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.TEMPO

SPORIS

Our House gets
. historic piano

Prep diamond
action heats up

Ohll' \'.lllq Publ! .. hin~ Co

EYShop
is 'sa,•/ right
l=::~h•rir

G.1111poli., • Ponwrn~ ·Pt. Ple.1.,.1nt ·April 15, 2001

Vol. 36. No. 9

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Gallia · ·

Egs-tra pxlies

HEALTH CARE

GOP

Me•gs ·
launches
planning
proce•

seeking ·.

candidates
' . 8r ICaWt KEw'
~ SENTlNEL STAFf
G~UPOLIS ·Gallia

County • RepublicatPI!eaden
have 3$ked qualified candidates interested in appointment to the soon-to-bevacalf'd conunon pleas judge's
bench to have a letter of
inte~t submitted to them by
. April20.
,.........,· ~...., Roger ·
'Watson,
chairman of
the.· GOP
Executive
Committee,
said a list of
three names
will
be
drawn from
.'
those letters
and submitted to Gov. Bob Taft for consideration.
Taft, a Republican, will
. make . the , appointment to
replace retiring Ju~ Joseph
L. Cain, a. Oempctat whose
re.;!gnation 'is effective May 1. .
The governor wants three :
n:IQles and if it would happen ·
we have more than three, the ;
central ..committee. will- ~

I

Bv CltAALENE HOEFUCH

o -elimina ·e~·1)' e,
arlirl · ·
said. ''The go~e_rrior will make

·: .. ~.
· Because 1Cain has optel to ·
take vacati.o n prior to· the
effective date of his resignation, the ben~h is being filled ·
by appointments through the ·
Ohio Supreme Co)Jrt.
· Cain said that locally, !=3Ses
can he heard until an appoint• ment is made by ·Prob;~.te·
Juvenile Judge Thomas Moulton and R. William ·Jenkins,
the comrrion pi~ .magistrate
;u'ld former probate-juvenile

thl: firial&gt; d,ecision." · · .

· · • MLWA(Sarllt Ssge)
• .VINCA
•CELOSIA

judge.

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students encouraged.
up early and often ·.

to

BY TONY M. l.w:H
. TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

POMEROY -"Safety belts save lives" was
·. the message directed towards students at
Pomeroy Elementary School during a special
program prese.nted, .by the Pomeroy Police
, Department. ·
Police Chief Mark Proffitt, who was accompanied by Safety Dog, a.k.a. Sgt. Floyd Hickman, gave a special presentation to third
graders at Pomeroy Elementary in hopes of
increasing safety belt awareness.
. Through a partnership between the Ohio
Department of Public Safety (ODOPS) and
local law enforcement agencies, said Proffitt,
third grader&gt; from around the state are receiving presentations such as this to emphasize the

importance' of safety belts and air bags.
Titled "Operation Buckle Up," the program
is often employed through various demonstrations, discussions and hands-on activities and is
. a proven technique that conveys the message
of safety belts to adolescents. added Proffitt.
"Safety belt awareness is an important issue
that rriustbe taught to our children;' said Proffitt. "We must protect them from injury at all
costs. They arc our future."
Besides learning about seat belts, students
were also instructed on how to act responsibly
while riding .inside a vehicle.
Following the program, each student was
made a "Safety Belt Deputy" and pledged to

Please see Safety, A6

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lflth:701 .
I.Ow:501
Details, A3 ·

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Clessifieds

02-7

-·~·Schob&gt;l offers.· 'alternative' for at-risk teens

SUKF'SUP!-~ .

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TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

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POMEROY - On Thursday's tour of
Meig~ County's new long-te~m altei'l)~rive school, Pomeroy attorney and O~io
School Board President Jennifer Sheets
·\vas ready ' wi1h soine advice ' for the
I
~
'
school'~ eight teen-aged ~tudents.
"You can get anywhere yo9 want,"
Sheets said. 'just ·take it ol)e step at a

time."
Those steps are big ones for soi1ic of
the students in the school who, for one
, reasoti or another, .find thems~lves in situations which make it difliculi ~if not
impossible - to complete their school
'tt\rm. .
·
,
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.
: The SEM School - named after
Meigs County's three high schools,
Southern, Eastern and Meigs - gives

those students, aged 14 to 21, the tools
and personal attentton th ey need.
Some students haue missed so much
sc hool because
of an . illness or family
.
problem that they would have to repeat
the term if the alter native program were
nnt in place. Others are using the opportunity to complete their General Equivalency Diploma .

Plea•• see School; AI

Medical

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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

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Holzer Medical Center salutes our
M.dical Laboratory ProfessiQnOis during this special week. ·
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POMEROY -The process of developing a
community health care plan (or Meigs County
has begun.
Meeting Thursday at Veterans Memorial Hospital, a steering committee composed of com. munity leaders including representatives of ·
public agencies, economic development organi- .
zations and businesses, began the process of
developing a blueprint for health care in the
county.
The process, as explained by Karl Runser and
Susan Isaac of the Institute for Local Govern- ·
ment Administration and Rural Development,
Athens, will be based on a new method for
delivery of health services in rural communities, called the Oklahoma Model.
Using that model as a guide, the q&gt;mmittee
will move through a strategic planning process
where services available now will be identified,
..com~unity needs will be asse~sed, a~. w~ys to
fulflli"'ftwse needs determined.
The first ·step, as explained by Runser and
Isaac,. is for the committee to take a comprehensive look at th e local health care system and
the changes which have occurred over the past
several years, and then to come up with a map
for the future of Meigs County's health care.

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on your porch
· ordeckl
FULLY STOCKED WITH
MARSARELLI CONCRETE
. STA1'UARY!
Wide Sel tlun to dl()oC se INII!l)

tor!

Common pleas judges from
surroundil)g counties , MeigS' Frederick Crow Ill '
and Richard Walion from
Lawrence' ' - can . ~ serve if
their sch~ule permitJ.
Cain, who was in the midst
. of his second term as judge,
resigned Mardi _2'7 .and is ·
reloeating California,
Watson said that after names
· have ~een submitted, a meet•
ing of· the central and e~cu­
tive com!J)~ttee~ ' 11115 been
scheduled tentativ~ly for April
24 at 7 p,m. in. the courthouse

~to set

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·~ar-old ~""'l!h Hardwicl&lt; IIXI!ITlined Jl!e.l
participation in saturday's Easter egg hunt In Ga~
.Hpolls CHy PB!k. 'fhl! dauf.1ter of
~ C!8'8·~ardwlck of; Chicago, Ill., Meredith and her parents were In town
~~~~grand~/ TOm arjd M~ry To~l ~John arKI.Mlta Strauss, all of Gallipolis.. (Kevin Kelly photo) .

:.

f1lled wHh your
. f&amp;YOI'IR'flowers
•ReadY to take

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TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

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FLOWERS

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Discover -the Holzer Difference.

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Ho11seowner
dess April 21

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lerter or utility bill with l:i}eir
name, address and a recent
date. Driver's license will not
be accepted this year.
Eligible people will receive
food orders evety two weeks
until supplies are depleted.

announced by Gov. Bob Wise.
. .SOuthwestern Community
Action Council received
$487,843 . to weatherwize
about 125 units in Cabell,
Lincoln, Mason and Wayne
counties. The grant will serve
313 people,
The West Virginia Department of Health and Human
Resources and the U.S.
· Department ofEnergy will be
used this. year to weatherizef
1,188 units. Fifty percent
the homes 'will target elderly
residents, while 25 percent
will target handicapped residents.
In addition, the county will
receive .benefits from Community Service Block Grants,

p.m., or visiting the website at
.._.._.w,NW.cofchris.or.

cenl$ per tile .for motorcycle
and lawn tractor tires.There is
a limit of 20 tires per load.
For more information, call
the health department at 4412018.

Issued licenses

GALLIPOLIS
Free
CHESHIRE - A homeimmunizations Will be proowner education class will be
POMEROY - Marriage
vided by the Gallia County licenses have been issued in
offered by Gallia-Meigs
Health !:Jepartment at the fol- . Meigs County Probate Court
Community Action Agency
lowing locations this week:
on April 28,- 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
to Patrick Arnol Weaver, 28,
each day.
·
Gallia
Met•
Wednesday
Vinton, and Jill Ann Lemley,
. GALLIPOLIS - Wai-Mart
The course is free of char~e o.f Gallipolis is scheduling a ropolitan Estates, 2"3 p.m.
20, Rutland, and to Don Ray•
ThursdayGallia
Counand will cover various types of Big Gobbler contest.
mond WhanJr., 35, and jenny
POINT P~ANT,WVa.
ty
Health
Department,
499
mortgages, obtaining a mortLynn
Cook,
34,
both
of
MidEntries are due at the sportMason County Career
dleport.
ga~, cm!it repons and ho'Qle ing goods dep~rtment ofWal- Jackson Pike, 4-6 p.m.
Center's FBLA, VICA and
.Children in . need of immumamtenance.
Mart by midnight on April
FCCLA students, along with
nizations
must be accompaGuest speaken, including 22. The winner wiU be selectPoint Plea$ant High School
nied by a parent or legal
.aaorneys, bankers, insurance ed May 13 at 8 p.m.
. Drama Club students will
POMEROY _..,. A civil suit
agents, realtors, ext'e nsion
The winner will be selected guardian, and bring a current
tour New York City during
agents, contractors, housing by lengrh of beard.lf there are immunization record with filed in Meigs County .Comspring break.
authorities and other agencies multiple beards, a decision them.
mon Pleas Court by RJW
They will ·r depart Point
Additional services, such ~ Construction Inc., against
will present information per- will be made from the total
Pleasant early Tuesday. Their
tinent to anyone interested in length of all beards equalling blood pressure d1ecks and Home Creek · Enterprises according to Wise.
The Southwestern Com- itinerary includes a walking
pregnancy tests, will be Inc., has been dismissed.
purchasing a home.
final length.
·
A ·
Council tour ofTin,es Square, the themuntty
ctton
The course is ~esigned to
If beard 'length is the sam..-, offered during the evening
atre district, visit to the
received $610,694.
benefit any.o ne regarclless · of a tie will be settled by by hours at the health departThe block gra nts service. Empire State Buil&lt;ling and
age, f.1mily situation or weight. If the weight is the ment.
POMEROY - An · a~tion low-income residents who Stante of Liberty.
income level. Seatin'g is limit- same; ~he tie will be settled by
· On Wednesday, th. ey will
for divorce has l&gt;een filed in meet specific income .gui de- visit Rockefeller Center for
ed and · reservations may be spur len!.''th.
·
Meigs County Common lines establish~d by the U.S.
m:&gt;de by calling C AA at 367All turkeys in the contest
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Pleas Court by Vi c)ci Lyn n Office of M anogement and the taping of the NBC
7.3~ I or · 992-6(&gt;29. Families
must be brought to the lawn
are wdmme and refreshments and garden entry gate at Wal- Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Hoffiuan, Po1 1croy, and Fred Budget. The areas of service "Today". Sh,ow. They will sec
will be provided.
Mart by 8 p.m. on the day the District lt:is lifted a boil ndvi- Michael Hoffinan, Syracuse. include conuuuniev revitaliza..• ·· ~t. Patr.• ~k ~ 11 c;a lfedral and
. soty for customers in Bedford · The case was reported e~rlier tio;1, family stitliitiiy' and self- '' FAOS,V:lrti, Ne\vrlork Stock
CAA 's housing program , bird is harvested.
, ~qfficiency.
.
Exchange ~nd .world Trade
along \Vith Ohio 'l.llley Bank,
There is a $5 entry fee and .Township, from the intersec- as a dissolution action ..
I
the
p"
rogram
are
~enter. !hey wt.l.l ·al~~ attend
Funds
for
are offering the course in a 75 percent payback to the tion of U.S. 33 and Ohio 681
provided by' the
DepartLes Mismbles on Broadat Darwin, north on U.S. 33
conjun ction with a project w1nner.
ment of Health· and Human way.
. .. ' ,
to Burlingham , including
that will build six stick-built
and
the
AdnunistraThey
will
"depart
·the Big
Services
Park · Road, Swindell Road,
homes in Syracuse. •
don for Children and Fami- Apple for Point Pleasant on
Jones Road, ~ur\i!lgham
.The homes are alfordable to
POMEROY
-Jerry
Aora
li
'. , . 1
Thursday. ·
: '· '
Road and Williams Road.
es.
both moderate and low'· '" ·' "' ·
·•
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' A sample taken April ' 12 is was sentenced in Meigs
income families. Participants
HOGSETT. WVa. A considered.safe.
County Common Pleas
L!..
. n'
who graduate from the course
Cqurt
to
a
·year
in
prison
on
111t1
'
may be eligible to purchase a contract will be awarded by
each
of
three
counts
of
POINT
PLEAS!&lt;NT,WVa.
new home with interest rates the Huntington· District of
'
·
, !I~~ · · - An Easter sum'ise/comniureceiving stolen property.
as low as 4 percent for 30 the U.S. Army Corps ofEngiThose sentences · were sus·POINT PJ,.EASANTWVa. nion serVice will 1le "held at
years, with no down payment •neers to improve fishing
pended
.
by
Judge
Fred
W.
,"--.:..
Mason · Co~htY ~~er- · the Chuhih ·of 'Cb~ist in
access at the Ohio River
require-d:
RACINE As . of· last Crow ·III, and flora , was · ··gency Food ~rid 'Shelte,r Pro- Chri1.tian Union, Mai.\ Srteet,
T~e class is also a require- abutment of the Robe~t C.
ment for those applicants Byrd Locks and Dani . this week, the church formerly ordered to complete . th~ gram food bahk . will ·open at 6 a.m. Easter mortling. .
·
kno:wn as the Reorganized Southeastern Probatioqaty Tuesday. , The. food bank is
There will . be . special
wishing to apply for the down month.
Construction is expected to Church ofjesus Christ ofLat- Treatment Alternative pro- located in die b~sement of the singing by the i:lioi~ ~nd othpayment assistance activity
ter Day Saints changed its gram in NelsonviUe. . ' . . · Presbyterian Church~ 8th and en. The public is wclco.fie.
includ~d in the Gallia County begin in late April, with comHe was also ordered to 11ar- Main Streets: and Willlie'open
·
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Community
Housing · pletion scheduled for Octo- name to the Community of
ber. Preliminary ·surveying at Christ, according to the local ticipate in the Community every other Tuesday from 1-4
. Improvement Program.
. ·p.m. u·n til supplies, are
.
For )tformation on CHIP, the site wiU . b~gin once the · congregation whose church is Corrections program.
on Lovett Road, just off
.The char~es were fifth- exhausted. ~:. .. " ~. ·. · :: ,:,,. ,. f91!'l.1" PIJ?ASg.IT,WVa.
contact CAA's Gallia County contract is awarded. ,
degree
felomes.
To be elig1ble for this pro- · Mason County AARP
Fishing
access
on
the
Ohio
County
Road
35.
(Portlandoffice at 446-1018.
gtam, you must be a resident :.chapter will ·liave its Eastet
side wiU be closed for periods Racine) .
·
of Mason &lt;::ounty and ·unem- .'Dinner · on Wednesday " at
of time to diminate safety
Community of Christ is an
p'loyed.
noon at Fort Randolph 'Thrconcerns to the public due to international denomination
Eligible
!·
pe6ple
·J
should
·
race.
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construction activities. How- With appl:qlfimately 250,oqp
evef, fishing access on the members in more ,than · 50
CHARLESTON W.V: _ : ; bring· fheir ·Social ~''Secutity ·, ·:: •:£V.ryolle''ig lllskf:d' tlllbi'ing a
GALLIPOLIS -The City ._W~st Virginia shore
nations.
,
,
M
C
. ~II
fi nun1ber and proof'of Mason covered dish and a '. ineeting
e,n~ tt. County
residence • when 'vill follow. .
.,
ason ~un.~ , ,W,,1
Commission will meet in spe- renlain open during the conThe R~DS Church was
from
Wcathen.zation
lUSIS•applying
for
foo~l.
·'fo
pnwe
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organized ' in 1860. A release
cial session Tuesday at 7 p.m. struction period.
in the Gallipolis Municipal
The improved fishing area · from the local congregation tance , Progra'!' , · ,grants · they are residents; they-need a· ·· • .&lt; '
courtroom, City Manager will provide handicapped said that (n recent yean' many
access below ·the datu on the have expressed -a, desire to
E.V. Clarke Jr. announced.
Ohio bank. Majo~ features have a name that ~ aderepresents
the
include improved parking qu.ately
areas and. a fishing pier at the church's theology and mistop of the existing submerged sion : "We ' proclaim Jesus
sheet pile cdls downstream of Christ and promote commu· GALLIPOLIS - A scrap the dam .
nities of joy, hope, love and
tire collection day has been
A handicapped accessible peace."
set for April 21 from 9:30 ramp will be constructed
Delegates at the church's
a.m. until 2:30 p.m. at the from the lower parking lot to 2000 · World Conference
Gallia County Service Center the fishing pier.
approved the Community of
(old Ohio Departme.nt of
For more information, con- Christ name with a nearly 80
Transportation .garage), 499 tact Pe&amp;~,"Y Nod at 304-529- perce nt affirmative vote, it
Jackson Pike.
5451. ·
was reported.
The event is sponsored by
The local congregation was
Gallia
County
Health
established in 1929- 1930. The
Department, Gallia County .
pastor is Michael R. Duhl,
Holzer M~dical Center
commissioners and the Galwho can be contacted at 7 40, lia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton
Discharges April 12 843-5481.
-~=~~~-~
' Solid Waster Management
More about the Communi-•
Kimberly Preston.
District.
.
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. Neil ty of Christ can be learned by
Fees include $1 per tire for
Whaley,. daughte.r, Mason , ~!tending services on Sunday
car-pickup tires; $2 per tire
WVa. (Published with per- mornings at 9:30 and 10:30,
for heavy truck tires; and 50
and Wednesday. evenings at 7
miasion)

Coldest slated

Case dismissed

_._,. •.jenti~trr.l

SUnciiiJ.,.,.. 11. 2to1

Cinc.ycurfew.aims to curtail more riOts·

: Ohio weat.her
••:lundly, Ap11111

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Students
to tour NYC

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CINCINNATI
Srteets were
generally quiet for a second col)secutive
night as the city extended its curfew, forcing churches to cancel traditional Good
Friday services after dark.
The city official who ove=es · police
operations resigned laa; Friday afternoon,
the first change at City Hall since three
days of ri()ting spad;ed by the shooting
de:rtil of an' unarmed black man by a ·
police officer. ·
In what was seen as a victory for critics
who deman ded changes at the police
department, Safety Director Kent Ryan
resigned for personal and health re:ISOns.
Ryan , 55, spent a night in a hospital "ith
ch~t pains earlier this week.
C hurches called off or reschedt:lei
nighttime Good Friday services

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Lift advisory

u.s.

Sentenced on
charce

Improved ·

access planned

SerVice $et ,.

k.
openS .......-....lay

Food

Church changes
· name

Meeting slated

Commission
meets Tuesday

area propamS . ,
i/'

will

Day planned for
tire collection

Acco&lt;ding to an Energy D~partment 1orecast, molorisis this surrmer could pay
more for gasoline lhan last summMs average price of $1 .53 per gallqn.

Meigs

grand ju·ry

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specl11catlon that the property
involved In the crimes were blank
checks.
The 1orgery counts are also 11fth·
degree felonies.
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A cold front will be m9\'lng
across the area Sunday. There
;; ;~viii be a chance of showers,.
'"with ,.thunderstorms possible.
Highs will be in the 70s. .
Lows will faD into the upper
20s to. )ow \ 30s Tuesday and
Wedn~y. The weather ser. ·'.vice $ays people with sensitive
. ,.plants o4\5ide or plants that are·
, , vulnerable to tio• or lieezing
, 1 , should ~w:t preparing to pro'; .teet d)t;~.
.
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Sullfi$e .Sunday ~ be at
!, 16:54 a.m.
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Sun!lay. .. Sho~rs
likely•.
mainly from late morning. on.
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DNA matches jailed killer

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·h:· CINCINNATI (AP) - A former executive director of the
! .. defunct Notth Ohio Valley.Air A.uthority. W:is sentenced Friday
..•$n ~ .year and a day in prison for his role in a scheme to help a

businessman get state p~~mits to operate a landfill.
·
1
f. 3" ,Bdahard Canetm~ro, 68•, of Steubenville, also was sentenced by
J,) .J.S. District Judge .Sandra S. Beckwith to one year supervis.·d
released and fined $10,0001 said U.S. Attorney Sharon Zealey.
Canestra.l'O had.· pleaded guilty to a charge of public corruption for aiding Patsy DeLuca in the ·unlawful acceptance of
!'-.S169,'750 in kickbacks for ~hrec years beginning in 1994.
Canestraro succeeded DeLuca as NOVAA's exerurive direc: tor in fuly ·1995. DeLuca and his sbn, R!onald DeLuca, and for: mer NC)YAA techni~ Vincent Zumpano previouSly pleaded
. '_gUilty aild have been sentenced Ol) charges connected with the
!andfill permits and to conspiring' to dbcdve the Internal Rev• !'n~te Service:
·
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TOLEDO (AP) -· DNA evidence that helped free a man
who served 19 years of a life sentence on a murder conv~tion
matches that of another man who is in prison for committing
another murder, investigators said. ·
Now investigators are planning to take another sample from
Sherman Preston, a prisoner at the Lebanon Correctional Facility, to deilltrune if he •~tad a role in the 1981 strangling death
and rape of Bobbie RusseU, a 28-year-old mother of thr.ee. .
Preston is in jail for the 1983 murder of Denise Howell of
Toledo. His DNA was in a database of 30,000 violent offenders
who have be~n imprisoned in Ohio. Lucas Co unty prosecutors
have known ·about the match since Feb. 16.
Investigators this week obtained asearch warrant tog)'t a sec-·
ond sample so they ca n confirm the DNA match discovered by
the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification &lt;lila Investigation.

Gal~~II•

(740) 446-2265

...•• ..

~J.Ptn Plalat

(740) 667-3161

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(~4,.:tl) F~ers 'Bank
~ We're, Your Bank for

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COLUMBUS (AP) - Neighbors of Buckeye Egg Farm
have lon g complained about the stench coming from it's· massive barns. Now the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is
complatntng too.
·
The EPA filed a. notice on Jan. 19 that acc uses Buckeye Egg
of v•olaung the federal C lean Air Act at its operations in Croton in Licking County and Marseilles .in Wyandot County
The agency is threatening civil and criminal penalties if the
co mpany does not reduce emissions .of particulates, which
increasingly have been linked to asthma and other respira~oty
problems: The emissions come from such things as manure and
·
..
dust.
, Buckeye Egg also is accused of n~t getting the proper per-

nuts.

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Iron ore supplier wants limits

Int

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Cra~e

operator back in jail

eel

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Slfety ~diNdof reslps

Ctf4GINN&lt;\Jl (AP-) - CiW SafetY . Director . Kent Ryan
resigned P~idw foll~-.g seoic~ 'days ·of qocln'g &lt;Ncr the police '
ShOOting Of an Una'nne9 bJaclt mill. .
1
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~ 'Mayor Charles Luken Said Ryan resigned for personal and ·
health reasons. Ryan, 55, had checked into University Hospitals''
Son Moqday with chest pai115 and checked out a day later.
.
~ On Wednesday; city Cooncilwoinan Alicia Reese "Called for
! Ryan's;1e,signation, ~ng he,(ailed to foster pblice~community
Grelations in nearly 4 1/~ yean in the job. Ryan had day-to-day
; conun4Jii:l over the city's police and fire forces. ·
Luken said Ryan expressed a delire tp be relieved ofhis duties
before the rioting. He · &amp;:lid . the resignation gives the city a
chance to appoint a safety 'dire,c tor,who is mpre proactive ..

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Egg farm faces •ccusation

CLEVELAND (AP) - The largest .suppli er of iron ore to the
North American steel industry wants governm ent support for a
five-year freeze on imports of se mi finished steel, or slabs.
Clevela nd-Cliffs Inc. argues the imports threaten the iron ore
industry.
·
In· writte·n comments to the U.S. Comm erce Department, the
company on Th ursday sald increased reliance o n imports could
lead to more shutdowns of steel-making furna ces that use iron
COLUMBUS (AP) - The operator of a crane that fell on a ore pellets.
'
The Comm erce Dqlartmcnt is invcsti gaung whether iron
U;
car and kiUed a driver has been sent back to jail for violating his
ore and scmifiAishcd steel imports are threa tening national
m~y
'' probation.
.
securi ty, which could resul t in such remedies as quotas and tar• CINC
. JNN•'TI (AP)
u·,s. A.t. .to rney G eneraIJo.h n Ash cro.tc. Mark Burcher,
42, of Columbt\s, drunk at the tune of the
,
.,
· .n
'd . ·
ills on those goods.
jlas •l!~.;jnied''Asslital!t U.S. Attorney Salvador Domin et as crane. :_cct en~ m 1997 ' was ordered ~n Thursday to se.rw· the
I J~~ interim cfuef federal pros.;cutor for the SOUthern di~ict of remall11ng . 1 3~. da~S of a \&gt;ne-year J&lt;Ul term after h e 11leg~lly
! Oh' · • &lt; •
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renewed hts dnver s hcl•nse and tested posttJVe for alcohol.
;~~··app,ointrtumt \viii be effective Sunday.
. Judge David Fais of Franklin C~unty Common Pkas Court
f ,. 'Donrlnguez bas ' served as first a!listant • to US Atto .
sentenced Burcher to one y&lt;:llr tn Jatl two years ago, unposed a
: S:ha~n 1Ze;U~ since July. 1997.:
· · . rney $1,500 fine. and suspended his. driver's license fo r three y~ars.
l ~eal~y, 41, ls.rtsigriing ~0 becot11e a lawyer in the Cincinnati Burcher. renewed hts driVers hccnse on Jan.- 3, accordmg to
· · ffi
fBI k R'
c · · t... · d M C I
Phil I .
hiS probation officer.
.
o...,;.e ~~-·· an , , O,!l!~· ~1111So.y an · c au ey, a
ade phia·
ase~w. lirm,
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Test.f•llto-det..d source

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Bring In your out-dated, worn out jewelry and
we'll lllve It a makeover that will turn It Into a
splenatd new stylish creation. It's like having a
totally new piece of jewelry - only better - you
already own the stones to bellln with. Trust our
50 years of experience ana workmanship In
remounting.
·
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CHARDON (AP) - Four of nine paralyzed residents of a ,
h?me who depend on ventilators have appea led a deciston n:qumng them to find someplace else for their care.
/ H eather Hill Hospital and Health Partnership decided last
week to end its long-term care for ventilator patients.The Ohio
Depa rtm ent of Health will hold a hearing to decide if the four
who appealed have ·to n~ove out by May 3.
The nursing home has lost more than $1 million ·in the two
years since government medical reimbursements for ventilator
.patients were cut , saii:l Greg Storer, chi ef operating officer. It
can't afford to keep them, after th e state refused three times to
raise the reimbursements, he said.
A nursing hom e is allowed to discontinue services for business reasons ,and discharge patients by following stafe procedures, ODH spokesman Randy Hertzer said .

High in the lower 70s. South
wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of
railf'60 percent.
·
Huon
1.30 -.....
........ .
............. ............IjSunday
night ...Mosdy
1
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. cloudy with a chance of showers. LOYi 45 to 50.
uo ...
·Extended forecast:
Monday. .. Partly . cloudy.
High in the upper 50s.
·
Thcsday... Cioudy with a
chapce of·showers. Low near . SOURCE: U.S. Oeplrtmenf o1 Energy
AP
40 and high in the mid 40s.
.Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
home near Waverly on Wednesday.
wit:Q a chance of showers. Low
, Sheriff's deputies were called to the trash bin after I 0 a.m. '
in the upper 30s .a nd high in
Wednesday by an ambulance crew. The baby, which appea red to
the mid 40s.
be a few hours old, was later declar&amp;:d dead at ]?ike CommuniThursday... Pudy
cloudy.
Low in the lower 30s and high ty Hospital.
.
in the uppet"50s.

CLEVllUND ·(AP)· - · (\'n · jndeperident e~amination of
-.water samples failed to show the source oCLegionnaires' disease
~t a Ford Motor Co. plant, a count,y health official said Friday.
~ Ford closed the 2,500-employee CleVeland Casting Plant on
:March 14 .a nd· scrubbed it tl?o~t&gt;ughly for 'five· days after four
~&lt;?rkm cqntt;~ted the disease and two of t!Jem died.
·
~ The Centers for Dis~ase Control and Prevention conduCted
~n analysis that failed to pi~point the source of the disease, said
P'erry Jt.ilan; ditl!ctor .of community health for the Cuyahoga
ounty Board of Health.
.
The CDC analyzed, 53 \Vater sarllples from thl: plant, of
lthicb seven, or 13 percent, tested p\}sitive for the Legionella
;pacteria, Allan s~id Friday.
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Four appeal ventilator decision
1~ursmg

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1..50 .............. . ' ............... ... -- . ' ... ~ · -···- .. ..
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,·Ex-aviation chief sentenced

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5YearRate!

Published every Swnday, llS 1\ltd Jwc..
O~a Valley PubiiMiq
Compony. c l • - pol4 a Oallpallt,
Obi•
Eltertd u HeotHI elm 111111111 maner 11
Oailipolil, Oblo, by i11c

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WlthA Fixed

IIJIPS 113-Utl

BY TliE ASSOCIATED PRESS

$1.70 pe·~ ......:...........................

He isn't supposed to drive again until next year.

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6unbap-Qttmef 6mttuel

• Marion E. Snider, 23, Racine,
am..,
on two counts o1· burglary and
ICCinlt. llyoo aow tf u error Ia a ~ Tht Auodued Prf:p, 1ftd 11M' Oblo
three counts o1 breaking and
.....,, call ... ""',... at (74t) 446entering. Snider was aJiegedly
511114 lddfta corrmloftlto tbe
00or .....,.,, ('14t) f9%-lU.S. We ril ~1=·~
Suadl~ ·11mea Slltiael, 825· Third Ave.,
involved in the Feb. 20 break·lns
dleek yoor loro..etltll aad •ake a Oallipaii•Oblo
&lt;Sill I.
at the Ray Wade residence, Wag·
cot •edlollf ,..rruted.
·
,
IIIINDAY ONLY
ner Hardware, Star Mill Park and
.,
IUIICRimOIIIlATEll
li Cln1oror M - the Racine American Legion hall.
Ntwlo-tnllllll
0..'\ll:ek ..................................................... $1.~
The ~harge~ are 1ilth·degree
Gllllpolle · ·
IOM Yoar ...................................................... 16&gt;.00
felonies.
• ,,
SINGUI COPY PIIICE '"
n.
••••
.....
,
11 &lt;A6·l342.
ne,ua.at ....... ue: -"
; Chad Wlse 1 22, Middleport, on
~'::~pti;'b;-~'i'j;;.;;it;t'j;·~·~z;
. a 1our!fHlegru 1el9ny. charge ot
H-'1111 Wlor.-..--Eit.na home cwr~Cr •"'" lsavai!Mic.
nc SM.-y11~Sclllilll will not be reipOUible
· unlawful sex~al COIIdUct wHh a
CIIJ llilllir
-£11.121
ftw ~.......,.. lhlllctoeatrlcra.
UfiiiP
.
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minor. Wile Is ICCustd 01 engag··
Pllbli*r ruim:l tlw: riPe 10 adjllll tlla durin&amp;
s,o..
111.123
lng In sexual conduct whh a 13
tile sublalptlon period. Sut.:ripdoft me ~
n~ay be lmplerncllttd by dlualna'the dundoa of
year-old gl~ .
!&lt;1Ell.
"'
the t~blcriprloll.
To .... JI.Mol
• S~erry Clark, age vnreported,
plbll @ct.... _
Point Pleasant, W.Va., on a charge
MAIL"':t~=ONS
NlwiDipl''*''
o1 grand thelt. She Is accused o1
IJ \ll:eb. .., .................................................$27Jll
Po11111oy
stealing videotapes 1rom the Home
26 - ...................................................I.!J.82
Th
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I•
"2·2155.
l2 - . ................................ ...............$105.56
Entertainment Center in Pomeroy. · Dtpon-ttlltooioMari:
- a-co~~oc.o~~y.
The charge against ·Clark car· I· •
llw..ta......................................................l29.~
~ Ma......--.111.1101
~as a , spectlicatlon alleging that
26
W..ka.
.................................................. $.56.68
New~ .. ___ ...............--Ext.llll
52 \ll:eka. .......,l ......................................St09.n
tHe tapes In question are valued at
-··-·-"'"_,.......- .... or Ext liN
·more than $500, but less than

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FROM STAFF REPORTS

Comcllon Polley
o.r...m .....nlaad....W.iltobe

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your' own
home,
you
can
bo.+o'W'.againsi.ihe·
.
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..
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.
-'1~,; .r.~ . . . ' . i=-"~QUJ..~y,.l
that s ...u~.r" · nght mto your house!'· -·: . · .· • 1. 1 ••• ., ,

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Reader Services

,

A.F~R~ERS ~A~K "Ho~e ~qy~h~f,lg:e'~:·Equi;ty;:. '.: ·;
Lm¢ w11l m~ke,. your d~eams growl' ·.If you o-wn· . ''·

1ndicts four MORE. COCAL FOLKS
MORE LOCAL NEWS
POMEROY
Four
in&lt;lictmeilts ,were issued by
the Meigs Courlty Grand Jury
followihg their session last
week.
·
Indictments· · were filed
agatnst:

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' Notlonalrw.,age retail price for gasoline

'

HMCnotes

$5.000.
• Paula Clark, 35, Racine, on six
counts i:&gt;1 receiving stolen property
and three counts· 111 1orgery. The
receiving charges are 1elonies of
the filth degree, and carry tHe

Mayor Charles Luken reluctantly said he us. There's no doubt;' Ruberg said.
expected the curfew to continue until at
Tyrone Smith, 50, aid he thinks the violeast Easter Sunday,
lence is over and that religious leaden will
"A . lot of businesses are suffering," keep the weekend peaceful. .
Luken said. "We'd like to get them back in
"I like to think there will be enough
business as soon as \ve can .''
..
leadership out there to address that;' he
Police reported no major proble~1S in said.
th:, fi.rst hour of the curfew Friday niiht.
Helmeted police officers, joined by 120
Its been wry calm· out there," police State Highway Patrol troopers and 'sherspokesman Lt. Ray Ruberg said. "We've iff's deputies outnumbered residents on
had a lot of community support." '
the deserted streets Thursday night,
Timothy Thomas, 19, ·who was shot enabling tl1em to prevent all but a few
while Hceing an officer, was buried Satur- outbursts.
day following a church service in Over"You could break up smaller groups or
the-Rhine, the neighborhood where most individuals before they formed into larger
of the rio ting occurred Monday through groups;' Ruberg said. "Last night the offiWednesd1y. Police were preparing for a cers were our and proactive in stopping
lafge turnout at the funeral.
people and finding out why they were
"That could be a potential problem for there."
•

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Teen. ·dteclln ni'Wborn's
death' .
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; WAVERLY (AP) - ·A 16-Year•old girf was charged Friday
~vith pntting her ne,'&gt;:born baby in :l trash bag and dumping it
J.n a trash bin.T he baby was declared dead a few hours later.
Christina McCoy was arreste.d Friday. afternoon' and ch;uged
fvith aggravat&lt;!d murder, involuntary manslaughte~ and endanli;ering children. .
.,
·
~ Pike County Prosecutor Robert Junk said the girl apparentconcealed her pregna~cy~;ind delivered ~he baby girl at .her .

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Ho11seowner
dess April 21

--

lerter or utility bill with l:i}eir
name, address and a recent
date. Driver's license will not
be accepted this year.
Eligible people will receive
food orders evety two weeks
until supplies are depleted.

announced by Gov. Bob Wise.
. .SOuthwestern Community
Action Council received
$487,843 . to weatherwize
about 125 units in Cabell,
Lincoln, Mason and Wayne
counties. The grant will serve
313 people,
The West Virginia Department of Health and Human
Resources and the U.S.
· Department ofEnergy will be
used this. year to weatherizef
1,188 units. Fifty percent
the homes 'will target elderly
residents, while 25 percent
will target handicapped residents.
In addition, the county will
receive .benefits from Community Service Block Grants,

p.m., or visiting the website at
.._.._.w,NW.cofchris.or.

cenl$ per tile .for motorcycle
and lawn tractor tires.There is
a limit of 20 tires per load.
For more information, call
the health department at 4412018.

Issued licenses

GALLIPOLIS
Free
CHESHIRE - A homeimmunizations Will be proowner education class will be
POMEROY - Marriage
vided by the Gallia County licenses have been issued in
offered by Gallia-Meigs
Health !:Jepartment at the fol- . Meigs County Probate Court
Community Action Agency
lowing locations this week:
on April 28,- 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
to Patrick Arnol Weaver, 28,
each day.
·
Gallia
Met•
Wednesday
Vinton, and Jill Ann Lemley,
. GALLIPOLIS - Wai-Mart
The course is free of char~e o.f Gallipolis is scheduling a ropolitan Estates, 2"3 p.m.
20, Rutland, and to Don Ray•
ThursdayGallia
Counand will cover various types of Big Gobbler contest.
mond WhanJr., 35, and jenny
POINT P~ANT,WVa.
ty
Health
Department,
499
mortgages, obtaining a mortLynn
Cook,
34,
both
of
MidEntries are due at the sportMason County Career
dleport.
ga~, cm!it repons and ho'Qle ing goods dep~rtment ofWal- Jackson Pike, 4-6 p.m.
Center's FBLA, VICA and
.Children in . need of immumamtenance.
Mart by midnight on April
FCCLA students, along with
nizations
must be accompaGuest speaken, including 22. The winner wiU be selectPoint Plea$ant High School
nied by a parent or legal
.aaorneys, bankers, insurance ed May 13 at 8 p.m.
. Drama Club students will
POMEROY _..,. A civil suit
agents, realtors, ext'e nsion
The winner will be selected guardian, and bring a current
tour New York City during
agents, contractors, housing by lengrh of beard.lf there are immunization record with filed in Meigs County .Comspring break.
authorities and other agencies multiple beards, a decision them.
mon Pleas Court by RJW
They will ·r depart Point
Additional services, such ~ Construction Inc., against
will present information per- will be made from the total
Pleasant early Tuesday. Their
tinent to anyone interested in length of all beards equalling blood pressure d1ecks and Home Creek · Enterprises according to Wise.
The Southwestern Com- itinerary includes a walking
pregnancy tests, will be Inc., has been dismissed.
purchasing a home.
final length.
·
A ·
Council tour ofTin,es Square, the themuntty
ctton
The course is ~esigned to
If beard 'length is the sam..-, offered during the evening
atre district, visit to the
received $610,694.
benefit any.o ne regarclless · of a tie will be settled by by hours at the health departThe block gra nts service. Empire State Buil&lt;ling and
age, f.1mily situation or weight. If the weight is the ment.
POMEROY - An · a~tion low-income residents who Stante of Liberty.
income level. Seatin'g is limit- same; ~he tie will be settled by
· On Wednesday, th. ey will
for divorce has l&gt;een filed in meet specific income .gui de- visit Rockefeller Center for
ed and · reservations may be spur len!.''th.
·
Meigs County Common lines establish~d by the U.S.
m:&gt;de by calling C AA at 367All turkeys in the contest
TUPPERS
PLAINS
Pleas Court by Vi c)ci Lyn n Office of M anogement and the taping of the NBC
7.3~ I or · 992-6(&gt;29. Families
must be brought to the lawn
are wdmme and refreshments and garden entry gate at Wal- Tuppers Plains-Chester Water Hoffiuan, Po1 1croy, and Fred Budget. The areas of service "Today". Sh,ow. They will sec
will be provided.
Mart by 8 p.m. on the day the District lt:is lifted a boil ndvi- Michael Hoffinan, Syracuse. include conuuuniev revitaliza..• ·· ~t. Patr.• ~k ~ 11 c;a lfedral and
. soty for customers in Bedford · The case was reported e~rlier tio;1, family stitliitiiy' and self- '' FAOS,V:lrti, Ne\vrlork Stock
CAA 's housing program , bird is harvested.
, ~qfficiency.
.
Exchange ~nd .world Trade
along \Vith Ohio 'l.llley Bank,
There is a $5 entry fee and .Township, from the intersec- as a dissolution action ..
I
the
p"
rogram
are
~enter. !hey wt.l.l ·al~~ attend
Funds
for
are offering the course in a 75 percent payback to the tion of U.S. 33 and Ohio 681
provided by' the
DepartLes Mismbles on Broadat Darwin, north on U.S. 33
conjun ction with a project w1nner.
ment of Health· and Human way.
. .. ' ,
to Burlingham , including
that will build six stick-built
and
the
AdnunistraThey
will
"depart
·the Big
Services
Park · Road, Swindell Road,
homes in Syracuse. •
don for Children and Fami- Apple for Point Pleasant on
Jones Road, ~ur\i!lgham
.The homes are alfordable to
POMEROY
-Jerry
Aora
li
'. , . 1
Thursday. ·
: '· '
Road and Williams Road.
es.
both moderate and low'· '" ·' "' ·
·•
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' A sample taken April ' 12 is was sentenced in Meigs
income families. Participants
HOGSETT. WVa. A considered.safe.
County Common Pleas
L!..
. n'
who graduate from the course
Cqurt
to
a
·year
in
prison
on
111t1
'
may be eligible to purchase a contract will be awarded by
each
of
three
counts
of
POINT
PLEAS!&lt;NT,WVa.
new home with interest rates the Huntington· District of
'
·
, !I~~ · · - An Easter sum'ise/comniureceiving stolen property.
as low as 4 percent for 30 the U.S. Army Corps ofEngiThose sentences · were sus·POINT PJ,.EASANTWVa. nion serVice will 1le "held at
years, with no down payment •neers to improve fishing
pended
.
by
Judge
Fred
W.
,"--.:..
Mason · Co~htY ~~er- · the Chuhih ·of 'Cb~ist in
access at the Ohio River
require-d:
RACINE As . of· last Crow ·III, and flora , was · ··gency Food ~rid 'Shelte,r Pro- Chri1.tian Union, Mai.\ Srteet,
T~e class is also a require- abutment of the Robe~t C.
ment for those applicants Byrd Locks and Dani . this week, the church formerly ordered to complete . th~ gram food bahk . will ·open at 6 a.m. Easter mortling. .
·
kno:wn as the Reorganized Southeastern Probatioqaty Tuesday. , The. food bank is
There will . be . special
wishing to apply for the down month.
Construction is expected to Church ofjesus Christ ofLat- Treatment Alternative pro- located in die b~sement of the singing by the i:lioi~ ~nd othpayment assistance activity
ter Day Saints changed its gram in NelsonviUe. . ' . . · Presbyterian Church~ 8th and en. The public is wclco.fie.
includ~d in the Gallia County begin in late April, with comHe was also ordered to 11ar- Main Streets: and Willlie'open
·
"' ' · ·
·
Community
Housing · pletion scheduled for Octo- name to the Community of
ber. Preliminary ·surveying at Christ, according to the local ticipate in the Community every other Tuesday from 1-4
. Improvement Program.
. ·p.m. u·n til supplies, are
.
For )tformation on CHIP, the site wiU . b~gin once the · congregation whose church is Corrections program.
on Lovett Road, just off
.The char~es were fifth- exhausted. ~:. .. " ~. ·. · :: ,:,,. ,. f91!'l.1" PIJ?ASg.IT,WVa.
contact CAA's Gallia County contract is awarded. ,
degree
felomes.
To be elig1ble for this pro- · Mason County AARP
Fishing
access
on
the
Ohio
County
Road
35.
(Portlandoffice at 446-1018.
gtam, you must be a resident :.chapter will ·liave its Eastet
side wiU be closed for periods Racine) .
·
of Mason &lt;::ounty and ·unem- .'Dinner · on Wednesday " at
of time to diminate safety
Community of Christ is an
p'loyed.
noon at Fort Randolph 'Thrconcerns to the public due to international denomination
Eligible
!·
pe6ple
·J
should
·
race.
· ,_. ,.,. .: · ,.
construction activities. How- With appl:qlfimately 250,oqp
evef, fishing access on the members in more ,than · 50
CHARLESTON W.V: _ : ; bring· fheir ·Social ~''Secutity ·, ·:: •:£V.ryolle''ig lllskf:d' tlllbi'ing a
GALLIPOLIS -The City ._W~st Virginia shore
nations.
,
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fi nun1ber and proof'of Mason covered dish and a '. ineeting
e,n~ tt. County
residence • when 'vill follow. .
.,
ason ~un.~ , ,W,,1
Commission will meet in spe- renlain open during the conThe R~DS Church was
from
Wcathen.zation
lUSIS•applying
for
foo~l.
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organized ' in 1860. A release
cial session Tuesday at 7 p.m. struction period.
in the Gallipolis Municipal
The improved fishing area · from the local congregation tance , Progra'!' , · ,grants · they are residents; they-need a· ·· • .&lt; '
courtroom, City Manager will provide handicapped said that (n recent yean' many
access below ·the datu on the have expressed -a, desire to
E.V. Clarke Jr. announced.
Ohio bank. Majo~ features have a name that ~ aderepresents
the
include improved parking qu.ately
areas and. a fishing pier at the church's theology and mistop of the existing submerged sion : "We ' proclaim Jesus
sheet pile cdls downstream of Christ and promote commu· GALLIPOLIS - A scrap the dam .
nities of joy, hope, love and
tire collection day has been
A handicapped accessible peace."
set for April 21 from 9:30 ramp will be constructed
Delegates at the church's
a.m. until 2:30 p.m. at the from the lower parking lot to 2000 · World Conference
Gallia County Service Center the fishing pier.
approved the Community of
(old Ohio Departme.nt of
For more information, con- Christ name with a nearly 80
Transportation .garage), 499 tact Pe&amp;~,"Y Nod at 304-529- perce nt affirmative vote, it
Jackson Pike.
5451. ·
was reported.
The event is sponsored by
The local congregation was
Gallia
County
Health
established in 1929- 1930. The
Department, Gallia County .
pastor is Michael R. Duhl,
Holzer M~dical Center
commissioners and the Galwho can be contacted at 7 40, lia-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton
Discharges April 12 843-5481.
-~=~~~-~
' Solid Waster Management
More about the Communi-•
Kimberly Preston.
District.
.
Birth- Mr. and Mrs. Neil ty of Christ can be learned by
Fees include $1 per tire for
Whaley,. daughte.r, Mason , ~!tending services on Sunday
car-pickup tires; $2 per tire
WVa. (Published with per- mornings at 9:30 and 10:30,
for heavy truck tires; and 50
and Wednesday. evenings at 7
miasion)

Coldest slated

Case dismissed

_._,. •.jenti~trr.l

SUnciiiJ.,.,.. 11. 2to1

Cinc.ycurfew.aims to curtail more riOts·

: Ohio weat.her
••:lundly, Ap11111

...

Students
to tour NYC

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PageA3

(APJ -

CINCINNATI
Srteets were
generally quiet for a second col)secutive
night as the city extended its curfew, forcing churches to cancel traditional Good
Friday services after dark.
The city official who ove=es · police
operations resigned laa; Friday afternoon,
the first change at City Hall since three
days of ri()ting spad;ed by the shooting
de:rtil of an' unarmed black man by a ·
police officer. ·
In what was seen as a victory for critics
who deman ded changes at the police
department, Safety Director Kent Ryan
resigned for personal and health re:ISOns.
Ryan , 55, spent a night in a hospital "ith
ch~t pains earlier this week.
C hurches called off or reschedt:lei
nighttime Good Friday services

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Lift advisory

u.s.

Sentenced on
charce

Improved ·

access planned

SerVice $et ,.

k.
openS .......-....lay

Food

Church changes
· name

Meeting slated

Commission
meets Tuesday

area propamS . ,
i/'

will

Day planned for
tire collection

Acco&lt;ding to an Energy D~partment 1orecast, molorisis this surrmer could pay
more for gasoline lhan last summMs average price of $1 .53 per gallqn.

Meigs

grand ju·ry

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specl11catlon that the property
involved In the crimes were blank
checks.
The 1orgery counts are also 11fth·
degree felonies.
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-.. Showers return for Easter

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A cold front will be m9\'lng
across the area Sunday. There
;; ;~viii be a chance of showers,.
'"with ,.thunderstorms possible.
Highs will be in the 70s. .
Lows will faD into the upper
20s to. )ow \ 30s Tuesday and
Wedn~y. The weather ser. ·'.vice $ays people with sensitive
. ,.plants o4\5ide or plants that are·
, , vulnerable to tio• or lieezing
, 1 , should ~w:t preparing to pro'; .teet d)t;~.
.
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Sullfi$e .Sunday ~ be at
!, 16:54 a.m.
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:Weather forecaat: .
Sun!lay. .. Sho~rs
likely•.
mainly from late morning. on.
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Limited
tinie offer..

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DNA matches jailed killer

•

·h:· CINCINNATI (AP) - A former executive director of the
! .. defunct Notth Ohio Valley.Air A.uthority. W:is sentenced Friday
..•$n ~ .year and a day in prison for his role in a scheme to help a

businessman get state p~~mits to operate a landfill.
·
1
f. 3" ,Bdahard Canetm~ro, 68•, of Steubenville, also was sentenced by
J,) .J.S. District Judge .Sandra S. Beckwith to one year supervis.·d
released and fined $10,0001 said U.S. Attorney Sharon Zealey.
Canestra.l'O had.· pleaded guilty to a charge of public corruption for aiding Patsy DeLuca in the ·unlawful acceptance of
!'-.S169,'750 in kickbacks for ~hrec years beginning in 1994.
Canestraro succeeded DeLuca as NOVAA's exerurive direc: tor in fuly ·1995. DeLuca and his sbn, R!onald DeLuca, and for: mer NC)YAA techni~ Vincent Zumpano previouSly pleaded
. '_gUilty aild have been sentenced Ol) charges connected with the
!andfill permits and to conspiring' to dbcdve the Internal Rev• !'n~te Service:
·
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TOLEDO (AP) -· DNA evidence that helped free a man
who served 19 years of a life sentence on a murder conv~tion
matches that of another man who is in prison for committing
another murder, investigators said. ·
Now investigators are planning to take another sample from
Sherman Preston, a prisoner at the Lebanon Correctional Facility, to deilltrune if he •~tad a role in the 1981 strangling death
and rape of Bobbie RusseU, a 28-year-old mother of thr.ee. .
Preston is in jail for the 1983 murder of Denise Howell of
Toledo. His DNA was in a database of 30,000 violent offenders
who have be~n imprisoned in Ohio. Lucas Co unty prosecutors
have known ·about the match since Feb. 16.
Investigators this week obtained asearch warrant tog)'t a sec-·
ond sample so they ca n confirm the DNA match discovered by
the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification &lt;lila Investigation.

Gal~~II•

(740) 446-2265

...•• ..

~J.Ptn Plalat

(740) 667-3161

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(~4,.:tl) F~ers 'Bank
~ We're, Your Bank for

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COLUMBUS (AP) - Neighbors of Buckeye Egg Farm
have lon g complained about the stench coming from it's· massive barns. Now the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is
complatntng too.
·
The EPA filed a. notice on Jan. 19 that acc uses Buckeye Egg
of v•olaung the federal C lean Air Act at its operations in Croton in Licking County and Marseilles .in Wyandot County
The agency is threatening civil and criminal penalties if the
co mpany does not reduce emissions .of particulates, which
increasingly have been linked to asthma and other respira~oty
problems: The emissions come from such things as manure and
·
..
dust.
, Buckeye Egg also is accused of n~t getting the proper per-

nuts.

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Iron ore supplier wants limits

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Cra~e

operator back in jail

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Slfety ~diNdof reslps

Ctf4GINN&lt;\Jl (AP-) - CiW SafetY . Director . Kent Ryan
resigned P~idw foll~-.g seoic~ 'days ·of qocln'g &lt;Ncr the police '
ShOOting Of an Una'nne9 bJaclt mill. .
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~ 'Mayor Charles Luken Said Ryan resigned for personal and ·
health reasons. Ryan, 55, had checked into University Hospitals''
Son Moqday with chest pai115 and checked out a day later.
.
~ On Wednesday; city Cooncilwoinan Alicia Reese "Called for
! Ryan's;1e,signation, ~ng he,(ailed to foster pblice~community
Grelations in nearly 4 1/~ yean in the job. Ryan had day-to-day
; conun4Jii:l over the city's police and fire forces. ·
Luken said Ryan expressed a delire tp be relieved ofhis duties
before the rioting. He · &amp;:lid . the resignation gives the city a
chance to appoint a safety 'dire,c tor,who is mpre proactive ..

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Egg farm faces •ccusation

CLEVELAND (AP) - The largest .suppli er of iron ore to the
North American steel industry wants governm ent support for a
five-year freeze on imports of se mi finished steel, or slabs.
Clevela nd-Cliffs Inc. argues the imports threaten the iron ore
industry.
·
In· writte·n comments to the U.S. Comm erce Department, the
company on Th ursday sald increased reliance o n imports could
lead to more shutdowns of steel-making furna ces that use iron
COLUMBUS (AP) - The operator of a crane that fell on a ore pellets.
'
The Comm erce Dqlartmcnt is invcsti gaung whether iron
U;
car and kiUed a driver has been sent back to jail for violating his
ore and scmifiAishcd steel imports are threa tening national
m~y
'' probation.
.
securi ty, which could resul t in such remedies as quotas and tar• CINC
. JNN•'TI (AP)
u·,s. A.t. .to rney G eneraIJo.h n Ash cro.tc. Mark Burcher,
42, of Columbt\s, drunk at the tune of the
,
.,
· .n
'd . ·
ills on those goods.
jlas •l!~.;jnied''Asslital!t U.S. Attorney Salvador Domin et as crane. :_cct en~ m 1997 ' was ordered ~n Thursday to se.rw· the
I J~~ interim cfuef federal pros.;cutor for the SOUthern di~ict of remall11ng . 1 3~. da~S of a \&gt;ne-year J&lt;Ul term after h e 11leg~lly
! Oh' · • &lt; •
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renewed hts dnver s hcl•nse and tested posttJVe for alcohol.
;~~··app,ointrtumt \viii be effective Sunday.
. Judge David Fais of Franklin C~unty Common Pkas Court
f ,. 'Donrlnguez bas ' served as first a!listant • to US Atto .
sentenced Burcher to one y&lt;:llr tn Jatl two years ago, unposed a
: S:ha~n 1Ze;U~ since July. 1997.:
· · . rney $1,500 fine. and suspended his. driver's license fo r three y~ars.
l ~eal~y, 41, ls.rtsigriing ~0 becot11e a lawyer in the Cincinnati Burcher. renewed hts driVers hccnse on Jan.- 3, accordmg to
· · ffi
fBI k R'
c · · t... · d M C I
Phil I .
hiS probation officer.
.
o...,;.e ~~-·· an , , O,!l!~· ~1111So.y an · c au ey, a
ade phia·
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Bring In your out-dated, worn out jewelry and
we'll lllve It a makeover that will turn It Into a
splenatd new stylish creation. It's like having a
totally new piece of jewelry - only better - you
already own the stones to bellln with. Trust our
50 years of experience ana workmanship In
remounting.
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CHARDON (AP) - Four of nine paralyzed residents of a ,
h?me who depend on ventilators have appea led a deciston n:qumng them to find someplace else for their care.
/ H eather Hill Hospital and Health Partnership decided last
week to end its long-term care for ventilator patients.The Ohio
Depa rtm ent of Health will hold a hearing to decide if the four
who appealed have ·to n~ove out by May 3.
The nursing home has lost more than $1 million ·in the two
years since government medical reimbursements for ventilator
.patients were cut , saii:l Greg Storer, chi ef operating officer. It
can't afford to keep them, after th e state refused three times to
raise the reimbursements, he said.
A nursing hom e is allowed to discontinue services for business reasons ,and discharge patients by following stafe procedures, ODH spokesman Randy Hertzer said .

High in the lower 70s. South
wind 5 to 10 mph. Chance of
railf'60 percent.
·
Huon
1.30 -.....
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............. ............IjSunday
night ...Mosdy
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. cloudy with a chance of showers. LOYi 45 to 50.
uo ...
·Extended forecast:
Monday. .. Partly . cloudy.
High in the upper 50s.
·
Thcsday... Cioudy with a
chapce of·showers. Low near . SOURCE: U.S. Oeplrtmenf o1 Energy
AP
40 and high in the mid 40s.
.Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
home near Waverly on Wednesday.
wit:Q a chance of showers. Low
, Sheriff's deputies were called to the trash bin after I 0 a.m. '
in the upper 30s .a nd high in
Wednesday by an ambulance crew. The baby, which appea red to
the mid 40s.
be a few hours old, was later declar&amp;:d dead at ]?ike CommuniThursday... Pudy
cloudy.
Low in the lower 30s and high ty Hospital.
.
in the uppet"50s.

CLEVllUND ·(AP)· - · (\'n · jndeperident e~amination of
-.water samples failed to show the source oCLegionnaires' disease
~t a Ford Motor Co. plant, a count,y health official said Friday.
~ Ford closed the 2,500-employee CleVeland Casting Plant on
:March 14 .a nd· scrubbed it tl?o~t&gt;ughly for 'five· days after four
~&lt;?rkm cqntt;~ted the disease and two of t!Jem died.
·
~ The Centers for Dis~ase Control and Prevention conduCted
~n analysis that failed to pi~point the source of the disease, said
P'erry Jt.ilan; ditl!ctor .of community health for the Cuyahoga
ounty Board of Health.
.
The CDC analyzed, 53 \Vater sarllples from thl: plant, of
lthicb seven, or 13 percent, tested p\}sitive for the Legionella
;pacteria, Allan s~id Friday.
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Four appeal ventilator decision
1~ursmg

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,·Ex-aviation chief sentenced

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5YearRate!

Published every Swnday, llS 1\ltd Jwc..
O~a Valley PubiiMiq
Compony. c l • - pol4 a Oallpallt,
Obi•
Eltertd u HeotHI elm 111111111 maner 11
Oailipolil, Oblo, by i11c

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WlthA Fixed

IIJIPS 113-Utl

BY TliE ASSOCIATED PRESS

$1.70 pe·~ ......:...........................

He isn't supposed to drive again until next year.

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6unbap-Qttmef 6mttuel

• Marion E. Snider, 23, Racine,
am..,
on two counts o1· burglary and
ICCinlt. llyoo aow tf u error Ia a ~ Tht Auodued Prf:p, 1ftd 11M' Oblo
three counts o1 breaking and
.....,, call ... ""',... at (74t) 446entering. Snider was aJiegedly
511114 lddfta corrmloftlto tbe
00or .....,.,, ('14t) f9%-lU.S. We ril ~1=·~
Suadl~ ·11mea Slltiael, 825· Third Ave.,
involved in the Feb. 20 break·lns
dleek yoor loro..etltll aad •ake a Oallipaii•Oblo
&lt;Sill I.
at the Ray Wade residence, Wag·
cot •edlollf ,..rruted.
·
,
IIIINDAY ONLY
ner Hardware, Star Mill Park and
.,
IUIICRimOIIIlATEll
li Cln1oror M - the Racine American Legion hall.
Ntwlo-tnllllll
0..'\ll:ek ..................................................... $1.~
The ~harge~ are 1ilth·degree
Gllllpolle · ·
IOM Yoar ...................................................... 16&gt;.00
felonies.
• ,,
SINGUI COPY PIIICE '"
n.
••••
.....
,
11 &lt;A6·l342.
ne,ua.at ....... ue: -"
; Chad Wlse 1 22, Middleport, on
~'::~pti;'b;-~'i'j;;.;;it;t'j;·~·~z;
. a 1our!fHlegru 1el9ny. charge ot
H-'1111 Wlor.-..--Eit.na home cwr~Cr •"'" lsavai!Mic.
nc SM.-y11~Sclllilll will not be reipOUible
· unlawful sex~al COIIdUct wHh a
CIIJ llilllir
-£11.121
ftw ~.......,.. lhlllctoeatrlcra.
UfiiiP
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minor. Wile Is ICCustd 01 engag··
Pllbli*r ruim:l tlw: riPe 10 adjllll tlla durin&amp;
s,o..
111.123
lng In sexual conduct whh a 13
tile sublalptlon period. Sut.:ripdoft me ~
n~ay be lmplerncllttd by dlualna'the dundoa of
year-old gl~ .
!&lt;1Ell.
"'
the t~blcriprloll.
To .... JI.Mol
• S~erry Clark, age vnreported,
plbll @ct.... _
Point Pleasant, W.Va., on a charge
MAIL"':t~=ONS
NlwiDipl''*''
o1 grand thelt. She Is accused o1
IJ \ll:eb. .., .................................................$27Jll
Po11111oy
stealing videotapes 1rom the Home
26 - ...................................................I.!J.82
Th
••I•
oo•btr
I•
"2·2155.
l2 - . ................................ ...............$105.56
Entertainment Center in Pomeroy. · Dtpon-ttlltooioMari:
- a-co~~oc.o~~y.
The charge against ·Clark car· I· •
llw..ta......................................................l29.~
~ Ma......--.111.1101
~as a , spectlicatlon alleging that
26
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.................................................. $.56.68
New~ .. ___ ...............--Ext.llll
52 \ll:eka. .......,l ......................................St09.n
tHe tapes In question are valued at
-··-·-"'"_,.......- .... or Ext liN
·more than $500, but less than

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FROM STAFF REPORTS

Comcllon Polley
o.r...m .....nlaad....W.iltobe

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your' own
home,
you
can
bo.+o'W'.againsi.ihe·
.
., ~~·~·;
..
1....... -t., buih .
.
-'1~,; .r.~ . . . ' . i=-"~QUJ..~y,.l
that s ...u~.r" · nght mto your house!'· -·: . · .· • 1. 1 ••• ., ,

I

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Reader Services

,

A.F~R~ERS ~A~K "Ho~e ~qy~h~f,lg:e'~:·Equi;ty;:. '.: ·;
Lm¢ w11l m~ke,. your d~eams growl' ·.If you o-wn· . ''·

1ndicts four MORE. COCAL FOLKS
MORE LOCAL NEWS
POMEROY
Four
in&lt;lictmeilts ,were issued by
the Meigs Courlty Grand Jury
followihg their session last
week.
·
Indictments· · were filed
agatnst:

,

' Notlonalrw.,age retail price for gasoline

'

HMCnotes

$5.000.
• Paula Clark, 35, Racine, on six
counts i:&gt;1 receiving stolen property
and three counts· 111 1orgery. The
receiving charges are 1elonies of
the filth degree, and carry tHe

Mayor Charles Luken reluctantly said he us. There's no doubt;' Ruberg said.
expected the curfew to continue until at
Tyrone Smith, 50, aid he thinks the violeast Easter Sunday,
lence is over and that religious leaden will
"A . lot of businesses are suffering," keep the weekend peaceful. .
Luken said. "We'd like to get them back in
"I like to think there will be enough
business as soon as \ve can .''
..
leadership out there to address that;' he
Police reported no major proble~1S in said.
th:, fi.rst hour of the curfew Friday niiht.
Helmeted police officers, joined by 120
Its been wry calm· out there," police State Highway Patrol troopers and 'sherspokesman Lt. Ray Ruberg said. "We've iff's deputies outnumbered residents on
had a lot of community support." '
the deserted streets Thursday night,
Timothy Thomas, 19, ·who was shot enabling tl1em to prevent all but a few
while Hceing an officer, was buried Satur- outbursts.
day following a church service in Over"You could break up smaller groups or
the-Rhine, the neighborhood where most individuals before they formed into larger
of the rio ting occurred Monday through groups;' Ruberg said. "Last night the offiWednesd1y. Police were preparing for a cers were our and proactive in stopping
lafge turnout at the funeral.
people and finding out why they were
"That could be a potential problem for there."
•

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Teen. ·dteclln ni'Wborn's
death' .
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; WAVERLY (AP) - ·A 16-Year•old girf was charged Friday
~vith pntting her ne,'&gt;:born baby in :l trash bag and dumping it
J.n a trash bin.T he baby was declared dead a few hours later.
Christina McCoy was arreste.d Friday. afternoon' and ch;uged
fvith aggravat&lt;!d murder, involuntary manslaughte~ and endanli;ering children. .
.,
·
~ Pike County Prosecutor Robert Junk said the girl apparentconcealed her pregna~cy~;ind delivered ~he baby girl at .her .

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su....,. Afrl11,2001

No resolution yet on video poker bill

West VIrginia weather
Sund8y, April15
N:oJW..-..w

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OliO

Ohio Valley Publl•hlng .Co.
Ct.leeW.Govey
~bi!Mer .

me

R. Shawn Lewis

Mln~glng

organizations that currendy hold a Class •
A liquor license, own their own
machines and are "in good standing."
The ~maining permits were to be distributed through an open bidding system proposed by Wise and contained in
the Senate bill.
·
Although the sides couldn't agree on
the permits; they did come ro terms on
an issue that House leaders had said
would be a deal breaker-· an increase in
the nuximum bet on slot nuchines
operated at West Virginia'&lt; four racetracks.

CHAIU.ESTQN. 'fi.Va. (AP) - A acr befo~ the tegular 60-day .session
House-Se~ comnuttee charged with ends at midnight Saturday.
drafting a co~
' romisc bill to enact Gov.
When asked if given the time &amp;arne,
Qob Wise's · to regubte and tax video the Video poker machine bill had a
poker machin. caUed it quits cady Sat- chance. Craigo said:"I don't have a clue.
hours of nego- Whether we work something out in the
urday mornillg·after
· tiatiqns, most,'o f it behind closed doors. afternoon, I don't know."
I "I think everyone's tired right now .
Craigo, D-Putnam, said the effort to
and frustrated apd maybe when we get reconcil~ the differing versions fell apart
·some rest ... ~ve can try again," said Del- over how permits · for the machines
egate Mike Caputo, D-Marion, as he would be distributed.
headed for the eKit.
The bill, HB2205, would legalize ~nd
Senate Fi112J1Ce Chairnun Oshel Crai- · ux the \Vinnings from the so-called gray
go said whe~ the talks broke of!' at 1:30 machines and limit them to 9,000
a.m. the 10-Shen}ber conference com- statewide and areas not accessible to
•pittee woul4,not 11\eet Saturday morn- children.

Glllllpoll8, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point Plflflnt.

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·I

KY.

The provision· increases the maximunt
bet from $2 to $5 on the sute Lottery

Earlier, committee tnentben discussed Commission-regulated machinos. Tlie

mg.

· The conu1tittec is facing a deadline to distributing the permits two at a rime to provision is expected to generate about
·
reach an agreement so both houscs can bars, clubs, and fraternal and \'eter.m SSO 1nillion f year.

OUR VIEW

..

Done?

·.

Judge postpones plea

Loaded vans at •reater risk to roll
TIJe risk of rollover in 15·passenger vans increases ~ramalically with the
number of passengers on board. according lo an analysis of single-vehicle
crash data by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administ1ation.

•

Man presumed drowned

OUR READERS' VIEWS

It~

not too late to change
minds about Ohios ·budget

'

I know thls letter mabs me sound biaer 6nal three months' period had pooibly stlrt.
and if I think about i~ I agree. I feel, though, ed.
No
more
chemotherapy
was possible, and
Dear Editor:
if you IM:l'e to wade in my shoes every time
there,
on
my
table,
was
an
envelope
from Aiea
I would like to reply to the letter written it begins to rain, every time the Ohio Ri...:r
in the Sunday, AprilS, 2001 paper, &amp;om Mr. starts to rise, every time I go in and out ofthls Agency 7 With an . aWard One, of my
Some folks believe the budget reductions contained in
and Mn. Robert Albaugh concerning the road, every tinie we wish Jr. was here, you thoughts I had written at night had been sent
Ohio's biennial budget that takes effect July 1 are a done deal.
in by my long time · friend &amp;om M~
ftood problem on their road
might understand why.
. The Republican majority in the Statehouse won't go against
I too live on a road that lw a ftood probEomy day we think this shouldn't have County's Bookmobile Service - ;md it had
Gov. Bob Taft spending plan and public services are in for a
!em; Shady Cove Road, at the lower end of happened and the only reason it did is won GaUia Coun'ty~ lint place in the essay
cutback.
Middleport.
because we didn't 8ft the help we should contest.
This is only April. The Legislature has time yet to tinker with
The last 6ne of their letter said, "thls is gov- have fi:om our tru~~ea. How else can I fed? · '.'The good is there" - my snndmother
the plan and hopefully restore funding to needed services.
ernment at ics finest:' I feel you shoidd thank
This letter isn't going to put me on top of used to say-"ifyou aren't too busy pitying
That's where we come in. Sometimes we have to tell lawmakyour trusteeS.They did their job; without the Salisbury trustees lilt. .I am not writing it yourself.'
ers what we think.
Thank you God for another day and·ant
help of your trustees, you won't 8ft the help because I want to be there. I am writing it
If anyone is concerned ,jibout the fate of Gallipolis Developothet
you choose to send me:
you need &amp;om the government.
because I Want other people who haft a
mental Center, the 500 people it employs and most importantVDma PlkkDJ•
I know this first-hand. On Feb 20, 2000,1 problem with their trulteCS to speak up. Get
ly, the more than 200 clients its serves, now is the time to call,
.
Gallipolis
lost my husband to our flood problem. We the help you should ~ If you had a probwrite, fax or e-mail legislators and teU them how important
couldn't get our trustees to ask the gowm- !em with them and.they pushed your probGDC is to the local economy, and what it means to clients they
ment
for the help we needed with our flood !ems under the filii, 8ft it back out. Don't let
serve.
We have made this· request before. We ask again because as
problem, l!fitil it was too late. We had to have 10~ like what happen to our family
a
drowning before th~ goyernment became happen to yours. The trwreei run for their Dtlr Editor:
the deadline nears for Ohio tO put a school funding plan into
involved.
·
job. If they don't want to put 100 percent
There arc angels of mercy here in Meigs '
effect to satisfy a Supreme Court directive, it appears deeper
When yaur trustees .won't do .something into it, let\ vote them out.
County - the Holzer Hospice 111eigs
reductions in the budget may have to· tinan~e that plan.
for you, try' to do it yoursel£ I wrote letter
I hope every voter on election ·day County Unit.
Developmental centers have an impact on the. communities
after
letter
to
everyone
I
was
told
to.
I
wmt
rememben
what happen on Shady Cove
The unit consists of regbtered .nu~ •
. where they are located. 'rhe effect GDC has had on the ecoto the Salisbury Township trustees' meetinjp. Road. The 1r111tees haven't done a thing on Sheila Brooks,
~ :"'d Dopa John- ,
nomic and social fabric of the tri-county is deep. It's been a
I even went in front of RichafC\,]QIICS, at .the . our road-~ the accident.
son.The ~ gMt' u Kim Mitchell and1bnya
part of the area for more than a century, ·and enVisioning a
1
future without it is painful, to tay the least.
.
co1'111llissioners' meetiJtS' in Pomeioy. ·
_,._I.·
, Please don't just vote to 8ft yo\11' family,. H~11!, !l~~':f~~~
I was always told the same thing: that my friend. or ilomeone you know elected. I feel
These wo~ women are.on :z4- ~ur
Understandably. the Taft admininration is looki71g to save
trustees would ha'lli to ask for ~ce. the trustees did not do their job this term and eaU. They adminis!er m,d ~orutor medicamoney and put it to better use.
.
Everything has to Start at the bottom. Which we should 8ft thetn out and let:someone else bon,l:lke care pf the rauent ~ personal needs,
School funding certainly qualifies, but at what expense to
means the trustees have to ask for the help that will be willing to help everyone in. We and support. the family ~unng the terminal
services the state provides? The 4.1 percent cut now in the pro~
and they are the ones that have to fill out the need someone that will get the job done .• • ~their loved on~ s illness. .
· posal affects not only mental retardation/ developmental disforms.
befun, the damage is done, big or smaU. AU
Thetr mere presenc~ m the home ~ a great
abilities, but health, mental health and prisons.
With
the
trustees
starting
i~
hopefully.
it
problems
should
be
looked
into.
We
need
~·
The family IS •gwded and mclude_d
If enacted as it stands, or with a another reduction built in,
gets to the top. Which in your case, it did. It . trustees, that will help :ill, not just an ill-cho- J? every step o~ the dying process. ,No decijob losses are possible not- only in Gallipolis but in other comonly
reached the top because your trUStees sen few.
Slon .IS ~ Without the family's consent.
munities where the st;lte is a major employer. Without ~ plan
saw that there was a problem, and cared
Debbie Engle
Kim MitcheU came to o~ home ~
or other jobs to absorb those losses, those communities will
enough to do something about it. . ·
Middleport day. She was competent, frienclly and was
suffer.
After
Jr.,
my
husband,
drowned,
the
~ one step ahead of w~t needed ~ be
If jobs are lost, the state may see cost-effectiveness. But with
that many people out of wo9r'-for who knows how long, how
trustees involved the goilernment. After other
r.·
done. .
.
letters
I
wrote
asking
them
to
raise
our
road
.
Sheila,Teresa,;mdDana
came
three
tunes
a
can the state expect sales tax revenue to get back to where it
n,.r Editor:
, _ · week, but were also on eaU. They .were a
or. to help u.• get a walk-path ou~ they never
used to be? Fewer jobs means fewer people spending, causing .
did anything. It cost too much, one excuse
When onJan.2,2001, the test. reports that pl!one caD away and were there Wlthit) mma ripple effect felt aU the way to the Statehouse.
after
another.
They
just
didn't
Want
to
deal
the
cat scam and the X-rays were :ill read and Utes when the family needed th.em. .
More efficient o(leration is a double-edge sword. Less people
with our ITood problem.
reported by specialists and the second opin- To~ was ~ry hel~ful dealing ~th the
on the' payroll saves money, but worsens an already ailing econNow they have asked for a grant to 8ft us ions, the 6nal report was given to me by the emobons and msecunbes,ofthe family.
,
omy.
a walk-path out. We just wanted something canter speciali;t. It was, in her wonls,l~~t~~rWhen our .father passed aw.~y, .one of the !
And for the 2,000 residents of state DCs, what becomes of
we could use with our 4-wheelers and t0 il!' .W,
the lllng tlf the aanmr. It ·was :mge1s w.IS wtth us. She made (1hone ~· :
them? "I have seen the tragic effects of deinstitutionalization of
able
to
walk
out.
It's
bani
going
through
the
fiut
growing
and
ineutable, but I did have a !ook care of our father and was a cornfottmg :
the mentally ill," U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland t!)ld Taft. in a recent
- W2ter, briars, faUen trees, seeing snakes, and choice of accepting it with the the least pain inlluence for ~ :ill.
f
.'
letter, "which has resulted in hundreds of thousands of mentaltrying to look presentable when we get to ;md discomfort, or a treatment period with
Losing a loved one is diJiiclili, but with ·I
ly iU individuals liVing on the streets and ip jails and prisons."
It's something to think about, for us and legislators. It's not
the other side. We had jobs to go tO, doctor' Pouible discOqWrt during chemotherapy H~. Hospice, th~ .Passing is
much
appointments, our children go to school..111is treatment
,eaSier. The Holzer Hosptce urut IS a non- 1
too late to change their minds. Let them know what you think
doesn't
sound
like
America,
does
it?
I
think
it
Prolonging
time
was
probable,
but
not
profit organizati~.You dOn't need insu!'anc~ :
about the budget and its impact, and how it wiU affect friends
. sounds like Meigs County.
ptOmlsed. This ~the route I chose, with fuD .or money to w.lil younelf of therr serVices. ·~
and neighbors for years to come.
We , didn't get the walk-path I.JU,de. 'It's knowl~ of the end result as accq)ting the
When the time comes, please a\li'W these I
going to' cost too much. I think dley said terininal cancer. · '
won~ people to help yi&gt;u, your family :
$250,000or$500,000.Whareveritwas,itwas
I didn't~ any promises to myself. nor ~your loved one 4uough .this dillic;Wt' ;
too much for the government. I think they did! aile for any miracle to come my way. All wne. Titanir: you, Holzer H&lt;ispice M~ ;
thought we wanted a highway built here.
I aslted for to be able to tay "thank you" for County Urut.
.
:
Now, we are being told that the govern- · another day given to me. And I did that by
Judld) R. ~ :
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ment will be wiUing to buy the propel cy Ol\ settilli! two rules in my life from now on: first
. : J&gt;omeruy ~
Today is Easter Surtday, April 15, the 105th day of 2001.
Shady
Cove
Road."
A
GREAT
IDEA,
JUST
dlat
I
accepted
"thy
will
be
done"God~
There are 260 days left in the year. ·
1
4
MONTHS
AND
ONE
LESS
iruswill,
not
mine,
and
that
I~
old
enougl1to
Today's Highlight in History:
BAND TOO LATE. Yes, it only tonk the die, and }'Oung enough tO use the gifts of the
•
On April15,1861, three days after the Confederate attack
trustees fo)ll' months to get the government days ~ for me to live.
n- Editor:
~
on Fort Sumter, President Lincoln declared a state of insur.involved, after my husband's death.
I learned to stop thinlcing in three tenseS
I think 1join with :ill Americans in rejoic- l
rection and called out Union troops.
The trustees have known about this flood - &amp;om now on. I am living in two tenses, ing over thQ release of America's naval aVia- l
On this date:
problem since 1979 and I have been writing, past and present,The future I know is not for ton &amp;om li)eir captivity on the Chinese \
In 18§0, the city ofSan Francisco was incorporated. ·
letters that long. Not one of our trustees had me io .plan, it' is alMady planned and what a island ofHainan.Their ordeal'is a reminder of 1
'In 1865,President Lincoln died, several boun :afte'r he was
the concern to stand llP and get the IJOVml- comfOrt it is to la)ow that it is there.
the constant danger our servicemen and ,
shot at Ford's Theater in Washington by John Wilkes Booth,
ment involved. When the- others wouldn't ' To learn to reverse, among other things. women face daily in even the 111ost routine :
Andrew johnson became the nation's 17th. president,
agree that we need help on Shady Cove was to learn to build on energy ·instead of missions.
:
In 1912, the British luxury linerTitanic sank in the North
. Road, it took a tragedy like this to get them saving it; to·ducowage friends &amp;om "saVing
We should all gra~ ackn~ledge their :
Atlantic off Newfoundland, less ' than three hours after strikto do their j9bs.
you:''! had to teD them time .and again that bani work and sacrili\:e1 and· acCept their ~
ing an iceberg. About 1,500 people died.
Our trustees even had the nerve to rem~ the days left fur me ~ gifts, and I was to Easter week release with ~uruble thanbgiv- I
part (the part Jr. .was fixing the day he use them.
·
·
ing.
· ·
In 1945, during World War II, Bhtish and Canadian troops
'
.
~) of the road withol;lt remoVing it
I was able to learn to re)!uild'enough of my
I ~ve aho been es~ proud of the 1
liberated the Nazi concentration camp Bergen-Belsen.
properly,leavjng the job liP ~ my hwband to body resistance with rest and food, so that I way in which President Bush and his admin- •
In 1959, Cuban leader Fidel Castro arrived in Washington
·
do.And Jr., being the kind of person he was, was able to accept the chemother;tpy treat- istration handled this international crisis. :
• to begin a goodwiU tour of the United States.
·
did it.
ments without too much discomfOrt, !utpris- Throughout the 11 days of the cr:eW~ captiv- :.
In 1986, the United Siates launched an air raid against
To this day, the trustees havert't done any- ing the doctors.
ity, our new president kept the nation calm :
Libya in response to the bombing of a'discotheque in Berlin
thing
fo~ us. My son and I keep the road
But
of
course,
time
w.IS moving on. To with his· even, yet firm approach tci pu. siru- I
on April 5; Libya says 37 people, mostly civilians, were kiUed.
work done. Even thOI!gli Wl: were told by Ed keep my mental capacity as active as possible, ation. He managed to bring the crisis to a :
In 1989, students in Beijing launched a series of proDurst that he Would ha~ that part of the I continued my habit of writing down my · ~. peful and honotable,conclusion;
l
democr~cy protests following the death of former Commproad put back on the mileage again. And the .though~$ ._ they came to !lle, usuaUy at 3 a.m. . President ,Bush has l:lken a han! beating by I
nist Party. leader Hu Yaollang; the prorests culminated in the
tnistees woUld maintain it again.
After writing my,':Thoughts for·the day:'I .· the nati'?nal press in his first three months in :
Tiananmen Square massacre.
~TRA!NGE HOW EASY EVERY- usually went back to sleep fur an hour or so. office. Yet such a successful trial as this one ~
In 1989, 95 people ~ied in a crush. of soccer fans at HillsTHING IS, AFTER SOMETHING LIKE It was up to my faithfillliiends,mosdy Addie, will help dampen the arguments .o f his \
borough Stadium in Sheffield, England.
THIS . HAPPENS. S~METHING THAT to Jlick up the "poor excuses" of writing.and detractors. I tip my hat to our new adrninis- j
In 1990, actress Greta Garbo died in New York at age 84. '
SH~ULDN'T Hi.VE HAPPENED, IF set type to them. The most .unusual and tration,and even more so to the ritilitafY. pro- ~~
In 1998, Pol Pot, the notorious leader of the Khmer
THE TRUSTEES WOULD HAVE bisg&lt;est gift~ could em- rece~.ve came yes- f.ssionals who serve and represent it.
· Rouge, ,died at ag~ 73, evading prosecution for the deaths of
INVOLVED THE GOVERNMENT terday,~ 10, :p)1,when I returned ji:om.
Fruit A. Cremeens
SOONER.
the doctOr~ oflice, havin8 been told tl)at my
·
. ~!A
2 million Cambodians.
1

·U'hat does it take?

Offering comfort

!m;u

"''

rtna

1thoughts

Pasaengers ', Cr01h11S
Rollover&amp;
Rollover ratio
MORGANTOWN (AP) -A search continued Sa,turday for
224
a 26-year-old man who fell into the Tygart ll..iver at v.,n,;y Falls
1,815
Less than s
State Park.
16
510 g ·
n
- 2 0.8%
Sulatin Alg:nni was w~wral other people when he fell
16
55
10 to 15
- 2 9.1%
into the river a~out 5:30p.m. Friday, said Valley Falls State Park
Superintendent Ron Fawcett.
70 D"o
to
7
More than 15
1 "We got a call that a·subject had fallen off the rocks between
==:-::-=========:::::--~-----SOURCE: Natfonal Hi~., TraNt: S-'«1 AdmifUtrarion
the first and second falls. By falling off there, he landed right in
the main current coming around the rock.
"He then went down and was swept over the second falls,"
Fawcett said. "He was seen flailing in the water going do~ the
next rapids, but then he disappeared and we haven't seen 1\im
WHEELING (AP) - Ohio County's assessed property valsince," Fawcett said.
ues have increased more than 70 percent since 1990 even
though the county has lost more than 3,400 residents:
· Assessor Greg Kloeppner has assessed the county at $1.02 billion for the 2001 tax year, a S40 millio1,1 increase from the. 2000
MORGANTOWN (AP) - State Liquor Commissioner tax year. "
Tom Keeley is expected to discuss ~tate efforts to control underThe' collJlty\Vide assessed value was S600 million for the 1991
age drinking when he meets with Monongalia Counry officials tax year, the first full year after the refease of 1990 census fignext week.
ures.
Keeley was invited after officials and residents voiced conKloeppner attributed much of the increase to new construccerns about teen-agers purchasing alcohol in the Morgantown tion, especially construction of homes worth about SSOO,OOO.
..
area.
"
"I had expressed concern about the problem of underage
people buying liquor in town and we had heard some concerns
from the· public about the enforcement of the law," Monongalia
FAYETTEVILLE (AP) -The owner of a Fayette County
~ounty Commissioner John Pyles said Friday.
mountain bike shop will spend 30 day•· in jail after pleading
Pyles said Keeley was aware of the problem and would discuss guilty to cD:ltivating marijuana in his basement.
how the Alcohol Beverage Control Administration was preparPhilip M _:' Davis, 44, of Fayetteville, entered his plea Friday
ing for stric!er oversight and better enforcement.
before Fayette Counry Circuit judge John Hatcher. Qavis operates Ridgei·Rider Mountain Bikes.
-·· ·. ' Da~is \'Vas· originally charged last August with manufacture of
a controlled substance and intent to deliver. Prosecutors agreed
" NEWBURG (AP) -The North CentralWestVirginia Black to drop the intent charge in exchange for a guilty plea.
Davis'Ja,vyer, Grady' Ooten, ask Hatcher not to impose a j~il
Lung Clinic plans to expand serVices ' patients with respiratosentenCe, saying his client " ha~ '
ry illnesses.
The Clinic, based at the Newbu Clinic in southern Preston been serving the community
County, serves patients in 12 cciu ties: Barbour, Grant, Harri- in a positive manner."
son ' Lewis, Marion, Mineral,
Preston, R andolph,
. Mono alia,
'
Toyior, Tuck\!r and Upshur.
, ,
· · Preston-Taylor Con1muniry Health Centers, Inc., operates
the clinic, with administrative. offices at the Newburg Clinic.
The program offers diagnostic, preventive, rehabilitatiw and
educational services to patients with respiratory iUnesses . The
slate Department of Health and Human Resources funds the wWw.my~ailytribune.com
clinic and this year increased the budget to S120,57 1, allowing www;mydailyregister.com
more services to be provided.
·
www.mydailysentinel.com.

..:;;

Land value increases

Liquor·chief eyes teen drinkin1

.Bike store owner sentenced

CLARKSBU RC (AI') - A Harrison CountY JUdge' \nnts
·lllOIC information bcfon• making j decision about whether to
a(-ccpt an accused killer's plea agn·emcnt.
Gerald Everett is charged with first-degree murder. felony murder and grand larceny in the July 2~ · death ofDomu Lisa CritchfiCJd and the burning of her Anmoore home:
The plea ag:n"entcnt would reduce d1ose

Ex·scoubnaster faces charge
NEW CUMBERLAND (AP) -A former Boy Scout assistant
accused of mole$ting members of his scout pack 15 years ago has
been indicted on 23 counts of third-degree sexual assault.
Dale T. Brant, 38, was indicted and ~rresred at his New MancheSter home Wednesday by West Virginia Sute Police.
In 2000, tWo men claimed Brant repeatedly molested them
between April 1985 and October 1986 when they were both 12
years old, said Hancock County Prosecutor Jan1es Davis.
The alleged assaulr. occurred in Brant's home, his'vehide and at
Tomlinson Run State Park, DaVis said.

Charges do1 rape susped
CHARLESTON (AP) -A Cabell County man charged with
raping a Kenruclt)' woman also faces sexual assault and kidnapping
charges in Kanawha County.
Charles Woods, 39, of Milton, was arraigned Thursday before a
magistrate and ordered held \Vithout bond at the South Central
Regional J.til. The charges stem from a March IS rape in
Charleston.
·
Police said the suspect approached a female pedestrian and
asked if she wanted a ride. She got in his truck and told him where
she wanted to go, but the driver changed directions and took her
to a secluded place where he allegedly raped her.

SURF'S UP.
'

•'

1

ifmnl""'-

'·

!

made

TODAY IN· HISTORY

Time to rejoice

.;

r - - ·- - -

---.--,---.-----

COUPON QOOD ":"IIOUQH APIIIL 21. :1001

·sterling
lOk Gold
14k Gold'

!

J

•

"

,

•

..

..

Rings. Bracelets, Necklaces

-- --

Sci:Ive From Our Everyday Low Prtcesl

-.-1 •. ,.

~

I '

·~

.L

.

'

•

'I

I

to volunc.uy

manslaughter and fourth-degree arson.
.If convicted of manslaughter, he would face up to 15 years in
prison. The arson charge carries a penalty of up to two years in
prison and a S2,500 fine.

..

'

chargL.~

"·.

�Page AS

A4

Opln

su....,. Afrl11,2001

No resolution yet on video poker bill

West VIrginia weather
Sund8y, April15
N:oJW..-..w

I

w.v..

OliO

Ohio Valley Publl•hlng .Co.
Ct.leeW.Govey
~bi!Mer .

me

R. Shawn Lewis

Mln~glng

organizations that currendy hold a Class •
A liquor license, own their own
machines and are "in good standing."
The ~maining permits were to be distributed through an open bidding system proposed by Wise and contained in
the Senate bill.
·
Although the sides couldn't agree on
the permits; they did come ro terms on
an issue that House leaders had said
would be a deal breaker-· an increase in
the nuximum bet on slot nuchines
operated at West Virginia'&lt; four racetracks.

CHAIU.ESTQN. 'fi.Va. (AP) - A acr befo~ the tegular 60-day .session
House-Se~ comnuttee charged with ends at midnight Saturday.
drafting a co~
' romisc bill to enact Gov.
When asked if given the time &amp;arne,
Qob Wise's · to regubte and tax video the Video poker machine bill had a
poker machin. caUed it quits cady Sat- chance. Craigo said:"I don't have a clue.
hours of nego- Whether we work something out in the
urday mornillg·after
· tiatiqns, most,'o f it behind closed doors. afternoon, I don't know."
I "I think everyone's tired right now .
Craigo, D-Putnam, said the effort to
and frustrated apd maybe when we get reconcil~ the differing versions fell apart
·some rest ... ~ve can try again," said Del- over how permits · for the machines
egate Mike Caputo, D-Marion, as he would be distributed.
headed for the eKit.
The bill, HB2205, would legalize ~nd
Senate Fi112J1Ce Chairnun Oshel Crai- · ux the \Vinnings from the so-called gray
go said whe~ the talks broke of!' at 1:30 machines and limit them to 9,000
a.m. the 10-Shen}ber conference com- statewide and areas not accessible to
•pittee woul4,not 11\eet Saturday morn- children.

Glllllpoll8, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point Plflflnt.

'

.

Editor

~.:Ill
0

VA.

·I

KY.

The provision· increases the maximunt
bet from $2 to $5 on the sute Lottery

Earlier, committee tnentben discussed Commission-regulated machinos. Tlie

mg.

· The conu1tittec is facing a deadline to distributing the permits two at a rime to provision is expected to generate about
·
reach an agreement so both houscs can bars, clubs, and fraternal and \'eter.m SSO 1nillion f year.

OUR VIEW

..

Done?

·.

Judge postpones plea

Loaded vans at •reater risk to roll
TIJe risk of rollover in 15·passenger vans increases ~ramalically with the
number of passengers on board. according lo an analysis of single-vehicle
crash data by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administ1ation.

•

Man presumed drowned

OUR READERS' VIEWS

It~

not too late to change
minds about Ohios ·budget

'

I know thls letter mabs me sound biaer 6nal three months' period had pooibly stlrt.
and if I think about i~ I agree. I feel, though, ed.
No
more
chemotherapy
was possible, and
Dear Editor:
if you IM:l'e to wade in my shoes every time
there,
on
my
table,
was
an
envelope
from Aiea
I would like to reply to the letter written it begins to rain, every time the Ohio Ri...:r
in the Sunday, AprilS, 2001 paper, &amp;om Mr. starts to rise, every time I go in and out ofthls Agency 7 With an . aWard One, of my
Some folks believe the budget reductions contained in
and Mn. Robert Albaugh concerning the road, every tinie we wish Jr. was here, you thoughts I had written at night had been sent
Ohio's biennial budget that takes effect July 1 are a done deal.
in by my long time · friend &amp;om M~
ftood problem on their road
might understand why.
. The Republican majority in the Statehouse won't go against
I too live on a road that lw a ftood probEomy day we think this shouldn't have County's Bookmobile Service - ;md it had
Gov. Bob Taft spending plan and public services are in for a
!em; Shady Cove Road, at the lower end of happened and the only reason it did is won GaUia Coun'ty~ lint place in the essay
cutback.
Middleport.
because we didn't 8ft the help we should contest.
This is only April. The Legislature has time yet to tinker with
The last 6ne of their letter said, "thls is gov- have fi:om our tru~~ea. How else can I fed? · '.'The good is there" - my snndmother
the plan and hopefully restore funding to needed services.
ernment at ics finest:' I feel you shoidd thank
This letter isn't going to put me on top of used to say-"ifyou aren't too busy pitying
That's where we come in. Sometimes we have to tell lawmakyour trusteeS.They did their job; without the Salisbury trustees lilt. .I am not writing it yourself.'
ers what we think.
Thank you God for another day and·ant
help of your trustees, you won't 8ft the help because I want to be there. I am writing it
If anyone is concerned ,jibout the fate of Gallipolis Developothet
you choose to send me:
you need &amp;om the government.
because I Want other people who haft a
mental Center, the 500 people it employs and most importantVDma PlkkDJ•
I know this first-hand. On Feb 20, 2000,1 problem with their trulteCS to speak up. Get
ly, the more than 200 clients its serves, now is the time to call,
.
Gallipolis
lost my husband to our flood problem. We the help you should ~ If you had a probwrite, fax or e-mail legislators and teU them how important
couldn't get our trustees to ask the gowm- !em with them and.they pushed your probGDC is to the local economy, and what it means to clients they
ment
for the help we needed with our flood !ems under the filii, 8ft it back out. Don't let
serve.
We have made this· request before. We ask again because as
problem, l!fitil it was too late. We had to have 10~ like what happen to our family
a
drowning before th~ goyernment became happen to yours. The trwreei run for their Dtlr Editor:
the deadline nears for Ohio tO put a school funding plan into
involved.
·
job. If they don't want to put 100 percent
There arc angels of mercy here in Meigs '
effect to satisfy a Supreme Court directive, it appears deeper
When yaur trustees .won't do .something into it, let\ vote them out.
County - the Holzer Hospice 111eigs
reductions in the budget may have to· tinan~e that plan.
for you, try' to do it yoursel£ I wrote letter
I hope every voter on election ·day County Unit.
Developmental centers have an impact on the. communities
after
letter
to
everyone
I
was
told
to.
I
wmt
rememben
what happen on Shady Cove
The unit consists of regbtered .nu~ •
. where they are located. 'rhe effect GDC has had on the ecoto the Salisbury Township trustees' meetinjp. Road. The 1r111tees haven't done a thing on Sheila Brooks,
~ :"'d Dopa John- ,
nomic and social fabric of the tri-county is deep. It's been a
I even went in front of RichafC\,]QIICS, at .the . our road-~ the accident.
son.The ~ gMt' u Kim Mitchell and1bnya
part of the area for more than a century, ·and enVisioning a
1
future without it is painful, to tay the least.
.
co1'111llissioners' meetiJtS' in Pomeioy. ·
_,._I.·
, Please don't just vote to 8ft yo\11' family,. H~11!, !l~~':f~~~
I was always told the same thing: that my friend. or ilomeone you know elected. I feel
These wo~ women are.on :z4- ~ur
Understandably. the Taft admininration is looki71g to save
trustees would ha'lli to ask for ~ce. the trustees did not do their job this term and eaU. They adminis!er m,d ~orutor medicamoney and put it to better use.
.
Everything has to Start at the bottom. Which we should 8ft thetn out and let:someone else bon,l:lke care pf the rauent ~ personal needs,
School funding certainly qualifies, but at what expense to
means the trustees have to ask for the help that will be willing to help everyone in. We and support. the family ~unng the terminal
services the state provides? The 4.1 percent cut now in the pro~
and they are the ones that have to fill out the need someone that will get the job done .• • ~their loved on~ s illness. .
· posal affects not only mental retardation/ developmental disforms.
befun, the damage is done, big or smaU. AU
Thetr mere presenc~ m the home ~ a great
abilities, but health, mental health and prisons.
With
the
trustees
starting
i~
hopefully.
it
problems
should
be
looked
into.
We
need
~·
The family IS •gwded and mclude_d
If enacted as it stands, or with a another reduction built in,
gets to the top. Which in your case, it did. It . trustees, that will help :ill, not just an ill-cho- J? every step o~ the dying process. ,No decijob losses are possible not- only in Gallipolis but in other comonly
reached the top because your trUStees sen few.
Slon .IS ~ Without the family's consent.
munities where the st;lte is a major employer. Without ~ plan
saw that there was a problem, and cared
Debbie Engle
Kim MitcheU came to o~ home ~
or other jobs to absorb those losses, those communities will
enough to do something about it. . ·
Middleport day. She was competent, frienclly and was
suffer.
After
Jr.,
my
husband,
drowned,
the
~ one step ahead of w~t needed ~ be
If jobs are lost, the state may see cost-effectiveness. But with
that many people out of wo9r'-for who knows how long, how
trustees involved the goilernment. After other
r.·
done. .
.
letters
I
wrote
asking
them
to
raise
our
road
.
Sheila,Teresa,;mdDana
came
three
tunes
a
can the state expect sales tax revenue to get back to where it
n,.r Editor:
, _ · week, but were also on eaU. They .were a
or. to help u.• get a walk-path ou~ they never
used to be? Fewer jobs means fewer people spending, causing .
did anything. It cost too much, one excuse
When onJan.2,2001, the test. reports that pl!one caD away and were there Wlthit) mma ripple effect felt aU the way to the Statehouse.
after
another.
They
just
didn't
Want
to
deal
the
cat scam and the X-rays were :ill read and Utes when the family needed th.em. .
More efficient o(leration is a double-edge sword. Less people
with our ITood problem.
reported by specialists and the second opin- To~ was ~ry hel~ful dealing ~th the
on the' payroll saves money, but worsens an already ailing econNow they have asked for a grant to 8ft us ions, the 6nal report was given to me by the emobons and msecunbes,ofthe family.
,
omy.
a walk-path out. We just wanted something canter speciali;t. It was, in her wonls,l~~t~~rWhen our .father passed aw.~y, .one of the !
And for the 2,000 residents of state DCs, what becomes of
we could use with our 4-wheelers and t0 il!' .W,
the lllng tlf the aanmr. It ·was :mge1s w.IS wtth us. She made (1hone ~· :
them? "I have seen the tragic effects of deinstitutionalization of
able
to
walk
out.
It's
bani
going
through
the
fiut
growing
and
ineutable, but I did have a !ook care of our father and was a cornfottmg :
the mentally ill," U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland t!)ld Taft. in a recent
- W2ter, briars, faUen trees, seeing snakes, and choice of accepting it with the the least pain inlluence for ~ :ill.
f
.'
letter, "which has resulted in hundreds of thousands of mentaltrying to look presentable when we get to ;md discomfort, or a treatment period with
Losing a loved one is diJiiclili, but with ·I
ly iU individuals liVing on the streets and ip jails and prisons."
It's something to think about, for us and legislators. It's not
the other side. We had jobs to go tO, doctor' Pouible discOqWrt during chemotherapy H~. Hospice, th~ .Passing is
much
appointments, our children go to school..111is treatment
,eaSier. The Holzer Hosptce urut IS a non- 1
too late to change their minds. Let them know what you think
doesn't
sound
like
America,
does
it?
I
think
it
Prolonging
time
was
probable,
but
not
profit organizati~.You dOn't need insu!'anc~ :
about the budget and its impact, and how it wiU affect friends
. sounds like Meigs County.
ptOmlsed. This ~the route I chose, with fuD .or money to w.lil younelf of therr serVices. ·~
and neighbors for years to come.
We , didn't get the walk-path I.JU,de. 'It's knowl~ of the end result as accq)ting the
When the time comes, please a\li'W these I
going to' cost too much. I think dley said terininal cancer. · '
won~ people to help yi&gt;u, your family :
$250,000or$500,000.Whareveritwas,itwas
I didn't~ any promises to myself. nor ~your loved one 4uough .this dillic;Wt' ;
too much for the government. I think they did! aile for any miracle to come my way. All wne. Titanir: you, Holzer H&lt;ispice M~ ;
thought we wanted a highway built here.
I aslted for to be able to tay "thank you" for County Urut.
.
:
Now, we are being told that the govern- · another day given to me. And I did that by
Judld) R. ~ :
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ment will be wiUing to buy the propel cy Ol\ settilli! two rules in my life from now on: first
. : J&gt;omeruy ~
Today is Easter Surtday, April 15, the 105th day of 2001.
Shady
Cove
Road."
A
GREAT
IDEA,
JUST
dlat
I
accepted
"thy
will
be
done"God~
There are 260 days left in the year. ·
1
4
MONTHS
AND
ONE
LESS
iruswill,
not
mine,
and
that
I~
old
enougl1to
Today's Highlight in History:
BAND TOO LATE. Yes, it only tonk the die, and }'Oung enough tO use the gifts of the
•
On April15,1861, three days after the Confederate attack
trustees fo)ll' months to get the government days ~ for me to live.
n- Editor:
~
on Fort Sumter, President Lincoln declared a state of insur.involved, after my husband's death.
I learned to stop thinlcing in three tenseS
I think 1join with :ill Americans in rejoic- l
rection and called out Union troops.
The trustees have known about this flood - &amp;om now on. I am living in two tenses, ing over thQ release of America's naval aVia- l
On this date:
problem since 1979 and I have been writing, past and present,The future I know is not for ton &amp;om li)eir captivity on the Chinese \
In 18§0, the city ofSan Francisco was incorporated. ·
letters that long. Not one of our trustees had me io .plan, it' is alMady planned and what a island ofHainan.Their ordeal'is a reminder of 1
'In 1865,President Lincoln died, several boun :afte'r he was
the concern to stand llP and get the IJOVml- comfOrt it is to la)ow that it is there.
the constant danger our servicemen and ,
shot at Ford's Theater in Washington by John Wilkes Booth,
ment involved. When the- others wouldn't ' To learn to reverse, among other things. women face daily in even the 111ost routine :
Andrew johnson became the nation's 17th. president,
agree that we need help on Shady Cove was to learn to build on energy ·instead of missions.
:
In 1912, the British luxury linerTitanic sank in the North
. Road, it took a tragedy like this to get them saving it; to·ducowage friends &amp;om "saVing
We should all gra~ ackn~ledge their :
Atlantic off Newfoundland, less ' than three hours after strikto do their j9bs.
you:''! had to teD them time .and again that bani work and sacrili\:e1 and· acCept their ~
ing an iceberg. About 1,500 people died.
Our trustees even had the nerve to rem~ the days left fur me ~ gifts, and I was to Easter week release with ~uruble thanbgiv- I
part (the part Jr. .was fixing the day he use them.
·
·
ing.
· ·
In 1945, during World War II, Bhtish and Canadian troops
'
.
~) of the road withol;lt remoVing it
I was able to learn to re)!uild'enough of my
I ~ve aho been es~ proud of the 1
liberated the Nazi concentration camp Bergen-Belsen.
properly,leavjng the job liP ~ my hwband to body resistance with rest and food, so that I way in which President Bush and his admin- •
In 1959, Cuban leader Fidel Castro arrived in Washington
·
do.And Jr., being the kind of person he was, was able to accept the chemother;tpy treat- istration handled this international crisis. :
• to begin a goodwiU tour of the United States.
·
did it.
ments without too much discomfOrt, !utpris- Throughout the 11 days of the cr:eW~ captiv- :.
In 1986, the United Siates launched an air raid against
To this day, the trustees havert't done any- ing the doctors.
ity, our new president kept the nation calm :
Libya in response to the bombing of a'discotheque in Berlin
thing
fo~ us. My son and I keep the road
But
of
course,
time
w.IS moving on. To with his· even, yet firm approach tci pu. siru- I
on April 5; Libya says 37 people, mostly civilians, were kiUed.
work done. Even thOI!gli Wl: were told by Ed keep my mental capacity as active as possible, ation. He managed to bring the crisis to a :
In 1989, students in Beijing launched a series of proDurst that he Would ha~ that part of the I continued my habit of writing down my · ~. peful and honotable,conclusion;
l
democr~cy protests following the death of former Commproad put back on the mileage again. And the .though~$ ._ they came to !lle, usuaUy at 3 a.m. . President ,Bush has l:lken a han! beating by I
nist Party. leader Hu Yaollang; the prorests culminated in the
tnistees woUld maintain it again.
After writing my,':Thoughts for·the day:'I .· the nati'?nal press in his first three months in :
Tiananmen Square massacre.
~TRA!NGE HOW EASY EVERY- usually went back to sleep fur an hour or so. office. Yet such a successful trial as this one ~
In 1989, 95 people ~ied in a crush. of soccer fans at HillsTHING IS, AFTER SOMETHING LIKE It was up to my faithfillliiends,mosdy Addie, will help dampen the arguments .o f his \
borough Stadium in Sheffield, England.
THIS . HAPPENS. S~METHING THAT to Jlick up the "poor excuses" of writing.and detractors. I tip my hat to our new adrninis- j
In 1990, actress Greta Garbo died in New York at age 84. '
SH~ULDN'T Hi.VE HAPPENED, IF set type to them. The most .unusual and tration,and even more so to the ritilitafY. pro- ~~
In 1998, Pol Pot, the notorious leader of the Khmer
THE TRUSTEES WOULD HAVE bisg&lt;est gift~ could em- rece~.ve came yes- f.ssionals who serve and represent it.
· Rouge, ,died at ag~ 73, evading prosecution for the deaths of
INVOLVED THE GOVERNMENT terday,~ 10, :p)1,when I returned ji:om.
Fruit A. Cremeens
SOONER.
the doctOr~ oflice, havin8 been told tl)at my
·
. ~!A
2 million Cambodians.
1

·U'hat does it take?

Offering comfort

!m;u

"''

rtna

1thoughts

Pasaengers ', Cr01h11S
Rollover&amp;
Rollover ratio
MORGANTOWN (AP) -A search continued Sa,turday for
224
a 26-year-old man who fell into the Tygart ll..iver at v.,n,;y Falls
1,815
Less than s
State Park.
16
510 g ·
n
- 2 0.8%
Sulatin Alg:nni was w~wral other people when he fell
16
55
10 to 15
- 2 9.1%
into the river a~out 5:30p.m. Friday, said Valley Falls State Park
Superintendent Ron Fawcett.
70 D"o
to
7
More than 15
1 "We got a call that a·subject had fallen off the rocks between
==:-::-=========:::::--~-----SOURCE: Natfonal Hi~., TraNt: S-'«1 AdmifUtrarion
the first and second falls. By falling off there, he landed right in
the main current coming around the rock.
"He then went down and was swept over the second falls,"
Fawcett said. "He was seen flailing in the water going do~ the
next rapids, but then he disappeared and we haven't seen 1\im
WHEELING (AP) - Ohio County's assessed property valsince," Fawcett said.
ues have increased more than 70 percent since 1990 even
though the county has lost more than 3,400 residents:
· Assessor Greg Kloeppner has assessed the county at $1.02 billion for the 2001 tax year, a S40 millio1,1 increase from the. 2000
MORGANTOWN (AP) - State Liquor Commissioner tax year. "
Tom Keeley is expected to discuss ~tate efforts to control underThe' collJlty\Vide assessed value was S600 million for the 1991
age drinking when he meets with Monongalia Counry officials tax year, the first full year after the refease of 1990 census fignext week.
ures.
Keeley was invited after officials and residents voiced conKloeppner attributed much of the increase to new construccerns about teen-agers purchasing alcohol in the Morgantown tion, especially construction of homes worth about SSOO,OOO.
..
area.
"
"I had expressed concern about the problem of underage
people buying liquor in town and we had heard some concerns
from the· public about the enforcement of the law," Monongalia
FAYETTEVILLE (AP) -The owner of a Fayette County
~ounty Commissioner John Pyles said Friday.
mountain bike shop will spend 30 day•· in jail after pleading
Pyles said Keeley was aware of the problem and would discuss guilty to cD:ltivating marijuana in his basement.
how the Alcohol Beverage Control Administration was preparPhilip M _:' Davis, 44, of Fayetteville, entered his plea Friday
ing for stric!er oversight and better enforcement.
before Fayette Counry Circuit judge John Hatcher. Qavis operates Ridgei·Rider Mountain Bikes.
-·· ·. ' Da~is \'Vas· originally charged last August with manufacture of
a controlled substance and intent to deliver. Prosecutors agreed
" NEWBURG (AP) -The North CentralWestVirginia Black to drop the intent charge in exchange for a guilty plea.
Davis'Ja,vyer, Grady' Ooten, ask Hatcher not to impose a j~il
Lung Clinic plans to expand serVices ' patients with respiratosentenCe, saying his client " ha~ '
ry illnesses.
The Clinic, based at the Newbu Clinic in southern Preston been serving the community
County, serves patients in 12 cciu ties: Barbour, Grant, Harri- in a positive manner."
son ' Lewis, Marion, Mineral,
Preston, R andolph,
. Mono alia,
'
Toyior, Tuck\!r and Upshur.
, ,
· · Preston-Taylor Con1muniry Health Centers, Inc., operates
the clinic, with administrative. offices at the Newburg Clinic.
The program offers diagnostic, preventive, rehabilitatiw and
educational services to patients with respiratory iUnesses . The
slate Department of Health and Human Resources funds the wWw.my~ailytribune.com
clinic and this year increased the budget to S120,57 1, allowing www;mydailyregister.com
more services to be provided.
·
www.mydailysentinel.com.

..:;;

Land value increases

Liquor·chief eyes teen drinkin1

.Bike store owner sentenced

CLARKSBU RC (AI') - A Harrison CountY JUdge' \nnts
·lllOIC information bcfon• making j decision about whether to
a(-ccpt an accused killer's plea agn·emcnt.
Gerald Everett is charged with first-degree murder. felony murder and grand larceny in the July 2~ · death ofDomu Lisa CritchfiCJd and the burning of her Anmoore home:
The plea ag:n"entcnt would reduce d1ose

Ex·scoubnaster faces charge
NEW CUMBERLAND (AP) -A former Boy Scout assistant
accused of mole$ting members of his scout pack 15 years ago has
been indicted on 23 counts of third-degree sexual assault.
Dale T. Brant, 38, was indicted and ~rresred at his New MancheSter home Wednesday by West Virginia Sute Police.
In 2000, tWo men claimed Brant repeatedly molested them
between April 1985 and October 1986 when they were both 12
years old, said Hancock County Prosecutor Jan1es Davis.
The alleged assaulr. occurred in Brant's home, his'vehide and at
Tomlinson Run State Park, DaVis said.

Charges do1 rape susped
CHARLESTON (AP) -A Cabell County man charged with
raping a Kenruclt)' woman also faces sexual assault and kidnapping
charges in Kanawha County.
Charles Woods, 39, of Milton, was arraigned Thursday before a
magistrate and ordered held \Vithout bond at the South Central
Regional J.til. The charges stem from a March IS rape in
Charleston.
·
Police said the suspect approached a female pedestrian and
asked if she wanted a ride. She got in his truck and told him where
she wanted to go, but the driver changed directions and took her
to a secluded place where he allegedly raped her.

SURF'S UP.
'

•'

1

ifmnl""'-

'·

!

made

TODAY IN· HISTORY

Time to rejoice

.;

r - - ·- - -

---.--,---.-----

COUPON QOOD ":"IIOUQH APIIIL 21. :1001

·sterling
lOk Gold
14k Gold'

!

J

•

"

,

•

..

..

Rings. Bracelets, Necklaces

-- --

Sci:Ive From Our Everyday Low Prtcesl

-.-1 •. ,.

~

I '

·~

.L

.

'

•

'I

I

to volunc.uy

manslaughter and fourth-degree arson.
.If convicted of manslaughter, he would face up to 15 years in
prison. The arson charge carries a penalty of up to two years in
prison and a S2,500 fine.

..

'

chargL.~

"·.

�--- ..... .. ... -..w .

, ~···-

rr

Pomeooy. nrddap IXt. Qpllp anr, Ohio. Point Plnil ... wv

- Acilltncl

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\

•

SundaY. Apr1115, 2001

Natl.,-n ·• Wolld

''

.Jwhav ~me.- ieadintl
•••

: WASHINGTON (AP) - New elliciency standards proposed
: by the Bwh administration for ait conditionen :and ·heat pumps
. would save • thitd less energy than standard&amp; fur those appliances
· •dopted during the Clinton presidency.
; The 20 pen::ent improvtment in air conditioners and he.t ·
: pumps President Bush propo5ed Friday would '""" enough ener-

CARLISLE - Angel Marie Carr, infant daughter ofTodd
Carr and Alicia Hogg. 944 Dubois Road, Carlisle, died Thursday, April I 2, 2001 in Middletown Hospiul.
She w:u born April I 2, 200 I at Middletown Ho5pital.
Surviving in addition to her parents are her nutemal grandmother, Teresa H~ of Fanlclin; maternal great-grandmother,
Novella (BiD) Herald of Franlclin; six n:uterml great-uncles and
three maternal great-aunts; paterruil gr.andmoiher, Sanda Sue
Carr; paternal great-gr:mdmother, Virginia Lee Carr; and four
paternal great-uncles and two paternal great-•unts.
Graveside services will br 12:30 p.m . Tuesday at WoQ&lt;!hill
Cemetery, with Preacher Cline R:iwlins offici•ting. Arrangements arc by Eaton-Anderson-Uoglesby Funeral Home,
Franklin. ·

lheima Nibert
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WVa. - Thelma Nib~rt , 86, Gallipolis Ferry. died Thursda)'. April 12, 2001 in Holzer Medical
Center.
Born May 27, 191-t in . Hobosett, W.Va., daughter of the late
Jennnc and O shie bura Bowen Harbour, she. was a member of
Jordan Baptist Church .in Gallipolis Ferry. and was a homemaker.
.
She was also precc§i.!'d in death by her husband, Worthy
Franklin Nibert, on NO\·. 2, 1991; an infant daughter, Donna
Jane; and five sisters, Etta Harbour, Ron1:1 Bush, Bonnie Wood,
Mer[ie' Litchfidd and Nora Hush.
Surviving are two daughters, Phyllis (Jade) Stevens of Gallipolis Ferry, and Juanita (fred) Copeland of Ellijay, Ga.; three
gr:mdd1ughters and four great-grandchildren; a sister, Erma
Vl(ood of Bidwell; and a brother, Stanley Harbour of Mason.

W.Va.

~

•

,

Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
Point 'Pleasant, WVa., with the Rev. Carl Burrows and the Rev.
Charles Moses officiating. Buriai will be in Beale Chapel
Cemetery, Apple Grove, WVa.Visitation was held in the funeral home on Saturday.
·

Morg~l:l

J. Pinkennan

GROVE CITY - Morgan J. Pinkerman, 68, Grove City,
"died Thursday, April 12, 2001 in Mount Carmel Medical Ce.nter, Columbus.
Son ·of the late Hillis and Elva Pinkerman, he was a member
of Pleasantview Baptist Church and was a Korean War veteran . .
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Stella, on Dec. 25,
1999; and a brother, Charles Pinkerman.
Surviving are two children, Morgan L. (Brenda) 'Pinkerman"
and Juliann (Michael) Stamper; three stepchildren, Brenda
(Leonard) '\Vagner, Carol Ann Robinson and Bethany (Gary)
Vanderson; seven grandchildren, four stepgrandchildren and
four great-grandchildren; and four sisters, Geraldine DeWitt,
Vera Small, Betty Lou Gates and Adele Ashley.
Services will be 10:30 a.m. Monday in Schoedinger Norris
Chapel, Grove City, with Pastor Curtis Sheets officiating. A
graveside service will be lield at I :30 p.m. Monday at Providence Cemetery near Gallipolis. Visitation was held in the
·
chapel on Saturday.

: gy to light all U.S. homes fur two ~equal to the oucput of37
; 400-megaw:att power plants_

MEETS STUDENTS - Ohio School. Board President Jennifer
Sheets, Pomeroy, greets Carrie Mayle at Thursday's open
house at the SEM Sct\....ool, a facility opened last month to help
students · catch up" with their academic goals. (Brian J. Reed
photo)
·

School
fnNn Page.A1

For wharewr reason the
· stude1its are at the SEM
School, their goal, and the
goal of their reachers and
their parents, is to use the
faciliry's close personal attention and intensive bur informal format to catch up.
Before a student is admitted
into the program, extensive
discussions are held 'between
parents, teachers, administbtors and · others involved in
public education, such as
mental health professionals
and juvenile court officials.
Those
discussions
are
designed,
in
.part,
to
deter1
' mine what direction tlle student should .take in order to
·achieve liis goals, and, how
those goals will ultimat~ly be
met.

Meigs
fnwnPageA1

Count)' ,Family and Children
''
First wrote the grant, and
The system now, resources
Mdgs County Department of available, and how it all plays
Job and Family S..-rvices acts .in the local . etonomy were
as the fiscal agent for the WIA among the things which Isaac
program on behalf of the said has to be L1ken into ~on­
Meigs Count)· commission- sideration when finding the
crs.
fit between the health care
The program, -funded at system and the vit.1lity of the
Sl12,oop, can ·serve up to 10 communiry's economy.
students at a time, and a max- The
outcome,
she
imum of 20 for the funding explained, will be to establish
cycle.
a set of priorities for the comThe facility is located on munity, determine what •is
Mechanic Street, but ,is uqre- most important and what the
Jared to the short-term alter- vision is - . all with v.e ry little
native ·school upstairs on document and a lot of"to do ...
Mulberry Avenue.
things.
Fenton Taylor, retired prinShe said Meigs County will
dpal of Meigs High School, be the first in the state of
serves as the facility's coordi- Ohio to 'attempt to imple~
nator, and · teacher Kelly ment the Oklahoma model.
Also speaking was Dr. Leroy
Tho!J1aS, · youth specialist
Steven Presley, and Shannon J. Hushak of the Ohio State
_Wood complete the faculty University·Extension, Depart- a faculty which allows stu- ment of Agricultural, Envidents the freedom they need ron mental and · Development
to achieve their goals, but Economics.
which also demands respect.
He called on the committee
" It's a really good atmos- to "take ownership ... of a plan
phere," said Doris Arnold, a and then move it from stratestudent working on her GED. · gic plan11ing to action plan" It's like a one-on-one ning. Accomplishments are
opportunity to work on our the important part, said
goals, and it's very casual. Husha~. •
That's what I like about it....
He discussed the health secSaid Arnold' . younger tor and its impact on e.m ploybrother, Curtis: "All they ask ment, income, retail sales and
for is respect."
.. . _
sales tax using a table comJohn Costanz.o, superintin- -pleted for 'M•igs Cou~ty , in
dent of the Athens-Meigs 1998 showing how each of
Educational Service Center, those factors multiply as they
'w hich ove!'seei ~he operation move into the conlmunity's
of the school, said the. pro- economy.
gram is probably do-or-die
He also said that critical serfor some of the students, and a vices in a community are vital
golden opportunity for all of· if employers are to retain
them.
employees.
To begin the work, which is
"Every one pf these students would be out of school expected to result in an action
tocby if this facility were not plan by the end of the year,
here," Cpnstanzo saic;l, " so the committee was divided
their chances for su"ess are
greater, just b~cause thL-y're
here."

Career objectives are also a
h1ajor consideration, accbrd~
ing to Boster.
"This is, of cour!", an educatimial program, but there's
definitely
a
vocational
emphasis," Boster said. "We
want "ach of these students to have a strong idea about
where they are going after
they leave here."
Students can spend up to 12
months in the program, and
will also benefit from 12
GALLIPOLIS - Marie G. Roberts Saunders, 79, Fostoria, · months of follow-up atten.formerly of Gallia Counry, died Friday, April 1.3, 2001 in Fos- tion.
toria Comnnmity Hospital.
"lly the time they leave us,
Born June .3, 1921 in Gallia County, daughter of the .late they will each haw indenti. Alfre\1 Monroe and Jennie Strickland Hatfield, she retired as a ficd a realistic career goal,"
nurse from Holzer Medical Center and Gallipolis Develop- Hoster said.
.
.
mental Center.
The school ·open.:d last
She was a m~tmber of Springfield Baptist Church, also known month, using grant · funds
as the Brick C hurch in Gallia County.
from the formula youth proShe was also preceded in death by two husbands. Myrl gr~m funded under the WorkRoberts and W.1lter Saunders; two brothers, Raymond and Bob fdrcc Investment Act (the for. Hatfield; and two sisters, Etta Rowsey and Alice Rutan.
mer JTPA program) . Amy
Surviving are seven children, Eucgcne (Barbara) Roberts of Boster of ACESS / Meigs
Austin , Texas, Margena (Sam) Dimitrovski of Naples, Fl~ .• Barbara Woodruff and Carolyn Miles, both of Fostoria, ·Paul
(Mary) Roberts of Fremont, Roger (Violet) Roberts of
and-in control &lt;?f the yehicle;
Columbus, and Phillip Roberts of Bidwell; 13 grandchildren,
• The chanc~ ofbeing killed
23 great-grandchildren ,and a great-great-grandchild; a brother,
are 25 timj!S greater if one is
George Hatfield of Napoleon; .and two sisters, Faye. Hanley of
thrown out of an automobile;
Fostoria, and Rilla Luckadoo of Gallipolis.
• You cannot brace yourself
Auto- Owner•lmurance
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in Waugh-Hilley-Wood
wear his/her safety belt and to adequately in , a ·crash. A 100.
· Ufe Home Car Business
Funeral Home, with Pastor Glenn Rowe officiating. Burial will
remind others to wear theirs as pound person .in a 20 mile.per
be in Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
well.
•
hour crash becomes ·a ~.DOO
7Ift ~ As/d
home from 5-8 p.m. Monday.
Both rulers . and pencils, pound force;
. •
: INSURANCE PLUS
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made · to the
inscribed with safety messages,
·•
AU
50 · stateS"'nve a child .. 1 •
•
• ' ' •
Alzheimer's Foundation.
'
was also distributed among the safety seat la\v. In ·Ohio, chit- I AGENCIES, INC.
chilqren.
dren who are-either 40 pounds
114 Court Pomeroy
Tlie ODOPS offers several or less than.(i,l r year$ .old m~~St • ,
safety belt facts for the public be secured in a ,safety seat;
·
SCOTTOWN -Johnny Vim, 48, Scottown: died Fridaf, to remember:·
April13, 2001. .
• • Most crashes occur at safety
• Infants
rear-;facing
seats in
ibotild
never child
ride , '
Arrangements will be announced by Hall Funeral Home,
speeds less than 40 miles per in the fron~ .seat of a, vehicle .
P~ctorviJie .
hour;
with a. passenger-sid.e air bag.
• Most collisions occur less Children age,· 12 and under,
than 25 miles from home;
should hlso ' ~ide buckled up in'
'
missioner.
• Each irldividual l;as a one . tpe back se~t; . · · · • -. ~·
• Persont •not , protected by
·"Hopefully, the governor . in three chance of being in a
·
serious
&lt;luto acddent in their
safety b!!lts &lt;;?r seats hay~ be,e n
will decide sometime soon;'
.
l&lt;illed at sp,eeds as low: · as 12 ·
·
Watson said-. "I don't think lifetilpe;
he'll drag his feet about it, and
• safecy be.lts can help ,pre- n1iles ptl:l hour. - the spetd ·
· to examine the list. If three or he'll make the best decision vent secondary collisions by often traveled in a supermarket
keeping one behind the wheel parking loJ,
fewer names are s.ubinitted, he for Gallia County."
said a motion to submit them
Alt\lough Cain's present
'.
.
to Taft will be made. ·
te~n1 doesn,t expire unti,l
COUPON
·Galli a's GOP Central Com- 2004, his replacement will
mittee is chaired by Paul Dean · have to run in 2002 to fill out
Niday, ·• former county 'com- . the rem~inder of the term.

Marie Roberts Saunders

: Bm the standinls adopted by fOrmer President ainton, which
!:Bush hopes to replace, would have meant a 30 percent improYe~ ment, enough to light all U.S. homes for J_J ~ and equal to the
. OUipUt of 53 pOwer plants.
.' Complying \vith the Bush standards would add $21.3 in upfront
~ costs by 2006 to the average S2,236 price of a house central air
~·conditioning
sys~nl, bringing in cost to $2,449, the ~rnment
-estm:utes.
.
Buyers would recoup the extra cost through lower utility bills
over 9.8 years.

DISCUSSING HEALTH CARE - Meigs County Commissioner
Mick Davenport, center, spoke with Susan Isaac. ~nd ~art
Runser of the Institute for Local Govemm~nt Admmrstrati~
and Rural Planning, following the first meeting of the county s
community health planning committee Thursday. (Charlene
Hoeflich photo)

into four work groups with
assigned roles and respon~ibil­
ities. Each co mmittee named
· a chairman.
They are:
• Rhonda Dailey, administrator, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, inventory work
group, to provide a comprehensiw picture of the exJSnng
health care ddivery system;
· • Norma Torres, health
conunissioner and ad•ninistrator of th~ Meigs County
Health D epartment, survey
work group, to . gather the
views of community mem"
bers regarding what they want
and need from their health
care system; ·
· • Perry Varnadoe, economic
development director, data
and information work group,
to identify and analyze all
current relevant sources of
data and information about the comll).unity's general
health profile; and
• Charlene Hoeflich, general manager, The Daily Sentinel, publicity work grliup, to
keep
the
: ~ommunity
informed about the activities
of the entite health planning
process and promote commu·nity participation .. in the
health care survey.

mean choosing not io ,
have amemorial?

WASHiNGTON (AP) - Hundreds of post offices ~ stay
open late Monday to accommodate last-minute tax filets .

China said friday ir has not decided
what to do with the aircraft." What to do
about this plane will be decided acconling
to the n:sult of the inwstigation," China's

Shark attacks ~pt waming
MIAMI {AP) -At least seven people were attacked by sha~
along Aorid:i's east coast this week as sharks hunted for fish along
theit northward rnigatory route.
Thousands ofheachgoers were warned to stay out o( the water
after sharks were sighted and bites- none of them life-threaten~
ing - were reported.
A 16-year-old from Charleston, S.C., and a 12-year-old were
bitten on the anlcles Friday while surfing sep~rately at New Smyrna Beach, said Capt. Rob Horster of the Volusia County Beach
Patrol.
· Three other surfers and a wave-boarder were bitten by sharks
on Wednesday and Thursday in the same area.
.
"These are not the kinds of attacks that were made famous in
Jaws,"' said Geolll': Burgess, director of the International Shark
Attack File in Gainesville.

Stranded ship comes to port

m\.'mbcrs I~Jning (M.:r the ship's rails, st..·ei ng thems.:I\'~S closer u} .
getting p.1id and going horne.
"Yeah, I would like· to go home." s:Ud Roque Munoz vf Pan.Jnu , chief tllJtL'" on the..· Agios Mina~. "" I think we are going m New
Yurk ami the new mmcr's going to pay for the salarY ond n:patri-

ation:·

'

But the cn.•w's ondcal didn't end at the shore. Instead they haw
found themselves ca ught in a legal battle between two creditors of
the ship's former owner, both dainling rights to the w ssd to settle old debts.
.
Th.; U.S. Marshal Service seized control of the ship within an
h~ur of its arrival at port and otder it to remain in Brunswick.
.

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BRUNSWICK, Ga. {AI') -· A freighter stranded for 48 days off

Most of Cheney's income
came when he exercised stock
options and sold stock in Halliburton Co., the Dallas-based '
energy services firm he headed until late in the presidential
campaign. The White House .
did not specify precisely how
much . Cheney ' earned from
that.
The vic~ president received .
s~.3 million in deferred compensation and bonuses. He
reported $806,332 in salary.
Cheney sold part of his .
stock to avoid raising conflictof-interest · questions, and 'he
reported sustaining a $1.9
million loss. '
He also reported $823,50,9

2001 Buckeye Hills
.,Ohio Valley EXPO

in capital gains.
Though his federal tax liability was SI ~ ..3 million,
Cheney paid only li9 .6 million during the year. He paid
the remaining balance of $4.7 .
million when he filed on Fri~
day.
The'
Bushes
reported
donating S143,.300 to charity,
including $75,000 in royal~ies
from his biography published
during the presidential campaign, "A Charge to Keep."
The book sale proceeds went
to '· fout organizations: Boy
Scouts of America, Girl
Scouts of America, Boys and
Girls Clubs of America and
Girls Inc . .

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HEARING TESTS

Most post offices open late

·,:

!

. . . Ill
tiA&amp;IIPIJ&amp;III

-~~~~- ------­

WASHINGTON (AP) - Residents of northern state$ could
·, be treat!!d to the aurora borealis this weekend fiom another solar
, ., flare's eruption fiom the sun.
.;. The latest flare burst forth ,o n Thursday, continuing two weeks
,, of activity on· the sun, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
•.· Administration said Friday.
It came from the same region on the sun that produced a pair
of nuss ejections Tuesday, NOAA's Space Environment Center in
·
,Boulder, Colo., reported.
. ~'The sun rotate.s about I 5 degrees each day; so this area should
; be going away in a few days;' said NOAA's Joseph Kunches. But
:. the region that \.vas really active two weeks ago will be coming
: .around again. "We're waiting for the arrival of that one." ,

CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) .
President Bush reported
earning $894,880 last year, .
most of it from interest on
investments, while Vice Presi; t\ent Dick Cht'ney tuok i1i
: 536 million , the bulk t&gt;f it
' from stock options and sales.
; The president and his wife,
; laura, paid $240,342 in feder' al taxes, the Cheneys $14.3
: million; acconding to figures
: released Friday. Both would
: see significant reductiops . if
: their tax-cut proposals are
: enacted..
• Bush reported $549,236 in
interest from investments,
' blind
: held in state .and federal
: trusts. ,
.
: He also reported $1'38,358'
.
: in capital gains.
: Bush listed $70,554 in
: salary earnings. He was governor ofTe)las until resigning in
: December. .
: The Bushes were entided to
' a federal income tax refund of
: $244,534. They elected to
; apply',about half- S127 ~220
: - to 'their 2001 tax bill and
: were repaid the difference pf

It certainly doesn' 11m to. ARDck
of Ages memorffi is a tribute to a
life fullY lived. Abeautiful graiUte
mncmbranec, penonalizcd and ·
guaranteed forever. And aRDck of
Ages memorial is as appropriate to
cremation as to inttrnmcnL
Can or visit us and discover
the timeless beauty of aRDck of
Ages memorial.

!i=~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~;~l

-REE

:

Chin~."

'

foreign ministry spokcsnun said
A joint conunission established three
yean ago to improve air and maritime
safety convenes April 23 in San francisco, 11
and could become a forum for a tense airing of dilfere~ces.
·
The plane's 24 crew members arrived
Thu!Wy in Honolulu and will fly w
WhidbCy Island, Wash .. on Saturday to be
home for Easter. White. House spokesnun
Ari Aeischer said Friday that !'resident
Bush · will not go to their homecoming
ceremony. " He does not believe that
politician' need to always insen themselves into tender n1oments.'' Aeischcr
·said. "The militarv will know how tu welcome people back. He thinks tim· will ·be
fitting and appropriate and j ust the right
amount of hoop-de-Ja."

. thl: · Gcorgi.t co:tst n:turnc.:·d to porc '" frid-.y with grinning~

:income; Cheney $36 mdhon

Does choosing cremation

992·6677

from Pagel1

· New solar flare burSts

Department complaints to Beijing in
December and again in Janwry.
.
"I think .they owe us an expbrution,"
Deputy Secrewy of Stare Richard L.
Arpitage said in discussing preparations
for the meeting in Beijing with reporters.
One item on the agenda i&lt; the return of
the danuged surveillance plane. "The EP3 aircraft i&lt; United States property. h was
worth in excess of SSO million:· Deferu;e
Secretary Dooold H . Rumsfdd said Friday. "That subject \viii be fiont and center
at the April 18 meeting.,just as it has been
every single day since the crew landed in

Iucome"tax returns must be postnL1rked by midnight April 16,
a~d the Postal Sen~cc ex'Pccts as many as .j() nuUion tax forms to
be mailed on that d1y.
·
The l&gt;ost.11 Service offered the following ad,·ice to tax-filers:
• Use first-class I?Ost.1ge. The lntt'rnal Re-venue Scn.~ce acc~pts
the posnnark as proof that a return has b&lt;'Cn mailed on time.
• Use pre-addr&lt;'SSCd labels where possible. T~ke special care to
ensure that handwritten ~nvdope's are legible.
• Include a return address .
· • Affix sufficient postage. One ounce is 34 cents; each additional ounce up to 13 ounces costs 31! ~dditional 21 cents.

fBUSh rePorts $894,a8o ~~

¥"

Judge

q

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presidt!'nt Bush should accept the
Senate's vote to trim his ta-x cut as an acceptable compromise on
_ the 2002 budget, a moderate Democrat said Saturd.1y.
;, The Senate, in passing its budgt!'t resolution last week, trimmed
.; Bush's signature tax package fiom $1.6. trillion down to $1.2 tril_ lion while adding billions of dollars in spending above Bush's rec. onunendations.
,Sen. John Breaux of Louisiana said in the Democrats' \veekly
" radio address that the dt'cision represc1its the bipartisanship that
Bush has said he wanted to achieve.
· "While nearly aU of us in Congress- Dt!'m&lt;?Crats and Repub. . licans - agree that aU Americans desL"''\1, a significant tax ~ut," he
_said, "n\any also fear the president's $1.6 rrillion tax plan would
li'W't' us unable to. fulfill our commitment to in1portant national
; . priorities such as education, agriculture and national defense.:' .

WASHINGTON (AI') -A Pentagonled delegation. will accuse China nat
week of~ and dangerous interception and tnclcing of American reconnaissance pbnes iD what looms as another
extended diplomatic standoff bel\veen
Beijing and the United States.
In talks scheduled r.o open in the Chi"
nese capital Wednesday; the Bqsh adnlinist12tion, \viii insist the kind of reconnaissonce conducted by a U.S. plane that made
an emergency landing at a Chinese air
base April 1 is routinely carried out by
5ome half-dozen Asian countries, including China, a Ienior U.S. official said Friday.
Recent.U.S. flights, however, have been
~ntercepted by Chine':"' jets that maneuvered as close as three feet to surveillance
aircraft, which prompted .strong State

...
: --------------------~----~~--------~'~--~--~~----------~~--

f•omPapA1

0

Demoaats issue budget appeal

U.S. delegation will scrutinize China

.~

Safety

Johnny Viars

sunct.y. Apillls, 2001

•

•

Angel Marie carr

PageA7

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Entertllinment'
tCnft Sllow
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tC..bo• Sales
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•••

: WASHINGTON (AP) - New elliciency standards proposed
: by the Bwh administration for ait conditionen :and ·heat pumps
. would save • thitd less energy than standard&amp; fur those appliances
· •dopted during the Clinton presidency.
; The 20 pen::ent improvtment in air conditioners and he.t ·
: pumps President Bush propo5ed Friday would '""" enough ener-

CARLISLE - Angel Marie Carr, infant daughter ofTodd
Carr and Alicia Hogg. 944 Dubois Road, Carlisle, died Thursday, April I 2, 2001 in Middletown Hospiul.
She w:u born April I 2, 200 I at Middletown Ho5pital.
Surviving in addition to her parents are her nutemal grandmother, Teresa H~ of Fanlclin; maternal great-grandmother,
Novella (BiD) Herald of Franlclin; six n:uterml great-uncles and
three maternal great-aunts; paterruil gr.andmoiher, Sanda Sue
Carr; paternal great-gr:mdmother, Virginia Lee Carr; and four
paternal great-uncles and two paternal great-•unts.
Graveside services will br 12:30 p.m . Tuesday at WoQ&lt;!hill
Cemetery, with Preacher Cline R:iwlins offici•ting. Arrangements arc by Eaton-Anderson-Uoglesby Funeral Home,
Franklin. ·

lheima Nibert
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WVa. - Thelma Nib~rt , 86, Gallipolis Ferry. died Thursda)'. April 12, 2001 in Holzer Medical
Center.
Born May 27, 191-t in . Hobosett, W.Va., daughter of the late
Jennnc and O shie bura Bowen Harbour, she. was a member of
Jordan Baptist Church .in Gallipolis Ferry. and was a homemaker.
.
She was also precc§i.!'d in death by her husband, Worthy
Franklin Nibert, on NO\·. 2, 1991; an infant daughter, Donna
Jane; and five sisters, Etta Harbour, Ron1:1 Bush, Bonnie Wood,
Mer[ie' Litchfidd and Nora Hush.
Surviving are two daughters, Phyllis (Jade) Stevens of Gallipolis Ferry, and Juanita (fred) Copeland of Ellijay, Ga.; three
gr:mdd1ughters and four great-grandchildren; a sister, Erma
Vl(ood of Bidwell; and a brother, Stanley Harbour of Mason.

W.Va.

~

•

,

Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
Point 'Pleasant, WVa., with the Rev. Carl Burrows and the Rev.
Charles Moses officiating. Buriai will be in Beale Chapel
Cemetery, Apple Grove, WVa.Visitation was held in the funeral home on Saturday.
·

Morg~l:l

J. Pinkennan

GROVE CITY - Morgan J. Pinkerman, 68, Grove City,
"died Thursday, April 12, 2001 in Mount Carmel Medical Ce.nter, Columbus.
Son ·of the late Hillis and Elva Pinkerman, he was a member
of Pleasantview Baptist Church and was a Korean War veteran . .
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Stella, on Dec. 25,
1999; and a brother, Charles Pinkerman.
Surviving are two children, Morgan L. (Brenda) 'Pinkerman"
and Juliann (Michael) Stamper; three stepchildren, Brenda
(Leonard) '\Vagner, Carol Ann Robinson and Bethany (Gary)
Vanderson; seven grandchildren, four stepgrandchildren and
four great-grandchildren; and four sisters, Geraldine DeWitt,
Vera Small, Betty Lou Gates and Adele Ashley.
Services will be 10:30 a.m. Monday in Schoedinger Norris
Chapel, Grove City, with Pastor Curtis Sheets officiating. A
graveside service will be lield at I :30 p.m. Monday at Providence Cemetery near Gallipolis. Visitation was held in the
·
chapel on Saturday.

: gy to light all U.S. homes fur two ~equal to the oucput of37
; 400-megaw:att power plants_

MEETS STUDENTS - Ohio School. Board President Jennifer
Sheets, Pomeroy, greets Carrie Mayle at Thursday's open
house at the SEM Sct\....ool, a facility opened last month to help
students · catch up" with their academic goals. (Brian J. Reed
photo)
·

School
fnNn Page.A1

For wharewr reason the
· stude1its are at the SEM
School, their goal, and the
goal of their reachers and
their parents, is to use the
faciliry's close personal attention and intensive bur informal format to catch up.
Before a student is admitted
into the program, extensive
discussions are held 'between
parents, teachers, administbtors and · others involved in
public education, such as
mental health professionals
and juvenile court officials.
Those
discussions
are
designed,
in
.part,
to
deter1
' mine what direction tlle student should .take in order to
·achieve liis goals, and, how
those goals will ultimat~ly be
met.

Meigs
fnwnPageA1

Count)' ,Family and Children
''
First wrote the grant, and
The system now, resources
Mdgs County Department of available, and how it all plays
Job and Family S..-rvices acts .in the local . etonomy were
as the fiscal agent for the WIA among the things which Isaac
program on behalf of the said has to be L1ken into ~on­
Meigs Count)· commission- sideration when finding the
crs.
fit between the health care
The program, -funded at system and the vit.1lity of the
Sl12,oop, can ·serve up to 10 communiry's economy.
students at a time, and a max- The
outcome,
she
imum of 20 for the funding explained, will be to establish
cycle.
a set of priorities for the comThe facility is located on munity, determine what •is
Mechanic Street, but ,is uqre- most important and what the
Jared to the short-term alter- vision is - . all with v.e ry little
native ·school upstairs on document and a lot of"to do ...
Mulberry Avenue.
things.
Fenton Taylor, retired prinShe said Meigs County will
dpal of Meigs High School, be the first in the state of
serves as the facility's coordi- Ohio to 'attempt to imple~
nator, and · teacher Kelly ment the Oklahoma model.
Also speaking was Dr. Leroy
Tho!J1aS, · youth specialist
Steven Presley, and Shannon J. Hushak of the Ohio State
_Wood complete the faculty University·Extension, Depart- a faculty which allows stu- ment of Agricultural, Envidents the freedom they need ron mental and · Development
to achieve their goals, but Economics.
which also demands respect.
He called on the committee
" It's a really good atmos- to "take ownership ... of a plan
phere," said Doris Arnold, a and then move it from stratestudent working on her GED. · gic plan11ing to action plan" It's like a one-on-one ning. Accomplishments are
opportunity to work on our the important part, said
goals, and it's very casual. Husha~. •
That's what I like about it....
He discussed the health secSaid Arnold' . younger tor and its impact on e.m ploybrother, Curtis: "All they ask ment, income, retail sales and
for is respect."
.. . _
sales tax using a table comJohn Costanz.o, superintin- -pleted for 'M•igs Cou~ty , in
dent of the Athens-Meigs 1998 showing how each of
Educational Service Center, those factors multiply as they
'w hich ove!'seei ~he operation move into the conlmunity's
of the school, said the. pro- economy.
gram is probably do-or-die
He also said that critical serfor some of the students, and a vices in a community are vital
golden opportunity for all of· if employers are to retain
them.
employees.
To begin the work, which is
"Every one pf these students would be out of school expected to result in an action
tocby if this facility were not plan by the end of the year,
here," Cpnstanzo saic;l, " so the committee was divided
their chances for su"ess are
greater, just b~cause thL-y're
here."

Career objectives are also a
h1ajor consideration, accbrd~
ing to Boster.
"This is, of cour!", an educatimial program, but there's
definitely
a
vocational
emphasis," Boster said. "We
want "ach of these students to have a strong idea about
where they are going after
they leave here."
Students can spend up to 12
months in the program, and
will also benefit from 12
GALLIPOLIS - Marie G. Roberts Saunders, 79, Fostoria, · months of follow-up atten.formerly of Gallia Counry, died Friday, April 1.3, 2001 in Fos- tion.
toria Comnnmity Hospital.
"lly the time they leave us,
Born June .3, 1921 in Gallia County, daughter of the .late they will each haw indenti. Alfre\1 Monroe and Jennie Strickland Hatfield, she retired as a ficd a realistic career goal,"
nurse from Holzer Medical Center and Gallipolis Develop- Hoster said.
.
.
mental Center.
The school ·open.:d last
She was a m~tmber of Springfield Baptist Church, also known month, using grant · funds
as the Brick C hurch in Gallia County.
from the formula youth proShe was also preceded in death by two husbands. Myrl gr~m funded under the WorkRoberts and W.1lter Saunders; two brothers, Raymond and Bob fdrcc Investment Act (the for. Hatfield; and two sisters, Etta Rowsey and Alice Rutan.
mer JTPA program) . Amy
Surviving are seven children, Eucgcne (Barbara) Roberts of Boster of ACESS / Meigs
Austin , Texas, Margena (Sam) Dimitrovski of Naples, Fl~ .• Barbara Woodruff and Carolyn Miles, both of Fostoria, ·Paul
(Mary) Roberts of Fremont, Roger (Violet) Roberts of
and-in control &lt;?f the yehicle;
Columbus, and Phillip Roberts of Bidwell; 13 grandchildren,
• The chanc~ ofbeing killed
23 great-grandchildren ,and a great-great-grandchild; a brother,
are 25 timj!S greater if one is
George Hatfield of Napoleon; .and two sisters, Faye. Hanley of
thrown out of an automobile;
Fostoria, and Rilla Luckadoo of Gallipolis.
• You cannot brace yourself
Auto- Owner•lmurance
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in Waugh-Hilley-Wood
wear his/her safety belt and to adequately in , a ·crash. A 100.
· Ufe Home Car Business
Funeral Home, with Pastor Glenn Rowe officiating. Burial will
remind others to wear theirs as pound person .in a 20 mile.per
be in Centenary Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
well.
•
hour crash becomes ·a ~.DOO
7Ift ~ As/d
home from 5-8 p.m. Monday.
Both rulers . and pencils, pound force;
. •
: INSURANCE PLUS
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made · to the
inscribed with safety messages,
·•
AU
50 · stateS"'nve a child .. 1 •
•
• ' ' •
Alzheimer's Foundation.
'
was also distributed among the safety seat la\v. In ·Ohio, chit- I AGENCIES, INC.
chilqren.
dren who are-either 40 pounds
114 Court Pomeroy
Tlie ODOPS offers several or less than.(i,l r year$ .old m~~St • ,
safety belt facts for the public be secured in a ,safety seat;
·
SCOTTOWN -Johnny Vim, 48, Scottown: died Fridaf, to remember:·
April13, 2001. .
• • Most crashes occur at safety
• Infants
rear-;facing
seats in
ibotild
never child
ride , '
Arrangements will be announced by Hall Funeral Home,
speeds less than 40 miles per in the fron~ .seat of a, vehicle .
P~ctorviJie .
hour;
with a. passenger-sid.e air bag.
• Most collisions occur less Children age,· 12 and under,
than 25 miles from home;
should hlso ' ~ide buckled up in'
'
missioner.
• Each irldividual l;as a one . tpe back se~t; . · · · • -. ~·
• Persont •not , protected by
·"Hopefully, the governor . in three chance of being in a
·
serious
&lt;luto acddent in their
safety b!!lts &lt;;?r seats hay~ be,e n
will decide sometime soon;'
.
l&lt;illed at sp,eeds as low: · as 12 ·
·
Watson said-. "I don't think lifetilpe;
he'll drag his feet about it, and
• safecy be.lts can help ,pre- n1iles ptl:l hour. - the spetd ·
· to examine the list. If three or he'll make the best decision vent secondary collisions by often traveled in a supermarket
keeping one behind the wheel parking loJ,
fewer names are s.ubinitted, he for Gallia County."
said a motion to submit them
Alt\lough Cain's present
'.
.
to Taft will be made. ·
te~n1 doesn,t expire unti,l
COUPON
·Galli a's GOP Central Com- 2004, his replacement will
mittee is chaired by Paul Dean · have to run in 2002 to fill out
Niday, ·• former county 'com- . the rem~inder of the term.

Marie Roberts Saunders

: Bm the standinls adopted by fOrmer President ainton, which
!:Bush hopes to replace, would have meant a 30 percent improYe~ ment, enough to light all U.S. homes for J_J ~ and equal to the
. OUipUt of 53 pOwer plants.
.' Complying \vith the Bush standards would add $21.3 in upfront
~ costs by 2006 to the average S2,236 price of a house central air
~·conditioning
sys~nl, bringing in cost to $2,449, the ~rnment
-estm:utes.
.
Buyers would recoup the extra cost through lower utility bills
over 9.8 years.

DISCUSSING HEALTH CARE - Meigs County Commissioner
Mick Davenport, center, spoke with Susan Isaac. ~nd ~art
Runser of the Institute for Local Govemm~nt Admmrstrati~
and Rural Planning, following the first meeting of the county s
community health planning committee Thursday. (Charlene
Hoeflich photo)

into four work groups with
assigned roles and respon~ibil­
ities. Each co mmittee named
· a chairman.
They are:
• Rhonda Dailey, administrator, Veterans Memorial
Hospital, inventory work
group, to provide a comprehensiw picture of the exJSnng
health care ddivery system;
· • Norma Torres, health
conunissioner and ad•ninistrator of th~ Meigs County
Health D epartment, survey
work group, to . gather the
views of community mem"
bers regarding what they want
and need from their health
care system; ·
· • Perry Varnadoe, economic
development director, data
and information work group,
to identify and analyze all
current relevant sources of
data and information about the comll).unity's general
health profile; and
• Charlene Hoeflich, general manager, The Daily Sentinel, publicity work grliup, to
keep
the
: ~ommunity
informed about the activities
of the entite health planning
process and promote commu·nity participation .. in the
health care survey.

mean choosing not io ,
have amemorial?

WASHiNGTON (AP) - Hundreds of post offices ~ stay
open late Monday to accommodate last-minute tax filets .

China said friday ir has not decided
what to do with the aircraft." What to do
about this plane will be decided acconling
to the n:sult of the inwstigation," China's

Shark attacks ~pt waming
MIAMI {AP) -At least seven people were attacked by sha~
along Aorid:i's east coast this week as sharks hunted for fish along
theit northward rnigatory route.
Thousands ofheachgoers were warned to stay out o( the water
after sharks were sighted and bites- none of them life-threaten~
ing - were reported.
A 16-year-old from Charleston, S.C., and a 12-year-old were
bitten on the anlcles Friday while surfing sep~rately at New Smyrna Beach, said Capt. Rob Horster of the Volusia County Beach
Patrol.
· Three other surfers and a wave-boarder were bitten by sharks
on Wednesday and Thursday in the same area.
.
"These are not the kinds of attacks that were made famous in
Jaws,"' said Geolll': Burgess, director of the International Shark
Attack File in Gainesville.

Stranded ship comes to port

m\.'mbcrs I~Jning (M.:r the ship's rails, st..·ei ng thems.:I\'~S closer u} .
getting p.1id and going horne.
"Yeah, I would like· to go home." s:Ud Roque Munoz vf Pan.Jnu , chief tllJtL'" on the..· Agios Mina~. "" I think we are going m New
Yurk ami the new mmcr's going to pay for the salarY ond n:patri-

ation:·

'

But the cn.•w's ondcal didn't end at the shore. Instead they haw
found themselves ca ught in a legal battle between two creditors of
the ship's former owner, both dainling rights to the w ssd to settle old debts.
.
Th.; U.S. Marshal Service seized control of the ship within an
h~ur of its arrival at port and otder it to remain in Brunswick.
.

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BRUNSWICK, Ga. {AI') -· A freighter stranded for 48 days off

Most of Cheney's income
came when he exercised stock
options and sold stock in Halliburton Co., the Dallas-based '
energy services firm he headed until late in the presidential
campaign. The White House .
did not specify precisely how
much . Cheney ' earned from
that.
The vic~ president received .
s~.3 million in deferred compensation and bonuses. He
reported $806,332 in salary.
Cheney sold part of his .
stock to avoid raising conflictof-interest · questions, and 'he
reported sustaining a $1.9
million loss. '
He also reported $823,50,9

2001 Buckeye Hills
.,Ohio Valley EXPO

in capital gains.
Though his federal tax liability was SI ~ ..3 million,
Cheney paid only li9 .6 million during the year. He paid
the remaining balance of $4.7 .
million when he filed on Fri~
day.
The'
Bushes
reported
donating S143,.300 to charity,
including $75,000 in royal~ies
from his biography published
during the presidential campaign, "A Charge to Keep."
The book sale proceeds went
to '· fout organizations: Boy
Scouts of America, Girl
Scouts of America, Boys and
Girls Clubs of America and
Girls Inc . .

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HEARING TESTS

Most post offices open late

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. . . Ill
tiA&amp;IIPIJ&amp;III

-~~~~- ------­

WASHINGTON (AP) - Residents of northern state$ could
·, be treat!!d to the aurora borealis this weekend fiom another solar
, ., flare's eruption fiom the sun.
.;. The latest flare burst forth ,o n Thursday, continuing two weeks
,, of activity on· the sun, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
•.· Administration said Friday.
It came from the same region on the sun that produced a pair
of nuss ejections Tuesday, NOAA's Space Environment Center in
·
,Boulder, Colo., reported.
. ~'The sun rotate.s about I 5 degrees each day; so this area should
; be going away in a few days;' said NOAA's Joseph Kunches. But
:. the region that \.vas really active two weeks ago will be coming
: .around again. "We're waiting for the arrival of that one." ,

CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) .
President Bush reported
earning $894,880 last year, .
most of it from interest on
investments, while Vice Presi; t\ent Dick Cht'ney tuok i1i
: 536 million , the bulk t&gt;f it
' from stock options and sales.
; The president and his wife,
; laura, paid $240,342 in feder' al taxes, the Cheneys $14.3
: million; acconding to figures
: released Friday. Both would
: see significant reductiops . if
: their tax-cut proposals are
: enacted..
• Bush reported $549,236 in
interest from investments,
' blind
: held in state .and federal
: trusts. ,
.
: He also reported $1'38,358'
.
: in capital gains.
: Bush listed $70,554 in
: salary earnings. He was governor ofTe)las until resigning in
: December. .
: The Bushes were entided to
' a federal income tax refund of
: $244,534. They elected to
; apply',about half- S127 ~220
: - to 'their 2001 tax bill and
: were repaid the difference pf

It certainly doesn' 11m to. ARDck
of Ages memorffi is a tribute to a
life fullY lived. Abeautiful graiUte
mncmbranec, penonalizcd and ·
guaranteed forever. And aRDck of
Ages memorial is as appropriate to
cremation as to inttrnmcnL
Can or visit us and discover
the timeless beauty of aRDck of
Ages memorial.

!i=~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~;~l

-REE

:

Chin~."

'

foreign ministry spokcsnun said
A joint conunission established three
yean ago to improve air and maritime
safety convenes April 23 in San francisco, 11
and could become a forum for a tense airing of dilfere~ces.
·
The plane's 24 crew members arrived
Thu!Wy in Honolulu and will fly w
WhidbCy Island, Wash .. on Saturday to be
home for Easter. White. House spokesnun
Ari Aeischer said Friday that !'resident
Bush · will not go to their homecoming
ceremony. " He does not believe that
politician' need to always insen themselves into tender n1oments.'' Aeischcr
·said. "The militarv will know how tu welcome people back. He thinks tim· will ·be
fitting and appropriate and j ust the right
amount of hoop-de-Ja."

. thl: · Gcorgi.t co:tst n:turnc.:·d to porc '" frid-.y with grinning~

:income; Cheney $36 mdhon

Does choosing cremation

992·6677

from Pagel1

· New solar flare burSts

Department complaints to Beijing in
December and again in Janwry.
.
"I think .they owe us an expbrution,"
Deputy Secrewy of Stare Richard L.
Arpitage said in discussing preparations
for the meeting in Beijing with reporters.
One item on the agenda i&lt; the return of
the danuged surveillance plane. "The EP3 aircraft i&lt; United States property. h was
worth in excess of SSO million:· Deferu;e
Secretary Dooold H . Rumsfdd said Friday. "That subject \viii be fiont and center
at the April 18 meeting.,just as it has been
every single day since the crew landed in

Iucome"tax returns must be postnL1rked by midnight April 16,
a~d the Postal Sen~cc ex'Pccts as many as .j() nuUion tax forms to
be mailed on that d1y.
·
The l&gt;ost.11 Service offered the following ad,·ice to tax-filers:
• Use first-class I?Ost.1ge. The lntt'rnal Re-venue Scn.~ce acc~pts
the posnnark as proof that a return has b&lt;'Cn mailed on time.
• Use pre-addr&lt;'SSCd labels where possible. T~ke special care to
ensure that handwritten ~nvdope's are legible.
• Include a return address .
· • Affix sufficient postage. One ounce is 34 cents; each additional ounce up to 13 ounces costs 31! ~dditional 21 cents.

fBUSh rePorts $894,a8o ~~

¥"

Judge

q

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presidt!'nt Bush should accept the
Senate's vote to trim his ta-x cut as an acceptable compromise on
_ the 2002 budget, a moderate Democrat said Saturd.1y.
;, The Senate, in passing its budgt!'t resolution last week, trimmed
.; Bush's signature tax package fiom $1.6. trillion down to $1.2 tril_ lion while adding billions of dollars in spending above Bush's rec. onunendations.
,Sen. John Breaux of Louisiana said in the Democrats' \veekly
" radio address that the dt'cision represc1its the bipartisanship that
Bush has said he wanted to achieve.
· "While nearly aU of us in Congress- Dt!'m&lt;?Crats and Repub. . licans - agree that aU Americans desL"''\1, a significant tax ~ut," he
_said, "n\any also fear the president's $1.6 rrillion tax plan would
li'W't' us unable to. fulfill our commitment to in1portant national
; . priorities such as education, agriculture and national defense.:' .

WASHINGTON (AI') -A Pentagonled delegation. will accuse China nat
week of~ and dangerous interception and tnclcing of American reconnaissance pbnes iD what looms as another
extended diplomatic standoff bel\veen
Beijing and the United States.
In talks scheduled r.o open in the Chi"
nese capital Wednesday; the Bqsh adnlinist12tion, \viii insist the kind of reconnaissonce conducted by a U.S. plane that made
an emergency landing at a Chinese air
base April 1 is routinely carried out by
5ome half-dozen Asian countries, including China, a Ienior U.S. official said Friday.
Recent.U.S. flights, however, have been
~ntercepted by Chine':"' jets that maneuvered as close as three feet to surveillance
aircraft, which prompted .strong State

...
: --------------------~----~~--------~'~--~--~~----------~~--

f•omPapA1

0

Demoaats issue budget appeal

U.S. delegation will scrutinize China

.~

Safety

Johnny Viars

sunct.y. Apillls, 2001

•

•

Angel Marie carr

PageA7

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'c

•

•

•

'

.

'

· OUr House

Blentiernassett Island have share in'': restored piano

of

TESTAMENtS: Oepici'ting Ainerica's twcrparty system on Scripture

I

.

¥'

DEAR ABBY: Because of
todays ever-improving technology in wireless phones,
millioas of Americans have
ceO phones lying around that
are no longer being used.
lnsread of tossing them in
the garbage when new ones
are purchased, thcie handsets
can be given to the "DonateA-Phone" program that helps
domestic violence victims.
Sponsored by the Wireless
Foundation, the "Donate-Acampaign
was
Phone"
launched in Septelnber 1~9
to collect and refurbish a portion of the 24 million wireless
phones no longer being used.
The phones are , reprogrammed with 911 and other
so
emergency numbers
domestic violence victims can
access local emergency services and bot-line numbers at
the touch of a button.
From May 1 to July 31,
2001, Radio~hack is once
a'gail!' partnering with the ·
Wireless Foundation to col- ·
~~~~U p_ho!'ft- ~.,. the~;~­
~· Abby1 please let your
readers'
they can help
victims of dome5tic violepce
'
.
bv ~nat\ng their old ~leu
·phohes. - JILL A. LAIN,
RADIOSHACK
'
. :OEAil JILL: What a ter. .
. J' '
'
.
''
rific ideal Prepare for a del. ,.
'
uge, becawe ·-' I'm sure that
BY KR11 DorioN
TIMESSENTINEL STAfF
,
many, people who see your
· ALLIPOLIS -What would you do if someone said .that ·
'Jetter will be delighted to join
they •would giVe you $10,000 tO restore "your" piano, in ·
ypur
"Donate-A-Phone"
exchange
for borrowing your other piano - and weD,
campaign.
they'll rehab rl)ar one, too? ' ·
'
Re~: Between May 1
''
PrJbably
exactly what . the Our House Museum said to the
and July 31, your outdated
Blennerhassett Historical Foundation Board ofDtreccell phone ~ be dropped
, ' ton: "Yces, pIease.I"
, ·
off at any of RadioShack's
A
treasure
was
discovered
last year in the basement
. 7,100 stores. Phones and
of the Our House Museum in the
' · accessories in any condition
form
the Roman Menager
wiiJ lie gladly acc~pted, and all
Bureau piano; circa 1850.
·
doiutions"are tax-deductible
It
was
fuund
dismanded,wrapped
to the fullest extent of !he Jaw.
in plastic, its rosewood pealing, yet
IRS regulatiom prohibit the
i~ mother of pearl keys in tact.
receiving organization from
·
The Our House, being a nonplacihg a value -orl donat~d
, profit organization, knew a restoraitems, but generally, the fau.lion, W9Uid be extraordinarily
niarket· value can be claimed
expe.nsive, but then an unbelievable
on your tax return.
offe(
came fiom the BHfB. .
For further information on
Sihce the buming of the abanthis campaign, access -the Web
doned Blennerhassett mansion in
site: ·
·
1812 by drunken Ohio soldiers, the
www.oonarcaphone.~om.
.
fOundation has been searching for
DEAR ABBY: Whenev,
origin31 artifacts from the house.
er there is a,death in qr ourBy accident, Ronald Ray Swick,
side of our .family, my mother
historian
for the foundation, found
always ·sends a card with cash
.a newspaper article that described a
in it to the grieving family.
RESTORAnON - Master Cablnf1t·
piano
that
reportedly
originated
maker Joe Roby starts to put. the
This mortifies me. She sends
fiom
the
Blennerhassett
ho~e.
restored plano back together at the
$5 oo $50 for funeral elipens"The
Feb.
15,
1889
Gallipolis
Bulletin
article
proOur House Museum. ·
es regardless of the financial
vided
the
filst
detailed
description
I
ever
discovered
of
situation of those in mournthe Blennerhassett piano," said Swick.
.
ing. It aeems so tacky. I beg.
"I
immediately
phoned
niy
.friend
Henriet!il
Evans
her to send food or flowers or
in Gallipolis and asked if she possessed any e~dence
just ~ card, bur she continues .
or intuition as to the piano's present-day locat10n.
to sofia cash every time.
.
"She instandy repijed,'that sounds like the piano in
ON
ITI
WAY
·The·
cllamant~d
plano
What think?.- MORTI- ,
!he balhpom at Otir House."· : .
·
was found in the .basement of the Our
FmO DAUGHTER IN
House
wrapPed In plastic. Here thjl plano
MICHIGAN ,
PlaaM ...- Hllfory, Cl
Is on Its 'way tO' r~lbllitatlon at ~e
. DEAR MORTIFIED:
''
skilled hands:ot Joe RobY. , , . , .· -'' .
Lightt,n up! This may be _a
't·•'
generational difference:. It 11
certainly a caring gesture and f' cannot ~ee that it is in
any way "tacky." If the grieVing family doesn't need the
money, ·it can always be for'
.
.
'
'
.
warded to the deceased's
Borg's
scenario:
.
Scriprure,
and
pro';llotes
the
liberal
BY R1oHMD N. Ol'n.M . ,
the Bible.
favorite charity.
··
. .
In the "older way" of thinking
AP AELIOION WRIT£R
' Borg .is •a professor of religion and parcy.
'DEAR ABBY: Why do
. Marcus Borg gets right to the point: Culture at otegon Stare Univemty and
athletes get paid more · than
(However, Borg actually treats polar- among fundam&gt;ntalists and evangeliteachers and policemen? They
"Conflict over how tO see and read the part of the radic:i! Jesus Seminar, wWch ized Protestantism, not Christianity as a cals, "the Bible is to be interpreted lit,..fe the people who educate , Bible is. the siDg\e greatest issue divi&lt;;l- has.deoared·~t the·Gospels. are large- whole; he mosdy i~ores the Catholics erally. unless the Janguage of a particuw and keep us .jafi;, r believe
ing Christians in North America ly inauthentic as history. In "Reading and Orthodox.) .
lar .pa~ge is clearly metaph~rical.'~
the ·public can live without
today."
.
..
the Bible Again for theJ:'irstTime:TakTo give equal time to the conserva- That phrnsing avoids distortions others
·· watching athletes, h11t can't ..
Some 1l11rali.~~ di=,hsaying --~t ing the B_ihle Seriously But Not Liter- tive party, read Borg debating N. T. make of the conservatives, who realize.
y omosexwu.
) B
live without p,eople ;who keep . sexua! 11\0 ty, esp
24
ity, is eve~ 11101e divisive, but Boig cor- , ally" (HarperSanFranciSCo, ~ . , . o~ Wright, canon theologian ofWestmin- many Bible passages are intended to be
u~
us smarr. rectly observes cha~ this_and mast other ~ dtat , all, of U.S, Chrisaaruty !S ster Abbey, in "The Meaning of Jesui: poetic.
AGE 9,
,,....... llble. ca .
. disput~ stem liom interJretation of po!anzed mto die two-party system on 1\vo Visions."

