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Commentary
~unbq

Peg• M

Reform supporters fighting to the ·end

1rimes· Jeadintl
'Esta!Jfislu4 ill 1966

By WALTER A. MEARS

125 Tblrd AYWiue, Galltpolla, Ohio
740 ue 2342 • Fu: 4411 3008

111 Court SbNt, Pomeroy, Ohio .
740 182·2158 • Fu: 11112-2157

.·
Comm~nlty Newspaper Holdings, Inc.

·

ROBERT L WINGETT

.

Publlah111
01- Hill
· Control!«

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APSp1 ''Corrnpaf't 11
WASHINGTON (AP) - Campaip finance
reform, a cause as dunblc as ill unyielding roes, is
roming up again this fall, with advocatr:s slill trying
to find a path past the perennial Senile Republican
filibuslcr.
Republican leaders agreed to action on bills they
oppose, after the sponsors ·threatened to fora: the
issue, clogging other business on the·crowded "F"'
da just before Congress quit for .Ummer ...,.lion.
So the House will consider an IL'ISOitmenl of four
campaign bills next month, among them one that
would deal with the 'chief latJiel of reformers by
banning the unlimited contributions that now can
Dow into polilical pulies - unrestricted political
money that has become a route around the limits
that cover donations to candidales.
That's the bill that House passed 252 to 179 in
1998, overriding the opposition of. GOP leaders, to
send it to its regular filibuster fate in the Senate. It
never came to a direct vOle thcre,.but a majority did
side with the ~formers on a preliminary step. Their
problem, now as then, is that a majority won't do.
They need 60 votes to stop the talk and f~
action. Opponents, led by Sen. Mitch McConnell,

Risky tax.scheme .!t~~E~ve:~:v::rci:: :~the.::
·

1

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By R•• T.cl Strlcldlmd
. As ~e ofy~u w:!ll remember, 1981 was a difficult time for our country.

stalemate, leaving the loopholed, 25-year-old campaip finance law alone. II limits contributions to

The natton had JUst hmped out of a decade full of political scandal, energy
shortages, high inDation and high unemployment. Out of that desperation,
our country IUrned toward a fiscal experiment that simply failed.
•.
The experifiiCnl centered on massive Ia.&lt; cut to stimulate economic
growth. And, instead of reducing spending to inatch the size of the tax' eli~
spending was actually increased based on the argument that the tax cut .
would lead to such.incredible economic growth that the government would
take in sufficient resources to achieve a balanced budget. And we were tOld
not to worry that mosi of the tax cuts would benefit the wealthy, because the
wealthy's economic galns would "trickle down" to average Americans.
Un.fort~nately, neither of those ·things happened. Because of the large
'
· spendtng tncrease and large tax cut, the federal government's debt quadrupled within a 12 year period Of lime. In fact, our country's debt increased as
much in that brief time span as the entjre debt which had accumulated from
the Presidency of George Washington to the Presidency of Jimmy Carter.
· And, because the government was eating up so much debt, interest rates
remained high, meaning higher mortgage and car payments for American
families and meaning b!lSinesses had less money with which to invest in
themselves or their workers.
. When l'i-esident Qinton took office in the early 90s, the.country was reeling from a recession caused, in pw:t, by the bad economic decisions made in
the 801. Despite its unpopularity ·at the time, the President and Congress
crafted a budget that cut spending, closed corporate loopholes and raised
~me taxes on higher income Am.ericans. At the same time,through·expand-.
mg the Earned Income Tllll Oedit, the budget qffered the biggest tax break
.,
•,
•·
many working families had seen in decades. .
The result was stunning. Interest rates fell . Home ownership went up, and '
loan payments went down. Businesses began investing in their factories and
workers again. The U.S. economy rocketed out of recession. And, in a few
short· years, the federal budget was balanced for the first time since the
1961ls. .
. .
The ,lesson of this success was clear: the best way to insure strong economic growth is to spend wisely and reduce federal deficits. Of course, we ·
must make necessary investments in health care, education and defense. But
we can'! afford to spend wi!dly or sho"(er big tax breaks on .the mo8t well to
do in our society.
·
Sadly, this lesson seems lost on the current le&amp;!ler\.hip in Congress. Last
week, the majority in the house passed an $800 billion tax cut, mostly targeted to the wealthy. They approved this bill despite the history of the 80s
·
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and despite the fact that most economic experts argue we need to reserve
most of our projected surpluses to shore up Social Security and Medicare
aitd retire our multi trillion dOllar debt.
•
·
.. ' By Q.org. A. Plag.nz
According ·to the Center on Budget imd Policy Priorities, a watchdog
DEEP IN THE HEART
group, the bill would actually cost an extra $150 billion in interest payments Ol' TEXAS .. 1 came here to
because it would slow down our ability to pay off the national debt.
· check out the cowboy's song
So th.e actual cost of the tax cut is $932 billion over 10 years. In short, and 1 can tell you thai every
this bill would usc up all of the federal budget surplus .not reserved for Social word is true.
There is "land, lots of land
Security, leavin~ nothing to help solve Medicare's 'impending insolvency.
The only other illternative left would be to slash investments in education, under starry skies above" in
. '
this second-largest state in the
health .care and defense by close to saoo billion.
And, according to analyse's by Cidzens ·for Tax Justice, 69 percent of the country. · "You can ride
lax cut would go to the ' IO percent most wealthy households. At the same through the wide, open countime only nine percel)l of the ~ . cut would go to the bottom 60 percent of try" and be by yourself "in the evenin' breeze and
American families. Obviously this is not a middle class tax·cul.
. listen to the ll)urmur of the cottonwood trees."
Given those statistics, it isn't surprising that the· tax cut gives a generous · "The prairie sky is high an&lt;!·wide and the sage
' · break to big business and special interests. All ·lold, more than $49 billion in in bloom ,is like perfume," just'!'! the song says.
tax cuts would go to this grpup, including: a $24 billion lax break for multi . Best of all, there is no overcrowdiJig. If the
national corporations, $7 billion for a Corporation Capital Grains tax cut, ltme should ever come that you feel elbowed, you
$5.$ billion for the Oil and Gas Industry and so on.
can just saddle old Pain~ move a couple hundred
Taxes are a bllf!len for working families. And 1 8111 pushing a series of tax miles in ·any direction anc! set down new stakes.
cuts aimed at middle income families, including a reduction in ihe marriage There will be nobody to fence you in.
tax penalty. But! remain steadfastly opposed to risky ta.&lt; proposals like the
Overcrowding is one of the major ills of our
o~e the House approved last week, which would threaten Social Security society. It creates perhaps more than anything else
and Medicare, but do very little to help working class folks with their tax the stresses and •strains that bring on a host ·of
bills.
·
physical and mental maladies.
Tlld Strlckr.nclre~.m. th• Sixth Ohio District In 1h• u.s. Houn of
· Overcrowding in schools causes behavioral

candidlles, but the Supreme Court ruled that their
spending can't be limited because that would
infrillll" on fmdom of speech. The oontribljtion
limits are S1,000 for individuals, SS,OOO for political action committees and $25,!XX&gt; to a national
political puty.
·
"But those limits are easily evaded by tltC: unlimited contributions of soft money," said Sen. Carl
Levin, 0-Mich. "We have, in effect, no limits
today...
Sen. John McCain of Arizona, chic( Republican
sponsor of the bill that would ban those unrestricted donations, itgreed.to
deal that promises the
·measure will rome up by Oct. 12 for at least three
days of debate. McCain, a GOP presidential candi·
date, had threatened to snarl Senate action this
month to get something done on the bill.
To avoid that, Sen. Trent L.ott, the majority
leader, offered the agreement for action in the fall,
but with a price on it. The sponsors get one chance'
tp push
bill past the filibuster to a vote. Lott, RMiss., promised them ample time for debate and
' action on amendments, after which the Senate iS 'to
vote on ending the filibuster. Their part of
deal
is that unless they win the 60 votes to do it, they
won't try 14&gt; raise the issue again this year.
Sen. Russell Feingold, D-Wis:, McCain's
cosponsor, said that with "real amendments, real
debate and a real discussion," he thinks the reformers can round up 60 votes, maybe 70.
They've never come close to th~ numbers, not

the

the.

* ' ''

the

the

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'
EDilOR'S NOTE - · WIIJIIIr ...R. MMrw, vice
pr.ldMII Md columnlllt for TIM ANocltrted
PlwH, hu r.ported OR WUhlngton •ncl national polltlc8 for more than 30 y.ara.
·

~~lfR

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Th.e..1•11 s

Tc;d;;·ln History

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Dozens injured in blast
at newly-readied hotel

"I saw people just running and
GRAPEVINE, Te~a&gt; (A P) - A
possible gas leak at a new hotel near pamcki ng," Stacie Duncan said . " I
ZANESVILLE - Mary Bell Denny Burrows, 71. Zanes,ville. formerly
•
of,Apple Grove, W.Va., died Friday, Aug. 6, I 999 in the Good Samaritan Hos·
Dallas·Fort Worth International Air· saw ch1ldren with glass stuck in their
MIDDLEPORT - James "Jim" L. Brewer, 66, Middleport, died Friday, pital, Zanesville, following a brief illness.
port may have led to the explosion legs scream1~g for their parents."
Aug. 6, 1999 m the Charleston Area Medical Center, Charleston, W.Va., afler
that
Born
Dec.
26.
1927
in
Apple
Grove,
daughter
of
the
late
George
William
serio usly burned a1 least one per·
a lengthy illness.
.
and Edith Goldie Chapman Simmons, she was a homemaker. and attended son and lacerated dozens with broken
Born Oct, I I, 19n in Knoxville. Tenn., son of the late Leslie and Gladys the freewill Baptist Church of Zanesville.
gla&lt;s.
Robertson Brewer, he was a construction worker associate~ .,.ith Local 521.
A gas Ime fe cd•ng I he heater for
sons,
Jeffrey
Glen
Nichols
of
Mount
Perry,
Ohio,
and
Surviving
are
two
Hunungton, W.Va.
James Burrows of Frazeysburg; five grandchildren and eight great-grand- the swimming pool at the Embassy
A U.S. Navy veteran of World Warn. he was a former Middleport Vil- children; and two brothers, George William Denny of Delaware, Ohio, and
Suites Outdoor World ho!el might
lage Counctl !'!ember, and a member of the First Baptist Church in Middle- · Charles Denny Sr. of Gallipolis.
have been responsible for Friday 's
·pon.
·
She was also preceded in death by a daughter. Carol June Burrows: and blast, said General ,Manager Bill
.Surviving. are his wife, Mary '.'Poochie" Gilmore Brewer of Middleport; by a brother and two sisters.
Bretches.
,
children~ Judt (Ron) COWIIJI, Terry Brewer and Marybeth (Vaughan) Mitchell,
Services will be II a.m·. Sunday in the Wilcoxen Funeral Home. ·Point
The explosion blew through ali
all of Mtddleport, and Jimmy (Dale) B'rewer of Shepherdstown, W.Va.; five Pleasant, W.Va., with the Rev. Lee Baird officiating. Burial will be in the
exterior wall and the hotel 's gift.shop
grandchtldren; a s1ster, Margaret Ann (Larry) Wilham of Xenia; and sever- Beale Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove. Visitation was held in the f~neral home. in ~he pool area·of the hotel, which
al COUSinS.
opened Tuesday.
on Saturday.
He was also preceded in death by an infant son, Michael Lee Brewer;.and
Bretches smd I he heater was being
his stepmother, Pemie Brewer.
"
serviced by a contractor, who was the
Graveside services will be I p.m. Sunday in the Riverview Cemetery, Midmost severely injured by the blast.
POMEROY - Dorothea Fisher. 84. 200 Lincoln Hill. Pomeroy. died
dleport , with Woody Call officiating. There will be no calling hours. ArrangeThe worker was airlifted to a Dallas
Thursday, Aug. 5, 1999 in the extended care unit of Veterans .Memorial Hos·
ments are by the Fisher F~neral Home in Middleport.
·
hospital where he was listed late Fri·
In li~u of Dowels, donations may be made to one of the following orga- pi taL
day in serious condition with secondBorn Jan. 19, 1915 in Gallia County, daughter of the la1e Roy D. and Nina degree bums over his face and arms.
Now
nizations: PIGS, A Sanctuary, P.O. Box 629, Charleston, W.Va. 25414, or the
Faye
Ewing
Rothgeb,
she
was
a
former
employee
in
the
office
at
Kaiser
AluMeigs Band Boosters, Meigs Local High School, 42091 Pomeroy Pike,
"The first 'crews on the scene
.
.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. .
·
·
'
mmum.
they~
reported
some sort of gas release ,··
.
.
.
'
,,
She was a member of the Sacred .Heart Catholic Church, the 'rounder of . said Sandy.Smith ofTXU Electric &amp;
the Meigs County Humane S~iety, an~ a member of the Calhol~ Women's
Gas, the local gas ulihl'y. "We don 't
Club and Dominican Associates . .
ha~e any indication of th at yc1 . bu1 il
Surviving is a granddaughter, Rachel Mosher.
SYRACUSE - Marjorie Lou Ferrell, 67, Syracuse, died Saturday, Aug.
could be that one of th e workers in ad·
She was also preceded in death by her. husband. Clinton Fisher; and a
.1, 1999, following a lingering illness.
'vertently cu t a gas line and il ex plod·
Lucy Amsbary. ·
··
·
daughter,
Born Sept. 26, 1931 in Charleston, W.Va., daughter of !he late Leo and
ed."
·
Services will be 10 a.m. ·Monday in the Sacred Heart Church, with Rev.
Mary Elizabeth Jarrell Reed, she was a homemaker, and attended the Ash
Wilnesses said they smelled gas
Father Walter Heinz officiating. Burial will be in the Sacred Hean Cemeboth before and after 1he blast.
Street Freewill Baptist Church in MiddlepOrt.
Chief David Anderson of the
Surviving are two sons, Reed Oudy) Ferrell of Cummings, Ga., and James tery. Friends may call at the Ewing Funeral Home. Pomeroy, from 7-9 p.m.
Sunday.
.
.
Grapevine
Fire Deparlment said eight
R. Ferrell of Racine; three daughters, Mary (Mel) Fry of New Haven, W.Va.,
ser~ice
will
be
held
in
the
funeral
home
at
8:30p.m.
Sunday.
A
vigil
other victims we re taken to hospitals
Trina (Dick) Davis of Syracuse, and Teresa (Donald) Icenhower of Bell, Fla.;
for treatment of cuts . and burns.
five grandchildren, five stepgrandchildren, four great-grandchildren and six
About two dolen ol her peopl,c were
step-great:grandchildren; a brother, Leo Shearer of Michigan; and/ive sistreated by ·p aramedics at the sce ne -for .
ters, Fawn Adkins of Ripley, W.Va., Fronnie S(oyer of West Virginta, Freda
HENDERSON, Ky. - Dorothy Irene Plantz, 74, Henderson, Ky., died
Lacy of Sharon, W.Va., Norma HanshawofPocatalico, W.Va., and Lois Per- Thursday, Aug .' 5, 1999 in the Communify Methodist Hospital. Henderson. · ..cuts primarily caused by tl yi ng glass.
A Texarkana woman was in a
rY ()f Maryland.
.
·
.
.
following i brief illness.
.
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glass elevator 'overlooking the ppol
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Dtlford W. Fenell; an
Born Oct 25. 1924 .in Lithopolis, Ohio, daughler of the late William Weswhen the explosion took place .
infant son. Dilford Douglas Ferrell; and two brothers, John Shearer and . ley and Allie Neville Crawford. she was a nurse's aide, and a member of the
Orville Shearer.
Church of God in Springfield.
.
•IIIICD.-!1~ Rllll
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the Fisher Funeral Home in Po'meroy,
Surviving are rwo daughters, Marifyn Salyer of Bowling Green, Ky. , and
•Ern l!aiD!IIII
with the Rev. Leslie Hayman and the Re~. Mark Morrow officiating. Burial Vivian Haire of Henderson; three sons. Marian David Plantz of Troy, Jghn
•fl'll 1st-.
will be in the Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home Plantz of Henderson, and Wayne Plantz of Santa Claus. Ind.; 22 grandchil•NI CIIIIJ'Ictl
from 6-9 p.m. 'Sunday.
dren and 17 great-grandchildren; lwo sisters, Barbara Harbour of Gallipolis
• Ttl fl'll TICII
•KaUe Miller, Mgr.
Ferry, W.Va., and Marjorie Wieser of Amarillo, Texas ; and two brothers,
luppDI't-AVIIIbll
Howard Crawford of Point Pleasant, W.Va. , and William W. Crawford of
520 W. Maio St.
24f7
. Apple Grove, w.va:
'
,
.•llddltlanll Emllll
Pomeroy, 0
She was also preceded in death by a brother, John W. Crawford.
•Dill Up IICCIII
Graveside servi·ces will be 2:30p.m. Sunday in the Apple Grove Memo~Web Hllltllg'
Ncar Ma11on Bridle .
rial Gardens, with the Rev. Bud Hatfield officiating . Visitation ·waS' held 'in
•Unllmlll~ IICCIII
the Wilcoxen Funeral Home, Point Pleasant, on Satu!'liay.
·· · •
E •IIVIIIIbll In JICklln
IRd Glllll CaUntlll
T

James 'Jim' L. Brewer

•

-DQrothea Fisher

Our Memorial&amp;
are Easy to
appreciate.
re also
easier to afford!

.M,a rjori·e Lou Ferrell

Summer
Sale ·

•'

Now In·ProFe••

Dorothy Irene Plantz

· Qy·e~~~~

stahlarlltlusa.net

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and ·J•0 y 8 . .··--•
and learning problems. .
Much of our crime, social scientists say, can bci
laid to. the stresses of overcrowding in our ghettos
and central cities. Wars are fought over lack of
Lebensraum-- space needed for life and growth.
Karl Lorenz, the German scientist, said, "I
strongly doubt that You can con d't'
tton man so th at
he does not become nervous and neurotic when he
is crowded...
Lorenz says it has been his experience ·that
"people who live miles from the n\l8fest neighbors and are not overwhelmed by human contacts
show· the greatest human kindness." He tells a
story from the days when he lived in crowded
Munich,
··
"We had as house guests," he says, "an Americari couple who lived in the wilds of Wisconsin.
Just as we sat down to supper the doorbell rang,
and I, who was overfed with hum1111 conlacts, said
with irritation, 'Who is that now?'"
His guests, says Lorenz, were shocked.
"To be less than overjoyed when the doorbell
rang was incomprehensible to these people who
lived deep in the country. It made me realize how
much I had become a victim of overcrowding."

.

MIDDLEPORT- James "Jim" L. Brewer. 66, of Middleport, died on
Friday, August 6, 1999 'in the Charleston Area Medical Center, Charleston,
West Virginia, after a lingering illness.
He w.as- born on Ociober II, 1932 in knoxville, Tennessee, son of the late
Leslie and Gladys Robertson ~rewer. .
.
·
.
, He was a U.S. Navy veteran of World War II , ~ former Counctl member
of Middlepon Village, a member of the .First B~pust Church m Mtddlepon,
and he was a construction worker assoctated wtth Local 52 I tn Huntington,
West Virgi'nia.
•
· .
· lie is survived by his wife, Mary "Poochie" Gilmore Brewer of Mtddleport;· children. Judi (Ron) Cowan of Middleport, J.immy (Dale) Brewer of
Shepherdstown , West Virginia, Terry Brewer of Mtddleport. and Marybeth
(Vaughan) Mitchell of Middleport; five grandchtldren, Ryan and Sam COIN·
an of Huntington, West Virginia, Melissa and Kelh Brewer of Mt~&lt;!lepon, ·.
and Bre Mitchell of ¥iddleport; a sister. Margaret Ann (Larry) Wttham of
Xenia; and several cousins. ·
,
.
·. .
in addition to his parents, ~e was precede&lt;! tn deatl) by an tnfant son.
Michael Lee Brewer; and his stepmother, Pernte Brewer.
·
.
.
Graveside services will be I p.m. Sunday, AugustS, 1999.at the RivervieW
Cemetery in Mi~dlepon, with Woody Call officiating. The~ will be no call'ing hours . Arrangements are by the Fisher Fu11eralliome m Mtddleport. ,
· In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to ·one of the followmg organizations : PIGS, A Sanctuary, P.O. Box 629, Charleston, West Vtrgtnta 25~14,
or the·Meigs Band Boosters, Meigs Local High School, 42091 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy,' Ohio 45769.
·

ofcrowd·s

·

·Anna Mary Simmons
.

James 'Jim' L. Brewer

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But, though Lorenz is right, 'it probably ou gh t
to be said that the reason we dislike crowding is
that by and large we dislike the people who arc
crowding us. People are a problem for us.
We were friends once with a family who had
13 children. The last time we .were at their house
• supper, 2 1 of us crowded. happily around 1wu
.or
lables in the kitchen to eat-- the 15 in their rami ly and our six.
And I decided then, that much ·as I like a lot of
room, I would rather be in a small room with a
happy family of 15 than' in a·large room with one
person I don't particularly like.
,
To be crowded by someone you love can be
very pleasant. Or, to put it another way, "When
she sits close, that's not crowding." ,
I once got a card on Father's Day from one of
my boys who penned these words: "May guuJ
company continue to surround you. Company i&gt;
thought's best sustenance -- and stimulus. " ,
Here we may have the formula for the ideal
life-- good company and plenty of room .. Texas
style or even a little bit smaller.
·

James Robert Wamsley
POMEROY - James Robert Wamsley, 67, of Pomeroy, died at his residence on Friday, August 6, 1999, following a lengthy illness with cancer.
He was .born·on February 28, 1932 in Henderson, West Virginia, the son
of Clarence Wamsley and Zoa Patterson Wamsley.
He served in the Korean ConDict frot;n Fenruary 1950 unti.l April 1957. ·
He retired in 1987 from RACC, Ravenswood , West Virginia, where he was
in the Casting Department and Reduction Yards and Grounds Maintenance.
He was a member of the American Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39, the
Mason VFW, and the Lemanhaw Sportsman Club in Warden ville.• West Vir·
gtnta.
He is survi~ed by his wife of 40 years, Alice FisherWamsley of P,qmeroy;
a daughter and son-in· law, June Ann· and Mark Rhodes of Parkersburg, West
Virginia; a son and daughter-in-law, J.R. and Barbara Wamsley of Pomeroy;
grandchildren, Douglas and Holly Rhodes of Racine, and Michael and Elisa
Beth Wamsley of, Racine; father and stepmother, Clarence and Mae Wamsley of clinon, West Virginia; brothers and sister-in-law, Denver and Ann
Blake of Clifton, West Virginia, Eugene Wamsley of Newark, and Jolm Warnsley of Clifton, West Virginia; sisters, Leona Smith oflndianapolis, Indiana,
Bonnie Wamsley and Sue Wamsley of Columbus, and Dorothy Blake of Point
Pleasant, West Virginia; brothers· in-law and sisters-in-law, Tom and Helen
Fisher of Cambridge, and Jim and LouiseSmith of Baltimore, Maryland; several nieces and nephews ; a special friend. Brandy Snyder; an~ many other
friends . ·
He was preceded in death by his mothcf'r; Zoa Patterson Wamsley.
· Services will be 5 p.m . .Monday, August 9, 1999·in the Fisher Funeral
Home in Pomeroy, with the Rev. Connie Faires officiating. Friends may call
atthc funeral home on Sunday, ""-'gust 8, 1999, from 6' 8 p.m .. and on Monday, August9. 1999 from 3:30p.m. until the time of the service at 5 p.m.
In lieu of flowers, ¢ontributions may be made to the Amencan Cancer
Society-Meigs County Unit, P.O. Box 703, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Copyrlght1111 NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

.

On Hil.lary: Let the·first la.d y speak!

By TM AMoclllt.cl Pr••
By Chrl~ Mlltt"-w• ·
. · knows the kind of family. baclcground he came
·: Today is Sunday, Aug. 8; the 220th day of 1999. There are 145 days left
: Washmgton-- If th~ truth hur_ts, lh\s is the city from.
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·
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m·the ye'!'. . .
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·
. Wtth lhe.lowest threshold of pam. J;iillary offers
"And I thtnk she has consulted psychologists
Today s Htghhghttn•Htstory :
,
,
· the c~dtd ~em ark that her husbands
who have told her that someone
On Aug. 8, 1974, President Nixon announced he would resign following ~havlor. mtght ~ connected to cerfrom that ba~kground, unless they
taln ~amtl&gt;: conDtcts at an .early age.
have therapy and intensive therapy,
new ~aging revelations in the Watergate scandal.
On thts date:
l'eanng disaster, the Whtte House
that he has not be able to have, will
In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte set sail for St. Helena to spend the remain- "war room" sends out the orders to
act out in that particular way.
der of his days in exile. · .
.
.
search ~~ destroy.
.
..
"I think she was saying to me
In 1876, Thomas A. Edtson receiVed a patent for his mimeograph.
Leadmg .the charge ts James The
this explains why she can forgive
In 1942, six convicted Nazi saboteurs who'd landed in the United States Ragtn' Cajun" Carville, who has
him, why she can separate his
were executed in Washington, D.C.; two others were sentenced to fife offered a reward of $100,000 "t~ any
behavior from his love for her, and
' imprisonment.
.
re~lrler ~ho can show that Ht!lary
that his behavior is rooted in lust
In 1945, President Truman signed the United Nations Charter; The Sovi- · Cl.. nton hnked the. pre~ident's sexual
and paihology where his love for
el Union declared war against Japan during World War II.
mtsconduct wtth hts chtldh~."
her is enduring.
·
· In 1953, the United ·States and South Korea initialed a mutual security
. I sugge~t that Carv1lle gtve first
"We have marriages where
pact. .
·
·
dtbs. on hts Jambalaya jackpot. to.
there are needs and lacks and all
In 1963, in what became known as Britain's Great Train Robbery, thieves Luctnda Franks, t~e Talk magazme
sorts of strange connections. So
made off with 2.6 million pounds in bank notes.
reporter who, unhke h1m, actually
why should the first lady and the
In 1968, Richard M. Nixon was nomi·nated for president at the Republi- was prese~t when the firs~ lady. spoke
HILLARY CUHTOH
·first couple be held to these strict
can national convention in Miami Beach, Fla.
of the tenstons between Btll Omton's
Ozzie and Harriet standards?"
In 1973, Vice President Agnew branded as "damned lies" reports he had ?,'other .~nd grandmot~er that she believes
What on God's earth is wrong with that? How
taken kickbacks from government contracts in Maryland and vowed not to
scarred. the future prestdent .
.
can anyone, ·certainly any married adult, not .
reslan- which he eventually did.
.
I~ potnt of fact, Ms. Fran~ ts qutte clear on .. empathize fully with Mrs. Qinton's deep-seated
In 1978, the United Slates launched Pioneer Venus II, which carried sci- the ltnk the first lady was making about what hap- desire to understand Mr. ClintOn?
ontific probes to study the atmosphere of Venus.
·
r,ned .to ~hn'?n lit age 4 .and what .~arville calls
She loves the guy. She believes he lol(es her.
Ten years ago: .The space shuttle Colut;nbia blasted off from Cape
t~~ prestdent s sexual m!sc?"duct.
.
She sees how he behaves and betrays. She tries to
Clnaveral, Fla., on a secret, five-day military mission.
I asked her. the questt?n that e~eryone wants find an explanation in her husband's emotional
Five years ago: Israel and Jordan opened the first road link betWeen the to know: Why ts she stayt~g wt~ lhts man who development.
two once-warring countries.
has..betray~ her so many. limes?'
.
We can buy Hillary's hypothesis or debunk it.
One year ago: President Clinton, in his Saturday radio address, vowed the
. She answered that thts ~!"~yal has roots tn a ~at we can't do is deny the human riddle she's.
bombers of two U.S. embassies in Amca would be brought to justice, "no chtl.dhood that was so chaottc tits remarkable that trytng so desperately to solve: how this guy she
.he ts abl~ to get ~~ every d~y an.d do wh~t he loves can bring her so much pain.
matter how long it takeJ or where it takes us."
"He was so young, barely 4~' she told Ms.
Today's Birthdays: Jazz· musician Benny Carter is 92. Actress Rosella does. I thtnk .her abl~tty to ~o~gtve ~tm for h1s sexLeNoire is 88. Producer Dirio DeLaurentiis is 80.
ual compulsiOns, hts addlcttons, ts because she Franks in the interview, "when he was scarred by

'

ny Burrows

'

even when t)le campaign reform issue was dran&lt; a
tized and driven by Democratic fundraising abuse&gt;
and Republican investigations of illicit roreign
donations in 1996.
Since then, the reformers have narrowed thoJr
aims, to
soft money ban, stronger disci"'""
requirements, and regulation of what are cnlkd
issue Ids. Those are campaign commercials pairll · .
by inrcrest groups which avoid the ci?ntribution I! "'
its because they do nOI directly advocate the eke
tion or de~eat of a candidate. They do so without
saying so,
.
,
Earlier campaip bills sought to curb polllir ..l
~ion rommlttees, and to have the governmenl P' ',.
vide incentives to candidates who would agree t '
limit their campaign spending.
·
That hasn't placated opponents. "The Ameri&lt;a" .
people do n01 need. government speech polic&lt; :totaling what, where, when and how they can
about issues," said Rep. Tom DeLay, the GOI '
whip.
House Speaker Dennis Hasten said carnpaogn
'legislation will be considered the week of Sept. 13.
his timetable held after a petition drive by tlw ·
reformers stalled.short of the majority ii would have
taken to force earlier action.

.

'.,

Sunday, August 8, 1999

~· Auguat., 1m

a6use that he can't even take it out and look at ·it
There was terrible conflict between his mothe; .
and his grandmother.
"A psychologist once told me that for a boy
being in the middle of a conflict between two
women .is the worst possible situation, " Mrs .
Clinton continued "There is always the de sire 1.,
please each one."·
What are we supposed to believe the first laJ
was talking about here? The 'boss's ''one Chin · ~
policy?
'
"
(Chrl• Mltlh-•, chief of th• San Francisco
Exlmln•r•a w..hlngton Bur•au 11 host or
"Hardllllll" on CNBC cabl• chann~la.)
Capyrlghttllt NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Letter to the editor
Village junkyards

C~LLING ~ll

MEIGS COUNTY
..\RTISTS! .

I was reading the newspaper about lh c
Pomeroy Village Council meeting. It said that Mr.
Musser was commenting about junk cars pil iug
up behind Searles Service Station on West Maiu
Street. He said that the area could not be ·used a;
a junk yard. Well, I would like to know. if a ser..
vice station cannot be a junk yard how can some·
one have one behind their hou~. Mr. Musser'! 1
live on Butternot Avenue and next door to me i&gt;a
junk yard. I ~ave to. see it every day. We hnvc
"':"n at counctl meetmgs and everything but it b
still there. So why hasn't something been done
about it?
Edna Buchanan

Are you interested in partivipating in Meigs
County's" Artisans of Appalachia" product
brochure?
··

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'

LAKIN, W.Va.- Anna Mary Simmons. 89. Lakin, died Thursday, Aug.
5, 1999 in the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
.
She was boi.n July I, 1910, the daughter of the late Harvey Simmons.
Services will be 10 a.m. Monday in the Lakin Chapel, with the Rev. Ben
Stevens officiating. Burial will be in the Lakin Cemetery. There will be no
'' vi~itation . Arrangements are by the Wilcoxen Funeral Home.

Pomeroy

"

c•

HAVING
FINDING SHOES
THAT FIT CORRECTLY?
CALL

V. Clay Tuttle
MIDDLEPORT - Virgil Clay Tuttle, 89, Middlepon, die,d Friday, Aug.
6 1999 in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
,
' Born Sept. 19, 1909 on Silver ~dge , Orange Township, Meigs County.
son of the late Walter and Mae Hoffman Tuttle, he retired from the fonner
Gallipolis Motor Co. as general manager, and was in automobile sales for
over 60 years
·
He attended the Middlepon Church of Christ.
· He was also preceded in death by hi s wife of 58 years, Geneva Faye Tuttle, on March 25, 1999; a brother, Veri Tuttle ; and two sisters, Vida Parrish
and Vesta Tuttle.
·
.
,
·
·
SurViving are two sisters, Flora Marie Gibson of Middleport, and Verneda Hartung of Chester; and several nieces and nephews.
.
.
Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the Fisher Funeral Home 1n Middleport, with Bill Frazier•officiating. Burial will be in the Tuppers Plains·Christian Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 6·8 p.m.
Monday . .

One only

On&amp; only

Stock #t074

Stock Nt069

·James Robert Wamsley
POMEROY- James Robert Wamsley, .67. Pomeroy, died Friday, Aug.
6, 1999 at his residence, following a lengthy illness. ·

Born Feb. 28, 1932 in Henderson, W.Va., son of Clarence Wamsley of
Clifton. W.Va., amd the late Zoa Patterson Wamsley, he retired in 1987 from
RACC, Ravenswood. W.Va.
· A veteran of the Korean Conflict, he was a member of the American
Legion Drew Webster Post 39, the Mason VFW, and the Lemanhaw Sports·
man Club in Warden ville, W.Va.
'
Surviving in addition to his father. are his wife of 40 years ,. Alice Fisher
Wamsley; a daughter, June Ann (Mark) Rhodes of Parkersburg, W.Va. ; a son ,
J.R. (Barbara) Wamsley of Pomeroy ; four grandchildr~n; his stepmother, Mae
Wamsley of Clifton; three brothers and sister-in-law, Denver (Ann) Blake
and John Wamsley, both of Clifton, and Eugene Wamsley of Newark; four
sisJers, Leona Smith of lndianapoli~. Ind., Bonnie Wamsley and Sue Wamsley. both of Columbus, and Dorothy Blake of Point Pleasant, W.Va ..; brothers-in-law and sisters-in-Jaw, Tom and HelenFisher of Ca"1bridge, and Jtm
and Louise Smith of Baltimore, Md.; and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be 5 p.m. Monday in the Fisher Funeral Horne in Pomeroy,
with the Rev. Connie Faires officiating. Friends may call at the funeral home
from 6-8 p.m. Sunday, and on Monday frpm 3:30p.m. until the time of the
In lieu of tlowers, contributions tnay be made to the American Cancer
SocietY;· Meigs County Unit, P.O. Box 703, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
'
-·'
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�Sports

Sunclay, AugtMt 8, 1999

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

Fair's Friday sales total -nearly_$180,000
.continued flvm pege A 1
steers,•· Dee! said, adding that the quality of the liveSiock projects oontinues to improve.
•we had some excellent .r omments from all the
judges about how the quality of liveSioclr., down the
line from the U.Jlper to the lower end, was excellent, • he

CLEANING UP - Eleven-y....-old Andy Duty of
· Gmllpolls cl•ns. out ths stall whers "his nwllet
stHr 1"7 houHII during ills 10011 Gslllll County
Junior Fslr. Duty's etssr plscsd MIIMoUoln ths com. pstlllon snd hs _,~ $1.00. psr pound for ths anlmsl PI 1817. Duty, s membsr' of tho 'Muskstssrs 4-H
Club, slso hsd s market hog for lhow. Ths hog
!Jiscsd 10th In lt8 ciSSI.

Sot I

By DAVE GOLDBERG

loon by his 17-y&lt;ar old son, , Almost as emotional was the
CANlON, Ohio (AP) Lawrence Taylor Jr. - called TJ. by induction of Newsome, lhc leading
lawrence Taylor ...,med 10 he giv- friends and Wnily.
receiver among tight ends. He played
ong homself a pep talk ahout turning
"If I could pick anyone lo be my his en_tire &lt;;aRer with the Oeveland
around his troubled life right then: on fatbco'. I'd pick lawrence Taylor." · Browns, but as the team's personnel
the stage during his Pro Foolball Hall T J . said. That prompted his Dad to director moved to Baltimore when
of Fame induction.
·
say:
owner Art Mod&lt;ll moved the fran"Anyone can quit," said Taylor,
··r had a bel with Bill Parttlls-that cbise thoR.
who despite drug. money and family I wouldn't cry. 1 almost lost the "bet
Modell was booed when his
problems became one of the greatest there."
image appeao ed on the big screen
defensive players in history. "A Hall
of Farner doesn't quit: A Hall of
Farner realius the crime is not being
knocked down. The crime is not getting up again."
Taylor. one of just two defensive ·
players ever to be league MVP and
the leader of the New VIlli&lt; Giants
tearns that won Super Bowls in 1987
and 1991 , was one of five ex-players
inducted Saturday. .
.
·
The orloers were Eric Dickerson,
the NFJ.'s third leading career rusher;
Tom Mack,' a guard who played 13
years for .the · Los Angeles Rams;
Ouie Newsoine. a tight end for the
Cleveland Browns; and Billy Shaw, a
guard for the Buffalo Bills from
1961-69 who became the first Hall of
Forner oo spend his entire career in
the old American F001ball League.
But Taylor, whose electiOII last
January was preceded by several
weeks of controversy because of his
drug arrests and suspensions. was
clearly the star of the show.
Cheered on by a large conli~gent
of New York· fans chanting,." LT. LT,"
10011 INDUCTEES - This yesr's Pro Footbsll Hall of Fame
he seemed ready. to make peace with
induc:IHB
pose for (lhaloa by fsmily, friends and ths meclls shortly
his troubled past.
sftsr
..-lYing
lhelr busts st lhe Induction ceremony Saturdsy at the
And it started with the introduc·

'

Married couples fare best in analysis .of GOP tax cut
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
rich might get the most money back
from the Republican tax cut, but
married couples with incomes of
$100,000 or Jess ~ould see the
largest percentage reduction in
income taxes.
The 10-yea,r, $792 billion tax cut
approved by Congress would have
widely differing effects on individual
taxpayers, depending on their marital
' status, number of children, invest·
ments and claimed deductions,
according to an analysis by the
Deloihe &amp;Touche accounting firm .
In terms of total dollars, the
weallhiest taxpayers ·would 'get the
most money back - about 60 percent of the overall cut would go to
, the top 10 percent income bracket.
But married couples of middle- and
upper-middle class incomes would
benefit from the largest percentage
cut in taxes owed.
In the Republican analysis.
DeloiHe &amp; Touche found .t/tat marritd couples earning between
$50,000 and SIOO,IXXJ - with or
without children - would see tax

Section

8

;. • -r t l , -

Taylor joins Newsome, Mack in Pro Football Hall of Fame

said.
During the sales, the prices for Sl&lt;ers and lambs
only occasionally dipped below $1 per pound. That
average helped keep prices up throughout the sales,
Dcel added.
"It's a tremendous donation bact to the youth of the
community,• he said.
With Saturday's hog sale, the number of projects
sold totaled 521, up from the 498 sold laSt year, Deel
noted.
Deel said be was enoouraged by the recognition 4H projects receive during the fair. For the second year.
Holzer Oinic issued cash ·awards to ;non-liveSiock
youth projects, another example of.the community's
interest in youth activities, he added
• As I think bact on this week in my travels around
. the fairgrounds, it's a positive experience for kids to be
recognized for their ac~ievements, to reward them for
their excellent work, • Deel said.
The sales were one of ,the highlights of Friday's
activities as the fait entered its final phase. A pretty
baby contest sponsored by the Gallipolis Junior
Women's Club W'IS held earlier, while evening were
topped off by the OSTPA Sanctioned Tra&lt;;tor Pull and
a performance by Bittersweet, a-local group.
The hog sale and a Farm Bureau talent show started
off. Saturday's schedule of events. This year's fair
wrilpped up in .the evening with the demolition' derby.
NICE BUNNY - KM8Iyn B)nnr, '-It, of GsWp oils
a performance by Common Ground, and a golden pels one of the fww ,.....nina rallblls 111ft In the bam
anniversary trib~te marking the fair's 50th year.
on Friday wenlng Ill the Glillll Counly Junior ~r.

'

'

reductions of 6.8 percent to 17.9 per~
Keating said opponents of the capital gains tax ani! standard deduc- . DUR NIMIITAR CUIIOMIR,
IAIUIAII¥-. . . Of.
·
cent if the Republic;on tax bill Slate tax cuts - "mostly Democ- tions would owe $4,199 in income
became law today.
rat5" - predicled that "doom and taxes, compared with $4,479 ·under
IIOWI
Single people in those same gloom would descend i( Slate gov- current law. Tbat's a 6.2 percent cut
·
.. income categories, however, would ernments Jet taxpayers keep a few · and a savings of $280.
Giw uo your MIMIIS1U
' -A married ·couple with no chilreceive a tax cut of 4.4 percent to 5.8 extra dollars. Well, those stale govbill
giw you a
· percent.
eniments are still in business - in dren earning · $48.500 a year and
lUI DISH NEIWOIK
. . with ileniThis is panly because lawmakers ' fact, they're 'being .run more effi- $1,500 in capital gainsDIGITAL $A1ILLITE TV Sl51IM,
targeted the "marriage penalty" now ciently than ever before. Ahd the cit- ized deductions of $12,500- .would
INSTAllS)*
paid by millions of two-income cou- izens of those states are enjoying real owe $4,405, down from $4,725, a cut
of 6.8 percent and savings of $320..
pies by proposing to double tlie stan- prosperity."
-A married couple with two
dard deduction for joint tax tilers and
The Republican bill, which Presiincreasing ihe amount of income dent Ointon on Friday again threat- children under age 17 earning ·
6FRBMON1HS
subject to the loweS! inoome tax rate ened to veto as too large, would $72,750 and $2,250 in capital gains
OUMRICA'S
10P40'
with
$15,750
in
,ilernizeddeductions
-currently .15 percent but 14 per- make dozens of changes to tax Jaws
PIIOQIIAM'IWIIl MQ('I,Gf
cent under the GOP bill.
affecting individuals and business, · would owe $5,643, down from
VAWID AT $19.99 . . MONTHI
, In addition, married couples with . • but I he analysis focUsed on the sec- $6,734. Thai's a 16.2 percent lllll cut,
CAflwWFt .... ,_.. ... ...,
·
·
chi14ren, and 'those wilh children in' lions that would affect the greatest or $1,091.
\-A married couple with one
college, can lower their taxes under number of people.
Clo
fni.l . l . . afPIIII
I I ..U ' ' I S :..."-'current law by claiming $500-a..:hild
These include a 1-percentage- child under 17 and one in college,
• C 'w •I
...
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
ml
·
s
dp;111
Is
·
and' education tax credits. Those point reduction in all five income tax earning $100,1XXJ a year including ·
creditS would not change.
rates. a doubling of lhe standard $3,000 in capital gains - and
Oklahoma Go¥. Frank Keating, deduction for married people; a $20,1XXJ in' itemized deductions delivering the Republitan Party's widening of the lowest tax bracket would owe $11,165; down from
weekly radio address today, said his for married people and a cut in capi- $12,984. That's a drop of 14 percent,
·,fellow GOP state executives have led tal gains taxes on investments from or $1,819.
'411ea..ka" '
-A married oouple with no chitthe way in cu!ting tax by recognizing 20 percent to 18 percent.
that "your tax dollars belong to you
'Although the cuts . would be
- not us." '
phased in between 2000 and 2009 including $30,1XX) in capital gains,
and are not fully in effect until the with $153,798 in ,i!Cmized deducfinal year, Deloitte &amp; Touche exam- tions would owe $292,517, down
ined what would happen if all from S302,3n. Thai 's a cui of 3.3
states over five years, Wilson said.
changes were in place for the &lt;;JJrrent peocent, or S'-!,861.
Occasionally. they would stop at a
1999 tax year.
home they maintained in Sevierville,
Here~alookatfivedifferentsce-.-~:::::-. . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . .~. . . . . .~::~----~"11
Tenn.
·
narios
if lhe GOP tax cut proposals
•
Jeep
Boone, 52, and Reeves, 36, were
were in effe&lt;;t:
in Findlay Municipal Court Friday
-A single taxpayer with no chilon a charge of receiving stolen propAymdren earning $35,1XXJ a year with no
erty,

GREAT RIWARDS

anc1-·•

showing highlights.
But Newsome "as roundly
cheered by lhc "Dowg Pound." the
famous Oeveland fan · secuoo that
,.,;n be re'ived when the nc;w expansion Browns begin pl~y litis season.
And be .. on them over completely
when be coocluded his induction
speech by saying:
"There iS a cause for ecldDtion.

O.cka-son ·s turn.
"'The last few days we taltcd
about ,.·ho was going 10 f&lt;qet someone." Dockersoo said. lootiAJ
toward •ilere Shaw's wife was sirung .
"'Pat Shaw would you please
stand up." She did. to applause aad
laughter.
Taylor. the last of the five 10 be
inducred. On hand were bis parents,
his ex: wofe and his three ehildreu 10
whom he said: " Thank you for
putting up with me for all !hose

Today we hSV&lt;: that caust because m
1999. there is f001ball back on the
lalr.efrooL There' s a song that's been
playing tn my head for the paso three
of.four hours . It 's ' H~re we go
.again.".. .
.
As usual. there "as some lenty.
After Shaw thanked his cluldren.
coaches. emplo)m and just about
e\'eryone ' but his dog. · it ' was

,years.
He• also got emotional when be
saw Harry Carson. his former learnmate -..ho had openly criticized
Tavlor 's off-focld conduct.
·· .. Thao ·s clas&gt; ."" Taylor said to
Carson. ··11ove you. man.".
Taylor said the three people who
most influenced his career with the
Giants from 1981-93 were Parcells •
. who coachc:d him: George Yoong,
the · general manager then, and
Wellington Mara the owner.
· He paid spectal tribute to Mara
who tned oo help Tallor with his
drug problems. sayong:
'' He probabl) cared 'more ahout
me as a person .than he really should
have·.··
Buo the final . most touching oribule ~;as from Taylor's 0" '" son.
" You peop,e:· TJ. said. poiil!ing
oo bleacher'S full of fans 'wearing
Giants ' number '" 56 .. shirts . .. love

Pro Footbsll Hsll of Fsme In Canton, Ohio. From left to rightsre Billy him for being LT, I )O\'e htm not for
Shaw, Eric Dickerson, Tom Msck, Ozzie Newsome snd Lawrence being LT- but for being Lawrence
Taylor. (AP)
Taylor. my father ...

:illiliii,t.

•

,_.~~,.~~·;~I~S~=~==· ...

-

'

Couple's antique scam hit 11 states
. FINDLAY (AP) - A husband
and wife . stole thousands of ml·
lectible items from antique stores
across the nation with the unknowing help of their 5-year-old daughter,
authorities said.
Police Lt. Chuck Wilson · said
Terri Lynn Reeves would distract
store operators while husband DOnald Boone would gnib the loot. Their
daughter would sometimes hold the
door for dad, Wilson said.
They would then · sell items
including p&lt;ittery, expensive paint: ·
ings and old jewelry to stores in
other towns.
"It apparently was their liveli"
hood," Wilson said Thursday. "During the past five yea,;, we believe
they pretiy much lived 0 n the road,

from ·motel to· Tnotel."

,

it\

"

«)

.

Vision plays an important role in helping
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treatment of probl~ . ns that may interfere with a
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lifetime of learning

Police arrested the pair Wednesday after receiving a tip from a local
antiques dealer who read about the
schemt in a trade magazine.
_
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The couple hit stores in at )east'! I

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WEISS SCORES ·-'- The Atlanta ~raves' Walt Weiss slides in to
BACK TO FiRST - Phllsdelphla first sacksr Rico Brogns lays S.turdsy's Nstlonall. .g"' gsme In Phillldslphla, where three home score as San Francisco catcher Scon Servsis applies the late tag in
down the tag on the Arlzons Diamondbacks' Tony Womack In a runs, Including one by Womack, drove the Diamondbacks to an 8-2
second inning of Saturday's National League game in Atlllnts,
pickoff anempt by pltchsr Curt Schilling In the fourth Inning of victory. (AP) . ·
•
I w'heo·e the Braves won 15-4. (AP)
·

Astros whip .C ubs 10-4; Diamond_
b acks, Braves also win

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EAGLE

CHICAGO (AP) - Russ Johnson drove in a careerhigh six runs and Carl Evereu hit two homers Saturday
· to suppon Scott Elarton and lead the Houston Astros to
·
an I0..4 victory over the Chicago Cubs.
Johnson hit a two-run single in the third, a two-run
double in the fourth and RBis singles in the eighth and
ninth.
·
Everett homered from both sides of the plate, hitting
a solo homer off Kevin Tapani (6-10) and a solo homer
off lefl-hander Felix Heredia.
, , Elarton (6-3) gave up four ·hits in seven innings, tying
his career high with nine str*eouts.
Elarton struck out Sammy Sosa lo start the second,
then walked the next two batters. One out .later, Gary
Gaetti doubled to drive in two runs. Elarton then retired
· .' , I 4 .batters before Henry Rodriguez singled in the se'venth.

