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                  <text>PRIDE 2001

~.

April 27, 200t

TEMPO

SPORIS

MONEY

Poets haven

Area diamond
roundups

Sears
grand
•
•
open1ng 1n
new·
location

tmts

unba.....
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

COLl)MBUS (AP) - Rued advocates say they are- grateful Appalachian
Ohio rerwins on state leaders t:ldm
even though programs for the 29-county region won't get any new money
under the latesr venion of the sure budgel.

Letart fanners,
homes under
Phase I limits .
'

.

mt

Gallipolis • Po meroy • Pt. Pleasant • April 29, 2001

GOP's budget

TP-C
•
1mposes
water
restriction

•

•

The House Republicans' rwo-year
budget, released Thursday, maintains or
ruts funding for most Appalachian programs instead of granting the marginal
increases Gov. Bob ,Taft had proposed.
"It does limit us in some ways. but I

Vol. 36. No. 11

decrease funding

think we all understand the situation,"
Perry Varnadoe, director of economic
development fur Mei~ County, said Friday.
Taft made funding for Appalachia a
priority .in the last budget cycle, but he
called for only a $100,000 increase, to $5
million, in 2002 and 2003 fur the Governor's Office of Appalachia. Under the
House Republicans' version, the offices
budget would remain at $4.9 million
each year.
The House Republicans' budget also

would cut funding by 2 pen:ent in 2002
for Appalachian Local Development
Districts and would provide the same
amount - $453,962 - in 2003. Taft
had reconunended that funding for the
districts stay the same at $463,227 in
both years.
"TwO percent isn't going to make 'em
or break '&lt;'111, but it will just impact their
ability to expand their services beyond
what they're doing now," said Joy Padgett, director of the Office ofAppalachia.
State money "makes a significant dif-

ference" in Appalachian Ohio because
the area lacks corporate and charitable
donors. said Karen Alfeld, director of
development for Rural Action, an
Athens-based nonprofit organization
dedicated to revitalizing the poor counties of southeastern Ohio.
Rep. Nan~y; H.ollister, a Republican
from Marietta, said the region fared well
in the House Republicans' budget, given
the amount of money available to work

PIHse see GOP, AI

BY IIIMN J. REID
TIMESSENilNEL STAFF

~

LETART . FALLS
;Warer use by commercial
f.umers in Letart Township
_in Meigo~ County has resulted in a voluntary water
restriction for residents and
farmers in the community.
: Donald C. Poole, general
manager of the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District, said the distribution
sy11em serving all of the
commercial
township's
farming operations and
households is no longer
large enough to meet the
demand for water - espe~
cially now, at the height of
the floriculture season. ,'
''The system now in
place was built and sized to
provide potable water to
hornes in the area;' Poole
,!aid in news release 'issued
~ri~~"tl~ ~ con- .
tmued 8im!th:ofthe 'Indus- ·
try has gone beyond our
ability to serve,"
·
Poole said the district
added a new waler tank and
distribution lin~ to help tHe
district with both flow and
pt:mllJt', but the system is
once again insufliciep~.
· "Another project to
improve flow, to the area is
in the planning stige, but
funding has not yet .been
secured," Poole said. "While
our first obligation is to .

Unions

intensify
lobbying
BY KEVIN KELLY
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

GALLIPOLIS- As legislators continue with
hearing,; on the reduction - laden 2001-03 state
budget proposal, public employee unions are
intensifYing lobbyin g efforts to restore funding
to affected agencies.
"It's important that the public gets both sides
of the story, not the just governor's and legislature's side," said Kathy Ville, administrative organizer for SerYic,e Employee~ International
Union at a Thursday pi:~s~ conference n ear GallipQlis Devdo~fental Center.
~.... S'EitJ&gt;i ' Dis · · t 119'J~represenls pilblic.and
private · health ca.re workers in Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky, including up to 40 staffers

a

PIIMe,_wat.r,AI

The Sang·· F

y

L-R: Beau, John, Brad &amp; Brian
(Not Pictured) Brent

.
M
.

'

eig. County cancer survivors, their families, health prof~~onll)s and others dedicated to funding can,cer treatment and teseatch through the Met~ Umt of the
American Cancer Society walked in the Relay for Life on Friday
evefling.Thams ~hat collecred donations to the event set up booths,
, some of whom ate pictured here registering and picking up their
commemorative T-~hirts. walked around the Eastern High School
track, and participated in a number of events during the evening' 'long event, which concluded with a memorial luminary service.
The Big Bend Cloggers, High Country, Rockin'·Reggie and The
Whites were among the local perfOrmers who entertained at the
relay.'The 'evening's events starred with a surVivor's walk, made up
o£local cancer survivors. (Brian J. Reed photos)

•

GALLIPOLIS -Arthur C. Lund, director
of chaplaincy services at Holzer Medic:il
Center, is retiring effective May 3, said LaMar
Wyse, president and chief executive dfficer of
HMC.
,
.
, Lund has be~ri. with HMC since July

Paul's Lutheran Church
in Pomeroy,as well as
completing an internship
in Clinical Pastoral Education at the Fallsview
Merna! Health Center,
Cuyahoga Falls, from

,1974.

1973-74.

FROM STAFF REPORTS ,

Arthur C. Lund

Hlali: 701
Law: 10s
Dellils, A3

'·

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... .. . . .... .
~

~

~

'

Mercury
I-lVI 1...,1

IN

140-446:-9800 •

Please s• Unions, AI

'Doonopen .

LUnd retiring tom HMC post this week

, . Prior to 1, his pastoral career in Gallipolis
• ?fld following graduation from seminary,
Lund served font years as ~e pastor of St.

LINCOLN
.. "

1.25

1

vou•

t4

CAh:Odl!ll
Clusifieds
~mi~

Edjtorja!s

ObH111011
SIHIID

StAcy

P2·Z
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Dl

He also completed a
summer unit of Clinical
Pastoral Education at

Massachusetts General Hospitaf in Boston .
Lund is' a clinical member of the Association for Clinical Pastoral Edu cation, a member of the Association of Professional Chaplains, and the Ohio Healthcare Chaplains
Association .
He has served as Central District representative on the executive board of the Ohio
Healthcare Chaplains Association, and on the
Continuing Education Committee of the

PI•••• see Lund, AI

, Cameron Muncy, left, and Gallipol is City Commissioner Celestine Skinner cut the ritlbon Saturday for the grand opening of the Sears Dealer Store at 2200 Eastern Ave. For more on the
store, see story and photos on Dl of today's
edition. (MIIIissla, Russell photo)

.House t~rminates pa·perless program
COLUMBUS (AP) Gov. Bob
Taft's program to- pull more paper out
of state government won't even get
started under the House Republicans'
version of the $45 billion budget being
heard in the House Finance Committee.
Taft outlined the idea, known as egovernment; in his initial State of the
State speech in 1999. It was designed to

'
cut down on the paperwork
at agencies
by shifting certain transactions, memos
and other informati9n sharing to email and the Internet.
Ohioans can now pay state taxes, get
license plate .a nd boat registration
renewals and receive other services
online. E-gqvernment proposed spending $17.5 million over the next two
years to concentrate on government

agencie~.

Th e program was to be owrsee n by the Department of Administrative Services.
Under a subst itmc budget bill introduced by House Republicans on
We·dne sday, however, th e program
would be eliminated, Lawm akers are
looking for ways to increase funding for
primary and secondary education by
$1.4 billion over the next two years.

OWN LANI

•

Holzer Home
of Holzer. Medical Center
Skilled Nursing, Home Heollh Aides, Physical,
Occupational and Speech Therapy.

~
'

'

'I

(740)'446·5301

'

,,

HO~ZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

�.

•

I

Ohica

PapAl

_•_w_~~q~~-in_.,._-_J_e•_a_w__~~~----~~~!t)!II!!______~--~----~M~~~.~~d~2~~~2~•i
TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS
Suspect hunt

continues

Hydrant flush
slated by city

PLEASANT,
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis
POINT
WVa. - Authorities are con- will observe the following
tinuing the search for Jean L. schedule for hydrant flushBates, 47,Columbus, the man ing:
• May 7 Eastern
Wl,l'lted in connection with
· Wednesday's armed robbery . Avenue, Maple Shade area,
First, Second, Third ' and
of Peoples Bank, NA.
Officers believe there is a Founh avenues, Vinton
strong
possibility Bates Avenue, Neil Avenue and
remains in this area as he is Ohio Avenue.
thought to have family m
• May 8 - Ohio 7 (down
GalJia County. A federal bank river), Neighborhood Road,
robbery warrant has been Green Acres, Texas Road and
Ohio 141.218,588 and 160
issued for his arrest.
Anyone with any informa- to U.S. 35 bypass.
tion on his \vhereabouts is
• May 9 - All of U.S. 35
urged to contact the Point West and all of McCormick
Pleasant Police Department Road. '
These areas will have their
at 304-6 75-1104 or Point
Pleasant Detachment-West hydrants flushed between 8
Virginia State Police .at 304- p.m. and midnight. Residems
should be cau tioned that
675-0850.
.
some temporary discoloration of the water and low
pressure may occur during
POINT '
PLEASANT, these periods.
W.Va. - West Virginia and
M ason County Schools
require all eighth grade stuc
GALLIPOLIS ._ · The Galdents complete the first two
lia
County Sheriff's. Office
years of the five-year educahas been informed that
tional plan.
. In order to complete this Attorney General Betty
plan, Point Pleasant Middle Montgomery's office is investhe
American
School staff will be available tigating
on Tuesday from 3:30 to 6:30 Deputy Sheriffs Association
p.m. in the cafeteria. All stu- (ASDA) for possible violadents must have the two-year tions of the Charitable. Trust
plan completed and signed Act of Ohio.
Sheriffs in northwest Ohio
by a parent/ guardian before
enrolling in Point Pleasant have been contacted by staff
High School. Enrollment and of the Charitable. Solicitaregistration for ninth grade tions section of the attorney
courses will be completed at general's office wanting to
know .if they have ·received
this time.
All eighth grade students any assistance from ASDA. ·
"As of this date, I am
and their parents/guardians
unaware
of any donation or
are urged to attend. If you are
unable to attend, individual contribution to any sheriff's
appointments can be made · office 10 this state:• Gillia
by contacting PPMS at 675- Sheriff David L. Martin said.
"Citizens of GalJia County
3820.

