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                  <text>•,

TEMPo·.

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Clifty
·. Sisters watch
business grow

.Mirdl
Final Four preview

bmeytodle
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Ohio Valley Publis hing Co.

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Gallipolis • Pomeroy • Pl. Pleasant • April 1, 2001

•1.15

••

last day
"on job
~s May_ 1
BY KIVIN

•

Vol . 36, No . 7

Judge's

•

·-·

KEu.Y

nwo

Meigs is first Ohio
county to implement
~Oklahoma Model' ·
BY

T1MESSENTIN8.. STAFf

IRIAN J. REED

TlMES.SENTINEL STAfF

health · care in Meigs County wiU Mick Davenport, who is heading up
hold its first meeting later this the. committee, said the Oklahoma
month.
Model is specially designed for rural
The commitee, made up of a dozen communities, and addre~ses those
community, busipess and health que communities' unique health care
.leaders in Meigs . County, . will. meet concerns. ·
April 12· at Veterans Memorial Hos- · Meigs County will be the first
pita! to begin implementing the county it) Ohio to implement the
Oklahoma Model for health care.
plan, and Susan Isaac of the ·Institute
Meigs County Commissioner for Local Government and Regional

Development at Ohio University will
assist the committee in planning its
work, Davenport said.
The commitee wiU be charged
with evaluating health care needs of
the community, and to determine
what can be realistically achieved in
the community to meet those needs.
"This local committee will. 'sit ·

GALLIPOLIS - After
POMEROY -A local committee
more than 30 years in the
formed to institute. a 'new model for
Plelse ... Map.AI
legal profession - the last
eight as Gallia County
Common Pleas judge Joseph L. Cain is retiring.
Cain
submitted his
letter of ·
resignation to
Gov. Bob
Taft last
week.
His last
day on
the
bench will be May 1.
The judge will be moving
and having gone through ·the
to the Sacramento, Cali£,
building, we made the decision
area to join his wife, Sharon;
that it was imperative to move
and' two children. His- wife
people from the building as
•has been caring for an ailing
soon as possible:• Clarke said.
relative there for some time.
"We didn't go in there· and
Cain, a ~rry TownShip
IJy the seat of our pants' make
native, received hiS. law
BY ICE\IIN Kfu.y
this decision:· he 01dded .•
4egt:ce fivm ' Ohio State
TIMESSEN11N8.. STAFF
Clarke said helpiltg . Me ,.
. Uriivmity in 1970 and his
GALLIPOLIS - A state Home Health stalf move to a
career has taken him from
inspection team ~ expected to rlftw. Iocatio~ was to help preprivate practice to councy
be in Gallipolis next week to serve the business.
prosecutor, and then to
conduct an indepe'n dent
"We don't o::. :ed to lose
judge of two local coutts.
anafysis of structural damage in another business downtown;" "There are always mixed
the former Thomas Clothiers he said.
feelings about leaving;' Cain
building that was evacuated
The ·city has asked ·rhe state ·
said. "I have enj&lt;Jfed the
Thursday.
·
to dispatch an inspecti9n team
people and developed relaCity empl~es. firefighters , ro· Jook at the building, examtionshipS over the years. But. ·· NEW EQUIPMENT - PomeroY, Cbuncllmen VIctor Young Ill and 'John Musse~ examine one of
. ~d volunteers helped move ine the city's findin~ and cqn-· \..
the six new wooden plcnlq .tabJes :that was .recently pl~ced Inside the shelter house at · merchandise for the building's firm the building is unsafe.'
we also look at this as a new
'-• :
Pomeroy's' new. Waterworks ·Par'k on Ohlo.124. (Tony M. Leach photo)
chaUenge for the next stage
"Then the owner has to get
sole occupant, Medi Home
•.
of our lives."
Health, into the offices for- engineers and appropriate
"I've enjoyed the law very
merly occupied by the Gallia. people in there .to determine .
much;' he added. "The local
County Historical Society.
what needs to be done to proattorneys have made my'job
A
barricade
remained
in
teet
the public:· .Clarke said.
.
.
.
as a judge very -easy, ·and I
·front of the Thomas building, "We )Vant the buiJding to stay
thank them for their effotts
BY TONY M. LEAcH
received several new . picnic acre in size and 'surrounded by )
which
Gallipolis
Code fuere, but it has to be deterin working with the court."
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF
table~. barbecue grills and a rustic split-rail fence, has
Enforcement . Officer Don mined by the owtler what
After working as an assis-.·
OMEROY
heavy duty trash cans for the been under·construction since
McDade found to be "unsafe" should be done:•
tant Ohio attorney general,
Progress ... ~ ,.,.H'I ,_.·paric--.and that the equip10ent earJy 'last summer and is
and in "imminent danger of
In the interim, Clarke said
Cain opened a practice in
Porneroy's Water- installation will start soon.' ·
coUapse:•
. 'precautions are in place to
expected to be finished in
Gallipolis in the mid-1970s
works Park project
"We have already seeded the about four to six weeks.
• aased on that conclusion, minimalize risk.. .
with R,..ichard C. Roderick
. . is moving forward courty;:ud area and put down
If a wind storm threatens the
A walkway near the river- . City Manager E. V. Clarke Jr.
Jr. He was elected prosecu"now that new equipment for gravel for the park's entrance,"
of
the
area,
the city will be notified by
ordered
the
evacuation
front has yet to be constructed
' .
tor in 1976 and was in the
the park has arrived and prepa~ said Young. "We are now makstructure on the 300 block of 91 1 and the area around the
and three period.lights will be
'midst of his third term
rations for its installation final- ing· preparations to begin
Second Avenue.
building will be secured.
to
·
help
illuminate
.
the
instaUed
when he won election ~
ized.
.
pour~ several 6-by-8 foot
"S9inething ha~ to be done
"Due tp the ·possible danger
·
park, added Young.
judge of the ·Gallipolis
Councilmen · Victor Young concrete pads for the decoraabout it:' Said C larke.
of coUapse, if there is an indica"We are very anxious and
. Municipal Coutt in 198~.
III and John Musser, who are rive pfcn,ic tables and barbecue ·
" The . code enforcement tion of high wind, we have a
excited about the park's co"mco-coordinators of the project, . grills."' '
officer and a professional engi- - plan to block off the whole
neer reviewed the situation, area:· Clarke said.
The new .park,just over on~
said Friday that the village has
Piu............ AI
PIIIH . . . CIIn.AJ

Downtown

buildift still
bl
off
Sfilte team

to

inspect 'unscfe'
strntture

WateMtorks .Parlropening nearS

,

·Officials Weigh census . lllpad
By Mlc.w• CM11R
TIME5-SENTI~8.. STAFF

• '

POINT J,'LEASANT, W.Va.
As Mason County officials
learn the results of the 2000
census, the effect of the_nwnbers
are leaving them with questions.
Totals show Mason County's
,. popllhltion grew by 3 pen:ent to
25,957. The 1990 ~;ensus
showed a county population of
25,178.
Co\Ulty Commissioner Bob
Baird said he wa5 happy to see ..
ilie population fur the count)! as
a whole had irlcreased, but he is
not so pleased it dido't inctease
more. ,.
,
·~1 hope these figures help us
in our quest to have MasonCountY repJ;eSented as a single
,,
delegate district in the West Virginia House ofDelegares;• Baird
said. "I don't ·think the increase
will hurt our chances fur a sindelegate, but 1 don't know if
1 it will help." •
~.

gle

..

ul hope these figures
help us in our quest t'j
have Mason County
. represented in the
f*st' Virgit}ia House
.of Delegates. " ·

time how and if the drop in
population will effect the city's
'•
status.
· , Pleased with · the county's
. increase, Roach said "I feel like,
we all need to work together to ,
bring h\lsinesses into Mason
County so the population will ·
lob laird
continue to increase."
City council member Jim
Although the county experi- Wilson said the bOundaries of
enced an increase, Point Pleas- Point Pleasant do not allow for a
ant's I)&lt;&gt;Pulatipn declined ·7e2 lot of room to expand p~pula- ·
• •
pen:ent to 4,637' from 4,996 in cion:
"There
is just not a whole lot ·
1990.,
.'
MaYor John .Roach ~d he of area to grow;• he said "With
·believes the closing of businesses the 'current boundaries, areas •.
and layofiS in local industries · that are growing are l~d just
have affected the. city's popula- outside the city liJ'Ilit5. Boundary'
expansions or annexation could
tion the most.
At this point, Roach said he help the city grow.'' ·
has not seen information, other
"The decline in population is
that what appeared in Thursday's an indication of what iS here:'
Register, to determine more Wilson said. "There are not a lot
of the young adults corning
about the decline.
He said he' is ·unclear at -this hack here to raise their families:•

.)

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·Governor wants details
.on helping schools ·

Morning!
lprl... ahead
Don'I forgello 181 Your clock one
hour ahead lo ol&gt;aervo Dayllghl
Savings
Tlmo.

•

COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. tions include replacing teach.
.'
Bob Taft wants a bill overhaul- ers,_school dosin~ and sending
ing Ohio's proficiency test sys- in "intervention teams."
tern to provide more details on ·
"Discussions af!! under way
. how the state should pelp now betWeen our office and.
' · chroniQilly failing schools.
the Legislature with a goal of
As passed by the Senate this fine-tuning that ' passage,"
week, the bill incorporates Kellems said.
many of t~e 32 recommendaThe bill, SB 1, still must be
Inside today'~
tions made by Taft's C:omtnis- approved by the House. Hearsion for Student Success last. in~ begin Tuesday. '
'limo· jmtintl
year.
, Lawmakers, ,kept the bill
However the bill leaves it up somewhat vague, concerned
D2•7
to· the· state ·school board to · about applying a one-size-fits'Colila
lnurt recommend a plan "for inter- aU approach to schools, said
vening in and assisting sehool Robert Gardner, Senate edu'ldltpdtls
M
Dl . districts that centinue to c;~tion chairman.
MolltJ
decline."
''I'm not exacdy sure what
AS
Taft is concerned ·that the the governor is looking for, but
11·1 : measure didn't follow ,the we tried. to leave it somewhat ·
. stockt .
commission's recommenda- · open-ended so the departmen~
Dl
Cl·l · ~ tions closely enough in the could make decisions based on
Jwpo .
· area
of failing schools, · the dynanlics of the building in
•
spokesman Kevin Kellems said jeopardy," said Gardner, a
c 2001 Ohio IIIIey Publishing Co.
Friday. Those recommenda- R epublican fmm Madison.
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VALLEY BRIEFS

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HMCstap .t
GALLIPOLIS -

John

H.

Caldwell II, boiler operator

County EMS .apondcd t0 1&lt;4
calb for auisrance Friday,
bringing the toed m1mber of
runs for tbe mondno 323 and
962 on me )ar.
Ruus included tnnspons to
Holzer Medical ~nter li:om
!ubon · of Gallipolis, Gallia
County Senior Citiuns Center,Jacbon Esta~ and US. 35
'West. . .
.
RefuSal of tteaanent wu
noted on runs t&lt;1 •Ohio 7
South, Ohio 160, U.S. 35
West,Vale R~ Gallia County Jail and Scenic Hills ·Nursing Center.
Runs to me county jail and
Scenic Hills w.:ni cancelled. ·
A unit also made an emergency transport of the MtdFiight ~d wing crew frdtn
the Gallia~Meigs ·Regional
Airport to HMC an!l back to
the airpoit.

~

Sundlly, Aprll1

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~~c~;i!:; ~~;~-~t;.:!:~

Call· 'SWORDS'
for~our

40,\ 245 S7 2

Most people don't .
~eed nUISing homes.
As we age we oft.en

Divorce flied

just ne~d help with

certain things.

EMS

more often people just need help from time to time with
medications, meals or bathing.
·

Resourc.e officer sought fo,r_ Wahama

Residents here can live independently in homelike sur-.
r~&gt;Undings and still receive nursing support and other
services when they're .m?eded. Medication supervision
anq administ~ation; home' cooked meals, transportation,
outings, housekeeping, activities - t.he list of amenities
and services isn't endless, but it's very long.

BY MICHIL2 CAIITIII

the basic salary and benefits
·"It is a pleasure for the
·.for a certified fuU-time "town · ·administration ·to work in an
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. officer,
Mayor
George interagency effort to provide
- The Town of Mason, in Nichols said.
greater safety in our school
·"The grant program is the system:· Superintendent D~.
cooperation .with Wahama
High School and the Mason same as the one applied for by Larry Parsons said. "I applaud
County Board o( Education, the Mason County Sheriff's Mayor Nichols and the town
• is applying for ~ grant to put a Department to put two offi- · police ·force on ·recognizing
' Prevention Resource ·Officer cers in Point Pleasant High the area of concern .a nd
School and Middle -School, addressing it."
· in the Bend Area school.
•
•
Wahama Principal fbil
,; The gra"l, administered but it has a different funding
; through the Department of ·source," Nichols said. ~'The Goodnite said the added
security and preventative
; C~iminal Justice, would cover grant amount is $·17,700."
work the officer will do at
. _TIMES.SENTINEL STNT

6uubap-ttim~

6mtiuel

~~hama

is greatly

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DOnation has tolerance ·tag

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ap~reciat-

(IJIPUI).JIIl

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The Arthritis Foundation Is hostlno Q · Public Seminar on the
Treatment 8c. Manaoement. of OsteQporasls at Wync;,ate of,
Gallipolis onlt\onday, Aprll2~. at 6:30p.m. The Quest speaker will
be Dr. Arnold R. Penix, M.D. Dr. Penb;c .Is an Orthopedic Suroeon .
.at Holzer Hospital. ·
·
.
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::'..

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.·tl~~::.;";II;M;•·;•~·-~;~-~::::~:~~~~ll~~~~=~;~:: ~:::~:::~: ~: : ~=-~·: ~: ~: :~: :~: : :~:k:·:~J
19

Ell liN

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in
aU ways
possible, including·
withi;1
the schools.

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There Is no charoe for the seminar. Snacks and refreshments
wiU be serv~. l;or mqre Information, please contact the Arthritis
Foundation at 890-358-0380 or Wynoate at 740'."441-9633.

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300 Briarwood Drivt.' • Callipolis OH 45631

delays budget vote

f'

FREE DOOR PRIZES • PUBLIC WELCOME .

ow
n
TODAYII Sunday, Apr11 .1 ··
9:00-4:00 .

Holiday Inn, Kanauga, Ohio
10 Dealers to BUY and SELL
Including MTS Coin Shop of Gallipolis
'

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(oUacre matks 115 yearS

\ ..

outlines energy aid

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Taft nixeS funding proposal

· h·a irport a"ccO·rei ·

State' seeks ·suit
·a·IIIII1ssa1

tioftal Airpott.
·
.
Among changes from the original agreement, Cleveland will '
: purchase about 45 more acres of Brook Park than originally
COL'6MBUS (AP) _ The
t proposed, for a total oi 135 acresi.Cleveland ·now intends to state has asked an appeals court
I _purchase up to 31.4 homes in BrooK Park over Sel(en yea.rs.
to throw out a lawsuit filed by
Meanwhile, Cleveland has guaranteed that the adjacent .
,
_.
· 1 lnternation:ll Exposition Cen·
I ter, which holds conventions
'I and trade shows, will stand for
1
, 10 · years. Cleveland can' then
I choose to demolish it.
· j
As part of the original agree' ment worked ollt by Cleveland ·
Mayor Michael R. White . and
1 • Brook Park Mayor Thomas ].
' Coy~e Jr., the 350-acre NASA
Glenn Research Center, now
.mostly iQ Cleveland, would
. become part of Brook Park .in
2004 . .

Fire &amp; Water Damage Repair

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Group,fights
. challenge

'

. crNtiNNATI (AP) - A
. _ priva"te organization that sup"' port$ keeping ~hristmas as a
1 public holiday asked the U.S.
Supreme Co)lrt on Friday to
' rejeai a lawsuit chajl. enging its
- o.~·erva~ce by .f he. fClleral go.11r

I

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Hiah QualitY 'LaundrY ·&amp; DrY Cl·eanina
&lt;:

· ·ComPlete Clothina Care SPec.ialists

.There Is Still Time To Register
.For Spring Quarter ·_
· , Call Today!!
446-4367 :ot 1-800·2·1 4-0452

r

Galli . Ji5lftlf~

.

~, .~~reem!los~

.

, 1743 Centenary Road
Gallipolis, OH
Open Mon,..'i=rl 7:00 - 5:00; Sot. 8:00 - 1:00.

Spting Valley Rlaza •- Galllpc)Hs ,
,l'ill!~·
•

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,..--....WEBSiTE
JWWw.golllpollacareercollege.com
,
£mail · ,
gccCDgalllpolllcareercollega.com

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a child-support advocacy group that is seeking millions of dol~
Iars in back payments the state has \liithheld.
,
Attorney General Betty Mon~gomery ffied a motion with
the lOth Ohio District Court of Appeals this week to dismi~s
the lawsuit filed by the Association for Children for Enforce- ··
ment of Support for lack of jurisdiction.
ACES sued the' Ohio ;Department of Job and Family Ser- l
vices , this month. over the back pay.ments. The state has
atknowledged tha(Jit withheld about $6 million in the payments from noncustodial parents. ACES pegs the total closer to
$13 rtullion.
,
,
The state says the withheld money only involved ·back paym~ nts to custodial parents and that qo current payments were
withheld. The department said it had not n:programmed its
computer system to stop intercepting the payments. A 1996.
federal law prohibits states frotn taking back payments intended f9r welfare recipients.

'

SANDUSKY (AP) - Nearly all union workers at Cedar
Point went' bal:,k to work Friday afieq eight union plumbers
Coundl~
"tooli. down their picket line outside the amusement park.
CLEVELAND (AP) -The mayor and h1s staff are getting : The plumbers, who rejected a contract offer two weeks ago,
ready to stop nonessential city services if a balanced budget. is remained locked out. Negotiations have been scheduled for
JIOt ~ptWed by Monday night.
.
~ a . ' · Tuescb)),sa!,d J:ark sp~k.eswo,Tan Janice Wither.ow.
.
~.-~ur~ty ·&lt;;:ouncil President Mike. Polensek sa1d there-is no , ~bout . 130' electrtctans, ca~penter~, nde mechamci, and
_. budget crisis and desribed Mayor'Mi.cahel J:l::. White's plans as pamters went back to work Fnday, ~1therow md. .
nothing more tha~ "theatrics."
./ r
.
They had refused to _cr'?ss the ptcket hne, causmg C~dar
',
Council members had planned to vote on the budget during Pomt to bnng m noqumon replacement workers to get the
i1 an e111eq~ency rpeeting Friday, but changed their minds in . park ready for its o.pening May 6.
1 favor 'of continued negotiations with White's 'administration.
· ' ·•·.
·.
1
TaJJc,.·w.ere expected to connnue through the weekend.
i By State law, the city must have a balanced budget approved
-e
CINCiNNATI
(AP)- Hebrew Union College, the oldest
II by midnight Monday.
institution ofJewish higher learning in North America , held. a
I'
celeb~ation Friday marking. 125 years of tra.ining rabbis.
~raham
I
Rabbi Isaac M. Wise founded the college in Cincinnati in
I· SHARONVILLE (AP) - U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer 1875, hoping to guarantee the survival ofJudaism in America .
The college remains tli~ historical and intellectual cencer of
Abraham said Friday that the Bush administration was looking
at w~ys to help California mee~ i!S electricity demands and Reform Judaism, supplyi~g rabbis, cantors and educators to the
1
· fast-growing denomination.
avert blackouts in the peak air-conditioning season.
·"The reality of a vftal,.modetn American jewry has not orlly
"This· summer is ·a serious crisis," Abraham said, acknowlfulfilled,
·hut exceeded Rabbi Wise's inost ambitious dreams,"
edging the administration's expanded role in monitoring the.
lormer coUege pre.sident Sheldoh Zimmerm~n wrote m a
state's energy S'!pply.
"The federal government doesn't own ·a big g~nerator in the rec'e nt issue of Reform Judaism magazine.
basen'tent of our 'department that I can send additional electricity to California with:' Abraham said. "But Wt:'re going to
'
look at things we can do ... for instan~e. reduce d~mand at our
.
.
. .
.
.
own federal facilities in California."
.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft on Fnday vetoed a
Abrah'am said California needs 61,000 megawatts of elec- propo~al that could have fu~her drained s_tate resources by
tricity duri3g peak periods, and only has ' about 56,000 · changmg the. w~y t~e State Highway Patrolt~ funded.
Taft u~ed h1s line ttem.veto power on a proposa.\ to create the
megawatts. He met Thursday with officia:Js of California's energy suppliers to urge them to do everything possible to plan for State Htghway Patrol Funding Task Force.
.. . · ·
·
·
The proposal was containe~ in the .$3.6 .billion budget for
dealing with shortages.
'
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the Ohio Department ofTransportation passed this week and
sent to Taft.
OWftS NIC
Taft was concerned the task force's study could lead to fund, "c LEVELAND (AP) -The city and suburban Brook Park , ing the patrol out of the statfs general revenue fund . ·
. on Friday completed an agreement first disclosed in February .
t9 clear the way for expansion,of Cleveland Hopkins lnterna- ,

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"""o:r!!!'!"""

_"""'.......,l•ml-

Union .takes
clown picket lines
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And one of the best things about WYNGATE OF GALLIPOLIS is
something we didn't have much to·do with: the inter;ictiim
of our residents. Sure we facilitate things, but people here
· genuinely like each othe:.;. _·
. ·
· ·

"We look forward to workPIIbl~od •=";;,~,;. ft:;'-,...,_
., ing with the Mason Police
Oolllpall• Olllo, bJ lllo Olllo v.u., Plli&gt;llsbl'l
Department in this endeavor,"
!a"-Y· Socood "'-o- poW •Oolllpallo,
eorr,ctlon Polley
0111o:
Goodnite _said.
O.r.U.-Iaallitrlotlotobo Ea11rtll 111 IICOI!d cl111 111aill•1 mlltcr 11
.......,,OIIIu""'.m...
The grant presents an
Knnle. If , .. bow or u error Ia a Me.blr. Tltl AuociMed Pre .. 11141 the Ohio
...,., call tM _ . _ I I (741} 446- ""'-_,.... ·
·
OP.portunity·to work in copp-·
UG or .......,, (741} 992-2155. Wt 'IIIII lf()lt"MAATas-llddnllwwa d11111101'bl
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'th _stu dents
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-,.nmoo SIOIIO&lt;I, S&lt;l Tlllrd """
era t 1on
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....k '"' lalo,..lloo aid • • a
OtllfOIII.Oilo~YONLY .
Wahama and to extend fork'*'11'" lfwarnlled.
~==
ing relations with the Preveno.c w..t................................................... IIJS -. tion
Resource
Officer,
145
no ••I• ••• .:;;~,, 44,·U4i. OocYotr..... 8iiii'iiim'i;iii""'"' .oo • Nichols said.
Dopa-ntetlllouare;
~':""l""ij;lii;'b;iiiiii'ji;imiiied'~-~·~
. "We pray the' officer won't
~.S!.!~·---111.111
be used or needed in a terri1 n-Sooo~M~wru .... ....,...b~
~-,
~;:====~llxi.IZI
Tlllu..,..
!II.Ut
r.r..._P', _ _ .,......._
ble situation, but will serve
~~~:__._
hblllk:r te,orva tk ._.. la".JJitl nta durlaa
:r.::_•_
111.111
IM -.o~aa period. Saloalpdoo""....,..
more as a deterrent and asset
,..,..,..,...__,111~.-,.~.~E.~Mall""'.:..llxi.U'
~"f,:.""' "'"""'ilf'" '""'"""'
to the sc hool 's administrapllribo~
MAJ~NS
. tion," the l}layot. jaid.
~.Deparlmlnt
•
Nichols said the town is
Pomeooy
·•. •• _ u Woolll:...................................................
S27Jo
Th ••I• ..... , lo "2·2J55. l6Woob. ................................................... l.!l.ft2
workihg with the Mason
o.a-n- n1c111ooo "'"
sz -...-o;;;w;·CW~;c;;;;;...uos..56
County Sheriff's Department
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Reader Servtces

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.Showers return on.~unday

BloodiiiObile

t

ernment.
.}
'rhe Wasin~on, D.C.-based Becket Fund for Religious liberty. asked the high court to reject the lawsuit rather than
_· schedule ,a, ht:aring for oral arguments by lawyers.
'
A Cincinnati ·anorney, Richard Ganulin, filed a lawsuit in
1998 challenging the federal observance of Christmas. Ganulin
argued that- Congress violated the separation of church and
'V'THE ASsoCIAT£0 PRESS
percent
~tate by embracing the Christian holiday more than a century
The National Weather Ser~
. Sunday night ... A chance of ago.
A federal judge in Cincinnati and the 6th U.S. Circuit Court
vice says moisture ' will ram sh~ers ~arly. .. Fo~owed
increase tonight in advance of by·partial. clearmg. Low tn the · of Appeals already have rejected Ganulin's lawsuit. Ganulin has
a colq front approachV1g nud 30s.
asked the Supreme Court to review the case. The high court
Ohio tiom the ·\vest:
Extended forec(ltt:
c;m refuse to hear it, wlric!t would lef the appeals court's rulShowers will spread slowly
· Monday... Partly cloudy. ing stand. .
.'across the area late · Sa~rday High in the lower 50s. ·
into Sunday, continuing into
Tuesday... Mosdy cloudy. A
Sunday night as -me · frOnt chance of showers during the
• mo~ across me area.
night. Low 35 to 40 and high, . COLUMBUS (AP) - .An. anonymous donor gave a church
Temperatures Will be in the 58 ·tp 63.
$600,000 to continue to indude gay, lesbian, bisexual and
40s Overnight, recovering into
Wednesday._. .Mosdy cloudy transgender ~embers .
·
the 50s Sunday.
wid! a chance of shoWers.•. King Avenue United Methodist Church received the gift
SunriSC\ Sunday i.vill be 'at Low in the upper 4Us and tiom a retired iawyer who has· been a member of the church
. 7:16.a.m.
high in the mid 60s.
for 3~ years, said the Rev. Grayson Atha.
· ·w.ther forecast:
Thurs~y... Pardy dof.!dy.
He said 'the '500-member church, located near Ohio State
Sunday. .. Showers likely. .A Low in the lpwer •5\)s and University, hasn't decided how to spend the money. .
thun~erstorm also. possible . high in the lower 70s.
"We're in tht process now of making some decisions on that.
through midday. High 50 tci
Friday... Mosdy · c~oudy We -plan to open it up to people in the congregation for sug55. So11,th wind iO to 15 mph with a chance of showers. j:estions," Atha said Friday.
·
'b~cc&gt;tiling west early in the Low in the lower 50s and
afternoon. Chance ,of run 70 'high.64 to 69.

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{888\ 803•1168

Council ......

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COLUMBUS (AP) - The sate is
The Web site is getting 2,700 hits a day northern Kentu~ky. called ARTIMIS, do
giving motorists here an up-to-the- with the largeSt number coming betw.:en not recol'(!· the visual images they relay
minute look at intentate traffic with an 3 p.m. and 6 p:m. Images of trafli~ !l!l the on the Internet, officials from bod! agen-·
cies 'said..
. ·
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experimental Webcam project that could site update every few seconds. .
be expanded to other metropolitan ~as.
Based on the success of the J'RlFm•
"We're very dear about the fact that
Commuters travding lnterstatcf 70 ODOT will add more cameras around we're a 'tnffic management center. We're
during the upcoming coiutruction sea- the city and place digi~ message boards not a t~c enforcement center. Our
-son can log onto ~l-70.org f~r a live over interstate lanes to wa,rn motorists of· goal here is to make sure that traffic keeps
feed of traffic at 16 diff~nt locanons.
problems.
.
.
· " ·d T ' Sch h d
a
·
movmg,
sat
tm
oc · eputy
The state ·spent $17 ,000 on cameras • A. 16-mile· sttetch o f I- 71 tio
. m ownfc ARTIMIS
hi proh ·
and Si5,000 for a server to gi-.., motorists town to north of Columbus will be gram. manager or
• w c IS
a chance to view traffic and select an ·under surveillance by the end of th~ year,. Jomtly funded by_ ODO~ and the Kenalternate route before mey get caught·up Hunt said
,
rocky Transportatwn Cabinet.
' in congestion;said Joel Hunt, spokesman
Cleveland would likely be the next city
ARTIMIS has 85 · =.eras perched
for the Ohio Department ofTransporta- to get highway cameras, possibly in five - along 1-71 , 1-75 and other tnterstates and
tion.
years, said How:ud·Wood, ODOT's intel- state routes. Images from the cameras are
"This is a pilot project f~r what we ligent transportation system coordinator. available online and used by ODOT for
Both the Columbus cameras and a early detection of accidents, congestion
hope to do around the state for all work
. zones," Hunt said Friday.
traffic camera system in Cincinnati ~nd or disabled vehicles.

I .. IAI'f IW~WI •

am·- ·

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Webcams give heads·up .~n ·traffic pro~l~ms

Ohio weather

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Rehab helps\.

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lt,s .,..he Sprl·ng ·
I e anillg Seas 0 n I

Sale off

•.,. ~~ 1, ili1~·

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Sale pllftfted

· for plant operations at Holzer
• Medical Center, was named
' Marth 20th Emp~ of the
• Monm, said LaMar Wyse.
-deparanent, 499 Jackson Pike.. · default on _a mortgage agree- ,~~~~~~~~~~~~"~~~~~iqg
pmident and chief eacuti.w
Children in need of immu- . ment in the amount of .~
· officer.
r
nizations must be accompa- $24,639.74.
Caldwell
nied by a parent, and bring a
A foreclosure has been
I I
bas been :an
current immunization record granted to Manufacture~ aitd
empl&lt;J)ft at
with them.
Traders Trust Co., against
HMC since
LAt.,. put the 8pl1ng Fruhnue beCic
Additional services, such 'as Danny J. Ten:opplous, and
In ~r C8rpel and upt..,..lllrfl .
blood pressure checks and others.
December
GREAT 'PRICES 6 EXCELLENT R~ULTSI
1998.
..
pregnancy tests, will be offered
A partition action . relating
. 2 Roama: 138.85 (up IQ 2110,,141• ft.)
A n.ttive
during me evening hours at to real e.t2te in ChesterTown· Or 80fa OR .2 ,chalra: $30.85
of
Cape
the health deparanent.
ship has been filed by ~obert
May, NJ.,
Caldwell is
carpet Clean Ina
L.Jol~:.~.~c~~~~~~~~~=•~ni' a licensed
Reedsville,and·others. ·
{-t.pofntmennoda 'I
stationary
POMEROY - The' sherA case filed by Bank One,
·engineer and ·i.tl November
iff's sale scheduled for April 13 N .A,, against Cora . . Mae
1
• ·
· 2000, was reissued his license
in the matter of Farmers Bank Smith, ·ana others, has been
by the Ohio Department of
against . Leah R . Rose, and dismissed.
·
I
··Commerce,
Division
of
others, has .been canceled.
Industrial Compliance, Examiners of Steam Engineers, that
. qualifies hi~ as a dJird claSs
GALLIPGIUS - Garland
· steam engineer.
Lambert is a resident of Jack- . ROCK SPRINGS
He attended West Virginia son County. He -was adQPtted . Meigs High Schoot Band
University in .Morgantown, to Hg!p:r Senior Care CCnter Boosters will meet ori Mon.majoring in physical educa- related to his 1,1eel). for rehabil- day at 6:30 p.m. at the high
. tion. He aliO received training iation.
1chool band rooin. Officers
. . by me National Association of
His plan upon admisSion will be nominated and electPower Engineers in Washing- was to be short-term place- ed.
'
.
ton, becoming certified in ment, but. there was some
power plant engineering, as doubt in his mind ·about his
well as receiving his CFC cer- ability to return home.
RACINE -Village Coun· ed nursing and
tification
from
Ferris
State
H e recel'o'
.
.
H
.
d
U ruverstty. e ts curren y . h
' ·
d ·
his cil will meet in regular session .
.
·
f t erapy serV1ces unng .
th
U
odin
0
atte
· d on Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Ri G g de e · mvemty
· 10
· Jan stay at -HSCC. H e game
~ ran maJ~~g P t · strength and independence municipal building.
mamB-~nance ~c ntoHMop;j.C. h . within four weeks of• his
aore conung o
e · _._, __ ·
da
d
d
ked C. Pillsb
C .
awuu•ton
te an returne
~rlls · oEr,., . ~- 1 o. ~n ~ his home in Jackson.
we ron, mctent .nu nc.,tn
H · 'd his
d
Columbus, and Elite Meehan- . e sat . . success was ue
ical Corp. in Point Pleasant, to the canng and_competent
W.Va.
staf! a HSCC. ,
Caldwell has been a resident
The me.raptsts are great
f Gallipolis since 1995. He and the numng s~ are excel0
and his wife Heidi have two Ient,"he w 'd.
children, Erica, 16 and Zach
Although he was physically
~ble .to rerum h~me he ':""s
English, 13.
In his spare time, he enjoys
havmg a hard ame lea~ng
fishing, water sports, camping, be.cause of ~e l~g relatt~?­
• bunting, 1nd most imp. ortant- ship fomrned With the s~
rf.ly spending time with bis famHe satd·was grateful for the ·
il .
care he received and recomemployee of the month,
mends anyone in need of
CaldweU re,;,ived a $100 U.S. nuning or therapy services
POMEROY .- Marriage
Satinp Bo'lr'd, a merved
ch001e · Holzer Senior Care Jicensn have been iuued in
parkins space esisnated in his Center. .
Meip County Probate Court
name, a complimentary meal
Before makins a tinal deci- to Tony Alva Shope, 30, and
in the h01pital cafeteria, his
- 1ion about any nuning center, Anna Ruth Fink, 21, _both of
picture displayed on the
HSCC extends an Invitation Middleport, and Eugene
.. employee of the month waU
to visit and view the lifestyle Arms, &lt;4 7, and Patti K. John'
I
near·the employee entrance,
of comfort and care offered. wn, 38, both of Poliieroy.
and his name engraved on
Call Amber Johnson, Director
the 2001 employee of the
of Admissions, at. (740)4!16- .
month plaque, also diplayed
5001 to arrange a personal
on the employee of the
tour or st9p by.
POMEROY ..._ A divorce
month waJJ.
Holzer Senior Care Center, action has been filed in Meigs
380 Colonial Drive, BidweU, County
Common Pleas
Ohio 45614, is one quarter Court by Stephen M. Tracy,
IUDS
mile west of Holzer Medical Racine, against Angela M.
GALLIPOLIS ·_
Gallia Center.
. Tracy, Racine.
Nursing homes offer intensive care for very ill people, but

..

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gymnasium fiom 8 LDL until
· 4 p.m. Proceed! li:om the sale
will go towards funding a stuPOMEROY - A foreclodent trip to Washington.
sure action has been filed in · . TUPPERS PLAINS For more information, all
GALLIPOLIS
Free Meigs County Common Eastern Elementary School
immunizations will be provid- Pleas Court by Beneficial will be holding a rummage 985-3304.
ed by the Gallia Countv
•, Obi o 1nc., EJmhurst, ru ., sale· on April 7 in the schools
Health Deparanent on AprilS against Timothy]. Klein, Syra.fiom 4-6 p.m. at the health' cuse,' and others, alle~g

Suits filed

,_ PapAl

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446-9585

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�:~----------------------~~~~~!Ct!ll~~~~------~-2~
~·~··~
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~~~~1·~~~1
VALLEY BRIEFS

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HMCstap .t
GALLIPOLIS -

John

H.

Caldwell II, boiler operator

County EMS .apondcd t0 1&lt;4
calb for auisrance Friday,
bringing the toed m1mber of
runs for tbe mondno 323 and
962 on me )ar.
Ruus included tnnspons to
Holzer Medical ~nter li:om
!ubon · of Gallipolis, Gallia
County Senior Citiuns Center,Jacbon Esta~ and US. 35
'West. . .
.
RefuSal of tteaanent wu
noted on runs t&lt;1 •Ohio 7
South, Ohio 160, U.S. 35
West,Vale R~ Gallia County Jail and Scenic Hills ·Nursing Center.
Runs to me county jail and
Scenic Hills w.:ni cancelled. ·
A unit also made an emergency transport of the MtdFiight ~d wing crew frdtn
the Gallia~Meigs ·Regional
Airport to HMC an!l back to
the airpoit.

~

Sundlly, Aprll1

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c

~~c~;i!:; ~~;~-~t;.:!:~

Call· 'SWORDS'
for~our

40,\ 245 S7 2

Most people don't .
~eed nUISing homes.
As we age we oft.en

Divorce flied

just ne~d help with

certain things.

EMS

more often people just need help from time to time with
medications, meals or bathing.
·

Resourc.e officer sought fo,r_ Wahama

Residents here can live independently in homelike sur-.
r~&gt;Undings and still receive nursing support and other
services when they're .m?eded. Medication supervision
anq administ~ation; home' cooked meals, transportation,
outings, housekeeping, activities - t.he list of amenities
and services isn't endless, but it's very long.

BY MICHIL2 CAIITIII

the basic salary and benefits
·"It is a pleasure for the
·.for a certified fuU-time "town · ·administration ·to work in an
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. officer,
Mayor
George interagency effort to provide
- The Town of Mason, in Nichols said.
greater safety in our school
·"The grant program is the system:· Superintendent D~.
cooperation .with Wahama
High School and the Mason same as the one applied for by Larry Parsons said. "I applaud
County Board o( Education, the Mason County Sheriff's Mayor Nichols and the town
• is applying for ~ grant to put a Department to put two offi- · police ·force on ·recognizing
' Prevention Resource ·Officer cers in Point Pleasant High the area of concern .a nd
School and Middle -School, addressing it."
· in the Bend Area school.
•
•
Wahama Principal fbil
,; The gra"l, administered but it has a different funding
; through the Department of ·source," Nichols said. ~'The Goodnite said the added
security and preventative
; C~iminal Justice, would cover grant amount is $·17,700."
work the officer will do at
. _TIMES.SENTINEL STNT

6uubap-ttim~

6mtiuel

~~hama

is greatly

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DOnation has tolerance ·tag

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ap~reciat-

(IJIPUI).JIIl

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The Arthritis Foundation Is hostlno Q · Public Seminar on the
Treatment 8c. Manaoement. of OsteQporasls at Wync;,ate of,
Gallipolis onlt\onday, Aprll2~. at 6:30p.m. The Quest speaker will
be Dr. Arnold R. Penix, M.D. Dr. Penb;c .Is an Orthopedic Suroeon .
.at Holzer Hospital. ·
·
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.·tl~~::.;";II;M;•·;•~·-~;~-~::::~:~~~~ll~~~~=~;~:: ~:::~:::~: ~: : ~=-~·: ~: ~: :~: :~: : :~:k:·:~J
19

Ell liN

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ll WooUJ..................................... ,........SI09.1l

in
aU ways
possible, including·
withi;1
the schools.

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There Is no charoe for the seminar. Snacks and refreshments
wiU be serv~. l;or mqre Information, please contact the Arthritis
Foundation at 890-358-0380 or Wynoate at 740'."441-9633.

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300 Briarwood Drivt.' • Callipolis OH 45631

delays budget vote

f'

FREE DOOR PRIZES • PUBLIC WELCOME .

ow
n
TODAYII Sunday, Apr11 .1 ··
9:00-4:00 .

Holiday Inn, Kanauga, Ohio
10 Dealers to BUY and SELL
Including MTS Coin Shop of Gallipolis
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(oUacre matks 115 yearS

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outlines energy aid

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Taft nixeS funding proposal

· h·a irport a"ccO·rei ·

State' seeks ·suit
·a·IIIII1ssa1

tioftal Airpott.
·
.
Among changes from the original agreement, Cleveland will '
: purchase about 45 more acres of Brook Park than originally
COL'6MBUS (AP) _ The
t proposed, for a total oi 135 acresi.Cleveland ·now intends to state has asked an appeals court
I _purchase up to 31.4 homes in BrooK Park over Sel(en yea.rs.
to throw out a lawsuit filed by
Meanwhile, Cleveland has guaranteed that the adjacent .
,
_.
· 1 lnternation:ll Exposition Cen·
I ter, which holds conventions
'I and trade shows, will stand for
1
, 10 · years. Cleveland can' then
I choose to demolish it.
· j
As part of the original agree' ment worked ollt by Cleveland ·
Mayor Michael R. White . and
1 • Brook Park Mayor Thomas ].
' Coy~e Jr., the 350-acre NASA
Glenn Research Center, now
.mostly iQ Cleveland, would
. become part of Brook Park .in
2004 . .

Fire &amp; Water Damage Repair

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Group,fights
. challenge

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. crNtiNNATI (AP) - A
. _ priva"te organization that sup"' port$ keeping ~hristmas as a
1 public holiday asked the U.S.
Supreme Co)lrt on Friday to
' rejeai a lawsuit chajl. enging its
- o.~·erva~ce by .f he. fClleral go.11r

I

,,

Hiah QualitY 'LaundrY ·&amp; DrY Cl·eanina
&lt;:

· ·ComPlete Clothina Care SPec.ialists

.There Is Still Time To Register
.For Spring Quarter ·_
· , Call Today!!
446-4367 :ot 1-800·2·1 4-0452

r

Galli . Ji5lftlf~

.

~, .~~reem!los~

.

, 1743 Centenary Road
Gallipolis, OH
Open Mon,..'i=rl 7:00 - 5:00; Sot. 8:00 - 1:00.

Spting Valley Rlaza •- Galllpc)Hs ,
,l'ill!~·
•

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,..--....WEBSiTE
JWWw.golllpollacareercollege.com
,
£mail · ,
gccCDgalllpolllcareercollega.com

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a child-support advocacy group that is seeking millions of dol~
Iars in back payments the state has \liithheld.
,
Attorney General Betty Mon~gomery ffied a motion with
the lOth Ohio District Court of Appeals this week to dismi~s
the lawsuit filed by the Association for Children for Enforce- ··
ment of Support for lack of jurisdiction.
ACES sued the' Ohio ;Department of Job and Family Ser- l
vices , this month. over the back pay.ments. The state has
atknowledged tha(Jit withheld about $6 million in the payments from noncustodial parents. ACES pegs the total closer to
$13 rtullion.
,
,
The state says the withheld money only involved ·back paym~ nts to custodial parents and that qo current payments were
withheld. The department said it had not n:programmed its
computer system to stop intercepting the payments. A 1996.
federal law prohibits states frotn taking back payments intended f9r welfare recipients.

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SANDUSKY (AP) - Nearly all union workers at Cedar
Point went' bal:,k to work Friday afieq eight union plumbers
Coundl~
"tooli. down their picket line outside the amusement park.
CLEVELAND (AP) -The mayor and h1s staff are getting : The plumbers, who rejected a contract offer two weeks ago,
ready to stop nonessential city services if a balanced budget. is remained locked out. Negotiations have been scheduled for
JIOt ~ptWed by Monday night.
.
~ a . ' · Tuescb)),sa!,d J:ark sp~k.eswo,Tan Janice Wither.ow.
.
~.-~ur~ty ·&lt;;:ouncil President Mike. Polensek sa1d there-is no , ~bout . 130' electrtctans, ca~penter~, nde mechamci, and
_. budget crisis and desribed Mayor'Mi.cahel J:l::. White's plans as pamters went back to work Fnday, ~1therow md. .
nothing more tha~ "theatrics."
./ r
.
They had refused to _cr'?ss the ptcket hne, causmg C~dar
',
Council members had planned to vote on the budget during Pomt to bnng m noqumon replacement workers to get the
i1 an e111eq~ency rpeeting Friday, but changed their minds in . park ready for its o.pening May 6.
1 favor 'of continued negotiations with White's 'administration.
· ' ·•·.
·.
1
TaJJc,.·w.ere expected to connnue through the weekend.
i By State law, the city must have a balanced budget approved
-e
CINCiNNATI
(AP)- Hebrew Union College, the oldest
II by midnight Monday.
institution ofJewish higher learning in North America , held. a
I'
celeb~ation Friday marking. 125 years of tra.ining rabbis.
~raham
I
Rabbi Isaac M. Wise founded the college in Cincinnati in
I· SHARONVILLE (AP) - U.S. Energy Secretary Spencer 1875, hoping to guarantee the survival ofJudaism in America .
The college remains tli~ historical and intellectual cencer of
Abraham said Friday that the Bush administration was looking
at w~ys to help California mee~ i!S electricity demands and Reform Judaism, supplyi~g rabbis, cantors and educators to the
1
· fast-growing denomination.
avert blackouts in the peak air-conditioning season.
·"The reality of a vftal,.modetn American jewry has not orlly
"This· summer is ·a serious crisis," Abraham said, acknowlfulfilled,
·hut exceeded Rabbi Wise's inost ambitious dreams,"
edging the administration's expanded role in monitoring the.
lormer coUege pre.sident Sheldoh Zimmerm~n wrote m a
state's energy S'!pply.
"The federal government doesn't own ·a big g~nerator in the rec'e nt issue of Reform Judaism magazine.
basen'tent of our 'department that I can send additional electricity to California with:' Abraham said. "But Wt:'re going to
'
look at things we can do ... for instan~e. reduce d~mand at our
.
.
. .
.
.
own federal facilities in California."
.
COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft on Fnday vetoed a
Abrah'am said California needs 61,000 megawatts of elec- propo~al that could have fu~her drained s_tate resources by
tricity duri3g peak periods, and only has ' about 56,000 · changmg the. w~y t~e State Highway Patrolt~ funded.
Taft u~ed h1s line ttem.veto power on a proposa.\ to create the
megawatts. He met Thursday with officia:Js of California's energy suppliers to urge them to do everything possible to plan for State Htghway Patrol Funding Task Force.
.. . · ·
·
·
The proposal was containe~ in the .$3.6 .billion budget for
dealing with shortages.
'
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the Ohio Department ofTransportation passed this week and
sent to Taft.
OWftS NIC
Taft was concerned the task force's study could lead to fund, "c LEVELAND (AP) -The city and suburban Brook Park , ing the patrol out of the statfs general revenue fund . ·
. on Friday completed an agreement first disclosed in February .
t9 clear the way for expansion,of Cleveland Hopkins lnterna- ,

i

"""o:r!!!'!"""

_"""'.......,l•ml-

Union .takes
clown picket lines
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And one of the best things about WYNGATE OF GALLIPOLIS is
something we didn't have much to·do with: the inter;ictiim
of our residents. Sure we facilitate things, but people here
· genuinely like each othe:.;. _·
. ·
· ·

"We look forward to workPIIbl~od •=";;,~,;. ft:;'-,...,_
., ing with the Mason Police
Oolllpall• Olllo, bJ lllo Olllo v.u., Plli&gt;llsbl'l
Department in this endeavor,"
!a"-Y· Socood "'-o- poW •Oolllpallo,
eorr,ctlon Polley
0111o:
Goodnite _said.
O.r.U.-Iaallitrlotlotobo Ea11rtll 111 IICOI!d cl111 111aill•1 mlltcr 11
.......,,OIIIu""'.m...
The grant presents an
Knnle. If , .. bow or u error Ia a Me.blr. Tltl AuociMed Pre .. 11141 the Ohio
...,., call tM _ . _ I I (741} 446- ""'-_,.... ·
·
OP.portunity·to work in copp-·
UG or .......,, (741} 992-2155. Wt 'IIIII lf()lt"MAATas-llddnllwwa d11111101'bl
'
'th _stu dents
· at
-,.nmoo SIOIIO&lt;I, S&lt;l Tlllrd """
era t 1on
WI
....k '"' lalo,..lloo aid • • a
OtllfOIII.Oilo~YONLY .
Wahama and to extend fork'*'11'" lfwarnlled.
~==
ing relations with the Preveno.c w..t................................................... IIJS -. tion
Resource
Officer,
145
no ••I• ••• .:;;~,, 44,·U4i. OocYotr..... 8iiii'iiim'i;iii""'"' .oo • Nichols said.
Dopa-ntetlllouare;
~':""l""ij;lii;'b;iiiiii'ji;imiiied'~-~·~
. "We pray the' officer won't
~.S!.!~·---111.111
be used or needed in a terri1 n-Sooo~M~wru .... ....,...b~
~-,
~;:====~llxi.IZI
Tlllu..,..
!II.Ut
r.r..._P', _ _ .,......._
ble situation, but will serve
~~~:__._
hblllk:r te,orva tk ._.. la".JJitl nta durlaa
:r.::_•_
111.111
IM -.o~aa period. Saloalpdoo""....,..
more as a deterrent and asset
,..,..,..,...__,111~.-,.~.~E.~Mall""'.:..llxi.U'
~"f,:.""' "'"""'ilf'" '""'"""'
to the sc hool 's administrapllribo~
MAJ~NS
. tion," the l}layot. jaid.
~.Deparlmlnt
•
Nichols said the town is
Pomeooy
·•. •• _ u Woolll:...................................................
S27Jo
Th ••I• ..... , lo "2·2J55. l6Woob. ................................................... l.!l.ft2
workihg with the Mason
o.a-n- n1c111ooo "'"
sz -...-o;;;w;·CW~;c;;;;;...uos..56
County Sheriff's Department
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Reader Servtces

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.Showers return on.~unday

BloodiiiObile

t

ernment.
.}
'rhe Wasin~on, D.C.-based Becket Fund for Religious liberty. asked the high court to reject the lawsuit rather than
_· schedule ,a, ht:aring for oral arguments by lawyers.
'
A Cincinnati ·anorney, Richard Ganulin, filed a lawsuit in
1998 challenging the federal observance of Christmas. Ganulin
argued that- Congress violated the separation of church and
'V'THE ASsoCIAT£0 PRESS
percent
~tate by embracing the Christian holiday more than a century
The National Weather Ser~
. Sunday night ... A chance of ago.
A federal judge in Cincinnati and the 6th U.S. Circuit Court
vice says moisture ' will ram sh~ers ~arly. .. Fo~owed
increase tonight in advance of by·partial. clearmg. Low tn the · of Appeals already have rejected Ganulin's lawsuit. Ganulin has
a colq front approachV1g nud 30s.
asked the Supreme Court to review the case. The high court
Ohio tiom the ·\vest:
Extended forec(ltt:
c;m refuse to hear it, wlric!t would lef the appeals court's rulShowers will spread slowly
· Monday... Partly cloudy. ing stand. .
.'across the area late · Sa~rday High in the lower 50s. ·
into Sunday, continuing into
Tuesday... Mosdy cloudy. A
Sunday night as -me · frOnt chance of showers during the
• mo~ across me area.
night. Low 35 to 40 and high, . COLUMBUS (AP) - .An. anonymous donor gave a church
Temperatures Will be in the 58 ·tp 63.
$600,000 to continue to indude gay, lesbian, bisexual and
40s Overnight, recovering into
Wednesday._. .Mosdy cloudy transgender ~embers .
·
the 50s Sunday.
wid! a chance of shoWers.•. King Avenue United Methodist Church received the gift
SunriSC\ Sunday i.vill be 'at Low in the upper 4Us and tiom a retired iawyer who has· been a member of the church
. 7:16.a.m.
high in the mid 60s.
for 3~ years, said the Rev. Grayson Atha.
· ·w.ther forecast:
Thurs~y... Pardy dof.!dy.
He said 'the '500-member church, located near Ohio State
Sunday. .. Showers likely. .A Low in the lpwer •5\)s and University, hasn't decided how to spend the money. .
thun~erstorm also. possible . high in the lower 70s.
"We're in tht process now of making some decisions on that.
through midday. High 50 tci
Friday... Mosdy · c~oudy We -plan to open it up to people in the congregation for sug55. So11,th wind iO to 15 mph with a chance of showers. j:estions," Atha said Friday.
·
'b~cc&gt;tiling west early in the Low in the lower 50s and
afternoon. Chance ,of run 70 'high.64 to 69.

·,-.

{888\ 803•1168

Council ......

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COLUMBUS (AP) - The sate is
The Web site is getting 2,700 hits a day northern Kentu~ky. called ARTIMIS, do
giving motorists here an up-to-the- with the largeSt number coming betw.:en not recol'(!· the visual images they relay
minute look at intentate traffic with an 3 p.m. and 6 p:m. Images of trafli~ !l!l the on the Internet, officials from bod! agen-·
cies 'said..
. ·
'
experimental Webcam project that could site update every few seconds. .
be expanded to other metropolitan ~as.
Based on the success of the J'RlFm•
"We're very dear about the fact that
Commuters travding lnterstatcf 70 ODOT will add more cameras around we're a 'tnffic management center. We're
during the upcoming coiutruction sea- the city and place digi~ message boards not a t~c enforcement center. Our
-son can log onto ~l-70.org f~r a live over interstate lanes to wa,rn motorists of· goal here is to make sure that traffic keeps
feed of traffic at 16 diff~nt locanons.
problems.
.
.
· " ·d T ' Sch h d
a
·
movmg,
sat
tm
oc · eputy
The state ·spent $17 ,000 on cameras • A. 16-mile· sttetch o f I- 71 tio
. m ownfc ARTIMIS
hi proh ·
and Si5,000 for a server to gi-.., motorists town to north of Columbus will be gram. manager or
• w c IS
a chance to view traffic and select an ·under surveillance by the end of th~ year,. Jomtly funded by_ ODO~ and the Kenalternate route before mey get caught·up Hunt said
,
rocky Transportatwn Cabinet.
' in congestion;said Joel Hunt, spokesman
Cleveland would likely be the next city
ARTIMIS has 85 · =.eras perched
for the Ohio Department ofTransporta- to get highway cameras, possibly in five - along 1-71 , 1-75 and other tnterstates and
tion.
years, said How:ud·Wood, ODOT's intel- state routes. Images from the cameras are
"This is a pilot project f~r what we ligent transportation system coordinator. available online and used by ODOT for
Both the Columbus cameras and a early detection of accidents, congestion
hope to do around the state for all work
. zones," Hunt said Friday.
traffic camera system in Cincinnati ~nd or disabled vehicles.

I .. IAI'f IW~WI •

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Webcams give heads·up .~n ·traffic pro~l~ms

Ohio weather

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Rehab helps\.

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lt,s .,..he Sprl·ng ·
I e anillg Seas 0 n I

Sale off

•.,. ~~ 1, ili1~·

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Sale pllftfted

· for plant operations at Holzer
• Medical Center, was named
' Marth 20th Emp~ of the
• Monm, said LaMar Wyse.
-deparanent, 499 Jackson Pike.. · default on _a mortgage agree- ,~~~~~~~~~~~~"~~~~~iqg
pmident and chief eacuti.w
Children in need of immu- . ment in the amount of .~
· officer.
r
nizations must be accompa- $24,639.74.
Caldwell
nied by a parent, and bring a
A foreclosure has been
I I
bas been :an
current immunization record granted to Manufacture~ aitd
empl&lt;J)ft at
with them.
Traders Trust Co., against
HMC since
LAt.,. put the 8pl1ng Fruhnue beCic
Additional services, such 'as Danny J. Ten:opplous, and
In ~r C8rpel and upt..,..lllrfl .
blood pressure checks and others.
December
GREAT 'PRICES 6 EXCELLENT R~ULTSI
1998.
..
pregnancy tests, will be offered
A partition action . relating
. 2 Roama: 138.85 (up IQ 2110,,141• ft.)
A n.ttive
during me evening hours at to real e.t2te in ChesterTown· Or 80fa OR .2 ,chalra: $30.85
of
Cape
the health deparanent.
ship has been filed by ~obert
May, NJ.,
Caldwell is
carpet Clean Ina
L.Jol~:.~.~c~~~~~~~~~=•~ni' a licensed
Reedsville,and·others. ·
{-t.pofntmennoda 'I
stationary
POMEROY - The' sherA case filed by Bank One,
·engineer and ·i.tl November
iff's sale scheduled for April 13 N .A,, against Cora . . Mae
1
• ·
· 2000, was reissued his license
in the matter of Farmers Bank Smith, ·ana others, has been
by the Ohio Department of
against . Leah R . Rose, and dismissed.
·
I
··Commerce,
Division
of
others, has .been canceled.
Industrial Compliance, Examiners of Steam Engineers, that
. qualifies hi~ as a dJird claSs
GALLIPGIUS - Garland
· steam engineer.
Lambert is a resident of Jack- . ROCK SPRINGS
He attended West Virginia son County. He -was adQPtted . Meigs High Schoot Band
University in .Morgantown, to Hg!p:r Senior Care CCnter Boosters will meet ori Mon.majoring in physical educa- related to his 1,1eel). for rehabil- day at 6:30 p.m. at the high
. tion. He aliO received training iation.
1chool band rooin. Officers
. . by me National Association of
His plan upon admisSion will be nominated and electPower Engineers in Washing- was to be short-term place- ed.
'
.
ton, becoming certified in ment, but. there was some
power plant engineering, as doubt in his mind ·about his
well as receiving his CFC cer- ability to return home.
RACINE -Village Coun· ed nursing and
tification
from
Ferris
State
H e recel'o'
.
.
H
.
d
U ruverstty. e ts curren y . h
' ·
d ·
his cil will meet in regular session .
.
·
f t erapy serV1ces unng .
th
U
odin
0
atte
· d on Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Ri G g de e · mvemty
· 10
· Jan stay at -HSCC. H e game
~ ran maJ~~g P t · strength and independence municipal building.
mamB-~nance ~c ntoHMop;j.C. h . within four weeks of• his
aore conung o
e · _._, __ ·
da
d
d
ked C. Pillsb
C .
awuu•ton
te an returne
~rlls · oEr,., . ~- 1 o. ~n ~ his home in Jackson.
we ron, mctent .nu nc.,tn
H · 'd his
d
Columbus, and Elite Meehan- . e sat . . success was ue
ical Corp. in Point Pleasant, to the canng and_competent
W.Va.
staf! a HSCC. ,
Caldwell has been a resident
The me.raptsts are great
f Gallipolis since 1995. He and the numng s~ are excel0
and his wife Heidi have two Ient,"he w 'd.
children, Erica, 16 and Zach
Although he was physically
~ble .to rerum h~me he ':""s
English, 13.
In his spare time, he enjoys
havmg a hard ame lea~ng
fishing, water sports, camping, be.cause of ~e l~g relatt~?­
• bunting, 1nd most imp. ortant- ship fomrned With the s~
rf.ly spending time with bis famHe satd·was grateful for the ·
il .
care he received and recomemployee of the month,
mends anyone in need of
CaldweU re,;,ived a $100 U.S. nuning or therapy services
POMEROY .- Marriage
Satinp Bo'lr'd, a merved
ch001e · Holzer Senior Care Jicensn have been iuued in
parkins space esisnated in his Center. .
Meip County Probate Court
name, a complimentary meal
Before makins a tinal deci- to Tony Alva Shope, 30, and
in the h01pital cafeteria, his
- 1ion about any nuning center, Anna Ruth Fink, 21, _both of
picture displayed on the
HSCC extends an Invitation Middleport, and Eugene
.. employee of the month waU
to visit and view the lifestyle Arms, &lt;4 7, and Patti K. John'
I
near·the employee entrance,
of comfort and care offered. wn, 38, both of Poliieroy.
and his name engraved on
Call Amber Johnson, Director
the 2001 employee of the
of Admissions, at. (740)4!16- .
month plaque, also diplayed
5001 to arrange a personal
on the employee of the
tour or st9p by.
POMEROY ..._ A divorce
month waJJ.
Holzer Senior Care Center, action has been filed in Meigs
380 Colonial Drive, BidweU, County
Common Pleas
Ohio 45614, is one quarter Court by Stephen M. Tracy,
IUDS
mile west of Holzer Medical Racine, against Angela M.
GALLIPOLIS ·_
Gallia Center.
. Tracy, Racine.
Nursing homes offer intensive care for very ill people, but

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gymnasium fiom 8 LDL until
· 4 p.m. Proceed! li:om the sale
will go towards funding a stuPOMEROY - A foreclodent trip to Washington.
sure action has been filed in · . TUPPERS PLAINS For more information, all
GALLIPOLIS
Free Meigs County Common Eastern Elementary School
immunizations will be provid- Pleas Court by Beneficial will be holding a rummage 985-3304.
ed by the Gallia Countv
•, Obi o 1nc., EJmhurst, ru ., sale· on April 7 in the schools
Health Deparanent on AprilS against Timothy]. Klein, Syra.fiom 4-6 p.m. at the health' cuse,' and others, alle~g

Suits filed

,_ PapAl

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446-9585

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.. Jun)iag 'll~at , , ..

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A4

Opl11ion

'"diawl

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r

'l unlls;, Aprl1
Alit:ANI--

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. cnmpalln, 0111o • Polt•oy,
Point PI I T n', W.V..

Ohio Valley Publlsl:'llng Co.
Chartle W,

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ecn..,

Aclvwtlllng ...........

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R. Sll8wn 1Awis

Pubhta
IM1ylloy.r

CHARLESTON (AP) - Legidatm
bfa.s lWIIkl be part ·« a new C0D1111iJsioo that would OYeuee aD cure tupported economic devdopmc:ot projects under
a bill approved Friday by a Senate comminee,
The bill. SB716, introduces ,a plan
called the WestVirginia Ecol10111k ~
opmeot Competitiveness Act. w~
would place the state's development
office under the commission's control.
The development oflice and the state.
Depahment «Tax :md Revrnur would
be required to submit annual reports to
the conunission that would include information on economic development
invi:stments, tourism expenditures, new,
businesses and tax incentives offered to
entice new b~inesses.

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Committee calls for f~mation of commission

WeSt VIrginia weather

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an

lllging EdltcM'
~-

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.....
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... _.
tu..r.._.,,_ ..
Con~

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P.IOIOPt!·tc; NtW HotllrMFUL

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NATIONAL VIEWS
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.Showers return on Sunday

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Congress·needs to reverse
stance -on workplace injuries

t

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Ulho . will·end ~p paying for the spo(ted ..otvl?
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55. South wind 10 to 15 mph
National ·Weather Ser- becoming west early in the
·• . --'v1ce
.The· says
moisture. will afternoon. Chance of rain 70
increase tonight in advance of percent.
a · cold front approaching
Sunday night,.A chance of
Ohio &amp;om the west.
· '·
rain showers early. .. Followed
Sh(])IVers will spread slowly by partial clearing. Low in the
aJ;ro,ss the area late Saturday mid 30s.
into Sunday, continuing into
.EXtended forecast:
· Sunday .night as the front
· Mo?day... Partly
cloudy.
moves across the: area.
High
m
the
lowet:_
50s.
..
Temperatures will be in the
Tuesday...Mosdy cloudy. A ..
40s overnight, recovering into
chance
of showen during the
·. the 50s Sunday.
_
night. Low 35 to 40 and high
~unset tonight will be at
6:55. Sunrise Sunday will -be 58 to 63.
Wednesday. ..Mosdy cloudy
-'·
at 7:16a.m.
with
a chance ·of showers.
Weather foreeast:
·.
Tonight. .,Showers likely, ~ow in the upper 40s and
. ·~y toward dawn. Low in high in the mid 60s.
· the lower 40s. Northeast wind Thursday... Partly · cloudy.
,&lt;
· 5 to 10 mph becoming south- Low in the l~r 50s and
' east. Chance of ;.tin 60 per- high in the lower 70s.
· Friday... Mosdy cloudy with
· · cent,
Snnday.,Showers likely, A a chanc~ of showers. Low in
; thunderstorm also possible the lower 50s and high 64 to
: through midday. High 50 to 69.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

• The Tampa (Fla. f Tribune, on the . truth about
ergonomic saftiy: No sooner had Congress scuttled new

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At it's session on M~rch 19, the
1
lui:k.
rules . regulating ergonomic safety in the workplace
"
The f9undation coJillplained that habi- ·
than a firestorm of criticism rained on the Republican _ Supreme :Court denied appeals :n 2,!11 .
pending cases. Lost in the ' debris was
tit rules fall with special impact upo'n
majority. "This is the biggest heist of a special in~erest.
fanners and r.:mchers. "Forcing families
Case No. 00-1238, the Case of the Spotin the history of the Congress;' lamented Hoqse
te'd Owls.
to forgo lla!'vesting d!eir timbe):,so that it
· l_'his was an appeal the court should
can serVe- a$ a set-aside for habi12t not
Democratic · leader Richard Gephardt, who said the
have taken, for. it presented a large issue
J~h-es·
only deprives them o( cunent income &gt;
vote signals the end of bipartisanship...
of constitutional law on an· undentandcUU
.
~
!Ur may be critical to 'e conomic.viabi!i- .
JJec;IUse so many lawmakers and business leaders are
able scale. The question \vas not especialty, it also fo~es them to be-tt. the unco~-·
being unfairly accused of wanting tO boost· profits by
ly complex:To what extent may the state
'
pensated rtsk tha:t they Will lose thetr ·
crippling ~.erican ~ "\YPrkers, a review of the major
total inv~nnent at any· time .by ~?'
compel a private company to . bear the
problems with the rule5 is warranted . .,
cost·of a public benefit?
,
..
The American furest and .Paper Asso- •
&lt;In
its
Delphic
Way.
the
Constitution
.
.
.
ciatiori
also filed.. a brief in Bqise's _s up• Employers would have to pay workers with l'epet53)'1 only that "private prophty shall not tion. Five yean passed in litigation. Final:. · .port It npte~ that W;ashin~n and.c~~
itive stress injuries 90 percent of their salary and ben· be taken for public use, without jwt Jy, in !ipril 1997, the Oregot\ Supo:me '. forma have a~pted ~Itat ~les like
efits for up to three months.,. : .
compensation." James Madison ·(eft it to tourt. upheld the ·. boaJd's decree. Six ' ~ps~ I~ Oregon. Califormu .. rules
• Specific limits would be imposed on work, includfuture courts to define what he meant by . months later, it turned 9 ut that ·calatrlity' ot:equm: that I ,300·. acres. of owl ~abitat·
ing a four-hour limit on typing in any workday.., '
"takeil" and "public use."The question in had fallen upon the pai,r ·of owls. The · must be -erotec.t ed "YYthin L3 miles of
the Case of the Sported Owls is whether female had been found dead. "~d :the each ~~t site or ,Pair .activity ~enter. The
The science of ergonomics is rapidly improving as
·.
· Oregon, in its ~ffort to save a pair of male was.recendy observed at a site ~rules unpose huge econormc cos~. ~n
more is learned a~ut the human body and why some
· endangered birds, temporarily "rook" .a than e1gljt mi)" away?' The site. \vas no , th?se~ Ian~~ unlu~ky en~Ugli . to
• repetitive motions create debilitating pain. It is in the
large chJ!nk of property own~d by ·the longer subject to protection illlder Ore- ,:have spotted owlS on the•r land. A 1994 ·
~ fnterest of both .employers 'and employees to create a . Boise Cascade Corp.
. .
. . gon law.
·.
. .
• .
.study p'4ced a .value
matun: timber• Safer and healthier work environment, and·the way to
The facts are not grea\ly in dispute. ll\ · Boise sued"the state tor the roSt opp.or~ Iapil of $10,000 to $40,000 per acre,
1988 Boise ·acquin!d a 65=acre parcel of tunity. A jury concluded that. during tlie dependii!g llpon the .sJiecies and volume
·- ~ do th~t ~through rul~ that are effective and fair. ·
timber in Oregon. AI about th'e same five-year period of"phySical .occupation"· 0~~e anticipated ~est..
.
.
COngress now must insist that such rules be devel.
.
. · time, the. Oregon Deparnnent ,of Fish by the owls, t)le vl!J!.Je. ofBoi~'s traet _had· - .!bus, ,unless JUSt compensation 1s
oped. ,
•
·
,
.
. .
.
and Wildlife designated th~ spotted owl diminished by $,1.8 million. Oregon't' available . under · the FiftJl and ·14th
• Florida Today of Melbourne, on generation couch
as a thl'l1atened species. The state's board Supreme Court reversed · the award of Amen'!:'"ents, the .cost to ~e landowner
potatoe~:. Think about this the next time you drive,
of forestry promulgated regulations . damages. In the court's view, the s~te had ofprovuli~ al,i·9Wl pre~erve o~ 59Q acres
requiring zones of protectio!l around not caused or i~quced the spotted owls . ofmafure tunb~ for a sm~e .P~.ofspot: instead of wa1X, to the store just down the street.
·
1
nesting· sites. In these zones logging to nes~ on B01se land. The, company\ ~mx~. can run from $5 million'to $20
• · A recent federal study showed that only about one
operations could be prohibited.
. pending appeal ensued.
•
' . · Thon.
·
· 'd d did
in four US. adults exercised sufficiently in 1998.
• point, only a single spotted owl· 1n a =
· "'the-court
· b ne
·. f we
"'' d In
· .
esc tharguments
CV1 en y
At this
u1end::01h'gh
hi h d not
. d
That's virtually the same sorry performance Ameri1
1
had ever been recorded on the "site, but in the Supreme Co)lrt, th9 ·Pacific L!:gal !"~re_ss e
. !:CUrt, w c
_eme .
cans chalked up at the beginning of the last decade,
. ts
fi
d th
Foundation argued 'that the state's regu• Botse5 appeal Without recorded diJsent.
1992 orm"thoIogts
con rme
e pres.
E tuall li ·•
will ha to b
according to data collected by the Centers for Disease
.:vc: . e
ence of a breeding pair. When Boise lations.left the compan)l ·in.an impossible fi vea Thy I e l~ues I .
applied for a State permit tO COnunence position. If the endangered owls "chose to ' :~ ~ · e spgho~e ·CJY' IS a~ u;~tlng
Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
logging . the state board of forestry laid nest in cotilpa~y, trees, .the company ~ · .ghe
t to dp~erve 1~ lntp ythas ·
The CDC recently reported tha\.,?nly 25.4 percent
10
down ~nacceptable conditions, In order coilld 110t evict
The owls were not
e:tr
t l mg to ~· · ut 1~pose e
of US. adults met federal recoiiU1leniiations for physi~reservat~on I so e Y upon
to protect the pair 56 ;)r the 65 a ; exactly·· · poespass.er..s: They had simply ~.ost 0
•
·· ·
,
un
ers IS qu te sunp y WJVng
cal activity. Nearly 30 percent said they got no regular
could not be touched. The comp
moved in ~er BQise bought the site. The
·
.
· .
exercise at all... ·
·
(Jam sj .Kilpatrick is a rolumnist for Uniprotested .that this amounted to a taking stite had placed Bois~ it:t a position of
Perhaps not coincidentally, the agency recently
of its property Without jwt compensa- c~mp'eHed acquiescence tp a piece of bad versal Prw SyndiCJJte.)
~ . found that one in four Americans is obese, and more
.;,. · than 60 percent of the population is overweight,
.
·
Excess weight is a risk factor in the development of ·
• · diabetes, which kills 180,000 Americans a year and is
• · becoming more prevalent in the U.S,
•
· To guard against . that
other illnesses, healtlt
experts say, the first step is to eat se_nsibly. The second
is to get off the couch. Merely exercising moderately
WASHINGTON - Since Internet
And while most of us are not fond of
usage is so ubiquitous, why did the dottelemarketing, the analogy is appropri• for half an hour three times a week or vigorously for
ill
the
dot-com
econate.·lfa
rash of telemarketing companies
coms
collapse?
W
20 minutes twice a week will help keep weight down
omy recover?
•
had raised huge sunis of money in pub: and im,Prove fitness ..
On March 20, 2000, · the dot- com
· '
lie offerings during the tele"phone's for. I'
: -· Tennis, anyone?
.
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stocks crashed, and it was a eras!) . that
mative ye~s. they too would hav&lt;!·gone
was as widespread as the Internet that
~1"'"
the way of today's dot-corm, and for ·
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spawned those New Economy compa. . OU~
~ne reason: They would have been pre- · .
nies. Quite simply, the business models
mature.
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did not work, either bc;cause they were
The Internet wil\ soon prove to .be a
•
based on poor assumptions or because
COLUMNIST
significant CO!!SU11\er'. ajd,, rather than a
they were prerpature.
·
time-consuming .irritant, Spee'd- \\d)l
•
· The primaty assumption un~erlying
,.
~e\'Olutioqize'.th,d lntern~t and the way
muscular disease, I'm genuineaU the hope and hype was: that .banner But images on the lnte~net takeflme · cpnsumers shop. Images will pop up in
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ads (t~ose ads runmng across the top of to appear, making image-heavy .ads
a blin~. They will ·be in color, three
ly grateful for the caring sup- ·
port of · customers and
Web Sites) would sell products and ser- . time-coruuming irritant .for most cop- dimensional, panoramic •and even. interDear Editor:
vices. This was the essence of the B-to- sumers. Hence Internet advertising active. Prices will be 'competitive,
.employee~ at convenience
Even the leprechauns are
C (business to consumer) model, and it failed to live up· to expectations, and . b~cause they_will b., i~stantly comparastores, supermarkets, restau• green with envy
over
failed. B-to-B (business to business), that failure led to the failure of many ble.
.
rants and other retailers in
Pomeroy's response to the
however, is working. •
dot-c.oms. But hope remains alive.
~ut the Internet will not replace the
Pomeroy. ·
.: ' Muscular Dystrophy AssociaThe
reasons,
respectively,
for
these
:
The
B-to-0
business
modeJ·was
simbnck-and-mortar
store. It will expand
The 18th annual Shamrocks
tion's Shaniroc~ Against Dys- Against Dymophy campaign
failutts arid success · were speed and ply premature. With ·the advent of DSL .it. It will improve consumers' ability to
trophy
campaign.
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need. CoruUJilers, with litde time and and ~ther t~chnologies, Internet acces~ d_o .their hoine'!Vork:·Physic~ stores and
.
raised more than $10 milli9n
Many thanks to the thou- nationally. These donations
less attention span, concentr~te on , and display 1s about to speed up,dramat- o~me stores w11l be more COp1plemensands of people who donated help MDA fund .a lmost 400
speed, whereas bllsinesses concentrate ically. No longer will consumers click . tary than competitive. Whi:n will t)lis
to MDA arid signed paper research teams worldwide.
.on need.
:
,
on a computer mouse and wait and wait happent It ·is happening now. The dot• ·. shamrocks in businesses in
The fact is that . the Internet is slow · for a Web site to appear or for an image- co~ are. not ~ing to go the way of the
On behalf of the millions of
February and March. Their Americans affected in some
when _compared to other information heavy page in a Web . site •tci finally tulip bubble m 17th century Jiolland,
generous participation in way by the more than 40 dismedia, such as television, the telephone unfold. Instead; images will pop up "in a when a _fraze for tulips momentarily
Shamrocks will . help MDA eases covered by MDA and newspapers. This is not true for blink.
· drove t?eu value to hundreds of. thoutext-only di splays. which is :vhy stock·
"Blink" technology will be to the sands of dollars, or. any of the "other
continue .to provide. families thank you - ahd may St.
quotes. on the Internet, ironically,- have Internet :what direq-dial telephones b?om~and-bust phenomena throughoat
· · affected by neuromuscular Patrick bless you aliJ:ar long.
largely replaced stock quotes in newspa- were to the old crank-and-call tele- his~ory. The Internet IS. here to stay, and
diseases in our community
. Maureen J\1cGovern
pers as the information source for most pho'!es ·w hen callers had to rely. upon so Is Internet commerce.
with valuable services. ·
· National C~airperson
As one· of many who has a
MDA Shamrocks Against
investors. Online trading has been a ·big operators to connect every call- clear(Jack 4nderson and Douglas Coh 11 are
• loved one affected by a neuror5ystrophy
. succc;ss. '· .
ly an inhibiting factor for telemarketing. columnists for VnUed Features Syndicate.)

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KilpatricK

COLl!MN!Sf

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th'em.

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WASHINGTO·N MERRY-GO-ROUND

ang,

·.Don't give '1P on. those ·d~t.-com· businesses .yet
Jack , .. '
Anderson
&amp;
D

Cohii

OUR READERS'
VIEWS
Great ·response

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amsred on thdt charges.
City Manag.;r Bruce McD;miel said police will collect the money
for the next couple of months.
·
The city also is tightening conools on employees' access to keys to
the meters, and beefing up internal Controls to inlpiOYI: accountability.
James A . Hanning. a technician in Fainnont's aaffic clepamn~nt, is
charged 'vith felony einbezzlemenL He w.1S arrested last weekend
after detc:ctives reportedly sPotted him emptying the .meter conection boxes.
.

SIBfJ e.~ held in slqil'i
MARTINSBURG (AP) -A Berkeley County nian has been
charged ~ ltilliyg his 72-~.&lt;,]d grnndmother after forging
checks in her name totaling more than $12,000.
Terry Eugene Walter, 25, of the In~ area, w:IS held without
bOnd Friday at the Eastern Regional Jail 00 .a first-de~e murder
chaige.
· State Police say Walter allegedly slashed the th!oat ofVera May
Oatk last Sept 17 in her Berkeley County hoitfr.
Walter's 22-}'Qr::ald wife, Heather, said he did not kill his grand-

mother.

in1poundmen1S.
J
The committee also will hold a two-hour hearing beginning at 4
p.m. Monday at the Radisson hotel to listen to resideniS' concerns,
said National Research Council ~pokcsman Bill Kearney.
Congress set aside about Sl.6 million last year for an investigation
after the Oct. 11 collapse of an A.T. Massey Coal Corp. cool slurry
impoundment near Inez, Ky.
'

aneley incNating fees
MARTINSBURG (AP) - Berkeley County may raise the fees
it charges developers to help pay for another assistant county engineer. and some builders support the idea.
Commission President How.ud Strauss will bring up several fee ·
proposals April 2 with the county Planning Commission, which
must formally reconunend the increases to ~commission:
On the campaign trail last Ull, Stt:iuss said lie'believes the fees the
county charges are too low.
The basic fee to process a_subdivision request is $300,$45 nf whi~h
goes to~engineering moiew. Strauss and some developers support
raising that fee by an additional $45 to add a plan reviewer.

U.S. alluiaaq leaviug post

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WWto
MORGANTOWN (AP)- West Virginia Univenity is ready to
produce its own steam heat if the Morgantown Energy Associates
plant is forced to ~ offline while a crippled silo there is tom down.
The power plan'fhas supplied ste:un heat t6 the univenity since
1992. A collapse of a coal silo on Man:h I fon:ed a systemwide shut-

down. .

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County zoning law.seems to indicate ne\v structures can only be
35 feet tall, Buchanan said Thudilay. The ente[fainment center and
parking garage would both be about 55 feet tall, while the nineHARPERS FERRY (AP) - . Rep. Shelley Moore- Capito hand- story, 250.:room hotel would be about 101 feet tall . •
, delivered an An1erican flag that once flctv over th~ U.S. Capitol to a
When officials unveiled the plans last fall, they said the hotel \..Uuld
sc~ool whose IJag was burned by vandals.
be' done in California mission-style architecture, and the entertain~
' . "Straight fiom Washington, a new flag-for Harpers Ferry Junior ment complex would include a theater and new buffet area,.
High;-said Capito, R-W:Va., who handed the new Oag tQ student
' body presillent. Chena Bolton on Friday.
'
Among those attending the ceremony were war veterans, Harpers
Fetry j&gt;olice officers and the Jefferson ~ounty sheriff.
CHARLESTON (AP) -A national panel investigating coal dam
·. ·'Wuths are believed to be responsible for breaking into the school safety will take public conunent at a hearing nq:t -week in Huntearly Sunday. A glass window and several light
were broken. ington.
The school's U.S. Oag was burned and the sta~· flag was stolen.
The committee, appoi!lted by . . ·the National Resean:h Council, 1
will meet Monday and Tues(lay to
fQCUS on the mapping of underFAIRMONT (AP) - fairmont officials have changed the way ground mines • near coal waste
money is collected fiom parking meters after an employee was

WHEELING (AP) - U.S. Attorney Melvin W: Kahle Jr.
announced Friday he will leave
the Northern District as of mid·
nightApril20.
His resignation, submitted
President George W Bush and
AttOrney General john Ashcroft,
2000 end 2001
came one day after the resignation
Silver Dollen
of his counterpart in West Virginia's Southern District, Rebecca
MEW Willennium

Coin• end
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· Coal dam hearing Monday

fixtures

.Aieged llteft spurs changes

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. overbrook Center is
." proud to announce th~t
Dr. Muhammad Alam
M.D., office .foc·ated iO:
New· Haveil, has joined .
'
·our medical staff.
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Dr. Alam Ia a graduate of Dow Medical Center In
1984 with several years experience In Internal
Specialties
Include: · cardiology, . pulmonary
endocardlology, and neurology.

a

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an

. Capilo ...... burned lag .

medicine.
medicine,

• completed r.esldency at sound Shore Me~lcal Center In· West
Cheater County In New York. ·
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• Associated with Marshall University School of Medicine In the
Dipartment of Pulmonary .Medicine In 1997.

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exuemely important · dut's not being
The 16-member ' group ,wolitd be
don~ now. It aeat£5 :m ovenll economic known as the Joint Commission on Ecode\ldop{JlCIIt strategy for the state, and it nomic Development and would include
gives us Ia W2)' ~ tne2SUie our progre»," the chain of the House and Senate·
said Sen,l . Brooks McCabe. D-K.tnawha, finance, judiciary, education and health
chatrman «the Senate Ecouomic Dewel- and human resourcts committees. The
opment Conunitt«, which originated other eight members would ~ appointed
and endorsed the bill. It now goes ro the by· the Senate president and ~e House
Senate Finance Conunitt«.
speaker. ,
·
· One of the bill's key c.omponeniS is
"I beliC'IIe in the idea .o f account~bi!ity;'
accountability requirement on economic . said West Virginia Development Office
developen, said- Sen. John Unger, D- Direetor John Snider.
Berlceley. who crafted the bill,
Snider said the only question is
"It forms the coimnission, but what's whether the new bye£ of accountability
even more important is that it ~ will cost more than it will bring in. He
way to measure where our economic ) would have to expand his development
development money is going;' Unger office staff to meet the needs addressed in
said. "Right now we just don't know the legislation.

A f:illure of the struCture's intemd structure caused some 1,400
_;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___::.
' - - - - - - - - - - - · tons of coal and machinery to come crashin'g down,'killing Ronald
Betts.
~
--a.--..1
E.Wobl', 32, of Morgantown. ,
-The Justice Department has 120
Sl')iei' JICIIu::IIJU;U
. SinCe the collapse,WVU has relied on auxiliary natural-gas fired
days to name interim U.S. attor, ,MORG~PWN (N') _ A G~ .man ·!!as been sen- 'boiler u~ at tJ:le plant.
. . •
neys for both.slots,
·
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tencod'to onqear in jail for fatilly shooting a 12-year::ald boy.
Kahle, who was Ohio County
Dmd S. Hanlin was sentenced Friday in Monongalia County''· ·
prosecutor for six yean, assumed.
Circuit Cou~;t for inwlutltary manslau~ter, the res~lt of a plea
:CftAIUEsTOWN (AP) -The owners of CharlesTown Races his · fe&lt;;leral · post in November
agreement made w1th Prosecutor Matcl3 Ashdown. He pleaded will have to t
·n
·
6 b ildi h 'gh if th
guilty earlier to the Aug. 14 shooting ofAndrew G. Lambert.
do ~£1"1 millige zom g vananceslanor du ng el t
ey want to 1999, succeeding . William D.
Wilmoth.
. hdown
d dro
fe(
ha
of
a tKJU
on expaliSIOn as p ne .
. As
In -excha.nge,
a~
to
P
a
ony
_
c
tge
\vanton
·
11-ck
.
p-;dentJun
"
B
hana
"d
th
·
call
fi
,.!,__
•
1'
file
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,_X
uc
n sal
e expans1on
or a new
enTh'5boy~.ment IIIVOh ':~Rgtha ki armh · f H nlin'
bil, h
gambling and entertainment center, plus a I ,200-space garage and a
wass otm e tc eno a
smo e orne.
hotel.
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"·This bill would . do som~thlng these things, so ~·s no accoun6;ability."

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•. Currently working for Pleasant Valley Hospital.
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AI am Is accepting ·patlanti at Ov~tbrt?ok Center.
Information; call Theresa Lavender, LSW, a\ (740) 992-8472.

pr.

For

Save BIG on a
FARMERS ·BANK loan!!

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OFF!

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Take an additiona/.25% OFF wltll ""
IIMIOrf!lllic JHIYitlrnt fro/1111 FA/fME~S BANK chtc~ing

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&amp;'Savings Company

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...;.·~~~'L=~L=!~.w.~J~-----~-J

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·.25%
Your Bank ""' Ule.·..

333 Page Street • Middleport, OH 45760
"A Celebration of Ufe" · . .

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Bring this advertisement .into Farmers Bank
and get .25% off on a Personal Loan:"

~ae.~~
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• Olocount

a~alloble tor limited time only. All !Oano

8\bject to CtWdlt

approval. Doao not appy to "'atestate.or bustneu toano, other opoeio1
promotions anc:Vor refinanctng e.Misting loans. Member FDIC.

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Opl11ion

'"diawl

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'l unlls;, Aprl1
Alit:ANI--

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. cnmpalln, 0111o • Polt•oy,
Point PI I T n', W.V..

Ohio Valley Publlsl:'llng Co.
Chartle W,

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ecn..,

Aclvwtlllng ...........

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R. Sll8wn 1Awis

Pubhta
IM1ylloy.r

CHARLESTON (AP) - Legidatm
bfa.s lWIIkl be part ·« a new C0D1111iJsioo that would OYeuee aD cure tupported economic devdopmc:ot projects under
a bill approved Friday by a Senate comminee,
The bill. SB716, introduces ,a plan
called the WestVirginia Ecol10111k ~
opmeot Competitiveness Act. w~
would place the state's development
office under the commission's control.
The development oflice and the state.
Depahment «Tax :md Revrnur would
be required to submit annual reports to
the conunission that would include information on economic development
invi:stments, tourism expenditures, new,
businesses and tax incentives offered to
entice new b~inesses.

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Committee calls for f~mation of commission

WeSt VIrginia weather

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lllging EdltcM'
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NATIONAL VIEWS
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.Showers return on Sunday

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Congress·needs to reverse
stance -on workplace injuries

t

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Ulho . will·end ~p paying for the spo(ted ..otvl?
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55. South wind 10 to 15 mph
National ·Weather Ser- becoming west early in the
·• . --'v1ce
.The· says
moisture. will afternoon. Chance of rain 70
increase tonight in advance of percent.
a · cold front approaching
Sunday night,.A chance of
Ohio &amp;om the west.
· '·
rain showers early. .. Followed
Sh(])IVers will spread slowly by partial clearing. Low in the
aJ;ro,ss the area late Saturday mid 30s.
into Sunday, continuing into
.EXtended forecast:
· Sunday .night as the front
· Mo?day... Partly
cloudy.
moves across the: area.
High
m
the
lowet:_
50s.
..
Temperatures will be in the
Tuesday...Mosdy cloudy. A ..
40s overnight, recovering into
chance
of showen during the
·. the 50s Sunday.
_
night. Low 35 to 40 and high
~unset tonight will be at
6:55. Sunrise Sunday will -be 58 to 63.
Wednesday. ..Mosdy cloudy
-'·
at 7:16a.m.
with
a chance ·of showers.
Weather foreeast:
·.
Tonight. .,Showers likely, ~ow in the upper 40s and
. ·~y toward dawn. Low in high in the mid 60s.
· the lower 40s. Northeast wind Thursday... Partly · cloudy.
,&lt;
· 5 to 10 mph becoming south- Low in the l~r 50s and
' east. Chance of ;.tin 60 per- high in the lower 70s.
· Friday... Mosdy cloudy with
· · cent,
Snnday.,Showers likely, A a chanc~ of showers. Low in
; thunderstorm also possible the lower 50s and high 64 to
: through midday. High 50 to 69.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

• The Tampa (Fla. f Tribune, on the . truth about
ergonomic saftiy: No sooner had Congress scuttled new

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At it's session on M~rch 19, the
1
lui:k.
rules . regulating ergonomic safety in the workplace
"
The f9undation coJillplained that habi- ·
than a firestorm of criticism rained on the Republican _ Supreme :Court denied appeals :n 2,!11 .
pending cases. Lost in the ' debris was
tit rules fall with special impact upo'n
majority. "This is the biggest heist of a special in~erest.
fanners and r.:mchers. "Forcing families
Case No. 00-1238, the Case of the Spotin the history of the Congress;' lamented Hoqse
te'd Owls.
to forgo lla!'vesting d!eir timbe):,so that it
· l_'his was an appeal the court should
can serVe- a$ a set-aside for habi12t not
Democratic · leader Richard Gephardt, who said the
have taken, for. it presented a large issue
J~h-es·
only deprives them o( cunent income &gt;
vote signals the end of bipartisanship...
of constitutional law on an· undentandcUU
.
~
!Ur may be critical to 'e conomic.viabi!i- .
JJec;IUse so many lawmakers and business leaders are
able scale. The question \vas not especialty, it also fo~es them to be-tt. the unco~-·
being unfairly accused of wanting tO boost· profits by
ly complex:To what extent may the state
'
pensated rtsk tha:t they Will lose thetr ·
crippling ~.erican ~ "\YPrkers, a review of the major
total inv~nnent at any· time .by ~?'
compel a private company to . bear the
problems with the rule5 is warranted . .,
cost·of a public benefit?
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The American furest and .Paper Asso- •
&lt;In
its
Delphic
Way.
the
Constitution
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ciatiori
also filed.. a brief in Bqise's _s up• Employers would have to pay workers with l'epet53)'1 only that "private prophty shall not tion. Five yean passed in litigation. Final:. · .port It npte~ that W;ashin~n and.c~~
itive stress injuries 90 percent of their salary and ben· be taken for public use, without jwt Jy, in !ipril 1997, the Oregot\ Supo:me '. forma have a~pted ~Itat ~les like
efits for up to three months.,. : .
compensation." James Madison ·(eft it to tourt. upheld the ·. boaJd's decree. Six ' ~ps~ I~ Oregon. Califormu .. rules
• Specific limits would be imposed on work, includfuture courts to define what he meant by . months later, it turned 9 ut that ·calatrlity' ot:equm: that I ,300·. acres. of owl ~abitat·
ing a four-hour limit on typing in any workday.., '
"takeil" and "public use."The question in had fallen upon the pai,r ·of owls. The · must be -erotec.t ed "YYthin L3 miles of
the Case of the Sported Owls is whether female had been found dead. "~d :the each ~~t site or ,Pair .activity ~enter. The
The science of ergonomics is rapidly improving as
·.
· Oregon, in its ~ffort to save a pair of male was.recendy observed at a site ~rules unpose huge econormc cos~. ~n
more is learned a~ut the human body and why some
· endangered birds, temporarily "rook" .a than e1gljt mi)" away?' The site. \vas no , th?se~ Ian~~ unlu~ky en~Ugli . to
• repetitive motions create debilitating pain. It is in the
large chJ!nk of property own~d by ·the longer subject to protection illlder Ore- ,:have spotted owlS on the•r land. A 1994 ·
~ fnterest of both .employers 'and employees to create a . Boise Cascade Corp.
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. . gon law.
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.study p'4ced a .value
matun: timber• Safer and healthier work environment, and·the way to
The facts are not grea\ly in dispute. ll\ · Boise sued"the state tor the roSt opp.or~ Iapil of $10,000 to $40,000 per acre,
1988 Boise ·acquin!d a 65=acre parcel of tunity. A jury concluded that. during tlie dependii!g llpon the .sJiecies and volume
·- ~ do th~t ~through rul~ that are effective and fair. ·
timber in Oregon. AI about th'e same five-year period of"phySical .occupation"· 0~~e anticipated ~est..
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COngress now must insist that such rules be devel.
.
. · time, the. Oregon Deparnnent ,of Fish by the owls, t)le vl!J!.Je. ofBoi~'s traet _had· - .!bus, ,unless JUSt compensation 1s
oped. ,
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and Wildlife designated th~ spotted owl diminished by $,1.8 million. Oregon't' available . under · the FiftJl and ·14th
• Florida Today of Melbourne, on generation couch
as a thl'l1atened species. The state's board Supreme Court reversed · the award of Amen'!:'"ents, the .cost to ~e landowner
potatoe~:. Think about this the next time you drive,
of forestry promulgated regulations . damages. In the court's view, the s~te had ofprovuli~ al,i·9Wl pre~erve o~ 59Q acres
requiring zones of protectio!l around not caused or i~quced the spotted owls . ofmafure tunb~ for a sm~e .P~.ofspot: instead of wa1X, to the store just down the street.
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nesting· sites. In these zones logging to nes~ on B01se land. The, company\ ~mx~. can run from $5 million'to $20
• · A recent federal study showed that only about one
operations could be prohibited.
. pending appeal ensued.
•
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·
· 'd d did
in four US. adults exercised sufficiently in 1998.
• point, only a single spotted owl· 1n a =
· "'the-court
· b ne
·. f we
"'' d In
· .
esc tharguments
CV1 en y
At this
u1end::01h'gh
hi h d not
. d
That's virtually the same sorry performance Ameri1
1
had ever been recorded on the "site, but in the Supreme Co)lrt, th9 ·Pacific L!:gal !"~re_ss e
. !:CUrt, w c
_eme .
cans chalked up at the beginning of the last decade,
. ts
fi
d th
Foundation argued 'that the state's regu• Botse5 appeal Without recorded diJsent.
1992 orm"thoIogts
con rme
e pres.
E tuall li ·•
will ha to b
according to data collected by the Centers for Disease
.:vc: . e
ence of a breeding pair. When Boise lations.left the compan)l ·in.an impossible fi vea Thy I e l~ues I .
applied for a State permit tO COnunence position. If the endangered owls "chose to ' :~ ~ · e spgho~e ·CJY' IS a~ u;~tlng
Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
logging . the state board of forestry laid nest in cotilpa~y, trees, .the company ~ · .ghe
t to dp~erve 1~ lntp ythas ·
The CDC recently reported tha\.,?nly 25.4 percent
10
down ~nacceptable conditions, In order coilld 110t evict
The owls were not
e:tr
t l mg to ~· · ut 1~pose e
of US. adults met federal recoiiU1leniiations for physi~reservat~on I so e Y upon
to protect the pair 56 ;)r the 65 a ; exactly·· · poespass.er..s: They had simply ~.ost 0
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,
un
ers IS qu te sunp y WJVng
cal activity. Nearly 30 percent said they got no regular
could not be touched. The comp
moved in ~er BQise bought the site. The
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exercise at all... ·
·
(Jam sj .Kilpatrick is a rolumnist for Uniprotested .that this amounted to a taking stite had placed Bois~ it:t a position of
Perhaps not coincidentally, the agency recently
of its property Without jwt compensa- c~mp'eHed acquiescence tp a piece of bad versal Prw SyndiCJJte.)
~ . found that one in four Americans is obese, and more
.;,. · than 60 percent of the population is overweight,
.
·
Excess weight is a risk factor in the development of ·
• · diabetes, which kills 180,000 Americans a year and is
• · becoming more prevalent in the U.S,
•
· To guard against . that
other illnesses, healtlt
experts say, the first step is to eat se_nsibly. The second
is to get off the couch. Merely exercising moderately
WASHINGTON - Since Internet
And while most of us are not fond of
usage is so ubiquitous, why did the dottelemarketing, the analogy is appropri• for half an hour three times a week or vigorously for
ill
the
dot-com
econate.·lfa
rash of telemarketing companies
coms
collapse?
W
20 minutes twice a week will help keep weight down
omy recover?
•
had raised huge sunis of money in pub: and im,Prove fitness ..
On March 20, 2000, · the dot- com
· '
lie offerings during the tele"phone's for. I'
: -· Tennis, anyone?
.
I
stocks crashed, and it was a eras!) . that
mative ye~s. they too would hav&lt;!·gone
was as widespread as the Internet that
~1"'"
the way of today's dot-corm, and for ·
••
spawned those New Economy compa. . OU~
~ne reason: They would have been pre- · .
nies. Quite simply, the business models
mature.
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did not work, either bc;cause they were
The Internet wil\ soon prove to .be a
•
based on poor assumptions or because
COLUMNIST
significant CO!!SU11\er'. ajd,, rather than a
they were prerpature.
·
time-consuming .irritant, Spee'd- \\d)l
•
· The primaty assumption un~erlying
,.
~e\'Olutioqize'.th,d lntern~t and the way
muscular disease, I'm genuineaU the hope and hype was: that .banner But images on the lnte~net takeflme · cpnsumers shop. Images will pop up in
•
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ads (t~ose ads runmng across the top of to appear, making image-heavy .ads
a blin~. They will ·be in color, three
ly grateful for the caring sup- ·
port of · customers and
Web Sites) would sell products and ser- . time-coruuming irritant .for most cop- dimensional, panoramic •and even. interDear Editor:
vices. This was the essence of the B-to- sumers. Hence Internet advertising active. Prices will be 'competitive,
.employee~ at convenience
Even the leprechauns are
C (business to consumer) model, and it failed to live up· to expectations, and . b~cause they_will b., i~stantly comparastores, supermarkets, restau• green with envy
over
failed. B-to-B (business to business), that failure led to the failure of many ble.
.
rants and other retailers in
Pomeroy's response to the
however, is working. •
dot-c.oms. But hope remains alive.
~ut the Internet will not replace the
Pomeroy. ·
.: ' Muscular Dystrophy AssociaThe
reasons,
respectively,
for
these
:
The
B-to-0
business
modeJ·was
simbnck-and-mortar
store. It will expand
The 18th annual Shamrocks
tion's Shaniroc~ Against Dys- Against Dymophy campaign
failutts arid success · were speed and ply premature. With ·the advent of DSL .it. It will improve consumers' ability to
trophy
campaign.
:
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need. CoruUJilers, with litde time and and ~ther t~chnologies, Internet acces~ d_o .their hoine'!Vork:·Physic~ stores and
.
raised more than $10 milli9n
Many thanks to the thou- nationally. These donations
less attention span, concentr~te on , and display 1s about to speed up,dramat- o~me stores w11l be more COp1plemensands of people who donated help MDA fund .a lmost 400
speed, whereas bllsinesses concentrate ically. No longer will consumers click . tary than competitive. Whi:n will t)lis
to MDA arid signed paper research teams worldwide.
.on need.
:
,
on a computer mouse and wait and wait happent It ·is happening now. The dot• ·. shamrocks in businesses in
The fact is that . the Internet is slow · for a Web site to appear or for an image- co~ are. not ~ing to go the way of the
On behalf of the millions of
February and March. Their Americans affected in some
when _compared to other information heavy page in a Web . site •tci finally tulip bubble m 17th century Jiolland,
generous participation in way by the more than 40 dismedia, such as television, the telephone unfold. Instead; images will pop up "in a when a _fraze for tulips momentarily
Shamrocks will . help MDA eases covered by MDA and newspapers. This is not true for blink.
· drove t?eu value to hundreds of. thoutext-only di splays. which is :vhy stock·
"Blink" technology will be to the sands of dollars, or. any of the "other
continue .to provide. families thank you - ahd may St.
quotes. on the Internet, ironically,- have Internet :what direq-dial telephones b?om~and-bust phenomena throughoat
· · affected by neuromuscular Patrick bless you aliJ:ar long.
largely replaced stock quotes in newspa- were to the old crank-and-call tele- his~ory. The Internet IS. here to stay, and
diseases in our community
. Maureen J\1cGovern
pers as the information source for most pho'!es ·w hen callers had to rely. upon so Is Internet commerce.
with valuable services. ·
· National C~airperson
As one· of many who has a
MDA Shamrocks Against
investors. Online trading has been a ·big operators to connect every call- clear(Jack 4nderson and Douglas Coh 11 are
• loved one affected by a neuror5ystrophy
. succc;ss. '· .
ly an inhibiting factor for telemarketing. columnists for VnUed Features Syndicate.)