Sosa went 0-for-3 with a
walk. He has one hit in 15
at-bats since hilling his
42nd' homer Wednesday
against Montreal,
Tapani gave up five runs - three earned- and s~ven
hits in six inning~ .
'
Diamondbacks 8, Phillies 2 - At Philadelphia,
Andy Benes struck out I0 in 6'1, innings and lhe Arizona
Diamondbacks battered Philadelphia's Curt Schilling for
three home runs to snap the Phillies' four-game winning
streak, 8-2 Saturday.
Jay Bell, Matt . Williams and Erubiel Durazo each
I
homered for the Dtamondbacks.
.
Benes (7-10) allowed two runs~ one earned- and
five hits. ·
Schilling (I 4-5) allowed eight runs - seven earned

- and eight hits in 6 \, Francisco Giants on Saiurday.
innings. He struck out six ·
Terry Mulholland (7-6) gave up four hits to begin the
and walked three:
· . game, but still got the win.
.
Arizona collected four
. Atl anoa pounded Russ Oniz (12-8 ) and three' relieve,;
hi~ and three runs in the first inning.
·.for I 6 hits. with five runs in ,both the fifth and sixth
After Tony Womack J_ed the game off with a single. inning9.. Brian Jordan capped the six th with io two-run
Bell hpmered . Durazo capped the scoring with an RBI h9mer.
.
single!. .
·,
·
Williams had a two-run ·single in the first. a double in
Durazo made it 4-0 in the fourth with a 446- foot the fourth and a three-run homer in the sixth.
homer.
The Braves went ahead with four runs in the second.
The Phillies, who loaded the bases in ohc first and did- highlighted by Williams' two-run single. The Giants tied
n"t score. got RBI singles f(om Rob Ducey in the fifth it in the third. but Atlanta regained the lead in the bottom
inning a~d Bobby Abreu in the seventh.
of the inning on Ryan Klesko's double . •
Braves 15, Giants 4 - At Atlanta , streaking GeraJd
Mulholland lasted six innings. He gave up all four
Williams set a catecr-High with his I I th homer and also runs, but on ly two were earned.
· .
had five RBls as the A!lanta Braves. after falling behind
Ortiz left .after 4'• innings, having surrendered nine
3-0 in the first, rebounded for a 15-4 rout of the San runs - sc\'cn earned- and nine hits .
•

Major league baseball

..

Jarrett outlasts Labonte in. finallaps, .wins .Brickyard 400
Come see motor trends

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Or Toll Free 1-800-446-0842

By MIKE HARRIS
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Dille
Jarrett and his crew were both near
perfect this time .
A miscalculation by the Robert
Yates Racing crew ran Jarrett out of
gas while leading last year's
Brickyard 400. On Saturday, a laterace gamble by crew chief Todd
Parrott to change only two tires
turned a tough battle into a runaway
at the lndia~apolis Motor Speedway.
" It's the same race car,'' the
Winston Cup points leader said. "It
handled with two tires better than ii
did · with four all day. It was just
something to drive ."
Jarrett's No. 88 Ford Taurus pulled
away from runner-up Bobby Labonte
in the final laps, crossing the finish
line 3.351 -seconds - about half a
straightaway - ahead of Labonte's
Pontiac.
The son of two-time series champion Ned Jarrett earned his fourth
' victory of the year - tying him for
the season lead with Jeff Gordon and
Jeff Burton - and lhe 21St of his
career.
Jarrett, who won here in 1996
after leading just II laps, dominated
this time , leading 116 of the 160 laps
on the historic 2.5-mile · oval, He

joined Gordon as the only 'two-time
winners in the event that has beco me
one of NASCAR's classic races in
just six years .
The winner averaged 148 .228
mph in the race slowed by only three
caution flags for a total of 12 laps.
The last caution came out on lap
142 when Dave Marcis blew his
engine. Jarrett was leading Mark
Martin at that point and. unlike
Manin, Gordon and several other dri·
vers, was confident. of getting to the
finish without another gas stop .
"When that caution 'came out I
was a little upset about that ." Jarrett
said. "I wasn't sure what two tires
would do because we hadn ' t done
that here. But once I got out front, it
. just took offand went That was some
of the fastest laps I did all day."
The only problem Jarrett had on
Saturday .came on lap, 19 when he
-brushed the wall in turn two while
trailing pole-winner Gordon.
,
"That came from not paying good
enough attention on my part. I looked
up to see what was going on around
me and I just hit the wall. I know I
didn ' t hit it that hard. I usually do that
here every race, so it wasn ' t any big
deal. "
"'

It was a popular victory with the think they made sure they didn 't run
usual sellout crowd" of about 320,000. out of gas this year and they just
But they also cheered ·loudly · for killed everybody ...
Labonte came out second fo llow.
Gordon , who spent his teen years juSt
down the road in Pittsboro, Ind ., as he ing tile last stop , passing both Martin
charged from seventh oo third foilow - and Burlon in the pits. But he could
never get Close lOa run at Jarrell .
ing the final pit stops.'
''I'd trade n Pocono win .to ·Dale
Ray Evernham, Gordon's crew
Jarrett
for one of these in a he art·
chief, also took a gamble on that stop.
taking the time to change all fou(tires beat" sa id Labonte. who swept both
and costing the team track position. races 31 the Pennsylvania track earliBut Gordon had no thoughts about er thi s season.
Martin wound up fourth , followed
trying the two-tire gambit thai has
by
Jeff Burton and his brother Ward.
Won him races in th'e past.
rookie
Tony
"Heck, no , I
Stewart
and
for ·
didn't want two
met
Brickyard
tires." .Gordon
winners Ricky
said. "Ray called
Rudd and Dale
for four and I .just
Ear~hardt.
called
The first cau' Hallelujah!' We
tion nag
the
just didn 't have
afternoon flew on
enough laps to get
lap 43 when
it done after that "
Geoffroy Bodine
Gordon said
and Chad Little
Jarrett was the
bumped in turn
class of the field
two.
sending
all daY,
Little's car spin·
"He was this
ning hard into the
dominant last year
wall as Bodine
at this track and t......__
continued.
he ran out of gas. 1
DALE JARRETT

or

· •· Bodi nc bumped rne once in turn
one ·and then ··again in tum two."
Little said. "You can't be bumping
people ott. this tl at track at these
s pee~s . That wa&gt; a htain -dcad
maneuver on hi s pan .··
Kyle Petty alsp was knoc ked out'
of the race in a scary crash on lap 73

when he ran over a piece of debris,
-cut his right-front tire and hurtled into
the turn two "all al about 180, mph .
The ca r caught on fire ·and Petty

scrambled to get ou t of the smoke. He
sat down, then laid down on the
asphalt track near the wall . But the
third-generation NASCAR racer was
not injured.

.Here arc the results of the six th
NASCAR Brickyard 400 ·Winston ·
Cup ral:c at the Ind ia napoli s Motor
Speedway. list ing finishing position.
starting position Ill parentheses. dri-

ver. make of car. laps completed, rea son out· if any and prize money from

the $6.147.061 purse :
I r ~ l 0Jic hrrtH . Ford, 160 laps. S71 U40.
2 t7) Bobby Lalxml e. Pflntiac. 160, S270,950,
~ (I l Jeff G1)[Uon. Che\'rnlet. 160. S262.800.
-l 1~1 M~rk t-1artm, Ford. 160. $2 22,450
5. (lfiJ Je ff Burton. hlrd , 160.$ 193.240.
6 111 ) Ward Burton, f'ontaac~ 160, SIS7,210.
7. (II ) Tony Stewart, Pontiac . 160, $162,63~ .
8 t l7 ) RliSf)"Wallace, Ford." l60, $140.435
9 t l-4 ) R1 c k.~ Rudd . ):ord. 160, S137 ..SJ5.

10: {18) Dalt Earnhardt, Chevrolet , 160,
SIJ~ . S.!S

11. 1221 Terr~ · labcime. ChtHolrt. 160.
Sl!9. 160.
~
11 (b) ~hkc Skmner. Che,·rokt . 160. $11 7.0 10.

D (l.Sl Ken n) lrwm. Ford.l60. SIIIAHJ
1-' 127 1 W3ll~ Dallenbach. Chevrolet. 160.
SI0'-10 10

.

I\ C.U) 51&lt;'\f'" Pnrk. Che vrolt1. 160. S I09.610
16 11 11 Sterling Ma.rl!n. Cht\'role1. 160.
S109 ..1JO
•
. ,
17 1~5 1 Rohert Preulcy. ford. 160, $ IIXl,450.
18 C9l Ken Schrader. Che:,·rolel. 160. S 103 .410
19. 1.~9) Johnn) Benson, Ford. 160. $112.410
:20 1~ ) D:n 1d Green. Cbevi"olet. 160. S 10 1.575.
. 21 ( I] ) Elltou Sadler. Ford. 160, $1 02,7 10.
·22 l.'~l Joe Nemechek . Chevrolel. 1~9,
5100.7 10.
•
2.1 m 8111 Elliott Ford. 1.59. $99,6 10. ,
2 ~. t..WJ Erme ln•an. Pont1ac. 159, $98,510.
25 I lJl Geoff Bod n-at: . Chevrolet, 159, $90.7 10.
26 f-'2 1Jtmmy Spencer. Ford. 159. $96,J85 .
n 151 Michae l Wahnp. Chevrolet. . 159.
S9-U85
28 (20) Dave Rluney. Pontiac. 159. $84,385 .
29. ( 19) Jeremy Mayfield , Ford, IS9, S98.885
JO ( 4 .~ ) Kevin Lepage. Ford. 159. $90.910 .
J I ( 2~ ) Jerry Nadeau , Ford, 159, S8J.485.
J2 . (J 1) Dernke
Co pe. Pontiac:. 159. SR2.3S5 .
J3. {36) Hut Stnck.hn. Ford. ISS , $8 2, 115
34. (26) R1cl.: y Cra\le n, O.eVTolet, ISS, $81.88~
3~. (JO) Ted Musgrav.: , Ford, ISS, $84,110.
31'1 . 0 ~ ) Rick Mo.st. Ford. 1.58. $81.510.
37. ( 1OJ John Andretu. Pontii'IC, 158 , $96,410.
J8 071 Bot"ob} Hamthon. Chevrnlel. 15 7.
$96.Jl0.
.
39 _ {4 If Kt•nn }', Wa Ilace. Che\lrolet, IS 7.
SSUIO
·
-tO. (29) Da,·e Marcis. t'bevrolet, 139. engine ,
$8~.010 .

-' 1 {24) K.ylt; Petty. Pontiac . 72, crash. SSl.OlO
42. (.\5 ) Darrell Waltrip, Ford, 58, CnJine.
$80,910.
.
43 . (JBt Chad Lr"le. Ford, 41 , cruh, S9l,60S.

I

�'·

,.

hge82•· )

.

•

~n·

•

Gwynn gets 3,000th
career hit in Padres'
.1 2-10 win vs. Expos
Br SEAN Fk A •• I
MONTREAL (AP) - . Tony
Gwynn bas wom a lol of differe!ll
uniforms on his· way 1o joining lbe
3,000-bit club. ADd, most importantly to him, lhey' ~ all been with lbe
same team.
.
Gwynn went .4-for-5, singling in
his fii'SI at-bat to become lbe 22od
major leagD[tt lo reach 3:CXIO hits, as'
the San Diego ' Padres beat the
Montreal Expos 12-10 Friday nighl
Gwynn, who went 2-foc-4 in his ·
major league: debut fOI' San Dieg_o on
July 19, 1982. has sported man)"different eoloc scbemes - including
the memorabl~ combination of yel·
and unifonn
low and brown ooigns over· the course of his 17·
year career. The important thing to
Gwynn is that he wore all of those
different unifonns as a member of
the Padres.
" I've done It all in one unifonn,"
' Gwynn said. " Well. not counting the
brown. but I've done it in a few dif·
ferent unifonns and hey. I'm proud
of that. I'm a Padre. I'm a San Diego
Padre.··
Gwynn is the eighth player to get
3.000 hits all wilh one major league
team.
"Joining )he 3,000-hit club as a
member of one ~am ·and one team

lbe dugout to congratllltte him, and

first ~ umpile Kerwin Danley -

ACCEPTS CONGRATULATIONS - The San Diego Padres' Tony
Gwynn (right) accepts congratulations from first base umpire
Kerwin Danley after !Jetting his 3,000th career hit in the first inning
of Friday night's National League game against the host Montreal
Expos, who lost 12·1.0. (AP)
· ·
this is great for me ... Gwynn said.
"Every time I came up to the
'_'Mark had his day, today is my plate. they let me know tbey were
day.''
pulling for me ... Gwynn said. " The
The crowd at Olympic Stadium, . last time up. it finally switched. One
on its feet and clapping th~oughoUI gu)• said. 'OK. you got three, that 's .
lhe at-bat. gave Gwynn a lengthy enough.···
ovation.
(See GWYNN on 8·3)

Scoreboard ·.

I

-o;-

WNBA standings
Iii

:nll'
NcwYo.t ...................... 13
, Owtone
..
14

NN Yo4 ........._. ________________66

=0·:=:~::=:::~::::.::::::::=1~
Bl.lu~ ...........................-.48

:61 -~
440

T~

18 ~

64 . .413

21 \

Bay ...........................45

.