Meeting slated

Advisory issued

'U'P

...,.'""";~~ ........ . , .... t,..

of any phone solicitations
they may receive."
The Buckeye State SheriffS
Association does not use
telephone solicitations, only
direct mail, which residents
have probably received, Martin said.
" Ifyou have aliy q!Jestions,
please contact my office," he
said.

Ceremony set
atBHCC
RIO GRANDE - The
annual senior certificate ceremony of the Gallia-JacksonVinton Joint Vocati.o nal
School District will be May
17 at 6:30 p.m. in the Buckeye Hills Career Center
amphitheatre.
In case of rain, the ceremony will be moved to Lyne
Center at the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College.
Students from BHCC will
receive a Career-Technical
Certificate of Completion
and a Career Passport. The
Career Passport is a credentialing tool that documents
the specific occupational
skills, academic skills and
· employability skills of students who complete a secondary career-technical education program in Ohio.
Scholarships and other special awards will be given to
students during the ceremo- ·

ny.

Ki·Ro·Li meets
Maya
GALLIPOLIS The
three service clubs .of Gallipolis - . Kiwanis, Rotary
and Lions clubs - will meet
for their annual combined
dinner meeting ott May 8,
with the Kiwanis Club as

host.
The meeting will be in the
Fellowship Hall of Grace
United Methodist Church,
starting at 6:30 p.m.
State Rep. John A. Carey,
R-Wellston, will be guest
speaker.

Board to 111eet
RIO GRANDE Rio
Grande Board of Public
Affairs regular monthly
meeting will be Tuesday at 6
p.m. in the Municipal Building.

Beef workshop
BIDWELL
Gallia
County Extension Service
will be offering a workshop
on clipping, fitting and
showing 4-H beef projects
on May 3 at 6 p.m. at Champion Hill Farms, Ohio ·554,
Bidwell.
This will be a hands-on
informational session for all
individuals who are interested in showing 4-H beef projects. The program will cover
the proper techniques of
clipping, fitting and showing,
as well as important tips for
show day preparation.
Tammy Shifflett, a senior in
animal and poultry science at
Virginia Tech, will present
the program as part of an
internship with OSU Extenswn and Champion Hill
Farms.
Champion Hills herdsmen
Jon Davis and Kevin Rose
will also assist in the program. The Gallia County
Extension Service encourages all Gallia County Junior
Fair. exhibitors to participate
in this program.
For more information, or
to obtain a flyer, call the
OSU Extension Office at
446-7007.

Meetlnpset
GALLIPOLIS First
Presbyterian Church of Gal_:
lipolis will spo!lsor a series.of
meetings on commumty
concerns in May.
On May 2, a speaker frorri
Gallia
County
Senior
Resoun;e Center will discuss
·services available in the area .
May 9 will feature a speaker
fiom Hospice, and on May
16, a speaker from Serenity
House will discuss domestic
abuse.
Each meeting will begin at
6 p.m. with a light supper
provided by the Evangelism
and Outreach Committee.
Each speaker begins the program at 6:30 p.m. The com- ·.
munity is invited to attend
both the dinner and information session.

'

'

planned

'
RACINE --;- Plans are
underway
for
the
Racine/Southern
Alumni
Banquet to be held on Saturday, May 26, at Southern High
School. The dinner will be at
6:30 p.m. followed by in~­
duction of alumni as weD as
special entertainment. Cost of
the dinner is $12.
Tickets may be ordered by
sending a request along· with a
check to Shirley A. Johnson
55590 State Route 124, Portland, 4S770. Also tickets may
be purchased at the Racine
Home National Bank, Cross
Grocery, and Southern High
School.

EMS nans

atGAHS

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
POMEROY - Units of the
Academy
High
School Meigs Emergency Serviae
Choirs will present "Bye Bye · answered seven calls for ~e
Birdie" May 11 and 12 in the on Friday. Uni!S responded as ful•
Washington
Elementary lows:
School auditorium at 8 p.m.
CENTRAL DISPAT&lt;li
Tickets are $6 per person
4:14 p.m., East Main S~m:t,
and will go on sale Tuesday, Don Lewis, Anna Lewis, Dave
Wednesday and Thursday, Bass, refused treatment;
and again May 7 and 10 in
9:05 p.m., Maples, Bonnie
the lobby ofWashington Ele- Atkins, treated.
•
mentary from 5-7 p.m.
MIDDLEPOIU
Tickets . can also be pur1:18 a.m., Jessie Cleek Road,
;
chased at the door, or by assisted by Pomeroy; strucl:llre
contacting Libby Wiseman at
fire, Kim Athey residence, no
446-8299.
injuries.
POMEROY
2:35 p.m., Powell Street,
Audrey Daughty, Holzer MeaPAGEVILLE Revival
ical Center;
services will be held at the
4:14 p.m., East Main streer,
Pageville Free Will Baptist
Emily Dillard, Pleasant Valley
Church, May 3, 4 and 5. Calvin
Hospital.
· Minnis will be the speaker.

Revival set

RACINE .

8:09a.m., Elm Street, Etta Mae
Hill,HMC.

REEDSVJI.i.E ' ·:

I ' '

World economic leaders
trying to avert.recession

banquet

'Bye Bye Birdie' ·

.......... ._;.,.,...,

.'

mission ~ meet on Monday
at 7:30 p.m. at the office at 1 t1
E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy..:

POMEROY
Meigs
CountyVeterans Service Com~

7:28 a.m., Swan Road,. RUth
Stethem,
Carndeh-Cla!k ·
Memorial Hospital. ·

Dad watd:es kids spar

~~ Teen indicted in toddler's death
.

•r

, CANTON (AP) - A 17-year-old baby sitter faces life in
.!lrison if convicted of beating a 3-year-old girl to death.
;,. Antwuan Burton w:as indicted Thursday on a cl)arge of
~~ravated murder in the death of Shay WiUiarns. Burton isn't
eligible for the death penalty under Ohio law because he was
,only 16 at the time of the girl's death .
,
, " Burton was scheduled to be arraigned May 4 in Stark Coun.ty Common Pleas Court.
· . The toddler died of a skull fracture, trauma to the abdomen
'and abdominal bleeding, according to county Coroner James
'l,'ritchard.
·
·
·

...

:. Doctor sentenced in murder plot
·· · CLEVELAND (AP) - A doctor was sentenced to 45 years
· 'l'n prison for plotti ng the death of his pregnant wife and two
.

.

•

•

~ . ·. •

S~uderita

at Meigs Middle School partlclpat·

ed In "HI!)ple Day,· a special evant held to educate teenaaars
about the late 1960s and VIetnam War era. From left are, Jeff
Baughman, Amanda Hoyt, PeUY Duff, Anna Sayre, Katie Reed
and Joe Howard. (Tony M. Leach photo)

BY TONY M. Wc:tt
SENTII'£l. NEWS STAFF

MIDDtEPORT- Students
at Meigs Middle School were
"feelin' groovy" Friday afternoon during an informal gathering to both reflect and learn
about events that took place
during the late 1960s.
Tie-dyes, bell bottoms and
chants of "flower power" filled
the school's gymnasium as students participated in a day to
remember a time when mainstream society was fighting a war
and, at .the same time, attempting ro ·~ust give peace a chance."
"Every spring we hold a
'Hippie Day' so that srudents
can get a more realistic idea of
one of the most imporrant.times
in American history," said Amy
Perrin, bnguage/arts teacher at
the school.
""' "The event is being held i?
COIIJuncbon wtth the schools
history · teachers, who are cur-'
rendy teaching the students
about the late '60s and the Vietnant ~r era.''
Besides the colorful apparel,
Perrin added that Friday's "time
·w.~rp" also included music and
' lingo often heard during that
specific period time.
Randy Hart, eighth grade student, s;lid he enjoyed flressing up
- - - .ft.,

_ _, · -

.~-. •

in the '60s garb, but that he
couldn't see doing it evety day.
"It's fun for one day, but I just
don't know about having to
wear these clothes all the time:·
joked Hart. "However, the event ·
really does give us, the students,
a feel for what life niust have
been like during such a rurbulent and tadical time m our
country's history."

; . Public Notice
:~be a public or non
oprolll entity.
3. An applicant muat
provide
wrltlen
~ •••urance that tha
nnlor htclllty will lie
ope111tecl •• a public
or nonpiorn antlty.
; ~. All appHctlnt muat
provide aaaurancea
', that tilt facility will be
·,open at !nat 5 daya
and 35 houre per

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

federal or atata
regulatlona, energy
;elated renovallona,
refurblahlilenta or
exjlllnalon of exlatlng
to
ap ace
eccommodate aging
aarvlcea delivery, or
conatructlon of a new

o·r
obtain
the
remaining fundlrig
from organizational .
re·eourcea or other
funding aource1.
Matching lunda can be
any contribution of
.. 1'111 property, caah, lnkind contrlbUII!Ina and
equipment
and
lurnlahlnga.
Real
property match C.nnot
exceed· 90% of the
match requirement.
The 11111xtmum gront
lor the SFY 2001/ SFY
2002 funding cyalo Ia
$50,000 per proJect
aponaor. All proJect
expenditure• muat be
m•d• by May 31',

Dlalrlc! 7, Inc. by May
21, 2001.
The
Govetnor
will
announce funding
declalone no later
than mlchluty.
Plaa11 call Nina
Kellar
or
Rita
Tracawell II you have
any quaatlone about
the Senior Facility
Program and/or ere In
need of technical
aaalatanca
In
·completing the SFP
appllcauon.
_April 29, May 8, 2001

facility.

·Ineligible
expenditure• Include:
Equipment
end
lurnlllhlnga with laaa
5. An eppllct~nt muat
than a 10-yaar life
,provide aaauranca
expactancy,
.that the facility will be
equipment
and
'Ope111ted •• a aanlor
lumlllhlnga that could
canter for at leaat 10
be eaelly removed
. !flll'll following the
from tha facility,
·· taat dliy of the fl~t~~al
proJect
aponaor
• rear lor which the
admlnlatrellvl
grant lunda were · expenaee aaaoclated
IW8rdecl.
with tha project, end
EUOIBU!
INH peymanta.
.PROJECTS
.
Senior FIJCIIItl..
Tha · following
Prog111m tunUa cin"'
proJecll ara eligible
to finance not
lor ,siP ·rundlng: -uaed
"'~,. t_
hen 110% of Ill
ri Enllfvenor rapatra lor
proJICtl total budgtl:
,. IIIII)' or hulth
The local project
boncarna, ranoVIItlon
1f10ntor muat provide
proJIIGII 11111ndatad by

-k.

