
to
comLab
security
stinks, and it's been that way for
. The organizations that assisted in the sweep were AEP Meigs Mines, AEP
"The
DOE's
performam:e,
throughout
its
hi~­
ment
on
the
omission.
decades.
Fuel Supply (Lancaster), Meigs Olunty Fish and Game, Meigs County IIC:es,
tory, should have been regarded as intolerable,"
But several members of Olngress are wonderSo far, the Senate is winning the publicity war,
Forked Run Sportsman Club and Mr. and Mrs. Bill aild Martha Durst.
Rudman
wrote.
ilig
why
the
university
that
manages
the
labs
has
aided
by a major hearing last. week where lawThe volunteers from the Forked Run Sportsman Club served over 152
"The
panel
found
a
department
saturated
with
.managed
to
escape
blame.
:
makers
from four committees rehashed the Rudvolunteers a lunch of freshly grilled hamburgers and hot dogs. Pizza, baked
cynicism,
an
arrogant
disregard
for
autltority
and
"The
question
I
have
is:
Why
didn
'I
Rudman
man
report.
House members Were · less than
beans, ~ole slaw and the fixin's.
a staggering pattern of denial."
go all the way?:' says Rep: Bart Stupak, 0-Mich. pleased.
Once again thank you to everyone that worked to make this year's Ohio
But, like the May espionage report·from Rep. "Why didn't he say 'let's take the bull by th~
"I think the Senate, because they think world
River Sweep such ·a great success. I hope that I see each and every one of
ChriStopher Cox, R-Calif., Rudman's public horns,' say 'let's cancel the contract and send the affairs only lie in the Senate, will always try to
you out on the Ohio River B!mk in the year 2000.
report shied away from identifying the source of message that we really mean business this steal. the spotlight from the House,'' Stupak
Tom Haym~~n most of the problems: feeble, ineffective manage- . time?"'
griped. "I mean, who in the Senale doesn't think
Long Bottom ment by the University of California.
Of course, there is plenty of blame io go they should be president or secretary of state?
It seems that these blue-ribbon reports · arc around -- from the late-acting administration to We've all been briefed on this issue. Of course the
falling
into their own pattern of denial.
· Republicans bent on politicizing this most bipar- AmeriCfR people have a right to know what's
I would like' to thank Sherry Fraser for her letter to the editor on June 18,
"!think you have to trace the culture the Rud- tisan of scandals. But by refusing to make the uni.- going on, (but) that (hearing) was grandstand1999, titled "A ~boice between loyalties." I couldn't say it any belter. I feel
·
.
that by having the parade on Sunday .at .6 p.m. is telling our youth that w~ man report describes directly to the University of · versity compete for ·the contract, the D()E fos- ing."
The only useful thing to come out of the hearare forgelling God, the one who gave us this country. The Fourth of July California," Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, told our tered a culture of arrogance.
Energy made things worse by refusing to pun- ing was Sen. Pete Domenici's objection to cr~at­
Parade has always been a family outing and this year it was supposed to be associate Ashley Baker. "They have done a misish
the university for repeatedly violating the con- ing a new agency within the DOE to handle ilecuerable
job.
At
the
very
least,
they
should
have
to
extremely special, because I was taking my I I mo. old son to his first parade·
tract.
rity.
·
ever.
compete for the contract."
For example, the most recent Los Alamos con- ·
In the early 1990s, .a similar bureaucracy•
Rudman's silence on the issue is particularly
To my disappointment of the parade being on Sunday at 6 p.m., he won't
be going. For my responsibility IS a parent is to teach him what comes first noteworthy given that one of ·the report's princi- tract ~tales thit "The (university) shall... be eXpanding plan set up the Laboratory Admlnistraand that is God! The answer to Ms. Fraser's question ''which one will you pal authors -- Sidney Drell -- recendy stepped responsible for safeguarding all classified docu- lion Office, ostensibly to provide oversight. The
c~oose?" is "As for me and my house, we will sdvc the Lord." Joshua down as the chairman of the University of Cali- ments and material, and special nuclear material; · office, however, can'tafford to be objective. If the
24:15. .
fornia President's Oluncil on the National Labo- and protect qainst sabotage, espionage, loss, and University of California loses its contract, the
·
Melli• Henry ratoriea. As chairman, Drell was a full-time cheer- theft. It is understood that .. failure to safeguard office would disappear.
Ollllpolll leader for the university's management of the any classified information that may come to the Copyright IWt, United Feeture 8yndlea1e, ~

'£st46llslid In l966

By ROBERT WEEDY
Morality and good government

Documents arouse suspicion
Ohio landfill is radioactive

SPELUNG. ..

cancer

a

Business leaders take on military-industrial complex

•
:
•
'
•

•
•
:
•
'

'
•'
•
•

•
:

'

::
•:
·.

,·

•

.

Rudman stops short of blaming ·U.C.

Letters.to the editor

Groups make River Sweep a success

: '/couldn't say It any better'
·,
::
•.

!·
,;

,·
•
•

..
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Jtunbq 111~-Jtmtt-l • Page A~ .·

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

PegeA4

:Century's end finds Earth a crowded, noisier place ·
By DAVID FOSTER

Aaaoclat...t Pr
W It
.
-~- ••• r er
·Lester Brown, global watchdog,
. can cite enough looming catastrophes
to spoil anyone's day: Water tables
are falling, tempemtures are rising,
rain forests are shrinking
·
Gordon Hempton, professional
"sound tracker," faces a simpler
problem: It's getting awfully hard
these· days to find 15 minutes of
peace and quiet.
Each man, in his own way, is talking about the same thing. A lot more
people live on the planet than ever
before, and by and large we're a hun· bunc:h · Of a11 I he
gry, needy, nmsy
changes the 20th century has seen
none l·s more far-reachr'ng than the'
. of human population explosion
the· one trend to which everybody
'b
conOtrl uhtesd. d
. I 6 b'll'
ne un re years ago . 1 ton
'

he remains awed by humanity 's tal ent for multrphcatron.
"Th h be
I .
ere as en more popu auon
growth smce 1950 rhan dunng the
. 4 mr'JI !OR
'
preced mg
years,· " B rown
says. . .
'
Whrle Brow n s parh to comprehens ·ton ·rs pave d wrt· h a·rg-p·rcture
chans and graphs. Gordon Hempron
has a more personal way. of measurmg how crowded the world has
become.
He hste~s.
.
From hts home 10 Port Angeles,
Wash., Hempton treks to remote corners of the world wrth an expensrve
tape recorder in hand, seeking to can.
~
lure nature's quiet symphony.
T bl · f
1
·
rouhuman
e IS,noise
ew doesn
Paces't intrude.
remarn
where
In rural glades of the southeastern
U . dS
H
h
.d.
nne tales, empton as tne 10
vain to escape the low drone of
"monster flutes" - the smokestacks
of coal-fired electric plants ·dolting

people lived on Earth. This year,
world population will reach 6 billion. the landscape. In Wyoming, his quest .
for quiet bas been interrupted by the
rhythmic booming of oil-well pumps.
How to keep allrhose people alive Even in the Southwest's lonely
without ravaging the planet is a deserts, he finds no peace.
"If youlisren in the middle of the
question Brown addresses daily as
president of the World watch Institute, . night, the desert landscape is actualbl' .. h
"A 1 en
an environmental research group 1
y
rum
mg,
e
says.
based in Washingron, D.C. Yet even do us amount of sound is rem
being

'
·
"
·
pumped out from drstant crues, hrghways. power -transmrssron hoes,
. d
d . . ..
rn U$lry an mmmg.
Frfteen years ago, Hempton documentc d 21 spots, ·m . Was h'mg ton
state ':"'here he could reliably capt~re
15 monutes of natural sounds unrn:
db he l'k
f
· · t
terrupt~ y t
I es o ro~ng JC s,
hummmg trucks and barking dogs.
Now he li~ds only three.
. ~e mourns the loss. When we
can '· escape nmse ~ our senses stan
shuttmg dow~ and hfe IS not as sweet,
Hempton behe~es .
.
And so, m hrs own quret way •. he
reach~s th~ crux of the po~ulauon
6 brlhon or
quesuo~
. Itspeople
not whether
16 b1lhon
can be crammed
·
h 1
h
. fl'f
onto 1 e Panel.
It's 1 e qhua1rty 0 h1 .•
rhose people enJOY ' w atcver I err
. d Otti
number.
Hempton craves so1rtu e.
ers
want gasoline for their cars and elec· · c h ·
M'll'
tncrly tOr I err computers. • rons
wou ld sell!~ 'or a dally loaf of bread
or bowl of nee. Can the globe support
us all in the manner to which we are
accuston;red? . .
Some perspecuve from the chans
d
hs·
an grap ·
.
• Population growth accelerated
during most of this century. It took all
of human history to reach a world
·populau·00 of 1 br'llr'on 1·n 1804 It
.

will onl y increase wirh more people
around.
"P 1 , ,
eop e aren t JUS! mouths ro
feed . They' re crearors of art and genera tors of technology .. he , . Y'
· surprisi
"" ·•· ngly
People can also be
adaptable. Lasr October, U.N.
demographers reduced rh ·rr po 1,,_
c 2pumil•;
lion-growth esrimates by ahour
lion a year, saying they hadn ., ""lieipated how qu~ekly women around
the world would embrace rhc noti on
of hav ing fewer children .
I~ rhe 1950s.- rhc average woman
gave brrrh.five rimes during her liferime . Today that global feni lity rate
is 2.7 births per woman and ·fallin !i,
the United
Nar io ns says · .
·
Frfry years from now. rhere will be
8.9 billion people' on Earrh, accord· tot he Unrte
· d Narrons'
··
·
·
mg
mrdleve~
"most likely"
. t' v·
jl
prOJCC ron. rrtua 11 y a
the. gai n will occur in the poorer
natrons
Will.re
..
..
en bl s~ur"":s be avrulable, or hf~
JOya e, or that populauon, 50 per.
cent greater than roday 's?
.
Gordon Her:npton answers wrth ~
story. He.":'"' rn the Everglades one
day, working agamst the odds to
make an unonlerrupted recordi ng of
an Eastern meadowlark
"Thirty seco nds inr~ the record- .
. .. h
..
ong, fe ;eca11 s, su;e enough, the
roar o a Jet came m. ·
.
Hemptqn let the tape roll. and now
the recording is o.ne of his favorites,
The sweet· song of the lark and
coarse thunder of teChnology speak to
restoring pre-World War II Mercedes him ofnaiure's grace and humanity 's
to be~efit Bitgood's family members. vehicles, Creech said. He lives, or has
The trust also contends that Von lived, in Dayton, St. Petersburg, Fla., striving~~ duet affirming thar even
m a cramped and noisy world , there
· Fragstein. owes it several million Germany and Czechoslovakia.
is music in the air.
dollars for costs of Ii ligation and
.
~~·--~~~~~~~~
repossessing the three cars. Von Fragstein says the trust should reinstate
his canceled contract to sell the cars,
and that the trust also owes him about
$1 million in expenses and lost ~ales
commJsswns.
· The trust demands a financial
accounting from Von Fragstein pertaining to other cars he sold in the
past for the Bitgood. interests.
The three cars, all black roadsters,
are collectively valued at about $7
million. One of them was once a gifr
from Adolf Hi'tter to Nazi field mar. shal Hermann Goering and all three .
had links to high-level Nazi Party
officials at various times, lawyers
said Monday.
At issue for the Aug. 30 trial is the
status of the three cars and whether
the trust may transport and sell them,

took 123 years 10 reach 2 billion in
1927, 33 years 10 reach 3 billion in
. . .
1960, 14 years to reach 4 billion In
1974, and 13 years to reach 5 billion
·m 1987. Addmg
· the srxth
·
· · a
brlhon,
milestone that United Nati ons
demographers calculate will occur in
· early October, wrll
· have taken JUSt
· 12
years.
.
• The growth rate has started to
slow, but world population still rises
by 78 million each year, the U.N.
Pop.tilation Divi~ion says. That's li.ke
addmg 1.5 mrlhon people, or a cny
the size of Philadelphia, every week,
• All those people consume a lot
of resources. In 1900,· only a fewd
thousand barrels of 01! were use
each day wotldwide. Today, human·
72· mr'It·1on barre Is a day •
I 1Y uses
Worldwatch says. Use of metals has
risen from 20 million tons a year to
I 2 billion tons the group says .
·
• ·
• On average, people have nevet .
been healthier or wealthier, but the
gap between rich and poor remains
wide. Half of all American adults are
overweight, yet elsewhere more than
13 ,000 young'children die every day
of malnutrition and related illnesses,
, t'
h 'W ld H 1h 0
t eB or
eat rg:nrf~· JOn, s~y~
I ro~n sees orofineh' ep e rdonf, gllo a warmrng, over rs rng an a mg
watertablesasbillscomingduefrom

h h ' Ea h
· H
grow r t c n . cannot sustaon .. e
believes Amencans and others hvmg
hrgh on the hog should scale back
.
.
theJr consumptrun to leave enough
food and resources
for others
.
. .
. World gram . productron hovers
JUSt under 2 brllron tons a year,
Brown nares . How many mouths that
can feed depends on how m~h is eaten drrectly vs. bemg fed to livestock,
an .equation rhat varies widely by
nauon.
'
" With 2 billi?n tons: of g~ain, you
can feed 10 brlhon lndrans, • Brown
says. ''Or you can feed 5 billion halra~s. Or you can feed 2.5 billion
Amen
A ·cans. If we 're all eating like
mencans, we need another planet,
basically."
So me don 't consr·der the century•s
near-quadrupling of population a
problem
.
"We ~hould celebrate r't "sa's Jer· '
ry Taylor, direcrorof natural resource
studies for the Cato Institute, a conservative think tank in Washington
"It's a produ~t of improving huma~
health, improving lifestyles and better nutrition . . People are living
longer. "
. Wh'I h
.
'tot ers worry thalloo large
a popu atr~n lwrll exhaust natural
resources, oay or says human mgenuityisthetrueresource - andrhar

:·c ourt battle over classic cars far from over
: By JOHN NOLAN
Benz convertible had been scheduled trust has dropped its claim to the car.
: Asaoctated Preaa Writer
. for argument. Tuesday before the 6th
After the Bitgood trust dropped its
: CINCINNATI - The legal baltles , U.S. Circuir · Court of Appeals in · claim, the federal appeals court ruled
; 9ver !930s-vintage classic cars, once Cincinnati. · But the hearing was that Von Fragstein -· as an agent for
: used by top Nazi Party officials and scrapped after the court dismissed the estate- had no standing to press
· now prized by auto collectors,.aren't Von Fragstein's claim to the car.
a claim to il, said his lawyer, Herbert
finished yet.
Deym said rogue soldiers stole the Creech.
One years-old dispute over own- shiny black convertible during the
But still at issue are three classic
ership of a Daimlt!r-B.enz Cabrioleta 1930 from hr's vr' lla before he tled to
s
and whether the trust or Von Fragconvertible wonh $750,000 has been Ita1y to escape the Nazis ·
stein is owed money.
resolved in the federal courts. But the
. A ',ederaI magr·strate in Dayton '
Von Fragstein has admirted under
fate of tbree other 1930s-era cars where th.e car had been srored ~Lthe
stored in Dayton, valued together at Packard Museum under courr cus- oath thitt the cars belong to the Bit$7 million and also seized by French
good trust, said Paul Horstman, a
tody while the .dispute was pending, Dayton lawyer for the trust.
· soldiers in the 1940s, is still at issue ru Ied thar tbe car shou ld be return ed
Von. Fragstein specializes in
in a state court..
to Deym.
· Deym · has so ld I he car m
· Mercedes-Benz cars, all built in the
. Involved in both cases were Her- Switzerland for about $750,000, a 1930s and also stored at the Packard
bert Von Fragsteio, a classiC car lawyer in the case said Monday.
Museum under coun supervisioo.
restoration ' specialist, and MiddleBitgood said he had bought the car That dispute is scheduled for trial
town, Conn., veterinarian George E. in the 1950s from a collector who did
.
Bitgood Jr., an avid collector of clas-. 1 not say where he had obtained it. Bit- . Aug. 30 ·m Montgome~ County
siccars.whodiedinAprill998atage "Common Pleas Court 10 Dayton
93.
good rumed the car over to Von Fr.ag- 'before Judge Patrick Foley. The BitVon Fragstein's challenge of stein for restorati~n in 1994. Deym good trust claims ownership ~fthose
Bavarian Count Hubert Graf Deym's learned of the car s whereabo~ts and cars and wants to take pos§llssron and
·ownership claim to the Daimler- . demanded rts return. The Brtgood sell them, plus a stock of spare parts,

b Levi~ Dockers

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:Pam.'s removal will be history .i n the ma.k ing
By GLENN ADAMS
~a.1oclated P~A

Writer
AUGUSTA, Maine -A ~-footlong sturgeon leaps from the npphng
\l,'ater and arches into the air just
below a dam on the Kennebec River, almos'.as if marking the site where
\listory wtll soon be made. .
.
. .. On Thursday, water. wtll gush
through an opening cut in the 162year-old Edwards Dam, which has
blocked Atlantic salmon, shortnose
sturgeon and other sea-run fish from
upper stretches of the Kennebec
since Henry David Thoreau was .
writing about Walden.
U.S. Interior Secretary ,Bruce Babbill plans to attend the dam breachrng, an event long awatted by conservationists and anglers.
: The entire 19-foot-high, 917-footwrde dam . wtll be d~s~antled ~nd
removed by .Thanksgrvrng, creatrng
. "potentially .the stron~est sea-ru.~
fishery 1~ the eastem Un~ted States,
says Marne Plannrng Dr rector Evan
Rrchert.' whose agency ts overseemg
the proJeCt.
.
Dams have been taken out rn other ~tales: rncludmg North Carolrna,
.Cahfornra and Oregon, but Edwards,
whrch produced a small amount of
·

electricity. was the · first ordered
removed againsr an owner's wishes.
In 1997, the Feder~! Energy Regulatory
Commrss10n
ordered
Edwards Manufacturing Co., owners
of the da!Jl, not only to le!lr it down
but als~ to pay for. the removal and
restoration, reasonrng that Edwards
had profited .from a pubhc waterway
for generauons. Edwards challenged
the order and threatened to sue.
But m May !998, Edwards agr~ed
to grve the dam and adjacent nversrde
acreageto the state, which accepted
responsrbrhty for the ,removal and
cleanup as long as it was privately
funded.
Bath Iron Works, a u.s. Navy
contractor 25 miles downriver is contributing $2.5 million in · a 'son of
environmental tradeoff 10 help batance the impact of its expansion onto
nine acres of wetlands: And owners
of several dams upstream agreed 10
pay $4.75 million in exchange for
delays in the required installation of
fish passages along the Kennebec and
some of its bibutaries.
Removal of the Edwards dam is
expected 10 cost about $5 million .
Any money left over from the Bath
.. .
... .

EMS units record 11 calls

POMEROY - Units of Meigs
Emergency Services answered 11
calls for assistance on Friday. Units
responding were:
.
.
CENTRAL DISPATCH
12:40 a.m., Souh Second Street,
Mary Pickens, Pleasant Valley Hospital;
10:56 a.m., State Route 681, with
Reedsville assisting, Sylvia Curtis,
,Veterans Memorial Hospital;
2:1 9 p.m., Main and Broadway,
Racine, with Racine assisting, Elson
Spe~ce~. Veterans Memorial;
. 6:18 p.m., East Main Street,
Charles Eakins, treated;
9:44 p.m., Willow Creek Road,
with Pomeroy assisting, Johnnie Nelson, treated.
RACINE
6:18 p.m., Elmwood Terrace,
Racine, George Cummins, Pleasant
Valley.
RUTLAND
5:18 p.m., County Road I, with
S•Iem · Township assisting, James .
Latham Ill, O'Bieness Memorial
Hospiral;
.
6:51 p.m., County Road I, Donald
Wooten, Holzer Medical Ceriter.
TUPPERS PLAINS
· 11: 19 a.m.. Arbaugh Addition,
Roy Buchannan, St. Joseph's Hospital;
3:16 p.m.. Mount Olive Road,
with Central Dispatch, Elizabeth Bartoe, Pleasant Valley;

and dams' conlribuuons wrtl be combined with public funds to restore
several migratory fish species io the
river.
Steve Brooke, leader of a coalition
that worked for the darn's removal,
points to spots where increasing
numbers of sturgeon, salmon and other species have been seen in recent
weeks, almost as if they know the
darn is coming down.
"They've all been waiting,"
Brooke says. "These rivers are so
productive. if we give · them a
chance."
Sportfishing and co~servation
groups, including the Atlantic Salmon
Federation, . Trour Unlimited and
Amencan Rrvers, have been pushrng
for dam removal since then-Gov.
John McKernan first proposed it a
decade ago. . .
As the plan prcked up momentum,
support appeared from far-flung quarters. In 1992: actor Rrchard ~~sart,
who .~tarred rn the.TV show L.A.
Law, retu~ed to hrs ho.metown and
clambered mto a fishtng boat to
make a senume~tal prtch tot~ down
a dam ll)uscled. rnto pla~e by Irish and
French-Canadran rmmrgrants rn the
1830s.

In rhat era before heavy machinery. workers wrth hand tools bolted
5:47 p,m., Forked Run State Park, together huge timber cribs, filled
Keilh Grueser, Camden-Clark them with rock ballasr and covered
Memorial Hospital.
them with pine planks, stone and 1!11-

lnlt'(Hiueinu!""
El izalwl h ~(' haad

.
·
er concrete, For generations, the dam
power¢ a riverside cotton mill; its
electricity was later sold to a regiona) power company. ·
The structure has been modified
and patched many times, especially
after floods that breached it as recently .as 1974.

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�PageA6•, t

Sunday, June 27, 1999

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

Sunday, June 27, 1999

Germany to proceed with Holocaust memorial
By ANNE THOMPSON

14 abstentions, m favor of the project. Europe."
Berliners would not support the
Alloclllted Prell Writer
"This was an important and hon·
Intellectuals, such as Germany's
Eisenman design because of its s1ze,
BERLIN -It has long been Ger- est and responstble decision," said best-known author Gue?ter Grass, at
and he warned that graffiti vandals
many's most controversial construe- Michel Friedman, a leading first sup~rted the project but then
who already plague the city would
lion proposal: whether --' and how spokesman of Germany's Jews. turned aga1~sttt, ar~umg that a monfind the pilfars an·attractive ne)V canSOIJTH WEBSTER- Paul C. Carmichael, 79, South Webster. died Fri- to build a national Holocaust memo- "More than two-thirds 0 ( the people's ument was 1nsuffic1ent to commemvas.
day, June 25. 1999 tn the Oak Hill Community Medical Center.
rial in Berlin remembering the 6 mil- representatives said, yes to memory, orate so horrific a crime.
Hoping to reach a compromise.
Born Dec. 21, 1919 in Scioto Furnace, son of the late Rev. L.R. and Ruby lion Jews killed under the Nazis.
yes.to reminder, yes to history -but
Nonetheless, the proJec.t went OA.
theologian and politician Richard
Mae Kuhner Carmichael, he was formerly employed at Roberts Jewelers in
On Friday, after more than four also yes to continuity of learning for A contest produced a destgn for an
Schroeder presented a plaq for a sinl'ortsmouth; and was a clerk and rural mail carrier for the post office at South. hours of debate, parliament autho- young people from the past."
enormous ~lab of concrete to _be
gle pillar mscribed with "Thou Shalt .
'Webster.
.
·
rized a monument and approved a
Building the monument in Berlin engraved wt;h ,the names of Jew1sh
Not Kill" in languages including
He was a veteran of the U.S. Marine Corps, county president of the Rur- design by New York architect Peter has special relevance, because the Holocaust vacu~s . Then-Chancellor
Hebrew.
.. Carriers Association and the area steward. He was president of the South Eisenman, a defining moment in a government thts year completes its Helmut Kohl mxed 11 as bombastiC .
That plan was defeated on Fri~ay,
'Webster Betterment Club and a membi:r of the Pinkerman South Webster decade of national soul-seari:hing.
move from Bonn to the prewar capA second c~ntest produced fo~
as , were several lawmakers · who
Community Church. He was a 1937 graduate of Pomeroy High School.
"We're not building this memor- itaI, 'the staging ground of. Hitler's finalms,mcludmg Et~nman, Kohl s
argued against a memorial, saying ·
favonte. ~ut the project was postSurviving are hts 52 years, Eileen Rhea Carmichael; a son, Gary (Denise) ial for the Jews or for other victims. genocide.
money would be beller spent on
Carmichael of Grove City; a daughter, Pam (Ttm) Mahan of South Webster; We 're building 11 for us," parliarnenLocated near the Brandenburg . poned ~gam w~en Kohl lost last Sepmuseums ·and exhibits at the decaytary president Wolfgang;Jbierse said. 1 Gate, with its Prussian chari.ot and tember s eleci!On to Chancellor Gerfour grandsons; and a sister, Jean (Delmar) Hamm of South Webster.
ing former concentration camps, or
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the Kuhner-Lewis Funeral Home, Oak " With this memorial there can be no galloping horses, and the restored hard Schroeder. .
.
on a German-Israeli youth project.
Reichstag, with its gleaming glass·
Whether to bmld a memonal at all
ltill, with the Rev. Jim Sherman officiating. Burial will be in the South Web- more denial or indifference."
Even among Germany's Jews,
The parliament's vote opens the dom!', the memorial should be a strik- agam became an open ,question under
ster Cemetery. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 4-8 p.m. Sunday.
disagreement remained after the vote.
way for groundbreaking next year on ing reminder of Germany's terrible ·Schroeder; Germany s first leader
While Michel Friedman championed
Eisenman's destgn, a vast field of past for leaders determined to move born 100 late to have pers~nal memthe decision1o dedicate the memori-.
2,700 close-set concrete pillars on a Europe's biggest nation into a future ones of World War II. HIS cultural
alto Jews alone, another member of
KJTfS HO..L- George H. Gilmore, 69, Kitts Hill, died Thursday, June plot, about the size of two football less defined by guilt.
czar, M1c~ael Naumann, sug~ested a
the Central Council of Jews in Ger~
24, 1.999 at his residence, following a brief illness.
fields in the heart of Berlin. An exhiThe debate surrounding the Holo- museum Instead ~f memonal, but
many, said the opposite.
Born Oct. 21, 1929 to Pine Grove, Ohio, son of the late Davtd Sr. and bition and multimedia document cen- caust memorial started with its incep- event~ally agreed With Etsenman to
Salomon Korn said parliament
Mary Alice Woods Gilmore, he retired from Ashland Oil Inc. in 1992 after ter wtll be partly underground at the tion in 1989, when TV journalist Lea combme the concrete p1llars wtth a . missed "a great historic cha~ce" to
servipg as a lube plant operator for the No. I Refinery at Catlettsburg, Ky.,. site.
Rosh founded a private initiative for research center.
.
recognize all groups of Nazi victims.
. ror 30 years.
.
.
.
Lawmakers voted 314-209, with remembering "the murdered Jews of . Throughout the controversy, crtlHe ·t(Jid a Berlin · newspaper that a
tCs had complamed that the memor:
A U.S. Army veteran of the Korean War who served with the 82nd Airmonument only to Jewish victims
i~l ~hould honor all mnocent Nazi would create the impression that
borne Diviston, he was a memlier of tne Marnre Missionary Baptist Church
vtcttms, not jUSt Jews. •Others, mcludof Kitts Hill, and served as a deacon. He was also a member of the adult Sunsome victims were more important
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
day School class and the XYZ group at the church.
McDamel, Cheshire, $200 and costs, ing Berlin Mayor Eberhard Diepgen
than
others.
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli processed 14 petty theft; Helbert Bare, Middleport, had complained the Etsenman design
S~rviving are his wife, Betty J. Saunders Gilmore, whom he married Sept.
10, 1954; three sons, Randy (Bobbi) Gilmore and Steve (Marieda) Gilmore, cases during Mayor's Court this $100 and costs, menacing threats; was too &lt;~monumental "
Diepgen argued in parliament tha.t
both of Kitts Hill, and Greg (Amanda) Gilmore of Wheelersburg, four grand- week.
John A. Pullins, Pomeroy, $200 and
.
Fined
were:
Thomas
Feth~rol
f,
c;hildren; and three sisters, Virginia Rosenberg of Charlotte, N.C., and
costs, underage consumption, $100,
South
Bloomington,
$25
and
costs,
possession of drug parephernalia.
Avanelle Alley and Marie Gilmore, both of Sandusky.
Forfeiting bonds were: David AveHe was also preceded in death by a sister, Evelyn Dreschel; and two broth- improper starting; David G. Hoffman, Mason, W.Va., $100 and costs, rion, Middleport, $60, improper bakers, David Gilmore Jr. and Lawrence Gilmore.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Mamre Missionary Baptist Church, underage copsumption; Charlie Gary, mg; Nokey J. Kimbler, Gallipolis,
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City
. with the Rev. Jeff Davenport, the Rev. Chuck Herrell and the Rev. Scott Jenk- Middleport, $100 and costs, disor- $60, running red light; Matthew
Police
and the State Highway Patrol
derly
by
intoxication,
$200,
resisting
Marcinko, Long Bottom, $150, reckins officiating. Burial will be m the Woodland Cemetery. Friends may call
were
out
Friday night with a sorbriarrest;
Samuel
McCloud,
Middleport,
less operation; Walter Haggy, Midat the Phillips Funeral Home, I004 S. Seventh St., Ironton, from 6-9 p.m.
ety
checkpoint
to curtail drunk dri$100
and
costs,
trespassing,
$100
and
dleport, $60, fictitious tags; Robert R.
Monday.
ving.
five days in jail, menacing threats, Mitchell, Bidwell, $60, wrong way
Military graveside rites will be conducted.
Police Chief Roger Brandeberry
$200
and three days in jail, destruc- on a one-way street; Bartholemew
·The family requests that contributions in his honor be made to the Mamcalled
the event a "public relations
tion
of
property;
Chuck
L.
Stewart,
Boggs,
Pomeroy,
$250,
reckless
operre MissiOnary Baptist Church Butldmg Fund, 2367 County Road 182, Kitts
yo~tinsure
tool"
to
inform motonsts of the danPomeroy,
$100
and
costs,
menacing
atton, $60, no seat belt.
Hill, Ohio 45645.
·
gers and penalties of driving under
home with us,
threats, $200J_!I'sault; Roger Keith
the influence.
.
mrougn Auto-Owners
.
Nearly 20 officers stopped cars
and talked to drivers about seatbelt
Insurance Company, we11 save
. POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ~ Park D. McDaniel Jr., 76, Point Pleasant,
safety and the upcoming holiday -.
died Friday, June 25, 1999 in the Veteran Hospital, Lextngton, Ky.
you money! Statistics show that
a time when officers report more
Born July 17, 1922 m Pomt Pleasant, son of the late Park D. Sr. and Besste
accidents than any other holiday. '
your age group experiences 1•
E. Bennett McDamel, he retired from ,Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp.
noted
that
the
posiBrandeberry
lfter 25 years of servtce, and was among the ftrst to organize the Point Pleas- ·
fewet; less-costly
·
tive contact was important for offiapt EMS, with 20 years of service as an emergency medical technictan. He
cers. ·
losses,
served on the board 'of directors of the EMS.
.
"We've
bee11
in
a
time
of
edcua• A U.S. Navy veteran of World War II, he was a ·member of the Boilerallowing
t6akers Local of Fairmont, W.Va., and the Krebs Chapel Church in Point
SOUTH WEBSTER - Paul C. Carmichael, 79, of South Webster, died tion, but with the Fourth of July
coming up, we're going into a time
Pleasant.
.
us lO
Friday, ·June 2~, 1999 in the Oak Hill Community Medical Center.
He was also preceded ·in death by his wife, Mabel McDaniel on Jurie 3
He was born on December 21, 1919 in Scioto Furnace, son of the late of enforcement," he said. "Tonight , pass .the
1986.
.
'
'
Rev. L.R. Carmichael and Ruby Mae Kuhner Carmichael. He was former- will serve as a reminder to drive caresavings
; Surviving are two daughters, Brenda (Jim) Spencer and Ltnda Norman, ly employed at Roberts Jewelers in Portsmouth, and was a clerk and rural fully."
Officer~
passed
out
literature,
key
·
bo!h of Point Pleasant; four grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren; mail carrier for the post office at Sou!h Webster.
on .to you:
• .
tire~ sisters, Charlotte Browning and Doris Moore, both of Point Pleasant
He was a veteran of. the U.S. Marine Corps, county president of the Rur- rings and water bottles to drivers. The
our agency . •
Contacl
Maryorie (;ardner of New Haven, W.Va.; and several nieces and nephews:
al Carriers Association and the area steward. He was president of the South program was paid for with grant
.
~rvtces wtll be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Wilcoxen Funeral Horne Point Webster Betterment 'c tub and a member of the Pinkerman South Webster money, and no tickets were Issued for
.today for a customized
violations such as seatbelt or inspecPIOIISant, with Brother Isaiah Crump Jr. officiating. Burial will be in th~ Lone Community Church. He was a 1937 graduate of Pomeroy High School.
proposal on your homeowners
~metery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Monday.
He is survived by his wife of 52 years, Eileen Rhea Carmichael; a son tion stickers.
' lofthtary gravestde ntes wtll be conducted by American Legion Post 23
and daughter-in-law, Gary and' Denise Carmichael of Grove City; a daughinsurance protection.
••• ulltl• IIIIa
ol' Poin( Pleasant.
ter and son-in-law, Pam and Ttm Mahan of South Webster; a sister and broth•Fnl !lctly*
er-m:law, Jean and Delmar Hamm of South Webster; and four grandsons,
•FNI.._
,
Christopher Wayne Hightower, Timmy Dale Mahan, Luke Creighton
eNICIIIPICtl
Carmichael and Drew Marshall Carmichael.
•TIIFNITICII
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Harlin E. Newsome 71 Point Pleasant
Services will be held on Monday, June 28, 1999 at II a.m. in the Kuhndied Friday, June 25', 1999 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.' '
' er-Lewis Funeral Home in Oak Hill, with the Rev. Jim Sherman officiating.
· Born July 3, 19F in Garrett, Ky., son of the late Leonard and Bel vie Pen- Burial w1ll follow in the South Webster Cemetery. Friends may call at the
INSURANCE PLUS
nington Newsome, he retired from Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corp., funeral home from 4-8 p.m. Sunday, June 27, 1999.
•llll .. lcCiil
'!lh~re he served as an electrical engineer, in 1989'.
AGENCIES, INC.
' . ~graduate of Morehead State University who received his master's degree
•Uo T_,li1llll kCIII
trom the Umverstty of Tennessee, he attended the First Church of God in
•Av I II II JICbll
114 C~urt
Pomeroy
PATRIOT- Ronald Warren Skidmore, 56, of Patriot, died Saturday, June
...... Ca Ills
Point Pleasant. He was a U.S. Army Air Corps veteran of World War II.
t-100-JZI-6440
26, 1999 at his residence, following an extended illness.
Surviving are his wife, Evelyn Johnson Newsome; two sons, Steven E.
He w;tS born July 23, 1942 in Springfield, Ohio, son of the late Warren
(llrenda) Newsome of Point Pleasant, and Paul D. (Jane) Newsome of Columand Mary Alice Skidmore. He was a heavy equipment operator employed
bus; a daughter, Peggy Johnson of Memphts, Tenn.; four grandchildren· two
~rothers, Conrad Newsome of Charleston, S.C., and Ro.bert Newso~e of
by several southeastern Ohio companies.
He was a member of the St. Louis Catholic Church, and a ~960 graduate
Beaufort, S.C.; and two Sisters, Sh1rley Galvin of Avon, Mass., and Jackyn
Slone Dammron of Lexington, Ky.
·
of North Gallia High School.
· He Y&gt;:as also preceded in death by a sister, Louise Wright.
He married Linda Richards on November 29, 1974 at Perisburg, Virginia,
and she suryives, along with a son, !l,onnie W. Skidmore of Columbus; a
. Serv1ces wtll be II a.m. Tuesday in the Deal Funeral Home, Point Pleasdaughter, Sherry Gibson of Rio Grande; two grandsons, Andrew and Thomas
~·· ~tth the Rev. Clearance Dillon and Pastor Carl Swisher offic1ating. Burtal wtll be tn the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funerGibosn of Rio Grande; a special niece who was reared in the Skidmore home
al home from 6-9 p.m. Monday.
for several years, Hollie Jo (Mark) Haner of Logan; two brothers, James P..
Skidmore of Evergreen, and Christopher D. Skidmore of Evergreen; and three
sisters, Mary Margaret"Peggy" (David) McCarley of Dayton, Kathleen Marie
"Penny" (Robert) Ratliff of Evergreen, and Elizabeth Ann "Becky" (David)
'
Grant of Evergreen.
'I
He was pre\:eded in death by a brother, Larry Michael Skidmore, on August
.· HOUSTON (AP) - Immigration rants. He was stmply treated like any 26, 1992 .
·''
will
be
I
p.m.
Tuesday,
June
29,
1999ln
the
St.
Louis
C:atholic
Services
~off1c1als say they didn't know Rafael other illegal immigrant and repatri·
Church, Gallipolis, with Monsignor William R. Myers officiating. Burial will
,a,esendez-Ramtrez was wanted for ated."
'
be in the Skidmore Family Cemetery, Evergreen. Friends may call at the
~questioning m three murders in Texas
,
It appears he did not remain' in McCoy-Moore Funeral Home Wetherholl Chapel, Gallipolis, from 3-5 and
)lnd one in Kentucky when they took Mexico long.
·.
7-9 p.m. Monday, June 28, 1999.
. .
:hiJil mto custody early this month but
Two days after his June 2 release,
Rosary
services
wtll
be
conducted
in
the
funeral
home
under
the
du:ec'
then let him go
authorities believe he killed a 73- tion of Monsignor William R. Myers at 9 p.m. Monday, June 28, 1999 . .
The ImmigratiOn and Natt!raliza- year-old woman west of Houston.
Pallbearers will be Christopher and James Skidmore, Peggy and Dav1d
tion Service arrested Resendez- The following day, they believe he McCarley, Penny and Bobby Ratliff, Becky and David Grant, and Ruthie and
Ramirez in the El Paso area during killed a,26-year-old H~uston schoolJohn Davis.
.
lhe week of June I for bemg m this teacher at her home. His fingerprints
In lieu of flowers, memorial conu;ibutions may be made to the Holzer Hos- ·
•
):ountry tllegally and deported him to then were found June 15 in Gorham, pice, 100 Jackso.n Pike. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, in care of Sue Bowers.
Mex1co later that day, the FBI said. Ill., at the scene of the.murder of an
"He was processed as one of the 80-year-old man and his 52-year-old
•
•
~pproximately 1.5 million illegal daughter. ·
tmm1grants captured by the Border
An FBI task force of more ,than
Patrol in the Southwest every year,". 200 investigators has been fielding
••
,;
INS spokesman Russ Bergeron said hundreds of tips ' since Resendez- ·
Friday.
Ramirez, believed to he 38, went on
"At the time he was in tlie custody the agency's 10 Most Wanted list
•
of the Border Patrol, they didn't have Monday. A $125,000 reward is post•
Dr. Robert Holley has received special
any information on hts. criminal ed for his capture.
•
record or of any
•
Training to identify and treat the many risk facton

Sunday, June 27

-

Accuwealh•

•
l~~Me~~etd

·I Cal~ 172'111' I

..

w. ~

0~--. ~-·-·

Southeast Ohio zone forecast .

you're:· ;

~ . . .· money!

Weather service state forecast

Rcwgnizing that strong popular sentiment,
Republicans are approaching the issue cautiously:-'
preparing alternatives in addition to lining up · a ~
attack on Ointon's plan.
. ' '
Sen. William Roth, R-Del ., chairman of ih?J
Senate Finance Committee, issued a stateme• '·
cituies, offering less expensive'cover· Friday saying his panel will design it's own pro
_11ge tlum IIUUIJ seniors cu"entlJ.MVe scription drug benefit for consideration in the fall~
access to in t/Je private sector.
Republican leade11 have praised one plan pro· t
. posed in March by an advisory commission. It
retirees pay more for coverage of doctors' office would provide government-subsidized drug bello ~')
visits and other Ol,ltpatient medical care. Current- fits only for those living near the poveny level. ·; ~
ly, those premiums- $4S.SO a month in 1999Rep. Bill Thomas, R-Calif., an author of l~e-­
are the same for everyone.
commission proposal, wrote to Republican colAt one meeting. Ointon's Chief of Staff John leagues on Thursday pointing out that about tw&amp;-' i
Podesta heard complaints about that proposal thirds of Medicare beneficiaries already ha•t!''
from House DelllOCiats who are worried about some type of drug coverage.
· -,.
proposing any sort of premium hikes as they head
That includes retirement benefits from fo!'IN:t'
into the 2000 elections.
employers, supplemental insurance policies
Democrats, who spoke on oondition of retirees buy ·on their own, government poverty
anonymity, said they believe the White House programs and extra benefits offered by managed
would drop the idea altogether or make it apply care health plans that participate in Medicare. •
only to beneficiaries with very high incomes.
Among questions Thomas said RepublicanS"
Clinton said at his news conference that he has should raise about Clinton's plan: "Would th~
been open to·the idea of means testing since 1992, benefit be available to retired millionaires who d&lt;l1
but The Washington Post reported in its Saturday not . need assistance from another government
editions that he decided Friday to drop the idea in entitlement?"
·~
the face of opposition from lawmakers in both
One White House proposal floated on Capitor
parties.
Hill this week would have the government pao}•
"Increasingly, people are jus.t real nervous half of prescription costs for Medicare beneficiaabout it. It causes more political and administra· ries up to an annual limit of several thousand dot1
live problems than it's worth," said Patricia Iars, roughly between $3,000 and $5,000 a yeat:J
Smith, a senior health lobbyist for the AARP, the
To oblain that benefit, re\:ipients would have tlii
nation's largest organization of older adults.
pay an additional monthly premium. It would' bt.
However, the influential AARP supports tile higher than $20 a month but less than the average
concept of adding prescription benefits to $90 charged for drug coverage under a Medigaf!'
Medicare - which currently pays ·only for a few policy. ..
drugs administered in hospitals - ·and the idea .
Medigap policies cap drug benefits at $3,000 2fl
also has proved exceedingly popular in public year and also require senior citizens to pay a S2SW
opinion polls.
·
deductible before drug coverage kicks in.
·~

AdmlnlstnJtion olftciiJ/s lum Sllld
tlu drug be11ejil would bt mtUlt 11Nil11bk tiS 1111 option for llll 39 million
ekhrlJ 11iul disllbhd Medictue btnefl·

' ·~

Storm's moving Into Ohio
By Th1 Aaaaclalad Prau .
·
·
Oouds were fOrecast to move into the western part of Ohio Saturday
night with a chance of showers and thunderstorms late and more storms likely Sunday, according to the National Weather Service. ·
Low tcmperaliu~ Saturdar night we~ expected to be in the upper 6()s
and lower 70s. It wtll be hum1d Sunday w1th temperatures in the 80s.
The chance of showers and thunderstorms will continue into the work
week with highs expected to the 80s and lov.:s generally expected to be in the
upper 60s.
.

Paul C. Carmichael

.~

Storms remain over Southwest
By The AIIOCIIIed Prau
Some light rain -~ell over pans of the Northeast early Saturday as clear,
dry weather moved mto the Great Lakes and Midwest. .
~howers in _Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont was expected to taper
off m the evemng,
A. ~igli pressur~ system over Michigan was expected to bring clear, dry
.condtttons for regtons ~~the Great Lakes, Midwest ~nd Ohio Valley.
. Warm; muggy condtltons were expected to contmue over the Southeast
wtth showers and thunderstorms forecast from Mississippi eastward into
Florida and the Carolinas.
Isolated storms with the potential for heavy rain were fOrecast in pans of
Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Tennessee and Kansas.
A ridge of high pressure over Arizona was expected to keep skies clear
over much of the Southwest, while mostly clear and pleasant oonditions alao
were fo~t for areas of the California Coast.
. A cold front stretch,ing from No~h Dakota to California was expected to
bnng ~trong sto!'"s With the pote~llal for heavy rain, strong winds and hail
to regJons of Mmnesota, the Oakotas and Montana, while clouds and a few
light showers were predicted in parts of the Pacific Northwest.
Highs were forecast in the 60s and 70s in the Northwest· in the 80s and
90s in regiotls of the Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Southeast and Midwest· and
in the lOOs and I lOs for are'as of the Southwest.
·
'
Temperatures Friday across the Lower 48 ranged from 109 degrees in
Gila Bend, Ariz., to 34 degrees in Mullen Pass. Idaho.

)

.

Harlin E. Newsome

...!r"..........

.-.....fllllll
...........

992-6677

INS briefly held murder
su~pect early this month

• u........-...n..r• Page ~

Sunday: Humid. Showers and thund~rstorms likely. Highs 80 to 85.
Exlanded farKa.t
·sunday nlgbt: A chance of sbowers and thunderstorms. Lows 65 to 70.
Monday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the upper 70s
to mid 80s.
1Ueaday: A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Morning lows in the
mid and upper 60s. Highs in the upper 70s to mid 80s.
Weduelday: Fair. Lows in the 60s. Hishs in the lower and mid 80s.

Park
D. McDaniel Jr.
.

Ronald Warren Skidmore ·

homes."

House press secretary Joe Lockhart said, and final
details will not be discloeed until Ointon presents
it Thesday.
Administration off'tcials have said the drug
benefit would be made available as an option for
Boony Pl. Cioody Cloudy
Showofl T-.no
Roil
FUtloo
a.loo
all 39 million elderly and disabled Medicare beneficiaries, offering less expensive coverage than
many seniors currently have access to in the private sector.
However, it is unclear how Ointon plaris to
Simday: Showers and thunderstorms likely. Highs 80 to 85. Chance of answer politically sensitive questions such as how
rain 60 percent.
much the new benefit would cost taxpayers Extended forecaat
sure to be many billions of dollars - or how it
Sunday olgbt: Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. Lows 70 to 75. would be paid for.
Monday: Partly cloudy. Highs 80 to 85.
White House officials have heen bouncing
Thesclay: Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms. ideas off wary congressional Democrats this
Lows in the mid and upper 60s and higha 80 to 85.
week. Among the proposals to find money in the
Wedaesday: Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s and highs 85 to 90.
already cash·strapped program: Tying Medicare
premiums lo retirees' incomes so that wealthier

50 or

•d

WASHINGTON (AP)- The Ointon administration is testing political support for a new
Medicare drug benefit that would pay roughly
half the COlt of prescriptions - up to perhaps
$3,000 to $5,000 a year - in n:turn for higher
premiums from beneficiaries.
"We should offer a drug benefit but we should
do it in a way that it's quite clear that it won't
break the bank," President Ointon said at a news
conference Friday, announcing that next week he
will unveil his long-anticipated plan to offer
retireea government assistance paying for prescriptions.
"This is the most significant health care need
thai senior citizens have today," Ointon said. In
addition to helping retirees, he said, a new
Medicare drug benefit "will, in the long·term,
save medical costa because it will help keep people out of )he hospitals IJid out of the nulling
The drug propoul still ia being written, White

•
dd
'
MI 1eport mayor s court

Traffic check
held by police

170".-· I •

.• \ *''·
._

George H. Gilmore

,

Clinton administration tests political.
support for Medicare drug coveraga

Ohio weather

Paul C. Carmichael

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaant;WV

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OH • Point Pleaeant, WV

Sunday, June 27, 1999

B
orts
San Ant ,.nio claims NBA crown
•

Section

Program offers boost for-elementary students New welfare partnership
trom
agreement presented to
Meigs County commission
pt~ge

Continued

Iunday, June27,1•

'

A1

mary class, and said that the computer program being used for the
class, the CCC Successmaker,
allows her to monitor the progress
of the students as they continue
through the next several weeks'
work.
Linton and Sayre have designed
their own curricula to use in the
program, but · Jewett said that the
program stresses the building of
skills necessary to improve reading
· skills.
Jewett said that the emphasis on
reading and writing in Senate _Bill
55 is good for students, bec~use of
the importance of reading and writing to success in every subject. The
intensive summer program empha.sizes these skills.
Jewett said that Eastern students
arc exposed to a lot of writing in the
elementary grades: Journal keeping, letter writing and other creative
writing assignments, designed to
improve phonetic skills, grammar,
vocabulary development and usage,
have helped the district's students
attain relatively high writing skills
on the fourth grade proficiency test.