7',
1

C...,..Dirisioio
4lJ

.602
,4n

CLEVELAND .....................65
Oucaac ................................51
~~~n~a .......................... 45
Ka:n.$as Ciry ........ ,........... :.....45

63

.411

Jk:u'oll ... ··'·······-..·········-·""')

66

56

Eastera Con(........,

•.

.W:Ll&lt;l.
42 .611

1&lt;111

ra.
.542

"
II

:394

...
....... ~ ....._.. ,:.11
,Los Angeles .. ' .................... 17
Sacnmento
.............. 16

4 .840
7 .108
10 .61S

Milml50tl .

12

500

.458

.602

Phoerux .. ~: .......................... 11 13
Ur.b _
...... -.. -.......9. . IS

OUt""'
............... ,.. .SS SI ·• .S32
Seattle ............................ -53 S6 .&lt;186

Friday's scores

• TrJ.U

.Wawn. Dh'llb.
.............................65 43

Anilht•m ...... ,........................46

H~lon

6l .421

62

_,_, .. ,.12

n.

Los An3des
Miaacsota
HousiDa 81. C'b'Lone S I

.426

. 37~

lbcbccr 10 a t'II."O-)"nr ronnacl
PHOENIX COYOTES Named R1ch;wd Na.Jm
\1tt presKiem of mrdta :tllfl player relations

"

TAMPA BAY UGHTNING. Acqu•red G kff
~and a runlb-round chf1 dloicc: 1n 2(XX} from

NORTIIERN IOWA Annourx:ed freshman C
Slaven Marto\i C transfared to Soolht:outem Iowa
Jumor College. and frtshm:m G Ooy t.bller is meft·
! •bie thu ~~
OHIO WESLEYAN Named laiJt)' Meeks
...,...,me~ · s track and field and (fOSii cou ntry "oach.
PENNSYLVANIA ·. Named Karin Brower
-..·Qmen 's lacronc coach .
ST LAWRENCE: Named Man Bruce se-condar)·

College
FERRIS STA'ffi. Named Mike Rejnhold defeniive lin.: mach
3\
~o\NNO~: Named Michelle t.1ason volleyball
S\ ,

~

Dol$ Eamflardt

.
.•.

.

Jr.

PWS KIDS APPAREL

,,

. '

coach.

9 '~

s9

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AF

)E

Washington at a.£Vf.Lt\t;ID. 4 p.m.
Orlaodo • Ow-lone, 7:30p.m.
Mimats01a at Utlh. 9 p.m.
Phocni1. • ,Sacramenlo. 10 p.m.

RTHE. SALE

BI.QEE

! )

' home run now
age . '"He hils t.be key
and then. He plays hard and !hat's
something !hat rubs off on the otber
guys.''
Villone, like Vaughn a fonner
Brewer. allowed five .hits and f~ur
walks while striking out one. 'The
.left-hander escaped jams in the first
inning and, after surrendering the ·
two runs in the third, gave up . only
'one more hit in his final two innings
before· being relieved by Sullivan.
The Reds added three more runs ,
in the ninth. They bad four straight
hits, including RBI singles by Barry
Larkin and Taubensee. The third run
scored on a wild pitch.
The ' Brewers are within one loss
of dropping I0 games below the .500
mark for the second time this season.
Cirillo is ·hoping' the Brewers can
regroup · and gel back to .500 again
.
~
this sea.c;;on.
"We haven't played our best
baseball," he said. " When we don't
play well , it 'can get ugly. Baseball is·
a streaky game :.. sometimes you·
play well and other limes you don't.
We qeed to bailie through it.
"We've come back from 10
games below .500 before and we're
capable of doing it again."
Notes: The Reds bullpen leads the
majors with 27 victories .... The Reds
are .14-5 since the All-Star break. The
Brewers are 7-14 . ... Milwauk;ee is I·
6 on its current .12-game hm11estand . .
... The Brewers will honor Robin
Yount prior to Saturday's game .
Yount was .one of tile inductees last
month into the Baseball Hall of
Fame .... Cin~innati is i3-8 against
Milwaukee since the Brewers joined
the National League in 1998 ....
·Mark Loretta walked three times to
COLLISION - The Ml!,w aukee Brewers' Dave Nilsson collides lie a season-high for the Brewers ....
with Cincinnati second ucker Pokey Reeae at second baae and pre- The Brewers have allowed consecuvents the double play attempt In the first inning of Friday night's tive ·homers seven times jn 11)99.
~tlonal League game In Milwaukee, w~ere the Reda won 9-2. (AP)

Lorena walked and scored on a double by Jeff Cirillo. Alex Ochoa
walked and Geoff Jenkins drove
Cirillo home with a one-out single.
The rally ended when Villone picked
Ochoa off second and Marquis
Griisom popped out. •
.
Cincinnati regained the lead on
Vaughn's home .·run off Steve
Woodard (11-6) with two out in the

~~1/mnnu SpenCer

MISSOURI-ST LOUIS Named Lesa Bonne

softball coach

" To get 3,000 on my mom's

Reds win ... (Continued from B-2)

II ':

They pboy&lt;d Saturday

Toronlo S. Texas 4
MinAeSOta 9. KllllSal Ciry 8
Bos1oo S. Anaheim I
Oakland 9. Chieago I
Nrw YOJk 1!. Seanlc 8

you.'"
Gwynn didn't wait long to add
soon as the hit dropped in, and me," said Gwynn. who got No. on. In his second at-bat, be ~ingled
Gwynn's mother, Vendella, celebrat- 2,000 on his mother's 58th birthday. up the middle to move past Robeno
ing her 64th birthday, came onto the ·,.1 was hugging her and !CUing her, Clemente into 21st. place on · the
field and embraced ber son.
'Happy Blrlhday, Mom. This is for career list.

. -s ·~

Sacnmeoto 71, Omuit 58

Deuon 4. Baltimore J

HOFSTRA N:uned Mehna Marks anoc1a~
;uhletK nama
MAINE Nnrned Robert J l_a,uoo athkll( tr.lln·

CEDARVIllE: Named Grtg Hughes bak-ball

l'l1oaU 63. New Yorlt SS

Frlday's5alftl
Tampa Bay 4, CLEVEL\ND 2

Fireworks, usually reserved foc

Expos' home runs, were set off as birthday is a really speciaJ thing for

a

. T-sHIRTS • CAPS •. JACfE:TS • C,(lLLE,,C,:fAsLES

miles from where he grew up and
played Little League ball in TampL
"'There were butterflies. But once
the game started and I got into the
now, they sort of left," Boggs said,
adding !hat he doesn't necessarily
·feel added p~essure to reach the mile-

3 with a walk in the Tampa Bay
Devil Rays' 4-2 victory over the
Cleveland Indians.
The five-time AL batting cham pion admitted to being more nervous
than usual before the game at
T"ficl!lla Field, which is ahout 20

stone in the remaining five days of a
six -game home stand.
"It'll happen whenever it wants
to .... You can't sit there and. drive
yourself nuts ahout when it's going
to happen or it's got to happen in the
next three at-bats . You'll drive your-

sel( absolutely nuts .''
A crowd of 34.623- well above
Tampa Bay 's season average of
20,479, but about 9,000 shy of a ;ellout - watched Boggs Oy to left in
the fim, hit a comebacker to lbe

After grounding out in the founh
Gwynn singled to right in the
sixth and singled to right in the
eighth before leaving for a pinchrunner. The crowd gave him another
stan\ling ovation after his 3,003rd
hit.
"It was because my family was
telling me don't·just be satisfied with
getting one," Gwynn said. "After I
got the hit in the first inning. I was a
whole lot more relaxed than I had
been."
Gwynn became the first NL player since the Cardinals' Lou Brock in
1979 to reach 3,000 hits. Brock was
at Thursday's game in St. Louis, as
was Stan Musial, hoping to see

Gwynn reach 3,000 ..
" We ' ve been waiting for this
moment and' it.'s a moment that we'll
cherish along with Tony. " Padres
manager Bruce. Bochy said. " We're
so proud of him . I consider it a priv·
ilege to have played with him. managed him and to see him reach his
milestone ."
.
, Several, AL players - · Paul
Molitor. Eddie Murray, George
Breit, Robin Yount, Dave Winfield.
Carl Yastrzemski and Rod Carew reached 3,000 htts in the years since
·
Brock did it.
Gwynn reached 3.000 in, 2.284
games , third-fastest behind on ly Ty
Cobb and Nap Lajoie. Cobb wa~ the

·first 1n the sixth against Indians
staner Dave Burba.
Fans booed when reliever Steve
Karsay nearly hit Boggs with a pitch
and then walked him in the seventh.
(See INDIANS on 8-4)

mound in the third and ground to

Gwynn &amp; 3,000th hit... (ContinuedfromB-2)

~-u a~.:h

"'bbons coprd.JnaiOl
LOS ANGELES KINGS A~ to cerms 'II.Hh
G Sltphauc Fiset to a OliC'·)rar CVfllr.KI
MONTREAL CANADIENS Sl!ned 0 B:~n!

oooch.

Wesltn! Confmi!Ct!

Milwaukee manager Phil Garner
said. " It probably was a combination
of both."
Sullivan deflected the praise to his
teammates. " Our hittelli really
picked up the pace the last couple of
innings and made it a relaxing situation to pitch in," he said.
Ed Taubensee went 3-for-S,
including his 12th homer of the season - matching a pe!SORal higl) to stan Jhe eighth. and AarOn BOone
followed wilh a solo shot. It was the
fourth time the Reds had hit back-toback home runs this season. The pre·
vious three times by Scan Casey and
Vaughn.
'The Reds took 1-0 lead in ·the
first on a one-out walk to Dmitiri
Young and an RBi double by Casey,
who entered the game 7-for-41
(. 171). Casey later added another
double, finishing 2-for-5 and raising
his average to .353, second best in
the National. League behind
Colorado's Larry Walker.
The Brewers. losers ·o f six straight
games. scored twice in the . third
inning to take a 2-1 lead. Mark
(See REDS on B-3)

Marte

the Toronto Maple Leah fOI" a nimh-round dnft
cbotct tn 20Cl) Armoun~ lhr rrllrefn('nt of Rttsc::
ud rwned him coahending consultant

ll .538
14 ·.440
14 .417
17 .J2Q
19 .240

Oazuit . ...
. ............. II
Orlmdo.. .. .................... 10
Washington ......... ·............... 8
a.EVELANo, .................,.. 6

ly FRED GOODALL
ST. PE'ffiRSBURG. Fla. (AP) On a night that Tony Gwynn got his
3,000th hit. Wade Boggs stayed put
in his pursuit of the milestone.
Boggs remained three hits shy of
the pla1eau Friday night, going 0-foc·

' .Jert

,.

commuru~:allonslmr:dill

AL staodings

MILWAUKEE (AP) Greg
Vaughn lcnows the best way to bn:ak
out of a slump is to go up to the plate
and take good cuts at the ball.
~ 1 was ballling myself all night. I
just ~ept.swingi ng at breaking balls
.and ~ly got one to hit." Vaughn
said after ending a zero-for-13
drought with a two-run homer to lift
Cincinnati to a 9-2 victory over the
slumping Milwaukee Brewers Friday
night.
His ·26th homer of the season
overcome a 2-1 deficit and gave tbe
Reds a lead tbey dido ' 1 relinquish as
well as making a winner of Ron
Villone (6-4 ).
. " That was tbe key hit, no q,uestion
about it. It gave us the lead, that was
the big thing,'' Cincinnati manager
Jack McKeon said. " but there were a
number of guys who had big nights.
We like to come from behind. Give
us an opening and we'll run through
it." ·
Scott Sullivan came on .in tbe
sixth and retired all 12 baltelli be ·
faced to earn his second save.
"I don 't know if it was his good
'pitching or us being in a rut."

Jbu.l • Page 83

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

Devil Rays defeat Indians 4-2; Boggs walks, goes 0-for-3

Reds··cruise to 9-2
win over Milwaukee

only. Tha1 bas a nice ring to it as far
as I'm couceoned," Gwynn said
Gwynn loot can: of lbe milesronc
hit in his fllSI 81-bai as be reached
down and golfed a. soft line dri v~
past sccood ~on a 1~2 pitch from
Dan Smith (3-6). a rookie making
his lith career start. ·
"If somei!ody's going 1o get a hit
off me like tbat, be's lbe best guy to
do it," Smith said "I ~ up 1'001·
ing for him and I tip my hat to him.··
Gwynn's teammates raoed from
Gwynn's colleg~ . teammate at San
Diego State - gave him a hug.
The ball and the fim ~ bag
were taken out of play. with ·one oc
both likely to end up in the Hall of
Fame.
"The relief that you feel is· the
fillit thing that hits yoi.t," Gwynn
said. "Then I was starting to get
emotional."
Gwynn reached the milestone in
front of 13,540 fans - more ihan
30,000 fewer than watched him get
his 2,999th hit llnm;day in St. Lo,is
when Mark McGwire hit his SOOth
and 50 1st homers.
•
.
'Td have .loved to do it last night
in St . Louis, but now .that things have
happened the way they've happened.

Sunday, August 8, 1999

Sunday, AUQUM8,1999

Pomet oy • 'Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant. WV

fifth. It scored Dmitri Young, who
singled with one out.
Vaughn, balling only .224 entering the game, sent a Woodard pitch
393 'feet. His last hit, a single. came
on July 30 at home against San
Francisco. His last homer was July
23 at San Francisco.
· "I don't pay any aueiltion to it,"
McKeon said of Vaughn's low aver-

i~ning,

fas test, doing it in 2,135 games. .
Gwynn beat Tampa Bay 's Wade ·
Boggs to the milestone by at least
one day. Boggs went 0-for-3 with a
walk against Cleveland, leaving him
·
three hits shy 9f 3.000.
" It 's a very special time for not
only him and his family. but for
maJor league baseball to go ahead
and get that taken care of," Boggs
Said from St. Petersburg, Fla. "My
hat's off to him . Nice going . Work,on
4,000 now."
Hitchcoc k
(11-8)
Sterling
allowed Vladimir Guerrero 's 23rd
homer a·nd Chri's Widger's . second
homer in as many games .

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Today's games

They played Saturday
Boston (Rapp J-.5) a1 Anaheim (Belcher .5-6).

4•05 p.m.

Houston a1 New York, 4 p.m.
·
a.EVELANO at Washington. 4 p.m.

Chi(ago (Parque 9-7) Ill Oakland (Appitt 10-9),
• ·Dl
C EVELAND \Nagy 12-7) at r.,., Bay (Win
6-7). 6:35p.m.

Em

Detroit \ Borkow ~i 0-1) a1 Balriii'IOtt (Ericboe
7-9) , 7 OS p.m.
· •

Minnesota (Mays~ ~ at K.ansu Oly (Rosado 78 ),

MLS standings
-;,

8:05p.m.
Toronto &lt; H~ntgrn 7-7) at Teus (Sele 11-6). 8:3.5

pm.
Nt=w York {Peltllte 8-8) at Seanle {F. Garcia I Hi).

9·05 p.m

·

Today's games
Detro• • (Moehler 8-\\J at Balli~ (Boaa 0- 3).
1:l 5 p.m ,
CLEVELAND (Wnght 7-6.) at Tamp11 Bay
(Alvarez S-6). \:35 p m
Minne wt&lt;~ {Hawk.Jn~ 7-8} at Kansas City (Stein 00), 2·0S ·p m
Chicago 1Baldwtn 5- 11 J a1 Oakland (Hudson 61) , 4:0~ pm
NeW York (Cone: 10-fiJ at Seaule (Halama 9-2),
.. 4:35p.m.
·
Tor,omo {Well &gt; 11 ~ 7) 111 fexas (But-ken 3-5). 8:05
p.m ·
BostOn tP. Martinez 15-.1) at Anaheim (McDowell

.

~3) , 8Mpm

61

42

43

.

Division
..67

6)

••

"'

.609
l9l

.l60
J96

4

19 32

35

3

18

26

34

3

18

26

39

9 17

37

~82

2
II

Co!orado ........................... l.~ 5 _3 39 35
Cbkago ............................. ll 9 I 31 Jl
Dallas .., ..... ....................... llll 1 Jl 37

21
22
21
LosAogclcs .. ,..............., ... l2. 8· ·' 30 23 J7
San Jose ....... ____ ,........... II 9 9 IS 28 36
Kansu City ........................ 6 I 5 2 14 25' 40
' NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for
shOI:Mout wia and zero points for loss . Shootout
(SOW) is a su~t of wins .

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.555

Friday's scores

•1

"

Colornd o . . ................ 48
LosAng.cle5 .................. 47

\' .

.

DH: Houston 6. Chicago 1; Chicago 6, Houston 0
DH. Piusburg.h 5. St Louis I. St Louis 5.
Pittsb,urgh I
Flcmda 9. Colorado I
Atlanta 7. Snn Francis~.: o .\
New York 2. Los An'geles 1
San Diego .l 2, Montreal 10
Philadelphia 4. Arizona 2 ( 11) ·
S:INCINNATI9. Milwaukee 1

They played Saturday
Anzoqa (Benes 6- 10) al Phllodelphla (Sch11hng
14-4) , I IS p m
Son Fr~ndsw (Ortiz 12· 7) at Atlanta (Mulholland
6-6), 1:15pm. '
·
Houston {Eianon :'i-3 ) at Chicago (fapani 6-9),
3:15p.m
San 'Diego (Williams 5·9) at Mqntreal
{lknnanwn 4--10), 7:05p.m.
Colorado (Bohanon 10-8) at Florida(Meadows 8-

America• Lu1ue
ANAHElM ANGELS: PurchllK'd the Contracl of
INF Trem punington fro'm Erie of the Eastern
League Optio~ INF Andy Sheets and C Steve
Oed,er 10 Edmonton of the P~~~:ific Co:1SI League
Relea5ed C Charlie O'Bri~n . A(tivated RHP Tim
Bekher from the 15-day disabled list.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX : Purchased lhe (On·
tract of LHP Je:=~us Pena from Birmingham of the
Southe:=m League.
. TORONTO BLUE JAYS· Claimed OF CunJS
Goodwin off waivers from the Chicago Cubs.
OptiOI).td OF Jrue Cruz Jr. to Syracuse of the
International league.
National Lea~:ue
·
CHICAGO CU BS: Recall~d OF Chad Meyen
from lowo of the PCL. Optioned LHP Ray Kin&amp; 10
Iowa.
A.ORJDA MARLINS: Ophoned · (f/OF Tim
Hyers to Calgary of Pacific Coa~t League. R~alled
OF Todd Dunwoody from Calgary
HOUSTON ASTROS: Activated . RHP ' Scan
Bergman. from ·the 1S-day di1abled Jist. Oftioned
•RHP Jose Cabrera to New Orlean5 of the PC .
NEW YORK METS: S1gned RHP Jose
Mc:r"edes to a minor-league contract and ani&amp;ned
him lo Norfolk of the lmcrnational League.

7:05p.m

St. Loui s (Bottenfield 15-4) 11 Pinsburgh
•
(Cordova 6 -~ ) . 7:05 p_m.
' Lot Angel es (A.rnold 2-2) a1 New Y01k (leiter 9-,

7),7 t0 pm.
CINCINNATI (Tomko 4-S) at Milwaukee (Karl
1·10). 8 : 0~ p.m

Today's games
San Francisco (Rueter 9·6) at Atlanta (Millwood
12-6), I:!Op.m.
San Diego {Boehringer 6-4) at Montreai·(Vuquez
5·S),l:l5p.m.
Aritona (Reynoso 7·1) at Philadelphia {Oaea 6. 9). 1:35 p.m.•
St Louis (Oliver 7-7) a1 Pittsbw)h {Benaon 9-8),

10-l), 1:40 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Harnisch 10-6) at Milwaukee
(Nomo 9-4), 1;05 p.m.
Colorado (Wright 0-1) at Florida (Demspter 4-6).
p.m.
Houston (Hampton I 5-3) a1 Chicqo (Bowie 0- 2),

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Football
' National Football IAIIIH
CINCINNATI BENGALS: Waived· G-LS Greg
Krause.
INDIANAPOLIS COLTS: Sianed · S Tito
Wooten .

Hockey
N•donll Hockey Lope
ATLANTA THRASHERS: Sigoed G Corey
Schwab.

CALGARY FLAMES: Sianed F Dave Roche, D
Wade Belak and D Lee Sorochan to con1rae1 eJ.ttnsions.
A-ORIDA PANlliERS : Named Chria Kelleher

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N1tlonal Basketball Association
NEW YORK KNICKS: Signed F John Wallace
to a three-year conlrict.
LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS: Agreed to trnns
with G-F Eric Pialkowtki on a multiyear conrrac1.
SAN ANTONIO SPURS: Re-signed G Jiln::n
Jacluon to a three-year contract.

1:35 p.m.
l.Qs Angeles (Dreifort 8-11) at New York (Reed

8:05p.m.

1999 FORD ESCO

Friday's ,score
Ne~

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Western ConfeRnce ·

Tod1y
Coloiado at Chicago. I p.m.
Tamp;:~ Bay at O.C, United. 1 p.m.
Kansas City at COLUMBUS. 6 p.m.
Wednesday
.
D.C, United a1 New York-New Jeney.? p m.

25

6().1 .

l89

56 l5 .505
54 l5 A'J5
l O l8 A6J
..49 58 .458

61
62

3

UVII11DD CAR. IRICIB, AID VIII TD CIDDII fRDMD

This week's slate

l.'

.52]
.477

11),

Tanlpa Bay .................. ..... 9 12
New Eftglatw:l ..... ::_............. 8 12
Miani .............................;.•" 8 13
NY-NJ
...... ...... 5 14

I.
I'

Western Division
Am.ona ., ,.. , . . ....... 61 49
San Fntnmco ...
. .57 51
San 01..- go
.. 52 57

.,

28
20

GOOD/YEAf!

New York-New Jrrse )· at MianU , 8 p.m.
los Angeles at San Jose . IO:JO p ril

L f&lt;l. . !ill

.,
"" "
" 68

c~n lral

HouMon .
CINC INN ATI
Sl. louis
Pi!tsburj h
Chkago
Milw;u.'l kee

29

It,s the Dealer Behind The Deal
That Makes The .REAL Di«ereneel

· They played Saturday

Eastern Di "is ion
Nrw York .
· At lanta ........
Philadelphia
· Monrreal .....
Florida

29

Colorado I.

»:
... 61

!iA

COLUMBUS .......... ...... 13 7 5

,

NL standings
fum

.Eastern CooCerencr

:nll' !.&lt;OIYP!sli£
D.C......................... ..... .... 13. 7 3 J3 39

'

, Control.
•J hut
~ rlt-clion!'

•Up-rront Hat

nun.

-~

.

�, ..
I

J

'~ !fwl

Sunday, August 8, 1999

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

Browns to play for first time since 1995

ly~VWITHIRS

· unifonns for Monday night's Hall of been counting down the days until
Fame Game against the Dallas the new millennium, Cleveland has
E ELAND . (AP) -:-- ~e
comeback tn NFL hostory ts
Cowboys in Canton, Ohio, one of the been ticking off the hours and sec..,J_comcteple1re.
.
league's.signature cities will official- onds to the moment the new Browns
""'
ve _and ~rowns ~ JUS!
ly have tiS beloved team back.
kick off.
And its heart.
"This is what Cleveland has been
days from theu: rebtnh followmg an
"Yeah , baby," said cornerback waiting for," Langhalll said. "Get
Anlomo Langham, one of the three ready everybody."
new Browns who also played for the
Get ready, NFL. The Dawg Pound ·
teamtakentoBaltimorebyformer isabouttobeunleashed.
•
owner Art Modell on February 1996.
·
" It's Cleveland football again: It's
With the possible exception of
By AfiiDREW CARTER
fered its fourth consecutive loss and time to start bleeding orange and Green Bay, nowhere is a city's makeTimll 8111t1nt1 SUIH
has been outscored 11 -3 during the brown again."
up more defined by football than in
DENVER, Colo. - Coll&gt;rado ',our-game sk'd
WL'J
he rest of the wo,· r Jd has
o
.
.
.
.
"'
e
t
(See RESURRECTION on B;S)
goa lkeeper Ian Feuer made three
Feuer notched his fifth win of the ,-----'..' - - - - - - - - _ : __ _ _....:::=...:.::=====::..:...=:.=...::.:.._,
saves in regulation and one more in season for Colorado sipce replacing
the Sbootout to lirt the Rapids to a 1- Marcus Hahneman, who signed with
0 victory over New England in Major an English league side over a month
League SC¥cer-action Friday night. A ago. Feuer's record is 5-2 and he has
crowd or 23,895 fans witnessed the recorded three shutouts.
VINTON - Volleyball practice for Vinton Elementary's junior high
match at Mile High Stadium.
Chris Kelderman and Johnny
teams
will begin Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. at Vinton Elementary.
. Colorado ( 15-5, 39 points) Torres were the only players to score
more infonnation, call coach Harvey Brown at 388-8586.
For
tncreased tiS lead in the Western for New England in the•tic-breaker.
Conrcrence table to eight points with Joey PiGiainarino and Chris
~ victory. Dallas and Chicago are Martinez each conve rted their Rebels' reserve volle.y ball
It~ ror second place with 31 points shootout opportuniii es before Bravo
aptece whole Los Angeles is one put away the match-winner for the practice to start Wednesday
poin,t back in third place.
Rapids.
MERCERVILLE - South Gallia's junior varsity and freshman vot-·
The Rapids played the ll!.atch
MLS news and notes
leyball
practice will start on Wednesday froin 2 to 4 p.m. at Hannan Trace
Tampa Bay striker Raul Diaz Arce ·
without the services of leading scotElementary.
·
er Wolde Harris, Ross Paule and · was named MLS Player of the Week.
Freshman
and
sophomores
interested in playing are required to report
Anders Limpar. Harris is serving Dia~ Arce .. who was traded to the
to
this
practice.
with the Jamaican national team and Muoiny by San Jose .. is lied for fifth
All athletes mUst have physicals in order ro practice.
both Pa4le and Limpar are injured..
in the MLS scori~g chase. He has
more information. call coach Dafney Davis at 256-1364 for more
For
Additionally, regular starters Paul nine goals and six assists, good for
information.
Bravo·, Marcelo Balboa . and Matt 24 .points.
McKeon had just returned from U.S.
Miami stri ker Diego ~erna will
national
team duty at the miss .the rcmaindeF of-ohe 1999 cam·
Confederations Cup and were on the paign wioh a severe knee 'injury.
sideline at the start of the match.
Serna, tied for si&lt;th jn the .league
Brav!' played a key role after scoring race, sl!ffered a torn ACL in a
entering the .match . in · the 60th · match at Columbus last S~nday folminute. He scored the winning goal 10\",ing . a hard · tackle by Crew
in the fifth round of the shootout for defender Todd Yeagley. .
Colorado.
.
Columbus striker' Jeff Cunnirygham
McK:eon played ten minutes after has been called int(H .ervice 'With \he
replacing Kevin Anderson in the 80th Jamaican national team. It 's
minute. McKeon's shootout attempt Cunningham's first chimce to play at
was snuffed by goalkeeper Jeff the international level with the senior
Causey. Causey came on in the 75th national team.
minute for starter Walter Zenga who
Today's MLS slate
left with a left knee sprain following
Colorado at Chicago, 1 p.m.
a collision with a teammate. .
(Univision)
New England (8-12, 18 points)
Tampa Bay at D.C. United, 2 p.m.
enjoyed the better of the play in the . (ABC)
·
offensive end, outshooting Colorado
Kansas City at Columbus. 6 p.m.
· 10-6. However. the Revolution suf- ESPN2

=:est

out New .
Rap .ldS shut
·
·
•n
shootout
E"gland 1 0 l

Vinton junior high volleyball
practice set for Monday

Indians lose.. ~ ' (continu~d from B-3l
The 41-year-old thi£!1 hasem3!' let
out a groan . that.-could be heard
throughout the park when he jumped
back to avoid ball three.
'"I thought it was going to hit me
in the hand, and it scared me. I had
flashbacks of sayonara, see you later,
we'll see you in 2000, .and it scar¢
me," Boggs said.
"But that's not the first ball that's
ever come close to hitting me, I know
he didn't do it on purpose and there
was nothing there to indicate that he
did."
Boggs offered words of congratulalions for Gwynn. who needed one
hit to reach 3,000 and went 4-for-5 in
San Diego 's 12-10 victory over the
Montreal Expos.
'"It's a very, special time for not
only him and his family, but fqr
major league baseball to go ahead
and get that taken care of. My hat's
off to, him. Nice- going. Work 'o n
4,000 now."
·.
.
Aaron Ledesma drove in two runs
with a bases-loaded single off Burba
(8-7) in the sixth for a 3-2 Tampa
Bay lead. Dave Martinez followed
with an RBI single to give the Devil
Rays a two-run cushion.
·
Yan (3-2) pitched I 'h scoreless
innings for the win and Roberto
Hernandez pitched the nint~ td earn
his 29th save in 32 opportunities.

Cruz · in the .l\Cventh inning when he
tore · a ligament in his right thumb
sliding into second base. ·
Cruz was scheduled to fly to
Cleveland for an MRI exam on
Saturday.

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PRICE

HYUNDAI ELANTRA 18118-23,000 miles, Bal. of Fact.
...,..._ AT, AC, cass., ~ar def.......................
9,995
99 DODGE INTREPID 18134-25,000 mllea, Bal. of Fact
norr.. ~~~~AT.~
tilt, cruise, PW, PL ............... 17,495
1 18094-34,000
98
mlln, Bal. of Fact.
Warr., AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW, PL ........................... 14,230
99 DODGE INTREPID 18138·28,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
Warr., AT, AC, 1111, cruise, PW, PL ......................... .-.17,495
98 FORD ESCORT ZX218048·23,000 miles, Bal. of Fact
Warr., At, AC, A~/FM ~.............................................. 12,795
CHEVY MONTE CARLO 18060-34,000 miles, Bal. of
Fact. Warr., AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, spt..wheels ....:..
.............................................................................:•.•. 14,·368
MAZDA 626 ES.V618028-14,000 mllea, Bal. of Fact.
AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW, "Load~" ............... 18,950
TOYOTA COROLLA LE 17943-26,000 miles, Bal. of
Warr., AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW ........................ 12,995
CHEVY CAVAUER 18101-2 DR, AT, AC, cass., rear
.
11,623
FORD Tf'URUS 18050-AT, AC, lilt, crulie, PW, PL .....
............................ ;...................................................... 13,$95
CHRYSLER SEBRING LXI 17909-24,000 miles, Bal.
Fact Warr., AT, AC, till, cruise, AM!FM CD, "Loaded".:...
u ...........

.....•... ~ .............................. ;......................................... 15,995
97 NISSAN ALTIJI!A GXIi 18027-Bal. of fact. Warr., AT,
AC, tltt, cruise, PL .......................... ~ ...........;............ 11,800
98 MERCURY mACER SIW 18143-AT, AC, tilt, cruise,

caaa., roOf rack, sport whaels ................................·:.9,475
CHRYSLER CONCORD 18120·AT, AC, tilt, cruise,
PW, PL, P seat, sport wheels ................................. 13,4~5
CHEVY CORSICA 18096-AT, AC, AM/FM, rear del......

.................................................................................... 7,930
PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 18063--AT, AC, tilt, cruise,
PW, Pl.; rear spo!ler ................................................ 12,415
OLDS 88 18086-AT, AC, tilt, cruiSe, PL, PW, P seat,
leathe.r seats, ..............................(.............................. 9,495
PONTIAC GRAND AM GT 18090-AM/FM, cass., sport
wheela,AC, V6 eng., tilt; i:rulse, PW, PL ................. 7,995
PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE·2 DR 18124·Red, At, AC,
cruise, V&amp; eng., PW, PL ...................................... 8,495
.FOFID MUSTANG LX 17994-AM/FM cass., AC, .
.,
,.nc.LuL•c 18142-AT, AC, .tilt, cruise,

PL,

sun roof .......~ .............................. ~ ........................... 8,995
91 MAZDA MIATA CONVERTIBLE 18132·AC, cass., hard
top &amp; soft lop, alloy wheels .................................,... 7,995
91 UNCOLN CONTINENTAL 18097-"Loadld" ........ 6,995
95 FORD ESCORT 2 Dr.I8152·Rid, cass., AC, Spt.
wheels.~ ....................................... ~ ............................ $8,995
9S NISSAN GLE 18154-AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW, PL., Sun
roof, spt. wheels......................................................$8,495

EAGLE SUMMIT 18153-AT, AC, cass............. ,. $4,995
HONDA CMC 181113 ........................ ;................ $8,995
SATURN 18016-Red, 2 Dr., AC, Alloy wheels, AM/FM
94 DODGE CARAVAN SPORT 18138-0uad seating, AT,
AC, tl[l, cruise, spt. wheels, PW, PL ........................ il,495
95 CHEVY ASTRO .YAH 118141·AT, AC, 7 Pass., V6 eng.,

PW, PL....................................:........................~ ......... .-8,995
·

The Indians stranded six runners
and were 0-for-6 with men in scoring

position .before fina.lly breaking
through against starter Rolando
Arrojo in the sixth.

Trailing ·I-0, Cleveland"loaded the
'bases with one out on a hit batsman
and owo walks. Enrique Wi !son's
sacrifice tiy to left drove in Jim
Thome before Einar Doaz singled in
David Justice from second base to
give the Indians a 2-1 lead.
The Devil Rays came right back
with three runs in the b&lt;inom of the
inning off Burba, who had limited
them to Bubba Trammell's run-scor·
ing double and a single · by Fred
McGriff in the first five innings.
McGriff, 1-for-19 against the
Cleveland starter before Friday
night,, singled for his second hit of
the game 'with two ou~s in the sixth . .
Trammell and Paul Sorrento walked
to load the bases for Ledesma. whose
two-run singie put Tampa Bay ahead
3-2.
Martinez followed with his RBI
single.
Airojo, who hasn't won since
beating Texas on May 18, allowed
two runs, six hits, walked two and
struck out two in 5\\ innings. Burba
also went 57, innings, yielding four
· runs on five hits with four walks and
five strikeouts.
Burba didn't take any satisfaction
in shutting down Boggs, who's 1-for7 lifetime against the right-hander.
"N_aturally I don't ':"ant him to get
the htts off me, but I've got to
approach him like any other hitter in
the lineup," Burba said. "If I start
focusing all my attention on him,
then the guy behind him is going to
get' me. He's the one that's going to
hurt you, not Wade with a base hit.
I'm just trying to get him out."
The loss was costly for the
Indians, who lost outfielder Jacob

122'950*
• Vorlac V-8 Power ··
• 4 Captain's Chairs
• Rear Sola Bed

.

Brand New 1999 Chevy
Full Size Conversion Van

97 CHEVY EXTENDED VENTURE VAN 18127-Red, V&amp;
eng., AT, AC, cass., PW, PL, 1111, crulse ................. 14,995
96 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SE 17983-Lefl side
sliding door, AT, AC, tilt, crulie, roof.-.ck ............ 14,437
95 FORD WINDSTAR GL 18159-AT, AC, AM/FM, V15

Eng., 7 Pass................. ! .........................................$10,995
98 FORD WINDSTAR GL 18163-AT, AC, 1111, qulse,

• flbe~glass Running Bds.
• Cullom Aluminum Wh~a

• Loaded!

lracllon control, rear AC, pW, PL......................... $18,495
96 FORD WINDSTAR GL 18162-32,000 miles, AT, AC,
lilt, cruise, PW, PL, 7 pass, V-8 eng ................. ,... $14,895

·

·

ftDl:ICI

92 FORD RANGER 4x4 #8156-Stx., AC, f&gt;.T; cass., spt.
wheels.~ .................................................................... $7,995

821 950
.

'

FORD F·150 Eddie Bauer 18164-29,000 miles, AC,
cruilse. dual gas tanks, cass~ ......................... $13,995
MA&lt;mAB2500 18061·13,000 miles, Bal. of fact
AT, AC, rear slider, spt. wheels .................. $11,965
FORD F·150 18131-8' Bed, AT, AC, apt. wheels, lool .·

* Brand New 1999 Chevy Astro

. .

Raised Roof Conversion Van

• Color TV &amp; VCP .
• Air Conditioning
• Power Windows l Locka

.

• APM'M Cassette
• Rear Sofa Bed··

18065·Red, AT, AC, cruise, rear

82l 950
'

* BrandNew2000Chevy
.Silverado 314 Ton Ext Cab 4x4

~ Vortec 6000 V-8 Power • Power Door Locks
.. • Exterior Appearance Pkg.
• Air Conditioning
• Loaded!
• Crulae/Tllt

2850*
'
•

!)t
•1

•Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• At.VFM Cassette

.

wheels....................... :......................... $1 0,995

;. Loadedl

Brand New 1999 Chevy
S·Series LS Pickup
• 4 Wheel Anti·Lock Brakes
• Aluminum Wheels

• Loaded!

NISISAN TRUCK 18026-AC, cass., spi. wheels ......... ..
........... ...................... ........................ .............. ·~ .........$7,595·
CHEVV:S-10 SUPER CAB LSI81211-AC, cass.,
beclllnt!r ........ ... :....................................... ~~ ............... $7,995
GMC SIERRA 1500 #8077-Red, VB eng., At, AC, sport
w:;~~~;JB' bed._....................................................... $13,905
9:
RANGER 181 06-cass., bed mat.. ........... $6,595
92 FORD RANGER 181 DO-Sport wheels, rear slider,
bedllner ........................;........................................... $5,495
97 FORD F150 XLT 18144-23,000 miles, Bal. of fact
Warr:, PW, Pl.., lilt, cruise, spt. wheels .................$15,700
97 FORD F150 XLT 18145-23,000 miles, Bal. of Fact.
Warr., PW, PL, lilt, cruise, spl. wheals, ...............$15,700
98 NISSAN :4X4 mUCK lt7984-cass., bedllner, sport
wheels .................................................................... $11,995
95 FORD RANGER 18073-Long bed, AT, AC, cass., PW,
PL, rear slider ~··········· ..................................."........... $8,495
97 FORD RANGER 18076·13,000 miles, Bal. of Fact. .
Warr., AC, rear slider, spt. wheela, AM/FM CD .... $11,490
97 FORD RANGER SPLASH 17990-29,000 miles, Bal. of
f~t. Warr., AM/FM CD, spl. wheels, AC, rear.slider ....... .
.........................................................................., .....$12,495
98 NISSAN 4x418166............................................$11,995

INRT UI'ILI'rY IDICLII ·

97 FORD EXPLORER 4x4aport #8161·AT, AC,IIIt,
cruise, AM/FM CD, PW, PL, leather eeals, spt.

,

Whetla .................................n .. , .... ,, ................. . .. . .. $18,495
97 JEEP WRANGL,ER 4X418146, Red, AT, tilt, cass.,
convertible, apt. wheels ....................................... $14,995
PaymenJs flgurtcl with down payment of $1 ,995 CUh or tr11de plus

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

s rowns , resurrec-tIOn
. ...

Retirement a poor
ploy to get a
shot at Super Bowl

SALE

exc.ruciating three-year absence for
thetr. devoted fans , whose football
passton helped return the team.
And when the expansion B~wns
tak~ the field .m thetr tradJUonal,
plaon orange helmets and all-white

Sunct.y, August 8, 1999

whelmed NFL commosstoner Paul
Tagliabue's office with faxes and letters demanding a new franchise. Led
by Mayor Michael R. White and with
the help of former Browns players
By SAM WILSON
such as Bernie Kosar, Lou Groza and
Tlmes·Sentlnel Corr'Qpondent
Paul Warfield, Cleveland mounted a
If Barry Sanders is in ermest about retiring, !ben
"Save Our Browns" campaign.
[wish him the best. It's the pathos of tile rich modThe unprecedented movement
ern superstar that they don't have to follow their
the ' NFL to make a deal
convinced
careers to their conclusions, as was the case only a
with
Cleveland.
agreeing to allow the
generation ago. Multi-million dollar contracts make it possible for successcity
to
keep
its
nickname,
colors a~d
ful. athletes, but especially superstars like Sanders and Michael Jordan, to
history. and promising a new team tn
rettre on their own terms.
over them moving -across the river to 199~ .
'
Naturally, fans are robbed of seeing these athletes perform during these :~~~~~~~ .J;~~ s:~~;~i~:ou~ti~~~ ~~~t~~k~· r~~~~!;a•~.~~k~~~~~ s~~; play in Jersey.': ,
AI Lerner, a local · billionaire and
final years. Jordan could have brought another championship to Chicago. gone."
.
.
hearts out. "
Once the shoe~ wore off. minority owner under Modell (it was
The fans in the Windy City still blame the two Jerrys for Michael's deparLong before comedian Drew
Grown · men wept openly while Clevelanders wiped away their tears on Lerner's private jet that Modell
lure. They shouldn't, because the final decision was Jordan's to make.
Carey was fitted for his first pair of · watching Modell 's news conference and began to fight . They over(See BROWNS on B-6)
Now Sanders retires within a season or two·of breaking Waller Payton's black glasses in suburban Brooklyn , from Baltimore a few days later. And
all.time rushing title of 16,726 yards. Regardless, Sanders is still a first bal- Ohio, and decades ahead of the Rock all of Cleveland, .which ~ad underlot Hall of Fame inductee. Even though he never played in a Super Bowl or and Roll Hall of Fame becoming the gone a remarkable downlown renaismade it to Disney World, he was, next to Jim Brown, the greatest running city's top tourist attraction , the sance, felt crushed and betrayed.
back in th~ _ league's history.
Browns owned Cleveland.
Three thousand miles away, 49ers
What bothers me is the possibility that Sanders may be using this retireBrowns Town, they called it.
president Cannen Policy thought he
ment as a ploy to get Detroit to trade him to a legitimate title team. Maybe
Paul Brown's teams of the 1940s knew how Browns fans · felt . B'ut
Sand,ers does deserve to be iq the Super Bowl more than Terrell, Davis in dominated the old All-American Policy. an Ohio native who left his
Denver or Jamal AndersQn in Atlanta, but I'm a little tired of players forcing Football c;onference, winning four · job in San Francisco 10 run the new
the issue like a championship is a right or passage for all superstars. '
straight titles, and when the storied Brow ns, said it wasn'o until he came
Like Sanders, Walter Payton played on some horrendous learns before he coach brought the Browns into the to Cleveland ohat he began to undermaddt to Super Bowl Sunday. Payton, who is now confronted with a life· NFL in 1950, they promptly won the soand the depth of the city's pain .
" It was as ohough ohey'd been
threatening liver diseilse, -never complained or threaicned to retire. He just championship and redefined the
went out every :Sunday and gave it his best.
.
game with a wide-open passing cheated," Policy said . ·' People
Many superstars never played in the big on• . Former Chicago Cubs gre~t attack.
ceferred to it like a dcaoh in ohc nunErnie Banks never ma~e il to the -World · .eries. Now ·stars like Roger
The Browns played in 10 straight ily. Well , io wasn'o like it was j ust a
Clemens and Chuck Knoblauch, w~" have p .yed in the fall classic, demand championship games, and their sue- death in the family. It was like a famto be traded to contenders, or the Yanke~ ho have the greatest chance of cess carried into the '60s when Jim ily member had been murdered .
· ·
·1
Brown shredded defenses as perhaps That's the feeling. It wasn 't just a
wonnong a Itt e.
.
h
· b k · h.
1
·
1 d f · 1 "
Being a superstar no longer means getting the big paycheck, it also means t eCglr~atel stdr~ntnmg acf thm ' 7'o"?ry.d oss. II was a crue an un aor oss.
h
d. · · h
·
· If
d • ·
h
. h' .
eve an s earns o e
san
Sundays that once rev olved
you ave a ovme. t:l!l I to wm a Itt 1e. you .on I Wtn ~ ca!"ptons 1P, nag, ... '80s never. made it to the Super around Browns games wcren 't fun
. lhen your career ts t~complete. Heaven forbtd, someone ~tght even J~dge Bowl. But their close calls - " Red anymore .
~our career lobe a failure, How anyone could ~II Clemens career a failure Right ·88" (Brian Sipe's end-zone
" I didn't watch football for three
~s beyond me.
.
.
.
.
.
.
interception against Oakland in years,"
Dale
Gail-braith
of
·. !lake umbrage at thts tactoc.l hved tn Chtcago and Banks was not a fat!1981) The Drive (John Elway's 98- Indianapolis said recently after driSuper clean locally owned. We sold It newt Loaded with
ure. Charles Barkley, Patrick Ewing and Karl Malone are not.failures. Mark
'
pwr seats, PW, PL, tJit, cruise and much more.
Grace, Rarael Palmerio and Ken Griffey Jr. are not failureS.
.
·Yes, it's a shame that we never got to 8ee Sanders perform on Super Bowl
Sunday. Like John Elway, Sanders deserves to be on a championship team.
GALLIPOLIS - Here are the 15
But if Sanders is using retirement as a means to get there, then he has done
Aug.
4 results from Cliffside Men 's
Match 7: Toler &amp; Toler Insurance
himself and the fans of Detroit a great disservice. Sanders, like &amp;nks, was
14,
Lorobi 's Pizza 26
Golf
Association
action,
held
each
a champion without the ring.
Match 8: Smith Custom Cabinets
Wednesday at Cliffside Golf Club.
Match l: Brown's Insurance 23, 17, Parts Bam 23
, Many American league fans keep concentrating on the Yankees-Indians
Players of the week: Gary
Paul
Davies Jewelers 12
rivalry as the one to produce this year's champion. They might want to pay
Match 2: Spark!~ Supply 20, Harrison Sr. 34, Gary Harrison Jr. 34,
some att~ntion to the Texas Rangers. In this struggle to produce the best ·
Rodney. Rankin 39, Scott Rankin 40
Thomas Do-lt Center 20
tecord in the league, the Rangers are righ(fin the hunt. They have a potent
,,,
Weekly prize winners
Match 3: Tom's Auto Clinic 2,
offense, better ·pitching than Cleveland, and the best closer in the game.
Closest to .pin - Scott Rankin,
G&amp;M Fuel38
Palmerio and Juan Gonzalas may be the ones to make i1 to their first fall
4:
, .Johnson's Tin Snedegat"
.
Match
classic iit October.
Longest putts - fred Staley.
Supermarkets 31 , D&amp;W Homes 9
PW, PL, tilt, cruise, AM/FM cass, Brickyard style
. Fans are not enamored with this year's home run.tace. It's a sign ofhow · Match 5: Norris-Northup Dodge Gary Minton .
·
spoiler, alum wheels and much more.
· .. · ·spoiled we have become since last year's reconct season.. Yes, McGwire · 26, Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn 14
won't hit 71, .but he and Sosa are on a pace to hit 63. Big Mac might reach·
Standings
Match 6: Smith Buick 24, Elks
500 career homers befo"- Wade Boggs and Tony Gwynn rerch ~.000 hits.
l tbru 4 Division
That is a testament to McGwire .s the most prolific home run hiuei .of this
Iwn
&amp;
' ·
generation. Singles are not an option foi Big Mac.
Cannichael's .............................. 223
Brown's Insurance ..................... 219
Finally,.it's a tragedy to read that Tiffany Young, a senior guard on this
D&amp;W Homes ............................ .200
year's 1999 national champion team at Purdue, was killed by a drunk driver
Elks ......... ..... ... .... ............ ........... 174
iit Gary, Ind. Young, from Hillsboro, Ala., was visiting her boyfriend's famGALLIPOLIS
Gallia
5 thru 8 Division
i)y in Gary. The other driver had a blood alcohol content of 0.30 and -sustained only minor injuries in the crash. It may be me, but doesn't that always Academy High School will begin its G&amp;M Fuel... ............................... 287
preseason
volleyball_ . practice Lorobi's ............ .......................... 228
&amp;eem to happen this way?
Monday.
Thomas Do-It Center .................. 209
Head coach Garry Adkins said Parts Bam ....................,........ :...... 206
that workouts will be held from 9 ·
9 thru 12 Division
.Ji'!'
a:m. to II :30 a.m. at the GAHS gym- " Paul Davies ................................ 245
Auto,'A!C, AM/FM cassette, Pwr steering,
nasium. All girls interested in play- Sparkle Supply .......... ................. 202
PB, and much more.
ing volleyball this season are invited Smith Custom Cabinets ............. 199
· to attend.
Toler &amp; Toler lnsurance ............. l99
· Adkins said that all participants
13 thru 16 Division
·must have a physical card on file Norris-Northup Dodge ... ............ 241 ·
with the high school in' order to take Johnson 's Supermarkets ............. 234
' part in the practices.
Smith Buick .... .......................... 219
Tom's Auto Clinic ... .... .... ...... ..... 211
Cleveland. Football is more than a
sport or passing interest.
"It's who we are,': electrician
Armand Monday said after wrapping
up one of his final days work)ng at
the new, 72.000-seat. state-of-the-art
Cleveland Browns Stadium, constructed on the shores of Lake Erie
over the site' of the old Municipal
Stadium .
" Football has always been here,
that's what made it so tough when
the Browns left ," he said.

CMGA submits match results

Buick,

Olds,
'

Monday- Saturday 9 am - 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm • 8 pm

.
1996 CHEvY MONTE CARLO LS

-·-

1996 PONTIAC SUNFIRE.

· Blue Angel ,
volleyball practice
to start Monday

Local prep teams
post practice dates·

1989 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE

, Varsity Blue Devils to begin
. football practice Monday

. GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy High School officially begins its
· preparations for the 1999 football season Monday.
.
.
.
; According to head coach ·Brent Saunders, two-a-day practtces wtll be
. held from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. to I p.m. e.ach day at Memonal
·
•
·
. ~ field. ·
· Forty-one players are expected to suit up for the Blue Devtl varsoty squad
this season. Saunders has 15 seniors, eight juniors and 18 sophomores on the
preseason roster.
·
.
·
:•
The varsity scrimmage is scheduled for Friday, Aug . 20 at Vinton County
. High School in McArthur. The' scrimmage will begin at 6:30p.m.
·
Freshman football practice also begins next Monday. The freshman squad
'
. , will practice at the same time as the varsity.

GAHS football
ticket sales
to start Monday
GALLIPOLIS· - Reserved tick,
ets for the 1999 Gallia Academy
football season go on sale on
Monday and .Tuesday for Super

. Locally owned with only 59,000miles. V6, tnt; cruise, ·
AJC and more. ·

Boost~rs .

Reserved seats fbr parents of var·
sity and junior varsity players, band
meinbers and cheerleaders will be
available on Wednesday and
Thm·sday.
'
· The general. public can begin purKCMS -football conditioning to start Monday chasing
reserved seating on Friday.
Tickets are $25 each and can be purCHESHIRE- Junior high football conditioning at Kyger Creek Middle chased at the Gallia Academy High
School begins Monday from 8-10 a.m.
School principal's office from 8 a.m.
. , Players need physicals and should bri~g water. ·
to 3 p.in .
Super Boosters will be limited . to
purchasing I0 tickets each on the
Varsity Raiders to commence
first day of sales. Following the first
.volleyball practice Monday
day, there is no limit on the number
'
of tickets that can be purchased.
. ' CHESHIRE- Any girl interested in playing volleyball at River Valle~
· High School should report to practice at the school on Monday, .
-"""!---~--"'!"'-"""!"""!!""'-"!"-.
Seniors and juniors will practice from 8-10:30 a:m., and sophomores and 1
•
·freshmen from II a.m.· I p.m.
Complete Line of DeWalt Industria Too s
• Players must have their physicals to participate.
NOW IN STOCK

&amp;1

•

.

.

Meigs

_,__"""!---....

cc
. practice to start Monday

ROCK SPRINGS -Cross country practice for Meigs High School and
Middle School will begin on. Monday, August 9 at 8 a.m. in the high school
lobby.
.
·
. ·"
.
. .
All boys and girls interested in running this year should an end at thts ttme
even if they don't have a physical.

-·-- -

ROOFING SALE

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Sale

West VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac,
And Custom Van Dealer.

(Continued from B-4)
yarder on 1987), and The Fumble ving six hours to see the nev. Browns
(Ernest Byner's at the goal line in hold their first summer training camp
Denver in 1988) - epitomized the practice. "It was a long. long three
struggling city, which became a years."
Imagine New York wtthoul the
national joke when its river caught
Yankees.
Montreal w1thou1 the
fire .
Canadiens.
Notre Dame without ohe
Yet despite five losing seasons in
Fighting
Irish.
six years to stan the 90s, no one was
"I remember saymg to my faoher,
prepared for Nov. 6, 1995. Afttrfailohose
people have to be hunmg."
ing' to convince Cleveland officials
to build him a new stadium, Modell Browns coach Chris Palmer said . "I
grew up rootillg for the New York
· announced he was lea ving .
" It was devastating," said Bob Giants. and it took me a year to get

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Call .Toll Free 1-800-521-0084

�0

Outdoors

~~. . .: .. . . . . . . .,_.~
. . .nll8ol

Sunday, August 8, 1999

Largemouths, bluegills prefer Ross Lake's Christmas trees
ODNR's weekly
fishing report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Here
is the weekly fishing report provided
by the Division of Wildlife of the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resources:
Southeast
ROSS LAKE - Approximately
400 discarded Christmas trees were
placed in this lake ' last year as fish
concentration devices. These are
good places to fish for largemouth
bass and bluegills. Keeper bass must
measure at least 15 inches. Previous
surveys indicate fishing pressure and
success are strong hete for ba.&lt;s and
channel catfish. The 143-~cre lake is
located just east of Chillicothe.
LAKE LOGAN- This Hocking
County lake is among a number of
. pleasant, family-style fishing lakes
found iri Ohio that ·docs not aur~ct a
lot of fish,mg pressure. Largemouth
bass and bluegills offer fair 'fishing
from many shoreline areas. At night.
ang lers will find much impro\led

be in shallow water feeding near the
surface. During midday, look toward
deeper waters to find bass. Troll
large crank baits and imitation baits
along points and dropoffs in the
lower half of the lake to take
muskies. Crappies and channel catfish also offer good fishing action.
EAST FORK LAKE - Night
fishing in the stream channel and in
the upper half of the lake is good to
excellent when seeking channel•catfish. Use prepared bait&gt;. cut baits,
and _night crawlers fished along the
bottom. The deeper water along
drop-offs and points are good places
to seek crappies. Fair numbers of
sponed bass weighing up to two
pounds are in this lake. Fish with soft
craws and live shad when seeking·
hybrid striped bass.
Cenlral
' HOOVER RESERVOIR
Saugeycs have provided some good
fishing action this summer in the
shallow waters of the main reservoir.
. Check with area bait sho)!&gt;s on the
best methods and locations to take
these fish. Most of these fish are
measuring 14 to 19 inches. Fishing:at

bass fishing is catch-and-release. but
these lakes have among the highe•t
catch rates in the state.
'
CHARLES MILL LAKE - The
deeper waters of this lake that have
any type of submerged structure arc
likely places to find crappies in late
summer. Try trolling small bladed
spinners. spoons. and crank baits
when seeking hybrid striped bass.
Channel catfish generally measure
•12 to 24 inches and may be taken at
night on traditional baits fished along
the bottom. Aathead catfish measure
up to 48 inches and can be taken on
live bait such as small sunfish ..
bluegills. and large chubs or shiners.

Northeast
MOGADORE RESERVOIR This is among the most popular
hluegill fishiog lakes in the region,
though these fish average less than
seven inches in length. Many of the
shoreline areas can produce . good
bluegill fishing when using wax
worms·, red wonms. and larval baits
beneath a bobber. Redear · sunfish
measuring nine to 12 inches can be
takep mthese same locations .
FINDLEY LAKE -This 93-acre
Lorain County lake offers excellent
fishing opportunities for bluegills
which average more than seven inches. Areas with brushpiles and drop-

offs are good places to use larval
baits and small wonns when seeking
bluegills. Channel catfish offer
eKCellent night fishing opportunities
lakewide. Most largemouth bass
measure less than 16 inches, but
offer good opportunities for adults to
· introduce novice anglers to recreational sPonflshing.
"\
Lake Erie .\
Central basin anglers are reporting good success when fishing for
walleyes and stcelhead trout. An
added bonus has been the occasional
report of anglers catching chinook
and coho salmon while fishing for
walleyes. Much of the fishing action

is concentrated at depths of 45 to 65
feet in waters up to 75 feet deep
approximately eight to 24 miles
north of central basin harbors from
Cleveland to Conneaut.
'In the western basin, walleye fish
action remains fair. Reports of yellow perch catches are beginning to
gradually increase. Anglers are using
spreaders lipped with minnows and
fished near the lake boltom around
the islands and reef complex.
Walleyes are being taken in many
locations, but seem to provide, more
action for anglers who are trolling
spoons off of dipsy divers and planer
boards.

Along the River

Section

Sunday, Augullt 8, 111!111

Michael Peterson to headline

Wally Pike's Outdoor Life
~----------~----~

' .

HE'S NOT CU'T
00'1' FOR "THE
tHCO&amp;tlllO STUff,

lM£ Sf"TE MUST

IUiliiE RAIS£0 1M£
GAME WAlOEt'~'
&lt;iiUOT~ MAIN •

·

I~

A1ickuJP~
.

HE?

•

Sai., /Juy. 14, 9 p.m.

around the lake offers good tlshing

b;:;:=;;~~g~~~~~~~LC~

'
Muskinguftl
The
Philo
Pool is River
the Y-Bridgc
·
County
d
area locate in Musktngum
and covers an It-mile stretch of
river. The y:Bridgc area .is a good
sp0t for anglers seeking spotted bass.
Try fishing around deep suhmerged

opportunities
for bluegills
using small worms
and larval when
baits
'" 1
l,. I 1,_'c.
beneath a bobber.
'·
t~
INDIAN LAKE- Fish at night f-...J.;;., __....;:.:.,_....~o~--.t...-_,...,::.;ou...ll
with sh'ad. or minnows ncar the 1---.. -·_ . ______ . _,__________..._. ___,__.....................-----·---·----··-·-~..:--"--''....,_"-'-''---""--.-;;"""'"'"'.;4-"".,..,_,.,_..~!f_.::,::;_..;+\...,~.._;g
bridges when seeking' white bass.
Areas with current are •ood locastructure, logjam s·. docks. stream tions to fish at ·night for channe l calconnuenr..:es and nprap with small · fish. Use cut baits and niglit craw lers
spin ners. crank baits, jigs. and plastic along the bottom for best results. The
wonns for best results. Use chtcken riprap areas generally produce -good
livers and night crawlers f1shed fishing action for anglers seeking
along the bottom of deep holes and largemouth bass. Keeper bass must
around sand and gravel bars when measure at least 12 inches. The Old
seeking c ha~nel catfish. Use live Indian Lake area remains .among the
chubs and sunfi sh to take flathead top spots to fish for saugeyes.
catfis h. Anglers also enjoy opportu· Northwest ·
nities to ·take bloegills. largemouth
LAKE LA SU AN AREA - The.
"'+ Ll\:&lt; : &lt;ll \:
bass, crappies, and saugeyes.
wildlife area in Williams County
~uthwest
offers 13 small fishing lakes full or
COWAN LAKE - Largemouth largemouth bass and bluegills. Some
bass pro,vide excelleiu fishing oppor- lakes are ope~ to anglers on ly on an
tumtles. Anglers should seek out advanced reservation basis. while
areas with fallen trees, drop-off others are open to walk-in fishing.
points, and s~ bm erged humps . as , Redears, pumpkinseeds and bluegills
good bass ftshmg locattons. Durmg are of high quality and often measure
evening and early. morning. bass may eight inches or more. Much of the

'
\

Mcrcurv !f// '

~~.feeM~

the spring walleye but returned for
the carp.
·
Carp wjll eat anything from crustaceans to vegeiation, but. most serious carp anglers have their own bait
recipes. 'Daugherty keeps his recipe
sectet, admitting only that its base is
Wheaties, a cereal used in many variations of carp bait.
ije's a bit ·more specific about
tackle. He uses a stiff ~'1, -foot rod.
and a I0- to 12-pound line and
mounts thebait. ball on treble hooks.
No sinker is required, although occasionally he will lie on a split shoot.or
two.
'

PB,

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'

G-AHS junior higb foolball
meelings Monday
At Gallipolis, Gallia Academy's
eighth-grade football squad wi ll
begin practice Monday ..
According to head coach Brack
Houchens, the Blue Devil eighth
,graders will start training for the ·
1999 campaign at 8 a.m. at Memorial
Field.
·
·
The ~eve nth-grade team will hold
an organizati onal meeting on
Monday at 5:30 p.m . at Memorial
Field.
Raiders' cross country practice .
to start Monday
At Cheshire, River Valley cross
country coach Ed Sayre anno.unced
that the Raiders' first team practice
will'begin•on Monday, Aug. 9 at 6:30
p.m. al River Valley High School.
The practice is open for students
enteri ng grades 7-12 this fall.
Contact coach Ed Sayre at 4410850 for more information.

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195

UPPER RIVER RD.

!:lOURS: MON. • FRI. e-:1;

740-446-9800 800-272-5179

c 9 p.m.

The Calvary Echoes came into existence in 1976. Sever'\! years ago, the gro~p recorded its first national project
on the Dawn label with the single, "'Moses, Take Your Shoes Off;'' which hit the Top 20 natiotl'lllly. Next came "New
·Jerusalem Corning Down", which hit the Top·40.
As of June 12; 1992, the Lord called the group into ~ospel singing as well as writing, on a full-time basis.
The Calvary Echoes have had the privilege of bemg on two of The Gaith er videos, "'0 Happy Day" and
"Revival.'' They have taken part in many of The Gaither's special events over the years like the 1994 Praise Gathering in Jndianapolis, Ind . and Jubilate in Charlotte, N.C.; in 1995 and 1997, the Waljo People Choice Awards in
Winston Salem , N..C.; and in I ~97 at Ru'pp Arena in Lexington, Ky.
. "Cook is well known in this area," said Brian Billings. chairman of the fair entertainment committee. "We were
asked by several local area groups to get th em for the fair.')

1

•
•

21M-STOCK
Auto, A/C cruiN, Hh,

21N·STOCK

If, 3 i: 9 p.m. .

On the follow-up to his smash I Stoled This Record, Cledus T. Judd asks
the immortal question, "Did I Shave My Back For This?"
During the last 18 months, Cledus has trucked a lot of miles, made a lot · ·
of vide.os and achieved unique success as th e court jester, of country. His
video hit "If Shania Was Mine"; "(She's Got A Butt) Bigger Than The Beatles"; and. "Ciedus Went Down to Georgia" .have established him as a genuine force in the country world as artists like Shania Twain, Joe Diffie. Charlie Daniels and David Ball have all made guest appearances on his videos.