APPUCATION
PROCI!BB
H your O{ganiiiiiiiOn II
lnllraatedln ·applying
· tor &amp;FP· funding,
~=•• requeat a
. rem MerMJal and
application by ctilllng
Rlta ,TrMawlll atAree
A.gency on Aging

c.m..,,.
Cillo.

Correction Polley
Our lAlla coocen lo aH lloriea II to be
lttunte. If , •• bow or •• .emr Ia I
II0'70 tall lbf DfWI,.., It (740) 446IJ41or Pomero,.; {140) "-1·1155. We will

, • ..,k your lnfo.,.1tlon 1ad 111kf 1
oomdtonlf warn11td.
NIWI~I'Ime!lll

. · · Galllpolla
Th a11la number II 446·1341.
DeplrUMIIt ntnUo• aft:

Mn..llldltor
-Ell. Ill
Cit)&lt; ldltor---Eot. Ill
Elt.llO
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NOWJ-------Elt.llt
1b Soad E-MaU
phribollf@nnkalld.com .

SPE.CIAL .·
i Tumble
2 hrs. each week
Only $50.oo
CHEER STATION
740-446-9603
Ohio River Plaza
Gallipolis
(740) 446-3484 .
til 9
Daily

U....,.lo----·--·

"""Pomeroy
Dfpltrtmtnt
•liD nmber J• "1·1155.
1,.,

n.
Deport-,........,,

__

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·~-·

Middleport Residents
Village Income Tax

P05lMASI'Eib Scld llldral COI'T'eedoas to,, .
S11nday-nmu Scnllncl, -IllS Third Ave.,
Gtlllpoli•Oillo 45631.
8UNDAYONLY
8UIIicaJmON MTES .

DEADLINE

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SINGLICOPYPRICI!

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-oati-

MAJ'lj,~ONS

Monday
Call George before June 1st a·nd receive
FREE regul,a r Installation. .

. ...................................................
· - Gtllo Coolly
•
13 W..b
$27.:1)

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62Weda..II;;;'Odiiif't.fiih'~··SI05.56

. . . . . . . . . . . . _. . . . .

Golfnl Ma-r··-··-·--Ell. Uti
13 W..U............................... _....:...... -.......$29.2:1
NewJ.......;.-·- - -.Elt.1181 I ~=
1.56.68
............- ............"..................or Ert 1106 ··
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'

'",_, ""'olll...

._"""'...,.. 11 , . _
no Swodo) n....s.nlloel wUI"" to. mpollllblo
,.,.,._,__.,_
Plo~l""r """""" rip 10 odjuol- durlq
•.. oul&gt;ocolpdoo period.~""
mor he lmp!c.,.aled by
Ill
the "bo:riptloot.
.

.......

llt:;;;;,:;-;Hollow Green House
. Large Selection of Proven
Petunia plants, baskets
other proven winners. Also
other bedding plants,
vegetable plants, perennials &amp;
Hollow
.herbs. German
'
· Greenhouse. 55 Allison Rd.
Patriot 'Ohio. Look for signs
al011a C.R. 775 and 14. Closed
Sundays.

GeorgeGrate,

7'40-742·2271

~n lndepettdent Sales Representative
·•

•

-.. .... .... --" - • ·•
_,

APRIL 30, 2001
Late filing penalty will
apply after due date.

SAVE AD
2 Avg. size _rooms cleaned
$29.99 ea: rril.

65 and Over
Get your Breathing Medication;
Albuterol, Alrovent, paid by
Insurance. Free Delivery

Captain S1eamer Carpet Cleaner
446-6784or

Toll Free 1-888-338·7647

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

Save ad

serves victims of domestic
violence call 446.·6752 or
1·800-942-9577
. Auto Insurance
Monihly Payments
Problems with your driving
record; DUI's speeding
tickets, etc.
Same Day SR·22's issued .
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency
446· 1960
.

.'

· TJ's CHILDCAAE

.'

. 161h Annual
· •
Mercerville/Hannan Trace Alumni
May 261h
Hannan Trace Elementary School
Doors open 4:00 pm.
Dinner 6:30pm, $15.00 ea.
RSVP Call Secy·Treas;
Katie Mullins
7 40·446· 7379

Graduates
Call 441-7331 for all your
graduation party supplies.
We have themes for the
preschool to college
· graduate.
www.1BOOparJyconsuilantcom/32248

Hanging Baskets $6.50
Geraniums 50¢
PLANTS R US
Near Clay School
St. Rt 7 South
M-S 10:00-6:00
Sun 12-6:00

Courtside Bar &amp; Grill
celebrates
Cinco De Mayo
May 4th &amp;5th
Drink Specials
Prizes C&amp;J
Production$
OJ Cory

Quality Christian Child Care
SUMMER ENROLLMENT
State Licensed for
Infants, Toddlers, Pre-School
and School-Age

HORIZON
CONSTRUCTION
A New Beginning.
With Qualify You Can Afford
• New Homes • Additions • Roofing
• Siding • Windows • Porches &amp; Decks
• Eieclricai • Plumbing
Call Today For A FREE ESTIMATE
(740) 256·6900 or
TOLL FREE (866) 556·6900
Licensed &amp; Insured
Serving lhe Ohio Valley with over 75
Yrs. EKperience
Sam &amp; Mindy ~mith, Owners

·.

. 5/15/01

Good Times Bar
Pomeroy, Ohio
for.the Ladies·
Male Revue
Monday, April 30th
Show Time
8:30pm

Serenity House

Call for avallabllily or Child Care Spols

Entered 11 aecoU clau ma11111.1 miller at
Pooncovy, Ollia
M.....-: The Altoctllccl Prcu, a11d lM Ollio

-

'""*'"""do

Srn~i"g l~ Sirm 1191

TIN viewo "/'~ arr ""'" ofw
nor """"'rily ..jf«t th&lt;....., ofAJ..,, /roc. Un/m •rhm.ut-'. rhnpui.ru .,.,
mopfgyfd oraffi/imd wirh A4""&lt; Inc. M.m. In&lt;. Mmob&lt;r: NYSE. NASD. SIPC A mmob" •fT"- MONY G'""P·

North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6 , fully furnished, 2nd
row, ocean view, washer/diyer.
Openings from May thru Sept.
446-2206 Mon thru Fri.
Evenings &amp; weekends .

Diamonds.N Gold

I..

Advest

'

&amp;unbap -Gttmef &amp;mtinel
Reader Services

DATE &amp; TiME:

Advest, Inc. cordially
invites you to attend a LOC.UION:
Holiday Inn
complimentary 577 State Route 7 North, Ga/Jipoli!, OH
seminar focussing on
Seating is limited, rmroations art rtquimi.
the newest option in
R.S. V.P. by calling Chris Copeland or Lori Young
college savings. ·at (740) 446-8899 or (800) 446-0226

· CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS

tt• s Planting T"lme

(IJIIPS Ul·MI)
C••IIIJ ......,.riWIIIIra.IK
Publllbcd evtt)' SU1&lt;11y, 82.!1 1'11-lrci Aile.,
OaUipolil, Oblo. by tbo Ohio Ydley Ntlilhh'l
-diu - ptld .. Ollllpolii,

Putnam Investments

2002•.

.

Let us plant one of our propane tanks
for you and grow warm this winter.

PubliA: Nlllka ia Now....,..... A

and

7:00pm - 8:00pm

French City Foodservlce
740-446-7059

TheiRS hilS
provided a new
way for you to
save for college
education
expenses.

Monday, April 30, 200 l

tra:ya,

·Middle School students
re-create 'hippie' era.

.Ex-;band
director pleads
.

.·
ConUnuecr Irani D-7

IHklnt firl

HIPPII DAZI -

sex sting operation. Police alleged Spitzer made physical contact
with an undercover officer.
.
On Mo~day, the Sugarcreek Local Board of Educatiqn
accepred Spitzer's resignation from his reaching and supple~
mental duties at the high school, effective Aug. 26.

CINCINNATI (AP) -An exclusive ptjvate school has settled its complaint against Steven Soderbergh's Oscar-winning
film "Traffic" over the use of the school's name in the film.
The filmmaker, USA Films, and Cincinnati Country Day
School reached the settlement Monday, a la~vyer for the suburban Cincinnati school said Thursday. The school had been pre'
pared to sue If an agreement had not been reached,lawyer StanDAYTON (AP) -A former Bellbrook High School band ley C he sley said.
director has entered a no contest plea ro a charge of disorderly
C hesley declined to discuss the settlement's terms. A
conduct in a plea agreement with prosecutors, who dismi ssed a
'spokesman for USA Films released a one-line ~tatement.
count of public indecency.
David M . "Marty" Spirzer
was found guilty Thursday on
the disorderly conduct charge
and was fined S100 plus court
costs of S54 said Pam Nipper, a
deputy clerk 'in Dayton Municipal Court.
The cicy prosecu tor's office
had filed the charges in conHosTED BY:
nection with Spitzer's arrest
Bryce Smith, Associau VP- lmmtmrots, Advest, Inc.
April 5 by undercover Dayton
Mark Smith, CRPC- lnvestmrotJ, Advest, Inc.
police in Triangle Park during a
Ryan Smith, Financial Advisor, Advest, Inc.