.,''·

•

~

••

�SIP! f, APrtl15, 2001
~

.
•'

t

Inside:

Ja·••t S..- lrlliweJ
.

•

Okbratiuns begin urr 2C ·
loarl rolumnist! begin un 3 C
1 ocal happenings, 4C

Cl

•
&gt;

oser

•
'

•
•'
•
•
'

s

Dear
Abby

•'

•'

.•.

0

ADVICE
'

Yl&gt;ur old cell
·phone can
provide new
lease on lifo

,•

..
'

·Interested In working closer to home?
'

{lnfoCislbn ig expanding bur thrwntQ'Wn ·Gallipolis
I

-

.

- '•!

••

.

nd we~re adding 175 positions in the
multi-fa tE~d

,..
•
'

knaw

'

tele. rvices industr¥.

'•'

.
We provi9e a untque opportunity to work with
.

.

a long list of Fortune 1000 companies and many
of the largest and most prestigious

norzprofit
. '
l

organizations in the world. In fact, lnfoCision is

_recognized nationallj as a leader in

I

l

the teleservices industry.

"It's nice working so
close to ·home, and in
such·a p~ofession~l, ·
fri~ndly environment."

If you;re looking for a.

!I

•

i

' 'I

f

better, Career

or would just like to work closer to home,
i

.

•

•

lnfoCision is worth a look. We offer acompetJttve _
.

'

salary,

'

'',,

'

'

an excellent benefits pa~kage, and
.

'
''

. '

•

~

•,

·flexible full- or part.-time positions.

••'

•
lnfoCision is the undisputed leader in the Teleservices Industry. We have
been recognized with numerous awards for our growth, community
service, and unparalleled
commitment to quality.
.
.
In just two weeks; we will open our third Gallipolis Call Center dedicated
.to raising funds exclusively. for.conservative political organizations and
recruiting members for the National Rifle Association. which protects our
• Second Amendmeht rights. ·
To learn more about career opportunities With a great company, gi.ve us
.acall on our toil-free joo hotllne or stop by our expanding location at
242 3rd Averiue in downtown' Gallipolis.

.

• ..Competitive hourly rate plus additional
bonus potential
',
averaging $2 per hour
'
'
• Full time and unlimited overtime, paid time-and-a-half
• Fixed work schedule and weekly paycheck
• 1 Full health benefits. 401(kl retirement program
'
• One week paid .vacation every six months, and seven ·
paid hOlidays per year
,
Arewarding·and f.ulflillng car~r with a long-term·commitment
State-of-the-art facility and
work environment
-

,'

'

'~I
~

•,,
"
I'

I·

I
I
I

•

''·

1 .

'

'c

•

•

•

'

.

'

· OUr House

Blentiernassett Island have share in'': restored piano

of

TESTAMENtS: Oepici'ting Ainerica's twcrparty system on Scripture

I

.

¥'

