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Page 12 • The Dally Sentinel
Friday, June 4, 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio
..
(
Along the River
Five Meigs graduates receive Crovv-Karr memorial scholarships
Inside
State
track
meet
results
The Crow-Karr Memorial Scholarship winners awarded in memory
of Fred W. Crow, Jr. and Eleanor·
Karr Crow, have been anno~nced by
theor three choldren, Linda, Rick and
Carson.
The scholarships are available to
de scendants ef members of the six
Meigs County se rvi ce organi ~ations.
·
Scholarships have been awarded
to:
Valerie Karr, whose grandfather,
Paul R Karr, ·served in the U.S.
Marines in World War II in Guam
and Iwo Jima in Combat Intelli-
1·
tmts
in the Arm y in Vietnam .in the
infantry ;. whose paternal grand father. Henry E. Cleland . served in the
Army in World War II in the Philip·
pines and New Guinea, where he
was
I
Ohio Valley Publi sh in g Co.
VALERIE KARR
whose maternal grandfather. Don·
aid Roush, served in the Air Force
in World War II , where he worked
on airp lanes and loaded bombs :
whose great- gra ndfat her, Walter .
Helmi ck, was a cook in the Spanish·
wit h Genera l MacArthur·· American War; and
w tios~
g reat ·
'
Rota~y
BRIDGET 'VAUGHAN
great-grandfat her. Henry Cass Cleland, was in the Civi l War as an II ·
year-old dcummer boy hefore h~ing
wounded and captured as a pri ~·il ) nc r
of war confined to And erson ville
TRENTON CLELAND
ther, Delbert A Smith, served in the
U.S. Army in World War II in German y and France and was awarded
the Good .Condu ct Medal and a
Bronze Star:
Jennifer LaV{rence, .whose great-
Pri son;
grandfat her, Orvi lle A.· Crooks, of
Je ss ica R Sol)ith, wh ose grandfa -
discusses organ transplants ·
capacity. She finally collapsed and
would have died, but now wi th a
new heart and some medication she
li ves a fairly n.ormal life.
When Carolyn liad her hean
transplant, $ 10,000 was raised !\!c al·
.ly to help with expe nses . Thi s
money has now been spent and was
used entirely for medications.
Brianna Abbott of LifeLine of
Ohio also spoke on the iri1portance
of volunteering to be an organ and
tissue donor in the event that persons, through accidents, should die
or be declared brain dead:
There are 63,000 persons on the
waiting list for organ or tissue dona·
lion, she said. Thirteen people die
every day waiting for a transplanr.
Bill Knight was a guest from the
.Point Pleasant Club and rhe meal
·· was served by the women of rhe
Heath United Methodi st Ch urch.
JENNIFER LAWRENCE
JESSICA SMITH .
Syracuse, served in the U.S. Army
in World War I, and whose grandfather, John Crooks, served in the
Army in World War II and was
awarded the Purple. Heart.
The commillee, in additi ory tb
being impressed with the academ i'c
.
Racine native backing NATO plan in Kosovo
· oatmg sr ent yo t e coast o t ong 1 erent rom t e rest o my
ugoslavia in the Adriatic Sea is friends." Grindley said. "Televihc largesl nava l force assembled · sion and movies about the Navy
·ince Desert Storm. The ir 'goa l is innuenced my decision to enlist.
·imple: to stop the suffer in g of at The Navy abo seemed to be more
least· 450,000 ethnic Albanians technical than the other services."
who have'becn forced )o nee their
A hull maintenance technician,
homes and loved ones in Kosovo. Grindley, 28, is a vital member of
One sailor participating in the . ·the Vella Gulf team . .
humanitarian effort is Christopher
'Tin a welder and I deal a lot
. Grindley; son of Linda Grind- with damage control. I'm the type
Icy of Rac ine. Assigned to the of person who likes to get dirty. I
•uidcd-mi ssile cruiser USS Vella also like to look at what I've
ulf, homeported in Norfolk, Va., . accomplished, especially when I
rindley and nearly 350 men and did it with my own two hands."
women on the ship recently
Currently, the guided-missile
eployed to prov ide support in the cruiser and its battle group are
war-torn Adriatic region.
operating in the Mediterranean
Grindley graduated fr om Sea in support of Operation Allied
So uthern High School in 1989, Force. The U.S. has joined 18
· nd joi ned the Navy the same year. NATO allies arid several other
"I always wanted to. tr some· nations in providing personnel,
Ko.rn. a rormer Pomeroy resident
and employee in the county title
office.
Carolyn was the recipient of a
heart transplant several years ago.
Her heart had deteriorated to only
functioning at eight percent of
FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND .AFTER THE SALE
JEI?
BBEE
Sc hoo l gy mna sium . The . Bu ilders
Qu ~rt c t
Munday . 7:30 p.m. at the Chester
courthouse for the July 16 and 17
Ches ter Shade Days celebration.
Anyone will to help, attend.
tu sin g. C hl!stcr. TUppers
Pin ons. Cuul\' illc , Recd<V ille Night
SYRACUSE '- Bible school at
the Syracuse Nazarene Church
Monday through Friday, 6 to 8:30
p.m. woth Friday sessio n at pool side.
·POM EROY_:_ Fun. food and fel· For more information contact 992luwshi p project a1 God's Neighhor· .25 14 or 992-3517.
hood Escape for Teens , Frid ay. Free
fooJ for s n a~,;king \vhdc tt..:cns al (.;e n·
REEDSVILLE . - Olive Townt~o:r. No n-vio len t video games , com·
ship Trustees, regu lar meeting, 7
putcr prog rams and .cards at L:c nter p.m .. township building, Joppa Rd.
:It's the Dealer Behmd The Deal
That Ma.kes The BEAL DiRerenoel
to be ohservdl Prc·scrv icc spcd al
mu sK hy Jame s Soul sby.
·
!ncatcd on _Main Street, Pomeroy.
Pool tahlc avai lable. Center opens at
6 p.m. and closes at 10:30 p.m. Fri·
day arid Sat urday nigl1ts.
RACINE Racine Village
Council , 7 p.m. Mond ay at the
municipal bui lding.
SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - Friends
PO MEROY - Millennia! Cru- of the Library will meet at the East·
sade for Chri st, 7 p.m. Meigs High · ern Library Monday at 7 p.m.
School gy mnasium . West Virginia
Night to be observed. Puppets with a
SYRACUSE- Sutton Township
Miss ion and Bleedi ng Soul to be Board df Trustees regular meeting
featured music.
Monday, 7:30p.m . at Syracuse.Vill!lge iiall. .
·
·
CHESTER - Chester Township
Trustees special meeting Saturday, 7 · TUESDAY
a.m. at the town hall. ·
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Neighborhood Watch meeting, 7
CHESTER - The Meogs County p.m., American Legion Annex.
Fish and Game Association's annual
childre n's fishing derby, Saturday, 8
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
.a.m., for ages 15 and under, at the Chamber of Commerce, regular lunChester club house. Luncheon will cheon meet ing, Tuesday noon.
.be served, pri zes will be awarded. Speaker, Perry Varnadoe, Meigs
Take own fishing equ ipment.
· County Economic Development.
SALEM
CENTER- · Star
POMEROY - Salisbury TownGrange 778 regular meeting , Satur- ship Trustees, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. at
day, potluck supper, 6:30 p.m. fol- . the township. hall on Rock Springs
lowed by meeting at 8 p.m. Racine Road.
·
Grange wo ll vis it. Members to · take
food bank items.
. POMEROY - Meigs Local
Board of Education regular meeting
MONDAY
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. in the Meigs
CHESTER - Pl ann ong session, High School library.
SE
Plans to se rve food and bevcr·
made when the Rock. Sprin gs Unit·
cd Methodist Women met recently
at the church.
·
Scripture f¥om Romans was read
by the president, Dorothy Jeffers
and followed by the Lord's Prayer
and UM W purpose in uni son.
Report s were give n by Norma .
Baker, secretary, Leah Ord . treasurer. and Pandora Coll in s. card
report.
Plans for becom ing a five -star .
I
group were di scussed . Ord had
pray·e r for requests made by the
group. Goeglein led devotions with
theme "Be Imitators of Christ's
.Humility" and a poem entitled "The
Power of Prayer.."
.
Jeffers had rhc program on Pentecos t reading from the' Old Testament, Exodus 23, and from the New
Testament, Act. 2, by Goeglei n. A
poem, "Tioe Perfect Church" was
read by Jeffers . Baker gave the
closing prayer. Refreshments. were
served by Jeffers and Leifheit .
.
An Albany area
man was
killeddriving
when the
pickup
truck
he was
overturned
early Saturday on . Meigs County
Road 1 (Salem School Lot), th~ Gal-
~:;;;!~~~:~.ofthcStateHighway
V6,a uto, A/C. tilt, cruise, Cass, CD, low miles
''
Priced Reduced to $14,889
r"""'"----
Good Morning
Reduced to
Tod.Y'• Cftt
•:IJPqesltwl
14 Sections • 1
Calendan
~11a1n~•
~-lg
Ji:!!lt!!Dals
AIIIDIIM Bb:a:
Ql!llllld~
!!aorta
C6&7
DH
. JDRrt
A~
~·
.Y
111:1
0 t999 Ohio Villoy l\lbl ...... Ca.
1996 FORD WIND.STAR
V6, auto, A/C, tilt, cruise, all power equipment
Price Reduced to $13,967
';
. 1997 FORD CROWN VICTORIA LX
VB, auto, Ieaiher, all power. loaded
Price Reduced to $13,876
Phone
740-992-2196
461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport
.\
' ~·
.
.
'
ronmental Protection Agency.
Eatablilhed by the EPA in 1986 for chemical manu·
facturers .nd other industries, the TRI wu e•panded to
include fOIIil-fucl burning utilities, beginning with 1998
releNCS. to be reoorted to the 'EPA by July 1. . .
Of the repm.able chemicals at illl 16 c:oal-burning
plants located in five states, AEP:
• Releued about 95.9 million pounds into the air
through plant stackll. About !10 percent of the air "'leases arc hydrochloric acid aerosol.
. • Released approximately 17.1 million pounds c:onlained in fly uh. bottom ash, boiler slag or flue. gas
.-
........•
-
•
•
Kevin M. Shaner, 21, 41975'
School Lot Road, died ·in the 2:55 By KEVIN KELLy
a.m. accident one-tenth of a mile 1lmM-8entln-' Bt11t1
south of Columbia TownshipJtoad 3
GALLIPOLIS -A forum the Gallipolis eity soliei·
Jones),
8ccording
to
the
patrol.
,,_
•
tor'i-office
c:om!lacted last week with lOcal men:han.ts
(
' qtay lead to more suCcessful prosecution 'of fraud and
Troopers said Shaner wu south· · other crimes c:ommilled against the businesses,· .a rnem·
bound when his pickup went off the her of the office's staff sAid.
right side of the road and struck a
Assistant Solie! tor Margaret Evans said the forum at
ditch, causing it to overturn several the GaiQpolii Munic.ipal courtroom was held not only to
times before coming to rest on. its brief mcrch•!l on how to provide the evidence needed
top. Shaner was ejected from the
-.-~
~"'"'ul·~alsn:ll)t
. velllcle, Cttil\lln" to1llr"re-. · ' in 'CIMI ,....~
lllll•lheft, '!'
•
,.....
hear concerns t161n the buiineu ownen.
·
Troopers said an investigation I~
continuing into the accident. and the.
. "The thing ia, we're lookina at being cleaf will! the
victim wllli released to the Bigony- merchants on what is needed," abe Aid. "We &OIIl~Fth
Jordan Funeral Home in Albany.
cr with them, discussed 91Jr ...._ and< whllf they are
·concernCd about.••·
·
It marked Meigs County's third
The forum drew over 20 merchants and the discustraffic fatality of the year and the Ilion may lead to future rneelin.,. with the businliiCI,
second in over a )Week. Overall, the
...Gallia-Meigs Post hu investigat,ed Evans and 01)' Solicitor DouaJ• COwlea, Evans Ald ..
"We were very pleued and it's clearly Worth doing
five fatality accidenl!I in its coverage again," Evans Aid. "I think it'll ntiake us better at our
area this year.
Ohio State considers
~ture~"d the mcrcbaniS bcner in dealing with this in the
1998 LINCOLN TOWN .CAR
va, auto, leather, all power equipment
4,0L, auto, A/C. cass, all power 15,000 miles
1998 MUSTANG .
Vol. 34, No. 16
burned about 108 billion pounds of
desulfurization matecoal last year to meet customer
riil: Releases reportneeds for electric service.
,
.ed in solid form were
"The U.S. EPA's 1998 report to
transported to reguCongress indicates that gene~ally,
lated landfills or suremissions from utilities - while
face impoundments
high in volume - are low in risk
managed by AEP, or L.....,rl--;_._~.::....--:L..........:::.._ _ _ _~_J to public health," Heydla11ff said.
transferred off-site to oiher regulated entities.
"Regulatory agencies set soupd, science-based limits on
·• Discharged about347,450 pounds into water. Water any release that has the potential to harm health or the
. releases were within already,regulated permissible lim- environmen~ and we comply with existing standards.
its, officials said.
"If new s!Andards on any of our TRI releases are ~t
"These are large numl\ers, larger than most other indusConUnuecl on pt~ge A2
.
Ptlce Reduced to $14,367
1997 FORD RANGER XLT SUPERCAB
Price Reduced to $13,875 .
Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· June 6, 1999
Gallia merchants,
court Offl'cl'a·ls
me·et to' ta·ckle·.
tl
I
prosecu 10n.1s...sues
COLUMBUS (AP)- Ohio State
University trustees have given pre·
liminary approval to a 6 percent
tuition rate increase for undersradu·
ales.
The board, which voted on Fri·
day, will consider final approval in
July to raise instructional and general fees to $4,110 a year for a.full·
time undergraduate student. This
year's tuition is $3,879, up 6 percent
from the year before.
Tuition would· go up 5.2 percent .
.for graduate students. Those from .
Ohio 'would pay $5,730, o::om~
with $5,445 for the curreQI year,
Room and board would increase
4.3 percent for most sludcnts living
in dormitories, to an average of
$5,142.
· ·
Fund raiser planned by Rock Springs UMW
ages at the Jacobs . aucti on were
CHESHIRE - Coal-burning plants operated by
American Electric Power - including three located in
Gallia and ·Mason counties- released a total of 113.2
million pounds of reportable chemicals Into the abnOIphere, land and water in 1998, but offieials at the
Columbus-based utility maintained that the release 'is
"low in risk" to the public. ·
.
·
·
AEP ani!.Ohio Valley Electric Corp., which operates ·
the Kyger Creek clej;lric generating plant at Cheshi,e,
· distributed information about reportable chemical
releases Friday. The totals are included in· a Toxics
Release Inventory (TRI) developed by the ·U.S. Envi· ·
raising .tuition 8 percent
V6, auto, A/C, tilt, cruise, all power
mt
w ·- ,..
.Community Calendar-FRIDAY
POMEROY - Millennia) Crusad e f<ir Chri " . 7 p.m. Meigs High
Details on
pageA2
ooal-buming utilities in the (X)unlly,
ALBANY · Christopher A. Grindley
equipment, and weapons in thi.
operation. For NATO and it
allies. this is the last resort to pro
vide eace in the re ion.
Low: 60s
AEP, OVEC ·report chemical I~-~r1~;~.~:E;2:~~if~=
=releases. f.rom power .plants
~~d~~~.~;;~:;
MeigsSaturday
man killed
In
early
accident
DISCUSS ORGAN TRANSPLANTS - Carolyn and Gaorgi Korn
are shown ~ere wit.h Rotary member Lloyd Blackwood and Brlanna
Abbott of Ltfellne of Ohio. LifeLine of Ohio is involved in securing
organ and tissue transplants. Mrs. Korn was ttie recipient of a heart
transplant several years ago.
·
The gifr that can save a life! That
would have been an appropriate ti.tle
l9r the presentation give n recentl y to
mem bers of the Middleport·
Pomeroy ·Rotary Club by Carolyn
.
accomplishments of each of the·
app li cant s, noted the c' emplary;
military records of their forbearers
in servi t:e to thei r coun try and it was ·
in their honor and ·memory that rhc
scholarshi ps were awarded.
HI:,_, 90
•
•
gence;
Bridget M. Vaughan, whose
grandfather, Leo L. Vaughan, served
in the U.S . Ann y in World War II in
England, Fra nce, Belgium and Ger·
many .in a Field Artillery Battali on;
Trenton Clelcnd . whose father,
Henry "Hank" E. Cleland Jr. , served
$1 "'
....
. .... ....
.
The initial meeting, held June I, focused mostly on
how to .prosecute and collect on bad checks, with
Cowles and Evans stressing the need for men:hants ·and
employees to request a photo idcntiftcallon, llidl as a
driver's li~:eniiC, when patrons buy with a check. ·
Although asking for such idcntiftcallon & conaidcred
an inc:orivenien~:e, Evans said havina the merchants or
their staff identify the alleged author of !he bad check is
invaluable to them in maldna a ca5c.
Men:hants, Evans explained, "ue really like the
police ~gency because they kind of control the aiblation.
It's really up to their benefit to .be uJl!lated 0J1 proc:e·
·:;____._ ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
du~ becinse those pr~urea are wh~ we rely o~
LENOINQ ASSISTANCE•~ ~ltllnt Galllpolla City Solicitor MargeNt
ev1dence. A person wnung a,check Without a posttlvc e- IW'-d a - f i l e. with Galllpolla Municipal Ju• William s.
1D can throw up some red Daga."
.
M1t11y 11 the two t1 · 11111d how • forum with local merchllntl can help
' "There are a lot of people who have been sliffed by with •acn1ful prOiecutlon of o f f - committed ~plnll the bull·
bad checks," said Municipalltjdp Willi.am S. Medley, . n•
· The forum-.. held Ju111 t In Matlly'a courtroom.
who perticipa!cd in the f~ "We l!aw a perticular ·
.· ·
·
problem with our being on ilie, border with Welt Virthe interim, "Evanl arid Cowles are available to answer questions
ginia, so men:hants bave beeil very c:oncotned about how to stem about prosecittion, and offer advice on other legal. remedies, such
the inabilil)' to c:ollect on th- bad checki."
·
u civil action.
·
. Evans Aid ll)e fclnim WIS lo ~ave covered several other iasuel;
"This really help8' the peoJile, H Medley noted ... A lot of people
including ahoplifti!llo llut the poup rari out of. time, and has are of the opinion that If they take it to court. nothing happens. But
promp!Cd.~ssi.on of holdiniJ; ~similar forum llllel' this year. In no, we're vel}' serious about clearing up those situations."
!or
Historic:Harder cabi.n may become branch library
By 8R~ J. REED ·
11mll 8antlnelatafl
RlrrLANI) - Tho, historic
Harder cabin In J\utland may
become a branch of tbe Meias
County Dtllrict Public Library after
.It ia mov:ed to the JWtland Ovic
• Center property.
The cabin .was purcl!ucd from trustees, the cabin may be converted
Cletua and NID Harder as a part of into a small branch library, if buildthe vtll~ge'a DOI;Id huard mitigation ing c:odes and other requirements
program, and will be relocated with· can·lie met.
in the month to a site near the RutLittle .-d !hal the library board is
land Ovic Center. .- · .
"very interested" in 'locating . a
· Accordina to Oouaiu Little, branch in Rutland, 11"1 said that Rutpresidonl of the library's board ' of ,land Vill11e Council hu offered the .
use of the cabin as a library location.
That proposal was discussed by
the library board during its May
meeting, at which time the board
decided to inspect the building once
it was moved to its new location.
·The inspection will be conducted
by members of the library board's
building committee, which will
determine if the cabin is appropriate
for library use. The building must
meet certain building codes and
other requirements if it is to be used
as a library location, Little said.
In addition to the main library in
Continued on 11'1118 All
Seeking signs of.battle: .Portland .site of archaeological survey
lly JIM FREEMAN
,John 'Hunt MOrptl's ~ of cavalrymen routed by two '
11maa Santlllll 8tafl
much-luger poops of Union soldiers, and Navy aunPOIITLAND- AlmOII 136 ycara after lhe Civil War boats on Ohio River.
·
.
Battle of Buffin&ton Island, little on the surface that
AlthOU&h •!!Jere ~ numero.. writteD acc:ounts of the ·
indicates a fight ever took place here in this quiet Ohio · battle, 6ndiJI& 'Where the ftghtina actually took place
River community.
rem•• 11 challenp.
·
.
·
That is why archaeologists m currently lookina
"We want to demonstrate that we can find the battle•
below the surface for tell-talc signs of combat.
,
field, • alid J>ratt.
.
'
Dr. G. Michie! Pratt, the H~idelbcrl; Collep archae·
.The teain'l' fit\ds will be plotted on c:omputer mapa in
ologist credited with redofinln~; the location of the 1794 10 etfon to .give blstoriiDI a better idea of where the
Pallen Timbers battl~fielcUn· MaumC~;, Ia conducting a aotual battle linea were located, be explained. Whenever
similar project at Portland. .
· an object IIIIPidad to bt frollllbe battle is found. It Ia
The National Park Service'a American Battlefteld Pro- recovered ancl tsgec1, and the aile Is located via the OPS
· tection l'ropam has awarded Pratt and Hcidelbefa a rcc:elver.
.,
Early last week, IIC!Iuchers were trying to determine
$40,000 grant to condUClt an oirchaeologicalliii!W)' of the
'Buffington Island Ovil War Battlefield. Pratt's survey will where the initlalllkinnilh in the battle between Confedattemptto identify and reaolve diaputes aboutlht location
Contllluecl on p11ge M
and size of key aspects of the Melp CoUnty battle.
Prau and a team of about 13 workers and volunteers,
armed with metal deteciora, shovel• and a'OPS (OIObal .
Positionina Satelltte) receiver, 1111 acouriq ~ of
the baUiefield in aiCIICh for bullOIII and other cletriiUI of
the July 19, 1863, battle which saw Confederate Oen.
\.
�..
.
PegeA2•.-
t
reportable chemicals into the air, transfer. The bulk of the reportable
1
. Coiltlnued from pege A
land and water. About 2.7 million chemical released was 2.1 million
in· the future, bued on scientific pounds each went into the air and pounds of sulfuric acid aerosol.
lltudict, we will comply with them,"
on-site land, with 9,020 pounds · Reportable releases from the
he lidded.
. In 1998, the Gavin Plant ielcucd released into the water. Of Gavin' s Kyger Creek Plant totaled 8.6 mil·
around S.S million pounds of total, 16,200 pounds went to off-site lion pounds in 1998, Plant Manager
Utilities _give early figures on coal-burning power plant releases
·· WASHINGtoN (AP)- Electric:
utilities . provided preliminary fig·
Friday on toxic c:hemical
releailcs from coal-burning power
plants, but did not include information on mercury, a cancer-causing
chemica• that bas been the subject of
~ing health concerns.
. • The Edison Electric Institute said
'ftports fro111 two-thirds of the coalburning power plants showed
3SS,OOO tons of toxic releases last
year. About two-thirds of the total .
was hydrochloric or sulfuric acid,
which pose linle direct health copl:ern when released inlo the air at
;ow concentrations.
, The Institute, which represents
lnvestor-owned utilities, also said
'he coal plants released 64,000 tons
. 1>f barium, 16,000 tons of man:ganese and 4, 700 tons of nickel.
:Most of these heavy metals were
·round in ash usually· disposed of in
.
· the ground. .
. : Beginnin,! this year, the ulilities
;must report to the Environmental
·Protection Agency toxic releases
:from coal- or oil-burning power
:plants. The EPA will include the
·information in its annual toxic
.invenlory report next year. In all,
more than 600 chemicals are covercd, but industry officials predict
their plants will be · involved with
only a few dozen.
'•. The numbers provided Friday
urea
covered only seven chemicals
becaus~ those were all that would be
required of utilities at this time
under the reporting thresholds cur·
rently in effect, said Paul Bailey,
EEl's director for environment.
Some of those thresholds; including
the one for mercury, are likely to be
reduced before the reporting is completed, however.
.
Environmentalists criticized ·the
industry group for not reporting.
· mercury releases. It is believed that
utilities account for about SO tons of
mercury emissions .annually. Mercury is a Jiersistent1oxic chemical
that is considered by many health
experts to be dangerous at even low
doses because it accumulates ·over
long periods of time in fish and in
humans.
·
The EPA dOes not require report·
ing on mercury emissions unless a
plant releases more than 25,000
pounds. However, the agency is considering lowering the threshold to 10
pounds:
..
.
Ear iter th1s week, seven northeast
utilities, breaking with the rest of the
industry, said they would f~v~r the
government sethng federal hm1ts on
mercury releases from P_Ower. plants .
as part of a program cuttmg mtrogen
oxide and sulfur emissions.
•
Bailey said release data on mercury was not included because no
plant released more than 25,000
pounds of it. making it exempt under .
the current threshold from ·Toxic
Inventory Reporting requirements.
While there may be. large
amounts of toxic chemicals released
-386 million pounds of hydrochloric acid, for example - the concen·
trations are "below levels that present a publ!c health concern," Bailey said.
The industry group provided only
aggregate numbers and no release
data from specific plants.
The group also cited an EPA
report to Congress last year that coneluded the cancer risks from power
plant releases is exceedin_gly lo~ . a chance ?f less than one tn. a mlihon
of an add1honal cancer dunng a hfe·
time.
,
But Frank 0 Donnell of the Clean
Air Trust, an e~vi~n mental .group,
accused the utli1hes of trymg to
"control the spin" on .the toxic em is·
sions iss~e and "deceive the Ameri·
can pubhc about the real .!mpact of
power comp~nr poilu lion.
EPA Admm1strator Carol Brown:
er, .meanwh1le, h~ made c[ear t~at
the :age~.cy consider~ the P'?tentlai
health nsk from pers1stent, b1oaccumulat_ive.chemicals such as mercury .
as a s1gmficant area of concern. And
the age_ncy wan!s utilities to provide
more mformahon·. on releases of
mercury and other toxic chemicals.
..
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i
:Phlo weather
punday, June 6
..
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i
'~
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'
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l•~na~t•ld
1114'188' I •
'' .
•llllcliltld Rllll
•Fr•ll:tlv..._
~:
•lflllllttp
•NI CUII'Ictl
•TalfNITICh
..,.rt-AVIIIIIII
·24!7
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E
T
·.
•AdtiiUonll Emilia
l'DIII Up IICCIII
•WHHIIIIDI
•Uttlltlltad AI:CIII ·
•llvllllltlll II Jaclt•n .
1111 ••• Cotlllllll
I-IOfHZI-64§0
·
sz Years Yowig! ·
2r/a Off on AU Summer Lingerie & Robes
% Off ALL Bathing Suits (Janz~~"· Tommy Hllflger)
·113 OffJU,£ Summtr 'Drusu
25% Off ALL Alfred Dunner
211'/• ~ 21'/• Off ALL JIIIIID Sportswear .·
'
I
'
1/Z 011 ALL Summer Jackets (Great Buys)
Coriie Celebmte Our !Anniversary
!i
!
.
All~
Flullles
'
,.
$15
$ 20
·
lee
·
... , .. fill,,..
Southeast Ohio zone forecast
Sun...y: Partly cloudy and hot. Highs near 90.
.Extended forecast
Suadlly oigbt: Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower and mid 60s.
Moa...y: Partly cloudy. Highs 85 to 90.·
_,. 1\aetcllly: Partly cloudy. Lows 60 to 65 and highs in the mid and upper
80s.
.
Wedaesday: Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower and mid 60s and highs in
the mid and upper 80s. ·
$
25
r.
~r-----------------------------------~~
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~i2.:
Community Ncwapepn- Holdings, INC.
Published every Sunday, 82S Third Ave., OallipoII~ Ohio by !he Ohio Volley Publilhins Complny.
O.r . . ce.c:era 111 all ltorlel ll to be · Second cta.u posllae p~id at Gallipolia, Ohio
.;.;;;;.,;.,..: U J• ...., .r • enar 111 1 45631 . Ente~ u second cl•mailina matter at
Pomeroy, Oh1o POI1 Office.
IIIIJ,
...
lk - - - M: Golllpotlo: M ' 11 Tho
Praa and !he Ohio
('MI) ...
(140) m-
.. uaw. ... - ,.................
~
.Suadl)l 11met·Semiael, 82S Third Ave., Glllipotis, Ohio 4$631.
.
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d •lfWUTMied.
•
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M'""' Rooto
One W..k....................... ;.........
1
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St.~
· CGII Todaylll
446-4367
or 1·800·214·0452
..
:16 -·-·-·······-......SS3.1l
521Nieb ..........................-sto:s.56
--a-~
13 - - ...................... "---Slt.l5 '
2lli .............- •••, ...........J56.61
52 lllleeb·......................... Jitl!l.72
_.. __ _
•
,
Huffman, .Long Bottom, failure :t<f
control, $30 plus costs; William ·1.
Aaisig, Pomeroy, failure to yield, $20
plus costs; seal belt, $25 plus cost&;
Ronald V. Jones, Racine. DUI, $8W
plus costs, 10 day~ jail suspende4,'
one year probation, jail and $550 Sll&;
pended upon completion of residcn•
tial treatment program school withi.ll
90 days: Bette J. Hili, Racine. rcclfr
less operation, $100 plus costs; left of
center, costs only; possession, ~50
plus costs.
• •·
'I( you're 50 .·.
older, you're
in the mOQ.ey!.
140-441-2151
Anderson, 22. and Brandy Nicole
Ro'usb, 22, both of Racine:
·---~--------.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;i;;;;;i;;;;;i;;;ji;i;iiiij;iiiii;iiiii;iiiii;iiiii;iiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii....."
'
ftJ aur llaluell
customers.•• •
As part of our commitment to serving the Gallipolis
community, we are expanding our banking 'office at 500 3rd
Avenue. When the expansion is completed; ·the Gallipolis
office will be approximately twice as large, With more lobby
space, more convenient access and parking, night deposit
service, 11 24-hour ATM. and much more.
·
. ·
,.,
14
. f.,
.)
.. l .!
~.
'.
.
'.
We have already cleared the land next to our facility for
additional parking spaces, Now, the next phase Is urideJWIIY -~
the expansion and remodeling of the building itself.
I
'I
•
•
OAK HILL
BANKS
Banking In Your Best.lnterut
Thursday
500 3rd Ave., Gallipolis, 446-0315
wireless
that works. .. .
for you ·
Friday
•
'
•
•
We appreciate your patience and understanding as we expand
·
our Gallipolis office. Thank you for yoU{ patronage.
Ill
Wednesday Accounting 111
ptD1es lit lkOidilioiiM.
Rite pilr1 mirlltll all! lool pMk mlllMs.
Toll. and
induded
,.
• .
s
Monday
.
""'...............
..,n.lring not
CELLUlAR
..
.
~.vv
-~c-,.
. 13 Weeb. ...........................J27.JO
(d
three
CLASSES
Tul8day
MAI~V~N
'
r
During this phase, we must temporarily close our drive-in
· lane. We anticipate that the work will take about a month to
complete, after which the drive-In will reopen.
.
?
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fOr
•
b
• I
BINGLE COPY PRICE
. . -...
•
iC!
B
N
M'ddl
. ret:
ewsos;~ I 1 epo ~nmm~l tresp~ed 4 ;('costs, 30
ays.Ja• suspe . h 10he M oursCoucommuntty serv1ce wu t
e1gs
nl Sherifrs Office ·one ear rohlJn i
Y P . .
lion, restramong order tssued;_ DanielA
J. Murphy. Long Bottom, fa1iure te:
control. $30 plus costs; Gregory A .
Loomis, Punta Gorda, Aa., speed, E. Batey, Middleport, domestic Vl~s30 plus costs; Ladonna J. Se.arles, lence, $200 plus costs. 90 days Jail
Rutland , speed, . $30 plus costs; suspen_dep to L~o. days, .tw_o years
Ramon A. Trujillo; Rutland. seat probatton, restraJmng order 1ssued;
belt, s25 pius costs; Trevor l HarriAmy J. Molden, Columb~s.' DUI,
son, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; $850 plus costs, 10 days Jail susLinda L. Hoffman. Gallipolis. speed, pended to
days, 9<klay OL sus·
s30 plus'costs; James P. De Weese Jr., ~nsaon, Jatl. and $550 su~pended
New Haven, speed. 30 plus costs: upon completion of ~es1denttal treat·
Clark R. Miller, Marionville, Pa., foi - · ment program Wl~m 90 days, one
lowing to closely: $20 plus costs;
year probation; failure to control,
Michael P. King, Dunbar. W.Va.; costs. only; ~ossesswn, $SO pl~s
speed, $30 plus costs; Boyd C. S•d' cos_ts. possesston of drug parapherwell Jr.• Coolville, no F.U.T. decal, naha,.$75 plus costs, three days _Jill
$30. plus costs: Dale M. .Elwell, concurrent ~1th DUI; ~atn~1a
Strongsville; speed, $30 plus costs; Reynolds, .M1ddleport, contnbullng
Carmen E. Le Port, Lesage, W.Va.. to lh~ ~ehnquency of a mmor, 3~
speed, $30 plus costs; Robert E. Del- days Jad suspended to seven days ,
ligatti, Parkersburg, speed, $30 plus Sheryl T1emyer, Middleport, fadure
costs; Demetrius J. Mayfield. Char· to control, $100 plus costs; Charles
•
lotte, N.C., failure to control , $20 R. Grubbs, Pomeroy, dotl\esttc VIO· .
'·
you
;insure
plus costs; Roberts. Fasig, Lakeville, lence, costs, 10 days jail s~spended
failure to maintain assured clear dis- to one day, one-year probatton:
home with us,
tance, $20 plus costs; Matthew W.
Michael E. 'Jackson, Pomeroy,
thnlugh AUto-Owners
Marcinko, Long Bottom, speed, $30 sexual•mpos1tton, costs. 60 days .Jail
plus costs; Tabatha D. McDade, suspended to 30, two years probatton,
Insurance O:Jmpany, we11 save
Shade, speed, $30 plus costs; Sievie restraining order issued: Kenneth F.
you money! Statistics show
J.' McQueen, New Philadelphia, Mitchell, Langsville, DUI, $1,000
speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt. $25 plus costs, two'year OL suspension,
your age group experiences
plus costs;
·
one-year jail suspended to 90 days
James D. Bigerton, Carroll. speed, jail. 180-dayvehide immobilization,
fewe~ less-cosdy
$30 pius costs; Richard J. Kessler, two years probation; driving under
losses,
Bremen, no registration certificate for FRAsusl?"ns1on, $200 plus costs, s1x
allowing
commercial semi, $20 plus costs ; months Jail suspended to 90 days
<'
William F. Hutchison, Albany, speed, concurrent, two years probatiOn; seat
us to
$30 plus costs; Jason G. Quively, bell, $25 plus costs; Vmcent K.
pass the ·
Pomeroy, failure to maintain assured Stone, M1ddlepon, DUI, $1 ,()()()plus
clear distance. $20 plus costs; Tony costs. s1x months Jill suspended to 30
savings
R. Clonch, Racme. speed, $30 pius days, two-ye~ OL suspenswn, two
on to you.
costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs; Robert years probat1on, 180-day veh1cle
R, Darst, Cheshire, no turn signal. tmmob•l•zatJOn; drmng under FR!- I.(:Onttact our agency •
$20 plus costs· Randall ' L Carl suspe:stonj $ 500 gl~s co;~·d SIX
today fur a customized ·
Pomeroy failure' to maintain ~sured mont s Jill stuhspeDUnl et to ·
ays
. '
concurren w1 · . , wo years pro·
proposal on your homeowners
clear distance, $20 pius costs; Steven bation;
C. Boso. Portland, failure to control,
insurance protection.
$20 plus costs;.Rf)land E. Goodwin,
Long Bottom, stop sign, $20 plus
costs: Steven L. Smith, Parkersburg,
An~RNEY
speed, $30 plus costs; James E. Park.Arllo-~lli.Auut • •
·
Ufe Home Car Buslneea
er. Long Bottom, seat belt, $25 plus
LOUIS
W.
CENNIMO
Jio'IOR,I6•uW• .
costs· ·
·
1-614-221-oaaa
B;adley D. Baker Kend•llville
Locel Appolntmanta in
Ind., speed, $30 pl~s c~sts; Gerald H:
INSURANCE PLUS
POmeroy & Galllpolla
Durieux, Barberton, failure to immeYeara Blnkruptcy Court
'diately tag wild 1urkey, $40 plus
AGENCIES, INC.
costs; Vaughan K. Mitchell, Middle114 C~urt
Pomeroy
port, DUI, $850 plus costs, 1o days
SlmeDay
. 992-6677
jail suspended to three days, 90-day
OL suspension. one·year probatiQO, ·
jail and $5SO suspended upon completion Qf residential treatment program within 90 days; left of center,
costs only: Russell A. Robinson.
-In the Wal*Mart Vision CenterPomeroy, domestic violence, costs.
We
provide
vision exams for all ages, tit all types of contacts,
30 days jail suspended io four days,
and diagnose and treat diseases of the eye.
·
one-year probation; Carl E. Taylor Jr.,
"Appointments
available
and
wilk-Ins
aceepted
as
time.
allowsMarion, DUI. $850 plus costs, 10
days jail suspended to three days, 9{).
Drs. Michelle & Du1ne Deeds
day OL suspension, one-year probation· failure to drive within marked
Independent Optometrists .
lane's. costs only;··
·
·
•
One Year................................... .J6!11.00 •
!t:?rAiOO·t.;·m~w;;;;;;;u;n;;~~:.,here
.
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Gregory A. Sellers, Portla~d. seat
belt. S25 plus costs; Jesse L. Mold·
en, Pomeroy, underage consump·
tion. S200 plus costs, three days jail
dd
bat.
t'l 21 years
suspen e '. pro IOn un I
.
of age; Chnstopher R. Ball, Syracuse,
speed, $23 plus costs; Jason N. Mor,
ris Pomeroy fishing·without a valid
lic~nse $40 p'Ius costs· AmyL. Slee
Shade, no front plate. $20 plus costs;
David c. Milliron, Racine, speed,
.
1
$2 9 plus costs, seat belt, : 25 pus
costs; Jere~y Hubbard, home;~~·
~~~~~~~ ~~~;~ J~~r::s:;:;d:i~~o·~~~!. ~r,e;~l~~b~,s~s~~:.:
s;a~~~u~~~~t~ ~!~:~E~~~t!~t~~~~~~i!.
JEa~:~
seal belt, $25 plus costs; Phoebe R. P
'
.Y · P
• . .
days, SI25 suspended 1f vahd OL
GALLIPOLIS- Volunteers are need~ for the 1999 R~ver Sweep slat- presented within 60 days, vehicle
ed for Saturday, June 19 along ~he shoreh~e of the Ohm River..
immobilized;· speed. SJ2 plus costs ;
The swee~, an annual event stnce .1989, ts a nauonally-recogn1~ elea~up possession of drug paraphernalia,
eventextendmg more than 3,000 m•les_along the Ohm River and mcludmg $75 pius costs; Shawna J. Daugherparts of sever~ ~butanes. ~~ s~eep IS spons~ by the Ohm ~.IVer Val- ty, Marietta. expired OL, $200 plus
ley Water Samtatton Commtss10n (ORSANCO) ~n partnership With several costs, one year probation, five days
mdustrles and b~smesses throughout the Ohto River Valley.
jail and SIOO suspended if valid OL
. Persons w~ttng to ~olunteer should call 1-800-359:3977for c~unty coor- presented within 90 days, one year
dmators and s1tes tn thm_area. Each volunteer will rece1ve a free River Sweep prpbation, vehicle immobilization;
T-shirt, and trash bags wtll be provtded by Ashland Chem1cal and Accutech.
Jeremy D. Cline, Reedsville. driving under financial responsibility
RIO GRANDE- An open house showcashig the services available al action suspensi.on.• $.200 plus costs..
the Rio Grande One-Stop Employment and Training Center operated by the f1ve days Jail and $100 suspended 11
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services has been set for We9nesday, June 16 val(d OLprese~ted· within 60 days:
from 4-7 p.m.
Patnck L. Ae1ker, Long Bottom.
Refreshments, door pri~s and demonstrations of the Internet are among DUI after underage consumptiOn,
the activities planned for the event: The center, which serves Galli a, Jack- $200 plus costs: 30-day OL suspenson, Meigs and Vinton counties, is located at 445 Buckeye Hills Road.
~ton , I0 days )ad suspended to three
For more information, contact the center at 245-9509.
days, three days Jal.l suspended upon
completion of resident,ial treatment
•
program w1thm 90 days; fadure to
GALLIPOLIS- The 1999 Little Miss and Mister Firecracker Contest control, $20 plus costs: Mark A. Fry,
Of the Gallipolis River Recreation Festival· will be Friday, July 2 at 6 p.m. Mason, W.Va., DUI, $850 plus costs,
Chiidren .aged 4. 5 and 6 are eligible to enter the contest. The master of 10 days jail suspen~ed to three days.
ceremonies will ask each child a ,question and speak briefly with the. c<,m· 90-day OL suspenso on, one year protestants. Judging will be based on personality and appearance while on stage. bation, jail and $550 suspended upon
Out-of·town judges will be used to judge the contestants. Dress for the .con- completion of residential treatment
test is c\1-'iual.
·
program within 90 days: possession,
There will be one overall boy and girl winner crowned as Little Miss and $50 plus costs:
S.M. Brown, Coolville, DUI, $850
Mister Firecracker, with a nlnnerup in each age group. There will be one 4year-old boy and girl runnerup, pne 5-year-old boy and girl runnerup, and plus costs, 10 days jail suspended to
one 6-year-old boy and girl runnerup.
three days, 90-day OL suspension,
Winners will receive a crown, sash or ribbon and trophy, as well as a free
one year probation, jail and $550 sus8-by-10 photo from th~ Image Gallery (sitting fee not included). ~un~ersup pended upon completion of residenwill receive rosette ribbons and participants will receive a winner's nbbon. · tial treatment program within 90
Entry fee for the contest is $S. Entry forms can be picked up at the Gal- days; Jason A. Childress, Racine,
lia County Chamber of Comme~e.atl6State .St., Gallipolis. All en~
· es m~st
DUI, $850 plus costs, 90 days jail
be received by June 25. Late entries w1ll be charged a $10 fee. La reg•s· suspended to 10 days, one-year OL
tratio~ and e~try number pickup will stan one hour pnor to the conte \,.at 5 suspension, two years probation, 90p.m. m the ctty park:
.
·
.
' - - day vehicle immobilization ; no OL,
The event is sponsored by the chamber, We Care Day Care and the Put $200 plus costs 90 ·days jail sus. On Shop.
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pelided to Hi d;ys concurrent with
For more information, call the chamber at 446-0596. ·
DUI; Kim Hayman, Racine, expired
OL $200 1 ·
fi d · .. ·
I.U
.
pus costs.' IVe ays Jad.
..,.,
&v
It
and S100 suspended 1f vahd OL preGALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police cited Yvonne Adams, 26, Gal- .sented within 90 days. one year P:<>lipolis Ferry, W.Va., for shoplifting on Friday, acCording to police ~cords.' bauon;
.
Ronald E. Goodwm, Long B'ot.I'
.
tom, stop s1gn, $20 plus costs; Steven
: GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis City Poli~ cited Carolyn Mays, 35, 1855 R. Hoover Jr.• Pomeroy, seat belt, $25
Summit Road, Vinton, for assured clear distance and fictitious registration plus costs: Robert R. Darst, Cheshire.
following an accident Friday on Eastern Avenue. .
.,
no turn signal, $20 plus costs; Mary
• Mays was northbound in heavy traffic, when die vehicle in ·front of her, · Ann Diamond, New Haven, W.Va.,
driyen by Pamela Callicoat, Proctorville, stopped, officers said. Mays was speed, $30 plus costs; Bradford M.
unable to stop in time and struck Callicoat's vehicle in the rear, ac~ording Anderson, Athens, speed, $30 plus
to the report.
costs; Jocelyn J. Wilson, Albany, seat
. Both vehicles were slightly damaged.
b~lt, $25 plus costs; Allen M. Nolan,
reporttt~d
Bidwell. overload, $500 plus co~rs:
· GALLIPOLIS - Thelma Balcom, 381 Buck Ridge Road, Bidwell, report- Deibert E. Flora IV, Henderson,
ed to the Gallia County Sheriff's Department that an unknown subj¢ct had W.Va., speed, S30 plus costs; Pauhne
taken a 12 speed bicycle from her back porch.
.
M. Lew•s: Parkersburg, W.Va., speed,
. . The incident is believed to have happened Thursday or Friday, and is cur- $ 30 plus costs; Clyde E. Hively Jr.,
rently under investigation.
·
Parkersburg, speed, $50 plus costs;
Ken L. Bragg, New Haven .. seat belt,
r•
I•
f,
•'
Ill
$25 plus costs; Ab1e P. S1ms, Fort
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County sheriff's deputies placed four individu- My~rs, Fla.. seat !'ell,$ 15 pius costs;
als in the Gallia County Jail Friday and early Saturday, including William Mehssa A. Colhns, Long Bottom,
L. Dickens, 19, Jackson, failure to comply with the terms ofa protection order, speed, $30 plus costs;
no operator's license, driving while under the influence and possession of
Leah 1. Hayes, Scottowp, seat belt,
4rug paraphernalia; Gary Riffle, 44, 828 Sencond Ave., Gallipolis, DUI, fail- $I 5 plus costs: Fredd1e L. Hayes Jr. ,
ure to comply with the terms of a protectiop order and no insurance; Charles Scottown, seat b~lt, $25 plus cost1;
ll. Cochran. 30, 570 Yellowtown Road, Patriot, two counts of failure to appear,
DUJ and operating under suspension; and Jackie N. Hunt, 50, 3076 Garners
ford Road, Thurman, DUI. .
POMEROY - 'The following
couples were issued marriage licenses recently in the Meigs County Probate Court of Judge Robert Buck:
'
. POMEROY-UnitsoftheMeigs
3:24p.m., Salem Street, Kenny
Christopher Scott Newell, 29,
County Emergency Medical Service Wiggins, treated at the scene, Ce~tral Long Bottom, and Jamie Dawn
recorded six calls for assistance Fri- Dispatch squad assisted.
Ervin, 20, Pomeroy; David' Alan
day. Units responding included:
Bates, 35, and Susan Kay Carl, 27,
CENTRAL DISPATCH
P4ul Simon and Art Garfunkel both of Pomeroy: Roger Lee Atkins,
12:1 2 p.m., Holzer Meigs Clinic, won the Grammy Award for best 44, and Sandra Kay Frazier, 48, both .
Pomeroy, Plltticia Wehrung, Holzer single recording in 1968 for "Mrs. of Pomeroy;' Curtis Lee Jeffer~. 19,
Medical Center, Pomeroy squad Robinson," and again iri. 1970 for Pomeroy, and Keliie Dawn White,
assisted;
" Bridge Over Troubled 'Yater."
I 9,
Bottom; Brian Alfred
7:46 p:m., South Second Avenue, . ·I~~.~i:~E=~G::r:;;:;::::~::;:~;::"'""...l
Middleport, Dottie Sizemore. Veter·
N
BU...EY S
ans Memorial Hospital;
U.T'I'~G <:~B
8:52 p.m., Middleport Police
_ summer HoureDepartment, Doug Lowery, treated at
Mon- Fri.
the scene.
12:00 noon- 10:00 pm
. RUTLAND
Saturday, • Sunday
10:58 a.m .• State Route 124,
10:00 am- 10:00 pm
Melissa Fife, VMH;
TEAM RATES
II :06. a.m., volunteer fire departAlso fast pitch softball
ment to SR 143, structure fire/brush
General
Perk .
fire, Bobby Arnold owner, no injuries .
reported; ·
0156
to deputies .
l
FREE ActivatiOn
~~only$7·
stiNDAY ONLY
No
home e~rrier ""'"" ila•ail.bll.
The Suodoy n...s..unot wltiiiOl be ~
ble for JdVIIKl8 ..flJ'MiatiiMde 10 c:atritl'l.
·
,..bllsheo ,_...,,be rip 10 lldjult _,durin&
llloRbecrlpllon period. -.~on
..., be l l l l p i - by ........,. tbo clulllloo of
... llil>oc:riplioll.
.
50
stop sign, $20 plus costs; Kala C.
Clark, Mt. Pleasant, S.C., speed . $35
plus costs; Tammy S. Gardner, Bel·
pre. speed. $30 plus costs: Mary L
M
B1
ed $30 1
.
oore. e pre, spe '
p ~·costs,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Tonya M.
Gcis. Lakewood. speed, $30 plus
costs· Gregory L Carney Lancaster
speed' $30 plus c.osts· Jan' et s· Mor:
ed $
t.
1 R .
1
~,'· d acFmFe. speh ' .,. 30dp ufs.,cos tos.
va 1 en . arn am, 101e o. at ure
control, $30 plus costs;
Jeremy D. Bickerstaff, Columbus.
$25 Pre-paid phol)l! card and '
SUIISCiuPrtONRATES
11J C.nlor or
~h;~i~~~;m,;:J;drf~~CRl~;i s:~ep
.
Meigs EMS units answer 6 calls
\ {I '"I • '
(VSPS5l5-HO)
-te<l
,.._,_lion.
, .. ----ionatoThe
CENTERVILLE -The Raccoon Township Neighborhood Watch will
POMEROY - The following
cases were resolved recently in the
Meigs County Court of Judge Patrick
H O'Brien
·
·
Fined were: Russell Gilbert, New
Haven W Va drivin unde the
'nfl e •·e $8
Ius c~st 10rd
~ .1u nc ' d d P hr d s, 90-~ys
Jat suspen ~ to 1 ee ays,
ay
operator's license suspens1on, one
b t'
.. 1 d $550
yeardedpro a •on, Jat .~n f .dsuspen
upon comp1cuon o rcs1 en·
tial treatment program within 90
days; Lonnie K. Prater, Galloway,
Court issues marriage licenses
150 ceUular minutes
180 digital minutes~
You own the phone. ..
Correctlon Polley
:ua, ., .......,,
70 ceUular minutes
120 digital minutes ·
PrepaJd CeUular
is tt.e Perfed: Gift :
for Dad!
' By The Aleoc:illed Prua
The National Weather Service says an area of high pressure centered over
r. the mid-Atlantic states extends west into the Ohio Valley and the Great
" Lakes. Southwest flow developing across the area will bring increasing tern~ perature and humidity to Ohio. ·
::
liO ceUular minutes
80 digital minutes
on rate plans of $20 and higher
-~~ Higher temperature, humidity forecast
i.~
·RB(:COOn Neighborhood Watch to meet
. rour J"BI"'ed by Gsll''a she•r"ff's o"r"ce
untiiNO¥ember1999
Sun...y: Partly to mostly.sunny and warm. A chance of a morning thunderstorms northeast. Highs in the middle 80s to lower 90s.
·
Extended forecast
. Suo...y olgbt: Fair. Lows in the ~li' Monday: Hot and humid. Highs in the middle 80s to lower 90s.
~
1\aelday: Fair. Lows in the 60s. Highs in the !lliddle 80s to the lower 90s.
:•
Wednelday: Fair. lows in the 60s. Highs in the middle 80s to lower 90s.
Render Services
.
Bicycle theft
FREE Weekends
National Weather Service forecast for Ohio
.......
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Citation Issued in Galllrtol/s crash
"
Rate Plans
Snow
Free Immunizations slated Monday
A,e·a oman cl"...d' •or shopll"ftr"ng
300 Second Ave.
0 11MhxuW...,_, Inc.
ShDWOill T·l1olma
CROWN CITY -Ali Ohio Township roads will be treated for dust con· trol on Monday the township trustees announced
•
'
·
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GALI:IPOLIS- The Gallia County Health Department will provide free
immunizations on Monday from 6-7 p.m. at the Rite-Aid Pharmacy in GalUpoUs.
.
.
. · . .
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Children m .need of •mmun1zattons mus.t be accompanted by a parent or
legal guardian, and bring a current immunization record with them.
•
KY.
Cloudy
d
fOB I
:Little Mlss/Mr. Firecracker contest set
·another tie this year••
0~·*· ~-·
• OhJ0 7iWp.
.
SBt 10f .
.Job center slates open house for June 16
If they get me
Sunny Pt. Cloudy
DUS t COn tf0I
water and 1,051 pounds to off-sit~
Ralph Amburgey said, adding that million pounds of coal last year.
Reportable chemical releases transfer. Hydrochloric acid aerosol
about 7.6 million pounds were
released into the air through its from AEP's Sporn and Mountaineer apin ai:counted for most of the
stack. lust over 80 percent of the air plants in New Haven, W.Va., for reportable chemical release at 7.3
release was hydrochloric acid 1998 totaled about 6.1 million and million pounds.
aerosol.
9.1 million pounds, respectively,
AEP also reported that its merAmburgey noted that approxi- according to the TRI.
cury releases for the first quarter .of
mately 1 million pounds were conSporn released about 5 million 1999 totaled just over 13,00\J
tained in fly ash and boiler slag pounds into the air, around 1 million pounds . Approximately 9,000
material released in solid form to pounds to the land on-site, 1,906 . pounds were released into the
regulated treatment mounds, An pounds into water and 184 pounds to . atmosphere, 4,000 pounds to. land,
additional amount of the material off-site transfer. Hydrocholoric acid· 260 pounds to off-site transfer a!'d
was used as a· substitute for other aerosol accounted for the bulk of 14 pounds to water. .
raw materials and the manufacture the diseharge at about 4 million
pounds.
of blasting grit.
·
The amount of mercury released
The Mountaineer Plant released a was not sulficient to be listed on the
About 15,060 pounds were discharged into water, which were Iotal of just over 8 million pounds TRI, but AEP reported the total from
within permissible limits, Amburgey into the air, 1.1 million pounds to the information obtained by sampling
'
said. Overall, the plant burned 5.9 land on-site, 4,421 pounds into ·the coal delivered to its plants.
. ... . .
u l!t.n-JI tialel• Page A3
- Tri-County Briefs:- Cases concluded .in Meigs County Court ;
·~EP, OVEC report chemical releases from power plants
·•
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Sunday, June 6, 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
••
~u
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Sunday, June 6, 1999
'·
'·
�..
·,.Comtnentary
..• ~unb~ ~imes- ~eattinel
..
'Uuz!J(Isftd in
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.
825 Third
~1
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1966
Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio
740 440 2342 • FIX: 44&-3008
·-·.• '
....
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111 Court StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
740-002-2158 • Fex: 11112-2157
r
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Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllher
·-..•..•
.......
,.
.....• '
Diane Hill
Controller
PageM
'
Sunday, June II, 1111!11
Accountability is surely necess.ary
By ROBERT WEEDY
on
data seven warheads, including every current- office of intelligence, that his concerns were dislsn 't the timing of the "news"
ly deployed !hermonuclear warhead in the ·u. S. misSed as the views of "Cold War warriors". He
interesting? Just as we 'Prepared
ballistic missile arsenal. Oassified design infor- raised these concerns in 1995.
to honor those who gave their
mation for the enhanced radiation weapon, com•Whil~ there are still ongoing investigations by
last full measure of devotion for
moilly known as the "neutron bomb," was also as many as nine committees, it does appear that
their country, the declassified
loSt. No nation has yet deployed this weapon.
information reached the White House in 1996. No
portion of th~ report by the bipar•Technology transfer was made much easier action by Sandy Berger has been mentioned and
tisan Select Committee on Chiwhen in 1994 controls on lab security were eased. that of course, was a campaign year. The Presinese espionage is released for the
Background checks on Visiting scientists were dent issued PDD 11 in February-- 1998 and
American public. The 900 page
often neglected and 'free exchange of information received the Cox report in January 1999. Yet on
classified report was i""'ued· January 3, 1999. appears to have become rather common. Power March 19, 1999 he .said that "nobody told him
Intelligence and law enforcement agencies cut out over technology lransfer was transferred from the about espionage at the national labs" during his
2()() pages that can 'I be told to Americans.
·
State Deparlrnenl to the Commerce Department watch.
It would appear that when "the torch was to make licensing easier for U. S. Companies who
The Senate and House committees claim that
thrown from failing hands to us," no one · was were dealing with China to assist their missile the Justice Department stonewalled them in their
alerted to catch it and ."hold it high." Taken program after they lost several expensive U. S. attempts to get information. The Select Committogether, China's thefts and purchases of U. S. satellites during launch. U. S. missile technology tee had bitter disputes with the White House over
weapons technology amount to "one of the worst has now enhanced their missile capability, the what could be told to the American people. "If the
counterintelligence failures in (U. .---------------:.....-----------~---:----'----:-,
S.) history," said the committee's
,
Nlfr
top Democrat, Rep. Norman Dicks
VI
of the state of Washington.
CAN
PICK-UP
Nil .
Interesting also is the feeling of
.
some that blame should no.t be
t" YQU
stahlerOfuae.net
assigned, for as Secretary Richardr..;a
ONLY
_____________.
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..• ......._
:_~Patrol:
•
Sunday, June 6,1999
Stay out of the 'No-Zone'
VO'J
OVER
CffANNE'
CAN [)ECJPHE'R
sao
9AR.
'"'
son has assu(ed us "We've moved
effectively and aggressively, we've
u.~. wrAD~llr
corrected the problem." However,
~
CIV'VIl~
· Submitted by Lt Richard E. Grau
all of the horses are out of the bam.
Ti'~CHN()I~II
Commercial !rucks provide vital services to communities throughout The CIA-dire.cted damage asseS&C:::
IV!;}f
Ohio, and around the country.
ment says . that China's nuclear
~
In fact. nearly two thirds of all American communities receive freight espionage has not ."resulted in any
,only by trucks, and over 75 percent of the dollar value of freight in the Unit· · apparent modernization of their
·: -ed States is shipped by truck.
·
deployed strategic · foroe or any
I
Ohio depends heavily on the trucking industry for a
'
new nuclear weapons deploy·
· ··'strong economy. Our state is among the safest of the most
ment." One might wonder if they
. · po'pulous states in which to ttavel.·
don 't know what is going on in our
Also, the Ohio interstate system is one of the most
. ow,n labs how can they give such
· :heavily .traveled Systems by commercial vehicles anyruisuranoes without winking?
. . where in the midwest. For example, each year approxiA great need today is for leaders
• mately seven million trucks use the Ohio Turnpike to trawho will put the interests of' the
verse the state.
American people above their self• Given these facts, it is extremely important for cars
ish political'interests. Damage con; and trucks to share the roads safely as Ohio lraffic volumes continue to trol to protect Americans, yes;
,r Increase.
'
'
damage control to protect the
'
Unfortunately, driving in the presence.of a commercial truck presents cer- slothful, no. Running for cover
~ tain hazards to motorists in passenger vehicles. Trucks have bigger blind seems to be a frequent athletic
.: spots, require additional room for maneuverability, have longer stopping dis- .experience in our nation's capital.
. lances, require longer distances needed for passing, and pose more severe
All nine members of this com: consequences for passenger vehicle occupants resulting from crashes.
mittee are to be' congratulated for keep)ng their delivery arm for the thermonuclear weapons. White House had it's way there would have been
. The Ohio State Highway Patrol's Partners for Safety effort exemplifies pact, over a lengthy investigation, nol to leak American cities are now vulnerable to their mis- no report," Cox said.
: 'the cooperative efforts between the Patrol and business wprld necessary to information to the media: They must also be rec- siles.
The FBI chief says this is their No. I priority is
' ensure both trucks and cars coexist on our highways safely. .
o~:nized for working together as Americans and
•What should have been a hu&e breakthrough the espionage investigation. Energy Secretary
~.. To that end, a new partnerShip with Roadway Express and other trucking not as members of a political party.'That indeed is carne in 1995 when a "walk-in document" was Richardson assures Americans that "China has
~ companies is intended to educate the motoring public on the dangers of the laudatory lind hopefuny. will set an example for given to i.J. S..personnel in Beijing, containing · signed the non-proliferation treaty," whatever
· No-Zone.
many others to :follow~
"secret" Chinese information obtained by spying solace that is meant to be. The Clinton Admini~
· ' Roadway Express and the Patrol have partnered to create a No-Zone trail- ·
The "we'll just have to win then" attitude may in the U. S. State and Commerce said they were tration has designated China as the No. I prolifer, -er designed to educate the public on the dangers associated with driving near be a short term success for an officeholder, but a not told. That is also the year the Clinton cam- ator of weapons.