y_. Rllht to KDow, Doliwnd Ript to Your Door. ~

'French Clh
Foodsenlce
whtt you •re

WASHINGTON (AP) Fund, got under way Fri- FinanCial leaders of the · day.
world's richest nations want
About 25 demonstrators
to prevent the. sputtering picketed near the h,ead ~
global economy from top- quarters of the two instituH11
pling into recession and tions in the first of what
will work on ways to keep they have billed .as "militant
that from happening.
but nonviolent" protem
The an1wer to all your
.
Treasury Secretary Paul that culminate with a twoO'Neill, Federal ' Reserve hour rally Sunday.
paper 1upply needl...
.· '
Chairman Alan Greenspan
All 1inl of fo•m cup1 and Ud1, foem
As the ministers gathered
and their cqunterparts from they received some good
paper platu, compartD:umt htnlecl
six other major industrial- news in the form of betternaplda.1, paper towell, table
ized nations were con- than-expected growth rates
cover, and much, much more•••
fronting thorny issues at in the United States, the
their meeting Saturday at wo~ld's largest economy, in.
Deli 1uppUet avallable, tool
Blair House across from the
the first quarter of 2001.
.
Call now for prtcm,l
White House.
Among the most pressing
Phone Orden or fax Orden acceptedl
But .one thing the Group
concerns at the G-7 meet· Orden received byl:OO p.m. wtl1
of Seven, or G-7, officials
ing is Japan, the second
apparently won't have to
be ready for picJr.up by noon
large~t econbmy, which still
worry about is the huge
.. . . , on the following clay:!··
,
is struggling with a decadea'nti~globalization protests'
'l6ng bout of weakness. A
C..h &amp;: CIIJ'IY cutomen welcomel
that clogged Washington's
new
prime
mmuter,
streets ·last spring and
Junchiro Koisumi, took
resulted in 1,300 arrests.
89 Sycamore St. • Gallipolis, Ohio
Temporary steel barri- office this week pledging to
clean
up
the
country's
trou-·
cades were in place and
police officers were in posi- bled banking system.
tion as the first demonstra•
tions against the econoinic r------"!"":":~--=~----::~---~----------..;.-t
policies ofWorld Bank and
its sister institution, the
·
·•
International
Monetary

Anthony Andrejic, 30, a former Cleveland Clinic surgical resident, did nat spcalc during his ~entencing Thursday in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court: His attorney, Michael
O'Shea, said Andrejic was innocenr an d that the jury was not
allowed to hear all the facts.
"Anything that Andrejic said might be used •gainst him later
if he wins an appeal and gets a new trial," O'Shea said.
.Prose~utors said Andrejic tried to hire a hit-man to kill his
wife, her lover, her unborn child and an informant while he was
waiting to be moved from the Cuyahoga County jail to stare
prison on a drug trafficking conviction.

I

N~E

SUIIII}". Afrl2t. 2011

othe~ .

AKRON (AP) -Thomas Lavery, a father who is accused of
abUsing his home-schooled, high-achieving children, watched
~ two of his daughters sparred in courl.
.
'
- His 22-yen-old daughter, Mary. was in Akron Muncipal
Court on Thursday on a charge that she attacked her 19-yearold sister, Marjory, at a spelling bet in February: ·
• The accusation was the brest to wind up in court for the LavGrf family.
"The entire family situation is a tragedy," said municipal
Judge &lt;Aria Moore.

P%%IC

PageA3

Attention Meigs County 4-H
&amp; FFA Members
Club Pigs for sale
Call 740·245·5672
or 740·367-7176

Gene Plants &amp; Sons
Air Conditioning
Sales- Service!nstallation
Plumbing Heating
Cooling
Free Estimates
300 Fourth Ave. ·
446·.1637

For More
Information ... 446-2342 or 992-2156

•

�.

•

I

Ohica

PapAl

_•_w_~~q~~-in_.,._-_J_e•_a_w__~~~----~~~!t)!II!!______~--~----~M~~~.~~d~2~~~2~•i
TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS
Suspect hunt

continues

Hydrant flush
slated by city

PLEASANT,
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis
POINT
WVa. - Authorities are con- will observe the following
tinuing the search for Jean L. schedule for hydrant flushBates, 47,Columbus, the man ing:
• May 7 Eastern
Wl,l'lted in connection with
· Wednesday's armed robbery . Avenue, Maple Shade area,
First, Second, Third ' and
of Peoples Bank, NA.
Officers believe there is a Founh avenues, Vinton
strong
possibility Bates Avenue, Neil Avenue and
remains in this area as he is Ohio Avenue.
thought to have family m
• May 8 - Ohio 7 (down
GalJia County. A federal bank river), Neighborhood Road,
robbery warrant has been Green Acres, Texas Road and
Ohio 141.218,588 and 160
issued for his arrest.
Anyone with any informa- to U.S. 35 bypass.
tion on his \vhereabouts is
• May 9 - All of U.S. 35
urged to contact the Point West and all of McCormick
Pleasant Police Department Road. '
These areas will have their
at 304-6 75-1104 or Point
Pleasant Detachment-West hydrants flushed between 8
Virginia State Police .at 304- p.m. and midnight. Residems
should be cau tioned that
675-0850.
.
some temporary discoloration of the water and low
pressure may occur during
POINT '
PLEASANT, these periods.
W.Va. - West Virginia and
M ason County Schools
require all eighth grade stuc
GALLIPOLIS ._ · The Galdents complete the first two
lia
County Sheriff's. Office
years of the five-year educahas been informed that
tional plan.
. In order to complete this Attorney General Betty
plan, Point Pleasant Middle Montgomery's office is investhe
American
School staff will be available tigating
on Tuesday from 3:30 to 6:30 Deputy Sheriffs Association
p.m. in the cafeteria. All stu- (ASDA) for possible violadents must have the two-year tions of the Charitable. Trust
plan completed and signed Act of Ohio.
Sheriffs in northwest Ohio
by a parent/ guardian before
enrolling in Point Pleasant have been contacted by staff
High School. Enrollment and of the Charitable. Solicitaregistration for ninth grade tions section of the attorney
courses will be completed at general's office wanting to
know .if they have ·received
this time.
All eighth grade students any assistance from ASDA. ·
"As of this date, I am
and their parents/guardians
unaware
of any donation or
are urged to attend. If you are
unable to attend, individual contribution to any sheriff's
appointments can be made · office 10 this state:• Gillia
by contacting PPMS at 675- Sheriff David L. Martin said.
"Citizens of GalJia County
3820.

Meeting slated

Advisory issued

'U'P

...,.'""";~~ ........ . , .... t,..

of any phone solicitations
they may receive."
The Buckeye State SheriffS
Association does not use
telephone solicitations, only
direct mail, which residents
have probably received, Martin said.
" Ifyou have aliy q!Jestions,
please contact my office," he
said.

Ceremony set
atBHCC
RIO GRANDE - The
annual senior certificate ceremony of the Gallia-JacksonVinton Joint Vocati.o nal
School District will be May
17 at 6:30 p.m. in the Buckeye Hills Career Center
amphitheatre.
In case of rain, the ceremony will be moved to Lyne
Center at the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College.
Students from BHCC will
receive a Career-Technical
Certificate of Completion
and a Career Passport. The
Career Passport is a credentialing tool that documents
the specific occupational
skills, academic skills and
· employability skills of students who complete a secondary career-technical education program in Ohio.
Scholarships and other special awards will be given to
students during the ceremo- ·

ny.

Ki·Ro·Li meets
Maya
GALLIPOLIS The
three service clubs .of Gallipolis - . Kiwanis, Rotary
and Lions clubs - will meet
for their annual combined
dinner meeting ott May 8,
with the Kiwanis Club as

host.
The meeting will be in the
Fellowship Hall of Grace
United Methodist Church,
starting at 6:30 p.m.
State Rep. John A. Carey,
R-Wellston, will be guest
speaker.

Board to 111eet
RIO GRANDE Rio
Grande Board of Public
Affairs regular monthly
meeting will be Tuesday at 6
p.m. in the Municipal Building.

Beef workshop
BIDWELL
Gallia
County Extension Service
will be offering a workshop
on clipping, fitting and
showing 4-H beef projects
on May 3 at 6 p.m. at Champion Hill Farms, Ohio ·554,
Bidwell.
This will be a hands-on
informational session for all
individuals who are interested in showing 4-H beef projects. The program will cover
the proper techniques of
clipping, fitting and showing,
as well as important tips for
show day preparation.
Tammy Shifflett, a senior in
animal and poultry science at
Virginia Tech, will present
the program as part of an
internship with OSU Extenswn and Champion Hill
Farms.
Champion Hills herdsmen
Jon Davis and Kevin Rose
will also assist in the program. The Gallia County
Extension Service encourages all Gallia County Junior
Fair. exhibitors to participate
in this program.
For more information, or
to obtain a flyer, call the
OSU Extension Office at
446-7007.

Meetlnpset
GALLIPOLIS First
Presbyterian Church of Gal_:
lipolis will spo!lsor a series.of
meetings on commumty
concerns in May.
On May 2, a speaker frorri
Gallia
County
Senior
Resoun;e Center will discuss
·services available in the area .
May 9 will feature a speaker
fiom Hospice, and on May
16, a speaker from Serenity
House will discuss domestic
abuse.
Each meeting will begin at
6 p.m. with a light supper
provided by the Evangelism
and Outreach Committee.
Each speaker begins the program at 6:30 p.m. The com- ·.
munity is invited to attend
both the dinner and information session.

'

'

planned

'
RACINE --;- Plans are
underway
for
the
Racine/Southern
Alumni
Banquet to be held on Saturday, May 26, at Southern High
School. The dinner will be at
6:30 p.m. followed by in~­
duction of alumni as weD as
special entertainment. Cost of
the dinner is $12.
Tickets may be ordered by
sending a request along· with a
check to Shirley A. Johnson
55590 State Route 124, Portland, 4S770. Also tickets may
be purchased at the Racine
Home National Bank, Cross
Grocery, and Southern High
School.

EMS nans

atGAHS

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
POMEROY - Units of the
Academy
High
School Meigs Emergency Serviae
Choirs will present "Bye Bye · answered seven calls for ~e
Birdie" May 11 and 12 in the on Friday. Uni!S responded as ful•
Washington
Elementary lows:
School auditorium at 8 p.m.
CENTRAL DISPAT&lt;li
Tickets are $6 per person
4:14 p.m., East Main S~m:t,
and will go on sale Tuesday, Don Lewis, Anna Lewis, Dave
Wednesday and Thursday, Bass, refused treatment;
and again May 7 and 10 in
9:05 p.m., Maples, Bonnie
the lobby ofWashington Ele- Atkins, treated.
•
mentary from 5-7 p.m.
MIDDLEPOIU
Tickets . can also be pur1:18 a.m., Jessie Cleek Road,
;
chased at the door, or by assisted by Pomeroy; strucl:llre
contacting Libby Wiseman at
fire, Kim Athey residence, no
446-8299.
injuries.
POMEROY
2:35 p.m., Powell Street,
Audrey Daughty, Holzer MeaPAGEVILLE Revival
ical Center;
services will be held at the
4:14 p.m., East Main streer,
Pageville Free Will Baptist
Emily Dillard, Pleasant Valley
Church, May 3, 4 and 5. Calvin
Hospital.
· Minnis will be the speaker.