DEAR ABBY: Because of
todays ever-improving technology in wireless phones,
millioas of Americans have
ceO phones lying around that
are no longer being used.
lnsread of tossing them in
the garbage when new ones
are purchased, thcie handsets
can be given to the "DonateA-Phone" program that helps
domestic violence victims.
Sponsored by the Wireless
Foundation, the "Donate-Acampaign
was
Phone"
launched in Septelnber 1~9
to collect and refurbish a portion of the 24 million wireless
phones no longer being used.
The phones are , reprogrammed with 911 and other
so
emergency numbers
domestic violence victims can
access local emergency services and bot-line numbers at
the touch of a button.
From May 1 to July 31,
2001, Radio~hack is once
a'gail!' partnering with the ·
Wireless Foundation to col- ·
~~~~U p_ho!'ft- ~.,. the~;~­
~· Abby1 please let your
readers'
they can help
victims of dome5tic violepce
'
.
bv ~nat\ng their old ~leu
·phohes. - JILL A. LAIN,
RADIOSHACK
'
. :OEAil JILL: What a ter. .
. J' '
'
.
''
rific ideal Prepare for a del. ,.
'
uge, becawe ·-' I'm sure that
BY KR11 DorioN
TIMESSENTINEL STAfF
,
many, people who see your
· ALLIPOLIS -What would you do if someone said .that ·
'Jetter will be delighted to join
they •would giVe you $10,000 tO restore "your" piano, in ·
ypur
"Donate-A-Phone"
exchange
for borrowing your other piano - and weD,
campaign.
they'll rehab rl)ar one, too? ' ·
'
Re~: Between May 1
''
PrJbably
exactly what . the Our House Museum said to the
and July 31, your outdated
Blennerhassett Historical Foundation Board ofDtreccell phone ~ be dropped
, ' ton: "Yces, pIease.I"
, ·
off at any of RadioShack's
A
treasure
was
discovered
last year in the basement
. 7,100 stores. Phones and
of the Our House Museum in the
' · accessories in any condition
form
the Roman Menager
wiiJ lie gladly acc~pted, and all
Bureau piano; circa 1850.
·
doiutions"are tax-deductible
It
was
fuund
dismanded,wrapped
to the fullest extent of !he Jaw.
in plastic, its rosewood pealing, yet
IRS regulatiom prohibit the
i~ mother of pearl keys in tact.
receiving organization from
·
The Our House, being a nonplacihg a value -orl donat~d
, profit organization, knew a restoraitems, but generally, the fau.lion, W9Uid be extraordinarily
niarket· value can be claimed
expe.nsive, but then an unbelievable
on your tax return.
offe(
came fiom the BHfB. .
For further information on
Sihce the buming of the abanthis campaign, access -the Web
doned Blennerhassett mansion in
site: ·
·
1812 by drunken Ohio soldiers, the
www.oonarcaphone.~om.
.
fOundation has been searching for
DEAR ABBY: Whenev,
origin31 artifacts from the house.
er there is a,death in qr ourBy accident, Ronald Ray Swick,
side of our .family, my mother
historian
for the foundation, found
always ·sends a card with cash
.a newspaper article that described a
in it to the grieving family.
RESTORAnON - Master Cablnf1t·
piano
that
reportedly
originated
maker Joe Roby starts to put. the
This mortifies me. She sends
fiom
the
Blennerhassett
ho~e.
restored plano back together at the
$5 oo $50 for funeral elipens"The
Feb.
15,
1889
Gallipolis
Bulletin
article
proOur House Museum. ·
es regardless of the financial
vided
the
filst
detailed
description
I
ever
discovered
of
situation of those in mournthe Blennerhassett piano," said Swick.
.
ing. It aeems so tacky. I beg.
"I
immediately
phoned
niy
.friend
Henriet!il
Evans
her to send food or flowers or
in Gallipolis and asked if she possessed any e~dence
just ~ card, bur she continues .
or intuition as to the piano's present-day locat10n.
to sofia cash every time.
.
"She instandy repijed,'that sounds like the piano in
ON
ITI
WAY
·The·
cllamant~d
plano
What think?.- MORTI- ,
!he balhpom at Otir House."· : .
·
was found in the .basement of the Our
FmO DAUGHTER IN
House
wrapPed In plastic. Here thjl plano
MICHIGAN ,
PlaaM ...- Hllfory, Cl
Is on Its 'way tO' r~lbllitatlon at ~e
. DEAR MORTIFIED:
''
skilled hands:ot Joe RobY. , , . , .· -'' .
Lightt,n up! This may be _a
't·•'
generational difference:. It 11
certainly a caring gesture and f' cannot ~ee that it is in
any way "tacky." If the grieVing family doesn't need the
money, ·it can always be for'
.
.
'
'
.
warded to the deceased's
Borg's
scenario:
.
Scriprure,
and
pro';llotes
the
liberal
BY R1oHMD N. Ol'n.M . ,
the Bible.
favorite charity.
··
. .
In the "older way" of thinking
AP AELIOION WRIT£R
' Borg .is •a professor of religion and parcy.
'DEAR ABBY: Why do
. Marcus Borg gets right to the point: Culture at otegon Stare Univemty and
athletes get paid more · than
(However, Borg actually treats polar- among fundam&gt;ntalists and evangeliteachers and policemen? They
"Conflict over how tO see and read the part of the radic:i! Jesus Seminar, wWch ized Protestantism, not Christianity as a cals, "the Bible is to be interpreted lit,..fe the people who educate , Bible is. the siDg\e greatest issue divi&lt;;l- has.deoared·~t the·Gospels. are large- whole; he mosdy i~ores the Catholics erally. unless the Janguage of a particuw and keep us .jafi;, r believe
ing Christians in North America ly inauthentic as history. In "Reading and Orthodox.) .
lar .pa~ge is clearly metaph~rical.'~
the ·public can live without
today."
.
..
the Bible Again for theJ:'irstTime:TakTo give equal time to the conserva- That phrnsing avoids distortions others
·· watching athletes, h11t can't ..
Some 1l11rali.~~ di=,hsaying --~t ing the B_ihle Seriously But Not Liter- tive party, read Borg debating N. T. make of the conservatives, who realize.
y omosexwu.
) B
live without p,eople ;who keep . sexua! 11\0 ty, esp
24
ity, is eve~ 11101e divisive, but Boig cor- , ally" (HarperSanFranciSCo, ~ . , . o~ Wright, canon theologian ofWestmin- many Bible passages are intended to be
u~
us smarr. rectly observes cha~ this_and mast other ~ dtat , all, of U.S, Chrisaaruty !S ster Abbey, in "The Meaning of Jesui: poetic.
AGE 9,
,,....... llble. ca .
. disput~ stem liom interJretation of po!anzed mto die two-party system on 1\vo Visions."

.,''·

•

~

••

�•
Sunay,Apri1S. 2001

Inside: .

•

&amp;ebdll roundup, Page B2
1M Cheap &amp;ats, Page B3
Today~ Scoreboard, Page B6
Outdoors, Page BB ·

•
'••

•

•

Page 81

•

s.....,....... 15. 200..

•
•
•

oser

SUNn\Y's
••
••

to

GAHS

HIGHLIGHIS
8Y AllftiEW CMmt

•i

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

•

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Academy sophomore Mich:ael
Warren lw been selected to
play in the Junior Olympic
Baseball Championships in
June:
· Warren, the Blue Devils
starting third baseman, is a
member of the Hoosier Diamond dub,
which
IS
based
in
Noblesville,
Ind.The club
will be pan
of the 63team tourna• ·
ment schedL...;.-'-.&amp;.-.;;!1 uled for June
. , w.ren
22-30
m
Tucson, Ariz:
Warren is one of 20 players ·
on the Hoosier Diamond'roster who hope to land a spot
on the USA Baseball Youth
National Team, which will be
selected from the p9QI of
players involved in the Junior
Olympic tournament. Players
chosen for the youth national
team will then compere in the
International Baseball F.ederation's world championships,
which . will be held in Veracruz, Mexico, in August.
The Junior Olympic championships will be played at the
spring training complexes of
the Arizona Diamondbacks,
Chicago White Sox and Colorado Rockies as well as at
Hi1CiJrbett Field, the home ,
b~ for .USA: Baseball.· t
•

\ \.
•

~

-.
•

•

•

.

,,
1

Interested in .working closer
to home?
:)

.

'

.

'

...
•
...,.

~lnfocislon i~ expanding bur downtown .Gallipolis
•

~

•

location and we're adding 175 positions in the
•

t

multi-faceted

•

i

.

teleservices industry.
VINCENT - River Valley's five-game winning streak
went by the boards friday as
the Raiders dropped a 6-5
deCision to Warren in SEOAL
softball action.
A costly error by River Val~
ley in the seventh inning
allowed Warren to plate the
winnirlg run. The miscue
came ,with two outs and the
game tied at 5-all. The
Raiders committed four
errors in the game.
Geri Me Faun suffered a
tough loss for River Valley.
She held Warren to just three
hits and recorded three strikeputs and four walks.
River Valley (8-.3, SEOAL
4r2) pounded out nine hits
agai!lst Warren with McFann,
Nicole Watkins, , Amanda
Lawson and Christen Baird
each going 2-for-4 .
Mcfann · drove in t}lree
runs, while Watkins and Lawson each had · one RBI. All
three players ripped doubles.
River Valley plays at Point
Pleasant Monday and then has
a · rematch at home against
. Eastern Tuesday; . ·

We provide a untque opportunity to work with
a long list of Fortune 1000 c;ompanies and many

norzprofit
'

organizations in the world. In fact, lnfoCision is

recognized nationally as a leader ir~

'•

, j'

the teleservices industry.

"It's nice working so
close·to home, and in
such a professional,
friendly environment.''

If you'~e looking for a'
.

In Just two weeks, we will open our third Gallipolis Call Center dedicated ·
to raising funds exclusively. for.conservative political organizations and
recruiting members for the National Rifle Association, which protects our
Second Amendment rights . .
·
o
To learn more about-career opportunities with a great company, giVe us
a call on our toll~free job hotline or stop our expanding location at ' ''
242 3rd Avenue In downtbwn'Gallipolls.
·

bv

better career

lnfoCision is worth·a look.

salary,

7

'

'

•••

0

''

I

we offer acompettttve

'•.
''

an excellent benefits package, and

flexible full- or part-time positions.

•
lnfoCision Is the undisputed leader in the Teleser.tlces Industry. we have
been recognized with numerous awards for our growth. community
service, and unparalleled commitment to quality.
•

'I

or would just like to work closer to home,

'

'

,.,!',

.

'
,,
'•
'I•'

,• Competitive hourly rate plus additlorral bohus potentfal ·
averaging $2 per hour
'
• Full time and unlimited overtime. paid time-and-a-half
• Fixed work schedule and weekly paycheck
• , Full health benefits, 401&lt;1(1 retirement program
• One week paid vacation every six months, and seven
paid holidays
per
year
.
'
.
.
• A, rewarding and fulfilling career
wltli a long-term commitment
•
•
~ State·of·the•art facility and posltl\/e work environment
'

· .GALLIPOLIS
- Point
Pleasant scored two .runs in
the filth ro break a 5-5 tie and
went on ro defeat Gallia
Academy 10-7 Friday.
Amber Raimey and Bridget Nibe~ had the big bats
for the Lady Knights, driving
in five runs combined.
Raimey went 2-for-4 with
three RBI, including a tworun double in the third that
gave Point. a 4-0 lead.
Nibert went 3-for-4 with a
solo home run and a RBI
· triple. Nibert's homer led off
the third, \n inning in which
the Lady Knights scored four
runs. Her triple to left center
in th~ seventh pushed an
insurance run across for Point
after Amber Curfman's single
scored Jennifer Adkins, who
doubled with two outs in the

•.,

·]
•
~

"~:

~

1 •

'

~-

'•
•

•

.'
'
•

•

COLUMBUS 1\vo
Meigs County schools were
ranked in the first Ohio high .
school girls ' softb)ll poll as
voted by a state panel of
coaches.
: Meigs was sixth in Division ·
II with 18 poipts, behind
~en ton Ridge · (47), Con!leaut (~9), Dover (25) arui
Tallmadge ( 19} and Akron
Holban (19) were. tied . fo.r

tourth.
: In the Division IV poD,
Eastern was. picked eighth
-\vith 15 points.
'
Eastern and Meigs were the
only TVC teams selected. ' .
Foi a co.mple!e list, see
Page B/;, ·

/.~.1

Point
· 8Y DAN Pol.cYN
OVP SPORTS ~AFF

POINT PLEASANT
The Big Blacks built a big
·lead and then held off the
Blue Devils for a 9-6 SEOAL
baseball win Friday.
Point improves to 4-6 on
the season with the win. The
win stops the Big Blacks fivegame winless slide.
/ Point tallied four runs in
the first inning off of Gallia
Academy starter Brandon
Rocchi. A Blue Devil infield
error and singles by Matt
Warner, Joey Loomis, Andrew
Dennis, Todd Hill, Jason Sims
and Derrick Watterson generated the runs, but left two
runners on base.
GaUia Academy answered
with a run in the third after
David Brodeur led off with a
double and later scored on
Raysean Allen's single.
Point added three in the
fo urth frame. Bucky Nibert
reached on a fielder's choice,
which was. followed by Man
Warner's single. Dennis
brought both of them home
with a double before coming
home on Nick Duncan's single to left.
•
The Big Blacks added solo .
rim in the fourth and fifth.
Jason Sims singled and was
pushed home by a bases
loaded walk in number four. ·
Gar'litt Hu&lt;ihali~ked in the
fifth an[!' came home on a
walk to Kevin Thompson.
Gallipolis couldn't capitalize

innit;Jg.
Kendra Riffle picked up
the win in relief of Miranda
Durst. Riftle came on ·in the
fifth for the Lady Knights and '
held the Blue Angels ro two
runs in three innin~. She had
four strikeouts, including two
in the seventh to stymie a ·
rally by Gallia Academy.
Durst gave lip five runs on
five hits and had two strikeouts and six walks in' four
innin~ of work. '
After Point (9-7) jumped
out tiJ a 4-0 lead in the third,
the Blue Angels pulled back
one run in the home half of
the third as Amber FeUure
drew a bases-loaded walk that
allowed Jessica Donnally to

score.

..

:1

Poirtt picked up 1 anoth.,ll
run in the fourth with Nibert
scoring on a sacrifice by
Heidi Sturgeon to ext~nd its

,.,,,. . . Paint. ...

•

of the largest and ,most prestigious

. .

·Devil
·rally falls
short at ~ ·

HERI'S THE WIND UP•••. -Point Pleasant's Kendra Riffle prepares to fire the pitch during the Lady Knights win over Gallla Academy Friday. (Andrew Carter)

Pietist HI Devil, 14

·The one ·thing/like most about baseball.• • •
Its baseball season again.
catch the Smelly.... ! mean Alley Cats? hasi1't happened to me yet, but give it
Oh,joy! Oh,joy!
These are on my list, but what's on · time.
The · cursing when your team is
I say skip the NBA after football
top?
struggling to stay out of the cellar.
. and go straight to baseball season.
Rotisserie Baseball.
Did I mention that there's a lot of
You ~ght be wondering what do .
Ah, yes. The gentleman's g.1me.
I, The Butchmeister; ·your everyday
The chalienge of draft day and reg- cursing involved? Kind of makes you .
wonder why I enjoy it so.
Joe, enjoy most about America's Pasular season ·moves.
.'
'
Last year, I played in one area .
time.
The cursing when your 38 dollar
Okay, pretend that you're wonderpower hitter (Vladimir Gurrerro) league and two' on the internet. This
mg.
hasn't hit any home runs for you as of year, ,I've focu sed my attentions on
my area league team and ' not even
Alright! Don't pretend!
Friday.
bothered
with the net.
ing a warm afternoon'
Sorry.
·
· The cursing when your 29 dollar
Last year, I was a rookie when it
The smack of th e bat when it closer (Derek Lowe) blows two saves
Anyhow, . what do I ehjoy most
came
to fantasy baseball .
makes the sound that you know is a
about baseball season?
right off the. bat.
Sure, I've been playing fantasy foothome run?
. - The smell of peanuts and popcorn
The
cursmg
when
,
your
players
·
ball
for eight years now even went to
R egularly scheduled trips to
and Cracker Jacks?
,
start going do'rn due to injuries that
'
,
Charleston 's Watt Powell ·Park to
PINII see Cooper, 87.
we live with everyday. Alright, that
'I'he smeP of freshly cut grass dur-

Butch
Cooper

Wahama
.
'

netters
roll on.

, You're Out!!!

warren adds to
Raiders woes

Nolan finished the game
2.:for-3 for the R aiders (2IEJy FRANK CAPEHART
C HESHIRE - Warren , 10, SEOAL 0-5).
·
OVP COf!RESPONO~NT
,
pitcher Brad Venham came
Spaulding, the starting
NEW HAVEN - The·
with his stuff against River pitcher ·for River Valley,
Wahama racquetee~s initiValley Friday.
, .
helped keep the Warriors
ated their new uniforms in
Venham stru ck out mne from scoring in the third
high style Friday. Resplenbatters as th e Warriors with some help from his
dent in the new colo~ •
defeated the Raiders l 1-1 infield.
their pill}' was equally
in five innin~.
Spaulding allowed five
sparkling in a 6-1 win over
He also allowed only earned an d four walks on
Gallia Academy.
four hits, one walk and one 11 hits.
_ Hillary Fields 'continued
earned run .
'
In the top of the fourth,
h~·r powerful play from
Down 5-0, the· .Raiders though, Warren added to
baseline to net 'in an
got onr the board in th e its lead on ap RBI single
impressive 8-0 wil} over
Adam Kuhn that 'scored
bottom of the fifth.
Kayla Brownell at first siqNi'k Fisher was hit by a Derrick Wet~, who dou gles. folls&gt;wing th:at lead, ~
Venham
pitch
and bled to get on base, ~nd a
f(rlsta Roach ro;tm~d the
advanced to second on an RBI double by Jesse
court iii a hustling eJihibi~rror.
After Ryan Spauld- R oush that scored Kuhn.
tion of returns tO annex a
Wetz was 3-for-4 at the
ing singled 'with one out,
solid a 8-1 set · with ,
· Eric Nolan drove in Fisher bat for the Warriors (6-5 1
'Stephanie ~aas for a 2-0
on a base hit of his own to SEOAL 3-3), while Roush
, Falcon lead.
'
snap a scoreless strea~ that went 2-for-4, .
Casey
Miranda · .Fields and
'FORGET
ABOUT
IT
Cinclnn.
a
ti's
Kelly
Stinnett
(right)
tags
had
lasted
since
the
second
Duvall
2-for-3,
and
J. T.
Rachael Haas, locked I!P in .
'New Yorl&lt;'s Joe Me Ewing out at' the plate during the Reds
·.game of the Ra.iders dou- Hill 2-for-2. .
a .fien;e duel at n.wnbet ' out
1.0 win over the M~ts Sund!IY· For more, see page 82. (AP)
bleheader against Wahanu
' - - - - -.....:.'-· _ _.;.._..;__ _ _ _ _ _..;__ __,_ ___,
·' . on April 7. .
Please ... Reld8fll, 14
BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

..........
.
........
,
.
'

'r

..
,.

'

�•
Sunay,Apri1S. 2001

Inside: .

•

&amp;ebdll roundup, Page B2
1M Cheap &amp;ats, Page B3
Today~ Scoreboard, Page B6
Outdoors, Page BB ·

•
'••

•

•

Page 81

•

s.....,....... 15. 200..

•
•
•

oser

SUNn\Y's
••
••

to

GAHS

HIGHLIGHIS
8Y AllftiEW CMmt

•i

OVP SPORTS EDITOR

•

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Academy sophomore Mich:ael
Warren lw been selected to
play in the Junior Olympic
Baseball Championships in
June:
· Warren, the Blue Devils
starting third baseman, is a
member of the Hoosier Diamond dub,
which
IS
based
in
Noblesville,
Ind.The club
will be pan
of the 63team tourna• ·
ment schedL...;.-'-.&amp;.-.;;!1 uled for June
. , w.ren
22-30
m
Tucson, Ariz:
Warren is one of 20 players ·
on the Hoosier Diamond'roster who hope to land a spot
on the USA Baseball Youth
National Team, which will be
selected from the p9QI of
players involved in the Junior
Olympic tournament. Players
chosen for the youth national
team will then compere in the
International Baseball F.ederation's world championships,
which . will be held in Veracruz, Mexico, in August.
The Junior Olympic championships will be played at the
spring training complexes of
the Arizona Diamondbacks,
Chicago White Sox and Colorado Rockies as well as at
Hi1CiJrbett Field, the home ,
b~ for .USA: Baseball.· t
•

\ \.
•

~

-.
•

•

•

.

,,
1

Interested in .working closer
to home?
:)

.

'

.

'

...
•
...,.

~lnfocislon i~ expanding bur downtown .Gallipolis
•

~

•

location and we're adding 175 positions in the
•

t

multi-faceted

•

i

.

teleservices industry.
VINCENT - River Valley's five-game winning streak
went by the boards friday as
the Raiders dropped a 6-5
deCision to Warren in SEOAL
softball action.
A costly error by River Val~
ley in the seventh inning
allowed Warren to plate the
winnirlg run. The miscue
came ,with two outs and the
game tied at 5-all. The
Raiders committed four
errors in the game.
Geri Me Faun suffered a
tough loss for River Valley.
She held Warren to just three
hits and recorded three strikeputs and four walks.
River Valley (8-.3, SEOAL
4r2) pounded out nine hits
agai!lst Warren with McFann,
Nicole Watkins, , Amanda
Lawson and Christen Baird
each going 2-for-4 .
Mcfann · drove in t}lree
runs, while Watkins and Lawson each had · one RBI. All
three players ripped doubles.
River Valley plays at Point
Pleasant Monday and then has
a · rematch at home against
. Eastern Tuesday; . ·

We provide a untque opportunity to work with
a long list of Fortune 1000 c;ompanies and many

norzprofit
'

organizations in the world. In fact, lnfoCision is

recognized nationally as a leader ir~

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"It's nice working so
close·to home, and in
such a professional,
friendly environment.''

If you'~e looking for a'
.

In Just two weeks, we will open our third Gallipolis Call Center dedicated ·
to raising funds exclusively. for.conservative political organizations and
recruiting members for the National Rifle Association, which protects our
Second Amendment rights . .
·
o
To learn more about-career opportunities with a great company, giVe us
a call on our toll~free job hotline or stop our expanding location at ' ''
242 3rd Avenue In downtbwn'Gallipolls.
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flexible full- or part-time positions.

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lnfoCision Is the undisputed leader in the Teleser.tlces Industry. we have
been recognized with numerous awards for our growth. community
service, and unparalleled commitment to quality.
•

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or would just like to work closer to home,

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,• Competitive hourly rate plus additlorral bohus potentfal ·
averaging $2 per hour
'
• Full time and unlimited overtime. paid time-and-a-half
• Fixed work schedule and weekly paycheck
• , Full health benefits, 401&lt;1(1 retirement program
• One week paid vacation every six months, and seven
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per
year
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wltli a long-term commitment
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'

· .GALLIPOLIS
- Point
Pleasant scored two .runs in
the filth ro break a 5-5 tie and
went on ro defeat Gallia
Academy 10-7 Friday.
Amber Raimey and Bridget Nibe~ had the big bats
for the Lady Knights, driving
in five runs combined.
Raimey went 2-for-4 with
three RBI, including a tworun double in the third that
gave Point. a 4-0 lead.
Nibert went 3-for-4 with a
solo home run and a RBI
· triple. Nibert's homer led off
the third, \n inning in which
the Lady Knights scored four
runs. Her triple to left center
in th~ seventh pushed an
insurance run across for Point
after Amber Curfman's single
scored Jennifer Adkins, who
doubled with two outs in the

•.,

·]
•
~

"~:

~

1 •

'

~-

'•
•

•

.'
'
•

•

COLUMBUS 1\vo
Meigs County schools were
ranked in the first Ohio high .
school girls ' softb)ll poll as
voted by a state panel of
coaches.
: Meigs was sixth in Division ·
II with 18 poipts, behind
~en ton Ridge · (47), Con!leaut (~9), Dover (25) arui
Tallmadge ( 19} and Akron
Holban (19) were. tied . fo.r

tourth.
: In the Division IV poD,
Eastern was. picked eighth
-\vith 15 points.
'
Eastern and Meigs were the
only TVC teams selected. ' .
Foi a co.mple!e list, see
Page B/;, ·

/.~.1

Point
· 8Y DAN Pol.cYN
OVP SPORTS ~AFF

POINT PLEASANT
The Big Blacks built a big
·lead and then held off the
Blue Devils for a 9-6 SEOAL
baseball win Friday.
Point improves to 4-6 on
the season with the win. The
win stops the Big Blacks fivegame winless slide.
/ Point tallied four runs in
the first inning off of Gallia
Academy starter Brandon
Rocchi. A Blue Devil infield
error and singles by Matt
Warner, Joey Loomis, Andrew
Dennis, Todd Hill, Jason Sims
and Derrick Watterson generated the runs, but left two
runners on base.
GaUia Academy answered
with a run in the third after
David Brodeur led off with a
double and later scored on
Raysean Allen's single.
Point added three in the
fo urth frame. Bucky Nibert
reached on a fielder's choice,
which was. followed by Man
Warner's single. Dennis
brought both of them home
with a double before coming
home on Nick Duncan's single to left.
•
The Big Blacks added solo .
rim in the fourth and fifth.
Jason Sims singled and was
pushed home by a bases
loaded walk in number four. ·
Gar'litt Hu&lt;ihali~ked in the
fifth an[!' came home on a
walk to Kevin Thompson.
Gallipolis couldn't capitalize

innit;Jg.
Kendra Riffle picked up
the win in relief of Miranda
Durst. Riftle came on ·in the
fifth for the Lady Knights and '
held the Blue Angels ro two
runs in three innin~. She had
four strikeouts, including two
in the seventh to stymie a ·
rally by Gallia Academy.
Durst gave lip five runs on
five hits and had two strikeouts and six walks in' four
innin~ of work. '
After Point (9-7) jumped
out tiJ a 4-0 lead in the third,
the Blue Angels pulled back
one run in the home half of
the third as Amber FeUure
drew a bases-loaded walk that
allowed Jessica Donnally to

score.

..

:1

Poirtt picked up 1 anoth.,ll
run in the fourth with Nibert
scoring on a sacrifice by
Heidi Sturgeon to ext~nd its

,.,,,. . . Paint. ...

•

of the largest and ,most prestigious

. .

·Devil
·rally falls
short at ~ ·

HERI'S THE WIND UP•••. -Point Pleasant's Kendra Riffle prepares to fire the pitch during the Lady Knights win over Gallla Academy Friday. (Andrew Carter)

Pietist HI Devil, 14

·The one ·thing/like most about baseball.• • •
Its baseball season again.
catch the Smelly.... ! mean Alley Cats? hasi1't happened to me yet, but give it
Oh,joy! Oh,joy!
These are on my list, but what's on · time.
The · cursing when your team is
I say skip the NBA after football
top?
struggling to stay out of the cellar.
. and go straight to baseball season.
Rotisserie Baseball.
Did I mention that there's a lot of
You ~ght be wondering what do .
Ah, yes. The gentleman's g.1me.
I, The Butchmeister; ·your everyday
The chalienge of draft day and reg- cursing involved? Kind of makes you .
wonder why I enjoy it so.
Joe, enjoy most about America's Pasular season ·moves.
.'
'
Last year, I played in one area .
time.
The cursing when your 38 dollar
Okay, pretend that you're wonderpower hitter (Vladimir Gurrerro) league and two' on the internet. This
mg.
hasn't hit any home runs for you as of year, ,I've focu sed my attentions on
my area league team and ' not even
Alright! Don't pretend!
Friday.
bothered
with the net.
ing a warm afternoon'
Sorry.
·
· The cursing when your 29 dollar
Last year, I was a rookie when it
The smack of th e bat when it closer (Derek Lowe) blows two saves
Anyhow, . what do I ehjoy most
came
to fantasy baseball .
makes the sound that you know is a
about baseball season?
right off the. bat.
Sure, I've been playing fantasy foothome run?
. - The smell of peanuts and popcorn
The
cursmg
when
,
your
players
·
ball
for eight years now even went to
R egularly scheduled trips to
and Cracker Jacks?
,
start going do'rn due to injuries that
'
,
Charleston 's Watt Powell ·Park to
PINII see Cooper, 87.
we live with everyday. Alright, that
'I'he smeP of freshly cut grass dur-

Butch
Cooper

Wahama
.
'

netters
roll on.

, You're Out!!!

warren adds to
Raiders woes

Nolan finished the game
2.:for-3 for the R aiders (2IEJy FRANK CAPEHART
C HESHIRE - Warren , 10, SEOAL 0-5).
·
OVP COf!RESPONO~NT
,
pitcher Brad Venham came
Spaulding, the starting
NEW HAVEN - The·
with his stuff against River pitcher ·for River Valley,
Wahama racquetee~s initiValley Friday.
, .
helped keep the Warriors
ated their new uniforms in
Venham stru ck out mne from scoring in the third
high style Friday. Resplenbatters as th e Warriors with some help from his
dent in the new colo~ •
defeated the Raiders l 1-1 infield.
their pill}' was equally
in five innin~.
Spaulding allowed five
sparkling in a 6-1 win over
He also allowed only earned an d four walks on
Gallia Academy.
four hits, one walk and one 11 hits.
_ Hillary Fields 'continued
earned run .
'
In the top of the fourth,
h~·r powerful play from
Down 5-0, the· .Raiders though, Warren added to
baseline to net 'in an
got onr the board in th e its lead on ap RBI single
impressive 8-0 wil} over
Adam Kuhn that 'scored
bottom of the fifth.
Kayla Brownell at first siqNi'k Fisher was hit by a Derrick Wet~, who dou gles. folls&gt;wing th:at lead, ~
Venham
pitch
and bled to get on base, ~nd a
f(rlsta Roach ro;tm~d the
advanced to second on an RBI double by Jesse
court iii a hustling eJihibi~rror.
After Ryan Spauld- R oush that scored Kuhn.
tion of returns tO annex a
Wetz was 3-for-4 at the
ing singled 'with one out,
solid a 8-1 set · with ,
· Eric Nolan drove in Fisher bat for the Warriors (6-5 1
'Stephanie ~aas for a 2-0
on a base hit of his own to SEOAL 3-3), while Roush
, Falcon lead.
'
snap a scoreless strea~ that went 2-for-4, .
Casey
Miranda · .Fields and
'FORGET
ABOUT
IT
Cinclnn.
a
ti's
Kelly
Stinnett
(right)
tags
had
lasted
since
the
second
Duvall
2-for-3,
and
J. T.
Rachael Haas, locked I!P in .
'New Yorl&lt;'s Joe Me Ewing out at' the plate during the Reds
·.game of the Ra.iders dou- Hill 2-for-2. .
a .fien;e duel at n.wnbet ' out
1.0 win over the M~ts Sund!IY· For more, see page 82. (AP)
bleheader against Wahanu
' - - - - -.....:.'-· _ _.;.._..;__ _ _ _ _ _..;__ __,_ ___,
·' . on April 7. .
Please ... Reld8fll, 14
BY BUTCH COOPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

..........
.
........
,
.
'

'r

..
,.

'

�•

Baseba
AROUND THE DIAMOND..
_..._ .........
........ -

.

Bl

San Diego S, lol Allgeleo 4,

-

f'hlado\llia

Pel
.687
.600
.455

6
6
A1larta
5
6
New York
7 .364
4
Florida
3
8 .333
centniiDivlalon
w L Pet
HOuston
7
3 .700
,60()
Chicago
6
SL louis
5
5 .500
Cincinnati
6
6 .500
Pittsburgh
4
6
.400
7
4
.364
Milwaukee

straight game

•

Gil

112

2
3
3

GB

•

2-0 an!~ Martinez ·-departed
after the seventh with the
score 2-2,
It stayed tied until Soriano
led off the ninth against Pete
Schourek'':(0-1). With a 2-2
count, Soriano lifted a high fly
to left that bounced off me top
of the 37 -foof&gt; high
reen
Monster and into the screen
behind the wall for his second
homer of the season _
Mariano
Rivera, ,\,ho
allmwd Manny Ramirez's
ga nt ~-\vinning, t\vo-run single
in Boston's 3-2, tO-inning win
FJ;iday night, was much better
Saturday.
He pitched a perfect ninth
- Striking OUt IWO and fielding a grounder for the other·
out - and gained his third
save.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

~

&amp;oiDIYioian
L
1

Cincinnati set the modern
NL record by scoring in its
175m straight. game, and the
Reds beat the New York Mets
1- 0 ~ann day behind 7 1-3
sc:&gt;reless innings 'by C hris
Reitsma.
Danny Graves rdiewd
R eitsma (2-0) and got Mike
Piazza to hit into an inningending double play. Piazza
could only shake his head in
another
fru stration . after
squandered opportunitr
Th.- Reds used Reitsma's
lim career hit and a wild pitch
by leiter set up the only run.
R~itsma kd off the sixth
with a flare to right field for
his lint hit in five career atbats. After a fiddds choice
and a single by Pokey R eese,
leiter got crossed up with
Piazza and threw a wild pitch.
That proved costly when
Dmitri Young hit a hard
grounder to the left of third
basem·an Robin Ventura, leavCarlos Delgado's RBI single
ing the Mets with only a play capped Toronto's rally from a
at fint and giving th1 Reds a three-run ninth-inning deficit
1-0 lead,
and gave the Blue Jays the victory over the Kansas City
ALRoundup
Royals.
Kansas City closer Roberto
Hernandez allowed all four
runs in me ninth to blow his
second save and take the loss.
The Royals have blown 58
Steve Sparks pitched a four- saves the last t\Vo..plus seasons.
Hernandez (0-2) walked
hitter ·to outduel Chuck Finley, and the Detroit Tigers . Darrin Fletcher and pinchstopped a five-game losing hitter Jose Cruz Jr. before
streak by beating me Cleve- Shannon Stewart hit an RBI
land Indians.
double and Alex Gonzalez hit
·Sparks (2-1) became the first a run-scoring grounder. After
Tigers pitcher to wi'n twice Raul Mondesi tied it with an
and had his best outing since a RBI single, he stole . second,
five-hitter against Seatde last before Delgado, who - also
Aug. 15, his only other homered, hit a bloop single to
shutout.
center field.
finley (1-2) pitched a threehitter for his 61th career comFriday's Games
plete game, his first since last
NL Roundup '
Q'une 6 against Milwaukee. 1-Jc
struck out three and walked
one:
D etroit scored in the first
when R ogti r Cedeno led off
Pokey Reese was more
with an infield single, stole i mpress~d with his game-savsecond, took third on a fly ball ing play than he was with his
and scored on Bobby ·Higgin- go-ahead home run at .Ne\\'
son's sac rific ~ fly. .
York.
Reese hit a thre~-run
bonier and made a nifty
defensive play, leading the
Cincinnati Reds to a victory
over the New York Mets.'
Rookie Alfonso Soriano
. stol~ the spotlight from Pedro
M artinez and Roger Clemens
with a ninthcinning solo
homer that gave the New York
Yankees a win at the Boston
Ryan Dempster pitched 7
Red Sox.
2-3 strong innings, and Mik~
The marquee matchup lost Lowell hohtered and had four
' its luster when Clemens left RBls to lead Florida to victoafter the sixth inning trailing ry at Montreal.

Weot 'olviolcn

San Franl,;..,.,
Los Angeles
San Diego
AriZOna

Colorado

~

6
5
4
4

L
3

s
s
6

8

.
Pet

.700
.545
.500
.400
.400

1
2

2.

3
31/2

GB
1 112

2

3
3

Tllurodr(o-

AIMIIan
IIIIIDiul':t
w L Pet _ oa·
•
3 .7!10
-York
I
3 .7'0
112
7
•
.838 . 1112
8 m1101e
4
I
.400 '3 i/2
T - Boy
3
1 .300 4 112

Cindnnollt, N.Y. -

0
Houoton .. St. LDulo. 2:10 p.m.
, _ , . . at CNeooo Ctbl, 2:20 p.m.

-··~.late
Aoridaat_,eol,lote

~ atAIIonla. ....

san FrancilcO ar ee •·•. late
lol Ar9!Joo at San Oiego. late
TodOy'o(Person 1-0111 Atlanta

~

(Perez D-1), 1:05 p.m.
Cineinnati (OesHilS HI) II N.Y. Moll
(Appier 1.0), 1:10 p.m.
.
Florida (GriiD-1) a t - (Annas Jr.
P·2), 1:35 p.m.
,
'-San FranciiCO (Ortiz 2.0) al Milwaukee
(Rigdon 0.0), 2:05 p.m.
PiltJburllll (R~ D-2) at Chicago CIA&gt;s
(Wood D-1), 2:20 p.in.
Arizona (ScNIIng 2-01 at Colorado (Viilone 0.0), 3:05p.m.
.
Houston lOM t.O) at St LOOio (Benes
D-1), 3:10p.m,
(JaNis D-1), 5p.m.

San Di&lt;!go 8, San FnliiCisco 3

c

N8tion.l LNgue I tt11,..
Tlllouth F~day'o BATTING-Lankford, .St. Louis, .-uo;
Polanco, St LDulo, .429: LWal&lt;er. Col·
orado. .425; Darr, San Diego, . ~11;
OWaod, Houston, .400; Biggio, Houston,
.395; Ri&lt;IB, San Franetsa&gt;, .394; f;loyd.
Florida, .394.
HOME AUN5-LGonzalez, Arizona, 9;
LWatker, Colonldo, 6; Gtudzle/anek, Los
Angeles. 5; 11 are tied with 4.
-

Cincimliti 11, Pitlil&gt;urgh 6
N.Y. Mets 1, Adanta 0, 10 in'*tgs

Los Angelos 5, Arizona 4
·
Frlday'o Gameo

u..ue

tO lrn1gl

lol Angeles (Bmwn o-t) at San Diego

COlorado 6 , SL Louis 4

Uitwaukee 12. Houston 4

·

Chicago Cubs 4, Pitlsborgh 2

FkJrida 9, Monlreal3
CinciMatl 3. N.Y. t.tets 2
Allanle 4, Philadelphia 2
Houston 4. St Louis 2
San Francisco 7, Milwaukee 3
Arizona 7, COlorado 3

Blue Jays 5,
Royals 4

C1eYeland

--

WLPCIG8
.1
2 .118
~
3
5
8 .455

Clica1JO
Delrolt
KansaaCity

•4

57

·.364

2

9

.1112

3

"
6

W..iliMolon
Seattle
Anaheim
Te...

Qaldand '

L · Pet
3 ;700

' G8

6
4 ' .600
5
6 .455
2 8 .200

1
2 112
5

W
7

'TII&lt;Irodar'•- '•
•

Frkllly'o -

Toronto 2, Kansas City 1
Boston 3, N.Y. Yankees 2, to innings
Ta11113 Bay.2, BaJtlmore o•
Cleveland 9, Detroit 8
Minnesola 7, ChiCago Whtta Sox 4

Anaheim 4, Seallle3
13, Oakland t

T - I l Ooldond..
Chicogo- SOx .....- . -

- .. Anahei
m.- · ·'
Todar'aO...

N.Y. Y - ( P - 2&lt;0) ~~­
(HOmo 2.01, 1:OS. p.m.
10-~ 11 Detroit (Perlsho
o.o). 1:05'p.m.
.
KAINU ~ (_, 0.2111'ji&gt;nlo*&gt; (C8rperort.()l, 1:05 p.m.
r....,P. a.~ (AeiW o-ti 11 8oitlmore
(POIWM 0.2), 1:35' p.m.
,,
Chicago While SOx (P -.0.0) at Minnesota ~ t.O), 2:05p.m.
sUitle (Hilama 1-1) a t - (Rapp
D-2). 4:05p.m. .
·

c-

Texas (OI!Wir 2.0) 81 Oeldalici'(Herida
D-2), 8:05p.m.

'·

Kon·
Ofl&lt;o. Chicago, .452; StBwart;-Toronto,
.435; EMartlne:; Seattle, .424; Brosius,
New Yorlc, .421 ; TCiark, Delrolt, .417;
Eck51eln, """"''"" .406.
HOME RUN$-Quinn, Kanoal City, 5;

Glaus, Anaheim, 5: CDelga~. Toronto, 5;
JGonzatez, Cleveland, 5: Branyan. Clave·
land, 4; Oaubacli, Boslt&gt;n, 4; Posada,
New YO&lt;Ic, 4; O'Neill, NOW Yoll&lt;, 4; Galarraga, Texas, 4.

league-leadin~t . nine in I o·
,,
games, as Arizona won at Co)Greg Vaughn hit a two-run
orado.
homer, and . Albie lopez
Randy
Jo,\l!l~o? •· , (2-1) , !ihcl~q. 1 , his ,_.third career ·
- all~;&gt;wed three runf :rn(I 'SlX hrt5 , 5hUf~ .as Tam_Ba Bay1won at
' with no walks md 1'1 strike~ ;; Baltimore: ·"" ''' ' •
outs, a Coors Field record.
lopez (2-1) outdueled Orjoles starter Pat Hentgen (0-1)
as the Devil , Rays \ von their
$econ&lt;J, consecu rive 83;11)e after
Dod~:.4
lo~il}g seven straijl~t, Lope~
.-.~
'
~ ~
.' ... ..
a)lowed ~g hits, walked two
.., ' • '.~&lt;
'.--,
Alex Ari~s .. si~gl~l:i :in .Ben and struck
. . out four.. . ·
Davis with ohe out.u1 die. lOth .
· ~ff Matt Herges ,(~.~J~/giving ·
S;m Diego the 'VICt{)ry' over .
.• LosAngeles . . . · ~·.,;_ ...
·
1
~.' .J he visid?g Dod~rdvfre .. , ., "
. , ,
~nSf two outt&amp;orn.a wm w.lien . AI tl nodri
hi hi 6
'Jeff Shaw bl~ what . ~IJ}d
ex ·.~- guef t s nt
b een • 'l's
~,;; · ·!9th s·t rat'ght home
run for Te~as, and
· u..ve
.
.
,
,
Rusty • Greer and Randy
'I
Velarde opened the game with
AL R6und~p
back-to-back homers off
,,., "', ,
.
Cgtiy Lidle (0-1) to lead me
• ,.,,, '""' ' • ·, '
Rangen a! Oaklal\d.
'J'he A's lost their fifth
1
•
straight to drop to 2-8, their
., ,
wqrst &gt;tart since going 2-10 in
....
. . 1998.
' '
Manny Ramirez signed with
' ·
,
•
' •. I
: •
;
f ,
I
the Boston Red Sox tn pprt
. ·,
P
1
because he was tired of seeing
'
the Ne~v York Yank~es win:
Ramtrez wasted no pme
'
contributing to the Red· SoxGarret Anderson hit a two-·
Yankees rivalry, hitting a tworun single in the 1Oth inning run homer off Seattle closer
off Mariano Riv~ra to give Kazuhiro Sasaki . (0-1) in the
ninth inning for host AnaBoston the win.
·
heim.
Adam Kem1"dy, in his fmi
at-bat since coming off the
disabled list, also hit a two-run
homer for the Angels.

·;

'~

Ranger's 13,
AthletiCS J

Tigers I,

Indians o

·L"

sare.

NEEDED REST - Boston starting pitcher Pedro Martinez
, rests his head in his hand moments after giving up two runs
In the seventh Inning to the Yankees. (AP)

' .:

Red 'Sox:lJ, ''
Yankees· 2

n.,eIs 4,:.. ·...
Manners 3
A'

Braves 4,
Phillies 2

Milwaukee.
Rueter (4-0) allowed three
runs. and three hjts to improve
to 6-1 lifetime with a 2.05
· ERA against the Brewers. Milwaukee didn't get a hit after
the second aga inst Rueter and
two reli ewrs.

Tom Glavinc pitch ed six
strong innin gs, and Wes Helms
hit a two-ru n homer for
Atlanta. ·
Glavine (1-1) beat the visiting l'hillies, early leaders in the
Nl East. John Rocker pitched
a perfe.ct ninth for his third
save.

Yankees 3,
Red Sox 2

/

Marlins 9,
Expos 3

Giants 7,
·Brewers 3
Kirk Rueter pitched six
strong innings, . and Barry .
Bonds hit his 497th career
homer to lead San Francisco at

Astros 4,
Cardinals 2
Craig Biggio hit a tiebrca king two-run homer off Darryl
Kile in the seventh ·&lt;is Houston
won at St. Louis.
Kile allowed four runs and
eight hits in ·seven innings,
falling to 1-3 against his old
team.

D'backs7,
Rockies 3
Luis Gonzalez hit two home
runs, giving him a major

Indians 9,
Tigers 8

Russell Branyan's three-run
homer keyed a six~run first'
initing against Jeff Weaver (12), and C.C. Sabathia Jiicked
up the first win of his career
for visiting Cleveland.
Sabathia (1-0) allowed fqur
runs , five hits and two walks' in
five innings. Paul Shuey struck
out . two batters for his._ first
save.
'' '

d

Devil Rays 2,
, .Onol.es o.: .

Blue Jays 2,
..Royal• ~:·

.

.
'Chris Michalak (2"(&gt;) cont1
blned with th tee relievers on a
fou'r-hitter to win his second
straight' start \ts Toronto beat
Kansas City i.Ya repaired SkyDome.
·
A. rnechanidl n\alfunction
in the 1s'(:idiurh 's ''retractable
roof re-saltet! in 'one panel
cra'shing into&gt; anoiher, post' poning ThUrsday's game.' ' .,_
'

wrist.
larkin is not expected to. be
. back in the lineup until Toesday at the earliest. The Reds
finish their nine-game road trip
Suitday in New York and are
off Monday before starting a
homestand against Milwaukee
the· next day.
·
.
Juan ~astra started. _ _1~.1• .

•· '

time~

starting lineup for Saturday's
game against the New York
Mets because of a strained left

. r'

Start
.,.OM_Oft_m
~

~gw-

~

www.nJWtlalt,getayll.com

Ca/124 horm a

Gctyourcredit

Andrew
Carter

W -O RLD CUP QUALIFYIN ,G

••

'

wins bi~ but soccer loses.
''''

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MONDAY • APRIL 16, 2001
SAKRETE COMPA~Y
will be at

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
POMEROY, OH
7:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

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'SIKRhE:~·
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.371·3

Prep Softball

Prep Baseball

)

"' BRISBANE, Australia (AP)
·~- Australia was · leading
'".American 'Samoa 16-0 at halftime oftheirWorla Cup qualifYing game, and Aussie coach
5:00
5:00
• .
Frank Farin~ gave the closest
Waterford at Eastern, Waterford at Eastern,
thing his team needed to a
5:00
5:00
pep talk.
· ·
Southern at Trimble, 5:00 Southam at Trimble, 5:00
"Score as many goals as you
u can . . .. and be professional;'
t. rFarim said.
-. 1 "The Australiaru, who ~nt
_(' 'On to a record 31-0 victory,
'' •obviously got the· fint part of
" farina's edict. But whether
me team paid attention to .
r' •being '1 profe.ssional" i! up· for
''&lt;iebate:
,.; That lopsided win followed
a 22-0 ihrashing of Toriga in
Australia's opening match,
'
' ;- f
turnirt Or6upl@n~ ofOcea-"
·Free do1J9hnuts and coffee
nia 's tournament : into an
' , ..
embarrassing &lt;'farce for lhe
REGISTER TO WIN
World Cup soccer qualifying BEATEN DOWN- American Samoa goalkeeper Nicky Salapu lies at the net after another Aus•
A 10 Cu. FT. DUMP CART
tralia goalls scored during his team's 31-0 loss during World Cup qualifying on Wednesday. (AP)
. process:
•'
" .. After the opening victory, anything."
winner," he said.
in arm, smiling and acc.,pti ng
":Australian soccer officials · Farina said' Monday's win
Recently installed Oceania the applause of the crowd,
_, were lambasted bv · Btoitish over Tong:~ · was "clisgraceful Soccer Federation chief Basil retaining th~ir dignity despite
"
embarrassing,"
but Scarsella, • the region's repre- the scott•.
clubs, which \Wre ~ps.-t that and
·, ·some of their leading players non~*dess admitted he sentative to the sport's gov"God is the righteous one,"
·"rhad been recalled by a team wouldn't do it any other way. etning .body FlFA, responded coach Tunua Lui said, "and
·.•that clearly didn't need any
"As' a coach, my responsi- by saying that Farina sho~tld because of him, losing by so
help.
bility is to Australian soccer stick to coaching.
tnany goals dot·s not mnttt'r."
Glasgow Rangers coa~h and to get us to the World
" FIFA is not worried a b~ut
/
Dick 1\dvocaat was furious. Cup finals," said Farina, a for- what Farina thinks is lack of
that Craig Moore and Tony mer Au~tralian international competition in this region ,"
Vidtu~'r were taken· from his player. "The f3ct is I brought Scarsella said. "ThosL' com team by Australia. The Sun in back some of the overseas m~nts arL' absolutely unjusti- _
Britain headlined · the story guys mainly for the danger lied."
:-':"22 Reasons to he ·Futious." game against Fiji.
,
But on Thursday, Oceania
1:, EveiJ Australian · forward ''Imagine what the media and FlFA officials adtnitted
,,.Archi$. T,hompson, who'd would have · said if I didn't they were thinking about
,only scored one international bring these players back and having teams like American
· goal before getting ·a FIFA- somechill'g disastrous hap- Samoa, 'J'on~a and the Cook
, cfCCOrd l3 against American pened.''
.
Islands play early round games
'.': Samoa, questioned his feat .
·In most World Cup qualifY- to see who plays the higher! ,, "Yo~ have to look at the ing n'latches, a team would ranked teams such as Australia
· -· teams~ a~ playing and start want to sc11re as marty goals as and New Zealand in the final
asking, .. , q1,1estions,'' . , said possible beeauae that can help Oceania stages.
,.Thompt()n, who plays in Aus- determine possible tiebreakAustralian media, caught up
i)ra]ia's domestic league. "We en.
. .
,
in .steroid possession charges
c.llon't need to play these
Iq Australia's case, ho)NCVCi;' against one of their top swim
' 'games. The best two sides in ·iu opponents are so weak that coaches, were relatively quiet
"'- 'the 'Ocean!a group should the!:~!! V'Ould be virtually no on the scoring scandal.
: ,have fqllalifie~ wtth a qome chance of that sit1ution
In a stoey beneath a photo
~ J.n!i aw.y leg. It.'s really a waste occurring.
.
. caption ,that read "Target
1997 Pontiac
' tif time,':.
·
' ,
·
Tonga coach Gary Phillips Practice," Michael Cockerill
: Australia, if it beaa Fiji on complained that Australia's in the Sydney Morning HerTrans Sport
4WO, 17,000MIIes,
t &gt;Saturdayj• will . qqalif}r fro~· use of eighl overseas-based 1 aid wrote ,. that Australia's
SLE PkQ, Clearance Priced At ..
IAallllrl'kQ, Clean, LGcal Owner, &amp;.n
I; Group One; It will then have playt!rs was overkill and ~de "S9alfest ... reached glutto0
00
5
, ,~ _to play d;te Wif!ner o( Ocea- ~ . mockery" of the meager pous proportio~s with an
':nia's G~u~ 1\ro, l~kely, NeW rei-OUll=CS " available .• to his incredible 31-0 slaughter.''
·Zealand~ 10 · a li9f11e•arid- Soutl1 Pacific Island. ' , .
' ," fifty-three go,als how in
home; tp'lll)-goals. leties in
"1 ,do riot see the point of twO games, the l'l)cord books,
: June.
SQillt of these ,supentan com- both collectively and individ1 The winner of that series ing back for this," l'hillips u.illy, torn to bits," Cockerill
' will play th~ fifth•place'Soum said. "If you add •together -the said. "It is too late to end the
Americah team in a hon1e- value of ·the Australian teant carnage this time around, but
and-hom; series in Novem- and the~ divide. it by five, there should be no repetition
her, with- the winner. adYllnc- then you have the value of the in four yeat:S."
ing to next year's World Cup Tongan economy."
The American Samoans·,
in Japan and 'South Ko~a.
Fadha a4mitted the qualify- many of them deeply relifarina · feds caught in a •no- ing syst~nt thould b~ ~hanged gint~&gt;, sp~nc part of Friday in
win situation. He fim had to so Australia do~·s not have to training tin tht·i r Saturday
-nnswer ; ~ome . o~ the. ~ritish pl~y slid\ bad teams . ,
' · gam~ against Tonga . Re gard~e.am f!'anagers crmctsms,
"We had hothlhg to gain l~s of the outcome, the playttelling ,Advocaat that he can· from it and tl;tey had nothing ers probably . will leav~ the
1 ~ 'blow r,s much wind as ~~ · to gain from it either. It was 'fidd as tht•y did in · their
~vantl, ,. but it. won't change · etltbarr:isslng, no one was a rccottlloss to Australia- arin
From St. Rt. 7 Turn On St. Rt.
•'t-

I
.·-'. ....

NOW./

, •. aoo-·~
·

Monday's Prep Games
.Wahama at South Gallia, South Gallia at Hunting12:00
ton St. Joe, 4:30
Point Pleasant at River · GalliaAcademy at Logan,
Valley, 5:00
5:,00 ·
.
Logan at Gallia Academy, River Valley at Po1nt
:;:oo
Pleasant, 5:00
·
Nelsonville-York at Meigs,: Nelsonville•York at Meigs,

BY DINNia PAlM ·

""'--s

~ew
'

followup confrontation with the
•
Marauden is set for April 26. ·
Due to being on opPosite sides of
the TVC, Eastern and MeigJ wc;&gt;n't
fac:e each other again. Game, set,
match, Eagles.
• Tuesday's River Valley-Eastern
matchup could be the classic contest
THE CHEAP SEATS
of ·the season, fe_aturing twO of the
top pitchen in mt: area in Eastern's
Juli Bailey and River Valley's Geri tide.
McFann.
WUSA begins play
Bailey has been dominant this year,
Still riding high on the wa* of
leading me Eagles to an undefeated success generated by the 1999 FIFA
ma_rk in 1VC Hocking Division play. Wo~ten's World Cu~, the Women's
Bailey and me Eagles haven 't tasted . Umted Socc~r Assocratton (WUSA)
defeat since falling to River Valley on laced up its boots and began play this
March 27.
·
weekend as the Washington Freedom
McFann has been equally brilliant and the Bay Area CyberRays went
for the Raiders, who had a five-game head-to-head Saturd1y in the league's
winning· streak snapped in a loss to inaugural match .
W:trten Friday. Even with the loss, · The eight-t~am league features the
the Raiders are 4- 2 in SEOAL play vast n1ajority of the stars of the vicand still in contention for the. league torious U.S. women's national team

as well as high-profile internatioml any indicator, me league should be in
players. Mia Hanun, me undisputed pretty good shape, Its playe,rs have
goddess of world soccer (and perhaps been extremely visible in the media
world spurt in genr:ral), is the head- over the past two years, nuking publiner for one of the WUSA's anchor lie appear.toces all over the pbce and
franchises, the Washington Freedom, pining popularity not only for me
based, ap!lropriately, in our nation 's women's game, but also exposing
capital_
faru to the sport in general .
Other familiar names to US. socThe allure of the those homecer fans include Br.tndi Chastain, grown girls next door, also known as
owner of the world's most famous the U.S. national': team .. was overspo~~ br.i, Drianm Scurry, Cindy whelming in 1999. Their personali~
Parlow, Kristine Lilly, Tiffany Mil- ties were magnetic and the underlybrett and Julie Foudy. International ing stories of !heir lives and times
stars filling out WUSA rosters · drew in a whole generation of young
;nclude Br;tzilian sensations Sissi, people, both male and female. The
Roseli and PretinlU, as weU as·Niger- player.; were revealed to be human
ian standout Mercy Akide, China's beings lim and foremost, and, oh,
indomitable Sun Wen , FIFA's co- yeah, they're me best soccer players
player of the 20th Century, and Aus- · on the planet, too.
tralian ironwoman Julie Murray.
Good marketing by U.S. Soccer,
So what are the odds of success for the ·game's governing body here in
women's arofessional socce r I.-ague these United States.
in these United States?
Ple..e see c,.,ter, 87
If the success ofWo rld C up 1999 is

l

Larkin 's place Saturday and batted sixth.
l~kin mildly straine~ pis
wrist Friday night as he ·
stopped Tsuyoshi Shinjo's
grounder in the, hole m the
SCCO!td inning,

.They are schedule to play · Problems Oetting Your Car Loan Approved?
mght games agamst the BrewCII U Toda 1
. .
1
1
ers oo Tuesday npd Wednesd:ly,
Y·
. but thos•. game
could be
changed tf a curfe\V m the c1ty
remains in effect.
A curf~w . was ' . imposed
ThurSLlny _after rioting wno
sparked by the shooting of 19· year-old Timothy Thoma~ the fourth black tl1an killed by
Cill&lt;:lnna ti
police
since
Nov&lt;ntber.
Larkin injured
eincin nati Redi s hor t~top
B.arry Larkin was out of the

day at home ag:ainst me Eagles. The

·~..,~_,~ .

Reds·to meet with. city officials
to ta1k about recept rioting ·
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Reds will m•et with Cincinnati officials Monday to determine if riots in 'the dty will
f0 rce the team to alter its
schequle next week. ·
The Reds, who·are on a 10game. ioad trip, don't play at
home again until · Tue.sday
against Milwauke"'

Fastpitch sofiball is alive and kicktg in Meigs and Gallia counties_
The ai'L'a featum two of die top
mud teams in Ohio and another
lub that is on the rise in Meigs, Eastm and River Valley. respectiwly.
The Maraudcn are ranked No.6 in
, , he latest Division II poll, while
:ounty neighbor Eastern checks in at
•'Jo. 8 in Division IV.
M~gs owns a 6-5 mark after falling
:o Eastern 3-2 in a classic battle last
" Monday.
' The Eagles ai'L' 8-1 with their lone
,loss to..:,River Valley, a club that
!ports a~ 8-3 record, bu~ isn't ranke~ .
The Raiden are vastly tmproved this.
season and ai'L' just two wiiu shy of
·;:marching the schooli'L'cord for \vins
· in a single season.
, · By the way, River Valley also owns
a victory over Meigs.
·".. River Valley plays Eastern and
.- Meigs one m11re time each this sea"·son, beginning with a reniatch Tues-

~1 . ~0
T~BeyltP ' ' r101•. ll..

BATTIN(h(l~. ~• .. 467;

Kansas City at ToJOOip, ppd. root damage

Te~eas

'

-Tllrougll Frtu&lt;;'a
i...,Ji.aAdera
-

Cleveland 5, oetroil 3
Anaheim 13, TexaJ 3

..

Reds 3, Mets 2

Sqftball alive and well in Meigs and Gallia ·counties

--

N.Y . _ 3 , _ 2
-5.-City4

Seattle 7, oakland 3
Bosloo 8. Baltiroore 2

Padres.s;.'

Dempster (2~0) held the
Expos without a hit through
four innings ·and improved his
record at Olympic .Stadium to
.J-0 in five career starts.

.

"'

.

'

w

Pomlfot • •tldl•p lilt • G1 WJI air, Olllo.Point P11 zrt, wv.,

.

SU•dlf, Aplll -~~ 2001

Reds set mark,
score in 11sth

J

•

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-MORE-LOCAL
SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
.

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· F..Om Downtown Gallipolis!

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Baseba
AROUND THE DIAMOND..
_..._ .........
........ -

.

Bl

San Diego S, lol Allgeleo 4,

-

f'hlado\llia

Pel
.687
.600
.455

6
6
A1larta
5
6
New York
7 .364
4
Florida
3
8 .333
centniiDivlalon
w L Pet
HOuston
7
3 .700
,60()
Chicago
6
SL louis
5
5 .500
Cincinnati
6
6 .500
Pittsburgh
4
6
.400
7
4
.364
Milwaukee

straight game

•

Gil

112

2
3
3

GB

•

2-0 an!~ Martinez ·-departed
after the seventh with the
score 2-2,
It stayed tied until Soriano
led off the ninth against Pete
Schourek'':(0-1). With a 2-2
count, Soriano lifted a high fly
to left that bounced off me top
of the 37 -foof&gt; high
reen
Monster and into the screen
behind the wall for his second
homer of the season _
Mariano
Rivera, ,\,ho
allmwd Manny Ramirez's
ga nt ~-\vinning, t\vo-run single
in Boston's 3-2, tO-inning win
FJ;iday night, was much better
Saturday.
He pitched a perfect ninth
- Striking OUt IWO and fielding a grounder for the other·
out - and gained his third
save.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

~

&amp;oiDIYioian
L
1

Cincinnati set the modern
NL record by scoring in its
175m straight. game, and the
Reds beat the New York Mets
1- 0 ~ann day behind 7 1-3
sc:&gt;reless innings 'by C hris
Reitsma.
Danny Graves rdiewd
R eitsma (2-0) and got Mike
Piazza to hit into an inningending double play. Piazza
could only shake his head in
another
fru stration . after
squandered opportunitr
Th.- Reds used Reitsma's
lim career hit and a wild pitch
by leiter set up the only run.
R~itsma kd off the sixth
with a flare to right field for
his lint hit in five career atbats. After a fiddds choice
and a single by Pokey R eese,
leiter got crossed up with
Piazza and threw a wild pitch.
That proved costly when
Dmitri Young hit a hard
grounder to the left of third
basem·an Robin Ventura, leavCarlos Delgado's RBI single
ing the Mets with only a play capped Toronto's rally from a
at fint and giving th1 Reds a three-run ninth-inning deficit
1-0 lead,
and gave the Blue Jays the victory over the Kansas City
ALRoundup
Royals.
Kansas City closer Roberto
Hernandez allowed all four
runs in me ninth to blow his
second save and take the loss.
The Royals have blown 58
Steve Sparks pitched a four- saves the last t\Vo..plus seasons.
Hernandez (0-2) walked
hitter ·to outduel Chuck Finley, and the Detroit Tigers . Darrin Fletcher and pinchstopped a five-game losing hitter Jose Cruz Jr. before
streak by beating me Cleve- Shannon Stewart hit an RBI
land Indians.
double and Alex Gonzalez hit
·Sparks (2-1) became the first a run-scoring grounder. After
Tigers pitcher to wi'n twice Raul Mondesi tied it with an
and had his best outing since a RBI single, he stole . second,
five-hitter against Seatde last before Delgado, who - also
Aug. 15, his only other homered, hit a bloop single to
shutout.
center field.
finley (1-2) pitched a threehitter for his 61th career comFriday's Games
plete game, his first since last
NL Roundup '
Q'une 6 against Milwaukee. 1-Jc
struck out three and walked
one:
D etroit scored in the first
when R ogti r Cedeno led off
Pokey Reese was more
with an infield single, stole i mpress~d with his game-savsecond, took third on a fly ball ing play than he was with his
and scored on Bobby ·Higgin- go-ahead home run at .Ne\\'
son's sac rific ~ fly. .
York.
Reese hit a thre~-run
bonier and made a nifty
defensive play, leading the
Cincinnati Reds to a victory
over the New York Mets.'
Rookie Alfonso Soriano
. stol~ the spotlight from Pedro
M artinez and Roger Clemens
with a ninthcinning solo
homer that gave the New York
Yankees a win at the Boston
Ryan Dempster pitched 7
Red Sox.
2-3 strong innings, and Mik~
The marquee matchup lost Lowell hohtered and had four
' its luster when Clemens left RBls to lead Florida to victoafter the sixth inning trailing ry at Montreal.

Weot 'olviolcn

San Franl,;..,.,
Los Angeles
San Diego
AriZOna

Colorado

~

6
5
4
4

L
3

s
s
6

8

.
Pet

.700
.545
.500
.400
.400

1
2

2.

3
31/2

GB
1 112

2

3
3

Tllurodr(o-

AIMIIan
IIIIIDiul':t
w L Pet _ oa·
•
3 .7!10
-York
I
3 .7'0
112
7
•
.838 . 1112
8 m1101e
4
I
.400 '3 i/2
T - Boy
3
1 .300 4 112

Cindnnollt, N.Y. -

0
Houoton .. St. LDulo. 2:10 p.m.
, _ , . . at CNeooo Ctbl, 2:20 p.m.

-··~.late
Aoridaat_,eol,lote

~ atAIIonla. ....

san FrancilcO ar ee •·•. late
lol Ar9!Joo at San Oiego. late
TodOy'o(Person 1-0111 Atlanta

~

(Perez D-1), 1:05 p.m.
Cineinnati (OesHilS HI) II N.Y. Moll
(Appier 1.0), 1:10 p.m.
.
Florida (GriiD-1) a t - (Annas Jr.
P·2), 1:35 p.m.
,
'-San FranciiCO (Ortiz 2.0) al Milwaukee
(Rigdon 0.0), 2:05 p.m.
PiltJburllll (R~ D-2) at Chicago CIA&gt;s
(Wood D-1), 2:20 p.in.
Arizona (ScNIIng 2-01 at Colorado (Viilone 0.0), 3:05p.m.
.
Houston lOM t.O) at St LOOio (Benes
D-1), 3:10p.m,
(JaNis D-1), 5p.m.

San Di&lt;!go 8, San FnliiCisco 3

c

N8tion.l LNgue I tt11,..
Tlllouth F~day'o BATTING-Lankford, .St. Louis, .-uo;
Polanco, St LDulo, .429: LWal&lt;er. Col·
orado. .425; Darr, San Diego, . ~11;
OWaod, Houston, .400; Biggio, Houston,
.395; Ri&lt;IB, San Franetsa&gt;, .394; f;loyd.
Florida, .394.
HOME AUN5-LGonzalez, Arizona, 9;
LWatker, Colonldo, 6; Gtudzle/anek, Los
Angeles. 5; 11 are tied with 4.
-

Cincimliti 11, Pitlil&gt;urgh 6
N.Y. Mets 1, Adanta 0, 10 in'*tgs

Los Angelos 5, Arizona 4
·
Frlday'o Gameo

u..ue

tO lrn1gl

lol Angeles (Bmwn o-t) at San Diego

COlorado 6 , SL Louis 4

Uitwaukee 12. Houston 4

·

Chicago Cubs 4, Pitlsborgh 2

FkJrida 9, Monlreal3
CinciMatl 3. N.Y. t.tets 2
Allanle 4, Philadelphia 2
Houston 4. St Louis 2
San Francisco 7, Milwaukee 3
Arizona 7, COlorado 3

Blue Jays 5,
Royals 4

C1eYeland

--

WLPCIG8
.1
2 .118
~
3
5
8 .455

Clica1JO
Delrolt
KansaaCity

•4

57

·.364

2

9

.1112

3

"
6

W..iliMolon
Seattle
Anaheim
Te...

Qaldand '

L · Pet
3 ;700

' G8

6
4 ' .600
5
6 .455
2 8 .200

1
2 112
5

W
7

'TII&lt;Irodar'•- '•
•

Frkllly'o -

Toronto 2, Kansas City 1
Boston 3, N.Y. Yankees 2, to innings
Ta11113 Bay.2, BaJtlmore o•
Cleveland 9, Detroit 8
Minnesola 7, ChiCago Whtta Sox 4

Anaheim 4, Seallle3
13, Oakland t

T - I l Ooldond..
Chicogo- SOx .....- . -

- .. Anahei
m.- · ·'
Todar'aO...

N.Y. Y - ( P - 2&lt;0) ~~­
(HOmo 2.01, 1:OS. p.m.
10-~ 11 Detroit (Perlsho
o.o). 1:05'p.m.
.
KAINU ~ (_, 0.2111'ji&gt;nlo*&gt; (C8rperort.()l, 1:05 p.m.
r....,P. a.~ (AeiW o-ti 11 8oitlmore
(POIWM 0.2), 1:35' p.m.
,,
Chicago While SOx (P -.0.0) at Minnesota ~ t.O), 2:05p.m.
sUitle (Hilama 1-1) a t - (Rapp
D-2). 4:05p.m. .
·

c-

Texas (OI!Wir 2.0) 81 Oeldalici'(Herida
D-2), 8:05p.m.

'·

Kon·
Ofl&lt;o. Chicago, .452; StBwart;-Toronto,
.435; EMartlne:; Seattle, .424; Brosius,
New Yorlc, .421 ; TCiark, Delrolt, .417;
Eck51eln, """"''"" .406.
HOME RUN$-Quinn, Kanoal City, 5;

Glaus, Anaheim, 5: CDelga~. Toronto, 5;
JGonzatez, Cleveland, 5: Branyan. Clave·
land, 4; Oaubacli, Boslt&gt;n, 4; Posada,
New YO&lt;Ic, 4; O'Neill, NOW Yoll&lt;, 4; Galarraga, Texas, 4.

league-leadin~t . nine in I o·
,,
games, as Arizona won at Co)Greg Vaughn hit a two-run
orado.
homer, and . Albie lopez
Randy
Jo,\l!l~o? •· , (2-1) , !ihcl~q. 1 , his ,_.third career ·
- all~;&gt;wed three runf :rn(I 'SlX hrt5 , 5hUf~ .as Tam_Ba Bay1won at
' with no walks md 1'1 strike~ ;; Baltimore: ·"" ''' ' •
outs, a Coors Field record.
lopez (2-1) outdueled Orjoles starter Pat Hentgen (0-1)
as the Devil , Rays \ von their
$econ&lt;J, consecu rive 83;11)e after
Dod~:.4
lo~il}g seven straijl~t, Lope~
.-.~
'
~ ~
.' ... ..
a)lowed ~g hits, walked two
.., ' • '.~&lt;
'.--,
Alex Ari~s .. si~gl~l:i :in .Ben and struck
. . out four.. . ·
Davis with ohe out.u1 die. lOth .
· ~ff Matt Herges ,(~.~J~/giving ·
S;m Diego the 'VICt{)ry' over .
.• LosAngeles . . . · ~·.,;_ ...
·
1
~.' .J he visid?g Dod~rdvfre .. , ., "
. , ,
~nSf two outt&amp;orn.a wm w.lien . AI tl nodri
hi hi 6
'Jeff Shaw bl~ what . ~IJ}d
ex ·.~- guef t s nt
b een • 'l's
~,;; · ·!9th s·t rat'ght home
run for Te~as, and
· u..ve
.
.
,
,
Rusty • Greer and Randy
'I
Velarde opened the game with
AL R6und~p
back-to-back homers off
,,., "', ,
.
Cgtiy Lidle (0-1) to lead me
• ,.,,, '""' ' • ·, '
Rangen a! Oaklal\d.
'J'he A's lost their fifth
1
•
straight to drop to 2-8, their
., ,
wqrst &gt;tart since going 2-10 in
....
. . 1998.
' '
Manny Ramirez signed with
' ·
,
•
' •. I
: •
;
f ,
I
the Boston Red Sox tn pprt
. ·,
P
1
because he was tired of seeing
'
the Ne~v York Yank~es win:
Ramtrez wasted no pme
'
contributing to the Red· SoxGarret Anderson hit a two-·
Yankees rivalry, hitting a tworun single in the 1Oth inning run homer off Seattle closer
off Mariano Riv~ra to give Kazuhiro Sasaki . (0-1) in the
ninth inning for host AnaBoston the win.
·
heim.
Adam Kem1"dy, in his fmi
at-bat since coming off the
disabled list, also hit a two-run
homer for the Angels.

·;

'~

Ranger's 13,
AthletiCS J

Tigers I,

Indians o

·L"

sare.

NEEDED REST - Boston starting pitcher Pedro Martinez
, rests his head in his hand moments after giving up two runs
In the seventh Inning to the Yankees. (AP)

' .:

Red 'Sox:lJ, ''
Yankees· 2

n.,eIs 4,:.. ·...
Manners 3
A'

Braves 4,
Phillies 2

Milwaukee.
Rueter (4-0) allowed three
runs. and three hjts to improve
to 6-1 lifetime with a 2.05
· ERA against the Brewers. Milwaukee didn't get a hit after
the second aga inst Rueter and
two reli ewrs.

Tom Glavinc pitch ed six
strong innin gs, and Wes Helms
hit a two-ru n homer for
Atlanta. ·
Glavine (1-1) beat the visiting l'hillies, early leaders in the
Nl East. John Rocker pitched
a perfe.ct ninth for his third
save.

Yankees 3,
Red Sox 2

/

Marlins 9,
Expos 3

Giants 7,
·Brewers 3
Kirk Rueter pitched six
strong innings, . and Barry .
Bonds hit his 497th career
homer to lead San Francisco at

Astros 4,
Cardinals 2
Craig Biggio hit a tiebrca king two-run homer off Darryl
Kile in the seventh ·&lt;is Houston
won at St. Louis.
Kile allowed four runs and
eight hits in ·seven innings,
falling to 1-3 against his old
team.

D'backs7,
Rockies 3
Luis Gonzalez hit two home
runs, giving him a major

Indians 9,
Tigers 8

Russell Branyan's three-run
homer keyed a six~run first'
initing against Jeff Weaver (12), and C.C. Sabathia Jiicked
up the first win of his career
for visiting Cleveland.
Sabathia (1-0) allowed fqur
runs , five hits and two walks' in
five innings. Paul Shuey struck
out . two batters for his._ first
save.
'' '

d

Devil Rays 2,
, .Onol.es o.: .

Blue Jays 2,
..Royal• ~:·

.

.
'Chris Michalak (2"(&gt;) cont1
blned with th tee relievers on a
fou'r-hitter to win his second
straight' start \ts Toronto beat
Kansas City i.Ya repaired SkyDome.
·
A. rnechanidl n\alfunction
in the 1s'(:idiurh 's ''retractable
roof re-saltet! in 'one panel
cra'shing into&gt; anoiher, post' poning ThUrsday's game.' ' .,_
'

wrist.
larkin is not expected to. be
. back in the lineup until Toesday at the earliest. The Reds
finish their nine-game road trip
Suitday in New York and are
off Monday before starting a
homestand against Milwaukee
the· next day.
·
.
Juan ~astra started. _ _1~.1• .

•· '

time~

starting lineup for Saturday's
game against the New York
Mets because of a strained left

. r'

Start
.,.OM_Oft_m
~

~gw-

~

www.nJWtlalt,getayll.com

Ca/124 horm a

Gctyourcredit

Andrew
Carter

W -O RLD CUP QUALIFYIN ,G

••

'

wins bi~ but soccer loses.
''''

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MONDAY • APRIL 16, 2001
SAKRETE COMPA~Y
will be at

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
POMEROY, OH
7:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

l

'SIKRhE:~·
...
-~ ~29~ ~

,.

Smith's GMC

uck Center...

SQ

~

1

.

.371·3

Prep Softball

Prep Baseball

)

"' BRISBANE, Australia (AP)
·~- Australia was · leading
'".American 'Samoa 16-0 at halftime oftheirWorla Cup qualifYing game, and Aussie coach
5:00
5:00
• .
Frank Farin~ gave the closest
Waterford at Eastern, Waterford at Eastern,
thing his team needed to a
5:00
5:00
pep talk.
· ·
Southern at Trimble, 5:00 Southam at Trimble, 5:00
"Score as many goals as you
u can . . .. and be professional;'
t. rFarim said.
-. 1 "The Australiaru, who ~nt
_(' 'On to a record 31-0 victory,
'' •obviously got the· fint part of
" farina's edict. But whether
me team paid attention to .
r' •being '1 profe.ssional" i! up· for
''&lt;iebate:
,.; That lopsided win followed
a 22-0 ihrashing of Toriga in
Australia's opening match,
'
' ;- f
turnirt Or6upl@n~ ofOcea-"
·Free do1J9hnuts and coffee
nia 's tournament : into an
' , ..
embarrassing &lt;'farce for lhe
REGISTER TO WIN
World Cup soccer qualifying BEATEN DOWN- American Samoa goalkeeper Nicky Salapu lies at the net after another Aus•
A 10 Cu. FT. DUMP CART
tralia goalls scored during his team's 31-0 loss during World Cup qualifying on Wednesday. (AP)
. process:
•'
" .. After the opening victory, anything."
winner," he said.
in arm, smiling and acc.,pti ng
":Australian soccer officials · Farina said' Monday's win
Recently installed Oceania the applause of the crowd,
_, were lambasted bv · Btoitish over Tong:~ · was "clisgraceful Soccer Federation chief Basil retaining th~ir dignity despite
"
embarrassing,"
but Scarsella, • the region's repre- the scott•.
clubs, which \Wre ~ps.-t that and
·, ·some of their leading players non~*dess admitted he sentative to the sport's gov"God is the righteous one,"
·"rhad been recalled by a team wouldn't do it any other way. etning .body FlFA, responded coach Tunua Lui said, "and
·.•that clearly didn't need any
"As' a coach, my responsi- by saying that Farina sho~tld because of him, losing by so
help.
bility is to Australian soccer stick to coaching.
tnany goals dot·s not mnttt'r."
Glasgow Rangers coa~h and to get us to the World
" FIFA is not worried a b~ut
/
Dick 1\dvocaat was furious. Cup finals," said Farina, a for- what Farina thinks is lack of
that Craig Moore and Tony mer Au~tralian international competition in this region ,"
Vidtu~'r were taken· from his player. "The f3ct is I brought Scarsella said. "ThosL' com team by Australia. The Sun in back some of the overseas m~nts arL' absolutely unjusti- _
Britain headlined · the story guys mainly for the danger lied."
:-':"22 Reasons to he ·Futious." game against Fiji.
,
But on Thursday, Oceania
1:, EveiJ Australian · forward ''Imagine what the media and FlFA officials adtnitted
,,.Archi$. T,hompson, who'd would have · said if I didn't they were thinking about
,only scored one international bring these players back and having teams like American
· goal before getting ·a FIFA- somechill'g disastrous hap- Samoa, 'J'on~a and the Cook
, cfCCOrd l3 against American pened.''
.
Islands play early round games
'.': Samoa, questioned his feat .
·In most World Cup qualifY- to see who plays the higher! ,, "Yo~ have to look at the ing n'latches, a team would ranked teams such as Australia
· -· teams~ a~ playing and start want to sc11re as marty goals as and New Zealand in the final
asking, .. , q1,1estions,'' . , said possible beeauae that can help Oceania stages.
,.Thompt()n, who plays in Aus- determine possible tiebreakAustralian media, caught up
i)ra]ia's domestic league. "We en.
. .
,
in .steroid possession charges
c.llon't need to play these
Iq Australia's case, ho)NCVCi;' against one of their top swim
' 'games. The best two sides in ·iu opponents are so weak that coaches, were relatively quiet
"'- 'the 'Ocean!a group should the!:~!! V'Ould be virtually no on the scoring scandal.
: ,have fqllalifie~ wtth a qome chance of that sit1ution
In a stoey beneath a photo
~ J.n!i aw.y leg. It.'s really a waste occurring.
.
. caption ,that read "Target
1997 Pontiac
' tif time,':.
·
' ,
·
Tonga coach Gary Phillips Practice," Michael Cockerill
: Australia, if it beaa Fiji on complained that Australia's in the Sydney Morning HerTrans Sport
4WO, 17,000MIIes,
t &gt;Saturdayj• will . qqalif}r fro~· use of eighl overseas-based 1 aid wrote ,. that Australia's
SLE PkQ, Clearance Priced At ..
IAallllrl'kQ, Clean, LGcal Owner, &amp;.n
I; Group One; It will then have playt!rs was overkill and ~de "S9alfest ... reached glutto0
00
5
, ,~ _to play d;te Wif!ner o( Ocea- ~ . mockery" of the meager pous proportio~s with an
':nia's G~u~ 1\ro, l~kely, NeW rei-OUll=CS " available .• to his incredible 31-0 slaughter.''
·Zealand~ 10 · a li9f11e•arid- Soutl1 Pacific Island. ' , .
' ," fifty-three go,als how in
home; tp'lll)-goals. leties in
"1 ,do riot see the point of twO games, the l'l)cord books,
: June.
SQillt of these ,supentan com- both collectively and individ1 The winner of that series ing back for this," l'hillips u.illy, torn to bits," Cockerill
' will play th~ fifth•place'Soum said. "If you add •together -the said. "It is too late to end the
Americah team in a hon1e- value of ·the Australian teant carnage this time around, but
and-hom; series in Novem- and the~ divide. it by five, there should be no repetition
her, with- the winner. adYllnc- then you have the value of the in four yeat:S."
ing to next year's World Cup Tongan economy."
The American Samoans·,
in Japan and 'South Ko~a.
Fadha a4mitted the qualify- many of them deeply relifarina · feds caught in a •no- ing syst~nt thould b~ ~hanged gint~&gt;, sp~nc part of Friday in
win situation. He fim had to so Australia do~·s not have to training tin tht·i r Saturday
-nnswer ; ~ome . o~ the. ~ritish pl~y slid\ bad teams . ,
' · gam~ against Tonga . Re gard~e.am f!'anagers crmctsms,
"We had hothlhg to gain l~s of the outcome, the playttelling ,Advocaat that he can· from it and tl;tey had nothing ers probably . will leav~ the
1 ~ 'blow r,s much wind as ~~ · to gain from it either. It was 'fidd as tht•y did in · their
~vantl, ,. but it. won't change · etltbarr:isslng, no one was a rccottlloss to Australia- arin
From St. Rt. 7 Turn On St. Rt.
•'t-

I
.·-'. ....

NOW./

, •. aoo-·~
·

Monday's Prep Games
.Wahama at South Gallia, South Gallia at Hunting12:00
ton St. Joe, 4:30
Point Pleasant at River · GalliaAcademy at Logan,
Valley, 5:00
5:,00 ·
.
Logan at Gallia Academy, River Valley at Po1nt
:;:oo
Pleasant, 5:00
·
Nelsonville-York at Meigs,: Nelsonville•York at Meigs,

BY DINNia PAlM ·

""'--s

~ew
'

followup confrontation with the
•
Marauden is set for April 26. ·
Due to being on opPosite sides of
the TVC, Eastern and MeigJ wc;&gt;n't
fac:e each other again. Game, set,
match, Eagles.
• Tuesday's River Valley-Eastern
matchup could be the classic contest
THE CHEAP SEATS
of ·the season, fe_aturing twO of the
top pitchen in mt: area in Eastern's
Juli Bailey and River Valley's Geri tide.
McFann.
WUSA begins play
Bailey has been dominant this year,
Still riding high on the wa* of
leading me Eagles to an undefeated success generated by the 1999 FIFA
ma_rk in 1VC Hocking Division play. Wo~ten's World Cu~, the Women's
Bailey and me Eagles haven 't tasted . Umted Socc~r Assocratton (WUSA)
defeat since falling to River Valley on laced up its boots and began play this
March 27.
·
weekend as the Washington Freedom
McFann has been equally brilliant and the Bay Area CyberRays went
for the Raiders, who had a five-game head-to-head Saturd1y in the league's
winning· streak snapped in a loss to inaugural match .
W:trten Friday. Even with the loss, · The eight-t~am league features the
the Raiders are 4- 2 in SEOAL play vast n1ajority of the stars of the vicand still in contention for the. league torious U.S. women's national team

as well as high-profile internatioml any indicator, me league should be in
players. Mia Hanun, me undisputed pretty good shape, Its playe,rs have
goddess of world soccer (and perhaps been extremely visible in the media
world spurt in genr:ral), is the head- over the past two years, nuking publiner for one of the WUSA's anchor lie appear.toces all over the pbce and
franchises, the Washington Freedom, pining popularity not only for me
based, ap!lropriately, in our nation 's women's game, but also exposing
capital_
faru to the sport in general .
Other familiar names to US. socThe allure of the those homecer fans include Br.tndi Chastain, grown girls next door, also known as
owner of the world's most famous the U.S. national': team .. was overspo~~ br.i, Drianm Scurry, Cindy whelming in 1999. Their personali~
Parlow, Kristine Lilly, Tiffany Mil- ties were magnetic and the underlybrett and Julie Foudy. International ing stories of !heir lives and times
stars filling out WUSA rosters · drew in a whole generation of young
;nclude Br;tzilian sensations Sissi, people, both male and female. The
Roseli and PretinlU, as weU as·Niger- player.; were revealed to be human
ian standout Mercy Akide, China's beings lim and foremost, and, oh,
indomitable Sun Wen , FIFA's co- yeah, they're me best soccer players
player of the 20th Century, and Aus- · on the planet, too.
tralian ironwoman Julie Murray.
Good marketing by U.S. Soccer,
So what are the odds of success for the ·game's governing body here in
women's arofessional socce r I.-ague these United States.
in these United States?
Ple..e see c,.,ter, 87
If the success ofWo rld C up 1999 is

l

Larkin 's place Saturday and batted sixth.
l~kin mildly straine~ pis
wrist Friday night as he ·
stopped Tsuyoshi Shinjo's
grounder in the, hole m the
SCCO!td inning,

.They are schedule to play · Problems Oetting Your Car Loan Approved?
mght games agamst the BrewCII U Toda 1
. .
1
1
ers oo Tuesday npd Wednesd:ly,
Y·
. but thos•. game
could be
changed tf a curfe\V m the c1ty
remains in effect.
A curf~w . was ' . imposed
ThurSLlny _after rioting wno
sparked by the shooting of 19· year-old Timothy Thoma~ the fourth black tl1an killed by
Cill&lt;:lnna ti
police
since
Nov&lt;ntber.
Larkin injured
eincin nati Redi s hor t~top
B.arry Larkin was out of the

day at home ag:ainst me Eagles. The

·~..,~_,~ .

Reds·to meet with. city officials
to ta1k about recept rioting ·
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Reds will m•et with Cincinnati officials Monday to determine if riots in 'the dty will
f0 rce the team to alter its
schequle next week. ·
The Reds, who·are on a 10game. ioad trip, don't play at
home again until · Tue.sday
against Milwauke"'

Fastpitch sofiball is alive and kicktg in Meigs and Gallia counties_
The ai'L'a featum two of die top
mud teams in Ohio and another
lub that is on the rise in Meigs, Eastm and River Valley. respectiwly.
The Maraudcn are ranked No.6 in
, , he latest Division II poll, while
:ounty neighbor Eastern checks in at
•'Jo. 8 in Division IV.
M~gs owns a 6-5 mark after falling
:o Eastern 3-2 in a classic battle last
" Monday.
' The Eagles ai'L' 8-1 with their lone
,loss to..:,River Valley, a club that
!ports a~ 8-3 record, bu~ isn't ranke~ .
The Raiden are vastly tmproved this.
season and ai'L' just two wiiu shy of
·;:marching the schooli'L'cord for \vins
· in a single season.
, · By the way, River Valley also owns
a victory over Meigs.
·".. River Valley plays Eastern and
.- Meigs one m11re time each this sea"·son, beginning with a reniatch Tues-

~1 . ~0
T~BeyltP ' ' r101•. ll..

BATTIN(h(l~. ~• .. 467;

Kansas City at ToJOOip, ppd. root damage

Te~eas

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-Tllrougll Frtu&lt;;'a
i...,Ji.aAdera
-

Cleveland 5, oetroil 3
Anaheim 13, TexaJ 3

..

Reds 3, Mets 2

Sqftball alive and well in Meigs and Gallia ·counties

--

N.Y . _ 3 , _ 2
-5.-City4

Seattle 7, oakland 3
Bosloo 8. Baltiroore 2

Padres.s;.'

Dempster (2~0) held the
Expos without a hit through
four innings ·and improved his
record at Olympic .Stadium to
.J-0 in five career starts.

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Pomlfot • •tldl•p lilt • G1 WJI air, Olllo.Point P11 zrt, wv.,

.

SU•dlf, Aplll -~~ 2001

Reds set mark,
score in 11sth

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SPORTS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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pJilt • 0 ' :' , Olllo • Pulnl P

Civil rights panel urges
end to Indian sports
names at ·schools
WASHINGTON (AP)- "1 rulize it'l not the
American Indian activi•ts
nul stmotypu in
cheered a (edetai civil rights
Panel's call Friday for an end sports, 6ut I thittlc it
to Indian team names and wtU rully imporuant
mascots at non-Inlfian that a ftllnal commisscboob, colleges and univer- siort get involved and
sities.
. The recommendation by tti4U a st.Umunt to
moue our country
rhe · U.S. Commission on
' Civil Rights does n~t carry toward more equality
the weight of Law, but
and social justice."
activisu saw it as an endorse•
ment of rheir efforts.
"Thls is a great day:' said
Charlene Teters, a member
of the Spokane Nation. Her
protests at the University of name for its sports teams.
llliilois in the Late 1980s and
The civil rights commisearly 1990s helped spark a . sion did not include profesnational debate over Indian sional · sports teams in the
sportS names and mpcots, statement.
even though the university's
Approving the recomteam n_ame is still the lllini, mendation on a 5-2 vote,
named for an old Midwest the group said Indian names
-Indian confederation, and its and mascots could ·be
mascot is still Chief Illini- viewed as "disrespectful and
wek.
ofFensive" to Indian groups
Teten and others said the and could c~eate "a racially
commission statement could hostile educational environpersuade schools · to take . ment" that may be intimianother look at their Indian dating to Indian students.
nicknames and mascots, aiv- The commission also said
..- •
•
ing opponents of the names the names may violate antilegitimacy when they push discrimination laws.
"Schools have a mponsifor changes.
"1 .realize it's not the· end bility to educate their stuo( steteotyp.es in sports;' said dents. They should not use
Cyd Crue, president of the their influence to perpetuate

of

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AND THE PITCH.... - Point Pleasant's KeFI!If·Durst releases a pitch during the Big Blacks win
over Gallla Academy Friday. (Andrew r.,u·tco!r.i~..&gt;

Devil
fnHnPIIpl1

.
•

Mike Warren then .cleared
the bases with a three-run
homer before Pyles was pulled
and Kenny Durst, who had
worked the first six innings,
was brought back in to finish
the game.
.
,/
Durst
finished ( having
worked 6 2/3 innings, giving
up seven hits and recording
eight strikeouts. He walked
just four batters, but two of
those were · after having
returned in relief of Pyles. He
gave up just one run.
The Blue Devils left 10 runners on base. The Big BLacks
stranded 11. 'runners. · · • '
For rhe ' Blue Devils, Bush
had two singles, and Brodeur
had a · double and a single.
Allen Skinner, Wade Caldwell,

Merola, and Allen added singles. Warten~s lone hit wu the
·three-run homer.

For Point, Dennis had three
hits of rhe Big BLacks ·12 hits,
on a big opportunity in rhe
including a double and three
fifth. An error and two singles
RBI. Loomis had a single and
a double. Warner and• Sims
· IUinois chapter · of the mimpJ;J:sentations of any
loaded the bases wirh nci outs,
each had a p~r of single$. Hill,
National Coalition on · culture 'or peoP,le," the statebut two Kenny Durst strill;eouts and a grounder to second
Duncan, and Watterson each
RaciJm in Sports and the ment said.
had single.
.Media, "but I think it was
Commission
member
ended the thteat.
'
. ·really important that a feder- .Elsie Meeks, who sponsored
The Blue Devils didn't go
Gallia Academy . used' thtee
al commissiQn get involved the recommendation, called
down easily, though. In the
pitchers, Rocchi, Scott Nida
and make a statement to .it "good civil-rights policy,"
ieventh inning, they ripped
and
·Bobby
Jones.
Rocchi
Point reliever Ashley Pyles for
•--d r
·
·
N "d
move - our country toW2rd saying it would encourage
WOri'C JOUr IDDIDgs .
I a
ali
d · "a) •
· h )s
h
de
five big runs. That rally started
pitched 1 2/J and Jones faced"
~ote equ ty an lOCI JUs- sc oo
to teac ~tu _nts
with a free pass to Allen Skinb
n~." ·.
"the true and histoncal
1 ' ·
ner and Bobby 'bnes reaching
one. atr.er. 11
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mou expenences o f ' N attve
on an error. Another walk to
spokesman Bill·Murphy said ~ Americans."
The Blue Devtls (1 - 11) will
Drew Bush was followed by
0
play host to Logan
Monday.
a committee was formed last
Two commission memNick Merola's two-run single
10
00
~mtdtra~els RIVer Valley
month to con~ider the mat- bers said it did litde to
to right,
011 ay.
ter, and the NCM. also is address
Indians' · most
--------------------------------exploring the issue of Indian intractable problems·: teanl names. .
poverty and poor education
base' on an error. However,
Wamsley was 1-for-4. DonAt Florida State Uni\iersi- - but the remaining comRiffie retired the next three naUy went 1-for-5 and Sipple
ty, home of rhe Seminoles, mission members voted to
batters on a ground ball arid , was 1-for-3.
two
school
fly
balls
to
end
the
Blue
President Talbot approve the statement,
from Page 81
·' Point entertains River V.11Angels threat.
"Sandy" D'Aiemberte said which criticizes schools .that
ley Monday and travels to
he would review the state- contend Indian names and
lead -to 5- 1, but the Angels
Neither side mustered any Parkersburg So uth Tuesday. ·'
came alive offensively in the offense in the sixth as Donment and carefully consider references hc:mor rather than
Galli a Academy (0-7), still
bottom of the inning, scoring naUy retired the side in order in search of its first win this
its recommendations. He . demean Indians.
four runs.
and Riffie struck out two bat- season, plays at Logan Monsaid; however, Seminole
"Even those that purport
Gretchen Faudree walked ters and got la •ground out day an~ entertains Fairland
.tribal leaden support the to be positive are romantic
and B.J. Wamsley singled to after surrendermg a base hit to Tuesday.
school's use . of the tribe's stereotypes that · give a disstart the inning. Faudree Sipple to lead off the inning.
All of ' Point's runs in the
scored on a single by Joanna
Bokovitz. Bokovitz came seventh came with two outs
around on another bases' as the bottom half of the
loaded walk that. put. Fellute
order paid dividends 'for the
.
rd
bo
a a .
Lady Knights. Five of Point's
Meghan Mooney slapped a eight hits wete provided by
single to left tliat scoted Abby spots six through nin~ in rhe
Sipple and Haylie Johnson batting order, led by Nibert,
and tied the scote at 5-all. the No. 8 hitter.
Sipple teached on a fielder's
Adkins, hitting in the s~
choice and Johnson follo\Wd hole,"Went 1-for-3 and scoted
with a single.
a run.
Poitit went.back to work in
No. 7 hitter Curfman was
the fifth, scoring two more 1-for-3, scored a run 'and
runs to take a 7-5 lead. Katie drove in a run. Stuqi~:on, the
.uuul
Roush reached base on an · No. 9 hitter, had an RBI.
error with one out and Riftle
Durst went 1-for-2 with a
- doubled to left to drive in ·run and and RBI. Riftle wis
Roush with the go-ahead 1-for-2 with a run and an
run. Raimey then chopped a RBI.
,
Oonnally went the·distance ,
single through the left side,
allowing a QUstling Riflle to for Gallia Academy, giving up
scote the second run of the 10 runs on eight hits. She
' '
mmng.
· recorded five strikeout$ and
Jessica Donnally got out of walked just two batters ~
a tough situation with the · Bokovitz . went 2-for-5 to
bases loaded by getting a lead the Angels. She had an
ground ball to short, which RBI and scoted a run.
Fellure did not have an offi, Faudree threw on to Mooney
for the force at second. • ·
cial at-bat, but drove in two
Gallia Academy managed to runs by drawing walks in the ' ·
get one run back in the fifth third and fourth . Mooney
Finan ce
with Katie Painter scoring on went 1-for-2 with two RBI.
an error that allowed Faudree Johnson was 1-for-2 and
to get aboard after reaching scored a .run.
·The Citizen• Bank
Mlln SIIHI, MOrthtld, I&lt;Y •
WWW.IIIIi llilll.lll ' liB
score four runs to put W~rren
up11 - 1.
1
In the bt&gt;ttom of the fifth,
Venham forced a ground out
fnNIIPip81
and picked up back- to- hack
It wasn't until the fifth strike outs to end th~ game.
when the Warrio.rs put the
River Valley \Viii play host
game away.
to Point Pleasant Monday,
Three straight walks to start before going to Symmes Valthe inning loaded the bases. A ley Tuesday. The Raiders·have
C~Juple of errors and a sacri- already posted a win against
fice by Casey Duvall helped the Vikings this season. . ,

a

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Point

Use this

rorted view of the past:' the
statement·said.
The push to. get rid of
Indian nanies and nwcors
began in 1988, when Teters
and two fellow Indian•
arrived at the University of
Illinois as graduate .students.
Teters was shocked to .see
Chief llliniwek dancing in a
basketball halftime show
using eagle feathers, which
Indians believe are sacred
symbols.
Her protests - first at basketball games, then at football games - earned local
scorn and national attcmtion.
Eventually. Teters' protests
became the subject of the
1997 documentary "In
Whose Honor?"
Hunlfreds of teams still use
names such as Indians and
Braves, but several school
districts; colleges and univer"
sities have chl!nged team
names at the urging of Indian gtOU.JlS.
The St. John's University
Redmen are now the Red
Storm, while Stanford fans
cheer for the · Cardinal
instead of the · Indians.
Mianli
University
in
Oxford, Ohio, has also
changed its nickname from
the Redskins to the Red- ·
Hawks.
This week, t;he Afton,
N .Y., school board voted
unanimously to stop using
an Indian maseot and logo
for its sports teams, doing
away with the mascot, logo
and " Indians" nickname at
the end of this school.
Lastweek, NewYorkState
Ed·ucat1"on- Gomm1"ss1·oher' 1
Riehard Mills sent a letter to ·
school districts urging them
to drop Indian names, symbois and mascots.
Don Messec, a board
member of the National
Coalition on Racism in
· Sports and the Media, said
the commission's recommendation would help local
officials who take a stand
against Indian names and
mascots. Traditionally, ·he
said, t.hose who agitate for
the change often risk com- .
mitring "political suicide."

and serulces you need
a marketplace.
··

~

Greg Page and the
.. other side of p1ofessiont1,. boxing
.

.

he also became a · sparring Idaho, North Carolina, Oredo know rhe Kennlckf bWI uGrtg Page wasn't in slurpefor this fight.
and regulatio ns and am quite
panner and trainer with ~me gon and Kentucky.
H~
hadn't
hero
trained
properly.
we'd
Why did Page keep boxing?
. : ERLANGER. Ky. (AP) .capable of enforcing them."
glorious moment In 1990, he
Michael Mudd, more than
~reg Page was 42 and losing
According to those rules, a
knocked down Tyson, th= the
·known hpw out slurpt he was, we
liis edge.
·boxer mull pass a routine
he2"Y'veight champion, dur- any other Krntucky Athl.etic
wouldn't have broflght him up here"
. In his bones - and in his physical by rhe ring doctor
ing sparring before Tyson's Cominissioner. knows the
~go the fonrft:r heavy-, wirhin eight boon of dte
shocking knockout lms to answer.
~ght champion wouldn_'t fight. Oxygen is supposed to
" Because some people just
· Buster Douglas.
~lieve what was as clear as rh_e be on hand. Unlike many
lave
boxing;• Mudd said. "I
Three years later, after Page
into
the
ring
with
Witherworld
tide,
but
his
promising
~attered nose on his face. His orher stateS, Kentucky doesn't
was knocked out in the ninth love to fight. I've fought
sp0$'n
for
a
World
Boxing
career
soon
went
downhill.
\'est days were ~r.
require a pre-fight CAT scan
round by Bruce Seldon. he everywhere. In a parking lot
In 1985, five months after retited from professional box- behind a liquor store, a ware• He wanted one more to show current or potential Co uncil · tide fight. Page
¢bance at a title. I~ George brain c!a"mage such ~ a blood looked tbbby and unfit. He winning it, Page lost the WBA ing. It was a brief departure.
house, everywhere: '
fpreman could do at at 48, doc. Thete also is no require- fought so pporly. the crowd ·championship on points. to
In 1996, he was back. His · His Last bout was in 1999 at
booed.
Wirherspoon
won
by
Tony
Tubbs.
He
never
fought
why couldn't he?
ment for an ambulance, and
opponenll \Wte mosdy no- 53.
for the Iitle again.
; •So on March 9, Page put on none was present during the decision.
names, his venues far fium
Page did go on to ~ a
Page continued to box, but Vegas: Tennessee, India na, ·
!Us white boxing robe and Page-Crowe fight.
tnode across a cavernous,
"What m they trying to do,
fm?ke-lilled room whete old save the taxpayers · $200?"
Jadies normally play bingo. . asked Cedric Kushner; -an
A rhousand people sitting internationally known proon metal chairs at folding mor.er. "One should have an
tables could read rhe words ambuLance on sire, docrors on
. stitched in red letters acrou, his site, eme~ncy medical techhefty back as he stepped mto nicians on site."
t~e ring: "Feel rhe Knockout
Each state should have the
P&lt;&gt;wer of rhe Lord."_ .
same safety rules, Kushner·
; But 10 rounds Later, tn the said. "We'te in a very danger~nalseconds of rhe fight, Page ous sport, we don't deny that,
~s down. The ~fe,tee count- those of us who are ptepared
~ to 10. Page dido t get up.
to admit the truth." .
· He was taken by am~Lance
Despite rhe complaints of
~c_ros~ th~ 0~10 _R iver t_o trainer James Doolin, who
~mcmnatu Uruvemty Hosp1-. claims Page was in top condiJ:al, where he spent days in a tion and has threatened to sue
Foma, listed in critical condi- Peels Palace, the commission
pon after surgery ~o re~ove .a and others, many observers say
blood clot from his bnm: Hu Page's head never hit the canbiner, in an account that has vas.
·
~een disputed, said Page ·According to state athletic
~mmed headfirst onto a can- · commissioners and others
vas
with
non-regulation who saw the boat0 or Vt·ewe'd 11
I
•
padding.
.
videotape of it, a . worn-out
: .A closer look reveals a qwte Page staggeted into the ropes
different story about that mght and slumped to floor with his
:~nd anorher side of boxing.
leg~ and rear end on the .can" -:rhis nde of the sport has vas, his head lolling on the
' pothing to do with Las Vegas ropes.
:~pectacles that lu~ I-~:ollywood
"The ringside doctor said
:~elebnnes to rm~de · seats. the exhaustion brought on a
•:t'hese
are not b1g-money stroke"
said Terry O 'Brien ' the
l~
.
t
:("'ghts, ~uch as the_recent bout fight's promoter.
'
: ~n wh1ch champ1on Ev~~!ier
"Greg Page wasn't in shape
.•liolyfield collected $5 million. for this fight. He hadn't been
;~he na~es here do not ca~ up trained properly. If we'd
: 1~st~nt Images: _the sometimes known !low out of shape he
Sport
..
1117 Clwvy ..._ 4X4 4 Dr 111180 ·AT,!'£, 11~. Alloy
•b1zarre behavwr . of Mike was, we wouldn't have brought
;ryson; rhc inlpish elegance of him up · here" from his
1iW'FOni'EXPiOi't;'liiOit'iiM712'iif.'AT.~:·:roii.·c;;..~;·1:.·1Ri~~~~·
:9scar De La Hoya.
Louisville home.
:: This . is blue-collar boxing. · Peels ·manager McFadden
:llt'sT life"irrwhich men· traviol' said' Page li\oked 'dead 6rl· llis
::tiom town to town, support- feet. "I said to the guy sitting
;:iJtg families by beating each next to me, 'He's exhausied,"'
;;other · for as .little as.. $400 a McFadden tecalled.
:!fight.
In the last · 10 secorids,
:;. Page's March 9 bout with · Crowe landed a left - •not a
•'up-and-coming boxer Dale particula'rly powerful one ;,Crowe, 24, was his 76th fight to Page's chin, causing the
,;- his overall record .was 58 older boxer to lean into a
:;wins with 48 knockouts: 17 clinch, McFadden said. Crowe
::l~sses and one tie.
pushed him away and Page feU
. ,; In 19~4. he knocked out against the ropes.
:·~errie Coe_tzee in the eighth
"There was no haymaker,"
- •·round to wm the World Box- McFadden said. "It was a
~:ing Association heavyweight push."
But in his day, Page could .
.;;ehampion~hip aqd $500,000.
,' • He was a long, · long way land punches that would make
,:/rom those days when he your ears ring. "A monster
: ·~ntered . the ring at Peels with tremendous boxing
; palace, a bar and social club skills;• Muhammad Ali's train•
• tjlat plays host to everything er, Angelo Dundee, said in
• from cancer b~nefits to state7 1979, the year Page went pro.
G~gory Edward Page, born'
, sanctioned boxing. He'd get
! $1,500 for this fight.
in Louisville, had wanted to be
• By the Last few rounds, Page . a champion. since childhood.
: lOoked exhausted. But he was By 15 he was sparring with
fighting ' his heart out for ~e ,Ali, ~so frOm Louisville. :
; l{~ntucity champl~nshi~ in
~age mi~cked the Ali shuf; th1s 1 bllnk;-and-ypu ll-m1s~-it .fie and l&gt;cgan daring ·oppo- .
~ ~own be11do a . thundepng 1nents to hit .h im by just stand' mters~te. Peels P~lace _manag- ing there, bouncing and shak; er Guy McFadden s21~ Page ing his head. As an amateur, he
; despeqtely wanted to w1n and was called the new Ali. lrl 'the
: return to big-time,boxing, the mid-1970s, ·at a Cincinnati
~ kind broadcast by HBO ·and · Golden ·Gloves match, Page
• ESPN.
.
·
danced all over the canvas and
"Page said it was a stepping so confounded his teen~age
stone to doing what Geotge ri~ the boy dropped his lii~
Foreman did!' said McFadden, and -gaped. Page knocked him
a transpl,ant~d New Yorker o\ft; . •
who sp~rts a M~iii· b~e~all
In 1978, at 20, he became '
111111 ford Wlndlllr QL 18781- Green,AT, AC,11~. Cruise, Power
1
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the National Golden Gloves'
cap.
L.NU111 Nil.. "".:.. ,......... '....." ....... "'""".' .............. .. ... .... .. " ... $12,885
I
heavywdsbt champion..' c:l&gt;ne '
. "He cap1e here t,o
McFadden 'said, "He WliS seri- yeadater, he turned pto1 ,
18tlll Ponlllo Mont.nnvhlw 18730 • 4 Dr, AT, AC, 11~. Crulae,
ous." '
'
·
· .In 1982, ,.promoter ' Don
PW&amp;L, PS, AM!FM/CO .................. ................. .... ................. $16,695
18M Ford Wlndltlr 18381·, AT, AC , 1111, Cruise, PWI!oL .... $8,995.
Since last month's bout, King entered ·the scene. The
18M ford Wlndltlr 1111822 -GrNn, AT, AC, 11", Cruise, Sport
Page·~ . condiVon. has bee11 _story goei that. King att~nded
Wheela .................................................................................... $7, 195
upgrad~dJroin critjcal ·to fair. die funer.~l of Page's father;
~~=-~-~~-~~.:.~T:.~~:.~~ ~~~~~:.~:~ ~~~-15::995
He was ~moved April 3 to a . paid for the service and th~ew'
18M
Car8VIn 18684· White, 7 Pass, V·6 Eng .. AT, AC .......
Louisville tehabilitation cen- himself sobbing onto the cofter. Family and hospital staff fin. He left with Page's signai't8ii'iioni·~·VI;;· ~e7iil·:·v:a·ii~ii: ;.,:r:-;;c;:·n·ii~:.·c;;;i::'""'
PW&amp;L.... ,, .......................... ............................................ .. .
'fill not. publicly discuss his tute on a contract.
II I
But Page discovered, as had
injuries.
1. Those who' have visited him many others, that life ~ith
; siay Page's eyes are open and he King can be vexing.
· is alert, but cannot speak or
Another heavyweight, Tim
mo:ve one side c;&gt;f his body. . ' Withe~poon, once sued King,
''' The fight is being invescigat- claiming fraud and conflict of
ed by the Kepnicky Athletic interest. He won SI million in
' 'Commission, which sanctions an out-of-court setdehteilt;
' ~nd regulates boxing matches. · Page confessed to a reporter
' "On boxing itself, I can't say he one~ carried . a . .357 mag- ..
that I'm an expert," said com• num to a 1986 fight so he
' mission executive ·director could shoot King -but thought
' Nancy Black, ; who ~trended better of it. ,•
the first fight of her ll(e ~ ' !e.fore wil\ning his. ,W.BA
, ~e~ alt.rr the Page -match .. ] ch,tnplonshlp; Page cllmb~
BY D&amp;VIWI IIAsnllllil

AP NA'IIOHAL WAll ER •

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Civil rights panel urges
end to Indian sports
names at ·schools
WASHINGTON (AP)- "1 rulize it'l not the
American Indian activi•ts
nul stmotypu in
cheered a (edetai civil rights
Panel's call Friday for an end sports, 6ut I thittlc it
to Indian team names and wtU rully imporuant
mascots at non-Inlfian that a ftllnal commisscboob, colleges and univer- siort get involved and
sities.
. The recommendation by tti4U a st.Umunt to
moue our country
rhe · U.S. Commission on
' Civil Rights does n~t carry toward more equality
the weight of Law, but
and social justice."
activisu saw it as an endorse•
ment of rheir efforts.
"Thls is a great day:' said
Charlene Teters, a member
of the Spokane Nation. Her
protests at the University of name for its sports teams.
llliilois in the Late 1980s and
The civil rights commisearly 1990s helped spark a . sion did not include profesnational debate over Indian sional · sports teams in the
sportS names and mpcots, statement.
even though the university's
Approving the recomteam n_ame is still the lllini, mendation on a 5-2 vote,
named for an old Midwest the group said Indian names
-Indian confederation, and its and mascots could ·be
mascot is still Chief Illini- viewed as "disrespectful and
wek.
ofFensive" to Indian groups
Teten and others said the and could c~eate "a racially
commission statement could hostile educational environpersuade schools · to take . ment" that may be intimianother look at their Indian dating to Indian students.
nicknames and mascots, aiv- The commission also said
..- •
•
ing opponents of the names the names may violate antilegitimacy when they push discrimination laws.
"Schools have a mponsifor changes.
"1 .realize it's not the· end bility to educate their stuo( steteotyp.es in sports;' said dents. They should not use
Cyd Crue, president of the their influence to perpetuate

of

.

•

AND THE PITCH.... - Point Pleasant's KeFI!If·Durst releases a pitch during the Big Blacks win
over Gallla Academy Friday. (Andrew r.,u·tco!r.i~..&gt;

Devil
fnHnPIIpl1

.
•

Mike Warren then .cleared
the bases with a three-run
homer before Pyles was pulled
and Kenny Durst, who had
worked the first six innings,
was brought back in to finish
the game.
.
,/
Durst
finished ( having
worked 6 2/3 innings, giving
up seven hits and recording
eight strikeouts. He walked
just four batters, but two of
those were · after having
returned in relief of Pyles. He
gave up just one run.
The Blue Devils left 10 runners on base. The Big BLacks
stranded 11. 'runners. · · • '
For rhe ' Blue Devils, Bush
had two singles, and Brodeur
had a · double and a single.
Allen Skinner, Wade Caldwell,

Merola, and Allen added singles. Warten~s lone hit wu the
·three-run homer.

For Point, Dennis had three
hits of rhe Big BLacks ·12 hits,
on a big opportunity in rhe
including a double and three
fifth. An error and two singles
RBI. Loomis had a single and
a double. Warner and• Sims
· IUinois chapter · of the mimpJ;J:sentations of any
loaded the bases wirh nci outs,
each had a p~r of single$. Hill,
National Coalition on · culture 'or peoP,le," the statebut two Kenny Durst strill;eouts and a grounder to second
Duncan, and Watterson each
RaciJm in Sports and the ment said.
had single.
.Media, "but I think it was
Commission
member
ended the thteat.
'
. ·really important that a feder- .Elsie Meeks, who sponsored
The Blue Devils didn't go
Gallia Academy . used' thtee
al commissiQn get involved the recommendation, called
down easily, though. In the
pitchers, Rocchi, Scott Nida
and make a statement to .it "good civil-rights policy,"
ieventh inning, they ripped
and
·Bobby
Jones.
Rocchi
Point reliever Ashley Pyles for
•--d r
·
·
N "d
move - our country toW2rd saying it would encourage
WOri'C JOUr IDDIDgs .
I a
ali
d · "a) •
· h )s
h
de
five big runs. That rally started
pitched 1 2/J and Jones faced"
~ote equ ty an lOCI JUs- sc oo
to teac ~tu _nts
with a free pass to Allen Skinb
n~." ·.
"the true and histoncal
1 ' ·
ner and Bobby 'bnes reaching
one. atr.er. 11
·
'"'"'
·
1
'
-~ll'-.,...,
..
m·~···
·
•
•
.
. .
';
mvers ty or
mou expenences o f ' N attve
on an error. Another walk to
spokesman Bill·Murphy said ~ Americans."
The Blue Devtls (1 - 11) will
Drew Bush was followed by
0
play host to Logan
Monday.
a committee was formed last
Two commission memNick Merola's two-run single
10
00
~mtdtra~els RIVer Valley
month to con~ider the mat- bers said it did litde to
to right,
011 ay.
ter, and the NCM. also is address
Indians' · most
--------------------------------exploring the issue of Indian intractable problems·: teanl names. .
poverty and poor education
base' on an error. However,
Wamsley was 1-for-4. DonAt Florida State Uni\iersi- - but the remaining comRiffie retired the next three naUy went 1-for-5 and Sipple
ty, home of rhe Seminoles, mission members voted to
batters on a ground ball arid , was 1-for-3.
two
school
fly
balls
to
end
the
Blue
President Talbot approve the statement,
from Page 81
·' Point entertains River V.11Angels threat.
"Sandy" D'Aiemberte said which criticizes schools .that
ley Monday and travels to
he would review the state- contend Indian names and
lead -to 5- 1, but the Angels
Neither side mustered any Parkersburg So uth Tuesday. ·'
came alive offensively in the offense in the sixth as Donment and carefully consider references hc:mor rather than
Galli a Academy (0-7), still
bottom of the inning, scoring naUy retired the side in order in search of its first win this
its recommendations. He . demean Indians.
four runs.
and Riffie struck out two bat- season, plays at Logan Monsaid; however, Seminole
"Even those that purport
Gretchen Faudree walked ters and got la •ground out day an~ entertains Fairland
.tribal leaden support the to be positive are romantic
and B.J. Wamsley singled to after surrendermg a base hit to Tuesday.
school's use . of the tribe's stereotypes that · give a disstart the inning. Faudree Sipple to lead off the inning.
All of ' Point's runs in the
scored on a single by Joanna
Bokovitz. Bokovitz came seventh came with two outs
around on another bases' as the bottom half of the
loaded walk that. put. Fellute
order paid dividends 'for the
.
rd
bo
a a .
Lady Knights. Five of Point's
Meghan Mooney slapped a eight hits wete provided by
single to left tliat scoted Abby spots six through nin~ in rhe
Sipple and Haylie Johnson batting order, led by Nibert,
and tied the scote at 5-all. the No. 8 hitter.
Sipple teached on a fielder's
Adkins, hitting in the s~
choice and Johnson follo\Wd hole,"Went 1-for-3 and scoted
with a single.
a run.
Poitit went.back to work in
No. 7 hitter Curfman was
the fifth, scoring two more 1-for-3, scored a run 'and
runs to take a 7-5 lead. Katie drove in a run. Stuqi~:on, the
.uuul
Roush reached base on an · No. 9 hitter, had an RBI.
error with one out and Riftle
Durst went 1-for-2 with a
- doubled to left to drive in ·run and and RBI. Riftle wis
Roush with the go-ahead 1-for-2 with a run and an
run. Raimey then chopped a RBI.
,
Oonnally went the·distance ,
single through the left side,
allowing a QUstling Riflle to for Gallia Academy, giving up
scote the second run of the 10 runs on eight hits. She
' '
mmng.
· recorded five strikeout$ and
Jessica Donnally got out of walked just two batters ~
a tough situation with the · Bokovitz . went 2-for-5 to
bases loaded by getting a lead the Angels. She had an
ground ball to short, which RBI and scoted a run.
Fellure did not have an offi, Faudree threw on to Mooney
for the force at second. • ·
cial at-bat, but drove in two
Gallia Academy managed to runs by drawing walks in the ' ·
get one run back in the fifth third and fourth . Mooney
Finan ce
with Katie Painter scoring on went 1-for-2 with two RBI.
an error that allowed Faudree Johnson was 1-for-2 and
to get aboard after reaching scored a .run.
·The Citizen• Bank
Mlln SIIHI, MOrthtld, I&lt;Y •
WWW.IIIIi llilll.lll ' liB
score four runs to put W~rren
up11 - 1.
1
In the bt&gt;ttom of the fifth,
Venham forced a ground out
fnNIIPip81
and picked up back- to- hack
It wasn't until the fifth strike outs to end th~ game.
when the Warrio.rs put the
River Valley \Viii play host
game away.
to Point Pleasant Monday,
Three straight walks to start before going to Symmes Valthe inning loaded the bases. A ley Tuesday. The Raiders·have
C~Juple of errors and a sacri- already posted a win against
fice by Casey Duvall helped the Vikings this season. . ,

a

·

°

Point

Use this

rorted view of the past:' the
statement·said.
The push to. get rid of
Indian nanies and nwcors
began in 1988, when Teters
and two fellow Indian•
arrived at the University of
Illinois as graduate .students.
Teters was shocked to .see
Chief llliniwek dancing in a
basketball halftime show