; large trucks. Look for the No-Zone trailer around Ohio this summer, and at long term disaster for America. National security paign was gearing up and poll ratings were at a
When political games are played at lhc
the State Fair in Columbus during August.
'
is likely the main responsibility of the federal low and so were funds. Johnny Chung and expense of Americans, we should be angiy. While
~ • The No-Zone is the area around lrucks where cars "disappear" into blind government, vested principally in the Executive Charles Yah Lin Trie were transferring Chinese nothing visible may happen to us in 1999, the
; spots, greatly increasing the possibility of a collision.
. branch.
money to the coffers to·boost the campaign. Hear- potential for millions of Americans in the next
: There are more than 250,000 cra5hes involving cars and trucks· every
A review of a part of what has occurred is star· ings in progress are revealing documents being decade to be under the threat of nuclear attack is
: year. In Ohio, during 199,2,184 crashes involving a commercial truck arid . tling:
·
·
tossed in the Trie case and threats against Chung's . very real.
1
; passenger vehicle occuned on rural interstates ..
•The Pe<lple's ·Republic of China (PRC) has family from the Chinese if he didn't keep his
It is pf little comfort to hear the response,
! While it seems obvious and most people realize it is more difficult to stolen design information on the United States' mouth shut, and of hush money to defend himself · "Mistakes were m.ade." Accountability is surely
drive a truck than a car, many are not educated about the limitations of a most advanced thermonuclear weapons. These if he did. Also, the U.S. Senate Energy and Nat- .necessary!
~ truck in terms of maneuverability, stopping distances, and blindspots.
give the PRC desigR information on a par ural Resources Committee learned in May hearRobert Weldy 11 a columnllt for the Sunday
+ The good news is many crashes involving passenger cars and trucks' secrets
·
with our own. The information includes ~lassified ings from Notra Trulock, former director of the Tlmee-S.nttntl. ·
7 could be avoided if motorists knew more about truck limitations and how to
steer clear of unsafe situations involving trucks.
Keys to safer highways and staying out of the No-Zone include being
conscious of lrucks as they make wide turns, and of their r.ear and side
• blindspots. Drivers of passenger cars also need to recognize the additional
; distance required to pass a commercial vehicle due to the truck's length.
der·in-chler. Intern•· offer himself as a candidate? Do you
· Can . you give me
By Chrl• Matthews
WASHINGTON - I have a pop one?
tlonalleadcr?
view heredity as a decent indicator
• Remember, most trailers are over eight feet wide and can completely hide
quiz
for
those
giving
George
W.
Jot down some obser· of fuiure political success? If so,
· objects that suddenly come between them and a loading area. A driver who
Bush his commanding lead in the
• Name some things
vations . that give you why are. you. backing the ·son of a ·
: tries to pass a truck can enter a No-Zone blindspot:
.
Bush hu said that you
confidence ·in his deci- president who won just 38 percent
Another No-Zone is. located just in front of trucks. One of the biggest presidential polls.
. Don't worry. It's just the usual agree w1th. A few that
· mistakes motorists can make is to cut in too soon and slow down after passsion-making in these of the popular vote when he ran for
; ing a big truck.
stuff, the things you'd want to know you don't agree witb?
·areas. Do you know any- re-election?
Can you recall any· thing about his .econom·
; Trucks also need a much greater distance to stop than· cars because of . abOut anyone you're touting as the
~ their size and weight. Be sure to maintain a consistent speed when passing next global CEO.
thing Bush ha5 said?.
ic, milill!ry or diplomatic
• What does the "W"In George
thinking? ·
W. Bush's name stand for?
·
; and do not pull in front of a truck unless the entire front of the truck is visi• List three Issues you care
: ble in the rear-view mirror.
• What Is It about
• What does he stand ror?
• George W. Bush Is
. Unlike automobiles, trucks have deep blindspots directly behind them. !!bout personally. Soc:lal Security the
way
Bush
• Tailgating not only rnakes cars impossible to sec by truck drivers, but it also · privatization? Abortion rightS? approaches governabout to tum !3. Can
Gun control?
·
; cuts off motorists view of traffic.
·
ment and 'polities that .
. • Bonus: Given your answen,
you eitc il non-political
·
Write
down
·
where
George
W.
you
like?
What
Is
It
; Trucks have much larger blindspots on both sides than do cars. Traveling
achievement or his dur- do yo.u think the British were right
Bush stands on these issues. Take all that you don't like? Is there some- Ing those yean that gives you con· or wrong in their dec:lslon thll
~ in a truck's blindspot for any length of time makes a car invisible to the truck
• driver. If the truck driver needs to make an emergency maneuver or change . the time you want.
thi1J8 In Bush's overall phll080phy · ftdence In his personal abilities?
year to end the practkt: or glvllll
! tanes, the result could likely lead to a crash.
that grabs you?
ramlll~ hereditary seats In the
Due to .the size of the vehicle, lruck drivers sometimes need to swing
• List three ·achievements . or . Are you familiar with his overall
• Do. you think Georp W. Bush Houst; of Lords?
philosophy?
sbould be viewed u e .credible
wide to manage their t.ums. When they do, truck drivers cannot see cars Bush u governor of Texas.
Can yo'u name one?
directly behind or beside them that are in the No-Zone. Consequently, give
choice for president because or
(Chrla Matthewa, chief of 1ha
:trucks plenty of room and never try to squeeze around them.
• What Is ail American presi- who Is parents are?
S•n FranciiCO Examiner'• Wash·
• List three programs Bush put dent's most Important job? ~o . Would you support John F. lngton Bur111u, Ia holt or "Hard·
:: : Everyone shares in the responsibility of keeping .Ohio roadways safe. Do
)'~ur part by safeiy sharing ·the road with trucks, and stay out of the No- through u governor.
.nomlc policy-maker? Cornman- Kennedy, Jr. for' president were he to ball" on CNBC cltble channel•-)
Copyrlghltllllt NEA.
,
-Zone.
·
.
· - Lt Grau 11 eommandar ol the Gallla·MIIga Poll! or the Ohio Stele
Highway Patrol.
AS WELL.
t
r
Filling in the blanks ·o n George W.
An Internet domain by any other name... ·
Today In History
II
By The Auoclllled Pr•• .
Today is Sunday, June 6,the !57th day of ·t999.There are 208 days left
in \he year.
Today 's Highlight in History: .
• On June 6, 1944, Allied forces stormed the beaches of Normandy, France
iii the "Q-Day" invasion of Europe in World War II.
· On this date:
: - In 1799, American orator Patrick Henry died in Charlotte County, Va.
In 1844,the Young Men's Christian Association was founded in London.
In 1925, WalterPercy Chrysler .founded Chrysler Corp.
In '1934, the Securities and Exchange Commission was established.
In 1942, Japanese forces relreated in the Wotld War II Battle of Midway.
• In 1966, black activist James Meredith was shot and wounded as he
.'walked along a Mississippi highway to encourage black voter regislration.
: In 1968, Sen. Robelt F. Kennedy died at GoOd Samaritan Hospital in Los
:Angeles, a day afterdte was shot by Sirhan Bishara Sirhan.
· • In 1978, California voters overwhelmingly approveq PropOsition 13, a
primary ballot initiative calling for major cuts in property taxes.
· In 1982, Israeli forces invaded Lebanon to drive out Palestine Liberation
OrganiZation figbters. (The Israelis withdrew in June 1985.)
In 1985, authorities in Brazil exhumed a body later identified as the
remains of Dr. Josef Mengele, the notorious "Angel of Death" of the Nazi
Holocaust.
.
Ten years aao: Burial services were held for Iran's spiritual leader, Ay atollah' Ruhollah· Khomeini. On Capitol Hill, Thomas Foley was elected the
49th speaker of the House ot Representatives,
· -Five years ago: A Chinese passenger jet crashed, killing all 160 people on
board.
· One
ago; The UN SeCurity Council demanded in a unanimous vote
that India and Pakistan refrain from further nuclear tests and sign nuclear
·control agreell)ents. "Real Quiet" was denied horse racing's Triple Crown
as "Victory Gallop" won the Belmont Stakes by' a nose.
·
Today's Birthdays; Actress Billie Whitelaw is 6~. Civil rights activist
Roy Innis is 65. Singer Levi Stubbs (The Pour TQps) IS 63.
..
year
By lan Shoalea
Gov. George 'Y:I- Bush of Texas, gingerly running for
president and having earned front-runner status for no
discernible reason, has naturally become a ripe target for
unrepentant satire,
The Internet, that unruly marketplace, hu stepped up
to the plate with a Web site: GWBush.com. It duplicates
the look of Mr. Bush's " real" Web site (www.georgewbush.com), while positing ridiculous pasitions for Mr.
Bush to take. "Amnesty 2000," for instance, is offeied as
Mr. Bush's "bold new policy initiative," which will free
all "grown ups" from prison. GWBush.com also has Mr. Bush·admitting to
rampant drug use as a youth, and says that the "Barbie Liberation Organi·
zation," which snuck into stores and switched the voice boxes of talking 01
Joes and talking &rbies an prank, was Bush's "first widely publicized project."
·
GWBush.com is the brainchild of a Massachusetts resident named lack
Exley. When asked abOut the site, Mr. Busli said he was "aware" of it, and
said about Mr. Exley, "This guy is just a garbage man / ' Lawyers for Bush's
campaign have filed complaints with the Federal Election Commission, and
sent letters to Mr. Exley warning him that his "wholesale misappropriation"
of the official Web site is a violation of a "host of copyright and lrademark
laws." A spokesperson for Mr. Bush claims that these actions have caused .
Mr. Exley to "tone down" his material.
.
Of course, this is a .b~ouhaha partly of Mr. Bush's making. In the wanin,S
days of the 20th century, one of the unpleasant chores of a public figure ts
to snap up any domain names that could possibly have a negative bearing on
the public's perception of said figure. According to RTMARK, which is, as
near as 1 can tell, an anarchist ~vcrtising agency, whose designers helped
create GWBush.com (and was the organization behind the Barbie/GI Joe
voice-box-switching prank), the Bush campaign did buy bushblows.com,
bushsux.com, and some similar names. But this left GWBusli.com,
GWBush.org, and GBush.org up for grabs; and they were subsequently
taken by Mr. Exley.
,
Then, accbrdins to a press release from RTMARK, "Domain name spec-
.
.
ulators begin snappins up other names related·to the Bush campaign, like
gwcoCainejr.com, bush-lite.com, and cokeisbush.com. GWBush.com itself
has so far reserved justsayyestobush.com, fantasticbush.com, bushisnicelydressed.org, \lfld about a dozen others." ·
··
~
.
I thougllt for a moment about lrying to buy bushisgod.com, ilike· ·
bushandikc.com, or bushbushbush.org, before reason overtook me. Even lf
coUld get these sites up and running, with oodles of sarcastic tex~ arid .linb
galore, what would be in it for me? I certainly wouldnlt be making an¥
money, unless I C:OUid somehow get these sites listed on NASDAQ. But then.
I'd have to make an IPO, and figure out a way 'tO invest the millions l:_d .
malcc from the subsequent hyper-inflated stock. Who has the time?
. •
Besides, finding permutations of domain names could prove to be an endless task. According to Advertising Age, 'J'roctet & Gamble; still reeliri&
from the silly rumor some years ago that their logo was a Sa'-!tic symbdJ,
has cautiously launched a new product, Febreze, that controls animal odora.
As part of its canipaign, and to stifle bad publi<:ity, it has registered the following domains: febrezekillspets.com, febrezekillsdogs.com, fcbrezeklllibirds.com, fe~rezesucks.com, and· ihateprocterandgamble.ci>m. ·
•
So here's another new cultural trend triggered by the Internet: namehoarding. As I write, public relations staffers are collecting clintonsu<:ks.orj,
clintonbites.com, lfilljarjarnow.com, bringmetheheadofjarjar.org, goreisbo(ing.net, kissmedarthmaul.com, don 'tcallmeliddy.com, ihcartbirbie.net •• the
list,is infit~itel Domain names are more countless than the very stars!
:
Worse, these names a(C being collected so they can't be used! lt's· Ii~
putting money in a non-interest-bearing account. It's like putting gas in a car.
then putting the car up on blocks. It's like buying all the tickets to a movie,
and then locking the theater. ·
·
.
;
The B'ible tells us that Ood gave names to His creations; and He gavt
Adam and Eve dominion over the. "fish of the sea, and·over the fowl .of the
air, and over the cattle, and over all' the earth, and over every creeping thinj .
that.creepeth upon the earth." Now the Internet creepeth upon the earth, anll
we have dominion over that too. Did God intend us to ~ine virtu!f
misers? Oteck out www.virtualmisers.com. (On second thought, never
mind. Somebody probably already owns it.)
~
Copyrlght1111111 NEWSIIAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
•·
; .--_S-e-ek-i-ng~s-ig_
n_
s_
o_f-b-att_l____,e
. Continued from page A1
crate cavalrymen and Union scouts
took place. The team was searching
·an area south of the Portland Park
along state Route 124.
The most common finds arc typ. ically bullets and artillery shell
.. ·fragments, and areas where many
- · bullets are found should indicate
~ the areas of heaviest fighting, Pratt
·said.
.
So far, searchers have found a
· • wide variety of bullet types, coni. cal carbine bullets, small caliber.
handgun bullets, round rifle balls
and buckshot (large lead pellets
.fired from shotguns), or combina. · · lions of loads (such as buck and
ball). Pratt speculated that Mor·
· · .' gan's men uSC!~ a wide variety of
-· · projectiles during the raid, as .
· opposed to Union soldiers who
: would most lik~ly have standard, ized bullets .
Thursday afternoon, searchers
found several small buttons several
hundred yards behind a house
reputed to have served as a hospital
following the battle.
Included among the party are
Larry Hamilton and Rich Green,
who form the Indianapolis firm,
Historical
Archaeological
Research.
The metal detectors give
searchers an idea of ·where to dig
and generally the"find' is nothing
more than a nail, a piece of barbed
wire or a broken tractor part, but
sometimes the starch yields a gen·
,, uine artifact, perhaps a Civil War• era bullet or a button.
Whil~ de111onstrating use of .the
metal detector, Hamilton; a resident
of Louisville, Ky., unearthed what
appeared to be a small handgun
.
ARCHAEOLOGICAL FINDShtn are HVIrll bullltl, llld
billla, •n artillery fun and button• found ilt POI'Uand by a Heldtllerg
Colleg•baaed archaeological aurvey IHm. ThltHm, under dhotlon
or Dr. G. Michell Pmt; II 1tt1111pUng to dltlrmlne 11'111 wtl«<llght·
lng tOok place during the1183 Bettie or Buftlngton Island. Photo_,_
tHy Buftlngton 111anc1 Blttllfllld ArchMologlcal ProJect
bullet of approximately .32 to .36
caliber. .
The finds are bagged and will be
· examined later for authenticity.
Eventually they will be returned to
the landowners or ·to the Meigs
County Museum, depending on the
landowners'
wishes,
Pratt
explained.
.
The survey, which will continue
through June 13, does not include
land owned by Shelly Materials
inc., Pratt said. The ·company is
'
seeking to mine some of the land
associated with the battle.
Meanwhile, the school's director
of university relations, Jamie Abel,
is doCumepting the efforts on a
day-by-day. b~is and placing the
finds ·on the mtemet at www.he•delberg.edu/buffington.
The Buffington lslahd Battle. field Archaeological Project web
site features backgfound information on Morgan's Raid and . the
Buffington Island Battlefield.
:Meigs County courthouse. security grant
Continued frOm page A1
Pomeroy, the library board operates
branch locations in .Middleport and
Racine, as well as a branch public
library at Eastern Elementary
School.
Rutland
Councilman
Jay
Dewhurst said Thursday that the
cabin will be moved from its current
location on Main Street in Rutland
within the next three weeks, and that
the library board has been offered a
. 'very inexpensive' lease on the
property.
Dewhurst said that the terms of
the FI!MA flood mitigation program
prohibit the sale of the building.
The cabin is one of two structures
to he moved as a part of the mitigation progr&l!l. Almost $600,000 in
gnnt funds have been spent in the
village to date in elevating homes
out of the flood plain and making
other improvements which arc
designed to prevent future flood
damage in the Rutland community,
which is highly susceptible to flooding.
.
Dewhurst said that the Harder
cabin was offered to the library board
for use as a branch so that Rutland
residents CQUid have better access to
library services, especially in light of
the discontinuation of bookmobile
Senator calls for resisting .pension .raids
ur vn•ce ma
~=4:24=S~E:CO:N:D:·::GA:LL:I:PO:U:::S=========:::
NEW LIFE VICTORY.:
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~
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:~t~!~i~~i!:~·::u~~:. June
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"th guesf Spea ker
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.·TAWNEY STUDIO
done three things: given airlines two der tbe government's day-to-day cash
more hours ·of flight time, given flow without actually doing anything
pilots unions a defined duty period to help Social Security out of a finanand given passengers the benefit of cial crisis looming after baby boomers
havt'ng crews who recet've a 10-bour retire in droves in the 21st century:
off-duty period - two hours more
.Santorum has proposed letting
than the current rest period.
Various factions balked at the ..---:=:-----,:~---.,.---..,
proposal, .and in February a rule- .
making body told the FAA there was
no consensus within tbe aviation .
community on the issue.
FAA Administrator ~ane Garvey
Tanner's Special
met with representatives of the
S: 30 • 4:30
Allied 'Pilots Association on Friday,
and union officials said she told 1\Jes.-Fri. 1200 Session
them the agency would announce its
Evenings & Sat. , 3oo
intention to enforce the existing
rules next week and begin doing so
Chester, Ohio
ai the end of the year.
·
FAA officials would say only that L__.....;::....:::..::~-.:::.._;:_::..;:;___....J
Garvey had · met with the union.
They refened reporters to a statement on the agency's Web site that
said the FAA "will soon place a
notice in t~e Federal Register stating
its intent to enforce the current regulations until a JICW proposed rule is
developed 811d made part of the Fed·
eral Aviation Regulations."
·
Asked whether the statement was
affected by the crash, FAA
spokesman Eliot Brenner said: "The
meeting ·had been sched11led for at
least two weeks."
~
lntaflne doe confu•ion of a child ..Ito
eannol /tear our ,.or/d. A cltUd~ ""'"
crltieal learning lime io bil·tlt to tltree
·
Hearing li your child~ {iN I
i:onneclwn to tlie!r •UITOunflinBa and
...enlwl in d.uelop~ many Important
opeech, la"«"IIB"• t.arnlng and
•nr•lnl olcillo.
early detection of a
lheariq prcob£om· meaiU your chUd will
be•l chance lo pow M>ilh
,..,, of the M>orld.
haul before the 2000 presidenti11l election. The GOP drive to formally sepa- ·
rate tbe Social Security surpluses is
partly a fallbaek plan to counter
Democrats' accusations that Republicans want to spend the money on tax ·
cuts.
·
WASHING1UN (AP) - Protect· workers take part of the money they
ing Social Security surpluses from now pay in Social Secu.rity taxes and
other I!Ovemrnent functions is key to invest it in the stock market through a
the retirement program's future, a pelliOnal retirement accoun~ although
Republican senator said Saturday in he did not mention this in his address.
Skepticism has been growing that
his party's weekly radio address.
Congress
can pass a full-scale overSen. Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, co-chairman of the Senate
Republican task force on Social Secu- . .~~!!!'!!!!!!
rity, urged Democrats to support a
GOP effort to legally separate the JIIQgram's funds from the rest of the budget, preventing raitb for other pro-
r:.;~~~ ~t.?::;~~~~~
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
ThaJ word Fridlly came tllne
liead of the Federal Aviation Admindays after an American jlt
· istration told·the American Airlines . t:rGSIItd (Jn landing in Liltll
. pilots union that the agency will R k ~ric
..._ nd 0,,. 11 1o
· stnct
- 1y en.oretng
• - crew rest daocfi'"' 'h ., al mt t be
· J
ng_
begm
kpU
'. regalations by the end of the year,
!Y or t t two-mtm r coc _
the union says.
.
· cnw, tz/Jhough tht FAA saUl ·
Th.at word Friday came three the slepJnd·up enforcement WGS
' 'days after an American jet crashed
. not nlllud to tltt accident.
·. on landing in Utile Rock, Ark., at
· lhe end of a long day for the two- might then be expected to complete
member cockpit crew, although the · his or her allotted eight hours of fly-.
· ~FAA said the stepped-up enforce- ing time over a 12-hour period. .
ment was not related to the aecident.
. In such a case, the pilot would be
Under federal law, airline pilots awake for 27 consecutive hours but
cannot fly m()re than eight hours in a should have had eight hours of rest
24-hour period. They also must be within 24 hours.
·
.able to rest for eight hours in that . · "The lac\ of compliance has
same span.
· beeome · an industrywide problef!l
' In the case of the American crew, and a major cause of pilot fatigue
:'.the pilots had been on duty 13,112 that is seriously compromising avia' . hours, close to the airline's 14-hour tion safety," sai'd Capt. Richard
duty limit and within three hours of Rubin, a spokesman for the Allied
' when they would have had to start Pilots Association, which represents
•: ~their FAA-mandated rest period.
American's 9,600 pilots.
Pilots claim airlines routinely
The FAA announced in 1995 that
·' violate the tenor of the rest rules, it intended lo resolve disputes over
.especially with backup crews. They . crew rest It proposed a rule allowcan be on standby status for days · ing up to 10 hours of flight time, but ·
without being told when they should within a 14-hour duty day.
rest.
·
During "duty" time, crews may
For exampfe, a reserve pilot not be flying, but they may be at the
·· might awaken at 1 a.m. and not be airport, checking ·in for a flight or on
·
: told until 8 p.m. of a flight assign- a layover. ·
' ment beginning at 10 p.m. The pilot
The FAA l'roposal would have
AS
UBRARY USE POSSIBLE - The hllllorlc Harder cabin In RU111itn1d
mil)' bleome a branch o1 the Milg• County Dltllrlct Public Ubrery lifter
It Ia moved to the Rutl111d Civic Centll' prope~ .
visitors' attraction, and village counservices several months ago.
cil
has taken no official action on
The cabin has also been considdetermining
the use of the cabin.
ered as a meeting facility and as the
centerpiece for a public paric · and
he~~
· FAA to begin enforcing crew rest rules
lbaol • Page
Historic Harder cabin
Continued from page A1
·
sai~- 'l_b~se entran~~ would ,incre~ security _whi~c grams. ·
'employees to notify the sheriff's department in the event mam~ammg the archttectural mtegnty of the htstonc
"Republicans believe voting to
bu1ldmg..
.
. of a security problem. .
preserve the Social Security Surplus
Security f;arlleras are now in place on the third floor .'
The major components of the new systems should be . for Social Security ·alone is a critical
. of the building, where County Court and Common Pleas ·.•in,place within 30 days', Canan said;
.first step to preserving Social Securi· ~urt facilities are _located, but Can.an said t~ilt the g_rant.· , The grant does not allow for employees' salaries. ty'slong-tcrm future," Santorum said.
· will allow for acti!th?nal cameras m strate~c loca!Jo~s :Canan is paid thr()ugh the budget ofthe Common Pleas
"We can· take this step together
. throughout the bulldmg, as well as for add11Jonal rnom- · Court, and he said ThufS\Iay that he has discussed the .
tors.
_
.
possibility ofan additional officer to assist in monitoring and
pulting
the system
on a fiscally
begin
the important
worksusof
_ Canan S8Id that a new fire alarm syste~ w1ll al"? ~ the new systems.
·
tainable course for the 21st century,"
tnstalled. The only fire alarm system now m plaoe IS m
,
the elevator area. The new system will consist of a '. <?anan ~a:' requned to Ct?~~~Piete 160 hours of spe416-12 vote last month, the
' &moke and heat-detecting system which will notify the c!ahzed tratni~J!o ge~red spec•fically to c;ourthouse secu- House passed
legislation that would
. county EMS office in the event of a fire. ·
nt~ . .That trammg m_cluded the !'lost mtense firearms
makeitharderforlawmakerstospend
The fire system is actually an expansion of. an exist· t~mmg he has expene~ he ~td, ~u~ of the spe- surpluses
coming from Social Securiing syste!ll, since the elevator fire alarm system is c1al nature of the secunty work m a bulldmg such as a
already compatible with the EMS alarm system.
county courthouse.
ty ':..~ihe Senate version oflhe bill
A burglar alarm system will als6 be installed, and
·"We have the equipment, and so we rieed to be able
0
new security doors will be plaoed.atthe main entrances to use it as best we can,• he said. "If we're going to do
to the courthouse if enoulh funds are available, Canan this, we need to do. it right.'
·
six votes short of the 60 needed to
:
,,
I
Jlmdlav tlimn-JI
PomefOY • Middleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Lemonade will be served from
11 a.m. - 2 p.m.
Y2K is aJ.most here. we CiUl show you. what your
account will look like in the year 2000.
We have tested it and it works .
i.
~ .
~Bank/n~...
Fo .Farmers Bank
· & Savings Company · ·
r
�Sunday, June 6, 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaunt, WV
PageA6•~
Music scene icon Mel Torme dies Saturday
Mary·Louise Plants Adkins
' LETAKf, W.Va. - Mary Louise Plants Adkins 85 Letart died Friday
June 4, 1999.
' '
'
'
Born Dec. 27, 1913 in Mason County, W.Va., daughter of the late Isaac
G. and Mary B. WhiuingiOn Plants, she was a homemaker and a former
~mployee of the G.C. Murphy Co. in Point Pleasant.
·
She was a member of the Oak Grove United Methodist Church in Letart
where she taught Sunday School for many years. She was a 1932 gradual~
tlf Pomt Pleasant High School.
·
,. She, was also preceded in death by her husband of 60 years, Virgil F.
1'ater' ~dklns, a granddaughter, Teresa Lynn Icenhower; three sisters, Pearl
0 . ~hule, Oarneu Baxter and·Dimmie Plants; and six brothers, Gilbert,
Virgtl, Donald, Chester, Leo and Owens· Plants.
.surviving are a daughter, Sue (Glenn) Icenhower of Letart; two grand·
children and a great-grandson; a sister, Opal Love Justice of Chesapeake;
and many meces and nephews.
.
: Services. will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point
P~asant, '!"tlh tbe Rev. lack Mayes,1he Rev. Nancy Mayes and the Rev. Bobb~ Woods offictattng. Burial wil1 be in the·Suncrest Cemetery, Point Pleas.ant. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Yvonne F. Birchfield Buck, 59, Point Pleasant, dted Fnday, June 4, I 999 at her residence.
Born Aug: ·17, 1939, daughter of the late Worley and Mary Maude Henry Btrchfield, she was a homemaker, and auended the Yauger Chapel Church
m Leon, W.Va.
Survivt_ng are her husband, Paul B. Buck; two daughters, Tina y (Dean)
Lee of Pmnt Pleasant, and Tava R. (Randy) Hunt of Gallipohs; two stepdaughters, Phyhss J. (Robert) Henry of Lafayeue, Tenn., and Tammie L .
(Stephe~) Tucker of Leon; a stepson, Wayne (Rhonda) Buck of Leon; ')3
grandchtldren and two great-grandchtldren; a brother, Lawrence Patterson
of Galhpohs; and three sisters, Eleanor Austin of Point Pleasant, Nancy
Thomas of Reno, Nev., and Ona May Fuller of Ironton. ,
Servtces .w•ll be l I a.m. Monday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home·, Point
Pl_easant, wuh \he Rev. Herbert Buck and the Rev. Johnny Hayman officiatmg. Bunal wtll be m the Forest Hills Cemetery, Flatrock, W.Va. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m ..Sunday.
Harry Norton Calloway
GALLIPOLI~ I'.ERRY, W.Va. - Harry Norton Calloway 86 Galli lis
Fe rry,dted Saturday, June 5, 1999 in the Pleasant Valley Nur;mg' and J:!.a.
b111tat10n Center.
.
v Born Aug. ll, I912 in Henderson, W.Va. , son of the late John M. and Bela Fowler Calloway, he rettred as a riverboat captaih 10 1974, following 43
years of servtce. He was a member of the Church of Christ in H d
where he also served as an elder.
en erson,
·. re wt; ~s~ preceded in death by his wife, Elizabeth Roger~ Calloway
~ru:::';.
; Ya brother, John Monroe Calloway; and a stster, Leona M:
9
Surviving are three daughters, Marlene Ann (Robert) Hope of·Ind . n
d~~c~, ;'~j and Myra Kaye.(Michael) legg and Shela (George) Millereg~th
0 Soem . easa nt,beW.Va._
; and IO grandchildren and I2 great-grandchiictren
11
·Pleasant
rvtces
p...
m M
· the Wtlcoxen
·
B wt. I 'II1be
h on day m
Funeral Home, Point·
. una WI
'" t e Rogers Cemetery Redmond Rid
M
County.
Fnends may call at the funeral home fro~ 5-8 p.m. Sun dge,
.
ay. ason
Mackie_McKinney Harrison
CHESAPEAKE- Mackie Ellison McKinney Harrison, 75, Chesapeake,
formerly of Fayette County, W.Va., died Saturday, June 5, 1999 at her residence, following an extended illness.
·
Born Sept. 25 •. 1923 m Lansing, W.Va. , she was the daughter of the late
Ethel Ellison Fine and Noll Ellison.
' She. was also preceded in death by her first husband, Joseph Ray McKInney, m _1956; her second husband, Gus Harrison, in 1969; an infant daughter, Bonnte McKmney, m I948; a stepdaughter, Marsha Harrison Hagan, in
1971, a stster, Margte Wtlhs; two brothers, Alvin and Joe Ellison· and a greatgranddaughter, Kayla Wright.
' ·
Surviving are three sons, Lewis "Buddy" McKinney and Ernest (Patncia) McK.inpey, both of Chesapeake, and Joseph "Shorty" (Terrie) McKinney of South Pomt; three daughters, Patsy McKinney (Ronald) Turner of
Chesapeake, Fay (Vernon) Thompson of Wayne, W.Va., and Janice Harrison, at home; two stepsons, Herschei ·"Sunny" (Judy) Harrison of Dayton,
and Donald Harrtson of Portsmouth; and seven grandchildren, two stepgrandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.
Services will be I l a.m. Monday in the Hall Funeral Home Proctorville
whh the Rev. Phil Faust officiating. Burial will be in the Ro~e Cemetery:
. Fnends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
Otho Gary 'Mitchell
'
3,
BIDWELL- Otho Gary Mitchell, 66, Bidwell, died Thursday, June
1999 10 Holzer Medtcal Center, following an extended illness.
Born Jan. 5, 1933 in Mason County, W.Va., son of the late J.C. ''Tab"
Mitchell and Flora Jane Glenn, he was employed by the Quaker State Oil
Co. for 24 years and the Par Mar Oil Co. for four years.
He was an owner and operator of Sticks and Stones Logging and Firewood Co. Inc., and PTRS GEO Mitchell Trucking. He was a U.S. Army veteran and a member of the French Ctty Baptist .Church.
· ·
Surviving are his wife, Elizabeth Sexton Mitch'ell, whom he married Jan.
31: 1953 at Northup; a son, G~ E. (Gina) Mttchell of Btdwell; two grandchildren and two step_grandchtldren; two brothers, Calvin (Louise) Mitchell
of Port Ch_arlotte, Fl;1., and Larry Gene Mitchell of Gallipolis; and a sister,
J:Aary Marte (Ron) Davis of Reynoldsburg.
.
He was also preceded in .death by four brothers, Lawrence, John, Sherman and Bobby Mitchell.
·
. Services will be l I a.m. Monday in the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
Vmton, wtth the Rev. John Wood officiating. Burial will be in the Vinton
Memorial Park, with military graveside rites presented by the Vinton Amertcan LegiOn Post 161. Friends may call at the funeral home from 3-5 and 79 p.m. Sunday.
Elections director is accused
of misusing Internet computer
,I
I
II
I
I
WAVERLY (AP) - The Pike
County elections director has been
accused of using her new office
computer to access gambhng and
pornography sites on the Internet.
Sharon Smith, 51. who has
· worked 16 years for the election
board, denied the accusation. She
said someone else could have used
her computer because her password
and e,mail address were posted there.
No laws were broken and there is
no l5oard or county policy about personal use of county computers to
access the Internet. But she could be
disciplined when the elections board
meets Monday in this ctty about 60
miles south of Columbus.
aoard Chairman Doug Miller said
Friday that cenain things found in the
computer were not appropriate and
that misuse warrants 'either suspension or diSJllissal.
New computers were installed m
the office in January and February,
but only Smith's was provided Inter·
net access, Miner said.
The access improves the board 's
communications with the company
Wilco~ said.
Tonne received a lifetime achieve·
menta\Yard from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences
at February's Grammy Awards.
Besides his singing and prolific
song-writing, Torme's career included acting in movies and on televisi011,
where he drew fresh attention in the
late 19.80s on "Night Court" as the
musical hero of main character Judge
Harold T. Stone, played by Harry
Anderson.
,
"He was a very special talent, one
of the mosttalente'd individuals in our
business," said singer Vic Damone.
·Marion--c. Brady
Yvonne Birchfield Buck
..
than half, including "Born To Be
"A composer, musictan, arranger. He Rlue" an\[ "The Christmas Song,"
was so very bright."
with Robert Wells. .
" He was one of the supreme jazz
When people would ask why he
singers of all time. with the vocal kept singing old songs, Torme said
dexterity matched only by Ella
Fitzgerald. He had the best sense of they're simply beuer than new songs:
timing and a lot of heart in his work. "When young rock singers began
And he was a good guy," said singer writing their own, they displaced the
community of songwriters who
Jaclt.Jonefo.
"I've lost a wonderful friend," worlc:ed with grace, wit, charm, intelsaicj comedian Jerry Lewis. "There ligence and brilliance.
"Absolutely the lyric to me is 95
could never be anyone to replace
percent
of what a song is. The singer·
Mel, not only as a singer but as a dear
is portraying a playlet to the audifriend."
'
ence,
involving the audience in what
E'Ven people who had heard little
he
is
saying.
If the.melody is attrac·
of )lis ¥inging coul!l not miss his oth·
tive, that's frosting on·the cake. The
er claim 10 musical immonality: He lyric' is the cake."
r-----------~---..
was co-author of the lyrics and music
At 70, he said he maintained his
to "The Chrisbnas Song"- "Chest- vocal strerigth by taking care of himnuts roasting 011 an open fire, Jack self; no smoking, only an occasional
Frost nipping at your nose." The song glass of wine, careful avoidance of
~as a huge hit for Nat "King" Cole
m 1946 and has been recorded- by
countless other singers, including
Torme himself.
Torme, who began his singing
GALLIPOLIS -Marion C. Brady, age 89, of Gallipolis, died Tuesday, ~areer on_ radio at age 4, preferred
June l, 1999 in the Mercy South Hospital, Charlotte, North Carolina.
Jazz smgmg to the crooning that
Born May 7, 1910 in Glen Cove, New York, daughter of the late Francis · brought him his nickname.
Cocks and Lydia Malone Cocks, she was a former third grade schoolteacher,
"It really wasn't until the end of
a member of St. Louis Catholic Church, and a member of the Maria Goret- my high school days, in 1943, that I
ti Choir in Scottsdale, Arizona.
determined to be a jazz singer," ·he
In addttton to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, Dr. says. "Then I got sidetracked. (His
Joseph Brady; and a brother, Frank Cocks.
manager) felt the way to the gold was
, Survtvmg are a son, ,Frank Brady of Scottsdale, Arizona; a daughter, Dora • for me to become a crooner.
0 Shaughnessy of Charlotte, North Carolina; six grandchildren, Paul and
"For a long period.! was singing
OUR CUSTOMERS
Devon O'Shaughnessy, Kristen Mcneil, and Ryan, Malt and Meghan Brady; mushy, sentimental songs. I began to
and a great-granddaughter, Shannon Mcneil.
be called'the Velvet Fog. I never liked APPRECIATE THE RAREsT ·
. Mass of Christian Burial will be conducted at 9 a.m. Monday, June 7, 1999 11."
QUAliTY_OF Au.:
~n St. Louts Cat~olic Church, with Monsignor William Myers officiating. Bur- · He said he was. rescued by a
. tal wtll follow 10 the St. Louis Catholic Cemetery. Friends may call at tbe recording executive who heard a bit
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home on Sunday, June 6, 1999 from 7-9 p.m. of jazz in his style and urged him in
"QUALITY THAT
A prayer service will be conducted in the funeral home on Sunday, June that direction.
·
6, I 999 at 8:30p.m.
He saw his vocal career as a work
ENDURES" .
ln lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to etther St. Louis Catholic in progress, "a long learning curve."
Church, 85 State Stre~t, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ; or to the American Lung Listenin~ to recordings in a box CD
One of Ohio's old01t, largelt ud
Assoctat10n, 1700 Arhngate Lane, Columbus, Ohio 43228.
set on hts career, he said: "The earrespected monument companies
ly songs are kind of callow. I cringe
a little !>it at them."
He was his own arr~nger for
much
of his career, played piano and
BIPWELL - Otho Gary Mttchell, 66, of Bidwell, died Thursday, June
other
instruments,
acted in a few Hol3, 1999 in Holzer Medical Center, following an extended illness.
··
lywood
films,'
had
a TV talk show for
He was born January 5, 1933 in Mason County, West Virginia, son of the
a
while
in
the
'50s,
and.had his occalate J.C. "Tab" Mitchell and Flora Jane Glenn. He was employed by the Quaksional
·appearances
on ·'.'Night
er State Oil Company for 24 years and the Par Mar Oil Company for four
Court," where Judge Stone kept a
years.
·
He was an owner and operator of Sticks and Stones Logging and Fire- photo Qf Torme in his office.
He )!las nominated for a !lest sup'
.
wood Company Inc., and PTRS GEO Mitchell Trucking. He was a United
porting
actor Emmy in 1956 for a role
520 W. Main St. _: Pomeroy, 0
States.Army veteran and a member of the French City Baptist Church.
Phone 992-2588
He married Elizabeth Sexton on January 31, ·1953 at Northup, and she in "The Comedian," a Playhouse 90 ·
production.
·
·
Vinton
- 388-8803
survives, along with a son, Gary E. (Gina) Mitchell of Bidwell; two grandHe
~rote 5'ome 300 songs, more
Gallipolis448-08112
children, Jennifer Elizabeth Sue and Gary Eugene Mitchell II; two stepgrandchildren, Aaron D. and Jeremy Harmon; two brothers, Calvin (Louise)
~:::::::!.
Mitchell of Port Charlotte, Florida, and Larry Gene Mitchell of Gallipolis;
and a sister, Mary Marie (Ron) Davis of Reynoldsburg .
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by four brothers,
Lawrence, John, Sherman and Bobby Mitchell.
Services will be II a.m Monday, June 7, 1999 in the McCoy-Moore
Fun6ral Home m Vinton, w.ith the Rev. John Wood officiating. Burial will
follow in the Vinton Memorial Park, with military graveside rites presented·
by t~e Vinton American Legion Post No. 161. Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday, June 6, 1999 from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.
.
-Pallbearers will be Jesse Pishner, Darrell Shaw, Lee "Sonny" Morrison, ·
"cadq foiYou Like F.mllyBrad Fillinger, Carroll Canaday, Byron Chapman, Ray Wedemeyer and Don IGIIIIII1J0li18, ott
Since 1984
Jlcklon, ott
Denney.
·
740 448 7283
740-288-7484
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Mel
Tonne, the jazz and pop singer whose
wanm vocals earned him the unwanted title "the Velvet Fog," and the cowriter of the Ch(istmas classic that
celebrates "chestnuts roasting on an
open fire," died Saturday. He was 73. .
. Torme, who had suffered what
was described as a mild stroke in
August i996, died of complications
from that stroke after being rushed .
from his Beverly Hills home to University of California, Los Angeles,
said his publicist, Rob Wilcox.
Torme's wife, Ali, and ftve chi!_dren were at his side when ·died,
that provides voter registratiOn software, he said.
Otho Gary Mitchell
-j
Voinovich presents leaders mock check
representing Ohio share of tobacco deal
COLUMBUS (AP) -U.S. Sen.
George Voinovich . and Gov. Bob
Taft praised Congress' decision to
letthestafeshaveallofthe$200billion in settlements with tobacco
companies, including Ohio's share.
Voinovich, a former Ohio gover. nor, presented fellow Republican
Taft on Friday with a "symbolic"
check for $9.8 billion. That is what
Ohio is due over the next 25 years as
its part of the settlements.
· The states will get all the money
and the federal government none
under a bill that Congress approved
last month.
"I'm reaJiy glad to be here to celebrate something called, 'It's your
money,"' Voinovich said at ~ news
conference. Also attending ~ere
Attorney !Jenera! Betty Montg()mery, Ohio Senate President
Richard Firian of Cincinnati and
""'h
*-t
.,, get all th e money
.1. ' e SJU es Wl
an d th efiedera / government none
Un der a bl"ll that COngreSS apprOVed
laSt m0n tJ• •
.
Ohio House Speaker Jo Ann David- joining settlement negotiations only
son of Reynoldsburg, all Republi- after 24 other states had done so.
She defended the wait, saying it
cans.
Taft praised Voinovich's work in saved Ohio taxpayers money.
"I've tried very hard to pick our
getting Congress to quickly approve
arguments,
our issues in the federal
the' ~n.
.
'pllis issue was Issue No. -1 for courts," Montgomery said.
Ohio likely won't ~;ive
the state of Ohio in Washington,"
Taft said. "I never would have real check, expected on '• "dreamed it would happen this $120 million, until next
because officials in New
early."
·_Both· had plaudits for Mont. California are squabbling over
gomery, who has been criticized for to spend th~ir shares.
~arly problems reported followh1g
TOLEDO (AP) - Some northwest Ohio b.usinesses which do
ll!uch of their shipping by rail say
they're disappointed after the first'
v.leek of the takeover of former Conr\il, lines by the Norfolk Southern
B!'d CSX railroads.
; • "Things have gotten considerc
ably worse than they initially
. aflpeared to be," said Neill McKinstray, manager of transportation and
~~Jarket development for The Andersons of Maumee.
~ His company's large shipments
"fere moving slowly and single-carlead deliveries weren 'I moving at
all, he said.
; " We've had no service for the
Jl)lst two days," said Pa~lette
Lauber, rail operation manager at
·Sauder Woodworking in Archbold.
"They-don't know where our cars
are. They can :t tell us."
Norfolk Southern spokesman
Rudy Husband acknowledged that
"we did have a problem earlier in
the week" with . crew dispatching,
but staff and phone lines were added
to resolve it.
CSX representative Gary Wollenhaupt said calling train crews to
work and getting them to the right
places at the right time was tricky,
with "some hiccups here and
there."
·
He also said CSX plans to 'review
train operations, particularly in the
Cleveland area, to reduce delays to
high-priority traffic.
'
CSX and Norfolk Southern paid a
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cs,x takeover
combined $10.3 billion for Conrail
in 1997. Last year, they received
federal approval to merg~ their
respective portions of the Conrail
system into their own. railroad networlc:s.
Starting. Monday night, work to
shut down Conrail's C!Jmputer system and transfer data to the "orfolk
Southern and CSX systems began,
The next morning, former Conrail
workers officially reported to their
new employers.
United Parcel Service spokesman
Norman Black said the company
was dissatisfied with long delays of
its rail shipments on CSX and Norfolk Southern. "It has been a very,
very poor week," Black said.
UPS is the nation's highest-volume user of intermodal service, in
which truck trailers are shipped on
railroad flatcars. It operates a terminal in Maumee that is fed in part by
..
...I
...
ra.il service in Toledo.
Black said UPS is prepared to
re>route rail shipments to trucks if the
ra:ilroads' problems persist.
"We have high hopes for next
w•~ek. We are trusting that they 're
going to be working all weekend on
clearing this up/' he said.
"It's mass confusion so far, especi;llly on the Dearborn Division,"
said David Eden, .a si>okesman for
the United transportation Union.
The division, based in Dearborn,
Mich., encompasses former Conrail
lines in Michigan, Ohio, Indiana and
Illinois, including the east-west
main line through Toledo.
Other than having difficulty getting woit assignments, former Conra.il crews weren't adequately
tr:ai.ned to use Norfolk Southern
computers and have faced trouble
g-etting credit for the time they do
work, he said.
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Sun'tlay, June 6, 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galli polls, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Section
·NATO, Yugoslav generals meet at border cafe to set peace terms
BLACE, Macedonia (AP) Yugoslavs asked for more time to
NATO met all afternoon with consult " higher authorities" about
Yugoslav generals at a Macedonian terms of the withdrawal.
coffeehouse along the Kosovo bor·
Clifford said the meeting would
der Saturday to spell out the exact resumt Sunday morning at NATO's
terms for the withdrawal of Serb Kumanovo base in Macedonia. He
troops from Kosovo- a key condi· called the talks " very constructive ...
lion for the allied bombings of with positive results."
Yugoslavia to halt.
Nevertheless, the failure to reach
The talks adjourned after five agreement Saturday cast doubt on
hours, ami a NATO spokesman, U . whether the ' 2 1/2-month-old air
Col. Robin Clifford, said the campaign would. end this weekend,
which Pentagon spokesman Ken·
neth Bacon said was possible if the
two sides finalized the withdrawal
plan promptly.
Alliance jets, meanw~ile, stl1!ck
throughout Kosovo, hitting at nnil i·
tary targets just 12 m\')Jo!i from the
talks even as British commander
Michael Jackson was joined at the
Europe . cafe by a delegation' of
Yugoslav generals that showed up
three hours late.
NATO aircraft broke the sound
barrier over the Yugoslav capital of
Belgrade, Nis and several other
cities in Serbia, the Tanjug state
news agency reported Saturday
afternoon. It said no bombing raids
were recorded afterwards.
NATO said there would be no
negotiations in Blace over terms to
end the bombing campaign that
began March 24 following a bloody
13-month crackdown on ethnic Alba·
nians by Slobodan Milosevic's Serb
forces- just details establishing the
conditions and logistics of the pull·
out.
·
•
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)- UNHCR, the U.N. refugee agency,
The most widespread devasl ation
The talks that started at noon on a
They left a land of villages, vineyards said this weekend in Kukes, Albania. seems to be in the countryside.
hillside overlooking no man's land
and fields. They will come back to a
Kukes, 16 miles from the border
Kosovo is a poor, rural pro'fince were expected to be long and
broken, burned-out .place. When witb Yugoslavia, is expected to be a dotted by villages of big brick farm - tedious, lasting unlil the Serb deleKosovo's ethnic Albanian refugees major re-entry point for the returnees. houses that were home to large, gation headed back by car to
return, !heit. tired, homesick eyes will
Many of the refugees have no extended, mainly Muslim fanllilies. Yugoslav territory for what Clifford
flU with scenes of devastation.
homes to return to. By some esti' Many of. them depended on m10ney said would be consultations on "a
They will see fallow fields, shat· mates, half lhe houses in Kosovo earned by relatives who worked few points" of the withdrawal plan.
tered shops, towns and cities ravaged were destroyed and 10 percent were abroad.
Russian observers were invited to
The full extent of the destruct ion is attend, NATO sai.4, but never
by war and ethnic hatred. They will damaged· when the mass exodus
see homes, stores and apartments loot· began, also in March. The destruction still unknown, but traveling through showed up,'\The Russian Defense
ed, charred and scarred by graffiti. · since then appears to have been . Kosovo it is hard to find an e'thnic Ministry said it was unaware it was
~
Albanian village where homes have to take part in the meeting. Russia
· What they won't see are the Serb immense.
U.N. officials say the refugees also pot been burned. Thousands a.re in has opposed some , terms of the
police, paramilitaries and soldiers that
drove them away. What they won't will have to cope with land, mines, ruins.
Chickens peck around in the empty
. hear are the NATO bombs that filled shortages of food, cleari water and
electricity, and a host of other prob· yards. Livestock roanis wild. JFarms
them with terror.
They may not even see the Serb lems. Telephones don't work, roads and fields have been left unt<:nded,
neighbors they so uneasily shared the have been chewed up by """'ored their owners gone, often leaving
provin!=C with for so long. Many vehicles, bridges have been bombed aboard !he sturdy little tracto~s that
farmers regard as indispensable.
expect t~e Seib minority, fearful of by NATO.
Some
cities,
like
Djakovica,
are
City-dwellers have a better chance
reprisals for the ethnic rampage that
helped wreck Kosovo, will flee on the badly battered by the war between of finding thei,r houses or apart:ments
Serb forces and the KLA, ethnic whole. But.they are likely to find their
heels of the withdrawing forces.
"A number of desperate and badly purges and NATO attacks. Others, businesses burned and looted.. And
informed people in Kpsovo will fol- like Pristina, the provincial capital, · even in intact homes and apartrrients,
low in the tracks of the Yugoslav and . Prizen are · comparatively vandals have been at' work, taking
army and the police, " opposition unscathed, although a vast number of what they liked, trashing what they
left behind.
leader Vuk Dra5kovic predicted Sat· residents fled.
unday.
Under the peace deal accepted
Thursday, all Serb forces are to with·
draw . from Kosovo. NATO peace·
keeping troops will be deployed
,
throughout the province to ensure the
safe return of all 855,000 refugees.
To Kosovo 's Serbs, the NATO
troops are an enemy·occupying force.
:Jbe Serbs also fear the rebel K9sovo
peace plari that mediator Vilc.tor
Chernomyrdin played a major role
in crafting.
Bacon said there has been no
indication three . days after
Yugoslavia announced it had accept·
ed NATO's demands to end the con·
flict that Serb forces are withdrawing.
As a result, NATO. said it was
continuing t~ attack Serb forces in
Kosovo while intensifying prepara·
tions to enter the southern Yugoslav
province once a verified withdrawal
has begun and help return hundreds
of thousands of ethnic Albanian
refugees home from Macedonia and
Albania.
Tanjug said NATO jets fired four
missiles near Urosevac, close to
Blace. NATO attacks were also '
reported near Mount Goles south·
west of Kosovo's capital and the
southern city of Prizren.
·
NATO said allied pl ~nes struck
30 artillery pieces; nine tanks and
over two dozen other military targets
in Kosovo during 536 sorties.
.
· " Other facilities that support
Serb forces in Kosovo responsib,le
Devastation awaits returning refugee:s
~ ,:C") ....._.,
""')
· United Nations officials hope for a
slow, orderly return of refugees to
scarred
war when
the worst
ofami
the
Kosovo,bywhich
was already
poor
ethnic purges began in March. .
.
"I don't think we can move a large·
number of refugees inio .Kosovo very
quickly because of the .great level of
destruction," Daniel Endres ·of the
e
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Salutes
Our 1999
Graduates!
.
,
,,
..
Jeanifer Selluds
Point Pleasant High SchOOl
~of
Micuel G. Sellards
(Ad•iaistratioa)
Daalel Rodgers
Ripley High School
Slqa:Gof '
Lil Rod&eri, RN
(Patieat Care Services)
Billy Shalt
River Valley High Sch®l
Sooof
Jeaaie Sbato
(Cardio-Respiratory Svcs.)
Toni Shah
Point Pleasant High School
Cauie B••aaner
PoiltPie&lantHigh School
Sistcrof ,
Carrie B1111araer, PTA
(Ho•e Dealt• Ser¥iets)
~of
MCSWt,MD
A1brey Wiakler ·
BaDdysHighScbool
(AxJdan'*"of
Charles A Carolya Fulks
(Au~iliiey Me•bers)
i
Kevia Kltcbea
NOOb IVel1em Olllege
Sooof
Jeri Kilcbea, RN
.(Obstetrics Department)
Alice Brow1i11
PoinlPieasant High School
Dqlmof
Rebma Browaiag
(Laboratory)
Jeue Jordan
W.OSHigh Scbool
Guimof
Rose Jordan
(FOOd Smim)
J.D. Wny
PointPI~HighScbool
Sooof
Sharoa Shull, RN
(Patieat Care Str¥ices)
Naacy Baker
PointPieasantHighScbool
Dqlmof
Betty Baker
(Patieat Care Ser¥ieea)
Aagela Baker
MastmiiWVU
DqlmOf
Betty Baker .
(Palienl Care Smicei)
By STEVE WILSTEIN
PARIS (AP) - One of the most
dramatic finals in Grand Slam history ended with hoth players in tears.
.Steffi Graf wept in disbelief at ~in·
ning her six~h and finalFrench Open,
Manina Hingis because of her stun·
ning collapse.
"Amazing," Graf told the crowd
after capturing her 22nd Grand Slam
title Saturday with a 4-6, 7-5, 6-2
victory over the N,o. I Hi"gis. "This·
is the most intredible memory I'm
going to have looking back on my
career."
Moments later after celebrating
with champagne, Graf declared that
this French Open, her 16th, was also
her last. No other player has graced
the red clay at Roland Garros more·
times. in the Open era, and only Chris·
Seaa Gibbs, DC
PalnrrOJUegeofOJiro!n:tic
Sooof
Aray Powell, RN
(Post Aautbesia)
By STEVE WILSTEIN
PARIS (AP) - Andre Agassi
·strutted off court tapping his heart, a
gesture to show he still has all !he
desire it takes to win a Grand Slam
.:championship.
1
.
His passion for tennis had waned
a few years ago, aitd his ranking
plummeted, but on Satuiday tl\e old
fire burned for everyone to,see he .
reached !he French Open final.
Seven games in 24 minutes is all
Agassf needed to deliver a . quick
knockout of Dominik Hrbaty, completing a rain-suspended match 6-4,
7-6 (8' 6), 3-6, 6-4.
Now only Andrei Mcdvedev,
ranked No. I00 but playing the best
tennis of his own resurrected career,
stands · between Agassi · and tennis
history.
Medvedev has spoken all week
about how his game is a reflection of
his peace of mind now t~at,he's in
·love agaln with !he German tennis
as
.
Ada• Peanoa
Point l'leasllitHigh School
bof .
Yvoue Pear101
(Rebbilitatioa Smices)
.
GaUia Academy Blue Angels'
4 X 100/200-meter relay team .
Blue Angels ·take third place
in Division II state track finals
Arch::.:
Blllae Arboaast
RioGnmde Uoivetsity
Him of
Lisa AJtoaut, RN
(lateaaive Care Uait)
Jamie Holl11d
. PointPicasantHigh sChoOl
. O.pof
c•eryl HoUnd, PTA
(P.ysical Thrapy)
Nie.olas Nort••P ·
'Wia&High Scbool
bof
Doaaa Northup, RN
(PVNRC)
. Do1glas Boyles
Point Pleasant High Schil!ll
Sooof
· A11e11e Boyles
(Board o( T11sleea)
Fraakle RifDe
Tm C~eesebrew
PoiJtPicasantHighScbool '
Point ~tHigh School
b,of ·
Dapof
.
Barbm Rime
Joyce c•eesebrew, RN
(P.ylidaa Practice Sm.)
(Openliac Roo•)
s•iroa Nort•
GalliaAcadlmy High SdKlOI.
Nmof
s•eala r...a.
(Radloi'IY Ser¥1ees)
Even, with seven titles, had greater
success.
"This is definitely .the last time I
played here, without a doubt," said
Graf, who turns 30 on June 14. "This
memory should .be the way it is. It's
very special."·
It was, she said, the biggest, most
unexpected victory of her career. She
hadn't won a tournament all year,
hadn't even reached a major final iil
three years. In recent years, she suffered enough injuries .to 1111 a med·
ical journal, ·endured more surgeries
and rehabs than she cares to remem·
ber.
Now, Graf hinted, it's time to look
toward the end.
"It is tournament by tournament,
match by match, " she said. One
'thing is certain, though. Sbe's head-
ing to Wimbledon to go for her
eighth title on the Centre Court she
loves so much.
Everything about this final truly
was, as Graf said, amazing: fans
roaring for her and booing Hingis
mercilessly ; Hingis throwing a
ljlntruin and nearly defaulting; Graf
storming back when Hingis was
' serving in the second set, just three
points from victory.
lp desperation, Hingis even hit an
underhand serve in the last game,
winning a point but drawing louder
boos from a crowd that treated the
18-year-old like a national enemy. .
Pans hooed Hingis off the coun
when the match ended, and resumed
booing her when she returned for the
trophy presentation, sobbing 4ncontrollably in her mother's arm~.
IS-East Palestine 11.00, IS-MihmEdison ii.OO. lO· Northwestern '9:3.1 .82 (Dara A _ldredg~. Sarnh
Lanustrr Falrfteld · Untbn 10.00. 20- Medina Lemon, Katie Hay, lessica OJlkcs). 6-Canron CentnJI
BuCkeye 10.00. 20-Springfidd Northwestern 10.00. Catholic 9:36.22 (K~ti e ·tupsor, Ja~.:kie Brechbill.
23-Cinciimati lndiln Hill 8.00. 23-Hilli~boro 8.00. Colleen Malone)·, Maria Juueaume). 7.Cincinnati
23-Mogadorr: Field 8.00. 23~Smithville 8.00. 23: . Mariemont 9:39.77 (Decca Vianello, Lb. Parker,
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney 8.00. 28-0rrville Mara Cunliffe, Lauren Pons ). 8-Keucring
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VALLEY 6.00. 29-6.00. 29-Circleville 6,00. 2'9- Hinde,
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·"""·Edwards ).
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Louisville St. Thomas Aquinu ·.6.00. 29~
tOO·ruter hl&h hurdles: 1-Eri n Connolly.
Ponsmoulh , ,00. 29-Sprlngfteld Kenton Ridge Springfield Shawnee, 14.78. 1-FoU J•mes. Albany
6.00. 29-Sunbury Big Walnut 6.00. 36-Rocky River Alexander, 15.31. 3-0leridy Ryari, lancaster
5.50. 37-Cincinnati Wyoming S.OO. 37-MIIIenbtJ!& Fairfield Union, 15.44. 4-SHANNA CARTER,
Wesr Holmes S.OO. 37-0ntario 5.00. 40-Barneivllle GALLIPOLIS CALLIA ACADEMY, 15.62. S;
4.00. 40-Napoleoo 4.00. 40-Nonon 4.00. 43 -Autora Audrey Whittaker, Med ina Buckeye, 15.76. 63.00. 43-Beachwood 3.00. 43-Columbus Grandview Markita May. Columbus Hamilton Township, 15.79.
Hrs. 3.00. 43-Columbtls Hamilton Township 3.00. 7-Kacie Vavrek. Bellaire, · JS.8S. &-Tina Fuch s.
43-Dayton Olristian 3.00. 43 -Wen Milton Milton-
Akron 1:43 .72 Archl:li~hop Hob1n (Andrea
Ue~·dlyn. Ambt:r Kl;'lle y. Samh Kmer, LaShaunlae
MQO(e). 5-Nonuu 1.46.83 (Kri$Un Kraft. Me hua
h ak . Joana Roberts, Crystal Love1. 6-Medma
Buckeye I:46.86 (Susan Wallace, Stephanie Supan.
Medma Yuravak, Laura Sclmurn -7-S pn ngfield
Nonhwes•e•n 1·. <6.94 (B•ookc Co•••ll, Jcsso<•
Main, Ericah Beacom: Dar:i Aldredge). · §You ngstown Cardinal Mooney 1:4698 (Chantal
Ami II, Layla Morri5, Sarah Lyras, Lon Patrone)
1 ,600-m~lrr run:
1-Vo nnie Down mg.
Cleveland Hts.-Beaumom School 5:09.44. 2-Becca
Vianello. Cin Mariemont 5:09.S'i. ~-Candice Leep.
Spri ngfi eld K ~nton Ril!ge 5.11.83. 4- Lmdse~
(See RESULTS on B·8) .
Agassi .defeats Hrbaty, moves·
on to French ·o pen title round
'
Aln11der Loag
Point Pleas.JtHigh School
Sooof
Debra Loaa
(Rebbilitalion Services)
Charismatic was loudly cheered
in the post parade and when he was
loaded into the gate by a huge crowd,
many pf whom came hoping to see
racing's 12th Triple Crown winner.
and first since Affirmed in 1978.
Charismatic was the 8-5 favorite
ahead of Menifee (5·2) and
Silverbulletday (5-I ), winner of II
of her 12 previous starts and making
her debut against males.
Silverbulletday, ridden by Jerry
Bailey, finished seventh after being
in !he lead with a half-mile to gp and
.
still second behind Charismatic at
the quarter pole. ..