Revival set

RACINE .

8:09a.m., Elm Street, Etta Mae
Hill,HMC.

REEDSVJI.i.E ' ·:

I ' '

World economic leaders
trying to avert.recession

banquet

'Bye Bye Birdie' ·

.......... ._;.,.,...,

.'

mission ~ meet on Monday
at 7:30 p.m. at the office at 1 t1
E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy..:

POMEROY
Meigs
CountyVeterans Service Com~

7:28 a.m., Swan Road,. RUth
Stethem,
Carndeh-Cla!k ·
Memorial Hospital. ·

Dad watd:es kids spar

~~ Teen indicted in toddler's death
.

•r

, CANTON (AP) - A 17-year-old baby sitter faces life in
.!lrison if convicted of beating a 3-year-old girl to death.
;,. Antwuan Burton w:as indicted Thursday on a cl)arge of
~~ravated murder in the death of Shay WiUiarns. Burton isn't
eligible for the death penalty under Ohio law because he was
,only 16 at the time of the girl's death .
,
, " Burton was scheduled to be arraigned May 4 in Stark Coun.ty Common Pleas Court.
· . The toddler died of a skull fracture, trauma to the abdomen
'and abdominal bleeding, according to county Coroner James
'l,'ritchard.
·
·
·

...

:. Doctor sentenced in murder plot
·· · CLEVELAND (AP) - A doctor was sentenced to 45 years
· 'l'n prison for plotti ng the death of his pregnant wife and two
.

.

•

•

~ . ·. •

S~uderita

at Meigs Middle School partlclpat·

ed In "HI!)ple Day,· a special evant held to educate teenaaars
about the late 1960s and VIetnam War era. From left are, Jeff
Baughman, Amanda Hoyt, PeUY Duff, Anna Sayre, Katie Reed
and Joe Howard. (Tony M. Leach photo)

BY TONY M. Wc:tt
SENTII'£l. NEWS STAFF

MIDDtEPORT- Students
at Meigs Middle School were
"feelin' groovy" Friday afternoon during an informal gathering to both reflect and learn
about events that took place
during the late 1960s.
Tie-dyes, bell bottoms and
chants of "flower power" filled
the school's gymnasium as students participated in a day to
remember a time when mainstream society was fighting a war
and, at .the same time, attempting ro ·~ust give peace a chance."
"Every spring we hold a
'Hippie Day' so that srudents
can get a more realistic idea of
one of the most imporrant.times
in American history," said Amy
Perrin, bnguage/arts teacher at
the school.
""' "The event is being held i?
COIIJuncbon wtth the schools
history · teachers, who are cur-'
rendy teaching the students
about the late '60s and the Vietnant ~r era.''
Besides the colorful apparel,
Perrin added that Friday's "time
·w.~rp" also included music and
' lingo often heard during that
specific period time.
Randy Hart, eighth grade student, s;lid he enjoyed flressing up
- - - .ft.,

_ _, · -

.~-. •

in the '60s garb, but that he
couldn't see doing it evety day.
"It's fun for one day, but I just
don't know about having to
wear these clothes all the time:·
joked Hart. "However, the event ·
really does give us, the students,
a feel for what life niust have
been like during such a rurbulent and tadical time m our
country's history."

; . Public Notice
:~be a public or non
oprolll entity.
3. An applicant muat
provide
wrltlen
~ •••urance that tha
nnlor htclllty will lie
ope111tecl •• a public
or nonpiorn antlty.
; ~. All appHctlnt muat
provide aaaurancea
', that tilt facility will be
·,open at !nat 5 daya
and 35 houre per

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

federal or atata
regulatlona, energy
;elated renovallona,
refurblahlilenta or
exjlllnalon of exlatlng
to
ap ace
eccommodate aging
aarvlcea delivery, or
conatructlon of a new

o·r
obtain
the
remaining fundlrig
from organizational .
re·eourcea or other
funding aource1.
Matching lunda can be
any contribution of
.. 1'111 property, caah, lnkind contrlbUII!Ina and
equipment
and
lurnlahlnga.
Real
property match C.nnot
exceed· 90% of the
match requirement.
The 11111xtmum gront
lor the SFY 2001/ SFY
2002 funding cyalo Ia
$50,000 per proJect
aponaor. All proJect
expenditure• muat be
m•d• by May 31',

Dlalrlc! 7, Inc. by May
21, 2001.
The
Govetnor
will
announce funding
declalone no later
than mlchluty.
Plaa11 call Nina
Kellar
or
Rita
Tracawell II you have
any quaatlone about
the Senior Facility
Program and/or ere In
need of technical
aaalatanca
In
·completing the SFP
appllcauon.
_April 29, May 8, 2001

facility.

·Ineligible
expenditure• Include:
Equipment
end
lurnlllhlnga with laaa
5. An eppllct~nt muat
than a 10-yaar life
,provide aaauranca
expactancy,
.that the facility will be
equipment
and
'Ope111ted •• a aanlor
lumlllhlnga that could
canter for at leaat 10
be eaelly removed
. !flll'll following the
from tha facility,
·· taat dliy of the fl~t~~al
proJect
aponaor
• rear lor which the
admlnlatrellvl
grant lunda were · expenaee aaaoclated
IW8rdecl.
with tha project, end
EUOIBU!
INH peymanta.
.PROJECTS
.
Senior FIJCIIItl..
Tha · following
Prog111m tunUa cin"'
proJecll ara eligible
to finance not
lor ,siP ·rundlng: -uaed
"'~,. t_
hen 110% of Ill
ri Enllfvenor rapatra lor
proJICtl total budgtl:
,. IIIII)' or hulth
The local project
boncarna, ranoVIItlon
1f10ntor muat provide
proJIIGII 11111ndatad by

-k.

APPUCATION
PROCI!BB
H your O{ganiiiiiiiOn II
lnllraatedln ·applying
· tor &amp;FP· funding,
~=•• requeat a
. rem MerMJal and
application by ctilllng
Rlta ,TrMawlll atAree
A.gency on Aging

c.m..,,.
Cillo.

Correction Polley
Our lAlla coocen lo aH lloriea II to be
lttunte. If , •• bow or •• .emr Ia I
II0'70 tall lbf DfWI,.., It (740) 446IJ41or Pomero,.; {140) "-1·1155. We will

, • ..,k your lnfo.,.1tlon 1ad 111kf 1
oomdtonlf warn11td.
NIWI~I'Ime!lll

. · · Galllpolla
Th a11la number II 446·1341.
DeplrUMIIt ntnUo• aft:

Mn..llldltor
-Ell. Ill
Cit)&lt; ldltor---Eot. Ill
Elt.llO
...., , _ _ _ _ _ ....
•~ 1..
....111·..
NOWJ-------Elt.llt
1b Soad E-MaU
phribollf@nnkalld.com .

SPE.CIAL .·
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Late filing penalty will
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.'

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· •
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May 261h
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Doors open 4:00 pm.
Dinner 6:30pm, $15.00 ea.
RSVP Call Secy·Treas;
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7 40·446· 7379

Graduates
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. 5/15/01

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for.the Ladies·
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Monday, April 30th
Show Time
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Evenings &amp; weekends .

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Reader Services

DATE &amp; TiME:

Advest, Inc. cordially
invites you to attend a LOC.UION:
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Putnam Investments

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Let us plant one of our propane tanks
for you and grow warm this winter.

PubliA: Nlllka ia Now....,..... A

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French City Foodservlce
740-446-7059

TheiRS hilS
provided a new
way for you to
save for college
education
expenses.

Monday, April 30, 200 l

tra:ya,

·Middle School students
re-create 'hippie' era.

.Ex-;band
director pleads
.

.·
ConUnuecr Irani D-7

IHklnt firl

HIPPII DAZI -

sex sting operation. Police alleged Spitzer made physical contact
with an undercover officer.
.
On Mo~day, the Sugarcreek Local Board of Educatiqn
accepred Spitzer's resignation from his reaching and supple~
mental duties at the high school, effective Aug. 26.

CINCINNATI (AP) -An exclusive ptjvate school has settled its complaint against Steven Soderbergh's Oscar-winning
film "Traffic" over the use of the school's name in the film.
The filmmaker, USA Films, and Cincinnati Country Day
School reached the settlement Monday, a la~vyer for the suburban Cincinnati school said Thursday. The school had been pre'
pared to sue If an agreement had not been reached,lawyer StanDAYTON (AP) -A former Bellbrook High School band ley C he sley said.
director has entered a no contest plea ro a charge of disorderly
C hesley declined to discuss the settlement's terms. A
conduct in a plea agreement with prosecutors, who dismi ssed a
'spokesman for USA Films released a one-line ~tatement.
count of public indecency.
David M . "Marty" Spirzer
was found guilty Thursday on
the disorderly conduct charge
and was fined S100 plus court
costs of S54 said Pam Nipper, a
deputy clerk 'in Dayton Municipal Court.
The cicy prosecu tor's office
had filed the charges in conHosTED BY:
nection with Spitzer's arrest
Bryce Smith, Associau VP- lmmtmrots, Advest, Inc.
April 5 by undercover Dayton
Mark Smith, CRPC- lnvestmrotJ, Advest, Inc.
police in Triangle Park during a
Ryan Smith, Financial Advisor, Advest, Inc.