Multiple nominations for Country Weekly 's Golden Pick Award and a -nomination for a TNN/Music City News Award have furthe r cemented his status .
'
as a country music parody master, bar none.

'

DAVID LEE MURPHY

Browns... (Continued from B-5J

I

'WeJ., -1/uy.

pra ncluo. F..:tOI)' R!lbilte and Colleg-e
Grad rl'bate. T~es and leu lldr1

1997051

.

e~~JwJJ

4 Dr, auto, NC,

He acknowledges that his . fondness for carp doesn't st&lt;etch to the
dinner tab!e.
"'I personally have never eaten a
carp, but it's ea.teri all over the
world," Daugherty said.

Just 12 days later, Browns fans
will gather again on the lakefront,
making the familiar walk across the
foot bridge on West Third Street to
their brand new stadium as the
Browns play the Minnesota Vikings
in Cleveland's first home game since
Dec. 17. 1995.
When fans enter the stadium,
they'll pass by a plaque honoring
their commitment to bringing the
.
Browns back .
It· reads, in part : '"Cleveland
Browns Stadium is dedicated to the
invincible spirit of Browns fans who,
through their perseverance and
tenacity, refused to say goodbye.
OUR TEAM ... OUR NAME
OUR COLORS ."

David Lee Murphy's r~cords have an extra kick that makes him &lt;instantly
identifiable in a crowd of new country artists. Cail if a driving rhythm or -a
no-nonsense attitude or a willit,gness to push the envelope- it's an element
of his artistry that' has produced S!Jme of the biggest hit singles of 1995 and
1996, and it's there on his new MCA album, We Can't All Be Angels.
Murphy knows exactly how to describe the music of We Can't All Be
Angels. "It's a rockin' record," he sa id. "Mentally, it's th e country message,
but as far'asthe framework goes, it's got a rockin' feel to it. 'Dust on the
Bottle' did, too. All
records have been more rockin' than PQnmal for
Nashville. I like to record music that we're able to really crank up and rock .
on live."
'

my

I

signed. the final pap~rs to go to
Baltimore), won an ownership bjdding war and bought the new Browns
for a then -record $530 million in
September 1998.
And on Monday night, after 40
former Browns arc introduced before
the game and Hall of Famers Otto
Graham, Leroy Kelly, Groza' and
Warlield participate in the coin toss,
a new era of football will begin in
Cleveland.
"'We won," said John Thompson.
aka "Big Dawg" , the leader of the
Browns' rabid Dawg Pound. "'It's a
big victory. We showed the rest of
the ·country that Clevelan!l sticks
together. that we aren 't the Mistake
on the Lake." ·

&lt;JuJH., _-lluy.. .fO, 9 p.m.
·
..

·~1~$15;925

Gallia cross country, golf, junior
high football teams set meetings
GALL.IPOLIS
Gallia
Academy's var.sity an'd junior high ,
cross country teams will begin officia l pract ice Monday at-- 8 a.m. at
G&lt;1ll1a Academy High School.
Those interested in running for
these teams this season shou ld
anc,nd.
Those unable to attend or desiring
more ·information should contact
coaches Keith McGu~re (367 -7137)
m Eric Wooten (441 -1324).
Raider golfers to hold
qualifying round :'.londay
At Gallipolis, River Valley's golf
team will hold a team meeting and a
qualifying round qn .Monday at g~ 15
a.m: at Cliffside Golf Club.
Any prospects entering grades 912 this fall are eligible to attend the
team meeting.
All athletes must have a doctor's
physical in order to compete in the
qualifying round .
Fur more information , call coach
Toql Weaver at (304) 675-2687.

Michael Peterson will headline entertainment a1 the Ma,on Cou nty Fai r. Aug.
· 10 through 14, according to Brian Billings. cha irm an of the fai r emen ai nment
committee. He will close the fair with a perform ance Sat urday. Aug. 1 ~ . at 9 p.m.
· ~we wanted him la~t ye ar. bul were un succe ssful :' said Bill ings. "'Vt'e didn' t
give up though. and got him this year." Peterson is so mew hat of a newcom er to
country music. but has been very successful with such hits as " Drink. Swear. Steal
&amp; Lie," "Too Good To Be True.'' "When the Banender Cri es:· and --From Here
To Eternity."
If you· were to ask Peterson the one thing he would most I ike people to know
about him , he would likely reply, "the music." Listening to his Reprise Records
debut album confirms [hat the easiest route to an understa nding of Michael Peter. son, the man, is through an understanding of Michael Perersun. the. album. For
the II songs on that offering capture the. compassion, 'trength, ,insight, intelligence and fun-loving spirir of the man that a brief meeting or lifelpng relationship
would reveal. He ·is an artist driven'with a desire to inv ite us all to laugh, da nce
and consider our own lives- often simultaneously.
" I can't remember one moment in my life whCn music wasn't my friend. my
favorite source of entenainment, my comfot1 and my encouragement ,.. he said. "I
have been consumed with writing and singing my entire life - long before I got
paid for it and long before anyone except my Grandma listened ."
Peterson was born in .Tucson, Arizona and raised on the ~olumbia River in
Eastern ·Washington. Between playing sports and hanging with his friends , ·he
spent countless hours in front of a record player at his grandmother 's house .
Playing football in college, Michael earned a starting .spot for two-and-a-half
yea~ as left offensive tackle, and a National Championship ring he still proudly
wears on his right hand. More importantly. he developed a relationship with quar• terback Brad Westering, whose post-college success as a producer for Denise'
Williams gave. Michael his first professional opportunity as a songwriter. 11 was
about this time that a friend told him that if he really wanted to grow as a writer
and artist, he should move to Nashville: .
,

i •

CARPS devotes energy to boost
image of carp as game fish
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Anglers rare I~ speak of the carp with
the same affection as they have for,
say, the walleye or the largemouth or
smallmouth bass. But it does have its
defenders.
. They include Leo Daugherty and
ut her 111embers of the Columbusbased' Carp Anglers Recreational &amp;
Partying Society. The tOO-member
group is '.' devoted to raising the tarnished image of the world's most .
misunderstood game fish," acconding to its mission statement.
'
The carp breeds relentlessly and
sUrvives in heated, low-oxygen
water · that kills other fish. It also
destroys habitat as. it· mucks up bottoms in its search for food.
But an angler can fish for carp any
time, Daugherty points out.
. Daugherty 'said he went ·to the
Maumee River in northwest Ohio for

.

.

fishing success when seek.ing chan- night near the causeway openings
nel catfish that measure I0 to 20 w11h shad l'an produce good catches
inches. The lake also offers good of white bass. The shoreline cover

frug. hunting opportumtics.

C

&lt;Jite 'kJW'I/leH, B~
dJ.ru., -lluy. f3, 3 c 9 p.m.
At their first Nashville club gig, hack in 1995. Brad and Brett Warren cl eare d . l~ bucks and .ran up a bar tab of
$20, hardly the way _to make a living. Less th an two years later, The Warren Brothers were one of Music City's
hottest hve acts, pulhng 10 standmg room only aud1ences all over 'town. Sure enough. the record folks came calling.
and by t,he end of 1997, Brad and Brei! were ln the studio with producer Chris farren. Their debut album, Beautiful Day m rile Coli! Cruel World , already has ms1ders testifying that The Warren Brothers are one of the freshest,
mosl exciting acts to hit Nash' i!le in yea rs.
,
Born. and raised in Tampa. ~ &gt;L rida. Brad and Brett learned music from their father. a proficient country picker,
and their church-s mgmg mother. Full-t 1me mus1c1ans before they were out of their teen s. they were averaging 300
shows a year by the earl y 'IJOs. They-move d from Florida to Nashville and , after keeping at it for a while. signed on
with BNA Records.
·

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

Sunday, Auguat 8,1999

Sundlly, Auguata, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoll., OH • Point Plea..nt, WV

JJuldt..v 11la- JJmtbul • Page C3
9

Love of a horse leads man to new life as horse ·whisperer
By MAllY PEMBERTON
•
•

AIM

9

I

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,.._Writer

liDEN, Md. (AP) - Steve
Grant's new career began with a
promise whispered in a dying

hone's ear.
His beloved Emma lay on a

salldy knoll in the middle of the pasture, unable to move. lbere was
nothing to be done except put her
• down. Grantleaned over Emma, and
whispered.
"I !Old her I would never forget
: her, and I'd give back everything
she cave to me," Grant said.
. When he had bought the horse at
auction three years earlier, in 1992.
, the 11-year-old, dressage-trained
: thoroughbred was perilously close
:: t9 ·being sold for dog food .
"She looked coy .. . and she
danced forward." he said.
, She changed his life . helping him
get through, ~ divorce. Because of
his promise, his life has changed
even more since. he says.
When he bought her. he lived in

a

''Steve was our rescuer. •• Ms.
subdivision m Salisbury; an Eastern trader.
with a quieter, more manageable
"You're the best. you are."
Shore town. where a swimming pool
Front Stage's problem IS thai he 's
The horse .-entually allows horse." saJd Fo1, mast.er of the local Barnes said.
In trailung, Show Me still shOW&gt;
took up most of thr backyard. He sk.mislt. He's a 1.600-pound. 17 II!· Grant to rub the hated cloth over hiS fox hunt who has trait&gt;ed horses
his spirit. sending sand Oying as· he
didn 't have a horse trailer. He didn ' t hand scaredy -cat that can be muuk .
himself.
even know how to ride.
Brealcing a horse usV.g tradition- tears around the outdoor ring before
spooked by a plastic bag tluttenng
"No" don't you be afraid."'
Today he lives in a replica of an across a field .
Grant sa)S "" thro"'s a plastic bag al method.&lt; of roping and tying can Grant slows him. When the 2-year18th century Georgia mansion on
"' What does he hav&lt; to be afra1d 1nto the air. The hor!oe 's eyes widen cause phys1cal or emolional trauma. old tries to sneak up to bite hjm.
117 acres on the Wicomico River. of?" Grant S.ys, looking fondly up but he doesn ·.t back away. Grant Grant said. Lyons' techniques rely G111Dt whirls and tlaps his arms in
with plenty of paswre, a 12-stall at the huge horse.
blows mto the bag. then snaps it on understanding horses as herd ani· ·the horse 's face to make him back
barn and a 12.000-square-foot
mals "ho are fearful when isollled. off.
Grant helps Front Stage face h1s The horse stays put.
Onl) when he gets Show Me ~t­
indoor training arena
fear through the use of props. each
·'Oh, you're malcing me happy," Horse whisperers t,y to gain the aniting
at a nice pace and stopping llJ1d
An entrepreneur who had created one a lit~e scarier than the last.
mal's confidence. .
· Gram says.
two successful financial businesses.
Connie Barnes owns an Arabian turning o n coinmand doeS he-allOw
AS he stars a co1led rope against • Grant then tri~s opening and
he has changed professions. too. his th1gh. Gran\ gets Frunt Stage to closing an umbrella Front Stage stallion named Show Me. Because the horse tO at&gt;Proach: Grant stro)&lt;es
Last year. he traveled to Parachute, move easily around the ring.
doesn't holt . When Grant' opens a of harsh methods used by previous and pats the stallion's neck. It's -the
Colo., received I 2 weeks of horse
When the horse faces him and large piece of 9ilver insulation and trainers , he would kick and bite first lime the horse has allowed a
training ·and was cenified in the drops his head. Front Stage is send- naps it. the horse turns to run. then wh.en loaded into a trai lcr. He rrainer lo get this close .
" Good boy. we've made a good
John Lyons' method of "trai ning ing Grant a ~ignal. .. He's 1elling me . stops and faces Granl.
wouldn 't let anyone put a halter on·
without trauma.··
' You are m control now.··· Gmnt
Front Stagt&gt; lowers his head so . him or brush him ·and would allack start:· Grant says.
Still lean at 50. with tousled said.
Grant can hug him . ·' You can do it. if gi\·en 3 chance. Now, after several
blond hair and blue C'lo'es. Grant sue·
Grant piCk&gt; 11p a " ·hite towel and You can do it." he whispers into the months with Grant , he can enter the
gem the char~cter played by Robe-n . the horse backs awa\. Grant encour- horse·s car.
show ring .
Redford in the mo,·ie "The Horse ' agt&gt;s him tO ~omt&gt; in.· The horse takes
. The owner. Ham ilton Fox, s~ys
Whisperer ... But he, is not acting .
&lt;,1 few tentati1o·e ' steps forward. on I)
hi~ horse is mw.:h improved.
Btlbis• Are
He tram s about I 0 horses a coming in for strokc.s when the
" It takes a !01 more patience to
Sielc When
month .. corr~c1ing: pro~ems ranging . towel is dro ppo;d.
·
do it the wav Steve does and John
from biting to refusing to get into a
" GoO!! bo~ :· Grant says. Lyons does ~ut 't think you end up
They Don\ BaN
9

Our

Geefin6

To.
Pletue GiN them
TluJir ;,~~~.

Schooi ·News: .Poetry, ,Just a Bachelor at Arts
CHICAGO (AP) ~ The poetry" skills. says Garnett Kilberg Cohen.
c ha1rm-an o f Columbia'. College 's
~ajor has his rhymes. and his rea·
sons.
English depanment. " There is huge
Whateve: they · are, he's riding demand for writers in this Commuthe crest of poetry 's new popularity. nication age . The skills our students
Cplumbia College Chicago offers learn ~erve them well as lhey proan undergraduate poetry major ~ ceed intO·graduate school or pr,o fes·
so far the only one in the country sional writing jobs."
The college 's new poetry major
and many other colleges and univer·
sities include poetry· concentrations requires intensive study of literature
within ~ creative· writing majbr or .- and writing courses in poetry, ficoffer_ an English majo~ with a poet· tion. -and professional writing. Electives include screenwriting, playry mmor.
Ryan Kulefsky is as surprised as wrighting , and songwriting. "We
anyone that he ended up choosing want our students to be both broadpoetry ·as his major at Columbia ly educated and deeply knowledge·
College. " I' m from an athletic fam- able about the .crart of poetry," says
ily: and being the younger son, I had Paul Hoover, poet-in-residence.
"The study of poetry involves
to play baseball. I thought my life
calling was to be a gym teacher."
the development of critical intelli·
He says he became -interested in gence at a high level," says Hoover,
poetry when "I Was lonely and whose book of poetry.- "Viridian, "
· . began to write my thoughts on . was the 1996 winner of the Georgia
paper. My uncle gave me two poet· Prize for Poetry. "Poetry also teach•· r)' collections: Allen Ginsberg's es us a good .deal about life. I can
'Howl' and Lawrence· Ferlinghetii 's think of no better way to prepare a ·
'A Coney Island of the Mind.'"
student' for a happy and productiv.e
Parents may wonder what a child career than the study of-the world's
will do in life with a degree in poet· great poems.''
ry.
'
Other schools repon an upsurge
!)ays l(ulefsky: "What will a of interest in the study of poetry,
poetry mlijor prepare me for7 tife." once considered an arcane corner of
On a practical level, strong writ- 'academic study.
Cynthia Hogue, director of the
mg programs lead to marketable

MasSagers
• SOO\he ..
your body.

S1adlcr Cenler for Poetry ar Buck· of Associmed Writing Programs, a
nell University jn Le" isburg . Pa.. national organization which pubsays the Jemand for poetry courses li shes a guide to college and univerhas caused the sc hool to triple the sity creative writing programs , says
numher offered . ""Siudents held an rhere an~ mr~re such programs lhan
ope n poetry reading that lasted from . ever.
' ' ·
'
8 p.m. to 2 a.m. on a Friday night." '
'· Relatively few undergrads go
she recalls . " With 200 students on to become ·Writersi' he says .
crainrried into the cafe. it vied with &lt; "But they learn critic 'I) skills, readthe fraternity parties for the hottest ing skills and creative-imaginative
thing to do on campus Jhat week- writing skills which · are invaluable
' . .
to any line of work.'' .
end... .
And says poet and novelist Max Most programs are taught and
-ine Chernoff, head of the creative run by published writers and poets,
writing depanment at San Francisco and some publish literary journals
State University in California: "We which the students help edit. Writhave students nocking to us. The ing workshops, where student poets
more young writers hear established read and critique their work under
writers. the more their enthusiasm the guidance of the teacher, are typ· .

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public:

MONDAY
CHESHIRE ~ DISabled Ameri'
can Veterans of Cheshire .' Monday.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - 30th anniversary · at the hall. Dinner. 6 30 p.m .: l)lCCI·
revival : faith Valley Tabernacle ing, 7 p .m.
Church , Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy,
Sunday. Monday and Tuesday, 7
POMEROY - Girls voll eyball
p.m . . each evening. Evangelist practice. Meigs High -School. Man·
·
·
George Scott, Huntington, W. Va. day, 10 a.m.
Rev. Emmett : Rawson, pastor,
POMEROY
Righi to Life.
invites public .
Monday. 7:30 ·p.m. ·at the Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT Rev. Bob
Robinson, guest spealcer, First Baptist Church, Middlepon, 10:15 a.m.
and 7 p.m. Mrs. Robinson guest
soloisl at evenit:tg service.

MOODY-BEVAN

-TABOR-REYNOLDS-

GALLIPOLIS · Mr. and Mrs. ·
Rick Moody are announcirg · the
engageme nt and upcoming marriage
of thc'ir daughter. lillian Brooke. to
Qabriel (Gabe) T. Bevan. son of Mr.
and Mrs Charles Gatewood.
The .wedding will take plaec at
the First Presbyterian Church. Gal·
lipolis, o'n Saturday. August 14,
1999. The music will start at 2:00
p.m. and the wedding cere mony at
2:30 p:m. The gracious custom of

~ewe

opening church .yedding will be
observed.
The br~de- to-bc is a graduate of
Galli a Academy and affe ndcd Gallipolis Business College. Bevan also
graduated from Galli a Academy and
received an associate degree in com:
puler aid design from Columbus
Technology Education Coll ege .
Th·e coup le will ceside at 50
Texas Road. Gallipolis. along with
their daughter Alexis Brae.

polioy ,

- Blood Drive •'

Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Monday, August 30; 1999
Noon
.. to 6 p.m.

+FREE T-Shirts To
. All Donors
·+ Door Prizes

Let us ,. copy your old
photos. '.Special 2·5x7's for
$14.95 . Reg. $19.95. SAVE
$5.QO. · We also do passport
photos, Identification photos and
one day service on photo
finishing. Watch Batteries while
you walt.

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.. Amphibious Order of Frogs,
The group gathers each year at
St. Anthony's Lodge to get a leg up,
so to speak.
The event, which is open to men
only, has a large following in the
Italian-American community an4
has grown steadily s, ince its found·
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Reyn olds 1s the son of George
GALLIPOLIS · Teresa Lynn
Tabor .and William · Edward and Don na Kent and the late
Reynolds announce their engage- William R.:y nolds of Bidwell . He
ment and upcoming wedding.
· works in maintenance, in training
· Miss Tabor is the daughter of for a.n electrician jOb at Mills· !'ride
Gary and Vicki Myers and Charlie in Waverly.
·
and Ronda Tabor of Gallipolis. She
The open church weddi~g Will be
is a student at Rio Grande Universi· at 6:30 pm , ,at White Oak Baptist
ty and works in data processing at Church , Gallipolis.
Hol zer Clinic.

~unbap ~tmes- ~enttnel

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Chrisf,;.n
comedian
e
arnke, Friday
through Sunday, 7 p.m. nightly at
the Ash Street Free Will Baptist
Church. Free. Susan Warnke to
speak. Pastor Les Hayman invites

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa (AP)A' herd of ansy cows ·has invaded
Chicago, and now some Cedar
Rapids leader.; want io bring equally hip pigs to town.
Richard Luther, Cedar Rapids
development manager, wants a
"Pigs on Parade" display simi lar to
the decorative cows in Chicago
called "Cows on Parade ."
Chicago 's cows. a puhlic arl
exhibition , were decorated by hundreds of that city's artists :
Cedar Rapids Mayor Lee
Clancey. who hails from Winnetka,
Ill .. saw the Chicago tows several
. weeks ago and spoke to Luther
about pitching the idea to the arts
commission.
They decided pigs would · be
more representative of Iowa's heritage.

Teresa Tabor and William Reynolds

ln an effon to provide our reader·
ship with current news, the Sunday
Times-Sentinel will not accept wed·
dings after 60 days from the date of
the event.
.
..,&gt;..: ' ~· . . .
Wedding'
s
s
ubl)litt~d
after
the 60·
I .
•
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d~adline
will
appear
during
the
tp determine if pineapple Life Savers stay
week i'n Th~ Daily Sentinel and the
have. We haven't done anything to
By The Associated Press
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
.
NEW YORK (AP)- The sweet update it for a long time." hc·said.
All c lub meetings and other news
pineapple tlavor in Life Savers "But sometimes the worst thing you articles 'in the society section must
candy rolls could be coming to a bit- can do is change things. So we'lllet · be submitted within 60 days of
consumers d~cide . " .
ter end.
occurrence. All binhdays must be
Life Savers come in several vari .. submitted within 60 days of the
Consumers will determine by a .
vote whether pineapple-flavored elies, from mints to tropical fruits . occurrence .
Life Savers candies are to be .But pineapple is only included in the
Only black and white or color
dropped from the original five-tla- . five.fla\~or original.
glossy prints will be accepted .
vor lineup that has been in place
since 1935.
•
The other four tlavors - cherry,
lemon, lime and orange -'-- will be
unchanged. Pineapple co uld be _
replaced with watennelon or straW·
"Let yovr body heal itself through
berry.
•'
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Nutrition"
Company research shows pine:ip· ·
pie is the least popular tlavor, John
Tracy Saunders, RN
(740) 441·1~82
Barrows, a spokesman for Nabisco
Holdings Corp.'s Life Savers divi• Carpel Tunnel
• Arthritis
sion, said Thursday.
• Bulk &amp; muscle
• Weight lou, weight gain
·. · "The five-navor roll is one of
*Perimenopause
or menopause
• ·1' Energy
·
oldest and most famous products we
! 1' Sex drive (Men &amp; women) *Diab11tics ·
'
Amphibious Order of Frogs meets
• Heartbu·r n, ulcers
·
• Allergies/hayfever
DOWNINGTOWN, Pa. (AP)• Stress, Depression, Anxiety
• Sleeping difficulties ..
Some folks are connoisseurs of
• Prostate
• Eye problems, vision
:.wine. These guys are fanatical about ·
*PMS
• Infertility
frogs.
• Osteoporosis
Nearly 900 men consumed half a
• High cholesterol &amp; high Triglycerides
ton of frog legs Thursday in celebra-

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

REEDSVILLE Cohnolly
reunion · Sunday at the .Belleville
Locks and Dam s elter house .

'Pigs on Parade' to hit Iowa

JUlian Moody a·nd Gabriel Bevan

: Votes

poetry."

Home. ·

POMEROY Meigs County
Humane Society, general membership meeting, 3 to 4 p.m. Sunday at
the Pomeroy Public Library. A fund
raising dance, Thrift Shoppe volun·
teers and other matters will be discussed.

FLAIR

446-4612 EXT. 292

TUESDAY
POMEROY Signups · for
POMEROY
Immunization
Meigs Middle Schoo! cheerleading dinic. Meigs County Health Depart·
n:youts. Monday noon to 2 p.m. ·and ., ment, Tuesday, 9 to n a.m. and 11 to
Tuesday, I0 a .m. to noon. ·
· 7 p·. m. at its office on Memorial
Dri ve·. Every chi ld to be accol)lpa·
RACINE :::_ Board of. Public nied by parent or legal guatdian and
Affairs. Monday, 7 p.m . at the have immunization record.
muni(ipal buildi~g .
·
POMEROY - . Meigs Coun ty
MINERSVILLE
Vacation Board of Elections, Tuesday. 9 a.m .
Bible School. Minersville Methodist
Church. Mqnday through Friday. 6
..
to 8:30p.m.
•
RACINE
Vacat10n . Bible
School, Racine First Baptist Church.
7 p.in . through Friday. Classes for
all ages.

......,
··
POMEROY - Gordon and Jill Gallipolis.
.Holter an,noUnce the engageinent
The groom-elcct...ls also a graduand approaching marriage of their ate of Eastern High Schoo l and is
daughter, Martha Renee Holter. to currently attending the University of
Micah John Otto, son of Ron and Rio Grande majoring in spons and
Joyce Hill of Pomeroy and Mike and exercise. He is employed in the
Photo Lab at Wai-Man in Gallipolis.
Violet Otto of Llano, Texas.
. The bride-elect is a graduate of ·
The open church wedding will
. , · . Eastern High·School. She js current- take place Saturday, Sept. II at the
, : : iy attending the University of Rio Fellowship Church of the Nazarene
: • Drande majoring in elementary edu- at Long Bottom at 4 p.m. The recep-;: );atio n and is employed as an assis- ·tion will immediately (ollow a( the
~- ~ ta'nt manager at Dollar Tree. Inc .. in Racine American Legion Hall.

----------

Free Vlcdneslor
G1llil Couaty

Library.

ROCK SPRINGS~ Meigs High
School Band Boosters. 6 p.m .. at
fairgrounds, Bring cleaning suppli es
to clean fair booth. All parents urged
to attend .

-.,---"HOLTER-OTIO - -

.toward the purchase ·on ·
any adjustable.bed

. Gallia County
He._lth Department

groWs . "
ical.
·
Emerson College in Boston has
Ryan Kulefsky qf Columbia Col;
" ~n internship program which prolege finds the workshops, especially
vides students with work experience .valuable because they taught him
and sometimes job offers after grad- the discipline ihat goes into writing
uation . One of the reasons for its and provided' mentorship and inspisuccess, says John Skoyles, chair- ration. "I studied with Paul Hoover
man of the writing, literature and · ~nd realized I could ma~e a life for
publishing depanment, is that "our myself in poetry, and that the possiprogram prepares students to write bilities are unbounded.
well . I have had phone calls .from
"That opened up doors for me to
newspapers and talent ' agencies . study literature and all fields of
because they say. · Emerson,students · k.llJJw!edge- because everything is

know how to write. "'
David Fenza, executive director

Martha Holter and Micah Otto

~00 Coupon good

~om.munity C~lendar----...,.....The Comm.unity Calendar is pub·
I
ished
as it fre'e service to non-prbfit
f\,
groups wishing to announce meet·
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or fund raisers of any type. Items are
printcd . only as spac~ permits and
cannot be guaranteed to be printed a
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Offer expires 8/15/99 . Some restrictions may apply. Not valid with any other offer;

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

Sunday, August 8, 1999

.Sunday, August 8, 1999

Skip the ketchup ·- add the mayonnaise- when dining on Belgian frites·
By SAMANTHA CRITCHELL
Auoeiated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - French
fries have ascended to a higher
.level. America's favorite side dish
is the main dish - and the only
dish - served at the Belgian frites
shops popping up all over the city.
As a staner, you can dip chspy,
golden potatoes into the traditional
European mayonnatse, which ts a
little thicker than its American
cousin. Next, try a peanut satay
~ auce or Parmtsan peppercorn
sauce. For the sweet tooth, there is
mango chutney mayonnaise or
Hawaiian pineapple mustard.
Ketchup is an option, but mostly the novices use it, according to

Suzanne Levinson, owner of two
Pommes Fntes shops tn Manhattan. For the true European e~peri-

ence, lntes should be eaten wtth
mayonnaise,
curry-flavored
ketchup and chopped onion.
Levinson, 33, had her "frites
epiphany" while she was a college
student visiting Belgium.
"I thought I knew fries. Every
kid grows up on fries - it may be ,
the first solid food they eat ~ hut
these are· "fries."'
'Belgians were the first to enjoy
their potatoes as a crispy. salty
snack, even though Americans call
them french fries, Levinson sa1d.
Levmson, a New Yorker w1th
no previous food-busme ss expenence, opened ,her first ,store almost
three years ago. Pommes Frites has
expanded into a 20-employee
operation, and ~evmson IS a consultant to aspmng fntc ... -s tore
owners around the country.
1

There are a half-dmen fntes frankfurter they so often accompa- It 's a vegetable, " sa id Levinson,
ny . Levmson occasionally spots ratmnahzing the snack she eats all
shops in Manhauan
Prices at Pommes Frites range someone carrytng a burger from a day long
The two Pommcs Frttes locafast-food restaurant, but that 's the
from $3 to $5.50.
exception,
not
the
rule.
tions
use about 7 tons of potatoes a
The best way to eat fnh.:s IS tn
Frequent customers are like week Because of the volume. the
an open cone made of hghl paper
(which helps · absorb any excess regulars at a bar They stop by at shops use electric sheers and peeloil). with sauce poured on top as the sallJC time every day, and. ers. But if Levinson were making
you walk , down the street, Levtn· desptte a choice of 30 sauces, !hey ' them at home, s he would slice the
always order the same .thing . she potatoes by hand int o pieces
.son satd .·
"about the si£e of a fmger."
But on a summer afternoon. satd
Levinson uses mostly Russet
Amcnca's afftnny for french
several' frites eaters opted for the
small dtnin g area oi' the Eas t Vtl- fries crosses all demographic cate- Burbank potatoes, but said the
\age shop . seumg o ut a selec tion of gories, old and young, rich ·and more expens!'e Yukon Golds are
sauces and securing theu fntes in poor - even dieters need an occa- worth the tnvestment for home
c.ook.s.
.1
cone holders (holes cut ou t uf the SIOnal qUick ftx, Levinson said.
Belgtan
fnte
s
arc
fned
twice .
The a nrac t1 o n IS the sal~mess
shop's wooden tables). ·
$(&gt;me c ustom'ers make meals a.nd the cnspmess that come from The ftrsl ttme, they are cooked for
SIX rnmutes to eight minutes m ml
o ut of thetr fn ed potatoes. layenng ' fried foods. " People just crave tt. "
How unhealthy are crunchy, heated to 325 degrees F. The potasauces and t opping~ them with raw
toes should turn a light yellow
Y1d::tha o mons,as if the frites them- g reasy. perfectly delicious fnte s?
"They can't be that bad , nght l color. Then. without drainin~
se lv es were the hJ.mburgc r 0 1

Expert help with managing professionals: Not all painters are pros
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By DANN-Y LlPFORD
away to show VIsible hrus~ mark s gun' can blast thmugh wmdows, g loss and hase . Pamters mJ.Y fecToday's Homeowner Magazin~e
and· wobbly cut hnes on wmdows :;car sidm2 and tear sc reen~ A~ fur om mend a painl , but it's usually
For the Associated Press
and tnm 'r;ou have to go to a site the actuarprcp. rcqutre that s iding because they're getting a good
To get the quality paint job and take a clo se . look . When you be d iS k-sanded . The sanded areas price on tt , not because it's a high you're paymg for, ask these ques- · ask for references. the painter wil l shou ld then be foathorcd wtth a quality finish. So, do _your own
tt qns and make sure your contract ts like ly · steer you to a current or very pa lm sandct to blend 111 Wtlh the research. You ' ll find . as I hav e. that
very spectftc. .
recent JOb. Most lresi"J,ly patnted tes t ol the JDh . Abo spet:tly thai all yo u get what you pay for. '
houses look •reat But bec ause the gaps be fill ed with cau lk a nd that
Site protection and cleanup
It doe s n't take muc h more than a real test of a paint·JOb IS hov. wei itt all the Stdtng he pnmcd wttht, pen The contrac t should require your
brush. bucket and ladder to get mto stands up over lime. tnspect a JOb etrating. slow-drymg pn iner~Avmd patnter to use drop c loths (or mask -'
the pam ling business Of all. ' the that was done at least three years "spot pnnung ... where JUst the bare mg tape and paper) to-cover everytrades , painting offers the most ago Look for the followmg when v.ood IS pnmed For tnstde work , thmg ·at nsk from sptll age, splatter
opportunities for less- than-sk illed you check out work· conSistent · make sure the patnter checks all or overspray. For ex(erior work .
workers to pass themselves off as . .' wear over the entire surface; peel- drywall joints for smoothness and thts means shrubs, the driveway
experienced pros . It's also easy for ing' and flaking; and cracked glaz- fixes damaged walls . For wood and even sections of the roof, and
unscrupulous sons to work a scam · mg . compound around w mdows. tnm, stipulate that the pamter fill for an interior job, floors, cabinets
on homeowners. In one classic Also .check for Signs of overspray, nat! holes, seal 1\nots and pnme and electrical ·fixtures. If I walk
scheme, the painter charges you for splatter or spilled paint. espectally with a slow-drymg pnmer A con- onto a site and don't see a sea of
premium paint but applies a lower on the roof, driveway. stdewalk and tract for premium work call s for all drop 'cloths , I grow suspiciOUS that
grade . We recently had a situation shrubs. Ask the homeowners if woodwmk to be sanded between the painter tsn't thorough. Also
where we caught a pamter. pounng they ' ve noticed any problems with fmtsh coats.
require that the painter return the
cheap paint out of 5-gal. pails into how the paint ts weathering, if their Application methods.
stte to prejob condittons, especially
empty cans of expensive paint; he landscaptng su(fered any ill effects , The contract should specify How landscaping . And agree before the
was charging the customer for the whtle t!te pa1nter was workmg, tf the pamt will be applied. For exte~ job starts who wi.ll clean the winhigher grade and pockeung the dif- the patnter kept. to the budget and tf ' nor. work, pnmer ts ties! apphed by dows - and , if it's part ' of the
fere nce. He was gone by noon.
they would hire him again.
brush. I don't nouce much dtffer- pamter's fee - once the work has
It's tmportant to hire a painter TfiE CONTRACT
· etice between spraying and brush- been completed. Payment
you trust. Much of (he work takes
A contract with a painter is more ing for topcoats and for ~xterior
Never give the painter more than
place when you aren't around, and , than an agreement for him to paint work , though spray mg uses more 10 percent of the total job cost at ,
it is difficult to check a paiqter 's your house- for a certain price. It's pamt. What's more, a painter.expe - · the co!'tract signing. Thereafter,
work. Once · the job ts complete, your chance, to commit the painter rienced in spraying and a mple over- ,, •disperse one-third of the remainder I
you won't be able to tell if he to following specific prep and' spray proiection , are a must. Also on the first day of work. a third at
pnmed the entire surface or even tf application methods.; ustng quality write In mintmum drying ttmes
the midpotnt (use a job milestone,
he applied two coats rather than materials; protec~mg the .site; and Patnters who want to speed through like "all prep done, pnmer and first
one.
Cleaning up. It's also the way to set a]ob will spray over wet caulk, and coat applied") and the final thtrd
The Checkup
a payment schedule.
even want to apply a secoQd' coat . after the painter has cleaned the site
Before you hire someone, check Prep work.
before the first has ttme ·to dry and removed his gear and you have
For outside work, proper prep is properly ' Leave at least a day approved the job. Once you hand
his certificate of tnsurance to guarantee he has general liability insur- crucial to the durability of the paint between each coat. Also make sure over that last check, it will be tough
ance, and also verify that workers' job. Don't settle for vague contract your paint~r isn't putting latex- to get the pamter to return for
compensation insurance is in effect language like " properly prepare all based paint over ,,oil-based pamt touchups.
if he has any employees. Checkmg surfaces." If you have. wood stding, wtthout the proper primer. Latex
work quality isn't as easy. Painters the contract should state that the o'ver oil wtthout pnmmg IS a recipe
Award-winning remodeling conwill offer photos of past jobs as tes- painter will power-wash the house for senous peelmg Material qual- trapor Danny Lipford, owner and
timony of thetr skill, but these with a bleach or TSP mixture. Also ity
prestdept of ltpford Construction
won't tell you much. For an exteri- demand that the power-wash operaWrnc into the con tract the pamt in Mobile , Alabama, ts host of the
or JOb, for example, they're usually · tor be e.perienced. In the wrong yo u want by li sttng the t.na~ufactur- TV program "Today's Homeowner
shot from the curb. This is too far hands, these high-pressure water er name along with th e grade. color, With Danny Lipford."

Forget those bold tie p~tterns --- go solid tq be in fashion

,

RIPON , England (AP)- Foulltams Abbey, three miles from here on the
River Skell, is a ruined Cistercian monastery founded tn 1132 Once &lt;(he of
England's most influential religious houses, ·it· has been in ruins since the dissolution of the monaste,ies under
VIII
1539.

Susan Bristol
Old Friends

Attention Teachers ·
Come see the latest
for your Back to
School fashions

• Polo
• Woolrich
'

300 Second Ave. Gallipolis
I

Are you interested in working with children? Have
h h b
fo
b • d ,
you ever t oug t ci QUt ster care· ut lUSt on t
know if you want the commitment?
Host Home, a 1·14 day respite care network may
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Ppportunity to ma . e a i renee In someone S I 1
·are flexible, and reody to leorn· give US a call.
~

'

Muse~m store~ manager Tony
Sparks .satd · the earnngs, whtch
sell for $20 a patr, were the. store's
most popular Jewelry item .
According 't o him, they were

ft•l

earring~

;'o ld out Friday m'ornmg and a few
customer orders : · whrch were
recetved before the dectSton was
made: wtll be filled.

Conl1dent wltb

.,,

•'

com

I

shins~ which has helped convincer--'--~_:__'___ _-c-___~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==;=~~
cbnsumers the look can work.
- --- -·· ·
"There has bee n a real sh1ft m the
outfit that men wear," said .Larry
'
Schechtennan. a vtcc preSident ol
Moorestown . N.J. -based Today '!
Man . "H ts less ahoul pallern and
more aboul te~ture and color, soltd
color.".
Saks Ftfth Avenue also has made
the soltd tte a maJor part of tts neck
wear department , selling tour to ftve 1.
times more than they did just a fe"
• The Skip Peck Quartet
years ago.
Thursday, September 30, 1999
But the s11ltd tte ISn ' t for every ·
Jai.zMusic
one,
6
" ' '
" I thtnk the btg dtsadvantage tc

1:

Pleasant
Artist Series

Season

IU•:S'I' I•ICI('I•:S 01•' '1'111~ \ '1•:.\lt!!

for :\'ovemher &amp; December 1999
.
Departures.
.;..

fJAP (() fJte ({)ela £1jueen &amp;!ean~oai. GJo .
. Cf&gt;re~nt opec!ally Cf&gt;riced Cruises

f!IJ7 South Central Ohio offices.
NOW for these

special discounts.

CALLO.Jl.STOP B_Y TOI)A Y!!!,

Season 1i~,:kets for the 199~Point Pleasant Artist Series are currently
on sale fof.lY $50/person~
The PPAS supports education and
appreciation for the arts. All perfonnance~
will be held at the State Theater pr the
Point Pleasant Middle School gymnasium.
It promises to be a BlEil' year, so please
join IJs in supporting these talents!

eM any cmisc dates m•ailahlc!!

1

Are you:

• Cantori Mo{}ntani
F.riday, December 10, 1999
Caberet•StyleChristmas Show

•Sh-Boom
-

Thursday, lanlUII)' IJ, 2000
SO's &amp; 60's Oldies Review

Thursday, March 23, 2000
Oldies Chart Toppers· Six# I 's

10'1',.,

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Attn: Belly Kl:Juff
119 South Park Drive
Poinl Pleasanl. WV 2JJJO

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

. ''

Do you have: · .

Have. you been exposed to c~arcoal fumes,
vapors, dusts, asbestos, etc.. .

I

I

.

-Emphysema?
,..Asthma?
-Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease?
-Asbestosis?
.
.
-Occupational Lung Disease?
.

• The Vogues

Ill G
S50rlft~to"TiulronGtiU."

.

-A welder, insulator,. iron or chemical worker, etc.?
-An .active or retired coal miner?

I

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

, -Occasional shortness of breath?
·_Tightness in the .chest?
·
-Burning in the chest and throat areas?

• The Gift ofthe Magi

p/M:tJ

II {]efepione-,-----,---11 'Xum~ of ;z'dels --__...,-~
II ?!moun/ 8nc!OJed..______

Do you experience:

'Friday, Novembef 5, 1999
Childmt'sBallet

r----------------------------------------,I
I %zn,., _ _ _ _ _ __
hrclulu
ptl«toAIIIfiSI IS,IP'J9
I
~~ddnw----------

('I'll"'('

Testing is being provided at no .cost to the patient. Cqsts not covered by ·
· patient's insurance will be offset by the .Ohio Department .o f Health .
Black Lung Grant and The Holzer .Clinic Foundation Grant.

Tickets

oftkktiJ

CHECK THIS OUT. ..
euu hl'f;
tfi .\ ('01/11 ts!

·•

Gens4tkyo, a anti-nuclear.group tn
Japan.
Group spokeswoman Naomt
Kishimoto .said ,Thursday · "It's
not the sort of tliing you should be
hangmg from your ears or ustng to
decorate your desk ."
The Japanese
group had
learned of the earrings on the
museum's Web site, whtch .also
was reviSed to remove mention of
'them.

Contact: Amy Boster, Director of Community
Support Services or Melissa Kimmel, Host Home
Coordinator at ACCESS to Human Resource
Development - 1·800·562·5565. ACCESS is a
community mental heolth center in ,Gallia, Jackson
and Meigs counties and is a AA/EEO Employer.

While some say the monochrome
lte is a look better suited for movte
mobsters , some consurtlers don't
seem to mind.
Jon Schmidt bought three soltd
ttes tn the last feW months, whicH is
more· than he's bought tn the last
three years. One recent evenin g, he
wore a bold blue tie with a matching
shtrt and a black suit.
,
"I no longer go through the
mornmg stress of whether the tie
matches or hot," said Schmidt, a 30year-old New Yorker who. W'!rks at a
Wall Street investment firm. " ! like
the simplicity of the solid-ue thtng "
At the men's retail chain Today's

r.eservation~

American consumers might keep
prices more stable . Truman also
us.
forced higher margms for persons
As a pan of Truman's Marshall deahng m gram tradmg so as to lurut
Plan to rebuild Europe, he asked speculation.
Americans to conserve.
Some organizations like the PoulThe October 6, 194?, edition of try Producers complained that Truthe Galhpolis Daily Tnbune satd: man's cQnservation program was
"The strictest food conservauon unfair to poultry growers .
drive in American peacetime history
Chicken and turkey farmers were
got underway today witb. an appeal having a hard time selling their am.for the public to observe two days of mal! in a market that was betng
self-dental, each week to feed hun- depres&lt;ed down by the government
gry Europe. Unless all Amencans They were willing to conserve
cooperate, President Truman said in grams fed to poultry but encouraged
an extraordinary radio address last 'persons to go ahead and eat more
night, they may endanger any hope chickens.
After the first day of the new pro- '
of salvaging peace from the present
chaotic world situation."
gram , the OPI was' reporting that
The v_oluntary rationing program meat , m;~~rkets actually saw an
told Amencans to use no meat on · mcrease In the buymg of meat on the
, This Max Tawney photo shows the crow'd that had gathered on
Tuesday ; and no poultry or eggs on fifSt "meatless day." Diners. contin- October 9, 1947, awaiting the opening of the new Kroger's store-on
Thursday. Every person eating at ued to serve meat.
Third Avenue. Kroger 's was located on this spot until the 1970s. The
home was to save a slice of bread
The anicle quoted one man as building was torn down lor extra city parking shortly after closing.
every, day. Restaurants were told to saying, "Americans will e~t as' ,long
no longer serve bread and butter as they have the money and if they
1947 1.ncluded. Octagon C lean ser. nat1o nw1de fl'vc Hudson Sedans , five
don't lhave steak one day, they'll eat
wilh every meal.
"' .
Octagon Soup, Argo Starch . Dreft , fur coats. 1150 Westinihouse pnzes
Behmd .lhe scenes Truman was two the next day to make up for it ·:
Lux ~oap , Mott 's jelltes · Swan:s (toasters. roasters, and tran s). Mrs
working agamst grain speculators,
1947 was the introductory year Down Cake Mix and Clapp s Baby Haro ld D Wood was the first cuswho had been dn ving prices up. forTide and It's interesting that most Food. Eatmore Oleo. Spotltght Cof- tomer at the new Third Avenue store.
Since the U S. govennnent was buy- of the Tide slogans from 1947 sttll
fee , Clock Bread, and Latonta SOda The 1l111d Avenue store was closed
mg a lot of gratn on the open market survive: "T1de's m, dirt's oui", and Pop.
m the ' 1970s when a store was
to send to Europe, Truman hoped "Washday mtrade".
In 1947 Kroger wa s gtv~ng away . opened in the Stiver Britlj]e Plaza
that lessening the demand from
Other products at Kroger's tn

Holzer Clinic
· in conjunction with the
Black Lung Clinic
• ·.
and the . · ·
Oh~o ·Depart ent of Heal.th

wtth loud flowers, cartoons, maps of
the world and abstract art - and
·many men tried to relay their personalities to the world through their
neckwear.
But not these days. Stores around
the country say sales are bnsk for
monochrome ties- tn,conservative
blues ,a nd blacks as well as hot ptnk,
sh immery red and royal blue
"It used to be you would make a
fashton statement by how busy your
tie was, but not anymore," said
Davtd Wolfe, creative director at
Doneger Design DtrecttOn, a [ashton
for~caster and consulting firm.
"Now, it's the plainer, the better."
The new look in neckwear is
helping to boost tie sales, which
l!ave been weak in recent years.
There were I 00 million ties sold tn

At all
Make

: KIRTLAND
AIR ' FORCE
&amp;ASE, N.M. (AP)- The Nahan· al Atomic Museum has dectded
nOt to se.ll souventr earri ngs with -.
tiny silver replicas of the atomic
b!lmbs dropped on Japan amid
HiternattOnal protest nn the 54th
anmversary of the bombing of
Hiroshima.
"The foundation (that operates
the museum) just dectded stnce
tt's a sensitive day and there's so
ll)uch concern, it just wasn't worth
the bad feelings ," museum director Jim Walther satd Fnday.
'Walther couldn't ' say if the
decision was permanent, but
added there are no plans to restock
the items.
The earrings shaped like
"little Boy," which was dropped'
on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945,
and "Fat Man," which was
dropped on Nagasaki on Aug·. 9,
1945 - had drawn protests from

·luz claiborne!·

J;::;:

the new store in 1947 was the first
week for voluntary rattOntng m the

·fNational Atomic Museum gift shop pulls A-Bomb

Man. sohd ties represent about 20
percent of the tota l ue bust ne ss, up
from 12 percent a year ago
Today 's Man has diSplay s show ing solid ues wnh coord inattn g

DULLES, Va. (AP) - America
Online Inc. will make its Instant
Messenger service easily available
to the 2.5 million customers of two
smallei Internet access serv1ces,
further defying Microsoft Corp 's ·
attempt to crack AOL's lock on the
·
market.
The move Fnday drew a sharp
reaction from Microsoft, wh1ch IS
promoung its own instant messagIng service but has been rebuffed so
. far in getting AOlto let customers
of both se rvices exchange messages .
" It 's too bad that AOL contmues
(O advance their own separate
efforts and is not listening. to consumers' de sires for . tnteroperability
pet ween messenger serv1ces,"
Mtcrosoft spokeswoman Deanna
Sanford said .
'
1
AOL, based tn Dulles, satd it wtll
distribute its messaging service
through MmdSpnng ' Enterpnses
and Earthhnk Network, the first
time its popular service has been
avatlable through another Internet
service provider.

By:

Important abbey now in ruinb

the United States last year. down
from 110 mtlhon tn 1994, accordmg
to the Port Washmgton , N.Y.-based
market research firm The NPD
Group.
.

AOL raises stakes in
instant · messaging
battle with Microsoft

block of Second Avenue. near the
Clendenin Hotel. In the 1930s the
James
Kroger store was moved to the 300
Sand•
block of Second Avenue . Then m
1939 Kroger's moved to 17 Court
Street. There they remained until the
new store was built tn 1947.
The first workers at the Third
,Avenue Kroger's store were : Fr~d
Phtlhps , manager; Blanche CanaOn Thursday, October 9, 1947, day, office assistant; Violet Barcus,
Kroger Supermarket opened on Pearl Canaday, Mary Chevalief, and
Third Avenue in Gallipolis the Mae Null, cashiers; Harold E1Win ,
largest and best tn the entire chain.
Forest Thompson, Fred Northrup ,
The yellow bnck one-story Junior Ho~ck, Adrah Hutchmson ,
butldmg cost $150.000 to build. The and Wendell Halley, clerks; Naomt
storeroom floor was 60 feet by 160 Bailey, dairy dept.: Byrdell Forth.
feet and the, mside also had a yellow produce dept., George E. Cooper
look, brought on by the yellow tile.
and Paul Lambert, meat dept.
The manger Fred Philltps was a
Fluore scent hghting was used
and the butlding was heated by two nattve of Hidwell. After ht s graduaautom atic heat circulators suspend- tion !rom Btdweli-Poner and Rio
ed from the acoustic fabn c ceihn_g Grande, he taught school at Btdwell .
,
_
Yellowtown. and Kyger. In 19-22 he
level.
The fumtlure was oak and best went to Preble Countv, Ohio. to
new refngeration equtpment on the teach and in I n4 JOined Kroger's,
market was installed. In the parking being asstgned to a store m lndi anapolis ·
lot there was. room for 150 cars.
: Kroger's ftrst 'came to Galhpohs 1. " Later he managed stores 111 and
• m 1927 . By the late 1920s Kroger's arou.nd ' Charleston, West Virgtnia
hpd nearly 6,000 stores aeross the Iromcally hiS brother Wayne Phtlltps
country. Kroger, of course started in· lived just down the street one block
1883- in Cincinnati. That first Gal- - from the new Kroger store.
The week that Kroger's opened
lipolis store was located m the 400

Jt

By RACHEL BECK
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK '( AI') - You can't
judge a man by his tie anymore
Busy tte s were long the rage -

the solid tie is the food issue. " Wolfe
satd "If yo u get food on it. it doesn ' t JUS I blend m. wnh the pattern. "

Kroger opened new supermarket to large crowds on ·October, 9, .1947

them , they should Stt - fur as httle as five minutes and up to 24
hours. .
Just before the frites are o be
served, they are fried in oil heated
' to 375 degrees F. The potatoes
should be cooked for about two
minutes .
In frites shops, the potatoe~
then go into rhe "tosser,'' a device:·
that resembles a metal colander" :
wtth a baking pan attached to the
bottom to keep the oil from splattori ng The fntes ·are salted while
they are very hot.
AI home, cooks can use a regular colander but they should be
mindful of the hot oil and shake
the fne l over a bowl. Levinsoq
advised. Salad dressings can be .
substllut~d for the more exotic
sauces found at fnles stores.

I

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

. ..

HOLZER SYCAMORE CLINIC
4th &amp; Sycamore Streets

.

* Gallipolis, Ohio

,. (740) 446·5'2 44

PRICES GOOD THRU
SAT. AUG 14

.·

'
·
.

�PageC6•,

b , . . . _ , •bed

~unday,

Sunday, August 8, 1999

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

August 8, 1999

The Community c...n •• Ia .,.._

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) - A socialite's din~r ~ith Prince Andrew
was secretly videotaped by ber jealous husband. accordtng to a la':"sUJt1hat
claims the video and suggestions of a tomd royal tryst were gtven to a
British tabloid.
.
Melissa M. Lincoln, 40, of Newport Beach filed a Superior Court la"[suit
Tuesday against J.D. Lincoln. 63, claiming he&lt; privacy was invaded and she
suffered emotional disuess wben he made her a scandal-sheet celebrity.
In addition to allegellly giving the video to The Sun in Loodon, Lincoln
is accused of revealing intimate details about their marriage and providing
nude photos of Mrs. Lincoln. The suit seeks unspecified damages over the
July 24 tabloid spread.
·
'
Mrs. Lincoln met Prince Andrew on a flight to Hawaii. her attorney Gloria Allred said Thursday. The two had dinner ...:. and nothing else- and the
video was shol from the busbes outside Mrs. Lincoln's bungalow as the
prince left for the evening. Ms. Allred said.
·
.
There was no telephone listing for J.D. Lincoln in Orange Co.u~t,~

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County District Libntry Board of
profit
group•
wtahlng
to Trustees meeting, S p.m.. at the
ennounce IIIMtlnp and lpeCial . library.
evente. The Clllendar 11 ' not
deelgned to promote lllee orENO - Eno Grange 2080 meet. funcl-raiMre of any type. 11eme .,.
printed 11 apace permlte end cen- ing scheduled for Aug. 10 has been
not be guar11nleed to run 1 apeelf. canceled.
lc number of days.
Nailed

n a

free ..vice

to - .

•••

•••

Sunday, Aug. 8

•••

POINT PLEASANT. W.VA. Narcotics Anonymous Tri - County
group meeting, 611 Viand Street,
, 7:30p.m.

•••

Mr. and Mrs. William

Sutton

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

-WENDLING-SUTTONPORTLAND - Ti.na Louise
Wendling. daughter of Joyce and
Clarence Weddle. Jr. of Ponland.

-ROUSH-ANDERSON, RACINE ' Brandy Nicole
Roush and Brian Alfred Anderson
were united in marriage on June 12
at the Racine United Methodist
Church.
The Rev. Brian Harkness performed the wedding ceremony at
6:30p.m.
The bride is the daughter of Gary
and Teri Roush of Letart Falls and
the granddaughter of Charles and
Ann Findley Jr. of Minersville and
Carrie Roush of Letart Falls.
The groom is the son of Jim and
Becky AndersQn of Racine and the
gi;llndson of Arthur and Ada Nease
of Racine and George and Mary
Morris of Pomeroy: He is also the
great-grandson of .Helen Nease of
Racine.
The wedding carried out a Cinderella theme since the groom proposed to his bride in Cinderella's
Castle at Walt Disney World in
Orlando, Fla. three years ago.
· For he~ wedding the bride wore a
formal ~hite. gown of satin and tulle.
The bodice was fashioned with a
.square neckline, spaghetti straps,
and a forin -fitting waist. It · ~as a
semi-cathedral length with a very
full tulle bottom. She wore a tiara
· headpiece with a cathedral length
veil accented with scattered pearls
which was created by her mother-in-

law, Becky Anderson. She also wore
white elbow-length gloves to accent
her gown. She carried a hand-tied
bouquet of silk white open roses,
French · lilacs, stephanotis, and
greenery accented with sheer blue
ribbon.
l'allon Roush, sister of the bride,
was,the maid of honor. Bridesmaids'
were Sherri. Frederick, Jenni ·Roush,
sister-in-Jaw, Amy Northup, and
Heidi Nelson. They wore light blue
floor length gowns of crepe satin
and carried rhinestone scepters
accented with sheer blue ribbon.
Tjle flower girl , Jordan Anderson, cousin of t~e .groom, wore a

floor length dress of white satin, a
tiara headpiece a veil ' matching the
bride also made by the groom 's
mother. She carried a white basket
trimmed with b.lue ribbon filled with

no immediate comment.

.

Following Kennedy's fatal plane
·crash last month , Fox reportedly
paid a stringer $10,000 for video
footage of a Kennedy famil Y party
on the Fourth of July in 1998. The
videp showed Kennedy playing with
children and his wife. Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, doing handstands on
the grass at' the Kennedy compound.
The tape was run on "Fox Files"
and Fox News Channel. Afterward,
the syndicated programs "Access .
Hollywood," " Extra" and " Entertainment Tonight " asked for permission to use sn ippets of the video,
said a Fox executive, who spoke on
condition of anonymity.

Fox denied the requ est from

Early patriot led varied career

CHARLESTON. S.C. (AP)- Statesman Henry Laurens, born here in
·1724. lived for a time in London, then operated an import-expon. business
white rose petals.
in Charleston. In 1757' he was elected to the House of Assembly and·served
The ·groom wore a black tuxedo in the Continental -Congress from 1777 to 1779, becoming its president. En
with a white shirt and silver vest. He route to negotiate a treaty with the Netherlands. Laurens was captured by
also wore a boutonniere of si lk the British· and imprisoned from 1780 to 1781 in the Tower of London.
white swcethean roses and stephanotis accented with blue ribbon.

KANAUGA: Worship service at
' .}ilver Memorial FWB Church, 6 .
p.m .. with Rev. Miles Trout.
•

·For initial evaluations or follow-up visits,
we offe.r monthly office hou~s.

August 13, 199·9 _
Member, Ohio Orthopaedic Institute
.;

•'A' h

~IS.

POmeroy. h was decorated with a

castle, nelling , lights, and Cinderella
belongings of the bride.
:,.
The four-tiered. white cake was
topped w:th a Cinderella and Prince
porcelain figurine given by the
bride 's parents. Following a dinner.

mooned in Cancun, Mexico and now

reside in Racine.

"Entertainment Tonight" because it
was angry at how it had been treated
by . the syndicated show in the pasi; .
but said yes to its two competitors, .
"Entertainment Tonight" reponedly used the video anyway, taped
from Fox· News Channel.
Video piracy is a touchy subject

•••

C.o;DMUS - Walnut Township
Crime Watch, 7 p.m., Cadmus
Community Center.

•••

.•

'

"THE TEACHER DOESN~T LIKE ME."

"THE DOG ATE MY HO_MEWORI&lt;."

•••

Your kids
••

GALLIPOLIS - Choose To Lose
Dicr Group. 9 a. m. at Grace United
Methodist Church. For information
. call 256- 1156 .

ses.

I

•

•

'
·''·
1.

.

•

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•hown in the ad.

TUesday, Aug. 10

GALLIPOLIS - A)coholics .
Anonymous meeting, St. Peter 's
: Episcopal Church. 8 p.m .

satellite dishes c~ n give different
netw orks access to materials that a

tors for use of the video .

.....
•••

t~levision

erty:
Fox and Param o unt lawyers
began discussing a settlement after
Fox threatened to sue the syndi ca-

GALLIPOLIS- GrievingJ'arents Support Group meeting. New
Life Lutheran Churth, 7 p.m.

.,

You'.., got qu.,.tiona. We've got anawera.

0

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•••