using eagle feathers, which
Indians believe are sacred
symbols.
Her protests - first at basketball games, then at football games - earned local
scorn and national attcmtion.
Eventually. Teters' protests
became the subject of the
1997 documentary "In
Whose Honor?"
Hunlfreds of teams still use
names such as Indians and
Braves, but several school
districts; colleges and univer"
sities have chl!nged team
names at the urging of Indian gtOU.JlS.
The St. John's University
Redmen are now the Red
Storm, while Stanford fans
cheer for the · Cardinal
instead of the · Indians.
Mianli
University
in
Oxford, Ohio, has also
changed its nickname from
the Redskins to the Red- ·
Hawks.
This week, t;he Afton,
N .Y., school board voted
unanimously to stop using
an Indian maseot and logo
for its sports teams, doing
away with the mascot, logo
and " Indians" nickname at
the end of this school.
Lastweek, NewYorkState
Ed·ucat1"on- Gomm1"ss1·oher' 1
Riehard Mills sent a letter to ·
school districts urging them
to drop Indian names, symbois and mascots.
Don Messec, a board
member of the National
Coalition on Racism in
· Sports and the Media, said
the commission's recommendation would help local
officials who take a stand
against Indian names and
mascots. Traditionally, ·he
said, t.hose who agitate for
the change often risk com- .
mitring "political suicide."

and serulces you need
a marketplace.
··

~

Greg Page and the
.. other side of p1ofessiont1,. boxing
.

.

he also became a · sparring Idaho, North Carolina, Oredo know rhe Kennlckf bWI uGrtg Page wasn't in slurpefor this fight.
and regulatio ns and am quite
panner and trainer with ~me gon and Kentucky.
H~
hadn't
hero
trained
properly.
we'd
Why did Page keep boxing?
. : ERLANGER. Ky. (AP) .capable of enforcing them."
glorious moment In 1990, he
Michael Mudd, more than
~reg Page was 42 and losing
According to those rules, a
knocked down Tyson, th= the
·known hpw out slurpt he was, we
liis edge.
·boxer mull pass a routine
he2"Y'veight champion, dur- any other Krntucky Athl.etic
wouldn't have broflght him up here"
. In his bones - and in his physical by rhe ring doctor
ing sparring before Tyson's Cominissioner. knows the
~go the fonrft:r heavy-, wirhin eight boon of dte
shocking knockout lms to answer.
~ght champion wouldn_'t fight. Oxygen is supposed to
" Because some people just
· Buster Douglas.
~lieve what was as clear as rh_e be on hand. Unlike many
lave
boxing;• Mudd said. "I
Three years later, after Page
into
the
ring
with
Witherworld
tide,
but
his
promising
~attered nose on his face. His orher stateS, Kentucky doesn't
was knocked out in the ninth love to fight. I've fought
sp0$'n
for
a
World
Boxing
career
soon
went
downhill.
\'est days were ~r.
require a pre-fight CAT scan
round by Bruce Seldon. he everywhere. In a parking lot
In 1985, five months after retited from professional box- behind a liquor store, a ware• He wanted one more to show current or potential Co uncil · tide fight. Page
¢bance at a title. I~ George brain c!a"mage such ~ a blood looked tbbby and unfit. He winning it, Page lost the WBA ing. It was a brief departure.
house, everywhere: '
fpreman could do at at 48, doc. Thete also is no require- fought so pporly. the crowd ·championship on points. to
In 1996, he was back. His · His Last bout was in 1999 at
booed.
Wirherspoon
won
by
Tony
Tubbs.
He
never
fought
why couldn't he?
ment for an ambulance, and
opponenll \Wte mosdy no- 53.
for the Iitle again.
; •So on March 9, Page put on none was present during the decision.
names, his venues far fium
Page did go on to ~ a
Page continued to box, but Vegas: Tennessee, India na, ·
!Us white boxing robe and Page-Crowe fight.
tnode across a cavernous,
"What m they trying to do,
fm?ke-lilled room whete old save the taxpayers · $200?"
Jadies normally play bingo. . asked Cedric Kushner; -an
A rhousand people sitting internationally known proon metal chairs at folding mor.er. "One should have an
tables could read rhe words ambuLance on sire, docrors on
. stitched in red letters acrou, his site, eme~ncy medical techhefty back as he stepped mto nicians on site."
t~e ring: "Feel rhe Knockout
Each state should have the
P&lt;&gt;wer of rhe Lord."_ .
same safety rules, Kushner·
; But 10 rounds Later, tn the said. "We'te in a very danger~nalseconds of rhe fight, Page ous sport, we don't deny that,
~s down. The ~fe,tee count- those of us who are ptepared
~ to 10. Page dido t get up.
to admit the truth." .
· He was taken by am~Lance
Despite rhe complaints of
~c_ros~ th~ 0~10 _R iver t_o trainer James Doolin, who
~mcmnatu Uruvemty Hosp1-. claims Page was in top condiJ:al, where he spent days in a tion and has threatened to sue
Foma, listed in critical condi- Peels Palace, the commission
pon after surgery ~o re~ove .a and others, many observers say
blood clot from his bnm: Hu Page's head never hit the canbiner, in an account that has vas.
·
~een disputed, said Page ·According to state athletic
~mmed headfirst onto a can- · commissioners and others
vas
with
non-regulation who saw the boat0 or Vt·ewe'd 11
I
•
padding.
.
videotape of it, a . worn-out
: .A closer look reveals a qwte Page staggeted into the ropes
different story about that mght and slumped to floor with his
:~nd anorher side of boxing.
leg~ and rear end on the .can" -:rhis nde of the sport has vas, his head lolling on the
' pothing to do with Las Vegas ropes.
:~pectacles that lu~ I-~:ollywood
"The ringside doctor said
:~elebnnes to rm~de · seats. the exhaustion brought on a
•:t'hese
are not b1g-money stroke"
said Terry O 'Brien ' the
l~
.
t
:("'ghts, ~uch as the_recent bout fight's promoter.
'
: ~n wh1ch champ1on Ev~~!ier
"Greg Page wasn't in shape
.•liolyfield collected $5 million. for this fight. He hadn't been
;~he na~es here do not ca~ up trained properly. If we'd
: 1~st~nt Images: _the sometimes known !low out of shape he
Sport
..
1117 Clwvy ..._ 4X4 4 Dr 111180 ·AT,!'£, 11~. Alloy
•b1zarre behavwr . of Mike was, we wouldn't have brought
;ryson; rhc inlpish elegance of him up · here" from his
1iW'FOni'EXPiOi't;'liiOit'iiM712'iif.'AT.~:·:roii.·c;;..~;·1:.·1Ri~~~~·
:9scar De La Hoya.
Louisville home.
:: This . is blue-collar boxing. · Peels ·manager McFadden
:llt'sT life"irrwhich men· traviol' said' Page li\oked 'dead 6rl· llis
::tiom town to town, support- feet. "I said to the guy sitting
;:iJtg families by beating each next to me, 'He's exhausied,"'
;;other · for as .little as.. $400 a McFadden tecalled.
:!fight.
In the last · 10 secorids,
:;. Page's March 9 bout with · Crowe landed a left - •not a
•'up-and-coming boxer Dale particula'rly powerful one ;,Crowe, 24, was his 76th fight to Page's chin, causing the
,;- his overall record .was 58 older boxer to lean into a
:;wins with 48 knockouts: 17 clinch, McFadden said. Crowe
::l~sses and one tie.
pushed him away and Page feU
. ,; In 19~4. he knocked out against the ropes.
:·~errie Coe_tzee in the eighth
"There was no haymaker,"
- •·round to wm the World Box- McFadden said. "It was a
~:ing Association heavyweight push."
But in his day, Page could .
.;;ehampion~hip aqd $500,000.
,' • He was a long, · long way land punches that would make
,:/rom those days when he your ears ring. "A monster
: ·~ntered . the ring at Peels with tremendous boxing
; palace, a bar and social club skills;• Muhammad Ali's train•
• tjlat plays host to everything er, Angelo Dundee, said in
• from cancer b~nefits to state7 1979, the year Page went pro.
G~gory Edward Page, born'
, sanctioned boxing. He'd get
! $1,500 for this fight.
in Louisville, had wanted to be
• By the Last few rounds, Page . a champion. since childhood.
: lOoked exhausted. But he was By 15 he was sparring with
fighting ' his heart out for ~e ,Ali, ~so frOm Louisville. :
; l{~ntucity champl~nshi~ in
~age mi~cked the Ali shuf; th1s 1 bllnk;-and-ypu ll-m1s~-it .fie and l&gt;cgan daring ·oppo- .
~ ~own be11do a . thundepng 1nents to hit .h im by just stand' mters~te. Peels P~lace _manag- ing there, bouncing and shak; er Guy McFadden s21~ Page ing his head. As an amateur, he
; despeqtely wanted to w1n and was called the new Ali. lrl 'the
: return to big-time,boxing, the mid-1970s, ·at a Cincinnati
~ kind broadcast by HBO ·and · Golden ·Gloves match, Page
• ESPN.
.
·
danced all over the canvas and
"Page said it was a stepping so confounded his teen~age
stone to doing what Geotge ri~ the boy dropped his lii~
Foreman did!' said McFadden, and -gaped. Page knocked him
a transpl,ant~d New Yorker o\ft; . •
who sp~rts a M~iii· b~e~all
In 1978, at 20, he became '
111111 ford Wlndlllr QL 18781- Green,AT, AC,11~. Cruise, Power
1
,I
''
the National Golden Gloves'
cap.
L.NU111 Nil.. "".:.. ,......... '....." ....... "'""".' .............. .. ... .... .. " ... $12,885
I
heavywdsbt champion..' c:l&gt;ne '
. "He cap1e here t,o
McFadden 'said, "He WliS seri- yeadater, he turned pto1 ,
18tlll Ponlllo Mont.nnvhlw 18730 • 4 Dr, AT, AC, 11~. Crulae,
ous." '
'
·
· .In 1982, ,.promoter ' Don
PW&amp;L, PS, AM!FM/CO .................. ................. .... ................. $16,695
18M Ford Wlndltlr 18381·, AT, AC , 1111, Cruise, PWI!oL .... $8,995.
Since last month's bout, King entered ·the scene. The
18M ford Wlndltlr 1111822 -GrNn, AT, AC, 11", Cruise, Sport
Page·~ . condiVon. has bee11 _story goei that. King att~nded
Wheela .................................................................................... $7, 195
upgrad~dJroin critjcal ·to fair. die funer.~l of Page's father;
~~=-~-~~-~~.:.~T:.~~:.~~ ~~~~~:.~:~ ~~~-15::995
He was ~moved April 3 to a . paid for the service and th~ew'
18M
Car8VIn 18684· White, 7 Pass, V·6 Eng .. AT, AC .......
Louisville tehabilitation cen- himself sobbing onto the cofter. Family and hospital staff fin. He left with Page's signai't8ii'iioni·~·VI;;· ~e7iil·:·v:a·ii~ii: ;.,:r:-;;c;:·n·ii~:.·c;;;i::'""'
PW&amp;L.... ,, .......................... ............................................ .. .
'fill not. publicly discuss his tute on a contract.
II I
But Page discovered, as had
injuries.
1. Those who' have visited him many others, that life ~ith
; siay Page's eyes are open and he King can be vexing.
· is alert, but cannot speak or
Another heavyweight, Tim
mo:ve one side c;&gt;f his body. . ' Withe~poon, once sued King,
''' The fight is being invescigat- claiming fraud and conflict of
ed by the Kepnicky Athletic interest. He won SI million in
' 'Commission, which sanctions an out-of-court setdehteilt;
' ~nd regulates boxing matches. · Page confessed to a reporter
' "On boxing itself, I can't say he one~ carried . a . .357 mag- ..
that I'm an expert," said com• num to a 1986 fight so he
' mission executive ·director could shoot King -but thought
' Nancy Black, ; who ~trended better of it. ,•
the first fight of her ll(e ~ ' !e.fore wil\ning his. ,W.BA
, ~e~ alt.rr the Page -match .. ] ch,tnplonshlp; Page cllmb~
BY D&amp;VIWI IIAsnllllil

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Cleveland
28 51 .354
22
Allanla
24 55 .304
26

Ill?

w

17

34

L

25
28
30
49 30
43 37
28 50
17 62
54
54
50

,___
CIII

Pet
G8
.684
.875 ' 112
.825 41/2
.820

5

.539 11112
.367
25
.215
37

ThurodaJ'
•811,
Jersey 78
New

115, Ulah 93 • Pllillldelphia

-·=·-~8. ~W.Y. 4

2000--Cott C7oltl. Copirol. bOyS lllllltt-MIIIa:orlllt.,..,. llllrclolle. P . - . g .

Gl•4bcwv e. Hw2

b1

I

....

ltt&amp;-Oolid

n

107, _San Antonlol05, OT
OO, Yancouvet-87
LA LMonll19,- Ui2
Frlday'oWaohlnglan 113, Orlondo 1.10
New York 101, Allanla 85
Clavetand 97, New Jarsey 91
ToroniO 84, Miaml82
Indiana 113, Boston 108, OT
Utah 84, Chicago 83
Dallas 101 . Sacramenlo 97
Denvef 108, Golden Stale 92
Phoenix 109. Soalfo 100
HoosiOn 109, Ponland 103
L.A. Clippers Ill, Minnolola105

Solurdaf'oDolri&gt;il at Allanta, late
Denver at San Anlonio, !ale
Toronto at Milwaukee, late
Houston at Yanoou\ler, late
LA. Clippers at Golden Slate. lata

T-f•-

New Jarsey at llos10n, 12:30 p.m.
New Yollt 81 PlliladofpiU, 12:30 p.m,
Clavoland at WUiirlglon, I p.m. ·
Orlondo al Miami, 2 p.m.
Indiana o? a.k:ago, 3 p.m.
Utah al
3 p.m. .
POfllend at LA. Loklf1. 5:30 p.m.
Clllrfotto at Dolrolt. 8 p.m.
Dalal a15aallll. ~p.m.
SacramaniD at PhoerD, 10 p.m.

Mil•-·

liFL Ployo?fw
Stmll?otalo

SMurdoy'o Game
San Francisco at Onando, lata
Torlap'IGame
Chicago at Los Angoloa, 7 p.m.

. Chomplonohlp '
Sunday, Aprf? 21
Semifinal wimars, B p.m.

w.vo. high oehoot cOICh o? yoor ?Ill
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Wlmers ollhe
West VIrginia high &amp;chool coach of the year
award presented by the West Virginia
Sports Writers Association:

K~.

T - Counry, gifls

borlllttll
1885 Jolin O'N&lt;Iol, -

-Qito-ol&gt;ll

Catao.

HldGOfy 11 1 • :uc.d
Kar• ...... lllo&gt;dnglon
~.

W.V. II boPmoM.
GtMnlboro. una ...,....

Chriltlan,

Soulh ChariMton,

11182-Da.. Borkldale,

oon. boyo bor-1

w-

Cho-. S.C.
w•• ,.,.,., lo?ac:on
Salo'llollllll

wot--

Cho-. w.v.

KarwiiiJCllfa ollo&gt;dnglon

lttl--.llm - · St&gt;encet. 1990-f'aUt 8i?iafd, - · fool!&gt;ol
19811 Roger JaftetiOrl, crtplal, 10011&gt;111
' 11188--.lim LilY. O.k Hit, boyo 11187-Pout llilarll, · _.
11186--Bobllollor). Paden Cily, boyobls-

1

I
3

1985-b&gt;tl Nocicla, Siste-. loolbal1984-0on Slover. StonowaU Jacl&lt;son,

boyo bul&lt;etl!lll
11183-,Jim l.lly. Ook Hil. boys -

11182 ..... - .. Ulgan. boys basl&lt;al·
borl
1981-tDu Nocicla, Sislersllille, fOOibal
I~ Mldlael. North r.taoton, foOl·
bal
1879--Wayno Jomi.OO, llridger)orl. fool·
bal .
1978-..\enninQo Boyd, Northfollt, boys

-·

1977-Pete Culicerto, Woodrow Wilson,

r..,.,.._

· ·at...Coplla?
9 - Cily
Ccl?unM

IIIII3-Do\le Rogots. Mar1inlbulg, b0y1

bltkttbll

:a:wn 1

P*rtllal
aty
....
,..,,at
a.-.,
S.C.
va••.,..., • Mtcon

1tt7-oowl
91118 - -.
K~. T
--Coulr(,
-tlits

1991 Bryce

· - ployufJ """
&lt;&lt;liuchodconlarence

DMIIONH

. - 1.~21

·
;
•
•
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.

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-

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ball

39 40 AIM
22 57 .2'11

PocltcDMoion

··-

lt7

4
8
46 33 .582
10
43 37 .531 13112

1-llll?l
1-Dolu

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11

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2
5

7

- 3.

·foolball·track
·
·
1976-JemingS Boyd, Nonhfofk, bo1$
borll&lt;etball
1975-Jonnings Boyd, Nonhfollt, boys
ll&lt;JKolo 11 Otllw~ late
borll&lt;el&gt;al
R _ , OI'Po-. tote _
1974-Tex WiUiams. SL Alllans, boys
scranton a1 s -. tate
baskel&gt;al
Charlotte at Columbut. late
1973-Don Arlhur. Easr Bank. fOOibal
Durham at Toledo, kilt
1972-Wayno J amison, Bridgepof1, foot· • Louisville II Norfolk. tote
bal
Indianapolis al Alcbrnond. lale
1971- AI Morgan, Groenbfier EasL boys
Toc?eJ'obasl&lt;elbal
Bul?alo at Ottawa
1979-Frank Vincenl. Cllalleston. foot·
Chaflolle at Columbus
bal
Durham at Toledo
11189-Frank Vincenl. Charleslon. fool·
,....._.. al RJcl1mond
bal
1118&amp;-Ead kaa..... Monongah, foolboll
11187--&lt;:an Wool. Conrc?o-Kenova, foot·
,
bal
Dlvl- .
1tee--.108 Michael, lluckhannon, foot·
W L Pet. Q8
b81
Kennepo~s (\Y!lOlC)
1 2 .n8
11185--Morrlll Gainor, Bfuetleld, football
Otllrnorva (Oriofoo) 8 3 .825 I 112
11184-Aoy Wiliams, East Bonk. foolball LeJdngton (Astnlo)
5 4 .558
2
1983-Gflll1YIIIolapp, Buckl1annon,foot· C?uo.-.WV(8Jop)4 '4 .fiOO. 2112
bal
~- (GIInll) -.. 4 .500 2 112
11182-Merrll Gainer. Bluofteld, fOOibal
Lakswood ( - . ) '4 5 .444
3
1961-Bob Sullvan, Magnolia, all opofls GrNnot&gt;on&gt;IYanks) 3 5 .375 3 112
I ~Sam Mandich, Palltenburg. boys Htclrmy ( - )
2 7 .222
5
ballk44ball
-..185~ernl Gainor, Bluof&amp;eld, fOOibaU
W L Po!- . GB ,
1958-lluntell Carey, Weir, foolball
w~mfng1on IOOdgers) 7 2
• 1857- Sian Romanoski, DuriJer, boys ColurriJus (lndlono) 8 · .elfT
1~
track
savannah (Rangers) ~ 4 .558
1958---Sam LeRos~. St Albans, foolball , Auguste (f.lodSox)
4 5 .444
I 955-Lawis D'Antoni, Mullens, boys Capital Cily(Moll)
4 5 .444
3
basketball
_
Chaneston,SC(IlRays)4 5 .444
3
,
.
Macon (Braves)
4 5 .444
3
(1942·54 combined high school-college - AsheYile (Rockies) 2 . 7 .222
5
coach o1 year)
I
1951~erome Van Meter, Woodrow Wilson', all sports
• ·
Frldap'o Gomn
1950-Carl Hamill, Weir, footbarj
Auguste 2, AoheYile 1 • ·
1946-Jeron\o Van Meter, Woodrow Wlf·
Columbua 5, Capital C!IY-3
sOn, football
Sa,annah 8, Charle;ton, S.C. 4, . 11
1948-flie), Forest-Underwood, Hunting· Inning~
.
ton East, boys basketbatl,and Homer Filer,
Wilmlnglon 3, Maoon 1
University, loo1ball
Lakewood I, Hickory 0
194 ~ B!U Weber, South Charleston, all
Lexingtoo 13, Kannapoli13

lollrc?e,··-

Lou-··-A-,.,...

[I

-?IALL

...._.IAIIUII

ANAHEIM ANGEl S llcllvllod 28Adanl
KOIWMidy from ... 15-doy PiiiL
RHP llrfon Cooper and LHP Marl&lt;
Wkulnicz from Sail· ..... City gf the
PCL CljAioiiOIIINF Larry Bomol, fNF JaN
Nieooo and RHP r.tatt Wioo to SaJt Leke
Cly.
CHICAGO WHITE SOx-Aecal?ed RHP
wanzo a.~ to lrorn Cllarlolle o? ""'
tmomalional League.
MINNESOTA TWINS-S9"'d OF Quln1011 McCracken to a minot 1oa!7uo conttacl
. end llllignad t1im 10 Edmonlon olflo PCL
OAKLAND AT?iLET1C5-Recalled RHP
CGty lkle from Sacramorlto o5 1he PCL.
Sant OF Rollin Jennings outrtghl lo Saeta·
menlo.
. .
TAMPA' BAY DEY!~ RAY~tloned
RHP Ariel Priolo to Durham of tho lntema·
Ilona! Laogue. Recalled 38 Aub&lt;oy Hoi
from Durham.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES-Placed RHP Joe
Stusarski on 1he 15-day disabled Ast.
FLORIDA MARLIN5-Senl C Ramon
Costro OUIIIQhiiO Colgaf\1 ollho PCL
MflWAUK~E BREWERS- CaHOd up
RHP Chad FoM from Indianapolis of die
II'IIOmllfOnaf ~- AHP E Srul frllm 1he I 5-day clsabled 1111 101l1o Ill).
dey Dl. Sent RHP' Ben Sheela 10 .....
anopolfo.
MONTREAL EXP05-Signoc? RHP
Muato YoshiiiD a one.yaar contracl:.
o..-

...

lluflolo 2, Cll1owo I
Pa10iucl&lt;el3, Rocholl..-2. 1stgamo
Pa-et.,4,
2nd game
SCranton 8, SyriCUI4 1
Columbus 8. Chartol?a I
Oumam 5, Toledo 1
NOtlofk 3, lrdanopolfs 2
Aichlnond 8. Louilvflle 3

a

llllo?moM

.ne

~

. BAtKETBALL
NMian8l e·te n •
:tl"an
NBA-Flned Dollao Movertcka owner •
MarkCullanJIOO,OOO and IIJJPOnded 111m
for one game for making a dtrogatory II"'
tura and publicly Cf11iciZing oflf&lt;iala during a
game ogalnSI 111o P'-'ix Sooa "'! Apfl
II .

.

FOOTIIALL
-F-Ileaguo
NFL-Relnateted Tonnoosae Tltano
defensive lineman Joah Evane after he

::::"'.:,~"':= ~=~:,.

DENVER BRONCQS-Signed OT Todd
Fordham.
. OAKLAND RAIDER5-Signod RB Char·
lie Garner to a four-year contract.
SAN DIEGO CHAFIGERS-Stgned K
Wade Richey to an offer sheet.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-Announced _
the rellrement ol R.C. Owens, executive
assistant and alumN director.
HOCKEY
.
· National Hacl&lt;oy Loagua
DETROIT RED WINGs-Recalled G Ken
Wragget from Manitoba of lhe IHL and ·F
Jason Wllilamo lrorn Cincinnati of the AHL

'

''·

Capitars
darl&lt; .

~

New 0~-SAA .b}1aws to govern open
i enroUment among other things .,

named top

W.Va. prep

coach ·
CHARLESTON

Yean,

(AP) - For
Carl
Clark paid his dues and
lad little to show for it
save for perhaps
some calluses and bouts
of exhaustion.
He toiled -as both the
boys and girls basketball
coach at Capitaf High
School, including a forgettable pair of seasons
when both sportS were
played at the same time
after the girls switched
fiom the f.1ll to the winter.

Clark -could also be
seen before and after
practices and games
doting on the de~ils no
one else would bother
with - sweeping the
floor, filling water bottles, taping ankles, ~sh­
ing uniforms. He was
part coach, part manager, part custodian.
But now you can call
him part of an elite fra.
ternity of coaches,
·
From those humble
and jumbled beginnings, Clark has penevered and placed the
Cougars' program on · a
pedestal
few
!lave
reached wmmng
back- to-back
Class
AAA boys · championships. For his efforts,
he has been voted as the
"" coach
state - high school
of the year by the.West
Virgipia Sports Writers
Association.

PREP SPORTS

'

·

•

•
:

· BY Scorr WOI.FE.

:

0\IP CORRESPONDENT

member school administrators, parents,
and srudenc-athletics· are reminded that
OHSAA Bylaw 4-7-3 (tr.an$fers)
becomes effective at the beginning of the
2001-02 school year, as approved by the
membership during last fallis referendum
'I(Oiing. The OHSAA . highly encourages·
all persons involved in athletics to review
this regulation with student-athletes
before the current si:hool year en,ds.
New Bylaw 4-7-3 means students can
make • choice of a school when advancing from grade .8 to grade 9, but there
would be a one year p.e riod of ineligiblity if a transfer was made at any time after
beginning grade 9. Exceptions' are 1.) if
the parents or legal guardian change residence from one public school district to
another; 2.) if the superintendents of
both districts enter into a written agreement in order to protect the OHSAA
CommisJioner; 3.) if a school doses, and
4.) if a · student transfen to the State
School for the Blind or State School for
the Deaf.
Not including the exceptions, if a student starts a school in grade nine, he has
four years of eligibility at that school. If
that same student changes schools after
entering grade nine, he . has to set out a
full year of sports activities, in essence
cutting his eligibility to just three years,
assuming he stays at the second school.
The followin_~t is the implementation
for this new transfer rule: At the beginning of the 2001-02 school year, a srudent who is entering grade 9, 1-0, 11 or
12 may embll in and attend any member
school that accepts the student. The studentis eligiblity shall be established by
one of two situations: 1.) participating in
a contest (scrimmage, preview or regular
season contest) prior to the opening day
of a school, or 2.) attemJ~pg the fint day
of school' at any member school.
Once eligiblity has been established at a
member· school for the 2001-02 school

:
COLUMBUS - The, Ohio High
: School Athletic Association (OHSAA) ,
i the governing body that regulates athlet: ic events and athletic eligibility in the
.~ state of Ohio, has adopied Bylaws 4-7-3
; and 4-8-3, the new law governing open
~ enrollment srudents, foreign exchange
~ students and athletic eligibility.
:
The OHSAA is a voluntary, unincor: porated, not-for-profit association of
:. public and private high schools and 7th
:; and 8th grade schools. During the 2000,:'. 2001 school year there were 816 member
1 schools. There were 855 member schools
~ in the 7th-8th grade division.
''
Several years ago the OHSAA adopted
•- rules governing eligibility for open
•.•• enrollment~dents, . who moved from
"\
:• one district to another in pursuit of aca•: demic excellence under Ohio law. The
:: open · enrollement laws unlocked the
~ flood gates for a mass exodus to athletic
'· heaven. Athletes who were unable to
:;'· gain eligibility, except for a move from
~ . one district to another, now could live at
~ home and go to the school with the best
;. athletic programs.
1 Star players were seen abandoning
:~ mediocre programs for established prof grams, and some schools simply became a
~ collection of players resembling an all-star
~ -team. It wasn't the single-moVe athletes,
: however, that triggered a change, but
: playen who shopped around for just the
~ . right school; the player who made multi-.
:• pie moves with no eligibility penalties.
,:;. What was a wonderful deal for srudents
' seeking academic excellence became a
: black mark·on the integrity and loyalty
: high school team sportS. Students went
; team shopping under the guise of acadet mics. Now, all that will c~ge and return
t 'to requirements very similar to the pre;. open enrollment days. .
;
Ohio High School Athletic Association

of

year, the srudent nuy not tr.aosfer to
another school and retain athletic eligibility unless he or She meets one of the
exceptions to this Bylaw.
The complete results of the fall 2000
referendum issues along with frequendy
asked questions pertaining to Bylaw 4-73 appeared in the January 2001 OHSAA
Athlete magazine. fhe vote for this referendum was 511 in favor of the new bylaw
(82.8 percent) and 106 opposed (17.2
pereent).
By voting _in favor of revised Bylaw 48-1 (Issue 14132), students from countries and provinces outside the US. are
ineligible for interscholastic competition
except: 1.) if the student's parents mow.
into and are legal residents of the s~ool
district in which the student is enrolled
and attending and the OHSAA Commissioner gives approval; 2.) if a student is in
.an aP.proved CSlET (Council on Standanis for International Educational Tra,·el) program and the QHSAA Commissioner gives approval (maximum of one
year of eligibility); 3.) if a student is legally ~dopted by resident of the school district in -whiCh the student is attending
and the OHSAA Commissioner gives
approval; or 4.) if a student's parents are
U.S. citizens but are residing outside the
country, and the OHSAA Commissioner
• gives approval. The vote was 317 in favor
ofthe modified bylaw (98.8 pen::ent) and
four opposed (1.2 percent) .
The major change with the bylaw dealing with students from foreign countries
not in an approved foreign exchange pro- _
gram is that students will · no longer
become eligible by obtaining a change in
legal guatdianship. A proposal under
exception 2.) that would have made foreign exchange students ineligible f'or ·
OHSAA spon,ored tournaments was not
approved. ·
'
Both changes have an ell'ective 4ate of
August 1,-2001.-

L-------------~·

.

1 set to malce it 4-0.
complimented each other .well in coor. Par~ ~ndJ:IU!a~~iddJ,iOI'Jwl.fl!!l"JIL.-CO play to move past I:J;w _al).dJ,ih
at -n1,1mber one sinjes againit Brownell lian Mendietta 8-3 in a well-contested
and Steph Haas. Tliis time the Gallia gals set, giving the Falcons a 6-0 advantage.
got it going well.
·
At third·doubles, Myers and Haas col- The Blue Angels pushed it to the lim- Ia borated neady to edge past Amber
its, but the Falcon pair was up to the Athey and Miranda Fields 8-4 for the
challenge.
final 6-1 team totaL
-'
Now standing at a shining 8-0 seasonTeam play and searing ground strokes
on crucial late points brought a hard- a! mark, the Lady Falcons take a week
fought 8-6 win for WHS in a dandy ofT for spring break and resume play on
duel.
Mond~y. April 23 in a match at Gallia
Sabrina Tennant and Shonna Halstead Academy.

Waba.ma,

;;
••.
•
.,•

'

fiomPIIpBI

•
three singles. Neither could wrangle a
: safe lead, but Fields gained a tense 8-6
~ win with some key shots at crucial times
~ in _
the final three games.
11
:
Then, Laura Parker made 1t an official
; team victory with a sweep of singles.
: Kristen Myen battled, but Parker won
:.1 the close ones, and captured a strong 8-

..

•w
•••
•"

..•

-

.

carter

;

·-

•
••-~

fiomPapBl

~

:
;
.:
:
'
I
~I

And what'~ the payoll' for the WUSA?
The )eagu~ has locked up a 22-match
television schedule, which includes the
semifinals and championship in late
August. TNT and CNN/SI will broadcast the matches, with TNT airing the
playo'f!S and eight regub,t season broad· dasts: i\11 11 CNN/SI telecasts will be

Cup 1999:
shown on Sunday evenings.
Obviously, the level· won't be the sam,e
TV ratings for World Cup 19~9 were
as
what fans witnessed during World CuR
outstanding and with fhe holdoYer of the
tbp players froin rhe rournament, the 1999. After all, it's not going to be
WUSA sliould put up some · decent national team lversus_national team, but
matQ!es 'should be entertaining and fairnumben.
· ' '
, · ,'\.
1
, Those numbers ~ depend _on the ly high scorin~ a key to keeping interest.
lev,el of play the leai'le _ofTen; which The influx _o f top shelf domestic and forshoold be pretty good. After all, .tl;11! U.S, -eign talent also automatically raises the
is the world l~der in women's soccer, level. _
All in all, it seems the WUSA is ofr to
although • the rest 'o f Ol;lr itltertlational
a
good
start even before taking the field .
neighbors have nude up consi~erable
So rock on , ladies, we'll be watching.
as evidend:d at World
. ground since.r",, 1995,
.,
.., ·~'
-

f."'

LS Package, 6.0 VS Engine,
Auto Trans., Towing Package
LOADED

1996 Fora Ranger
Extenaea EtJb"-

. Super Sharp! Locally Owned!

~

: ----~~1~--~--~------------------------~--~--~~~------~------------------------I usually stay up until 1 a.m. (only to
~·'

~

~,

:

~

1

coo·p-· er
fntna Pail Bl

;•
:·
:

the 'super Bowl my first season, but
~ baseball, especially the W:iy we play it, is a
: different story.
.
For instance, in my football drafts, you
• draft the best players available right off the I' bat. A Peyton Manning or Kurt Warner
. : last -~ might have bee!) yout tot-' pkk.
' . ! ·even trie4 fat1t;asy basketball ~ couple
, 'of yean ago and I hated, it.
· : But the baseball draft is a different story.
; A true · rotisserie draft involves paying
: · money to get players.
: Not real money. mind you.
~ . ·You start out with 260 fan~y dollars. ·
; ·. With that. you have .to draft a team of 23
' p~yers, nine of which have to be pitchen.
; So, in the first round, the best players
won't be drafted right away. ·
,• Take Pedro Martinez; for instance.
: ·some ~onsider him the best fantasy
: player in the . game since · he's almost
: · untouchable.

i

20GOC!itvy
Caviller Sldln

150*

•Aulomltlc
• All Conditioning

• AIIIFM Calllll

....

CNIVIOLU

f"

...

'

' Bul'in our draft! Pedro is SSO tlii~ ~ea,on according to,-'the pricing. li~ .~ use get up 7 a.tn. for work) to check bO:xSfrom john Hunt ofB,uepaiiWeeldy;II;'h_at's cores and see what my players did that
almost a fifth of your team's funds. ,_ ., day.
- Now during the season, let's say.. .. o)l,
Suffice it to say. Pedro ~·t dtatl:ed.
There are leagues that bid for players, Barty Larkin gets injured and is out for
t~ -seaso_n and he's·on your team.
-but I don't want to go there just yet.
l!arkin is worth $15 . ·
. Last year, in my tint full s~a.son of rotisserie, I finished d_ead last to seasoned vet- - Now, you are in a position of replacing
Larkin with another player SlS or less or
erans.
This year, I'm' currendy in the middle doing multiple moves, perhaps drop a
of .the pack and acruaJ!y tied fo1 first in Derek BeD, who is S14. This frees up $29
for pick up tWo .outfielders. .
·•
stolen ba~es. , ., _ 1 ( ~ • : ' . , ·:.
Then
you
can
pick
up
a
$20
outfield~r
The d1fferen~e 1s I, was able ~o at.ift
players that _wiU play .aJmo&amp;t all the time, _and a $9 outfielder if you wish.
Oh, by the way, you 'Il= limited to three
but so far 'they haven't produced like "''d
moves a month for S2 (of real111oney) a
w:ont them to.
-·
But, since they. are getting~ lot of play- move. And ,then you can only make
ing time (my batt~n co~lj_ined ~e . moves once a week (with a Friday deadalmost 100 morc at-bats than the next line) to go into ell'ect the following week.
Then it goes back to the cursing thing
team), I ha\&gt;e the potential to jump up in
I talked about earlier.
the standings.
'
But in the end, it's fun.A challenge realLive and learn, I suppose.
I never ·realized how .much fun rotis- ly. And it gives me another reason to-look
ierie baseball would be, thouah. and hav- focward to baseball season.
But. of course, there will probably be a
ing a home computer linked to _the intc~·
lock-out
in Octobe~. so wl\y bother.
net is a great help.
· -

'

I: ------~~--~.-~--~----------------------------------------------------------~------~~
atta-ck but didn't quit.
nium or· the other during a fight," he

:

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.

Mudd said hi; opponent~~ '!-!PPOted

: to bo 40 yean old _;md w•lah 175

l

pounds.- Inatead, the men WJI 30 atld
w.illl-d 200.; Mudd wu !punched ~
' hard, his 1 t~rnun\ cracked. He had a heart

1

•' '

~

'

!I

"I !llid, 'Hell, I feel OK Let's keep
soins.' "
,
Ht ~nded up lo!ini·
Mudd ftels bad for Page, but he
know; all too weD that terrible things
ca11 happen in boxinll·
'4Look, yo1,1r bi'IPin..!!tj in liquid in your
.brain pan -- 10 yo1,1r brain is constantly
being crashe«tagain~t one sidt of the era~~

said. "But lome of these guys love bo~ing
and they Can't give it Up."
• _p1, '
Promoter O'Brien .p-uts it another
way.
"Some of them never know th e
glory's over. It's up to the trainer or man~gerto ~it them down and say, ·Hey,. it's
tim~ to get a job.' And, I'd say, some of
them just can't do anything else."
I
•

2001 Chevy
Cavalier 4 Door

Auto Transmission, Air Condltlonlng,
Factory Warranty

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52 27 .65e
50 28 .633

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2,JifOIJIOivileH-Iel1!

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3, Aia.Mancheste~-1)-

23

4, LooisvilleSlTl'&lt;JmasAqoinas
5, LaGrange?&lt;eystone
e. Kansalllal&lt;otalll
8, 1tie)Spring.NE
8, P011Smoo111W.
t. Bloom-&lt;:arroft
8, (fte)P..,.,..IaWoodridge

20
18
15
15

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8

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58
54

3, ~ranldln(21_

4,
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4, (.. Aoc7clordf&gt;a-y(1) 7. Oldfort
l. Ri llftWIW..tem

38
38
38
32
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.................. AIIG

1

PI

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AIPintlclllvlalon

,
•
;
•
•

•

-.

xu~

1-f'orlland

Soalllo

L.A. Clippetl
~s-

W L l'cl
GB
Z·Phlladelphla • 54 25 .684
x-Miami
48 31 .608
8
•·New Yollt
47 32 .585
7
x-ortal)do
· 42 37 -.532
12
Boston
35 45 .438 I 9 112
New Jersey
26 54 .325 28 112
Wathington
19 eo .241
35
Control Dlvlolon
W LPcl
GB
y-MIIwaukeo
50 29 .633
K·Toronto
45 34 .570
5
x-&lt;:haototto
43 36 .544
7
M·ll)dlana
39 40 .484
11
Dotroft 31 47 .397 18 112
Cleveland
28 51 .354
22
Allanla
24 55 .304
26

Ill?

w

17

34

L

25
28
30
49 30
43 37
28 50
17 62
54
54
50

,___
CIII

Pet
G8
.684
.875 ' 112
.825 41/2
.820

5

.539 11112
.367
25
.215
37

ThurodaJ'
•811,
Jersey 78
New

115, Ulah 93 • Pllillldelphia

-·=·-~8. ~W.Y. 4

2000--Cott C7oltl. Copirol. bOyS lllllltt-MIIIa:orlllt.,..,. llllrclolle. P . - . g .

Gl•4bcwv e. Hw2

b1

I

....

ltt&amp;-Oolid

n

107, _San Antonlol05, OT
OO, Yancouvet-87
LA LMonll19,- Ui2
Frlday'oWaohlnglan 113, Orlondo 1.10
New York 101, Allanla 85
Clavetand 97, New Jarsey 91
ToroniO 84, Miaml82
Indiana 113, Boston 108, OT
Utah 84, Chicago 83
Dallas 101 . Sacramenlo 97
Denvef 108, Golden Stale 92
Phoenix 109. Soalfo 100
HoosiOn 109, Ponland 103
L.A. Clippers Ill, Minnolola105

Solurdaf'oDolri&gt;il at Allanta, late
Denver at San Anlonio, !ale
Toronto at Milwaukee, late
Houston at Yanoou\ler, late
LA. Clippers at Golden Slate. lata

T-f•-

New Jarsey at llos10n, 12:30 p.m.
New Yollt 81 PlliladofpiU, 12:30 p.m,
Clavoland at WUiirlglon, I p.m. ·
Orlondo al Miami, 2 p.m.
Indiana o? a.k:ago, 3 p.m.
Utah al
3 p.m. .
POfllend at LA. Loklf1. 5:30 p.m.
Clllrfotto at Dolrolt. 8 p.m.
Dalal a15aallll. ~p.m.
SacramaniD at PhoerD, 10 p.m.

Mil•-·

liFL Ployo?fw
Stmll?otalo

SMurdoy'o Game
San Francisco at Onando, lata
Torlap'IGame
Chicago at Los Angoloa, 7 p.m.

. Chomplonohlp '
Sunday, Aprf? 21
Semifinal wimars, B p.m.

w.vo. high oehoot cOICh o? yoor ?Ill
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - Wlmers ollhe
West VIrginia high &amp;chool coach of the year
award presented by the West Virginia
Sports Writers Association:

K~.

T - Counry, gifls

borlllttll
1885 Jolin O'N&lt;Iol, -

-Qito-ol&gt;ll

Catao.

HldGOfy 11 1 • :uc.d
Kar• ...... lllo&gt;dnglon
~.

W.V. II boPmoM.
GtMnlboro. una ...,....

Chriltlan,

Soulh ChariMton,

11182-Da.. Borkldale,

oon. boyo bor-1

w-

Cho-. S.C.
w•• ,.,.,., lo?ac:on
Salo'llollllll

wot--

Cho-. w.v.

KarwiiiJCllfa ollo&gt;dnglon

lttl--.llm - · St&gt;encet. 1990-f'aUt 8i?iafd, - · fool!&gt;ol
19811 Roger JaftetiOrl, crtplal, 10011&gt;111
' 11188--.lim LilY. O.k Hit, boyo 11187-Pout llilarll, · _.
11186--Bobllollor). Paden Cily, boyobls-

1

I
3

1985-b&gt;tl Nocicla, Siste-. loolbal1984-0on Slover. StonowaU Jacl&lt;son,

boyo bul&lt;etl!lll
11183-,Jim l.lly. Ook Hil. boys -

11182 ..... - .. Ulgan. boys basl&lt;al·
borl
1981-tDu Nocicla, Sislersllille, fOOibal
I~ Mldlael. North r.taoton, foOl·
bal
1879--Wayno Jomi.OO, llridger)orl. fool·
bal .
1978-..\enninQo Boyd, Northfollt, boys

-·

1977-Pete Culicerto, Woodrow Wilson,

r..,.,.._

· ·at...Coplla?
9 - Cily
Ccl?unM

IIIII3-Do\le Rogots. Mar1inlbulg, b0y1

bltkttbll

:a:wn 1

P*rtllal
aty
....
,..,,at
a.-.,
S.C.
va••.,..., • Mtcon

1tt7-oowl
91118 - -.
K~. T
--Coulr(,
-tlits

1991 Bryce

· - ployufJ """
&lt;&lt;liuchodconlarence

DMIIONH

. - 1.~21

·
;
•
•
'
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.

..so..-

-

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ball

39 40 AIM
22 57 .2'11

PocltcDMoion

··-

lt7

4
8
46 33 .582
10
43 37 .531 13112

1-llll?l
1-Dolu

Qlto

QNo ...., -

~·~r~.~~~~~~Ap~~~1~1,~~~Q~~~~~----------------_!~~~·:'~I~d~~!I~P~D~~~·~G~I"~I~p~D~~7~~CN~·~o~·!P~~~~~~~s~rs~r~rt~,¥rV~
11

,-

,....,.._

2
5

7

- 3.

·foolball·track
·
·
1976-JemingS Boyd, Nonhfofk, bo1$
borll&lt;etball
1975-Jonnings Boyd, Nonhfollt, boys
ll&lt;JKolo 11 Otllw~ late
borll&lt;el&gt;al
R _ , OI'Po-. tote _
1974-Tex WiUiams. SL Alllans, boys
scranton a1 s -. tate
baskel&gt;al
Charlotte at Columbut. late
1973-Don Arlhur. Easr Bank. fOOibal
Durham at Toledo, kilt
1972-Wayno J amison, Bridgepof1, foot· • Louisville II Norfolk. tote
bal
Indianapolis al Alcbrnond. lale
1971- AI Morgan, Groenbfier EasL boys
Toc?eJ'obasl&lt;elbal
Bul?alo at Ottawa
1979-Frank Vincenl. Cllalleston. foot·
Chaflolle at Columbus
bal
Durham at Toledo
11189-Frank Vincenl. Charleslon. fool·
,....._.. al RJcl1mond
bal
1118&amp;-Ead kaa..... Monongah, foolboll
11187--&lt;:an Wool. Conrc?o-Kenova, foot·
,
bal
Dlvl- .
1tee--.108 Michael, lluckhannon, foot·
W L Pet. Q8
b81
Kennepo~s (\Y!lOlC)
1 2 .n8
11185--Morrlll Gainor, Bfuetleld, football
Otllrnorva (Oriofoo) 8 3 .825 I 112
11184-Aoy Wiliams, East Bonk. foolball LeJdngton (Astnlo)
5 4 .558
2
1983-Gflll1YIIIolapp, Buckl1annon,foot· C?uo.-.WV(8Jop)4 '4 .fiOO. 2112
bal
~- (GIInll) -.. 4 .500 2 112
11182-Merrll Gainer. Bluofteld, fOOibal
Lakswood ( - . ) '4 5 .444
3
1961-Bob Sullvan, Magnolia, all opofls GrNnot&gt;on&gt;IYanks) 3 5 .375 3 112
I ~Sam Mandich, Palltenburg. boys Htclrmy ( - )
2 7 .222
5
ballk44ball
-..185~ernl Gainor, Bluof&amp;eld, fOOibaU
W L Po!- . GB ,
1958-lluntell Carey, Weir, foolball
w~mfng1on IOOdgers) 7 2
• 1857- Sian Romanoski, DuriJer, boys ColurriJus (lndlono) 8 · .elfT
1~
track
savannah (Rangers) ~ 4 .558
1958---Sam LeRos~. St Albans, foolball , Auguste (f.lodSox)
4 5 .444
I 955-Lawis D'Antoni, Mullens, boys Capital Cily(Moll)
4 5 .444
3
basketball
_
Chaneston,SC(IlRays)4 5 .444
3
,
.
Macon (Braves)
4 5 .444
3
(1942·54 combined high school-college - AsheYile (Rockies) 2 . 7 .222
5
coach o1 year)
I
1951~erome Van Meter, Woodrow Wilson', all sports
• ·
Frldap'o Gomn
1950-Carl Hamill, Weir, footbarj
Auguste 2, AoheYile 1 • ·
1946-Jeron\o Van Meter, Woodrow Wlf·
Columbua 5, Capital C!IY-3
sOn, football
Sa,annah 8, Charle;ton, S.C. 4, . 11
1948-flie), Forest-Underwood, Hunting· Inning~
.
ton East, boys basketbatl,and Homer Filer,
Wilmlnglon 3, Maoon 1
University, loo1ball
Lakewood I, Hickory 0
194 ~ B!U Weber, South Charleston, all
Lexingtoo 13, Kannapoli13

lollrc?e,··-

Lou-··-A-,.,...

[I

-?IALL

...._.IAIIUII

ANAHEIM ANGEl S llcllvllod 28Adanl
KOIWMidy from ... 15-doy PiiiL
RHP llrfon Cooper and LHP Marl&lt;
Wkulnicz from Sail· ..... City gf the
PCL CljAioiiOIIINF Larry Bomol, fNF JaN
Nieooo and RHP r.tatt Wioo to SaJt Leke
Cly.
CHICAGO WHITE SOx-Aecal?ed RHP
wanzo a.~ to lrorn Cllarlolle o? ""'
tmomalional League.
MINNESOTA TWINS-S9"'d OF Quln1011 McCracken to a minot 1oa!7uo conttacl
. end llllignad t1im 10 Edmonlon olflo PCL
OAKLAND AT?iLET1C5-Recalled RHP
CGty lkle from Sacramorlto o5 1he PCL.
Sant OF Rollin Jennings outrtghl lo Saeta·
menlo.
. .
TAMPA' BAY DEY!~ RAY~tloned
RHP Ariel Priolo to Durham of tho lntema·
Ilona! Laogue. Recalled 38 Aub&lt;oy Hoi
from Durham.
National League
ATLANTA BRAVES-Placed RHP Joe
Stusarski on 1he 15-day disabled Ast.
FLORIDA MARLIN5-Senl C Ramon
Costro OUIIIQhiiO Colgaf\1 ollho PCL
MflWAUK~E BREWERS- CaHOd up
RHP Chad FoM from Indianapolis of die
II'IIOmllfOnaf ~- AHP E Srul frllm 1he I 5-day clsabled 1111 101l1o Ill).
dey Dl. Sent RHP' Ben Sheela 10 .....
anopolfo.
MONTREAL EXP05-Signoc? RHP
Muato YoshiiiD a one.yaar contracl:.
o..-

...

lluflolo 2, Cll1owo I
Pa10iucl&lt;el3, Rocholl..-2. 1stgamo
Pa-et.,4,
2nd game
SCranton 8, SyriCUI4 1
Columbus 8. Chartol?a I
Oumam 5, Toledo 1
NOtlofk 3, lrdanopolfs 2
Aichlnond 8. Louilvflle 3

a

llllo?moM

.ne

~

. BAtKETBALL
NMian8l e·te n •
:tl"an
NBA-Flned Dollao Movertcka owner •
MarkCullanJIOO,OOO and IIJJPOnded 111m
for one game for making a dtrogatory II"'
tura and publicly Cf11iciZing oflf&lt;iala during a
game ogalnSI 111o P'-'ix Sooa "'! Apfl
II .

.

FOOTIIALL
-F-Ileaguo
NFL-Relnateted Tonnoosae Tltano
defensive lineman Joah Evane after he

::::"'.:,~"':= ~=~:,.

DENVER BRONCQS-Signed OT Todd
Fordham.
. OAKLAND RAIDER5-Signod RB Char·
lie Garner to a four-year contract.
SAN DIEGO CHAFIGERS-Stgned K
Wade Richey to an offer sheet.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-Announced _
the rellrement ol R.C. Owens, executive
assistant and alumN director.
HOCKEY
.
· National Hacl&lt;oy Loagua
DETROIT RED WINGs-Recalled G Ken
Wragget from Manitoba of lhe IHL and ·F
Jason Wllilamo lrorn Cincinnati of the AHL

'

''·

Capitars
darl&lt; .

~

New 0~-SAA .b}1aws to govern open
i enroUment among other things .,

named top

W.Va. prep

coach ·
CHARLESTON

Yean,

(AP) - For
Carl
Clark paid his dues and
lad little to show for it
save for perhaps
some calluses and bouts
of exhaustion.
He toiled -as both the
boys and girls basketball
coach at Capitaf High
School, including a forgettable pair of seasons
when both sportS were
played at the same time
after the girls switched
fiom the f.1ll to the winter.

Clark -could also be
seen before and after
practices and games
doting on the de~ils no
one else would bother
with - sweeping the
floor, filling water bottles, taping ankles, ~sh­
ing uniforms. He was
part coach, part manager, part custodian.
But now you can call
him part of an elite fra.
ternity of coaches,
·
From those humble
and jumbled beginnings, Clark has penevered and placed the
Cougars' program on · a
pedestal
few
!lave
reached wmmng
back- to-back
Class
AAA boys · championships. For his efforts,
he has been voted as the
"" coach
state - high school
of the year by the.West
Virgipia Sports Writers
Association.

PREP SPORTS

'

·

•

•
:

· BY Scorr WOI.FE.

:

0\IP CORRESPONDENT

member school administrators, parents,
and srudenc-athletics· are reminded that
OHSAA Bylaw 4-7-3 (tr.an$fers)
becomes effective at the beginning of the
2001-02 school year, as approved by the
membership during last fallis referendum
'I(Oiing. The OHSAA . highly encourages·
all persons involved in athletics to review
this regulation with student-athletes
before the current si:hool year en,ds.
New Bylaw 4-7-3 means students can
make • choice of a school when advancing from grade .8 to grade 9, but there
would be a one year p.e riod of ineligiblity if a transfer was made at any time after
beginning grade 9. Exceptions' are 1.) if
the parents or legal guardian change residence from one public school district to
another; 2.) if the superintendents of
both districts enter into a written agreement in order to protect the OHSAA
CommisJioner; 3.) if a school doses, and
4.) if a · student transfen to the State
School for the Blind or State School for
the Deaf.
Not including the exceptions, if a student starts a school in grade nine, he has
four years of eligibility at that school. If
that same student changes schools after
entering grade nine, he . has to set out a
full year of sports activities, in essence
cutting his eligibility to just three years,
assuming he stays at the second school.
The followin_~t is the implementation
for this new transfer rule: At the beginning of the 2001-02 school year, a srudent who is entering grade 9, 1-0, 11 or
12 may embll in and attend any member
school that accepts the student. The studentis eligiblity shall be established by
one of two situations: 1.) participating in
a contest (scrimmage, preview or regular
season contest) prior to the opening day
of a school, or 2.) attemJ~pg the fint day
of school' at any member school.
Once eligiblity has been established at a
member· school for the 2001-02 school

:
COLUMBUS - The, Ohio High
: School Athletic Association (OHSAA) ,
i the governing body that regulates athlet: ic events and athletic eligibility in the
.~ state of Ohio, has adopied Bylaws 4-7-3
; and 4-8-3, the new law governing open
~ enrollment srudents, foreign exchange
~ students and athletic eligibility.
:
The OHSAA is a voluntary, unincor: porated, not-for-profit association of
:. public and private high schools and 7th
:; and 8th grade schools. During the 2000,:'. 2001 school year there were 816 member
1 schools. There were 855 member schools
~ in the 7th-8th grade division.
''
Several years ago the OHSAA adopted
•- rules governing eligibility for open
•.•• enrollment~dents, . who moved from
"\
:• one district to another in pursuit of aca•: demic excellence under Ohio law. The
:: open · enrollement laws unlocked the
~ flood gates for a mass exodus to athletic
'· heaven. Athletes who were unable to
:;'· gain eligibility, except for a move from
~ . one district to another, now could live at
~ home and go to the school with the best
;. athletic programs.
1 Star players were seen abandoning
:~ mediocre programs for established prof grams, and some schools simply became a
~ collection of players resembling an all-star
~ -team. It wasn't the single-moVe athletes,
: however, that triggered a change, but
: playen who shopped around for just the
~ . right school; the player who made multi-.
:• pie moves with no eligibility penalties.
,:;. What was a wonderful deal for srudents
' seeking academic excellence became a
: black mark·on the integrity and loyalty
: high school team sportS. Students went
; team shopping under the guise of acadet mics. Now, all that will c~ge and return
t 'to requirements very similar to the pre;. open enrollment days. .
;
Ohio High School Athletic Association

of

year, the srudent nuy not tr.aosfer to
another school and retain athletic eligibility unless he or She meets one of the
exceptions to this Bylaw.
The complete results of the fall 2000
referendum issues along with frequendy
asked questions pertaining to Bylaw 4-73 appeared in the January 2001 OHSAA
Athlete magazine. fhe vote for this referendum was 511 in favor of the new bylaw
(82.8 percent) and 106 opposed (17.2
pereent).
By voting _in favor of revised Bylaw 48-1 (Issue 14132), students from countries and provinces outside the US. are
ineligible for interscholastic competition
except: 1.) if the student's parents mow.
into and are legal residents of the s~ool
district in which the student is enrolled
and attending and the OHSAA Commissioner gives approval; 2.) if a student is in
.an aP.proved CSlET (Council on Standanis for International Educational Tra,·el) program and the QHSAA Commissioner gives approval (maximum of one
year of eligibility); 3.) if a student is legally ~dopted by resident of the school district in -whiCh the student is attending
and the OHSAA Commissioner gives
approval; or 4.) if a student's parents are
U.S. citizens but are residing outside the
country, and the OHSAA Commissioner
• gives approval. The vote was 317 in favor
ofthe modified bylaw (98.8 pen::ent) and
four opposed (1.2 percent) .
The major change with the bylaw dealing with students from foreign countries
not in an approved foreign exchange pro- _
gram is that students will · no longer
become eligible by obtaining a change in
legal guatdianship. A proposal under
exception 2.) that would have made foreign exchange students ineligible f'or ·
OHSAA spon,ored tournaments was not
approved. ·
'
Both changes have an ell'ective 4ate of
August 1,-2001.-

L-------------~·

.

1 set to malce it 4-0.
complimented each other .well in coor. Par~ ~ndJ:IU!a~~iddJ,iOI'Jwl.fl!!l"JIL.-CO play to move past I:J;w _al).dJ,ih
at -n1,1mber one sinjes againit Brownell lian Mendietta 8-3 in a well-contested
and Steph Haas. Tliis time the Gallia gals set, giving the Falcons a 6-0 advantage.
got it going well.
·
At third·doubles, Myers and Haas col- The Blue Angels pushed it to the lim- Ia borated neady to edge past Amber
its, but the Falcon pair was up to the Athey and Miranda Fields 8-4 for the
challenge.
final 6-1 team totaL
-'
Now standing at a shining 8-0 seasonTeam play and searing ground strokes
on crucial late points brought a hard- a! mark, the Lady Falcons take a week
fought 8-6 win for WHS in a dandy ofT for spring break and resume play on
duel.
Mond~y. April 23 in a match at Gallia
Sabrina Tennant and Shonna Halstead Academy.

Waba.ma,

;;
••.
•
.,•

'

fiomPIIpBI

•
three singles. Neither could wrangle a
: safe lead, but Fields gained a tense 8-6
~ win with some key shots at crucial times
~ in _
the final three games.
11
:
Then, Laura Parker made 1t an official
; team victory with a sweep of singles.
: Kristen Myen battled, but Parker won
:.1 the close ones, and captured a strong 8-

..

•w
•••
•"

..•

-

.

carter

;

·-

•
••-~

fiomPapBl

~

:
;
.:
:
'
I
~I

And what'~ the payoll' for the WUSA?
The )eagu~ has locked up a 22-match
television schedule, which includes the
semifinals and championship in late
August. TNT and CNN/SI will broadcast the matches, with TNT airing the
playo'f!S and eight regub,t season broad· dasts: i\11 11 CNN/SI telecasts will be

Cup 1999:
shown on Sunday evenings.
Obviously, the level· won't be the sam,e
TV ratings for World Cup 19~9 were
as
what fans witnessed during World CuR
outstanding and with fhe holdoYer of the
tbp players froin rhe rournament, the 1999. After all, it's not going to be
WUSA sliould put up some · decent national team lversus_national team, but
matQ!es 'should be entertaining and fairnumben.
· ' '
, · ,'\.
1
, Those numbers ~ depend _on the ly high scorin~ a key to keeping interest.
lev,el of play the leai'le _ofTen; which The influx _o f top shelf domestic and forshoold be pretty good. After all, .tl;11! U.S, -eign talent also automatically raises the
is the world l~der in women's soccer, level. _
All in all, it seems the WUSA is ofr to
although • the rest 'o f Ol;lr itltertlational
a
good
start even before taking the field .
neighbors have nude up consi~erable
So rock on , ladies, we'll be watching.
as evidend:d at World
. ground since.r",, 1995,
.,
.., ·~'
-

f."'

LS Package, 6.0 VS Engine,
Auto Trans., Towing Package
LOADED

1996 Fora Ranger
Extenaea EtJb"-

. Super Sharp! Locally Owned!

~

: ----~~1~--~--~------------------------~--~--~~~------~------------------------I usually stay up until 1 a.m. (only to
~·'

~

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:

~

1

coo·p-· er
fntna Pail Bl

;•
:·
:

the 'super Bowl my first season, but
~ baseball, especially the W:iy we play it, is a
: different story.
.
For instance, in my football drafts, you
• draft the best players available right off the I' bat. A Peyton Manning or Kurt Warner
. : last -~ might have bee!) yout tot-' pkk.
' . ! ·even trie4 fat1t;asy basketball ~ couple
, 'of yean ago and I hated, it.
· : But the baseball draft is a different story.
; A true · rotisserie draft involves paying
: · money to get players.
: Not real money. mind you.
~ . ·You start out with 260 fan~y dollars. ·
; ·. With that. you have .to draft a team of 23
' p~yers, nine of which have to be pitchen.
; So, in the first round, the best players
won't be drafted right away. ·
,• Take Pedro Martinez; for instance.
: ·some ~onsider him the best fantasy
: player in the . game since · he's almost
: · untouchable.

i

20GOC!itvy
Caviller Sldln

150*

•Aulomltlc
• All Conditioning

• AIIIFM Calllll

....

CNIVIOLU

f"

...

'

' Bul'in our draft! Pedro is SSO tlii~ ~ea,on according to,-'the pricing. li~ .~ use get up 7 a.tn. for work) to check bO:xSfrom john Hunt ofB,uepaiiWeeldy;II;'h_at's cores and see what my players did that
almost a fifth of your team's funds. ,_ ., day.
- Now during the season, let's say.. .. o)l,
Suffice it to say. Pedro ~·t dtatl:ed.
There are leagues that bid for players, Barty Larkin gets injured and is out for
t~ -seaso_n and he's·on your team.
-but I don't want to go there just yet.
l!arkin is worth $15 . ·
. Last year, in my tint full s~a.son of rotisserie, I finished d_ead last to seasoned vet- - Now, you are in a position of replacing
Larkin with another player SlS or less or
erans.
This year, I'm' currendy in the middle doing multiple moves, perhaps drop a
of .the pack and acruaJ!y tied fo1 first in Derek BeD, who is S14. This frees up $29
for pick up tWo .outfielders. .
·•
stolen ba~es. , ., _ 1 ( ~ • : ' . , ·:.
Then
you
can
pick
up
a
$20
outfield~r
The d1fferen~e 1s I, was able ~o at.ift
players that _wiU play .aJmo&amp;t all the time, _and a $9 outfielder if you wish.
Oh, by the way, you 'Il= limited to three
but so far 'they haven't produced like "''d
moves a month for S2 (of real111oney) a
w:ont them to.
-·
But, since they. are getting~ lot of play- move. And ,then you can only make
ing time (my batt~n co~lj_ined ~e . moves once a week (with a Friday deadalmost 100 morc at-bats than the next line) to go into ell'ect the following week.
Then it goes back to the cursing thing
team), I ha\&gt;e the potential to jump up in
I talked about earlier.
the standings.
'
But in the end, it's fun.A challenge realLive and learn, I suppose.
I never ·realized how .much fun rotis- ly. And it gives me another reason to-look
ierie baseball would be, thouah. and hav- focward to baseball season.
But. of course, there will probably be a
ing a home computer linked to _the intc~·
lock-out
in Octobe~. so wl\y bother.
net is a great help.
· -

'

I: ------~~--~.-~--~----------------------------------------------------------~------~~
atta-ck but didn't quit.
nium or· the other during a fight," he

:

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.

Mudd said hi; opponent~~ '!-!PPOted

: to bo 40 yean old _;md w•lah 175

l

pounds.- Inatead, the men WJI 30 atld
w.illl-d 200.; Mudd wu !punched ~
' hard, his 1 t~rnun\ cracked. He had a heart

1

•' '

~

'

!I

"I !llid, 'Hell, I feel OK Let's keep
soins.' "
,
Ht ~nded up lo!ini·
Mudd ftels bad for Page, but he
know; all too weD that terrible things
ca11 happen in boxinll·
'4Look, yo1,1r bi'IPin..!!tj in liquid in your
.brain pan -- 10 yo1,1r brain is constantly
being crashe«tagain~t one sidt of the era~~

said. "But lome of these guys love bo~ing
and they Can't give it Up."
• _p1, '
Promoter O'Brien .p-uts it another
way.
"Some of them never know th e
glory's over. It's up to the trainer or man~gerto ~it them down and say, ·Hey,. it's
tim~ to get a job.' And, I'd say, some of
them just can't do anything else."
I
•

2001 Chevy
Cavalier 4 Door

Auto Transmission, Air Condltlonlng,
Factory Warranty

�Inside:

A gunsmith's tales of teiTO~'&lt;
What peo'Ple do to thet'r
firearms •f

go,t
'bow

SCOTT DEPOT, W.Va. (AP) curiosity
the best of me. l
The monsten that haunt
aalced lWn
the slide and
Stew: Cale's dreams look nwch
t!le wire happened to gd into
1
like you and me. They have
that barrel:
-DOnnal human features , wear
" H e said be'd gone hunting
Whionable clothes and exhibit
that morning in his brother's
sociolly acceprmle behavior.
people who tty too hard cause bridging the gap be~en the car.\As soon as he stepped out
But boy, do they ronure their them. too.
cylinder and the barrel. I had to. of the car, he spotted a nice
firearms!
"MuzzieloaMr season is cut it in half with a coping saw doe. He shot the doe and
Calc is a gunsmith, and the always interesting," he · says. ro swing the cylinder aside and wounded i~ but the gun
dtinp he sees brought into his " One fellow had used bore poke &lt;?Ut the other 11 bulleiJ. jammed. The spent cartridge
Teays Valley shop give him cleaner on the barrel of his . "If he had fired just one was stuek in the chamber.
nightnwes.
muzzleloader, and alkr he used properly charged round with
"H~ tried to open the bolt,
"It's amazing to me that peo- it he found the gun wouldn't the barrel plugged like that, the but he couldn't. So he walt
pie will invesr hundreds of dol- shoot straight anymore.
gun would have blown up like and found a stick to try to push
Ian in nice guns and then fnis..
"l looked down the barrel a hand grenade. Lucky for lWn it out. He start.ed poking !lawn
neat them the way they do;' he and saw that it had been thor- he'd undercharged all the car- . the barrel with the stitk, b"t it
says. The most conunon prob- oughly etched with a po~rful tridges."
broke otT. S,O ltow.he has a stick
lem Calc sees is rust..
solvent. I asked him how long
Most of the hair-raising and a shell stuck in the gun. "People don't realize just hc'd lefttheborecleanerin.He firearm abuse Calc encounters
" He looked around _for
how quickly a gun's steel can ~
-d he'd left _it i.n ~night. If seenu to fit into nice, tidy cat- somethi~ tu use as a ramrod,
rust," he ~- "Under the right . h followed the dinktioru, he egories - rust, poor mainte- and he spOtted the radio antenconditions, rust can set in '""' dn't have left it in there nance, no maintenance, too na on his brother's car. H~
overnight.''
more than I 0 minutes. He had much maintenance, bad loads. broke it oil' and tried to poke
Some bunters and shooters to buy a new barrel."
But occasionally, a case comes out th~ stick, but the antenna
don't seem to grasp that fact.
Some of Cale's probl~ms alopg thai defies d~scription.
caught in the barrel's ritling
Every y.,ar, Cale geiJ hired to stent from seeing the efforts of Just such an incident and just corlcJcrewed around
repair rust damage - in some do-it-yours~lf gunsmiths, such occurred during last Decem- the stick.
cases, a lot of it.
as the fellow who lightened his · her's doc season. " I was work"I had to tald. a steet'cleaning
"The worst case l ever saw ritle 's trigger-pull a tad ' too . ing in the shop, and it was rod and drive the whole mess
w.os brought in here the day much. ·
pouring rain," Cale says. "This out. As soon if the last of it
before the deer-season opener
"He didn't even have hiS fin- · guy dressed in sopping-wet came out, he gr-abbed the rille
a couple of years ago," he ger on the trigger, but as soon camoulbge comes in carrying a and said, 'I've got one •hell left.
recalls. " A fellow came through as he chambered a round and rltle.
Hope that deer'f still there; and
the shop door carrying a gun closed the bolt, the gun dis"He said, Got a proble!J;l left."
case. He said he couldn't ger charged and shot a hole in the with my gun; and he handed it
Calc still dobn't know the
the bolt_on his rifle to open.
bumper ofhis son's truck;' Calc td me. He said something was fate of that deer,' or the fa~ of
"It was a plastic gun case, recalls.
· in'the barrel. "11ooked·at it,aitd the hunter who had to explain
foam-lined. Apparendy, the guy
People who hand-load their saw what looked like a piece of the broken-oil' antenna to his
had opened it up in a down- own ammunition show up in heavy wire sticking out. He brother. Calc does know,
pour on the first day ofthe pre- Cale's nightmares, too.
·
said, There's a piece of stick in though, that as long as he convious deer season, He'd hunted
"A woman called me one there, too.'
tinues in his profession, he's
all day with the rifle, then pu~ it day and s~id her father had a
"Well, I started working on going to see things that cause
back into the case in the mid- gun with a problem," Cale the rifle, but pretty soon my him nighanan:s.
dle of another downpour.
recalls. "It turns our that the
"What he didn't reilize was fellow had loaded up a bunch
that foam soaks up water like a of ammunition and had taken
sponge. When l opened up the his revolver, a long-barreled
case, all l could see was or:inge .38, out to 'the range for some
rust. When l took the rifle out, target practice.
l could hear it peeling away
"He shot six rounds, but
_from the rusty foam.
couldn't see· where the bullets
"It took a whole can of pen- were hitting the target. So he
etrating oil and some persua- loaded six more rounds into
sion from a hanuner to get the the- cylinder and shot them. On
bolt to open. As soon as it the last round the twelfth he'd
bro_ke free, the guy said, That's shot, his hat biew sideways.
fine; and took oil'. It wun't up "Turns out he didn't put
to my s~dard of gunsmithing, enough powder in the ammo
but what could I do?"
he'd loaded. All twelve of those
• Though people who fail to bullets were jammed, one after
take care of their firearms cause the other, in the barrel of that
nuny of Calc's nightmares, revolver. The last one was
-

Celebrations begin tnt 2C .
Local columnists btgin on 3C
Locallrappming.s, 4C

Ohio deer hunting~ ciE5
and regulations apProved

s

. COWMBUS (AI') - The Ohio W'ddlife Coancil on
Thursday approved deer hunting season dates and regulations, acc:ording to the Division of W'ddlife of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resowces.
·
There is lin:le change to this year's deer hunting sea&gt;00
dates and bag litniiJ from 2000. The most notable clunje
involves the reduction in standanl ander length used for
determining an andered deer.
·
.
.
This year, the length will be reduced from 5 inches ro
three inches. The change was made due to increased numbers oft 112-year-old bucks with anders less than 5 inches..
The deer archery season will run from Oct. 6 through Jan.
31 and the statnride gun season will ' run from Nov. 2tio
tluough Dec. 2.
The statewide primitive ~on sea19n will run liom
Dee. 27 through Dec. 30.
Ohio will continue · to be separated into three hunting
zones.
Zone A: Hunters can take one deer, which could be a deer•
of either sex, during the first two days of the gun season or
a buck only duriQg the last five days.
Zone B: Hunters can take a deer of either sex during the
seven
with ·a bag limit of one deer.
·
Zone C : Hunters can take a deer of either sex during the
seven days, with a two-.deer limit, only one of which could
be a buck.
,
The new deer hunting zones are as follows:
Zone A: Henry, Wood, Ottawa, Paulding, Putnam. Hancock, Van Wert, Mercer, Auglaize. Darke and Shelb)r.
"
Zone B: Williams, Fulton, Lucas, Defiance, Sandusky, Erie,
Lorain, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Ashtabula, Trumbull,
Seneca, Hilron, Medina, Sununit, Po~. Wyandot. Cr-aWford, Richland, .,_.bland, Wayne, Stark, MaholliBg,
Columbiana, Carroll, Allen, Hardin, Marion, Morrow,
Logan, Union, Delawue, Miami, Champaign._ Madison.
Fayette, Clark, Preble and Montgomery.
Zone C: Knox, Holmes, Thscarawas, Harri1011, Jell'enon,
Coshocton, Licking. Muskingum. Guenuey,I-&lt; B~lmont,
Franldin, Fairfield, Pei-ry; Morgan, Noble, Monroe, Pickaway,
Ross, Hocking, Washington. Athens, Vinton, Meigs, Gallia,
Jackson, 'Lawrence, Pike, Scioto, Greene, Buder, Warren,
Clinton, Highland, Clermont, Brown and Adanu.

•

OHIODNR.

Spring has found its voice as
migrating neotropical · songbirds begin retutning to Ohio.
Those sweet trills you're hearing indicate the mass migration of southern songbirds i'
well underway.
Neotropical b1rds are those
that breed in Nor~ America
during the 'Pring and 'ununer
months. In winter, they live in
places such as Central and
South America, Mexico and
the Caribbean.
Ohio'' fim spring songbirds
to appear include blue-headed
vireos, pine warblers, and bluegray gnatcatchers. As the
weather becomes warmer, the
tlight of northbound neotropics increases. Numbers of yellow·r-umped warblers appear,
. as do hermit thrushe,, blackthroated green warblers, rubycrowned kinglets, and chimney
swirlS.
The Baltiqtore oriole, a
highly recognizable songbird,
returns in late April whistling a
clear, flute-like song. Its orange
underside and glossy black top
feathers. make it a perennial
favorite ·among bird watchers.
Preferring habitats \Yith large
shade trees, the oriole i~ at
home in open woodlands, suburban areas·and parks.
Another highly anticipated
returning migrant is the rubythroated hummingbird. This
incredibly small bird, weighing
less than an ounce, beats its
wings an average of 53 times
per second in flight. It's been
estimated that the trip across
the Gulf of Mexico requires 4
million wing beats!
This mass migration of
songbirds is not normally seen
because neotropicals migrate at
night when most of their
predators are sleeping. During
. migration, these birds face
, many challenges, including
finding sufficient food and
proper. places in which to rest,

-build nests, and raise y~ung.
Ohio offers an abundance of
quality habitat to meet those
needs.
1
'Spring is an exciting time
of the year for bird watching,"
said SaraJean Peters, urban
wildlife education officer with
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. "For backyard
birders, the real secret is upderstanding that their yard provides significant habitat for
birds on the move."
May is the peak month for
the
flood
of returning
neotropical migrants. Some of
the best birding opportunities
occur along Lake Erie's · coast
and wetlands where these tiny
~ravelers stop briefly to feed
and rest.
"Lake Erie is a staging area
allowing birds to meet up, rest
and .forage before jumping
north to Canada, Michigan,
and New Eqgland," ~aid Dr.
Bernard Master, a physician
and member of the American
Bird Conservatory. ·
Sheldon Marsh Nature Preserve in Erie County and
Magee Marsh Wildlife Area in
Ottawa County off'et a large
concentration of warblers and
other ·colorful songbirds. Shel,don Marsh alone is known to
attract pearly 300 bird species.
Bird watching provides a
low-cost, enjoyable outdoor.
experience. While songbirds
can be seen iq nearby commu-·
nity pHks and woodland&lt;,
Ohio's state parks, siate nature
preserves and state forests provide some of the best viewing
opportunities.
Designated
Watchable Wildlife Sites are
also·great places to go birding.
If you're interested in birding, but lack experience, now
is a good time. to plan an outing. By choosing a popular
birding location chances are
you'll buqtp into some veteran
birders who are willing to
share their knowledge.'

'

•

Dear ·
Abby
ADVICE

0

days;

•••

lOur old cell
phone dln
provide new·
lease -on life
DEAll ABBY: Because of
today's ever-improving technology in wireless phones,
rnillio~H of Americaru have
cell phones lying around that
' att no longer being used.
Instead of tossing them in
the garbage when new ortes
att purchased, these. handsets
· can be given to the "DonateA-Phone" progr.un that helps
domestic violence victims.
Sporuored by the Wireless
Foundation, the "Donate-APhone"
campaign
was
launched in September 19'?9
to collect and tefurbuh a,portion of the 24 million wireless
phones no longer being used.
The phones att reprogrammed with 911 and other
emergency
numbers
so
domestic violence victims can
access local emergency services arid hot-tine numbers at
the touch of a button.
From May 1 to July 31,
2001, Radio~hack is once
ag!iih partnering· with the
Wireless Foundation to col-

,

Ieot~ "u ~- c, th!: ,pro.. ~ 1
gram. Abby, please let your
readers know they can help

victims of domestic violence

f,y

donat\Jlg them old wirelcss
phones. - :JILL A. LAIN,
RADIOSHACK
DEAll JD.L: ~ a terrific idea! Prepatt Cot a delIIF• because I'm .sure that
many people who see your
letter will be ·4elighted to join
ypur
"Donate-A-Phone"
campaign.
ReadeQ: Between May 1
and July 31, yout outdated
cell -P.hone ~be - dropped
off' at apy of RadioShack's
7,100 stores. Phones and
" accessOries in any condition·
willl!le gladly accq&gt;ted, and all
donations are tax-deductible
to the fullest extent of the law.
IRS regulatioru prohibit the
receiving organi~tioii from
placirig a value ort donated
items, but generally, the fairniarket value can be claimed
on your tax return.
For further information on
this campaign, ~ccess ·the Web
site: · '

Songbirds provide the·
sights and sounds of spring
• BY LAURA JONES

1 ,. Af~ 15. 2111

HoUse;
.
'
13lennerhassett
Island
have
share·
in,~: restored piano
. .
.
fl
.
.
.
~ "-

!

exchange for borrowing your other piano - and well,
dtey'll rehab d)at one. too?
·
P1'11116·hly exacdy what' the Our House Museum said to the
. BleMerhassctt Historical Foundation Board ofDirec' ton: ',;Yes, please!"
A treasure was discovered last year in the basement
of
Our House Museum in the
·
form of the Roman Menagei
Bureau piano, circa 1850.
. It was IOund dismanded, wrapped
in plastic, irs rosewood pealing, yet
it;! mother of pearl keys in tact.
. ' The Our House, being a npnprofit organization, knew a restora-tion would be extraordinarily
expensive, but then an unbelievable
offe(came from the BHFB.
Since_the burning of the a]:landoned Blennerhassett mansion in
1812 by drunken Ohio soldiers, the
foundation has been searching for
original artifacts from· the house.
By accident, Ronald Ray Swick,
historian for .the foundation, found
· a newspaper article that described a
·piano that reportedly originated
from the Blennerhassett house.
"The Feb. 15, 1889 Gallipolu Bulletin article provided the first detailed description I ever discovered of
the BleMerhassett piano:• said Swick.
"! immediately phoned my-friend Henrie~~? Evans
in Gallipolis and asked if she possessed any evidence
or intuition as to the piano's present-day loeation.
"She instandy rep~ed, 'that sounds like the piano in
the ballroom at Our House.''

!he

DEAR ABBY: Whenev-

FIED DAUGHTER IN
MICHIGAN .
. DEAR MORTIFIED:

.....-

Lighten up!. This may be a
generational dill'erence. It is
certainly a caring gesture ·and l cannot 1ce that it is in
·any way "tacky." If the grieving family doesn't need the
money, it can always be forwarded to the deceased's
favorite chaticy.
· DEAR ABBY: Why do
athletes get paid more than
teachers and policemen? They
.are the people who educate
us and keep udafe~ I believe
the public can live without
-watching athletes, but ean't _
live without people who keep

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

~

•

•

....'

-~-

.

· ALLIPOLI~ -What would you do if someone said that
they would giVe you $10,000 to restore "your" piano, in

•

www.donateaphone.~om.

er there is a death in 11r outside of our ·family. my mother
always sends a card with cash
in it to the grieving family.
This mortifies me. She sends
$5 to $50 for 'funeral expenses regardle11 of the financial
situation of those in mourning. It ~eems so tacky. l beg·
her tQ send food or flowers or
just a card, but she continues
to send C3$h every time.
' think? - MORTIWhat

DentoN

TJMES.SENTINEL ~M'F

ON fTI WAY ...., . The· dismantled plano

w••
found In the .basement of the our
HOUle wrapped In
f:le"' P,lano
f!lllll~.

·'.

!~

" - • ... HlltDry~ Cl

Ia ,on lla w~ to r,tlabiltu!tkln at t_he ·
skilled hands of Joe· Ro~,
; •. .:.. ·
' ' '
.

'

RESTORATION - Master Cabinet·
maker Joe Roby starts to put ttie
restored piano back together at the
Our House Museum.

T \

... ·

f,

.•,

TESTAMENlS: Depicting America~s two-party system on Scripture
IIY

RlolwiD N, o.n.

the Bible.
Borg is 11 professor of religion and
Marcus Borg gets right to the p;oint: cultu~ at &lt;Jregon State University and
. "Conflict
over how to see and
read
-"··" a1 Jesus
r.
Semmar,
·
·Li • th .:.• ..1
•
di the
'd
part o f t1i e •!""c
which
B t01e 11 e ""'l!'e greatest· ISSUe VI - has d
_, .... .,_ ·
·
ing Christiaru in Nodh Ameri~a ··
' eclare-.·t'~t me Gospels are large- ,
today:'
ly inauthent\C as history. In "Reading'
Some might disagree, saying that the Bible Again for the l;'irstTime:Tak&amp;exualll\Oralit}l especiaJiy hom~xual- ing the Bible Seriously But Not Literity, is even more divisive, but Borg cor- ally" (HarperSanFrancisco, $24), Borg
rectly observes that this and mOst other ·says . that all of U.S. Christianity is
disJ)uiei stem from . .
of pol'arized into the two-party sysrem'on
· N' IIEllGioN YtMER

~

•

0

Scripture, and pro':"otes the liberal
party: · .fir
(However, Borg acrually treats polar· d p rotestannsm,
- not Ch nsnamty
· · · as a
1ze
.
·
whole; he mosdy 1gnores the Catholics
and Orthodox.)
To give equal time to the conservarive party, read Borg debating N .T.
Wright, canon theologian ofWesnninster Abbey, in ·~The , Meaning of Jesus:
1\vo Visjons.''

Borg's scenario:
In the_ "older way" of thinking
among fundamentalists and evangelicals, "the Bible is to be interpreted literally, unle" the language of a particular ·passage is dearly metaphorical."
That phrasing avoids distortions others
make of the conservatives, who realize
many Bible passages arc intended to, be
poetic.

PllaM ... IIble,CI

�Inside:

A gunsmith's tales of teiTO~'&lt;
What peo'Ple do to thet'r
firearms •f

go,t
'bow

SCOTT DEPOT, W.Va. (AP) curiosity
the best of me. l
The monsten that haunt
aalced lWn
the slide and
Stew: Cale's dreams look nwch
t!le wire happened to gd into
1
like you and me. They have
that barrel:
-DOnnal human features , wear
" H e said be'd gone hunting
Whionable clothes and exhibit
that morning in his brother's
sociolly acceprmle behavior.
people who tty too hard cause bridging the gap be~en the car.\As soon as he stepped out
But boy, do they ronure their them. too.
cylinder and the barrel. I had to. of the car, he spotted a nice
firearms!
"MuzzieloaMr season is cut it in half with a coping saw doe. He shot the doe and
Calc is a gunsmith, and the always interesting," he · says. ro swing the cylinder aside and wounded i~ but the gun
dtinp he sees brought into his " One fellow had used bore poke &lt;?Ut the other 11 bulleiJ. jammed. The spent cartridge
Teays Valley shop give him cleaner on the barrel of his . "If he had fired just one was stuek in the chamber.
nightnwes.
muzzleloader, and alkr he used properly charged round with
"H~ tried to open the bolt,
"It's amazing to me that peo- it he found the gun wouldn't the barrel plugged like that, the but he couldn't. So he walt
pie will invesr hundreds of dol- shoot straight anymore.
gun would have blown up like and found a stick to try to push
Ian in nice guns and then fnis..
"l looked down the barrel a hand grenade. Lucky for lWn it out. He start.ed poking !lawn
neat them the way they do;' he and saw that it had been thor- he'd undercharged all the car- . the barrel with the stitk, b"t it
says. The most conunon prob- oughly etched with a po~rful tridges."
broke otT. S,O ltow.he has a stick
lem Calc sees is rust..
solvent. I asked him how long
Most of the hair-raising and a shell stuck in the gun. "People don't realize just hc'd lefttheborecleanerin.He firearm abuse Calc encounters
" He looked around _for
how quickly a gun's steel can ~
-d he'd left _it i.n ~night. If seenu to fit into nice, tidy cat- somethi~ tu use as a ramrod,
rust," he ~- "Under the right . h followed the dinktioru, he egories - rust, poor mainte- and he spOtted the radio antenconditions, rust can set in '""' dn't have left it in there nance, no maintenance, too na on his brother's car. H~
overnight.''
more than I 0 minutes. He had much maintenance, bad loads. broke it oil' and tried to poke
Some bunters and shooters to buy a new barrel."
But occasionally, a case comes out th~ stick, but the antenna
don't seem to grasp that fact.
Some of Cale's probl~ms alopg thai defies d~scription.
caught in the barrel's ritling
Every y.,ar, Cale geiJ hired to stent from seeing the efforts of Just such an incident and just corlcJcrewed around
repair rust damage - in some do-it-yours~lf gunsmiths, such occurred during last Decem- the stick.
cases, a lot of it.
as the fellow who lightened his · her's doc season. " I was work"I had to tald. a steet'cleaning
"The worst case l ever saw ritle 's trigger-pull a tad ' too . ing in the shop, and it was rod and drive the whole mess
w.os brought in here the day much. ·
pouring rain," Cale says. "This out. As soon if the last of it
before the deer-season opener
"He didn't even have hiS fin- · guy dressed in sopping-wet came out, he gr-abbed the rille
a couple of years ago," he ger on the trigger, but as soon camoulbge comes in carrying a and said, 'I've got one •hell left.
recalls. " A fellow came through as he chambered a round and rltle.
Hope that deer'f still there; and
the shop door carrying a gun closed the bolt, the gun dis"He said, Got a proble!J;l left."
case. He said he couldn't ger charged and shot a hole in the with my gun; and he handed it
Calc still dobn't know the
the bolt_on his rifle to open.
bumper ofhis son's truck;' Calc td me. He said something was fate of that deer,' or the fa~ of
"It was a plastic gun case, recalls.
· in'the barrel. "11ooked·at it,aitd the hunter who had to explain
foam-lined. Apparendy, the guy
People who hand-load their saw what looked like a piece of the broken-oil' antenna to his
had opened it up in a down- own ammunition show up in heavy wire sticking out. He brother. Calc does know,
pour on the first day ofthe pre- Cale's nightmares, too.
·
said, There's a piece of stick in though, that as long as he convious deer season, He'd hunted
"A woman called me one there, too.'
tinues in his profession, he's
all day with the rifle, then pu~ it day and s~id her father had a
"Well, I started working on going to see things that cause
back into the case in the mid- gun with a problem," Cale the rifle, but pretty soon my him nighanan:s.
dle of another downpour.
recalls. "It turns our that the
"What he didn't reilize was fellow had loaded up a bunch
that foam soaks up water like a of ammunition and had taken
sponge. When l opened up the his revolver, a long-barreled
case, all l could see was or:inge .38, out to 'the range for some
rust. When l took the rifle out, target practice.
l could hear it peeling away
"He shot six rounds, but
_from the rusty foam.
couldn't see· where the bullets
"It took a whole can of pen- were hitting the target. So he
etrating oil and some persua- loaded six more rounds into
sion from a hanuner to get the the- cylinder and shot them. On
bolt to open. As soon as it the last round the twelfth he'd
bro_ke free, the guy said, That's shot, his hat biew sideways.
fine; and took oil'. It wun't up "Turns out he didn't put
to my s~dard of gunsmithing, enough powder in the ammo
but what could I do?"
he'd loaded. All twelve of those
• Though people who fail to bullets were jammed, one after
take care of their firearms cause the other, in the barrel of that
nuny of Calc's nightmares, revolver. The last one was
-

Celebrations begin tnt 2C .
Local columnists btgin on 3C
Locallrappming.s, 4C

Ohio deer hunting~ ciE5
and regulations apProved

s

. COWMBUS (AI') - The Ohio W'ddlife Coancil on
Thursday approved deer hunting season dates and regulations, acc:ording to the Division of W'ddlife of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resowces.
·
There is lin:le change to this year's deer hunting sea&gt;00
dates and bag litniiJ from 2000. The most notable clunje
involves the reduction in standanl ander length used for
determining an andered deer.
·
.
.
This year, the length will be reduced from 5 inches ro
three inches. The change was made due to increased numbers oft 112-year-old bucks with anders less than 5 inches..
The deer archery season will run from Oct. 6 through Jan.
31 and the statnride gun season will ' run from Nov. 2tio
tluough Dec. 2.
The statewide primitive ~on sea19n will run liom
Dee. 27 through Dec. 30.
Ohio will continue · to be separated into three hunting
zones.
Zone A: Hunters can take one deer, which could be a deer•
of either sex, during the first two days of the gun season or
a buck only duriQg the last five days.
Zone B: Hunters can take a deer of either sex during the
seven
with ·a bag limit of one deer.
·
Zone C : Hunters can take a deer of either sex during the
seven days, with a two-.deer limit, only one of which could
be a buck.
,
The new deer hunting zones are as follows:
Zone A: Henry, Wood, Ottawa, Paulding, Putnam. Hancock, Van Wert, Mercer, Auglaize. Darke and Shelb)r.
"
Zone B: Williams, Fulton, Lucas, Defiance, Sandusky, Erie,
Lorain, Cuyahoga, Geauga, Lake, Ashtabula, Trumbull,
Seneca, Hilron, Medina, Sununit, Po~. Wyandot. Cr-aWford, Richland, .,_.bland, Wayne, Stark, MaholliBg,
Columbiana, Carroll, Allen, Hardin, Marion, Morrow,
Logan, Union, Delawue, Miami, Champaign._ Madison.
Fayette, Clark, Preble and Montgomery.
Zone C: Knox, Holmes, Thscarawas, Harri1011, Jell'enon,
Coshocton, Licking. Muskingum. Guenuey,I-&lt; B~lmont,
Franldin, Fairfield, Pei-ry; Morgan, Noble, Monroe, Pickaway,
Ross, Hocking, Washington. Athens, Vinton, Meigs, Gallia,
Jackson, 'Lawrence, Pike, Scioto, Greene, Buder, Warren,
Clinton, Highland, Clermont, Brown and Adanu.

•

OHIODNR.

Spring has found its voice as
migrating neotropical · songbirds begin retutning to Ohio.
Those sweet trills you're hearing indicate the mass migration of southern songbirds i'
well underway.
Neotropical b1rds are those
that breed in Nor~ America
during the 'Pring and 'ununer
months. In winter, they live in
places such as Central and
South America, Mexico and
the Caribbean.
Ohio'' fim spring songbirds
to appear include blue-headed
vireos, pine warblers, and bluegray gnatcatchers. As the
weather becomes warmer, the
tlight of northbound neotropics increases. Numbers of yellow·r-umped warblers appear,
. as do hermit thrushe,, blackthroated green warblers, rubycrowned kinglets, and chimney
swirlS.
The Baltiqtore oriole, a
highly recognizable songbird,
returns in late April whistling a
clear, flute-like song. Its orange
underside and glossy black top
feathers. make it a perennial
favorite ·among bird watchers.
Preferring habitats \Yith large
shade trees, the oriole i~ at
home in open woodlands, suburban areas·and parks.
Another highly anticipated
returning migrant is the rubythroated hummingbird. This
incredibly small bird, weighing
less than an ounce, beats its
wings an average of 53 times
per second in flight. It's been
estimated that the trip across
the Gulf of Mexico requires 4
million wing beats!
This mass migration of
songbirds is not normally seen
because neotropicals migrate at
night when most of their
predators are sleeping. During
. migration, these birds face
, many challenges, including
finding sufficient food and
proper. places in which to rest,

-build nests, and raise y~ung.
Ohio offers an abundance of
quality habitat to meet those
needs.
1
'Spring is an exciting time
of the year for bird watching,"
said SaraJean Peters, urban
wildlife education officer with
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. "For backyard
birders, the real secret is upderstanding that their yard provides significant habitat for
birds on the move."
May is the peak month for
the
flood
of returning
neotropical migrants. Some of
the best birding opportunities
occur along Lake Erie's · coast
and wetlands where these tiny
~ravelers stop briefly to feed
and rest.
"Lake Erie is a staging area
allowing birds to meet up, rest
and .forage before jumping
north to Canada, Michigan,
and New Eqgland," ~aid Dr.
Bernard Master, a physician
and member of the American
Bird Conservatory. ·
Sheldon Marsh Nature Preserve in Erie County and
Magee Marsh Wildlife Area in
Ottawa County off'et a large
concentration of warblers and
other ·colorful songbirds. Shel,don Marsh alone is known to
attract pearly 300 bird species.
Bird watching provides a
low-cost, enjoyable outdoor.
experience. While songbirds
can be seen iq nearby commu-·
nity pHks and woodland&lt;,
Ohio's state parks, siate nature
preserves and state forests provide some of the best viewing
opportunities.
Designated
Watchable Wildlife Sites are
also·great places to go birding.
If you're interested in birding, but lack experience, now
is a good time. to plan an outing. By choosing a popular
birding location chances are
you'll buqtp into some veteran
birders who are willing to
share their knowledge.'

'

•

Dear ·
Abby
ADVICE

0

days;

•••

lOur old cell
phone dln
provide new·
lease -on life
DEAll ABBY: Because of
today's ever-improving technology in wireless phones,
rnillio~H of Americaru have
cell phones lying around that
' att no longer being used.
Instead of tossing them in
the garbage when new ortes
att purchased, these. handsets
· can be given to the "DonateA-Phone" progr.un that helps
domestic violence victims.
Sporuored by the Wireless
Foundation, the "Donate-APhone"
campaign
was
launched in September 19'?9
to collect and tefurbuh a,portion of the 24 million wireless
phones no longer being used.
The phones att reprogrammed with 911 and other
emergency
numbers
so
domestic violence victims can
access local emergency services arid hot-tine numbers at
the touch of a button.
From May 1 to July 31,
2001, Radio~hack is once
ag!iih partnering· with the
Wireless Foundation to col-

,

Ieot~ "u ~- c, th!: ,pro.. ~ 1
gram. Abby, please let your
readers know they can help

victims of domestic violence

f,y

donat\Jlg them old wirelcss
phones. - :JILL A. LAIN,
RADIOSHACK
DEAll JD.L: ~ a terrific idea! Prepatt Cot a delIIF• because I'm .sure that
many people who see your
letter will be ·4elighted to join
ypur
"Donate-A-Phone"
campaign.
ReadeQ: Between May 1
and July 31, yout outdated
cell -P.hone ~be - dropped
off' at apy of RadioShack's
7,100 stores. Phones and
" accessOries in any condition·
willl!le gladly accq&gt;ted, and all
donations are tax-deductible
to the fullest extent of the law.
IRS regulatioru prohibit the
receiving organi~tioii from
placirig a value ort donated
items, but generally, the fairniarket value can be claimed
on your tax return.
For further information on
this campaign, ~ccess ·the Web
site: · '

Songbirds provide the·
sights and sounds of spring
• BY LAURA JONES

1 ,. Af~ 15. 2111

HoUse;
.
'
13lennerhassett
Island
have
share·
in,~: restored piano
. .
.
fl
.
.
.
~ "-

!

exchange for borrowing your other piano - and well,
dtey'll rehab d)at one. too?
·
P1'11116·hly exacdy what' the Our House Museum said to the
. BleMerhassctt Historical Foundation Board ofDirec' ton: ',;Yes, please!"
A treasure was discovered last year in the basement
of
Our House Museum in the
·
form of the Roman Menagei
Bureau piano, circa 1850.
. It was IOund dismanded, wrapped
in plastic, irs rosewood pealing, yet
it;! mother of pearl keys in tact.
. ' The Our House, being a npnprofit organization, knew a restora-tion would be extraordinarily
expensive, but then an unbelievable
offe(came from the BHFB.
Since_the burning of the a]:landoned Blennerhassett mansion in
1812 by drunken Ohio soldiers, the
foundation has been searching for
original artifacts from· the house.
By accident, Ronald Ray Swick,
historian for .the foundation, found
· a newspaper article that described a
·piano that reportedly originated
from the Blennerhassett house.
"The Feb. 15, 1889 Gallipolu Bulletin article provided the first detailed description I ever discovered of
the BleMerhassett piano:• said Swick.
"! immediately phoned my-friend Henrie~~? Evans
in Gallipolis and asked if she possessed any evidence
or intuition as to the piano's present-day loeation.
"She instandy rep~ed, 'that sounds like the piano in
the ballroom at Our House.''

!he

DEAR ABBY: Whenev-

FIED DAUGHTER IN
MICHIGAN .
. DEAR MORTIFIED:

.....-

Lighten up!. This may be a
generational dill'erence. It is
certainly a caring gesture ·and l cannot 1ce that it is in
·any way "tacky." If the grieving family doesn't need the
money, it can always be forwarded to the deceased's
favorite chaticy.
· DEAR ABBY: Why do
athletes get paid more than
teachers and policemen? They
.are the people who educate
us and keep udafe~ I believe
the public can live without
-watching athletes, but ean't _
live without people who keep

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

~

•

•

....'

-~-

.

· ALLIPOLI~ -What would you do if someone said that
they would giVe you $10,000 to restore "your" piano, in

•

www.donateaphone.~om.

er there is a death in 11r outside of our ·family. my mother
always sends a card with cash
in it to the grieving family.
This mortifies me. She sends
$5 to $50 for 'funeral expenses regardle11 of the financial
situation of those in mourning. It ~eems so tacky. l beg·
her tQ send food or flowers or
just a card, but she continues
to send C3$h every time.
' think? - MORTIWhat

DentoN

TJMES.SENTINEL ~M'F

ON fTI WAY ...., . The· dismantled plano

w••
found In the .basement of the our
HOUle wrapped In
f:le"' P,lano
f!lllll~.

·'.

!~

" - • ... HlltDry~ Cl

Ia ,on lla w~ to r,tlabiltu!tkln at t_he ·
skilled hands of Joe· Ro~,
; •. .:.. ·
' ' '
.

'

RESTORATION - Master Cabinet·
maker Joe Roby starts to put ttie
restored piano back together at the
Our House Museum.

T \

... ·

f,

.•,

TESTAMENlS: Depicting America~s two-party system on Scripture
IIY

RlolwiD N, o.n.

the Bible.
Borg is 11 professor of religion and
Marcus Borg gets right to the p;oint: cultu~ at &lt;Jregon State University and
. "Conflict
over how to see and
read
-"··" a1 Jesus
r.
Semmar,
·
·Li • th .:.• ..1
•
di the
'd
part o f t1i e •!""c
which
B t01e 11 e ""'l!'e greatest· ISSUe VI - has d
_, .... .,_ ·
·
ing Christiaru in Nodh Ameri~a ··
' eclare-.·t'~t me Gospels are large- ,
today:'
ly inauthent\C as history. In "Reading'
Some might disagree, saying that the Bible Again for the l;'irstTime:Tak&amp;exualll\Oralit}l especiaJiy hom~xual- ing the Bible Seriously But Not Literity, is even more divisive, but Borg cor- ally" (HarperSanFrancisco, $24), Borg
rectly observes that this and mOst other ·says . that all of U.S. Christianity is
disJ)uiei stem from . .
of pol'arized into the two-party sysrem'on
· N' IIEllGioN YtMER

~

•

0

Scripture, and pro':"otes the liberal
party: · .fir
(However, Borg acrually treats polar· d p rotestannsm,
- not Ch nsnamty
· · · as a
1ze
.
·
whole; he mosdy 1gnores the Catholics
and Orthodox.)
To give equal time to the conservarive party, read Borg debating N .T.
Wright, canon theologian ofWesnninster Abbey, in ·~The , Meaning of Jesus:
1\vo Visjons.''

Borg's scenario:
In the_ "older way" of thinking
among fundamentalists and evangelicals, "the Bible is to be interpreted literally, unle" the language of a particular ·passage is dearly metaphorical."
That phrasing avoids distortions others
make of the conservatives, who realize
many Bible passages arc intended to, be
poetic.

PllaM ... IIble,CI

�..
•

•••
._

. . . . Aprll11, 2DD1

Si.niey, April15, 2001

r-:

'
Pomeroy • Mlddl1port • Gelllpolla, Ohio Point Pl•••nt. WV

COMMUNIT.Y CORNER

TALKIN' SMACK
•

•

·
Former
Middleport
resident
I
will
be
making
music
in
lrelafld
I·
l .
I

· ~'

Men, the tlme has come
to shut down (The School'

Many of you will remember talented BevAbout a year ago a certain
For example, you ~ve just
•
_&amp;dy Wilcox, daughter of Raymond and
school came ro my mention
finished eating a wonderful
·tdaryln Wilcox of Middleport, and the {ltusic
from a "friend" whom I will
'
meal your significant other has
~She made while growing up. here.
prepared for you .You take the
• call ... Earl. This school has
. "' For the pan several· years, she has been
brought to light answers to
plare (not being able to eat it
~rector of the River Magic Chorus of
· all) and,. simply set it on the
. some of my most intriguing
Z:Huntingron, which will be traveling to Irequestions.
counter. . If your significant
I think it is time to share
' land this fall to compete in the 12th Annual
other does not like what you
Conventio.111?f the lrish_ t.~sol'iation of Barthese findings with my fellow
have just done, she will not say
COMMUNITY
-··
·
· ·"'
bershop Singers.
men frie1.ds so they may reap
MY VIEW anything. She will do even
the
benefits
that
have
been
so
worse; sbe \viii give you "The
The 28-member chorus she directs is the
fint ever from Sweet AJelines International experience filled with bea~ty and awe, and
·gracefully bestowed .upon me. skills. But today. I must con- Look."·
and West Virginia to be invited to take part, tempered with a few extreme clements of
(Note:"This article is simply ·centrate on one power that is
Only a woman can give a
so it's quite an. honor.
nature and man:·
for men only. If you are a given to women at the school. look that makes a man wash
woman and find yourself readMen, have ·you ever been the dishes, put them away. dean
The chorus wiU be joined by the Kanawha
I read with interest his account of the trip
e ·house, wash the dog and
ing the column, . please turn doing something and have that
Kordsmen of the Society for the Preservation - a saga of flight delays and changes to get .
. all in the
your attention to another part horrible feeling that a knife has ·. b '"'\ he~ a diamondand Encouragement of Barbershop Quaner to Wales, an IRA bombing at the_BBC build1 Singing in America from Charleston.
ing in London, high alert at atrport when
of the paper.Thank you.)
just entered your back' When ;.-;:;;~ mght.
:- ... or now, ever1y•s group, w h.tc11 sh e says they. prepared for
the
tnp
home,
and
comphAre
they
gone?
Good.
Let
'
you turn, you see the most
, be careful. There is no
.
.
b
1
f
"h
·
·
h
ld
...
.
-.
canolils
on
getting
to
certam.
p
ac&lt;"S
ecause
horrifYing thing that a mail can s~ h
ool for us and there
me b"egih.
0
·
f annoi11Zifungdt er worh ' IS 10 of the outbreak offoot and mouth diseaseMen,
this
column
will
see.
Your
significant
other
is
never
be. Women have
thase aprocess
o rats~ng n s .or t e tnp.
d
h
1 h
h M "k
Til 'U b d ·
rf&lt;
. h
.
an came to t e cone uswn t at w en 1 e ·
answer all of your questions standing directly behind you been going to ..this school for
ey , e domg pe ortlmankices · mb t kie. tfl- said they had "a great time" he was. using the
decades and no man has ~
about the opposite sex and the giving you"The Look."
stare area an are curren y ta ng oo ngs.
. al ..
be h b
d d"
d
. WI·u be Bever1y•s secon d tnp
.
e, remcm r t e est an
1sregar
things they do that you have
All of you know what I'm known about until now. Wn~
Th 15
to 1re- ratwn
h
never
been
able
to
figure
out.
talking
about. It is the facial your congressman and ~sk
' I d Sh
h
. Fb
t e rest.
, ,: an . e was t ere m e ruary representmg
Anyways, the opportunity to lecture at the
You can ask them, bm you will · expression a woman can give what you can do to help bnng
yo: Harmony Consultants Ltd. , coachmg cho- University of Wales has since opened many
not get the correct response. that makes you know exactly this school down.
-~ J ruses and quartets m Skerne~. Athlo?e and doors for Mike. He has been asked to deliver
Why? It's simple. This is the . what she is saying without
(Bryan Long is an Ol1io f.flllty
, C':or~ m the barbenhop style of smg~ng. more lecrures at more universities, to present
biggest
conspiracy
since
th
e
uttering
a
word.
Publisl1ing
staff writer.)
·
1
~;;Wb!le there.' she lO~red t~e country, descnb~ a paper 00 his new theories, and already has
Roswell happenings.
·
v1·mg 1t ~ h~vtng the mY_thJCal charm of a .~atry a publisher for the new paper that he hasn't
Women are the m"ost com, Jtale wuh tts many casdes and cathe~rals.
yet written.
plex ~rearures on this planet,
He has also been asked to come on board
And, of qmne, she thoroughly enjoyed the
possibly in the uniVerse. They
:· :music - . from inspiring hymns to the Irish with a new joint research project sponsored
have the ability to make you
;• ··public ' ballads to the barbershop harmony, by the University of Rio Grande (Their
think things you would never
1
·
Welsh Studies Institute) and the Universiry of
" Ireland style.
even dream of, and they have
Beverlv and her hu•band. Ben MiUer. oro- \lf•l~s.
the power to make .Y.,u do
s;. fessor .o f music at Marshall University,live-.jn
anything, even if it goes against
Huntington where she worlcs as a certified
every moral fiber in your body.
••
public accountant. ·
And all of these wonderful •
powen liave been taught to
This ~eek, Shirley Appleby will observe
them .
her 90th birthday and friends want to make
Where? In Arizona. Yes, Ariit a. special occasion for her. Cards may be
Mike Struble and his son, Evan, had a great sent to her at 55 S. Third Av~ .• Apartment 6,
zona.
· time in Wales last month.
Deep in the Arizona desert
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Mike lectured for four days at the' Univer- ·
lies one the .natiolt's best-kept
sity o(Wales in Swansea and then spent a few
secrets:"THE SCHOOL."The
days visiting historical sites and doing
I is simply just that research for furure projects befpe) coming
Have a nice Easter.
exception. No man has
(Char/eire Hoeflich is gen(ralmanater ofl11e
.
de-it out alive.
·,.home.
·
it 0as being an "exciting Daily Sentine(, Pomeroy.)Sunday, 11.prll15
You see, when girls reach the
•,, Mike described
age dose to 10 or I 1, they are
"·~·--------~--------------------------------------------------~-sent to a special sch!JOI. This
school teaches them all the
~~·F--JI~· M.,ILY basics of becoming a woman in
today's society. Here they are
taught everything from balancing the checkbook to driving

..

••

Bryan
Long

Charlene
Hoeflich

I

J~~equellne

RenN' Merry and J - Mlct.el Ou...

Lloyd- Kamer engqgement - ·Meny- Ours engagement
M.-. Lynn SMets and Child Lee Roberts '

. Sheets-Roberts engagement
REEDSVILLE .- Mr. and Mrs. David Sheets of Reedsville
announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their
·daughter, Mandi Lynn, to Chad Le.e RobertS, son of Mr. and
Mn. Randall RobertS of Racine. ·
The bride-elect, granddaughter of Frances Carleton of
Pomeroy. and the late Harry Carleron and Ezra and Frances
Sheea, is a 1993 graduate of Eastern High ~chool and is
employed at Overbrook Nuning Center as a licensed practical
nurse.
She is pursuing her registered nuning degree at Hocking
College in Nelsonville.
Her fiance, grandson of Marie Robera of Basham, and the
late Geo~ Ro.bera and Clarence and Gladys Shields, is a 1985
graduate of Southern High School. He is employed at South-

=~n°~~:~~;~·~::::~~~·.

held on Sept. 15,2001 at
4:30 p.m. at First Southern Baptist" Church on Pomeroy Pike.
Music will begin at 4 p.m. A reception will follow immediately at Royal Oak Resort.
·

'

OAK HILL - Mr. and Mrs. H Paul Uoyd of Oak Hill ate
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Jeffiey Merry of Bidwell, and
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Alicia Jean, ro Mr: and Mn. Marvin Oun of Gallipolis are announcing the
Aaron Matthew Kamer.
upcoming marri;lge of their childnm,Jacqueline Renee' Merry
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Oak Hill High School and the lO James Michael Ours.
· .
.
•
University of Rio Gr.mde.At Rio G~e, she received her RN
The bride-ro-be is a 1995 graduate of G~ Academy High
and BSN degrees in nuning.
-.
.
··· School, and a 1999 graduate of the UntversJty of~o Grande,
She is presendy an assistant nune
ger in the rehabilitation with a degree i~ medical office technology. She 1S currendy
unit at Scioro Memorial Hospital in Ponsmouth. She cumndy employed at Ohio•Valley Bank.
.
resides in Ponsniouth. .
'
·
,
The bridegroom is also a 1995 graduate of GAHS, and a
· Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman ~mer of South i 999 gradtl.lte of the University of Rio Grande, with a deg.ree
PortSmouth, Ky., where -he resides. He is a graduate of Gteenup in plant maintenance technology. He is currendy· ~~ploye&lt;J at
County (Ky.) High School He completed his paramedic training Rockwell Automation as a quality assurance techrucwt.
.
at Shawnee Stare Univenity. He is currendy employed at Scioto
The wedding will biQJune 16, 2001 at 3:30 p.m. at St. Louts
Memorial Hospital in the emergency department He plans ro Catholic Church, Gallipolis. A reception will follow.
attend the University of Rio Grande, majoring in nursing.
The couple will reside in Gallipolis.
/
.The open church wedding will be July 14, 2001 at I p.m. in
Oak Hill Uni]H Methodist Church.
,
--'-----,,-------:---.::...----.:.....-'~-'----,.---------------'--_:_--

I d 1•

•

·

h h

Senior mea e "IVery goes ' ig -tech'.'
.

·
GALLIPOLIS - "We are
now the first senior ,!:enter in
' ·,
Ohio to use one of these new
food pxkaging devices, and
· • reports indicate that our
Me21s on W"heels clients really
appreciate the new system."
.
So said Dan Davies, president of the Gallia County
Council on Aging, about a
hand-operated senior meals
· BIDWELL- Johh William Loveday and Sandra Anne Love- packaging system recently
day were united in marriage March 17,2001 at Trinity United placed in operation in the
Methodist Church, Bidwell.
.
Gallia
County
Senior
The bride is the-£laughter of Charles and Sally Quigley of Resource Center'• kitchen.
Grand Rapids, Mich., and •he groom is the son of John and
The new unit enables the
Ruth Loveday of Bidwell.
nutrition staff to aave time
The Rev: Jack Berry perfu rmed the double ring ceremony. after tray food compartmenlll
Sister of the bride, Susan .Bru •.LCher, served as maid-of-honor; are filled, and then i
ediKim Woqldridge and Phylis Smathers served as bridesmaids. · ately wrapped and se ed with
Brother of the gro.Qm, Dan Loveday, served as best man; Dave Mylar polyester
Lucas and Randall Cummons were the groomsmen. Garrett
Once sealed, · t
Sheets was ringbearer.
remains hotter when reachA reception was held at Ellcs Lodge 107 _in Gallipolis, fol- es the clients, no food is
lowing the ceremony.
·
· spilled from one compartment tp another, the food
remains in the tray without
leaking or spilling, can be
placed in a microwave or con-

.

~

tilm.

·
ven!ional oven for re-heating,
and the client can see all of
the food on the tray.
The lone complaint thus far

. came &amp;om an e!d )Y l'lllde,.

man who told the meal driver
that "I want ro be surprised ·
wpen I open the lid, bu~ now
I !=an see everything before I
-get a chance to open it."
The unit is food grade
approved for both froz~n or
hot meal packaging and will
operate at temperature ral'lllft
from minus-40 degrees to 400
degrees. Fahrenheit. , .
"We are very happy with
this new device becau1e ,each
food item i1 sealed separately.
an~ we can now include soup
In the meal and not worry ·
about spilling it into other
food itenu," aai4 .Jean Niday.
executiVJ! director of the Gallia County Senior Reso.un:e
~enter.
·
Niday sajd contributions
from the Gallipolis Junior
Women's Club, Ohio Valley

Holzer -

. Bank Employees Community Emblem Club enabled the
. . program
.
Fund, Fintir .Bank employees, centers' nutntton
to
Business and Professional · purchase the money-saving
Women's Club and Gallipolis machine,
'
-

~

•••

•••

•••

MATTER·s ·

.

Sale

· ,.Block the sun more to make .
yourself look·younger

·Save 30%

Give your I)NCioul a•m11l
new life, S.ledfrom
100'1 oftoday'• mo•t

popular mounttno•·

I

Ourtxpetllcan help
you find the pt11'ect

You
rob:ibly won't find ·th e
a healthy. glowing
!!:secret
in a jar of
'l'lolstllm!er. But it may help
~rol~eili(Y&lt;&gt;ur skin if it con-

leftlnO for vou.
Llmlllcl Tlllll Ofrlr

cer.

,

• Avoid the period of peak
su n intensity- between 10
a.m. and 2 p.m.
• . Cover up. When
exposed to direct sunlight,
.'
wear clothing with long
to the
sleeves and pants . Wear
rays . no't ·
wide-brimmed hats to
ADVICE
'.
·
your risk of skin
cover your fa ce, nec k and
tin, eel',; it•• is .the primary
ea rs.
prematpre skin ounce bottle should last
• Don't count on the
clouds
to protect you. They
~~~~·~di~~.Chances ·are you through applications. And
•
r
'
lee ' the~" signs on this goes for .armers, too. only filter about 20 percent
' and neck- a .dry That type of long-term, ofUVA and UVB rays.
"'cfi!:l~cd•' ~lh blott h{ texture. unprotected exposur~ to the ·
(Becky Colli11s is Gallia
f\ ":'"..,..:. especially before age· 20, sun can lead f9 something County.'s Exteusio11 agent fOr
"Pr .if you have • ~ fair com- •J11u.c·h ; worse than a few ·fa mily "imd _cm1sumer scie11ccs,
l r$lexion.
wrmkles . It can cause can- 0 /iio ·State University.)
:
It's neyer too late to ben- .
efit... ·~~m · protecting your·
skin. ~!Avoid · more tanning
'
and allow your skin . to
~ The Right Chair,
The ~ight .Price
repair some of the damage
~·
~tght Now...
1 on its own. Fine wrinkes,
rough patches and other
"weatheredtl signs ca n
become less noticeable;
more . tanning \md sunburn
wiU make them more visible.
J
To avoid tanning and sun1 burn, wear sunscreen every
1 day. Choose a product with
1
a minimum su"n protection
factor (SPF) of 15 . And .
remember these · tips:
. • Screen both UVA and
UVB
.rays. Buy' sunscreen
t
I
products which offer dual
I
protection; your pharmacist
Ccan recommend one.
r: • Apply sunscreen every
~two hc;mrs during long periods of stln exposure •. regardAbaolutely tort•ousl SplendidlY comfortabl•l
less of the SPF stre11~h. Be
Ultra c~teniporary BERKLINil Rclln•~: has
. ~u~e to apply it liberally. It
laywed horseshoe cuahlon back, deep
&lt;"Should take one ounce to
two p•d Hat .and double padded ~ttoman.
Comfort wrlnkl•• .,.. ever-ao-aupple In 100%
(fully cover an adult. ·
t•nulne le•ther with matching
,
·
, That means that an eight-