. Amy Wilson, Shanna Cart~r, Tessa Sibley and Jessica Bodimei'
The crowd roared in anticipation
of a stretch battle between the filly
and Charismatic, but Silverbulletday
faded and lemon Drop Kid and
Vison and Verse stole Charismatic's
thunder.
Then s~ddenly, just strides past
l!llk .li nru!
. ·4x100m
4x200m
the finish line, a.damper was put on
March
27-Warren
Relay
s
at
Warren
Local
............................................
:53.1
(I)
I
:48.2
(I )
the 131 st · Belmont when Antley
April
1-at
Chesapeake
..
.....................................
,
.............................
........
:51
.2
(
I)
I
:48.7
( I)
pulled up his horse and dismounted.
April
6-at
logan
vs.
Jackson
& hosts .........................................,. ........... :53.3 ( I)
I
:48.4
(I)
" He broke down just after the fin April 13:home vs. Point Pleasant & ,South Gallia ............................ ...... :53.7 (I)
I:52.9) I)
ish line," Antley sa:id. " He gave us a
'
April
17-Ray
M~Coy, Invitational in Huntington, W.Va ....................... :.:52.2 (I)
I
:47.5 ( I )
lot. He gave America a lot. ".
,
April 24-Marietta Lions lnvitational... .................................................. :54.75 (4)
I :48 .76 ( I )
It was another disappointment for
April 27-at Fairland ............ .............................. .... ,.......................... .. ..... :5 1.21 (I ) ·
I :46.9 (I).
Bob and Beverly lewis, who also
April 30/May !-Gazette Relays in Charleston , W.\fa. .......................... :50 .11 ( I)
I :45.35 (I)
saw a Triple Crown bid fail in the · May 7-Rio Grande Invitational. ... :.......................................................... :57.9 (I j
1:51).4 (I )
1997 Belmont when their SiI ver
May 15-SEOAL meet at logan ........ .. ................. ........... .. ...................... :50.9 (I)
I :46.7 (I)
Charm finished second.
May 19122-Div. II Ironton district' mect·........ .......................................... :49.3 (I)
I :44.3 Il l
May 26/28-Div. II Zanesville regional meet... ...... .... .. .... ........................ :49 .2 (I)
I :42.64 (I)
June 4/5-Div. II state meet at Dayton .......... .. ...... .. .................................. :49 .3 (2)
. I:43.28 (2)
Notes: In the Warren Relays, seni or Angel Beck ran in Sible.y's place in the 4 x lOOm race .... ln the Logan
and home triangular meets, freshman Micah Eberhardt ~nd sophomore Gretchen Craig ran the first two legs
of the 4 x lOOm race .... ln the Marietta Lions In vitational, Kim Anderson, Craig and Ebe rhardt ran in the 4 x
lOOm race. In the 4 x 200m ra.ce. Anderson ran in Carter's place .... Jn the SEOAL meet. Crai g ran fo r Si bley
in the 4 x IOOm race. Eberhardt ran for Wilson in rhe 4 x 200m race.
home run in the fourth inning as the
New York Yankees rallied from a
three-run deficit for a 6-3 win
Saturday.
.
While the Yankees .remain on
track for their fifth straight trip to the
postseason, the 1\iets (27•28) quickly
are sinking out of contention, falling
•
under . soo for the first lime since
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Final Union 3.00. 49-Andover Pymatuning Vnlley 2.00. Cnmden Prebl e Sh awne('. 16 n
losing their $eason opener.
I s
d f
h D' - ' II 49-Be llevut 2.00. 49-Beloit West lljnoch 2.00. 49- ' IOO·mtllfr dash : !-Jodie Rates . Dyuvi llc
Before the game, there was talk resu ts atur ay rom t e I VISIOn
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesui~ 2.00. 49-Granville Meadowbroo k. 12 .10 l-U.S hau ntal'; Mnore. Akron
L- replaced state track meets at the University of HXl. 49-McConnelnlllt Morpn 1.00. 49-Newton Archbi shop Hoban, 12. 48 3-Luc.reiUI Corbin.
that Bob Apodaca may ""
D" 1 • "' ]
St d.
Falls 2.00. 49-Spri ngfield Northeastern 2.00. 49- Urbana, 12.49 4-Deao m:~ Caldwell , Orrville. 12.6"1
't h' .
h Masa t0 "'1 OSh"11 (5 •
i:lyTum
on S ne come
a mm:
Warsaw River View 1.00. 58-Belmont Union Local S-Akua Soadwa. Cle Hts Beaumont School. 12.66
as
p1 C mg C03C •
scores: 1-Clevr:land Hu. Beaumom
•) d'd • h ) Apod •
1
1.00. 5 8 -Ca~ t alia Margaretta 1.00. 58-Cincinn ati 6-Cour1 ney Jamerso n,· Columbu5 B1shop Hartlay,
J
I n t ep
aca .S cause, OS - Schoo189.00. 2-Akron Archbishop Hoban 44.00. J. ~Purcell -Marian 1.00. 58-0arksville Clim on-Mass ie 12.71 1-TF..SSA SIBLE\', GALUPOLIS
ing for only the second time in seven GALLIPOLIS GALLI A ACADEMY 31.00. 4· 1.00. 511-Memor Lake Catholic 1.00.
GALLI A ACADEM\', 12.'75. R-And1ea Ue"~H rn
. A 'l 27
Columbus Bishop H art~ 24.00 . 4--Columbus
4x100~mder re-lly :
1-Cleve land "Hu . Akron Arch b•stlop Hob..m. 12 90
.. '
starts Stnce PO
·
I
School F« Girls 24.00. 6- b.-ny Akundtr 11.50. Beaumont Schoo19:1".34 (Eileen Wittman, UOOsey
.tdOO·meltr relal: 1-Cir-,·ela nd Ut!!
The Yankees had 11 hits, include 1·Byesville Mudowbroot 20.00. 8-Keuerin& Nemulil, Vonnir Downina. Cicely Campbel). 2· Beaumont 'Sc hool 1·42_4\ (Shavonne Machn, Ak.u.ll
ing six doubles - two by Chuc'k
Alter 19.00- 8.UWI!!" Slftdtlsky 19.00. ~'"Sandusky 9:21.37 (Daniel Oottfrled, Kathy S011dwa, Teun Fmuon. C1cely Campbt;ll ). 2,.
· 10-S
Y P.,kias 11.00. ID-vrw. 18.00. 12·
·E itY Hemng,
· J · F lk) J L
Ill S• ' GALLIPO LIS GAL LI A ACADEMY t.4l.l8
Knoblauch.
Spn"n•fleld Shawnee 17.00. · 13-Richtirld Revm
eu•ca a · • oussv e ·
Thomas mAquinas
9:23.70 (Pam Farnsworth, Alison (JESSICA BODIMER, TESSA SJBLEll',
o
Orlando Hernandez (6·5) won tor 16.00. 14-Cil~innali Mariorpool 15.00. IS-Batavia Buchanan, Sarah BertOlini, Anna Gambone). 4· SHANNA CA RTER. AM\' WILSON). :t. d · - to
Clermont Northeastern 11.00. IS.Camden Preble Milan Edison SUI.74 (Christy Campana, Kate Colun_~bu s 81ihup Hartley 1:43.5fi (Kee li Sthh .
tJme 10 lOUt StartS.
Shawn~
I t.OO. 15-C
. anton Cenlnl Carnotk Jt.OO. Arthur. Stacey Hay, Megan Zil ner). S·Springlield Shanae Miler.
1 R~'·a S4u1re, Cuunney Jamersun) 4- r
the IhIf
1:
Graf beats Hingis, captures
women's French Open crown
•
.I
By ED SCHUYLER Jr.
suffered a cracked ankle bone.
NEW YORK (AP) - Lemon
"Natul}llly our feelings arc pretty
Drop Kid, a long shot racing for just low, but naturally our main concern
the fifth time this year, came on in is for the horse," Charismatic 's
·the stretch and won the Belmont owner Bob Lewis said. "We're dev·
Stakes on Saturday as Charismatic astated with the thought that anyfinished third in a bid /or .the Triple thing could . be wrong with
Crown.
Charismatic." .
Shortly
after the · finish ,
After the race, Antley was in
Charismatic, the Kentucky Derby tears.
and Preakness winner, was pulled up
"Charismatic is going to be OK, I
by jockey Chris Antley, who imme- think," he said. "I'm just a little low
diately dismounted. 1t appeared the right now."
strapping chestnut colt was favoring
Lemon Drop Kid was fifth on the
his left foreleg.
rail turning for home. !hen went out·
Lemon Drop Kid, ridden by Jose side for !he stretch drive that ended
Santos, took the lead from in a victory wonh $61.50, $26 and
Charismatic with about an eighth of $10.60 .and a purse .of $600,000,
·mile left and got to the end .o f the I which was three times his previous
I /2 miles ahead of another longshot, · career earnings.
Vison and Verse.
The grandson of Seattle Slew, the
The filly Silverbulletday was in 1977 Triple Crown winner, ran I 1/2
the hunt until the quaner pole and miles in 2:27.89 for his second victo·
then faded in her bid to become the · ry in five starts this year. He ·had fin·
first of her sex to win the Belmont ished ninth in the May I 1\entucky
si nce Tonya in 1905.
Derby, then skipped the Preakness
It was the third straight year that a two weeks later and prepped for the
bid for the elusive Tripi~ Crown W\IS Belmont with a third in the Peter Pan
foiled, and this one ended on a very ·on May 23 at Belmont.
sad note.
.
lemon Drop Kid finished a head
About five minutes after the end in front of Vison and Verse, who was
of !he race, Charismatic was taken I ,1/2 lengths ahead of Charismatic.
from. the track in a horse ambulance. Best of luck was another 4 3/4
Veterinarian Dr. 'Larry Bramlage . lengths back in a field of 12 three·
said he was told thai Charismatic year-olds.
·Aloml!l' hit a hard grounder off
Sanders (1-4) that first baseman
Mark Grace could only knock down.
Grace scrambled to make ~ quick
.sidearm throw to Sanders, who
CLEVELAND (AP) - A comedy dropped it. .
of errors by Scott Sanders and .the
~s the ·ball rolled away, Alomar
Chicago Cubs and Roberto Alomar's broke for second. He was sliding in
baserunning smaits ·gave the Indians headfirst at second while Sanders
their wildest win of the season on threw .off-balance into left field .
Saturday.
Alomar popped up at second and
Alomar went to third without hit· easily dashed to third. Sanders was
ting the ball out of !he infield in the charged with two errors on the play
II th inning and scored on Wil . and Alomar was credited with. a hit,
'Cordero's·single.
his third of the game.
· ·The Indians scored two runs in
Mike Jackson (1·2) got the win.
the ninth - set up by two Chicago
Yankees 6, Mets 3
·errors - · befor~ Alomar a.Gcd •..,. ~J;<Iew;yon. lhe·Subway Series
around !he bases on a play resem· ts tutrung tnto a black hole for the
bling a scene from !he " Bad News New.York Mets.
Bears." · .
Jino Martinez hit a go-ahead
Point Pleasant
~ \.:
'-.
Lemon Drop Kid captures
victory in Belmont Stakes
Major league
baseball
I)
Kipling
·
.
Shoe
Co.
.. ,
t)
1800
Indians get by Chicago Cubs
8-7 in 11 frames; Yankees win
.IS%011
~·
~:;~ion Army, which h~ not dis- ~ E~~~
for the ethnic cleansing were
attacked," NATO said in a state·
'ment, including a command post at
Prist ina.
AI the same time, preparations
were accelerating to move into the
area with the 49,000-strong interna·
tiona! peacekeeping force. ·
Jackson, commander of .close to
16,000 NATO troops already in
Macedonia preparing to enter Koso·
vo as part of that force, put his head·
quafters in Skopje on .24-ho'ur
notice. · ·
· It was Jackson who acrived first
at the Blace meeting, followed by a
European Union delegation. A short
time later, five sedans carrying the
Yugoslav delegation pulled up to the
coffeehouse reserved for the talks.
Clifford said the delegates were
working through detailed documents
laying out NATO's terms for the
troop pullout from Kosovo, and both
sides were taking care to make sure
translations for the Yugoslav delega·
tion were precise.
"It is crucially important that
everybody understands what is
meant by the ,words;'' Clifford said.
GHT sPoTs
v
uI
Sunct.y, JuM
B
e,
'
;
player Anke Huber.
"I'm happy to hear that," Agassi
said. !'I prefer if he lets his gir.lfriend
play for ·him instead, with all due
respect to her gall)e."
for his part, Agassi said he doesn't;beJieve the breakup of his mar·
riage to actress Brooke Shields has
.made him more motivated or more
focused in tennis.
.
."I would hate to ·give the impression that !hat's the c115e," he said,
"because that would mellJl that the
beautiful years I shared with Btooke
somehow interfered with my tennis.
"I think we constantly make
choices in life. The choice !hat I
made iri my personal life was a very
important personal decision. But the
one I made with my tennis was also
a very calculated specific decision,
and that's just to continue maximiz·
ing the things I still feel! can accomplish." · ·
If Aeassl wins .the French title
today he will complete a career
Grand Slam and become the first
man lO win all four majors on three
different surfaces.
Only four other men have won
the four majors - the Australian,
French, Wimbledon,•and U.S. ppen
- but they did It when the tourna·
ments· were played on either clay or
grass, not hard couns.
"It would be · iin incredible
achievement," said the 29•year-old
Agassi, who also is bidding to
become !he first American to win all
fopr since Don Budge in 193,8.
Agassi's trip 'to the final was
threatened Friday when Hrhaty won
six of the last seven games to take
the third set and a 2·1 lead in the
fo~rth . But rain gave Agassi a
reprieve, allowing him to come back
fresh oti a dry day with 'the court
more suilable to him .
Brian Mitchell, Jeff Mitchell, Bert Craig and T.R. Rogers
Gallia Academy Blue Devils'
4 x 100-meter relay team
~·~
.
.
.
.
'
.
~·
March 27-Warren Relay s at Warren Local .......... .:.... .. ... .............................. .. .... .. ...... .. .... :.... ............... :46.2 (2)
April 1-at Chesapeake ................. ................ ... ....... ....... ... ......... .. :............. .... .... .................................... :45.7 (3)
April 3-at Ironton ....... ,.... ................. ... ....................... ...... ............... ........... ·............................................. :46 (4)
April6-at logan vs. Jackson & hosts .... .. ... .... .:...... .. ......... .. ............ .. .. ................................................ .. :4'i .8 ( I)
April 13-home vs. Point Pleasan t & South Gallia ... ....... :.................... .... ...... ....... .... .. .. .......................... :46.6 ( I I
April t 7-Ray McCoy Invitational in Huntington, W. Va .. .. .. ............................ .. .......... .............................. :46 (I)
· April '24-at Marietta Invitational ....... .......... ... .. ............................................ .. .......... ...... .. ,.................. :44.7 (2)
.· April 27-at Fairland ...................... ........... .... :............ ...... ................................................................... ,.... :45 .5 ( I )
April 30/May .l ·Gazelte Relays in Charleston, W.Va . .... :............ ..... .. ................... ...... .......... :............. :45.37 (2)
May 7-Rio Grande lnyitational ........ ....................... ........ ................. ..................... .. .............................. :44.4 ( I )
May 15-SEOAL meet at Logan .............. ................. ........... ........... ...................... ,.............. ...... :43.9 (I)
May 19/22-Div.ll Ironton district meet ........................................ :... ,..................... ............................ ,.. :43.3 (2)
May 26/28-Div. II Zanesville regional.mect. ......................................................................................... :43.28 (3}
June 415-Div. II.state !Deet at Dayton ............................................................ ,...................................... :43.67 (7)
(
'
I;
.'
•
I
•
-- ·- .. ...
_
. ...
I.
•
••
�Sunday, June 6, 1999 ·
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Gae.t ti's clutch homer helps Cubs tally 5-4 win over Indians ~;.
'
ly_JOM WITHERS
~LEVELAND (AP) -
Gary
Gaetli is 40. He's played in· more
ll1"'!2,200 games and hit 356 career
hQillers. Those numbers didn't make
hisn feel any better when he came to
the plate in the ninth inning and saw
:174 on the scoreboard.
, ','It's embarrassing to look up and
sef ,your battin,g average like that,"
he,,s!lid. "I've just been trying to do
something every day to try and help
thC team win."
· Gaetti helped the Cubs by hitting
a .!!wo-ruq homer in the ni~th inning
on Mike Jackson as the Cubs rallied
yc\.again Friday night, this ti_me for a
Fi~st
5-4 victory Friday night over the Indians, who took a 4-3 lead into the
Cleveland Indians.
ninth and handed the ball over to
Chicago's latest comeback gave Jackson (0-2), who had converted 24
the Cubs II wins in their final at-ba) straight save chances since Aug. I.
this season, including eight in the last
"I wasn 't aware of my save
, 16 games. Of the Cu~s· 30 victories, streak," said Jackson, who was II 15 are of the come-from-behind vari- for-11 this year. " I never look at perely.
sonal stats. I look at getting the first
"That's the mark of a good hitter I face . That sets the tone.
team," Gaetti said. "Good teams do Tonight, I walked him .''
that. The teams that I've pl~ycd on
" Him" would be Tyler Houston,
that have go ne to the playoffs and · who was replaced by pinch, runner
beyond have all won like that. The Curtis Goodwin. Gaetti, in an 0-for-8
Yankees did it a lot last year and I slide, then drove a 1-2 pitch into the
know the Indians do it."
. seats ·in right-center for his fifth
David Justice and Jim Thome homer.
each hit two-run homers for the
"Hey, you never know," Gaetti
said. "That's the saying for tonight,
·You never know."'
Gaetti drove in a run with a fieldcr's choice grounder in the second,
grounded out in the fourth and lined
out in the sixth before facing
Jackso n. He went 2-for-13 in his last
homestand and even after his homer
was hitting a whoppi'ng .1 81.
"What do you want me to say,
batting averoge is overrated?" he
joked.
Rick Aguilera (2-1) got two outs
in the eighth . and Terry Adams
· pitched the ninth for his second save.
Cleveland put runners on first and
third with one out. but Richie Sexson
struck out- making him hitless in
20 at-bats- and Kenny Lofton flied
out.
Cleveland had been 29-0 when
leading after eight innings before
Jackson gave up Gaetti's homer.
"It was the first time all year
Mike did. not do his job," Indians
manager Mike Hargrove said. "He's
human. He hung a pitch to Gaetti and
sometimes that happens. I'll take my
chances with ·Mike Jackson out
there."
SammySosa went 1-for-4 with an
RBI for the Cubs, but before flying
out to right in the ninth, he didn't hit
a ball out ofthe infield. He is 4-for-
night. of interleague play sees NL win nine of 13 games
' game of the season on the opening
Martinez struck out a career-high basebail's first t'l-game winner as Braves 5-1 Friday night.
. "I felt great," said Martinez (II Pedro Martinez pitched his best night of .interleague play.
16, pitching a three-hitter to become the Boston Red S"'' beat the Atlanta
I), · who reached double digits in
strikeouts for the . eighth time this
season. "I felt I ·could throw it by
anybody, and I did. "
·
By The AsiiOClated Press
.MONTRf'..AL EXPOS: Agreed 10 terms with
LHP Josh Gird ley,
;:::1~~~~~~~~~t~=J~~E~~~:~~
At Thurman Munson
M~rr1orial Stadium, Canton
CuynhogmFalls 0 0- 11 vs . Cinci nntati Elder 1266). II
•AL standings
EaStern Division
:w
Gil
L l<L
8ouon ............................ :. 33
20
NeW York ............................ 31
'Joro1H0 .................. ........... 26
Ia?lPa Bay ........................... 24
galumore .............. ........... ....20
ll
62J
.·l96
JO
JO
JJ
.444
..~71
Central Division
t:LEVELAND ................. 34 18
Chicago ..............
·,-·24 2?
~ails~ Cit,Y. .... .
B 28
&elroll .... ..
... .. .... . . .. B J I
Minnesota .
... l B 35
.47!
.45 l
.426
1':
8' :
9' :
IJ
464
(
1 ·
654
9':
lO',
ll
H{
.1.40
Dh·i!ion
21
Oakland .................... .....28 20
Wu~un
fexas ..............................J2
t~i~·
. . . . . . . . . . ··:::::~~
~~
4'·
5
6\
NL standings
bam
:W L l<L
Atl1111a..........
....... 32 22
thilidelphim ................... .... .. 27 26
tlew Yortc. ................... ,......... 27 27
~on&real ............................... 19 32
f1orida .................................. i9 36
·
'
•~oUstoo
.509
.500
..\ 73
.345
~~~~~~~-.~~;~siit
NCINNATI ................. : .27
............................. 30
lt
ll
1$bur&h ............. ............. :..29
"Louis .............................. 26
24
27
547
491
Milwauk.ee ............ ,............... 24 JO
.444
~
. ilic"o
~
. ..
,.,
.S93
.604
.588
.SSt
..............
,.
1~
Western Division
,~·zoDa ..-...............................33 22
• an Francisco ....................... 30 2$
•
Angeles ,.. ........................27 26
olorado ............. :................. ll 28
&n Diego ............................. 2t 32
'
.a
.600
.H5
.509
.4lt
.396
Friday's scores
(ALvs. NL)
!
~
Boston S, Allabla I
*
·•
4
Florida 10. Tampa Bay 0
Toronto 6, Montreal 2
Chicago Cubs S, CLEVELAND 4
Derroir 4, St Louis 1 ·
N.Y. Yankees 4, N.Y. Me1s 3
;1
3
.
Fr•'day's West"rn
Conference linale
"'
Cuyahoga Elll ~ Wnlsh Jesuit (27-4) vs .' Roc ky
Rm:r (22 -81. J p.m
Dh·l~ lon 111 nnal~
AI cooper Stadium . Columbu~
Campbell ,...lemoria l (2J- J ) lo'S Cinnntlati
Madeira (26-J ). 11 a.m .
Di,·ision IV
At Thurman Munson 1\lemorial Stadium
Morral Ridg~d.1k CI'J, 11 ) \'S. S( Henry ( 18-~ ). J
pm
State softball
.
Dt~llas 4. Colorado. I. Uallt~s wi ns sen.es 4}
.
Stanley <:;up finals
Thfsda\'
Buffalo ar Dall a~. 8 p.m.·
Thursdu,·
Buffalo 111 Dallas. 8 p.m. ·
.
Sutu rd rn·
Dtlllas nt Buffalo. 8 p.rn Tue~a\", June 15
DtlllaS 111 BuffakJ, 8 Pm
Thu~aJ, June 17
Buffalo l\t Dallas, R p.m.. rf necessr.r)'
Sa~urda~· . June IIJ
Dalla! at Buffalo, 8 p.m.. 1f necessar)'
The"sday. June ll
Uuffalo at Dallas. 8 p.m . if necessary
tourname~ts
· ' cOLU MRUS. Ohto lAP) ~ Championship
pa1 rings nnd semrft nnl resul ts fo r the 22tld annual
Friday's semifinal scoreS
Division I
N011h Canton Hoover 4, Cehna 0
Pickerington 10. Hamilton Ros§ I
Division II
LaGrange Keys1one I. PORTSMOUT H 0
Spri ngfield Kenton Ridge 3, T<~llmadge 0
Dhision Ill
Jeromesvi lle Hill sdale 6. Morral Ridgedale 2
N. Robinson Colont!'l Crawford 13. N .
Lewi sburg Triad 0
' ·
·
Baseball
to'' ~tSr~l~~uELcES'rObDGERS : A.cti votcrl INF
Jme Vtr.cni no from 15-iby di~nh led li ~t. Purchuu:d
the ro ntnK t of INF Chance Sanford from
t\lbllquerque of the I'C L Placed OF Todd
H olla~;~dswonh t~nd IF Mark Grudzielrmek on 15-da)'
disabled hsL Reca lled OF Ke,·in Gibbs from
i\ ltluquerque rmd pi<Jced him on 60-d<J)' disab led li st.
Signed ss Jason Repko.
SAN DIEGO PADRES : P.laced ss Chris Gomez
and OF Reggie Sa nders on 1he 15-dny disab le d li st
Rl'cal\cd OF G:~ry M:mhews from Las Vegas of the
P:~\'ific Coast League. l'urchascd the w mnu.:t of INF.
David Newhan from Las Vegas . Tra11sfened LHP
R11r1dy Myers frum the 15 to 60-duy disabled list.
'
Cleveland 4; ,Philadelphia 9, :
Baltimore 5; Houston 7, Minnesota
6; Pittsburgh 6, White Sox 3 in II
innings; San ,Diego 3, Seattle 2; and ··
San Francisco 4, Oakland 3 in 15
innings. Cincinnati 'sgame at Kansas·· ·
At Feriway Park, Damo.n"Buford, .. City was postponed because pf a ~
who went 3-for-4, made it 5- 1 with a - power failure and rescheduled as ·
homer in the eighth as the Red SOx . part of a doul:Jieheader tonight. ,
won for the 21Sl time in 27 games,
Yankees 4, Mets 3
beating Tom Glavi ne (3-7).
In 0 th er game s' I't was th e
Yankees 4, Mets 3; Arizona II ·,
Texas 3 ; LOS Angeles 5' Anaheim 4·'·
San Franci sco-Oakland; Florida I 0,
Tampa Bay O; Toronto 6, MOntreal
2; Defroil 4, Sl. Louis I i Cubs 5,
Scott Brosius hi I
tiebreaking' .
·a
doubl e I'n th e seventh bCt'ro re a bois ..
terou s, sellout crowd of 56, 175 at '
Yankee Stad '
d' g the Mets.
lUm. sen In
I
to their seventh straight loss.
. (See INTERLEAGUE .on B-3)
'
Basketball
Women's N~tional Basketball Association
CLEVEL1\ND ~OCKERS : Rdeased F Tnnjn
Kb~ tl c iUlfl C Tammye Jcnkin!i
Football
National Football League
NI:L: Su spended Dallas Cowboys DT Leon Leu
rndcfi nitcly ,.or violuting the league·s· substance abuse policy for the third time .
ATLANTA FALCONS: Released P James
Gracia . MINNESOTA VIK INGS: Signed DE Talance
Sawyer.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS: Signed WR Terrell
. Owens to a one-ye ar contract. '
SEATtLE SEAHAWKS: Signed J WR Charles
Jordan. Released WR Brinn Blades.
'WASHINGTON REDS KINS: Signed DE Mar'co
Coleman to :i one-year comrnct.
Low, low miles and loeally owned w/auto trans, .air
eondltlonlng, Styled studded wheels and mueh more.
~
:
1990 MERCURY TOPAZ
Arizona 11 , Texas 3
San Diego 3, Seattle 2
Los Angeles .S, Anaheim 4
San Francisco 4, Oakland 3, ( 1S)
Auto,
power windows, power locks, AM/FM eass,
Great ata1rtar· car for a new driver· low miles·.
They played Saturday
N.Y. Meu (Yoshii S--4) at N.Y. Yankees (0.
llernandez 5-5), I :OS p.m.
; . Chicago C~bs (Lieber 5-1) a1 ~LEVELAND
-,Gooden 2-2), l-.05 p.m.
!'
j,
Atlanla (Maddux 4-3) at Boston (Rose 3-0), 4:05
r
• .m.
'
Monuea.l (8Mista 4.2) at Toronto (Hamihon 0•l- 4,05 p.m
f.' ~nahcim (Belcher 3-4) a1 lo5 Angeles (Park. 4fl. 4:05p.m.
· .
.
t
Oakland (Oqui!l 5-3) at San Francisco (Rueter
.
·
,-21. 4,05 p.m.
1: . St. Louis (Bottenfield 8·2) at ~troit (Mlicki 2;
t).l:OS p.m.
.
' ·It' DH: CINCINNATI (Bere 3-0 atxl Parri1 3-0) a1
Cily (Rosado'J-4and Suppan 3·4), 5:05p.m
.. Florida (Meadows 4-5) al Tampa Bay (Rekar.4l). 6JS p.m.
·
~ Philadelphia (loewer 4,-5 ) at Baltimore (Ponson
~4). Mlp.m.
.
• Pittsburgh (Benson 4-_3), at Chicago White Solt
l'""!ue S-l). 7,05 p.m •
l Houston (Holt 0-6) 111 Minnesot:a {Perkins 1-J),
OS p.m.
Texas (Glynn .0·0) at Arizona (Reynoso 3-1 ).
JIHll p.m.
St:ault: (Moyer 6-4) at San DiegQ (W. Williams
('3 ), 10:05 p.n\.
;,
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Park Avenue Sedan
'
• 3800 V-6 Power .
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Today's games
'
·
Atlanta a1 Boston. I :05 p.m.
tt:
~~ Montreal at Toront o. I :05 p.m.
Chicag? Cubs at ~LEV.ELAND. 1:05 p.m
f.
,_. St. LouiS at Detrou. I :05 p.m.
t ' Philadelphia at Baltimore. I :.15 p1m.
t." Florida at Tampa Bay. I :35 p.m.
.
·• AMIFM Power Load Cassette .
• Remota Keyless Entry
• Totally Loaded!
LS Paekage, al11m wheels, A/C, 4 eyl, 5 sp, AM/FM ease,
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out the Avalanche
July 1997.
homered as the Yankees improved to
Preston Wilson hit his 13th
5-2 overall in three season.• of inter- homer, tops in the majors by a rookleague play against the Mets.
ie, as Springer (2-6) limited his forBy SAM WILSON
Jason Grimsley (5-0) got the win, mer team to seven hits.
TIMII 81ntlnel COli llpondant
Rick Reed (3-3) was "the loser and
Ryan Rupe (0-3) was the loser at
Laa1 Tuesday's hockey match between the Stars
Mariano Rivera got his 14th save.
Tampa Bay in a game that drew just
and Avalanche was another classic in this y~r·s
Diamondbacks 11, Rangers 3
20,167.
,
Western Confcn:nce finals. Dallas, facing eliminaRandy Johnson (7-2) didn't give
·
Blue
Jays
6,
Expos
2
tioo, found a way to win on the road to tlke the
up a hit until Juan Gonzalez singled
David Wells (6-5) won for just
series btl(:k home for game seven on Friday.
with two outs in the seve nth at the second time in six starts, and
With the score !ied at 1 going into lht third perioo, Jamie i.angenbrunncr
Phoenix . Johnson allowed two runs Homer Bush and Jose Cruz Jr. drove
scored two goals m the final fifteen minutes to help give the Stars a comand three hits, and struck out II in in two runs each.
mandmg 4-1 lead. Dallas outsbot Colorado lS-8 in the thind period. For the
eight innings .
Toronto ·has won five straight
gaf!le Dati~ had 13 more shots on goal than the Avalanche. Colorado goalAri.zona stopped the Rangers·· against the Expos and is 6-2 against
tender Patnck Roy haS been spectacular this series; however, the sudden
nine-game winning streak. the them since the stan of interleague
death almosphen: of the final period brought the best out of Langcnbrunncr
longest in the major leagues this sea- play in 1997. Bobby Ayala (0-5)
and his teammates. ·
son, and won for the ninth time in I 0 remained winless;
.
games.
The irony is that Colorado has.been a better road team than home for the
Tigers "4, Cardinals 1 .
Andy Fox hit a three-run homer
playoffs. This #act was most evident during the previous series with the Red
Frank Catalanotto hit a two-run .
in the second and Jay Bell, Steve ho)tler and 8nan Moehler (5-5) ·
Wing~~. The Avs won three of their four games in Detroit. For the playoffs
Finley and Travis Lee homered in a allowed one run and four hits in
Colo~ is 3-6 at home but an amazing 8-1 on the road. So even though
five-run third.
seven innings as St. Louis returned
.Dallas Will have home ice advantage, it would not be wise to count out the
Dodgen 5, Angels 4
Avalanche.
to Tiger Stadium for the first time
Jose Vizcaino hit a two-run since the 1968 World Series.
. After dispensing with the Toronto Maple Leafs in six games, Buffalo is
homer and Chance Sanford si ngled
Mark McGwire, who hit his first ·
· ~t home waiting for the winner. Unfortunately for the Sabres, there aie three
home two runs during a five-run major league homer in Detroit · in
an the Western ·Conference that are better then Buffalo. Detroit, Colorado
fourth at Dodger Stadium as Los 1986 and is one of four batters to
and Dallas are a' cut above liasck and the Sabres. The team that won on FriAngeles rallied from a 3-0 deficit. · hom~ over the left-field roof in
. day will have home ice advantage and will he the favorite in the Stanley Cup
Kevin Brown (6-'3) 'gave up 'four Tiger Stadium, was 0-for-4. · ·
finals. .
·
·
·
runs
and nine hits in 6 213 innings,
Rookie Jose Jimenez (2- 7) lost
It's so nice to sec Tom Glavine and O,reg Maddux struggli11g with the new
and
Jeff
Shaw
got
his
13th
save.
his
seventh straight decision.
major league strike zone. Yes, it is a 'lot easier to pitch and win when umpires
·
Anaheim
starter
Omar
Olivares
Phillies 9, Orioles 5
gave you strike zone a foot outside the outside corner of the plate. Now
(6-4) strained his left hamstring run-·
Tommy and Gn:ggic arc playing on a level field. Maddux has the highest era
ning to first on a groundQut in the
of his career and leads the majors in hits allowed.
sixth and liinped badly as he was
· Power pitchers like Pedro Martinez, Randy Johnson, John Smollz and
helped from the field.
,
Roger Clemens arc not having the same difficulties as these finesse pitchens.
Giants 4, Athletics 3
A 9S mile and hour fast ball is difficult 10 hit where ever it is thrown.
J.T. Snow hit a sacrifice tly to
:rtte striic zone ldjilstmcnt is long ovenduc. The Braves are still winning,
bring home the winning run in tl)e
so 11 really haa not affected the better teams. II just requires pitchers to throw
bottom of the 15th as San Francisco
true strikes to get the.call. After all, if you have rulca defining the strike zone
beat Oakland in a game that tied for
!hey should be enforced.
· . ·
·
the . second-longest. inter league
Now l'ffiA fans are really seeing the travesty of the 50 game seasons. The
game.
Knic:ks have finally found their stride. Imagine where they would be if there
Reliever Billy Taylor (0-3), the
had been an 82 ga!De season. When this season ended New York was only
seventh A'.s pitcher, issu!'d walks to
six games ~hind the first place Miami Heat. They could have made this · pinch-hitter . F.P. Santangelo and
~und up in the last 32 games. ·
Marvin Benard to start · the 15th
. · It is only that the true potential of this Knicks team is showing. More
inning. Bill Mueller bunted to move
important, it .is exciting•.They are in an excellent position to win the 'NBA
the runners up, and Stan Javi er was
championship as an eighth seed. They ·have the most 511ffocating defenses in
intentionally wal~ed to load the
liaskctball. Also, Marcus Camby and Latrcll Sprewell have finally adjusted
bases for Snow, whose fly ball to left
field was long enough to let
·
to their new team and roles.
Santangelo score. .
.
Following the signing of nm Thomas and the trades that brought Camby
Marlins 10, Devil Rays 0
. and Sprcwellto New York, experts predicted the Knicks to be in the Eastern
Bruce Aven homered and drove ·
Confen:nce finals. Now .they are all surprised at how well the Knicks are
in
a career-high five . ·runs at ·
doing following their "disappointing" season.
. .
SkyDome
to back knuckleballer ,
Like everyone else the Indiana .Pacen underestimated the new look
Dennis
Springer's
first shutout since ·
Knicks. The Pacen are lucky they go into New York with the series tied at ·
1-1. If not for a terrible call against Camby in the final seconds of game two,
the Pacers could be down by two games. FonunateiY for Indiana, they still
have lime to make the proper adjustments. Bither way, it has been a great
series up to this point.
.
(Continued from B-2)
Colon, a hard-luck loser. in his 1997, for St. Louis.
Cleveland
prexious stan a11ainst Boston's Pedro selected 'Kansas State's Michael
Martinez, allowed three runs and six Bishop in the 44th round of
!)its in seven innings.
Thursday's amateur dnift. Bishop, an
In the second, Thome followed a outfielder, played quarterback in col·
leadoff single by Wit Condero with a lege and was taken in April's NFL
462-foot homer to center field that draft by New England. ... Omar
netirty cleared the seconll tier of the Vizquel made an error on Sosa's
picnic area on ihe fly. Thome's grounder in th~ fifth. It' was the Gold
homer was the third longest in Glove shortstop:s first error in ·22
Jacobs Field history, surpassed only games and gave him seven in 1999.
by Mark McGwirc'& 485-footer and He had five last season.
Mo Vaughn's 476-foot shot.
Notes: Friday was the 25th KCLLT directors
anniversary of "I 0-Ccnt Beer set registration
Night" at Cleveland Stadium when
fans rioted during the Indians game deadline for June 16
against the Texas Rangers. "I
remember standing near the mound
CHESHIRE - The Kyger Creek
and looking up and feeling like Little League Tournament, which
Custer because there was ·a wall of will run from July 16 to July 25 at the
humanity coming at me, •• said Kyger Creek Employees Club near
Indians manager Mike Hargrove, a Cheshire, will accept team registra. rookie with ihe Rangers in 1974 .... tions until Wednesday; June 16.
Mulholland has not allowed a stolen
For tournament information, call
base in his last I 09 games. The last Jim Crace ·at (740) 949-9023, Dan
runner to steal a base against the Edwards at (740) 742-2359 ot Dave
lefty was Royce Clayton on June 24, Walker at (740) 446-3402.
)
...
;
fr~m
Indians...
Ph1ladelptua 9, Balnmore S
Pimburgh: 6, Chicaao Whtte So:\ 3 (II)
Hou11on 7, Mannesota 6
CINCINNATI at Kansas City (ppd .. power fai l-
.:
...
NHL playoffs
·
Amulcan League .
ANA HEIM ANGELS: Placed ·C Cha rli e
Gil
O ' Brien on the 15·day disab led lisL Recalled OF
Reggie W illiams hom Edmonton of the PCL.
· BOSTON RED SOX: Activated RHP Kip Gross
l
from the 15-day diu1bled li~ l and optioned him IO
II':
Pawtucket of the International League.
13 1 :
They played Saturday :
NEW YORK YANKEES: Recall ed INF Chi)'
Division I final'
Bellinger and RHP Todd f.rdos from Columbus <lf
At Brookside Wea, Ashland
North CantOn Hoo11er (29-2) v~ . Pickerington the,lntemationai'League. Placed RHP Jeff Nelson on
.
College
the 15·da)' disabled li.u. Opti oned LHI' Greg
I
(29·2), l p.m.
BENEDICf:
Named
Benjamin Trapp men's bas·
McCarthy
to
Columbus.
J
Division II
TAMPA BAY .OEVIL RAYS: Signed OF Josh · kctball coach.
J
At Brookside Park, A1hland
DOM INICAN, N.Y.: Na m ~ d l uu Fn~tell o
,
6 . ' LaGrttnge Ke)'Stone (32.0) -.s . Springfield Hamilton to a minor-le ague contract .
women's soccer cmich and Andy Kohlbrenner mt:n's
TORONTO
BlUE
J{\Y
S:
A s~ igned RHP Paul
8111
Kenton Ri ~ ge ,(30-3), 10 a.m. ·
.Qurmtrill to Dunedin ol the Rorida Stale teague for and women 's !.TOSS countr)' coJU;b.
Division IIJ,
MUHLENBERG : Announced that women's golf
' rehnbililation
At Brookside Park, A~hland
has been added as a Vttl'!lit)' sport beginning in tbe
NaiiOnal
Lt:a&ue
Jeromenille Hillsdale (25-3) V§ . North
CINCINNATI REDS : Released _2B Carl os 1999· 2000 academic year. Announu-d tl!e resigna3 ' Robinsun Cq lonel Crnwford (25-2) , 4 p.m.
tion of Stacy R9w le)', men '! tennis coach.
Baerga.
·l
NORTHWEST MI SSOURI: Named Gene
FLORIDA MARLINS: Transferred RHP Kevin
8
Olsen from Kane Cou nty of the Midwest League to Stei nme yer wornen 's basketbaO coach
II
ST. LAW RENCE : Named Iere m)' Freeman
Brevard County o( the florida State League.
me n '~ and wo men 's tenni s coach and ass istant
Rems ~ ign ed I' Jeff LaRoche and OF Miguel Abreu to
!iqDIIS h cOach.
extended spring ·
Eastern Division
:l
Division II finals
slllte high school soft b<r llt ournarnents:
.604
.519
.509
.481
&
•
a.m.
NEW YORK METS: Signed RHP JOse Uuutist il
At Cooper Stadium, Columbus
:tc...
L
26 in six career games against the : ;
Indians.
" I had butterflies in my stomach •
the first time I faced him," Indians: ·
starter Bartolo Colon said of Sosa,
who like Colon is Dominican. "After
that I treated him like a regular hit-'
ter."
Cubs starter Terry Mulholland ··
took a 3-2 lead and a four-hitter into'
the seventh wheii Justice. batting
eighth, snapped an 0-for-19 slump
with his I lth homer. ·
.
Justice, familiar with Mulholland :
from their days in the NL. is 12-for-· ~
32 (.375) with four homers in ,his" •
career against the left-bander. · . '·
:S~un~d~a:y~,J~u~n~e~6~,~1~~~~~~~~========~P~o;mer;;;o~y;•;M;Id;d~l~~;rt~·~G~a~IJ~Ipo:;ll~a,~O~H~•;Po~i~n~tP~I~e~aaa~n~t,~WV~~~~~~~~~~~:-:"~=R~"=C='::•~~::•mu~;•:Pa~ge~B::3q
··Not-wise to count.
lnterleague play.~. (Continued B-2)
.
')
Derek Jeter and Jorge Posada
Brand New 1999 Pontiac
Grand Am SE Coupe
'!J
•
_C ongratulations,
Chuck Stowers
Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnso·n
Chevy-Oids
has announced
lthl:at Chuck Stowers
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Salesman of the
Month for
May.
CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE.
1616 Eastern
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446s3672
Houston at Minnesota, 2:0!1 p.m.
·
CINCINNATI at Kansas City, 2:05p.m.
..1
Seaule at San Diego, 4:0!1 p.m.
,
~~ Oakland Ill San Francisco. 4:05p.m.
Anaheim at Los Angeles, 4:10p.m.
N.Y. Meu at N.Y. Yankees, 8:05p.m.
·
Texas MArizona, 8:05p.m.
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·:
Friday's score
cass, .all power 15,000 miles
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;. San Antonio 85, Penland 63; San Antonio leads
~ea .l -0
:1
They played Saturday
'• Indiana at New York,.6:JO p.m.
"~ ·
1bls week's slate
.•
lbnlpl
l
-y ·
·s San Antonio at Portlantl, 6':30 p.m
·j•
Indiana at New York, 9 p.m.
Tlladay
Ponbd 11 San Antonio, 9 p.m., if DeceuBry
w.........y
New Yort atlftdiana, 9 p.m.
·
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SID Antonio at Portland, lBA. if ntceuar~
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..
Jason J(endall broke a 1-1 tie"ffi'
the I lth with a two-run single II
Comis~ey Park and Warren Mom•'"
followed with a three-run homer is
Pittsburgh won its seventh straight~· u
Marc Wilkins (2-0) allowed t""'l
walks in one-third of an iiming. BiiP•!
Simas (0-2) gave up five· runs ani!·'
three hits in one-third of an inning.; l'l
Padres 3, Mariners 2
"' •
Pinch-runner David Newhan,
making his major league dcbut,n
scored the go-ahead run ·on Johti'•1
Vander. Wal's bases-loaded, broked:.>'
bat grounder in the eighth at Siri ''
Diego.
Donne Wall (3-0) worked on~ · :
inning for the win and ·Trevdi''
Hoffman pitched the ninth for hi~ {
lOth save. Jose Paniagua (3-5) was
the loser.
BLAZER 2 DR 4X4 .
t' Piusbllrgh IU Chicago White Salt, 2:05 p.n1 .
·i
Doug Glanville and Ron Gant
each had four hits as Philadelphia
pounded Scott Erickson (1 -8) for
seven runs and II hits in S 213
innings at Baltimore. The Phillies
had a season-high 18 hits.
Chad Ogea (3-3) allowed three
runs, five hits. and ,a career-high
seven walked in five innings.
Astros 7, Twins 6
Derek Bell hit a go-ahead, tworun double in the eighth and ·Jeff
Bagwell hit his 16th homer as
Houston rallied from a 5-I deficit at
Minnesota. Dennis Hocking hit his
first career grand slam for.the Twins.
M1ke Trombley (1-2) has blown
three of six save chances this season.
Mike Hampton (6-2) allowed six
runs and six hits in seven innings,
and Billy Wagner got his 13th save.
Pirates 6, White Sox 3 ·
------·-~~~--·-·~::.":"lll_llr.,·
-.
... ...... _342~114. 01·--...
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7 40-992-2196
461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport
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.,
'·
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Page B4 •. '
u11...._. ntllwt
~purs
thrash Trail Blazers 85-63, seek to e.nd series
.
NBA playoffs
Bll BOB BAUM
iPORTLAND; Ore. (AP)- Nine
consecutive playoff victories don't
li~ The NBA race out West is no
contest. San Antonio's super Spurs
are making a joke out of what was
supposed to be the league's toughest
COJlferencc series.
·The Spurs swept the Los Angeles
Lakers and are on the brink of doing
the same to the Portland Trail
Blazers . On Friday night , .San
Antonio embarrassed the Blazers &563 on Portland 's home court to move
within one victory of its first trip to
tht NBA Finals.
·
, "San Antonio is a team right now
thpt wants it," Portland's Isaiah
Rider said. "At this point , they have
the will to win. "
: As well as the talent and ••perience . ·
· ' A victory tonight 'wou ld comp lete
thesweepandsendiheSpursi ntothe
"It is huge for us to win without
much from me," Dun·can said.
"Somebody different is stepping up
every game. People just keep gettmg
it done."
Portland 's 63 points were its
fewest ever in the playoffs, and tied
for the second-fewest by any team .
Its 19 field goals were an NBA play· off low.
"I honestly want to apologize to
our fans ," Ponland's Greg Anthony
said, " because that was just one of
the worst displays I've seen from a
basketball standpoint. "
Damon Stoudamire was 1-for- 12
after complaini ng earlier in the week
about not playing in the fourth quarter. of most games. He and the rest of
the Blazers were booed·by their fans
in the final period.
" If I had paid good money to
watch that, I'd ·have booed too, "
Stoudamire said.
Duncan managed just five points ,
but it could not have mimered less ,
not the way the rest of the Spurs
~~~~~·sf~:s:~~/~~:.t~~~si;r:hc:~~~~:
ly with
them.
Nodeficit
team to
haswin
come
·back
· from
a ·3-0
an
NBA pl ayo ff.series .
"This is the dosest I've ever
been," David Robinson said, ·.·and it
feels good: It's a great opportunity.
but we don 't want to mess this up.
We want to win Sunday. We don't
wan t to play around with the
Blazers."
'
With Tim Dundm in foul trouble .
San Antonio steamrolled .the Blazers.
with a 16-0 third-quarter run on their
way to their fifth playoff road vic tory in as many tries.
pia) ed and the way Portland 's
offense vanished in a nightmare second half.
"It was our offense, or inability to
make shots and to force them to have
to come double-team us·or to have to
switch on some double coverages,"
Portland coach Mike Dunleavy said,
" I think at times we has some pretty
good look s.
" We .hit a slump. We didn't make
shots."
Robinson had I 5 points, nine
rebounds , five assists and seven
blocked shots.
"David dominated the third quarter in my· opinio n," Avery Johnson
said. "He looked like. he was eight
fee t tall in there."
Jaren Jackson tied a San Antonio
record with six three-pointers. scoring 19 points, and John son had 14
points ard eight -assists.
The Blazers shot 25 percent ( 19for-77) from the fi.Cld . They were 8·.for-40 in the !e<ond hal f while being
outscored 43-25.
Rasheed Wallace scored 22
points, but got no help as the Blazers
lost at home for only the fourth time
this season. Two of those losses were
to the Spurs. San Arytonio has beaten
Portland si• in a row, all of them
close until thi s one.
San Antonio outscored Portland
24-8 in the third quarter. It was the
second horror quarter for the Blazers
of the playoffs . They set an NBA
record wi th five points in the fourth
· quarter of the first game of the, conference semilinal series against Utah.
This one, though, ·hurt much
worse .
Arvydas Sabonis cut the Spurs'
lead 48-46 with a sweeping .hook
shot with ·6 :42 to go in the third quarter when. an ugly night turned
unbearable for Portland. The Blazers
didn't score again in the period.
Johnson's 16-footer started the
decisive outburst, Jackson's founh
. thre~-po inter hig hlighted it, and .
Johnson's 20-footer finished it.
Portland scoreil t.he first four
Sunday, June 6, 1999
Sunday, June 6, 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
.
points of the fourth quarterto cut the
lead to 64-50, but Wallace was called
for a technical, Jackson made the
free throw, Johnson scored on a driving bank shot and Jackson made' his
fifth three-pointer to give San
Antonio a 70-50 lead with 10:09 to
play. .
After a miserable first half that
featured 28 personal fouls , 19
turnovers and enough bricks to pave
the Willamette River, San Antonio
led 40-38: The Blazers shot just
under· 30 percent in· the first two
quarters (11-for-37) and no one was
thinking it could gel worse. But it
did.
San Antonio led by as many as 26
in the fourth quaner.
to~ight
'
"I guess it was just one of those
nights," Spurs coach Gregg
Popovich said.
Notes: As the shot clock wound
down on Portland's first possession,
Wallace chased down a loose ball
and nung it at the basket from 21
feet. and it swished thcough .... The
Blazers were 15-for- 17 from the foul
line in the first quarter and didn 't
shoot a free throw in the second .•.
Take away ~all ace, and the rest of
the Blazers were 12-for-66 from the
field .... Spurs reserves, who scored
just 15 points in the first two games,
had 18 in the firs! half and 35 in !hi::
game . ... After going O-for-12 in the
playoffs , Steve ,Kerr had five points,
including a three-pointe•.
.
GALLIPOLIS- Galli a Academy
High School will be .the site of the
Blue Angel Basketball Camp , a girlson ly camp for those from all area
sc hools entering grades 4-9 this fall.
The camp is scheduled to run
from Monday to Friday from I to 4
p.m. qai ly.
The cost is $60. per camper. The
camp wi ll have Blue Angel coaches·
and varsity players as instructors.
The cos t will cover instructi on on
fundam ental s, compe titi ons with
awards. a camp T-shin. games and
GAHS grad uate s such as Rio
Grande's Meghan Kolcu n, Shawnee
State's Brandi Muon and Murray
State'~ Susan Tackett as guest speakers.
·
MERCERVILLE ~ The South
All checks must be made payable
Gallia baske tball coaches will con- to Blue Angel ·varsity head coach
duct a . fundamental camp for stu- Kim Adkins. 518 Third Ave .,
dents. entering grades 2-8 this fall Gallipolis; Ohio 45631.
·
·
ftor:n Monday, June 7 to Thursday.
For more information , call Adkins
June 10 at South-Gallia High School. at 446-7654.
: The coaches, assisted by several .
-*high school players, will instruct the
GAHS will . be the site of the
campers on the game's basics with · Ga!'lipolis Area Basketball Camp, a
. lectures, demonstrations and drills in boys-on ly camp 'for those from all
the four-day camp.
area schools entering grades 4-9 this
· There will be contests and games fall.
iri which all winners will receive
The camp is ,scheduled to run
prizes.
from Monday. June 14 to Thursday.
The camp will cost $40, whic~ June 17 from 1 to 4 p.m. daily.
iocludes a camp T-shirt. Campers
The cost is $60 per camper.
~Q get a brother/sister to register
Those who register on or before
have to play $35 per camper.
June 7 m11st pay a $15 regi stration
• !Checks ~e to be made payable to fee . The remaining $45 will be due ·
GWTy Ryan, 3600 State Route 325, on the camp's first day.
.
~riot, Ohio 45658.
·
Those who pay after that date
! ;For more information, call Ryan must pay $65, which is due on the
al256-6379.
South Gallia
basketball camp
et
... for June
camp's first' day.
The camp wi ll have Blue Devil
coaches and varsity players as
·instructors.
·
The cost willl:over instructi on on
fu nd amentals. competition s with
awards , a camp T-shin , a camp basketball and refreshments_
All applications m.ust be sent to
Blue Devil varsity head coach Jim .
Osborne at GAHS , Gallipoli s, Ohio
4:5631.
For more information , · call
Osborne at 446-3212 (school) or
446-9284 (home).
Amy Wilson
Senior- Gallia Academy H.S.
Senior- River Valley H.S.
Senior- Gallia Academy H.S.
· ,
JliiDJI
llaah .
~AHS
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April 6-at Feder~! Hocking ............................... l2S-8 (I)
34-8.5 (I)
April 13-at Eastern H.S.................................... ! 09-9 (I)
35-6.5 ( I)
Aprill7 -at Meigs Invitational... ..................... t29- 10 (I)
38-5 (I)
April 20-Home vs. Hannan & Oak Hill .........116-1 0 (I)
35-0 (I)
April 24-at Marietta Lions lnvitational ............ l30-1 (2) 36-1 .25 (4)
April27-at Athens H.S ......... ,........................... 137-9 (I)
37- 1 (I)
May 1-at Portsmouth lnvitational... ................ l30-ll (I)
37-8.5 (I )'
May 7-Rio Grande Invitational ..... .............. l24-10.5 (I)
35-1 {I)
May 15-SEOAL meet at Logan ......... ~ .. .. ........ . l23-l (2) 37- 10.75 (2)
May 19122-Div. .11 Ironton district meet.. ......... l21'9 (I)
36-2.5 (I)
May 26/28-Div. II Zanesville regional meet .... 131-1 (2)
37- 1 (4)
June 4/5 -Div. II state meet at Dayton ............. 138-11· (3) 36-8.25 ( 13)
rac·e with a 49.69;second finish that
was .the fastest of the day in eith~r
heat. ·
• In the .4 x 200-meter race, the
Blue Angels turned in a I :43 .59 winning .finish in the second heat. O nl y
Akron Archbishop Hoban ,( 1:42.69),
Cleveland
He ights
!Jeaumont
( 1:43. 15) and Columbus Bishop
Hartley (I :43.48), the top three
teams in the fi rst heat, were faster.
• In the 200-meter dash, junior
Shanna Carter won the first heat with
a 24.97-second sprint. Only Hoban's
LaShauntae Moore, the second heat's
winner, was faster (:24.87).
·
• In the I 00-meter hurdles, Carter
.turned in a 15.58-second finish that
earned her third place in the first
heat, which was won by Alexa~der
senior Foli James . In the 16-runner
fie ld, James was second overall , and
Carter was fifth.
o In the IOO;meter dash, jun ior
Tessa Sibley took founh in the. first
heat wi tl) .a '12.5 1-second sprint in a
race
won .
by
Byesv ille
Meadowbrook's Jodie Bates (:12. 1).
Between them . were Beaumont's
Akua Soadwa (: 12.33) and Orrville's
Deanna Caldwell ( ; 1~ .49). Sibley
fini shed si•t!l among the finalists .
• The boys' 4 x 100-meter relay
team, consisting of junior Brian
Mitchell, seniors · Jeff Mitchell and
Bert Craig and junior T.R. Rogers,
took founh with a 43.62-second finish in the seconQ heat in a race won
by Washington Court House (:43).
The Blue Devils finished eighth
I
Spencer
PLUS KIDS APPAREL
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Sophomore
Gallia Academy Q.S •
•
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GALLiPOLIS Professional
cyclists from around the world will
arrive in Gallipolis on Tuesday, June
15 to compete in the Holzer Clinic
" Heart of It All" Cyclist Tour. The
three-day event, organized by Tym
Tyler of TeamColumbus, reatures
cyclists competing in the first of a
• •
series ofrour events.
The tour is sponsored by Holzer
Clinic, the Gallipolis Main Street
Committee, Community Health Plan
of Ohio, the Ariel Theatre, the Gallia
County ,Chamber or Commerce, the
Chamber · or
Meig s County
Commerce, the Wilkesville Civic
Association, the Ohio Valley Visitors
Center and the 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District.
Registration for the cyclists will
begin at the Ariel Theatre on June 15
from 3 p.m. until 5 p.m. An introduction of the teams will be rollowe<;\ by
a reception in ' their honor. Event
organizers said that world class
cyclists will he among the participants.
Time trials begin June 16 at 6 p.m ..
in the Gallipolis city park. Cyclists
will race from the park to-the shelter
' on fortification Hill . ·
On June 17, the participant~ will
compete in a 77.1 mile rood race
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Apri13-at lrontoii ... ....................... :.......................S-1.0 (7) 19-6.5 (6)
April6-at logan vs. Jackson & hosts ...................S-10 (3) 19-0.75 (3)
Aprill3-home vs. Point Pleasant & South Gallia .. 5-6 (I) 19-9.5 (I)
Apriii7-Ray McCoy lnvitational. ............... :.......... 5-8 (3)
20-7 ( I)
April 24-at Marietta lovitational.. ............ :............5-6 ( I 0) 18-0.5 ( 15)
April27-at Fairland ............................. ,...................5c8 (4)
19-7 (3)
A!irii'30/May 1-Gilzette Relays ............ ........ :: ......5-8 ( 12) 19-9.5 (3)
May 7-Rio Grande lnvitati'onai. ................ ,..............6-0 (I) 20-8.25 (2)
May 15-SEOAL meet at .Logan ............ ................ 5-10 (S) 21-5.25 (I)
. May 19122•Div. II Ironton district mee~ ............... 5-8 (I 0)
20-5 (2)
May 26128-Div. ll Zanesville regional meet.. ................... x ,20- 10 (3)
June 4/5-Div. II state meet at Dayton :.............................. 20-6.5 (14)
'Note: In his triple jumps this season, he won with a 37-foot, 7.5inch effort at Logan on April 6 and took second with a 41-foot , 5.5inc~ effort in the SEOAL meet.
. '
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"With Over 2.0 Years
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135 Pine SI/Rte.16o
~~au·
87SATURN
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740·446·2532
123 950
" !
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'1·1
Or
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,
In the boys' long jump: Craig saw .•
hi s 20-foot. lu- inch leap get him .
13th place_Sophomore Ike Sim mons ~
took 14th with a 20-foot. '6.5:inch
leap tn an event won by .
Chesapeake's Robert Isaacs (23:5).
New
through Gallia, Meigs and Vinton
counties. The race begins at 5 p.m.
Over 80 professional .cyclists from
around the world are expected to
compete in·the road race.
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In the girls ' long jump , Wil son
took eighth with a 17-foot, 1.5-inch
leap . in an event won by East
Palestine 's . Ale• Casil ( 18-8.75).
James saw her 18- foot. eight-Inch
night earn her runner-up honors.
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·"•'
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'668 PINECREST D IVE, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
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.iwlul
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among the fi,nalists.
-•In Friday 's field events fina ls,
.River ·Valley's AShly Robens took
third in the discus with a 138-foot,
I l-inch effort. Ahead of her .were
Richfield Revere 's Melissa Bickett
(149-9) and the champion, senior
Rebekah Green of the Columbus
School for Girls ( 162-8).
Green 's state meet-record perfor-,
mance erased the previous mark, a
157-foot, 10-inch effort by South
· Point'~ Teresa Sherman in 1988.
In the shot put, Roberts finished
13th with a 3(}-foot, 8.25-inch heave
in an event won by Green (4810.75). ' Green. erased the old state
meet record (45-2.25) she set as a
sophomore in 1997.
'
·-:
200m
.
821 '951
.' '
Long
Aprill-at Chcsapcake .............................._........ l6' 0 .75 (I) :27.4 (I)
April6-at Logan ,vs. Jackson & hosts.. .............. IS -6.5 (I)
. DNC
Aprill3-home vs . P0int Pleasant & S. Gallia ...... l5-3 (I)
:29.1 (2)
DNC
April 17-Ray McCoy lnvitational.. .................. l5-4 . 7~ (2)
April 24-at Marietta Jnvitationai.. ...................... I6-7.S (I)
DNC
April27 -at Fairland ........................................ 16-5.5 ( I)
DNC
Aprii30/May 1-Gazetti: Relays ........ "" ............. 17-0.5 (2) :26.52 (3) , ' •
; l
May 7-Rio Grande lnvitational. ............... .......... l6-5.5 (I)
DNC
:26.3 (2)
May 15-SEOAL meet at Logan ..... ...., .... ....... 16-1 0. 25 (I)
May 19122-Div. II Ironton district meet.. ......... l6- 11.5 (2) :26.8 (2)
May 26/28-Div II Zanesville regional meet.. .. l6-5.75 (4) :26.4 (5-sf)
'.