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KilpatricK

COLl!MN!Sf

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th'em.

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WASHINGTO·N MERRY-GO-ROUND

ang,

·.Don't give '1P on. those ·d~t.-com· businesses .yet
Jack , .. '
Anderson
&amp;
D

Cohii

OUR READERS'
VIEWS
Great ·response

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amsred on thdt charges.
City Manag.;r Bruce McD;miel said police will collect the money
for the next couple of months.
·
The city also is tightening conools on employees' access to keys to
the meters, and beefing up internal Controls to inlpiOYI: accountability.
James A . Hanning. a technician in Fainnont's aaffic clepamn~nt, is
charged 'vith felony einbezzlemenL He w.1S arrested last weekend
after detc:ctives reportedly sPotted him emptying the .meter conection boxes.
.

SIBfJ e.~ held in slqil'i
MARTINSBURG (AP) -A Berkeley County nian has been
charged ~ ltilliyg his 72-~.&lt;,]d grnndmother after forging
checks in her name totaling more than $12,000.
Terry Eugene Walter, 25, of the In~ area, w:IS held without
bOnd Friday at the Eastern Regional Jail 00 .a first-de~e murder
chaige.
· State Police say Walter allegedly slashed the th!oat ofVera May
Oatk last Sept 17 in her Berkeley County hoitfr.
Walter's 22-}'Qr::ald wife, Heather, said he did not kill his grand-

mother.

in1poundmen1S.
J
The committee also will hold a two-hour hearing beginning at 4
p.m. Monday at the Radisson hotel to listen to resideniS' concerns,
said National Research Council ~pokcsman Bill Kearney.
Congress set aside about Sl.6 million last year for an investigation
after the Oct. 11 collapse of an A.T. Massey Coal Corp. cool slurry
impoundment near Inez, Ky.
'

aneley incNating fees
MARTINSBURG (AP) - Berkeley County may raise the fees
it charges developers to help pay for another assistant county engineer. and some builders support the idea.
Commission President How.ud Strauss will bring up several fee ·
proposals April 2 with the county Planning Commission, which
must formally reconunend the increases to ~commission:
On the campaign trail last Ull, Stt:iuss said lie'believes the fees the
county charges are too low.
The basic fee to process a_subdivision request is $300,$45 nf whi~h
goes to~engineering moiew. Strauss and some developers support
raising that fee by an additional $45 to add a plan reviewer.

U.S. alluiaaq leaviug post

·

WWto
MORGANTOWN (AP)- West Virginia Univenity is ready to
produce its own steam heat if the Morgantown Energy Associates
plant is forced to ~ offline while a crippled silo there is tom down.
The power plan'fhas supplied ste:un heat t6 the univenity since
1992. A collapse of a coal silo on Man:h I fon:ed a systemwide shut-

down. .

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County zoning law.seems to indicate ne\v structures can only be
35 feet tall, Buchanan said Thudilay. The ente[fainment center and
parking garage would both be about 55 feet tall, while the nineHARPERS FERRY (AP) - . Rep. Shelley Moore- Capito hand- story, 250.:room hotel would be about 101 feet tall . •
, delivered an An1erican flag that once flctv over th~ U.S. Capitol to a
When officials unveiled the plans last fall, they said the hotel \..Uuld
sc~ool whose IJag was burned by vandals.
be' done in California mission-style architecture, and the entertain~
' . "Straight fiom Washington, a new flag-for Harpers Ferry Junior ment complex would include a theater and new buffet area,.
High;-said Capito, R-W:Va., who handed the new Oag tQ student
' body presillent. Chena Bolton on Friday.
'
Among those attending the ceremony were war veterans, Harpers
Fetry j&gt;olice officers and the Jefferson ~ounty sheriff.
CHARLESTON (AP) -A national panel investigating coal dam
·. ·'Wuths are believed to be responsible for breaking into the school safety will take public conunent at a hearing nq:t -week in Huntearly Sunday. A glass window and several light
were broken. ington.
The school's U.S. Oag was burned and the sta~· flag was stolen.
The committee, appoi!lted by . . ·the National Resean:h Council, 1
will meet Monday and Tues(lay to
fQCUS on the mapping of underFAIRMONT (AP) - fairmont officials have changed the way ground mines • near coal waste
money is collected fiom parking meters after an employee was

WHEELING (AP) - U.S. Attorney Melvin W: Kahle Jr.
announced Friday he will leave
the Northern District as of mid·
nightApril20.
His resignation, submitted
President George W Bush and
AttOrney General john Ashcroft,
2000 end 2001
came one day after the resignation
Silver Dollen
of his counterpart in West Virginia's Southern District, Rebecca
MEW Willennium

Coin• end
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· Coal dam hearing Monday

fixtures

.Aieged llteft spurs changes

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. overbrook Center is
." proud to announce th~t
Dr. Muhammad Alam
M.D., office .foc·ated iO:
New· Haveil, has joined .
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·our medical staff.
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Dr. Alam Ia a graduate of Dow Medical Center In
1984 with several years experience In Internal
Specialties
Include: · cardiology, . pulmonary
endocardlology, and neurology.

a

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an

. Capilo ...... burned lag .

medicine.
medicine,

• completed r.esldency at sound Shore Me~lcal Center In· West
Cheater County In New York. ·
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• Associated with Marshall University School of Medicine In the
Dipartment of Pulmonary .Medicine In 1997.

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exuemely important · dut's not being
The 16-member ' group ,wolitd be
don~ now. It aeat£5 :m ovenll economic known as the Joint Commission on Ecode\ldop{JlCIIt strategy for the state, and it nomic Development and would include
gives us Ia W2)' ~ tne2SUie our progre»," the chain of the House and Senate·
said Sen,l . Brooks McCabe. D-K.tnawha, finance, judiciary, education and health
chatrman «the Senate Ecouomic Dewel- and human resourcts committees. The
opment Conunitt«, which originated other eight members would ~ appointed
and endorsed the bill. It now goes ro the by· the Senate president and ~e House
Senate Finance Conunitt«.
speaker. ,
·
· One of the bill's key c.omponeniS is
"I beliC'IIe in the idea .o f account~bi!ity;'
accountability requirement on economic . said West Virginia Development Office
developen, said- Sen. John Unger, D- Direetor John Snider.
Berlceley. who crafted the bill,
Snider said the only question is
"It forms the coimnission, but what's whether the new bye£ of accountability
even more important is that it ~ will cost more than it will bring in. He
way to measure where our economic ) would have to expand his development
development money is going;' Unger office staff to meet the needs addressed in
said. "Right now we just don't know the legislation.

A f:illure of the struCture's intemd structure caused some 1,400
_;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___::.
' - - - - - - - - - - - · tons of coal and machinery to come crashin'g down,'killing Ronald
Betts.
~
--a.--..1
E.Wobl', 32, of Morgantown. ,
-The Justice Department has 120
Sl')iei' JICIIu::IIJU;U
. SinCe the collapse,WVU has relied on auxiliary natural-gas fired
days to name interim U.S. attor, ,MORG~PWN (N') _ A G~ .man ·!!as been sen- 'boiler u~ at tJ:le plant.
. . •
neys for both.slots,
·
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tencod'to onqear in jail for fatilly shooting a 12-year::ald boy.
Kahle, who was Ohio County
Dmd S. Hanlin was sentenced Friday in Monongalia County''· ·
prosecutor for six yean, assumed.
Circuit Cou~;t for inwlutltary manslau~ter, the res~lt of a plea
:CftAIUEsTOWN (AP) -The owners of CharlesTown Races his · fe&lt;;leral · post in November
agreement made w1th Prosecutor Matcl3 Ashdown. He pleaded will have to t
·n
·
6 b ildi h 'gh if th
guilty earlier to the Aug. 14 shooting ofAndrew G. Lambert.
do ~£1"1 millige zom g vananceslanor du ng el t
ey want to 1999, succeeding . William D.
Wilmoth.
. hdown
d dro
fe(
ha
of
a tKJU
on expaliSIOn as p ne .
. As
In -excha.nge,
a~
to
P
a
ony
_
c
tge
\vanton
·
11-ck
.
p-;dentJun
"
B
hana
"d
th
·
call
fi
,.!,__
•
1'
file
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,_X
uc
n sal
e expans1on
or a new
enTh'5boy~.ment IIIVOh ':~Rgtha ki armh · f H nlin'
bil, h
gambling and entertainment center, plus a I ,200-space garage and a
wass otm e tc eno a
smo e orne.
hotel.
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"·This bill would . do som~thlng these things, so ~·s no accoun6;ability."

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•. Currently working for Pleasant Valley Hospital.
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AI am Is accepting ·patlanti at Ov~tbrt?ok Center.
Information; call Theresa Lavender, LSW, a\ (740) 992-8472.

pr.

For

Save BIG on a
FARMERS ·BANK loan!!

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OFF!

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Take an additiona/.25% OFF wltll ""
IIMIOrf!lllic JHIYitlrnt fro/1111 FA/fME~S BANK chtc~ing

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Your Bank ""' Ule.·..

333 Page Street • Middleport, OH 45760
"A Celebration of Ufe" · . .

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Bring this advertisement .into Farmers Bank
and get .25% off on a Personal Loan:"

~ae.~~
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a~alloble tor limited time only. All !Oano

8\bject to CtWdlt

approval. Doao not appy to "'atestate.or bustneu toano, other opoeio1
promotions anc:Vor refinanctng e.Misting loans. Member FDIC.

..._

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Pomeroy •llldcllport • OIWpolla. Ohio • Point PIIIIPnt, WV

SUnd8y, Aprt1..1, 2001

•

iii Fishtr-~ funcal Home, Pomeroy,~ the Rev. Simuel
Basye ofticiating. Burial will be in Gm.od Hill Cemetery,
Chestun..Visitation was held in the funeral home on Satuntay.

Obituaries

...111t1M11t'l1tonlll

.
. . . . Gitlin GoiM11 If

MIDDLEPORT - James Albert Thomas, 68, Middleport,
A1HENS - William Glenn Goldlberry~8j, Athens, died die~ Saturday, March 31, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
'lbesd.y, Man:h Z7, 2001 at Hickory N~
· Home, foDowing a . Bofll Aug. 19, 1932 in MiddlepQrt, son of the !ate John and
lcr,.cby illnea.
·
. ·
. Con Matheny Thomaf, he was a retired ironworker with Local
He - the son of the late Roy E . and
GiJ1Wui Golds- 787 of Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
~and was emp~ by McBee Co. for ~ as a ·fore- - A'U.S. Arm'{ ~teran of the Korean Conflict. he was a memman. superintendent and plant manager until retirement
oo ~nd Past Master of Middleport Masoni' Lodge 363, 32nd
7 He - a member of Harrisonville Lodge 411 free and Dcgree5cottishRiteValleyofColumbus,AladdinTcmpleShrine
Accepted Masons cf Ohio, Disabled American Vetenns, McBee aJl!f Gallipolis Shrine Club, Middleport Eastern Star-Evangeline
Quarter Century Club and the Ohio Gun Collecton Associa- Chapter 173, a Kentucky Colonel, and a member of the Rutland
tion.
American Leg!o!VI'ost.
.
· · He was also a vi:tenn ofWOrld War II in the European TheSu~ng are ilis wife,.Ann B. Priddy Thomas; two so~. John
ater and received the Combar,lnfantry Award with two stars.
S. (Gma) Thomas of Pomeroy. and Joe C (Trcsa) Thomas of MidAlong with his parents, he was preceded in death by three dlcport; six grandchildren and a great~gnnddaughtcr; ~ sisten,
brothen, Eugene, David and Drennen.
Fbzel'Bowen of New Carlisle, and Ginny (Ro~rt) Arbaugh o(
SurviWtg are his wife. F. ~velyn Williams Goldsberry; two Pomeroy; and s~ral nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded m death by two brothen, fb,rry and
sons, Judge L. Alan· (Stephanie ShCT.-) Goldsberry, and Randall
tee (Pam Ramsey) Goldsberry, bOth ofAthens; three gnndchil- Ernest Thomas; and a SISter, Maxine Balser.
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dren; and a sister, Mary Eliiabeth .Parker of &lt;:;osby. Tenn.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in fisher-Acree funeral
Services were held friday,' Mateh ·30, 2901 at J~n Funeral Home, Middleport. with the Rev. Clifforci',Colema'hofficiating.
, ljome in Athens, with th, R,ev.W:Tad Cu~kler officiating. Bur~ · Burial will be .in Gravel Hill Cemetery, 'Cheshire. Friends may
ial was in Adi,ens Memory Gard~ns. . ·
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call at the fune~l home from 7-9 p.m. Monday.
' Memo~ial contributions cill'l·be sent $P the American Qiabefes .. Masonic services will be conducted in the funeral home at
, 'Foundation Inc., 937 N. High St.,Worthington, Ohio.'43085; · .. 8:30 p.m.•Monday. ...

n

. Shl.tef ·arrant Latp · ... : ··

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John •;.pa• .veith

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, PaUl E. •Hatch' La.ude&amp; 111•1t Sr..,;.

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holds the lease on the cour,ity's only hqspital buildi~,
Davenpor.t said Friday t&amp;t
other health care provid~rs
will be invited .to part,!cip;i;~e
in discussions, in hopes f~t ·
the counry's healt)l care n~~!;ls
can be. met.
., .
Some
hospitals· h~~e
expressed an interest . in providing services to 'Meigs
County. residents, and Dave:nport s:Ud that he thinks oth~rs •
, will · follow suit, once tpe
Oklahoma Model .is put into
place.
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"I think that as .this proC,C.ss
continues, there will ·probab)y
.be more interest from oth.er
he~lth ' care providers. and
othet hospitals.~ ' pavenp~~~
said.
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Davenport said that seeking
·a ~ 'critic;~l aceess" ·designation
for the · county, V~[hich would
allow fo~ exceptions to the
· Medicare ' I:Hlling · policies to
ben~fif p;a~e,nls 'YiliJ.' limited
access ' to ' medical facilities ;
might be considered in conjunction with the .Oklahoma
Moqel .process, but is not
automatioally· ·a part of the
,,
process.
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Surviving, are a son, Paul (Louise) Laudermilt Jr.; two daugh- P~stor Larry L,emle}&gt; officiating. Burial will be in Ridgelawn -----~..:....._:.__-:-------'------­
ters, Donna (Mike) Miller and Sandra Hoffman; 11 grandchil- Cemetery. Frieni:ls may call ·at; the funeral home from 6~8 p.m.·
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dren and s~ral great-gnridchildren; a brother, Walter "Whitey", . Monday. , . .
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Laudermilt ofYoun~town; 1\vo sisters, Emma Laudermilt Wilson .
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. and Maxine Lauderrnilt Lee, both.of Pomeroy; and·several nieces . '
and nephews.
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space; arid a boat ~oaking facil~
Subscribe today. 446-2342
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He was also preceded In death by two sons, Timothy and Wality for ..v~t.er el'aft. enthusi~sts.
ter "Steve" Laudermilt; four brothers, Louis, Todd, Willard and ·
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Once the p,ark is ~omplete, a,
"'
Jim ' Laudernlilt; and tWO sisten, Velma Laudermilt Young ana
. . . . . . . . A1
ribbon•cutiing cererrtopy will '
B«ry Laudermilt !mboden.
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l:!e schedUled for the public· \O
Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Sundt?' at Gilmore Ceme- pletion;,'
Mussei. ''Once, . ~ttimd, _adiled Musser.
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tery, with Brother Theron Durham: officiating. Friends may call. finished, the public 'will have a . · . Young S.id · more than .
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home, Pomeroy, on SundaS' fiom 9: to woncleiful area to .enjoy therp- · $.18,000 'ih nioriey and materi. '
a.m.
selves while attending to th~ir ~ was donated '}iy local busi;.
summertime activities."
hesses and residen~ for ~he
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A 21~by-29 shelter house park's"development and that 'a
·HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL ~QUIPMENT
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. was constructed during the ·bronze plaque will be placed '
. ~We Care For You Like FamHy", '.: ' ···
CHESAPEAKE- JQSCph M. Mullins, 83, Chesapeake, died wint~r and six new wo!'den insjde , the;'park to show the
• . picnic tables were recently Village's appreciation for the
Friday, Mm:q 30,2001 at his '.residence.
70 Pine lti'Ht
··
Born Feb. 3, I ~18 in Kanaw~ County; W.Va., he 'o/as the son pla~~d inside.
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donor1'· "investment in . the
OH of the late Joseph M. Mullins Sr. and Lily May Bailey.
. · Future , pl~ns for the park community."
He was also preeeded in ~ath by IUs wife, Lillian Marie · iilclude thi·addition of chi!- r-----....,~~~--..,.o--'!'....,_..;..._~----....;,---.;;..,
Mulliru.
drens' ,playgtOund equiptnent,'. .
"I'm In Pa!n" ,
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. SurviVing are tWo sons, Joseph M. Mullins Jr. of Huntin~n, horseshoe pits, · water ·foun..: '
W.Va., and Ronald Mullins of Proctorville; four daughters, Betty tains;e~ra trees fo~ . the~greep
.. ' . Can Chiropractic Help Me?
·,
(Larry) Anderson·of Proctorville, Marcedia QuintaruJla of Hunt' '
HOW MUCH WILL IT COST
ington, Lillian Knotts of Columbus, and Linda KeUey
GalWt
1re.
ofttn
llktcl,
"Whht'l
tilt beat WIY of flncllng CIIUt Whtlhtr or not 1 lklotonf chlroprectlo •
lipolis; and a sister, Susie Hall of Cabin Creek, WVa.
htlp my problem?
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Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in.HaU Funeral Home, ProcWt believe tilt 1 _ , oan be found In 1 oompllle. chlropreotlo ooneun.tlon 'lncl eumlnltlon,.
tOrville, with the 1\ev. Ed Hood officiating. Burial will be in
lnoludlng x-nya.
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.And
to
help
ftncl
out
for
eure,
wt
Will
do
•
oom~
-•ultltlon
eniiiXImlnallon
lnoludlngx-raya,
·
White Chapel 1\:iemorial Gardens, Barbounville, W.Va. Friends. \ ·
1
H
-~•ry,
(prooldtlllt
normal!
colt
•121.00
or
mono)
for
t2$.00.
.
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.
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may call at die fUneral home .from ~-9 p.m: Sunday. .
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Wt wll -kt lhll IP"III JHIIIII'IIIIIMIIIIIblllhniiHih Merch. Till only~1on to lht cittar ,lnva!v-1 .,
pereonallnjury (Mrklre' oomjlanlltlon 1ncl auto aoaldtntl) In .w,fl.;i;-h,. II no charge dli'IOtly

n......
r1

MORE .LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
,.•.

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Tracking a fugitive: ·.How the
finish
quarter o·n ·po~itive notes FBi caught up with Jam~s Kopp

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BIDWELL - Ruth W. Smith, 90, ~f Bidwell, died Friday
morning, March 30, 2001 at Holzer Senior Care Center.
She was born January 12, 191 1 in Jeffersonville, lndia!JI,
the daughter of the late Albert Worthin~on and Anna Kei,win Worthington.
·
,;.
She was a , former employee of Gallipolis Oevel~~riie9t .
Center, and 1n her earlier yean, had been ·a beaut1c1an 1,n
Louisville, Kentucky.
· · '
She was a charter member of the. Faith Baptist Church!~n \.
G~polis. '
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In addition to her parents. she wu preceded rn ·death on
September 20, 1992 by ,her husband, Clinton E . Smit}.
whom she. married February 27, 1943; and .two sisters, v'l]ginia Patterson and Marjorie Benneu. .
•
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Surviving are a sister, Helen Mattox of Louisville, Kc;l!;;
tucky; and five nieces and a nephew.
Services will be 11 a.m. on Monday, April 2 , 2001 at Fajth
Baptist Church, with Pastor Jim Lushe.r officiati~g.• Burilll
will follow in Calvary Cemetery. I:,riends may call at Waug~­
Halley-Wood Funeral Home on Sunday, April 1, 2001 f~Jn
7-9 p.m.• and a't the church on Monday. April 2, 2001 , o:Qe
hour prior to services.
"
Pallbearers will be Harold Saunders, Gene Huffman , Gl~n .
Hatten. Lester Plymale, Jimmy Allen and .Phil PO\vell.
.
Honorary pallbearers are Wilbur Dennis, Charles Dotsd'il.
Carl Rathburn, Curt Wiggins, Woody Pyles, Allen Roinaid"e,
'~
Cjarence Myers and Alfred Valle nee. ·

·Meigs

:'.:II~•::•:Jt~fi~,:Ap::::rl~1~·:2a:G=._:I~------....:._!Pol~
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i

Ruth W. Smith .

. D~RING. - Shirley Bryant Large, 93, Df~ring, died J::ridat. · ',··CHESHIRE -. John "Papa"Veith, ·88, Cheshire, died friday,
~
;March·.30, 2001~ Kings Daughre~ ¥edical Center, Ashland;, March 30, 2001 m Holzer M~dical Center.
.·
. . Ky. .
, . . , . ··
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.'· . Bqrn Sept 21, 1912 m Gallia County, son of the late George
.- !Jorn Aug. 26, 1907, daughter of the lite Rev. Willard and Jan~. ~d Sus1e Lewts Ve~th, he;was formerly employed as a drill helper
Bryant, siJe.tauglit in the oiW50n; Brj.lnt Schoqr,Disti-i{ t until for Ohio River Coruers(~oal, Co.
..
· .• her retirement·at • ·Jp,
· . · .
: .. . . .
He was a cha*r .!lleml&gt;er of 0-Kan Coin ·Club, a supporter
· ·she was a charter member ofCommuniry Baptist Chutch at ,of'the Children's Hon,t~ i:luring the ·holidays, and a member of
PapAl
· D~ring,ewhere !he. ttaught. Sun~ ~chool for 33 years. She 'Yas . .Silvef .~emofial Freewill B~p~st 5huteh at KWauga.
· .
a gnduate of Manhalf Uruverslty; where· she was a member of . Sury~\tlng .are a son, Carl Bob . (S~ndra K.) VeJth of Gallipo- down at the table to address
the women's basketball ~m. and 'received a bachelor of :1m lis; a daugliter; Do!Qthy .(Don) teach pf Cheshire; seVen grand.degree fiooqhe University .o(~ Grande. ·. .
· ~ · · &lt;:hildreri arid 1~ great-~randchitdren; a b'ro.ther. George Veith Jr. all of Meigs County's' health
. She w.ts hqno~d in 2000 fdr bein~ Rio G~nde's oldest living · of Colu~bus; a s1ster, Ann; ((;arl). ,Rathburn of Gallipolis; ·and ~~rec~:d~~nh~e:~h~~~b~rn~
gnduate. She was a member of the [awrente County Historical several rueces and nephews:
· ·
cerns can be best addressed,"
Society. J~ Stuart Founliation·.and First · B~ptist Church of .. He~ .also.prccede.a in death by his wife, Dorothy Veith. in Davenport said. .
'llt1nton.
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}982; a brother, Fr.ink Veith; and a sister, Hetty Hampsh4e..
"We will address threeShe was also preceded in death by her husb~d, Bill Large· four ·' Se~ces will be J p.m. MQnday "in Silver· Memor'ial Freewill
. ri . • h
. h
brothers Tim Bryant, Fred Bryant Pearl Bryant and C~oce Baptisi Church, with the Rev. Anarew P-ars6ns arid sons official- · ques~10 s. "':, er~ IS t de co~­
Bryant· ~d "-- sisters Jun
. e Oeeds' 'E·- Bowman R~ma Carri- irig. Burial will be' 'iti Grave!' Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. friends • muruty_n_ow, w ere boe.s 1 de
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community want to e an
co, Dorothy Bazcl) and Mable Collins. •. ·
may caD at FISher-Acrce funeral Ho111e, Mid~eport, ·fiom S-8 'h
ill '- _ .
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da
d .~
h h
h ·
· · ·
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-·
ow w trn: commumty get
· Survi~ng a~ four daughten, Jeanine (Ciifi) P~encial of p.m. un y, an. at me c urc one our pnor tQ ~emces.
there."' . •
, j
~ruDSWJck, M~e,Jo Ann. Oohn) Warmk~ of~olumbus,Jeanette ·
•
. ; '
Implementing the plan will
O•m~ Mc!Cemi~ .of Dee~g: and.Jaru':e (Richard) Wheeler. ~~
~vonell
.also like'y include surveys of
Balwnc:'re• Md.: 12 ~ndchil~.n and 30 great-gnndchildren,
the·communitY. to determine
. , and a ':"ter, ~~e Deeds ofDeenng.
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. GAlliPOLIS -. •E~ Avonell West, 73, qalax,Va., died li'ri- health-care needs, and, fipally,
.
, the, development of a comSeMces ,Will ~ 2 p.m. Monday m .commurpty ~a~llS~ day, March 30, ~001 i(llndependence, Va. . . .
Church, wtth DaVId Saunden and Denrus Sttawn oflicunng. · Born Mateh 19, 1928 in Gallia County, daughter ofthe late inunity health pl~n .. ·
..
Bu?aJ will be 10 Commumty Cemetery. Fnends may call at Alva and Vilona Sheets Fellure, she was a fornter bank employ•
Mei~ Co\lnty's health care
Phillips funeral Home, Ironton, fiom 11-9 p..m. Sunday.
'ee, .having worked for · Hocking National B~nk.-and Ohio system took a ·serious hit in
.
.
Nanonal Bank.
.
1 2ooo h c · I'd ·
Surviving are her husband, Thomas Hailow West, whom she· eadr YH I ,hw Sen on so •1 at1
•.
. d 's ept. 19 , 1955 ..m Cheshi re; two da ughten,.J ud y Lyon .. e h ' h eat
,
. .mar.ne
h Ids ystems
I nc.,
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· ·
f
a1
·
w 1c
o
a 99-year ease
POMEROY - Paul Eugene "Hatch" Laudermilt Sr., 69, Roush (Roger) .Griffis Q West P m Beach, Fla .• _a ndjane Ann
h
. d VMH
0
Pome!O)I died friday, March 30,2001 at the home. of his' care- Martin of Jupiter, Fla.;- five granddaughters; a sister, Naomi
t ; c~un~-~n~
•
giver Wa,nda Harwel1, following a brief illness. · ·
·
Beman ofThurman; and a brother, Garrett Fellure of Patriot. ' c ose . t e os~Jia - s · emerB~n Aug: 27, 1~31 in Pomeroy' son of the late Walter and · She was also preceded in death by her first husband, Harold ~enlcy ro~m an a cut.e~ care
' ·
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· Edw' ' R' h
· F 11
•·
Edith · ,ac1 111es a.ter a tax evy ,or us
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·
Letha Laude!'J,lilt, h~ was a U.~..Marme Corps veteran.
\&gt;
.
m' ous ; a b. ro~h er, Irwm
. ~ ure;, and five S!Ster,
s, . . su ort
dl ' efeated
He was a member of the American Leo-ion Post 140 of New · Saunqers, Hazel Fellure, Jewell .. Rice, Lilha Staver ~nd Vug~e b PP ~ •.W .9·"P. ·r'~ ~
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y 1oca voters
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Haven, W.Va., and Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 of Mason, Houck.
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AI h
h ' .
' I'd d.
W.Va. •
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Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday. in Willis fun.cr¥ Home, with
t ou~ · -Conso 1 ate

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BUFFALO. N .Y. (AP) FBI ~nt Mi41aael Osborn . on federal charges of harbor- '
NEW YORK (AP) the first three month1 of remains in bear market tcfrBy eavesdroppi9g . on the describes how the authorities ing a felon.
.,Bargain hunters drove up 2001 was the Dow's worst ritory, more than 24 percent
('Phone calls · an(! e-mail of followed Kopp 's. trail and
Marn had been arrested
-stock price. friday, a rare first- quarter performance off its high.
two anti-abortion actiVists. - finally piilned him down.
with Kopp during protests in ·
bright spot to mark the end since 1978.
.
investigaton were able to fol- \ ' Kopp, 46, became a suspect Italy and Vermont. Malvasi.
On Fri3ay, investors rr;~d­
: of one of tire market's worst · The Nasdaq composite ed cautiously, partly on
. low the movements of one of within two wee!.s of the her husband,. had pleaded
. :· quart~n in decade..
· index finished up 19.69 ar expectations that earnings
their 10 most wanted fugi- sniper attack that ' ltilled Dr. guilty to involvement in two
Investors overlooked signs 1,840.26, after
closing will continue to suffer in the
rives, 1; man suspec;ted in the Barnett Slepian as he stood at abortion bombings in 1987
•'• that the economy ~as Thursday at its lowest level coming months, and partly
1998 sniper slaying of an his kitchen window near and had served five years in
· ~ump~d even further and in .riore than two years. The because of a report by the
abortion doctor.
Buffalo on Oct. 23, 1998, prison.
" ~ut aside fears ·a bout ~ ·reces- tech-heavy index fell 25.5 Putch2sing
When the couple were
FBI agents spent two years But bY the time officials
Management
' !ion to• take advantage of percent during the first Association of Chicago, anatracking James Charles Kopp went looking for him. their found living in a Brooklyn
cheaper prices of long-bat- three months of 2001, end- lysts said. The group reportapartment rented under a
from New Jersey and suspect had disappeared.
tered tech stocks and recent- ing its worst-ever first quar- ed that its index of business &gt; through Europe until 'Thurs- · Agents beli~ he fled to false name. the FBI grew sus. ly hard-hit blue chips. Like-. ter. and is now niore than 63 activity in the Midwest fell
day, when police in France New York City, then New piciou~. Agents determined
• wise, mutual fund and percent off its high of 't o 35..0 in March, its lowest
arrested him ashe stopped at Jersey, 'then to Ireland and they were creating a safe
money managers made end- , 5,048 .62 reached last March.
finally France.
house for an ailing and pena post office for money.
level since March 1982. Any
of-quarter tndes selling
The Standard &amp; Poor's number below 50 indicates .
"There was a lot of highOsborn explains in the niless Kopp.
losers and picking up win- 500 index gained 12.38 · to
fiv'ing
in
the
office,"
said
affidavit
how police finally
" He started w tire," said.
· nets- to better their port- close · at ' 1,160.33, though business in. ~nan~factur­
Hardrick Crawford Jr., acting caught up with Kopp'by fol- · Paul Moskal, an FBI agent in
mg sector 1s contractmg.
,. · folios' overall first-~~uarter
special agent in charge of the lowing the movements of Buffalo. " H6 was living hand
results.
FBI's Buffalo office, as news Dennis John M.alvasi . ~ d to. mouth.
Despite Friday's moderate
of the arrest ripple(! through Loretta Claire . Marra in
" It took its toll on him and
the agency.
gains, analysts cautioned
.
Brooklyi'lt, two radical abpr- I think. he was ]poking for
~bout getting overly . opti.
·
A court affidavit signed by tion foes arrested Thursday' 'comlort."
. mistic that the mar!.et is ·
ready to sustain a r;illy. ·
~
"You are going t,p hear a
ma..Y of us, sleep Ia
a dream
lot of talk now that it was
Alr•kaos are not geltilg 11!1011111 sleep, iMXM&lt;i 'illo a recent PQII. All .... liolliog ...111141., ...... such a bad quarter that
_.
83 percenl of people surveyed reported getting less lhan the rec:omn• oded
eight
houl8
of
sleep
each
night
People
who
work
king
houiB
and
those
who
••••
,
«,
"thin~ have got to get better,
have children ippear 10 have the most trouble gettklg sufficient oloep.
· · but so far nothing has
Married witll children .
Pwn•tacr o1 ....... alia.-..
' changed," .said Gary KaltOn average, on a workday
lllh~.-L-----------~
' llau!D, market technician for
Manied wilh children under e·yvars old
• ;First Union Securities, not2
4
6
tomnia
jjj,' '
~ ing that earnin~ and the
., 1
economy have been severely
not leeting refreshed
'".~rippled.
·
·
. "With the ·way the econ. omy has fallen off the cliff it
six
old
· is going to take a while to
· get thin~ going again," he
·· 'said.
' · ... The Dow Jones industrial
full-time witll children
.~verage rose 79.72 to close
. -falling asleep
·..~t 9,878.78, but still posted
.'
· its wont first quarter ever in
•
Rocky Hupp, local agent for Monumental, has received the
SOURCE: ~1/onlll Sltlep FQI!.Indjt/on
::" t~rms of points down
'•
Monumental Platinum Achievement Award. Hupp's sales for
· •~ 908.07- and it§. 10th-worst
life and health Insurance are ranked ninth in the nation for
" '·i n terms of percentage los~.
_ the Monumental. Paul Price of. Monu111ental made the preThe
8.4
percent
decline
for
sentation. (Brian J. Reed photo)
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bflht patient.

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$

2. 5 •00.
.

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f'lvl I 1$111C.Utloif.W • •I4i"p; lfuaeW"'
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.,;'A ~IIPIIUW. 'Til- ll'lliWJITIP WI
- liiTIMIIHI CllliiOPMcnc CAN't IIILP VOU.

.

THESE CONDITIONS ARE SOME
OF THE DANGER siGNALS: .

., tErri he,
tl Arlhrttle peln lly llttft Mgk

f1l A.......,. .........

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

•

(l!xplrattori Qete: 04/3012001)

YOUR INITIAL VISIT WILL INCLUDE
.,x.nya. .. 7

..

Reg. 0 128.00 Pro.g ram ·
Mua~ pre-nt ad et time ·
ot appointment.
.

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- CDUI!FIC.Jif!1'£ -

FRENCH CITY CHIROPRACTIC
121 Upper AIWr AOid, Ollllpolll, OH 48131, (740) 441 3831

Thll 0111111oalw llllttln

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.., Arm pe1n 1 nU:::o.W
If II_DI aahl

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tl' Whlolooh lnNry

For

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,y

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cain

Five
yean
later, he was
elected com,._mon
· pleas
judge, ·a nd won
re-election

support local veterans in the 1990s.
"I can probably rick off about 20 of them, but
lro
those are some of the highlights," he said. "It's
..
••
been a pleasure,being part of legal and governmental
history here for nearly aquarter of a cen•
'
""g
tury."
'
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""without opposition in 1998.
A member of the county bar association, Cain
· · .Cain uid one of the bigest tasks he encolin.:. has also belonged to the Lions Club, and the
, ~d came as p10sec:utor when the old wins of boudl for the chamber of commerce, historical
the courthouse burned iii 1981.
society and Gallia-Meigs Community Action
The . aftermath and the p1t1cen that· led to Apncy, where he also served a term as presi·· construction of the new wing thre~ yean liter dent.
"required an inordinate amount of time to put
C~n. is leaving the bench with th~c ~an
· ~ther:' he added.
renuarung IJn hil ~urrcnt term. A replacement
'. Other ~or iuuea he recalled were esrabllsh· will be appointed by Taft, who will choose f1t1m
ment of the county EMS in 1979, going to the a candidate list prepared by the Gallia RepubJi:
Supreme Court twice in the 1980s to presem a can Central Committee.
sigtliticant share of the county's tax revenue
The successor will have to run in . 2002 to
from its power plants, and winning funding to . complete Cain's term.
J":i\,

~ j

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rwum,...A1
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a e . nterest
n ur ates,

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Our Members
Have .an Appetite

''

nowpack
•

1ms

California
po"Yer hopes
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
- N"": measurctjlents
'how the snowpack in the
fierra Nevada isoso low, Cal. trornia's hydroelec~ric pro;tuction could fall more' than
f third below · normal this
Jummer.
~· It's not what state officials
~ready struggling with tight .
ower supplies and W(!rried
bout blackouts wanted to
' '
.
ear.
'
"' California draws about a
l&gt;urth of its power from in:l:ate hydroel~ctric plants,
hich rely on melting snow
611 reservoirs for summer
hen precipitation is scarce.
jhe dry winter and resulting
low snowpack mean power
~roduction could drop more
t,llan a third below norm:il,
d. Maury Roos, .the state's .
ief hydrologist.
"This il a ' blo\v from
l'jlother Nature," said Chri;ty
Qennis, a spokeswoman for
~~~cific Gas and Electric Co.,
. tlie, state's biggest· utility.
· t California already expectei litde 'hydroelectric power
dam th·e drought-stricken
P.lcifi&lt;: Northwest to help
pPwcr grid. operators . keep
,elk lights on. :

""~AP)

f0 r

vprinr·~
0

Try. our new
WINNING
POINTS diet!

'

· Dt!l&amp;nod for Y?U - your
schedule, your tastes!

~
J~in Now for

l

"1/2 0

•t
.

With two great rates and terms to choose
from, there's· never been a better time to
.invest in .a CD at City National ·Bank.
Stop in.today and .ta~e, your pick. ·
• Annual Percentage Yield. The AP'( is accurate as of March 27, 2001. Penalty may be imposed
for early withdrawal. Minimum balance required ro obtain the advertised APY is $1,000.00.
Limited tirpe offer.

1-888-3-FLORI N E
www.888-3-florl ne .com

'

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GALLIPOLIS
St. "-tari Epllc""" Ch~i'ch
541 Second Avtnuo

•

TUE 6:00 pm • WED 9:30 am

' --JACKSON
.
Comfort Inn • 605 East Main •

.

MON 6:30 pm; SAT 9:30 am .

MIDDLEPORT
Church of Christ'• 437 Main Street
THUR 6:00 pm .

.

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,.,.... ....... ,.,............. -.'Mitp.~~looc.IJI~ ..........

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-~~ ............. ........,_.WilllfiiWM!tltri~. IM.

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ReceiVes "award

.sa¥!

Joseph M. Mullin$

•

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Pomeroy •llldcllport • OIWpolla. Ohio • Point PIIIIPnt, WV

SUnd8y, Aprt1..1, 2001

•

iii Fishtr-~ funcal Home, Pomeroy,~ the Rev. Simuel
Basye ofticiating. Burial will be in Gm.od Hill Cemetery,
Chestun..Visitation was held in the funeral home on Satuntay.

Obituaries

...111t1M11t'l1tonlll

.
. . . . Gitlin GoiM11 If

MIDDLEPORT - James Albert Thomas, 68, Middleport,
A1HENS - William Glenn Goldlberry~8j, Athens, died die~ Saturday, March 31, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
'lbesd.y, Man:h Z7, 2001 at Hickory N~
· Home, foDowing a . Bofll Aug. 19, 1932 in MiddlepQrt, son of the !ate John and
lcr,.cby illnea.
·
. ·
. Con Matheny Thomaf, he was a retired ironworker with Local
He - the son of the late Roy E . and
GiJ1Wui Golds- 787 of Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
~and was emp~ by McBee Co. for ~ as a ·fore- - A'U.S. Arm'{ ~teran of the Korean Conflict. he was a memman. superintendent and plant manager until retirement
oo ~nd Past Master of Middleport Masoni' Lodge 363, 32nd
7 He - a member of Harrisonville Lodge 411 free and Dcgree5cottishRiteValleyofColumbus,AladdinTcmpleShrine
Accepted Masons cf Ohio, Disabled American Vetenns, McBee aJl!f Gallipolis Shrine Club, Middleport Eastern Star-Evangeline
Quarter Century Club and the Ohio Gun Collecton Associa- Chapter 173, a Kentucky Colonel, and a member of the Rutland
tion.
American Leg!o!VI'ost.
.
· · He was also a vi:tenn ofWOrld War II in the European TheSu~ng are ilis wife,.Ann B. Priddy Thomas; two so~. John
ater and received the Combar,lnfantry Award with two stars.
S. (Gma) Thomas of Pomeroy. and Joe C (Trcsa) Thomas of MidAlong with his parents, he was preceded in death by three dlcport; six grandchildren and a great~gnnddaughtcr; ~ sisten,
brothen, Eugene, David and Drennen.
Fbzel'Bowen of New Carlisle, and Ginny (Ro~rt) Arbaugh o(
SurviWtg are his wife. F. ~velyn Williams Goldsberry; two Pomeroy; and s~ral nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded m death by two brothen, fb,rry and
sons, Judge L. Alan· (Stephanie ShCT.-) Goldsberry, and Randall
tee (Pam Ramsey) Goldsberry, bOth ofAthens; three gnndchil- Ernest Thomas; and a SISter, Maxine Balser.
•
dren; and a sister, Mary Eliiabeth .Parker of &lt;:;osby. Tenn.
Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday in fisher-Acree funeral
Services were held friday,' Mateh ·30, 2901 at J~n Funeral Home, Middleport. with the Rev. Clifforci',Colema'hofficiating.
, ljome in Athens, with th, R,ev.W:Tad Cu~kler officiating. Bur~ · Burial will be .in Gravel Hill Cemetery, 'Cheshire. Friends may
ial was in Adi,ens Memory Gard~ns. . ·
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call at the fune~l home from 7-9 p.m. Monday.
' Memo~ial contributions cill'l·be sent $P the American Qiabefes .. Masonic services will be conducted in the funeral home at
, 'Foundation Inc., 937 N. High St.,Worthington, Ohio.'43085; · .. 8:30 p.m.•Monday. ...

n

. Shl.tef ·arrant Latp · ... : ··

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John •;.pa• .veith

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from

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, PaUl E. •Hatch' La.ude&amp; 111•1t Sr..,;.

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holds the lease on the cour,ity's only hqspital buildi~,
Davenpor.t said Friday t&amp;t
other health care provid~rs
will be invited .to part,!cip;i;~e
in discussions, in hopes f~t ·
the counry's healt)l care n~~!;ls
can be. met.
., .
Some
hospitals· h~~e
expressed an interest . in providing services to 'Meigs
County. residents, and Dave:nport s:Ud that he thinks oth~rs •
, will · follow suit, once tpe
Oklahoma Model .is put into
place.
.
•·
"I think that as .this proC,C.ss
continues, there will ·probab)y
.be more interest from oth.er
he~lth ' care providers. and
othet hospitals.~ ' pavenp~~~
said.
.-...
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Davenport said that seeking
·a ~ 'critic;~l aceess" ·designation
for the · county, V~[hich would
allow fo~ exceptions to the
· Medicare ' I:Hlling · policies to
ben~fif p;a~e,nls 'YiliJ.' limited
access ' to ' medical facilities ;
might be considered in conjunction with the .Oklahoma
Moqel .process, but is not
automatioally· ·a part of the
,,
process.
"
~.

~

Surviving, are a son, Paul (Louise) Laudermilt Jr.; two daugh- P~stor Larry L,emle}&gt; officiating. Burial will be in Ridgelawn -----~..:....._:.__-:-------'------­
ters, Donna (Mike) Miller and Sandra Hoffman; 11 grandchil- Cemetery. Frieni:ls may call ·at; the funeral home from 6~8 p.m.·
"•
dren and s~ral great-gnridchildren; a brother, Walter "Whitey", . Monday. , . .
·
· . .: . · . ·
Laudermilt ofYoun~town; 1\vo sisters, Emma Laudermilt Wilson .
·''
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. and Maxine Lauderrnilt Lee, both.of Pomeroy; and·several nieces . '
and nephews.
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space; arid a boat ~oaking facil~
Subscribe today. 446-2342
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He was also preceded In death by two sons, Timothy and Wality for ..v~t.er el'aft. enthusi~sts.
ter "Steve" Laudermilt; four brothers, Louis, Todd, Willard and ·
· ..
Once the p,ark is ~omplete, a,
"'
Jim ' Laudernlilt; and tWO sisten, Velma Laudermilt Young ana
. . . . . . . . A1
ribbon•cutiing cererrtopy will '
B«ry Laudermilt !mboden.
·
.
l:!e schedUled for the public· \O
Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Sundt?' at Gilmore Ceme- pletion;,'
Mussei. ''Once, . ~ttimd, _adiled Musser.
.
tery, with Brother Theron Durham: officiating. Friends may call. finished, the public 'will have a . · . Young S.id · more than .
at Fisher-Acree Funeral Home, Pomeroy, on SundaS' fiom 9: to woncleiful area to .enjoy therp- · $.18,000 'ih nioriey and materi. '
a.m.
selves while attending to th~ir ~ was donated '}iy local busi;.
summertime activities."
hesses and residen~ for ~he
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A 21~by-29 shelter house park's"development and that 'a
·HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL ~QUIPMENT
'
. was constructed during the ·bronze plaque will be placed '
. ~We Care For You Like FamHy", '.: ' ···
CHESAPEAKE- JQSCph M. Mullins, 83, Chesapeake, died wint~r and six new wo!'den insjde , the;'park to show the
• . picnic tables were recently Village's appreciation for the
Friday, Mm:q 30,2001 at his '.residence.
70 Pine lti'Ht
··
Born Feb. 3, I ~18 in Kanaw~ County; W.Va., he 'o/as the son pla~~d inside.
.
.
donor1'· "investment in . the
OH of the late Joseph M. Mullins Sr. and Lily May Bailey.
. · Future , pl~ns for the park community."
He was also preeeded in ~ath by IUs wife, Lillian Marie · iilclude thi·addition of chi!- r-----....,~~~--..,.o--'!'....,_..;..._~----....;,---.;;..,
Mulliru.
drens' ,playgtOund equiptnent,'. .
"I'm In Pa!n" ,
.
. SurviVing are tWo sons, Joseph M. Mullins Jr. of Huntin~n, horseshoe pits, · water ·foun..: '
W.Va., and Ronald Mullins of Proctorville; four daughters, Betty tains;e~ra trees fo~ . the~greep
.. ' . Can Chiropractic Help Me?
·,
(Larry) Anderson·of Proctorville, Marcedia QuintaruJla of Hunt' '
HOW MUCH WILL IT COST
ington, Lillian Knotts of Columbus, and Linda KeUey
GalWt
1re.
ofttn
llktcl,
"Whht'l
tilt beat WIY of flncllng CIIUt Whtlhtr or not 1 lklotonf chlroprectlo •
lipolis; and a sister, Susie Hall of Cabin Creek, WVa.
htlp my problem?
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Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in.HaU Funeral Home, ProcWt believe tilt 1 _ , oan be found In 1 oompllle. chlropreotlo ooneun.tlon 'lncl eumlnltlon,.
tOrville, with the 1\ev. Ed Hood officiating. Burial will be in
lnoludlng x-nya.
.
. · ·
·
.And
to
help
ftncl
out
for
eure,
wt
Will
do
•
oom~
-•ultltlon
eniiiXImlnallon
lnoludlngx-raya,
·
White Chapel 1\:iemorial Gardens, Barbounville, W.Va. Friends. \ ·
1
H
-~•ry,
(prooldtlllt
normal!
colt
•121.00
or
mono)
for
t2$.00.
.
·
.
·
may call at die fUneral home .from ~-9 p.m: Sunday. .
·· •
Wt wll -kt lhll IP"III JHIIIII'IIIIIMIIIIIblllhniiHih Merch. Till only~1on to lht cittar ,lnva!v-1 .,
pereonallnjury (Mrklre' oomjlanlltlon 1ncl auto aoaldtntl) In .w,fl.;i;-h,. II no charge dli'IOtly

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MORE .LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
,.•.

I'll . ..

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Tracking a fugitive: ·.How the
finish
quarter o·n ·po~itive notes FBi caught up with Jam~s Kopp

.

BIDWELL - Ruth W. Smith, 90, ~f Bidwell, died Friday
morning, March 30, 2001 at Holzer Senior Care Center.
She was born January 12, 191 1 in Jeffersonville, lndia!JI,
the daughter of the late Albert Worthin~on and Anna Kei,win Worthington.
·
,;.
She was a , former employee of Gallipolis Oevel~~riie9t .
Center, and 1n her earlier yean, had been ·a beaut1c1an 1,n
Louisville, Kentucky.
· · '
She was a charter member of the. Faith Baptist Church!~n \.
G~polis. '
· .
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In addition to her parents. she wu preceded rn ·death on
September 20, 1992 by ,her husband, Clinton E . Smit}.
whom she. married February 27, 1943; and .two sisters, v'l]ginia Patterson and Marjorie Benneu. .
•
,"
Surviving are a sister, Helen Mattox of Louisville, Kc;l!;;
tucky; and five nieces and a nephew.
Services will be 11 a.m. on Monday, April 2 , 2001 at Fajth
Baptist Church, with Pastor Jim Lushe.r officiati~g.• Burilll
will follow in Calvary Cemetery. I:,riends may call at Waug~­
Halley-Wood Funeral Home on Sunday, April 1, 2001 f~Jn
7-9 p.m.• and a't the church on Monday. April 2, 2001 , o:Qe
hour prior to services.
"
Pallbearers will be Harold Saunders, Gene Huffman , Gl~n .
Hatten. Lester Plymale, Jimmy Allen and .Phil PO\vell.
.
Honorary pallbearers are Wilbur Dennis, Charles Dotsd'il.
Carl Rathburn, Curt Wiggins, Woody Pyles, Allen Roinaid"e,
'~
Cjarence Myers and Alfred Valle nee. ·

·Meigs

:'.:II~•::•:Jt~fi~,:Ap::::rl~1~·:2a:G=._:I~------....:._!Pol~
, ~m~...~oy~·~~~~~~~~~dl~:l!p-~ort~.:,·~0~t'~lll!p-~ol~la,~Ohi~IIO~~·!P~ol~nt!!,!PI~al~t~-~nt,~WV~---~\~--~jk~JIU~p!:!~~PIIIK~-!jiatj~~·m!!l.:•!P~88!..~A~7~

i

Ruth W. Smith .

. D~RING. - Shirley Bryant Large, 93, Df~ring, died J::ridat. · ',··CHESHIRE -. John "Papa"Veith, ·88, Cheshire, died friday,
~
;March·.30, 2001~ Kings Daughre~ ¥edical Center, Ashland;, March 30, 2001 m Holzer M~dical Center.
.·
. . Ky. .
, . . , . ··
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.'· . Bqrn Sept 21, 1912 m Gallia County, son of the late George
.- !Jorn Aug. 26, 1907, daughter of the lite Rev. Willard and Jan~. ~d Sus1e Lewts Ve~th, he;was formerly employed as a drill helper
Bryant, siJe.tauglit in the oiW50n; Brj.lnt Schoqr,Disti-i{ t until for Ohio River Coruers(~oal, Co.
..
· .• her retirement·at • ·Jp,
· . · .
: .. . . .
He was a cha*r .!lleml&gt;er of 0-Kan Coin ·Club, a supporter
· ·she was a charter member ofCommuniry Baptist Chutch at ,of'the Children's Hon,t~ i:luring the ·holidays, and a member of
PapAl
· D~ring,ewhere !he. ttaught. Sun~ ~chool for 33 years. She 'Yas . .Silvef .~emofial Freewill B~p~st 5huteh at KWauga.
· .
a gnduate of Manhalf Uruverslty; where· she was a member of . Sury~\tlng .are a son, Carl Bob . (S~ndra K.) VeJth of Gallipo- down at the table to address
the women's basketball ~m. and 'received a bachelor of :1m lis; a daugliter; Do!Qthy .(Don) teach pf Cheshire; seVen grand.degree fiooqhe University .o(~ Grande. ·. .
· ~ · · &lt;:hildreri arid 1~ great-~randchitdren; a b'ro.ther. George Veith Jr. all of Meigs County's' health
. She w.ts hqno~d in 2000 fdr bein~ Rio G~nde's oldest living · of Colu~bus; a s1ster, Ann; ((;arl). ,Rathburn of Gallipolis; ·and ~~rec~:d~~nh~e:~h~~~b~rn~
gnduate. She was a member of the [awrente County Historical several rueces and nephews:
· ·
cerns can be best addressed,"
Society. J~ Stuart Founliation·.and First · B~ptist Church of .. He~ .also.prccede.a in death by his wife, Dorothy Veith. in Davenport said. .
'llt1nton.
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}982; a brother, Fr.ink Veith; and a sister, Hetty Hampsh4e..
"We will address threeShe was also preceded in death by her husb~d, Bill Large· four ·' Se~ces will be J p.m. MQnday "in Silver· Memor'ial Freewill
. ri . • h
. h
brothers Tim Bryant, Fred Bryant Pearl Bryant and C~oce Baptisi Church, with the Rev. Anarew P-ars6ns arid sons official- · ques~10 s. "':, er~ IS t de co~­
Bryant· ~d "-- sisters Jun
. e Oeeds' 'E·- Bowman R~ma Carri- irig. Burial will be' 'iti Grave!' Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. friends • muruty_n_ow, w ere boe.s 1 de
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community want to e an
co, Dorothy Bazcl) and Mable Collins. •. ·
may caD at FISher-Acrce funeral Ho111e, Mid~eport, ·fiom S-8 'h
ill '- _ .
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s
da
d .~
h h
h ·
· · ·
·
-·
ow w trn: commumty get
· Survi~ng a~ four daughten, Jeanine (Ciifi) P~encial of p.m. un y, an. at me c urc one our pnor tQ ~emces.
there."' . •
, j
~ruDSWJck, M~e,Jo Ann. Oohn) Warmk~ of~olumbus,Jeanette ·
•
. ; '
Implementing the plan will
O•m~ Mc!Cemi~ .of Dee~g: and.Jaru':e (Richard) Wheeler. ~~
~vonell
.also like'y include surveys of
Balwnc:'re• Md.: 12 ~ndchil~.n and 30 great-gnndchildren,
the·communitY. to determine
. , and a ':"ter, ~~e Deeds ofDeenng.
.
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. GAlliPOLIS -. •E~ Avonell West, 73, qalax,Va., died li'ri- health-care needs, and, fipally,
.
, the, development of a comSeMces ,Will ~ 2 p.m. Monday m .commurpty ~a~llS~ day, March 30, ~001 i(llndependence, Va. . . .
Church, wtth DaVId Saunden and Denrus Sttawn oflicunng. · Born Mateh 19, 1928 in Gallia County, daughter ofthe late inunity health pl~n .. ·
..
Bu?aJ will be 10 Commumty Cemetery. Fnends may call at Alva and Vilona Sheets Fellure, she was a fornter bank employ•
Mei~ Co\lnty's health care
Phillips funeral Home, Ironton, fiom 11-9 p..m. Sunday.
'ee, .having worked for · Hocking National B~nk.-and Ohio system took a ·serious hit in
.
.
Nanonal Bank.
.
1 2ooo h c · I'd ·
Surviving are her husband, Thomas Hailow West, whom she· eadr YH I ,hw Sen on so •1 at1
•.
. d 's ept. 19 , 1955 ..m Cheshi re; two da ughten,.J ud y Lyon .. e h ' h eat
,
. .mar.ne
h Ids ystems
I nc.,
·
•
· ·
f
a1
·
w 1c
o
a 99-year ease
POMEROY - Paul Eugene "Hatch" Laudermilt Sr., 69, Roush (Roger) .Griffis Q West P m Beach, Fla .• _a ndjane Ann
h
. d VMH
0
Pome!O)I died friday, March 30,2001 at the home. of his' care- Martin of Jupiter, Fla.;- five granddaughters; a sister, Naomi
t ; c~un~-~n~
•
giver Wa,nda Harwel1, following a brief illness. · ·
·
Beman ofThurman; and a brother, Garrett Fellure of Patriot. ' c ose . t e os~Jia - s · emerB~n Aug: 27, 1~31 in Pomeroy' son of the late Walter and · She was also preceded in death by her first husband, Harold ~enlcy ro~m an a cut.e~ care
' ·
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· Edw' ' R' h
· F 11
•·
Edith · ,ac1 111es a.ter a tax evy ,or us
·
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Letha Laude!'J,lilt, h~ was a U.~..Marme Corps veteran.
\&gt;
.
m' ous ; a b. ro~h er, Irwm
. ~ ure;, and five S!Ster,
s, . . su ort
dl ' efeated
He was a member of the American Leo-ion Post 140 of New · Saunqers, Hazel Fellure, Jewell .. Rice, Lilha Staver ~nd Vug~e b PP ~ •.W .9·"P. ·r'~ ~
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y 1oca voters
·
Haven, W.Va., and Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 of Mason, Houck.
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AI h
h ' .
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W.Va. •
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Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday. in Willis fun.cr¥ Home, with
t ou~ · -Conso 1 ate

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BUFFALO. N .Y. (AP) FBI ~nt Mi41aael Osborn . on federal charges of harbor- '
NEW YORK (AP) the first three month1 of remains in bear market tcfrBy eavesdroppi9g . on the describes how the authorities ing a felon.
.,Bargain hunters drove up 2001 was the Dow's worst ritory, more than 24 percent
('Phone calls · an(! e-mail of followed Kopp 's. trail and
Marn had been arrested
-stock price. friday, a rare first- quarter performance off its high.
two anti-abortion actiVists. - finally piilned him down.
with Kopp during protests in ·
bright spot to mark the end since 1978.
.
investigaton were able to fol- \ ' Kopp, 46, became a suspect Italy and Vermont. Malvasi.
On Fri3ay, investors rr;~d­
: of one of tire market's worst · The Nasdaq composite ed cautiously, partly on
. low the movements of one of within two wee!.s of the her husband,. had pleaded
. :· quart~n in decade..
· index finished up 19.69 ar expectations that earnings
their 10 most wanted fugi- sniper attack that ' ltilled Dr. guilty to involvement in two
Investors overlooked signs 1,840.26, after
closing will continue to suffer in the
rives, 1; man suspec;ted in the Barnett Slepian as he stood at abortion bombings in 1987
•'• that the economy ~as Thursday at its lowest level coming months, and partly
1998 sniper slaying of an his kitchen window near and had served five years in
· ~ump~d even further and in .riore than two years. The because of a report by the
abortion doctor.
Buffalo on Oct. 23, 1998, prison.
" ~ut aside fears ·a bout ~ ·reces- tech-heavy index fell 25.5 Putch2sing
When the couple were
FBI agents spent two years But bY the time officials
Management
' !ion to• take advantage of percent during the first Association of Chicago, anatracking James Charles Kopp went looking for him. their found living in a Brooklyn
cheaper prices of long-bat- three months of 2001, end- lysts said. The group reportapartment rented under a
from New Jersey and suspect had disappeared.
tered tech stocks and recent- ing its worst-ever first quar- ed that its index of business &gt; through Europe until 'Thurs- · Agents beli~ he fled to false name. the FBI grew sus. ly hard-hit blue chips. Like-. ter. and is now niore than 63 activity in the Midwest fell
day, when police in France New York City, then New piciou~. Agents determined
• wise, mutual fund and percent off its high of 't o 35..0 in March, its lowest
arrested him ashe stopped at Jersey, 'then to Ireland and they were creating a safe
money managers made end- , 5,048 .62 reached last March.
finally France.
house for an ailing and pena post office for money.
level since March 1982. Any
of-quarter tndes selling
The Standard &amp; Poor's number below 50 indicates .
"There was a lot of highOsborn explains in the niless Kopp.
losers and picking up win- 500 index gained 12.38 · to
fiv'ing
in
the
office,"
said
affidavit
how police finally
" He started w tire," said.
· nets- to better their port- close · at ' 1,160.33, though business in. ~nan~factur­
Hardrick Crawford Jr., acting caught up with Kopp'by fol- · Paul Moskal, an FBI agent in
mg sector 1s contractmg.
,. · folios' overall first-~~uarter
special agent in charge of the lowing the movements of Buffalo. " H6 was living hand
results.
FBI's Buffalo office, as news Dennis John M.alvasi . ~ d to. mouth.
Despite Friday's moderate
of the arrest ripple(! through Loretta Claire . Marra in
" It took its toll on him and
the agency.
gains, analysts cautioned
.
Brooklyi'lt, two radical abpr- I think. he was ]poking for
~bout getting overly . opti.
·
A court affidavit signed by tion foes arrested Thursday' 'comlort."
. mistic that the mar!.et is ·
ready to sustain a r;illy. ·
~
"You are going t,p hear a
ma..Y of us, sleep Ia
a dream
lot of talk now that it was
Alr•kaos are not geltilg 11!1011111 sleep, iMXM&lt;i 'illo a recent PQII. All .... liolliog ...111141., ...... such a bad quarter that
_.
83 percenl of people surveyed reported getting less lhan the rec:omn• oded
eight
houl8
of
sleep
each
night
People
who
work
king
houiB
and
those
who
••••
,
«,
"thin~ have got to get better,
have children ippear 10 have the most trouble gettklg sufficient oloep.
· · but so far nothing has
Married witll children .
Pwn•tacr o1 ....... alia.-..
' changed," .said Gary KaltOn average, on a workday
lllh~.-L-----------~
' llau!D, market technician for
Manied wilh children under e·yvars old
• ;First Union Securities, not2
4
6
tomnia
jjj,' '
~ ing that earnin~ and the
., 1
economy have been severely
not leeting refreshed
'".~rippled.
·
·
. "With the ·way the econ. omy has fallen off the cliff it
six
old
· is going to take a while to
· get thin~ going again," he
·· 'said.
' · ... The Dow Jones industrial
full-time witll children
.~verage rose 79.72 to close
. -falling asleep
·..~t 9,878.78, but still posted
.'
· its wont first quarter ever in
•
Rocky Hupp, local agent for Monumental, has received the
SOURCE: ~1/onlll Sltlep FQI!.Indjt/on
::" t~rms of points down
'•
Monumental Platinum Achievement Award. Hupp's sales for
· •~ 908.07- and it§. 10th-worst
life and health Insurance are ranked ninth in the nation for
" '·i n terms of percentage los~.
_ the Monumental. Paul Price of. Monu111ental made the preThe
8.4
percent
decline
for
sentation. (Brian J. Reed photo)
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bflht patient.

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$

2. 5 •00.
.

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ti'AprMII•

tlllntlllt•...,· ·_
.""

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-•* • a n-•oiiN¥1001111-...IOia''"' IIDH
lneuni a· ·-.
.,;' Aooo..-lllol- olow...,.,...
\
f'lvl I 1$111C.Utloif.W • •I4i"p; lfuaeW"'
_..,.
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it
V Loa poln • - · .
tf

.,;'A ~IIPIIUW. 'Til- ll'lliWJITIP WI
- liiTIMIIHI CllliiOPMcnc CAN't IIILP VOU.

.

THESE CONDITIONS ARE SOME
OF THE DANGER siGNALS: .

., tErri he,
tl Arlhrttle peln lly llttft Mgk

f1l A.......,. .........

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

•

(l!xplrattori Qete: 04/3012001)

YOUR INITIAL VISIT WILL INCLUDE
.,x.nya. .. 7

..

Reg. 0 128.00 Pro.g ram ·
Mua~ pre-nt ad et time ·
ot appointment.
.

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- CDUI!FIC.Jif!1'£ -

FRENCH CITY CHIROPRACTIC
121 Upper AIWr AOid, Ollllpolll, OH 48131, (740) 441 3831

Thll 0111111oalw llllttln

·

.., Arm pe1n 1 nU:::o.W
If II_DI aahl

,..,..,.. .

, et Tentloft
tl' Whlolooh lnNry

For

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,y

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cain

Five
yean
later, he was
elected com,._mon
· pleas
judge, ·a nd won
re-election

support local veterans in the 1990s.
"I can probably rick off about 20 of them, but
lro
those are some of the highlights," he said. "It's
..
••
been a pleasure,being part of legal and governmental
history here for nearly aquarter of a cen•
'
""g
tury."
'
.
'
""without opposition in 1998.
A member of the county bar association, Cain
· · .Cain uid one of the bigest tasks he encolin.:. has also belonged to the Lions Club, and the
, ~d came as p10sec:utor when the old wins of boudl for the chamber of commerce, historical
the courthouse burned iii 1981.
society and Gallia-Meigs Community Action
The . aftermath and the p1t1cen that· led to Apncy, where he also served a term as presi·· construction of the new wing thre~ yean liter dent.
"required an inordinate amount of time to put
C~n. is leaving the bench with th~c ~an
· ~ther:' he added.
renuarung IJn hil ~urrcnt term. A replacement
'. Other ~or iuuea he recalled were esrabllsh· will be appointed by Taft, who will choose f1t1m
ment of the county EMS in 1979, going to the a candidate list prepared by the Gallia RepubJi:
Supreme Court twice in the 1980s to presem a can Central Committee.
sigtliticant share of the county's tax revenue
The successor will have to run in . 2002 to
from its power plants, and winning funding to . complete Cain's term.
J":i\,

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rwum,...A1
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a e . nterest
n ur ates,

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Our Members
Have .an Appetite

''

nowpack
•

1ms

California
po"Yer hopes
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
- N"": measurctjlents
'how the snowpack in the
fierra Nevada isoso low, Cal. trornia's hydroelec~ric pro;tuction could fall more' than
f third below · normal this
Jummer.
~· It's not what state officials
~ready struggling with tight .
ower supplies and W(!rried
bout blackouts wanted to
' '
.
ear.
'
"' California draws about a
l&gt;urth of its power from in:l:ate hydroel~ctric plants,
hich rely on melting snow
611 reservoirs for summer
hen precipitation is scarce.
jhe dry winter and resulting
low snowpack mean power
~roduction could drop more
t,llan a third below norm:il,
d. Maury Roos, .the state's .
ief hydrologist.
"This il a ' blo\v from
l'jlother Nature," said Chri;ty
Qennis, a spokeswoman for
~~~cific Gas and Electric Co.,
. tlie, state's biggest· utility.
· t California already expectei litde 'hydroelectric power
dam th·e drought-stricken
P.lcifi&lt;: Northwest to help
pPwcr grid. operators . keep
,elk lights on. :

""~AP)

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Stop in.today and .ta~e, your pick. ·
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..

t.

GALLIPOLIS
St. "-tari Epllc""" Ch~i'ch
541 Second Avtnuo

•

TUE 6:00 pm • WED 9:30 am

' --JACKSON
.
Comfort Inn • 605 East Main •

.

MON 6:30 pm; SAT 9:30 am .

MIDDLEPORT
Church of Christ'• 437 Main Street
THUR 6:00 pm .

.

•1n:0. ...... ,.......... IIMIIM_...IIM.'fthlll.,...... MttdrWII M

,.,.... ....... ,.,............. -.'Mitp.~~looc.IJI~ ..........

.

-~~ ............. ........,_.WilllfiiWM!tltri~. IM.

.. '
~,..,_

t

ReceiVes "award

.sa¥!

Joseph M. Mullin$

•

�•

-.

......
"

•

•mu.~ J'adhatJ·

Set yow dodls nhend

•
•

•

Low.inventories set stage for high fuel pri

WASHINGTON (AP) - P~ lime. recurm on
Suliday to most of !be nation. .
'
That means it's time w &lt;et ~ docks
spring furwml
WASHINGTON (AP) - ~ supply, increased deiiWid, Rfinery Uid · MTBE production Ius been 9 ,
"'-- to gain an hour of light in the evening for Wl!llller recre-.
lpw inventories of gasoline rould set problenu or pipeline interruptions percent below Wt )'rir's leveJs.
ation.
·
· · ·~
the stage for regioru,kupply problenu could 'J'ark ~ run-up in prias1 be told
Wunings of potcntid pso ·
The clwlge occun ollicially ~t 2 a.m. local time Sunday, but
and another sumntc:r of high fuel the House Comm~ energy subcom- sho~UgeS this summer also came in ·- .
for most people it's easiest to make the change before retiring ~ prices, gwernmen~ and industry· mitree.
.
report issued Friday by the ~
· Satunby night. ·
·
.
experts told bwnukers Friday.
In separ~re· testimony, Gregory TwJe.Commi&lt;Mn on bsr )'fll''S
lc:'! ·also a good time w replace batteries in smoke ilirms, safeThe federal Energy Information King. executive vice pn!Sideot of San west gasoline price spikes. :
. •;
ty ~dvocares uy.
Administration repomd that srocb of Antonio-based Valero Energy Corp., . The FTC cited a variety of reaso01,;
D~light-uving lime lasts until Ocr. 28. · .
gasoline going into the heavy driving said a shortage of MTBE. in addi~ including poor planning by indw!:r£!
Some pam of the country don't observe the change. They
season are exp~ted to be below hst that 1111kis gas burn cl~ner, could :odd pi.-line problems and requilemeoa•,
include Arizona, Hawaii, the part oflndiana in the Eastern time
• 1 1s
t
1
bl
·
· tb areas
ryears eve .
o supp y pro ems m some u an
fur clemer oocnline, for high prices bit,
zOne, Puerto Rico. the Virgin Islands and Amerian ~moa.
.
This "could set.the suge for region- wh«e the additive is needed in guo,..-al supply problems that oni:e ag:ain line to meet air quility requirrments. fCH .~t soared past S2 a gallon ia:
·could brihg 2bout significant price
Higp natural gas pris;es and Chioago, Mil~ukee and Detroit.
:
volatility, especially in the Midwest ~nd increased de~nd have made less gas
"There is no evidence that !he pri ::
WASHINGTON (AP)- Egypt's foreign minister. pmri~on both coasts:• said John Cook, direc- ~vailable ·for making MTBE, So stocks inc~es were~ result of conspiracy or:
ing what President Bush likely will hear Monday from PR!Si~
tor of the EIA 's petroleum division.
of the ~dditive in February were 22.4 any other antitrust violation;• FTC:
dent Hosni Mubarak, says 1$rael must lifr economic c'u tbs on
With littl., cushion from invento- perc.,nt lower than at the same time a Chnnnan Robc:rt Pito&amp;ky said in , ~
1
the Palestinians and show willingness to compromise if vio- •
ries, any un.,xpected problems with year ago, according to EIA. The agency surement.
: ~
lence in the region is to be ended.
~
4
In the meantime, the. State Departn~ent .aid Friday it had .
•:
seen no eff~ct from Bush's c~ for restraint on both s~des. And so~p may coniain metal mgrnents, federal food safety offiCials by ICil of Media, Pa.
::
Pal_esuman leader Vasser Araf2t s office m ll.:tnullah, on the West said Friday.
·
"I don't agree with purring Social Security money in thl:
~ank,_accu&lt;ed th:. Umted States offavonng lsra:l and Israel of The Archbold, Ohio-based company became aware of the .stock market," said 21-year-old student Che Marufield ~
horfl,ble cnmes.
.
..
.
.
problem afier consumers complained. the Agriculture Depart- Statesboro, Ga. "From what 1 know, 1 think the money shoulj~
Fo~tgn Mtruster Amr Mousu of Eg)'l)t satd And Sharon, ment's Food and ~ety Inspection Service said Friday. There . be used to help old people. Not everYl!ody participates ip th~ '
~.srael s prtme tmmster, has shown no Sign of compronuse. were no repons of injuries. a company official said.
sroclt rnuut."
..
·
: ·
.. •
W,?at we need from the U.S. has always been the honest bro- · Company spokeswoman Karen Lynn said ConAga officials
ker, Mousu satd at a luncheon.
•
were' unsure how the"metal$ot into the soup.
·
·
•
.i:
The Whtte House turnHo Moussa s boss Mubarak on Mon- . The product b.,ing recaUed in 18:75-ounce cans of Marie
'!!
day, and next week tp Kin~ Abdullah_of Jordan, _for help 10 Callender's Hearty Chicken 'N Homestyle Noodles soup. Each
~
reverSl?g the spt_raling conflict. On Fnday, turmoil__~a&lt;,:hed a can bears the lll'arlcing"EST. P-91" on the U~DA seal of inspecG.I\RY.lnd. CAP) - Students were e;atherin.~r in front of leVI ;
new htgh 10 .~ SIX-week cycle of bloodshed. Palesununs, 10 a tion and a dare code of"023L3P91 ."The product was produced Wallace High School for the last day of classes before spring ;
"day of rage, fired on lsraelt soldiers and on a small Jew15h and packaged Feb. 3, 2000, and distributed to retail stO- in break, a , day featuring a talent show, when a gunshot blast: :
enclave in- Hebron.
· California, ArizoM, Utah, New Mexico, Nenda arid Colorado. sounded in th., p~rking lot.
.
·
!
Neal Boyd, a 16-,ar-old sophomoie, dropped to the ground; :
as
.scattemi. The gunman then Bed. wimesses

Page 81
5

d •· Aprl1. 2001

mead-

Mi&amp;.;

Ex'-SIItdenl held in 'slayiftl

!

'JWO finnS retaII chicken
• .

Poll: lftVestincloses S..ppoi (

~tudencs

HIGHIJGHIS .

Silver Bridge Plaza • Gallipolis, OH

oM

Waminc issued on soup

.'

........

Pollstt.lsto

RAVENSWOOD, WVa. In a game played Thursday.
Ravenswood def~ted the
Lady Knights' softball remt, 43 in nine innings.
Point (2-3) scored the goahead run in the top of the
· ninth, bur two singles. rwo
w:alks, md an error allowed
. the OMettes to answer with
two md Qke \he game in
their half.
Kendra Riffle .t ook the loss
foe Point.
Point's leading hitter was
Bridget Nibert with infield
hits. Jennifer Adkins had a '
double, md Amber Curfinan,
Miranda
Dlint. Amber
Raitiey, and Aimee Casto had
singles.

MASON, W.Va - The
Lady Falcons softball team
improved ics record to 3-2·
with a 13-4 win over
Williamstown Friday.
Wa~ tallied nine runs in
the third inning to build an
insurmountable lead over the
· LadyYeUowjackets, who committed three of their six error:s
in that tfame to aid the Lady
Falcon efforts.
Tiffany Osmer picked up
the win for Wahama.
Hitting for Wahama were
Osmer, Malldry Weaver,
Michelle 'Shiltz, Na.talie
Faulk, Meredith
Riggs,
ijrigette l.an).bc:rt, and Jenn;r,.. ·finnicum, all with sin-.. ,

cuban defector ·
heads for

bullpen

CLEVELAND (AP) .
The Cleveland Indians have
told Danys Baez that his
future with the organization
is in the bullpen.
Baez, 2~. will start the season in a relief role at Triple-A
. Buffalo after a sPring training
in which 'he hit 96.·mph several times ' but had a high
ERA.
General manager John Hart
~id the club has always built
its l;nillpens With power arms.
"We think he can come real
fast in the bullpen:' Haq said.
Baez signed a four-year,
S14. 5 million contract before
last season after defecting
from Cuba during the Pan
American Games. The Indians
outbid several teams, including the NewYorkYa!lkees and
Atlanci Braves for Baez, a star
pitcher on the Cuban national team.

Everyfhing Must Go!! ,
HURRY- SALE .IS APRIL QNI

Battler player of

. theyear .

·3626 State Route 14~ • Gallipolis, OH
. -Hours.
Phone 441--'
1
611
.
Tuesday through Saturday
'
.

.

·~

OIIP COAR£SPOHilEHf

· ~
tyC:S.

'

Fourth inning Belpre rally SnuffS th~ Tornadoes
RACINE - Plating three ruru in
the fourth inning. the Belpre Golden
~es posted a 7-5 come from
. behind win oveT the Southern Tornadoes Friday night in Tri-Valley COnference baseball ~n in Stat Mill.
Park. Southern (2-2, .1-2) agam.got
good pitching from Brie., Hill and
Matt Ash, but a couple· defensive
• blunden ~lped ~P the loss.
·
Belpre (2-0) !OOl the initial lead
when Randy Deem doubled and
scored on a Brandon Poling single and
error. the score 1..0. Hill got Belpre to
pop up and take a· call third strike to

.

10:00
a.m. to 6:00p.m.
.
.

, MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Adantic Coast Conferenc.e Scored a rare sweep when
Duke All-American Shane
· Battier and North Carolina
coach Matt Doherty were presented with Phlyer of the Year
and Coach of the Year awards
by The Associated Press.
Battier averaged 19.9 points
· and 7.2 rebounds this season,
leading the top-ranked Blue
Devils to the NCAA Final
I'Qut. He is the reigning two- ·
time national defensive player
·of th~ year and is the first playc
er ih ACC history to finish
with at least 1,500 poinis, 500
rl!bounds, 200' blocks, 200
assists and 200 steals. ·
Doherty, in fiis first season at
his aima mater, led the· Tar
Heels to a 26-7 recoa;d and a
share of the ACC regular-season tide. North Carolina started its ACC season with 11
straight victories, part of an
18-game winning strealr.

end the inning.
Southern wett up 4-1 in the bottom half the inning. Brice Hill singled and Chad Hubbard was hit with
a pitch. After a pop-out Brandon
reached on ah error ro bring
home a run, and Brandon Hill followed up in the same fashion. Aaron
Ohlinger wallced to load the bases and
Dally Hill slammed a two-run single.
putting SHS up by three runs.
In the third inning Belpre chipped
away with a run on a Steve G.mt single, a 4-3 ground our. and an erro(,.42. Southern got the run back in the
bonom of the frame when Ohlinger
and Justin Allen reached on .errors and

Pierce

·another error allowed Allen to score,
Ash put the Golden Eagles ·down
S-3.
1-2-3. bur Deem also blanked the
In the fourth, two walks, a fielders Tornadoes in a scoreless seventh tO '
cbqice, and a hit hatter loaded the secure the game. 7-5 . .
bases for ~lpre. G.mt then ham- · Southern hitters were Brice Hill
mered a duee-run double thar tied it and .Hubbard with singles and Dally
all at 5-5. ·Southern threatened in the Hill a double. Gant went 3-4 for Belfourth with two runners. and Hub- pre with r~e RBiis, Poling had two
bard singled in the sixth, bur the rallies singles, Deem doubled, and Hildecame up dry.
brand doubled.
Maq Ash came on to blank the side
Ash ""'l charged with the loss
for Southern in the 6frh. and had two despite a good effort in relief of Brice
outs in th., second when a Gant single.. Hill. they com.bined for four strikeand an error got things· roUing for outs, just two walks, and two hit batBelpre. Poling foUowed up with a sin- ters, while allowing eight hits.·
Deem picked up the win in relief
gle to put Belpre up one run, the
Smith notched another for a 7-5 tally. of Poling.

•

JOy.doesn't last for Ea""hardt
.5 "

Knight
removes
three
players

•

DaleJr. takes
pole for
Harrah~ 500

to~ :

WASHI~~TON ~AP) -. Americans' enth~ fo~ ~m_i- . ~~~ said be walked up .to him (Boyd), shot him once::
dent Bushs. 1dea of mvesnng Social Secunty contnbuaons 10 ·
- - ---"-'
.
d
d
. .. -~ :
the stock market has dropped sharply along with ·the market ·wallced away. w~ up his hood an starte runmng. w • •
says an Associated Press poll.
' Gary Police Officer JetrTatum, who is stati~ned at the school. .. :
.The poU taken after two of
the roughest weeks the market
has had in recenr years shm¥s
they're about evenly split on
that idea now.
Mon. • Fri. Hours II a.m. - 7 p.m. Sat. 11 - 7 p.m. . ·
About half in the poU, .49
p~,x:ent, said they support a
plan to give people the option
Coupon Per Person, Per Day
of investing some of their
•
•
Social SecuritY contributions,
while 44 percent oppose it, says
~L·----~--------WASHINGTON (AP) - ConAgra Grocery Proilucts Co. is the P&lt;?ll conducted for the AP
'
recalling about 55,000 cans of chicken noodle soup because the

WASHINGTON (AP) -Two food companies are recalling
millions of pounds of chicken breast strips because the labels do
nyflect that they contain egg yolks and whey, which are
common allergens.
'
The companies, Simmons Foods otVan Buren.~ .• and Keystone _Foods o~ Gadsen, Ala., discovered' the ~beling ~roblem ·
and reported 1t to government food tnspecnon offictals, the
Agriculture Department s~d Friday. . .
·
. ..
Stmmoru Foods 1s recalling 5.5 million pounds of chicken
breast strips and Keystone is recalling 3.7 million pounds.
No reporo of allergic reactions because of the chicken have
been reported, according to the USDA.

SuNnw's

FORT WORTH, Texas
(AP) Nothing could
keep the smile on Dale
Earnhardt Jr.'s fa.c e ' for
more than a few fleeting
seconds at a time.
Not his first pole since
last August. Nor the cheers
- from more than 70,000
fans, a larger than usual
Friday crowd that
greeted his ' every move
during qualifying for Sunday's Harrah's 500. Not the
sense that his young crew is
coming togetbet:--.,
· His father's d~ath will
shadow everything he does
from now on. .
"I think ·about him all
the time, aitd it seems like
there's good days and ·bad
days;• said Earnhardt, who
took the pole in his
Chevrolet with a lap of
190.676 inph on the 1
1/2- mile oval. "Just when
you think you're beginning
to feel better ' about it,
you'll hit a bump in the
road and you 'U spend two
or three days W;here you
can't think about nothing
else. I' don't know how ·
long that'll . be, but it's not
such a bad thing because I
like to think about him
often."
The younger Earnhardt's
starting position is his best
since he started sixth and

.......... NASCAR....

..

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) It took Bob Knight just seven.
days to show he's in charge.
Three players were kicked
off the Texas Tech b:lsketball
team Friday for "some violation of team rules," school
· president · David -schmidly
. said. A fourth playet a5ked for
·and was granted his release.
Fresh mini '.reserve Brannon
Hayes said he and two other
players were dismissed from
the team because of a misunderstanc\ing during a meeting •
· with Knight earlier this ,week.
The other.;
were identified iS
.
Jamal ; Brown. th~ r~ed
Raiders' starting guard who
averaged 10.6 points per
game, and Rodn ey Bass.
another freshman reserve.
Schmidly said. he does not
receive reports on problems
wi th basketball players and
was unaware of which rules
or what ·type of violations
occurred.
· Bass told the ·· Lubbock
Avalanche-Journal that the
three had been late to practice.
" It was just . a misunder. standing in the mee ting
between the three of us."
Hayes told the Associated
Press." Alii know is I was just
not wanted .here next year.
Personally, I ·think the decision was made before I even
knew it."
.,
Brown, Bass and Mayes will
their
scholarships ·
keep
through next year.
The school ~Jiil,llted a fourth
player, Rona. .Hobbs, his
release Friday.
. Hobbs, a backup guard who
averaged 5.5 points per game,
said his departure was planned
weeks before former coach
. J~mes Dickey was fired March
" 9 following the Red Raiders'
9-19 season.
The news caught other
players off guard.
"I was surprised to hear
that:' Hobbs said. "I thought I
was by myself."
Junior center Andy Ellis,
who is Brown's. roommate,
said he didn 't know about the

.

MIXED EMOT.IONS -:- Dale Earnhardt Jr. talks to the press after wlnnlnS the pole for Sun·
day's Harrah's 500. (AP)
,.

aves··honors winter athletes
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS
Intensity Award ·- Hannah Beaver.
GALLIPOLIS - ' The 2000-01 Ohio, Obedience Award - Alyssa Zirille.
VaUey &lt;:;hristian winter 'spores banquet
Courage -.. Mittra Esmaeili ..
was held Friday at the First Baptist
Initiative - · Tessa Haggerty.
Church of Gallipolis,
Diligence - Chelsea Gooch.
·Awards went to:
Helpfulness - Aimee Agustin.
Girl• Basketball
Contentment- Kristi Pavis .
Player of the Year - Chelsea Gooch. .J)etermjnation .:.._ Hallie Carter.
Ball Control Award - Alyssa Zirille.
AD- Around
Shooting Accuracy Award - Tessa
The Shield Award, Boys - Brad
Haggerty.
Bowman.
Servant Awaid - Sarah Dawn JenkThe Shield Award, Girls - C helsea
' .
ins.
,
.Gooch.
Consistency Award - Kelsey SalisMighty In Spirit · Award, Boys
bury.
·
Jason Holdren. .

Mighty In Spirit Award, Girls
Alyssa Zirille.
'
Letterwinners were:
Cheerleading
Already lettered- Lindsey Wheeler,
Crystal Taylor, Hannah Burleson , Elizabeth Stevens, Sarah Smith, Kelli Irwin.
Fi rst year letterwinners - JoeeJarvis.
·
Girls Basketball
Pin -·
Hannah Beaver, C helsea
Gooch, Kelsey Sailsbury, Mittra
Esmaeili.
Number - Tessa Haggerty, Alyssa
Zirille.
•

0

Please see Knlpt. 85

PIHse ... OVCS,B6
·,

Big Blacks·struggle at Sl Joseph's meet
.

BY DAN POLCYN
OVP sPoRTS STAFF

PARKERSBURG, WVa.
lt was a rough day at the
office for the Point Pleasant
track · teams at Friday1s St
Joseph's Invitational track
meet.
The girls finished last ih
their session and the· boys,
who qualified two relay teams
to the state meet in
Charleston last year, did' not

-

cof!tplete
ariy of their
three sprint,
relay and finished eighth
in the 11team
field
with
27
points,
The only
Boneoutter Lady
,.
Knights' athlete . to place was
sophomore Jennifer Kayser,

'

who placed fourth in the know what we 'll work on
300-merer intermediate bur- next week."
dles with a time of 54.67 .
Girls/sprinters coach Chip
Murphy 's law ruled the Wood suggested another conrelay as the Big Blacks were tributing fac tor in the lack of
plagued by a missed exchange coordination in the boys relay
on the 800-meter relay, a events. "The ,lack of fa cilities
falling runner in the 400- · at Point Pleas:tnt High School
metel: relay, and a false start in is part of the reason for us
the 1'600-meter relaY,
having problems with · the
"I ithink it was my fault," relays;• ·said Wood. "We don 't
said foint coach Bill CottrilL have a track to ·prac tice on
"We i w~re not 'prepared . I that has markings. We have to

make our own markings on
the ground."
. John Bon e e~lttcr earned the
high est placement of any of
the Big Blacks,.fini shing second in the 100-meter dash ·
with a time o( 11 .53. In the
200-meter dash, he placed
.third with a 24.0.
In both of his feature
events, Bonecutter finish ed

Pluus•Polnt. H .

�•

-.

......
"

•

•mu.~ J'adhatJ·

Set yow dodls nhend

•
•

•

Low.inventories set stage for high fuel pri

WASHINGTON (AP) - P~ lime. recurm on
Suliday to most of !be nation. .
'
That means it's time w &lt;et ~ docks
spring furwml
WASHINGTON (AP) - ~ supply, increased deiiWid, Rfinery Uid · MTBE production Ius been 9 ,
"'-- to gain an hour of light in the evening for Wl!llller recre-.
lpw inventories of gasoline rould set problenu or pipeline interruptions percent below Wt )'rir's leveJs.
ation.
·
· · ·~
the stage for regioru,kupply problenu could 'J'ark ~ run-up in prias1 be told
Wunings of potcntid pso ·
The clwlge occun ollicially ~t 2 a.m. local time Sunday, but
and another sumntc:r of high fuel the House Comm~ energy subcom- sho~UgeS this summer also came in ·- .
for most people it's easiest to make the change before retiring ~ prices, gwernmen~ and industry· mitree.
.
report issued Friday by the ~
· Satunby night. ·
·
.
experts told bwnukers Friday.
In separ~re· testimony, Gregory TwJe.Commi&lt;Mn on bsr )'fll''S
lc:'! ·also a good time w replace batteries in smoke ilirms, safeThe federal Energy Information King. executive vice pn!Sideot of San west gasoline price spikes. :
. •;
ty ~dvocares uy.
Administration repomd that srocb of Antonio-based Valero Energy Corp., . The FTC cited a variety of reaso01,;
D~light-uving lime lasts until Ocr. 28. · .
gasoline going into the heavy driving said a shortage of MTBE. in addi~ including poor planning by indw!:r£!
Some pam of the country don't observe the change. They
season are exp~ted to be below hst that 1111kis gas burn cl~ner, could :odd pi.-line problems and requilemeoa•,
include Arizona, Hawaii, the part oflndiana in the Eastern time
• 1 1s
t
1
bl
·
· tb areas
ryears eve .
o supp y pro ems m some u an
fur clemer oocnline, for high prices bit,
zOne, Puerto Rico. the Virgin Islands and Amerian ~moa.
.
This "could set.the suge for region- wh«e the additive is needed in guo,..-al supply problems that oni:e ag:ain line to meet air quility requirrments. fCH .~t soared past S2 a gallon ia:
·could brihg 2bout significant price
Higp natural gas pris;es and Chioago, Mil~ukee and Detroit.
:
volatility, especially in the Midwest ~nd increased de~nd have made less gas
"There is no evidence that !he pri ::
WASHINGTON (AP)- Egypt's foreign minister. pmri~on both coasts:• said John Cook, direc- ~vailable ·for making MTBE, So stocks inc~es were~ result of conspiracy or:
ing what President Bush likely will hear Monday from PR!Si~
tor of the EIA 's petroleum division.
of the ~dditive in February were 22.4 any other antitrust violation;• FTC:
dent Hosni Mubarak, says 1$rael must lifr economic c'u tbs on
With littl., cushion from invento- perc.,nt lower than at the same time a Chnnnan Robc:rt Pito&amp;ky said in , ~
1
the Palestinians and show willingness to compromise if vio- •
ries, any un.,xpected problems with year ago, according to EIA. The agency surement.
: ~
lence in the region is to be ended.
~
4
In the meantime, the. State Departn~ent .aid Friday it had .
•:
seen no eff~ct from Bush's c~ for restraint on both s~des. And so~p may coniain metal mgrnents, federal food safety offiCials by ICil of Media, Pa.
::
Pal_esuman leader Vasser Araf2t s office m ll.:tnullah, on the West said Friday.
·
"I don't agree with purring Social Security money in thl:
~ank,_accu&lt;ed th:. Umted States offavonng lsra:l and Israel of The Archbold, Ohio-based company became aware of the .stock market," said 21-year-old student Che Marufield ~
horfl,ble cnmes.
.
..
.
.
problem afier consumers complained. the Agriculture Depart- Statesboro, Ga. "From what 1 know, 1 think the money shoulj~
Fo~tgn Mtruster Amr Mousu of Eg)'l)t satd And Sharon, ment's Food and ~ety Inspection Service said Friday. There . be used to help old people. Not everYl!ody participates ip th~ '
~.srael s prtme tmmster, has shown no Sign of compronuse. were no repons of injuries. a company official said.
sroclt rnuut."
..
·
: ·
.. •
W,?at we need from the U.S. has always been the honest bro- · Company spokeswoman Karen Lynn said ConAga officials
ker, Mousu satd at a luncheon.
•
were' unsure how the"metal$ot into the soup.
·
·
•
.i:
The Whtte House turnHo Moussa s boss Mubarak on Mon- . The product b.,ing recaUed in 18:75-ounce cans of Marie
'!!
day, and next week tp Kin~ Abdullah_of Jordan, _for help 10 Callender's Hearty Chicken 'N Homestyle Noodles soup. Each
~
reverSl?g the spt_raling conflict. On Fnday, turmoil__~a&lt;,:hed a can bears the lll'arlcing"EST. P-91" on the U~DA seal of inspecG.I\RY.lnd. CAP) - Students were e;atherin.~r in front of leVI ;
new htgh 10 .~ SIX-week cycle of bloodshed. Palesununs, 10 a tion and a dare code of"023L3P91 ."The product was produced Wallace High School for the last day of classes before spring ;
"day of rage, fired on lsraelt soldiers and on a small Jew15h and packaged Feb. 3, 2000, and distributed to retail stO- in break, a , day featuring a talent show, when a gunshot blast: :
enclave in- Hebron.
· California, ArizoM, Utah, New Mexico, Nenda arid Colorado. sounded in th., p~rking lot.
.
·
!
Neal Boyd, a 16-,ar-old sophomoie, dropped to the ground; :
as
.scattemi. The gunman then Bed. wimesses

Page 81
5

d •· Aprl1. 2001

mead-

Mi&amp;.;

Ex'-SIItdenl held in 'slayiftl

!

'JWO finnS retaII chicken
• .

Poll: lftVestincloses S..ppoi (

~tudencs

HIGHIJGHIS .

Silver Bridge Plaza • Gallipolis, OH

oM

Waminc issued on soup

.'

........

Pollstt.lsto

RAVENSWOOD, WVa. In a game played Thursday.
Ravenswood def~ted the
Lady Knights' softball remt, 43 in nine innings.
Point (2-3) scored the goahead run in the top of the
· ninth, bur two singles. rwo
w:alks, md an error allowed
. the OMettes to answer with
two md Qke \he game in
their half.
Kendra Riffle .t ook the loss
foe Point.
Point's leading hitter was
Bridget Nibert with infield
hits. Jennifer Adkins had a '
double, md Amber Curfinan,
Miranda
Dlint. Amber
Raitiey, and Aimee Casto had
singles.

MASON, W.Va - The
Lady Falcons softball team
improved ics record to 3-2·
with a 13-4 win over
Williamstown Friday.
Wa~ tallied nine runs in
the third inning to build an
insurmountable lead over the
· LadyYeUowjackets, who committed three of their six error:s
in that tfame to aid the Lady
Falcon efforts.
Tiffany Osmer picked up
the win for Wahama.
Hitting for Wahama were
Osmer, Malldry Weaver,
Michelle 'Shiltz, Na.talie
Faulk, Meredith
Riggs,
ijrigette l.an).bc:rt, and Jenn;r,.. ·finnicum, all with sin-.. ,

cuban defector ·
heads for

bullpen

CLEVELAND (AP) .
The Cleveland Indians have
told Danys Baez that his
future with the organization
is in the bullpen.
Baez, 2~. will start the season in a relief role at Triple-A
. Buffalo after a sPring training
in which 'he hit 96.·mph several times ' but had a high
ERA.
General manager John Hart
~id the club has always built
its l;nillpens With power arms.
"We think he can come real
fast in the bullpen:' Haq said.
Baez signed a four-year,
S14. 5 million contract before
last season after defecting
from Cuba during the Pan
American Games. The Indians
outbid several teams, including the NewYorkYa!lkees and
Atlanci Braves for Baez, a star
pitcher on the Cuban national team.

Everyfhing Must Go!! ,
HURRY- SALE .IS APRIL QNI

Battler player of

. theyear .

·3626 State Route 14~ • Gallipolis, OH
. -Hours.
Phone 441--'
1
611
.
Tuesday through Saturday
'
.

.

·~

OIIP COAR£SPOHilEHf

· ~
tyC:S.

'

Fourth inning Belpre rally SnuffS th~ Tornadoes
RACINE - Plating three ruru in
the fourth inning. the Belpre Golden
~es posted a 7-5 come from
. behind win oveT the Southern Tornadoes Friday night in Tri-Valley COnference baseball ~n in Stat Mill.
Park. Southern (2-2, .1-2) agam.got
good pitching from Brie., Hill and
Matt Ash, but a couple· defensive
• blunden ~lped ~P the loss.
·
Belpre (2-0) !OOl the initial lead
when Randy Deem doubled and
scored on a Brandon Poling single and
error. the score 1..0. Hill got Belpre to
pop up and take a· call third strike to

.

10:00
a.m. to 6:00p.m.
.
.

, MINNEAPOLIS (AP) The Adantic Coast Conferenc.e Scored a rare sweep when
Duke All-American Shane
· Battier and North Carolina
coach Matt Doherty were presented with Phlyer of the Year
and Coach of the Year awards
by The Associated Press.
Battier averaged 19.9 points
· and 7.2 rebounds this season,
leading the top-ranked Blue
Devils to the NCAA Final
I'Qut. He is the reigning two- ·
time national defensive player
·of th~ year and is the first playc
er ih ACC history to finish
with at least 1,500 poinis, 500
rl!bounds, 200' blocks, 200
assists and 200 steals. ·
Doherty, in fiis first season at
his aima mater, led the· Tar
Heels to a 26-7 recoa;d and a
share of the ACC regular-season tide. North Carolina started its ACC season with 11
straight victories, part of an
18-game winning strealr.

end the inning.
Southern wett up 4-1 in the bottom half the inning. Brice Hill singled and Chad Hubbard was hit with
a pitch. After a pop-out Brandon
reached on ah error ro bring
home a run, and Brandon Hill followed up in the same fashion. Aaron
Ohlinger wallced to load the bases and
Dally Hill slammed a two-run single.
putting SHS up by three runs.
In the third inning Belpre chipped
away with a run on a Steve G.mt single, a 4-3 ground our. and an erro(,.42. Southern got the run back in the
bonom of the frame when Ohlinger
and Justin Allen reached on .errors and

Pierce

·another error allowed Allen to score,
Ash put the Golden Eagles ·down
S-3.
1-2-3. bur Deem also blanked the
In the fourth, two walks, a fielders Tornadoes in a scoreless seventh tO '
cbqice, and a hit hatter loaded the secure the game. 7-5 . .
bases for ~lpre. G.mt then ham- · Southern hitters were Brice Hill
mered a duee-run double thar tied it and .Hubbard with singles and Dally
all at 5-5. ·Southern threatened in the Hill a double. Gant went 3-4 for Belfourth with two runners. and Hub- pre with r~e RBiis, Poling had two
bard singled in the sixth, bur the rallies singles, Deem doubled, and Hildecame up dry.
brand doubled.
Maq Ash came on to blank the side
Ash ""'l charged with the loss
for Southern in the 6frh. and had two despite a good effort in relief of Brice
outs in th., second when a Gant single.. Hill. they com.bined for four strikeand an error got things· roUing for outs, just two walks, and two hit batBelpre. Poling foUowed up with a sin- ters, while allowing eight hits.·
Deem picked up the win in relief
gle to put Belpre up one run, the
Smith notched another for a 7-5 tally. of Poling.

•

JOy.doesn't last for Ea""hardt
.5 "

Knight
removes
three
players

•

DaleJr. takes
pole for
Harrah~ 500

to~ :

WASHI~~TON ~AP) -. Americans' enth~ fo~ ~m_i- . ~~~ said be walked up .to him (Boyd), shot him once::
dent Bushs. 1dea of mvesnng Social Secunty contnbuaons 10 ·
- - ---"-'
.
d
d
. .. -~ :
the stock market has dropped sharply along with ·the market ·wallced away. w~ up his hood an starte runmng. w • •
says an Associated Press poll.
' Gary Police Officer JetrTatum, who is stati~ned at the school. .. :
.The poU taken after two of
the roughest weeks the market
has had in recenr years shm¥s
they're about evenly split on
that idea now.
Mon. • Fri. Hours II a.m. - 7 p.m. Sat. 11 - 7 p.m. . ·
About half in the poU, .49
p~,x:ent, said they support a
plan to give people the option
Coupon Per Person, Per Day
of investing some of their
•
•
Social SecuritY contributions,
while 44 percent oppose it, says
~L·----~--------WASHINGTON (AP) - ConAgra Grocery Proilucts Co. is the P&lt;?ll conducted for the AP
'
recalling about 55,000 cans of chicken noodle soup because the

WASHINGTON (AP) -Two food companies are recalling
millions of pounds of chicken breast strips because the labels do
nyflect that they contain egg yolks and whey, which are
common allergens.
'
The companies, Simmons Foods otVan Buren.~ .• and Keystone _Foods o~ Gadsen, Ala., discovered' the ~beling ~roblem ·
and reported 1t to government food tnspecnon offictals, the
Agriculture Department s~d Friday. . .
·
. ..
Stmmoru Foods 1s recalling 5.5 million pounds of chicken
breast strips and Keystone is recalling 3.7 million pounds.
No reporo of allergic reactions because of the chicken have
been reported, according to the USDA.

SuNnw's

FORT WORTH, Texas
(AP) Nothing could
keep the smile on Dale
Earnhardt Jr.'s fa.c e ' for
more than a few fleeting
seconds at a time.
Not his first pole since
last August. Nor the cheers
- from more than 70,000
fans, a larger than usual
Friday crowd that
greeted his ' every move
during qualifying for Sunday's Harrah's 500. Not the
sense that his young crew is
coming togetbet:--.,
· His father's d~ath will
shadow everything he does
from now on. .
"I think ·about him all
the time, aitd it seems like
there's good days and ·bad
days;• said Earnhardt, who
took the pole in his
Chevrolet with a lap of
190.676 inph on the 1
1/2- mile oval. "Just when
you think you're beginning
to feel better ' about it,
you'll hit a bump in the
road and you 'U spend two
or three days W;here you
can't think about nothing
else. I' don't know how ·
long that'll . be, but it's not
such a bad thing because I
like to think about him
often."
The younger Earnhardt's
starting position is his best
since he started sixth and

.......... NASCAR....