y_. Rllht to KDow, Doliwnd Ript to Your Door. ~

'French Clh
Foodsenlce
whtt you •re

WASHINGTON (AP) Fund, got under way Fri- FinanCial leaders of the · day.
world's richest nations want
About 25 demonstrators
to prevent the. sputtering picketed near the h,ead ~
global economy from top- quarters of the two instituH11
pling into recession and tions in the first of what
will work on ways to keep they have billed .as "militant
that from happening.
but nonviolent" protem
The an1wer to all your
.
Treasury Secretary Paul that culminate with a twoO'Neill, Federal ' Reserve hour rally Sunday.
paper 1upply needl...
.· '
Chairman Alan Greenspan
All 1inl of fo•m cup1 and Ud1, foem
As the ministers gathered
and their cqunterparts from they received some good
paper platu, compartD:umt htnlecl
six other major industrial- news in the form of betternaplda.1, paper towell, table
ized nations were con- than-expected growth rates
cover, and much, much more•••
fronting thorny issues at in the United States, the
their meeting Saturday at wo~ld's largest economy, in.
Deli 1uppUet avallable, tool
Blair House across from the
the first quarter of 2001.
.
Call now for prtcm,l
White House.
Among the most pressing
Phone Orden or fax Orden acceptedl
But .one thing the Group
concerns at the G-7 meet· Orden received byl:OO p.m. wtl1
of Seven, or G-7, officials
ing is Japan, the second
apparently won't have to
be ready for picJr.up by noon
large~t econbmy, which still
worry about is the huge
.. . . , on the following clay:!··
,
is struggling with a decadea'nti~globalization protests'
'l6ng bout of weakness. A
C..h &amp;: CIIJ'IY cutomen welcomel
that clogged Washington's
new
prime
mmuter,
streets ·last spring and
Junchiro Koisumi, took
resulted in 1,300 arrests.
89 Sycamore St. • Gallipolis, Ohio
Temporary steel barri- office this week pledging to
clean
up
the
country's
trou-·
cades were in place and
police officers were in posi- bled banking system.
tion as the first demonstra•
tions against the econoinic r------"!"":":~--=~----::~---~----------..;.-t
policies ofWorld Bank and
its sister institution, the
·
·•
International
Monetary

Anthony Andrejic, 30, a former Cleveland Clinic surgical resident, did nat spcalc during his ~entencing Thursday in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court: His attorney, Michael
O'Shea, said Andrejic was innocenr an d that the jury was not
allowed to hear all the facts.
"Anything that Andrejic said might be used •gainst him later
if he wins an appeal and gets a new trial," O'Shea said.
.Prose~utors said Andrejic tried to hire a hit-man to kill his
wife, her lover, her unborn child and an informant while he was
waiting to be moved from the Cuyahoga County jail to stare
prison on a drug trafficking conviction.

I

N~E

SUIIII}". Afrl2t. 2011

othe~ .

AKRON (AP) -Thomas Lavery, a father who is accused of
abUsing his home-schooled, high-achieving children, watched
~ two of his daughters sparred in courl.
.
'
- His 22-yen-old daughter, Mary. was in Akron Muncipal
Court on Thursday on a charge that she attacked her 19-yearold sister, Marjory, at a spelling bet in February: ·
• The accusation was the brest to wind up in court for the LavGrf family.
"The entire family situation is a tragedy," said municipal
Judge &lt;Aria Moore.

P%%IC

PageA3

Attention Meigs County 4-H
&amp; FFA Members
Club Pigs for sale
Call 740·245·5672
or 740·367-7176

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Sales- Service!nstallation
Plumbing Heating
Cooling
Free Estimates
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446·.1637

For More
Information ... 446-2342 or 992-2156

•

�----

Opinion

iunNg tina,._.. jeidiud

Page AS
•18
su••.,..
West
Small business owners balk at poker bill

PageA4

s•• y. _,,. 21. 2011

Apttl2•• 2001

i ~W~ed~~~r~gl~nl~a-w-~~he-,-------.·

SUnd8y, Aprll29
r

r• AccuWeathefe lorecasl for daytime oonditions, low/high tamperalll'es

•I

Gelllpol... Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point PI iII I 01, W.V..

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chllrtea W. Gover

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Texas should consider
halt to executions
• · Austin (Texas) Amet"icUI-Statesman, on the death
penalty: There are at least three good reasons for the Texas Legislature to make changes to the death penalty: Clarence Lee
Brandley; Kerry Max Cook; and Randall Dale Adams.
All three were sentenced to death for capital murder. All
spent long years on death row. All were innocent.
The three freed death row inmates embody all that is wrong
with capital punishment in Texas ....
Lawmakers should now look closely at the state's death
penalty and weigh its value in deterring or punishing crime
against a growing list of freed death row inmates here and
across the country.
·
The National Conference on Wrongful Convictions and the
Death Penalty identified 73 men and two women nationwide
who have been released from death row since the 1970s, when
the death penalty was overhauled. .
Of the current death·row population across the country, 43
percent are African Americap. according to ihe NAACP Legal
Defense and Education Fund, Inc. And the death penalty also
has been employed more often when the victim was white 82 percent of the victims of death row inmates were white,
while 50 percent of all homicide victims were white. In Texas, ·
where blacks trulke up 12 percent of the population, they are
42 percent of death row inmates ....
The national spotlight of a presidential election focused
intense attention on Texas' death row. Who can forget the
words of former Gov. George W. Bush, then the GOP presidential nominee: "There's no doubt in my mind that each person who has been executed in my state was guilty of their ·
.
cnme.
.That spotlight has faded. Few are as confident as Bush about
the death penalty. Texas lawmakers should approve death penalty reforms.
They should remember Adams, Brandley, Cook ...

.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BV THE ASSOCI4T~D PRESS

Today is Sunday, April 29, the ll9th day of 2001. Thete are
246 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 29, 1945,.American soldiers liberated the Dachau
concentration camp; that same day, Adolf Hider married Eva
Braun and designated Admiral Karl Doenitz his successor.
On this date:
In 1429,Joan of Arc entered the besieged city of Orleans to
lead a victory over the E.nglish.
In 1861 , Maryland's House of Delegates voted against seceding from the Union.
In 1862, New Orleans feU to Union forces during the Civil
War.
In 1899,jazz legend Duke Ellington was born in Washing. ton D.C.
.
In 1916, the Easter Rising in Dublin coUapsed as Irish
nationalists SUtt:endered to British authorities.
In 1946, 28 former Japanese leader$ were indicted as war
criminals.
·
·
In 1974, President Nixon announced he was releasing edit•
ed transcripts of some secredy made White House tape recordings related to Watergate.
In 1981, truck driver Peter Sutcliffe admitted in a London
co~rt to being the '.'Yorkshire Ripper," the killer of 13 women
in northern England during a five-year period.
In 1983, Harold Washington was sworn in as the first black
mayor of Chicago.
.
In 1992, deadly rioting erupted in Los Angeles after a jury
in Simi Valley, Calif., acquitted four L.A. police officers of
.limos! all state cbarges in the videotaped beating of Rodney
King.
Ten years ago: More than 100 people were killed and some
100,000 were left homeless when a strong earthquake struck
Soviet Georgia. U.S. troops continued airlifting Iraqi refugees
· from a camp in southern Iraq to Saudi Arabia.
Five ·years ago: former CIA Director William Colby was
missing and presumed drowned by authorities in Maryland
after an apparent boating accident; his body was later recovered.
. One year ago:Tens ofthousa'&gt;ds of angry Cuban-Americans
marched peacefully through Miami's Litde Havana, protesting
the raid in which armed federal agents yanked 6-year-old Elian
Gonzalez from the home of relatives. Lennox Lewis knocked
out Michael Grant .in the second round at Madison Square
Garden in New ~ork to retain his WBC.and IBP heavyweight
tid~s.
.
Today's Birthda)'1: Actress Celeste Holm is 82. Rh~hm-~nd­
blues ,singer Carl Ga.rdner (The Coasten) is 73. Singer-musician Lonnie Donegan i$ 70. Poet Rod McKuen is 68. Actor .
Keith Baxter is 68. Bluesrnan Otis Rush is 67.