June 4/5-Div. II stale meet at Dayton ................ 17- 1.5 (8)
x
sf- semifinal. heat
. Note: In her only 100-meter race of the s~asoll, she won with a
13.3-second finish at Fairland H.S. on April 27.
- ·
Holzer Clinic 'Heart of it All'
bicycle race set for·June j 5
'
:• Ike Simmons
• 15 bp OHV engine by Kohler"
Dm .& mw
5lwl m&&
enters finals in eight events; Robe.rts gets third in
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
T(mes-Sentlnel Staff .
• DAYTON -In Friday 's Division
!'action in the Ohio high school state
tr'llck and field champi onships at
Welcome Stadium, nine Gallia
Academyathletes (of the II entered)
~o participated in six' semifinal
eYents advanced to the finals . which
W.re held Saturday morning.
: Also competing Saturday were
senior Erin Nehus in the girls' I ,600meter final and junior Craig Swisher
i~ the boys' 3;200-meter final .
• In the semifinals:
: • The Blue Angel~' 4 • 1001200nteter relay team, consisting of freshman Jessica Bodimer, juniors Tessa
Stbley and Shanna Carter and senior
~my Wilson, won .t he 4 x 100-meter
..
,-
•.
D!aqg
Dayton hosts Ohio high schpo/ state track and field championships
GAHS will be the site of the Baby
Blue Basketball Camp, a camp for
youths entering grades 1-3 thi s fall .
The camp . which wi ll cost $30 per
panicipant, will run from Monday,
June 28 to Wednesday, June 30 from
I to 2 p.m.
Each participant - will receive a
instruction on fundamental s, games,
camp basketball,· a camp T-shirt .artd
rcfres(lmcnts.
For more information. call camp
director Jim Osborne at 446-3212
(school) or 446-9284 (home).
-ttl
..
Dak .& JWi
lOOm
Long
.
-
.,.
Ashly Roberts
Aprill-at Chesapeake .................. :..................... l9-2 .5 (3)
: 11.9 (6)
April 3-at Ironton ...................... ........................ 18-6.5 (9) : 11.9 (14)
April 6-at Logan vs. Jackson & hosts ................ 20-4.5 (I) :12 .2 (4)
April 13-home vs. Point Pleasant & S. Galli a .... 18-11 (4) : 11.9 (4)
DNC .
April 17-Ray McCoy lnvitational .......... .. ............. 20-2 (2)
April 24-at Marietta Invitational.. ... .. ............... 20- L75 (3) :11.44 (4)
• April 27-at Fairland ................................ ... :........... 20-4 (2)
:12 (4)
DNC
: April 30/May !-Gazette Relays .................. .. .. .20- 1.75 ( I)
: 11.6 (2)
; May 7-Rio Grande 'lnvitational ........................ 21-8.25 (I)
:12 (4)
: May 15-SEOALJ1)e~tatlogan ....................... 21-3.75 (2)
: 11.9(8)
• M~y 19/22-Div: IIIronton district meet ...............20-.l (3)
)<
: May 26/28-Div. II Zanesvi lle regional meet..20-10.75 (2)
X
· June 4/5-Div.
at Dayton ............... 20-10 (13)
. ll state meet
.
•'
-·-
Dale Earnhardt
Jeff.Gordon .
Mark
Bert Craig
Dm .& mw
G II" A d.
b • f"
f
h
a Ia ca emy to egln lrst 0 yout
summer basketball camps M0 n·day ·
.
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipoll., OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Brand New 1999 Chevy
Silverado Pickup
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH" Polnt.Piea..nt, WV
·sunday, June 8, 1999
State track meet scenes
••
We're Cookln.1 Up Some Oreat Dea
This Weekend at Don Tate Motor•
Craig Swisher
Erin Nehus
Junior- Gallia Academy H.S.
: Senior - Gatlia Academy H.S.
• Top DoUar Trade-In
Values
• On the site fina.ncing
• Courteous Sales
People
•
•
.•
: nm•mftl
99 OLDS SILitOUEnE GLS
t.600m
.
!.600m
3JOOm
Aprill-at Chesapeake ............................................. DNC 9:44.5 (1)
Aprii3-at lronton ............ ........ .. .......................... 4:33 (I )
9:55 ( I)
April 6-at Logan vs. Jackson & hos ts......... : ...4:42.5 ( I)
DNC
April 13-home vs. Potnt Pleasant & S. Gallta.4: 45.6 (I)
no. race
April 17-Ray McCoy Invitational .. ... .. .................... DNC
9:49 (I)
April 24-at Marietta Invitational.:................. .4:33.58'(2) 9:53.82 (2)
April27-at Fairland ..................... ....................... 4:39 ( I )
DNC
Apri130/May 1-Gazette Relays ............ (-...... 4:32.42 (2) 9:34.45 ( I)
May 7-Rio Grande Invitational... .......... 1........ .4:41.3 (I)
DNC
May 15-SEOAL meet at Logan ....................... 4:36.4 (2) 10:' 1.7 ( I )
May 19/22-Div. II Ironton district meet .......... 4:36.2 ( I ) 10:06.9 (I)
May 26128-Div. II Zanesville regio nal meet.. ......... DNC 9:42. 12 (3) ·
June 4/5-Div. II state meet at Dayton .................... ,......... 9:53.53 ( II )
Note: In his 800-meter races of the year, he won with a 2: 12 finish
at Logan on April 6 and won with a 2:09.9 fini sh at Fairland H.S. on
April 27 .
,,
THIRD IN DISCUS _ River Valley's Ashly .
Roberts made it to the review stand Friday after
her third-place performance in the Division 11 discus finals. Roberts, who turned in a 138-fool, 11·
Inch effort after firing the iron 122 feel, seven inches on this attempt, later finished 13th in the shqt
put in her last day of high school .competlllon.
FINISHES EIGHTH - Gallia Academy's Amy
Wilson takes flight in the third flight of the Division
II lon~ jump ·finals Friday evening. Wilson saw
19.25 mches separate l:ler eighth-place effort from
that of the champion.
Buckeyes sta.1d one win rom CWS
CROSSING THE LAST ·
- Gallla
Academy's Sheilne Carter crosses the last hurdle
'In the 100-fT!eter hurdles In Frlday'a 8emlflnala.
The junior flnllhed third' In her.heat, helped her
team win Its heats In the 4 x 1oo- and 4 x 2oo-meter
relays and won her semlfinlli h!lllt in the 2()()..meter
dash - all in less than two hours. These efforts
put Carter .in the position of running then eventS
In a 2 112-hour period Saturday morning.
'
; TAKING FUGHT- Gallia Academy's Bert Craig
gets airborne in the Division II long jump finals on
. Yialcome Stadium's east side bleachers. Craig finIshed 13th In this event after helping his 4 x 100metar relay team take fourth In Its head and earn!ng a berth in the finals, which were held Saturday.
...,._...,;"!'""_..
--------.--------.-------111!"---""'!!"'"----.
Area sports briefs
Southern U.S. athletic
For more information. call 740- · l86-3491. ·
x;fc!~
RACINE - Athletic .physicals 8'
physicalinslated
fQr FridayLocal
for · athletes
the Southern
School District will be held at the F.~=:::~:::,
V8, leather, Sable, Black
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~
Save Thousands
auile,
~~~~~~~~~~~§.~~~§~~~~~-
._55!!~. AC,, IIIefoo cuo., -
.
Donnie Jones
Basketball Camp
~o ·start July 6
..
EVENT
l~~~~~~~Y,~'!:'~~·Di~~r~~-~·~·o~nTse!:le~cit~N~ew~·~";~i::~u~~~e~drv~e~h~ic~te;·s~·~in~S~to~c~k~
4DR, auto, air, low mles,
program cor
W•• $9Now
989
$11,995
1
·
·
tT.fiiriiiicii;;;ii;iii;iruiii~;y.ii
oi 4x4,
w.1
$11,995
Now
$16,888
w...
convertl1., blue
Now
$6,995· $4,400
w. 1
$9,995
Naw .
$1,100
...
$1,995
~~~:!~~~· rear
,
,
SUNFIRE 17881·28,000 milea, Bal. of fact.
:~· ~~~~~~~~ :A~~·I7ii4jj::26,Qiiii';;;l~;;·a~i:·~i·i;:t~ 1'995
AC, tilt, cruln, P Hat, PW, spon WhHII ................ $13,495
FORD TAURUS 17953·27,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr.,
crulae, P nat, PW, sport wheels .......................$13,495
r-11~:w MAUBU 17894-AT, AC, cassette, tilt, PW,
97 SUZUKI X-90 17857·13,000 miiH, Sal.
AM/FM CD, T·lcips, PW ............................ :............................... $8.~·9~
CHEVY CAVAUER 17933·26,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
AC, caasette ................................................................$10,995
CHRYSLER SEBRING LXI 17909-24,000 miles, Bal. of
AT, AC, tilt, cruise, AM!FM CD, leather seats, P sun
wheels, P seat,.PW ......................,.......................... $16,995
TOYOTA COROLLA 17939-16,000 mllas, Bal. of fact.
cassen,, crulse ..............~ ..........~ ..........................$11,495
.... ···-• PRISM 17851·34,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr., AT,
AC, AlltFM, fold door rear
.
l , ;. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.............. ~ ......................................................,............. $23,995
FORO EXPLORER 4x4 4 Dr. 18007-AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW, .
-· """·· wheels ...............................................
~ $9,495
CHEROKEE COUNTRY 4x4 4 Dr.I7980-AT, AC, tilt,
ltru1ise, PW, PL, sport wheeli, roof rack, sun roof ......... $12,445
97 JEEP WRANGLER 4x4 17975-Biack, AT, sport
l l . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .
wheels.~... ,.............. ~....... :.......................................
I . . . . . .. . ; • ••
$13,995
GMC JIMMY 4x4 SLE 17973-AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, roof rack, sport wheels........................................ $17,540
96 JEEP CHEROKEE GRAND LOREDO 4x4 17952-4 Dr., AT,
AC, tilt, cruln, PW, PL, luggage rack, sport wheels .....$16,985
SUZUKI X·90 4x4 17858-cassette, PW, PL, sport wheels, TCAB 4x4 17717·18,000 miles, Bal. offact.
cauette, spon wheels, rear slider, bed mat.$13,99.5
NISisAN 4x4 17984-Red, sport wheals, cassette, bed
liner ...............................................................
~ · ··· ·~ $11,995
1... ..... .
.. .
ftiCU
97.fiORDF·150 17999-Biue, 8' bed, AT, AC, cassette, 10,000
Bal. of fact. warr., spon wheels, bed liner, rear
010000000000~000
15,385
FORD F-150 17998-GI'Itll, super cali, 3rd door, AT, AC,
. . • • U00000I0 0 0 01010 t l 001 1 1 otto iOI 0"0000 "01 " ' 1
Rebates
.
FORD MUSTANG 17902-32,000 miles, AT, ·AC, tilt, cru111e,
PW, PL, P seat, sport wheels ........................................... $13,495
DODGE INTREPID ES 17941-AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW,
wheels ...............................................................""'''"$9,995
FORD T.SIRD 17921-Grnn, AT, AC, tilt, cruise, AM!FM
P nat, spon wheels..........;...... :.................................. $8,995
MURCURY COUGAR 17897•AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW,
PL ..........
t'"''''""""'"''"'"'"''''"'"'"''"' '"'"" $7,495
PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE ~7920-AT, AC, tilt, ""''''"
casaet11e, PW, PL ..................................................... ~ ............$5,995
BUICK ~ARK AVE 17963-AT, AC, tilt, crt,~lse, PW, PL, P
.
.
,995
414'1 . . . ., IITM'I RIICioll
ft~ Toi\\1/\TA 4-RANGER 4x4 4 or: 18005-AT, AC, tilt, cruise:
PL,' sun roof, sport wheels, 30,000 miles, Bal. of fact :
0000 000 0 I 0 00000 0 ;
s
~~~:~~c~~~o~~ :=.~~tii:6'E'~ii::·;p;;·rt·~: . . 515'800
whetls................................ ~ ................................................ $4,995
FORD RANGER SPLASH 17990-29,000 milea. .Bal. of fict.
AM/FM CD, AC, spon wheals, rear slider, bed
liner... ~ ...............................................................................$12,495
ISUZU HOMBRE 17923-Greert, cassette, AC, bed liner, rear
4 New nres .........
~
H . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
$8,495
;;-,;;;;.,;.; RANGER XLT 17922-26,000 miles, Bal. of fact. warr:,
~·;o:~~~,..~~r~~~~~~-rms:a;iiOO·~i-l;;·a;i:·~~~;ct:·:·~
The
run begins
9 a.m.
the ,~;.~~
Manpower
Park onatEast
Main atStreet
in Jackson.
;wp;n;;:
Th~ entry fee for ~ race is $q
and all registrations will 'be accepted
the day of the race. The race features
13 different age brackets in both the
111en's and women's divisions . .
I
CHEVY S-10 LS 17879-33,000 miles, AC, cessette, bed liner,
95 CHEVY SUIURIAN 4WD,Ioaded, LT·plcg, llether lnt, . s22,900 ... ~ .................... .... ... ,........,$I.,·IIHIV
whella................. ,..........................................
95 CHM G-21 Convtlflllon Van, loaded, Was $18;900 ............................................................... $1~,850
· 38K mil•
S"JO.PJCJIUP 4 Cy, 5 sp, air, AMJFM cala, Wu $10,900 ................................;........................ .'.. $8925
CHM'I/2 TON·LWI snverado, V6, auto, air, tilt, orulse, 9,900 mi, Was $19,900...................$17,250
CHM 1/2 TON SWI V6, 5 Sp, Tilt, Cruise, Air, Am/fm Case, Sport Pkg, Red WAS.$11,900 .... $9450
DCIIIGIIKT (AI2 WD, Lsranile SLT pkg, Red Wu $16,995.......... ....................................,. ...$16,550
GMC SIEIIA SU Ext Cllt 4x4, loaded, Was $23,800 ......................... :........ .. ............. .... :........'.$22,450
GMCJMYV6, euto,,atr, titt, cruise, AM/FM ~4 WD, 4 Dr, Waa $23,900 ....................... $21,560
OlbsMoltLE IUVADA AWi loaded, 4 o'r, WU l24,900 ..... ~o ....................... ..
$21,i50
CHM AS1RO Conversion Van, V6, ~ad, Wu s8999 ............:..... .'....:................................... $7,450
GMCSOJIOMA 4 WO, EXT CAB, ve,
lit, U~. CIUIN.'Aium wit.t.,AMJFM cue WU$16,825 .....$18,900
5-ID IIAZII4 WD, 4 DR, V6,
AIR, TILT, CRUISE, WAS $23,999 .............................$11,900
lttriO, Cllf, k:Jaded, 45K
2llK mllel,
$9,985
lllllllll, ; . .............
lUI
DODGE CARAVAN SE 17926-AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PL, left
llldlflli door, roof rack ..............................................$14,995
.POMIROY, ONIO
Mon.·Frl. 9 a111·l
Sparky Anderson managed the
Cincinnati Reds from 1970-78,
winning fo\Jr National League
, pennants and two World Series
(l97S an!! 1976).
'i
l .. . ........
FORD RANGER SUPER CAB X~T 11845- cassette, bed
aport whltll, rear allder ................................,........ $1 0,495
CHEVY·S-10 EXTRA CAB 17931·19,000 miles, Bat of fact. .
Cllllllt, alloy whHII ..............................................$9,995
FORD F-150 SUPER CAB 17951'·bed liner, aport wheels,
PW, PL,.tllt, crulu, rter allder ......................................... $16,349
FORD F·150 SUPER CAB XLT 17950-20,000 miles, Bal. of
warr., AC, tilt, PW, PL, sport wheels ..........,............$16,595
FORD RANGER SPLASH SUPER CAB 17948-30,000 miles,
1111. of lact: warr., AC, sport whttll, calllllt ............... $12,945
95 CHM 3/4 Tse 4 WD, LWB, ye, auto, air, tin, crulae, Was $13,995 ......... ,......................,..:...$12,650
~~~~!~~~~
Morrissey
scottm@urgrgcc.edu.
· Jac.kson atCounty
sports festival
. SK run set for July'
JACKSON - The third annual
Jackson County Sports Festival 5K I ~·50" mo~wli1i:liliil
run is scheduled for Saturday, July 3. 3t-:=~
I
_____
UMMER CLE AD
The· Buckeyes left the bases
:tear."
·
toadcd in the seventh and nearly
9lranded two runners in the eighth,
6ut Jason Trott fouled off three con~c utive pitches with a full count and
eventually drew a walk.
• EhrnsbCrger followed Trott , dri "ing a 3-and-1 pitch from Kirk
~aarloos (7-3) a,bout six feet inside
the foul pole in left. The Buckeyes
rj\n out of the dugout to make sure
FORD MUSTANG LX 17994-AM!FM cassette,'spon whet1ls,
crullte, AC ............................................................................ $4,995
DODGE INTREPID 17982-Green, AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW,
ca8118tte .................................................................................... $12,160
MERCURY TOPAZ 17985-AT, AC, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, 2
whella, Clllllll, ,.., alldtr...............~....................$9,985
con- ~~~~i~~~i~~~~~~~;;~;~~
'
6 08 2
l--------•'1'!.·__
::;s19
ve,
Rio Grande to host soccer
camp in 111id-June .
RIO GRANDE- The University .
of Rio Grande soccer team Will host li~ft:i
jts annual youth soccer camp June
14-18.
: The Rio Grande soccer camp is
open to players ages six through 17
.
WAS~18,838
CADIUAC'SEDAN DIVIW Loaded, White, leather·tnt, only 15,000 ml, Wu $32,900 -n·un ~~i:::~:
CHM MONTE CARLO Vl3, auto, ali, tlb, cruise, AM/FM cass,·was $14,995 ............................. ~•
. (2 to clio- tn. I .__ I Slllld 1111
95 CAD SEVIW SLS LOaded leather lnt, Was S24,900 .............................................. .. .. .. .............. $18,900
97 LUMIIIA V6, 111to,'.atr, tlit, cruise, AM!FM cass, Was $13,900 ........ ............... ,......................... $1 0,400
96 CADilLAC SEDAN DEVIW V8, leather lnt, loaded Wail $24,999 ....... ,........................................ $20,800
CADILlAC SMW STS loaded. leather Int. Wu $29,900 ................................ .......... ...... .. ........ $22,450
91 OLDSMOIIU DELTA 18 LOaded • 3 to chooa from Yow Cholet" Oaly $15,995
91 PONTIAC GlAND AM V6, autci, air, tltt, crule, AM/FM caaa Was $13,900 ............... ,................$10,800
96 UIICOLN TOWN (All va. auto, leatherlnt, White; only 40,0oo Ml, waa $19,900 ............... .... .$17,450
931UICII USAIRE
auto, air, tlh, cruise, AMJFM caaa Was $7999............................................. $6,200
95 FORD TAlUS V6, auto, air, tltt, cruise, P. seats, PW, AMJFM caaa Was $7900: ......................... $5,900
93 CADILlAC SEDAN DlVJW Loaded, leather lnt, P. Moonroof, Was $10,900 ................................. $8,450
96 POif(IAC FIRDIRD V6, auto, air, ~tt. cruise, T-tope, CD player, Was $12,995.........................$11,860
91 CAMARO COUPI V6, auto, air, tltt, cruise, Was $18,900.:........;............;: ............... ::...... :........ . $14,950
91 PONTIAC SUNFJil 4 Dr, 4 Cyl, auto, air, tin, tinted glass, Wu $12,900 .. ,.. . .
$9975
97 SATURN Sl2 52,000 Ml, Beige 4 cyl, 5 sp, AM/FM caaa, tilt, cruise, Was $11.900 --·~ UiOJU
92 OUISIIOIIU Dill~ 18 va, auto, atr, cua. un•.crulle, Wu $8900 ...;..........................................,'1
96 OLDSMOIIU 91 Loaded, leather lnt, one owner, Wu $15,995 .. .'......................... ..... .............. ~~!~~!
91 CHIYSUl'SEIIING, L1ded, 111thtr lnt, Sunroof, CD ·PIIYtr, on~ 11,1100 ml, m 'owner, elltl clean, Red wu '19,110~ ...
96 CADILlAC SMW SLS, lolcled, ltllhtr lnl, LT G1m11 Red, on11 15,500 ml, on, owner, I*' new was $27,885 ....,............ ~l-~I,O~tU
95 OLDSMOIIU CUTLASS SIIPRIMI4 Dr, V6, autb, air, tiR, cruise; AM/AM caaa Was $1 0,900 .........
97 HONDA A~(ORD .4 Dr, atllo, air, tltt, cruise, Black Was $17,800 ...;......,........... :: .................... .
99 GRAND AM 4 Dr, auto. air, tilt, cruise, alum wheels, AMJFM ease, Was $15,999 ...<: ...... ..
91 PONTIAC .
Loaded, only 21,000 ml, Was $18,995 ...................................... ......... ..
Iron! &
·
tactFor
Riomore
Grande
head soccer
information,
pleasecoach
Scott Morrissey at 740-245-7126.
Interested parties may also ~mail.
Jade Green, V6, CD · Loaded
~""'
' Racine on the next two Fridays - ~~~~~~""==
June . ll and June 18.
This week, physicals will be
given to girls entering gmdes . 7-12
this fall from I to 5 p.m. .
~~~~~~
. On June 18 the physicals will be
given. to all boys entering grades 712 this fall from 1 to 5 p.m.
: Sports physical cards are avaiiJible through flunter's office or
Southern High School and must be
completed and signed by a parent or
years
old.
A mini-c;amp
willyears
be held
for kids
ages
four and five
old .
Half-day and full-day cainps will
be offered. The half-day runs from 9
a.m. to noon each day and costs $65
per camper.
The full-day camp will run from 9
a.m. umil 3 p.m. each day. The cost
is $120 for the full-day camp.
The mini-camp com $45 per
playe~ ·
·
Families with multiple children in
camp will receive a $5.00 discount
per player.
V6, loaded, Midnight.
WAS $24,11015
.
w/Approved Credit
• Prices & Payments Clearly
Mark ed on Win,dshields
• Credit Applications Are
Now Being Accepted For
Processing
LE 17943-26,000 miles, Bal. of
AC, tilt, cruise, PW, PL, casaette....................$13,995
DOD1~E INTREPID 17957·29,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
AC, tilt, crulae, ~L ..........................................................JJ
CHEVY CAVALIER 17880-29,000 miles, Bal. of fact.
iy DOUG ALDEN
the ball 'was fair and swarmed around
• COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP)- Ohio Ehrnsberger as he crossed the plate
St ate, whi ch hasn 't been to · the and the crowd chanted "l'j' 'hern
College World Series since 1967, baseball."
•.
~eedcd a victory over Cal State
"I just wanted to hit the ball. I
Fullerton in an NCAA super regional saw the ball well and it just carried, " ·
Wonderful opportunities are available in
~aturday night.
.
said .Ehmsberger, who was -for-5
Tom Peden Country. We are expanding our facilities
: The Buckeyes got" closer to that with five RBis.
~oal by winning till: fi~Mq,e of the
·The grand slam was neede4,by the.
and need more sales peoplt3. No experience is required,
&est-of-three series I0-7 Fridil)cnight Buckeyes, for the Titans rallied in the
only a willingness to ·learn, work as a team
·
(in Chad Ehrnsberger's grand slam in top of lhe ninth. Fry gave up'leadoff
and have a strong initiative.
·
the bottom of the eighth ·inning. They singles to Reed Johnson and Chris
'Were scheduled to send E.J. Laratta Beck before being pulled t9r Kurt
(10-2) against Fullerton's Jon Smith Fullenkamp, who apparently w[\Sn't
• Excellent Payment Plan . • ·Great Benefits !lnctodnv c1omo _..,I
. ~-0) Saturday night
.
quite ready.
• Work At The t1 Dealership
. • Fullerton went in trying to avoid
He bit Aaron. Rifkin with his first ·
~s first four-year College World pitch, then walked Ryan Q~ens on
Series dro~,~ght ·since it first qualified five pitches to load the bas~ before
Call To Schedule An ·Interview:
for the eight-team tournament in being relieved by Andy Lee,, ,.
.
]975.
Lee, normally a startcr,.eamed hts ·
Tom Pedetn Country
' The Buckeyes (51 -12) held off a first save by getting Shawn Norris to
1-800-.822..()417 • 372-2844
ninth-innin~ rally for their first victo- )li'ound into a double play. ~'
. 475 South Church Slnlel • Ripley, WV
ry in four tries against the Titans.
Fullerton (47-12), which, won its
1
Ohio State staner Justin Fry ( 11-2) .third College World Series title in
tied his· season high for strikeouts 1995 but .hasn't returned to'l:)maha's
· .,Yith 1·2 and nearly went the distance, Rosenblall ~ta~ium since, t'!5'k a 1-0
getting one out in the ninth before lead in lhe first and went up, 5-2 in
being pulled with two men on.' He lhe fifth on back-to-back sOlo home ·
allowed six runs: five · of them iii'hs by -Aaron' Rifkin "iM' Ryin ' ....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _, ._ _ _ _ _ _ _
~amed, on eight hits and walked six. Owens.
• " I left it all on the field tonight.
was working well tonight . . .
rMywasslider
getting ahead of their hitte,rs
and that was a key," Fry said. :"With
a team like Fullerton, you have to
Stay on top all night."
.
· The Bqckeyes also took advanl&ge of. nine walks and three errors by
Ole Titans (47- 13), leaving Fullerton
coach George Horton wondering
what happened to his tl\atll.
.
: "We played like we ·had never
.Ia ·
Rlayed in an important game
'f.
before, " Horton said. "They didn ' t
.:.,..,:..;;:;..-...;;;..~...::..;;;;.._,,__,_,_...,.
""'1
Qsten to my recommendations and
~id "Ieverything
I told them n~lt to do.
s·
AN(~E
probably yelled at them more
~
.,.
t)lnight than afte~ any other loss all
1.
l
I
. ·,
OSU diamo1.dmen.top
CSU~Fullerton 10-7 ::
--
~~~
• NO MONEY DOWN
• NO PAYMENTS UNTI L
September 1999
11m ll mW
J.?Jl!jw
: April t -at Chesapeake ......................................S:32.9 (I) 12:14.8 (J)
; April6-at Logan vs. Jackson & hosts ..............5:44.1 (I) ·
DNC
~ April1 3-home vs. Point Pleasant & S. Qallia.5:54.4 (I)
DNC
·; April 17-Ray McCoy lnvitationai ...................... ,.... DNC
12:09 (2)
April 24-at Marietta lnvitational... ................. 5:24.72 (2) .
DNC
April 27-at Fairland .. .. .. ...................................5:.37.6 (I)
DNC
: April 30/May 1-Gazette Relays ....................... 5:40.6 (4) 11 :53 .78 (4)
. May 7-Rio Grande liwitational .... .... ............... ........ DNC
DNC
: M1y 15-SEOAL meet at Logan ...................... .5:24.6 (I ) 12:07.8 (t)
· M, l 19122-Div. lllrontondistrict meet.. ........ 5:26.4.(1) 11 :57.7 (l)
: May 26128-Div. II Zanesville regional meet .5:19.08 (I ) 12:02.53 (~.)
~ June 4/5-Div. II state meet at Dayton ............ 5:17.76 (9)
<
Note: In her 800-mcter races of the season, her 2:34.8 finish glllle
~ her the victory at Logan on April 6. On May 7 at Rio Grande, ~he won
· with a 2:25 fini sh.
LS Pkg, . air, cass, Indigo
Blue, more WAS $14,273
4 DR, V6, leather, 7 pass
,~ c-...,adhul • Page
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolln, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
11'
., .
97
�-
Page 88 • Jfm beg....... 'bid
• I
Sunday, June 6, 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gaillp,olla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
:
H Wu htntton. 39.05. 5-Devon Booltt-r, Cle
State track meet results ... (Continued from 8-l)
Nrmutil, Clevelud H11. Beaumont School S:II .U .
S..Jcnka Oates, Spriqftdd Northwettem 5:13.20
6-AIIi Once, Columbus Grandview Hts. ~ : 14.15 . "1SarU Mielke, Bellevue :5: I:S.•U. 8-Calletn
Maloney, Cuuon Cttlual Catholic 5:16.M.
.t•1ft-•tter rtlly: 1-Colwnbus Bishop
Hanley •9.29 (St'l.aue Miller. Candice fowtll , Dta
Mixon, CounDt)' Jamersoa). :Z-GALLIPOLIS
GALLIA ACADEMY
49.30 VI:SSICA
IODIM£1l. TESSA SIBLEY, SHANNA
CAilTER, AMY WILSON). 3-Citveland Hu.
Beaumont Scbool49.68 (Michelle McCoy, Simone
Simmons, Shavoane Maclin. Aloll Soadwa). 4Akron A-rchbishop Hoban 49.70 (Katte Kmet,
Ambe:r Kelley. Amanda Reed, Andrea Lltwellyn). .SByesville Meadowbrook 50.33 (LteAnn Moon:,
Kelly Singleton. Heidi Sichina, Jodie Bates). 6Sprinlfit.ld Shaw~ .SO..S9 { ~in Coonolly, Taylor
Mabry. Melinda CriDer, Tara Connolly). 7-0ranville .
50.69 (Julia Winkfield, Sarah Waddell . Je11ny Wood,
lenny Lamneck). 11-Cincinnati Purceii-MariatJ 50 ..85
(NW:ole Henderson, Carlina Flowers, Celina Wilson,
Jenlse Smith).
40Q-mder dash : 1-l..aShauntae Moore. Akron
Archbishop · Hoban 55.05. 2-Teresa Frierson,
Cleveland Hts. Beaumont Sct.ool S5 .S6: ]-Lucretia
Corbin, Urbana 57.0.S. 4-Keeli Stith, Columbu s
BlshopHartley~7 .67 . ".S-DarcyCopcland, Columbus
School For Girls 57.79. 6-Shavonne Maclin,
Clevelalld Hts. Beaumont School 58.54. ?-Je nni fer
Maas, Newton Falls 58.66. II·Amanda Mercer.
Belmont Union toc:al 59.82.
,.._meter low hurdles: 1-Tina Fuchs. Camden
Preble Shawn« 4J.99. 2-Hannah RU.rener . .
Smhbville 44 .95. 3-Atiya Ferguson. Portsmouth
4.S . I 8 . 4-MeiMohr. Millcrsbl.lrgWestHolmes4~ .87.
S-Erin Connolly, Springfield · Shawn~e 46.19. 6·
Audrey Whinaku . Medi11a Buckeye 46.52 7:stephanie Baugher. Andover Pymatuning Valley
. 46.56 . 8-Mandy Duncan, Cl11rksv ill e Cli nt on. Massle48 .49.
·ItO-meter run : 1-Cicely Campbell. Cle\'elnnd
• Hts. Beaumont School 2:12.86. l ·Sarn Edwnrds:
keuering Archbishop Alter 2: l.l15. ~ - Maria
Juuenume. Canton Central Catholic 2: !.l64 . 4·
: vo11nie Downing. Cleveland Hts . Beaumont School
, 2:15.68 . .S-Jennie C.m le. BarnesVille 2: 16. 16. 6• Mesan Ankerma11 ."W. Milton Milt on-Union 2:16.4 1.
•7-Jtnica Fal k. , Upper Sandusky 2:17 .06. 8-Becca
~ Vianello. Cind n11ati Mariemont 2:17.95.
100-metcr dalsh : 1-l.aShauntae Moore. Akron
. Archbiihop Hoban 25.09. 2·SHANNA CA RTER.,
, GALLIPOLIS GALU A ACADEMY 1!.11 . J.
• Lucretia Corbin. Urbana 25 .67 . 4-Akua Soadll·a .
• Cie\"cland Hts Btaumont School 2~ . 85 . 5-AmJrea
.. u~we ll ~ n . Akron Archbishop Hoban 26.13. 6•Jacqui Copt:land, Cincinna1i Indian Hill 26_15 . 7.
· shelll Jo Sauthhall, McConntlsvllle Morgan
;:z6.ll. 8-1\ lex Cu i, E. Palesti ne 26 J I.
•
3200-met.er run : !-Kristen Fryburg. Keuering
.. Archbishop Alter 11 ! 04~ 76. 2-Emily Mars .
Mogadore Field 11 :15 1;12 , J-A drienne Shue .
~ c irc l e,·i ll c I 1:23.87. 4-Sherri Tren1. Ontari o
• JI :28.01 : .S-Emily Schnitke)', Napoleon 11 :3 1.40. 6, Lindsey Nemastil, Cleve land fH s. Beau mom School
7- Lissa
Faulkner.
Springfte ld
: 11 ;32.44 .
, Northeastern li :33J6. 8-Collcen Maloney. Canton
. Ce ntral Calholic J I:39.92.
•~~~:401-meter
rcla)':
! -Cleveland Hts.
•Beaumont Sc hoo l 3:52.59 {Vonnie Dowmng.
""Shavonne Maclin , Teresa Fri erson. Cicely
: campbell). 2-Upper Sandusky .\:59.39 (0amel
.,Gottfried, Kathy Were, Emily Herring, JessicD Falk J.
..3-Sunbury Big Walnut 4:00.55 (Amy · Layton.
.Counney Stelzer. Amy Winter. Megan InneS]. 4-.
"Cincillna ri Wyomlng 4:01.08 (Lola Omoyosi.
'Eiizabc1h Shelleby, Julie Knapke. Robin Fult on). 5:cincillnliti Mariemont 4:01.00 (Erika Howard. Liz
..Parker, Kalie Wetze l. Becca VianelloJ. 6-M il an
· Edi5on4 :03.85 (Mega11 Zitner, Kate Arthur. Amanda
~Drier, Christy Campana). ?-Cuyahoga Falls Wal sh
!'Jesuit 4·:03 .97 (Char Traub, Kara Warnke. Sarah
J> unn, Karen GladstOne). 8-Ak_r~m Archbishop
J-(oban 4:06.73 (Amber Kelley, Kalle Kmet..Amanda
..Reed, Sarah Kmet).
· Discus: !-Rebekah Green, Colum bus School
'"for Girl$ 162' 8'". 1-Melissa Bickett. Richfield
'Re~Jere
149' 9" . J-ASHLY ROBE RTS,
:cHESHIRE RIVER VALLEY IJ8' 11 ". 4-Apnl
~Craver, Batavia Clermont Northeastern 135' 8" . 5.Monique Smith. Hlll sboro 131 ' 3". 6-Lcna Harris.
--Beachwood 126' 9". 7-Shnyla Lewi s. Youngstown
"Cardinal Mooney 116 · 6". S-Bobbi Jo Close. Beloit
"Wen Branch 12 123' l '".
Hlp jump: !-Natalie Gentry, Sandusk)'
Perkins 5' 6" . 2-Adrienne Davie, Sandusky Perkins
S' .S''. 3-(tie) Rachel Perme. Rock)' River. Foil
JIMU. Albany Aleundcr 5' 4". 5- Kacie Vavrek.
Bellaire. Olivia Peters. Aurora 5' 4'" . 7-(lie) Emily
HerrinJ, Upper Sandusky. Heidi :Urban. Ment or
Like Calholic. Elise Miller. Castaha Mar'garetta 5'
2" .
Lone jump: 1-Alex Casi. E. Palestine 18' 8314". l-Foll James, Albany Aleunder 18' 8". 3Heidi Sicllina, Byesville Meadowbrook 18' 7- 1/2"' .
4-Jacqui Copeland, Cincinnati Ind ian Hilli S' 2" . 5Cheridy Ryan, Lancaster Fairfield Um on 17' 10112". 6-MeJan Zitner. Milan Ediso11 17' 10" . '1• Mary Good, Warsaw Ri\·er View IT. 8-3/4". 8AMV WILSON, G..\Ll~ IPOLIS GALLIA
ACADEMY 17' I· Ill".
Shot put: !-Rebekah Green. ColufTlbus School
For Girls 48' 10-314" . 2-Melissa Bickell , Richf1 eld
Revere 42 ' 9- 112" . 3-April Craver. Balavia
O~nt N011heastern 42' 4"_ 4-Shayla Lewis,
Youncsto'!"n Card i n~tl Mooney. 41 ' R-3/4" . 5Monique Smith. Hill sboro 41' 5-114" 6-Ryan
Mobley. Dayton Chri stian 39'11-]/4"' . '7- Deck)·
Caskey. OrJ'o.oiiJe' 39' 8-114"" 8-Bobbi Jn Clnse.
Beloil West Brarv::h 38' I1".
Porttm•uth, .!l.ot. 38-Sprlngfield NorthtaSiern.
5.00. 4:1-Jronton, 4.50. 42-Pala.skala Walkins
Memorial, 4.SO. 44-Chnterland Wnt Geluca. 4.00.
44-0evell\lld Oran,ge, 4.00. 44-Dayton Olristioa.
4.00. 44-Delta, 4.00. 44-Ravenlli Sooll'leut, 4.00,
44-TallmadJe, 4.00. 44-Tipp Ci()l Ttppeeanoe. 4.00.
.U..Warre11 Ot:unpioa, 4.00.
!!2-AIIiance Marling1on. 3.00 . .52-Aurora. 3.00
.S2-Belh~vue, 3.00. .S2..Cleveland Villa-AngelaiS!.
Joseph, 3.00. .Sl-Frcdericttown, 3.00 . .S2-Philo,
J.OO. SB-Akroo East, l .OO. 58-Bucyrus. 2.00. 58Cincinnati Finneyrown. 2.00. 58-CiDCinnali PurceiJMarian, 3.00. !t-Galllpolls GaUia Academy. 1.00.
58-Mt. Orab WeSiern Brown, 2.00. 58-West Miltoo
Milloo-Unioo, 2.00. 65-EI)Tia Catholic. 1.00. 65Garfield Hts. Triait)', 1.00. 65-Girard. 1.00. 65Jefferwn Area, LOO. 65-Mtdina Hi&hland. 1.00. 65"Middl~town Madison, 1.00. 65-Mlnront. l.ot. 6!Pemberville Eastwood. 1.00.
4 x too meter relay : 1-MoaadOte Field (Charlie
Walker, Mite Hall, Mike Shriner, Nate Hutchinson)
"7:57.81 . 2-Van Wen (Drew Wallmire, Josb Keuneke.
Man Heizman. Scoo Bolenbaugh) 7:58.08. 3-Eaton .
(Brian Hess. Luke Pelers, Brad Weller, Ryan Clark)
1:59.71 . 4-A.manda-Cieucreek (Jbad Helber, Jeff
Bigham, Tim Sykes, Todd Helber) 8:01.75. 5- .
Orrville (Ben Gadfield, Ryan H"ochst eder, CJ.
Handwerk, Chris Bowman) 8:04.64. 6-Tallmadae
(Dave Kochan, Matt Prochnow, Olen11 Moore, Gary
Robinson) 8:06.33. 7-Pataskala Watki ns ·Memorial
(JameS Woos ley, Tim Boyer, Keith Eul , Eric
Hamner) 8:07.97 . 8-Garfield Hts. Trinity (Demetrius
Ell iso11, Ryan S.nalh. Carl Eaton. Man Anderson)
8:08.4.S..
110 meter high hurdles: 1-Keith RQberts.
Bellefontaine, 14.45. 2-J ulius Wallace. Martins
Ferry. 14..49. J-D.avid Payne, Cin. Wyomi ng, 14..S9.
4-Ryan Wiggmton. Col. Centennial, 14.67. 5-Eddle
Larki ns. D11y1on Dunbar, 14.96. 6-Anthony Davis.
W11shi11gton C. H. Wa~hington, 15.00. 7-Rio Evans ,
Sandusky Perkins. 15 .5J . 8-Rick Lapprrt. Medina
Highland. 15.71
·
100 meter dash: 1-Dru Robinson, Orrville.
i l.O:t 2-Walter Reyes, Struthcn. II. J:\ . 3- Dwight
Smith, Day ton Chammade-Julien ne. 11. 14. 4·
Robnt Isaacs. Chesapeakt, 11.1!!. 5-Manllcw
Cart er. Copley. II 24. 6. Windllam Ratchrord.Cie.
Ora.nce. ) 9.13 6-Jwnd Batbtr. Alhlrutd Crestvtew,
Villa-Anaeii/St. JOKOh, 11 .30. 7-'BI'VIden G<r&).
Wuhinaton C. H. Washiniloo, II .36. 8-EIIsha
Akins, Orrville, 11 .10.
Pole V•ult
1-Drew Downq, Tomogan y
Otseco. 1.5' J" . 2-Jeremlah JOOnson. Gnadenhuuen
Indian Valle)'. 15' 3". 3-Corey Ooonenbach, Cl·rde.
14' 9". 4-0.ris Wineberg, Springfield NonbeJl!ltem.
14' 3". 5-Je&h Pluenoo. Dayton Olrisdllll, 14" J"
6-Howard Traul, Bellefontaille, 1.'' 6". 6-S cott
Haik:n, Pataskala Wilkins Memorial , IJ ' 6' '. 8Robbie Moyer, Eato11 lJ' 6" 8-Don Well s.
FrankfM Adeu, 13' 6".
1.600 mder run : 1-Rob Myers, LaocHster
Fairfield Union, 4:09.11. 2-lason Mueller. Shelby,
4:11.47. 3-Ryan Clark, Eaton. 4:14.35. 4-Adatn
Hall, Belldontaine , 4:17.91. S-Nate Hutchinson,
Mogadore Field, 4:21.93. &-James Sjostrom.·Aurora.
4:22.10. 7-Bart Smith, Thom'"IHe Sht:rld'an.
4:1.5.32. 8·Aaron Mack. Elyria Catbolic, 4: 26~ lt• .
4 x 100 meter relay : !-Marlins FelT)' (Rich1ud
Thomas, Ronald Hill, Anthony Collette, Jul 1i us
Wallace} 42.50. 2· Wasllin&tan Coun House
Wasl\incton (Anthony Davl1. Tristan Seny, Preston
McClendon, Branden Gray) 42.99. 3-Copl t!Y
(William Mills. Scou Wood. Tom Krtll, Mattht!W
Carter) 43 .-47. 4-0rrville (Demarkus Robinson, F'a1
McAllister, Oru Robinson. Jerrell Nolan} 43.411. 5·
Milan Edison (David Evins. Andrew Pais. Robt:n
Kand,ll, Josh Lamben) 43.67 . 6-Bellevue (Aaron
Schoen, Anlbony Edgington. Ryan Cramer, Ch"d
Beamer) 43.67. 7-GALLIPOLIS G"'-LLIA
ACADEMY (BR IAN MITCHELL, JEFF
MITCHELL, BERT CRAIG, WILL1Ah1
ROGERS) 43.67, 8-Bellefontaine (Cody Mnrti;ct,
Randy Householder, Keith Robens. Jim Ball) 44.6:i .
4Dt mtter d•sh : 1-Ju sti ll Froley, Ck:.
Benedictine, 48.60. 2- Mourice Shelby,. Lima
Shawn~e. 48 .69. 3-Marc Kremer, Oak Harbor,
48.81. 4-Chris Bowman, Orrville, 48.98. 5-Keit ~
Spivey, Oiesterland West Gea.ug:t, 49.50. 6-0a\·id
Payne , Cl11 . Wyomi nK, 49.76 .. 7-Prestoll FO)I,
Bucyms, 50. 18. 8-Aaron Gra nt , MiddletOWI I
Madison, 50.84:
300 meter lo•· hurdles: I-Rya 11 Wiggimon,
Col. Cenaennial. JS . IO. 2-Eddie Larkins , Dayt o n
Dunbar, 38 ..58. 3-Dallny Wi lli ams , Ca mpbell
Memorial. J8_7J . 4-Amhony Oa\'is. Wash ington C' .
Century•
$1,000
Rebate
PLUS 2.9%
Flnancl
lOOm
200m
hurdles !him
Aprill-al Chesapeake .......... .. ....................-........ .... .:16 (I)
DNC
April 6-at Logan vs. Jackson & hosls .................. :l6.7 (I)
:27 (I )
Aprill3-home vs. Poinl Pleasant & S. Gallia ..... :l6.9 (I) · :27.4 (I )
April 17-Ray McCoy lnvitational.. .................. .... :l4.9 ( I )
DNC
April 24-at Marietta Invilat.ional ...... :......... ,......... DNF (8)
DNC
April 27-at Fairland <. .................. ............. ................. . DNC
DNC
April 30/May !-Gazelle Relays .. ....................... :15 .35 (I) :25.47 (I )
. DNC .
May 7-Rio Grande lnvitationat..: ......................... :l6.l (I).
May 15-SEOAL meet at Logan ...........................:15.7 (I) :24.7 (I)
May 19/22-Div. II Ironton districl meet.. .............:l5.5 (2) :~5 .8 (I)
May 26/28-Div. II Zanesville regional meet ...... : 15.47 (4) :24.97 (I)
June 4/5-Div. II state meet at Dayton ................ : 15.62 (4) :25. 11 (2)
I2Dk .& ll!ttl
Power Seat, Aluminum Wheels,
CD Player,. Only 10,0,00 Miles
Tessa Sibley
Junior ·- Gallia Academy H.S.
1118 Century Custom
V6, Cauette, .P o.wer Seal, Power
Windows, Balance of New Car Warmnly
•
:uo
14,
8
cboos•
from
400m
Wh !Wh
Dak l!lmw ..
Aprill -atChesapeake ......................................... .:l2.8(l)
DNC
April 6-at Logan vs. Jackson.& hosts ... ...............: 13.1 (I)
DNC
April 13-home vs. Point Pleasant & S. Galli a ..... : 13.4 (I) I :04.8 ( I)
April 17-Ray McCoy lnvitational.. .......... ...... .. .... :l2.5 (I)
DNC
April 24-at Marietta Invitational ..................... ... : 12.45 (I)
DNC .
April 27-at Fairland ....................................... ... ..... .DNC
DNC
April 30/May 1-Gazene Relays .. ...... ...... ........... :12.98 (3) 1:013 (3)
May 7' Rio Grande Invitational ...... ... ... ........ ... ..... : 12.7 (I) :58.9 [I)
May 15-SEOAL meelatLogan ........... :........... .... :l2.7 (l) :58.4(1 )
May 19/22-Div. lllro nlon district meet ...... ......... : l2.7 (I) :58. 1 ( I )
May 26/28-Div. II Zanesville regional meet. ..... : 12.43 (3) :59.9 1 (6)
June 415-Div. II state meet a1 Dayton .......... ...... : 12.75 (7)
x
Note: In her only 200-meler race of the season, her 26.7-second linish gave her the victory at Fairland H.S. on April 27.
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24
11
'
GALLIPOLIS - For aenerations, the effects and
·documentation that belonaed to a Civil War veteran
· from Galiia County who played a ~riticll role against
the Confederacy's most feared ruder have been pre- ·
served by his family.
Those souvenirs of the conOict that pitted Americans aaunst each other are now attractina intercsl
from historians and the public alike, a development C.
Richard "OJ" Blazer is gratified lo see because the
exploits of his areat-grandfather, Capt. Richard R.
Blazer of the 9lst Ohio Infantry, and his men are
coming to light
Cy Blazer, who lives in Chillicothe, was aivcn his
ancestor's possessions - including a sword, riOe,
field orders, photosriJlh.!l and olher items - by his
father, Richard Blazer <;i'f LaRue, Ohio, lind he is now
handling inquiries and requests for •present.ations.
The prcsentalions are helping fa&!)inatelj Civil War
buffs leim more about the elite unit called Blazer's
SCouts thai was.formed 1o end the auerrilla campaip
of Col. John Sin&Jeton Mosby - still r~vered as the
"Gray Ghost" of the Confederate cause,
''They call this unit the Lesion of Honor," Cy
Blazer said of Blazer's Scouts. "We have been lo various battlesitcs with this information, and we've
received invitations to many diffcrent,lbl1111in Virainia, because they lake.this vel}' serious~ ,
' -c.pt. BIUer'tl biiCMe liPftlitlfOiby'l
era are
mentioned in many IC(:Oun(l, includina
Written ·
by Mosby. One member of the Ranaen, John H. ·
Alexander, recalled In a 1907 memoirtnat Blazer •was
certainly a thorn in Mosby's side."
· "It's .a truly inteieitina slory," noted Mstorian Dar!
Stephenson of Manusas, VL; who said Blazer's.
Scouts are considered by some as thai period's equivalent of the Green Berets,. usina the same raidina
technique that earned fear and respCcl for Mosby's .
mililal)' tactics.
Richard R. Blazer, born in 1829 at lllazcr's Landin&
on what is now the Muon-CabeU county line in West
Vi!Jinia, was residing in Gallipolis when he enlisted with
the 9lst in 1862 as a fint lieutenant As Alexander noted
in his book "MOiby's Men," Blazer "10 distinPhed himself that he was specially chosen for the tuk of drivina
away or desiroyina MOiby and his command."
The unit, which came lo be known.as Blazer's
Scouts, consisted of men penonally chosen by Blazer,
most of them from Gallii utd surroundina IXIDnties.
Amona the group wu a soldier from Marietta, 'Harrison Gray Otis. who later found fame IS the publisher
of the Los Angeles limes.
"Ymi11 find that some of the people involved in
these stories are unbelievable,• said OJ Blazcr,'who
added that tiiC unit's operations were secret, 'known
only to'certain Union oftlce11 and ·generals, SI!Ch as ·
Ulysses Grant, Philip Sheridan urd Ge~rge Crook.
"Secrelal)' of War (Edwin) Stanton knew ilbout it, .
but research h115 shown President Lincobl knew nothing about his unit's existence," Cy Blazer suil.
Richard Blazer, promoted to captain by Ohio Gov.
John Brough in May 1864, was soon after charpd
with eliminatina Mosby IS a·fiahtina force because
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•
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The Hltrh"'"Y To EJ~cellence
~~.::·;·~~~~.•=·~~.,~~~1;,~·=vr:::.~;
his impact was keenly feltby the Union. ·
,.
"The Mosby men were the best of the beJt,• OJ
Blazer explained, ,"(Robert E.) Lee didn't approve of
his methodoiOJy, but things were apparenUy kind of
heaic then, 110 they just lei him go."
In a report to his commanden in October 1864,
CApt Bluer described how the scouts' brand of a.uerrilla warfare in northern Vi!Jiru~ earned them a repuration with Mosby's crew.
"Early on the momina of (SePt 4) I crossed the
river at Backus' Ford and moved up the river to where
I could set up the mountahi throuaJI the woods," ·
Bluer wrote. · ·
.
.
"I struck the piko out of the top of !he mountain,
and moved 011 their camp. Findina that (Mosby) had
left durin& the niJht in the di~tion of <llarlestown, 1
determined to follow. I RC:nlii5Cd the mountain
throuJII Lewil Gap, llld, by a forced march, I overtook theni about 2 p.m. at Mycn' Fl'fd, and, after a ,
spirited fiJllt for several minutes, loomplctely routed
them, with a Jaas on his part of 13 killed, siJ; wound- ·
ed, five prisonen and 17 horses. My 10111 W115 one
"
killed utd sill: wounded. •
·
As detennilied to get Mosby 115 he was, Bluer and .
his men likewise bccam~ a special target of their
,.
quarry, 1111d following a slcirmish •at Kableltown,
'
· 'HE IILEEPS A sOLDIEII'- Union Army c._ RltharlllBIMw, ,_.,. ot 8!e '• s--. ~~~~;~
Loudoun Count)-, VL, on ·Nov. 18, 1864, Blazer was
1 ot 1118 ,.,_ r.wr Jlllldallllc llutt 8tnlct Gel'; al/e/n 1118 fd ol1nt 8tHI/1 INl18d In llo&lrNI Hill
captured, knocked off his hoJSC liy a punuing 188bow. . . , _ , . , under llt8k ,..,... ,...,
of d8tlpwrtt8 ..,.,... " " , . lmlcHI,
year.,old Mosby Ranpr, sydnor Fe~n. Cy Blazer IMIIIP•" Rllogblld. "HII/IIpiiiOklllr."
cr arm, spcedina the diseuc-pliJ8Ued boat on ill way.
Lee's surrender to Grant at Appomattox Courthouse,
relates that another of Capt. Blazer's punuen was
Of c.pt. Blazer's 11 children, a son, Elmer,
none other thm Lewis POwell (Lk.L Lewis Pune), ,
but also the disbandina of Mosby's still-unvanquished
·
unit It was then, Cy Blazer learned, that the riOe he . · worked u a printer's devil and later became the plant
who within a year
foreman of the Gallipolis Journal. He moved to Mari·
'lll(ould be executed now poesesses, seized from.his arcat·sraftdfathcr
on
and worked for the Star, the newspaper operated
when
capcured,
was
returned
to'
him.
Capt•
Blazer
had
115 one of the conby Warren G. Hardina.
spiralplll in the
earlier captured the riOe from a Confedcr4te durina
Elmer would later becom~ a publisher, serve as
one ~f the battles, acconlina to OJ Blazer. ·
Lincoln assassin•·
mayor
of LaRue and cun.,Uan for Hardin& in his
"You
will
find
that
he=
and
some
of
M06oy's
men
lion.
onetime employer's successful presidentiit campaip •
Tal!en.to Libby : huged·each other," ho said. "That's all true."
Jeffry
D.
Wert;
in
his
1990
study
"M01by's
in 1920. Another of Capt Blazer's !KIDS. Wilaon,
Prison in Rich- '
monel,.Blazer was
,
Ranaen," relates that Mosby was aa:ompuried at the would become superintendent of the Gallia County
<llildren's Home.
•
jn custody until ari negotiations with Union officers by Ferauson, and .
that
when
he
and
Blizer
recopized
each
olhef,
they
Elmer
Blazer
died
in
1943
at
aac
70
and
his
son
•
exchanae was
Richard would eventually inherit the artifaas of Capt. worked out with · "huaied each other like long-1011 brothers." ·
Discilaraed in 1865, Cipl Blazer returned to Gal- . Blazer's miliwy career. Richanf has since puscd them :
the Union - for
lipolis,
where he luJd fRViously worked IS a riverboat down to his son, Cy, and Cy's son JJJOOb Richard.
no less than one of
pilot and farmer, and was elec:leil Gallia Olunty sher·
Lcarnina the fao:ll from the wealth of materill
the rebels'
iff, servina from 1868 to 18?1.
available hu aiven OJ Blazer 111 apprecl~tion of a
colonels.
He would become one of the victims of the yellow time and the S~~Crifice endured by Capt. Blazer, and he ,
"He wu hlJhly
stands ready 1o help publicize his areat-Jr&ndfather~
enQuJh reaarded • fever epidemic that swept Gallipolis in the fall of
role in the war.
·
so that the Conf~ 1878, urd the !fonton Resister wpgld reQII that "his
oralel would only '
acoull, under their fearleaa Ieider, dld a steal deal of
"This is my way of aivina somethina bal:k to the • ,
· ellchup runi for 1 . dcsptrate Mrvice for the Union. He sleeps a soldier."
community," Cy Blazer said.
· Amona thoae he is -istina is Darl Stephc11100, a ..
colonel or another ·
Capt. Blazer is buried at Mound Hill Cemetery.
·
.
Cy
BI!izer
noted
that
an
unuaual
family
connoction
former federal aovernment employee. with Ohio rooca
hiJller-ranking
officer," C)< .Blazer 5wrounded Capt. Blazers death: while he died or'the
who said he wants to "set out the true story" of Bluyellow fevcr·brouJllt to GlllipollS by the dilabled veser's Scouts with the book he pians lo write.
,.
sel
John
Porter,
it
wu
another
of
his
peat-putdfathera,
Stcphenson
said
the
saaa
of
Blazer's.
Scouts
cries
~kinscrvi~
1M Ill ,.,.,., sud.
Capt. Blazer would Breighton Hill, who eo:owned a foundry with Enol
for attention becaWJC the unit has for over a century
Hill,
who
finllly
repaired
the
John
Porter's
broken
rocknot only witnea
been "mere props in the story of Mosby's men."
rlldl,..,..,
__
_
-··· ~~~~~~51~~~~~~~if;
TOLL FREE:
I
.I
luncley, JuM I, 1 •
X
Grand ••
$500 Rebate
89
.Section ·C··
By KEVIN KELLY
~~~8~"
lOOm
24
1999
1999
1
Along the .R iver
Preservin
X
Possessions
-
highlight
Gallia County
man's role in
CivifWar
·Junior- Gallia Academy H.S.
FllOMTEND
ALIGNMENT
8
Handy,·erk, Michael Robinson, Ben Gadfiel~ Chrb
Bowmilll) 3· 19 97. 2- YounMstown Ursuline, (Tim
A\'erban, Dnan Moschella, Lcnn1e Dukes, Chris
Curd ) 3:20.41. 3-V.n Wen, (Josh Keuncke, Joth
Cook , Ore"" Waltmire, Scoo Bolenbau11h) 3:21 .11 .
4-Porrsmouth, tJoc Parker. Jerm~y Hamrkk,
Jonah Booktr, Raymond Roblnso•) 3:11.59. S..
Oak Harbor. {Jason Osborne, Jon Bk:kerhaupt:, k.-c=
Man1n, Marc Kremer) 3: 23.01. 6-Dayton Dunb•
(Anthony Perdue, Donno!Jlln Brown, Eddie L..artina:,
William Ware) 3:2.U6. 7-Akroa East (Larry Alfonl,
Dean Stanford, Jovan Thomas, Enc Kmg) 3:2.S.91.
8-CiOCIMiti Wyomin, (Will Parks, Nate Vemy,
Stefan McLandnctl, Da ~J id Payne) 3:3 2.60.
Shanna Carter
Boys' competition
"Telm scores: 1-0rrville. 42.00. 2-Wasllington
Court House Washington. 28.00. ]-Bellefontaine,
26.50. 4-Chtsape..ake. 25.00. 5-Copley. 22.00. 5Shelby, 22.00. 7-Cieveland Benedictine. 21.00. SDaylon . Dunbar, 20.00. 8-Lancaster Fairneld
Unktn, 10.00. 10-Eaton. 18.50. ! !-Marlins Ferry.
18.00. 12-ColumDu s Centen11ial , 15.00. 13-Burt on
Berkshire, 14.00. 13-Mogadore Field, 14.00. 13-Van
Wen , '14.00. 13· Youngstown Ursuline. l·tOO .
17-Dayton Chaminade-Jul ien ne. 12.00. 11 ·
Milan Edison , 12.00. 11-Thorn,·llle Sheridan.
11.00. 20-Arnallda-Ciearcreek. 10.00. 20-Cincinnali
Wyoming. 10.00. 20-Ciyde, 10.00. 20-Fostoria,
10.00. 20-0ak HarOOr, 10.00. 20-Sandusky Perkins,
10.00. 20-Tontogimy Otsego. 10 .00. 27 -Avoll , 8.00.
27-Camp~ ll · Memorial , 8.00. 27 -Gnade nhunen
Indian Valley, 8.00. 27- Lima Shaw11ee. 8.00. 27Pnillesville Harvey. 8.00. 27 - Str~etsbmo, 8.00. 27StruthrFJ. 8.00- 27-Twinsbucg Chamberl in. 8.00. J;.
AJh lnnd Crestv iew. 7 .50. ]6-Cant on Ccntr:~ l
Catholic. 6.00 . 37-Fnmk.fon A d ~nll. 5.50. JSBellvil!e Clenr Fork.- 5.00. JR-Cuyahoga Fa ll s
Cuyahoga Valley Chri5tin n Academ)· . .'1 .00 38-
39 64. 7-l.e!Ji MD'A'ry, Bellville Cltar Fork, 39.74. I·
S<otl Caudll~ Mlnlord. J9.J7.
100 mtttr run: 1-Rob Mytrlo Llae•lttr
falrOeklllnlon, 1:51.73. 2-Ben Elchill, Sandusky
Pcrk.ms. I :.S3.78. 3- PBRP~s Joh. Oe. lknedictint,
1:54 61. 4-Todd Helber. Amanda-Ciurcreek.,
1:54 90 ,.Josh Coot . Clyde. 1!55.19. 6-Chris
McClelland, Bellville Clear Fort, 1:5.5.31. 7-Tra.visHobbs. W. Mtlton Milton-Union. I :56.04. 8-Gary
Robmson. TallmadJe 1:57. 56.