GALLIPOLIS -AI -Anon meet·
ing at St. Peter 's Episcopal Church.
8 p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - New Life
Lutheratr'Church ' 12 S_tep Spiritual
. : Growth Program', 6:45 p.m.

•••

•

FA~ILV

•••

POINT PLEASANT. W.VA. -

Thursday, Aug. 12

•••

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

•••
•••

GALLIPOLIS • Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, 8 p.m. St.
Peters Episcopal Church.

•••

.fr

PORTER - Bible study at Clark
Chapel Church. 7 p.m,

•••

EVERGREEN - Springneld
Townhouse,church service, 7 p.m.

••• •
•••

Saturday, Aug. 14
GALLIPOLIS - Miracles in
Recovery Group Narcotics Anonytnous meeting, 9 p.m: St. Peters
Episcopal Church.

•••

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

•••
•••

Aaron -Fry reunion: Augus1 8.

Krodel Park Shelter house 2. Lunch
at I p.m:

•••

CENTENARY - Kuhn - Coon
family reunion. August 15. at the
farm of the late Charles N. Kuhn.
Centenary Road. Dinner at npon .
•

VACATION, BIBLE'SCHOOL

'

GALLIPOLIS- Vacation Bible
School at First Churcll of the
Nazarene. August 9 - 13, 6:30 - 9
p.m. "L6ve Is No Illusion,'' featuring John Louis.

. . ***

GALLIPOLIS
Nel\' Life
Lutheran Church Vacation . Bible
· School. August II · 14, 6:30 · 9: 15
p.m. nightly. except Saturday begin ning at 3:30p.m. Theme Great Bible

•••

PATRIOT- 81 st Myers reuni&lt;&gt;n.
August 8. Fox Fairview Church. · ·
Mount Ziilt&gt; Road .' Basket dinner av'·
I p.m. ·
..
'
*** '

MERCERVILLE - Barry-Moore
family reunion, August 8, noon.
Hannan Trace Elementary School
cafeteria.

.Friday, Aug. 13

•

•••
REUNIONS
•••

•••

RIO GRANDE- I 19th Blazer
reunion at Rhodes Hall, August 8.
University of Rio Grande. begin- .
· ning at II a.m.
...

•••

PORTER - The 78th annual
Gooch family ·reunion, A,ugust 8, at
. the home of David and Judy .
Keslnedy. Covered dish dinner at
12:30 p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Denney family
reunion, August 14, 4 p.m. until
dark. Raccoon Creek Park. shelter
house Ill. Potluck dinner at 5:30
p.m. Bring chairs, stories and pictures.

•••
•••

CLASS REUNION
Southwestern High School Class
of 1984, 15 year reunion , Aug. 21 22. If you have information on .
class members call 379 . 2730.

•••

REVIVAL
BIDWELL - Dunami s 99
Revi.val at Living Water Church.
August 8 - 15. scr;iccs, 7 p.m.
ntghtly except for August 15 ser.
vices beginning cu· I0 a.m. and 6
p.m. Nursery and childrcns church
nightly. Worldwide noted evangelist
Mike Manuel preaching August II
- 13. Difle~ent speakers ni'ghtly.

nes~ of a small religious movement ·
He also told of torturing two
By RICHARD N. OSTLING
in Palestine to reach Rome and slip unnanw~ female deacon s to extract
AP Religion Writer
What evidence do we have about into any records ·from · the empire information. making them the first ·
Jesus' Christians find that a strange that have survived. As' we might pre- Christian martyrs on record diet, Bruce said, such information something denomioatio~s that for ·
.
·
question.
bid women deacons might ponder.
1
We have the New Testament. But first appeared as ''police records."
' some skeptics say. that bec·ause the
The Roman historian Suetonius,
The mo~t important non-ChristNew Testament '\lras written by compiling data in about A.D. 120, · ian source is the most problematic.
: Christians· (true), the material is ' recalled ' that the Emperor Claudius · Late in the first century the Jew ish
~ unusable (false - insider accounts banished all Jews from Rome in' historian Josephus wrote "Jewish
: are essential to history).
.
. A.D. 49. Why? 'fhey were constant- Antiquities. " The 18th book has a
Occasionally some radical will ly rioting "at the instigation of long section about John ihe Baptist
that largely agrees ·'with the New
: claim we can't even be sure Jesus Chrestus."
That
was
obviously'
a
misspelling
Testament..He
also reported the exc- .
existed. Serious hiStorians today
: think differenily. With no Jesus, how of ''Christ." Suetonius . misunder- cution in A.D. 62 of "the brother of
do we cxplain the rapid rise of the stood the available records . and Jesus the so-called Christ, James by
: Jesus movement in the first century? assumed SODJC troublemaker named name."
And there 's a famous passage
'
In addition, we do in fact have C:hrestus was actyally in Rome. This
: tantali;· · i£ bits of infof'1Tiation about brief comment indicates that two about Jesus himself. The bad news is
, Jesus and his movement that were decades after Jesus ' death. Chris- that Christian and non-Christian
' written by non-Christians during the tianity had reached Rome and was sc hol ars agree it was later reworked
dividing the Jewish community.
by ' overzealous Christians. since it
' ·ce ntury after Christ. ·
Tacitus loathed the Christian includes pious phrases that no Jew
: The scarcity of such outsider
inforrnati on is no surprise to E.P. "plague" but his "Roman Annals," in the pay of anti-Christian emperors
Sanders of Duke University. He written in about A.D. 115, preserved would have written .
The good new s is that authorities
: writes iri " The Hiswrical Figure of the fact that Christ ")Vas executed
! Je sus" ( 1993). " It is someti mes hard by sentence of the procurator Pon- figure it's obvious which words
were addecl. Take those away and
' to believe how unimportant Jesus tius Pilate in the reign of Ti'berius."
A third writer in that period , we're told Jesus was known as a
; was during his lifetime, especially
Pliny the Younger, became imperial · "wise man" and " doer of wonderfu l ,
· . : outside Palestine.''
legate
for Bithynia (in present-day works. ·· attracted helicvers. was cru,
The Roman occupation governTurkey)
in about A.D. Ill and sent cified by Pilate. and start ed a move: ment in Jeru salem might have kept
numerous
letters to the Emperor mcnt 'thal stil l existed. ·
; recOrds about Jesus Sanders writes.
. Josephus ' passage on Jqus
: but it is ass umed lh.ey ~ere Trajan. One of t~ese described his
destroyed during the devastating policy of executir:tg Christians who comes before rh C one on John the
rebe ll ion against Rome that began in refused tO curse Chris! and worship Baptist. reverse order of the New
the Roman gods,
Testament accounts. John .Meier
; A.D 66.
.
Pliny
reported
that
believers
"arc
considers that a strong clue that
British sc holar F.F. Bruce proin
the
habit
of
meeting
On
a
certain
minerial on Jes us cam e from Joseduced an excellent I 974 survey
ti tled "Jesus and Chri stian Origins fixed day before su nrise and recitin g ph us and was nnt entirely made ur
Outside the New Testament.'' Bruce an antiphonal hymn to Christ as by later Christians. who would ha ve
has si nce died amllht! book is out of God.'" after which they "meet again told about John first and th en Jesus.
to partake 'of food ." It's an invalu- the way the New Testament docs · '
print.
able
glimpse of early Christians.
. Naturally 11 took time for aware- ·
1

""Just A Sample Listing Of Sale Items
Item In The Store Is On Sale Now"

•••

'TESTAMENTS: Yes, there is data about
:Jesus outside the New Testament
'
'
,
:
:

!PRICES HAVE ftEVER BEE" BEllER!

•••

•••
•••

,:_:: CHESHIRE · TQPS (Take Off
;;:P.ounds Sensibly) meeting, .at
heshire United Methodist Church,
;;10 - II a.m. Call Ann Mitchell at
•,l88- 8004 for information.

•

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I

...

•••

-

•••

Monday, Aug. 9

news· operations
on hot stories, par_ticularly si nce
among

•••

GALLIPOLIS • Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles In Recovery
Group, St.' Peters Episcopal Church,
7:30p.m.

there was music for dancing ~

The bride is a I?95. graduate of
Southern . High School and is
employed at Valley Incorporated in
Millwood, W Va.
·
·
The groom is also a 1995 Southem graduate and is a senior at the
Russ College of Engi~eering at Ohio
University
majoring
10
electrical/computer engineering.
Mr. and Mrs. Anderson honey:

•••

•••

KANAUGA - ·vacation Btble
School at Kanauga fair Haven Unit- .
ed Methodist Church, August 9 13 ,6:30- 8:30p.m. Program August
15. bcginnihg.at6 p.m.

•••

...

were · Ti'acy Pickett ,

Regina Manuel, and Brittany Morarity, cousins of the bride, and . Bev
Roush. aunt of the bride . coordinated the ceremony. The Anderson
family presented 'the music and
Sarah Anderson sang a solo. ·
Nettiqg and greenery decorated
the church along with fern provided
by the bride's parents.
The reception was held at The
Sacred [lean Catholic Church in

u-~, •u.J • Page C7

Dig. classes for all ages mcluding
adults.
·

CHESHIRE - Vacation Bible
School at Old Kyger Freewill Bap-·
Wednesday; Aug. 11
tist Church. Aug. 9-13 . 6 30-8:30
•••
, p.m. The theme .is "In Search of VicHENDERSON, W.VA. - Western tory : Putting On tbe Armor of God."
square danci11g. 7:30- 10 p.m.,
Henderson Recreation Building. '
CROWN CITY - Providence
Missionary Baptist Church, Teens
POMEROY " Narcotics AnpnyRun R6ad, August9 - IJ, 6:JI) • 8:30
mous Living In The Solution
p.m. Theme 'We Shine For Jes~s .'.
Group. Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, ?·p.m.
GAGE- Vacation Bible School 'at
Salem Baptist Church, August 9 VIN'fON -Vinton Baptist
13, 6 :30 ~8:30p.m. Theme 'Station
Church's Pastor Marvin Sallee
WSFJ. We Shine For Jesu s.' Ages
teaching series on "Nehemiah 's
kin&lt;!&lt;rgarten - sixth ·grade .
Project", each Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Nursery provided.

: · · GALLIA- Homecoming at Gal: lia Baptist Church, beginning with
: Sunday School at 10 a.m .. Cover
• dish lunch at noon. Aftenloon S&lt;r'
; vi~es with Evangeli'st Davi!l Frazee,
· : beginning at I: 15. Special singing
' : GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
' by the Miller Family. Cline
·: Retired Teachers Associatidn meet.• ing, noon, Gallia County Senior
: Rawnies pastor, •
:· .. ·''' ·~ '
'
Resource Center. Guest speaker
PATRIOT- Songfest at Bethesda Earl Tope, 'Gallia County: As l
' Methodist Church, 7 p.m.
remember it. ' Call Louise Greenlee.
245 • 5029 or Janet Wetherholt, 441
·-0514.
.

Jamie Anderson served as besl

Greeters

,""~

•••

· KANAUGA- Kanauga Fair
Haven Uni.ted Methodist Church
; . S~nday School picnic at D.A.V
::;suilding , 12:30 p.m. Bring covered

.

(614) 221-6331 for Appointment limes

man for his brother. Groomsmen
were Dave Anderson, cousin of the
groom. Jeremy Roush . and Adam
Roush , brothers of the bride, and
Jeremy Hill . . Acolytes and ushers
were Grant Circle and Ryan
Williams. Patrick Johnson , cousin of
the groom, was a greeter and in
charge of ttre aisle:runner.
The ring bearer, Clayton Findley.
cousin of the bride, carried a Cinderella pillow with rings attached.
They all wore black. tuxedos with
white shirts and black vests. Their
boutonniere's consisted of silk white
sweetheart roses accented with blue
ribbon .

Fox says P·aramount to settle in
John Kennedy Jr., video dispute
FBy DAVID BAUDER
AP Tdevision Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - The syndicators of " Entertainment Tonight"
. agreed to settle a dispute that began
when Fox accused the show of stealing exclusive · video of John F.
Kennedy Jr., the network said Friday.
Fox spokeswoman Karen Pederock refused to disclose terms of the
· deal. which is believed to include a
monetary payment from Paramount
•
to avoid a lawsuit. 1
A Paramount spokeswoman had

was married to William Charles Sutton of Dayton, on Jul y 19 '"
Pomeroy.

••••

SpecJa!Jzeo Care for Total Jomt Replacement

wv

Gallia Community Calendar;..__-

Prince Andrew dragged into messy divorce

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc..

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

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Livestock sale

a'l'l:b"-·J~--'b"Ill' ...... Cll

f.!~ CO~!!~.~w~U~~~""t~..~r!~~!!!q: .!~~~~.m~!!i....I~C?~
APTIIeu'tltlll Wlk
was popular in the rural South, and editor of the Wrestling Observ&lt;r
NEW YORK (AP)- What does that's where ECW had most of its newsletter. '·The. WWF has in some
pM:kin' and grinnin ' have in conunon fans. The Nashville Network clung ways changed what bas become
with bonc-janring wrestling7 We're to its co•intry music roots, but even- a&lt;:ccpbbJe."
about to find out.
tually rouldn't help· seei~g what
TNN had been showing demoliThe Nashville Network joins the wrestling was doing for TNT and the tion derbies on Friday nights, then in
professional wrestling p.arty later USA network.
January succeMfully paired that
this month, afler agreeing with the
World Wrestling Federation and with an up-to-date, crunching. verproducets of Extreme Champi- World . Championship Wrestling sion of roller derby. Wrestling will
onship Wrestling to air a one-hour shows are routinely amOng the,high- · be the third show in that lineup.
weeldy series. It premieres Aug. 27 esi-rated cable programs each week.
ECW depicts itself as an innovaat 8 p.m. EDT.
.
Pro wreslling is a cultural phenome- tor in the entertaining. story-based
This intriguing deal is a window non with young men and boys, an form of professional wrestling. Yet
into the malleability of a television audience that TV advertisers crave beCause it has been seen only on
network enticed by something hot, and find difficult to reach.
pay-per-view events or in syndicaand seems certain to mobilize critics
TNN's corporate parent, CBS, has tion. it doesn 't have. the high profile.
who worry about the effects of this already di:inortstrated its eagerness to of its two competitors.
entertainment on children. .
reaCh this demographic by giving
"In some ways it's more extreme
For three years, ECW producers Howard, Stem a weekly show through than the,, WWF a~d in some ways it's
tried without success to interest the company 's syndication arm.
less. It 's just different. '' Meltzer
TNN in a wrestling series. said
The fit suddenly seemed more said. " I would say it's heavier on the
Steve Karel, the organization's man· natural. "I don't think a network like violence than the WWF and lower
aging director.
'
· TNN. even a year ago. would have on the perversion.''

'

wide.range of emotions- awkward-

he wants a shoW that will put more dren are do~ng.
.
·
more ~ ·~ does coun~ry m~IC.
emphasis on wrestling, and less on
As is almost predictable when Then agam, tf the wresthng ratmgs
outside-the· ring dramas.
somelbing is st......,ssful, television go through the roof ·:· .
ll'IN will air a show with a "oon- may soon face a wrestling glut. The
EDITOR'S NOTE DIIVId
sumer-friendly,
mainstream struggling UPN broadcast netwmt Bauder Qn be uMChed Ill db•udapproach," he said. Some of the will introduce uts own wreslhng
more extreme anti&lt;;s that are shown show in the fall. ,
in a pay-per-view special won't fly
TNN will give its show a lV-14
on basic cable. he said.
rating, setting itself up to walk the
"I don't like the i&gt;hra5e ' tone same fine line as Comedy Central
(FRI tl/6. THURS &amp;(12199)
down,"' ECW 's Kan:l said. 'Td like does with "South Park." Both are
101 OlfKI WIU or9l AT 6:30PM
to use the phrase ' focusing on the presented to the public as for adult~,
.-SHOWS,
&amp;S.IWIIIS
action inside the ring."'
yet they're very adolescent in thetr
Authorities have questioned appeal.
whether wrestling is a harmful influ"It's not something for your
1:10 &amp; 3:10
ence on young people. Dallas police kids," Meltzer said, "and at8'p.m .•
this spring issued a warning to par· it's going to be viewed by kids."
INSPECTOR GADGET (PG)
ents and young:;ters following the
Wrestling is one pan of an effon
1:00 &amp; Q:20 DAILY
accidental death of a 3-year-old b!&gt;y · by TNN to broaden . its appeal.
~nNEES SAT/SUN I :00 &amp; 3:20
ai the hands of an older brother who Another subtle indicator: It refers to
was imitating a wrestling move he'll itself as TNN, instead, of The
7:20 A 1 :20 DAILY
seen on TV. ·wrestling officials Nashville Network, so as not to tum
MATINEES SAT/SUN t:20 &amp; 3:20
deneer responsibility, saying it~s up off people wbo don't like country
music. "We're looking at more of an
MYSTERY MEN (PGI3)
approach towand Americana than
· 7:10 &amp;1:30 DAILY
country right at this second," Hall
said.
private school, with its wide-angle
That doesn't neceSsarily mean
shots and variety of camera angles,
and while his fi)m is about a gay relationship. its themes of loneliness,
I KAN A U G A DRIVE - IN
love and loss are universal.
FRI, SAT, SUN &amp; liON
1
' Get Real," a Paramount Oassics
ADAII~DLER
release, runs II 0 minutes and is rated
BIG DADDY"""
R for•language and sexual issues•
AND

ness.. anxiety. adoration, confusion.

frusirntion and, ultimately, joy. His
moment of truth at the end is a little
too feel-good. btU he plays it with
great·,hean.
Gonon. whose character si)11ply
. could have been a vapid pretty boy. is
surprisingly compelling as the complacent jock who doubts everything
Motion Picture Association of
he's made of. even though hes truly America rating definitions:
fallen in .loye for the first time. As
G - O.,neral audietJCeS. All ages
·
John, he shows an impressive bal- admitted.
ance beiween his love for Steven and
PG - Parental guidan!:e suggesthis paranoia of being found out.
. ed. Some material may not be suitBrittain is.tenrific as Linda. who's able for children:
tough and saucy on the outside but
PG-13 - Special parental guidclearly lonely and a little sad under- ance strongly suggested for children
neath. A scene in which she tells off a under 13. Some material may be
drunk jock at the school ·dance• is a ina~ropriate for young children. .
powe_rful, you-go-girl moment. .
R Restricted . . Under 17
Shore's direction is edgy and ·rein' . requires accompanying parent or .
iniScent of "Rushmore, •• ~lso set in a· . adult guardian.

•

•••••• 0

0

••••••••• 0

•

••

0

•

· ,·,

r

•

•

Ruff,
Rio's Pride. 1326. Willis Funer· . Hayseeds, 1196, MCF &amp; Ass&lt;&gt;&lt;;iates,
al Home. SI.05: ForreSb Elliott, Hop(:'s S 1.01 ; Craig Payne, Raccoon Valley.
Helping Hands. 1161; Shelly Co., $1: 1356, Gallipolis Auto Auction,
Kem Butler, South Galli a FFA, 1242. Sl: Tyler Duncan. Triangle, 1166. Paul
Caner Plumbing. $1..25 : David Burdell . &amp; lean Niday, S1.11: Whitley Sigman,
·Family &amp; Friends, 1005. Burlile Oil Co .. Triangle, 1240, Superbank-Foodland &amp;
SJ.O&amp;:,Lisa lo Vollbom, Rio Wranglers. Wai-Man , S 1.01 : Ryan Stidham. Anothsteer sale at the Gallia County Junior 1301 , ' v McCoy-Moore
Funeral er Generation, 1062, Mll . 5 1.07: Travis
Fair.
Home!Evans~Moore Agency/Blackburn l·lill, River Valley FFA. 1304. Bob Evans
Betsy Shawver. a member of the Realty. S1.15: Luke Vollbom. Rio Wran- Farrris, $1.01: Andrea Russeli,.Gallia's
Rilccoon Rowdies 4-H Club, sold her glers, 1270. Midland Co·op, S I. II ; Joe Barnyard Buddies, 1252. Wiseman Real
1,229-pound reserve champion steer Graham. Triangle. 1097. Norris Northup Estate. S 1.06: Jordan Shaffer, Thivener
for $3. 11 per pound to Wiseman Dodge, $1.16; Clark Walker. River Val· Pioneers. 1068. Save-a-lot Food Stores.
Insurance Agency.
ley FFA. 1136.Marlin Ro&lt;e .. $1.05: les- $1.16: Dustin Fisher.' Galli a's Barnyard
Complete results of the j 999 Gal· sica Allie. Tria~gle, 1188, BurlileJPeoples Buddies, J 144. Evans' En~erprises . $1 :
Bank, $1.05; Leslie Hudson. Gallia's Wade Caldwell. Raccoon Rowdies. ·1187.
lia County Junior Fair steer sale are Barnyard Buddies. 1325, Holley Brother~ Douglas M . ... Cowles. Attorney at
as follows, in or!kr of exhibitor, club, Construction. $1 .05: Cuois Waugh, Hay- Law/Peoples Bank, $1.0 1: Matthew
weight of animal, buyer and price per seeds, 1172. lrnn·, Qla». $1 .02: Clarke Hemphill . Rodney Rangers, I383.: Smith
pound:
· Saunders, To~·n &amp; Country Club, 1233, Cuslom Cabinets ..$ \ _06; Sarah JiViden .:

Man Atha, River Valley FFA, 1284,. Tope 's Furnilure/L:ifestyle Furniture.
$1.10; Aaron Walker.
River Val·
Icy FFA. 1058. Wmerloo Coal.
S1.05: Danielle Sander;. Raccoon Rowdies, qo8. Pleasant Valley Hospital,$!;
Joey Hamillon, Ri o's Pride, 1272, Evans '
Enterprises, $1 : Justin Saunders, Raccoon
Ro:"'dies, 1116, Gene Johnson , $1.09: .
Ginger Canaday. Whiz Kids,' l!39, H~ l z­
cr Clinic, $1.12; Crystal Clonch, Rising
Stars. 1214, Midland Co-op. $1.60: Amy
Damron, Silverstre.ak. 1432. Big Ri ver ·
Electric, $1.05: Erica Taylor, yaliia's
Barnyard Buddies, 11 71, Rusty Martin,
$1.03; Nicole Wolford. Soutti Gallia
fi'A, 1238. Super 8 Motel.$! ; Kyle Wat·
son,SouthGalhaFFA.I048, Waugh-Hailey-Wood Funeral Home, $1.21: Jeremy
Clark, South Galli a FFA, 1284, Dan Tax
Income Tax , $1.04: Holly Vanco, Kids R
Us, 1272, Smith Buick-Pontiac. $1.01:
Emily Walker, Kountry Kritters, 1070.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.$1 ; Mary
Beth Manin. South Galha FFA: 1139,
Faf)llers Bank. $1.05; Joshua Waugh ,

O'Dell Lumber, $4.15; Betsy Shawver,
Raccoon Rowdies. 1229, Wiseman lnsur·
ance, $3.11 ; Rashel Fallon, Hope's Helping Hand, 1206, Holzer Medical Center,
$1.80: Bethany Bryant, Triangle. !263.
.Thomas Do It Center, $1 .35; Beth Walk·
cr. River Valley FFA, !304, McDonald's,
$1.20: Cassie Graham, Triangle, 1275.
Oak Hill Banks , $1.60: Zack Ruff. Whiz
Krds, 1325 , Farmers Bank. $1.40: Holly
Canaday. Whiz Kids. 1262• .GRF Club
Calves: $1.55; lody Kuhn. Gallipolis
·FFA, 1225, DanT~x Income Tax, $1.35:
Patrick Saunders, Raccoon Rowdies.
1105, Foodland Supermarket, $1.70; Bri·
an Shaffer, Raccoon Rowdies. 1282.
Foodland Supermarket. $1.25: Aaron
Ruff. Gallipolis FFA. 1262, DanTax
Income Tax . $ 1.05; Sarah Russell , Gal·
lia's Barn yard Buddies, 1114, MeDonaid's, $1.25: Zach Shawver, Raccoon
Rowdies, 1140. D &amp; L RV Sales, $1. 15:
Cody Caldwell, Faces of the Future,
1216. Ohio Valley Bank , $1.25: Cassidy

I

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·
Presents....
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built of sandstone in ' l894. Constructed by Dr. J.A. Lupton, it was th.e
sight of the first .library in Gallipolis in 1895. The bulidings is on the
National Register of Historic Places.
Gallipolis, Ohio 1999
Cost: $20.00
Orders being taken now at the Chamber cif Commerce, 16 State Street,
.
OH*446-0596.

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· GALLIPOLIS - TJ. Cox. a
member . of the Gallipolis Future
Farmers of America chapter; _sold his
130-pound grand champion 'lamb for
$34 per pound to Eric Blackburn to
start Friday's sheep sale at the Gallia
County Junior Fair.
.
Kyle Forgey, a member of the
Whiz Kids 4-H Club, sold his. 121 pound reserve champi on lamb for
$12 per pound to A ce Hi gh Mu,ic 9f 1
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
·
Complete results of the 1999 Ga llia Cou.nty Junior Fair .lanib sale are
as follows, in order of exhibitor, club,
weight of animal, buyer and price per
pound:
TJ. Co.x, Gallipolis FFA, 130: Eric
Blackburn. $34; Kyle Forgey, Wh iz Kids,
121. Ace High MuSic, $ 12; P,avid Stan·
ley, Early Birds. 12 1. Peoples Bank of
Gallipolis. $6: Bryce Taylor. Dairy Cl,ub,
128, Atha Construction, $4.50: Josh
· Myers, Country Side, 118, Farmers Bank.
$5.50; Seth Forgey, Whi z Kic!;, 120, State

price/monttl

'

Andrea Vernon, Temperature 8ising, 126

Foodland Supermarkets, $5 ; Teddy Fort·
ner. Whiz Kids. 121 ,. C. C. Caldwell &amp;
Sons. $5.50; ·Josh Staton, Pairs and.
Spares, 125, Ace High Music, $6; Anna
Fonner, Whiz Kids, 114, Forgey Club
Lambs. $4: M.att Atha, River Valley
FFA, 130, .Frame &amp;. Spring Inc. , $3.50:
Ashly Robens, North Galha 4-H. 120,
McCoy-Moore 'F4ncral !·lome/Evans-

'• Multiple retail service options,
including an active agent
network a,nd select Wai-Mart
store locations .

Sons Trucking. $1.06: Casey Clary. Pairs
&amp; Spares, 1251 , Farmers Bank.
·
$! , II : Kyle Dee!, Raccoon Valley, 1082.
Bowman's Homecare. Sl.04; Brenton
Fisher, Gallia's Barnyard Buddies, 1124.
Chrysler Plymouth , $1.01; TJ . Stroud.

Bank.. '$ 1; Ca.\Sie Hudson , Gallia's Barn-

$1 .09: Anthony Lemley. River Vallev

yard Budd ies. 1083, Foodland Super- • FFA ,
care, SI.Oi ; Brandon Montgomery, Gal-

Call. $1.05 ; Amanda Harder. Raccoon
Valley. 11 70. Oak Hill Banks. 96 ce n" :
J e~sica Hamilton. Rao's Pnde. 1228, Peo-

lipolis FFA. 11 94, Union Stockyards ,

pies Bank of'Gall ipo!is: $1.08: Kim Prc-

markets, $1; Jeremy, Stroud, Buc.kridge

Bueks-N-Does, 1149, Bowman's Home-

sica·Burleson, Gallia's Pride, 1227, Hol -

$1.06: Jacob Clagg , Tempei-ature Rising . ston. Racl:oon Valley, 95 2. r-..'1idlaml Co1309, Smith Custom Cabinets. $102; · ' op, $1.01: Sieven Call . Outsiders . 1.101.

ley Brothers Construction, $1.05: Ryan
Elliott, Rodney Rangers. 1038 , Marlin
Rosc/Haffelt's Mill Outlet. '$1: Tiffany
Sanders, Raccoon Rowdies. 1286, Butler
&amp; . Son, Sl .!0; Meghann· Clary, Galli a's
Barn yard Buddies, 1262, Ohio Valley

Attorney, $1.09: Jamic Thcvcnir, Si lverstrea k, 1267, Foudland Supermarkets,

1106, Bob Evans Farms, $1.0 1~ Jod ie
McCalla, Raccoon Rowdies , IIJO,
Bernadine's , $1 .04; Jenn ifer Dunn, Rae-

Tru cking. $1.05. Sonya Wells, Sal ver!.trcuk. 1425 . Bob Evan~ Farms. $ 1. 01:
Kendra Walker. Family &amp; Frrend,. 1177 ,
WiscmiJ n In surance Agency. 98 n:nt&lt;,:
Aaron Phil lips. Hayseeds. !224. Ohau
Valley Bank. 94 cent s: Ni ck Stidh am.

coon Rowdies, 1205 , Shake Shoppe.

Ri ver Valley FFA. 967. l'auger Farm

$1105; Jodie Stout, t River Vall ey FFA ,

"S uppl). 95

t:em~ : Kristen Halley, CounLc"i ~ Fami ly Restaurant s

1326, Richard K10 geryiHoban· tr) ~Ide. J·I2J

Jamie Allie, Triangle, 11 51. C.C. Cald- Oak Hill Banks. 99 cen ts: Rachel Navlor
Ruck ridge Bucks-N- Dm::s , 11 82. Wise-. well &amp; Sons Trucking , $ 1.05: Todd
Raccoo n Valley. 1171. D &amp; W Hn;;,cs:
man Insurance Agency, $1.01 ; Alex
Houck, River Valley FFA, 1248,
,
· $1: RICk)' Spurlock. Cou'ntry Fncnd&gt;.
Hamilton. Rio's Pride. I342. Rodney Firstar Bank, $ 1.01 : Andy Dut y, Muske- 1087. Southea~tcril Equipment. 94 ~·cnb:
Supply/Bjg
Wheel·
Catry-Oul . teers, 974, Mercerville Convenient, David Mills, CountryMdc. liD . Central
$1.01 ;Nathan Wood, Hope's Helping Sl.Ol ; Tommy Saunders. Raccoon Row-· Supply Hardware . .$ 1.02; Tom Cuilh,cll.
Hands. 1179, Big Bend Really, S1.11: Jes- . dies, 1282, Brett Saunders, Prosecuting Raccoon Rowdie ~. 1205. John K Gtll

·of h 'd:son. $!.05; Dame I Preston. Musk ett'cr ~. J 1 9~ . Crernean!l C9ncrete &amp;

SuppiJ. 92 cent s; James Chambers , Gallia Ruccancc.rs. 1316, Bill Medley. Judge,
92 cents: \¥111 Burleson, Twilight Zone.

11 74, Producers Livestock of Gallipolis,
$1.03: T1m Wnght. South Gallia FFA.
983, Gary's Constructron. $1.21 : Kristi·
na Najlor. Raccoon Valley, 12 16, Farm.'
crs Bank. 99 ce nts; Jennifer Halley,

South Gall ia FFA. 11 71, Holzer Medical
Center, $ 1.04; Jason Pugh. Raccoon Val-

Icy. 1016.
$1.06

~av is

Chrysler Plymouth,

'·

.

Moore Agency/Blackburn Really, $3 ..75:

lia 4-H, 117, Holley Brothers Construe-

Rachel Saunders. Pairs and Spares, 109...

Li on. $3.25; Aaron Lanier, Galli a's Pride,

Big Bornt-R&lt;:alty. $3.50: Jeremy Queen,

128, First ar Bank, $4.25: Gavin James,

Twilightcrs, 107, Willis· Funeral Home .

Th e Tribe , 1'18, Wis'eman ln surancti
Agency, $4; lillian Swain. Pai rs and·

$3.75: Gerald Lee Cade, Country Friends,
93. Food Man 218 .. $3 .75 : Zach Haner,
Adventurer&gt;, 115. Food Mart 218, $3.75:
Kimberly Beaver. Thive ner Pioneers,
127, Ace High Musi c. $4.50; Dale Taylor. Dairy Club. 123. Ohio Valley Bank,
$4: I. Nicholas Craft. Raccoon Rowdies.
119, .David T. Evans, $4: Jessica Myers, ·
Country S1dc, II 3, Big Bend Realty.
$4.25; Doug Hlair, Dairy . Club, I09 .

Spares, 113. Ronald Slone/Slone's Tobac·
co Hauling , $3.50: Patrick Fillenger. Rio
Hope fuls, 110, David T Evans, $3.75;
Adam Scotl , Little Kyger Valle~ Boys,
96. Ferrell Gas. $3c25 ; Nick Reed, Triangle, 114, Betty Evans, $3.25; iudd
Swindler, Outsiders, 122, Super Bankfoodland &amp; · Wai-Mart, $3.25: Nathan
Beaver, Thivener Pioneers, t !'8·, Shelly

.Kyger Oc'ntal Asso~.: i ate:;, $3.50:· Kar.i
James, Th..: Tribe , 103. Wise man lnsuranc~ Agcnt:y, $4: Ayla Gibbs. Whi z

Co .. $5; Lehanna Craft, Raccoon Rowdil!s, 112. Crown -Excavating, $4 .50;
Samuel Warren , Twilighters, Ill . City Ice
Kids . 99 . Gallipo lis Candy &amp; Tobacco, &amp; Fuel, $3.25; Miranda Me·Kinney, KCK,
$4 .25: J ord~m Swain . Pairs and Spaies. ' 102, Welch Electric,
$3.25; Teri
115, MCF &amp; As~ocmtes. $.l25: Angel a Clagg, Thi vencr ~ionecrs, · 128, Holley ,

Warren. Gallipolis FFA. 131, Food Mart
218. $4: Tanya Haner. South Galli a FFA ,
12 1, Food Man 218, $3.50: lenny Fowler,

Brothers Constructron, $3.50; Han nah
Beaver, Thivener Pioneers. 118, MTI. $5;
Robyn WarrCA,
Gallipolis FFA. 11 3.

Adventurers. lllJ , Holzer Cli nic, $4 ;
Jonathan Bea ver. Thivencr Pi onecrs.llO,

Food Man 218, $3.25.; Lauren Bing,
KGK. 107, Burlile Oil/Peoples Bank.

Clinton Stone Inc. $5:

$3.2'5: Beth Spurlock. Sil verstreak. 99.

Sashi1 Shriver, River Valley FFA ;

Farmers Bank, ·$3': Court ne }· Hawks,

Jason Merrick, Pairs and Spare, 115 , Flo- · Smith's OMC, .. $4.25; Valerie Taylor."

· ral Fashions, $,!1.75: Maithew Beaver.
Raccoqn Rowdies, 119, Irvin 's Glass Ser~
vice, $4.50; Jeffrey Moore , River Valley
FFA. 113, Ohio Valley Bank, $3. 25 ; Car-

Dairy Club, 11 3. Southern Stales, $5.35 :
Samantha Mi Her, Gall ia Buccaneers, Ill•,
AcquiSitions Fin"e Jewelry. $3; Al an K.

Haley, Galli a's Pride : 104, Forgey Clu b
rie Saxon, Gallia's Barnyard Buddies, Lambs. $3..10: Jay Durst, Rodney
105, Fruth's Ph armacy.. $3_.2 5: RJ . Rangers., 101. Harrison Farms. $.1: Mary
Browning, Si\ verstrea~. 100, Harrison Beth Martin. Sout h Galh a FFA. 11 5. Bob
Farm. $3.25: Kyle McCarl,ey. North Gal· Evans Restauranl, $4.50: .

GRAND CHAMPION LAMS - T.J. Cox sold
his grand champion lamb to Eric Blackburn for
$34 per pound at . Friday'~ sale. From left to
. right are Melissa Blackburn, behind daughters
Erica and Courtnev Blackburn.: Eric liJiackburn,
Cox, Tyler Smith, Little Mister Gama County;

Jodie McCalla, Miss Gallia County; Carly
Atkins, Little Miss Gallla County; Livestock
Queen Rashel Falldn, Livestock Princess Kayla Johnson and Courtney Shriver, Little l\,1iss
Gallia County first runner-up. (Times-Sentinel
photo)
·

Christina Taylor. Ga-llla's Pride , 127. fuls . 107.' Cellular One, $3.7 5: Am anda
Quality Farm &amp; Fleet. $3 ..50:. Justin · ..Law -s~n . Raccoon Valley.lJ-l , Home Cn~

Jriplen, Thivcner Pion.e~rs. 123 . Shi rley

Angel. Jeff Halley and Steve McGhee.
$5: Katlin Hawk,, Raccoon Valley. I!8.
Jerry Bi bbee Ford Inc.. $5 ; Robbie Man non. Sundance Kids, l !3. Norris Nonhup

Dodge,

$3.25: Kenny Dyer. Rio Hope·

Jeep Eagle. $-175; Bradie Angell, Thrvencr.Pioneers. 107, M &amp; D Paving Inc. $5 :

Btn g. KCK . 112.

Kali lin Angell. Thivener Pioneers. ·85.

Burlile Oil. $3.25; Brandic Mercum.

Robbie's BP, $5 .75; Chris Reynolds ,

Icc .

$ 3. 50~ Curt1~

Rising Stars. flO, Super Bank-Foodla nd
&amp; Wai-Man , $3.25: Danny Durst. Rod ·
ney Ran gers, 104. Yauger Farm Supply.
$3: Erin Reese. Rrsing Stars, 85, Chrysler

Thivcncr Pioneers, 117 Cellular One ,
S ~ .7 5 ; Rrittany Elliott , Rodn ey Rangers .

112. Paul &amp; Jean Niday. $4: Jane Durst.
Rodney Rangers. 97. Hol7er Clime, $4.

Results of Saturday's market hog sale will
be in Monday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
.
.

J.R,. Boothe's top tobacco
project auct.ioned for $1 ,300
GALLIPOLIS - J.R. Boothe. a
member of the Hayseeds 4-H Club.
sold his grand'champion tobacco pro·
ject for $ 1,300 to a coalitron of
Republican Party officeholders in
Gallm County to commence Friday's
annual tobacco sale at tht! Galli a
County J.unior Fair.
.
Thomas Cummons. a· mcmher of
the Pairs and Spares 4-H Club. sold
his r'eserve c hamPion project for
$350 to New Farmers Tobacco Ware·
house of Ripley, Qhio.

·~------· w.•...•,,.

Y. US. Celbdar
Tilt!

front of Jodie McCalla and Fallon· are Tyler
Smilh, Little Mister Gallill County; Carly Atkins,
Little Miss Gallla County; and Courtney Shriv·
er, Little Miss Gallia County first runner-up.
(Times-Sentinel photo)

1223, OK Tobacco Warehouse . .$1.06:
Scott Payne, Raccoon Vall~y. 988 . Midland Co-Q.p. $1.08: Hannah B~rle so n .
Twili ght Zo.ne. 1278, CC. Caldwell &amp;

I03, Acdligh Music , $3.75: Brooke.Tay- , R,accoon Valley, 129, Loan .·Central.
Farm lnsllrance/D &amp;, W1 Homes. $5 ;" lor. Dai'ry Club , 1,01, Pauy Forg,y, $l75~ $3.25: Adam Srniih. Rio Hopeful s, 121.

• Local and 24-hour Customer.,
Service

•

Racr.:90n Rowd1es. 1162. GalliJX&gt;Iis Dairy

Queen, $1.05; J.R. Boothe. Hayseeds.

GRAND CHAMPION STEER - Matt Atha's
grand champion steer was sold to O'Dell Lumber for $4.15 per pound at Friday's sale.
Behind the steer are Atha, O' Dell repreunta·
live Dick McCalla, Jodie, McCalla, Miss Gallia
County; and Livestock Queen Rashel Fallon. In

T.J. ·Cox~s. lamb sold
as·grand champion
during·junior· fair sales
.

!Deludes: Saad

Sundey, August I , 1181

GALLIPOLIS - Matt Atha, a
member of the River Valley Future
Fanners of America chapter, sold his
1,284-pound grand chanipion st~:er to
O'Dell Lumber of Gallipolis for
$4.15 per pound 10 begin Friday's

i(

AMERICAN PIE •

D

Atha's grand champion
steer goes for $4.15 per
pound at Friday fair sale

'Get Real': a funny, engaging film about growing up
tie stanled to find each other, and
By CHRISTY ,U:MIRE
Alloelllled Press Writer
seem a ffiismarched pair. Skinny
As if dating when you ' re a teen- Steven is all gangly limbs and long
ager isn't hard enough. imagine being eye lashes. John is rugged and muscua gay teen-.ager in an elite private lar. with wavy dark hair and ~ strong
school in an insular English to.wn.
. Jaw.
This is Steven Carter's reality in
.. Quickly. each findS in the other a
.. Get . Real," a funny. engaging film much-needed friend and companion,
about growing ,up and falling in love and the Scenes in which Steven and
urnkt djfficult circumstances.
··
John explore their relationship are
Steven (Ben Silverstone) has tender and sweet. .
known he's gay since age 11, a secret
A.. 5ense of melancholy bl~kets
he keeps froiri everyone in his homo- their bliss. however, ~cause we
phobic environment except his besl know it can't last. John is wealthy.
friend, Linda (Charlolte Brittain), · athletic and Oxford-bowid. There's
whose ample size and brash no way his love affair with Steven
demeanor make her somewhat Of a can be exposed.
misfit herself.
Pairick Wilde 's screenplay, adaptAs his high 'school graduation ed from his play, "What's Wrong
looms, his yearnings to. come out of With Angry?". is lively an~ warm.
the closet grow stronger, yet he must The teen-agers are smart and endearcontinue meeting men furtively.
ing. a~d they talk like young p&lt;Ople
In a series of funny, awkward really talk. Throughout the adaptation
scenes. we see Ste":en at a gay cruis· process. the filmmakers held read· ·
ing spot in a park bathroom. "He's ings at several schools. and the input
got eyes like Brad Pin," Steven coos ·they received fn:im students makes
to Linda about an attractive blond the dialogue ring true.
' .
with whom he's become intimate and
Even a scene at a school dancewho turns out to be manried.
obligatory for any movie about teen·
One sunny afternoon, he finds an agers- feels authentic. The students
unlikely panner in the park - the don 't appear to be having fake, conbest-looking, most popular guy at trived fun, and ditector Simon Shore
school, track star John Dixon (Brad even let the young actors choose the
Gonon). John has a girlfriend- who inusic playing in·the background.
models underwear for mail-order catWhat truly makes this film shine
alogs- but clearly is confused about are the performances.
·
his sexuality.
Silverstone seamlessly embodies
The two boys are more than a lit- his character. He adeptly shows a

Section

way people talk aroUnd here;

Compl&lt;tc results of the 1999 Gal ·
Jia County Jun ior Fair tobacco saiC

Fann Supply. $.100: Jc remv Clor, ,

South Ga\lia FFA . Kr;.~me r In~tJra lll'l'

arc as follows, in order of exhibitor, Agc nn. $~75 : A:-.hla MtllliC' tllll ~ n·.
· Snurh · Gall in FFA . lnd c rc nde~ r
club. buyer and total price :
J.R. Boothe, Hayseeds, Rcpubli'- Tohacco \Va rchou . . c. $-+75. Dust\
can Officeholders. $1:300: Thomas John". llll . Cnuntn S1lk . Rob F\.!1;~ ·
CummoOS. Pairs &amp; Spare"'. Nc'"' Rl'\lau r;~nts. S500: JD:.h \\'au£ h. H :1~­
Farmer~ Tobacco Wareho u i~. ~550;

Trent Cremeans. Gallipol is FFA.
Joh nson' s Mobile Homes. $450 ;
Dana Bickle . South Galli a !OFA: King
Burley Tohacco Warehouse. $.100 :
Vanc e fellure , Ou tsrdcrs. Altiter

~~.: d s. DY kc ·11 T1lhacc\ 1 \\'~m.: h ou ... c .
Mariah Cald\\cll. ~Y'iO and C urt1 :-.

Wnu ~ lt . HCl~

seed . . . Ohll1 \'aHc~ U .:m~ .

$,00

Campaign promotes Ohio agriculture

TOP TOBACCO PROJECT - J.R. Boothe's
grand champion tobacco project was sold to a
coalition of· Gallia County Republican Party
officeholders for $1,300 at Friday's sale. fn .front
are (L-R) Rec~rder Molly Plymale, County
Commissioner Shirley Angel, Treasurer Steve
· McGhee, Boothe, early Atkins, Little Miss Gal·
!Ia County ; Livestock Queen Rashel Fallon,
Livestock Princess Kayla Johnson , Tyler Smith,
Little Mister Gallia County; and Jeff Halley of

_Shop-tt~ _~lua..- on tM lnte~ ft www.usetflul¥.rom
Offer rtqUim 1 new_ont-~ SfMU agrttlllil"!- ~ 10 mil'des induOt

.
180 bonus minutn, 450 minutes indude 100 bonus
muwtes. tnd 125 I'IWiutts incNdt 550 bonut. mifllftft. Nter 1 rnonms, sund.vd packalj! minutts apply Roarrung char~, ta~~tS,
IOik .1nd network wrdlMgti nor lndudtd. Cllhel ~s IT'IIY 1pply. Ste store for details. ~r e.p1re5 August 31. 1999.

Cltiltic-

GollipO!Is

J1ckson
Classic Plaza
408 E. Huron

Now a -

bne !'tall Shopping Center
t OU N. Bridge St.

usee wa~Mirt Kiosk

(7401441·1066

285-!iDDt

4010 Rhodes AV8.
(7401355·3001
. 285-5&lt;10
9o1 ,, ~
456·8122 Of 18001824-777
:;..:5_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

u.s. Cetlulor
17!).4141

2145 E•tom Av.,...

U.S. Celular

New Boston Shopping Center

PansiWOUih

Be In Touch Co"""'nications

1 1403 11th St.

'

Po-

Wovcrty
USCC W.I·Mort Kiosk

2475 Scmto Trail

90lt 'N;·· • i mmit Avenue

Hil~op

Center

Alto, ·c •• •nil visit oae of

ourWoi-Minlacltlatls: 1
New Boston, Jackson.
For your convenience we heve ••, ., 90 a••lhorized agent
locat1ons. Outside consultant s

, e upon re uest,

the Gallia County Board of Elections. Behind
them are Commissioner Harold Saunders,
Auditor Larry Betz, former County Commls·
sloner Harold Montgomery, County ·Engineer
Glenn Smith, State fjep .. John Carey, Jodie.
McCalla, Miss Gallia County; Gallipolis Munic·
ipal Court Judge Bill Medley and Clerk of
Courts Noreen Saunders: (Times-Sentinel pho·
to)

TOLEDO (AP) - A new
advertiSing campaign promoting
the state's farming indu stry boas ts
thill one of every six Ohioans
works in agri culture. What it docsn 't say is that thnsc' numbers
include waiters. grocery clcrh and
paper plant workers.
'The message we're trying to
get acro ss is agricultUre impact s
your life in a .lot of different
ways." .said MJry Beth ~nwardin.
a marketmg ottlci[ll tH the Ohio

Agriculture Department
The aa ~. which Cd ll he

'.CC ll Ill

ncwsp;~.pcrs and' 'magaLincs. call

agriculture Ohio's largest i_ndu stry
and say il ,contributt:s more than
$73 bi lli on tn the state 's econom y
each year.
It a1 S6 SH) S that 16 percent nf all
Ohi oan . . arc 111 agnc ulturc . The
U.S . Bpn:;.w nf Labor S ta ti~tit.:~.
!hou gh. COUilb I ,7 r~n.:: cnt of
'Ohioo.m . . in 1thc :-.am~ field .
Th e dillcn.,' m.:c IS 111 th.:; dc!'i ni j l U ll ~.

Th e federal burea u l1mih '"'

~,.·,, unt to farme r-. ;md the pcopll•"

\\ lw hu ~ or ... ~ II ·di rcctI)'· fwm them

nr aLh 1..,c th~m. such a~ Yct~r.inar ­
wns. cror :-e n IL'C prlwida~. bnd scapcr!': and marh·tcr:-..
·.

The

A~ r i c ulturc

l.'PP ~ . .

,md \1\h(:r'n.:swurunt stall
Til; II -~ Jgricu ltu rc 7·~ !-la i~
(1-.' IK'\' IL'\ 'L' O ~ r nk ~1. a \\ &lt;J itrcss at
Pumpcrqn.: ~ c b. Deli &amp; Ca.fc in
Toh;dn. "I \\oulcln ' t ('l)ll ~lPcr waltrcssin l! to he agrir.:ullurc . I thtnk
1~1at \ i1nd of -.!lh ..

•

•

•

&lt;r

·'

Department ·

•.:nunt" al~w.s t t'\' L'I'~ o ne , whose
\\m~ 111\olvc~ ~ ~~ u ch ing food o r
\\(l~ld " r ".nmcthin g m·cJcd to produ~·l· lh l'lll C\Cn ... hurt order

'

�I

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

Sunday, August 8, 1999
Pomeroy o Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea..nt, WV

Investing your retirement income
By IIIAAK E. SMITH
GAU.JPOUS - Studies show that you II need
between 60 to 80 percent of pre retirement mcome to
meet retirement tncomc needs But of that amount only
two-lhirds Will come from Social Secanty peOSions
and other benefits and eammgs for those who work
The rest wtll come from personal mvestments
Whether you re savtng for reltrement or already
retired and dependmg on mvestment mcome to cover
hvmg expenses 11 s a good tdea to develop a long term
Investment strategy When developmg such a plan con
suit a financtal professiOnal who can help you devtse a
strategy by exammmg how much nsk you re wtlhng to
assume the amount of money you feel you can afford to mvest your tax
bracket lhe length of lime you have to mvest and the results you expect to
achteve
You have a variety of choices - Whether you are still workmg or
already rettred, choosmg growth-onented mvestments may mcrease the
value of your portfoho However as you move further nto rettremenl
receiVIng mcome and protecttng your pnnctpal wtll most hkely become your
pnmary ob)ecttves Whatever your goals there ts a wtde array of mvest
ments to choose from for etther your 40I(k) Tradtllonal IRA Roth IRA or
mdiv1dual mvestment account
Eqalties- Htstoncally stocks prov1de a htgher rate of return than many
other Investments and generally are excellent growth vehtcles for the long
run Focus pnmanly on well established corporahons wtth gooll track
records In general av01d the more aggresstve tssue~ or at the very best
allocate a fatrly small portiOn of your portfoho to these mvcstments
Mutual funds and untt trusts- Both are professiOnally managed and
offer the benefits of tnvesllng m dtverstfied portfolios to reduce nsk and the
opportumty to compound rem vested eammgs Systematic wtthdrawal plans
are also available wtth mutual funds Both are sold through prospectuses that
mclude charges and expenses so be sure to read them carefully before
mvestmg
Aanultil'S- Annuthes are contracts between you and an msuranct: com

pany that are dtvtded mto an accumulahon penod and payout penod They
can provtde safe lax-deferred accumulation and mcome Ft~ed smgle pre
mtum deferred annu111es can be purchased m a chotec of guaranteed penods
rangtng from one to ten years
Your premtum depostt earns annual compounded tnterest and eamtngs
arc tax deferred until payout When you want the money you can recetve 11
m a lump sum or tn penodic payments (Please note that m most cases th e
IRS wtll penalize you tf you Withdraw you r funds before the age of 59 1/2)
You also can conSider a vanable annutty whtch tnvests m equntes or bonds
However vanable annumes are sold through a prospectus Please read
US government secunties - Treasury btlls notes and bonds are
backed by the full fatlh and credtt of the U S government In other words
they are among the safest mvestments and are also constdered the most hq
utd
G1nD1e Maes - A popular mvestmenl offered by U S government agen
c1es these are tssued by the Government NatiOnal Mortgage Assoctatlon to
help finance homes They y1eld substanttally more than Treasury obi gallons
and offer the convemcncc of monthly payments
Corporate bonds - When selectmg corporate bonds look for those
wtth mvestment grade ratmgs A corporate bond wtth the same matunty of a
government obllgatton ts hkely to pay a shghtly htgher yteld but bonds
backed by corporahons are conSidered nsk er mvestments than those backed
by the U S government
A tax~xempl alternative- You may want to constder the advantages
of muntctpal bonds Wtth these mvestments mcome IS exempt from federal
taxes and m many cases state and c•ty taxes as well Consult your mvest
ment profty;tonal to learn the status of an~ bond and select those that best
meet your needs Of courso tax exempt mvestments should be mcluded
only m accounts outstde of a tax favored retirement account
Although financtal sttuahons dtffer havmg suffictent tncome to cover
rehrement needs IS of concern to everyone To help you select and manage
mvestments so they achtcve the goals you set consult an mvestment profes
Stonal
(Mark E Smith Ia an lnveatmentexacutlve with Advest Inc In Its Gal
llpolls office )

Late summer best time for reseeding
By HALKNEEN
POMEROY - Are your pasture
or lawn grasses dead or non eXIstent?
Are weeds grow ng where pasture or
your lawn use to be? Now s the time
to prepare to reseed your lawn pas
ture or hay field or to sow your fall
cover crop

Late summer IS the best ttme to
seed these areas as the sml IS warm
moiSture IS ava1lable and a long cool
growmg season wtll be begmmng for
estabhshmg an extenstve root system
before wmter comes
The first step ts to take a sot I test
You need to know what condi'lton
your sotlts m Is the pH (the level of
actdtty or alkahnay of the sotl) ade
quate to grow grass? Most forage and
lawns would prefer a pH of 6 2 to 6 5
Unfortunately many ttmes we plant
m low pH sods of 5 5 or less The
seed begms to genmnate but at low
pH levels the root system IS unable
to extend deeply mto the sotl substrata
Save yourself ttme and money
brmg m a sotl sample to be tested to
the extenston office For a nommal
fee we send the sample off to a pn
vatc sml tesung laboratory Our office
reVIews the results of the test and rec
ommends ferttltzer and llmmg apph
cattons to sua your spectfic sotl
needs
The second step IS to choose the
nght seed for the area bemg planted
For the homeowner you need to
know whether your lawn •s m parual
shade or full sun do you "ant a htgh
or low mamtenance area and wtllthe

area be under a lot off ot raff 1 e
ne ghborhood basebtll fcld Our
office has nfom1at onal fact sheets to
ass1~t vou n ) ou cho cc Fanners
cho ces are dependen upon the use
of the forages held condtuons and
the last crop grown tn the field The
Ohm State Un verstty Agronomy
GUide hsts and revtews many of your
opuons HtllSldes and flood ng bot
tom lands need spec tal seedmg selec
twn to maxt!J)Ile ytelds yet be con
sctous to eroswn and the envtron
mental problems
The thtrd step IS to make sure tfie
seed sown has good contact wtth the
sotl Prepare the seed bed properly
Plowmg dtskmg and levehng out the
lawn or field ts extremely tmportant
Remove low lymg wet spots For no
ull farmers reserve for nommal fees
per acre no ull dnlls from our local
Metgs County S01l &amp; Water Conser
vatmn Board (992 6676 e•tenSton

3)
For lhe homeowner a hght layer
of straw (not hay) wtll help retam

motsture for an tmproved grass stand
For more mformauon please call
(992 6696) or stop by the extenston
office located m the basement of the
County Annex Blllldmg behmd the
Holzer Metgs Chmc
Are yellow jackets d sturbmg your
outdoor actiVIt es? The populat on of
yellow Jackets m a nest are qutckly
expandmg m numbers as the nest pre
pares for the emergence of the next
generatiOn of adult female queens
The first ktlllng freeze wtll k1ll the
nest howe\cr unul then the best

:uh u..:e s

avmd the nes and to m n

1m ze your attracu encss to

the

msect
A otd "ear no br ~ht LOiored
cloth g us ng heavy s c ntcd sh tm
poos and soaps eaung outdoors htgh
I) sugared foods hke cakes and ptes
leav g opened pop cans or fruu
JUICes lor dnnkmg Ia er Our extcn
SIOn office docs ha' e mformauonal
&gt;heels to asSist you n the proper and
safe way to control these nsects
The yellow Jacket fact sheet
dcscnbes the life cycle and dtetary
habits of tl e msect Dtd you know
that yellow Jackets are meat eaters?
Thetr mam food source are caterptl
Iars and fhes In the spnng and early
summer months yellow Jackets are
benefictal msects destroymg many
pests hazardous to shrubs trees and
ammals
However startmg n late summer
the yellow Jackets swttch from htgh
protem dtets needed for ra~smg the
developmg larvae to htgh carbohy
drate dtets for the matunng breedmg
adults Only the new queens sumve
the wmter as they htde m protected
areas away from the current nest stte
ThiS change 10 dtet mcreases the fm
agmg workers tmtabtllty and thus we
are more likely to get stung Thetr
search for carbohydrate sources
attract the nest workers to our sodas
ptes cakes and all other sweets
found m our late summer ptcmcs
Several hummmgbtrd lovers have
called that thetr hummmgb11d feeders
(sugar and water soluuon) are attract
ng large numbers of yellow Jackets
The yello" Jackets are gangmg up on

the hummmgb rds thus preventing
the b rds fton s pp ng the art fi ctal
nect tr from I he feeder I
In the Ot1ho s book How To
Attract Hun m ngbtrd s &amp; Butler
tltes 11 suggests two n cthods I
asml ng the hun m ngb rd The f rst
IS to purchase or make a yellow Jack
d guard out ol "trc mesh or cloth
nett ng (tulle) The open ngs allow
the long narro v beak and tongue of
the humm ngb rd to reach the sugar
solut on but prevent the msects from
reachtn• the fo od The second
method s to arefully smear the sur
faces around the feedmg open ngs
w th a shppery substance hke petro
leum Jelly salad 01l or mmeral otl
Apply spanngly and avotd placmg
the substances m the feeder or m1x
mg t m the feeder solutiOn Replace
substances frequently as they wash
and wear off
If you have a yellow Jacket nest
that ts above ground euher hangmg
under heavy branchmg or under
overhangs you may have the mlro
duccd German yellow Jacket wh1ch
appears to be more aggresstve to
mtruders than the Eastern yellow
Jacket wh ch bUilds tts nest under
ground Destroymg yellow Jacket
nests IS dtfficult - tf not outnght
dangerous Smce the nests do not sur
vtve the wmter tf posSible avotd the
nest area and let Nature ktll off the
c:ntters
(Hal Kneen Is Meigs County s
extension agent for agriculture
and natural resources Ohio State
Umverslty)

Firm's perks designed to retain good workers
'

•

By TIM PUET
Assoclated Press Wrltar
COLUMBUS- The head of a
h1gh tech busmess believes he s
found a way to retam employees m a
ttght JOb market Do the1r house
keepmg and make them spend com
pany money for btg vacahons
Gary Qutck prestdent and ch1ef
execuhve officer of Qutck Soluuons
Inc says he knew when he founded
the company m 1991 that h1s btggest
problem would be hmng and keepmg
good wotkers
The company develops software
sets up computer networks and pro
vtdes busmess analySts Wtth rev
enues of about $25 mtlllon m 1998 a lot less than Microsoft takes m each
day - 11 s a small player based m a
clly known more as a traanmg ground
than a destmatton for htgh technology workers
Qutck tned to makes hiS employ
ees feel welcome from the start
Sometime dur ng thai first week
we send a i;&gt;asket of pasta products to
the home of a new consultant and t s
amazmg how that boosts the morale
of not JUSt that person but h1 s or her
spouse Qu1ck sad
Ftrst tmpress10ns are cverythmg
and those baskets seem to gtve a lot
of people the sense that thmgs are dtf
ferent here I ve gotten many hand
wntten thank you notes from people
saymg that they worked for compa
mes for years and never rece1ved any
recognltton like that
Jncent1ve contests for te lev1s1 on
sets and other pr zes take place
throughout the year but the btg pay
off for Qutck s employees comes
after 36 months w1th the company
At that pomt they become ehg•
ble for a benefits program begun n
February that mcludes free house
cleanmg once a month and a $1 200
annual voucher for personal travel
Qutck satd be s thmkmg of
expandmg the housecleanmg pro
g,am by workmg with a company
that does grocery shoppmg closes
open garage doors ptcks up clothes
from the dry cleaner and provtdes

'

other personal servtces for employees
dunng the day
I ve had lots of people tell me
that when they come home and see a
clean house tt makes them feel the
company loves them and boosts thetr
morale and that of everyone m thetr
famtly QUtck satd
The vacatiOn money ts mce but
the housecleamng IS much more
1mponant satd Jane Barker who
has worked for Qu ck for 3 1/2 years
I d been usmg a housecleamng ser
vtce before thiS anyway so thts s
savmg me a good bll of money
I become ehgtble for the benefits
plan 10 March 2000 an~ my wtfe
can t wan for the cleanmg serv1ce to
start showmg up satd Mtke Hold
croft a Qutck employee for 2 1/2
years whose wtfe sat home wnh the
couple s 8 month old baby
We won t recrUit people from
other clients but word of th1 s pro
gram has gotten around a nd I know
there are people thtnkmg thts k nd of
package I S worth leavmg whore they
work and co mng here
Qu ck sa td the $1 200 11 a vel tllol
ment whtch must be used as a lump
sum once a year g"es e mployees the
chance to take the k nd of tr ps they
mtght otherwiSe be unable t alford
Doug Hmes wnh Qutck for 3 1/2
years used hiS allotment to help pay
for an anmvers try cru se to Alaska he
and h s wtfe already had planned
We were takmg the cru se any
way but tlus made It a lot less ex pen
st ve he sad More tmportantly next
year we II use the money for the kmd
of tnp we never would ha ve been
able to afford agam for years
Whtle few employers match
Qutck s magnammlly hts deme to
have employees take real vacat ons IS
m step with the latest corporate
thmking
That tdea of requmng vacatiOn
ume to be used m a btg chunk ts
somethmg that seems to be on the nse
m busmesses satd Howard J Klem
an JlSSOCiate professor of manage
ment and human resources at Ohto
state Um vers ty

Otherwtse employees often end
up usmg vacattpn lime a day here or
a day there and they don t get the
ume they need to reJuvenate
Most compames have figured
out that money alone tSn t the answer
The kmd of perks that Mr Qutck IS
offenng are hkely to become more
common because they encourage
worker loyalty and reduce employee
stress So the benefits they provtde m
the long run are v.orth he expense
Klem satd
QUick a McArthur nauve and
1974 Ohto State Untvers ty graduate
sa1d h s prevwus work ex per cnce as
a recruiter for other busmcsscs taught
h m ho" tmportant It IS to have hap
py employees
I had a chance to s 1 do vn w th
probably thousands ol people and
hear the r likes and diSlikes abo•t
the tr JObs ~nd thetr btggest compla nt
usuall) was that the company they
worked for dtdn 1 care for them and
saw hem as no hmg llOrc than an
nem on the balance sheet
Qu ck SolutiOns employs about
250 nformat on teclu ology spectal
sts whose serv c.es have been used by
more than I00 compantes mcludmg
Bank One Ashland Chemtcal and

Amencan Electm Power It ranked
345th on Inc magaz ne s 1998 list of
fastest grow ng co npames
Most of tts workers are m Col urn
bus but the company m the last two
years has opened offices 10 Chtcago
and Charlotte N C , wtth plans for a
branch 10 Dayton and posstbly one m
Rtchmond Va
QUick satd he hopes eventually to
have offices m ftve or SIX cmes and
employ about I 000 people
He satd the company h11ed about
170 people last year and lost 70 wtth
40 of those gomg to work full t1me
fdr QUick Solutwns clients and about
15 be10g ltrcd for poor JOb perfor
mance
Most of the other 15 enJOY\"d
work10g here but had to leave
because thetr spouse was bemg trans
ferred or for other reasons that
weren t JOb related he satd
For the most part we re rctatn
10g th" people we want to retam and
I thmk the mcenuve program has a lot
to do w th that Qutck satd
h may t.:ost more than mas com
pames are wtlllng to sp&lt;;nd but the
program pays lor tself 1n terms of
kecpmg people and savmg constant
trammg costs

Optimism fades for merger
of W.Va. steelmaking firms
WHEELING W Va (AP)- West
Ytrgmta s two maJor steel producers
say they are no longer opttmtsttc
about a posSible merger
Thts has never been an easy
transaction and we I kc Wheeling
Put conunue to explore thts oppor
tumty as well as othe" satd Da\ld
Robertson Wetrton Steel s executive
vtce prestdent for human resources
We certamly haven t g ven up on
the tdea 11 makes a lot of sense
But Paul B~ha chatrman of
Wheeling Ptttsbtlrgh Steel Corp
acknowledged Tuesday that the two
nonhero panhandle compames are
now dramattcally further away
from a deal

We were so far along at the end
ol June wnh at least a concept that
we mtght have brought a thtrd or
fourth company nto the negotta
t1ons he sa1d
Wellton Steel located along
Oh o s eastern border employs about
I 480 Oh oans Wheel ng Pttt has
plant&gt; m Steubenvtlle Mmgo June
uon and Mart ns Ferry Oh o
Offic als at WHX Corp Wheel
ng l"llt s pare It company suggested
alks wJth We1rt n Steel be term n tt
cd but were persuaded to let them to
contmue However Bucha sa d no
new talk s a e c urre ntly sc hedulccl

JJunbq Gtuae. jJmtbul • Page 03

Sunday, August 8, 1919
•

This definitely doesn't need fixing
By BRUCE WILLIAMS
fi.IWIPIPir EnterpriH . . .otilltion

AGENCY EARNS DESIGNATION - The Evans Moore Insurance Agency of VInton has been named a 1999-2000 Pacesetter
Agency by Motorlatslnsun111ce Companies Columbus Above are
agency operator Joe A Moore with his wife Sarah L Evans
Moore

Local agency earns
insurer's designation
VINTON - The Evans Moore Insurance Agency w11s recently named a
1999 2000 Pacesetter Agency by Motonsts Insurance Compame•
Thts destgnauon ts awarded to recogmze the agency s outstandtng pro
fess10nallsm profitabthly and customer sattsfaclton
Pacesetter agenctes are respected for thetr commitment to provtdmg pol
tcyholders wuh excellent msurance and supenor customer servtce
Motonsts IS headquartered m Columbus The Evans Moore Agency based
at 165 Ma n St Vmton has served the area for over three generations

Job report intensifies
blue chip stock slide
By EILEEN GLANTON
AP Business Writer
• NEW YORK - Blue chtp stocks
resumed the11 slide Fnday as a report
of strong U S employment solldtfied
Wall Street s beUef that the Federal
Reserve w11l nuse tnterest rates later
thiS month
The Dow Jones mdustnal average
fell 79 79 pmnts to close at
I 0 714 03 erasmg more lhan half tts
119 pomt gam on Thursday The
blue ch p mdex ended a choppy
week 58 88 pomts htgher a gam of