Becky '
Collins ·

.

;

"Speaks.Out" at
Care Canter
~~~:

:.'2:.''t£'"!~~

·~
... ~~

!

I

I

I

LEATHER
WALLAWAY
OR
ROCKER
RECLINER
AT A
GREAT
PR(CE!

•

I

·

~

.

s....
ftft

vinyl trim. Chooee apac....vlnt
recliner, or Rocker-bclln•r. ·

Jffy muddy
Wfie'! my r_Daddy signs fiis name
:He always writes ".ivf.'D."
'Tfiat's ·so people will li.now
'Tfiat fie belongs to me.
'For "Jvf/D." means my daddy
'· Or sometfiingjusttfie same.
!And tfiat is wfiy fie always
'Puts tfiese letters on fiis name.
. Some of tfie letters in fi~s name are small
'But tfiese are'not you see,
.Jie always mali.es tfiem big like tfiat,
'Because fie's so prouq ofme.

cr'rnfia J. 'Patel
3rd 9rade .
..Cogan Cliri.stian Scliool

Compliments Of

'Ilm '13allman
~dmirer

of&lt;'Poetry

I

: MORE LOCAL NEWS.
I

! MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

'

~-

..\.

'

"

�..
•

•••
._

. . . . Aprll11, 2DD1

Si.niey, April15, 2001

r-:

'
Pomeroy • Mlddl1port • Gelllpolla, Ohio Point Pl•••nt. WV

COMMUNIT.Y CORNER

TALKIN' SMACK
•

•

·
Former
Middleport
resident
I
will
be
making
music
in
lrelafld
I·
l .
I

· ~'

Men, the tlme has come
to shut down (The School'

Many of you will remember talented BevAbout a year ago a certain
For example, you ~ve just
•
_&amp;dy Wilcox, daughter of Raymond and
school came ro my mention
finished eating a wonderful
·tdaryln Wilcox of Middleport, and the {ltusic
from a "friend" whom I will
'
meal your significant other has
~She made while growing up. here.
prepared for you .You take the
• call ... Earl. This school has
. "' For the pan several· years, she has been
brought to light answers to
plare (not being able to eat it
~rector of the River Magic Chorus of
· all) and,. simply set it on the
. some of my most intriguing
Z:Huntingron, which will be traveling to Irequestions.
counter. . If your significant
I think it is time to share
' land this fall to compete in the 12th Annual
other does not like what you
Conventio.111?f the lrish_ t.~sol'iation of Barthese findings with my fellow
have just done, she will not say
COMMUNITY
-··
·
· ·"'
bershop Singers.
men frie1.ds so they may reap
MY VIEW anything. She will do even
the
benefits
that
have
been
so
worse; sbe \viii give you "The
The 28-member chorus she directs is the
fint ever from Sweet AJelines International experience filled with bea~ty and awe, and
·gracefully bestowed .upon me. skills. But today. I must con- Look."·
and West Virginia to be invited to take part, tempered with a few extreme clements of
(Note:"This article is simply ·centrate on one power that is
Only a woman can give a
so it's quite an. honor.
nature and man:·
for men only. If you are a given to women at the school. look that makes a man wash
woman and find yourself readMen, have ·you ever been the dishes, put them away. dean
The chorus wiU be joined by the Kanawha
I read with interest his account of the trip
e ·house, wash the dog and
ing the column, . please turn doing something and have that
Kordsmen of the Society for the Preservation - a saga of flight delays and changes to get .
. all in the
your attention to another part horrible feeling that a knife has ·. b '"'\ he~ a diamondand Encouragement of Barbershop Quaner to Wales, an IRA bombing at the_BBC build1 Singing in America from Charleston.
ing in London, high alert at atrport when
of the paper.Thank you.)
just entered your back' When ;.-;:;;~ mght.
:- ... or now, ever1y•s group, w h.tc11 sh e says they. prepared for
the
tnp
home,
and
comphAre
they
gone?
Good.
Let
'
you turn, you see the most
, be careful. There is no
.
.
b
1
f
"h
·
·
h
ld
...
.
-.
canolils
on
getting
to
certam.
p
ac&lt;"S
ecause
horrifYing thing that a mail can s~ h
ool for us and there
me b"egih.
0
·
f annoi11Zifungdt er worh ' IS 10 of the outbreak offoot and mouth diseaseMen,
this
column
will
see.
Your
significant
other
is
never
be. Women have
thase aprocess
o rats~ng n s .or t e tnp.
d
h
1 h
h M "k
Til 'U b d ·
rf&lt;
. h
.
an came to t e cone uswn t at w en 1 e ·
answer all of your questions standing directly behind you been going to ..this school for
ey , e domg pe ortlmankices · mb t kie. tfl- said they had "a great time" he was. using the
decades and no man has ~
about the opposite sex and the giving you"The Look."
stare area an are curren y ta ng oo ngs.
. al ..
be h b
d d"
d
. WI·u be Bever1y•s secon d tnp
.
e, remcm r t e est an
1sregar
things they do that you have
All of you know what I'm known about until now. Wn~
Th 15
to 1re- ratwn
h
never
been
able
to
figure
out.
talking
about. It is the facial your congressman and ~sk
' I d Sh
h
. Fb
t e rest.
, ,: an . e was t ere m e ruary representmg
Anyways, the opportunity to lecture at the
You can ask them, bm you will · expression a woman can give what you can do to help bnng
yo: Harmony Consultants Ltd. , coachmg cho- University of Wales has since opened many
not get the correct response. that makes you know exactly this school down.
-~ J ruses and quartets m Skerne~. Athlo?e and doors for Mike. He has been asked to deliver
Why? It's simple. This is the . what she is saying without
(Bryan Long is an Ol1io f.flllty
, C':or~ m the barbenhop style of smg~ng. more lecrures at more universities, to present
biggest
conspiracy
since
th
e
uttering
a
word.
Publisl1ing
staff writer.)
·
1
~;;Wb!le there.' she lO~red t~e country, descnb~ a paper 00 his new theories, and already has
Roswell happenings.
·
v1·mg 1t ~ h~vtng the mY_thJCal charm of a .~atry a publisher for the new paper that he hasn't
Women are the m"ost com, Jtale wuh tts many casdes and cathe~rals.
yet written.
plex ~rearures on this planet,
He has also been asked to come on board
And, of qmne, she thoroughly enjoyed the
possibly in the uniVerse. They
:· :music - . from inspiring hymns to the Irish with a new joint research project sponsored
have the ability to make you
;• ··public ' ballads to the barbershop harmony, by the University of Rio Grande (Their
think things you would never
1
·
Welsh Studies Institute) and the Universiry of
" Ireland style.
even dream of, and they have
Beverlv and her hu•band. Ben MiUer. oro- \lf•l~s.
the power to make .Y.,u do
s;. fessor .o f music at Marshall University,live-.jn
anything, even if it goes against
Huntington where she worlcs as a certified
every moral fiber in your body.
••
public accountant. ·
And all of these wonderful •
powen liave been taught to
This ~eek, Shirley Appleby will observe
them .
her 90th birthday and friends want to make
Where? In Arizona. Yes, Ariit a. special occasion for her. Cards may be
Mike Struble and his son, Evan, had a great sent to her at 55 S. Third Av~ .• Apartment 6,
zona.
· time in Wales last month.
Deep in the Arizona desert
Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Mike lectured for four days at the' Univer- ·
lies one the .natiolt's best-kept
sity o(Wales in Swansea and then spent a few
secrets:"THE SCHOOL."The
days visiting historical sites and doing
I is simply just that research for furure projects befpe) coming
Have a nice Easter.
exception. No man has
(Char/eire Hoeflich is gen(ralmanater ofl11e
.
de-it out alive.
·,.home.
·
it 0as being an "exciting Daily Sentine(, Pomeroy.)Sunday, 11.prll15
You see, when girls reach the
•,, Mike described
age dose to 10 or I 1, they are
"·~·--------~--------------------------------------------------~-sent to a special sch!JOI. This
school teaches them all the
~~·F--JI~· M.,ILY basics of becoming a woman in
today's society. Here they are
taught everything from balancing the checkbook to driving

..

••

Bryan
Long

Charlene
Hoeflich

I

J~~equellne

RenN' Merry and J - Mlct.el Ou...

Lloyd- Kamer engqgement - ·Meny- Ours engagement
M.-. Lynn SMets and Child Lee Roberts '

. Sheets-Roberts engagement
REEDSVILLE .- Mr. and Mrs. David Sheets of Reedsville
announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their
·daughter, Mandi Lynn, to Chad Le.e RobertS, son of Mr. and
Mn. Randall RobertS of Racine. ·
The bride-elect, granddaughter of Frances Carleton of
Pomeroy. and the late Harry Carleron and Ezra and Frances
Sheea, is a 1993 graduate of Eastern High ~chool and is
employed at Overbrook Nuning Center as a licensed practical
nurse.
She is pursuing her registered nuning degree at Hocking
College in Nelsonville.
Her fiance, grandson of Marie Robera of Basham, and the
late Geo~ Ro.bera and Clarence and Gladys Shields, is a 1985
graduate of Southern High School. He is employed at South-

=~n°~~:~~;~·~::::~~~·.

held on Sept. 15,2001 at
4:30 p.m. at First Southern Baptist" Church on Pomeroy Pike.
Music will begin at 4 p.m. A reception will follow immediately at Royal Oak Resort.
·

'

OAK HILL - Mr. and Mrs. H Paul Uoyd of Oak Hill ate
BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs. Jeffiey Merry of Bidwell, and
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Alicia Jean, ro Mr: and Mn. Marvin Oun of Gallipolis are announcing the
Aaron Matthew Kamer.
upcoming marri;lge of their childnm,Jacqueline Renee' Merry
The bride-to-be is a graduate of Oak Hill High School and the lO James Michael Ours.
· .
.
•
University of Rio Gr.mde.At Rio G~e, she received her RN
The bride-ro-be is a 1995 graduate of G~ Academy High
and BSN degrees in nuning.
-.
.
··· School, and a 1999 graduate of the UntversJty of~o Grande,
She is presendy an assistant nune
ger in the rehabilitation with a degree i~ medical office technology. She 1S currendy
unit at Scioro Memorial Hospital in Ponsmouth. She cumndy employed at Ohio•Valley Bank.
.
resides in Ponsniouth. .
'
·
,
The bridegroom is also a 1995 graduate of GAHS, and a
· Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Sherman ~mer of South i 999 gradtl.lte of the University of Rio Grande, with a deg.ree
PortSmouth, Ky., where -he resides. He is a graduate of Gteenup in plant maintenance technology. He is currendy· ~~ploye&lt;J at
County (Ky.) High School He completed his paramedic training Rockwell Automation as a quality assurance techrucwt.
.
at Shawnee Stare Univenity. He is currendy employed at Scioto
The wedding will biQJune 16, 2001 at 3:30 p.m. at St. Louts
Memorial Hospital in the emergency department He plans ro Catholic Church, Gallipolis. A reception will follow.
attend the University of Rio Grande, majoring in nursing.
The couple will reside in Gallipolis.
/
.The open church wedding will be July 14, 2001 at I p.m. in
Oak Hill Uni]H Methodist Church.
,
--'-----,,-------:---.::...----.:.....-'~-'----,.---------------'--_:_--

I d 1•

•

·

h h

Senior mea e "IVery goes ' ig -tech'.'
.

·
GALLIPOLIS - "We are
now the first senior ,!:enter in
' ·,
Ohio to use one of these new
food pxkaging devices, and
· • reports indicate that our
Me21s on W"heels clients really
appreciate the new system."
.
So said Dan Davies, president of the Gallia County
Council on Aging, about a
hand-operated senior meals
· BIDWELL- Johh William Loveday and Sandra Anne Love- packaging system recently
day were united in marriage March 17,2001 at Trinity United placed in operation in the
Methodist Church, Bidwell.
.
Gallia
County
Senior
The bride is the-£laughter of Charles and Sally Quigley of Resource Center'• kitchen.
Grand Rapids, Mich., and •he groom is the son of John and
The new unit enables the
Ruth Loveday of Bidwell.
nutrition staff to aave time
The Rev: Jack Berry perfu rmed the double ring ceremony. after tray food compartmenlll
Sister of the bride, Susan .Bru •.LCher, served as maid-of-honor; are filled, and then i
ediKim Woqldridge and Phylis Smathers served as bridesmaids. · ately wrapped and se ed with
Brother of the gro.Qm, Dan Loveday, served as best man; Dave Mylar polyester
Lucas and Randall Cummons were the groomsmen. Garrett
Once sealed, · t
Sheets was ringbearer.
remains hotter when reachA reception was held at Ellcs Lodge 107 _in Gallipolis, fol- es the clients, no food is
lowing the ceremony.
·
· spilled from one compartment tp another, the food
remains in the tray without
leaking or spilling, can be
placed in a microwave or con-

.

~

tilm.

·
ven!ional oven for re-heating,
and the client can see all of
the food on the tray.
The lone complaint thus far

. came &amp;om an e!d )Y l'lllde,.

man who told the meal driver
that "I want ro be surprised ·
wpen I open the lid, bu~ now
I !=an see everything before I
-get a chance to open it."
The unit is food grade
approved for both froz~n or
hot meal packaging and will
operate at temperature ral'lllft
from minus-40 degrees to 400
degrees. Fahrenheit. , .
"We are very happy with
this new device becau1e ,each
food item i1 sealed separately.
an~ we can now include soup
In the meal and not worry ·
about spilling it into other
food itenu," aai4 .Jean Niday.
executiVJ! director of the Gallia County Senior Reso.un:e
~enter.
·
Niday sajd contributions
from the Gallipolis Junior
Women's Club, Ohio Valley

Holzer -

. Bank Employees Community Emblem Club enabled the
. . program
.
Fund, Fintir .Bank employees, centers' nutntton
to
Business and Professional · purchase the money-saving
Women's Club and Gallipolis machine,
'
-

~

•••

•••

•••

MATTER·s ·

.

Sale

· ,.Block the sun more to make .
yourself look·younger

·Save 30%

Give your I)NCioul a•m11l
new life, S.ledfrom
100'1 oftoday'• mo•t

popular mounttno•·

I

Ourtxpetllcan help
you find the pt11'ect

You
rob:ibly won't find ·th e
a healthy. glowing
!!:secret
in a jar of
'l'lolstllm!er. But it may help
~rol~eili(Y&lt;&gt;ur skin if it con-

leftlnO for vou.
Llmlllcl Tlllll Ofrlr

cer.

,

• Avoid the period of peak
su n intensity- between 10
a.m. and 2 p.m.
• . Cover up. When
exposed to direct sunlight,
.'
wear clothing with long
to the
sleeves and pants . Wear
rays . no't ·
wide-brimmed hats to
ADVICE
'.
·
your risk of skin
cover your fa ce, nec k and
tin, eel',; it•• is .the primary
ea rs.
prematpre skin ounce bottle should last
• Don't count on the
clouds
to protect you. They
~~~~·~di~~.Chances ·are you through applications. And
•
r
'
lee ' the~" signs on this goes for .armers, too. only filter about 20 percent
' and neck- a .dry That type of long-term, ofUVA and UVB rays.
"'cfi!:l~cd•' ~lh blott h{ texture. unprotected exposur~ to the ·
(Becky Colli11s is Gallia
f\ ":'"..,..:. especially before age· 20, sun can lead f9 something County.'s Exteusio11 agent fOr
"Pr .if you have • ~ fair com- •J11u.c·h ; worse than a few ·fa mily "imd _cm1sumer scie11ccs,
l r$lexion.
wrmkles . It can cause can- 0 /iio ·State University.)
:
It's neyer too late to ben- .
efit... ·~~m · protecting your·
skin. ~!Avoid · more tanning
'
and allow your skin . to
~ The Right Chair,
The ~ight .Price
repair some of the damage
~·
~tght Now...
1 on its own. Fine wrinkes,
rough patches and other
"weatheredtl signs ca n
become less noticeable;
more . tanning \md sunburn
wiU make them more visible.
J
To avoid tanning and sun1 burn, wear sunscreen every
1 day. Choose a product with
1
a minimum su"n protection
factor (SPF) of 15 . And .
remember these · tips:
. • Screen both UVA and
UVB
.rays. Buy' sunscreen
t
I
products which offer dual
I
protection; your pharmacist
Ccan recommend one.
r: • Apply sunscreen every
~two hc;mrs during long periods of stln exposure •. regardAbaolutely tort•ousl SplendidlY comfortabl•l
less of the SPF stre11~h. Be
Ultra c~teniporary BERKLINil Rclln•~: has
. ~u~e to apply it liberally. It
laywed horseshoe cuahlon back, deep
&lt;"Should take one ounce to
two p•d Hat .and double padded ~ttoman.
Comfort wrlnkl•• .,.. ever-ao-aupple In 100%
(fully cover an adult. ·
t•nulne le•ther with matching
,
·
, That means that an eight-