Continued from pt~ge A1
.
or General Relief program. Those who .fail to meet those requirements arc
subject to severe sanctions.
·
.
Tbc 1o00 co!IIJOI of welfare funds which is so important to lhc new reforms
bu allowed lbe county to include a unique provision ··tbc only such provi·
sion iii the state •• which sets aside TANF funds for economic development
and tourilm cllorts, u the efforts relate to workforce development and job
creation.
Tbc dew contt:act increases the amount for those efforts from $1SO,OOO to
$175,000 per year for ihe ~ contract period.
·
.. .
Bccallle of the lack of Industry and othet employment .opporturulies tn
Mcip County, t!IOIIC IUpoiiSible for tbe agreement between the county and
lhc lltale have emphasized the imponancc o( agressive funding for development; and for tourism, which they sec as a potential job creator.
Those fuq arc administered by the county economic development office,
and arc used for marketing and promotion, rather than salaries. The cconom:ic developmelll and tourism component of the contract is monitored closely
by the lnetitute for Local Government and Regional Development (ILOARD).
Swiaher said.
"We realize that these are taxypayer dollars; and we want to be sure that
they are used where thcy.arc needed and in lhc proper way."
In addition to providing an additional $25,000 per year for cconomic
development and tourism, the proposed new agreement increases eligibility
for the PRC prQ&amp;r~m .to lSO peroent of poverty, a provision that Swisher said
. SUMMER INTERVENTION - Cindy Untorl II plctur«&lt; with her group of foilrth, fifth end abdh gradww
wiU allow his c!eputmcntto "help someone quicker and keep them in a job."
at E•atern Elernentllry ·School'a summer Intervention program. The voluntary program 11 dMigned to
Medical bene,fita through lhc DHS are now provided to those at 185 I!Cr·
lmprova reading and math.akllla, 1nd, ultlmatlly, teat reaulta on atate proficiency ~cent above poverty, more evidence that the program emphasizes assistance for
fourth graders of. 79 percent, com- lion, Eastern and Meigs students skill, and oral communication is a
the "workina poor,• those who have jobs with few or no benefits.
The results of the recent test pared to a score of 43 percent in scored at S1 percent, and Southern skill. The more you develop these
County Commiuloner Jeffrey Thornton noted that the number of cub
results for fourth graders showed an Southern Local and 60 percent in at 40 percent.
skills, the better you arc at tbc.m,"
assistance recipients has been reduced by over SO percent since the new Ohio
average writing score for Eastern Meigs Local. On the reading por·
"Reading is a skill, writing is a Jewett said.
Works First program went into place .over a year ago, but Swisher noted that
his department has experienced little change in actual worlcload, since the new
program requirea 11 strong support staff for those who find entry-level emplor·
mcnt.
..
DHS.e\f!ployees work closely with those who arc placed in first-time entry·
level positions, offering counseling and close monitoring.
. :
Donald L Edwards, 27, Pomeroy, was indictThe commissioners are expected to act on the proposed new contract du_rPOMEROY - Five men were indicted by a represent him and his trial was set for Sept. 9. He
grand jury recently in the Meigs County Court of remains in the Meigs County Jail in lieu of ed on two counts of illegal conveyance of drup ing their regular meeting on Monday.
into a detention facility. He is accused o~ attempt·
Common Pleas.
· $200,000 bond.
i.ng to smuggle Vicodan, a pain reliever, and mar·
G.
Quivey,
18,
Pomeroy,
was
indicted
on
Jason
Jerry A. Stone, 41, Dextet, was indicted on
charges of attempted murder, kidnapping, felo- a charge of grand theft of a motor-vehicle; a ijuana into the Meigs County Jail on May 21.
He pleaded innocent to the charges and Pat
nious assault, felony domestic violence and pos- felony of the fourth degree. He is accused of
Story
was appointed to represent him. He is being
on
May
31.
stealing
a
pickup
truck
session of a weapoll' while under a disability, fol·
held
in
jail at Nelsonville. Trial was set for Aug.
He
pleaded
innocent
during
his
arraignment
lowing an incident June 10 in which he allegedly
threatened to kill his wife and later allegedly shot and a trial was set for Aug. 31. He is represented 12.
Richard F. Fuller Ill, 22, Bidwell, · was
by Pu~lic Defender Steve StorJ .• :.d remains free
at her. .
•
· arraigned on charge of grand theft of a motor·
.
Felonious assault and attempted murder are on bond.
Eddie Patrick, ·30, Pomeroy, was indicted on vehicle on June 11 after. his indictment.
both second-degree felonies punishable by up to
He pleaded innocent and trial was set for Aug.
charges of felonious assault, kidnapping and
eight years in prison.
No Purchase Necessary
Stone pieaded innocent during .his following grand theft of a motpr-vehicle, vandalism: He is 31.
He is currently free on bond and is represented
arraignment. Attorney Pat Story of the Meigs repr:esented by Steve Story and is being held in
1
by Steve Story.
·
·
..
.
County Public Defenders Office was appointed to · the Meigs County Jail.

Sprewell missed one la.qt awkward shot after catching
AP Sporta Writer··
the ~II too far under the basket. The most thrilling
NEW YORK (AP) ...: David Robinson and Tim game of a series that suffered from post-Michael Jordan
Quncan embraced when it was over, savoring the TV ralings came .down to the last sbot, lhc way so many
t~lling ride propelled by the old-school guy and the of Jordan's games did.
·
young man with little flash but plenty ofllilent.
" We fought hard," Sprewell said. "We didn't want
And quite a future.
·
them to win on our court,
The Spurs are no longer
but they played well. They ·
soft, weak, overrated or
deservpl it They were the
unappreciated. They are
· best t6m this year."
·
NBA cha!Jlpions for the. Sprcwell scored an
first time, a team whose tal·
incendiary 35 points that
ent - and yes, toughness
included a vicious dunk
· .:.... caught up with their
that nearly brought the
composure in a thrilling
house down at Madison
finale to a season that once
Square Garden. On . the
seemed as thOugh it might
game's final play, Charlie
never happen.
Ward's inbounds pass
"I've been privileged to
found Sprewell too far
play with two of the great
under the basket. Sprewell
players in this league," said
missed, and the Spurs
'Mario Elie, who earned his
stormed the court with their
third championship ring ·
wives; children ·and girl·
Friday night when the
friends to celebrate.
Spurs beat ,1he New York
"It's a journey that goes
Knicks 78-77. "David was
to show that hard work and
MVP, and Tim obviously
persistence truly pays off,"
was the MVP this year. You
said Robinson, criticized
guys that didn't vote for
during his career · for not
him should be ashamed of
being able to lead his team .
yburselves." ·
to a title . .
.Before Sprewell 's miss,
Duncan, who· finished
second to Utah's Karl Malthe Knicks inexplicably
one in the MVP voting this
failed to foul when the
season, was second to no
Spurs got the ball with
one in the finals. He scored
about 30 seconds left .
3'1 points and was. named
Instead, they let San AntoMVP of the finals, winning Tim Dunc1n, right,
the herdwara 1ftar the nio run a play. Avery Johnhis first NBA title in his Spurt defNted new York 78-77 to Clp«ure the son missed a long jumper
second season.
NBA championship Frl,tay. Roblneon holds the that just avoided the shot
"It's a blessing to do NBA trophy while ~n~ gu.. up at the MVP clock, and Larry Johnson
what we did this year, and award. (API
got the rebound in the corthere's no guarantees. I'll ever be back," said Duncan,, ner with 2.1 seconds ldt.
talented enough to win the title and just hayseed eno4g~ l
"As disappointed as I am in the result, I am very,
to record t~ postgame celebration with a mimi-cam . . • very proud of our guys," said. Knicks coach Jeff.Van
Robinson, .the other part of the TWin Towers, shouldlj Gundy, who indicated be will be back nel!.t season after
have bee~ tf!e one rolling tape. It took him I0 years to nearly getting fired late in the regular season.
win his chlllllpions'llp. - ·
.
The Spurs' firSt title and the first for a former ABA
"That one big goal that I had, achieving that goal,' team. All those labels that had been attached to themhas been met," said Robinson, whose besi accomplish- soft, above all - no longer apply.
n\ent this season was checking his ego at the door an~
. Avery Johnson, the journeyman 1\'hO heard too many
staying out of Duncan's way.
.. .
times that he'd never be a success in tbe NBA, calmly
The Knicks - 'those 'incomparable, no-quit Kni~ hit corner jumper that put the Spurs ahead 78-77 with
-.- didn't get out of the way in Game 5 until Latrell 47 second lc;ft. He described the Spurs as "a tough-

an

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Clinton ·draws battle lines with GOP
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Qinton, racing against the 2000
political calendar, promises "to be
working right UJT to the very end" of
his tenn.
·
· But as he draws deep battle lines
with Republicans on issues as dive""' ·
as gun control and class size with only
19 months left in his presidency, be
ackliowlcdges reality: "The closer
you get to the election the more diffi·
cult it will be to pass anylhing."
In his wcelcly radio address Satur·
day, Qinton announced $1.2 billion in
grants to hire 30,000 teachers for the
new school year - a program
approved by Congress with bipartisan
support last year, when lawmakers
were up for re-election.
.
This year, Qinton said, "unfortu·
nately there are some in Congress who
are backing away from their commit·
mentto ~uce class size" by financing a total of 100,000 new teachers.
"I think a promise made in an elec·
tion year should be kept in the years
when there are no elections," he said.
The president answered questions
for 74 minutes Friday at a news con·
ference meant to showcase his commitment to domestic iSIIIIes now that
Kosovo is no longer a preoccupation.
On Tuesday, he is due to unveil a
proposed Medicare prescription drug
benefit, which aides will work through ..
the weekend to finalize.
As for concerns about the billions
of dollars his prescription benefit
would cost, Ointon said, "we should
do it in a way .that we're quite clear ,
that it .won't and can't break the
bank."
He noted that he has been open
since 1992 to the controversial idea of
a means-testing requirement that links

a

OHIO VALLEY CHECK :
.CASHING &amp; LOAN

premium costs to beneficiaries' ized as a ·do-nothing GOP-run Con- against criticism for using tupayerincomes for doctor visits and services. grcss to approve his proposals for financed planes for political trips .to
But The Washington .Post reported Medicare, Social Security, gun con· New York, saying the first lady takes
Saturday that Qinton has dropped that trol, education, child care and c3m- the issue "se""usly" but the Seem
&amp;ervice. cl.t;tlfiJ,,much of hF ba~
idea from the prescription plan in the paign finance,
, ., . , ·... ,,
face qf strong opposition in Congress.
House Republicans pre-empted the arrangements.
216 Upper River Road . Gallipolis, OH
He sai4 the;Lewinsky IICillllal will
The president cracked jokes and president with a Friday rooming .
laughed at· times, but thumped the appearance on the Capitol steps, not burt his wife's political 1111bitiona
1/2 Mile South of the Silver Bridge ,
podiufll and wagged his finger at other showcasing their own priorities to hoi- "" tho. IA 11id•Qij,al I'IOipllian, of YKlC
license CC 700077-000 and 001 License CL 750048-,000 and 001 /"'
moments. On questions about his ster national security, improve ed\IC3· President AI Gore.
moral leadership and what responsi· tion, cut taxes and safeguard the
bility he personally bears for .the Social Security surplus f()r improving
Washington partisanship he so that program.
·
decried, he adopted a husky, profound
"I ask the president: Please include
tone of voice.
tax relief in your agenda," said House
He said the "shattering effect" of · Speaker Dennis Hasterl, R-DI., joined
the high school shooting at Littleton, by dozens of rank·and-lile Republi·
Colo., troubled Americans more than cans.
the Monica Lewinsky scandal and
Clinton said he intends to raise his
impeachment ordeal ever did, "I think . voice ipto the nation's political debate.
people are worried when they see ...
"I expect to be working right' up to
the fabric 9f life still under great strain, the end," he said. Yet, he acknowlin spite of the fact that we have quite a edged the reality that he is a lamelot amount of prosperity," he said.
duck president. "The closer you get to
As for his legacy, "I'll be remem- the election, the more difficult it will
As part of a major push to proVide advanced network servtees, to
bered when I'm gone,". said the sec- . be to pass anylhing," he said.
ond U.S. ·president ever to be
He twice praised his wife, Hillary,
students, faculty and staff, Ohio University announces the folimpeached. "Right now I'm ·not gone. for her efforts on domestic policy, a
lowing new opportunities to join Its department of
I've got lots'to do:"
nod to her all-but-official campaign
Communication Network Services:
He challenged what he character- for the Senate. And he defended her

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wer.e struggling at 21-21 and
seemed unlikely ·to make the playoffs .' .
,.
That's when Ernie Grunfeld lost
his job as general manager and the
team seemed in disarray.
All at once,. New York turned it
around. Seeded eighth· in the Eastern · Conference, they zoomed past
Miami·, Atlan.ta and Indiana, earning
Van Gundy- the coach who almost
was fired'- a $3 .5 million contract
extens.ion.
.
Against the Spurs, though , they
simply ran out 'o f healthy bodies.
Ewing was out. Larry Johnson
sprained his right knee ,
Chris Childs sprained his left
knee. Chris Dudley had a hyperextended elbow. Attrition caught up
with the Knicks.

They did not go quietly. · ·
On Friday night against San Antonio, Sprewell·
went on a second. half tear, scoring 14 straight"
points, singlehandedly keeping the Knicks alive. , .
The end was hard to accept for him.
"We were trying to get a layup from the out·of·
bounds ," Sprewell said of the final shot. " Charlie
Ward threw an excellent pass . 1 was so far under
the basket. I just tried to get the shot off, but ir was
far too short.
"It was disappointing once you know it's (inally over and you know the shot didn ' t go down ."
Van Gundy paid tribute to Sprewell .
"'Latrell made big big shots, got to the freethrow line and played outstanding." he said.
So it stood to reason that when New York needed one more basket in the final minute, Spreweii ·
was the shooter 'they went to.
Both times, he came close.
Both ttmes, the shot' mtssed .
It was an appropriate finish to a strange season.

Russia, ChinS, advance to quarterfinals with victories
By ANDREW CARTER
Wright off balance then trickled over the line into ·the net. Olga Karasseva
Times-Sentinel Staff
·' freed. tip Fcirmina for the shot with a nicely-weighted pass. ·
:
GROUP C
Karasseva capped off the scoring onslaught with a goal in the 90th
Rulllil 4, Cenlda 1
minute. ·. , .
.
EAST RIJ'lliERFbRD, N.J.· ~ftc~ scoreless first ~fl Russia explod- · R,ussla now has six points and will most likely finish second in Group C
ed forrfqur goals m the final penod and routed Canada 4·1 Saturday to behind Norway, which was. expected ~o defeat Japan in the group's final
advance .to the quarterfinals of the 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup.
match played last night. If the Russians finish second, they will meet Group
Irina
Grigorieva
·
·
D champion China.
opened the scoring in the
GROUP D
54th minute with a 22·
China 3, Auautralla 1
yard rocket that slipped
EAST
RUTHERjust below the crossbar ·
FORD, N.J .• Sun Wen
.and into the net. Canadifollowed up a hat trick
an goalkeeper· Nicci
on Wednesday with two
Wright, who wandered
more goals ~aturday in
100 far off her line, was
China's 3-1 ·win over
Oaught by surprise on
Australia. The yictory
gives China the Group D
Grigorieva's blast.
'· Russia (2-1-0) went
title and ensures a quar.ahead by a 2-0 count in
terfinal berth.
tbe 66th minute when
Wen put China ahead
substitute Elena forrnina
· 1-0 in the 39th minute
matched . , 9.ri&amp;O{jeva's,
with a well-placed head,effort .with ~ rt~)'ridener into the right comer of
the net. Zhao Lihong set
tical missile of he't own
from ·22 yards away:
up the go-ahead tally an
Prigorieva set Ul&gt; Formi·
accurate cross:
na with a pass that left
China (3-0-0) extendher open on the left flank
edits advantage to 2-0 in
just outside the top of the
the S lst minute with
penalty area.
Wen once again doing
the honors. Lihong sent
Canada (0-2-1) cut
the deficit to 2· 1 in the
a long ball to Pu Wei on
. 76th minute thanks its star Charmaine Hooper•.who has·been
the right wing, who then pushed the ball back to Wen for the put-away past
by opposing defenses throughout these l"orld · championshi~Hooper. • ·netminder Belinda. Kitching from Sl~ yards out,
· ·
.
scored on ·a header inside the six-yard box that found its way just inside the ' Australia (0-2- t), which played the vast majority of the match without
left post.
· the services of Alicia I:erguson who was ejected in the second minute of
The Russians added two insurance goals in the final five miputes of the. play, found new life for a short time when Cheryl Salisbury scored in the
inatch to cap off a solid run in group play. Formina tallied her
66th minute to cuttbe gap to 2-1. Salisbury hit a slow liner that trickled past
of the match in the 86th minute, whipping in a powerful shot
Chinese goalkeeper Gao Hong, ending a 209-minute shutout streak.

Australia's hopes of a comeback were
.quickly dashed seven minutes later after Liu
Ying scored the clinching goal·for China. .
The victory is a bonus for China. allowing the Asian power to advance to next
year's Olympic competition.
Australia, as host, automatically qualifies
for the 2000 Olympics . in Sydney. The
"Waltzing Mathildas," a:s Australia i~
known, gained a measure of respect in this
year's World Cup with a, stronger overall
,performance than it had in 1995.
Today'a •action
In Group A, the United States hopes to
run the table with ·a victory over upstart
North Korea. North Korea 'sh\)Cked Denmark 3-1 on Wednesday in Portland to
record the major upset of lbe tournament so
far.
·
The . match is expected to be ,fast-paced
and highly technical, unlik~ the Americans'
most recent encounter with Nigeria, which the
won,
. ,
Nigeria played untypically physical and even dirty ill times. The U.S .
scored six goals in the first half, including four in a 13-minute span. after .
Nigeria stunned the .crowd of 65,080 at Soldier Field in Chicago with a goal
in the second minute.
Nigeria faces hapless, and winless, Denmark in the other Group A contest today.
.
· Like the U.S., Brazil hopes to complete the group phase with an unblemished record . The '"Samba Queens" face Group B favorite Gemany tOday.
. The Germans erupted for a 6- I win over Thursday night. Expect t~is
match to be a contrast in styles. pitting the Brazilians short passing game
against Germany's direct style ..
The other Group .B match features Italy and Mexico. The Italians are
hoping to salvage three points to give themselves an outside chance of
moving on to the next round. However. they will have to rack up at least
nine goals against .the porous Mexican defense and hope Brazil defeats Germany in a shutout .
·
·
Currently, Italy· is a·minus-2 in goal differenc 0, while Germany is a plus6. Italy and Germany tied 1-1 in their group match last weekend.

'

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. Powerboat racing comes to the
.................Page 2 -"""'"~i:l:lt~o~p~HH.oo~uilstko~ni:..:..~..:..::.~
.•.:••~.•~..~..:..•:•.~..~..:..:...:..~..:...:..~..:...:..:..:..:...:..~..:..::
..:I.Piia~gMe~6S~
Mac Ia back (with Stetfl)' at Wimbledon ~m···············
P1ge 3
• Jack·bows out due to InJury ..................................................Page 7
•· MLB action from Friday ........................................................P~e 4
• Mlnneaota'l Haskins resigns .....................·..........................Page 7
• Dr. Sam· Rules, what are they good tor?............................Page 5
• Buckeye bow tlahermao makes his polnt .........................~.Page 8

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NEW YORK (AP)- A soap opera season had a· .the Knicks from losing 78-77. .
.
sad ending for the New York Knicks; whose trip to · . "It's all for nothing at this
the liSA Finals came up a couple of shots short in point," Sprewell :said. "I felt really
tht last game.
. .
· ~'" I!OOd outthete. I shot the ball really
.They endured until the end after their general well .. I'd rather have two points and
ma?ager was fired, th~ir coach came under fire and have the victory."
therr season was 1n dtsarray.
Spreweli was the antihero. TradThey survived a string of injuries that left their ed to the Knicks after sitting out a
. roster looking like an, ~"'IY in full retreat..
•· 68-game suspension last season, he
And they wound
losing when their best was turned into a reserve, and was
shooter missed two shots at the end of Game S of unhappy with his role .
the NBA Finals .
But like the fortunes of his team,
The way Latrell Sprewell' was shooting Friday ali that changed in the play·offs and
night, those .two shots seemed simple- first a 15- with Patrick Ew~ng o.ut becau·se of a
foot jumper· with 29 seconds to play, and then a torn Achilles'· tendon, Sprewell and
. last-gasp 6-footer with one-ienth of a ' secqn~ leW Allan Houston became the team's
on the cloc.k. .
.
~
main scoring threats.
Both missed, and they took wlth them New
It was a delicious turn of events msnce Latrell
and
York 's last ~hance t~ ex.t~nd th~ season. - ~prewell for Sprewell, largely ignored early the Knicka.came up short In
wound up wuh 35 potnts, mcludtng f 4 stratght and on by coach. Jeff Van GuQdy, who iheir bid to win the NBA title.
18-of-23 down the stretch. They couldn 't t&gt;r~vent h was on the hot seat when the Knicks (AP)

a

.
• t1NJX Admfnf1tration ud Network Securlty Enitneen

p

.

you heard me everybody - tough basketball team."
Duncan was simply unstoppable. He scored seven
Duncan averaged 27.4 points and 14 rebounds and straight Spurs points late in the third to keep the Knicks
didn't have to be slick like Allen Iverso n or strong like from building on a 4-point lead, then scored San AntoShaquille O'Neal to get a championship ring.
nio"s first three baskets of the fourth. Finally, he ran
"I don 'tthink lhcre are words to describe 11m Dun- interference while his little buddy, the S-foot -11 Johncan," Spurs forward Sean Elliott said. "He's not flashy, son, hit the shot that decided the game.
·
"The mai'n thing is, you
he's not in your face, he
doesn't have to intimidate
have to know you're
,going to shoot it," John·
people. He just goes out
and plays the game with a
son said. " Don't hesi~e,
lot of styleca lot of class."
shoot it, let it go."
With an efficient,
And let the celebration
unflappable run of success
begin.
in these playoffs,, the
Notes: Kerr and Will
Spurs ran. off a IS-2
Perdue, who each won
record that tied the· secthree titles for the
ond-best playoff run in
Bulls, won their fourth
NBA history. And while
title. " I would say that
many of them preferred to
they're
all · pretty
savor the moment rather
good ," Kerr said. . ..
than dream of more titles
The shot clock. above
to come, Mario Elie didn 't
the Spurs' basket mal mind.
· ,
functioned with 3:28
"I tell the guys, 'Enjoy
left in the third . After ,;;
this feeling. I know you're
lengthy delay, the offigoing to want to do .this
cials decided to shut off
again,' " said Elie, who
the Knicks" clock and
won two previous titles
place a new one in the
with the Rockets and had
corner of the court for
some·unkind words for his
eac h t earn . ... Dunca n, a
former team after getting
-=A-n""to_n.,.io-' poor free-throw shooter
his third.
Spurs celebrate their flrat
title.
Spurs are when he entered the
"I kissed them off dur- the flr!lt of the old ABA clubs to aver make It to ·the league, shot 35-for-44
ing the season with a 3- NBA finale,' much win the championahip. (AP) ·
(80 percent) in the
.,
series ... . The 1983
pointer, and now they're
home watching me get another ring."
Philadelphia 76ers had the best postseaso n record
That is about all the bravado that will come from the in NBA history, 12-1. The 1991 Bulls' and 1989
Spurs, a team with a quirky mix of veterans like Elie, Detroit Pistons also went 15-2 in the postseason. , ·
Steve Kerr and Johnson and younger guys like Jaren
Jackson and Duncan who seemed· the perfect fit for
their quiet coach, Gregg Popovich .
"You wonder if it's really true. You wonder what
you 're doing here," Popovich said.
In their thi'rd game of the series at the Garden, it
became clear near the end what the Spurs had on their
minds.
'
Elic, who looked as pumped as a prize fighter before
the game, hit a big 3-pointer in front of Knicks fan
Spike Lee and made like Reggie Miller- glaring at the
orange-clad film maker and gi'ving him some of that
New York City mouth. ··
· Jackson, who preferred to relax and listen to headphones before taking the floor, hit a deep 3-pointer a
few min\ltes before that.

Soa_
p opera ., _
eason finally comes· to an end for Knicks:

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P.--··~--" :-· '··-· ·

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�Sur1day, June 27, 1999 ·

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

Becker. Agassi advance at Wimbleclon .

McEnroe and Graf steal. ·s how with mixed doubles victorY
By STEVEN WINE
oarnent in the world has subpar
AP Sports Writer
medical ·conditions for the play WIMBLEDON , England (AP)
ers."
~ Boris Becker, eager to delay
Wimbledon officials contradicthu 'goodbye to Wimbledon as long
ed Courier 's claim, saying they
as possible, notched another Cendo indeed have facilities to treat
tre Court victory Saturday by
for dehydration .. But the officials
beating Lleyton Hewitt 6- I, 6-4,
said the doctor attending to
7-6 (7-S).
Courier on site didn't 'believe he
Jo.i ning. Becker in the fourth
needed intra~enous fluids followround was Andre Agassi, who
ing his match .
defeated Alberto Martin 6-2, 6 -0,
Courier plays local hero Tim
2-6, 6-3. Agassi, seeded fourth,
Henman in the fourth round Mon moved one step closer to becomday. ·
.
ing the first man since Bjorn Borg
The unseeded Becker, who plans
in 1980 to win the French Open
to retire this summer, was back on
and Wimbledon in the same year.. .
the court where he won Wirnble"It would be awesome to win
.,.
don three titles in the 1980s. His
.
dominating serve and ·net play
this tournament, btit a lot of guys
feel that way," Agassi said .
.
·AndreAg&amp;a· overpowered Hewitt , an 18-year"There's a lot of tennis left."
slaalutea the crowd following his o ld Australian who is a ri si ng star
o n the men 's tour.
Not all of the attention was .on win over Alberto Manln. (AP)
tennis.
Becker, 3 1, reached the round of 16 for the 12th
lim c;ourier said he was feeling .much better time .
after been treated at a hospital for· dehydration fol"He's ce rtainly not the favorite to win, but he's
lo wing.· his five -set victory f'riday over Sjeng got to be up there," Hewitt said. " He' s serving
Schalken . But Courier complained that Wimbledon well npw. If he keeps that up , .h e co uld go a long
shou ld be able to provide such treatment on site.
way ."
·
.
.
"·It 's the on ly rhe co untry we play in where that
The American women had a big day, led by 18isn 't the case," Courier said . "I'm just angry aboui year-old .amateur Alexandra Stevenson . Lisa Rayi~ It's too bad a tournament that 's tl\e biggest tour- rnond eliminated 1994 c hampi on Conchita Mar•

Cleveland Grand Prix

tJiurphy to enter .supplemental .draft

Montoya spoils pole run for de Ferran, Andretti
By MIKE HARRIS
AP Motorsports Writer
.
.
CLEVELAND (AP)- Juan Mon.toya played the role of spoiler Saturday. cruising around Burke Lakefront Airport 'in the final two min- .
utes of qualifying to win the po le for the Medic Drug Grand Prix of
C leve land ..
The rook ie sensati.on from Co lomb ia won hi s second s tra igh t pole
and third of the seaso n wh ile sq uelchi ng th'e hopes of former Clev~ l and
winners Gil de Ferran and Michael Andrctll .
" It 's a uniq ue track ," Montoya said of the fl at, bumpy 2. 106-mile , ·
10-turn circuit built on ai rport runways and taxiways. "Sin ce we were
on a runway, I couldn't stop thinking the car was going to take off."
Despite Montoya 's fear of fl ying, his Target-Chip Ganassi Racing
Reynard-Honda st uck to the ground as he twned a lap of 133.448 mp)l .
That was just·shy of the ·reco rd of 134 .385 set las t year by Alex Zanardi. the driver Montoya rep laced . .
Zanardi, now in Formu la One, won here the last two years.
Montoya, fifth after Frid ay's openi ng round of qualifying , wasn ' t
the favorite go in g into Saturday th is time. De Ferran , who took the provisional po le on F riday, and Andreui, fastes t in th e mornin g practice,
were ex pected to bailie for the pole.

FOURTH GRADE GIRLS RUNNERS'UP _.Plating second In the
founh grade girls' segment of the Eastern Elementary basketball
tournament was the Eastern Bobcats. Front row, left to right, Jenna
Hupp, Ashley Gibbs, Trista Simmons, Hannah Pratt. Back row, left
to right, Lester Stewan, Coach; Jllllan Brannon, Erin Weber ·Brittany Bissell, Coach Don Jackson.
'

Andreui knew going into the. 30-mi nu te sessio n that he wo uld have
to get the job done in a hurry . Late in Friday 's session, he spun into a
.
·
tire barrier, caus in g a red flag stoppage.
Ci\RT FedEx Series rules specify that a driyer causing a red flag in
the ftnal I0 mtnutes of a qua lifyi ng sess ion must park his car for the
final eigh t minutes of the next session .
·
"That 's part of the rules," A ndretti said . " We j ust tr ied to set up our
·
.
· ·
.
strategy for it. "
His fast lap of 132.457 came with 9 1/2 minutes rernaini~ g. and
Andrett1 knew tl was unltkely to hold up.
" That was everythin g I had ," he said . " I knew the track was get ting
better a nd better, and it was pretty frustrating si ttin g the.re and watching those guys pick me off one by o ne. "
De Ferran. com ing off a. win last S unday in Portland , Ore., was the
first to bette r Andrett i's speed, turning a lap at 132 .882 with 4 1/2 minute s to go.
But the amaz in g 23-year-old Mont c&gt;ya was lurking behind th e
Brazili an driver. Montoya 's fast lap, ca me wi th exact ly I :40 remaining
in the session. De Ferran managed to raise hi s fast lap to 132.97 1, but
.
.
.
carne up well short of the pole.
" I di d one good lap and th en· I couldn ' t quite get it all together
again,'' de .Ferran said. "B ut , even if l did ge t another fast lap, maybe
I wouldn 't have been able to catc h him ."
Montoya will be making his seve nth co nsec ut ive top-five start.
The first turn of the Cle ve land co urse has see n more than it's share
of crashes at the start of the race and on restarts because it is so wide
drivers (end to try ·a variety of lines and inevitably get in eac h o ther 's
way.
'A ndrett i said he was actually pl eased wh en he wound up th ird
instead of second . .
·
" If you look at history, the first row is iough here going down into
turn one," he said. " You have more options startin g third . Maybe it
will work out for us. "
De Ferran was asked if he would g ive Montoya, who never had see n
the circ uit until Friday, some advice about handling the first turn . He
smilerl and replied: "None."
.
.
Bryan Hert a, .third on Friday, hung on for fourth with a lap of
132.05 1, followed by Roberto Moreno at 131 .904 , Patrick Carpentier at
13 1.762 and Friday's runner-u'p Paul. Tracy, who went off course early
in Saturday 's sessio n, at· 131 .682.
· ·
.

• COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) ~Rob Murphy, a twotime All-American offensive lineman dismissed
!lorn Ohio Stare for poor grades, said he will make
lrimself eligible for· the NFL's supp lemental draft
July 8.
; " I will petition to get into that draft," Murphy
· sJiid Friday night.
.
• "These things happen , and now I have to m·ove '
&amp;, just like Ohio State will move on."
: . Murphy, 6-foot-5, 300-pot.ind guard, was suspended from the team last spring for academic reasons before Ohio State dismissed h.im from school
'fv'ednesday.

a

ly and had lost about 40 percent
o f his stomach to ul ce rs in 197 8,
but th e current illnes s carne on '
s uddenl y.
" Evidently lie ate something
or he didn 't ea t so mething and ·
one of the ul ce rs ruptured , " he
said.

-.·

: COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP) - Mike Borkowski wet and see if it leads . to anything down the
cif subrublin Dublin is scheduled 'to make his road ."
· .
tfASCAR' W\nston Cup debut today in the Sa~e, · Bor~owski attempted to qua lify for th~ Ind~­
Mart 350 at Sears Point International Raceway tn anapohs 500 wtth PDM Motorpsorts earhe r thts
Sonoma, Caiif.
year, but cras hed in practice and didn't get a
: He 'will be driving a Pontiac prepared by chance to m ~ke a qualifying attempt.
.
NASCAR Winston West team Midgley MotorBorkowskt , 26, d,rove for Team Rahal la st year
~orts, with title spon sorship from AT&amp;T.
.
in th~ Indy l:ights series and was rook!• of the ·
• " l &lt;lon't think I've looked fllrward to a race as year 1n 1997 m the SCCA Trans -Am senes:
.
Jttu ch as this o ne in a long time ," Borkowski
fie also ha's won national charnptonshaps m
said .
.
SCCA's Pro Formula 2000 and Pro Sports 2000
: "This is o'n e of the most competitive series in series.
,
Oae world and . the learning curve will be stee p,
There are no o ther Ohioan s c urre ntly drivin g
~utl ' m anxious to get out there and get . my feet in the Winsto n Cup · series.

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'

:
.
•.
,

'

-

'

'

Ohioan makes .Winston Cup debut at Sears Point

•

'

.He had to take summer classes to be eligible for
the 1998-99 season. Murphy and former team mates
Andy Katzenrnoyer and Damon Moore attended
summer school together. Both have s ince moved o n
to the NFL .
..
·
Murphy thought about passi ng up his senior year
to enter the NFL draft, but announced he would stay
after t~e Buckeyes' Sugar · Bowl win over Texas
A&amp;M in January .
"Of course I wish this hadn ' t happened. but I'm
not crushed or ~nything," Murphy said.
"You take everything in stride. You just deal with
it and get on with your life."

T-SHIRTS • CAPS • JACKETS • COLLECTABLES

Dale Earnhardt
Jeff Gordon
Mark

·

• ••

The King recovering after
blood loss from bleeding ulcers

SONOMA, Calif. (A P ) ~
Former stock car star Ri chard
Petty is fec uperating from an
atta ck of bl ee din g ul ce rs that
put him in a hospital earlier thi s
week, : ac co rding to hi s so n ,
Kyle .
Kyl e Petty, who is com peting
in today's Save Mart -K r age n
350 Win sto n Cup race, .sai d a
fa mily friend had stopped by to
visi t hi s father. .
" He sa id , ' I don ' t feel so
good,' and by the time he said' (
don't feel so goo d ,' he just
fainted. "
The frie~d got him to a hospi ta l in Greensboro, N .C ., ·where
it was .de termin ed ihat he had
los t 40 perce nt of hi s bl ood .
'" He had a couple o f ulce rs
that were bleeding pretty bad.
They had to give him a cou pl e ·
pints qf blood ," Pelly sa id .
He said doc tor s stabilize d the
b leedi n g on Thursday.
" He ' s d oin g prclly good . He
has a c ut o n hi s face a nd a black
eye from the fall. He' II be .hom e
to morrow morning before the
race. He'll be watching the
~IXTH GRADE GIRLS CHAMPIONS-The. Eastern Spanans c~p- race. "
tured the sixth grade girls' ponlon of the Eastern Elementary basKyl e Peuy sa id hi s father
ketball tournament Front row, left to ·rlght, Jennifer Arms, Chelsea ·. hadn ' t bee n fee lin g well •recentYoung, Megan Venoy, Sarah Yost, Abbie Chevalier. Middle row, left
to right, Krista White, Morgan Weber, JennHer Hayman, Andrea
Grueser, Kayla Nlitva. Back row, left to right coaches Craig Venoy,
Olive Weber, and Randy Young.
'

Save

tinez 6-3, 6 - 1, and Lindsay Daven.
The 17-year-old Lucie pulled off
port beat Laura Golarsa 6-3, 6-2.
the biggest victoty of her Grand
Stevenson ,. a qualifier from San
Slam career, upsetting fourthDiego who plans to tum pro after
seeded Monica Seles . McEnroe
the tournament , upset lith -seeded
and Graf, meanwhile, were winJulie Hal ard -Decugis 6-3, 6-3.
ning and grinning in t~eir debut as
Stevenson has won 12 of her past
a mixed doubles team .
13 matches on grass.
On the first point, Graf smacked
J.997 French Open champion
her service return into the net, and
Gustavo Kuerten became the first
McEnroe · slammed his racket to
. Brazilian man to reach Wirnble the grass in feigned disgust. The
don's fourth round in the Open era.
stadium shook with laughter.
which began in 1968 . The lithOn the second point, McEnroe
seeded Kuerten . who had a lifetime
hit his service · return into the net,
record on g'rass of 0:4 until this
so Graf also threw her 'racket
week, swept past qualifier Nenad
down. Another gleeful roar from
Zirnonjic 6-4, 6-4, 6-2.
the crowd.
No . 8 Todd Martin beat Jeit s
But Mac and Steffi also played
Knippsc hild 6-7 (5--7), 6- 1, 7 -6 (8 for keeps , beating Jeff Coetzee of.
6). 7-5 . Au stralian qualifier Wayne Becker calbratea hla win over South Africa and Eva Meli charova
Arthurs swept three tiebreakers to Lleyton Hewitt (AP)
of the Czech Republic 6-2, 6-4 .
beat No . 14 Tommy Haas 7-6 (8-6), 7-6 (7.-3) , 7-6
" I co uldn 't have picked a better partner," said
(7-2).
McEnrqe, who · delighted a near-capacity crowd
· · In other women 's re s ults, defending champi on with hi s flashback j n the flesh .
lana Novotna beat Maria Antonia Sanchez Lorenzo
When Lucie cornplet.ed her .victory over Seies, 76-4,6-3 . No . 9 Mary Pierce eased past Elena Wager 6 (7-4), 7-6 (7-4), she JUmped up and down tn cei6-3, 6-0. No. 14 Barbara Schell eliminated Larisa ebratt on. It was a powerful, ernollo na l performance
Neiland 6-2, 6-3 .
by the young Croat, who has had the look of a
The matches follow ed a Friday of drama pfovi d- potential Grand Slam cham pi on sj nce her pro debut
ed by Courier and Mirjana Lucie. and laughs with 1n 1997 .
John M cE nroe and Steffi Graf.

·

.,
,

..

••

'·
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.-

�Sunday, June 27, 1999 .

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

Friday's NL roundu.p

.

·:·

Reds survive beanball war to defeat Astros, 10-1··
HOUSTON (AP) - The race is heating up in the
NL Central Division.
And for awhile Friday night, ii looked li~e a serious
beanball war, if not an all-out brawl , might break out in
the Reds·Astros game.
Cooler heads · ultimately prevailed as Cincinnati
went on to win 10-7. But both teams were talking
about head hunting after division-leading Houston 's.
second straight loss to the Reds , who trail the Astros by
·
only two games.
The ugliness· between the two teams staned in the
second inning when Greg Vaughn, the Reds' leading
slugger, was hit by Chris Holt 's pitch. Vaughn said it
was no accident.
" When they throw at my head with a 90-mph pitch,
it makes me angry," Vaugh~ said. " It's part of the
game. I don't have any pr~blems with pitching inside.
"But when you miss with three pitches at my head
and hit me with a founh , I have a problem . It 's a rough
ga.me. I know that. I understand pitching inside, getting
knocked down and getting hit. But! have two kids and
I don ' t like people throwing at my head.
· "A good thing about this league is pitchers have to
hit. If they,do that, then you have to go after them ."
Holt denied throwing at Vaughn, andAstros interim
manager Matt Galante said. " It was j ust a couple of
pitches inside. No big deal."
But Reds starter Brett Tomko retaliated by hitting
Derek Bell, who had homered earlier, with a pitch in
the sixth. Bell moved briefly like he was goi ng to
charge the mound, and ye lled several things to Tomko

before going to first.
Wilson Alvarez of the Chicago White Sox on Aug . II, Phillles 3, Cubs 2
After the game, Bell ref~sed comment on the con· 1991. He is the first St. louis pitcher to do it si nce
Mike Lieberthal hit a two-run homer and Chad
frontation. But Tomko said he was just doing his job.
Ogea snapped a personal three-game losing streak.
Bob Forsch on Sept. 2'6, 1983 .
"I never try to hit 'anybody, " he said. "I was just
Liebertha1 hit his 16th homer as the Phillies handed
Johnson (9·4) struck out 14 to .reach 2.500 for his
pitching inside . I didn 't think much about it, and then I career and had a shutout until Thomas Howard hit an the Cubs their 12th loss in 15 games before 40,553
look around and he was halfway to the mound . Then I RBI single with two outs in the top of the ninth .
fans, the largest crowd at Wrigley Field this season.
heard him yelling ."
Padres 10, Rockies 1
'Ogea (4-6) held the Cubs to one run over eight innings . .
No one in the Astros dressing room was buying the
Brian Boehring,er pitched seven shutout innings Expos 4, Marlins 3
.
"j ust pitching inside" claim.
Friday as the San Diego Padres . won their seventh · Carl Pavano scattered five hits over eight innings ·
"The game of baseball is supposed to be played a straight ·with a 10- 1 victory over the Colorado Rock- and Chris Widger drove i n two runs as the Expos .
certain way," Jeff Bagwell said. "If you were watching ies. That didn ' t bother the reclu sive Boehringer, who handed Florida its lOth straight loss.
the game, you know why (Bell bein'g hit) happenect.
refused to talk about himself or his team after hi s
Pavano (6-6) allowed three hits in the third,
"I don'tthink it will ca!'l'y over. We 'll start over the longest outing as a starter.
including a three-run homer to Afex Gonzalez. But he .
next game. It's just part of the game."
Boehringer (4-1 ), a converted reliever, allowed allowed only two olher hits to win for the sixth lime
Michael Tucker went 3-for-4 with a home run and a four hits, struck out four and walked one in his II th since opening the season with an 0·4 record.
· triple and four RBI on his 28th birthday, and Eddie career start and fourth of the seaso n. Padres manager Pirates 5, Brewers 3
Taubensee had a two-run sing le.
Bruce Bochy made Boehringer a starter after an
Jason Kendall had two hits and stole his 20th base
Car(linals 1, Diamondbacks 0
injury to Andy Ashby depleted the rotation .
as Pittsburgh won for on!y the second time in seven .
Jose Jimenez, who entered the game wiih a 6.69
The Padres , coming off three-game sweeps of games.
ERA , outdueled Ranpy Johnson with the firs t no-hit · Pittsburgh and l os Angeles, have .their longest win·
Jason Schmidt (7 ·5) went seve n-plus innings for
ter by a St. Louis pitcher in 16 years._·
ning streak si nce tying a·club record with II straight the win , allowing three run s and 10 hits . Kendall stole
It was the first no-hiller by an Nl rookie since last June 7- 19.
second base in the fourth inning , making him the
1972. wh~n· Bun Hooto n of the Chicago Cuhs beat Mets 10, Braves 2
fourth catcher to steal 20 bases in .two seasons.
Philadelphia 4-0. Jimenez is the first Cardinals rook·
Rick Reed' shut down Atlanta ove r 6 1-3 innings Dodgers 4 , Giants 2
.
ie to throw a no-hitter s ince Paul Dean, Dizzy's broth· and also had an RBI sing le during a thr~e - run sixt h
Kevin Brown combined with two re lievers on a
er, beat Brooklyn 3-0 in1934.
·
as the ·streaking Mets closed wi th in two ga mes of . six -hitter to ·stay undefeated against San Francisco.
Jimenez (4· 7.) struck out eig ht , walked two and hi t the Braves in the ]Ill East.
Todd Hundley homered as visit ing Los Angeles
a batter. No Arizona runner got beyond second hasc
The sta rt of the· game was de layed 45 minutes ended a three-game los in g streak while handing the ·
against the 25 -year-o ld from the Domini can Repub- when a problem in the electrica l system at Turner G iants their fourth s tra ight loss. Brown (9'4)
lic.
·
Field knocked out a sectio n of field li ghts . New improved hi s career record against the Giants to 7-0
Jimenez is the first rookie to pitch a no- hiller since .York has won .15 of its last 18 games.
with an 0.78 ERA.