200
meter dash: 1-Robert
ls.. cs,
Ctws.peake.ll.ll. 2-losh L..ambtn. Milan Edison,
2234 J-D'*i&hl Smith, Dayton ChamiaadeJuUeane, 22., I 4--Ju~thl Friley. Cle. Benedictine,
22 59. S..chri1 Frlc.bcl, Shelby, 22.6.S. 6-Maethcw
Carter. Copley. 23.07. 7-Canon Brown, Campbell
Mert'ICI"lal, 23.34 8-Dru Robmsoo. Orrville, I :()$,7)
J.ltl mtttr run: 1-Jason Mueller, Shelby,
9:09 56. 2-Perry Griffith , Paine1ville Harvey,
9:32.38 3-Ryan Clark, Eaton. 9:33.79. 4-Tim Meier,
CuylhoJa F1lls Chris!ian Valley Academy, 9:3$00
S- M i~ Nelson, Ravenna Southeast, 9:38.SO. 6Vira Swlf!Zelllruber, FrWer"ick.towll, 9:39.21. 7Adlm Hall, Bellefontaine, 9:19.44 . 8-Paut
Robincue, Girard , 9:41 .01 .
4 • .&00 mtlu rela)': 1-0nville, (C.J.
.
_,,.
~_,,.
1·877-446·2282
MDIII;'Jitanfli • II
,,
J
'"v
•
'
'
�.
..
'
..
.. .......
Sunday, June 6, 1999 .
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pleeeant, WV
lbW
·,-Travels With Max ...
•
•
'
~
ing. But old Max didn 't.
After ealing a hearty breakfast.
(Max TaWDey, looctlme dowfi!".J
we left those nice people heading town Gallipolis bualattaiU!Ii;.
further soulh in our 4 • wheel drive occasioully writes articles aboul-- ~·
vehicle for more points of interest - bb travels and experiences for the ~
and intrigue. A report on the next leg Sunday Times-Sentinel.)
'
·or our memorable trip will be forth coming in a later article. Stay tuned.
Holzer Health Hotline
"Best Buddies =S_D.IDIIIte_l'_.~~~~
,
•
<.
Kellle White and Curtis Jeffers
All!ber Baughman and JOMph Arrington
BAUGHMAN-ARRINGTON -__,...WHITE-JEFFERS-__,.
'
.
GALLIPOLIS · Mr. and Mrs. .Gallipolis . Weddihg m.usic will
LONG BOTTOM Kellie and Belinda Nease of Portland and
James E. Baughman of Gallipolis begin at 3 p.m. and the ceremony at. White and Curtis Jeffers announce the late Ronald Jeffers. He gradual- . .
wjsh to announce the engagement '3:30p.m. The reception will be held their engagement and forthcoming ed from Meigs High School in 1998
and is now employed with Runyon
.
.
Coleman and Gregory
and upcoming marriage of their immediately following the ceremo- marriage.
. ·,
.•
daughter Amber Dawn, to Joseph ny at the First Church of God in GalShe is' the daughter of Bi II and Logging of Reedsville.
lipolis.
·
The
wedding
will
be
held
on
June
,•
Carolyn
White
of
Long
Bottom.
A
-7··---.,..
Todd Arrington, son of Mr. and Mrs.
The bride elect is a 1996 graduate 1998 graduate of Eastern High 19at4:30 p.m . at the Victory Baptisl
David R. Arrington of Gallipolis
of Gallia Academy High School. School. she is now employed at the Church in Middleport. Officiating
The bride elect is a 1977 graduate Ferry, West Virginia.
; CHESHIRE • Carol Frances
will be John Swanson of Rutland.
Coleman of Cheshire, and Gregory of Kyger Creek High School, and At . Miss Baughman is the grand· She is currently attending the Uni- Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center.
versity
of
Rio
Grande,
majoring
in
Her fiance is the son of Stephen
,_lexander Snipes of Baltimore, -· Home Professionals in Colorado daughter of Ollie Swain and the late
nursing.
She
is
employed
at
Cabell
Springs,
Colorado,
and
is
trained
as
Virgil
Swain
and
the
late
Delmas
Maryland announce their engage·
a .medical transcriptionist. She is and Ernestine Buaghman. Arrington Huntington Hospital in Huntington,
Engagement notice.correction
m~nt and upcoming wedding.
W.Va.
.
also
a
member
of
and
a
Sunday
is
the
grandson
of
Garland
and
lack.
~ ·The bride elect is the daughter of
Due to a typist error, the at 2:30p.m.
The prospective groom is a 1995
I;lorothy F. Wright, Coleman of School teacher at the Father's ie Arrington . and the late William
· The bride elect is the daugh - .
location
of
the · Renee
graduate of Hannan High School
<lheshi're and the late George F. House Church in ' Hartford, W.Va., and Betty Henry. ·
ter . of John and Loralee ' .
Carmichael
Scott
Siedel
wedThe couple will wed in an open and is employed at the American
<:olemail, Jr. She is the granddaugh- and has played piano for nearly 18
ding was incorrectly listed in Carmichael of (lallipolis. The · ·'
. , church ceremony on June 12, at Car Foundry, Inc., in Huntington, · the Sunday Times Sentinel. The prospective bridegroom is the , ' ,
¢r of the late George F. Sr.. and Vir· years for The Gabriel Quartet.
Snipes is employed for the Unot' Christ United Methodist Church at W.Va.
gie Coleman and the late . Berkley
couple will wed in an open son of Gary and Mary Siedel of
ed States Governmen\ at the Nationood Ethel Wright.
.
church ceremony at Christ Unit- Greenwich . .
.: The .prospective bridegroom is al Security Agency. He is a member
The Sunday Times Sentinel :
ed Methodist Church in Jack· .
...e father of Holly Stonebreaker and of lhe Middle River Baptist Church
son, on Saturday, June 19, 1999 . apologizes for th'e mistake . .
in Baltimore, Md.
,
~ the son of the late Ruby Bond and
On
May
15,
matron-of-honor
the late George Sntpes.
·.
: The couple will have an open Doris Hively Irwin of Proctorville,
was not meant to gain any advantage.
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) 4hurch wedding on June 12, 1999, at gave a shower in honor of the bride
It
was just in the casual course of con'
O p.m. at Fair Haven United and groom to be. Appro~imately 35 Maryland's second-highest coun has
versation."
·
·
ethodist Church, Kanauga, with · were in attendance. The shower was ruled that the word "babe" is not to be
The apPeals court disagreed, rul- ·
Rev. Joe Grimm perfonning the held at the Kyger Creek Club house used .in addressing female lawyers
ing
that Harris' behavior was a "crass
· ·
during legal proceedings.
ceremony. Miss Coleman will be in Cheshire.
The cou.ple will reside in Essex,
The Court of Special Appeals said attempt to gain an unfair advantage
providing her own music for the cerMd.,
a
suburb
of
Baltimore,
Md.
<
Thursday
the lelm is derogatory and through the use of demeaning lanemony. She and her brother Mark
guage."
evidence
of
gender bias.
I
·
'
~
will be singing.
The ruling involved a deposition
hearing in a 19941awsuit by a woman
seeking damages from a lawyer she
said had given her genital herpes.
'
'
As the woman, Betty Sue Aude,
By T!Je Associated Press
.
.
.
left the room, Alan Harris, who repreThese Chutney-Glazed Ham Ste'aks are nch wnh ·flavor but low on sented the defendant, joked that Ms.
' I
fat. And they get that flavor from ingredients that will already be on Aude was going · to meet another
many pantry shelves.
'
·
.
boyfriend.
Canned pears are part of the streamlining. They sim"'er with se~·
Ms. Aude's lawyer, Susan Green,
sonings to make the chutney sauce, while ham steaks 'pan-fry: The end complained about the remark, and
result is a tasty dish ,that's ready in about half a.n hour.
asked Harris: "You got a problem
Chutney-Glazed Ham Steaks
with me?'' ·
16-ounce can pear slice~ or halves in juice
"No, I don't have a problem with
2 cloves garlic, minced ·'
you, babe," Harris said.
I tablespoon minced ginger root
"Babe? You called m~ babe? What
114 cup white wine vinegar
generation are you from?" Ms. Green •All 11ze extr1
lor added comfort
3 tablespoons sugar
replied.
I /2·teaspoon salt
"At least I didn't call you bimbo,"
'li"
..
1/4 teaspoon ground cumin
Harris responded, according to court
,&• .__ ___ _
Four 4-ounce leal\ , low- sodium ham steaks
records.
FllRMTUJIE A DESIGN
Drain and dice pears, reserving 114 cup liquid. In a small saucepan,
Ms. Green obtained an order pro...... _'""""""'.'""""""'
combine pears, reserved liquid and all remailiing ingredients e<cept hlbiting Harris. and his client, who · b::i.:i:=i::=:.i~i:::.::::!Z:tlWJ
ham ; simmer gently .for 20 minute's. While sauce is simmering, pan -fry was eventually found to have negliham steaks on both sides in large nonstick skillet over medium-high gently infected Ms. Aulle, not to have
'\
heat. Place ham on heated serving dish ; set aSide. When sauce is done, contact with. Ms. Aude or her family.
brush sauce over ·ham. Serve ham steaks with remaining sauce on the Harris was also Ordered to pay $1 ,500
Rocksprings Rehab Center of Pomeroy wishes to celebra•e .
side .
to Ms. Aude's lawyers for time spent
National Nursing Assistant Week (June 3-10) by saying thank you.·
Makes 4 servings
seeking the order.
.
.
Nutritional facts per serving: 277 cal., 29 g pro., 25.7 g carbo.,
to all of our dedicated and caring CNA's~ A steak dinner will be
"I've run into gender bias. How·
1.72 g dietary fiber, 6.37 total fat , 62.4 mg chol., 15.10 mg sodium.
ever, I have never run into a' situation
served on June 9th In their honor, by the management staff.
·
where .it has been so outrageous, so .
'
Rec!pe from: Pacific Northwest Canned Pears.
totally without provocation," ~s.,
Employee
.........
.
..
:
Since
. .
Employee
............
Since
Employ,ee
............
Since
Green said. "Sometimes. you've just
"
Kellie Lightfoot
1998
Judy Musser
·1980 Carla Nottingham
1995
In 1956, "Damn Yankees," star· got to say enough is enough."
Famous people born . in Utah
Harris, 69, explained: "it's just a
Edna Harris
1999
Wanda Smith
1981 · Ju.anita Sayre
1995
include : Maude Adams, Merlin ring Gwen Verdon, won a Tony as way my generation speaks. There was
Shilnnon Scott
1999
Barb Payne
1984 ·' Pat Imboden
1995
Olsen; the Osmond Family, Lorena Broadway's best new musical. The no offense intended, and it certainly
real Yankees also did well that year, ·
Young and Brigham Young.
Delcie Clonch
1999
Delores Cunnigham 1988 " Amy Harrison
1995
winning the World Series.
CQ LEMAN -S NI·pES
..
Maryland court · rules •that ·female
attorneys may not .be·called 'babe'
E
Low-Fat Cooking: Chutney-Glazed Ham
Steaks healthy, but still rich in flavor
[A fK
Jarred Wellll
.
will Graduate
Ohio State Universit~~· .
College ·· · · ·
of Veterinar~
Medieine
June 11, 1qqq.
..
She .Jaas aeeepted .
11 position with a
.· Large Animal
Praetiee in Northern ··:
Ohio. Ja,.rod is the
daueJate~ ~f.
Bill fl Julie.Wellll.
.
e~e · ~ae~
HEAD
REGISTRATIONS
:J-4·5 YEAR OLI)S
Come register your child for HEAD START
Wednesday June 2, 1999 11:00 to 7:00 or
Wednesday June 9, 1999 11:00 to ~:00
CLAY 256-6186 GAlliPOLIS, OHIO
WOODLAND 441·2170 GAI.UPOLIS, OHIO
DAVIS HALL 245·5150 RIO GRANDE, OHIO
TUPPERS PLAINS 667-0426 TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
MIDDLEPORT 992-3088 MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
YOU WILL NEED CURRENT ll MONTHS (PROOF OF INCO~)
CHILDS SHOT RECORDS
CHILDS BIRTII CERTIFICATE
PARENTS AND CHILD SS NUMBER
.. CUSTODY PAPERS
FULL YEAR-FUU DAY CHILD CARE PROGRAMMING
IS ALSO AVAILABLE AT SELECTED SITES.
DOOR PRIZES WILL BE GIVEN OU1 AT 3:00 AND 7:00
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN. ·
PLEASE CALL TilE SITE CLOSEST TO YOU FQR DI~CTIONS
I
AND MORE INFORMATION.
ere~~
..
Brenda Hauber
1988 Charolette Eakins · 1997
Angie Baker
1988 Jessica Startcher
1997 ·
Trinia Lee ·
1990 Naomi Wilson
1997
· Regina Eakins
1990 . Kathy Elias
1997
Jean Startcher
1990 Beverly Hayes
1997
Norma Eakins
1991 Charlence Hayman 1997
Sally Fowler
1992 Patricia Keebaugh
1997 '
Latisha Grueser
1992 Clara Neal
1997
Violet Hunnell
1992 . Jennifer Husk
1998 ·
'
1998 ,
Melissa Warth
1992 .Patty Miller
Phyllis Lattimer
1993 Natahsia Ridenour 1998
Tammy Bumgarner · 1993 Mindy.Seymour . ~ 1998
' 1998
Donna Gheen ·
. 1994 1 Lynn White
Donna Copeland · ' 1994··. Sherry Kinnan
1998
Rhonda Oiler
• 1995 Denise Lambert
1998
(j// .
Hope Neace
1999
Pam Grimm
1999
Kelly Buzzard .
' 1999
Rebecca Schartiger. 1~99
Shelly Otworth
1999
.
Shelia Partlow
1999
I
'
Margaret
Blake
1999
Katie Hysell
1999 ·
Rachellee
1999
Sara lee
1999
· LOri Fillman"'· . · •1~99
Diana sjgler' , ·. . · ·l.~9·
Bridgett .Varney , .. J 9..99
Nancy Ziegler
· 1999
'
Marcy Cl'aig
· ' 1999
.
'
•'
l'
••'
I'.
.. ..
I
.f
l
i
. !
·~ ;
•i
,1, .
l•
. ·. I
POMEROY.
j
Mr. and Mrs. James Parkt II
· ----'---PHALIN-PARKS - .POMEROY- Tera Dawn Phalin and Todd O'Linn, both of Marietta.
11nd James Dale Parks II, both of The groom's brother, Chris Parks of
Marietta, were married in a double Marietta, and Iamie Sams, also of
ring ceremony on May 15 at 4:30 Marietta were ushers. Robbie White,
p.m in the Valley View Baptist nephew of the groom, of Columbus
Church in Reno, Ohio.
was the ringbearer, .and flower girls
The bride is the daughter of San- were nieces of hte bride, Allison
dra Laudermilt of Pomeroy and Mizik and Kelsie Rider of Caldwell.
Terry Phalin of Caldwell. and the They wore white dresses and carried
groom is the son of Linda Parks, baskets of rose petals.
Marietta, an'd James · Parks,
The· bride's mother wore a light
Williamstown, W. Va. The Rev. blue dress and the groom's mother a
Gary Doan perfonned the wedding · purple dress, and both had rose corceremony following a program of sages.
music presented by Nancy Becker.
A reception was held at the
An arrangement of wine, mauve American Legioq hall in Marietta.
and white roses and candelabra dec- The seven-layer fountain cake with
. orated the altar and the pews were . heart-shaped side. cake~ was
marked with white and wine bows.
enhanced by white. lapers with wine,
• Given in marriage by. her parents mauve and white rose candle rings .'
and esi:orted to the altar by her Jennifer Smith, sister of hte groom,'
father, the bride was attired in a fit- of Columbus presided at the cake
ted gown with a flared full-length table, and registering the guests
skirt. It as 'fashioned with short were lhe groom's sister, Diana Parks
sleeves,
lace overlay on the of Columbus. Music was provided .
bodice, accented ·with seed . pearls by D. J. Art Leister.
and lace appliques. The train v.rith
The couple.took a wedding trip to
·lace edging was attached at the waist Blackwater Falls, W. Va. and now '
l>y • bow. The sown was designe(l reside in Marietta.
apd made by the bride's mother.
The bride is a 1995 graduate of1
·; She carried ·. a bouquet of wine, . Warren Local High School and
mauve and white roses with ivy and · attended the Washington County'
~ore a diamond necklace made .Career Center, · followed by . two
from the diamond ring belonging to years at the Washington State Comher molher, and the diamond ear· munity College in Marietta. She is
rings of her grandmother.
employed in the · office of Drs .
. The bride's attendants were her Brockett, Leopold, and Tappe! in•
two sisters, Lena Richaros, Walker, Marietta.
•
W. Va. and Amy Leister of Caldwell,
. The groom graduated from Maria)ld a half-sister, Jackie Mizik of etta High School and the Washing-·
Caldwell. They wore wine-colored ton County Career Center and is
iowns with short ·sleeves and carried employed at B.M.\Y. Medtec, Parks!vag bouquets of wine, mauve and ersburg, W. Va.
white roses. The necklaces and earrings they wore were gifts from the .
biide.
·
; Best man for this brother ·was
Doug Parks of Manetta, and
groomsmen were Aaron· O'Brien,
a
1-800-462-5255
7 days a week • 6 a.m. untll 2 a.m....
OOR··AnnOAL SALE OF FinE.FURniTURE
lrtVE·ttTORY ·REDOCTIOtt
--------------------·SOFAS
& Dining ~oom Suites
And Chairs
.,.,, • ao•J•.Off
N~~ ~~~~ J~~.u~ 3~~
1999!!! kOUR DEADUNE FOR THE
DISICOt)NTI:O PRlCE OF $2580 PER
· HOUSTON (AP) - A fonner .
PERSON, DOUBLE OCCUPANCY, HAS
TV station executive who rigged a .
BEEN
.
EXTENDED.
THIS , I~CLUDES
ROUNDTRIP
contest so that his mother-in-law ·
MOTORCOACH FROM CITY NATIONAL ·BANK TO
would win a pickup truck was given
COLUMBUS AJRPORT. ROUN!YfRIP AJRFARE, TAXES, TIPS,
60 days in jail, finetl $IO,OQO and
TO HONOLULU, SEVEN DAY CRUISE ON THE SS
ondered to wear a sign declaring him
INDEPENDENCE INCLUDING ALL MEALS, ENTERTAINMENT,
tQ be "a liar, a coward and a thief."
TAXES AND TIPS. DURING THE CRUISE WE HAVE IN<;LUDED
· Tim Edward Trostle, 4I, fonner
promotions manager at KNWS, was
FIVE MAJOR SHORE EXCURSIONS INCLUDING WAILUA
convicted of organized criminal
RIVER AND FERN GROTTO ON KAUAJ, lAO VALLEY, MAUl
. activity.
PLANTATION . AND LAHAINA ON MAUl, VOLCANO
• District Judge Mark Kent Ellis
NATIONAL PARK ON THE BIO ISLAND OF HAWAJI AT HILO,
ilidered Trostle to attend the $ept. 25 "'"''"' THE DISCOVERY TOUR OF KONA, ALSO ON HAWAII,
football game between Rice UniverAND THE PEARL HARBOR/ARIZONA MEMO[{IAL ON THE
si,ty and the U.S. Naval Academy
ISLAND OF OAHU. THERE SIDE TOURS ARE USI.JALLY AN
w~ile wearing a sign that says: "I
ADDmONAL COST BUT WE HAVE INCLUDED THEM AS
am · a liar, a coward and a thief. I
WELL AS TitE TRANSPORTATION AND TIPS.
rigged the Channel 51 contest so my .
WE WILL BE HAYING A TRAVEL SHOW WITH TIPS ON
m,other-in-law would win the pickup
HAWAIIAN TRAVEL, A VIDEO . OF THE SHIP AS WELL AS
truck and give it to me."
·
PLACES OF INTEREST AS WE GO TO ALL FOUR ISLANDS,
. "The $27,opo truck. wqs given
REFRESHMENTS, . DOOR PRIZES; AND ANSWER ALL
away during a Rice football game in
QUESTIONS. THE SHOW WILL BE HELD AT CITY NATIONAL
1998.
BANK, PT. PLEASANT LOCATION, 1UESDAY, JUNE 8, AT 7
P.M. CALL ME AT 674-1028 IF YOU HAVE PLANS TO XITEND
OR HAVE ANY QUESTIONS CONCERNING TJiE TRIP. TO
ATTEND DOES NOT OBLIGATE YOU TO TAKE THE TRIP. IF
YOU DO PLAN TO JOIN I:JS, A DEPOSIT OF ~450 IS DUE BY
1M WlfF Allllude .U.o ,_..fOr
JULY 6 AND THIS INCLUDES CANCELLATION INSURANCE •
P.layStadM, adNrtlood In Kmcon\
FINAL DUE AUG. 4.
.
s.u.J.1 J,.,.. 6, J P!l9 ad • .....,,.
If YOU HAVE EVER WANTED TO GO TO HAWAJI, NOW IS
.U. fHJP J 1..ul ;..,, 6o GNila61.
YOUR CHANCE-JUST SIT BACK AND RELAX AND WE TAKE
CARE OF ALL DETAJLS.. IMAGINE 'IiJE'BEAUTIFUL SUNSETS
. ..... "' 111GIIIifaet"""" .,.,_,.,. Tho
AS YOU SIT UNDER A PALM TREE WITH AN ICY COLD
..,..,..,.,. date of tid.,_..
BEVERAGE, AND W.&J'CH THE ISLAND PERFORMERS· Olt
MAYBE YOU WILL ENJOY LF.;.RNING THE HULA· WE DID.
THIS WILL BE OUR THIRd' TRIP AND WE'D · LOVE TO
0. Pap 45 ""' ad prieo for ""'
INCLUDE YOU.
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TV exec who rigged
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.~m a liar' sign
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SALE
rf:======================h
740..992-6606
.. .
NEGOTIATING-Max Tawney, on hie recent trip to Coati Rica with
his grandson, Dr. Bill Crank, DVM, 11 'shown here negotiating with a
young merchant about the price of freahly picked bananas. Max
obviously ultimatalll won the negotiating session by paying the
equivalent of "nly two cents per banana for his purchase.
goi ng to take a look.
. As we pulled in to the planned
lodging quaners parking lot, I spout. ed off, "No way will I stay in . this
honky tonk place." Again my grandson~ humorcd me saying, "'"ct's take
a look at it anyway."
·
We went in and met the lady -and
man who ow ned it and they succeeded in changing my mind after
showing me that the ro'oms were
By Max clean and nice . Thi:' husband and
Tawney wife are from Can~da and came to
Costa Rica about 10 years ago after .
An · article I · had written last retiring from school teaching. They
month told of my desire and inten- had purchased the large tract of land,
tion of taking another trip to add to in which 90% of it is forest, t9 premy long list of enjoyable experi- serve the woodland from natives
ences in some 67 C\)Untries duriqg who are selling them . out for big ·
60 years of worldwide traveling.
money.
Within a few days after !hat artiThe husband has walking paths
cle was published, my grandson, Dr. all. through his forests and take
Bill Crank, a doctor of veterinary tourists a two-hour hike through it
medicine near Point Pleasant, and I e~plaining the history of the many
were off on a joyous trip. to Costa different varieties of trees. It was
Rica.
very educational.
We embarked on a large ContiThe elevation where we stayed
It's tha~ time of year again! Please keep in .DI· lind
nental plane in Columbus and eight that first night was 7,000 feet so you
hours later landed in San Jose where had to take it easy as breathing could·
summer activity safety! Call the Holzer Health ·. ·
'we hastily found a hotel to spend the be difficult. That evening, the
Hotline for your health care concerns. A
first night before setting out to .sight- owner's wife and a maid had an out- ·
see.
standing meal ·for us. Then we sat
specially trained RN is on duty to answer your · ·
•
By early next .morning niy 85 around the table by a hot pot belly
health questions.
year-old body was well-rested and I stove talking until II p.m. It was
was anxious to begin traveling the very cool at this altitude and we
country.
•slept covered with heavy blankets as
We rented a 4-wheel drive vehi· the temperature dipped below 45
cle and headed south. I was in my · degrees. We also had an electric
glory except for the fact those road heater in our room.
curyes were ,really trying as they
There was a cold shower bathwound their way thr9ugh the moun- . room outside and Bill w.as brave .
Ask your physician about medication concern$
tainous terrain that they call high- enough to try it out the next momc
ways.
' .
When we would get behind a .
sl9w · moviag· truck . it would take
many miles before we could pass.
' .
After a while I coaxed myself in\o
becoming more patient ana we
began stopping often to enjay the
J
gorgeous scenery and take photos.
After we had driven . about six
hours over unpaved roads that were
'
literally unbelievable and were nearing a destination Bill had picked for
r•
us to spend the night, I became quite
All In Stock Merchandise -No Special Orders
annoyed and apnounced to him
empljatically that I was not going to
Sale Starts 9:30 Friday
stay anywhere along' that rock and
gravel laden path referred to as a
AU Bedroom
highway. But he talked me into ·
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Grap~Uipolia
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90 D•y• Si111e At Cith
Lon1er Terlllt" Av~il•~l•
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�Sunday, June 6, 1999
Sunday, June&; 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Page C4 • JJ~mba; 11tb!!ee-J5mttn.!
Pomeroy • MlddlepQrt • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
:
•
EASTMAN'S
WASHINGTON (AP) It's conditions on maps and realized that
right there every day, something you it could have been predicted easily
take for granted like the electric light and warnings sent.
. or the paved street. But just like
The result was the issuance of a
those things, the weather map hasn't daily weather bulletin from Paris
always existed - it had to be invent- staning Jan. I, 1858. Britain began
ed.
its daily forecasts Sept. 3, 1860, with
When~· look at the weather map _ its first storm warning going out
in the daily paper or on television, its Sept. I, I861.
usefulness seems obvious as storms
Even so, the weather maps comand winds parade across the land.
piled from reports sent by telegraph
But while scientfsts have collect- df(w criticism from ' scientists who ·
ed weather repons for centuries, the said they lacked sound theoretical
first weather map didn't appear until background - pressure that led to
1816, repons Mark Monmonier in the suicide of Adm. Roben FitzRoy,
his new book, " Air Apparent: How head of the British meteorological
Meteorologists Learned to Map, Pre- office.
diet and Dramatize the Weather." ·
That conflict between pure scien"What jumps out at me was the ti sts and practical meteorologists
fact that it wasn't until about 1816 continued for years.
that people realized that you can take
Monmonier quotes George Bliss,
weather data and map them," he a U.S. Weather Bureau forecaster,
said.
who in 1917 described his job as
"I was amazed hy the fact that requiring "a special facility for intothey had thi s organization in Ger- itiv~ly and quickly weighing the
many. which had a very rich data ' forces indicated on the weather map
base, w.h'ich they did not map .. . rather than by profound study of
because they had no clue that there atmospheric physics."
•
was any relationship betwee.n space
Detailed atmospheric pl)ysics is a
and (air) pressure and wind," he said bigger pan of today's forecasts,
in a telephone interview.
thanks to the guidance provided by
It took a disa<tcr to make those massive computers running complex
maps a regular thing.
'programs that analyze and predict
After a storm on Nov. 14, 1854, . what' the weather will do.
sank several French and British sh ips
'But in the end, it still gets preduring the Crinican War, weather- sc nted on the good old weather map.
men were ab le to . rcl:onstruct the
The first weather rilap was com-
.
. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Cremeans
'
Qouple observes anniversary
•GALLIPOLIS · Mr. and Mrs.
Richard W Cremeans of Gallipolis.
celebrated their 58th wedding
an:niversary on Apri l 28, while
Richard was hospitalized ·at Si.
Mary 's Hosp it al in Hunt ington,
W~:st Virgi ni a.
·· Th eSt. Mary 's nurses on the
third floor surpri sed the coupl e
witn a 'happy an niversary cake'
DIAR
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21 0 East Main St. ·
Pomeroy, OH 45769
-740-992-1182 304-773-5305
Mountain
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Sample Our Cuisine •Fri.-Sat. 5:00pm-9:00pm
Sunday Buffet • 10:00 am-3:00pm
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PROG
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.CALL TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMATION
(740) 992·2117 or
(800) .992·2608
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IGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
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31b. pkg.
Superior's ·
Hot Dogs·
2/S
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Family Pak
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Western Style
Pork
Baby
Back
Pork .Ribs
Sib. box
Flanders
Beef
Paffies
2/8
RC Cola and
Diet Rite Cola
12 Pack
ASST. VARimES
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Eastman's ••. CIMe to !loMe,
Community ·-Minded
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Vegetables
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Foodland
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14-151/2 oz. cana
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12 oz. cana
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·Pork Loins·
$ 89
8 39
EDICAL
ELIGIBIL
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8
11b. 1'011
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Whole Boneless
American Cheese
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Tender Choice
Lb.
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ea~ ·
6FRIIMONTHS
• OF AMIRICA'S TOP 40'
99
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10 lb.
Whole Boneless. ·Fresh Chicken
Leg Quarters
Pork Loins
Give ua your PRIME STAR bill
and we'll give yau'a
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Tender Choice
NOW I
Catering 13y Carpenter Inn C!ief jean jones
(jorinerfg ofSyfvia's)
and a rose from Richard to Beulah.
Richard left St.
Mary's after 97 days · and is now in
rehabi litati on at Overbrook Center
in Middleport.
Cards may be sent to Richard at
Overbrook Center, · Room 210 B,
333 Page St.. Middleport. 45760 or
cards for . the cou le to 1129 Su nset
Drive, Gallipolis, 4563 1.
.
an e rt to prov e · our
readers hip with curre nt news, the tine! and the Gallipol is
S9nday Times-Sentinel will not bune .
accept weddin gs after 60 days · Only black and white or color
glossy prints will ·be accepted.
from the date of the event.
All materi al sub.mitted for pub: Wedding s submitted after the
li
cation
is su bj ec t to editi ng.
6?-day deadline will appear dur·
piled by Heinrich Wilhelm Brandes.
a physics professor at Prussia's University of Breslau. Today, Breslau is
irl Poland and known as Wroclaw.
Unlike today's weather maps,
those produced by Bran des weren ' t
used for forecasting the weather_
After three years' work, he published
365 daily wea!her maps in 1819,
covering Europe's weather for the
year I 783:
That " hindcast" gave scientists
new knowledge . It revealed closed
circles of low pressure that form
storms and showed · that the winds
around these systems all seek to flow
inward.
Within a few decades that knowledge could be put to use in designing
maps of nearly current weather
thanks to the invention of the electric
telegraph - a device quickly adopted by weathermen to collect data for
plolting on maps.
"In 1846, two years after Samuel
Morse linked Washington and Baltimore ... William Redfield proposed
using the rapid ly growing network to
warn Atlantic ports of storms devel oping in the South and Midwest,"
Monmonier repons.
Limit QUIII1IIIIes •
Thru
�Sunday, June 6, 1999
P~meroy • Middleport • Gallipoli :a, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
According to Hardesty's Atlas,
"Salt was a very scarce article and it
James
was hard to get any. At that date
Sands
there were but two stores in Gallipolis. Tea sold for three dollars -per
polmd and coffee brought 50 cents, ·
and other things were in proportiOn.
Leather was hard to secure, and
the family had to make a pair of
shoes last them. a year. All the
Probably the first church to be schools were supported by subscripbuilt in Gallia County was the tion, and it was impossible to obtain
Bethel Methodist Church. It was in a good education."
Some of the great early
1810 that William Cherrington built
Methodist
ministers preached at
a log church that would serve as
Bethel
Church
and stayed in the
home for Methodist gatherings from
Cherrington home.
1810 to 1865.
Included in the number would be
It was in the Cherrington home
Henry
Bascom, William ·P. Strick~bQut • 1805 that one of the first
land
and
Jacob Young. Bethel in .
·Methodist sermons was preached in
1810
was
on the Letart Circuit
the county. Cherrington was over 50
which
counted
"26 preaching stops of
·y~:irs old when he crossed the OhiO
both
sides
of
the
Ohio River stretchRiyer two years after Ohm became a
siate(l803). He seuled four mtles in g from northern Meigs County
w(>;t of Gallipolis on the Chicka- down to about Burlington. ·
Youno considered William Chermauga Creek. There he . formed the
ri
ngton
~s one of the most remarklir5t selllement in Addtson Townab
le
men
he had ever mel and Young
ship:
·
.
wri
tes
of
him
in Young's autobiograWilliam made the first hand mtll
phy:
"It
"
will
be necessary to take
in Addison Township and neighbors
came from many mi les - 10 grind parti cul ar notice of this good old
man ; he was a native ~f New)erscy ;
cQm.
in early life emigrated to the state of
Virginia, and while he was a young
man, became pious, and united himself to the Methodist Episcopal
Church."
,
"The great Bishop Mc,Kendree
spent many happy nights under his
hospitable roof, and with his children and grandchildre!\. They took
his Methodist training; and although
they .are numerous, they are'llearly
all members of the Church, and
some of them preachers of the
Gospel:"
.
The Cherrington family was
joined in the Bethel commwllity by
the Mortons, Switzers, Entsmingers,
Rogers, Watts, and Johnstons.
The last named fami ly came to
Old Gallia from near Melrose
Abbey. Scotland. They settled in the
Bethel commwnit y about 1.88 1. Pennell Cherring ton, son of William,
married Jennene Johnston in 1825.
Both bride · and groom were 23 at
that time.
Miss Mary John stoll , a descendant of James and Margaret Johnston who were the ones who came
here from Sc.otland. se rved for many
years as steward, trustee. class
leader and pillar of the church.
Miss Johnston once recalled her
days at Bethel and the strongest
memories had to do with the quarterly conferences. "Mr. Cherrington
would kill a beef and the ladies
wou I d make a half barrel of doughnuts and prepare other food in proportion in order to feed the people
who came.
"Oftentimes, because of the distance traveled many of the visitors
would spend the night in the homes
of the Bethel community."
·
In the early days all weddings,
baptisms, communions and such
special events were planned around
the Quarterly Conferences when the
presjding elder and later the District
Superinte ndent would visit.
It. was about 1865 that the second
Bethel Church was built .·That building was then replaced by a more
modern structure in 190 I.
The 1901 building would serve
until the closing of the church in the ·
1950s. The off and the building
taken down. in the late 1920s included as trustees Andrew Raikes, Ed
Fulton, E.F.Stone, Arthur Blazer and
W.A. Blazer. The stewards Arthur ·
Blazer. and Arthur Blazer. The Sunday School Supt. E.F. Stone: Arthur
·Chicago officials question Springer, take aim at show's violenc~l
· TrebleMakers, this area's barbershop chorus, will be presenting its fifth annual harmony show at 7:30p.m., S: rday, June
19, at the Ariel Theater in Gallipolis ..
The Meigs area has several men involved in the chorus which
practices at 7:30 p.m: every Tuesday at the Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis and membershi"p is open to men
who enjoy singing and performing .
·
Members of the organi zation from the Meigs area are Qerald
Powell, Gerald Kelly, John Anderson and hi s sort, John , Denver
Rice, Dave Powers and Don Fritz.
Appearing as guest performers as a part of the June 19 show
will be t,wo quartet s, Chessy System of Charleston, W. Va., and
winners of the coveted International Barbershop Quartet Gold
Medals, Jokers Wild.
Show ticket s are $10 each and· can be purchased at HaskinsTanner, Corbin Snyder and the Grace United Methodist Church
in Galli polls. If you ·live in Meigs Coun ty, securing tickets at
those locations might be a problem but I' m sure if you' ll contact
' one of the Meigs area si ngers taki ng part, they will be glad to
give you an assist with the problem .
"Dusti ng Off Some of the Old Songs" is the theme for Saturday's show.
·
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In this picture fro!TI the collection of the Gallla County Historical
Society ona sees the Bethel Methodist Church. Bethel, organized
about 1805, was the first Methodist Church in Gallla County. Tha
church's foundar was William Charrlngton.
teachers incl uded: Mrs . Emza
Hager, Miss Susan Raikes, Miss
Janet Bailey and D:M. Ra1kes .
'
Gallia Community Calenda
•••
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...
Sunday, Ju!le 6
l'OINT PLEASANT, W.Va ...
Narcoiics Anonymous Tri - County
Group meeting, 611 Viand Street,
7:3"0 p.m.
•••
·:ADDISON - Preaching service
at Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
·.6p.ln.
•••
KANAUGA - Worship service at
Silver Memorial-FWB Church , 6
·p.m., with Rev. Charles Neece
preaching .
...
Henderson Recreation Building:
w.il l preach at Good Hope United
Baptist Church, II a.m.
·
Monday, June 7
•••
. GALLI POLIS - Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles In Recovery
Group, St: Peters Episcopal Church,
7:30p.m.
•••
CHESHIRE -TOPS (Take
Off Pounds Sensibly) meeting, at .
Ches hire United Methodist Church,
I0 - II a.·m. Call Anri Mitchell at
388 - 8004 for inforn1ation.
•••
POMEROY - Narcotics Anonymous"Living In The Solution
Group, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7 p.m.
•••
VINTON -Vinton Baptist
Church's Pastor Marvin Sallee
teaching series on "Nehemiah's
Project", each Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Nursery provided.
•••
•••
Thursday, June 10
GALLIPOLIS- Overeater 's
POINT PLEASANT,
· Anonymous at New Life Lutheran .
VINTON - Fellowship Chapel
. Church, 7 p.m. F<;>r information call ·W.VA. -·Narcotics Anonymous
Church homecoming services
meeting Tri - Counfy meeting, 611
446 - 4889 or 367 - 7475.
beginning at 9:30a.m. SpeCial
Viaild Street (use side entrance) ,
music by Vinton and Marcella ·
7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Rankin . Guest speaker Cliff ColeVeterans
'Comm.ission
regular
man. Dinner to follow. Paul Ring,
GALLIPOLIS - New Life
monthly meeting, 9 a.m . al the
pastor
Lutheran Church 'Hunger forHeal- .
.office .
ing' video series, 8 p.m .
GALLIPOLIS - Hol zer Medical
GALLIPOLIS- John Gee Black
Center's Sibling Class. fo.n:hildren
GALLIPOLIS - Galli a -County
Historical Center open for public
ages 3 and up, I :30- 2:30p.m.
Retired Teachers meeting at Bob
tours, 10 a.m.- 2 p.m.
· Infant and Child CPR Class, 3 Evans Farms Shelter House, noon .
.7:30 p.m. French 500 Room. Call
ORTA
president elect Frances Sites
446 - 5085 to pre - register. Walk · to speak. For information call
Thesday, June 8.
ins welcomed. Refre>hments
Louise Greenlee at 245 - 5029 or
served .
Janet Wetherholt ai 441-0514.
GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymou s meeting, St. Peter's
MERCERVILLE - Ralph Work GALLIPOLIS - John Gee Black
Episcopal Church, 8 p._m.
man wi ll be the guest speaker at
Historical Center open for public
Canaan Baptist Church, II a.m. and
. ***
GALLIPOLIS - Choose To Lose tours, 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.
7 ~.m.
'
Oiet Group , 9 a. m. at Grate United
GALLIPOLIS - New Life Victo- .
Method ist Church. For information
GALLIPOLIS -Trinity Gospel
ry Center serviCes with Rev. Darrell
call 256 - 11 56.
Mission homecoming. Dim1er. at
Huffman , pastor of New Life Victoi10on , singing at I p.m. Gospel
ry Center in Huntington, W.Va.
GA LLIPOLIS- AI -A non meetBluegrass Boys, Mike Priest and .
ing
at
St.
Peter's
Ep
iscopal
Church,
others. Pastor Robert Hersman .
8p.m.
·
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GALLIPOLIS - Harber Family
GALLIPOLIS - Prayer Coffee
Friday, June il
to si.ng at Bell Chapel Church, 7
for Gallipolis Area Chri stian
. p.m.
***
'
GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
·***
Women's Club at the home of Carol
Anonymous meeting , 8 p.m. St.
GALLIPOLIS - Homecoming
Carter, 10 a.m.
Peters Episcopal Church.
services at While Oak Baptist
•••
. Church. Preaching by Bud Hatfield , . ENO - Eno Grange# 2080 meetPORTER- Bible study at Clark
si nging by the Gospel Messengers.
tng, 7:30p.m. Potluck to follow.
·Chapel Church, 7 p.m . ·
Services begin at \0 a.m., dinner at
•
noon. ·
EVERGREEN - Springfield
'***
Townhouse church service. 7 p.m.
Wedqesday, June 9
GALLIPOLIS - Watson famil y
teunion at Raccoon Creek Park,
***
HENDERSON, W.VA. -· Western
GALLIPOLIS - New Life Victoshelter #I . Dinner 'at 12:30 p.m.
square dancing, 7:30- 10 p.m.,
ry Center services with Rev. Darrell
· GALLIPOLIS - Evening servkes at Poplar Ridge Freewill Baptist Church, 6:30 p.m., Robert
Phillips of. North Carolina special
singer.
•••
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Huffma n, pastor of New Life Victory Center in Huntington, W.Va.
Choir - Friday, Centenary Church
Choir- Saturday.
·***
REVIVALS
Garden Of My Heart Holy
. Tabernacle will hold a revival June
There wi ll be a camp m~eting at
10- 12, 6 p.m. nightly. Preaching
the "Bidwel \ Foodland, May 3!by Calvin Minni s. Pastor Charles
· June· ll , 7 p.m. nightly. Different
Ted Glassburn.
preachers. Sponsored by the D.an
Logue Ministries.
•••
...
•••
. A revival will be held at the Big
4 Church, June 6-12, 7 p.m. nightly,
with Brother Larry Boner, Pond
Gap, W.Va. , as evangelist. Special
si nging nightly. Singers include.
Barbara Holley - Monday, Larry
Bumgardner - Tuesday, Vjrginia .
Stapleton - Wednesday, Ours Family - Thursday, Paw Paw Church
sent to her at Arbors Nursing Home,
170 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis,
'
45631.
•••
Mary Notter will observe her
85th birthday o~ June 8. Cards may ·
be sent to her at Holzti Senior Care
Center, Room 123, 380 Colonial
Drive, Bidwell , 45614.
•••
•
There will be a card· shower for
. · .Helen Preston's 85th birthday tin
Nora Searls will celebrate her 89th June II. ~ards m ~y be ~nt to her at
birthday on June 27. Cards inay be Cheshire, 45620.
·CARD SHOWER
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GALLIPOLIS- New Life
Lutheran Church graduation party
following 10:30 a.m. service.
·
•••
JOKER'S WilD
Fifth Annual
. FrencL (i~ Chapter
BarLersLoP-Ifarmon"f Show
SPEBSQSA, Inc.
Certified Mammography
•,
.
.
'
The Best Care Is Prevention!
Call today for an appointment.
.
.
Holzer Meigs Clini.c:
88 East Memorial Drive
Jlomeroy, Ohio
Holzer CltnU;...
Keeping O~r Promise!
(740) 992·0060
.
~
International Quartet_Champoins
Holzer Meigs ·Ciinic·
'
"
Ariel Theater
Gampolll,
Ohio
.
Saturday, June 19, 1999
Show Tickets $-10.00
.,
Afterglow UO.OO
7•30 p.m.
Available at
Haskins TaMer, Corbin Snyder and
.
A~able ~t .
.
Grace United Methodist Church
Holiday Inn mGalhpohs, 0~10
Food and Fun for all ages and ...
more
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www .e ure lhanet.com
I
GALLIPOLIS
Ohio River Plaza
---...,..
We just continue to progress don 't we? Mr. Kellogg has
added "gree n jacks" to my box .of Apple Jacks andJ didn ' t eve
as k fot thaf. l wonder ifne· found looking 'irthe viv id green Jit,
tic circles floating in milk parti cularly appetizing before he
added them to my box? Do keep smiling. ·
The Community Calendar is pubSYRACUSE- Sutton Township
li'shcd as a free service to non-profit "Board of Trustees regular meeting
groups wishing to announce IJleet- . Monday, 7:30 p.ni . at Syracuse Vil ings and special events. The calen - lage Hall'.
. .
dar is not des igned to prom o!~ sales
or fund raisers of any type . Items are
POMEROY
Governance
printed on ly as space permits and Committee of the Athens- Mei gs
C!Jnnot be guaranteed to be printed a Educational Service Center meeting
specific number of day s.
. Monday, I p.m·: at the office located·
at 320 1/2 E. Main St.
SUNDAY •
· RACINE George Holter Jr.
SYRACUSE - Meigs Coun~
fiimily reunion Sunday, I p.m. at the Republican Committee meeting
h.ome of Jim and Karen Holter Monday , 7:30 p.m. at Carleto11
Werry, Coun Street.
School in Syracuse.
MONDAY
CHESTER - Planning session,
Monday 7:30 p.m .. at the Chester
courthouse for the July 16 and 17
Chester Shade Days celebration.
Anyone will to help. attend.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Neighborhood Watch meeting, 7
p.m., American Legion Annex .
SYRACUSE - ' Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, regular·luncheon meeting, Tuesday noon.
Speaker, Perry Varnadoe, Meigs
Cotinty &;onomic Development.
POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees, Thesday, 6:30p.m. at
the township hall on Rock Springs
Road.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Dist rict Publi c Library long range
"technology planning committee
POMEROY Meigs" Local
· meeting al the Pomeroy Library, . Board of Education regular meeting
. Monday at 6 p.m.
·· Thcsday, 6:30 p.m. in the Meigs
High School library.
REEDSVILLE -'- Olive Township Tru~tees ; regular meeting, 7
POMEROY - Immuni zati on
p.m., township building, Joppa Rd.
clinic Tuesday, 9-ll and 1-3 p.m. at
the Meigs County Multipurpose
RACINE Racine Village Building. Children must be accomCo un cil. 7 p.m. Monday at the · panied by parent or guandian with a
municipal building .
copy of shot. record.
. Featuring
...
"'!!·-~~---
The next planning sessions for the annual Relay of Life project have been set for Thursday, . June 10, at the library in
Pomeroy. Team captains for "the walk will meet at 7 and the '
committee will meet at 8 p.m.
:
Tho Rel ay .earlier was set for this month at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds but has been postponed to July and will be staged a(
the Meigs Higli School.
SYRACUSE - Bible school. at
the Syracuse Nazarene Church,
Monday through Friday, 6 to 8:30
p.m. with Friday session at poolside.
For more information contact 9922514 or 992-3517.
.- .
LECTA .- Homecomi ng at Okey
Chapel Church. Lunch at noon .
Afternoon speaker is John Jeffrey.
" I'm hired to be· a host at a talk
- '!
show.... I' rn not the le gal counsel.
I'm not the head of the busin~ s, ;
that' s not what I' m htred to do." • •
Springer agreed to eliminate l!tc :
fighting on hi s sht•w after nurner~> ;
protests last year, but they returned ;
when the show 's ratings suffered;
Meigs Community Calendar
••
•••
about all the contr&:b and bu~iness
arrangements of 'The Andy Griffith
Show....
"" If you're intercqcd in making a
show here, and JUSt beat up our
show, I hat's fine . ilut you know you
can get those answers, don 't you? ...
Yuu don't have to he asking me . You
know that. ..
.....
.
·
.
.
.
Eure]l<aNet
------~
i\ neV: program is to be offered at th e Holzer Meigs Cli nic in
Pomeroy this month.
·
Holzer ·c linJ c has announced" that a cardiac rehabilitation
""pil ot study" will be co nducted at the Pomeroy faci lity.
The study will offer 12 weeks of monitored, supervised e>e rcis~ and ed ucati on sessions for heart patients. Most major insurance compan ies will pay for these services for persons who have
had heart attacks , coronary artery ·bypass s urgery, a~d stab le
angi na.
.
.
.
T he program is e> pected to begin early this month and those
interested in th e study-and the number taking part will be lim ited due . to the space needed- should call 740-446-5280.
Perhaps, you have heard of laser pointers- apparently a dan gerous item which shouldn ' t even be on the market.
Rece ntly a seventh -grader in Kansas City., Mo., suffered a
,, permanent partial burn to his retina after a fellow stud.ent point:. ed th e light from a-laser pointer onto his face. Altho~gh there is
SOme di sp ute abOUt the threat"C8USed by SUCh pointerS Which are
avai lab le for less than $10; some school distr.icts, in cluding
th ose in Meigs Cou nty have banned the pointers for safe ty and
cl"assroom and disruption reasons .
Incide ntally, the Meigs Fair Board is asking all vendors at the
1999 fair not to offer the pointers for sale or as prizes for game s.
some in the audience applauded
Spnnger, ·a former mayor of Cincinnati , at umcs when he objected to
some questioning, such as that aboUI
his salary.
··1 don ' t work for yuu. ' ir," he
told Burke. " I really don 't. .. . I'm
tryi ng lo be very respectful but
you're not th e hoss ." He smd he was
polite enough to show up when he
heard about the hearing even though
the a\demtan hadn 't called him tu
invite him.
He also said he didn ·1 kn ow a lot
about such questions as the terms to
the lease on rhe ~audio where the
show is taped and suggc>tcd Rurke
cou ld have asked hi s producer<
directly. ·
"There are 1hings I kn()w, a lo1
about, and there are things iha1 arc
not my business, " he said. " I ca n' t
nmaginc Andy Griffith knew a lot
.
•!f.
•••
•••
CHICAGO lAP) - Talk show
host Jerry Springer appeared today
before a Chicago City Council hearing, telling alderm en he knew little
ai)out the business arrangements
behind his show and decltning to
disclose his salary.
Alderman Edward Burke, a for.
mer policeman, called the hearing of
the Police and Fire Committee. He
said that if the if the fist lights, chair
throwing and hair pulling on the
controversial show are genuine,
Chicago police should enforce the
law, cuff the guests and haul them
off to jail.
If it 's staged, Burke suggested;
"The Jerry Springer Show" should
be required to obtain a city entertainment li ce nse. Th.e nationally
syndicated show is taped in Chicago.
As the hearing got under way.
'
Blazer was the assistant and Bonnie
Haskins the secretary with · Ruby
Miller servi ng as her assistant. The
.1JIIllhv Glimn-.1Jmtbul • Page C"f_ ·.
~----------~--------------~-----------
Bethel Methodist was Gallia County's first church, founded in 1810
By:
.. •.
Sunday, June 6, 1999
Pomeroy • Mlddl8s»rt • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
TUPPERS PLAINS - . Friends
of the Library, will meet at the Eastern Library Monday at 7 p.m.
DARWIN - Bedford Township
Trustees will meet Thesday, 7 p.m.
at the townhall .
Beanie .Babies frenzy hits the .freeway
' '
ATLANTA (AP) -Talk about a "Stretchy the Ostrich," in its kids'
rush for Ben nie Babies.
meal s these days.
Some Atlanta motorists risked life
Taylor said he saw at least six or
· und limb Thursday evening to grab · seven motofists leaning from their
the· popu lar stuffed ani mals when cars to scoop up the Beanie Babies
they spilled onto Interstate 285 dur- with one haild while they kept rolling
. ing rush hou r.
.
.
with the other hand on the wheel.
ll1e ostri ch Tecnie Beani e Babies
He and another officer removed
likely were headed for a McDonald's about 30 sluffed animals from the
restaurant when "they escaped their freeway, two lanes of which were
carrier, sunni scd Phil Taylor, a covered with Beanie Babies road
superviso r for the state's motorist . ·klll. Officials aren't sure which vehiassistance agen~y. The fast food cle dropped the stuffed animals . or
chain is featuring a series of " Tee- how many were snatched by
nie" versions of the toys, including motorists.
' '
•
S OFF HILLS EVERYDAY LOW PRICES !
�:•
Enterttiinment
Kristin Davis brings hope and laughs
8r FRAZIER MOORE
· 14' Tlllevlalon Writer
· ; NEW YORK (AP) - Hope
, springs eternal for Charlotte York.
•• It's an endearing trait that sets her
· Jlf< from her three Manhattan gal. ,pals in "Sex and the City," HBO's
~licious adult comedy returning for
• a second season Sunday at 9 p.m.
EDT.
• • Charlotte, like her churns, recognizes the unalienable right of every
l hirtysomething single woman to life,
liberty and the pursuit of carnal happiness. She alone holds another truth
to be self-evident: Prince Charming
· is just around the comer.
A Smith College graduate and a
. dealer of fine art, Charlotte is the
· series' designated randy romantic, its
~ P.ark Avenue Pollyanna, its goOdy: two-shoes straight from a Ferragamo
: fairy tale.
. ·· And, as played by Kristin Davis,
. ~lte is a delightful counterpoint to
Miranda (Cynthia Nixon), the corpo-
rate lawyer who argues a convincing
case against the opposite sex; Sarnan' tha (Kim Cattrall), the liberated PR
exec whose spin on men is, they're
her toys; and Carrie (Sarah Jessica
Parker), the self-described "sexual
anthropologist" who writes a newspaper column about the way-cool singles scene while engaging in an onagain, off-again affair with a busi. nessman known only as Mr. Big
(Chri~ Noth).
"Sex and the City" was developed
by Darren Star ("Beverly Hills
90210," " Melrose Place"). But .it
was conceived in the New York
Observer, a zesty, often acerbic Manhattan weekly whose "Sex and the
City" column was written by Candace Bushnell, Carrie's real-life
progenitor.
' Carrie is the show's interpretative
narrator. But as she and her sisters hit
the clul!s, the shops, the sack, then
the neighborhood diner to sort things
out, it is Charlotte who serves as the
Joan Plowright
By DoUGLAS J. ROWE
A81ocllllad Pras Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Joan
Plowright sa;s it felt good to get out
of her straitja~ket.
·
Straitjacket?
"Yes, a straitjacket- Lady Oliv-'
er," she answers, laughing.
· Married for 28 years to Sir Laurence Olivier until his death in 1989,
Plowright is talking .about how her
film career has flourished over the
past decade.
"I just think I hit a lucky streak,
starting off With Lawrence Kasdan
(who directed her) in 'I Love You to
Death."'
" I just loved the opportunity to do
something wild - get out of my
straitjacket;" she says, chortling over
her role in the 1990 dark C!>medy.
Then she did BarrY Levipson's
u Avalon" and, as she puts it, "then it,
kind of snowballed,'' with such var. · ied films as "Enchanted April," for
which she received an Academy
Award nomination, and "Last Action
Hero." She even played Mrs. Wilson
in "Dennis the Menace" and took a
role in "101 Dalmatians"- both as
a "treat" to her grandchildren.
Now she's co·-starring in a cine, ll)atic rarity - a film dominated by
powerhouse actresses (this year's
Oscar-winning supporting actress,
ludi Dench, and previous Oscar
winners Maggie Smith and Cher as
well as Uly Tomlin). In Franco Zeffirelli's autobiographical "Tea With
Mussolini," Plowrighl, Dench and
Smith are the "scorpioni," .tarttongued British expatriates who help
raise a boy who was born out-ofwedlock in fascist, wartime Italy -·
each in her own idiosyncratic way.
"The thought of being all together for the first time made us feel,
-
viewer's surrogate. Her finishing··
school inhibitions and cheerleade 'r
,gusto mirror our own mixed reaction: 1
to the fun and games.
Davis sparkles. For one thing, sht:
radiates Charlotte's brand of hopeful··
ness. Naturally. And how convenient'!
To play anything but hopeful (long..
.term, anyway) would require "too
much acting,'' she explains with a lit tie frown.
On "Seinfeld" a couple of yeam
·ago, Davis portrayed the loving girl ·
friend whose toothbrush, unbe knownst to her, Jerry knocked int<~
the toilet. Afterward, fearing th":
worst, he couldn't bring himself to .i
kiss her. In a better apartment with a
higher-income cad, this is the kind c,.f
relationship Charlotte could easily
suffer on "Sex and the City" - an'd
recover from, with her hope intact.
Wee!t in, week out on "Melro! 1e
Place" a few seasons back, acting g1 >I
to be too much for Davis as the dev 1ous, histrionic Brooke Armstrong.
to 'Sex and the City'
!ached, has dealt herself out of the
dlling pme. She's just too busy, too
nomadic.
me the past year, for example.
Between .her work in the first "Sex"
season in Manhattan and her return
for this year's 18 on-location
episodes, the Los Angeles resident
parked herself in Toronto to co-star
with Rob Lowe in the NBC miniseries ., Atomic Train."
"When are you going to find time
to go meet people to date?" Davis
poses. "And where do you go? I
don't know!"
At the suggestion that her current
series tells how to go about this very
thing, she bursts out laughing.
"Ale you kidding?! It's a textbook
.course on how NOT to!"
She's right, of course. ''Sex and
the City" is riotoUsly instructive, but
pnly as·a social satire, as a cautionary
fable. Ail that, it's wickedly on-target.
"One thing about our show really
makes sense,'' Davis says with beenthere authority. "There does seem to
be a certain level of freaky behavior
going on with men over 30.
"They seem really great ·on the
·"It was also to do with a passion
for the job which was shared. ... outside:"
Then, for -'an example of how a
Understanding, compassion, and the man's behavior can suddenly go
fact that one person can put their
career on hold now and again. And I
think that is essential. I mean quite
obviously if I'd gone off.all over the
place, it wo.uldn 't have lasted. He'd
have found somebody else,'' she
says, chuckling ruefully, "to have
the talks with.''
"On 'j\ieii'OI!C Place,' the women
characters were all . really mean to
each other," she notes; "So it was
nice to get 'Sex and the City,' where
the four women are all friends and
that's .a given, and everything else
revolves around them.,.
While Charlotte is a Connecticut
preppy, Davis readily admits to
equivalent status from below the
Mason-Dixon line: She is a Southern
belle from Columbia, S.C.
Does she, like Charlotte, believe
in romance?
" Yeah: Sure! I've had it,'' Davis
declares. "It's .a while ago at this
point, but 1've had it."
A picture-perfect brunette with
enormous brown eyes and a dazzling
smile, the 34-year-old Davis is
dressed simply in gray slacks and a
pink T-shirt, with a matching 1'0\!C·
quartz beaded bracelet. Rose quaJ1z,
she volunteers, "is for lqve."
Kristin Davis, the only "Sex and
the City" actress currently unat-
out of the role of Lady 01 ivier
And it was the meeting place fm
her, her fellow rebels and Olivic•r,
considered by many to be the 20tlocentury 's greatest actor, ·
"Larry appeared to be the epitoome of the Establishment, an ol afashioned great success of the We :st
End. Of course, he wasn't. ... He
came to the Royal Court to do John
Osborne's 'The Entertainer.' The ,re
we were all thinking, 'Oh Lor·d,
we're being invaded by this Sir',"
says Plowright, who played bis
daughter in the stage and screen version. .
But he took off his coat and sta ned rehearsing with a power and paiSsian that won them over. ·
"M): goodness, I mean, he w·as
just
one of us! He was an act,or.
Joan Plowrlght ·
That's what he was. A great actor! "
' Gosh, this is an opportunity that is
A year after Olivier divorce.d
probably never going . to. happen Vivien Leigh, they were married iin
again,"' Plowright said during a Connecticut. BOth were appearing .
recent trip to New York from Lon- on Broadway at the: time - he in
don.
"Beckett,'; she in "A Taste 'of
. The 69-year-old Plowright says Honey," for which she won the 19C i1
she's grateful for parts that extend best-actress Tony.
·
beyond "maiden aunts, or battered
Soon, she felt that restrictive guwives, or decoration - on the afi1!S ment ihat came from being Lady 0.
of a man."·
She thought she couldn~t be he •rBecause her mother ran a local self in public and feared her opi namateur drama group, Plowright ions in interviews would be taKen to
was involved in theater at age 3. She be those of Olivier's. "Which pe o. soon was spending school vacations ple wmdd do in tho"!' days,'' slhe
al summer sessions of university says. "And that's why I got into· a
drama schools. After high school, straitjacket.
sh·e won a two-year scholarship ·to
~· 1 had ·to be awfully careful of
the drama school at the Old Vic The- what I said. Because it would lbe
atre in London.
somehow assumed, or .they . could
By 1956, she joined the English use his name, because it was a bigStage Company, headquartered at ger name than mine - 'Oiivi er
London's Royal Court Theater,. thinks ...' because his wife said so .. "
where she gained recognition in
A major reason their marriage
"kitchen sink" dramas that were worked for nearly ihree decades was
written by the so-called Angry that they could talk about anythi11rg
Young Men.
with each other.
south, she turns to the season's first
episode: Charlotte is perplexed tbat
her otherwise-wondelful boyfriend is
constantly, er, adjusting himself in
public.