Becky '
Collins ·

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"Speaks.Out" at
Care Canter
~~~:

:.'2:.''t£'"!~~

·~
... ~~

!

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I

LEATHER
WALLAWAY
OR
ROCKER
RECLINER
AT A
GREAT
PR(CE!

•

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~

.

s....
ftft

vinyl trim. Chooee apac....vlnt
recliner, or Rocker-bclln•r. ·

Jffy muddy
Wfie'! my r_Daddy signs fiis name
:He always writes ".ivf.'D."
'Tfiat's ·so people will li.now
'Tfiat fie belongs to me.
'For "Jvf/D." means my daddy
'· Or sometfiingjusttfie same.
!And tfiat is wfiy fie always
'Puts tfiese letters on fiis name.
. Some of tfie letters in fi~s name are small
'But tfiese are'not you see,
.Jie always mali.es tfiem big like tfiat,
'Because fie's so prouq ofme.

cr'rnfia J. 'Patel
3rd 9rade .
..Cogan Cliri.stian Scliool

Compliments Of

'Ilm '13allman
~dmirer

of&lt;'Poetry

I

: MORE LOCAL NEWS.
I

! MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

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, IF C4 ••• ,., l:iUIH-6ntiutl

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=rmAprtl15
- Sunrile Mrviee
• Addllon FrllltWill Bapliat
Oudl, 7 a.m. Breakflll after
Ill vice.

ADDISON - Service a!' Addi·
1011 F...wil Baptist Church, 6
wilh Rick Barcus preach-

e:,-·

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BIDWELL- Sunrise service at
PI• ...,.ct Baptist Church, 6:30

a.m;, Pastor cart Basham
preacHng. Sunilay school al9.
a.m. fllw. ChaJ1e&amp; Hively
preacliing al 7 p.m.
CROWN CITY - Sunrise service at Kings Chapel, 6 a.m.,
with Pallor MaHhew Henry
preaching.
NORTHUP- Sunrise service
at Noithup Baptist Church,
6:30a.m.with Dave Bryan
preaching.Sungay school 9 ·
a.m.
CENTENARY - The Christian
M-ngers will sing and Rev.
Ron Donahue will preach
beginning at 10 a.m. at Conte·
nary. United Christian Church.
CROWN CITY -Sunrise service a1 Good Hope United Baptist Church, 6:30 a.m., with
Brother Larry Haley preaching
and Brother lim Delong
singing.
'
PATRIOT- Sunrise service at
Patriot United Melhodist
Church, 6 :30 a.m.
CROWN CITY- Sunrise ser·
vices at Bailey Chapel Church,
7 a.m., with special singing by
C:u,if-lt J;etmilu Wilh:n'tt TAtdnr
and Connie Robinson. Sunday
School at 9 a.m. No services
Sunday night.

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VINTON - Easter services at
Vinton Baptist Church. Sunrise
service at 7 a.m. with breakfast
to follow; Sunday School at
9:30 a.m.; moming worship
With e spacial choral preeenta·
lion at 10:30 a.m. Nursery provided. No evening service.
'RIO GRANDE- Sunrise ser·
vice will be held at Calvary
Baptist Church at 8:45 a.m.
Thll will bs followed by a
breekfaat:"'AII welcome.

CROWN 'CITY- Sunrise HI'·
vice at Libelty Chapel Church,
6:30 a.m., Sunday 8Chool at 9
a.m., Benny Simpkins singing.
GALLIPOLIS - Easter Egg
Hunt 9:30 a.m. at FHllt Prelbyterian. All children welcome.

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Elaptist ·
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus preaching.

CardSh-a.
ROONEY - Resurrection cel- . Aget-well card drive is bl!ing
held for Benny Simpkins as he
ebration at Rodney Pike
Church of God featuring Sanc- recovers from surgery. Cards
tuary Choir. youth drama "Ignit- may be sent to either Pleasant
Valley Hosphal, or to-Benny's
ed" and KICK's Children's
home: 725 Williams Road,
Choir."Egg hunt to follow worScottown,
45678.
ship. For"informaUon, call 2459518.
Acard-shower is being held for
Daisy Sims to celebrate her
GALLIPOLIS - Sunrise serbirthday on April 18. Cards ·
vice at Victo~aptisl Church,
may be sent to 13756 Ohio 7,
6:30 a.m.; re hments IP .folGallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
low in fellows p hall. Sunday
school begins at 9 a.m.
An open house and card show·
er will be held fa celebrate NetGALLIPOLIS - Sunday
lie Carter's 90th birthday on
School, worship service and ·
May 19, 2001 from 2·5 p.m. at
Easter egg hunt at Calvary
287
Arnbleside Drive, Kerr,
Christian Center Inc .. starting
Ohio.
No gifts, please.
at 10 a.m. Easter draina at 6
p.m.
A card shower will be held for
Sarah Halley. as she celebrates
- Sunrise serher 89th birthday on May 2.
vices a~heshire Unhed
Cards may be sent~o her at
Methodist Church, 6:30 a.m.,
101 Mills Place, Harborside
breakfast to follow services.
Heanh Care, New Lebanon,
Ohio 45345.
PORTER - Pastor Steve
Rollins will preach a special
ReviVIIIS
message, "Way of the Cross
Leads Home." at Clark Chapel HARTFORD,W.Va- There
Church, 7 p.m. Sunday School will be revival at Church of
r.hriRt in ,Chrisli!ln Uni011. Aonl ·
•t 10 a.m.
17-21, 7 p.m: mghtly, WJth
Monday, Aprll16
speaker Gary Jacksom, and .
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Special singers incudlng
Animal WeHara League, 7:30
Ramey &amp; Dolores CundiH, and
p.m., St. Peter's Episcopal
Frank &amp; Ida Martin. Everybody
Church.
welcome.

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CH~Ii

Tuelday, Aprl117

KERR - MuRi-county Prayer
and Praise meeting at Uvlng
Waters Church.
VINTON - Regular meeting of
Huntington Grange 731, 7:30
p.m., with potluck to follow.
Thuradly, Aprll18 . .
ADDISON - Pray,cmeeling
at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 7:30 p,m., with Malt
Smltb preaching.
·

BIDWELL- Sunrise Hrvlce at
Hanla Baptiat wiH be held at 7
a.m., with ~n Lemley speakIng. A breakfast will bs held at
Friday, Apfll 20
8 a.m., Sundly School at 9
GALLIPOLIS - Parkinson
a.m., 11rvlce at 10 a.m; An
. Support Group, 2 p.m., library
. EUler Egg Hunt will be held
of Grace United Methodlll
Church. Topic: "OIMeiiOM Mel
dtr11rvice.
Anewers. • I'or morelilforma·

MORGAN CENTER ...... Revival
at Morgan Center Christian
Holiness Church, April 18·21, 7
p.m. nightly wHh preaching by
KeHh Eblin. Trease Preston will
sing Wednesday; Sharon Eblin
on Thursday and Friday: and
The Conners on Saturday. For
more lnlormatlon, call 3886098.
The Community Ceiendar Ia
publllhed ae a lr11 Hrvlce
to nonprofit groupe wllhing
to ennounce IMitlnge and · ·
lpiCIII IVIIItl. The· calendar
11 not dlllgned to promote
..,.. or fund~leere of any
tyPf. tteme 1r1 prlntld a1
.,..._ P•'"'... "'d cannot bl
guarantlld to run.

lUNDAY
PORTLAND -Community of
Chrtsl Church, localed on
Lovatt Road just off County
Road 35, eunrise aervlc" at 8
Lm., wKh breakfast to follow.
Ealler egg hunt will follow
brelkfHI. · '

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Baptist Church sunrtse service, Temple. Practice for inspection.
6:52 a.m. Easter Sunday, ·
MIDDLEPORT- Ash Street'
Rel.reahments.
·
Church, Middleport, sunrise
evening worship, 6:30 p.m.,
and Wednesday evening ser~ervlce and breakf1181, Sunday,
SYRACUSE -Meigs County
. vice, 6:30 p.m.
. 8 a.m. Elder Kenny Yeauger,
Tuberculosis Cll~ic, free
·
guest speaker, publiC welcome.
evening clinic, 4.30 to 6:30
RUTLAND - "Lamb of God."
p.m.,' Syracuse Fire Depart·
an Easter drama, Friday at
POMEROY - Easter sunrise
ment. Free of charge to Meigs
service, 6:30 a.m., Mount Her· 6:45 p.m., .and Sunday at 9:30
County re.sldenta and those
.a.m., Rutland Church of the
mon UnHed Brethren in Christ
working In Meigs County. Teats
Church; bniakfast to follow.
Nazarene.
must be read on Wednesday, ·
Sunday school, 9:30; worship
4:30 to 6:30 p.m.
10;30 a.m. no evening service. REEDSVILLE -Sunrise ser· Church located on Wickham
vice, Reedsville United
TUESDAY
Road off TaKas Road.
Methodist Church, 7 a.m., wHh
MIDDLEPORT - Ladies lor
breakfast to follow.
the Lord, women's Bible study,
DORCAS - Bethany-Dorcas
Abundant Grace Church, TuesUnHad Methodist Church, East· TUPPERS PLAINS- South
day, 10 a.m. All denominations
er sunrise service, 7 a.m.,
Bethel New Testament Church, · welcome.
Easter Sunday Reaurrsction
breakfast follows at 8 a.m.
Day service, 7 a.m., with
RUTLAND - State Rep. John
HOBSON ~ Hobson Christ.lan breakfast to follow, regular
Carey, A-Wellston, meets with
Sunday service, 10:10 a.m.
fellowship Church, Sunrise
constituents at Rutland Civic
Hrvice, 7 a.m., Slngin~
Center, 11 a.m. to noon. ;
Echoes, 10 a.m., evemng
TUPPERS PLAINS- North
revival service, 7 p.m., with
Bethel United Methodist ·
POMEROY - Modem WoodChurch, Easter service, 4 p.m.
Rev. Charlie Griffith as speakmen of America, dinner, Pcin- .
•r. ,
derosa in Gallipolis, Tuesday,
MONDAY
5:30 Ia 7:30 p.m. camp 6335
POMEROY- Sun~se service
RACINE - Recessed session
will pay $3.50 on each meal.
of Racine Village Council, 7
and communion at .Hysell Run
p.m. Monday at the municipal
Holiness Church at 6 a.m.•
RACINE- Aspecial meeting
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m., wor- building.
ot the Southern local Board of
lhip,1 0:30, and evening serEducation will be held at 6
POMEROY- Pomeroy East·
vice, 7 p.m.
pm.. Tuesday at the Southern
ern Star 186, OES, Monday,
Junior High School. Personnel
7:30 p.m. Chester Masonic
CARPENTER,... Mount Union
matters will be discussed.

POINT PLEASANT- Clothing
give away every T ~MSday, 10
a.m. to noon at Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church, 8th and
Main. Clothing contributions
appreciated.

LEON - Sunrise Hrvice at
Crlltllon Church, 6 a.m. The
Rev. Gerald Sayre wiH bring
the rnMHge following -the program.
HENDERSON -Town of Henderson Easter Egg Hunt, 2

MASON - Community Cancer
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
Un~ed Methodist Church. All
area cancer patients, families
and caregivers invited .. (April
17 meeting cancelled.)
HENDERSON•- Line dancing,
Hender&amp;an Community Build·
ing, wHh insti)JCior Dawn Halstead. Beginners 6 p.m. and
advanced 7 p.m.
·.

p.m. at Hendertan Community
Building.
·
APPLE GROVE- Sunrise"'
service at Mlllatone Church, 6
a.m. Evening service at 7 p.m.

MASON - Sunrise service at
Faith Baptist Church, 6 a.m.,
followed by breakfast cooked
by men of the church. Sunday
school at 9:45 a .m. followed by
morning worship at 11 a.m.
The Lord's Supper observance
at 6 p.m. foiJowed by Easter
cantata at 7 p.m.
·

WEDNESDAY, April 18
POINT PLEASANT Wednesday night Bible .clubs
for preschool up through 12tiJ
grade, 7too8: 15 p.m. at
Gospel lighthouse Church,
Neal Road. For information call
675-7229 or 675-6620.

.

LEON - Elmwood Community
Church will have 9:30 a.m.
passover service wHh communion. Meal will follow service.

POINT PlEASANT- Violence
on Campus seminar at Marshall University Mid-Ohio Valley Cenler, 1 p.m. with special .
speakers and a 15-minute film.
Sponsored by Concerl'!ed
Women For America of West
Virginia.

LETART- Sunrise service for
Uni9n Charge at Oak Grove
United Methodist Church, 6:30
a.m., with breakfast to follow in
fellowship hall. Easter program
al 7 p.m. at Union Church.
APPLE GROVE - Sunrise
service at Beech Hill United
Methodist Church, 6:30 a.m.
LEON - Special program.
Bible study, teaching and
prayer JESeven Places Jesus
Shed His Blood." 11 a.m.,
Baden Community Building,
W.Va. 87, with speaker Don
Cox. For infonmation, call 372·
6091 or 458-2574.
NEW HAVEN - Sunrise Easier service, St. Paul Lutheran
Church. 6:30a.m.
·

GAU.IPOLIS - I rWlu some
• people rWI my articles. Just m:endy
Vic and Mary Niday ame into my
..... sron: md Mnlied to tee my photos of
"On !he R&lt;Ud to Mandalay:'
VJC told me his mother vm Marg;uet DonoaDy, who married Paul )
VICtor N"Jday Sr. in 1928. Margmt '
,vm my teacher, who alw3yl talking

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lion, cal o«6-0808.
Sunday, April 22

THURSDAY, April 19
POINT PLEASANT- TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) 5.
· p.m. w!ljgh in and meeting at
5:30 p.m. at Trlnily United
. Methodist Church. Far information call 675-3692.
POINT PLEASANT - Shoot at
Point Pleasant Gun Club, 6
p.m.
POINT PlEASANT - Weight
Watchers, Christ Episcopal
. Cl)urch, with weigh in at 4:45
p.m. and 5:15 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS FERRY- The
. ' NEW HAVEN - New Haven
Carpenter Family Renewal
Jr. OUAM 175 meeting, 7 p.m.
Ministries will present "The
Deliverance•. at Faith Gospel
Church at 10:46 a.m. At 7 p.m. POINT PLEASANT- Point
Pleaeant Lions Club, 6 p'.m.,
the junior church will praaent
"Eaeter Miracle.• · · .
Malinda'• Restaurant.

Church 7 p.m. Presented by
youth ministry drama 1.-n o1
Ridgewood Bapllst Church. rRoanoke, Va.
·
SUNDAY. April 22
GALLIPOLIS FERRY - Musical drama at Faith Gospel .
Church 9:45 a.m. Pr811!1f1tad by
youtll ministry drama team ol ·
Ridgewood Baptist Church,
Roanoke, Va.

about on the road to Mandalay s:iying
•· she hoped to go there someday. She
never made it !hen: but she sure
impressed me, and I went !here 18
yean ago and wallr.ed on· the road for
five miles and took some beautiful
photos.
I :un going to gi\-eVic and his wife
a photo of Manchhy.· I wiD always
remember that old saying, "On the
Road to Manchhy." Thank you, Vic
and Mary, for bringing back !hose
happy days that I spent !here on the
road to Mandalay.
Getting back go my school days at
Hawk School, whc;n I was in the
eighth grade, we had a woman
teacher'and she could not contiol the
older boys. Some of the bqys were
much ol~r !han I was and they

ADDISON, Ohio - Preaching
service at Addison Freewill
Baptist Chtll'ch, 6 p.m. with
Rick Barcus. .
REVIVALS

POINT PLEASANT - Revival
at First Church of the
Nazarene, 2500 Mount Vernon
Ave., with Evangelist Rev.
Bertram Grant of Mineral
Wells. Services begin at 9:45
a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Sunday,
April 15 and continue through
Thursday, April19, at 7 p.m.
nightly. Special singing.

~

FLATROCK- Revival April
· 17-22 at Wesleyan Methodist
Church~ W.Va. 2, with Rev.
Billy McCoy at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Handballs will also be lea·
lured.

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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. Special singers
will be April 16: Mercy; April
17: Harmoners; April' 18: ·
Rollins Family; Allri.l. 19: Joyce
Banke; Aprtl 20: Stover Trio; D
and April 21: Barcus Singers.

HARTFORD - Revival at
Church of Chrlat In Chrlatlan
MONDAY, Aprll16
ADDISON, Ohio- Prayer '
Union, April 17-21 at 7 p.m.
meeting
at
Addison
Freewill
with
spacial speaker Rev. Gary
SOUTHSIDE - Chubs weight
Baptist
Church,
7:30
p.m.
with
·
Jackson.
Special alngel'll "
loaa 1upport group, Southllde
Matt Smith preaching .
Include Tuaaday,, Ramey lind
Community Center, weigh-Ina
Delores Cundiff; Wedneeday,
5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a ·
fiAIDAY, ADtll 20. ·
· Frank and Ida Martin; Thul'll·
1hort milling.
~
SOUTHSIOE- Jam eees!cin
dly, Connle,Gaodnlta; Fri.,
at Soulhalde Community CenGabriel Quartet: and Saturday,
POINT PLEASANT- Kl~e
Bible Club, Wealeyan Hollne" ter wllh proceeds to the build· Earthen Vessels.
lng fund, 7 lo 10 p.m.
Church, 2300 Lincoln Ave.,
6:30 to 8 p.m., for ages 6 to
POINT PLEASANT- Evange·
listie services at Shiloh Com12. For Information call Debbie SATURDAY, April 21 ~ .
munity Church for 12 coneecu· ·
Alexander at 676·5464 or Deb· SOUTHSIDE - Dance at
Southside Community Center,
ble Peachey at 875-1187.
live Saturday nights beginning
8 to 11 p.m. wllh Clay County
April 7 at 7 p.m. with Ev11!1geCountry.
·
TUESDAY, Aprll17
llsi'Stanley Shaffer and spacial
LETART- HELP Dlel Claes,
singing every service.
· POINT PLEASANT- Alco-'
Letart Community Center.
holies Anonymoua, 8 p.m.,
Weigh-Ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
Community cal.e ndar 11 pub·
Point Pleasant Presby!erian
followed by short meeting.
llehed I I I fr" llrYICI to
Church, corner of 8th and
non•proflt group• wlahlng to
FLATROCK -Clothing closet . Main, usa side door.
announce m11tlnga and
eta! 1vent1. The calendar 1 ·
give away every Tuesday at
GALLIPOLIS' FERRY- Musl·
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
prlntad ae 1paoe penmlt1 and
cal drama at Failh Gospel
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
cannot be guarant"d to run.

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GALLIPOLIS - One hundred yean ago, &amp;ster fell on
April 7 and of the servicd at
Grace Methodist Episcopal
Chwch in f901, we n:ad in the
Daily Tribune:
, · "There were good congregations on Sunday morning
and evening. The church was
.·handsomely . decorated with
· palms, fe.-ns, and cut flowen
al')d attracted much admira·
tion. The discourses wen: edifying and the singing charming. ~. Fred Canaday's
anthem in the inonling and
Miss Letitia Mills' anthem in ·
the evening were very bcauti·
.. ful"
The ~ev. L.L. Magee's lCrmons were: "The Cornentane
of Christianity" and "S)!IIlpa·
.rby.- .Human. and Divine:',
:.; Other titles of sermons in
town on Easter included: "The
.. Divine Branch Planted" at first
. Baptist and "Death and Life" at
'St. Peter's. Songs sung at !he
• Presbyterian ChuJ+h -included:
,, "The Angel's Message;• "Why
Seek Ye The Living Among .
The Dead?", "Hark Ten Thou·
sand Harps and Voices" and
"Christ The Lord Is Risen
·:Today."
·
· Perhaps the most poignant
; 1 sermon was given ey Editor
r Sibley in an editorial before
Easter when he said resurreccion ~ a promised sure thing.
It was a matter of whelher a
. p non • chose resurrection to
9
life or resurrection to danma-.
tion. Sibley was never shy
about commenting ·on religio_us issues. It was also that
.spring that he said about ·one
n:lfgion that it was "rather

Dr. KeiJ B,•sb
Chiropra~c cl Sports
lnjunt Pbysicilll

·Carpal Ti.lnnel S~drome
HS'!liated Disc/Sciatica

Holler CIWc SJe•.-e

('740) 44, 944

' annual spring fair. The inenu
• ·consisted of chiclren pie, tran·
~ beri:y sauce, mashed potatoes,
: 'baked beans, cole slaw, pies and
; fruit. There were a number of
~ musical selections, and a parasol
~ and hoop drill. Admission to
~ the event held in the church's
: Jectun: room \vas 10 cents.
~ The -.yeek .after &amp;stcr, Grace
; church held a lecrure featuring
" the Wbrld famous htunorist
. Brooks.
,.- fred Emenan
r. A large crowd filled ·the
f. church, but Brooks failed to
~ •show up, two nights in a .row.
;: finaUy, on the third night, he
~ was there ana to rruilre up for
~ his faux-pas. He ,gave the

J'

CJiappy

CEasfer

hag had died. He saw his shad·
·ow but spring had aln:ady

992 •22 4

crowd a cwo.haur lecture. The
Daily ;rtbune reported that
Brooks message of palh~&gt;S and
humor fully redeemed htmself.
It was Brook.' last lecture of
·the year.
.
Oth,er news fro.m the week ·
of East~r 1901 mcluded the
propoSJao~ fro~ W.G. Stbley
of lhe Daily Tnbune that the
city ch~nge the . number~d
streets m town to Ohio
.Avenue, Lafayette Avenue, Paris· .
Avenue and . Chickamaqga
Avenue.
He furlher suggested that
cross streets (Vme, Grape,
Court, State,_ etc) be ren~ed
1
.as streets wtth !he. follOWlJ_II! 1
names: Safford,. Cadet; Drouil· ·
lard, Menager,- Bureau, Vinton,
Nash, etc.
It was sadly reported that the
1901 s~wberry c~p would
be short. Alf Henking gave a
talk at .Rio . Grande CoDege
about ~~ tra~ls m Italy. Th~re
was a btg tram wreck &lt;;mtstde
Pomt Pleasant. T~ . Tuxe~o
Club gave a dance, wtth '_fti!SJC
provtded . by the ~obmson
O~hestra. The Silv~r Star
Mmstrels C2JIIe ):!ere a few c;lays
after &amp;ster and · they hired a
•
boy to ptpmote the
young
show. He began run~mg up
Second Avenue fiom Court
· Street.
· .
He ran all !he way to the
courthouse. A crow~ of the.J
cunous began runrung after

.n.o o

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HOURS
Mon- Frl8om - 9pm
Sat. 8am - 6pm
Sun. 1Oom- 4pm

'TIIl9 •
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1 11\11 1 "•

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Of&gt;

Appalachian Children's Chorus

Dr. Todd hblty
· Chiroprldic Pbysicim.
Holler Clktle Jaclu•
(740) S9!-887S

Call for an appointment today!
'

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy Is
authorized to fill your
presci"lptloos under the Trlcare
Senior Pharmacy Prooram. You
only pay the Co-Pay.
We welcome your business.
.

Kenneth McCullouoh, R. Ph.
Charles Rime, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ARIEL, THE\AT'R~,

. . ·Scoliosis

Hours:

~;;;,;;;;iiiii~ijii;ijiiiij~~;~
I

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him as weU as a c11rious police·
man. Finally, the boy was cor·
nered at the courthouse and

Work-related ipjuries

Pome,roy, Ohio

-

•

•

•

· come. It was .rainy and wan at RoedeU store. This monkey
to explain himself.
Before a crowd of several Easter in 1901. A flefeated wore clothes, drank beer out of
hundred people, the boy went politician made a calculation 'a bottle, ate wilh a knife and
into a song about the Silver that if only 20 percent of !he · fork, smolred and ilid nearly ·
Star Minstrels and how they . votes he had paid for had actu- everything that a human could
would pby the theatre the next ally been cast, he would have . do.
evening. He said he meant no been elected. l-Ie was heard to
(James Stinds is a .sp«ial corresay,
"That's
the
last
time
I
deal
harm. It was jwt that he was
spondent for tiJe Sunday Times·
&amp;ntim{ He can be contmted by
"chasing up a new idea", to in futUres." ··
There was a monkey fea- writing to 346 Me11dow LAne,
promote the show.
Also appearing here just rured in the window of !he Cirrleville, Ohio 43113.)
before Easter was ,the At G.
Field Minstrel Show: The field
· show had a cornetist who had
played with the famous Sousa
band. The cornetist stood on
!he Park Central corner one
afternoon giving a concert
promoting the shOw:
•
Prank'Cheney n:ported !hat
his pet. ground hog finally · FromThe
Sttifl of the
came out of his hole on March
30.
6unbap Qttmel 6e]nUnd
· ·Cheney thought the gtound

POOLS AND

Spedillzlng In:
Sports Injuries
Whiplash Injuries
Nedc &amp; Back Pain
Headaches
.

bet I did. Back in those days when by the name of CarlWhe.n the school
you got a whipping at school, you also day was about over, my dad would tell
got a whipping at home. If !hey did Dd it is time to go get Max. Carl
that today, there would be no shoot- would bke off and wait at the school
ing or killingt in schools all through for me ar the ·dOor t:reryday, which
was about a mile from my house. He
the country.
But the teachers are not allowed to Would w:rit for ine to come oui and
whip students in school today, and walk me back home. Those were
that is tao bad. I am glad I came up happy days, even if I did get a whiplhc hard way, when our parents told ping now and then. But they taught
us to do somel=hing we did it and we me some good lessons.
When they .consolidated schools a
also behaved in school.
You would think I would hate my few ye~ ago, Hawk School came up
dad for whipping me, but I always for sale. I had a chance ro buy my
loved him. He would always put his school and all the bnd around it, but I
arm around me and say Max, " I did rurqed it down -because I had jwt
this for your own good. learn to be started in the photo bwiness and a
do!)ar w.fS a doUar back !hen.
good and honest."
I made a big mistake by not borI always try to do !hat. I had a falher
rowing
the money and buying it. But
that ma&lt;J.e something out of me. He
even mortgaged his farm for $30,000 that is water over tht dam, now it
to help me buy the building on the belong; to John Nibert. I think I
corner of Court and Second, where I could write a book abour my happy
had my a \Wdio. I paid him back in school days etc. But I am too old now.
I will be 88 my next birthday. I sure
two years by hard work.
· Later when I was in busi(Jess, both have happy boyhood memories that
Ben Evans and Dale Durkey became will go with me to my grave.
(Max Tawney is a lon~time Jlii&lt;Sf colrmrgood friends of mine.
I used to have a beautiful collie dog nisr firr the Smulay Times-Scmincl.)

as~d

.

" ulsive" · .
•re~ few 'days before Easter, !he
ladic$ of Grace had their big

. Chiropractic Services

Max
Tawney

BY JAMES 5.\ICII

GALLIPOLIS FERRYRevival with Evangelist
Richard Harper of Charleston
through April 15 at Jordan
Baptist Church. Special ·
singing. Services at 7 p.m.'
nightly and 6 p:m. Sunday.

HOLZER CLINIC

the Water.
From !hen on, there -re no problems at Hawk School
Now I will teD you a few of the
thinp I did in school I received a fey.&gt;
whipp~ mysel£ I will never forget
wht'n I was in the sixth ~de, I put a
1m bug down theo dms of !he girl
who sat in liont of me. Her name was
GUEST VIEW
Nora Burleson. She let out a scream
that rocud the builtljpg. She had to
would nat mind her when she told go home and change her domes. My
!hem to do something.
teacher was Mr. Pale D~rkq.
So she was fired and a man by me'
. Did I get a whipping? You bet I did,
name of Ben E~. who just had and all the students got to see it.There
graduated linm coUege, beC2JIIe our weren't too many boys that d4ln't get
teacher. I will never forget when Mr. a whipping back !hen. I' Will never
Evans told Dick Fletcher, who at 17 forget !he fint day he took over as
was still in !he sevcnlh grade wilh teacher at our school.You always got a
mosdy Fs, to get a buclret of water· whipping in liont of the students so
fiom a spring wflere we got our that !hey wouldn't make the same
drinking water.
mistau.
Dick said, "I don't want to." Mr.
I told my sister Ruby about my
Evans Said nothing, but took _out his whipp!ng, and rold het n01 to teD my
knife from his pocket and cut a switch dad. Ruby was not at school the day I
off a tree nearby. He came back inside gpt a whipping.' Instead she told my
and took a good hold of Dick and mother, and my molher told my Dad.
gave him a good whipping in front of I would not talk to Ruby for a week.
all us srudents. So Dick went and got
Did I get a second whipping? You
•

Sermons explored meaning of Easter a century ago

LEON - Revival at Smilh
Chapel Church, April 16-21, 7
.p.m., with Evangelist Sampy
Ha.rt and special singing.

.Bringi11g a new approach to multidisciplinary medicine!

The .f abric Shop

•

.Happy ·memories combine with recollections of the ?lard way'

SUNDAY, April 15
LETART- EMler IIIVicet IJ
Old Town Board Blptist
. Church, oft Sand Hill Road, 6
a.m.- SunriN service; 10 a.m.
Sunday School; 11 a.m. moin·
lng worship; and 7 p.m.
evening worship.

•

Pomeroy •llldcllport. Gallipolis, Ohio. Point Pletaant, wv

......., Aptl15, 2001

Sund8y, Apri115. 2001

Pomeroy • llldcllport • Galllpol... Ohio • Po1ot Pllntnt, WV

.
'

April28, 2001 at 8 p.m.
Tickets: $15 Adults $5 K-12th .

Tickets Available at Haskins Tanner, Rebecca's and Floral Fashions

�•

, IF C4 ••• ,., l:iUIH-6ntiutl

'

=rmAprtl15
- Sunrile Mrviee
• Addllon FrllltWill Bapliat
Oudl, 7 a.m. Breakflll after
Ill vice.

ADDISON - Service a!' Addi·
1011 F...wil Baptist Church, 6
wilh Rick Barcus preach-

e:,-·

I

BIDWELL- Sunrise service at
PI• ...,.ct Baptist Church, 6:30

a.m;, Pastor cart Basham
preacHng. Sunilay school al9.
a.m. fllw. ChaJ1e&amp; Hively
preacliing al 7 p.m.
CROWN CITY - Sunrise service at Kings Chapel, 6 a.m.,
with Pallor MaHhew Henry
preaching.
NORTHUP- Sunrise service
at Noithup Baptist Church,
6:30a.m.with Dave Bryan
preaching.Sungay school 9 ·
a.m.
CENTENARY - The Christian
M-ngers will sing and Rev.
Ron Donahue will preach
beginning at 10 a.m. at Conte·
nary. United Christian Church.
CROWN CITY -Sunrise service a1 Good Hope United Baptist Church, 6:30 a.m., with
Brother Larry Haley preaching
and Brother lim Delong
singing.
'
PATRIOT- Sunrise service at
Patriot United Melhodist
Church, 6 :30 a.m.
CROWN CITY- Sunrise ser·
vices at Bailey Chapel Church,
7 a.m., with special singing by
C:u,if-lt J;etmilu Wilh:n'tt TAtdnr
and Connie Robinson. Sunday
School at 9 a.m. No services
Sunday night.

I

''

I

,

l

VINTON - Easter services at
Vinton Baptist Church. Sunrise
service at 7 a.m. with breakfast
to follow; Sunday School at
9:30 a.m.; moming worship
With e spacial choral preeenta·
lion at 10:30 a.m. Nursery provided. No evening service.
'RIO GRANDE- Sunrise ser·
vice will be held at Calvary
Baptist Church at 8:45 a.m.
Thll will bs followed by a
breekfaat:"'AII welcome.

CROWN 'CITY- Sunrise HI'·
vice at Libelty Chapel Church,
6:30 a.m., Sunday 8Chool at 9
a.m., Benny Simpkins singing.
GALLIPOLIS - Easter Egg
Hunt 9:30 a.m. at FHllt Prelbyterian. All children welcome.

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Elaptist ·
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus preaching.

CardSh-a.
ROONEY - Resurrection cel- . Aget-well card drive is bl!ing
held for Benny Simpkins as he
ebration at Rodney Pike
Church of God featuring Sanc- recovers from surgery. Cards
tuary Choir. youth drama "Ignit- may be sent to either Pleasant
Valley Hosphal, or to-Benny's
ed" and KICK's Children's
home: 725 Williams Road,
Choir."Egg hunt to follow worScottown,
45678.
ship. For"informaUon, call 2459518.
Acard-shower is being held for
Daisy Sims to celebrate her
GALLIPOLIS - Sunrise serbirthday on April 18. Cards ·
vice at Victo~aptisl Church,
may be sent to 13756 Ohio 7,
6:30 a.m.; re hments IP .folGallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
low in fellows p hall. Sunday
school begins at 9 a.m.
An open house and card show·
er will be held fa celebrate NetGALLIPOLIS - Sunday
lie Carter's 90th birthday on
School, worship service and ·
May 19, 2001 from 2·5 p.m. at
Easter egg hunt at Calvary
287
Arnbleside Drive, Kerr,
Christian Center Inc .. starting
Ohio.
No gifts, please.
at 10 a.m. Easter draina at 6
p.m.
A card shower will be held for
Sarah Halley. as she celebrates
- Sunrise serher 89th birthday on May 2.
vices a~heshire Unhed
Cards may be sent~o her at
Methodist Church, 6:30 a.m.,
101 Mills Place, Harborside
breakfast to follow services.
Heanh Care, New Lebanon,
Ohio 45345.
PORTER - Pastor Steve
Rollins will preach a special
ReviVIIIS
message, "Way of the Cross
Leads Home." at Clark Chapel HARTFORD,W.Va- There
Church, 7 p.m. Sunday School will be revival at Church of
r.hriRt in ,Chrisli!ln Uni011. Aonl ·
•t 10 a.m.
17-21, 7 p.m: mghtly, WJth
Monday, Aprll16
speaker Gary Jacksom, and .
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Special singers incudlng
Animal WeHara League, 7:30
Ramey &amp; Dolores CundiH, and
p.m., St. Peter's Episcopal
Frank &amp; Ida Martin. Everybody
Church.
welcome.

.

CH~Ii

Tuelday, Aprl117

KERR - MuRi-county Prayer
and Praise meeting at Uvlng
Waters Church.
VINTON - Regular meeting of
Huntington Grange 731, 7:30
p.m., with potluck to follow.
Thuradly, Aprll18 . .
ADDISON - Pray,cmeeling
at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 7:30 p,m., with Malt
Smltb preaching.
·

BIDWELL- Sunrise Hrvlce at
Hanla Baptiat wiH be held at 7
a.m., with ~n Lemley speakIng. A breakfast will bs held at
Friday, Apfll 20
8 a.m., Sundly School at 9
GALLIPOLIS - Parkinson
a.m., 11rvlce at 10 a.m; An
. Support Group, 2 p.m., library
. EUler Egg Hunt will be held
of Grace United Methodlll
Church. Topic: "OIMeiiOM Mel
dtr11rvice.
Anewers. • I'or morelilforma·

MORGAN CENTER ...... Revival
at Morgan Center Christian
Holiness Church, April 18·21, 7
p.m. nightly wHh preaching by
KeHh Eblin. Trease Preston will
sing Wednesday; Sharon Eblin
on Thursday and Friday: and
The Conners on Saturday. For
more lnlormatlon, call 3886098.
The Community Ceiendar Ia
publllhed ae a lr11 Hrvlce
to nonprofit groupe wllhing
to ennounce IMitlnge and · ·
lpiCIII IVIIItl. The· calendar
11 not dlllgned to promote
..,.. or fund~leere of any
tyPf. tteme 1r1 prlntld a1
.,..._ P•'"'... "'d cannot bl
guarantlld to run.

lUNDAY
PORTLAND -Community of
Chrtsl Church, localed on
Lovatt Road just off County
Road 35, eunrise aervlc" at 8
Lm., wKh breakfast to follow.
Ealler egg hunt will follow
brelkfHI. · '

'

1

Baptist Church sunrtse service, Temple. Practice for inspection.
6:52 a.m. Easter Sunday, ·
MIDDLEPORT- Ash Street'
Rel.reahments.
·
Church, Middleport, sunrise
evening worship, 6:30 p.m.,
and Wednesday evening ser~ervlce and breakf1181, Sunday,
SYRACUSE -Meigs County
. vice, 6:30 p.m.
. 8 a.m. Elder Kenny Yeauger,
Tuberculosis Cll~ic, free
·
guest speaker, publiC welcome.
evening clinic, 4.30 to 6:30
RUTLAND - "Lamb of God."
p.m.,' Syracuse Fire Depart·
an Easter drama, Friday at
POMEROY - Easter sunrise
ment. Free of charge to Meigs
service, 6:30 a.m., Mount Her· 6:45 p.m., .and Sunday at 9:30
County re.sldenta and those
.a.m., Rutland Church of the
mon UnHed Brethren in Christ
working In Meigs County. Teats
Church; bniakfast to follow.
Nazarene.
must be read on Wednesday, ·
Sunday school, 9:30; worship
4:30 to 6:30 p.m.
10;30 a.m. no evening service. REEDSVILLE -Sunrise ser· Church located on Wickham
vice, Reedsville United
TUESDAY
Road off TaKas Road.
Methodist Church, 7 a.m., wHh
MIDDLEPORT - Ladies lor
breakfast to follow.
the Lord, women's Bible study,
DORCAS - Bethany-Dorcas
Abundant Grace Church, TuesUnHad Methodist Church, East· TUPPERS PLAINS- South
day, 10 a.m. All denominations
er sunrise service, 7 a.m.,
Bethel New Testament Church, · welcome.
Easter Sunday Reaurrsction
breakfast follows at 8 a.m.
Day service, 7 a.m., with
RUTLAND - State Rep. John
HOBSON ~ Hobson Christ.lan breakfast to follow, regular
Carey, A-Wellston, meets with
Sunday service, 10:10 a.m.
fellowship Church, Sunrise
constituents at Rutland Civic
Hrvice, 7 a.m., Slngin~
Center, 11 a.m. to noon. ;
Echoes, 10 a.m., evemng
TUPPERS PLAINS- North
revival service, 7 p.m., with
Bethel United Methodist ·
POMEROY - Modem WoodChurch, Easter service, 4 p.m.
Rev. Charlie Griffith as speakmen of America, dinner, Pcin- .
•r. ,
derosa in Gallipolis, Tuesday,
MONDAY
5:30 Ia 7:30 p.m. camp 6335
POMEROY- Sun~se service
RACINE - Recessed session
will pay $3.50 on each meal.
of Racine Village Council, 7
and communion at .Hysell Run
p.m. Monday at the municipal
Holiness Church at 6 a.m.•
RACINE- Aspecial meeting
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m., wor- building.
ot the Southern local Board of
lhip,1 0:30, and evening serEducation will be held at 6
POMEROY- Pomeroy East·
vice, 7 p.m.
pm.. Tuesday at the Southern
ern Star 186, OES, Monday,
Junior High School. Personnel
7:30 p.m. Chester Masonic
CARPENTER,... Mount Union
matters will be discussed.

POINT PLEASANT- Clothing
give away every T ~MSday, 10
a.m. to noon at Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church, 8th and
Main. Clothing contributions
appreciated.

LEON - Sunrise Hrvice at
Crlltllon Church, 6 a.m. The
Rev. Gerald Sayre wiH bring
the rnMHge following -the program.
HENDERSON -Town of Henderson Easter Egg Hunt, 2

MASON - Community Cancer
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
Un~ed Methodist Church. All
area cancer patients, families
and caregivers invited .. (April
17 meeting cancelled.)
HENDERSON•- Line dancing,
Hender&amp;an Community Build·
ing, wHh insti)JCior Dawn Halstead. Beginners 6 p.m. and
advanced 7 p.m.
·.

p.m. at Hendertan Community
Building.
·
APPLE GROVE- Sunrise"'
service at Mlllatone Church, 6
a.m. Evening service at 7 p.m.

MASON - Sunrise service at
Faith Baptist Church, 6 a.m.,
followed by breakfast cooked
by men of the church. Sunday
school at 9:45 a .m. followed by
morning worship at 11 a.m.
The Lord's Supper observance
at 6 p.m. foiJowed by Easter
cantata at 7 p.m.
·

WEDNESDAY, April 18
POINT PLEASANT Wednesday night Bible .clubs
for preschool up through 12tiJ
grade, 7too8: 15 p.m. at
Gospel lighthouse Church,
Neal Road. For information call
675-7229 or 675-6620.

.

LEON - Elmwood Community
Church will have 9:30 a.m.
passover service wHh communion. Meal will follow service.

POINT PlEASANT- Violence
on Campus seminar at Marshall University Mid-Ohio Valley Cenler, 1 p.m. with special .
speakers and a 15-minute film.
Sponsored by Concerl'!ed
Women For America of West
Virginia.

LETART- Sunrise service for
Uni9n Charge at Oak Grove
United Methodist Church, 6:30
a.m., with breakfast to follow in
fellowship hall. Easter program
al 7 p.m. at Union Church.
APPLE GROVE - Sunrise
service at Beech Hill United
Methodist Church, 6:30 a.m.
LEON - Special program.
Bible study, teaching and
prayer JESeven Places Jesus
Shed His Blood." 11 a.m.,
Baden Community Building,
W.Va. 87, with speaker Don
Cox. For infonmation, call 372·
6091 or 458-2574.
NEW HAVEN - Sunrise Easier service, St. Paul Lutheran
Church. 6:30a.m.
·

GAU.IPOLIS - I rWlu some
• people rWI my articles. Just m:endy
Vic and Mary Niday ame into my
..... sron: md Mnlied to tee my photos of
"On !he R&lt;Ud to Mandalay:'
VJC told me his mother vm Marg;uet DonoaDy, who married Paul )
VICtor N"Jday Sr. in 1928. Margmt '
,vm my teacher, who alw3yl talking

..

lion, cal o«6-0808.
Sunday, April 22

THURSDAY, April 19
POINT PLEASANT- TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) 5.
· p.m. w!ljgh in and meeting at
5:30 p.m. at Trlnily United
. Methodist Church. Far information call 675-3692.
POINT PLEASANT - Shoot at
Point Pleasant Gun Club, 6
p.m.
POINT PlEASANT - Weight
Watchers, Christ Episcopal
. Cl)urch, with weigh in at 4:45
p.m. and 5:15 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS FERRY- The
. ' NEW HAVEN - New Haven
Carpenter Family Renewal
Jr. OUAM 175 meeting, 7 p.m.
Ministries will present "The
Deliverance•. at Faith Gospel
Church at 10:46 a.m. At 7 p.m. POINT PLEASANT- Point
Pleaeant Lions Club, 6 p'.m.,
the junior church will praaent
"Eaeter Miracle.• · · .
Malinda'• Restaurant.

Church 7 p.m. Presented by
youth ministry drama 1.-n o1
Ridgewood Bapllst Church. rRoanoke, Va.
·
SUNDAY. April 22
GALLIPOLIS FERRY - Musical drama at Faith Gospel .
Church 9:45 a.m. Pr811!1f1tad by
youtll ministry drama team ol ·
Ridgewood Baptist Church,
Roanoke, Va.

about on the road to Mandalay s:iying
•· she hoped to go there someday. She
never made it !hen: but she sure
impressed me, and I went !here 18
yean ago and wallr.ed on· the road for
five miles and took some beautiful
photos.
I :un going to gi\-eVic and his wife
a photo of Manchhy.· I wiD always
remember that old saying, "On the
Road to Manchhy." Thank you, Vic
and Mary, for bringing back !hose
happy days that I spent !here on the
road to Mandalay.
Getting back go my school days at
Hawk School, whc;n I was in the
eighth grade, we had a woman
teacher'and she could not contiol the
older boys. Some of the bqys were
much ol~r !han I was and they

ADDISON, Ohio - Preaching
service at Addison Freewill
Baptist Chtll'ch, 6 p.m. with
Rick Barcus. .
REVIVALS

POINT PLEASANT - Revival
at First Church of the
Nazarene, 2500 Mount Vernon
Ave., with Evangelist Rev.
Bertram Grant of Mineral
Wells. Services begin at 9:45
a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Sunday,
April 15 and continue through
Thursday, April19, at 7 p.m.
nightly. Special singing.

~

FLATROCK- Revival April
· 17-22 at Wesleyan Methodist
Church~ W.Va. 2, with Rev.
Billy McCoy at 7:30 p.m. nightly. Handballs will also be lea·
lured.

.

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

HARTFORD - Revival at
Church of Chrlat In Chrlatlan
MONDAY, Aprll16
ADDISON, Ohio- Prayer '
Union, April 17-21 at 7 p.m.
meeting
at
Addison
Freewill
with
spacial speaker Rev. Gary
SOUTHSIDE - Chubs weight
Baptist
Church,
7:30
p.m.
with
·
Jackson.
Special alngel'll "
loaa 1upport group, Southllde
Matt Smith preaching .
Include Tuaaday,, Ramey lind
Community Center, weigh-Ina
Delores Cundiff; Wedneeday,
5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a ·
fiAIDAY, ADtll 20. ·
· Frank and Ida Martin; Thul'll·
1hort milling.
~
SOUTHSIOE- Jam eees!cin
dly, Connle,Gaodnlta; Fri.,
at Soulhalde Community CenGabriel Quartet: and Saturday,
POINT PLEASANT- Kl~e
Bible Club, Wealeyan Hollne" ter wllh proceeds to the build· Earthen Vessels.
lng fund, 7 lo 10 p.m.
Church, 2300 Lincoln Ave.,
6:30 to 8 p.m., for ages 6 to
POINT PLEASANT- Evange·
listie services at Shiloh Com12. For Information call Debbie SATURDAY, April 21 ~ .
munity Church for 12 coneecu· ·
Alexander at 676·5464 or Deb· SOUTHSIDE - Dance at
Southside Community Center,
ble Peachey at 875-1187.
live Saturday nights beginning
8 to 11 p.m. wllh Clay County
April 7 at 7 p.m. with Ev11!1geCountry.
·
TUESDAY, Aprll17
llsi'Stanley Shaffer and spacial
LETART- HELP Dlel Claes,
singing every service.
· POINT PLEASANT- Alco-'
Letart Community Center.
holies Anonymoua, 8 p.m.,
Weigh-Ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
Community cal.e ndar 11 pub·
Point Pleasant Presby!erian
followed by short meeting.
llehed I I I fr" llrYICI to
Church, corner of 8th and
non•proflt group• wlahlng to
FLATROCK -Clothing closet . Main, usa side door.
announce m11tlnga and
eta! 1vent1. The calendar 1 ·
give away every Tuesday at
GALLIPOLIS' FERRY- Musl·
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
prlntad ae 1paoe penmlt1 and
cal drama at Failh Gospel
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
cannot be guarant"d to run.

•r.•

·'

GALLIPOLIS - One hundred yean ago, &amp;ster fell on
April 7 and of the servicd at
Grace Methodist Episcopal
Chwch in f901, we n:ad in the
Daily Tribune:
, · "There were good congregations on Sunday morning
and evening. The church was
.·handsomely . decorated with
· palms, fe.-ns, and cut flowen
al')d attracted much admira·
tion. The discourses wen: edifying and the singing charming. ~. Fred Canaday's
anthem in the inonling and
Miss Letitia Mills' anthem in ·
the evening were very bcauti·
.. ful"
The ~ev. L.L. Magee's lCrmons were: "The Cornentane
of Christianity" and "S)!IIlpa·
.rby.- .Human. and Divine:',
:.; Other titles of sermons in
town on Easter included: "The
.. Divine Branch Planted" at first
. Baptist and "Death and Life" at
'St. Peter's. Songs sung at !he
• Presbyterian ChuJ+h -included:
,, "The Angel's Message;• "Why
Seek Ye The Living Among .
The Dead?", "Hark Ten Thou·
sand Harps and Voices" and
"Christ The Lord Is Risen
·:Today."
·
· Perhaps the most poignant
; 1 sermon was given ey Editor
r Sibley in an editorial before
Easter when he said resurreccion ~ a promised sure thing.
It was a matter of whelher a
. p non • chose resurrection to
9
life or resurrection to danma-.
tion. Sibley was never shy
about commenting ·on religio_us issues. It was also that
.spring that he said about ·one
n:lfgion that it was "rather

Dr. KeiJ B,•sb
Chiropra~c cl Sports
lnjunt Pbysicilll

·Carpal Ti.lnnel S~drome
HS'!liated Disc/Sciatica

Holler CIWc SJe•.-e

('740) 44, 944

' annual spring fair. The inenu
• ·consisted of chiclren pie, tran·
~ beri:y sauce, mashed potatoes,
: 'baked beans, cole slaw, pies and
; fruit. There were a number of
~ musical selections, and a parasol
~ and hoop drill. Admission to
~ the event held in the church's
: Jectun: room \vas 10 cents.
~ The -.yeek .after &amp;stcr, Grace
; church held a lecrure featuring
" the Wbrld famous htunorist
. Brooks.
,.- fred Emenan
r. A large crowd filled ·the
f. church, but Brooks failed to
~ •show up, two nights in a .row.
;: finaUy, on the third night, he
~ was there ana to rruilre up for
~ his faux-pas. He ,gave the

J'

CJiappy

CEasfer

hag had died. He saw his shad·
·ow but spring had aln:ady

992 •22 4

crowd a cwo.haur lecture. The
Daily ;rtbune reported that
Brooks message of palh~&gt;S and
humor fully redeemed htmself.
It was Brook.' last lecture of
·the year.
.
Oth,er news fro.m the week ·
of East~r 1901 mcluded the
propoSJao~ fro~ W.G. Stbley
of lhe Daily Tnbune that the
city ch~nge the . number~d
streets m town to Ohio
.Avenue, Lafayette Avenue, Paris· .
Avenue and . Chickamaqga
Avenue.
He furlher suggested that
cross streets (Vme, Grape,
Court, State,_ etc) be ren~ed
1
.as streets wtth !he. follOWlJ_II! 1
names: Safford,. Cadet; Drouil· ·
lard, Menager,- Bureau, Vinton,
Nash, etc.
It was sadly reported that the
1901 s~wberry c~p would
be short. Alf Henking gave a
talk at .Rio . Grande CoDege
about ~~ tra~ls m Italy. Th~re
was a btg tram wreck &lt;;mtstde
Pomt Pleasant. T~ . Tuxe~o
Club gave a dance, wtth '_fti!SJC
provtded . by the ~obmson
O~hestra. The Silv~r Star
Mmstrels C2JIIe ):!ere a few c;lays
after &amp;ster and · they hired a
•
boy to ptpmote the
young
show. He began run~mg up
Second Avenue fiom Court
· Street.
· .
He ran all !he way to the
courthouse. A crow~ of the.J
cunous began runrung after

.n.o o

'"·' •

"

HOURS
Mon- Frl8om - 9pm
Sat. 8am - 6pm
Sun. 1Oom- 4pm

'TIIl9 •
/\ 1

I

1 11\11 1 "•

i- 1

Of&gt;

Appalachian Children's Chorus

Dr. Todd hblty
· Chiroprldic Pbysicim.
Holler Clktle Jaclu•
(740) S9!-887S

Call for an appointment today!
'

Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy Is
authorized to fill your
presci"lptloos under the Trlcare
Senior Pharmacy Prooram. You
only pay the Co-Pay.
We welcome your business.
.

Kenneth McCullouoh, R. Ph.
Charles Rime, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-2955
112 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

ARIEL, THE\AT'R~,

. . ·Scoliosis

Hours:

~;;;,;;;;iiiii~ijii;ijiiiij~~;~
I

•

him as weU as a c11rious police·
man. Finally, the boy was cor·
nered at the courthouse and

Work-related ipjuries

Pome,roy, Ohio

-

•

•

•

· come. It was .rainy and wan at RoedeU store. This monkey
to explain himself.
Before a crowd of several Easter in 1901. A flefeated wore clothes, drank beer out of
hundred people, the boy went politician made a calculation 'a bottle, ate wilh a knife and
into a song about the Silver that if only 20 percent of !he · fork, smolred and ilid nearly ·
Star Minstrels and how they . votes he had paid for had actu- everything that a human could
would pby the theatre the next ally been cast, he would have . do.
evening. He said he meant no been elected. l-Ie was heard to
(James Stinds is a .sp«ial corresay,
"That's
the
last
time
I
deal
harm. It was jwt that he was
spondent for tiJe Sunday Times·
&amp;ntim{ He can be contmted by
"chasing up a new idea", to in futUres." ··
There was a monkey fea- writing to 346 Me11dow LAne,
promote the show.
Also appearing here just rured in the window of !he Cirrleville, Ohio 43113.)
before Easter was ,the At G.
Field Minstrel Show: The field
· show had a cornetist who had
played with the famous Sousa
band. The cornetist stood on
!he Park Central corner one
afternoon giving a concert
promoting the shOw:
•
Prank'Cheney n:ported !hat
his pet. ground hog finally · FromThe
Sttifl of the
came out of his hole on March
30.
6unbap Qttmel 6e]nUnd
· ·Cheney thought the gtound

POOLS AND

Spedillzlng In:
Sports Injuries
Whiplash Injuries
Nedc &amp; Back Pain
Headaches
.

bet I did. Back in those days when by the name of CarlWhe.n the school
you got a whipping at school, you also day was about over, my dad would tell
got a whipping at home. If !hey did Dd it is time to go get Max. Carl
that today, there would be no shoot- would bke off and wait at the school
ing or killingt in schools all through for me ar the ·dOor t:reryday, which
was about a mile from my house. He
the country.
But the teachers are not allowed to Would w:rit for ine to come oui and
whip students in school today, and walk me back home. Those were
that is tao bad. I am glad I came up happy days, even if I did get a whiplhc hard way, when our parents told ping now and then. But they taught
us to do somel=hing we did it and we me some good lessons.
When they .consolidated schools a
also behaved in school.
You would think I would hate my few ye~ ago, Hawk School came up
dad for whipping me, but I always for sale. I had a chance ro buy my
loved him. He would always put his school and all the bnd around it, but I
arm around me and say Max, " I did rurqed it down -because I had jwt
this for your own good. learn to be started in the photo bwiness and a
do!)ar w.fS a doUar back !hen.
good and honest."
I made a big mistake by not borI always try to do !hat. I had a falher
rowing
the money and buying it. But
that ma&lt;J.e something out of me. He
even mortgaged his farm for $30,000 that is water over tht dam, now it
to help me buy the building on the belong; to John Nibert. I think I
corner of Court and Second, where I could write a book abour my happy
had my a \Wdio. I paid him back in school days etc. But I am too old now.
I will be 88 my next birthday. I sure
two years by hard work.
· Later when I was in busi(Jess, both have happy boyhood memories that
Ben Evans and Dale Durkey became will go with me to my grave.
(Max Tawney is a lon~time Jlii&lt;Sf colrmrgood friends of mine.
I used to have a beautiful collie dog nisr firr the Smulay Times-Scmincl.)

as~d

.

" ulsive" · .
•re~ few 'days before Easter, !he
ladic$ of Grace had their big

. Chiropractic Services

Max
Tawney

BY JAMES 5.\ICII

GALLIPOLIS FERRYRevival with Evangelist
Richard Harper of Charleston
through April 15 at Jordan
Baptist Church. Special ·
singing. Services at 7 p.m.'
nightly and 6 p:m. Sunday.

HOLZER CLINIC

the Water.
From !hen on, there -re no problems at Hawk School
Now I will teD you a few of the
thinp I did in school I received a fey.&gt;
whipp~ mysel£ I will never forget
wht'n I was in the sixth ~de, I put a
1m bug down theo dms of !he girl
who sat in liont of me. Her name was
GUEST VIEW
Nora Burleson. She let out a scream
that rocud the builtljpg. She had to
would nat mind her when she told go home and change her domes. My
!hem to do something.
teacher was Mr. Pale D~rkq.
So she was fired and a man by me'
. Did I get a whipping? You bet I did,
name of Ben E~. who just had and all the students got to see it.There
graduated linm coUege, beC2JIIe our weren't too many boys that d4ln't get
teacher. I will never forget when Mr. a whipping back !hen. I' Will never
Evans told Dick Fletcher, who at 17 forget !he fint day he took over as
was still in !he sevcnlh grade wilh teacher at our school.You always got a
mosdy Fs, to get a buclret of water· whipping in liont of the students so
fiom a spring wflere we got our that !hey wouldn't make the same
drinking water.
mistau.
Dick said, "I don't want to." Mr.
I told my sister Ruby about my
Evans Said nothing, but took _out his whipp!ng, and rold het n01 to teD my
knife from his pocket and cut a switch dad. Ruby was not at school the day I
off a tree nearby. He came back inside gpt a whipping.' Instead she told my
and took a good hold of Dick and mother, and my molher told my Dad.
gave him a good whipping in front of I would not talk to Ruby for a week.
all us srudents. So Dick went and got
Did I get a second whipping? You
•

Sermons explored meaning of Easter a century ago

LEON - Revival at Smilh
Chapel Church, April 16-21, 7
.p.m., with Evangelist Sampy
Ha.rt and special singing.

.Bringi11g a new approach to multidisciplinary medicine!

The .f abric Shop

•

.Happy ·memories combine with recollections of the ?lard way'

SUNDAY, April 15
LETART- EMler IIIVicet IJ
Old Town Board Blptist
. Church, oft Sand Hill Road, 6
a.m.- SunriN service; 10 a.m.
Sunday School; 11 a.m. moin·
lng worship; and 7 p.m.
evening worship.

•

Pomeroy •llldcllport. Gallipolis, Ohio. Point Pletaant, wv

......., Aptl15, 2001

Sund8y, Apri115. 2001

Pomeroy • llldcllport • Galllpol... Ohio • Po1ot Pllntnt, WV

.
'

April28, 2001 at 8 p.m.
Tickets: $15 Adults $5 K-12th .

Tickets Available at Haskins Tanner, Rebecca's and Floral Fashions

�•

PageC&amp;

.....,, Aprll11, 2001

su••.,. Aprll15, 2001

Copyrights not alw~ys clear on Web

LOW-FAT COOKING: Creamy Chicken ·and Mushrooms.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Heft''s a scylish dinner menu to
serve four. The main dish is Creamy
Chicken and Mushrooms, which
sounds rich and does indeed raste
I, but fits in the low-fat category
it haHess than 7 grams offat
use ..
,
per servmg.
Make roasted aspa.rngus to serve
with the chicken; prepare ice cream
with praline sauce for dessert and hold »&gt;ur breath'=- you can have it
- aU ready in 30 minutes or less.
,
The menu and recipes by Tamar
Haspel · are featured in Cooking
Light magazine's April issue, along
with a game plan to streamline the
cook's progress.
Creamy Chicken
and Mushrooms

(Total preparation and cooking time
.
25 minutes)
2 cups .uncooked medium egg noodles
Cooking spray
1 pou;.d skinless·, boneless chicken
breast, cut into bite-size pieces
., I teaspoon olive oil
'h cup chopped shallots
8-ounce packa~ presliced mushrooms
~ cup dry white wine
I cup fat-free milk
2 teaspoons all-purpose flour
. ~ cup (3 ounces) spreadable cheese
with garlic and herbs
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
~. teaspoon black pepper
Chopped fresh parsley (optional)
Cook pasta according to package

directions, omitting salt and fot.
While pasta cooks, heat a large
no.Jtick skillet coated with cooking
spray over medium-high heat. Add
chicken, saute 4 minutes. or until
done. Remove chicken from pan; set
aside.
)
Heat oil in pan over medium-high
heat. Add shaUnts; saute I minute.
Add mushrooms;· saute 4 minutes.
Add wine, and cook for 3 minutes,
or until liquid almost evaporates.
Combine milk and flour in a smaU
bowl; stir well with a whisk. Add
milk mixture to ~an; cook 3 minutes
or until slightly tTiick.
Add chicken, cheese, 2 tablespoons
parsley, and pepper; reduce heat, and
simmer for 3 minutes or until thoroughly heated.

VEGETARIAN~. Baj~ Quesadillas
the beans. Mix beans, tomato
minced
1
teaspoon
·.ground
cumin
and
cilantro into onion mixThe growing popularity of
Mexican food has made
IS-ounce can black beans, ture and cook 1 to 2 minutes
beans, or frijoles as they are
(see note) . Spoon~' cup mix·or I ~ cups cooked dryture on one side of each torpackaged black beans,
called in Mexico, a· staple
food that turns up in many
tilla and sprinkle with 1'h
rinsed, drained (see note)
variations of Mexican dishes.
IS-ounce can pinto beans, · tablespoons cheese. Fold toror I ~ cups cooked drytillas in half and spray both
Vegetarians, of course, are
sides
with cooking sprny.
packaged
pinto
beans;
already adept .at making the ,
Bake on cookie sheet at
rinsed, drained
most of beans, in many com- .
binations and flavors, in a
450 F until browned and
I cup choppec! tomato
~ cup finely chopped
range of cooking styles.
crisp, 5rso 7 minutes, or cook
cilantro
in large'· skillet over medium
Baja quesadillas are easy to
Salt and pepper to taste
heat until br&lt;&gt;Wned. Garnish
prepare and eat. This lively
p rnrrilb&lt; (fi-inchl
Quesadillas with salsa and
miv nf fresh ve~retables
tucked inside flour tortillas
7.ro1cup(3to4
sour cream.
ounces) shredded 'fourwill be of special interest to
Makes 6 servings.
vegetarians who include
cheese Mexican blend, or
Note: Any canned or drycheese in their diets, but will
reduced-fat four-ch~ese
packaged beans can easily be
also appe'al to many other
Mexican blend
substituted for specific beans
fans of Mexican seasoning.
Salsa, for garnish
mentioned in ingredient list.
Sour cream, for garnish
The bean mixture can be
Baja Quesadillas
. I,"reheat oven to 450 F.
prepared 1 day ~head of serv(Preparation 20 to 25
Spray large skillet with ing time and kept refrigeratminutes, baking time 5 ·ro 7 cooking spray; heat over ed in a covered container.
minutes)
medium heat until hot. Saute
Nutrition information per
Vegetable cooking spray
zucchini, onion, garlic, serving (without garnish and
1 medium zucchini, cut
jalapeno chili and cumin salt): 408 cal., 11 g fat, (23
. lengthwise in half, sliced
~"until crisp-tender, about 5
percent of calories from fat),
1 cup sliced_ onion
minutes.
.
66 g carbo., 832 mg sodium,
1 teaspoon minced garlic
Add beans to side of skil- 16 g pro., 11 g dietary fiber,
1 small jalapeno chili,
let; coarsely mash about half 13 mg chol.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

QUICK COO~ING: Honeyed Lamb
•
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A simple dish that has
lamb as its base,
Honeyed Lamb With. Couscous ge.ts a distinctive
Mediterranean flavor from
ingredients that include
almonds, honey and fragrant
SpiCCS.
Here's the bonus for
cooks: It ca n be made in a
little over half an hour; to
serve 6 diners. The recipe
includes the Honey Lemon
Sauce that gives the meatballs a succulent finish as
rhey cook.

}, teaspoon ground cumin
~. teaspoon ground cinna-

gro~nd

:
:
:
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:
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•
:
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··mon

3 medium sweet bell peppers, mixed red, green and
.' yellow, cut iQto thin strips
1 teaspoon olive oil
Honey Lemon Sauce (recipe
follows)
4 cups cooked. couscous

Preheat oven to 375 F
Lightly ·oil a 13-by-9-inch
baking pan.
Finely chop almonds in
food processor. With blade
running, drop m garlic
cloves; process until finely
Ho[!eyed 1.8mb
chopped. Add lamb, honey,
With Couscous
egg, · curry powder, salt,
(Preparation 20 minutes,
cumin
and .. cinnamon;
roasting time .15 minutes)
proce.ss until well . mixed.
1 c~p (4 ounces) blanched
Form mixture into 18·
whole almonds
~l'atba\ls and place in pre2 large cloves garlic
pared baking pan, Place pep1 poun~ lean ground lamb . per strips in separate pan;
1, cup honey
drizzle with 1 teaspoon olive
.
I egg·
oil. Roast lamb and peppers
4~ teaspoons curry powder · at 375 · F for 10 minute~.
I ~ teaspoons salt
Meanwhile, prepare sauce.

r.
I

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,

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·Remove peppers from
oven; set aside. P01u Honey
Lemon Sauce over lamb in
pan; toss to coat. , Return
lamb to the oven; roast. 5
minutes or. until sauce · is
slightly thickened. Serve
meatballs over couscous; gar- ·
nish with pepper slices.
1 Ma~es {i servings.

S~e

Honey Lemon
·~~ cup fresh lemon juice
~.cup honey
·
. ·
2 tablespoons olive oil
· 2 garlic cloves, finely
chopped
), teasr,oon ground cumin
1, teaspoon salt
~. teaspoon cayenne .
In a stnall bowl, whisk
together juice, honey, ~oil,
garlic, cumin, salt and
cayenne. Set aside . .'
Nutrition information per .
serving .(1 /6 of finished
recipe): 563 cal., 27 g fat, 86
mg chol., 848 mg sodium, 20
g carbo., 18 g dietary fiber,
46 g pro.

•

'
·:- NEWPORT NEWS, Va.
t (AP) -The Virginia Marine
, Products Board offers a free
: brochure iided '·'Affordable
: Shellfish,'' with
recipes,
: descriptions of shellfish char: acteristics and moneysaving
: tips such as these:
f • Look for oysters or crab: me~ I in smaller · containers,
• useful for singles or s.eniors or
· ' to usc in "stretcher" recipes.
Buy only what you C!jpect to
eat, to eliminate waste.
. • Scallops, .oysters 'and
·. clams shrink, and lose their
plumpness 'a nd tenderness
when they are &lt;&gt;vcrcooked.
Be careful not to o:_,ercook
and you hn use fewer. ·
'

• Add shellfish to stews or
soups just before serving to
avoid overcooking.
• Microwave cooking is
risky: It's too fast and may
produce poor-quality results.
• Although shellfish are
available year-round, season
and supply can dictate price
differences. Watch for good
prices.
• Combine shellfish with
lower-priced fish in stews,
c howder~ or soups.
• Serve shellfish in combination with other foods: fried
.
'
oysters on coleslaw as an
entree; grill ed scallops with
crumbled bacon to top a .
salad; clams, scallops or crab-

'

able bottom and press' into
A routine meal can leave ' pan with your fingers to
diners really happy when it is form a crust. Put pan in
rounded off with a dessert as freezer to firm while you
. seductive as toasted walnut complete the next step
(about I 0 minutes).
and chocolate tart.
Use a knife IQ break
The tart's filling combines
chocolate and citrus-orange chocolate into small shards.
flavors, walnuts add a healthy In medium saucepan bring
crunch to the texture, and cream to a boil, add chocothe recipe is easy as well as late and remove from heat.
elegant. It was created by Stir until smooth. Stir 'in
Eric Olson of Ojai, Calif., Grand Marnier. Pour mixstudent-chef at the Culinary ture into chilled tatt mold
Institute of America, and it and refrigerate for 4 hours or ·
won him the-grand prize is a ~vernight,
recipe competition for CIA
In ·a small nonstick saute
students sponsored by the pan, combine the remaining
'Yalnut Marketing Board..
2 tablespoons simple syrup
and! the orange· zest. Cook
Toasted Walnut and
over medium heat until most
Chocolate Tart
of the water has evapo,rated
3 cups plus I 2 hal:ves waland the zest is translucent, .2
nuts, toasted ,,
'l. cup simple syrup (see
note)
6 tablespoons .('/, stick) "
unsalted butter, melted
12 ounces dark Belgian
chocolate
. I~ cups heavy cream
2 tablespoons Grand
Marnier
' Zest of 2 large oranges, to
candy for garnish
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .

a

Toast walnuts irt a J5Q F
oven for 5 to I 0 minutes.
In a food processor coarsely chop 3 cups walnuts for
crust. Place c hopped walnuts
in a b9wl, add 2 tablespoons
of the simple syrup and th'e
melted butter; mix well.
Place mixture in · a to-inch
fluted tart pan with remov-

~

I.

I
I

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to 3 minu tcs. Remove from
pan and cool.
To . serve: Keep chilled
until ready to serve. Remove
tart from pan. To slice, use a
knife · dipped in hot water
and wiped with a towel. Garnish slices with powdered
sugar-dusted walnut halves
and candied orange zest.
Makes 12 servings.
Note : To make simple
syrup, in a small covered
saucepan, simmer ~. cup
sugar, and ~ cup water for 4
minutes to dissolve crystals.

your b!XIY·

•••

.. ,

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic Laboratory System is
celebrating National Med, ical Laboratory Week April
15-21.
This is a week to re~­
nize the dedication of area
' laboratory professionals . in
,: maintaining high quality
standards in laboratory
test.,. .
./
mg..
The laboratory
team
' " includes
phlebotomists,
•· medical · laboratory technicians, medical technologists,
, cytotechnologists and secre; tarial individuals, each con,. tributing a valuable part to
"' the operation of the labora~ tory, based.;&gt;t seven locations ·
throughout southeast Ohio
and West Virginia. ·
. These locations include
" Gallipolis, Jackson, Pom~roy
~and Proctorville in Ohio,
• and Point Pleasant and
:1 Charleston, W.Va.
.0 More than 500;000 tests
" are porformed annually by
the Holzer Clinic Laboratory System in one. of s~n
~ lc:sta\idil's~ 'E'a'c'h"locanon' has'
C' ~ · maintai11e&amp;
accreditation
~ through the College of
t American Pathologists or
~ the Commission on Labora' tory Accreditation.
~. All of the Holzer Clinic
~ laboratoriei wree awarded
~ continuing
accreditation
~
'
~

after successful completion
of on-site inspections 'ondueled in late 2000 and January 2001.
Each laboratory must
meet rigorous standards of
testing to ensure accuracy
and quality in patient care

Flaws ovenvhelm good parts in '/trmy Men: Green Rogue'
BY WIWAM Sc:tiFJ:MAN

per goes . down , dumping our
petri dish hero into a ~
•
•
Great games are not always infested
area. He has to ba
the biggest scllers.
his way out through 16 levels, .
But crummy games don't . using a nice selection of
always wind up on the $9.99 weapons, including a flame
sale counter, either.
thrower, grenade launcher, rifle
That's the mystery .behind and a screen-clearing Biothe Army Men series from Strike.
3DO. The ·games are unatttacThere are power-ups galore,
tive, play strangely and appear including health, extr.Jlives an'tl
to have been designed for continues. There also are multisome ancient 8-bit system. Y~t ple levels of weapon power,
they sell like hotcakes llf!d, topped by "nuclear stri~."
because the graphics are basiThere are five bosses m beat.
cally one step above stick fig- At the end of every level, an
ures, 3DO Can pump out. a awards screen pops up, display~
new one every few months.
ing your performance and notThe latest to flicker across ing the medals you won .
my teleVision screen is "Army
The premise is a winner; two
Men: Green Rogue" for the
PlayStation 2.
Here we have the Green
Army Advanced Research
Division producing something
caUed the Omega Soldier, a
supersoldier brewed up in the
divisi'on's lab and sent' out alone ·
to battle the Tan army.
He's been created because, as
the lab notes , say of regular
warfare, "the cost in tears and
plastic is jwt too high." ·
Omega Soldier is being
transported by helicopter in a
packing case when the chopASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

serv1ces.

As part of the c;elebratioh
of National Medical Laboratory Week, the Holzer Clinic Laboratory system is
sponsoring a bone marrow
donor drive. The National
Marrow· Donor Program is
an organization that matches
volunteer donors with
patients in need of a bone ·
marrow transplant.
·
Significant cjevelopments
in medical technology have
contributed to finding new
ways to treat diseases. Bone
marrow transplants' can successfully help patients overcome many disease states.
The Holzer Clinic labora-·
tory is seeking volunteers ·ro
become donors, but also
financi~ support to •c~r ,;:
the eicpenie of donor iypmg.
. The cost for one individual is S88 for Caucasian and
$21 for minorities. .
For information, caU Kim .
Ballinger, Shari Fiel4s or
Susan Davis at Holzer Clinic, 446-5148.

armies of plastic soldiers like
those you played with as a kid
face off over·some long-forgotten slight. No blood, and
nobody except toy soldiers die.
So why isn't this a better
serieS?
Only 3DO · knows the
answer to that question. Here's
what's · wrong wi~h "Army
Men: Green Rogue."
Grnphics get a D. They are
simplistic and boring. The soldiers move like robots, the
backgrounds are monotonous
and the whole game appears to
have been drawn by kindergarten tots with three cr:i.yons.
.It makes no use of the PS2's.
muscle, and could easily have

been a PlayStation title released
three or four years ago.
, Control also is aD. The game
plays like a reaDy old 20 shooter. You have some control over
your character, but the game
pushes him relentlessly forward, even if you migh't like ro
hide behind a rock for a while.
If you slip behind a bush or
tree you can get stuck there
while Tan sharpshooters pick
you to pieces. Even worse,
shooting .in any direction but
straight forward .requires you to
swing around using the right
stick. Unfortunately, using the
stick for accurnte aiming is
impossible, so you wind up
spinning in a circle.

Sll"er Bridge Plaza • Gallipolis, OH
Mon. -Fri. Hours 11 a.m.- 7 p.m. Sot. 11 - 7p.m •

One Coupon Per Person, Per Day .
SIQnature,_ _ _ _' - - - - - -

Postal,Service will issue 34-cent stamps
;• to commemorate legendary.baseball fields ,

FLAIR

&amp;DESIGN

z.

Kl•. GllllpoUs Ferry, WV 61!·1371

------

·· --------:-------;-~,

IS
In
Prolasslonal Sill•
P11111•
IOSPbl

I·

•••

Hol_zer Clinic joins in
nat1onal observation

·~ U.S.

·, .PillS&amp; call•

1

~!fON - Gallia County commissioners proclallned Apnl 15-21 as National Medical LabOratory Week.
Seated is Commissioner Skip Meadows. Standing, from
. lett•. are ComniissionEJf\ Bill Davis, Shari Fields, Kim
Balhng.er, Susan DaViS and Commissioner Shirley Angel.
·
(Submitted photo)

•
•

"Think Ahead For A Healthy,Baby"

I
meat on a pizza; grilled .scallops served on a bed of
lentils. Top julienne vegeta. bles with pan-seared oysters
or scallops; add a few ounces ·.
of crabmeat or scallops to
noodles in bmth for an Oriental-style treat.
• Buy dams by tile 1GOcount bag for clam masts, as a
substitute for more expensive
oysters. Cook over ,;)als until
shells open.
To obtain a copy of ·the
hrochure, send a stamped,
self-addressed business-size
envelope to: Virgi1iia Marine-Products Board, 554 Den: ·
bigh Blvd. ;Suite B, Newport
News VA 23608.

Y
panley, if desired.
Makes 4 servings (serving size ~
pecans
cup chicken mixture and ~. cup
Low-fat chocolate ice cream
pasta}.
.
Combine
caramel sauce and
Nutrition information per serving: 338 cal. (18 percent from fat), pecahs; serve over ice cream.
Game Plan:
6.9 g fat (2.5 g saturated fat), 37.1 g
Prepare ingredients while water
pro. , 31..3 g carbo., 2.9 g fiber, 101
· for egg noodles comes to a ~il. .
mg chol. , 241 mg sodium.
'
'
• Cut chicken into bile-Size
Roasted· Asparagus
pieces.
·
•
Chop
shallots
and parsley.
1 pound trimmed asparagus
• Wash and trim asparagus.
I tablespoot~ olive oil
• Chop and mast pecans.
· ~ teaspoon salt
· Roast asparagus in oven while
~. teaspoon black pepper
Preheat dven to 400 F. Toss aspara- chicken cooks.
Prepare pralin~ sauce.
gus with oil, salt ~nd pepper; bake
Remove
ice cream from freezer
for 5 minutes.
just before serving meal.

filling·for seductive dessert

__ ____,___

Find and Use Copyright-Free Writings, common these &lt;faYs, and there's an indusMusic, Art &amp; More," which, happily, is try assumption that we all know the
S~len anything lately?•
written better than it i! tided.
basics. But that can be frustrating to
If you surf the World Wide Web, the
It costs $34.95 and is published by someone not born clutching a pocket
answer is almolt. certainly yes.· Thats Nolo, which handles plain,.English legal protector and keyboard. .
because the heist is so easy and the goods advice.
'
.
PC World magazine by IDG is a good
are so availabJe.
'\ Some of whats in the public domain is place to find advice written for the ordiWe're talking intellectual property and surprising. According to an appendix, nary cons~er.
copyright, and the Internet and personal 'many son~ by the famed Irving Berlin
It features understandable product
computers lm(e made the 1 unauthorized are now public domain.
reviews, comparison shopping, and pracand unpaid rleproduction of music, art,
The book is comprehen;ive and sur- tical user tips. The April .issue; for examwr\ting, photos, software and film so easy prisingly readable given the subject mat- ple, compares 50 PCs spread across
that most of us steal without a thought.
ter and the 23 chapters and three appen- power, value, notebook and home uses.
Printed pictures downloaded from dixes. The author, an attorney, is careful
At $5.99 off' the newsstand, those of w
news Web sites and the by-now infamous to inject· a real-world tone, pointing out, who remember nickel comic books will
' Napster case for music are 'examples. But for e~mple , that even though a copy- gulp a bit, but it's worthwhile reading~'\
other content might be legitimately in . right notice might be spurious on a.wqrk those who are new to personal computthe public domain ·and free for the ~k- truly in the public domain, that's still no mg.
guarnntee you won't get· sued if you use
mg.
"
The Web site for PC World ts
So whether you're designing a Web &gt;.ite it.
http:/ /www.pcworld.com.
or putting out the company newsletter,
The book's ISBN number is 0-87337how do you tell the difference between 433-9 and tile Nolo Web site is
Questions and comments are welwhat's copyrighted and what isn't?
http ://www.nolo.cotn.
come. Send them to Larry Blasko, AP, SO
A good starting' point is Stephen FishRockefeller Plaza, New · York, NY
man's "The Public Domain: How to
Personal computers ire a lot more 10020-1666: Or e-maillblasko@ap.org.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WIIIIER

Ice Cream Wi~ Praline· Sauce
~cup fat-free .caramel .S&gt;Ufe
2 tablespoons chopped, to~ted

Walnut and chocolate make
.

•

g tips·for making
more affordable ·

Serve over pasta; sprinkle with

8Y l,unry .. AlltO

:

BY IYD KIIQNIIH

:

AP WEEKLY fEATURES

stamps still stand - Tiger St1dium, Yankee
Stadium, Fenway Park and Wrigley Fiel9.
Stamps and first-day covers are available'
through the Philatelic Fulfillment Center ofthe USPS by calling (800) STAMP-24.

,

i

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the
~ famous "Shot Heard 'Round the World" when
:.Bobby Thomson of the Giants hit a homer in
.the ninth inning to defeat the Dodgers and
win the National League tide.
The shouting has gone, the excitement has
Last year, the Postal Service ·hailed 20 players ·
g()ne, ~d so has the Polo Grounl:ls - but not as the majer league "AU 20th-Century Team."
the memories.
·
, .
· Portrayed on these 33-cent stamps were:
In conjunction with ~ajor League BasebaU, Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Lefty Grov~. Jackie
the U.S. Postal Service will issue 10 new 34- Robinson, Rogers Hornsby, Satchel Paige,
cent stamps &lt;inJ~ne 27to commemorate leg- . Honus Wagner, ·Mickey Cochrane, Chtisty
endary playing fi~lds. . ·
Mathewson, Cy Young; Dizzy Dean, Walter
Depicted on the stamps are the Polo Johnson, Lou Gehrig, Pie Traynor, Roberta,
~unds inNewYork, Ebbets Field in BrookClemente, George Sisler, Jimmie ·Foxx, Josh
' lyn:{:omi~key Park in Chicago, Wrigley Field Gibson, Eddie Collins and Tris Speaker.
·
· · in Chicago, Shibe Park in P)liladelphia,, and
These stamps are available at your local dealSportsman's Park in St. Louis.
er and the Stamp Ful6llment Service at (800)
Only fo'u~ of these fields honored on the STAMP-24.
.

•••

Double Reclining
· sectional
Prices Start At

•1&amp;4995

•145915

'

PREVIEW SALE

lnllnnlllon.
.NaturaUser

.

Be P1'8111rld..

Torino
sectional With
Chaise Lounge

•1.1 99

ca....ron

Double Reclining
Sofa With snuggle
Recliner Chair

95

Nicole

Prices Start At

•1459"s

••A8T,loAND ·

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

Pleasant Valley

-KIPLING SHOE CO.

Obstetric Department

__

-· ... (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1230
~-----·------.__

\

,,

'

.
,.

300 2nd Av.enue

Rt. 2 Bypass
Point ·Pleasant, WV

' Gallipolis, OH

675-7870

Monday A Friday- 9:30 am • 8:00pm

Monday • Saturday - 9:00 am • 7:00 pm
· Sunday - I :00 pm • 6:00 pm

-···-·-----·-·- ------. ·P) ..

Double·Reclining Sofa 1r.
Matching Double
Reclining Loveseat

Spring &amp; Summer Sandal

i

'

----~

llla•hdance

S.h oe Company

toraclln
pra-concaPIIon

.... -~--

MOnte carlo

'

441-9010

Tues., Wed ., Thurs. - 9:30 am • S:OO.om

.·

•
--.---.~

�•

PageC&amp;

.....,, Aprll11, 2001

su••.,. Aprll15, 2001

Copyrights not alw~ys clear on Web

LOW-FAT COOKING: Creamy Chicken ·and Mushrooms.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Heft''s a scylish dinner menu to
serve four. The main dish is Creamy
Chicken and Mushrooms, which
sounds rich and does indeed raste
I, but fits in the low-fat category
it haHess than 7 grams offat
use ..
,
per servmg.
Make roasted aspa.rngus to serve
with the chicken; prepare ice cream
with praline sauce for dessert and hold »&gt;ur breath'=- you can have it
- aU ready in 30 minutes or less.
,
The menu and recipes by Tamar
Haspel · are featured in Cooking
Light magazine's April issue, along
with a game plan to streamline the
cook's progress.
Creamy Chicken
and Mushrooms

(Total preparation and cooking time
.
25 minutes)
2 cups .uncooked medium egg noodles
Cooking spray
1 pou;.d skinless·, boneless chicken
breast, cut into bite-size pieces
., I teaspoon olive oil
'h cup chopped shallots
8-ounce packa~ presliced mushrooms
~ cup dry white wine
I cup fat-free milk
2 teaspoons all-purpose flour
. ~ cup (3 ounces) spreadable cheese
with garlic and herbs
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
~. teaspoon black pepper
Chopped fresh parsley (optional)
Cook pasta according to package

directions, omitting salt and fot.
While pasta cooks, heat a large
no.Jtick skillet coated with cooking
spray over medium-high heat. Add
chicken, saute 4 minutes. or until
done. Remove chicken from pan; set
aside.
)
Heat oil in pan over medium-high
heat. Add shaUnts; saute I minute.
Add mushrooms;· saute 4 minutes.
Add wine, and cook for 3 minutes,
or until liquid almost evaporates.
Combine milk and flour in a smaU
bowl; stir well with a whisk. Add
milk mixture to ~an; cook 3 minutes
or until slightly tTiick.
Add chicken, cheese, 2 tablespoons
parsley, and pepper; reduce heat, and
simmer for 3 minutes or until thoroughly heated.

VEGETARIAN~. Baj~ Quesadillas
the beans. Mix beans, tomato
minced
1
teaspoon
·.ground
cumin
and
cilantro into onion mixThe growing popularity of
Mexican food has made
IS-ounce can black beans, ture and cook 1 to 2 minutes
beans, or frijoles as they are
(see note) . Spoon~' cup mix·or I ~ cups cooked dryture on one side of each torpackaged black beans,
called in Mexico, a· staple
food that turns up in many
tilla and sprinkle with 1'h
rinsed, drained (see note)
variations of Mexican dishes.
IS-ounce can pinto beans, · tablespoons cheese. Fold toror I ~ cups cooked drytillas in half and spray both
Vegetarians, of course, are
sides
with cooking sprny.
packaged
pinto
beans;
already adept .at making the ,
Bake on cookie sheet at
rinsed, drained
most of beans, in many com- .
binations and flavors, in a
450 F until browned and
I cup choppec! tomato
~ cup finely chopped
range of cooking styles.
crisp, 5rso 7 minutes, or cook
cilantro
in large'· skillet over medium
Baja quesadillas are easy to
Salt and pepper to taste
heat until br&lt;&gt;Wned. Garnish
prepare and eat. This lively
p rnrrilb&lt; (fi-inchl
Quesadillas with salsa and
miv nf fresh ve~retables
tucked inside flour tortillas
7.ro1cup(3to4
sour cream.
ounces) shredded 'fourwill be of special interest to
Makes 6 servings.
vegetarians who include
cheese Mexican blend, or
Note: Any canned or drycheese in their diets, but will
reduced-fat four-ch~ese
packaged beans can easily be
also appe'al to many other
Mexican blend
substituted for specific beans
fans of Mexican seasoning.
Salsa, for garnish
mentioned in ingredient list.
Sour cream, for garnish
The bean mixture can be
Baja Quesadillas
. I,"reheat oven to 450 F.
prepared 1 day ~head of serv(Preparation 20 to 25
Spray large skillet with ing time and kept refrigeratminutes, baking time 5 ·ro 7 cooking spray; heat over ed in a covered container.
minutes)
medium heat until hot. Saute
Nutrition information per
Vegetable cooking spray
zucchini, onion, garlic, serving (without garnish and
1 medium zucchini, cut
jalapeno chili and cumin salt): 408 cal., 11 g fat, (23
. lengthwise in half, sliced
~"until crisp-tender, about 5
percent of calories from fat),
1 cup sliced_ onion
minutes.
.
66 g carbo., 832 mg sodium,
1 teaspoon minced garlic
Add beans to side of skil- 16 g pro., 11 g dietary fiber,
1 small jalapeno chili,
let; coarsely mash about half 13 mg chol.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

QUICK COO~ING: Honeyed Lamb
•
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A simple dish that has
lamb as its base,
Honeyed Lamb With. Couscous ge.ts a distinctive
Mediterranean flavor from
ingredients that include
almonds, honey and fragrant
SpiCCS.
Here's the bonus for
cooks: It ca n be made in a
little over half an hour; to
serve 6 diners. The recipe
includes the Honey Lemon
Sauce that gives the meatballs a succulent finish as
rhey cook.

}, teaspoon ground cumin
~. teaspoon ground cinna-

gro~nd

:
:
:
;
•

••

:
•
•
:
;
:

••
••

•
~

··mon

3 medium sweet bell peppers, mixed red, green and
.' yellow, cut iQto thin strips
1 teaspoon olive oil
Honey Lemon Sauce (recipe
follows)
4 cups cooked. couscous

Preheat oven to 375 F
Lightly ·oil a 13-by-9-inch
baking pan.
Finely chop almonds in
food processor. With blade
running, drop m garlic
cloves; process until finely
Ho[!eyed 1.8mb
chopped. Add lamb, honey,
With Couscous
egg, · curry powder, salt,
(Preparation 20 minutes,
cumin
and .. cinnamon;
roasting time .15 minutes)
proce.ss until well . mixed.
1 c~p (4 ounces) blanched
Form mixture into 18·
whole almonds
~l'atba\ls and place in pre2 large cloves garlic
pared baking pan, Place pep1 poun~ lean ground lamb . per strips in separate pan;
1, cup honey
drizzle with 1 teaspoon olive
.
I egg·
oil. Roast lamb and peppers
4~ teaspoons curry powder · at 375 · F for 10 minute~.
I ~ teaspoons salt
Meanwhile, prepare sauce.

r.
I

.
,

l

••'

r

•

·Remove peppers from
oven; set aside. P01u Honey
Lemon Sauce over lamb in
pan; toss to coat. , Return
lamb to the oven; roast. 5
minutes or. until sauce · is
slightly thickened. Serve
meatballs over couscous; gar- ·
nish with pepper slices.
1 Ma~es {i servings.

S~e

Honey Lemon
·~~ cup fresh lemon juice
~.cup honey
·
. ·
2 tablespoons olive oil
· 2 garlic cloves, finely
chopped
), teasr,oon ground cumin
1, teaspoon salt
~. teaspoon cayenne .
In a stnall bowl, whisk
together juice, honey, ~oil,
garlic, cumin, salt and
cayenne. Set aside . .'
Nutrition information per .
serving .(1 /6 of finished
recipe): 563 cal., 27 g fat, 86
mg chol., 848 mg sodium, 20
g carbo., 18 g dietary fiber,
46 g pro.

•

'
·:- NEWPORT NEWS, Va.
t (AP) -The Virginia Marine
, Products Board offers a free
: brochure iided '·'Affordable
: Shellfish,'' with
recipes,
: descriptions of shellfish char: acteristics and moneysaving
: tips such as these:
f • Look for oysters or crab: me~ I in smaller · containers,
• useful for singles or s.eniors or
· ' to usc in "stretcher" recipes.
Buy only what you C!jpect to
eat, to eliminate waste.
. • Scallops, .oysters 'and
·. clams shrink, and lose their
plumpness 'a nd tenderness
when they are &lt;&gt;vcrcooked.
Be careful not to o:_,ercook
and you hn use fewer. ·
'

• Add shellfish to stews or
soups just before serving to
avoid overcooking.
• Microwave cooking is
risky: It's too fast and may
produce poor-quality results.
• Although shellfish are
available year-round, season
and supply can dictate price
differences. Watch for good
prices.
• Combine shellfish with
lower-priced fish in stews,
c howder~ or soups.
• Serve shellfish in combination with other foods: fried
.
'
oysters on coleslaw as an
entree; grill ed scallops with
crumbled bacon to top a .
salad; clams, scallops or crab-

'

able bottom and press' into
A routine meal can leave ' pan with your fingers to
diners really happy when it is form a crust. Put pan in
rounded off with a dessert as freezer to firm while you
. seductive as toasted walnut complete the next step
(about I 0 minutes).
and chocolate tart.
Use a knife IQ break
The tart's filling combines
chocolate and citrus-orange chocolate into small shards.
flavors, walnuts add a healthy In medium saucepan bring
crunch to the texture, and cream to a boil, add chocothe recipe is easy as well as late and remove from heat.
elegant. It was created by Stir until smooth. Stir 'in
Eric Olson of Ojai, Calif., Grand Marnier. Pour mixstudent-chef at the Culinary ture into chilled tatt mold
Institute of America, and it and refrigerate for 4 hours or ·
won him the-grand prize is a ~vernight,
recipe competition for CIA
In ·a small nonstick saute
students sponsored by the pan, combine the remaining
'Yalnut Marketing Board..
2 tablespoons simple syrup
and! the orange· zest. Cook
Toasted Walnut and
over medium heat until most
Chocolate Tart
of the water has evapo,rated
3 cups plus I 2 hal:ves waland the zest is translucent, .2
nuts, toasted ,,
'l. cup simple syrup (see
note)
6 tablespoons .('/, stick) "
unsalted butter, melted
12 ounces dark Belgian
chocolate
. I~ cups heavy cream
2 tablespoons Grand
Marnier
' Zest of 2 large oranges, to
candy for garnish
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .

a

Toast walnuts irt a J5Q F
oven for 5 to I 0 minutes.
In a food processor coarsely chop 3 cups walnuts for
crust. Place c hopped walnuts
in a b9wl, add 2 tablespoons
of the simple syrup and th'e
melted butter; mix well.
Place mixture in · a to-inch
fluted tart pan with remov-

~

I.

I
I

__

to 3 minu tcs. Remove from
pan and cool.
To . serve: Keep chilled
until ready to serve. Remove
tart from pan. To slice, use a
knife · dipped in hot water
and wiped with a towel. Garnish slices with powdered
sugar-dusted walnut halves
and candied orange zest.
Makes 12 servings.
Note : To make simple
syrup, in a small covered
saucepan, simmer ~. cup
sugar, and ~ cup water for 4
minutes to dissolve crystals.

your b!XIY·

•••

.. ,

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic Laboratory System is
celebrating National Med, ical Laboratory Week April
15-21.
This is a week to re~­
nize the dedication of area
' laboratory professionals . in
,: maintaining high quality
standards in laboratory
test.,. .
./
mg..
The laboratory
team
' " includes
phlebotomists,
•· medical · laboratory technicians, medical technologists,
, cytotechnologists and secre; tarial individuals, each con,. tributing a valuable part to
"' the operation of the labora~ tory, based.;&gt;t seven locations ·
throughout southeast Ohio
and West Virginia. ·
. These locations include
" Gallipolis, Jackson, Pom~roy
~and Proctorville in Ohio,
• and Point Pleasant and
:1 Charleston, W.Va.
.0 More than 500;000 tests
" are porformed annually by
the Holzer Clinic Laboratory System in one. of s~n
~ lc:sta\idil's~ 'E'a'c'h"locanon' has'
C' ~ · maintai11e&amp;
accreditation
~ through the College of
t American Pathologists or
~ the Commission on Labora' tory Accreditation.
~. All of the Holzer Clinic
~ laboratoriei wree awarded
~ continuing
accreditation
~
'
~

after successful completion
of on-site inspections 'ondueled in late 2000 and January 2001.
Each laboratory must
meet rigorous standards of
testing to ensure accuracy
and quality in patient care

Flaws ovenvhelm good parts in '/trmy Men: Green Rogue'
BY WIWAM Sc:tiFJ:MAN

per goes . down , dumping our
petri dish hero into a ~
•
•
Great games are not always infested
area. He has to ba
the biggest scllers.
his way out through 16 levels, .
But crummy games don't . using a nice selection of
always wind up on the $9.99 weapons, including a flame
sale counter, either.
thrower, grenade launcher, rifle
That's the mystery .behind and a screen-clearing Biothe Army Men series from Strike.
3DO. The ·games are unatttacThere are power-ups galore,
tive, play strangely and appear including health, extr.Jlives an'tl
to have been designed for continues. There also are multisome ancient 8-bit system. Y~t ple levels of weapon power,
they sell like hotcakes llf!d, topped by "nuclear stri~."
because the graphics are basiThere are five bosses m beat.
cally one step above stick fig- At the end of every level, an
ures, 3DO Can pump out. a awards screen pops up, display~
new one every few months.
ing your performance and notThe latest to flicker across ing the medals you won .
my teleVision screen is "Army
The premise is a winner; two
Men: Green Rogue" for the
PlayStation 2.
Here we have the Green
Army Advanced Research
Division producing something
caUed the Omega Soldier, a
supersoldier brewed up in the
divisi'on's lab and sent' out alone ·
to battle the Tan army.
He's been created because, as
the lab notes , say of regular
warfare, "the cost in tears and
plastic is jwt too high." ·
Omega Soldier is being
transported by helicopter in a
packing case when the chopASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

serv1ces.

As part of the c;elebratioh
of National Medical Laboratory Week, the Holzer Clinic Laboratory system is
sponsoring a bone marrow
donor drive. The National
Marrow· Donor Program is
an organization that matches
volunteer donors with
patients in need of a bone ·
marrow transplant.
·
Significant cjevelopments
in medical technology have
contributed to finding new
ways to treat diseases. Bone
marrow transplants' can successfully help patients overcome many disease states.
The Holzer Clinic labora-·
tory is seeking volunteers ·ro
become donors, but also
financi~ support to •c~r ,;:
the eicpenie of donor iypmg.
. The cost for one individual is S88 for Caucasian and
$21 for minorities. .
For information, caU Kim .
Ballinger, Shari Fiel4s or
Susan Davis at Holzer Clinic, 446-5148.

armies of plastic soldiers like
those you played with as a kid
face off over·some long-forgotten slight. No blood, and
nobody except toy soldiers die.
So why isn't this a better
serieS?
Only 3DO · knows the
answer to that question. Here's
what's · wrong wi~h "Army
Men: Green Rogue."
Grnphics get a D. They are
simplistic and boring. The soldiers move like robots, the
backgrounds are monotonous
and the whole game appears to
have been drawn by kindergarten tots with three cr:i.yons.
.It makes no use of the PS2's.
muscle, and could easily have

been a PlayStation title released
three or four years ago.
, Control also is aD. The game
plays like a reaDy old 20 shooter. You have some control over
your character, but the game
pushes him relentlessly forward, even if you migh't like ro
hide behind a rock for a while.
If you slip behind a bush or
tree you can get stuck there
while Tan sharpshooters pick
you to pieces. Even worse,
shooting .in any direction but
straight forward .requires you to
swing around using the right
stick. Unfortunately, using the
stick for accurnte aiming is
impossible, so you wind up
spinning in a circle.

Sll"er Bridge Plaza • Gallipolis, OH
Mon. -Fri. Hours 11 a.m.- 7 p.m. Sot. 11 - 7p.m •

One Coupon Per Person, Per Day .
SIQnature,_ _ _ _' - - - - - -

Postal,Service will issue 34-cent stamps
;• to commemorate legendary.baseball fields ,

FLAIR

&amp;DESIGN

z.

Kl•. GllllpoUs Ferry, WV 61!·1371

------

·· --------:-------;-~,

IS
In
Prolasslonal Sill•
P11111•
IOSPbl

I·

•••

Hol_zer Clinic joins in
nat1onal observation

·~ U.S.

·, .PillS&amp; call•

1

~!fON - Gallia County commissioners proclallned Apnl 15-21 as National Medical LabOratory Week.
Seated is Commissioner Skip Meadows. Standing, from
. lett•. are ComniissionEJf\ Bill Davis, Shari Fields, Kim
Balhng.er, Susan DaViS and Commissioner Shirley Angel.
·
(Submitted photo)

•
•

"Think Ahead For A Healthy,Baby"

I
meat on a pizza; grilled .scallops served on a bed of
lentils. Top julienne vegeta. bles with pan-seared oysters
or scallops; add a few ounces ·.
of crabmeat or scallops to
noodles in bmth for an Oriental-style treat.
• Buy dams by tile 1GOcount bag for clam masts, as a
substitute for more expensive
oysters. Cook over ,;)als until
shells open.
To obtain a copy of ·the
hrochure, send a stamped,
self-addressed business-size
envelope to: Virgi1iia Marine-Products Board, 554 Den: ·
bigh Blvd. ;Suite B, Newport
News VA 23608.

Y
panley, if desired.
Makes 4 servings (serving size ~
pecans
cup chicken mixture and ~. cup
Low-fat chocolate ice cream
pasta}.
.
Combine
caramel sauce and
Nutrition information per serving: 338 cal. (18 percent from fat), pecahs; serve over ice cream.
Game Plan:
6.9 g fat (2.5 g saturated fat), 37.1 g
Prepare ingredients while water
pro. , 31..3 g carbo., 2.9 g fiber, 101
· for egg noodles comes to a ~il. .
mg chol. , 241 mg sodium.
'
'
• Cut chicken into bile-Size
Roasted· Asparagus
pieces.
·
•
Chop
shallots
and parsley.
1 pound trimmed asparagus
• Wash and trim asparagus.
I tablespoot~ olive oil
• Chop and mast pecans.
· ~ teaspoon salt
· Roast asparagus in oven while
~. teaspoon black pepper
Preheat dven to 400 F. Toss aspara- chicken cooks.
Prepare pralin~ sauce.
gus with oil, salt ~nd pepper; bake
Remove
ice cream from freezer
for 5 minutes.
just before serving meal.

filling·for seductive dessert

__ ____,___

Find and Use Copyright-Free Writings, common these &lt;faYs, and there's an indusMusic, Art &amp; More," which, happily, is try assumption that we all know the
S~len anything lately?•
written better than it i! tided.
basics. But that can be frustrating to
If you surf the World Wide Web, the
It costs $34.95 and is published by someone not born clutching a pocket
answer is almolt. certainly yes.· Thats Nolo, which handles plain,.English legal protector and keyboard. .
because the heist is so easy and the goods advice.
'
.
PC World magazine by IDG is a good
are so availabJe.
'\ Some of whats in the public domain is place to find advice written for the ordiWe're talking intellectual property and surprising. According to an appendix, nary cons~er.
copyright, and the Internet and personal 'many son~ by the famed Irving Berlin
It features understandable product
computers lm(e made the 1 unauthorized are now public domain.
reviews, comparison shopping, and pracand unpaid rleproduction of music, art,
The book is comprehen;ive and sur- tical user tips. The April .issue; for examwr\ting, photos, software and film so easy prisingly readable given the subject mat- ple, compares 50 PCs spread across
that most of us steal without a thought.
ter and the 23 chapters and three appen- power, value, notebook and home uses.
Printed pictures downloaded from dixes. The author, an attorney, is careful
At $5.99 off' the newsstand, those of w
news Web sites and the by-now infamous to inject· a real-world tone, pointing out, who remember nickel comic books will
' Napster case for music are 'examples. But for e~mple , that even though a copy- gulp a bit, but it's worthwhile reading~'\
other content might be legitimately in . right notice might be spurious on a.wqrk those who are new to personal computthe public domain ·and free for the ~k- truly in the public domain, that's still no mg.
guarnntee you won't get· sued if you use
mg.
"
The Web site for PC World ts
So whether you're designing a Web &gt;.ite it.
http:/ /www.pcworld.com.
or putting out the company newsletter,
The book's ISBN number is 0-87337how do you tell the difference between 433-9 and tile Nolo Web site is
Questions and comments are welwhat's copyrighted and what isn't?
http ://www.nolo.cotn.
come. Send them to Larry Blasko, AP, SO
A good starting' point is Stephen FishRockefeller Plaza, New · York, NY
man's "The Public Domain: How to
Personal computers ire a lot more 10020-1666: Or e-maillblasko@ap.org.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WIIIIER

Ice Cream Wi~ Praline· Sauce
~cup fat-free .caramel .S&gt;Ufe
2 tablespoons chopped, to~ted

Walnut and chocolate make
.

•

g tips·for making
more affordable ·

Serve over pasta; sprinkle with

8Y l,unry .. AlltO

:

BY IYD KIIQNIIH

:

AP WEEKLY fEATURES

stamps still stand - Tiger St1dium, Yankee
Stadium, Fenway Park and Wrigley Fiel9.
Stamps and first-day covers are available'
through the Philatelic Fulfillment Center ofthe USPS by calling (800) STAMP-24.

,

i

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the
~ famous "Shot Heard 'Round the World" when
:.Bobby Thomson of the Giants hit a homer in
.the ninth inning to defeat the Dodgers and
win the National League tide.
The shouting has gone, the excitement has
Last year, the Postal Service ·hailed 20 players ·
g()ne, ~d so has the Polo Grounl:ls - but not as the majer league "AU 20th-Century Team."
the memories.
·
, .
· Portrayed on these 33-cent stamps were:
In conjunction with ~ajor League BasebaU, Babe Ruth, Ty Cobb, Lefty Grov~. Jackie
the U.S. Postal Service will issue 10 new 34- Robinson, Rogers Hornsby, Satchel Paige,
cent stamps &lt;inJ~ne 27to commemorate leg- . Honus Wagner, ·Mickey Cochrane, Chtisty
endary playing fi~lds. . ·
Mathewson, Cy Young; Dizzy Dean, Walter
Depicted on the stamps are the Polo Johnson, Lou Gehrig, Pie Traynor, Roberta,
~unds inNewYork, Ebbets Field in BrookClemente, George Sisler, Jimmie ·Foxx, Josh
' lyn:{:omi~key Park in Chicago, Wrigley Field Gibson, Eddie Collins and Tris Speaker.
·
· · in Chicago, Shibe Park in P)liladelphia,, and
These stamps are available at your local dealSportsman's Park in St. Louis.
er and the Stamp Ful6llment Service at (800)
Only fo'u~ of these fields honored on the STAMP-24.
.

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ca ·....., e~-.. 6nlillfl

H~
11

.r,.c•

"I lost no time telephoning
\

Barb Kanper (Our House
. diiector at the time) and wr
lncasuring the instrument. it
w.as confirmed:'
The foundation approached
the Our Howe with a trade
idea. If they would let the foundation "borrow" the piano for
10 ~it would pay to reswre
the Bweau piano discaw:red in
ruins in the basement.
"Yes, it truly is an historic
t:ranw:tion, this exchange . we
two history groups effected in
1m:· said Swick.
";\ll of Blennerhassett Island
workers can never adequately
thank Our House's board of
directors for its sensitive
response to the Island's needs:'
The Our House .Bureau
piano was skillfully restored by
master cabinetmaker Joe Roby.
The restoration began on Jan: 3,
2000, and ·it was returned Feb
5, 2001 . The jewel now resides
in the Ladies Parlor/Music
Room · at the Our House
Museum.
The Blennerhassett piano
will be promineitdy displayed at
the mansion with a sign dispbyed saying that it is on loan

fiom the Our House Museum
in G.illipolis.
"This is great publicity for
us:• said Our House Boanl
President Dene Pellegrinon.
"They get a lor more traffic at
their museum and it will be a
great W7f to let those visiton
know that there's another great
bit of history just down the
· river."
r:
There will be a public UJIYCiling and reception for the
Menager Bureau piano at the
Our House April 22 fiom 2-5
p.m. Present will be a delegation fiom the foundation
.
..and
the Ohio Historical Society.
"I hope our exc!Wige will .
serve as a precedent for other
Ohio Valley history organizations:' said Swick.
"Modern spiraling expenses
and other exigencies pressure all
of us repositories of the past,
and the government level
seemingly cannot alford to be
as supportive as it might, so, we
litde local museums should
work together 00 help each
other as we struggle toward the
future and the uncertainties it
--contains."
.
The Our House Museum
will open its doors at 432 FiJ;St
Ave. on weekends in May with.
its season beginning on Memorial Day.

Stllrllly, Apll11, 2001

v fnwn Pap C1
Borg says the traditionalists
·believe "God guided the writing of the Bible, direcdy or
irtdirecdy," so what Scripture .
says "ultimately · comes from
God.""As a divine product, it is
God's truth" and thus "the ultimate authority about what to
believe and how to live:' On
history, "what the Bible says
happened really happened:'
Borg, n'iarried to an EpiscO:.
pal &amp;athedral canon, was raised
in that creed as a Minnesota
Lutheran, moved lefiwatd in
college and seminary, aban. doncd .ch11rch 'l&gt;r nearly a
decade and returned as a liberal some yefrs ago.
He contends the" older way"
"no longer works" and has
"made the Bible incredible and
irrelevant for vast numben" in
the cl\un:h and millions who
have dropped our.
What replaces it? To Borg,
the Bible is entirely a human
product, the response of
ancient conununides to their
experiences of "God (or 'the
sacred' or 'Spirit; terms that I
use synonymously"). So these
writing,; should ·always be read
metaphorically, asking what a
story means without worrying
much about the historical facts. ·
Parts of Scripture are irrelevant to us or never .were the·
will of God, he believes. The
Te~ Commandments were
"written from a male point of
view:' Other Old Testament
passages suggest "a disturbingly
C:lllricious and malevolent
God." There may be some history underlying the Exodus

the Multi-disciplinary A.:ade2001 .
my ol Affiliated McdiQI Am.
LLC. as a Diplomate in allied
health professional arts and
allied medical scicnc:es. '
The desigr®on 'WZ given
CHESHIRE - Jerry A. . based on Koch's advanced
Myers,.a chemist :issi511!nt at training, and ability and expcrObio Valley Electric Co[p:s. rise.
Kyger Creek pbnt, retired
MAAMA is a national orgaApril 1 wr more than 17- nization, based .in Las Vegas.
1/2 years of service with the Nev., comprised of interactive
company. said Plant Manager professionals from the medRalph E. Amburgey.
ical, scientific and affiliated
Myen joined OVEC in service communities.
1983 .as a bborer in he bbor
department and advanced to
coal handler 1989.1n 1990,
he was promoted to chemist
assistant. ·
ltpoit
He is ~ member of Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - . United
Masonic Lodge 469 in Eureka, and Clifliicle Golf Course Producers Inc. marlctt report
, in Gallipolis. Myers and his fiom Gallipolis fur sales con,vife, r,targaret, reside in Gal- ducted on Wednesday. .
Feeder Cattle-Steady·
lipolis, and they are the parents
275-415# St. S101-S116
of three children and five
H£ $98-$109, 425-525# St.
grandchildren.
S95-S 102 H£ 190-$97 550625# St. $85~$92 Hf. $8J-S91
650.:.725# Sr. $78-$84 Hf.
$74-$83; 750-850# St: 170GALLIPOLIS - Lisa M. $80 H£ $65-$75.
Cows-Steady
Koch, MS, of G:illipolis, has
Well Muscled/Aeshed $42been certified &amp;y the Board of

.........

and, interest rate oudook for

MARIETTA -

John C.
Miller, CFP, was one o( more
than 1,300 Raymond ]antes
Financial Services Inc., finan- .
cial advisors to attend che
company's National Conference recendy in Las Vegas,
Nev.
"My cliencs depend on me
to educate and inform them
about economic and financial
issues that may affect their
invesrmenls," said Miller, a
. financial advisor ana branch
manager . at the Raymond
James Financial Services office
in Marietta.
'"I~he . conference . allowed
me to learn valuable information that I can pur to work for
them," he added.
Fioancial advison spent a
busy week attending workshops and lectures on a variety
of investment and financial
subjects. Topics included
retirement and estate ·planning, tax-fiee investing, asset
allocation, mutual funds, equity research, aSset management,
insurance, and an economic

KJI•·~Uil

D

Wins Dlplolute.
status

$54; Medium/Lean S37..f4\;.

Tbin/I..igbt $30-$36; lk4

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Noted poet.
NEW YORK- Sylvia Pbrh
(1932-63) is a renowned

Back To The Fum:
•
Cow/CaJf Pain .$650-S71J!l';

Bied cOws $550-$780; lbbr
Calva $95-$310; Goats $13$80.
Call the office at 446-969Ji.

THE WEEK IN STQCKS
T1ris chart ~how! how 1ocaJ !toch of inkrrst per/vmtLd 1mt week.
Each .,~ closiil8 figurrs an! proviMtl by AtJo..m ofGallipoW.

liON.

lUE.

WED.

THiJ.

FRI.

35

c

FRIENDLY SEIMCE
(LEFT) - The Fabric
Shop's friendly staff is
one of the reasons
quitters, seamstresses
and other sewing hobbyists keep coming
back, year after year.
They are Cathy Clark,
Ann Lambert, Judy
EiChinger and Becky
Anderson, store
owner.

'

GALLIPOLIS - Robert
L. s~ president of G.illipo:.
lis Career Coli~ and jack~.
Henson, :ulmissions representative at GCC, ~ently
attended an admissions workshop at the University Plap
Hotel in Colupibus. •
The workshop was sponsored by the Ohio Associati9"
Of Career CoDe~- abd
Schools, a Columbus-based
association representing the
legislative and educational
inteteSU of more tharf 200 1¥
w_te career schools.
Featured speaker was I;)r.
Brian Beckett, counselor . ar
RETS Technical Center .:in
'
&lt;)
t
Dayton.
•

STORE OWNER
(BELOW) - Becky
Anderson. third generation owner of The
Fabric Shop, Is pictured with a number of
the custom applique
products offered at .
her P.omeroy store.
Hobbyists can purchase everything they ·
need for .an applique
project at the store,
and those who have
neither the time nor
talent tor such a project can buy the
jumpers, vests and
other appllqued items
· in their finished form.
(Brian J. Reed photos)

.

•..••
•

Colossus" (1960), is higlily
Amencan poet who began
disciplined and personalpublishing' her work as a
qualities that define most of .
child. She studied at Smith
College and Cambridge. Her- . her work." Ariel" (published
wideposthwnously in. 1968),
first volume of p~. "The
..
·

SBRdiiJ. Ap.. 15, 1101

$49-$5-4

NEWS IN BRIEF

•
ly considered her best colle~
~n of poetry, was written ih
the last months of her ~. ;
Her bte poems reveal a ~- .
nation
. with death.
.

..
I

•
•

1,300 m·inut~s per,.~
·month for only
•
$29.95/mo.
'

,

I

{

.1111 Fabric Shop is 'sew right'
Worthington

\".

+

10}.

10

10~

y

, W.,uld you likt'to see • stock of local intemt listed?
1f so, toni&lt;Ut News Editor Ktvin Kelly 4t (740) 446·2342, ext. 23.

. f

INVESTING

..... section 529 college
'
"''.!·,~savtngs programs
.

.

'

featured phones'

GALLIPOLIS .- Saving fur
college hai always been a challenge fur families. The introduc.
tion of strte-sponsored college
savingol plans has created a new
type of investment vehicle to help
families address dlis growing need.
In 1997, federal tax legislation
created Section 529 of the Internal Revenue ~. State college

't
$19.88 with a

new

super leisure plarJs

· agreement

$29.95 with

a new

two-y11r II(VIce

Century ·
makes two
appoinb11ents

agreement
caJ anv...:. e wllhln the u.s. from YQU'
home callq·na. \1slt your local us.
cellular"" store for details;
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• caller 10

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-call walling

-usee Messege cente!"" voiCe mall

51851

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uacellular.com

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Phone olflfs IIQUire 1 naw I'II'O·YII' sfMce aoreenwnt. PrlmiiiOIII pllene·IUbjiCI to clllngtlllltd on Mlllblllty. 1,300 IJ1INAii lflcluCIII300 arwttme m!IIIMIIIMI1.~ ~ ll'lltlt*lllll' monll. ~ ·miiNtn '*'~
oe "" M.fl\ ip·5:59a and frklly 8i&gt;Molldll 5:59a. Role P0ntli!l1d .. """' llloio Plw, IIIlich oo Mill&gt;~ In USCC-- 01~. Wlh U.loii·IIM USA lolln, -COO call ~ . . . llllin .. U.S. 110m 11101
!lome calll"'ll&lt;tiiOI on addlllonal$6.95 11'1 ....~. Nallcnoldo ICII·IIH CIIIIIIQ dots not lncludl "'mlnQ c1wgH"""' OUIIIdo- ,_calling OR. """*1ft,""'*111 "--. . ond Ill~ ra lncli.llld.IIIIOImay awry. Sto ll.. lor 11111111. Olltr ......Juno 3. 2001.
-

·-·

Ryan
Smith
GUEST
VIEW

savingol pmgr.um created under
dlis code, coinmonly called "529 to pay fur college.When the funds
Plans;' oll'er unique features. and are withdrawn to pay fur coUege
·~efics which can make them an expenses, the· eamin~ are tlla!d·at
attractive investment fur families. the students taX rate - usuaDy 15
About 40 states now ofi'er 529 percent - instead of the parent's
Plans and each one is diffemlr. rax rate, Which can range up to
··Malt' programs ate open to tesi- 39.6 percent.·
.
denlll ofany state. some states pro- . • If the money IIOMd ~ nOt used '
vide 'special incentivtis fur residents fur college costs, the ~ Win '
of their states.
be subject IX! a penalty -usually
These can include state taX 10 or 15 pe\'CeD1'- in addition to
deductions fur contributions or state and fedml taxation. If the
adv.mtages when the funds are student receives a scholanhip. an
wed to pay fur college. X &amp;mily amount equal to the scholarship is
should review the unique featui-es
to dlis penal~):
of their state program when com- 'nor~ subject
The funds are owned and
. paring it to othen.
There are several features which conlrolled by the account conall the state 529 Plans have in tributor and not the child benetici.ary. It Is the contributor who
commom
owns
the account and decides
• 529 Pbns provide taxdeferred ~ fiom the time how the funds are to 1x; used At
.invested until the money is used

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

•

•
til

•

'
'

~

.,

..

'!

Third-generation
"'
store now serves
q~tlters, nbbbyists
.

Includes :m anytime minutes and 1,00(l'niglt &amp;weekend mii1Jtes
.with a new one-year service agr een1e1 rt.

BUSINESS BRIEF

•

Ullitad
PtuducleiS

m

two-year service

'
.
organizational design and
recruiting. He joined C:ugill
Steel in 1980, where he held
human . resource positions of
increasing responsibility at
plants in Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. and
Pennsylvania. 'His most
· Century Aluininum Co. has
announced two appointments recent positions was vice president of human ·resources in
to its corporate stalf.
David M. Lewis has been Minneapolis, Minn:
Born in Clevebnd, Schneider
named to the newly created
position of human ·resoqn:es holds a bachelor of arts degree
director. He will be ba.ied at in accounting from .Marietta
Century's Ravenswood Opera- College and a inaster of arts
. tiom with ·human services degree in applied behavioral
responsibilities
for . the science from Bastyr University.
Ravenswood plant and Centu- He is .also a certified public
ry's Hawesville, Ky., Operations. . accountant.
Schneider· has more than 20 ,
Steve Schneider has been
named corporate controller and ,year~ of experience in the aluhe will be based at Century's minum . industry, principally·
Monterey, Calif., headquarters. with Alcoa Inc., in accOUIJting
· Born in Logan, W.Va., Lewis and procurement. Most recentgraduated from Marshall Uni- ly, he was director of procure~rsity with a bachelor of sci- ment for Alcoa Business, Supence degree in criminal justice port Services in Knoxville,
and. psychology, and master of Tenn. ·from 1993 to 1995,
science degree in industrial Schneider was vice president of
management.
finance ·for Ravenswood AluHe has had experience . in rnirJum Corp., a predecessor
labor and employee relations, company tn Century Aluemployee development; safety, nunum .

-

~

ston.

In the New Testament, Jesus
may have actually healed some
people bur couldn't have literally stilled the storm or fed the
5,000. He wasn't born of a virgin, and the Easter story isn't
about literal resurrection but
experience of an exalted Jesus
as "a living reality after his
death:' Also, Christian exdusivism must go·
Borg says this liberal mindset
"has become increasingly common among lay members of
mainline churches" the past
few decades." At the grass-roots
level of mainline churches, a
major de-literaliza!iotl of the
Bible is underway," even
though a "vocal minority"
resists.
True, the balance within
mainline Protestant churches
may be shifting Borg's way, but
most mainliners · probably
haven't moved as far left as this.
And his claim that the number
of grass-roots liberals is growing overall is highly depatable.
Liberal churches are generally
shrinking even as those that
c.hampion the "older way"
expand.
This · isn't original scholarship, as . Borg would freely
admit, b1.1r the latest of several
books in. which he attractively
synthesizes the libetal side of
the biblical divide. It amounts
to a more thoughtful venion of
"Rescuing the Bible from
Fun~mendlism" and "Why
Christianity Must Change or
Die" by his fellow Episcopalian, Bishop .John , Shelby
Spong.

Cltus!fkd ads, ~ J?2-7

BUSINESS BRIEFCASE

story but that doesn't matter;
the point is liberation from
economic and political oppres-

Bible

•

..
•"'

_____..

-

8Y BRIAN I. REID
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF .

POMEROY -·
The
sewing habits of American
women have changed dramatically since the 1950s,
but The Fabric Shop in
Pomeroy continues
to
attract quilten, seamstresses
and other hobbyists from
around the region .- ansf
around the nation.
Becky Andenon is a
third-generation owner of
this unusual store.
1-Jer parents and her
grandmother, Art and Ada
Nease, and Amber Warner,
started the business in the
Crow Building in Pomeroy
· ' back in 1959. In 1961, the
store was moved to West
Second Street, where it

The store also '!fler.s tuxedo re11tals as an .
(luthorized clealerjor Cflpitol TuxedO, and offe,rs
a convenient pickup location for dry cleaning.
remained until 1987, when "'space nor only for more
it was relocated to the for- fabrics, but also for the line
mer Ebersbach Hardware of Singer sewing machines
offered through one of the
store on West Main Street.
The 19,th-cenrury store, nation's few remaining
with its high, tin ceiling and independent Singer dealerriver view, is the perfect ships.
location for The Fabric
The store also offen luxeShop. More than 3,000 do rentals as an authorized
bolts offabric, in a spectrum dealer for ·Capitol Tuxedo,
of colon and patterns, are and offers a convenient
lined fiom floor to ceiling pickup location for dry
- many accessible only by cleaning.
two identical moving lad- · When The Fabric Shop
ders, daring back rei ·rhe was first opened, it was to
building's days as a hardware supply area women with
store.
rfabrics,
patterns
and
A second floor provides notions they' needed to sew

. Balthaserfarm
to host pond clinic
GALLIPOLIS - Are
you interested in building a
pond, reducing unwanted
aquatic vegetation in your
)lond, stocking fish to catch
Or 'discovering what crea·rurts lurk in the streams ·
before they empty into
your pond?
Plan to attend the "Meigs
County Pond Clinic 2001
onApril21 fiom 10 a.m. to
Noon at Cu~tis Balrhas~r·s
Farm lat 30286 Briar
· Ridge Road (Meigs
County Road 2) in
Danvilll(.
· This free program is
being sponsored by the Soil
&amp; Water Conservation District and· Ohio State University Extension of Meigs
Count):
Topics to be covered
indude:"What We Have To
Look For In A Good Pond

Hal
Kneen
..

GUESI'V'&amp;i

Sire;' "Fish Stocking and
Fish l{iJJs " "Plant Control
Around 'the Pond" and
"Healthy Stteams Feeding
Your Pond:'
Registration is fiee and
begins at 9:30 a.m. Progrant$ start at 10 a.m. The
pond clinic will be held
rain or shine. Bring your
own chair or blanker to sir
on. Light refieshments will
be served by the Meig,; Soil
and Water Conservation

Plnn ... KnHn.DI
~t

.

their family's clothing.
Now that the role of
won1en

in

society · has

changed, and many more
women have entered the
traditional work force, the
store's mission has changed
somewhat, also.
Now, the store primarily
serves the hobbyist seamstress - the quilrer and the
applique artist - looking
for just the right fabric or
trim.
"Back in 1959, most
ladies didn't work outside of
the home," Anderson said.
"They spent a great deal of
their rime making clothing
and mending clothing for
their family. That's just not

Plllse ... F8brk. Dl

Tobacco float
.system .management
GALLIPOLIS - For many
producers, it was the introduction of float systems that made
tobacco ·seedling production
bearable for growers and their
Jennifer
families. However, the producByrnes
tion system requires careful
management of temperature,
materials, and fertilit):
· GUEST VIEW
Rmperature management is
of particular concern re~endy.
If the Warm weather persists recent day temperatures. As a
this early in the season; the general rule of thumb, productobacco float systems will need ers should be prepared to open
conscientious management to the ends or roll up the sides of
avoid
overheating
the . the float cover when : 1.) Outseedling,;.
side temperatures reach 70
For those still in the early degrees on a sunny day, or 2.)
stages of production, the tern- oucside temperatures reach 75perature at tray level should be 80 degrees ori a douqy or
maintained .at 65-75 degrees ovetea~t day.
for the fint 7-14 . days after .
In both cases, the temperaseeding, as this is the optimum ture under the cover will be
temperature fur germination. , over 90 degrees, which severeEven established seedling,;
can suffer heat injury in the
Plellse ..., lynn, Dl

'

.

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"I lost no time telephoning
\

Barb Kanper (Our House
. diiector at the time) and wr
lncasuring the instrument. it
w.as confirmed:'
The foundation approached
the Our Howe with a trade
idea. If they would let the foundation "borrow" the piano for
10 ~it would pay to reswre
the Bweau piano discaw:red in
ruins in the basement.
"Yes, it truly is an historic
t:ranw:tion, this exchange . we
two history groups effected in
1m:· said Swick.
";\ll of Blennerhassett Island
workers can never adequately
thank Our House's board of
directors for its sensitive
response to the Island's needs:'
The Our House .Bureau
piano was skillfully restored by
master cabinetmaker Joe Roby.
The restoration began on Jan: 3,
2000, and ·it was returned Feb
5, 2001 . The jewel now resides
in the Ladies Parlor/Music
Room · at the Our House
Museum.
The Blennerhassett piano
will be promineitdy displayed at
the mansion with a sign dispbyed saying that it is on loan

fiom the Our House Museum
in G.illipolis.
"This is great publicity for
us:• said Our House Boanl
President Dene Pellegrinon.
"They get a lor more traffic at
their museum and it will be a
great W7f to let those visiton
know that there's another great
bit of history just down the
· river."
r:
There will be a public UJIYCiling and reception for the
Menager Bureau piano at the
Our House April 22 fiom 2-5
p.m. Present will be a delegation fiom the foundation
.
..and
the Ohio Historical Society.
"I hope our exc!Wige will .
serve as a precedent for other
Ohio Valley history organizations:' said Swick.
"Modern spiraling expenses
and other exigencies pressure all
of us repositories of the past,
and the government level
seemingly cannot alford to be
as supportive as it might, so, we
litde local museums should
work together 00 help each
other as we struggle toward the
future and the uncertainties it
--contains."
.
The Our House Museum
will open its doors at 432 FiJ;St
Ave. on weekends in May with.
its season beginning on Memorial Day.

Stllrllly, Apll11, 2001

v fnwn Pap C1
Borg says the traditionalists
·believe "God guided the writing of the Bible, direcdy or
irtdirecdy," so what Scripture .
says "ultimately · comes from
God.""As a divine product, it is
God's truth" and thus "the ultimate authority about what to
believe and how to live:' On
history, "what the Bible says
happened really happened:'
Borg, n'iarried to an EpiscO:.
pal &amp;athedral canon, was raised
in that creed as a Minnesota
Lutheran, moved lefiwatd in
college and seminary, aban. doncd .ch11rch 'l&gt;r nearly a
decade and returned as a liberal some yefrs ago.
He contends the" older way"
"no longer works" and has
"made the Bible incredible and
irrelevant for vast numben" in
the cl\un:h and millions who
have dropped our.
What replaces it? To Borg,
the Bible is entirely a human
product, the response of
ancient conununides to their
experiences of "God (or 'the
sacred' or 'Spirit; terms that I
use synonymously"). So these
writing,; should ·always be read
metaphorically, asking what a
story means without worrying
much about the historical facts. ·
Parts of Scripture are irrelevant to us or never .were the·
will of God, he believes. The
Te~ Commandments were
"written from a male point of
view:' Other Old Testament
passages suggest "a disturbingly
C:lllricious and malevolent
God." There may be some history underlying the Exodus

the Multi-disciplinary A.:ade2001 .
my ol Affiliated McdiQI Am.
LLC. as a Diplomate in allied
health professional arts and
allied medical scicnc:es. '
The desigr®on 'WZ given
CHESHIRE - Jerry A. . based on Koch's advanced
Myers,.a chemist :issi511!nt at training, and ability and expcrObio Valley Electric Co[p:s. rise.
Kyger Creek pbnt, retired
MAAMA is a national orgaApril 1 wr more than 17- nization, based .in Las Vegas.
1/2 years of service with the Nev., comprised of interactive
company. said Plant Manager professionals from the medRalph E. Amburgey.
ical, scientific and affiliated
Myen joined OVEC in service communities.
1983 .as a bborer in he bbor
department and advanced to
coal handler 1989.1n 1990,
he was promoted to chemist
assistant. ·
ltpoit
He is ~ member of Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - . United
Masonic Lodge 469 in Eureka, and Clifliicle Golf Course Producers Inc. marlctt report
, in Gallipolis. Myers and his fiom Gallipolis fur sales con,vife, r,targaret, reside in Gal- ducted on Wednesday. .
Feeder Cattle-Steady·
lipolis, and they are the parents
275-415# St. S101-S116
of three children and five
H£ $98-$109, 425-525# St.
grandchildren.
S95-S 102 H£ 190-$97 550625# St. $85~$92 Hf. $8J-S91
650.:.725# Sr. $78-$84 Hf.
$74-$83; 750-850# St: 170GALLIPOLIS - Lisa M. $80 H£ $65-$75.
Cows-Steady
Koch, MS, of G:illipolis, has
Well Muscled/Aeshed $42been certified &amp;y the Board of

.........

and, interest rate oudook for

MARIETTA -

John C.
Miller, CFP, was one o( more
than 1,300 Raymond ]antes
Financial Services Inc., finan- .
cial advisors to attend che
company's National Conference recendy in Las Vegas,
Nev.
"My cliencs depend on me
to educate and inform them
about economic and financial
issues that may affect their
invesrmenls," said Miller, a
. financial advisor ana branch
manager . at the Raymond
James Financial Services office
in Marietta.
'"I~he . conference . allowed
me to learn valuable information that I can pur to work for
them," he added.
Fioancial advison spent a
busy week attending workshops and lectures on a variety
of investment and financial
subjects. Topics included
retirement and estate ·planning, tax-fiee investing, asset
allocation, mutual funds, equity research, aSset management,
insurance, and an economic

KJI•·~Uil

D

Wins Dlplolute.
status

$54; Medium/Lean S37..f4\;.

Tbin/I..igbt $30-$36; lk4

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Noted poet.
NEW YORK- Sylvia Pbrh
(1932-63) is a renowned

Back To The Fum:
•
Cow/CaJf Pain .$650-S71J!l';

Bied cOws $550-$780; lbbr
Calva $95-$310; Goats $13$80.
Call the office at 446-969Ji.

THE WEEK IN STQCKS
T1ris chart ~how! how 1ocaJ !toch of inkrrst per/vmtLd 1mt week.
Each .,~ closiil8 figurrs an! proviMtl by AtJo..m ofGallipoW.

liON.

lUE.

WED.

THiJ.

FRI.

35

c

FRIENDLY SEIMCE
(LEFT) - The Fabric
Shop's friendly staff is
one of the reasons
quitters, seamstresses
and other sewing hobbyists keep coming
back, year after year.
They are Cathy Clark,
Ann Lambert, Judy
EiChinger and Becky
Anderson, store
owner.

'

GALLIPOLIS - Robert
L. s~ president of G.illipo:.
lis Career Coli~ and jack~.
Henson, :ulmissions representative at GCC, ~ently
attended an admissions workshop at the University Plap
Hotel in Colupibus. •
The workshop was sponsored by the Ohio Associati9"
Of Career CoDe~- abd
Schools, a Columbus-based
association representing the
legislative and educational
inteteSU of more tharf 200 1¥
w_te career schools.
Featured speaker was I;)r.
Brian Beckett, counselor . ar
RETS Technical Center .:in
'
&lt;)
t
Dayton.
•

STORE OWNER
(BELOW) - Becky
Anderson. third generation owner of The
Fabric Shop, Is pictured with a number of
the custom applique
products offered at .
her P.omeroy store.
Hobbyists can purchase everything they ·
need for .an applique
project at the store,
and those who have
neither the time nor
talent tor such a project can buy the
jumpers, vests and
other appllqued items
· in their finished form.
(Brian J. Reed photos)

.

•..••
•

Colossus" (1960), is higlily
Amencan poet who began
disciplined and personalpublishing' her work as a
qualities that define most of .
child. She studied at Smith
College and Cambridge. Her- . her work." Ariel" (published
wideposthwnously in. 1968),
first volume of p~. "The
..
·

SBRdiiJ. Ap.. 15, 1101

$49-$5-4

NEWS IN BRIEF

•
ly considered her best colle~
~n of poetry, was written ih
the last months of her ~. ;
Her bte poems reveal a ~- .
nation
. with death.
.

..
I

•
•

1,300 m·inut~s per,.~
·month for only
•
$29.95/mo.
'

,

I

{

.1111 Fabric Shop is 'sew right'
Worthington

\".

+

10}.

10

10~

y

, W.,uld you likt'to see • stock of local intemt listed?
1f so, toni&lt;Ut News Editor Ktvin Kelly 4t (740) 446·2342, ext. 23.

. f

INVESTING

..... section 529 college
'
"''.!·,~savtngs programs
.

.

'

featured phones'

GALLIPOLIS .- Saving fur
college hai always been a challenge fur families. The introduc.
tion of strte-sponsored college
savingol plans has created a new
type of investment vehicle to help
families address dlis growing need.
In 1997, federal tax legislation
created Section 529 of the Internal Revenue ~. State college

't
$19.88 with a

new

super leisure plarJs

· agreement

$29.95 with

a new

two-y11r II(VIce

Century ·
makes two
appoinb11ents

agreement
caJ anv...:. e wllhln the u.s. from YQU'
home callq·na. \1slt your local us.
cellular"" store for details;
.
.

• caller 10

•

-call walling

-usee Messege cente!"" voiCe mall

51851

-==

~lllo
......
~ ~olilloU

II

a:

~ri.s.Celh.m

1-888-BUY-USCC
uacellular.com

We connect with you~

.

.

Phone olflfs IIQUire 1 naw I'II'O·YII' sfMce aoreenwnt. PrlmiiiOIII pllene·IUbjiCI to clllngtlllltd on Mlllblllty. 1,300 IJ1INAii lflcluCIII300 arwttme m!IIIMIIIMI1.~ ~ ll'lltlt*lllll' monll. ~ ·miiNtn '*'~
oe "" M.fl\ ip·5:59a and frklly 8i&gt;Molldll 5:59a. Role P0ntli!l1d .. """' llloio Plw, IIIlich oo Mill&gt;~ In USCC-- 01~. Wlh U.loii·IIM USA lolln, -COO call ~ . . . llllin .. U.S. 110m 11101
!lome calll"'ll&lt;tiiOI on addlllonal$6.95 11'1 ....~. Nallcnoldo ICII·IIH CIIIIIIQ dots not lncludl "'mlnQ c1wgH"""' OUIIIdo- ,_calling OR. """*1ft,""'*111 "--. . ond Ill~ ra lncli.llld.IIIIOImay awry. Sto ll.. lor 11111111. Olltr ......Juno 3. 2001.
-

·-·

Ryan
Smith
GUEST
VIEW

savingol pmgr.um created under
dlis code, coinmonly called "529 to pay fur college.When the funds
Plans;' oll'er unique features. and are withdrawn to pay fur coUege
·~efics which can make them an expenses, the· eamin~ are tlla!d·at
attractive investment fur families. the students taX rate - usuaDy 15
About 40 states now ofi'er 529 percent - instead of the parent's
Plans and each one is diffemlr. rax rate, Which can range up to
··Malt' programs ate open to tesi- 39.6 percent.·
.
denlll ofany state. some states pro- . • If the money IIOMd ~ nOt used '
vide 'special incentivtis fur residents fur college costs, the ~ Win '
of their states.
be subject IX! a penalty -usually
These can include state taX 10 or 15 pe\'CeD1'- in addition to
deductions fur contributions or state and fedml taxation. If the
adv.mtages when the funds are student receives a scholanhip. an
wed to pay fur college. X &amp;mily amount equal to the scholarship is
should review the unique featui-es
to dlis penal~):
of their state program when com- 'nor~ subject
The funds are owned and
. paring it to othen.
There are several features which conlrolled by the account conall the state 529 Plans have in tributor and not the child benetici.ary. It Is the contributor who
commom
owns
the account and decides
• 529 Pbns provide taxdeferred ~ fiom the time how the funds are to 1x; used At
.invested until the money is used

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

•

•
til

•

'
'

~

.,

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'!

Third-generation
"'
store now serves
q~tlters, nbbbyists
.

Includes :m anytime minutes and 1,00(l'niglt &amp;weekend mii1Jtes
.with a new one-year service agr een1e1 rt.

BUSINESS BRIEF

•

Ullitad
PtuducleiS

m

two-year service

'
.
organizational design and
recruiting. He joined C:ugill
Steel in 1980, where he held
human . resource positions of
increasing responsibility at
plants in Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. and
Pennsylvania. 'His most
· Century Aluininum Co. has
announced two appointments recent positions was vice president of human ·resources in
to its corporate stalf.
David M. Lewis has been Minneapolis, Minn:
Born in Clevebnd, Schneider
named to the newly created
position of human ·resoqn:es holds a bachelor of arts degree
director. He will be ba.ied at in accounting from .Marietta
Century's Ravenswood Opera- College and a inaster of arts
. tiom with ·human services degree in applied behavioral
responsibilities
for . the science from Bastyr University.
Ravenswood plant and Centu- He is .also a certified public
ry's Hawesville, Ky., Operations. . accountant.
Schneider· has more than 20 ,
Steve Schneider has been
named corporate controller and ,year~ of experience in the aluhe will be based at Century's minum . industry, principally·
Monterey, Calif., headquarters. with Alcoa Inc., in accOUIJting
· Born in Logan, W.Va., Lewis and procurement. Most recentgraduated from Marshall Uni- ly, he was director of procure~rsity with a bachelor of sci- ment for Alcoa Business, Supence degree in criminal justice port Services in Knoxville,
and. psychology, and master of Tenn. ·from 1993 to 1995,
science degree in industrial Schneider was vice president of
management.
finance ·for Ravenswood AluHe has had experience . in rnirJum Corp., a predecessor
labor and employee relations, company tn Century Aluemployee development; safety, nunum .

-

~

ston.

In the New Testament, Jesus
may have actually healed some
people bur couldn't have literally stilled the storm or fed the
5,000. He wasn't born of a virgin, and the Easter story isn't
about literal resurrection but
experience of an exalted Jesus
as "a living reality after his
death:' Also, Christian exdusivism must go·
Borg says this liberal mindset
"has become increasingly common among lay members of
mainline churches" the past
few decades." At the grass-roots
level of mainline churches, a
major de-literaliza!iotl of the
Bible is underway," even
though a "vocal minority"
resists.
True, the balance within
mainline Protestant churches
may be shifting Borg's way, but
most mainliners · probably
haven't moved as far left as this.
And his claim that the number
of grass-roots liberals is growing overall is highly depatable.
Liberal churches are generally
shrinking even as those that
c.hampion the "older way"
expand.
This · isn't original scholarship, as . Borg would freely
admit, b1.1r the latest of several
books in. which he attractively
synthesizes the libetal side of
the biblical divide. It amounts
to a more thoughtful venion of
"Rescuing the Bible from
Fun~mendlism" and "Why
Christianity Must Change or
Die" by his fellow Episcopalian, Bishop .John , Shelby
Spong.

Cltus!fkd ads, ~ J?2-7

BUSINESS BRIEFCASE

story but that doesn't matter;
the point is liberation from
economic and political oppres-

Bible

•

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•"'

_____..

-

8Y BRIAN I. REID
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF .

POMEROY -·
The
sewing habits of American
women have changed dramatically since the 1950s,
but The Fabric Shop in
Pomeroy continues
to
attract quilten, seamstresses
and other hobbyists from
around the region .- ansf
around the nation.
Becky Andenon is a
third-generation owner of
this unusual store.
1-Jer parents and her
grandmother, Art and Ada
Nease, and Amber Warner,
started the business in the
Crow Building in Pomeroy
· ' back in 1959. In 1961, the
store was moved to West
Second Street, where it

The store also '!fler.s tuxedo re11tals as an .
(luthorized clealerjor Cflpitol TuxedO, and offe,rs
a convenient pickup location for dry cleaning.
remained until 1987, when "'space nor only for more
it was relocated to the for- fabrics, but also for the line
mer Ebersbach Hardware of Singer sewing machines
offered through one of the
store on West Main Street.
The 19,th-cenrury store, nation's few remaining
with its high, tin ceiling and independent Singer dealerriver view, is the perfect ships.
location for The Fabric
The store also offen luxeShop. More than 3,000 do rentals as an authorized
bolts offabric, in a spectrum dealer for ·Capitol Tuxedo,
of colon and patterns, are and offers a convenient
lined fiom floor to ceiling pickup location for dry
- many accessible only by cleaning.
two identical moving lad- · When The Fabric Shop
ders, daring back rei ·rhe was first opened, it was to
building's days as a hardware supply area women with
store.
rfabrics,
patterns
and
A second floor provides notions they' needed to sew

. Balthaserfarm
to host pond clinic
GALLIPOLIS - Are
you interested in building a
pond, reducing unwanted
aquatic vegetation in your
)lond, stocking fish to catch
Or 'discovering what crea·rurts lurk in the streams ·
before they empty into
your pond?
Plan to attend the "Meigs
County Pond Clinic 2001
onApril21 fiom 10 a.m. to
Noon at Cu~tis Balrhas~r·s
Farm lat 30286 Briar
· Ridge Road (Meigs
County Road 2) in
Danvilll(.
· This free program is
being sponsored by the Soil
&amp; Water Conservation District and· Ohio State University Extension of Meigs
Count):
Topics to be covered
indude:"What We Have To
Look For In A Good Pond

Hal
Kneen
..

GUESI'V'&amp;i

Sire;' "Fish Stocking and
Fish l{iJJs " "Plant Control
Around 'the Pond" and
"Healthy Stteams Feeding
Your Pond:'
Registration is fiee and
begins at 9:30 a.m. Progrant$ start at 10 a.m. The
pond clinic will be held
rain or shine. Bring your
own chair or blanker to sir
on. Light refieshments will
be served by the Meig,; Soil
and Water Conservation

Plnn ... KnHn.DI
~t

.

their family's clothing.
Now that the role of
won1en

in

society · has

changed, and many more
women have entered the
traditional work force, the
store's mission has changed
somewhat, also.
Now, the store primarily
serves the hobbyist seamstress - the quilrer and the
applique artist - looking
for just the right fabric or
trim.
"Back in 1959, most
ladies didn't work outside of
the home," Anderson said.
"They spent a great deal of
their rime making clothing
and mending clothing for
their family. That's just not

Plllse ... F8brk. Dl

Tobacco float
.system .management
GALLIPOLIS - For many
producers, it was the introduction of float systems that made
tobacco ·seedling production
bearable for growers and their
Jennifer
families. However, the producByrnes
tion system requires careful
management of temperature,
materials, and fertilit):
· GUEST VIEW
Rmperature management is
of particular concern re~endy.
If the Warm weather persists recent day temperatures. As a
this early in the season; the general rule of thumb, productobacco float systems will need ers should be prepared to open
conscientious management to the ends or roll up the sides of
avoid
overheating
the . the float cover when : 1.) Outseedling,;.
side temperatures reach 70
For those still in the early degrees on a sunny day, or 2.)
stages of production, the tern- oucside temperatures reach 75perature at tray level should be 80 degrees ori a douqy or
maintained .at 65-75 degrees ovetea~t day.
for the fint 7-14 . days after .
In both cases, the temperaseeding, as this is the optimum ture under the cover will be
temperature fur germination. , over 90 degrees, which severeEven established seedling,;
can suffer heat injury in the
Plellse ..., lynn, Dl

'

.

.,

�•

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- - - _. _. ··--·- ,. -

. - ·-

.

"

Sundey.Aprtl15, 2001

.._~1111·6elllttttt•PrgeDI

•

110 . Help w.ntiCI
ILACK6TONE
PARALEGAL
STUDI£8. Comprehee:Jiiw. aftofd~· Home Study legal training
llnct 1190. Fr-. ,.lalog: 1·100- ·
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AREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
excellent income. Easy claims
processtpg. Fuij training. Home·
PC required. Call Physician &amp;
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ANNOUNCEI,\E'HS
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JUST CALL

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FREE SEARCH!

-

.siNGlESc:om

Genllema.n Seeking White Female Over 50 Years For Walks

And Friendship. Reply To: 553
2nd Avenue. Gallipolis . Ohio
'5631 , Apanmem ~3

bft

1 will not
responsible lor debts
incurred by othetS than myself,
Including me1a1 &amp; physical doctor

bills, Lawrence J. Taylor.

7 Adorable Puppies, 6 Weeh ~- """""' 112 ~. 112
Old. Just In Time fOl Easer, 112 Lab, no 1115 •4413. •
c - Nose Beagle, 112 Ausliollan. Shepherd, Please ..Call To Good Home. Molhor Goldin
1304)1195-3957
~. Fa- e1ac11 Lab, Good
·
• ,
Natured Beau11ful Puppies Has
Ad..!.blo 'killens, lreo lo a good 111 ShoiS And Wormed. Cllll An- ·
home, Iiiier lralnod, 7'0·8'3· ly!::ti:::n•::;I1!!;48~14:::46:;:7234:::;:::.,__-:-_

60

Lost end Found ..

Free Maple llrewood, easy ac·

1=-~:---.---:~~:':':":::.:
fomd. male,

Quality clothing and household
ii811JS. $1.00 bag sate every
Thursday. Mondoy thru Saturday

&amp;lllil. 74G-8112-71~.

· Heoler/Collia

9:!10-6:00.

9229.

9-1 Slimsoll. Alhons
7~592-1802

t~ading ,

eess tor

some needs

country, shepherd mi•. 740.. 992·

wmtTHE

.

Rev. C.J.
Lemley
On his birthday,
April 12

A aoul that waaln
hn found
light todoy. Now life

darknt~s,

h11 come to thet
soul. beceun you

Clime thla wey.

I met you when lire
was 11d and lonely,
but you brought a
amll• of cheer. Uy
saul haabaen
enlightened, just
bcaull you ere here.

Juotlot your light
koop lhinlng, through
ell the dlricneu of
life. And you will
rnake more souls

hoppy, )UII II you
heve mine.

Light con lhlne
through derkneu, .
when nothln~ eloe
will do. Thatoo why
thla soul Ia happy,
~uat because of you.
1/ttlllan.by C.J. leMie)'
Written on lhe night
of Aioguot 24, 1&amp;53

Veteran's Mcmor1~11 HosptLd il,1s
rmmecl!atc opcn1ngs for the follo•;;III&lt;J
Billing Clark-

Absolula Top Dollar:

Bu81,... Otnce pert time.

• LPN • Sldllad Nu....ng F.:lllty pert time
Tray Allaemblar - Nutrition s.rvtc:u part time

u.s. Sliver.

Gold Coins. Proofsels, Diamonds, ,
Gold Rings. U.S. Curropcr.·
U .T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
........ Gaillpot!o 7~ 448 2142. .

Wanted .

110

Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has an opening
for a Respiratory Therapist for our DME.office In
Pl. Pleasant, WV. Excellent pay and ~enefits.
S.@!ld resume to:

·,

Excellent wage and benefits package.

Roale Ward
·.
·
VIce Prealdent of lfuman Resource•
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

'"ACCESS TO A COMPUTER! .
Put 11 10 wort&lt;! $251hr·$7M!r. FTI
PT. FREE Info. 800:871·81145 axl.
601 www.lahomoblz.com. ,

100 JICklon Pike

Galllpolta~..oH

45831-1583

Phone: v40) 441-11105
FAX/TDD: (740) 4411-5108

'"lliORK FROM HoME"'
$500-$1500 par mo. Prr
$2000·$8000 por mo., Frr
No o"'l8ffenco noedoci,Tralnlng jlrOYidod.
. 1·800-39H93p ,

m student Pfl•s

P-H¥SICAL
, 41;,1~~PIST
'

NMjlotll
'
Dr1Yo The Big Trlf*BU
Earn The Blg'I!Ocks!f·;1 '
38k·'2k po..,lllil
No e!Cpar!Onco ~~I
14 Doy COL Training
No coal Training If Oilallllid
Call1 ·800-394-2405.

' I

'

.

Card of Thanka
'

TO

THE MEMBERS OP
THE ·GALLIPOLIS
CHR.ISTIAN CHURCH

.

'

•

ON BEHALF OF SHIRLEY AND MYSELF, I WOULD LIKE
TO THANK THE CHURCH FOR THE PRIVILEGE 0~ .
B!RVINQ YOU FOR OVER A QUARTIR OF A CINTURY. IT
HA8 BI!&amp;N TRULY A JOY AND AILE811NG TO HAVE
HRVID AI YOUR PREACHER. I KNOW OF NO
MINIITIR OF THI OOIPIL WHO HAl RICI!IVID MOR!
INCOUAAOIMINT AND DIMONITRATION OF LOVI
FIIOM Hll CONORIQATION THAN MYIILF. GOO HAl
TIIULY ILIIIID Ui WITH A LCVJNO FAMILY, IN YOU,
THI IFFOftT, TIMI, AND IX~INII YOU FUT INTO
lliFIIIIIiNO THAT LOVI; AT OUIII'AIIIWILL DINNIIIJ.
WILL NIVIII.I FOIIOOTTII'j, NOll WILL THI MIT 2•
YIA,.I Of' Hil CIRAOI THIIOUCIH YOU. OU!I FRA\'1..1
II TH4T THI LOIIO WILL CONTINUI TO ILIII YOU .
RICHLY 41 HI HAl Ul, THROUCIH YOU, THANK VOI.I
AND 000 ILIII YOU,

.. Denny Coburn
Former EvAngelist

if interested, please contact:

Rosie Ward, Vice President of
Human Resources ·,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTj:R
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563
·
Phone: (740) 446-5105 .
FAX/TOO: (740) 446-5106 .
EMPLOYE~

: •" •

110·

'-"'""PLAZA
The Arbors at Galllpolla I• •~eking dependable,
energetic, caring lndivldyal• for fulbllme and part-lime
poaltlons. Must be a team player. . Premier wages
Including pay for experience. Beneflta Include heahh '
Insurance, dental ln1urance, 401k, and paid vacation.,
Please.apply ·In peraon:
,, ·
·

. Unlveralty of Rio
, Grande .
Community Coliege Croaaroada
Program Ia accejrtlng appll~atlona for
Its' .Youth.Employment Services (YES)
Program. Participating ~outh, agea ·
18·21 yura, will receive $6.15 per
J:!our for up to 120 hours of paid work
experience at publl~ and/or private
workaltaa In Meigs County.

..-tve

vu partlolpantl wtll
compreheniiYI
•-flllnt, employment rHctlneutrelnlng, 1nd
aulltlnllll to ftncl tun.ttme permanllll amployment,
11 part of thl overell work uparllnae progrein.

High eohool etudlntl, colllfl lludentl~lnll our of

work VC!utll 11'1 encour~all to apply. plloenta
mUll bt Meta• County realdenta, lltl 1 1 Ytll'l,

end milt WOI'IIfoi'OI lnvlllment Aot 1111111Hitv

·

· I'IIIUI,.manta.

·.

Til ~ply, Ylllt thl UnlvlrlitY of lllo .
llrtndi/CII'OIII'OICIIIII!Iolll 110'MIII .....
MldiiiiiiOrt. OhiO (lfiiH u=r:~~=lt 1oiQOol. .
'PIOi r lilt. 11M, or
71104,
.
Tllll WIA.III'YIII II funiiiCIIIv thl Ul~ tllf'lilll\
.till Olllo D.IJII tnd the Mtltl _County Dllllltmtnl ef ·
.Job ~net 1'111tlly lttvl....
'
UnlverlitY of lllo Oil....
lifo Drtlnlle Oomrnun~tv Dill"'
lqu11 OpportunftV lmploylr

j

il()rivars needed· passenger vans.·
part lime. full time, call Fred Barn-ry, 74Q-574.0568.

97 lleecll Street
991-9W Olllce • 991·0580 1111\
!very TllUI'IICiv .NWht 8:00 p,m.
Coaalpmenta ~iDe
Wedaeaday tO am - 3 pm
Thruada, 10
-3

j

An alcohol and ot~er drug
counse!lhg/ prevention agency
located In . Gall Ia and Japkson
Counttes, Is seeking. an ambitious
lndivJdual to fill lhe lollowlng
poaltlons:
·
Prevenllon · Edueetor· This
pei-son will work with all age ·
. groups In both communUies ..
Responsibilities Include: Coor·
dlnarlon of Drug Free Community
• Coalition\ Aware·ness a'ctivltles,
Education Programs, Training
Programs, and Development and
Implementation of new grant
projects . A minimum of a
Bachelors, Oegroa wtth know!·
adge ol aloohol. lobacco, and
other arugs. &amp;e~ro"ry· Gallla
ofllco- ,A minimum of (1) yaar
B)Cperience In general 11~retarlal
dulles and a high school diplOma.
Must posses accurate 1klll.s In
word and Excel programs.
Musl be dapon~ablt with ·good
lolophoria skills. Send 'resume by
May 1, 200t to: FA€TS, 45
Olive, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563t or
Fax i740)~14. EOe, M/FIH
AN UNUSUAL OPPORTJNITVfl
Work from homf wnh r'}Oi boss I
Visit www.dontworryb8rteh.ntt or
Call BOQ.259·2998
,

"
Arbors at Gallioli!!S '· .

· 170 Pinecrest Drive, Galllpoljs. f!hio 45631

Phone: (740) 446-7112 • FAX: (7:40) 446-9088

110 Help Wente~

Applications arti being acctplad
tor lifeguards at London· Pool tor
the summer season. 2001. ~all or
drop ott resume at cleit•s'office,
Syracuse VIllage, Box 268, Syro·
· CIJS8'byMay1 ,2001,
',
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII CrafiS ,
Toys , Jewelry, Wood; Sewing,
Typlng ... Groal Payl CALL 1-800·
795-0380 Extt 201 (~ral ;

X-RAY TECHNICIAN

··Monday ~ Friday

ATTENTION I
WOrk From Homo.
Mall O!dtor·lniOrnot

.

• 11800-$8000 Ptr Monlh PT/FT

WHI '!lain HIOQ.ee5.Qa.42
~.
www.~l-aflhltholjlt,oo~

4.;

Apply In Person

at
838 St. At~
-1
'

on,.u

448·9820

ATTENTION: OWN A COM~UT•
11'1? Mall·ordtrii·CommtrOt•
. Ullt/Wtak PT, l1000•141i0001
wttk fiT. full Training. Prot ook•

111. www.orutadreamlfft,oom
(100) ?H-1101, .

A~L\NTIONi ' WO~IC ·-'~OM
Mill Oi!lti/I•OOI!WIIIIIt liutiMN

II ,ICO·l1,IOO rnonlll f'TIFT .
~rot lnltlrmation: I•IOG-114-017'
W'llll.llri¥11Taluoolfll.oom
AVONI t~~rtlll To lu~ Of ltll,
. lflwlltY
11, 1104•1?1-!1111, ·
AVON• ~OOklna lor fllglltr In•
oomal Mora llt~bla houra? lndt•
pandlno&amp;l AVON Ill~ wllal
. ro.u•rt looking tor, Ltta talk,

..

,..,......

(

·'

.

It "'-tr Own bOttl i'IMr lol
Altln larn Up to li!OO·IIOOOI

·

MOI'T/f'T

WWW,CtthNowAndfl-.oi6n

'

98 NH 1411 Diskblne Nice

JD 6410 4 WD 90 HP Cab 500 hnr.
NH 472 Hayblne Nice
Like new
NH 474 Hayblne Nice
JD40200 .
NH 488 Hayblne Nice
JD
1219
.
.JD 3155 4 WO 100 HP 3976 Hrs
JO 5400 65 HP 4 WD 900 Hrs Ex.
.IH 35 Rake
JD 5300 50 HP 2 WD Sync Trans
BRUSH Cll'tmJs
640 Hrs. Uke new
JD 709 Pufltype Cutter Very Good
4;' POSTER
VERY
JD 407 3 PT Cutter .
.
5500 75 HP 4 WD SYNC Trans
FANCY CEDAR CHEST, KNEE HOLE DESK,
890HrsEx.
3-~ng Kutter 10 FT Cutter
.
CHIMNEY CUPBOARD, BUCKET BEN~ 1/2
4230 110 HP 4 Post 4500 Hrs
_
Brush
Buster
Side
Boom
Mower
SIZE JENNY UND BED, LARGE AMOUNt OF
· Verynlce
Fila Ford 5610 8610 7610
CHRISTMAS ITEMS, UNENS, LARGE
4230 CAH 4900 Hrs
Rhino 15 Ft. Batwing Cutter
AIIJOUNT OF BOOKS, SOME DEPRESSION
JD
4030
95
HP
500
Hrs
on
Overhaul
Woods1 o Ft. ollaet cutter
.GLASS, OLD DISHES, PICTURES.L LARGE
Very Nice
15 ft. Caldwell Batwing BH Cutter
AMOUNT ,Of KHICK-KNACKS, ::~EVERAL
JD
4020
95
HP
Power
Shift
SPRUQEBI
NEW lr.EIIS . SnLL IN BOXES, BOXES OF
JD
2s.io
82
HP
Openstalion
Low
Hrs
Ex
JD
450
Hydra
Push
G"-ASS AND DISHES IN BASEMENT, SLAW
4010GWF
.
JD33
C111:TiaAS,
MICR,OWAVE AND ·CART,
JO MH CYL Tractor
!IILAQE
KITCHEN COOKWARE, TABLE AND 4
2130CAB
2WD
2- JD 716A Wagons W/Tandern Gears
CHAIRS, 4.5 CUBIC · FT. FliiEEZER, TOOLS,
Ford 5000 ep HP
1-Gehl940 Wagon
TORO LAWN MOWER, LAWN FURNITURE•••
Ford
4000
50
liP
NH 782 Chopper Metal Alert /Narrow
'
Ford801
Head
r ,., 11 fl11 •d , .~
Ford 8N •
. NH 782 Cliopper /2 Row Narrow Head
• 1,'/IHJil Ull!(J .
F.ord Restored 9N Very Nice
HayHead
,
·
liondod In favor of
Ford 6eOO 70 HP
fo!H 180 Chopper /1 Row Head :i Aow I
Announcernenra lite day tatco prtQOdenco 1¥0/er:§materlal.
Hay
·
FQrd
7600
780
HP
.
·
.
1J'!111!S; ,c:Mti OR IIOPO.CH!CO&lt; WITH 1'tC1!JI!' 10
. IMfT10N •
MF
275'7o'tii&gt;·4450
HRs
Very
Nice
· NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR THEFT ·
C SER'I~D ·
GEHL CB 1200 Chopper /2 ·~
· .
R.L. "BOB' S~US 7-10-843.0281 HAROI.Q NEAL 7 533-Q83ol .
MF 4235 Ser# 45090 Cab 4 WO LDader
Row/Snapper /Hey
·.
'
300 HRS Uke New
Arts way Silage Cart
2!1550 HP
MIICI' I ANEQU$
MF 165/Loader
, Year·A'ROOOd JD cab
MF 135 G Power Steering Fresh
Dunham loader for Masaey
Overhaul very nice .
2Ss/275/285
150/Loadar
Ann Round Bale Muicher
MF 1085 HP HRS Cab Nice
-oyER 4Q bAWN &amp; Q!RDEN
2 FannaiJA
TAACIOAS•
IH 1086 ClbAC &amp; Heat New 18.4x38
JD F911 22 HP Commercial FrQnt
radials
Mower
1.04~1t11d It tha Reolria,
on
IH 4S41H 444
~D425AWS
In Recine, Ohio ,
David Brown 995 Cab/LOader
· JD :345 2 Cyt PS Uq Cooltid
"LAWN EQUIPMENT &amp; TOOLS"
Beliuus 820 M 4 WD 74 HP 850HRS
JD GT 225 1 Year Old Warranty
3.5 pus~ mower, i.awn Boy push mower, McCauley
Nice · ,.
JD GT 242 Uke New
string 1rlmmer W/ saw blade, 1/2 HP electric trimmer,
fertilizer spreader, Craftsman spindle cutter, Craftsman . Dautz 6280 Cab 4 WD I Loader
.
J,D 332 Diesel.
cordless ve:c., Hometlte chain saw 14" w/ case, Small I Dli1utz Dx90 2 WD 90'HP 4700 HAS Nice . 3.JD 3188
.
chain saw, Hand crank grinding wheel, 2 • B&amp;D
Long 610
2-JD
LX
178
2
Cyl
Liquid Cooled
AUCTIONEER: Leslie A. Lemley
routers, Hydraulic floor jacks, wood lathe -w/ motor, 3
Long 440
JD LX 188 2 Cyl Uquid Cooled
HP B&amp;S motor, 8 HP;Kohler motor neeas repair, 2· 3
(740) 38$.0823 (HOME) OR
19QxTCab3110 HAS
JD
GT 262 Nice
phase electric motors...
'
.
Oliver
16500
Runs
Great
JD
420/60"
New Engine
(740) 245-9866 (BARN) ·
J
.,::SPORTS. EQUIPMENT~'
.
.&amp;KIQ
STEER
JD265
10 spe'l!d women's bicycle, Exercise bike, . Cardlo
97 JO 7775 W CAB /72" BUCKET
JD 175
Exerciser,
Pool
sticks
&amp;
Case,
Ping
P()ng
table,
2
' · "Licenaed &amp; Bonded by State of Ohl.o"
pbANJINQ I DU AQE
JD 165
Zebco rod &amp; re.Js, Fishing tackle box...
, .
uHOUSEHOLD"
.
JD 7000 8 Row End Transport- Nice
JD317
· Porch swing, small stand, white cabinet, swivel
Cash/Approved Chick Only • Good Food
Vermeer GO 107 NOTILL 10 Ft. Drill
JD210
'
'
'
'
rocker, and.tables, revolving TV stand, potato &amp; onion
7000 4 Row NOTILL
JD212
bin, portable sewing machines, Rainbow sweeper,
New Coulters Units Rebuilt
JD 112 Electric Uft
Holland
2
row
carosel
Setter
Used
1
Gravely
12-G Nics
humidifier,
cpmfortar,
rag rugs,
glassware,
craft
.light, silver
tub, pla,stlc
items,
13 boxeshanging
Mason
Season
Gravely 14G Nics
dome lids, cookware, VCR &amp; Lots more ...
Holland
1
Row
Carosel
Satter
Used
1
2-Gravely
Pro 8 WAikbetilnd.Uke New
"AUTO ACCESSORIES" ·
Season ·
·
;
·
Cub
z
54
Zero
Tum Mower
Ford be4 liner, racing sea! belts, 4' 15" Mustang GT
•w·h•a
26418
Ft.
Hyd
Fold
Disk
·
. Toro Wheel Horse 312-8 Nice
rims, P215/6SR15 tires &amp; rims, ru.bber mats, car ·
.. ,.
2- Huskvarna
ramps, 'car creeper and more::.
• · ' · JH 520 3-16 Ssml Mount Plow' ·
Glencoe 7 Shank Soli Saver
,
·"MISC"
3'Craflsman
' Roll ·tar paper, Jog qh.aln, whke vinyl siding pieces, · Glencoe 12 ft. Soli Finisher .
Many Mo.re...
chiCken wlrl!, 2" !J~tlc PIP&amp;, Swimming pool, 3 legged
SEVERAL MORE TRADES COMING IN1
camp_lng ataols, Baby strCJIIer, 3- 3011 round chicken
TBUCK .
JO 456 Round Baler Uke New
fe~ders, 2 fuel oil burners, GPX radio w/ double
JD 535 Round Baler Very Nics
191j5 F 250 Diesel 4 WD Low mllee nice
cassette, 4· 81/2" HD plastic flower pots, 2· tape · NH 660 flound Baler
' COMPACT TBAQIQRI
pleyers·racordere, 1 pair air lift front springs for P30
Nl 4855 Round Baler Uke New
Ford
1520
Hydro 4 WD 350 Hre .
.Chevy \ruck...
·
·'
·
NH 650 Round Baler
Cub
7265
4
WD 350 Hrs
"OUNS"
New
'GEHL
1875
Round
Baler
Net
. JD 117 Backhoe fits 770{790
-Black powder double barrel 12 gauge shotgun,
Wrap"
New
4WHEE1 fB
· $1mmon'•· 4 power pistol or shbt gun scope brushed
,JD
920
Roll
MOCO
KAW220
aluminum.
NH 855 Round Baler
. BUsh Hog GT 42 8 HP 4 Wheeler
~QJFT .CERTIFICATES SERVICE &amp; SELF'~
NH 570 Square Baler
Donated by: Diddle's DrlUing, Racine Eye Clinic,
Mower
Racine Dtntll, Racine M8dical Center, Raelne.Servlce
NH Bale Thrower
USEp DAQ I QUAYI
Center, Wagner's Hardware, 'R&amp;G Feed, Pine Hill Golf
MF 124 Squate Baler
2· 8 x 16 Front Tractor
Courae, Riverside G.olf Course, Fores,t Run Block I G111fre 17 Ft. Tedder 2 Years Old
2- 16.9x 30
PIBnt, Beat Hardware, A-Cut Above Beauty &amp; Tanning
119 Square Baler
2- 11 .2x24
Salon, Pizza E)(Jlress. R\ine Berber Shop, Kountry
NH.256Raks
2· 18.4 4x38 Hub DualS
Kitchen, AB&amp;T auto, .Racine Lawnmower Shop,
JD
350
3
PT
Rake
218.4x3811res
Nease's Greenhouse. Marehall Roush Greenhouse,
, r
JD
:720
Mower
Conditi~ner
Darrell Norris' Greenho~se, Della'.s · &amp; Donna's
Ml' ,( l Ll/\Nf f1lJC,
Athens S&amp;L metal bank,
Greenhouse, David &amp; Linda Gre11nhouse, Roy Pierce,
tins, 1950s Rock-n,Roll album set.. Old Mary Kay &amp; Hills Cless!c Atito.
hats &amp; helmets, Cast Iron spittoon;
.,
"SPORTS MEMORABILIA"
' ~rass -Items, ' Marbles, Barn lantern,
Drew Bled8oB autographed ' game football,
lamps, washboards, ,t Oid ,Pictures, .011 cans, Spaulding official NBA Basketball signed by WNPA
TERMS ANQ CQNQID.ONS; Cash, .Certified Fund&amp;, Currant Bank Letter of Credft,
linens, Metal horse &amp; wagon, KitChen utenslle, Players, Mike Bartrum' Green Bay autographed Game
~mless known to Auction Company or Cannichael's. Financing available with pregrinders, Wlnd.sor (elect) ship clock, M~al steins, Shoes, Cincinnati Benga,ls game · Jersey .Rich
approval. On site ·flnanctng ai&amp;O available. Owners, Auctlonear or EmJl!o¥ees not
~ral)am's, Dallas Cowboy " autographed' Pennant.
auDenv postelsc:allia, Oriental lamps.
"'· ·
responsible for accidents or theft. NOTE: This Jlstlng could change due to ~ally
Cleveland Browns Pennant, Richard Petty signed
sales. Call for current Inventory. Tfedes coming In dally. Statements made on sale
piCture, Richard Rlnco signed picture &amp; Other sports
day taka precedence over printed material. Equipment sells as Is where Is.
·
" Refrflshments will b8 available.
memor.abllla ...
Auctioneer Dean·Jett 5817
~·•: C~RMIC~AEL'S
CASH • POSITIVE ID • REFRESHMENTS
utiensed &amp; Bonded In Favor. of Ohio ·.
. DAN SMITH AUCTIONEER
ons\~~\1. (740) 446-2412 -: Fax (740) 446-9104 ~''For
Announcements night of sale take
OHIO# 1344WVII 515
,.'
· NOTE: This list Is by no means complete:..
preced&amp;rlce· OVir all adVtsrtiB41mBI~.
· RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
·
there is rtiote to come.
.
Corne bring to sell or buy and help tHe church.
(304) 773-5785-t(~•·•"" ""~Hut /H Sue.~ fJ'"
'

A NEW CAREER, Exam lniorJM·
tlon· ·Postal Jobs. Up to $18.351
hour. Senaflls/Pen'slon. 1-88872e.9083 x1701 ·
'

\ .

E•perlenced Truck Mechanic
N'eeded. ~IK AeUremenL Mtdl·
cat, Dental &amp; VIsion Insurance.
Vat:aUon Pay Based On Experl~
once. 00 f7o40)286-1'13

ago, ~ti,. ~. Sllllt PI·

rorontial, Wage E~porlenco, And
Anen&lt;~anco Bonuseof Call Today
For More tnfortnltion About Ttlil
Great Opportunity! Ask For
R~onda Holstein AI 1740)4487150
.

ai~'GgfESSER,

$987.85 WEEKLY! Processing
. HUDIFHA Morlgage Refunds. No
Experience Raqulred. For FREE
lnformallon Call 1·800·501-8832
ext. t300. '

If lntareatecl, pl181e contact:

EEO/ADA

Wanted

www.hwtrudtOO(Il

FUll-limO Part·dmo liN Polllion• Available At Scenic Hlll.o
Nur&amp;ing C.W. We Ollar , _
Sclladuling. Gras• Benefit POd&lt;·

will be selling Items . from the
hpme of Della (Queen) Lo,nge~bakar,
long time resident of Gallipolis, Ohio.

www.e-oommbiZ.net

State Route 160
GalUpolls, Ohio

EARN $25 000 TO $50 ,000/rr.
Medical lnsuranct 81111ng. NoO&lt;I·
ed lmmedill181yl Home Computer
Needed. FREE Internet, 1·800··
291-'683 Depu 109

W.•

$2000-$5000/mo

In Person

Or""latlon Pay
Be 22YeoiS, Clean MVR
A COL, Hazmat
-010 Pllgo. AYij---.as.oatt
TaN&lt; To F!aftdr

every 6 mos. Bonus -Alder pro·
gram. Paid. Vac. Ins. avail .
www.cannonexpress.com 1" 800·
M5-9390.

"'* .. .,...,.cam

8aJn.5prn.

• 40 MAG!QBS' IIKID I'I"EfB•

Accepling Appllcallons For
CNA's And In-home Workers
Throughout Mason County.
Applications May Be Picked Up
AI Mason Co. Acllon Group, In
Home Services, 221-112 Main
street,
Point
Pleasant.
(304)675·3300 , 'MCAG, ·1hc. Is
EOE, MIF, AlA
'

7.14"' ~-

DRIVERS ~ Cannon Express.
Owner Opllease prograrrt Your
lruck or outS ..83¢+/mi.; company
drivers starting UIJ to .34e/mi. w/.
increases up to .39c . Pav raise

EARN WHILE YOU LIEAIINI
Worl from .....,., Fun Trailllno.
$500-$4500 PTIFT. "- - . . .
tton (414) 2i0-8fOO ...,__

.

$925 WEEKLVII
Make Monay Helping PeoPle
Receive Government Relundl
Froe OelaU~I (24 hl1l)
, ,.
1-800-449-4625 Ext. 5700 &gt;' ·

110

The family of J?elmar Dean Clerk would like
express our appreciation to all our family, friends &amp;
neighbors for ell you~ prayers, .cards, kind words &amp;
donations you gave during the Illness and loss of our
loved one.
,
.
.
A special Thank You to our Pastor Allred Holley for
all he's done over the past year..
Also a special thanks to Dr. Vennani, Dr. Choi, Dr.
Ayers and the staff of Pleasant Valley Hospital.
To the nurses and staff of Holzer Hospice, a warm
thank you for your loving care which· you showed our
'loved one.
'An especi!IIIY warm note of thanks to the
employees of the Gallla-Meigs Commun"y Action
Agency. Your kindness over the last ye~r can never
be repaid. You are true friends.
·. .
Thank you to the Flsher-Acree Funeral Home ·of
II Nllddlepclrt for the wonderful job you did.
·
During such a time of. sadness,' all of you, along
wkh so many others were true blessings from God.
May God bless and watdh over each~
.
and every one of you.
.
The Clark Family

Ins Plans. fullltnallll
&amp; liolldoy Pay
Home !Ill% 01-.oo.
DKect llepooit ,~,n&lt;~ - l y Po!t

'*' I ~

home. Easy! No experience. 1·

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
lntarnel Uaers Wonted .

Hours:
·. Monday ·-Friday
·Shift Work--

0.....

%Or-..ge

Help

$1200 WEEKLY POSSIBLE· pro·
ceasing Inquiry envelope, at

Pleasant Vallfy Hoapltal, c/o Human Reaorc"
252D lillllev Drive. Pt. Pleasant, WI 25550
Or FAX to (304) 675-6975'
AAIEOE ·
.·..

Card of Thai'lka

17~1286-1463

C_OIIIPihJ

.

01111-800-226-0317

EEO/ADA Employer

0
· Pleasant Valley Hospital

Cltu Al fS COL Drivers. Good
Pay, Benehts, .-ouc;, Vacation. Insurance . Home Evenings . Call

H&amp;WlNcldog Co.

110

o.-i: P.A.U. Trt_... No or·
porii11Co noodOd• 2 wook COL
Training. $34 ,000/yr. pluo Full
benems &amp; Pold Training. Drioora
l&gt;asod In midwest 1·•77·230·
6002. Sunday iam•Sprn. Mon.·Frl.

'or

8505/WK. working with tho gOY·
ernrnent lrom home. Part·llme/!ull·
time. 1-888· 745·3772 ·Ext A11
(24 hrs.J

110 Help Wanted

Cla ss A COl OrlYer Wanted . 2
Years OTR Experience. Call
(7'01388- 8331- Leave Name &amp;
Nurtllef .
.

DrMrs

DrMw
WANTED. Experienced flalbe&lt;l
Company Drivers. Slarting Pay
Based Upon Eiperience Up To
S.36 Mila , "Late Model Tractora
"T•rp Pay. •stop Pay. "Layover
Par. ·vacalion ·pay. 'BCBS, •
Ouoi Comm. n 'lbu Wam To
Work
For The Best, Call
Car~lnal
Flatbed C•rrJere.
1-800-221).2421

r--

110

CashOnTho-.com

m

. Arbors at GaU!polis
170 Pinecrest Qrjve, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone: 740) 446-7112 • FAX: 740 446-9088

Vo·Tech, Rl2 4·8 1 Point Pieasant,

WV 25550 0• Fax 1304 )$23·
2678

.......

-Pold~

Association.

,

Pteaaanr. wv. 'reacher Al-

slttants-1 Full Time &amp; 3·' Port
Time. HS Diploma· Equivalent.
Must Be 18 Years Ofd. Experl·
ence With Prescho·o l Children
Preferred. Send Re,ume To
Children' s VUiaga, Mason Co.

110

- . . Fn&gt;m HOrre ""Olllcit seoo$60001m0. PTIF(f Mol Orlllrlln-

memberi
throuah the
meml5era

.

1-888-974-JOBS

..

Help Wanted

S2,000 WEEKLYI Moiling .0~
brochures! Satisfaction Guar·
anloedl Postage &amp; Suppllel provided! Rush Self-Addrts'"d
Stamped En.. lopol GICO, PEPT
5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH. TN.
37011·t438 Slart ll!llllldaraty.

. Due to an upgrade lri lhlt facUlties level of .cute.
aervlcei and due to promotion a within this organization,
we havli an opJ)o(lunlty to· · offer employment to
RN'a/LPN'a. part-time and full-time. We offer 12 and 8
hour ahifta, extremely competHive. wagea, a bonua for
experience, 401k plan, and· exi:ellenl health and den..l
Insurance.
EOE. ·Apply In person or call Jill
Bumgardner at (740) 448-7112.
'

Poil'll:

Help Wailled

lntomallonii~Erplnding

.•

RN'S/LPN'S ·

Childcare Centel' Located 111

IIIRTENTIONIII

Holzer Medical Center,
a Director of Chaplaincy
dlrecta and coordinateS
the Hospital to

· H lnterlltld, pl.... co~ Human
Reaourcea at (740) 992-2104
· lllonday through. Frtday, e a.m. - 4 p.m.

m

:

Civic OeveiOpmem Group/Millennium Teiaervicea

800-755-2027153el~holinll

110 Help Wanted

110

personal interview today! ,

E1.1PL0Yf.1EN f
SEflVICfS

DIRECTOR OF ··.
C-HAPLAINCY SERVICES

110 Help Wanted

Wanted to Buy

90

CLEAN HOUSE

110

If you bue worked for us ill tbe put aod would
Pike to' set ap aootber lattiniew, we welcome you to
·do 10. ..O.JK/Media~I/Dentai/PIIId ncatiou for fit
employees. Doo't wait!
·
These positloas will f!ll up qalddy!
IC1illthe number listed below to set up vourl

RlverCida Auction Barn. Sale
Every Salurday Night at ep.m..
Auclioneer Raymond .Johnson
17o40)2S6-6989

Free puppies 10 good home In

Free PUppies, Saint Bernard/
Golden Retriever Mix, Been
wormad1Wic8, (7~)4 18 44!1

~-- .,~

Rk:t Pearson Auction Company,
tun time auctioneer. complete
auCtion
servic'e.
Licensed
tfi8,0hlo &amp; West Virginia , ~773-5785 Or 304-ns-su1.

5268.

NeW To 'IIlii Thrift Shoppe

right... We ffiave upped 'our wage
after training to $7/hour for
fundrelalng work- no experience
neededt'

FThat'•

. 110

'

'

~~·~N~o~t~~~i~~§~or~lo~e~tp~ro~p~t~rty~J~·~~~~
;

.

w

2 RINGS BRING A FRIEND!!
2-AUCTIONEERS

'FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.

..

~'!~\l)b\e

Inve:~

LUNCH ..• LOADING &amp; TRUCKING AVAILABLE

�•

..

- - - _. _. ··--·- ,. -

. - ·-

.

"

Sundey.Aprtl15, 2001

.._~1111·6elllttttt•PrgeDI

•

110 . Help w.ntiCI
ILACK6TONE
PARALEGAL
STUDI£8. Comprehee:Jiiw. aftofd~· Home Study legal training
llnct 1190. Fr-. ,.lalog: 1·100- ·
126-t228, 1&gt;0 80X 701"9 Da~
too, TX 75370 rx hllp:/ " ' -.btadl·

• ·•·com

110

Help ...
WWI1lld

AREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn
excellent income. Easy claims
processtpg. Fuij training. Home·
PC required. Call Physician &amp;
Hoalthcoro Do,..lopments toll~.. 1·1100-772·5933 ext 2070.

Wentad

DOW PIIYIDG $7/HR TO STftRT!

ANNOUNCEI,\E'HS
TALK10 GIIIU LIYEI
JUST CALL

PersonaIa

HIOO·a.8130 Ex1. 7173

FREE SEARCH!

-

.siNGlESc:om

Genllema.n Seeking White Female Over 50 Years For Walks

And Friendship. Reply To: 553
2nd Avenue. Gallipolis . Ohio
'5631 , Apanmem ~3

bft

1 will not
responsible lor debts
incurred by othetS than myself,
Including me1a1 &amp; physical doctor

bills, Lawrence J. Taylor.

7 Adorable Puppies, 6 Weeh ~- """""' 112 ~. 112
Old. Just In Time fOl Easer, 112 Lab, no 1115 •4413. •
c - Nose Beagle, 112 Ausliollan. Shepherd, Please ..Call To Good Home. Molhor Goldin
1304)1195-3957
~. Fa- e1ac11 Lab, Good
·
• ,
Natured Beau11ful Puppies Has
Ad..!.blo 'killens, lreo lo a good 111 ShoiS And Wormed. Cllll An- ·
home, Iiiier lralnod, 7'0·8'3· ly!::ti:::n•::;I1!!;48~14:::46:;:7234:::;:::.,__-:-_

60

Lost end Found ..

Free Maple llrewood, easy ac·

1=-~:---.---:~~:':':":::.:
fomd. male,

Quality clothing and household
ii811JS. $1.00 bag sate every
Thursday. Mondoy thru Saturday

&amp;lllil. 74G-8112-71~.

· Heoler/Collia

9:!10-6:00.

9229.

9-1 Slimsoll. Alhons
7~592-1802

t~ading ,

eess tor

some needs

country, shepherd mi•. 740.. 992·

wmtTHE

.

Rev. C.J.
Lemley
On his birthday,
April 12

A aoul that waaln
hn found
light todoy. Now life

darknt~s,

h11 come to thet
soul. beceun you

Clime thla wey.

I met you when lire
was 11d and lonely,
but you brought a
amll• of cheer. Uy
saul haabaen
enlightened, just
bcaull you ere here.

Juotlot your light
koop lhinlng, through
ell the dlricneu of
life. And you will
rnake more souls

hoppy, )UII II you
heve mine.

Light con lhlne
through derkneu, .
when nothln~ eloe
will do. Thatoo why
thla soul Ia happy,
~uat because of you.
1/ttlllan.by C.J. leMie)'
Written on lhe night
of Aioguot 24, 1&amp;53

Veteran's Mcmor1~11 HosptLd il,1s
rmmecl!atc opcn1ngs for the follo•;;III&lt;J
Billing Clark-

Absolula Top Dollar:

Bu81,... Otnce pert time.

• LPN • Sldllad Nu....ng F.:lllty pert time
Tray Allaemblar - Nutrition s.rvtc:u part time

u.s. Sliver.

Gold Coins. Proofsels, Diamonds, ,
Gold Rings. U.S. Curropcr.·
U .T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
........ Gaillpot!o 7~ 448 2142. .

Wanted .

110

Pleasant Valley Hospital currently has an opening
for a Respiratory Therapist for our DME.office In
Pl. Pleasant, WV. Excellent pay and ~enefits.
S.@!ld resume to:

·,

Excellent wage and benefits package.

Roale Ward
·.
·
VIce Prealdent of lfuman Resource•
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

'"ACCESS TO A COMPUTER! .
Put 11 10 wort&lt;! $251hr·$7M!r. FTI
PT. FREE Info. 800:871·81145 axl.
601 www.lahomoblz.com. ,

100 JICklon Pike

Galllpolta~..oH

45831-1583

Phone: v40) 441-11105
FAX/TDD: (740) 4411-5108

'"lliORK FROM HoME"'
$500-$1500 par mo. Prr
$2000·$8000 por mo., Frr
No o"'l8ffenco noedoci,Tralnlng jlrOYidod.
. 1·800-39H93p ,

m student Pfl•s

P-H¥SICAL
, 41;,1~~PIST
'

NMjlotll
'
Dr1Yo The Big Trlf*BU
Earn The Blg'I!Ocks!f·;1 '
38k·'2k po..,lllil
No e!Cpar!Onco ~~I
14 Doy COL Training
No coal Training If Oilallllid
Call1 ·800-394-2405.

' I

'

.

Card of Thanka
'

TO

THE MEMBERS OP
THE ·GALLIPOLIS
CHR.ISTIAN CHURCH

.

'

•

ON BEHALF OF SHIRLEY AND MYSELF, I WOULD LIKE
TO THANK THE CHURCH FOR THE PRIVILEGE 0~ .
B!RVINQ YOU FOR OVER A QUARTIR OF A CINTURY. IT
HA8 BI!&amp;N TRULY A JOY AND AILE811NG TO HAVE
HRVID AI YOUR PREACHER. I KNOW OF NO
MINIITIR OF THI OOIPIL WHO HAl RICI!IVID MOR!
INCOUAAOIMINT AND DIMONITRATION OF LOVI
FIIOM Hll CONORIQATION THAN MYIILF. GOO HAl
TIIULY ILIIIID Ui WITH A LCVJNO FAMILY, IN YOU,
THI IFFOftT, TIMI, AND IX~INII YOU FUT INTO
lliFIIIIIiNO THAT LOVI; AT OUIII'AIIIWILL DINNIIIJ.
WILL NIVIII.I FOIIOOTTII'j, NOll WILL THI MIT 2•
YIA,.I Of' Hil CIRAOI THIIOUCIH YOU. OU!I FRA\'1..1
II TH4T THI LOIIO WILL CONTINUI TO ILIII YOU .
RICHLY 41 HI HAl Ul, THROUCIH YOU, THANK VOI.I
AND 000 ILIII YOU,

.. Denny Coburn
Former EvAngelist

if interested, please contact:

Rosie Ward, Vice President of
Human Resources ·,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTj:R
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563
·
Phone: (740) 446-5105 .
FAX/TOO: (740) 446-5106 .
EMPLOYE~

: •" •

110·

'-"'""PLAZA
The Arbors at Galllpolla I• •~eking dependable,
energetic, caring lndivldyal• for fulbllme and part-lime
poaltlons. Must be a team player. . Premier wages
Including pay for experience. Beneflta Include heahh '
Insurance, dental ln1urance, 401k, and paid vacation.,
Please.apply ·In peraon:
,, ·
·

. Unlveralty of Rio
, Grande .
Community Coliege Croaaroada
Program Ia accejrtlng appll~atlona for
Its' .Youth.Employment Services (YES)
Program. Participating ~outh, agea ·
18·21 yura, will receive $6.15 per
J:!our for up to 120 hours of paid work
experience at publl~ and/or private
workaltaa In Meigs County.

..-tve

vu partlolpantl wtll
compreheniiYI
•-flllnt, employment rHctlneutrelnlng, 1nd
aulltlnllll to ftncl tun.ttme permanllll amployment,
11 part of thl overell work uparllnae progrein.

High eohool etudlntl, colllfl lludentl~lnll our of

work VC!utll 11'1 encour~all to apply. plloenta
mUll bt Meta• County realdenta, lltl 1 1 Ytll'l,

end milt WOI'IIfoi'OI lnvlllment Aot 1111111Hitv

·

· I'IIIUI,.manta.

·.

Til ~ply, Ylllt thl UnlvlrlitY of lllo .
llrtndi/CII'OIII'OICIIIII!Iolll 110'MIII .....
MldiiiiiiOrt. OhiO (lfiiH u=r:~~=lt 1oiQOol. .
'PIOi r lilt. 11M, or
71104,
.
Tllll WIA.III'YIII II funiiiCIIIv thl Ul~ tllf'lilll\
.till Olllo D.IJII tnd the Mtltl _County Dllllltmtnl ef ·
.Job ~net 1'111tlly lttvl....
'
UnlverlitY of lllo Oil....
lifo Drtlnlle Oomrnun~tv Dill"'
lqu11 OpportunftV lmploylr

j

il()rivars needed· passenger vans.·
part lime. full time, call Fred Barn-ry, 74Q-574.0568.

97 lleecll Street
991-9W Olllce • 991·0580 1111\
!very TllUI'IICiv .NWht 8:00 p,m.
Coaalpmenta ~iDe
Wedaeaday tO am - 3 pm
Thruada, 10
-3

j

An alcohol and ot~er drug
counse!lhg/ prevention agency
located In . Gall Ia and Japkson
Counttes, Is seeking. an ambitious
lndivJdual to fill lhe lollowlng
poaltlons:
·
Prevenllon · Edueetor· This
pei-son will work with all age ·
. groups In both communUies ..
Responsibilities Include: Coor·
dlnarlon of Drug Free Community
• Coalition\ Aware·ness a'ctivltles,
Education Programs, Training
Programs, and Development and
Implementation of new grant
projects . A minimum of a
Bachelors, Oegroa wtth know!·
adge ol aloohol. lobacco, and
other arugs. &amp;e~ro"ry· Gallla
ofllco- ,A minimum of (1) yaar
B)Cperience In general 11~retarlal
dulles and a high school diplOma.
Must posses accurate 1klll.s In
word and Excel programs.
Musl be dapon~ablt with ·good
lolophoria skills. Send 'resume by
May 1, 200t to: FA€TS, 45
Olive, Gallipolis, Ohio 4563t or
Fax i740)~14. EOe, M/FIH
AN UNUSUAL OPPORTJNITVfl
Work from homf wnh r'}Oi boss I
Visit www.dontworryb8rteh.ntt or
Call BOQ.259·2998
,

"
Arbors at Gallioli!!S '· .

· 170 Pinecrest Drive, Galllpoljs. f!hio 45631

Phone: (740) 446-7112 • FAX: (7:40) 446-9088

110 Help Wente~

Applications arti being acctplad
tor lifeguards at London· Pool tor
the summer season. 2001. ~all or
drop ott resume at cleit•s'office,
Syracuse VIllage, Box 268, Syro·
· CIJS8'byMay1 ,2001,
',
ASSEMBLY AT HOMEII CrafiS ,
Toys , Jewelry, Wood; Sewing,
Typlng ... Groal Payl CALL 1-800·
795-0380 Extt 201 (~ral ;

X-RAY TECHNICIAN

··Monday ~ Friday

ATTENTION I
WOrk From Homo.
Mall O!dtor·lniOrnot

.

• 11800-$8000 Ptr Monlh PT/FT

WHI '!lain HIOQ.ee5.Qa.42
~.
www.~l-aflhltholjlt,oo~

4.;

Apply In Person

at
838 St. At~
-1
'

on,.u

448·9820

ATTENTION: OWN A COM~UT•
11'1? Mall·ordtrii·CommtrOt•
. Ullt/Wtak PT, l1000•141i0001
wttk fiT. full Training. Prot ook•

111. www.orutadreamlfft,oom
(100) ?H-1101, .

A~L\NTIONi ' WO~IC ·-'~OM
Mill Oi!lti/I•OOI!WIIIIIt liutiMN

II ,ICO·l1,IOO rnonlll f'TIFT .
~rot lnltlrmation: I•IOG-114-017'
W'llll.llri¥11Taluoolfll.oom
AVONI t~~rtlll To lu~ Of ltll,
. lflwlltY
11, 1104•1?1-!1111, ·
AVON• ~OOklna lor fllglltr In•
oomal Mora llt~bla houra? lndt•
pandlno&amp;l AVON Ill~ wllal
. ro.u•rt looking tor, Ltta talk,

..

,..,......

(

·'

.

It "'-tr Own bOttl i'IMr lol
Altln larn Up to li!OO·IIOOOI

·

MOI'T/f'T

WWW,CtthNowAndfl-.oi6n

'

98 NH 1411 Diskblne Nice

JD 6410 4 WD 90 HP Cab 500 hnr.
NH 472 Hayblne Nice
Like new
NH 474 Hayblne Nice
JD40200 .
NH 488 Hayblne Nice
JD
1219
.
.JD 3155 4 WO 100 HP 3976 Hrs
JO 5400 65 HP 4 WD 900 Hrs Ex.
.IH 35 Rake
JD 5300 50 HP 2 WD Sync Trans
BRUSH Cll'tmJs
640 Hrs. Uke new
JD 709 Pufltype Cutter Very Good
4;' POSTER
VERY
JD 407 3 PT Cutter .
.
5500 75 HP 4 WD SYNC Trans
FANCY CEDAR CHEST, KNEE HOLE DESK,
890HrsEx.
3-~ng Kutter 10 FT Cutter
.
CHIMNEY CUPBOARD, BUCKET BEN~ 1/2
4230 110 HP 4 Post 4500 Hrs
_
Brush
Buster
Side
Boom
Mower
SIZE JENNY UND BED, LARGE AMOUNt OF
· Verynlce
Fila Ford 5610 8610 7610
CHRISTMAS ITEMS, UNENS, LARGE
4230 CAH 4900 Hrs
Rhino 15 Ft. Batwing Cutter
AIIJOUNT OF BOOKS, SOME DEPRESSION
JD
4030
95
HP
500
Hrs
on
Overhaul
Woods1 o Ft. ollaet cutter
.GLASS, OLD DISHES, PICTURES.L LARGE
Very Nice
15 ft. Caldwell Batwing BH Cutter
AMOUNT ,Of KHICK-KNACKS, ::~EVERAL
JD
4020
95
HP
Power
Shift
SPRUQEBI
NEW lr.EIIS . SnLL IN BOXES, BOXES OF
JD
2s.io
82
HP
Openstalion
Low
Hrs
Ex
JD
450
Hydra
Push
G"-ASS AND DISHES IN BASEMENT, SLAW
4010GWF
.
JD33
C111:TiaAS,
MICR,OWAVE AND ·CART,
JO MH CYL Tractor
!IILAQE
KITCHEN COOKWARE, TABLE AND 4
2130CAB
2WD
2- JD 716A Wagons W/Tandern Gears
CHAIRS, 4.5 CUBIC · FT. FliiEEZER, TOOLS,
Ford 5000 ep HP
1-Gehl940 Wagon
TORO LAWN MOWER, LAWN FURNITURE•••
Ford
4000
50
liP
NH 782 Chopper Metal Alert /Narrow
'
Ford801
Head
r ,., 11 fl11 •d , .~
Ford 8N •
. NH 782 Cliopper /2 Row Narrow Head
• 1,'/IHJil Ull!(J .
F.ord Restored 9N Very Nice
HayHead
,
·
liondod In favor of
Ford 6eOO 70 HP
fo!H 180 Chopper /1 Row Head :i Aow I
Announcernenra lite day tatco prtQOdenco 1¥0/er:§materlal.
Hay
·
FQrd
7600
780
HP
.
·
.
1J'!111!S; ,c:Mti OR IIOPO.CH!CO&lt; WITH 1'tC1!JI!' 10
. IMfT10N •
MF
275'7o'tii&gt;·4450
HRs
Very
Nice
· NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR THEFT ·
C SER'I~D ·
GEHL CB 1200 Chopper /2 ·~
· .
R.L. "BOB' S~US 7-10-843.0281 HAROI.Q NEAL 7 533-Q83ol .
MF 4235 Ser# 45090 Cab 4 WO LDader
Row/Snapper /Hey
·.
'
300 HRS Uke New
Arts way Silage Cart
2!1550 HP
MIICI' I ANEQU$
MF 165/Loader
, Year·A'ROOOd JD cab
MF 135 G Power Steering Fresh
Dunham loader for Masaey
Overhaul very nice .
2Ss/275/285
150/Loadar
Ann Round Bale Muicher
MF 1085 HP HRS Cab Nice
-oyER 4Q bAWN &amp; Q!RDEN
2 FannaiJA
TAACIOAS•
IH 1086 ClbAC &amp; Heat New 18.4x38
JD F911 22 HP Commercial FrQnt
radials
Mower
1.04~1t11d It tha Reolria,
on
IH 4S41H 444
~D425AWS
In Recine, Ohio ,
David Brown 995 Cab/LOader
· JD :345 2 Cyt PS Uq Cooltid
"LAWN EQUIPMENT &amp; TOOLS"
Beliuus 820 M 4 WD 74 HP 850HRS
JD GT 225 1 Year Old Warranty
3.5 pus~ mower, i.awn Boy push mower, McCauley
Nice · ,.
JD GT 242 Uke New
string 1rlmmer W/ saw blade, 1/2 HP electric trimmer,
fertilizer spreader, Craftsman spindle cutter, Craftsman . Dautz 6280 Cab 4 WD I Loader
.
J,D 332 Diesel.
cordless ve:c., Hometlte chain saw 14" w/ case, Small I Dli1utz Dx90 2 WD 90'HP 4700 HAS Nice . 3.JD 3188
.
chain saw, Hand crank grinding wheel, 2 • B&amp;D
Long 610
2-JD
LX
178
2
Cyl
Liquid Cooled
AUCTIONEER: Leslie A. Lemley
routers, Hydraulic floor jacks, wood lathe -w/ motor, 3
Long 440
JD LX 188 2 Cyl Uquid Cooled
HP B&amp;S motor, 8 HP;Kohler motor neeas repair, 2· 3
(740) 38$.0823 (HOME) OR
19QxTCab3110 HAS
JD
GT 262 Nice
phase electric motors...
'
.
Oliver
16500
Runs
Great
JD
420/60"
New Engine
(740) 245-9866 (BARN) ·
J
.,::SPORTS. EQUIPMENT~'
.
.&amp;KIQ
STEER
JD265
10 spe'l!d women's bicycle, Exercise bike, . Cardlo
97 JO 7775 W CAB /72" BUCKET
JD 175
Exerciser,
Pool
sticks
&amp;
Case,
Ping
P()ng
table,
2
' · "Licenaed &amp; Bonded by State of Ohl.o"
pbANJINQ I DU AQE
JD 165
Zebco rod &amp; re.Js, Fishing tackle box...
, .
uHOUSEHOLD"
.
JD 7000 8 Row End Transport- Nice
JD317
· Porch swing, small stand, white cabinet, swivel
Cash/Approved Chick Only • Good Food
Vermeer GO 107 NOTILL 10 Ft. Drill
JD210
'
'
'
'
rocker, and.tables, revolving TV stand, potato &amp; onion
7000 4 Row NOTILL
JD212
bin, portable sewing machines, Rainbow sweeper,
New Coulters Units Rebuilt
JD 112 Electric Uft
Holland
2
row
carosel
Setter
Used
1
Gravely
12-G Nics
humidifier,
cpmfortar,
rag rugs,
glassware,
craft
.light, silver
tub, pla,stlc
items,
13 boxeshanging
Mason
Season
Gravely 14G Nics
dome lids, cookware, VCR &amp; Lots more ...
Holland
1
Row
Carosel
Satter
Used
1
2-Gravely
Pro 8 WAikbetilnd.Uke New
"AUTO ACCESSORIES" ·
Season ·
·
;
·
Cub
z
54
Zero
Tum Mower
Ford be4 liner, racing sea! belts, 4' 15" Mustang GT
•w·h•a
26418
Ft.
Hyd
Fold
Disk
·
. Toro Wheel Horse 312-8 Nice
rims, P215/6SR15 tires &amp; rims, ru.bber mats, car ·
.. ,.
2- Huskvarna
ramps, 'car creeper and more::.
• · ' · JH 520 3-16 Ssml Mount Plow' ·
Glencoe 7 Shank Soli Saver
,
·"MISC"
3'Craflsman
' Roll ·tar paper, Jog qh.aln, whke vinyl siding pieces, · Glencoe 12 ft. Soli Finisher .
Many Mo.re...
chiCken wlrl!, 2" !J~tlc PIP&amp;, Swimming pool, 3 legged
SEVERAL MORE TRADES COMING IN1
camp_lng ataols, Baby strCJIIer, 3- 3011 round chicken
TBUCK .
JO 456 Round Baler Uke New
fe~ders, 2 fuel oil burners, GPX radio w/ double
JD 535 Round Baler Very Nics
191j5 F 250 Diesel 4 WD Low mllee nice
cassette, 4· 81/2" HD plastic flower pots, 2· tape · NH 660 flound Baler
' COMPACT TBAQIQRI
pleyers·racordere, 1 pair air lift front springs for P30
Nl 4855 Round Baler Uke New
Ford
1520
Hydro 4 WD 350 Hre .
.Chevy \ruck...
·
·'
·
NH 650 Round Baler
Cub
7265
4
WD 350 Hrs
"OUNS"
New
'GEHL
1875
Round
Baler
Net
. JD 117 Backhoe fits 770{790
-Black powder double barrel 12 gauge shotgun,
Wrap"
New
4WHEE1 fB
· $1mmon'•· 4 power pistol or shbt gun scope brushed
,JD
920
Roll
MOCO
KAW220
aluminum.
NH 855 Round Baler
. BUsh Hog GT 42 8 HP 4 Wheeler
~QJFT .CERTIFICATES SERVICE &amp; SELF'~
NH 570 Square Baler
Donated by: Diddle's DrlUing, Racine Eye Clinic,
Mower
Racine Dtntll, Racine M8dical Center, Raelne.Servlce
NH Bale Thrower
USEp DAQ I QUAYI
Center, Wagner's Hardware, 'R&amp;G Feed, Pine Hill Golf
MF 124 Squate Baler
2· 8 x 16 Front Tractor
Courae, Riverside G.olf Course, Fores,t Run Block I G111fre 17 Ft. Tedder 2 Years Old
2- 16.9x 30
PIBnt, Beat Hardware, A-Cut Above Beauty &amp; Tanning
119 Square Baler
2- 11 .2x24
Salon, Pizza E)(Jlress. R\ine Berber Shop, Kountry
NH.256Raks
2· 18.4 4x38 Hub DualS
Kitchen, AB&amp;T auto, .Racine Lawnmower Shop,
JD
350
3
PT
Rake
218.4x3811res
Nease's Greenhouse. Marehall Roush Greenhouse,
, r
JD
:720
Mower
Conditi~ner
Darrell Norris' Greenho~se, Della'.s · &amp; Donna's
Ml' ,( l Ll/\Nf f1lJC,
Athens S&amp;L metal bank,
Greenhouse, David &amp; Linda Gre11nhouse, Roy Pierce,
tins, 1950s Rock-n,Roll album set.. Old Mary Kay &amp; Hills Cless!c Atito.
hats &amp; helmets, Cast Iron spittoon;
.,
"SPORTS MEMORABILIA"
' ~rass -Items, ' Marbles, Barn lantern,
Drew Bled8oB autographed ' game football,
lamps, washboards, ,t Oid ,Pictures, .011 cans, Spaulding official NBA Basketball signed by WNPA
TERMS ANQ CQNQID.ONS; Cash, .Certified Fund&amp;, Currant Bank Letter of Credft,
linens, Metal horse &amp; wagon, KitChen utenslle, Players, Mike Bartrum' Green Bay autographed Game
~mless known to Auction Company or Cannichael's. Financing available with pregrinders, Wlnd.sor (elect) ship clock, M~al steins, Shoes, Cincinnati Benga,ls game · Jersey .Rich
approval. On site ·flnanctng ai&amp;O available. Owners, Auctlonear or EmJl!o¥ees not
~ral)am's, Dallas Cowboy " autographed' Pennant.
auDenv postelsc:allia, Oriental lamps.
"'· ·
responsible for accidents or theft. NOTE: This Jlstlng could change due to ~ally
Cleveland Browns Pennant, Richard Petty signed
sales. Call for current Inventory. Tfedes coming In dally. Statements made on sale
piCture, Richard Rlnco signed picture &amp; Other sports
day taka precedence over printed material. Equipment sells as Is where Is.
·
" Refrflshments will b8 available.
memor.abllla ...
Auctioneer Dean·Jett 5817
~·•: C~RMIC~AEL'S
CASH • POSITIVE ID • REFRESHMENTS
utiensed &amp; Bonded In Favor. of Ohio ·.
. DAN SMITH AUCTIONEER
ons\~~\1. (740) 446-2412 -: Fax (740) 446-9104 ~''For
Announcements night of sale take
OHIO# 1344WVII 515
,.'
· NOTE: This list Is by no means complete:..
preced&amp;rlce· OVir all adVtsrtiB41mBI~.
· RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
·
there is rtiote to come.
.
Corne bring to sell or buy and help tHe church.
(304) 773-5785-t(~•·•"" ""~Hut /H Sue.~ fJ'"
'

A NEW CAREER, Exam lniorJM·
tlon· ·Postal Jobs. Up to $18.351
hour. Senaflls/Pen'slon. 1-88872e.9083 x1701 ·
'

\ .

E•perlenced Truck Mechanic
N'eeded. ~IK AeUremenL Mtdl·
cat, Dental &amp; VIsion Insurance.
Vat:aUon Pay Based On Experl~
once. 00 f7o40)286-1'13

ago, ~ti,. ~. Sllllt PI·

rorontial, Wage E~porlenco, And
Anen&lt;~anco Bonuseof Call Today
For More tnfortnltion About Ttlil
Great Opportunity! Ask For
R~onda Holstein AI 1740)4487150
.

ai~'GgfESSER,

$987.85 WEEKLY! Processing
. HUDIFHA Morlgage Refunds. No
Experience Raqulred. For FREE
lnformallon Call 1·800·501-8832
ext. t300. '

If lntareatecl, pl181e contact:

EEO/ADA

Wanted

www.hwtrudtOO(Il

FUll-limO Part·dmo liN Polllion• Available At Scenic Hlll.o
Nur&amp;ing C.W. We Ollar , _
Sclladuling. Gras• Benefit POd&lt;·

will be selling Items . from the
hpme of Della (Queen) Lo,nge~bakar,
long time resident of Gallipolis, Ohio.

www.e-oommbiZ.net

State Route 160
GalUpolls, Ohio

EARN $25 000 TO $50 ,000/rr.
Medical lnsuranct 81111ng. NoO&lt;I·
ed lmmedill181yl Home Computer
Needed. FREE Internet, 1·800··
291-'683 Depu 109

W.•

$2000-$5000/mo

In Person

Or""latlon Pay
Be 22YeoiS, Clean MVR
A COL, Hazmat
-010 Pllgo. AYij---.as.oatt
TaN&lt; To F!aftdr

every 6 mos. Bonus -Alder pro·
gram. Paid. Vac. Ins. avail .
www.cannonexpress.com 1" 800·
M5-9390.

"'* .. .,...,.cam

8aJn.5prn.

• 40 MAG!QBS' IIKID I'I"EfB•

Accepling Appllcallons For
CNA's And In-home Workers
Throughout Mason County.
Applications May Be Picked Up
AI Mason Co. Acllon Group, In
Home Services, 221-112 Main
street,
Point
Pleasant.
(304)675·3300 , 'MCAG, ·1hc. Is
EOE, MIF, AlA
'

7.14"' ~-

DRIVERS ~ Cannon Express.
Owner Opllease prograrrt Your
lruck or outS ..83¢+/mi.; company
drivers starting UIJ to .34e/mi. w/.
increases up to .39c . Pav raise

EARN WHILE YOU LIEAIINI
Worl from .....,., Fun Trailllno.
$500-$4500 PTIFT. "- - . . .
tton (414) 2i0-8fOO ...,__

.

$925 WEEKLVII
Make Monay Helping PeoPle
Receive Government Relundl
Froe OelaU~I (24 hl1l)
, ,.
1-800-449-4625 Ext. 5700 &gt;' ·

110

The family of J?elmar Dean Clerk would like
express our appreciation to all our family, friends &amp;
neighbors for ell you~ prayers, .cards, kind words &amp;
donations you gave during the Illness and loss of our
loved one.
,
.
.
A special Thank You to our Pastor Allred Holley for
all he's done over the past year..
Also a special thanks to Dr. Vennani, Dr. Choi, Dr.
Ayers and the staff of Pleasant Valley Hospital.
To the nurses and staff of Holzer Hospice, a warm
thank you for your loving care which· you showed our
'loved one.
'An especi!IIIY warm note of thanks to the
employees of the Gallla-Meigs Commun"y Action
Agency. Your kindness over the last ye~r can never
be repaid. You are true friends.
·. .
Thank you to the Flsher-Acree Funeral Home ·of
II Nllddlepclrt for the wonderful job you did.
·
During such a time of. sadness,' all of you, along
wkh so many others were true blessings from God.
May God bless and watdh over each~
.
and every one of you.
.
The Clark Family

Ins Plans. fullltnallll
&amp; liolldoy Pay
Home !Ill% 01-.oo.
DKect llepooit ,~,n&lt;~ - l y Po!t

'*' I ~

home. Easy! No experience. 1·

ABSOLUTELY FREE INFO
lntarnel Uaers Wonted .

Hours:
·. Monday ·-Friday
·Shift Work--

0.....

%Or-..ge

Help

$1200 WEEKLY POSSIBLE· pro·
ceasing Inquiry envelope, at

Pleasant Vallfy Hoapltal, c/o Human Reaorc"
252D lillllev Drive. Pt. Pleasant, WI 25550
Or FAX to (304) 675-6975'
AAIEOE ·
.·..

Card of Thai'lka

17~1286-1463

C_OIIIPihJ

.

01111-800-226-0317

EEO/ADA Employer

0
· Pleasant Valley Hospital

Cltu Al fS COL Drivers. Good
Pay, Benehts, .-ouc;, Vacation. Insurance . Home Evenings . Call

H&amp;WlNcldog Co.

110

o.-i: P.A.U. Trt_... No or·
porii11Co noodOd• 2 wook COL
Training. $34 ,000/yr. pluo Full
benems &amp; Pold Training. Drioora
l&gt;asod In midwest 1·•77·230·
6002. Sunday iam•Sprn. Mon.·Frl.

'or

8505/WK. working with tho gOY·
ernrnent lrom home. Part·llme/!ull·
time. 1-888· 745·3772 ·Ext A11
(24 hrs.J

110 Help Wanted

Cla ss A COl OrlYer Wanted . 2
Years OTR Experience. Call
(7'01388- 8331- Leave Name &amp;
Nurtllef .
.

DrMrs

DrMw
WANTED. Experienced flalbe&lt;l
Company Drivers. Slarting Pay
Based Upon Eiperience Up To
S.36 Mila , "Late Model Tractora
"T•rp Pay. •stop Pay. "Layover
Par. ·vacalion ·pay. 'BCBS, •
Ouoi Comm. n 'lbu Wam To
Work
For The Best, Call
Car~lnal
Flatbed C•rrJere.
1-800-221).2421

r--

110

CashOnTho-.com

m

. Arbors at GaU!polis
170 Pinecrest Qrjve, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone: 740) 446-7112 • FAX: 740 446-9088

Vo·Tech, Rl2 4·8 1 Point Pieasant,

WV 25550 0• Fax 1304 )$23·
2678

.......

-Pold~

Association.

,

Pteaaanr. wv. 'reacher Al-

slttants-1 Full Time &amp; 3·' Port
Time. HS Diploma· Equivalent.
Must Be 18 Years Ofd. Experl·
ence With Prescho·o l Children
Preferred. Send Re,ume To
Children' s VUiaga, Mason Co.

110

- . . Fn&gt;m HOrre ""Olllcit seoo$60001m0. PTIF(f Mol Orlllrlln-

memberi
throuah the
meml5era

.

1-888-974-JOBS

..

Help Wanted

S2,000 WEEKLYI Moiling .0~
brochures! Satisfaction Guar·
anloedl Postage &amp; Suppllel provided! Rush Self-Addrts'"d
Stamped En.. lopol GICO, PEPT
5, Box 1438, ANTIOCH. TN.
37011·t438 Slart ll!llllldaraty.

. Due to an upgrade lri lhlt facUlties level of .cute.
aervlcei and due to promotion a within this organization,
we havli an opJ)o(lunlty to· · offer employment to
RN'a/LPN'a. part-time and full-time. We offer 12 and 8
hour ahifta, extremely competHive. wagea, a bonua for
experience, 401k plan, and· exi:ellenl health and den..l
Insurance.
EOE. ·Apply In person or call Jill
Bumgardner at (740) 448-7112.
'

Poil'll:

Help Wailled

lntomallonii~Erplnding

.•

RN'S/LPN'S ·

Childcare Centel' Located 111

IIIRTENTIONIII

Holzer Medical Center,
a Director of Chaplaincy
dlrecta and coordinateS
the Hospital to

· H lnterlltld, pl.... co~ Human
Reaourcea at (740) 992-2104
· lllonday through. Frtday, e a.m. - 4 p.m.

m

:

Civic OeveiOpmem Group/Millennium Teiaervicea

800-755-2027153el~holinll

110 Help Wanted

110

personal interview today! ,

E1.1PL0Yf.1EN f
SEflVICfS

DIRECTOR OF ··.
C-HAPLAINCY SERVICES

110 Help Wanted

Wanted to Buy

90

CLEAN HOUSE

110

If you bue worked for us ill tbe put aod would
Pike to' set ap aootber lattiniew, we welcome you to
·do 10. ..O.JK/Media~I/Dentai/PIIId ncatiou for fit
employees. Doo't wait!
·
These positloas will f!ll up qalddy!
IC1illthe number listed below to set up vourl

RlverCida Auction Barn. Sale
Every Salurday Night at ep.m..
Auclioneer Raymond .Johnson
17o40)2S6-6989

Free puppies 10 good home In

Free PUppies, Saint Bernard/
Golden Retriever Mix, Been
wormad1Wic8, (7~)4 18 44!1

~-- .,~

Rk:t Pearson Auction Company,
tun time auctioneer. complete
auCtion
servic'e.
Licensed
tfi8,0hlo &amp; West Virginia , ~773-5785 Or 304-ns-su1.

5268.

NeW To 'IIlii Thrift Shoppe

right... We ffiave upped 'our wage
after training to $7/hour for
fundrelalng work- no experience
neededt'

FThat'•

. 110

'

'

~~·~N~o~t~~~i~~§~or~lo~e~tp~ro~p~t~rty~J~·~~~~
;

.

w

2 RINGS BRING A FRIEND!!
2-AUCTIONEERS

'FARM &amp; LAWN, INC.

..

~'!~\l)b\e

Inve:~

LUNCH ..• LOADING &amp; TRUCKING AVAILABLE

�•
Pome;

,,.

!l!!p "P I" d

flull IIBJ AN flto&amp;ttmn '·c"..,.l

for Jock.
notre-

IIIII ••• LPN l"aallool -.,..
_,_.....,_Nurllngc-

-

call---Or

tar. ....,,_.•cal lnCiflll..
l'ay Ollam. WHI ""Y Far '!bur

e__. .......

II I I I 1 For Mar.
To lcttadu._ lui
(140)MI-7Ui0

'IIMih U8A
I
!IOU -~~- II, ho k&gt; ·
and -11 1-721).2127
'""' 'I ·~·
col
"""
i-!lpm.
Aprt 16-20. EOE.

1MI!IIAJIIIT.I . .IOII)

--

_

Available.
Paid
Blrt~ And Holldeye. ~ At
IUt&gt;OrondO-·

lundlly, Aprll15, 2001
I

110

Help Waalllld

110

z
.
Help Wanlllf

. . . OffiCI

HlUfy MIIOI C1e

•

I

dJ

(llonul ,.,.,.,.. In~
~0\'IU-WHIU,Y
llllnrttl
_ _ .,..,

Jt'JV 'lofW ~WOrt lOt

o..n 1 P.C.? Pu1 1 k&gt; - kt For a

Postal Jobl $48.323.00 yr. Now

www.gMpCIIIIOtitmm

lng· grnt bonofilo. cell 7 doyo
~3860 oxt. ./-385.

1 1 M - eM: 80Q.429-5653
Yll!t "' or*le:

or

hiring- No ••tJerltnea-pakJ lr-"'·

........... =w, t
Holl•r C Mtwlr Whit
p' 'I'

afiT•Pif~-

o -WII:ATIOIII
NO EXI'eltfloiCE NFE"E"-

PIIJD TRAINING'PROGRIUI
COU.EGE I HGft SCHOOL
STUOENTSwaCOME
APPlY IN PERSON AT:
424 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT, WV •
MONDAY April 16/IJ
TUE~V Aprl/ 17111 .
I:OOont To 3:00pm

Looking For Reliable Babyslnor.

7
""·=~~
937-695-1375 lax

Part-time. Must Be Able To Do

Weekend s. 3 Kids, (304,&amp;752682

~eeythOO.oom

lnforllllltion coil call 1·888 ·874·

Physical Therapy As·
:11t::50:.:""-=.:323-t=~--=--==-= I Licensed
slstanl PAN/part time noodod for
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELPt Wori1: from home! Mall-or·
dlr!EoComlnlece. $522+/week PT
11000·$4000/wk FT. 800·921 •

100 bed oklllod nursing lacllily.
Excellent opportunity tor chal·
lenging and rtwardlng experl·
enco. Groat lurnlne ••porlonct
:15::31:..:•:•::•:::-:=:::::::":;:·com:: ;__ ~ for a now grid or newly licensed
·I
PTA. E•collent progrosllve rthl·
Herrle Sttakhouae Now H~r ng. bllltation department both lnpa·
(30')875-87211
tlont IRd outpallont services pmHoiP- coring fDr the elderly, vlclad. Focilily hlo oxcolltfli 1'811110arst Group Home, now paying latOfy compliance history as wen
mk'timurn wage, new shifts: 7am· 11 atatM atafting. Interested can1
.._ ....__11
ttpm- ~~ ~atu should apply to : Rock·
..,....
..,....,... ..,.... ~·
springs Rehabilitation Cantor,
7am, c:ol7«1-1192·5023.
Po
3e759 Rockllll'lnes Road, mer·
HICUIE El&lt;flf!ESS NEEDS... ay, Ohio 45769. Allison Barnett .
Owner Operatortll . • Home MPT, Rthtb Services Director,
Weekly • NO Eall Coast • NO 740-992-e&amp;06. Equol Oppcrtunlly
Touch Ftolght • 75% Drop/Hook • Employer encouraging wort&lt;placo
NO Upfront Coats ' Accepting diversity.

Any--

Maintenance person wanted at
Colonial Part~; Apartments. begin-

nine part-limo ioacllng to tun-time,
call740-9t2·3711 be- 1Q-5.

OR

&amp;:OIIplll To 1:110..., 0tt1r
Ask lor MS. Hammond .

Managing Coometologlot With
Clientele. To Be Own Boss And
Work In Brand New Salon. Call
(740,3&amp;8-0498 With Any Quos·
tions.

Now taking Sollcilations Inviting

More lnlorllllltioQ Contact: Poll·
rnaa,.r, 440 2nd Avenue, GlllpcOhio 40631 (7-40)111 0314

Medical billing assistant needed
Immediately! FTJPT will train. Ex·

cellentlncome. PC required . 1·
888 H9 9773 ext. 222.
·

w..

Needed Experienced Crew for

Setting and Flntal'llng Sectional
Housing Sind Pricing lnformodon OTR dtiVor lor _.., op·
and experience to: Soutnern erator, no Hit coast, home w...
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST. Homes, PO Box 829, Jackaon, lcenda, aorrw lhrough the weak,
work on your computer. Guar· OH 45&amp;10
· no orientation. Apply loday, start
antoed omplaymont. Trelnlng/cor- .; ::.;.::;:::__ _ _ _ __
tomorroW. Cefl7«1-9t2·!5314, W no
llflcallon
Tartan Pub.. Inc.
.
1·800-944-5595.
.

11&lt;••,.

I

----·

CoN 1-100-200-2823

Ill-

Pert·llme Dl&lt;nary Aldt poalllon
• 7' tte in tOO bed S1U1M t.lwalng Foclllty. Pooliion roquirll

~houri. I l l WHktnd houre. E•copttanol op:
ponurity k&gt; -"&lt; wtlll I tiondorful
team of .coring· indlvkluols. Inter·

CL.OSE TO THE CITY 4 NEAT AS YOU'LL
FIND. Owners moving out of town and wants
action. GREEN TWP. 1 112 story newer home w/3
bcdrms .• 2 1/2 baths. first floor laun~'l'· Grut
floor pion offers family living. formal 11'1!119 ""/f· ~
dining ~m .• lovely carpet through-out. 8uut u
famiry rm. with outside, entry ~o yard. 2 car
attached garage deck a patio 4 f•sh pond. Tlttre
arc more than 3 i12 acres included. Loi:atcd on SA
141. Grut B!fYI Make on appointment w/VLS 446·
6806. #-4015
'