..

LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) It took Bob Knight just seven.
days to show he's in charge.
Three players were kicked
off the Texas Tech b:lsketball
team Friday for "some violation of team rules," school
· president · David -schmidly
. said. A fourth playet a5ked for
·and was granted his release.
Fresh mini '.reserve Brannon
Hayes said he and two other
players were dismissed from
the team because of a misunderstanc\ing during a meeting •
· with Knight earlier this ,week.
The other.;
were identified iS
.
Jamal ; Brown. th~ r~ed
Raiders' starting guard who
averaged 10.6 points per
game, and Rodn ey Bass.
another freshman reserve.
Schmidly said. he does not
receive reports on problems
wi th basketball players and
was unaware of which rules
or what ·type of violations
occurred.
· Bass told the ·· Lubbock
Avalanche-Journal that the
three had been late to practice.
" It was just . a misunder. standing in the mee ting
between the three of us."
Hayes told the Associated
Press." Alii know is I was just
not wanted .here next year.
Personally, I ·think the decision was made before I even
knew it."
.,
Brown, Bass and Mayes will
their
scholarships ·
keep
through next year.
The school ~Jiil,llted a fourth
player, Rona. .Hobbs, his
release Friday.
. Hobbs, a backup guard who
averaged 5.5 points per game,
said his departure was planned
weeks before former coach
. J~mes Dickey was fired March
" 9 following the Red Raiders'
9-19 season.
The news caught other
players off guard.
"I was surprised to hear
that:' Hobbs said. "I thought I
was by myself."
Junior center Andy Ellis,
who is Brown's. roommate,
said he didn 't know about the

.

MIXED EMOT.IONS -:- Dale Earnhardt Jr. talks to the press after wlnnlnS the pole for Sun·
day's Harrah's 500. (AP)
,.

aves··honors winter athletes
FROM OVP STAFF REPORTS
Intensity Award ·- Hannah Beaver.
GALLIPOLIS - ' The 2000-01 Ohio, Obedience Award - Alyssa Zirille.
VaUey &lt;:;hristian winter 'spores banquet
Courage -.. Mittra Esmaeili ..
was held Friday at the First Baptist
Initiative - · Tessa Haggerty.
Church of Gallipolis,
Diligence - Chelsea Gooch.
·Awards went to:
Helpfulness - Aimee Agustin.
Girl• Basketball
Contentment- Kristi Pavis .
Player of the Year - Chelsea Gooch. .J)etermjnation .:.._ Hallie Carter.
Ball Control Award - Alyssa Zirille.
AD- Around
Shooting Accuracy Award - Tessa
The Shield Award, Boys - Brad
Haggerty.
Bowman.
Servant Awaid - Sarah Dawn JenkThe Shield Award, Girls - C helsea
' .
ins.
,
.Gooch.
Consistency Award - Kelsey SalisMighty In Spirit · Award, Boys
bury.
·
Jason Holdren. .

Mighty In Spirit Award, Girls
Alyssa Zirille.
'
Letterwinners were:
Cheerleading
Already lettered- Lindsey Wheeler,
Crystal Taylor, Hannah Burleson , Elizabeth Stevens, Sarah Smith, Kelli Irwin.
Fi rst year letterwinners - JoeeJarvis.
·
Girls Basketball
Pin -·
Hannah Beaver, C helsea
Gooch, Kelsey Sailsbury, Mittra
Esmaeili.
Number - Tessa Haggerty, Alyssa
Zirille.
•

0

Please see Knlpt. 85

PIHse ... OVCS,B6
·,

Big Blacks·struggle at Sl Joseph's meet
.

BY DAN POLCYN
OVP sPoRTS STAFF

PARKERSBURG, WVa.
lt was a rough day at the
office for the Point Pleasant
track · teams at Friday1s St
Joseph's Invitational track
meet.
The girls finished last ih
their session and the· boys,
who qualified two relay teams
to the state meet in
Charleston last year, did' not

-

cof!tplete
ariy of their
three sprint,
relay and finished eighth
in the 11team
field
with
27
points,
The only
Boneoutter Lady
,.
Knights' athlete . to place was
sophomore Jennifer Kayser,

'

who placed fourth in the know what we 'll work on
300-merer intermediate bur- next week."
dles with a time of 54.67 .
Girls/sprinters coach Chip
Murphy 's law ruled the Wood suggested another conrelay as the Big Blacks were tributing fac tor in the lack of
plagued by a missed exchange coordination in the boys relay
on the 800-meter relay, a events. "The ,lack of fa cilities
falling runner in the 400- · at Point Pleas:tnt High School
metel: relay, and a false start in is part of the reason for us
the 1'600-meter relaY,
having problems with · the
"I ithink it was my fault," relays;• ·said Wood. "We don 't
said foint coach Bill CottrilL have a track to ·prac tice on
"We i w~re not 'prepared . I that has markings. We have to

make our own markings on
the ground."
. John Bon e e~lttcr earned the
high est placement of any of
the Big Blacks,.fini shing second in the 100-meter dash ·
with a time o( 11 .53. In the
200-meter dash, he placed
.third with a 24.0.
In both of his feature
events, Bonecutter finish ed

Pluus•Polnt. H .

�pI • · • n aYt.21 •

•

'

•

•

Pc1meror • llhflllpiM'I• G NpaM1, Ohio • Polrit Pin urt, WV '

Willtl

Sundly, Aprt11, 2.001

season ·a

BASEBALL-1001: A

.

......,, Aprtl1, 2001

.....~--···lvl·hie83

•

•

llr
WALKER
.liP . .'!Vll tJJUIER
)
Rater Oemens grins at biS

~

million, · 1O-year deal with
Texas. '
While sever:al stan seemed
jealous of his
it sounds
as if.A-Rod might'w be a bit
envious of his friend. Derek

'

·

moneY.

new

tnmmate, thr guy
puftiDs on the pinstripes for
the first time.
· Now pitching for tbe New
York Yankus. Mike Mussina.
Th tbe Rocket, it bas a .nicr
ring - as in tile typr that
comes studded with diamonds, the kind that's won at
' thr World Serirs.
.Lod . . P' U Ill
ult's a goal of mind, and I
IMp In hilling
ondnn-ln.
· would imagine everybody ·
else, to get Mike on bo:u:d so
he can know what it feels
· lilce," Clemeris said.
Everyone gets their chance,
starting Sunday. In a new
place, too: With the game
hoping to broaden its. horizons, Texas and Toronto play
opening day at Hirnn1 Bithom1
Stadium in San Juan, Puerto
Rico.
Yet even before Chuck
Knoblauch and Rick Ankiel,
baseball was bound for a wild
season:
- Lots of teams trying to
stop the Yankees' run of three
straight tidrs,led by their Subway Series rivals. LoiS of players taking aim at Alex
Rodriguez's quarter- billiondollar deal, led this spring by
Gary Sheffield and F~ank
Thomas.
"If you sign it, play it out.
It's that simple;• declared
Mark McGwi~, who took a good, and sever:al stars ailing:
cut-rate deal to stay with the Nomar Garciaparra, Ken GrifSt. Lopis Cardinals, "If you fey Jr., Derek Jeter, Kevin
have three or four yean left on Brown, . Greg Maddux, Trnvis :
your contract, there's no com- Fryman and John Smoltz.
plaining."
Smoltz, who missed all of
- Manny Ramirez, Mike last season after elbow .sutgery.
Hatilpton, Denny Neagle, Juan will start the year on the disGonzalez, Joh!'ny Damon, •abled list.
Andres Galarraga ancf Kevin · But Smoltz ·expects to be
Appier wearing different uni- back in the Braves' rotation
·
soon enough, ready,for Atlanta
forms .
- Albert Belle gone for to resume its ~ivalry with the

I•

17".
Q

A8

uo

529

~

157
I I . - - CIO\IIolld 118

-

..... _
--Y. Guonri&gt;. -

180

510

128
1S.

454
571

82 181
101 197

--.......

.

...... NAdiJU

a row..

AI.
.355 . ~. OOidand .
.345
j
•
· j D. W.... T"""*&gt; , 20-8
Pe!We, -YOII&lt;
111-9

I' ......

! NL

! -. Chicago

43 j · San Francisco 49
43 i ~. H&lt;xlSion
47

~ Hudson, Oakland

:

-../

Se~.

Seatda

NL

I -Kie, St.·1.ou1o
-

~ -·-

1

1s

~ AI.
i P. Moltinez. Booten

50

'I'

t~

l

Jeter, at 26, already bas won
four World Series rings. He
was the MVP last October as
the Yankus won their third in

3.00

111-7

M.tll•x, AtiMta

111-9

NL
4

Jolvlton. Arizonlo

2
2

M'Midr;IX 0

3

Atlanta

3
2

6tied

Ia Strlbouls
!

i NL

Martinez. ~~ 1•s ~ Helton,Colorado
SWIIIIIy. Kansu City 144 • i Sosa. Chicago
Thomal, &lt;{Neago
143
BlgweH, -ston

1•1
138
132

i

· .AL
P, Martinez, Boaton
I Colon. Clevolarid
MuUina, Baftitnote

·!
i

' NL
284
Johnson,Arizona
3'7
212 f Pari&lt;, Loa Angolea . 217
210 I Brown, Lot AngeleS 218

!

'
J ..·······.. ·········-···-·····..-···················--·--············-···-····-·-···--······································-···-···-··-···-···-··················-······-····
..·-·-·······

••••••••••

.....
AI.

AI.

R. Alamor, c-..,

39.

A. Radrlgooz, Saa111e 134
E.....,,An1holm
NL

.,

--

Dllfi1C!II, KM101 City

214

Lowe, -

121
NL

NL
V\dro, Montrul

138

Hallmon, Sin Diogo 43

200

N.,, San Fronc:laca

Edmondl, St. Loull . 129

•

New York Mets. They'll play
19 times this season under a
reworked schedule that calls
for more inmdivision games.
"I like it this way;• Smoltz
said. "Instead of l)aving_ to
watch the scoreboard, you're
playing the team you need to
~eat."

· - New ballparks in Pittsburgh and Milwaukee and a
revamped one · in Cinc;innati.
Plus a half-dozen new
man.;

42

-.

41"

•

agen, with Bob Brenly and another strike or lockout. The
Buck Martinez both making Basic Agreement . between
the mave from the broadcast players. and owners expires
Oct. 31 and the sport wants to
booth to the dugout..
- All those high sttikes the avoid its ninth work stoppage
umpires plan to call.
since 1972.
But a spate of ejections late
Whew, that's what fans want
in exhibition play, many after to hear. Because there will be
pitches called at the letters, plenty worth watching all yea~
indicated others may not be so . Iilng.
.
agreeable.
. It begins, with the opener,
-The whole season, played · when A-Rod plays his first
out against the threat · of game since signing his $252

.

Tribe tops

"It's awful hard to win four
of four," Yankees owner
George Steinbrenner said ..
Among the other things to
keep watching: .
-The Wild Bunch. Ankiel's
lack of control could cost him
a spot in the Cardinals' ro~­
tion, and perhaps his career at
-21. Knoblauch's errant th~s
fiom second base put him in
lett peld for the Yankees.
1
- - The Rangers' former coowner, President George W.
Bush will throw out the first
ball at new Millet Park in Mil&gt;y.~ukee and PNC ·Park opens
in · ·Pittsburgh. Cincinnati'~
Cinergy Field bas a new look,
with the stands tom down in
· center field and the artificial
turf torn up.
Rickey Henderson
signed with Sao Diego during
spring training, giving him a
chance at more i}istory. Baseball's all-time stolen base
leader needs 86 hits for No.
3,000, three walks to top Babe
Ruth's career record '(2,062)
and 68 runs to breakTy Cobb's
matk (2,245).
- Olympic stat Ben Sheets
of Milwaukee is ainong the top
rookies. So is . seven-time
Japanese batting champion
Ichiro Su~ki of Seattle.
-While Tim Raines tries to
come back.at 41, c3J. Riplcen's
days could be coming to an
·end.

••

Atlanta

·

•

ATLANTA (,6P) - Jacob
Cruz hit a solo home run in
the 12th inning Friday night ·
to give the Cleveland Indians
a 3-2 win over the Adanta
Braves, who got an impressive
performance from struggJing
Kevin Millwood.
Millwood pitched three hitless ' innings, by far his best
outing of the spring. Only one
bat\er reached base off him Einar Diaz, on an error by
shortstop Rafael Furcal. .
The Atlanta right-hander
lowered his spring ERA to
12.46. He has given up ,35 hits
and 24 earned runs in 17 1-3
innings.
. ''I ·finally felt like I was
pitching tlte way I was a coupl!! of years ago, again;' said
Millwood, who was 35-15 in
1998-98 before a 10-13 season a year ago.
"All in , all, it was a pretty
good outing,'' said Millwood,
who hurried off to the hospital afterward to be with his
wif~:, Rena, who _is pregnant
with their first child. Doctors
were to induce labor early
•
Saturday.
Cruz hit a 3-0 shot over the
right field fence - his third
homer of the spring - 'off
Adanta right-hander Billy
Sylvester.
The Braves ope'n ed the
scoring with two runs iri. the
fourth inning on an RBI single by Chipper Jones and a
. sacrifice fly by Brian Jordan
·off Clevc4nd ·starter Chuck

Head •••· ••••···•••
'

· · · · · · Left ehoulder
Mike Sirotka, Toronto
Blue Jays traded ace David Wells
lor Slrotka and his bum shoulder.
• • ; LAft IIIIOW
' BIKy Wagner, Houston ~
The best close~ in the NL In 1999.
.. ,. LAft forurm ·
Rey Ordonez, Mats
,
Baseball's slickest fleldlng shonstop
nissed the ftnal four months of last
season with a broken left forearm.

reconafructlve surgery.

;

l
·l

•

•

:.. LAII ring flnglr

Right wrist • ~
Nomar Garclaparra, Boston ,••••• ••••
Two-time balling champion could mile :
·
up to four months. with a splh tendon. l

. .... ·:

.

Javy Lopez, Atlanta
er-~~a~tng &lt;*herwl miS8 the start '
d the aeason With a bnJI&lt;en linger. ,

''

Rlahtknee ·'
Malk McGwire,"St. Louis
Home Run King was limited to 15 at·bals
afltt' AI~Star break last sauon becauae

San Diego
NL batting champion
knee

of Injured knee.

Ed Co Guero/AP

· 1999CHEVYCAVALIER

$7 99 5

~oor, air, auto, trana,
CD player, Extra aharp.

4-

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power aeeta, Very aharp .....................
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1993 BUICK PARK AYE· 4 Door, all powared$
6 99·5

1997 CHEVY CAVALIER· 2 Door, auto trana,56
air, tilt, crulaa, powar mlrrora .,.,,.,,,.,,•.,.,.,, 1
1996 FORD TAUJ:tUS Gl- Red, Juto trana, , 55
Extra Sharp, Power llCJUippad.,.,.,,.,,,,.,.,.,.,, 1
1995 FORD MUSTANG· Auto trani,.Ye, tilt 57 ·
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a new approach to multidisciplinary medicine!
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1994MERCURYTOPAZ·.4 Door, auto trana, ·sa 495
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1994FORDTEMPOGL-4 Door, 3,0 V8, auto 53 495
trana, air, all powar, Extra aharp ..,.,.........,
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1992 BUICK CENniRY- Auto trana, air,
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1989 MERCURY MARQUIS-auto, air, all
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power
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7

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.458 12 112
.381 19 112 ol
.381 19 112 ~
.301

Ha:;. .'aiOO
JnE: Fort Worth. T -

2A

.tat

33

TRACK L:INGTH: 1.5-mfte qullkW&amp;I
RACE LENG11t: 33-4 ..... 501 miflll
DEFEIIDIIIO ~: Dlle ~'lanft Jr.
OUAUfY1NG IIECORO: Tin)' Lallonlil,

WLI'IIICIII

51 21 · .708
4824 .887
48 28 .639
Mlmoooto
42 30 .583
-Houston
39 33 .541!
DenvOt" .
35 38 AN
' VanCOuver
21 52 .288·
PICIIclllvlolon
W
L . .....
x-sacramento 49 22 .890
L.A. Lakara
48 25 .658
• Portland
47 25 .853
: Phoenix
44 27 .820
· . saame
41 34 .M7
• L4. ClipiJe11
28 47 .358
Golden State 17 · 55 .236

.._ '
• Oalas

3

192.137 • • Msrdl31, 2000

5
9

RACE RECOAD: Teny Llbonle.
1~.278 • • Aprii28,1M

12
18 112
30 1/2

N.Y. Rlnge11 8, N.Y. tolandero 4
Pi11Jt1urgh 5, CIIICOgo 2
Na&amp;hvlllt 4, Phoenix 3, OT
" 2
2 1/2 . Colorado 1, Calgary o
LOS Angeles 3, Co!U- 0
5
5an Jooe 7, Anaheim 4
10
•. Frlday'oGimn
24 '
Ottawa
5,
Boo\On 4, OT
321/2
Buflato 4, Ananta o

Tllurod'.r'• -

WaShington 118, Golden Sta1e100
, Allanta 104, IN!lanl 93
· , san Antonio 108, Utah ea
• Mltwoukaa 104, Mlaml96
P'-"'&lt;90,Houslon85
•108, Chiclgo 104

•

v.r-aa.- - 8 8

'rkllr'a Clllloao

' 'lbnlniO 110,- ~ 90
' ~ 102, Golden Stllta88
Dlr.-103, Cl1lu1ole 96

~4.W~3, 0T

Tampa Bay 4, Flollda 2

Oaltat 5, Edmonton 4

. S.tiiiM, L4. Cilpp«&lt;IM

' Porllild 96, Now YOIII 79·
Bactlmonto 110, 96
L4. 4brB 96. Dtl1u 118

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

,.)

Flr.t -~
Frtdoy,llln:hll
.
AI Unlverafty of Deyton A,..,.
Dlyton, Ohio
Illinois 96, No!thw-m Stale 54
Charlotte 70, Tenne...., 63
. . Kantu 99, Cal State Northridge 75
Sl'fllcuse 79, HawaH 89
AIKomporArwno
Konaao CHy, Mo.
llu11er 79, Wake Fore1163
Altzona 101, Eastern lllnola 78
· Mllllttippl72, lone 70
Notre Dome 83, xavier 71

•

-.II

Sunday,-11 .

At Un-.Hy Gf Dlylon Anini
.
. Daylan, Ohla
Kanies 87, SyracuH 58
1 - 79, Charloltl61
AI Komi* ANno
ICon- Clly, liD.
Altzona 73, Bu11er 52
M'* fpl58, Notr.a Dame 58

.-y.o.m.

.caro~~no 11 onawa. 2 p.m.

N.Y. Alngo&gt;1 II Alllnla, 3 p.m.
Eom&lt;nloniiCI1iCOgo,3pnt

Buflalo 11 Tampa Bay, 8 p.nt
loYNIIIn!llon II Oolr!*, 7 p.m.

stl:liUi Ill ColumlluO, 7 p.m.

AtThe~DdOIMi

IIAIWIIIim, 8 p.m.

-~

lloglonol Bamlllnolo
Frldoy,ltlol$23
Arizona 86, Ml1tllt'W' 56
1111no11 eo, t&lt;anou 84
Roglonol Chomplonohlp "
Sunday, .....h 2li
An•ona 97, Illinois 81

-~~-.7:30p.m.

. Milmlll CNclgo, 8:30p.m.

Sin-. 8:30p.m.
CkMIOnd II LA. Clppora, 10:30 p.m.
~II

--.v'•O...

-EDT

.-.,.II Phlloclolphle, 12:30 p.m.
U1ah II VBrixluvor, 3 p.m.
·

WEST REGIONAL
Flrot-

' lloitOn II Chorloltl, 3'p.m.
· Mlmllola at Porlllind, 3 p.m.

, Now Y9f!&lt; II L.4. Lakora, 5:30 p.m.
~ lllbmn1a, 5:30p.m.
' Houlton ·at Now Jonly, 8 p.m.
Goldan Slololl OolrDit, 8 p.m.
Dalal II Bac!l!nonlo, 8 p.m.
Mllwlukaa IIPI1oonix, 9 p.m.

--

,.,

1*"-' at WuNngton. 7 p.m.

-

7 78

1ifj

MIDWEST RE~

- p.m.
St. Louis II8ol\ordor'l
Pit18burgl1; 3
COlorado 11 Loa Angtlaa, 3 p.m.
llelroi1at 1'111a~. 3 p.m.
. N.Y. Rangora II Now Jeraey, 3 p.m.
N.Y. ll1oriclora II Bo-., 7 p.m.
'lblor*lll ~· 7 p.m.
Milo- II
p.m.
Ban Jooe II Phoonlx, 8 p.m.
DIIU II COiglry, 10 p.m.

-

a. wo 1..1!!!1!!1

..-

TernJilt 84, Penn Stale 72
RogiONII Cllomplonohlp
Sundly, Ulleh 21
Michigan State 89, Temple 82

Anaheim 2, Vancouver 2. tie

1

112, """""'
• o.trutt
100,
Or1ondo11197 .
·lMh 115, Clrt:I'-Mf 88

·

2. , . , Gonion
4• .Jotnws' a. a=-a•
TIIM,.. _

08

. ' x-clinchad ployt&gt;ft apoi

Thu...,, Ulleh 11
AI COX ANno II Allie Bowl

EAII1 REGIONAL
...- Firat Round

v.-..

Tllondly,Morch15
At.Niosau
U..n«&lt;ll Cot.......,

.

UNOf'ld.... N.Va

c.-

'

Kan1ucky 72, Holy
88
1owa s9, c~ 58
t1oo1on Cologa 88, Southern Utah 65
Soulhem calllornilll9, Oldahoma State 54
At • • abauo CoiiMUm
or.. lboro, N.C.
utah Stoll 77, Ohio Stille 88, OT
UCLA81, Holstii.OS
Dukl ~. J\IO!'Irlpull), ]'I,J. 52
MIIIIOlJri 10,"Gioiglo 88

son otego

Sl.Joooph'a 88, Georgia Tech 82
Stanlon18$, North Carollna·Gnillnoboro

eo

.

Kent State 77, lnclana 73
Cinc1Metl84, Brigham Young 50
At stu Pmllon

·-·-

. Yto-(MI 8, N.Y. Y.._2
c.a
- · Mfi!INII 4 , Ctago C!lbo 2
Clav*&gt;d 3 , - 2. 121Minga
-8.-5
san Froncll&lt;:o 2, o
5,'Chtcogo While Sol.
Anlholn! 7, Arizona 8
Oaklancl2, St. Louts 1
Lot Arlgalel 5, ~ 2
San Diego 6, Lake Elllnore 2
. Syracuse w. Toronto II Dunedin, Fla.,

a:d, oopoctod lnclomenlwaalher
MomealVI. P_,rgh 1 1 - Fla.,
a:d
.
Oetllll! vs. Tampa Bay at St. Petelllborg
Fla., a:d
s.turday'o Oomn
--.traa! VI. Minnesota at Fort Mye&gt;1 fla .•
!2:05p.m.
Toronto Vs.' Teu1 at san Juan, Puerto
Ria&gt;, 1 p.m.
Chicago Cubs vs. Wast T..........., at
Jaci&lt;lon.Tonn., 1 p.m:
Baltimore at Attanra, 1;05 p.m.
Kansao Clly vo. Florida at VIera Fla .. 1:05

p.m.

Tampa Bay vs. Delrolt at Lakeland Fla .. ·
1:05p.m.
Phlladelphla.vs. Clnck'lnati at Sarasota
Fla .. 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mell at Pi1101Jurgn, 1:35 p.m.
Ctovolarld at Hou&amp;lan, 2:35 p.m.
Boston 11 Mllwaut&lt;ee, 3:05 p.m.
Anaheim at Arizona, 3:05 p.m.
Chicago While Sox VI. Montreal at Char·
lotio, N.C., 3:15p.m.
" Oaldand a1 8an Fmncl&amp;eo, 4:05 p.m.
COio!ado at LoaAngelto, 4:10p.m.
St. LoUis at seame. 6:35 p.m..
San Diego at S.cramenlo, 10:05 p.m.

Su~·­
Minnaaola VI.
Tampa Bay e1 St. Petero·
.buill Fla ...1:05 p.m.
.
Oe1mll vs. Erie at Jerry Uht Perk, 1:30 p.m.
N.Y, Matt at P_,rgh, 1:35 p.m.
Round Raek a1 Houl10n. 2:35 p.m.
~ al San Francllco, 3:35 p.m.
Altzona at Anaheim, 4:05 p.m.
san Diego II SocrameniO, 4:05 p.m.
St. Loullat Sao111e, 4:05 p.m. ·
'
'
. ' "-'
'""""' ~

.

...

.

. ''

'

.IAIIIALL
AmertconiAIIgUo

ANAHEIM ANG~ded LHP Rondy
' Eaplna M 1ho 15-day &lt;blbtecUII, retmac:llve to Morell 28.

· BALTIMORE ORIOLEs-PioC!Id RHP
Alan Millo on the 15-day dlaabled IIIII.
R-lgned INF .Brian RobOIIO to lhoir
nllnor laague camp.
. BOSTON RED SOX-ExerciiOd lholr
option on SS Nqmar Garolaparra's contract
lor 2004.
· ·
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Agreed to 11Hms
with RHP An!QniO Osuna on a two·yaor

contract extension.

.

CLEVELAND INOIANS-AgrHCI 1o
""" RHP Paul Shuoy an olh,_
year contract oxtenalon through 11004•
DEi'ROIT TIGER8-IIsasoi!Jiod RHP
Dave
LHP Kevin '\'otar, IB Ran·
doll Simon and C Ca~oo Mendez tllelr
minor league camp.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Ac:quiled OF
Endy Ctlove; 1rori11he Now York MatS and
aant him outrfgfll to Wichita ot lhe Texas
.laagoo. Son! RHP 'Chad Dufl!ln, f,\HP
Chrts Fusull, RHP Shawn Sonnier and IF
Wilson Delgado outright to Omaha o1 the
PCL. l.&amp;slgned RHP Cory Belley and OF
Jon Nunnally to Omaha. Placed LHP Scott
Mullen, LHP Jooe Rosado, AHP Ort&gt;or
Moreno and C Gregg Zliun on tho disabled
llsf. Purchl\&amp;ed the contracts of LHP Tony
Cogan, RHP Jaoon Grimsley and 1B:OF

Bo-.

Georgia Stato 50, WI&amp;C&lt;lflllln 49
Maryland 83, George Mason eo
Georgetown 83, Arkansao 61
~:1··
'Hampton 58, Iowa State 57
"'' ,
1.-nCuccfawtae
a-dd Round
Jl'
I
. '" ,, laiUfd"-r. MarCh 17 I
·
e .li
• .. W L TOL . ~
'
tllcandAt fi:ox Arena at Aztep Bowl
:::.~~ 44 18 12 3 ' 103
san Diogo
- . , . Monoh 17
•·
402411293
Clnclnna1188, Kent State 43
At
Naaaau
•
.
.
Morno1111
Collolum
Pltllburgll·' . · 31 27 9 2 89
Stanfon190, St. Joaaph's 83
'
Unlandtllet, N.Y.
,
N.Y.~iw .
30 41 5 1 88
Soulhom Celllomla t4, Boston COIIege71
AI SSU Povtllon
N.V. I~ ' 20 47 1 3 50
BOin,ldoho
Kentucky 82. Iowa 79
I ' .
"I North Ill\ Dlvlalon
·· ' Al-bOro Cotllltlim
Ma~and 79, Georgia State eo
." · . W L TOL: I'll
Clreonoboto, N.C.
. Geo•galo\\n 78, Hamplon 57
Raul Ibanez and added them to the 25·
xo()ltl •
411 20 9 3 104 , Du~e. 94, Mloooun 81
.
AI AITOwh- Pond
man roster.·
X·Bu«fl10
43 28 5 1 92
UCLA 75, Utah State 50 '
Mim.caur.
NEW YORK YANKEEs-Announced tho·
Toronto,,,,
35 27 11 5 88
AI Firat Union ~ •
anal Semtftnala
rellrornent ol RHP Dwight Gooden. Traded
Boaton;1,
32 29 8 8 eo
.
oy, Morch 22
Phl-lphlo
AHP Craig Dingman 10 11]8 Colorado Rock·
Mot\1~
28 39 8 5 85
Rlfllano1111mlft'nllo
Ma~ond 76 , Georgetown 88
les for a player to be named.
·
-IIDtvtalan
, • Stanford 78, Clnclooatl 65
Tlluraday, March 22
SEATTLE MARINER5-R'eleased INF
·
!r
W L TQI,. .Pit
Roalonol Chomplonohlp
SOU!hem. CaiMomla 119. Kentucky 78
Carlos
Ba8fll8 .·
·x·'wasllington:
39 25 10 :li 91
Saturday, March 24
Duke78, UCLA63
Nollanll LIIIUI
Carollno
35 .31 . s 3 81
ltllanol Chomplanohlp
Ma~ond 87, Stanton173
ATLANTA BFIAVE5-Rolelled LHP Steve
Florida!
20 38 13 9 82
hturdoy, Monoh 24
Avery. Placad RHP John Smeltz on 15-doy •
Tomp&amp;JBaV
2A 44 . 6 4 . 58
THE· FINAL FOUII.
Du
Southem Collfomla 89
dlsabl~ llat, "retroactive 'to March 23.
Allan~
22 42 12 2
58
AI The Hublrt H. Humphrey
CHICAGO CUB5-Roaso!gnod C Robert
Mllrodomo
lOUTH RIGIONAL.
Machado and RHP Dave Walnhouae to
1
c-..t Dl¥fllan •._
flr.lllound
Ill-polio
their minor league camp. Claimed 1B Chns
'
WLTOL · nl
Friday, lllt'Ch 11
• Nlllonol samlllnolo
Haas off waivers from the St. Louis Cardl~
x·Detroit
411 18 9 4 105
Saturday, Mlrch 31
AI Tho PyNmld
nals and optioned h.kn to West Tenn of the
x·St. Louie;
41 20 11 5 98
Michigan State (28·4) vo. Artzona (27·7),
llomphlo, Tenn.
Southam League.
.
Noot111tll•
32 34 9 3 76
5:42p.m.
Gonzaga 88, Vlfglnta 85
. COLORADO ROCi&lt;IE8-Ctalmed LHP
Chicago
29 37 7 4 69
Indiana Stole 70, Oklahoma 88
Duke (33-4) vo. Ma~and (25·10), follow·
Horacia Estrada off waivers from the FlortColumbuo'•
25 37 9 8 65
Michigan S1111 89, Alabama Stale 35
lng 11111 game
da . Ma~lns.
.
'• NortbWMt Dfvllton
Notlonol Ctlomplonohlp
Freono State 82, COIKomla 70
FLORIDAMARLIN5-Tradad RHP Manny
W L TOL I'll
AI Tho Loullllnl Supai&lt;lamo .
Monday, APfll 2
Aybar 1o the Ch go.Cub.s.IQ[J,HR Oswal·
y.cotorado
!50 14 9 4 113
· Semlllnal winners, 9:18p.m.
-OriHnl
do Malra
Edmonton
38 •27 10 • '3 89
Tample 19, Texao 85
HOUST ASm05-Piaced AHP Doug
VoncOUVor
35 25 11 7 88
Florida 88, Waatom Klfltucky 58 •
B
on lhe 15·day disabled llol. retroac·
.caigory •
28 33 14 4 · 10
Penn Slate 89, Providence 59
t
o Marolt 23. Placed AHP Shana
Mlnneaota.
24 38 12· .5 115
Nollh Coroina 70, Prtncoti&gt;n 48
ynolds on the 15·day disabled list.
J
Plclltc Dlvtolon
llaoondRound
Major Laoguo laoetroe.ctlve to March 27.
,
W L TOL I'll ·
· Sunday, March 11
Spring ltolntng pmoo
MILWAUKEE BREWERS,...SJnl OF Lou
y·Dallao .
45 24 1 2 99
AI Tho Pyl'llllld
Tllurodoy'I'Git11ft
. · Collier outright to Indianapolis of the lntersan.,....
37 28 12 2 88
Montreal 4, St. Louis 3
ll!to!fphii,TIM.
natlonalleaguu.
Pnoenl~ ·. '
33 28 18 3 8S
Detroit 7, Texas 3
Gonzaga 85, lndllna Stat• 88 '·
NEW YORK MET5-Acqulred OF Michael
Los Angeles
35 28 12 2 . 1M
Boston 3, Minnesota 2
.Mk:hlgon Stalo 81, Fretno Stale 65
Curry from the Kansas Cliy RO)&gt;alo lor OF
24 39 10. 5 63
N.Y. Met&amp; 18, Battlmore 4 '
At Tho LOultlono .SupardaOII
Endy Cbovez. Optioned INF-OF Jorge
· . Sea111o7, San Otego~
·
NowOriHnl
Tocalo Noofolk ollhe ln1ema11onal League:
' , TWo~.,O,nt'e for 8:wti1, .on• prilnt for a tie 11id Temple 75, FlOrida s.
Chicago Cubs7, Anaheim 5
·
Returned RHP Julio· Santana to the San
ovtrli~. loll.
Chicago WhKo Sox 12, Colorado 5
Penn Stole 82, Nortrt Carolina 74
Franclaoo Giants.
.
'
' x-dl~ ployolspot
Houston 3, Round Root&lt; 1
AI Till Giorgio 0..,.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Qplloned
y-dlnchld divlolon
Oakland 9, sacramento o
RHP Julio Santana to Fresno of the PCL.
Altanta
.
Thuraday'e Gll'ftttl
Arizona 5, Los Angelaa 4
Roglanol Bemlftnolo
Monlrlll 8, Tampa Bay 2
Florida vo. Atlanta el Kloolmmeo Aa., ccd.
Friday, Morch 23
Toronto 2. Phltodotphllt
Tampa Bay vs. Toronto at Dunedin Fla.,
Michigan Staton, Gonzaga 82

•"AIII!ni!O.,........ . •

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oold
auto
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' o·
CNIIe, new tiNI ...............:..........A...............
I

-CIIyt.FlorldoO

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Ww•nCaa*'awa .

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It
A5ll
17
.333 281/2
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32

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40 32
40 32 .
33 39
28 &lt;18
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51
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$2 495

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player, Iota of axtraa, only 72,000 •.,,.,,...,

Dr. Kely Roalh
Chiroprac'c a: Sports
. lnjury Pbywicilll
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(740) ••• SJ44

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Spedllllzlnam:
Sports Injuries
Whiplash InjUries
Nedc &amp; Back Pain

29
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John Smohz, Atlanta
·Missed all of 2000' recovering from

David Wells, While Sox
back could be as big a ·
concern to Chicago as Slro~a·s
shoulder Is to Toronto.

'

Right llbow • ~'

Finley.
Finley went four . inilings.
· The.,left-hander gave up three
·hits, two runs - one earned
--'- and. struck out five.
The Indians tied ·it in the
seventh on· a two-run homer
by Eddie Tauben.see, his .third
of the tpring, off Ke~ry
Ligtenber11"
· ·.
Brnves starter Tom Glavino, ,
· · wh&lt;l will pitch the homeopener agaln11 the ,New York
Mett on Thctday, went the first
. twO inni!'IIP• !Jiving up two
hiu and no ru·ns.

;············ Back
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· 50
4

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A loam's succass depends largaly on the health of ns pl!'yers.
·
Here are s6me Injuries plaguing players coming lnlo the 2001saason.

Rick Anl&lt;lal, St. Loula
Chuck KnobliiUch, Yani&lt;Ms
·
Need to overcome their mental demona
and throw ihe ball slralght again.
Right eye .,. ...
Bryce Aorie,"Boaton
· Frightening lnlury when ha was hit ,
by a line drive last September. l
· Rlaht ehoulcler • ''
James Baldwlil, Whitt Sox
After winning a carear-hfgh 14 games
laat season, Baldwin could miss at fellS! :·
the first month with a aore llhoulder. :

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· M*A*S*H unit ·

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104 197 372 1
p. Moltinez. 3.10
Clomono. -York
121 24o .355
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92 IS. .351 I
3.7t
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season ·a

BASEBALL-1001: A

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......,, Aprtl1, 2001

.....~--···lvl·hie83

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.liP . .'!Vll tJJUIER
)
Rater Oemens grins at biS

~

million, · 1O-year deal with
Texas. '
While sever:al stan seemed
jealous of his
it sounds
as if.A-Rod might'w be a bit
envious of his friend. Derek

'

·

moneY.

new

tnmmate, thr guy
puftiDs on the pinstripes for
the first time.
· Now pitching for tbe New
York Yankus. Mike Mussina.
Th tbe Rocket, it bas a .nicr
ring - as in tile typr that
comes studded with diamonds, the kind that's won at
' thr World Serirs.
.Lod . . P' U Ill
ult's a goal of mind, and I
IMp In hilling
ondnn-ln.
· would imagine everybody ·
else, to get Mike on bo:u:d so
he can know what it feels
· lilce," Clemeris said.
Everyone gets their chance,
starting Sunday. In a new
place, too: With the game
hoping to broaden its. horizons, Texas and Toronto play
opening day at Hirnn1 Bithom1
Stadium in San Juan, Puerto
Rico.
Yet even before Chuck
Knoblauch and Rick Ankiel,
baseball was bound for a wild
season:
- Lots of teams trying to
stop the Yankees' run of three
straight tidrs,led by their Subway Series rivals. LoiS of players taking aim at Alex
Rodriguez's quarter- billiondollar deal, led this spring by
Gary Sheffield and F~ank
Thomas.
"If you sign it, play it out.
It's that simple;• declared
Mark McGwi~, who took a good, and sever:al stars ailing:
cut-rate deal to stay with the Nomar Garciaparra, Ken GrifSt. Lopis Cardinals, "If you fey Jr., Derek Jeter, Kevin
have three or four yean left on Brown, . Greg Maddux, Trnvis :
your contract, there's no com- Fryman and John Smoltz.
plaining."
Smoltz, who missed all of
- Manny Ramirez, Mike last season after elbow .sutgery.
Hatilpton, Denny Neagle, Juan will start the year on the disGonzalez, Joh!'ny Damon, •abled list.
Andres Galarraga ancf Kevin · But Smoltz ·expects to be
Appier wearing different uni- back in the Braves' rotation
·
soon enough, ready,for Atlanta
forms .
- Albert Belle gone for to resume its ~ivalry with the

I•

17".
Q

A8

uo

529

~

157
I I . - - CIO\IIolld 118

-

..... _
--Y. Guonri&gt;. -

180

510

128
1S.

454
571

82 181
101 197

--.......

.

...... NAdiJU

a row..

AI.
.355 . ~. OOidand .
.345
j
•
· j D. W.... T"""*&gt; , 20-8
Pe!We, -YOII&lt;
111-9

I' ......

! NL

! -. Chicago

43 j · San Francisco 49
43 i ~. H&lt;xlSion
47

~ Hudson, Oakland

:

-../

Se~.

Seatda

NL

I -Kie, St.·1.ou1o
-

~ -·-

1

1s

~ AI.
i P. Moltinez. Booten

50

'I'

t~

l

Jeter, at 26, already bas won
four World Series rings. He
was the MVP last October as
the Yankus won their third in

3.00

111-7

M.tll•x, AtiMta

111-9

NL
4

Jolvlton. Arizonlo

2
2

M'Midr;IX 0

3

Atlanta

3
2

6tied

Ia Strlbouls
!

i NL

Martinez. ~~ 1•s ~ Helton,Colorado
SWIIIIIy. Kansu City 144 • i Sosa. Chicago
Thomal, &lt;{Neago
143
BlgweH, -ston

1•1
138
132

i

· .AL
P, Martinez, Boaton
I Colon. Clevolarid
MuUina, Baftitnote

·!
i

' NL
284
Johnson,Arizona
3'7
212 f Pari&lt;, Loa Angolea . 217
210 I Brown, Lot AngeleS 218

!

'
J ..·······.. ·········-···-·····..-···················--·--············-···-····-·-···--······································-···-···-··-···-···-··················-······-····
..·-·-·······

••••••••••

.....
AI.

AI.

R. Alamor, c-..,

39.

A. Radrlgooz, Saa111e 134
E.....,,An1holm
NL

.,

--

Dllfi1C!II, KM101 City

214

Lowe, -

121
NL

NL
V\dro, Montrul

138

Hallmon, Sin Diogo 43

200

N.,, San Fronc:laca

Edmondl, St. Loull . 129

•

New York Mets. They'll play
19 times this season under a
reworked schedule that calls
for more inmdivision games.
"I like it this way;• Smoltz
said. "Instead of l)aving_ to
watch the scoreboard, you're
playing the team you need to
~eat."

· - New ballparks in Pittsburgh and Milwaukee and a
revamped one · in Cinc;innati.
Plus a half-dozen new
man.;

42

-.

41"

•

agen, with Bob Brenly and another strike or lockout. The
Buck Martinez both making Basic Agreement . between
the mave from the broadcast players. and owners expires
Oct. 31 and the sport wants to
booth to the dugout..
- All those high sttikes the avoid its ninth work stoppage
umpires plan to call.
since 1972.
But a spate of ejections late
Whew, that's what fans want
in exhibition play, many after to hear. Because there will be
pitches called at the letters, plenty worth watching all yea~
indicated others may not be so . Iilng.
.
agreeable.
. It begins, with the opener,
-The whole season, played · when A-Rod plays his first
out against the threat · of game since signing his $252

.

Tribe tops

"It's awful hard to win four
of four," Yankees owner
George Steinbrenner said ..
Among the other things to
keep watching: .
-The Wild Bunch. Ankiel's
lack of control could cost him
a spot in the Cardinals' ro~­
tion, and perhaps his career at
-21. Knoblauch's errant th~s
fiom second base put him in
lett peld for the Yankees.
1
- - The Rangers' former coowner, President George W.
Bush will throw out the first
ball at new Millet Park in Mil&gt;y.~ukee and PNC ·Park opens
in · ·Pittsburgh. Cincinnati'~
Cinergy Field bas a new look,
with the stands tom down in
· center field and the artificial
turf torn up.
Rickey Henderson
signed with Sao Diego during
spring training, giving him a
chance at more i}istory. Baseball's all-time stolen base
leader needs 86 hits for No.
3,000, three walks to top Babe
Ruth's career record '(2,062)
and 68 runs to breakTy Cobb's
matk (2,245).
- Olympic stat Ben Sheets
of Milwaukee is ainong the top
rookies. So is . seven-time
Japanese batting champion
Ichiro Su~ki of Seattle.
-While Tim Raines tries to
come back.at 41, c3J. Riplcen's
days could be coming to an
·end.

••

Atlanta

·

•

ATLANTA (,6P) - Jacob
Cruz hit a solo home run in
the 12th inning Friday night ·
to give the Cleveland Indians
a 3-2 win over the Adanta
Braves, who got an impressive
performance from struggJing
Kevin Millwood.
Millwood pitched three hitless ' innings, by far his best
outing of the spring. Only one
bat\er reached base off him Einar Diaz, on an error by
shortstop Rafael Furcal. .
The Atlanta right-hander
lowered his spring ERA to
12.46. He has given up ,35 hits
and 24 earned runs in 17 1-3
innings.
. ''I ·finally felt like I was
pitching tlte way I was a coupl!! of years ago, again;' said
Millwood, who was 35-15 in
1998-98 before a 10-13 season a year ago.
"All in , all, it was a pretty
good outing,'' said Millwood,
who hurried off to the hospital afterward to be with his
wif~:, Rena, who _is pregnant
with their first child. Doctors
were to induce labor early
•
Saturday.
Cruz hit a 3-0 shot over the
right field fence - his third
homer of the spring - 'off
Adanta right-hander Billy
Sylvester.
The Braves ope'n ed the
scoring with two runs iri. the
fourth inning on an RBI single by Chipper Jones and a
. sacrifice fly by Brian Jordan
·off Clevc4nd ·starter Chuck

Head •••· ••••···•••
'

· · · · · · Left ehoulder
Mike Sirotka, Toronto
Blue Jays traded ace David Wells
lor Slrotka and his bum shoulder.
• • ; LAft IIIIOW
' BIKy Wagner, Houston ~
The best close~ in the NL In 1999.
.. ,. LAft forurm ·
Rey Ordonez, Mats
,
Baseball's slickest fleldlng shonstop
nissed the ftnal four months of last
season with a broken left forearm.

reconafructlve surgery.

;

l
·l

•

•

:.. LAII ring flnglr

Right wrist • ~
Nomar Garclaparra, Boston ,••••• ••••
Two-time balling champion could mile :
·
up to four months. with a splh tendon. l

. .... ·:

.

Javy Lopez, Atlanta
er-~~a~tng &lt;*herwl miS8 the start '
d the aeason With a bnJI&lt;en linger. ,

''

Rlahtknee ·'
Malk McGwire,"St. Louis
Home Run King was limited to 15 at·bals
afltt' AI~Star break last sauon becauae

San Diego
NL batting champion
knee

of Injured knee.

Ed Co Guero/AP

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$7 99 5

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1997 CHEVY CAVALIER· 2 Door, auto trana,56
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~

.95

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.

Tum4

.458 12 112
.381 19 112 ol
.381 19 112 ~
.301

Ha:;. .'aiOO
JnE: Fort Worth. T -

2A

.tat

33

TRACK L:INGTH: 1.5-mfte qullkW&amp;I
RACE LENG11t: 33-4 ..... 501 miflll
DEFEIIDIIIO ~: Dlle ~'lanft Jr.
OUAUfY1NG IIECORO: Tin)' Lallonlil,

WLI'IIICIII

51 21 · .708
4824 .887
48 28 .639
Mlmoooto
42 30 .583
-Houston
39 33 .541!
DenvOt" .
35 38 AN
' VanCOuver
21 52 .288·
PICIIclllvlolon
W
L . .....
x-sacramento 49 22 .890
L.A. Lakara
48 25 .658
• Portland
47 25 .853
: Phoenix
44 27 .820
· . saame
41 34 .M7
• L4. ClipiJe11
28 47 .358
Golden State 17 · 55 .236

.._ '
• Oalas

3

192.137 • • Msrdl31, 2000

5
9

RACE RECOAD: Teny Llbonle.
1~.278 • • Aprii28,1M

12
18 112
30 1/2

N.Y. Rlnge11 8, N.Y. tolandero 4
Pi11Jt1urgh 5, CIIICOgo 2
Na&amp;hvlllt 4, Phoenix 3, OT
" 2
2 1/2 . Colorado 1, Calgary o
LOS Angeles 3, Co!U- 0
5
5an Jooe 7, Anaheim 4
10
•. Frlday'oGimn
24 '
Ottawa
5,
Boo\On 4, OT
321/2
Buflato 4, Ananta o

Tllurod'.r'• -

WaShington 118, Golden Sta1e100
, Allanta 104, IN!lanl 93
· , san Antonio 108, Utah ea
• Mltwoukaa 104, Mlaml96
P'-"'&lt;90,Houslon85
•108, Chiclgo 104

•

v.r-aa.- - 8 8

'rkllr'a Clllloao

' 'lbnlniO 110,- ~ 90
' ~ 102, Golden Stllta88
Dlr.-103, Cl1lu1ole 96

~4.W~3, 0T

Tampa Bay 4, Flollda 2

Oaltat 5, Edmonton 4

. S.tiiiM, L4. Cilpp«&lt;IM

' Porllild 96, Now YOIII 79·
Bactlmonto 110, 96
L4. 4brB 96. Dtl1u 118

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

,.)

Flr.t -~
Frtdoy,llln:hll
.
AI Unlverafty of Deyton A,..,.
Dlyton, Ohio
Illinois 96, No!thw-m Stale 54
Charlotte 70, Tenne...., 63
. . Kantu 99, Cal State Northridge 75
Sl'fllcuse 79, HawaH 89
AIKomporArwno
Konaao CHy, Mo.
llu11er 79, Wake Fore1163
Altzona 101, Eastern lllnola 78
· Mllllttippl72, lone 70
Notre Dome 83, xavier 71

•

-.II

Sunday,-11 .

At Un-.Hy Gf Dlylon Anini
.
. Daylan, Ohla
Kanies 87, SyracuH 58
1 - 79, Charloltl61
AI Komi* ANno
ICon- Clly, liD.
Altzona 73, Bu11er 52
M'* fpl58, Notr.a Dame 58

.-y.o.m.

.caro~~no 11 onawa. 2 p.m.

N.Y. Alngo&gt;1 II Alllnla, 3 p.m.
Eom&lt;nloniiCI1iCOgo,3pnt

Buflalo 11 Tampa Bay, 8 p.nt
loYNIIIn!llon II Oolr!*, 7 p.m.

stl:liUi Ill ColumlluO, 7 p.m.

AtThe~DdOIMi

IIAIWIIIim, 8 p.m.

-~

lloglonol Bamlllnolo
Frldoy,ltlol$23
Arizona 86, Ml1tllt'W' 56
1111no11 eo, t&lt;anou 84
Roglonol Chomplonohlp "
Sunday, .....h 2li
An•ona 97, Illinois 81

-~~-.7:30p.m.

. Milmlll CNclgo, 8:30p.m.

Sin-. 8:30p.m.
CkMIOnd II LA. Clppora, 10:30 p.m.
~II

--.v'•O...

-EDT

.-.,.II Phlloclolphle, 12:30 p.m.
U1ah II VBrixluvor, 3 p.m.
·

WEST REGIONAL
Flrot-

' lloitOn II Chorloltl, 3'p.m.
· Mlmllola at Porlllind, 3 p.m.

, Now Y9f!&lt; II L.4. Lakora, 5:30 p.m.
~ lllbmn1a, 5:30p.m.
' Houlton ·at Now Jonly, 8 p.m.
Goldan Slololl OolrDit, 8 p.m.
Dalal II Bac!l!nonlo, 8 p.m.
Mllwlukaa IIPI1oonix, 9 p.m.

--

,.,

1*"-' at WuNngton. 7 p.m.

-

7 78

1ifj

MIDWEST RE~

- p.m.
St. Louis II8ol\ordor'l
Pit18burgl1; 3
COlorado 11 Loa Angtlaa, 3 p.m.
llelroi1at 1'111a~. 3 p.m.
. N.Y. Rangora II Now Jeraey, 3 p.m.
N.Y. ll1oriclora II Bo-., 7 p.m.
'lblor*lll ~· 7 p.m.
Milo- II
p.m.
Ban Jooe II Phoonlx, 8 p.m.
DIIU II COiglry, 10 p.m.

-

a. wo 1..1!!!1!!1

..-

TernJilt 84, Penn Stale 72
RogiONII Cllomplonohlp
Sundly, Ulleh 21
Michigan State 89, Temple 82

Anaheim 2, Vancouver 2. tie

1

112, """""'
• o.trutt
100,
Or1ondo11197 .
·lMh 115, Clrt:I'-Mf 88

·

2. , . , Gonion
4• .Jotnws' a. a=-a•
TIIM,.. _

08

. ' x-clinchad ployt&gt;ft apoi

Thu...,, Ulleh 11
AI COX ANno II Allie Bowl

EAII1 REGIONAL
...- Firat Round

v.-..

Tllondly,Morch15
At.Niosau
U..n«&lt;ll Cot.......,

.

UNOf'ld.... N.Va

c.-

'

Kan1ucky 72, Holy
88
1owa s9, c~ 58
t1oo1on Cologa 88, Southern Utah 65
Soulhem calllornilll9, Oldahoma State 54
At • • abauo CoiiMUm
or.. lboro, N.C.
utah Stoll 77, Ohio Stille 88, OT
UCLA81, Holstii.OS
Dukl ~. J\IO!'Irlpull), ]'I,J. 52
MIIIIOlJri 10,"Gioiglo 88

son otego

Sl.Joooph'a 88, Georgia Tech 82
Stanlon18$, North Carollna·Gnillnoboro

eo

.

Kent State 77, lnclana 73
Cinc1Metl84, Brigham Young 50
At stu Pmllon

·-·-

. Yto-(MI 8, N.Y. Y.._2
c.a
- · Mfi!INII 4 , Ctago C!lbo 2
Clav*&gt;d 3 , - 2. 121Minga
-8.-5
san Froncll&lt;:o 2, o
5,'Chtcogo While Sol.
Anlholn! 7, Arizona 8
Oaklancl2, St. Louts 1
Lot Arlgalel 5, ~ 2
San Diego 6, Lake Elllnore 2
. Syracuse w. Toronto II Dunedin, Fla.,

a:d, oopoctod lnclomenlwaalher
MomealVI. P_,rgh 1 1 - Fla.,
a:d
.
Oetllll! vs. Tampa Bay at St. Petelllborg
Fla., a:d
s.turday'o Oomn
--.traa! VI. Minnesota at Fort Mye&gt;1 fla .•
!2:05p.m.
Toronto Vs.' Teu1 at san Juan, Puerto
Ria&gt;, 1 p.m.
Chicago Cubs vs. Wast T..........., at
Jaci&lt;lon.Tonn., 1 p.m:
Baltimore at Attanra, 1;05 p.m.
Kansao Clly vo. Florida at VIera Fla .. 1:05

p.m.

Tampa Bay vs. Delrolt at Lakeland Fla .. ·
1:05p.m.
Phlladelphla.vs. Clnck'lnati at Sarasota
Fla .. 1:05 p.m.
N.Y. Mell at Pi1101Jurgn, 1:35 p.m.
Ctovolarld at Hou&amp;lan, 2:35 p.m.
Boston 11 Mllwaut&lt;ee, 3:05 p.m.
Anaheim at Arizona, 3:05 p.m.
Chicago While Sox VI. Montreal at Char·
lotio, N.C., 3:15p.m.
" Oaldand a1 8an Fmncl&amp;eo, 4:05 p.m.
COio!ado at LoaAngelto, 4:10p.m.
St. LoUis at seame. 6:35 p.m..
San Diego at S.cramenlo, 10:05 p.m.

Su~·­
Minnaaola VI.
Tampa Bay e1 St. Petero·
.buill Fla ...1:05 p.m.
.
Oe1mll vs. Erie at Jerry Uht Perk, 1:30 p.m.
N.Y, Matt at P_,rgh, 1:35 p.m.
Round Raek a1 Houl10n. 2:35 p.m.
~ al San Francllco, 3:35 p.m.
Altzona at Anaheim, 4:05 p.m.
san Diego II SocrameniO, 4:05 p.m.
St. Loullat Sao111e, 4:05 p.m. ·
'
'
. ' "-'
'""""' ~

.

...

.

. ''

'

.IAIIIALL
AmertconiAIIgUo

ANAHEIM ANG~ded LHP Rondy
' Eaplna M 1ho 15-day &lt;blbtecUII, retmac:llve to Morell 28.

· BALTIMORE ORIOLEs-PioC!Id RHP
Alan Millo on the 15-day dlaabled IIIII.
R-lgned INF .Brian RobOIIO to lhoir
nllnor laague camp.
. BOSTON RED SOX-ExerciiOd lholr
option on SS Nqmar Garolaparra's contract
lor 2004.
· ·
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Agreed to 11Hms
with RHP An!QniO Osuna on a two·yaor

contract extension.

.

CLEVELAND INOIANS-AgrHCI 1o
""" RHP Paul Shuoy an olh,_
year contract oxtenalon through 11004•
DEi'ROIT TIGER8-IIsasoi!Jiod RHP
Dave
LHP Kevin '\'otar, IB Ran·
doll Simon and C Ca~oo Mendez tllelr
minor league camp.
KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Ac:quiled OF
Endy Ctlove; 1rori11he Now York MatS and
aant him outrfgfll to Wichita ot lhe Texas
.laagoo. Son! RHP 'Chad Dufl!ln, f,\HP
Chrts Fusull, RHP Shawn Sonnier and IF
Wilson Delgado outright to Omaha o1 the
PCL. l.&amp;slgned RHP Cory Belley and OF
Jon Nunnally to Omaha. Placed LHP Scott
Mullen, LHP Jooe Rosado, AHP Ort&gt;or
Moreno and C Gregg Zliun on tho disabled
llsf. Purchl\&amp;ed the contracts of LHP Tony
Cogan, RHP Jaoon Grimsley and 1B:OF

Bo-.

Georgia Stato 50, WI&amp;C&lt;lflllln 49
Maryland 83, George Mason eo
Georgetown 83, Arkansao 61
~:1··
'Hampton 58, Iowa State 57
"'' ,
1.-nCuccfawtae
a-dd Round
Jl'
I
. '" ,, laiUfd"-r. MarCh 17 I
·
e .li
• .. W L TOL . ~
'
tllcandAt fi:ox Arena at Aztep Bowl
:::.~~ 44 18 12 3 ' 103
san Diogo
- . , . Monoh 17
•·
402411293
Clnclnna1188, Kent State 43
At
Naaaau
•
.
.
Morno1111
Collolum
Pltllburgll·' . · 31 27 9 2 89
Stanfon190, St. Joaaph's 83
'
Unlandtllet, N.Y.
,
N.Y.~iw .
30 41 5 1 88
Soulhom Celllomla t4, Boston COIIege71
AI SSU Povtllon
N.V. I~ ' 20 47 1 3 50
BOin,ldoho
Kentucky 82. Iowa 79
I ' .
"I North Ill\ Dlvlalon
·· ' Al-bOro Cotllltlim
Ma~and 79, Georgia State eo
." · . W L TOL: I'll
Clreonoboto, N.C.
. Geo•galo\\n 78, Hamplon 57
Raul Ibanez and added them to the 25·
xo()ltl •
411 20 9 3 104 , Du~e. 94, Mloooun 81
.
AI AITOwh- Pond
man roster.·
X·Bu«fl10
43 28 5 1 92
UCLA 75, Utah State 50 '
Mim.caur.
NEW YORK YANKEEs-Announced tho·
Toronto,,,,
35 27 11 5 88
AI Firat Union ~ •
anal Semtftnala
rellrornent ol RHP Dwight Gooden. Traded
Boaton;1,
32 29 8 8 eo
.
oy, Morch 22
Phl-lphlo
AHP Craig Dingman 10 11]8 Colorado Rock·
Mot\1~
28 39 8 5 85
Rlfllano1111mlft'nllo
Ma~ond 76 , Georgetown 88
les for a player to be named.
·
-IIDtvtalan
, • Stanford 78, Clnclooatl 65
Tlluraday, March 22
SEATTLE MARINER5-R'eleased INF
·
!r
W L TQI,. .Pit
Roalonol Chomplonohlp
SOU!hem. CaiMomla 119. Kentucky 78
Carlos
Ba8fll8 .·
·x·'wasllington:
39 25 10 :li 91
Saturday, March 24
Duke78, UCLA63
Nollanll LIIIUI
Carollno
35 .31 . s 3 81
ltllanol Chomplanohlp
Ma~ond 87, Stanton173
ATLANTA BFIAVE5-Rolelled LHP Steve
Florida!
20 38 13 9 82
hturdoy, Monoh 24
Avery. Placad RHP John Smeltz on 15-doy •
Tomp&amp;JBaV
2A 44 . 6 4 . 58
THE· FINAL FOUII.
Du
Southem Collfomla 89
dlsabl~ llat, "retroactive 'to March 23.
Allan~
22 42 12 2
58
AI The Hublrt H. Humphrey
CHICAGO CUB5-Roaso!gnod C Robert
Mllrodomo
lOUTH RIGIONAL.
Machado and RHP Dave Walnhouae to
1
c-..t Dl¥fllan •._
flr.lllound
Ill-polio
their minor league camp. Claimed 1B Chns
'
WLTOL · nl
Friday, lllt'Ch 11
• Nlllonol samlllnolo
Haas off waivers from the St. Louis Cardl~
x·Detroit
411 18 9 4 105
Saturday, Mlrch 31
AI Tho PyNmld
nals and optioned h.kn to West Tenn of the
x·St. Louie;
41 20 11 5 98
Michigan State (28·4) vo. Artzona (27·7),
llomphlo, Tenn.
Southam League.
.
Noot111tll•
32 34 9 3 76
5:42p.m.
Gonzaga 88, Vlfglnta 85
. COLORADO ROCi&lt;IE8-Ctalmed LHP
Chicago
29 37 7 4 69
Indiana Stole 70, Oklahoma 88
Duke (33-4) vo. Ma~and (25·10), follow·
Horacia Estrada off waivers from the FlortColumbuo'•
25 37 9 8 65
Michigan S1111 89, Alabama Stale 35
lng 11111 game
da . Ma~lns.
.
'• NortbWMt Dfvllton
Notlonol Ctlomplonohlp
Freono State 82, COIKomla 70
FLORIDAMARLIN5-Tradad RHP Manny
W L TOL I'll
AI Tho Loullllnl Supai&lt;lamo .
Monday, APfll 2
Aybar 1o the Ch go.Cub.s.IQ[J,HR Oswal·
y.cotorado
!50 14 9 4 113
· Semlllnal winners, 9:18p.m.
-OriHnl
do Malra
Edmonton
38 •27 10 • '3 89
Tample 19, Texao 85
HOUST ASm05-Piaced AHP Doug
VoncOUVor
35 25 11 7 88
Florida 88, Waatom Klfltucky 58 •
B
on lhe 15·day disabled llol. retroac·
.caigory •
28 33 14 4 · 10
Penn Slate 89, Providence 59
t
o Marolt 23. Placed AHP Shana
Mlnneaota.
24 38 12· .5 115
Nollh Coroina 70, Prtncoti&gt;n 48
ynolds on the 15·day disabled list.
J
Plclltc Dlvtolon
llaoondRound
Major Laoguo laoetroe.ctlve to March 27.
,
W L TOL I'll ·
· Sunday, March 11
Spring ltolntng pmoo
MILWAUKEE BREWERS,...SJnl OF Lou
y·Dallao .
45 24 1 2 99
AI Tho Pyl'llllld
Tllurodoy'I'Git11ft
. · Collier outright to Indianapolis of the lntersan.,....
37 28 12 2 88
Montreal 4, St. Louis 3
ll!to!fphii,TIM.
natlonalleaguu.
Pnoenl~ ·. '
33 28 18 3 8S
Detroit 7, Texas 3
Gonzaga 85, lndllna Stat• 88 '·
NEW YORK MET5-Acqulred OF Michael
Los Angeles
35 28 12 2 . 1M
Boston 3, Minnesota 2
.Mk:hlgon Stalo 81, Fretno Stale 65
Curry from the Kansas Cliy RO)&gt;alo lor OF
24 39 10. 5 63
N.Y. Met&amp; 18, Battlmore 4 '
At Tho LOultlono .SupardaOII
Endy Cbovez. Optioned INF-OF Jorge
· . Sea111o7, San Otego~
·
NowOriHnl
Tocalo Noofolk ollhe ln1ema11onal League:
' , TWo~.,O,nt'e for 8:wti1, .on• prilnt for a tie 11id Temple 75, FlOrida s.
Chicago Cubs7, Anaheim 5
·
Returned RHP Julio· Santana to the San
ovtrli~. loll.
Chicago WhKo Sox 12, Colorado 5
Penn Stole 82, Nortrt Carolina 74
Franclaoo Giants.
.
'
' x-dl~ ployolspot
Houston 3, Round Root&lt; 1
AI Till Giorgio 0..,.
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Qplloned
y-dlnchld divlolon
Oakland 9, sacramento o
RHP Julio Santana to Fresno of the PCL.
Altanta
.
Thuraday'e Gll'ftttl
Arizona 5, Los Angelaa 4
Roglanol Bemlftnolo
Monlrlll 8, Tampa Bay 2
Florida vo. Atlanta el Kloolmmeo Aa., ccd.
Friday, Morch 23
Toronto 2. Phltodotphllt
Tampa Bay vs. Toronto at Dunedin Fla.,
Michigan Staton, Gonzaga 82

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·Missed all of 2000' recovering from

David Wells, While Sox
back could be as big a ·
concern to Chicago as Slro~a·s
shoulder Is to Toronto.

'

Right llbow • ~'

Finley.
Finley went four . inilings.
· The.,left-hander gave up three
·hits, two runs - one earned
--'- and. struck out five.
The Indians tied ·it in the
seventh on· a two-run homer
by Eddie Tauben.see, his .third
of the tpring, off Ke~ry
Ligtenber11"
· ·.
Brnves starter Tom Glavino, ,
· · wh&lt;l will pitch the homeopener agaln11 the ,New York
Mett on Thctday, went the first
. twO inni!'IIP• !Jiving up two
hiu and no ru·ns.

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A loam's succass depends largaly on the health of ns pl!'yers.
·
Here are s6me Injuries plaguing players coming lnlo the 2001saason.

Rick Anl&lt;lal, St. Loula
Chuck KnobliiUch, Yani&lt;Ms
·
Need to overcome their mental demona
and throw ihe ball slralght again.
Right eye .,. ...
Bryce Aorie,"Boaton
· Frightening lnlury when ha was hit ,
by a line drive last September. l
· Rlaht ehoulcler • ''
James Baldwlil, Whitt Sox
After winning a carear-hfgh 14 games
laat season, Baldwin could miss at fellS! :·
the first month with a aore llhoulder. :

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BASEBAL.L 200}
CINCINNA,i·

(~)

steam

on
in~ a. new stadium. In

position pla)oeiJ and "liCYers

reac~ their

Barry Larkin .brought them to their feet and
IIIOVed the · owner to open his checkbook
· once again.
• A year later, the Cincinnati Reds are paying
the price for ·squeezing two superstar salaries
into a small~market budget. Something had to

gt).

'

·

·

Bye-bye starting pitching. Bye-bye ,role of
leading contender. ·
.
Although the Reds insist they can be a fact~ in the NL Centhl if eyerything goes
nght, their chances come do)lln to a shaky·
rotation that has litrle experience and a long
history of injuries.
.
"That's the key with every organization. If
you've got the pitching, you're ~oing to contend," Larkin said. "If you don't, you're scrambling. Tlut's the way it is in New York, in
Adanta, in Pirtsburgh and definitely here."
New York and Atlanta can afford to pay top
dollar for pitching. Pittsburgh is expanding irs

th~

was

wc'w

~

PITTSBURGH BASEBALL

'

I

IM Pajc 81

said he didn "t know about
• the dismissals. A number of
players said they were having
a hard time conracting the
point guard Friday nighL
. "Evidendy something happened that" coach Knight didn't like or didn't want on the
team," freshman guard Andre,
Em~ctt said, "so coach
~ght did what h:_. had to

·

YOUTH SPORTS

If all four players' scholar-

about the team," Giles said. "I think everyOne hen: feels we're
ready to start winning."

~n four walks and a wild pitch
111 the 6fth inning . .
Walsh (11-10, , 6-2 AMC)
banged out 13 hill. The &lt;Avalim. ~red two runs in the
first .tnrung, two more in tbe
second and third inniop o!f
lf:Jrter and l~r · Jessica
Lie~.. .
,
Rio JUruor ]aneua · Reese
pitched four innings of shut
our sofiball, striking out three
and walking one.

.
Rio Grande (3-ll, 0-2
AMC) managed only three
hits in the tint game, two
coming off ~ bat of junior
first baseman Jill Thonw.. The

Are Pirates parked in neutral as·they move into·new ballpar~?
PITTSBURGH · (AP) - The Pittsburgh Pirates haven't (lefties tormented him), Omar Olivares (couldn't win the No.5
played a game yet in new PNC Park and already it seems to be spot in Oakland's roration) and Bronson Arnzyo, plus left-hanCQrsed. .
~
.
den Terry Mulhplland (20 starts last year fur Atlanta at age 37)
How ehe to explain the sequence of injuries that has cost and Jimmy Anderson (ninth-worst in majors in quality starts) . .
them three-fifths of their starting rotation? That has createii ·a Left fielder Brian ~~es and catcher JasQn ~mjall,who signed
gloomy cloud of pesslfnlsm that theu first season tn the new . a combmed S105 rrtillion m contract extenstoru(kad an underpark will be a big bust - and not just because they're raising ~ rated offense. Giles, the first Pirates player to hit .300 with at
·
·
·
. least 30 homers and 100 RBis in consecutive s~ns. has betstatue ofWillie-fotargell?
" Am I ready to hang mysell?r. new manager Lloyd McClen- ter statistics the last two years than Ken Grift"ey Jr.
don said. "No, I'm not. And even ifl was, the rree would probHowever, the Pirates badly need first baseman Kevin Young
ably break:'
.
($I 8 rrtillion left on contract) and second baseman Pat Meares
His rotation already has broken down, with projected open- ($13.5 rrtillion left) to bounce back fiom off seasons.
Also, John VanderWal (.299, 24 homers, 94. RBis) needs to
ing day starter Kris Benson· (elbow), and the last two opening
day starters, Francisco Cordova (tlbow) and Jason Schmidt (rib duplicate a career year he fashioned despite getting only 384 atcage) out at least until early May.
bats. They also need something. fiom their curious $9 million
Benson's injury was a real shocker- almost as much as the investment in outfielder Derek Bell,.one of the NL's worst hitexplicit interview he gave Penthouse, much to. the Pirates' ters in the second halflasc season.
""- embarrassment - and could prove a significant setback to one
Defensively, McClendon felt the Pirates gave away too many
I
"' of the majors' best'young starters. He was only 10-12 last sea- infield outs and responded by benching Warren Morris, third in
son on ·a 69-'win team but had a 3.85 ERA.
the NL rookie of the year voting in 1999, and shifting Meares
''But we can't dwell on chis;' McClendon said. "We've got to to second.
'
move .on."
Mearet hasn't played 'second since 1991 and had 20 errors last
Move on they will, abandoning now-demolished Three season. B11t the move opens a sppt for new shortstop Jack WilJljvers Stadium (nearly every Pittsburgher claims to have a con- son, who hasn't played above Double-A but is a double play
crete chunk. from it) for PNC, which has a spectacular down- whiz and hit weU in the minors. Morris was sent to the ininors
town view and is even-smaller than Wrigley Field.
Friday.
.
However, it could be a case of n~ ballyaf'i, new ~~r, . ~~ird bas~~n ~ramis. R:'mirez, !.lOt yet ~.3. had ad im~ressiv~
same old problems.
· spnng and could have a btg year 1l"he adjusts to the. spaa&lt;IUs·
Last 5eason, when they lost 93 games in their eighth contec- left-center power alley in PNC Park. .
,
utive losing season, therr hitting was good, their defense awful
Another plus: center fielder Adrian Brown hit .315 in 104
. and their pitching almost as bad. Their 5.42 ERA after the All- games and seems tQ be the lead off hitter the Pirates have sought
"Star break was the majors' worse.
for years.
·
This season, the one they have been building for since Kevin
The bullpen, however, could undo whatever good the offense.
Mcqatchy bought the 'team in 1996, they fi~re to have good does. Balvino Galvez, who last pitched in the •majors in 1986,
hitting, so-sp defense and subpar pitching.
had a spot won until blowing up at being criticized during a
Uh, etect a trend?
pre-game drill and stormed out of camp. . ·
, For now, their .ro\&lt;ltion will be right-banders Todd Ritchie
"But I'm excited about the new ballpark and I'm excited

Redwomen scored both runs

_ Evaits Field.

.Kn1•ght · ·

ships are released, Tech's roster

'

. • Ponllr&lt;Dy •

'

RIO.GRANDE The
U~ of Rio Gm1de
Redwomen softball team
dropped its opening doubleb.eader of the American
Mideasc Conference season to
• Walsb University, 6-2 and 7-3
. on FrUby afternoon at Stanley

as Denny Neagle
3t
same point bst
seuon.
new stadium opens in 2003.
.
"What
tried to do within our salary_ To OIYOid another mi!ketson mnender. the
· The Reds began bsr season with a payroll fulmework is build a competitive team sp that Reds need Grifti,y and 1.arkin to IU'f beJkby,
around 144 million. It'll be about the same when revenues go up (in 2003), you can win the rat of the lin~p to produce in reconfigthis year, with a lor more ground to cover. · instandy instead ofhaving to plug four !&gt;r five uted Cinergy Field, and the ~pen to rank
· Ken Griffey Jr. nearly paid for hi~lf last holes," general manager Jim Bowden said. among the NL's best once ag;ut).
tcason, when he was reunited with .his home- "You try to build a young nuc;leus in the field . Larkin, who turns 37 on April 28, missed
town team and the Reds drew. 2.57 niillion and whenever you ·do have the dollars, put most of spring trai~~Plg with a poin strain
fans, the second-most . in frapchise history. them all into pitching at that time."
that's expected to linger into the season.
Th~ won't draw as many fans this .time
The Reds have sunk little money 'into their
"It'• going to affect my approach early on;·
around, so Junior's 112.5 million ~ry rotation. Atlanta's Greg Maddux maltes more ·Larkin said."[ won't be as aggreuive as if I was
$6.5 million of it deferred - will hurt a litrle · than twice as much as the combined salaries 100 pc!ll:ent."
· '1
more. ·• • '
of Pete Harnisch, Osvaldo Fernandez, Chris
Griffey, who tore his Ibft hamstring last seaThen there's Larkin, who blocked a trade to Reitsma, Elmer Dessens and Rob Bell, the son, seveA!f pulled it bsr Monday, leaving his
the Mets in July and then got a three-year, Reds' five starters for now.
starus in doubt and the Reds concerned.
$27 million extension . The nondeferred
Harnisch is the only proven starter in the
"We hope we've nipped this in the bud and
salaries of Griffey and Larkin will account for bunch. He has 311 starts in the majors, while it won't be a lingering thing," Dr. Timothy
roughly one-third of the pay~ll .
the ·o ther four have 103 starts combined. Kremchek said. "But hanuttings are unpreWhen raises for arbitration-eligible relievers Reitsma is coming straight from Double-A, dictable."
and position players were factored in, the where he started 14 ·games last season.
If Griffey and Larkin are burt, the Reds~ fate
budget c&lt;&gt;ufdn't stretch far enough. For this . If the Reds are out of contention in July, is. predictable.
year and next, the Reds wiU be a team full of Harnisch almost certaiply will be traded just

junior packed budget as it moves

Rio

•

them in during his .homecoming season.,., Cincinnati, they're biding their time untiJ. , a prime, relying on a rotation that's a reach,

•

IUn•• , . . 1, 2001

8l n 11y, Aprll1,...,..

PoiMIOJ •l•ddl•part • G&amp;... all, Ohio • .Pulnt P11111 11to WV •

by

I

. Jamie Aevhlini•nn pircbed
four innings to goet the win.
Walsh plated six runs io tbe
second inning of game two to
gain connol of the cootest.
Nicole Banmgardner went 2for-3 with an RBI single.
Erica CotP&gt;ran, Van Pelt and
Shannon Kohl all had RBI
hits in the second. . Lindsay
FleCk -nc · 2'-for-2 of£ the
bench and knocked in the
extn insur.tnce
in the top
of the seventh. .

run

shrinks to four scholarship, coach KD.ight," Hayes said. "I
players entering next te:ISQn.' think coach Knight is·a good
The school can then· sign lhre coach and I'm a coachable
scholarship players, which. pbyer."
leaves the school down four
It was former Dickey who
players fium the NCAA- . recruited the freshman from
allowed 13.
,
Port Arthur. And Htyes, 18,
Hayes ~d. he is~'t bitter who said_he will now go elseabout l{mghts dec 151on.
where to Jive out his basket.. ;'It's ~ . busines.&lt;," J-:Uyes said. ball dreams, would like to play
I m pretty sure I will find my for Dickey again.
way. I have a desire, ro play
"He is a man of class. He is
·basketball and that's all I a man of honor and he always
need."
came straight with me;· Hayes
• Hayes said he is leaving' the said. "I came to Tech a litrle
program
more
mature boy and I'm .leaving a man. I
because of the l!'ssons he learned ro much from James
learned from Dickey.
.
Dickey. I feel like 1 shoUld pay
''I'm not talking down on - him."

Auto Part• &amp;

;. 730 VIlli &amp; 4-WOI
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11193 C~ Si~rldo Sho•t Bed.

760

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All Types, Accen To Over
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1999 Honda Foreman 5450, 4a.f,

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•
$MIOO (740J258-t329

91 Honda Rebel 250, Exeenanl
Condition. 2100 miles. asking
$2000, (740l448-7i43

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luclltyt Hilla Road,
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tilt
tool
ond
tqulpmonl auction,
CCIIdacl .... ocllool at

proporly;

Tht

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11•roona1

JWDPirly being offONCI

for auction 11 1 ootory frem1 rencll
atvto modular houu.
Tho
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conatn.icttd · by til•
vocotlonal oohool
oluua ol Building
Trtcloo, lo twonty-alx
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Look for~ YO!Jf local
sports
"
andteams ·

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)
- Ending speculation surrounding his tWo key players,
Florida coach Billy Donovan
said Fr,iday that junior Udonis
Haslem and rophomore Brett
Nelson were not leaving
school early for the NBA.
"After talking to those guys,.
they P feel the best thing for
themselves ls to come back,"
Donovan said. "You hear ce·rtain guys names mentioned
that . they are going to be a
top-10 pick. I don't think that
Brett and (Udonis) right now
are in that situation." 1
There had been speculation
that Haslem and Nelson
would leave for the NBA, following *e path sophomore
Mike Miller 'a nd freshman
Donnell Harvey took a year
ago.
.
H ~slem, a 6-foot-8 center
and a first-team All-Smith-

eastern Conference selection,
averaged a team-high 16.8
points and 7.5 rebounds per
game.
":'elson, ·a 6-4 guard who
also was a first-team All-SEC
choice', averaged 15.3 points

llghll
• Andorton

• Flltoral•• 25 yur

dlmtnolonol roofing

IIi.

• l.lgllllbdurtt .

• HI
0)1• AJtpl.._ _.. ..:
hot ltfOior hoator,
+hawhlt, clothee.
.....,ldr;., etov•.
lftCI rofllglriiiOt'.
METHOD OF IALE:
lubjtclto .... rlfllht 01
.... so.d to,.......'"'
encl/or all bldo, the
•It ehall .,. IIIIICie to
.... hlghlat lllclclor lor

tfta modulor houu,
but ollall not M llnal
until
wrlll•n
notification of the
IIIICipllnGO ol the bid

.. c.:,.... ._.

of
.
•
TERMI OF IALE:
Ctoh (Ill till form of
....... Of a oortlflod 01
auhlor'o
ehook)
wllllln .lh• tlmo
provided In tho
concllllono of 1... 0111
roltrrsd to bOiow.
"Condlllono of lalo"
Tht houu will .,. told
In •AI lo" condHion.
Tho ochool dlolrlct 11
not rooponolblo "to
r~pttlr, roplaco, o;
provlda 1ddlllona1
building matorlll, or

ollltrwloo mako •ny
adjuotmenll to lh•
houu llltr till Olio. .
DEPOirn Cull or 1
cortlflod or c•ohl•r'l

NEW SURROUNDINGS - Plra~s manager Uyod McClendon
looks out from the new dugout at PNC Park In Pittsburgh. (AP)

·"

•I

•

'•

pr~d,uctlvltyl

••

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' ..

•
•

•

••••
•
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·'

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•

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r'

Beginning Microsoft Olllce &amp; Internet - .
Wednesdays, AprU 18, 25, May 2, 9, 16,23
6:45·9:4.5 p.m.
Southern High Sch~olcomputer lab

New start

1·800-886-3713

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lttmo NOT INCLUDED
In l i l t " -:
• Floor co ......... -

.

dlocrlrwlllltlon wltll

lletlonal origin, oox
•

I

~~~~~.

0

DEPOIIrn c... Of •
cortJfllcl or ...........
c'-li, paytbllt to ....

double

0111··--·1

.'

youth basketball. camps while
stiU a prep player in W~st Virginia.
·.
Nelson would like join fellow Kanawha Valleyan Jason
Williams as a star guardi n th
NBA.

........ ..-.-.
.....

row (4) 1nc1t
• Floor JOiolt (2" • 10"

·

an,d hit 45 percent from 3point range. He is fro.m St.
Albans, WVa .
Neslon ended up at Florida
via .conpecxtions he made
with Donovan and Gators'
·assistant Donnie Jones at

1mln_..,.._

....... _..tlMitor
......

Rees wins Elks Hoop Shoot ·DOnovan: Nelson and .ttaslem ~ns with the Gators
DELAWARE, Ohio
just three shy of the winning
Cyle Rees, the son of Jay and · 2t•of-25.
Tina Rees, of Racine, recentThe Elks Hoop Shoot Free
ly finished fifth in the Ohio Throw Contest is th:e largest
Elks State Hoop Shoot free and most visible of the many
:
throw· com- youth . activities sponrored by
r--=~...., petition.
Elks Lodges. More . than 3
Rees · com- rrtillion boys ::i.nd girl~, ages 8peted in the 13, compete annually. Youngage
nine sters start at the local level,
competition, advancing through the di~­
'Winning the trict, state, "gional and finally
initial round ·national levels by attempting
sponsored by 25 f~ee throw shots. The
the Gallipolis names of national winners are
Elks Lodge inscribed on a' plaque at the
Aee1
No. 107, hit- Naismith Memorial Basketling 21-of- ball Hall of Fame in Springe
25. He finished second last field, Massachusetts.
year in t~e competition as an
The Benevolent and Proeight-year old.
tective Order of Elks of the
He then advanced to the USA is one of the largest and
Districi level'at New Lexing- oldest f!aternal organizations
ton high School, where he in the United States.
m~de 22-of-25 to wi'n the . For more 'iilformation on
tompetition and advance to the Elks and its many prothe state ·
grams, contact the local lodge
R~es was among eight in Exalted Ruler or Secretary. ·
his age group to compete at
the state level in this nationwide competition, which
nationwi,de was sponsored by
the Benevolent and Protective
Call Us Today!
·
Order of Elk,. of .'l&lt;the• USA.
•
Cyle hit 18-of-·25 free throws,

and

• ... ,.,... lntortor

COLLE·GE HOOPS

.

........... of1172.
tnclltc110111104 of ... .
Aelltllllllllllon Act .,

nWWiiVW . . .

.......

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of 1114, 'l1llo iX ., ....

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~181

ence. (:!IM)89S-3887.
840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

...

COildUCttd
In
lldllel•to Title VI
of .... Civil Rial* Act

::-:.~m;·
;w~""[~·=~~'l
•nRaCJ)IIIf
•lWCZ)Mittlllt ·
.c.,...... ,........

May~ I, 20D1. Tho
.followlllf typeo of
.,ulpmollt
uo
lnclullled · In Ill•

AUCTION
Tlla
' Tnnus•
hetoby glvoa furlllar
notlco that , ... Qallla.
Jlllltall-VJnloll Joint
Vocational lohool
Dlolrlol will offer fot
oalo at Jlllllllo onatlon,
011 the Buckeye Hill•
Caroor
Contor
OMIJIUI, -llltiiCIIIIf
at noon on May 5,
2001, tho lollowlng .

C&amp;C ' Goporal Home Moln·
tenon... Palnllng. vinyl oldlng.
carpentry. doors, wlndoWI, balha.
mobile home repair and more. For
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livlngaton'a Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, free estimates, · lifetime
guarantee. 1"4yrs on job e•perl·

Home

toolo end
ent to tho

MODULAR HOUlE

- Home
Improvements

Pa lomino Tent Camper, AJC, Re·
triger.ltor. Stove. Sink, Port Pottle,
Queen Bed, Sleeps e. Excellent
Cond~lon, $3000 (3041576-2933

810

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... Dclrl~

.____.. --· ....
810

Ouest 2000. 28'. Hit contained,
$1·3.000. 740·742·2572.

Jay"" traveltraller. model 2!8·0

'

all oqUIJIIlltnl In "to

E&amp;S Lawn Service: Doolgn, lm·
ptomentallon. And Service. Aval~
- And
For PlanUng.
Spring Clean Up, - ·
lnq
Frw EoUrnotH.
Satlttactlon Guaranteed. Greg
MHhoan (:JIM )(17!1-4828

(740~1

1995 Tan Ford Windstar GL, E•·
cellent Condition, Immaculate In- '
· • . side And Out. 76.000 Mil81.
$1500 (740)37!HI21 1

*''*JVID.

1'\aJC NOTICE

740-241 5334 We Nil

lhldget Priced Tr•nemlealont

$11.500.

. CIA' I 'A MCUOII · -

u..d
I

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

: : 48.000 Mlos. Ono Qwnor, Garage

PIMcNallce

a•

.,. lilrfolltd

llquldatad
upon .. lluro or
lllgheol blddor .
p11rform; otlltrwloo,
..... d•poOit will' .,.
applied 11 part
paymont 01 · the

,_..... pflce lOr ....

JNIIOilll proporty. No

lnteNII will .,. ...... Oft
the bid dejloolt.

T... blllonc.

or tht

. . _ ..aprlctbe pold In ful ~ CUll

or

Jri...,.VIniDn

Vacrlloolll

Jolnl

certlfl•d . or

oallllr'o cMcll wtlllln
tlllrtr (30) dayo

8chool Dlatrlct. 01 •
comblnatloll, Ill tho

amounl Of toll (10)
.,.,_ of lllo blciiMIO
prloo will .,. ,..,.....

-.

ot tho time of tho
public aucllon from

....

~

.........

-urlly for faithful
Jlllrformanca. Should

the bkt MMnpetcl by

.... Board, ... dtpoelt
. ortD~nt

wiH M

flPIII*I

to .... purcii8H pt1ot.
ADDITIONAL .
.DIIIIATION AND
CONDITIONS OF THE

SALE: Information
followlllg wrltton concerlllng
tho
notlflclllon ol tho luollon aole, and a
cop~
of
til•
~··
of
lilt
bid,ICCOPtlnco
Tho houao
"colldltlon•
of
lilt
· eentiot llo moved · oolo" In accorclanco
btforo the blllonco Ia
with and oubjoct .to
JlllkL
.
which 111 bldo ollall .,.
The buyer anumo1· mado,
m1y . bo
the ,.,.,...bUlly lncl
obttlnod
··
al th•
coet ol ..curing 1 ,.,._,.,.1 OlllcL
lloua moving firm to
(Telophont: 740-~5monlllo llouurrom 15334)
lllo tchool dlolrlct't
Tho houu lo op11n
properly.
for public vlawlng
Tht buyor muol
Monday through
move lho llouN from
Frlelay from 11:00 1.m.
tho tchool'o JWOJNrty to 3:00 p.m. II II
no liter than Jul~ 1,
roqueoltd that on
2001.
·C"F
appolntmlllt .,. mtc1e
Th1 buy..- 11 to
through
lho
aoaumo
the · Suporlntenclont'o
r.. ponolblllly of
Ollie=- (740) 241 1334. .
payment of lexeo, 11
Th• Board ol ·
any, on 11111 home.
Educotlon ·rooorvot
Th1
minimum
the right to rojoct ~ny
acctpt.ble bid muet
01 lllliklo.
cOvtr lhe coat of tht

"-·
H II lhl policy ollht

GaRII.JIIIIkoon-VInton
J o I nI
Vocttlonal

School Dlottlct thll
oduC'1tlon11 JWogroml
and Olhtr actlvlll.. be ·

.

Donalyft K. '"'""
Troauror,
11oarc1 or
EdUCIIIIIon

011111-.IICkton-VInton

JolnH"a•IIOIIIJ
School Dlatrlot

Aprll1, 2001

••

�)

PI 1M• a n rCtazr•uti~

BASEBAL.L 200}
CINCINNA,i·

(~)

steam

on
in~ a. new stadium. In

position pla)oeiJ and "liCYers

reac~ their

Barry Larkin .brought them to their feet and
IIIOVed the · owner to open his checkbook
· once again.
• A year later, the Cincinnati Reds are paying
the price for ·squeezing two superstar salaries
into a small~market budget. Something had to

gt).

'

·

·

Bye-bye starting pitching. Bye-bye ,role of
leading contender. ·
.
Although the Reds insist they can be a fact~ in the NL Centhl if eyerything goes
nght, their chances come do)lln to a shaky·
rotation that has litrle experience and a long
history of injuries.
.
"That's the key with every organization. If
you've got the pitching, you're ~oing to contend," Larkin said. "If you don't, you're scrambling. Tlut's the way it is in New York, in
Adanta, in Pirtsburgh and definitely here."
New York and Atlanta can afford to pay top
dollar for pitching. Pittsburgh is expanding irs

th~

was

wc'w

~

PITTSBURGH BASEBALL

'

I

IM Pajc 81

said he didn "t know about
• the dismissals. A number of
players said they were having
a hard time conracting the
point guard Friday nighL
. "Evidendy something happened that" coach Knight didn't like or didn't want on the
team," freshman guard Andre,
Em~ctt said, "so coach
~ght did what h:_. had to

·

YOUTH SPORTS

If all four players' scholar-

about the team," Giles said. "I think everyOne hen: feels we're
ready to start winning."

~n four walks and a wild pitch
111 the 6fth inning . .
Walsh (11-10, , 6-2 AMC)
banged out 13 hill. The &lt;Avalim. ~red two runs in the
first .tnrung, two more in tbe
second and third inniop o!f
lf:Jrter and l~r · Jessica
Lie~.. .
,
Rio JUruor ]aneua · Reese
pitched four innings of shut
our sofiball, striking out three
and walking one.

.
Rio Grande (3-ll, 0-2
AMC) managed only three
hits in the tint game, two
coming off ~ bat of junior
first baseman Jill Thonw.. The

Are Pirates parked in neutral as·they move into·new ballpar~?
PITTSBURGH · (AP) - The Pittsburgh Pirates haven't (lefties tormented him), Omar Olivares (couldn't win the No.5
played a game yet in new PNC Park and already it seems to be spot in Oakland's roration) and Bronson Arnzyo, plus left-hanCQrsed. .
~
.
den Terry Mulhplland (20 starts last year fur Atlanta at age 37)
How ehe to explain the sequence of injuries that has cost and Jimmy Anderson (ninth-worst in majors in quality starts) . .
them three-fifths of their starting rotation? That has createii ·a Left fielder Brian ~~es and catcher JasQn ~mjall,who signed
gloomy cloud of pesslfnlsm that theu first season tn the new . a combmed S105 rrtillion m contract extenstoru(kad an underpark will be a big bust - and not just because they're raising ~ rated offense. Giles, the first Pirates player to hit .300 with at
·
·
·
. least 30 homers and 100 RBis in consecutive s~ns. has betstatue ofWillie-fotargell?
" Am I ready to hang mysell?r. new manager Lloyd McClen- ter statistics the last two years than Ken Grift"ey Jr.
don said. "No, I'm not. And even ifl was, the rree would probHowever, the Pirates badly need first baseman Kevin Young
ably break:'
.
($I 8 rrtillion left on contract) and second baseman Pat Meares
His rotation already has broken down, with projected open- ($13.5 rrtillion left) to bounce back fiom off seasons.
Also, John VanderWal (.299, 24 homers, 94. RBis) needs to
ing day starter Kris Benson· (elbow), and the last two opening
day starters, Francisco Cordova (tlbow) and Jason Schmidt (rib duplicate a career year he fashioned despite getting only 384 atcage) out at least until early May.
bats. They also need something. fiom their curious $9 million
Benson's injury was a real shocker- almost as much as the investment in outfielder Derek Bell,.one of the NL's worst hitexplicit interview he gave Penthouse, much to. the Pirates' ters in the second halflasc season.
""- embarrassment - and could prove a significant setback to one
Defensively, McClendon felt the Pirates gave away too many
I
"' of the majors' best'young starters. He was only 10-12 last sea- infield outs and responded by benching Warren Morris, third in
son on ·a 69-'win team but had a 3.85 ERA.
the NL rookie of the year voting in 1999, and shifting Meares
''But we can't dwell on chis;' McClendon said. "We've got to to second.
'
move .on."
Mearet hasn't played 'second since 1991 and had 20 errors last
Move on they will, abandoning now-demolished Three season. B11t the move opens a sppt for new shortstop Jack WilJljvers Stadium (nearly every Pittsburgher claims to have a con- son, who hasn't played above Double-A but is a double play
crete chunk. from it) for PNC, which has a spectacular down- whiz and hit weU in the minors. Morris was sent to the ininors
town view and is even-smaller than Wrigley Field.
Friday.
.
However, it could be a case of n~ ballyaf'i, new ~~r, . ~~ird bas~~n ~ramis. R:'mirez, !.lOt yet ~.3. had ad im~ressiv~
same old problems.
· spnng and could have a btg year 1l"he adjusts to the. spaa&lt;IUs·
Last 5eason, when they lost 93 games in their eighth contec- left-center power alley in PNC Park. .
,
utive losing season, therr hitting was good, their defense awful
Another plus: center fielder Adrian Brown hit .315 in 104
. and their pitching almost as bad. Their 5.42 ERA after the All- games and seems tQ be the lead off hitter the Pirates have sought
"Star break was the majors' worse.
for years.
·
This season, the one they have been building for since Kevin
The bullpen, however, could undo whatever good the offense.
Mcqatchy bought the 'team in 1996, they fi~re to have good does. Balvino Galvez, who last pitched in the •majors in 1986,
hitting, so-sp defense and subpar pitching.
had a spot won until blowing up at being criticized during a
Uh, etect a trend?
pre-game drill and stormed out of camp. . ·
, For now, their .ro\&lt;ltion will be right-banders Todd Ritchie
"But I'm excited about the new ballpark and I'm excited

Redwomen scored both runs

_ Evaits Field.

.Kn1•ght · ·

ships are released, Tech's roster

'

. • Ponllr&lt;Dy •

'

RIO.GRANDE The
U~ of Rio Gm1de
Redwomen softball team
dropped its opening doubleb.eader of the American
Mideasc Conference season to
• Walsb University, 6-2 and 7-3
. on FrUby afternoon at Stanley

as Denny Neagle
3t
same point bst
seuon.
new stadium opens in 2003.
.
"What
tried to do within our salary_ To OIYOid another mi!ketson mnender. the
· The Reds began bsr season with a payroll fulmework is build a competitive team sp that Reds need Grifti,y and 1.arkin to IU'f beJkby,
around 144 million. It'll be about the same when revenues go up (in 2003), you can win the rat of the lin~p to produce in reconfigthis year, with a lor more ground to cover. · instandy instead ofhaving to plug four !&gt;r five uted Cinergy Field, and the ~pen to rank
· Ken Griffey Jr. nearly paid for hi~lf last holes," general manager Jim Bowden said. among the NL's best once ag;ut).
tcason, when he was reunited with .his home- "You try to build a young nuc;leus in the field . Larkin, who turns 37 on April 28, missed
town team and the Reds drew. 2.57 niillion and whenever you ·do have the dollars, put most of spring trai~~Plg with a poin strain
fans, the second-most . in frapchise history. them all into pitching at that time."
that's expected to linger into the season.
Th~ won't draw as many fans this .time
The Reds have sunk little money 'into their
"It'• going to affect my approach early on;·
around, so Junior's 112.5 million ~ry rotation. Atlanta's Greg Maddux maltes more ·Larkin said."[ won't be as aggreuive as if I was
$6.5 million of it deferred - will hurt a litrle · than twice as much as the combined salaries 100 pc!ll:ent."
· '1
more. ·• • '
of Pete Harnisch, Osvaldo Fernandez, Chris
Griffey, who tore his Ibft hamstring last seaThen there's Larkin, who blocked a trade to Reitsma, Elmer Dessens and Rob Bell, the son, seveA!f pulled it bsr Monday, leaving his
the Mets in July and then got a three-year, Reds' five starters for now.
starus in doubt and the Reds concerned.
$27 million extension . The nondeferred
Harnisch is the only proven starter in the
"We hope we've nipped this in the bud and
salaries of Griffey and Larkin will account for bunch. He has 311 starts in the majors, while it won't be a lingering thing," Dr. Timothy
roughly one-third of the pay~ll .
the ·o ther four have 103 starts combined. Kremchek said. "But hanuttings are unpreWhen raises for arbitration-eligible relievers Reitsma is coming straight from Double-A, dictable."
and position players were factored in, the where he started 14 ·games last season.
If Griffey and Larkin are burt, the Reds~ fate
budget c&lt;&gt;ufdn't stretch far enough. For this . If the Reds are out of contention in July, is. predictable.
year and next, the Reds wiU be a team full of Harnisch almost certaiply will be traded just

junior packed budget as it moves

Rio

•

them in during his .homecoming season.,., Cincinnati, they're biding their time untiJ. , a prime, relying on a rotation that's a reach,

•

IUn•• , . . 1, 2001

8l n 11y, Aprll1,...,..

PoiMIOJ •l•ddl•part • G&amp;... all, Ohio • .Pulnt P11111 11to WV •

by

I

. Jamie Aevhlini•nn pircbed
four innings to goet the win.
Walsh plated six runs io tbe
second inning of game two to
gain connol of the cootest.
Nicole Banmgardner went 2for-3 with an RBI single.
Erica CotP&gt;ran, Van Pelt and
Shannon Kohl all had RBI
hits in the second. . Lindsay
FleCk -nc · 2'-for-2 of£ the
bench and knocked in the
extn insur.tnce
in the top
of the seventh. .

run

shrinks to four scholarship, coach KD.ight," Hayes said. "I
players entering next te:ISQn.' think coach Knight is·a good
The school can then· sign lhre coach and I'm a coachable
scholarship players, which. pbyer."
leaves the school down four
It was former Dickey who
players fium the NCAA- . recruited the freshman from
allowed 13.
,
Port Arthur. And Htyes, 18,
Hayes ~d. he is~'t bitter who said_he will now go elseabout l{mghts dec 151on.
where to Jive out his basket.. ;'It's ~ . busines.&lt;," J-:Uyes said. ball dreams, would like to play
I m pretty sure I will find my for Dickey again.
way. I have a desire, ro play
"He is a man of class. He is
·basketball and that's all I a man of honor and he always
need."
came straight with me;· Hayes
• Hayes said he is leaving' the said. "I came to Tech a litrle
program
more
mature boy and I'm .leaving a man. I
because of the l!'ssons he learned ro much from James
learned from Dickey.
.
Dickey. I feel like 1 shoUld pay
''I'm not talking down on - him."

Auto Part• &amp;

;. 730 VIlli &amp; 4-WOI
· · --~----.
11193 C~ Si~rldo Sho•t Bed.

760

..

All Types, Accen To Over
10,000 Trfnsrnlsslons, Trantftr .
CaHo, 740-245-Un. can: 339· ·

" • Kept. Must
• • (304)678-695t

See

Acces10rlu

•
•

3165.

790

.

.

Campert&amp;
MotorHol"IIM

1999 Ellie. 31 Foot~C,Like
New, $7,800: Ca11 tier 4P"'·

740

,.,

Motorcycles

12 Foot John Boat With Trailer,
Vahama
4·Wheelo&lt;.
250
(740)448 8887 Attar 3ilm -

;:

1999 Honda Foreman 5450, 4a.f,

• ••

LOll Than 400MIIes. Brlghl Rid.

: •. EliCOIIIIII Condition, Hardly Used.
•
$MIOO (740J258-t329

91 Honda Rebel 250, Exeenanl
Condition. 2100 miles. asking
$2000, (740l448-7i43

1DOLAND

IT AUCJ10N

EQI

TIM 0 S

Vlllton ·
Jolllt
Vocotlonol lcllool

.,........ . . .,. 1111"

lmprovem•nts
· BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifeUma guarantH.
· local references furnished. Es·
tabllshod 1.975. COli 24 Hro. (740)
446-D870, t·800·26H576..Rog.

ars Waterproofing.

lthfdlr at •
Mtatlllllon the

C•nt•r

c:.tor

Hllo

CllllpUI

. . . . . . 1:008.111.,

6323.

Rasldenllal or commerclll wiring,
new Hrvice or repalfl. Mallar U·
cen11d tltclrlclan . Ridenour
Etoetrieal , WV000306, 304·875·
t78e.

•w.·

•c.rv

1
~2' .1lllllly ........
Tho

Buelloyo Hlllo

c
- c.Mir at-·~~­
lo 1-IH
351

luclltyt Hilla Road,
Rio Glando, Ohio. For
,._ lllfonnalldn on
tilt
tool
ond
tqulpmonl auction,
CCIIdacl .... ocllool at

proporly;

Tht

..

11•roona1

JWDPirly being offONCI

for auction 11 1 ootory frem1 rencll
atvto modular houu.
Tho
houoa,
conatn.icttd · by til•
vocotlonal oohool
oluua ol Building
Trtcloo, lo twonty-alx
(21) ,... wlclt lftCI mty.

~

oalllntto
'

tight (II) ltat long
11,101 aquaro ltot).
'oaturoa Include tilt

follow"....:

.

• Buill 11 one unit,
dlvldol Into .. two

Look for~ YO!Jf local
sports
"
andteams ·

GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)
- Ending speculation surrounding his tWo key players,
Florida coach Billy Donovan
said Fr,iday that junior Udonis
Haslem and rophomore Brett
Nelson were not leaving
school early for the NBA.
"After talking to those guys,.
they P feel the best thing for
themselves ls to come back,"
Donovan said. "You hear ce·rtain guys names mentioned
that . they are going to be a
top-10 pick. I don't think that
Brett and (Udonis) right now
are in that situation." 1
There had been speculation
that Haslem and Nelson
would leave for the NBA, following *e path sophomore
Mike Miller 'a nd freshman
Donnell Harvey took a year
ago.
.
H ~slem, a 6-foot-8 center
and a first-team All-Smith-

eastern Conference selection,
averaged a team-high 16.8
points and 7.5 rebounds per
game.
":'elson, ·a 6-4 guard who
also was a first-team All-SEC
choice', averaged 15.3 points

llghll
• Andorton

• Flltoral•• 25 yur

dlmtnolonol roofing

IIi.

• l.lgllllbdurtt .

• HI
0)1• AJtpl.._ _.. ..:
hot ltfOior hoator,
+hawhlt, clothee.
.....,ldr;., etov•.
lftCI rofllglriiiOt'.
METHOD OF IALE:
lubjtclto .... rlfllht 01
.... so.d to,.......'"'
encl/or all bldo, the
•It ehall .,. IIIIICie to
.... hlghlat lllclclor lor

tfta modulor houu,
but ollall not M llnal
until
wrlll•n
notification of the
IIIICipllnGO ol the bid

.. c.:,.... ._.

of
.
•
TERMI OF IALE:
Ctoh (Ill till form of
....... Of a oortlflod 01
auhlor'o
ehook)
wllllln .lh• tlmo
provided In tho
concllllono of 1... 0111
roltrrsd to bOiow.
"Condlllono of lalo"
Tht houu will .,. told
In •AI lo" condHion.
Tho ochool dlolrlct 11
not rooponolblo "to
r~pttlr, roplaco, o;
provlda 1ddlllona1
building matorlll, or

ollltrwloo mako •ny
adjuotmenll to lh•
houu llltr till Olio. .
DEPOirn Cull or 1
cortlflod or c•ohl•r'l

NEW SURROUNDINGS - Plra~s manager Uyod McClendon
looks out from the new dugout at PNC Park In Pittsburgh. (AP)

·"

•I

•

'•

pr~d,uctlvltyl

••

Today, everyone needs to know
something about microcomputers and
·using the Internet. You can increase
your microcomputer skills with the
·basics of Microsoft Windows, Word
Excel aQd the Internet. Tq help you
.,; acquire those skills, Washington State
Community College will offer;

' ..

•
•

•

••••
•
•
•
'
·'

••
•

••

••

..

•

I'
r'

Beginning Microsoft Olllce &amp; Internet - .
Wednesdays, AprU 18, 25, May 2, 9, 16,23
6:45·9:4.5 p.m.
Southern High Sch~olcomputer lab

New start

1·800-886-3713

•
•••

2000Chevy

Mlllbu Sedan
•

q1,

• Autollllllc, Air Cond•.
• Power Window• I Lock•
CD Syattm,Tilt I Crulae
~ TaxM, TIGI, 'llUe Feetl~re. Rebate lndudedln IIIH price olnewv- ill8d whtM Olppliclllle. '"on~CNCII. OrfJellcl~modlll. NollftPOIIIillle !or~rapljcllei!OII. Prtcet QOOd

www.newt1Qrt.gelayet.com

Mlrch ~Through Aplllll.

~

Call 24 hours a daj/ ·

Cost for the·two credit hour course Is $175 per · ·
\. ·. participant P.lus a $15reglstration fee. Cost · ·
includes the $40 textbook.. Register onlinf! pt ·
www.ca/c.wscc.edu or at $outhern High School.
For more information, call Washington State · ~8tCOLL ' IGI ·
• Commun~ty College at 740.374.8716.

Get your credit problems
reversed RIGHT. NOW!

The Sunday
Ttmes·Sentlnel

•t

..

COMMU~ITY

Subscribe today.
446-2342

710 Colepte Drive Marieft4, OH ~S?SO

740.374.8716 PAX: 740.376.0257

-•
www.wacc.ouu

•

•

.

"

•

Increase your .
1111Cr0COI11pute·r

''

.4

•

...

• CHI¥10~1T

_@

.

• Two llunclrocl (200)
. . . IIICtllcel uMot
lttmo NOT INCLUDED
In l i l t " -:
• Floor co ......... -

.

dlocrlrwlllltlon wltll

lletlonal origin, oox
•

I

~~~~~.