"I don't get it!" Charlotte frets to
her friends at the diner. " He's from a
He went to Brown!
DOliNG that?"
ELECTION (R)
7:10 & 8:10 DAILY
STARWARS
1·
PHANTOM MENACE (PG)
'7:00, 8:40 DAILY
MATIIEES SAT/SUN.I :00, 3:40
NO PASSES, NO BARGAIN NIGHT
NEVER BEEN KISSED (PG13)
7:00 & 8:20 DAILY
MATINEES BAT/SUN 1:00 & 3:20
I can help you to hear better.
Iguarantee it 1000/ctl
Mel Mock sCH/s
we·have the latest state-of-the-art equipment
· and hearing aids. I am certain that we have what
you need to hear better. I personally guarantee it.
Summer heat ilnd humidity
CRACKLE I can wreck havoc with your
"'0 hearing aidl Try the new.••
......--4hl ·
o"'0 NMD1nu1r
IUAID"
HMrlng
Dryw
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Electronic
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Cherry Wood
ADVANCED HEARING CENTERS
1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis • Spring Valley Plaza
441-1971 or
434-4194
''
Farm/Business
D
Section
Sundly, June .. 1..0
Tobacco producer!f: .mu~t use anti-blue mold spray now .
~rght
Report from Kentucky spurs advisory
from agricultural extenst'on agent
By JENNIFER L BYRNES
GAL[
'
.
Kent~~~~~~ss. th~~u~~:~~:~r~~nG~~~~~:ud~:~.
now -. thrs weekend. Following initial application, sprays
shfouhlddcontmue weekly and fields should be SCOU!ed often for srgns
o I e 1sease.
·
Dnhane and Carbamate (Ferbam) are each labeled for .green-
·
tral
north cen. Due to wind and weather patterns, this source is a serious threat
to our area. Prod~cers should assume that there are already blue
mold spore~ blowmg_around the county; therefore, spray programs
should begm tmmedtately.
.
Even though you don ' t see any prob)ems, blue mold may still
1 t at 1ow 1eves.
1 Th e most e r~.ecttve
··
be present
. ·in yourtoba
. .
ceo Pans
controlts fung1c1de use and the most effective time to use them is
~hoa~s;:~ ~~~~[z~~~~sfa~~;~~:~~~~v;r~;:t~l~~~~ ~f~~ ~~~~~s
Acrobat MZ is already labeled for field set tobacco and sh;uld ~
appl_ied with high pressure, according to the label.
·
Srnce field set plants are still small , complete coverage should
not be too much of a problem. However, as tobacco grows high
pressure will become very important in the application of Aero"
bat. AI ways rea d an d ,oo II ow all label rnstrucllons
.
.
when applying
or
·
j
Although there are no confirmed cases in Gallia County or t~
rest of Ohro. I suspect the disease is already present at undetectaA
levels Th '
·
""f
· IS year •s d ry weat her may delay the dtscovery
of blui
mold in the area. so scout your field s carefull
.
'
~~o~~~sf:rc~~~~e m~ld, ple~se
olu
at
call the
Extension Offici
a fa~ visit Keep u';~~~~~· o~ . er dr~ease dragnosis, or t~ requc!:s
and shar; this information ~~thrtrona cooperatron on thrs effort,
Mold Forecast in the Ag News ~~~~nn~~~~~~e~~~lo: r~~~ Biue
arti cle ori th e Sunday Times Se~tinel Fa miB .
y g
tutal
(JennllerL ByrneaisGellla~ount , xtr 1 usmesslpage.
•
Y• e ens on agent or agrlcultur•
and natural resources,
Ohio State University.)
1
Clinic recognizes
71 employees for
years of service
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic
recently held its annual employee ser.
vice awards to honor employees
reaching five-year service plateaus.
The clinic honored 71. employees
during the ceremonies. Dr. J. Craig
Strafford, Holzer Clinic's president,
served as master of ceremonies.
Strafford and Clinic Administrator
Robert E. .Daniel recognized each
eprployee with a token of ilppreciation and .a cenificate ofachivement.
"In great part, it is dedicated ·
employees like you who make the ·
medical prOfession rewarding," Strafford said. "It is truly my pleasure to
honor you for your . dedication to
Holzer Clinic and our patients."
Employees receiving recognition
for years of service were as follows:
40 years -;- Gladys Grant.
30 years - Rita Coughenour and
Joann Hannan .
25 years - Jim Blevins, Carol
Curry, Barb Dunlap, Jean Gaskins.
Reba Hansen, Marlene Leven, Lovea
Minton. Pam Riffle and Mary Roush .
20 years- Christine DiCiemenrc,
Alice Eads, Donna Grymes and
Paulene Norlhup.
15 years ,
Lana Grimm,
Michelle Hager, Diana Jeffers, Janice
Sanders, Michael Stout and Sandy
Watson . ·
·
1
10 ~ears -:-...Mary Adams, Teq
Adams. Jeff Bar rd. Patncra Barton,
Jessie Beaver, Joyce Boster, Charlayne Crisp, Deborah Elliott, V~
Ellis, Mary Fraley. Dave Grimll'l!
Debbie Halley, David Long, Debbi~
Manley, . Amy McGuire, Teresi!' .
McMann, Pamela Sims, Linda Smalley, Lisa Tawney, Pam Theiss, Abbti-.
Thomas, Bill Tillis, Lori Ward and'
Diane Young.
·
.
.
FORTY YEARS OF SERVICE- Holzer Clinic employee Gladys
!lrant, center, received rec:Ognltlon for her 40 years of ..vice from
Clinic Administrator Robert E. Din lei, left, and !'f•r Clinic Presldant Dr. J. Craig Strafford during the cllnl1='a annual employee
eervlce awards ceremony.
_
·
.. THIRTY-YEAR EMPLOYEES- Holzer Clinic employees recelv•
lng recognition lor 30 years of eervlca were Joann Hinnan and
Rita Coughenour, aeen above with Clinic Admlnlatrlllor Robert E.
Daniel, left, and Dr. J. Craig Strafford, the clinic's president. The
recognition was made during the cllnlc'a annual employee - vice awards ceremony.
.
•
Five years - Terri Bartee, Tina Davies, Teresa Ellis, Todd Fowler, Leedy, Scott Lewis, Claudia Lyon, Queen, Helen Smith, Stephen SumCarter, Jennifer Cassell, Margaret Regina Hall, Buddy Harbour, Patty · Maureen Miller, Jenny Norris, mers, John Taylor, Jean Trace and
·
·
Cromlish, Rebecca Culp; Danise · Helms, Janice Henry, Deborah Sharon Norris, Chris Plants, Sandy Linda Ward.
,; l
Census reveals changjng .face of agriculture
Champion Industries'
incoine rises .by 11% .
By HAL KNEEN
~f the farms in Ohio sold. less thl1) cattle in place by noon. Show and · for future generations. This commuPOMEROY_:_ A copy of the lat- $10,000 wonh of agricultural prod~ showmanship . activities occur nity .event is open for all interested ·
est fi~e-year Census of Agriculture ucls and accounted for less than 2.5! throughout the afternoon. Afinal 4- people from young to old. RSVP for
1992-1997 arrived on my desk. This percent ($103 million) of the tot'!\ Hand FFA heifer-steerrev'iew will be directions,and more information to
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.- Champion l~dustries Inc. has announced
document provides agricultural plan- Ohio agricultural products sold. • held at 7:30 p.m. Pre-registration United Plant Savers, P.O. Bo• 98,
its 26th consecutive increase in quarterly earnings.
ners an'd strategists the b.asis for preThe face of local agriculture iS deadline is June 14. Forms can be .East Barre, Vt. 05649, or call 802Net mcome fqr the three months ended April 30, 1999, was
dieting future growth and trends in changing as farmers decide how t~: picked up from oure~tension office, 479-9825 .
$1,136,000, compared to $1,021.000 for the same periOd in 1998, an
agriculture.
survive the squeezing of pro tits mar- but need to be sent to H.R. Scott,
mcrease of 11.3 percent. Earnings per share were 12 cents in the second
Farming operations nationwide gins. A fanner's management and Room 40 I Counhouse, Parkersburg,
quarter of 1999 and 1998.
.
·
Cicada Update - Male cicadas
are seeing the biggest growth in accountability Of farm resources', W.Va. 26101.
.
are droning from dawn to dusk to 1he ·
Net income for the six months ende<l April30, 1999, was $1,991 ,0001
faqns with more than 1,000 acres (9 land, buildings, l'ivestook, 1111>n9;; J ;the Ohio Valley Limousin Ass<r irritation of most citizens. Meanan increase of $173,000, or 9.5 percent over the amount reported in the
percent of all farms) .and farms less and manpoW'er will determine hls/litt · ciation Show will''lle held' in conl while, female cicadas are hiying eggs
same period of 1998 of $1,818,000. Earnings per share were 21 cents foe
. than 50 acres (30 percent of all short-term and long-term success! junction with the Spectacular on into the pencil-sized branches. Trees
the six months ended April 30, 1999.
fanns).
. Local and regional extension pro- Sunday, June 20, starting at 10 a.m. hard hit by the egg laying in my yard
The board of direclors announced the. declaratio.n of the company's
Did you know that according to grams are provided at little or rl~ Registration deadline is June 14. . are flowering dogwoods, crabapples
quanerly dtvrdend of 5 cents per share. The cash dividend will be paid
1997 census figures, Ohio fanns charge to assist the farmer in makin'# ' Send registrations to Toni Fleming, and maples: Several branches of
on J~ne 28 , 1999, to shareholders of recor.d on June 10, 1999.
·
sold nearly $4.7 billion worth of agri- better decisions. If you have addi- Rt. I. Box 201. Waverly, W.Va. leaves are already flagging (droopMarshall T. Reynolds, chairman of the board and chief executive officultural products? On .a per-farm tiona!' local needs, let me know so ·26184.
ing) due to the disruption of water
cer o( Ch~mpion, said the firm was "pleased with the pr.ogress we have
basis, that amounts to $68,000; how- new programs can be developed for ·
and nutrient t1ow to the leaves.
made durmg the past srx months and we are proud to again reward our
Are you interested in native botanever, production expenses ainounted the fall and winter months.
shareholders for their commitmenr and confidence in Champion with our
Once the cicadas have completed
ical plants and native plant species? their life cycle (I predict locally in 1()) . 25th consecutive quanerly dividend.
to $53,000 per farm, thus gros.
.
.
income after production . expenses .
Plan on participating and attend- United Plant Savers Botanical Sanc- 14 days), you w.ill need to prune off
"Our emphasis for the second half of 1999 is to increase sales and conyielded only $15,()()(} per farm. The ing the Ohio Valley Beef Spectacular tuary is having a dedication ceremo- all reachable dying twigs and destroy
tinue to improve operating margins," he added . "A few of our divisions
average age of Ohio fw:m operators Weekend being held June 19-20 at ny on Saturday, June 26 at I p.m. for them. This . will reduce the next
are located in geographical areas that have experienced sofl printing sales. '
is 53.1 years. Over 15 . percent of· llle Wood County 4-H Campgrounds; the opening of a 380-acre site local· cycle's population and allow many
We are confident we can reverse these trends over the next few month·s.", ~
Ohio farmers are over 70 years of age Butcher Bend Road, Mineral Wells, ed at 3570~ Loop Road , RUIIand.
ornamental shrubs and trees to conChampion is a commerical printer, business forms manufacturer and' ;
The sanctuary is dedicated to con· tinue to recover from the cicada
and only 9 percent are un'der 35 years W.Va.
office. prOO.ucts ,and office, furniture supplier in regional markets easr of ;
of age.
the Mrss•ssrppL Champ ron serves its customers through 1he following com- :
In addition to having open class serve and restore native medicinal mjury.
The number of part-time farmers opportunities, this weekend high- plants of the United States and Cana(Hal Kneen Is Malga County's
pames and drvrsrons m 13 stales, including Ohio and West Virginia.
continues 10 increase, with 46 percent lights the Seventh Annual YoutJv ' da and their native habit;~ts while extension agent lor agriculture
of 'farm operators working over 200 Show, which is held on Saturday Junt working to ensure an abundant and natural resources, Ohio State
· days offrhe farm a year. Almost'haJf. 19. Check-in starts at 10 a.m., with all . renewable supply of medicinal plan Is Unlvei'Slty.)
One ·way .o f accumulating $100,000 ·
;
s~mething
After Holfrs
Pediatric Car
~
here's truly
special about work created by hand when the
craftsperson has put their heart and soul into creating a unique and fascinating
piece of art. Visit the oldest traditional art and craft fair in Wf'st 'Virginia.
Experience the joy of mu$ic and dance, the aroma of West Virginia's finest
foOds, and the experience of seeing works of heart created by over 200 juried
craftspeople. Enjoy the experience!
Jllltl Ill July 4111 frlr IIIII fltlf """''I Mlln Simi Ripley Fltlt:llt:klt5-K R1a.
lllnllltJ fnlm IIIII 11a
tuntl 1111 IIDtmltWtn Ripley ffrlllllllllon flltl/lflm.
"'Ill
• Hours:
Sunday
1 p:m. to 7 p.m.
·Gee fiscal o.fficer networks
with financial aid manag~rs
New oppo~~unity available for farming grant
5.:30 p.ni. to 10 p.m.
Saturday.
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
By BRYCE L.. SMITH
.
·
ing fixed rates of return, c_ompounding annually. It doesn't reflect past or.
~AUJPOUS-:- No matter what your goal1s- to lose
future performance of any mvestment, or taxes on investment income. ,
Weight, stop smokmg or set aside money - your resolve.
Risk vs. reward
has to.be solid ~f y~u are going to succeed. First, you need
All .investment decisions come down to a question of risk: how much .;e
to dec1de to do rt.
.
.
.
you willing to accept in return for a higher reward? Historically, "blue chip",
.Second, figu"!' out how much t1me you need to reach
stocks have been a mainstay of more conservative equity investors' retire-·
"' your goal. Even rf you want to accu~ulate .$100,000 in just
ment portfolios, averaging returns of 12.6 percent over the past .50years, 88 ;
1S or 20 y~rs, your goal may be attarnable rf you earn a reameasu~d by the Dow Jones Industrial Average. • . ·
·
isor~ablly h1gh rate of return.
.
.
But the Dow Jones is a changing portfolio of 30 common stO<:ks. Moil•
,
calculate what rat~ o.f return _you'll need to earn in
recent additions include such high·tech, volatile stocks' as America Onl~. ·
·~rder '? reach your goal w1thrn ,that trme frame you estab.What's more, different asset classes have delivered surprising results in the
-~rshed m step ·two. A mathematical concept, known as "compounding" '90s ·- not always pleasant surprises. Mutual funds, which are designed to
when the money you earn earns money for you- is the key to the final step. minimize risk b'y spreading investors' assets over a variety of securitiCs,
The following shows how you can accumulate $100,000 based on com- have yielded mixed results.
•<pounding at a relatively conservative 6 percent anrrual rate of return:
According to the Wall Street Journal, there are approximately 12,000 ·
··~
At
6
percent
a
year,
for
30
years,
with
a
monthly
investment
of
$99.56,
mutual
funds completing for investors' attention. More than 1 700 muru•l ·
ON HAND FOR CONFE;RENCE - J11nette Shirey, center, fie- ·
.~
J.ou'db>ntribute
a
total
of
$~S.~1.60,
em:"
$64,167.92
in
interest
for
a
total
funds
were
introduced in 1998 alone~ Most of the newer funds i~vest in very
cal officer for Galllpolll Cal'llt' College, attended the recant Qhlo · 1
o~$100,009.52;
2S
years,
wtth
a
monthly
rnvestment.
of$144.31,
you'd
eonspecrfic
asset
classes- not just stocks or bonds, but specific sectors lilrie
Aasoclatlon of Student Financial Aid Admlnlatratore In Akron.
tnbute
a
total
of
$43,293,
earn
$56,712.96
m
mterest
for
a
total
of
·technology
slocks,
energy stocks, international high yield bonds, sociall)'·
Fllllklng her are OASFAA Prnldant-alecl Stawn England of stark
S!OO,OOS.96; 20 years, with a ~onthly investment of $216.44, you 'd con- responsive _companies, ?r,they might focus on specific countries or gooSlate Community Collage, left, and Brian Pa1kvan, OASFAA praa·
' 1tnbute a. total of $51,~5, earn $48,058.53 for a l'!'al of $_
100,004.13; 15 ·~raph•c regton~. In ~arym~ degrees, all mutual funds vary in price and ~
ident, OWens Community College.
·,.,,Years. With a monthly mvest.m~nt of $343.86, you d contnbute a total of mvolve ·other nsk5; mcl~drng the possible loss of the principal you investC!J.
$~1,894.80, cam S~8,106.12rn rnterest for a total, of $100,~.92; 10 years, '
~good professronal m~estment adv,isor will get to know yq~ pef!!Onalty,
,w1th a monthly mvestmcn~ ~f $610.21, you d coptnbute a tot,al of · helprng you define your nsk parameters and give you ihe information alld
,. $73,225.20, cam $26,775.62 rn rnterest for a total of $100,000.82.
confidence you. need to develop an investment program designed to mcict
A monthly contribution of less than $1~, compounding at 6 percent a your individual needs and investment goals.
;
GALLIPOLIS - Jeanette Shirey, fiscal officer for the Gallipolis Career '· ~ear, would get to .)'9ur goal of $100,000 m 30 years. T~l cost of your . Bear in mind ·that time can be even more important than the speci~c
C9llege, attended a conference of the Ohio Association of Student Financial mvestment - less than $37,000. Total compound and drv1dends - more mve~tm~nts you choose. What'~ more, the sooner you get started, the grea~
Aid Administrators (OASFAA) at the Akron Fairlawn Hotel in Akron, May than $64,000.
the hkehhood that you woll achreve your goal of accumulating $100 ()()() 'l:>r :
19-21.
.
, . If you allow 10 years to r.each your goal, you would need to contribute even more.
·
' '
· . The conference.was held to discuss regulatory changes and policy slem- $50(1 a month and ~ a fixed nile of 10 percent annually to accumulate
Remember: past performance of investments does not guarantee fut~
•
llling from the 1998 'Reauthorization of the Higher Education Act. Mrs. Shirey $100,000, and yQllr rnvestment would have cost more than $60,000. Both results.
.
• Source: Value Une Publishing Inc.
.
.·
has been a member of the OASFAA since 1989 and said that the purpose of you and your money would have. to work harder.
Bear
in
mind
that
the
above
information
is
designed
to
give
you
an
idea
(Bryce
L
Sinlth
Ia
111
lnVHimlllt
exect.iuva
with
Advm
Inc
In
Its
attending the conferences is' to network with other financial aid administra·· ·
tors from around the state and gain valuable insight.on new federahegula- of what your goals should be by showing you hypothetical investments earn- Gallipolis ofllca.}
tions.
' In her capacity at GCC, Shirey said she has seen student financial aid
evolve from paper forms delivered by mail tO' paperless methods utilizing
c(lmputers and the Internet.
.
.,
'
By JENNIFER L. BYRNES '
aids. Applications must be post- which strips directly into baler box- cation . Th~ FJF will . il"Y $300 ;
·, Studenis attending GCC have a number of financial aid options, availGALLIPOLIS - The Farm marked by Sept: I. 1999 and lhe pur- es rna four- person operation.: or(3) wwards a srrippi9g wh~d. $500
able to those who qualify, including federal Pell grants, Federal Supplemental Inco~e Improvement Poundatro.n chase must be made (or have been a K & S Stnpprng Lrne. whrch ts a towards a K & S S1ripp\ng Line ;md
Education Opportunity Grants, federal direct loans and the Ohio Instructional (FIF) has just announced a new, addr- made) between Jan. I, 1999 and Oct. moton zed ~onveyo~system that car- $500 towards a leaf pn~~:cssur.
Grant.
uonal
grant program. .
15, 1999.
. . .
roes a full strck of tobacco, so that the
The procedure for this opporluni·
'The entire process has been accalerate<l so that our students can get imme.Jn addrtron to blue mold kus, cur- If you~ apphcallon rs approved, tobacco stnpper rs tree tn usc hoth ty is as follows: ( 1) nbtain an appli- .' '
diate results without waiting in long line§f' Shirey said.
618 structures and harvesters (for the FIF wtll assrst rn the purchase of hands to remove, son and grade the catiun (available at the Extension .:
. To completeoa Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) on the · which appli~ations were due May I, just one ~f the following : (I) a leaves.
.
.
Ollicc urarlocal ag supply), (2) com- ;
Internet, see http://www.fafsa.ed.gov. For information on scholarships, etc., lifi?J, there rs now the opportunity to • tobacco stnpprng wheel , tor whrch
L1mrted. rnformau on ahout rho
see http://www.tinaid.org.
.
. ·ag;Jy for financial assistance in the information is available a! the Exten- ' leaf processor and the K & S StripSummer quartet at GCC begins Jufy 5. For more information, call. 446- pilj'thase of burley tobacco stripping sion office; (2) a lea . processor, p1n g Lrnc wrll accompany rhe appli(Contlnuad on DB)
4367 od -800-214-0452.
..The Children's Clinic
2801 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
July 1 • 5, 1999 Cedar Lake& Ripley, West Vuginia
- . : llundly, Julf I • Sundly, July 4 10:00 lltl • 8:110 pm • Mondoy, .hJ~ 5 10•110 1111-!:IIO pm rM111: ffiEE • 11011111 """"" ti...IMIYIM 111101~
1999
,,
I
It
�Sunday, June 6, 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Sunday, June 6, 1999
Stocks post gains in wake of positive jobless report ·
By EILEEN GLANTON
A:P Bueinaaa WrHer
NEW YORK - Pnce,; rose smartly on Wall Street Fnday as traders were
pleasantly surpmed by the government s repon that mflatton and the econ
omy aren't runnmg rampant after all
The governments monthly employment repon helped temper mvestors
concerns that the Federal Reserve m•ght soon ra1se mterest rates to slow the
economy
Bargam hunttng that followed the recent selloff on Wall Street also con
tnbuted to Fnday s gams as the Dow Jones mdustn al average rose 136 15
Ill close at I0, 799 84 addmg to an 85 pomt gam on Thursday Forthe week
the Dow was up 240 I0
Broader stock mdtcators were also htgher The battered Nasdaq compos
1te mdex rose 75 02 to 2 478 34 ItS fifth largest pomt gam ever The Stan
dard & Poor s 500 rose 28 21to I 327 75
The Labor Department reported that the nauon s unemployment rate
dtpped to a 29 year low of 4 2 percent tn May But mvestors were parttcu
larly Impressed by the tact that only 11,000 JObs were created last month
far below the 225 000 expected by economiSts and a Stgn that the economy
iJ; growms moderately
.! Another md1cator closely watched for s1gns of mtlauon average hourly
trirnmgs was up 3 6 percenttn May compared to a year ago only a slight
$eleratJOn from a 3 2 percent mcrease the month before
Both factors eased concerns among tnvestors that the Fed wtll soon ra1se
rates to slow an economy that IS threatemng to overheat The central bank
warned May 18 that 11 would ra1se rates 1f 11 determmed that mflat1on was
ga1 nmg momentum
Investors may feel like the worst news on that front has already
occurred sa1d Bob Dtckey managmg d~rector of technical analystS at Da1n
Rau scher Wesse ls m Mmneapolls
The Fed s warnmg has created vo latility on Wall Street m recem weeks
with mvestors fc mng a rate h1ke would cut Into the profits of maJOr US
compan1es But analysts suggested that the weeks between 1hc Fed s m111al
hmt and the June 29 meeting of Its Open Market Comnuttee are g1vmg
mvestors time to gel used to the tdea
Analysts also attnbuted Fnda'y s gams to the relati vely cheap pnces that
have resulted I rom the downturn on Wall Street m rece nt weeks The Dow
ts down about 2 8 perce nt smce hlttmg a record h1gh on May 13, wh1Ie the
Nasdaq Js down 6 6 percent smce reachmg Hs all t1me htgh Apnl 26
Fnday brought the Nasdaq Its strongest gam smce Apnl 21 as mvestors
swooped m lookmg for bargams C1sco Systems up 6 1/ 16 to 114 7/8 and
Yahoo', up 12 1116 at 147 7/16 led a w1de rally
"A lot of these stocks have been h1t really hard and there s some renewed
Interest m buym g, Dtckey sa1d
On the New York Stock Exchange, Amenca Online rose 12to 117 3/4
AOL got a boost from a court ruhng that AT&T must proVIde open access
to 1ls cable lines, a deCISIOn that should make 1t eaSier for Internet compa
mes to compete for the busmess of offenng high speed access over cable lines
By con trast AT&Tsllpped 7/8 to 53 3/8 At Home wh1ch has access to
AT&T s cable properttes dropped 10 3/4to 94 112
Fmancml and bank stocks made some modest gams as dtd consumer prod-,
ucts tssues like Procter & Gamble wh1ch rose 3 1/8 to 96 518 am1d specu
latlon 11 wtll soon announce a restructunng plan
Sull analysts suggested Fnday's gams may be d1fhcult to sustam as long
as questiOns abo ut mterest rates hang ove~ the market
The market IS sti ll tepid and cautJous about what the Fed wtll do sa1d
Bryan PtSkorowskt, market analyst at Prudenttal Securmcs
Advancmg ISsues outnumbered dec liners by an 8-to 5 margm on the New
York Stock Exc hange where consolidated volume came to 836 66 m1lhon
shares compared wllh 868 80 mdhon 1n the prevtous sesswn
The NYSE compoSi te mdex rose I0 32 to 634 52, and the Ameman Stock
Exchange compoSite mde.x rose 5 04 to 780 98
The Russe ll 2000 mdex of smaller compames rose 6 35 to 442 33
Overseas, Japan 's Ntkket stock average rose 0 45 percent Germany s DAX
mdex was up I 7 percent, Bfllam s FT SE I00 was up 0 2 percent an(!
France's CAC 40 closed closed down 0 2 percent
'· Farmers Oil production cut~ack sends energy futures up
seek new
market
for crop
BISt-JARCK N D (AP) Fanners m northeast North Dako
,' ta are workmg to find new markets
: for a rotattonal crop that ts already
' helpmg them overcome depressed
wheat pnces
The Northland Alfalfa Produc
ers Assoctatwn plans to research
the potential of butldmg a farmer
, owned plant to process the crop
; mto a product that can be sh1pped
' more economically
Assoc1atton members already
j are selhng alfalfa hay to da1ry oper
at1ons m Mmnesota W1sconsm and
other states satd Denms Brown of
: Mtlton preSident of the assoc1a
j llon
1 Farmers can net about $60 an
1acre for h1gh qualny alfalfa Brown
1satd Meanwhile poor wheat pnces
make 11 nearly •mposs1ble for farm
ers to make money he sa1d
Even m a good year like last
year
when we had a good yteld
1
1W1th the pnce II JUSt doesn t work
!Brown sa1d
j The alfalfa assoc mtton was
•formed a month ago after a couple
:or years: of d•scusston belween
;farmers and economtc develop
,ment off1c1a ls It currently has
.about 20 farmer members from
northeast North Dakota and north
west Mmnesota 111 add1t1on to
about two dozen mdustry mem
~rs
; The group w•lllook mto bmld
mg a value added processmg plant
probably to compress alfalfa hay
Compressed bales are eas 1er to
market overseas because sh1ppmg
,fees are based on )he number of
contamers rather than wetght,
Brown satd Last month assoc1a
lion members toured a plant north
(>f Wmmpeg, Mannoba that com
!'resses alfalfa and sh1ps n to cus
torners m Pactflc Rtm countnes
Rudy R'ldke a North Dakota
State Un1versny ExtensiOn Servtce
~pectahst for h1gh value crops 1s
encouragmg the alfalfa group With
l)nces for tradJllonal crops slumpmg farmers need to Jake a good
hard look at several proJects like
the alfalfa one m terms of addmg
~alue he sa1d
: Radke ts mvolved m a three
&late study of a process now used
In France that breaks down alfalfa
And produces everythmg from bulk
feed to mdlvtdual protems and vii
arnms If the study determmes
ipere are markets for the products
the next step would be to look at
bu1ldmg a processmg plant he
sa1d
The alfalfa assoc1allon and the
Cavalier County Job Development
Authonty contnbutect $1 000 to the
$80,000 study The group also IS
studymg the 1dea of bulldmg a
plant that would turn alfalfa hay
mto livestock feed pellets
By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Business Writer
Energy futures rose sharply Fnday
on the New York Mercantile
Exchange amtd reports key world oil
producers were domg a better JOb of
keepmg crude off the market
On other markets, cocoa soared a
second day while coffee fell sharply
Crude JUmped amtd esumates that
t()e Orgamzatmn of the Petroleum
Exportmg Countnes 1n May
trnproved compliance w1th an agree
ment to slash productiOn of more than
2 percent of the world s oil
Analysts esttmate that the I 0
OPEC countries workmg to cut pro
ductwn met 72 percent of the1r goal
trom an Apnl I baseline up from 65
percent a month earlier Compliance buymg more expens1ve crude made ll
stood at 89 percent when compared less prolttable to refme II
The shutdown comes wnh U S
to a February 1998 baseline
gasoline
mventones up 2 percent
The estuhates helped support
from
a
year
ago and about 8 percent
1deas the otl producers are senous
about trymg to prop crude pnces, above the five-year average accord
wh1ch rose sharply after they mg to the Amencan Petroleum In sit
announced an agreement m March tute
Crude for July dehvery rose 58
but have stnce dnfted lower
cents
to $17 32 a barrel, July unlead
Also supportmg crude and unlead
ed gasoline pnces was news that ed gasohne rose I 51 cents to 50 II
Conoco Inc had shut a 50 000 bar cents a gallon July healing ml rose
rei a day gas makmg un1t at a I 56 cents to 41 29 cents a gallon
LouiSiana refinery
July natural gas rose 4 3 cents to
The shutdown 1s the latest m a $2 440 for each I 000 cub1c feet
spate of gasolme productiOn cut
Cocoa futures JUmped a second
backs Producers 1n Europe and the day on the Board of Trade of the Cny
Un1ted States m recent weeks have of New York as cocoa sh1pments
cunalled production as the cost ot slowed to a tnckle suggesung a glul
may begm to fade m commg weeks
Cocoa futures on Thursday post
ed tbetr b1ggest gams m nearly mne
years recovenng from recent stx
year lows as cocoa traders and
exporters reported fewer amvals of
beans at portS m Afr1ca
Ivory Coast the world s largest
cocoa grower mthe week ended May
30 sh1pped an esumated 7,540 met
nc tons, down by nearly half the
weeks previOus 14 280 metnc tons
Ghana another large grower, also
IS expected to run out ol shtpments
soon prov1dmg supply stde rehef to
a market that has been pressured by
a bumper world crop and weaker
world demand
July cocoa rose $35 to $1 058 a
ton
Coffee futures !ell sharply on the
New York Board of Trade alter mete
orolqg1sts predicted the chance foe:
frost m Brazil the world s largest
grower ts slim 10 comtng days
Coffee pnccs have se~sawed m
recent days as spcculat01 s be t Brazil
ca nn ot make 11 thHmgh a third wm
ter wit hout a damagmg fros l
BraZil pt od uccs mamly robusta
beans wh1ch are not ecru tied for
delivery agam>l New York fu lures
contract!\ But many roasrcrs m1x
those beans wtth h1 gh quality ,uabtca beans lor gourmet blends ang
record production last year left the
world flu sh "1th supplies
July arab1ca coffee fell 3 05 cents
to $1 20 a pound
Caution still surrounds_ _t;Jnline grocery buying
By RACHEL BECK
AP Business Wnter
NEW YORK _ You 11 buy a
book balance your checkbook and
even mvest 10 stocks over the Inter
net But when 11 comes ltme for groeery shoppmg most folks sttll hop 111
the car and head for the supermarket
1h t
1
S
f
maty
Cl
a,nge
soohn
omelo
a
t
the In erne s e1t e sue as reta1 er
Amazon com and the founder of
software piOneer Netscape are bet
tmg b•g money that consumers wtll
soon be sallvatmg over the tdea of
buymg evcrythmg from fresh tuna
slea ks to ra1sm bran on Ime
It s aII about expenence an d 1f
you make
the onhne expenence bet
t th
h 1 th
fi d th
er an w a
ey can '"
em
selves at the store there s a great
chance that your on Ime grocery bust
ness will succeed sa•d Michael
May an analyst at Internet research
I ~rm Jup• ler C ommumca ttons
Online grocery sales are sull quite
sma II totaIwg JUS t un der $150 m1 I
IJOn Iast year Iess t han I percent of
the more than $440 b1lllon m total
supermarket sales accordtng to
Jup1ter
Wh1le Juptter expects sales to rtse
to more than $3 5 billion by 2002 the
market IS developmg slowly as Web
grocers gear the" busmesses to the
needs of md•v•dual communlltes
rather than take the nsk1~r rQ!Ite of
gomg global
1 f
II
So far the b•ggest cha enge or
cyber grocers has been convmc1ng
Arnencans to JUSt try them out
In fact less than a mtlhon people
have bought grocenes online whtle
the avera.re
.,. Amencan VISits a bnck
and mortar supermarket2 2ttmes a
week
Amencans are attached to 1he1r
supermarkets 1 hey like to wander
around the stores and touch and
smell what they arc gomg to buy,
sa1d Tom Agan who works at the
retail consulung firm Kurt Salmon
Assoc1ates It's not so easy for many
pe ople to gtve that up
Today 's onhne grocers are also
struggling to msure shoppers that
spotled food hefty surcharges and
late dehvenes aren t the standard
Most charge a dehvery fee of $5 to
$10 wh1ch IS somehmes wa1ved for
larger orders
I d1dn t get what I wanted II
wasn t cheaper and the dehvery was
late After all that I figured II was eas
1er to JUSt go to the supermarket,"
dJ
R
ki
th f
sat amce yer, a wor ng mo er o
two from Atlanta
Ryer hasn t bought grocenes
onhne smce her diSastrous auempl a
year ago from a now defunct Internet
supermarket
that operated
out of her
Kr
k
1oca1 oger s mar et
But that doesn 1 mean th e fl edg
ling mdustry •s wnhout potenual Just
a year ago shoppers steered away
1rom b uymg c1othes on the 1nterne1
b
h
ld •
th
:~auseht ey c
kou nb t 1ry em, 0 n
'Dbuuay bt de mf ar etdJs oommg as ,,ears
a out af d Its an restncuve re1urn
po1tctes a e
The e grocers now generating the
b
d
d 11
most uzz- an mvestment o ars
-see m to have an Important com
bmauon of technological savvy and
understandmg of consumer serv1cc
One IS Webvan of Oakland Calif
wh1ch plans to begm servmg the San
Franc1sco Bay area later th1s year
Webvan founded by Borders
Books founder Lou1s Borders has
backers like CBS and the btg Japan
ese h1gh tech mvestment firm Soft
bank
Webvan s mechamzed warehouse
has motomed carousels ftlled w1th
thousands of nerns There a worker
can fill 10 ttmes more orders 1n an
hour than most cornpemors, whose
workersroamgrocerystoresorware
houses, fill
1 mg shoppmg carts
Another IS HomeGrocer com
whtch announced thts past week that
Amazon com had bought a 35 per
k f $
cent sta e or 42 5 mtlhon It also
recently rece1ved $5 mdhon from the
Barksdale Group an mvestment firm
run by James Barksdale founder of
Netscape
Founded JUSt a year ago, II now
has more than 10 000 customers ]n
the Seattle area On Monday 11 beg~R
servmg Portland Ore and had more
than 400 customers stgned up b~
m1d week
HomeGrocer buys all ul Its ov,lg
Inventory whtch 11 then stores 10 1 t~
own dtStnbuuon ce nter 10 each Cit)'!
That holds down 1ts pnces and al~o
msures better quality of products •
It also developed a delivery true~
w1th multtple zones allowmg 1ce
cream to go m the freezer oranga
JUtce to be refngerated and bread and
bananas to stay 1n a temperate ch
ma1e
,·
"l • wasn t sure what 1o expeot
when 1 started ord enng f rom them• •
satd M~ehelle Boroz an a h1gh tec h
worker from Seattlewho started shop
pmg at Homc G roccr 111 Fe bruar)
h h
b
B
w en er son was orh
ut 1t 1cal
ly ts easy and convement
The produce IS better than any'
thmg I would p1ck out my sell s h~
smd
,
As rail carriers merge, eastern routes set for change
By ANICK JESDANUN
Associated Press Writer
NEWARK N J - Donald Nel
son and hiS colleagues at three East·
ern rail camers are about to embark
on the most complex restructunng m
modern rallroadmg
Shippers, regulators and other
ratlroads wtll be watchmg closely as
the earners attempt to redraw the raJ!
map wh1le av01dmg the servtce foul
up that followed the 1996 merger of
Umon Pactfic wtth Southern Pac1fic
m the West and the Mtdwest
CSX Corp and Norfolk Southern
Corp have spent two years dottmg
the 1 s and crossmg the, t's m prepa
rauon for carv1ng up Phdadelph1a
based Conratl Inc on June I
MaJor m1shaps could delay letters
and packages tmpede commuter
trams and boost shtppmg costs for
farm products and consumer goods
Th1s ts a comphcated transac
uon and u s foolish to say Murphy s
Law won t play a role Nel son
semor v1ce pres1dent of operations at
Conrail sa1d as crews continued
thetr pre split routmes of sorung
boxcars outs1dc We have to be pre
pared to react to rap1dly changmg
events day by day hour by hour '
In Ohto the oompames satd the
merger would result m a gam of
about 140 JObs m the Wtllard rail
yards 1n north central Oh1o but a net
los s ot 290 JObs statewtde m the next
three years
About $50 mtlllon m tmprove
ments are planned for the Wtllard
yards With at least $125 rn1lhon m
•mprovements planned at other Ohw
snes mcludmg the Collinwood Yard
tn Cleveland and the Queensgate
Yard m Cmcmnau
Past mergers have generally
mvolved two or more compames
comb1nmg operations In the restruc
tunng of the ratlroads Conrad will be
carved mto three parts wtth two
pteces gomg to CSX and Norfolk
Southern and the th1rd shared by
both
All of that wtll take place whtle
trams contmue to run, leavmg httle
room for error as the compames fig
ure out wh1ch employees go to whtch
ratlroad and whtch shtprnents go on
whtch tracks
Crews will have to change habJtS
West and M1dwest bound trams
leavmg Newark for mstance, wJII
have to leave from the eastern s1de of
the ctty s Oak Island Yard to go on
CSX Norfolk Southern trams will
have to lea1e from the west Now
trams can leave from enher dtrecuon
based on what IS available and con
vement
The $10 3 blll10n transacllon wdl
gtve CSX and Norfolk Southern pn
martly Southeastern ra1lroads access
to the lucrative Northeast market
where Conratl has enJoyed a monop
oly smce tl was created by Congress
m 1976 out of SJX bankrupt ra1lroads
The two V~rgm1a based camers
WJII control VIrtually all rat! trafftc
east of the MISSisSippi Rtver With
tracks stretching nearly 45 000 miles
from Montreal to M1am1 and from
Boston to Kansas City Mo
Many sluppers have spent the past
year recovenng from the Un10n
Pac1fic meltdown wh1ch forced some
compan1es to shtp goods more ex pen
s1vely on trucks and a1rplanes and
prompted others to slow do""' pro
ductlon or furlough employees By
some esttmates, the gndlock cost the
U S economy at least $4 b1lllon
Those problems started m Hous
ton and eventually spread to other
earners that mterchange w1th Umon
Pact fie Shtpments were delayed for
days or weeks as trams got backed
Un10n Paclf1c has sa1d us melt
down m 1997 and 1998 " as not
merger related but acknowledges
that merger related labor and com..,
up and some shtpments were tern
puter ISs ues made the probl ems,
poranly lost because of mcompattble
worse
•
computers Amtrak's Sunset L1m1ted
Sh1ppers and mdustry analysts ,
passenger tratns whtch run on south however d~rec tly blame the compa ,
ern fretght routes routmely faced ny s attempt to qutckly absorb South••
delays of several hours
ern Paclf1c routes and make whole.''
CSX and Norfolk Southern have sale changes m personnel and oper.
postponed the Conra1l spin by mne ataons
;•
months - from Sept I to March I
CSX and Norfolk Southern have
and ulttmately to June I - to make spent more than $IIillllon combmed:
sure they arc ready
on new tracks connections and oth
As a result, they have also delayed er capacity nnprovements and have'
reapmg the savmgs and growth ben- mel regularly wtth Umon Pactflc to
efits from the transactiOn, all the learn from 11s mJSiakes
whtle spendmg $1 rn1lhon a day each
The compames also have met'
m mterest payments on the mo11ey regularly w1th sh1ppers, who have
borrowed to buy Conrad Earnmgs generally pratscd the radroadS:
have dropped, yet execuuves remam
approach
patient
"It's obVIOUS they've done iilot of:
"Wtth the Western merger there
work,"
satd R1ch Abel a trans porta:
was some pretty stgmficant econom
tc tmpactthey suffered as a result of llon consultant wnh the chemtcal
gtant DuPont The test Will be m the·
not dmng 11 rtght,' sa1d Gerry Gates
CSX vtce preSident for Conrlil field execut10rl
The r81lroads have a large stake m
operatiOns Our hope 1s we would
ellmmate those expenditures later and making sure the split goes smoothly •
sacnftco up front
Religious funds allow investor's morality to be the guide ,_
By DIAN VUJOVICH
disagrees He says that there are data that show that soctal screens don t
Some people mvestm mutual funds JUSt for the returns they hope to reap
always •mpact performance negattvely The performance benchmarks used
Others base thetr mvestment deciSions on portfolio style Some are goal dn
by soctally responSible funds are the Dommt Soctal Index and the Ct!Jzens
ven And then there are the folks whose moral consctousness dtrects thetr Index And accordmg to M1ller the year-to-date performance numbers
fuad p1cks
through Apnl 13 1999 show the S&P 500 up 9 8 percent, the C111zens Index
Rehgtous funds (a sub sect1on under the soc1ally responSible fund head
ahead 9 9 percent and the Dommt Soc1al Index ahead 9 3 percent
mg) don l necessanly mvest m the hottest IPO Internet or drug stocks
Here IS a sampling of the rehg1ous funds
In~tead, before buymg a share of stock the few funds tn th1s group spend a
• Amana fund s These funds mvest based on Islam1c pnnc1ples That means
lot of lime mvesltgatmg thmgs like what a company actually does as well the two fund s m th1s fam1ly - an mcome and a growth fund - use ~creens
as how tl's managed
that won 't allow them to mvestm cornpames such as those mvolved m pork
Take the MMA Prax1s funds for mstance (Praxts by the way, means meld
processmg casmo gambhng pornography liquor and mterest based banks
mg your behefs wnh your actions ) Th1s Ind1ana based Mennomte fund f~
• Catholic Values Investment Trust ThiS smgle-fund fam1ly has an adv1
Jiy IS made up of three funds that mvest m quahty-of-hfe compames That sory board that mvests 1ts assets based on Catholic values For mstance comIS, ones that have responstble managementm place and m some fashiOn do
panics that have anythmg to do wtth abon10n won 't be found 1n th1s portfo
Ito
thtngs that work toward economtc peace, JUStice and human dtgmty
While that all sounds well and good, don t mve.;tors gtve up performance
• Lutheran Brotherhood funds There are e1ght funds m thiS farn1ly four
when mvesbng based on their morals? The answer depends upon whom you stock fund s and four bond funds All stay away from the baSte sm stocks like
ask
alcohol tobacco and firearms compames One sentence of caution Call the If
Laura Lallos a semor analyst at Mommgstar net says that mvesung tnto 800 number and an automated vo1ce wtll ask for your Soctal Secunty num
any of the rehgwus funds today probably means setthng for a fund wtth ber To avotd gtvmg tt and sull get the mformauon you d hke, s1mply enter
m mne zeros
madJOCre performance "She thmks competllton makes for better fund per
fo~nce, and as the number of these types of rehgtous fund s grow the llke• MMA PraXIs funds There are three funds m thiS Mennonite family of
llliooa 1s that the1r perfonnance wtll too
funds - a bond, a growth and an mternauonal fund What they won t mvest
J B Mtller, national sales manager for the MMA Prax1s Mutual Funds,
•
•
~ t~u--Jkadbial• Page 03
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galnpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
mare compantes that make weapons or recetvc defense contracts, produce
alcohol or tobacco products or are gambling or pollutton related Even DIS
ney won't make 11 tnto the1r ponfohos because of the R rated and Vlole11,t "
movtes the company has produced
'
• Ttmotby Plan Thts small company value fund mvests as the rehgtous '
nght would They won t mvestm any company mvolved wuh abomon 10
any fashton from corporations that gtve to Planned Parenthood to hospi
tals performmg aborttons for profit, to drug compames that make aboruon- producmg drugs Nor w1llthe fund mvestm compames that produce pornog ,
raphy those that adverttse m pornographtc rnagazmes antJ fam1ly enter•
tamment compames, or those who prov1de same sex partner benefits to the 1 ~'
1
employees Even Amazon com won't be mvested m because they sell porn ograph1c books and rnatenals
,
So who are rehg1ous funds tdeally suited for? Stephame Kendall, a
spokesperson the mutual fund tracking company Wtesenberger says they al'l)
for people who ptck mvestments based upon thetr moral beliefs
(Dian Vujovrch'a molt recent bookalncluda "101 Mutual Fund FAQa"
(Chandlar Houae) and "10.Minute Guida to tht Stock Market" (Macmu:
tan) To learn more about mutual lunda, vlalt her Web elte at•
www dlanafundfteebl•.com )
Don't put·anything in the kids' names
tradll10nal IRA At your age n - DEAR BRUCE I am a 65 year
becomes a httle less 10lear whether old w1dow My estate IS worth about
you should take the tax hn and take $835,000 and I have a trust fund of
the benefit of tax free mcome 111 a $577 000 wllh my kids as co trustees
Roth As 10 the selectiOn process I My financ1al adviSer IS suggestmg I
agree Wtth your fne nds who wan; a g1ve $2 500 to each of my ch1ldren
professtonalto handle thts The sum and let them apply thiS to a life msur
of money should be attracllve enough ance policy on me that they wtll own
to a good cefllfied financial planner When 1 pass away the policy would
You tell them your goals, when you then pay my federal ta .xes Do you
1
would hke to rehre and how much agree wtth the plan - D M ,
IJSk you are prepared 10 take and Nashua N H
they should be able 10 take good care
DEAR D M Sounds like a plan
of you, beanng 10 mmd that there are to me Many people- 1ncludmg the
no guarantees 10 the mvestment areas undersJgned- are mvolved m some
_other than very low paymg mstru
vanatton of thts The tdea ts to have
ments such as CDs, savmgs accounts, the msurance policy make fu nds
etc
available to pay the taxes whtch ts a
DEAR BRUCE My mother dJed good deal less expenSive than d1gg1ng
In 1991 and dtd not leave a wtll mto your estate to pay them I am sur
There are five children Are we ent•
pnsed your advtser dtdn t also men
tied 10 anythmg from her estate? Has uon that you could gtve up to $10 000
100 much ltme elapsed? We don' t get to each of your ktds and an add111on
along wtth our stepfather, but we al $10000 to thetr spouses should
would hke some personal pictures you deme Gtven tl)e stze of your
and other effects _ s B , vta e-mail estate tt " unhkely that such g1fts
DEARS B If your mother dtdn't would affect your standard ofhvmg
leave a Will, someone could and and 11 would allow you to tran sfer as
should have apphed to the surrogate much as $80 000 a year wnh no tax
10 be appomted admmtStrator of her consequences
estate In the absence of a wJIIm most
Interested m buymg or selling a
states 113 of your mother s assets house? Lei Bruce Willi ams House
would go to her husband and 213 to Smart" be your guJde Pnce $14 95
her children Whether or not anythmg plus shtppmg and handling Call
can be done this late 10 the game 1s (800) 994 6733
anotl\er quesnon but It certamly
(Se11d )Our questwns to Smart
couldn t hurt 10 ask the surrogate tf Mon e) P.O Box 503 Elfers Fla
any Will was probated and/or If any
34680 E-matl to bethl1lgte net
one was appomted as admtmstrator Ques/JOIIS of general mtefest wtll be
In the absence of a wJII the children answered mfurure columns Owmg to
of the deceased Still have all Interest the volume of mad personal repltes
Whether or not her husband spentth1s call not be prov•ded i
away IS another story
Copynght 1999 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN
By BRUCE WILLIAMS DEAR BRUCE I have two boys
- 10 years and 18 months old
respectively What would be the
safest and most profitable way to
mvest $1,000 for each son mto some
kind of an account, so they have
money for college?- B W, Cynthia
Ky
DEAR B W You have put two
condmons m there that work agamst
one another You want the safest and
yet most profitable way to mvest The
more profit potenttal there IS, the
more room there ts for error and the
loss that comes wtth 11 Ftrsl of all I
would not put any money m a k1d's
name The one excepuon to thiS rule
1s the Roth EducatiOnal account,
whtch ts limned to $500 per year per
child The balance would be put mto
a mutual fund or m eqUJUes tf you are
able to select them, but m your name
or your w1fe's name - never the
child s ThiS way tf when the boys
turn 18 and elect not to go to school
or have some otbertdeas forthe man
ey, you and you alone wtll dec1de
how Ills to be spent
DEAR BRUCE My wtfe and L
are m our early 40s and recently
res1gned from pos1ttons at a hospital
where we were partlcJpaung Ill a
rettrement plan We w1ll recetve a d1smbuuon of a quarter of a mtlhon dol
Iars Our fnends tell us to seek the
advtce of a money manager and
mvest the money m mutual funds
ThiS IS our permanent retirement
mcome Can you g1ve us your best
adVICe Wtlh thiS hmlled lnfonnallon?
- H G • Reno Nev
DEAR H G You mtght well con
s1der rolhng the money over mto a
!TA~OFOHfO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
NOTICE OF HEARING
Ltgat Copy No. 1118 DBE
In eccordenca whh the
provlalon• of 41CFR Part
:It, .... director ol Thl OhiO
Department
of
Tnnaportatton (ODOl} will
hOld en open houH public
htarlnglconfartnat at 10
1m to 12 p m, June D,
11ft II thl Mlrleftll Holiday
tnn, 701 Pika Str11t,
Marietta, Ohto, tor tha
purpou of hllrlng
atettmtnta on the OBE
goal atttlng proaua and
ntlthod ol -lnmtnl.
The new ftdtrll OBE
rule, allacttvt February 21,
1111, makaa algnlffcant
chlngM to tha fiOIII altllng
and ettalnmanl procaaa
Thl rule vtawa the atatutory
~0 percent goal aa a
nattonwtda aaplrattonal gHI
which OOOT may or may
nat accept.
ODOT Ia
required to eatabltah an
overall goal thai will
repreunt a "level playlnl
ftttd", Of the 11111111111 ol 1>1
participation OOOT could
realtattcanr expect ld tha
lbaanct o di!IOrimlnllton.
Tht fiOIII muat be baaed on
evidence of tht avallabtlhy
of raedy, willing and able
DBEe to participate on DOT·
autatad
oontracta.
Addtttonally, ODOT muat
obtain aa muoh of till fiOIII
11 poulbla through race-
Public Notice
Public Notice
211 Noi11t College Avenue,
Rto Granda, Ohio
In accordance with the
Plana and &peclllcatlona
by
RVC,
prepared
Archlllell, Inc , 131 WHI
State"Siiiii, Athena, Ohto
dollar•) per HI
In fllvor ol RVC, Arcltltecta,
Inc
AU quut!ono regarding
the plane and apeclffcaaona ahould be llddreiiHd
to the David Reller,
Atchhect
Each bid mom be accompanied by a BID GUARANTY mntlng tht requirementa of Seetton 153 54 ol
the Ohio Reviled Code.
NOTE ALL C(\NTRAC·
TORS ARE REQUIRED TO
SUBMIT A CURRENT "EEO'
CERTIFICATE OR SHOW
PROOF FOR SUCH A CER·
TlFlCATE WITH THE FORM
OF PROPOSAL. FAILURE
TO DO SO WILL RESULT IN
REJECTION OF PROPOsAL
Biela ahalt bl Holed and
addreiiHd to Rio Grande
Community College, 218
North College Avanue, Rio
Grandt, Ohio 4&674
Pravatttng Wage Ratea,
Equal
Employment
Oppo~hy
and
Govarnor'a Executive Order
of January 27, 1172, and
amended
Governor t
Executive Order 84-9 art
applicable to title btd lnvlt•
aon
No bidder may withdraw
hit bid within otxty (80)
daya after the ectual data ol
the opening thtftof Rio
Grandt Collage rtatrvta
the right to waive any lnformalltl• or to ~oct any or
all btda
END OF NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
May30
June 6, 13, 20
Public Notice
Public Notlca
neutral I!IMM, I e , training,
technical uatatanca,
banding aulatanca,
bualntaa development or
mentor.protap progrema,
ate
Raca-conactoua
- -011n
· _.,
goala
only aa
be CCIIIII'BI
uaed II
1'1101-nautral maaur11 tall
Bat aatdll ara a,xpltaltty
prohtbllad, except In
axtrama caaaa, to remedy
egregloua problema.
Information Nganllng thla
hearing Wilt be IIVallable II
the ODOT, Olllce of
Con~ Anyone wtahlng
to eubmlt a written
atatamanl or alOhtblt
concerning thla program
lillY do ao at lhl hurlng or
mall II to 1111 ODOT, OffiCI
of Contracta, 1110 Will
Broad ltraat, Colutnbua,
OhiO 43223 Thtllnal data
tor aubmtaalon of
atatemanta « txhlbtlll will
be Auguat 13, 1111111
Junat,1311M
Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
SMied )II'GPOIIIe will be
racahrad at Olftca ol Dr.
Htrman Koby, Rio Granda
Communny Cottaga, 211
North College Avenue, Rio
Grilncle, Ohio by June 25,
11118 at 2.00 p.m. and
opanacl lmmedllttly therealter, for lurnllhlng till
malertal and ~*fanning the
labor for the execution end
~of:
ProJ-· 1110111
Rio Grandi Community
College • Ftna
Woodworking Canter
45701.
Bide witt be received tor
CONTRACT
1 General Conatructton
A pre-bid conference will
be htld at the tlte (Ptne
StrHI/Rtcharda Avenue,
lito Grande Communhy
College, Rio Grande, Ohio)
on June 8,11118112 00 p m.
Tha Information lor
Blddara, Form ol Propou~
Form of Contract, Plana,
Speclllcetlona, Form of
Bond, and olhtr Contnct
Oocumanta may be exam.
lned at the following
OlftCII"
RVC, Alct•tecta, Inc
131 Weat State &treat
Athena, Ohfo 45701
"w
Dadga Corporation
1175 Dublin Road
Cotumbua, Ohto 43215
Butklarl' Exchange of
Central Ohio
1175 Dublin Road
Cotuml!ua, Ohio 43215
CoPI••
of
Plana,
&peclllcattona,
and
Prapoaal Blanke together
with any further tntormatton
ctaalrecl may be obtained by
Prime C o n - tram the
Olftce ol RVC, Archil-.
Inc., 131 Wilt Stele S1rtat,
Athena, Ohio 45701 AU bid·
ding d-nta will be lor·
warclld ehtpptng chiJ'IIII
collect upon receipt of
Pt. Pleasant
GIYIIway
Tabby Klnana a weeki old Will
bo -
lui grownl P!ayfutl
lJitor llolnod
(7>401245-5104
eo
ANN OUNCEr,1ENT S
Gentleman Seeking Companion
ohlp From Nice Ftmele For Tanco
Wilko & Frl1ndahlp Send Ro·
pllaa To 6$3 Second Avonue,
Aplrtmanl t-403 Galllpolo
Starl Dallng Tonlghll Hava lun
Lost and Found
Found· puppy Shepherd mix
mollly blodc wRh whlto pows Po"*"1'~ 01174().1192-7248
Found comora during Melga Co
-
Blktra Memorial Day run call
740 982 8303 11k for Sam or
$50 00 (fifty
90
Wanted to Buy
6 Vicinity
4 family yerd aalt Miller Stroot
Maaon Wll 8 30 3 30 Sal June
5th Aaln or Shine
Want To SOli Your Sluff? Cal Alv
eralde Auction And let Us Sell It
RlrYou 74().256-6989
Football Carda 2 Showcaaea
5 &6 Lola or other mise Items
FMPLOYMENT
8 x18 wood out building 2 yrs
old 2 112 miles out Redmond
SEf-lVICES
Ridge Road
Tue June 1st thru
7AM 4PM
928
Sat June
110
5th
Help Wanted
Yard Sate Back of National
Armory 7111 Houoo on loll
S.IUrday 8 oo-1
80
Gokltn Retrie.... r & 2 Pupplll
74().~580
J 00 p.tn.
........ .......,.
'"""'.......,_
--I:OOp.ltl.
•10:00L111.........,
Yard Bill
~uno
7thllth 9 00
3 DO 4181 Butevllll Pike All
ltomoC'-11
Ponter!Jy,
Adorable male and femelt kit·
hOmo Ctn bt - ·
ttno 10 good
113lll! 3n1 81, MIIIOII. WV
Middleport
6 VIcinity
...d_Aaln_
1348 Fourth Strait srracuat
Frtt Kltttnl Molal and Ftmaltl 1\llldty,
Juno 8 10 fll ? Good
Vlry Tontedl To Good Homea
(7>40~2800
Mele Poodtt Nol Good With 0111•r Pill 14 Montht Alto Bllcl<
t&,MeM,7ot0-311Hl433
Mather Cot And 4 KIHtno Llnor
Tlllned Coli Alto~5 OOPm 740
-
5 ilmlly- 8e1Unllj! Jutte IIIII Ono
milo paat fllrgrounda Radford
,. ..... CIOllllnO lop
mile 80G-3:00
All Ylnl -
IIUII II Paid In
A1 aapm 111o
. ., befott llle •cl 11 to run,
-lne
Plolnor Bhavlnga ldlo for Mulch lundoy • llondiJ edltlonOr BtdiiiiQ 74().25HO$ll
1 illlplll , . . ,
tl
nRt.ro &many other ltlmo
Auction
and Fl• Marllet
Bill Moodlopough Aucllonoerlng
Comploto AuclfonHrlng Sorvlc
11 Consignment auction Mill
Stroot Middleport Thursday•
OhiO llconao 17893 740 989
2823.
Rick Pearson Aucllon Company
full lime auctioneer complete
service
t88 Ohio &
Llcenaed
Wool Vlrglnlo 304
J73.~78!1 Or 304- n:t-S447
IIIVERIID& AUCTIDN URN
Every Saturday Night 7 PM
Crown City, 74().~8 eeae
Wedam~tt 1 Auction Service
Galllpolla Ohio 74().3,..,2720
W•nled to Buy
COm~IOIO HoutohOkf Or EIIIIHI
Any l'ypo 01 Furnllll<e Apt>ll1nc
eo Antiquo 1 Elc Alto Appralaal
A-1740-3,..,2720
Abooluto Top 00111r All U S Sll
90
Must Be Accurate AI Data Entry
To
Borv-Wamor Auwmolivo
ATTN HA Dept .CLERK
2160
Eastern Awnue
Gallpolla OtU51i31
Fax 7~1 3249
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
Equal Opportunity
1 _:_:Afli:::r:::matlvo::.:::.Aot:.::;:lo.=n:.:E:::mpl0y0r~:=-F•EIGCAHTR~:~EAS
"
DRIVERS
FLATBEDTAUCKDRIVERI
H'll>u Aro Looldng For
• Btttlr Pay
•-
Btnafl1s
•lolo Equlpmarlt
• More Homl Tlma
Oloc<IJ ...__
-...--·
• Local Home T-~
Call Boyd At B00-2»2<121
EOE
Dllmondo, Antiquo Jewel~ Gold DIRECTOR OF ADIIISIIONI
Rl
Prt t t30 U S Currency Holzer Senior Care Ctntlf' A 70
E1c AcQulolllono Jtwolry Bod LTC II looking For Poaltlon
Coin ShOp 151 Saoond Of Dlroctor 01 Acil!'llltona You
Will M1rktt Our LTC And Will
-~7-
All Application• For Ad
Antlqueo lop prtcoa pold, ~IYOf· Aevlow
mllllonl And OIIWCI Fomlty Roll
tnt Antlqueo Pomeroy Ohio tlonl
And SOCial S.rvl<:tl Dullll
F1u11 Moor• owner 740 ea2
PooiiiOno Aoqulnlo A COitge 0.
groo LSW Prtlorrod But Not Reo
qulred, Oood Communication
Slilllo And Knowledge 01 long
Term Cart Aequlromanll Apply
Clean Late Model Carl Or AI Or Solid Rooumo WHn Cover
Trucko 1980 Modola Or Ntwor, ltlltr To ROOOf HIHie NHA 3aO
Smltll Butcf< Pont11o t800 Eoat Cotonltl Drhw ~ OH 4$1114
OrFu740-4111347EOE
om Galllpolla
,..