0 55 percent
Broader stock mdtcators fell mod
estly Fnday cappmg a week of steep
losses The Standard &amp; Poor s 500
tell 13 42 to I 300 29 ~nd the Nas
daq composite 10dex fell 17 86 to
2 547 97
The Nasdaq IS now II percent
below ts record htgh of 2 g64 48
reached July 16 Tradltlona!ly Wall
Street calls a market drop of 10 per
cent a correction
Stocks tumbled after the Labor
Department reported that employers
added a larger than expected 310 000
JObs to thetr payrolls m July and that
average hourly carmngs a key gauge
ol mllat on pressures rose 3 8 per
cent from a year ago
Jn,estors have grown mcreasmg
ly worr ed hat t ght labor markets
wtll fmce the Federal Rese'rve to ratse
nee rest rates as a pre empttve str ke
agamst mnatiOn Htgher mtete&gt;t rates
~.:ul mto t.:orporate profits by tatsmg
the cost of borrow ng
If the Fed ne'eded fuel to con
stder ra s ng rates they have It now
with these new numbers sad Alan
Ackerman sen tor vtce prestdent at
Fahnestock &amp; Co The strong jobs
repon ttlted the optimiSts upstde
down
The Labor Department also
reported the unemployment rate
remamed at 4 3 percent last month
neru; a three decade low

That pace of JOb growth m unac
satd Bruce
ceptable to the Fed
Stemberg ch ef economtst at Memll
Lynch
,
Bond pnces fell sharply on the
report pushmg the yteld on Trea
sury s 30 year bond up to 6 15 per
cent from 6 04 percent late Thursday
Interest rate concerns hurt finan
cml serv1ces stocks as J P Morgan
fell2 9116 to 122 15/16 and Morgan
Stanley Dean Wttter dropped 4 9/16
to 82 1/8 Amen can Express down 4
1/16 to 123 1/16 contnbuted most
hcavtly to the Dow s losses
The stock market s trymg real
ly I ard to ftght reality nght now mtercst rates wtll probably be nsmg
satd Bnan G Be lsk chtef mvest
ment strategiSt at George K Baum &amp;
Co tn Kansas Ct!y Mo But some
sectors can 1 escape the sel ling pres
sure
Certain tec hnologv ssues d d
escape the sell oll most nolabl y scm
conductor stocks like Mtcron Tec h
nology up 4 1/2 at 65 7/8 Strong
forecasts fdr personal c Jmputer sales
have supported the stocks of compa
mes that make comput p tr!s and an
ndustry group atd 1 hursday world
wtde semtconductor sales n June
rosen 6 percent from June 199&amp;
But Internet compan es whtch ral
lied sharply Thursday struggkd once
agam Yahoo losl I 7/16 to 126
1~/16 desp tea rat ng s upgrade from
Goldman Sachs Amenca Onlmc
gave up stgmficant early gams to end
13/16 htgher at 84 3/4
EBay the onlme auctiOn Slle
plunged 9 5/8 to 83 1/4 as Its system
shut down
Whtle most market tndexes ended
the week fatrly flat am d low volume
tradmg was volaule throughout the
week
It s tough lo call all the turns m
th1s market Ackennan satd It ts
hke the lndtanapolls 500 Everythtng
keeps changmg lap alter lap

Gallia man attends beef
board's summer meeting
GALLIPOLIS - Joe Foster J1
cow calf and datry operator from
Gallipolis represented Ohto beef
producers as a USDA appomted
member of the Cattlemen s Be~f
Promotton and Research Board dur
ng tis summer meetmg July 18 21m
Denver Colo
Beef Board members approved a
$45 mtlhon checkoff budget for fis
cal 2000 as well as mmor changes to
the admmtstrauon of the $1 per
head checkoff program
The fiscal 2000 checkoff budget
ncludes fundtng for program, to be
Implemented between Oct I 1999 to
Sept 30 2000 m the areas of pro
motion $25 4 mtlhon research $3 9
null ton consumer mformatton $4 3
mtlllon tndustry mformatton $1 7
mdhon foretgn marketmg $4 8 mtl
I on and producer communtcattons
$19m lhon
The Beef Promouon Opera! ng
Committee wnh ts 20 producer
members represen mg the Beef Board
and s late beef counet ls must sttll
appro'e mdt vtdual checkoff funded
program author zatt ons and contmc
tors The Opetalm~ Committee meets

Sept 22 23 m Omaha Neb
In addltlon to the program budget
Beef Board members approved a program evaluatto budge t f $ 1'0 000
a program dcvelopn ent budget of
$120 000 a USDA werstght budget
of $225 000 and an admtniSt at on
budget of $2 2 111 II on By law Beef
Board adm mstrat1 ve expenses can
not exceed 5 percent of prOJected rev
enues and actual expenditures have
been less than 3 2 percent m recent
years
Beef Board members also
approved m nor changes to the
admmtslratton of the d eckoff as rec
ommended by the board s Execut1ve
Commtttee In March the boards
Admm1s lratwn SubcommlHee was
asstgned by thee xecuuvc committee
the JOb of detenn tmng what changes
mtght 1m prove the checkoff system
and what conse nsus mtght ex st for
such changes
More than 200 ndustry organtza
twns were nvtted 10 provtde nput
and the subcommittee w dely sollctt
ed comments and deas fro n beef
producers throughout the U S

'

DEAR BRUCE Recently I was
appomted to look after my aunt s
affa~rs She IS 86 years old has done
nothtng to •mprove her financtal
condition and has left thmgs JUSt as
they were when her husband passed
away seven years ago She has almost
$] 5 mtlhon m as hard as It ts to
beheve certificates of dcpostt She
also has her penswn and Soctal
Secunty mcome Even with thiS mts
erable rate of return she IS sttll sav
mg a constderable amount of money
every year thereby mcreasmg her
estate I want to redeem these COs
and mvest the money m sohd equt
ttes where I know she wtll have a
much better return She ts very reSts
tant to the tdea Can you gtve me
some arguments I could place before
her to have her see lhat she IS gtvmg
up a great deal of mcome? - L W
Dayton Ohto
DEAR L W You know \he
exprcsston If tt am t broke don t
fix u? I don t thmk thiS needs to be
fixed Your aunt has more money
commg m then she can spend evt
denced by the fact that her estate ts
growmg She s domg the same thmg
her late husband dtd (o acqmre thts
money Thts IS preuy hard to argue
wtth The only people that m ght have
a dtfferent pomt of v ew are those
who wtll mhent th s money and
would like to see the estate grow In
my opmton It IS m your aunts best
Interest to tell her that everythmg IS
domg well and you are gomg to leave
thmgs JUSt as her husband mtended
them to be
DEAR BRUCE My son was m a

mull1 car acc1dent where one of the
many dnvers was a JUvenile We
eventually recetved a summons to
appear at a heanng concermng the
mc1dcnt I am con.emed that we
should perhaps have our own attor
ney represent us at thts heanng It s
an expense I can til afford but I don t
know that I can afford not to be represented - T W Ctnctnnatt
DEAR T W The reason one car
nes llabtllty msurance ts not only to
pay an)' awards that are assessed
agamst you but also to pay for the
appropnate defense Stmply tum thiS
summons over lo your msurance
agent wnh mstrucuons to see that the
legal department recetves 11 If m
thetr judgment representatiOn I S
needed they w11l provtde It wnhout
addmonal cost to you
DEAR BRUCE When I was
young and footloose (I dtdn t even
k:now my wtfe) I leased an automo
btle for five years 1ltere are two-and
a half years to go on the lease I am
now mamed wtth responslbllmes
and I stmply cannot afford the large
lease payments for what ts essential
ly a boy toy When I went to the
leasmg company I told them that I
wanted to gtve them back thetr car
and cancel the contract They all but
laughed m my face They told me the
reSidual value was far less than I
owed on the automobtle I would
have to make good on that before I
could cons dcr tradmg t n The fact
IS 11 IS worth about $5 000 less than
I owe on t They ol fered me an
arrangement vhcre I could trade the
car m o n another less expensl\c
lease but II JUSt looks to me like Ian
gettmg m deeper and deeper I don t

110
110

Help Wanted

SMART MONEY

BRUCE

have the $5 000 to gtvc them even tf
I choose to go that rou1e What do
you suggest 7 - B T Sail Lake Cny
DEAR B T Ltve wnh ttl The
likelihood IS th at you are sluck wnh
thts one So many others have gone
the same route leasmg an automob le
for ent rely too long a penod Leas
mg "stmply another way of !inane
mg Often your mtleage esttmate s
low That way the payments are low
wnh the lease - and you pay at the
end not the begmnmg Your best bet
IS to contmue wnh the lease take
extra spectal care ol the car and at the
end of the lease exerctse your nghl
to purchase- even tf you mtend to
se ll the vehtcl~ mme&lt;lmtely There s
a lesson here and I hope that you and
many others have learned tt
Interestqd m buymg &lt; r selhng a
hou se' Let Bruce Wtlltams House
Snart beyourgutde Prce $1495
plus shtppmg and handlmg Call
(800) 994 6733
(Send )Our quesrwns to Smmt
Mone} P.O Box 503 Elfers FL
34680 E mml to br cehrucew I

Exper RNs o p 0\1 de ca e o
cl ents n he homu Both pa
me iirld full me posl,llons w h
every o ne weekend schedu ed
v 11 ••pons t&gt; es ava ao e
Qual fied app lcanls mus have a
m n mum or one year of ecent
c n ca expe ence n a home
ca e or acu e ca e semno excel
lent commun cal on p oblem
ao v ng skIs and fie• b lty Ca I
740 594 8226 w th nqui as o
send you esume to Appalachian
Commun ty V s t ng Nu se Asso
c at on
nc
P 0 Box 768
Athens Ohio 4570 EOE
~ STARSEARCH 9i
S n11e s Bands G cups A
S~ es Ages Majo Reco d Labe
Agents Seek ng New A s s
Com ng To Par ~mouth OH 901
427 2639 901 427 9!514

ASSEMBlY AT HOllE II C a 5
Toys Jewe y wood Sew ng
Typ ng G ea Pay CALL 1 800
795-0380 Ext 120 (24 Hrs)
ATTENTION MQTHERS &amp; OTH
ERS WORK FROM HOllE
Wo k a ound ybu schedule
$499 pan lime to $7999 full t me
Ca to I ee booklet 6 6 752
8091 or www cash91 comlxsn g

I 10 cents 10 54 53 cents a gallon
and September natural gas was up 5 I
cents to $2 69~ for each I 000 cubtc
feet
In London Nonh Sea Brent Blend
crude otl for del very m September
broke the $20 barrel level for the I rst
ume stnce November 1997 fimsh ng
up 26 cents to $20 06 at the Interna
uonal Petroleum Exchange
1\ifeanwh le soybean and gram
futures pnces ftntshed the day htgh
er on the Chtcago Board of Trade
amtd forecasts for more dry weatl er
next week m the Mtdwcst
Pnces had fallen early tn th~ day
amtd forecasts for weekend ram But
meteorologtsts are now calhng for a
htgh pressure ndge to move m over
much of the gram belt bnngmg wtth
It more dry weather that could con

IN THE MEIGS COURT
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS POMERO~ OHIO
CHRISTOPHER S LANCE
Plalntlll
CIH No 89-CV-tleS
VI

CENTRAL OHtO
ANTHRACITE
LEASING COMPANY
JUDGE CROW
AKA COAL CO
Address Unknown
and
ROGER W DAVIS
Addreso Unknown
andIRIS J DAVIS
Address Unknown
Defendants
NO~CEBYPUBUCA~ON

TO ROGER W DAVIS AND
IRtSJ DAVIS
TO
CENRTAL
OHIO

START
DATING
TONIGHT!
Have Fun Mealing El g be 5 n
g es In You A ea Cii Fo Mo e
nformat on 1 800 ROMANCE
Ek1 9735

70

30 Announcements
NewrovouTh tt Shoppe
9 West Stimson Athens
74D-592 1842
Oua ty clo h ng and househo d
tems $1 00 bag sa e eve y
Thu sday Monday th u Salu day
9 00-5 30

A
Legal
Aaaoclatlon

Profeaalonal

8 North Court Stroot 2nd
Floor
-----d-F--dPost Olllce Box 661
60 Lost an oun
Alhena Ohio 45701 ~1
~
LOS 1 ~u f(lund The los
(614) 593 3347

(614) 592~56 FAX

Be Paid In Advance
QEAQLINE 2 00 p m
the day before the ld
Ia to run Sunday

Pu se Of Len o a Fe guscn A
Food and Jackson P ke Thu s
day a 5 p ease Return On!)' P c
u es 0 Har DECEASED Son
Please
1 740 256 222 0
740-446-2055

ca

ndustryll B00-832 7802
Ext 690

Located at 962 Bnck School Rd
On the htll ac oss lrom Addavtlle
School Just follow the s gns off
Rt #7 onto Add son P ke

(740) 367 7237
Mon Sat 9 00 to 5 00

CLASS

Brand Name Furniture

12

pm

500

Room

446 5030 for-

more mformat1on and
to reg1ster
Classes are free

and

open to the public

FOR SALE
1991 Cadtllac Sedan
Custom nstalled Motorola
mobile phone Custom
Cant nental ktl New Sears
battery (November 1998) New
Mtchehn Rad1al Tires (1998)
Flor da t tied auto mob e
Never seen snow ce or salt
Also ncluded Powertel
cellular phone
Actual mtleage 71 000

$10 200 00
(740) 446 1634

Pnce
Phqne

CHILDBIRTH

PR~PARATION CLASS

15

pm

500

Help Wanted

S2 000 WEEKlY I Ma ng 400
B och u es Sat slact on Gua
an eed Postage &amp; Supp es P o
v tted Rush Se Add essed
Slamped Enve ope G CO OEPT
S Bo• 1438 ANT OCH TN
37011 438 S art lmmed a e y

Bruntcardt Mustc
Must Sell Due To Health
Call Steve Rhodes
For Info

Denney Reun1on
Sat, Aug

dark
Raccoon Creek Park
Shelter House #t
Potluck at 5 30 PM
Bnng cha rs stones &amp; ptctures

R1o Grande
Baseball Assoc
Annual Pool Party
Tuesday,
August 10
Shelter House
Dmner 6 to 7
Pool Party 7 to 9
Bnng Covered 0Jsh

For Lease
Off1ce Su1te Especially

Fall Dance Class
Registration
September
From

47

Good For Insurance
Real Estate or

•

2

PM

Art School

Accounttng

1300 Sq

Ft Four Rooms

plus large Clencal Offtce
Kttchenette and Storage
Room ADA Restroom
Nat Gas Central Atr
Carpet
Corner of Thtrd &amp; Oltve
Galltpolis OH

740 446 3994

(740) 441 1988
1271 Eastern Ave

New Locat1on

I ~=~~~~O~H~=JI WOODYARD S MINI MALL
~
Located bes de the Dollar
Store at 314 Second Avenue~

Backhoe &amp;
Dozer Work
20

Exp
License &amp; Bonded
Yrs

Gall pols
Featunng

TV

Shopptng channel
clothing open1ng
Monday August 9th

7 40-388-9515
388-8030

336 Second Avenue
Ga po s Oh o
446 8235

For More Information
446-2342 or 992-2156

$800 WEEKLY POTENT Al
Camp ete S mp e Gove nmen
Fo ms A Home No E•pe ence

BOO 9% VJ599
E•l TOLL
2601 FREE
Necessa
CAI.:L

14

4 00 till

Leave Message

Room

The Lynch Agency

11 o

Med ca Sec neede d oca 0
n P P &lt;easanl A ea Ba
Camp skIs Good pe &amp;onal
~ Send
esume co Pont
Peasant Regs e O"ce E B 8
200 Man St eet Pt Peasant

I'·CIItloo

Needed Babys te Fo Tw n 4
Yea Od G sPa Tme Rete
ences Requ eel 740-446-8627

Selling Quality

w th return of premtum nder
If you don t use your pol cy
you wtll recetve back 80% of
you r prem um every 10 years
t 5% dtscount for husband and
w fe po c tes w th the same
da ly beneftt
Ronme Lynch

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Ma n enance Pos on Open
Pease send esume o Rou1e 1
Box 366 Po n Pleasant WI/
25550 Please no phOne cal s

M ss Pau as Oaycare Can e
Ca e G ve Must Be H~gh SChool
G adua e 8 Yeas Of Age Ap
p cal ons Monday August 9 h 9
A. M 5 PM

EARLY PREGNANCY

Insurance

All Yerd Sales Muat Be Paid n
A'dv1nce Deadl ne 1 OOpm the
dey before the ad Ia to un
Sunday &amp; Monday ed lion
I 00pm F~day

Loc:a 1i uck ng Company Seek ng
Qua 1 ed T uck D ve s Good
Pay And Benet ts Send Resume
To 0 ver P 0 Bo• 109 Jack
son Oh o 45640 0 Call 1 740
286 1463 To Schedule An Inter

wv

Trtple 'J' Furntture
NOW OPENI

edldon 2 00 p m

Pomeroy
M1ddlepor1
&amp; V1cmlty

576~348

FlATBED TRUCK
DRIVERS
Needed For A Na 10na Ca 18
We 0t1e G eat Pay &amp; Bene ns
Fo O'mOtves
Ca I Now Fo lnstan Approva
Jon The leade n The

Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems wtth
y6ur dnvmg record DUI s
speedtng ttckets etc
Same Day SR 22 s ssued
Cal for a quote
Brown Insurance Agency
446 1960

Nurs1ng Home

Friday Monday edition
10 00 1m Sltunl~

L P N Top Pav P ck you shift
Cap a Nu s ng Agency
800

v~w

Counse o Pos ton An Ou pa
en Alcoho And 0 he 0 ug
~gency Locafed In Ga a And
Jackson Coun es Is Seek ng A
Qua I ed Pe son To P ov de AI
coMI And 0 M 0 ug Counse
ngCounse oW WokWhA
Age G oups Know edge Or
Chem cal dependency RequJ ed
Bache o s Otg ee CCDC L SW
A.nd 0 LPC C P e e ed Send
Resume By Augus 20 999 To
FACTS 770 Jackson P ke B d
wei Oh o 456140 FAX740
446 8014 EOE MIF!l-i

open to the publiC

ALJ. Yard Sales Must

NO PHONE CAllS PlEASE

WE PAY FOR
YOUR EXPERIENCE!
S 000 ~n On BOnus
Qua 11y Home T me
La e Mode EQU'IJm&amp;n
COl A 6 Mas OTR
ECK MLLER l&amp;l0-611~
www eck m 1e com
Sunday AecrUJ e -Ca

Classes tnclude adult exerctse
"'~··~ tap pre ballet ballel pre
Call 446-5030 for
potnte pomte Jazz tap
modern and choreography
more mformat1on and
''- "'"' chtldren starttng at age 3
to reg1ster
Teens and Adults
For
More lnformatton Cal l
Classes are free and

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

PI Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Ortvers F albed

Kuhn Coon Reumon
wtll be held August 15 at the
Late Charles N Kuhns Farm
on Centenary Ad
Rei at ves Fr ends welcome

French

Yard Sale

Up gh p ano good cond on e
cenlly wned ca 740 742 7243
740-742 2100

App 1 A HOLZER SENIOR
CARE CENTER 380 Colon a
Road Bldwel Otuo45614

Compute Use s Needed Wo k
Own Hrs $251( $801({ V 1 800
536-0486 X 7777 www cwp com

Holzer Medical r..cnt.corl
Lost La ge Wh e Dog Lost Nea
A o Grande Rewa d 740 245
0485 After 6 00 PM

L censed Per5onne Only 18 LPN
LSW Those nte esled Pease

Seremty House
~erves v ct ms of domest c
vtolence
call 446 6752 or
t 800 942 9577

2 00-6 00

lOSING WEIGHT IS AS EASY
AS A B C Ca Joyce A 1 888
769-733 Ek1 222

13

EOE

Sunday August

Personals

ARTHRACITE
LEASING
CO AKA COALCO
Giveaway
Christopher S Lance
owner of apx 81.t AC In
Bodford Twp
Molgs
County Ohio has lttod an
action In Meigs County Adorable K tens To GoOd Home
Common Pleaa Court ask 740 446-3479
lng that certain eoal leooea - - - - - - - - granted lo you In 1976 and
1975 concerning aald property have taapod ore thorolore void and should be
rateaoed ol roeord
You have 28 days from the
dote of the taat publication
of thts nolle• to file your
reaponae and urvo upon
Plalndlla legal counce!
Frank A Lavelle
Attorney lor Plalntlll
Pa Chow Puppy G ea W h
Reg No 0010195
Kids Has Been Wo med 740
LAVE~LE LAW OFFICE
44 .()784
L.I1A

Auction
and Flea Market

~ugual

Compte

lton ot MDS 2 Ca e Conte ence
A endanct Ca e P ann ng And
Other DocumentabOI'I

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Call

80

HOlZER SENIOR CARE CEN
TE.R 1 Cu •ntly Accept ng Ap
phca ons Fo Soeta ServiCe As
s s anr Aespons b 1 es Include

But Are No L m led To

CLASS A CCL DRIVERS Dod
cated Reg ona &amp; OTR So os
S 30 M Teams S 34 M Sp
100% Company Paid Health Ben
el s Med ca Oenta Vis on
Company Pad Retirement Pan
PLUS 4011( Afte 90 Days (W h
~~ ch ng) Company Pad Vaca
on And Pad Ho days 95% No
Touch F e~gh Sate It Commun
eaton Ced l.Jnon 0 ec De
post Ass gnea Conven onals
Company Pad Unlto ms Stock
Pu chase Call 800 555 CWTS
cwt jObsOcon way com Con Way
T uckload Se v ces CWT Is An

6 30 8 30

60 Lost and Found

a

lndustr es P0 Box 307 Syra
cuse Ohio 45779 EEO

Training

• dasses for bolh dass A and BUcense
• finoncmg and lundtng avatlable based on ehgtbthty
'98% pla1emen1 on Class Alrammg'
Ucensed by lhe Ohta Depothnent ol Htghwt~y Solely
Mar11na Ohto 45750
Contact Ed Adams I BOO 648 3695 or (740) 373 6283 Exl 338

Ho !day Inn Wents Ful T 1nt Line
COOk Apply In Person No Phone
C41s Please 577 State Roule 7

999 10 Ca eton Schoo Me gs

Thursday Au~ust

Mid-Ohio Valley Truck Driver Training
Woel!day dasltS 8 Ia 5Mf Also evemngs &amp;weekends

Help Wanted

BULLETIN BOARD

French

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

e Submtl esume by

Holzer Med1cal Cente

In tradmg Fnday September
crude rose 32 cents to $20 88 a bar
tel September unleaded gasoline
was up I 35 ce tts to 65 83 cents a
gallon September heat ng o I rose

CRUISE SHIP JOBS' T 1¥1 I
Work Wo Ki Wide Fcx FREE Into
Send You Add eu To C ulse
c ew 124 492 Man S K Po n
4169 Australia

ass stanl veh cle ada van dr v

-,.------.
Business

"140

&lt;.':atd

Public Notice

tmue to hurt crops
That news sent soybean and com
futures pnces on an upward d mb n
a day of choppy tradmg - with
wheat futures followmg
There also were reports that the
July soybean crop wtll be below U S
Departtnent of Agnculture forecasts
Analysts say that may mean that
recent bouts ol hot dry weather may
also affect y telds later m th~ year
In tradtng Fnday wheat for
• December deltvery was up I 1/4
cents to $2 95 314 a bushel Decem
ber corn rose half a cent to $2 35 1/2
a bushel December oats were up a
quarter cent to $ t 17 3/4 a bushel
and November soybeans were up 2
3/4 cents to $4 83 a bushel

110

tor )aMor 11 c ew 14tadt s sec e
18 y cle ca teache teach no

I ams com Q lt!Stw rJS of general
u tere&lt;;t w II be ans'H.-ered m Jut re
colun ns Ow ng to the volume of
marl pe sona/ repl1es em rot be pm
v&lt;ded)

Help Wanted

Help Wanttd

Ca I on SCfiOO and Me gs In
dus es 1 seeking qua I ed ap
p cants fo lhe follow no sub&amp; I
tu • po5 t10n1 Bus d ve cook
Hea tn Se vices Coord na o (AN
or LPN} habilitation and workshop
spec al &amp;t (Ad ull Se vlcll) Jan

AI n CNA 1 Home Hea h Agen
cy Now H ng Full T me And
Pa T me Pas ens Agency W
Tr(t n Fo The PCA Post ons
Musl Have H S Diploma GED 0
Some Expe ence Ca ng Fo The
E de y You May P ck Up An Ap
p ca on To 266 Uppe R ve
Road Gal po s OH 45631 No
Phone Ca s Please

Unleaded gas futures jump forward
By MARTHA IRVINE
AP Buslneas Wrtler
Unleaded gas futures pnces were
up Fnday on New York Mercanule
EKchange as supphes continue to fall
dunng the busy summer dnvmg sea
/
son
On other markets soybean gratn
and orange JUICe futures pnces also
rose
Unleaded gas ts pulhng other
energy futures mcludmg crude otl
upward- wnh unleaded gas postmg
htghs not seen m two years - satd
energy analyst Ttm Evans
We ve had etght consecutive
weeks m whtch mventones have
fallen satd Ev~ns who works for
Pegasus Econometnc Group m New
York It s dnvmg season so demand
ts h1gher and producuon tsn t keep
mg up
He satd that s not necessartly
unusual for thts ltme of year But US
unleaded gas mventones are below
what they were a year ago by 9 4 mtl
hon barrels accordmg to the Amen
can Petroleum Insutute
The deftcll contnbutes to our
sense that the market IS ttght Evans

110

I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~
1!

at 10 am

�Sunday, August 8, 1999

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
110

210

Help Wanted

Nighl ohlft 7pm-..., &amp;mol IIOmt cal tor lnltrvlow 7 - 2

220 Money to loan

NHC A Loan T y Deb Canso I
dat on $!5 000 $200 000 Bad
C td 0 K FH 800 770 0092
ExL 21$

5023.

Own A Computer? Put

Business
Opportunity

1 To

Work $2S To $7S ~n Hour Port

A VISA CARD? $ 2 000
Unsecu td 81(1./No c edrt OK
Ev1 yon• We come
800 285
3588

230

E &amp; S Lawn Somco Dt&amp;lgn m
p tmentatlon
and St v ct

OWN APC'P
Plrf IT TO WORKI
S2S Sl'a IHr I'T 1FT

--com
1-801).J'84.85Se

Person or married COUI' t to lSI
st with milking and car ng tor
a ge dil 'I ht d Housing ut I
t es tic turn thad Respond to
Pt P easant Reg ater E B 4
200 Ma n Street Pt Pleatant
:!SS!iC

Ava able fo Spr ng Clean up
fen IZing and plant ng F M tl

220 Money to loan

ma •• · Sattsfacllon gua an eed
()log Mlhoon 3041!17!1-4e28

SS$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash Fo Aem a n ng Pay men s
On P ope ~ So d Mo gages
Annu t es Se temen s lmme
d a t ouo es
Nobody Sea s
Ou P en Na ona Cont ac
Buye s 800 .. 90 073 Ext 01
w.w natiOMICOntratmuye s com

Geo g11 Portable Sawm I don
t\aul 'fOUt logs to ht mH just caN
304-675- 957

H S Contracting Roofing Sheet
Ml al 3-0 Lap Sh 11ille&amp; Pa nl ng

wv

ave

Profe11lonal
Servlcea

CHARLEIITON WV AREA
A Grow ng Nallonal Htallhca t
Company Cu tnt 'I Has An
Open ng For A Full T mt Phys
c an To Prov de P avwntartva And
Fo A La ga Manu
Mad cal
ractu ng F m n Ravenswood
WV The Succ•••tul Cand da a
Shoukt Be Experienced In Fam y
Practice Erne gancy Medic ne Or
Occupa on a Med c na Th a Flo
s t on Offers An Opportun ty Fo
A Dad cated P ottu on a To
P act ce Medic ne n A St t ng
Not Bour,d By nsu anca Con
acts And Fee Schedules Ell
tellen Salary And Btne ts Pack
age EO~ f You A e f'l I eSIId
n Lea nng Moe About Ths Op
portun ty P ease Send A Copy Of
You CV To Me dan Co po a a
Healthca a Human Resource&amp;
20 Bu ton H s 8 vd Sta 200
Nashv a TN 372 5 Fax 615
665 1244

Mo-

210

v

AM VENDING
Coke /Peps /Henihey 30
Exce len Accts nves
Req 888-oE0-8363
,ARE U LAZY? I Am And Earn
S 000 A Day No Se ng No
MLM F ee Into Package I 800
786-8849 24 Hrs XT 27

-----------I
DATA ENTRY Nat ona B ng
Seeks A Fu I Pa 1 T me Medea
S e SaayA $46KPe Yea
PC Aequ ed No Expa ence
Needed ~ T a n Ca I 1 888
2$ 7&lt;75
DENTAL BillER Up To $20 $40

IH Dental B ng Softwa e Com
pany Needs Peop e To P ocess
Mad cal C a ma F om Home
Tan ng P ov dad Mus Own
Compu e 1 800 223 1149 Ext
460
EARN I10KTHIS MONTH I
Cu Taxes P otect Asse s Only
Se ous Peop e P ease 1 800

320-989511.123&lt;4
EARN $90 000 YEARlY Repa
ng NaT Flap ac ng Long C acks
In W ndsh a ds F ee V deo 1
BOO 826 8523 US Canada
wwwgtassmecnan • com
FRITO LAY
PEPSI COKE
$1 OOQ
VENDING ROUTE
WEEKLY
POTENTI~L
All
CASH BUSINESS PRIME LO
CAl SITES ON GOING SUP
PORT SMALL NVESTMENT
EXCELLE"'T PROFlTS 1 800
731 7233 EXT 3203
Gtt paid tor you computer knowl
edge Slcywarct TechnolOgy a oea
partne and Hanel ech com a
subald a y: of F nga hut Co p a e
ook ng to ta en ted nd v duals
and bu$ nasses to Jo n us n
cnang ng the race or PC eta ng
Ea n from the compu e adv ce
you g ve S a a evo u en n
you I tel No sk 30 day money
back gua an ee Phone 740 985
3498 o 11 s us on he wee at
http:llwww handteam COI'I'Vstr,warct

BUILDING LOTS
FOR SALE

GET YOUR CASH NOW 0 des
Buye s Of S uc u ed Sett emen s
Annu es And Go e nment Fa m
Paymen s A so Pu chas g Lo
e es And P va e Mo gages
Ca Se emen Cap a
soo
959 0006 www se a me cap

ta com

OVER YOUR HEAD N DEBT"'?
Need Mo e B eath ng Room?
Deb Conso da on No Qua f1y
ng FREE CONSUULTAT ON
800 556 1548 Ell 2 4 www ane
who zon o g L censed Bonded
Non Prof iNatlona Co
RECE V NG PAYMENTS? n
ves o Pays CASH NOW Fo
You Se e F nanced Mo gage
Real Es a e Con ac lnsu ance
Annu ty H ghest P ces F ee
Quotas Why Wa I? Call A ch
800-888 6450

SPECIAL
RECRUIT
Machine op~~ratara needed

N011hwealtrn Ohio

T..naporb111on prov(ded
and houelng optlona
IVIillble Starting WIQea
up to $V 5I). $V 75 por hour
out-of town work requiring
overnight elly for each 12
day work period then 2

doyf oii'
We will be)_ accepting

appiiCIItloria for theae
poaltlona at the
MEIGS COUNTY UeRARY
216 Waat Main Street

Pomeroy Ohio

on Tueaday Aur 10

noon 5 00 PM
Pltrooo bring 21or'ma oliO
12 00

.... ~·-·

know ng y accep
advert semen s to ea estate
whch s nvoatono1the
aw Ou eaders a e hereby
ntonned f'la a dwe ngs
advert sed n 11'1 s newspaper
a e ava abe on an aqua
opportun y bass

110

Help Wanted

SALES
Arn Dtvtlopmenl

Represtntalln
Athens Gallipolis Pomeroy Area

••e.

MAD DOGS PJ\LACE

n

C oss Lanes Home Conte Free
Se up De ve y AJC Wnde p n
n ng &amp; $500 Wa Ma Shopp ng
Sp ee w h each nome pu
ch .. sed S op &amp; see vou home
town hous ng spec a s woody
W a d {304}776 7699 o
800
922 9976 C ossLanes Ex 1 of

Snap-On Tools
JltiiOIIIo. WI

PlRSONN!L

Help Wanted

Adena Reg onal Med cal Cenrer a 231 bed qcute
care Foe lty. s currently seek ng the fallow ng nurs
ng pos Ions
Mecl~eai/Sul'fJICal Deparlmenls Includes full 11m
and pari l1me posrl ons ova /able n vanaus
Med/Svrg areas throughout the Hosp tal New
grads are welcome Ia apply
Emergency Servrces Includes 60%posrt on cons sf
fng of 3 8 hour mghts a 60% pas ton cons slmg of
2 12 hour days a 100% even ng sh ft pos l1on con
s/Stng of 2 'Bs and 2 12s and a full rme even ng
sh ft superv sor We requ re one year of emergency
serv ces/rr age exper ence or 5+ years of Med Surg
experence
Hvman Resource Development ADENA HEALTH
SYSTEM 2l2 Hosp1tal Road Ch1ll cothe Oh1o
45601 (740)779 7562 FAX (740)779 7902 ar
TDD (740/779 7933

EqUGI Opparlllmty Employer

540 Mlacellaneous

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Atjlalrod &amp; Ro1U11 k1 SlaCk
Call Ron Evano 1-800-537 9528
OWN A COMPUTER PUT IT TO
WORK S850 $3$00 MO PTJFI
FREE Oeta Is log Onto http
www tQn com Access COde 5298

550

540 Miscellaneous

Sc'llplu

ROOift G!

Wa.i'lut Colonie! OlnlnQ
"' '1 000 940 5 e.croom ...
w th SF Man til Se $500 Z•
n n Conso • T V I 00 Marta~
Wa"She Oryt Pa Good ConditiOn. $500 740-256-6 67
watt Tank 325 Ga S190 00
Wale Sue Ho d 29Ft 2 lneMI
S8 1 00 Water Red
22Ft 2
lncf'\eS $82 00 Hc:lnM l"- Wttaf
Pumpe Mo or $380 oo Wh e
WH1II P"' 10FL $41 00 Coal II-

Pharmaea.utlea 1 Now For nto 1
800 7:13 3211 COD S P • pay

2 ALL STEEL SLOGS FAC
TORY LIOUIOATIOH 40.:1&amp; Wu
110111 Stll $31100 50x90122 800 Sell 11 0 800 Doug 1101).

Ho_,

Mljor Credit c.oo

RofrlgororO&lt; $75 Gu Ringo $75
74(). 379--2882

lulldlng

Men:handlae

Merchaildlae

Rap d We gh Lon Fen Ph en
Aile native Combln.l on 100%
Sate On y $2&lt;4 95 8uy 2 Gat 1
F HI Lose 3 5 Pounds A Week
As Seen On T V Ca asane H
Yoogro Aloo Avo- C•H Unittd

lbwl• Page D5 •

3M-53.

7Tons $200 00 74().441 1205

560

Pets for Sale

AKC Gt man Shtphe d Pups
Famous Snowc&amp;oucU ne 3 Pu t
Wh tt 7 5 tve ISHftl Pu abred
PrlmMblr- frM Olr.cTV

8enga Km.ns 2 Left. Loll
Of Glittef 74().24!1-8213

Summar

P omo on Cal now t 888 265
2123

Friday. ffugust 11. 6:10 Pl1
LEI1LEY'S fiUCTIO" BfiRfl
8580 ST. Rt 588 (OLD Rf. 15)

GfiWPOLIS. OHIO
vending machme (CS72 Ca•valier, I
Top Good Cond1hon) Keeney
10¢ baseball machme (Operable very
good condition) Coco-Cola umlorm ( 60 s) Coco
BOTTLED WILLPOWER LOSE
Cola tray, large Coco Cola p1cture on drymg rack.
Up To 30 OS 30 DAV MONEY
Peps• Cola clock porcelam s1gns to mclude
BACK GUARANTEE Natural Or
Recommended 1•0 441 982
Texaco B F Goodnch overland parts Whitmans
Frte Samples
Chocolate Metal s1gns to mclude Knaph1de Hires
Root Beer Chevelle Malibu Ltlho other paper
adv 1tems Calha &amp; Metgs Counly paper ttems
Hull McCoy occup~ed Japan Depress10n glass
C.OOLDOWH
Central A Cond 1 on ng Added
collechble glass 2 Duncan Phyfe style end tables
To You Fu nace Camp e e Duct
w I Harp des1gn plus 3 Tier matching table CSX
Sys mes 6 Fu naces Heat
ed tnsta e I You
Pumps Ce
ra!lroad can NYC CRO Bar V1ctonan sellee
Don 1 Ca 1 Us We Both Losel74o44&amp;-8308 1 BOQ.29 .()098
stoneware Cast Iron skillets very unusual wall
DISCoun Mob II Home
pocket old ptctures &amp; pr nts old toys clocks
Pam &amp; Supply
I Atnsonia 8 day m n mantle Grandfather (key
Huge lrMtntory
V ny Sk rt 11i1 K 1 $299 95 5 Ga
1wmci), old Jewelry frUlt jars coffee gnnders gran-t
on A urn num F be ed Roof Pa n
$25 21 5 Gat Wh e Floor Pan lih~w;ue. marbles old books many, many
$57 69 Ancho s $5 Ooo s &amp;
W ndows Gas &amp; E ec c Wale 1g&lt;&gt;od 1tems
Heata s P umb ng &amp; E ect ca

I CIJCO··Cola 10¢

FIXTURE FURN TURE &amp; PROP
LIOU OAT ON SALE A G L
MORES 118 Yea s J,cqu ed
Items Star s Thu sday August
21h Doors Open AI 0 A M 143
S Surd~ S Oowntown Ka ama
zoo M 61()-345 354

Auctlonnr: Leslie A. Lemley
740.188..0811 (Homv) or
740.1445-9866 (Barn)
"Uwnstd and Bonded by St of Ohio•

Food
"Hot Responsible For Acdcltnb or Lost
Cash/Approved Check Onlyl
Pro.,.rtyl•

••nnt Salt • Friday, August 1011 WGkh
Pa!"r For Ad II

QUE U AUCTION
TUESDAY, AUGUST so, ft:JQ PM
LEMLEY'S
AUCTION BARN
•
8580 ST. RT. 588 (OLD RT. ~5)
GALLIPOUS, OHIO
ihts IS JUSt a partial hst ng of older tlems f om a
local hornet
ANTIQUE FURNITURE Tall tlahoall cuphoarl
(all ong good cond ) fan cy Oak dresser Oak
washs1and fern stand Bucket ben'C h Pnm 1 -e
ches1 1930 s s1and mce dome 1runk h1gh cha1r
rocker more pes m mce condttlon

COLLECTIBLE SMALLS Lg " H~re s Root Beer
Tm S1gn (C~rca 1940) Weller Louelsa Ewer 14
pes Blue W11low childs d1shes collection of 13 cups
&amp; saucer sets 38 pes F1esta ware (H C Co ) 55
pes Jewel tea diShes Jadue German HIP plates
N1ppon Hall Oval dresser box (V1ctonan) qmh•
bedspreads lnd1an style blanket• k11 hen 1ems
jewelry lg oval brass J.Hcture I Pan sh
1 :1 ?
fox prm1s sev lamps or g Allad n lamp sha lc
Galhpohs Itfms stone JUgs

books

NO RESTRtCllONB
ovety hOme site

ue ooo No 201
Fa rfie d Church G aen Twp Coma

""~'C'Res'on m s property

2

E

ller11t Hunting

Wooded Modular s &amp; mob Ia

hornMI

bu ld ng 10 No

1I!~~~!~~~~~~JR~~OIS WELCOMED
7 1 2 MIN REDUCED IN PR CE No mobile I
Private wooded Sen ng on the
Commerc 1 o hOme site Surveyed On Burtchart

ro md butt er

mold unusual square wooden buuer mold rock ng
horse Howdy Dood) f1gure granlle t n I O) s
adv plate S&amp;P s much much more not h, ted all
older Items

Auctioneer: LesUe A. Lemley
74G-:588-0h3 (Home) or
740oZ445-98ftft (Barn)
"Ucenaed and Bonded by St. ol Ohlo"
Caah/Approved Check Only! Food
"Not Reaponal1,le For Accidents or Lolt
Propert:r'"
• • Our replar Antique Auetlon b
Friday Aupat J:J"' Watch for Ad"

FUlLY lOADED PENT UM
COMPUTERS Poo C ed 0 K
800 520 6364

ena

Henry E Cleland Jr 992 2259
I 800 458 9990
742 2357

h p Jy..wwappoaC&lt;lm
( ma app og@c ynet nc

Public Sale end Auction

2'i271

Help Wanted

ADENA.
Health System
Adena Health Sysmm s cvrren~y seek ng the follow ng
pos tom
CUNICAL MANA(;ER
We are cvrren~y recrv hng a Cl n cal Manager for our
Urgent Care loCated at our sam// m ambulatory care Foe I
ty n Waverly Oh a
The Cl n cal Manager s respons ble fo the ave all cl n cal
management of pal enl care For the pahenl CUllomer of all
ages for urgent care serv ces Th s nd 'dual co//aborores
w th o~ er med cal professronals n develop ng mple
ment ng and eva/vat ng the qual 1y of care prov ded Key
management respans bItes nclude budget development
! seal management and srrateg c plan ng of U gent Ca e
serv ce• The pa• I on s under the d reel •vperv s on of the
Adm n •trot ve D ector of the Emergency Department
The successful cond dare wr/1 be a I censed R N n the
stole of Oh o BSN preferred w th o m n mum of 2 years
exper ence n Emergency. U'IJenl Core or comparable •et
I ng requ eel A m n mum of 2 yeo" management exper
ence n a s m lor role s reqv red
INDUSTRIAL PHYSICAL THERAPIST &amp;
PART- nME PHYSICAL THERAPIST

Adena Health System s g ow ng and expand ng our cam
prehens ve fndvslr a/ Rehab I tot oq Program Adena
WORKS We a e look ng For a Phys cal Therap sl w th
expe ence pe fo m ng luncl anal capac ty eva/vat on JOb
analys s and/ a I ansI anal work Manual therapy sk lis
are a plus Th s pas I an w II be mob le perform ng ser
v ces fo many south cenrral Oh o employers We offer an
excellent salary and benehls package We are also cur
ently seek ng a pari I me Phys cal Therap st to work week
ends Th s pas I an s el g ble For bene! Is
The qual hed cand dates w II be a g advam of a Phys cal
Therap sf p ogram accred t,d by the Comm Sl on on
Accred tot an al Physrcal Therapy Educat on APTA Must
have a current/ cense or be I cense el g ble by the Stom of
Oh o PT Boord
REGISTERED RESPIRATORY THERAPIST
We have two 50% Reg stered Resp ratory Therop

sl pas
ava /able
The qual ! ed cand dam w II be o gradvam from an
A M A Clpproved school of Resp ratory Therapy and cur
rent reg stry o el g b I ty w th NBRC and I censed by the
Store of Ohio
ln'te ested cand dotes n any of the above pas Ions may
subm t the r resume fo Human Resovrce DeYelopmenf
ADENA HEALTH SYSTEM 272 Hosp tal Rood Ch 1/icothe
Oh o 4560 I (740) 779 7562 FAX {140) 119 1902 o

I ans

TDD {740) 119 7933 ,
Equal Opporlunily Employer

Kathleen M Cleland 992-6191

ABSOLUTE PUBLIC RUCTION
SRT RUG 14, 1999 RT 18 88 RM

164

ADENA HfALTI:f SYSTfM

"'"'"' snapon com

Merchandlae

540 Mlacellaneoua
Man chltndlae

hg . . . . ."

949-2926

c y ov.n og

abnO

We offer an attract vc compen
sat on package
nclud ng
salary comm ss•on on sa es
pad expenses and comprehen
s ve employee benefits

Ouah~ ed cand1dares should subm1t a resume Ia

PRO.WRESTLING TRAINING
AND PROMOTIONS
R.vo ut onary Sohwa e L a De
20 Yrs E.:per ence BOO BS9 tecto P og am Star You Own
0758 Tra ne B e Sawye In Home 0 alrlbullon Bus ness $399
Memo y o Mad Dog Bun
o Start 5 Un s + Promo Malerl
Sawye Tan to be wre1 e 1
Ia Nat anal ACivt Using &amp; P a"!•nag• • o betel {Male o Ft
Money Saek Gua an eed t
motet
&amp;78-7837

8 L O.W 0-U-T
$499 Down AI S ng es $999
Down Doub es Supe Low Pay
men s L m ed T me Oakwood
Homes Ba bou sv e wv 304
736 3409

you

540 Mlsc:ellaneoua

"

Public Sale and Auction

Fo sa e Tappan gas cook
stove o d ng whee cha both
like new 740 949 2692 o 740

and gc away to

11 o

(800) 376-0967

7795

Pack up he fam

hiS carce or
ented employ men opportun ly
you I need o have n erpe
sona s~ s o ela e and sel t
shop owners echmcmns and
mechan cs and he en epre
neur at ab II es o bu d up a
v able bus ness

STAFF NURSES

MONEY MAKERS SECRETS
Learn How To Make A Leas
$S 000 /Week S mp e &amp; Easy To
Loa nAnd Irs FREE Chock My
Weba te hHp www sac: e s2suc
CHI COtTVspec 8 39090

No 1
2BR 2BA
AR!Sk ling Financing Avellllble
{304)675-6055

800-383-6862

On Tools Company Bob De
Lau en s 67 Mel osc Ave
Be gcnf eld NJ 07621 Fax

App ai"'ces
Recond toned
Washe s 0 ye s Ranges Ref
gra o s 90 Day Guaran ee
French C ty May ag 740 446

Lea c llewo k
week beh nd you

New Bank Aepo s On y 3 Le

F.o confidenual cons derauon
subm t you resume o Snap

Household
Goods

740.446- 409

Live For
The Moment

www poe ry com

2 F lteen Inch Klcke s mpu se
Speake s And Bo• $200 MTX
275x325 Watt Amp&amp; W th Amps
K t $200 Sanyo CD Playe S 00
Cal 304-875-1275

Pa ts nter he m M e &amp; Co e
man A Cond one s &amp; Hea
Pumps Benne s Mob e Home
Suppy 740 446 9416 Ga po s
Ohio

2 Bedroom Gas Heat ww Carpet
A C Ve y N ce 740 446 2003

Jeade

NURSING f05mONS

MED CAL PROCESSOR FTPT
No E~~:p Nee W Tia n PC Raq
Eo n 40K CaiJ1 800 -158 4 3S

Between Athens and Pom,e oy 2
&amp; 3 bed oom mob le homes a
cond oned $260 $300 sewe
wa e and t ash nc uded 740
992 2 67

Come on board w th he au o
rna ve tools and equ pment

ADENA

Schools
In structlon

Mob Ire Home Space G een
Scf'loo 0 atrlc 4 M u F om
Ho zer Hasp a Some Rest c
!Ions Apply 740446-40S3

510
A ea esaeadvertsng n
th s newspdpe s subjec o
l1e Fade a Fa Hous ng Act
o 968 wh ct'l makes it ega ~
o advert se any p ere ence
mta ono dsc mnaion
based on ace colo re tg on
sax lam a sta us o nato a
ong n or any nten on to
make any such p e e ence
mita on o d sc:nm na IOfl

To quahfy for

for lmmed .. te work at
packaging plent In

s•

Call Today 740.446-4367
800-21......c&gt;452
Reg tS&lt;l 05 27 48

s

MERCHANDISE

Th s newspape w not

WORK FROM HOME
G ow ng
Company-NEEDS HELP $399
999 PT Ft
www jcsdes
ignt com 1 888 283-2372

G.olllpoll• c.-r Collogo
Careers Cloia To Home)

pi cat ons tor lmmed a a occu
pancy 1 &amp; 2 Bed oom Apts AI
Cond don no. K tchen appl ances
Fenced n P.tayg ound Laundry
On S ght Management Wate
5ewago and Trallh Pold Full time
uden must m11 Oh o Hous
ng F nance Agency Qual t ca
t ons Sen o C t zent We come
EOE For mo a Info matlon ca
(740} 245 8170 Monday th u

Weier and Elect lc Re•dy For
Hook Up Nice Lots $8 000 00
Eoch C•l 304-773 5184i

CREO T PROBlEMS? V SA
CARD Gua an eed App ova
No CedI Check O%APR Ae
qu emen s 8 US C zen Halle
Check ng Accoun Phone App o
11a
800 737 0073 Issued By
MerriCk Bank SLC UT

;;;;;;;.:;,;;;;;;:;;.______ I

Ao

5

Ca NOW Fo F ae Maps
Owne F nanc ng Into Take 1Oo/.
Off L ~ Pnce On Cash Buys

CONSOLIDATE DEBT Reduced
Month ~ Paymen s 20 50~ Save
ThOusands Of Do a s n n a es
Non--Pro it TCC 800 758 3844

110

BualneiS
Training

Valley V 1w Apa tments

Thursday 9 00 12 00 noon

BEAUT FUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 WestwoQd 0 ve
om $279 o $358 Wa k to shop
&amp; moves Ca 740 446 2568
Equa Housii"'Q Opportun ry

INTERESTED IN WR T NG PO
ETRY? POETRY CONTEST
S.t8 000 In Pr zes Poss ble PW~
cat on Send One 0 1g na Potm
20 L nes 0 lass To nlefnauon
al L brary Of Poetry Poe ry P~
za Suite 11835 Owll'lQ$ M Is M0
21 17 0 'Ente On ne ~

G Jnde Oh Now ACC81'1 ng ap

s

410 Houses for Rent

Meigs Co Rut and Wh ts H
Ad
Aces$4 00009 Ac
as S 2 000 Pub c Wa e Dan
vI e B a A dge Ad
7 Ac as
$ 3 000 0 On SA 325 9 Aces
$ 7000 PlblcWae

BUSINESS SPACE RENTAL 01

!1il7&lt;1044e 9539

Two bedl oom In Pomtrov a utililies paid S3!iC par ff\Oitll doposn
and eferences equ ad 740
992 !iCOS

740o44114i2

t ce Space 0 Sa es Rooms Fo
Lease On 2nd Ave Ga po s

C oa• To Cout' house &amp; C y
Budng1 2 3 4Rooms AI N
cely Deco a ed A. C Wate Sew
•r ~ Us A a Pa d Make You
Cho ce Now You Mus See
These Spaces Phon!!t Fo Sho¥¥

28 Ft T 8 e W th Awn ng I
Decl1 Overlook 11i1 Ohio RIYor Fut
Kitchen &amp; Bath Fu n shed S225J
Mo 1-888~521

Hot Tub W h Oeck New Cove
$4!iC 74().441 1502

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandlae

·I·•..::.:.~:;_..:.._..:.._.:...-,--,---

BRUNER LAND

Bualneaa
Opportunity

INOncE
OHIO VAllEY PUBliSH NG CO
ec..ommends tha you do cus
ness w th peop e you know and
NOT o send money h ougf'l the
ma unt y,ou f'lave nves ga ed
"" otl8nng

As a subs d ary o Househo d In
a na ona we otte a competitive
hot. y a e &amp;Jtce en benet ts
package and p og ess ve sa es
manage men t a n ng prog ams
P ease tax you esume A n
T av s C ne o 740 992 66 o
EOE Mlf/ON

Excellen Oppo unity Supfll&amp;
ment You Income Lea n In
come Tax P epa at on 1 s Wk
Cou sa C asses 1 Day A Wk 10
AM To" PM Ca oanTax nc
Tuesdays o To 4 0 1 1•0
8178 Or 1-800 221 8178

f!eal Eslate
Wanted

a

Belore S 74Q.44&amp;.3-18

v

FINANCIAL

A111111n1
Benet e a F nance a Housat'IO d
Co p nas a Sa es Ass s an op
po un y a au Pome oy OH o
cation As a leader n he nancaa
se v ces a ena be ng a membe
of ou consume t nance eam
means f'lav ng a good pace o
sta t A e you sell motlva ed as
se ve and enjoy dealing w h
peop e? A p easan pe sona y
and good phone sk s are a must
Respons bItes nc ude ac v ea
elated o c edt sales account
management and accounting

EARN A LEGAL COLLEGE DE
GREE QUICKLY Bache o s
Mas e s Ooc1o ate By Co a
spondence Based Upon Prk)r Ed
uca on And Sho t Study Course
Fo FREE nro mat on B ook t
Phone CAMBR DGE STATE
UNIVERSITY 1-800 964-8318

NEW ON MARKET
23Aces 2MiesOHSR7&amp;SR
218 SouthO Ga pos Sn
g ew des A owed Land Cant act
Ava abe On $27 000 1 600
2 3-8365

Gil 1 Co Fnendty Rklge Ad
Acres S 4 000 C tv Schoo s

Seloo

150

360

sa com

!1613

140

20ACRES
$23 000 On Land Cont acl
S1 000 Down W App ovid C ed
Most y WOOded G eat Fo Re
e eat on 0 Hunt ng Road Bu
To Land Tf'len On In o Wayne
Na ona Fa e&amp; F ee Maps
80().2 3-8365

RENTALS

310 Homes for Sale

Sporting
Good1
Aemengtol• 12 gaugre 1187 Preme•r kt new ask ng $475 740

Townhouu Ape menu
y Spac ou1 2 Sad ooms 2
F-. CA 1 112 Bath Fully Ca
paled Ad u t Poo &amp; Baby Poo
Pa o Sta $350 Mo No Pats
Lease P us Securiry O.:pos t Ae
qu ed Aflt 5 740.446 010t

Mob e Home Lot Fo Aen
S 00 00 Mon h In C own C 'I
74o-256 491

-888 582 3345

$ Ea n Exrra Income S Me chan
d sa s And Demons 8to s At
Loca Reta S o es W T 8 n
On y Dapendab a Peop a w th
Good Wo k E h cs AnCI Tans
po tat on Need App
800 "64

WllDL FE JOBS To $21 SO IHR
NC BENEF TS GAME W~R
DENS
SEGUR TY
MAIN
TENANCE PARK RANGERS NO
EXP NEEDED FOR APP AND
EXAM INFO CALL I SOD 813
3585 EXT 14211 8 AM 9 ~M
7 DAYS ds nc:

Ta
ve

TURNED op'NN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No FH Unless We W n

REAL ESTATE

GOT A CAMPGROUND MELt
BERSHIP OR TIMESHARE? We!
Take 11 Ame ca 5 Moll Sue
cess u Campg ound And T me
11\1 e Resale CJearingf'IOust Call
ResOit' Sales lnle nariona
800423-$967 24 Holn

1185-380

MAKE OFFER! Hoose And Lot 2
aedrooms 1 Bath $600 00 Down
Nea 8 dwe Con ac Oav d A
800-333-69 0

POSTAL JOBS To $ 8 35 HR
INC BENEFITS NO EXPERI
~NCE FOR APP AND EXAM
INFO CALL
BOO 813 3S85
EXT,.210 SAM 9PM 7
DAYS ds nc

W ldl e Jobs o $21 60 Hr
ne Benaf ts Game Wa dens
Secu ty Man enance Pa k
Range s No Exp Needed For
800 8 3
App Exam nfo Ca
3585 EXT 8827 BAM 9PM 7
Days fds nc

FORECLOSED HDM~S low Dr 0
Down Gov t And Bank Repo s
Be ng Sod NOW F nanc-ing
Ava abe Ca Now 1 800 730
7772 Ex 8040

540 Mlacellaneoua
Men:handlae

Houaehold
Good I

for Rent

3 9-3323 Ext 1709

ooms 2 Ba hs W h La ge Cov
e ~ Deck A so A 30K.W Garage
3 M IS F om A 0 G ande Clta
s a e o Re emen Home 740

BANKRUPTCY $79 Stops Ga
n shmen s 0 vo ce $99 A so
Fo ec osu e Avo dance P og am
Homeowne Loans F eshS a 1
888 395 8030 www ash~ a u

510

Ap11rtmenla

.....oooe.

286 2554

ShrYba Trimmed Mu chlng
PI nllng etc Cell Bill Leave
(3(M)e75-7 12

440

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

Now Tak ng Appl ca ons 35
wa•t 2 Sad oom Townhouse
nc ud11 Watt
Ape tman 1
Sew1ge Truh $3 5 MO 7-'0

Pass ble Fo L 11 ngs Cal 800

HOuse For Sao By Climer 3 Bed-

ca •

ngs H ghways And Br dO•• And
Some Pope ty Su vey ng For
F m n Soulheaste n Oh o F ve
Years Expa e nce Us ng Total
Sta on Know edge Of CAD And
Sot1c:tesk Survev App cat ons W I
Be He p u P o ess ona Reg stra
ton No Requ ed Send Resume
To CLA 480 c o Ga pols Oa y
Tnbune 625 Th d Avenue Gall
pols Oh o 4563 Benet s And
Sala y Package Commensu ate
W th Expe ence Equa Oppo
un ty Efflllloye

for Rent

S 0 000

House on One &amp; One-Half Acre o
land Ca Ate 8PM 304)882
2663

15 Years Expe ence Deck
Bu d ng 7"0 .u 0653 Ca A
lo 8 OOPM

PHYSICIAN OPPORTIJNITY

Wanted Su veyo Fo Const uc

ApariiMI'IIa

n SyracuM twO lots tor sale one
1 2 ac et the otf'le t 5 ac as
bo h to S 5 000 ca 1•0 992
456

3BA Home n New Haven WV
$32 000 {304)832 371'2
Buy Homes From

440

5 B&amp;(j oom Loca Gove nrnen
&amp; Bank Fo ec osu es F nanc ng

-wor1c-~ntt

1on Lay Out Of S te work Bu ki

350 Loll &amp; Acreage

W~NT

TlnJo Ful-TlnJo 1-800-294 9e4Q

Teache s A de and Cook Pa
1 me pos ons w th benefits Aide
hou s a e M F
30AM 5 30PM
Cook hou s a e M F 8 OOAM
OOPM Mus be at east 18 y s
o d w th a HS Cl p om a o &lt;3EO
A de e~~:pe ence wo k ng w f'l
ch d en p e a ed Cook pad
expar ence as a cook pre e ad
Send esume by August 1 t h o
R ve Valley CDS P 0 Box
544 Hunl nglon WV 25701 by
Aug 8 EOE

310 Homn for Sale

320 Mobile Homea
for Sale

Sunday, August 8, 1999

;.....,..,.: ................ 992-2259

--

Lawn Carden and Tools Craftsman 10 h

30 Announcements

Top Soil
For Sale

d ng mower

Rotot ller B~eycles Tool boxes Motor stand. Lot of
Hand Tools (Amer can Made) lots ol Car supples
Wheels and lires and Jots of other m sc 1984 Ntssan SR
Senes P ck Up Lots of box lots ana m sc We are still
unpacking and fmdmg lois of new and used merchan
diSe

Moodtspaugh Auctionaa ng Satv1cas
BIIMoodspough AIJ(honeet lc No 7693
Phone 17 40) 989 2623 I Cosh•ChBck w/pos hV8 IDI Ref eshm8nts
Nol ReS!Jons ble f01 Ace dents o loss of Pope 1y
Announcements doy ol sole toke pecedence once pt nted mot8no
l censed &amp; Bonded n fovo of Sio e of Oh o
Public Sale and Auction

Isaac's Aucllon House
15241 St Rt 16(}
Vmton, OH 45686
Antique Sale Aug 14, 1999 7 00 pm
Partial Ltst
Old Hand Crank Com Sheller 7 Shovel Plow
Horse Drawn Old Bottom Bean Plow 2 Iron
Kettles (damaged) Old M rror Old Wood
AdJustable Cha1r Meakin Impenal Brown Bottle
Col OH Cambndge He1sey Umbrella Frog
Covered D1sh Basket Wall Pocket M1mature
Lamp Macaw Covered D1sh Crystal Ftgunnes
McCoy Ins Herr ngbon e Vase Japanese Covered
D sh Tnnket Box F1esta Bowl Candle Holders
Dresser Box Ltfton Cardmal &amp; Seagull Iron
Skillet Fatrbanks Scales 1906 Savage Model 29
Octagon Barrel Rifle

Will be tak1ng consignments up t1ll
6 pm day of sale for Ant1que
Auction Sale.
Finis "Ike" Isaac
Auctioneer
For lnlo Call: (740) 388-8880
(740) 388-9~70

sm ng on app 0)( 5 ac es tl'la
secluded Has 3 to 4 bed ooms 3
room an equ pped kitchen a 2 ea
bl ns O&amp;corated nloe and has 5

trl~eve

LENDER

Fu n ture and Appl ances Cherry chests and cab nets

Maple table and cha rs Recliners Cha.rs Lamp stands
Lamps End and Coffee tables TV s VCR s Rad1o s
Apt Sz Washer and Dryer small appl ances Metal
computer desk Royal cash regtsle and Metal shelv ng
and loiS of M sc
Antiques Old Maytag washer Pr mat v:e horse drawn
equ p Horse drawn hay wago Wood f I ng cab net
Iron beds Old record player w 33 &amp; 78 ecords and lots
of oth~r m1sc

DELONG RD- A gorgeous
s close o town but
baths

G:t

Locau n St Rt 33 Burhngham Oh10 AJlprox 12 mile
N of Po t:roy or 12 n le S of Athens Follow Slgns
We } av e } cc1 comm Sa oned to aell I e follow ng terns

CORNER OF RACINE BASHAN RD end KARR RD A n ce
co ne o with approx 4 2 ckta ed acres and a 1989 doub e w de
ha s 28 I( 60 and s tt ng on a full basement Has 3 BR 2 baths
g LR w th firep ace d n ng a ea and an o de one ca ga age
Also an equ pment shed $80 000

Dump Truck Load
$85 00

SVFIACUSE Co ne of cherry &amp; 2nd S s A 3 BR home w th 2
baths d n ng oom D g lvlng room and an equ pped k tchen Has
a new oof and new carpet and 11 nyl ftoors almost everywhe e
Thee s a sma s o age bulkflng and a front po ch w th a w ap
a ound deck Very n ce

Guarantftcl To
Satisfy

-.ooo

w th ~ BR 2 ba hs d n ng
oom a ge fam y oom hUge Mng roem part basemen 3 BR
att c n ce appea ance just step ght rn Has a n ce o $69 900

CHESTER An ode 2 1101'/ Mmt

Charlie Miller
245-5535
Are you want ng to se I
your house w th no
ws t ng and rec eve
cash at clos ng? We w111
PAY YOU CASH for
res dentlal property n
Galha Jackson
Lawsrence Me gs P ke
Ross Sctoto and Vtnton
count es Call Southeast
lnvest111ents Inc
1 800 388 8194 for no

LOANS
•HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
•PURCHASE
•REFINANCE
•CONSOLIDATIONS
•FHA •VA
•NON CONFORMING
•COMI'ETITIVE RATES
• ALI. CREDIT
CONSIDERED
0 QVICK RESPONSE

SYRACUSE B ck &amp; v nyl sp It leve home LA DR K w app 4 BA
2 ba hs u ty oom Fam m w FP &amp;. pooltab e We nsu ated w HP &amp;
CA
oa gaage n Bsm Sg Bdg Conceepkg aea P c:ed o
se Bes buy n own
MIDDLEPORT BEECH ST WARRANTED HOME Very n ce 4 BR
home LA k wapp Bah Lagecone o Nea ctypak &amp;poo
POMEROY Mu be y Hg s
story hornEt w LA 2 BA K lg U Y
Am (cou d be BR) o sot c ose s Att Ga age 2 Add B dgs C cse
o ho5p a
POMEROY Butte nu Ave Bu d ng w basemen &amp; 2 I oo s Ou s de
en ance o each oo k chen ba h oom n su p s ng y good
cond t on La ge add ona o ac oss s ee o pa k ng A S eat buy
Take $22 000
fo he ght pe son Worth $45

0?0

1 RIC na Comp e e hyd au c &amp; mach ne shop 2 Lg B dgs w 7
ove Mad doo s M ng mach nes Lathe We de s M G TIG &amp;
portab e Camp e e Hyd au c Capab es 120 240 480 wit p e
phase e ect iC L s of oo s ava ab e o se ous buye s Every h ng
you need
2 Rae ne Loca ed on SA t24 Th s b dg was se up o pha macy
bu cou d have ots o usl!' LQ d sp ay a ea w b g coun e a ea
Off ce Res com Fu nace Rm CNFA Gas u nac:e Ex s ny &amp;
b ck Paved pa k ng a ea
~n·•~11•· Good comma c a oca on on SR 7 Two b dgs Mu ude

LISTING

SubdliviSillfl·

Liberty Mortgage

•PI•Iy by phone

0

R

FAX (740) 286 2660

.

We arc a muli&gt;pic' l"''"'g REii')LTOR
C. 111 us locta 1

'

MT

,BtJ~F~,~~lr5~"~l~~t'~~·:;·:~ ~~~~~~:::•PjT~S~OWNSHIP

UNION

POMEROY LINCOLN Or ve A 1

2 s ory home hat has been
comp e e y emode ed and has 3 8R one ba h d n ng oom lind
ancefron snngpoch Has cent a a and tseemsas f s n
the coun ry au e and on a oad w th ow aff c G eat p ace o a
Now

2 y od anch home

ROAD

p

POMEROY Two Sto y Frame Apartmen
Bu ld ng Has 4 apa ments one s 3 MIDDLEPORT Vacant co ne o loca ed on
bed ooms and the o he 3 apartmenls a e 2 SEIC0&gt;1d Slreet Pub c wate elect c and has
bedrooms Monthly ncome s $ 945 00
I
MMEDIATE POSSESSION Pertecl
Ca peUwood floo s w th N G H W heat S de
mob le home s e
ASKING
and ea ueck and on porch a so has a 1~U,U1JI!
basement ASKING $62 000

I

Co Inc
CALL l 800 388-8194
to

NEW LISTING SR 124 Loca ed us Above
Ru land Co p L m ts 100&lt; 49 Lo w th a
I
home 3 bed ooms am y v ng and
ooms 1 3 4 ba tl1 s At ached
ca
oa•·ao,e . Detached
ca ga age wo kshop
Elec:tric H P C A we wa e w h pub c ap
av&lt;lilaible. Pub c sewe N ce oomy am Y
ASKING $64 500

SR 7 A g ea oca on to a most any business A newer metal
po e bu d ng &amp; a 4 BR 3 bath home Has many extras nclud ng a
fen ce d back ya d and f eplace A so a one year o d
manufactu ed home w th 3 BR 2 baths that s Ike new Also a 2
BR ode mob e home and rve frontage with 5 camps tes and a
aunch ng pad .AJ s n ng on app ox 6 ac es $225 000

DOTIIE TURNER Broker
JERRY SPRADUNG
Ct'iARMELE SPRADUNG
BETTY JO COLUNS •
BRENDA JEFFERS
"
OFFICE

992 5692
149 2131
149-213t
149-2049
M2 1444

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

Pwts far Sate

Vegetables

AkC ~ -LAI&gt; Pupo,

Shott&amp; Wormed ~ Ready 4th Of
Jut,,7«).251 , .

Ftah, Birds Pond Suppllea
Sun 1 4PM Mon ·Sat , tAM·
IPM Floh Tanii/Pot Shop 241 3
Jeckton Avenu./Point Pleasant
(304)815-2063

10mawo

570

Musical
Instruments

1990 Gtbson Las Paul Studio
MOdel E•cellent Condition
$600 Peavey Amp, $250
(304)&amp;75-8149

Frtntone canmng peaclles half
busl'ttl S12 00 Bucktyt Farm
740-742-7-FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

610 Farm Equipment
30 Inch Brand New Barn Far~
Also 1965 M·5 Otesel Tractor
740-2116-2496

For Silt Qkj Plano Gooc! lor l8wnor $150 (304)675-5933

Heavy Duly 4 Whee ler Tra tl er
'1 250 740-245-5439

Paavey ElectriC Guitar $200 506
Zoom Pedal S100 Both In Great

See The New John Deere 200
Series Sk1d Steer Load!HS 7 5%
JOC Flnanc1ng Carm1chae1 s
Farm &amp; lawn Inc 1 800·5941111 Gall1pol1s OH We DeiMN':!

EvlooMoga

Sttlpel 74().367-!1622

Spinet Console Plano For Sate
Take On Small Payments See
locally HMI0-343-1414

580

Fruits a
Vegetables

• Black Berne5 113
•

00 Gallon
$3 50 Ouan Available through
August (:114)458-1667

Canning tomatoes for sale S4/
boshel you pick SSI boshol I pick
Chris Wolfe call 740-949·2773 or
7..0.949-3315
Canning tomatoes pldo: ~ur own.
$4 bushel breng containers Raymond Rowe Farm, 740-247-4292

620 Wanted to Buy
BU)'Ing Ttmberlands
We pay top pnces for timberland
ready to cut now or ready to cut
'"10 to 15 years or timberland
cut recendy Fot more tnformation
can loll free Wtlhout obligation
800-487 0017 ext 366 or ext
205 or wme to 9111 Bnght Bnght
Timberlands Box 460 Sum
mersvllte W!/26651

640

•a&gt;os For
319·

198&amp; Honda Aecora l X Char
Groo 5 Spd • Or Vo&lt;y 0.
pendable, Will Trade For 4

w......

CARS $100 S500 &amp; UP POI..ICE
IMPOUNDS Honda 1 Toyota's
Chevys, Jeep5, And Sport Utili
ties Call Now! 800·772 7470
EXT 7832

740-25ll

eoee

1917 Suzuki Samaun. 11 800

(:114)67~

(304)815-1272

1989 Ford F150 XLT Lanat
(304)895-3378.
t 990 Dodge Splrtt

Olda 98 Regency Blue
Condtlion $400 740 256

Cold A.IC
Child Sate Ooott, Autom Runs
And LOOkS Good $1 200 00
080 7ot0 4 t6 8621

11180 ·1110 IIONDA CARS
FROM .$500 Pollee Impounds

1991 Buick Regal, While 4
Doors A/C All Power $3 500
080 740-388-9878

AM Tax Rspo s For Usttngs Call
1 800-319-3323 En 44l!O

1991 Cavalier

123 000 Miles $2 500 (304)615
2+13

'

1984 Cullass Good Wqrk Car
$975 Also Big Block cnevy En
gm ... Complete $1 500 And
MISC Big Block ~arts 740 «63100

I

Black, Tinted

Wlnctows AJC C 0 , Runs Good

1963, 944 Porsche good cond1
lion $3 500 or 080 (7-.0) 388
8591 or (304)-633-8937

1

1992 Jeep CherOkee"Sporl 6 Cy
IInder S\andard Air 1989 Chevy
lroc Z 11·8 Automttlc Alf T To«:~
740-245-9234

1992 'Oida, Cullan Supreme
WP'I att w1th blu• Interior

~OR

Snarp 1304)675-6153

1992 Toyota Corona 5 spd '
dt AC cruise A.M/FM Cass
good cond1tlon . runs great
99 000 2M owner Call wenc:ty
1993 Dodge Sttatth, IU10. am/lm
cassena ale alley whMis sun
roof s1fver with gray InteriOr front
fonder damage. $3 700 74o-9&lt;&amp;-

264&lt;...,.

1993 Mazda 626 6 cyl Auto
AC 4DA Runo GOOd $3200 00
(304)675-7270
1994 Cavalier Wagon Sae by
appomtment 13 800 Also roll
away bed almost new 175
(304)675-3275
1995 Ford Elqlklrer Spon Grun
2 Doors lots Of Extras looks
Now! $12.350 7~1-14!n

11195Z34 . ~111&lt;1-

E-

1996 Oldsmobile Aurora excel
lent condition low miles cal Tom
Anderson. 740~992 ~ 3348 alter
5pml

1971 f.100, Au1om 302 E1111ma
New Motor &amp; Transml11lon, e.d
liner Tool Box, Great Shapel
7-t0-258 5l88

1996 Plymouth Breaze, 51 000
mtles while with gray Interior
auto, cru11e, air amnm uu 4
dt' ast•no $7 soo. 7ol0-992-t506
days 740-94~2644 ....

1911 Chov S·10 Blazer 5 Spd
$3,000 • Motorized Treadmill
$125 • Kirby G 4 wtanael'llments
$250 (304)675 7879 II no an

---

740-669-0904

ltll Mt&gt; ChtrokH Spon 4•4,
PL PW, cruise tilt, afl\ltm ellsene ••cenent COndition 740t112 2143.

·-73.

van $3 200 080

1ge7 Ford full IIZt con~r1ion
dn 302 automlhe. tvory Cout
Conversion (Houston. Te•at)
rpt
Interior. front and air, all enr•• S-4800 080 740
992 1506 doys or 740 949 2fi«

'tt7 Gr.tc Safari van AWO
45 000 miiN $18 500 140-247-

"""'"r

2111

.......

cetlen1 Conduion Alklng $8 000
OBO (304)112 2997

FACTORY WHEElS, Alloy
Steel Rally World's Most Complete Inventory Of OEM Wheels
Shlp
Nationwide
1 800
9WHEElS S1oek Wheels (Md
Hub Caps) Only Buy S.H 1·BOO'
99ol 3357 www adrBiwhael com

-on

au Tonko

38S3 or 1-«10-273«121

Motor Hom.
1171 Prowler
11 R. V..,
GOO&lt;I Condition. 12.500 140- 5 4. -5PJl

.. Honda Hell• Motor Scooter
" 250cc Engine Pertect CondiHOn
IJaby Gokl W'"ll. Ollor. 7C0:

1987 HH.o . . . oil. 3 ,.
lriglfo10r, 112 ba1h, 1hrM bomer
ltOWI, double link, other edras.
S3000.CII740812 2'

'750 Boats

1993 Ford F•250 XLT ..... D1e
sal Must See! Call arter 5 00
(740) 256-1565

a Moton

eo.-.

1995, 2•Ft Gulf Slre~m Conquest Clan C, MotorHome

for Sale

1t,OOO -

' 1986 Bayllner lomarot. Ou1board.
C1111dy Cabin ~ Coodition.

.. ::7~4~0~4~46~00~~~----=~-=---

1987 Bass Tracker TX.17 70 HP
Mercury Trolling Motor Tilt.
$2 800 740-446-2519

127.500

1997 Coleman Yut~on Pop VP

Second Sllwl (740)812-6333

n-os.

I

u'iC:Ou;()~~'l! BR mobile home tlltuated on very nice lot

large ou1bullding Great Location 1122.000
DEXTER- 3 BR home with oak wood wor1&lt; and large rooms,

Card of Thanks

Skidmore

'
: •

'DotuiUf £. -'tmTJ.tno

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

'

and character abOuAd
1n this remOdeled 2 story But yeu
won't have the okt house hassles
beCause rt has been extensiV~
remodeled
Also features a
mother rn law addl!lon that • hD
several uses In all 6 bedrooms, -.
baths ltVIng room famlly room
eat In kitchen (very mce) pl\ls
formal dvung, rec room and m4Ch
much more And aft this priced at

.. ... 4411209

OUR WEB PAGE IS www.YIImtth.com
.mill YIMIIItl'll.com

Real Estate General

Realty
446-3636

--

'G}

m

o&lt;'PORn.o ~

~£ ~\I OR 0

1

111~~~!:~1,; landscaped
Satellrte lawn
system
with
and Rock Gardens 5
Expenence the

25 LOCI!ST ST -GALL IPOUS

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Ronald K. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, Associate

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 Rl0 GRANDE IF YOU HAVE
INVESTMENT IN MIND BETTER LOOK AT THISI
THE PRICE IS RIGHT $69,900

•

NEW
rn on thrs
Purchase
Newfy
lets
burldtng on a
corner lot wrth 2 lots
An
apartment or off•ce space etc on
the second floor
2 baths
separate utilities n~w root
central air 2 furnaces Make: an
appointment wN1rgtn1a 446 6806
13028 OWNER MAY TRADE 17
acres of vacant land some
excavatiOn ha5 been completed
~ocated clOse In on Starcher Ad
11- DO YOU HAVE BUILDING
IN MIND? Don't overlook these
gu~at lots at a surprisingly low
prrce for a SPRING SALE
Located on L.akev•ew Om,oe off
Charo lals Lake Dr 2 3 Ac m/1
Also 5 AC for
O&lt;O,IIIJU,IJU ._ VLS
Very Nice 1 Ac lot w/2
frontage• Access to boat
Very mce lot to bwld or to
mob1le home on Close