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This May 3 decide to become and expires on May 10,2001. How
involved with millions of Ameri- can a fire department operate on
c~ on their .knees, as they inter- only $47,000 when a single. ladDear Editor:
America has a tradition of prayer. cede for our nation. You can make der/pumper truck could cost in
excess of $400,000?
The National Day of Prayer is a a difference.
Steve Beha
I think the Green Township resigreat opportunity for Americans to
Brenda Barnhart dents should plan on attending the
unite in recognition of our incredRev. Craig Crossman May 14 township meeting. Just a
ible need for God.
Gladys Cumings · reminder to the residents, it is held
Appropriately, this year's theme is
Faith Hayman at 7 p.m. at the town hall. I'm sure
"One Nation Under God," reflectPeggy Crane our trustees, Tony Beck (446ing the biblical promise in Psalm.
Maggie Biggs 3096),TomWoodward (379-2143),
33: 12, "Blessed is the nation whose
Pomeroy Carter Belville (446-7754) and the
God is the Lord."
gendemen starting the Green Fire
Despite the troubling circumDepartment will be available to
Some concerns
stances that often surround us as a
answer our questions.
country, we can maintain a steadRuss Layne
fast hope as we trust in God's faithDear Editor:
Gallipolis
fulness to His people. It. is only the
After reading the recent articles
working of God within our society, ·in the paper, 1 have some concerns
Get out and vote
our laws, our judgments and• our myself. I would also like to know
hearts that America will again why a few of the former Gallipolis
know the he.a ling of God's power volunteer firefighters decided to
Dear Editor:
upon our land .
.
start a fire department in ·Green
I would like to take this time to
On May 5, 1988, the Hundredth' Township.
.
.
. encourage all the voters of Gallia
Congress of the · United States
Was t~e ammos1ty d~e t_o County to vote May 8.
passed a bill, signed by President changes m the departments poliThis isn't a letter of support or
Ronald Reagan, "to provide for c1es and procedures? Surely, these opposition to any issues, candidates
setting aside the first Thursday in chang~s ~ould J?e appro~ed by the or levies. I would simply ask that
May as the date on which the comnusstoners and the_c~ty man_a~- We each go to the polls and cast il
National Day of Prayer is celebrat- 'er and woQld only be 1mt1ated 1f It vote ·of your c;hoice.
ed."
was to better the service to the . Much too often, electiQns are
Although the annual event was community. If this is what hap- decided by the minority while the
established by an act of Congress in pe~ed, why would we, as Green majority simply complain because
1952, it did not begin to gain residents, want a fire department their candidate doesn't win or they
momentum until a specific day was ~at ~uld be con~_lled by some~ are levied tax they might oppose.
set aside to observe it. Now, 13 body s persona] polic1es and proce- · On Tuesday, May 8, it is your
years later, participation in the dures?
.
.
obligation to go to the polls· and
National Day of Prayer continues
I checked w1t~ ~y msurance cast your ballot. That way, at least
to grow and become a vital part of company a~ut pr~ce mcreases. My you can say I voiced my opinion
our American heritage. This year's msurance ra~g will go from ~ 5 to whether my vote was with the
observance will be Thursday, May 8 . The ratmg may be h1gher majority or not. .
.
3.
·
because Green Township will have
Thank you, and make sure tQ
Meigs County's observance of a new department . and will not vote May 8.
the National Day of Prayer begins have a viable water supply.
Johnnie Russell
on Sunday, April 29 at 4 p.m. with
The rate will go from $192 to
Bidwell
the beginning of the Bible Read~ $473 per year. This rating is based
ing Marathon at the pavilion • on' on•an, ISOratingofthefire,depart- · •
the levee in Pomeroy. A prayer vigil ment that covers your property. If
at the Pomeroy United Methodist the property is within five miles of Dear Editor:
Church .will begin at the same · the fire department and a . fire
At first "blush," the McCain.time. These two activities will con- hydr;mt is within ·1,000 feet of the Feingold bill on campaign finance
tinue daily, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Mon- property, the rate will be that of the reform (which recendy 1;'&lt;\Ssed the
day, Tuesday, Wednesday, conclud- fire department (Gallipolis Fire U.S. Senate), would seem to address
ing at 10 a.m. Thursday, May 3.
Depattment is a 5 on a scale of 1 to ~e issue of"paper money" and its·
At 7 :30 a.m. on Thursday there 10) .
mfluence on American politics.
will be. a prayer breakfast for public
The local fire hydrants are conNot SO, it seems.
With all the dders, amendments
officials and members· of the clergy sidered to be flush hydrants. Flush
at the Trinity Church. From 11:30 l).ydrants are not consider to be a and rhetorical manipulations, it
a.m.-12:30 p.m. we will unite in water source tha.t can be used by a seems that this proposed legislation
prayer at the courthouse steps in fire department without written would greatly favor ·the liberal
Pomeroy. Please plan to join us for permission (check with your ·n.e ws and entertainment media,
five minutes or for one .hour. Pub- trustee; the township does not have while gagging the Christian voice,
'lie prayers will be offered on behalf permission). This il)Surance rate is pro-life groups and private citizens,
of natwnal, state, and local govern- o~y on penon:aJ. property; the ·pre- ~m speaking their thoughts on
ment leaders, and for churches, nuum for a bus1ness such as Holzer 1ssues and candidates.
families, schools and communities. Hospital must be very expensive (if While doing little to restrict "big
At .7 p.m. a Concert of Prayer w~ll they_ can purchase ~policy).
. money," the legislative proposal
be_ held at the Ash Street Church m , ~~ll our taxes go up?~ ~opl~ say goes against the grain of the fourth
M1ddleport.
.
thts ts a 'very good poSSibility smce portion of Article 'I of the First
Abraham Lincoln had this to say there have already been requestS fo.r Amendment: "or the right of the
about .7alling upon the name of the donations fro~ some of the bu~i- people peaceably to assemble, and
Lo~: Unless the great G~d who nesses located 1_n Green Townshtp. to petition the government for · a
amsted · ~Pre~1dent ~ashmgton) . ~reen Townsh1p alre.ady has the r.edress of grievances:·
·
sh.all be w1_th me and aJd me,! ":Iusc highest.
rate _and 1s the largest
.cl~arly, the McCain-FeingoJd
fa1_l. But . 1f the ~arne ommsctent townsh1p m ,Gallia County. .
bill, m its present form, should not
mmd, and Alm1ghty . a~m, *a~ . I c~ecked &amp;nto what we pay Gal- be · approved. Our congressional
d1rected and protected h1m, shall lipolis for our cut rent fire coverage. representative, · Ted Strickland,
guide and support me, I shall not Green has.a yearly contract and the needs. to hear from you now while ~
f:iil ... Let us pray that the God-of amount is b~ed on the cost of the it is still allowed.. ·
'.
our .fathers· may not . forsake us fire runs from the previous year.
Bob Murphy
now.
' The current contract 1s $47,000
Vinton .

'One Nation Under God'

a

. MARTINSBURG (AP) - Human remains found by a
hiker on the Appalachian Trail last weekend have been identified as a 19-year-old Harpers Ferry man.- who disappeared a
year ago.
State Police troopers used dental records to identify the man .
·as Eric Cheeks, who had been missing since he attended
· party last year, said West Virginia State Police Sgt. S.E. Paugh.
Cheeks' mother had told The Journal in Martinsburg on
. Monday tha~ she suspected the remains were her son because·
a wallet, driver's license and pager belonging to her son were
found with the body.
State Police troopers ·confirmed Friday that some of Eric
'Cheeks' belongings were f0und at the site, which was about
' 300 feet off the trail and just inside the West Virginia state line.
'

a

Manchin unveils program

•

the Cedar Grove Exxon.
· Danny Young, the owner of the Park
Mart Sunoco in Charleston, said he
fired two employees, one third of his
work force, on Monday to prepare for
his losses when the state takes his 12
gray machines.
Young said he plans to apply for five
new machines, the maximum that bars
and clubs are allowed under the bill.
Fraternal organizations, like the Moose
Lodge, are allowed to ·have 10

32 percent.
"West Virginia doesn't do anything
simple; they have to make it complicated," said Charlie Gearhart, owner of
·Charlie's, a restaurant and bar in Cross
Lanes that has eight gray machines.
Bill Case, Wise's spokesman, said the
bill not only provides the state with
much-needed revenues, but it also
restricts illegal gambling that has
become rampant across West Virginia.
"We heard from many, many people
maChines .
that owners were using these machines
Others complain the bill is confusing for gambling," Case said. •• A lot of peoand requires owners to fork over too
muc h money to get the new machines. Ple wanted .it stopped."
They say owners will have to pay a
Video poker machines are .legal if
·
c
h
h
used
$1 ,000 annuaI pernut oor eac mac ine
"'oJ' an1useo11ent purposes. The
and a $500 annual licensing fee. Aho, problem, Wise and others have' said, is
they must provide 24-hour surveollance the machines have become illegal gamof any area that has a gray machine. bling· devices where players receive
Added to that is the cost of the wonnongs.
.
machines themselves, which can be as
Case said this bill wHI allow the state
much as $10 ,000, said Virgil Helton , to restrict and regulate· the illegal paydeputy director of finance at the West ours, while giving the state money for
Virginia Lottery. The revenues pro- . program s like the
merit-based
duced \:!y the machines will be taxed at · PROMISE scholarship.

CHARLESTON (AP) -The state Bureau of Employment
Programs has sued a Buxton County company for failing to
pay more than $39,000 in Workers' Compensa.tion and Unemployment Compensation premiums.
The bqreau said Friday 'it had .filed a lawsuit ·in Kanawha
County Circuit Court this week against Mid Pallet Corporation ;a wooden manufacturing firm.
Mid Pallet owes back taxes, interest and penalties of$29,650
to Workers' Compensation and $9,840 to Unemployment
Compensation, the bureau reported.
· The Iawsuit calls for Mid Pallet to stop doing business.

me.nts following last year's
release of more than 250 mil~
lion gallons of tar-like sludge
from a Keutucky refuse
impoundment operated by an
A.T. Massey CoaL Co. subsidiary.
The Oct. 11 release occurred
when the bottom fell out of the
70-acre pond operated by Martin County Coal Co., and
sludge rushed into an abandoned underground mine and~
into tributaries of the 'Big
NITRO (AP) -The state Division of Environmental Pro- Sandy river.
tection on Friday gave 51 companies 45 days to submit safety
information about coal ~fuse impoundments they operate.
The order is part ·of the agel'cy's review o( coal impound-

DEP wants coal dam data

Thank You

BECKLEY (AP) -Secretary of State Joe Manchin unveiled
·:his new voter education program on the 30th anniversary of
.lhe passage of the 26th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
, The · 26th Amendment, authored by the late Sen. Jennings
Randolph, D-W.Va., extended the right.to vote to 18-, 19- and
20-year-olds.
,
, . "West Virginia SHARES is about getting young adults
involved in the process," Manchin told students at Woodrow
Wilson High Scliool on Friday. "Currendy, only 15 percent of
18 to 24-year-olds are registered to vote."
.
SHARES, which stands for Sharing History and Reaching
Every Student, recruits volunteers, especially veterans and
senior citizens, to visit classrooms to share their life history ·
..with students, Mailchin said.

PRING S

SEARS

ERE!!!

Tb~~~~~o'::'nty Saturday, May 5th
M~sierGanleners

10:00 a.m. -1:00 p.m.

Bossard Memorial

at the Library

· ·

and '

" Library

FAIRMONT (AP) - Ten of 15 store clerks targeted by a
three-hour St~te Police sting operation in Marion County
have been cited for selling tobacco products to minors.
. Trooper Mark Kiddy said half the clerks targeted Wednesday
·hight asked the undercover teen-age buyers for identification,
11nd even checked th eir IDs, bur still went · ahead and sold
tobacco to the teens.
State law forbids the sale of tobacco products to anyone
.under the age of 18. ·
, Kidd said the number of citations resulting from the sting
;was higher than he had expe.cted.

.,

MANNINGTON (AP) .Molecular OptoElectronics
Corp.'s Marion County plant will lay off 38 workers next week
'because of slow demand for the company's high-tech product.
Molecular OptoElectronics announced the layoffs at its
fvtannington plant on Friday. The workers' last day on the job
will be May 4.
,
The company also eliminated 20 positions at its headquart~rs
.. ,. . fn·'Watervliet, N.Y. ), .-:: ~· ~ · ·- r :~- ~~:. .;. :,. ;...: ·.:"r"~~'i. ": (r..:..=;i-t..;·~ ,r-.:.....f--f '
President and Chief Executive Officer Randy Stewart said
the cutbacks ate due to a slow market. ·

762 West Union Street
Athens, Ohio

Unpaid premiums yield suit

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CONGRATULATIONS

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On your beautifUl new store - .
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1523 11117111'111
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Congratulations
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Jeff Jacobs

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Letting Us Do
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EIICbDDICS &amp;

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In Switzer· Room

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Layoffs set at Marion plant

BEST

For choosing us to
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electric construction.