0

DEPOIIrn c... Of •
cortJfllcl or ...........
c'-li, paytbllt to ....

double

0111··--·1

.'

youth basketball. camps while
stiU a prep player in W~st Virginia.
·.
Nelson would like join fellow Kanawha Valleyan Jason
Williams as a star guardi n th
NBA.

........ ..-.-.
.....

row (4) 1nc1t
• Floor JOiolt (2" • 10"

·

an,d hit 45 percent from 3point range. He is fro.m St.
Albans, WVa .
Neslon ended up at Florida
via .conpecxtions he made
with Donovan and Gators'
·assistant Donnie Jones at

1mln_..,.._

....... _..tlMitor
......

Rees wins Elks Hoop Shoot ·DOnovan: Nelson and .ttaslem ~ns with the Gators
DELAWARE, Ohio
just three shy of the winning
Cyle Rees, the son of Jay and · 2t•of-25.
Tina Rees, of Racine, recentThe Elks Hoop Shoot Free
ly finished fifth in the Ohio Throw Contest is th:e largest
Elks State Hoop Shoot free and most visible of the many
:
throw· com- youth . activities sponrored by
r--=~...., petition.
Elks Lodges. More . than 3
Rees · com- rrtillion boys ::i.nd girl~, ages 8peted in the 13, compete annually. Youngage
nine sters start at the local level,
competition, advancing through the di~­
'Winning the trict, state, "gional and finally
initial round ·national levels by attempting
sponsored by 25 f~ee throw shots. The
the Gallipolis names of national winners are
Elks Lodge inscribed on a' plaque at the
Aee1
No. 107, hit- Naismith Memorial Basketling 21-of- ball Hall of Fame in Springe
25. He finished second last field, Massachusetts.
year in t~e competition as an
The Benevolent and Proeight-year old.
tective Order of Elks of the
He then advanced to the USA is one of the largest and
Districi level'at New Lexing- oldest f!aternal organizations
ton high School, where he in the United States.
m~de 22-of-25 to wi'n the . For more 'iilformation on
tompetition and advance to the Elks and its many prothe state ·
grams, contact the local lodge
R~es was among eight in Exalted Ruler or Secretary. ·
his age group to compete at
the state level in this nationwide competition, which
nationwi,de was sponsored by
the Benevolent and Protective
Call Us Today!
·
Order of Elk,. of .'l&lt;the• USA.
•
Cyle hit 18-of-·25 free throws,

and

• ... ,.,... lntortor

COLLE·GE HOOPS

.

........... of1172.
tnclltc110111104 of ... .
Aelltllllllllllon Act .,

nWWiiVW . . .

.......

. .:c.·=

of 1114, 'l1llo iX ., ....

• II 7 " 1 a.k ld&amp;elwn

• c-tructlon oncl
Aulolllllllw T....

•clan:

.. , ...

DatM

........ldlbt$
• Ylnrl IIIII,._ .•tlolllf.UIII~IIol

~181

ence. (:!IM)89S-3887.
840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

...

COildUCttd
In
lldllel•to Title VI
of .... Civil Rial* Act

::-:.~m;·
;w~""[~·=~~'l
•nRaCJ)IIIf
•lWCZ)Mittlllt ·
.c.,...... ,........

May~ I, 20D1. Tho
.followlllf typeo of
.,ulpmollt
uo
lnclullled · In Ill•

AUCTION
Tlla
' Tnnus•
hetoby glvoa furlllar
notlco that , ... Qallla.
Jlllltall-VJnloll Joint
Vocational lohool
Dlolrlol will offer fot
oalo at Jlllllllo onatlon,
011 the Buckeye Hill•
Caroor
Contor
OMIJIUI, -llltiiCIIIIf
at noon on May 5,
2001, tho lollowlng .

C&amp;C ' Goporal Home Moln·
tenon... Palnllng. vinyl oldlng.
carpentry. doors, wlndoWI, balha.
mobile home repair and more. For
rr.. numa• call Chet. 740·992·

livlngaton'a Basement Water
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, free estimates, · lifetime
guarantee. 1"4yrs on job e•perl·

Home

toolo end
ent to tho

MODULAR HOUlE

- Home
Improvements

Pa lomino Tent Camper, AJC, Re·
triger.ltor. Stove. Sink, Port Pottle,
Queen Bed, Sleeps e. Excellent
Cond~lon, $3000 (3041576-2933

810

'ICI ...

... Dclrl~

.____.. --· ....
810

Ouest 2000. 28'. Hit contained,
$1·3.000. 740·742·2572.

Jay"" traveltraller. model 2!8·0

'

all oqUIJIIlltnl In "to

E&amp;S Lawn Service: Doolgn, lm·
ptomentallon. And Service. Aval~
- And
For PlanUng.
Spring Clean Up, - ·
lnq
Frw EoUrnotH.
Satlttactlon Guaranteed. Greg
MHhoan (:JIM )(17!1-4828

(740~1

1995 Tan Ford Windstar GL, E•·
cellent Condition, Immaculate In- '
· • . side And Out. 76.000 Mil81.
$1500 (740)37!HI21 1

*''*JVID.

1'\aJC NOTICE

740-241 5334 We Nil

lhldget Priced Tr•nemlealont

$11.500.

. CIA' I 'A MCUOII · -

u..d
I

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

: : 48.000 Mlos. Ono Qwnor, Garage

PIMcNallce

a•

.,. lilrfolltd

llquldatad
upon .. lluro or
lllgheol blddor .
p11rform; otlltrwloo,
..... d•poOit will' .,.
applied 11 part
paymont 01 · the

,_..... pflce lOr ....

JNIIOilll proporty. No

lnteNII will .,. ...... Oft
the bid dejloolt.

T... blllonc.

or tht

. . _ ..aprlctbe pold In ful ~ CUll

or

Jri...,.VIniDn

Vacrlloolll

Jolnl

certlfl•d . or

oallllr'o cMcll wtlllln
tlllrtr (30) dayo

8chool Dlatrlct. 01 •
comblnatloll, Ill tho

amounl Of toll (10)
.,.,_ of lllo blciiMIO
prloo will .,. ,..,.....

-.

ot tho time of tho
public aucllon from

....

~

.........

-urlly for faithful
Jlllrformanca. Should

the bkt MMnpetcl by

.... Board, ... dtpoelt
. ortD~nt

wiH M

flPIII*I

to .... purcii8H pt1ot.
ADDITIONAL .
.DIIIIATION AND
CONDITIONS OF THE

SALE: Information
followlllg wrltton concerlllng
tho
notlflclllon ol tho luollon aole, and a
cop~
of
til•
~··
of
lilt
bid,ICCOPtlnco
Tho houao
"colldltlon•
of
lilt
· eentiot llo moved · oolo" In accorclanco
btforo the blllonco Ia
with and oubjoct .to
JlllkL
.
which 111 bldo ollall .,.
The buyer anumo1· mado,
m1y . bo
the ,.,.,...bUlly lncl
obttlnod
··
al th•
coet ol ..curing 1 ,.,._,.,.1 OlllcL
lloua moving firm to
(Telophont: 740-~5monlllo llouurrom 15334)
lllo tchool dlolrlct't
Tho houu lo op11n
properly.
for public vlawlng
Tht buyor muol
Monday through
move lho llouN from
Frlelay from 11:00 1.m.
tho tchool'o JWOJNrty to 3:00 p.m. II II
no liter than Jul~ 1,
roqueoltd that on
2001.
·C"F
appolntmlllt .,. mtc1e
Th1 buy..- 11 to
through
lho
aoaumo
the · Suporlntenclont'o
r.. ponolblllly of
Ollie=- (740) 241 1334. .
payment of lexeo, 11
Th• Board ol ·
any, on 11111 home.
Educotlon ·rooorvot
Th1
minimum
the right to rojoct ~ny
acctpt.ble bid muet
01 lllliklo.
cOvtr lhe coat of tht

"-·
H II lhl policy ollht

GaRII.JIIIIkoon-VInton
J o I nI
Vocttlonal

School Dlottlct thll
oduC'1tlon11 JWogroml
and Olhtr actlvlll.. be ·

.

Donalyft K. '"'""
Troauror,
11oarc1 or
EdUCIIIIIon

011111-.IICkton-VInton

JolnH"a•IIOIIIJ
School Dlatrlot

Aprll1, 2001

••

�a~
.qJ~~..

pI • •,

••

).

.
Suudlf, Aprt11, 2001,

II*(

-

He WOD nric:e in me 6nt year, we jun really got
.Earnhardt and Bobby
half of the 2000 season, but iDUDature about lhinp and Labonte
followed by
1tn1gsled in die second half we blew up in front of our Dale Jarrett's Ford at
and wound up losing Rook- crew memben and really 190.&lt;436 and the Chevys of
ie of the Year bonon to confused everybody,'~ he Bobby Hamilton and Steve
fip!e!eeclsecQ!ld ill the sea- Matt ~nseth.
said. "It was terrible. But Park- the third DEI enrry
son ~ ar Daytona _.!
Earnhardt admitred there we've really maintained this -at 190.208' andl-89.813,
.
die rau cbat claimed Dale was a burnout factor, hick- attitude this year that no respectively.
ering
between
him
and
his
nMter
what,
we
had
to,
The
'6rnhardt
team
had
l!amlwdt's life.,
" knew there were some · crew chief and confusion· worlt together and we've_ all three driven in the top
. pys a lirde bit quicur thaa within the· crew on his- No. got to make this happen." ' 10, with Waltrip seventh at
Earnhardt isn't the -only 189.235.
us in practice," laid Little E, 8 Dale Earnhardt Inc.
driver looking for a win . at
who bad the sixth-fasresr ·Chevrolet.
He ·hasn't finished any · the Texas Motor Speedway
time in the .morning practic:e round. "As it gOt cooler, better than 15th or started' to lift his spirits.
Laboiue, the defending
l peu the· melt got away higher than ninth since his
from everybody. But I'm father's death. Still. he said, Winston Cup champion and .
pretty happy and pretty sur- his crew's chemistry has the younger brother of 1999
continued to improve.
race winner Terry Laboitte,
prised. to be sitti9g here." .
" Me and the ream a.re is 19th in the standings after
Earnhardt's fellow driven
track
were' liappy for him as well. really working good togeth- seven races. He bas only one
baseball
"It's great to see Junior er, better than last year," he top-10 finish this season,
softball
get the pole, He does need a said. "We've got our can to after 24 in 34 starts in 2000.
tennis
"I've felt like a fish out of
boost," said Bobby Labonte, drive better. Maybe this
whose Pontiac will start on weekend 'will be the week- · water the last couple of
the outside of the front row . end we can go home happy weeks," Bobby Labonte said.
144q1
the
Sut1tlq
Tlmu-Set~tltlel
celebrate
a
victory
of
"This
was
a_
good
qualifying
and
after he drove .190.463 in
our own ."
·
effort.
·
qualifying.
446-ZJ4i
The
key,
he
said,
is
mote
"I'd
sure
like
to ·win this
His father's death came at
the start . of what the maturiry,on his part and on race because nrry has wpn
younger ~arnhardt, 26, had the part of his COI!sin and it and I'd like to be able to "
. say I did the sa~te_ thing he
hoped would be a strong cre:-v chief, Tony Eury Jr.
. "As the year went .on last did."
sophomore season.

were

Pomeroy •llldclrport • CWIIpolla. Ohio • Point Phnnt, WV

\o .......

C~ (~

Wonderful oppDI'IUnlll•- 8VIIIIeble.ln Tom
Peden cOuntry. We - ...,.ndlng our f8cllltiN•nd nMd rnotW uiM-pepple. No upertence I•
reqii~. only • wllllngneu to lum, work •• • .
tum, and hllw etrona lnltllltlve.

'

Exc•• • •ur ~.......,. PLNi
GMAT 8IIHVn'e (INCLUDING DteMo ,PRoGRAM)
WORK AT THE 11 DEALIMI•

CtJI Tg 'Gbtdu" An lnttMew;

Tom Peden Country
1 800 '2?o0417 •(304) 344-5847

.,..,wv·

•

POint
fiMPqll1
behind
. Parkersburg
South's Chris Spencer, wlio
earned the individual highpoints honor for the meet.
Spencer set a new ·meet
. record· In winning the 200meter with .a time of 22.91,
shaving .02 off his own
meet standard. He won the
100-merer- dash with a
11.36 and anchored South's
winning sprint relays.
The Patriots won every .
sprint relay, including the
sbutde hurdles and 1600meter relay.
After the two disap)ointing sprint relays, Point's
Justin Beckner came back to
take third in the 300-meter
hurdles with
time of
43.24, cutting a whole second off the time which won
the event for him at last
week's Early Bird Invitational'.' ·
·
·
· Also -placing third with a
pencinal-recorcl throw was
senior Eric Frye, who.
e~plo'ded ' for a 44-3 ton in
the shot put.
Justiar Carr placed sixth in
the discus wiih a tOll of
134-9.
Although they didn't
place, Cottrill found positives in the efforts of another pair of runners.
"Dale Smith-Levine was
very positive," said Cottrill.
"He took eight seconds off
his time.' Chris Miller took
some time off his two-mile."
Smith-Le.v.ine's progress
w'~s in the ·800-meter run.
Parkersburg won the girls '
meet with 109.5 ppints. The
Big Reds were followed by
Doddr.idge (101), · Martinsburg (92), and Parkersburg
South (66.5).
Parkersburg South cruised
to the boys tide with 163
point!. Ravens'VOod was a
distant second with 89. •
, Parl&amp;rsburg was third with .
64, followed by Martinsburg .

a

.........

llll2111

Ch1n11111

'28J5
'

Call Today 1·800·885·6767
..
•

Gcllll~Pf)ltfal

(740) 446-3672 .

.

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OARD···
BULLETIN
DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY ~46·2342 or 992·2155
Serenity House
. serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
.· 1-BOD-942·9577
'ANGEL ACCOUNTING
For Cor-npuar, Poor ••lonillndMdu.J
.

and

auaw- Tlx prepntlon

'

ASK US ABOUT
ELECTRONIC FlUNG
735. Second Ave.
448 sen·

An gal

.

'

Tree Trimming and Removal

Contact Eric Blackburn

446-2422

. . Auto Insurance
· Monthly Payments
'• with your driving
'
Problem•
r8QOI'd; DUI's .speeding
tlc~eta, etc.
Same Day SR-22's Issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency

I';==:;=:·

==~

'*'=
· ::
·1:;:
-

CHANNEL
MARKER

Firewood for sale

~

HUGE MOVING SALE

105 Ann Drive
Gallipolis ·
Furniture, new ladles
golf clubs, Home Interior,
crafts, toys
Friday- April 6 .
Saturday- April 7
1·5 only

ftwn.lapl1
SHEAR PLEASURE
HAIR &amp; TANbiiNG
.Most !;:st. r;towntowri

B(,ya Ba•btball

· J~nlor Hip Boya
Number- J.P. .1,indeman,
Nathan Bowman, Brody
Blankenship, Oliver Herdman;
Already lettered - Conrad
Buffinton, Andrew Holcomb,
Aaron Beaver, Kaleb Eldridge,
Luke
Stimon,
Richard
McCreedy, Bryce Taylor,
Lbgan Gary.
Others Chris TerraBlanche; Corey Kelley, Brandon Bartee.

.Eastern Avenue,
)

I

• '

'

- Call toll Free · _,, .
. l-80~~21-0084 ' . .

.

Pin Brad Bowman,
Adam Holcomb, Mike Jenks,
G~be]enkins, Dale Taylor.
Letter - jay Jellkins, John
Polcyn.
Others
· N;li't han
Williams, Amir Agrawal, S.cottie Frans, Nathan Bowman.

.

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ovcs
.

.

with 44.
.
Cabell-Midl:!.nd
High
The Big Blacks and Lady School next Saturday.
Kni~thts will compete in the
Carl Alters Invitational at

t
.I

walk-In ·salon
Proms are our SpeCialty
Sandy Dambrough · ·
owner/stylist
Missy Tackett -stylist

446·4442
'

. RACINE PIZZAS&gt;&lt;fiRESS
. 949-,4900 .
:
Spl'lng &amp; Summer
Hours10.10'M·Th ·
: ·10·11 Frl &amp;Sat
Cfoaed Sundays ·
Speclat.16" Deluxe $13.99
. 2 ·1_Er 31tem $21 .99
Delivery 10 am • 2 pm
· 4 pin • closing
effective April 2

..

-

CONDOS

Green Elementary .
Baseball Slgn•up
Tuesday, April ,3rd
6:30 pm til 8:30 pm

GALUA COUNTY

740-245·&amp;597

HISfORICALAND
' '
GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
•

Rio Grande Baeball Aaloclallon
. will be having ilgn•ups
Tues. April 3 IIWI5:30 • 7:00 pm
Meeting trrimedllttly after
· lign·uput 7:00 pm
EvtfYOI'II wtlcome

.65 and Over

Information ...

'

..

Scent Candles .

&amp; Balloons

.

said. "We've got a great team here. If we stay healthy, play hard . The bullpen is a bit suspect in the middle innings, esp~cially •
inside the lines ana stay consistent, we'll win a Jot.This team has if Steve .Karsay stays in the rotation. Closer Bob Wickman is
everything, speed, power, smart playen. everything."
solid and Cleveland's Gold Glove infield - t~e India~ ma~ .
And; for once, pitching. .
27 fewer erron than any other AL team .- will make Jt easJer
~ season, injuries foreed the Indians ro_use a maj~r league to get 27 .outs.
. .
.
record 32 pitchen. This year, they're counting on !herr Top 3:
Apparendy, som~ Cleve~nd f~ns ha~e therr doubts, adoptmg \..
Bartolo Colon, Chuck Finley and Dave Bu,rba ro carry the a w:ut-and-see atlltude With thiS years club. For the first llme
load.
'
.
in five seasons, the entire ho~son at Jacobs Field was not
The trio won 47 ga~es a year ago and .could improveLon that sold out before opening day.
if Colon (1 S-8 in 2000) fulfills his potetn:ial· and becom'l5 a • October is no longer a birthright.
•
bonafide No. 1.
·
,
"The one thing we learned last year," said Thome, " is that
Rookies C .C.Sabathia and Tim Drew could be factors in the every game in April means as much as ·every game in Septemrotation while right-banders Jaret Wright and Charles Nagy ber."
'
continue their comebacks foUowing surgery.
· , .,

•

;·;·~--------~~------------------~-----,
PREP. SOFTBALL

!,;.Late rally gives_.Belpre

. 4 Mill Cr:eeli Rei. Ga!llpolls 1',
4413-9271
. ' .•
a Dellver·Stop·ln &amp;.ask•about ·

!;

:win over Southern·, 19-5

I '

,

I

':' ·,I

WE ARE TRYING
•SOMETHING NEW PLeAse·
PLAN TO ATTEND OUR
FIRST ,
Evening Senior Dinner
Mon., Apl'll2, 1001, 6:00,pm
fOr all those sq and over .. ·
Requested raserva~9n by: ·

I .

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'

m

April 3, 2001
Npminatio!'l of
officers.

'.

~

.

a Harris walk am~ Adams
• I
OVP CORRESPONDENT
double in the second, then
!· •R:ACIN~ ....:. For three Chapman s_at down . the
:· innings it was a·close game, side 1-2-3· in the third
: but the flood gates opened inning. Southern had the
:: in the fourth inning as makings of a good rally in
: defending s~ctional cham- the third with two runners
i1 : pion Belpre rolled to a 19- on and oo out 1 but a non:· 5 win over the host South- chalant baserl!nning mis( ern Tornadoes at Star Mill rake killed . the l'lllly and
; · Parlt.
resulted in I double play.
;
Belpre (2-0) took the
In the faurth jnning,
:: lead .in the fi.rst inning · Belpre then erupted for six
;. when a hit batter, ail error runs and a 10-3 lead, fol; ' and a · walk loaded the lowing th~t up with a
•',:bases.
Southern starter. nine-run fifth inning.
:· Rachel Chapman walked
Southern plated single
.: another for the games fi~st runs in the· fourth and fifth
: , run, then a three-run error \ftd Pullins and Chapman
:, right through the short· each stole home. The final
:: , stopls legs gave Belpre a 4- ended at 1~-5.
:. : 0 advantag~:,
.
,
Chapman walked ten
; ! Chapman came back to and gave up . three hits,
:. ! strikeout1 the next batter while Barnts came on in
;: · and get a flyoui to end the reliec' to walk six and give
" inning.
'•
up . three htts .
Belpre
:: • Behind four walks and scored several runs in the
an error, Southern plated top . of the ' sixth 'but the
• three runs in the bottom runs were negated as the
!,, half. the inning. _Briget~e garhe was called because of
; Barnes, Tammy Fryar, Ka~e darkness. . '
. , ,
',
Sayre and Macy!l_ Er~m
Petty was the ~~~~nmg
1
::: each -wal·k ed ~d Deana pitcher for Belpre wrtli five
::' Pullins reached on, an strikeouts and seven wall!.s . .
;\ error, the \core 4-3.
..
.soutb,rn hom Water- ·
;1•.. Belpre plared,on~ run o-n ·rord on Monday. .

BY SOon WciLFI

!

. .··

'•

...

_________ ___

....;,

l\1 .

~ ·For More · ·

·' · 446-2342
or.992-2156 ·
.
\

,"

Get your Breathing Medication; ...__ _ _ _ _.,.....,.....____.
Albuterol, Atrovent, paid by
Insurance. Free Delivery

BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
446-7283
.'' 1'·800-458-6844 '

J.

IHt

'i===::;;;:;:;:::;:;:==::;

companto.n.

.

. '

North Myrtle Beach
~:oopm ,
Sleeps , fully furnished, near
0811 446·7000
restaurant row. Openings from
$3.00 cost for dinner ,
May thru Sept.
·
Baked
Steak, Baked Potato,
' 448-2208Mon thru Fri.
Green Beans Cole Slaw, Rolla,
Evenings &amp; weekends
Fruit .Pie, Ice Cream
·
Entertainment and Door Prizes
Senior Fjesource Center ·
· . GIVEAWAY .
Young 12 yr old female poodle,
1167 State Route 160 · ..
have. been orphan8d: I need a ':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::~
good home with no children or r
·
.
dogs. Excellent health. Would
VFW.Post 4464 ·
maJ&lt;e someOne a good IOvi!1g
. Meeting 7:30 'p•

-1-funtlng Safety Class
April7 &amp;8
·· Noon till 5:00
To register call
· No~n Sa1.1nders
446-4612

New Location
4.12 S&amp;cond Ave.
New Hours
.Monday 1 pm til 7 p{Tl
Tuesday thru Friday
10 am tll4 Pm .
Sunday .10 am tll1 pm

Hea~nly

'· ,

part

of their season-long 100th
~ celebrauon, the Cleveland Indians have a variety of
special eveniS and promotions planned.
They'll hand out posten, refrigerator magnets, bobble-head
dolls and other giveaways.
The AL Central isn't one of them....
Amr dominating the division by winning five straight tide$
from 1995-1999, the Indians finished second last season five
games behind the Chicago White Sox.
.
'
Worse yet. after ~oming a mountain of injuries, Oeveland p~ better than :ptynne in the league folloMng the AllStar bre.aL They won dme more games than the New York
YaJ1,1tees but still came up 'One·game short in the wild-card race
and missed the postseason for the first time in six years.
Winter came earlier than UJual. The Indians are deterinined
not to 1et it happen again.
'
.
"I couldn't even watch the playoffs I was so bummed out;'
said first baseman Jim Thome. "Maybe it was gOod not to go.
Because now the hunger is back. I think e~ryone here understands what's needed for us ro get back there."
, Attitude isn't the only change in the Indians as they enter
their centennial season in -the AL. There are new faces in the
.
lineup, starting rotation and bullpen. ,
And for the fint time in years, the Indians aren't taking anyJhing for gral)red.
: ..... do think not being in the playoffs last ·year will help us;'
&gt;iaid general manager John Hart. "There is a quiet determina'uon. In rhe put, we really cjidn't think anyone in the division
•could push us..But those days are ov~r. and our guys know it.~.'
•:. Manny Ramirez is no longer one of the guys, and neither i$
;htcher Sandy Alomar. 'I\vo of the steadiest and most· popular
'lndians left via nee agency - Ramirez to Boston, Alomar to
illh~:White Sox - during the off-ieason. '.
f. 1b olliet Ramirez's loss, the Indians signed Ellis Burks to a
::wee-year, $20 million contract and..picked up fo~r two. ::iime AL MVP JuaJI Gonzalez for one year at S10 million. Eddie
:l'aubensee was acquired as a backup Cor Einar Diaz, who now
;;replaces Alomar as the .Indians' full-time catcher.
,
.
: Gonzalez, a .344 career hitter at Jacobs Field; gives the lndi·::ans a presence in the lineup and a team capable of detl;!roning
:the Yank.!es.
'.
.
'
:: '1~.is a force," New York manager Joe Torre said. "If you're
P,ing to get one player to replace Manny, Juan's a good choice."
• So far, Burks has been one, too.
.
: In just one month, Burks has made quite an impression on his
~ew teammates With his professionalism and leadenhip quali::ries. The Indians plan to play him in the outfield as often as his
. ;:tender knees -.- he's had surgery on both- will permit.
~ "I'm excited about -seeing this team play," said BurkS, who
~arted .344 with 24 homers and 96 RBls for the Giants last,sea;)on and will DH when not in th.e Indians' outfield. "I'm aln:ac!Y
:r nvisioning us doing some big things."
.- . .
, · Gonzalez could ·be the key.
: · Happy and healthy following a disastrous season in Detroit,
i;Gonzalez v.:as the qnly player in the rnajon to match Ramir:ez's
:Offensive production the past six seasons.
:. He'D take over Ramirez's cleanup spot and will play right and
; eft field. . , . . . . .... •f""'- -·.. ... • •
.... 1
__,·; . , • ., .. ~
~~ "I know Juan;• said (ionzalez's good friend, Indians second
;baseman' Roberto Alomar, who helped· convince Hart that
lPonzalez \VaS worth -the risk. "You watch, he's going to have_;~
· 1}iuge season. He could get 170 ~Is."
·
'
' Gonzalez never ~t comfortable with ·me Tigers and his stats
~22 homers, 6.7 RBlsfpl';'mmeted. Comerica Park dii:ln't fifhis
~wing · and he had trouble adjusting to a new team, a new· city
::~ nd something else - losing.
·
;;~ "It's tough when you go from a winning team like we had in
::rexas and. then Heam that's struggling like Detroit," GonZalez
'_As

'