(~)8a234n
AVON! All Araaol To Buy or Soli
Shirley $peall 304-e75-1429
AVON hat a place for vout Join
the 11 beauty company! Enjoy
Your own busintss Buy your own
product& al cost Call I 800 •
AVON or 74().5~
Avon ProdUCII Star1 your own In
Home Bu siness Work Flexible
Houra Enjoy Unlimited Earnings
1 688-$111 2866
c.-
CIIIIBOffi
Team Straight Truck Latt MOdel
Driver Long Haul & Aegtonat
Have A CarHt In 2 Hours! •Paid
Health tn1urance •oental Plan
Avallabte "40tK a!'ld ure In
aurance Obtelnable Safety and
Productivity 8onu111 Appllca
Ilona Proceasad In 2 Hours Or
Ltsll Bequlremtnll 8 monthl
OTR axper 23 v.ara or 1ge good
driving record Continental Ex
press Inc (800) 293 0700 IBOOI
4473 Recent Driving School
Grlduatoo Welcome!
615
Drivers Wanted Earn $30 000 +
1&1 Year 1• Day COL Training
FLI time and Part tlml Aagl I
Nurw poolllona oval~ {Ill ""'
ou) at Ooll Hill Community - .
cat Center Ohio Licensure ra
qulrecf If lntorollecf pltiN ....t
resume to Oak HUt Corn~
Medical C.nlar Anltllllon B
McKenzie 3!50 Charlotte Ava
Ook Hill 011 45656 EOE
.
Health Manag41ment Hal An Im-
Bolh Polllfona
polls
ReiQhtilners With SIHplra Must
Have A ir Brake Endorsements
800 Mile Aadiua Home Deliver
mediate Opening
For RN
GoOd
Compensa.tloo Packagt If Inter
osttd Ceij 7>40 448 380e Or ApP~
AI 782 Second A...... Galt-.
45631 EOE
AHeUI 25 'fear~ Old
4tteut 2 Years~
Good MVR
Help with elderly 7pm:.eam
Wor1c Well W11h The PUI>IIc
Immediate Jan•tor Helper Need;
ed Requlrmg at lent one y11r
exporlonca 1304)485-1210
For Mora Information Can 800
..37-87&4 H11 8 00 AM 5 PM
Immediate OponiOQI lor C.rtlllecf
Home Health Aides Competltl"-'
W1ge plu& Mileage MedL Home
Heallh {7>40)441
available No experience necea
sary COL Holders call 1 soo
7~
9112 !!023
Weoldy Pay
Hoahh Insurance Avallablo
Call 1 888 253-8901 FrH Tuition
1779
ll$ll-23.53
BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY
BOOTS
All Leather Western Boots
Reg $149 00
Sate Pnce $59 00
Large Stock
Engineer
$49 00
Wellington
$49 00
Loggers
$50 55
Harness
$59 00
Carollna-Georg1a- H & H
Insulated Safety, Gortex
SWAIN FURNITURE
Olive St
Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems w1th
your dnv1ng record DUI s
speed1ng t1ckets, etc
Same Oay SA-22's 1ssued
Cali for a quote
Brown insurance Agency
4461960
JVSD
1999 Summer SchooL
Both Jr High & High School
make-up credtts
June 14-July 2, 1999
800am -120onoon
Um1ted bus1ng provided
(740) 245-5334
Backhoe &
Dozer Work
20 Yrs. Exp.
License & Bonded
740-388-9515
388-8030
GRAHAM'S
UPHOLSTERY
Why buy new furntture
when we can make your
Galllpoll , Ohto
446-8235
Top Soil Delivery
Dump Truck Load
$85.00
2212 Seventh Street
Syracuse, OH
740-992-4410
Long & Short Term
Care Available
BOOK SALE
for a FREE Jnspep!JOn
740-446-2801
Serv1ng Galha County
for over 40 years
Seremty House
serves vJctJms of dornest1c
v1olence
call446 6752 or
1 800 942 9577
foam and quality
craftsmanship Call
446 3438 for a free est•rnate
2205 Graham School Rd.
Are you unsat1sfied with
your acrylic na1ls?
Do they look lumpy,
crooked, or JUSt platn
fall off?
Then Call Ubby or Jenell to
get the bestlookmg and
teehng natls
you've ever had
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
Now accepting Visa &
Mastercard
"Li'l'' OrbitS
CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS
AG~CY
336 Secon Avenue
ean EXTERMITAL
SPECIAL
448 Porter Rd
Misc. furniture,
clothing, spotting
equipment and more.
THE LYNCH
Are you concerned that your
home may have terrn1tes?
of sample fabncs, new
Mint
Doughnut Machme,
makes up to 100 Doz per hr
Automatically
Good for lairs
& flea markets
DENTAL INSURANCE
Choose any dentist
Save 2 months prem1um by
paytng annually
Ronnte Lynch
FREE
Termite Inspection
furmture as good as new.I\=S=U==M=M=E=R=T=IM=E:m!
We offer a large
YARD SALE
One Day
Mon. June 7th
And Possess Mlcroaott Skills
Position Requires A Sell Starter
ver And Gold Coln1 Proor11t1
2S2II
Arllat Dnlgna Needed II ~ou
can produce simple creative In
color
dulgns
call Mike
Plld limo Off
Single Driver late Modal Ken
WOffhl Wtlh RHferl WMt Coall
Call
Michael & Friends
446-0698
AIR CONDITIONING
Serv1ce and Rep!llr
Ail Makes
Sm1th-Butck-Pont1ac Galltpohs
North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6, fully furnrshed,
near restaurant row
Openrngs from
May thru Sept
446-2206 Mon lhru Fn
Gallipolis Shnne Club
Hrll Brlly Fund Rarsing
Dinner & Dance
Gallipolis
Shrine Club
Fishing Derby
June 12th
8 am till11 am
June 12th
Happy Hour
5:30 to 6.30
Dinner 6:30
$15 00/Couple
ADULT HOME
Guard
M
hour appl No tl~Ptrlenct wilt
train Condltlona apply Must be
18 Cafl304-485-4300
Ply Good & lnsLWance
ClaiiAOTR
Background Helpful To Receive
ConlldanUai Conlideratlon For
Any Po1lt1ons Submit Resume
loaI 1$ Month I look Polled Lim
oullln Bull 0 J Whlto ttlomper
Road 740 4IB 21$11
Loot Englloh Bulldog 'Brutua•
KHtono Bllclt Milt C1lllco Fomole B WOOkl To Good Homo 1
,._ 740-411-1707
3 Adull 0001 2 Colllt Mix t
lcolnloo tfepartmonl St 0 3! por
Cion 8 With Hoz Mal Good
6929 ST Rt 588·
BOO-ROMANCE -lion 9681
2
BuriHe ou Company {GaJIIpolll)
Naedl Driver With Minimum Of
Help Wanted •
.J
OIIMNO I'OSITIOIIS
AVAILAIILl
ELDORADO
3201
2l!ooglo Doga, 74().4.11 1178
""'""" Galllpol• OH 45631
An students ,HYerat ru1 and pert
time openings ln cuttomer aerv
740 -441
With Strong Interpersonal And
Communication Skills Purchasing
playing lht Olllo Dallng Game 1·
.z·w...,-.
_'llnl-.. __
...
Barttndtr Wanted
1421
Sand Rooum11 To CLA 475 elo
Galllpollo Oel~ Tribune 825 Thlfd
110
Help Wentad
(740) 245-5535
Temporary Po•ltlon Candkiates
auction
Dental Aeceptlon lat Needed
110
FOR SALE
Large house & I 87 ac In a
convenient locatlon-PnvateC•ty Schools
tronlca All alzes/glrla clothing
Home Interior prom dresses fur
GOing OUt 01 - - Sale 40%
Oft
Store Wide Wlllon Cakt Wlltlt wttlt BloWn apoll II llllllld
Pan a DJ a Craft Shop 2390 lllcl •...., cal {7~) 4te t582
Ptko, 7-2t34
70
Yard Sala
Now To 'll>u Tlv1fl ~
9 -~ SllrMoo Alhlnl
74().$92 te.t:!
Oulllly clothing and houaohold
lttml $1 00 beg 1111 every
Galllpolla
Thuradly Monday thru Salurdly
eoo-5 30
& VIcinity
5 Family 3738 Addlaon Plko
Celdwtll R111d1nt1 Thursday
40
Giveaway
~~Sunday e-e
1 Yo1r & Holf Old Auotrotllan
Shlplterd 74().378-2307
Al.l.
Help Wsntad
AOMIIISTRATIVE ClERK
23rd St
lost• wtdo atrlpod black &groy
mole labby tfeclawed King HIIV
Klngobtrry Ad vlclniJy 740 992
30 Announcamente
110
Help Wanted
(~)675-15&1
PI Pleasant longenbarger Elac
'
110
lor
to see
River Reo. Queen
Contest
Applications
Scholarship Prrzes
Queens Parade
Activities
Deadline June 11
Call441-1385
June 11th & 12th
Hours Fnday 9 9
Saturday 9 3
Sponsored By
The -Friends Of The Ubrary
Dr Samuel L Bossard
Memonal Library
7 Spruce Street
Galhpohs, OH
For More Information
446·2342 or 992·2156
Rodney Grade
School
Annual Reunion
Saturday
June 12
Eat at 5:00 P.M.
Strawberries
Taylor's Berry
Patch
2864 Kerr Rd
245-9047
Summer Sesston
Ballet, Tap, Jazz,
Baton Classes
Gall1a Performmg Arts
(7 40) 245-9880
446-0526
~
�Sunday, June 6, 1999
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
11
o
110
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
Profet~lonal
230
Servlcea
Reta•
Jewelry Sa es
Sales and
Computer Experience Required
Acqulalt on& Fme Jewelry 1~ 1
Second A\lt Gal polls App 'I
Monday lhru Ft1day
landlord needs part time main
tenance person 740-992 5858
LAUNDRY II.INEN
SUPERVISOR
l
Holzer Medical Center It Seeking
A Full Time Laundry /Linen Su
perv leor Candidates Shoutd
Have P lor Management And
Ma ntenance Exper ence Ae
sponstb IIUes Include SupervisiAg
A Stalf Of 15 Personnel And A
P oducUon Of 1 5 Million Po\Jnds
OIUnenPerYoar
Exttllent Wage And Benefll
Pa~·
llt~•'iested Please Contact
Secretarial Posltkm The Athens
Meigs Educational Service Can
tar II saaldng a ~allflfKi appllcanl
whh In ti&INt for a Secretar al PoSition In the Athens Ofllct start
lng salary s S7 75/hr w th e1tcel
lent benefits
typmg 45 WPM
1 mullll ne phone
sy&tem computer experience e11
cellent organltalfonal skiUs and
the ability to work well with stall
and public Applicant must pro
vide their own transportal on Alt.
pllutlon Ptldllnt June 10
1999 Please subm I a klner ol In
teres! resume and references to
Or John 0 Costanzo Super n
tendent 4thens Me gs Educa
tiona! Service Center !507 R ch
land Avenue Suite 108 Athen s
Ohk> 45701
Skilled nullllng facll ty seekmg an
AN lor ful tme on 117 shift We
are also accepting appl cat ons
lor pan Ume LPNIRN ROCI<sprlngs
•
ReMb\ltallon Center Is a 100 bed
skll es:t and lntermedlite level
facti ty We have an excellent
survey h story and a very stable
staff This Is an excel ent oppor
!unity lor the •ght candidate for
personal and protess onal growth
Subm t resume to Rocksp lngs
Rehabilitation Center 36759
Rocksp ri ngs Ad Pomeroy Ohio
45769 Carol Green•ng Director of
Nursing Equal Opportunity Em
ROSie Ward
c:ijrector Of Human Resources
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike
$ia lipo 1!1 OH 45631 1563
'~
Phone 740-446 !1105
,. Fax fTOD 740-446 5106
Medical Processor
FTIPT No eKptrl&nce necessary
Wl l train PC requ red Earn 40K
ployet
Callll00-663-7440
40K Call 800-663-7440
Someone to spend the night with
the elder y mldn gnt Bam 5 deys
per week $10 per day 740 992
MTIMLT Ja ckso n General Hos
pltal Ripley wv has a tempo
rar~ posn on Ia a Laboratory
Tech nolog st Send esume to
Truck 0 lver To Haul New &
Used Empty Tralle s Hook &
Drop 74(}441~266
25271 or ca l 304 372 273 1 ext
275 for more nfo mallon EOE
Underground Utl lty Locator Paid
Tralnmg Excetlent Wages Com
pany Vahle o Resumes taken at
Putnam Job Service
M~l:l cal Proce ssor FT / PT No
Exc Nee wu Tram PC Aeq Earn
5039 or 740 992 4410
JGH PO BoK 720 Rlploy WV
Need 7 Lades To Sell A110n 740
446 335B
Needed Babysltte Day Shif t &
Evening Sh ift Preferably In My
HqMe 1 Child 740 446 3912
Lea.W Message
Now Hir ng Darn no s P zza of
Polpt Pleasant Good pay fl ex
bl+ hours Must be 18 or over
Te,.-n members apply In person
NURSING LPN • And STNA •
I LPN FT 11 7
I LPN PT Rotating
1 STNAFT11 7Aso PTRo
la~OQ
Holze r Sen or Care Center 70
Bed LTC Is Look ng For Exper
ended And Ded ca te d Peop e
Who Work As Team Members
Wllh Qua ty Resident Care Ae
Thflr Goal Ohio Ll ce ns"B Req
Apply At Or Send Resume With
Cower Letter Attn D 0 N AI 3BO
Cobnal 0 IV9 Bidwel OH 456 14
Or fa< 740-441 1347EOE
NU/!SING SUPERVISOR /MD$
NuRSE 1 RN Unit Manager t
MOS RN Coord ne to r Holzer
S~lor Care Center 70 Bed LTC
Is looking For RN s With Super
"' sory Asse ss ment And Com
mCrn cation Skills Must Have
Kn~wiedge Of PPS Infection
CG(IIrOI And MOS2 0 Oh o U
c:eryse Req Apply At Or Send Re
s~.~;111e W th Cover Letter Att n
D(IN AI 380 COIOnllll Dr Bidwell
Oti4S614 Or FaJC 740 441 1347
EO~
NOrslng Supervisor/MDS Nurse
1 AN Un t Manage 1 MDS RN
Coord nator Holzer Senlo Care
~ente r 70 Bed LTC s too k.ng
\:lr AN s w th superv sory as
sessment and co mmunication
4k s Must have knowledge of
PPS Infect on Contra
and
MD$2 0 Oh o L1cense Req ap
ly at o send resume w th cover
e ter An n D a N at "380 Colonia
B dwell OH 45614 or Fax
~
14Q-446 1346 EOE
'
OAK HILL COMMUNITY
MEDICAL CENTER
WANTED Ful Time POSit on
A\ISIIable To Work W th An lnd
v•dual W1th Menta Aeta dat on In
Then Own Home In Jacks on
Hours Man 3 PM Th u Sat 8
A M Sleep 011er ReQuired Day
I me Hours Oil STUDENTS ThiS
Pos1t on Enables Vo u To L \le n
The Home Rent Fee Seven Days
A Week As A Benef t Of Wo king
The Job !Some Restr ct ons w
App y) High Schoo Degree Or
GED Valid Dri vers L ce nse
Three Year s Good Dr v ng
Re cord And Adequate Automo
b e lnsu ance Coverage Re
qutred Starting Sa ary $5 50 / Hr
EJCcellent Benefit Package lnclud
ng Health And Dental Insurance
Send Resume To Buckeye Com
mun ly Servi ces P 0 Bo x 604
Jackson OH 45640 Dead I ne For
Appl cants 6 9/99 Pease Spec
fy Pas I on App y.ng For Equal
Opportun ty Employer
1
IOE
WE NEED DRIVERS
New Equipment
Good Pay
KELLITRUCKING, INC
Cal
740.28&-0879
740.211S-0209
Wildlife Jobs to $21 60/Hr Inc
Benefits Game Warde ns Secur
ty Ma ntenance Park Rangers
NoExp Needed For App /EJC am
Info
Call
1 800 813 3585
E>l B813 SAM 9PM 7 Days
Ids me
W1ldl le Jobs/$21 60 Hr tn cl
benefits Game Wardens Securl
ty Main te nance Pa k Range s
No Exp Needed For app /e~ m
Info
cal
1 80 0 813
3585 Ext 8827 8AM 9PM 7days
Ids Inc
140
liuslness
Training
Galllpollo Coreer College
Today! 740-448 4367 1800214-0452 Rog t!l0-05 12748
180
Wanted To Do
E & s Lawn Service Dfllslgn lm
plementaiiOn
and Service
Ava•lable lor Spr ng Clean up
lerlll zing ancs pant ng Free est
mates Satisfaction guaranteed
Grog Mo hoan 304/675-462B
Geo ges Portable Sawmill don t
hau you r togs to the mit Just ca
304 675 1957
Interior & Exterior Painting Ex
perlenced Flefe ences Reason
able Rate s For Free Estimate
+'-"-------'---- 1740;388-13041
:•
OWN A COMPUTER?
:-:----::-:---:-----:--
.. .,.
PUT ITTOWOFIKI
:•
$25 $75/Hr PTIFT
• .,.
1-883-581-3718
• www work from home net/turin
Interior EKterlor Pa nllng Pres
sure Wash ng Tree Remova l
Gutter Cleaning lawn Care Ae
mode lng and Aofftng (740) 446
~t T me Olflce Help Mise Du
¢as Must Ha\le Rei able Trans
g,or ta t•on 4 5 Hrs Per Day 5
Oays A Week App y In Pers on
~ Burlle 0 I Company Gall polls
6B02
J ms Drywall & Construct on
New Co nstruC tion & Remode l/
D ywal l Siding Roofs Addl
t ons Pa nt ng e1c (304)674
6hoo
4623 or (304)674.0155
Person to help Ca pet Instal er
Oependable Neat Honest Mon
day Fr Clay Some Saturdays
nup (304)675 4538
WU Mow and Hau and do Clea
Woge $B 00 por hourj (740) 388
~2
~lion Available Full T me Ac
CO\Jnts Manager Jo b Requl es
Some Heavy L1lling Benefits
Available Health & Dental In
(urance 401K & Paid Vacat on
Qpportunltle s To Move Up To
Ni9hly Mol vafod Peoplo Apply In
Person At Rent Way 1o oo A M
•• ;qo PM Monday To Fr day 5
q.nJo River Plaza Ga 1poll s
l!o~atal Job s 10 $1B 35/Hr Inc
eneflts No experien ce For
p and Exam Info Call 1 800
ll-13 3585 Exl B812 8AM 9PM
7.0/IY&1ds Inc
J)ostal Jobs/$ 18 35/Hr !ncr ben
t(Jita no experience For app 1
E(;xam Info ca ll 1 800 813
311&5 EKI B826
~fdsnc
BAM 9PM
7
WII Slay Wllh Eldorly AI Night
Exper enced And Have Aeferenc
ea 304-675 7961
FINANCIAL
21 0
For More lnformallon Peg
Ruosell 740 3B8 B983 1 888
2112 3758
Ill'
Re liable Person To Live In With
E)dBfly Male Room Board Sal
ary Supplied (304)B95-3942
Business
Opportunity
INOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re commends that you do bus
ness with people you know and
NOT Ia send money throUgh the
maU until you nave Investigated
lt'le offertng
AAA GREETING CARDS
Po!I110K Rosloclolng Local
Stores Now Selling Accts
Are Provided $9 950 Invest
Secured By Inventory
188B 468-6574
~crulllng People For Discovery
"ys
""""0
Happy Tracks Bath & Grooming
Has Moved to H ghtand Avenue 1
PI Ploa5anl Ca I (304)675 2696
lor Appl
The complete cleaning se v ce
Carpet Upho stery Walls Cell
ngs and als o Power Washing
For a free est mate cal Clearly
Clean at (3041675 4040 Guar
anteed Work!
TURNEb DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1888 5B2 3345
WALL CEILING CLEANED EX
PERTLY Saves on repa nt ng In
defin tely We use the axe us ve
Von Schrader V53 Power Wall
C ean ng System Protects pamt
eaves glass retards cha king
Ant1 Mildew no odor saniti zes
Free estimates Call Clearly
Cean at (304)675-4040
REAL ESTATE
310 Homes for Sale
124 Klneon Drive Ga I polis 3
Bedrooms Fully Equipped K tch
en Basement $57 900 740 446
2158
ALL CASH BIZIII
Got $20 BliS Fat $12 5011
ssoo s1 500 Nlk E..yt
FrOB $5 Samplellnv RoQ
1 800-997 9888 24 Hrs
(304)675 5162
3 BeCr oom Sp t Entry Br ck
Home on Route 2 at Mt Alto
Bu II n K !chen Dlnlngroom LA
3 Baths FP Woodburnlng st ove
on nearly 5 acres land (304)895
3881
3BR Home New Roof New Car
pel Large lot Georges Cree k
Kel y Orve Call (304)675 4230
aMer6PM
3BR
Full Baseme nt( 1/2 I n
lshed) ! Bath K tc hen LA /FR
2acres l ull deck Barn LP gas
131 62 South Foot of Deadman s
Cuovo (304)675 5380
Beaulllu 'llery pr vate t 52 Acr
es Near Ri p ey 35 mm from
Buffalo Appalachian Log House
Pub c Water 4BR 28A l 'lllng
room Fam y Room large Kitch
en Dining Room Walk out
Basement 2 car garage separate
!rom house & other build ngs
$269 000 (304)458 162e
B adbu y 6 rooms ba th full
ba seme nt 2 car garage large
yard well ma nta ned new electr c
fu nace with heat pump $52 000
By owner 725 Pag e Street M1d
dleport house & 3 lots must see
to app ec ate w II sell house with
out lots for $89 000 740 992
2704 740 992 5696
Cute 5 room home lu I basement
Lennox heat pump ce ntral air
Anderson t t In windows good 1n
su allan v ny s d ng I ant and
back porches n ce level lot good
neighborhood Maso n WV call
740 992 304t or740 992 3557
Ga !pols Area 2 Bedrooms
Askmg $35 000 Immediate Pos
SBSSIOnl 740 256-6702
Hou•• an d Lot lor sale 2 bed
rooms 1 bath $600 oo Down! l ocated on Kr ne Rd Contact Oa
vkf at 1 (800) 333-6910
House on At 2 N 5 Bedrooms
Fu I Basement Shown By Appt
(304)BB2 3748
Ideal Locati on 4 Miles Fr om
Gal1polls On SA 218 17+ Acres
Two Story Home Full8asement
Garge Smat Barn 740 441 0555
Evemngs
Family Home With Pool 2 Car
Garage/ Apt Albany 7 M les
OU Meigs Mne 74(}698 7150
Owner Relo cating! Anx1ous to
Set New y Remodeled I 3 Bed
rooms 2 balhs $62 900 00 (740)
245 5341
Re stored Victorian hOme slruated
on 12 acres V age Middleport
secluded an d pnvate appo nt
ment cal 740 992 5696
320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
141170 Hoi yPark Mobl ehome
28R Large Bath/garden bathtub
separate shower large llv ng
room wlh gh ce lings new ca rpel
kitchen has new top of the hne
gas stove has gas heat centra
air Installed In 1994 new steel
doors &storm doors Asking
$12 000 00 (304)-675 2319
197 1 Darin 14x60 2 bedroom
new carpet In tlv ng room 2 year
old carpet In the rest both bed
rooms are big w II lake $3500
740 992 0075 must be movec
eel lotus 1 2 3 \lOrd Pro ancs
P*'ron Experience tor our Stcre
laoy Payroll recepllonlol PoiiiiOn
P"aoo apply a1 311 Buckndga
Rlf. a ooarn-.~ 30pm
Clearly Clean al (304)675 4040
for Free Eat mates!
Laokmg To Buy Good 0 der
Homes 1-.800 383--6862
New 1999 14x70 three bedroom
Incudes 6 months FREE lot rent
Includes washe & d ye skirting
deluxe steps and setup Only
$200 74 per month with $1150
down Ca 11 BOO B37 3238
New Bank repos only 2 left we
f nance call 304 722 7148
Older Mobile Homo $2 500 740
446 7418
Please He p 3 Bttdroom 2
Baths just ta ke over Payments!
Ren t Buster New 1999 t4 x70 2
a 3 Bed ooms Only $995 00
Down S195 00 per month Free
Delivery and Set Up Call 1 eoo
946 567B
Trailer For Sa le Olll ce Trailer
1Ox40 A I Elect c & A C
(304)675-4123 alter 6 30PM
Oakwood Homes Barboursv lie
WV $499 Down S ng le Wide
$999 D ow n Double W de 304
736 3409
Cal (740) 387 7306 EW!nlngsl
1979 Sky! ne Mobile Home $500
0 B 0 740 388 B532 740 38B
9839 Belweon 9 A M 9 PM
1987 Clayton t,1ob lle Home
14x70 Stove & Refrig erator All
Electric 3 Bedrooms 1 112 Baths
Centra A r $8 000 Fi rm Cash
On~
740-448-4207
1988 Red mond Danville 14x70
Also Has Expando Ve ry Nice
Must Sell! Asking $14 ooo 740
340
Business and
Buildings
1992 14.~~: 70 Redma n three bed
room s1orm windows ~ heat
pump 74(}..742 2795after4pm
1993 Sunsh ne On Re nted Lot
Reasonably Prices Excellent
Cond lion Shown Appointment
Interested Parties Only! 740 446
8002
420 Mobile Homee
for Rent
Pleasant Upalltra Ut lltltia Paid
References O.poalt and Lease
required No Pets S425 par
monlh (513)211 0091
1411.70 Fl On Georges Creelt 2
1.1 ~· Oul 740-<Wl 366EI
t41(70 Mob Ia Home 2 becroom
55! Turkey Run Cheahl e Ohio
$350 00 month $1 &0 Oeposl1
(740) 378 9840
2 & 3 bedroom mobPe homes a r
condU on ed $260 $300 sewer
water and I ash mcluded 740
992 2167
2 bedroom mobile home n M d
dleport S275 per month plus de
posit 74().992 31&4
Needed Roomate to Sh8Je E•
penses tn 2 Bedroom Tra1ter In
Vinton $175/Mo Includes AI
740.388 B964 74Q-441 1401
Nice 2 Bedroom Traler In Small
Trailer Park Depos I & Referenc
es Required 740-446-1104
Two bedroom mob te home 1n
Rae ne $325 month we pay wa
ter sewer and tras h 740 992
5039
440
2 Bedroom A.partment In Point
Apartments
for Rent
1 and 2 bed oom apartments fur
nlshed and unfurn shed security
deposit required no pets 740
992 2218
2 bedroom apartment lor rent
$200 will at ow 1 pet 740 667
9729
2 bedroom ape tment In Middle
port we pay water sewer & trash
you pay gaa & alecrrtc $200 par
month $100 deposit 740 992
7806
2bdrm apt s total electric ap
pt ances furnished laundry room
faclllles c ose to school In town
AppliCations available at V llage
Green Apts 149 or call 740 992
3711 EOH
663 Tl'l lrd Avenue Gallipolis 2
Bedrooms $300 00 Plus Utll ties
and one month Depos II (7 40)
740-446-2957
1 Bedroom Furnished Utlltles In
eluded $300/Mo Also Efllclancy
Furnished Utilities Included $2501
Mo 740 367 0611
1 Bedroom Upstairs Apartment In
Syra cuse $250/Mo Deposit &
Referen ces Requ re d 740 992
7104 After 6 P.M
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 52 Westwoo d Onve
from $279 to $358 Walk to shop
& movies, Ca 1 740 446 2588
Equa Housing Opportunity
Chusty s Family Livin g Sch.ool
day Special pay depos t & re
celve first month s rent free Ca 1
74Q 992 4514 ask for Chri s Mar
tin
Chnsty s Family Living apart
meats home & trailer rentals
740 992 "514 apartments avail
able furn shed & unfurnished
All Electric
Per
sons No Grau To Mow No
Lawn First Floor Fo An Ap
polntment To VIew Phone 740
446-9539
F rat Avenue One And 1\vo Bed
rooms From $275 $350/Mo Se
curlty Depos it Refere ~ce s Re
Qulred 740-441 0952
F1ve
Call to see 1f you can
VA, FHA and
as low as 3% down
also have
uu;~n~ With
Conventional
Call today
free prequahficatlon Let F1ve Star Mclrtg:agtel
ldr•eants come true
Call Vickie Hauldren at
Five Star
Raal Estate
Wanted
Wo Pay Cash 1 BOO 213 B365
Anthony Cllnd Co
RENTALS
Mortgage
10 Myrtle Avenue
Galhpohs, Ohio
45631
(740) 446-4042
Public Sale and Auction
ANTIQ!IE
2 Be droom House In Gatllpol s
2 BR fu nlshed home In Mason
No pe ts Aeftrrences required
(304) 77~5861
3 Bedrooms 2 Batti s Partially
Furn shed 4 Miles South or Galli
po
s 740.256 9121
3 Bedrooms Central Air Condl
tion ng Ga age 7olll-446 258~
5 oom house bath lurnlshetl
$300 &mal repair jobs deducted
!rom ren t ca ll 740 867 6944
75e F rst Ave 1 Bdrm 1 Bath
Newly Renovated Washer Dryer
Hookup S275 oo Rant Wllh Do
posit 74()..446 3481 Or 740 446
0101 Allot 5OOPM
Beautiful Rl11er VIew Nice Two
Bedroom 1 112 Bathroom Home
On 108 Terrace Street Stove &
Refrigerator Basement One Car
Garage Washat /Dryer Hook Up
Oeposit & Ralerencaa ~equtred
No Pets Rent [;)lscoont Call 740
992 5502
New haven 28R Home Garage
River Frontage Deposit Lean
Rolerences (304)934 7462
Nice 2 bedroom apartment 1n Syr
acuse $285 per month trash in
eluded 740-667 3516
Now Taking Appllca t ons 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments
Incl udes Water
Sewage Trash $315/Mo 740
446 0008
Tw n Rivers 1;ower now accepting
eppllcattons to r 1 BR Hl.ID sub
sldlzed apt fore der y: and hand-
EOH 304-875-6679
Two 1 Bedroo m Apt w th AC In
Point Pleasant Call evenings
(304)675-4975
Repa1nwt New & Relluln In Stock
CaH Ron Evana 1 800-537 9528
$69 00 $100 ol1rea programming
L mlled time offer ca~ 1 800 779
B194
18 000 BTU 1 Sears Air Co.ndl
1oner (740~448-0390
Appliance•
Rec.ond itloned
Washers Dryer~ Ranges Aafrl
graters 90 Day Guarantee!
French C ty Maytag 740 446
7795
1998 Honda Fourtrax 300 2 WO
37 Wurlltzer Juktboll /Re cords
13 5 Aluminum V Bonom Boat 9 5
Johnson Motor 740-379 2228
6 Drawer Dresser $50 1 Kllohen
Table 130 1 Brown Cl'lalr $30 1
Brown /Plaid Couch StOO 740
44f 048t 1987 Nlssan Stanza
Washers dryers refrigerators
range& Skaggs App111nC11 76
VIne Street Call 740 44~ 7398
1 888 818 0128
Excellent~
HOINI.<:Grnmorti&IUniS
FREE Color Calalog
CaHToday 1-711.0158
Oueen Size Mattress /So~~:
Spr ngs Hutch Headboard
Hutch Dresser M rror Chest
Noghl Stand
$600
740.446-3745.
Bicycles
H1s/Hers
27
12
speed cost new $380 Se 1 lor
$150 00 for both same as naw
Be ow Holiday Inn Kaneuga
Used K ng S ze Bed Complete
$250 Full Size $135 Twtn $115
New Oay Beds S130 Bunk Beds
New Mattresses Dressers Chest
Of Drawers Cou chea Dinettes
Collee /End Tables Much Morel
740 44e-4JS2
1004 5 Miles Ou t B\JIBvll e Pike
Of1 35 Righi On Ke..r Road Blue
HooaaOnloft
lawnMower WeedEater A/C
Nail Gun Air Compre&sor Suzuki
230 Utllty Modal 4 Wheeler TV
& Mecna ntc To o s (.304)675
Maytag washer $130 coflee
table w th 2 erld tables dark hke
Case W nc:tow Air Conditioner
Works Good! $150 Call Alter 5
PM 740-446-2398
Complete A r Condit oner 3 112
Ton 2 Gas Furna ces 740 446
7404 Ca t Anylme
Condole Shelving For Sale 740
388-8806
CDOLDDWN
Air Exerc ise Bike $75 Coffee
Table $40 End Table $40 Small
Student Desk $15 Bath oom Or
ganlzer S15 Twin Frame & Head
board $20 All Items E11ce lent
New Window Air Condit on er
new $100 740-992 5907
Small Gibson Cheal Type Freez
er s1so oo (304)675-5621
I;;;;=====..:.:::.;,;...__
530
Antiques
Antique Bottle Adver* ng Sale
And Aucllon 81261h 9 4 Polnl
VInyl Sk nlng Kns $299 95 5 Ga~
For Sale 25 30Ft Antenna Tower
with antenna Call (304)674 0023
alto 5PM
A.UCTIONEER1 LESLIE A.. LEMLEY
740-388-0823 (Home) or 740-245-9886 (Barn)
"llomecl Ancl Bonclecl By State el Ohio"
tatillftrOt!e<l(}kot tJI(t,-.1I
fQgtf
Not Rosponslltlo For Accidents
or Lost Property•
Announcement
~HAPPY HIPPY HAULING
TUSH SERVICE
ts pleased to announce that due to our recent
purchase of a USA Waste route along Route
7 South we are now offenng trash ptck up
from Gallipolis South to the Lawrence County
line along Route 7 We are a locally owned
company for over 8 years, and the rnajor
trash hauler for local churches and trailer
parks
We offer lower rates ($1 0 00 per
lllQnth) for up to 9 30 gallon bags per week
perfamtly
Spectal rates for sentor Citizens as well as
front door p1ck up
Call 256-6550 today for all your trash needs
We also have roofing shtngle hauling service
homo
Point 1 Female Blue Point Q1
clawed F!Kod Ard AI~ Shots 74024!1-9239
AKC Registered Black Lab&
Have been wormed S200 00
each 2 females 5 matu One
Yellow Female AKC R1g l1tertd
2 yrs old housebroken $100 00
Below Bentley 740.446-1280
AKC
Reg ist ered
Miniature
Dachshund pupp es red a dap
Pool Table 3 xs oversize with 31
4 slate New Cover Balls &
Stlclc1
Etcellen t Con dit on
AKC Wh itt German Shepherd
Pups PlcX 1 Male and 1 Female
$500 (304)875 5093
500PM
$100 00 Ea<t1 740-3677123.
CFA Ptrllan Cats 1 Ma e Seal
AKC Lab P\.wlei 740-379-2883
plo
Allor
Blue Point S am111 Kittens
Blue Point Siamese Kittens
Wormed And L.l1ter Trained
740.742 8101
7~0.~
Cred 1 Approval J01219 JD720
2 Square Hay Baler Maule Fer
guaon Model 12 And Vtcon ~51
AlsO 7 0 1C 4 Bush Hog 740
150 00 (740)446-4412
4 AKC Boxer pups rtady to go
tlo11 $2000 (304)675 eoe9 aller
580
NH474 NH469 NH488 Haytine
Strawberries You Pick We Pick
Cloud Sunday Taylors Berry
Patch 740 245 9047 2864 Kerr
Aoed
4x4 Sheennlu Tractor $5 500 5
Ft King Kutter F nlsh Mol#lfer
$750 Bougl'lt Both New In April
99 740-446-4812
Real Eltate General
Purebred bla ck Cocker apanitl
pupples two femalts one mate
lt'IOII wormed talll dOCked born
99a9
Aprl21 $75 74().1192 7557
Schnauzer puppies 2 min ature
ma$es AKC champion blood lnts
aan& . _ 740-887 3404
Office Man11ger ·Comptroller
Wanted to buy couch and chair
Waterline Special
3/4 200 PSI
of the fastest growmg Automobile
SPRING SCENTS OF MEADOWS
FULL OF WILD FLOWERS AND
TREES A BLOOM A serene Coun1y
Grasses for horses and cattle and a
small shed lor sheller
$37 00 Par 100 All Brass Com
prosslon Fittings In Stock
ll(dlegr•ee preferred), some knowledge of com·
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
needed Automobile expenence preJaCkSOn OhiO 1 BOil-537 952B
wheal Horae 16 hOrse motor llfc~m:d bUt nOt necessary AbtJtty tO get along
th
n t
lr d
aluminum wheols o/1 Ford pockup
0 ers a mUSt neierenCeS requ e
:~~~~~ conaulon s250 740
resume and/or letter of Abil1t1es With
h1story to
Grubb s Plano tu ning & repairs
Problems? Need Tuned ? tal the
NEW USTING-Sl: RT 141· Immaculate
Kept Home on 8 2 Acres m/1 Tall
lliodivi•dual to oversee day to day office operMust have accounting background
IPorner<Jy, Oh1o
Newspaper Box
83
45769
sett1ng
Th1s home s
almost new Features a lg living room
ove y Ranch Almoet Llko Now Lg
IV ng room Beaut ful tall equopped
lichen all oak cab1nets Cathedral
el1ng 1am1ly room 3 Bedrooms 2 BA
g heated 2 car garage
Heated
orkshop out back All on one flat acre
bedroom su1te 14x13 w/walk In closet
and Beaul1ful Bath 2 6oth lg lamily
room t7 5 x14 Beaut1lul complete
kitchen w/oak cabinets and 2 sky
windows New garage 28 x32 fully
Insulated water Great place to raise
the kids Shown by appt
LET THE BEAUTY SHINE THROUGH
This home just sparkles w/skyl ght
w ndows thai • • o wcalhedral
cal1n~ ~~
a natural
Deco
om Lg Custom
deslg
tchen 3 BR 2 Bath full
basement Lg lomshed garage 2 Plus
From your tront ~dic":ecik;lic"w.~
RIVER AND THE o
Surrounded by a
a111n bloom Beaut lui Crystal
~~
opened & wa1t ng for su mmer
Lg
Auctioneer Rick Pear1on 1186
Apprentice Auctioneer Greg Blain IIA-17:1
Ma10nW Va
Res 773 5785 or Auction Center n3 5447
Terms Cash or check wilD
Not responsible for accldenta or lo. . of property
Public Sale and Auction
ESTATE
AUCTIO
I)JUE$DAY?JUitl,,, 1919 .I
6:00P.M.
Located at the Auction Center on Rt 33 In
Mason , WV Mr & Mrs Poole will be moving
and selling their household belongings Along
with guns being sold from the Orla Zirkle
estate
Cherry Entertainment Center china cabinet 10 gun
cab10el Maple 0 R Su1le Table 6 chairs & hutch
Krohler sofa glass & brass coffee table & end tables
W1cker cha11 roll top desk Queen size Hyda Bed 2
end tables lg desk 2 bar stools ch1ld s rocker high
chair Hol Po1nt 12 7 CF Frost Free Refngerator 30'
Fr~g1da1re eleclnc range copper craft shelf G E
M1crowave & stand p1cn1c table exerc1se equipment
p1tcher & bowl two lg oriental vases glessware
McDonald s llnY beames plus other beame babies
p1ctures bedspreads linens rugs pots & pans new
bl fold vinyl door Children s furniture table & 2 chairs
kitchen cabinet k1lchen center loy box, Fisher Price
work bench Caslle sand box Igloo sw1ng set My
Size Barb1e Barb1e Doll House posl office &grocery
store kids b1ke helmet bicycle Jeep & Big Wheel
Wheel barrow and much morel
QUNS WILL 8E 80lj) AT 7;00 P.M.
SKS 762 Oviedo Spain M 1916 308W Antique
muzzle loader 25 Beretta Gardone Vermont 111929
Marlin 118022 B A Winchester 11840 12 gauge
Savage 111914 22 pump Mossburg 20 gauge BA
Steven s 1166 C B A 22 Anl1que muzzle loader A
Hesler Ivory Johnson 12 gauge SS Champion Glen
R1ed #30 A 30 30 KBI 12 gauge D B Russia M1 30
Carbine Ivory Johnson Champion 16 gauge 55 Ivory
Johnson 32 Rev pistol Crossman 150 22 cal pellet
pistol Hopkins & Allen Arms Co As1s Co" Huntsman
22 L R auto p1slol 2 BB Guns Daisy Black Diamond
plus gun parts cleamng supplies hunllng supplies
Arrow & much morelll
TRAVEL TRAILER WILL BE SOLD
AT 8 30 PM W/RESERVE
1993 20 5 Terry 5 Wheel Travel Tra1ler Roof A!r
Cond furnace refngeralor µwave
Dad,
Card of Thank•
Wee
lth,ank "':~.~;~:!~
•
for to
tloe
l<>ra''"'·'· l'lotver., food,
& kmdne•• dunns
the tUness & death of
I:Liennio. Thanks to the
ne11rhbors on the htU,
frwnda & w ve ones.
Freedom Gospel
Church Staff at
Arbors, Cretneen.&
Funeral Home &
Leswn Po•t 128 We
Jgrilssi·ve
011'0)'
11
RWANDA"
110
MEDICAL CENTER, a proand growmg JCAHO accredlit~Hll
located m
We would be
celebrat"'B your 6011hiB
bmhday 1odayl
In Lot!"'B Memory
of Frank Harnnumd
t eam for the folloWing fulllhme, part-tune and per diem positions
RN LPN NURSE AIDE CST
RADIOLOGY TECHS
PHYSICAL THERAPISTS
LICENSED PHYSICAL
THERAPY ASSISTANTS
Help Wanted
ll'..XCtl lffm t
SALES/DRIVER
POSITIONS
Southeastern
setlkinlt mdividuals to JOm
Twenty Jive yeara
ago, you pa.,ed
In my Ufe there Is no living
That Is not a pan ofYOU
Sadly Missed By
Jerry
lbm
and
Auctlon~ter Rick Pear10n ltl8
Apprentice Auctioneer Greg Blain IIA-1n
MaaonW Va
R11 773·5785 or Auction Ctntar n3:-3447
OWNERS ROBERT & DEBBIE POOLE
ADM JANE ZIRKLE
Terma C11h or check wilD
Not rtaponalble for accldlntl or lou of property
F R w/w b f replaco
garage Storage bUilding
Detached garage approx 24x36 on
3 75.Ac M/L Shown by appoontment
LISTlNG-30+ Rollong Acres
secluded & wooded
~nvata.
NEW HOME SITE Hunting ground or
a place In lhe country for camping
a 4 whee!er or h1k1ng
LAND LOTS
5 Acre.-Fairt1eld Church Can ba spiii-Restr clad
JockHn Pike Aroa N1ce bUilding lot $14 000
Four City Lot.-CommerCial or home sne
Porllnnouth Rd -7 1/2 Acres REDUCED IN PRICE
Harrtoon Twp -40 Acres+ SALE PENDING
2 440 Acreo-Reslr cted Flal bu ld ng site Green Twp
benefit package mcludmg
llllh1ealith and life msurance, vacation time,
He1ner's Bakery Inc " currently accephna
aml1calions from qualified candidaies for sales/
driVer pos11ion1 at it.e Alhens Branch Qd,fied
cxtndidoles must have a wlid drivet's 110!!1"' slrong
Work elh1cs the ab1lo<y lo wcric alOne 011n a learn
enwonmonl a htgh school d,ploma 01 GED be
at least 21 )'!SCI" Of age and be wtlll!)g lo wcric
lcng hours This11 ihe ICuahew i9b you'll.....,. b.. I
We offer on excellent "beneRts package and
cat'f'""'MM hourly wo~bosed on
NlnCil).
We wtll be occepling
icolions at
branch
unfil S 00 P. m on W riesdCr).: June 9 Women
and m1nonhes ore encouraged to awl><
ltloexi.b le spendmg accounts , pensiOn plan
Henty E Cleland Jr 992-2259
mterested please contact
Rosie
Shem L Hart ..:.......... 742-2357
Ward
Kathleen M Cleland 992-6191
:d':j
Office .......................... 992-2259
lleiter'sllolalll y
1708 Eastern A -
GaD•polis,
OH 45631 -1563
OFFICE 992-2259
Gullipb,OH
appreculle you aU &
wve you
The Family
DennuM
Wife Gertw (A nna)
Chtldren 'troy &
Denue
Grandchtldren
Andrew. Anthony &
Emtly
Canaday
Realty
446-3636
a
FOUR UNIT APARTMENT HOUSE ONE UNIT
FRAME DWELLING PLUS MOBILE HOME ALL
PRESENTLY OCCUPIED LOCATED IN THE
VILLAGE OF RIO GRANDE NEXT DOOR TO THE
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE IF YOU HAVE
INVESTMENT IN MIND BETTER LOOK AT THIS!
THE PRICE IS RIGHT $6i,900
j...
ENTERPRISE AD Just out of F'omeroy this
1 112 story frame home leatures 7 rooms
newly remodeled d1n1ng room and kllchen and
bath Laundry room two bedrooms down
spacious bedroom up Newer FAN G
furnace HP/CA porch deck and 21 x 35
metal
Very affordable
home
and some sill
needs
I
Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Den look1ng out and
Full
& snack bar area
In my eyes there Ues no
vision
But the sight of your dear
Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Lg
Features L R Don ng room 3
3 baths k Iehan w/Oak
GAIL ROWE
In my heart there Is no
feeling
But the wannlh of your
embrace
In my mind there are no
thoughts
But the thoughts of you
pear
In my soul no Olher
longing
But just to have you near
All my dreams were bud1
around you
I vc come to know tl s
Surrounds th1s lovely home
Ouah1y Throughout A lonna! antry Lg
Bedroom su to & whorlpool tub bath
Beautiful Custom designed kitchen LA
w/Foreplace Upper level 3 bedrooms
Full basement Fam11y Room All oak
trim Only 1 yr old
v!ew of the A1ver & all the boats A great
place to hang out th1s summer
IITh~ale:rshi:ps 10 the Valley ts l~king for an
$21 95 Per 100 1" 200 PSI
CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
CU.SSIIFIIEOSI
look Mo Over • Make An Oller
Beautllul brick 2 story home on the
banks of tho Oh1o 4 BAs 2 1/2 BA
Lots of glass & deck1ng A wonderful
reasonably priced 740-992-6942
NH851 Round Balers New Jotfn
o.e e Round Ba5ers Mower Con
d 1ones o•~~o 12 Month1 2 75%
24 Mon1n1 3 75,. 36 Months
4 75% 48 Monlhs 5 5% 60
Months Carmichaels Farm &
Lawn Inc 1 800 594 '11 1 Galli
poMs OH wa oenver1
IHio. (304)582 3436
Prlmea\lr free DlrecTV Summer
Promotion Call now 1 888 265
2123
Cago $50 (304)B82 3477
J0335 NH630 NH650 I!F1580
256-0140
Fl'\lltl &
Vegetable1
Hand Fed Tame Cockatea Ba
bin Ddfar•n1 color• & pr cea
Also bOncted pair Nanday Conu
ers & Proven Pairs or Cocka
Le1tl (740~24!1-11213
Teame Beanie Babies Set For
Sa te $100 Large CockateU
Junt Ultd Hay Equip,._,! Sill
• 8% Financing With John Deere
Yamaha Stereo Ktyboard Doll
Everytnlng Perfect Condit on!
S125 no-386-9645
(304)875-2063
can 740-992 5465
Kimble Conao e P ano w/bencn
Pec1n Wood Excel ent Condl
610 Farm Equipment
Pet• for Sale
2 mate Eskimo sp tz pupp u
ahots $50 each ready lor good
610 Farm Equipment
FARM SUPPLIES
& LIVESTOCK
8PM
Happy Ad
Locatad at 2605 Jackson Ave behind
Clinic In Pt Plaasant, WV
OFFICE FURNITURE - MED EQUIPMENT MISCELLANEOUS
Office Desks
Printers
Carpels
Office Cha1rs
M1sc L1ghl Fuctures
Cop1ers
Bookshelves
F1le Cabinets
M1sc Cab1net
Used Medical EqUipment
Plus Many Many More llemsl
Everylltlng muat be removed day of auction
Bring your Truckall
HOLZER CLINIC OF WEST VIRGINIA
I
5121
Mu1lcal
1n1trumenta
Sun t 4PM Mon Sat 11 AM
8PM fl1h Tank/Pet Shop 2413
Jackaon AvtnuaJPolnt Pleasant
42 cut good tires $1000 set of
'
PUBLIC
AUCTION
Floh Blrdo Pond Supplll&
Block brick ~ewer plpel wnd
ows lintels etc Claude w ntera
Rro G ancse OH Call 740 245
(304)675-6046
Many Retired longaberger Bas
kat& fAccesaor" Prices At Or
Discount Mob le Home
Parts & Supp~
Huge lf'Mintory
ton Aluminum F1bered Roof Paint
$25 21 5 Gal White Roof Pant
Corditlonl 74Q-441 0988
$57 69 Anchors $5 Doors &
AIUZING
METABOLISM Windows Gas & Electric Water
Breakthrough!!! liose 10 200 Heaters Plumbing & Electrical
Pounds Eaay Quick
Fast Parrs tnterthar m Miler & Cole
Dramatic Results tOO% Natural man Air Cond !loners & Heat
Doctor Recommended Free Sam Pump s Ban nett s Mabile Home
Supply 740 446 9416 Gallipolis
pes Caii74G-441 19B2
Ohio
$200 00 (304)675 5192 leave
I·M:_0:.;':;;'";:00:..,..-------
Buy or sell Riverine Anllquea
1124 E Main Street on ~t 124
Pomeroy Houra MTW 1000
am to 6 00 p m Sunday 1 00 to
e 00 p m 740 992 2526 Russ
Moore owner
a Used Furniture l Ap
- - - - - - - . . : . 578
560 Petll for Sale
Building
Suppllet
446-630B HIQ0-291-G098
1:_..:_.:...__:.~-----
Mobile Home Lot For Rent Refer
ences ~equlred 740-256 t 922
Johnson
pi onces 740 448-4039 741l-44B
C B Base Radio Demeo Sate!
11e Boughl New (304)875-8980
550
560
7163
Central A r Conditioning Added
9 Day Florida Bahamas Vaealion To Your Furnace Complete Duct
• 3 Bonus Trips S1 200 Includes Systmes & Furnacea Heat
Cruise PClrt Feea Rental Car Ca 1
Pumps Ce tlf ed Installe r If You
740-446 3471
Dont cat Us We Both l osel 740
New And Use~ Furniture Store
Mereh1ndiM
(304)675 1731
$900
1.:...=.::...:...:...:.:._"'""___
Noeded 740.992 5088
COLLECTIBLEc£>
AUCTION
WALNUT HtGH BACK BED, 2 PETAL CARS,
CHERRY DROP LEAF TABLE, PRIMITIVE
KITCHEN CABINET, SPOOL CABINET, OAK
STAND, 54" LoNO MAHOGANY U.S NAVY
MusEUM MODEL Of SUBMARINE U 55
NAUTILUS, OVAL PICTURE FRAMES, MAo
MAGS
AND
OTHER
BoOKS,
DISNEY
CoLLECTIBLES, OLD ToY GuNs. 1926
AMERICAN fLYER ELECTRIC TRAIN SET,
STEREO CARDS, ALBUM Of TIN TYPES, OLD
BoTTLES & FRUIT )ARs, Aov Boxes, PtNK
DEPRESSION GLASS, BUNKO, FIESTA, fENTON,
OLD ToY GAMES&: PuzZLES, TtNWtND-UP
ToYs. CosTUME )EWELRY, MARBLES, Wooo
SHAFT GoLF CLuss, VALLEY BELL Avo StoN,
ScooTER. juMBO )ARS, MucH MucH MoRE
MoT LISTED YET_
...,....
Flt>ble F nancl~ Avallahkt
1e• DlrecTV Bltelllte Syetemt
I '-004'--7'----------
460 Space for Rent
GALUPOUS, OHIO
11
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Pleasant Armory Quality Dealers
8580 Sl RT. 588 (OLD Rl 35),
2BA unlurnlshed house 507 112
2nd St New Haven Call after
3 Bedrooms 1 Bath In Gallipolis
N1ce Yard With Fence & 2 Star
age Bu td ngs Central Heat & Air
Lease & Deposit Se25/Mo 740
441 51 !8
13711(304)675-3230
@
41 0 Houses for Rent
304-576 2438
Modern 1 BR ali Utll ties paid ex
capt ele ct ri c Gall polls Ferry
Area $250+deposlt (304)675
WOL.FFTANHIHO .. EDS
Buy Factor)~ Direct
12 Hour HP Wheelt House Mow
er Hydroelectric 36 Cut Oldy
Bu1 Goodyl740-367 7800
Air Conditioner& Used Different
Sizes Guaranteed I 740 886
540 Mlacellaneou1
~-:A-;:1!:-;AZI=NQ.::,.:lV:.:L;:DW~;P}IIC;;::,ES,.--
Sla r Steps 740.379 2169 Allar 5
PM
15C F Freezer New Oultlng Ma
chine 4 Collector Barbie Dolls
RCA Video Camara Heavy Duty
Kitchen Mixer N kkon 6006
35mm Camera s/acctaaorles
BTC Computer w/17 Monitor &
Ml~eellaneou•
MerchlndiH
Crottovtr also Include• Speak
er boll lOaded with 1 12 JL and
1 Exercise Bike 1 Tread Mill 1
Good I
GDDD USED APPLIANCES
Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment
74(H46--0390
FRIDAY, _TUNE l~J 6:30PM
LEMJ..EY1S AUCTION BARN
Meigs Co Rutla nd Whites H1H
Rd 1t Acres $14 000 Or 9 Acr
es $12 ooo Water Danville Briar
Ridge Rd 7 Acres $13 000 On
SR 325 Nice 5 Ac es $16 000
Water
740 286 0081
38H 862
'_l540
plano Or 740 446-4525
for our RECD no down payment loan
Schools Water
2 20 ACRE TRACTS
Houllhold
f1t your fmanc1al needs Do you have good
Maps I 600 21 3 8365
BRUNER LAND
740-4411492
Fo Only $22 000 Each Take
Both And Get D scount Great
Hunt ng Land Fu ll Of Deer Has
Road Access To Wayne National
Fore st Land Contract Available
510
Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
,.,.,.,..M.,.I-:-ICe-.,.,ll,...•neou
__
_,
MerchandiM
350 Watt Allllll11er wllh built In
4 I o• Jlo lwo(2) I TWullro
also lneludod $900 00 080
(740) 245 5128 or (740) 379
9458 loiMI Measage
MERCHANDISE
dream become a reahty Let us tailor a loan to
In The Co untr y West Gall/a
County Lots Of Meadow With
New Barns And Fane ng Ready
For An ma s Lots Of Road Fran
tage More Land Available Now
0 vlded Into 5 & 10 Ac e Tract
Take Both
15 Ac res For
$27 500 Double W des Are Per
m lied :S% Down !,.and Contract
With Approved C edit F ee
Call NOW For F ee Maps +
Owner. Finane ng Info Take tO%
Off List P ce On Cash Buysl
Kllchon 513 851 0100 Or 740
441 38915
Public Sale and Auction
help make your home
15 Acros $14000 City
Grac10us ltv ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
Rtvers de Ape rtmants In Mkldle
port From $249 $373 Call 740
992 ~64 Equal Hou1lng Opper
turwtles
Mobile home site ava abe bet
ween Athens Md Pomeroy call
740 385 4387
Mortgage Corporation wants to help make that
NO PROBLEM
540
.
HOUII Within 1S Mlltl Of Borg
Warner Ftnced 't'ard +lice
~~~~----~~~----- ·
OWING YOUR OWN HOME?
2830 .
Ad
470 Wanted to Rent
Eoual Hous ng Opporlunlty 740. I ·E:::P::"""=:;P_:m;:_::lor::..::(304=)6::.7..:5-..:3:...126:::..._
44 6----4 639
30 Announcement•
5 Acres Bla cktop F ontage &
Lake VIew
Ga Ia Cou nty
$32 000 Mo e Acreage Ava table
Oallla Co Hunters I S Off SA
218 W lllams Hollow Rd 68
w ooded Acres With Stream
$45 500 Water Fnendly Ridge
osn
lcapped
lm<:nt.
15 ACRES
READY FOR HORSES
Furnished 2 88droom Apartw.nl
Across From Park AC No Pets
Reterencea Deposit 1325/Mo
740..446-8235 740-44S
Gat1a Mai'IOI' Apartment Now Ac
cept1ng Applicat ions For 1 Bed
room HUO Subsld sed Apartment
For Elderly And Hanes capped
II00-
350 Lots & Acreage
6 M les From Gal1polls t6382 On
141 5 30 Acre Es ta te s Sur
veyed March 1999 74 0 379
Frenchtown Apartments Now
Accepting Appllca11ont For 1
secroom FMHA Subsldlltd
Apar1ment For Elderty And Hanc:tlcapped Equal Hous ng Oppor
tunlty 740-448--4639
Apartment lor rent in M ddleport
no pets 740-992 5858
lcn~an but JUSt haven't saved up down a pay-
741l-38B B67B
Apertment•
for Rent
PI ot Progra m Renters Needed 1
1 Bdrm EKtra N1ce F rst Month
F ee Wi th One Year Lease
$279 00 Per Month P IJ8 Utlltlea
440
245-9595
Ca'mmerclal SUI ding For Lease
Sma 1 Business o Off ce In H gh
Traff c A ea Across F om Wa l
Mart On Corner 740 441 5118
Or 304 634 0540 Le ave MeS
sage
388 8335
$16 500 00 (740) 446 8113
7 4().643-Q, 22
Apertment1
for Rent
381H!504
3 Bedroom House 5 Miles From
A o Grande Watts Road By Lev
el $500/Mo 740 245-5677
1974 K rkwood 12x60 2 bed
rooms Good Condit on $4 950 00
Waterloo House $325/Mo In
eludes Water & Garbage Deposit
& Aaferencts 740 643 2916
26 Acres MfL 6 Stall Ho se Barn
3 Bedroom House Fence 740
1973 Hll crest two bedroo m mo
bUo homo 740 992 5039
440
410 HOUIII for Rent
330 Farms for Sale
5PM (304 )675 3469
1991 14f1X72ft Shingle Root VInyl
Siding
Excellent Condition
ki!Qwledge In Mlc,_n word Ex
385 9621
ASAP
230
Scenic Hilla Nursing ~enter 11
seeking a petaon with oompuler
Good se eel on of used homes
w th 2 or 3 bedrooms Sta t ng at
$3995 Quell delivery Call 740
14x70 At anttS Mobile Home All
Electric 740 245-9633
& Experience Pay RN Daytime
Carpet and lJphOistery Cleaned
without Steam or Absorbent
Ccmpounds Soapleas Anti Re
soil Detergents used exclusive
ly Safe for all tab ca Fast dry
!ng ( 1 2 hours) Eliminates ov11u
wetting Guaranteed Work Call
Fo sale t4JC65 1984 Carolina
Mob Ia Home ask ng $3000 ca 1
740 992 2136 and ask for Sheila
We Buy Land 30 500 Acres
&:Pan Time Wllh Shift Qillttorlllal
P!rlence Poy .011ered STNA 1 All
Shfts Apply SAM -430~M
BQ0-383 6862
1985 14x65 II 2 Bedr ooms CIA
Fu nace New Appliances Excel
lent ConditiOn! 740 446 2751
0221
Poe Uon Part TlnMI Ex
Low Interest Rates For 1st T1me
Buyers L mlted Time Ava table
Wanted To Buy 3 Bedroom
Home Good Condition On 1
Acre Lot Or More 740 24~9633
(800)-820 43S3
S e~perv aor
(304)895-3167
360
1990 Clayton 2 Bedrooms A/C
New Carpet All Electri c May
Stay On Rented LOI 740 44 1
Profe11lonal
Service•
2 Bedroom Rt 87 big I an t
porch flrep ace free lot ren t
SB 000 OBO (304)675 3123 or
Amazing
5 Bedrooms 2
1/2 baths over 2 000 sq ft fo r
tess than S400 mo Free De11ve ry
& Set 1 800 948 5678
VENDING Lazy Persons Dream
Few Houra • Great In co me
Priced To Sell Free Brochure
Scenic Hilla Has Saveral Posl
tt&na Available LPN • Full Time
1997 16x80 3BR 2 Baths Gar
den Tub CA 8x10 Bu ldlng on
1888 736 3332
3 Bedroom built In kitchen DR
bath & launcry Mid 30 s
On~
1994 14x70 Sunsh ne 3 Bed
rooms 2 Baths Blue Carpet W/
D CIA $15500 MustBoMo'IBdl
Wheels Are Avallab e 937 379
4015 leave Message
renllld lol (304)675-4871
74().992 5907
(Careers C ose To Home) Ca 1
A 64 Bed Hospital And Nursing
Fac tty l oca ted In SOutheastern
Ohlo Has An lmmedllte Open1ng
~!<> A D~rector Of Pharmacy Cur
r;enuy Thi s Cendidaltt Would
i ovlde Serv1 ces In Inpatient
l:ll ome Health Behaviors Health
~mt Long Term Care Eme gency
Oepartment And Outpatient Cl n
fi;s Sa ary $65 000 (Nogotablo)
~hl o L cense Ae~u lred Manage
t'fltnt Experience Preferred Send
Resume To Oak H1i Community
Medical Center Atten!lon Human
eesources 350 Charlotte Ave
que Oak Hill OH 45656
Does Your House S d ng Deck
or Or veway need a clean ng' II
so Pressure Washing Is the an
swerl Call Clearly Clean at
(30 4)67!5 4040 lor e. F ea Ea
320 Mobile Homes
for Sala
Sunday, June 6, 1999
Audrey F; Canaday, Broker
Ronald K. Canaday, Broker
Mary P Floyd, Asaoclate
RACINE This Is An Absolutely Lovely 2 Story
Frame Home 9 rooms 4 to 5 bedrooms ~II
att c 1 1/2 baths and open foyer AuthantiC
slatrcase w th hardwood flooring throughout
home w1th so me carpetmg
Enclosed sun
room back porch kllchen IMng and d ntng
room Full basement w1th 3 rooms Cement
walks paved park1ng area block garage With
attached carports Large double lol No
problems ASKING $85 000
~~~~t~~r.