Fridav's AL roundup

K.C.'s Suppan throws six-hitter as Royals blast Indians, 8.-2 ··
KANSAS CITY, Mo . (AP) - The question caught Kansas City Royals took the loss.
Dan Naulty (1-0) got his first victory fo r the Yankees, while' :
staner Jeff Suppan off guard .
Yankees 9, Orioles 8
Mike Timlin (3·6) took the loss.
Did he have fun pitching against the Cleveland Indians o~ Friday n(ght? ·
In Baltimore, Shane Spe ncer hit a ti cbreaking homer leading off Angels 4, Athletics 3
After all , Suppan threw eight strong innings against the Al. Central the ninth inning as Ne w York blew a three-r un lead .before rallying to
In Anaheim, M o Vaughn ti ed th&lt;i game with a two-run single in '
Division-leading Indians in an 8-2 victory.
win its fourth s trai ght.
·
the e ighth and Je ff Hu son won it with a two -out si ngl e in the ninth .
" Fun ?" asked Suppan (4-4), who allowed just six hits and two runs
Tina Ma rtine z went 4-for-4 with two RBis to lead a 16-hit
Doug Jo nes ( 1·2) struc k o ut Orlando Palmeiro to o pen the ninth :
agai nst the top scoring team in the majors . " It was filn to win , but pitch· attack against five Baltimore pitcher s. The Yankees scored in all But Troy Glaus doubled dow n the right -field line, advanced o n a
ing against them is hard work."
but two inning s and went down in order on ly once.
ground ou t by . Matt Walb ack ·and came ho me when Huso n hit a
The Indians were shut out for the first time this season Thursday night
Baltimore's Jesse Orosco made his major league record 1,05 1s t grounder toward the middl e an d beat the off-bala nce throw from
by Toronto.
reli ef appearance, breaking a ti e wit h Kent Tekulve atop the canier shortstop Miguel Tejada with a head -first dive .
" No excuses," Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove said. "We didn ' t li st. Orosto has pitched in ' 1.055 ga mes , 16 short of the record
T roy Percival (2-2) earned th e victory after pitching a perfect
play very well . You play 162 games and we're fortunate that there aren ' t held by Dennis Eckersley .
ninth inning .
many like this one."
·
Suppan managed to get out of a first-inning jam, which was something
the Indians' Jaret Wnght (6-4) was unable to do against the founh-place
Royals.
.
Suppan walked leadoff man Kenny Lofton and Dave Justice in the first
~
inning but managed to pitch out of it.
"Gelling out of the first inning without allowing a run v;as big," SIIPc
pan said. " Usually -when you walk the leadoff ·man, you pay for it. "
But it was Wright who paid for a disappointing stan.
Wright allowed four first-inning runs, dropped a throw at first base for
an error and went just three innings for his shortest appearance of the searon . ·
·
"E verything just seemed to snowball in that first inning," said Wright,
wlio allowed six runs.in his three-in.ning stint. " I felt good coming into the
ga!"e, but the first inning was terrible. You want to do well, and when you
.. .
pitch like I did, it stinks." .
Carlos Beltran walked to lead off and Carlos Febles followed with a
bunt single. Johnny Damon then hit a triple that bounced off the first base
bag to score two runs.
Mike Sweeney drove home Damon with a groundout ~nd Jermaine Dye .
reached when Wright dropped the ball covering the bag at first. Jeremy
Giainbi, who went 3-for-3 with three RB!s, added a run-scoring double.
Suppan last won on May 20, when he defeated the Oakland Athletics 7 ·
' .
I. He had four no-decisions since.
:The Royals added a pair of runs in the third when Giambi lined a two•
run single. The designated hitter· has reached base seven consecutive times
over two games with five hits, a walk and a hit-by -pitch.
"Muser was. pleased with hi s team's performance, including reliever
Matt Whi senant 's scoreless ninth inning.
"Whiz needed to pitch ," Muser said. " He'd had five days off and we
needed to get him in there for an inning."
· Beltran, leading all AL rookies in RBis (49), multi-hit games (23) , run s
scored (50), hits (89), total bases ( 142), doubles ( 16), stolen bases ( 12) and ·
extra,-base hits (29), hit his II th homer, a solo shoi, in the fourth off reliev·
er Mark Langston.
"I was very happy with our relief pitching," Hargrove said. " Wright
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FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SALE

JE~RY

IBBEE

It's the Dealer Behind Tbe DeaJ
That Ma..kes The BEAL Dil"l"ereneel

1999 FORD RANGER XLT

1999 FORD EXPEDITION
NC,

there.''
.J ustice hit his 15th home run, a solo shot in the sixth innin g., for the
Indians.
The Royals added a run in the seventh as Scott Leius reached Steve
Reed for an. RBI single.
.,
Rangers 14, Mariners 4
- Ivan Rodriguez and Juan Gonzalez made sure Ryan Glynn finally got
his first major league viQtory.
Rodriguez and Gonzalez each had two home runs and five RB!s, and
Gl~nn (1-2) won in his sixth start in the majors as the Texas Rangers hit a
season·hi'gh five homers in a 14·4 victory over Seattle in the opener of the
final Kingdome series Friday night.
·
· . The AL West-leading Rangers won their third straight, . while Seaule
lost for the sixth time in seven games . Texas is six gam~s in front of the
second-place Mariners and Oaldand, each a game under .500. · .
_Lee Stevens also homered against Frankie Rodriguez (2·2) for Texas,
which had 18 hits .
:rhe M3!'iners played without Ken Griffey Jr., who has a sinus infection.
The Rangers improved their record to 4-0 against the Mariners, all in
Seattle, this season. And they've scored 26 runs in the last three games .
Seattle, which leads the majors with 132 homers, got one from David
·
. .
.
.
Segui.
.
The Mariners, who will play their final games at -the Kingdome loday
and Sunday, will move to their new home, the $517-million Safeco Field,
on July 15.
.
· Red Sox 6, White Sox 1 ·
In Boston, Troy O 'Leary drove in two runs with his first triple of the
season and Brian .Oaubach had a two-run homer for the Red Sox.
1in Ho Cho (2-0) allowed one run in si,x innings for Boston, which has
won eight of 10. Mark Guthrie struck out six the final three innings for hts
5econd save.
·
O'Leary, who leads Boston with 16 RB!s this month, put the Red Sox
ahead 2-0 with his triple in the third. Daubach's homer off Chicago starter
John Snyder (7-6) in the fourth made it 5-1. ·
Devil Rays 11, Blue Jaya 4
·Wilson Alvarez struck out a team- record II in his first complete
game of the season, and Jose Canseco hit hi s m ajor league-leading
28th homer as Tampa Bay snapped an It -game home losing streak ..
Canseco and Fred . McGriff hit back- to-back homers. off Davod
Well s (8·6) in a four-r.un fourth inning .
Alvare-z (3-5) got his first win at Tropicana Field s ince last July
26: He allowed four runs and six hits in his lith career complete
game .
Tigers 2, Twins 0
In Detroit, Brian Moehler threw a six-hiuer to end a personal
three -game losing streak and give the Tigers their first complete
game of the season.
Dean Palmer drove in both runs with his 21st homer ood an RBI

sin~~~hler (6-8) won for th~ first time since May 29 ;.,ith his

fitth
career s hutout. He is 3-5 in nine starts since serving a 10-game sus·
pension for scuffing balls May I at Tampa Bay. Eric Milton (2· 7)

•

Sunday, June 27, '999

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

Ru.les: Enforce 'em if you got 'em
By SAM WILSON
morning). it wasn't a goal."
runs allowed. He might not-have won all those Cy
Times-Sentinel
A major problem with professional s(lOrts Young Awards if the rules had been enforced.
Correspondent
today is the failure of officials to enforce the
The NBA could increase scoring if it
Last Monday, the NHL rules . What Jones said about Hull's goal is the enforced its rules. Officiating there is the worst
announced that it will not truth. This year it is not a goal! It is a shame to in any spon. Call traveling, three-seconds, caruse replays to decide dis- lose a world championship on a blown call.
rying the ball and the other forgotten rules. One
puled goals when a player
Ten years ago I was serving drinks at a spons reason Allen Iverson has such a deadly
is in the crease. Pardon me, bar and disc~ssing the baseball race with local crossover is, he palms the ball . Larry Johnson
but isn't it a little late for patrons. During our discussion , Rickey Hender- has a moving pivot foot. Mark Jackson · and
this rule change?
son was called out while trying to steal second. Shaq bowl defenders over as they back their
Less than two days after The replay clearly showed Henderson to be safe. way to the basket. In my book, that's charging .
the Stanley Cup Finals ended in a· controversial One patron justified the call by saying_the ball · The offensive player gairied an advantage by
call, the league decides to abandon its crease rut- beat Henderson to the bag and that was why the moving a stationary defender.
ing policy. Commissioner Gary Bellman said the umpire made the call.
The NBA announced rule.changes this week.
Excuse me' The rule states that the runner · They willauempt to limit holding . Now Reggie
rule change had nothing to do with the goal
scored by Brett Hull that won the cup for Dallas must be tagged before he ·reaches the base. Miller will be able to get an open shot without
against Buffalo in triple overtime game.
Nowhere in the rules does it say the rUilner is out . being mugged on the· way. What the Knicks did
Here I was watching an exciting playoff game . if the ball arrives first. If the umpire can't make to him in the playoffs would get most people
in tl)e early morning hours only to see it ruined by the call, then he should retire.
· time in prison.
There are complaints about . the increase in
The problem isn't a juiced ball , small
an official blunder. That call wins the Don
Denkinger award for the 1990s .
offense in the major leagues. There is no need to parks, better athletes or what ever excuse we
Up to that point, the finals had been spectacu· change the rules. Just start enforcing those that have been. told over the past few years . The
tar. It is a shame .to taint them with such an obvi- are already on the books. If umpires would problem is the rules . have been forgotten ,
ous infraction. Jerry Sullivan, writer for The Buf· enforce the strike zone as it is defined in the rule ignored or simply _not enforced . There was no
falo · News, compared the NHl with pro book, then offensive production would decrease. better example that Brett Hul' ' s goal.
· wrestling . "That's the only other spon where the Enforcing the rules would don l ie the size of the • , As Jack Todd of the MontreJI Gazette said,
referees turn thei~ heads and pretend not to see." current strike zone. Look at what has happened to " . . . without the crease rule no one would
Terry Jones of the Edmonton Sun wrote, "Five Greg Maddux and Tom Glavine after the umpi~es have fil.ed ,the m~ekest protest. But the rule
years ago il would have been a goal . Next year decided not to call strikes a foot off the outs.tde does exost. That ! the· pomt - 1f ot exosts . II
it' ll be a goal again. But at 1:33 a.m . (Su nday · corner. At one time, Maddux led the league m s hould be enforced.

By BOB BAUM
AP Sports Writer
PHOENIX (AP) - Co medi·
an Bill Dana built h is .ac t
aro und a laugh a ble lo ser ca lled
Jose Jimenez. Base ball 's Jose
Jimenez h ad n ' t fared so well ,
either.
Unlil . Friday night , when
Jim e nez pitch e d a no - hitter
and beat Randy Jqhn so n at hi s
best. After the ·St. louis Cardinals ' 1-0 victory over J o hnson
and the Arizona Diamond backs. nobody i.s laughing at
the 25-year-old Dominican
right- hander .
'' I think next start I'll for·
· get what I did," Jimenez sai d .
· Fat chance.
· Jime.nez (4 -7) pitched the
lirst Cardinal no- hitter in 16
)'ears ·and the first by a St.
Louis roolcie since Paul Dean
· ilid in the . night c ap of a dou ·
bleheader on Sept . 21, 1934 .
· h d
.
Paul 's brother D tzzy pile e · a
ihree-hitter in the opener, then
i aid afterward that "If I ' d
·
Jc.nown
Paul · was · going to,

;;~~o~~~AfNi:E~:~:~~:Ar,·;;:c::·l;~;·~;~i~~:· r;w:

..

wh'"' " lealher

.
HONDA CMC EX #8037-10,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
AC,tllt, cruise, PW, PL, P seats, P sun roof ............ $14,300
TOYOTA COROL.j..A LE #7945·26,000 miles, Bal. of
AT, AC, 1111, cruise, PW, ...........................................$13,995
PONTIAC FIREBIRD 17993-14,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
AC, AT, lilt, cruise, PW, PL, T·tops, P seat, sport

97 CHRYSLER
LXI 17909-24,000 miles, Bal. of
AT, AC,tllt, cruise, AMJFM CD, "Loaded" ............. $16,995
FORD MUSTANG 17902·32,000 miles, AT, AC, tilt, I
PW PL, P seat. ...............................................:.................. $13,495
'
414'1 IIPIII'r
IDICLIS
.
NISSAN PATHFINDER 4x4-4 Dr., 18047-21,000 miles, Bal. of
warr., AT, AC, lih, cruise, PW, PL, r09f rack, AM/FM CD,

m.m

WEEK 7 RESULTS
.
Match 1: Brown 's Insurance 17,
Smith Buick 25
. Match 2: Toler &amp; Toler 25, Nor·
ris Northup 15
: Match 3: Smith Custom Cabi)lets 22, Johnson 's 18
· Match 4: Parts barn 19, Tom's
Auto .Ciinic 2i
: Match S: lorobi 's 27, Sparkle
:;upply 13
·
• Match 6: Elks 12, Paul Davies

1997 FORD F1 SO
Supercab, 4X2, Auto,Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Tilt,
. cruise, Etc., Only 10,000 Miles .

sport wheels ......................................................................$21,800

121,950*

Brand New 1999
Chevy Bl~r 4 Door 4x4

• 4300 VOI1SC v.e Power
• Air Conditioning
• AMn=M Ctsllltt

•nit/Cruise
• Aluminum Wheel•
• Well Equlppedl

•
•
•
•'

. Pleyers.of the WHk
Rusty Saunders, 33
Doug Norris, 35 :
Del Ross , 39 ·
Scoll Rankin; 37

~8,

All New 1999 Chevy Silverado
Extended Cab Pickup

• 4 Wheel Dlak Bl'lktl
• Styled Wheels
• Rear Step Bumper . •.Well Equipped!
• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo

qa,&amp;5D*

Carmichael
• Closest to the pin (lj13): Del
P,oss
Lo111est putt (118): Bill Griffith
Closest to the pin (17): Mike
:Haynes

XLT, VB, Auto, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Tilt, Cruise,
·
All Power Equipment

Standings

1994 FORD RANGER
. XLT, 4X4, 4.0L, Aut.o, Air Cond., AM/FM Cass., Tilt,
Cruise, Much More

1-4 Division
,
•'

,.
~

'·

f
,:
'
I

••
•
•.
,

t

:

Phone
740-992-2196

\

461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

'

I. Carmichael's, 153 .
2. D &amp; W Homes, 145
3. Brown's In-surance, 139
4 . Elks, 112

5"

Division
I.G&amp;MFuel, 190
2. Parts Bam, 137
3: Thomas Do-lt; 134
4 . Lorobi 's, 118

9-12 Division
I. Paul Davies, 148
2. Sparkle Supply, 133
.3. Toler &amp; Toler, 127
4 . Smith ·cabinets, 119

• Air Conditioning
•LS Plcklgt
• AMIFM Cllllltt

tf1150*
•1 ' .
• Sporttldt Body
• Air Concltlonlng
• AMIFM c....ttt

Brand New 1999 Chevy
5-Serlel LS Extended Cab
• Aluminum Whetll
• 4 Wheel Anti-Lock 8nlkt1
• Nicely Equipped!

tn

pt1ct

..

. .

Vllidt 1111111.....,. ,.,. ""'

ftUCu

FORD F-150 18040-8' Bed, V-8 Eng., topper (mechanic
'
.
$1,995
5-10 SUPER CAB 18059-11h, CD player, alloy
whee~a.AC,topper, V-6 Eng ............................................... $7;695
CHEVY 5-10 18065-Red, AT, AC, crulee, rear slide, topper, .
wheela ...................................................................... $11 ,332

MAZDA 82500 h061·13,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr., AT,
mr slider, 1port wheels, bed liner ...........................$11 ,965
F-150 17999-Biut, 8' bed, AT, AC, cassette,
' " n1111 miles, 1111. of flc1. warr., sport wheela, bed liner, rear
............................................................................. ~ .... $15,385

FORD F·150 SUPER CAB 17998-Green, 3rd Door, AT, AC,
cisaett1, cruise, tilt, aport whltla ............ ".................... $15,800
RANGER SPLASH f7950.29,000 milts; Bal. of
IICII warr., IUI/IFM CD, sport wheela, rear slider, AC, bed

• 4 Wh11l Anti-Lock ,BI'IIkll
• Aluminum Wheel•
• L01dedl

11l1o-- ,.._lncMIId,_,..,..for
'!It or-

rack .................................................................................... $17,640

94 JEEP CHEROKEE COUNTRY 4x4-4 Dr., 17980-AT, AC, 1111,
cruist, PW, PL, sport wheels, roof rack, sun roof.. ....... $12,445
JEEP CHEROKEE GRANDE ·LOREDO 4x4-4 Dr., 14953-AT,
cruise, PW, PL, luggage rack, sport wheeis ..... $16,985
:;u,~ul\l X-90 4x4 1785kassette, PW, PL, sport
T·

'

Brand New 1999 Chevy
S.Series LS Sportslde Pickup

• Tull. TIQI.
..... Good .... 2511llru .Mit 27th. Nol

JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE 18064-Loredo 4x4 4 Dr., AT,
AC, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, AM!FM cassette, sport wheels, roof

CHEVVS-10 SUPER CAB 4x418054-sport wheels, AM/FM
$13,695
.
. '
'
FORD F-150 4x4 18069.Y-8 Eng., AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW,
wheels .........................,.....;...................................... $13,900
NISSAN 4x4 17984-Red, Bal. of 5 yr-60,000 mile warr., sport
whttels, cassette, bed ilner ...............................................$11,995
NISiSAN 4x4 18022·28,000 miles, Bal. of 5 yr.-60,000 mile
warr. sport wheels, bed llnerl!!'ar sllder................ $13,200

'

' Weekly Prize Winners ·
.· Longest
- putt (112):
Ron

1995 FORD BRONCO ..

GEO PRISM #7871 'AT, AC, AMJFM ............................... $8,995
SUZUKI X,90 17857-13,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr., AT,
IT·IIlOS. PW,Iealher seata ................................................... $8;495
113 FlnRn MUSTANG LX 17.994-AM/fM cassette, sport

thr ow· a no-hiller, I 'd · h ave
"He came · from bauble - A a
Jim enez sai d he felt "a lilli e
18016-Red, 2 Dr., AC, cassette, tilt, cruise,
thrown o ne too."
year ago, " manager Tony La terror" ·when Womack stepp~.d
whttels, PW ......................................................................... $10,570
Rare is the day that grea t Ru ssa said. "Yo u watched htm to the plate that la st tom e. I
PONTIAC GRAND AM SE 18055-Red, 4 Dr., AT, AC, I
pitching is the story for · the tonight. Did he lo ok like he said, 'I'm going to keep the
~rullli'. PW, PL ..~ ...................................,. ............................. $10,950
1999 Cardina ls. In fact, pitch· was rattled?"
ball low. I just need a ground
ing, or lack of it , is a big rea·
Eve n with Johnson at .his ball . I don ' t need a s trike ."
PROBE 18062-28,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr.,
so n th e Cardinals aren't con· ' overpowe ring best, · str iking
Womac k hit the ball · harm - ·
cas118tte. sport wheels, re~r spoller.,.............................. $10,937
tenders, d es pite a- pow erfu l out 14 to reach 2,500 for his lessly to second ·base man Joe
NISSAN ALTIMA GXE #8027·Bal. ol 5 yr-60,000 mile
o ffense centered around Mark caree r, Jimenez never cncked . McEwing, who tossed it to
12 100
McGwire.
While Jimenez seemed calm McGwire for ihe final out.
.....$ '
The big c row d show e d up on the outside, . he was never
The 6 - foot -3 Jimenez , who
. .. .
$11,270
early Friday to watch McGw ire too confident, not with John · turns 26 on July 7, was jus t 18
MERCURY COUGAR 18067·31,000 miles, AT, AC, I
s lam a few into the seats in so n mowing down the &lt;ipposi· years old when he signed with
l . . . . t.... V-8 Eng., PW, PL, P sea~ sport wheels .............. $11,425
batting practice, then saw an tion i'n what was a scoreless tie the .Cardinals . He played three
SATURN SW 18017-AT, AC, cruise, PW, PL, 1111.. ....,.. $11 ,995
o ld-fashi o ned pitch 1ng duel. as · until St. Louis broke through seasons in· the Domini ca n
MURCURY SABLE 17949-27,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
good as any you'll find. '
with a run· in the llinth , when Summer League, one year in
AC, lih, cruise, P seat, PW, PL................................... $13,495
' M ac to TL,., .. as H owar d broke ho' s bat rookt'e ball and .another in
" We don • 1 n ee d B tg
CHEVY
MAUBU #7894-AT, AC, cassette; lilt, PW, PL,
hit a h o me run ," ca tc h er .o n Johnson's 96-mph fastball Class A.
'
Alberto Castillo s aid in th e but got the ball to drop in for
His . breakthrough seaso n
FORD ESCORT ZX2 18048-24,000 rrilles, Bal. of fticl
heady aftermath of Friday an RBI single in left field.
came l.ast year, when he was
AM/FM cassette.................~ .........................:........$12,795
night's victory . "We are a
." ! never thought I couldn't 15-6 with ' Double-A ·Arkansas ,
TAURUS #8050-AT, AC, Ull, cruise, PW, PL .... $13,975
team,"
lose it, that they couldn't take including a no-hitter against
For one n igh t anyway, it it away," Jimenez said, "until Shreveport, and was named the .
PONTIAC BONNEVILLE #8063·AT, AC, lilt, cruise, cass,elle,
was . true . ·
the 27th out."
Texas League pitcher .of th e · PW PL, rear spoller... ,...........:... ~ ... :..........................,....... $12,915
'
.
.
With his array of s lider s,'
He'. stru c k .out. eight, walked year.
98 CHEVY MONTE CARLO #8060·34,000 miles, Bal. of
curves and changeups and his two and hit a batter. Only one
Called up by the Cardinals
warr., AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW, PL. sport wheels ... ~........ $14,730
fl
bl
coo l
Jimenez runner got as far as second late last season, Jimenez was
DODGE INTREPID 17957·30,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
un appa e
•
·
3-0 with a 2.95 ERA. In his
showed why the Cardinals con· base. Speedy le'adof.f hitter
AC, till, cruise, PL....................................... :.......:....... $17,995
·
T ony · W omac k was the fl. nal ft' rst three suirts this year, he ·
s ider him so ,important to l h eor
MAZDA
626 ES-V-6. Eng. #8028-14,000 miles, Bal. of 3
was 2-0 with a 2.95 ERA.
future.
out..
50,000 warr.,
AC, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, P sun

Cliffside MGA
Wednesday
Night League ·
posts
results from
Week 7 links
action

: Match 7: Carmichael's 15,
'Thomas Do-It 25
: Match8:D&amp;WHomes 16,G&amp;
M Fuel24

5.4L, Auto, Pwr. Moonroof, Leather, CD, Air, Cass., Tilt,
Cruise, All Power

• NO MONEY DOWN
• NO PAYMENTS UNTIL
September 1999
w/Approved Credit
• Prices &amp; Payments Clearly
Marked on Windshields
• Credil Applications Are
Now Being Accepted For
Processing

Jimenez's no-no is no laughing matter

:28

1998 LINCOLN NAVIGATOR

Tickets For Family of 5 · Free With Purc~ase of Vehicle

..

CHEVY 5-10 EXTRA CAB 17931·29,000 miles, cassette,
"OIIIIIPftMd 11111. an'*""~ I'IIOdlll.

.

F·150 SUPER CAB XLTI7951·bed liner, sport
PL, tilt, cruiea, mr 1ilder ........................... $16,349
FORD F·150 SUPER CAB XLT 17951).20,000 milea, Bal. of
warr., AC, tilt, PW, PL, sport whttls ...................... $16,595
FORD RANGER SPLASH.SUPER CAB 17948-34,000 miles,
olllct. warr., AC, aport whttl1, caiHIIe ............... $12,945

whtt~l. PW,

13-16 Division
1. Tom's Auto, 164
2. Norris Northup, 146
3. Johnson's, 137
4. Smith Buick, 137

,,

'

'

'

·

�Sunday, June 27, 1~

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

Page B6 • ,n~tl'Nig c-..~

Parris. Belinda. White combine for two-hitter ·

~S~u~nd~ay~,~J~un~e~·=27~·~1~9~99~~~~~~~~~~~P~om~w~o;y~·;M=Id;d;leport~~·~G;•;I=II;p~~~la~,~O~H~·~P~o~l~nt~P~I~e~aaa~n~t,~WV~~~~~~~~~~~~t~t.,~l~I~C~a..~~-~~=~d~md~~·~Pa~ge~B1~:

School officials claim low graduation rates don't tell full story

·:

Cincinnati turns back Houston's·
clock,
8-1
;
..
'

HOUSTON (AP) - Steve Parris pitched seven
innings of one-hit ball and Sean Casey had three hits Saturday to lea4 the Cincinnati Reds to their sixth straight
victory, 8-l over the Houston Astros.
Parris (5- 1) allowed only an infield sjngle to Carl
Everett in the first inning and an unearned run in the seventh as the Reds closed within one game of the first-place
. Astros in the NL CentraL Parris walked five and also
slluck out five .
Stan Belinda and Gabe White finished the combined
two-hitter, sending Houston to its third consecutive loss
and fifth in six games.
· · Sean Bergman (4-5) lost his third straight outing,
allowing five runs on seven hits in five innings.
Casey, who entered the game hitting .379, went 3-for5 with two singles and a two-run homer off Scott Elarton
in the seventh. It was his 16th of the season and gave the
,
,
Reds a 7-0 lead.
Cincinnati took a 2-0 lead in the third when Aaron

Boone tripled off the center field wall and came home on Back to the futunl
The 1970s returned to the Astrodome on Saturday as
Parri~' groundout. Pokey Reese followed with a triple
·the
Houston Astros wore their infamous bright orangebefore scoring on Michael TUcker's sacrifice fly.
and-yellow
" rainbow stripe" jerseys some would just as
. Eddie Taubensee led off the fourth with a triple and
soon see burn in a disco inferno.
scored on Mike Cameron's groundout.
"These are bad," Astros closer Billy Wagner said,
Run-scoring groundouts by Greg Vaughn and Barry
grimacing, as he examined the jersey and pylon-orange
Larkin made it 5-0 in the fifth .
The Astros broke the shutout in the seventh. Ricky hat he prepared to wear. "That's really bad right there."
. The Astros paraded out the most ·recognizable duds in
Gutierrez walked and moved to third on Boone's error.
c lub history on a Fox telecast that might ha~e been misGutierrez scored on Ttm Bogar's groundout.
Taubensee 's solo homer in the eighth, his eighth of the taken for a·rerun of "That ' 70s Show." In honor of their
last season in the Astrodome, they broke out the· uniseason, made it R- 1.
,
,
·
Everett was ~ redited with a single on a grounder to forms worn from 1975 through 1986,
"I thought they were great, but some guys didn't like
·
Reese that the second 'baseman failed to field cleanly.
Redlegs Notes: The Astros. are hitting ,208 (81-for- them. Mainly the fat guys, " broadcaster and former
3~9) over their last 12 games .... Barry Larkin is hitting catcher Alan Ashby said.
The buttonless jerseys were a response to other fash.4 16 (37-for-89) in June. ,, Jeff Bagwell is 5-for-34
(.1 47) in his last II games ... , The Redshad three triples ion oddities in baseball during the 1970s, started by the
Oakland Athletics.
for the first time since April 17, 1996 (at Chicago).

NCAA report: gQod news, bad news for Ohio student-athletes
By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
A••ocllltecl P""1 Writer
The men's college basketball teams at Xavier and Cin~innati share the
same hometown and both have programs that chum out to(l:-25 rankings,
playo:rs who fill up NBA rosters and lots of victories.
But w~n it comes to athletes' graduation rates, they are poles apart.
Accord1ng to the_NCAA's most rece nt figures, 77 percent of Xavier's
recru1~ p1cked up d1plomas within six years of starting school: During the
~me lliJlC period, not a single Cincinnati player graduated from the schooL ' .
L1ttle more than half of the football ·and male and female basketball players
at the nauon's major colleges- including those at Ohio's 13 Division I uni. versities ~ graduate within six years of enrolling, aecording to the NCAA
numbers.
.
·
The national rate for athletes in football and men's and women 's basketball is 58 percent; Ohio 's is 55 percent
Men's basketball, which has the lowest graduation rate nationally of the
three sports, has a 43 percent rate both nationally and in Ohio.
While 52 percent of major-college football players graduate within six
years, Ohio schools hand over diplomas to 54 percent
The state 's women's basketball players also e~ceed the national average,
71 to 66 percent
Almost everyone in college athletics agrees that graduation rates should be
higher, Almost everyone also concedes the numbers can be misleading,
" I think graduation rates tell one aspect of the story. I don't think it's corripletely what we 're all about," said Andy Geiger, Ohio State's athletics director.
.'Td like to see us at 100 percent, but we'll never have that," he said.
"Young people learn a lot while they're heie. They don't all finish·here, they
don ' t all finish within a defined time period. T' tey go on and do many other
successful things without graduating."
·
For the past eight yea ·s, the NCAA hasp· Jlished graduation statistics for
all its member institutions, Federa! . ,W rea• res schools to track and release
the numbers.
·
The most recent statist ics followed athletes who started school from 198889 to 199! -92. The NCAA' provides a six-year window for graduation.
Xavier graduated the highest percentage of athletes 84 percent - of any Ohio college, -while Cleveland State
was lowest at 45 percent
The reporting and calculating problems
apparent
when considering Cincinnati 's graduation rate- or lack
. of one - for its basketball playe&lt;S.
Of.the eight players recruited by the Bearcat~ between
the fall of 1988 and 1991, two dropped out, four trans·
ferred to.other schools and ti"O completed their eligibility
b~t didn't graduate.
· " I got out of the situation everything I wanted except
my degrc!e, and I' m in the process of doing that," said Tarrice Gibson, recruited to Cincinnati in fall 1989.
· Gibson played all four years but left a few credit hours
short of his degree. He was determined to get a job to suppprt his 3-year-old daughter.

The AstriJS last wore the rainbows during the thrilling
1986 National League Championship Series, won in six
games by the New York Mets. The switched to rainbowsleeved uniforms until they unveiled the current blue- ..
and-gold look in 1994.
'
The Astros, who finished 43 games behind the Big
Red Machine the year the rainbows debuted, didn't fare ,
much better Saturday. Cincinnati won 8- L
Opinions from today's players. most of whom were :
children when the Astros were rainbow wafriors, varied .
from Wagner's "c.lown suit" analogy to Jose Lima's Sat- · ,
urday afternoon fever, complete with ·70s-style big-hair, ,
· wig.
·
One Asl{o not respiendent in his old threads was .,.
. longtime player and current manager Larry Dierker, who
is recuperating from brain surgery.
"I remember those uniforms, " he said last week. ·
"And I'm happy that on the di.y they're going to wear ,
them I'm not going to be involved."

Aching hip forces Golden Bear out midway through third round :·
By ffi\RRY ATKINS
AP Sports Writer

·

DEARBORN, Mich: (AP) - First he put as ide hi s pride and rode a cart,
yet the pain in his hip was just too much. The Bear could no longer bear it.
Jack Nicklaus who used a cart in compellllon for the f1rs1 t1me Fnday,
withdrew from th~ Senior Players Championship after nin e holes of the third
.
·
.
,
round Saturday.
" You know, i1 's cen ainly not my ch01ce, " The Columbus, Oht o, nat1ve
said. " I've always fini shed. But 1 felt like I could have caused too much
damage toda". When they star! talking about nerves, that' was what bothered
me."
'
.
Nicklaus. who had hip-replacement surgery in January, rode all nine
holes at the TPC.of Michigan - a course he qesigned. He said he decided
to quit after the seventh hole , feeling something pinching a nerve.
·
" I told the guys, 'I'll finish nine with you, and that will be the easiest
place for the tran sitimi,"' Nicklaus said . "I think 1t's kmd of fooh~h f?r.~e
tu go on and just ag~avate somethi ng beyond what I should do w1th n.
Despite his discomfort, however, N1 ckla.us curled 10 a 12-foot putt for
birdie on the ninth hole, giv ing him a rover-par 38 for the side. He had gone
71 -74-'-145 during the first two rounds, heading into the third round nine

strokes behind leader Graham Marsh.
Open," Nicklaus said. "I got through that, which was my goaL Bull didn't ,
"But it finally got to where I.~o~ld not gel in~~ my left side hitting golf reali~e that I'd pay a price f?r that, which I' m paying now,"
.
, ,:
balls the last three or four hol es, Nicklaus sa1d . It was about as much as I
N1cklaus has won 18 maJors: plus 1,)\'0 U.S, Amateurs and 70 t1mes he s
could handle.".
.
fimshed 10 the top 10m a maJor. He was granted an exemptiOn mto the .
Ntcklaus sa1d he would return home and try to take 11 easy.
.
Semor Players Champ10nsh1p.
"Hopefully, I'll be all right for the .U .S. Senior Open (July 8-11 in Des
And, despite all that happened this week, he sllll was de.fiant about the
Moines)," Nicklaus said of the event schedul ed for July 8-11. "I'll play it by u se. ~f carts in competition.
.
,
ear."
I.~e~er used~ c~ 10 a tournament, when a cart wasn I P~~ of the
This is only the third time in his long and distinguished career that Nick- rules: N1ckl~us sa1d. My pos1Uon has not changed. I hate them.
.\aus has withdrawn from a tournament The first was the 1981 World Series .
N1c klaus was one of several golfers who spoke out agamst the court rulof Golf, where .he had to be carried from the practice area. A sore back also ing that allowed Casey Martin to use a cart on the PGA Tour and ,l~ . U.S . .
forced him from the 1983 Masters,
' Open.
,
.
Nicklaus, 59, returned to competition with a titanium left hip at the
Carts have always been part of the scene on the Sentor PGA tour, how.Senior Tour's Bell Atlantic «;:lassie in May, four months after surgery at New eve.~.
,
.
.
., .
,
.. .
England Baprist Hospital in Boston and played three rounds on a hilly
The S~nt,or Tour _ts !he Sentor Tour-; 11 s not the.•:"alking tour, Ntck,
course, the 6,961-yard Hartefeld National Golf Club.
.
.
, , laus sa1d; Its the·walkmg wounded, that s what 11 IS.
. Two weeks later, he played, at h1s Memonal Tournament m Mu1rfield Vtl- __ . ~~- ~hould know.
lage Golf Club 10 Dubhn , Ohto, - and made the cut. He also played 10 the
,
U.S . Open- where he m1ssed the cut.
,
" I did what I w~nted to do, which was play the Memonal and the U.S.

New
Or
Used

' de~

f

Even thou&amp;h David, 26, graduated within four years of starting college, hi s
departure from Kent is reflected in the university's 49 percent graduation ralc 1
for football players.
'
"I don' t think they should count that against me because I transferred ," '
saicj David, now a general manager of a car dealership. " [loved Kent, I neal- ·.
ly did."
.
1
A similar case is that of Ryam Wood, who in 1991 started at fullback
Youngstown State beat Marshall for tbe Division I·AA national charnpi- '
onship.
The Colorado native had always
dreamed of playing in the West at the
highest level of college football, Divit.:·i:.::..t.:."'¥•· •" •..... M •
==c.r':C"" ... " • .•.. • ... • • ~
'
sion 1-A. After his sophomu e year,
. , ...... . , ..... m
Wood transferred to Arizona State and
• · •• · · • · · · · ~
started for the Sun Devils in 1994 and
'• ~'0
'' .''''
· ·'
· •''• -~
.....
"' • •
1995.
.. .. , ........ •
... , "" ... " •n~
"They should make more effort to
track each individual case," he said.
!:ij~ii
"Not just dump my year and a half in
~·
· , ....... ... .. Wllo
Youngstown:"
· LLf,i~~iiti~~;""""':
•••••• , .•.· erkt

as

.

:·................
.,. ;.... •.,.-

Now 29 and a sales
Cincinnati, Gibson said he
regret not earning his degree.
"To play in college was one of my biggest aspirations. I cannot even fath·
om the thought that I'd be upset with the institution because I didn't graduate," Gibson said.
Ci ncinnati 's zero percentage is " not a rate we're particularly proud of,"
said athletics department spokesman Tom Hathaway. " But it does force us to
continually look at ,what'we ' re providing young men and women who make
a commitment to come and pursue their academic and athletic interests here."
One of the biggest complaints about the reporting requirement is that
schools are penalized by athletes who leaye and flourish elsewhere.

g. graduation rates .•~:.;;;~~~~~~~2:~d
canComparing
be misleadinthe
"We have no problem tracking graduation rates ,
oversees academic issues for Kent's athletics department .
just that it 's
unfortunate that they don't somehow take into accouritthat very few institutions have ·a 100 percent graduation of students."
The NCAA figures also don't take into account that Cleveland Stal"
dropped men's cross country, meaning those six runners were co unt« \
against its graduation rate.
Allempting to give a more accurate reading, the NCAA is exploring new'
ways of calculating academic progress.
"The association, through its school s, contin.ues irJ
look at ways to address 1he lack of ·a.cadcmic prepara-'
· tion," said the NCAA's Steve Mallonee . " We' re· reemphasizing that your education is ypur primary reas o'n
··
to be there :"
'
The sc hools aren 'tthe on ly ones who need-remindin g.
Pauline Saternow, associate executive director of athletics· at Youngstown State, recalled the tim e the school
discussed its graduation rates with an athlete and hi s par ents. The school waS trying to show off its 84 percen C
graduation rate for athletes who complete their cligibili '
ty.
. " We tried to show that other schools were far less, "
Saternow said, " but the mother said , 'Yes, but they're on

TV more often."'

Haskins
steps aside after 13 years as Minnesota coach:.
.
'

ElY QIOVANNA DELL'ORTO

.740·446·2532
Gallipolis, OH

135 Pine S1/Rte.160
.L..u vu•

·

Sales &amp; S,ervice"

'

.
As a matler of decency and. fairness, Yudof said, he fell the uni vcrsi - ,
ty should honor Haskins ' contrac!. The buyout wifl be paid with money.
from the men's athletics department.
The buyout agreement calls fo r Haskins to. cooperate with any inve,.
ligation and have a joint news conference with the university at a later
date ,
Jim Lord , an attorney for several people who have alleged wrongd oing in Minnesota athleti cs, called the buyout bad public policy wi thout
considering a challenge to Haskins' contract.
• •.
"He-orchestrated the scandal and in return the y stuffe d his p'o cket so '
full ofmoney he has to waddle out of William s Arena. " Lord said .

'

'

Boston said outside Haskins' home. "He remains loyal to the university.
He wants to see the players rally and support each other. He 's hoping
there is no exodus ,"
·
·
Haskins issued a statement saying he had been honored io coach the
Gophers and would continue to support them. The statement made no
mention of the allegations or investigation.
Seven players held a news conference to express their disappointment .
"The ·past few weeks leading up to this has been tough on me,"
Gophers center Joel Przybilla said. "Not just for me, for everyone. And
today it just broke my heart I just love the guy to death, " .
Interim reports from investigators make it "extremely likely there will
be numerous findings of academic

AIIOCIIted Pre11 Writer
; MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Clem Haski~s, national coach of the year in 1997 .
after taking Minnesota to the Final Four, is
oot of a job although investigators found
$evidence implicating him in an academie fraud scandaL
But university President Mark Yudof,
who announced a $1.5 millio.n buyout of
Has.ki.ns ' . cowact,. said. it i.s. ::.e~tremely
likely" that fraud did occur and said a

•

"Witli Over 20 Years

Ryan David, who started at Kent in 1990 as a football free safety, butted
heads with a defensive coach and transferred to West Virginia State. After .
sitti ng out a year he started for the Yellow Jackets· for two seasons, then 1
transferred to Thiel College in Pennsylvania so 'be could earn a finan ~e :

are

Charlotte stings Cleveland 59-57 in WNBA thriller
.
CLEVELAND (AP) - Back-to-back, home-and-away games almost sank McConnell Serio.
Braxton
who
also
had
an
asSist
and five rebounds in 20 minutes, said she
Charlotte, but a last-minute turnover and a missed 3-poinl shot made the.differ·
"In
the
beginning
I had to get used to being back out there,
acclimated
'quickly.
ence as the Sting kept the Cleveland Rockers winless.
.
,
but
it
felt
good
to
be
out
on
the
court
again,"
she said.
.
"We hung on in the second half," Charlotte coach MarynellMeadors srud
Cleveland
coach
Linda
Hill-MacDonald
was
satisfied
with
Braxton's debUt
after the Sting heat Cleveland 59-57 Friday night.
.
"Part of the reason was we played Phoenix last night (Thursday) at home. Any .., never expected sne'd be in the game for 20 minutes tonigh~ but she played
.
.
.
time you do that, you are going to struggle in the second half. i don't can;, how . very, very welL"
Charlotte,
which
led.
40-29
at
halftime,
widened
its
lead
to
48-,
3
3
w1th
15:26
much rest you give your players. That second day IS really bt1,1tal on them.
left
to
play
as
Rhonda
M.ipp
hit
a
jumper
and
Bullett
hit
a
hook
shot
Charlotte led by as much as !5 points early 10 the second balf and only surBraxton's back-to-backjumpers got Cleveland w1thin 52-50 With S:43leftand
vived because Oeveland's Mery Andrade missed a 3-point shot with 2.9 seconds
. '
' to play, Sharon Manning rebounded for Charlotte.
·
. · her layup with 52 seconds left cut Charlene's lead to 58-57.
30
secon~
left.
Andrade
rebounded
for
After
Manning
missed.
a
jumper
with
Vicky Bullen scored 18 points and Andrea Sunson had 13 forCharloue (3-3).
and
Braxton
fouled
Bullett
wtth
stx
secCleveland
but
Eva
Nemcova
lost
the
ball
· Cleveland (0-7) was led by 12 points from Janice Braxton, wbo played her
first game of the season after coming out of retirement, and II from Suz1e onds to play. She hit one of.two to make it 59-57.

·

r•----------------.. . .

~-----------":"'~---""1
change was necessary to restore confifraud, primarily and entirely condence~
'
nected to the writing of papers for
"It is clea,t' that on· his watch , substanstudents," Yudof said.
litil, numerous violatiol)s of our academic
· : Thouah no evidence links Haskins to fraud, "it is clear that public
conduct code have occurred," Yudof said.
" We thought it's time for a management
confidence in the academic integrity
change." .
,
of the university has been eroded by
Haskins w'ill step down June 30, three years before hi s 10-yenr con- the allegati ons. In order to restore
tract was to expire. He compiled a 240-165 record in 13 seasons. The that public confidence, a change in
Gophers lost to Kentucky in the semifinals of the Final Four in 1997,
· leadership is warranted ," Yudof
University officials said they will begin searching for a permanent or said.
interim coach immediately.
The university is e~pected to
Haskins has been under pressure since March, when former tutor Jan report on its investigation to the ,_______,_ _ _ _ _ _ ___,_.::-..:....;;_-_.;;;.....;;~~-:::--~--:::=---:::-=--=----11:
Gangelhoff said she did more than 400 pieces of course work for at least NCAA in September. Yudof said
20 basketball players from 1993 to 1998 .
earlier this week that the university
In the three months since then, the investigation has widened to was likely to sanction itself if its ...----=~:;;:;;;;;;.;;.;~;:;;;;;;;_...=~~;;;;;~;::;;~..;;;...;;;.~;;..;;.-:~-~--:--=:---::--:--:-::-::--1
include accusations of improper ·payments, travel irregularities and investigation showed wrongdoing.
35 New .Trucks In ,,.,,c,. Today. We Have Everything 4X4's, Diesels , Dually, Quad Cabs,
improper relationships between the team and university police investignt- Enforcement records show th·e
4X2's, Club Caba . From stripped To Fully Equipped We Have What You Need!
ing possible crimes involving players .
.
. NCAA generally is less hiush on l---~~~~:.::-~~~;;..;.~~~~~~-:-::7=-:±::-:-7.:-=--r-:-:::~:-:;:::;:-;:;--:-;;:;--1
Haskins asserted his innocence when the scandal broke on the eve of universities that deal decisively with
the Gophers ' first-round NCAA game against Gonzaga . Four players rule-breaking.
Tit.
'now!
He
wece made ineligible for that game, a loss that ended 'Minnesota's season.
Yudof acknowledged that people,
I
I
I In, RJise
·' . ' I e qUiwou, I
' I I I o_
sse
He has maintained since then that he had no knowledge of wrongdo- including Gangelhoff, say Haskins
-W
~~- ,... -W
'"OtP"
After
ing. Phone calls to his s'Uburban Minnetonka house Friday went unan· . knew about academic cheating by
u-"'
r·
u-"'
~J
1
leiMite
swered.
·
'
players. But he said ·"when it comes ·------;::-;;:;;;;~;;;'ii~;t;;;y;:;~j;'ioj::;~iii~tu:~;;;~;;-:fiiiij'i~-----1
. But several players stopped by to visit Haskins; and McKinley Boston, to direct, provable evidence today
Come See
Of The. Year" I 999
vice president for student development and athletics, talked to the coach - maybe, not for all time, but for
~-.Jer
at his h9me.
today - that evidence does not
-·-~
"He's disappointed, obviously. in the outcome, but he is not bitter," exist. "
l---~T~h~e~U~I~t~lm~a~t~e~l~n~·~!_!~S~e~d~a~n!_!~~~;l~N~O~W~~n~u~a~l~la~b~le~::::=.::-J

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Sunday, June 27, 1998

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

COLUMBUS , Ohio (A P) - Fred Brown. uses a bow and arrow wife, Becky, bought him a canoe last year for Father's Day.
rather than a rod and reel w catch fish and says he wonders why
Now he spends many afler-work and weekend hours in t~e coves ,
and backwaters of the Scioto just south of Greenlawn Dam .
more people don 't join him .
"I guess people just don't understand it. They look at my setup
He takes the stabilizer from his compound bow and replaces it
and they've never seen anything rc==r-==='""Z:C"'"'""7'~--c"'""""'
with a Zebco spilicast reel and a
like it," said Brown, who on May
rod that's about 18 inches long.
29 caught a gar in the Scioto
He uses 250-pound test line
River that weighed 11 pounds 5.7
that 's more like nylon cord, along
ounces .
with arrows designed for bowIt's now in the proc.ess of being
fi'shing.
certified as a state record .
The result is a sport that loo~s .
Gar have an elongated body
like old-time whaling .
covered with scales, a long ,
The arrow and cord go :zinging
beaklike snout and sharp teeth .
toward the fish, whieh is effecGar, carp and suckers are plentiful
lively harpooned .
in the Scioto River, where Brown
"On any given day, I shoot ,
does most of his bowfishing.
anywhere from five to a dozen
" It' s exciting, " Brown told
apiece of carp and gar," Brown
The Columbus Dispatch 1n
said. "\)n real hot, sunny days,
they just come up to the surface
explaining why he prefers the
alternative method of angling.
a,nd lay there ."
" You get more fish this way
Brown caught his possible
and they put up just as much of a
record -setting gar about 50 feet
fight " as they woul&lt;j if a rod and
from shore.
reel were being used .
The fish was about 1.0 feet
Brown 's uncle got him interestfrom his canoe .
ed in bowfishing five years ago.
"He towed us from one side of
He spent four years cruising the
the river to the other and almosl
bank s of the Scioto before hi s
all the way back across bef'?re I

got him i 10 the F"?'f'':'I'd'r":H"ir~7'7"'"?'""':1~~'!"7"""'iM
boat," he said.
Brown went
to two bait' shops
to
g~tJ
it
weighed,
but
neither. ad a
certified •Scale,
which
is
required for a
fish to b~ recognized as a stale
record.
He eventually
ended up · in - a
Columbus grocery store.
·
He wrapped the fish in garbage bags but had a hard time concealing the long, narrow package as he walked back to the butchet
shop.
"I didn't want it'to look obvious or look like a gun and get the
cops called,"' brown said. · .
:
·
"But then. the lady unwrapped it and weighed it right there , right
where you gel your meat weighed, and all of a sudden we had a big
crowd and a million questions."
·
·
Brown said that if the fish sets a record. he hopes it ·will makt
others want to try bowfishing .
.
"I wish more people did it ," he hid. "I'll tell you what, you do
it once and you'll be hooked."
Or unhooked -as the case .may be .

Buckeye State is home
to four kinds of lizards
By JOHN WISSE
species of turtles and 30 species of
Ohio Division of Wildlife
snakes.
CINCINNATI, Ohio (AP)- The
Snapping turtles are the largest
state's wildlife includes nearly 50 among the state's commonly
known species of reptiles, including known turtle species, with larger
four kinds of lizards.
specimens weighing more than 35
The European wall . lizard is an pounds. The Midland smooth softexotic species that was introduced shell turtle is found only in south- ·
into the Cincinnati area in 1951. Two ern Ohio where it lives in the larger
specimens were believed to have tributaries of the Ohio Jl,iver, parbeen brought to the city by a resident ticularly the Scioto River.
returning from vacation near Milan,
There are three types of ven·
Italy and released into a back yard.
omous snakes: the northern copThese wall lizards now occupy an perhead, eastern m.assasauga and
area of about two square miles and timber rattlesnake.
are considered pennanent residents
The copperhead is found mainof Ohio.
ly in southeast Ohio. It is most
The·northeni fence lizard belongs active at night and enjoys lying on
to a group of, spiny lizards and is . wet, •!earning roads after a sumknown as a tree climber. Though mer storm.
found in various habitats, fence
Ohioans would most likely see
lizards prefer the dry, wooded hills the eastern garter snake, the most
common of Ohio's snakes. Mea- .
of southeast and east-central Ohio.
The ground skink is found only in suring 18 to 26 inches, ~he garter
Scioto County ·and oiher parts of snake has a pattern of three
extreme southern Ohio. The five- stripes. ·
lined skink is found statewide. The
An estimated 10. to 25 people
broad-headed skink is Ohio's largest die each ye-ar in the United States
lizard and found only rarely in so~th· as a result of a snake bite, less
ern counties.
than. the number of people who die
· There are about 90 species of · from bee and wasp stings. The
lizards in the United States, mostly . deaths from snake bites generally
in the Southwest.
are due to delays in seeking medOhio's wildlife also includes 12 ical attention.

4 Dr, 4 cyl, Pwrit.omg, f'B, Drtvtr'IAII Big, CO Changer,
Akriun Wheetl
IISAP t13,'131

No¥1 $1 0,969
,.~~rtotlnc:*JDIII,..,...