~·~
·

...,,
~~~

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446-2342

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••nbp W:iliiH -6fntind • Page 87

new century

t

"'"''"w

Cl

'

Indians

'

BASEBALL 20.01

•

·'·)

. The re~on's best
coverage of prep sp6rts

...

&gt;

'·
"

�a~
.qJ~~..

pI • •,

••

).

.
Suudlf, Aprt11, 2001,

II*(

-

He WOD nric:e in me 6nt year, we jun really got
.Earnhardt and Bobby
half of the 2000 season, but iDUDature about lhinp and Labonte
followed by
1tn1gsled in die second half we blew up in front of our Dale Jarrett's Ford at
and wound up losing Rook- crew memben and really 190.&lt;436 and the Chevys of
ie of the Year bonon to confused everybody,'~ he Bobby Hamilton and Steve
fip!e!eeclsecQ!ld ill the sea- Matt ~nseth.
said. "It was terrible. But Park- the third DEI enrry
son ~ ar Daytona _.!
Earnhardt admitred there we've really maintained this -at 190.208' andl-89.813,
.
die rau cbat claimed Dale was a burnout factor, hick- attitude this year that no respectively.
ering
between
him
and
his
nMter
what,
we
had
to,
The
'6rnhardt
team
had
l!amlwdt's life.,
" knew there were some · crew chief and confusion· worlt together and we've_ all three driven in the top
. pys a lirde bit quicur thaa within the· crew on his- No. got to make this happen." ' 10, with Waltrip seventh at
Earnhardt isn't the -only 189.235.
us in practice," laid Little E, 8 Dale Earnhardt Inc.
driver looking for a win . at
who bad the sixth-fasresr ·Chevrolet.
He ·hasn't finished any · the Texas Motor Speedway
time in the .morning practic:e round. "As it gOt cooler, better than 15th or started' to lift his spirits.
Laboiue, the defending
l peu the· melt got away higher than ninth since his
from everybody. But I'm father's death. Still. he said, Winston Cup champion and .
pretty happy and pretty sur- his crew's chemistry has the younger brother of 1999
continued to improve.
race winner Terry Laboitte,
prised. to be sitti9g here." .
" Me and the ream a.re is 19th in the standings after
Earnhardt's fellow driven
track
were' liappy for him as well. really working good togeth- seven races. He bas only one
baseball
"It's great to see Junior er, better than last year," he top-10 finish this season,
softball
get the pole, He does need a said. "We've got our can to after 24 in 34 starts in 2000.
tennis
"I've felt like a fish out of
boost," said Bobby Labonte, drive better. Maybe this
whose Pontiac will start on weekend 'will be the week- · water the last couple of
the outside of the front row . end we can go home happy weeks," Bobby Labonte said.
144q1
the
Sut1tlq
Tlmu-Set~tltlel
celebrate
a
victory
of
"This
was
a_
good
qualifying
and
after he drove .190.463 in
our own ."
·
effort.
·
qualifying.
446-ZJ4i
The
key,
he
said,
is
mote
"I'd
sure
like
to ·win this
His father's death came at
the start . of what the maturiry,on his part and on race because nrry has wpn
younger ~arnhardt, 26, had the part of his COI!sin and it and I'd like to be able to "
. say I did the sa~te_ thing he
hoped would be a strong cre:-v chief, Tony Eury Jr.
. "As the year went .on last did."
sophomore season.

were

Pomeroy •llldclrport • CWIIpolla. Ohio • Point Phnnt, WV

\o .......

C~ (~

Wonderful oppDI'IUnlll•- 8VIIIIeble.ln Tom
Peden cOuntry. We - ...,.ndlng our f8cllltiN•nd nMd rnotW uiM-pepple. No upertence I•
reqii~. only • wllllngneu to lum, work •• • .
tum, and hllw etrona lnltllltlve.

'

Exc•• • •ur ~.......,. PLNi
GMAT 8IIHVn'e (INCLUDING DteMo ,PRoGRAM)
WORK AT THE 11 DEALIMI•

CtJI Tg 'Gbtdu" An lnttMew;

Tom Peden Country
1 800 '2?o0417 •(304) 344-5847

.,..,wv·

•

POint
fiMPqll1
behind
. Parkersburg
South's Chris Spencer, wlio
earned the individual highpoints honor for the meet.
Spencer set a new ·meet
. record· In winning the 200meter with .a time of 22.91,
shaving .02 off his own
meet standard. He won the
100-merer- dash with a
11.36 and anchored South's
winning sprint relays.
The Patriots won every .
sprint relay, including the
sbutde hurdles and 1600meter relay.
After the two disap)ointing sprint relays, Point's
Justin Beckner came back to
take third in the 300-meter
hurdles with
time of
43.24, cutting a whole second off the time which won
the event for him at last
week's Early Bird Invitational'.' ·
·
·
· Also -placing third with a
pencinal-recorcl throw was
senior Eric Frye, who.
e~plo'ded ' for a 44-3 ton in
the shot put.
Justiar Carr placed sixth in
the discus wiih a tOll of
134-9.
Although they didn't
place, Cottrill found positives in the efforts of another pair of runners.
"Dale Smith-Levine was
very positive," said Cottrill.
"He took eight seconds off
his time.' Chris Miller took
some time off his two-mile."
Smith-Le.v.ine's progress
w'~s in the ·800-meter run.
Parkersburg won the girls '
meet with 109.5 ppints. The
Big Reds were followed by
Doddr.idge (101), · Martinsburg (92), and Parkersburg
South (66.5).
Parkersburg South cruised
to the boys tide with 163
point!. Ravens'VOod was a
distant second with 89. •
, Parl&amp;rsburg was third with .
64, followed by Martinsburg .

a

.........

llll2111

Ch1n11111

'28J5
'

Call Today 1·800·885·6767
..
•

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(740) 446-3672 .

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OARD···
BULLETIN
DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY ~46·2342 or 992·2155
Serenity House
. serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
.· 1-BOD-942·9577
'ANGEL ACCOUNTING
For Cor-npuar, Poor ••lonillndMdu.J
.

and

auaw- Tlx prepntlon

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ASK US ABOUT
ELECTRONIC FlUNG
735. Second Ave.
448 sen·

An gal

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Tree Trimming and Removal

Contact Eric Blackburn

446-2422

. . Auto Insurance
· Monthly Payments
'• with your driving
'
Problem•
r8QOI'd; DUI's .speeding
tlc~eta, etc.
Same Day SR-22's Issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency

I';==:;=:·

==~

'*'=
· ::
·1:;:
-

CHANNEL
MARKER

Firewood for sale

~

HUGE MOVING SALE

105 Ann Drive
Gallipolis ·
Furniture, new ladles
golf clubs, Home Interior,
crafts, toys
Friday- April 6 .
Saturday- April 7
1·5 only

ftwn.lapl1
SHEAR PLEASURE
HAIR &amp; TANbiiNG
.Most !;:st. r;towntowri

B(,ya Ba•btball

· J~nlor Hip Boya
Number- J.P. .1,indeman,
Nathan Bowman, Brody
Blankenship, Oliver Herdman;
Already lettered - Conrad
Buffinton, Andrew Holcomb,
Aaron Beaver, Kaleb Eldridge,
Luke
Stimon,
Richard
McCreedy, Bryce Taylor,
Lbgan Gary.
Others Chris TerraBlanche; Corey Kelley, Brandon Bartee.

.Eastern Avenue,
)

I

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- Call toll Free · _,, .
. l-80~~21-0084 ' . .

.

Pin Brad Bowman,
Adam Holcomb, Mike Jenks,
G~be]enkins, Dale Taylor.
Letter - jay Jellkins, John
Polcyn.
Others
· N;li't han
Williams, Amir Agrawal, S.cottie Frans, Nathan Bowman.

.

'

ovcs
.

.

with 44.
.
Cabell-Midl:!.nd
High
The Big Blacks and Lady School next Saturday.
Kni~thts will compete in the
Carl Alters Invitational at

t
.I

walk-In ·salon
Proms are our SpeCialty
Sandy Dambrough · ·
owner/stylist
Missy Tackett -stylist

446·4442
'

. RACINE PIZZAS&gt;&lt;fiRESS
. 949-,4900 .
:
Spl'lng &amp; Summer
Hours10.10'M·Th ·
: ·10·11 Frl &amp;Sat
Cfoaed Sundays ·
Speclat.16" Deluxe $13.99
. 2 ·1_Er 31tem $21 .99
Delivery 10 am • 2 pm
· 4 pin • closing
effective April 2

..

-

CONDOS

Green Elementary .
Baseball Slgn•up
Tuesday, April ,3rd
6:30 pm til 8:30 pm

GALUA COUNTY

740-245·&amp;597

HISfORICALAND
' '
GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
•

Rio Grande Baeball Aaloclallon
. will be having ilgn•ups
Tues. April 3 IIWI5:30 • 7:00 pm
Meeting trrimedllttly after
· lign·uput 7:00 pm
EvtfYOI'II wtlcome

.65 and Over

Information ...

'

..

Scent Candles .

&amp; Balloons

.

said. "We've got a great team here. If we stay healthy, play hard . The bullpen is a bit suspect in the middle innings, esp~cially •
inside the lines ana stay consistent, we'll win a Jot.This team has if Steve .Karsay stays in the rotation. Closer Bob Wickman is
everything, speed, power, smart playen. everything."
solid and Cleveland's Gold Glove infield - t~e India~ ma~ .
And; for once, pitching. .
27 fewer erron than any other AL team .- will make Jt easJer
~ season, injuries foreed the Indians ro_use a maj~r league to get 27 .outs.
. .
.
record 32 pitchen. This year, they're counting on !herr Top 3:
Apparendy, som~ Cleve~nd f~ns ha~e therr doubts, adoptmg \..
Bartolo Colon, Chuck Finley and Dave Bu,rba ro carry the a w:ut-and-see atlltude With thiS years club. For the first llme
load.
'
.
in five seasons, the entire ho~son at Jacobs Field was not
The trio won 47 ga~es a year ago and .could improveLon that sold out before opening day.
if Colon (1 S-8 in 2000) fulfills his potetn:ial· and becom'l5 a • October is no longer a birthright.
•
bonafide No. 1.
·
,
"The one thing we learned last year," said Thome, " is that
Rookies C .C.Sabathia and Tim Drew could be factors in the every game in April means as much as ·every game in Septemrotation while right-banders Jaret Wright and Charles Nagy ber."
'
continue their comebacks foUowing surgery.
· , .,

•

;·;·~--------~~------------------~-----,
PREP. SOFTBALL

!,;.Late rally gives_.Belpre

. 4 Mill Cr:eeli Rei. Ga!llpolls 1',
4413-9271
. ' .•
a Dellver·Stop·ln &amp;.ask•about ·

!;

:win over Southern·, 19-5

I '

,

I

':' ·,I

WE ARE TRYING
•SOMETHING NEW PLeAse·
PLAN TO ATTEND OUR
FIRST ,
Evening Senior Dinner
Mon., Apl'll2, 1001, 6:00,pm
fOr all those sq and over .. ·
Requested raserva~9n by: ·

I .

.

'

'

m

April 3, 2001
Npminatio!'l of
officers.

'.

~

.

a Harris walk am~ Adams
• I
OVP CORRESPONDENT
double in the second, then
!· •R:ACIN~ ....:. For three Chapman s_at down . the
:· innings it was a·close game, side 1-2-3· in the third
: but the flood gates opened inning. Southern had the
:: in the fourth inning as makings of a good rally in
: defending s~ctional cham- the third with two runners
i1 : pion Belpre rolled to a 19- on and oo out 1 but a non:· 5 win over the host South- chalant baserl!nning mis( ern Tornadoes at Star Mill rake killed . the l'lllly and
; · Parlt.
resulted in I double play.
;
Belpre (2-0) took the
In the faurth jnning,
:: lead .in the fi.rst inning · Belpre then erupted for six
;. when a hit batter, ail error runs and a 10-3 lead, fol; ' and a · walk loaded the lowing th~t up with a
•',:bases.
Southern starter. nine-run fifth inning.
:· Rachel Chapman walked
Southern plated single
.: another for the games fi~st runs in the· fourth and fifth
: , run, then a three-run error \ftd Pullins and Chapman
:, right through the short· each stole home. The final
:: , stopls legs gave Belpre a 4- ended at 1~-5.
:. : 0 advantag~:,
.
,
Chapman walked ten
; ! Chapman came back to and gave up . three hits,
:. ! strikeout1 the next batter while Barnts came on in
;: · and get a flyoui to end the reliec' to walk six and give
" inning.
'•
up . three htts .
Belpre
:: • Behind four walks and scored several runs in the
an error, Southern plated top . of the ' sixth 'but the
• three runs in the bottom runs were negated as the
!,, half. the inning. _Briget~e garhe was called because of
; Barnes, Tammy Fryar, Ka~e darkness. . '
. , ,
',
Sayre and Macy!l_ Er~m
Petty was the ~~~~nmg
1
::: each -wal·k ed ~d Deana pitcher for Belpre wrtli five
::' Pullins reached on, an strikeouts and seven wall!.s . .
;\ error, the \core 4-3.
..
.soutb,rn hom Water- ·
;1•.. Belpre plared,on~ run o-n ·rord on Monday. .

BY SOon WciLFI

!

. .··

'•

...

_________ ___

....;,

l\1 .

~ ·For More · ·

·' · 446-2342
or.992-2156 ·
.
\

,"

Get your Breathing Medication; ...__ _ _ _ _.,.....,.....____.
Albuterol, Atrovent, paid by
Insurance. Free Delivery

BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
446-7283
.'' 1'·800-458-6844 '

J.

IHt

'i===::;;;:;:;:::;:;:==::;

companto.n.

.

. '

North Myrtle Beach
~:oopm ,
Sleeps , fully furnished, near
0811 446·7000
restaurant row. Openings from
$3.00 cost for dinner ,
May thru Sept.
·
Baked
Steak, Baked Potato,
' 448-2208Mon thru Fri.
Green Beans Cole Slaw, Rolla,
Evenings &amp; weekends
Fruit .Pie, Ice Cream
·
Entertainment and Door Prizes
Senior Fjesource Center ·
· . GIVEAWAY .
Young 12 yr old female poodle,
1167 State Route 160 · ..
have. been orphan8d: I need a ':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::~
good home with no children or r
·
.
dogs. Excellent health. Would
VFW.Post 4464 ·
maJ&lt;e someOne a good IOvi!1g
. Meeting 7:30 'p•

-1-funtlng Safety Class
April7 &amp;8
·· Noon till 5:00
To register call
· No~n Sa1.1nders
446-4612

New Location
4.12 S&amp;cond Ave.
New Hours
.Monday 1 pm til 7 p{Tl
Tuesday thru Friday
10 am tll4 Pm .
Sunday .10 am tll1 pm

Hea~nly

'· ,

part

of their season-long 100th
~ celebrauon, the Cleveland Indians have a variety of
special eveniS and promotions planned.
They'll hand out posten, refrigerator magnets, bobble-head
dolls and other giveaways.
The AL Central isn't one of them....
Amr dominating the division by winning five straight tide$
from 1995-1999, the Indians finished second last season five
games behind the Chicago White Sox.
.
'
Worse yet. after ~oming a mountain of injuries, Oeveland p~ better than :ptynne in the league folloMng the AllStar bre.aL They won dme more games than the New York
YaJ1,1tees but still came up 'One·game short in the wild-card race
and missed the postseason for the first time in six years.
Winter came earlier than UJual. The Indians are deterinined
not to 1et it happen again.
'
.
"I couldn't even watch the playoffs I was so bummed out;'
said first baseman Jim Thome. "Maybe it was gOod not to go.
Because now the hunger is back. I think e~ryone here understands what's needed for us ro get back there."
, Attitude isn't the only change in the Indians as they enter
their centennial season in -the AL. There are new faces in the
.
lineup, starting rotation and bullpen. ,
And for the fint time in years, the Indians aren't taking anyJhing for gral)red.
: ..... do think not being in the playoffs last ·year will help us;'
&gt;iaid general manager John Hart. "There is a quiet determina'uon. In rhe put, we really cjidn't think anyone in the division
•could push us..But those days are ov~r. and our guys know it.~.'
•:. Manny Ramirez is no longer one of the guys, and neither i$
;htcher Sandy Alomar. 'I\vo of the steadiest and most· popular
'lndians left via nee agency - Ramirez to Boston, Alomar to
illh~:White Sox - during the off-ieason. '.
f. 1b olliet Ramirez's loss, the Indians signed Ellis Burks to a
::wee-year, $20 million contract and..picked up fo~r two. ::iime AL MVP JuaJI Gonzalez for one year at S10 million. Eddie
:l'aubensee was acquired as a backup Cor Einar Diaz, who now
;;replaces Alomar as the .Indians' full-time catcher.
,
.
: Gonzalez, a .344 career hitter at Jacobs Field; gives the lndi·::ans a presence in the lineup and a team capable of detl;!roning
:the Yank.!es.
'.
.
'
:: '1~.is a force," New York manager Joe Torre said. "If you're
P,ing to get one player to replace Manny, Juan's a good choice."
• So far, Burks has been one, too.
.
: In just one month, Burks has made quite an impression on his
~ew teammates With his professionalism and leadenhip quali::ries. The Indians plan to play him in the outfield as often as his
. ;:tender knees -.- he's had surgery on both- will permit.
~ "I'm excited about -seeing this team play," said BurkS, who
~arted .344 with 24 homers and 96 RBls for the Giants last,sea;)on and will DH when not in th.e Indians' outfield. "I'm aln:ac!Y
:r nvisioning us doing some big things."
.- . .
, · Gonzalez could ·be the key.
: · Happy and healthy following a disastrous season in Detroit,
i;Gonzalez v.:as the qnly player in the rnajon to match Ramir:ez's
:Offensive production the past six seasons.
:. He'D take over Ramirez's cleanup spot and will play right and
; eft field. . , . . . . .... •f""'- -·.. ... • •
.... 1
__,·; . , • ., .. ~
~~ "I know Juan;• said (ionzalez's good friend, Indians second
;baseman' Roberto Alomar, who helped· convince Hart that
lPonzalez \VaS worth -the risk. "You watch, he's going to have_;~
· 1}iuge season. He could get 170 ~Is."
·
'
' Gonzalez never ~t comfortable with ·me Tigers and his stats
~22 homers, 6.7 RBlsfpl';'mmeted. Comerica Park dii:ln't fifhis
~wing · and he had trouble adjusting to a new team, a new· city
::~ nd something else - losing.
·
;;~ "It's tough when you go from a winning team like we had in
::rexas and. then Heam that's struggling like Detroit," GonZalez
'_As

'

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SindiJ. Afrll. ~
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·Anglers should·see succe~s during-this years. Wall~ye - ~uri
BY LAURA JotEs

•

OHIO ONR

Annual riwr event a prelude to
spring and summer'fishing season
&amp; temperatures increase over the
'.

next two ~celtS, thousands of fishermen wiU again visit the Maumee and
Sandwky river shores participating in
the annual "Walleye Run." Cons~d- ·
ered by many to be the best fishmg
event of the year, the walleye run is
expected to be in full swing the first
week of Apr'il, when schools of walleye swim up L.ke Erie's tributaries to
spawn in rivers where their lives
began.
. "I look for April 5-15 to be the
peak spawning period in the. Sandusky and Maumee rivers," said
Doug johnson, an aquatic biologist
with the Ohio Depart":'ent of Natur-

al Resources (ODNR), Division of are still in the riven feeding before
Wildlife. · "With air temperatures moving back. to Lake Erie.
expected to reach the 50s and 60s
According to Johnson, walleye
soon, spawning w.illeyes will move caught along riven wiU nor affect the
from deep ri~ pools into \y.lrttler big lake's walleye population because
riffies upstream.•
only a very small percentage of w.illThe ODNR Division .of Wildlife eye are harvested during that time
says this year's ~leye run should period.
•
please anglers, ,as long as Mother
Anglen generally favor using 1/4
Nature copperates. tvtost walleyes will ounce lead-head jigs tipped with
be 16 to 20 inches in length, though white, yellow _or florescent-colored
anglers can expect to see a number of ·twister tails. Increasingly popular are
22 to 26-inch fish . In past years, some floating jigs located 10 to 18· inches
streamside angln-s.have caught wall- above a 1/4 to - 3/4 ounce barrel
eye as large as 14 poupds.
• sinker.
\(?eak spawning . tia~itionally occurs · During this spring ritual, most fishwhen water temperatures reach the ing occurs from shore or by wading
46 to 48 degree range, usually into the stream, though small boats
between the first and s.cond week of are sometimes used. The Ohio
April. Aft'Cr May 1, spawning activity Department of Nat\]ral Resources
gradually tapers off, though many fish urges those fishing to be very cautious

the art Of
tying flY-fishing ~it
CHARLESTON - David trout are not too picky about
Walls walked into class towing their food selection, trout
a dolly filled with stuffed \&gt;ags. native to West Virginia can be
As people milled around the extremely finicky eaten . .
"Even though native trout
classroom at Capital Commu'nity Education Center in have a brain about the size of
Charleston, Walls unloaded a pencil eraser, they pass on
:bags of feathers, boxes ~f their genetics to their offbeads, an assortment of thread spring. No water quality is the.
spanning the color spectrum same, so insects chang!' colon
of the rainbow, a boggling from stream to stream and the
range of hooks, squirrel tails, native trout know what insects
plastic bags brimming with are in their ~~ails said
deer and ·rabbit hair - and a to explain why a wide selecdizzying array of yarn, floss, ·tion of styles, colors and sizes
Che~nd lead wire.
. of flies are needed for fishing.
Walls objective is not to
To fool the fish, flies are tied.
confuse, but to clarify. Walls, from an amazing variety of
who is from Saint Albans, materials liO)ited only by the .
teachel the practice a11d art of imagination. Feathers from
tying flies for fly-fishing.
pheasants, peacocks, ducks,
"It's like building a model as turkeys and grouse .are all
a kid, said Walls, a member of called for in different fly
the Kanawha Chapter oiTrout recipes. Hair from -deer, elk,
Unlimited and self-taught fly caribou, muskrats and beavers
tier. "You build- one_basic' fly are all useful fly-tying m~teriand work forward."
als.
,
Flies realistic:illy, or impresAlong with cultivating
sionistically, mimic the natural friendships with hl,.lnters to.
food source of trout and other gain fly-tying materials, Walls
fish. These foods range from suggest. looking around·' the
the underwater larval stage of house as- well: Old coats, fur
insects such as nymphs and liners in old hats, yarn and
hellgrammites that live around even fuzz from· the carper can
,
tocks to die transitional phase be used to make ·classic and
of the insects life as it moves unique flies.
to the"!!lrface beds its shell,
Certain hackle capes, from
and prepareS to fly: Files also specially raised roosters, are
mimic Insects about to leave worth the extra money spent
the· suri'ace of the water to fly on them, according ro Walls.
away. ;bther food sources Poore( quality hackle feathers
"
. wpied by flies are minnows, will not produce as many flies
., . , "·sculpins, bull , heads, grasshop- or the quality of fly that the
pers, crickets, beedes, frog; and ·more expe'nsive hackles can··
mice in a nearly endless vari- help create.
ety of shapes and sizes.
People can · get sfartesJ fly
"There is something about tying by themselves with help
making your own fly ·and then from the volumes of books,
catching a fish with it, your videos and Web sires available.
heart just starts going," said· The basic tools needed for fly '
Walls who has been tying tying are vise to hold the
since 1994 and reaching class- hook, a pair of small quality
es since 1998.
scissors, ,bobbin to hold the
"'&lt;" Walls explains that by learn~ thread, glu'e, a thin needle-like
mg the basic flies and skills bodkin and hackle pliers to
needed to tie flies for trout hold feathers. Ay tying kits,
fis~ing, you can then adapt the ·complete with materials, .are
techniques and tie flies to available from most fishing
0
cover any type of fishing from and fly-fishing suppliers.
\
spring-fed stream trout fishing • Walls . recomm~nds t?at
"---to bass and saltwater fishing.
people .mte_rested m learmng .
Fly tying is a natural pro- to ne lites etther take a class or
· gression for people who start l~arn from an expenenced fly
fly-fishing. Collecting a solid tter to see firsthand how
·selection 0~ flies _to fill your matenals are add~d to the
vest and to meet changing hook; the thread ts wrapp~d
fis'liing conditions, anil ·moods and what knots are esse?ttal to
.offish, can put a dent in the ke_ep a fly together tn the
.
pocket booj. Commercially wmd and water.
tied flies range in price from
Walls stres~es the tmporabout $1.25 to flies worthy of t~nce qualtty '':'stead ?f qua~­
framing that cost $15 or more. tu:y. Often, b~gtnnen tmmediAfter the initial expense of ate reac~on IS t~ try I'D ·tte ~s
buying the materials and tools many flies as qutckly as posst~
fl
·
ble to fill up thetr fly boxes.
h ld
l)eeded .or y tymg, 11tes can p 1 . d 11 be tied for about 30 cents oor y tte tes w~11 not o
each. Walls explains th-at 'with up under the Stram of bet':'g
f b
cast and repeatedly1 dunked
· 't'al
an 1m 1 expense o a out h ·
· 10
1et a one bemg
·
k
b
t
e
water,
Sl36 ,a fl yaercanma ea out
k db
fi h
.,p S525 wort h o ffl"1es.
attac e y a IS ·.
~
" I'm tired of buying fli es,"
begi nnin g fly tier Chad
Brown says. "I iake pride in
making something myself."
Jason Butler is dra,vn to fly
tying by ' the money he can
save ·and to meet the conditions he faces on the stream
fishing for trout.
"You want to have every
size and every color. of fly
when you get out on the
stream. It's frustrating when
you dQn't have what you, arid
the fish, want," Buder said. Walls 1ays that while stocked

If so, fax your

•

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•

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•
when wading in water, as water levels yean, with thousands of lngten dotin both riven are often high in the ring the river shores " said Johnsoti.
spring and can be dangerous.
"In fact, it's not uncommon to ~
Additionally; anglers should note cars in parlting lots 6om aU across
changes dfective this year for the Mid-.t. •
daily limit of walleye on Lake Erie
In addition to great fisliing, tljs
and iu tributaries. Berween March 1 highly anticipated annual .,Vent p19-•
and April 30 the daily bag limit is four vides anglers some added bonuses: an
and after that date,' anglers can harvest opportunity to view some of Ohio's
up to six walleye a day.
beautiful scenery; abundant wildlif¢,
Remember, too, snllgging is illegal and the chance to make some new
meaping only fish hooked in the fishing b.uddies.
mouth may be kept. Fishing on the
Current information on the w.illeye
rivers ·must be done during daylight run is available ·by calling 1-800hours, and those fishing 'are prohibit- BUCKEYE or
ed from using more than one hook.
i -8!18-HOOKFISH. Information is
Detailed information about l;hese and also available by calling 419-89:}'other rules can l;&gt;e obtained when you 9740. To view the ODNR fishiiTg
purchase your fishing license.
report
online
,go
l'O
"The modern walleye run 'bas been .www.dnr.state.ol).us and click '!n , ,
a popular activity in Ohio for many . fish.
,

Bi
•

FIS

QUITE A CATCH - This
big catfish that didn't get .
away was caught by Jeremy
· and Joe Blaekston in the
family pond. The two, children of Robert and Brenda
Blackston of near Pomeroy,
returned It to the ,pond
once they h~ posed for a
picture. ·

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Brld11•ort East Pointe Shopping Ctr., 154 Emily Dr., (304)622-2331
Chillicothe U.S. CeHular, 750 Western Ave.,(740)702-4872
·
Chillicothe In-Touch Wireless &amp; More, 34 East Water, (740)779-6999 •
Elkin• 220 Third St., (304)636-9311
•
.
Fairmont 17 Middletown Rd., Route 73, (3041363-7881
.
GaiNpolla -usee Wai-Mart Kiosk, 2145 Eastem Avenue, (7401441-1066
,...._ Classic Plaza. 408 E. Huron, (740)288-0016
Mt.lklpe The Cellular Group, Crti11101ds Mall, 255·7737
M01111110- Morgantown Commons, 6518 Mall Road, 130~)983'2355
MOIIIIIIOWII #4 Su~Uib1'f1_ Court PIIZI, Chestnut Ridge Rd., (304)598-2450

outdoors

newstq44&amp;-

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NeW llaltH

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U.S. Cellular, New,Bostoo ShopplnQ Center, 4010 Rhodes Ave ..

IHOI 456-8722

.

l'urtiiiiOUtll Hiltop Canter. 2736 Scioto Trail, (740)355·0058 ·
,I'IIIICatoR Pine Plaza, 1261 Stafford Or., 1304)487-3855
SliiiiiRWivflll 1016 Wal Street, 1304)872-6922
W-'Y usee Wei-Mart Kloslr. 900 West Emmit~-· 17401947-00&amp;9
W~art locatlona:
.
·

BeCklty, Buckhannon, Clarksburg, Fairmont; Glllton, Jackson,
Lewisburg, Morgantown, New Boston, Oak HIM, Princeton, Summemille
For your convenience ,we have over 50 aUthorized agent locatloo1. Ollllldt
consultants ara available !JPOn request.
·

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"Inside:
Celebrations begin on C2
Tri-county f!appenings, C5
Recipes, C6

C1

.-

Sud-f. Afll 1. 2111

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Ann
Landers
\

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ADVICE

Grattny-to-be -. '
doesn't know
what to ·say _
Dear Ann Landers: You
think you've heard everything? Well, listen to this. Our
· daughter, age 32, dropped a
bombshell on us last week.
We are still trying to get·over
the shock. She told us she-got
pregnant through the use of a
sperm donor.
"Peggy" never dated anyone seriously. She said her ·
' biological clock was. running
out and she wanted a child
more than anything in the
· world. She concluded that
waiting for the right Jl1!1n was
pointless and the sperm batik
was the best way to go. We
· are warming to the idea of
being grandparents, but are
not sure what to tell family
and friends who inevitably
wiD say, "I had no idea Peggy
was married."
I realize the details are
nobody's bl!sines~Jmt there
still has to be some explanation of where this baby suddenly came from. Can you,
offer any sugge,stions? We.
need help.-"- Midwest
GrandmCJ~er-TCJ-Be
Dear M.G.T.B.: Put this
ball where it belongs - in
Peggy's court. Ask HER, '
J.ha~ you' should say when,
~opte ' e~ress astonishroen
af the news of her impending
motherhood. The decision
she has made is gping to
require a lot · of courage. I
wish her luck. She is going to
need it.
.Deer Ann Lander•: Sevetal months ago, I read a letter in your column about
pensions ·available to women
whose· husband~ had died
while on active dllty, even
though the widows had
remarried. My second hus. band died a' few years ago,
making me eligible for this
pension. I .called the number
you provided, and , within a
month, I was receiving benefits . I am retired and living on
a fixed income, a!)d the
monthly benefit from this
pensioq has · made my life
much easier.
I am writing not only to
thank 'you, but to ask you to
repeat the information. If I
had missed your column that
day, I 'would not have been
aware __of the pension, and
that would have been a real
loss. - Grateful in CaHfCJrnia
Dear Grateful: I continue
to receive letters from war .
widows, telling me . how
grateful they are that I printed that infor tion. Once
again, h re it . . . '
The
ependency and
Indemnity Compensation
(DIC) is paid to the survivi!1g
spouse whefl die death of the
veteran happened while on .
·active duty, if the death y.oas
in some way associated with
a recognized service•connected disease or injury, or
· the veteran was rated as per~
· manently and totally disabled,
from ' a service-connected
disability. _In the past, if a
widow remarried, her bene·ftts were discontinued per- .
· manently.
The new chan(!e is that
benefits will once again be
paid to those . surviving
. spouses · if the subsequent
· -marriage was t~rminated by ·
death or divorce.
For more information,
readers can contact the VA's
toll-free number, 1-800-8271000, and speak to a v~terans
benefits counielor. .
.

.

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J,

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[

HAMMERING (BEl OW) - Glenn
Long hammers a nail in the
cross as fellow Bellemead United
Methodist Church member-s
Orval Robinson, Alesia Green,
JanJ!y Collins, Dale Collins, ,Betty
Wallis, Bobby Wood, Belle Saunders and Betsy Crank look on.

•

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MARY AND MARTHA- Amy

.I"

CHECKING TOMB (MIDDLE
RIGHT) _,. Mary and Martha

Crank and Angela Lanier portray Mary and Martha in Bellemead United Methodist
Church's ·Journey To The
Cross. •

,, l

(Amy Crank and Angela Lanier)
look in the tomb to find Christ
has risen.

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Live presq..n(ation.depicts Jesus.' last days,on Earth ~
8v

MICHELl CARTIR
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

•

OINT P+~AS- ·
ANT, W.Vf. ..j.... A
.~.crown, o&amp; .thorps,
·the -pounding of
nails
and TheI . Last
.
.
Supper.... all imprt;ssions ,that
Christians around the.:. tricounty area ·!lssociate 1 with
Easter. ·
•, .
· · In observance of one of the . most
holy days in the Christian cal~dar,
ll,ellenlead United Methodist Church
in Point Pleasant has planned a very
special Easter production. · . .,.
"Jourqey to ~he Cross" will fe"!yre
11 scenes which depict the eventl' of
Christ's final week on earth.
'
Orval Robinson, 9rganizer of; the
event, saw the prod,uction during t~e .•
West Virginia United Methodist
Annual Conference in Buckhannon. •
"T!te Lord laid it upon my heart to
do it at the church," he said: ''I am
really excited about it' and so are the
others involved. It's going to be great,"
Members of the church will be acting out each. scene. The scenes to ~e
depkted include The Verdict; Jesus · Is
Denied; Jesus Is Condemned; Jesus ' Is
Beaten and Mocked; Jesus Bears the
Cross;Jesus Laments Jerusalem; Jesus is
Stripped For ·Crucifixion; Jesus_ Is

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"· Crucified; Jesus' Brokenness; Resurrection of The Saints; and Taking the
· Body to the Tomb.
A designated leader will take a small
gro'up of people every few minutes on
a "journey" throughAthe events that
took place in the life Jf Christ during
his final, tragic week upon the earth.
The walk-through service will feature hands-on participation in some of
the scenes including rolling the dice
for Jesus' clothes, driving a nail in the
· cross, lifting the cross, and placing a
crown of thorns on Jesus' head.
"It is very moving," Robinson said.
Church member Brian ·Billirgs. who
will be. an actor- in "The Verdict"
scene, said he had been through the
entire pr~duction during rehearsal.
"It is so real as yoti journey through
the different scenes and participate in
them," Billings said. "It gave me goose
bumps - you really feel as if you were
. there at that time. It is a very emotional experi~ n ce to travel through the
scen~s."

CROWN

.

Acc9_ffiing to Robinson, approximately' 50 church member' will be
participating in the event. So far, there
have been two J)~ree dress
rehearsals, Robinson ~aid.
The church will be pe~orming the
. dramatic presentation on April 9, 10
and 11 f~om 7 to 9 p.m. T:he public is
invit&lt;!d. to attend the event. Refresh.- .
'
ments will be ser.ved.

. THORNS -

The Rev. Larry
places a crown of thorns on the head of Christ I~IIIV
.Crank) In one 'of the scenes depicted In ·Journey
The Cross.·_
·

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Page Be•
SindiJ. Afrll. ~
..

-i';5 -~- i'tutblt!

·Anglers should·see succe~s during-this years. Wall~ye - ~uri
BY LAURA JotEs

•

OHIO ONR

Annual riwr event a prelude to
spring and summer'fishing season
&amp; temperatures increase over the
'.

next two ~celtS, thousands of fishermen wiU again visit the Maumee and
Sandwky river shores participating in
the annual "Walleye Run." Cons~d- ·
ered by many to be the best fishmg
event of the year, the walleye run is
expected to be in full swing the first
week of Apr'il, when schools of walleye swim up L.ke Erie's tributaries to
spawn in rivers where their lives
began.
. "I look for April 5-15 to be the
peak spawning period in the. Sandusky and Maumee rivers," said
Doug johnson, an aquatic biologist
with the Ohio Depart":'ent of Natur-

al Resources (ODNR), Division of are still in the riven feeding before
Wildlife. · "With air temperatures moving back. to Lake Erie.
expected to reach the 50s and 60s
According to Johnson, walleye
soon, spawning w.illeyes will move caught along riven wiU nor affect the
from deep ri~ pools into \y.lrttler big lake's walleye population because
riffies upstream.•
only a very small percentage of w.illThe ODNR Division .of Wildlife eye are harvested during that time
says this year's ~leye run should period.
•
please anglers, ,as long as Mother
Anglen generally favor using 1/4
Nature copperates. tvtost walleyes will ounce lead-head jigs tipped with
be 16 to 20 inches in length, though white, yellow _or florescent-colored
anglers can expect to see a number of ·twister tails. Increasingly popular are
22 to 26-inch fish . In past years, some floating jigs located 10 to 18· inches
streamside angln-s.have caught wall- above a 1/4 to - 3/4 ounce barrel
eye as large as 14 poupds.
• sinker.
\(?eak spawning . tia~itionally occurs · During this spring ritual, most fishwhen water temperatures reach the ing occurs from shore or by wading
46 to 48 degree range, usually into the stream, though small boats
between the first and s.cond week of are sometimes used. The Ohio
April. Aft'Cr May 1, spawning activity Department of Nat\]ral Resources
gradually tapers off, though many fish urges those fishing to be very cautious

the art Of
tying flY-fishing ~it
CHARLESTON - David trout are not too picky about
Walls walked into class towing their food selection, trout
a dolly filled with stuffed \&gt;ags. native to West Virginia can be
As people milled around the extremely finicky eaten . .
"Even though native trout
classroom at Capital Commu'nity Education Center in have a brain about the size of
Charleston, Walls unloaded a pencil eraser, they pass on
:bags of feathers, boxes ~f their genetics to their offbeads, an assortment of thread spring. No water quality is the.
spanning the color spectrum same, so insects chang!' colon
of the rainbow, a boggling from stream to stream and the
range of hooks, squirrel tails, native trout know what insects
plastic bags brimming with are in their ~~ails said
deer and ·rabbit hair - and a to explain why a wide selecdizzying array of yarn, floss, ·tion of styles, colors and sizes
Che~nd lead wire.
. of flies are needed for fishing.
Walls objective is not to
To fool the fish, flies are tied.
confuse, but to clarify. Walls, from an amazing variety of
who is from Saint Albans, materials liO)ited only by the .
teachel the practice a11d art of imagination. Feathers from
tying flies for fly-fishing.
pheasants, peacocks, ducks,
"It's like building a model as turkeys and grouse .are all
a kid, said Walls, a member of called for in different fly
the Kanawha Chapter oiTrout recipes. Hair from -deer, elk,
Unlimited and self-taught fly caribou, muskrats and beavers
tier. "You build- one_basic' fly are all useful fly-tying m~teriand work forward."
als.
,
Flies realistic:illy, or impresAlong with cultivating
sionistically, mimic the natural friendships with hl,.lnters to.
food source of trout and other gain fly-tying materials, Walls
fish. These foods range from suggest. looking around·' the
the underwater larval stage of house as- well: Old coats, fur
insects such as nymphs and liners in old hats, yarn and
hellgrammites that live around even fuzz from· the carper can
,
tocks to die transitional phase be used to make ·classic and
of the insects life as it moves unique flies.
to the"!!lrface beds its shell,
Certain hackle capes, from
and prepareS to fly: Files also specially raised roosters, are
mimic Insects about to leave worth the extra money spent
the· suri'ace of the water to fly on them, according ro Walls.
away. ;bther food sources Poore( quality hackle feathers
"
. wpied by flies are minnows, will not produce as many flies
., . , "·sculpins, bull , heads, grasshop- or the quality of fly that the
pers, crickets, beedes, frog; and ·more expe'nsive hackles can··
mice in a nearly endless vari- help create.
ety of shapes and sizes.
People can · get sfartesJ fly
"There is something about tying by themselves with help
making your own fly ·and then from the volumes of books,
catching a fish with it, your videos and Web sires available.
heart just starts going," said· The basic tools needed for fly '
Walls who has been tying tying are vise to hold the
since 1994 and reaching class- hook, a pair of small quality
es since 1998.
scissors, ,bobbin to hold the
"'&lt;" Walls explains that by learn~ thread, glu'e, a thin needle-like
mg the basic flies and skills bodkin and hackle pliers to
needed to tie flies for trout hold feathers. Ay tying kits,
fis~ing, you can then adapt the ·complete with materials, .are
techniques and tie flies to available from most fishing
0
cover any type of fishing from and fly-fishing suppliers.
\
spring-fed stream trout fishing • Walls . recomm~nds t?at
"---to bass and saltwater fishing.
people .mte_rested m learmng .
Fly tying is a natural pro- to ne lites etther take a class or
· gression for people who start l~arn from an expenenced fly
fly-fishing. Collecting a solid tter to see firsthand how
·selection 0~ flies _to fill your matenals are add~d to the
vest and to meet changing hook; the thread ts wrapp~d
fis'liing conditions, anil ·moods and what knots are esse?ttal to
.offish, can put a dent in the ke_ep a fly together tn the
.
pocket booj. Commercially wmd and water.
tied flies range in price from
Walls stres~es the tmporabout $1.25 to flies worthy of t~nce qualtty '':'stead ?f qua~­
framing that cost $15 or more. tu:y. Often, b~gtnnen tmmediAfter the initial expense of ate reac~on IS t~ try I'D ·tte ~s
buying the materials and tools many flies as qutckly as posst~
fl
·
ble to fill up thetr fly boxes.
h ld
l)eeded .or y tymg, 11tes can p 1 . d 11 be tied for about 30 cents oor y tte tes w~11 not o
each. Walls explains th-at 'with up under the Stram of bet':'g
f b
cast and repeatedly1 dunked
· 't'al
an 1m 1 expense o a out h ·
· 10
1et a one bemg
·
k
b
t
e
water,
Sl36 ,a fl yaercanma ea out
k db
fi h
.,p S525 wort h o ffl"1es.
attac e y a IS ·.
~
" I'm tired of buying fli es,"
begi nnin g fly tier Chad
Brown says. "I iake pride in
making something myself."
Jason Butler is dra,vn to fly
tying by ' the money he can
save ·and to meet the conditions he faces on the stream
fishing for trout.
"You want to have every
size and every color. of fly
when you get out on the
stream. It's frustrating when
you dQn't have what you, arid
the fish, want," Buder said. Walls 1ays that while stocked

If so, fax your

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when wading in water, as water levels yean, with thousands of lngten dotin both riven are often high in the ring the river shores " said Johnsoti.
spring and can be dangerous.
"In fact, it's not uncommon to ~
Additionally; anglers should note cars in parlting lots 6om aU across
changes dfective this year for the Mid-.t. •
daily limit of walleye on Lake Erie
In addition to great fisliing, tljs
and iu tributaries. Berween March 1 highly anticipated annual .,Vent p19-•
and April 30 the daily bag limit is four vides anglers some added bonuses: an
and after that date,' anglers can harvest opportunity to view some of Ohio's
up to six walleye a day.
beautiful scenery; abundant wildlif¢,
Remember, too, snllgging is illegal and the chance to make some new
meaping only fish hooked in the fishing b.uddies.
mouth may be kept. Fishing on the
Current information on the w.illeye
rivers ·must be done during daylight run is available ·by calling 1-800hours, and those fishing 'are prohibit- BUCKEYE or
ed from using more than one hook.
i -8!18-HOOKFISH. Information is
Detailed information about l;hese and also available by calling 419-89:}'other rules can l;&gt;e obtained when you 9740. To view the ODNR fishiiTg
purchase your fishing license.
report
online
,go
l'O
"The modern walleye run 'bas been .www.dnr.state.ol).us and click '!n , ,
a popular activity in Ohio for many . fish.
,

Bi
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FIS

QUITE A CATCH - This
big catfish that didn't get .
away was caught by Jeremy
· and Joe Blaekston in the
family pond. The two, children of Robert and Brenda
Blackston of near Pomeroy,
returned It to the ,pond
once they h~ posed for a
picture. ·

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Chillicothe U.S. CeHular, 750 Western Ave.,(740)702-4872
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Chillicothe In-Touch Wireless &amp; More, 34 East Water, (740)779-6999 •
Elkin• 220 Third St., (304)636-9311
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GaiNpolla -usee Wai-Mart Kiosk, 2145 Eastem Avenue, (7401441-1066
,...._ Classic Plaza. 408 E. Huron, (740)288-0016
Mt.lklpe The Cellular Group, Crti11101ds Mall, 255·7737
M01111110- Morgantown Commons, 6518 Mall Road, 130~)983'2355
MOIIIIIIOWII #4 Su~Uib1'f1_ Court PIIZI, Chestnut Ridge Rd., (304)598-2450

outdoors

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l'urtiiiiOUtll Hiltop Canter. 2736 Scioto Trail, (740)355·0058 ·
,I'IIIICatoR Pine Plaza, 1261 Stafford Or., 1304)487-3855
SliiiiiRWivflll 1016 Wal Street, 1304)872-6922
W-'Y usee Wei-Mart Kloslr. 900 West Emmit~-· 17401947-00&amp;9
W~art locatlona:
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BeCklty, Buckhannon, Clarksburg, Fairmont; Glllton, Jackson,
Lewisburg, Morgantown, New Boston, Oak HIM, Princeton, Summemille
For your convenience ,we have over 50 aUthorized agent locatloo1. Ollllldt
consultants ara available !JPOn request.
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"Inside:
Celebrations begin on C2
Tri-county f!appenings, C5
Recipes, C6

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Sud-f. Afll 1. 2111

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Ann
Landers
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ADVICE

Grattny-to-be -. '
doesn't know
what to ·say _
Dear Ann Landers: You
think you've heard everything? Well, listen to this. Our
· daughter, age 32, dropped a
bombshell on us last week.
We are still trying to get·over
the shock. She told us she-got
pregnant through the use of a
sperm donor.
"Peggy" never dated anyone seriously. She said her ·
' biological clock was. running
out and she wanted a child
more than anything in the
· world. She concluded that
waiting for the right Jl1!1n was
pointless and the sperm batik
was the best way to go. We
· are warming to the idea of
being grandparents, but are
not sure what to tell family
and friends who inevitably
wiD say, "I had no idea Peggy
was married."
I realize the details are
nobody's bl!sines~Jmt there
still has to be some explanation of where this baby suddenly came from. Can you,
offer any sugge,stions? We.
need help.-"- Midwest
GrandmCJ~er-TCJ-Be
Dear M.G.T.B.: Put this
ball where it belongs - in
Peggy's court. Ask HER, '
J.ha~ you' should say when,
~opte ' e~ress astonishroen
af the news of her impending
motherhood. The decision
she has made is gping to
require a lot · of courage. I
wish her luck. She is going to
need it.
.Deer Ann Lander•: Sevetal months ago, I read a letter in your column about
pensions ·available to women
whose· husband~ had died
while on active dllty, even
though the widows had
remarried. My second hus. band died a' few years ago,
making me eligible for this
pension. I .called the number
you provided, and , within a
month, I was receiving benefits . I am retired and living on
a fixed income, a!)d the
monthly benefit from this
pensioq has · made my life
much easier.
I am writing not only to
thank 'you, but to ask you to
repeat the information. If I
had missed your column that
day, I 'would not have been
aware __of the pension, and
that would have been a real
loss. - Grateful in CaHfCJrnia
Dear Grateful: I continue
to receive letters from war .
widows, telling me . how
grateful they are that I printed that infor tion. Once
again, h re it . . . '
The
ependency and
Indemnity Compensation
(DIC) is paid to the survivi!1g
spouse whefl die death of the
veteran happened while on .
·active duty, if the death y.oas
in some way associated with
a recognized service•connected disease or injury, or
· the veteran was rated as per~
· manently and totally disabled,
from ' a service-connected
disability. _In the past, if a
widow remarried, her bene·ftts were discontinued per- .
· manently.
The new chan(!e is that
benefits will once again be
paid to those . surviving
. spouses · if the subsequent
· -marriage was t~rminated by ·
death or divorce.
For more information,
readers can contact the VA's
toll-free number, 1-800-8271000, and speak to a v~terans
benefits counielor. .
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HAMMERING (BEl OW) - Glenn
Long hammers a nail in the
cross as fellow Bellemead United
Methodist Church member-s
Orval Robinson, Alesia Green,
JanJ!y Collins, Dale Collins, ,Betty
Wallis, Bobby Wood, Belle Saunders and Betsy Crank look on.

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MARY AND MARTHA- Amy

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CHECKING TOMB (MIDDLE
RIGHT) _,. Mary and Martha

Crank and Angela Lanier portray Mary and Martha in Bellemead United Methodist
Church's ·Journey To The
Cross. •

,, l

(Amy Crank and Angela Lanier)
look in the tomb to find Christ
has risen.

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Live presq..n(ation.depicts Jesus.' last days,on Earth ~
8v

MICHELl CARTIR
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

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OINT P+~AS- ·
ANT, W.Vf. ..j.... A
.~.crown, o&amp; .thorps,
·the -pounding of
nails
and TheI . Last
.
.
Supper.... all imprt;ssions ,that
Christians around the.:. tricounty area ·!lssociate 1 with
Easter. ·
•, .
· · In observance of one of the . most
holy days in the Christian cal~dar,
ll,ellenlead United Methodist Church
in Point Pleasant has planned a very
special Easter production. · . .,.
"Jourqey to ~he Cross" will fe"!yre
11 scenes which depict the eventl' of
Christ's final week on earth.
'
Orval Robinson, 9rganizer of; the
event, saw the prod,uction during t~e .•
West Virginia United Methodist
Annual Conference in Buckhannon. •
"T!te Lord laid it upon my heart to
do it at the church," he said: ''I am
really excited about it' and so are the
others involved. It's going to be great,"
Members of the church will be acting out each. scene. The scenes to ~e
depkted include The Verdict; Jesus · Is
Denied; Jesus Is Condemned; Jesus ' Is
Beaten and Mocked; Jesus Bears the
Cross;Jesus Laments Jerusalem; Jesus is
Stripped For ·Crucifixion; Jesus_ Is

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"· Crucified; Jesus' Brokenness; Resurrection of The Saints; and Taking the
· Body to the Tomb.
A designated leader will take a small
gro'up of people every few minutes on
a "journey" throughAthe events that
took place in the life Jf Christ during
his final, tragic week upon the earth.
The walk-through service will feature hands-on participation in some of
the scenes including rolling the dice
for Jesus' clothes, driving a nail in the
· cross, lifting the cross, and placing a
crown of thorns on Jesus' head.
"It is very moving," Robinson said.
Church member Brian ·Billirgs. who
will be. an actor- in "The Verdict"
scene, said he had been through the
entire pr~duction during rehearsal.
"It is so real as yoti journey through
the different scenes and participate in
them," Billings said. "It gave me goose
bumps - you really feel as if you were
. there at that time. It is a very emotional experi~ n ce to travel through the
scen~s."

CROWN

.

Acc9_ffiing to Robinson, approximately' 50 church member' will be
participating in the event. So far, there
have been two J)~ree dress
rehearsals, Robinson ~aid.
The church will be pe~orming the
. dramatic presentation on April 9, 10
and 11 f~om 7 to 9 p.m. T:he public is
invit&lt;!d. to attend the event. Refresh.- .
'
ments will be ser.ved.

. THORNS -

The Rev. Larry
places a crown of thorns on the head of Christ I~IIIV
.Crank) In one 'of the scenes depicted In ·Journey
The Cross.·_
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�\£
~ • Mldll1p01t • GlllpDIII,

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....._,Apri1,ZOO'i'

Ohio: Point P11111nt, WY

Pomeroy • Mldlllp Ott • PI'pol'l, ohio Point P11n1nt, wv

lluncley. Apr1.1, 2001

0

Hum~n clinicql berry trials to begin
GALLIPOLIS - Human diniatl trials on
the effects of berries to inhibit cenain c:an:l:en are scheduled to begiri in May 2001,
~:-~~mg to ~e Ohio State U~nity
~her who IS heading the project.
Ste_~r, bead of the Laboratory of
,
c~ CnemopreventiOn and Etiology at '
. ~SU • James Cancer. Hospi·tal· and Solove
e"
~ ~ wd "preliminary studies
'FAMILY .
bqin ~meqm~in May to determine if
l:lemes, inCluding strawberries and
ck. qspberries, inhibit the development 'of strawberries .and · black . raspberries inhibit
PhJfni and colon cancers in humahs
colon and esophageal cancers in lab rats. Th~
His ;!~t current research fo110d that f~ed- herpes were ineffective in inhibiting the
g .c:a.:a;r-induced rats five to 10 percent of development oflung cancer in mice, h'owever.
eze · ted black .raspberries in thc;ir diet
"It may be a mat$er of absorption;· said
- r a 36-we~ penod reduced the d~elop- Stoner. "The inhibitory molecules in · the
cot ?f colon tumon by .50 percenr.
· berries may be absorbed locally in the esoph41"Malignant c~lon tumors were inhibited by agus and colon but·do not get absorbed in the
~-~e~lt. Sunilarly, 10 25-week stuwes, blood at high enough levels to be protective in
~
rnes and black raspberries . reduced the lung."
·
pluigeal ~ancer by 50-60 percent.
S~oner contends that ellagic-acid,long con,
S~c;, finwngs were. enou~ for Stoner to sidered to be a potential .cancer inhibitor, is
. uncling for. c~rucal tnals. to see rf the not working alone in fighting cancer. Berries
ibe.~nes produce s1milar results 10 humans..
c&lt;;~ntain a variety of vitamins and minerals and
If the bernes provtde prot~ction i~t ani- a ·h'ost' of antioxidants known collectively as
mals, then t~ey ?ught also ptovtde protecll.on phytonutrients that in some capacity do their
10 , humans, sa1d Stoner. The clirucal mals
pan in fighting cancer and also other diseases
Will
focus
on
two.
cGndi,rions:
Barrett.'s
.such
as diabetes, h~~rt di~ea~. stroke ~nd
1
!Esophagus and Familial Adenomateou~ Poly- osteeporosis.
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h'
k
h
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h
'b'
&lt;r
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we t m t e In 1 1tory euect of berries is
1
Barrett s Esophagus IS a disorder m which due 'to the combined effects of many campothe limng of the esophagu.s goes through eel- nents in them. The amount of ellagic acid in
~ular.changes caus.e d by ac1d reflux,leacling to freeze-dried berries is one-fifth to one-tenth
a.type of cancer called esophageal ade~tocar- the amount we used in early experiments
cmoma: _
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.
where we showed that ellagic acid by itself
'· FAP IS a rare genetic d1seas~ characterize4 could. inhibit esophageal cancer in rats,"
ny the development of polyps 10 the colon. If explains Stoner.
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lef! untreated, It develops into colorectal can'~Yet .the freeze-dried berries are just as
~er. Some. polyps return even after they have acnv,e as pure ellagic acid. Therefore ·there
~een surg1c:illy removed..
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must be other substances in the berri~s that
_, Stoner 5ald the prelimm~ry studies would , are responsible for their cancer-inhibitory
. .
address two Issues: the possible level of toxic- effects.". .
·1\ty of ber~ies in humans and how well comScie.ntists are just now beginning to under-tonen~ m bernes are ,absorbed mto the stand what phytonutrients are found in fruits
;. ody.
and vegetables, but more research needs to be
• "W~ want to ~ee if berries exhibit a~y sort conducted to determine how these compo1?f ~JU_pty. I don .~ ·expect to see :my toXIcity at nents inhibit cliseas&lt;S. ·
.
~!;ltd Stoner. Then we will collect blood
To better educate the public on what phy~o see . what components of the berries~re tonutrients are, the Produce for Better Health
taken ~to the bloo_ds~al!l and h~ high of Fo11n,dation is tea~ng up with the U.S.
lcvels .canbe achi~d.
.
Depa!'(ment of Agnculture to build a database ·
· For Sto11er, findjng out what components of of which phytonutrients are found in fruits
bertie ; ~ctu~y contribute to cancer inhibi- and 'vegetables.The databate is scheduled to be
('t\On hilS become J~St as much of~ part of his completed by this fall, .
/ _)'b;~arch as detertruning whi~h betll.es inhibit
(Becky Colliits is Gallia County~ Extension
which types of cancer. . . .
agent for fomily and consumer sdences, Ohio State
Stoners research has revealed that wetary University.)
•

IC!!aty

Becky
Collins

P

I

Tamara Hayman lllld Eric Tucker

·Hayman- Tucker engagement
Joseph Gavin Lane and Talka Wendy Taylor
'

Lane-Taylor
engagement
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GALLIPOLIS -Janie Lane ofG.allipolis and Ga;f Lane of
Gallipoli! an: announcing the engagement and upcoming marriage of their son,Joseph Gavin Lane of \'Aonroe, N.C., toTas~
Wendy Taylor, daughter ofJerry and Jerri Taylor of Monroe.
The groom-to-be is a 1990 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School, and a 1995 graduate of Ferris State University
with a bachelor of science degree in marketing and a minor in
·.
' prof~sionaf golf management.
He is currendy employed as Head Golf Professional at Stonebridge Golf Club in Monroe.
.
. The bride.,elect is a 1986 graduate of Sun Valley High
School, and a 1990 graduate of Univetsity of North Carolina
at Chapell Hill with a bachelor of arts degree. ~he is a sales
executive with Coats &amp; Clark of North America in Charlotte,
N.C.
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The couple will exchange vow~ at a 4: p.~. open church cer- ·
emony o~June' 23, 2001 at Mineral Spriogll United Methowst
Church, Mineral Springll, N.C.

Mk:hl!lle O'Nall and Glem Morpn
',)
SYRACUSE - . Mr. arid Mrs. Dan Hayman of Syracuse
announce the engagement and approaching marri'ie of their
daughter, Tamara, to Eric Joseph Tucker of Huntington, WVa.
He is the son of Paul Tucker ofWheeling, WVa., and lUthy
T~cker ofJacksonville, Aa.
.
The. wedding will ta~ 'place on Sept. 15, 2001 at 5:30 p.m.
'P OMEROY -. Michelle Lynn 0'-Nail and Glenn Kent
at Christ Temple Chur9h in H!!ntington, where the couple Morglln announc&lt;; their e. ngagemcnt and approaching marattends chu{Ch.
1
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The bride-elect is a gra?ua~. of Southern High S~hool, class ,- n~~·e bride-elect is the daughter of James and Peggy Robino£.1993, andMarshall Uruvemty. class of 1997. She IS ~ former son of Coolville. She will graduate from Eastern High School'
~abrshall Und1vemty ch.eerlea~ehr and holds a .bac~elhors degree in May and is currendy emploYed at the Rockspringll Reha~
10 us10ess a numsttatlon w1t a... concenttanQn m ealth care . bili'tan· on c ent er.
·
management.
·
Her fiance is the son of Glenn and Lou Morgan of
She is the former Miss West Virginia Hawaii:~,n J'ropic.
Williamstown, WVa. He is a 1977 graduate of Orange County
Her fiance graduated from John Marshall High of Glenville, High School in North Carolina, and is employed at Northwest
WVa., in 1997 and wilir graduate in May from Marshall Uni- Pipe in Parkersburg, WVa.
versity with a bachelors degree in communication stuwes. He
The we&amp;Jjng is planned for Aug. 25, 2001 at the 19th Street
formerly played football for, MU.
· Churc.h of God in Parkersburg.
• ·

0'Nail-Morgan engagement

Long rifle exhibition set in Marietta
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,' The Association of Ohio
MARIETTA -The Associ- Hennan said..
ation of Ohio Long Rifle Col-' .
He added the members and Long Rifle Collectors was
lecto., will hold its 26th annu- experts at the show can often formed in 1975 for ,tlie study
al exhibit April 7-8 at the identifY longrifles that visitors ,and preservation of Ohio made ·
· bring to the show, thus estab- muzrleloading rifles. The
Hotel Lafayette.
"This exhibit \fill enable the lishing the age, value, and_zhis- grou~ has recendy completed
general poblic to' 1view the torical significance .of w hat thl: . publication of a 6ve"vol- .
finest Ohio mu·zz!doawng otherwise would just be a ume set of bo~ks listing the
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. 1 the College of Fine Arts and
rifles' in existence," said Mark ,"wallh
gunsmiths of Ohio, by county, .
. anger... .
- The l'ylarshall University has been heard by local auwHerman, AOLRC president. ·
Choral Union will present its · ences in concerts ·of Cham"The approxima~ly-. · 400 '
annual . spring concert on ber 10 and local church perantique rifles exhibited by pfi...
April 8 and 9. The concerts formances.
vate · collectors represent some
will be held in Smith Music
. Rickard ·· is minister of
of the 6 nest ·rifles produced
Hall on the Marshall campus music at Grace Gospel
· 'vithin Ohio.
(corner Third Avenue and Church, and music teacher
"The rifles include plain
Hal Greer Boulevard and in ,the Grace Gospel Acadeworking rifles as well · as
will begin at 8 p.m. each my. He was heard last year in
extremely fancy brass, silver;
evemng
the university's performances
and ivory inlayed rifles that are
Tickets will be available at of the St. John Passion by
excellent example! of Anterithe door. Adult P!ice is $5, . Bach.
can folk art."
student price is S2;-MU stu. Branita Holbrook graduatThe exhibit for 2001 will
dents with activity . card are ed from -Marshall with the
include ·an'' expanded Jo~n1at ·
admit!ed free. Doors will BFA degree in voice perfotwhich will.feature an\ authentic open. at 7:30 each evening. mance in 1992, She earned
Parking is available on any her MM in voiee perfor- ' . 19th century working gunshop
on site, as well a "Trading
uni~nity parking lot after 7
rnance . from the· Southern .
Table" where members can
p.m.
Seminary in Louisville; Ky.'
"
offer muzzleloading arms and
~ The spring progra!f1 for During
1999-2000, she .
accessories for sale or trade.
2001 is a performance of the served as an intern at the Vir· "The purpose of the
oratorio "St. Paul" by Felix ginia Opera in Norfolk.
expanded format is to attract
Mendelssohn, scored for
For information, contact
visitors who may no~ther­
chorus,
orchestra . and Bals~w at 304-~6-2399: or
wisc be able to view and. P\lr- ·
soloists,
by e-mail at Balshaw@Mar·
.
chase original Ohio lonwlfles:·
This dramatic work focus- shall.edu. ,
es upon crucial events in the
life of St . . Paul, beginning
with the p~rsecution of
. Stephen; and continuing
•
with the conversion 'of Saui ·
of Tarsus (becoming St . .
Paul), following with a summary of his ministry among
th~ Jews and Gentiles and
enwng with his final journey.
Mendelssohn was much
taken with both the oratorios of Handel and passiqns
• of J:S. Bach (which .he had
rewscovered and introduced
to 19th century aucliences) . ,
In "St. Paul," he borrows
from both traditions, to create a work of dramatic power
and lyrical beauty.
In this performance, the
&lt;:;honl Union will be joined
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by th'ree soloists: baritone
, . ." . .
you find 6ut about something terrif«:, it
"
Larry W Stickler singing the
is hard to restrain yo~elf- you have to tell
role of St. Paul; tenor Wesley .
Rickard singing the roles of
someone! Call and speak to a specially
Stephan and Barnabas; and
trained Holzer Medical Center
when you
soprano Branlta Holbrook as
the Angel.
have a health concern or..question.
,• The , per(onnance will be •
conducted by Paul Balshaw,
d~ys
distinguished professor of
music at Marshall University.
Stickler is professor of music
at Marshall University where
lie teaches Voice and Music
· Education. He is the immediate past associated dean of
about medication concerns

Marshall slates.spring
COJl~~rt !\pril 8·9
.-

.: flower
.; Basket

Available
In 111:1e1

The Secret is Out!

Wafer
P,u)l1p
PlaMfer
·&amp;ardeM
Barf
Jlla}tfer

RN

6 am until 2 am • ·7

Large
WagoM
Wheel
YiaMter

.

~

with biographical information •.
and showing examples of their
work.
The hours for the public are
April 7 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
and April 8 fiom 9 a.m. to
p.m. Fo; information, ·ctmJct~
Herman at 61~BS5-q57; or
Ted Dixon, 740;..98~2983.
•
'

lDxl&amp;

GALLIPOLIS
Th~
Thomas Merton Foundation
ha5 announce
2001 winners o~ The Thomas Merton
Prize for Poetry of the Sacred.
This year's ·contest was
judged by former US. Poet
~au~~e ,Robert Pinsky. More
than 1:300 poems . were
en~red in the contest by 545
poets. Entries came fr&lt;Jm 47
states and six · foreign countri¢s,· ' (
Fi11t ,prize of; $500 was
aYfarded tO..,Kimberly Johnson
for her poem " Pater Noster."
Ms. Johnson makes her horne
in California where she is
pu!'Suing a Ph.D. in English at
the' University of California at
Berll.eley.
She eArned an MA from the
Johns Hopkins Writing Semioars and an MFA from the
Iowa Writers Workshop. Her
work gas appeared in The
New Yorker and Colorado

.. '

the

Bazeho
SMaii .
WagoM
Wneel
YiaMter

..•

·I

Water'
Trough
YiaMter:
Jubk ·
Joard ·
·viaMfer

Gallia CountY WIC celebrates
National Nutrition Month ·
.
GALLIPOLIS
· The
theme for National Nutrition
Month,. "Food i!c: Fitness Build a Healthy. Lifestyie,"
incorporates the dietary guide_lines, Aipt, Build and Choose,
which can help reach an inwvidual'$ goals in the daily effort
f9J' good health and fitness.
~ ' InCo.pOating nutrition a~d
fimess into one's lifesryle will
help lifelong health, plus
reduce stress.
. -· ~~guidelines for ~er­
kans . l~Cgin with the basics of
the ABCs for individuai and
family health. These guideilnes
are intended for healthy children (ages 2 and older)· and
adults of any age. Aim for fitness. Build a healthy base.
Choose sensibly.
During National Nutrition.
Month,Gallia County WIC
Program partici~ated in activities for children and adults.
Nuttition , education activities
included visits to Woodland
· A'ccess HeadStart, Miss Paula's
D~y Care and theUniversity of
Rio Grande Health Fair.
WIC is a supplemental food
:ind nuttition education program ·for women . pregnant,
breastfeecling or who just had a

·

WIC STAFF- Jaf!!le Back, DTR; and.Janet Wetherholt, RD. LO,
are ell'!ployees of the Gallia County WIC Program; The WIC
Office IS located in the Gallia County Health Department at .
499 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
· ·
·
baby, Infants to 1 year old, and
. children to age 5.
•
. Apphca~u .. must . ~eet
mcome eligtbil1ty gu1delines.
For example: a family size of
rwo, monthly · income cannot

exceed $1.750; family size 'of
four, S2,722;family size of five,
$3,187; family size of six,
$3,653.
Call the WJC Office at 441 ~ .
2977 for information.

'From Solitaires to 'Bridal
Sets: 'For tfielargest ·
Iselection of
todf!Y's best ~tyles
all value priced
Cfiecli. us out before you
decide.

poetry contest
wln·ners for -2000 named

-

.

• 61Uap . . . . ·6tldild • ,.... C3

M~rton

i

!''

.

.,

.

\

Review.
· Review, Sundog, Cimarron
Her first collection of poet- Review, Another Chicago
ry, "Leviathan With a Hook," . Magazine, and other publica·will be released in . 1002 by tions.
,
Persea Books. "Pater Noster"
Moira Linehan received
' will appear in a forthcoming honorable luention for her
1 issue of Gulf Coast.
poem "On Jnishmor," She
Honorable mention prizes currendy lives in Winchester,
of $50 were' awarded to three Mass. Her new work has
individuals.
recendy appeared in Alaska,
Elinor Benedict received Quarterly Review, Green
"· ~onorable mention for her Mountains Review, Notre
'poem "A Wise Man's Gift of Dame Review, and Poetry.
Birds." She lives in Rapid
The winning poems can be
· River, Mich. Her poetry col- read by visiting The Merton
lection,"AIIThatDivides us;" Foundation web site at
won the 2000 May Swenson www.mertonfoundation.org
Poetry Award.
and then clicking on "W~at's
Karen Craigo received bon- New" and "Poetry of the
arable men\ion for her poem Sacred
2001
Winl)ers
"Self-Portrait as Woman Dri- Announc;ed."
ving 80 mph.". She teaches . These poc:ms.
also be .
English . at. Bowling . Green publishe~ in t he surnmer
State University, where. she is issue ofThe Merton Seasonal.
poetry.'ewtor of Mid-A'meri- The Seasonal is mailed to all
can Review. Her poem have · nlembers of the International
appeared in Crab Orchard Thomas Merton Society.
-·- ___ ,...,.,. ,_,..,. ······•

Yfpfirodite's Smile
rtfit fiearl frozen eartfi started to melt,
tR_esponding to tfie fond toucfi.
Of wanning sun rays;
rtfie hibernating life
Under tfiat deep.freez.e, eased out,
. 13reaking tfie barrier of ic~,
'IO tfie love's land of whispering winds,
and fluttering buttePjlies'. .

will

·'. '
\
'•

~·~

'

rtfirougfi tfie wi~dows of the scattered
Wfiite clouds over tfie river town,
IJ'fie angels watcfied with joy,
rtfie burning candles in tfie gorgeous
Wantfol eyes of an arcfiangel,
!And blissful~ blessed a wisfi.

Show Choir.
Exhibition
•
•

I
I
\

I

rtfie Ofiio tR_iver, that was
tR_aging with the floods offeeling,
Was lulled to serenity;
.
. !And in the heavens, .apfirodite smiled .
.

•

I,

I

Feati.tring

.Wheel

The.Hurrican~ H.S. Red Hots

Jarrow

.
·'

•,

.

.,.

'.

fJJ{alesfi rpatel

•
Presenting Rocl&lt;: &amp; Roll
.
With Songs From "Grease" And Songs By Elvis
(

AprillO, 2001 • .7:00p.m-.
. ". .,_

a week

' Tickets are s15 for adults and '5 for -student K-12 and are
~4. available at Haskiqs Tanner, Rebecca's, and the door.

1

"''

admirer of &lt;Poetry

426 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
·.,.
(740) 446-ARTS

.
'·

:Nicole 'Rasfiid"

:~IUEL..,heatre

,.,

•

C:ompliments Of

'

'

'

"''

,,

•

.,,

~,.

'l

�\£
~ • Mldll1p01t • GlllpDIII,

'

....._,Apri1,ZOO'i'

Ohio: Point P11111nt, WY

Pomeroy • Mldlllp Ott • PI'pol'l, ohio Point P11n1nt, wv

lluncley. Apr1.1, 2001

0

Hum~n clinicql berry trials to begin
GALLIPOLIS - Human diniatl trials on
the effects of berries to inhibit cenain c:an:l:en are scheduled to begiri in May 2001,
~:-~~mg to ~e Ohio State U~nity
~her who IS heading the project.
Ste_~r, bead of the Laboratory of
,
c~ CnemopreventiOn and Etiology at '
. ~SU • James Cancer. Hospi·tal· and Solove
e"
~ ~ wd "preliminary studies
'FAMILY .
bqin ~meqm~in May to determine if
l:lemes, inCluding strawberries and
ck. qspberries, inhibit the development 'of strawberries .and · black . raspberries inhibit
PhJfni and colon cancers in humahs
colon and esophageal cancers in lab rats. Th~
His ;!~t current research fo110d that f~ed- herpes were ineffective in inhibiting the
g .c:a.:a;r-induced rats five to 10 percent of development oflung cancer in mice, h'owever.
eze · ted black .raspberries in thc;ir diet
"It may be a mat$er of absorption;· said
- r a 36-we~ penod reduced the d~elop- Stoner. "The inhibitory molecules in · the
cot ?f colon tumon by .50 percenr.
· berries may be absorbed locally in the esoph41"Malignant c~lon tumors were inhibited by agus and colon but·do not get absorbed in the
~-~e~lt. Sunilarly, 10 25-week stuwes, blood at high enough levels to be protective in
~
rnes and black raspberries . reduced the lung."
·
pluigeal ~ancer by 50-60 percent.
S~oner contends that ellagic-acid,long con,
S~c;, finwngs were. enou~ for Stoner to sidered to be a potential .cancer inhibitor, is
. uncling for. c~rucal tnals. to see rf the not working alone in fighting cancer. Berries
ibe.~nes produce s1milar results 10 humans..
c&lt;;~ntain a variety of vitamins and minerals and
If the bernes provtde prot~ction i~t ani- a ·h'ost' of antioxidants known collectively as
mals, then t~ey ?ught also ptovtde protecll.on phytonutrients that in some capacity do their
10 , humans, sa1d Stoner. The clirucal mals
pan in fighting cancer and also other diseases
Will
focus
on
two.
cGndi,rions:
Barrett.'s
.such
as diabetes, h~~rt di~ea~. stroke ~nd
1
!Esophagus and Familial Adenomateou~ Poly- osteeporosis.
'
·
'JIOSIS (PAP) ·
"""'
h'
k
h
·
h
'b'
&lt;r
·
. ,
.
•
we t m t e In 1 1tory euect of berries is
1
Barrett s Esophagus IS a disorder m which due 'to the combined effects of many campothe limng of the esophagu.s goes through eel- nents in them. The amount of ellagic acid in
~ular.changes caus.e d by ac1d reflux,leacling to freeze-dried berries is one-fifth to one-tenth
a.type of cancer called esophageal ade~tocar- the amount we used in early experiments
cmoma: _
. . _
.
where we showed that ellagic acid by itself
'· FAP IS a rare genetic d1seas~ characterize4 could. inhibit esophageal cancer in rats,"
ny the development of polyps 10 the colon. If explains Stoner.
·
.
lef! untreated, It develops into colorectal can'~Yet .the freeze-dried berries are just as
~er. Some. polyps return even after they have acnv,e as pure ellagic acid. Therefore ·there
~een surg1c:illy removed..
'
•
must be other substances in the berri~s that
_, Stoner 5ald the prelimm~ry studies would , are responsible for their cancer-inhibitory
. .
address two Issues: the possible level of toxic- effects.". .
·1\ty of ber~ies in humans and how well comScie.ntists are just now beginning to under-tonen~ m bernes are ,absorbed mto the stand what phytonutrients are found in fruits
;. ody.
and vegetables, but more research needs to be
• "W~ want to ~ee if berries exhibit a~y sort conducted to determine how these compo1?f ~JU_pty. I don .~ ·expect to see :my toXIcity at nents inhibit cliseas&lt;S. ·
.
~!;ltd Stoner. Then we will collect blood
To better educate the public on what phy~o see . what components of the berries~re tonutrients are, the Produce for Better Health
taken ~to the bloo_ds~al!l and h~ high of Fo11n,dation is tea~ng up with the U.S.
lcvels .canbe achi~d.
.
Depa!'(ment of Agnculture to build a database ·
· For Sto11er, findjng out what components of of which phytonutrients are found in fruits
bertie ; ~ctu~y contribute to cancer inhibi- and 'vegetables.The databate is scheduled to be
('t\On hilS become J~St as much of~ part of his completed by this fall, .
/ _)'b;~arch as detertruning whi~h betll.es inhibit
(Becky Colliits is Gallia County~ Extension
which types of cancer. . . .
agent for fomily and consumer sdences, Ohio State
Stoners research has revealed that wetary University.)
•

IC!!aty

Becky
Collins

P

I

Tamara Hayman lllld Eric Tucker

·Hayman- Tucker engagement
Joseph Gavin Lane and Talka Wendy Taylor
'

Lane-Taylor
engagement
.
.

.,

GALLIPOLIS -Janie Lane ofG.allipolis and Ga;f Lane of
Gallipoli! an: announcing the engagement and upcoming marriage of their son,Joseph Gavin Lane of \'Aonroe, N.C., toTas~
Wendy Taylor, daughter ofJerry and Jerri Taylor of Monroe.
The groom-to-be is a 1990 graduate of Gallia Academy
High School, and a 1995 graduate of Ferris State University
with a bachelor of science degree in marketing and a minor in
·.
' prof~sionaf golf management.
He is currendy employed as Head Golf Professional at Stonebridge Golf Club in Monroe.
.
. The bride.,elect is a 1986 graduate of Sun Valley High
School, and a 1990 graduate of Univetsity of North Carolina
at Chapell Hill with a bachelor of arts degree. ~he is a sales
executive with Coats &amp; Clark of North America in Charlotte,
N.C.
-•
~ .
.
The couple will exchange vow~ at a 4: p.~. open church cer- ·
emony o~June' 23, 2001 at Mineral Spriogll United Methowst
Church, Mineral Springll, N.C.

Mk:hl!lle O'Nall and Glem Morpn
',)
SYRACUSE - . Mr. arid Mrs. Dan Hayman of Syracuse
announce the engagement and approaching marri'ie of their
daughter, Tamara, to Eric Joseph Tucker of Huntington, WVa.
He is the son of Paul Tucker ofWheeling, WVa., and lUthy
T~cker ofJacksonville, Aa.
.
The. wedding will ta~ 'place on Sept. 15, 2001 at 5:30 p.m.
'P OMEROY -. Michelle Lynn 0'-Nail and Glenn Kent
at Christ Temple Chur9h in H!!ntington, where the couple Morglln announc&lt;; their e. ngagemcnt and approaching marattends chu{Ch.
1
•
·
The bride-elect is a gra?ua~. of Southern High S~hool, class ,- n~~·e bride-elect is the daughter of James and Peggy Robino£.1993, andMarshall Uruvemty. class of 1997. She IS ~ former son of Coolville. She will graduate from Eastern High School'
~abrshall Und1vemty ch.eerlea~ehr and holds a .bac~elhors degree in May and is currendy emploYed at the Rockspringll Reha~
10 us10ess a numsttatlon w1t a... concenttanQn m ealth care . bili'tan· on c ent er.
·
management.
·
Her fiance is the son of Glenn and Lou Morgan of
She is the former Miss West Virginia Hawaii:~,n J'ropic.
Williamstown, WVa. He is a 1977 graduate of Orange County
Her fiance graduated from John Marshall High of Glenville, High School in North Carolina, and is employed at Northwest
WVa., in 1997 and wilir graduate in May from Marshall Uni- Pipe in Parkersburg, WVa.
versity with a bachelors degree in communication stuwes. He
The we&amp;Jjng is planned for Aug. 25, 2001 at the 19th Street
formerly played football for, MU.
· Churc.h of God in Parkersburg.
• ·

0'Nail-Morgan engagement

Long rifle exhibition set in Marietta
.

.

.

,' The Association of Ohio
MARIETTA -The Associ- Hennan said..
ation of Ohio Long Rifle Col-' .
He added the members and Long Rifle Collectors was
lecto., will hold its 26th annu- experts at the show can often formed in 1975 for ,tlie study
al exhibit April 7-8 at the identifY longrifles that visitors ,and preservation of Ohio made ·
· bring to the show, thus estab- muzrleloading rifles. The
Hotel Lafayette.
"This exhibit \fill enable the lishing the age, value, and_zhis- grou~ has recendy completed
general poblic to' 1view the torical significance .of w hat thl: . publication of a 6ve"vol- .
finest Ohio mu·zz!doawng otherwise would just be a ume set of bo~ks listing the
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. 1 the College of Fine Arts and
rifles' in existence," said Mark ,"wallh
gunsmiths of Ohio, by county, .
. anger... .
- The l'ylarshall University has been heard by local auwHerman, AOLRC president. ·
Choral Union will present its · ences in concerts ·of Cham"The approxima~ly-. · 400 '
annual . spring concert on ber 10 and local church perantique rifles exhibited by pfi...
April 8 and 9. The concerts formances.
vate · collectors represent some
will be held in Smith Music
. Rickard ·· is minister of
of the 6 nest ·rifles produced
Hall on the Marshall campus music at Grace Gospel
· 'vithin Ohio.
(corner Third Avenue and Church, and music teacher
"The rifles include plain
Hal Greer Boulevard and in ,the Grace Gospel Acadeworking rifles as well · as
will begin at 8 p.m. each my. He was heard last year in
extremely fancy brass, silver;
evemng
the university's performances
and ivory inlayed rifles that are
Tickets will be available at of the St. John Passion by
excellent example! of Anterithe door. Adult P!ice is $5, . Bach.
can folk art."
student price is S2;-MU stu. Branita Holbrook graduatThe exhibit for 2001 will
dents with activity . card are ed from -Marshall with the
include ·an'' expanded Jo~n1at ·
admit!ed free. Doors will BFA degree in voice perfotwhich will.feature an\ authentic open. at 7:30 each evening. mance in 1992, She earned
Parking is available on any her MM in voiee perfor- ' . 19th century working gunshop
on site, as well a "Trading
uni~nity parking lot after 7
rnance . from the· Southern .
Table" where members can
p.m.
Seminary in Louisville; Ky.'
"
offer muzzleloading arms and
~ The spring progra!f1 for During
1999-2000, she .
accessories for sale or trade.
2001 is a performance of the served as an intern at the Vir· "The purpose of the
oratorio "St. Paul" by Felix ginia Opera in Norfolk.
expanded format is to attract
Mendelssohn, scored for
For information, contact
visitors who may no~ther­
chorus,
orchestra . and Bals~w at 304-~6-2399: or
wisc be able to view and. P\lr- ·
soloists,
by e-mail at Balshaw@Mar·
.
chase original Ohio lonwlfles:·
This dramatic work focus- shall.edu. ,
es upon crucial events in the
life of St . . Paul, beginning
with the p~rsecution of
. Stephen; and continuing
•
with the conversion 'of Saui ·
of Tarsus (becoming St . .
Paul), following with a summary of his ministry among
th~ Jews and Gentiles and
enwng with his final journey.
Mendelssohn was much
taken with both the oratorios of Handel and passiqns
• of J:S. Bach (which .he had
rewscovered and introduced
to 19th century aucliences) . ,
In "St. Paul," he borrows
from both traditions, to create a work of dramatic power
and lyrical beauty.
In this performance, the
&lt;:;honl Union will be joined
I
4
by th'ree soloists: baritone
, . ." . .
you find 6ut about something terrif«:, it
"
Larry W Stickler singing the
is hard to restrain yo~elf- you have to tell
role of St. Paul; tenor Wesley .
Rickard singing the roles of
someone! Call and speak to a specially
Stephan and Barnabas; and
trained Holzer Medical Center
when you
soprano Branlta Holbrook as
the Angel.
have a health concern or..question.
,• The , per(onnance will be •
conducted by Paul Balshaw,
d~ys
distinguished professor of
music at Marshall University.
Stickler is professor of music
at Marshall University where
lie teaches Voice and Music
· Education. He is the immediate past associated dean of
about medication concerns

Marshall slates.spring
COJl~~rt !\pril 8·9
.-

.: flower
.; Basket

Available
In 111:1e1

The Secret is Out!

Wafer
P,u)l1p
PlaMfer
·&amp;ardeM
Barf
Jlla}tfer

RN

6 am until 2 am • ·7

Large
WagoM
Wheel
YiaMter

.

~

with biographical information •.
and showing examples of their
work.
The hours for the public are
April 7 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
and April 8 fiom 9 a.m. to
p.m. Fo; information, ·ctmJct~
Herman at 61~BS5-q57; or
Ted Dixon, 740;..98~2983.
•
'

lDxl&amp;

GALLIPOLIS
Th~
Thomas Merton Foundation
ha5 announce
2001 winners o~ The Thomas Merton
Prize for Poetry of the Sacred.
This year's ·contest was
judged by former US. Poet
~au~~e ,Robert Pinsky. More
than 1:300 poems . were
en~red in the contest by 545
poets. Entries came fr&lt;Jm 47
states and six · foreign countri¢s,· ' (
Fi11t ,prize of; $500 was
aYfarded tO..,Kimberly Johnson
for her poem " Pater Noster."
Ms. Johnson makes her horne
in California where she is
pu!'Suing a Ph.D. in English at
the' University of California at
Berll.eley.
She eArned an MA from the
Johns Hopkins Writing Semioars and an MFA from the
Iowa Writers Workshop. Her
work gas appeared in The
New Yorker and Colorado

.. '

the

Bazeho
SMaii .
WagoM
Wneel
YiaMter

..•

·I

Water'
Trough
YiaMter:
Jubk ·
Joard ·
·viaMfer

Gallia CountY WIC celebrates
National Nutrition Month ·
.
GALLIPOLIS
· The
theme for National Nutrition
Month,. "Food i!c: Fitness Build a Healthy. Lifestyie,"
incorporates the dietary guide_lines, Aipt, Build and Choose,
which can help reach an inwvidual'$ goals in the daily effort
f9J' good health and fitness.
~ ' InCo.pOating nutrition a~d
fimess into one's lifesryle will
help lifelong health, plus
reduce stress.
. -· ~~guidelines for ~er­
kans . l~Cgin with the basics of
the ABCs for individuai and
family health. These guideilnes
are intended for healthy children (ages 2 and older)· and
adults of any age. Aim for fitness. Build a healthy base.
Choose sensibly.
During National Nutrition.
Month,Gallia County WIC
Program partici~ated in activities for children and adults.
Nuttition , education activities
included visits to Woodland
· A'ccess HeadStart, Miss Paula's
D~y Care and theUniversity of
Rio Grande Health Fair.
WIC is a supplemental food
:ind nuttition education program ·for women . pregnant,
breastfeecling or who just had a

·

WIC STAFF- Jaf!!le Back, DTR; and.Janet Wetherholt, RD. LO,
are ell'!ployees of the Gallia County WIC Program; The WIC
Office IS located in the Gallia County Health Department at .
499 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
· ·
·
baby, Infants to 1 year old, and
. children to age 5.
•
. Apphca~u .. must . ~eet
mcome eligtbil1ty gu1delines.
For example: a family size of
rwo, monthly · income cannot

exceed $1.750; family size 'of
four, S2,722;family size of five,
$3,187; family size of six,
$3,653.
Call the WJC Office at 441 ~ .
2977 for information.

'From Solitaires to 'Bridal
Sets: 'For tfielargest ·
Iselection of
todf!Y's best ~tyles
all value priced
Cfiecli. us out before you
decide.

poetry contest
wln·ners for -2000 named

-

.

• 61Uap . . . . ·6tldild • ,.... C3

M~rton

i

!''

.

.,

.

\

Review.
· Review, Sundog, Cimarron
Her first collection of poet- Review, Another Chicago
ry, "Leviathan With a Hook," . Magazine, and other publica·will be released in . 1002 by tions.
,
Persea Books. "Pater Noster"
Moira Linehan received
' will appear in a forthcoming honorable luention for her
1 issue of Gulf Coast.
poem "On Jnishmor," She
Honorable mention prizes currendy lives in Winchester,
of $50 were' awarded to three Mass. Her new work has
individuals.
recendy appeared in Alaska,
Elinor Benedict received Quarterly Review, Green
"· ~onorable mention for her Mountains Review, Notre
'poem "A Wise Man's Gift of Dame Review, and Poetry.
Birds." She lives in Rapid
The winning poems can be
· River, Mich. Her poetry col- read by visiting The Merton
lection,"AIIThatDivides us;" Foundation web site at
won the 2000 May Swenson www.mertonfoundation.org
Poetry Award.
and then clicking on "W~at's
Karen Craigo received bon- New" and "Poetry of the
arable men\ion for her poem Sacred
2001
Winl)ers
"Self-Portrait as Woman Dri- Announc;ed."
ving 80 mph.". She teaches . These poc:ms.
also be .
English . at. Bowling . Green publishe~ in t he surnmer
State University, where. she is issue ofThe Merton Seasonal.
poetry.'ewtor of Mid-A'meri- The Seasonal is mailed to all
can Review. Her poem have · nlembers of the International
appeared in Crab Orchard Thomas Merton Society.
-·- ___ ,...,.,. ,_,..,. ······•

Yfpfirodite's Smile
rtfit fiearl frozen eartfi started to melt,
tR_esponding to tfie fond toucfi.
Of wanning sun rays;
rtfie hibernating life
Under tfiat deep.freez.e, eased out,
. 13reaking tfie barrier of ic~,
'IO tfie love's land of whispering winds,
and fluttering buttePjlies'. .

will

·'. '
\
'•

~·~

'

rtfirougfi tfie wi~dows of the scattered
Wfiite clouds over tfie river town,
IJ'fie angels watcfied with joy,
rtfie burning candles in tfie gorgeous
Wantfol eyes of an arcfiangel,
!And blissful~ blessed a wisfi.

Show Choir.
Exhibition
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rtfie Ofiio tR_iver, that was
tR_aging with the floods offeeling,
Was lulled to serenity;
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. !And in the heavens, .apfirodite smiled .
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Feati.tring

.Wheel

The.Hurrican~ H.S. Red Hots

Jarrow

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fJJ{alesfi rpatel

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Presenting Rocl&lt;: &amp; Roll
.
With Songs From "Grease" And Songs By Elvis
(

AprillO, 2001 • .7:00p.m-.
. ". .,_

a week

' Tickets are s15 for adults and '5 for -student K-12 and are
~4. available at Haskiqs Tanner, Rebecca's, and the door.

1

"''

admirer of &lt;Poetry

426 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
·.,.
(740) 446-ARTS

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:Nicole 'Rasfiid"

:~IUEL..,heatre

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C:ompliments Of

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Pomeeoy o Mktl:lllport o o.lllpolla, Ohio • Point Pinen-e, WV

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'Prom' afirst for Meigs

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S~nior ·citizens ·~enter

maybe enticing the MeigS Branch of the
Are you going lo the prom? No. not
University of Rio Grande into a movethe liigh school prom, the one being held
there.at the Senior Citizem Center on April
And -we've he.ud the village "is consid24.
ering trying to get the Middleport EleIt's a "first" for the center.
mentary for offices of village ofti~.
Jwt like the school pronis, the pllce
·As for' the Salisbury school, consulc;rawill be decorated &amp;om top to bottom
tion is. ~g giwn lfl ilsing it for tbe disand while formal attire will not be the
trict's Central Office.'fhere = a couple
dress, seniors a(&lt;' encouraged .to break
of ideas swirling about for use of
COMMUNITY
out their best and'join the rest for dane- Pomeioy Elementary. One has to do with
ing in the dark ... I lneap, daylight.
.The prom will be held from 10:30 from 9 a.m. ro 3 p.m. to assist owners in GOD's Net, the other Pomeroy Village.
a.m. to noon and Gerald "Gig" Powell, mbving out their possessions.
, 1 • As for the older Bradbury and Harthe man with the dancing feet, will be
• • •
, . risonville schools, we haven't heard a
the emcee. It will resume after the cenTaking schools out of.communi~es is thing, so they will probably be demoltds evening meal &amp;om 5:3g to 7 p.m.
always traumatic for residents and'-brings ished.
. -about conce~ns of what's going to hap·
• • •
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You know it's spring when RACO pen to the old buildings. Wjll they be
A benefit I'D. help with .medical and
announces plans for the aanual floWer torn down. left 10 stand vacant for years, other expenses has been planned for the
festival at Star Mill Park.
or put to some good use?
Beth Murphy f:imily. ·
·
It will be held April 28, and the enterThe reality of change to come has realBeth, who has young children at hon\e,
tainment this year will include the Mid- ly struck home and lots of questions are is suffering fiom complications of recent
night C loggcrs, the Ross Sisters and 'being asked~ what with the recent open- surgery and is now in rehabilitation. She
Clyde, Country Remedies, Country ing of bids on one phase of the project.
is the daughter offom and Sue Hayman.
Grass, and the Carmel Bluegrass Band.
Since you asked, we'll tell you what · The benefit will be held at the liorked
' Kicking off the fcstiv.1l will be a 1_0 we've he;ord at sc hool board meetings Run Sportsman Club on Saturday. It will
a. m. parade, the flower queen will be and "on the street." It's pretty. well set in incl~ean ;ouction to be held from 1 to 3
.crowned at noun and a .kiddie tractor stone that Rutland Elementary School . p.m. a d .a ch,icken barbecue dinner to be
pull will get under way at 1 p.m.
will be torn down and the bnd turned served · rom 2 to 6 p.m. for a donati?n of
• lior those of y.ou with crafts tu display oveno the Rutland Fire Departnwnt for SS .
and sell, spaces are now available. Just call a new headquarters buildin~
, Now about that auction. Items to sell
Marilyn Powell at 949-2678 if you have · Salem Center School is located on are needed and anyone who h,as Items to
property . which has some ownership donate is asked to take them to the club •
any questions, • • •
_~
complications,Iike teverrii&gt;g back to the house on . Curtis Hollow Road before
And ,speqking _of spring, the Meigs original owner when the land is not noon on the day of the benefit.
,
CountY Fair Board says it's time to occupied by a school. Sq that pretty well
If you have any questions, need direcempty the buildings on the fairgroun&lt;ts takes care of that school.
tions, or any other infornution, just call of "good stuff" stored" there over the
The Middleport .Planning Commission Jim Werry at 949-27 46.
,
winter.
is working on a renovation and restoraThe buildings wi11 ·be open .1nd a fair tion project for _the old Middleport High
(C/;ar/ene Hoeflich is general mAnager of
board .,Pember will be on hand Saturday School aqd have several ideas for use, like 71re Daily $etrtinel, Pome:or-J

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J' GALLIPOLIS - PA1ac1Wlg
• NIVice Addison Flliewill Bap. '· _. Chun:h 210 ~·I
·~ P'lcet
. • with Rick Batcus p reaching, 6 .
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·charlene
Hoeflich

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Moon wedding
Joy

POMEROY - Stanford Jay Moon a11d
,Renee Moon
were united in marriage on Feb: 28 at the Chapel of Bells in
Las Vegas, Nev.
The bride is the daughter of Charles and Paulette Cundiff of
Pomeroy, and -the groom is the ·son of the late John Moon of
Pomeroy, and Annie Harris of Middleport.
·-·
The R:ev. Bettie Rainey performed the 'double-ring ceremony.
For her wedding. the bride wore a white silk dress with la~;e
accent. She carried a bouquet of baby blue roses. with baby's
breath. The groom was in a black rwo-piece suit with a floral
·
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tie.
James Smith, uncle of the groom, attended the couple.
The couple honeymooned in Las Vegas for five days, After
returning home, they were given a reception at the home o(
the bride's parents. Dinner, cake and other refreshments were
served.
.
,
Attending were the bride's children, Dcsirae and Devon
Cundiff, Mark and April Mayes and children, Corey, Ashley; and
ShayUa Mayes of Pomeroy, Angie Fletcher and son Bpndon.
The couple now resides in Middleport. .

,.....

SOUTHSIDE - The Roach

: Family will sing at Han-bick
" Church, Little 16 Road, 7 p.m.
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:_, • MoNDAY, April 2
.
. SOUll-ISIDE 7 Chubs weight
_ , 1oea 8!JPP011 group, Soulhside
Community Cenler, weigh-ins
· 5:30- 6 p.m., lolowed_by short
-' · meeting.
F'OlNT PLEASANT- Kids
,. Bible Club, Wesleyan Holiness
.. , Church, 2300 Uncoln Ave.,
every Monday, 6:30 - 8 p.m.
for ages s~ to. 12. For informa·
__. tion call Debbie Alexander at
-,,. 675-5454 or Debbie Peachey
' at675-1187.
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LEON - Creston Cemetery
will be. cleaned for mowing
season. All flowers on the
ground will be disposed of.

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Wahama High
School will host an open hause
from 4 to 7 p.m. An Local
School lmprovtjment Co1,1ncil
,· meeting is planned at 6:30
; . p.m. in the cafeteria.
MASON -

,.. POINT PLEASANT--Mason
Cot!nty Farm Bureau, 7 p.m.;
· Mason County Ubrary.

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, TUESDAY, April 3
LETART- HELP Diet Class,
Latart Community Center.
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
followed by short meeting.
FLAT~OCK-

Give away
clothing cloeet eveI)' Tuesday
at Good Shepherd U.M.
Church, Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1
p.m.

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·.Exercise, proper
diet
.
can
help
prevent
osteoporosis
.
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In order to build strong
Q:_Does exercise play a role
bones, the body needs calcium
in dealing with osteoporosis? If
- about 1,500 ~gtams of it
so, what limitations or special
each day. This won't guarantee
directions should be followecj?
freedom fiom osteoporosis, but
A: I imagine you and ·most
it certainly does ~educe the' risk
of my readers know ihat osteoof this dreaded iUness.
, ·
poro~i(ik a diseasl' in which, the
Regular exercise is impo~t
boner become weakened. In
in
reducing the risk of osteomore severe cases, ~the bones
John C. Wolf, D.O.
can become so weak that they
porosis too, because it is the
Alsoaate Profeaor
break while doing simple "daymuscular puU against
strong
of Family Medicine
• to-day" activities like walking
bones that encourages bone
· growth. osteoporosis.
or looking over your ,shoulder
as you back up your vehicle. cells. Some of these cells con- in a car'traveling a bumpy road.
( "F~~t~~i/y Medicine" is a wtek/y
Each year iii the U.S. about 1.3 staqdy diSSdlve elfisting bone, The · fracture produces acute_ column. To submit questions; WritL
million broken bones - or and at the same time, others lay pain in the area of injury that is to Jolin C. Wo!f. DO. Ohio Unifr.tctures as doctors cill them' down new bone. All b01~es, accompanied by .a great deal of ~~ersity College of Osteopathic
RIO GRANDE - Fine .- . ofVoiceBox create a sound
- are attributable to osteo- whether in an adult or a· child, ·· spasm in the· surrounding mus- Medicine, Gro.wenor Hall, Athens,
music is comingApril 22 to that audiences and critics
porosis; with mos~ yictims are continuaUy undergoing this des.
0/rio 45701.)
the University' of Rip love.
· being 45 or older. These fr.tc- type of change. Normally durOne critic describesVoiceGrande/Rio Grande Comtures are not only painful but ing adult 'year.;, the amount of
munity College when Voice- Box's rendition of "You Are
are also often fataL
bone formed is equal to that
Box performs .The New Day" as a song
You may be surprised to lost. This produces no net ·
The .perfor~unce,- which that "has a wedding song
begins at 2:30 p.m., will be afmosphere, recalling love _ learn that tipward of 40,000 change iQ the strength of bones l"'!oPo!"o!"o!"o!"o!'!.!'!o!'!!o!'!!o~o~o~o'!'o'!'.'!'.'!'o'!'o"•
Americans die each war from . because the ·quantity of stored
~ ..,d- in the John W Berry Fine birds an~ nighrfalls, it's rising
•••
causes i:lirectly attributed to minerals and living bone cells
/C
and Performing Arts Center and ' falling rhy~m will put
osteoporotic frac tures·.
remains constant.
at Rio Grande. Voice Box is you in ·mind of b~athing, oP
Women are af!liGted more · The loss of bone strength
being brought to Rio ' the ebb and flow of strong
often . than men with · osteo- fiom decreased mineral content
VfMEVrS :
Grande as part 'Of the Valley emotion."
porosis. Some addiliional risk can result in a crushing type of
·
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Artists Series.
Another · music .critic
' factors lor this condition, in fracture in the vertebra in the
-~IIFFFFW~ Clllltl :!
the Yo iceBox group is writes d)at the .group mem~
addition to being ~ woman . region of the shoulders and low
....11
-lllinR
composed of eight singers - hers "breathe together and
, after menopause, are surgical back. Other common locations
21% Iff 111•1111
:
who blend their voices into a swing together, but most of
removal of the ovaries before for oSteoporosis fractures are in
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sophisticated and entertain- all they have mastered the art
the IIOrmaJ age of menopause, 1the lower arm and also·ip the •
2ft0FFU.Inclllls :
- .ing sound, and they do it all of communication.'' The
being. thin, smoking tobacco, a hip. Most of these frlctures . 21% OFF Eft.
:
without any instruments. · group has performed \vith
diet
\vith
insufficient
calcium,
occur
suddenly
with
only
2ft1FfD·U·ISJI
:
The a cappella group from •groups such as the Cincinnot exercising regularly and minor exertion. Sometimes this _
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Cincinnati performs ·a mix- nati Pops, on Cincinnati ar:ea
cluonic use of sorne i&gt;tedicines" \' is no more thari lifting a light .
'
ture of pop and classical radio and TV stations and has
The
most
common
medicines
object,
jumping
out
of
a_
car,
TAWNEY
JEWELERS
songs in a fun and lively per- -also released several albums.
that can cause problems are the stumbling over a curb, suffering ~ 2 ~ ~~ tONIJ -\VF ( .,\UIPOII~
formance.
For inforn\ation call 245"cortisone" . type of steroids, a minor faU or even just riding
740-446-1615
The musicians are all clas- 7364 or 1. 800-282-7201,
sicaUy trained vocalis~ with ext. 7364. The VaUey Artists
with oralcommonly~prescribed
predniso11&lt;;. being the
.,.•
most
diver.;e backgrotinds ranging Series, which w~s created in
from cburch and synagogue 1984, regularly brings major
Bones are made of stored
singer.; to account executives events to the Rio Grande
one.
,
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minerals - mosdy calcium
.,
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in Cincinnati. When they campus for students and ~es­
.and several types of living bone ·
come together, the member.; idents.

. , POINT PLEASANT- Cloth·
,: . ing give away every Tuesday ·
~ 10 a.m. to noon at Point Pleas.· ' ant Presbyterian Church, 8th
..; and Main. Clothing contribu·
, •· ·lions appreciated.

_;hmilp . ·

.. MASON'-

~dicine

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VoiceBox readies concert·
at University of Rio Grande·

. ' HENDERSON - Line dane·
ing, Henderson Community
·(·~ BuHding wHh Instructor Dawn
,1 •. · HJ!attad,_.Bllginners 6 p.m.
••,: and advanced 7 p.m.

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PM G'IN lrl
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740-446-2342

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FiNANCIAL CONI'ANY

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THURSDAY, AprilS
POINT PLEASANT~ TOPS
(Take Off Po'!fldS Sensibly) 5
p.m. weigh in and meeting at
5:30 p.m. at Trinity unned
Mel~odisl Church. For informa- .
lion. cajl 675-3692.

GALLIPOLIS FERRY'Revival with Evangelist
Richard Harper of Cha~eston
April 1· 15 at Jordan Baptist
Church. Special singing nightly.
Services at 6 p.m. Sundays
and 7 p.m. weeknights.

POINT PLEASANT- Shoot
at the Point Pleasant Gun
Club, 6 p.m.

FLATROCK - Revival April 1·
5 at Good Shepherd Unned .
Methodist Ch)Jrch with Evangelist G~Phillips, 7 p.m.

POINT PLEASANT- Weight
Watchers, Christ Episcopal
Church, Main Street, Point
Pleasant. Weigh in al4:45
p.m. and the meeting, 5:15
p.m.
NEW HAVEN - New Haven
Jr. ~. U.A.M. 175 meeting, 7
p.m.
.
POINT PLEASANT- Mason
County Democratic Women's
Organization, 7:30p.m.,
Mason County Library.
POINT PLtASANT- The
Odd Fellows Lodg-e Easter
Dinner, 6:30 p.m. at lodge hall
fqr members ;ind their wives.

BROAD RUN - Relllval at
Broad Run Community Church,
April '1·7, at 7 p.m. Special , .
spea~r and singers nightly.
Sunday, Troy Dudding speaks
FRIDAY, April 6
and singers are Evelyn Roush,
SOUTHSIDE- Jam session
Sandra Long and Delores
at Southside Community Cen·
Riggs; Tarah Gerlach arftl Jon ·
tar, 1· 10 p.m. Proceeds to
·and Pjlm Stewart; Monday,
benefit building lund.
Billy Zl!span; Gloryland Believ·
ers and John and Pam SlewLETART -'- Jam session at
art; Tuesday, Billy Zuspan; The
L.etart Comm!Jnity Center, 7 to
11 p.m. Country, bluegrass and File Sisters, John and -Pam
gospel music. 'Letart Pioneers
Stewart; Wednesday, Billy Zuspan; Mark Coleman and John
4-H Club will have conces· '
sions.
and Pam Stewart; Thursday,
Billy Zuspan; Called for Christ,
SATURDAY, April 7·
John and Pam Stewart; Friday
SOUTHSIDE - Dance at
and Saturday, Billy Zuspan;
Southside Community Center 7 The Williams Family of Pre·
to 10 p.m. wnh Back Roads.
stonsburg, Ky. and John and
' ..
'
Pam Stewart.

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RACINE - Vllage Council, regl!lar meetiug, 7 p.m., municipal
building.

SYRACUSE- Sutton Township Trualees, ragular meeting,
• Monday, 7:30 p.m Syracuse •
municipal building.

REEDSVIuJ:- Olivlj'Townlhip Trusts as, Monday; 7:311
p.m. at the ~office on
Joppa Road. To get on' ag~~~m
cal378-6149 PIP' 10 nwelii~g.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
GommuniiY Association, 8:30
. a.m., Peoples Banking and
TruSt Co.
ALFRED - Orange ToWnship
Trustees, regular session, Tues·
day, 7:30 p.-m. home of cleik,
Osie Follrod.

· WEDNESDAY
PAGEVIUE- Sdplo T~ .
Tn~atees, 8:30p.m. Pagevllle

town hal.

Sunday, Aprll1
GALLIPOLIS - Evening worship at Chrisl UnHed Methocisl
Church will be al 6. p.m.
PORTER - The Rev. Lucian
, Neison will preach at Clark
Chapel Church, 7 p.m.
'
GALLIPOLIS -' Circleville
Bible

College Choir will perlorm at
First Church of God on Garfield
Ave:, 8 p.m.·
. NORTHUP ...::' Allee Click and
Dea!lna Stewart will speak and
sing at Northup Baptist Church's
11 a.m. service.

Thursday, April 5

Monday, April 9

ADDISON - Prayer"meeling at
Addison Freewill Baptist Churi:h,
7:30 p.m., with Jack Parson
preaching;

GALLIPOLIS ..;_ John Gee Historical Society will be open from
10 a.m.- 2 p.m.
Card Showers .

Saturday, April 7

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CROWN CITY - Evening ser·
vices al Good Hope UnHed Baptist Church are now 7 p.m.

Songlest at Deer Creek Freewill
Baptist Church, 7 p.m., featuring
the singing' of 'Earthen Vessel'
and wnh Pastor Mickey May,
nard.

Monday, April 2

Sunday; Aprils

CHESHIRE - TOPS (Take -Off
Pounds Sensibly) meeting at
IIOH 1383, Cheshire United
Mathodist Ch~rch. Weigh-in is
from 8:3(). 9:45 a.m. for more
information call Janet Thomas at
(740) 387-0274.

ADDISON- Preaching service
at Addison Freewill · Baptist
Church, 8 p.m., with Rick Bar·
cus.

A get·well dud drive is being
held for Benny Simpkins as he
recovers from surgery. Cards ·
may be sent to enher Pleasant
Valley Hospital, or to Benny's
home: 725 Williams Rd., Scot·
"town, 45678.
A get-well card shower is being
held lor Patty Forgey as she ·
recovers from heart surgery. ·
Cards may be sent to: Box 163,
Rio Grande, OH 45674.

We

GALLlf:'OLIS.- John Gee Historical Center will be open from
10"a.m.· 2 p.m:

ru..~y. Aprll3

.

, GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Academy
High Schoo) Choir Soosters, 6
p~ m., choir room.
Wadn•.•day, April 4 .
GALLIPOLIS - Christ United
Methodist Church will not be
having any worship ser'vice.
CROWN CITY :- Evening services at ·Good Hope United Bap-tist Church are now 7 p.m .

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. ~.BERKLINE®

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FIRST ...
BAPTIST

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CHURCH

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"'· .... April 1- 6

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Dr. Mike Bere
·Sunday 9 a.m. &amp; 1oa.m. Su)1day Night 6 p.m:
· Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. Nightly

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First Baptist Church·

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11 oo Fourth 'Avenue

1 m~~

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• Galli

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Tha

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Triumph
·
• Comfort Rest Mid-ottoman • Button Tufted
• Chaise • Adjustatile Pillow Back • Removable Back • erlock® Removalli'e Back • Wallaway®
Back • Rocker-Recliner •-Handle activated
Recliner • Button Activated ·
·
. .,

·Everyone Welcome

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THURSDAY
SYRACUSE -Syracuse VilPO~ROY- Meigs County • • lage Council, regular maeliug, 7
Retired Teachers and Meigs
p.m. Thursday at village hal.
Educational &amp;ervice Centl!r,
RUTLAND - Rutland Township . sponsoring a retirement plan· ·
POMEROY. Fibromyalgia
Trustees, regular session, Mon- ning seminar, Tuesday, 6:30 to
self-help course. free. Pomeroy·
day, 5 p.m. at the Rutland Fire
8:30p.m. at Meigs High School.
every Thursday, 1 to'3
Station.
. All active teachers and spouses p
seven weeks beginning
welcome.
Thu
y. Sponsored by the·
LETART- Letart To~bip
Ohio UniVersity CoNege of
·Trustees, 5 p.m. Monday, oftice
POMEROY- ~lisbury Town·
Osteopathic Medicine and the
building..
.
ship Trustees regullfr meeting,
-Central Ohio Chapter of the
Tuesday, 6 p.m. township hall,
Arthritis Program.

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740-992-2156 .304-6 75-1333

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Road.

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POINT PLEASANT- Revival
at Gospel Lighthouse Church,
Chestnut Ridge Road, with
Evangelist Jack Parsons April
16- 21 at 7 p.m. Spacial
singers will be April 16: Mercy;
17: Harmoners; 18: Rollins
Family; 19: Joyce Banks; 20:
Stover Trio; and 21: Barcus
Singers.

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LEON - Youth revival at Cr•
slon Unned Methodist Church
·April 2-6 at 7 p.m. with Evan·
gelist -Chris Skeen.

RACINE- Racine Chapter'
134, OES, 7:311 Monday.
Reln!shments.

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APPLE GROVE - Builders
Quartet at Barton Chapel
Church, 7:30 p.m.

dioom, 10 elect ollicers.

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NEW HAVEN - Mid-week
Lenten sBfii!Ce, St. Paul
Lutheran Church, FJfth Street,
7p.m.

day.

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
Band Boosters, 6:30 p.m., ban-

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_ AIIIoonuru~ecttollli!nMI. ,

POPLAR RIDGE - Revival at
Poplar Ridge Churi:h Marc!!
28-31 at 7p.-m. with Evange- . list Rick Towe, pastor of New
life Church of God, 'Gallipofis.
Special singers include local
singers, Gloryland Believers,
Ray and Deloris Cundiff and
Earthen Vessels. For inlorma·
lion caU 1-740-593-7390.

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REVIVALS .

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COTTAGEVILLE...,. Contempoi'BI)' gospel concert. 6 p.m.
at Jackson County Fair
·
Grciunds, with Under Authority
and FiAI Proof. Admission is
one can of food. TheA! w~l be
a freewill offering.

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AN OAK

POINT PLEASANT - Community Lenten Luncheon, Point
Pleasant Presbyterian Church.
11 :45 a.m., Rev. Frank Frye
will speak.

parking lot. Part of dean-up
win be Lone oak and Sunc:nlsl
Cemeteries.

SYRACUSE- Syracuse Board
of Nllic Alfllirl, regular 11'111111·
ing, water ollice, 7 p.m. Mon-

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POINT PlEASANT- POint
Pleasant Cllywide _Clean-up
Day, beginning at 9 am. 'at
Point Pie~ Middle School

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57 court St., Oalilpolls, 740·446·{1000

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8

of 8lh and
Main, use lkle door.

WEDNESDAY, April 4
POINT PLEASAI'ttWednesday night Bible dubs
for preschool up through l 2th
grade, 71o 8:15p.m. at Gospel
Lighthouse Church, Neal
,
Road. Lessons. refreshments
and special craft night once a
month. For information call 675-7229 or 675-6620.

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QPen Monday, TUesday, Wednesday, 11110 Fftday f[Om e,,Q until s,oo, anciTnursGay frOm 8:50 unli16:00.

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Church,

GALLIPOLIS FERRY- Gal·
lipolis Ferry Convnunity Center
regular meeting, 2:30 p.m.

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For fast. friendly servic~ on your next loan. ·
see Peggy Watson,. Brancb Manager

POINTP
holies
Poinl

POINT PLEASANT- Quits
'N' Things, Too, 5:30 p.m., ·
Courthouse annex.L ;

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1

Rt. 211ypass,Polnt Pleasant, WV
304-675-7870 • Mon-Sat 9-7 Sun I - 6
300 2nd Ave Gallipolis, OH
740-441-9010
.
Mon&amp;Frl9:30-8 Tut, Wed, Thurs
Sol. 9'.30-5:00 Sunday Closed

in system.

To list your Happening, give ·us a ,call:

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cial-=lg.

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Debt·Consolldatlon
New &amp; used Vehicles·
·Home Improvements
l'tfotorcvctes, Boats, RVs
Furniture &amp; Appllantes
. .. and much more!· .

, ,..

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rt ' .
~:

we·re making_loans for . ••
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·' •· POINT PLEASANT- Qul~s
•' ' 'N' Thlnge will celebrate ,
National Quilting Day with a
birthday fiesta at the Mason
• County Courthouse Annex ·
, ;_. beginning at 9:30 a. m .'Ladi~s
:J;-• from Jackson County Creat1ve
.-:; Qui~ers will tie their guests. ·
( r Lunch, cake, punch, games,
~· ~ door prizes and fun. Gilt
excha[lge.
.- ~ POINT PLEASANT - County·
._ : wid&amp; teachers meeting, 5 p.m.,
~ : Carpenter's Local. Discussion
·~ : on giving teacher's more voice

BARGAIN DAYsl

iiiiii~-.- -.-.--.-,.~~----------------------·-..

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Community Can·
cer Support Group, 7 p.m., ·
Maso11 UnHed Methodist
Church. All area cancer
patients, families and caregivers invHed.

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' MONDAY
•
LONG BOTTOM- 8(tec Ml _..
, wlcee Mondly 11woutti' Sllurclay, .
7:311 •llf•r. Hazl8l CorMiunity
Church- Long Bottom, SpeJohn Elclwick.
....
l
.

I

p.m.

.... .

Mr. and Mrs. Stanford Jay M-.

SUNDAY, Aprtlt
r,rtng F~M&amp;dl Don't lot'gM
fO ~ JDIM' clc\"'

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s3ggoo
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$299°~

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Pomeeoy o Mktl:lllport o o.lllpolla, Ohio • Point Pinen-e, WV

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'Prom' afirst for Meigs

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•u•tbt 1t'ima- -~ldiutt·
r-~
·- ---~~~J:IJ
. ,IVIAII_
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S~nior ·citizens ·~enter

maybe enticing the MeigS Branch of the
Are you going lo the prom? No. not
University of Rio Grande into a movethe liigh school prom, the one being held
there.at the Senior Citizem Center on April
And -we've he.ud the village "is consid24.
ering trying to get the Middleport EleIt's a "first" for the center.
mentary for offices of village ofti~.
Jwt like the school pronis, the pllce
·As for' the Salisbury school, consulc;rawill be decorated &amp;om top to bottom
tion is. ~g giwn lfl ilsing it for tbe disand while formal attire will not be the
trict's Central Office.'fhere = a couple
dress, seniors a(&lt;' encouraged .to break
of ideas swirling about for use of
COMMUNITY
out their best and'join the rest for dane- Pomeioy Elementary. One has to do with
ing in the dark ... I lneap, daylight.
.The prom will be held from 10:30 from 9 a.m. ro 3 p.m. to assist owners in GOD's Net, the other Pomeroy Village.
a.m. to noon and Gerald "Gig" Powell, mbving out their possessions.
, 1 • As for the older Bradbury and Harthe man with the dancing feet, will be
• • •
, . risonville schools, we haven't heard a
the emcee. It will resume after the cenTaking schools out of.communi~es is thing, so they will probably be demoltds evening meal &amp;om 5:3g to 7 p.m.
always traumatic for residents and'-brings ished.
. -about conce~ns of what's going to hap·
• • •
·
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You know it's spring when RACO pen to the old buildings. Wjll they be
A benefit I'D. help with .medical and
announces plans for the aanual floWer torn down. left 10 stand vacant for years, other expenses has been planned for the
festival at Star Mill Park.
or put to some good use?
Beth Murphy f:imily. ·
·
It will be held April 28, and the enterThe reality of change to come has realBeth, who has young children at hon\e,
tainment this year will include the Mid- ly struck home and lots of questions are is suffering fiom complications of recent
night C loggcrs, the Ross Sisters and 'being asked~ what with the recent open- surgery and is now in rehabilitation. She
Clyde, Country Remedies, Country ing of bids on one phase of the project.
is the daughter offom and Sue Hayman.
Grass, and the Carmel Bluegrass Band.
Since you asked, we'll tell you what · The benefit will be held at the liorked
' Kicking off the fcstiv.1l will be a 1_0 we've he;ord at sc hool board meetings Run Sportsman Club on Saturday. It will
a. m. parade, the flower queen will be and "on the street." It's pretty. well set in incl~ean ;ouction to be held from 1 to 3
.crowned at noun and a .kiddie tractor stone that Rutland Elementary School . p.m. a d .a ch,icken barbecue dinner to be
pull will get under way at 1 p.m.
will be torn down and the bnd turned served · rom 2 to 6 p.m. for a donati?n of
• lior those of y.ou with crafts tu display oveno the Rutland Fire Departnwnt for SS .
and sell, spaces are now available. Just call a new headquarters buildin~
, Now about that auction. Items to sell
Marilyn Powell at 949-2678 if you have · Salem Center School is located on are needed and anyone who h,as Items to
property . which has some ownership donate is asked to take them to the club •
any questions, • • •
_~
complications,Iike teverrii&gt;g back to the house on . Curtis Hollow Road before
And ,speqking _of spring, the Meigs original owner when the land is not noon on the day of the benefit.
,
CountY Fair Board says it's time to occupied by a school. Sq that pretty well
If you have any questions, need direcempty the buildings on the fairgroun&lt;ts takes care of that school.
tions, or any other infornution, just call of "good stuff" stored" there over the
The Middleport .Planning Commission Jim Werry at 949-27 46.
,
winter.
is working on a renovation and restoraThe buildings wi11 ·be open .1nd a fair tion project for _the old Middleport High
(C/;ar/ene Hoeflich is general mAnager of
board .,Pember will be on hand Saturday School aqd have several ideas for use, like 71re Daily $etrtinel, Pome:or-J

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,• , hour/
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J' GALLIPOLIS - PA1ac1Wlg
• NIVice Addison Flliewill Bap. '· _. Chun:h 210 ~·I
·~ P'lcet
. • with Rick Batcus p reaching, 6 .
•

·charlene
Hoeflich

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Moon wedding
Joy

POMEROY - Stanford Jay Moon a11d
,Renee Moon
were united in marriage on Feb: 28 at the Chapel of Bells in
Las Vegas, Nev.
The bride is the daughter of Charles and Paulette Cundiff of
Pomeroy, and -the groom is the ·son of the late John Moon of
Pomeroy, and Annie Harris of Middleport.
·-·
The R:ev. Bettie Rainey performed the 'double-ring ceremony.
For her wedding. the bride wore a white silk dress with la~;e
accent. She carried a bouquet of baby blue roses. with baby's
breath. The groom was in a black rwo-piece suit with a floral
·
_
tie.
James Smith, uncle of the groom, attended the couple.
The couple honeymooned in Las Vegas for five days, After
returning home, they were given a reception at the home o(
the bride's parents. Dinner, cake and other refreshments were
served.
.
,
Attending were the bride's children, Dcsirae and Devon
Cundiff, Mark and April Mayes and children, Corey, Ashley; and
ShayUa Mayes of Pomeroy, Angie Fletcher and son Bpndon.
The couple now resides in Middleport. .

,.....

SOUTHSIDE - The Roach

: Family will sing at Han-bick
" Church, Little 16 Road, 7 p.m.
•

:_, • MoNDAY, April 2
.
. SOUll-ISIDE 7 Chubs weight
_ , 1oea 8!JPP011 group, Soulhside
Community Cenler, weigh-ins
· 5:30- 6 p.m., lolowed_by short
-' · meeting.
F'OlNT PLEASANT- Kids
,. Bible Club, Wesleyan Holiness
.. , Church, 2300 Uncoln Ave.,
every Monday, 6:30 - 8 p.m.
for ages s~ to. 12. For informa·
__. tion call Debbie Alexander at
-,,. 675-5454 or Debbie Peachey
' at675-1187.
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LEON - Creston Cemetery
will be. cleaned for mowing
season. All flowers on the
ground will be disposed of.

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Wahama High
School will host an open hause
from 4 to 7 p.m. An Local
School lmprovtjment Co1,1ncil
,· meeting is planned at 6:30
; . p.m. in the cafeteria.
MASON -

,.. POINT PLEASANT--Mason
Cot!nty Farm Bureau, 7 p.m.;
· Mason County Ubrary.

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, TUESDAY, April 3
LETART- HELP Diet Class,
Latart Community Center.
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
followed by short meeting.
FLAT~OCK-

Give away
clothing cloeet eveI)' Tuesday
at Good Shepherd U.M.
Church, Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1
p.m.

•

·.Exercise, proper
diet
.
can
help
prevent
osteoporosis
.
'

In order to build strong
Q:_Does exercise play a role
bones, the body needs calcium
in dealing with osteoporosis? If
- about 1,500 ~gtams of it
so, what limitations or special
each day. This won't guarantee
directions should be followecj?
freedom fiom osteoporosis, but
A: I imagine you and ·most
it certainly does ~educe the' risk
of my readers know ihat osteoof this dreaded iUness.
, ·
poro~i(ik a diseasl' in which, the
Regular exercise is impo~t
boner become weakened. In
in
reducing the risk of osteomore severe cases, ~the bones
John C. Wolf, D.O.
can become so weak that they
porosis too, because it is the
Alsoaate Profeaor
break while doing simple "daymuscular puU against
strong
of Family Medicine
• to-day" activities like walking
bones that encourages bone
· growth. osteoporosis.
or looking over your ,shoulder
as you back up your vehicle. cells. Some of these cells con- in a car'traveling a bumpy road.
( "F~~t~~i/y Medicine" is a wtek/y
Each year iii the U.S. about 1.3 staqdy diSSdlve elfisting bone, The · fracture produces acute_ column. To submit questions; WritL
million broken bones - or and at the same time, others lay pain in the area of injury that is to Jolin C. Wo!f. DO. Ohio Unifr.tctures as doctors cill them' down new bone. All b01~es, accompanied by .a great deal of ~~ersity College of Osteopathic
RIO GRANDE - Fine .- . ofVoiceBox create a sound
- are attributable to osteo- whether in an adult or a· child, ·· spasm in the· surrounding mus- Medicine, Gro.wenor Hall, Athens,
music is comingApril 22 to that audiences and critics
porosis; with mos~ yictims are continuaUy undergoing this des.
0/rio 45701.)
the University' of Rip love.
· being 45 or older. These fr.tc- type of change. Normally durOne critic describesVoiceGrande/Rio Grande Comtures are not only painful but ing adult 'year.;, the amount of
munity College when Voice- Box's rendition of "You Are
are also often fataL
bone formed is equal to that
Box performs .The New Day" as a song
You may be surprised to lost. This produces no net ·
The .perfor~unce,- which that "has a wedding song
begins at 2:30 p.m., will be afmosphere, recalling love _ learn that tipward of 40,000 change iQ the strength of bones l"'!oPo!"o!"o!"o!"o!'!.!'!o!'!!o!'!!o~o~o~o'!'o'!'.'!'.'!'o'!'o"•
Americans die each war from . because the ·quantity of stored
~ ..,d- in the John W Berry Fine birds an~ nighrfalls, it's rising
•••
causes i:lirectly attributed to minerals and living bone cells
/C
and Performing Arts Center and ' falling rhy~m will put
osteoporotic frac tures·.
remains constant.
at Rio Grande. Voice Box is you in ·mind of b~athing, oP
Women are af!liGted more · The loss of bone strength
being brought to Rio ' the ebb and flow of strong
often . than men with · osteo- fiom decreased mineral content
VfMEVrS :
Grande as part 'Of the Valley emotion."
porosis. Some addiliional risk can result in a crushing type of
·
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Artists Series.
Another · music .critic
' factors lor this condition, in fracture in the vertebra in the
-~IIFFFFW~ Clllltl :!
the Yo iceBox group is writes d)at the .group mem~
addition to being ~ woman . region of the shoulders and low
....11
-lllinR
composed of eight singers - hers "breathe together and
, after menopause, are surgical back. Other common locations
21% Iff 111•1111
:
who blend their voices into a swing together, but most of
removal of the ovaries before for oSteoporosis fractures are in
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sophisticated and entertain- all they have mastered the art
the IIOrmaJ age of menopause, 1the lower arm and also·ip the •
2ft0FFU.Inclllls :
- .ing sound, and they do it all of communication.'' The
being. thin, smoking tobacco, a hip. Most of these frlctures . 21% OFF Eft.
:
without any instruments. · group has performed \vith
diet
\vith
insufficient
calcium,
occur
suddenly
with
only
2ft1FfD·U·ISJI
:
The a cappella group from •groups such as the Cincinnot exercising regularly and minor exertion. Sometimes this _
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Cincinnati performs ·a mix- nati Pops, on Cincinnati ar:ea
cluonic use of sorne i&gt;tedicines" \' is no more thari lifting a light .
'
ture of pop and classical radio and TV stations and has
The
most
common
medicines
object,
jumping
out
of
a_
car,
TAWNEY
JEWELERS
songs in a fun and lively per- -also released several albums.
that can cause problems are the stumbling over a curb, suffering ~ 2 ~ ~~ tONIJ -\VF ( .,\UIPOII~
formance.
For inforn\ation call 245"cortisone" . type of steroids, a minor faU or even just riding
740-446-1615
The musicians are all clas- 7364 or 1. 800-282-7201,
sicaUy trained vocalis~ with ext. 7364. The VaUey Artists
with oralcommonly~prescribed
predniso11&lt;;. being the
.,.•
most
diver.;e backgrotinds ranging Series, which w~s created in
from cburch and synagogue 1984, regularly brings major
Bones are made of stored
singer.; to account executives events to the Rio Grande
one.
,
.•
minerals - mosdy calcium
.,
·
in Cincinnati. When they campus for students and ~es­
.and several types of living bone ·
come together, the member.; idents.

. , POINT PLEASANT- Cloth·
,: . ing give away every Tuesday ·
~ 10 a.m. to noon at Point Pleas.· ' ant Presbyterian Church, 8th
..; and Main. Clothing contribu·
, •· ·lions appreciated.

_;hmilp . ·

.. MASON'-

~dicine

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VoiceBox readies concert·
at University of Rio Grande·

. ' HENDERSON - Line dane·
ing, Henderson Community
·(·~ BuHding wHh Instructor Dawn
,1 •. · HJ!attad,_.Bllginners 6 p.m.
••,: and advanced 7 p.m.

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"·" J ,

AT TA

PM G'IN lrl
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740-446-2342

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FiNANCIAL CONI'ANY

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THURSDAY, AprilS
POINT PLEASANT~ TOPS
(Take Off Po'!fldS Sensibly) 5
p.m. weigh in and meeting at
5:30 p.m. at Trinity unned
Mel~odisl Church. For informa- .
lion. cajl 675-3692.

GALLIPOLIS FERRY'Revival with Evangelist
Richard Harper of Cha~eston
April 1· 15 at Jordan Baptist
Church. Special singing nightly.
Services at 6 p.m. Sundays
and 7 p.m. weeknights.

POINT PLEASANT- Shoot
at the Point Pleasant Gun
Club, 6 p.m.

FLATROCK - Revival April 1·
5 at Good Shepherd Unned .
Methodist Ch)Jrch with Evangelist G~Phillips, 7 p.m.

POINT PLEASANT- Weight
Watchers, Christ Episcopal
Church, Main Street, Point
Pleasant. Weigh in al4:45
p.m. and the meeting, 5:15
p.m.
NEW HAVEN - New Haven
Jr. ~. U.A.M. 175 meeting, 7
p.m.
.
POINT PLEASANT- Mason
County Democratic Women's
Organization, 7:30p.m.,
Mason County Library.
POINT PLtASANT- The
Odd Fellows Lodg-e Easter
Dinner, 6:30 p.m. at lodge hall
fqr members ;ind their wives.

BROAD RUN - Relllval at
Broad Run Community Church,
April '1·7, at 7 p.m. Special , .
spea~r and singers nightly.
Sunday, Troy Dudding speaks
FRIDAY, April 6
and singers are Evelyn Roush,
SOUTHSIDE- Jam session
Sandra Long and Delores
at Southside Community Cen·
Riggs; Tarah Gerlach arftl Jon ·
tar, 1· 10 p.m. Proceeds to
·and Pjlm Stewart; Monday,
benefit building lund.
Billy Zl!span; Gloryland Believ·
ers and John and Pam SlewLETART -'- Jam session at
art; Tuesday, Billy Zuspan; The
L.etart Comm!Jnity Center, 7 to
11 p.m. Country, bluegrass and File Sisters, John and -Pam
gospel music. 'Letart Pioneers
Stewart; Wednesday, Billy Zuspan; Mark Coleman and John
4-H Club will have conces· '
sions.
and Pam Stewart; Thursday,
Billy Zuspan; Called for Christ,
SATURDAY, April 7·
John and Pam Stewart; Friday
SOUTHSIDE - Dance at
and Saturday, Billy Zuspan;
Southside Community Center 7 The Williams Family of Pre·
to 10 p.m. wnh Back Roads.
stonsburg, Ky. and John and
' ..
'
Pam Stewart.

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RACINE - Vllage Council, regl!lar meetiug, 7 p.m., municipal
building.

SYRACUSE- Sutton Township Trualees, ragular meeting,
• Monday, 7:30 p.m Syracuse •
municipal building.

REEDSVIuJ:- Olivlj'Townlhip Trusts as, Monday; 7:311
p.m. at the ~office on
Joppa Road. To get on' ag~~~m
cal378-6149 PIP' 10 nwelii~g.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
GommuniiY Association, 8:30
. a.m., Peoples Banking and
TruSt Co.
ALFRED - Orange ToWnship
Trustees, regular session, Tues·
day, 7:30 p.-m. home of cleik,
Osie Follrod.

· WEDNESDAY
PAGEVIUE- Sdplo T~ .
Tn~atees, 8:30p.m. Pagevllle

town hal.

Sunday, Aprll1
GALLIPOLIS - Evening worship at Chrisl UnHed Methocisl
Church will be al 6. p.m.
PORTER - The Rev. Lucian
, Neison will preach at Clark
Chapel Church, 7 p.m.
'
GALLIPOLIS -' Circleville
Bible

College Choir will perlorm at
First Church of God on Garfield
Ave:, 8 p.m.·
. NORTHUP ...::' Allee Click and
Dea!lna Stewart will speak and
sing at Northup Baptist Church's
11 a.m. service.

Thursday, April 5

Monday, April 9

ADDISON - Prayer"meeling at
Addison Freewill Baptist Churi:h,
7:30 p.m., with Jack Parson
preaching;

GALLIPOLIS ..;_ John Gee Historical Society will be open from
10 a.m.- 2 p.m.
Card Showers .

Saturday, April 7

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CROWN CITY - Evening ser·
vices al Good Hope UnHed Baptist Church are now 7 p.m.

Songlest at Deer Creek Freewill
Baptist Church, 7 p.m., featuring
the singing' of 'Earthen Vessel'
and wnh Pastor Mickey May,
nard.

Monday, April 2

Sunday; Aprils

CHESHIRE - TOPS (Take -Off
Pounds Sensibly) meeting at
IIOH 1383, Cheshire United
Mathodist Ch~rch. Weigh-in is
from 8:3(). 9:45 a.m. for more
information call Janet Thomas at
(740) 387-0274.

ADDISON- Preaching service
at Addison Freewill · Baptist
Church, 8 p.m., with Rick Bar·
cus.

A get·well dud drive is being
held for Benny Simpkins as he
recovers from surgery. Cards ·
may be sent to enher Pleasant
Valley Hospital, or to Benny's
home: 725 Williams Rd., Scot·
"town, 45678.
A get-well card shower is being
held lor Patty Forgey as she ·
recovers from heart surgery. ·
Cards may be sent to: Box 163,
Rio Grande, OH 45674.

We

GALLlf:'OLIS.- John Gee Historical Center will be open from
10"a.m.· 2 p.m:

ru..~y. Aprll3

.

, GALLIPOLIS - Gallla Academy
High Schoo) Choir Soosters, 6
p~ m., choir room.
Wadn•.•day, April 4 .
GALLIPOLIS - Christ United
Methodist Church will not be
having any worship ser'vice.
CROWN CITY :- Evening services at ·Good Hope United Bap-tist Church are now 7 p.m .

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. ~.BERKLINE®

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FIRST ...
BAPTIST

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CHURCH

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"'· .... April 1- 6

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Dr. Mike Bere
·Sunday 9 a.m. &amp; 1oa.m. Su)1day Night 6 p.m:
· Monday thru Friday 7 p.m. Nightly

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First Baptist Church·

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11 oo Fourth 'Avenue

1 m~~

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m m

• Galli

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p

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Tha

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Triumph
·
• Comfort Rest Mid-ottoman • Button Tufted
• Chaise • Adjustatile Pillow Back • Removable Back • erlock® Removalli'e Back • Wallaway®
Back • Rocker-Recliner •-Handle activated
Recliner • Button Activated ·
·
. .,

·Everyone Welcome

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THURSDAY
SYRACUSE -Syracuse VilPO~ROY- Meigs County • • lage Council, regular maeliug, 7
Retired Teachers and Meigs
p.m. Thursday at village hal.
Educational &amp;ervice Centl!r,
RUTLAND - Rutland Township . sponsoring a retirement plan· ·
POMEROY. Fibromyalgia
Trustees, regular session, Mon- ning seminar, Tuesday, 6:30 to
self-help course. free. Pomeroy·
day, 5 p.m. at the Rutland Fire
8:30p.m. at Meigs High School.
every Thursday, 1 to'3
Station.
. All active teachers and spouses p
seven weeks beginning
welcome.
Thu
y. Sponsored by the·
LETART- Letart To~bip
Ohio UniVersity CoNege of
·Trustees, 5 p.m. Monday, oftice
POMEROY- ~lisbury Town·
Osteopathic Medicine and the
building..
.
ship Trustees regullfr meeting,
-Central Ohio Chapter of the
Tuesday, 6 p.m. township hall,
Arthritis Program.

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740-992-2156 .304-6 75-1333

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Road.

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POINT PLEASANT- Revival
at Gospel Lighthouse Church,
Chestnut Ridge Road, with
Evangelist Jack Parsons April
16- 21 at 7 p.m. Spacial
singers will be April 16: Mercy;
17: Harmoners; 18: Rollins
Family; 19: Joyce Banks; 20:
Stover Trio; and 21: Barcus
Singers.

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FROM

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LEON - Youth revival at Cr•
slon Unned Methodist Church
·April 2-6 at 7 p.m. with Evan·
gelist -Chris Skeen.

RACINE- Racine Chapter'
134, OES, 7:311 Monday.
Reln!shments.

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APPLE GROVE - Builders
Quartet at Barton Chapel
Church, 7:30 p.m.

dioom, 10 elect ollicers.

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NEW HAVEN - Mid-week
Lenten sBfii!Ce, St. Paul
Lutheran Church, FJfth Street,
7p.m.

day.

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
Band Boosters, 6:30 p.m., ban-

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_ AIIIoonuru~ecttollli!nMI. ,

POPLAR RIDGE - Revival at
Poplar Ridge Churi:h Marc!!
28-31 at 7p.-m. with Evange- . list Rick Towe, pastor of New
life Church of God, 'Gallipofis.
Special singers include local
singers, Gloryland Believers,
Ray and Deloris Cundiff and
Earthen Vessels. For inlorma·
lion caU 1-740-593-7390.

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REVIVALS .

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COTTAGEVILLE...,. Contempoi'BI)' gospel concert. 6 p.m.
at Jackson County Fair
·
Grciunds, with Under Authority
and FiAI Proof. Admission is
one can of food. TheA! w~l be
a freewill offering.

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AN OAK

POINT PLEASANT - Community Lenten Luncheon, Point
Pleasant Presbyterian Church.
11 :45 a.m., Rev. Frank Frye
will speak.

parking lot. Part of dean-up
win be Lone oak and Sunc:nlsl
Cemeteries.

SYRACUSE- Syracuse Board
of Nllic Alfllirl, regular 11'111111·
ing, water ollice, 7 p.m. Mon-

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POINT PlEASANT- POint
Pleasant Cllywide _Clean-up
Day, beginning at 9 am. 'at
Point Pie~ Middle School

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AJt;o.

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57 court St., Oalilpolls, 740·446·{1000

e

8

of 8lh and
Main, use lkle door.

WEDNESDAY, April 4
POINT PLEASAI'ttWednesday night Bible dubs
for preschool up through l 2th
grade, 71o 8:15p.m. at Gospel
Lighthouse Church, Neal
,
Road. Lessons. refreshments
and special craft night once a
month. For information call 675-7229 or 675-6620.

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QPen Monday, TUesday, Wednesday, 11110 Fftday f[Om e,,Q until s,oo, anciTnursGay frOm 8:50 unli16:00.

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Church,

GALLIPOLIS FERRY- Gal·
lipolis Ferry Convnunity Center
regular meeting, 2:30 p.m.

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For fast. friendly servic~ on your next loan. ·
see Peggy Watson,. Brancb Manager

POINTP
holies
Poinl

POINT PLEASANT- Quits
'N' Things, Too, 5:30 p.m., ·
Courthouse annex.L ;

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Rt. 211ypass,Polnt Pleasant, WV
304-675-7870 • Mon-Sat 9-7 Sun I - 6
300 2nd Ave Gallipolis, OH
740-441-9010
.
Mon&amp;Frl9:30-8 Tut, Wed, Thurs
Sol. 9'.30-5:00 Sunday Closed

in system.

To list your Happening, give ·us a ,call:

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cial-=lg.

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Debt·Consolldatlon
New &amp; used Vehicles·
·Home Improvements
l'tfotorcvctes, Boats, RVs
Furniture &amp; Appllantes
. .. and much more!· .

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we·re making_loans for . ••
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·' •· POINT PLEASANT- Qul~s
•' ' 'N' Thlnge will celebrate ,
National Quilting Day with a
birthday fiesta at the Mason
• County Courthouse Annex ·
, ;_. beginning at 9:30 a. m .'Ladi~s
:J;-• from Jackson County Creat1ve
.-:; Qui~ers will tie their guests. ·
( r Lunch, cake, punch, games,
~· ~ door prizes and fun. Gilt
excha[lge.
.- ~ POINT PLEASANT - County·
._ : wid&amp; teachers meeting, 5 p.m.,
~ : Carpenter's Local. Discussion
·~ : on giving teacher's more voice

BARGAIN DAYsl

iiiiii~-.- -.-.--.-,.~~----------------------·-..

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Community Can·
cer Support Group, 7 p.m., ·
Maso11 UnHed Methodist
Church. All area cancer
patients, families and caregivers invHed.

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' MONDAY
•
LONG BOTTOM- 8(tec Ml _..
, wlcee Mondly 11woutti' Sllurclay, .
7:311 •llf•r. Hazl8l CorMiunity
Church- Long Bottom, SpeJohn Elclwick.
....
l
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p.m.

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Mr. and Mrs. Stanford Jay M-.

SUNDAY, Aprtlt
r,rtng F~M&amp;dl Don't lot'gM
fO ~ JDIM' clc\"'

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s3ggoo
'

$299°~

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Pomeroy • lllddlep ort • Gelllp all, Ohio • Point PIUtlnt, WV

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GRANI&gt;Ii -

8Y ~ &amp;SSOCW£D PRESS
ley and Shank bone..
not we too much warac.) In a laJF
NEWYOR.K- Oac of the most
Ac.cordins to Ginsberg. the bitter saucepan. cook liuit in the original
cdebnla:doCJewishboticbys,~ herbs, usually honeradish, are a. water until scii. about 1 hour. Stain_
arriws with · a Sourish hefalding reminder of the bitter lives jews led as c(l9ked fruit and warac through a
spr-ins. a time foi- Rbinh and renewal, slaws; the egg and the p..,!ey S)'11lbol- haiid strainer to make a solid pattc.
expl•im Johan~• Gimbcrg, pui!Oca- 'ize rebirth-and renewal; the buoset,a Maire sure the tough skin sepan...,
lions cliiKtol' at the Jewish Theologi- fruit-nut mixtnre, repn:scna the IDOl'- fiom the fiuit and remains in the
· cal Seminary.
tar used by the exiled lsnelires to strainer, to be discanled.
On the £nt ~ nigtus of the eight- make bricb for Egypt's ~;and · · Put the paste jn a h~ saucepan .
day feitival. which this year begins at the shank bone n=lls the sacrificial and cook o¥cr low heat to al1aw any
sundown SatuRby, April 7, fmWies · lamb whose blood was spl'C&lt;IIi ori the extra water to ewporate, turning
~mf¥:r a,ro&lt;LJDd the seder able to retell door poSIS of.Jewisb homes as a signal occasionally with a lal-ge spoon.
~:!:~,~Sto~~ry and Rlive their to the angel ofdeath to pass OYer these Remove fiom heat when the paste
~estcn:s'
liom slavery into homes while fidfilling the 1Oth reaches a good consistency. thick and
fieedom.
plague, the slaying of all ijrsr-bom not too. watery.·
Seder literally means order, Gins- Egyptian males.
f&gt;dd nuts, little by little, to the paste..
berg says, and the retelling follows a
!u the liquid paste cools, it will thickspecial ages-old order that begins with
Emile\ Egyptian ~ ·
en. Haroset 1112y also be garnished
the ~un~t child's recitation of four
I pound dates
with qm nuts.
questionS, including the often-repeat· 2 pounds raisins
.
ed, "Why is this night diffeRnt liom
~. pound roa5ted hazelnuts, shelled
DvOrah Buhr, a student in the ""minary's canrprial school, is also ·a proall other nighiS?"
, .
· and crushed
The seder plate sits at !he center of :, pound walnuts, shelled and cru~hed ' fessionally certified pastry chef. The
the table. On it~ five symbols of the
Barely cover the dates and raisins following recipe is fiom her Passover
holiday: bitter herbs, cgg;horoset, pars- with water and soak overnight. (Do kitchen repertoire,

Malzo ScradeJ .
./
12 sheets DlaiZC1
~ cup (1 lliclt) butter or nwpine
8 or 9 apples, cored and sliced
2 cups sugar.

cinnamon ·

1 tablespooo
~ cup -potato IW'&lt;:b or mauo cake

meal

Jl now on display.

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2 cupi applesauce
For the Sauce:
2 cups apple juice
Spte&lt;ll! 2 cups of applesauce on tffe
1 cup applesauce
tops of the struljels after they ~
· . 1 cup sugar
~n put in the pan. Dab; in the ~
~ cup buuer or margarine
for about 30 to 40 minutes. If areas !jf
2 tablespoons potato starch
the. -tzo darken too fast. place fiiil
T~ make the Strudel:
• lighdy over the pan, not sealing tire
Preheat 011en to 350 F. Grease a '1~ edges.
.~
by-13-inch baking dish.
To make the Si uce:
,.~·
Wet the matzo sheeiS under runCombine apple juice, applesa~,~cc, ;1
ning water and ~t aside. Divide stick cup sugar, butter and pouro stan:h ~
of b11tter into 12 equ:d portions and a saucepan; bring to a boil, boil for,;'
set aside. Toss apple slices \vith 2 cups minute and set 'aside: Ladle over finsugar, the cinnamon and potato starch ished strudels as desired. Serve \varQ?
(or
me:.!).
·
or cold. Try the dessert hot, a Ia mo&lt;Jf.. '
Lay a matzo. sheet on. a cleap;.r
work
with ice cream.
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ma120

Rich variety of Israel's cuisine Ma~in Ya.n on the road, taking~
includes·recipes ·for·Passover world view ·of Asian cuisine
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%teaspoon salt
Pia~ rice in a small fryi.!jg
blade, and chop or julienq~. Add t.he carrots, .
NEW YORK (AP)
:. teaspoon black p~pper,
pan over medium heat; cook,
lemon juice, orange juice, oil, and salt and
Martin Yan strides into -Dim
E'or the Dressing: .
shaking pan trequendy, unfil
pepper. Pulse until the carrots are well
Sum Go Go, -a funky China1 tablespoon uncooked
lighdy browned, about 3 t9. 4
chopped but not pureed. AdjiiSt the seasontown eatery in Manhattan.
Momentarily, he is bereft ·of
ings and serve, _ ·
white, long-grain rice;
ininutes. Immediately l':'mo)
~ cup thinly sliced shallots
fiom pan to coot:' Grind rtte
Makes 6 servings:
the megawatt grin that, along
Note: You can add orange slices and-or
with his . wok, cleaver and ~ cup coarsely chopped mint finely in a SP.ice grinder. Add
radish slices to g.~rnish this salad. Add grated
leaves
• ground rice to shallots, mif!t
comedic culinary antics, has
or julienned celery root with the carrots in
~ cup lime juice
leaves, lime juice, fish saua_
elevated him to chef stardom
, winter.
as the ebullient Chinese·chef3 table,spoons fish sauce
onion, lemon grass, pepper ailtl
This Israeli-inspired asparagus rtcipe is
. '!.
host of the public telc:vi$ion 1 tablesp0on chopped green sugar; mix well.
good dish for a Passover seder, or for any
series, "Yan Can Cook."
onion or scallionS'
Arrange lettuce on a pia~.
~ringtime meaJ,.Nath'an say!.
"Sorry I'm late; I couldn't 1 ~ teaspoons finely chopped . Just before serving, toss meat •
·
get a cab!" he says.
Asparagu\ With Jda Orange
lemon grass (see note)
with the. dressing, and arrange ·
and Ginpt Vinaigrette
' Shrugging off his · black
1 ~teaspoons crushed red
on the lettuce. Garnish .witft
2 pounds fresh asparagus
. leather jacket, Yan caDs the
pepper· ·
mint spjigs. Makes 4 to 6 sc;,._
4 tablespoons fresh ot:mge jUice .
waiter over and orders dim
1~ teaspoons SUgl!r
ings.
"'·
1 tablespoon fresh lemon jUice
sum in rapid-fire . Cantonese. • 3 cups shredded iceberg letNote: Lemon -grass ~ avalt&gt;1 large clove garli~. crushed
With food on its way, . he
tuce
able at Thai or Asian marketS,
1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger ~
· re~ns his usual good humor.
Mint sprigs
or ethnic sections in some gro_• Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
The peripatetic_ Yan has
Seasen beef steak with salt eery stores.
. ••1:
4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive ·oil
been on the roadllsince early and pepper.
·~
Black an,.d white sesame seeds for garnish
.January, traveling through
Place beef in a lighdy ,oiled
. 1 orange, sliced, foi-garnish
Bangkok, Singapo~, Taipei, grill pan over high heat. Cook,
Dreak off the bottom ends of the asparagus
Hong Kong, Guangzhou, turning once, until mediumwith your ha!lds.' ~ook the spears in, boiling
Beijing and Shanghai. He has · rare to medium (depending on
. salted water until tendq, about 5 to 7 min- .
just finished filming the · new preference), 3 to 4 nljmltes on
utes. Remove with tong5 and quickly trans"Yan Can Cook: Asian each side. (I( the flank s~ak is
fer to a large bowl of ice water so the asparaFavorites" series, which' thick, cover the grill pan with a
gus will. retain its brilliant green color. Drai_n
includes "The Great Chefs of lid. to cook the inside more
on paper towels and Rfrigerate, wrapped'iil'a
Hong Kong;' "The Flavors of evenly.) Remove fiom stovetop
towel, up to 4 hours befoJe serving;
.
Taiwan" and "The Wonders of grill, cover meat with aluPuc the orange and lemon juices, the garThailand."
'
minum foil, and let stand for 15
lie, ginger, and salt and pepper in a small-mixminutes. Thiply slice flank
· ing bowL Whisk in the oil.
Here is one of Van's Thai steak "'ross the grain and set
Arrange the asparagus on a plate and driz~
recipes adapted for home ·aside:
' j&gt;repare Dressing:
zle with the vinaigrette. Garnish with the
· cooks to try.
·
Tq
sesam~ seeds and orange .slices.
.. In the northeastern part of
Thailand, grilled meat ·dishes
'
with fiery sauces are popular.
Auto.- Owrter• .lmuram;e
Roasted rice powder is an
.
'
ingredient commonly added
Ute Home car BuaiU.
to meat "dressings," as in the
recipe that follows.
.1tf. '7/. Atl&amp; jZl . jt. •
'rhai Beef Salad
.NSURANCE PWS
(Neua Nam Tok)
AGENCIES, INC.
(Adapted fiom "Yan. Can .
Cook: The Wonders ofThai114 Com Pomeroy
land;' PBS series, 2001) '
•·.
1 pound flank steak
Stir in cocoa and melted but-·
Ma~es 16 brownies.
ter until well blended. Stir in · Note: To toast almonds,
!llatzo cake meal, then heat oven to 350 E Spread
chopped nuts. Pour into pre- allnonds in thjn layer in shalpared pan.
low baking pan. Bake 8 to 10
Bake 25 t(l 30 minutes or c-.inutes, stirring occasionaluntil brownie is set and sur- ly, until light golden brown;
face is shiny. eool complete~ cool cllmpletely before
ly in pan on wire rack. chopping. ·
,
Remove fiom pan; remove ·
Nutritional information
and discard foil. Cut in · per l!rownie: 150 cal., 8 g fat
squares. Place on,. serving . (4.5 if saturated fat), 2 g pro.,
'
plate with strawbetries,, if 18 g carbo., 40 mg chol.,_50 ·
mg sodium. ·
desiRd..

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C~ocolate favorite adap~

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ntcely to Passover trad1t1on

' • BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The · celebration
of
Passover is filled with special
S&lt;iDgl, meals and customs ind the challenge to prepare
great-tasting foods without
-leavening.
One way of'meeting this
challenge is with •this Fudge
Nut
Passover
Brownie
Rcipe, which uses cake meal
in plice of flour to produce a
moist fudgt cake with
crunchy texture fiom toasted
almonds. Another advantage:
· The recipe requires only
three simple steps. If you .
.wish, add fresh strawberries,
sliced or whole, to your
dessert platter. ·For vari~ty.
make -a batch of brownies
. with
chopped
walnuts
instead of almonds.
Fudge Nut ·
Paaaover Brownie
~ cup (I stick) butter
2 eggs ·
I cup sugar
'4 cup cocoa .
1
·~ cup matzo cake meal
·~ cup slivered alm~mds,
toasted and chopped
Fresh strawberries (optional)
Heat oven to 325 F. Line
8- inch square baking pan
with foil; lighdy butter foil.
Melt ~c up butter; set aside
.to cool slightly. Using spo9n,
beat eggs slighdy in medium
bowl. Add sugar, beat well.

992-6677

MEDICAL ASSOCIATES OF GALLIPOLIS
PRACTICING AT THE MEDICAL PLAZA
936 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
telepho.ne: 740-446-9620

Thomas Price, M.D. board certified in obstetrics an~ gynecoiQgy;
accep~ng new patients; practice limited omce gynecology, yearly
exam, pelvic exams, pap tests, and·mammogr41ms.
·

Isn't if a
.·good time
to give to\

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Balusamy Subbiah, M.D., board certified in internal medicine and
pulmonary disease; accepting new patients; p_ractlce limited to
chronic lung d!sease,,ilsthina, emphyse~a, black lung, asbestosis.

.

Goodwill?

To donate, please cill (304} 675-4460

Gerald E. Vallee, M.D. board· certified In internal medicine and
pulmonary disease.

Goodwill Industries
Stort I oration: Point Plllaant
3rd Street Bypag ffoodland p!ez•l
,

.

OPEN EVERY
NIGHT
.
MONDAY-SATURDAY 8AM TO 8PM
SUNDAY 11AM TO 7PM

On site x-ray, E~G, ultrasounds, st~ss testing, bone 4ensity testing,
pulmonary function. testing and extensive laboratory testing.
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• The show is open Monday
•through Friday until April 13
:_ftom tO a.m. until 2 p.m.
pnthe carnpbs ofi:he UniverJ ity of Rio Grande, in. the
' a\:rium of the Fine andPerfPnning Arts building.
· · .' The annQal "Meet the
··Artiscs and Authon Tea" will
':be Apri14,1iom 1-3 p.m.This
:event is open to' the pubiic
·
"ind aD are invited.
·•· "It is wotldcrful to see all
the fabuloiiS paintings this
~r. I am very impressed·
,with the writtdl essays and
pQems that have been subnutted," Matura said.
~ Community , Relations
· - ~oo!dinator Sharon Bow- •
.' man for the Area _Agency&gt;
said, "It bas been great \vork,ing with the Art Show Committee. In the past, it tok ·
three days to hang all the pictures and three days to tear
down the shoW. Now we do '
it in' one day."
For additional information
about this ewnt, you may call COMMITTIE MEMBERS -Pictured above are members of the Area Agency on Aging District
Bowman at 245-5306 or 1- 7 Art Show Committee. In front, from left, Rushie McAllister and Juanita Clark; back, f!arbara
'800-582-7277. .
. McKinnis~ Joan Exline, Kathleen Siders,.Ken McAllister and Bernadine Johnson.
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Gallia to obseiVe National Public Health. Week .

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,e11yiro.~IJ1.~1!t:

.J:irough ptibli~ health effortS
impnM! heal~ status, and
'ng and working environ- ·
' enu, the life expectancy .in
·e U.S. · has significandy
reased over · the past 50 HEALTH WEEK - Proclaiming 'April 2.!8 as National Health
Week In Gallia County were, standing, from left, Sandra Walk~years.
:&lt;II According to ·the Ohio er, RN, WIC director;. Zane Beegle, ~s. director of ·environ~epartment of Health, "the mental health; County Commissioner(Bill .Davis; Judy Linder,
1\.lse ·of population-based RN, BSN, nursing d.irector; and County Commissioner Shirley
~trategies .for disease and Angel. Signing the proclamation is County Commissioner Skip
. ('
.~njury prevention have con- Meadows.
;,t.Pl1uted to the decline in ill:r;ieu and injury, including services, environmental ser- home s.ewage systems. On
~eart disease and scroke, .;ices, . prevention/ ed~:~cation the local level in Gallia
~obacco-related · disease,
effort$, and crisis interven- County, I services such as
:Srtfectious disease, and motor tion.
_
mos'q uito •spraying; farm ani~e..hi~le
and
workplace
Clinical services available mal vou ohers; open dum}f
i)I\J UrlCI,
· at the Gallia County Health cleanup ; residential health
~ "Continued eff'otts to Department include a Pre- and safety inspections; scrap
:ii:levelop methods to immu- natal Clinic; the Women, tire c'ollebtions; and · water
~ize populations agaiillt dis- Infant!, and Children (WI C) sampling &gt;are just a few of
~uei, maintain sood nutri-- Program; and the Bureau for the additional programs
:tionalstandards, and provide Children with Medical offered by tqe health dep.art-·
~od • ·p renatal care for Handicaps (BCMH) Pro- ment.
Prevention/ education
.
t::rwne are pr.imary and gram.
An
aggressive
tuberculosis
'
programs
are an important
ventive meas11re1 vital to
health): commpnities."
. control program helps to means of, improving the
fi Local he~th departments. -limit the disease in the health of:'. the populatiqn.
Many ' d~,partments offer
responsible for public county.
The feasibilitY of a Well- · pro~rams ' to encourage
i;ealth in Ohio. They offer
Child
Clinic is also being healthier ·~fes,tyles anci p,re~te-mandated programs as
vent · chronic disease and
..,.ell as · programs created explored at this time.
The -laws of Ohio general- InJury.
;pecifically for their local
ly
mandate environmental · ·Childhood and adult
~ opubtions.
Program funding comes services. These include the immunization; blood prest'rom local sources SI!Ch 3_5.. licensing of food service and sure screening; blood sugar
ax levies, state subsidies and vending operations and the . and cholesterol screening are
·' ;!rants, and federal sources ins~ection and li~ensing o,f a sample of the variety of
~although these .dollars are · marinas, restaurants, public programs offered daily by
swimming pools and mobile the Gallia County Healih
:limited) .
·
·
DepartJ:!lent9ursing staff.
&gt;~« Generally !speaking, public home parks ..
Public health sanitarians
A new Cardiovascular
ealth cove'rs four critical
also
inspect
.
and
license
Health
Project Grant will
areas. These lhdude clinical
.

'

GALLIPOLIS . Gallia held. Past candidam oC this
Academy Board of Trustees award have included Maj. Gen.
met -recently at the home of George Bush. retiml, USA,
'- President Wilma Brown to the bte Lawa HBetty" Kratz,
make pbru for the annual Bertha Evans, Grace Davis and
reunion of all Gallia Academy Marguerite Hineman. They
High School Alumni.
have been recOgnized for their
· The reunion is held annually' contributionS to the cotllJDU.
at the Raccoon Park District nity and to recognize their
just off Ohio 775. Date of the . acc:ompJW,ments.
reunion will·be June 30. RegThe rest of the afternoon is
istration of members and spent r:enCwing old friendships
friends of all classes of GA.HS with all alumni and friends in
since 1918 ;will begin at 10 · attendance. Any GAHS gndua,m.
ate .interested in becoriling a
Visitation with classmateS member should contact Memwill continue until noonwhen bership
Chairman Janet
· a picnic lunch will be served. Wetherholt at 441 -OS 14 or
Reservations must be received Bertie Roush at tf6-4273.
. by the associatiqn by June 25.
The scholarships in . t.he
Alumn i are encouraged ro amount of $1,000 for twO
bring .a picnic lunch if they seniors graduating this year
choose, or,just visit.
from GAHS 'viii also be
Election of officers and awarded and announced durboard members for the ing the picnic. These recipients
upcoming year will be held will be in atcendance and
shortly after lunch. Cost is $5 introduced.
for yearly dues or $1 00 for lifeThis organization Ius many
tim~. registration is SS and $10 alumni items for sale. New
to purchase ~ . lunc h. Funds are · item introduced _last year is a
used to rent the park area, pay GAHS alumni charm or tie
for tents and to continue with tack pin.
one of the organization's main
These are only available fiom
objectives, to present schobr- one of the members of the
ships to tWo deserving students • board. To purchase one for any
each year.
·
GAHS graduate, contact
Presentation of the annual Wilma Brown at 446-6280 or ·
.GAHS Hall of Fame will be Bertie Roush at 446-4274.

.

Derek Q. Johnson ·

. address the significant -problem of deaths due to cardia-' ·
NEW YORK (AP)
vascular dis_ease in Gallia
Derek
Q.Johnson, a top execCounty. With the exception
utive of AOL Time Warner,
of some adult and travel
was named to head the hisimmunizations, the above
toric but. troubled Apollo
nursing services· are offe~d
Theater in Harlem.
to all Gallia County resiJohnson, following his
dents at no cost.
·
appointment by the Apollo's
In the . event of an outboard Thursday.'night, said he
break of diseases; for examwill step , down as an AOL
ple, Legiol'maires or Hepati. Time Warner senior vice
tis A, health departroents are
president to assume his new
responsible for the investigapost as president of the nontion and control. In the
profit Apollq Theater Foundaevent of bioterrorist attacks,
' tion, which runs the stateth~. Ideal health department
would be the frontline
defense. In ·other Words,
public health provides a safety net when a crisis hits.
The motto for . Nationai
Publi c
Health
We~k,
"Healthy People Living in
H ealthy ·
Communities," .
en c ompasse~ the national
goal to ensure that homes,
neighborhoo ds, and communities are places we all ;
especially 'our children, can
thrive.
For information about the
services offered by the Gallia
County· Health Department,
contact the nursing staff at
441 - 2950, WIC at 446,·· 6851, or the environmental .
staff at 441-2943 .
·

owned theater.
The board's vote· came just
months after Rep. Charles
Rangel, D-N.Y, quietly
!!!signed as chairman of the
Apollo's board.
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. GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia Coq.fttx Health Department !Jas announced that
April 2-8 is National Public
.flealth .Weelt.
.
,\, Altliough the public bene~ts liom public health's many
•~ccesses, . both · past and
..ongoing, they may not be
aware of the many contribu..tions that ~ been made to .
,imp= society's heJlth.
. "· The mission of ' public
· health is to promote; health,
prewnt diseases and injuries,
d maintain or improve a

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Barry Pepper

~ LOS ANGELEs (AP)

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;lll

~a_rry Pepper can laugh a~UI

.winning a Gqlden Raspberry
· ward . as worst · supporting
ctor in "B~ttlefield 'Earth:' .
• Basea on a novel by Scien,t ology founder L. R-ori Hub!bard, the film starring John Tra•volta was a box-office bomb. It
:;earned
R:azzies, includ; )ng worst pictuR and worst
) ctor for Travolta.
.
•. "i was hoping somebody
~uld invite •me. I would've
ne and accepted it;' Pepper
·
d. "That would've been so
uch fun. My agent probably
,
Uld •have told me not to."

POOLS AND

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Amber Johnson (right), her husband and a,on reside In Racine,
OH; She has nine years experience In long/term care as Director
of Admissions. She jolnetVIolzer Senior Care Center as Director
of Admissions and Social Services on October 28, 1999.
Patty Hartley (left) , her husband and three children reside In ~-·
Pleasant, WV. She has twenty-one years of experjence In
·
healthcare. She has served as Social Service Assistant at Holzer
Senior Care Center since Nov.1998.
Both state the fulfillment of their positions comes·from being a support system lor
the residents and their families. They also strive to ensure that the residents
:
maintain the highest level of quality of life as possible. It is caring Individuals like
Amber and Patty that make a difference in the standard of caring provided at
Holzer Senior Care Center. The staff at Holzer Senior Care Center is very proud .
of the Social Service Department and wishes them greal - continued success!

seven

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G4me H. Abels, M.D., board certified In internal medicine; accepting
new patients; practice limi~ed to heart disease, hypertension; lipid
abnormalities (cholesterol abnormalities) and any · ·associated
diabetes. Special intere5t In congestive heart failure.

·

on~ District 7 Art Show

· nwgarine on the top in the middle,~
the line of apples and roll up rbF
mauo; place it seam side down in tli'e
_ _,~ bakjn dish. When the diib
r·~..-~
--~ ~
JS . full, 'the finished ,..........
,
look lilre manicotti.
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announced

surface and place abou&amp;. cup of ~
apple mixture 41 a line down ~ UJ!.ter ofthe maim puallel to the lines,jp
the mattO Place 1 pat of butter or

.

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Matun bas
mat
~e 19thAnm~a1Area.Agency

•

NEW YOR.l{ (AP) . - Food writer Joan
Nathan, whose latest book celebrates Israel's
rich variety of food and culture, recalls with
delight the experience of Passover in Israel.
"We in America don't really understand
what Passover is like there;' she said, in an
interview by phone fiom St. Louis. 'fhe significance of bitter or green herbs, for exampie, in the joyous spring period. "If you lived
in the desert, you'd understand that the· only
· time you saw green things growing was in
the spring.n
Horseradish became a common representation of bitter herbs in Europe, "because in
March that could often be the only green
thing there was to include in the seder to
take the pbce: of the bitter herbs. In Israel,
~u really get a sense of where the traditions
come liom."
.
The "qUintessentially Israeli" carrot salad is
also an old family favorite, Nathan says. "Not
only does it taste and look good, ·but it is so
easy to prepare that I nuke it for last-minute
dinner gue~ when 'I have no lettuce in the
house. Somehow my fridge is always stocked
with raw carrots."
llueli Carrot Salad
· 2·cloves garlic
8 sprigs ~. bunch) fresh parsley, sterns
, '
removed
1 pound carrots, peeled
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 tablespoons orange juice
4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
/, teaspoon salt
Several grinds of pepper
- Place ,the garlic and the parsley in the bowl
of a food processor equipped with. a steel

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utiw Director Pamela K.

IIJ

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~AAA 7 art show now on display· GAHS
~ RIO
~pia

Passoyer foodS symbolize rich biblical histOry
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HUN11NGTON, WV

.HOLIDlYPOOL.
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Pomeroy • lllddlep ort • Gelllp all, Ohio • Point PIUtlnt, WV

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GRANI&gt;Ii -

8Y ~ &amp;SSOCW£D PRESS
ley and Shank bone..
not we too much warac.) In a laJF
NEWYOR.K- Oac of the most
Ac.cordins to Ginsberg. the bitter saucepan. cook liuit in the original
cdebnla:doCJewishboticbys,~ herbs, usually honeradish, are a. water until scii. about 1 hour. Stain_
arriws with · a Sourish hefalding reminder of the bitter lives jews led as c(l9ked fruit and warac through a
spr-ins. a time foi- Rbinh and renewal, slaws; the egg and the p..,!ey S)'11lbol- haiid strainer to make a solid pattc.
expl•im Johan~• Gimbcrg, pui!Oca- 'ize rebirth-and renewal; the buoset,a Maire sure the tough skin sepan...,
lions cliiKtol' at the Jewish Theologi- fruit-nut mixtnre, repn:scna the IDOl'- fiom the fiuit and remains in the
· cal Seminary.
tar used by the exiled lsnelires to strainer, to be discanled.
On the £nt ~ nigtus of the eight- make bricb for Egypt's ~;and · · Put the paste jn a h~ saucepan .
day feitival. which this year begins at the shank bone n=lls the sacrificial and cook o¥cr low heat to al1aw any
sundown SatuRby, April 7, fmWies · lamb whose blood was spl'C&lt;IIi ori the extra water to ewporate, turning
~mf¥:r a,ro&lt;LJDd the seder able to retell door poSIS of.Jewisb homes as a signal occasionally with a lal-ge spoon.
~:!:~,~Sto~~ry and Rlive their to the angel ofdeath to pass OYer these Remove fiom heat when the paste
~estcn:s'
liom slavery into homes while fidfilling the 1Oth reaches a good consistency. thick and
fieedom.
plague, the slaying of all ijrsr-bom not too. watery.·
Seder literally means order, Gins- Egyptian males.
f&gt;dd nuts, little by little, to the paste..
berg says, and the retelling follows a
!u the liquid paste cools, it will thickspecial ages-old order that begins with
Emile\ Egyptian ~ ·
en. Haroset 1112y also be garnished
the ~un~t child's recitation of four
I pound dates
with qm nuts.
questionS, including the often-repeat· 2 pounds raisins
.
ed, "Why is this night diffeRnt liom
~. pound roa5ted hazelnuts, shelled
DvOrah Buhr, a student in the ""minary's canrprial school, is also ·a proall other nighiS?"
, .
· and crushed
The seder plate sits at !he center of :, pound walnuts, shelled and cru~hed ' fessionally certified pastry chef. The
the table. On it~ five symbols of the
Barely cover the dates and raisins following recipe is fiom her Passover
holiday: bitter herbs, cgg;horoset, pars- with water and soak overnight. (Do kitchen repertoire,

Malzo ScradeJ .
./
12 sheets DlaiZC1
~ cup (1 lliclt) butter or nwpine
8 or 9 apples, cored and sliced
2 cups sugar.

cinnamon ·

1 tablespooo
~ cup -potato IW'&lt;:b or mauo cake

meal

Jl now on display.

....

2 cupi applesauce
For the Sauce:
2 cups apple juice
Spte&lt;ll! 2 cups of applesauce on tffe
1 cup applesauce
tops of the struljels after they ~
· . 1 cup sugar
~n put in the pan. Dab; in the ~
~ cup buuer or margarine
for about 30 to 40 minutes. If areas !jf
2 tablespoons potato starch
the. -tzo darken too fast. place fiiil
T~ make the Strudel:
• lighdy over the pan, not sealing tire
Preheat 011en to 350 F. Grease a '1~ edges.
.~
by-13-inch baking dish.
To make the Si uce:
,.~·
Wet the matzo sheeiS under runCombine apple juice, applesa~,~cc, ;1
ning water and ~t aside. Divide stick cup sugar, butter and pouro stan:h ~
of b11tter into 12 equ:d portions and a saucepan; bring to a boil, boil for,;'
set aside. Toss apple slices \vith 2 cups minute and set 'aside: Ladle over finsugar, the cinnamon and potato starch ished strudels as desired. Serve \varQ?
(or
me:.!).
·
or cold. Try the dessert hot, a Ia mo&lt;Jf.. '
Lay a matzo. sheet on. a cleap;.r
work
with ice cream.
"
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ma120

Rich variety of Israel's cuisine Ma~in Ya.n on the road, taking~
includes·recipes ·for·Passover world view ·of Asian cuisine
• i j;

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%teaspoon salt
Pia~ rice in a small fryi.!jg
blade, and chop or julienq~. Add t.he carrots, .
NEW YORK (AP)
:. teaspoon black p~pper,
pan over medium heat; cook,
lemon juice, orange juice, oil, and salt and
Martin Yan strides into -Dim
E'or the Dressing: .
shaking pan trequendy, unfil
pepper. Pulse until the carrots are well
Sum Go Go, -a funky China1 tablespoon uncooked
lighdy browned, about 3 t9. 4
chopped but not pureed. AdjiiSt the seasontown eatery in Manhattan.
Momentarily, he is bereft ·of
ings and serve, _ ·
white, long-grain rice;
ininutes. Immediately l':'mo)
~ cup thinly sliced shallots
fiom pan to coot:' Grind rtte
Makes 6 servings:
the megawatt grin that, along
Note: You can add orange slices and-or
with his . wok, cleaver and ~ cup coarsely chopped mint finely in a SP.ice grinder. Add
radish slices to g.~rnish this salad. Add grated
leaves
• ground rice to shallots, mif!t
comedic culinary antics, has
or julienned celery root with the carrots in
~ cup lime juice
leaves, lime juice, fish saua_
elevated him to chef stardom
, winter.
as the ebullient Chinese·chef3 table,spoons fish sauce
onion, lemon grass, pepper ailtl
This Israeli-inspired asparagus rtcipe is
. '!.
host of the public telc:vi$ion 1 tablesp0on chopped green sugar; mix well.
good dish for a Passover seder, or for any
series, "Yan Can Cook."
onion or scallionS'
Arrange lettuce on a pia~.
~ringtime meaJ,.Nath'an say!.
"Sorry I'm late; I couldn't 1 ~ teaspoons finely chopped . Just before serving, toss meat •
·
get a cab!" he says.
Asparagu\ With Jda Orange
lemon grass (see note)
with the. dressing, and arrange ·
and Ginpt Vinaigrette
' Shrugging off his · black
1 ~teaspoons crushed red
on the lettuce. Garnish .witft
2 pounds fresh asparagus
. leather jacket, Yan caDs the
pepper· ·
mint spjigs. Makes 4 to 6 sc;,._
4 tablespoons fresh ot:mge jUice .
waiter over and orders dim
1~ teaspoons SUgl!r
ings.
"'·
1 tablespoon fresh lemon jUice
sum in rapid-fire . Cantonese. • 3 cups shredded iceberg letNote: Lemon -grass ~ avalt&gt;1 large clove garli~. crushed
With food on its way, . he
tuce
able at Thai or Asian marketS,
1 teaspoon grated fresh ginger ~
· re~ns his usual good humor.
Mint sprigs
or ethnic sections in some gro_• Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
The peripatetic_ Yan has
Seasen beef steak with salt eery stores.
. ••1:
4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive ·oil
been on the roadllsince early and pepper.
·~
Black an,.d white sesame seeds for garnish
.January, traveling through
Place beef in a lighdy ,oiled
. 1 orange, sliced, foi-garnish
Bangkok, Singapo~, Taipei, grill pan over high heat. Cook,
Dreak off the bottom ends of the asparagus
Hong Kong, Guangzhou, turning once, until mediumwith your ha!lds.' ~ook the spears in, boiling
Beijing and Shanghai. He has · rare to medium (depending on
. salted water until tendq, about 5 to 7 min- .
just finished filming the · new preference), 3 to 4 nljmltes on
utes. Remove with tong5 and quickly trans"Yan Can Cook: Asian each side. (I( the flank s~ak is
fer to a large bowl of ice water so the asparaFavorites" series, which' thick, cover the grill pan with a
gus will. retain its brilliant green color. Drai_n
includes "The Great Chefs of lid. to cook the inside more
on paper towels and Rfrigerate, wrapped'iil'a
Hong Kong;' "The Flavors of evenly.) Remove fiom stovetop
towel, up to 4 hours befoJe serving;
.
Taiwan" and "The Wonders of grill, cover meat with aluPuc the orange and lemon juices, the garThailand."
'
minum foil, and let stand for 15
lie, ginger, and salt and pepper in a small-mixminutes. Thiply slice flank
· ing bowL Whisk in the oil.
Here is one of Van's Thai steak "'ross the grain and set
Arrange the asparagus on a plate and driz~
recipes adapted for home ·aside:
' j&gt;repare Dressing:
zle with the vinaigrette. Garnish with the
· cooks to try.
·
Tq
sesam~ seeds and orange .slices.
.. In the northeastern part of
Thailand, grilled meat ·dishes
'
with fiery sauces are popular.
Auto.- Owrter• .lmuram;e
Roasted rice powder is an
.
'
ingredient commonly added
Ute Home car BuaiU.
to meat "dressings," as in the
recipe that follows.
.1tf. '7/. Atl&amp; jZl . jt. •
'rhai Beef Salad
.NSURANCE PWS
(Neua Nam Tok)
AGENCIES, INC.
(Adapted fiom "Yan. Can .
Cook: The Wonders ofThai114 Com Pomeroy
land;' PBS series, 2001) '
•·.
1 pound flank steak
Stir in cocoa and melted but-·
Ma~es 16 brownies.
ter until well blended. Stir in · Note: To toast almonds,
!llatzo cake meal, then heat oven to 350 E Spread
chopped nuts. Pour into pre- allnonds in thjn layer in shalpared pan.
low baking pan. Bake 8 to 10
Bake 25 t(l 30 minutes or c-.inutes, stirring occasionaluntil brownie is set and sur- ly, until light golden brown;
face is shiny. eool complete~ cool cllmpletely before
ly in pan on wire rack. chopping. ·
,
Remove fiom pan; remove ·
Nutritional information
and discard foil. Cut in · per l!rownie: 150 cal., 8 g fat
squares. Place on,. serving . (4.5 if saturated fat), 2 g pro.,
'
plate with strawbetries,, if 18 g carbo., 40 mg chol.,_50 ·
mg sodium. ·
desiRd..

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C~ocolate favorite adap~

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ntcely to Passover trad1t1on

' • BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The · celebration
of
Passover is filled with special
S&lt;iDgl, meals and customs ind the challenge to prepare
great-tasting foods without
-leavening.
One way of'meeting this
challenge is with •this Fudge
Nut
Passover
Brownie
Rcipe, which uses cake meal
in plice of flour to produce a
moist fudgt cake with
crunchy texture fiom toasted
almonds. Another advantage:
· The recipe requires only
three simple steps. If you .
.wish, add fresh strawberries,
sliced or whole, to your
dessert platter. ·For vari~ty.
make -a batch of brownies
. with
chopped
walnuts
instead of almonds.
Fudge Nut ·
Paaaover Brownie
~ cup (I stick) butter
2 eggs ·
I cup sugar
'4 cup cocoa .
1
·~ cup matzo cake meal
·~ cup slivered alm~mds,
toasted and chopped
Fresh strawberries (optional)
Heat oven to 325 F. Line
8- inch square baking pan
with foil; lighdy butter foil.
Melt ~c up butter; set aside
.to cool slightly. Using spo9n,
beat eggs slighdy in medium
bowl. Add sugar, beat well.

992-6677

MEDICAL ASSOCIATES OF GALLIPOLIS
PRACTICING AT THE MEDICAL PLAZA
936 State Route 160
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
telepho.ne: 740-446-9620

Thomas Price, M.D. board certified in obstetrics an~ gynecoiQgy;
accep~ng new patients; practice limited omce gynecology, yearly
exam, pelvic exams, pap tests, and·mammogr41ms.
·

Isn't if a
.·good time
to give to\

i

,

Balusamy Subbiah, M.D., board certified in internal medicine and
pulmonary disease; accepting new patients; p_ractlce limited to
chronic lung d!sease,,ilsthina, emphyse~a, black lung, asbestosis.

.

Goodwill?

To donate, please cill (304} 675-4460

Gerald E. Vallee, M.D. board· certified In internal medicine and
pulmonary disease.

Goodwill Industries
Stort I oration: Point Plllaant
3rd Street Bypag ffoodland p!ez•l
,

.

OPEN EVERY
NIGHT
.
MONDAY-SATURDAY 8AM TO 8PM
SUNDAY 11AM TO 7PM

On site x-ray, E~G, ultrasounds, st~ss testing, bone 4ensity testing,
pulmonary function. testing and extensive laboratory testing.
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• The show is open Monday
•through Friday until April 13
:_ftom tO a.m. until 2 p.m.
pnthe carnpbs ofi:he UniverJ ity of Rio Grande, in. the
' a\:rium of the Fine andPerfPnning Arts building.
· · .' The annQal "Meet the
··Artiscs and Authon Tea" will
':be Apri14,1iom 1-3 p.m.This
:event is open to' the pubiic
·
"ind aD are invited.
·•· "It is wotldcrful to see all
the fabuloiiS paintings this
~r. I am very impressed·
,with the writtdl essays and
pQems that have been subnutted," Matura said.
~ Community , Relations
· - ~oo!dinator Sharon Bow- •
.' man for the Area _Agency&gt;
said, "It bas been great \vork,ing with the Art Show Committee. In the past, it tok ·
three days to hang all the pictures and three days to tear
down the shoW. Now we do '
it in' one day."
For additional information
about this ewnt, you may call COMMITTIE MEMBERS -Pictured above are members of the Area Agency on Aging District
Bowman at 245-5306 or 1- 7 Art Show Committee. In front, from left, Rushie McAllister and Juanita Clark; back, f!arbara
'800-582-7277. .
. McKinnis~ Joan Exline, Kathleen Siders,.Ken McAllister and Bernadine Johnson.
r
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Gallia to obseiVe National Public Health. Week .

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,e11yiro.~IJ1.~1!t:

.J:irough ptibli~ health effortS
impnM! heal~ status, and
'ng and working environ- ·
' enu, the life expectancy .in
·e U.S. · has significandy
reased over · the past 50 HEALTH WEEK - Proclaiming 'April 2.!8 as National Health
Week In Gallia County were, standing, from left, Sandra Walk~years.
:&lt;II According to ·the Ohio er, RN, WIC director;. Zane Beegle, ~s. director of ·environ~epartment of Health, "the mental health; County Commissioner(Bill .Davis; Judy Linder,
1\.lse ·of population-based RN, BSN, nursing d.irector; and County Commissioner Shirley
~trategies .for disease and Angel. Signing the proclamation is County Commissioner Skip
. ('
.~njury prevention have con- Meadows.
;,t.Pl1uted to the decline in ill:r;ieu and injury, including services, environmental ser- home s.ewage systems. On
~eart disease and scroke, .;ices, . prevention/ ed~:~cation the local level in Gallia
~obacco-related · disease,
effort$, and crisis interven- County, I services such as
:Srtfectious disease, and motor tion.
_
mos'q uito •spraying; farm ani~e..hi~le
and
workplace
Clinical services available mal vou ohers; open dum}f
i)I\J UrlCI,
· at the Gallia County Health cleanup ; residential health
~ "Continued eff'otts to Department include a Pre- and safety inspections; scrap
:ii:levelop methods to immu- natal Clinic; the Women, tire c'ollebtions; and · water
~ize populations agaiillt dis- Infant!, and Children (WI C) sampling &gt;are just a few of
~uei, maintain sood nutri-- Program; and the Bureau for the additional programs
:tionalstandards, and provide Children with Medical offered by tqe health dep.art-·
~od • ·p renatal care for Handicaps (BCMH) Pro- ment.
Prevention/ education
.
t::rwne are pr.imary and gram.
An
aggressive
tuberculosis
'
programs
are an important
ventive meas11re1 vital to
health): commpnities."
. control program helps to means of, improving the
fi Local he~th departments. -limit the disease in the health of:'. the populatiqn.
Many ' d~,partments offer
responsible for public county.
The feasibilitY of a Well- · pro~rams ' to encourage
i;ealth in Ohio. They offer
Child
Clinic is also being healthier ·~fes,tyles anci p,re~te-mandated programs as
vent · chronic disease and
..,.ell as · programs created explored at this time.
The -laws of Ohio general- InJury.
;pecifically for their local
ly
mandate environmental · ·Childhood and adult
~ opubtions.
Program funding comes services. These include the immunization; blood prest'rom local sources SI!Ch 3_5.. licensing of food service and sure screening; blood sugar
ax levies, state subsidies and vending operations and the . and cholesterol screening are
·' ;!rants, and federal sources ins~ection and li~ensing o,f a sample of the variety of
~although these .dollars are · marinas, restaurants, public programs offered daily by
swimming pools and mobile the Gallia County Healih
:limited) .
·
·
DepartJ:!lent9ursing staff.
&gt;~« Generally !speaking, public home parks ..
Public health sanitarians
A new Cardiovascular
ealth cove'rs four critical
also
inspect
.
and
license
Health
Project Grant will
areas. These lhdude clinical
.

'

GALLIPOLIS . Gallia held. Past candidam oC this
Academy Board of Trustees award have included Maj. Gen.
met -recently at the home of George Bush. retiml, USA,
'- President Wilma Brown to the bte Lawa HBetty" Kratz,
make pbru for the annual Bertha Evans, Grace Davis and
reunion of all Gallia Academy Marguerite Hineman. They
High School Alumni.
have been recOgnized for their
· The reunion is held annually' contributionS to the cotllJDU.
at the Raccoon Park District nity and to recognize their
just off Ohio 775. Date of the . acc:ompJW,ments.
reunion will·be June 30. RegThe rest of the afternoon is
istration of members and spent r:enCwing old friendships
friends of all classes of GA.HS with all alumni and friends in
since 1918 ;will begin at 10 · attendance. Any GAHS gndua,m.
ate .interested in becoriling a
Visitation with classmateS member should contact Memwill continue until noonwhen bership
Chairman Janet
· a picnic lunch will be served. Wetherholt at 441 -OS 14 or
Reservations must be received Bertie Roush at tf6-4273.
. by the associatiqn by June 25.
The scholarships in . t.he
Alumn i are encouraged ro amount of $1,000 for twO
bring .a picnic lunch if they seniors graduating this year
choose, or,just visit.
from GAHS 'viii also be
Election of officers and awarded and announced durboard members for the ing the picnic. These recipients
upcoming year will be held will be in atcendance and
shortly after lunch. Cost is $5 introduced.
for yearly dues or $1 00 for lifeThis organization Ius many
tim~. registration is SS and $10 alumni items for sale. New
to purchase ~ . lunc h. Funds are · item introduced _last year is a
used to rent the park area, pay GAHS alumni charm or tie
for tents and to continue with tack pin.
one of the organization's main
These are only available fiom
objectives, to present schobr- one of the members of the
ships to tWo deserving students • board. To purchase one for any
each year.
·
GAHS graduate, contact
Presentation of the annual Wilma Brown at 446-6280 or ·
.GAHS Hall of Fame will be Bertie Roush at 446-4274.

.

Derek Q. Johnson ·

. address the significant -problem of deaths due to cardia-' ·
NEW YORK (AP)
vascular dis_ease in Gallia
Derek
Q.Johnson, a top execCounty. With the exception
utive of AOL Time Warner,
of some adult and travel
was named to head the hisimmunizations, the above
toric but. troubled Apollo
nursing services· are offe~d
Theater in Harlem.
to all Gallia County resiJohnson, following his
dents at no cost.
·
appointment by the Apollo's
In the . event of an outboard Thursday.'night, said he
break of diseases; for examwill step , down as an AOL
ple, Legiol'maires or Hepati. Time Warner senior vice
tis A, health departroents are
president to assume his new
responsible for the investigapost as president of the nontion and control. In the
profit Apollq Theater Foundaevent of bioterrorist attacks,
' tion, which runs the stateth~. Ideal health department
would be the frontline
defense. In ·other Words,
public health provides a safety net when a crisis hits.
The motto for . Nationai
Publi c
Health
We~k,
"Healthy People Living in
H ealthy ·
Communities," .
en c ompasse~ the national
goal to ensure that homes,
neighborhoo ds, and communities are places we all ;
especially 'our children, can
thrive.
For information about the
services offered by the Gallia
County· Health Department,
contact the nursing staff at
441 - 2950, WIC at 446,·· 6851, or the environmental .
staff at 441-2943 .
·

owned theater.
The board's vote· came just
months after Rep. Charles
Rangel, D-N.Y, quietly
!!!signed as chairman of the
Apollo's board.
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. GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia Coq.fttx Health Department !Jas announced that
April 2-8 is National Public
.flealth .Weelt.
.
,\, Altliough the public bene~ts liom public health's many
•~ccesses, . both · past and
..ongoing, they may not be
aware of the many contribu..tions that ~ been made to .
,imp= society's heJlth.
. "· The mission of ' public
· health is to promote; health,
prewnt diseases and injuries,
d maintain or improve a

.

•

Barry Pepper

~ LOS ANGELEs (AP)

-

;lll

~a_rry Pepper can laugh a~UI

.winning a Gqlden Raspberry
· ward . as worst · supporting
ctor in "B~ttlefield 'Earth:' .
• Basea on a novel by Scien,t ology founder L. R-ori Hub!bard, the film starring John Tra•volta was a box-office bomb. It
:;earned
R:azzies, includ; )ng worst pictuR and worst
) ctor for Travolta.
.
•. "i was hoping somebody
~uld invite •me. I would've
ne and accepted it;' Pepper
·
d. "That would've been so
uch fun. My agent probably
,
Uld •have told me not to."

POOLS AND

~-.-;---·-~ -'--.,--.,.-.._----~-~ ----------

•

.

'

'

/ ·

'

Amber Johnson (right), her husband and a,on reside In Racine,
OH; She has nine years experience In long/term care as Director
of Admissions. She jolnetVIolzer Senior Care Center as Director
of Admissions and Social Services on October 28, 1999.
Patty Hartley (left) , her husband and three children reside In ~-·
Pleasant, WV. She has twenty-one years of experjence In
·
healthcare. She has served as Social Service Assistant at Holzer
Senior Care Center since Nov.1998.
Both state the fulfillment of their positions comes·from being a support system lor
the residents and their families. They also strive to ensure that the residents
:
maintain the highest level of quality of life as possible. It is caring Individuals like
Amber and Patty that make a difference in the standard of caring provided at
Holzer Senior Care Center. The staff at Holzer Senior Care Center is very proud .
of the Social Service Department and wishes them greal - continued success!

seven

.

,. ,,

,

..,

j

G4me H. Abels, M.D., board certified In internal medicine; accepting
new patients; practice limi~ed to heart disease, hypertension; lipid
abnormalities (cholesterol abnormalities) and any · ·associated
diabetes. Special intere5t In congestive heart failure.

·

on~ District 7 Art Show

· nwgarine on the top in the middle,~
the line of apples and roll up rbF
mauo; place it seam side down in tli'e
_ _,~ bakjn dish. When the diib
r·~..-~
--~ ~
JS . full, 'the finished ,..........
,
look lilre manicotti.
· .~

.

•

, , /)

.

announced

surface and place abou&amp;. cup of ~
apple mixture 41 a line down ~ UJ!.ter ofthe maim puallel to the lines,jp
the mattO Place 1 pat of butter or

.

. '

Matun bas
mat
~e 19thAnm~a1Area.Agency

•

NEW YOR.l{ (AP) . - Food writer Joan
Nathan, whose latest book celebrates Israel's
rich variety of food and culture, recalls with
delight the experience of Passover in Israel.
"We in America don't really understand
what Passover is like there;' she said, in an
interview by phone fiom St. Louis. 'fhe significance of bitter or green herbs, for exampie, in the joyous spring period. "If you lived
in the desert, you'd understand that the· only
· time you saw green things growing was in
the spring.n
Horseradish became a common representation of bitter herbs in Europe, "because in
March that could often be the only green
thing there was to include in the seder to
take the pbce: of the bitter herbs. In Israel,
~u really get a sense of where the traditions
come liom."
.
The "qUintessentially Israeli" carrot salad is
also an old family favorite, Nathan says. "Not
only does it taste and look good, ·but it is so
easy to prepare that I nuke it for last-minute
dinner gue~ when 'I have no lettuce in the
house. Somehow my fridge is always stocked
with raw carrots."
llueli Carrot Salad
· 2·cloves garlic
8 sprigs ~. bunch) fresh parsley, sterns
, '
removed
1 pound carrots, peeled
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 tablespoons orange juice
4 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
/, teaspoon salt
Several grinds of pepper
- Place ,the garlic and the parsley in the bowl
of a food processor equipped with. a steel

.

utiw Director Pamela K.

IIJ

~

,·

~AAA 7 art show now on display· GAHS
~ RIO
~pia

Passoyer foodS symbolize rich biblical histOry
.

t

HUN11NGTON, WV

.HOLIDlYPOOL.
.,.----· · ·-- ___._,_....._..._ __ _,'"1t ....._....

.

.

·- --- ·---- -- - ·-

~·

-----------~ - ----~---~ ---· ··-·--' ------~ ----~-

------- --

-~- ·- - - ~- -

�•

•

. 'A

SUndly, Apf11, 2001 :

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolla, OhiO • Point PltiMnt. WV

lhwe Ta.• leulineJ
CLus!fitd ads, Pagt D2- 7

..

D1
5 1 ,_ ..........

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
· 77ris chart shows how local· stocJcs of inJuen pe~fomwJ last
Each day's closing figures are provided by A4vut of Gallipolis.

..

liON.
44'1.

TUE.

WED.

44'!.

45

THU.

w~~k.

FRI.

S~1'~ht.~

.

)7" 7ie '9«4'Ut
~()~-~~

*;at~Mite &amp;4~
~odiA . ~··

10'1.

I'

Eckrich

Eckrlch

·Regular
Cheese
Smoked

l#Bologn
or
•·
~
1# FrankS.t:~

Grillers

(Reg/Bun Size)

I

l Pound Package
BAKED GOODS- Sisters Tammy Grimes and liz Stewart start baking their fresh ·baked goods for their new business
·
the Crafty Kitchen In Point Pleasant. (Krls Dotson photo)

Kitchen·· takes .off

Eckrich

:· smorgas
Pack
·
1 Pound Package
9'1..

Worthington

Eckrich

3 oz. Pepperoni

Uiluld you like to see Q stock ~ loaz/&lt;interesl lisred?
if so, conttul N.WS Editor Kevio Kelly al (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.

6oz.

Butterball
.
1 Pound Pt1ckoQe

INVESTING

Turkey
Breast

New and improved
GALLIPOLIS· Everyone
is tal~ing -about it: You can't
pick up a businc!ss magazine
or listen "to a financial program without hearing, "The
IRS has issued new minimum
distribution rules for IRAs .
and retirement plans, effective
GUEST
immediately."
',
VIEW
So, what does it mean for .
you?
If you're over 70, or getting - Unlike before, your beneclose, and have money in an ficiary plays little. role in cal· IRA, you probably kno~ that culating the. minimum distrithe -IRS requites you begin bution. With,{he new calculataking money out by Aprillst tion, you simply look up your
of the year after you reach age life expectancy factor in the
70-1/2. Until now, the newly . adopted "Uniform"
'amount you must withdraw, . table and divide your IRA
the minimum distribution, accouQt balance as of Dec. 31
was . calculated according to by it: That's it! Reg~rdless ~f
complicated, inflexible IRS . ·who or how old your benefi·ciary is. Fo~ almost everyone,
rules that were full of tr~s.
On Jan. l1 of this year, the your required minimum disIRS issued new Proposed tribution will decrease.
Regulations that simplify the · The new "Uniform" table is
minimum distribut.i on calcu- actually the old MDIB table,
lation, starting with 2001 dis- · which was previously used '
only·when a non-spouse bentributions.
Note: Don't let the word eficiary w-as more than 10
proposed mislead you. Th~ years younger than the !RA
IRS frequently operates owner.
It gives a factor basel! on
under proposed nde$. The old
the
joint .Jife expectancy of
rules were "proposed" and
they've been in ·effect since · you and someone 10. years
youQger. · Under the new·
1987.

Bryce
Smith

·s

. Armor
MeatBalls
Chicken Strips
Nuggets ·

,;""
• Wedera Union
..

40~=-rl
Street
Mi eport,
OJI
M~Stm
.

'

.

'

\

Simplif"l.8d calculationt

•.Put.UcFu.
·-Federal kpre•

(740) 99Z.;,J471

ROUNDYS.

'

'

. Give us • all lit (740) 4tfi

Service
..,

'.

~··..-

I•

Pl••t ... SIIdth.DI

tt.ve·• bu$1ness nNS tteml

• VIdeo Rental

I• '

BY KRII DOTSON

l

••

!'

·-

.,

'

.

:i:M2. Ut. ~s
1/

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

OINT PLEASANT,
W.Va.-. Close your
eyes and inhale ...
and you'd swear you .
were in your grandmother's kitchen back in the

HfH&gt; expected to -start
gradually attd take our
time with our crafts, but
it's just taken off."
T'rnmy GrimM

\
from
health
care and do something
1950s.
Open your eyes and you'd find else. Stewart is a professional grandthose delicious tastes and smells mother and decided she'd like to .try
coming from the Crafry Kitchen in something different too.
"First, it was going to be cr-afts,
Point Pleasant.
'
Sisi'ers Tammy Grimes and Liz candles, lotions, breads and. pies, but
Stewart opened their craft, · candle, · then everyone kept co.ming in and
'
.
lotion and restaurant on Valentine's asking what was for lunch," said
Day this year and business has been- Grimes .
One thing led to another. "This
well, fantastic.
place
changed daily for awhile,"
"We have such big· families (nine
. children) and I said if they support: Grimes said. "I think people loved
ed us, we could make it," said coming in just to see what was new."
They added lunch to their· menu
Grimes.
And make it they have - and then two weeks ago. They &lt;;&gt;ffer one spesome.
cia! and soup d"n weekdays, and two
. .The sisters decided to open their on the weekends. Each . meal. comes
own business so they could do the with two side dishes and the prices
things they loved and that was craft- are extremely reasonable.
ing and baking. '
. "We expected to start gradually
' Grimes, a registered nurse . of 20 and take our time with our crafts, but
years, was looking to take a break it's just taken off," said Grimes.

.

·Beeffarm. management
"series this week ··

.

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST
VIEW

producers identify and
learn
more
about
resources available on
their farms.
ul·tlmate
. . 1y, pro ducers
bl
1earntomatch availae
.
. ·
resources to the1r needs
d .
. . bili
an mcrease sustama ry
and decrease
costs.-Th1s
h
approac encourages p~­
ducers to look at the1r
· Plun ... ly11111, Dl

"

POMEROY - A.re yo'u
having problems with ,wild
onion and wild garlic in
your pasture, wheat or
'lawn? . '
Now is the · best time to
control it. Wild garlic (Allium vineal·e) is a perennial
plant that produces underground and aerial bulblets
and seed. The leaves are
hollow, nearly round, and
attached to the lower half
of the Item. .
Wild onion (Allium
~anadense) is a perennial
plant that grows from seed
or,a solidary bulb. It has flat
leaves atising from the base
of the plant with ste.1\1s
reaching two feet big!\.
Both plants have an
onion/ garlic odor to their

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW

bulb and leaves.
For wheat growers, Har- .
mony Extra applied after '
the · two leaf stage and
before the flag leave is visible has been quite effective.
Tank . mixing with Buctril,
~. 4-D or MCPA improves
control of thistle, .ragweed
and other broadleaf weeds.
Wild garlic1~s best con- .

PIIIHIH.l(,nHn.De

'
I

-

Controlling wild
onion, wild garlic
.

GALLIPOLIS - Integrated Resource Management (IRM) is an agricultural phrase that is'
' increasing in populariry
and used co describe man, agement practices of forage based 'farm systems.
IRM education is
diverse; however, the.
emph~sis is on ·advanced
grazmg and forage rna;- ..
agemiRenMt tofroplcs. The sh• t
'to
. ..
m mana~ement .mtenSlve
grazmg
.
·al one,
IS to mcrease pro.·
d
d ucer awareness an
k nowIed ge ab ou t th e
intera£tions between land,
. lives tock , wa tcr, W1'ldll'fie,
finances, industry, and
human resources. .
IRM
·training helps
.

Grimes' son works o~ the river but
five days a month. Each of those days
you'll find him hard at work at the
Kitchen building shelves, counters,
painting, doing deliveries - . you
"
name it.
It's truly a family business in every
sense of the word.
"No family member wants to
. come in and eat because if they stand
still too ·long we" put them to work,"
said Grimes.
. The Crafry Kitchen can seat 12 to
15 comfortably. In addition · to their
specials, every day _you can count on
fresh breads, buns, donuts, cookies,
pies, carrot cake and salads.
The crafts. are also all made by
hand . They make their own candles,
lotions, soaps, silk flowers (fresh by
special order) and custon~-desi~ne4
. baskets.
'
~t. , ..
"We catered our children's wed- '
dings and Liz did all -the flowers and
our friends remembered, and they
told their friends; ..
"Word of mouth is our best advertisement."
Stewart said, "It takes some getting
used to, but 1 like it."

"\'

�•

•

. 'A

SUndly, Apf11, 2001 :

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolla, OhiO • Point PltiMnt. WV

lhwe Ta.• leulineJ
CLus!fitd ads, Pagt D2- 7

..

D1
5 1 ,_ ..........

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
· 77ris chart shows how local· stocJcs of inJuen pe~fomwJ last
Each day's closing figures are provided by A4vut of Gallipolis.

..

liON.
44'1.

TUE.

WED.

44'!.

45

THU.

w~~k.

FRI.

S~1'~ht.~

.

)7" 7ie '9«4'Ut
~()~-~~

*;at~Mite &amp;4~
~odiA . ~··

10'1.

I'

Eckrich

Eckrlch

·Regular
Cheese
Smoked

l#Bologn
or
•·
~
1# FrankS.t:~

Grillers

(Reg/Bun Size)

I

l Pound Package
BAKED GOODS- Sisters Tammy Grimes and liz Stewart start baking their fresh ·baked goods for their new business
·
the Crafty Kitchen In Point Pleasant. (Krls Dotson photo)

Kitchen·· takes .off

Eckrich

:· smorgas
Pack
·
1 Pound Package
9'1..

Worthington

Eckrich

3 oz. Pepperoni

Uiluld you like to see Q stock ~ loaz/&lt;interesl lisred?
if so, conttul N.WS Editor Kevio Kelly al (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.

6oz.

Butterball
.
1 Pound Pt1ckoQe

INVESTING

Turkey
Breast

New and improved
GALLIPOLIS· Everyone
is tal~ing -about it: You can't
pick up a businc!ss magazine
or listen "to a financial program without hearing, "The
IRS has issued new minimum
distribution rules for IRAs .
and retirement plans, effective
GUEST
immediately."
',
VIEW
So, what does it mean for .
you?
If you're over 70, or getting - Unlike before, your beneclose, and have money in an ficiary plays little. role in cal· IRA, you probably kno~ that culating the. minimum distrithe -IRS requites you begin bution. With,{he new calculataking money out by Aprillst tion, you simply look up your
of the year after you reach age life expectancy factor in the
70-1/2. Until now, the newly . adopted "Uniform"
'amount you must withdraw, . table and divide your IRA
the minimum distribution, accouQt balance as of Dec. 31
was . calculated according to by it: That's it! Reg~rdless ~f
complicated, inflexible IRS . ·who or how old your benefi·ciary is. Fo~ almost everyone,
rules that were full of tr~s.
On Jan. l1 of this year, the your required minimum disIRS issued new Proposed tribution will decrease.
Regulations that simplify the · The new "Uniform" table is
minimum distribut.i on calcu- actually the old MDIB table,
lation, starting with 2001 dis- · which was previously used '
only·when a non-spouse bentributions.
Note: Don't let the word eficiary w-as more than 10
proposed mislead you. Th~ years younger than the !RA
IRS frequently operates owner.
It gives a factor basel! on
under proposed nde$. The old
the
joint .Jife expectancy of
rules were "proposed" and
they've been in ·effect since · you and someone 10. years
youQger. · Under the new·
1987.

Bryce
Smith

·s

. Armor
MeatBalls
Chicken Strips
Nuggets ·

,;""
• Wedera Union
..

40~=-rl
Street
Mi eport,
OJI
M~Stm
.

'

.

'

\

Simplif"l.8d calculationt

•.Put.UcFu.
·-Federal kpre•

(740) 99Z.;,J471

ROUNDYS.

'

'

. Give us • all lit (740) 4tfi

Service
..,

'.

~··..-

I•

Pl••t ... SIIdth.DI

tt.ve·• bu$1ness nNS tteml

• VIdeo Rental

I• '

BY KRII DOTSON

l

••

!'

·-

.,

'

.

:i:M2. Ut. ~s
1/

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

OINT PLEASANT,
W.Va.-. Close your
eyes and inhale ...
and you'd swear you .
were in your grandmother's kitchen back in the

HfH&gt; expected to -start
gradually attd take our
time with our crafts, but
it's just taken off."
T'rnmy GrimM

\
from
health
care and do something
1950s.
Open your eyes and you'd find else. Stewart is a professional grandthose delicious tastes and smells mother and decided she'd like to .try
coming from the Crafry Kitchen in something different too.
"First, it was going to be cr-afts,
Point Pleasant.
'
Sisi'ers Tammy Grimes and Liz candles, lotions, breads and. pies, but
Stewart opened their craft, · candle, · then everyone kept co.ming in and
'
.
lotion and restaurant on Valentine's asking what was for lunch," said
Day this year and business has been- Grimes .
One thing led to another. "This
well, fantastic.
place
changed daily for awhile,"
"We have such big· families (nine
. children) and I said if they support: Grimes said. "I think people loved
ed us, we could make it," said coming in just to see what was new."
They added lunch to their· menu
Grimes.
And make it they have - and then two weeks ago. They &lt;;&gt;ffer one spesome.
cia! and soup d"n weekdays, and two
. .The sisters decided to open their on the weekends. Each . meal. comes
own business so they could do the with two side dishes and the prices
things they loved and that was craft- are extremely reasonable.
ing and baking. '
. "We expected to start gradually
' Grimes, a registered nurse . of 20 and take our time with our crafts, but
years, was looking to take a break it's just taken off," said Grimes.

.

·Beeffarm. management
"series this week ··

.

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST
VIEW

producers identify and
learn
more
about
resources available on
their farms.
ul·tlmate
. . 1y, pro ducers
bl
1earntomatch availae
.
. ·
resources to the1r needs
d .
. . bili
an mcrease sustama ry
and decrease
costs.-Th1s
h
approac encourages p~­
ducers to look at the1r
· Plun ... ly11111, Dl

"

POMEROY - A.re yo'u
having problems with ,wild
onion and wild garlic in
your pasture, wheat or
'lawn? . '
Now is the · best time to
control it. Wild garlic (Allium vineal·e) is a perennial
plant that produces underground and aerial bulblets
and seed. The leaves are
hollow, nearly round, and
attached to the lower half
of the Item. .
Wild onion (Allium
~anadense) is a perennial
plant that grows from seed
or,a solidary bulb. It has flat
leaves atising from the base
of the plant with ste.1\1s
reaching two feet big!\.
Both plants have an
onion/ garlic odor to their

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW

bulb and leaves.
For wheat growers, Har- .
mony Extra applied after '
the · two leaf stage and
before the flag leave is visible has been quite effective.
Tank . mixing with Buctril,
~. 4-D or MCPA improves
control of thistle, .ragweed
and other broadleaf weeds.
Wild garlic1~s best con- .

PIIIHIH.l(,nHn.De

'
I

-

Controlling wild
onion, wild garlic
.

GALLIPOLIS - Integrated Resource Management (IRM) is an agricultural phrase that is'
' increasing in populariry
and used co describe man, agement practices of forage based 'farm systems.
IRM education is
diverse; however, the.
emph~sis is on ·advanced
grazmg and forage rna;- ..
agemiRenMt tofroplcs. The sh• t
'to
. ..
m mana~ement .mtenSlve
grazmg
.
·al one,
IS to mcrease pro.·
d
d ucer awareness an
k nowIed ge ab ou t th e
intera£tions between land,
. lives tock , wa tcr, W1'ldll'fie,
finances, industry, and
human resources. .
IRM
·training helps
.

Grimes' son works o~ the river but
five days a month. Each of those days
you'll find him hard at work at the
Kitchen building shelves, counters,
painting, doing deliveries - . you
"
name it.
It's truly a family business in every
sense of the word.
"No family member wants to
. come in and eat because if they stand
still too ·long we" put them to work,"
said Grimes.
. The Crafry Kitchen can seat 12 to
15 comfortably. In addition · to their
specials, every day _you can count on
fresh breads, buns, donuts, cookies,
pies, carrot cake and salads.
The crafts. are also all made by
hand . They make their own candles,
lotions, soaps, silk flowers (fresh by
special order) and custon~-desi~ne4
. baskets.
'
~t. , ..
"We catered our children's wed- '
dings and Liz did all -the flowers and
our friends remembered, and they
told their friends; ..
"Word of mouth is our best advertisement."
Stewart said, "It takes some getting
used to, but 1 like it."

"\'

�•

.

•

•
•

Sund8y, Aprtl1, 2CI01

•

•
••
t
•

,. .....,...

.,.. ...............
•

005

30 Announcementa

Penonale

....... Loet. Jfound.

UVE-..an

Ohio
Blglool Conlerenco,
Saturday April 71h 3pm, I Opm,

HI00,228-11140
EXT.9789
3.99 poonin.
Muotbll8yq.

Newcomers Town Middle SChool

-11

To Do M.llllulll . . ......
............., ,f···

'•Qf•w n·

2:00 p,m, tile dly IMfln
tile ld .. to run, Sundly • .
UDill.., IIIII 1111 2:00 p,m, IIOIIANCE

FOR

""':7' , . , • :

llundly • llondlly edllklft
t :00 p,m, Frlclay.

STAAT DATING TONIGHT!
H-lun meoHoog _ Oiig~ singles
in your 1re1. C1ll for more intormalion . 1·800·ROMANCE, exl .

t:OO p,cn. tile dly IMfln
tile ld 1e to run.

MftJa D'ADUtl;

2 dCiy8 befoN tile ld leiO
run 11r 4:30 p.m. Sflurdii\'
6 llocllley ldiiiOh• 4:30
' Thunldly.
•ondll- •I:IJ•Dt .tD
Clllllfle d!M_IO llolldlys"

1736.

Roull

(tn.

36

Exil)

.

40

Salurday &amp;

Fr01

. Gl-y

Sales! I

5-1/2 Week Old , Puppies, To
Good. Homoa. Golden AetrleYer.
Border Collie, ·Rottweller Mi•
(740)245-QBI ·

Yard Sale: April 41h, 5th, 61h. Off
Rl. 180,' 272 Sl&lt;iclmof8 Rd. UliS ol
'Household and Miscellaneous
Items ~

frH Border Collie, 3 mo old tamale Puppy. Found in Gallipolis,

-Pomeroy,

(74())3'' 8855 or (740)388-8965

April 2-3: Aullend on Nelson Ad .
just off New Lima, 101&amp; ol irams and

bally iloms.

(3041895:33811

sewing machine, quilt pieces.
drapes, adult, children ctothes &amp;
more.
•

9WM15IIrnlon,~lher1a

A I H i O U~KEr. IE rJTS

' 740:5112-1842
Qualily clothing and household
ilemo. $1.00 bag aaio 0\'ery
Thursday. Monday thru Salurday

Pentecostal Church. truckload

9:(1()-6:00. -

:======:::::;=;.t_.;=======:.::
In Memory

FREE SEAACHI

1

-.51NGlEs.com

In Memory
In Memory of
Nevo M. Crimm
on her birthdoy
Apr;il let!
In Heaven we know
IM i. hapJ11 AI we
on eoch year
Pl.OH uU IMr Lord,
Happy Birrladay
And •IN u ill our

so

hearu and thoUBhe,
Ewn tho111Jh IM u
' with you.
Lowd&amp;Mu..d
Her ltwityJfamily

In Memory of

Merch I. Rife
on hi~ birthday April 4tl) 1936
who left Us December 12, 1997

Memory u11 trWuurt tW one c11n steal,
Delllh ;, 11 hetn111eht no oru c11n herd
Some ""'!form mnu tlmt JOIIIIrf grme.
But 1111'/J ni/J rrmem'ber
No 1fllltm' how lo"f
Always In our hearts, ·
Sadly missed by
Wife, &lt;;hlldren and Grandchildren

.

Carport sale. behrnd Melg5 fair·
grounda by perl&lt;,n·ri!Je, April 5·6.

-To You Thrill~

aaie, 803 S. Third
dleport 10:4.

~venue,

Mid·

Sat., 'SUn., Mon ., 311 Wright

SUeel.

110

I

Help Wanted , ·

l!!tmNTlONm
•-national Con'!lanw Ellpardng
Wo&lt;jl From Home or OffiCe
$500.G0-16.000.00'mo. PTIFT
Mail Onle!11Paicl Trainiilg/Vacations
Cali 1-600-228-0317
.._.,CashOnTheTable.com

!IIATTENTIONI!!
inlomalionai ~ny Expardng
Wo&lt;ll From Home or Olfa

' Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

FOUND: Young Female Dog ,
Blacl&lt; With Sitwr. Heo Curly Tali ,
Eagle Ridge Road, By Chaltin

-

Sunday, 9:G0-3:00pm.

Rain Or Shine, 1306 Jaekson
Pil&lt;e. Racing And llart&gt;ie Colleda·
bleS, lOIS Of MISC . No Early

60 Loet and Found

30 · Announcemenbl

EMPLOYr,1ENT
SERVICES

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Admiuion,lnlo (740)'98-9878

YOUIII
1:900·773·UO E•lonston eus
12.99 Per Minulo, Muat Be 18
....... Slfv.U (8tt)81, , 81:M

FrtcMy

,

Help Watlsd

~ll..IICEO CAll WOIIK-

"" . . _ _ .... _
pooilion
.., ~- t~·homo protocliv.

110

Help W&amp;rl$tl

110

Help Wa I II'

,
E•.,.1ienc.d Coshllr (3041895· - GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
3603 ·
1
HELP!
dorn!·Con•nen:e. $522.,._ PT .
E•periencod Truct Mochanle. $1 000-$4000/wk FT. 100-121·
N -. 401K llatiromont, Medl- 10311 www.do.,IQbiM.com
cal, O.ntal &amp; VIsion 1n1urance.'
VICIII!on Pay Solid Or&gt; E•per~
·
IOOI.Ciil(740)216-1403
lloml ,j...

-!rom---..-,

l-

1o ctoitdoWII .... lornilot.
II _ . , . . lo PIO\'IcN
'I IHM...-.ta, Cfilll ll\lft..
•eem•nt, ea.. management
Mnticea and caa• planning for
protiCIIv. I&amp;Mee families. Muol Gallta Meigs Community Acllon $635~poootllirg­
Easy!
ll'
· po~.., good communication
Houoing Coordinator ''"o·i~Col~1~-801&gt;~480-~114~50~24~lvl.~-:--:..__
tkllrt. · wrftlng tldllt 1 typing com- SIIkl
monitor and 111lst with home
puter all:llls, time management building proltcl. Construction Houstkttptr NHded. P ..ase
. tkll1a. valid drivers lieense and bacl&lt;ground, communiCation _
and Apply At Budget Inn. Joctoon
cornplele a criminal record - report skills roquirod. Reoume Pib, GalllpoUa, No Phonl Colla
Mutl p•rtlclpate In afler-houra
whh """' hiltory and ~nco Plolse.
on-eau syslem.. Matter's"1legr• . can be mailed to So• 272.
In Social work preferred.
Cheshire. on .5620. through ~41 Jewelry Benchman- RtPelr, SIZ·
Bachalor's Degreo In Social Worlc 01-. EOE
ing. Stone Siding 01 Fine~or related !laid roquirld . Starting
Full· tlme· l,mmediate Opening ,
oatary $25·35,000 yr. 35 -hour Ga.. rnonont Jobi $11.00~ Apply At Acquiaillono. Fino
$33.00 per ho\lr potential. Paid Jewelry. 151 Second A"nue .
Training/full Benefits. F6'r more Gallipolis.
PARENT INTERVEfiTION SPEinlormalion call call 1·888,6749150 8111. 3234 '
.
CIALISI· Thlo position I&amp; deslgf!td to provide support and
education lo lamllies. who have . Help wanted 1r1 aduh group llomo.
dllldran lllr111 10 5 yean and have day and night shlh. call 74G-9925023.
been kllntiliod .. ~ at ri&amp;l&lt; lor
abuse or neglect. Worker is expected to ha~e weakly contact
wllh tammes and to teach and
demonstrate to paren11 appropriate p1rentlng skills. Many ot

Pomerov. Ott
Pt. Pleasant
· . &amp; VIcinity · ·

Benefit Rummage Sale, March 31
At Ashlon Elemenlllry 9am· 3pm.
All PrOCHds Go Toward Funeral
Expenses For May ~angilon .

$500.G0-$6,000.00/mo.PTIFT
Mail ardernnteme~
Paid Trakling/VaCalions
·
Calll:&amp;oo-548-0922

$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
brochurtsl Sa..tisfaction Guar·
Postage &amp; Supplieo pro:

I Rush Self-Addressed
EnvoiopOI GICO, DEPT
5,
1438, ~NTIOCH, TN .
37011,14311 Start lmmedalaiy.

-I

6QI-.IahomebiZ.com

ViSit WWW.dOntworryberk:h.MI Of

Call 110(1:259:2908
ANYONE CAN 00 !TI $21i1S711
Hfi.PT/FT, ot ~­
' 37W.tl .

372 -~ Oriwrs

--

-,TitlnldllgDOIIII'I.COM

Drtva Tho Big Trud&lt;sll •
Eam The 8'0 Bucks!!

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Cralls,
Toys , 1"Jewelry, Wood, Sewing,
Typing ... Great Pay! CALL 1·800795-0380 Exit 201 (24hrsl

381&lt;--4211 polenlial .
No expefilnce ~
• 14 Day CDL Training
No COSI Training HCuaiilled
Coll-800-394-2&lt;106.

E"""'

A NEW CAREER,
lnlorma·
lion· Postal Job&amp;. Up to $18.351
hour. Benefils/Pension. 1-888-

726-9083 x1701
Absolutely Free Into! Internet
Uoer&amp; Waniad . $2,000- $5,000/
mo. www.e-nat-drearns.com

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
Internet U&amp;er1i Wanted

. AN UNUSUAL OPPORTuNCTVII
Work from h9rne with no bolll

ATTENTION: II you haVe to _..,
Work from hon)l. $20 to $5(1 hr.
Pl./Fl. ft'OI lletlliiS.
~TTENTION :

OWN A COMPl:IT,
ER? Mail·orQerJE·Commerca .
$522+/Wtek PT. $1000-$4.000/
week FT. lull Training. Fill Boot&lt;,
let. www.createcreemltfe.com
(800) 755-400

eare and are Involved with the

court •vstem. Must be able to
wort&lt; with a vlirioty ol ooclal lasuea tnd family challenges.
Knowladgo of child -p~nt
and P"rantlnil atratoglto ~oqulred.
Excellent communication akllls
and the ability tOo- work some
evenings expected. Minimum requitHienl'la a BA in Family Sludiel, Child Davaiaj!ment, Social
Worl! or olhar relatld lietd. Valid
drlve,·s license and computer
1~1111 ~ required . 36-hour work
WHk. Salary commensurate with

S2000-S5000'mo
www.e-oomrrl&gt;lz.net

Make Money Helping People

Rec:eive Go&lt;-Ornment Returns
Fr.. Oetail&amp;t (24)
f-1100-449-0625 Eld. 5700
$987 .85 WEEKLY ! Processing ·
HUD/FHA Mortgage Relunds. No
Experience Required. For FREE
,Information Call 1-800-50 1-6832
.... 1300..

_..,ICe.

Mid-Ohio . V~ll~y Truck
Driver Training

S~nd

COL Certification 5 Week Course
Mon &amp; Fri 7:00-3:30 Weekend
Claaaea Sat &amp; sUn 8;004:30 12 weaka
Fln•nclng and Funding ·
·Available B••ed On Eligibility .
. '"Job pla~fTNint on Cl••• A ,t,.lnlng•

'1

Contact Ed Adams 1-800-848-3895
-or ·
373-3968

Auction
and FIN Markat

K"lll'l ProdUCI • Fill Mlri&lt;ll,
Frtlh Product , Crans, Toot's,
Mloc. lloma. Open Thu, Fri· Sat,
Phono
(740)440-7787
Or
(740)33t-2t 31 1 Milo w~~~ 91
Holnr Hospital On Jacl&lt;aon Pi,..;
Galil&gt;ol~.

Of1io

Rick P11rson Auction Company..
full time auct'ionter, complete

·auction
sar~iee .
Licenaed
166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304,
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.
•

lrt MltriOI'J of

Ashley Hol~iday
Ashley,
4-1-86 fiJ 8-JJ.l/9
.
On your birthday and always. chert is a candle
bumina_. AJldme tllat'never OrrJWS dim:
For illm Is a heal'iness in our hearts, an emptiness in
our lives that time wdl never mend.
' So uxlllj it's on!Y_ natural, to chinA Iovino thauohts '!£. '
you. _Alone with ·ihe assurance that you 'rt ·thinRino ij'
us too.
So with eath new tomorrow, thouehrs c?f)'OU willorow
more dear. lf an!r we rould just hue you and have you

Wanted to Buy

90

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Sltver, ·
Gold Coins. PrOolsets, Diamonds,
Gold Rings, U.S. Currency,·
M.T.S . Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740~~42 .

,&gt; I

'

,

.'' '_,"

,

·---....

==

llrl·aa·•;m
Ellt4mA-·

·Holl~ls .

Who went to be .
with Jesus on
March 29, 1994,
at a~e33.
Sadly mtssed and
often thought of by
her daugliter Jill,
grandmother
Freda, her daddy
Raymie, brother
Jolui, siaters Becky
and Tonda, stepbrother John1
family, and
friends.

Ronnie

•NswHomas .
•Additions
• Roofing • Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Porches &amp; Dticka
• Insurance Work
• EIK1r!r:tl
' u...- alnltnd
• Plumbing

.RDid- Form~~~ link

IMIJ14Hall .

In Memory

Card of Thanks

f:J,IIIf.,......,

_........
......... . .
,..

fll~1

M, Bill•
_ ... like fO

...

doe lolrtloday

eel.,....doaeed
loe:!t.eoaewH
e •· l'oar
dloa~dala.,.•
..-eller
lolrtlodaY "ery
opeelall

•

081ded.
Ca,tlf40-992-3e64
.. _
bles,
phon,
lines. no insurance

Own A Compulor?
Put ft To World
$25- S7Mir. PTIFT
1-888~325

Hours:
Monday- Friday
Shift Work·

Uceued Pncllcsl
Nanes
for Physician Offices
Excellenl pay and _
benefi!S.
Send resume to:
Pleuaat Valley
Hospital
c/o Humu Resources
2520 Valley Dr.
Pt. Pleuaat, WV 25550
- orfu to
(304) 675-6975.

www.b-l)alli.axn

Part !!me ~ oppor!unily·
must have llnow6adge Of account·
lng procedutta, Mic::rosoft Word.
and typing, good oral and wrilleO\
communlc•tron skill&amp; and enj~
worl&lt;ing with lha publiC. Sind .-.
IUI110 c/o: Tho Doily SlnUnol, P.O . .
Box 729-02 , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Public Sale and Auction

GALUA .JACKSON -VINTON JVSD
· ·PUBUC NonCE
"
TOOL AND EQUIPMENT AUCTION
,

In Person

1M Gallle.Jeckson-VInlon Joint Vocetlonll 8chool
Dlatrlct will be IMIIIng U8ld toola and equipment to
tile hlghHt blcld« It 1 public tuctiOn on the Buclu~
Hll11 C....., Center _,pua ...rtlng It 1:00 a.m., lily
15, 2001. The following typ81 ·of equipment are
Included In tile riuctlan:
• Construction and Automotive Tool•

ICALPI AZA
.

'

...

'ou

-=========;;========:,
e
Pleasant

Hospital

Monday.;. Friday

o

'' •

1~NANCIALAID ADVIS~R .

936 St. Rt. 160.·
or can

Mccormlclilooilna
Shawn Micheal Henry
S-25-82

'

at

'.

'f).~ut

Need estima1e to move t'IOml. no
pl'oblem with permtt1. Power ca-

• Medical Equipment
• Welding Equipment ,
State Route -160
• Computer Equipment
•
B'x12' Wily Storlgl Bam
GallipOlis, Ohio.
The 8~ HUla Cal'ell' CatJtar canipua Ia located
(304) 675-6975;
!'
351 Buckeya Hilla Road, Rio Grande, Ohio. For
AA/EOE
more Information on.the lool and equipment auction,
contact the echool 1t 74G-245-5334. we 1!111 111
~------~
- ~~L-~~
1 .
equipment
In •q le" condition.
Wanted
• MI}PULAR HOUSE AUCTION
The Trtuur..- hereby glvn further notice thlt tha
11:1\ L'
lll'anl Thl' \t''' ..,·: 1 Glllla.,ackiOn-VInton Jolpt Vocational School
Don't miss
• THERAPISTS
Dlalrlct will offer for ule 11 public auction, on tha
'
this
HUll Cereer Center Cllmpue, commencing It
Buckeye
Heartland rehabilitation service Is seeking highly
· InfoCision Management-Corporation is
noon
on May 5, 2001, the following pereonal property:
mollvaled lndMd~s to join our rehabilitation team, .
, The per10rial proptrty being offal'ld tor auction 11 1
opportunity~··
Expanding in Gallipolis, ··
one-etory frame ranch etyle modular houae. The
Location - Mlddlei!Ort, Jackson, and Rortsmouth, Ohio
houaa, conalructed by tile vocatiOnal echool cia• Up to $7/hour +
Pos~lon -· Physlcai ·Theraplst
·
of
Building-Tr1daa, Ia twlnty-elx (26) IIMI wldt tnd
BQnuses
Physical Therapist Asslstaht ·
Full lime Positions Available lmmedlatl!ly!
fllly..lght (58) 1,111 long (1 ,508 aquare fait). Faaturn
Occupational Therapist
•Full-time evening
Include tilt following: .
Certified
Speech
Therapist
•
Built ·11 ona unit, dlvldaa Into two halvaa for
shift
Speech
Therapist
CFY
tranaportlng
to 1 foundation tilt
$7.00 per h~ur
• Exc:ellent benefits
• Three (3) bldroomt
Full-time, part-time, PRill avallablllly. Please fax your
pec:ksge
•'tWo (2) full btths
,·
resume attention Amy Walter (419) 537·0948 or mall to
•
• lncludn rnedlcll,
Dry-wallld wells end celllnga
• Set schedule
• lnatallad Qlk · kllchan cablnata and bathroom
1; • dental &amp; vltlon
3425 Executive Parkway Suite 128, Toledo, OH 43606.
• Wee\UY·bonus
vtnlttes
t&lt; ln•uranca &amp; 40t (k)
EOEM/F/DN
• Six panallntartor doors
, , , l'lllrlntlnt plan
• Overtime available
• llraA coach exllrlor llghta
• Every Friday and Saturday off
• Anderson d~ubla hung windows
! Help us make a
110
Wanted
• VInyl Sldlnlt' doubll ~r (4) l_nch
• Paid vacation every 6 months
dlflarenca by
• Floor lollll (2" x 10" on 18" centers)
• Paid holidays
• Flbargltaa 25 ynr dlmenalonll roollngthlnglea
recrunln voluntHrs
• Two hundild (~ amp llactrlcal nrvlca
'OVIr e ph
for
ttem. NOT INCLUDED In !hi houn:
·
Are
you
a
ts!entld
tslkeh
I
-.
Ivarious nc-in-p " fit
• l'loor covlllngll
Do
~ou like to call your own shots?
~h organlatloni•.
Call now to schedule and interview: 1-888-237-5~1 ext. 1131 _ • Llghl fixture•
· Do you heve a lot of energy ·
• Htatlng ayltam
poeltlons .
. but nowhere to put n?
• Appll•ncaa auch-aa; hot Watpr haatar, .dlahwnhar,
.
Involve or stop by our Oallipolis location: 141 Third Avenue
Would you like to • •.your
clotiNs
wathar/dryer, atove, and rafrlgerator. ·
~ FUNDRAISINQI
reeults .I.Y.youi-.pi!YcJ,Itc:k?
Galllpoll1, OH
METHOD
OF SALE: SubJect to the right of the Board
...
Would you like to gat the
I
Ill
reject
any
and/or all blda, tile 1111 ahall be mad• to
reepect that you dtltrve?
CalllnfoCitlon toclly to .
Are you looking for ap lace t9 zig
'::====~~:::;:;:;::;~=::;=====-=
tht
bidder
lor ~·
modularofhoun,
but •hall
not 'hlghelt
be 111111 until
wrlllln
notlllcatlon
the tccepllnce
lchldule 111 lnlervl.wl
when other placaa zag?
11 0 Help Wanted'
of the bid Ia given by the Board of EduCIItlon.
,
Don't nt where you are now?
TERMS OF SALE: Cnh (In the form of-Clllh, or I
No problem ... you are Jul1 whO we are looking lor.
I
cll'llflad or Cllahlar'a check) within the tl1111 .provided
1-886-475-7223
In tha conditions of thl nle refll'rld to below.
' ext. 1901
"Condlllonl of Sail"
·
'
·
.
·
The
houal
will
bt
10ld
In
•Aa Ia • condition. The
EARN $25,000 TO• $50,000/yr.
achool
dlatrfct
Is
not
reepon.alble
to rapt~lr, replace, or
Moqicai insurance Billing. Naadprovide
additional
building
mstirlal,
or otherwlaa
ed ''limedialeiyi Home Compular
Valley
Nettled. FREE l,.,ft, 1-800llltkl any adjultmentato the houat 11111' the nit.
29ilil&amp;83 P.P! flat..' . .
Pleasant Valley Private Duty has
DEPOSm Caah or • certified or clahler'a check,
to tht Gt111a.Jackaon-Ylnton Joint Vocational
peyabla
EA!IY. WORK! GAE~T PAY! Earn
Immediate openings for personal care
$500 Pius a Woo~ AssemDiing
School Dlilrlct, or 1 combination, In tha amount of
Pr91'uC11 at Homo. No Experience
110 Help Wanted
aides/nursing assistants In ·
ten (1 0) parctnt of the bld/1111 price w111 be required
'Nectaaary. Call T6fr Fr•• HOO·
at
ths tlina' at the public auction from the hlghaat
2611'39&lt;14 •138
.
.
Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties.
( ' .
bidder 11 1 aacurlty for tlllhlul performance. Should
ENI'iiY LEVEL MA.....0EMENT
Excellant pay and flexible scheduling.
the bid be-accepted by the board, til* dapoaltamount
iniOCislon Managemtrlt Corp. is
•
will ba appllld to the purchaaa price,
'
Seililng Individuals For Entry·
F~r more information contact Tia Wooten
The bid dapoalt will be forfeited •• agraad
'Manogement To Add To ·
T"m In OUr Galii&gt;Otio
llquldeled damegaa upon failure of the hlgheat bidder
at (304) 675-7400 or 1-800-746-0076 or
C
Clnler. Reaponsi&gt;IM\ea
to
ptrfoml; othiiWIII, that dttpOIII will be applied I I
'I
incil
Managing A Team 01 1
apply
in
person
at
pirt
paymant of thl purchan price tor the· pareonll
Toieommvntcators, Client An~
lifo lntaraot will ba paid on the bid dapoaiL
property.
Pr
m Knowledge, And Some
~011 Viand St. Pt. Pleasant, WV 2SSSO
R · rt Wrlting'. Ouaiilled CllnTht ba11nce of tha houn nit price muat ba peld In
ditJ.litB Must Have A 4-Vear
AA/EOE
full by caah or certified or ceahler'a check within
OBQ~-. Slrong lnterperaqnoi,
thirty (30} daya following written notification of the
C011}!11unieatlon, And Leadership
boerd'a scceplllnc• of the bid. The houll ctnnot ba
Skill~. ··
11 ttelp Wanted
moved before the balance Ia paid.
tnkll;ision OHors A Compethlve
The buyer allirmta the reaponalblllty and coat of
~tt MonthlY BonuJaa And Ex·
aacurlng
ti houaa moving firm to move the haiJaa
Banelils Including Health,
from tile echoot dlatrfct'e propt!rty.
,
Li ,' ilabiiily, 401 K, And Paid
•
The bliyar mutlt move 1111 hou11 from the sohool'e
vacatiOn And Holidays.
property no llllr than July 1, 2001.
II You Are Looking For A
The J niversity of Rio Grande invites application
Tha buyer Is to aaeume tht reeponelblllty of
Chaiienging Carter And Think
for
an
intermediate
level
financial
aid
position
..
paymfnt
of taxes, If a.ny, on thla home.
·
VOu Have What It Takes To
Contribule To OUr Succos~ Send
Tha
minimum
eccepiJibla
bid
mutlt
COVII'·
!hi
coat
of
· Candidates sholild possess excellent organizational,
'lllur Reaume And Cover Leller
thahouaa.
·
'
To ·
interpersonal and communication_ skills. The
11 .11 ttl• policy olthe Galtla.Jtckaon-VIntori Joint
'lnio&lt;;ision Management Corp.
Vocational School Dlltrlct that educational progremt
successful candidate will be highly motivated,
Ann: Samuel Gasket
325 Springsidt Or.
othar tctlvltlaa ba conducted In allharance to
creative and effe'ctive in working as part of a and
. Akron, OH 44333
Title VI of the Civil Rlghta Act ot 1884, Tltl' IX of the
successful administrative team . Skills in computer
Eductllonal Amendment• of 1972, and Section 1104 of
Or -Email To:
the
Rehsb111tatlon Act of 1973 In a11urlng _'non·
HRDirectorCinfoClston.eom
applicalions (PC and mainframe systems) is crucial.
Visit Our Web Site At:
.
with regard ~o race, color, na~lonal
dlecrlmlnatlon
Abilily to interpret ' tax returns and understand
inloCiolon.corry
origin, s-x and dlubUity.
.
complex federal regulattons will be necessary. , A DEPOSIT: Cnh or a cartlf)ed or ceahlar'a check,
payebll to the Ga111a.Jackaon-VInton Joint Vocational
110 Help Wanted
bachelor's degree is required. Preference will 'be
School Dlatrlct, or a combination, In the amount ol
given to canqidate's wilh previous financial iird or ten (1 0) percent of the bld/.. 11 price w111 be requll'ld
at tha time of the public auction from the hlghall
college administrative experienc~.
&amp;
bidder •• a ncurlty lor faithful parlormance. Should
we ara looking for brlgbt, energetic Individuals who are interested In a _Manageme~t
Responsibilities i'nclude, but not limited to, advising
bid bl accepted by the Board, the dapoalt amount
thl
eareer with the nations largest employer. We offer compedttve salane~, excellent students and parents, performing needs a-nalysis and
wiU
ba appllld to tile purchaae price. •
·benefHs, profit sharing, a 401 (k) savings plan, associate merchandise dtscount and
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND CONDITIONS OF
aid packaging, &lt;:onducling informational sessions both·
an associate stock purchase program . II you are looktng for a strong, growing
TH.E SALE: Information concarnlng the auction aale,
company with tremendo_ue opportunities for career·mlnded people and have the on-campus arid in the local communities. Sensitivity and 1 copy of the "conditione 'of lha aala" In
· accorilenct with and aubjact to which all blda ahell
desire tO BXCBI· WB want to talk tO youl
. to confidential infonnation is essential.
be made, may be obtained altha Treaaurer'a Office.
MUST BEWILUNG TO RELOCATE;:,_.,.'- - - - - - - - . . ; . . . - - - , , All applicants musl submit a letter of interes~· and
resume including the names of three references o'11 or (Ttllphone: 74G-245·5334)
Send resumes to:
The houae Ia open 'for public viewing Monday
beforeApri123, 2001, to:
WAL-MART DIS:rRICT OFFICE
through Friday. from 9:00 _t.m. to 3:00 p.m. It Ia
· Mr. Phyllis Mason, SPHR.
raquaatad that an appolntmant bl made through tile ·
ATTENTION: DEBRA MAYS
Suparlntendent'e Office (740) 245--5334.
Director of Human Resources
12504 U.S. RT. 60
The Board of Education raearvenhe right to reject
' of I!.~\1.-~~ .
University
any or all blda.
·
·
··
·.
ASHLAND, KY 41105
1; j*j ~ , •
Donalyn
K. Smith
·
·
P.O.
Box
500
l-(606) 928-6760
Treaaure~. Board ol Education
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
Ga111a.Jackaon·Yintoli Joint Vocational Sch!IOI
. EI!O/AA Emplo~er
Dlatrlct
IS AN

SOl 1046, Athens, Oh 45701 . 11{&gt;pllcatlon deadline is April 1~.
2Q01 . Equal Dpporlunity Employ. "''
.

r

In Memory

-. ....,, t?."f •

r

Needed Experienced Crew for .
Setting' and Finishing Sectional
Houatng. 5end PriCing information
and experienc:t to ; Southern
Homes, PO Box 829, Jackson,
OH 45840

Medlcll
ReceplioalatiMedlcll
AssisiJiata 8lld

Apply In Person

~a,cr~

1e'e.t... f.- 4 ' . . f-.

Hot~pital
Pleasant Valley Hospital
currently has openings
for:
R.eglateftd Nune-for
ICCU
Uc. Pndlcal Nune's
for all noon
Send resuine to:
Pleuaat Valley .
. (Jospltsl
c/o Humu ~n:es
2520 Valley Dr.
Pt. Plea18DI, WV 25550
orfUto

~

Mllrtb 28, 2000.
&amp;ully milled by

•
"Heppy 13th 'Birthdey" My Beautiful Angell

Mon.'frl, 8am-5pm.

-

X-RAY TECHNICIAN

In Memory

with,,,., ,,

ASHLEY

Pleuant Valley

--

who-tofu

There 11 •lnglng thlre a1 the Sible told,
The etreets up thire ere made of gold,
The big wide galee are made of pearl,
I went up there to IH my favorne girl..;

(~)286-1483

~=====~~~~~~!!!~=====~.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
cum:ntly bas openinp
' '
f01:

·CALL
1·888·974-JOBS
TODAY! ·

• 110112SR

joseph P. Rite

April 1{1 . .1 to AUIUit II, 1111

A_VON- Looking lor hig"tr incoma? More '-1? Indopendenee? AVON hal what
you're looking for. Ltl'l talk .
18118158H!IIIIII.
-:--.;_------CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
e-.cellent income. E11y claim1
procaulng. Full training. ti0111t·
PC roquirod. Call Physician &amp;
Heallhcare Oe'tlelopments toll·
lr•1·800-m,5833oxtj!070• •

Olreclor'Of Nur•lllg: lnltriM•
Mason COunl'( Action Gfoop. inc. .diatt care Ctnltr.'Wtst Vlrglnt.
11 Nbw Taking Applications For Aeg iste.(ed NutH Llunse At·
CNA'I And ln·home Worker~. quirld. Mlrllmum five 'liars Full·
Please Pick Up App,licatlons At .time Or Equlv1\ent E•perience
101 Second Str01t. Polnl PieU· Nursing Supervision Required.
Int . N.o Phone Calls, Pl•illl. ANSILPNI. Wtll Vlrginio Li ·
MCAG, lnc; ll An EOE, 'MIF, AI ...... Aeqoirad. Sind RHumo n
A. Al&gt;!&gt;liCOiiono Will Be Tokln Point Pleaunl Cen!or, Glneota
Unti14:00 pm On Apri1411, 2001 .
~ car.. Slail Routa 62N, flo.1. Box 321. Point Piunnt,
MecticaJ A - t, lui /ll'ld/or port ut•
wv
25550 EOE.
limo needed Jor toea! phyliCian's
oHice. Sand resume to P.O. Box Drlvoro: P.li..M . TranOjtOrl. No ox-·
458, Rlcino, OH 45771.
perlence needed . 2 week COl
training. $3&lt;4,000/yr. year plus
Ctuo AlB COL Drivers. Good Full Benefits &amp; Paid Training.
Pay, SenofiiS, 401K, Vocation, ln- Gr.v«s based In Utdwest 1·8n. lll!IRCI . Home Evenings. Cell 230·G002 . Sund~y 9am·5pm.

!

•

~LOving~-~
,
of

?.e~t'IA4~~

AVQHt AI Araul To Buy or Sol.
-.y Spears, 30U75-1429.

Help Wanltd

If Thm

.. .,.,., fllll't.,.,

loer~aed

..,., ""

- --ToS...-.corn

110

Help Wlnlild·

!RARE OPPORTUNITY!

I

near.

. At times we 'still tell ourselves this has to be a dream,
there's no way It can be true. Because, what could
posslb!r be tlie purpose c?[ takin9 one as innocent as
you?
Ashley, art-:rou u_ylno to ull us somethlnn at nioh t
when we can t sleep? . We toss-n-tum _anil when we
open our 9!5· there you art and ""' beoin to ""'ep. ·
Ashley, the memories we have collected c?{ you are
· precious souvenirs. Reminders tfJ the happiness we
shared with you those I J shan years.
As time ileepens love, our hearts well bow.-.J _Like
su_nshlne deepens the bloom of a rose. .
Happy 11th Binhd'!Y, Ash1ey.
We love you &amp;Mus you.
· • ··
You willforever remain in our hearts, ·
MaMaMa!Y.
&amp;.Aunt Jl.o6in.

ATTENTION; WORK FROM
HOME moll order/E eommorce
eualne11 $1 ,500·$7,200 month
PTIFT'Fr01 lnlormation' l -80o·
124-0174
.

110

!f·

Another
Year Older
For Erwin

!i~

Help W&amp;11td ,

'Hospital

iiC::