FAIRVIEW
BRICK RANCH IN
PRICE JUST REDUCED BETTER HURRY
ONE IT IS PRICED TO SELL FASTI
IF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR A COMFORTABLE
TWO STORY HOME IN A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY
SETTING WE .jUST LISTED ONE! 3 BEDROOMS 2
BATHS FORMAL DINING ROOM SCREENED
PORCH BETTER CALL SOON THE PRICE IS
$59 00011
TWO VACANT LOTS FOR SALE !N THE CITY OF
GALLIPOLIS EACH LOT IS 40 X t 50 $10 000
EACH OR PURCHASE BOTH LOTS FOR $111,500 00
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
PORTLAND· Meigs County Newest
SubdiVISIOn BUFFINGTON LANDING is an
executive oubdtvislon designed for horse 1~'MIER•OY·
lovers You won1 bal1eve1he futures Accaos 11
Rtver 'v1ew out of high water
to the beaut ful Oh10 for boal lovers rldmg
1 2 bedrooms bath llv1ng room
ring picnic shelter tiding trails a~d much
kitchen basement and sitting porch
more Certain restrictiOns apply Call Today for
$221000
lnlorma110n lot pnces and acreage vary
l8l:w<ding to lhe partiCUlar amentllas
RACINE All Set Up and Ready To Move lntoll
Two bedrooms new pa nt lns1de new roof oo
GALLIPOLIS SR 141 Fixer Uppar This 3 porch new carpet new eloctrlc hot wator
bedroom one balh needs TLC and • heater roof newly coated Front decl< 14 x 110
Handyman Kitchen l1v ng room lu ll older unit m Vary Good Cond1toon1 ASKING
basement with a fintahed fam11y room Oeck 18 500
and yard space 952± sq ft plus lhe
basemsnt F A N G heat Laundry room
Needs work ASKING
a
�•
Page 06 e . . uuhgtlt--Jiaa:tbtd
110 Fwm Equipment
Llvwtock
630
lloon 18 Ft Goo11 Neck Cattle Fo< selo 1892 reglotered Sutlolk
-
u. Nowl7-3127
Ram S150 19S9 Bprtng Ram
S100 allo Spring lambs roady lor
bulchorlng 740-948-2008
Farm Tractor Ford 2000 For
... 000 740.446 3159 740 446
Pomeroy • Middleport e Gallipolis, OH • Po t Pleaunt, WV
710
710
Autoe for Sale
t 990 Cougar high mile I runa
great looks good V 6 $21 00
740-949-2836 or 740 94g..2045
7<10-286-5.195
1991 Dodge Spirit very good
Condition! Locally Owned!
13 000 00 (7 401 446 1543 Aller
600pm
2780
Percheron Mare Reglslered 3
1991 F1rebird TTop Like New
Fergu1on 30 Good Shape 740
Year Old Trained Harneas &
$3 000 608-<7~1181
·~
Farman Cub tractor with rebuilt
Out&tandlng 4ngus And Chian
gua Sui 1 Reaeonably Prtced
State Run Farma Jackaon Ohio
motor Includes mowing machine
& cuiUYitara $1800 740 742
36&-8721
Cat 553 Sheep Foot Roller
$31 000 Cal 215 Track Hoe
$31 000 45ft Parlllrarler $1 800
16ft Trent Box $3 000 2 000 Gal
ton Water Tank $800 oo 427
Chevy Truck Motor $750 00
Milt SIMt Buma Pipe Vlbrat
lng T - fill 416 Cat Hoe Water
Pumps 18ft Trent Foot $3 000 00
(7401 643 0122 6 00 4 00 alter
5 00 (7401-&43 2918
~eg l s tered
1991 Ford Taurus 86 000 miles
Excellent Condition $2500 Firm
1304)67~5 altar 4PM
640
1994 Probe auto amnm cassette
Ice cold air runs excel ent V 8
pd pw body excellent condition
llmousin Bulls Red
Black Polled 9 Months To 2
'Nar5 70-367 7600
Hay
& Grain
4 good tires $1495
Square Bales ol Hay For Sale
1304)675-,.,72
1991 Toyota Tercel 4 ap runs
excellent gas saver body good
condiHon 4 good tires 1150
TRANSPORTATION
M&J Auto
740-368-9693 0174Q.742-4510
~ Cutter 9 Ft 3 PI Hitch Oou
lilt AI A Rale 740-3677600
~rol lc
hose making setup w1th
cutoff saw hose crimping ma
chln1 with large sect on ot cr mp
ond & hose & adapters 160313669436
Large aasortment of bolts &
~ 18031366-9436
New Holland 258 Hay Ra
Holland 477 Hay Bmd 64
New
Ford
Tractor Set Cu tlvators s ck e
Bar Mower For Farman Cub 740..
448-ns7
Slonogo Bullcltll &poco
30'x40'x8 Painted Steel Sid ng
Sleet Roofing 15118
Irick door 3' wa k door $6 888
Eteetedl Iron Horse Bu Ide s 1
(800)-352 1045
Wizard 18HP Garde n Tracktor
$600 351 Windsor Moto $300
l(lng Wood & r.oa l Slove $150
13041695-3076
See The New John Deere 200
S.rles Sk d Steer loaders 1 5%
JOC Flnanclna" Carmichaels
Farm & Lawn Inc I 80 0 594
1111 Gallpo ~ OH We DellveN
630
710
Livestock
9 Horses 5 Paints 2 Sorrells 2
Studs P Ices Slart At $450 740
44&-4110
1948 Fo d 2 Doors II 8 Chevy
Engine Sl 400 740-258-1203
1810 ltiOCAR8 FROM$500
Po lice Impounds And Tax
Aepo s For Listings Ca I I 800
3111-3323 Ext 4420
1986 Buk:k Skylor1< PS PB PW 4
Doors $8,., 740-446-9726
1986 Dodge Colt 4 door auto
$750 00 080 17401256-9220
1988 Ssp & 1992 Pontiac Le
Man& Atuo 1978 Toyota Stalion
Wagon All runs Go01111740144t
1033 after 6 00 (740) 367 0514
Leave Message!
1988 Mercury Atl Wheel Orve 4
Doors Automal c Nice Fam 1y Or
WOrlt Car $1 800 740 379 2566
s
1998 Grand Cherokle Laredo 4
WD PW PL Overhead Console
New Tires Good Condition
50 000 Milos $18 600 740 245
9008
11197 Ford Explorer XLT Loaded
28 ooo t..t les Bat Fact Warr Ex
cellent Cond lion Price Reducedll
740-448-&191
11197 Grand Am GT wlllta ,., 000
miles $10 500 740-949-1701
1998 Cavalier Z24 PW PL PS
Keyless Entry CD Player Aulom
Teal Graen
14 800 Mllea
$9 500 00 740-256-1011
1998 N ssan 200SX 19 ooo
M tes $11 900 740-379-2796
•
HOG SHOOT
' SLUGS&
BUCKSHOTS
Forked Run
Sportsman Club
June 6th - 1 pm
Half of proceeds go
to Shriner's Crippled
1: Burned Chlldren
Fully
loadedl Price Reduced to
122 500 00 Great Graduallon
G ftll (740)448-.4648
2 C1r1 1988 Chevy Corsica
loOkl & runs great $1500 1881
Ctlovy Coralca auto lie AM/FM
Cau looks & runt great 52800
(304)675-2949
C}/~
<lt
For Bate or Tiade 1988 Plymouth
Reliant Auto AIC (7401 446
95&4
Oh o Valley Bank w 1 Offer For
Sale By Public Auction A 1957
Wlllys Truck 1811766 & A 1981
Sportscar 1101971 At 10 00 AM
On 6/12/99 AI The OVB Annex
143 Third Avenua GeJIIpolla OH
Sold To Hlghea1 Bidder 'As Is
Wh
..., ere Ia Wllhou I Expresse~.~• 0 r
720
1986 Chevy Utility Van Auto
$1500 1304)675-8693
1990 Nlasan 4l4 4 Cylinder 5
Speed New Whatll On 31•
Tkeo Run& Great 740-25HI60
Mark Ill
Loaded
1304)675-2949
$5700
1993 Chev Pick Up Short Sod
4•4 Excllllnt Condition Rllall
Value $13 800 Ask ng 111 900
74C)-.148..7729
1995 Ford Ranger 5 Speed Air
A"/F" S
m m
IOriO With 57 000
Milas At king $9 500 UO 37911270
Truclie for Sale
1973 Chevy Truck 8 cyt auto
pointed
$1 000
utility bed
ru (~In:!-~
ns great
1978 Ford F 150 4•• 109 000
Actual Miles Average condition!
(740)-44&4053
Ohio Volley Bank W II Olfer For
Sale By Publ c Auction A 1986
Chryaler New Yorker 11•1257 At
10 00 AM On 6/5/99 AI Tho
OVB Annex 143 Third Avenue
Gallipolis OH Sold To Hlgholl
Bidder AI Is Where IS Without
Expressed Or Impled Warrany &
Moy Be Sean By Coiling The Col
lecllon Dept At740 441 1036
0VB Reserves The R ght To Ac
capt /ReJe ct Any & All Bids &
Withdraw llama From Sale Prior
To Sale Terms Of Sale CASH
1987 Ford F 700 With 54 HI
*
Branch Office
23 Locust St
Gallipolis Ohro
45631
1
1994 Ford Ranger XlT 6BK
Milos AC AM/FM Cauollo
$8000 OBO Must SOIII740-446-
IIIII Six lott In Walters Htll Subdlvlston
ukforl2018
Call today
We are • • glad to help you 1111 or buy property
Rlnl81 property Ia 1110 .,.lllble Give ut I cell at
750
1995 Honda Shadow Ace 11 oo
CC 2800 Mllul Garage Kept!
Like New Many Extrasl {740)
388-8972
Molor Bu d In 1ump pump
$2 300 (304)675-38e2
Bus Tracker TadPole
1994
14FI w/Fiah Finder 8HP Mer
cury & Trolllngt..totor w/Tralter
used very IIIII& $3 500 1304)6751731
Boats & Motors
for Sale
I 994 24 fl Pontoon Boat w/Porta
Pottle Excellent shape tow
hours SHOO (3041875 6858 af
1989 KlngOuad ••• ATV LOll
than 200 ml111 Suzuki $3 500
1304)675'8888 Aftar8PM
ter 6PM
1996 Marada Sport I 16Ft Open
B'ow 3 OL Mercrulser Alpha 1 11
0 In The Water 6 Times like
New Many E:ctrasl Sl 1 700 740
245-9391
19 112Ft Saaray 110 HI? In
board outboard EZ Load Trailer
River camps te tor tent and dock
IIIJ for ~oat with water cement
patios 740-992 5956
7
0
Auto Parte &
Acceeeorlea
e-mell us for Information on our lllltlnge
RUSSEU D WOOD BROKER
446 4618
a~
VIRGINIA SMITH 8ROKER ..•...,. ....,,. .. ~444~8HIIIIIDIIOI
EUNICE NIEHM1 ..•••...•• .,.......,. .................. 11187
. . .112011
Engines All Types Access
c~
NEW LISTING! MOVE IN
AND RELAX to this almoill
new comfortable ranch with
covered
front
porch
Oversized kitchen with loll of
cabinet apace formal dining
area that leads 10 rear patio
through atrium doors 3
bedrooms 2 full baths 2 car
attached garage t 5 acre lot
~~~out
ot town & wanta
A
CREDIT oll1100 00 10
apply at cloalna This one lo]uat
like NEW 4 Bdrma 3 balhs
Sma~ living rm large k11chen
w/Oak cabinets 2 bedrms on the
flrsr floor 2 on second fu I dMded
basement decorated In Early
American Charm Located In
PICTURESQUE opol In Rio
Grande area 2 Ao MIL OWner
Will Nogotllle S188 1100.
13012 RIO GRANDE VICINIT'I:
Huge 2
home
with overhead storage Newly
installed Satellite system
Art stlcally landscaped lawn with
many uees and Rock Gardens 5
ACRES MIL Exper ence the
bedrooms
baths
krl
Luxury Virginia 446-6806
.
.
. 1:1'~
, --- ;II~.
Fam
LISTEN OWNERS SAID
THEY ARE MOVING •
WANT THIS HOME SOLO
LIKE NOWI One look at
this ranch style home and
this large well manlc~red lot
will sell youl 3 Bedrooms 2
full baths large liVIng room
dining area & kitchen combo
Detached garages
Too
much to mention
Call at
once! Your offer might buy
I I
rms Patio
446 6806
117
hospi1al
Waler gas sewer
P1necrest Nurs ng
II aC..a close to new Fwy
,.- I
13025 IT S A PERSONAUTV
PLACE WITH AN AWESOME
VIEW OF THE OHIO RIVER
1711 SR 7 SOUTH ON THE
RIVER EDGE Spring Summer
Winter or Fall wil be most
enjoyable living here 26 x28
Great RrJl
Formal Entry
w/Parquet hoora living rm drnlng
rm Equ pped kl1 ls1floor bath &
bedrm Deck w/Hot Tub Carport
fOl' entertainment 3 bedrms up
Ba.sement Wrap front porch
anached 2 car garage Plus a
24 IC44 garage apartment 3 2n
acres more or MtSS Floating dock
wJjet ek
Sateltte MAKE
li~E
LIVING
CaU
SMITH 448 6806
UP
WITH A SMILE and have a groat
day 1v1ng n a lovely suburban
home Enjoy outside living loo
Fishing boating Ice okstlng &
garden Formal entry living rm
& Dining rm Great rm with
fireplace spiral staircase and
windows from the floor to the
ceiling
Lower
level
entertainment rm 3 deckl 2 car
garage
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION! Juot one
our
exclusive offering•
'
,,...-': I
.
•
I
t
i
,,
I
-·-
·~
•
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121111 WOODEO 11 Ac m/1
Located In the c~ on a
quiet dead end St 4 bedrms 2
1/2 baths 8 rooms very lg LA
Th s home can accommodate 2
fam l1es Extra large lot VLS
448-6600
COUNTRY GENTLEMEN
value for someone need ng plenty
ot space 4 large BRa 3 baths
LR formal OR k t wlbuin in BBO
Ful basement w{dlvlded rms 2
wood buming FPs central a r
large garage
Ma~
about o1hero too? Virginia
6808
36 acres rnJI
Mineral right&
PRIVATE
LOCATION Approx 2 500 aq ft
S13e 100 Vlrglnle «e-6808
Me 000
LIKE YOUR PRIVACY?
Then this Is a definite
find approx 25 acree come
with thla brick t 1/2 story
home with lui baaement wlth
extra apece 2 Full baths 3
4 bedrooms large detached
garage plus mlac sheds
Pasture (and that Is fenced
Call todayl f10B3
Located on Kemper
Hollow Ad 1998 Mobile home 3
bodnne 2 balh& Hea1 Pump &
C A GoOd windows and many
e>Ctras on this custom bu tt unit
... 000 VLS 44fHI806
11- WHIT1! liD Loll Reduced
for Spring Sale 6 8 Ac mJI
Rolling countryside 1o build a new
homo with a Groat View
$24 100.00 VI.S 446-11808
1873 Old end BuMdlngo
located on 117 ocroo more or
,....
Wa1et Sewer l Gas
available
Can be used for
development
13338 CHESHIRE LOT 55 N
Owner will
Third
12115 YOU MIGHT BE
OVERLOOKING THE BE&TI All
br ck ranch 3/4 bedrma 2 1/2
bath& formal LR & DR fam rm
2/lg windows Loeda of cabinets
& 91orage
Full divided
basement 2 woodburn ng
f replaces fenced yard gar &
carport attic storage 1 Ac mJI
f ronting on the beautiful Ohio
River City schools & very close
to town vts 446-6806
13011 PRICE REDUCED
$81,000 cnanco to buy a iollely
home & just what you have been
for
bedrm
MOVE INTO IMMEDIATELY!
Extra nice 3 bedroom 2 bath
home with easy to maintain
lawn
Covered rear deck
large detached garage
Newer carpeting & more
Start
packing
today $53,500 00 1101111
LIKE
SOME
EXTRA
INCOME TO HELP MAKE
YOUR MTG PAYMENT.?
Then pick up the phone and
call to see this almost new
home just a few minutes of
town You will be lmpre888d
with this home Large famUy
room living room dining
kitchen 3 bedrooms 2 full
baths & lots of 8xtrae
Included Collect the rental
Income off the garage
apartment Included Call for
details 11085
$4,500 00 LOT LISTING
being approx 59x114 with
frontage along Raccoon
Creek
Call for more
Information 11075
CHECK OUT THIS PRICE
$47,800.001 Hard to believe
this terrifiC buyl Ranch with
3 bedrooms mce lawn that
has fencing
Living room
wUh L shaped dining area &
kitchen combination Super
1811
I
3
bedroom 2 bath home living
room dining kUchen Large
wrap around deck All this
and more situated at 278
Debbre Drive close. &
convenient to
&
I to
lmprovemente
CIC
larS!Im
mobile home rop.o~ and mort For
''" tltlmltt call Chat
992
8323
1980 31 Coechmen lriVIIIratler
real good condition S5 ooo 740
992 5561
1986 Scamper Slide-In For 8 Full
Size Pick Up Crank Up Model
lea Bo' Stovo Sink Sllopt 3 4
General Home Me n
tentnce Painting vlnvt 1 ding
carpentry doors winctowa bathl
trice Carpentry Porches Tralie
Stl Ups And Air Condit on ng
Also Maintenance 740 U1
1401
r•o
~~~----------~~
Homt!
Blackburn Realty
lmprove~nente
M&A Gene al Contracting Eltc
Rlfo I R-Ung & Now Homos
50 yea r• exp•rience Free nil
mates 7-40 1•2 3l15 7-40 753
3711
::Jot!-
840 Electric al and
514
Refrlg~aretlon
llllnbow BuNderl
Livlngacon 1 Basement Water ,Bu ld new or repa ir old no job
Proofing all baumant repairs
too small or arge Major credit
Residenll.ll or contmercl.ll winng
done free estlmatu 1 tatlma cards
tWI/029582
Call
new service or rtpalrs Master L1
I
12
J b
1 (~"58 1049 BP 1528-8092
cens ed elect I an Ridtnou
guaran 18
yra on
exper
~r
Eiectr cal WV000308 304 675
~ence~~~304~~~~38e~7========J_-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __j~l~7~~----
1993 27 lnnabruck Good Condl
tlon S7 500 Negollabtt With
30
199e lnnsbruek Fifth WhHI 26
Self Contained with tilde out
condl11on
114 500
Good
1304)675-2339
Investors Ent ep enau s Buodno:ss
Hunters
He e s a golden
opportunity Motel located on SA
160 between Holzer and town Is
perfect fo several different uses
Rev tal ze it ana continue using II
SERV ICES
as a mote make ~ into a m ni mall
convert it nto apartments
Home
App:ro• . 4 acres are included
expand t 4 rooms
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional I tetlme guarantee
Local referenc11 furnished Es
tabll"""' 1975 Call 24 Hra (7401
446 0870 I 800 287 0576 Rog
era Waterproofing
Appliance Parts An Service All
Name BrA'lds Ova 5 Ye111 Ex
perlent. "I Wo Ju1ranteed
French City M
g 7~0 4~6
baths
24 x28
family
rm
lnground pool BIICk1op driveway
also eXIra 101 with new eeptlc
water tap &.electric Call
apartment or omce apace etc on
the 1econd floor
separate utilities
cemral air 2
!lfl!lOintment
2 batho
new roof
Make an
pole
ga~age
The comer
location would mll1e a greal
commercial ahe Owner will
consider your offer! Call to
see this one today! 110118
REDUCED • •000 00 18
THE NEW PRICI! I'OR
THIS NEAT HOUSE that Is
full of hiltory
Loll of
updating toyer lYing room
dining kitchen den
8
bedrooms 2 full bathl All
cedar lined cloHta 2 car
garage & loadll more
11041
13M2
YOUR
bldroome 2 bl1hl
ehaped counter
~ulppoel kllcnan
fireplace In the Great
You 11 be 1urprlaed at the tow
price Owner wanllla quick ..1e
Located 855 Porter Rd
NI,IOII.OO.
t$344 COMMERCIAL LOT I
IUIINESI Locale<! on E..lem
Avo
Great Opporlunllyl
1he comer lot with or
•
'
Mid-Ohio
BNuttful Ntw 4 Btclroom Home
For Bale Located In Green Twp
Truck Driver Training
M-E l'ltllings & 1111ltlllds.
·'1~,.,.,
18111 Ho•re'ir
11
_
•I
cion to Green Elementary this
outstanding home 1 perfect fo the
growing family who demands
quality Shueted on appro~ 4
acres this home offers a very
useable floor plan w1th lots of
amen ties Beaut ful ash wocxlwork
throughout along with custom oak
kitchen will enhan ce your
enjoyment 4 BAs tam ly room
den large upstairs rec room
formal d nlng room 3 1/2 baths
oversized 3 car garage concrete
drive and much much more The
no expense du ng
cor1str;u~i[O_r!:_ Come- see to r
kt037 A Groat Location
Low Maintenance and a
Manicured Setting
compliment th s 3 BR 1
BA br ck ranch Located on a
lev~! corner lot JUSt m nutes
from Holzer Mad cal Center
Th s home offe s a qu et
country sen ng close to worll;
shopping school & play
W th centra l heat and a1r t'vYO
op'en porches and a two
gara ge
With
storage area
t s a mus.l
at $92 000
Ca I for
addrtronal detarls and
locatlon
T1lk ng about thle home dote
not c~ o It juatlca You really need
to SI ~Je t for you self Beaut fu l y
remt: de ed throughout t~ ts cozy
ra nc ~n offe rs formal entry I v ng
room and dimng room arge tam ly
roo1 n 3 bedrooms & 2 baths
wa Tl k tchen w th oak cab nets
anC ceramic t le floor 1 ca carport
lac rtted on 92 acre mJ Ready for
to move Into at a price of only
msulat on
w ndows
heat
pump a,nd roof Ownershtp
never looked so good
Centrally l oca ted near
Rodney call now fo yo ur
weekend v ew ng $58 900
~~::~:~!~.,';~!' Property
Property *
16
I(
MIL Localed al the
runct:rrn ol SA 35 and SA
near A o Grande Oh to
#1029 Well maintai ned 4
BR one bath
1 5 story
home offers a peaceful
sell ng n the Vrllage of Rro
Grande Extras nclude a
full basement with one car
garage hardwood lloors and
beaullu l hardwood tn m
throughout All Situated on a
large corner lot $79 900
I heehlre/ Kygar area on
-~-
--~
-..
.
Quellly Living! Owners are
11035 NEW LISTING!
Finally an AFFORDABLE
SPACIOUS 4 BEDROOM
RANCH HOME w/ I 1/ 2
ba1hs
t.arg e k Ieha n OR
LA utility room slorage
10om
Covered wood deck
overlooks fenced m back
yard Much more Hurry and
see th1s one I
moving out ol state and want I
sold! Very n ce 3 bedroom home
In a quailtyne ghborhood Very
I veable f ao plan nc udes eat In
•
l
k tchen thai Is open to a fam ly
room with a r rep ace fo rma
d nlng and formal liVIng rooms and
2 1/2 bathl 2 story colon ai
detlgn Ia attractive irlSide and out
Deck/patio and 2 car ga age
Priced IO Sell el $119 90011225
1
11017
Lot the
eound of a whlsperl ,ngl
brook relax you tn
REDUCED!
N D W
$58,00Q 00
GREEN
SCHOOL
DISTRICt: Motivated Seller
here 3 bedroom home
large living room 2 full
baths covered front porch
Kids will
and rear patio
keep cool this summer with
lhls above ground 24 pool
with nice deck I acre treed
lot Get quick po88esslonl
11078
FARM Ranch
with
23+ acres Acreage flat to
slightly rolling
Great for
pasture or crops Fencing
pond large 76 x78 barn 3
Bedroom ranch home Call
for complelellsUng 11080
84 ACRES MIL with hUnting
cabin & garage mostly all
wooded with approx 15
tillable ecres Private good
hunllng areal $55 000 00
11ot3
•
•
CHECK OUT THIS NI!W
PRICEI $85 aGO 00 Just
lowered price $4 000
Owner wants to sell
now agela18 3 4
bedrooms (2-3 bedrooms on
main level) living room
dining kitchen 2 baths &
laundry Detached garage
City lot being approx 40X150
& more CaM to view this one
11088
11001 3 bedroom 2 bath
unlbullt/moduJer home A 4
car detached garage and
attached 24K24 shop offers
the handy man plenty of
workmg room Bask m the
warmth o1the sun room year
r ound
ove r l ook ng
a
manict>red I
$811,800.00
V/ELLS RUN Approx 30 of wooded laod with a nice
P9nd free gas and two cfe8rad camping Illes Alto has a lOg
j:abln with an upper aleeplng area Very private
$31,500.00
•
iiJIDDLEPORT Rutland St Approx 2 25 acree of ground
w~h a 3 bedroom ranch and a full basement Hal a detached
~ 112 story garage vinyl aiding front porch & dect<
,
M7,000.00
NEW USTINGI 100 ACRES
11/L. CITY
jiACINE· .Approx. 1 aero WOoded lot and an older mobile
home with addition Haa had aome remodeling dona Alto
~as a place for two ot11er mobile hOmes shOuld you wont to
rent them out tor tha Income
SCHOOLS financing
to
qualified buyer! Several feet
of road frontage Acreage
borders Raccoon Creek
Approx 50 acres tillable
good fencing mineral rights
nice cleared wooded area
that would make a perfect
spot to build that new home
HURRY! 1!0112
LOCATION
LOCATIONII
POTENTIAL POTENTIAL
POTENTIAL II One look w II
conv1nce you thi S h'sto c 2
s1ory home located In th e
heart ol Gallipol s offers 3 4
bedrooms I bath I 0 foot
c e1lmgs
and hardwood
lloors The unrqu e hardwood
f repla ce man11es and large
storage area make
home a must see Step
the past at $65 000
Rlduoed to $37,00Q.OO
I
relocate and leave this gorgeous
cullom bu n home Over 5500 aq
ft of very nice I vlng space plus
ROUTE 33 • Here' a home that Ia walling for a lamtly It hal
~ bedrooms large lYing room full basement older garage
and cenlfal air Has a front porch and a rear deck with
_,prox 1 acre
over 6 acres and a pond for
outs de en1oyment 8 bedrooms 4
ful and 2 half baths 2 fully
equipped very mea kllcheno and
much much more Quality
construction Country atmoaphlfe
only 5 minutes from the hoapnal
end
I
3 car garage
Many more
for more
•
OWNER WILL CONSIDER
LAND CONTRACT! 12
Acre plus tract of land
MoetiY all level Situated SA
141 11078
LOOKING FOR A
~OOKING FOR A MOBILE HOME?
Here I a 1984
anslo~ that Ia 14x70 and has 2 bedrooma with loiS of
~t
LOT?
L.ol8 start at approx 1 6
acree to """' 2 acree
lllvlce
Public
water
available
Reetrlcted for
your protection $12,000 00
. , _ 11081
YOIIR
SUPER IICIIII
OI'FER MIGHT 8UY THIS
HOME .3-<1 bedrooms 2 full
baths family room with
French dOora that lead to
multi level deck perfect for
entertaining thle summer
Over 2 ICro8 C&ll to view
thla quality All American
Home lltluatad at Crew
Road 11040
#1 034 Live In One And Rent
The Other! W lh thiS 3 BR 2
BA two story home the
conven ence of n town I v1n
IS
BR 2 BA Home
Include central atr
roof arge back yard wit,;· tl.
16x32 lngorund Pool
w1thm mmutes of town
Located on B ttersweet Onve
near Ga!hpol s Its a must
see at S69 900
hard to beat Large fam ly
roo ms and an overs zed
k1tchen enr ch the coz ness of
th1s h star c home bUill 10
1928 and remodeled n 1974
Located nexl door s a cute
1 2 bedroom rental home that
can help pay the mortgage
Pr ced n the 50s Can today
lor addrtronal deta Is
#1038 NEAT AS A PINIIIII 3
BR 1 BA New S drng new
root new easy clean ng
w ndow 10/98 New carpet
wa 1 cover ng and htgh
eH c ency heat and a~r
system
IN ALL A SHORT
WALK TO CITY POOL &
PARK CALL CALL CALLI
$4680000
111016 MAKE
Owner wants this
If you are handy
thmgs up then tt'l s
1/2 story home could
dream home! thiS home.·~~!
a lot of poten1ral If you
look ng for a frx er upper
very reasonable pnce th1s
11 ~
55 5
Conlidlr any or all lhreel
SITE IN CHESTER VILLAGE
11077
COMMERCIAL
BUILOING 112 West Main
street
Pomeroy
$45 000 00 2 L..arge ealee
areas office area rettroom
loll of atorage area upatalra
and on main level Call lor
more Information 11084
pace Comes equipped wtth a alove and refrigerator Aleo
as a heat pump with central air
1 cealed d ect y across r omt he
IIACINE· A very nice mobile home wlth heat pump 2
rooma one bath large attached atorage building and
age Perlecl lor that busln- at home Has a large lot
rs very near boat ramp
( lly park and n exce lent
c ondltlon th a bu ld ng ts worth
1nvestlng 1n Wonderful remodeled
ntore area offering apro)( 1 140
uq tt p ua on ce area and an
udd tlonal 1 577 sq fl of storage
()r 'room to exp•nd
Upata~rs
•.500.00
t
,
tzO,OOOOO
~OMEROY
'
'
'r
garage security syattm e
IICf8ll more or lasa of land
2 lots combined lor one sUe
I
I
Location
1>eco ol downtown M18
New$38,000.00
•
.RIBTER ROAD- Juat Inside Athens Co Ia approx '7 acres
q1 secluded land Nice building site Some woodt aod eome
qleared Eleclrlc and water available
.12,000.00
..............................-
·
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841-2131
Won1 1811
......................... ~ .......... Me-~
Location
11partment Wlth living room offering
tleaut ful view of the pa k 1nd
r lve 2 bedrooms 1 bath eat In
. ,11chen .nd utll ty area Priced at
1•95 000 o w your t1me to own a
Uncoln DriVe A 1 112 story home that has
l)een completely remodeled and has 3 bedrooms one bath
41nlng room and a nice front allling porch Hu central air
and It seems as If It Is In the country Quiet and on a reed with
l~w traffic Great place for a family
I
38081 IALL RUN ROAD
Supar nice ranch homo lhll
II 2 yeara young
3
Bedrooms 2 full balha fuU
basement 2 car attached
1 oc•Uon
WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
( 740) 446-3644
E Mall AddreBB
a
"""""'UNIOV
wtseman@zoomr tel net
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GR I- 446-9555
Sonny
Oarnes 446·2707
Robert Bruce 446-0621
))
4 BR 3
In a pluah
Green selling Located IUSI
outside of town ThiS home
res des on 4 spaciOus lots
w1th an 10 ground pool
protected by a p vacy fence
wrth 1astefu lly landscaped
surroundmgs
One half .o1
the house is enhanced w1th a
spl l leve des1gn e)(pand ng
the total I v ng area to twa
levels The other ha lf oilers
an overs1zed d n ng and I vmg
room w th a co m p letel y
remodeled and equ pped
k tct en all located over you r
own be\sement work out room
and prtva te sauna
An
overs1zed attach ed two ca r
garage w1th a spac ous 30x3B
frame n1etal build ng rounds
out the features Call fa your
#1024 OWNERSHIP WITt! A
LOW
MAINTENANCE
PRICE Sta~ build ng equrty
1oday n th e 4 BR one BA
home Wrlh all new s drng &
GENERATION
GARAGE
READY FOR
Several extras
ho1s ts lifts a r
lrnmn'"''•"' and tools 3
sorv;r,• area w th large
and reta I floor room
I for deta Is
L.ane Modestly p iced anoh
n ce yard offers 3 bedrooms t 1/2
baths eat In kitchen llv ng
r oomand faml y room Detached 2
ar garage Excellent buy for a
1tarter home at $68 000 1205
•
f1CI88
Very nlcel 11070
bullntlll
740 441 llJl
Announcement•
•
•
'
742-3171
Thll r11noh home altuatacl
on opprox 8 75 has
had lots of care and Ia readY
lo move Into The home has
a carport n well as a large
Olu o 1o(>31 0994
evansmoo@zoomnet net
11032 Want to etart a Bod
and Breakfast or just live
like e King and Queen You
can w lh th s h1stor c two
story 20 room colon al home
BUilt w1th the French flavor of
our selllers
lh s 5 6
bedroom 4 bath home burllrn
the sp r~ng of 1853 offers a
large ~ne r lot In walktng
dlsta
of downto w n
Gallipo
Let the massrve
rooms take you back to a
lime when c~aflers leveled
floors by hand Large open
windows let cool spr ng arr
flow throughout and beaulful
hand crafted f replaces
g,aced each room Take a
step back n t1me and call
to day
l or
add lronal
n and locat1 on
HHcll 740-2-140
I
IDEALLY LOCATED &
EASY
ON
THE
POCKETBOOK Neat & tidy
ranch altueled w tHin a mile
of Holzer Hospital
Level
lawn 3 bedrooms 1 1/2
baths large living room
attached one car garage
Electric heat pump/central arr
conditioning
Low price
t83,800.0011087
Gulhpol1s,
?wt1~r.l
Real Eatate General
Cheryl Lemley
on
unique building and ftoral l
ehop
Purcha" building
equipment & 2 loll or buolneae
Inventory or Building and 2 loti
Newly llmodolod Ill brick bulkltng
on a comlf lot with 2 lola N1
Seco nd Ave
74 0 446 0008
MEIGS COUNTY
13028 OWNifl ANXIOUB TO
SELL.. Home & 5 acres more or
leo& $150 000 00 or wRh alllhe
adjoining land being 57 acrea
more or le.. Wooded and iollely
w lh trails
MAKE OFFER
Dol ghllul 4 bedroom homo 2
A /Moore Sroka(
°
$1 000 11194 Layton F fth Wheel
Travel Trailer S etps 6 AfC
Heat Bathroom Microwave Re
frlgerator Stove Oven Cedar
Clout Excellent Condition
$7 000 Both Units Are Non
Smokera 740-245-6271
Wday dasses Bto
Also
• Classes fGr boll! doiSA ond I U..
• Flnandna and lundtng available based on ellgill~
' '91" plaurnent on (lou Atralnilg'
Uclll!ld by lhe Ohio Dlpllrlmentol Highway Saftiy
Maritno Ohio 4S750
Conttld Ed Adams l 100-641 369S or (7f01
Ext 331
on lor alzel
3 Baths 4
bedrooms family room
kllchen living room 20 x25
living room with 16 ceiling
Full walk oul buement
double deck on front Needs
some flnlehtng work to eulle
your taste
2 Plus acre•
garage barn and morel
810
Home
Improvement•
Truck Tires 4 ea mounted on 15 7795
FQ(d Alms 2/4 Hub Caps off of
4•4 Ford $120 1304·::.>:::67:;:5-:;.;1~73::;1.;.......1-----
Owner willing to
work with you Give us an
offer on this nice 7 room log
home
2 Full baths 3
bedrooms full basement
central air
oversized
detached metal garage
Nice place to live Call lor
more Info Let owner help
with some financing
UVABLE $18,800 00
Small one story home 2
bedrooms living room
khchen bath At the edQe of
town Not a lot still available
In this price range! 11038
810
Jomts. 740 245-sen
Now gas tanko & body pariB c &
R Au to Ripley wv (304)372
39~"' 1 60Q.273-9329
. .
Home
Improvement•
To, Over 1o 000 Tranam sa ons
l
Coachman Motor
Home Dodge ChalliS N•w
Starter and Water H11ter
Equlppad with Roof Air Runa
good! $3 SOD (740)-245-5829 al
110
1979 19ft
810
2 5 Liter 4 Cylinder Chevy En
gi Oe With Transmission With
811; 000 Milos 1250 304 875
101'5
blgbend@eurekanet com
-
Campers &
MotorHomee
S&B Dao Wave Runner A 1 Con
dl n With Tralk!r 740-446-1012
Budga1 Pr ced Transm salons
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
115006
Wocxll.trnd In Morg~~n Twp., 8 4 acres more or le88 Call
lnformlllon 112018
Fully Drened 2 New Helmeta
$3 ooo OSO MolburV 12 Gauge
with Slug Barer Call Morning a
(740)-3117-D848
trailer livewell baltwell rOdiOCk
35HP Evln
rude Outboard Motor and Trot! ng
er built In gas tank
1995 GMC J mmy 4x4 Lots Of
Extraal Excellent Cond Honl Retail
Gourmet kitchen with Smiths
ro
Need a realdonUol lot In
Galltpois?
We have
something for you 112017
Broker Owned
done loll of chrome 110000 no
1111. 74Q.IM9.2812
JJmthu all"'"' jJndbute Page 01
Pomeroy • Middleport e Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
710
1~83 Glauport Baas Boat w/
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101
1100
custom built oak cabinets plus
work sland & Pantries EnJoy
nature from the SOlanum Formal
dining rm has a great view
Glass enclosed back porch First
ftoor laundry 4 bed'ms 3 baths
More ltving area n a t nlshed
baSement 2 car attached garage
,ecm
Be aggro . . lve and 111
your money work for you
with
thna
renttl
propertleol
t t 12 story
build ng contalmng 3 apts
also 12 x60 - 2 bedroom
mobrle home easy lo rent
OWNER MAY FINANCE
1980 FLH Harley Davklaon red
white & blue top and bottom ,,..
Boete l Motors
for Sale
1972 Glaatron 19 Foot 302 Ford
Powared Clean S3 500 740-44835\)5 740 245-9166
BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
1989 Chevy S 10 Pick Up
$2 295 00 Call (7401441 1136
Monday Friday
fireplace a so family and game
rm w/open gas log f replaces
OHIO 45631
1155
Motorcyclee
750
86 Model (304)61'5o<l622
Important
Delightful 3 bedroom
homo In a country setting
Gallipolis C1ty I Schools
Located on approx 1 acre
Csll for Information
We
would like to show It to you
740
1998 Honda Recon excellent
Shape (304~75-!W90
Ranger 740-44&- 1012
PRICE
REDUCTIONEXQUISITE OUAUTY IN THIS
SPACIOUS
14
RM
MASTERPIECE
Offering e
fonnal entry living room w/gas log
BEECH GROVE
ROAD
Looking tor a groat place
to ralae • family? Five
year old home with 3
bedrooms
2
baths
fireplace Yard rs approx
5 9 acres for lots of funl Lei
us show ~to
1159
O"lo Vollay Bonk Will Otter Fot
Sola By Public Auction A 1997
Yamaha VFM400F ATV f07101l
AI 10 00 AM on 6118/81 AI The
OVB Annex 143 Third Avenue
Gallipolis OH Solct To Hlg,•st
Bidder •As Is Where II WithOut
E•pro11ed Or Implied Warranty ~
Moy Be Seen By Ca~ng Tho Coltoe lion Dept At 740 441 1031
OVB RISIIVII Tho Righi To Accapl / RijOCI Any & All Bldl &
Withdrew Items From Sale PrJor
To Sale Terms Of Sale CASH
OR CERTIFIED CHECK
Motorcycle•
muatseei 110M
PER GAME
Claoolc ranch otyle, log
homo thot hao a touch of
on Interior decorator and
landocaper A retreat w1th
a large stone f replace 3 4
bedrooms
3 baths 2
krtchens finished basemen!
for entertarnrng Approx 5
acres wtlh a view of the
countrysrde
10 mmutes
from Holzer Chn c 1181
N Ford Wlndotor GL dark gr24 000 mttea ucallant cond~lon
740-742 3304
m/1 Conveniently located A
BINGO
If convenience and
comfort ero key to your
property choice consider
1hrs well cared for home
Comforts
Include
3
bedrooms 2 baths French
doors
deck
frnlshed
basement baY...li.Oies
oak~bt••PP,"!Wing
roo
floors NC
and ont porch One acre
more or le~ocate~ In
Gallrpolrs Cr
ools We
can give y u a tour on
request 11
7 40
Nt~ds~ ~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====:
&
BidsTo &Accept
Wl1hdraw
lloma
TheAllRight
/Reject
Any
From Sale Prior To Sale Terms
Of Sate CASH OR CERTIFIED
CHECK.
446-6806~'(B:,kk
Announcement
GALLIPOUS
730 Van• & 4-WDe
1987 1300cc Yamaha Venture
1991 C,evy Converalon Van
1971 Chevy Plcl Up 305 At
$2 000 Good COndition 740-441
1794
Implied Warranty & May Be Seen
By Calling The COllection Dept AI
740 441 103 s ove Reserves
f;/md
Allen C Wood Broker 446 4523
Ken Morgan Broker 446 0971
Jeanette Moore 256-1745
Patneta Ross
74()..446.1066 or 1-al0-894-1066
has 3
full basemen!
''"'""'';"" pool and rs
wtth central atr
Gallipolrs Call
Informal on 1166
$1500080740-448-2883
~.;;;.,
WOOD liEtiLTY, IN€
Greet
Road
your special touch to
fixer UPP'er w th 3
bedlrooms. 2 baths large
and kitchen You
move n nght away but
have to call ftrst
at $31 900 Broker
TYNiled. Ask for 1188
1984 Ford Bronco Automatic 4
Good Rubber
Wheel Drive
Ohio Valley link Will Ofler For
Salt By Public Auction A 11•8
Ford F 150 tA9008 AI 10 oo
A M on 6118/99 A1 The ova .o.nn-., 143 ntrd Avo Galllpolla
OH Sold To H•hest 8 ddtr •Aa
Is Where 11• Without ExpreiMd
Or Implied W-rronly & May ae
Seen By Cdlrlg Tho Collacllon
Dept AI 740 441 1036 0'18 Re
se vos Tho Rllj)lt To Accept/lie
Joel ~ny & AU l lda & Withdraw
Items From S.ale Prior To sa(•
Terms Of Sal• CASH OR CEFI
TIFifDCHECK.
8 ll'uek Toppor $125 1983 Oldl
118 $300 AI to 74Q-2M-1489
... ·-, -
IJ>~:::i:on~lo~~~~:
II<
Milchell
'
89 Buick Par~ ~venue Futlv
~quip Evaryl!llng workal WeU
Maintained wU•• Clf 132K
$2 800 00 080 1140)281-19011
I 998 POf'ttla c Trans Am
Real
32 WCUST STIIEET
730 Vane & 4-WO.
Sale
"
MON. & WED.
6:30P.M.
RUTLAND
POST 467
STAR BURST
$1,200.00
$50.00 OR MORE
Announcements
tf
Sunday, June 6,1999
_ _ _ _..:....!.:O:R:C:E:R:TI:FI:E:D:C:H:E:CK===::::....'.2V~a!!;lu~o~S:21Z8~8LOO
740-448 n29 Asking $14 600
2644 eves.
CU.SSDFIIEDSi
Autoe
Real Eetate General
1989 Ford Thunderbird 3 8 auto
sll¥er with gray nterlor 74 000
ml es a~r cru sa amltm cassette
good t res 11ery clean $2 700
740 992 1506 days 740 949
CLEAN HOUSE
WITH THE
30
Autoa for Sate
1987 Buck Century new brakes
needs fuel pwnp & battery asking
5500 call740 992-(1()75
a.,M~Jumo
$7900 1304)675-2338
710
Autoe for Sale
-
Sunday, June 6, 1999
Carolyn
NEIGHBORHOOD AD
Jl .c:ou.NniY SETTING CITY
CONVENIENCE L et th s 3
BR 2 Bath rersed ranch wrlh
eat m kitchen be a starting
place for you and your lam ly
Located rn Green Townsh p
near town th s home offers
over 1440 square feet of
hvlng space w11h one car
basement garage and \2x12
storage shed PLUS 20x24
Garage All on JUS1 under an
acre
Con 1 m1 ss your
opportun ly
for
home
ownershrp $60 000
11040 Living Large Close
To Town can be found In this
3 BR and A Bath bnck ranch
Covered w1th hardwood
fl oors tastefully accented
With hardwood tnm and
Increased hv ng space 1n a
ftntshed basement can all be
f o und
In
lown
EXTRA Storage Storage
Closets
Too nume rQus to
mention
Come see tor
yourself Call for a showing
tmmedlate Possession
#1020 PEACEFUL PARADISE- Watch life roll by In a newly burl!
tog home on lhe Ohio River Lo~a1ed In the ral!lxrng
of Syracuse 1h s ru stle 2 3 BR 2 bath home offers
eKtras rncl ud ng appro• mately 700 feet of wrap around
wrth Hot Tub to seat srx A stone hearth f replace
great room wrlh a loft day bed room overlook ng ts ~~~~:d~~:~~
m ss owning your own p1ece of the Oh10 call today for
details
W11sch 441·1007
Rita Wlsen 1an 446 9555
I
'
I
(
�Sunday, June 6, 1999
Pomeroy • Mlddlepmt • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
Thorough cooking can't kill toxins
SIFE chapter,
advisOr honored
during·· exposition
RIO GRANDE - A group of stu- have committed themselves to helpdents from the University of Rio ing SIFE grow and prosper.
Grande/Rio Grande Community Col"You forget about eight hour days
lege recently returned from an inter" and 40 hour weeks," Gust said.
national, competition with plenty of
Divens said the group received a
great memo.ries, two trophies for their lot more than awards at the competifinish and one member of the team tion , though. They received a lot of
itls~Ued in the organization 's inter- good ideas from other groups, made
nattonal hall of fame. .
a lot of friends and even got a few
· The students are members of the leads on internships and jobs after
Students In Free Enterprise (SIFE) college.
.
c.h~pter at Rio Grande and they par"It was the best career fair you'll
tl~tpated tn, the 1999 International ever see," Divens said. Business
flxposition in Kansas City after win- leaders served as judges and advisors
ning a regional comPetition earlier at the competition. and were very
this year.
accessible to the students, he added.
· ' At the international contest, the Many students got on the spot jol>'
students received the iunners-Lip tro- interviews with the business leaders
phy in their league and received and some left with job opportunities,
another award in the Success 2000 he added.
·
Competition at the international con- ·
The students also made friends
test.
with SIFE members frorn around
"I think it was the best presenta- America, as well as from countries
tion we've ever given." and SIFE such as Russia, Australia, Brazil,
President Tim Divens. He said the Mexico and Poland. The Rio Grande
students were pleased with how they students especially became friends
dtd , but they are already working to with many of the students from
do better next year.
Poland.
. SIFE advisor Jerry Gust said the
Divens said all of the students at
students were very close to making it the competition believe in free enterto the finals .this year and hope to prise and have a lot in common, so
advance in the competition next year. · it was easy for them all to get along.
To his surprise, Gust also received
He said the Rio Grande students
two awards at the competition. He are already-working on projects they
received a Champion of SIFE award will present at the competition next
and was inducted into the SIFE Hall year and recently spoke with the
of Fame.
Regional Economic Development
"1\:lidn't know that was coming," . Association. He is hoping· more stuGust said about the Hall of Fame dents will join the Rio Grande chapihduction. "I was nabbergasted."
ter next year... Divens said the group
· Gust has been Involved with SIFE is open to all students, not just busifor II years and even served on the ness students. He said students of all
national board that set up the criteria majors can get a lot out of the ·expefor the Hall of Fame. ·
nence.
"I had no idea I could ever qualiThe special recognition awards are
fy," Gust said. He said he was a lit- nice, Gust said, but he appreciates
tle embarrassed about the recogni- even more the frequent phone calls he
tion, but was also honored:
receives from fonner .students in
~·1 have to admit, it was kind of
SIFE telling him where they are in
nice," G~st said. 'The Ch;~mpion of their careers and how much SJFE has ·
SIFE award, he added, was given to helped them. ·
·
advisors and business partners who
.After record low prices~ hog
farmers now breaking even
KIRKLIN , Ind. (AP) - Hog
farmer Jay Hawley isn't ellactly
ecstatic lhese days, but for the first
time in nine months he C<Jn sell his
hogs for about what it costs to raise
them.
After enduring the worst hog price
crisis since the Great Depression,
Hawley and other hog fa1111ers hope
prices rise or at least remain stable so
they can erase debts incurred when
·the market collapsed last year.
.. "It's sad when you look at breakeven as beiJ!g good," Hawle:t said.
"The basic premise is you should
make money doing this."
Small and midsize family fanners
such as Hawley- who's been famiing hogs in Clinton County for 30 .
years - lost tens of thousands of dollars each during the low-price crisis.
Starved for profits, they now need '
to .pay overdue bills, repleni sh bank
balances and justify to themselves
and their families their continued toil
at one of farming 's dirtiest and toughest jobs.
· Purdue University economists
estimate that the crisis could have
robbed Indiana fanners of $300 million in net wonh when the final numbers are tallied up.
The price plunge struck · with a
vengeance at the end of last summer
knocking farm prices be low th~
break-even range of 35 cents to 40
cents a pound.·
Prices tumbled even furiher in
autumn, and in December they
dipped under I 0 cents a poun'd - a
record low if in nation is factored out.
Money-losing prices continued to
haunt farmers until this month when
prices edged back up to the breakeven price of 40 cents per pound.
Whether slaughter plants will continue paying those plices isn't clear.
Prices typically shoot up in May
because of a temporary lull in hog
shtpments as fanners are busy with
spnng planting.
·
Getting the crops in the ground
every spring . is critical for a hog
farmer, espectally tn these low-price
Urnes. Half of the corn Hawley raises is fed to his hqgs as a cheap, homegrown food source.
By BECKY COLLINS
EMPLOYEE OF THE MONTH
- Kimberly Follrod of Racine
was recently named emp·loyee of
the month for May at O'l!!leness
.Memorial Hospital In ;"hens.
She has been an eme•'f'gency
room nurse at the hospltatlslnce
1995. She Is the daughter •)f Jack
Follrod of Pomeroy, and S ue Clr·
cle Hager of Racine.
PLA results
Producers Livestock 1\1arket
report from Gallipolis for salt lS conducted on Wednesday, June 3.
Feeder Cattle.
200-300# St. $88-$100, Hf. $74$84, 300-400# St. $75-$92. Hf. $70$82 500-650# St. $71-$84 Hf. $65$74 650-800# St. $63-$72 Hf. $59$68,
Well Muscled/Fleshed $39-!~45;
Medium/Average $34-$38;
Thin/Light $25-$31; Bulls $45$53
Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $380-$575; Br ·ed
Cows $245-$590; Baby Calves $50$235; Goats $28-$56.
Upcoming specials:
Herd bull leasing progrlllll avai 1able. High quality Angus bulls. ,
Call the office at 446-9696.
heating of contaminated 'rood won 't
GALLIPOLIS - Have you ever prevent you from getting ill within
noticed as you are putting burgers on two to seven hours. Fortunately,
the grill that the ground beef looks symptoms of nausea. diarrhea and
and smells a little off? Will cooking muscle cramps are usually relatively
it kill any bacteria? After all, heat mild - although, even mild nausea
kills most of the bad stuff; right?
and diarrhea is no fun!
Well , partly right. Many types of
Other tollin-producing bacteria
food poisoning are caused by bacte- include Bacillus cereus and Clostridria that reproduce in the intestinal ium perfringens; the stomach ailtract and makes you sick to your ments they cause usually clear up
stomach. When thoroughly .cooked, within 24 hours. More serious are
the bacteria are killed and these . Clostridium botulinum - the organtypes shouldn't cause problems.
ism that causes botulism- and any
Unfortunately, other ty~s of food bacteria in the 'Vibrio species, includpoisoning are caused by toxins pro- ing the organism that causes choler!!.
duced by bacteria. The bacteria itself
Safe food-handling guidelines
might be kilied, but the toxins include:
remain. Most of .these toxins don't
Clean. Wash hands, utensils and
give you any sign of their presence- surfaces with hot, soapy water before,
the cooked food might look, smell during and after preparing·food. So,
·and taste perfectly nonnal. That's don't cut the watennelon on the same
why proper food-handling techniques cutting board that you trimmed the
are so important.
steaks unless you wash it before cutOne of the most common types of •ing the melon. Always change
toltin-producing bacteria is Staphy- 1 ~nives too.
lococcus aureus. Almost half of the \ Separate. Keep raw meat, eggs,
pPpulation carries staph in their nose, poultry and seafood and their juices
throat or skin. This type ·of food- / aw11y from ready to-eat foods. Nevborne disease can usually be traced to · cr place cooked food on an unwashed
an infected person handling already- ipJate that previously held raw meat,
cooked food that's kept at room tern- ·eggs, poultry or seafood. So, . don't
perature for several hours after.being put the cooked burgers on the same
contaminated. Even a thorough re-_ plate that you carried the raw meat to
the grill. Use a paper plate, so you can'
throw away the contaminated one and
get a clean one, rinse the original
plate in warm, soapy water, or just get
a clean plate from the cupboard.
Cook. Cook foods to proper internal temperatures ·- t60 degrees for
ground meats and 165 for ground
poultry; at least 145 degrees for rare
steaks and roasts; and 180 degrees for
poultry. Use a thennometer to check
the food . This is especially rtue for
poultry, pork and ground meats. So,
that rare hamburger isn't a good idea.
Chill. Refrigerate perishables
within two hours, or less if the food
is kept someplace hot and humid. 1llc
best strategy when at a picnic or
cookout is to plan not to have leftovers. Take the amount of food
you'll eat atid decide to toss out what
few leftovers you may have.
(Becky Collins Ia Gallla Coun·
ty'a extension agent for family and
consumer sciences, Ohio State
University.)
Consumers' guide to what's in
food
·
NEW YORK (AP) - Labeling
requirements are not much use if
what they tell us remains a mystery.
A new guide aims to help the layperson read labels with better understanding.
Save Energy and Money with . Style
.
.
fi EII:IN
Atlanta Stove
-..., lit8d Ill Ollar
ACTIIW!
lnfrqred Hea~~r
. ....
,
Buy Where Service Is Guaranteed
.
This Heater Will Heat Up To 900 Square Feet
~\l
.•..'
""-ll"'·
\
o,lt9n CertHicatlon • Built-In ODS Pilot (Oxyg8n Depletion Sensor)
-ate-...
lllety • 99.9% efficient • Vent free • EMily "'-lied • Easy to oper·
continue to op8l'lll even if the
goes oft ·
Program participant
COOLVILLE- Lee's Framery
& Stitchery, 2731 Lottridge Road !,
Coolville, is a participant in thtl
·~Neat Stuff Automatic" program ot'
Honey Bee Creations, a company that
makes ceramic buttons for crossstitch designs.
Ea7h month, Lee's Framery &
·Stitchery receives a new graph and
pattern using Honey Bee's buttons.
The latest, for July, has a nag of cross
stitch, wirh a firecracker and stars of
buttons.
BOTTLE GAS
4 Locations To Serve You
Rutland, Ohio
The Plains, Ohio
1•800·837·8217
1·800•382~5657
. -STOVE
ATLA~·
Log•n. Ohio
Torch, Ohio
1·740·380·2831 .
1·740-667-01 00
•
.·Gallia County student will
major in industrial design
.
BIDWELL- Matt White, a 1999 graduate of River Valley High School,
has re~etved a Faculty Award Scholarship to attend the Columbus College
of An & Design .
. . The merit scholarship was awarded as a result of an an portfolio compeUtton held at the college, which was judged by a team of CCAD faculty members.
~hite Will begin his Studies this autumn and plans lO major in industria)
destgn. He ts the son of Steve and Linda White, 631 Ball Run Road, Bidwell, and was a student of an instructor Jan Safford.
Founded in 1879, the Columbus College of An & Design is one of the
oldest pnvate colleges of art in the country and has a full-time enrollment
of over· 1,200 students.
•
•
New opportunity available
n
'
(Continued from 01)
plete the application and mail it to the
address indicated at the bottom of the
fonn, ·(3) wait for a ·c·enification"
fonn, which ensures that you have
been approved to buy the item for
which you applied, (4) make the pur'chase by Oct. 15, 1999, if you have
not already (save receipt), (5) sign the
certification form and attach all
receipts and mail or deliver. it to the
Extension office, in care of Jennifer
Byrnes (this gotifies the certification ·
c9mmittee that an inspection for '
proof of purchase is needed prior. to
Nov. 15, 1999), (6) inspection will be
arranged, completing certification
and your reimbursement check will
follow.
The actual application is very
sjmple and the deadlines are very
strict. Only one application per
household· will be considered. Gallia
County led the !Jtate in the number of
.applications in the spring grant program. Producers are encouraged to
make the same showing with this
opportunity. Application approval
will be granted on a first-come, firstserve basis, so pick up your applicatiOns as soon as possible. For more
infonnation, please call the OSU
Extension office at 446-7007.
Ag news
Blue mold forecast - There is
blue mold in KENTUCKY. Confinned cases are less than 200 miles
from this area. Preventative spray
programs should begin immediately.
Please see the supplemental article on
the
Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Farm/Business Page for details about
current blue·mold outbreaks and recommended control practices.
Cattle and sheep producers Plan to attend the Stockman's
Research Review at the Jackson
Branch ofOARDC on June 7, beginning at 4 p.m. For more infonnation,
please call the Extension office. .
(Jennifer L.· Byrnes I• Gallla
County's extension agent for agrl·
culture and natural resources,
Ohio State Unlvarllty.)
•
•
e~t
•
mer1ca
.
•
•
rvg 1 n 1 a
iQQQ!
.,
.
;
Pleasan~·>Valley Hospital
;
.,
.
�
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06. June
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June 6, 1999
adkins
birchfield
brady
buck
calloway
cocks
harrison
mckinney
mithcell
plants