Report shows deer harvest
down 23 percent in 1998-99
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Summit and Mahoning counties.
Ohio Division of Wildlife said The harvest totals in these areas
hunters killed 23 percent fewer deer went as follows: Franklin, 804;
during the 1998-99 hunting season . Hamilton, I ,299; Cuyahoga, 300;
than they did one year earlier.
Lucas, 440; Summit. 903; and
. The ODNR said the number of Mahoning, 667 ..
deer killed during the period was
The ODNR ·expects · this year's
·I I 8,270. The 1997-98 count was deer harvest to be slightly lower
153,159. A record 179,543 deer than last seasoit's. The state's deer
were killed during the 1995-96 hunt- herd this year is estimated to be
mg season:
approximately 420,000.
"Last season's deer harvest was
Ohio's statewide archery deer
consistent with our P.reseason fore - season .opens Oct. 2. The statewide
cast. of I 05,000 to 125,000 deer. deer gun season opens Nov. 29.
Deer ab~ndance has decreased over
much of the state during the past
several years, but the primary reason
for the decline from 1997 was due to
more co11servative hunting regula,
lions," said Mike Tonkovich, an
ODNR forest research biologist.
Hunters using longbows and ·
crossbows killed 25,548 deer, representing a decline of 4 percent from
the 26,639 deer killed during the
1997-98 archery season. ·
The 1998 deer gun season harvest
total of 79,106 was 28 percent less
than the 1997 total of 110,215 and
accounted for 67 percent of last
year's total deer kill. There were
12,432 killed during the five-day
statewide primitive deer season.
That figure was the second highest
in state history, ranking only below
the total of 15,289 killed during the
1997-98 hunting season.
• There were 52 counties that had a
reduced bag limit last season, ·
io~luding 19 counties where the deer
g)ln season was reduced from six .
days to two days. Overall, Ohio's
antlerless deer harvest declined 33
percent from 1997 to 1998.
.Counties with the highest number
of deer killed last season were:
Muskingum, 5,939; Athens, 4,165;
qatlia, 4,155; Hocking, 4,016;
,Meigs, 3,971; Washington, 3,864;
Noble, 3,738; Morgan, 3,700; Ross,
~.583 and Vinton, 3,475.
Counties where the fewe~t number of deer were killed last season
were: Madison, 20 I; Mercer, 211; ·
Fayette, 2 I 3; Ottawa, 237 and Putnam, 239.
In Ohio's largest metropolitan
1!feas, hunters killed more deer in
Franklin and Hamilton counties, but
fewer deer in Cuyahoga; Lucas,

aCv19: ~ ......_ ,._ n ,_ Exn

·

'99 MERCURY MARQUIS GS

'99 fORD RANGER

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attachments; gas side.burners and sturdy work surfaces.
. .
·
How large a cooking surface do I need? For a
POMEROY- The backyard barbecue grill has
family of four that doesn~ do a lot of entertaining, a
become a fixture in many. households, and during_
small-to-mediurn-sized grill may be enough. But,
most summer weekends (and week nights!) the aroma Weber says, make sure the grill is large enough to
of steaks, cheeseburgefll and other grilled (oods wafts accommodate the foods that you will want to cook
through the neighborhood.
·
once you are more familiar with your grill.
What is it about cooking over a fire that makes
BUILD A GOOD FIRE
.
dinner more fun?
While it is the most basic step in barbecue, many
For niany family che(s, it is the opportunity to get
people are still confused about the proper way to start
out of that hot kitchen and prepare dinner in the fresh the lire.
air ·and sunshine of the backyard. Many people enjoy
If you're using a charcoal grill, remove the lid and
the hands-on activity of building and tending to the
open the air vents before building a lire. Mound the ·
fire. For other families, it is the ·camaraderie that ·
briquettes into a pyramid shaped pile, 1111d place'
comes with a backyard meal. .
crumpled newspaper under the briquettes and light. If
The cook-out is also the perfect lime to bring
using lighter fluid, follow the directions carefully.
friends and neighbors •• the extended family -When coals are covered with a light gray ash (usu.togolher.
ally in 2S to 30 minutes), arrange the coals acc:ording
Whether a meal is cooked on an inexpensive table to the cooking method you are going to use. For
top charcoal grill, or an elaborate gas grill with side
smoke Oavor, consider addin&amp; hardwood chips or
warmers and other accessories, grilling is an everychunks (soaked in water for atleast30 min~tes and
growing American pastime.
drained) or moistened freah herbs, such as basil, sage
Many backyard cooks agree that nothing beats the or rMC:mary, thyme or bay leaves. Place the wet wood
taste of foods cooked on a real fire, fed by charcoal
or herbs directly on the coals, just before cooking.
or wood chips, while others prefer the convenience of
Gas grills sbould be started in accordance with
a gas grill.
manufacturer's directions. Once the &amp;fill is safely
Barbecuing is equal-opportunity fun - a small
ignited, the grill's lid should be closed and the grill
table top charcoal grill can be had tiJr as little as, $5,
preheated until the thermometer reaches 500 to 550
although it may not last the summer! For another
degrees F., about ·10 to 15 minutes.
$20, a more substantial grill can be had, and if used
COOK SAFELY!
properly and maintained welf, can last for several
While your mother may have warned you not to
years.
play with lire, she probably knew that up the grill
. Meanwhile, gas grills, which begin at around
was a good idea. By following a few simple precau$100, represent a more pennanent investment, but
tions, you can assure that all of your bilrbecues are as
allow for more elaborate meals •• all cooked on the
fun as safe as the meals are delicious.
grill lop.
·
·
Never place the grill close to a combustible materCHOOSE THE RIGHT GRILL
ial. The outside of a grill can radiate a lot of heat, and ·
Prospective grill buyers should approach the puraccidental ignition could result if placed too close to
IT'S FUN- NIH from ,,.
to . - , . • hot kitchen, outdoor cooking provldN the
chase of a grill as they would any appliance. Some of wood, paper, or other flammable materials.
opportunity .frN frlmlty, friend• •nd nelghbota to get together. He,.., Kylle HuHr of P•rlc•,..·
the questions thai a buyers should consider include:
Make sure thallhe grill is made of sturdy conbulfl, W. Ve. •nd Sh•un W•d• of Middleport help p,..pere • mNI for • getherlng of frlendtl In
Hof often will the grill be used? Should I buy a
struction and .doesn't wobble, or lean tone side.
Middleport.
grill that can Stand up to weekly use, or will I grill
Always use heat-resistent barbecue mitts or gloves
only three or four times a year? For more frequent
and long-handled barbecue tools wlt~n tenl!ing the
o Chicken breasts.cook tO to 12 minutes; chicken
use, the manufacturers of the Weber grill line recomfire or turning food.·
in the refrigerator.
pieces approximately one hour.
·
mend grills with stainless steel or porcelain-enameled . ·. • When done, pi~ the lid_on l)lc,&amp;fill and ciD~W all
Never place cooked food on the same platter that
one-inch
thick,
cook
in
approximately
8
•
Steaks,
cookin&amp; surfaces, which arc more dunble thin other
vOn!', 'furn.• .gas grill off at the bimlers and ~~he
raw food waa ~t;f: on.
minutes, four minutes on each side.
types.
gJ SOURlO.
• ,... . ·' r
IS It DONe
· • Fish steaks should be cooked approximately 12
How safe is the grill? Will it tip over if bumped or
Food safely concerns are also important. Hallds
A reliable food thermometer is a must. for any
in a strong wind? Is the ,propane tank in a gaa grill
should be washed with hoi, soapy water before startminutes.
cook, but the following cooking guidelines can be
For grilling tips and recipes, including a free copy
too close to the burner elements?
. ing any meal preparation, and after handling fresh
' used to detennine when grilled meats, fish and poulof the "Beyond Burgers Barbecue BOOklet." call the
How long is the warranty? What is the projected
meat, fish and poultry.
·
·
try are finished cooking.
Weber Grill-Line at 1-800-GRILL-OUT (1 -800-474life span of the grill? A well-made grill sbould last
If a sauce will be brushed on meat during grilling,
o Hot do~ cook in approximately six to tO min5568.
The Reynolds Kitchens offers a free booklet of
years, even decades before it is replaced.
divide the Sallee, reserving party for brushing and
utes.
"Quick 'n' Easy Dinner on the Grill"
grill
recipes,
Ooes the grill come with the accessories that I
part for serving at the table. Do not serve sauce at the
o Cook hamburgers approximately four minutes on
through the toll-free number (800) 745-4000. Both
want? An ash catcher, ~uilt-in thermometer or hinged table which has been used during food preparation.
· each side.
companies provi~ed · recipes, photos and infonnalion .
cooking grates are popular components for charcoal
Do not defrost meat, fish or poultry at room tern• Fresh sausages cook approximately 20 to 2S
for this story:
grills. In g~ grills, many people look for smo!Ong
perature or on a countertop. Meat should be defrosted ·minutes.

Recipes for the backyard grill-

MSRP $23,260 ·

No¥1$20,61 .

THE ALL-AMERICAN CHEESEBURGER
(The American love affair wirh the burger dates back to 1904, when it
was i11troduced the World's Ftlir. Americans fell in l1111e all over again
when cheese were melted mnop. The
'true' creator of the cheeseiHirger
remains a mystery, but three restaurants, the·Stop Restaurant in California, ·the Humpty-Dumpty Drive-In in
Colorado and KDelin's RestauTGnl in
Kentucky all talce credit for the invelltion. The American Dtliry A.ssoclatiott
suggests this recipe as a perfecr "mini"
cheeseburger, IHit the ncipt can be
modified for full·size IHirgers, as well.)

ai

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98 FORD CONTOUR

96 MIRCURY SABLE
·21N·STOCK

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31N-STOCK

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97 fORD T·BIRD

130181
V6, IUio, A/C, POL, PW,
cruiH, Ult

96 KIA SPORTAGE

1312501
A/C, AM/FM CIH, PW, PL,
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41,000mtla

91 OLDS 88
VI, AJC, AMJFM Clll, crulu,
tilt, Pwr equip, M,OOO ml

98 FORD RANGER 4X4
ltll5701

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99 FORD RANGER 412
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VI, AIC, PW, PL, Ol\ltlt,
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1/2 teaipoon garlic powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 IS-ounce can tomato sauce
1/2 cup dark brown sugar, packed
1/4 cup while vinegar
Combine the Barbecue Spice, chili seasoning,
black pepper, gin,ger, garlic powder, and salt in a
non-reactive saucepan. Blend in the tomato sauce,
brown sugar and vinegar. Make the sure the tomato
sauce is mixed in well.
Bring the mixture 10 a boil, then reduce heat
and Iimmer for about 10 minutes, stirring occasionally. (Or iristead of cookina, blend the ingredients
well, and set the mixture aside for 2 to 3 hours before
using.) The sauce will keep well for several weeks in
an airtight jar, in the refrigerator. Makes 2-3 cups.

-

crumbs

131370

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96 DODGE AVANGER
'
AUio, va, I'W, PL. OIUIIt. 1111,

94 JEEP 4D1 SPORT
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4 sheets (8x12 inches each) Reynolds Wrap Everyday Heavy
Duty Aluminum Foil
4 graham crackers, broken into halves
2 (1.55 oz. each) milk · chocolate candy bars, divided in half
crosswise
4 large marshmallows
PREHEAT grill to medium. For each S'more, top one graham
cracker square with one candy bar half, one marshmallow and another
graham cr~ker square. Repeat with remaining graham crackers, candy
and marshmallows.
CENTER one S'more on each sheet of foil. Bring up sides of foil
and double fold. Double foil ends. to form a packet, leaving room for heat
circulation inside the packet. Repeat to
make four packets.
·
GRILL 4 to 5 minutes in covered
grill. Makes 4.

-

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class/~ is eve11 more delicious becaiiSe the chocolate melts just a lillie and
the nt4rshmallows aren't covered by ashes. The Reynolds Kirchens has
prepared a series of recipes using foilpackets, .perfect for the grill.

MASTER
BARBECUE SPICE
beef
2
tablespoons
1 cup cr~shed potato chips
paprika
.
3/4 to 1 cup sweet pickle rei·
1
tablespoon
ish or piccalilli
COFFEE AND PEPPER-CRUSTED
dried light brown sugar
6 slices American cheese, cut
NEW YORK STEAKS
2 teupoons dry
into quarters
·
Have you masrered lhe arr of cheese·
12 mini Kaiser or dinner rolls
!Dustard
burgers
and hot do/is? Want to try some1/2 teaspoon garlh.illg
more
impressillt! for your backyard
lic powder
Preheat grill. Mix together
guests? This recipe from Weber's 'Art of the
1/2
teaspoon
ketchup, unseasoned bread crumbs
Grill" cookbook uses lin unexpected ingreground
celery
seed
and ground beef.
dient-- coffee beans-- to mellow out rhe f/41/2 teaspoon sea
Fonn into 12 mini patliea for
vors of a classic "steak au poivre."
salt
mini cheeseburgers. Grill oover modi2 tablespoons whole coffee beans
1/2 teaspoon ground thyme ·
urn heat, about 6 to 8 minutes, or until desired doneneu. While bu!JCfl
2 tablespoons whole black pepper1/2 teaspoon ground coriander
are cooking, combine crushed potato chips and relish. ·
corns
1/2 teaspoon around marjoram
.
Top each cooked burger with about ·2 tableapoons of potato
4 New York (strip) steaks, each about
1/4
teaspoon
cayenne
chip/relish mixture, and then place two quarters of the sliced cheese ori ·
3/4
pound
and l -inch thick
Combine
all
ingredients,
and
blend
top.
·
.
Vegetable
oil for brushing the cookServe on mini rolls with desired condiments: Makes 12 mini- well. Store in an airtiaht jar in a cool, dry
ing
grate
·
place for 2 tq 3 months, or in the freezer for
burgers, or S to 6 regular-sized burgers.
Kosher
salt
up to 6 months. Us the spice u 1111 all-purCoarsely grind the coffee beans and
JIOIC rub for meal, poultry or fish, or to ldd
peppercorns in a food processor or coffee
spice to a mop or sauce. (To dry brown sugar,
grinder.
Press the mixture evenly on both
plKC
it
on
a
cciokle
lheci
llld
air-dry
it
for
2
TRIED AND TRUE BARBECUE SAUCE
sides
of
the steaks. Lightly brush copking
Paul Kirk, knowrt as the "Baron ofBarbee~. • is famous ill the llilliolt· to 3 houn, mlxit~~lt every 30 to 4~ minutes,
grate
with
vegetable oil.
al barbecue circuit for his award-winning, slaw-coolu!d barbec~ recipes. unlil 11'1 dry. Sift before usina. Makes 1/2
EASY GRILLED S'MORES
Grill
steaks directly over high heat,
As all pit mailers knmlj the true stcret is a gMU spict ndl and 11 rried and cup.
turning
once,
for about 8 to 10 minutes, or
true sauce. From Beyottd Burgers Barbee~ BIIOklet, avoil«ble from
until cooked to desired doneness.
Weber.
Remove the steaks from the grill, and season both sides with salt•
. 2 tablespoons Master Barbecue Spice (see recipe)
Allow
to
rest for 2 to 3 minutes before serving WI!J'lTI.
I!A8Y GfULL!D I'MOR!I
1 tablespoon chili seuoning
·
Serves
4.
·
'For II quick IUfd l!lllty barbecw MSSI!i'~ the# S'IIIOM llrt llssembled in
I teaspoon black pepper .
foil JMCkm rutd are rn4y 1o 1!111 ill las tllan filii! minllles, 71ris Cllmp{W
1 teaspoon ground &amp;i n~er
.,
I 1/2 pounds . lean ground

---i

94 MEROIRY SABLE LS
V8, A/C,tlll , _

112 cup ketchup
114 cup unseasoned bread

9~fOIDF-ISOEITCAI ' 96FORDEXPLORER

97 DODGE 1500

Suncbly, JuM 27, 11H

By BRIAN J~ REED
11-Sentlnel Stitt!

P•.

21N·STOCK

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Barbecue tips for
the·backyard chef

4 pr, atto, 8 cyt, NC, Pwr steering, PB, PW, Pl,
Drllw'a .~ Bag.
lif bag, AWFM llereo,
Cut, ktylesl «&lt;try

96 FORD TAURUS GL

Section

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Bow isherman wonders why more don

Along the River

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Jtunbau 'mimn-Jfmthul • Page C3

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

Sunday, Juna 27, 1999·

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Julie Golden and John Ring

--GOLDEN-RING--

Renee Russell and Todd Powell

Mr. and Mrs. Darryl Drt;mrnnr&gt;d

-RUSSELL~POWELl:-

Silver anniversary noted

MINERSVILLE ---'- Mr. and Mrs.
·James Ted Russell of Minersville
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daugh·
ter, Renee Daw n Russell , to Todd
Keith Powell. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry C. Powell of Pomeroy. .
T11e bride-elecl is the granddaughter of Herbe n and Mary Jane Pugh of
Minersville and Bill and Mary Russe ll of Five Points. A graduale of
Southern High School in 1992 and

CHATTANOOGA,
TEN - degrees in elementary cducalion
: NESSEE - Mr. and Mrs. Bobby L. from David Lipscomb Univers ity,
; Golden of Chauanooga, Tenn. Nnshville, Tenn., where she was a
~ announce lhe engagemenl and fonh - • member of Gamma Lambda Sorori; coming marriage of !heir daughter, ty. She is employed as a teacher al
: Julie Michelle Golden to Gerald Graysville Elementary School and is
; ·John Ring, son of Mr. and Mrs . Jerry a member of the Hixson Church of
• J. Ring of Wellston.
. Christ
The fulure bridegroom is . the
:
The wedding is planned for SunThe Community Calendar is pub·
; day, July 25, al Pallen Chapel on.the grandson of the late James and
.
li
shed
as a free service to non-profit
; campus of the Universily of Ten· Audrey Cahoon Payne of Wellston,
groups
wishing to announce meetand the· ·late Jeremiah and Louise
. nessee al Chauanooga. ·
ings and special events. The calen The bride elect is the grand - . Warnick Ring of Wellston.
,
dar
is not designed to promote sales
Ring is a graduate of Wellston
• daughler of Mrs. Harolyn Wend!
or
fund
raisers of any type . Items are
· Bundy and the late Nelville J . Bundy High School and attended the Uni printed
only as space permits arid
• of New Orleans, La., and · Mrs. versi ly of Rio Grande, where he
cannot
be
guaranteed to be printed a
Geneva Cantrell Golden and the late majored in business administration.
specific
number
of days.
; Leighton Golden of Tunnel Hill. Ga. · He IS employed as a nalional '
Miss Golden is a graduale of accounts manager with Documcntor.
,
; Boytl · - Buc hanan School. She Corporatio n in Allanta. Ga .. and also SUNDAY
RACINE P()meroy-Racine
received bachel or's and masler's attends the Hixson Church of Christ.
Lodge 164 F&amp;AM will honor its
· ~~~~~~~~~--~--~ wives and widows Sunday, 2:30
· Cutting the chord: Clapton sells·guitars for charity ·.· p.IT). at the lodge hall on state Route
. NEW YORK (AP) - Slowhand caster brought $497,500, far surpass- 124 at Racine 's eastern corporation
was a fast mover on the auction ing the $320,000 auction record for a line. Cake and ice cream will be
: block.
guitar that belongcd·to Jimi Hendrix . served. All Masonic widows invited.
"Br()wnie ," as Clapton called it,
. Eric Clapton, parting with some
of hi s favorit e possessions in the .yas said to be one of hi s favorile gu1REEDSVILLE
Annual
; name of drug rehabilitation, rai sed tars and was used to record his Biram-Hayman Reunio n Supday at
; more than $5 million for charity in · renowned love song " Lay Ia."
·For~ed Run State Park· shelter house
· an atict1011 of 100 guitars.
In addi tion , Clapton sold a 1954 . no. two. A basket lunch will be
: The buzz at Christie's was that Fender Strat.for $211,500 and a 1974 served at 12:30 . All welcome . .
; only 99 of the instruments actuall y Manin 000-28 for $173.000. Both
MIDDLEPORT - Restoration
; wound up in the hands of strangers
were used for recording and stage
.Ciaplun himself was believed inter- work during the 1970s. A rare . sol id · and Renewal serv ices at Faith
· cstcd in getting one guitar back , a body 1958 Gibson Explorer went for Chapel in Middleport through
Wedne sday. Services will ·be held at
1930 Gibson L-4. ·
$ 134,500. ·
Clapton, whose mu sica l ·g ifts 10 a.m . and 6 p.m . on Sunday, and
Christi e's declined to confirm
whether Claptnn did in fact bid on once drove fans to scrawl ··ciapton Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday at
the guitar, whi ch he had been quoted is God" on London subway walls, 7 p.m. The public is invited. Evan as saying is a " very personal" ins1ru- wrote in the C hri stie ~s catalog that gelist Harry Wingler of Coolville
ment he used at home rat her than in hi s guitars represent his life 's jour- will preach.
ney through music.
the stud io or on the road .
WVa.
HEN DERSON ,
It went to an unidentified buyer
"They all have a place in my
for$57 ,500 - asumthatdid n' t cvcn heart and my life ," he wrote. "It is Descendants of Sam and Melvina
Sunday at the
make Thursday's top 10.
no easy thing to say goodbye to Birchfield
Co
mmuni
iti Henderson .
Strata- · them."
·
A 1956 sunburst

GALLIPOLIS • Darryl and Bren·
. da Drummond celebrated their si lver ·
wed\ling anniversary with family
and friends at a gathering held· at
.
their home, in Gallipolis .
Campbell of Strongsville. They have
The couple married on June 16,
10 grandchildren and tWo great
grandchildren.
Mr. Campbell retired from Lordstown G.M. Fabricating Plant, Lo.rd·
stown, in 1991. Mrs. Campbell is a
speak~r
homemaker.
From November t.o April, they
make their home in Ft. Myers, Fla.

Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell

Golden anniversary observed
. WARREN - Mr. and Mrs. John
Gardper Campbell, of Warren, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary recenlly. Mr. Campbell and the
former Virginia Ross were married
on June 18, 1949, in Bladen.
They have one son, James (Jim)
of Warren , and two daughters, Bren,da Hannah of Girard, ·and Peggy

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A basket dinner ·
be served at
noon. Family and friends are .invit·
ed .
RACINE - Ann.ual Aibef\ and
Eliza Hill reunion Sunday at Star
Mill Park. Basket dinner at 12 :30
p.m. Family and friends invited.
STIVERSVJLLE - Stiversville
Community Church, community
picnic, 5 p.m. Sunday, followed by
hymn sing with Delivered at 6:30
p.m. and preaching by David Bailey,
evangelist at 8 p.m. Take lawn
chairs, covered di sh.
RACINE - Annual Albert and
Eliza .Hill reunion , Star Mill Park,
Sunday. basket dinner ·at 12:30 p.m.
Family and friends invited .
MONDAY
RUTLAND - Rutl and Garden
Club meeting Monday, I p.m. at the

I

tral office in Pomeroy to rank build· ; · ;
ing design firms.
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RACINE Southern Local
COOLVILLE- Vacation Bible '::
Board of Education, regular session, .
·school
· ··~The Ultimate Adventu"re - . ·:
Monday, 7 p.m. Southern · High
with Jesus" through July 2, 6:30- i :
School.
8:30 p.m. at Whites Chapel Wes- · : :
POMEROY - Meigs County leyan Church, Coolville, for chll· : :
:; '
Veterans Service Commission meet· dren preschool through I 3.
' '
ing Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the Veter'
'
r I
MIDDLEPORT
-:
A
revival,
The
,
ans Service Office, 117 Memorial
Messiah in the Tabernacle, by John
~
Drive.
Moxley, continued through Thurs' ,
·. POMEROY
Local day, 7 p.m:· nightly, at the Victol)l · . ,
, ;
Baptist Church.

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Corne efljoy .lhe culinary.deligltu al affordabte price1.
Fine DiniRB •Fri. &amp; Sar. 5-9 •SIIIUf 8HUUI! lalltf ,0·5
Our chef,]ean ]one• (fonnerly of Sylt&gt;ia ~),
e!J:anse• our menu weekly.

the ..

r~~enter
Inn
~t'
l!Mifa

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333 Page Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760

Lavish, encyclopedic survey
o.f American Indian jewelry ·
· NEW YORK (AP) - "North only survived near annihilation
American Indian Jewelry .and but also continued to produce
Adornment"
such a concentra(Abrams, $75) is
tion of superb
a colorful heavyanisans within a
"'eight, packed
relalively small
with information
population."
a'n,d images of
She calls the
the
precious
abundance of present-day Indian
treasure docu mented
by
talent one of
au_thor
Lois
America's best~err Dubin.
kept secrets. Ani, 'There' s
facts were geners~jlrcely a page
ally created as
where the readitems to be ·used
er!s eyes are nol
not as "an,"
drawn to illustra·
Turn to the
t:r.ns of such
This cuff bracelet with ·cha ter
· ':"
. ·
an Indian warrior, Is just
P .
on
w~arablc art as one example of the crafts- turqumse for a .
fine bead. em_brot· manshlp explored In · ·the sumptuous exam·
~y 111 dtzzymgly book.
·
pie of how she tells
IIJlriCate patterns;
•
her story.
lJOld silver work ; plumes of col- .
The detailed text. is compleered feathers made into ceremo- mented with lots of illustrations,
&amp;ial bonnets; and buckskin dress- including a six-page foldout, of
~ decorated with waterfalls of
the bright stones. Some of the
ft"ing~ .
pieces arc more than I ,000 years
; The book, subtitled ."Fiom old, others were made in the
erehistory to the Presenl," care- 1990s.
fully traces . Indians' jewelry
And many are shown in use.
ihrough the ages into our times. An archival pholo dated 1901
The subject is also dealt with introduce s readers to an elegant
· ~gion by region, mapped and young w9man wearing turquoise
eharted over the whole area, from · earrings under a hairdo that swirls
Q:Ie flowers and furs of the sub· upward i"n the high, elabo(ate
i\rctic to the Southwest'~ veins .of "butterfly" style worn by unmarltlrquoise.
.
ried Hopi women .
; With . all the enormous geo·
A few pages away, an elderly
~raphical diversity, Ms. Dubin
Navajo husband and wife pose
emphasizes the connections, the gravely, decked out in their heiranks with past culture. She mar- looms of turquoise and silver, in
¥els that "the Indian people. not color photos made in 1994.

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Couple marks anniversay ;.

1974, in Gallipolis. They are the parents of lhree children, 'Thomas Bur:
ton of Columbus , Raymond Bunon
of Gallipolis and Connie Drummond
of Gallipolis. They have four grand·
children.

SYRACUSE - Larry and s 'ally
Ebersbach of Syracuse, observed
their 3lith wedding anniversary o n.
Sunday, June 20.
They were married o n June 20,
1964 in Sparta, N:C.

The Ebersbachs have two sons,
David o f Hanover, Lnd. , and Chris of
Wickliffe.
Th9 ce lebrated their anniversary
With a ge t-tOgether at Port Clin·
ton/Put -in-Bay area with their sons.

-WE'RE

GALLIPOLIS · Raben Weedy
of Logan, will be guest speaker at
the First Church of God, 109
Garfield Ave., Sunday July 4th, at
10:25 a.m . for a Patriotic Service.
He and is wife Sharma have been
married for47 years. They have five
children Kathy, Chris, Mark, P.aul
and Becky.
we·c dy is a graduate of ·Ohio
State ·University College of Engi:
neering , Class of '5 1. He is a registered professional engineer, with the
state of Ohio. He has forty-seven
years industrial experience including twenty-fi ve years consulting services . For nine years. he was associ- ·
ated with !:locking College as an
instructor in Ceramic, Industrial ,
and Heat Processing Technology.
He is Director·of Pregnancy decision ce nter, Someone Cares, Inc, and
chairman of ·local Christian- Coalition Chapter. He is associated with
the Christian Missionary Church.

:HAVE IT
LOAN
Weedy

HOLZER HEALTH HO'l'LINE

••

at

.'

Robert Weedy to
be guest
at r.:irst Church of
God's
patriotic
worship services

.·

"

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OHIO VALLE

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it's not something to

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To apply, stop by your nearest Firstar branch
· or calll-800-274-4111.
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"The Ovt:,rbrook Difference"

.Recently named
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MEMBER FDIC

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It's convenient l.ocation _was one of the reasons my husband and I chose Overbrook
Center over all the other facilities. I can be at my husband's side In less than 10
minutes, if he needs me.
Exceptional care, Overbrook's trademark was the other reason Grover and I felt
.Overbrook center would make a wonderful "home away from home" for him.
Mrs. George "Grover" Cremeans
(Wife of Overbrook Resident George "Grover" Cremeans) ·

17 40-992-64721
"£~e•lt,,e, ;, R11itlenf Ca,,

Our tJailiJ Clmmifm111f"

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: Outdoor activ~ties are a favorite
:. this time of the year~ .. but, as
:,Parenting is a 24 hour a day job,
• we still have to worry about
;·insects, cleanliness, and keeping
[ the food safe!!! Call the Holser
t· Heal~h Hotline if you have any
:: concerns this summer season!
'

l-800-462~5255
7 days a week
6 a~m. until 2 a.m.
Ask your physician about
medication concerns

Bank Without Boundaries

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�· CROWN CITY- Barrio Smith
to sing at Good Hope United Baptist Church, I I a.m.

•••

*** .

GALLIPOLIS • Walter reunion,
Raccoon Creek County Park, shel·
ter house 2, lunch at 12:30 p.m.

ADDISON · Preaching service
at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m.. with ~ick Barcus
preaching.

•••

BIDWELL - Sunday morning
service at Poplar Jl.idge Freewill
Baptist Church, II a.m., with
interim pastor John Elswick; Sunday evening service. 6:30 p.m.,
with interim pastor Jobn Elswick.

•••

KANAUGA . Worship service
at Silver. MemiJrial FWB Church, 6
p.m .. with Rev. Billy Zuspan
preaching.

•••

•••

PORTER · Doug and Patty
Miller to sing at Trinity United
Method ist Church, 6 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Homecoming at
St. Martin's Lutheran Churc h, German Ridge Road . Potlutk dinner at
I p.m.

..

•••

GALL! POLIS ·. White Oak
Baptist Church sin gi ng serv ice, 7
p.m., featurin g 'Released.' Reccp·
ti on fol lowing honori ng Bob and
Cathy McCully 's 25 th wedding
anmvcrsary.

•••

...

EVANS~POPE
GALLIPOLIS· Deanna Evan s,
daughter of Jerry and Ruth Ann
EYans, Ga llipoli s, and Chad Pope,
son of Donovan and Leota Pope,
Gall ipolis, were united in marriage
at Grace United Methodist Church
on,May 1, 1999.
.The bride is the granddaughter of
Gertrude and the late Wilford Evans
and the late Fred and Mary Hawk,
all of Gallipo li s.
The groom is the grandson of
Wood row and Mae. Belle Pope of
Lecta, and Mildred and the late Ray
Brumley of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The double ring ceremony was
pe rformed by Rev. Dave Hogg.
Music was ·prov ided by organist
Edith Ross, viol inist Dr. Edward J.
Sherid an, and soloist Dr. Keith
Sheets.
·
· Given in marriage by herparents.
and escorted to the alter by her
fa ther, the bride wore a white si lk
satin short sleeve fi oo r iength gown
with a sweet-heart necklin e, ·a filled
• bod ice lhal was adorned with pe arls
and sequins whic h fiowed in to a tra·
ditional fu ll skirt and a trai n al so
accented with pearls and sequins,
along with a simple elbow length
white vei l wit h a pearl headpiece.
;
The maid of honor was Kell y
' Sm ith of Gal lipolis. Brides ma(ds
were Beth Ca ldero ne of Columbus.
Dena Greene of Columbus, Kim
Ca ldwell of Gallipol is, and Vick i
Hcrrc l of Columbus.
•
•

The auendants wore a sleeveless

• fined floor-length gown of pale yel: low sat in . Flmycr girl was Morgan
Foster. cous in of the gro.om. She
wore a dress of pale yellow with
pink lea- rose print made by Helen
McG uire of Ga lli polis ..

•••

CHESHIRE - TOPS (Take ·Off
Pounds Sensibly) meeting, at
Cheshire United Methodist
Church, 10 - I I a. m. Call Ann
Mitchell at )gg • S004 for informaCENTERVILLE • Gallia
Cou nty Amature Actors Guild to
present patriotic one act play,
'Treasured Moments of Civi l War
Americ ana, ' writlen by Charles A.
· Murray and directed by Estivaun
Mauhews, Grange Hall , 7:30p.m.

...

CHESHIRE· Memori al Homecomi ng at We sley Chapel Church,
GALL!POL!S · Elizabeth
The best man was Jason Daniel under large tent where old churoh
Potluck
dinner
at
I
p.m.
'stood.
Chapel
Church services with
of Columbus. Groomsmen were Fan
Tent
revival
start
in
g
June
28,
7
Schwartz
Family singing. Alfred
McCoy of Pikeville, Ky, Chri s BoldHolley,
pastor.
p.m.
For
more
informati
on
call
en. of Gallipolis , Jay Shriver of
Chillicothe, and Brent Simms of Roy &lt;•e, 388 · 9 181.
***
GALLIPOLIS - Loaves and
Gallipolis.
CHES
HIRE
Bradbury
Jenkins
Fishes
free meal, noon, St. Peter 's
Ushers for the wedding were
Dwayne Evans of Gallipoli s, brother
of the bride; Dwight Evans of Gal lipolis, brother of the bride; and
NEW YORK (AP) - Naturalist Raymond L Dit.;,ars (IS76-1942)
Brandon Montgomery of Patriot, worked for five years in the entomology department at the·American Musenephew of the. groom. The ring barer um of Natural History. fn ,1899, when the Bronx Zoo opened its reptile house,
was Ryan Stewart of Crown City, D1tmars became Its curator of repttles. As an expert on· snakes, Ditmars wrote
cousi n of the bride. The groo m wore many books for amateur naturalists. These included "The Reptile Book"
a traditional black tu xedo w1th a dia- ( 1907), "Field Book of North American Snakes" (I 939) and "Animal King·
mond textured white tic and ·vest. dom " (1 94 !.) .
. ·
·
·
·
The groomsmen and ushers wore
black tuxedos with a diamond tex- ...- - -...- - -...- -.....-"'".'-""!'--"'!"'P"-""'!~---.
lured black tie· and vest. The ring
bearer wore a tuxedo similar to that
of the groom.
The mother of the bride wore an
ivory fl oor length two piece suit
with seq uin accent around the lapel
and co llar of the jacket. The mother
of the groom wore a butter cream
ankle length two piece su it with
matching trim accent.
·. Tandc Montgomery of Patriot,
sister of the groom and Jody Kuhn
of Gallipolis, niece of the groom,
re giste red guests and di str ibuted
programs.
1..
The bride is a grad uate 'of Gallia
Acadeniy Hi gh Schoo l and ·of
Mount Carme l College of Nurs ing,
Columbus, and is em ployed by the.
Gallia Co unty Health Department
and Holzer Med ical Center as a reg ·

•••

•••

America's expert on snakes

iste rcd nurse.

Th e groom is a graduate of Gal·
lia Academy Hi gh School and Morehead State · University, Morehead,
Ky. He is se lf employed with Pope
and Pope Farms of Gallipoli s.

•••

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GALLIPOLIS ·Alc oholics .
Anonymous meeting·, St. Pe\er's
Episcopal Church, g p.m.

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KANSAS CITY, Kan . (AP) - .
Quindaro Boulevard, with its run·
down houses and abandoned busi·
nesses, developed a reputation as a
haven for prostitutes, drug pushers
and gangs. But this blighted comri1U·
nity, once known as n promised land
for runaway slaves from Missouri.
has become a sy mbol of hope again.
The United Nation of !slam not to be confused with the Nation
of Islam and its controversial leader
Louis Farrakhan - · has moved sev·
eral new businesses into the neigh.. borhood. The drug dealers , gang
members and street walkers have
moved out.
With names such as "Your
Diner," " Your Supermarket." and
'" Your Servi.ce Siation," the Islamic
· group hopes the businesses will help
transform the long-neglected area
into a viable community.
The United Nation of Islam's
businesses arc a bright spot in di smal surroundings. Each has a red
banner with Muslim symbols of a

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lorast, while harvesting select hardwoods.

volunteer at the United Nation of
Islam's construction company.
Officials with the l)nified Government of Wyandotte County and
Kansas City, Kan. , say they are glad
the group brought its plan to the city.
Kansas City - Kansas ' seco nd
largest city and one of its poorest
and most dangerous - was ·chosen
four years ago as the model project
because of its central location, 2X .
said.
Ulc· United Nation of Islam· also
has a sandwich shop in Wichita and
health and information centers in the
Washington, D.C., area. Its nationa l·
headquarters is in Temple Hills, Md.
The group farms tomatoes, wheat;
squash and watermelon in Maryland
which are shipped to Ka.nsas City
a:nd distributed to needy communi ties.

The spiritual head of the United
. Nation of !Slam is. a man named
Solomon, who was a member of the
Nation of !slam before its · leader,
Elijah Muhammad, died in 1975.
The Nation of Islam splintered after
star and crescent m oon.
The doors to the United N·ation of Muh ammad 's death, and one of the
!slam es tabli shments aren't open resulting groups is headed by Far·
just for fell ow Muslims. Anyone can · rakllan. About 6 mill ion Americans
cat at the diner or get gas at the sta- are Muslim.
2X won' t say how many people
tion.
"Everything that we have says helong to the United Nation of
' your' on it. It 's not for us. but for (slam, which teaches from the Bible,
everyone who reads the sign," said tl1e Koran and "the ope n book of
Laota Rassoull. a member of th e nature." While many of its practi ces
den om ination. "These ideas were · are si milar to those of the Nation of
de signed specificall y for the com· Islam. he says, there are differen·ces.
He said his group avoids pork for
munity."
Those who are interested can health reasons. " If you asked them
work at the United Nati on of Islam (members of the Nati on of Islam)
why tliey don't eat pork they might
busincsse.s, bui there is no payroJI.
say,
' Because it says not to eat swi ne
The establi shments are run by
in
the
Koran.' But why'/ We ope rate
volunteers who want 10 learn busi·
ness skill s. Those wanting to learn to on the why aspect. "
2X is often critical of Farrakhan 's
make bread and pas tries can work in
bakery. Would-be ~uilders can teachings and said the mini ster has

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By JENNIFER C. YATES
Associated Press Writer
PHILADELPHIA (AP)- Nyuk, nyuk , ~ yuk. Larry Fine, ,the frizzy.
hatred member of the Three Stooges who suffered never-e nding abuse
from Moe and Curly, IS ge tttn g gentler treatment in hi s hometown .
A wiseguy Philadelphia weekly is leadin g an effort to rai se. $25 000
to paint a inural of Fine on South Street, a funky stretch of restau;ant s
and tattoo and tongue- piercing parlors.
Is th e money coming in? Why, soitenly.
So far, the we~kly h~ s raised about $2,900 without once re sorting to
.·. eye- poktng or hatr-pulltng ,(or head-bopping, pie-throwin g or ad mini s·
'; ten ng a smack across three .faces in a row).
The tentative. desig.n is a 20- by-20-foot painting of th e put-~pon
'· Stooge's face, hts eyes wide in anticipation, on the hull's eye of target.
The artist who will paint the mural, ·David McS hane, is a Three
•
Stooge fa n who spent his childhood re-enacting the hoys' anti cs with his
brothers.
..:: ftve"Although
Larry was the local guy, he's probably the most over·
looked: Most of the stuff we did was more Curl y-isms," sa id McShane,
·. launchmg mto a ree~tatmn of Stooge lines (" ' Niagara Fa ll s. Slowly [
, tum .. .'' ) " He was. alway s getting his hair pulled and Moe wou ld be left
• wtt h a big hunk of his hair."
·
:
Fi ne was boni in. a rowhouse on Sout h Phil ade lphi a's South Street in
:. 1902 . The mural wtll be pat'nted nex t door on the side of Jon's Bar &amp;
-· Gn ll . Fin e died in 1975. Moe Howard and his brother Curl y arc lon g
gone, too.
The Philadelphia Weekly decided Fine would make good wa ll an
: after the. Phtlad~lphta Datly News raised money for a' mural of Frank
Smatra 1n heavtly Itali an South Phill y. The Week ly comp lained th at
• Smatra was from New Jersey, and it suggeste d honorin g instead a real
Ph1ladelph1an, namely one Larry Fine .
" We basically did it as a lark. and we just started hcarm g fr om people - po l1 ce off1 cers, lawye rs: Stooge fan clu b members. " sa id Tim
Whitaker, the weekly 's editor,
·
l
,
" Larry· Fine just see med pe rfec t because the Stooges were alway s
• upsellm g the applecart and goin g against the es tablishment ·and it
: seemed to fit in good wi th our paper. "
The city has agreed to pay 25 percent of the expec ted $25,000 cost.
A.Stooge marks a depart ure for the ci ty, which has pain ted niural s or
Mal co lm X and the Rev, Martin Luther King Jr. The 'city ha s m6re than
I ,800 murals.
:
" I think a lot o r what we do is ve ry serious, but occasionall y you
' have to do something fun," sai d Jane Golden, direc tor of the city's
Mural Arts Program.

" put a bad taste in people's mouths"
with innammatory racial and antiSemitic statements.
Like many Muslims, 2X dropped.
his last name and replaced it with an
X, w" ·. h sy!Jlbolizes the unknown. •
I .hew Cross, a police officer
whose beat covers the Quindaro
Boulevard area, said he's impressed
with 2X's group. Crime ha~n't gone
away, of cour5e, but he attributed
"most of the cleanup along Quin·
daro to the United Nation of Islam."
Ordering lunch at Your Diner,
Carolyn Folson agreed. "You notice
a difference. There were drug deal·
ers and a lot of ha~ging out. All
that's gone."
2X said: "We. don 't try to push
our ideas on anybody, but we lead
by example. Once people see us
doing right, they want to do right,

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too."
He said when customers ask why
cigarelles are not soid at the gas sta·
tion, he tells them , " It can be proven
that cigarelles cause cancer, so it
wouldn ' t be right for us to offer it to
you."

Health.fulness is the diner's
theme , too, he said. Specialties .
include fish chili, the sweetener on
the tables is fructose instead of
sugar, and the salt comes from the
sea and is free of iodine and addi- ·
ti ves.
The .businesses were started with·
out any public funding . Members
acro&amp;s the country pool their dona·
tions to run them , 2X said .
Profits are used to open new busi·
nesses. The United Nation of [slam
also has a dry-cleaning service, a

The physicians and.employees
of Holzer Clinic wish Dr. Orr
well in his.retirement!!

variety store, a warehouse and a ,

trucking ·company in the Kansas
City neighborhood. In the plans are
an employment agency and coin
laundry.

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James"M. Orr; MD
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Retiring J~~Y.: 2, 1999

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United Nation of lsla·m moves · in,·
prostitution and drugs move out

Children's Skeoher's

.•

. ~------------------------

and chose five sites he was ,inter es ted in and purch ase d 2', 500
acres .
Today, Steve and Sherry own
m·a ny th ousand of acres o'f ihe
most beautiful land in Costa Ri ca.

28'/• to 40'/a OFF

$

· Will Ph illy honor Larry Fine of the
Three Stooges? Why, soitenly!

J

VINTON .Vinton Baptist
Church's Pastor Marvin Sallee
ieaching series on "Nehemiah's
Project", eac h Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Nursery provided.

and memor.

•••
Thesday, June 29
•••

HENDERSON, W.VA. · West·
ern square dancing, 7:30 • 10 p.m.,
Henderson Recreation Building.
POMEROY - Nar59rtfs Anony·
mous Living In TheSolution
Group, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7 p.m.

•••

'

GALLIPOLIS - When Jay
Proffit, who works for Schwann's
and owns the beautiful Basket
Delights Flower &amp; Gift shop at
1725 Eastern Avenue in Gallipo·
lis, heard I was going to Costa
Rica, he urged me to visi t his
mother ' s niece and her husband ,
Steve and Sherry Brunner.
When my grands on , Dr. Bil l
Crank, and f arrived in the south ern part of Costa Rica , we felt
.very fortunate to meet and spend
some time with Sherry and Steve .
Steve graduated from law
sc hool at .Ohio State University.
In 1974, he new over the so ut h·

Wednesday, June 30

· CROWN CITY - Darren Smith
wi ll be sin ging at Mount Zion Mis·
sionary Baptist Church, 6 p.m.
LECTA - Vacation Bible School
program at Walnat Ridge Church.
Su nday School 9:30:a.m., with
program to follow. Jackie Clark of
Milton, W.Va,, to speak after the
program.

...

•••

GALLI POLIS - Knights of
Col umbus me.eting, 6·p.m. at Le
Marque . Guest speaker Jim Craft
sharing his 'Walk with the Lord ' as
a Christian man , husband, father

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS· Narcoti cs
Anonymous Miracles fn Recovery
Group, St. Peters Episcopal
Church, 7:30p.m.

tion .

...

GALLIPOLIS - AI -Anon meeting at St. Peter 's Episcopal
Church, g p.m .

. GALL! POLIS - Ange l family
reunion at 0.0 .. Mcintyre Park,
bluebird shelter house. Covered
dish lunch at noon.

•••

RIO GRANDE- Calvary 'Bap·
ti st Churc h services wi th missio naries Randy and Marg aret
William s. 10:45 a.m. The couple ·
m'inisters in Haiti . Mrs. William s i,s
the daug hter of Rev. and Mrs.
Luther Tracy of Rio Grande.
Morni ng worship me ssage by Pas-.
tor Jane Lang.

Mr. and Mrs. Chad Pope

***

GALL!POLIS · Cal Sanders
family reunion , all day at 0.0.
Mcintyre Park, sheller house #S.

•

•••
Monday, June 28
•••

the preservation of the rain forest.
Millions of acres per year are
being destroyed . They decided to

-

•••

•••

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . .
Narcotics Anonymous Tri · County
Group n)eeting. 611 Viand Street,
7:30p.m.

By MAX
TAWNEY

Lose Diet Group, 9 a.m. at Grace
United Methodist Church. For
information call 256- I 156 .

Episcopal.

ing. Dinner at noon .

purchase farmland that was once $20,000 to $30,000 . It makes the highlight of my trip to heauti ·
ful Costa Rica .
rain forest and began to plant rare beautiful furniture .
I know my grandson, Dr.
When [ was in China some 20
tropical hardwoods, which are
very valuable and sought after . years ago f purchased five pieces Crank, meant to do me a favor by
Some of the trees planted are of furniture , all hand-made out of booking the hur;e ride up in the
teak, purla rose, purple heart and teakwood, and I had it shipped mountains . And I had fun even if
back to Gallipolis . If you want to I did have a few accidents.
trebol.
It has been my life 's pleasure
Steve and Sherry' allo.w a select see some beautiful furniture, stop
number of referred investors to at my house at 154 ' First Avenue to travel all over the world meet·
ing people . I have memories that
purchase .a minimum amount of and'I will gladl y show it to you .
I
will never forget and have pho·
All.
through
the
so
uthern
part
trees, which are carefu lly planted
tos
to keep those memories .
of
Costa
Rica
,'
good
forests
are
and nurtured until hand-picked at
I
do not kn ow where my next
disappearing
and
that
is
why
harvest time,
will
be , but I intend to hit the
trip
The investors then feceive Steve and Sherry are being com · ·
my 86th birthday,
road
hefore
around 96 percent of the pro· mended for such a good job of
which will be Jan . 27 , 2000.
ceeds. It's sort of a share crop- preserving the rain forest.
I will say meeting these nice
ping idea.
(Max Tawney, longtime down·
The main purpose of Sherry people, and seeing what they· town Gallipolis businessmpn,
and Steve's tree plantation is IO have done to preserve the rain occll&lt;ionally writes articles a"!&gt;ut
di scourage harvesters from cu t- . forests , was much beuer than rid - his travels and experiences for the
ting out of the rain .forest and ing horses, li~c 1 got hooked into Su nday Times-Sentinel.)
·
encouraging them to · harvest off · for rive hours up in mountains at
7,000 feet, through rain storms ,
of private farm s.
The Costa Rica government and mounta.in streams.
RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) :loved the idea and decided to 0 1 wi II now confess 1 ended up
Founded in 1876, this city in lhe
allow anyone who wantS to invest fallin g off the horse and lost one
·Black Hills is named for Rapid Creek
in the project, to {Cap the rewards of my boots . Also, 1 couldn' t
which fiows through it. It is home to
wa lk straight for two days .
of a tax - fr~e investment.
the
South .Dakota School of Mines
That 's why I say meeting ni ce
Steve and Sherry were award·
Museum
of Geology, with a co lleced the National Arbor Day Good peop le like Steve and Sherry was
tion of fossils and handicrafts.
Samaritan Award. Becau se what
th ey are doing is for the good of .
the co untry and environment.
Max Tawney, right, Is sh.own with Sherry and Steve Brunner dur·
They have planted thousands
lng his recent trip to Costa Rica. The Brunner&amp; own the Tropical of teakwood trees. which are very
American Tree Farms, a business thai works .to preserve the rain·
val~ ab l e, and when mature, se ll

They are the founders of Tropical
American Tree Farms there .
They recognized the need for

-

reunion, Kyger Community Build·

Jlmtlla; G!u--Jimtbul • Page C5

Pomeroy • Middleport • &lt;:lallipolia, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Travels With Max...

Gallia
Community
Calendar
...