~~~~~~·VACANT

bl,~Siness

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1873
acres close to new Fwy hospttal
shop ctr
Water gas, sewer
AdJoining Pinecrest Nursmg
Home
13027 NATURE'S PARADISE
Are you searchmg for Tranquility
and acreage? Then thls IS For
You 5 acres m/1 with electric and
rural
on Property 112 aae

r,~~~~ ~~5CIOP,~II):on1y

IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A COMFORTABLE
TWO STORY HOME IN A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY
SETIING WE JUST LISTED ONEI 3 BEDROOMS.
2 BATHS FORMAL DINING ROOM SCREENED
PORCH BETTER 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

4 5 Bedrms 3 Oaths
l DR &amp; LA cry5tal
H cha.nd-elll•ers throughout
Full
'IIIIth com plete 1&lt;11 stone
BR w/gas 1rep ace
Landscaped lot
1 •.&lt;CICISive vlewrng wtth V~rgm a l
446 6806
11085 WHITE RD lots Redu ced
tor Spnng Sale
6 B Ac m/1
Roll ng country Side to bu ld a new
home wtth a Great View
~~',CJ2: VLS 446 6606

13o2•
SELL
acres more or
less $150 000 00 or with all the
adjommg land bemg 57 acres
more or less WOOded and lovely
wl1h tra1ls
MAKE OFFER
Delightful 4 bedroom home 2
baths 24 x28 fam~ly rm
lnground pool Blacktop dnveway
Also extra lot wtth new 5ept1c
system water tap &amp; electnc Call
VLS 446 6806
~3018
PRICE REDUCED
$68,000 Char'lce to buy a lovely
home &amp; JUSt what you have been
looktng for Immaculate 3 bedrm
ktt w1range &amp; ref d1n1ng room
lg LA ~ car
deck
bUilding &amp;

Fam11y
Some new 98rpet
throughout
2 car detached
garage Space for a mce garden
2 acres M/L $55,000 00.

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$19,500.00

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1334
Pnce Reciu c:edON 2 LOVELY make an
3 Bedrm 2 baths, horne 4/5 bedrm home 2
I Killche•n wtu counter &amp; bar &amp; srnk baths lo11Bly LA woodburnmg
f~replace
K1t w/oak cabinets
Pantry laundry rm lg
1 rm w/f~replace Formal d1n1ng area Level to roltlng land
some wooded &amp; pasture Barn
c!lnlng rm Cellar house barn
Call for an appomtment VLS
Call for appo1nlmenl VLS
446 6806
"(
*3027 NATURE 'S PARAD1SE
Are you sea.rch1ng for TranQUility "3347 QUICK POSSESSION 3
and acreage? Ttlen thiS IS For lovely bedrooms 2 baths garden
You 5 acres m/1 w1th electriC and tub Cozy LA Great k1t w/loads
of ca b1nets
Fam11y rm
rural water on Property 1/2 acta
.wllire:pl
l
a
ICe.
carport
&amp; garage
pond
Plenty of road
Loa1as ·or amenities C11y locat1on
$22,500 00

I~?;!~~;~~;~~~

$89,900 3 BEDROOM
IN
VERY
CONVENIENT
LOCATION
PRICE JUST REDUCE, BETTER
HURRY ON THIS ONE IT IS PRICED TO SELL
FASTI
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13017 A HOME WITH ELBOW
ROOM Located In the c1I1V o•n.a 1
quiet dead end St 4 bedrms ,
l /2 baths 8 rooms very tg: LR
Th s home can accommodate 2
families E)(tra large lot VLS
446 6806
1'2888 Chtahlra area old atrlp
mint land. $600 bo per acre
162 Ac Great for Huntmg or
Aecreat1on
Also 14 Ac m/1
on SA 7

t

of tha day to e~1rro~~nd yo,lroelt
with the aounda of
buuty? located on 3 8 acres
m,t1 1n the Rio Grande area, thts
newly constructed 2 story Offers
formal hv1ng room and dtnmg
room extra large kitchen w1th
custom made Smtih cabinets
open to large family room 3
bedrooms and 2 112 baths
(tnclud1ng a get away from •t all
master bedroom suite) plus a full
unf1mshed basement
Sound
good? Then can Carolyn today for
your pn'ro'ate 'ro'lew1ng Pr.ced at
$199 900 ftl14

Out1tandlng Deluxe Home In
Tara Th1s beaut•ful home boa5ts
I 3 000 sq tt of very nice
.. ;o:c;·cc· J:-4 bedrooms ~ full
baths oak k1lchen
large
part1ally covered
Ou1stand1ng family room (26 x 36)
w1th calhedral ce1hng wet
bullt~l n entertainment center
built-In coml)utertofflce area
large lot and 4 car garage
see to appreciale 1197 500 1121

fH

RfAilO~'

DALE E TAYLOR lllfiOKER)
WALT TAYLOR (SALES ASSOCIATE (740) 4&lt;4411180131S3DII I I
1

i

... Wa1orprootlng.

free estimate " II Cbet 740--992
6323.

Ltvingston 1 13tsement Water
Proohng all b,asemant repairs
done free esllmates hfettme
guarantee 1 2yrs on JOb
once (3041895-3867

••pen-·

:Jot!. A. /Moort!. 'BroltL.d ~

too &amp;mill or farge Major crtdlt
cards
IWV02958~
Call
(304)451-1049 BP 1528·8092

514 Second Ave

740

840 Elfictrlcal and
Refrigeration

OHIO

Allen C Wood, Broker • 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker - 446-0971
Jeanette Moore, •256- t 745
PatriCia Ross
740-446-1066 or UOO 894 1066

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Ow•n~1:• want a quick eell

one story briCk
Ale Grande With
'lmlm&amp;dlate possession you
l"e In this 3 bedroom
a bath home quickly,
first you have 10 !&lt;f\11
more de1alls by ask1ng
1170

E-Ma1 I Ad dress w1seman@zoomnet net

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
Sonny Garnes 446-2707
Roben Bruce 446-0621

Carolyn Wasch 441-1007
Rita Wiseman 446-9555

more or I
Gallipolis
can g1ve
req-t
C!oMic, ronch atyll. log
home lhatt 11M • touch of
on ln!er!or diiCorator and
landacllper. A retreat witli
a large stone fireplace. 3-4
bedrooms. 3 baths, 2
kitchens, finished basement
lor entertaining Approx. 5
acres with a view of the
countryside
10 minutes
!ram Holzer Clinic 1181
Home needs on ownorl
Getaway loc.ted In the
roii!IIIJ hUla of RIO Gntnde.
1994 frame. ranch home
w1th 2 bedrooms, 1 bath.
garage and 2 acres M or L.
W11hln Gallipolis City
Schools and best a! all It Is
reasonably priced In the
30's Call and ask lor 1180

evansmoo@zoomnet net

new $8MCI ()( repillfl Master U
censed elttctr•c•an Ridenour
Eilectnc,at WV000306, 304-...fi75

11CM1 Surround youraeff m
nch warmth o1 O'.Jr nanve
1:1ardwoo6s tn thts 4 BR 2 BA 3
car profesSIQnal masterpiece
U.f)OI'\ entenng tnls custom bUift

log

q

NEW USTINGf 1841 SA
218 Only approx 4 miles
!rom tow11 you w111 find 11us
1mmaculate brick ranch With
lots ot ltvmg space and
identities 3 Bedrooms, living

room, dmtng room, family

2 112 baths. family
full basement/f. car
auached garage, 16x32
1nground pool security
· !.l~!••".l::~~·~~: 4 5 acres
12013
room

room,

NEW UmNGI PLENTY OF
SPACE INSIDE &amp; OUT
HERE '" thiS charm1ng older
2 story home L1v1ng room
dtnmg room kitchen , tam11y
roam. 2 ba1hs. abOve grollnd
pool wolh pool house
complete wdh balh, Lots ol
remodelmg large corner
lots
to V1ew th1s stylish

_.. -·-·- SOLD
at thts
ranch style home and 1hls
large well mamcured 101 will
sell you• 3 Bedrooms. 2 lull
balhs. largo hvmg roam.
d1mng. area , &amp; kttchen
combo Detached garages
Too much to ment1on Call at
oncel You offer m1ght buy
this one 11019

NEW LIST!NGI LOTS!
CLOSE
lO
HOLZER
HOSPITAL.
Paved road
Lots are 5 acres &amp; up
Coun1y waler, n gas &amp;
elac1rlc
available
Res1ne11onsl 12007
NEW
LOT
LISTING!
$14,800.00, Nice building lot
cleared &amp; has, drtveway
electric &amp; water
Paved
roed 12005
LOTS ... ACREAGE RIO
GRANDE/RODNEY
AREA...Iats start !rom 5-6
acres to 14-15 acres
(acreage will be determmeoj
by survey) and a 48 acre
tract $19 900 00 &amp; up Call
lor complete lls11ngll2001

*1024 Gt1 out of th•t rented
•p•rtment •nd ;et lntD lhla!
Start burld1hg equ 11y In thrs
anract!Ye wei! mamtamoo 4 SA
home
A co11ered pa!lo and
fenced back yard are great for
fam1iy get togethersl ~1'1at a
great place lo start 1 PRICE
REDUCED I

•

For Sale· SIX lois In Walter's Hill Subdivision
ask for 112018

Call1oday

S~~:~~~~~F;~aur lfft\... One

Groat Prlcel Lots loca1ed 1n
TWJlV\Ir 112019.

We ere always glad to
Rental property 11

or buy property.
Give ua • c.ll at

'

LOOKING FOR A LOT?
Consider any or all three'
Lots start al approx 1 6
acres to over 2 acres Pubhc
water serv1ce ava1lable
Aestrtcted
for
your
pro1ectlon
$12,000 00 &amp;
leao .11011

1nstantly

enterta10ment SUrrouno jn tJ1e
elegant greai room to a cuS1om
destglied oak kitchen wttM built Ill
corner :ablnets that 1 rest on
pollsheo hard wood fiOOflng
nature surrou"l&lt;:IS yot.. Yot. Will
e~~:perj80Ce accentS of nattve oorn
oak groomeo througnout each ot
the ovef'Siled rooms while
wandenng on over 7 acres on
th•s hill top hideaway
ThiS
breathtaking vtew of the OhiO
Valley rs bound to spot! arty city
awener Call tOday tor a pr;vate
VlewJng

Land Listings
Four City Lots nelir
IOo-·own Ga1hpolls
The
Mtller F uner.al Home
frontage on Second Ave
as Thrrd Ave all
lco•1S&lt;S'I&lt;ng of 4..- Ctty Lots Call
and
deta.11ed

11029 Well maintained 4 BR
one beth 1 5 5tory home otters
~~~~~~~:-::::::-,;1 a peaceful senmg •n the Village of
::::
A10 Grande Extra5 Include a full
basement w•th one car garage
hardwood floors and beautrful
hardwood tnm throughout All
stluated on a large corner lo1
$1'01100

11035 A• IS THE GRADE
4
bdrm 1 5 bath Ll'lr:tng rm Dm tng
rm central a1r large cover ed

back dee!\ great for ta mlly
f en~ed backy ard
$58,500 00 CALL

RODNEY-RIO
GRANDE
AREAl 1 1/2 Story home
w11h 5 bedrooms. 3 ba1hs
SPACE
thlnkmg a biQ pnce nopel
THAN IT LOOKS. Plen1y of
$7~ . 900 00
Between 7·8
room for the grow1ng famtly 3
acres, hvrng room, famtly
Bedroom ranch home
room part basement let us
Replacement wmdows &amp;
newer roof Enclos&amp;d porch
Ntce lawn w1th good garden
spot Immediate possesston
w:tth
home Must see to

RETIRING? STARTING OUT
ON YOUR OWN? Check aut
thts neat home thai s JUSt the
nght stze for you N1ce oak
cab~nets m kttchen I!"Jtng
room. 2 bedrooms &amp; baoh
Decorated mealy' Large easy
to ma~nta1o lot Low utthty
b1lls
OWNER .WILL
CONSIDER
DOING
FINANCING Large storage
bUIIdmg
Edge of town
locauon 120011
HERE'S A CUTIEI LOG
HOME $10,700.00 .. Only a
lew years young Must be
moveQ to own lot Ntce
kitchen w1th oak cabmets
d1n1ng
and
ktlchen
combtnatton, electnc heat
Possess1on 1mmed1ately
upon clos~ng 12011
UVABLE ... $19,800 00
Small one story home, 2
bedrooms
ltv1ng room,
k1lchen, ba1h AI the edge of
town Not a lot still ava1lable
m lh1s pnce range I 11038

Call for
appointments

'

home
young
Be1jro1om:s, 2 lull ba1hs full
2 car attached
garage, secunty system 9
acres more or less of land
Very n1cel N1 070

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PRICE REDUCED/

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86
$52,500 DO
3 Bedrooms
START ranch wuh living room,
HOMEMAKING
HEREI kttchen, fam1ly room large
P need at an aHordablo lot newer roof and some
$29,500 00
lmmedoale carpettng
tmmed1ate
possesston 3 bedrooms possoss1on1 County schools
liVIng fOOm With large piCture
12012
wtndow eat·ln kttchen ...mce
I
lot and storage bu1ldmg

PRICE -RE_tt~~~ri(
CARE OF TODAY'S HOT
WEATHER ALONG SHADY
RACCOON CREEK A lovely
modern 7 room log home
wtth lots of amen1t1es 2 Full
baths 3 bedrooms county
water heat pump &amp; large 2
car garage Thts one ts n1ce
You must see You II get
exc1t1ng owner fmancmg
available #1 089
"
NEW
LISTING!
3043
BULAVILLE
PIKE-Acl
qutckly on th1s neat 3
bedroom 2 bath home w1lh
large open living room to
dtnmg area
Equ1pped
kttcheA lots of landscapmg
w1th lh1s mce approx 112
acre lawn Large covered
deck on rear Ntce for
barbecut(lQ and ntce 2 car
detached garage Let us set
you an appomtment to v ew
th1~ one now' #2009
NICE &amp; DIFFEF.IENT best
descnbes thts ltvable 3
bedroom 2 bath home, l101ng
room dtmng kitchen Large
wrap around deck All tt11s
and more sttuated at 278
Dabble Dr1ve
clqse &amp;
conven1en1 to shoppmg &amp;
schools! let us show n to
you $89,800
N1066

oo

742-3171

NHd a residential lot(a) 1n
Gallipolis?
We
have
somethmg lor you 12017
Brokor Owned

•

NEW
BULAV 1L L E ,
$60 ,000 00
1mmed 1a1e
possession' Check QU1 th1s 3
bedroom ranch style home
~ L1v1ng
room
k•tchen
attached , car garage Ntce
9Qx177 lo1 Newer roof let
us show
12014

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11044 LET THIS INVITING
TWO STORY &lt; COLONIAL
NESTLED IN THE ROLLING
HILLS OF SPRING VALlEY BE
YOURS TODAY Remodeled m
1996 ihts 4 BR 2 112 BA features
a formal entryway eat m kitchen
and cttnmg room With hardwood
floonng Adjacent to the Kttchen
IS Fam'tly room wtlh a cozy
ftreplace tor Hoo se erHII y
mornings New s•dmg roof and
nsulated w•ndows 1n 1996 keep
mamtenance costs tow A qu•et
M.ck
offers the perfect place
for
PICniCS by your own
pr vale

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NEW USTINGI ThiS home
IS m the country but ts JUSt
mtnutes from townl The
home
features
three
bedrooms 2 baths formal
liVIng room and d1n1ng roo m
as well as a large famtly
room
2 Car delached •
garage &amp; lull basemen! w1lh
outside entry S1luated pn
2 44 acres at Crew Road
You must look at thts home
Ia see all the additiOnal
features 1'1 096
REDUCED $85,000 00 IS
THE NEW PRICE FOR
THIS NEAT HOUSE 1hat IS
full ol hiS1ory
Lots of
updatmg foyer hvtng room
d tntng
kitchen
den
8
bedrooms 2 lull ba1hs All
cedar lined closets 2 car
garage &amp; loads more

11049

Call

#1017 Let the sweet sound of
a whispering brook relax you m
1h1S 3 4 BR ~e, E"'ras
tnclude
~.,;.1JIIwer roof
large ba
With 16x32
lnground P
All wtthrn m1nu tes
of town Ltkated on 81Nersweet
Dnve near 9a1Upc•lis..

c!

1,038 NEAT AS A PINIIJit 3 SA
1 BA New S1dtn9 new roof new
easy clean ng w ndow 10/98
New' carpet wa ll covermg and
htgh eff1C1ency heat and a1r
system IN All A SHOAT WALK
TO CITY POOL &amp; PARK CALL
CALL CALLI $46,900 00

Town can be
thl5 BA
and A Bath bnck ranch covered
wtth hardwood floors tastefully
accented w1th hardwood tnm and
.ncreased 1
space m a

11045 Over 2 5 AC MIL on the
water Is hard to lind
enywMera but we have It and
much morel W1th
I 2000
square feet
1
SA
I w11h an
wtth a 24

BUILT HOME LET US
HELP YOU I let !he large open
rooms 1n th1s 3 BR 2 BA newly
bu1lt ranc~ft. home sport you
l l 'cented wrth oak
I
tnm
1 solid doors and
tlli'hE•iohlen you r taste y decorated lhts home rs
eH~~~~ ~:~~ oak woodwork
t/1e water the ep11ome ot qual tY. and class
wrlh
sol1d 6 pane( doors H1Stde 1m sn The overstzed k•tchen wah tree
out thiS gem on the nver Don 1 t1ned 111ew keeps the country
pass on your dream seas ttle flavor w ttr so lid oak ca bmets and
hunter green accents $89 900
momentt $139,000

w&lt;hi! . .

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aeclude~;d~o::~~~~n~

town? Look no ruron,r.
thiS 3 BR 2 BA one
plan
sttuated on 32 Acres be the one
With ttle comfon 1of central heat
and arr and the luxury of a 2 car
surrounded by

0

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t¥1046 Expenence rolling
country meadows m thrs 3 BR t
SA ranch style home sttuated on
2 Acres MIL
Located rust
m nules from Holzer Med tcal
Center th•s we I maintained hOme
has open porches and a one car
garage Reduced $69,900 00
1 33 AC
your #1047 Morgan Rd
J..arul
Comract
WI
you r Em.e
11 11 Many possltlllttles $8.900 00
this beautiful 2 story
home t offers 3 bdrm 1 bath
LR w/fJreplace DR hardwood
ftoormg remodeled kttchen
enclosed back porch only
$&amp;,;,o,lo 0o•oc_ YOUR SEARCH
TODAY
PARAD.,OE I
property
offer5 38 5 acres 4 bdrm 1 l(ath
LA 38.:48 garage w/concrete
11oonng 48~54 chicken house 1
1/2 acre stocked lake on thtS
property
CALL FOR MORE
DETAILS $99 900 00
(.

NEW LISTING! 36115 SR
143, POMEROY Pla nmng
on
bul ld1 1'1g
a
new
home wasle no t1me here•
P1ck your own colors m th •s
newly constructed home 4
Bedrooms 2 ~ 12 baths den
1tv 1r,1Q room
equtpped
kitchen
2 Car attached
garage
i mmed ate
~~~N2010