~~~,;. qf.- Q/,utt

.

446-6806
.
9158 Clark Chlpel Rei..
Bidwell Ohio 45814

•

43ACREFARM

*

a

9W&lt;iJM
.a.anC:tt
OIIICe
23 Lllcu8l
St.

.
11

GallllioUt. Ohlo_
4M31

•

2 miles from Mercerville, 5 room house, 2 car CJCirGQe, .
larQe 6om. Some RJqttom ground, approx. 20 acres pasture

RN and LPN for t DO bod sklllid
nurolng flclllty. Excellent opportunlly far CIIIIIOnQing ond rewordIng exptrlence. Sign-on bonus,
grtat start ratea, exoellent regu·
latory compll•nce 1\lllory. InterClndldatH lhculd lpply to:
Rockoprln~ rk~bllitltlon Can·
tor, 31758
nga Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45788, Carol GrHR·
lng, AN. Director of Nllllng, 740·
992-8808. Equal Opportunity Em·
ployor oncoureglng workplace dl·
....lty.
RN lnd LPN lor t 00 btd lkllled
nurolng laclllty. Excellonc 111&lt;1
ratao, bonofitl linG lign on bonuo.
Opportunity to work wllh oxcop•
lionel team. ApplicollcMI lhould bo
aubmlllld to: ROCklprtnga ROha·
blilllllon !;load. Pomeroy, Ohio
4!788 or cell ana contact Carol
O"""ing, AN, Dlntetor of Nursing
at 740·992·6606 . Equal Oppor·
tunlty Employer. Encouraging

Plreo,._

Fuii-Tin11, Bonolila, Aolall Experienca Prolerrod.
Apply At Llfaolyla Furniture. No
Phone Calli, Apply In Person.
856 Third Avenue. Gaillpolla,
Ollio. .
Scenic Hille fo · Now Hiring
STNA'.a And Certlflo~ Nursing
Aselstanls For All Shifts. Wo ·Aro
A Prograaslva Foclllty Who Ap·
prt&lt;:lates Our Staff. Vou Have
Great Opportun!tles At Scenic
Hllol Please Call Rhonda Holstein
At (740,446-7150 .Todayl Dr
Slop By And Fill Out An Application.
•

.MIDDLEPORT INVESTMENT 'PROPERTY
Auction:
Saturday, Aprll21, 2001
1nen House:
·· 1

Bualneee
Opportunity

WORK PROII HOME! Elrn

fiCOMmlndJ thlt rou 'dO buJI•
no~s With people you tnow. and

1500·S7 ,000/month PT/FT. Full
Training. Fr...,lnlormatlon. Celt
Nowi1-I00-21CH11114

NOT to send money through 1111
mall until You have Investigated

hollering.

.

AAA Groaung Card Routo, 55
Busy Lac's, $2K Weekly Potential
Free Info. 800-m-9424 24 Hr&amp;

POSTAL JOBS to $t 8.35/hr·
WILDLIFE JOBS to $21 .6011ir Includes· Btnefltl. No Experience
Necenary. For Application and
Exam Info, coli 1·800·992·7054
x206 M·F 8:3G-5:00pm

210

.
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLiSHING CO.

Plirt-Hme LPN Poslllon Available
At Scenic HIIJs Nursing Center.
'lbu Can Get Flexible Scliedulcll(l.
Groat Benonts. Compolitive wag.
es. Slll1t ~- Wage Exparience, And AttendanCe Bonua,sl
Don't Peas Up A Groat Opporluntty To Bogin Or Continuo 'You
E~cltlng Nur1ing Career! · Call
Rho.nda Holstein At· (740,446-

Se~s

(No open house)

Bualileaa
Opportunity

A VENDING GOLDMINE· ACT
NOWI Machines vand Hershey
candy AND phone cards. (2 .551
min. U.S., Earn $800+Miy. Wor1r
6·9 h'"""'. Great locations! 8110858- t n5. 1rw. req. Fill - ·

Work~ DNM~ty.

Auction:
. Saturday) Aprll28, 2001 at 12:00

210

' tation Conttf, 36758 RcxDprings
Rd .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45789. All:
Gina W•awer, Cerlillad Dlelary
Manoger. Equal Opportunity Em·
ploy.r. Encouraging Worll: Place
DNorolly,

7150~

Propooal To Carry Mall By

Hlghwly Contrtct Service. For

110 Help WIJIIJd

Ailed 'oppiicenta ohoukl lljlflly In
PII"''ft 11: RoellaprlngJ Roh&amp;ili·

Cl!lldlwn iiSctrool

Live In night clerk. Meigs Motol,
colllo&lt; ........... 740-99H53t .

, . . , _ .Hoalthcare
..._
AZ.ONor1ifled
PO Boa 298

Training/full Benefitt. For mo'e

Hour1,

tnauranct

..._._ ... I I d
._!WE

110

www.Ad1jovoll&lt;Mml.oom

-tlln_nuriing_
Oltio~---1t1tt. Wages nogOIIal'". Coolact
'
Slac:y Grooms.

Oove"'-"' Jollo $11.00·
$33.00 Pllr hour polenUal. Paid

Hi1nQ AI 3 Sllllta. -

110· Help lf!b II d

INTERNATIONAL COMPANY
NEEDS HELP wltll MaM OrdlriE·
Comnwrco. S500·S7000 mo. PT/
FT trom homO. FtM 'l)ming. F&lt;oo
Booklet.
920·924· 11-'00

AZ.OIVE~ HlAI.TitCNIE
lnlorview. l l l u -. ......--PAN
~a clieNt i'l SColnlm

......-.g.....,.
TII&amp;_

•••
!U • d

110

Help vtal If

110

Or •llldcllport • GtRIF li!•• Ohio • Polnl P11111 It, "WV

www.atlllinurdrNma.com

230

310 Homea for ....

1-800-~IIXL981t

Professional
Servtcea

Nowty
Slngto Story
1800 quere Foot Ho11111. t 0
Mlnule Ft m Hosp ital, Loealed

HUO Homes, PaymintLBased
On lnl:ome. Limited Tme- Hurryt

Acre Lot, 3 lladroom. 2· 112 BIN.
Big Kitchen w/Custom Oak Cabl·

Oniy. (:t04~75-3696

$$ NEED A LOAN?
ABSOlUTE GOLD MINEII
Try llollt ConSOiidallont
SO Down!!
Cut Paymenla Up To 60%.
Cindy VENDI~G rou1o.
Al--~ln
Same Day AppmvaH
Not&amp; $48 ,0011+ FREE Into. Toll · t-en-769-8158.
tl1la
rt~~•la aubject to
Ftoo Hln-494-8885, 2'""'.
the Federal FlirH&lt;Uing Act
NEED CASH?? WE pay
ot 1988 which l1i8fu!a. illlgol
ATIT-MCI PAYPHONE ROUTES
for rema'lnlng pa~menta on
lo........_"anypafaaa,
EaL Locotions. l.ocol. Proven
Property
Soldl
Mortgages!
Annullnc:ome. 800-80Q.3470.
llmltaticM' or dlac:rlrr*1don
ties! Setllementsl Immediate
rw», Color. rwtlglon,
Quotetlll 'Nobocly bolla our prlcBeauty Salon equipment '"' sail·
• National Contract Buyer•
7 stations, lobby furniture, ,.nnlng
or1girl. t1r ..,. in4111IIOIIID
.... tOt . . .....
boda. will llilo 111 togotlilr or oep.
are,., can onyttmo, 740-381-o&amp;t2. •
fnllr8 any IUCf1
llfttldon
or
*kM1.•
)
Convenience
Storti· Food A Country Craltamon, Stripping
Thil ne ; p wll nat
SoNico, HIQII Vol..,. Fuel, Grut Refinishing, Caning . Repelra &amp;
kl-tgly ICCOpl
Locations In GaUipolia Aru. Upholstery, Coma Sao OurS._
t-888-819-980t
Room, tO% Of Anttq"" And Gift·
~lor .... """'(304, 743-1IOO
whlcftilln~olthe
EARN $500-$100 por wolk In
CASH
LOANS
.
12000·$5000.
IIW.
O u r - ore hereby
your bathrol&gt;l &amp; ollppora. Low In·
. lnformacl t1t1t 111 ~
voatmant. 1·600·272·01 93. awo• Conaolldallon to uoo.ooo. Bacll
. No Credit. Credit Cards, Mort· , - 1 f t t1tla -.&gt;11*
10m8Brnings.oorn
gagn . For IMormellon : t·800·
.......ltl&gt;loonttnequal
oppcrtunitybUia.
Hill Top Plzzo/1/ldeo/ Tonnlng , 335-76t2.ext.3622
Mt. Alto lnclu~•• 2 Homu, Livo
PROBLEMS? CAU. THE l;l-1111111------~~
In One. Aont Out Other. Call CREDIT
CREDIT EXPERTS . LICENSEO/
3 .Bedroom House On Ro~lt 2.
Bonnie At Old Colony For More BONDED CORRECt/REMOVE
Dolllla. 1-888-'Ht9791
BAO CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY, Gaiipolll Ferry, (304~75-5332 ·
L"WSUITS, JUOGMENTS. AAA 3 Bedroom, 1-112 Baths, Living
In Dob11 Owe Cl'ldltort?
RAnNG. t·88W1 1-11902.
Need ftnonciiiAsailllncol
Room, Kltclten, Dlnlngroom, 2 Car
Garage
•. Approrlmotoly t Aero·.
CIM 1 888 u~- 24111'1.
DiYon:8 • t 50
(740,388 9858
Ba®14&gt;tcy
SISti
No - · Free Appflcotion
$22$
MEDICAL BILLING Unlimited In- Adoption
2 Bedroom. Full Basement. Largo
Not
do-k·yoU(IOff·I&lt;IU
come potentlat No experience
Lot, Pork Drive, It 6 Liberty,
nec1111ry. Frtt tnformatfon &amp;. CAU. 1-100-283-0503
$48.500 Appointment Only.
FREE lnlormallonl .
(740P74-4t22
CD·ROM: Investment from $2495. Bonk'14&gt;tcy nlaln TNIKY
Financing avalloblo.-(800) 322·
By Owner, Colonial Brick Aanch.
1139,
Froo Money Nowl It's True! No
EXT 050 www.b.ualntSI•IIBr- rePI)'rnent Guaranteed. For per- Tara Estates, 3 ·Bedrooms, 2 Full
2 Car Garage (740) 367lup.eorn
l'onal nuda. oducallon, bual· Balno,
71108
Start A Trovel Apncy: Roctllvo. •••· t-8110·724-8047 (24 Hra)
Training, Buslnell auppcrt, 'Your NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up For Sate: ,j Bedroom. 2 Bath On 2
own Trevet Webaltt and Travel to '$500 Instantly Dy phonol I · Acres, $750 Down Payment
Dlecounls/Porko. Earn big US. 877·EARLYPAY. llct 750005, 1ot W.A.C. Eaoy Terms, Call Davl~ 0
1·800-333-69 1o
Nomlrlal Startup Cosll 1·888-811i- . AOII.o,NCE S!EEI
0901 or www.EarnBuckoFrom·
FORECLOSED GOV'T HOM ESt
ttome.oom
No Foot/Sorvlco Clllrges
$0
OR LOW DOWN! TAX
- .,
In Need ol flnanclat Assistance?
Start Your Buslnees Today;.. Ptease can Us toll Free 1·868· REPD'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDITI FOR LISTING! CALL t·
Primo Shopping Center Space 813·8881241ws.
8110·80t·t7n ext. 9813.
Available AI Allordabls Rate.
Sprlft11 Valley Plaza, COli 740-446TURNED DOWN ON
Handyman Special , In Great
0tOt .
SOCIAL SECUIIITY 1811?
Neighborhood. Good Condillon.
No Foe Unless We Wlnl
$75,000 Make Ollar. (304)875·
t-888·582-3345
t818
-

-on
--......-

P*'*'•'*·
clau•••

"

Middleporl· gray atorle, 3-4 bedrooms, 1a1go walk-In dosoto, larlio

eat·ln kltclten, 2 bathrooms, large
lR. lofmal DR, pine panolod doni
bedroom , full unfinished base.
menl, 11eam heat. ~uated on 3
vfllage lots:, one car garage, new
sidewalks, new roof, large front
porch , d•ct. &amp;mall outbuilding,
quiet street, lined basketball
courv parting area. will consider
all reasonable offers, 740· 9927396.
Must See! Beautiful 3 Bedroom, 2
bath, CfA, FR With Fireplace. 2
lots, New Roof, Refrigerator,

Stove, OW, Large 2 Car Garage,
Big Vard. large Rooms, Lots Of
Elllras, Relocating Out Of State,

S8r.ooo. Calll304,ns-5391
-

·

'

uporlsnced OTR· drivers lor dod·
lcatod nalbod runs. Uvo In Northern Indiana, Call Bruce BG0-551 ·
9057 or Northern Ohio area call
Bob 800-531-772S www.tand.cam
URG'ENTLY NEEDED· plasma
donors, oom $45 to S8() lor 2 "' 3 ·
hours waokly. Call Sora-Toe, 74Q592-885t .
WORK FROIIHOME

S5011'-t1.500- Mo ~' Part time.
$1200-$8000 mo. FuiTimo
PAID VACATIONS
1-8110-490·3019

Announcement

140

On A

Daytime (740,446 ·3093 ask for
Julie, (3(14~75-3290 lilt -nlng

AbsoMety Must Sell- Brand New

nets From Smith's Cabinets, DR.

3 BRI 2 Ba1h OO!Wblew 1de W11tl
Oelfvery, Stl· up, A/C &amp; Slr. 1rti ng
From $2871 Mon th Only 0 Oakwood- Gallipolis 1740)«6-3093

LR wfGas Log Fireplace. _5ront
Porclt &amp; 2· 112 CIJt Garage. aualily Construction · All The Way.

$135 .000 . Call (740,446- 4514
1rom 11-5, M·F, Or -(740)44&amp;-3248
Alter !lpm
Three bedroom, new plumb ing ,
electrical, gu forced air heater,

FACTOR Y OVERSTOC K!! New
Double Wide Only S t ,5SO.OO
Down And $316 .00 Per Month .
Free Delivery
Ana
Sett.¥&gt;
1-888·928·:W26

_,._.

hot Wl!t&lt;} IRk I bo~; - ~ ""~~::..;.;:;_ _ __ _ ~make good rental property, no Final Days, Nationwide Inventory
land contracts. located in Po- Reduction! (:1&gt;4)736-3409
moroy. 129.900 OBO. 304·485·
4037 after 5pm.
limited Or No Credit? Go\lern ment Bank Finance Only At OakTwo car garage/apartment in wood In Barboursville, wv 304Middleporr. two bedrooms, tuU, 736-3409.
bath, lR, kitchen with electric
range , canuat air, 740· 985·3650 Lot model clearance, save up to
or 7-40-1192·2795.
$8,625 wlih any home . check us
out v.-ere dealing, Cole's MGbil e
'!120 · Mobile Homes
Homos, US 50 East, All&gt;ens, Ott

for Sale ·

J4x70 Bayview, Now Since 97, Cl
A, Water Heather, Furnace. Price
Includtl Stove , Rolrlgorator,
Porch •.Shea &amp; Wooden Fence ,
Remolded 3 Bedroom. woo~
$7200 Call (304,.75-3008 Bolore
Flooro. 1-1/2 Bath, Boautllu13pm
Fireplace, 2 Car Ga-e, $73,oo0
(740)388-9t5t
....
14x70 Southern Dream , lroo Dolivery free Setup only $9995 1·

=

11184 Mdbill Homo lor Sail. 3 BR.
1 112 Bath, Call tor appointment.

litul , Private 1·1/2

Nice 3 Bedroom Home, ljardwood
Flooro, 75 Fool Lot. Gallipolis
SchoOl District. WMI Boll On Land
=Cont.:;;;111C1::.::·~(1:.;«1:::,:.:.•;.:411:.;7:..:4::.73:__~

··

'=---------

888-928~3426

MUST SELLI 3 Bedroom, 2 Balh
Home . No Old Con1rac1 To As·
sume . Jus1 A Reliab le Party To
Make Month ly Payment 1· 888·

928-9896

New u tt wkle S4S9. down only
St99 . per mon . call now t ·800·
69t •m
__
~__. - - - - - - New 16ft. wide 1499. pe1 mon ..
on:ty $270 . per mon . ca ll now 11100-119.1-8n7.

ttin Cameron Skyline , 12.SO. 2
bedroom, Qood condition, Racine.
on Willow Lono, $3,000, call 1· Now 200t 'F leetwood , 3 br.. 2
740·420·7823. 740·1149·2t23 tor bat~. set up In The Country Mobile Home Park, ready to move ln.
more InformatiOn abOut lt.
$995 ~own , St99.98 per month.
1982 111h70 Fairmont Townhouse, 740-992·21 67.
2 bedroom, t large bath With heat
pump &amp; olc , $7,500, 740·59t · New double wide 3 br . 2 ba .
$998 .00 down only $295 . per
4043 or 740-992-ot!38.
mon. cau now 1·800·69t·67n.
Country Living- Doublowlde On 2
Wooded Acres. $2500 &amp; Move· New FleetwoOd t8•80. 3 br/2 ~10.
only $199.66 per month . Call ror
ln. (740~3570
dstalls. 740-685-4367.
.

_ _ _ _..,:R:,:::MI Eatate General

lofH-

Iuildlng CompooNnll

FARM for SALE!!

Quality .........
orU!NGIP..r •

We have moved and ,are selling our farm. 3
bedroom home hils hiQh ceilings, oak trim,
and a large kltchen } ,Butldings Include a large
barn and garage. Extellent location I
Ootlon
House, barn, buildings with 86
acres for 129,900.
Opffon 2: Includes everything in option 1 plus
pasture, pond, and a total of 120 acres priced
at $189.900.
Shown by appointment only. Call evenings

Call today
for your quote!

'i

IOCMSU990

....,__

(740) 380-0259.

cy~· (}!

Tandem Traneport Corp. needs

ffitfuctod,

4t

Stanley Home Products -And
Fuller Brush. Av•llable, To Order
Products. Request Catalogs. Call
(304~15-8903

•

House For Set~
.
edroom. 1·
$750 llo!mpaymont W.A.C. E y ,Torm, Cell
David • t -800-333-69 t 0

(740~

2 Bedroom House On Greef
Road , Shown By Appointment

$ FREE .CASH NOW$ from
wealthy families l.llfoadng of dollars, to help minimize their
taxes. Write lmmecllatoly: WIND·
FALLS, 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD.
188, LOS ANGELES. CALIFOR·
NIA90010

310 HolMe tor ....

Bill. 011 -

10 DOWN HOMES! GOY'T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES ! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWNI OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

310 Homea tor Sale

rlmid · a

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

VIRGINIA 8MITH, IAOKER ............... 4 11 SIOI
4
8ELVILLE.............................:.... 4.. 12011
TRIIH INYDIR .....................- ...............1-e458
446-6806 ~nch~ OAIL
JOHNNIE RUBSELL.......................... .381.o323

OFFICE .

.

958 Clark Chapel Rei.
Bidwell, Ohio 45814

I

*. .

DAVID INYDIR .................................. 441-tM511
OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.vlemlthrNl..u.ta.com
•rmUI: vtafMieetate@zoomnet.net

992-2259 ~·

Bualneaa

Training
Joanna's ComPuter AppliCations
Training. Mlcrosofl Office User
Specialist, Cortlfle&lt;l Instructor. In
The COmfort Of Your Home Or
Busine&amp;s. 1740~ H 555

· Mid-Ohio Valley Truck
Driver Training
COL Certification 5 Week Cour••
Mon &amp; Frl 7 :00·3:3D Weekend
Claaaea Sat &amp; Sun 8 :00-4: 30 12 weeka
Financing end Funding
Av•ll•ble B•••d On Eligibility
..Joi:J placement on Cl••• A tr•lnlng"

Oofllpolle C...... CoiiJto
(Cartora Ctase To Homo)
Cai1Toclayl740--7,
1·8Q0-214-0452,
Reg .90-05-t274B.

(

It,.

Contact Ed Adams 1-800-648-3695
or (740) 373-3966

NEW LISTING • MINERSVILLE ·A

llome l('ld ready to move Into.
to all lOcal ' amenities. A 11/21101y hofne willt
living room, kitchen, 2'·3 bedrooms •. 1 bath
and Iota o1 atorage space. A full '*ement. 2
car garage, n,ce large side sitting porch
compliment thla home. II sits on a nice 1+
acre lot. Thl8 coulel be vour• ~r .
starter

Schools

150

Instruction
BLACKSTO~E
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Home Study, Ap·
proved 1 Alfqr1dable. comprehen·
slve, legal trafning since 1890.
FREE Catalog: 600·826·9228,
write: ·P.O. Boa 701449, DaHas. TX
75370 NA or http://Www.blacksto·

Slltwdlly, Aprlll, 2001 at 10:081111
)Ae '"'Ill: Balllrd'• " Soll'll- olll\. 50 " 7and

~ 555; In UUie

•

If'"*""

- ......

Oldo

~·Iorge
11ty1e homo IIIII hu
room &amp; dining .,.. tltlt Iorge re~r- ond private lawn. E111·1n kitchen 3 bedroomo,
large . family room, g11age,
concrete drive and mDMI

·---·---·-----·--""'
......
_...__
__
.......
.
.....
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_______ __
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.....

_ ..... _ .. _ ..... __...,~-... .w(..,........
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..........
lillll._l,"l&gt;l_,_.,._ll
...... TV,_..,
.. _ _
•

=••+A•
P"lm." ... '*~
~ .. .,.._...._....
. . ., , . . . . . . . . . . . . l .. a.-. ....... ..,.._ ..... 2.

3 additional bothi, Fireplace In the LR . Cl!armln1 on\fY
W/ltlileue IOidloa to 2nd level. Laundty room on tho mtin
lovol. · Plollbed buomenl, Detached 2 cor prye. ·On 3.3,
londscapod oma m/1. Loll of plutta A troos.
NO. Zit

.........,

. . . . . . ._, . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . _

...

MOilLE

Almoot Ui

I

·_

............ -l&gt;lo! ............ _

before lfl

· ··- ""'._,.. ... _ ...,.........a.m. ..... _.
.

Oavld't Otneral Contractora,
Plumbing, Electric , Painting
DICko, Misc. Work, AN Homo Ropolrs, Lawn Core. Call (740)2SI9373 Or Cell Phona 1-304·833·

•

IUILDINQ
locltlon. Large 2
wtth oil atrHI
jllil1~ng.
ftorol oho!), 110.
mora detalla , _

Dtpandebll ond hon11t. Will do
e•ntrll I'IDUI~ et•1nlng . call

(740)25&amp;-1227

EASTERN SCHOOL DISTRICT·

Thill

execuUve home hae many featuree. 4
btelroome, full flnlehed basement, garage,
W.B.F.P.. ehed, In ground pool, deck, 2.12+
aCf'BI
~rovnd. Quiet counlry aettlng, CIA,
,qui
• khchan, all mod,rn, Hard Wood
floorl;and . ~ I file. Eve,n lite wae~er I
elryer Jtayl Ownar Movlna •

a

PRICID TO 81LL 0 e148,000.

ACIIIACII... 30 1C&lt;10 nVJ Iota Of
WOOIII.

-

huntlne

bedrma,

ac m/1.

Pk. 3 btdrm, 3
1
quartera.
Also 18' x 32' garage plus 30' x 20
building 1/2 110. Of land. good soiOI
loc. Prtcod to soli. VLS
1873 REOUCED PRICE-117
...
~-pltal
ocr• close Io ~ew rwy., ·~
•
ahop ctr. Wtotor, gu, sower.
Adjoining Plnocreot Nuralng Homo.
13M2 120 Bille At. 2111 In the
VIllage of' Thurman. Nlol br..
cottage, bath, k~hln/dlnlng rcom
and utility
room.
lnauwlndowt, atool doora wllh storm
doors. Nics lot wkh oulbultGift11 •
Public wo1•11rtd aoon lo be public
aewage. 145,000

'•

~

Lawn Mower And. Small Engine
Repair. Freo ' Plck·up' And Dtlllv·
ory Wlihln 11' Mlln .2t Ytoro
Exporltnco. Coli Mike At
(740,441-78p4
.

.. ....

2

land.

.Harrlaon 'I'Ownlhlp. 130,000.110

1110
Charry
.•MI.aoo 0na Of the boot
v1owa In Gllllpolle from.tho porch
Of thla 1 112 IIOry homt. Living
rcom, dining or family room, over
2 aoreo.
-

111Cit
LOOKINQ

1'011 A

LCn:1

Hft

1rw a -lola with ~­
ond
.._
-·
Nailor
big prloa.
114.8110
lor them
botttI
lil1d -

ollwr.111171.

II ~ your

·cheryl ·l.emley .

742~3171

IINflr&lt; l 1/\L

LOTI 01' HOUII 1'0111 THI
MONm 1.11t1 - c.pe eoa

1111111111 Pll'llllt-• • • •
............ - ••••••1................ , ...
. . IIU11111••1 tiiiii:H•IIIII. . I.II.

Dan Smith ·AuctlonMr Ohio. 515
.

'

Cltllnd AMity, Inc. Ottlct.............IKI2•225SI

$1 ,000 WEEKLY I Wort&lt; II home
proc111ing automotive pom·
philtll ·No IKparlencll Wltkly
PeYChiC~sl Everything suppilldl

Henry E. Clel1ncl ••• .-....................... 192·~58

Shetrt L HM .•. ~............................... 742•2317
Klthl"n M. Cl1l1nd ..................... 1192..0181

t-8110-&amp;51·3115

..

Cash • Positive ID • Refreshments

BualnHa

Opportunity

ond fDrmal tWq - · ...
liaG deoldng - . . . . deofdngmuo11
on - moNf
· a
1111
lil1d
OWNI!AS
f!IL()CAnNO BAIO 'SI!U.
NOW'I ' .
.

I

yl

210

with till -olllllng ""'"' BR, a b a h , - LR,uplliML
lOVe&lt;, FR3

''(

.

133f171N
CITY Huge Family
homo w/4 BRa, 2 baths, k~, LR,
DR, porches, part.,; basement.
Pt1ced right· 110 Chis outstanding
oflet1 Vscant, raiidy to welcome
you. VLS 446-8806
13387 Large l'&lt;lme In lawn, new
roof t999, 4 BR, 2.5 BA. 2 ~r
garage,
vln1( aiding,
nice
neighborhood. Need! some TLC
but priced ngllt at $11,11110
CI1Y LOT 43' X t 70'
located 39 Vine St.

SR .124. 81LVJR CREEK SUBDMSION

haul your IOQI tO thO ITIIII)UII cell
304-818-19&amp;1.

romodolod

2 bathe,
lmmaculete
· condition 2000 eq. ft• .&amp; to an)oy
flmlly IIIIo to fuleat, Large rma,
tllrough llut· ftreplaco 1ft lR, sky
Ughll, beautiful lcltchan. Sun
porch w/Window walla. Goa &amp;
elec. heal, central air &amp; lovely
carpel Green Schoola. Thil one
worth -ng for, Juat a
phone cell away. IlLS 446-8806
MAKE OFFEFI
14014 KINO 8fZE FAiaY HOME
Grell 2 oty. 4 bodrino.r- 2 1/2
balhl, formal LR &amp; DR, Fam Rm.
.w/brlck fireplace, all large rma., 13'
x 25' mater bedrm. w/bath. 2 car
altechod - · 1.215 Ar: ,.,
$140,0110. Additlonlllot available.
IlLS
4

.. Lo1 N9 • 4.41 acres. Call 1oday and
mal&lt;e your appoin1rnenll'
.
ASKING $18,800.

Georvt~ Port.oble Sowmlll, don't

With thla 2

---••,..•--......,••~&gt;~o~
_ _ .. a.,_(...)..- (...,,. _ _c••J
......
GM.Ciii.., _ _ Pa.t .. lllo[. . . -~..,.l&gt;lo!,...Moel&gt;lo!

.

B&amp;B ConotrucUon- Roo11ng, Siding
And Concre,., Interior &amp; Extertor
Paln~(lll. All Phaaao Of Home Rt·
palro, ~or A Fret Estfmate. Call
1304,878-7738 After e:oo pm

..... m/1. Main- hlo ·
1,2!10 eq. ft. ond UPPIIr 880
ft. thll hu not been complotly
.
L.fl Ul tell ~ the 1011.
LOVELY TWO STORY .HOlliE DECORATED AS

,

homo,
4
equipped kk.
atorago apaco, utra lg.
Muter bedrm. Owner hlo made
many lmprovornonta. New carpal
6 lighting. YOUI' chlldrtr&gt; OMd
oidiB lot for playground. 41· 2 C8l
.garage. located In Addition. IlLS
446-8805
, .
·
~

180 Wented To Do

. PlUITI'Y AS A DOLL HOUSE • Pcatum a SPACIOUS
BBDROOIII SUI')l! W/ SITI1JIIO ROOIII. A BAni. ON
TilE MAIN LEVEL Wife approved kllch!n w/ Iota of
doal...d Dill&lt; coblneta. La- dlnlna room. 5 "'"'" B~

___.....,._..................-..
·--..............----.--..... ...

~~

Get your ~S oqulvallncy dlpiO(Tla
with our easy home; study course,
H!00·588·2t63 lid 310

NEW LII'I'IHOI sill- ,_ &amp;
you IIIII con llkl your ·flnlohlng
Voorl
young and
1 2.&amp;
1/2
1t0fV·
hOme3with
bailment

-~~---·--·,.,.o
.......

- - - - l A D _ _ _ .,..., _ _ _ ..

UYINQ

glllflo &amp;

nelaw.com.

-~

I -•(oooo)•A1nll._ ..... _,_...,,.._ .. _ _ _

13314

'.

..
,'

,,

,..

H355 AUTHENTIC LOQ HOllE
.WITH CHARACTER. If you like
lndMduallty--hore nlsl3,029 aq. ~more Of lool, 3 bodrma., 2 t/2
balhl, Kit., L.Rm, Ofllco rm .. ana
much 11101e. Wllp porch 1ron1 &amp; 2
akl•. 187 -!\all m~. Rolling
Poelure ond 3 Large llarno &amp;
FOod Lot sn... .2 nloo ponds. Lond
Ia moot oil cl•n &amp; hu oome
fencing. Electrtc &amp; lnlollroo water
In Che bem. FH&lt;I lot anes.
Formerly used lor Veil csw
OPttrotion. loCIIOd noor Rio
Grondo. Appointment Only. Call
L. smnn ,740·..8·5808..

�•
Pome;

,,.

!l!!p "P I" d

flull IIBJ AN flto&amp;ttmn '·c"..,.l

for Jock.
notre-

IIIII ••• LPN l"aallool -.,..
_,_.....,_Nurllngc-

-

call---Or

tar. ....,,_.•cal lnCiflll..
l'ay Ollam. WHI ""Y Far '!bur

e__. .......

II I I I 1 For Mar.
To lcttadu._ lui
(140)MI-7Ui0

'IIMih U8A
I
!IOU -~~- II, ho k&gt; ·
and -11 1-721).2127
'""' 'I ·~·
col
"""
i-!lpm.
Aprt 16-20. EOE.

1MI!IIAJIIIT.I . .IOII)

--

_

Available.
Paid
Blrt~ And Holldeye. ~ At
IUt&gt;OrondO-·

lundlly, Aprll15, 2001
I

110

Help Waalllld

110

z
.
Help Wanlllf

. . . OffiCI

HlUfy MIIOI C1e

•

I

dJ

(llonul ,.,.,.,.. In~
~0\'IU-WHIU,Y
llllnrttl
_ _ .,..,

Jt'JV 'lofW ~WOrt lOt

o..n 1 P.C.? Pu1 1 k&gt; - kt For a

Postal Jobl $48.323.00 yr. Now

www.gMpCIIIIOtitmm

lng· grnt bonofilo. cell 7 doyo
~3860 oxt. ./-385.

1 1 M - eM: 80Q.429-5653
Yll!t "' or*le:

or

hiring- No ••tJerltnea-pakJ lr-"'·

........... =w, t
Holl•r C Mtwlr Whit
p' 'I'

afiT•Pif~-

o -WII:ATIOIII
NO EXI'eltfloiCE NFE"E"-

PIIJD TRAINING'PROGRIUI
COU.EGE I HGft SCHOOL
STUOENTSwaCOME
APPlY IN PERSON AT:
424 MAIN STREET
POINT PLEASANT, WV •
MONDAY April 16/IJ
TUE~V Aprl/ 17111 .
I:OOont To 3:00pm

Looking For Reliable Babyslnor.

7
""·=~~
937-695-1375 lax

Part-time. Must Be Able To Do

Weekend s. 3 Kids, (304,&amp;752682

~eeythOO.oom

lnforllllltion coil call 1·888 ·874·

Physical Therapy As·
:11t::50:.:""-=.:323-t=~--=--==-= I Licensed
slstanl PAN/part time noodod for
GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS
HELPt Wori1: from home! Mall-or·
dlr!EoComlnlece. $522+/week PT
11000·$4000/wk FT. 800·921 •

100 bed oklllod nursing lacllily.
Excellent opportunity tor chal·
lenging and rtwardlng experl·
enco. Groat lurnlne ••porlonct
:15::31:..:•:•::•:::-:=:::::::":;:·com:: ;__ ~ for a now grid or newly licensed
·I
PTA. E•collent progrosllve rthl·
Herrle Sttakhouae Now H~r ng. bllltation department both lnpa·
(30')875-87211
tlont IRd outpallont services pmHoiP- coring fDr the elderly, vlclad. Focilily hlo oxcolltfli 1'811110arst Group Home, now paying latOfy compliance history as wen
mk'timurn wage, new shifts: 7am· 11 atatM atafting. Interested can1
.._ ....__11
ttpm- ~~ ~atu should apply to : Rock·
..,....
..,....,... ..,.... ~·
springs Rehabilitation Cantor,
7am, c:ol7«1-1192·5023.
Po
3e759 Rockllll'lnes Road, mer·
HICUIE El&lt;flf!ESS NEEDS... ay, Ohio 45769. Allison Barnett .
Owner Operatortll . • Home MPT, Rthtb Services Director,
Weekly • NO Eall Coast • NO 740-992-e&amp;06. Equol Oppcrtunlly
Touch Ftolght • 75% Drop/Hook • Employer encouraging wort&lt;placo
NO Upfront Coats ' Accepting diversity.

Any--

Maintenance person wanted at
Colonial Part~; Apartments. begin-

nine part-limo ioacllng to tun-time,
call740-9t2·3711 be- 1Q-5.

OR

&amp;:OIIplll To 1:110..., 0tt1r
Ask lor MS. Hammond .

Managing Coometologlot With
Clientele. To Be Own Boss And
Work In Brand New Salon. Call
(740,3&amp;8-0498 With Any Quos·
tions.

Now taking Sollcilations Inviting

More lnlorllllltioQ Contact: Poll·
rnaa,.r, 440 2nd Avenue, GlllpcOhio 40631 (7-40)111 0314

Medical billing assistant needed
Immediately! FTJPT will train. Ex·

cellentlncome. PC required . 1·
888 H9 9773 ext. 222.
·

w..

Needed Experienced Crew for

Setting and Flntal'llng Sectional
Housing Sind Pricing lnformodon OTR dtiVor lor _.., op·
and experience to: Soutnern erator, no Hit coast, home w...
MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST. Homes, PO Box 829, Jackaon, lcenda, aorrw lhrough the weak,
work on your computer. Guar· OH 45&amp;10
· no orientation. Apply loday, start
antoed omplaymont. Trelnlng/cor- .; ::.;.::;:::__ _ _ _ __
tomorroW. Cefl7«1-9t2·!5314, W no
llflcallon
Tartan Pub.. Inc.
.
1·800-944-5595.
.

11&lt;••,.

I

----·

CoN 1-100-200-2823

Ill-

Pert·llme Dl&lt;nary Aldt poalllon
• 7' tte in tOO bed S1U1M t.lwalng Foclllty. Pooliion roquirll

~houri. I l l WHktnd houre. E•copttanol op:
ponurity k&gt; -"&lt; wtlll I tiondorful
team of .coring· indlvkluols. Inter·

CL.OSE TO THE CITY 4 NEAT AS YOU'LL
FIND. Owners moving out of town and wants
action. GREEN TWP. 1 112 story newer home w/3
bcdrms .• 2 1/2 baths. first floor laun~'l'· Grut
floor pion offers family living. formal 11'1!119 ""/f· ~
dining ~m .• lovely carpet through-out. 8uut u
famiry rm. with outside, entry ~o yard. 2 car
attached garage deck a patio 4 f•sh pond. Tlttre
arc more than 3 i12 acres included. Loi:atcd on SA
141. Grut B!fYI Make on appointment w/VLS 446·
6806. #-4015
'

~~~,;. qf.- Q/,utt

.

446-6806
.
9158 Clark Chlpel Rei..
Bidwell Ohio 45814

•

43ACREFARM

*

a

9W&lt;iJM
.a.anC:tt
OIIICe
23 Lllcu8l
St.

.
11

GallllioUt. Ohlo_
4M31

•

2 miles from Mercerville, 5 room house, 2 car CJCirGQe, .
larQe 6om. Some RJqttom ground, approx. 20 acres pasture

RN and LPN for t DO bod sklllid
nurolng flclllty. Excellent opportunlly far CIIIIIOnQing ond rewordIng exptrlence. Sign-on bonus,
grtat start ratea, exoellent regu·
latory compll•nce 1\lllory. InterClndldatH lhculd lpply to:
Rockoprln~ rk~bllitltlon Can·
tor, 31758
nga Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45788, Carol GrHR·
lng, AN. Director of Nllllng, 740·
992-8808. Equal Opportunity Em·
ployor oncoureglng workplace dl·
....lty.
RN lnd LPN lor t 00 btd lkllled
nurolng laclllty. Excellonc 111&lt;1
ratao, bonofitl linG lign on bonuo.
Opportunity to work wllh oxcop•
lionel team. ApplicollcMI lhould bo
aubmlllld to: ROCklprtnga ROha·
blilllllon !;load. Pomeroy, Ohio
4!788 or cell ana contact Carol
O"""ing, AN, Dlntetor of Nursing
at 740·992·6606 . Equal Oppor·
tunlty Employer. Encouraging

Plreo,._

Fuii-Tin11, Bonolila, Aolall Experienca Prolerrod.
Apply At Llfaolyla Furniture. No
Phone Calli, Apply In Person.
856 Third Avenue. Gaillpolla,
Ollio. .
Scenic Hille fo · Now Hiring
STNA'.a And Certlflo~ Nursing
Aselstanls For All Shifts. Wo ·Aro
A Prograaslva Foclllty Who Ap·
prt&lt;:lates Our Staff. Vou Have
Great Opportun!tles At Scenic
Hllol Please Call Rhonda Holstein
At (740,446-7150 .Todayl Dr
Slop By And Fill Out An Application.
•

.MIDDLEPORT INVESTMENT 'PROPERTY
Auction:
Saturday, Aprll21, 2001
1nen House:
·· 1

Bualneee
Opportunity

WORK PROII HOME! Elrn

fiCOMmlndJ thlt rou 'dO buJI•
no~s With people you tnow. and

1500·S7 ,000/month PT/FT. Full
Training. Fr...,lnlormatlon. Celt
Nowi1-I00-21CH11114

NOT to send money through 1111
mall until You have Investigated

hollering.

.

AAA Groaung Card Routo, 55
Busy Lac's, $2K Weekly Potential
Free Info. 800-m-9424 24 Hr&amp;

POSTAL JOBS to $t 8.35/hr·
WILDLIFE JOBS to $21 .6011ir Includes· Btnefltl. No Experience
Necenary. For Application and
Exam Info, coli 1·800·992·7054
x206 M·F 8:3G-5:00pm

210

.
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLiSHING CO.

Plirt-Hme LPN Poslllon Available
At Scenic HIIJs Nursing Center.
'lbu Can Get Flexible Scliedulcll(l.
Groat Benonts. Compolitive wag.
es. Slll1t ~- Wage Exparience, And AttendanCe Bonua,sl
Don't Peas Up A Groat Opporluntty To Bogin Or Continuo 'You
E~cltlng Nur1ing Career! · Call
Rho.nda Holstein At· (740,446-

Se~s

(No open house)

Bualileaa
Opportunity

A VENDING GOLDMINE· ACT
NOWI Machines vand Hershey
candy AND phone cards. (2 .551
min. U.S., Earn $800+Miy. Wor1r
6·9 h'"""'. Great locations! 8110858- t n5. 1rw. req. Fill - ·

Work~ DNM~ty.

Auction:
. Saturday) Aprll28, 2001 at 12:00

210

' tation Conttf, 36758 RcxDprings
Rd .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45789. All:
Gina W•awer, Cerlillad Dlelary
Manoger. Equal Opportunity Em·
ploy.r. Encouraging Worll: Place
DNorolly,

7150~

Propooal To Carry Mall By

Hlghwly Contrtct Service. For

110 Help WIJIIJd

Ailed 'oppiicenta ohoukl lljlflly In
PII"''ft 11: RoellaprlngJ Roh&amp;ili·

Cl!lldlwn iiSctrool

Live In night clerk. Meigs Motol,
colllo&lt; ........... 740-99H53t .

, . . , _ .Hoalthcare
..._
AZ.ONor1ifled
PO Boa 298

Training/full Benefitt. For mo'e

Hour1,

tnauranct

..._._ ... I I d
._!WE

110

www.Ad1jovoll&lt;Mml.oom

-tlln_nuriing_
Oltio~---1t1tt. Wages nogOIIal'". Coolact
'
Slac:y Grooms.

Oove"'-"' Jollo $11.00·
$33.00 Pllr hour polenUal. Paid

Hi1nQ AI 3 Sllllta. -

110· Help lf!b II d

INTERNATIONAL COMPANY
NEEDS HELP wltll MaM OrdlriE·
Comnwrco. S500·S7000 mo. PT/
FT trom homO. FtM 'l)ming. F&lt;oo
Booklet.
920·924· 11-'00

AZ.OIVE~ HlAI.TitCNIE
lnlorview. l l l u -. ......--PAN
~a clieNt i'l SColnlm

......-.g.....,.
TII&amp;_

•••
!U • d

110

Help vtal If

110

Or •llldcllport • GtRIF li!•• Ohio • Polnl P11111 It, "WV

www.atlllinurdrNma.com

230

310 Homea for ....

1-800-~IIXL981t

Professional
Servtcea

Nowty
Slngto Story
1800 quere Foot Ho11111. t 0
Mlnule Ft m Hosp ital, Loealed

HUO Homes, PaymintLBased
On lnl:ome. Limited Tme- Hurryt

Acre Lot, 3 lladroom. 2· 112 BIN.
Big Kitchen w/Custom Oak Cabl·

Oniy. (:t04~75-3696

$$ NEED A LOAN?
ABSOlUTE GOLD MINEII
Try llollt ConSOiidallont
SO Down!!
Cut Paymenla Up To 60%.
Cindy VENDI~G rou1o.
Al--~ln
Same Day AppmvaH
Not&amp; $48 ,0011+ FREE Into. Toll · t-en-769-8158.
tl1la
rt~~•la aubject to
Ftoo Hln-494-8885, 2'""'.
the Federal FlirH&lt;Uing Act
NEED CASH?? WE pay
ot 1988 which l1i8fu!a. illlgol
ATIT-MCI PAYPHONE ROUTES
for rema'lnlng pa~menta on
lo........_"anypafaaa,
EaL Locotions. l.ocol. Proven
Property
Soldl
Mortgages!
Annullnc:ome. 800-80Q.3470.
llmltaticM' or dlac:rlrr*1don
ties! Setllementsl Immediate
rw», Color. rwtlglon,
Quotetlll 'Nobocly bolla our prlcBeauty Salon equipment '"' sail·
• National Contract Buyer•
7 stations, lobby furniture, ,.nnlng
or1girl. t1r ..,. in4111IIOIIID
.... tOt . . .....
boda. will llilo 111 togotlilr or oep.
are,., can onyttmo, 740-381-o&amp;t2. •
fnllr8 any IUCf1
llfttldon
or
*kM1.•
)
Convenience
Storti· Food A Country Craltamon, Stripping
Thil ne ; p wll nat
SoNico, HIQII Vol..,. Fuel, Grut Refinishing, Caning . Repelra &amp;
kl-tgly ICCOpl
Locations In GaUipolia Aru. Upholstery, Coma Sao OurS._
t-888-819-980t
Room, tO% Of Anttq"" And Gift·
~lor .... """'(304, 743-1IOO
whlcftilln~olthe
EARN $500-$100 por wolk In
CASH
LOANS
.
12000·$5000.
IIW.
O u r - ore hereby
your bathrol&gt;l &amp; ollppora. Low In·
. lnformacl t1t1t 111 ~
voatmant. 1·600·272·01 93. awo• Conaolldallon to uoo.ooo. Bacll
. No Credit. Credit Cards, Mort· , - 1 f t t1tla -.&gt;11*
10m8Brnings.oorn
gagn . For IMormellon : t·800·
.......ltl&gt;loonttnequal
oppcrtunitybUia.
Hill Top Plzzo/1/ldeo/ Tonnlng , 335-76t2.ext.3622
Mt. Alto lnclu~•• 2 Homu, Livo
PROBLEMS? CAU. THE l;l-1111111------~~
In One. Aont Out Other. Call CREDIT
CREDIT EXPERTS . LICENSEO/
3 .Bedroom House On Ro~lt 2.
Bonnie At Old Colony For More BONDED CORRECt/REMOVE
Dolllla. 1-888-'Ht9791
BAO CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY, Gaiipolll Ferry, (304~75-5332 ·
L"WSUITS, JUOGMENTS. AAA 3 Bedroom, 1-112 Baths, Living
In Dob11 Owe Cl'ldltort?
RAnNG. t·88W1 1-11902.
Need ftnonciiiAsailllncol
Room, Kltclten, Dlnlngroom, 2 Car
Garage
•. Approrlmotoly t Aero·.
CIM 1 888 u~- 24111'1.
DiYon:8 • t 50
(740,388 9858
Ba®14&gt;tcy
SISti
No - · Free Appflcotion
$22$
MEDICAL BILLING Unlimited In- Adoption
2 Bedroom. Full Basement. Largo
Not
do-k·yoU(IOff·I&lt;IU
come potentlat No experience
Lot, Pork Drive, It 6 Liberty,
nec1111ry. Frtt tnformatfon &amp;. CAU. 1-100-283-0503
$48.500 Appointment Only.
FREE lnlormallonl .
(740P74-4t22
CD·ROM: Investment from $2495. Bonk'14&gt;tcy nlaln TNIKY
Financing avalloblo.-(800) 322·
By Owner, Colonial Brick Aanch.
1139,
Froo Money Nowl It's True! No
EXT 050 www.b.ualntSI•IIBr- rePI)'rnent Guaranteed. For per- Tara Estates, 3 ·Bedrooms, 2 Full
2 Car Garage (740) 367lup.eorn
l'onal nuda. oducallon, bual· Balno,
71108
Start A Trovel Apncy: Roctllvo. •••· t-8110·724-8047 (24 Hra)
Training, Buslnell auppcrt, 'Your NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up For Sate: ,j Bedroom. 2 Bath On 2
own Trevet Webaltt and Travel to '$500 Instantly Dy phonol I · Acres, $750 Down Payment
Dlecounls/Porko. Earn big US. 877·EARLYPAY. llct 750005, 1ot W.A.C. Eaoy Terms, Call Davl~ 0
1·800-333-69 1o
Nomlrlal Startup Cosll 1·888-811i- . AOII.o,NCE S!EEI
0901 or www.EarnBuckoFrom·
FORECLOSED GOV'T HOM ESt
ttome.oom
No Foot/Sorvlco Clllrges
$0
OR LOW DOWN! TAX
- .,
In Need ol flnanclat Assistance?
Start Your Buslnees Today;.. Ptease can Us toll Free 1·868· REPD'S &amp; BANKRUPTCIES! OK
CREDITI FOR LISTING! CALL t·
Primo Shopping Center Space 813·8881241ws.
8110·80t·t7n ext. 9813.
Available AI Allordabls Rate.
Sprlft11 Valley Plaza, COli 740-446TURNED DOWN ON
Handyman Special , In Great
0tOt .
SOCIAL SECUIIITY 1811?
Neighborhood. Good Condillon.
No Foe Unless We Wlnl
$75,000 Make Ollar. (304)875·
t-888·582-3345
t818
-

-on
--......-

P*'*'•'*·
clau•••

"

Middleporl· gray atorle, 3-4 bedrooms, 1a1go walk-In dosoto, larlio

eat·ln kltclten, 2 bathrooms, large
lR. lofmal DR, pine panolod doni
bedroom , full unfinished base.
menl, 11eam heat. ~uated on 3
vfllage lots:, one car garage, new
sidewalks, new roof, large front
porch , d•ct. &amp;mall outbuilding,
quiet street, lined basketball
courv parting area. will consider
all reasonable offers, 740· 9927396.
Must See! Beautiful 3 Bedroom, 2
bath, CfA, FR With Fireplace. 2
lots, New Roof, Refrigerator,

Stove, OW, Large 2 Car Garage,
Big Vard. large Rooms, Lots Of
Elllras, Relocating Out Of State,

S8r.ooo. Calll304,ns-5391
-

·

'

uporlsnced OTR· drivers lor dod·
lcatod nalbod runs. Uvo In Northern Indiana, Call Bruce BG0-551 ·
9057 or Northern Ohio area call
Bob 800-531-772S www.tand.cam
URG'ENTLY NEEDED· plasma
donors, oom $45 to S8() lor 2 "' 3 ·
hours waokly. Call Sora-Toe, 74Q592-885t .
WORK FROIIHOME

S5011'-t1.500- Mo ~' Part time.
$1200-$8000 mo. FuiTimo
PAID VACATIONS
1-8110-490·3019

Announcement

140

On A

Daytime (740,446 ·3093 ask for
Julie, (3(14~75-3290 lilt -nlng

AbsoMety Must Sell- Brand New

nets From Smith's Cabinets, DR.

3 BRI 2 Ba1h OO!Wblew 1de W11tl
Oelfvery, Stl· up, A/C &amp; Slr. 1rti ng
From $2871 Mon th Only 0 Oakwood- Gallipolis 1740)«6-3093

LR wfGas Log Fireplace. _5ront
Porclt &amp; 2· 112 CIJt Garage. aualily Construction · All The Way.

$135 .000 . Call (740,446- 4514
1rom 11-5, M·F, Or -(740)44&amp;-3248
Alter !lpm
Three bedroom, new plumb ing ,
electrical, gu forced air heater,

FACTOR Y OVERSTOC K!! New
Double Wide Only S t ,5SO.OO
Down And $316 .00 Per Month .
Free Delivery
Ana
Sett.¥&gt;
1-888·928·:W26

_,._.

hot Wl!t&lt;} IRk I bo~; - ~ ""~~::..;.;:;_ _ __ _ ~make good rental property, no Final Days, Nationwide Inventory
land contracts. located in Po- Reduction! (:1&gt;4)736-3409
moroy. 129.900 OBO. 304·485·
4037 after 5pm.
limited Or No Credit? Go\lern ment Bank Finance Only At OakTwo car garage/apartment in wood In Barboursville, wv 304Middleporr. two bedrooms, tuU, 736-3409.
bath, lR, kitchen with electric
range , canuat air, 740· 985·3650 Lot model clearance, save up to
or 7-40-1192·2795.
$8,625 wlih any home . check us
out v.-ere dealing, Cole's MGbil e
'!120 · Mobile Homes
Homos, US 50 East, All&gt;ens, Ott

for Sale ·

J4x70 Bayview, Now Since 97, Cl
A, Water Heather, Furnace. Price
Includtl Stove , Rolrlgorator,
Porch •.Shea &amp; Wooden Fence ,
Remolded 3 Bedroom. woo~
$7200 Call (304,.75-3008 Bolore
Flooro. 1-1/2 Bath, Boautllu13pm
Fireplace, 2 Car Ga-e, $73,oo0
(740)388-9t5t
....
14x70 Southern Dream , lroo Dolivery free Setup only $9995 1·

=

11184 Mdbill Homo lor Sail. 3 BR.
1 112 Bath, Call tor appointment.

litul , Private 1·1/2

Nice 3 Bedroom Home, ljardwood
Flooro, 75 Fool Lot. Gallipolis
SchoOl District. WMI Boll On Land
=Cont.:;;;111C1::.::·~(1:.;«1:::,:.:.•;.:411:.;7:..:4::.73:__~

··

'=---------

888-928~3426

MUST SELLI 3 Bedroom, 2 Balh
Home . No Old Con1rac1 To As·
sume . Jus1 A Reliab le Party To
Make Month ly Payment 1· 888·

928-9896

New u tt wkle S4S9. down only
St99 . per mon . call now t ·800·
69t •m
__
~__. - - - - - - New 16ft. wide 1499. pe1 mon ..
on:ty $270 . per mon . ca ll now 11100-119.1-8n7.

ttin Cameron Skyline , 12.SO. 2
bedroom, Qood condition, Racine.
on Willow Lono, $3,000, call 1· Now 200t 'F leetwood , 3 br.. 2
740·420·7823. 740·1149·2t23 tor bat~. set up In The Country Mobile Home Park, ready to move ln.
more InformatiOn abOut lt.
$995 ~own , St99.98 per month.
1982 111h70 Fairmont Townhouse, 740-992·21 67.
2 bedroom, t large bath With heat
pump &amp; olc , $7,500, 740·59t · New double wide 3 br . 2 ba .
$998 .00 down only $295 . per
4043 or 740-992-ot!38.
mon. cau now 1·800·69t·67n.
Country Living- Doublowlde On 2
Wooded Acres. $2500 &amp; Move· New FleetwoOd t8•80. 3 br/2 ~10.
only $199.66 per month . Call ror
ln. (740~3570
dstalls. 740-685-4367.
.

_ _ _ _..,:R:,:::MI Eatate General

lofH-

Iuildlng CompooNnll

FARM for SALE!!

Quality .........
orU!NGIP..r •

We have moved and ,are selling our farm. 3
bedroom home hils hiQh ceilings, oak trim,
and a large kltchen } ,Butldings Include a large
barn and garage. Extellent location I
Ootlon
House, barn, buildings with 86
acres for 129,900.
Opffon 2: Includes everything in option 1 plus
pasture, pond, and a total of 120 acres priced
at $189.900.
Shown by appointment only. Call evenings

Call today
for your quote!

'i

IOCMSU990

....,__

(740) 380-0259.

cy~· (}!

Tandem Traneport Corp. needs

ffitfuctod,

4t

Stanley Home Products -And
Fuller Brush. Av•llable, To Order
Products. Request Catalogs. Call
(304~15-8903

•

House For Set~
.
edroom. 1·
$750 llo!mpaymont W.A.C. E y ,Torm, Cell
David • t -800-333-69 t 0

(740~

2 Bedroom House On Greef
Road , Shown By Appointment

$ FREE .CASH NOW$ from
wealthy families l.llfoadng of dollars, to help minimize their
taxes. Write lmmecllatoly: WIND·
FALLS, 3010 WILSHIRE BLVD.
188, LOS ANGELES. CALIFOR·
NIA90010

310 HolMe tor ....

Bill. 011 -

10 DOWN HOMES! GOY'T &amp;
BANK FORECLOSURES ! LOW
OR NO MONEY DOWNI OK
CREDIT! FOR LISTINGS! CALL

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

310 Homea tor Sale

rlmid · a

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

VIRGINIA 8MITH, IAOKER ............... 4 11 SIOI
4
8ELVILLE.............................:.... 4.. 12011
TRIIH INYDIR .....................- ...............1-e458
446-6806 ~nch~ OAIL
JOHNNIE RUBSELL.......................... .381.o323

OFFICE .

.

958 Clark Chapel Rei.
Bidwell, Ohio 45814

I

*. .

DAVID INYDIR .................................. 441-tM511
OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.vlemlthrNl..u.ta.com
•rmUI: vtafMieetate@zoomnet.net

992-2259 ~·

Bualneaa

Training
Joanna's ComPuter AppliCations
Training. Mlcrosofl Office User
Specialist, Cortlfle&lt;l Instructor. In
The COmfort Of Your Home Or
Busine&amp;s. 1740~ H 555

· Mid-Ohio Valley Truck
Driver Training
COL Certification 5 Week Cour••
Mon &amp; Frl 7 :00·3:3D Weekend
Claaaea Sat &amp; Sun 8 :00-4: 30 12 weeka
Financing end Funding
Av•ll•ble B•••d On Eligibility
..Joi:J placement on Cl••• A tr•lnlng"

Oofllpolle C...... CoiiJto
(Cartora Ctase To Homo)
Cai1Toclayl740--7,
1·8Q0-214-0452,
Reg .90-05-t274B.

(

It,.

Contact Ed Adams 1-800-648-3695
or (740) 373-3966

NEW LISTING • MINERSVILLE ·A

llome l('ld ready to move Into.
to all lOcal ' amenities. A 11/21101y hofne willt
living room, kitchen, 2'·3 bedrooms •. 1 bath
and Iota o1 atorage space. A full '*ement. 2
car garage, n,ce large side sitting porch
compliment thla home. II sits on a nice 1+
acre lot. Thl8 coulel be vour• ~r .
starter

Schools

150

Instruction
BLACKSTO~E
PARALEGAL
STUDIES. Home Study, Ap·
proved 1 Alfqr1dable. comprehen·
slve, legal trafning since 1890.
FREE Catalog: 600·826·9228,
write: ·P.O. Boa 701449, DaHas. TX
75370 NA or http://Www.blacksto·

Slltwdlly, Aprlll, 2001 at 10:081111
)Ae '"'Ill: Balllrd'• " Soll'll- olll\. 50 " 7and

~ 555; In UUie

•

If'"*""

- ......

Oldo

~·Iorge
11ty1e homo IIIII hu
room &amp; dining .,.. tltlt Iorge re~r- ond private lawn. E111·1n kitchen 3 bedroomo,
large . family room, g11age,
concrete drive and mDMI

·---·---·-----·--""'
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•

=••+A•
P"lm." ... '*~
~ .. .,.._...._....
. . ., , . . . . . . . . . . . . l .. a.-. ....... ..,.._ ..... 2.

3 additional bothi, Fireplace In the LR . Cl!armln1 on\fY
W/ltlileue IOidloa to 2nd level. Laundty room on tho mtin
lovol. · Plollbed buomenl, Detached 2 cor prye. ·On 3.3,
londscapod oma m/1. Loll of plutta A troos.
NO. Zit

.........,

. . . . . . ._, . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . _

...

MOilLE

Almoot Ui

I

·_

............ -l&gt;lo! ............ _

before lfl

· ··- ""'._,.. ... _ ...,.........a.m. ..... _.
.

Oavld't Otneral Contractora,
Plumbing, Electric , Painting
DICko, Misc. Work, AN Homo Ropolrs, Lawn Core. Call (740)2SI9373 Or Cell Phona 1-304·833·

•

IUILDINQ
locltlon. Large 2
wtth oil atrHI
jllil1~ng.
ftorol oho!), 110.
mora detalla , _

Dtpandebll ond hon11t. Will do
e•ntrll I'IDUI~ et•1nlng . call

(740)25&amp;-1227

EASTERN SCHOOL DISTRICT·

Thill

execuUve home hae many featuree. 4
btelroome, full flnlehed basement, garage,
W.B.F.P.. ehed, In ground pool, deck, 2.12+
aCf'BI
~rovnd. Quiet counlry aettlng, CIA,
,qui
• khchan, all mod,rn, Hard Wood
floorl;and . ~ I file. Eve,n lite wae~er I
elryer Jtayl Ownar Movlna •

a

PRICID TO 81LL 0 e148,000.

ACIIIACII... 30 1C&lt;10 nVJ Iota Of
WOOIII.

-

huntlne

bedrma,

ac m/1.

Pk. 3 btdrm, 3
1
quartera.
Also 18' x 32' garage plus 30' x 20
building 1/2 110. Of land. good soiOI
loc. Prtcod to soli. VLS
1873 REOUCED PRICE-117
...
~-pltal
ocr• close Io ~ew rwy., ·~
•
ahop ctr. Wtotor, gu, sower.
Adjoining Plnocreot Nuralng Homo.
13M2 120 Bille At. 2111 In the
VIllage of' Thurman. Nlol br..
cottage, bath, k~hln/dlnlng rcom
and utility
room.
lnauwlndowt, atool doora wllh storm
doors. Nics lot wkh oulbultGift11 •
Public wo1•11rtd aoon lo be public
aewage. 145,000

'•

~

Lawn Mower And. Small Engine
Repair. Freo ' Plck·up' And Dtlllv·
ory Wlihln 11' Mlln .2t Ytoro
Exporltnco. Coli Mike At
(740,441-78p4
.

.. ....

2

land.

.Harrlaon 'I'Ownlhlp. 130,000.110

1110
Charry
.•MI.aoo 0na Of the boot
v1owa In Gllllpolle from.tho porch
Of thla 1 112 IIOry homt. Living
rcom, dining or family room, over
2 aoreo.
-

111Cit
LOOKINQ

1'011 A

LCn:1

Hft

1rw a -lola with ~­
ond
.._
-·
Nailor
big prloa.
114.8110
lor them
botttI
lil1d -

ollwr.111171.

II ~ your

·cheryl ·l.emley .

742~3171

IINflr&lt; l 1/\L

LOTI 01' HOUII 1'0111 THI
MONm 1.11t1 - c.pe eoa

1111111111 Pll'llllt-• • • •
............ - ••••••1................ , ...
. . IIU11111••1 tiiiii:H•IIIII. . I.II.

Dan Smith ·AuctlonMr Ohio. 515
.

'

Cltllnd AMity, Inc. Ottlct.............IKI2•225SI

$1 ,000 WEEKLY I Wort&lt; II home
proc111ing automotive pom·
philtll ·No IKparlencll Wltkly
PeYChiC~sl Everything suppilldl

Henry E. Clel1ncl ••• .-....................... 192·~58

Shetrt L HM .•. ~............................... 742•2317
Klthl"n M. Cl1l1nd ..................... 1192..0181

t-8110-&amp;51·3115

..

Cash • Positive ID • Refreshments

BualnHa

Opportunity

ond fDrmal tWq - · ...
liaG deoldng - . . . . deofdngmuo11
on - moNf
· a
1111
lil1d
OWNI!AS
f!IL()CAnNO BAIO 'SI!U.
NOW'I ' .
.

I

yl

210

with till -olllllng ""'"' BR, a b a h , - LR,uplliML
lOVe&lt;, FR3

''(

.

133f171N
CITY Huge Family
homo w/4 BRa, 2 baths, k~, LR,
DR, porches, part.,; basement.
Pt1ced right· 110 Chis outstanding
oflet1 Vscant, raiidy to welcome
you. VLS 446-8806
13387 Large l'&lt;lme In lawn, new
roof t999, 4 BR, 2.5 BA. 2 ~r
garage,
vln1( aiding,
nice
neighborhood. Need! some TLC
but priced ngllt at $11,11110
CI1Y LOT 43' X t 70'
located 39 Vine St.

SR .124. 81LVJR CREEK SUBDMSION

haul your IOQI tO thO ITIIII)UII cell
304-818-19&amp;1.

romodolod

2 bathe,
lmmaculete
· condition 2000 eq. ft• .&amp; to an)oy
flmlly IIIIo to fuleat, Large rma,
tllrough llut· ftreplaco 1ft lR, sky
Ughll, beautiful lcltchan. Sun
porch w/Window walla. Goa &amp;
elec. heal, central air &amp; lovely
carpel Green Schoola. Thil one
worth -ng for, Juat a
phone cell away. IlLS 446-8806
MAKE OFFEFI
14014 KINO 8fZE FAiaY HOME
Grell 2 oty. 4 bodrino.r- 2 1/2
balhl, formal LR &amp; DR, Fam Rm.
.w/brlck fireplace, all large rma., 13'
x 25' mater bedrm. w/bath. 2 car
altechod - · 1.215 Ar: ,.,
$140,0110. Additlonlllot available.
IlLS
4

.. Lo1 N9 • 4.41 acres. Call 1oday and
mal&lt;e your appoin1rnenll'
.
ASKING $18,800.

Georvt~ Port.oble Sowmlll, don't

With thla 2

---••,..•--......,••~&gt;~o~
_ _ .. a.,_(...)..- (...,,. _ _c••J
......
GM.Ciii.., _ _ Pa.t .. lllo[. . . -~..,.l&gt;lo!,...Moel&gt;lo!

.

B&amp;B ConotrucUon- Roo11ng, Siding
And Concre,., Interior &amp; Extertor
Paln~(lll. All Phaaao Of Home Rt·
palro, ~or A Fret Estfmate. Call
1304,878-7738 After e:oo pm

..... m/1. Main- hlo ·
1,2!10 eq. ft. ond UPPIIr 880
ft. thll hu not been complotly
.
L.fl Ul tell ~ the 1011.
LOVELY TWO STORY .HOlliE DECORATED AS

,

homo,
4
equipped kk.
atorago apaco, utra lg.
Muter bedrm. Owner hlo made
many lmprovornonta. New carpal
6 lighting. YOUI' chlldrtr&gt; OMd
oidiB lot for playground. 41· 2 C8l
.garage. located In Addition. IlLS
446-8805
, .
·
~

180 Wented To Do

. PlUITI'Y AS A DOLL HOUSE • Pcatum a SPACIOUS
BBDROOIII SUI')l! W/ SITI1JIIO ROOIII. A BAni. ON
TilE MAIN LEVEL Wife approved kllch!n w/ Iota of
doal...d Dill&lt; coblneta. La- dlnlna room. 5 "'"'" B~

___.....,._..................-..
·--..............----.--..... ...

~~

Get your ~S oqulvallncy dlpiO(Tla
with our easy home; study course,
H!00·588·2t63 lid 310

NEW LII'I'IHOI sill- ,_ &amp;
you IIIII con llkl your ·flnlohlng
Voorl
young and
1 2.&amp;
1/2
1t0fV·
hOme3with
bailment

-~~---·--·,.,.o
.......

- - - - l A D _ _ _ .,..., _ _ _ ..

UYINQ

glllflo &amp;

nelaw.com.

-~

I -•(oooo)•A1nll._ ..... _,_...,,.._ .. _ _ _

13314

'.

..
,'

,,

,..

H355 AUTHENTIC LOQ HOllE
.WITH CHARACTER. If you like
lndMduallty--hore nlsl3,029 aq. ~more Of lool, 3 bodrma., 2 t/2
balhl, Kit., L.Rm, Ofllco rm .. ana
much 11101e. Wllp porch 1ron1 &amp; 2
akl•. 187 -!\all m~. Rolling
Poelure ond 3 Large llarno &amp;
FOod Lot sn... .2 nloo ponds. Lond
Ia moot oil cl•n &amp; hu oome
fencing. Electrtc &amp; lnlollroo water
In Che bem. FH&lt;I lot anes.
Formerly used lor Veil csw
OPttrotion. loCIIOd noor Rio
Grondo. Appointment Only. Call
L. smnn ,740·..8·5808..

�•

•
~

P I Dl• . ._, Ci.--6nd111tl
41 o Hotl•n for Rent

· One

7215

Par-- (31;)4)736-

330 FinnS for Sale
Farm House. Ba.utHullf Remo-

deled. 2983

Square

r.ot 17 N;r-

Pond, ln-glound Pool, Seve&lt;al
S.na. Goroge, Fruh Troes, .Close
1l&gt; · $215.000. (740)4464230
H,

•

350

Lots

a Acreage

13 Aeret With Beautilul Lake
View Sites $50.000. 18 Acrea
With Large L8kt, Mobile Home

Wllh Add On 179,500 . Gallia
County On

Blacktop Road ,

(7~)3118-8678

BRUNEll LAND
no."t-14!12
CO.· Chosloire, 6 Acrn,
Sl 1.500 01 37 Atlas S33.9001
Kerr Road. 8 Ac:res$21 ,0000r5
Aeres Witn Bains $31 .000. Rto

G -. 6 Acre&amp;. $19.000 Or 13
Woodlid Acres At Deadend

$28,900. Eureka. 33 N;res.Qf
Wilclllt 131 ,000. Tycoon Lake
Araa.10Acnts$11 ,9001
11o1go CO.·

T_. Plalns-

SA681 . NI&lt;:O Higlo 5 Acres On

Artist And Earty Child·
hood Professional With 18 Year
Old College Stddent We're
Loolllng For 3 Bedroom House, C/

6508 Or (740)4.t1 -3010 Asll For
Nancy

304-736-7295.
Syracuse- ready May l&amp;t! 2 bec;l·

room house on large corner lot,
LR. kit&lt;:!loo .,.,...., 1!!11. rofriooll·
tor , OR, large laundry, $350 per
monlh, 741H192-2437. ,

Bedro.om $3251 Month, In Vinton,
Ava ilable May lsi . (740)388-

0611

992·5064. Equel Housing Oppor-

Property Marl&lt;up.

Camp

Sites- Available on
Kanawna River. a miles from Point
Pleasant electric only. Call

(304)675-1722 , (304)675-414.
After 5pm.
Loo,klng To ~uy A New Home?~
Don't Have Land? We Oo!!l Hurry

Only 10 LOIS Leh, 304·736-7295.

360 .

Raal Estate
Wanted

Real estate wanted· l'am forced
out of my house for highway Improvement. Looking for old larm
house In Meigs County with

acreage. call 740-197-9303, 740·
992-9132.

2 Bedroom All Elecuic Trailer.

2 bedroom mobile home or 600

sq. h. office space. Alverpark. Ml·

Room&amp;, Fully EquipPed KI!Chon,
Central Healing, Cooling, Waoh·
er/ Dryer Hookup, (304)882-2523

3 bedroom with een1ra1 air, wash·
er &amp; dryer, $300 per month , 74Q·

410 Houaes for Rent
1 ·3 Sedropms Foreclosed
Homes From $1991Mo., •% Down,
30 Years at 8.5% APR. For List•.

ings, II00-319-3323 Ext 1709.

Spring Sale AI

Sewage, Trash, $350/Mo.. 740·
446 0008.
.

446-1409

River Bend Place Now Accepting

On Renled Lot In Gallipolis, (740)

Freezer 1 t 75: All Appliance
Guarrnteed. sttaggs Apptianc:es.
76 Vino S1nM1. (740)446-7398

used

w;ndow

tJnil

Air

Conditioners, 90 Day GuarantM,

(740)'146.8275

Sporti
Goods

520

REIGEiriT'IA.L..-.OWIIIERs
Antiquo Sellors Cablnll With
C - ~eo:fGiau In ExCIIlent Condition. AniiQue Secretary
With .C.urru 6.!1n, AnliQUfl
Round Oak Table With Four

540

Cl'lalrs, Antlque Chest 01 Draw·

ers, 2 Cuslom Built Oak Display
Caou Wilh Gla .. Shelves And
Mirrored Backs , Work Bench,

~ 1 i s = ~~~·9~~

8 350 Mot&lt;Xcycle. Ulility
Wa n (IO Pull Behind lawn
Tracl ) For lnlormotlon Call
(740)44e-72ll
ASTHMA ALLERGY NEEOED,
10.15 PEOPLE Who Desire
ln'NIIediate Raile!. To Try, Evaluale

Miscellaneous
Merchandil!8

A NEW COmpact .State Of The
Art

Ross (304)675-3379
AIIT08 , _ S60IUIO
Police 1_....., &amp; ......._ 1

$1 ,000 BACK 2 Ton Air Condi·
tioner. 2 Ton ·CoH, 1 Line Set, ln-Sialled. $2,295 , $1 ,000 Back ,

(304)675- 1&lt;22
515 Main Slreel Polnl Pleasant

$1295 Net Price. Free Estimates.
Call For Quotes On Other Sizes.

New&amp;UsedFL&lt;niiUro

II You Oon ·l Call Us, We
Botto Looe! Mobilo Homes Our

"~-

16' Rawhide Stock/ Horst trailer

(Bumper Pull) $1800 (304)7735188or (304)576-2147
(7~)2M-

. .../'

Pool~

Cal 800-7SS.:7880.

Gravely walk·behlnd dual wheel
tractor. ~chments go with II; '84
Mercury Grand Marquis; for sate.
S1000 eeo11 011rar1e for a good s10 Chevy truck or good Ranger
Ford rrl.llk; 740-992·5532.

Baby -Pool,

Apartments
for Rent

Lease Plus Security oapo·sn Re·
. qulred , Days : 740•4•8· 3•8 t ;

205

Evenings: 740·387·0502, 740·
446-()101.

'

t and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 7.. 0-

Middleport, OH

T!Oin RiverTow""' now IICCOjlllng
applications lot 1 BA.
HUD subsidized apt lot -'Y
and disabled. EOH. (304)6756879.

992·2218.

2 Bedroom, $3251mo, $150
oeposn, No Pets. (740)446-0050

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; Repairs.

Problema? Need Tuned? Can Tho
Piano Dr. 740-448-4525

VINE STREET· A 1 1/2 story 3 bedroom home with a lull
banment Thltl hOrne a1t1o has a lenced backyard. lt'ajuat
waltlniJ for a family.
NOW JUST ~100

Independent Herballfe Qistributor,
Call FC'f Produc~ Or ,Oppor tunity.

(7401"1-1982
JET
4ERATION MOIORS
Repalrad, New &amp; Rebuilt In Slack.
Call Rqn EIIBns, 1·1100·537·9528.

2 Bedroom RecenUy Remodeled ,
Sandhill Road, Reference &amp; No

Pels, (3041675-3834
2022 Jefferson Blvd ., 2·1/2
. Bedrooms\ 1· t /2 Bath, living·
room, KiteMn, Dining Room, Full

Maytag Cryer $100, Kenmore
Freezer $225. AKC Boston Terri·
or Puppies, RM&lt;IY May lol, "$250.

Baoemenl. $4001mo. (304)2734042 or (304)532·3180

(740)441Hl415

3 Bedooom House, I Bath, HUD

MOBILE HOllE OWNERS

Approved, $325 Per Month, De·

•

more options . Manufacturer

Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·

nacea ~ Hool Pumps . Bonnens
Mobile Homo Supply, 740·448·
84t8·www.orvb.oom'bennett

$425 deposll. 330-328-6863 or
740-992·6244.
LINCOLN STREET· Middleport • A 2 story brick hOrne
with big atone aci:ilnta on the corner. · There aril thrH
bedrooms, dining room, ~n. 1 112 bathe, family room
and a sun room. A lull basenwtt, and a large garage with
allathed carport. Has new carpet In some rooms.

3 bedroom, Middleport, $350 per
month plus depOsit, water, sewer,

trash Included, 740.992-0175.
3 BR, I bath home rents lot $5501

an

mo. Close to town. References
and deposit required . Wiseman

.

.

or

sawmills, eotaars and aklddera.
NORWOOD fNDUSTAIES 252
Sonwil Drive, Bulfolo. NY 14225.
FREE tnlor~n~~,Uon l-100-571·
1363 EXT. ~

I" Mulch, For Solo $10.00 A Pick, Up
' L98d, ,You Loed $10.00 ~I Load,
$15.00. (740~3888
.

now 110,971 , 50x1DOx18 was
127.590 now $19,990, 601200otte
was $58,780 now $ol2.990. 1-tO().
406-5126

550

.Building

Block; brick, 'sewer pipet, wind·

ows, llntalo, elc: 91aude Winters,
Rio Grande, 0" Call 740·245·
5121 .
.

560

2 Good Slaned Squirrel Dogs For
Sale. (304}675-8132

a

Second Ave., GaUipolie, Ohio 45631-0994
740-446-0008 740-441-1111
www.ev81111-moore.1eom
Fornutrfy Blaeiburn Really . "Serftlw Souallem Oldo For 0Hr A Quo11er Century"

.Joe A. Moor-Broker 44:1-1616
Sarah L. Evana-Moore, Broker 441·1616

Patricia Hays- 44j6~3~8~8~4~C~a~r~ag!~~~=:::~

OJ, Store

Stock,

Collection&amp; (937)675-2830 Alter
6_:ODpm....:.
.- - - - - - - Wanted Good Used Mobile
Home, In 'n te 80's. 2 Or 3

B&amp;droom, (740)446-Gt75 Or
(304)615-51165

630

Livestock

27th Annual JaCkson County,
Polled Herefo1&lt;d AsiiOCiallon Sale,

Saturday, April 2151. 7:30pm

Jacklon County, Livestock Mar·

kel Ripley, West VIrginia, 12

e

Cows Wilh CaiYes. 11 Heifers.
Bulls, 25 Steers. Contact Norma

Puo11ey. (304)895-3514

Calvtl. Sale AI Group Only
$1,000 Each . Call Allor 7pm.
(740)2M-1193
Fair Pigs For Sale. Contaet
Harold
Taylor, . Evenlnga.

(740)245-9047
HORIESHOEING, ce'lliiled
Earrlor, Fred Queen. (74012511330

(740)448-0115 or· (740)448-

l

Hay &amp; Grain

7843 Aller 6:00pm.

I

Someone with machinery lo har-

vest hay on sharea.~Sqlilra Bales

oi.Hty For Sale

(740)379-2839

$IOOOBO, cal7o10-992-04117.

.

.

.'

~I

"

cernlllr, and a big fenced In lide yard.

'' .

l1aiZ ·I .. -111/1-lllo

a..-.

t1111Q. - l o ! In Qalllpollo
Jl4,100
121111·15.3 -111/!ln Clwolllo
t.alcoAIN'
1

FAHf.,,

'

.

Satisfaction Guaranteed. Greg

la~e

Mlhoan (304)675-4628

Kicker and canopy, $8,500, 740·
949-2248.

Livingston's Basement Water
Prootlng, ·ail basement repairs
done , free 11timatas. lifetime
guarantee. 14yrs on Job e11.perl·

c,uf·~

Ford

A!lceasories
Budget Priced Trenamlaalone
All Types, Access To Over
10,000 Transmiss ion&amp;, Transfer
Casas, 740·245-567~ Cell: 339-

Aarostar. Good

Superior Home Maintenance. We
Do Atl Repair&amp; On t-lomes Carpentry, Plumbing, Decks, Ete.,
Eve's Spouts, Storage Buildings,

All Sizes. (740)'141..0113

3765.

COndhlon, $1,500, (740)441-9234
1987 Ford F-250, 4X4, Rebuilt 6.9
liter, Been Painted, Nice Wheels
And Tires. Nlea Truek $7800

790

(740)388-9875

tires, 3t• Side·

1994 Dodge Grand Caravan ES,
White, Loaded , quad Sealing, 7
Passenger, Lass TJ1an 75 .000
Miles On Engine And Transmis·
sian, Towing Package , Sharp , ,

90 Toyota Cai_Tlry Stationwagon,

V6, A~. 1· Owner. Excellonl Condl·
lion, Call (304)675-2090 beiWeen

Campers&amp;
MotOI' Homes

840

1988 Champion
1 34' motor
home. class A, sleeps 6 , self·
contained, very good condition ,
$13 ,500.
Call
Huntington

(304)736-4800

$6400 080 (740)441-ol35

5·9pm

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs . Mastet" LIcensed electrician. Ridenour

Electrical , WV000306. 304-67517116.

BULL·E T

710. Autos for Sllle

Goo

Con~lllon· Size 13.8x24 , Call
(304)773-5405

13th Annual

SO DOWN CARSI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S, .
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LOW AS $291
MD'S 019.9o/,; FQR LISTINGS,
CALL t.fl00-451-0050 ext . C·
9812

FORGEY CLU.B
LAMB SALE
Fri(jay, April 20
7:30pm

$0 DOWN C4ASI POLICE IM ·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LDW AS $291
MD'S 018.9%. FOR LISTINGS.
CALL 1·800·941·8777 exl, C·
9814 .

Gallia

65 and Over
Get your Braathing M81:lic2ttio11;
Albuterol, Atrovent, paid by
Insurance. Free Dalivery

BOWMAN'S

'lll#tte4 76-.Atla4 (J~Qt;

446-7283
1-800-458·6844

County

Selling approx.

60 top

.\Er

446·6752
1·800·942-9577

violence call

Herman Leach .

. Point Pleasant Girls Softball

KEEP GALLIA BEAUTIFUL

T·Ball age 4·6
Slow pitch Softball7·18
April 16th 6·8 pm
IPF•HS Cafeteria "Final S_ignupsl

by participating in the

Gallia County Trustee's and
•Clerk Association will meet
Monday, April 16 at the
Senior Citizen Building
7:00

P·lll· Guest speakers

will be !)avid Neal and

Monday, April ~ 6, 2001

Sakrete Company
be at

lumber Company

Johnaon'a
VIne Strttt

INC.

Clllllpelle, OH 41111

Cleanup 'on Saturday, April
21,

9 am

• 2 pm. Meet at

a

road assignment, gloves,

etc.

Refreshments

provided. Individuals,
need your help. It's your

. '.

North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6 , fl:!lly furnished, 2nd
iow, ocean view, washer/dryar.
Openings from May thru Sept.
· 446·2206 Mon thru

E~enlngs

&amp; weEikerldl

2 Avg. size rooms cleaned
$29.99 sa. rm .
Captain Staamar Carpet Cleaner

446-6784or
Toll Free 1-888,338-7847
SALE:
Antique
Sellers
I Cs1bln•BI wHh Caramel colored
in axcallant condHion,
An,tiqule Secratary wHh curved
Antique round oak tabla
four chairs, Antique chest of
drawers, 2 custom built Oak
display cases with glass shelves
and mirrorad backs: Work Bench.
Several misc. display racks, 27 ,fl.
round swimming pool,
Honda CB 350 motorcycle,
Wagon (ID pull behind
tractor) For Information call
740·448·7289.

I

home! Let's work together

to Keep Gallla Beautiful.
For.more Information,
· contact
Pastor John Jackaan,
chairman, at 4411·4888.

only

FLOWEA SPECIAL
All Flatl and Hanging
Buketl All Summer

$5.99111

Jackson Pike to receive

organizations, scouts· we

OH

Sakrete $2.99

FOR MOR! INFORMATION ON LISTINGS·
GlUE US ACALLI HOP! TO S!! YOU THERE.

annual countywide Spring

the McKenzie Ag. Center on

Free ~nute and coffee
Regleter to .win a
10 cu. ft. Dump Cart

RE~TY,

or

GALLIPOLIS CHURCH OF
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION
2173 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740·446·7119
Easter Services April15, 2001
Sunrise: 6:30 a.m .
Morning Worship: 10:00 am
Dedication of
.JIIew Church: 3:00 pm
Celebration Banquet: 5:30 pm
Coma and join us ·In worshipping·
Christ tha Lord.

7am-4pm

\

CHANNEL
MARKER .
CONDOS

·Serenity House

~~~~c~lu~b~l~a~m~b~s~~ ·~·•uv••~ victims of dorne!ltlcl

Eric Blackburn Owner

.