Sunday, June 27

· .Sunday, June 27, 1999

~

Wedding ·

Sunday, June 27, 1999

-

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

' . 500 3rd Ave., Gallipolis, 446-0315
201 5. Front St., 011k HW, 682-7733

_ .....

$2,500 minimum doposlt. liP'/ (onriual pen:entage yield) Is aoeur'!l• •• of
'the dote of this Issue but are subject to cllllnge. Penally for early wthdraWII,

.
. .

.

Holzer Clinic •••
lieeping Our 'Pr11mise!

�Page C6 •II t

uII~Jiaditul

Sunday, June 27, 1999

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

Sunday; June 27, 1999

'Aida' from Verona is first live
opera broadcast on Internet

Ohio's blue laws changed in 193-1 to allow movies to be shown on Sunday
laws in Gallia County had kept most only crowds at the only evening per- .rlowing his death lifted him to a "bigplaces of business and amusement fonnance of August 30 forced Fred ger than life" character.
James
Wheeler to schedule two additional
closed.
Gallipolis native and syndicated
Sands
On August I, 1931, the Ohio showings of the film. One show columnist Odd Mcintyre knew
Legislature made an exception to the began at II p.m. and the last show at Rogers from about 1915 on. Rogers
blue laws. for motion pictures. Local I a.m. There were over 300 people was. a performer for the Ziegfeld
communities could 9ot fore~ the at the I a.m. showing.
Follies and Mcintyre was a publicist
In December of 1935 Gallians for the show.
closing of the 'theatres on Sundays.
It was August 23, 1931. when the filled the Gallipolis Theatre four
Mcintyre claimed that Rogers
first Sunday movie was shown in straight nights to see Will Rogers' · was the "most honest man" in Amer' The Gallipolis Theatre started Gallia County. There were four last movie, "In Old Kentucky". ica. "He. never did a mean or peuy
showing movies abo ut 1905 and shows that day: I:30 p.in., 3:30 Rogers had died on August 15, · thing to anyone."
1935, near Point Barrow, Alaska in a
cantinued to run films until the late p.m., 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.
"Rogers' chann was largely in
plane
crash.
·
Fred
Wheeler,
ihe
owner
of
the
1960s.
that quality I should call unpreThe Gallipolis Daily Tribune of dictable. Few men do things as he
· ·Someof the memorable moments · Gallipolis Theatre, said that he was
in the history of film at the Gallipo- forced to go to Sunday shows, December 14, 1935, stated: "Never did ." Mcintyre told atiout Rogers'
lis· Theatfe came in the 193Qs arid because Gallians were driving to before has there been such an out: obsession with finding a good tie
included the switch from silent theatres in other cities and taking pouring of the masses to see a pic- and wearing it e•cl~sive!y until it
ture or a play or any other sort of wore out · completely.
movies . to "talkies" in 1931 ; the business away from Gallipolis.
Wheeler did a good job of pick- publi&lt;: entertainment. except per· beginning of Sunday movies in
"If Will Rogers were not one of
1931 , the showing of ·Frankensrei n ing good Sunday movies. Some of . hap s some circus a decade or gener- the most talented men of his time, he
ih 1932 and the showing of Will ihe fr rst ones shown here on Sunday ation ago.· However, there was a could have achieved greatness for
Rogers's last movie in 1935.
included: "Young As You Feel" with comparable allendance at the three this simple statement in a -world
The swr'tch to Sunday sh owings Will Rogers, "Daddy Longlegs" nights showing of "Steamboat swollen with hatred, 'I never met a
was quite controversial. It was not with Janet Gaynor and Warner Bax- Around the Bend", another Rogers man I didn't like.'"
until 1924 that such church organi- ter, "H uckleberry Finn" with Jackie picture early in the fall."
Mcintyre was a frequent visitor.
lntions as the General Co nfere nce of , Coogan and Mitzi Green, "Merely
'There were hundred s of other to Rogers' ranch in California.
th e Methodist Church ruled that it Mary Ann", with Janet Gaynor and perso ns who wanted to allend but Another . Gallipolitan who visited
was OK for parishioners to go 10 the Charles Farrell and the "American did not due to the expected hour- Rogers there was Aunt Emma
r\lovies on week days . Early co nfer- Tragedy".
long lines.
Kerns .
~nces had voted motion pictures ·as
In August of 1932·. ''FrankenWill Rogers' columns . had
She told how RogerS did not have
'j!rict ly a tool of the devri.The strict stein" made an amazing run at the appeared daily in the Tribune for to do much acting to be funny . "To·
o_nforcemcnt of the Sunday blue Gallipolis Theatre. Standing room many years. Tributes to Rogers fol- see his humorous expressions, to

J

By :

mate was Miss Crawford County.
The girls had an oft1cial chaperone
and was given the use of a 1999
Pontiac Grand Am during the week
of the pageant.
·
All 30 contestants' photos were

on display at the Richland Mall
where they remained for Miss Ohio
Week and a people's choice vote.
The competition started on June
16 at the restored Renaissance Theatre in Mansfield.

This 1954 Max Tawney photo shows the Gallipolis Theatre. Some
big moments In the history of the theatra came In the 1930s when
talking movies and Sunday showings began. The Gallipolis _Theatre
showed movies until the late 1960s.

hear his funny drawl were in them selves enough to provoke laughter,
and his clothes completed the pi cture .''
· Rogers' 'tragic death was felt so

strongly in Gallia County thai fundrai sers were held to bring in ·money
for the Rogers Mem orial. Mrs. Lady
Halliday O'Brien was in charge of
those activities in Gallipolis.

Mrs. C l~rlaten lman

--FERGUSON-I MANMr. and Mrs. Ronald Harris

Now You Can
Buy A
QUEEN SIZE
ForAFUU SIZE PRICE!

--KING-HARRIS-LONG B'OTTOM Sheila peach-colored flowers with greenRebecca King and Ronald Bryan ery. Organist was Kathy· Baker. A
Harris, Long Bottom, were united in duet ·· was perfonned by Bob and
marriage June 5, 4 p.m. at the Pente- Lucille Rhodes while a solo was
costal Assembly Church, Racine, perfonned by Cindy King Saddler.
She was given in marriage by her
with Pastor William Hoback conducting 'the double ring ceremony.
son, Adam Moore.
She wore a floor-length white
She is the daughter of Christine
King of Winston-Salem , N.C., and . satin gown. The gown and bouquet
the late Virgil King while he is the were both handmade by the bride.
Matron 'of honor was Pam Burson of Wilma Harris of Long Bot'dine while best man was Bob Burtom and the late Mayford Harris.
The church was decorated with dine.

lad1 Gu -artnttt

" ~-

:

I·

.

.

· News
policy
·.
,',
. . :y&lt;:'

. · c:&gt;·&lt; . . "-,;-, .:.

:i:•·{. :•' ,;,,:_. _ ,::·. __,:&lt;&gt;&lt;:..

• ' In an effort to provide our relld~rship ~ith cl!l'!'enVn~,.ys, . !lie ::~¥~ay
times-Sentinel ~ill not accept w~ddmgs after (jO days fromtfili:datc,oftbe
;:vent. • · ·:. · ·
·
.. .· .. ' ·
'.'' · · · .;
! Weddings .submitted after the 60-day deadline wilL~ppear ,d~ring lha,
~eek in Tile Daily Sentinel and the GalUpolis Daily '_fr(¥iieh :i' ·. •;. . '
· ;-\II dub tneetings and other news arttClcs in·the $~CIIlly Scc!J6l),'n)il$11l\l
submitted within 60 days of occurrence. All birtbdays ·must'bti subinitted
~ithin 60 days of the occurrence.
·
'

You ••

u1 .

Ransom 1'1~11 perfonned the ceremony.
Given in marriage by her father,
the bride wore a white lace dress and
earned a bouquet of white roses atop
a white Bible given by the groom.
Following the ceremony, a reception was held at Ryan's Restaurant
in Newport, Tennessee.

· GALLIPOLIS - A double ring
ceremony united Jody Suzanne Fr::rguson, daughter of Mr. and '-'irs
Joseph W. Ferguson, III·of Gallipolis, and Christen Allen !man, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Larry !man of S an
Diego, California, May 20, 1999, at
the Pigeon Valley Baptist church in
Hartford,Tennessee. The Reverand

City grew out of the prairie
IY'T)GE CITY, Kan. (AP)- This prairie city 150 miles west of Wichita h. • colorful history. It date:;. to 1872 when the arrival of the Santa Fe
Railroad enabled wagonloads of ~laughtered buffalo to be shipped east. By
1875 Texas longhorn cattle wen! being driven north to Dodge City by cowboys and trail bosses, then sent -eastward by rail. Dodge City is located on
the old Santa Fe Trail.

·Longtime soap opera ends,
Yielding to_ hip, you_ng 'Passions'

Systt111 A IDitollotlon Vldto.SO

NEW YORK (AP)- For two-thirds of her life, Fran Beauregard turned
. on the tube just abput every day at 2 p.m. sharp· to watch "Another

Year Wall A l'rame Warront7
OthtrStyla" SIRaAYOiloblo!

Wo:~5
7-year-old
mother raised her three kids through thousands of
episodes of the soap opera. On Friday, she was seeing her 'IV family for

www.eu rekanet.co.m

•

NEW YORK (AP) - The image
Rock music has already jx:erl :
was tiny and the sound lo-fi when a here and done thaJ. A group caU ~d :.
production of Verdi 's "Aida" from Severe Tire Damage perfonne&lt;ftive :
Verona, Italy, made history Friday as over the Internet rn 1993. A year •
the first opera to be broadcast live later, the Rolling Stones broadca&gt;t:
1
over the Internet.
over the Web.
,
n~e sold-out opening-night proDuring the " Aida " broadca&amp;i.;t • ;
duction at the 77th Verona Opera Web site offered , in addition t~
Festival was made available online libretto, ba, kground informati M"
througn IBM, which estimated that such as· a hi story of the 15 ,()()0.scat
50,000 to 100,000 pcopte clicked on amphitheater, built in 100 A.D..
to
the
Web
site, under the Roman s and used fur ~k!J.,
www.ibm.com/itlaida.
iator baules .
, 'o,
When watched and listened to on
Mary Jane Phillips-Matz, a V~ rd i
different computers, the sound was biographer, was horrified to read;
distant and not fine enough to judge · that "Aida" was commissioned fvr.
voice quality. On a computer with the opening of the Suez Canai'1n•
supposed ly better sound quality, the 1869, when it really was commirvoices broke up or re verberated .
sioned for the opening of a . "~w. ·
Singers ' movements were jerky, opera house in Cairo that year. .. ,
and the images, which were only 2
IBM has another Internet - fi r\ ~•
inches high, were dark.
th is week : the tennis matches ff&lt; \pt;
Next to the tiny picture, a viewer Wimbled on.
" The image is small . It 's notlika. ·
could scroll the libretto of the opera
watching TV," IBM spokesman lan.
in English or Italian .
.
"This is a fascinating precedent . Co ll ey said ."The advantage is, Y(lll.
We'll all be watching. to note video can pull up background i nlorme~trllll,
and audio quality," David Gockley, on th e players . whu·&lt; plaving whs;,...
general direct or of ihc Hou ston statistics and what 's ,g oing on vn,
Grand bpera, said Thursday.
other co urt s. You can custorniLc
"The Internet clearly will no
doubt become the main deiivery system for in -home fine art s performan ces. American producers, artists
and unions need to wake up and
make sure ·we can capture our share
of the action. ''
·
But David Mann, moderator of a
weekly classical-music Internet chat
session, said: "Listening to music
on a computer speaker is l.ike taking
a b~th with your socks on."

«

Racine teen participates in Miss Ohio.. pageant ·

: ~ Erica Arnott, 1999 Miss Ohio swimsuii and interview portions of
·River, was in Mansfield recentl y to the contest.
participate in the Miss Ohio ScholEvents leading up to ihe state
~rship Program.
.
pagea nt included a visit to Sea
: She is 19-year-old daughter of World in Aurora where the contes'enna and John Arnall, and a gradu- tants were photographed and given
'!lte of Southern High School. She ·an opportunity to get acquainted
currently attends Columbus State with each other. At that time Erica
Community College where she is was selected as one of three girls to
4najoring in early childhood devel- present her talent. The contestants
:Opment.
were honored at a dinner and each
: Arnott captured the 1999 · Mis s one was presented a gift.
:Phio River tille in pageant cereA week preceding the pageant
1nonies held in April in Mariella. held on June 19, Amon left for her
~here she too k first place in both .the hoist home in Mansfield. Her room-

••
J1tmbv 1!._.-llmtbui • Page C7 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoll~•. OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

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'
M·F a:3G-l5:00 • 9:3G-2:00 SAT.
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After 35 years, "Another World" is. going off the air.
AIL pzws INGROUIID POOlS IN ROCK
While most -of New York City was working, a crowd of diehards gathr~'-?!._____.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__:_:::__ _ _ _ _ __ _ -'---------------------'--------------:'~~
ered .at a restaurant to watch the 8,891 th - and last - installmenl on
giant-screen television and a handful of sm~ller sets.
.
A bo• of tissues graced each table, and they were well used.
Tears streamed as a massive gorilla bro.ke up the, long-awaited wedd1rn*
between Cass and Lila, who eventually married later in the show.
"I just want to see them happy , finally' " said a sniffling Mrs . '"'' "•••
gard, a homemaker from Seymour. Conn.
She sat transfi&lt;ed, her hands locked anxiously as _she awaited
moment that -followed ads for diapers, toothP.aSte and shampoo.
The crowd mobbed and cheered a hiilf dozen stars from the soap as
entered the eatery, called Blondie 's. Mrs . .Beauregard caught sight
Jonathan Sharp - who played 'Sergei - and rushed up for a delicate
on the lips from ' the blond hunk in a silver shirt.
.
Sharp plans to audition for other TV gigs and record a pop music
but he and others from the cast will surely miss the regular work.
It's also back to harder times for Taylor Stanley, who playe:,.ud ~:~~d\~·
young woman who was saved -from the streets . ·Ms. Stanley is b
again while preparing to appear in a movie.
Four other "Another World" actors are luckier, moving on to other
time shows, including "As the World Turns·: and "Guiding Lighi."
But for AW's fan s, there's just no substitute.
Bo.h O'Konis, a machinist for .a jet' engine company, said he
· watching "Another World" as a kid and thinks it stinks that the networrk
bagging it for "Passions," appealing to a younger audience.
The cancellation is so repulsive to attorney Rosalie Friedberg that
said she "will never watch an NBC show again'"
·
For at least one person at Blondie's, life itself won't be the same:
"Acting on ' Another World ' has meant. everything to me . I made a
of~en~."s~dSpe~~neruCI~k.ll,whopl~edSwnn.Hethwm~~L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
_his hand over his heart and said the show will "always be right here.
100 Bonus Minutes for 3 Months..
-.
For Mrs. Beauregard, television will never be the same.
"C'mon, ' Passions' isn ' t going to have il," she said. "What •h•·•' •rio
going for now is fighting -and sex - ladies taking off their bras and
ting into bed."
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�Entert.ainment

June 27, 1181

Hellman and Hammett: .PBS

,
-

pa~rs

melt . Detective. excerpts from several old TV inle•·NEW YORK (AP) - In her day,
Hammett in 1936.
Writer." at 10 views with her. There arc no inte1 ·- ,
"I always got
Lillian Hellman recalled, writers
views with Hammett, but his daughtp.m., on PBS.
along with Lillian
"smoked, drank, had affairs and
A dozen people ter, Josephine, appears:
but I liked and
made fools of o,urselves." And who
·
His
segment
includes
scenes
about
Hell
talk
admired
Dash
would know better than Hellman, !from
"The
Maltese
Falcon,"
star
man, whose finely
more," Lardner
writer who was involved with the
plays · ring 'Humphrey !3ogart as San11
crafted
said in a telephone
hard•drinking, hard-living novelist
incl ude "The Lit· Spade, and actor David Strathaim
interview.
Dashiell Hammett , creator of the
tie
Foxes," reading from Hammett's letters.
" Lillian could be
hard-drinking, hard-li ving detective .
Screenwriter Ring Lardner Jr. ,
a pretty difficult_
" Watch on the
Sa m Spade.
now
83,
is
interviewed
on
both
pro
Rhine"
and
"
The
person, more difBecause the two lovers' lives and
Lardner,
one
of
the
Holly
grams.
Children
's
ficult
than it
work were so intertwined for 30
wood
10
who
went
to
prison
for
shows in the TV
Hour."
years, PBS' " American Maste..S"
program. She had
Hammett, who epitomized Holly· refusing to answer questions befon '
series is airing profil es of Hellman
wood's masculine ideal - silent, the House Un-American Activitie:; a tendency to exaggerate things and
and Hammell back to back.
" The Lives of Lillian Hellman" tall , thin, sexy, intelligent, heroic, Committee, talks about Hellman'n make a fair story into a better sl~ry."
He cited her account of her helpwill be seen Wednesday at 9 p.m. humorous, childlike - avoided the and Hammett's politics and person ..
alities.
He
met
Hellman
in
1934
ami!
ing
out an anti-Nazi young WOIJ!an,
film
has
limelight.
The
Hellman
EDT, followed by "Dashiell Ham-

LOS ANGELEs (AP) - In Show- such a bracing slap in the face of timid Karen Black, Michelle Phillips and
time's " Rude Awakening," actress- television and TV 's shrinking-violet rocker Roger Daltry.
turned-writer Claudia Lonow fearleSs- female characters.
A true " dramedy," mixing comedy
"One thing I wanted lo do with this and l~edy in the half-hour format
ly tells all (or close eno~gh) about a
woman derailed by life m the Holly- character 1s have a woman who really and mmus a laugh track, the senes
wood fast lane.
says what 's. on her mind. Girls are chroniclestheslruggleofformerchild
At this moment, she's distracted expected to always be good, and I just star Billie to conquer .her alcchblism
from the series' sophomore season and hate that," Lonow says.
and assorted demons.
Billie is, an angry young woman
, Her mother (played by Redgrave) ·
is being coy about telling why.
•:y 0 u den 'l want to know what I with a drinking problem and a knack isn't much help. When Billie
was deing right no)V. You wouldn 'I for making things tough for herself announces she has attended her first
believ.e how stupid it is,': she says. .and her friends, That her life manages recovery group meeting, dear mom
Then, ljving up to the bold honesty of to be the stuff of truth and· humor is cheerily po_urs champagne for both to
" Rude Awakening," she 'fesses up.
due to Lonow, who knows both the , toast the mdestone.
" I' m single and young and .:. dark terrain and the meehanics of
So how much of Lonow's life'is,in
good-looking, bull never have·time to comedy.
"Rude Awakening"?
, meet anybody," she sa}'S. " I signed up
Th_e series, starrin~ Sherilyn Fenn
"llike I~ say C'J? percent i~ true and
forthisdatingservice,someonewrole ("Twm Peaks") as B1lhe, returned to 40 percen11s fictional, and 1t's up to
me, and me and the other writers on Showtime 10 p.m. EDT Saturday with you to figure out which," she replies.
the show are sitting and composing a 22 new episodes. Lynn Redgrave,
Here's some help:
funny e-mail back."
Jonathan Penner and Rain Pryor cc-Billie is an alumna of a primeThat's the .straight-talking Lonow star, with Roger E. Mosley ("Mag- time soap opera, "Emerald Isle";
who,. as personified by fictional Billie num, P.l.") joining as a ~ries regular. Lonow played Michele Lee and Don
Frank, makes " Rude Awake,ning"
Also appearing this .season will be Murray's wayward daughter, Diana
.

Fairgate, on CBS' "Knots Landing"
from 1979-84 and in the series' final
year, 1993.
- · Billie is ~orking, "'luctanlly, on
her alcohol add1ct1on problem; Lonow
did the same, eventually embracing
the sober life in, her 20s. (Her age
now? ''You can put down 34.")
- Unlike Billie, .Lonow has a
"very good relationship" with her parents. And, unlike Billie, she managed
to channel her energy away from !lei·
ing and into ~bar h":' .turned out ~ar
more rewardmg: ·wntmg and, wtth
, "Rude Awakening," producing.
If she had any inclination to coolin~e as an act~ lakin~ part i~ t~e
'Knots landing" reumon mov1e 10
1997 cured her of the impulse.
"I didn't want to be there. All I
could think was, 'The lasl time I did
this I was 21.' I didn't want to be this
person anymore," Lonow says. She
also concluded, "I was a ,very good .

Farm/Business

a

..

their portraits

which became the 1977 movie
"Julia," wliich won three Oscars.
"Dash's writing was realistic,
even though he was .dealing with
some aensational crimes. He always
made his characters
very real.
I think that's why readers liked his
stuff."
Lardner called Hellman's fourth
book, "Scoundrel Time," about the
McCarthy era, effective. "It is, how·
ever, based on an erroneous statement. She says that when she
appeared before the House UnAmerican Activities Commiuee she
knew she might end .up going to
prison ....
"She knew all that rould happen

aeem

Claudia Lonow mines her diff:icult past for laughs
'

I

actress as a teen-ager, but perhaps not
so grcal as a grown-up."
Although the cast and producers of
"Knots l.anding"~ere supportive, the
~rc of working so young on a
projecl.in which·5o much money was
at stake contributed to her addiction,
Lonow says.
"I would say it's an unusual person ..
who can deal with that kind of stress
and not have it affect them. It was hard ·
for me," she says.
. ,
'1\buld she !~t her daugh!"r, now S,
act'I"No way, l..onow replies, firmly.
"When you' re a teen-ager, you,should
work in a clothing store."
Searchi!'g f~r a. new career, she
struckoutmadlfecttonthatwas,partly, a return to her roots. As lbe siC)&gt;'
daughter of Mark Lonow, C&lt;H&gt;wncr
of the Improvisation .comedy club
chain, l..onow had written and performed routines beginning in her
teens.

to her would be to be blacklisted;
there was no danger at all of her
going to jail. She manages to get
away with that in the book. She
makes you feel she is in great danger.
· "Dash went to prison for another
thing entirely. He would not give the
names of people who contributed
money for bail for Communist Party ·
leaders. He was declared in contempt
of court. There was a rumor he might
come to the federal prison I was in,
in Danbury, Conn. He didn't."
After they mel in 1930, Hellman
and, Hammett became lovers. He had
stopped writing his pioneering hardboiled private detective novels - a
genre that flourishes today.

(FRI 8125-TUES 8121/99

lOX OFFta WIU iii'£H AT 6:30 I'M
FOR EVENING SHOWS,
12:30 I'M FOR SAT &amp; SUN MAnNIIS
NOntNG HILL (PG13)
7:15 &amp; 8:30 DAILY '
,
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:1S. 3:30
ENDS TUESDAY

STAR,WARS EPISOOE 1·
PHANTOM MENACE (PG)
7:00 &amp; 8:ol0 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:00 &amp; 3:40
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT

AUSTIN
(PG1~)
7:20 &amp; 0:20 DAILY.
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:20 &amp; 3:20

autobiographical songs because there impossible. Everyone is not going to
were more topics that intrigued him. like me. I wanted to write about that
"People have sort of got what I do . phenomenon. To performers, it's life
now, to a ·large degree," said New- and 'death. You go out on stage. Of
, man as he offered explanations of couise you want everyone to like
some of the album 's songs.
you."
'"I Miss You' is sort of an odd
His self-titled debut album was
song, a love song to my first wife. I . released , in 1968. It contained "I
called her when I wrote il. I said, 'It Think It's Going to Rain Today"doesn't mean I'm going to , move which Judy Collins also recordedwhere you are and stalk you.' I still and "Davy lhe Fat Boy."
.
do love her."
Newman has been nominated for
. As for "I'm Dead (But I Don't 12'Academy Awards, most recently
KnoW It)," Newman explain~d: "It's for best original musical or comedy
about all of us rock j&gt;eople going on score for "A Bug's Life," best origi·
much longer than anyone thought we nal dramatic score for "Pleaswould be able to and refusing to antville" and best song for "That'll
leave the stage.''
Do" from "Babe: Pig in the City."
And there is likely some reflection . The last composer to have three
of Newman in "I Want Everyone to simultaneous Oscar nominations was
Like Me."
Andre Previn in 1960.
"There's probably some truth thai
" I never·have taken an acceptance
I have thai kind of shallow desire. speech lo the awards," he said. "My
I've been overtipping for years," he uncle Alfred Newman was nominal·
said. Newman acknowledged: "The ed 40 times. I saw him win for the
nature of what I write sort of make~s~i~~~~lhings. I vote for cinematogra-

Caii'Tio· II

I

SUncay, JUM 27, 1181

Homegrown produce promoted
in pages of statewide directory
By HALKNEEN
POMEROY - Put on a kettle of water and sharpen the slici ng kn ife Oh10 Rtver sweet corn and tomatoes .are finding their way to local markets.
Nothing tastes so sweet as homegrown vegetables fresh from the local farm s.
,Homeo~ners, gro\~e rs and farm marketers are beiBg assisted in their pursunm buymg and selhng vegetables by the State of Ohio publication, "Ohio
Farmers Market Directory." More than 600 farm markets, roadside markets,
farmers' markets, pick-your-own operations, and Christmas tree operators are
listed in a new Ohio directory published this month by the Ohio Department
o~Agriculture- Divi si on of Markets. Copies may be obtained by calling 1.800-467-7683.
'
Help ~upport the local gr~ wers by asking and purchasing locally grown
produce 10 the local stores, roadside markets and farmer markets.

on animal.s. read pesticide labels before appl yi ng 10 pelS and human s. For a
lis1ing of potemial chemicals to spray please ca ll the e•tc nsion office and
ask for E"ension Fact Shee t #208 1-97.

The fi rs! of 14 statewide ecological farm tours will be taking place at
Eq umox Botanicals on Saturday, July 10 from9:30 a.m. 1o 12 :30 p.m. This
loca l farm si tuated outside Rutland was started 30 years ago by Pau l S!fauss
to preserve woodlands from timbering. Since then. Equinox Botan icals has
grown to encompass '700 acres of woodlands, gardens and field plots culli vated to produce medicinal herbs· for extracts. teas and salves.
Host Paul Strauss will·lead a tour of the farm's sanctuary and apothecary.
Stra~ss will also di scuss the unique partnerships 1ha1 have been developed
with the United Plant Savers and Fron.tier Herbs lo preserve and botanica lly map I ,000 acres of the farm and surrounding areas.
Are you getting welts around your ankles and legs' Are your cats and dogs
Attendance will be limited, so please call Ohi'l Ecological Farm and Famscratching themselves? Fleas may be the culprits, Homeowners are calling ily Association office· to pre-register at 614-267-3663. The series of tours is
into our office asking what can they do to control fleas both ,in their homes· sponsored by Innovative Farmers of Ohio, Ohio State University Extension.
and yards ,
'
Ohio Ecological Farm &amp; Family Association and Ohio Certified Organic.
, Fleas are insects which are 11,1 6to 118-inch long that do not fly. but can
jump 7-16 inches. A typical flea population consists of 50 percent eggs. 35
Are you interestedin·producing commercial small fruit crops like bluepercent larvae (young stage). 10 percent pupa (dormant stage) and 5 percent
berries, brambles or strawberries? The Ohio Fruit &amp; Vegetable Assoc iation
adults. Optimum temperatures for reproduction are between 70-85 degrees. is sponsoring a Small Fruit Tour in the Wooster/Mount Hope area. A preand relatively high humidity of 70 percent. This is why calls have increased tour gathering begins Wednesday evening at Maurer Farins near Wooster.
lately, especially if homeown ers are watering their yards. Pesticides which Thursday morning, the group will begin self-guided. self-driven tour at Farmkill adult lleas only have very little effect on total flea populations, only one ers' Produce Auction in Mount Hojle.
in 20 fleas are effected by adult pesticides.
Demonstrations. at Ohio Agriculture Research &amp; Development Center
For bettercontrol measures, clean up areas where lleas are. Indoor spaces
located in Wooster will be held in the early' afternoon, The day will end al
need to be vacuumed and swept. Keep lawns cut and trash picked ,up around
Moreland Fruit Fann near Wooster, with a walking tour, discussion and a
the home. Use a· combination of insect growth regula10rs lik e me1hoprene slice of fruit pie. Pre-registration is necessary, so call Mike Pullins ai 614and pyriproxyfen for developing ~tages of fleas and contact insectiCides for
292-2424. Cost is $5 per person.
• .
adult stages. Nme 1ha1 not all Ilea killing chemicals are labeled to be used
· (Hal Kneen Ia Melga County's exterialon aqeni for agriculture and nat·
ural reaourcea, Ohio State University.)
-·,

PROMOTION WINNER - Tanya Sheets of 'Rio Grande, right,
was the recent winner of two tickets to Cedar Point Amusement
Park given in a promotion held at Southeastern Ohio Satellite.
Ticketa were awarded compliments of Pepsi and 101.5 The Riv·
er. Presenting Mrs. Sheets with her tickets was Sam Farmer of
Southeaetern Ohio Satellite.
·

Drought .· has forage
supplies critically low

By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS - Wait ing . for mal or 11 the drought continues into
weeks on rain , producers have been the summer and causes pasture recovBy BRUCE WILLIAMS
found an· outside investor to cover enrolled agent specializes in tax anxious to see the ou_tcpme of last ery to be eYen slower.
SMART IIONI:Y
~ DEAR BRUCE: My wife and I
When the pasture s receive adetheir portion. This is a limited-liabil- , advice only, and we arc severely Thursday's forecast predicting the
are about to buy our first home in Ari- however, as a minority stock- queried before we can become much-needed moi sture. Although quate rain fall, new fo rage growth
zona. We have $40,000 in a 4-percent
·holder they can block you for a sig- enrolled agents. How about giving us consumers are·not yet alarmed, farm- should· be managed wilh care .
BRUCE
$avings account. , We earn about
nific• "' period of time and eat you equal time? - D.LH. , via e-mail
ers and associated organizations are Although land and other limitations
·$70,000 a year. The house price is
WILLIAMS aliv ith legal fees. What ·would
DEAR D.L.H. : I appreciate all of well aware of the critical conditions make over-grazing unavoidable for
l!i 190,000 and. interest rates are cursome producers, grasses still like to.
concern me is ' that your partners y'our comments and don ' t disagree, being caused by the drought .
. 1ently favorable - around 6.75 perregenerate
from existing leaf area.
would do sometl)ing like this to · ' With you - e•cept when you say I
Although row crops appear to be
cent for a 30-year fixed . Is there a
another partner. These ar10 the kind of never recommend enrolled agents, 1 hanging on·, most are fast approach- Because over-grated pastures do not
way to lock in these rates for six or
people I wouldn't trust as far as 1 do that on a regular basis. It is non- ing developmental stages where yield have adequate leaf surface. !hey must
seven months? Are we handling . s1nce the house is being custom, built, could throw a piano. If you are satis- productive to go back over hundreds losses will be significant if we do not regenerate using their root reserves.
things appropriately ? - B.P., viae- perhaps ,rou could work something fled with your arrangement and you . and hundreds of co lumns to find , receive adequate rainfalL For many whi ch weakens the plant and 1he pasmail
·
out w1th the contractor.
·
are making money that is all to the examples of thts. bu1 I can assure you producers, plans for a second cutting ture's sustainabilit y in co ntinued
·
DEAR B.P. : Why in the world
DEAR BRUCE: I am ,a 15-percenl good, but I would watch people who that I know what an enrolled agent is of hay around the Fourth of July were drought.
Like
with
most
unpl
anned
events.
would you keep $40,000 sitting in a owner of a club in Arizona. My three pull stunts like thisthe way a chick- and regularly recommend them both eliminated weeks ago.
drought
management
pracl
ices
are
·4-percent savings account' At the partners h)ive opened another club in enhawk eyes a hen.
in this column and on 1he air.
In order to manage the drought
very least, you could go to a broker- San Diego with the same name. Our
DEAR BRUCE: 1 am an NASD
Interested in buying or selling a t:onditions, livestock producers are inorc expensive; however, consider
age account and earn five-and-a-frac- operation agreement does not address registered representative with a house? Let Bruce Williams' "House being especially creati ve in their !he year-end lax liabilily if dimintion percent, but it would seem thiu this situation. It seems to me ihey Series-7 license and an enrolled Smart" be your guide. Price : $14.95, rotational grazing. With dormant pas- ished fe ed supplies forces the sale of
with just a little risk in the market- should pay me a fee for the use of a agent. My one complaint about your plus shipping and handling. Call : lures and hay supplies low o n some part or all of a herd. For alternative
place, you could get at least two and name thai I have an interest in else- column is that you never recommend (800) 994-6733.
beef farm s. producers have been management options, study the farm
with a fresh eye. and consider all the
a half times what you're earning just where. I was to be included only ifl enrolled agents for )irqfessiona)tax
(Send your questions to: Smart · wondering for weeks aboul where lO possib ilit ies.
now· - nol just in interest but in wanted tp pay for a percentage or the advice. Whenever tax advice is rec- . Money, · P.O. Box 503, Elfers, Fla. put the cattle next : Some are practicFor more information on emer·
growth as well. There is no way I ity corporation. - G.S.. via e-mail ommended, you invariably advise a 34680. E-mail 10: brucebrucewil- ing their llexibility by running temge
ncy
crops or forage and li vcsloc k
know of to lock in an interest rate for
DEAR G.S.: The s1raigh1 answer certified public accountant who spe- Iiams. com. Questions of general porary fence in rather un conventi onsix or seven months. si.nce no one is that of course you are entitled to cialize~ in tax matters. You are cor: interest will be answered in future al areas just to buy some time, Oth- managemen t in drought conditi on.
knows what the market will be doing something. for the use of your name reel to emphasize thai if one choos- columns. Owing to the volume of er prod ucers are pursuing short-tenn please call the OSU EX!ension offi ce
at thai time. My only advice is that business where they would not. They es a CPA, on_e must ascertam that he . mail. personal replies callllat be pro- leases on farm s thai have been 1aken aJ 740-446-7007
Ag news
out of productiOn. And some arc
or she spec1ahzes '" taxat1on. An vided.) '
Blue
mold
forecast
~ There are
.
..
.
already planning for emerge ncy crops
such as forage rye, pearl mille!, no report s of bl ue mold in Ohi o.
however. Te nnessee repon ed irs first
sorghUm-sudan grass and br;1ssicas.
•
asc last wee k. In additi on to Te nSeeded in August, the stems,
nessee,
other states currentl y.fi ghting
•
leaves and bu lbs of brass ica crops,
By AMY BETH GRAVES
nc.nt in corporations. Mennonities arc
"It's still a relatively new thing for started taking off in the 1950s.
blue
mold
include Florida, Georgia.
·such as turnips, can provide a highly
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
looking for ways to keep in touch Mennonites to be wealthy," he said,
South
Carolina.
North Carolin a and
"I had to overcome whether I diges1ible, quality forage for fall and
· MOUNT HOPE - On a recein with their faith.
"They're humble people and some could be in business and be a good winter grazing. Sorghum -s udangrass Kentucky. On June 23, !here were· ,
weekday, workers at Wayne-Dalton
Some of the successful Mennon- feel uncomfortable having so ·mu~h Christian, " he said. "The church
and pearl millet are warm season for- two ~eather trajectories that passed
Corp.'s steel-and-glass headquarters ile businesses include :
money."
grew
in
that
area
too
,
The
church
now
ages 1ha1 may be sown as late as Jul y, through southern Ohio that originaltook a break from their jobs to wit• Sauder Wood working Co., based .
The Mennonite Church is an out- recognizes thai they need business 15; and arc generally ready for graz- cd from 1he blue mold infeclcd areas
ness scene outside. A mare was giv- in the northwest Ohio town of Arch- growth of the Protestant Reformation
·
people as well as farmers.''
ing with fi ve-to-s ix weeks. Another of Burning Springs. Ky.. and Tifton.
ing birth in a nearby field.
bold. Erie Sauder started the ready- and takes its name from Menno
Herr
said
be
is
still
amazed
about
possibility
is forage rye, which if Ga. In the eve nt that we actually get
Although the company is a lead- to-assemble. furniture · company in Simons, a Catholic priest in Holland
the
success
of
his
company,
which
he
ing garage door maker with annual 1934 and remained active in Men- who jpined the Anabaptists in 1536.
seeded .in mid-August, is ready for some rain sometime soon, along
bought i.n 1946 for $1 ,750 and had grazing in November or December. wilh a se ries of cloudy days, please
sales of $300 million, CEO Willis 'nonite misSionary ·work until his His work was so influential that those
$35 a week in sales. The company
These options do not, of course. consider a lungicide application.
Mullei keeps it close lo the rural roots · death in 1991. His company has who followed his' faith were called
now sells dozens of different snacks, · provide immediate relief: however,
(Jennifer L. Byrnes Is Gallla
of his family's Mennonite liack- annual sales of more than $500 mil- · Mennonites. The group splintered in
County's extension agent for.agrt. employs 1,250 people and generates
ground. Every fifth employee at the lion and more than 3,200 employees. 1693 when a Swiss bishop named
they will help compensate this win· culture and natural resources,
about $150 million in sales.
are lower than nor- Ohio State University.)
company's Mount Hope plant - one
• Palliser Furniture. based in Win- Jacob Amman left, and his followers · "It's surpassed my expectations, ter .if hay. -supplies
.
of II nationwide - is Amish or nipeg, Canada. Founded by A.A. became known as the Amish.
Everybody 's done a good job," Herr
Mennonite. .
DeFehr, the company is Canada's
For centuries, the two groups qui- said.
"It's Willis' way of giving back to largest household furniture manufac- .etly made their living through farmThat type of humbleness is what
the Amish/Mennonite community,'' turer, employs 3,600 workers and has ing and were known for using horse- makes Herr and other successful
said David Osso, spokesman for the about $325 million in sales; DeFehr's drawn buggies. But some Mennonites ·Mennonites an anomaly in the busifamily-owned company located in son, Art, runs the company and con· are leaving farming and entering the ness world. said his son-in-law, Daryl
Mount Hope, a farming community tinues to be active in the Mennonite business world as land becomes Thomas. who is the company 's direcFREMONT (AP) - Twelve Ohio farms will share about $500.000 in state
about 60 miles southwest or Cleve- church.
,
expensive and scarce.
grant,s to build new housing for migrant workers and improve .or construct
tor of·marketing.
land.
Mennonites remain devout Chris• The Dutch Corporation, based in
"He doesn '1 look at hi s business water wells and septic systems,
While many may associate Men - the rural Ohio town of Walnut Creek. tians today, but unlike their Amish as an end in itself but as a means 10
llle farm s were among 20 !hal applied fo r the ·grants through the state's
nonites with buggies and old farming Foonded by Emanue l Mullet, who counterparts, they don't shun modern a greater end,.. Thomas said ... h.'s a Agriculture Labor Camp lmprovemcnl Program . The money is made avai lmethods, more and more Mennonites also. started the garage door compa- conveniences such as electricity, cars way to serve his commu~ity. At the able through the state Department of De velopment.
·
are - like Mullet - working in mul- ny, 11 had $3~ million in sales last and telephones.
Some ofthe largest grants were awarded to Benchmore Fanns in Elmore
same time, he continues to spread rhe
timillion-dollar businesses, said Cen- year from its eight restaurants, two
For years, rich Mennonites gospeL"
which received $37,500; Palter Berry Farm of Fremont , which rece ived
rad Kanagy, assoCiate professor of hotels aQd several gift shops.
·clashed with church leaders who
• Herr and other rich Mennonites· $35.700: and Liskai Fam1s in Wood ville. which received $29. 100.
sociology at lilizabethtown College
Kanagy said dealing with the were ·concerned that the business make charitable contributions
WSOS Community Action Commission Inc. assisted most of the 12 farms
in Elizabethtown, Pa. , ·
newfound wealth can be difficult f&lt;v world was eroding their principles, because 11 espouses the church 's tra- which received funding and will prov ide $143 ,800 in. matching grants. The ,
And·as they become more promi- Mennonites.
Kanagy said.
·
dition of helping those in need, Blade said.
James Herr, 75, said he tried not
Kanagy said. One of !hose organizaThe fundin g will help create 74 seasonal migrant jobs and r~1ai n anothto let the reaction from the church tions is Mennoni1c Mu!Ual Aid. er 391, budd 18 new housi ng units , and improve or construct 14 water wells
bother him when his Pennsylvania
and/or septic systems, WSOS officials sa id.
(Continued. on DB)
potato chip business, Herr Foods Inc.,

phy and costume design. What do I
know about that? It bothers fllC very
little I haven't won. I like very much
beingnominatedbythemusicdepartmenl."
·
.
Newman is busy' writing the score
for "Toy Story 11."
. How does he compare writing
XpQS8 , OUt 88r1ng
music for films with writing songs to Atlanta, GA.-FREE REPORT reveals alarming truths
sing himselrl .
"Cpming up with a very good about hearing aidS and their actual capabilities.
.: song is a more mysterious and more Many have spent thousands of dollars on instru:specialthing. I don't quite understand ments that do little more than make ann'o ying sounds
· ,how I wrote some of my songs. It I d
1i
·
·
:•;eemed like they were gifts. Maybe it OU er. 0 have YOUr free COpy Sent to you today call
111appens because you de it a lot."
and listen to the free message.
He r~ntly ., played in New
.,
·~ree
Orleans and appeated' at the SunFest
r
in West Palm Beach, Fla.
(Free 24 hour R
. ecorded Message)·

d Ab

D

No way to lock in interest for first house

Newman's pop tunes are 'explanation by nxaggeration'
NEW YORK (AP) - The narrator of a Randy Newman song· usually
isn' t Randy Newman. It's a person he
made up.
"Having a narrator, you can't trust
what he says, that's my basic style,"
Newman said.
Although critics call his lyrics
horiest, Irreverent, cynical and ironic,
some listeners didn't realize the irony
of "Short People," his best known
song, and were offended.
"I think cynical is kind of narrow,'' the 55-year-old Newman said.
" I think it's explanation by exaggeration. People in my songs are usually
worse than anyone in the audience. It
isn't likeTm saying there's a secret
hatred for short people out there. That
n"arrator is just nuts. n
Eleven years ago, Newman wrote
three or four autobiographical songs
for his " Land of Dreams" album, just
to see if he could de it.
For his new CD "Bad Love"
ffireamWorks), it was easier to write

Section

H

1··888·615·8693

---------------~===========~==========~--.]

'

Mennonites balance success with their beliefs
a

Ohio farms to share funds
for needs of migrant labor

•

After Ho~~rs

.

Pediatric Care

~ere's truly something special about work created by hand - when

the craftsperson has put their heart and soul into creating a 1,mique and
fascinating piece of art. Visit the oldest traditional art and craft fair in
West Virginia. Experience the joy of music and dance, the aroma of
West Virginia's finest foods, and the experience of seeing works of heart
created by over 200 juried craftspeople, Erijoy the experience!

'

Formula best for newborns during first 4-6 months

Join.n July 5111 for /he fltrt 1nnu11 1111/n SlrHt Rlplty Flrtmehr 5-K Rlt:e.
BrntfltJ from 1111 flt:e gp Ill fund 1111 do•nlfWll R/plty miii/IZII/tn PlfiQfllfl.

• Hours:
Monday- Friday
5:30p.m. to 10 p.m.

Sn.lluday
9 a.m:To '9-p.m.
1

The Children's Clinic
2801 Jackson Avenue
Point Ple3$allt, WV 25550

.s,.,
p.m.
p.m.
to 7

July 1 • 5, 1999 Cedar Lake~ Ripley, West Virginia

. NANJED 4·H AMBASSADORS- Caaale Graham of Gelllpolla,
center, and Cera Rocchi of VInton, right, were named allle 4-H
amba•aadofl for Gallla County. The two will r.preeient the coun•
·ty 11 eventa auch •• the Ohio flllle Fair, atate cam!14 .rid recognition
throughout thl
More lhltn 100
tlclplt ngln. the'4-H 1mbi-«H" P-I'OIII•m to enhln.-lhelr pu~
·lie 1p1111klng and peraonal preetnt.tiOn Iatka. WHh .ttlefn Ia Jeff
·King, .. alatant director of Ohio 4-H Youth Devtlopniant.

litwl: Thursdly, July 1 • Suldiw,July4 10:00 ln'l·f;OOpm • MaNit. Jvtw 5 10:00 1m · 5:!XIpm 1"1"111: FREE • 11,... ,.,...... '"'" MfYittt......

r,rovrama

.

.

yeer.

tfii!na .,. ..,.
•

'
-----

•·· -

-·

By BECKY COLLINS
GALLIPOLIS -It's a given: along with a new baby comes loads of wellmeaning advice.
·
'
Most ofthese anecdotes licgin with, "When my kids were this age ... ... and
ends with, " ... and it dido 't hurt them ," In fact, the mother of one of my friend s
swears that she gave her children beans and cornbread when they were six
weeks old (don't do this!). Actually, feeding the baby is one of the first topics of conversation. After all, there's nothing so intimidating as a crying newbOrn. So, what advice should you, the new parent, follow?
When it comes to feeding your baby, you should probably stick with 1he
advice your doctor gives you. But generally, breast milk or formula is usually fine for the first four to six months. When the baby's birth weight has
doubled, and he or she nurses more than eight times a day or drinks more
than 32 ounces of formula, yoo'll probnhly want to start considering solid
foods. The baby should be a~le .to hold h1s or her own bend up and sit up ·
With help. Another good md1cauon IS when the baby shows interest in 1he
.foods ypu eat.
·
.
Don't worry if things don't go well the first time you try feeding your
baby solid food . Make sure you pick a time when the baby is in a good mood
and isn't too tired or too hungry. Start with rice cereal. which is easily
digestible, A tablespoon 'mixed with three or four tablespoons of fonnuia ~r
·breast milk, once a day at first. should be about right. Keep the cereal thin.

and usc a smail spoo n. Put the cereal onl y on the tip.
Babies thmhave trouble swallowing might not be ready for solid foods
yet. Walt a few days, and try a~nin . Once the cereal goes down smoothl y,
feed your hahy the same cereal for a week before trying another navor.
When yo ~r baby becomes used tiJ the eercal. you can try adding pureed
vcgctahlcs. lrulls or meal. ln!roduce one new food per wee k. and one food
group per monlh. For example. try veg etables fo r a month. !hen add fruit s·
in a month. th~1i meat , lfthc baby shows any signs of food allergies, they' ll
be cns1cr ·to pm down th1s way. Mos l allergies or rcacri ons are short·Hved
- as the hahy devel ops, they usuall y go away,
When your haby starts getting 1ec1h. add finely chopped or mashed food s
In the r,urccd foods - !he texture helpS&gt;OOthc gums sore from ICC thing.
Don I g•ve milk (other !han breast milk or fonn ula) to babies le ss !han ~
year old - they' ll have a hard lime cli gcSiing it. Cow's milk has too much
protein for the hahy's se nsi ti ve digesti ve system. which is in fact still dcvelopmg.
. Babic' don't need sugar or.sail added to 1hci r fo()(l. ~nd don't worry about
tat conte nl. Babies n c ~d fnt for hrain growth .
.
·
, By the tim e hahies arc 9 10 12 months old. ripe. peeled fruit or soft. cooked
vc.gctablcs ca n be added 10 !heir menu .
,
·
. (Becky Collins Is Gallla C9unty's extension agent for family 1nd corjaumer sciences, Ohio State University.)
·
.