~~~A~n~n~o~uncem~en~t~~. . . . . .~~~'

......

Auclion lruckloid aaio· April I,
2pm, 202 -E Moln 61., Pomorov.
Ohio, I l l - illml.

resume and · cover letter

with 3 references to Athens
County Children Ser~icea, PO

110

~
Ph!uant Valley

tha---in- e

www.911Fl!MMI com

$925 WEEK~YII

Garage Sale: Mon· Tue-Wed.
2221 Jefferson Ave., Household
Items. Fu.rnlture . Baby Items.
Clotho&amp;

80

'"ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put k 10 - 1 $25/IV,$75/hr. FT/
PT. FREE info. 800-87HI045 eld .

Riverside Auction Barn, Salt
Every Saturday Night at 6p .m,,
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson
. (740)256-.6989

••

· 110

Pomeroy •• ddllpcMt• Gallpolls, Ohio Point Pllleant, wv

No_,.,,...-.

3.s41DYFIDIMiflt

n

.J

3-31-99

Two sad and lonely years have passed
since the day you went away.
You went upbn a Journey to_a distant
.
land that day.
You wiShed no one a last -farewell, or
even said good-bye
You were gone before we·.knew It,
and only God knows why,
The flowers we put' upon your place
may get wlnd·blown and fray,
But the love we have for you, our son,
will never fade away.
You are In our hearts
and thoughts every day.
Dad, Mom and Angle

•.

Certified Master Shingle ADp!!Citgr
• Specializing In CertalnTeecl Roofing ShlngiM
• Over 9 Yeara Experience
·
• References • Bonded
• OH Ucensed Contractor

CertainTeed Shingles Available In:
Independence • XT 3q
• XT25
New Horizon ~ Landmark 30 • Landmark
Lanclntark 40
·
• HatiJiras

Quality CertainTeed Shingles

Mccormick RoOfing
C.ltlfld ........................
Ulllt.llt. Ill • ...1....... OM 41DI

Plllla 111111&amp;1 MtCII'IIIIclle-17111 ll..lltl

.

446-9620

:KAL·MERCHANDIS£ FOOD

TRAINEES

·•

~--

\

l
•

J.••

...

• &gt;

..
'.

�•

.

•

•
•

Sund8y, Aprtl1, 2CI01

•

•
••
t
•

,. .....,...

.,.. ...............
•

005

30 Announcementa

Penonale

....... Loet. Jfound.

UVE-..an

Ohio
Blglool Conlerenco,
Saturday April 71h 3pm, I Opm,

HI00,228-11140
EXT.9789
3.99 poonin.
Muotbll8yq.

Newcomers Town Middle SChool

-11

To Do M.llllulll . . ......
............., ,f···

'•Qf•w n·

2:00 p,m, tile dly IMfln
tile ld .. to run, Sundly • .
UDill.., IIIII 1111 2:00 p,m, IIOIIANCE

FOR

""':7' , . , • :

llundly • llondlly edllklft
t :00 p,m, Frlclay.

STAAT DATING TONIGHT!
H-lun meoHoog _ Oiig~ singles
in your 1re1. C1ll for more intormalion . 1·800·ROMANCE, exl .

t:OO p,cn. tile dly IMfln
tile ld 1e to run.

MftJa D'ADUtl;

2 dCiy8 befoN tile ld leiO
run 11r 4:30 p.m. Sflurdii\'
6 llocllley ldiiiOh• 4:30
' Thunldly.
•ondll- •I:IJ•Dt .tD
Clllllfle d!M_IO llolldlys"

1736.

Roull

(tn.

36

Exil)

.

40

Salurday &amp;

Fr01

. Gl-y

Sales! I

5-1/2 Week Old , Puppies, To
Good. Homoa. Golden AetrleYer.
Border Collie, ·Rottweller Mi•
(740)245-QBI ·

Yard Sale: April 41h, 5th, 61h. Off
Rl. 180,' 272 Sl&lt;iclmof8 Rd. UliS ol
'Household and Miscellaneous
Items ~

frH Border Collie, 3 mo old tamale Puppy. Found in Gallipolis,

-Pomeroy,

(74())3'' 8855 or (740)388-8965

April 2-3: Aullend on Nelson Ad .
just off New Lima, 101&amp; ol irams and

bally iloms.

(3041895:33811

sewing machine, quilt pieces.
drapes, adult, children ctothes &amp;
more.
•

9WM15IIrnlon,~lher1a

A I H i O U~KEr. IE rJTS

' 740:5112-1842
Qualily clothing and household
ilemo. $1.00 bag aaio 0\'ery
Thursday. Monday thru Salurday

Pentecostal Church. truckload

9:(1()-6:00. -

:======:::::;=;.t_.;=======:.::
In Memory

FREE SEAACHI

1

-.51NGlEs.com

In Memory
In Memory of
Nevo M. Crimm
on her birthdoy
Apr;il let!
In Heaven we know
IM i. hapJ11 AI we
on eoch year
Pl.OH uU IMr Lord,
Happy Birrladay
And •IN u ill our

so

hearu and thoUBhe,
Ewn tho111Jh IM u
' with you.
Lowd&amp;Mu..d
Her ltwityJfamily

In Memory of

Merch I. Rife
on hi~ birthday April 4tl) 1936
who left Us December 12, 1997

Memory u11 trWuurt tW one c11n steal,
Delllh ;, 11 hetn111eht no oru c11n herd
Some ""'!form mnu tlmt JOIIIIrf grme.
But 1111'/J ni/J rrmem'ber
No 1fllltm' how lo"f
Always In our hearts, ·
Sadly missed by
Wife, &lt;;hlldren and Grandchildren

.

Carport sale. behrnd Melg5 fair·
grounda by perl&lt;,n·ri!Je, April 5·6.

-To You Thrill~

aaie, 803 S. Third
dleport 10:4.

~venue,

Mid·

Sat., 'SUn., Mon ., 311 Wright

SUeel.

110

I

Help Wanted , ·

l!!tmNTlONm
•-national Con'!lanw Ellpardng
Wo&lt;jl From Home or OffiCe
$500.G0-16.000.00'mo. PTIFT
Mail Onle!11Paicl Trainiilg/Vacations
Cali 1-600-228-0317
.._.,CashOnTheTable.com

!IIATTENTIONI!!
inlomalionai ~ny Expardng
Wo&lt;ll From Home or Olfa

' Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

FOUND: Young Female Dog ,
Blacl&lt; With Sitwr. Heo Curly Tali ,
Eagle Ridge Road, By Chaltin

-

Sunday, 9:G0-3:00pm.

Rain Or Shine, 1306 Jaekson
Pil&lt;e. Racing And llart&gt;ie Colleda·
bleS, lOIS Of MISC . No Early

60 Loet and Found

30 · Announcemenbl

EMPLOYr,1ENT
SERVICES

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Admiuion,lnlo (740)'98-9878

YOUIII
1:900·773·UO E•lonston eus
12.99 Per Minulo, Muat Be 18
....... Slfv.U (8tt)81, , 81:M

FrtcMy

,

Help Watlsd

~ll..IICEO CAll WOIIK-

"" . . _ _ .... _
pooilion
.., ~- t~·homo protocliv.

110

Help W&amp;rl$tl

110

Help Wa I II'

,
E•.,.1ienc.d Coshllr (3041895· - GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
3603 ·
1
HELP!
dorn!·Con•nen:e. $522.,._ PT .
E•periencod Truct Mochanle. $1 000-$4000/wk FT. 100-121·
N -. 401K llatiromont, Medl- 10311 www.do.,IQbiM.com
cal, O.ntal &amp; VIsion 1n1urance.'
VICIII!on Pay Solid Or&gt; E•per~
·
IOOI.Ciil(740)216-1403
lloml ,j...

-!rom---..-,

l-

1o ctoitdoWII .... lornilot.
II _ . , . . lo PIO\'IcN
'I IHM...-.ta, Cfilll ll\lft..
•eem•nt, ea.. management
Mnticea and caa• planning for
protiCIIv. I&amp;Mee families. Muol Gallta Meigs Community Acllon $635~poootllirg­
Easy!
ll'
· po~.., good communication
Houoing Coordinator ''"o·i~Col~1~-801&gt;~480-~114~50~24~lvl.~-:--:..__
tkllrt. · wrftlng tldllt 1 typing com- SIIkl
monitor and 111lst with home
puter all:llls, time management building proltcl. Construction Houstkttptr NHded. P ..ase
. tkll1a. valid drivers lieense and bacl&lt;ground, communiCation _
and Apply At Budget Inn. Joctoon
cornplele a criminal record - report skills roquirod. Reoume Pib, GalllpoUa, No Phonl Colla
Mutl p•rtlclpate In afler-houra
whh """' hiltory and ~nco Plolse.
on-eau syslem.. Matter's"1legr• . can be mailed to So• 272.
In Social work preferred.
Cheshire. on .5620. through ~41 Jewelry Benchman- RtPelr, SIZ·
Bachalor's Degreo In Social Worlc 01-. EOE
ing. Stone Siding 01 Fine~or related !laid roquirld . Starting
Full· tlme· l,mmediate Opening ,
oatary $25·35,000 yr. 35 -hour Ga.. rnonont Jobi $11.00~ Apply At Acquiaillono. Fino
$33.00 per ho\lr potential. Paid Jewelry. 151 Second A"nue .
Training/full Benefits. F6'r more Gallipolis.
PARENT INTERVEfiTION SPEinlormalion call call 1·888,6749150 8111. 3234 '
.
CIALISI· Thlo position I&amp; deslgf!td to provide support and
education lo lamllies. who have . Help wanted 1r1 aduh group llomo.
dllldran lllr111 10 5 yean and have day and night shlh. call 74G-9925023.
been kllntiliod .. ~ at ri&amp;l&lt; lor
abuse or neglect. Worker is expected to ha~e weakly contact
wllh tammes and to teach and
demonstrate to paren11 appropriate p1rentlng skills. Many ot

Pomerov. Ott
Pt. Pleasant
· . &amp; VIcinity · ·

Benefit Rummage Sale, March 31
At Ashlon Elemenlllry 9am· 3pm.
All PrOCHds Go Toward Funeral
Expenses For May ~angilon .

$500.G0-$6,000.00/mo.PTIFT
Mail ardernnteme~
Paid Trakling/VaCalions
·
Calll:&amp;oo-548-0922

$2,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
brochurtsl Sa..tisfaction Guar·
Postage &amp; Supplieo pro:

I Rush Self-Addressed
EnvoiopOI GICO, DEPT
5,
1438, ~NTIOCH, TN .
37011,14311 Start lmmedalaiy.

-I

6QI-.IahomebiZ.com

ViSit WWW.dOntworryberk:h.MI Of

Call 110(1:259:2908
ANYONE CAN 00 !TI $21i1S711
Hfi.PT/FT, ot ~­
' 37W.tl .

372 -~ Oriwrs

--

-,TitlnldllgDOIIII'I.COM

Drtva Tho Big Trud&lt;sll •
Eam The 8'0 Bucks!!

ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII Cralls,
Toys , 1"Jewelry, Wood, Sewing,
Typing ... Great Pay! CALL 1·800795-0380 Exit 201 (24hrsl

381&lt;--4211 polenlial .
No expefilnce ~
• 14 Day CDL Training
No COSI Training HCuaiilled
Coll-800-394-2&lt;106.

E"""'

A NEW CAREER,
lnlorma·
lion· Postal Job&amp;. Up to $18.351
hour. Benefils/Pension. 1-888-

726-9083 x1701
Absolutely Free Into! Internet
Uoer&amp; Waniad . $2,000- $5,000/
mo. www.e-nat-drearns.com

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
Internet U&amp;er1i Wanted

. AN UNUSUAL OPPORTuNCTVII
Work from h9rne with no bolll

ATTENTION: II you haVe to _..,
Work from hon)l. $20 to $5(1 hr.
Pl./Fl. ft'OI lletlliiS.
~TTENTION :

OWN A COMPl:IT,
ER? Mail·orQerJE·Commerca .
$522+/Wtek PT. $1000-$4.000/
week FT. lull Training. Fill Boot&lt;,
let. www.createcreemltfe.com
(800) 755-400

eare and are Involved with the

court •vstem. Must be able to
wort&lt; with a vlirioty ol ooclal lasuea tnd family challenges.
Knowladgo of child -p~nt
and P"rantlnil atratoglto ~oqulred.
Excellent communication akllls
and the ability tOo- work some
evenings expected. Minimum requitHienl'la a BA in Family Sludiel, Child Davaiaj!ment, Social
Worl! or olhar relatld lietd. Valid
drlve,·s license and computer
1~1111 ~ required . 36-hour work
WHk. Salary commensurate with

S2000-S5000'mo
www.e-oomrrl&gt;lz.net

Make Money Helping People

Rec:eive Go&lt;-Ornment Returns
Fr.. Oetail&amp;t (24)
f-1100-449-0625 Eld. 5700
$987 .85 WEEKLY ! Processing ·
HUD/FHA Mortgage Relunds. No
Experience Required. For FREE
,Information Call 1-800-50 1-6832
.... 1300..

_..,ICe.

Mid-Ohio . V~ll~y Truck
Driver Training

S~nd

COL Certification 5 Week Course
Mon &amp; Fri 7:00-3:30 Weekend
Claaaea Sat &amp; sUn 8;004:30 12 weaka
Fln•nclng and Funding ·
·Available B••ed On Eligibility .
. '"Job pla~fTNint on Cl••• A ,t,.lnlng•

'1

Contact Ed Adams 1-800-848-3895
-or ·
373-3968

Auction
and FIN Markat

K"lll'l ProdUCI • Fill Mlri&lt;ll,
Frtlh Product , Crans, Toot's,
Mloc. lloma. Open Thu, Fri· Sat,
Phono
(740)440-7787
Or
(740)33t-2t 31 1 Milo w~~~ 91
Holnr Hospital On Jacl&lt;aon Pi,..;
Galil&gt;ol~.

Of1io

Rick P11rson Auction Company..
full time auct'ionter, complete

·auction
sar~iee .
Licenaed
166,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304,
773-5785 Or 304-773-5447.
•

lrt MltriOI'J of

Ashley Hol~iday
Ashley,
4-1-86 fiJ 8-JJ.l/9
.
On your birthday and always. chert is a candle
bumina_. AJldme tllat'never OrrJWS dim:
For illm Is a heal'iness in our hearts, an emptiness in
our lives that time wdl never mend.
' So uxlllj it's on!Y_ natural, to chinA Iovino thauohts '!£. '
you. _Alone with ·ihe assurance that you 'rt ·thinRino ij'
us too.
So with eath new tomorrow, thouehrs c?f)'OU willorow
more dear. lf an!r we rould just hue you and have you

Wanted to Buy

90

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Sltver, ·
Gold Coins. PrOolsets, Diamonds,
Gold Rings, U.S. Currency,·
M.T.S . Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740~~42 .

,&gt; I

'

,

.'' '_,"

,

·---....

==

llrl·aa·•;m
Ellt4mA-·

·Holl~ls .

Who went to be .
with Jesus on
March 29, 1994,
at a~e33.
Sadly mtssed and
often thought of by
her daugliter Jill,
grandmother
Freda, her daddy
Raymie, brother
Jolui, siaters Becky
and Tonda, stepbrother John1
family, and
friends.

Ronnie

•NswHomas .
•Additions
• Roofing • Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Porches &amp; Dticka
• Insurance Work
• EIK1r!r:tl
' u...- alnltnd
• Plumbing

.RDid- Form~~~ link

IMIJ14Hall .

In Memory

Card of Thanks

f:J,IIIf.,......,

_........
......... . .
,..

fll~1

M, Bill•
_ ... like fO

...

doe lolrtloday

eel.,....doaeed
loe:!t.eoaewH
e •· l'oar
dloa~dala.,.•
..-eller
lolrtlodaY "ery
opeelall

•

081ded.
Ca,tlf40-992-3e64
.. _
bles,
phon,
lines. no insurance

Own A Compulor?
Put ft To World
$25- S7Mir. PTIFT
1-888~325

Hours:
Monday- Friday
Shift Work·

Uceued Pncllcsl
Nanes
for Physician Offices
Excellenl pay and _
benefi!S.
Send resume to:
Pleuaat Valley
Hospital
c/o Humu Resources
2520 Valley Dr.
Pt. Pleuaat, WV 25550
- orfu to
(304) 675-6975.

www.b-l)alli.axn

Part !!me ~ oppor!unily·
must have llnow6adge Of account·
lng procedutta, Mic::rosoft Word.
and typing, good oral and wrilleO\
communlc•tron skill&amp; and enj~
worl&lt;ing with lha publiC. Sind .-.
IUI110 c/o: Tho Doily SlnUnol, P.O . .
Box 729-02 , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Public Sale and Auction

GALUA .JACKSON -VINTON JVSD
· ·PUBUC NonCE
"
TOOL AND EQUIPMENT AUCTION
,

In Person

1M Gallle.Jeckson-VInlon Joint Vocetlonll 8chool
Dlatrlct will be IMIIIng U8ld toola and equipment to
tile hlghHt blcld« It 1 public tuctiOn on the Buclu~
Hll11 C....., Center _,pua ...rtlng It 1:00 a.m., lily
15, 2001. The following typ81 ·of equipment are
Included In tile riuctlan:
• Construction and Automotive Tool•

ICALPI AZA
.

'

...

'ou

-=========;;========:,
e
Pleasant

Hospital

Monday.;. Friday

o

'' •

1~NANCIALAID ADVIS~R .

936 St. Rt. 160.·
or can

Mccormlclilooilna
Shawn Micheal Henry
S-25-82

'

at

'.

'f).~ut

Need estima1e to move t'IOml. no
pl'oblem with permtt1. Power ca-

• Medical Equipment
• Welding Equipment ,
State Route -160
• Computer Equipment
•
B'x12' Wily Storlgl Bam
GallipOlis, Ohio.
The 8~ HUla Cal'ell' CatJtar canipua Ia located
(304) 675-6975;
!'
351 Buckeya Hilla Road, Rio Grande, Ohio. For
AA/EOE
more Information on.the lool and equipment auction,
contact the echool 1t 74G-245-5334. we 1!111 111
~------~
- ~~L-~~
1 .
equipment
In •q le" condition.
Wanted
• MI}PULAR HOUSE AUCTION
The Trtuur..- hereby glvn further notice thlt tha
11:1\ L'
lll'anl Thl' \t''' ..,·: 1 Glllla.,ackiOn-VInton Jolpt Vocational School
Don't miss
• THERAPISTS
Dlalrlct will offer for ule 11 public auction, on tha
'
this
HUll Cereer Center Cllmpue, commencing It
Buckeye
Heartland rehabilitation service Is seeking highly
· InfoCision Management-Corporation is
noon
on May 5, 2001, the following pereonal property:
mollvaled lndMd~s to join our rehabilitation team, .
, The per10rial proptrty being offal'ld tor auction 11 1
opportunity~··
Expanding in Gallipolis, ··
one-etory frame ranch etyle modular houae. The
Location - Mlddlei!Ort, Jackson, and Rortsmouth, Ohio
houaa, conalructed by tile vocatiOnal echool cia• Up to $7/hour +
Pos~lon -· Physlcai ·Theraplst
·
of
Building-Tr1daa, Ia twlnty-elx (26) IIMI wldt tnd
BQnuses
Physical Therapist Asslstaht ·
Full lime Positions Available lmmedlatl!ly!
fllly..lght (58) 1,111 long (1 ,508 aquare fait). Faaturn
Occupational Therapist
•Full-time evening
Include tilt following: .
Certified
Speech
Therapist
•
Built ·11 ona unit, dlvldaa Into two halvaa for
shift
Speech
Therapist
CFY
tranaportlng
to 1 foundation tilt
$7.00 per h~ur
• Exc:ellent benefits
• Three (3) bldroomt
Full-time, part-time, PRill avallablllly. Please fax your
pec:ksge
•'tWo (2) full btths
,·
resume attention Amy Walter (419) 537·0948 or mall to
•
• lncludn rnedlcll,
Dry-wallld wells end celllnga
• Set schedule
• lnatallad Qlk · kllchan cablnata and bathroom
1; • dental &amp; vltlon
3425 Executive Parkway Suite 128, Toledo, OH 43606.
• Wee\UY·bonus
vtnlttes
t&lt; ln•uranca &amp; 40t (k)
EOEM/F/DN
• Six panallntartor doors
, , , l'lllrlntlnt plan
• Overtime available
• llraA coach exllrlor llghta
• Every Friday and Saturday off
• Anderson d~ubla hung windows
! Help us make a
110
Wanted
• VInyl Sldlnlt' doubll ~r (4) l_nch
• Paid vacation every 6 months
dlflarenca by
• Floor lollll (2" x 10" on 18" centers)
• Paid holidays
• Flbargltaa 25 ynr dlmenalonll roollngthlnglea
recrunln voluntHrs
• Two hundild (~ amp llactrlcal nrvlca
'OVIr e ph
for
ttem. NOT INCLUDED In !hi houn:
·
Are
you
a
ts!entld
tslkeh
I
-.
Ivarious nc-in-p " fit
• l'loor covlllngll
Do
~ou like to call your own shots?
~h organlatloni•.
Call now to schedule and interview: 1-888-237-5~1 ext. 1131 _ • Llghl fixture•
· Do you heve a lot of energy ·
• Htatlng ayltam
poeltlons .
. but nowhere to put n?
• Appll•ncaa auch-aa; hot Watpr haatar, .dlahwnhar,
.
Involve or stop by our Oallipolis location: 141 Third Avenue
Would you like to • •.your
clotiNs
wathar/dryer, atove, and rafrlgerator. ·
~ FUNDRAISINQI
reeults .I.Y.youi-.pi!YcJ,Itc:k?
Galllpoll1, OH
METHOD
OF SALE: SubJect to the right of the Board
...
Would you like to gat the
I
Ill
reject
any
and/or all blda, tile 1111 ahall be mad• to
reepect that you dtltrve?
CalllnfoCitlon toclly to .
Are you looking for ap lace t9 zig
'::====~~:::;:;:;::;~=::;=====-=
tht
bidder
lor ~·
modularofhoun,
but •hall
not 'hlghelt
be 111111 until
wrlllln
notlllcatlon
the tccepllnce
lchldule 111 lnlervl.wl
when other placaa zag?
11 0 Help Wanted'
of the bid Ia given by the Board of EduCIItlon.
,
Don't nt where you are now?
TERMS OF SALE: Cnh (In the form of-Clllh, or I
No problem ... you are Jul1 whO we are looking lor.
I
cll'llflad or Cllahlar'a check) within the tl1111 .provided
1-886-475-7223
In tha conditions of thl nle refll'rld to below.
' ext. 1901
"Condlllonl of Sail"
·
'
·
.
·
The
houal
will
bt
10ld
In
•Aa Ia • condition. The
EARN $25,000 TO• $50,000/yr.
achool
dlatrfct
Is
not
reepon.alble
to rapt~lr, replace, or
Moqicai insurance Billing. Naadprovide
additional
building
mstirlal,
or otherwlaa
ed ''limedialeiyi Home Compular
Valley
Nettled. FREE l,.,ft, 1-800llltkl any adjultmentato the houat 11111' the nit.
29ilil&amp;83 P.P! flat..' . .
Pleasant Valley Private Duty has
DEPOSm Caah or • certified or clahler'a check,
to tht Gt111a.Jackaon-Ylnton Joint Vocational
peyabla
EA!IY. WORK! GAE~T PAY! Earn
Immediate openings for personal care
$500 Pius a Woo~ AssemDiing
School Dlilrlct, or 1 combination, In tha amount of
Pr91'uC11 at Homo. No Experience
110 Help Wanted
aides/nursing assistants In ·
ten (1 0) parctnt of the bld/1111 price w111 be required
'Nectaaary. Call T6fr Fr•• HOO·
at
ths tlina' at the public auction from the hlghaat
2611'39&lt;14 •138
.
.
Gallia, Meigs and Mason Counties.
( ' .
bidder 11 1 aacurlty for tlllhlul performance. Should
ENI'iiY LEVEL MA.....0EMENT
Excellant pay and flexible scheduling.
the bid be-accepted by the board, til* dapoaltamount
iniOCislon Managemtrlt Corp. is
•
will ba appllld to the purchaaa price,
'
Seililng Individuals For Entry·
F~r more information contact Tia Wooten
The bid dapoalt will be forfeited •• agraad
'Manogement To Add To ·
T"m In OUr Galii&gt;Otio
llquldeled damegaa upon failure of the hlgheat bidder
at (304) 675-7400 or 1-800-746-0076 or
C
Clnler. Reaponsi&gt;IM\ea
to
ptrfoml; othiiWIII, that dttpOIII will be applied I I
'I
incil
Managing A Team 01 1
apply
in
person
at
pirt
paymant of thl purchan price tor the· pareonll
Toieommvntcators, Client An~
lifo lntaraot will ba paid on the bid dapoaiL
property.
Pr
m Knowledge, And Some
~011 Viand St. Pt. Pleasant, WV 2SSSO
R · rt Wrlting'. Ouaiilled CllnTht ba11nce of tha houn nit price muat ba peld In
ditJ.litB Must Have A 4-Vear
AA/EOE
full by caah or certified or ceahler'a check within
OBQ~-. Slrong lnterperaqnoi,
thirty (30} daya following written notification of the
C011}!11unieatlon, And Leadership
boerd'a scceplllnc• of the bid. The houll ctnnot ba
Skill~. ··
11 ttelp Wanted
moved before the balance Ia paid.
tnkll;ision OHors A Compethlve
The buyer allirmta the reaponalblllty and coat of
~tt MonthlY BonuJaa And Ex·
aacurlng
ti houaa moving firm to move the haiJaa
Banelils Including Health,
from tile echoot dlatrfct'e propt!rty.
,
Li ,' ilabiiily, 401 K, And Paid
•
The bliyar mutlt move 1111 hou11 from the sohool'e
vacatiOn And Holidays.
property no llllr than July 1, 2001.
II You Are Looking For A
The J niversity of Rio Grande invites application
Tha buyer Is to aaeume tht reeponelblllty of
Chaiienging Carter And Think
for
an
intermediate
level
financial
aid
position
..
paymfnt
of taxes, If a.ny, on thla home.
·
VOu Have What It Takes To
Contribule To OUr Succos~ Send
Tha
minimum
eccepiJibla
bid
mutlt
COVII'·
!hi
coat
of
· Candidates sholild possess excellent organizational,
'lllur Reaume And Cover Leller
thahouaa.
·
'
To ·
interpersonal and communication_ skills. The
11 .11 ttl• policy olthe Galtla.Jtckaon-VIntori Joint
'lnio&lt;;ision Management Corp.
Vocational School Dlltrlct that educational progremt
successful candidate will be highly motivated,
Ann: Samuel Gasket
325 Springsidt Or.
othar tctlvltlaa ba conducted In allharance to
creative and effe'ctive in working as part of a and
. Akron, OH 44333
Title VI of the Civil Rlghta Act ot 1884, Tltl' IX of the
successful administrative team . Skills in computer
Eductllonal Amendment• of 1972, and Section 1104 of
Or -Email To:
the
Rehsb111tatlon Act of 1973 In a11urlng _'non·
HRDirectorCinfoClston.eom
applicalions (PC and mainframe systems) is crucial.
Visit Our Web Site At:
.
with regard ~o race, color, na~lonal
dlecrlmlnatlon
Abilily to interpret ' tax returns and understand
inloCiolon.corry
origin, s-x and dlubUity.
.
complex federal regulattons will be necessary. , A DEPOSIT: Cnh or a cartlf)ed or ceahlar'a check,
payebll to the Ga111a.Jackaon-VInton Joint Vocational
110 Help Wanted
bachelor's degree is required. Preference will 'be
School Dlatrlct, or a combination, In the amount ol
given to canqidate's wilh previous financial iird or ten (1 0) percent of the bld/.. 11 price w111 be requll'ld
at tha time of the public auction from the hlghall
college administrative experienc~.
&amp;
bidder •• a ncurlty lor faithful parlormance. Should
we ara looking for brlgbt, energetic Individuals who are interested In a _Manageme~t
Responsibilities i'nclude, but not limited to, advising
bid bl accepted by the Board, the dapoalt amount
thl
eareer with the nations largest employer. We offer compedttve salane~, excellent students and parents, performing needs a-nalysis and
wiU
ba appllld to tile purchaae price. •
·benefHs, profit sharing, a 401 (k) savings plan, associate merchandise dtscount and
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION AND CONDITIONS OF
aid packaging, &lt;:onducling informational sessions both·
an associate stock purchase program . II you are looktng for a strong, growing
TH.E SALE: Information concarnlng the auction aale,
company with tremendo_ue opportunities for career·mlnded people and have the on-campus arid in the local communities. Sensitivity and 1 copy of the "conditione 'of lha aala" In
· accorilenct with and aubjact to which all blda ahell
desire tO BXCBI· WB want to talk tO youl
. to confidential infonnation is essential.
be made, may be obtained altha Treaaurer'a Office.
MUST BEWILUNG TO RELOCATE;:,_.,.'- - - - - - - - . . ; . . . - - - , , All applicants musl submit a letter of interes~· and
resume including the names of three references o'11 or (Ttllphone: 74G-245·5334)
Send resumes to:
The houae Ia open 'for public viewing Monday
beforeApri123, 2001, to:
WAL-MART DIS:rRICT OFFICE
through Friday. from 9:00 _t.m. to 3:00 p.m. It Ia
· Mr. Phyllis Mason, SPHR.
raquaatad that an appolntmant bl made through tile ·
ATTENTION: DEBRA MAYS
Suparlntendent'e Office (740) 245--5334.
Director of Human Resources
12504 U.S. RT. 60
The Board of Education raearvenhe right to reject
' of I!.~\1.-~~ .
University
any or all blda.
·
·
··
·.
ASHLAND, KY 41105
1; j*j ~ , •
Donalyn
K. Smith
·
·
P.O.
Box
500
l-(606) 928-6760
Treaaure~. Board ol Education
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
Ga111a.Jackaon·Yintoli Joint Vocational Sch!IOI
. EI!O/AA Emplo~er
Dlatrlct
IS AN

SOl 1046, Athens, Oh 45701 . 11{&gt;pllcatlon deadline is April 1~.
2Q01 . Equal Dpporlunity Employ. "''
.

r

In Memory

-. ....,, t?."f •

r

Needed Experienced Crew for .
Setting' and Finishing Sectional
Houatng. 5end PriCing information
and experienc:t to ; Southern
Homes, PO Box 829, Jackson,
OH 45840

Medlcll
ReceplioalatiMedlcll
AssisiJiata 8lld

Apply In Person

~a,cr~

1e'e.t... f.- 4 ' . . f-.