BIG BEND

I

HOIMEC~AAlEI

.740-446·2422

'
12:00-I:OOpm
74YALEROAD
DJI"'CUona: SR 160toSR554_tum
left 1It It! ••• to rtoht past Rids
Goraoe houH on i19ht. LimN($
#2082$87,900.00

t180,000.00

.Auto Insurance
Monlhly Payments
Problems with your rl-r~~;J
record: DUI's speeding
. tickets, ate.
· Same Day SA-22's issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown lnsuranca Agency

Fairgrounds
1979 Z-28, Camaro, Needs Worir,
New Tires &amp; Rims, $800
(304)675-8888

1027 CLARK CHAPEL RD.
DJ!'IdJOni; SR 160 post Junction of.
SR 554 IMn 111 toad to rtoht Clark
Chapel, hou11 on left llkle of rood.
umMG#2107$89,900.oo
'
.

'f

once. (304)995-3887.

8. KUhl•n Mbw,
113002, May 15, 2001,
10:00 o'clock a.m.
Thomaa B. Moulton
.
PI'OHte Judge
Aprll 15, 2001

1:30 -l:30 pm

Broker •••••·......-..........~•.•112-see2
.................................. 141-1131

760 · Auto P•~• &amp;

730 , Vane &amp; 4-WDs

11 oo.

'II')

Tractor TU·e &amp; Rim,

...-.ooo.oo

HVtBLL IT. • A 3 to 4 bail room home with newer windoM.
Hal an ~quipped kitchen and laundry room. Hali a heat
pump with central air, fronl porch and alta on a
.
'

bass boat w"O tip. Mariner
Motor Guide trolling motor, also
new 8 hp., Mercury Four Stroke

(Oood, $1500.(740)742-4008

1987

lng And Planting. Free Estimates.

1

Food 2000 Traclor Wllh Finishing
$4800 (740)446-9815

510 lllon.d Avenue
\

91 Fisher 16 Pro Avenger Wal-

.• n

...... - e d
town.
• BR 2 BA C\1010111 1 1/.2 t10ry
toome 111 6+ acreo blltoo'ntto you,
your family and anlmalo. Sel up •
. • I10rH farm OOf11ll*e - bOird
fencing •• prive1a riding 11811 and
hoo'N bam.
Spaclouo ...In

fin---

E&amp;S Lawn Service: Design, lm·
plementatlon, And ServiCe. Aval~

able For Spring Cloan Up. Ferlllz-

90 Chevy PfU, Runs &amp; Drives

winder llros, 12.000, 740-247-

POmeroy,

bMiment,
3 car gerege .00 wrap
· par1lolly
around orcll. $218,000

1384.

'

111,1110.00

ftl--

mates, 740-698-6783 , 740-59.1·

. Public Notice

Sunday, April 22nd·

tiW11 Betu!!fUI -my -

1997 Se&amp;Doo GTI, 3 Sell Jel Sid

asking $3800. 740-247-7100 ..

86 lull size Blazer, gray, new 350
4-boll main motor, AJC Delco ~

O'Dell

1 qulel

Your complete hOme r-emodeling ,
repair &amp; maintenance contractor.
PainUnq . vinyl sidi"g· decks,
baths, k1tchens. electrical. plumbIng., many other services to suit
your needs. No job lo big or omall, ·
30 years experience, Free estl·

Ready lor Sumnllf (304)882·3780

89 Chevrolet truck~ short wheel
baoe, 3' body lift. 33' llras. V-6
4.3 motor, 4 ap. trans., runs good,

tomatlc, ram air. V-6, red, ,power
sunroot, completely loaded,
16,500 miles, asking 117,500 negotlable, 740-992...ao17. ~

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence - Palnling, vinyl siding ,
carpentry, doors, windows. balhs,
mobile home repair and more. For
free eatimate call Chat, 740·992·

tomatic , 93 Grille, Custom Paint,
New Transmission, 54 .000 Invested, Call Details, $2600 oso

Forul Green, $5500 OBO
(740)258-&amp;467

2000 Ponllac Grand Am GT, au-

446-0870, 1-800-287-0576. Ragoro Walerpoofrog.

88 S·IO, Exira cab, 4x4, V-6. Au-

(740)448-8627

___:_

Unconditional lifetime guaraniM.
local raf1rences •urnistled. El·
1975. ca1 24 Hrt. 11~1

(304)675-8844 01 (304)675-3451
and Trailer. EXcellent Condition,

Spoiler. For Llghls, Vent VIsors.

1997 Loade,d Mercury Grand
, locally Owned Bv Eldeny
Clean 63,200 Miles.

BASEMENT
• WATEAPI!OOFING

HOMIGRDWN ASPARAGUS
Cllarles McKun F•m. Cenllnary Rood, Gallpolla.· (140)-m944.11

IUZZMD DIN ROAD. • A place In the countryll Approx
10 1CM1 ol bMU!Ifulland and a two-IIIOry frame home with 9
rooma. Hu 8 bedroomt, 2 1/2 batha, and 2 garagn. One
fiii1ICI8 11 a S car and lite other Ia a 2 car. Aleb hu a· bla
titm lind • pond.

1995 18ft Maraluda Ski Boat . In
great condition with a t20 HOJH
Marc Cruise Engine, Skies, Ute
Jackets, and other extra's call

(304)615-2714 (304)875-7018

1897 Dodge Neon , 41,000m, Air,

Improvement•

Dodson &amp;ilders

$1000 (740)387-7235

S.le

. Home

810

8323.

17' Mark Twain With Walk
Through Windshield . 115 HP.
Mercury Motor, Runs Good .

partial trade or best olfer.

1998 Dodge Intrepid ES, CandyiPflll Red, Loaded , Leather,
Alloy Wheels, Highway Miles,
$8200 080, (740)441-G135

•

750 B011t1 &amp; Motors
. 101' Sale

windowo. 4 Cylinder. 5 Speed, Air,
·Till. Cruise, CD, K&amp;N $12.800,

Prlal $13,500. (740)-m-1759

'

l&lt;awasaki KOX 80, 2 Strdc.e, Runs
Good $500. (7~14'1HI24

2000 510 Extreme, 4700 Miles.
garage kept, Slack wi1h tinted

199'5 Lincoln Town Car, 66,0QO
Miles. Kelly Blue, S Book $14,370,

· will

T11la llitck ranch lo
· mlnut• fnlm lhOpplng, ........
gym and Wilking j)llh. NEW
, carpot, pelilt, roof, &amp; ·- r
newly rfi11Qdtled kltcllon
full bltlmont and

Trucka for

..

Toy Poodles: 5 Fematea, 7
wtekl, 2 Year9, 3 years; 3 Males,
5 Weeka, 4.5 months, 2.5 years,

HAMILTON ITIIUT · ,A 1'1•' a!ofY hort11 with 3 badrooma, a
dining room, living room, 2 eno!OHd porchea that t;Ould be
UHd tor anything, and 2 half balhl. Hu Ill! own drilled Mil,

-

(740)446 6583

1994 Dodge Dakota. V-6 Magnum, 2 wheel drNe, aut~~ir, red,
· nit:e-lrud&lt;, $3,250. 740-w&lt;-G002.

OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND

LEADING CREEK AD • Hara'a-a 48.6 we parcel of land
with many ·bulldlng lltea on both aldea of the toad, both
aldee of the ralltoad, and borders ·the
Beautnul
laying hOmt lllel. Thtrt II ~tO woodt lor

AT-V- 95 Yamaha 350 Big Bear,

VANCE'S AUTO SALES
t994"Chevy LJJmina, a1110, air.
wloie, clean, &amp;hall&gt; car, $3.495.

720

Prlal $10,000 (740)379-2768

19991iarley Wide Glide, 88CID,

.

Trim, Removal BuckBI Sarvlc1al

'

1999 Harley Davison 1200 Cus·
tom. 1700 Miles, lOIS ol Chrome.

Laser Red Pearl, 2900 Milft, Ex·
lras $17,500. (740)'141H1124

99 Grand Am GT, white. lady dri·
van , one owner, 18.000 miles.
loaded, exceUent condition. Sell
br payoff. Call 740--992·2358 after
4:00pm weekdays, anytime weekends. Serious ini:J,Jiries only.

1994 Geo Mauo. 2 Door, 58,800
Miles. Excellent Condlllon, $2200
(304)675-6748 OT(304)882-2nl

SERVICES

Norwolgn Elkloound Puppies, Bo!n
February 14, $75.00 Eaoh . 4
Miles Sou11i of Rio Goande oil 325
on Wo" Run, lsi houoe on rlglot.

very good condlllon, $8500. Call·
Hunllngloq (304)736-4800

t~~

$14.500 Frm, (740)4464)213

(740)'14Hl337

~
UftiiEUI!VABLE VIEW· ·sitting atop Riverview Drive Ia this"
pne 81ory•home that has a sunken living room with a big
beautiful while 11ona fireplace and glass all the· way to lite
top of the cathedral ceiling: Has 5 badrdoma, 3 baths, larnl~
room. dining area, and a beautiful kitchen . There Is Iota of ·
IIIOraga, a 2 car ~raga, ancl"aoacurlty ayatem.
·
NOW IIEDUCED,·A IIUB'r BEE AT 1111,100

Miles, O..r $5.000 Worlh Of Engine Work And Accessories,
E•cellent, Candy Apple Red.

cas-

OBO 17~)258--11877

E&gt;!oando Room. Aif Conditloning.
Awning (740)'141-llf&gt;31

t992 Harl ey Low Rider. 18.700

99 Cavalier. 4 Door. 4 Cylinder.
Auto, Air CQodiUon, AMIFM ,
sene. 13.000 Milas $7500 .

1993 SP..irlt Auto. Air. Red.
112,000 llites, Very Clean, 12100

94 Outel'lman Camper, 31H With

740- Motorcyclet

98 Honda Civic, Hatcl'lbadl;, Air,
Aula, $8900 (740)446 9355

1991 Dodge Steallh AT, Twin Turbo, Komalou Red. 300HP: 5
Speed, AWD., AWS , Loaded .
Super Sharp, $7800 OBO,
(740)'141-0135

lonl:

1999 Jeep Cherokee Sport. 2

Loaded $8 ,750 OBO (740)2561252 (7~1258-'1618

1119 Dodge Aries, Very Clean,
Very Good Condi1ion . Depend·
able, Must See To Appreciate !I
E¥eninga. (740)245-9239

19'0 Cl•st A Gulf Stream. 37

Fool, 480 FO&lt;dl OahKooh Chao·
aiel Fully Equij)ped. Including A
1998 5atlrn Pul c.. - EloctlMe! Loo MiNge. (740)245- .
5752

Door, 4x4, 38,500 · S14,500.
(740}379-2974 allot 5om

97
Cl'lrysler Sebring JXI
Convertible. 74 ,500
Miles ,

1988 GMC S1.E. Ful Size LA!adad.
52795: 1993 cavalier. S2l95, 94
Grond Am, V-6, Auto. $3695 ;
1998 Lumina, $4995, CDDK MDTORS. (740)m-OI03

new

-bed,-·

Atlail $8360 , Sell For $6800 .
(740)245--6648

Covolier -Z~4 . $1200 ·oso
(740)38&amp;-0113

lr~~~~~-_:_

1995 Chevy HI T041 Van, rod &amp;
gqy outside, gray liathef ins:tde.
color TV. CD. cauene. · tlif,
lots olmod
Iiies. 59,000 mile&amp;. Olleoltenl
coo- · $11 ,300,740-992-2478.

16 Mustang. 82K. Pacifk: Green.
Spoiler, One Owner, Mellculouoly
Maintained , Exce11ent COnditktn,

tor, 4 sp . trans ., runs good ,

And 25Q Square Bales. Call

740-992-3875.

91 Oldsmobile Ciena , 97,000
Miles. Good ConditiOn, 4 Door.
13500 OBO (7~1"1-GI72

1988 Mercury Grand Marquis,

sounds good.

1995 Chevy Gledlato&lt;,
good
condlllon. loaded. $7500 firm.

"-ir/ Till/ Cruise, 100.000 Miles'

_,..,., $880, 741H192·1493.

. MotOI'Homes

Votv

$2200.

$1800080 (740)256-1233

;r&amp;

lais Croll Breed COws, 21 With

RAM

·-c.mpll'la

790

93 Dodge Sloarlow, V-11. 5 Speed.

rtd wlbleck vinyl lop, $15,000.

740-949-2248.

4-H Me! FFA Cltm Pigs, BU!Cher·
ing Hogs F:~~le.
~~re .. ·189C Geo Tracklr, "{ery Good
And Round
(740
condlllon. 87,000 miles. Asking
$4500. Negoliable. CIH eher Spm
50 Voting Beef Cowl For Sail; 30
(740)m-8314 .
Angu1/ Angus Cross; 30 Char·

Weals Old, Very Friendly
(740)387-0859 Or (740)3390859
Better than Bunnies for Easter.
Miniature Poodles. shots current

....... 350 .....,•••

Mafty New Parts. S 1600. 1987

1950' s &amp; IHO'a· cs: 33 RPM
Recorda.

(740)2~77

1986 Subaru GL 4WO Wagon

Hay For Sale, 45 Round Bales.

ANNB STREET· A one atory hOme with vinyl aiding, nBMr
wlndowe and • part balemenl. A really cute hOme with
3 be4'ooma, 1 balh, lltltng on IJIPIOX• 314 aort. Hu ,_..
drywtlll evarywl)ere lnalde. 131'Nl Starter Horne or rental

_.Winlanloe+eiiR ·
llomt In CroWn City? Thlo
rar)Ch orr.,. · on over alzed
ftnced lot Wlll1 a two car
-andlll/2
NIW

, _ good

AKC Chocolalo Lab Puppies, 8

Ford 2$00 Dlooel Troclor, 3000
Beams, Pipe Rebar For COncrete,
Angle, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel · 0101e1, 4800 D!esal, t 952 t8 N,
(740)285 8522 .
Grating For Drains. Driveways &amp;

e~.-~· ~

"1111· nona good.

640

www.arcadJanmgmt.aom

(7~0)448-7300

good

•n.

._ ~
~
Massey .Ferguson Sayler. No3,
$1200; Allis Chambtr Tractor

7 Monlh Old Blonde Mole Coclcer
Spaniol Wllh Papers $75.00 •
(740)245-5247 E118ningl

.t997 Terramlte T5C, low hours,

Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Metals

2 dr., auto.

(937)584-2398. Leroy Larrick &amp;
Fan;ty (937)780-1802
.

Telephone.

NIW AND UIID STEEL Sleel

Chevy~ .

Fayelle"
Co.
Fairgrounds,
Washington Co:urlhousa, Selling
200 Head 0 .1 Barrows &amp; Gilts.
Conalgners
Roger Bentley

Pets fOI' S.le

&amp; LIVfO,TLlt 1\

1-SOG-345-11272 Ext 18 .'
ARCADIAN
VACATION
RENTALS

••

(740~121-100-5114-1111

The 28th Annual BenUey Pig
Sale; Friday, April 201h 7:30pm.

Tennis COurts , Color Television,

(304)675-3290 lale 8VIntnll_ ... _

Cannichaert Far.n &amp; Lawn.

DODGE

82

t t72 Chevolle. compleiOiy re·
&amp;lored 10 lhOw car coftdlllor'll ,

57.000 -

SSOO; Jack donkey, $400; 2 112
year ol~ Buckskin gelding,
11.000; 740-ll!lll-2785.

2nd l!ow. 1·4 Bedrooms CoQdo&amp; I~~-=--""'=~-:---­
and Collages. POOls, Whirlpools, 610 Farm Equipmant

3 BR, 1 Bath. All appliances In·
eluded. In nice neighborhood .

e.......-.

.

.__ T........ Hey
2
Avcl-ra, 2 Aing&amp;, Oon't Be
LATE! 11om Satunlly. Aprl 2111.

ShetJand stud pony, registered,

Suppllel

Vacation Rantals Ocean Front or

$74,000.00

-

s

MYRTLE BEACH, SC

Inc. (740)4-16-3644

...... ~,.,

o..r 40 farm Troctofl. o..r ~

"2001" FAIII PIGS fOil SALE.
STEEL BUILDINGS. Now, Mual IDIIN IN GALLIA COUNTY.
Sell. 30 ,~, 12 was 1o,200 now (7~)441-- OR (740)'14158.1190. 40x60xl2 wao $11.400" Ul2

a .

3 bedroom , 1 bath, carport &amp;
shared pond, S·C25 a month &amp;

Eslat~.

!.unt"

(740)448-3398
Huge lnvenlory, DIScounl Prices, 580
Fruits
On Vjnyl Skltllng, Doors. Wille!- , ., •.,.,...••• • .-' • ,._ -.. •'
ows, .AnchOrs, Waler Healers,
vegelablel

posit Required, (304)875-8806 or
(304)675-7016 as~ lor Oezra

Real

5awmlll $3,&amp;95. Ntw ~
bermclite 2000, larger capacities.

luxe roorns/1d1C11enettes &amp;. ba!CO-nles ovorlooking 1ho Gull of Mui-

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!

Pallo. Slarl $385/Mo. No PolS ,
.440

~

Manulacturer offers a two week
supply ot coloitomy or urostomy
brand name products with one
Si_mple phone cal. No obligallons.

Floors. CA. I 1/2 Balh. Fully carpeted, Adull

801J.812·5967 www-Of\'b..~
nell

EZPETRX.CDM. Sawe up to 50% lt~...:;._;_S;..:.;.:.__F_o_r--S-al-e
on ALL pet medlcetlona ond sup- op
oil
plies, InclUding Hoartgard, tnter- (740).t4I-G6I 9
coplor, Frontline, morelll FREE Walarllne Special; 3/4 200 PSI
SHIPPING. Order online www.Ez· $21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
petRoo.com 1-800-&amp;U-1427
$37.00 Per tOO: 1111 8ra11 Com- .
proulon ~ In S10d&lt;
For sale· aluminum headache RON EVAN) ENTERPRISES
rack, 3 door cabinet 18' deep, Jackson, Ohio, 1,S00.$37-9528
$1400, 304-773-5540.

Tara Townhouse Apartments ,
Very Spacious , 2 Bedrooms, 2

Required. (740)446-1104

Benolilllllelllng ., Cooling. 1--

1-1100-~48-1832

Disabled , EOH , (304)882· .
3121 Or (304)882-3274

Small 2 Bedroom Trailet In Trailer
Park. Reference . &amp; Dep~ait

Syst•ms Frtt B Year Warranty

co. ISland Inn Beach Reaort,
HIOOo451-o500Ed.Cf9817
Treasure Island, F~A. 800-241Comp~lero: WE FINANCE -DElL ·9980 www.lolandinnrllort.com.
COMPUTERS I Even · wi!h less Near St f'et811burg.
than perlect crediU 1-100-477- Tanning J Bed,
Home · Unit,
:.:_~Code AC16 www ..omc&amp;Olu- Rtpollfi!, Talce O..r Paymenta.

an~

(740)256-6574 .

....~ llilllftl· a.tatilltl• Page D7

{

710 AuiD8 tor s.Je

Auto. for S.le

710

TIPP.IIn HI Efficiency 80% Qu i WD45.13200. (304)695-3553
Fur- Oil Futr\ICM, 12 5eer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning 620 W• ltBd to Buy

SUN'SAND'SU-;FWhllt sandy
beaches, fabuloua aunMIII Do·

Toyotas, Chevy's, Jeepsl
Pieaose Cal for Listings,

Speciality 1-740-446-6308 1-800.
291-()098
.

1651

Air

ObligaUon. Free 3 Day Trial. Mel

No Credh OK! HUO, VA,
FH"' can t&gt;&lt; •stings
HI00-501-1777 Ext9818

For Sale: Gun Cabinet

Horne Or Business

l'l.&lt;illcalion svs-. No Co6t Or

SO DOWN HOMES

ApplicatiOns lor 1 Bedroom Hud
Subsided Apanmefll for· Elderly

New Mobile Home For Rent, NICe
Clean. 3 Bedrooms. In Country
With Nice lawn And Outbuilding.

610 fMn fqlll!lment

NEwaAAND NAME COMPUT·
ERS- Al-t ... ryoue-with tO OOWnl Looo,montltly Pill'·
l-too417·34Me&amp;l.330.
Niol
UMd ~ F·-.:.... ,.._
~·-· Anytime, (740)441-1004
Or

Wesl 2 Bedroom Townhou"
Apartments, tnetudes Water

For Rent Or Land Contract, 2·
Bedroom, Natural Gas Heat. AJC.

PuiiMoY • •ddl111 art • O""ipopls, Ohio· Point Pleaunt, WV
540 lllsc I "1 7110US

Sl&lt;a9UI Al&gt;olllnc-

Wasloef $95; O&lt;yer $95; gao
Range S9S; Rtfrigeralor S150; ,
wasllarl Dryer Set $275; Cllast

Remington 870 20 Gauge, 16
Gauge. 12 Gauge . 12 Gauge
Appllanett-!ReeondilioAed - Mag , Sa¥a~ge- 223--witb acope ,
(740~522
Wa5hers, Dryers, Ranges, Refrigrators, Up To 90 Days Guar·
Antiques
anleed! We Salt New Moytag Ap- 530
pliances. French City Mayrag.
120 'Pocket Watcl'\es In Good
7-·7795.
Coftditlon For Sate, Phone
(740)-m-1615, •22 2nd AYIHI!J8,
For Sale : .Recondi1ionad wash·
ers, dryers and refrigerators. GaJ¢1is.
Tnompsons Appliance. 3407
Bu~ or sen. Riverine Antiques,
- A....... (304)675-7318.
1124 Easl Main 111 SA 124 E. POGODD USED APPLIANCES meroy, 740-992·2526 01 740-9921539. Russ Moofe. owner.
Washers , dryers, refrigerators.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances. 76

vases. (7~1"8-4782

Sunday, April 15, 2001

11,

Goods

Now Taking 4ppllcatlons- 35

992-2167.

-

5

Houeehold

New And ·used Furniturf Store
Below Holiday Inn . Kanauga. We
Sell Grave Monuments And

Two Bedroom Apartments Large

3 bedroom mobile home in Mld-

. ~:-:~-:-:---:--:-:---

New 2 Piece LMngroom Suites,
$399. Buy, Sol,Trade.

erances, 740-992-0185.

dlepOrl. no pets, 740-992·5858.

r.1ERCHANDISE

51 0

••

(740)886-7531 (740:::;:"7

Main Slr80t Furnilure

New Haven , one b•droom fur·
nished apartment. haa washer
and dryer, no 'pets. depoll1 &amp; rel-

nersville, $300/mo. each, reduced
renr tor hand~ person who can
mow the grass in the park, 61•·
,87&amp;1661 .

Required. (740)U6-4425 Or
(740)'1 46 .,.,.
•

Accepted, (740)446-744• or I·
an-830-9162

IUnlties• .

RENTALS
•

bedroom

$300 monlh. No PelS (740)367-

ma . PJus Utilities. Security And.

Key Oepooil. No Pm. Rolooeuceo

Mollohan Carpel, 202 Clark
Chapel Ad, Porter, OH. FIBO Esti·
males. Easy Finarldng or 90 days
· same as cash. Visa, Mastercard'

4638

Goacious living. 1 and 2

District. lde:•l For Professional
Couplo, AM - r n Amonilioo. 3
Bldroooo~~; ~Living: 1-112
B&amp;lha. Anr Oecl&lt;. HVAC. $6001

Vine Slreot, Call 740·«6-7398,
1-1188-1!11Hl128. .

Acoeptlng Applicallona For I BA,
HUO, Subsidized Apartments For
El~erly And Handicapped, Equal
Housing Opportunity. V40)448-

2 Bedroom $3001 Month : 3

a

Jeanelle Moor&amp;•• 256-1745
Pabicia Ross.
740 41111011
-

Gallia Manor Apartments, Now

Wittl fll:je Barn $23,IXXI or 31
$37.900. Carr Road, 6 ACf·

Many More, Call Now For Maps!
Owner Financing Willi Sli{l!l

c.Woad, Blaker • 446-4523

(7~)'146--1519

Mobile Homes
for Rent

CLASSIFIEDSi

Ken Morpl,lllaker • 446-0971

Furni Shlld 2 ·I 3 Room Apart·
menos. Clean. No ...... No Smok·
ing, Reftrences &amp; Deposit Rt·
quired . Ulitlllet Furnlsl'led.

.

CIF'NHOUSE
WITH THE

ad

2nd Floof Aportmenl In HisloriC

llan,.l. Dozer.

STRfEI',

Allen

992-5231.

Vlf!CBtion Property, MyrtHt Beach
Condo, 3 Bedroom , 3 Bath,
Sleeps 8, GOOd Weeki Available.

Equl-nt

510

II

......._,600 Sq. re., A

Backhoe, lobcar. farm Tr11ctor
-~(7401"1~19
'

B'fHJDI
IBUln',
INC
32 LOCUST
GAWPOUS, 01110 4S631

For rent· one bedroom furnished
apartment in Middloporl, can 740-

DA. llrge laundry room, $350 per
montto, 740-992·.2437.
·

torRent

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

cies I'IJW',

Syracuse· re8dy May 1sU 2 bed·
room house on large corner. LR.
kitchen w/slove and retrtgerator,

410 . for I

Equlp111e11t

Relll Eat8te GIMI'II

Chrii! IY'I Family Living, 33140
·Ohio, 740Lina Ad., 742-7403. Apartment home and
trailer renlal&amp;. com-dal alore·
fronts available for lease. Vacan-

apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port. From $278-$3d. Call 7~-

$13,500. Rutland, 9 Acres $8,500!

WANTED: Tobacco Lease 2001
Crop, Pay $0 .55 Up Front.

shop &amp; movlts. _Call 140· 4462568. Equal Housing~

Pilor Program. Aenters Needed.

Shade Riwr $12,000, 7 Acres
os $12,0000r 16 Acres $23,000.
Danvile. Nice Wood 5 Acres

470 Wanted to A«tt

BEAUTIFUL APoliiTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES olT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 52 Weslwood
Drive ~om $297 IO $383. Walk 10

998&lt;

wes

TraiiOr lol fof renl in MiddlepOrt,
s125 ononUo. 740-992-3194.

UIIIIUII Plld, $210 Mon11o Plu&amp;
$100 Dtpooit(740)446-1340

A In Poonl Plea .. nl, {404)875-

w-.$125/tiiO.

(740~175

3 Room Apartrnlnt. FurnisheCI.

Gr~phlc

420

t:ra- 14'&amp;, ,.,,

"""'-· (7401"1-1519

410

HOlM lo1 . Wltl T•ke

s 100/Mp., · N•ed AeferePCet,

Plua Otpotil I A t -- HUD

Help, TI'Hty're S.lling The Hoose
We Have Rented. For 12 Years.

(304)675-7783

Mobile

I Ba.drodoOOI&gt;Omm ....,.,._, - . . . .
lOr, Range. A/C Included. Uet

Sir.... pl'oOnl (740)-m-3945

-

480 Spllol tor Rent

. lor Rent

Four Room House. 52 Olive

Prlva• " - " lind' Ntw Dou·

Sundey, Aprl15, 2001

Pomeloy •lllddl1port • OaWpal1, Ohio • Point P1111 Ill, WV

Black and Tan Mala
'
German Shepherd frC?m
Morton Rd. State Rt.
588 area. Reward $100.
Call 448·0415 or
448·1852

Baglnner Clogging Clua
1pon10red by Big Band Cloggert

April 17th epm f'omaroy
Munlolpll Building (f'ollot Station)
For mort~ Information oontaot
VM1n May 181·7183

. Eagle Ridge Farm•
Club Lambe for aale
Tom and Otbblt Orakt

· 74o-~e-aoo7

I.

�•

•
~

P I Dl• . ._, Ci.--6nd111tl
41 o Hotl•n for Rent

· One

7215

Par-- (31;)4)736-

330 FinnS for Sale
Farm House. Ba.utHullf Remo-

deled. 2983

Square

r.ot 17 N;r-

Pond, ln-glound Pool, Seve&lt;al
S.na. Goroge, Fruh Troes, .Close
1l&gt; · $215.000. (740)4464230
H,

•

350

Lots

a Acreage

13 Aeret With Beautilul Lake
View Sites $50.000. 18 Acrea
With Large L8kt, Mobile Home

Wllh Add On 179,500 . Gallia
County On

Blacktop Road ,

(7~)3118-8678

BRUNEll LAND
no."t-14!12
CO.· Chosloire, 6 Acrn,
Sl 1.500 01 37 Atlas S33.9001
Kerr Road. 8 Ac:res$21 ,0000r5
Aeres Witn Bains $31 .000. Rto

G -. 6 Acre&amp;. $19.000 Or 13
Woodlid Acres At Deadend

$28,900. Eureka. 33 N;res.Qf
Wilclllt 131 ,000. Tycoon Lake
Araa.10Acnts$11 ,9001
11o1go CO.·

T_. Plalns-

SA681 . NI&lt;:O Higlo 5 Acres On

Artist And Earty Child·
hood Professional With 18 Year
Old College Stddent We're
Loolllng For 3 Bedroom House, C/

6508 Or (740)4.t1 -3010 Asll For
Nancy

304-736-7295.
Syracuse- ready May l&amp;t! 2 bec;l·

room house on large corner lot,
LR. kit&lt;:!loo .,.,...., 1!!11. rofriooll·
tor , OR, large laundry, $350 per
monlh, 741H192-2437. ,

Bedro.om $3251 Month, In Vinton,
Ava ilable May lsi . (740)388-

0611

992·5064. Equel Housing Oppor-

Property Marl&lt;up.

Camp

Sites- Available on
Kanawna River. a miles from Point
Pleasant electric only. Call

(304)675-1722 , (304)675-414.
After 5pm.
Loo,klng To ~uy A New Home?~
Don't Have Land? We Oo!!l Hurry

Only 10 LOIS Leh, 304·736-7295.

360 .

Raal Estate
Wanted

Real estate wanted· l'am forced
out of my house for highway Improvement. Looking for old larm
house In Meigs County with

acreage. call 740-197-9303, 740·
992-9132.

2 Bedroom All Elecuic Trailer.

2 bedroom mobile home or 600

sq. h. office space. Alverpark. Ml·

Room&amp;, Fully EquipPed KI!Chon,
Central Healing, Cooling, Waoh·
er/ Dryer Hookup, (304)882-2523

3 bedroom with een1ra1 air, wash·
er &amp; dryer, $300 per month , 74Q·

410 Houaes for Rent
1 ·3 Sedropms Foreclosed
Homes From $1991Mo., •% Down,
30 Years at 8.5% APR. For List•.

ings, II00-319-3323 Ext 1709.

Spring Sale AI

Sewage, Trash, $350/Mo.. 740·
446 0008.
.

446-1409

River Bend Place Now Accepting

On Renled Lot In Gallipolis, (740)

Freezer 1 t 75: All Appliance
Guarrnteed. sttaggs Apptianc:es.
76 Vino S1nM1. (740)446-7398

used

w;ndow

tJnil

Air

Conditioners, 90 Day GuarantM,

(740)'146.8275

Sporti
Goods

520

REIGEiriT'IA.L..-.OWIIIERs
Antiquo Sellors Cablnll With
C - ~eo:fGiau In ExCIIlent Condition. AniiQue Secretary
With .C.urru 6.!1n, AnliQUfl
Round Oak Table With Four

540

Cl'lalrs, Antlque Chest 01 Draw·

ers, 2 Cuslom Built Oak Display
Caou Wilh Gla .. Shelves And
Mirrored Backs , Work Bench,

~ 1 i s = ~~~·9~~

8 350 Mot&lt;Xcycle. Ulility
Wa n (IO Pull Behind lawn
Tracl ) For lnlormotlon Call
(740)44e-72ll
ASTHMA ALLERGY NEEOED,
10.15 PEOPLE Who Desire
ln'NIIediate Raile!. To Try, Evaluale

Miscellaneous
Merchandil!8

A NEW COmpact .State Of The
Art

Ross (304)675-3379
AIIT08 , _ S60IUIO
Police 1_....., &amp; ......._ 1

$1 ,000 BACK 2 Ton Air Condi·
tioner. 2 Ton ·CoH, 1 Line Set, ln-Sialled. $2,295 , $1 ,000 Back ,

(304)675- 1&lt;22
515 Main Slreel Polnl Pleasant

$1295 Net Price. Free Estimates.
Call For Quotes On Other Sizes.

New&amp;UsedFL&lt;niiUro

II You Oon ·l Call Us, We
Botto Looe! Mobilo Homes Our

"~-

16' Rawhide Stock/ Horst trailer

(Bumper Pull) $1800 (304)7735188or (304)576-2147
(7~)2M-

. .../'

Pool~

Cal 800-7SS.:7880.

Gravely walk·behlnd dual wheel
tractor. ~chments go with II; '84
Mercury Grand Marquis; for sate.
S1000 eeo11 011rar1e for a good s10 Chevy truck or good Ranger
Ford rrl.llk; 740-992·5532.

Baby -Pool,

Apartments
for Rent

Lease Plus Security oapo·sn Re·
. qulred , Days : 740•4•8· 3•8 t ;

205

Evenings: 740·387·0502, 740·
446-()101.

'

t and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnished, security
deposit required, no pets, 7.. 0-

Middleport, OH

T!Oin RiverTow""' now IICCOjlllng
applications lot 1 BA.
HUD subsidized apt lot -'Y
and disabled. EOH. (304)6756879.

992·2218.

2 Bedroom, $3251mo, $150
oeposn, No Pets. (740)446-0050

Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp; Repairs.

Problema? Need Tuned? Can Tho
Piano Dr. 740-448-4525

VINE STREET· A 1 1/2 story 3 bedroom home with a lull
banment Thltl hOrne a1t1o has a lenced backyard. lt'ajuat
waltlniJ for a family.
NOW JUST ~100

Independent Herballfe Qistributor,
Call FC'f Produc~ Or ,Oppor tunity.

(7401"1-1982
JET
4ERATION MOIORS
Repalrad, New &amp; Rebuilt In Slack.
Call Rqn EIIBns, 1·1100·537·9528.

2 Bedroom RecenUy Remodeled ,
Sandhill Road, Reference &amp; No

Pels, (3041675-3834
2022 Jefferson Blvd ., 2·1/2
. Bedrooms\ 1· t /2 Bath, living·
room, KiteMn, Dining Room, Full

Maytag Cryer $100, Kenmore
Freezer $225. AKC Boston Terri·
or Puppies, RM&lt;IY May lol, "$250.

Baoemenl. $4001mo. (304)2734042 or (304)532·3180

(740)441Hl415

3 Bedooom House, I Bath, HUD

MOBILE HOllE OWNERS

Approved, $325 Per Month, De·

•

more options . Manufacturer

Plumbing &amp; Electrical Parts, Fur·

nacea ~ Hool Pumps . Bonnens
Mobile Homo Supply, 740·448·
84t8·www.orvb.oom'bennett

$425 deposll. 330-328-6863 or
740-992·6244.
LINCOLN STREET· Middleport • A 2 story brick hOrne
with big atone aci:ilnta on the corner. · There aril thrH
bedrooms, dining room, ~n. 1 112 bathe, family room
and a sun room. A lull basenwtt, and a large garage with
allathed carport. Has new carpet In some rooms.

3 bedroom, Middleport, $350 per
month plus depOsit, water, sewer,

trash Included, 740.992-0175.
3 BR, I bath home rents lot $5501

an

mo. Close to town. References
and deposit required . Wiseman

.

.

or

sawmills, eotaars and aklddera.
NORWOOD fNDUSTAIES 252
Sonwil Drive, Bulfolo. NY 14225.
FREE tnlor~n~~,Uon l-100-571·
1363 EXT. ~

I" Mulch, For Solo $10.00 A Pick, Up
' L98d, ,You Loed $10.00 ~I Load,
$15.00. (740~3888
.

now 110,971 , 50x1DOx18 was
127.590 now $19,990, 601200otte
was $58,780 now $ol2.990. 1-tO().
406-5126

550

.Building

Block; brick, 'sewer pipet, wind·

ows, llntalo, elc: 91aude Winters,
Rio Grande, 0" Call 740·245·
5121 .
.

560

2 Good Slaned Squirrel Dogs For
Sale. (304}675-8132

a

Second Ave., GaUipolie, Ohio 45631-0994
740-446-0008 740-441-1111
www.ev81111-moore.1eom
Fornutrfy Blaeiburn Really . "Serftlw Souallem Oldo For 0Hr A Quo11er Century"

.Joe A. Moor-Broker 44:1-1616
Sarah L. Evana-Moore, Broker 441·1616

Patricia Hays- 44j6~3~8~8~4~C~a~r~ag!~~~=:::~

OJ, Store

Stock,

Collection&amp; (937)675-2830 Alter
6_:ODpm....:.
.- - - - - - - Wanted Good Used Mobile
Home, In 'n te 80's. 2 Or 3

B&amp;droom, (740)446-Gt75 Or
(304)615-51165

630

Livestock

27th Annual JaCkson County,
Polled Herefo1&lt;d AsiiOCiallon Sale,

Saturday, April 2151. 7:30pm

Jacklon County, Livestock Mar·

kel Ripley, West VIrginia, 12

e

Cows Wilh CaiYes. 11 Heifers.
Bulls, 25 Steers. Contact Norma

Puo11ey. (304)895-3514

Calvtl. Sale AI Group Only
$1,000 Each . Call Allor 7pm.
(740)2M-1193
Fair Pigs For Sale. Contaet
Harold
Taylor, . Evenlnga.

(740)245-9047
HORIESHOEING, ce'lliiled
Earrlor, Fred Queen. (74012511330

(740)448-0115 or· (740)448-

l

Hay &amp; Grain

7843 Aller 6:00pm.

I

Someone with machinery lo har-

vest hay on sharea.~Sqlilra Bales

oi.Hty For Sale

(740)379-2839

$IOOOBO, cal7o10-992-04117.

.

.

.'

~I

"

cernlllr, and a big fenced In lide yard.

'' .

l1aiZ ·I .. -111/1-lllo

a..-.

t1111Q. - l o ! In Qalllpollo
Jl4,100
121111·15.3 -111/!ln Clwolllo
t.alcoAIN'
1

FAHf.,,

'

.

Satisfaction Guaranteed. Greg

la~e

Mlhoan (304)675-4628

Kicker and canopy, $8,500, 740·
949-2248.

Livingston's Basement Water
Prootlng, ·ail basement repairs
done , free 11timatas. lifetime
guarantee. 14yrs on Job e11.perl·

c,uf·~

Ford

A!lceasories
Budget Priced Trenamlaalone
All Types, Access To Over
10,000 Transmiss ion&amp;, Transfer
Casas, 740·245-567~ Cell: 339-

Aarostar. Good

Superior Home Maintenance. We
Do Atl Repair&amp; On t-lomes Carpentry, Plumbing, Decks, Ete.,
Eve's Spouts, Storage Buildings,

All Sizes. (740)'141..0113

3765.

COndhlon, $1,500, (740)441-9234
1987 Ford F-250, 4X4, Rebuilt 6.9
liter, Been Painted, Nice Wheels
And Tires. Nlea Truek $7800

790

(740)388-9875

tires, 3t• Side·

1994 Dodge Grand Caravan ES,
White, Loaded , quad Sealing, 7
Passenger, Lass TJ1an 75 .000
Miles On Engine And Transmis·
sian, Towing Package , Sharp , ,

90 Toyota Cai_Tlry Stationwagon,

V6, A~. 1· Owner. Excellonl Condl·
lion, Call (304)675-2090 beiWeen

Campers&amp;
MotOI' Homes

840

1988 Champion
1 34' motor
home. class A, sleeps 6 , self·
contained, very good condition ,
$13 ,500.
Call
Huntington

(304)736-4800

$6400 080 (740)441-ol35

5·9pm

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring,
new service or repairs . Mastet" LIcensed electrician. Ridenour

Electrical , WV000306. 304-67517116.

BULL·E T

710. Autos for Sllle

Goo

Con~lllon· Size 13.8x24 , Call
(304)773-5405

13th Annual

SO DOWN CARSI POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S, .
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LOW AS $291
MD'S 019.9o/,; FQR LISTINGS,
CALL t.fl00-451-0050 ext . C·
9812

FORGEY CLU.B
LAMB SALE
Fri(jay, April 20
7:30pm

$0 DOWN C4ASI POLICE IM ·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LDW AS $291
MD'S 018.9%. FOR LISTINGS.
CALL 1·800·941·8777 exl, C·
9814 .

Gallia

65 and Over
Get your Braathing M81:lic2ttio11;
Albuterol, Atrovent, paid by
Insurance. Free Dalivery

BOWMAN'S

'lll#tte4 76-.Atla4 (J~Qt;

446-7283
1-800-458·6844

County

Selling approx.

60 top

.\Er

446·6752
1·800·942-9577

violence call

Herman Leach .

. Point Pleasant Girls Softball

KEEP GALLIA BEAUTIFUL

T·Ball age 4·6
Slow pitch Softball7·18
April 16th 6·8 pm
IPF•HS Cafeteria "Final S_ignupsl

by participating in the

Gallia County Trustee's and
•Clerk Association will meet
Monday, April 16 at the
Senior Citizen Building
7:00

P·lll· Guest speakers

will be !)avid Neal and

Monday, April ~ 6, 2001

Sakrete Company
be at

lumber Company

Johnaon'a
VIne Strttt

INC.

Clllllpelle, OH 41111

Cleanup 'on Saturday, April
21,

9 am

• 2 pm. Meet at

a

road assignment, gloves,

etc.

Refreshments

provided. Individuals,
need your help. It's your

. '.

North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6 , fl:!lly furnished, 2nd
iow, ocean view, washer/dryar.
Openings from May thru Sept.
· 446·2206 Mon thru

E~enlngs

&amp; weEikerldl

2 Avg. size rooms cleaned
$29.99 sa. rm .
Captain Staamar Carpet Cleaner

446-6784or
Toll Free 1-888,338-7847
SALE:
Antique
Sellers
I Cs1bln•BI wHh Caramel colored
in axcallant condHion,
An,tiqule Secratary wHh curved
Antique round oak tabla
four chairs, Antique chest of
drawers, 2 custom built Oak
display cases with glass shelves
and mirrorad backs: Work Bench.
Several misc. display racks, 27 ,fl.
round swimming pool,
Honda CB 350 motorcycle,
Wagon (ID pull behind
tractor) For Information call
740·448·7289.

I

home! Let's work together

to Keep Gallla Beautiful.
For.more Information,
· contact
Pastor John Jackaan,
chairman, at 4411·4888.

only

FLOWEA SPECIAL
All Flatl and Hanging
Buketl All Summer

$5.99111

Jackson Pike to receive

organizations, scouts· we

OH

Sakrete $2.99

FOR MOR! INFORMATION ON LISTINGS·
GlUE US ACALLI HOP! TO S!! YOU THERE.

annual countywide Spring

the McKenzie Ag. Center on

Free ~nute and coffee
Regleter to .win a
10 cu. ft. Dump Cart

RE~TY,

or

GALLIPOLIS CHURCH OF
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION
2173 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740·446·7119
Easter Services April15, 2001
Sunrise: 6:30 a.m .
Morning Worship: 10:00 am
Dedication of
.JIIew Church: 3:00 pm
Celebration Banquet: 5:30 pm
Coma and join us ·In worshipping·
Christ tha Lord.

7am-4pm

\

CHANNEL
MARKER .
CONDOS

·Serenity House

~~~~c~lu~b~l~a~m~b~s~~ ·~·•uv••~ victims of dorne!ltlcl

Eric Blackburn Owner

.

BIG BEND

I

HOIMEC~AAlEI

.740-446·2422

'
12:00-I:OOpm
74YALEROAD
DJI"'CUona: SR 160toSR554_tum
left 1It It! ••• to rtoht past Rids
Goraoe houH on i19ht. LimN($
#2082$87,900.00

t180,000.00

.Auto Insurance
Monlhly Payments
Problems with your rl-r~~;J
record: DUI's speeding
. tickets, ate.
· Same Day SA-22's issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown lnsuranca Agency

Fairgrounds
1979 Z-28, Camaro, Needs Worir,
New Tires &amp; Rims, $800
(304)675-8888

1027 CLARK CHAPEL RD.
DJ!'IdJOni; SR 160 post Junction of.
SR 554 IMn 111 toad to rtoht Clark
Chapel, hou11 on left llkle of rood.
umMG#2107$89,900.oo
'
.

'f

once. (304)995-3887.

8. KUhl•n Mbw,
113002, May 15, 2001,
10:00 o'clock a.m.
Thomaa B. Moulton
.
PI'OHte Judge
Aprll 15, 2001

1:30 -l:30 pm

Broker •••••·......-..........~•.•112-see2
.................................. 141-1131

760 · Auto P•~• &amp;

730 , Vane &amp; 4-WDs

11 oo.

'II')

Tractor TU·e &amp; Rim,

...-.ooo.oo

HVtBLL IT. • A 3 to 4 bail room home with newer windoM.
Hal an ~quipped kitchen and laundry room. Hali a heat
pump with central air, fronl porch and alta on a
.
'

bass boat w"O tip. Mariner
Motor Guide trolling motor, also
new 8 hp., Mercury Four Stroke

(Oood, $1500.(740)742-4008

1987

lng And Planting. Free Estimates.

1

Food 2000 Traclor Wllh Finishing
$4800 (740)446-9815

510 lllon.d Avenue
\

91 Fisher 16 Pro Avenger Wal-

.• n

...... - e d
town.
• BR 2 BA C\1010111 1 1/.2 t10ry
toome 111 6+ acreo blltoo'ntto you,
your family and anlmalo. Sel up •
. • I10rH farm OOf11ll*e - bOird
fencing •• prive1a riding 11811 and
hoo'N bam.
Spaclouo ...In

fin---

E&amp;S Lawn Service: Design, lm·
plementatlon, And ServiCe. Aval~

able For Spring Cloan Up. Ferlllz-

90 Chevy PfU, Runs &amp; Drives

winder llros, 12.000, 740-247-

POmeroy,

bMiment,
3 car gerege .00 wrap
· par1lolly
around orcll. $218,000

1384.

'

111,1110.00

ftl--

mates, 740-698-6783 , 740-59.1·

. Public Notice

Sunday, April 22nd·

tiW11 Betu!!fUI -my -

1997 Se&amp;Doo GTI, 3 Sell Jel Sid

asking $3800. 740-247-7100 ..

86 lull size Blazer, gray, new 350
4-boll main motor, AJC Delco ~

O'Dell

1 qulel

Your complete hOme r-emodeling ,
repair &amp; maintenance contractor.
PainUnq . vinyl sidi"g· decks,
baths, k1tchens. electrical. plumbIng., many other services to suit
your needs. No job lo big or omall, ·
30 years experience, Free estl·

Ready lor Sumnllf (304)882·3780

89 Chevrolet truck~ short wheel
baoe, 3' body lift. 33' llras. V-6
4.3 motor, 4 ap. trans., runs good,

tomatlc, ram air. V-6, red, ,power
sunroot, completely loaded,
16,500 miles, asking 117,500 negotlable, 740-992...ao17. ~

C&amp;C General Home Main·
tenence - Palnling, vinyl siding ,
carpentry, doors, windows. balhs,
mobile home repair and more. For
free eatimate call Chat, 740·992·

tomatic , 93 Grille, Custom Paint,
New Transmission, 54 .000 Invested, Call Details, $2600 oso

Forul Green, $5500 OBO
(740)258-&amp;467

2000 Ponllac Grand Am GT, au-

446-0870, 1-800-287-0576. Ragoro Walerpoofrog.

88 S·IO, Exira cab, 4x4, V-6. Au-

(740)448-8627

___:_

Unconditional lifetime guaraniM.
local raf1rences •urnistled. El·
1975. ca1 24 Hrt. 11~1

(304)675-8844 01 (304)675-3451
and Trailer. EXcellent Condition,

Spoiler. For Llghls, Vent VIsors.

1997 Loade,d Mercury Grand
, locally Owned Bv Eldeny
Clean 63,200 Miles.

BASEMENT
• WATEAPI!OOFING

HOMIGRDWN ASPARAGUS
Cllarles McKun F•m. Cenllnary Rood, Gallpolla.· (140)-m944.11

IUZZMD DIN ROAD. • A place In the countryll Approx
10 1CM1 ol bMU!Ifulland and a two-IIIOry frame home with 9
rooma. Hu 8 bedroomt, 2 1/2 batha, and 2 garagn. One
fiii1ICI8 11 a S car and lite other Ia a 2 car. Aleb hu a· bla
titm lind • pond.

1995 18ft Maraluda Ski Boat . In
great condition with a t20 HOJH
Marc Cruise Engine, Skies, Ute
Jackets, and other extra's call

(304)615-2714 (304)875-7018

1897 Dodge Neon , 41,000m, Air,

Improvement•

Dodson &amp;ilders

$1000 (740)387-7235

S.le

. Home

810

8323.

17' Mark Twain With Walk
Through Windshield . 115 HP.
Mercury Motor, Runs Good .

partial trade or best olfer.

1998 Dodge Intrepid ES, CandyiPflll Red, Loaded , Leather,
Alloy Wheels, Highway Miles,
$8200 080, (740)441-G135

•

750 B011t1 &amp; Motors
. 101' Sale

windowo. 4 Cylinder. 5 Speed, Air,
·Till. Cruise, CD, K&amp;N $12.800,

Prlal $13,500. (740)-m-1759

'

l&lt;awasaki KOX 80, 2 Strdc.e, Runs
Good $500. (7~14'1HI24

2000 510 Extreme, 4700 Miles.
garage kept, Slack wi1h tinted

199'5 Lincoln Town Car, 66,0QO
Miles. Kelly Blue, S Book $14,370,

· will

T11la llitck ranch lo
· mlnut• fnlm lhOpplng, ........
gym and Wilking j)llh. NEW
, carpot, pelilt, roof, &amp; ·- r
newly rfi11Qdtled kltcllon
full bltlmont and

Trucka for

..

Toy Poodles: 5 Fematea, 7
wtekl, 2 Year9, 3 years; 3 Males,
5 Weeka, 4.5 months, 2.5 years,

HAMILTON ITIIUT · ,A 1'1•' a!ofY hort11 with 3 badrooma, a
dining room, living room, 2 eno!OHd porchea that t;Ould be
UHd tor anything, and 2 half balhl. Hu Ill! own drilled Mil,

-

(740)446 6583

1994 Dodge Dakota. V-6 Magnum, 2 wheel drNe, aut~~ir, red,
· nit:e-lrud&lt;, $3,250. 740-w&lt;-G002.

OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND

LEADING CREEK AD • Hara'a-a 48.6 we parcel of land
with many ·bulldlng lltea on both aldea of the toad, both
aldee of the ralltoad, and borders ·the
Beautnul
laying hOmt lllel. Thtrt II ~tO woodt lor

AT-V- 95 Yamaha 350 Big Bear,

VANCE'S AUTO SALES
t994"Chevy LJJmina, a1110, air.
wloie, clean, &amp;hall&gt; car, $3.495.

720

Prlal $10,000 (740)379-2768

19991iarley Wide Glide, 88CID,

.

Trim, Removal BuckBI Sarvlc1al

'

1999 Harley Davison 1200 Cus·
tom. 1700 Miles, lOIS ol Chrome.

Laser Red Pearl, 2900 Milft, Ex·
lras $17,500. (740)'141H1124

99 Grand Am GT, white. lady dri·
van , one owner, 18.000 miles.
loaded, exceUent condition. Sell
br payoff. Call 740--992·2358 after
4:00pm weekdays, anytime weekends. Serious ini:J,Jiries only.

1994 Geo Mauo. 2 Door, 58,800
Miles. Excellent Condlllon, $2200
(304)675-6748 OT(304)882-2nl

SERVICES

Norwolgn Elkloound Puppies, Bo!n
February 14, $75.00 Eaoh . 4
Miles Sou11i of Rio Goande oil 325
on Wo" Run, lsi houoe on rlglot.

very good condlllon, $8500. Call·
Hunllngloq (304)736-4800

t~~

$14.500 Frm, (740)4464)213

(740)'14Hl337

~
UftiiEUI!VABLE VIEW· ·sitting atop Riverview Drive Ia this"
pne 81ory•home that has a sunken living room with a big
beautiful while 11ona fireplace and glass all the· way to lite
top of the cathedral ceiling: Has 5 badrdoma, 3 baths, larnl~
room. dining area, and a beautiful kitchen . There Is Iota of ·
IIIOraga, a 2 car ~raga, ancl"aoacurlty ayatem.
·
NOW IIEDUCED,·A IIUB'r BEE AT 1111,100

Miles, O..r $5.000 Worlh Of Engine Work And Accessories,
E•cellent, Candy Apple Red.

cas-

OBO 17~)258--11877

E&gt;!oando Room. Aif Conditloning.
Awning (740)'141-llf&gt;31

t992 Harl ey Low Rider. 18.700

99 Cavalier. 4 Door. 4 Cylinder.
Auto, Air CQodiUon, AMIFM ,
sene. 13.000 Milas $7500 .

1993 SP..irlt Auto. Air. Red.
112,000 llites, Very Clean, 12100

94 Outel'lman Camper, 31H With

740- Motorcyclet

98 Honda Civic, Hatcl'lbadl;, Air,
Aula, $8900 (740)446 9355

1991 Dodge Steallh AT, Twin Turbo, Komalou Red. 300HP: 5
Speed, AWD., AWS , Loaded .
Super Sharp, $7800 OBO,
(740)'141-0135

lonl:

1999 Jeep Cherokee Sport. 2

Loaded $8 ,750 OBO (740)2561252 (7~1258-'1618

1119 Dodge Aries, Very Clean,
Very Good Condi1ion . Depend·
able, Must See To Appreciate !I
E¥eninga. (740)245-9239

19'0 Cl•st A Gulf Stream. 37

Fool, 480 FO&lt;dl OahKooh Chao·
aiel Fully Equij)ped. Including A
1998 5atlrn Pul c.. - EloctlMe! Loo MiNge. (740)245- .
5752

Door, 4x4, 38,500 · S14,500.
(740}379-2974 allot 5om

97
Cl'lrysler Sebring JXI
Convertible. 74 ,500
Miles ,

1988 GMC S1.E. Ful Size LA!adad.
52795: 1993 cavalier. S2l95, 94
Grond Am, V-6, Auto. $3695 ;
1998 Lumina, $4995, CDDK MDTORS. (740)m-OI03

new

-bed,-·

Atlail $8360 , Sell For $6800 .
(740)245--6648

Covolier -Z~4 . $1200 ·oso
(740)38&amp;-0113

lr~~~~~-_:_

1995 Chevy HI T041 Van, rod &amp;
gqy outside, gray liathef ins:tde.
color TV. CD. cauene. · tlif,
lots olmod
Iiies. 59,000 mile&amp;. Olleoltenl
coo- · $11 ,300,740-992-2478.

16 Mustang. 82K. Pacifk: Green.
Spoiler, One Owner, Mellculouoly
Maintained , Exce11ent COnditktn,

tor, 4 sp . trans ., runs good ,

And 25Q Square Bales. Call

740-992-3875.

91 Oldsmobile Ciena , 97,000
Miles. Good ConditiOn, 4 Door.
13500 OBO (7~1"1-GI72

1988 Mercury Grand Marquis,

sounds good.

1995 Chevy Gledlato&lt;,
good
condlllon. loaded. $7500 firm.

"-ir/ Till/ Cruise, 100.000 Miles'

_,..,., $880, 741H192·1493.

. MotOI'Homes

Votv

$2200.

$1800080 (740)256-1233

;r&amp;

lais Croll Breed COws, 21 With

RAM

·-c.mpll'la

790

93 Dodge Sloarlow, V-11. 5 Speed.

rtd wlbleck vinyl lop, $15,000.

740-949-2248.

4-H Me! FFA Cltm Pigs, BU!Cher·
ing Hogs F:~~le.
~~re .. ·189C Geo Tracklr, "{ery Good
And Round
(740
condlllon. 87,000 miles. Asking
$4500. Negoliable. CIH eher Spm
50 Voting Beef Cowl For Sail; 30
(740)m-8314 .
Angu1/ Angus Cross; 30 Char·

Weals Old, Very Friendly
(740)387-0859 Or (740)3390859
Better than Bunnies for Easter.
Miniature Poodles. shots current

....... 350 .....,•••

Mafty New Parts. S 1600. 1987

1950' s &amp; IHO'a· cs: 33 RPM
Recorda.

(740)2~77

1986 Subaru GL 4WO Wagon

Hay For Sale, 45 Round Bales.

ANNB STREET· A one atory hOme with vinyl aiding, nBMr
wlndowe and • part balemenl. A really cute hOme with
3 be4'ooma, 1 balh, lltltng on IJIPIOX• 314 aort. Hu ,_..
drywtlll evarywl)ere lnalde. 131'Nl Starter Horne or rental

_.Winlanloe+eiiR ·
llomt In CroWn City? Thlo
rar)Ch orr.,. · on over alzed
ftnced lot Wlll1 a two car
-andlll/2
NIW

, _ good

AKC Chocolalo Lab Puppies, 8

Ford 2$00 Dlooel Troclor, 3000
Beams, Pipe Rebar For COncrete,
Angle, Channel, Flat Bar, Steel · 0101e1, 4800 D!esal, t 952 t8 N,
(740)285 8522 .
Grating For Drains. Driveways &amp;

e~.-~· ~

"1111· nona good.

640

www.arcadJanmgmt.aom

(7~0)448-7300

good

•n.

._ ~
~
Massey .Ferguson Sayler. No3,
$1200; Allis Chambtr Tractor

7 Monlh Old Blonde Mole Coclcer
Spaniol Wllh Papers $75.00 •
(740)245-5247 E118ningl

.t997 Terramlte T5C, low hours,

Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Metals

2 dr., auto.

(937)584-2398. Leroy Larrick &amp;
Fan;ty (937)780-1802
.

Telephone.

NIW AND UIID STEEL Sleel

Chevy~ .

Fayelle"
Co.
Fairgrounds,
Washington Co:urlhousa, Selling
200 Head 0 .1 Barrows &amp; Gilts.
Conalgners
Roger Bentley

Pets fOI' S.le

&amp; LIVfO,TLlt 1\

1-SOG-345-11272 Ext 18 .'
ARCADIAN
VACATION
RENTALS

••

(740~121-100-5114-1111

The 28th Annual BenUey Pig
Sale; Friday, April 201h 7:30pm.

Tennis COurts , Color Television,

(304)675-3290 lale 8VIntnll_ ... _

Cannichaert Far.n &amp; Lawn.

DODGE

82

t t72 Chevolle. compleiOiy re·
&amp;lored 10 lhOw car coftdlllor'll ,

57.000 -

SSOO; Jack donkey, $400; 2 112
year ol~ Buckskin gelding,
11.000; 740-ll!lll-2785.

2nd l!ow. 1·4 Bedrooms CoQdo&amp; I~~-=--""'=~-:---­
and Collages. POOls, Whirlpools, 610 Farm Equipmant

3 BR, 1 Bath. All appliances In·
eluded. In nice neighborhood .

e.......-.

.

.__ T........ Hey
2
Avcl-ra, 2 Aing&amp;, Oon't Be
LATE! 11om Satunlly. Aprl 2111.

ShetJand stud pony, registered,

Suppllel

Vacation Rantals Ocean Front or

$74,000.00

-

s

MYRTLE BEACH, SC

Inc. (740)4-16-3644

...... ~,.,

o..r 40 farm Troctofl. o..r ~

"2001" FAIII PIGS fOil SALE.
STEEL BUILDINGS. Now, Mual IDIIN IN GALLIA COUNTY.
Sell. 30 ,~, 12 was 1o,200 now (7~)441-- OR (740)'14158.1190. 40x60xl2 wao $11.400" Ul2

a .

3 bedroom , 1 bath, carport &amp;
shared pond, S·C25 a month &amp;

Eslat~.

!.unt"

(740)448-3398
Huge lnvenlory, DIScounl Prices, 580
Fruits
On Vjnyl Skltllng, Doors. Wille!- , ., •.,.,...••• • .-' • ,._ -.. •'
ows, .AnchOrs, Waler Healers,
vegelablel

posit Required, (304)875-8806 or
(304)675-7016 as~ lor Oezra

Real

5awmlll $3,&amp;95. Ntw ~
bermclite 2000, larger capacities.

luxe roorns/1d1C11enettes &amp;. ba!CO-nles ovorlooking 1ho Gull of Mui-

FREE OSTOMY PRODUCTS!

Pallo. Slarl $385/Mo. No PolS ,
.440

~

Manulacturer offers a two week
supply ot coloitomy or urostomy
brand name products with one
Si_mple phone cal. No obligallons.

Floors. CA. I 1/2 Balh. Fully carpeted, Adull

801J.812·5967 www-Of\'b..~
nell

EZPETRX.CDM. Sawe up to 50% lt~...:;._;_S;..:.;.:.__F_o_r--S-al-e
on ALL pet medlcetlona ond sup- op
oil
plies, InclUding Hoartgard, tnter- (740).t4I-G6I 9
coplor, Frontline, morelll FREE Walarllne Special; 3/4 200 PSI
SHIPPING. Order online www.Ez· $21.95 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
petRoo.com 1-800-&amp;U-1427
$37.00 Per tOO: 1111 8ra11 Com- .
proulon ~ In S10d&lt;
For sale· aluminum headache RON EVAN) ENTERPRISES
rack, 3 door cabinet 18' deep, Jackson, Ohio, 1,S00.$37-9528
$1400, 304-773-5540.

Tara Townhouse Apartments ,
Very Spacious , 2 Bedrooms, 2

Required. (740)446-1104

Benolilllllelllng ., Cooling. 1--

1-1100-~48-1832

Disabled , EOH , (304)882· .
3121 Or (304)882-3274

Small 2 Bedroom Trailet In Trailer
Park. Reference . &amp; Dep~ait

Syst•ms Frtt B Year Warranty

co. ISland Inn Beach Reaort,
HIOOo451-o500Ed.Cf9817
Treasure Island, F~A. 800-241Comp~lero: WE FINANCE -DElL ·9980 www.lolandinnrllort.com.
COMPUTERS I Even · wi!h less Near St f'et811burg.
than perlect crediU 1-100-477- Tanning J Bed,
Home · Unit,
:.:_~Code AC16 www ..omc&amp;Olu- Rtpollfi!, Talce O..r Paymenta.

an~

(740)256-6574 .

....~ llilllftl· a.tatilltl• Page D7

{

710 AuiD8 tor s.Je

Auto. for S.le

710

TIPP.IIn HI Efficiency 80% Qu i WD45.13200. (304)695-3553
Fur- Oil Futr\ICM, 12 5eer
Heat Pump &amp; Air Conditioning 620 W• ltBd to Buy

SUN'SAND'SU-;FWhllt sandy
beaches, fabuloua aunMIII Do·

Toyotas, Chevy's, Jeepsl
Pieaose Cal for Listings,

Speciality 1-740-446-6308 1-800.
291-()098
.

1651

Air

ObligaUon. Free 3 Day Trial. Mel

No Credh OK! HUO, VA,
FH"' can t&gt;&lt; •stings
HI00-501-1777 Ext9818

For Sale: Gun Cabinet

Horne Or Business

l'l.&lt;illcalion svs-. No Co6t Or

SO DOWN HOMES

ApplicatiOns lor 1 Bedroom Hud
Subsided Apanmefll for· Elderly

New Mobile Home For Rent, NICe
Clean. 3 Bedrooms. In Country
With Nice lawn And Outbuilding.

610 fMn fqlll!lment

NEwaAAND NAME COMPUT·
ERS- Al-t ... ryoue-with tO OOWnl Looo,montltly Pill'·
l-too417·34Me&amp;l.330.
Niol
UMd ~ F·-.:.... ,.._
~·-· Anytime, (740)441-1004
Or

Wesl 2 Bedroom Townhou"
Apartments, tnetudes Water

For Rent Or Land Contract, 2·
Bedroom, Natural Gas Heat. AJC.

PuiiMoY • •ddl111 art • O""ipopls, Ohio· Point Pleaunt, WV
540 lllsc I "1 7110US

Sl&lt;a9UI Al&gt;olllnc-

Wasloef $95; O&lt;yer $95; gao
Range S9S; Rtfrigeralor S150; ,
wasllarl Dryer Set $275; Cllast

Remington 870 20 Gauge, 16
Gauge. 12 Gauge . 12 Gauge
Appllanett-!ReeondilioAed - Mag , Sa¥a~ge- 223--witb acope ,
(740~522
Wa5hers, Dryers, Ranges, Refrigrators, Up To 90 Days Guar·
Antiques
anleed! We Salt New Moytag Ap- 530
pliances. French City Mayrag.
120 'Pocket Watcl'\es In Good
7-·7795.
Coftditlon For Sate, Phone
(740)-m-1615, •22 2nd AYIHI!J8,
For Sale : .Recondi1ionad wash·
ers, dryers and refrigerators. GaJ¢1is.
Tnompsons Appliance. 3407
Bu~ or sen. Riverine Antiques,
- A....... (304)675-7318.
1124 Easl Main 111 SA 124 E. POGODD USED APPLIANCES meroy, 740-992·2526 01 740-9921539. Russ Moofe. owner.
Washers , dryers, refrigerators.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances. 76

vases. (7~1"8-4782

Sunday, April 15, 2001

11,

Goods

Now Taking 4ppllcatlons- 35

992-2167.

-

5

Houeehold

New And ·used Furniturf Store
Below Holiday Inn . Kanauga. We
Sell Grave Monuments And

Two Bedroom Apartments Large

3 bedroom mobile home in Mld-

. ~:-:~-:-:---:--:-:---

New 2 Piece LMngroom Suites,
$399. Buy, Sol,Trade.

erances, 740-992-0185.

dlepOrl. no pets, 740-992·5858.

r.1ERCHANDISE

51 0

••

(740)886-7531 (740:::;:"7

Main Slr80t Furnilure

New Haven , one b•droom fur·
nished apartment. haa washer
and dryer, no 'pets. depoll1 &amp; rel-

nersville, $300/mo. each, reduced
renr tor hand~ person who can
mow the grass in the park, 61•·
,87&amp;1661 .

Required. (740)U6-4425 Or
(740)'1 46 .,.,.
•

Accepted, (740)446-744• or I·
an-830-9162

IUnlties• .

RENTALS
•

bedroom

$300 monlh. No PelS (740)367-

ma . PJus Utilities. Security And.

Key Oepooil. No Pm. Rolooeuceo

Mollohan Carpel, 202 Clark
Chapel Ad, Porter, OH. FIBO Esti·
males. Easy Finarldng or 90 days
· same as cash. Visa, Mastercard'

4638

Goacious living. 1 and 2

District. lde:•l For Professional
Couplo, AM - r n Amonilioo. 3
Bldroooo~~; ~Living: 1-112
B&amp;lha. Anr Oecl&lt;. HVAC. $6001

Vine Slreot, Call 740·«6-7398,
1-1188-1!11Hl128. .

Acoeptlng Applicallona For I BA,
HUO, Subsidized Apartments For
El~erly And Handicapped, Equal
Housing Opportunity. V40)448-

2 Bedroom $3001 Month : 3

a

Jeanelle Moor&amp;•• 256-1745
Pabicia Ross.
740 41111011
-

Gallia Manor Apartments, Now

Wittl fll:je Barn $23,IXXI or 31
$37.900. Carr Road, 6 ACf·

Many More, Call Now For Maps!
Owner Financing Willi Sli{l!l

c.Woad, Blaker • 446-4523

(7~)'146--1519

Mobile Homes
for Rent

CLASSIFIEDSi

Ken Morpl,lllaker • 446-0971

Furni Shlld 2 ·I 3 Room Apart·
menos. Clean. No ...... No Smok·
ing, Reftrences &amp; Deposit Rt·
quired . Ulitlllet Furnlsl'led.

.

CIF'NHOUSE
WITH THE

ad

2nd Floof Aportmenl In HisloriC

llan,.l. Dozer.

STRfEI',

Allen

992-5231.

Vlf!CBtion Property, MyrtHt Beach
Condo, 3 Bedroom , 3 Bath,
Sleeps 8, GOOd Weeki Available.

Equl-nt

510

II

......._,600 Sq. re., A

Backhoe, lobcar. farm Tr11ctor
-~(7401"1~19
'

B'fHJDI
IBUln',
INC
32 LOCUST
GAWPOUS, 01110 4S631

For rent· one bedroom furnished
apartment in Middloporl, can 740-

DA. llrge laundry room, $350 per
montto, 740-992·.2437.
·

torRent

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

cies I'IJW',

Syracuse· re8dy May 1sU 2 bed·
room house on large corner. LR.
kitchen w/slove and retrtgerator,

410 . for I

Equlp111e11t

Relll Eat8te GIMI'II

Chrii! IY'I Family Living, 33140
·Ohio, 740Lina Ad., 742-7403. Apartment home and
trailer renlal&amp;. com-dal alore·
fronts available for lease. Vacan-

apartments at Village Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port. From $278-$3d. Call 7~-

$13,500. Rutland, 9 Acres $8,500!

WANTED: Tobacco Lease 2001
Crop, Pay $0 .55 Up Front.

shop &amp; movlts. _Call 140· 4462568. Equal Housing~

Pilor Program. Aenters Needed.

Shade Riwr $12,000, 7 Acres
os $12,0000r 16 Acres $23,000.
Danvile. Nice Wood 5 Acres

470 Wanted to A«tt

BEAUTIFUL APoliiTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES olT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 52 Weslwood
Drive ~om $297 IO $383. Walk 10

998&lt;

wes

TraiiOr lol fof renl in MiddlepOrt,
s125 ononUo. 740-992-3194.

UIIIIUII Plld, $210 Mon11o Plu&amp;
$100 Dtpooit(740)446-1340

A In Poonl Plea .. nl, {404)875-

w-.$125/tiiO.

(740~175

3 Room Apartrnlnt. FurnisheCI.

Gr~phlc

420

t:ra- 14'&amp;, ,.,,

"""'-· (7401"1-1519

410

HOlM lo1 . Wltl T•ke

s 100/Mp., · N•ed AeferePCet,

Plua Otpotil I A t -- HUD

Help, TI'Hty're S.lling The Hoose
We Have Rented. For 12 Years.

(304)675-7783

Mobile

I Ba.drodoOOI&gt;Omm ....,.,._, - . . . .
lOr, Range. A/C Included. Uet

Sir.... pl'oOnl (740)-m-3945

-

480 Spllol tor Rent

. lor Rent

Four Room House. 52 Olive

Prlva• " - " lind' Ntw Dou·

Sundey, Aprl15, 2001

Pomeloy •lllddl1port • OaWpal1, Ohio • Point P1111 Ill, WV

Black and Tan Mala
'
German Shepherd frC?m
Morton Rd. State Rt.
588 area. Reward $100.
Call 448·0415 or
448·1852

Baglnner Clogging Clua
1pon10red by Big Band Cloggert

April 17th epm f'omaroy
Munlolpll Building (f'ollot Station)
For mort~ Information oontaot
VM1n May 181·7183

. Eagle Ridge Farm•
Club Lambe for aale
Tom and Otbblt Orakt

· 74o-~e-aoo7

I.

�'*

~-

~

•·•-a

... -

--

•

..

-

...

...

,.
•

I

Sur.dry,

Ohio • Point Pin sa nt, WV
40 peiCent may be in the form
of urea or ammoniacal nitrogen.
Using 2()..I 0-20 as an exampie, this means that the label
would read 2D percent nitrogen,
ly inhibits germination, md under which there should be a
could dcby growth on esbb- bteakdowu of the nitrogen
lisbed m :lings.
coffiponc:nts stating at least 12
1be I) ltiil CO\'ef is a critical percent nitrate nitrogen (which
COilipO'- in te1fipemute CO!l\rollld represent 60 peteent of
IIQL In spite o( die p«ential for the total nitrogen) and the
washouu, pro4ucers are better remaining 8 percent also printed
ofT using the continental on the label, would be broken
polypropylene cover and dou- down into urea and ammoniacal
bling it to reduce the chances of nitrogen componenB. Neither
wUhouts. These covers shed urea nor anunoniacal nitrogen
water vay well, and maintain in high percentages iS suitable for
moderate tempcrarures.
tobacco float systems. .
Plastic is not recommended in
Urea in high percentages will
the use of float systems. Black be converted to the roxie forms
plastic abracB too much heat of nitrogen, which may cause
during the day and blocks sun- yeUowing, stunting, and even
light, clear plastic traps heat and death of the seedlings.Ammoniquickly kilk seedlings, and white ad ! nitrogen in high percentages
plastic is subject to bf!lad swings is nor toxic, however, is taken
in tempcranue and does not very slowly by the pIa.nt o fien
hold heat for the evel)ing hours. causing delayed growth and less
Just as crincal as temper:imre vigor of the planis.
For more infor\nation on
and materials is the fertility protobacco
float system. fertility
gram. This time of year, many
""""'n15, in.1portance of water
producers ask how much fertil- : P·-.,·izer to put in the beds. Using 20- quality, or other tobacco
10-20 as an example, the JI!Cipe seedling management issues,
is .42 pounds or 6.7 ounces per please c:.ll the OSU Extension
oliice at 446-7007.
I00 gallons of water.
Ag news
If it becomes necessary to add
Foot and mouth disease
water to the beds in mid or lateand
BSE (Mad Cow disease)
season, producers may add back
one-tenth of a pound or 1.6 program and field ~ schedounces of fertilizer per 100 gal- uled for April 19. Please join the
lons of water. To apply the prop- Ohio Cattlemen's ASsociation,
er amount, producers must Hidden Valley ~nch-, and ,OSU
know h~ many gallons .of Extension for the OCA
water their float systems hold.
Regional meeting, beginning
There arc several w.~ys to with a field day at 3 p.m. at Hiddetermine this, hO\.Vellel' the for- den Valley Ranch.
mula most easily remembered is
Dinner and formal cattle disthe number of trays times the ease program is scheduled for 6 ..
depth of water in inches times p.m. at the Seni'?r Resource
1.64 equals the number of gal- Center.
Reservations
are
lons in a float system.
required, so please call the OSU
Also critical to the manage- Extension Office at 446-7007 or
ment progmn is the type offer- Hidden Valley Ranch at 740tilizer used and the nitrogen 446-4111 to reserve a seat.
source. Begin with an appropriGrus 'tetany warning: Catate fertilizer ·such as 20- 10- de producers, please check the
20,1 S...S-15 or 20-5-20. Each of label on ~ur mineral for the
these options follow the fertility percent magnesium. If it is less
rule for tobacco transplanB of a than 10 percent, consider adding
1:1 ratio of nitrogen to potash some .magnesium oxide to the
with phosphorus being 1I 4 to feed if feeding any concentrates.
1/2 that of the nitrogen and If cattle arc on pasture alone,
potash content.
consider switching to a mineral
For healthy transplant produc- · that is at least I 0% magnesium
tion, at least 60 percent of the and preferably 12-14 percent.
total nitrogen in the analysis
(Jennifer L. Byrnes iJ Gal/ia,
should be in the form of nitrate Countyt Exremion OJ.'I!III for agri··
nitrogen which is readily avail- rulture and natuml resourrrs, 0/rio
able to the plant. The remaining State Unilll?rsity.)

£abric
r
1

f1um .....DI
the case any more. Now,
. women don't have time to do
that, but many of them make
'time to sew for enjoyment,
and that's where we come in."
In addition to the store's
ample supply of fabrics, patterns, notions and other quilting supplies, the store also
·caters to the applique hobbyist, with a wide . selection of
patterns and project materials
for applique jumpers, placemats and other projects.
Customers routinely travel
fiom
Parkersburg, WVa.,
Athens, Gallipolis and Jackson
to shop the fully-equipped
store, but travelers from Texas,
New York; Montana and other
d
1
ar
istant p aces are not unusu .
hi part, they come because
they have seen The · Fabric
Shop's advertisement in Qui!ters Travel Companion, a
· nationwide directory of quilting supply houses.
'
"These quilters who travel
around the country will go
.out of their way to visit a store
they see listed;' Anderson said.
HobbyistsfamiliarwithThe
Fabric Shop know that the
store's products are the top of
the line in terms of quality:
Mod a, Marcus Brothers,
.

SPOilS: Southern splits softball doubieheader, Bl

1S.

•

RJR's Thimbleberries, and
Sou't h Seas Imports, among
others. ·
They might also come
because of the store's reputation for friendly, personal servtce.
Longtime employees Judy
Eichin~r. Ann Lambert and
Cathy Clarlt are not just store ·
clerks - they a~ also avid
seamstresses and quiltei:s
themselves, and diey know
.just what '!WOrks and doesn't
work for almost any sewing
project.
"This is really a Ji100d place
to work" Anderson said. "We
have 1 'lot of fun because'
there's afwayi somc;hing dif- ·
ferent happel)ing."
A team of h'omc seamstress.d
I
.
e~ provtth e anh a tTerhanonFs bse~VICe
roug ·
e
a nc
Shop, and craft classes and a
'"Quilt Block of the Month"

Smith
any lime, the bendiciary an be
changl:d or chc funds can be
widxbawn (suiject to penalty
and wcarion) and chcte are no
income limits on eligibility to
contribute to 529 Plans.
• The maximum amount

" 0 «·nh • Ap nl 1b. 2001 ·Vol ~I

Nu

· HoMetown

News,.per

Middleport • Pomeroy. Ohio

I H'l

www.mydailysentinel.com

ElementarY·Site Clea
'

BY CIIAIILIJIIE HCIIFUCK
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMEROY -Work on clearing t)le
site along Ohio 124 ncar Rutland
where the new Meigs Local Elementary
School will ·be constructed · has been
completed.
'JWo houses and an old barn were
tom down earlier, and over the past
couple of weeks dozens of trees have
been cut· down by Jeffers Trucking and
Excavating Co.
Thesday at 1 p.m&lt; bids .for the site
preparation w~ be opened. The successful bidder on the project, which has
a projected budget of more than $1 million, is expected to begin work in late
M'ay. Meigs Local . School District

·Meigs
observes

---------------lOI..-....;..-.:

Kneen

Melp County"s ·

,

.

income

"What litt preparation mutt~
u tlt4t btuically tht grourlfl
will In prtparid on which
to unutnut tltt lndlding. "

William Buckley said preparing the site
will take several weeks, but if plans go
according to sehedule, the building
should be under construction by the
end of summer.
"What site preparation means is that
basically the ground will be prepared on
·which to construct the building," Buckley said.
That will include removing tree

stumps, leveling the ' site with· dirt to be
brought in from an area in baeok of the
school site where a bus gar•ge wiD be
built, installing the· drainage system and
. the water lines to the building area, and
doing preliminary sewer work including
bringing the line to the building.
The. superintendent said part o'f--the
lot on 'the Middleport side will require
a considerable amount of fill to bring it
up to the level of the rest of the area. He
said as .the ·contractor does the work, he
will stockpile the topsoil which will be
used for the yard and also to reclaim a
section damaged liy a mining operation
which took place many years ago.

PleiiHIHSite.AJ

DOWN THEY COME - Clearing of the site In preparation for
the construction of the new Meigs Elementary School on Ohio
124 near Rutland has been completed. The work was done by
Jeffers Trucking and Excavating. Here, Jim Pullins cuts down a
tree. Numerou~ trees have been cut down over the past couple of weeks. (Tony Leach photo)

·lhe hunt is on

'

from

0

·Habitat
For Life' is

'Take
Pride'

savilf

Stewa

theme ·

~

FROM STAFF REPORTS
FROM STAFF REPORTS
POMEROY - ·April
has been designated "Take
P~MEROY -''As living creatures with
the desire to control our domain, we have
Pride, Ohio" Month,and
Gov. Bob Taft has utged
a special responsibility to sustain a healthy
local communities to take
balance of all living elements that make up
part in litter control and
· · our sunoundings."
revitalization projects.
That's from Vicki Morrow, education
The campaign is ainned
coordinator for the Meigs Soil and Water
at bringing about comConservation District, which is sponsoring
munity. revitalization, raisSoil and Water Stewardship Week, ,_ll i1
ing ,t~e level of communi.:
29"Mar'6: _
, •.~·- "•· ·
ty pride. a~q . ~.s~bli~lling ' ·
The Meigs County commissioners
signed a proclamation declaring Soil and
susc,in~ble litter. prevention' ' programs across the
· Water Stewardship Week during their regstate.
ular meeting last week.
• The · Meigs County
The theme is "Habitat For Life." The
Office of RecyCJhig arid
focus is on the personal responsibility each
Litter Prevention has its
PIIIH ............. AJ
own "Plant Pride, Not
Hundreds cif youngster:s joined In the annual Easter egg huflt Sunday afterJioon at Hartinger Park in MiddleLitter" spring cleanup
port. Sponsoring the event were the Middleport Volunteer Are Department 8iib the Ladles Auxiliary. Each of :
program, co-sponsored by
the 2,400 colored plastic eggs hidden around the park contained cash and gift certificates contributed by local
the Ohio Department of
Individuals and businesses. The children were divided into age groups fortl'ie egg hunt and afterwards met
Na.tural Resources, Diviwith the Easter·Bunny. Ghairll)en for the event was Bobtiy Johnson, wlth ·other committee members being Don
sion of Recycling and LitGeary, Kenny Gilkey, Kenny Haning and Skip Johnson. (Debra Call photo)
·
' ter Prevention.
"Litter reflects a lack of
pride ·in our communities," local coordinator
kenny Wiggins said.· "A
cleaner
community
increases civic pride, and
COLUMBUS (AP) -.. Overtime
Thos~ figures come from a com- Franck, a nurse at Orient Correcmakes Meigs County a
20
puter
analysis of payroll reco,ds for tional Institution. His $101,368 in
by
state
workers
increased
by
healthier, safer place. to
pe~cent last year, helped by .a ours- 75,933 state employees by The overtime pay almost tripled his base
live, work and play."
in~ shortage that included one Columbus Dispatch, which pub- salary and made him the 22nd highSeveral local villages
employee who nearly tripled his lished results of the stuily on Sun- est paid employee in state govern. have scheduled · spring
base salary by working an average of day.
ment at $165,14 7 - $42,000 more
cleanups. . The Meigs
WEEK PROCLAIMED ...;;, Meigs County ComCounty · Recycling . and
, 94 hours a week.
It said state employees worked 3.1 than what Gov. Bob Tafi made.
missioners Jim Sheets and Mick Davenport
Litter Prevention program
The state paid $80.1 million in million hours of overtime in. 2000
A nationwide nursing shortage is
have
proclaimed the week of April 29 to May
is recndtil'lg gro':'ps and
overtime to employees last year, paid a.t titpe-and-a-half of their reg- partly respqnsible for the substantial
6 "Soil and Water Stewardship Week.· A
organizations to plan a
about 3 percent of the $2.74 billion ular hourly pay.
amount of "overtime worked year
numbe r of events focusing on personal
volunteer cleanups along
state payroll. The 1999 figure was , The worker who earned the most after year by.. Ohio prison nurses,
respons1u.li ty for the environment have belm
•
$65.7
million.
m
overtime
pay
was
Maurice
said Joe Andrews,
planned. (Brian J. Reed photo)
PIIIH ... MIIp.AJ

The
Joint Implant··
o;;"""*~·~~center '
'
Sprcializeri Core for Totnl

.OVBC reports earnings increase

Our next clinic date Is
Friday, Aprlll7.

.

·Monday

j

•

carry filrwald a lump IW11 gil
&lt;M2' a 1M- ~ period. Tliis
allows a $50,00&gt; anribucion 5o
be made gift t3X lfte- ahbnngh
nO other gifis to lbat beMiriary
an be made during em&amp;. liw~ period. This special de c:tiQn
should be C2ldi.dly considcmi ill
it could baYC an important csam:
planning impact.
.
• 'The funds em rover the
higher education cosiJ - boch "'

which can be conlributed varies gnduate and~­
by Slate. General~}: the amount 'is ofanyaccreditcdcollegeinthe
equal to five ~ of college US. and some foreign instituexpenses with most limits rapg- tions. The u-d funds can lie
ing fiom $100,00) to S160,1XXJ. Wed for quatilied education
Since the plans allow tbl! clwlg- expenses including tuition and
ing of beneficiaries, if one child fqs, books, S!lpplies and equipdoesn't attend college, ·the ment, and room and bo:ud for
~unt can be ~for another campus housing {off-campus
housing rates arc different). ·
"'1-J:"~ or close -•--=--'6
.
••""""'.
.
• 'The uwestment vehicle 15
There is an org;mization called
almost a1w.tys some combination the College Savings Plan Netof mutna1 funds. There 'are usual- work (CSPN), which .is the
.
.
.
ly differe~t. mvestment opuons umbrella organization for all qf
1...
.
for paroapanB 1:0 choose the Slate sponsored. college savc1ass ..,. mg qudters
from
·
h' among. By· law., once made, that ings progmns.The CSPN acts as
.
d
h
· cannO! be c.~'6~u.
1..----A •A~
aroun . t h.
e area mto t IS chOICe
the central souiCe of information
"!&gt;'c harnung s 0 P·
L---~
all . ·
stra ·
on ~ Slate plan.. It can be
Information about The Fab- """"" assetotte ocaoffered.non
tegie5
found · on the Internet_ at
· Sh ' I
d
'al are m051
n
.
nc
op
s
c
asses
an
spec•
Th
-•~ ·
-L'"- th
i1 bl . h
'
ese ,..• ..,.gtes &gt;~W•
e www.collegesavings.org. 11iis
.
events IS ava a e m t e stores invested funds
'odically the web site provides the toll-free
· monthly newsletter, available child ages. The~&amp; moveas&amp;om numbers and offer links to each
to customers by calling the a more aggressive initial ~- stites college savings program
store at 992~2284, or by wnt- weighting in equities when the website.
mg. to the , store ",\, 110 W childisyoqngtoamoreconserThis is a brief overview of die
Mam St., Pomeroy. 'the store vative OYetweighting in . fixed many a&lt;Mnages of Section 529
also ~as a website at ·
imlestments as t\te child Plans. Again, each Slate plan bas
wWw.eurekanet.com/-fabric- nears college age.
different teatuns and benefits to
shop/about.html ~ •
Some states offer a static, consider. If ~u are ir.raesu:d ip
"
,, ~ aJioarion where- saving for college through thde
by the equity to fixed itM:st- proglmlS.l'D be happy to ~
Don't toss out those extra men!&gt; allocation remains the them in lilOie detail
:
perennial plants from your same tegmllas of the child's age.
If }'OU ~ interested in
landscape's spring cleaning. Account contributors can tbel) for college thorough these p10Page DI
Bring in those healthy plants to choose a more aggressive or ron-· grams, ~u should consult ~'¥"
the Sixth Annual Perennial servatiYe strategy depending on financial and tax advisors tp
District Auxiliary. For informa- Plant Exchange ~ing held at their personal ~t prefer- delmnine the best plan for ~\If
tion, please call the Extension the Meigs County Senior Citi- . ence.
needs.
,
'
Office at 992-6696.'
zens Center on April 19.
• A unique provision of the tax
(K. R)llll Smith is 1111 investment
• • •
In · cooperation .. with the code for 529 Plans is the ability ellm4tive u.flh Smith fluiJkJS ill
Are you raising -cattle and Senior Citizc~ Program and to make a spccial election to Advest Inc., Gallipolis.)
•'
interested in improving , your OSU Extension's Master Garcattle growth and development, dener Program, learn about
as well .as in genetics? Plan on "Growing, Dividing and Plantattending the annual Ohio Cat- · ing Perennials:' Classes will be
demen's Regional meeting and · given at 11 a.m. and again · at
Spring Field Day orfApril19 at 4:30p.m.
'"'
the B~b Evans Hidden Vall~
After the noon meal, perenRanch.
nials Will be ~changed
At 3 p.m., a tour of stocker~ between· attendina•sorlior 'tigrazing, pasmre seed chokc:s, zens and guests. From 4:30 to
cube feeding, water sources 5:30 p.m., a .secon~ pen:nnial
development, fenCing and graz- exchange opporruruty will ~e
ing goatslsheep will be present- open for the ~ne,ral public
KnPe
ed.
out~ide the Senior, Citize~ :
. After supper at the Gallia Ceqter.
.,
,
:1111! r!Ifi fh· ploccmcnt
County Senior Citizens . Cen• · , H~meoY.mer
.• garderung
~--------.,...------...,----'--- ter, listen to Gary Wilson, past que~nons will .be answered by
For Initial ·evalu.atlons or follow-up visits, we "tt'"
president of OCA, speak on . I'V1e1gs Count)' M~"'r Garden·
Spongiform ers, a local Ohio Smte Uruvers1- . office hours . at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
B'?vine
Encephalopathy (Mad Cow ty ExtensiOn ¥olunteer pro- f Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.
· Disease) and Foot and Mouth gram. Be ·sure . to · label your '
Joint
FROM STAFF REPORTS
first quarter at 32 cents, wm- disease. The stair of the OCA perenmals and bnng a bag _to
Implant
GALLIPOLIS -An increase pared to 30 cenis per share in vill
h'f
. h carry your new pWits home 10.
1
· ' comp ere t e program w1t
ILl
v
. u · C · •
Surgeons, Inc.
in net incon\e of5.2 pe;:,;ent for the firs t quarter of 2000.
association business.
I' .a1. .-.lleell IS melg:
ounty~
the first quarter of 2001 was
OVBC directors approv~ ~
Th
d
.. r
E-.:rens•on agent fo&amp;agnatlture and
can (614) 221-6311
h di
e secon opporturuty tor
' •,
,
·
·
·. .
reported by Ohio Valley Baric 6 .6· percent mcrease
m cas
v- . ttl
.
d h 32 d natura1·rest&gt;rtrtCS1 11~ State Um1
for
an
appoln,ment.
,
R
obert
AI
flcla,_
MO,
FACS
. )
·
Corp. at the annual shareholders idends. Dividends will now ca emen 1s to atten t ...e As n
vcrs1ty.
C
ttl
A
al
Obi
increase
from
15
cenn
per
share
nnu
o
a
emen
s.
someeting Wednesclay.
President and Chief Execu- to 16 cenB per share, .payable ciation Annual Performance
tive Officer Jeffrey E. Smith said May 10 'to shareholders of Teste&lt;\- Bull Sale, being held
· Apri121, at Ohi~ State UnivetOVBC - holding 'company mcord on April23.
The
meeting
was
held
at
the
sity East District office, Bell~
for Ohio Valley Bank - had
net income of $1,106,900 for Morris and Dorothy Haskins Valley, Ohio (Noble County).
-~ ~·.
Online cqmputer purchasing ·
the first quarter of 2001, com- Ariel Theatre. Smith, Steven B.
pared to $1,052,000 earned Chapman and Robert H. East- will be available at various sites
'·
during the same period last man were re-elected to the in the state. Bidding begins ~t I
year. .
OVBC board of directors, each p.m. For further information,
fli • .
Net income per share serving a three-year term end- please call 992-6696.
increased 6.6 peteent for the ingin 2004.
• ·
•••
r

•

State paid SIOM in overtime

.

271XE4WD
6SHP Perkins 8x2
Transmission ·•·
Dual Remotes
Wet Brakes
• 540PTO
,FoldlnQ R.O.P.S.

I

.,

Tad.,...

Hlp: 401

Sentinel
2 Sldllh'll - 12 , . . .
Calendar
Classifieds

Comics

·*MASSEY FERGUSON.

Editorials
' Objtuaries

MIR.Y P'ergiiiOIIII '- 1 worlclwlcM llnlnd Ill AQCO Corpondlon, Dululll, CJA.

sports

me/w.u.

Weather

A5
82-4

BS
M
A3
Q1.3.6
A2

Law:211
Details, A2 ·

'

President celebrates.holiday at "church service

Lotteries

CRAWFORD, Texas (AP) - Yresident
Bush and his farni1¥1 celebra~d~ster Sun. day at a sunrise chilu:h service, joining in a .
OHIO '
·prayer of ::hanks for }lie safe remrn of24 U.S.
Pldc J: H-4: llldl4: &amp;4-2-5
service members held in China.
~&amp;.aim: 15-18-22·34-35-49 ' '
Three generntions,.o f Bu.mes attended the
lCidw. :z.&amp;6..7·1·1
outdoor
service near Bush's ranch, including
W.VA.
the president's parenlli, former President
Dilly S: 2-3-7 Dilly 4: 8-3·7-8 .
and Barb~ Bush; his mother- in-law,
·Bush
'
.
e 2001 Ohio Volloy Publishina Co.
Jenna Welch; Ills '•wife, Laura; his brother
Marvin; and Jill daughter Jenna.

About !50 people sat
on folding chairs at
Canaan Baptist Church,
on a slight bluff overlooking central Texas pastures. The site was bordertd on one side by a
.field ablaze with wildflowers, on another by a
cemetery.
The president twice w.IS

. the subject of remarks during the service.
A member of the congreg;~tion, Jerry
Gauer, led a prayer for the nation. ·
"We pray for President Bush, his staff and
the leaders of our nation as they seek at various times wisdom and guidance &amp;om you;•
Gauer said.
"We also celebrate this morning. Lord, the
fine young men and women who are home
this morning in America celebrating Easter
with their families and not in China:'

··Holzer Health Hotline
,,

5255

••• •
•
;

•
~

If you have health questions or concerns, call the Holzer Health Hotline
and speak to a specially trained Holzer Medical Cenk!r R.N.

~
~

;

''
'

Clllf"' tiN~~~,,.,' yo&amp;

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