•

�I

Page 02 • .f'mcbiqj Ct-. .f'eadbul

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

Trading day ends mixed
after early rally dissipates
By EILEEN GLANTON
AP Buelneea Writer
NEW YORK
S ock pnces
ended the qu erest sess o n of 1999
w th m xed results Fr day as op
mtsm abou second quaner earn ngs
gave way to naggmg concerns about
nterest ra es
The Dow Jones ndustr al average
ended JUSt 17 73 h gher at 0 552 56
Jlar n g mos of s 115 po nl ga n ea
her m the sess on The blue c h p
ndex sh ed 303 po n s or 2 8 percem
dunng the week as nves ors womed
about nteres ra es and co pora c
profits
Broader marker nd ca ors a so
tarned l ower ate n the day T e
Standard &amp; Poo s 500 fel 0 47 10
I 315 3 1 and the Nasdaq compos e
ndex fe ll I 34 o 2 552 65
Th s s a fa r y frus a ng rna
ket sa d B arry H ym an en o equ
ty analyst a Ehrenkran z K ng Nus
baum n N ew Yo k
Pr c:es m ally ose F day af c
!he Comme e Depa men cpo cd
h at he US c anom y g cw a a 4 3

a P per Jaffray n M nneapo s
Technology stoc ks fat ered af e
Merr II Lynch In erne analy Hen
ry B odge ssued a eport say ng
An e ca On! ne may not bea ana
l ys s earn ngs es mates by he huge
rna g ns I has n pas qua ters AOL
fell 3 15 16 o 102 13 16 pull ng
down most of he Internet sector
Yet he slump ng marke made
oom fo a b g new n al pub!
offer ng Jun pe Networks Inc ~ a
p ov der o f In erne! thf as uc ure
wasp ced a 34 and closed at 98 7 8
a ga n of 91 perce nt
Volume was paltry hroughout the
sess on Traders sa d the sl ugg shness
was yp cal o f a summe F day bu
was e pee ally ow as nves or s
awa ted he meet ng o f the Fede al
Reser ve s Open Ma ket Comm ttee
nex t T uesday an d Wednesday The
Fed s w del y expected to ra se ratos
next week n an el for o low he
e ono n y and nna on

No one wan s o go n o h s
weekend w h a rna o new pos t on
Ce

n ad
pe en annua a e n e f
qu
S
k go orne uppo I on a
ter sl ghtl y better han he 4 pe
np o e n n n h e bond
es mated n M a) The epo o a na kc The Trea u y 30 yea bond
s anger th an ex pec ed e on on y ar cd a y eld o f 6 15 p
en d ow n
ould ha e
rred fea of n na n
o n a e fhursdav 6 6 pe ce n
bu n e o see med to n erp e he
Wh le n os se o
were m xed
epo t as po end ng hea l hy econd
0 c nd v dual
0 k n ou hed
quarter corpo a e earn ngs
We '1a ted o ut well ba ed on he
econom t ne\\S but here wa s mpl y
no s ong f o lo" hroug h
a d Ton y
Ccc n d e o o f n u anal ad ng

pr

start o focus on earn ngs a her than
n e es ra es H y man sa d S rong
earn ngs should sta a fa ly good ral
l y and f we don ge one the m ar
ket w I have one h ng to worry
about
Ad vane n g ssues ba ely ou num
bered decl ners on the New Yo k
S ock Exchange w h I 491 up
456 d own and 592 unchanged
Consul da ed NYSE vo lume to taled
750 45 m II on shares ompared w h
834 31 m II on n he prevwus ses
son
The NYSE composite ndex fe ll
0 63 o 623 34 and he Arne can
S
k Ex han gc compo e ndex
ose 2 87 o 772 02 The Russell 2000
ndex of mall er ompan es fe 0 05
o 443 II
0 c ea Japan N kke
ock
09 pe eo Eu opean
a e ag fel
ndexe w e n xe d a Ge many s
DAX ndex o e 0 2 per en B a n s
Fr SE 00 g ned 0 3 per en and
F an c CAC 40 I ed do" n 0 4
p
en

Weather concerns take toll
on coffee, OJ, corn f•1tures
By MARIO FOX
Aasoc1ated Press Wr1ter

go e n n n
nd h s been
I de we c
n a n Flo
c 19Y9 20lXJ

W eather concerns helped send
fu ures pr ces l ower for coffee
orange JU ce and com on Fnday
In other fu ures rrad ng whea was
h gher and I ves ock p ces w e e
m xed
Coffee futu res pr es umbl ed
across he boa d on he New York
Coffee Suga a d Cocoa Exchange
on prospects f or large co npet ng
crops f om B az I
Jud th Ganes an ana ysl fo Me
r II Lynch &amp; Co n New York sad
m ld Braz I an weather com ng a a
cr 1cal JUncture at !he end of ha
country s f os season was dep ess
ng he market
They a e ex pec ed to expo t 40
m II ton bags ne xt ) ear compa ed o
26 5 m I o n th s yea
she sa d
July offee on racrs fe 2 25
centsto$101
Future pr e fa I o en concen
ate orange JU ce re ea ed on he
New Yo k Co o n Ex hange

en s o

ng

2 a bushel
On Thursday July soybeans had
plummeted 13 cents a bushel They
fell ano her 2 I 4 cenls on Fr day
Ha es t delays supported wheat
p es w h ch also were helped by
eports !he c urren c op m ay con a n
less m II ng qua y han or g nally
hought
July whea v.as $2 51 114 a bust el
up
I 4 cen s Jul) corn was down
I 4 ccn o $2 14 a bushel oats rose
I ce nt t o $ 1 13 I 2 a bushel and July
oybeans f ell 2 I 4 en s to $4 50 I 2
a bushel
Ca le p ces we re h gher and he
po k on plcx lu u e were m xed on
I c C h ago Me can le Ex&lt;:hange
T ade
we c luuk ng ahead
M o nda)
he go e nmenl
ae
po wa ex pcc ed o
p gs and ho"
g e new d e on o he rna ket
uppo ed by
Ca l e p ce
nc v ha Rus
n e es ed
US beef
po
Augu
eca le we cup
o 64 75 cnl a pound

Mennonite family feels ~uccess
of its companies is a blessing
By AMY BETH GRAVES
Auoc1ated Press Writer
WALNUT CREEK
T aff c
comes o a c awl as tour s m ake
thetr way throu gh Am h countr) o
ftll up on hear y f ood a Der Du ch
man Re s au ant buy qua n g f a
the Carl sle House G fl s and soak n
he peaceful s enery f om th e Car le
V llage Inn
E gh m les o he no h raff
also slows as mons ous sen truck s
struggle up a narrow wo lane h gh
way and try to avo d h mg ho se
drawn bugg es en oute (o he e d
quarters of Way ne Dal o n Corp one
of the nat on s Ia ges ga age doo
manufacture s
The two worlds a e omple el y
d fferent bu co nnec ed by one fac
all of he compan es are owned by
one Mennon le tan y
Emanuel Mul e who g cw up
Am sh and later sw c hed to h
w fe s mo e m ode a e Men non c
rei gton was th e launder o Way ne
Dalton and h e Du ch Co p wh h
owns etgh es au ants wu nn and
several g fl shops H e al so l ounded

Public Notice
NOTCE
Notice 11 hereby given to
Bobby McConaha and Mary
McConaha
whooe
all
known llldreu wa• 41300
U 8 Route 33 Shade Ohio
&lt;1&amp;778 and whoH proaonl
rooldenco 11 unknown that
Richard P
Howard and
Honey E Howard have I led
n Molge
a Complolnt
County
Court
(Caao
Number
99CVG00077)
Mola• County Courthou10
Pomoro)l Ohio 45769 nam
lng nah of you aa
Oofenllonll Tho object o1
1111 eomplolnl 11 the lorfe~
turo o1 1111 Land tnetollmont
Conlrlct llgnlll by the por
UH on Juno 17 1997 and
recorded In Volume 53
Pogo 181 Melga County
Olflclol Rocorde and tho
ramovol ol Dllendlnll ond
thllr property from 41300

U 8 Rout. 33 Shiell Ohio

H lm
L ne nc and d bbled n
b cd ng and ell ng h o e
I
cia ely u
l o one

a! ve I a her n aw who made he e
h ng p oss ble a d I h nk h s bu
eon n the fam y sad
ncsses w
D n el M li e w o n arr ed o Mu
c s daughter Ma y and s ha nan
of the Du h C rp
boa d of d ec
0 s
Mo of Mulle n ne h ldren and
h s 82 y ea old w dow AI na ve n
H o 11 c Coun y a fann ng a ca ha
s home lo he wo d s a gc Am h
om mun ty
~0 000 pcop c
M en non tc and A
h we c h h

par of he car y Anabaptist move
men n Europe When the Anabap
1 s s were condemned b y both
Cathol cs and P o estanls hey ned to
he mountams of Sw t zerland and
German) where he
ad t on of
fa m ng star ed
The M en no n e churc h s a ed n
15 36 when M enn o S m o ns un ted
many of he Anabap 1 gr oup In
1693 a Sw s b hop named Ja ub
A nman b oke fro n he M en non e
and h f ol o we becam e known as
heAm h
The Am h a e pr vale peop e
vel b; h e drawn bugg e
wl
nd h
en wear ong beard and he
w n en el g ou bo ne s as y nbo s
of he fa th The M ennon es a e le
tr
and u e
on
u I
nd

n
ul u c

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

45776 Yeu a a equ ad to
an awe thla Compla nl with
In twenty eight (26) daya of
pub calion by filing a w II
ten answer w th the Me gs
County Court and aerv ng a

ADDENDUM TO PART 1
TEM G (2) SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL
COMPANY MEIGS MINE
NO 31
LEGAL NOTICE
Southern
Ohio
Coo
Company Meigs M no 3 I
P 0 Bo• 490 Athens Oh o
45701 has subm tted on
ad[acont area app calion to
Coal
M n ng
and
Reclamat on
Pe m t
Number D 0354 6 to tho
Oh o Oepa tment of Natu a
Resou ces
0 v s on of
M nes and Reclam at on
The p oposod coal m n ng
and rec amat on ope a on
wll be conduc cd n Me gs
County Rutland Townsh p
Sec! on 36 1,1o gs County
Salem Townsh u Sect ons
6 13 and t8 Tl o p oposod
unde g ound m nlng a oas
encompasses &lt;il acres nod
s ocated on theW ~osvll e
7 1/2 minute USGS quad

rangle mop In the town of
Danv I e and on the Rutland
7 1 2 minute U S G S quad
rang e map 1 7 miles south
of Hanesv le Oh o The
app cat on proposes to
expand the a ea fo ful coal
extraction m n ng by long
wa I methods and room and
p liar mining
The app cat on Is on flo
at the oil co ol Molga
County
ecorde
Melga
County
Court
Houee
Second Street Pomeroy
Oh o 45769 lor publ c vlow
ng
Written comments
and o requeal fo an tnfor
ma con1erence may be eent
to the Dlv slon of Minoa and
Reclam allon
1855
Fountain Square Court
Building H 3 Co umbua
Ohio 43224 1387 within 30
days of the laat dell of publication of thle notice
(6) 27 (7) 4 11 18 4TC

copy of you

answe

on

Plalntlll a
attorney
of
roco d
Wlllla A Grim
8 North Court Stroot
Sulto 203
Athena OH 45701
(8) 27 (7) 4 11 18 25 (6) I
6TC

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Mo gan Twp
budget
meeting wll be he d Ju y 1
7 00 p m at !he egula
meeting place
Pa a Justus Clerk
Juno 22 23 24 25 27 28
29 30 1999
July 1 2 1999

PUBUC NOTICE
C oy Twp Budget M..Ung
w bo hold July 5 .t a 00
pm II their regulor meet ng
Wende K wough Clerk
June 24 25 27 1M

Public Notice

assets rose II 16 o 35 7 8
S II analys s sad mos stock s are
railed as n ves o s awa t the Fed s
meet ng nex week
Af er ha
he market should

70

Public Notice

Public Notice

e

Ce a n h gh ech and financ al
stocks ha had bee depre sed by he
ecen se !off ecovcred a b 1 IBM
o e 9 16 o 23
8 J P Morgan
ga ned I I 6 o c ose at 128 9 16
Lockheed
Ma n
wli c h
announced nlans o se I $1 b II on n

Sunday June 27 199i

NOTICI! TO IIDDERS
The Molge Loca Board of
Education
wloheo
to
reclevo bide lor the lo ow
lng
Propo11l1
lor
Oepooltory
of
Activo
lnoctlvo
and
Interim
Depoolll
Brood Bakery
Product• and Mllk/Dolry
Producto
A I bldo aholl be roclevld
In and opeclllcatlonl may
bo obtolned from TREA
SURER S OFFICE 320 E
Main Stroot Pomeroy OH
45789 on o before I 00
PM Monday July 28 11199
The Mo go Local Boord of
Educollon re11rv.. the
right to re(ect any or all
b do and the submitting of
any bid ahalllmpoat no lla
blllty or ob lgat on upon the
eald Board
All enve opel muet be
CLEARLY MARKED eccord
ng to the typo of bid
Cindy
J
Rhonemue

Hoolth oppolntmente
nd v dua • ntereated In
be ng conoldorld lor th111
appolntrnenll con do so by
requ11tlng on oppllcotlon
from
Flonokl A Adklna,
Executive Director
Gollla-Jocklon-Molgl
Boord of Alcohol Drug
Addict on ond Mento!
Hoollh Servlceo
53 Shawnee Line
PO Box514
Goll polio OH 45831
Phone 740-446-3022
Tho Board otrlv11 to ma ntaln 1 boloncod roproHnta
1 ve of commun ty membero
and wolcom11 minor ty or
lomolo app lconll
Juno 24 25 27 1M

Yard S81e

110

Ju y 5 8 00 1 Emt 1on John
1on ea dtnce Po and Oh o
Vllloty ol08ml and &amp;ilOI

Pt Pleaeant
&amp; Vicinity

A 1 udtn 1 ru and pa
m•
open nga n eu1tome 11 v c•
IIIII dip $ 0 35 PI!' hf 11J1&gt;t No
e.pe lence w t a n cond 1on1
app y Muat be 8 Ca 304 48~
-4300 www wo k o 1 uden 1 com/
Oh

Compu e Use 1 Needed Wo k
Own H 1 $25~ $80K/ Y t 800
478 6653 x m1 """ lcwp com

Public Notice
NOTICE
SALE OF OUT OF
SERVICE GOODS
Tho following teme will be
ao d •• 1t1 to the hlghoat
bidder lntoroated parties
ahould aubmH a llllld bid
to Buckeye Rural Electrc
Cooperative Inc (BREC) no
later than Wednesday
noon July 7 1M Bldo w II
be oponld at 1 00 p.m tho!
aame day All ltomo are
oHored ae lo meaning
Buckeye REC m1k11 no
atatomente Implied or oth
OIWIII al to lht CondHion
aulllblllty or functionality
ol all Items The buyer
aoeumeo all reeponalblllly
and liability lor any Item
purchased
1 One 1990 Ford Bronco II
2 One 1991 GMC Sllllon
Wagon
(formerly
Engln•rlng Oept vehicle)
a Onel991 Ford Styles de
pickup truck (formerly no
21)
4 Ono 11194 GMI: pick up
truck with hydraulic bucket
lift (BREC can not guaran
tee structural Integrity ol
bucket or dielectric condl
lion)
5 One Vermeer model
1600 wood chipper troller
type
6 Uaed utll ty poleo and
stubs aomo broken
Marvin Ouu for epeclnc
polea)
7 Old welde mounted on
doly
8 Gr•n fuel tank
9 Marker board (whitt lor
use with special fall tip
pons) approx 4 x 7 (local
ad n old appliance warehouse ••• Matt N)
10 Aasortld colla ol
Romox and Coax coble
(located In old appliance
warahouoe 111 Mill! N )
11 One pick up truck tool
box doub o I d pintle
12 Two oach motel utiHty
truck toolboXII 8 fl and 10

Job

Yard Se eWomens boys &amp;baby

co hes&amp; o he baby ems Tan
d)' Compu e eco d p aye home
ne o pic&amp; moe une293031
4 m e om Peu s Euon ou A

82 Sou h om 6 00 ? Roln o
Shine

FLEA MARKET

712 OAM 8PM
1fJ 0 AM 4 PM

14 PM 5PM
Auction 7 4 7 P: M
A " Thea re
426 second "-u• Ga po •
Arle Fund Ra H No Dealers
Wde Variety Of Used 'Ti easu es
And A Few An lques
Donations We come
Cai74~ARTS

Fo P Olr() Pick Up

HARR STRUCK NO CO

DRIVERS Wont To Buy A
T uck T acto 1 We Can Sa You
A ]uck w h No C ld Ne Co~h
up F on And Va y Low Pay
men s e ua Show Vou How To
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CALL 800-377 3 0
Drive s Flatbed
WE PAY FOR
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Wederneye 8 Auc on Se

ce

Ga lpo s Ohio 740-379 2720

90

110

Help Wanted

Wanted to Buy

PUBUC NOTICE
Tho elghteon member
Gallla Jac~eon Melga
Board ol Alcoho
Drug
Add ot on
end
Mentel
Heolth Sorvlcoa Ia oppolnt
od by tho Director of the
Oh o Deportment of Montol
Health (4 appo nt111) tho
Dlractor of tho Ohio
Deportment of Alcohol ond
Drug Addict on Sorv ceo (4
appolnlftt) and tho County
Commloolonere In Gollla
Jackson
and
Meigs
Counties (1 0 appolnlfta)
Curronlly thoro oro five
vaconcloo to be llllld by
two County Commlaalonoro
oppolntmontl oli ODADAS
oppolntmont
and
two
Dapartment
ol
Mental

210

310 Home• for S8Ie

Bualnee•
Opportunity

~-------- 350 Lot• &amp; Acruge
330 Farm• for Sale

320 Mobile Home•
for Sale
988 Redmond Oan e -4~~:70
A so Hu Expando VI y N ce
Mus Se Ask ng S -4 000 7ol0
388 6335

RH SUPEIIYISOR

350 Lola &amp; Acreage

FOR SALE

Ohio Rive ronragt Mtlgl CO 8
ac 11 w h o de mob t home
S30
740-&amp;4:J.54e2

ooo ceo

BUS OPPT $ 000 WEEKLY
WORKING FROM HOME Ae
ce ve $4 00 Pe Envt ope P o
cesaed Supp ea P ov ded
Gua an ted P og am CAll
NOW 24 Hou 1 FREE NFOR
MAT ON 3 0 54 4892 E• LG
2

A ea For mmldla o Con-

County

BUILDING LOTS

Se auttiC en 52 ac 11 w
wo
wo k ng na u a gas we 1 wo
good na u a sp nga p us TPC
wa e na d op oad 0 mtnutes
om Pome oy 20 m nu 11 om
A he s wo n e bu d ng s Bl
$68 ~00 w h &lt;4K70 houit tra le
pluS JC2 liP out. 740-1192 3564

A Rag 1te td Nu 1e Is Needed
Fa The Ho ze Mad ca Cen er's
Hosp ce Oepa men App can 1
Shou d Have A Leas One Yea
Mad Su g Expertence And Mua
A so Aea dt n The Jackson
lldamtlon-

Conlacl

""'sloWard
Dii8C!Or or Human Rasoureaa
HOlZER MEDICAL CENTER
00 Jackson Pb

2 20 ACRE TRACTS
On v S22 000 Each Take
Bo n And Ge 0 1coun G 11
Hun ng ana Fu 0 Dee Hili'
Road Access To Wayne Na iona
Fo .s
and Con ac A 1 table
740 286-Q08
Fo

EOE/AOA El!l&gt;lcvo
S NGERS GOSPEL OR C EAN
COUNTRY Ca Now To F ee
800 339 420. 0
6 s 387 8 53
Fo Appo n men To Come To
Nashv Ia TN And Aud on Fo
Me}o Aeccnl Prodoe&lt;lrs

Real Eatate
Wanted

360

CURRENCY DAY TRADING
Ea n B g SSS Tad ng On You
PC Fa Be e Than Socks S&amp;P
Make $$$ Ma ko Goes IJp 0
Down lmmed a e naoma
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Phone 740-416-5 05
TOO 740-446 S 06

4BA 2BA $499 Down Assume
Paymen 8 o S239 mo (304 755

DISCOUNT TOBACCO PRO
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Man ac u e Coupons Aecep
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W 3 Ca on 0 de s To F ee
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RENTALS

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ng NOT Rep acing Long Cracks
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...

B(llt1 Paoltlono
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Aueaa 2 'Y88 a Experience
GoOdMVR
Wookly Pay
Health Insurance Available
Work WOI Wlh The POOle

COKE
VEND NG ROUTE $ 000
WEEKLY POTENT A
ALL
CASH BUSINESS PR ME LO
CAL S TES ON GONG SUP
PORT SMALL INVESTMENT
EXCELLENT PROF TS
600
73 233 EXT 2603

Fo Mo e n o rna on Ca 800
437-8784 Hrt 6 30 AM 5 PM

Qua 1y Home Time

NEW PAY SCALE FOR STNA S

La a Modo Equlpmen
W/Ugh Wtlgh Sldo Kilo
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www eck m Uer com
Sunday RecrUite -Cal
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S 89

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Hollar Senior Care center 1 Now
Accep ng App cat ona F om

STNA 1 Who A e E•pe encod
And Dod calld Poople To Jo n
Ou Team We A e A so P oud
To Announce That The Pay
Sea t Fo STNA 1 Haa Recen y
nc eased App y n Pa son At
380 Co on a D va Bldwe OH
456 4 EOE

BRUNER LAND
7411-44 t•92

Adena Health Sys em • Current
y See~ ng Toe Fo ow ng Pao
tlonB

STAFF SONOORAPHER
Part
Galla Co t-~un a s Oft SR 2 8
W ams Ho ow Ad 68 Wooded
1986 C ayton 4w:70 2 Bed ooms
2 Be h&amp; Gas No dyne 36M 0
Stee Gas E ec c Package
Hea A
Spac ous n a o
F encn Ctty Homes Po nt P eas
an Wl/~75 400

Adana Aeg ona Med ca Cen •
A 238 Bad Acute Core FICII ty 1
Curren y Stek ng The Fo low ng
NU!IingPatltlon~

Mod co IBurvlco Doportmonto
nc ud11 Fu T me And Pa t
T mt Po1 t ona Ava labte In Va
atM Mtd /Su g A eos Throughout
The Hoap a New G adea A 1
Wolcomo To .lj&gt;ply

EMPLOYMENT
SERV ICES

Emergency Blrvtcea

nc udea

An 80% Po a on Cona at ng Of

11 0

Help Wanted

Fou 8 Hou Sh o Day And
Even ng Ro at on And A Caaua
Poa on WI Requ e One Yea
Of Erne gency Se v c11 ff, age
E•pe lonco 0 5 Yeo o 01 ModSUrg Exporlonoo

B LL NO AND FOLLOW UP
MANAOER

$2 000 WEEKLY Ma ng 400
8 ochu es Sa sfac on Gua
an aed Pos age &amp; Supp as P o
v ded

Rush

Se

Add eased

S emped Enve ope G CO DEPT
6 Bo• 436 ANT OCH TN
370
438

Galli poll a
&amp; Vicinity
AJJ. Yard Slktl Muat
Be Plkl n Advlnc.
DEAQL!NE 2 00 p
tho~

Endoecopy Inc udet Fu T me
And Pa TJme Pas ons Ava I
ab a n Ou Endoscopy Oepa
men Curren Oh o AN L censu e
And M n mum Dl TWo Yea o En
doecopy E-ltnce Raqul ad

m

bolorelho 1&lt;1

11 10 run Sunday
ld lion 2 00 p.m

Fndoy Mondoy ld Uon
I 0 00 1 m Sltunlay

EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT
UNIT SECRETARIES
We~

a Cu en Jy Setkng 2 Ca
aua Eme gency Sa v cea Un
Sec e a as On Va able And
One Two 8 Hou Nigh Sh fto And
Eve y 0 ba Weekend Thlo Pal
tlon 11 Respons bla Fo P ape ng
And Ma n a n ng Pa tnt flecordl
And a A l alaon Fac lla ng
Commun cal on Be wean Ca e
Providers And V~~ora

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
AH Ye d

~Ill

Mus Be Peld In

Adv1nce O..dllne t OOpm the
day befo • the ad 1 to run
Sunday &amp; Monday td t on
1 OOpm Fndoy

Tho Oue Wad Calldklale W Pas-

188&amp; A H gh Schoo 0 p oma 0
Equ '.'8 an And Must Be Fam 1
w h Medcal Te mnoogy A
M n mum 0 8 Men h Koyboo d
ng E•pa ence Aaqu ad One
Yea Previous Hta hcare Elpl

ence a Ota r1ble

Be you own boss Work a home
24 hou me11age 877 267~3

140

Go lpolll c.- Coliogo
(Careers Ck&gt;&amp;O To HOme C.
TOday 7 - 7 .8IJO.
21~2 Reg uo-os- ~48

Schools

In e as ad Cand datu May Sub
mtt The Reaume To Human R•
aou ce Deve opmen ADENA
HEALTH SYSTEM 212 HOop i
Road Ch catho OK e •&amp;80t
740 779 7582 FAX 740 771
790:2 Or 'TOO 740-7711-7833
EIJIIII Opportunlly E~

Manlenance

C!eanng

logan, Ohio

For The Best Wheat
Price In Central
And Southern Ohio.
Call 1·800·523·2217

180 Wanted To Do

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Mortthly Paymen a 20 50% Sava
Thousands 0 Do a 1 n n e es
Non-Profi TCC IIOIHS8-384o4
CRED T
CARD

PROS EMS?

V SA

Gua an ted App ova

No C ed Check 0~ APR Ra
qu emen s 8 US C zen Have
Check ng Accoun Phone App o
va I 600 737 0073 ssuod By
Mamct&lt; Bank SLC Ut
DON T BORROW MONEY The
Debl Managemen C ub (No Fa
P o ) Can Pay Vou Deb 1 And
You Don Have To Pay Us Back
EVER Sand SASE To DMC
V age CA9 676 8763 000
EJ&lt;t.4320
F NANC AL SERV SFREE CASH
NOW$ F em Wea hy Fam es
unoadng M onsO Do as To
HepMnmzeThe

Ta~~:es

W e

mmld ale y W NOFALLS 847..\
SECOND AVE SUITE t350
NEW YORK NEW YORK 100 7

Equal Opportunity Ernployor

WtHaveWokSes nGa po
• Spr ng Va ley Rio G ande And
Olna A eaa 0 Ga a COunly A
Jobs A • 40 Hou a Pe Week
$5 5 Per Hou And A o E•pocl
ed To Las Un A Laos La a
AL{OUII And POll b)' n 0 Sap
lamho Compult Aod Olht Job
Re ated 1i a n ng a Ava able Aa
Pan or Thl Work Scho&lt;llll

•E"""- OWnocl ~ny

~ NANC AL
SERV
CASH
LOANS Auto Loans &amp; Mo t
gages Sad C od 0 K 800
47 51 9 EJ&lt;t 45

oComplllllw Pay • •OI--.Inollltolel
Must EnjOy Physical a.-

MONEY PROBLEMS? We Can
He p Up to 100K No Fees Low
Ra e1 Qu ck Aaau S Cal 1 877

OUTDOOR CAREERS

OMCAA Encou ages Foma 11
Age 8 2 To App y Fe Those
Job Open ngs
To Oban A Ptapp ca on Ca
740 •46 to 8
740 992 2222
0 V Sl The RIO G IndO Of1lco 01
Th~ Oh o Bu oau 01 Emp oymen
Services

o

.lppllcan 1 Mus Be Rtsldon 1 0

WOrk Pa11111 Strong

746-9009

~lpSklll

HM
A Good Driving Record And
&amp;I Fle•llle To 1tavo To
Vartoua Work Lccallon~
OlMOS! INC
CaiiForlnlormlllon
Toi~F101 21 Hra" Dayo
lo177.fl'M731
EOE 11/f/0/Y
Vllh Our-to At

---

DWN A COMPUTER?
PUT ITTO WORK
$25 $75 1Hr PTIFT
11111141401
www work from-home netllu n

Gallla Molgl Communlly
Action Agency
IIOtO Nl)lth Slate Routt 7
Choah ra Ohio oi582Q.0~2

FINANCIAL

210

Nndld mmld 1 oty S !tors (Fo
P ma y Evon ng And N gn
Sh II) Fa Haza Ex I CaITo

Molgl COunty ArHI
Comptti!lvt ~ Ollorld

I n """ ad Contect

EOE ADA Employe&lt;

Buelne..
Opportunity

INOTICE
OHIO VALLEY PUBL SH NG CO
ecommtnda hat you do bua
neaa w h peop e you know and
NOT 10 oend mcnoy h augb he
rna un you have nvea ga ed
!he artorlng

Wo k In 'rht Ga 1 a Muon

Vick Nell nghem
Holzt Extra Cara
HDLZER MEOICAL CENTER
00 Jacbon Pike
Gal~ll OH 4583
Phone 800-920-8880

TIJRNED DOWN DN
SOC AL IIECUR TY /8SI?
No Fee Urleaa We W n
-686 562 3345
REAL ESTATE

310 Home• for S81e

HOLZER EXTRA CAllE

POSTAL JOBS To St8 35 HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPER
ENCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CAL~
800 8 t3 3585
EXT t•2t0 8 AM 8 PM 7
DAYS 1&lt;11 Inc

446 1960

DISABILITY
INSURANCE
How long wtll your sav ngs
last w1thout an rncome?
Ronme Lynch
THE LYNCH AGENCY
336 Second Avenue
Galhpol s Oh o

446 8235
To everyone n Gall a
Mason Metgs Araa Stop
by &amp; see Pate Peck to v1ew
our baautiful homes
basi de Auto Zone

BLASTOFF

Bo Age 4 2 And Motl JTPA
E lglblllly Raqulremtn!S

Equa Opportuni!( Errjlll&gt;ylr

Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Prob ems wrth
your dr v ng record DUI s
speedtng t ckets etc
Same Day SR 22 s tssued
Call for a quote
Brown Insurance Agency

446 3093

W do House C ean ng Hav•
Fleft encea and EJ!pe ence
(740) 388 842 e 740 446
2848 UtiWlMtllage

ADULT INTERNET
P epe d Access Ca da Ho em
No Compo ion R a
Maker
D s r1bulorlhlp Sta p $499

$$'

lliiN2g:.2371 Dopl87

and

ash nc uded 740

Co NOW Fo F eo Maps
Owne F nanc ng n o Take 0%

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

Dept 4320 P:O Box 4332 Va I)'

Cua loci Candida n Shou d Subm t A Reaume To H\.lman Re
aou ce Dave opmenl ADENA
HEALTH SYSTEM 272 Hosp a
Road Ch I coho Oh o 45&amp;01
FAX 740-779 7902 0 TDD 740
779 7933 If You Have Quea ons
Roga d ng The Emergency PoolIlona Plaaao Ca174o-7711-7694

A es W h S eam $40 000
Cash P ce Pub 1c wa a F end
y R dge Ad 5 A. es S 4 000
Cly Schools

wa e

992 2 67

BULLETIN BOARD

Laundry
Cia lea /Oiflco

Ga a Coun y 0 Me g1 County

Keynes Bros. Flour Mill

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE CUICKLY Bacha o s
Mn e s Ooc o a a By Co a
spondenca Based !Jpon P o Ed
uca on And Sho S udy Cou se
Fo FFIEE nfo rna on Book et
Phone CAMBRIDGE STATE
UN VERS TY 800-964 83 6

Aepa Ooub ew de Save Thou
sandsl 600-383-6862

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile hOmes air
cond oned $260 $300 sewe

Otl Us Price on Cash Buys

Buelneae
Training

lnatructlon

Yard Sale

70

WILDL FE JOBS To $2 60 IHR
NC BENEFITS GAME WAR
DENS
SECUR TV
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM NFO CALL 600 6 3
3515 EXT 142 1 8 AM 9 ~M
7 DAYS Ids nc

150

ft.

Public Notice

Help Wanted

HOSPICE A!OISTERED
NURSE

Loca ] uck ng Company SH~ ng
Qua f ad T uck D ve a Good
Pay And Bene 1 Send Resume
To 0 VI PQ BOll 09 Jack
son Oh o •5640 0 Cal 1•0
286 1483 To Schedu e An nte

&lt;•••

The auceeaalul bidder will
have live working doyo to
prottnt paymant to BREC
or forfeit hla/her right to the
Item lor which the bid 11
Intended Purchaser will be
roqulred to sign a b II ol
sale acknowledgment prior
to taking poatooelon ol
tem All purchoud Homo
muot be removod from
BREC property w thin 10
wo'k ng daya of July 7
11199 All tilled vohlcloo will
have a minimum accopllble
b d Buckoyo REC roHrVn
the ~gilt to accopt or reJect
any ond all bide recelvld
ltomo purcheald cannot be
returned or exchanged
Aboolutoly no rotunda will
belaauld
All Items may be lnapect
ld prior to tho bid ctoelng
Applicable
maintenance
recorda may bo rovlewed
upon roqueat aa available
In addldon tho lntorootod
poroona moy hove the specific Item examined by a
competent poroon of tholr
choice (ot their expenoe)
p~or to the nnal day of bid
dina lntpoct ona and view
lng moy be orrangod by
~ontrocUng oH ce peroon
nol ot Buckeye REC head
quarllro bllwe,n the houro
of 400 pm ond 500 pm
Monday thru Friday until
thellnol day of bidding
Juno 27 29 1989
July 1 1M

110

F LM lTV NOUSTRY LOCALLY
H R NG No Expo lenco NICOl
aa y Wo II. Bth nd Scenes P o
due lon All 1 1nt S. Cona uc
lion 323-~H954

-tWhh Tommy HoiOIO
WEDNESDAY JUNE 30
8PM To8PM
Glandvlow nn
GrandvieW Awlnue
SOuth Pain OH

DRIVERS

I-81J0.1121-15003
www hlrrtatrk.com

ltnct And Refll tncet

sv-

600-29~700 Or 800-695·~·H3

OUR GOAL S TO SATISFY
YOUR NEEDS ONE PHONE
CALL CAN MAKE THE
DIFFERENCE
•EanUpTo 35¢/Mio
• ay&lt;MI And s .., on Pay
• sareoy Bonus And Awarda
1 Paid Healttlll.lfe nuance
• 2 Wks Vae lfJ Paid Holidays
• 40 K /Pro ft Sharing
• Passenge Program
Al~gnocl Equip
1 Sa e e Communlcalone
• Tu lon RelmburMITIInt
Ava ollie
Come Grow With Ua
HARRIS TRUCK NO
COMPAIIY

E~

Exp d l lnoxp d DrNoro
lTMmoWiniOdl
Swill Paya Up To
For Exporto.- Drlverwl
No E"'**"" NICIIIUI)'
COL ltalnlng Avalilblt
With Road Maslofl

EOE

New To YouTh RShcppe
9 'l(es S mson Athe s
740-592 842
Oua y co h ng and househo d
ems S oo bag sa e e e y
Thu 8day Monday h u Sa u day
900530

Help Wanted

Rtqu td Th I POll on En I 1
Compu e Based Boot1 Payro
ob Cal ng, And Mu lplo .COm
pon •• I You Wo k Wo W 11
Pub c A 1 Honea And 8 r'ICI 1
AbOUI Wan ng To Wo k And
G ow Wtth The Company P 1111
Fo WI d A R11ume To Ch 1
aln 1 Cons uctfon 403 Eatte n
Avenue Gan po 1 OH 4583 No
PhOne ca 11 w' Do Accep oc1
Drhoors
A CAREER ONntE MOVE!
SWIFT TRANSPORTATION

CONT MENTAL EXPRE88
COL era.. A With 8 Monthl
EJcper 0 lvlng School Grads
COnsldo ad No NYC Homo
MoOIWAegional &amp; Long Haul

Pen~onale

quareniMa WIITIIntlee or

110

Dive

T.reaaurer
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD OF
EDUCATION
PO Box 272
Pomeroy OH 45769
PH (740) 992 5650
(6) 20 27
(7) 4 11 4TC

Help Wlnted

Bookktlpt Two Ytl 1 On Tht

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

!!!S!!!u!!!nd!!!a!!!iy!!!,!!!J!!!u!!!ne=27~,!!!!1!!!!999~~!!!!!!~~~~~~~!!!!!!P!!!!o!!!!m!!!!e!!!ro~y~·!!!!M~Id~d~le~p~o~rt~·~G~a=lllpolle, OH~·=P~o:in:::t:P~Ie~a~sa~n~t~,~W~V~=.====~~~~,~IUibv!!!!!!;•!!!!!!lmr!!!•~.f'~mt~iml~~·~P:a~g:e;D:::o3

3 Bed oom Rancn Home }850
Sq F 24x48 Gt ago Shop 6
Ac 11 Coun y Wa •
U es
F am Ga llpola CA 6u k In 811
$95 000 Nag 740-3711-2635

4th of July
wth

DJ Joe
Rockm Down
at

Backhoe &amp;
Dozer Work
20 Yrs Exp
L1cense &amp; Bonded

Seren ty House
serves VICIIms of domest c
violence
call 446 6752 or
1 BOO 942 95 77

Pager #740 339 0206

Candlemaking Supplies!!
you asked for em
we ve got em' I
New scentsNew sh1pment of cake
candles &amp; holders New pottery
sponged 1n Burgundy'!
THE CANDLE
we make scents
1591 SR 160 Gallipolis
Saturday 10 4
Monday Fnday 10 6

LIGHT UP

For Sale

your 4th of July

1991 Bu ck Park AvBnue
Leather Inler or GaragB Kept
Regular Serviced by GM s
Standards Excellent Cond liOn

740-388-9515
388-8030
COUNTRY
SERVICE
B g &amp; Small Jobs
Aer al Basket Available
RoofTrusss
Roof Top A/Cs
any type of I ft1ng needs
Owner Tom Stump

740 367 7554

With
SYMMES CREEK

ltve band
at

WAYNE S PLACE
Sat 9 pm 1 am

GOOD TIMES
Sat 9 pm 1 am

a..-

For Silo By
• Badroomt 2 Do hi AI&gt;P lanoo1
Ntw Floo New S d ng $8~ 500
140 Fou th Avenue 740 ~~~
1838 740-4&lt;441- 1785

For More Information
446·2342 or 992·2156

$5 995
Phone No 446 1969

�420 Mobile Home•
for Rent

440

I

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

Page 04 • ~ G!tmH-Jfadinal
Apartment•
for Rent

510

Houtehold

Goods

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

'

Miscellaneous
Merchandlae

'

2 Bedroom Mobile Home For
Rent, Call For lnlormalion Bet·
ween 6 P.M. -7 P.M. 740-4410754,

2 Bedroom Trailer, Galllpoll&amp;,
Central Heat &amp; Air, Washer IOryer Hook-Up Deposit, References

Required, 740-44&amp;-o893.
Bedrooms. $325/Mo., + Uttm~s.
No Pets, Central Air, 740·U8·

2

~313.

2 Bedrooms, AU Electric:, Newly

Remodeled, 74o'36H611.
3BA Trailer· for rent $250 month +

$100 depOs~ . (~)~76·22~1 .
For Rent or Sale: Mobile Home

for couple In Galllp'olis Ferry,.

(!ln&lt;)675-6335, 6·9PM.
Two bedroom mobile home In
Racine, $325 montn, we pay wa-

ter, sewer and trash , 740·992·

5039.
440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, lur·
nished and un furnished. security
deposit required, no pets, 740·

992-2218.

'

1 Bedroom Apariment. Stove &amp;
Regrlgerator lnclude'd. 740·~46-

Flfll Avenue , Ol"'ff Ana Two Bedrooms. From $275 ·S3501Mo .. Se·
curlly OeposiJ, References Re·

" 7806.

Used Furnllure / Appl!anc:es 011
BulaviUe Pilce On Keeler Road,
740· 446·4039. 740 ·446· 1004 .
Ca ll Any Time . Johnson's Und
Furniture .

Furn l ahed, Upstairs . Second
Avenue . No Pets, Utili ties Paid,
740-446-9523.
'
Gracious living. 1 end 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Rivers id e Apartments In Middle·
port. From $249-$373. Call 740992-5064 . Equal Housing Opportunities.
Honeysuck le Hills Apartments .
Lo cated On Colonial Orive, Be·
hind New Highway Patrol Post. On
Jackson Pike, 1, 2 &amp; 3 Bedoroms.
Rent Starts At $230/Mo., Low &amp;
Modern InCome, Equal Hollslng
Opportunity, 7-40-4'4 6·3344, TOO

1·800·750.0750.
Ni ce 1 br. apt. kit. furn . W/0
ho okup , $300. ,.. damage dep.
304·675.:~100 or 304·675-5509.

1 Bedroom Upstairs Apartment In

2 bedroom apartment In Middle·
port, we pay water, sew&amp;f' &amp; trash,
you pay gas. &amp; electric. S200 per
month, $100 dlposit, 740·992·

2b drm. apts .. total elecutc. ap·
pl1ances furnished, laundry room
facilities . close to school in town.
Applications ava ilable at: Village
Green Apts . t49 or call 740·992·
3711 . EOH

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments , Includes Water
Sewage , Trash. $3t5/Mo., 1.,0.

446·0008,

Apartment far rent In Middleport,
no pets, 740·992-5858.

Christy's Famlly living , ap~ rl ·
ments, ho me &amp; traller'rentals ,
740·992·4514, apar tments. avaJI·
able. lumtstled &amp; untumlshed.

PerAll Electric, Idea l For
sons, No Grass To Mow, No
Lawn, F1rst Fl oo r, For An .Appointment To View, Phone : 740-

446·9539

7398.
530

Antiques

Anllque Iron Baby Bed , VIntage
Lar:nps, Hand Crafted Shades &amp;
Morel Collectors Closet, 3rd,
Courl. Gallipolis. Call 740· 446 ·
9832, 740-446·4267.

810 SCREEN TV. Take On Small
Monthly Payments. Good Cred it
ReQuired . 1·800·718-1657.

Candle Creations,
· 636 Br~ Street,
Rultand, OH 45775.
740·742·2512.
Candles Of All Styles A.nd Types,
Will 0 0 Refills Over 70 Varieties
Of Scents. Hours: Monday -Sat·
urday, 10·9. Sunday 1·5 . Also ,
Making Body Lotions &amp; ShOwer
Gels!
Cobra 25 Classls CB Radio. t 50
Watt Linear, K·40 Ant. wiMagoet·

k:

Base. 1200. (304)675-1 240.

CCI OL
900 To 1.200 :;:,Q. Ft. A Coli, Line
Se l , A1r Con dl tlqn lng Un it, In:
s~lled,

St.250,

74~·44H308.

COOL DOWN
Central Air COnditioning Added

10 Wind ow Air Cond it'10ners,

446-6308, 1·800·291.0096 "

1B Ft. Hea vy Duty Trailer Oia·
mond Plate Deck , Electric Trailer
lights &amp; Brake Hook·Up. Hea vy
Duty Jack, $800, 740·44 t ·0 87 0
Arter 5 P.M. Or Lea~ Message.

1 8" OlrecT V Satellite Systems·

Mobile Home Lot For Rent · Refer·
ences ReQuired, 740·256·1 922.

6194.

740.385-4367.

(~)675-4548 .

To Your Furnace. Complete Duct
Systmes &amp; Furnaces, Heat
Pumps Certifie d Installer. If You
Do n'l Call Us We Both Lose! 740-

$69.00, $100 ollree programrhlng.
llmllecl lime offer. cau 1·BOO· 779·

Mobile home site avallable bel·
ween Alhens and Pomeroy, call

Baby bed , Playpen, Swing , Ca r
Seat, Stroller, Dreuing Table .

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

460 Space for Rent

Discount MObMe Home
Parts &amp; Supply
t'luge Inventory

1HP Hayward Motor, Sand Filler,
For Above Ground Pool, Cleaning
Ghemica ls, Ac cess one s Solar
Cover &amp; Old Pool. $300. 740-388-

Vinyl Skirting K1ts $299.95; 5 Gal·

~;5Ai~~~n'G~r~~~:.d :~~,' ~::~:
$57 69, Ancno rs $5 ; Do ors &amp;

w;ndows, Gas &amp; Eloclr;c Waler
Hea lers, Plumbl~g &amp; Elec1rlca1

~a;;s·~~·eg~~~~~:O~~~r: ~~:;
~:::. ~4e;.~:~:~ 4~~b~:ll~~~.~

Oh&lt;&gt;.
FULLY LOA DED PENTIUM
coMPUTERs. Poor crodll o.Kl
1·800·520·6364.

6355.
MERCHANDISE
510

Household

Goods·

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES . 52 Wes tw ood ·Drive
from $279 to $358 . Walle to shop
&amp; movies . Call 740·446·2568
Equal Housing Opportunity

trlc Range $95: Dryer $75 : FF
Refrigerator $150; Refrigerator
Like New $350, 1 Veer Warranty ;
Washer &amp; Dryer Like New S 150
Eac:n . Skaggs Appliances , 78
VIne Slreet. Oalllpo1is. 740-446·

Deck, Low Hours , Good Cpnd i·
t lon . Call alter 5 :pm {740)· 446 ·
3430

Twin Ri\lers Tower now accepting
applications for 1BR. HUD sub·
sldized apl. lor elderly and hand·

'

$95; G.E. Washer $95; 30' EleC·

Applian ces :
Recond itioned
Washers , Dryer s, Ranges, Re fri·
gra ters, 90 Day Guarantee!
Fren c h City Maytag , 740· 446·

7795.
Couch, Lo11eseat. Chair, Mauves
&amp; B lues, Dinette Set. 6 Chairs.
Maple &amp; White, Magnavox Big
Sc ree n T.V. Super Sing le Water
Bed, lilee New. 740·446·3372.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers. refrigerators ,
rang,es . Skaggs Appliances . 76
Vine Stre et , Call 740·446-7398,
1·888·818-0128.

2 used lilt Chairs. Great C1
tlon , 740·446-2206

3 White Washers Kenmore, G.E.
Whi rlpool $70 Each; Ke nmore &amp;
Adm iral Dryers $60 Each. Whirl ·
pool Refrigerator, $60, Call After

po P.M: 740·446·9068.
Affordable Dental Plan With Access to America's Largest Dental Networles AbOut $3 Per Week.
No Deductible, No Waiting Period,
And Pre- Existing Conditions Co\/·
ered . C hoice 01 Dentist 1·88 8·

227-3752.
AMAZING

Gra"'Y walk Beh in d Wllh 30'

Mower And Sulky $550, 740.245-

9589

·
In Memory

Artie Mae (Sts) ·

:Buskirk

METABOLISM

Breakthro ughll! Lose 1Q·200
Pounds Easy, Ouicli. , Fast
Dramatic Rasults, 100% Natural,
Doctor ·Recommended. Free Sam·

pies Call 740.441·1982

Call now 1·888·265·

Repaired, New &amp; AebuHt In Stock.

CaM Ron Evans. 1·80CJ.531-9528.

As the years roll by,

Memories will never die.
Missed b Famil

9Qol7, 740-38&amp;-8A61l.

sears Lawn Trac:1or SS 16 HP 2
Cylinder 42" Cut $600; Sears , t
HP Lawnmower For Parts St2!5,

$tOO,OO Matching Pecan Coffee
&amp;End Tables $50.00 Exc:ellent

•

Combi nation 100% Safe Only
$2~ . 95 Buy 2 Get 1 FrM1 LOU 35 PoUnds A Week Ai Seen On
T.V. Ceilasene. H·VIagra AIIO
Available . cau united ·Pha rma ·
ceullcals Now For Into 1·800·

733·32SB COD'S /Pro·pay /Major

Credit Carda.

Real Estate

For Sale·
Priced Reduced

Windows 3 .1, 5 Year&amp;. Old. In·
eludes : Harddrlve. Keyboard &amp;
Monitor, $200. For More lnforlf\l·

lion, Coll30+773-5&amp;41 .

Each , Or Bolh $175.
~51&lt; .

740-~46·

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Wedding Gown Size 18, 740..-16·

No Sunday Cello

Southern

States

675-2780 .

(www.heppyjacklnc.com)

550

Building
Supplies

Block , brick, sewer pipes. wind ·
ows. lintels . ete. Claude Winters ,
Rio Granda, OH Call 7•0· 2-45·

5121 .

Now Is rh&lt; lime for g-r-r·r-&lt;01
buys i1 rh&lt; clossifiN!s
'
30 · Announcements

Top Soil
For Sale

GIGANTIC ABSOLUTE II·D•n
PUBLIC AUCTION

$27,850 Now $19.990. 80"35"8

Was $79,850

Now $48 ,950,
l OOX175x20 Was $129,850 Now

Foifou.,. Sole •I FM&lt;I l'rlJdy D"'lf Co....,tlon UnJ.,;
Autho.Uy •I Moijp Counly o/wlriff~ Offic•
The.day ENn~, Jut~e 29, aa 5t00 pm.•• w.dn.,day,·}Uml
SO, at lOtOO run... 'l'lwnJdy, July 1, "' -IOtOO am&amp;: o,..
· Week Lmer••• Saturday, July 10, 1999 o&amp; lOtOO am.
CondJU'ted ot dae M•ip Co. Fabwround. POMEROY, OHIO.
j,.tolfU.S. Rt. JJ and St. Rt. 7.