Hot~pital
Pleasant Valley Hospital
currently has openings
for:
R.eglateftd Nune-for
ICCU
Uc. Pndlcal Nune's
for all noon
Send resuine to:
Pleuaat Valley .
. (Jospltsl
c/o Humu ~n:es
2520 Valley Dr.
Pt. Plea18DI, WV 25550
orfUto

~

Mllrtb 28, 2000.
&amp;ully milled by

•
"Heppy 13th 'Birthdey" My Beautiful Angell

Mon.'frl, 8am-5pm.

-

X-RAY TECHNICIAN

In Memory

with,,,., ,,

ASHLEY

Pleuant Valley

--

who-tofu

There 11 •lnglng thlre a1 the Sible told,
The etreets up thire ere made of gold,
The big wide galee are made of pearl,
I went up there to IH my favorne girl..;

(~)286-1483

~=====~~~~~~!!!~=====~.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
cum:ntly bas openinp
' '
f01:

·CALL
1·888·974-JOBS
TODAY! ·

• 110112SR

joseph P. Rite

April 1{1 . .1 to AUIUit II, 1111

A_VON- Looking lor hig"tr incoma? More '-1? Indopendenee? AVON hal what
you're looking for. Ltl'l talk .
18118158H!IIIIII.
-:--.;_------CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
e-.cellent income. E11y claim1
procaulng. Full training. ti0111t·
PC roquirod. Call Physician &amp;
Heallhcare Oe'tlelopments toll·
lr•1·800-m,5833oxtj!070• •

Olreclor'Of Nur•lllg: lnltriM•
Mason COunl'( Action Gfoop. inc. .diatt care Ctnltr.'Wtst Vlrglnt.
11 Nbw Taking Applications For Aeg iste.(ed NutH Llunse At·
CNA'I And ln·home Worker~. quirld. Mlrllmum five 'liars Full·
Please Pick Up App,licatlons At .time Or Equlv1\ent E•perience
101 Second Str01t. Polnl PieU· Nursing Supervision Required.
Int . N.o Phone Calls, Pl•illl. ANSILPNI. Wtll Vlrginio Li ·
MCAG, lnc; ll An EOE, 'MIF, AI ...... Aeqoirad. Sind RHumo n
A. Al&gt;!&gt;liCOiiono Will Be Tokln Point Pleaunl Cen!or, Glneota
Unti14:00 pm On Apri1411, 2001 .
~ car.. Slail Routa 62N, flo.1. Box 321. Point Piunnt,
MecticaJ A - t, lui /ll'ld/or port ut•
wv
25550 EOE.
limo needed Jor toea! phyliCian's
oHice. Sand resume to P.O. Box Drlvoro: P.li..M . TranOjtOrl. No ox-·
458, Rlcino, OH 45771.
perlence needed . 2 week COl
training. $3&lt;4,000/yr. year plus
Ctuo AlB COL Drivers. Good Full Benefits &amp; Paid Training.
Pay, SenofiiS, 401K, Vocation, ln- Gr.v«s based In Utdwest 1·8n. lll!IRCI . Home Evenings. Cell 230·G002 . Sund~y 9am·5pm.

!

•

~LOving~-~
,
of

?.e~t'IA4~~

AVQHt AI Araul To Buy or Sol.
-.y Spears, 30U75-1429.

Help Wanltd

If Thm

.. .,.,., fllll't.,.,

loer~aed

..,., ""

- --ToS...-.corn

110

Help Wlnlild·

!RARE OPPORTUNITY!

I

near.

. At times we 'still tell ourselves this has to be a dream,
there's no way It can be true. Because, what could
posslb!r be tlie purpose c?[ takin9 one as innocent as
you?
Ashley, art-:rou u_ylno to ull us somethlnn at nioh t
when we can t sleep? . We toss-n-tum _anil when we
open our 9!5· there you art and ""' beoin to ""'ep. ·
Ashley, the memories we have collected c?{ you are
· precious souvenirs. Reminders tfJ the happiness we
shared with you those I J shan years.
As time ileepens love, our hearts well bow.-.J _Like
su_nshlne deepens the bloom of a rose. .
Happy 11th Binhd'!Y, Ash1ey.
We love you &amp;Mus you.
· • ··
You willforever remain in our hearts, ·
MaMaMa!Y.
&amp;.Aunt Jl.o6in.

ATTENTION; WORK FROM
HOME moll order/E eommorce
eualne11 $1 ,500·$7,200 month
PTIFT'Fr01 lnlormation' l -80o·
124-0174
.

110

!f·

Another
Year Older
For Erwin

!i~

Help W&amp;11td ,

'Hospital

iiC::

~~~A~n~n~o~uncem~en~t~~. . . . . .~~~'

......

Auclion lruckloid aaio· April I,
2pm, 202 -E Moln 61., Pomorov.
Ohio, I l l - illml.

resume and · cover letter

with 3 references to Athens
County Children Ser~icea, PO

110

~
Ph!uant Valley

tha---in- e

www.911Fl!MMI com

$925 WEEK~YII

Garage Sale: Mon· Tue-Wed.
2221 Jefferson Ave., Household
Items. Fu.rnlture . Baby Items.
Clotho&amp;

80

'"ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put k 10 - 1 $25/IV,$75/hr. FT/
PT. FREE info. 800-87HI045 eld .

Riverside Auction Barn, Salt
Every Saturday Night at 6p .m,,
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson
. (740)256-.6989

••

· 110

Pomeroy •• ddllpcMt• Gallpolls, Ohio Point Pllleant, wv

No_,.,,...-.

3.s41DYFIDIMiflt

n

.J

3-31-99

Two sad and lonely years have passed
since the day you went away.
You went upbn a Journey to_a distant
.
land that day.
You wiShed no one a last -farewell, or
even said good-bye
You were gone before we·.knew It,
and only God knows why,
The flowers we put' upon your place
may get wlnd·blown and fray,
But the love we have for you, our son,
will never fade away.
You are In our hearts
and thoughts every day.
Dad, Mom and Angle

•.

Certified Master Shingle ADp!!Citgr
• Specializing In CertalnTeecl Roofing ShlngiM
• Over 9 Yeara Experience
·
• References • Bonded
• OH Ucensed Contractor

CertainTeed Shingles Available In:
Independence • XT 3q
• XT25
New Horizon ~ Landmark 30 • Landmark
Lanclntark 40
·
• HatiJiras

Quality CertainTeed Shingles

Mccormick RoOfing
C.ltlfld ........................
Ulllt.llt. Ill • ...1....... OM 41DI

Plllla 111111&amp;1 MtCII'IIIIclle-17111 ll..lltl

.

446-9620

:KAL·MERCHANDIS£ FOOD

TRAINEES

·•

~--

\

l
•

J.••

...

• &gt;

..
'.

�o ..
•

'

a

P111 D4 • . ...., CIIIH

110 tfllp Wtwtl d

'

•!latl

t

Hllp ...

110

w...,
•

d

!WIT 1'1111 MIIICIWGIIII
.... Coll-.g eaoo.,..,"""
.. _ . . ... Pill ... - ·
ctw't'·t . , . . U'IIINI. The
pooillon '*IUftl; ' - '"""'

Tho Aihono·Mtlgo ~auca11ooa1

I'OSTAL JOel $41,500/'(rl Now
Hiring. No E... IOIICI. Ptid Train-

S.rva C.ntar is Hftlng qual~
lied . . . -... 1o1 lho pooldM ot

i"91Grta1 Beno)l1o. Coli 1·100·
211-1111111t.131.
.

.=
101110---....-:
---""11-Ylllid- -llld . .

Treasur•r. AppUcanta mutl pol·

se&amp;s

a Treasurers license
Issue&lt;! by lho Ohio Dept o! Edu-

c

:~=='D
....... _1-1 Gill-

Of evidence

thar such II·

pr gove

Reputab&amp;e busil'iHII needs
ie•s- all shUts &amp; kitchen

inga. ........ lnd hoidlyl;
IIQ!beltltlll , . _ . . , .

ntal accounting dt·
sired. Experience as a chlel' fiScal
otf~r preferred. Applicants must
also have 111e -.y to be baNiod
and to prOVide their own transpor· .
tabOn. Submit letter ot ln!erest, r•

cash·
ht~ lp .

Send resumes c/o : The Daily

Sentinel.
~o. eox
at. Ohio 45769.

will

eolonl tlrMng rw&lt;xltd. Poy II

$8.15""' holl':- 24-32

grooo&lt;y. morcl1andlllng or liX:tl·
ing ionot 1 plut. Hquoifiod.
Pease send a restm~l): Ann:
HR ~ (PTM), Box 289,

• n

cans can be Qbtained. E•ptri·
•nee I school diurict. universtry,

polio"""~.,...,

hc&gt;tn por -:no bentfU. Prior

11~

110 Help . . . .

llvalllng ol ""10 Sl..,..... . .

Sales

r··-··
.

Posilion·

Full· Time .

·Lifestyle Furniture. No Phone
Calls, Apply In Parson. 856
Third ............ Gallipolis, Qh;o.

;

.

hiring- No experienet-paid train·

' 800-4&lt;9·3660 _
ext. J·365.

I'.

,

:-i

1~1. 11 &gt;1) \ """'

I l'

Brtef Llltlnt:
.

St. At. 7 in Tuppers Plains, Ohio at
the Lodwick car tOt.
"HOUSEHOLD~

Whirlpool refrigerator, Shorp ~aicrowove o~eo· &amp;
stand, hide a bed couch, dressers, chest of
drawers, Sharp TV; TV cabinet, stands, lamps,
single metal &amp; wood beds, misc.' chai..s, records,
record player, hall tree, mirror. pictures, misc.
li~, misc. knick knacks, sweepers, step sJool &amp;

Coins, Marvel Comic Books, Fenton glass,
Blue Cobalt, Milk qlass, Quilt, Stoneware,
Green Mason Iars, Baslcets, McCoy, Pressed
9lass, Dazey electric churn, Cross:.cut saw,
sklttets, 14 Wapak w/ embossed Indian head,
18 Wopak, Waqner ~ore, Cookie jar,
Washboard, lronston!! dishes by Harmony
House, Faley food mill, Waoner corn stick
pan, Silverware ":NI case, salt and pepper
sets, radio flyer waoon, btack amethyst and
Comlvol olass, More camino ln...

.

Rnls "Ike" Issac - Auctioneer

. • ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS 'ITeMS"
RCA radio·, 2 door cabinet, books, radio &amp; record

For more Information call VII'QJI
at Isaac's Feed Store 7 40-388-8880
or Ike &amp; Reonle 7 40·388-87 41 or 388-9370.

·•

'

Porch glider, ~- bike, 2 drawer fil~ cabinet step
ladder, Christmas tree, wheelchair &amp; other
items.

er.(419)531·0948. Mall to 3425

150

Schools
Instruction

5-STAR
·PROFESSIONAL
TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL now

oflers a 14 da~ COL TRAINING

PROGRAM . lmmediate Open·
ings. $36,000-t 1 sf year. Non Ex·
perienced ~

PTo, OTRI&amp; SLPI
.....,arroaiAmerico's
laJ90St providers o1 hlalthaare
IOIVIcos. haslho abcM1 OPPOR·
TUNITESin:
-

•11'' 1 RJ;:lor:tOH

Mu&amp;thaWOhlaslate-. 1+
yrs'. "''&gt;·I-I rehab. LTC. Excelent
salary/ b0nofi1s. Flaxiblo wort&lt;

schedUle/ caoeloiid. For conoid-

oro-: S0.212·1148, or tox reoumol3 -ron-1o: 710-729-

2421. Email: -_mortln-

eone'Mncor.com, Venoor Is a

drug-lrolenvlronment EOE

1-800·448·6669. Ex·

per lenced w/CDL 1·800·956·
2353.

8LACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Home Sludy, Ap·
proved, Allori:lable. comprenansive. legal train ing since 1890.

FREE Calalag: 800·626·9228,
wril8: P.O. Box 7014-411: Dallas. TX
75310 NA or hnp:/Jwww.blacksto-

to

to a new h,,m ..
propei'\Y of Alton and Thelma Story will"be sold as
listed l&gt;elaw. DIRECTIONS: From At. 33 south of
Athens, exit on Pleasant Hill Road for 1.2 miles to
right tum on Oxley Road· 1 mite to 10475 on left,
• watch tor
·
Aimc~ulis" a. COLLECTIBLES:. All antiques In
excellent condition-ready to set in your · home:
Beautiful 60" round oak pedestal table w/claw feet,
&amp;-matching press back oak chairs, beautiful oak
sideboard w/mlrror &amp; shelves ornate carving, oak
Icebox, oak swivel arm desk chair, nice oak wash
stand w/curved top drawer, 42' square oak table
w/5 column· legs &amp; extra leaf, 4-oak round seat
chalrs, . oak buffet, oak Hoos.ler-style kitchen
cabinets, painted drop leaf table, old maple high
chair wttray, 4-cast iron skillets (1·Wagner).
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: Gibson &amp; GE 17
cu. ft. refrigerators, Gibson 19.2 upright freezer,
White-Westinghouse 30" electric range, Kenmore
washer &amp; dryer, Lazyboy sofa w/recllnlng ends
(only 3 yrs old), matching sofa &amp; chair, Lazyboy
recliner, coffee &amp; end tallies, assorted lamps,
several stands, wall mount shelving, clothing racks,
Sylvania 25"1V .&amp; RCA 13" B&amp;W TV, Sony stereo
turn. table w/speakers, '8 mm projector &amp; screen,
modern china cabinet, modem dresser &amp; chest of
dr_awers, ~ouble &amp; slng!e bed frames wtmattresses,
porch sw1ng, gas grill, 2-wlndow air conditioners,
yam &amp; macrame supplies, and miscellaneous
dishes, kitchen Items, coolers, clock'S, vacuum
cleaners, etc.
MISCELLANEOUS: OAK 10 upper/lower CB base
CB grounll plane antenna w~ead, C-Band 1
satellite dish w/receiver, Murray 12 hp 38" riding
mow~r, exercise bike,_ weight bE!nch wtweights,
bowling ball &amp; shoes, ·roller- skates, downhill &amp;
Cf0$9 country skies, · and other · miscellaneous

I

I'

Wanted: Aggressive Telm Play·
er with lnlttattve to work in a last
paced, growth oriented. Estab·
llshad tnsuranc;:e Agancx. Must ...

838 Cauno1ruction; Roofing,
Siding I Conerttt. lntttiOr &amp;

Freedom Christian-counseling.

800·841 ·9157 .

Exterior Palntlnv. All PhaMo 01
Homo Ropolro For A Fr"
'E&amp;~ma1e. Call (304)815-7738
Allor 5 pm.

• ••

'

..

kitchen, newly remOdeled, ..pn •

•

::;"~~.':".~--?

" " " - --~
Please Call Us Ton Free 1·866·

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE 613-8881 241-o;
CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE.
TURNED DOWN ON
BAD CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY,
S-OCIAL SECURITY /SSt~
LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS. AAA
No Fee lJnlass We Wlnl
AJI:Tf\IQ. 1·~11-11902.
1-S88·582·3345

. do- window utatmenla, 10rne
l&gt;ed&lt;llng, pillowa. btdoklr1o,·l .~
leralion an moll ItemS. cal Sandy

740-992·3220.

OfvM:e$150

AdopllonS225

304-675-1~7.

Nolti&lt;Ht-yaursetl-lrin

haul your togs Ia tilt mill jul1 call

•

C'""'ASSIFIEDSI
~~lor=ma:t:lon:·~Ba:ntc::rup~l~cy~nJ~a~l:n~TNf=-L-~!!!::!!!::!!!::!!!i!=:;,~.~;!.. ~..

.

CALL t •800·26J.OS03 far FREE

Give plano l~tsona at hOme. Beginner&amp; &amp; adulla: also teach
chording &amp; 1ranspaoJng &amp;
rhyllms; 740-992-5403.
·

2264.

to .........

..,p;........

lil'nltalion or ciiQh;•lillkA•

11ott4111 on,..., color, religion,
---or-

3
Be&lt;ll)&gt;om- 1 Bath, Newly Flomodeltd,
Highway 62· 3 Mllal Pall

'Olfgln, or IIJ'f ; &gt;101 rtion 10

IMirf Mf SUCh JMIJII.ICI,

llr'rla.tiolr Dl' ~.·

n. •w r ,

Reduced For Quick Sale
$119,000 Sandhill Rasa . Real1ar

(304)895-:M11

w11 no~

io-V!r ......

(304)51&amp;-305e

atco•ltlei••G1or I'NI......,

Brick Homo. 3 Bedroom- 2 81th.
Reduced Far Sole $91,000- Gall·
palls Ferry. Realtor. (30•)S78·

ollho
lltw. O u r - ... t.rwby
.11*111Md thtll II d II It 101
fn 1hla,. popor

-

h

_,ir,

· (740)388 8002

1989 Sunshine ' trailer~ t4a71, 3
BedrO&lt;Ims, 2 Bath$, Heat Pump.
New Carpet In Living . Room &amp;
KitChen, Ca1hedrll Co11ingo, Cov·

FACTORY OVERSTOCKI1 Now
Double Wide O~ly S1 .Sto .oo
Froo Detivory .
.1-116!1-928·3426

ered Porch, A.lraadv Sa! Up On
Rented lot. Can Be Moved.

Final Days, Nationwldo"(nventary .
· , . •
Reductian!(304j7~ '
1992 14xBO. 3 BR. 2 Balh , 6.6
Acres 01 Land. Pond. Bam . And Limited Or No Credit? Government Bank Flnan&lt;:!l Only AI O.k·
Garage. $43.000 (740)4-41..{)302
wood In Barboursville. WV 304-

lot lt'IOdel clearanee, aeve up 10

$1.625 " lth any home. check uo

&amp;

·14a70 Sduthern Dream , lree De-

livery 1ree Se1up only $9995 1·
888-928·3428

1 1971 Schult For

Sale, New
Furnace &amp; Insulation. $3.000
1
, : (1~)361-10S2 Attar olpm
' 1979 Rarrllllndt i4x70, 3 BA with

out were dealing, Cole:s Mobile

1304)675-Jiloa

Homos, US Sl East. Athens. Oh.

·oiVORCE Causes Custom ordered Slnglewide Home To Be·
come Available , 5at~e SS Call t-

MUST SELLI 3 Bedroom, 2 Balli
Home. No Old Conlract To As·

"

sume. Just A Reliable Patty To

Make Mon1hly Paymon1 t ·888·

888·565.01 81

928-9896

Real &amp;tate

. appliances, $7.000 (H0)441·
1624 Of (140)446-2923
.

L

'

138-3409.

Furnace With Front Por~h Shed
Wood Fence.
Lots Of
Remoc:t.e ling . Muat See. SB .OOO

tor Sale

Sall4&gt;

And

(304)e7S.nS&amp;

76 14x70 Bayview ( wiDen~ New
' Since 97 · CIA , Water Heater

320 Mobile Homes

I

Down And $3UI .OO Per Mantft .

'

General .

-loin..._,

3056

are"MT'INeonM~

•

0(1PM1Unlty ,b ull.

....
~~

Stock

"'tlmeto

$500DOWN'

Sites

Lot-

lullcll •

Model ·

Clearance·

ITI.CfUIII

Available

CompOn.m

Quotly-

'

orLIMal,_ ·

quote.' .

..

""ww

RECIPIENr OF THE FL£E1WOOO
CUSTOMER SATIFACTION AWARD

3bedrooms,
plastered walla,
floor In
dining room, fireplace, garbage· disposal,
. over-sized heated garage.
A M4st Seell For $ale By Owner.
·
By ap~loln11metnf· or11v

Buelneaa .

Sal. 9:00-6:00..1
CIOHCI Sunday

lnter.ectlon 33
864
'
l.olan,OH
Mon-Frl 8:30-8:00 ·

Sat 9:00-6:00

Clo~;ed Sunday

- 1·800.837a3238

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
~~~ r:/J i} MAKES
THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA
BROKER ......-..... - 411
OAILBELV1LLE........ .,........................ 41112Gt
· 446~6806 -~'lB'JM
TRISH SNYDER ..,_............._, ..........-•.441-MII
Branch Office
IIIlTH,

Real

*

Eetatl General

ness wl1h pobple you know, and

eied~fJueAe

!he of1tr!ng.

~Houaehold"
Norge refrigerator, Tappen electric range, small
freezer, Hot Po.int washer, M.w : dryer, kitchen

table "&amp; chairs, Magic Chef microw~ve, · metal
wardrobe, 3 pc. bookcase bedroom suite, end &amp;
coffee tables, lamps, signature TV, 11 volt,

Rickie L. Koenig P.O. A.

Ohio #1344 W.Va. #515
Cash
POsitive 10
Refreshments
"Not responsible for accidents or loss of property"

www .BIG- BENDREALTY.. COM

A VENDING GOLOMINE·ACT
NOWt Mac.h ines vend Hershey

candy AND phone card&amp;. (2 .Se/
min. U.S.) Earn $800+/Wkly. Wall!

- Bet. &amp;wet-- iE'eatt,,~ ~~~e,

6-9 hrs/wk • .Great locations! BOO·

659·tn5.1nv. req. Fl-l avail.

AT&amp;T-MCI PAY PHONE ROUTES

Est Laeallans; Local.
Income. 800-800-3470.

Proven

l-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

~

Russell D"Wood, Broker 446-4618
Judy DeWitt .............................. 441-0262
Ch, I Le I

Beauly Selon equipment lor sal•
7 slatiOilB, lobby furnlttn, Ianning
bOd&amp;, will sole all together ar·sop~rala. callanyllme, 740-381-1)612.

' 2 317 ·
J. Merrill Cartel..... .'...................379-2184
ery m ey .......................:......... 74 • 1
Tammie DeWitt......................... 245-0022
Dana A1ha ......................................... 379-9209
Ruth Barr........................ ,................. 446-0722 . Ke?~eth Amsbary ............................. 245-5855

EARN $500·$900 per wook In
your ba1hrobo &amp; allppers. Low In·
vestment 1·800·272·0193. awe·

-

somearning.com

LMNG 4 btdrml. 2 bllhs,
&amp; 2 ac rn/1. Immaculate
ciondl1ion 2000 sq. ft. &amp; to onjoy
family like 10 fulloat, Large nns, """"""
1hrough out· ftraplace ·In lR, sky
lights, beau1iful · kllcllan. Sun
porch w/WI,_ walls. Gas &amp; ' - - - - . . , . .
alec. heal, cen1rol air &amp; loVely
carpet Green Schools. Thll ana
was worth walling f.., jul1 a
phone callaway. VLS 448-6806
14014 KING BIZ! I'AMILV HOME
Grell 2 sly. 4 btdrms., 2 1/2
bOtha, formal LA &amp; OR, Fam Rm.
w/brickflroplaca, all largo rms., 13'
• 25' muter bedrm. w/bath. 2 car
a1toehod garage. 1.25 "" m/1
$140,000. Add~lonal lot aval~blo .
-

Earn $90,000 YEARLY ropelrlng,
NOT roplaclng , L.ang cracks In
Windshields . Froe vldto 1·&amp;00·
82e·8523 US/Canada, www.glaso·
mechanbc.com

811111

JOHNNIE RUSSELL ........:._............-3e7.Q323
23 Locust St. DAVID SNVDER......-.........-........-..... 441-MII
GalllpoHs. Ohio OUR WEB P"GE IS:www.v..mtthr:-'-tate.eom
4e4131
. •rriall: vlaraleltale@roomn.t ..,..

858 Ciafl&lt; ChaPel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

NOT to sencl mont.Y thro~gn . tne
mall until you have Investigated

'
•
'
Located at . 42288 St. At. 7 in Tuppers Plains,
Ohio. The personal property of Doris Koenig.
.. uAntl "'
llect •8 It
''
qu. or co
or
erna
Oak small secretary, octagon table, dresser,
small buffet, rockers, metal single &amp; double beds,
lamps, hand painted picture by Alice Koenig, set
of Cornette dishes, milk glass items &amp; other
misc. .
,·

Logen.
M·F 8:30-8:00

&lt;011 1

a

· recomm,ndS· that you do bu&amp;l·

PUBLIC AUCTION

upplt )(j

'FOR TH.E FIFTH YEAR

Mower&amp;, and Farm Troc1a11. ASE
Certified. Call (740~1..()199 Or
(740)44)-4222

Sat.· Aprll7,· 200· 1
10:00 a M

us 33&amp; 595

Jult South of

800:458 9990

SITES AVAILABLE!!

Will Repair Automobiles , lawn

nme

lnte...-lonot

t Call today
10r.
your

1NOfiCE1 .
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
'

Beautiful

Foroptaoe, 2 Car Garage, $73,000

1885 14x70 With 1 tx8 E~tP~ndO
Must

3 Bedroom. Central

·
...

GET YOUR FORTUNE IN MO·
TIONI ' Earn $100·$Sl0/dally plus
bonusasl No hype! NO contulianl
No exp•rlence necaasar~.l We'll
lraln. Not MLM. Altaraable cost
Toll troo t-871-890-6321 . ..

Conveniently al1ueted near
hoapllal shopplnv, church, 01C.
~zed 2 car aHar;hed
garago,IM"9 room, ki1Chen with
a&gt;&lt;tra cablne1 apace &amp; formal
dining area, 1 1/2 balha, 3

HALLMARK Style GrOitlng Cam
Rle. HI Prall! Loc's. Local. p,.,..n
Income 800-277-11424 24 H11. .

bedrooms &amp; more. Easy to

maln1aln

level

lot.

PRICE OROPPED TO f57,800 5
!encad ronlng acres. A~ fronlage
slong twa roads. 50x70 mul11pla
.usa building with a 24x70 upllllrs
concro1o block and baked onamel
metal aiding. Ideal far comJI!Irclal
· use, s1orage unlto, af)O&gt;rtmen!a,' ltc,
Unlimited po18ntilll Building altos .
Give us a 1eltphone call 1oday for
moro d81ollsl12017. ·

wonderfUl

lamlly

home,

bedrOOm, 1 1/2 bllh, equipped

k~.

loado of storage space, e&gt;tlra lg.
Master bat!nn. Owner has made .
many lrr&gt;p&lt;overnen18. New carpef
&amp; lighting. Your dtildren need
extra lot far playground. Lg. 2 car
QariiQO. Located In Addlion. VLS
448-8805

Ouicl&lt;

poeeeulon hare! 12053

IF YOU MUST WORK, WORK
AT HOMEI Bulfd •your own IUC•

'I'~

cessful business. Mall·order/E·

Free Jnformanon. www.FocuaOn- .

FrOOd&lt;&gt;m.com 800-7ae-233-l,
MEDIC~L

OF BEAUTY IS A
FORMA. 4 BA, ALL
BR19f&lt; HOME, 1 1/2 bollia, lull
basement. Fireplace in LR, also In
one BR, formal DR, garage In rear.
Privacy · fence around tho
landocapod lot. 3rd ttoor finished
and Is lovely. All new C8l\l8l,
romodalod balh room. Don't take
my word lor It· see IT FOR
YOURSELF. VLS
114000: 171 Edoma.Trlll· Tycoon
~ko- 2 Lots $1 2.500 each.
Mabllo ' home, building &amp; lot
SIS,OOO al far $33,000
CARRYoUT BUSINESS
CONVENIENCE BrDRE
lALit New alarm eyttem.

BILLING Unllml1ed In-

come potential. No experience·
necessary. Free Information &amp; ...

CD·AOM. lnvootment lrom $2495.
Financing available. (800) .322·
1139,
EXT 050 www.b~alno&amp;~ , alar·
tup.com
e

Only $350 Per Acre Minimum Bid
' Owner Financing' OfhNd
O"*ed ln-13 fiGCia &amp; Aa A Whot.l
f. . . Cattt. or HoMmetn 11 fann offerecl In tNICt&amp;. Hu...,.
wilt 011lor - •. to oddHianol ""'""' C.. Wolot

Deft't mlat outl Tt,ls it a rore oppol't\lnity wh.,. you
.., wiiWI, woocNd wall•y• &amp; rcrvlnft phtt haft'-'
..,.,, 2 llory wln)l sided hom• wfblacktop "drtvewey,
4 Ndrmt, bath, ,.ploc4om•nl windowa, futl oil fvm"'-~·=~ ~
ht '-lly m., c.trol olr-conditionl~ ldtcMn w
Avlni !"'r JO'• 10' bam w/1 t' · hlgll d~ru -11, t

wo-. olocttlc, 1odt nw/oHia w/foocl lot. NICE lulhl....

:;;~ lylo ....... T-. 2 &amp; n han co.omo .. "'"'"' CIPIIII!
S.o. 4/1/2001 """'2 ·4 PM
.
, _ $1.000.00 down por • - otll010 ofiMIIor c1ooo

oo/Woro S/14/2001r- ,_ &amp; &lt;'- ol II'"' or "'"111111111
to '3.WIIdt11on.
•
'IINANONfl mMS ON VACANT rttAt:rr Of Ill ·
Ac:lnOifUU,1,000.00down porl-otfl,.oolllllot
lfti0-10roar....,,

·

t

11,.

.

IUI:IIIo I:ITA'I'E A V C I' I 0 II·
UlllCIIU: PIBE co. FIUIM
•
Orn:tu:D IN 17 TMCTi

IUt.HM' '•-llldl o-..- a' 1
Saturday, April 14, 2001 Noon
lollt II. . tl
Route 335 &amp;. Dutch Hollow • ...,
·
. .ver, Ohio

s-

1

..

::·:""~"'
.....rt.:abl•
1ht _.,
.... teroolo
'""' ............
IHkwwlhlllh
the ......
huntlfte
&amp; 1'1Crt:llle11ll
1_.
R~d

1he pon&lt;l to thHir 11•1ne &amp; 1ho woy MIt
........... ol1ho .hhl · - · • llooulllol ....... ' ,..,
• .,,..totl&gt;lohtlo loa to ltld on 1ho 17·(o- ftMI,ICI"'

· will

•.

- t o.. than10 .....~

.

.

CAIN mMSo $t ,000.00 doWft por 1 - ot H.,. o1

teiolr- ..,,_,. 5/14/2001r .,..,. "" &amp; cto. ollloat or

_,.....,.,.._,.,..111••·

RNANONII 'I'UMS ON VACANT rttAm
IDA an Olf 1mr $1 ,1100.00 dawrt por , _ otflmo ar,...,
12% lntert:ltr 10 year term. You may vi•w the viiCOftt land
dvrlnt any cfoyllght hourt.
'""' MIHo~ Millo• land C..
'CA lL FCI FilE£ •ot:HIIfln
STANLET &amp;. SONLINC. Au&lt;tionoort, looHo .. a ....,....,...

~
"loj. ·
.

40177:.'3330
W

---loYOIMIMft.illlootov, Ill tAIAudl-lhol-~ Jo. &amp; lohn ~~-. Aucrl_n&amp;l_

........................................;;.:

D. '!o!!H!. A-lso A""'-·

fi

FURNITURE: Baldwin ;5 door oak ict box.
drOP leaf fiiJie, m&amp;hOIIanll drOP front deSk,
Chelf Of drawers, POSSUm belly bakers table,
Size dental Chair r30sJ, oak lamP fable,
tliPll cabinet, oak · PBrlor tables, round oak
w/6 chllrs. sewlnll rocker. wash stan", arm
,.
wttole Paint, VIctorian tables, P&lt;ircelaln toP
mlac, old chairs, 4 trunks. earlll hlllh chair,
furniture
ANTIQUES

&amp;

COLLECTIBLES:

Oaze11

Sian A Tro..l Agoncyi Receive
Training. Business Support, Your
own Travel Wobsl1e and .Travel
Dlscaunls/Parks. Earn Big $$$ .
Nominal S1ar1up CasU 1·888-899-

~~~-~mwww. EarnBucksPram·

Slar1 Your Buslneu Today... .
Prime ShOpping cen1or Space
Avanablo AI 1\ttordsblo Role.
Spring Valioy Plaza, Call740-446·
o1o1 .
:-w~oA_K_F:-R-OM_H,oM"E".."."eA_R_III
st 5oo PIT ro ssaoo Flf.tnonlhilr

l&gt;ul~

e1a10 code.:

1988.
. Call

~~~J&gt;~~!!.~~19 or

ci'IORK PIICiM HDME... Earn
1soo-s1ooo1month PTIFT. FunTraining . Free Information . Call
soaP adv. box; central union tobacco Pail
NowiH00-290-8914
adv. fins. 2 ford oil ·bottle$. verv nice Aladdin
www,altainumroarna.com
lamP, wood coffee llrander. also unusual cast iron
230 Profnalonal
coffee lrlnder, -Malltall Gasoline enlllne. Malltlll
Serlllcee ·
Cali, lllrd IOhll Picture (1917 Ml, Ue'rnon,
S FREE CASH NOWS lrom
harness \lise, 11
1
..
fl
wsallhy !amllloa un10ac1ng mllltona
arD" W huer, meta 1
OUr
at dallara, IO help minimize 1hoi!
Pi'lmlfiVe butcher blOC!\, Old tOOl bOX fUll Of
laxto. Write lmmaalatoly: WINO·
FALLS, ~010 WILSHIRE BLVD.
too I f errI ers tool box. llraniteware. countrll
188, Los ANGELEs, CALl FOR·
900 0
coffee llrlnder. antique farm tools. SPrlnll HIH
::NI::-A
-,----bottle, Old alcohol Powered lOll, Old PICIIUI11S.I SS NEED ALOAN?
111111\Uare. Plus much more.
· ~~=~~~~~o~~s.mo boy Appra\oall
1·171·78H188.
"** Good Sale with many nic11 ·u nusual itemslll
AUCTIONEE!t: LESLIE A. LEMLEY
US NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash tor remaining paymentS on
740-388-0823 (Home) or
Properly ~ldl Marlgagool ~nnul·
740·24S-9866(Barn}
llest Sottltment•l lmrnadla1o
Oualeslll
'Nabocty booto our prlc·
"Liceoiied &amp; Beaded by State or Ohio~•
ea .'. Nallonal Con1rac1 Buytro .
1600) 490;01~1 lB1. 101 www.na·,
Cash/Approved check onlyll
Good Food llona)ci&gt;nlrsclbuyo,.,corn
"Not
for accidents or lost

AUTHENTIC LOO
WITH CHARACTER.. If you

~

churn. metal Silins and thermometers ·rPrestone.
RC, Coke. Double Cola• . PePsi, otherS);

s.

lndlvlduaiHy..hora It isl3,028oq. ft.

3

e11,800.00I 8 AcriO more or
wl1h rood f1Qn18ge. Partially
wooded. HornasHII. ·
-

MEIGS COUNTY

='.,..

.

cheryl Lemley 742·31171

'
LOTII cirl HOU. POR THI
W/IMr HELP WITH SOME MONEYI Uke now Cat10&gt; Cod . 1101 IR 1Z4.......1100.00 Bl·
CLOIINa
C08T8?
Tltct toorne w1t1t tun roar Ltval homo 1ha1 conals1a of 4
conalder iol1f"9 1hii ittllor holp offering mora opooo upateirl. 3 bedraorno, 3 betlll, IMng room,
you buy lhil well matn1alned BA, 2 ba1ht, fanltal IJI, ~. FA fclmol dining, kllchen and mort
rat\cll11omo. Equipped kltchtn, 3 • and formal &lt;lining - · !ergo on 11)o lnalda. Outaldo tttor. II ::;,;liioj;~i; wtth cltarm ·and groat
lleqtoornt. laiiiO level lawn w111t alud clecklnv aroa. largo atud ' approx. 1.114 aorta wllh a ~
- · - · Ole.
fruit trMiano hnA&gt;t. Must oee1o decking on roer, ovor 2 oere lot 11ocked pona. MOft call lor
room hero tor tlte !emily.
approclato 1hil homeI Move Into . •and much morel OWNERS corrtl&gt;lltlllltlngi12011
a call tor more dotalII.
immodlotoly. 120e1
RELOCATING SAID "SELl
I

t

NOW'1

-

FOR MORE LISTINGS STOP BY AND PICI&lt; UP A FREF OUALilY HOMES IN COLOR
BOOI&lt;LET OR GIVE US A CALL 8. WE WILL MAIL YOU ONE TODAY!

•

I

rand! aver Ml
car garage and
ftnlahecf lamily 100m. Home s~s on
2""· m/lln·Hannan Trace Schoalo.
Jull mlnu1os from downtown
Galllpolla. Tttil home featurea a
bltu11ful l~ocaped lawn, wood
pellot l1ovt1 and central air.
t.qcated lu&amp;t off Rock Lick Rd. on
Mablt Or. In nice nelgllbortlaod.
Have a gardM and rsl&amp;a soma
11owt11 but make aure 1o took 11. Bnck a vinyl e BR, 2 BA
on
1t11o. CaK Jahmle a1 387.0323 private 1 acre lat. Ftinlly ·
today fat an oppolntmeril.
IMng room ,wlftroplace. OR, and
I.AM!IY ltomo an tho IHuiHul lame u11111y roam In thil ant with
Ohio Rlvlrl Thla home has boon ·•
cornptotely remodeled. All ~ fuH basement. Attached 2 car
boon dono wHhln the iu11ou!,;ll'l. garage and detached 2 car garage
Now roof, Insulated wl~ u Will could bt uled lor 11arago.
1/c a furnace. all new appllancH, Priced for a qulcJ! file. $85,000
cemral Voo. system. Home 1\u lull 13312 INVESTMENT OR ,MOVE
bltemttnt w/Workahop. New guast tN 1917 Mobile Homo 80'l&lt;12', 2
to river, but above bedrooms, 1 balh, lumltura, range
Back yard fenced. &amp; . ret., HH1 pomp, central air.
a· fto~lng. Mld~iaport~1 a,6ao.~

•
-~

moro or loss, 3 bedrmo., a 112
baths, Kit., lRrf!, Otnce rm., anct
much more. Wrap pon:h front &amp; 2
sides. 187 ""'"", m/1. ~olinv
Puture and 3 Largo Bamo &amp;
Food L01 silas, 2 nice pandl. Land
11 mos1 all cloan &amp; hot
fencing. Eleclrlc a frool !rto wal:orl
'In tilt bOrn. Food lot - ·
Formorty uood lor Vaal calf
aporalion. Locl1ed noar Rio
Grandt: Appointment Only. Call
L. Smith 1~-·

14012·
homo 3
with blumonl.

\.
•

.

on

=:

sclot and @lnt..-tion af St. Rt.
160 &amp; 554. ClwrJor hu -

1~~-~lc m. ot ,.,.aZ~~~ ~rv• ~kltnv ~o·x~· ~:~ ~;~•o· :~~~:. :

")

r .

\

F!oora, 1 112 • Bath,
4

for S.Je

FoCIMy Cloaf 32x80 S10,000 Olf.
count only S1000.00 Down, Oolivory, and utup f)O&gt;id by Factor)'
1-800-691-em
·

Commerce $1000·$1000 PTIFT. •

l

I

Rtmoldtd 3 Bedroom , Wood

$75,000, 740-992·7504.

:::1,

AI,_.
lld'oa1iol!rg fn
1hla - - • ....,.... ..
1he - F a i r Hoonfng Acl
oi18UwHclt-·-.ga!

----~~=-=~::....:~=~---..:.;.._;_, Beau1itul 3BR- 21em On~ Aeroo.

Har~ki"9, Reliable Drilg Frto
28 Year Old Male Wllh Cla11A
COL's, Factory a wartllouu Ex·
perience laokl"9 FM A Ful·tlmo
Lang·1arm . Jab. Call Adam AI

Oota ... 1-1101).119-3001 x11e

. new central air, swimming pool,

U~ $38,~ Roallor (304)57e·

...

4% down. For Llsting&amp;IPayment

Spli1 · 101a1 eleclric. lour bedrooms. qne ana 112 baths. newly
remodeled family roof't, kilchen
with dishwasher, one ear garage,

acrt or land w/2 tlary garogi,
Oyosville Ra .. $55,000, 7«1-742·
100% remodeled inside, wiH am-.
slder land con1roct, 101 1'1NIIn1
Ridge, Pomerov. Oh, 740·698·
6783.
"
3 Bedroom, FuH Baaement. Large
Lot, Park Drive, 118 Llbertv.
s•6,soo Appalnlment ·only.
(740)374,.122

CtEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

llankr\4&gt;1cy 1195

Georges · Portabt• Sawmill, don't

HOMES FROt,i' $190'.30/Mo. I·
38A Repos f Foreelosures, f•e.

(140~151

1 1/2 story, 3 bedr'aom, bolh, big

No Answer Leave Mn11g1.

Dan Smith - Auctioneer
:1.

cc3

I&gt;D/NtCE FREEl

FOFIECLOSEO GOV'T HOMESI
SO OR LOW DOWN! TAX
so o'OWN UO"ES1 GO'"T • FIEPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
B'NK FORE''c -OS FIES•o• CREOITI FOR LISTING! CALL 1·
~
L U
IL W
OA NO MONEY DOWNI . OK 800-SOH m .... 9113. •
CAEDITI FOR LISTINGS! CALL
1-800-338-0020t&gt;&lt;t8611

310 Homet for Sele

320 Mobile Homll

320 Mobile Homes
.for Sale

310 Homea..for

Opportunity

'

•

0.1.

www.-.:&amp;.org (Non_ Profit).

Experienced otamo1rou cln

210

AUCTION

·

!:

For more Information coli VI roll
'at Isaac's Fted Store 740-388-8880
or Ike &amp; Raanlt 7 ~0-388·87 41 .o r 381l·0.370

EASY 10 gel started. Financial

877-EARLYPAY. Uet 750005, 11t

And RV's. Con1ac1 Ran At
(740)448-0151 or 339·0950. 11

.

and Auction

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE

' Finis "Ike" Issac- Auctioneer

P•Ym•nrs. Pay one biH/month.

Will Powerwasn Houses, Trailers,

10,000 BTU air conditioner, misc. chairs, lots ,of
knick knacks, pictures, rockers, stands, fans,

ZSZ Aaae GaiBa .Co. r·aaAdlolas 0 D N a

Froo Money Nowl 11'1 Truel No
-mom. Guaranteed. For pel'·
sanol nud.o, education, bu•i·
ness.1 ·800-72A,j1047(2•)

CONIOLIOATE YOUR WAY. NEED All EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
OUT OF OEITt R - monlhly Ia $500 inatonUy by phonal 1·

Will Pawerwaoh Hauua, Trailers,
And RV'a. Can1ac1 Ron AI
(140)446·0151 or 339·09~0 . 11
No Answer leave Mnaage.

~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~ dresser,
nightmachine
stand, hutch,
miseitems.
dis!les, pots &amp;
pans: sewing
&amp; sewing

.• .,auc

310 llomei for Sele

.. Site

Will ·Babysl1 In my home. Any
houll; LOvo Children, Plo... Call
(740)446-7883

o

&amp;

TERMS: · Cash ·or check w/posltlve ID. Not
responsible for loss or accidents. Food will be
available.
OWNER: Alton and Thelma Story ·
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Sheridan and Chrla Prater
Ucenaed &amp; bonded State of Ohio· Member
National &amp;.Ohio ALictlonHr'a Aaaoc.

so

Bmctllft. 1100- 31117.

ProfHIIonal

838·9568 lt140JS88-9848 Owner:
Rick Mount.

URGENTLY NEEDED· plasma
&lt;l0110rs, eam $45 10 $60 tor 2 or 3
hours weekly. Call Sara,J'ec, 74.0·
592·8851.
.

.

Over 200 baskets, mise accessories,
some pottery. Preview the baskets April
6, 6:90-9:00 p.m.
We have been commissioned to sell this
IG1"9e collection of baskets to Include:
All American, Bee, Booklno, Christmas,
Easter, Fat~er's Day, Features, Shades of
Autumn, Spe·clal Events, Tour,
Swf8theart, May Serlel~ Mother's Dciy,
Holiday Hoste11; HostelS, Horizon of
Hope, Incentive, Full Sal Tracllllon•, Tree
Trlinmlilo, Woven TrQdltlons, Collector's
Club and More. A lot of these are
comb9's. Too mGI),Y)Ol\lst
pleole call ·
me and I will fax a.~Wto you. . ·
.

Proot. Lowell TuiUon. Collogo
GuoraniH. CaM Froe Fr"

Pomeroy • llddl. Dl't • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plell18nt, WV
Servlc:el

No Credl1. Cr0di1.Cerao, Man01001. Farlnl9rma11an: 1·100·
335-7e12.01ft. 3822

nlque. Fact Program, Fdur•-

FINANCIAL

Preaton Muatard, Auctioneer
Llceneecl Bonded State of Ohio

a;

-.Uolod- ~ -·

.

Lunch served.
Muatard'a Auction Service
7!10-2fl&amp;.5868

2:,10

.~:!~,..'i~:~ ~~~ 5~~

Mount's Tree Service •The .Tr••
Professional•• Bueket Truck
Service· Top - Trim· Removal·
Stump Grinding. Free Eetimatas,
Fully Insured. Workers Col)"'p.
Bidwoll, Ohlq. Call &amp; 5e,., I -800-

PAID VACATIONS
t ·800-490-3019

=-~cash or local check with 10.

Pnh1tl01'111l

•

I will sl1 'wl1~ your laved opes
~M=1a=w=.rom~.------------, MondayF~lday. Exptrloncod.
EARN YOUR COlLEGE DEGREE Call (740)448-3635, 9 10 3 MonOUICI&lt;LY. Bachelors: Masters, day- Friday or any11mo Sa1urday
Doctorate , by correspondence
or Sunday
based upon prior•education and
short study course . For FREE inLawn Mower And Small" Engine
formbtlon booklet phone CAM·
Repa~. FrvO Pldc·up And Dotlv·
BRIDGE STA7E UNIVERSITY 1· ery Within 10 Mlloa. 21 Voaro
600-964-83t6.
Exporlenca. Call Mlko AI
(140)446-1'804 0 )
Mobllt Ho!"e /ia1n11ng. Ol&amp;count
lo Seniors. Call (740)448-1543

WORK FROM HOME
SSIO·S1.Sl0 Mo. Full

From Jilckaon, Ohio, take US 32 west about 3 miles, tum left
on SA 139 south, go 6 miles to Riegel Ridge, tum right ahd go
about 4 miles. Signs Posted.
,
Mf. Arthur Cr~sblree Is moving to Galllomia and will offer for
sale at Public AuCtion the lollowlng items: ·
Delta 13' comm~rclat 2 hp planer w/ dust vac, 0e11a
unnence table saw w/ blades, 3 hp air compressor, Craftsman
jointer and shaper, 30ft aluminum ext. ladder, Clark shop vac,
3 new rolla of chain -link fence, Metal tence pasta, 2 wheel
trailer, Lawn sweeper, Lawn spreacjer, 4 Rubber trash cans,
kerosene heaters, Bollen self propeiled' mQwer" amall push
mower, 18 hp Murry lawn uactor, Homelloht weedeater,
new MTO 12 hp riding mow'er, Garden tools, AIUique Oliver
hillside plow, Bed llnef and camper shell lor Chevy S10
bed, handmade block walnut night stand and matching
dre.saef, Homellte chain saw, plus MUCH MORE.
Travel Trailer: Uke new, 5 11 wheel 1211 self contained travel
. trailer. MUST SEE
aa.t: 12 fl. aluminum bass boat w/ 1o hp Honda 4 cycle
motor, 32 lb trolling motor, trailer, cover and extra's. Been In
the water lwlcel
Pickup: 1983 Chevy S-10, V6, 5 speed, 105,000 miles.
Looka and rune great ·
Car: 1987 Dodge K-Car, looks &amp; runs good. Make

'

ServlcH

h lcttoOI Dip II PI .. Home.

l:&gt;r Froo

25550

.

•

-

C81Taday174Q-4.46-4361.
1-800-214-0452.
__..;.Reg;:.!!.;l90-05-;:::..:::...t;;;2..;.74;;;B;..
. -~·

Send Resumes to Box JR 23, 200
Main Street. Pt. Pleasanl. wv

Ohio #1344 W.Va.ltl15
"Not responsible for aCCidents .or loss of property"

.

Gilllpollo eor- CGfltao
(CarOIIfS Clooe To Homo) ·

rate with experience ·and de5ire.

Positive ID

.

And PAN Availabiii1Y. Pl!fase Fax

Resume - ~uention A.my Wat1-

Business ;
Training

be Prompt, Reliable, Dependable.
Salary/ Commtulon Commensu-

DAN SMITH Auctioneer

Items.

140

Sund.y,Aprtl1,2001
230

SciiDbla

180 Wentecl To Do

aplst·CFY. Full-timt, Part-lime.

Full-time, part-time. por diem and
orr-call-I
•

Sat. April 7, 2001 7:00p.m .

Sat. April 7, 2001
12:29 p.m•. . . ,

Cash

Occupatianat '""""""'· Ctrti1ied

Therapv •

Antique's &amp; Collectibles Sale

PUBL'C AUC1'10N

"MISC"

I

j

E""'rionco at MROD 5&lt;hOOI and

RehabilitatiOn Team: Loealions·
Middlepofl. Jac:lloon. Porl....,lh,

v

1:-- \ \( . -:-. .\1 \TI&lt; &gt;\I H H :-: 1

ing· great benefits. call 7 days

player. .

lng. Rtllablt &amp; Honell ParHimo
Or Full-- (1«1,._112
Therat*1s· Hoardand 'Rohabllita·
lion SINieal Is SHklng Highly
Mallvated lnciWiduals To·Join our

Speoch Thorapiot, Speech Thor·

.

Approved OhJo Medicaid Pravki·
or looking lor indivlduoll in - "
autiam ther-apy. Have re...,.
e:;:z
(140)441-9516
or omal an·
ry.203t _ __

a s.a-

150

•

Wanted

Someone To Work At Car lor.•
Oanlpolia &amp; Middliport Area.
Kr10wf1dge ot Auto Repair

Avenue. Suite 108. Athens . Ohio
45701 . ApAiicaUOn deadline Is
~pr it 5, 2001 . The AMESC Is an
Equal Opporlunrty Empi"J'eri'Pro-.
vider.
,

'

SltUMJons ·

ot Home Health Care Services.

Toledo. Ohio ~3606 . EOE/M/F/0/
:

120

(304)815-3523

Ohio. Positons· Physical Thera ·
t&gt;i&lt;L Physical 1herapil1 Assls1anl,

Postal Jabs $48.323.00 yr. Now

miSC..

Someone To Sltf With Eldlr!Y
Woman In Hef Home. FridiY
Evening Till ~onday MornlftO.

Execulive Parkway, Suite 128 ,

portunily ~r/INFION

a·

If

H!lpWant

sume. 3 ,reterencws, and co~ ol
current licen&amp;e to John COStanzo,
Superintendent, 507 Richland

Mantcio Furnace. OH 45629 M
' tax (140)3549211 bv"" later than
Fridoy, A11&lt;i 6, 2001. Equal Op- •

Located on

...... Aprll1, 2001

PomeroY·· Middleport • GaiUpolla, Ohio • Point Plnr=l'lt, WV

er, aomrnorcial. Priced 0 tsa.ooo ·

._

.

�o ..
•

'

a

P111 D4 • . ...., CIIIH

110 tfllp Wtwtl d

'

•!latl

t

Hllp ...

110

w...,
•

d

!WIT 1'1111 MIIICIWGIIII
.... Coll-.g eaoo.,..,"""
.. _ . . ... Pill ... - ·
ctw't'·t . , . . U'IIINI. The
pooillon '*IUftl; ' - '"""'

Tho Aihono·Mtlgo ~auca11ooa1

I'OSTAL JOel $41,500/'(rl Now
Hiring. No E... IOIICI. Ptid Train-

S.rva C.ntar is Hftlng qual~
lied . . . -... 1o1 lho pooldM ot

i"91Grta1 Beno)l1o. Coli 1·100·
211-1111111t.131.
.

.=
101110---....-:
---""11-Ylllid- -llld . .

Treasur•r. AppUcanta mutl pol·

se&amp;s

a Treasurers license
Issue&lt;! by lho Ohio Dept o! Edu-

c

:~=='D
....... _1-1 Gill-

Of evidence

thar such II·

pr gove

Reputab&amp;e busil'iHII needs
ie•s- all shUts &amp; kitchen

inga. ........ lnd hoidlyl;
IIQ!beltltlll , . _ . . , .

ntal accounting dt·
sired. Experience as a chlel' fiScal
otf~r preferred. Applicants must
also have 111e -.y to be baNiod
and to prOVide their own transpor· .
tabOn. Submit letter ot ln!erest, r•

cash·
ht~ lp .

Send resumes c/o : The Daily

Sentinel.
~o. eox
at. Ohio 45769.

will

eolonl tlrMng rw&lt;xltd. Poy II

$8.15""' holl':- 24-32

grooo&lt;y. morcl1andlllng or liX:tl·
ing ionot 1 plut. Hquoifiod.
Pease send a restm~l): Ann:
HR ~ (PTM), Box 289,

• n

cans can be Qbtained. E•ptri·
•nee I school diurict. universtry,

polio"""~.,...,

hc&gt;tn por -:no bentfU. Prior

11~

110 Help . . . .

llvalllng ol ""10 Sl..,..... . .

Sales

r··-··
.

Posilion·

Full· Time .

·Lifestyle Furniture. No Phone
Calls, Apply In Parson. 856
Third ............ Gallipolis, Qh;o.

;

.

hiring- No experienet-paid train·

' 800-4&lt;9·3660 _
ext. J·365.

I'.

,

:-i

1~1. 11 &gt;1) \ """'

I l'

Brtef Llltlnt:
.

St. At. 7 in Tuppers Plains, Ohio at
the Lodwick car tOt.
"HOUSEHOLD~

Whirlpool refrigerator, Shorp ~aicrowove o~eo· &amp;
stand, hide a bed couch, dressers, chest of
drawers, Sharp TV; TV cabinet, stands, lamps,
single metal &amp; wood beds, misc.' chai..s, records,
record player, hall tree, mirror. pictures, misc.
li~, misc. knick knacks, sweepers, step sJool &amp;

Coins, Marvel Comic Books, Fenton glass,
Blue Cobalt, Milk qlass, Quilt, Stoneware,
Green Mason Iars, Baslcets, McCoy, Pressed
9lass, Dazey electric churn, Cross:.cut saw,
sklttets, 14 Wapak w/ embossed Indian head,
18 Wopak, Waqner ~ore, Cookie jar,
Washboard, lronston!! dishes by Harmony
House, Faley food mill, Waoner corn stick
pan, Silverware ":NI case, salt and pepper
sets, radio flyer waoon, btack amethyst and
Comlvol olass, More camino ln...

.

Rnls "Ike" Issac - Auctioneer

. • ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS 'ITeMS"
RCA radio·, 2 door cabinet, books, radio &amp; record

For more Information call VII'QJI
at Isaac's Feed Store 7 40-388-8880
or Ike &amp; Reonle 7 40·388-87 41 or 388-9370.

·•

'

Porch glider, ~- bike, 2 drawer fil~ cabinet step
ladder, Christmas tree, wheelchair &amp; other
items.

er.(419)531·0948. Mall to 3425

150

Schools
Instruction

5-STAR
·PROFESSIONAL
TRUCK DRIVING SCHOOL now

oflers a 14 da~ COL TRAINING

PROGRAM . lmmediate Open·
ings. $36,000-t 1 sf year. Non Ex·
perienced ~

PTo, OTRI&amp; SLPI
.....,arroaiAmerico's
laJ90St providers o1 hlalthaare
IOIVIcos. haslho abcM1 OPPOR·
TUNITESin:
-

•11'' 1 RJ;:lor:tOH

Mu&amp;thaWOhlaslate-. 1+
yrs'. "''&gt;·I-I rehab. LTC. Excelent
salary/ b0nofi1s. Flaxiblo wort&lt;

schedUle/ caoeloiid. For conoid-

oro-: S0.212·1148, or tox reoumol3 -ron-1o: 710-729-

2421. Email: -_mortln-

eone'Mncor.com, Venoor Is a

drug-lrolenvlronment EOE

1-800·448·6669. Ex·

per lenced w/CDL 1·800·956·
2353.

8LACKSTONE
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Home Sludy, Ap·
proved, Allori:lable. comprenansive. legal train ing since 1890.

FREE Calalag: 800·626·9228,
wril8: P.O. Box 7014-411: Dallas. TX
75310 NA or hnp:/Jwww.blacksto-

to

to a new h,,m ..
propei'\Y of Alton and Thelma Story will"be sold as
listed l&gt;elaw. DIRECTIONS: From At. 33 south of
Athens, exit on Pleasant Hill Road for 1.2 miles to
right tum on Oxley Road· 1 mite to 10475 on left,
• watch tor
·
Aimc~ulis" a. COLLECTIBLES:. All antiques In
excellent condition-ready to set in your · home:
Beautiful 60" round oak pedestal table w/claw feet,
&amp;-matching press back oak chairs, beautiful oak
sideboard w/mlrror &amp; shelves ornate carving, oak
Icebox, oak swivel arm desk chair, nice oak wash
stand w/curved top drawer, 42' square oak table
w/5 column· legs &amp; extra leaf, 4-oak round seat
chalrs, . oak buffet, oak Hoos.ler-style kitchen
cabinets, painted drop leaf table, old maple high
chair wttray, 4-cast iron skillets (1·Wagner).
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: Gibson &amp; GE 17
cu. ft. refrigerators, Gibson 19.2 upright freezer,
White-Westinghouse 30" electric range, Kenmore
washer &amp; dryer, Lazyboy sofa w/recllnlng ends
(only 3 yrs old), matching sofa &amp; chair, Lazyboy
recliner, coffee &amp; end tallies, assorted lamps,
several stands, wall mount shelving, clothing racks,
Sylvania 25"1V .&amp; RCA 13" B&amp;W TV, Sony stereo
turn. table w/speakers, '8 mm projector &amp; screen,
modern china cabinet, modem dresser &amp; chest of
dr_awers, ~ouble &amp; slng!e bed frames wtmattresses,
porch sw1ng, gas grill, 2-wlndow air conditioners,
yam &amp; macrame supplies, and miscellaneous
dishes, kitchen Items, coolers, clock'S, vacuum
cleaners, etc.
MISCELLANEOUS: OAK 10 upper/lower CB base
CB grounll plane antenna w~ead, C-Band 1
satellite dish w/receiver, Murray 12 hp 38" riding
mow~r, exercise bike,_ weight bE!nch wtweights,
bowling ball &amp; shoes, ·roller- skates, downhill &amp;
Cf0$9 country skies, · and other · miscellaneous

I

I'

Wanted: Aggressive Telm Play·
er with lnlttattve to work in a last
paced, growth oriented. Estab·
llshad tnsuranc;:e Agancx. Must ...

838 Cauno1ruction; Roofing,
Siding I Conerttt. lntttiOr &amp;

Freedom Christian-counseling.

800·841 ·9157 .

Exterior Palntlnv. All PhaMo 01
Homo Ropolro For A Fr"
'E&amp;~ma1e. Call (304)815-7738
Allor 5 pm.

• ••

'

..

kitchen, newly remOdeled, ..pn •

•

::;"~~.':".~--?

" " " - --~
Please Call Us Ton Free 1·866·

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE 613-8881 241-o;
CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSED/
BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE.
TURNED DOWN ON
BAD CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY,
S-OCIAL SECURITY /SSt~
LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS. AAA
No Fee lJnlass We Wlnl
AJI:Tf\IQ. 1·~11-11902.
1-S88·582·3345

. do- window utatmenla, 10rne
l&gt;ed&lt;llng, pillowa. btdoklr1o,·l .~
leralion an moll ItemS. cal Sandy

740-992·3220.

OfvM:e$150

AdopllonS225

304-675-1~7.

Nolti&lt;Ht-yaursetl-lrin

haul your togs Ia tilt mill jul1 call

•

C'""'ASSIFIEDSI
~~lor=ma:t:lon:·~Ba:ntc::rup~l~cy~nJ~a~l:n~TNf=-L-~!!!::!!!::!!!::!!!i!=:;,~.~;!.. ~..

.

CALL t •800·26J.OS03 far FREE

Give plano l~tsona at hOme. Beginner&amp; &amp; adulla: also teach
chording &amp; 1ranspaoJng &amp;
rhyllms; 740-992-5403.
·

2264.

to .........

..,p;........

lil'nltalion or ciiQh;•lillkA•

11ott4111 on,..., color, religion,
---or-

3
Be&lt;ll)&gt;om- 1 Bath, Newly Flomodeltd,
Highway 62· 3 Mllal Pall

'Olfgln, or IIJ'f ; &gt;101 rtion 10

IMirf Mf SUCh JMIJII.ICI,

llr'rla.tiolr Dl' ~.·

n. •w r ,

Reduced For Quick Sale
$119,000 Sandhill Rasa . Real1ar

(304)895-:M11

w11 no~

io-V!r ......

(304)51&amp;-305e

atco•ltlei••G1or I'NI......,

Brick Homo. 3 Bedroom- 2 81th.
Reduced Far Sole $91,000- Gall·
palls Ferry. Realtor. (30•)S78·

ollho
lltw. O u r - ... t.rwby
.11*111Md thtll II d II It 101
fn 1hla,. popor

-

h

_,ir,

· (740)388 8002

1989 Sunshine ' trailer~ t4a71, 3
BedrO&lt;Ims, 2 Bath$, Heat Pump.
New Carpet In Living . Room &amp;
KitChen, Ca1hedrll Co11ingo, Cov·

FACTORY OVERSTOCKI1 Now
Double Wide O~ly S1 .Sto .oo
Froo Detivory .
.1-116!1-928·3426

ered Porch, A.lraadv Sa! Up On
Rented lot. Can Be Moved.

Final Days, Nationwldo"(nventary .
· , . •
Reductian!(304j7~ '
1992 14xBO. 3 BR. 2 Balh , 6.6
Acres 01 Land. Pond. Bam . And Limited Or No Credit? Government Bank Flnan&lt;:!l Only AI O.k·
Garage. $43.000 (740)4-41..{)302
wood In Barboursville. WV 304-

lot lt'IOdel clearanee, aeve up 10

$1.625 " lth any home. check uo

&amp;

·14a70 Sduthern Dream , lree De-

livery 1ree Se1up only $9995 1·
888-928·3428

1 1971 Schult For

Sale, New
Furnace &amp; Insulation. $3.000
1
, : (1~)361-10S2 Attar olpm
' 1979 Rarrllllndt i4x70, 3 BA with

out were dealing, Cole:s Mobile

1304)675-Jiloa

Homos, US Sl East. Athens. Oh.

·oiVORCE Causes Custom ordered Slnglewide Home To Be·
come Available , 5at~e SS Call t-

MUST SELLI 3 Bedroom, 2 Balli
Home. No Old Conlract To As·

"

sume. Just A Reliable Patty To

Make Mon1hly Paymon1 t ·888·

888·565.01 81

928-9896

Real &amp;tate

. appliances, $7.000 (H0)441·
1624 Of (140)446-2923
.

L

'

138-3409.

Furnace With Front Por~h Shed
Wood Fence.
Lots Of
Remoc:t.e ling . Muat See. SB .OOO

tor Sale

Sall4&gt;

And

(304)e7S.nS&amp;

76 14x70 Bayview ( wiDen~ New
' Since 97 · CIA , Water Heater

320 Mobile Homes

I

Down And $3UI .OO Per Mantft .

'

General .

-loin..._,

3056

are"MT'INeonM~

•

0(1PM1Unlty ,b ull.

....
~~

Stock

"'tlmeto

$500DOWN'

Sites

Lot-

lullcll •

Model ·

Clearance·

ITI.CfUIII

Available

CompOn.m

Quotly-

'

orLIMal,_ ·

quote.' .

..

""ww

RECIPIENr OF THE FL£E1WOOO
CUSTOMER SATIFACTION AWARD

3bedrooms,
plastered walla,
floor In
dining room, fireplace, garbage· disposal,
. over-sized heated garage.
A M4st Seell For $ale By Owner.
·
By ap~loln11metnf· or11v

Buelneaa .

Sal. 9:00-6:00..1
CIOHCI Sunday

lnter.ectlon 33
864
'
l.olan,OH
Mon-Frl 8:30-8:00 ·

Sat 9:00-6:00

Clo~;ed Sunday

- 1·800.837a3238

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
~~~ r:/J i} MAKES
THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA
BROKER ......-..... - 411
OAILBELV1LLE........ .,........................ 41112Gt
· 446~6806 -~'lB'JM
TRISH SNYDER ..,_............._, ..........-•.441-MII
Branch Office
IIIlTH,

Real

*

Eetatl General

ness wl1h pobple you know, and

eied~fJueAe

!he of1tr!ng.

~Houaehold"
Norge refrigerator, Tappen electric range, small
freezer, Hot Po.int washer, M.w : dryer, kitchen

table "&amp; chairs, Magic Chef microw~ve, · metal
wardrobe, 3 pc. bookcase bedroom suite, end &amp;
coffee tables, lamps, signature TV, 11 volt,

Rickie L. Koenig P.O. A.

Ohio #1344 W.Va. #515
Cash
POsitive 10
Refreshments
"Not responsible for accidents or loss of property"

www .BIG- BENDREALTY.. COM

A VENDING GOLOMINE·ACT
NOWt Mac.h ines vend Hershey

candy AND phone card&amp;. (2 .Se/
min. U.S.) Earn $800+/Wkly. Wall!

- Bet. &amp;wet-- iE'eatt,,~ ~~~e,

6-9 hrs/wk • .Great locations! BOO·

659·tn5.1nv. req. Fl-l avail.

AT&amp;T-MCI PAY PHONE ROUTES

Est Laeallans; Local.
Income. 800-800-3470.

Proven

l-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

~

Russell D"Wood, Broker 446-4618
Judy DeWitt .............................. 441-0262
Ch, I Le I

Beauly Selon equipment lor sal•
7 slatiOilB, lobby furnlttn, Ianning
bOd&amp;, will sole all together ar·sop~rala. callanyllme, 740-381-1)612.

' 2 317 ·
J. Merrill Cartel..... .'...................379-2184
ery m ey .......................:......... 74 • 1
Tammie DeWitt......................... 245-0022
Dana A1ha ......................................... 379-9209
Ruth Barr........................ ,................. 446-0722 . Ke?~eth Amsbary ............................. 245-5855

EARN $500·$900 per wook In
your ba1hrobo &amp; allppers. Low In·
vestment 1·800·272·0193. awe·

-

somearning.com

LMNG 4 btdrml. 2 bllhs,
&amp; 2 ac rn/1. Immaculate
ciondl1ion 2000 sq. ft. &amp; to onjoy
family like 10 fulloat, Large nns, """"""
1hrough out· ftraplace ·In lR, sky
lights, beau1iful · kllcllan. Sun
porch w/WI,_ walls. Gas &amp; ' - - - - . . , . .
alec. heal, cen1rol air &amp; loVely
carpet Green Schools. Thll ana
was worth walling f.., jul1 a
phone callaway. VLS 448-6806
14014 KING BIZ! I'AMILV HOME
Grell 2 sly. 4 btdrms., 2 1/2
bOtha, formal LA &amp; OR, Fam Rm.
w/brickflroplaca, all largo rms., 13'
• 25' muter bedrm. w/bath. 2 car
a1toehod garage. 1.25 "" m/1
$140,000. Add~lonal lot aval~blo .
-

Earn $90,000 YEARLY ropelrlng,
NOT roplaclng , L.ang cracks In
Windshields . Froe vldto 1·&amp;00·
82e·8523 US/Canada, www.glaso·
mechanbc.com

811111

JOHNNIE RUSSELL ........:._............-3e7.Q323
23 Locust St. DAVID SNVDER......-.........-........-..... 441-MII
GalllpoHs. Ohio OUR WEB P"GE IS:www.v..mtthr:-'-tate.eom
4e4131
. •rriall: vlaraleltale@roomn.t ..,..

858 Ciafl&lt; ChaPel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

NOT to sencl mont.Y thro~gn . tne
mall until you have Investigated

'
•
'
Located at . 42288 St. At. 7 in Tuppers Plains,
Ohio. The personal property of Doris Koenig.
.. uAntl "'
llect •8 It
''
qu. or co
or
erna
Oak small secretary, octagon table, dresser,
small buffet, rockers, metal single &amp; double beds,
lamps, hand painted picture by Alice Koenig, set
of Cornette dishes, milk glass items &amp; other
misc. .
,·

Logen.
M·F 8:30-8:00

&lt;011 1

a

· recomm,ndS· that you do bu&amp;l·

PUBLIC AUCTION

upplt )(j

'FOR TH.E FIFTH YEAR

Mower&amp;, and Farm Troc1a11. ASE
Certified. Call (740~1..()199 Or
(740)44)-4222

Sat.· Aprll7,· 200· 1
10:00 a M

us 33&amp; 595

Jult South of

800:458 9990

SITES AVAILABLE!!

Will Repair Automobiles , lawn

nme

lnte...-lonot

t Call today
10r.
your

1NOfiCE1 .
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
'

Beautiful

Foroptaoe, 2 Car Garage, $73,000

1885 14x70 With 1 tx8 E~tP~ndO
Must

3 Bedroom. Central

·
...

GET YOUR FORTUNE IN MO·
TIONI ' Earn $100·$Sl0/dally plus
bonusasl No hype! NO contulianl
No exp•rlence necaasar~.l We'll
lraln. Not MLM. Altaraable cost
Toll troo t-871-890-6321 . ..

Conveniently al1ueted near
hoapllal shopplnv, church, 01C.
~zed 2 car aHar;hed
garago,IM"9 room, ki1Chen with
a&gt;&lt;tra cablne1 apace &amp; formal
dining area, 1 1/2 balha, 3

HALLMARK Style GrOitlng Cam
Rle. HI Prall! Loc's. Local. p,.,..n
Income 800-277-11424 24 H11. .

bedrooms &amp; more. Easy to

maln1aln

level

lot.

PRICE OROPPED TO f57,800 5
!encad ronlng acres. A~ fronlage
slong twa roads. 50x70 mul11pla
.usa building with a 24x70 upllllrs
concro1o block and baked onamel
metal aiding. Ideal far comJI!Irclal
· use, s1orage unlto, af)O&gt;rtmen!a,' ltc,
Unlimited po18ntilll Building altos .
Give us a 1eltphone call 1oday for
moro d81ollsl12017. ·

wonderfUl

lamlly

home,

bedrOOm, 1 1/2 bllh, equipped

k~.

loado of storage space, e&gt;tlra lg.
Master bat!nn. Owner has made .
many lrr&gt;p&lt;overnen18. New carpef
&amp; lighting. Your dtildren need
extra lot far playground. Lg. 2 car
QariiQO. Located In Addlion. VLS
448-8805

Ouicl&lt;

poeeeulon hare! 12053

IF YOU MUST WORK, WORK
AT HOMEI Bulfd •your own IUC•

'I'~

cessful business. Mall·order/E·

Free Jnformanon. www.FocuaOn- .

FrOOd&lt;&gt;m.com 800-7ae-233-l,
MEDIC~L

OF BEAUTY IS A
FORMA. 4 BA, ALL
BR19f&lt; HOME, 1 1/2 bollia, lull
basement. Fireplace in LR, also In
one BR, formal DR, garage In rear.
Privacy · fence around tho
landocapod lot. 3rd ttoor finished
and Is lovely. All new C8l\l8l,
romodalod balh room. Don't take
my word lor It· see IT FOR
YOURSELF. VLS
114000: 171 Edoma.Trlll· Tycoon
~ko- 2 Lots $1 2.500 each.
Mabllo ' home, building &amp; lot
SIS,OOO al far $33,000
CARRYoUT BUSINESS
CONVENIENCE BrDRE
lALit New alarm eyttem.

BILLING Unllml1ed In-

come potential. No experience·
necessary. Free Information &amp; ...

CD·AOM. lnvootment lrom $2495.
Financing available. (800) .322·
1139,
EXT 050 www.b~alno&amp;~ , alar·
tup.com
e

Only $350 Per Acre Minimum Bid
' Owner Financing' OfhNd
O"*ed ln-13 fiGCia &amp; Aa A Whot.l
f. . . Cattt. or HoMmetn 11 fann offerecl In tNICt&amp;. Hu...,.
wilt 011lor - •. to oddHianol ""'""' C.. Wolot

Deft't mlat outl Tt,ls it a rore oppol't\lnity wh.,. you
.., wiiWI, woocNd wall•y• &amp; rcrvlnft phtt haft'-'
..,.,, 2 llory wln)l sided hom• wfblacktop "drtvewey,
4 Ndrmt, bath, ,.ploc4om•nl windowa, futl oil fvm"'-~·=~ ~
ht '-lly m., c.trol olr-conditionl~ ldtcMn w
Avlni !"'r JO'• 10' bam w/1 t' · hlgll d~ru -11, t

wo-. olocttlc, 1odt nw/oHia w/foocl lot. NICE lulhl....

:;;~ lylo ....... T-. 2 &amp; n han co.omo .. "'"'"' CIPIIII!
S.o. 4/1/2001 """'2 ·4 PM
.
, _ $1.000.00 down por • - otll010 ofiMIIor c1ooo

oo/Woro S/14/2001r- ,_ &amp; &lt;'- ol II'"' or "'"111111111
to '3.WIIdt11on.
•
'IINANONfl mMS ON VACANT rttAt:rr Of Ill ·
Ac:lnOifUU,1,000.00down porl-otfl,.oolllllot
lfti0-10roar....,,

·

t

11,.

.

IUI:IIIo I:ITA'I'E A V C I' I 0 II·
UlllCIIU: PIBE co. FIUIM
•
Orn:tu:D IN 17 TMCTi

IUt.HM' '•-llldl o-..- a' 1
Saturday, April 14, 2001 Noon
lollt II. . tl
Route 335 &amp;. Dutch Hollow • ...,
·
. .ver, Ohio

s-

1

..

::·:""~"'
.....rt.:abl•
1ht _.,
.... teroolo
'""' ............
IHkwwlhlllh
the ......
huntlfte
&amp; 1'1Crt:llle11ll
1_.
R~d

1he pon&lt;l to thHir 11•1ne &amp; 1ho woy MIt
........... ol1ho .hhl · - · • llooulllol ....... ' ,..,
• .,,..totl&gt;lohtlo loa to ltld on 1ho 17·(o- ftMI,ICI"'

· will

•.

- t o.. than10 .....~

.

.

CAIN mMSo $t ,000.00 doWft por 1 - ot H.,. o1

teiolr- ..,,_,. 5/14/2001r .,..,. "" &amp; cto. ollloat or

_,.....,.,.._,.,..111••·

RNANONII 'I'UMS ON VACANT rttAm
IDA an Olf 1mr $1 ,1100.00 dawrt por , _ otflmo ar,...,
12% lntert:ltr 10 year term. You may vi•w the viiCOftt land
dvrlnt any cfoyllght hourt.
'""' MIHo~ Millo• land C..
'CA lL FCI FilE£ •ot:HIIfln
STANLET &amp;. SONLINC. Au&lt;tionoort, looHo .. a ....,....,...

~
"loj. ·
.

40177:.'3330
W

---loYOIMIMft.illlootov, Ill tAIAudl-lhol-~ Jo. &amp; lohn ~~-. Aucrl_n&amp;l_

........................................;;.:

D. '!o!!H!. A-lso A""'-·

fi

FURNITURE: Baldwin ;5 door oak ict box.
drOP leaf fiiJie, m&amp;hOIIanll drOP front deSk,
Chelf Of drawers, POSSUm belly bakers table,
Size dental Chair r30sJ, oak lamP fable,
tliPll cabinet, oak · PBrlor tables, round oak
w/6 chllrs. sewlnll rocker. wash stan", arm
,.
wttole Paint, VIctorian tables, P&lt;ircelaln toP
mlac, old chairs, 4 trunks. earlll hlllh chair,
furniture
ANTIQUES

&amp;

COLLECTIBLES:

Oaze11

Sian A Tro..l Agoncyi Receive
Training. Business Support, Your
own Travel Wobsl1e and .Travel
Dlscaunls/Parks. Earn Big $$$ .
Nominal S1ar1up CasU 1·888-899-

~~~-~mwww. EarnBucksPram·

Slar1 Your Buslneu Today... .
Prime ShOpping cen1or Space
Avanablo AI 1\ttordsblo Role.
Spring Valioy Plaza, Call740-446·
o1o1 .
:-w~oA_K_F:-R-OM_H,oM"E".."."eA_R_III
st 5oo PIT ro ssaoo Flf.tnonlhilr

l&gt;ul~

e1a10 code.:

1988.
. Call

~~~J&gt;~~!!.~~19 or

ci'IORK PIICiM HDME... Earn
1soo-s1ooo1month PTIFT. FunTraining . Free Information . Call
soaP adv. box; central union tobacco Pail
NowiH00-290-8914
adv. fins. 2 ford oil ·bottle$. verv nice Aladdin
www,altainumroarna.com
lamP, wood coffee llrander. also unusual cast iron
230 Profnalonal
coffee lrlnder, -Malltall Gasoline enlllne. Malltlll
Serlllcee ·
Cali, lllrd IOhll Picture (1917 Ml, Ue'rnon,
S FREE CASH NOWS lrom
harness \lise, 11
1
..
fl
wsallhy !amllloa un10ac1ng mllltona
arD" W huer, meta 1
OUr
at dallara, IO help minimize 1hoi!
Pi'lmlfiVe butcher blOC!\, Old tOOl bOX fUll Of
laxto. Write lmmaalatoly: WINO·
FALLS, ~010 WILSHIRE BLVD.
too I f errI ers tool box. llraniteware. countrll
188, Los ANGELEs, CALl FOR·
900 0
coffee llrlnder. antique farm tools. SPrlnll HIH
::NI::-A
-,----bottle, Old alcohol Powered lOll, Old PICIIUI11S.I SS NEED ALOAN?
111111\Uare. Plus much more.
· ~~=~~~~~o~~s.mo boy Appra\oall
1·171·78H188.
"** Good Sale with many nic11 ·u nusual itemslll
AUCTIONEE!t: LESLIE A. LEMLEY
US NEED CASH?? WE pay
cash tor remaining paymentS on
740-388-0823 (Home) or
Properly ~ldl Marlgagool ~nnul·
740·24S-9866(Barn}
llest Sottltment•l lmrnadla1o
Oualeslll
'Nabocty booto our prlc·
"Liceoiied &amp; Beaded by State or Ohio~•
ea .'. Nallonal Con1rac1 Buytro .
1600) 490;01~1 lB1. 101 www.na·,
Cash/Approved check onlyll
Good Food llona)ci&gt;nlrsclbuyo,.,corn
"Not
for accidents or lost

AUTHENTIC LOO
WITH CHARACTER.. If you

~

churn. metal Silins and thermometers ·rPrestone.
RC, Coke. Double Cola• . PePsi, otherS);

s.

lndlvlduaiHy..hora It isl3,028oq. ft.

3

e11,800.00I 8 AcriO more or
wl1h rood f1Qn18ge. Partially
wooded. HornasHII. ·
-

MEIGS COUNTY

='.,..

.

cheryl Lemley 742·31171

'
LOTII cirl HOU. POR THI
W/IMr HELP WITH SOME MONEYI Uke now Cat10&gt; Cod . 1101 IR 1Z4.......1100.00 Bl·
CLOIINa
C08T8?
Tltct toorne w1t1t tun roar Ltval homo 1ha1 conals1a of 4
conalder iol1f"9 1hii ittllor holp offering mora opooo upateirl. 3 bedraorno, 3 betlll, IMng room,
you buy lhil well matn1alned BA, 2 ba1ht, fanltal IJI, ~. FA fclmol dining, kllchen and mort
rat\cll11omo. Equipped kltchtn, 3 • and formal &lt;lining - · !ergo on 11)o lnalda. Outaldo tttor. II ::;,;liioj;~i; wtth cltarm ·and groat
lleqtoornt. laiiiO level lawn w111t alud clecklnv aroa. largo atud ' approx. 1.114 aorta wllh a ~
- · - · Ole.
fruit trMiano hnA&gt;t. Must oee1o decking on roer, ovor 2 oere lot 11ocked pona. MOft call lor
room hero tor tlte !emily.
approclato 1hil homeI Move Into . •and much morel OWNERS corrtl&gt;lltlllltlngi12011
a call tor more dotalII.
immodlotoly. 120e1
RELOCATING SAID "SELl
I

t

NOW'1

-

FOR MORE LISTINGS STOP BY AND PICI&lt; UP A FREF OUALilY HOMES IN COLOR
BOOI&lt;LET OR GIVE US A CALL 8. WE WILL MAIL YOU ONE TODAY!

•

I

rand! aver Ml
car garage and
ftnlahecf lamily 100m. Home s~s on
2""· m/lln·Hannan Trace Schoalo.
Jull mlnu1os from downtown
Galllpolla. Tttil home featurea a
bltu11ful l~ocaped lawn, wood
pellot l1ovt1 and central air.
t.qcated lu&amp;t off Rock Lick Rd. on
Mablt Or. In nice nelgllbortlaod.
Have a gardM and rsl&amp;a soma
11owt11 but make aure 1o took 11. Bnck a vinyl e BR, 2 BA
on
1t11o. CaK Jahmle a1 387.0323 private 1 acre lat. Ftinlly ·
today fat an oppolntmeril.
IMng room ,wlftroplace. OR, and
I.AM!IY ltomo an tho IHuiHul lame u11111y roam In thil ant with
Ohio Rlvlrl Thla home has boon ·•
cornptotely remodeled. All ~ fuH basement. Attached 2 car
boon dono wHhln the iu11ou!,;ll'l. garage and detached 2 car garage
Now roof, Insulated wl~ u Will could bt uled lor 11arago.
1/c a furnace. all new appllancH, Priced for a qulcJ! file. $85,000
cemral Voo. system. Home 1\u lull 13312 INVESTMENT OR ,MOVE
bltemttnt w/Workahop. New guast tN 1917 Mobile Homo 80'l&lt;12', 2
to river, but above bedrooms, 1 balh, lumltura, range
Back yard fenced. &amp; . ret., HH1 pomp, central air.
a· fto~lng. Mld~iaport~1 a,6ao.~

•
-~

moro or loss, 3 bedrmo., a 112
baths, Kit., lRrf!, Otnce rm., anct
much more. Wrap pon:h front &amp; 2
sides. 187 ""'"", m/1. ~olinv
Puture and 3 Largo Bamo &amp;
Food L01 silas, 2 nice pandl. Land
11 mos1 all cloan &amp; hot
fencing. Eleclrlc a frool !rto wal:orl
'In tilt bOrn. Food lot - ·
Formorty uood lor Vaal calf
aporalion. Locl1ed noar Rio
Grandt: Appointment Only. Call
L. Smith 1~-·

14012·
homo 3
with blumonl.

\.
•

.

on

=:

sclot and @lnt..-tion af St. Rt.
160 &amp; 554. ClwrJor hu -

1~~-~lc m. ot ,.,.aZ~~~ ~rv• ~kltnv ~o·x~· ~:~ ~;~•o· :~~~:. :

")

r .

\

F!oora, 1 112 • Bath,
4

for S.Je

FoCIMy Cloaf 32x80 S10,000 Olf.
count only S1000.00 Down, Oolivory, and utup f)O&gt;id by Factor)'
1-800-691-em
·

Commerce $1000·$1000 PTIFT. •

l

I

Rtmoldtd 3 Bedroom , Wood

$75,000, 740-992·7504.

:::1,

AI,_.
lld'oa1iol!rg fn
1hla - - • ....,.... ..
1he - F a i r Hoonfng Acl
oi18UwHclt-·-.ga!

----~~=-=~::....:~=~---..:.;.._;_, Beau1itul 3BR- 21em On~ Aeroo.

Har~ki"9, Reliable Drilg Frto
28 Year Old Male Wllh Cla11A
COL's, Factory a wartllouu Ex·
perience laokl"9 FM A Ful·tlmo
Lang·1arm . Jab. Call Adam AI

Oota ... 1-1101).119-3001 x11e

. new central air, swimming pool,

U~ $38,~ Roallor (304)57e·

...

4% down. For Llsting&amp;IPayment

Spli1 · 101a1 eleclric. lour bedrooms. qne ana 112 baths. newly
remodeled family roof't, kilchen
with dishwasher, one ear garage,

acrt or land w/2 tlary garogi,
Oyosville Ra .. $55,000, 7«1-742·
100% remodeled inside, wiH am-.
slder land con1roct, 101 1'1NIIn1
Ridge, Pomerov. Oh, 740·698·
6783.
"
3 Bedroom, FuH Baaement. Large
Lot, Park Drive, 118 Llbertv.
s•6,soo Appalnlment ·only.
(740)374,.122

CtEAN HOUSE
WITH THE

llankr\4&gt;1cy 1195

Georges · Portabt• Sawmill, don't

HOMES FROt,i' $190'.30/Mo. I·
38A Repos f Foreelosures, f•e.

(140~151

1 1/2 story, 3 bedr'aom, bolh, big

No Answer Leave Mn11g1.

Dan Smith - Auctioneer
:1.

cc3

I&gt;D/NtCE FREEl

FOFIECLOSEO GOV'T HOMESI
SO OR LOW DOWN! TAX
so o'OWN UO"ES1 GO'"T • FIEPO'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
B'NK FORE''c -OS FIES•o• CREOITI FOR LISTING! CALL 1·
~
L U
IL W
OA NO MONEY DOWNI . OK 800-SOH m .... 9113. •
CAEDITI FOR LISTINGS! CALL
1-800-338-0020t&gt;&lt;t8611

310 Homet for Sele

320 Mobile Homll

320 Mobile Homes
.for Sale

310 Homea..for

Opportunity

'

•

0.1.

www.-.:&amp;.org (Non_ Profit).

Experienced otamo1rou cln

210

AUCTION

·

!:

For more Information coli VI roll
'at Isaac's Fted Store 740-388-8880
or Ike &amp; Raanlt 7 ~0-388·87 41 .o r 381l·0.370

EASY 10 gel started. Financial

877-EARLYPAY. Uet 750005, 11t

And RV's. Con1ac1 Ran At
(740)448-0151 or 339·0950. 11

.

and Auction

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE

' Finis "Ike" Issac- Auctioneer

P•Ym•nrs. Pay one biH/month.

Will Powerwasn Houses, Trailers,

10,000 BTU air conditioner, misc. chairs, lots ,of
knick knacks, pictures, rockers, stands, fans,

ZSZ Aaae GaiBa .Co. r·aaAdlolas 0 D N a

Froo Money Nowl 11'1 Truel No
-mom. Guaranteed. For pel'·
sanol nud.o, education, bu•i·
ness.1 ·800-72A,j1047(2•)

CONIOLIOATE YOUR WAY. NEED All EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
OUT OF OEITt R - monlhly Ia $500 inatonUy by phonal 1·

Will Pawerwaoh Hauua, Trailers,
And RV'a. Can1ac1 Ron AI
(140)446·0151 or 339·09~0 . 11
No Answer leave Mnaage.

~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~ dresser,
nightmachine
stand, hutch,
miseitems.
dis!les, pots &amp;
pans: sewing
&amp; sewing

.• .,auc

310 llomei for Sele

.. Site

Will ·Babysl1 In my home. Any
houll; LOvo Children, Plo... Call
(740)446-7883

o

&amp;

TERMS: · Cash ·or check w/posltlve ID. Not
responsible for loss or accidents. Food will be
available.
OWNER: Alton and Thelma Story ·
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Sheridan and Chrla Prater
Ucenaed &amp; bonded State of Ohio· Member
National &amp;.Ohio ALictlonHr'a Aaaoc.

so

Bmctllft. 1100- 31117.

ProfHIIonal

838·9568 lt140JS88-9848 Owner:
Rick Mount.

URGENTLY NEEDED· plasma
&lt;l0110rs, eam $45 10 $60 tor 2 or 3
hours weekly. Call Sara,J'ec, 74.0·
592·8851.
.

.

Over 200 baskets, mise accessories,
some pottery. Preview the baskets April
6, 6:90-9:00 p.m.
We have been commissioned to sell this
IG1"9e collection of baskets to Include:
All American, Bee, Booklno, Christmas,
Easter, Fat~er's Day, Features, Shades of
Autumn, Spe·clal Events, Tour,
Swf8theart, May Serlel~ Mother's Dciy,
Holiday Hoste11; HostelS, Horizon of
Hope, Incentive, Full Sal Tracllllon•, Tree
Trlinmlilo, Woven TrQdltlons, Collector's
Club and More. A lot of these are
comb9's. Too mGI),Y)Ol\lst
pleole call ·
me and I will fax a.~Wto you. . ·
.

Proot. Lowell TuiUon. Collogo
GuoraniH. CaM Froe Fr"

Pomeroy • llddl. Dl't • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plell18nt, WV
Servlc:el

No Credl1. Cr0di1.Cerao, Man01001. Farlnl9rma11an: 1·100·
335-7e12.01ft. 3822

nlque. Fact Program, Fdur•-

FINANCIAL

Preaton Muatard, Auctioneer
Llceneecl Bonded State of Ohio

a;

-.Uolod- ~ -·

.

Lunch served.
Muatard'a Auction Service
7!10-2fl&amp;.5868

2:,10

.~:!~,..'i~:~ ~~~ 5~~

Mount's Tree Service •The .Tr••
Professional•• Bueket Truck
Service· Top - Trim· Removal·
Stump Grinding. Free Eetimatas,
Fully Insured. Workers Col)"'p.
Bidwoll, Ohlq. Call &amp; 5e,., I -800-

PAID VACATIONS
t ·800-490-3019

=-~cash or local check with 10.

Pnh1tl01'111l

•

I will sl1 'wl1~ your laved opes
~M=1a=w=.rom~.------------, MondayF~lday. Exptrloncod.
EARN YOUR COlLEGE DEGREE Call (740)448-3635, 9 10 3 MonOUICI&lt;LY. Bachelors: Masters, day- Friday or any11mo Sa1urday
Doctorate , by correspondence
or Sunday
based upon prior•education and
short study course . For FREE inLawn Mower And Small" Engine
formbtlon booklet phone CAM·
Repa~. FrvO Pldc·up And Dotlv·
BRIDGE STA7E UNIVERSITY 1· ery Within 10 Mlloa. 21 Voaro
600-964-83t6.
Exporlenca. Call Mlko AI
(140)446-1'804 0 )
Mobllt Ho!"e /ia1n11ng. Ol&amp;count
lo Seniors. Call (740)448-1543

WORK FROM HOME
SSIO·S1.Sl0 Mo. Full

From Jilckaon, Ohio, take US 32 west about 3 miles, tum left
on SA 139 south, go 6 miles to Riegel Ridge, tum right ahd go
about 4 miles. Signs Posted.
,
Mf. Arthur Cr~sblree Is moving to Galllomia and will offer for
sale at Public AuCtion the lollowlng items: ·
Delta 13' comm~rclat 2 hp planer w/ dust vac, 0e11a
unnence table saw w/ blades, 3 hp air compressor, Craftsman
jointer and shaper, 30ft aluminum ext. ladder, Clark shop vac,
3 new rolla of chain -link fence, Metal tence pasta, 2 wheel
trailer, Lawn sweeper, Lawn spreacjer, 4 Rubber trash cans,
kerosene heaters, Bollen self propeiled' mQwer" amall push
mower, 18 hp Murry lawn uactor, Homelloht weedeater,
new MTO 12 hp riding mow'er, Garden tools, AIUique Oliver
hillside plow, Bed llnef and camper shell lor Chevy S10
bed, handmade block walnut night stand and matching
dre.saef, Homellte chain saw, plus MUCH MORE.
Travel Trailer: Uke new, 5 11 wheel 1211 self contained travel
. trailer. MUST SEE
aa.t: 12 fl. aluminum bass boat w/ 1o hp Honda 4 cycle
motor, 32 lb trolling motor, trailer, cover and extra's. Been In
the water lwlcel
Pickup: 1983 Chevy S-10, V6, 5 speed, 105,000 miles.
Looka and rune great ·
Car: 1987 Dodge K-Car, looks &amp; runs good. Make

'

ServlcH

h lcttoOI Dip II PI .. Home.

l:&gt;r Froo

25550

.

•

-

C81Taday174Q-4.46-4361.
1-800-214-0452.
__..;.Reg;:.!!.;l90-05-;:::..:::...t;;;2..;.74;;;B;..
. -~·

Send Resumes to Box JR 23, 200
Main Street. Pt. Pleasanl. wv

Ohio #1344 W.Va.ltl15
"Not responsible for aCCidents .or loss of property"

.

Gilllpollo eor- CGfltao
(CarOIIfS Clooe To Homo) ·

rate with experience ·and de5ire.

Positive ID

.

And PAN Availabiii1Y. Pl!fase Fax

Resume - ~uention A.my Wat1-

Business ;
Training

be Prompt, Reliable, Dependable.
Salary/ Commtulon Commensu-

DAN SMITH Auctioneer

Items.

140

Sund.y,Aprtl1,2001
230

SciiDbla

180 Wentecl To Do

aplst·CFY. Full-timt, Part-lime.

Full-time, part-time. por diem and
orr-call-I
•

Sat. April 7, 2001 7:00p.m .

Sat. April 7, 2001
12:29 p.m•. . . ,

Cash

Occupatianat '""""""'· Ctrti1ied

Therapv •

Antique's &amp; Collectibles Sale

PUBL'C AUC1'10N

"MISC"

I

j

E""'rionco at MROD 5&lt;hOOI and

RehabilitatiOn Team: Loealions·
Middlepofl. Jac:lloon. Porl....,lh,

v

1:-- \ \( . -:-. .\1 \TI&lt; &gt;\I H H :-: 1

ing· great benefits. call 7 days

player. .

lng. Rtllablt &amp; Honell ParHimo
Or Full-- (1«1,._112
Therat*1s· Hoardand 'Rohabllita·
lion SINieal Is SHklng Highly
Mallvated lnciWiduals To·Join our

Speoch Thorapiot, Speech Thor·

.

Approved OhJo Medicaid Pravki·
or looking lor indivlduoll in - "
autiam ther-apy. Have re...,.
e:;:z
(140)441-9516
or omal an·
ry.203t _ __

a s.a-

150

•

Wanted

Someone To Work At Car lor.•
Oanlpolia &amp; Middliport Area.
Kr10wf1dge ot Auto Repair

Avenue. Suite 108. Athens . Ohio
45701 . ApAiicaUOn deadline Is
~pr it 5, 2001 . The AMESC Is an
Equal Opporlunrty Empi"J'eri'Pro-.
vider.
,

'

SltUMJons ·

ot Home Health Care Services.

Toledo. Ohio ~3606 . EOE/M/F/0/
:

120

(304)815-3523

Ohio. Positons· Physical Thera ·
t&gt;i&lt;L Physical 1herapil1 Assls1anl,

Postal Jabs $48.323.00 yr. Now

miSC..

Someone To Sltf With Eldlr!Y
Woman In Hef Home. FridiY
Evening Till ~onday MornlftO.

Execulive Parkway, Suite 128 ,

portunily ~r/INFION

a·

If

H!lpWant

sume. 3 ,reterencws, and co~ ol
current licen&amp;e to John COStanzo,
Superintendent, 507 Richland

Mantcio Furnace. OH 45629 M
' tax (140)3549211 bv"" later than
Fridoy, A11&lt;i 6, 2001. Equal Op- •

Located on

...... Aprll1, 2001

PomeroY·· Middleport • GaiUpolla, Ohio • Point Plnr=l'lt, WV

er, aomrnorcial. Priced 0 tsa.ooo ·

._

.

�·r-&gt;'

' - . . 6notl
. ..-

~~~~.:t!:!!-;;•;e;llti~·u~l:=.::~::--;
~ • ~~~ •o.HipOia. 0111o • Point PIMunt. wv·
"' Sundlly, Apr111, 2001 ..
-~
• i lor ....
. . . .H
_
'"'""~Ap=•=b••=n:ta~~~:§.§§~::=:;·~~==:::·-:-===;===:==i"§~~~~
- for1
Rent 0
.44..
·
510 Houllhold
540 Mltce111neous
MltcellanaOUS
560 PetJ lor Sale
for Rent

!lilly .... Cltln -

111110, 3
ledrocim
Cer1nl
Air.
Fronl
flttt Time Aent•CI . Nltr- Ci-,·

..,.,. II fl. wide S.H. por mon.
Only 1270. per mon. can now 1·
-1-1717.
.. .
•
New 'double wide 3 br. :t. ba .
lt98.0Q dOwn only 1295. per
mort catnolr 1-tOHI1-fiTT7.

School t•251mo. Water/ Tr11h
Included, Plol OOpoolt (Good U&gt;catiln) (740)2511-IIN

Small 2 ~ Trailer In Traitor
Reflrenee &amp; Deposft
Atqui&lt;ld. (740~1104

Pork,

Apar bnenta

440

tor Rent

Now ~ 1•x70 S16,9H.OD
3 Bedroom· 2 Bath. 1·877-777·
4170

·1 and 2 bedroom eponmtnta, lur·
nlshed and unfurnlthecl, HCUrity

Flet!WOOCI 16180, 3 llf/2 bll.
only $111V.ae por month. Call lor

4tposll required, no pers , 740·
1192·2218.

· 740-885'&lt;4317.
New
"Fleetwood,

18x80 ,

I19,9H.OO, 311tdn&gt;om, 2 Bath, 1·
177-m-4110.

New fleltwOOd, ttarn btclroom,
two both, $855 d~wn, $189 .58
.. · Cll7.t0-992-2187.

One.beclrqom, ln&amp;erlor his been
r••&lt; ~ ""· 14995, 1500 down. wll
lil)atlee. 740-9112-2i87.