N105~

Fantasllc 3 be~roo m
w/flrepla ce DR &amp; kttchen
combinallon N•ce leve lot Back
c;tecl&lt; front covered porch 2 car
garage attach ed l deta,ched
garage 2 5torage ou tbUtld ngs
CALL FOR YOUR SHOWING
TODAY $72 500 00

THIS RANCH
HOME
SITUATED ON APPROX
6 75 ACRES has ha&lt;llo1s of
care and ts ready to move
tnto The home has a
carport as well as a large
pole garage The corner
locat1on would make a great
commerc1al s1te Owner w1ll
consider your offeri Call to
see thiS one today' 11086

Owner wants thrs sold now• I
yow are handy with f1x1ng thtngs
up then lht~ 4 BR 1 1/2 story
hOme cou d be your dream nome!
$305

Cheryl Lemley

NEW LISTINGI 825 PAGE
STREET 1n Middleport ThiS
rancfl home features 3
bedrooms balh, hv1ng room
dining room kitchen, and
attached
N1ce large
lot
located
1
park and
N2015

nome

surroundea tn polished authentic
oak Wnh an ~fiT!Oll$ custom

S COUNTY

1501111

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RUSTIC STYLED RANCH
HOME neslled on a pr1Yale
4 5 acres 3 Bedrooms 21ull
baths everstzed eat-m
kitchen, covered froQt porch
across front Still like new
be1nganlySyearsyoung Let
us show
11 to you
$113~~00 11097

fun I
I Twp Call&amp;
request a show1ng lot 111111

Be aggrooolve and let
your money wor~ for you
with
then
rental
propattleal
1 1/2 story
building ccntalnlng 3 apta •
also 12'x60'-2 bedroom
mobile home-easy to renl
OWNER MAY FINANCE

IB

1786

e-mail us for lnfort11atlon on our listings:
big bend@eurekanet.com

Loo~lng lor a great place
10 ralae a family? Five
year old home
3
bed roo

city convenlancM?
thiS remodeled 1wo
home give 1hem 10
puttmg you Wilhln
dlslance of schools
Home has 3
5 balhs. lull
pool
wllh cen1ral
_Looa1&lt;oa m Gallipolis
your showing lodayl

740- 441 -l ] ll

Residenttal Of t:Omlnerdal uing

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

COMMERCIALI Restaurant
bus1ness tha1 seals 30,
1ncludes
oqu1pmon1
Furniture. 1nventory etc Plus
addoloonal approx 1,120 sf
rental space Plenty of
parking, road lrontage along
SA 160 Great lnvas1men1
pr~rty 120011

1111

I

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC. ~
(740) 446-3644
-OPPOATU'ITY

_til

view of the If
from tho llv1ng
of thiS ra1sed ranch
neat &amp; clean home
3 BR s 1 bath, full
, FP &amp; 2 car garage
of extras that are too
to mentiOn Call to
a lOOk for yourse~

EnJoy the
and luxury of thls
cozy new hOme located at 246
Ann Drive Bring the fan111y
together around the fireplace :1n
the great room open to the kllcfrlen
with oak cabinets 3 4 genecoos
bedrooms 3 baths &amp; 2 car garage
supply any
family s needs
Profess onally
landscaped
grounds and all "deckeg~ out
summer hv1ng or enjoy
neighborhood p1cnlc area and
access to Raccoon Creek All
at $132 500 yes
conS111ucl:ion and over 2 000
of liVIng space for under $1
Get exc•tad and call today bi.forel
1t s too latett 1627

wu
the maJest•c century
mark next year No need to worry
about replacmg old parts because
"
owners have already restored
entire house
Practically
everythmg has been replaced
except the charm and character
goes along with an older
k&gt;catlon with country
but very close to
Features Include
full baths hvrng room
dining room and eat
Hom•
hete to
n1ce WOOilwOI'k,
I
and leave this gorgeous
~~~[~~ arefloors
and beautiful I cusm1n built home Over 5500 sq
1n original cond•Uon ft or very nice living space plus
se"Jeral outbuddrngs and 4 over 6 acres and a pond tor
complete the per1ect outside enJoyment 6 bedrooms 4
3 56 acres m/1 offers full and 2 half baths 2 tuhy
garden or even a equ1pped very mce kltchefls a"r~d
animal
Don 1 much
much
more
Qu~llty
won 1 last long construction Country atmosphere
only 5 minutes from the hospr(al
and shopping 3 car garage
lnground pool
Many more
amenrt•es
Call
for
more
rnformatron 11227

44~- 0008

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

: ~----~------------------------------------Real Eatatt Gtnel'll

: ~==~~
IIEA.L Tl', INC
. lfflfJD
32 LOCUST STREET, GAWPOUS,
45631

Obw 45631-0994

Galhpohs .

Real Estate General

!.L-.F:RAH::c~E:s~t~'fll:no~'"::.:IS.OJIS~•:I!e:·~~:•:IIOCI:;-:._~:TEI~7:•::4:4e~~ae:_J

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Right Prict1Aigh1
LOti! You had better call
on th1s one! Newer home
maintained to perfection Th1s one
otters approx 1800 sq ft boasting
an open great room with d1nmg
area and workable kitchen wtth
custom made Sm1th cab1nets
tam1ly room with cathedral ce111ng
3 bedrooms 2 baths on a 1 acre
more or less level lot with 2 car
and separate wortlshop
$119900 thls could be
you ve been walling

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''t

Au::

complex Beautiful

AT HEART· See us lor your 'Dream
Busmess· We have many lt1t1ngsl! Too many lo hsl
sopara1ely'l'

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C«&lt;ar street SurpfiHII Heres .a
very ruce llnle home that won't
send you to the poor farm Alt the
major work has been done
fumace
central
atr
rOOf
plumbing hot water tank sidtng
windows, wiring to bring thts older
In
tht
home up to date conditioning ..3
1nv
Entrepreneu"' Bu
bedrooms, 1 1/2 balho IM1t11
Hunters
Hate a
a
opporlunl1yl M01el located on SA room dWHng room and eal·ll'l
160 between Holzer and town Is kitchen make this home well
per1ect for several different uses wolth 1he S5e,500 pnce lag ~
Re1J1tahze 11 a~ continue using It
as a motel, make i1 1nto a mini mall
Of convert it 1nto apartments
Approx 4 acres are lfl;Ciuded so
can expand 14 rooms plus
hv•ng quarters m the mtddle
to move at $199 1000 1231

Dto:::

f;~f.:~l~N~:e=w~~K;-12
Eastern Schools
Must It $135,000

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Cell

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brick ranch 314 bedrms , 2 112
baths formal LR &amp; DR ram rm
2/IQ Windows Loads of cabmets
&amp; storage
Full d1v1ded
basement
2 woodburnrng
f replaces fenced
gar &amp;
carport attiC
Ac m/1
front1ng on
Oh tO
Rtver Ctty
close
to town VLS

owNEii!"AiOOOiiS

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

ampngst hardwoOd forest
Sides
thl5 beautifUl
meadow sanmg offers a v1ew
seemingly goes on forever on the
other IWO Sides Perfect sunset
VIews can be enjoyed from the
&lt;leek o11hls OU1slandlf111 eountry 2
11ory hOme Only three~'" 01&lt;1,
this home has feqtUres too
numerous to be Included 10 th1s
act, but bel1eve us, i18 worth a
look Hardwood floors dress this 4
bedroom home up with a country
fla~r Plenty o1 space 1n the
gorgeous k1lchen IS htghllghted
3
with a vaulted ceiling
bathrooms full basement, bam
and ,20 acres are JUSt a few 1tems
on a fong list of amen111es Call for
Information Green Twp

s11uated on 1 5 acres m/1 Much potential PRICE
REDUCED$41.000
RUTLAND- Beautiful Home with g..at Hlling 4 BR, 2 bath,
Central
large closets, one floor plan On 13 acres m/1
with horse
outbuildings, and 1 OX12 Dog Kennel Must
to
$75.000
remodeled 2 BR home 1-lloor plan with
hardwood floors
rooms. lull basement, convenient
Jacaloon $42,000
REEDSVIU.E· ExquiSile 4 BR. 2 bath. Bl-level country
l1omo. profeSSIOnal landscap1ng. 2 very lg. decks (upper
and lower ltoors). outbu1ld1ngs with concrete walks. paved

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adfiiCOn1lo llmber Ridge Lake It
a 6 room house 12 • 70
mob1le home 36 x 60 bam 7
outbuttdlngs a fruit tree orchard 2
wells and a spnng Very beautiful
and very secluded acreage for
only$106000 1303

BE

VlS

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2-17 • 87 acre farm

of road

LAND-52 Ae
loealton land Land
and n'iay be some
.•~~~~~0

;;;~;;~;~• :;r-•nll

ovi:RiiDO~aNG THE BESTI All
12018 WOODED 11 Ae m~
$41 000 Located on Kemper
Holfow Ad 1996 Mobile home 3
bedrms 2 baths Heat Pump &amp;
C A Good windows and many
extras on th1s custom built untt
$49,000 VLS 446 6B0B
1873 Old Hou" and Buildings
located on 117 acres more or
less
Water Sewer &amp; Gas
avarlabte
Can be used for
development

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V1RGINIA SMITH, BROKER ..............,.·4'U14181o4811806106

wl''"''"

WATHPAOOFIII
Unc:on&lt;litionol 111e- guaron1M
Loc.~~ raferencea rurnistled Ea
1111ia1111d 1175. Cal 24 Hn; (740)
4o46-o870, t-100·21NI576 Aog

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

Build ne. or rep1rr old. no JOb

I l l 1'M!Mit 3

plus

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~anaday

C&amp;C General Home Ma1n
tenence Painting vinyl ald1ng

Blackburn Realty

Hours 74().o.W 1-(] 193

-a

remodeled vetll8tile home 2-3 BR new
lunnac:e, water heater. 2 large wrap-a-round

12987 CH01CE OF THE
COUNTRY GENTLEMEN Real
value for someone needtng plenty
of space 4 large BAs 3 baths
LA formal DR k1t w/bu'tll tn BBQ
Full basement w/d1v1det;l rms 2
wood burmng FPs central atr
large garage
36 acres m/1
Mmeral nghts
PRIVATE
LOCATION Appro)( 2 500 sq ft..
$139,500 VIrginia 446 6806
13020
Spring
Brings
Opportunltlta. That 1s
we
offer this large stocked
Jake 33 acres mft!;: 1:~rnf&lt;&gt;~!;e
mobile home park
be u5ed as a camp
new hom1ee~s~~~:t~~rr•er&lt;oial

1195.

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. BA 2 bo1h oentra111r. new root and appll... """ $1" 00

Straw Square Bales $2 75 Each
740-388-8466

Oftenng a
entl)' livtng room wtgas log
l iireol,ace alsr.l famti'JI and game
gas log ftreplaces
1;;~~~~:~•: kitchen w•th Smtih 5
Ic
oak cabmets plus
r l
&amp; pantr•es
Enjoy
from the Solanum Formal
rm has a great v1ew
Glass enclosed back porctl F rst
lloor laulldry 4 bedrm5 3 baths
More hv•ng area m a finished
basement ~ car anacned garage
overhead storage Newly

~PartiAndS.,.,..AII

MIR COntfactu-.g E&amp;eetr.al And
Re Mola•no TraHer Set Ups
Porches C.rpentry Ancf Repa ~ts

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rPOMEROY
- - -FlalwcodsArea- WEEYLYFEA1llRE
Bee&amp;dul hort'o9 witt\ futl

Hay a Grain

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- 11one
ot mMOnr)"
t&gt;rlcl&lt;
OIOdr.
~tt 20 yeara
lll*leila frM lltifnatN 304
77H550

c:arpenb'y dOOr$ WindowJ , baths
mobl6l home rapaw and more For

After 5:ooPm 7~245-5515

the Ohio Rwer. PRICE

13025 IT'S A PERSONALITY
PLACE WITH AN AWESOME
VIEW OF THE OHIO R1VER
9791 SR 1 SOUTH ON THE
RIVEA EDGE Spnng Summer
Winler or Fall will be mos;t
enjoyable hvmg here 26 x28
Great Am
Formal Entry
w{Parquet floors, hv111g rm dmtng
rm Equ1pped kit 1st floor bath &amp;
bedrm Deck w/Hot Tub Carport
for enterta•nment 3 bedrms up
Basement Wrap front porch
attached 2 car garage Plus a
24 .:44 garage apartment 3 277
acres more or less Floating dock
Satell1te MAKE
1 w/jet ski ramp
liFE WOf1TH liVING
Call
VIRGINIA l SMITH 446 6606
OR446 4802
13012 RIO GRANDE VICINITY
Huge 2 story home W/4
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths extra lg
~1t
Formal d.nlng room &amp; LA
Fam Rm Also Aec Am total
10 rms Pat10 &amp; 2 1/2 AC mil
Dial 446 6806 Right Now the
most Important call you 11 make
thiS year VLS 446 6806
13346 80 ACRES M!L Huntmgl
F1shtngl Hannan Trace Ad 2 Ad
frontages
Close to Wayne
National Forest VLS 388 8826
13344 COMMEAC1AL LOT &amp;
BUSINESS Located on Eastern
Ave
Great
Opportun1tyt
Purchase the corner lot with or

110

Camper AJC Storage Tank,
s.._. e. F• •• it C&lt;Mw:lllon, CIJI

situa1ecl on 2-acres with pond aitd
$71,000
3 BR, 2 bath , home with

GAIL BElVILLE..

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Home

RUSSELLD WOOD, BROKER
446-4618

l

wouft[ fiKJ to t;rprtss our sutCI:re
tlian{§ anti appruratum to our mAn'f
jittntfs c!! re[attves for tfit catrf.&lt;,
flowers, fooi, ana t;rprtsswn.s of
S!f"'palfi'f In fiLS reunt fieatfi :Jour
(]n&lt;fness, tfioug!itfuuinesi an&lt;£
pra'ftrS wilf neV£r 6e fo'!Jolten

SER\Ilt:-,

c.mp.ra &amp;

790

SYRACUSE- Noce home very good condition 4 BR. 2 bath,
good locatiOn, fenced play ff88 Must Seelll $111,1100
RUTLAND- 4
2 bath. vel}' mce. beautifully decorated

:Jamil'f of

810

Harne Brandl Ovef 2:5 Years Ex·
perlenct All Work Guaranteed
Fr•ncll Ct1y Maroag. 740-441

D 1 c:-:--~H~IOI-III8
____

A R Au1o Ripley. W'l (304)372

1191 Suzuki Katana 800, 101
mdes. blacWpurpk!l, quk:k faat &amp;
chOlpf 13.150 080, 740·992• 1506dlyS. 740-949-2644-.

24~

1!MM Plymouth Grand voyager 7
Pauenger Stereo Cass~ttte
Player AC Original Tires Excellent Cond1t10n 19 000. 7ol0-388·
1995 S 10 LS. Ea1ended Cab 4
9809
Cy11ndlf. 5 Speitil. Runs. loolis
Groan 1'10111 Sllel1 Tonneadu Cov 1995 Jeep Wranger Excellent
er, Below Loan 18 800 740-446- C&lt;lncfition 740-367 5039
1968 74G-388·8637 SM A1 Auto
li1mCan10r
1996 Chevy Blazer lS •••
Loaded Automatic, 4 Doors
Must Sae 1980 Chevy 1 Ton Great Snape! 1•0 379 9035
Factory R~llt 350 Engrne, New E-'"!10 740-379-2426. Days
$3 000 01!0 740-256-1 722

c
- . Cor11lollt ~
Blue l•M To VieW 740·441•

For S. TltM ft1a
Toyo,. Truetl 235R 15 Good
condition 11~00 far 111
(304)t37-3341.

Reptro-111

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Or Jual A...111ng In Your Own

Jt

(304)&amp;75-~164

1988 Ford F 150 8 Cyotlnder, 5
Speed, AJC E•cellent Cond1lt0n
S3 sso, caa Al1o.r 5 PM 740-386·
9780

fiJM• 'AfliiCI HlJIIIM

-

1993 Honda Aspencldt Lots Of
EJilraol Low Milos. EIIQI11en! Conili11on, Mus1 Seol SIO 500 Call A1·
101'5 PM 7..0.388-9780

161 Ford ExpiOrer·XLT .c.-Wheel
OliVe • 0001 Auto Loaded Ex-

$10500

MotorcydH

740

1992 Toyota " -runner SA S, v..a
4 -~ dr Spon Utlli1y loaded
with sunroof. excellent cond•Uon
t ownar 96 000 m1l81 Asktng

1982 Chevy 5·10. V-8 Auto
GoOd CQnc:tiUon $3500 080
(304)&amp;75- 1550

1997 Chevy Camara, ei(CIIItnt
conditiOn loaded 32 000 miles

1998 Pontiac Trans-Am, Fully
Loadedl Pnce • Reduced to
$22 500 00 Great Gradualion
Giltll (7-10~548

PennJ fJ BoiJfJJ Ratliff
naan•s for ,..,,.
(:J generousitJ.

c-.

1918 E1
20,000 On ....,.
And Transrnlntan &amp;olld Wtth
T_., $2100 00 740-24!&gt;-5173

tfoiM
Improvements

Improvements

(304)81~5909

. a ,., t.eoo-567-6831
720 Trucks for Sale

1916 Oklo C.tall &lt;DR 4Cy1 5Speecl Mint Condooon (30il882·
3894 $2 995

1995 Monte
runs Ilk&amp; new
Chevrolet 1500
Cab excellent condrhon

1987 Astro

Nt• MtliCO Btttttl Year Built
twt Original Clauac Rur En
llna lmpon•~ S12 500 A C

1996 Dodge Avenger 45 800
M1lu 740-441-2413 Evenings
7-24t2Days

1995 Mercury Tracer automatic,
air new tires cassene tow m1le
$harP $5800 740-99M810

ttl&amp; Full Slz• 'iafl t304).7S
&amp;151

I 8ft Mont• Carlo 23.C Black
Ltattltr, Sunroof
Loaded
$1&amp;000 740-245-5QI3

trey Interior Tinted Windows
E•cellent ConditiOn (304)578
20W(304)675-2714

1998 Chevy Cavalier. Sunroof
C 0 Player, 4spd Auto A/C
PW/0 loe'-. $13 900 (304)7735117

74().992 5949

Happy Ad

110

730 V.ns" ._WDs

k:lob.,..

t992 SMdow:
funl ...
new 70K , eold • tr autotnatle
tufttOOI • cylinder apod•r r.cf ,
$3650 740~t2045~

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6167

FOR SAlE CONSOLE PIANO
Reaponaible party Wanted to
make low monthly paymen1s on
plano See Locally Call 1 800
268-1218

Stand) $380, 740-446-9555

Police Impounds &amp;
Ultlllga CAll NOW
33Zh2156

1'/1t

1969 Camaro SS 350 Auto. PS
Elcellenl Cond1t10n $13 000
(304)675{)824

FAIR SPEC1ALS
JULY STHRU AUGUST 30
L!lwnTractors $150 011 On LTs
$200 OtiLXs And Grs, $250 Olf
300 s $300 01f 400 s And z
Trak s Financmg As Low As
5 9% ~r 36 Months Of $250 Olf
On Compact Utati1y Tractors
5210's 5310 s And Gators Free
Delivery Carmtchaef Farm &amp;
Lawn, Your Local John DBere
Dea~er Gallipolis Ohio 740.446·
24120.1 800-594-1111

At1en11onDrum
Bend - " ' ludwig,
Snare
Set, (Ca~e Pad

1985 Plymouth Rellanl Sllrion
Wagon After I PM 740 251

$500 CAAS FRO IUOOIII Buy

2t 13

For Ute· St Bernard puppies
$150-.. ph0no7..0.992·2721
Rottweiler Pups 1St Shots &amp;
Wormed, 1125 Each, 5 LeU, No
Paptrl, 7-2197

710 Autos lor Sale

yotJ

: -7,-0~Aut:--oe~for:--Sa:::--:-le--

710 Autos for Sale

TRAr&lt;SPORTATION

pid&lt; S3 I
boohol
pick. $4 a buohol Jom
0 Brien, Letart Fa111, 740 247·

CoMing

•bul • Page 07

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

I

FNita a

580

Sunday, Auguat8, 199tt

Sunday, August 8, 1999

110!56 NEW LISTING-completely
set up or a n•ce 101 ar'ld ready to
move tnto Th s 2 BA 2 BA 1969
mob1ie home located JUSt minutes
!tom town offers country llvtng
wrth the conv enience of the c t~
$24 900

#1037 A Great Location Low
Maintenance and 1 Manicured
Stnlng al compl ment thiS 3 BR
1 1/2 BA brtck ranch Located on
a level corner lot JUSf mmutes
lrom Holzer Med1cal Center Th1s
home offers a qurel country
sett ng Clo se to worlo. shopprng
school &amp; p ay II s a must set:~ at
$92 000
Call tor ad d1t1onal
deta1ts ana tocatton

'
11049
ATTENTION
INVESTORS!!
Two Mobile
Homes A 1990 and a 1991 on
Call for detalla
4 43 acres
$49,900 00
11055 NEW L1STING-Brlgh1,
Shinny and New look1ng with over
1600 SQ ft This masonry/vmyl
mtK ranch offers 3 BR and a BA
wtth new carpet new windows
new Siding Md nsulal•on new
central a r ana furna ce With an
equrpped kitchen an rest ng on
JUS! under 2 acres and a 26x40
detached block shop Oon t walt
for Christmas call today to frnd
out add IlOna! detatls sn 000

#1020 REDUCED-PEACEFUL PARADISE-Willch lne roll by
1n a newly bU!n log home on the OhiO Rtver Th ts rust1c 2 3 BR
2 balh home offers wondMul extras including 700 fee1 of wrap
around decking wtth Hot Tub to seat s1x A stone hearth
fireplace accents the great room W1th a lOft ctay bed room
overlooking tts beauty Over 100 feet of R1ver Frontage

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PageD&amp;•, ,

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Monday
August0, 1M

Weather

Sports

Reds defeat Brewers, Page 4
Always in Ann's debt, Page 10
NFL exhibitions begin, Page 5

Today: PleaS8nt ·
High: 80s; Low: 50s
Tomorrow: Cloudy
High: 90s; Low: 50

Devil Rays defeat
Cleveland lnd~

-P~4

•
Meigs County's
Volume

. RESERVE CHAMPION STEER - Betsy Rashel Fallon. In front of Jodie Mc:Calta an.d Fat, '
Shawver sold her reserve champion Stf81" 10 ton are Tyler Smith, Little Mister Gallia CounWieman Insurance for $3.11 per pound at Fri- ry; early Atkins, Little Miss Gallia Counry; Live.
day's sale. From left to right are Shawver, Wi- ·stock Princess Kayla Johnson and CoUrtney
man Insurance representative Gary Roach, Shriver, Little Miss Gallia CountY first runner· ·
holding niece Abby Wiseman; Jodie McCalla, · up. (Times-Sentinel photo)
·
' Miss Gallia CountY; and Livestock Queen •
.
. .
·

By DIAN VIIJOVICH

·

h ld
. . d.
L'
I
.o ~rs. accor mg to •pper nc.
That s well ahead ot the 20.63 per·
cent average ,annual total return on
f h
n
any .o I e di erent types of funds
thatF make
d up Lipper
h . 's G.eneral Equity un s g~oup .. w •ch mcludes cap- .
nal apprecl3t!Un funds , growlh funds,
m•d -cap funds , small-cap funds.
f ·d
h d·
m•cro-cap un s, growt ' an mcome
fund s, S&amp;P 500 Index funds , and
equny mcome fund s.
. So. tf s&amp;.P 500 Index. funds don't
d
be
h h h
wm up mg I e Ot·s ot g~n~ral
equ ny funds performance. wmners
th1s year. wha1 w1ll be? Without an
. ac.·c uratc crystal ball at my.dtsposa.I,
bl t be certam . B ut I f
II s •mposSI e 0

.With half of the year behind us,
it's anybody's guess as to which fund
tyP., will be. the all-out winner for
. .
1999. Bullfthereisa
trenddeve lop· ing. maybe _ just maybe_ it's that
S&amp;P 500 Index funds might not show
the same strength going fo..Ward as
they did in 1998. Or 1997. Or 1996.
Or 1995. Or even 1994.
For the last handful of vcars, sock·
ing some money into an Sti&lt;P 500
lnd~x fund has paid off handsomely :
From June 30. 1994to June 30; 1999.
these funds returned on average
27.31 per'cent per year to their share·

' be
. · d. · ·
num rs ~re an} m •caliOn . .'' m•ghl
be the m•d·. smal l- and m1cro-cap
.funps. The Iauer, fqr example. has
be ·
'
·
en makin.g hig perfomiance strides
.lately.
y
. ear-to-date numbers show that
the average mtcro-t;ap ' fund !' up
20.14 percent .. Take a tighter look.
df h
·
f d
an or I e quarter, m• cro-cap un s
were· up, Qver 20 . percent. That 's
more than double the returns on genera! equ1ty fun. ds.
.
B bK
o em IS ponfoho manager of
the Fremont U.S. Micro-Cap Fund. .
It's up 23.39 •perceot so far this year. .
Kern ho.pes thatth. e strong ·secondquaiter ·performance of micro-cap

RESERVE CHAMPION LAMB- f(yle Forgey •r. Little Miss Gallla County first runner-up.
sold his resei'Ve champion lamb to Ace High ·Behind them · are Jodie McCalla, Miss Gallia
Music of· Point Pleasant, W.Va.; for $12 par · CountY; Ace High representatives JOhn Caianpound at Friday's sale. Holding the banner at dros and Lois Scherer, Forgey, Livestock ·
right and hiding the lamb's head are (L-R) Tyler QUMn Rashel Fallon and Livestock Princess
Smith, Little Mister Gallia CountY; Cerly Atkins, Kayla Johnson. (Times-Sentinel photo)
Little Miss Gallla CountY; and Courtney Shriv·
·

k ·11 ·
· ·
·
.
by any means," says McHugh •. whose fund IS up aimost20 percent this year.
Perhaps the second quarter 1s .a
turning point where the trend is .
·
going tq continue for two to dt~ c,·
more yearS. But it's hard. to tell," says
Kern. who has manag"" Fremont's
U.S. Micro·CJ!p Fund since its inception five years ago. "
·
.
. He .points out that because smalland micro-cap stocks have been out
of favor for years, the cash that flows
imo them hasn't been anything to
rave about .. until recently, that is.
"We do need positive cash flows and
interesl!o get consistent positive rates
of returns for this asset class," says
Kern.
. . .
.
Then there are the mid.caps,
which are up on average over 12 percent for the quaner and the year-tO- ·
date as. wcU.
The Oberweis·Mid-Cap Fund, up
nearly 22 percent so far this year, is
mana£ed by Jim Oberweis Ire Like
To Receive your FREE Beanie Babie, simply scheduie an Eye Exam and
the snlall- and micro-cap 'stocks, he
Purchase a Complete Pair of Glasses featuring Fish~ r Price Lenses and Frame .
says,' mid-cap stocks h~ve gotten
" beat up ,prelty badly" over the last
couple of years.
"\:hQ n1arket had: simply favored
,large company stocks, until this quarter when we saw a shift to the small.
and mid-caps;" say Oberweis, who's
LENSES BY SOLA
managed the fund ·since it began in
September 1997·.
Chris McHugh. porlfQiio manager of Turner Midcap Gfowth Fund
agrees. He· notes that this is the first
.. quaner since 1997 in which the Russell Mid-Cap Growth lnde~ . the Russell 2000 Growth and !he Russell
2500 have outperformed the · S&amp;P
OFFER ONLY VALID WITH THIS AD. NOT VALID ON PREVIOUS PURCHASES. AD MUST
. ·500 . . ''

fisher· Price

fisher-Price·

CLEAfiVISION'·

Dr.·A. Jackson Bailes O.D.
. 224 East Main- Pomeroy; OH 45769
Call: (740) 992-3279 or 1-877-583-2433

·· ~ow.

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one quarter is not a trend

BE PRESENTED DURING YOUR INITIAL VISIT. NOT VALID IN CONJUNCTION WITH
OTHER·QOUPONS OR DISCOUNTS ..· OFFER ONLY VALID WHILE SUPPLIES LAST.

Farmers representative, early. Atkins, Little
Miss Gallia County; Livestock Queen Rashel
Fallon, livestock Princess Kayll! Johnson and
Jodie McCalla, Miss Gall.la Counry. (Times-Sen·
"
·
tinel photo)

I

·

1.

st~. s WI tngger aconunutng trend.

Beanie Bable

RESERVE CHAMPION TOB.t.CCO
· Thomas Cuinmons ~;~old his rasen/e champion
tobacco project to New· Farmers Tobacco
Warehouse of Ripley for $550 at Friday's sale.
In front are (L·R)'ari unidentified New Farmer~(
representative, Cummqna, an unidentified New

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Number 43

Single Copy- 35 Cents

Ta.ft, lawmakers to crack down on juvenile crime

Capital funds are regaining popularity with investors
Newspa- Enterprise Association

so,

Hometown Newspaper

University· MOVC

Building For Your Future!!

COLUMBUS (AP) -After seeing many of his cam·
· paign pledges fulfilled already, Gov. Bob Taft is ready
. for his next task: cracking down on juvenile crime.
.·
·Lawmakers, Taft and the Ohio Criminal Sentencing
Commission are expeeted to release their proposals in
the next few weeks. 1)te ideas are expected to include
making· parents responsible for their,children's actions
and allowing judges to sentence underage offenders past
the age.of 21. '
·
·
Also, Taft and Attorney General Betty· Montgomery
are sponsoring a Safe Schools Summit .in Columbus
Aug. 18 and 19. The summit is .in reaction to the recent

•'

.

-

"

---

school violence ·,and concern over incr~asing problems
with ju~enile crime.
'
The overall crime rate in .Ohio is declining, but juve·
nile arrests have been on the rise. From .1981 to 1996,
juvenile arrests 'increased 20 percent, drug juvenile
arrests tripled, and cases of unruly and delinquent youths'
rose 20 percent.
·
· "We have to be able to take care of the most violent
kids while trying to sal.age some of the others," pavid .
Diroll, the commission's executive director, told The
Columbus Dispatch for a stor~unday.
However, Diroll said the state must be careful in the

.

Re_g~_~g._al _ll_riefs
School districts building one school for all grades
GHILLICOTHE (AP) - Call it the modem-day v~rsion of the oneroom schoolhouSe.
·
·
.
The Ohio · School Facilities CommiS.ion is recommending to many
· small sChool districts that they build one schoolhouse for all of their stu·
dents to cut costs and increase the effieieni:y of bus routes, maintenance,
utilities and staff. .
,
"When you have a total population of 1,500 or fewer students in !he dis- .
triot, it doesn't make sense to have inore th.an one building," conimisSion
spokesman Brenton Zuch told The Columbus Dispatch for a story Sunday. ·
The comm~on recently pledged $I c03 billion ·in construction grants to
47 school districtS that must match state funds. Nine are proposing to use
the m&lt;iney for new, all-grade buildings, .00 three')\fe renovating existing
building. that house all grades. ·· ·
That makes 22 school districts using, or planning to 'Usc:, state money to
renovate or construct building. for those in kindergarten through 12th.
grade.
• '
·
.
Some officials question the academic and social consequences of placing 6-year-olds in the same boilding with 18-year-oldS.
·
"It could be a problem, or it could be a benefit," said Rob Tierney,
" director of Ohio State University's School of Teaching and Learning.
"It would be difficult to make a sweeping generalization. It would
·depend on the community developed within the school. Some places there
would be ~good cOmmunity; some places there !"ay not be."
Zuch said parents unfamiliar with the· concept often have eoncems
about young chil~n being with teen-agers. But many an; ll&lt;li!&lt;ved when
they- design plans showing separation between grade'leveiS..
"We don't want kindergartners eating wilh seniors," he said. "Often,
the place where the students are dropped off is different. They have different parts of the library. It is not uncommon to have more !han one gym."
. At Zane Trace, about 45 miles soulh of Columbus in Ross County, class c
peri &lt;ills are st~ggered so younger children are riOt in the halls.with highschool students, but they do ride the same buses.
"Our main problems are with language," said history teacher Todd Hoi. dren, referri'ng to adult language used by older students, "and noise in the
llallways."
. .
.
.
Some schools claim· one-buil~ng settings provide positive role models.
for younger. students And ease the transition from elementary to middle to
high school.
•
.
.
.
"We've tried to make it an advantage," said Paul &amp;sian, superintendent .
of Twin Valley Community Local School District west of Dayton in Prebl.e
County, which has bad all students.under one roof since 1995.
The consolidation has '!!lowed for structured tutoring of younger chi!·
dren by high-school students. "There have not been any 'signilicant prob·
lems since we moved,-· he said.
·
.

"

Good Afternoon
,

.

I'

GOP hopes to pressure
Clinton Into signing bill

aftermath of the recent ·schqol shootings.
age" law' for g~ns that would have gun ow~ers facing
. "~think there is a danger of overreacting.The Legis- (elony charges if their weapon was used in a violent
lature is a reactive body. But it is shocking how violent crime. He also wants to require gun dealers to offer trigsome of the incidents are ." .
ger locks when they sell weapons.
·
While details of Taft's proposal are being finalized, a.
The se ntencing .commission expects to finish its prospokesman said the legislation will include elements .. posal to res tructure the juvenile laws in the next few
Taft touted during last year's gubernatorial' campaign : weeks. •
.
.
strengthening Ohip's parental responsibility law, giving.
Diroll said the commission wanl' to allow Judges to
judges greater sentencing discretion in dealing with ' simultaneously impose juVenile 'and adult sent~nces,
juvenile offenders and making .some juvenile records sentence juvenile offenders to the age of 25 and mcarmore accessible.
.
cerate offenders as yaung as 10. The current age limit is
During his campaign, Taft also sought a "safe stor, 12.
·

Water line
break floods
Pomeroy's
downtown
A br~k in the main water
line on Eaa1 Main Street put
.
' water over much of
Pomeroy'a canter downtown
. block Sunday afternoon.
Praasure of the water broke ·
the concrete In'. several
places nndlng streams of
water aavaral inches Into the
· •.aJr. Traffic was diverted
through the parking lot as
street department employeea
worked live !:lours to repair
th8 ll.n e. All residents of
Pomeroy with tha exception
pf those living on Uncoln
Hill and MUlberry Heights are
aaked to boll their water
before using H for cooklnq
·
. · or drinking.

Feds·to·oki·ng at health of Paducah workers
WASHINGTON (AP)- Workers at an Energy Department uranium-enrichment plant in Ken- .
'tucky will be subjec.ts of a 111edical review following published allegations that thousands of
employees were unwittingl,y exP&lt;Jsed to plutoniurn'and other highly radioactive metals.
.
Energy Secrela!f Bill Richardson said Sunday, '
that he''ordered the immediate study of current
workers at the Paducah Gaseotis Diffusion Plant
and a study of workers' m!ldical history since_ the
1950s as additions to a program·already monitoring the. health of some former employees.

Richardson's aftnouncement followed a report. threat to public,health, worker safety or the envi in Sunday's Washington Post .that the Paducah· ronmenl, he added.
,
case differed from other nuclear contamination
Unsuspecting workers inhaled the more danin~idents because workers there .did not know ' gerous radiation in the form of plutonium-laced
.they were handling plutonium. lnstea&lt;:l, .they · d.usl brought into the plant for 23 years, beginning
'thought they wer~ dealing only with much less- . in the mid-1950s, as part of a government experi potent ~,ranium, which they were enriching for ment to recycle useo nuclear reactor fuel.
commercial nuclear fuel ;'the newspaper" said.
. "You wouldn ' t. know how my husbandsuf·.
"We. owe a·great debt Ia the workfon;e al Pad· . fered," Clara Hardtng told The Couner-Journal of ·
ucah, and we are fully investigating these issues," Louisville, Ky ..Her husband , Joe, die~ in .1980 of
RiChard.son said in a statement. An inspection . illnesses·he contended .were related to hJs expoteam sent to the plant in June· found no imminent sure to radiation at 'the plant.

Entries up for . ·
Meigs Fair's ·

open cor,npetition

Entries in the open class competi·
·. tioh, at the Meigs County Fair were
. WASHINGTON (AP)- Con- ,
expected to be down this year due to ·
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . gressional Republicans say they'r~
the drougqt's effect on the growing ·
w.illing to fund the government ill
.season.
1 Section • 10 Pages
current levels· for as·much"' a year
Hu.t .to the surprise of fair offi·
until a budget agi;eemerit can bC
1
cials,
the final figures a\ Saturday's
worked out, but they plan to pres;
entry
deadline showed 1!11 increase
Calendar
10
~ure President Clinton.into signing
of
604making the tolal number
6-8
their $792 billion tal( cut package.
Classilleds
of entries for the 1999 fair the •high·
. Comics
9
Ointon, meanwhile, .b&amp;'ihed the
est of the decade. In 1998 entries
_Er;d!!!i!!!tou:ri!l!&amp;tels'----&amp;2.,.
· - I · GOP lax all in a speech Sunday to
totaled 2,149; this year they total
Local
•. 3
the nation's governors, saying the
· ..
.... ,..,;'('
. 2,753. .
'
.
pro,n;al would automatically trigger
The lhree categories, hay, nower&gt;
Soorts
4&amp;5
billions of dollars in .cuts to Medicare,
and
farm crops, all expected io be
,.,
Weather
3
veterans .00 other programs.
down, 'were up.·
. GOP leaders made clear they
!'ina! figures showed 911 entries
·
Lotteries
would be willing to continue to
in l,he tWo flower shOws, the first
fund the government at current
REGISTERING ENTRIES ~ Aaron Sayre oh'·.Chapinan, l~ft, and Kelly Connolly, assistants In
one to be held on Monday, Aug: 16
omo
.
levels
for
as long as a year while
Racine,
longtime exhibitor at . the fair, was the Meigs ,pounty Fair Board office. ·
Pick 3: 6-6-8; Pick 4: 6-0-3-6
and the second · on Thursday, Aug.
an
agreement
dm
be
worked
out.
assisted
in registering his entries by Rachel
Super Lotto: 2-8-12-25-32-35
19; 517 in farm crops, and 25 in the
"That's the way to avoid a train
&gt; Other categories with their num ·
Little· Miss and Mister Meigs participate in the pretty baby ·contest
Kicker: 2-9-2· 1-5-2
hay show..
wreck,"
·
Seilate
Majority
Leader
·
ber
'bf
entries
were
draft
horses;
49;
County
entries totaled 24, with the sched uled for 9 a.m. on Saturday,
·W.)'A.
Baking and canning also 1 took a
Trent Lott said Sunqay on ABC's ·
·
76
beef
35
·
sh
.eep
4·
poultrv
selection
to be made at 9 a.m . on Aug. 21, the final day of. the fair.
.•
Daily 3: 3-4-1: Daily 4: 7-3-3-9
giant leap; from 315 last year to 436 d.alfy, ; · , , . . . ,
to
a
possi·
"This
Week,"
alluding
28;
doll)estic
arts,
!98;
painti
g,49;
Monday,
Aug.
16, the opening. day Both events will be.held on the 'Hill
0 IIJ99 Ohio Valky. J;l'l1blishing Co.
0
this year, as did photography. from
·
ble shutdownc
·
Grange, 4; antique display, 100.
. of· the fair, while SO registered to 'Stage.
157 in 1998 to 217this year.

Today's Sentinel

104

lntro to Biology
. Eng. Comp. I

JOt

102.
303 '

Eng Comp.H
.
~p~lach. Ftc/Poe

142

USIC Apprec.
Beginreing Go lf
Teac hi ngs of Jesus

.141
304

227

wmu.:Hin

4
3
3
3
3
I

5:00PM
BUS
6:30PM · BUS
4:00.PM . COM
6'JO PM
MAT
4:00 PM
' EME
5:00PM
EME
6:30PM
EME

3

. 4· "
Huma-n Anatom y
3 .
Uus &amp; Pro Co mm
History 3n.l World
3
lnt S..:ien..:e
4'
College Alg&lt;;bra
3
Nut Assess. lndividJ · J .
General Psychology
3
Intra 10 Sociology
3
Prob. Multi Society
3

.207
. 208

282
123
'219
201
200
207

Ibutldat:
BUS
cr

4:00PM .
' ~:30 PM
4:00 PM
6:30PM
6:30PM
4:00PM
. 6:30PM

MAT
MAT
OT

108
201
095 .
145
l;lll
120L
121

Accounting for Bus.
Human Relations
Oevel~ . Writing
Tech. a.th I
. Parame(Jic I
Paramedic Lab .
Paramedic II

279
101
096
11 5
265

3
' 3
3
3

8
2

2

Advert/Meroh/Sales
Fund. Of Comp Tech
Developme ntal Math
Btisiness Math
Office Prqc/Praclices

3
3
4
3

3.

Sa1ulllu .
BUS

6: 30P~

·~

MIS

Hurnan D~:vdopment
Level I Clinicaf
World Geo Problems .
Beginning Golf
PE tn Elem. Schools
Amer Nat n'l Gov

2t5
227

~·
3 19
319
201
311
2:i5

Prin. of Accou nting
Human Anatoniy
Fund. of Speefh
World/Rise of West
American History 1877
N11r Assess. lndi vid. II.
ln tro to Ph ilosophy
Child Development
Intra to Safety Ed.

. 6:30 PM
6:30PM
6:30 PM

3
0
3

TBA

6:30PM
5:00 PM
· 6:30 PM
6:30PM

1
J
3

3
4
3

3
.~

4

3
3
3

I

6:30PM
4:00. PM ;c
6:30PM
4:00 PM
6·30 PM
4:00PM
6:30PM
, 6:30PM
630 PM

3

Qcncral Chemistry
lnt _Science L.ab

-

6:30PM
6 :~0 PM
4:00PM
5:00PM
6}0 PM ·

Coop Work Experience 3

6:30 p

Comp &amp; Data Process 3
Prin_ Of Micro
J

6:30PM
6:30PM
.5:00PM
6:30PM
~:00 PM '
5:00PM
TBA

10:00 AM
10:00 AM

Coygglipp Pmpram
CR 602 Introduction to Exceplicnal ~hildren
. 3 hrs
Mo 0day 6:00-9:00 PM VC 102
CR 600 Professional [ndentiry
1 hr And
CR 603 Counseling Theories
3 hrs Bot~ will be offered on
Friday evening and Saturday four times (August 27/28, September
October 1~ and 29/30. Friday at 5:30PM and Saturday ~:30AM)
Specjal E&lt;Jyqtion Progrwm
.
Cl 520
Introduction to Exceptional Children
3 hrs Monda y 6:00·9:00 PM
Cl 533
Introduction to the Mentally Retarded
~
3 hrs Tuesda y 6:00·9;00 PM ·

'

After Hours·
Pediatric Care

RCJ.djpg Program

CJ 654.
Spe~ial Topics ~ReadiAg Diagonostics and Correction o(
Reading Difficulty Part 2 (m .old catalog Cl 5ij0)
3 hrs · W~dnesday 6:00-9:00 PM

'

.'

Commygjb and Trrbjplrol College

• Hours:

Profqdgpal Derel9pmen1 Couaes·

226
095
231
120
120L
121

Comrnvfical Papers
Deve lop . Writing
Tech Report Wnting

·2

6:30PM
5:00PM
6:30PM
6:00PM
5:00PM
TBA

233

Pcrsonn'ei Mgt ,
~
Dcvclopnlenta[ Math
4
Business Math
3
Adv. Word Proce-ssiog 3
Medical Terminology 3

6:30 PM
4:00 PM
5:00PM
6:30PM
6:30 PM

096
115
OT
OT

· 237
't51

Paramedic I

Para medic Lab
Parametic II

c::

3
~

3

8
2

..

All co urses .in this section are listed as CI 461 or CI 561.
· AIMS
Activities Intergrating Math and Science
3 hrs Thursday· 4:30PM
COMPUTER POTPOURRI - Basic activities in word processing,
Spreadsheels, desktop publishing, and powerpoint.
. 3 hrs Thesday · 5:00 PM
·
Rcfurri to Industry II Visjts to lndustry(Rese;arching ski lls needed
for entry into job market.
3 hrs 1\Jesda • 5:00PM

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

·

MU Mid-Ohio Valley Center
.
Peoples Banking &amp; Trust
North Branch Building .
Point
WV

I

The Children's Clinic
2801 Jackson Avenue
Point Ple~ant, WV 25550

Sunday
'
1 p.m, to 7 p.m.

. 2313 Jackson A•e.

304~675-2627

Sat~.trday

9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

. Clme• 8esln Aue11t 2f, 19!9 "' .

You must pr.e-regiJiler for each class!! . .
, For more information please
call our office.

-

. '(

•

Smith appointed to Meigs
County- Board of Health
POMEROY-Scott Smith, D.O.
of Holzer Oinic/Meigs Branch, has
been appointed to the Meigs County
· Board of Health. . '
.
Dr. Smith, who is board certi fled
in family practice by the Board of
Osteopathic Medicine, · fills . the ·
unexpired term of Khawaja Rah·
man, MD, who resigned in March,
1.998. Smith's term will conclude in
March of 2002 .
Jon D. Jacobs, registered sanitarian, deputy health commissioner,
administrator of Ihe Meigs County
Health Departmenl and secretary to
the Board of Health, administered
the oath of office to Dr. Smith dur·
ing the Board of Health's recent.
Smith joins other board mem-

'

In a general health district,
like Meigs, County, Board of
Health Members are selected
through nomination by the
District Advisory Council at
its annual meeting in March.
bers, Gene Jeffers, president; ·Jim
Clifford, Jr., vice president; Joann
Crisp, and Ann .Barrett. The fi•e
year terms of hoard members are
staggered so only one member is
appointed eacli year. By law, one of
the Board of Health members must
be a physician.
In a general health district, like
Meigs County, Board of He4lth
' '

•

Members are selected through nom·
ination by the District Advisory
Council at its annual meeting in
March, This body is composed of
the chief executive of each village
and lhe chairman of .the Board of
Tru.stees of each \ownship ~Within Ihe
'
county.
'
Th~ Meigs County Board of
Health, established in 1920, is a policy making hody. The Board through .
the Health DepartflJent has offered
and coordinated· its services on a 1.0
mill levy since 1982. As a result, the
agency has expanded its community
BOARD OF HEALTH - Scott Smith, D.O., . president, pictured left to right, and J.oann
services and program ·offerings
second
from left is a new member on the Meigs Crisp who was not present for the meeting
· through grant monies through stale .
and federai grar.ts, and. private and County Board of Health. He joins Gene Jeffers, when this photograph was .t aken • .
president; Ann Barrett, Jim Clifford, Jr., vice
public organizations.

I

.,
r

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\
•w - • ·· -

·- - - -- ·· ·- -- ·-

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·---------------------------~~-----

·'

I.

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