Fptlow hllrvround directional eigne.
3 BR., Large L.R.,
A M1mmoth Auction with Quality Throughout. The
amount of llem1 which mu11 bo aold In 1u11 4-doyl 11
Large kitchen, 11/2 Bath,
unb•IIIY•bt•.
You m1y not wltnele 1 ill• of thlt
Du111p Truck Load m1gnltud1 aaalnl
Laundry, 2 car garage,
ABSOLUTE AUCTION, AU Soli. To
Hipeot Bi&lt;ldor Rep...U., •I l'nce. Sale conducted In a
$85.00
full basement, large back
secured area, ently only through main gate. Grounds will be
porch, nice location on
patrolled by uniformed and' plain clolhas depulles and law
officers.
No admiuanc• prior I f.!&lt; auclion . ·Gate will open, at
124 next to river in
2;00 pm on Tuasday and 8:00am other auction days,
Syracuse, OH.
Stlllng TUESDAY Ev..,lng JUNE zg @ 5 pm : 2.JOHN
DEERE BULLDOZERS; J0400G w/lllt &amp; angle blade, only
740·99H860
399 hours; JD450B w/roll cage. 7·FARM TRACTORS:
245-5535
Mllilublshl MT2100 4wd diesel w/457 hrs. Ford 4630 W/31&gt;5
hrs. Restored Farmall Cub w/Woods belly mower. JO 950
w/wlda front. Int. 450 diesel w/wida front. AC 180
210
Business
Landhandler dl"al. Ford Golden Jubilee. EXCELLENT
OppOrtunity
SELECTION OF FARM EQUIPMENT: Like naw Bush Hog
posl auger; line NH Rolaba1 256 rake; like new.1996 Agrlc
AFMJ70 1iller; fine 1996 Lalnbech ladder: Hay Masler teddar;
like
new portable head chute; Leinbach 3 pl. augar;,Shaver
SUCCe88 f U1, 6 year, resld en tl SI/CommerC1a I
hyd post driver; King Kutter box blade w/rippars; King Kutter
disc; King Kuner finish &amp; rolary mowers; Marvel 6PO rotary
Carpet Cleaning Franchise
mower; NH 520 spreader; fine Newton ferl. spreader wagon;
Servicing 4·7 counties In Southern Ohio.
Ford &amp; Ferg plows; Ford 530 beler; other E;qulpment. SCAT
TRACK 1300 Skid Loader. TRAILERS: Good enclosed
Strong, established customer · baae with
stock t~ailer w/canter divider (abt. 40'); 5th wheel flat bad
tremendous growth potential. Must sell due to
lrallar (ab1. 24'): 16' car hauler; 16' sleel bed low trailer; nice
small trailer. LAWN &amp; GARDEN: TROY SILT Tomahawk
Injury. Will prOVIde OngOing CUitOmer SUpport,
Serious Inquiries may · send name. and phone · Shraddar/Mulcher; Troy Bitt "Horse" 1ille1; Troy Bill 5hp sickle
bar mower. 2·GRAVELY walk behind mowers. S1atasman
rear tina tillar; 12hp lawn tractor; 7·Weed lrlmmars; 15+chaln
saws; other Items. Over 30 rolls 6' chain link fence. New
plna and pressure traa1ad lumber. Lg. 'MEILNIX OOUBLE
DOOR SAFE w/cornbinatlon. Lots mora. ·
·
. Stlllng WEDNESDAY JUNE 30 @ 10 am.: O~•r 75
VEHICLES. StREET ,ROOS, Lot of MUSSEL CARS:
Magnlflcenlt935 CHEVY STREET ROD with fantastic work
Inside and out, possible Vet anglne . Pristine "HOOTERS"
Promollonal 1948 Ford STREET ROO w/sm. block GM
. , .• .,
...-w
engine (Both slreel rods Immaculate). 56 Chery BelAir
Gallla Co. Amioh Schoolo
hard1op; restored 55 Chevy pickup; RARE 67 Plymouth
Belvedere GTX w/426 only 15 made, possible only 4 taft In
Conoignment Welcome by 07110/99 comml11ion
••lstence; 67 Corvette Stingray w/28,000 miles; 77 Corvette
· 81.00 to 899.00 25%
In orig. cond; 66 Ptirmoulh sa1a1111e Commando 440; 65 Ford
Mus1ang 289; fine 62 Pon11ac G~and Prl• hdtp; rare 85 Chevy
8100.00 to 8499.00 10%
Caprice Classic 454 ; 67 Chayelle Super sport 396; 72
8500.00 and up 5%
Chavalle Malibu 296 hdtp; rare 69 Chevy Camara w/&amp;28,
85,000 miles; rare 67 Pontiac GTO w/42 1 wedge; 62
Held at the Andrew Troyer Farm, Richard• Rd.
Plymou1h
Signet convertible only 13,000 miles; 72 Plymouth
off 141, July 24th. Watch for later Uotlng
Barracuda 340 hdlp; 66 Chevy II Suparsport· 327 hdtp; 75
Chevy " Co~worth Twin *1914; 70 Chevy Nova Super Sport
396;
nice 66 VW convertible; rare 67 Chevy El Camino truck
.LesUe Lemley, Auctlon~r
W/427 (needs reslored); 69 Firebird; 67 Camara drag car; 69
Camaro; 66 Cadillac DaVIlla; 69 &amp; 115 Cadillac Convertibles;
65 Dodge Dart; 92 Mazda 626 w/13K miles; 90 Ford
MuS1ang; 92 Ford Conversion van ; 90 Plymouth Laser 16
valve; Ford Broncos &amp; Chavy Blazers; 81 lnl. School Bus:
SMALL TRUCKS: 88 Chevy SI 0 pro-straat Iruck w/only
12,000 miles; 86 Ford Ranger Edalbrock &amp; Holly w/16,000
miles; 88 Chevy Sto w/lroc Z28; 1994-89-85·63-67 Chavv
S1 D's; 9o l;hevy SS 454; Plut Several FULL SIZE Pick Lip
Truckt. DUMP TRUCKS: 89 Volvo·Wh~e 9-spd Fuller Dump
Truck w/Chelsea PTO; 66 Chevy 1-ton dump w/stake bed . 4HOLMES WRECKERS: 89 Ford Super Duty w/26K; 63 GMC
3500; 76 GMC Indy Pace Wrecker; 89 GMC. 3-ROLL
BACKS: 19961nl. 4700 Jerr-Dan Roll Back w/only 19k miles.
86 Ford F350 roll back, diesel; 76 Int. Loads1ar 1700 roll
beck. Unmentioned Cars &amp; Trucks. HONDA 300 EX Racing
4-Wheeter.
Honda Dune Buggy; Suzuki 250 QUAD
RUNNER. Homemade Go·Cart. 13 HAR~~LEY~~~~~~~~CI~
HONDA MOTORCYCLES; Harley's: i",
1977 XLCR Cafe Racer, 1979 XLH 10QO ~~rtsll~~.}9!9
RXS. 1982 XLH Sponsler 1000cc, 1984
1100cc, new Ha~oy .drag bike. 1991 Honda B25, 3-Hio1111a
road blkas. 20 High Perlormonc. ENGINES: Chevy
350, 396, 350, GM 327 (bera), GM 350,
2.5, new Chew I
454, 396 and others. Chrysler: 3l&lt;40~i:~~::Pl~~~
Ford: 46Q, 302 (barar,-3:/)L, other "' "
PARTS: Racing pistons jlnd rods (Super
~~:~~~~~~~~I
alumn, Intakes &amp; higllrisa Intakes; Holly &amp; A
· carbs;
headS/ double hump heads for GM; triple duce intake Intake
w/carbs; Lots Moral Approx. 300 NEW &amp; USED TIRES I
WHEELS.
Selection of HARLEY DAVIDSON
COLLECTIBLES! NOTE; This lisl has been prepared with
cara and to tha bast of our ability, may not be 100%
'
@
accurate, please Inspect items before bidding . Mllaaga not
goarantaed,
SELLING THURSDAY, JULY 1 @10 am; THOUSANDS OF
HIGH QUALITY HAND &amp; POWER TOOLS, SPECIALTY
TOOL$, LARGE TOOL CABINETS, COMMERCIAL
.

Guaranteed To
Satisfy
Charlie Miller

Business For Sale by Owner/Operator ·

Ben..t!ll• Au-son

Phonea388-0823

JULY
&amp;
AUG.
OPEN SAT. SEPT. 11th

f78,850 . 1·111J0.406·5126
560

A Great Friend Toy Pood les
rarents. 740-379-2639.

Cfann, esfaie, .9lnffque etc.

CONTACT

Marlin Wedemeyer

(740) 379·2720

256-6989

WELO~~R~S~A~N~O~~g~~;~~~~~t

More:
Hobart "PowerWeld' WELDER
COMPRESSORS,
NEW BlackMax 10 hp AIR
skids. Uncoln lnsonorizar
Welder/Generator. McGraw
Onan 15.0 GanSet
Generator. Gas Kohler Magnum 10 Air Compressor.
On 230 amp waldar; Century 145 amp Mig welder; Century
230 amp wa.ldar; Hobart BODO watt slick; other welders and
compressorsl Lots of welding accessories. TOOL
CABINETS: Very large SNAP·OIII 2·per1 Tool Cabinet; Mac
2·pt. Kenny Bornstein tool cablne1; others. SPECIALTY
TOOLS: nearly new Eagle above ground 9000 lb. AUTO
HOIST; David White Ml200A Laser Transit; EK-Cell 3200 psi
power washer: rransmlsslon jack; alec. chain hoist; slide
compound saw; battery chargers; HUGE QUANTn:Y of
SNAP.ON, PROTO, MAC, CRAFTSMAN RYOBI, DEWALT
1nd Other HAND TOOLS, Tha vary best quality, many naver
used. ALL TYPES OF QUALITY HAND TOOLS. AIR
TOOLS: 20 saw; Nailers; Devilbiss brad nailer; sand blaster·
Impacts; grinders; drills sanders, mora, POWER TOOLS;
Della 10" Contrac10rs table saw, Chicago band saw; Chicago
&amp; Craftsman labia saws; slide compound saw; 16 sp. drill
press; Milwaukee drills &amp; saws; lot mom. Tha best selection
of lools we have sold I Alao S•lllng THURSDAY: ANTIQUES
&amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS: Raslored single ·saat horse drawn
SLEIGH; 4-25¢ SLOT MACHINES: Ragulatlon Steeple1on
POOL TABLE: Nlca sat brass Sargent beam &amp; pan gold
scales; sm. elder press; fntll press: 2·oak wall phones; good
selection of old Iron Items; Alias blasting box; Dazey 130
churn;
chums; 2-caboose llgh1s; porcelain shaH
balance
; sleam whlsllo; 2-engraved tomahawks; 2· ·
I bottles &amp; rack; Lot More... Abl. 50
trucks.

AKC Female l.ab Pups, 1 B~c1c. 2
Yellow. 9 Weaks Old, $300, ShO"

Started! EKcellant Hunting B lood·~

Nne,

740.448 0080.

AKC Lab Puppfes, Very Lo...eable
~Friendly,

7Ml-367--o859.

~KC reg .min lture Dachshund ·

30+S75-4009.

AKC registered long haired minIature Dashund pups, flrll shots

·~ worrryeo, 7&lt;W·992-6951.

~KC Raglslered Yellow Lab p'ups,
Shots &amp; Wormed, Ready 4th 01

."u1y. 740·25&amp;-6338.

AKC· Aagtllered Bl ack Lab Pupplea. 7 Wk Olds . Ha\le been
wormed, has had 1s t shots.

$200. each. (304)675-6046.

B&amp; T Coonhound 2 year1 old, well
Started! Champion Bloodlines!

CaH: (740)·38S·S162

Fish. Blr~s . Pond Supplies.
Sun :1-4 PM, Mon.· Sat. 1tAM·

SPM. Fis h Tank/Pe1 Shop, 2413

$1100, 74IJ.992·2979 a111r8pm.

ln1tructlon

$1700, 7&lt;W·992·2939.

1987 Chevet1• Good 8ody, Good

1990 Cougar, hlgn milll . runa
great , looks good.
12100.

v-e.

992· 1~93 .

NH8!5t , Round Baler•. New John
Deere Round Balei'S. Mower Conditioners, 0% 12 Months, 2.75%
24 Months , 3.75% 36 Month&amp;,

Iinder 3 speed , 76 ,000 actual
mllas : very nice Inside and out ,
will take partial trade·in, $4800 ,

Toyota't,

Chevys,

EXT. 7832.

Mld.Ohlo Valley Truck Driver Training

Weekday classes lit SM·f. Also tvtnlngs &amp; wttltsnds.
•a-. for J.olh dad and I Llonse
.
• Filan&lt;lna and lunding milabfe ~ on Hg.'b~ity
'98" plaremtnl on !lass Akalnlng'
. lkenstd lrt tht Ohio Dljiallment of HighWay Soltly

1955 Chevy Belalr. 4 door. 6 cy· 19S5 BUiCI&lt; Rogal 740-256-1631 .

740-992·1493.

.

1985 Olds Calais , 1988 Cougar,

Bolh NHd Work . Will Soli Rlgh11

MorltHa, ohio mso

7.W.oU6-0106.

48 Monlhs. 5.5% 60

Months , Carmichael's Farm &amp;
Lawn, Inc. 1·800-59-4·1 111 J Galli·
polls, OH WI Deliver!

30

0~

Ca1- 553 Sheep Foot Roller $31 ,000. Cat· 215 Track Hoe

Con1tK1 Ed Adams J.80Q.648-369S 01 (140) 373·6283 Eat 338

Announcements

110

OF

Old Motorcycles, Motorscooters,
Motoracooter Pa rts (Cuihman
preferred) . Contact: 0 . Mitchell,
5568 80th PI.N o. Pinellas Park,

630

4 Arabian Mares pne 10

NOW HIRING

your financial needs. Do you have gv•uu 1

Piece: Oucks 3 Months Old. $6
A PieCe, 740·256·1233.

CFA Registered Himalayan kit·

Outstanding Angus And Ch langus Bulle , Reasonably Pricad 1
Slate Run Farms, Jackson, Oh io

tens , ...artety ol colors, 740·742·

1019.

Mate· Rat-Terrier 6 wks . old

(3()o1)875·7948. before a pm. $75.
each.

·

~egtstered Australian Shepherd.

Puppies. $150 Eac:h, All Colors,

Ready To Gol 740·388.0583. .

Regis tered Jack Russell Terrier.
Mala 3 Year s, While .With Black

pn.Ear, S50, 740.256-61S2 .
What's So Oltlerent About -The

HAPPY JACK 3X FLEA COL·
LAR? IT WOBKSI Agaln&amp;l
E.lUi. Jill,L ! Mlln Wllhpul
Systemic Poisoning . JO NORTH

74().286-5395.

Registere d Angus, eight Cow &amp;
calf ·pairs. eight 1· &amp; 2 'year old '
heifers , excellent bloOdlines. 7-40-

742·3033.
Registered Umousln Bull s: Red,
Black . Poll ed, 9 Months To 2
~ars , 74().367-7600-.
Re gistered miniature horses ,
good blood lines, 5 mares. ·3 stalli ons , 2 m ares are bred back ,

74().742-2050.
640

Hay

&amp; Grain

PBODUC!
740 · 4~6·1933.
(WWW.happyjacl&lt;lnc.com)

(304)S75-5072.

570

Slraw For Sale. (304)675-4308.

Musical
Instruments

SQuare Bales· of Hay For Sale .

.

TRANSPORTATION

P.A.

Equipment For Sate : L:ikli
~ew Peavey XR 1200 D Powered

Slereo MIKer With 128 Dlgllal Ef·
feels On 8oSJrdtl 4 Band Eq. And
4 AuK Sends Per Ch . 300 Walls
Per Channa ! 0 4 OHM S S750;
Peavey MD · 8 Stereo 8 Channel
Mixer Wilh Reve rb Stereo A- 8
A~d Sum Mon itor c;&gt;uts , $200;
QSC· MX 700A Pwer Amp , 350

WaUs Por Ch 0 2 OHMS $275;
(1 ) Peavey 15-10·H 3 Way
Speaker $150: (2) Fender 2· 15-H
Ouat 15• With 1;4orn Main Speak· ·
era $600 Pr; (2) Pea vey FH·1
Folded Horn Low En.d Cabinets
No Speakers,, $20Q;Pr. Contact

Mk:k Al 741J.446-6618.

. 110

Help Wanted ·

MACHINE
OP ERATORS
'

Mlchlne operatore
n - f o r Immediate
work II pockaglng plant
, In Northw..tern Ohio.
Tr1naportatlon and
houel~g option•
avall1blt. Starting wag ..
up to $9.50 per .hour; 2nd
lhlfl; IIQ.day aa1lgnment
with compl•llon bonu1.
FOR THIS POSITION, WE
USE OIALAPP, A 24HOUR, 7 DAYS A WEEK
APPLICANT SCREENING
SYSTEM. TO APPLY FOR
THIS POSITION,
· CALL 1-800·524·1900.
USE JOB CODE 1.1726.
. Pl1110 call by 4 PM,
Monday, June 28

lnt~in.
PIIIONNIL
110

Help Wanted

HELP WANTED

710

Autos for Sale

'86 Flreblrd. 6 cylinder automauc,

reo, Hops, looks good. $1 BOO; '88

Ford Tempo, 4 cylinder, $800 ;
740..742·2357.

110

Huffy Service First is loo
ing for a Technician t
assemble &amp; Repair Bikes
Grills,
Furniture,
Exercise Equipment. Pa
is based on., Number
Units
Assembled
Averages $9.00 per hour.
If interested please call 1
800-952-4738, Ext. 4670.
Please leave your . name,
number with Area Code,
City you live in &amp;
ime to calL

UNIT MANAGER -MATERNITY SERVICES
Adena H~lth System is seeking a Uni
Manager for Maternity Services. This is a
Level One Obsterical unit with annual births
of 1100· 1200. This ker. posltior is respon·
sible for the clinical and fiscal managemen
of the following areas: Labor and Delivery,
Postpartum, and Nursery. This . position
reports directfy lo the Director of Women$
and Children s Services.
·.
Qualified candidates must have current RN
licensure in the State of Ohio, with mini·
mum of 3 years experience in a rela
area with previous mana_gement or charge
nurse experience ·preferred. Bachelors
Degree and Certific;ation, or willingness lo
complete, is perferred.
Qualified candidates should submit a
resume to Human Resource Development,
ADENA HEALTH SYSTEM, 272 Hospita
Road, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601, (740} 7797562, FAX (740) 779-7902, or TDD (740}
779-7933.
Equal Opportunity Employer
Help Wanted

l ...keeper/Account•nt
Gallipolis Company has
an immediate opening for
a full-time"
experienced bookkeeper.
Send Resume by
July 1, t999to:
C/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
C0478
825 Third Ave.
GallipOlis; OH 5631
Help Wanted

• l.ate model Conventional ,
l'quipmt:m ·
• Excellent pay

. 1-800-S23.o804
or (740) 682-6613

740-256-6034

12,60 0,

1993 Pon ti ac G rand AM, Tu. l ,

388
...,
...,·_6408
_ _ _ _ _ _ __
t994 Cavalie r, 2 Door. Auto , AC,
$3,495; 1994 Cors ica V6, Aut o,
AJC , Loaded! $3 .695 : Cook Mo·
tora, 740-446-&lt;1103.

'1990 Lumina Priced: Below loan
Value, 1900 In Parts , 93 ,000

1994 Cors ica V-6. Au tomatic . Air
Conditio ning , Loaded $3 ,695 ;
1994 Cavalier 2 Coors, Automat·
ic, Air Condition ing , $3,495. Cook
Motors. 740-446-01 03.

7~0 · 446 -

Transminlon , AM I FM Stereo
Tape, Air Bag, Air Conditioning ,
A.ntllock Brakes , Power Door
Locks. Win dows, Drivers Seal ,
Cruise Control, Tlh Steering, Garage Kept With 80 ,000 Miles .

Aoklng

s~ . 295 ,

t 995 Bu ick LeSabre Custom. -4

Doors. Loaded. 740-682- 7512.
1998 Bu ick' Cen tury Custom. 4
Doors, $ 14 .000: Hl97 C1'1evy
Blazer LS $18,000 OBO. 7~7·

0157, Or 339-2809.

·

Call 740·446·

4223.

DOTTIE TURNER
REALTY
Dottie S. Turner, Broker
205 NORTH SECOND AVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OH 45760

Help Wanted

Applicalions are being accepted from persons .:u11e1·- n
ested working up to 40 hours per week in a llr&lt;&gt;cervl
store environment. Posit ions are available
store(s) located in Gallipolis, OH .
·
will mclude prompt, cour1eous cuslomer
accurate cash control, efficient operation of the scan- 1
ner register system, cleaning and stocking mcrcn.an·· 1
dise. Must be available to work anytime between 5
a.m. to 10 p.m . Must have a high school diploma

RIO GRANDE-country hving at it's best. A 12
year old ranch home with 3 bedrooms , 2 baths,
family room w ith fireplace , dining room, and a
pretty kitchen . Has a nice front and rear porch ,
above ground pool , &amp; a 2 car. garage . Some
new carpet , freshly pa inted &amp; decorated
interior.· All this sitting on a big ~orner lot that
Is level to rolling . ~ust step right in. One mile
from college, on State Route 325.'
NOW

you att: h11.r~ wo:e· · .·
and dependable this c;o
the
opportunity you are too
for .

G.E.D.

If

BENEFITS:
•
•
•
•
•

8.00 Per Hour
Full Time Hours 20-35
Part Time Hours Up To 20.
Sunday's Off
·
Paid Major Medicallnsu1ance thru Cigna
with PPO option
• Paid Den!allnsurance thru Cigna with PPO
option
• Family Medical &amp; Dental Insurance for
$50/ Month
• 401K Plan
• Paid Retiremenllncoine Plan
• Paid Vacation After Six Months of Service
Leanne Daniels with Aldi will be available for
you to apply in
from 7:30am to 2 pm
June 28th at:
on
. OH

OPEN HOUSE

"

Sunday, June 27th
2 to-5pm
Estate

'

Help Wanted

ADENA
.
Health System ·

110

110

1993 Dodge Sf\a&lt;fow 5 Sp&amp;&amp;&lt;l. V·

090

FULL TIME ' AND PART TIME

740.446-4053,
Chickens, 3 Monlhs Old $3.00 A

1992 Corsi ca ver\1 go od cond
12600 304-576-2749

$3.000. 74().2~5-565i.

CALL: 1-800-531-2301
IT'S THAT EASY!!

Call Vickie Hauldren at
'
Five Star Mortgage
10 Myrtle Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

CMrtoals Bulla 14 Months O ld ,
Big Enough For Service, $500,

(~ ) 675-206 3.

1990 Linco ln Cantlnentel , Black
With Black Interior, Moon Roof.

dreams come true.

lordable Rales. 740·388-8358.

___

1990 Pontaac Grar"!d Pm $1,450,

7&lt;W·«6.0519

__::_~..:.._

High Mileage, 13,500, 080, 740-

1990 Mercury Sable GS Sedan 6

lclrP.Hrn become a reality. Let us tailor a loan

Ve~ r

1991 S· tO ee,OOO U 1les $2 , i~ .

1990 Ford Taurus SHO, 5 sp.,
good condlllon, $3,500, wo&lt;1&lt; 740742·2444, home 740-742·8004.

C~llndtr , Automatic, 4 Speed

1 ,vtuu,g.,~;c Corporation wants to help make that

Old Mare 112 Quarter, 112 Mar·
gan. Installment Plan For Horses
To Good Home , 25o/. Oown, Af·

Auto• for Sale

e. Loaded, Nice Stereo

1127.

YOUR OWN HOME? Fiv&lt;:

Livestock

o

1990 Ford Mustang 4 CyHnder, 5
SpeOd. Cold &gt;JC. PW, POl, Claan
Car , High Miles . Runs Great!
$2.200 OBO, 740·""'8-8022.

M)lu, $1,750, OBO

Wanted

"'"'''""·· Afew good people who are willing
2644 Alter 6 P.M.; alter 5:00 Jcr&lt;~dit but just haven't saved up down a """'- I
to assist people with developmental disabili·
Jmc~nt. NO PROBLEM. Call to see if you
with daily living activities. Must have a
Locuet .baae post S2 .25 each or
soo or more $2.00 eac.h 304·882·
qualify for our RECD no down payment loan. IIGlm!ltiRh school diploma and a good dri·
32451 ~-~~82-2077 .
I
We also have VA, FHA and Conventional
See The New John Deere 200
llviiu!. record. Will be accepting applications at
Serle&amp; Skid Steer Loaders, 1 5%
loans with as low as 3% down. Call today for
JOC Financing, Carmichae l' s
Ash Street Baptist Church in
.
Farm &amp; Lawn. lnc. 1·600·594· a free prequalification. Let Five Star Mortgage
11 11, Gallipolis, OH \Ne Denver!
Wednesday, June 30th from lOam until3
Corporation help make your home owing
620 Wanted to Buy

71

740-949-2836 (y 740-949-20ot5

Impounds, And Tu
Aepo'l . For Listings Call 1 ~ 800·

Po llee

AUTOMOTIVE CARS $100 , 319·3323 Ext «20.
S500 &amp; UP. POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Honda' s

Autos for Sale.

nrn. UHS No 011 Easy On Gal.
Aun&amp; Goo&lt;ll 140-388·~72

~~75-5812 .

n2·1~70;

16ft Trent Box $3,000. 2,000 Gal·
ton Water Tank $800.00. 427
cn·e ... y Truck Motor.$7!50.00
Misc .: Steel Beams, Pipe, VIbratIng Tamp fits 4 16 Cal Hoe . 1611

710

-------11110 ·1110 CARS FIIOII$600

'Credit Apprcwal, J01219, J0720,
~H47,, NH469, NH488 Hayblne,

$31.000" 4511 Par1S trailer $1,800.

School•

1970 Ponliac Lemans With 360
Rocket Motor. S&amp;oO, Call After 5,

1982 Ford Granada. V'·&amp; au•
tomallc . runt good, $860, 740·

J0335, NH830, NH850, MF1580,

150

Autos for Sele

Jeeps, And Sporl U111111os. SOO·

Jaclc-aon Avenue/ Point Pleasant

·for local designed run
·• Home daily ·
• Oil Friday a&amp;emoon
lhrough Sunday
• lblal benefil package

'/

'92 Geo Metro, red , runt good.

FL33781, 727-464·7408.

SEMI DRIVER
NEEDED

..

710

(740)·~3-2916

110

•·

Sale

4.9% Flnanclng wun John Oaore

June Uted Hay Equipment Sale;

AKC , Vel Checked. $300. See Trenl BoK $3,000.00 . (740)·8~3·

*****************
C[J)e C[J)f/1 Cf3e CJloailable 'Tor

SPECIAL SALE'S

Pets for Sale

Aut01 for

'94 wh it• Grand Prill SE Coupe,
12 Fl. Cattle Trailer, Practically

~ . 75%

Steel Buil dings, New, Must Selll
40x60xl4 Was $,7,500 Now
$10 ,971 ,
50x100xt6
Was

9/ucHon 'Btl111
*****************
. WE WILL BE CLOSED

.. ~

1----------

Happy Jack 3X Flea Collar? 11 New, Wllh Middle Gall &amp; Divider.
Works! Agalnat lien, llck1, &amp;
&amp; Side Gall. 740.388-99-16.
mites with sy&amp;temlc polaloning .

prel81on Fittings In Stock

RON EVANS ENTERPR1SEB
Jlld&lt;Son, Ohio, 1·111J0.537-9528

.710

610 Farm Equipment

2288.

Jfunlalv Gtimn-Jfmtint1 • Page 05

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasaot, WV
FA RM SUPPLI ES
&amp; LIVE STOC K

Wl'lal's 10 dUfarent about tne

Uud Frigi daire Air Conditioner,
8200 BTU 's, Excellent Condition,
7~0-379·9110

lion Gla&amp;l Tor. Springs. $100

Rapid Welghl Lossl FEN·PHEN

540

Used Dell ComputiJ For Salt,

·Sola Ch&amp;lr Rec11nei, nl&lt;ol $225.00 P-...
(740)-«8-2165
Walerllne Spacial: 314 200 PSI
Two 9x7 Sleel Garage Doors, $21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 PS1
Like New, Non·ln&amp;UIIated. t Sec· 137.00 Per 100'; All Brass Com-

Layne Cedar Chest; Dark Color

Condl11onl (740)·245-5891

Holt

7~0.379·2730 .

Excellent Service

FleKible Financing AvaHable
Home /Com- Un11S
FREE Color Calalog
Call Tooay 1-800-711.0151

16 HP Simplicity Lawn Mower, 44'

River Bend Place ac'cepting ap·
pllcatlons now lor 1BR HUO Sub·
sldized apt. tor elderly &amp; handl·

Apanmenf'lor Re nt . !Bedroom,
1.Bal h, Ce ntral Air, Applicanes.

$325.00 Monlh, Call: (740)·446·
4859

Buy Factory Direct

2123.

AERATION MOTORS

Merchandllt

Hogs For Your Fruzer, 740·24&amp;Prtmaeta,-.. frH DlrecTY Summer

Sunday, June 27, 1999

540 Miscellaneous

540 Mlecelleneou•
Merchandise
Souaago, Hom, Pork Chops,

Promotion.

JET.

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFFTANNING BEDS

S50"00€ach. (740)·446·1 142

One bedroom fu rn ished apart·
ment In Middleport, call 740·9 92·
5304 after 6pm.

lcapp&amp;O. EOH 304·675·6679.

Whir lpool Washer Hea\ly Duty

Buy or sell Riverine Ant!ques ,
1124 E. Main Street.· on At : 124 ,
P ome ro~ , Hours : M .T.W. 10:00
a.m. to 6 00 p. m., Sunday i :00 to
·s :ao p.m. 740·992·2526. Russ
Moore owner

qapped. E"OH (304)882·31 21 " "

2 Rooms &amp; Bath , $225/Mo .. In·
eludes Utilities, No Kitchen; 1
Bedroom &amp; Bath Includ es Ulllhles,
No Kitchen. 740-446·2477 ·

2SIHI880

Mollohan Carpet, Room Stze Car·
pets . Orive-a·Little Save a Loll
202 Clark Chapel Road . Porter.

1unl1y. 740.«6-4639.

3516,

1 SR. A!C, Near Holzer, 1st
Month -Free With 1 Yr. Lease,
Quiet Locatio n, No Pets , $2791
Mo.. Plus Utilities. 740-446·2957.

2-4.000 BTU Air Conditioner Like
New, Price : Reasonabl ... 740·

Frenchtown Apartments, Now
(7&lt;W)·368·0173, (740)·446-74«
Accepting .Appllc:atlons For 1
T ired Of Going 'ro The Laundry
Bedroom, FMHA Subsidised
Apartment For Elderly And Hand· · Mat? Call Me For A Free Washer
&amp; Dryer, 1-800-383-6862.
icappe d , Equal Housing Oppor-

2563.

References ReQuired, 740·992·
7104A.f1er6P.M.

~7 .

QUired. 7&lt;W·«J.0962

Nice 2 bedroom apartment In Syr·
acuse , $200 deposit. $285 per
month Includes trash , 740·667-

S~racuse. $250/Mo .• Dep osit &amp;

Air Conditioners, used Dltferenl
Sizes . Guaranteed! 740-886·

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

Sunday, June 27, 1999

HELP WANTED

.

Gallia -Meigs CAA is currently accepting
Preappllcations for temporary summer workers
in the following occupational areas
Maintenance
Cleaning
Laundry
Clerical/Office
We have work sites in Gallipolis, Spring
Valley, Rio Grande and other areas of Gallia
County. All jobs are 40 hpurs per week. $5.15
per hour and are expected to last until at least
late August and posslply into September.
Computer and other job related training Is
available as part of the work schedule. .
GMCAA encourages females age 16·21 to
apply for these job openings.
To obtain a Preapplicatlon call 740·446·1 018
or 7 40·992· 2222 or visit the Rio Grande office·
of the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services.
Appl icants must be residents of Gallia
County or Meigs County, be age 14 -21, and
meet JTPA eligibility requirements .
Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency
8010 Nl:lrth State Route 7
.
Cheshire, Ohio 45620· 0272
Equal Opportunity Employer

205 North Second Ave.
OH

Henry E. Cleland Jr 992·

POMEROY· Lincoln Orlvo· A 1 1/2 story home 1ha1 has
been completely remodeled and has 3 bedrooms , Ol)e bath,
dining room, and a nice front sitting porch . Has central a1r

and it seems as if it Is in the country. Quiet and on a road with
low traffic. Grea1 placr for a family. NOW $38,000

'LOOKING FOR A MOBILE HOME? Here's a 1964 Mansion
1ha1 Is 14 • 70 and has 2. bedrooms wl1h 1o1s of space
Comes equipped with a stove and refrogerator. Also has
heat pump with central air. $9,500

G)

-LENDER

BRISTER ROAD· Just insida.Aihens Co. is appro•. 7 acras
o~~r:~~la~nd . Nice
i sit~ . Some wood s and some
~I
I and

REDUCED TO $30,~ote affordable and
In absolutely •move in1o" condition. Small lol.
Paved road. Equipped kl1chen , dining . living
room , 3 bedrooms, storage building, all neal
as a pinl Just waiting for you . Home faa1ures
naw windows, siding, root, furnace. A real doll
ROUTE

3J.

Here's a home that is wa it1ng for a fam ily. It has

3 bedrooms, large living room, full basement , older garage,
and central air. Has a front porch and rear deck with approx.

1 acre . ASKING $55,000
RACINE· Appro• . 7 acres · Wooded lot and an older mobile
remodeling done. Also

home with addition . Has had some
has
for 2 othe r mobile

want to re"t

type , a~:~~n~~~~.~~h
good neighborhood- Thlo 2 b•
home has a full basemen1 and an aU.&gt;ch11d
garage, level lot. hardwood floors, AC, and
modern kitchen . Trul~\a Nice Homel
ASKING $57,000.
·
NEW USTING-POMEROY- This older home
has a newer roof, full basemen1, carpeting,
and approximately 1000 sq . 1. of space .
Original woodwork, N.G. floor furnace. Living
room, kitchen, bath , 2 bedrOQms . House
needasome work. FIRM $10,000.

MIOOLEPORT· RUTLANO ST· Appro•. 2.25 acres of ground
with a 3 bedroom ~anch and a full basement Has a detached
1 1/2 story garage, vinyl siding, fronl porch &amp; deck . $47,000

POMEROY-I 1/2 story home with 3
bedrooms . Many new repairs. Large front
yard, and huge pole building for workshop or
auto repairs. Private setting just out of
Pomeroy with fron1 and side deck to enjoy the
summer avenin gil. ASKING $27,500.

CHESTER· An older 2 slory home with 3 bedrooms. 2 ba1h$,
dining room . large family room, huge living room , part
basement, 3 bedrooms, attic, nice appaarance,just step right
ln. Has a nice lol. $69,900 .
·
WELLS RUN· Appro• . 30 acres ol wooded land wilh a nice
pond, frae gas ..and 1Wo cleared camping silos. Also has a log
cabin with an upper sleeping area. Vary privale $31,500

POMEROY-ATTENTION HUNTERS-120
vacant acres loaded with all types of wildlife .
Very remole ~lth gas well . ASKING $79,800'

POMEROY· MULBERRY AVE· This 8 room home has 4
bedrooms. din ing room. family room . and prauy kitchen,
french doors, fireplace wllh· book shelves and bay window.
Also has a full basement, 1 1/2 baths . and 1ront siHing porch.
Only $23,000
DOTTIE TURNER, Broker .......................... 992·5892
JERRY SPRADLING .................................. 949-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING ........................... 949-2131
BETTY JO COLLINS ................................... II49-20411
BRENDA JEFFERS........... ~ ......................... 992·1444
OFFICE ......... , ........................ :........,............ 992·288e

IN tHE COUNTRY NEAR POMEROYapproKimately 1..81 vacant acres located Juol
oft SR 33, only minutes from 1own . Great
building or mobile home site. ASKING $5,800
MIDDLEPORT-BEECH ST.-7 rooms, 1 1/2
Storjt frame horne with 4 bedrooms . F.A.N.G.
heal. part basement, porchas . Double lot with
an BK1ra mobile home hook -up . Graal
IOcallonl ASKING $44,800
.

' .

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
710

Autoe

for Sale

720

Truckt for
C~~tvy

1M ChOYY cavalier, Z-24.' Auto,

· 720

Truckt for

Sale

730

Va1·• IL 4-WDt _

1730

730

Vane • 4-WDt

2753.

1987 Ford F-250, 4&lt;4. 6.9 dltlll
Good Shapol $5,000 080. (740)·
$22.500.00 Great Graduation 388-8743 ...... 5:00 prn
1998 Ponllac Trans -Am . Fully
LOidldl Prlcl Reduced to

Glftll (740)~546 .

1992 GMC SLE 112 Ton 2 W.O.
AUTOMOTIVE Japanese En- EXI. C.b. Red V-6. Auto. Loaded.
gines And Tranmlsslons. Used J 75K 112,500, 0807~1 .
Rebuilt, Super Low Prices, And
Imported Olrtctl~ From Japan.

1993 S· 10 Plck,Up. Tahoe pack·
Cleaned , Tasted , And Year War- aoe. PS, PB, Air, 2.6V6, 5Speed,
r anty. Foreign Engines. Inc 1- Toolbox. 60K Mil es. $5500.
(304)675-1240.
1100-535-9889.
FACTORY WHEELS, Alloy, Rally,
Steel. Buy, SelL Acker Wheel 1-800· 994-3357 . Worlds Most
Complete Inventory. www.ackerwheel.com

111118 Chevy Silverado, 3 quartO&lt;·
ton, tdtnd-a-ceb, 4 wMel drive.
20,000 mllu. Loaded. (304)81153707.
85 Ford Plck·Up F·150 , Short
Bod. 300, 6 cyt. &lt;lip. 96.000 mllto,
Abovt Averagt~ CondiUonl (740)·
388.()146

One 1986 KW One 1988 Wll1·
ern $tar Dump Trutkl , Good
Asphalt Trucks , Call Attar 6 P.M.

7.0.446-&lt;1257.

730

Vans • 4-WDe

1980 F-250 4X4 . Run• Good ,
BodY Fair Condnlon, 1800. 740·
388-8526.

1982 Ford F-250 4x4 , $2 .300

oeo. HU New A.... Hild1. Very

7.0.!M9-3221.
Toughl 700-245-51149, 700·703- 1:.;~..:..:=;;..-----­
ma.
1985 Chevy Van 350 Aulomatk:,
7.0.256-1631.
In Memory

In Loving
Memory

Victor C. Young Jr.

720 Trucks for Sale

70th Birthday

.

6-25·99

'91 GMC Sierra 112 ton Extended
Cab. low miles. excellent cond•·
tlon. $10,000, 740-742-2321..

Roses art!for Love
Orchids art! Ran!
Lilies are Pure

Happy Ad

Once he wu •
lug hair hippy,
· Now he hu
v-e·r-y s-h-o-r-t

Li/aq are Sweet
Tbese Flowers reminds
Us of You, Dem:

Son.
june 27, 1951 ·june 27, 1992

On Your 48th Birthday
Never Forgotten!!

Wife, Children and
Grandcbildren

"SO"

•.•

Love,
Dad&amp;

Miss and Love ltlu,

Bout
Being Fifty! .

Let's Eat!

'

To our Oldest
· Sister Sylvia,
w,·d just li~e to say
Hope you have a

.
LANDLOTS
5Acree-Fal~ield Church. Can be split-Restricted. No. 111

·pon 467
STAR BURST

$1500.00
:$50.00 OR MORE

Blending Old &amp; Now Lots of old
time c:herm and character abound
In this remodeled 2 story. But you
won't hav.ft the old rouse hassles
because It has been extensively
reritodeled . Alao feature&amp; a
mother·ln·law addition that haa
several use&amp;. In all, 8 bedrooms, 4
bathe, living room, family room,
eat·ln kitchen {vt:ry nice) plus
formal dining, rec robm and much,
much more. And all this priced at
$185,000. What a bargain!! Can
for a~ appointment. 1233

'

IB

PER GAME

nfAlfOn'

;BEECH GROVE
ROAD

Robert Bruce 446-0621 .

1

the Area
Property•Sold
~~~~ L~~~~
on East Bethel
Road, this property offers
16 x eo Sunshine mobile
with 3 bedroor:ns, 2 baths,
living room open to kitchen
dining area, 1 car carport and
x 28 covered porch on approx.
112 acre lot. Call today, this might
be your chance to be a
OOmeowner. Priced at $4!5,000.

1

. ·~

an on
Outo!lndlng ocro S•nlno This
wonderful home dlsplays ·top notch
workmanship with a very nice
appeal1 And home settings don't
get any better than this one: tree
shaded front yard with a scenic
Gallia COunty farm scene as the
back d~op. gorgeous Interior
1ash1ons, custom made oak trim,
beamed ceilings, a stone fireplace
together ' with modern and very
functional kitchen with oak cabinets
and baths · to make life "in the
country"
pleasurable. ·
Full
basement with second kitchen,
another bedrOom (4 altogether)
and a beth (3 total}. Over 3900 sq.
ft. of living space Inside and nearly
2200 sq. ft. of deck/porch/patio
space outside. Close to hospital.
Easy access to At. 35. Must see
for the upper price . range lookers.
1206

til" .

P.

·Carolyn Wasch 441·1007
Rita Wiseman 446-9555

..

UJ""~---

FOUR UNIT APARTMENT HOUSE, ONE UNIT
FRAME DWELLING PLUS MOBILE HOME ALL
PRESENTLY OCCUPIED . LOCATED IN THE
VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE. NEXT DOOR TO THE
UNIVERSITY OF RIO' GRANDE. IF YOU HAVE
INVESTMENT 11)1 MIND... BETIER LOOK AT THISI
THE PRICE IS RIGHT.$69,900

Canaday, Broker
Cedar Strut
1
very nice little home that won't
send you lo the poor farm . All the
major work has been
furnace,
central · air,
plumbing. hot water tank,
windows, Wiring to bring this
home up to date conditioning.
bedroom&amp;, 1 t/2 baths, living
room, dining room and eat·ln
kitchen make this home well
wonh the 158.&amp;00 price tag. 112211

Floyd, Asaoclate

446-4367

"Canen Cl011e

To Home"
Reg.
181J.05·1274B
.teeredlled
MeUer .t.C.I.£.S.

FAIRVIEW
$89,900. 3 ~~~
BRICK RANCH 'IN VERY CONVENIENT ;-;
PRICE JUST REDUCED. BETTER HUI'IRY
ONE ... IT IS PRICED TO SELL FASTI
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A COMFORTABLE '
TWO STORY HOME IN A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY
SETTING, WE JUST LISTED ONEI 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS , FORMAL DINING ROOM. SCREENED
PORCH ... BETIER CALL SOON, THE PRICE IS

$59,00011
TWO VACANT LOTS FOR SALE IN THE CITY OF
GALLIPOLIS. EACH LOT IS 40' X 150'. $10,000
EACH OR PURCHASE BOTH LOTS FOR 118,500.00

WOOD BMLTI', INC

760

Auto Partt

&amp;

Acc:eatorlel

197~ Apache f.UtHI Pop·Up
Camper, Tetephontt•: 740·24'·
!211 Or 740-446-775:1 •.

nos.

l ivingston'&amp; B11ement Water
Proofing, all baa•ment rep1i11
done, . free eatlmattt, lifetime
guarantee. t2yrs on job experl·
onoo. (3041895-3817.

Electrical

end
Refrigeration

RHidenttal

Of'

-

Commercial wiring, .,

MIR Generat Contracuno &amp; new aeMce or repairs. Master Li-' ;,
Electr~ . carpentry, Porcnu, · censed electrician . Rldlno u ~ ~
Trailer Stt•Ups, And Air Condl· Electrical , WV000301!, 304·875· .
tionlng, Alto, M1lntenance, 740· 17M.
, ....,
44H40t .
. ' '..-:

Blackburn Realty

Ings.

1996 Dutchman 3 ~~ Ft. With Ex·

pando In l.lvlng Room, Very Good
Condlllon. Raad1r To Got
-57.Aftar6 P. M.

840

.

,,'
.,

...

---

1990 26' Dutchman •r.:amper, elec·
trle front jack, new llrrln batterill,
20' awning, TV, sto reo 1y1tem,
rnlcrowovl, roollllr, 'l&gt;ur new 6 ply
tires, $7500, 740-N 2·2228 even-

7~0-

;[Ot!-

--Sc•lloris Campar

1i88 Sunllne
Sleeps e. Dual ~' 111e Gas. AIC,
Bath /Shower, One Owner, 740·
245-9316.

A. /Moorl!..

Br-ok.n(rliU~.._.r

514 Second Ave . Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994 ·

7 40-446-0008
7 40-441 - llll
.•
evansrnoo@zoomnet.net

e'x38' Furnished 1;amper On Prl·
vate Lot SO'x10CI'. Central Air &amp;
Heat, Water. Eta c:trlc, Sewer, On
Bear Run flaad , :f15,000, Phone,
Call 740-448-t 203. 740-448·

4349.

• Bed

and

llkle KJng
can with this
two story, 20-room
I home. Built with the
flavor of our aenlers, this
bedroom, 4 bath nome built In
I l l the apr1ng ot 1853 offers beautiful
hancl crafted fireplaces. A large
earner lot In walking dustance or
downtown Gallipolis. Take a step
back In time and call today for
addltlo'nal Information and

e-mail ua for Information on our llttlngt:
blgbend@eurekanet.com

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
446-4618

amongst har&lt;jwood
sides, this beautiful
hlll\op
meadow setting Offers a view that
~mlngl~ goes on forever on the
other two sides. Perfect sunset
views can be enjoyed from the
deck of this outstanding country 2
story home. Only three years old,
this Mme has features too
numerous to be lnctuded in this
ad, ' but believe us, it's worth a
.look. Hardwood floor!!l dress this 4
bedroom home up with a country
flair. Plenty of space In the
gorgeous ki~chen Is highlighted
~lth
a vauned ceiling, 3
bathrooms, full basement, barn
and 20 acres are just a few items
on a long list of amenities. Call fo"r
more Information. Green Twp.

Allen C. Wood, Broker • 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker· 446-0971

Jeanette Moore,- 256-1745
Patricia Ross
740-448-1088 or 1-800-884-1088

-

tit

I
Distance of town This brick
boast&amp; over 2500 aq: n. of
space. Includes 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, large living room, tormaJ
dining room and large rec. room in
the full basement. 2 car garage.
. Pr~od at $77,500. C.ll !Oday lor '
your private viewing. 1207

Surround yourallf In the
rich warmth of our native
In 1 ptuah
Httlng. This home resides on 4 hardwoods 1n this 4 BA, 2 BA 3
spacious tols with an In ground car professional masterpiece.
pool protected by a privacy fence Upon entering this custom built
with tastefully landscaped log home you 're Instantly
surroundings.
An oversized surrounded in polished authentic'
attached two-car garage with a oak, Wjth an enormous c.Ustorn
·~=~i~;:~ 30K38 frame metal ,entertainment surround in the
hi
the features
elegant great room, to a custom
I
destgned oak kitchen with buill·ln
corner cablne1s that rest on
polished hard wood flooring ,
nature surrounds you. You will
experience accents of ,native born
oak groomed throughout each of
the overs1zed , rooms while
wandering on over 7 acres on
this hill top hideaway. This
breathtaking view ot the Ohio
Valley Is bound to spoil any city'"
dweller. Call tOd~y for a _prNat(
loe~ted

..

1'

1

POTENTIAL, POTENTIALII Thla
histOric 2 story home located in
the heart of Gallipolis offers 3·4
bedrooms, 1 bath, 10 foot
ceilings, and hardwood floors.
Slep into 1f1o past at IM.OOO.
'

.

'

,,,.. I

.

'

~~~~:10!1

••
!