-oom

Trailer Willi Ctn~al Hill And Air,
1-112 llaflt. 3
And Mote.

Kerosene Hutet

-. (740~18117

And Wea ..

1 Btdroom At!'artment, Rtlrigera·
lor, Range, AIC tnetu ...d. $289
Plus Deposit &amp; Rtlortnce. HUD
Appnr.oed. (7ltp)"t-t519
1 Ballroom Apt Clote to Waf·
Mart. $375 poi month. AH udlillft
includtd. (740)2'5-5555
1 8tdroom Apartment For Rent In
Rio Grandt. Walking Dts1anet To
College. All Utllltiaa Paid,, 10%
Discount On First MonlhS Atnl
(740)2'5-51.00 .
2· 1 Bedroom Apartment, Close
To Schools &amp; S1orss. Prlwte Enrrenco Portially Firfnllhtd, UtilitieS
Paid ; (3~•1875·2117 0.JlOiit

.
f.nue,. 1 Bedroom

S250.Atnl~-

330 Farmt for Sa.ltt
M ·Acrt Farm For Sail By OWnsr
Wlh 1SOQ Sq,Fttl, 3 -00111, I·

•eo

Ftrai

Apartments,

$2fl6 • Damage

Deposit. Rererences Requlred,
(740. .531 .

112 Bat~ Homo Wllh lila~ Trim,
And Lorge KHChtn. Hal A Large
Garage And Barn \'lith •D• Till·
attle Acres. Excellent Location
Hoar · Rio . Grilndo. llsklng
$129,900. (740)380~259 Evon·
lr1ga
•

IEAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
ION ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive trom 1297 IO $3113. Walk IO
shop &amp; movlea . Call H0·••8·
2568. Equal Housing Oppor1ul1i!y.

Farm Hou... lltautilulty Remold·
td, 2963 Square Foot 17 Atres.
Pond, In-ground Pool, Stvwral

Chrloty's Family Living, 33140
New Lima Ad.. Rutland, Ohio, 740742·7•03. Apartment, home and
trailer rentals. CommerCial store·

lilarns. Garage, Fruit Treea, Close
ll&gt;' Holzer.
4230

1215,000. (740)&lt;44.

fronts avallible for lease. Vlcan·
ciea·now.

For rani- ona bedroom

340

Buslnett.and
. Buildings

Established Fino T·shlrt And
graphic Shop, Includes All Equipment, Clients And Office Trtller
(~)458-1926

350 Lots &amp; Acreage13 Acres With Beaulltul Lake
VIew · Sills $5();000'. . ,, Acree
With Large Lake, Mobile Home
With' Add On $79,500. Gallla
Coun1Y On Blacktop Road,
(740)388-8678

. 37·1/2 Acres Of Bottom ·land~
• . ~~~~~~dhl\1 Road· Realtor

4:11 Acres Neat lntei'section Of

Watson Road
Oulit, Private
Woods, ~oual
!0 Minutes

And Rodney Pika . With Sam, Creek "
Highway Acce,s.
·From Hospll 0 1,
Pharmacy, Bank, Grocery, Theator, Etc. $40,000 (304)875·4222
After Bpm Weekdays

I

l
!

BRUNER LAND

.

. {740)441·14112 .

Qollle (lo,• Vtr'f NIOe, LMI,
Clean Lola On KliT Rd.. 8 ACrH
121.000 Or s wil!l Barna
$31,000, 8coric Homt Sliol. RIO
Grendt, 10 Aeres With Pond
125,000 Or 8 A&lt;:rlt 119,000.
C'*hlre, 2• Acres With Barns +
. c""" 129,900. 8 Acres II 1,500
· Or 281\i:l'es $26,5001 BUrnt Run
Rood, t7 Acres St9,000.1Vc&lt;&gt;on
Lake, tO Acres $11,9001
Mtlgt CO.• Tupper P~lnS·
SR8111 , Fioh In Shade Creek. 5
Acres, $12,500, 7 AcrH Wl111
Pole Bam. S23,all0 or 31 127,900. Carr Ad, 12 Acrel
$21,000. ·Or 16 Acreo $23.000.
DanvUie, NIOe Wooded 5 AcrH
$13,500. Aulland, 9 Ai:rH $85001

furniSnad
aparl-.nlln Middleport, call7.t0992·5231.
. Furnished 2 &amp; 3 R~m Apart·
menll, Clean, No Pets. No Smok·
lng. Rt!erences &amp; Deposit Required. Ullllllt1 Furnished.
(740)446-1519
Gallia Manor Apartments, Now
Accepting Appllcallono For 1 BR.
HUD, S~bsldlzed Apartments For
Elderly And Handicapped. Equal
Housing Opportunity. (740)446-

4e311

.

.

2

Very Spacloua. 2 Badrooms
F1ocn. CA,I 112 - Baby
· F1A1y
,.,..,, Adult .Pool
Pool
P,, tlo, Start $385/Mo. No Ptla:
~.. PIUI Security llepoall R...
quored, Days: 740·4•8·3U1 ;
Evtnlngo: 740·317· 05112 740.

a

AA-..ntnt

·

446-0008.

.

Al\i'M Settd Place Now Accepilnd '
Appllcallons tor 1 Bedroom Hud
Subsided Apartment for Elderly
and Disabled, EOE. (304)882·
~121 Or (304)882-3274

Ga...-,
Buy or s•ll. Al•erlne Antiquta,
1124 East Main oo SA 12• E. Pomeroy. 740-992·2526 or 7.0.992·

1539. AIIIG

Moore.--

Equipment

A•ntot. Dozer,
Equipment
Baokhoe; Bobcat, Farm Tractor
And EqulponorL (740)"1 ~19

For Leau

Hiweehold

510

AU1IlS . . Pollco ImpOunds &amp; llaposl .

Oak Baby Bod. Changing Tobie.
Infant Cor Seal, 1111 500 Scra.•·Wheolor, H500; 91 Honda
SOOEX •·Wh~ter, $2Dil0 PBO
(740)+11-1348

Toyolea, Chtv)'s, " - '
cau 1or u~~~ngs,
1·800-451-0500
09817

Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
2 Grave. LOll, In Gardens 01

Pl&gt;r)y. (740~11)6

ssoo.oo

.P-

RecOnditioned

Washers, Dryers. RanQes, Refri·
gratofl, Up To .8 0 Days Guar·
ant.eedl We sen New Mayteg Ap-·
pllances. FTench C.lly Maytag,
7•1).448.7795. "
'
.
.
For Sale:.Recondltloned wash·
era, dryers and refrigerators.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407
Jacksoo Avenue. (304)875-,7388.

Deep

Gibson Chestl'nNI
Freeze.
Holds 300 lbs. Purchased New
$275, Will tali $125. (740)3689946
USED

Ext. 9818

Amish Buggy And Miniature

Goods
Appliances:

en

Friendly Ridge Ad, Crown City
(7.a)3118-0118-4 or (74013118-9336

Compulero: WE. FINANCE DELL
COMPUTERS! Even with 1111
than perlecl cradlll 1·8'00·~77·
9018. COde ACI4 www.. omcaolu·
tlon.com

Nice WOOded LO! On Floule 588,
Rodney (Unrestricted) 112.000
(7.0)24~
•

RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNERS
(&gt;

TapPan HI .Effieiancy 90% Gas
Furnaces. 011 Furnace&amp;. 12 seer
llelil Pump &amp; Air Condlilonlng
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennello Heiit~g &amp; Cooling. 1·
800-872-5967 ,._.orvli.comlblnneu
·

DtRECTV free lnatallalion, $200
cash back,

soo:2-.

biYt I Ht:"tt~TY Of

.

WallrllrApoclal: 3/'l ·zoo PSI
$21.95 Per 100; 1" 200 PSI$37.00 Per 100; All Bra11 Com·
pr...lon Flntngs In SiOdc
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackaon,CHUO. 1~537-95:t.B .

over twen-

ty varlellu or Oregon Dahlias 10
your friends, family, ~urselr. Visit
us Ohttpilwww.oregon&lt;!ahlia.com

540

u...:Modile

So- t3.1ll5. Now ~ l wmaoe 2000. Ia~ capacillas.
mort options. Ma,ufacturer of

UWI!IIKI, edgers and okiddtis.
NORWOOD I NDU~TRIES 2~2
Sonwi1 DriYt. ~. NY t•225.
FREE Information 1·100-578·

1313ExT.20CH.I
Singer sewi ng machine with atl
Oilllona; Undtfwood' fypewrHtr,
perfect shape: TV &amp; stand with
tamp ;-- large owl Jigttt ; saveral
blankets &amp; quill&amp;; older boys bi·
cycle. like ·"AW; mora items .\OO
numefous 10 Ttst. Calt Dwight Looan. 740·992·5107 afiernoons or

ae..me ·~·

CFA twmolayon Kittons. 1 - •
Old. (740~3188
oet.ono's Groom 511op, ~ning
All
7~1 ·11102.

Dog-.

&lt;WI
And' """'
·
ing Hop
~ Clob
&amp;ale.i'tga.
Hey,Squaro
And--(7-40]'91

Housobroluln $200 , (740)3792140

....

"•

UKC Walker co'Onhound pups. "

~

Champion llflol l;IUb Pig Sate,

111

· •

•....

.8anows And !,lila. For Mono tnlo,
Call,llil:ll Starr (740)1itl8.:t.5t5

~

.. c:l"'fiotr 11!11• lor Sale. Born In Gall~
r· Cqunty,

Soli

.

-·

(New) 840 New Holland Not
Wrap- Bale Command-. Wide
Sweep· 4x5 Rolls, Cosl S11.500
550
Building
Soli $13.500; AIC 333 4 Row No
Supplln
Till corn Planter. Ezcolenl Cond"
lion. $3,000 ' 'Andy SigiOf,
Block, brick. sewer pipes. wind · · (304)937-2018
ows. lln181s, ere. Claude Winters.
Rio Grande, OH' Call 7•0·245· .,993 Ford 5610, 1 owner. BoUght
5121.
New, 500 hours original. !ft. BuSh
f!0911000. (740):)88-9946
Sloat Buildings, New Musi Sell. ·
JO 318 ·50' Deck , Hydrostatic
40x60•12 Was $17,500, Now
OriOJ$, Hydraulic Uft. Power Steer· $10,971;
50x100x16" Was
Now
$19,990;
ing, 18HP ONAN
$2700
· $31,500,
70x150xt6 Was $59,990, Now· (304)675·8069·
$42,990 ;
80x200x16
Was
JOhn Deere 4020. 378 V·6 Cum$94.500 . 'Now $59 .990. 1-800·
mins. 120 hp $6000 (740)367 406-5126 •
7787
.

·580

Peta for Sale

11 Week Old Black Lab, first
Shots. $75 (740)448:-7054 '
3 blue heeler puppies, trrit thOis•
and wormed, call740·742·1103

atter5pm.

Reglsllred Toblano Choit1nu1
Slallton· Ouarltr Horoel Arabian
p . - Color Proctueer. (304)8757071

.

~

640

.,
.~! ·

GOOd Mllld tlay For Sale, Dtla·
no Jacl1ton Farrn (~)f75·11~
(740)4-48-11 04

..

Hay for sata oquara baln, S1.25

1950'S &amp;. 1960's 45, 33 RPM
ReCOrds'.' OJ. Store
Stock ,
Collections (937)675'-2930' Alter
6:00pm
·
colter~

(7.0)4~8 ~344

.•

1 milt on IU N. 304-815-48811

Hoy For Salt, $10 Round Bale,
$1.25 Square Sole. Slrlnga ' In
Good~- f740)4ol6-f185 .

.

; ::

.,~.'

&amp; pts.,

740-667·3493.
,
.

Hay &amp; Grain

200 Boln 01 Good Clean Gross
Hay, Never Wet, Sf.OO Per Bale

n,

620 .Wanted
to Buy
.
.

gOod mold bOards,

Spring FaPr Cllt Sale, Stlurllay
Aprll71h. 1:00pm, Collie Acctpt·
td After ~m On Friday. Hauling
llvallablo. All Conalgnmen11
Welcome. .
(7.0)5112-2322
(740--1

.•

3 bonom. 3 point ploW. m.ust have

AKC miniature Pinscher puppies,
block &amp; lan, 740.742.0310.

~

1

*"'

11190 GEO Pllsm, 4 &lt;lr, 5 sp.,
tm cas..Ita, new Urea. plus dis·
lribu10r, bralula, timing bttt,

1•o-

9112,2558,

1991 Grand Pli• STE. 3.1 Multf.

pon, Runs GOOd, 00 TransmisWorks

Good,

Wrecked, Whole . Car

(140)398-826,11

.

Chevys, FordS, &amp; more. For liSt·
1ngs , eatt rtOw! 1.. 800· 71$-3001
exLA010.

•HIIy lllrlghl WIN Tit S.., '!Nr

REAL ESTATE:
0

850 Sled &amp; Fertlllzllr.

St•ee 1943

Tobacco Plants For Salt. Call
(1.0)&lt;44-7..:1

....

-If

Tobacco Plants- Order Now To
Guarenlot Earty' Spring P~ntingo.
Increase Allotments Mean Extra
Planll. Thank· You For Your Bual·
nees. Call Danny Dewh.ursl·
Leave Mes11ge (304)885·37•0
Or 1304)995-371111

li

1

·"'

:1;

• .jj

')

Main s - t Fum~...
(3041875-1422 .
515 Main Strett, Point P!ea~r

living e~.

. " New &amp; Used Furnttlrre
New 2 Pteca llvlngroom Suites.
S399: Buy, s.n. Trade.
..

or verv

93 Oodll'l OekoUt . Runs Orear,
11800 080. 1179 GMC J"'-1'.

2 · balhl,
large FR/rea. roam In ghe
b-ment, 2 car garage,
·lovely rront porcll &amp; back deck
on lhe large level lot. Priced
at St 79,800. Cell Carolyn
tOday for your private vlft({ng.

-

.

OFFICE

1998 Ford Explore&lt;, 2 Door' 5po!t,
5 Spted, 63,000 Mi~s . $10,500
(740)379-2787

992.-2259

8&lt;1 N issen , ••• P ick~up, $-950
080 (~)516-9917

89 Ad Ford Bronco· II, Excellent
Conditio~'~, cau For More lnlorma·
tion (740)367- 7672

$500 .

.

eonwr-.

Cln

a.

730 Van• &amp; 4-WDt ·
Whaelcltair Lilt, 318, V-8 Engine.
Good Condition. $3,000 OBQ
(304)6~2238
.

•wo.

1989 Ford F·2SO
4 original
rims. sll"tng w4ndows~ new wide
"""" tires, """"· good !rude, 7407.2-8200.
.
.
1989 Ford Higb Top ConW4H'fion

wan, TVIVCA , newer Urn. dual

•

fuel tanks. towing package, rear
air, more. Kelly Bluebook $8265, .
askin g 55 200 OBO, 740· 7•2·
82011
•
.

conllnued an 85

s-

IIIV2 Plymouth Voyager S.E .. PI
W, V·8. 3.0. AIC, Cruise, exee~
lent Condition, $3500 17•0)2455946 Aller 5pm. •
..
1892 Pontiac Boftnieville SSE
Sunroof,
Loaded,
$4800,
(30.)875· 2583,
Aller
4pni ·
(304)675-3324
1993 Cadillac Eldorado. 17,000
Excellent Condllion (304)675·
5929 Or (~)875-6581

..

CHESTER • Brick
. COzy fireplace .
With gae togs.
spa~iaus .. iii'llliis,
bedrooms• . 1 'I• baths, finished attached
garage 20lc25 pon:h, 32x12 storage building
and lilted. Yard landtcaped. This home Is in
move In condition with many qualily features.
A must see Wyou want the best!
.
ASKING $120,000.

r~ in excelent

I

••

.·

I:

205 Nftrth S&lt;acor1a A,,•.
.

Middleport, OH

South Fourtll- A 1112 stotY rrame home with 3 bedrooms,
11/2 beth, dining room, and kitchen. Has a nice gu log

1993'Dodgo Shadow £5 90,000
Miles, 3.0 V-6, 5-spetd, loaded,
$3350- Like New (304)675;8069

u ..

fil'l!Piace, arched doorways, open feel baiW8eff kitchen arid
dining room, a front and back parch, with a SIJ!al 1lid8
Also has a one car
with a
·
$415,011.110

1994 Corsica, Loaded. Like New,
t3.395, 1994 &amp; 1993 Grand Am,
V·6, $3.895, 1996 Ranger, 70K,
$3,795, 1994 S·IO, $3,495, 0111·
era In Stock, Trade·lns Accopted. COOK MOTI)RS (7.0)U8·
0103
199• Dodge Sh6dow, Good Con·
dillon, 115,000 mlltl, $2600,
Smith Electric Gullar. S1000, cell
pllone (304)617.-o978 ·

POMEROY .COUld be omce IPICf, c&lt;iuld be a
home, you decide. SIYin roomt, 2+ bathe
a main 111'1411, 2 car garage, Could be a real·
thOw ~. Out ollloo!l ASKING . . .,000

cln

LONG IO'ITOM- New log cabin with bath &amp;
kitchen· area. locatell on Curtla Hollow
Road In Malge Paunty. Juat 314 mlla from
Forked Run State Pllk where there Ia great
flahlngl Only 4 mil• from the '!Dhlo River.
Adjacent It over 200 icrtl or·publlc hunUng,

IUCh D tqUirrel, dMr and turkey.

ASKING t38,8CICI.

. 1895 Ford Tauruo SHO, green
with gray leath•r lntarlor, power
sunroof, 5 speed, amlfm/CD, air,
740-948-2&amp;44.

s.ooo.

1995 Lincoln Conllnenrat, Low
Mileage, 88,000 Mlltl, $9,100
(7.0)«1-1309
1996 Geo Me~ l.SI, 4 cyl .. auto,
AC, new -ttrts. szsoo, (304)882·
2234
1997 Olds Achieve, 61.000 miles,
Book Value $7900,
$1900.

MAIN STREET· A two ltotY home with a large foyer, dlrilng
room. ·nvlng room. kitchen, and a bath dawnalalre, and 3
bedrooma upstairs, Has a full basement with a newer
furnace and ho1 water heater. A b&amp;autllu~ vlew of·1ha Ohio
River.
r
$25,000.00

IR 1:Z.i • MAPLE GROVE IUIDMIION •
OHIO RIVER FFIONTAGE • Approximately 2
acre lola • 10 • to choose from. Great
camping 1011. Celt today for more detalli.
.
ASKING $20,000.

.'
NEW USTING ·Are you tlred of paylng rent? Then STOPI This affordable B •¥¥''"'
bedroom home has many new repairs and Is ·so affordable that your payment
cheaper than rent• Home sits on a level double tot on maln route. Easy access

_

Lot

UIMble

LANGSVII:LE • Comer IQI on State Roula· t 24 that Is almael
80 acre. Big beauilrut yard and an alder mobile home with 2
bedrooms, 1 beth, equlpr.l k~chen, and rear deck. Alaa has
a detached garage for 2'/•l:ars.
$23,000.00

.-..
~~

RAINBOW RIDGE- Always wanted a farm? Here Is approx.
95 acres of moeUy woods, ~lays nice. Has about 10 to 15
acres tillable, Has a aeptlc_ WllllJI!Ich. TPC water available,
Has a road through the middle Of the property. Hu eome
caves, and a 40x58 roundatlon already poured wfth some
aide walls up far enough to be undarpinnlng ·far a RIOliile.
))ome. A mult-I
....000.00

.,

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'·'

••

FOI!ftd

••

large pole bern with 112 bllh;
framed hOUM that nMda
~lehed. Yet. lhert Ia work tD
be done here, but n It were
flnlehed, ~ would · bf priced
higher. P~Cid at $36,000

ASKING

. ...' -.

Jo
-.

"' Herw... apjwox. 1.1 acrea wlh

-

91 Dodge DureftgO SLT, Chill
PoppOr Red, 360 Engine, Tow
Pactage, PS, PW, COl CU11110,
$17,500 (304,.75· 5815 Of
(304)«1-711'29

1998 Jtmmy SL S. Low Miles,
Mocha Brown, $15,200 (740)446-"
8657

can- around

thle ftdor pion hu 3·4 BAs, 2
1/2 bathe, formal LA and DR,
flret t1oor mutw .euHe, FA
and second ftoor play room
for kldt. Additionally, run
unftnlehed bueinent with till
ceilings for .more tlvlg apace.
5 acre lot. Cl011 to halpllal. 4
yrs old. $288,800 I2Z1
Potential

080. ·

1979 DOdga Van Willi Hydraulic
19!18 DOdge ••~ . 318 5 Speed,
50.000 Mileo $16.000 Call
(740)379-2374 Alter 6:00pm

en over·elzelf CUllOm kllchtn,

FR

$800

Runs
Good,
' (7-40}!"' 9981

TflANSPORTATION

L.qcatic!l, Great U1llllyll 1
etory pl18 home Dll1n over

3300 sq. ' tt

1!193

1997 Bla&lt;:k 2WO Ram SLT Shorl
Bed , 12.000 Miles. New Tires, ·
Bed Mat. And COver. Excellent
Condition. $13,500 . Call After
6pm. (740)441- 1651
.

1 ttl Chrysler Sebring, Below
- . (740)448-21011
'Round Dell..ry I Volume Dll·
count Avatlablo. Heritage Farm.
. (304)8711-11724.

720 Truc::b for

condilion, air conditioned, call
7-tQ. 7-42-2271.

BOdy

.

720 Trucks tor Sale
5speed,
num wheels. bed liner. sliding
back window, amlfm cassette•
high mileage. hi· way. miles, A- 1

19ae Jttp Cherokee, 5·Speed,
4 .0 Lllor, 8-Cyl., Great Shape,
Runs Greal, 12300 OBO, 1993
Ford Aeroatar van. Ul&lt;t Ne!r. Ex·
Collen! c;ondllion $2900 OBO
.
(740!«8-364i Loaw !!n·ago

Hay For Salt, 45 Round Bolts,
And 250 . Squafo Sales. Call ' 1994 Ford Tempo, 51,000 m11t1, •
(740)441'-0111 or . (740)441· door/ whitt, power door locks/
7843 ,.,.,,8:00pm.
wlndowa. ctrivefl 1111, sir, ~ru111,
catl7.t0-lt2+WI.
.

:"'r

stil~.ores. Hondas.

IM7 - Till,Cenlury
limilerl,
-·
CfUIIO,
PW, POL,
nww tires
llrull. brllUf. $1400, (:i0-t)882:
2ZM

1992 Oldsmobile Cutlass Su·
preme
Fuly Recoriditioned And Engine Replaced .'
Power Everytl'llng . White Witl'l
Blaclc TOll. Really Nice Car. Price
Reduced For Oolck Sale. SS.95.
Can Bt
AI. A&amp;A Auto Detail
On Lower 4th Avenue. Call
(7401••1~177 Or (7•0)4461155
.

Outtn'a Hor..ahoolng BWFA
COr1ltierl (740)2511-1330

610 Farm Equipment

Dt,.ndoble, ·
{7.0)2f5-lii1GI

Fair Plgo, Born In Maaor1 ~
Certified Hint. l!elt!IY For plclwp.
17.5.00 Each. Cal (3o4)518-:t.5111 •

1248

(7.0)«1~19

· CARS FROM 5500 · Police '"''

t poundS &amp; laa

sion,,

.

PGint Pleasant, wv

720 .. Trucks for Sale

710 Autos for Sale

IPHd , Vrtry

pigs rN&lt;Iy to go; butdltring
hogS, 230-2501, 740-949-2017 Of

Quality Blade Angua Bulla, 1000.
1200 Lba, Cummlnga, Angus
Farms, Soulhaldla WY (301)875-

&amp; LIVESTOCK

"bung Trots, $5.00 'each. $7 .00
Each Dttiverect With Minimum 01
5
Drdera, Dogwood, Oak,
Chao.... (~)895-3408
.

or

'382

7-21011.

Sate

For

f7~)118

(740)«1~968

Fa~

Mollohan .Carpel, 2b2 Clark
Cha1101 Ad, Porter, OH. Fret E!ll·
matte, Euy Flnanelng or 90 days ·
same 11 cash. Vlaa, Mastarc;ard
Acpepled, (740)446·7444 or 1·
Bn·830·9182

.

Faytllt
Co.
Fairgrounds,
waahlnglon Counhouae FJ iday
April 8111 At 7pm . tiD Hoard Of

· Vegetables

Top

t03

Breaking, Training &amp; Boarding
Horstl. (301)87G-05tf LNVO
I 'I ago (7.0)'48-32112

.,39,

ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78
Vloe S1ret1, Call 740·446-7398, ·
fo1186-81JI.0128.

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanaugs. We
Sell Grave Monuments And
Vases. (740)..114782

"*·

Weokl Old.
Black! Tan. 4
Fema.tes. 3 Males. $50 E:6ch
(740)446-3576

temales, 3 males, shots up to
date. most blanket oacts. mother
·&amp; father excenent 1)10Ddlines and
tree doos. S100 each, 740·985-

~OiforSale

Polrlfi ~~~;-;~~~~t~~~
Options,

4 .'Nor
· Old ..
Ouarter
_ ~-~~
' -· 1Horu

On-(7~
4 ....., 111*1 lil;"9too 10
7-~12$.

full Blooded Ooberl"!''aM. ro

Reglstt;ed White Pomertnian
Male, Neutered •• All Shots.

• Middf1110011• &lt;WIIpolis, Ohio •
710

·-

Sltel Building&amp;, New M~ol Stll.
3D••Dx12 was $10,200 now
SU90. •ox60x12 was $16 ,400 580
FQJits &amp;
nolfl' $10,971 . 501100k16 was
$27,590 now $19,990: 601200x16
wos $58,760 now $42,990. 1-800- DELICIOUS IDAHO ORGANlC
40trS126.
·
. . YELLOW POTATOES. Baker!
and Steamers awailable. $42.00
SUN'SAND'SURF While saMy.
per .tO lb. box plus shipp fng. To
beaches. fabulous sunselsl De- order Call loll free 1 - 866 ~ 925·
luat roomsl1ci1Chone- &amp; balco·
5030 or hllp//www.kelleymlorgannilS overiOCiklng the guH of Mtal·
lelannl.com
·
co. laland Inn Beach Resort,
· Treasure Island, FLA. 800·2•1· I
eeao www.lalandlnoresortcom.
FARr11 SUPPLlES
-St~.

1,2oo'l

Real

APPLIANCES

washers, dryers. refrigerators,

Allen C. Wood, Broker· 448-4523
· Ken Morgan, Broker • 446,0971 ·
·
Jeanette Moore,· 256-1745
Patricia Rilss ~
.
740 448 1081
. ..;,
!!!!I.

Looking To Buy A New Home?
·Don't Have Land? Wo Colli Hurry
Onl}i 10 l.t&gt;ll L.aft. 304-736-72115.

Chrlatos, 2 Burial Vaults· Call
COiltCl (7.0)888 81108-

Commercial Sewing Maehlfla.
Heavy DI!IY. eact~,.;t Shape, can
Judy (304)875·236!1 8am-•pm
Monday· Friday

WOOD
llliiLTI', INC
·32 WCUST STREET, GALUPOUS, OHiO 45631 · ·

For Sale: 10.952 Acres on

IIOIIILE HOllE OWNEIIS

Homo-·-···--

Btaullful,1aoo 5q, Fell, 2nd Floor Apanmonl In Hlllorlc

MERCHANOISE

JET

Huge Inventory, Discount Prices.
-On VInyl Skirting, Doors. Wind·
owa, Anchors, Waitr H1atefs,
11.000 BACK Ton Air CondhionPlumbing &amp; Eltctrtcal Par'-• For·
er, 2'lon Call. 1 Line Set, In· . naces &amp; Heat Pumps. Bennetts
tlllle&lt;l, 12.295. $1 ,000 flack,
Mobile Home Suppl • H0· 446·
$1295 Net Pric!e, FrOt Eo!imatoa.
9416 www.orvll.
Coli For Ouoltl On Oilier Sizn.
NEW AND USED 8 EEL Slttl
II You Don't Call Us. we
. 80111 . loall MQI&gt;ilt Homos Our
Baams. Pipe Atbtr For Concrelt;
Angle, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Spoctality t-7•o.«a-saoe HOO·
Grallng For Drains. Drl..waya &amp;
29H)OII8
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Metals
AMAZINIIlY LOW PIIICES
(740~7300
WDLFfTAHitiiiO- iEDiNEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·
~'!!.=.='
ERS· Almost tveryone approved
with $0 down! Low monthly pay·
F-!Gnaneilg---~•·u 11s
menlsll-800-617-3476 exl330.
n
·
f'IIEE Color CafaW
Nice
Used
Fumllule, Col
CliToctaY 1-aoo-812-1310
Anytime, (740)448-100• Or
www.f1).011ario.com
(740)446-1275

m

f.IIOQ-501 •1

~~~~tor~i:-Re~~n~t-::-~

'

tndlapendtnl Herballt Distributor,
Call For .Product Or Opportunity.
·(740)«1-1912

No C - OKI HUll. VA.
FHA. Cal lor liltings.

Chrlstlon couple looking lor
Muse to r1n1. no pets, no kills,
Jim 7--3187.

District. Idea! For Professional
Couple. All Modern Amtnllies. 3
Bedrooms; Specious Living; 1-112
Baths, 'Roar Deck. HVAC. S8001
m·o. Plua Utllilill. Security AfMI
l(ey DepooK. No Pets. AeferordS
Re~ulrad. (740)448-4425 Or
(7.0)4~8 3936

PionoD&lt;. 7~

SO DOWN HOMES

470 W•nted to Rent

490 . .

..-.ez.
RiiPiiii.

'

Courthouse And City' !loildtng.
Nlcaty Otcoraled, 1&gt;/C, 3 Rooms
Bu11111ng By u..tt 441 2nct Avo.
(7.0)«11-fW
.

460

ceptor, Frontline, moreut FREE .
StfiPPIN~ Online
l*tfb.c:on\1~·14Z7 •
Gruotrs e..,.. Toning &amp;
Problems? Need Tuned? Call The

~TIONMOTOIIS
lltipoired, - · &amp; In Slod&lt;. .
Call Rein Evans. t.fi00-537-9528.

540 Miscellaneous
'
f'erc:handlse
Downtown Second Avenue Near

Real Estate General
.

Condition For Stle , Phone
(740)"6-1615, 422 2nd Awnut.

460 Space tor Rent

Leather Sola. Light ·Beige, Exeat·
tent Condition, $300; Small Oak
Roc!&lt;8r. $75. (740)4 ~~ 8857

Now Taking App]tcallons- 35
. Wilt 2 Bedroom Townhou
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage. Trash, $350/Mo., 740·

AnUq1111 •.

120 PO.Ckll WIIChtl tn ,Good

Twin RMrT--. now lii:iitAir'll
appieatit!••l tort BR.
HUD 11CIIid'Md -lor~
and ctllllbled. EOH. (304)875M79.
'

New Haven, one b8droorri fur·
lsl'lad apartmenl, has washer
dryer, no pots, deposit &amp; ret·
North Third, Mlddla~rt· 2 room
eftlcloncy, no .pets; depoill &amp; rtf·
erence. 740-992.0185.•

530

'

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
No Pets, $230/mo Includes Wa·
ter, $1 oo Deposit. (7.a~17

nces, 740-9112.01~5. ·

ptiel. lnduc.tiftO ~arcs. lntet~

2140

car.

Late Modal Almond GE Washer
$100, Other Washers $65 .00
Each. While Roper Dryer, $75.00.
Ot.her Dryara $50.00 And Up
(7~)44e-9086
.
.

tun.ldH.

Mln:hln!llte

Goode

·.EZPElR~.OOM. S... up to One set of likt new bunlt bedi·.
,,.,. lownnouu Apanmtnta. Very well modo ~5. (7.01379- on AU. pol . . . . . _ fnd -

GOOD

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at .VIllage Manor and
Riverside Aparlments In Middle·
port. From $278·$348. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing Dppor-

Mony More. call Now For
Mepsl Owner Financing With
Slight Properly Markup.

.•

.

•

--~

•

•·-• •

'

HDNOAS FROM SiiOO, Pollee I
lrf1]ounds, For Listings call (800)·
.719-~1 t;xt. 3901

.

Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce .............992·2259
. . ,_ Henry E.-Cleland .'..................·.-••••••• 992-2259
·"·'
.
1"'\f She rrI L Hart .. ~ .....- ..... ~ ..................
742~ 2357
;'Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-6191 .

.•

BUSINE$8 OPPORTUNITY· Just lhe business for you. A
radiator repair, welding at different metels, fabricatlng, and
selling of new radiators, welding equipment, steal, and
welding products. Also do maclllne work. A growing buslnltl
with an Increase In Income fiach year. It comea with approx.
2 .5 acres, large t 4 1/2 toot tall building ttiatls abou12 years
o(lj, and is 40 x
Aleo another okler building. Mobile home
hook-up, also. Selling because of heallh reasons. Molll
major companies use our service.

eo.

),

ReaiEstata
Wanted

Real eatatt wanted· l'am lorced
out ' ot my house lor highway lm·
proiHJ,...nt. Looking for old form
houae In ·Meigs County with
acroage, .un 740·797·9303, 740.
• 8112-9132.
.
•
•

E~~~~~ .
I

•
t,

410 Hou.-s tor Rent
Bedrooms

•

Forecloud

Horntl From 11119/Mo., 4% Down,
30 yaar&amp; at 8.!% APR: For LISI·
lnge, 800-319-3323 Ext 1709.

$711,000.00

•

I

''
,.
'.
j

bell1s; 2780 sq.
Fantuuc view, great prhlacy,
~= .pod, 2~.88 _ . • .

·1113

Gallipolis, 752 3rd Avenue, $300

\

·-

mull-

konctsl Nights. (740)448-81114

Month, 3 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Frame
House, Gaa Htat. No Pets, Wee-

Quollly in•tiiiW11
a quiet neighborhood
. Thlo Brick roneh Is
minutes from &amp;hOpping, uerclse
gym and walking path. NEW
carpel, peint, roof, &amp; exterior
doare, neiNty romodeled· kitchen
&amp; balh,
lull bllement and
.. 199.900

~

;·
'
.(

:l ift .

i

kends. Nlghlr. (740)446'6814

I

· f.Jlce 2 ·Bedroom. Relerence &amp;

I

Depoall, No Pets, (304)87H1e2
(~)736·7295

Pilot Program, Renter.&amp; Needtd,
.

'420 Mobile Homn

I

Well we
home with 2
and a batiT. II tl you are loo.klng lor
on acre m/1. Looated lnv. .tm•nt property we
City. this home Is have - r a l to oller. Call
priced to aell. Call to view 'and aak for Allen. '
bUilding

We alao havt Rent•l•

t.
i~,,

5 rooma, 3
1232
sq; ft.;

i

Affordable ' home
river, flat IO\ with 2
, available: 11206

WondtllfW

:..try~~

STREET • A big 2 slotY home wlth 3 to 4
bedrooms. dining room, 1'/• baths, enclosed porch and
sitting on a nlce.IOI. Has an upstairs and dawnstalrs heating
and cooling system. There ls a 3/4 basement and a nice
sitting porch . Home has french
a
etc.
·
•

f

''

i¥llh prMicy 1201

Before shopping for your Ne~- Addre~s.~. stop by ours: .

new avollebte. New 2 becl-m
1760 sq. opart11111nta wllh IMinlral
•

on the edge or htll and air. II yau'ra
ror
more lntenlltd call and atk
lnlo·rtnatlon Ask for 15012.
Allan.

f

7 rooma, 3 BAa, f 1/2
balhil; ,_sq. ft.; $13&lt;1,800
. lmmeculate eonrlillor1, groat
n~lghborhi&gt;Od,
convenient.
·location. 1121

Pilot Program .Ranlors Needed. ·

Two bedroom 1rillier on Loading
Creek Ad~ . $300 per month plus
deposit, call740·992·6926 .

.

..

.Jott A. Moor-Bro.ker 441·1818 .
. Sarah L. Evana-Moore, 8roker'441.:1818
Pa.trlcla Haya· 448-3884 .caf&gt;!l Caaey-245·9430

...l

Houae, Gas Heat, No Peta, Wea-

House
Trailer
For
Rent
Balow Gallipolis Locks On Stale
. Route 7 South . (~401"1-0619

.

~

' . .-,...,:..

I·•

Golllpolis, 7M 3rd Ave., $180
Month , 1· BR, I Bath, Frame

'

.

. ...,

.'

Four Room House, 52 Oliva

no pels, 7.0·992·5858.

STEWART HOLLOW RD • A home wUh 2 bedroa11JS. and 1
1/2 baths up and the same downstairs. Could be a lingle
family or live ln one and rent the other. Home is· about 18
years old and has stucco sheeting and brick on !he elltllrior• .

74&lt;1)-4&lt;&amp;.6-00ll)8 7 40-44l·llll
www.ev'ana-moore.com
"S.I'I'InB Southem O!afo For O~~e~ A Quar:ter Cenru,-"

l,.

S~•r. phone f7•0l..e-3945

2 bedrOQm· mobile nome tor rent,

'·

r

4 Bedroom House, 2 Bath House
For Atnl, f7.a)245-11128

14x80. 2 Bedroom. C/A, All Elec·
lric, WID. On 2i8, No Pell, Roltr·
once $200 Deposit (7.0)256·
1044 . .
.

a

I

•

'
~

(740)~

tor Rent

Fo"""rl1 BlaeWtwn R•""Y

:

· 3 BA: 2 bath home rentstor.$8001
lifO. and 3 BR, 1 balh·homo rente
lor $550/ mo.'CioH to town. Rettrances end deposll requlrod.
Wiseman Real £stale, Inc.

•

•~.
''.,
,.'

I
'J

Z.3 bedroom, one balhroorn on S. '
:!ild Avenue, Middleport, Can t888-798-3779, Ilk lor JUlio. '

304-736·7295.

.

Gllj~pt&gt;lie,· Ohio 45631-0994

HF NTAL ,,

1 -3

.·

MIDDLEPORT • A ian brick home thatiTas 2 stories, 811 attic,
and a 314 basement. Thera Ia 4 bedrooms, nice cabinets In
kitchen, dining room and 1 1/~ baths. 3
pretty
rnrepllaci1s a pretty etalrway and a lror1t and side

www .wisemanrealestate.com
David Wittman, GAl, CRS Broker 4i8 8555.· •
C•rolyn W•ech,.GRI - 441·1007 ·sonny Garnes
Robert Bruce 448 0821 .Rita Wittman

on 3.08 acres

40) 446·3'644

DOTTIE· TURNER, Broker........;..... ;...........lll2-llt2
JERRY SPRADLING ................ :................. 941-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLINO ...........: ...............Mt-2131

' Bl!n'V JO COLLINS ....................i,, ............ Mt-2041·
JIFFERI ......................................eta-3011

•

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I

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'•

.

�·r-&gt;'

' - . . 6notl
. ..-

~~~~.:t!:!!-;;•;e;llti~·u~l:=.::~::--;
~ • ~~~ •o.HipOia. 0111o • Point PIMunt. wv·
"' Sundlly, Apr111, 2001 ..
-~
• i lor ....
. . . .H
_
'"'""~Ap=•=b••=n:ta~~~:§.§§~::=:;·~~==:::·-:-===;===:==i"§~~~~
- for1
Rent 0
.44..
·
510 Houllhold
540 Mltce111neous
MltcellanaOUS
560 PetJ lor Sale
for Rent

!lilly .... Cltln -

111110, 3
ledrocim
Cer1nl
Air.
Fronl
flttt Time Aent•CI . Nltr- Ci-,·

..,.,. II fl. wide S.H. por mon.
Only 1270. per mon. can now 1·
-1-1717.
.. .
•
New 'double wide 3 br. :t. ba .
lt98.0Q dOwn only 1295. per
mort catnolr 1-tOHI1-fiTT7.

School t•251mo. Water/ Tr11h
Included, Plol OOpoolt (Good U&gt;catiln) (740)2511-IIN

Small 2 ~ Trailer In Traitor
Reflrenee &amp; Deposft
Atqui&lt;ld. (740~1104

Pork,

Apar bnenta

440

tor Rent

Now ~ 1•x70 S16,9H.OD
3 Bedroom· 2 Bath. 1·877-777·
4170

·1 and 2 bedroom eponmtnta, lur·
nlshed and unfurnlthecl, HCUrity

Flet!WOOCI 16180, 3 llf/2 bll.
only $111V.ae por month. Call lor

4tposll required, no pers , 740·
1192·2218.

· 740-885'&lt;4317.
New
"Fleetwood,

18x80 ,

I19,9H.OO, 311tdn&gt;om, 2 Bath, 1·
177-m-4110.

New fleltwOOd, ttarn btclroom,
two both, $855 d~wn, $189 .58
.. · Cll7.t0-992-2187.

One.beclrqom, ln&amp;erlor his been
r••&lt; ~ ""· 14995, 1500 down. wll
lil)atlee. 740-9112-2i87.

-oom

Trailer Willi Ctn~al Hill And Air,
1-112 llaflt. 3
And Mote.

Kerosene Hutet

-. (740~18117

And Wea ..

1 Btdroom At!'artment, Rtlrigera·
lor, Range, AIC tnetu ...d. $289
Plus Deposit &amp; Rtlortnce. HUD
Appnr.oed. (7ltp)"t-t519
1 Ballroom Apt Clote to Waf·
Mart. $375 poi month. AH udlillft
includtd. (740)2'5-5555
1 8tdroom Apartment For Rent In
Rio Grandt. Walking Dts1anet To
College. All Utllltiaa Paid,, 10%
Discount On First MonlhS Atnl
(740)2'5-51.00 .
2· 1 Bedroom Apartment, Close
To Schools &amp; S1orss. Prlwte Enrrenco Portially Firfnllhtd, UtilitieS
Paid ; (3~•1875·2117 0.JlOiit

.
f.nue,. 1 Bedroom

S250.Atnl~-

330 Farmt for Sa.ltt
M ·Acrt Farm For Sail By OWnsr
Wlh 1SOQ Sq,Fttl, 3 -00111, I·

•eo

Ftrai

Apartments,

$2fl6 • Damage

Deposit. Rererences Requlred,
(740. .531 .

112 Bat~ Homo Wllh lila~ Trim,
And Lorge KHChtn. Hal A Large
Garage And Barn \'lith •D• Till·
attle Acres. Excellent Location
Hoar · Rio . Grilndo. llsklng
$129,900. (740)380~259 Evon·
lr1ga
•

IEAUnFUL APARTMENTS AT
IUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
ION ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive trom 1297 IO $3113. Walk IO
shop &amp; movlea . Call H0·••8·
2568. Equal Housing Oppor1ul1i!y.

Farm Hou... lltautilulty Remold·
td, 2963 Square Foot 17 Atres.
Pond, In-ground Pool, Stvwral

Chrloty's Family Living, 33140
New Lima Ad.. Rutland, Ohio, 740742·7•03. Apartment, home and
trailer rentals. CommerCial store·

lilarns. Garage, Fruit Treea, Close
ll&gt;' Holzer.
4230

1215,000. (740)&lt;44.

fronts avallible for lease. Vlcan·
ciea·now.

For rani- ona bedroom

340

Buslnett.and
. Buildings

Established Fino T·shlrt And
graphic Shop, Includes All Equipment, Clients And Office Trtller
(~)458-1926

350 Lots &amp; Acreage13 Acres With Beaulltul Lake
VIew · Sills $5();000'. . ,, Acree
With Large Lake, Mobile Home
With' Add On $79,500. Gallla
Coun1Y On Blacktop Road,
(740)388-8678

. 37·1/2 Acres Of Bottom ·land~
• . ~~~~~~dhl\1 Road· Realtor

4:11 Acres Neat lntei'section Of

Watson Road
Oulit, Private
Woods, ~oual
!0 Minutes

And Rodney Pika . With Sam, Creek "
Highway Acce,s.
·From Hospll 0 1,
Pharmacy, Bank, Grocery, Theator, Etc. $40,000 (304)875·4222
After Bpm Weekdays

I

l
!

BRUNER LAND

.

. {740)441·14112 .

Qollle (lo,• Vtr'f NIOe, LMI,
Clean Lola On KliT Rd.. 8 ACrH
121.000 Or s wil!l Barna
$31,000, 8coric Homt Sliol. RIO
Grendt, 10 Aeres With Pond
125,000 Or 8 A&lt;:rlt 119,000.
C'*hlre, 2• Acres With Barns +
. c""" 129,900. 8 Acres II 1,500
· Or 281\i:l'es $26,5001 BUrnt Run
Rood, t7 Acres St9,000.1Vc&lt;&gt;on
Lake, tO Acres $11,9001
Mtlgt CO.• Tupper P~lnS·
SR8111 , Fioh In Shade Creek. 5
Acres, $12,500, 7 AcrH Wl111
Pole Bam. S23,all0 or 31 127,900. Carr Ad, 12 Acrel
$21,000. ·Or 16 Acreo $23.000.
DanvUie, NIOe Wooded 5 AcrH
$13,500. Aulland, 9 Ai:rH $85001

furniSnad
aparl-.nlln Middleport, call7.t0992·5231.
. Furnished 2 &amp; 3 R~m Apart·
menll, Clean, No Pets. No Smok·
lng. Rt!erences &amp; Deposit Required. Ullllllt1 Furnished.
(740)446-1519
Gallia Manor Apartments, Now
Accepting Appllcallono For 1 BR.
HUD, S~bsldlzed Apartments For
Elderly And Handicapped. Equal
Housing Opportunity. (740)446-

4e311

.

.

2

Very Spacloua. 2 Badrooms
F1ocn. CA,I 112 - Baby
· F1A1y
,.,..,, Adult .Pool
Pool
P,, tlo, Start $385/Mo. No Ptla:
~.. PIUI Security llepoall R...
quored, Days: 740·4•8·3U1 ;
Evtnlngo: 740·317· 05112 740.

a

AA-..ntnt

·

446-0008.

.

Al\i'M Settd Place Now Accepilnd '
Appllcallons tor 1 Bedroom Hud
Subsided Apartment for Elderly
and Disabled, EOE. (304)882·
~121 Or (304)882-3274

Ga...-,
Buy or s•ll. Al•erlne Antiquta,
1124 East Main oo SA 12• E. Pomeroy. 740-992·2526 or 7.0.992·

1539. AIIIG

Moore.--

Equipment

A•ntot. Dozer,
Equipment
Baokhoe; Bobcat, Farm Tractor
And EqulponorL (740)"1 ~19

For Leau

Hiweehold

510

AU1IlS . . Pollco ImpOunds &amp; llaposl .

Oak Baby Bod. Changing Tobie.
Infant Cor Seal, 1111 500 Scra.•·Wheolor, H500; 91 Honda
SOOEX •·Wh~ter, $2Dil0 PBO
(740)+11-1348

Toyolea, Chtv)'s, " - '
cau 1or u~~~ngs,
1·800-451-0500
09817

Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
2 Grave. LOll, In Gardens 01

Pl&gt;r)y. (740~11)6

ssoo.oo

.P-

RecOnditioned

Washers, Dryers. RanQes, Refri·
gratofl, Up To .8 0 Days Guar·
ant.eedl We sen New Mayteg Ap-·
pllances. FTench C.lly Maytag,
7•1).448.7795. "
'
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.
For Sale:.Recondltloned wash·
era, dryers and refrigerators.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407
Jacksoo Avenue. (304)875-,7388.

Deep

Gibson Chestl'nNI
Freeze.
Holds 300 lbs. Purchased New
$275, Will tali $125. (740)3689946
USED

Ext. 9818

Amish Buggy And Miniature

Goods
Appliances:

en

Friendly Ridge Ad, Crown City
(7.a)3118-0118-4 or (74013118-9336

Compulero: WE. FINANCE DELL
COMPUTERS! Even with 1111
than perlecl cradlll 1·8'00·~77·
9018. COde ACI4 www.. omcaolu·
tlon.com

Nice WOOded LO! On Floule 588,
Rodney (Unrestricted) 112.000
(7.0)24~
•

RESIDENTIAL HOllE OWNERS
(&gt;

TapPan HI .Effieiancy 90% Gas
Furnaces. 011 Furnace&amp;. 12 seer
llelil Pump &amp; Air Condlilonlng
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennello Heiit~g &amp; Cooling. 1·
800-872-5967 ,._.orvli.comlblnneu
·

DtRECTV free lnatallalion, $200
cash back,

soo:2-.

biYt I Ht:"tt~TY Of

.

WallrllrApoclal: 3/'l ·zoo PSI
$21.95 Per 100; 1" 200 PSI$37.00 Per 100; All Bra11 Com·
pr...lon Flntngs In SiOdc
RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackaon,CHUO. 1~537-95:t.B .

over twen-

ty varlellu or Oregon Dahlias 10
your friends, family, ~urselr. Visit
us Ohttpilwww.oregon&lt;!ahlia.com

540

u...:Modile

So- t3.1ll5. Now ~ l wmaoe 2000. Ia~ capacillas.
mort options. Ma,ufacturer of

UWI!IIKI, edgers and okiddtis.
NORWOOD I NDU~TRIES 2~2
Sonwi1 DriYt. ~. NY t•225.
FREE Information 1·100-578·

1313ExT.20CH.I
Singer sewi ng machine with atl
Oilllona; Undtfwood' fypewrHtr,
perfect shape: TV &amp; stand with
tamp ;-- large owl Jigttt ; saveral
blankets &amp; quill&amp;; older boys bi·
cycle. like ·"AW; mora items .\OO
numefous 10 Ttst. Calt Dwight Looan. 740·992·5107 afiernoons or

ae..me ·~·

CFA twmolayon Kittons. 1 - •
Old. (740~3188
oet.ono's Groom 511op, ~ning
All
7~1 ·11102.

Dog-.

&lt;WI
And' """'
·
ing Hop
~ Clob
&amp;ale.i'tga.
Hey,Squaro
And--(7-40]'91

Housobroluln $200 , (740)3792140

....

"•

UKC Walker co'Onhound pups. "

~

Champion llflol l;IUb Pig Sate,

111

· •

•....

.8anows And !,lila. For Mono tnlo,
Call,llil:ll Starr (740)1itl8.:t.5t5

~

.. c:l"'fiotr 11!11• lor Sale. Born In Gall~
r· Cqunty,

Soli

.

-·

(New) 840 New Holland Not
Wrap- Bale Command-. Wide
Sweep· 4x5 Rolls, Cosl S11.500
550
Building
Soli $13.500; AIC 333 4 Row No
Supplln
Till corn Planter. Ezcolenl Cond"
lion. $3,000 ' 'Andy SigiOf,
Block, brick. sewer pipes. wind · · (304)937-2018
ows. lln181s, ere. Claude Winters.
Rio Grande, OH' Call 7•0·245· .,993 Ford 5610, 1 owner. BoUght
5121.
New, 500 hours original. !ft. BuSh
f!0911000. (740):)88-9946
Sloat Buildings, New Musi Sell. ·
JO 318 ·50' Deck , Hydrostatic
40x60•12 Was $17,500, Now
OriOJ$, Hydraulic Uft. Power Steer· $10,971;
50x100x16" Was
Now
$19,990;
ing, 18HP ONAN
$2700
· $31,500,
70x150xt6 Was $59,990, Now· (304)675·8069·
$42,990 ;
80x200x16
Was
JOhn Deere 4020. 378 V·6 Cum$94.500 . 'Now $59 .990. 1-800·
mins. 120 hp $6000 (740)367 406-5126 •
7787
.

·580

Peta for Sale

11 Week Old Black Lab, first
Shots. $75 (740)448:-7054 '
3 blue heeler puppies, trrit thOis•
and wormed, call740·742·1103

atter5pm.

Reglsllred Toblano Choit1nu1
Slallton· Ouarltr Horoel Arabian
p . - Color Proctueer. (304)8757071

.

~

640

.,
.~! ·

GOOd Mllld tlay For Sale, Dtla·
no Jacl1ton Farrn (~)f75·11~
(740)4-48-11 04

..

Hay for sata oquara baln, S1.25

1950'S &amp;. 1960's 45, 33 RPM
ReCOrds'.' OJ. Store
Stock ,
Collections (937)675'-2930' Alter
6:00pm
·
colter~

(7.0)4~8 ~344

.•

1 milt on IU N. 304-815-48811

Hoy For Salt, $10 Round Bale,
$1.25 Square Sole. Slrlnga ' In
Good~- f740)4ol6-f185 .

.

; ::

.,~.'

&amp; pts.,

740-667·3493.
,
.

Hay &amp; Grain

200 Boln 01 Good Clean Gross
Hay, Never Wet, Sf.OO Per Bale

n,

620 .Wanted
to Buy
.
.

gOod mold bOards,

Spring FaPr Cllt Sale, Stlurllay
Aprll71h. 1:00pm, Collie Acctpt·
td After ~m On Friday. Hauling
llvallablo. All Conalgnmen11
Welcome. .
(7.0)5112-2322
(740--1

.•

3 bonom. 3 point ploW. m.ust have

AKC miniature Pinscher puppies,
block &amp; lan, 740.742.0310.

~

1

*"'

11190 GEO Pllsm, 4 &lt;lr, 5 sp.,
tm cas..Ita, new Urea. plus dis·
lribu10r, bralula, timing bttt,

1•o-

9112,2558,

1991 Grand Pli• STE. 3.1 Multf.

pon, Runs GOOd, 00 TransmisWorks

Good,

Wrecked, Whole . Car

(140)398-826,11

.

Chevys, FordS, &amp; more. For liSt·
1ngs , eatt rtOw! 1.. 800· 71$-3001
exLA010.

•HIIy lllrlghl WIN Tit S.., '!Nr

REAL ESTATE:
0

850 Sled &amp; Fertlllzllr.

St•ee 1943

Tobacco Plants For Salt. Call
(1.0)&lt;44-7..:1

....

-If

Tobacco Plants- Order Now To
Guarenlot Earty' Spring P~ntingo.
Increase Allotments Mean Extra
Planll. Thank· You For Your Bual·
nees. Call Danny Dewh.ursl·
Leave Mes11ge (304)885·37•0
Or 1304)995-371111

li

1

·"'

:1;

• .jj

')

Main s - t Fum~...
(3041875-1422 .
515 Main Strett, Point P!ea~r

living e~.

. " New &amp; Used Furnttlrre
New 2 Pteca llvlngroom Suites.
S399: Buy, s.n. Trade.
..

or verv

93 Oodll'l OekoUt . Runs Orear,
11800 080. 1179 GMC J"'-1'.

2 · balhl,
large FR/rea. roam In ghe
b-ment, 2 car garage,
·lovely rront porcll &amp; back deck
on lhe large level lot. Priced
at St 79,800. Cell Carolyn
tOday for your private vlft({ng.

-

.

OFFICE

1998 Ford Explore&lt;, 2 Door' 5po!t,
5 Spted, 63,000 Mi~s . $10,500
(740)379-2787

992.-2259

8&lt;1 N issen , ••• P ick~up, $-950
080 (~)516-9917

89 Ad Ford Bronco· II, Excellent
Conditio~'~, cau For More lnlorma·
tion (740)367- 7672

$500 .

.

eonwr-.

Cln

a.

730 Van• &amp; 4-WDt ·
Whaelcltair Lilt, 318, V-8 Engine.
Good Condition. $3,000 OBQ
(304)6~2238
.

•wo.

1989 Ford F·2SO
4 original
rims. sll"tng w4ndows~ new wide
"""" tires, """"· good !rude, 7407.2-8200.
.
.
1989 Ford Higb Top ConW4H'fion

wan, TVIVCA , newer Urn. dual

•

fuel tanks. towing package, rear
air, more. Kelly Bluebook $8265, .
askin g 55 200 OBO, 740· 7•2·
82011
•
.

conllnued an 85

s-

IIIV2 Plymouth Voyager S.E .. PI
W, V·8. 3.0. AIC, Cruise, exee~
lent Condition, $3500 17•0)2455946 Aller 5pm. •
..
1892 Pontiac Boftnieville SSE
Sunroof,
Loaded,
$4800,
(30.)875· 2583,
Aller
4pni ·
(304)675-3324
1993 Cadillac Eldorado. 17,000
Excellent Condllion (304)675·
5929 Or (~)875-6581

..

CHESTER • Brick
. COzy fireplace .
With gae togs.
spa~iaus .. iii'llliis,
bedrooms• . 1 'I• baths, finished attached
garage 20lc25 pon:h, 32x12 storage building
and lilted. Yard landtcaped. This home Is in
move In condition with many qualily features.
A must see Wyou want the best!
.
ASKING $120,000.

r~ in excelent

I

••

.·

I:

205 Nftrth S&lt;acor1a A,,•.
.

Middleport, OH

South Fourtll- A 1112 stotY rrame home with 3 bedrooms,
11/2 beth, dining room, and kitchen. Has a nice gu log

1993'Dodgo Shadow £5 90,000
Miles, 3.0 V-6, 5-spetd, loaded,
$3350- Like New (304)675;8069

u ..

fil'l!Piace, arched doorways, open feel baiW8eff kitchen arid
dining room, a front and back parch, with a SIJ!al 1lid8
Also has a one car
with a
·
$415,011.110

1994 Corsica, Loaded. Like New,
t3.395, 1994 &amp; 1993 Grand Am,
V·6, $3.895, 1996 Ranger, 70K,
$3,795, 1994 S·IO, $3,495, 0111·
era In Stock, Trade·lns Accopted. COOK MOTI)RS (7.0)U8·
0103
199• Dodge Sh6dow, Good Con·
dillon, 115,000 mlltl, $2600,
Smith Electric Gullar. S1000, cell
pllone (304)617.-o978 ·

POMEROY .COUld be omce IPICf, c&lt;iuld be a
home, you decide. SIYin roomt, 2+ bathe
a main 111'1411, 2 car garage, Could be a real·
thOw ~. Out ollloo!l ASKING . . .,000

cln

LONG IO'ITOM- New log cabin with bath &amp;
kitchen· area. locatell on Curtla Hollow
Road In Malge Paunty. Juat 314 mlla from
Forked Run State Pllk where there Ia great
flahlngl Only 4 mil• from the '!Dhlo River.
Adjacent It over 200 icrtl or·publlc hunUng,

IUCh D tqUirrel, dMr and turkey.

ASKING t38,8CICI.

. 1895 Ford Tauruo SHO, green
with gray leath•r lntarlor, power
sunroof, 5 speed, amlfm/CD, air,
740-948-2&amp;44.

s.ooo.

1995 Lincoln Conllnenrat, Low
Mileage, 88,000 Mlltl, $9,100
(7.0)«1-1309
1996 Geo Me~ l.SI, 4 cyl .. auto,
AC, new -ttrts. szsoo, (304)882·
2234
1997 Olds Achieve, 61.000 miles,
Book Value $7900,
$1900.

MAIN STREET· A two ltotY home with a large foyer, dlrilng
room. ·nvlng room. kitchen, and a bath dawnalalre, and 3
bedrooma upstairs, Has a full basement with a newer
furnace and ho1 water heater. A b&amp;autllu~ vlew of·1ha Ohio
River.
r
$25,000.00

IR 1:Z.i • MAPLE GROVE IUIDMIION •
OHIO RIVER FFIONTAGE • Approximately 2
acre lola • 10 • to choose from. Great
camping 1011. Celt today for more detalli.
.
ASKING $20,000.

.'
NEW USTING ·Are you tlred of paylng rent? Then STOPI This affordable B •¥¥''"'
bedroom home has many new repairs and Is ·so affordable that your payment
cheaper than rent• Home sits on a level double tot on maln route. Easy access

_

Lot

UIMble

LANGSVII:LE • Comer IQI on State Roula· t 24 that Is almael
80 acre. Big beauilrut yard and an alder mobile home with 2
bedrooms, 1 beth, equlpr.l k~chen, and rear deck. Alaa has
a detached garage for 2'/•l:ars.
$23,000.00

.-..
~~

RAINBOW RIDGE- Always wanted a farm? Here Is approx.
95 acres of moeUy woods, ~lays nice. Has about 10 to 15
acres tillable, Has a aeptlc_ WllllJI!Ich. TPC water available,
Has a road through the middle Of the property. Hu eome
caves, and a 40x58 roundatlon already poured wfth some
aide walls up far enough to be undarpinnlng ·far a RIOliile.
))ome. A mult-I
....000.00

.,

-

'·'

••

FOI!ftd

••

large pole bern with 112 bllh;
framed hOUM that nMda
~lehed. Yet. lhert Ia work tD
be done here, but n It were
flnlehed, ~ would · bf priced
higher. P~Cid at $36,000

ASKING

. ...' -.

Jo
-.

"' Herw... apjwox. 1.1 acrea wlh

-

91 Dodge DureftgO SLT, Chill
PoppOr Red, 360 Engine, Tow
Pactage, PS, PW, COl CU11110,
$17,500 (304,.75· 5815 Of
(304)«1-711'29

1998 Jtmmy SL S. Low Miles,
Mocha Brown, $15,200 (740)446-"
8657

can- around

thle ftdor pion hu 3·4 BAs, 2
1/2 bathe, formal LA and DR,
flret t1oor mutw .euHe, FA
and second ftoor play room
for kldt. Additionally, run
unftnlehed bueinent with till
ceilings for .more tlvlg apace.
5 acre lot. Cl011 to halpllal. 4
yrs old. $288,800 I2Z1
Potential

080. ·

1979 DOdga Van Willi Hydraulic
19!18 DOdge ••~ . 318 5 Speed,
50.000 Mileo $16.000 Call
(740)379-2374 Alter 6:00pm

en over·elzelf CUllOm kllchtn,

FR

$800

Runs
Good,
' (7-40}!"' 9981

TflANSPORTATION

L.qcatic!l, Great U1llllyll 1
etory pl18 home Dll1n over

3300 sq. ' tt

1!193

1997 Bla&lt;:k 2WO Ram SLT Shorl
Bed , 12.000 Miles. New Tires, ·
Bed Mat. And COver. Excellent
Condition. $13,500 . Call After
6pm. (740)441- 1651
.

1 ttl Chrysler Sebring, Below
- . (740)448-21011
'Round Dell..ry I Volume Dll·
count Avatlablo. Heritage Farm.
. (304)8711-11724.

720 Truc::b for

condilion, air conditioned, call
7-tQ. 7-42-2271.

BOdy

.

720 Trucks tor Sale
5speed,
num wheels. bed liner. sliding
back window, amlfm cassette•
high mileage. hi· way. miles, A- 1

19ae Jttp Cherokee, 5·Speed,
4 .0 Lllor, 8-Cyl., Great Shape,
Runs Greal, 12300 OBO, 1993
Ford Aeroatar van. Ul&lt;t Ne!r. Ex·
Collen! c;ondllion $2900 OBO
.
(740!«8-364i Loaw !!n·ago

Hay For Salt, 45 Round Bolts,
And 250 . Squafo Sales. Call ' 1994 Ford Tempo, 51,000 m11t1, •
(740)441'-0111 or . (740)441· door/ whitt, power door locks/
7843 ,.,.,,8:00pm.
wlndowa. ctrivefl 1111, sir, ~ru111,
catl7.t0-lt2+WI.
.

:"'r

stil~.ores. Hondas.

IM7 - Till,Cenlury
limilerl,
-·
CfUIIO,
PW, POL,
nww tires
llrull. brllUf. $1400, (:i0-t)882:
2ZM

1992 Oldsmobile Cutlass Su·
preme
Fuly Recoriditioned And Engine Replaced .'
Power Everytl'llng . White Witl'l
Blaclc TOll. Really Nice Car. Price
Reduced For Oolck Sale. SS.95.
Can Bt
AI. A&amp;A Auto Detail
On Lower 4th Avenue. Call
(7401••1~177 Or (7•0)4461155
.

Outtn'a Hor..ahoolng BWFA
COr1ltierl (740)2511-1330

610 Farm Equipment

Dt,.ndoble, ·
{7.0)2f5-lii1GI

Fair Plgo, Born In Maaor1 ~
Certified Hint. l!elt!IY For plclwp.
17.5.00 Each. Cal (3o4)518-:t.5111 •

1248

(7.0)«1~19

· CARS FROM 5500 · Police '"''

t poundS &amp; laa

sion,,

.

PGint Pleasant, wv

720 .. Trucks for Sale

710 Autos for Sale

IPHd , Vrtry

pigs rN&lt;Iy to go; butdltring
hogS, 230-2501, 740-949-2017 Of

Quality Blade Angua Bulla, 1000.
1200 Lba, Cummlnga, Angus
Farms, Soulhaldla WY (301)875-

&amp; LIVESTOCK

"bung Trots, $5.00 'each. $7 .00
Each Dttiverect With Minimum 01
5
Drdera, Dogwood, Oak,
Chao.... (~)895-3408
.

or

'382

7-21011.

Sate

For

f7~)118

(740)«1~968

Fa~

Mollohan .Carpel, 2b2 Clark
Cha1101 Ad, Porter, OH. Fret E!ll·
matte, Euy Flnanelng or 90 days ·
same 11 cash. Vlaa, Mastarc;ard
Acpepled, (740)446·7444 or 1·
Bn·830·9182

.

Faytllt
Co.
Fairgrounds,
waahlnglon Counhouae FJ iday
April 8111 At 7pm . tiD Hoard Of

· Vegetables

Top

t03

Breaking, Training &amp; Boarding
Horstl. (301)87G-05tf LNVO
I 'I ago (7.0)'48-32112

.,39,

ranges. Skaggs Appliances, 78
Vloe S1ret1, Call 740·446-7398, ·
fo1186-81JI.0128.

New And Used Furniture Store
Below Holiday Inn, Kanaugs. We
Sell Grave Monuments And
Vases. (740)..114782

"*·

Weokl Old.
Black! Tan. 4
Fema.tes. 3 Males. $50 E:6ch
(740)446-3576

temales, 3 males, shots up to
date. most blanket oacts. mother
·&amp; father excenent 1)10Ddlines and
tree doos. S100 each, 740·985-

~OiforSale

Polrlfi ~~~;-;~~~~t~~~
Options,

4 .'Nor
· Old ..
Ouarter
_ ~-~~
' -· 1Horu

On-(7~
4 ....., 111*1 lil;"9too 10
7-~12$.

full Blooded Ooberl"!''aM. ro

Reglstt;ed White Pomertnian
Male, Neutered •• All Shots.

• Middf1110011• &lt;WIIpolis, Ohio •
710

·-

Sltel Building&amp;, New M~ol Stll.
3D••Dx12 was $10,200 now
SU90. •ox60x12 was $16 ,400 580
FQJits &amp;
nolfl' $10,971 . 501100k16 was
$27,590 now $19,990: 601200x16
wos $58,760 now $42,990. 1-800- DELICIOUS IDAHO ORGANlC
40trS126.
·
. . YELLOW POTATOES. Baker!
and Steamers awailable. $42.00
SUN'SAND'SURF While saMy.
per .tO lb. box plus shipp fng. To
beaches. fabulous sunselsl De- order Call loll free 1 - 866 ~ 925·
luat roomsl1ci1Chone- &amp; balco·
5030 or hllp//www.kelleymlorgannilS overiOCiklng the guH of Mtal·
lelannl.com
·
co. laland Inn Beach Resort,
· Treasure Island, FLA. 800·2•1· I
eeao www.lalandlnoresortcom.
FARr11 SUPPLlES
-St~.

1,2oo'l

Real

APPLIANCES

washers, dryers. refrigerators,

Allen C. Wood, Broker· 448-4523
· Ken Morgan, Broker • 446,0971 ·
·
Jeanette Moore,· 256-1745
Patricia Rilss ~
.
740 448 1081
. ..;,
!!!!I.

Looking To Buy A New Home?
·Don't Have Land? Wo Colli Hurry
Onl}i 10 l.t&gt;ll L.aft. 304-736-72115.

Chrlatos, 2 Burial Vaults· Call
COiltCl (7.0)888 81108-

Commercial Sewing Maehlfla.
Heavy DI!IY. eact~,.;t Shape, can
Judy (304)875·236!1 8am-•pm
Monday· Friday

WOOD
llliiLTI', INC
·32 WCUST STREET, GALUPOUS, OHiO 45631 · ·

For Sale: 10.952 Acres on

IIOIIILE HOllE OWNEIIS

Homo-·-···--

Btaullful,1aoo 5q, Fell, 2nd Floor Apanmonl In Hlllorlc

MERCHANOISE

JET

Huge Inventory, Discount Prices.
-On VInyl Skirting, Doors. Wind·
owa, Anchors, Waitr H1atefs,
11.000 BACK Ton Air CondhionPlumbing &amp; Eltctrtcal Par'-• For·
er, 2'lon Call. 1 Line Set, In· . naces &amp; Heat Pumps. Bennetts
tlllle&lt;l, 12.295. $1 ,000 flack,
Mobile Home Suppl • H0· 446·
$1295 Net Pric!e, FrOt Eo!imatoa.
9416 www.orvll.
Coli For Ouoltl On Oilier Sizn.
NEW AND USED 8 EEL Slttl
II You Don't Call Us. we
. 80111 . loall MQI&gt;ilt Homos Our
Baams. Pipe Atbtr For Concrelt;
Angle, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Spoctality t-7•o.«a-saoe HOO·
Grallng For Drains. Drl..waya &amp;
29H)OII8
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Metals
AMAZINIIlY LOW PIIICES
(740~7300
WDLFfTAHitiiiO- iEDiNEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·
~'!!.=.='
ERS· Almost tveryone approved
with $0 down! Low monthly pay·
F-!Gnaneilg---~•·u 11s
menlsll-800-617-3476 exl330.
n
·
f'IIEE Color CafaW
Nice
Used
Fumllule, Col
CliToctaY 1-aoo-812-1310
Anytime, (740)448-100• Or
www.f1).011ario.com
(740)446-1275

m

f.IIOQ-501 •1

~~~~tor~i:-Re~~n~t-::-~

'

tndlapendtnl Herballt Distributor,
Call For .Product Or Opportunity.
·(740)«1-1912

No C - OKI HUll. VA.
FHA. Cal lor liltings.

Chrlstlon couple looking lor
Muse to r1n1. no pets, no kills,
Jim 7--3187.

District. Idea! For Professional
Couple. All Modern Amtnllies. 3
Bedrooms; Specious Living; 1-112
Baths, 'Roar Deck. HVAC. S8001
m·o. Plua Utllilill. Security AfMI
l(ey DepooK. No Pets. AeferordS
Re~ulrad. (740)448-4425 Or
(7.0)4~8 3936

PionoD&lt;. 7~

SO DOWN HOMES

470 W•nted to Rent

490 . .

..-.ez.
RiiPiiii.

'

Courthouse And City' !loildtng.
Nlcaty Otcoraled, 1&gt;/C, 3 Rooms
Bu11111ng By u..tt 441 2nct Avo.
(7.0)«11-fW
.

460

ceptor, Frontline, moreut FREE .
StfiPPIN~ Online
l*tfb.c:on\1~·14Z7 •
Gruotrs e..,.. Toning &amp;
Problems? Need Tuned? Call The

~TIONMOTOIIS
lltipoired, - · &amp; In Slod&lt;. .
Call Rein Evans. t.fi00-537-9528.

540 Miscellaneous
'
f'erc:handlse
Downtown Second Avenue Near

Real Estate General
.

Condition For Stle , Phone
(740)"6-1615, 422 2nd Awnut.

460 Space tor Rent

Leather Sola. Light ·Beige, Exeat·
tent Condition, $300; Small Oak
Roc!&lt;8r. $75. (740)4 ~~ 8857

Now Taking App]tcallons- 35
. Wilt 2 Bedroom Townhou
Apartments, Includes Water
Sewage. Trash, $350/Mo., 740·

AnUq1111 •.

120 PO.Ckll WIIChtl tn ,Good

Twin RMrT--. now lii:iitAir'll
appieatit!••l tort BR.
HUD 11CIIid'Md -lor~
and ctllllbled. EOH. (304)875M79.
'

New Haven, one b8droorri fur·
lsl'lad apartmenl, has washer
dryer, no pots, deposit &amp; ret·
North Third, Mlddla~rt· 2 room
eftlcloncy, no .pets; depoill &amp; rtf·
erence. 740-992.0185.•

530

'

Modern 1 Bedroom Apartment,
No Pets, $230/mo Includes Wa·
ter, $1 oo Deposit. (7.a~17

nces, 740-9112.01~5. ·

ptiel. lnduc.tiftO ~arcs. lntet~

2140

car.

Late Modal Almond GE Washer
$100, Other Washers $65 .00
Each. While Roper Dryer, $75.00.
Ot.her Dryara $50.00 And Up
(7~)44e-9086
.
.

tun.ldH.

Mln:hln!llte

Goode

·.EZPElR~.OOM. S... up to One set of likt new bunlt bedi·.
,,.,. lownnouu Apanmtnta. Very well modo ~5. (7.01379- on AU. pol . . . . . _ fnd -

GOOD

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at .VIllage Manor and
Riverside Aparlments In Middle·
port. From $278·$348. Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing Dppor-

Mony More. call Now For
Mepsl Owner Financing With
Slight Properly Markup.

.•

.

•

--~

•

•·-• •

'

HDNOAS FROM SiiOO, Pollee I
lrf1]ounds, For Listings call (800)·
.719-~1 t;xt. 3901

.

Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce .............992·2259
. . ,_ Henry E.-Cleland .'..................·.-••••••• 992-2259
·"·'
.
1"'\f She rrI L Hart .. ~ .....- ..... ~ ..................
742~ 2357
;'Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-6191 .

.•

BUSINE$8 OPPORTUNITY· Just lhe business for you. A
radiator repair, welding at different metels, fabricatlng, and
selling of new radiators, welding equipment, steal, and
welding products. Also do maclllne work. A growing buslnltl
with an Increase In Income fiach year. It comea with approx.
2 .5 acres, large t 4 1/2 toot tall building ttiatls abou12 years
o(lj, and is 40 x
Aleo another okler building. Mobile home
hook-up, also. Selling because of heallh reasons. Molll
major companies use our service.

eo.

),

ReaiEstata
Wanted

Real eatatt wanted· l'am lorced
out ' ot my house lor highway lm·
proiHJ,...nt. Looking for old form
houae In ·Meigs County with
acroage, .un 740·797·9303, 740.
• 8112-9132.
.
•
•

E~~~~~ .
I

•
t,

410 Hou.-s tor Rent
Bedrooms

•

Forecloud

Horntl From 11119/Mo., 4% Down,
30 yaar&amp; at 8.!% APR: For LISI·
lnge, 800-319-3323 Ext 1709.

$711,000.00

•

I

''
,.
'.
j

bell1s; 2780 sq.
Fantuuc view, great prhlacy,
~= .pod, 2~.88 _ . • .

·1113

Gallipolis, 752 3rd Avenue, $300

\

·-

mull-

konctsl Nights. (740)448-81114

Month, 3 Bedroom, 1 Bath, Frame
House, Gaa Htat. No Pets, Wee-

Quollly in•tiiiW11
a quiet neighborhood
. Thlo Brick roneh Is
minutes from &amp;hOpping, uerclse
gym and walking path. NEW
carpel, peint, roof, &amp; exterior
doare, neiNty romodeled· kitchen
&amp; balh,
lull bllement and
.. 199.900

~

;·
'
.(

:l ift .

i

kends. Nlghlr. (740)446'6814

I

· f.Jlce 2 ·Bedroom. Relerence &amp;

I

Depoall, No Pets, (304)87H1e2
(~)736·7295

Pilot Program, Renter.&amp; Needtd,
.

'420 Mobile Homn

I

Well we
home with 2
and a batiT. II tl you are loo.klng lor
on acre m/1. Looated lnv. .tm•nt property we
City. this home Is have - r a l to oller. Call
priced to aell. Call to view 'and aak for Allen. '
bUilding

We alao havt Rent•l•

t.
i~,,

5 rooma, 3
1232
sq; ft.;

i

Affordable ' home
river, flat IO\ with 2
, available: 11206

WondtllfW

:..try~~

STREET • A big 2 slotY home wlth 3 to 4
bedrooms. dining room, 1'/• baths, enclosed porch and
sitting on a nlce.IOI. Has an upstairs and dawnstalrs heating
and cooling system. There ls a 3/4 basement and a nice
sitting porch . Home has french
a
etc.
·
•

f

''

i¥llh prMicy 1201

Before shopping for your Ne~- Addre~s.~. stop by ours: .

new avollebte. New 2 becl-m
1760 sq. opart11111nta wllh IMinlral
•

on the edge or htll and air. II yau'ra
ror
more lntenlltd call and atk
lnlo·rtnatlon Ask for 15012.
Allan.

f

7 rooma, 3 BAa, f 1/2
balhil; ,_sq. ft.; $13&lt;1,800
. lmmeculate eonrlillor1, groat
n~lghborhi&gt;Od,
convenient.
·location. 1121

Pilot Program .Ranlors Needed. ·

Two bedroom 1rillier on Loading
Creek Ad~ . $300 per month plus
deposit, call740·992·6926 .

.

..

.Jott A. Moor-Bro.ker 441·1818 .
. Sarah L. Evana-Moore, 8roker'441.:1818
Pa.trlcla Haya· 448-3884 .caf&gt;!l Caaey-245·9430

...l

Houae, Gas Heat, No Peta, Wea-

House
Trailer
For
Rent
Balow Gallipolis Locks On Stale
. Route 7 South . (~401"1-0619

.

~

' . .-,...,:..

I·•

Golllpolis, 7M 3rd Ave., $180
Month , 1· BR, I Bath, Frame

'

.

. ...,

.'

Four Room House, 52 Oliva

no pels, 7.0·992·5858.

STEWART HOLLOW RD • A home wUh 2 bedroa11JS. and 1
1/2 baths up and the same downstairs. Could be a lingle
family or live ln one and rent the other. Home is· about 18
years old and has stucco sheeting and brick on !he elltllrior• .

74&lt;1)-4&lt;&amp;.6-00ll)8 7 40-44l·llll
www.ev'ana-moore.com
"S.I'I'InB Southem O!afo For O~~e~ A Quar:ter Cenru,-"

l,.

S~•r. phone f7•0l..e-3945

2 bedrOQm· mobile nome tor rent,

'·

r

4 Bedroom House, 2 Bath House
For Atnl, f7.a)245-11128

14x80. 2 Bedroom. C/A, All Elec·
lric, WID. On 2i8, No Pell, Roltr·
once $200 Deposit (7.0)256·
1044 . .
.

a

I

•

'
~

(740)~

tor Rent

Fo"""rl1 BlaeWtwn R•""Y

:

· 3 BA: 2 bath home rentstor.$8001
lifO. and 3 BR, 1 balh·homo rente
lor $550/ mo.'CioH to town. Rettrances end deposll requlrod.
Wiseman Real £stale, Inc.

•

•~.
''.,
,.'

I
'J

Z.3 bedroom, one balhroorn on S. '
:!ild Avenue, Middleport, Can t888-798-3779, Ilk lor JUlio. '

304-736·7295.

.

Gllj~pt&gt;lie,· Ohio 45631-0994

HF NTAL ,,

1 -3

.·

MIDDLEPORT • A ian brick home thatiTas 2 stories, 811 attic,
and a 314 basement. Thera Ia 4 bedrooms, nice cabinets In
kitchen, dining room and 1 1/~ baths. 3
pretty
rnrepllaci1s a pretty etalrway and a lror1t and side

www .wisemanrealestate.com
David Wittman, GAl, CRS Broker 4i8 8555.· •
C•rolyn W•ech,.GRI - 441·1007 ·sonny Garnes
Robert Bruce 448 0821 .Rita Wittman

on 3.08 acres

40) 446·3'644

DOTTIE· TURNER, Broker........;..... ;...........lll2-llt2
JERRY SPRADLING ................ :................. 941-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLINO ...........: ...............Mt-2131

' Bl!n'V JO COLLINS ....................i,, ............ Mt-2041·
JIFFERI ......................................eta-3011

•

\

.r

· ;o..

I

•,

·"
'•

.

�er

· Pometoy •1111d,di•Port • o·r:p a'II, Ohio • Point Ptnnrt. WV
ficieor strength to push forth
new lnves from dormant
buds along the pbnt stem.
FuU •unlight, good soil
preparation and proper
maintenance should give you ·
loa of roses for your enjoy-

be free of~ and insec~
There is no .coot for thi
plana ~x:change.. Pco;lii
without pbnG to eschari!J!
are weleome to participaa.

•
· ize the bwn (3 to 4 times a
ducen ~asked to call the
year) and tO cut rhe bwn
OSV Ex:remion office at 446high (2 112 to 3 inches). Stop
7007 as soon as pomble.
by the extension office for
Ag news
II_.PqeDI
fact sheeu on fertilizing and
Tobacco produce~ - In
Pond ownen, keep Apd
duc.,n to look at th.,ir fm'm lieu of my annual ·tobacco troUed when it is less rha.n t2 maintaining your lawn.
2t, tO a.m. to noon on your
m~nt.
as interactive agricultuDI sys- Ooat system fertilizer article, a inches tall, With two to four
alendan,
so you can attend f
Rose fanciers. your roses
• • •
terns,
simple reminder: be sure ro inches ·· of . new growth.
A,;nual Perennial Pbnt Pond Clini.C: at the Curt!
The OSU Extension office purchase 20-t0~20 (or tS.- 5- Applying 'when le'IJlperatures should be , pru·n&lt;:d back.
of Gallia and Jocltscm conn- · 15 or 20-5-20) &lt;tnalysis with are over 60 degrees Fihren• Prune off de&lt;td and old Exchange wiD be April 19 at Balthaser £arm located jUf
ties, as weD &lt;tS the So,il and ~t lt;ast 60 percent of the heit ~!so improve its perfor- branches. Hybrid t&lt;:as, tlori~ the Meigs County Senior e2.1t of Danville on· Counrt
W3ter Conservation District, nitrogen source being from mance. Herbicid~s like Peak, bundas, and granditloras may Citizens Center in Pomerc;Jy. Road 2. This event is opon~
programs
and. sored by Meigs Co~nty SOil •
are offering &lt;tn IRM series Nitrate Nitrogen.
2, 4-E&gt; and Express have been be cut back to 12 to 18 incll- , Two '
'exchanges wiU be held, one &amp; Water Conservation Ser~
this week for local live!tock
· This' information is usually used in OSU u;ials with less es above the graft.
June blooming climbing at II a.m. arid again at 4:30 vi~nd O!"o State Utlivef"
producer;s which will incl~de indicated on th., analysis bbel. successful results.
the popular advanced 'grazing If a break down ofthe ni~
For the homeowner with a roses and old-f&lt;tshioned bush p.m. , This annual event is sity Extenston. More detaJt .
·
topics as weD as the lRM ceo- gen sources are nor listed, the little patch of either plant, roses should only h~ve de&lt;td sponsored by the Meigs next week!
(H41
Knun
is
~igs
CoN
nomic topics.
chances are that the nitrogen removal of the entire jllants wood and cane rips pruned · Cou.nty Senior Citizens
The meetings will be held source is mainly urea , thus with their bulbs by digging :away at this time: The reason Center &lt;tnd OSU Extension ty~ Exte..sion ogenl forfgri ,
turt o11t! rum.ral resour«f.
Tuesday and Thu&lt;Mby of ibis choose •nother fertilizer. them out is ·a possibility. In is that these rosrs form tbeir Master Gardeners.
~
AU planu are inspected to State Univt!rsity.)
week, both at the University Avoid any analysis with over severe cases, a homeowner bloom }luds ·on' last y&lt;:ar's
of Rio Grande in Wood HaU, 40 ·percent of the nitrogen may apply a spot spr;oy of wood. Heavy pruning will
Room 115, from 7-9:30 p.m . source being from !JTC&lt;l or weed kiliers containing gready reduce 0!)wer pro- ----------------------~
A field experience \Vill cOJn- ·ammonium ·nitrate or a com- eicher 2. 4-D ester, trintec, or duction . Save your heavy
ter, Debbie Ste"'art, wh
pruning until just after the
bakes and cooks on · Satu
p.lete the series on April 7 bination ·of the two.
dic.mba.
blooming
season.
from 9 a.m . to noon.
When representing m•er 40
Weed killer containing
days.
:
If you plan to plant bare·Tuesday's schedule \viii fea- percent · of the nurogen 2,4-D ester fi1rmulation
The theme of the Kitchefl
hamPagtDl
ture Dave M•ngione, OSU source, urea will be toxic to works best if air temperature root roses, this is an ·excellent
is river boating. The ladief
Her favorite pari 15 the f&lt;tther was a riverboat captaitt '
Extension South
District socdlings and cause yellowing · is above 60 de~,;rces Fahren- time . of year. Make sure to
Agrinilture and
Natural and stunting of the plants. heir. Ester formulations P repar~ a well drained site baking.
and their moth(r a riverbo:(f
Resources specialist..
Ammonical nitrogen is not should be spot sprayed only. that can be easily kept weed . " I like the older peqple cook. They come by thebDave wiU present the ceo- roxie, however it is tak.;n up as the spray may volatilize free and . receives I0 to 12 ' that . come • in. •They keep
cool&lt;ing ulents naturaUy. ~
nomic oudook of the beef very slowly by the plant and and adversely effect neigh- hours of full sunlight.
telling us how good everyThe Crafty Kitchen ts
cattle industry, and then itt the may delay growth and vigor. boring ornamental plants.
Many rose growers build thing is and it's cncouraglocated
at t506 Jeffersop
special raised beds that aUow ing,.. sai d Stewart.
second half ofrhc program, he Nitrate nitrog&lt;'n is in the
,. • •
wiU present principle record. us.1ble form .
· Last reminder to lawn for extra drainage, Roses like · The two sisters have Blvd. and can be reached 4t
~ec:ping methods for livestock ·
For a more detailed fact owners who have had _prob- lors of organic mat~r · for ,worked together in nursing 675-6817 or 675-6115 fd~
'.
producers.
sheet, please call the· Exten- lems with crabgrass; you their roots to grow into so hom~s before.
_ ordering or limited delive!
Their hours are 7 a.m. to
"We make a good team _
Between Dave's presenra- sion Office.
need to · apply pre-emergent add compost, peatmoss or
r!ons, Bob Hendershot of Soil
Pesticide . training for herbicides ·like benefin, ben- compos ted manure when we're sisters we have' ro:• she p.m. Monday, through Satu .
creating your rose gard
a·nd Water Conservation Dis- original certification is sulide, ·
siduron, first
day and 9 a.m. to 5 p.ni. oh ,
sai .
.
d
trict will uise producer being offered a second . time peodimethalin, dithiopyr or ·
/
· '
, e~~ur . bareroor , rose plants
They also Jave another sis- Sunday.
awareness about water and , this yeu, on Monday from 6- prodiamine on esiablished
'
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!environmental concerns on 8 'p.m. at the C . H . McKenzie lawns in the next couple of ; hould not have lea\&lt;eS show- _ _ _ _...::;
•
the farm.
Agricultural Center
weeks.
·-- '
ing yet. If they do, remove
'.l\lJI
On Thursday, the program
Pesticide testing will take
Remember that the best them :is these will probably
•••
will be prodttction 7 based, place again on April ·9 from 3- . way to minimize crabgrass in freeze off in the next heavy
with ·topics such as Fescue 5 p.m. at the CH. McKenzie the lawn -is to prqperly fertil- frost. Plants should have suf-

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- · llllph E..._~
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'It should
nol be legal4 lzed for
8Y81y0118.

However,
there area
number of

peopki who
sutler from
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who could
llliaal]ll) benefit ftpm ~ ·

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JlUillllDIIJI
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IJIOple
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from Page D1

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rules, everyone uses this
table, regardless of your ben·eficiary's age .:lnd even if you
have changed beneficiaries,
, have a charity as a benefi ciary, or have no . beneficiary.
(There is one exception. If
your beneficiary is your
spouse who is more than 10
years younger than you, yoo
use his or her actual age and
the ·old jcint life expec ta~cy
table. Under this circumstance your minimum distributiqn doesn't change.)
No more irrevocable
decisions -The main bene.fit of the new rules is that
you are no Ionger "locked"
into the beneficiary and
· ·
ll
m1mmum
otstribution
calculation method you chose
h
70 J/?
w en you ,were · · · - - ·
Another advantage IS now
when benefi ciaries inherit
lRAs they ca n stretch dist~ibutions out over their 0,~n
life expectancy.
Under the old rul-;,s, thi s
fant itstic esta te planning
technique was only . avaibbl~
to people who ch ose the
.proper beneficiary and dis- ·
tributio n method at 70- 1/ 2.
. Depending on th e initial
method chose n, man y benefidaries would bave bc'en
req uired to withdraw (~nd
pay taxes o n) · the ~ •Hire
tnherit~d IKA babn ce within a year. Now, all ben~ficia ries can rake ad\'antag~ of
the "stretch."
Here ·~ an exrmpkJoc, age
75, nan ·o his wife, Betty. hi s
bcnefi iary when he tur ned
70- 1/ 2. He chose th &lt;' "rcral- .
culation " ' c;t hod usin g their
joi nt· life icpectancy. Sadly.
Amy
away and joe

lnCKY SITUAnON- The alw.ays reliable roll of duct ~pe-was put to yet another creative use
on Friday, as successful readers at Rutland Elemen~r'y School ~ped their Principal, Rusty
Bookman, and their Reading Coordinator Carolyn Nicholson, to the gym wall. Students reached
their 4,00Q.book reading goal and were rewarded with the full assembly. (Brian J. Reed phOtos)

~tJif/

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named his so n , Roger, his
new beneficiary. On Dec. 31,
2000, his account balance ·
was $300,000.
Old - · With the old rules,
Bettfs life expectancy is
zero and Joe calculates the
minimum distribution using
his single life expectan.cy
(12.5). Even though Roger is
his new beneficiary. Joe is
locked 'iqto the beneficiary
and method he chose for his
fmc required distribution.
His require,d distributio~ for
2001 is $24,000 ($300,000
divid~d by' 12.5). If Joe dies,
his sQ_n will have . to withdraw the entite account balance the next ~ar.
V N
-W
-- . ·h ·h
s. ew lt t e new
rules, Joe uses the factor for
~ his age on the new "Uni~
form" table-, 21.8. So his
required distribuiion for
200t is S13,761 ($300,000
divided by 21.8). That ·
means, ·for 2001, $10,00~ .·

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11'•--

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FQ[Vt'l•

Management by Chris · Pen- Agricultural Center. If you
rose, Extension agent in Mor- · stiU need study mat.,rials,
gao County; Feed Budgeting please call the office at 446-·
by Jeff McCutcheon, Exten- 7007.
· '
sion agent in Perry County;
Tobacco settlement and Finishing Cattle on Grass Still no formal news on the
by Dave Samples, Extension distribution basis of the 2001
agent in Jackson County.
Phase II Tobacco Settlement
On Saturday, the class will payments.
visit local farms that &lt;tre using
The call of the week
the principles of IRM to came from an enthpsiastic citimprove their farm systems izen who reported seeing a
and increase sustainability. The bald eagle in Gallia County.
farm locations will be Although bald · eagle populaannounced at the m"eting on tions are back and the bird .is
Thursday.
no longer' considered· endanThe cost to attend the &lt; gered, our national symbol is
entire school and to receive a still classified as " Threatened,"
resource manual is S 10. Pro- and remains under the protecducers . who would like to tion of the U.S. Endangered
attend a portion of the series Species Act
are also more than welcome
acuuifcr L Bymes is Gallia
to p.irticipate.
Couury's Ex}CIIsiou axcur for ·
However. resen·ltions are ii)Jrimlrurc mrd uatuml rcsmtrccs,
. required, so interested ' pro- ·Ohio Srarc Urtit,ersiry.)

c.. nl\

gas
IQOmingfor
•

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

d.

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Monday

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SENTINEL NEWS

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,., ~.llliiis-.Cl:eUmtedR~alef",. . s·&lt;n.~··

UTLAND - It's the oppo.r ·
t?nity of a lifetime: sticking it
to the principal.

At Rutland Elementary School; that expres~
sion proved ttue 't o life as Principal Rusty
Booltm&lt;tn and Librarhm Caroly11 Nicholson
ware duct-ciped to the gymnasium waD. It was
aU in fun - for the studenu, anyway - and a
teward to them for meeting their year-long
. teadin~; goal of 4,000 books.
The student body and . faculty, who have
been most successful in their reading goals

,bled

in the school gym so Bookman and
. Nicholson 'could keep their pbmise: srudents
coul~ tape them to the waD -and leave them
hangmg.
After roll upon roll of the ever-dependable,
. fix-it-:-all tape was ;.vrapped mummy style
arounp the principal ,and librarian, they were
left ha'hging on the wall, to the delight of the
students, parents and teachers who had assemWed for the show.
This year's goal of·4,000 is twice last year's
goal, but presented little problem to the bookhappy students, who, to date, have read more

PI•H .... GCNII, A3

TOLEDO (AP) -With gy Information Ad!ninistrathe p-ave! season approach- tion, said that low gasoline
· ing, Ohio motorists are . inventories make the imr~
bracing · for higher fuel ket especiaUy vulnerable to
prices and the possible · shortages.
return of 52-a-gallon gaso- . The' federal
ag~ncy
li~~'
. . .
.
expects :i national summ"'T
Many of tli~ mgred1ents price average in the high
that caused ·the increases St.40s, he said. ·
las~. s~er are still with
"But don~t be surprised if
us, wd Geoff Sundstrom, ~ we get anoth~r spike - the
spokesman
at
~A s underlying · conditions are
nattonal.
office
in th ere,.. C os1eUo·sa.•'d. ,...,
I.WoHeathrow, Fla., who has d Ua
• 1.
,
'bl
.
r
o r gaso me " • pPSSl e
,
k
d
I
trac e g;aso
me prrces ror but not very like1y...
to years. &gt;
.
D PI .
.
"Prices may not get to
an antmg, manag&lt;:' of
die S2 level
mformatlon
but certainly , "That would just and . analysis
they will be
b
l
for
the
much higher
e a s.i ver lining, American .
(this summer)
though· ffi don't Petroleum
advocate havirlg a Institute,
than they ' are
now;•
said • recession to keep
said gasoline
Sundstrom,
·oas prices lower. ., prices will
who
has 6
depel)d
tracked gasoa.otr Suncloibo.n
. heavily on '
line prices for
the price of
tO years.
crude
oil,
· Supply disb
"'
which· i\ difruptions similar to last sum- fie~ to predict.
mer would be t~e most
"Historically, people haYe
likely reason for another not been good at forecastprice spiral this · year, ing gasoline prices," Plantiexperts said. ·
ng said.' "OPEC has said
Sundstrom said a contin- what they're going to do
uing economic downturn but that doe so 't mean
could
dampen
fuel they'll do it."
demand.
. Last week, the nation"That wo'uld just be a sil- wide average for unieaded
verlining,though.Wedon't regular was Sl.40 per galadvocate having a recession Jon, which was unchanged to keep gas prices lower," from the ·previous week
he s~id.
and seven cents lower thim
Dave Costello, an econo- the mid-February avetage,
mist wit)! the federal Ener- Costello said.

,.f:lleport:
Bu~
emergency
rooms
close
with,
little
notice
.

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CLEVELAND (AP) -Busy hospitil,,..,cmcrge.ncy rooms . em dose to
mcoffiing an)bulanees without '!W'r·
sight or incentive
to reopen, The Plain
,
I
Dealer repOrted Mqilday.
.
And the system for , reporting ER
shutdowns to ambulance squads is so
,

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complicated that the system has
become nearly· meaningless to Cuyahoga County paramedics, the paper
teported.
'
Sometimes, rescue crews must

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decide at an. accident scene which
Emergency medical services officials
"We have not gotten any complaints
hospital might be willing to accept a and ER doctors in Cuyahoga County , and we have little, if any, authority, but
patient, based , on whether a victim work through a committee to keep obviously if this is something chat rises
needs sutures or a CT scan or if respi- ' ambulance traffic moving on occasions · to a public-health issue, then clearly
ratory distress is symptom of conges- when to~ many hospitals divert ambu- we will have to .take alook at it;' said
rive heart failure or .an asthma attack. lances.
·, . "
" · Dr.). Nick Baird, director of the Ohio
In such iiiscances, "We're hearing
The state coUects no information to Department of Health.
hi the Cleveland area, it is not
some kind of restriction and we're determine the magnitud~ ofthe'probgoing to divert," said William Shaw, · lem, and the .Ohio Departmen~ ,of unusual for hospitals to shut out
chief"of the Solon Fire Department. Health offers no guidance about·when ambulall\:es for days at a time, the
"We really don't know what the end it may be appropriate to turn away paper said.
result is going to be for the patient."
amb\llances, the paper said.
Metrolrieij!~li 'M,edical Center m

a

June diverted ambulances for 10 days
straight because it lacked critical-care
beds. In September, Kaiser Permauente's ER at the Cleveland Clinic
restricied ambulances for 11 · consecutive days.
.
Some other cities have developed
policies to 1 encourage hospitals to
manage reso~es better so they can
avoid ER shutdowns. They set time
limits for the shutdowns when closings
cannot be averted.

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,Hlp: lOt
Low:401

Tcidlf•

Sentinel

more than under the ol ,1
rules can continue .· to grow
rax-deferredLffr"the account.
When Roger inherits the
account, he will be able to
calculate ' minimum ldistributions based on his life
ex pectan cy, allowing the
account to benefit from taxdeferr~d growth even longer.
Most people ~ both IRA
owners and beneficiarie s - . '
will benefit under the new
ml~s. but the IRS will let
you use the o ld rul~s for
2001 if yo n wish. Bcfor~ you
. withdraW a'ny money from ·
your IRA this year, mah·
~ ure you consult you r financial or tax advisor for more
details on the new rul es and
how th ey will affect yo u .
(Bryce L Sr~tir!t is an iu Pc.&lt;r-

Details, A2

'

Lotteries
I dor
C:Un

Democrats hope ~efections will stop budget

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WASHINGTON (AP) Senate
Democrats are hoping a few last-minute
Republican defections will derail Presi,dent Bush's blueprint for tax curs and curtailed spending.
,
Republicans have said they think the
1 budget measare will squeak by in the
evenly divided Semte with the 50 votes
needed plus Vice President Dick Cheney's
tiebreaker. GOP lawmakers succeeded last
week in pushing the $1. 94' trillion budget
I

fqr 2002 through the House.
.
The vote for final passage is expected to
foUow party lines, with one senat!)r on
each side almost certain to defect. Democrats are hopeful that additional moderate
·Republicans will vote their way because of
concerns ~r t~e spending plan's centerpiece - a t 0-year, $1.6 trillion tax cut .
"We think.there is a possibility we could
defeat the budget resolution and go back
to the negotiating table," Senate Detpocra-

tic leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota·
said Sunday on CBS"' Face "the Nation."
He added: "We're very hopeful we QR
pick up one or two, maybe three' Repub-

licans."

,

e

·

Bllt . the Senate's second-ranking
Republican expressed only co fidence.
"We're going to be iucc sful. By d&gt;e
end of this week we're ing to pass the
budget," Sen. ·Don Nickles, R-Okla., said ·
n' k'"
'
on ABC •s "T
· 'hiswee.

,

~----~------~---------------------------------------,--------~ '

.

.

Holzer Health Ho~ine

-.

.
,If you ~ave health questions·or concerns, call the Holzer Health .Horline
and speak to a specially trained Holzer Medical Cenler R.N.

e.wmrit•c wirh Sm&lt;illt ·...,--,
Partners,;, Ad11c.&lt;r btc., Gallip&lt;&gt;lis)
111&lt;'111

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Check witf;. y®t ph)•sician about medication concerns.

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