Road •

on SA 160 bor•ders•U
AcrooCourt House
Creek.
~
55 AC tillable, 20
•
30 Ac wooded
near Ew ington .
•

!

.

I' ,• ;
11044 NEW ~ISTING-LET THIS
TWO-STORY

N•!•n-•o IN THE

•
,
•

"
•

,.

"

bncl&lt; &amp; vinyl
the person who
allll close to tow~~n:."' {~;,;;;::;
Georges Creek Road, this
boasts 3 bedrOOfT_ls, t 1/2 baths, J
equipped eat-in kitchen, LFVOR
combinatiorl: famll~ room with
fireplace, small office, large
storage room and ulility room.
heat pump and Andersen
windows. Garage and 12 x 16
outbuilding . Rear deck offers a
peaceful, country view that will :
chase away the day's worries.
Call today... awalts your discovery. "
$112,000 not

SPRING
YOURS TODAY.
11196 lhio 4 BR 2
a fo rm al
entryway, eat-in kitchen a~d
dining room with hardwood
flooring. Adjacent to the Kitchen
ia Famll~ room with a cozy
fireplace for those chilly
mornings. New siding, roof and
Insulated windows in 1996 keep
maintenance costs low. A quiet
back Yard offers the perfect place
tor relaxing ,Picnics by ~our own
water garden.

hll.

~~~~~~=~--docorltor
and
11
A re1reat with

fireplace, 3·4
a large
bedrooms, 3 baths, 2
kitchens, finished basement
for entertaining. Approx. 5
acres with a view of the
you looking lor countryside. 10 minutes
IJII~? We have a home !rom Holzer Clinic, 1181
on St. At. 160 that Ia
nestled on 25 acres M or L, Looking lor 1 111111 plac•
3 bedrooms w/walk-ln to rilal 1 r1mlly? Five
closets, 2.5 baths, 2 year old home with 3
fireplaces,. an office, sun bedrooms,
2
baths,
r90m, 2 car garage &amp; an fireplace. Yard is approx
lngrouhd pool w/deck &amp;
9
f
1
11 ·
poolhouae w/cellar. Don't 5. acres or ots o unl
miss your opportunity to · Located In Cia~ Twp. Call &amp;
"e this home. Ask for request a shoWrng for 1158
1115
PRICE REDUCED/

•

•

Nesd 1 reeldentlal lot(t)ln
Gallipolis?
We have
something lor you. 12017
lroktr Owned

;
.,
,.,

.

.,.

..

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
441-1007

•

•.••'

1•

•
•

•

. 1201s .

acres more or le...

1111: Six Iota In Wflittr'a Hill Subdivision. Call
ask for 12018
·

••

".
~------------~------------------~------J~
Rila Wiseman 446·95'55

l:~:~:t,l~ln~IMora•n '1\Np., 8.4

•=:~~~F~our loll lor One Gmt
S

Prlael

Twp. Ask lor 12011.

we lrt alwlye glad to help you Mil or buy Jlf'OPIIIy.
Rrtnlll proplfly le 1110 IVIIIIbte. GIVI Ull CIH It

448-1-.

. new
easy cleaning window 10/98.
New carpel, wall 'coverinQ and
high efficiency heat and air
system. IN ALL A SHOAT WALK
TO CITY POOL &amp; PARK. CALL, 11018 IIAKE AN OFFEAI
CALL, CALLI Me,eoo.oo ·
Owner wants this sold nowl II
you are handy with fixing things
up, then this 4 BR, 1 1/2 story
hocne C9Uid be your dream home!
$30'S.

water I• h1rd to find
anywhert ... but we hmo n...and
much morel With nearly 2000
square feel , this 3 BR. 1 1/2 BA
contamporary IS built with an
over11lzed 2 car garage with a 24
x 28 finished great room above.
This Captains Ouartera Includes
an oversited dock on the rtver
offering you your own private
marina. Wooden decks with river
viewl on two levels heighten your
enjoyment of the water.
Handcrafted oak woodwork with
solid 6 panel doort inside finish
out this gem on the river, Don't
dream ... o•oas the

OwneN W1nt 1n Ofl1r on
thll Delightful 3 bedroom
hom• In a country "ttlng.
Gallipolis City Schools.
Located on approx. 1 acre.
Call lor Information. :wa
would like to show H to you.
1155
I I 11111r111IVI 1nd Ill
your money work tor you
with
thlll
re.ntal
proJIIrtllll
1 112 story
building containing 3 apta.;
also 12'x60'-2 bedroom
mobile home-easy to rent.
OWNER MAY FINANCE .

11031
I
1 BA New Siding, new

111145 Ovor 2.5 AC r.t/1. on tho

MEIGS

742·3171

COMMERCIAL
IUILDINQ;.. 112 WMI Mlln

Sti'Mt,

LOOKING I'OR A LOT?
Consider any or ell ttireel
Lots SUtr:t at approx. 1
acr" to over 2 acrM.
Public
water
service
available.
Restricted for
your protection . $12,000.00
lltae. 11011

.e

IUILDINO
liTE
IN
CHEITEII VILLAGE. 2 Iota
combined lor one lite.
last long. 113,000.00.
11077

Pomeroy. WOn,

\ $45,000.00. 2 L.arga aalee
areas, office area, reatroom,
lola of 8tor8gtl .,.. upeiaira
and qn main lew!. ~ lor

more lnlomtatlon. 110114

•
11031 A Great LOCIIIOn, Low
Maintenance tnd 1 Manicured
Setting all compliment this 3 BR
1 1.12 BA brick ranch. Located on
a tevel corner lot jult minutes
from Holzer Medical Center. Thla
home otters a quilt country
setting ctosa to work, shopping,
school a play. H't a must see 811
$92,000. Call for additional
datails and localion.

Cheryl Lemley

Tht1 ranch home altultld
on approx. 8.75 1crea has
had Iota of care an!! is ready
to move Into. The home has
a carport as well ·aa a lar~
pole gara~.
The corner
· location would make a greal
commercial site. Owner will
consider your offerl Call to
aea this one todayl 110M·

NEWLY IUILT HOIIE...LET US .
HELP YOUI Lot tho largo open··
rooms in this 3 BR 2 BA newly •
built ranch style home spoil you:
with comfOrt. Accent.ed with oak
trim, ti panel solid doors and
tiiStefully decorated, this home Is
the epitome of quality and class.
The over3ized kitchen, with treelined ·view, keeps the country
fiavor With solid oak cabinets and
hunter green accents. Sll8,100

cou::NTY

15008

E-Mail Addre!JS: wiseman@zoomnet.net
Wasch

Nesd city corivenlenc11?
Let this remodeled two
story home give them to
you by puHing you within
walking distance of schcols
&amp; shopping. Home has 3
bedrooms, 1.5 baths, full
basameni, _lnground pool
and Is equipped with central
air. Locatad In Gallipolis.
Call lor your shoWing todayl
1186

•
•
•

1St

· Robert Bruce 446-0621

I

•.

•

INVITING

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(7 40) 446-3644
OI'POIITUNIIY

Carolyn

ad you will
almost n tiW ranch home
Is compl• ;~e with 3 bedrooms,
2 full baths, oversized
kitchen, living room,
.
covered · ~ont porch, over
acres rrnakes this home
nestled ·with privacy. Just
minutes of Holzer Hospital.

.

.

~~:~

~~~----c=~------~~~--~ :

Sonoy Garnes 446-2707

LISTEN ... OWNERS SAID
THEY ARE MOVING &amp;
WANT THIS HOME SOLD
UKE HOWl One look at this
ranch style home and this
large wall manicured lqt will
sell youl 3 Bedrooms, 2 full
baths, large living room,
dining area &amp; kitchen combo.
Detached garages.
Too
much to mention . . Call at
oncel Your offer might buy
this
. 11oee

I

a peaceful setting
Rio Grande. Extras Include: a full
.basement with one car garage,
hardwood floor• and beautiful
hardwood trim throughout. All
situated on a large corner lot.
l7tl.ll00.

LOOKING FOR AHOMJi: IN TOWNT

PRcii&gt;EiRTY

·''

0111

THIS
TO SELLI Make us an offe~
A beautiful 7 room log home,
·2 full baths, 2 or 3 bedrooms,
county water, heat pump and
large 2 car garage. Shaded
area, barbecue facilities,
boating, swimming and even
finapclng available I Located
along Raccoon Creek. II is
all here, call nowl 11089
'

1220

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

$55,0DO.OO
SCHOOL
DISTRICT... Motlvated Seller
here .. .3 bedroom home,
large living room, 2 full
baths, covered front porch
and rear patio. Kids will
keep cool this summer with
this aboye ground 24' pool
with nice deck. 1 acre treed
lot. Get quick possession!

32 LOCUST STREET, GALUPOUS, OHIO 45631

1211

..

£rULTODA\'

OR
l-800-214.0452
GAJUPOLIS
CAREER
COLLEGE

VItiio.iiin
•
well cared 1or home on Maln
Street features outstanding oak
woodwork . Very ntce tayout allows
for 3 bedroom&amp;, 1 112 baths, IMng
room, dining room, eat-In kltc:hen.
Also a 1 car anached garage. If
you like character, this Is a must

Uotlng Beautiful Counlry
Home located on approx. 9 gently
rolling acres with a wonderful view
of the countryside. Only apprcx 10
yrs. old and dnpplng wllh
character and . charm. Boasting
over 2400 sq. ft with lovaly formal
living room with floor to ceiling
briCk ltreplace, formal dtning room,
family room with fireplace open to
a beautiful gourmet kitchen, 3
bedroom, 2 112 baths and 2 car
----4.,-,==,...,..,---.....,-,.;..,jgarage complete this lovely home
plus a 30 .x 40 detached garage for
the handy man In the family.
Pr..,ieodrourat $169,900. Call Carolyn
fo
private viewing. 1121

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary

.2321 .

em.

'

II convenience 1nd
comfort are key to your
consider

SIJMMER
K.

Appllan .. Parts And Service: All
Name Brtndl OYer 25 V..ra Ex·
perlence All Wark Guaranteed,
French Clly Mayrog. 740·448·

too amall

r

~)

NeW. Llatlng Right PrlcetRight
Hoo,ne/Right Lolli You had beHO&lt;
call right now on this one! Newer
home, maintained to perfection.
.._
Th is one ona-rs
approx. 1800 sq. ft.
boasting an open great room with
dining area and workable kitchen
with custom made Smith cabinets,
family room with cathedral ceiling, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths on a t acre,
more of less, level lot with 2 car
garage and separate workshop.
Pncod at $119,900. This could be
the one you've been waiting for.

FOR

Ronald

...,.-__,.

Build ntw Of repair old . no job
or large . Major credit
cords.
tWV029582.
Coli
(304)4511-1049. 8P 0528-8092.

..•

I

H25

C·a naday

EMIOtLING

WATEAPfiOOFHtG
Unconditk»rlll lifetime guarantH.
local reterenc11 lurnlah~ . Ea·
1975. Col 24 Hrs. (740)
446·0870, t-100.287.()578. Rogn Waltri&gt;IOOflng.

Wibow Bulldtn

1

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555

Realty
446-3636
2

--

IAI£11EHT

C&amp;C Ganeral Home Main·
ltnenca- Painting . vinyl li~ l ng .
carprentry, dOOr&amp;, windOwl, bllf'll.
~ home rep~W end mort. For
frH estlmete cat/ Chltt, 740·892·

~~~==:5:·:6 :A:C:R:E:s-B~:uh:I:M:o:n:o~niR~di.iSluirv~e~yiedi'~Wioiod~ed~.N~o~.~11~4~~~~=====~··

E-Mail Address: wlseman@zoomnet.net

•

na-531 4 11ave meuag.t,.

Now gao llnfto &amp; body par!l. 0 &amp;
G1mbler Intimidator 20 lt. ban . R Auto. Alptoy. wv. (304)372boat, dual consoles 200 hp. 3933 or 1-800-273-932!'1:..
. _ __
evlnrude motor, · fully equip.
bought new In 88, .used approx· 790
camperfl, ..
imattty 10hr1. priced well under
Motor Honnn
"!&gt;&gt;k· 304-773-5998.
'82 Tarry Reaort 24' tJ' II~r. excef.
lent condition, $700CJ, 740·742·
J.S. Marine Ia loadtd Up On
Used Trade Ins. Ready For 5alt: ·
1979 26 ~ - 'TWin Englna Thunderbird With Trailer 112.500; 1984
19 Ft. Concord With 91 200 HP
Mariner With Trailer $5,500; t988
t7 Ft. Stratoa Floh &amp; Ski Wllh
115 Suzuki &amp; Thllltr $o4,000; 1984
Wellcralt 16 Ft. Wllh 4 Cyllndlr
Wllh Trailer 18.800, 080: 1988
"te Ft. Baja With 4 Cylinder 1
Trailer 13,500; 1977 21 Ft.
Checkmate. 4 C~tlnder I Tl'llller
$3,000; 199d 18 Playtime Wllh 66
HP Evlnrudl Wllh Trailer 13.500: ·
1978 Stingray 18Ft. 4 c,ltnll&lt;!r
With Traflar $2 , ~00, 740·258·
6160.

Home
lmprovemen11

2.440 Acr. .-Restricted. Flat building s~e. Green Twp Cora Mill Rd. No. 208

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
. . ' ( 740) 446-3644 .
OPPORTlJNITY

Sonny Games 446-2707

QIJAmR%1
OASSES BEGIN
IIJtY 5TH

112

810

Harrl10n 'I\Np.-40Acres+ . SALE PENDING. No.113

Call today for an apvointment!.
With low interest rates and reduced prices,
you can afford the home of your dream!!

RUTLAND

7.0.~9381 .

Improvement•

lmprov-11

Accettorhta

Home

810

Homt

810

~,EIW ICES

I

room has parquet llloarlna~
fireplace and a view- of the river
that 1s wonderful. this Is the per1ect
room to relax in. $71,000 Call for
your personal cippointment. F&gt;rlced
to sell. 1400
Look of Dlltlnctlon This home
"' comb.lnes elegance and QOmfort.
Very good quality throughout Its
2600 sq. ft. of Hvlng space. Accent
features Include cherry kitchen
'cabinets, crown molding &amp;
hardwood floors. Large limestone
Well Cared for Brick Ra'nch fireplace and much, much more.
located on Hilda Drive, this home Also Included are 3 bedrooms, 2·
Is In e~cellent shape Inside and 1/2 baths, sunken living room and
out. Feat~.c~res Include 3 bedrooms, dining room, eat-In kitchen, large
Snd 2 half baths, li11ing room (amlly room, screened in porch
fireplace, family room and 3 . and 2 car garage. New roof, new
season enclosed porch. Eat·ln heat pump, Anderson windows.
kitchen also. Newer windows, new Very mOe home priced to sell at
roof. 2 car garage plus outbuilding. $11m,500. 1128
Nlcelol. $104,9d0 1124

MON. &amp; WED,
6:30.P.M.

NOT

Portlmouth Rd.-7 112 Acres. REDUCED IN PRICE. No.

MIDDLEPORT· ~th St. Property
completely renovated. New Inside
and oulslde. Nice level lot.
Access to front &amp; back. Move In
condition. Agent owned. Let ua
show Jou. Don't let all the work
we di ol') this home scare you
away- It's still priced right. Central
heat &amp; air.

yard.

BINGO

T'

LU~'"~;;&lt;~nll~

the oversized famll~ room, t/2
b8th and ·ample storage area.
Priced
rower rover
at $75,100,
, your ramlly
you can't
willafford
love
r'lot to check this one out. te13

Flbtrgllll cover 1111 c:navy full
·a1zo 11110rt .,.., uuck 13 no.oo 304-

Parta. 6

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

MILE HI~L AD,
Acres m/1- 3
Bedroom house. Central Heat.
Window Air Conditioner: Garage.
Extra bldg!. Fruit trees· Berries &amp;
Grapes . Also 2 BA trailer. MIDO~EPORT • BEECH ST.
Secluded. Prtced right· in low 40's. WARRANTED HOMEI V,ery nice
4 BR,home. LA, kit w/appl. Bath.
Large corner lot. Near city park &amp;
pool .

Four City L.Ota-Commerclal or home site. Surveyed. No. 108

Reduced Prlcell
"'modelod and localod on approx.
1.2 acres, this lovely bl-leval otters
on 111e first lloor living room, dining
area open to nice. kitchen, 3
bedrooms and one bath. On the

Uti Marada Sport I 3L Wtr·
c:rul ..r, 110, In Tht Wtter 5
Times, Llkt New, Many Eatrul

Auto

BIG BEND REALTY, INtC .
UR'nNn •
~ACIIIE· 2. 7

Jeckoon Pike Area-Nice building lot. $14,000. No. 110
Tredlttonal or Contemporary ...
You Decide Beautiful hardwood
floors together with neutral decor
give this home a contemporary
feel . However, the floor plan Is
very traditional with format living
room and dining room, large family
room , attract1ve kitchen with large
breakfast nook and first floor
master bedroom. 5 bedrooms
altogether and 3 1/2 baths. Th1s
home seems much larger than the
2800 sq. ft. floor plan calls for.
Also partial basement. Charalais
1 area. Broker's Note :
·~:~i~~ho~ta way below the
Ct
on this house. It

780

~··'

Real Ettate General

POMEROY~ Union Ave. Nice
home ptu1 an excttllent trailer lot.
This 112 acre m/1 is priced for
quiCk sale. Call us today for an
appointment

These motivated sellers have reduced the price
of their home to get them sold NOW!!

witfi to tflarrk 'Fisfier
New Listing Close to Town Here's
a very nice home for the neat and
rFtmeral Jfome arrcl
tidy! 3·4 bedrooms allow plenty of
room, plus full basement for eveh
Staff, rpleasant Valley
more space. Living room. eat-in
kitchen, dining area, 2 baths. Walk
J{ospital. arrd all tfie
out basement leads to nice yard.
Located on St. At. 588 just outside
family arrd friends
city limits . Priced at W
tfiat smt cards, flowers , I l l - • •
marrey: food, love arrd
prayers . It is truley
·appreciated. Your ·
kindness 1vi/l be ·
cfierisfied abva

750 Boat. • Motors
for Sale

1996 24 n.PonllJna boat wl 90 f'c&gt; .

,,.,

!Angela 'teaford
· 'Englisfi

Happy
Sixty-Fifth
Birth
'r'vonna &amp;

MotorcyciM

1986 C - 6· 10 lllaaf 4WD.
t990
Big BOir 4&lt;4, good
11~00 080, good work vohlelo,,
condltlon .- 117~ 080, call 7401tta Yamaha 350 W.rrlor Eltc· 742-4(106,.., lor-call740-992·100 Iller 5·oapm.
trlc Af!lr 5 P.M. Phone: 74D-«e·
198D 4 WO Dually With Utility 7411 .
199t Honda XRBOA Runl Good,
Bed, 5.2 Oltlll. Good Mecn.L.ool&lt;l Good, $800, 080 740-«e1989 Horloy Davidson 1200 6651.
1h1Cil, 7~257 After 8 P.M.
Sportator, 57000, call 740-992·
' 1991 Ford Marte. Ill, Conversion 4572 evanlnga or 740·992·3812 1997 Honda 400 Foreman Red, ·
Excellent Condition, 220 Hours,
Van, VB, .Capt. Chairs, Rear dayl.
Bench Seat Converts to lull Sill
$4,400, 740 446 6651.
bed, Dual Gaa Tanka, Like New, t 989 Yo moho YFM 80 Molo 4
Excellent Condition, $1 ,400.
$6,9d0. (304)675-1731 .
Looi&lt;J &amp; Runs Llf&lt;e Nowl 74D-4461994 Explorer, 6 Cylinder, 4 &amp;651 .
750 Boatt &amp; Motore
Doors, •x-4, Air, Brand New Tow
for Sale
Package : Run1 Great! $1 !5 ,500 Ohlo Valley Bank Will Offer' For
7.0.245-5100.
Sale By Public Auction A 1998 1992 Searay 220 Mint Condition,
1994 GMC Jimmy SLS, Loaded, K*waaakl . VN800B3 · MIC Cuddy Cabin &amp; Many Extrlll L.ow
40Ft, Excellept Condition . High 1501617 &amp; A 199e Vamaha Ko- Hours, 740·388-9991, 74D-388Milos . 19,400. Call belore 9PM, diak 4X4 ATV 0046881 At 10:00 9515.
A.M. On 7110199 AI The OVB An(304)675-7946.
.
nex, 143 Third Avenue. Gallipolis, 1993 Cobia 17 112' Runabout Lll&lt;e
2· 84 Dodge Ceravans , lor parts OH. Sold To Highest Bidder "As New, wnt"Trada For A Pontoon
S3bo. or make offer ~-675·3383 Is ·Where Is" Without E~epresaed Boat Of Equal Value, 740· 448·
attar 5 pm.
Or Implied Warranty &amp; May Be 4782.
:;:::..::.;~----'-----1 Seen By Calling Tho Collection
740 Motorcyclat
oepr. At 740-«1-1038. ova Re- 1994 ' Bass Trac~er. TadPole,
. serves The Right To Accept /Re· UFt. , wJFish-Findlr. 8HP Mer·
1987 H.D. Soflall C~stom, lots ol ject An~ &amp; All Bids, &amp; Withdraw cury, &amp; Trolling Motor, w/Trailer.
chroma, recently restores, tow Items From Sale Prior To Sale . U&amp;ed ""'Y IIH!e. $:1,500.(304)675miles, 115,000, 740-992·3112 at- Torm&amp; Of Safe: CASH OA CEA· 1131.
tor 5 or 700-992.()()78.
TIAEO CH~CK.
1995 Kawasaki 900 ZXI Jet Ski,
Tr411er Included. Very Low Houra,
Excellent Condition, $&lt;4,500, 080
Cal740-«e-1741 .

..

BAG A BARGAIN

}o Ann, Tammy,

'Tiie Jam ily of

740

•

Love,

Nuthen 'Nllty!:

Motorcycl•

honda ,boat has bathroom, metal Budget Priced Tranamlsslona
top &amp; many extras, tandem axle and Engines. All TYpes, Access
tralter'wl brakes $16,500. call al· To Over 1o.ooo Transl't'liaalona,
ter 5 pm. 304-458-2047.
· eve Joints, 7.o-24s-56n.

hair 1t
Happy Birthday,

Card of Thanks

740

4-WDe

oeo.

of Our

Loving Memory

6

l'lmona

U79 F1 50 4X4 EM.tendtd Cab,
351-M englnl, liking $t 100 ,

. In Memory

S1lzed Cars From $500. Spon,
.qucury. &amp; Econo~ Cars, TriJckS,
414'11 Utility &amp; More. For Curr8nt
liltings Call 1·800·311 ·50o48 Ext.
1183
·.

V.nt

Real Eatatt General

Plctc-up ShortWhMI

, B Cvl.. 3 Spd., w/axtraa,
. Ca ll aHer 6PM (304)578·

A.C.• P.W., P.O. loek, SunRool. 11

c.o....,..,. (~)n:l-5117

Sale

;S~u~nd~a~y~,~J~u~ne=-27~,=1~9~99~~~:::;::~=~~~~~P~o~rtl~ero~y~- ·~M~Id~d~lepo~~rt~·;G:a:l~llpo~l~ls~,~O~H~·=P~o~ln~tJ:•leaaant, WV

Sunday, June 27, 1999

3110151 IALL RUN ROAD.
Super nice ranch home that

II

2 yeers young.

3

Becl rooms, 2 lull bltllt, lull
buremenl, 2 car att.i:hed·

garriQI, aecurity ayslenl. 9
· mora or lea of land.

)

PEACEFUL PARADISE-Watch Hie roll by In a newly bultt
on the Ohio River. This rustic 2·3 BR. 2 .bath home
w&lt;&gt;·ndl!rfull extras including 700 feet of wrap around dellking
Tub to seat six. A stone hearth fireplace accents the
with a loft day bed room overlooking Its beauty. Over
of River Frontage. S1 50,000

�_.mtbtel

Page 08 • .-..at 1 tn....

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

Sunday, June 27, 1999

Monday

Kans,as races to bring in its winter wheat

TIME OUT - Gallla County Treasurer Steve McGhee, center,
took a time out from a recent continuing education seminar In
Newark with State Treasurer Joe· Deters, left, and U.S. Treasurer
Mary Ellen Whhrow.

Mennonite's balance
(Continued from D1)
. fa ith to their business," Longhurst
whicl1 distributed $25 mi llion in said. "They're runnin g the business:
grunts last year. mostly to needy es not to make themselv.es rich but
because they have a responsibility to
Mennonite congregations .
the
community, to the poor and to the .
"They really want to give back to
environment."
the 'church and believe in li ving out
Some Mennonite companies distheir faith every day." said Jud y Marplay
the connecti on to their faith
tin Godshalk . spokeswoman for
prominently.
Their businesses don 't
MMA. headquartered in Goshen,
sell
alcohol
or
tobacco products and
Ind.
·are closed on Sundays. The Dutch
Another group, Menn onite Eco·
Corp. offers $4 buggy rides from its
nomic Development Associates, restaurant and gi ft shop in Walnut
helps its members bridge the gap
Creek and its Web site features a pic- .
betwee n their businesses and their ture of il Mennonite girl shopping in
faith, said John Longhurst, commu- its gift' shop.
nications director of the WinnipegBut wealthy Men nonites themhased group.
selves have maintained a lo'w profi le
Longhurst said the group helps about their success and probably
Mennonites handle business deci- will continue, Kanagy said.
sions \hat carry an ethical component,
" People outside the Mennonite
· such as whetherto lay people off.
church aren 't aware oftheir wealth
The 2,600 MEDA members because they don 't flaunt it. Awaredonate money so the organization can ness is rninimal," he saJd. " Rich
g.ive loaJ:) s to low-income entrepre- Mennonites are very good at not
neurs worldwide. Their efforts create bei ng conspicuous consumers.
or sustain IO,ooO jobs every year. · They've been hiding their wealth rel"The people who belong to . us
want to find ways to connect their atively well."
.
.

By ROXANA HIIEGEMAN
Asaoclated Pre 111 Writer
KIOWA, Kan. ·- Battered by violent spring stonn,s and plagued by
outbreaks of crop diseases, Kansas
farmers have beg• m bringing in the
first truckloads of •winter wheat from
their fields.
But nature's wi1ims pale next to
the dismal crop p1,·ices at the local
grain elevator, where the price early
this week hovered at $2 .29 per
bushel.
" We work hard tO try to raise a
good crop. We like to haul as much
into town as we car.1. Unfortunately,
the price isn't the re ," said Greg
Miller, a third-generation Kiowa
wheat farmer.
Miller brought in a sample Tuesday to the 0 .K. Co- op to test. The
weight, at 60.2 pour.lds per bushel,
was good. But it was still too.moist
to cut that day. Like m6st farmers,
Miller is anxious 'to ge t the crop in-

he has already lost 18 percent of his
crop to hail this spring.
"Everybody has started pushing
it," he said .
Around Kiowa - a south central
comm unity where the wheat harvest
traditionally begins in Kansas - the
first bushels brought in so far have
looked very good.
Test weights on loads now coming
in to the O.K. Co-op have ranged
between 60 pounds and 62 pounds
per acre, said assistant manager Jeff
Kimme ll.
" We have had such a moist spring
wheat has filled out really well on a
weight basis," he said.
It i_s still too early to get a good
estimate of yields in the area.
·
Disease problems have been minimal in these pans of the state, unlike
other regions where nearly half of the
wheat crop has been infested to
some degree with a variety of dis·
eases. Much of the first wheat har-

June21, 111118

vested so far in Kiowa is infested 48,000 bushels of grain in storage,
with cheat grass, which lowers test much of it to cover government
loans. But the elevator has nearly
weights.
But at this fanner-owned cooper- 350,000 bushels more of storage
ative, elevator wotlcers were reluctant space available this year than during
to dock fanners unless it was really the last wheat harvest, he said.
Storage is n't as tight here as it is
bad.
"They are the owners of this busi- fnrther north, wher,e crops are more
ness too - it is a cooperative. We diversified. And si nce Kiowa is
feel we can absorb that," Kimmell where the Kansas harvest staned,
there is still room in larger terminal
said.
elevators
to move the crop.
The first wheal-laden trucks began
Tyson
Tucker,
a high school senior
bringing in the crop late Monday, and
hauling
wheat
for
a. local farmer,
by the end of that first day the elevator had taken nearly 20,000 brought in a load this week .with .a
bushels, said elevator manager Steve 60.7 pound per bushel test weight and
only 13.7 percent moisture.
Fenton.
Tucker said the crop looks real
" I figure today we ought to get a
good
- good bushels and pretty
pretty good start," Fenton said Tuesclean·.
day. " We still need some 90-pius
Custom cutter Kim Clark just got
.temperatures, and a good stiff wind
(to dry fields). I'm hoping to be rock- back to her hometown of Kiowa after
'ing and rolling by Wednesday or cutting wheat in Texas and OklaThursday t&gt;y the latest. "
homa.
The O.K. Co-op still has about

tomorrow: Hazy, humid
High: 80s; Low: 60s

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper
s ""JI"

Copy

!',

c""t·.

New national ·plant sanctuary opens 'i n Rutland
By BRIAN J. REED
.
"ups has set three goa.Js for its ncw 'sanctu- species of plants, 12() species of treqs and
.
.
ary, a continuation of the organization's 200 species of fungi on the property. ·
.S•ntlnel N•wa Staff
"Plants and people surviving together,"
goals: the conservation, restoration and
Strauss, an active member of UPS, and
That's the goal of an organization which ·preservation of native plant life, public edu· 'the owner of Equinox Botanicals, an her~al
• dedicated a 380-acre botanic•( sanctuary in cation about plant preservation, and research medicine firm, has lived in Meigs County
rural Rutland Township on Saturday.
into wild plants and how those plants can be near the new UPS sanctuary for almost 30
Approximately. a year ago, United Plant sustained in their natural environment.
years, and was honored at Saturday's event
Savers, a nonprofit organization focusing on
The group has established lists of endan- for his contribution to !he organization,
the preservation of native plants, purchased gered plants and at-risk plants,. which arc including ihe donation of land.
315 acres of the former Lee and Bea Wood threatened by wi!dcrafting. clear-cut timber.Strauss said that the economic impact on
farm on Loop Road from Paul Strauss, a lead- ing and other industries.
Meigs County from !he sanctuary and the
ing herbalist who lives on nearby McCumber
It was noted at Saturday's ceremony that burgeoning herb-related industry near Rut Hill Road, and Strauss himself donated an 2,400 acres of plant habitat are lost every land should not be discounted.
·adjoining 65 acres for the sanctuary, which day across the country, and the UpS .hopes
He noted that thosCinvolved in the induswill now be used as a safe haven for endan- that their efforts in research and plant preser- try purchase materials and equipment from
gered plants and as a learning center by UPS. vation will help curb this damage.
local businesses.
·
A conference for UPS members was held
The organization selected the site because He and his colleagues have also noted in the
this weekend as a part of the dedication of the " amazing diversity" of plant life on past that the herbal Industry, especially the
event.
the property. One UPS member noted that local cultivation of endangered medicinal
The organization, which boasts members the site appears to be ideal in terms of soil herbs, could offer employment . opportunifrom across the country, conducts national content and climate, saying that it is the .ties.
conferences on issues relating to the preser- place where "north and south meet."
. "The green spark reaches Jrom this site
So far, UPS members who have conduct- throughout Meigs County and Southeastern
vation of plants, and will conduct many of
those conferences at the Ruthlnd site.
ed research at the site have identified 600 Ohio today," Strauss said.

ing Up Some Great Deals This Weekend
t Don Tate Motors
• Top Dollnr Trade-In Value•
• On the Bite. financing • Courteous Sales
People
.

·
··

SANCTUARY DEDICATED- Paul Strauaa of Rutland Is pictured at
the dedication and open houae at the United Plant Savere' new plant
aanctuary near Rutland. SOme 300 people, moS1 of them UPS membera, attel'ided the ceremony on Saturday.

•

.Racine man shares experience with fellow pilots

. PARKERSBURG (AP)- A 24year-old !Dan who disappeared
while swimming in the·Ohio River
was found dead by divers.
. Ernest N. Gregory of Newark,
Ohio, initially entered the water
Saturday night to retrieve a small
fishing boatthat had drifted away
from the Williamstown boat ramp.
said Sgt. H.E. · Shaver with the
state
Division
of Natural
Resources.
Three people who were with the
victim told .authorities that Grego. was,swimmins b~bind t~t&gt;oat,
30 feet from shore, when he
suddenly went below the surface.
· Gregory's companions searched
for him for about 15 minutes, then
asked another boater to contact
authorities, Shaver said.
Authorities did not know Sunday what caused Gregory to drown
Saturday.
"There was not much current ·in the river, and there was very, very
little wind," Shaver said. "The water was clear."
Gregory's body was taken to the
. coroner's office in · Montgomery
Good Afternoon County, Ohio, for an autopsy,
officials said.

OfficeMax Inc. replaces
president for retail sales
CLE VELAND (AI') - Office-. for a chief operating officer, a first for
Max Inc. is replaci ng its top execu- OfficeMax. When it is filled, Feuer
t1ve and hiring a retail consultant in will focus on strategy and Iongan effort to improve profits:
range planning to compete better with
The offi ce-s upply company sai&lt;l office-supply ri vals Staples and
Thursday the position of John Mar- Office Depot.
1in, president of retail sales, had been
The chain of 870 stores also hired
eliminated and replaced with a four- Atlanta-based retail consultant Kurt
member team. The management team Salmon Associates to recommend
will report to Michael Feuer, founder . ways to quickly improve productiv.
and chief executive officer.
ity.
Martin , who held the job for Six
OfficeMax, based in nearhy Shakyears. could not be re!ched for com- er Heights, trai ls in terms of sales.
ment. Co mpany spokesman Mike earning s and s·ame-store sales growth
Weisbarth said Martin wasn't avail- wh en compared with Wes tboro,
able but agreed to pass along a mei- Mass.-based Staples. which has about
sage seeking comment.
~0 more stores, and Office Dei&gt;ot,
Fe uer said a search would begin which has about 125 less and is hascd
in Delray Beach, Fla.

High volume hauler wins
recogntion in newsletter .

Aa:onling to Navy pilots, cruis.ing
the skies in defense of liecdom is a
thrill. 'Trapping and catapulting off an
aircraft canier is also a definite rush,
But the pilot's life and the succcs5 of
the mission depe~ on the sailors that'
keep their machines operating perfectly.
Making SIIR that aircraft are ready
are sailors like James M. Bush, son of
Suzanne Bush of Racine and son,iniaw of James and BaJbant Fry of
. Pomeroy; who is instructing an
advanced course at the Naval Air
Maintenance Training Group in Virginia Beach.
At the school, students gain knowledge they need to keep the Navy's
. IIAte,of-.the·ut fipter airmft in lilt
air.
~- - .. -~.
Bush, an aviation electronics technician, teaches sllldcnls more about
their chotlen ~feaaions.
"I am·an instructor, teadting electronics and avionics systems to members who work on F-14ainnft. I enjoy
being able to see students become
excited about being able to leave this
school and work on the airaaft,• Bush
said.
Bush,
joined the Navy in 1985,
a year after . paduated from South-

1 Sections • 10 Pagts

they can send out their CSRs.to phase ·
estimate the next stage of construction.
"Bob also has a great rapport with :
with our builders. They seem to real - ·
ly appreciate his service," he added.
C.W. Snyder is ope rated by Cliff
and Betty Snyder. Chcy and Debbie
Snyder and Cunningham. ll1e firm 's
current payroll cove rs 25 empl oyees,
including the 84 Lumber deli very
trucks in Jackson and Portsmouth,
and 14 over-the-road semis hauling
building supplies in the 36 states east
of the Mississippi .
·
The firm congratul ated Cunningham and his crew, Frank Taylor. Bob
Lotts and Doug Bird "for a fine job
managers · directions to the "site so 'and congratulate them on their dedi cation to the service of the 84 Lumber store s."

CoJRiq
Ec111orlals
Local
Soorta

Weather

9
2

3
4&amp;5
3

Lott(•rre:;
f)' l l t

Plek 3: 2-S-3; Plek 4: 9-3-9-9
Super Lotto: 2-8-13-28-34-41
Kldcer: 8-IJ-6-4-8-6

w.yA.

Dally 3: 6-2-4; Dally 4: 7-8-0-4
C 1999 Obio Val~y Publilhiaa Co.

Contract talks stall
over benefits, wages

"It is nice to know that othets appreCHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
ciate your job performance, as well as
enjoying doing things you need to do." - Company and union negotiators
But not all of .his time has been at Century Aluminum Corp. in
spent
learning and teaching others Ravenswood are at an impasse
•
about the ins-and-&lt;&gt;uts of modem tech- over · wages after resolving disnology. He's also had the time to travel agreements over medi cal beQefits.
In negotiations in Pittsburgh,
and experience new cultures.
"I have traveled to the exciting ports the company on Friday proposed a
of Greece and Israel. It was exciting to contract that offers improved medsee many different cultures and to see Ical benefits. Negotiators for .the
United Steelworkers of America
the sights in Jerusalem during the tours
countered
with a demand for high that I took whiie in port"
.
Bush, married to the former Ruth A .er wage.increases.
The company relaxed its stance
Fry. ha5 two children; Cheryl, 8, and·
JarMaM. Bu1h
Justin, 3. With the training and educa- on medical benefits to avoid a
em High School.
tional opportunities available to him, h~ strike, said Jerry Kitchen, an executive vice president of Century
is
excited about the future,
"I joined lhe Navy to see new areas.
Aluminum.
"I plan to continue to advance and
I
not ready to go to cOllege, so I .
"What Wt had' said WI(S that this
• figllll!d.I would join thc.Navy."
get as muclt job experiehce for use after
seemed
to respond to everything
In addidon to teaching, Bush has retirement from the service as I can.
The biggeSt thing I am looking forward that we had been told was requestlearned a lot about life in general.
"I now have a sense of pride and to is to be able to help my children with ed," he said.
The company distributed a flier
. discipline. The Navy has taught me to their education, because I will be home
use my available time to do as many with them during their activities and Friday that spells out its final offer
achievements while 'they are in to·workers. It carried a cover letter
farnily-aiented things as possible."
that read, "Our plant is on the
He said that along with his personai . school."
achievements, be's made quite ·a few
Regardless of his future, Bush will verge of a crisis today."
Company officialS. say a strike
· professional ones along the way, such have the training,and experience to be
· as receiving a Navy Achievement sua:essful. H~11 also have the memo- could shut the plant and force its
Medal and selection as Sailor of the ric5 and pride that come with serving sale.
Quarter.
011r country.
Continued on
3

w•

Community Corrections
Program conducts IVpalrs
on local cemetery

Today's Sentinel Pollee officer IJCCIJSBd

GALLIPOLIS - The 84 Lumber
corporate· new sletter has recognized
C.W. Snyder Inc., Clary Road, Jack. so n, which hauls the company's
material out of its P,arts!flouth and
Jackson .stores, for outstanding
deliv.
.
ery se rv1ce.
Chad Summers, 84 !cumber's area
man ager, hailed the wor~ don~ ,by
Bob Cun ning ham of C.W. Snyder.
Cunningham and his wife, Sabrina
Snyder Cunningham , reside in Gallipolis.
"Bob always has a great attitude
and docs whatever he is asked," Summers said. "While on a deli very, if
Bub sees ajobsite we arc not selling,
he will give the store manager or

steaHngdlsmonds quits

COLUMBUS (AP) - A police
officer accused of stealing $20,000
in diam.onds from the jewelry story
wbere he worked as an off-duty
security officer has quit ~is job with
the police department.
James Cross, 30, of Newark,
quit Friday after working four years
in the patrol division.
Cross has been on administrative leave since his arrest April Z4
on a theft charge.
The diamonds turned up missing
between April 17 and 20.
Cross .admitted taking the diamonds and having a gambling
problem, said the store's owner,
Elie Hamnoush.

Partlclpanta In Meigs County'• Community Correc11ons
Program were on the job Satur. day at the Syracuse Cemat•ry,
repairing vandalized headstones.
Community Corrections
Director Andy Baer, pictured on
tht backhoe, said that partlcl·
pants In the program, which
ovilraeal those who have been
sentenced to community nrvlce work aa part of their court
sentencu, helped retiet ·o ver 30 ·
atones, and will partonn similar
work In othllt' cem•terlu. The
backhoe Wll donated by Home
Crt111k Ent•rprlses.

·Kosovo conflict and aftermath costing billions Mancharqedintatalcrashot

Couple returns
'
from convention Retirement noted
GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs. C.
Leon Saunders recently attended the
Merle Norman Cosmetics Conven. tion at the Hyatt Regency in Atlanta,
G'a.
• The main topic was "Face the
Future With Long-Lasting Makeup."
Several seminars. were held and
new products were introduced . Next
·year 's convention.will be held in Dallas, Texas, where Mrs. Saunders will
receive her 30-year pin. She and her
husband plan to attend, along with
Christi and Mall Johnson, manager of
Headquarters bf Juanita.

In Houston to take
NL Central lead
-Page4

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Vot"m" '&gt;O N11mh•,r Hi

,

.

Lancaster beats Meigs, Page 4
Ann Landers: Rabid animals, Page 6
Caring for birds as pets part two, Page 6

at Kyger Creek

CHESHIRE - C. Leonard Deal,
an equipment operator at the Ohio
Valley Electric Corp.'s Kyger Creek
Plant.• retired June I after nearly 33
years of service with the company,
Plant Manager Ralph E. Amburgey
announced.
Deal joined OVEC in 1966 as a
laborer in the labor department. in
1967, he transferred to the operations
department as a utility operator. In
1970, he was promoted to auxiliary
equipment operator and in 1976, to
equipment operator.
Deal and his wife, Doris, reside at
2608 Mount Vernon Ave., Point
·
CHESHIRE - Lester Hudson of Pleasant; W.Va.
Cheshire is a new member of the
American Angus Association,
according .to Dick Spader, executive ' Producers Livestock Market
· vice president of the St. Joseph, report from Gallipolis for sales con· Mo.-b.ased national organization.
ducted on Wednesday, June 23.
. The association, with over 31,000
Feeder Cattle.
active adult and junior members, is
200-300# St. $88-$99, Hf. $74the largest beef cattle registry asso, $93, 300-400# St. $75-$94. Hf. $70ciation in the world. Its computerized $84 500-650# St. $70-$84 Hf. $65records include detailed information $77 650-800# St. $'63-$75 Hf. $59on over 13 million registered Angus. $70.

Joins association

PLA results

'

\

·.

\

'

.

py TOM RAUM
.
lion to $4 billion, according to the Center for Strate:
A110.c lated Prall Wrlt•r .
gic and Budgetary Assessments.
·
WASHINGTON (AP)- Waging war with $2 milThe costs are difficult to estimate because the Penlion missiles can run up quite a tab. So can preserv· tagon has not given details on how many munitions
ing peace.
other than cruise mis.siles were used. •
.
NATO's 78-day air campaign against Yugoslavia
Further, the Pentagon plans to upgrade, rather than
cost the United States as much as $4 billion accord- · replace, some of-the cruise missiles and other muni·.
.
,
•
'
•ng to provate and co~grcss1onal esttmat~s.
lions while also increasing stockpiles, center analyst
Annual peacekeeptng and reconstruction expenses Elizabeth Heeter said.
arc expected to run nearly as high - and that
In late May, President Clinton signed an· emer•
assumes the United States will honor· President Clin- gency spending bill that set aside about SS billion for
ton's pledge that "not a penny" will go to rebuild the airstrikea through Sept. 30, if necessary.
Serbia's roads and bridges while Yugoslavia PresiWith the fighting over and warplanes headed
dent Slobodan Milosevic remains in power.
home, the administration hopes to use as much of the.
The U.S. military contributed .to the NATO force remainins IJ!Oney as possible-. about $2 'billion by
more than 725 aircraft, a 'variety of artillery, multi- some estimates- to pay for peacekeepini in Kosovo,
pic-launch rocket systems and about S,SOO support- a province of Yusoslavia's dominant republic Serbia.
ing Army troops.
Tendini to the peace in Kosovo is J:Xpected to run
Clinton called up about S,OOO reservists.
$2 billion to $3.S billion annually, not · includina
U.S. aircraft flew 2 300 missions in the 11 weeks reconstruction Costs, the center says. The international
: of airstrikes. U.S. Nav~ ships fired about 450 Toma- force of 50,000 peacekeepers includes 7,000 U.S.
hawk cruise missiles, at a price of about $1 million a trQOps to help resettle and protect ethnic Albanian
: missile. U.S. Air Force B-52 bombers launched 90 refugees. ,
·
he d cruase
' ouss1
' 'I es, w h'ach .cost a b out $2
Thc Wh'ttc House c h'te f of sta ff, Jo hn Pode sta, sat'd
.· a~r-launc
' aptece.
•
U.S. peace kcepen wt'II bo needed tn
· defi1ntte
· Iy.
mt'II ton
The Pentagon has not put a price on these deployU.S. peacekeepers in a second Balkans hot spot,
. ments or on replacing the_muni!ions they consumed. Bosnia, have cost more than $9. billion. About 6, 700
An Independent research organtzatlon ha!: $2.3. bil- U.S. troops remain in Bosnia, down from a peak of

I

more than 22,000. . .
They are helping to implement the 1995 U.S.-brokercd Dayton peace agreement that ended three years
of fighting by the country's Serbs, Muslims and
Croats.
.
For Kosovo, the administration and congressional
leaders insist the bulk of Western reconstruction aid
.,
must .come fro!D. europe.
. .
.
Wtthout Wllttng for the admmtstr~tton to requ~st a
U.S. share, .the Senate ~pproprtattons Commtttee
voted to p_rovide $535 m1lhon fo~ postwar ~al_kan
reconstructton. Ko~ovo· would recet~e $150 mtlhon,
but the rest of SerbJa would get nothtng.
!-awmakers want the Unhed States to provide about
20 percent of total costs, said Sen. Mitch McConnell,
R-Ky., chairman of the Appropriations subcommittee
on foreign operations and author of the reconstruction
plan .
.
The Senate could take up the measure this week.
The European Commission, administrative arr11 of
the IS-nation E~ropean Union, has estimated the cost
of rebuilding Kosovo at $7 billion for the first three
y4!irs • .It plans to spend up to $722 million on recon · eac h o f th e nex t th ree years.
s1ruet'1on d unna
' depend.•n.t asency has· ~sessed damage
• Wh1'l_e no 1n
.
tn Serbta, Yuaoslav clatms range as htgh as $90 bli lion. F~ct~ries.• railroac!s and bridges bore the brunt of
NATO s .atrstnkes,

thre~vehtc/e crash along 1•76

. LAKE ~ILT~N (AP) - A man has been charged
tn connectton WJtb a c~h that killed three and sent a ·
tanker tr~ck crashtng tnto a lake, the State H1ghway
Patrol srud.
.
.
2
M~arrell g:nkhn: ~ ~f Deca~r, Ill., ; ,as h•.n \he
h ~~dtng edun~y Jat d f ~,r ont c ar~est .0 · vef•cud.ar.
omtct e, spe tng an at tng o matn run a sa e tS·
lance, and he was scheduled for arraignment in the
Austintown branch of Mahoning County Common
Pleas Court, Sheriff's Deputy Tom Halko said.
The crash happened about 9:50p.m. Saturday on
Interstate 76 near Youngstown.
Killed were Ohio resident Janet Freeman, .40. of
Stow, and Larry Smith, 57, and Mary Smith, 49, both
also of Decatur, according to the State Highway
Patrol.
·
The Smiths' tanker truck swerved to miss Freeman's car, which_had slowed ~wn or ~as s!opped'_on
1-76, and drove mto Lake Mtlton, wh•ch stts astrtde
the lTeeway between Akron and Youngstown, the
patrol sai~.
, ·
fF
,
0
Frankhn then_smashed tnto the back
reeman 5
car,Dt~e patrol sadtd.h S . h , bod' f
th
k
·s· dtversf pu 11e t e mtt 5 · tes rom e 1a e·
unThe
ay a temoon.
· who was driving
· the
trol did not know
1 k :'k
an;~:~e.stretch of 1_76 was closed in both directions for 18 hours, the patrol said.

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