TiME FOR THE PLANT EXCHANGE!

Clerks cited in tobacco sting·

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Tha~k you for letting us do your concrete workl.

CREMEAN'S CONCRETE &amp;SUPPLY CO.
tGO G('o r~(··,, Cn·!' l' H11.1rl • Gallqoolis. OH

Thank You For Choosing Us...

Bestolluck
0

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Good Luck On Your Grand Reopening
Of Your Beautiful New Store!

vour ura reopening
of vour new storeI
Thomas
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·---------------------------Human remains identified

·:~.

.

~

VA

r-•.j'Biuelletd I31YI&amp;7'i

•

OUR READERS' VIEWS

,.

CHARLESTON {AP) - . Small
business owners say they will be forced
out of business if legislation regulating
video poker machines in West Virginia
becomes Jaw.
Gov. Bob Wise's video poker bill,
which eventually could produce an
estimated $112 millimi annually for the
state once it's signed into law, prohibits
grocery stores and convenience stores
from having the machines.
"Our governor· and our government
don't give a rat's ass ·about the small
businessman," said Dave Lawrence,
whose ,grocery store near Charleston
has seven gray machines.
Othe '&lt;Owners are equally outraged
by the blfi, which will ban all existing
gray ma~ hines on Jan. I. They will be
replace4.. by 9,000 new machines,
awarded· to bars and fraternal orgariizatimis through a bidding process that
will be regulated by the state .
"People don't understand that the
few cents you make from people playing these machines for amusement only
adds up.~· said Bob Rogers, owner of

•

•

Jet. Rt. 35 &amp; 160• Gallipolis, Ohlb

Rt. 2 Bypass, Pt. Pleasant, WV

740-446·2002

304-675-5200
Un1n-S:mt. 8·7 • :&gt;Un/aay

.

;

•

�----

Opinion

iunNg tina,._.. jeidiud

Page AS
•18
su••.,..
West
Small business owners balk at poker bill

PageA4

s•• y. _,,. 21. 2011

Apttl2•• 2001

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SUnd8y, Aprll29
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Gelllpol... Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point PI iII I 01, W.V..

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Chllrtea W. Gover

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Texas should consider
halt to executions
• · Austin (Texas) Amet"icUI-Statesman, on the death
penalty: There are at least three good reasons for the Texas Legislature to make changes to the death penalty: Clarence Lee
Brandley; Kerry Max Cook; and Randall Dale Adams.
All three were sentenced to death for capital murder. All
spent long years on death row. All were innocent.
The three freed death row inmates embody all that is wrong
with capital punishment in Texas ....
Lawmakers should now look closely at the state's death
penalty and weigh its value in deterring or punishing crime
against a growing list of freed death row inmates here and
across the country.
·
The National Conference on Wrongful Convictions and the
Death Penalty identified 73 men and two women nationwide
who have been released from death row since the 1970s, when
the death penalty was overhauled. .
Of the current death·row population across the country, 43
percent are African Americap. according to ihe NAACP Legal
Defense and Education Fund, Inc. And the death penalty also
has been employed more often when the victim was white 82 percent of the victims of death row inmates were white,
while 50 percent of all homicide victims were white. In Texas, ·
where blacks trulke up 12 percent of the population, they are
42 percent of death row inmates ....
The national spotlight of a presidential election focused
intense attention on Texas' death row. Who can forget the
words of former Gov. George W. Bush, then the GOP presidential nominee: "There's no doubt in my mind that each person who has been executed in my state was guilty of their ·
.
cnme.
.That spotlight has faded. Few are as confident as Bush about
the death penalty. Texas lawmakers should approve death penalty reforms.
They should remember Adams, Brandley, Cook ...

.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BV THE ASSOCI4T~D PRESS

Today is Sunday, April 29, the ll9th day of 2001. Thete are
246 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 29, 1945,.American soldiers liberated the Dachau
concentration camp; that same day, Adolf Hider married Eva
Braun and designated Admiral Karl Doenitz his successor.
On this date:
In 1429,Joan of Arc entered the besieged city of Orleans to
lead a victory over the E.nglish.
In 1861 , Maryland's House of Delegates voted against seceding from the Union.
In 1862, New Orleans feU to Union forces during the Civil
War.
In 1899,jazz legend Duke Ellington was born in Washing. ton D.C.
.
In 1916, the Easter Rising in Dublin coUapsed as Irish
nationalists SUtt:endered to British authorities.
In 1946, 28 former Japanese leader$ were indicted as war
criminals.
·
·
In 1974, President Nixon announced he was releasing edit•
ed transcripts of some secredy made White House tape recordings related to Watergate.
In 1981, truck driver Peter Sutcliffe admitted in a London
co~rt to being the '.'Yorkshire Ripper," the killer of 13 women
in northern England during a five-year period.
In 1983, Harold Washington was sworn in as the first black
mayor of Chicago.
.
In 1992, deadly rioting erupted in Los Angeles after a jury
in Simi Valley, Calif., acquitted four L.A. police officers of
.limos! all state cbarges in the videotaped beating of Rodney
King.
Ten years ago: More than 100 people were killed and some
100,000 were left homeless when a strong earthquake struck
Soviet Georgia. U.S. troops continued airlifting Iraqi refugees
· from a camp in southern Iraq to Saudi Arabia.
Five ·years ago: former CIA Director William Colby was
missing and presumed drowned by authorities in Maryland
after an apparent boating accident; his body was later recovered.
. One year ago:Tens ofthousa'&gt;ds of angry Cuban-Americans
marched peacefully through Miami's Litde Havana, protesting
the raid in which armed federal agents yanked 6-year-old Elian
Gonzalez from the home of relatives. Lennox Lewis knocked
out Michael Grant .in the second round at Madison Square
Garden in New ~ork to retain his WBC.and IBP heavyweight
tid~s.
.
Today's Birthda)'1: Actress Celeste Holm is 82. Rh~hm-~nd­
blues ,singer Carl Ga.rdner (The Coasten) is 73. Singer-musician Lonnie Donegan i$ 70. Poet Rod McKuen is 68. Actor .
Keith Baxter is 68. Bluesrnan Otis Rush is 67.

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This May 3 decide to become and expires on May 10,2001. How
involved with millions of Ameri- can a fire department operate on
c~ on their .knees, as they inter- only $47,000 when a single. ladDear Editor:
America has a tradition of prayer. cede for our nation. You can make der/pumper truck could cost in
excess of $400,000?
The National Day of Prayer is a a difference.
Steve Beha
I think the Green Township resigreat opportunity for Americans to
Brenda Barnhart dents should plan on attending the
unite in recognition of our incredRev. Craig Crossman May 14 township meeting. Just a
ible need for God.
Gladys Cumings · reminder to the residents, it is held
Appropriately, this year's theme is
Faith Hayman at 7 p.m. at the town hall. I'm sure
"One Nation Under God," reflectPeggy Crane our trustees, Tony Beck (446ing the biblical promise in Psalm.
Maggie Biggs 3096),TomWoodward (379-2143),
33: 12, "Blessed is the nation whose
Pomeroy Carter Belville (446-7754) and the
God is the Lord."
gendemen starting the Green Fire
Despite the troubling circumDepartment will be available to
Some concerns
stances that often surround us as a
answer our questions.
country, we can maintain a steadRuss Layne
fast hope as we trust in God's faithDear Editor:
Gallipolis
fulness to His people. It. is only the
After reading the recent articles
working of God within our society, ·in the paper, 1 have some concerns
Get out and vote
our laws, our judgments and• our myself. I would also like to know
hearts that America will again why a few of the former Gallipolis
know the he.a ling of God's power volunteer firefighters decided to
Dear Editor:
upon our land .
.
start a fire department in ·Green
I would like to take this time to
On May 5, 1988, the Hundredth' Township.
.
.
. encourage all the voters of Gallia
Congress of the · United States
Was t~e ammos1ty d~e t_o County to vote May 8.
passed a bill, signed by President changes m the departments poliThis isn't a letter of support or
Ronald Reagan, "to provide for c1es and procedures? Surely, these opposition to any issues, candidates
setting aside the first Thursday in chang~s ~ould J?e appro~ed by the or levies. I would simply ask that
May as the date on which the comnusstoners and the_c~ty man_a~- We each go to the polls and cast il
National Day of Prayer is celebrat- 'er and woQld only be 1mt1ated 1f It vote ·of your c;hoice.
ed."
was to better the service to the . Much too often, electiQns are
Although the annual event was community. If this is what hap- decided by the minority while the
established by an act of Congress in pe~ed, why would we, as Green majority simply complain because
1952, it did not begin to gain residents, want a fire department their candidate doesn't win or they
momentum until a specific day was ~at ~uld be con~_lled by some~ are levied tax they might oppose.
set aside to observe it. Now, 13 body s persona] polic1es and proce- · On Tuesday, May 8, it is your
years later, participation in the dures?
.
.
obligation to go to the polls· and
National Day of Prayer continues
I checked w1t~ ~y msurance cast your ballot. That way, at least
to grow and become a vital part of company a~ut pr~ce mcreases. My you can say I voiced my opinion
our American heritage. This year's msurance ra~g will go from ~ 5 to whether my vote was with the
observance will be Thursday, May 8 . The ratmg may be h1gher majority or not. .
.
3.
·
because Green Township will have
Thank you, and make sure tQ
Meigs County's observance of a new department . and will not vote May 8.
the National Day of Prayer begins have a viable water supply.
Johnnie Russell
on Sunday, April 29 at 4 p.m. with
The rate will go from $192 to
Bidwell
the beginning of the Bible Read~ $473 per year. This rating is based
ing Marathon at the pavilion • on' on•an, ISOratingofthefire,depart- · •
the levee in Pomeroy. A prayer vigil ment that covers your property. If
at the Pomeroy United Methodist the property is within five miles of Dear Editor:
Church .will begin at the same · the fire department and a . fire
At first "blush," the McCain.time. These two activities will con- hydr;mt is within ·1,000 feet of the Feingold bill on campaign finance
tinue daily, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Mon- property, the rate will be that of the reform (which recendy 1;'&lt;\Ssed the
day, Tuesday, Wednesday, conclud- fire department (Gallipolis Fire U.S. Senate), would seem to address
ing at 10 a.m. Thursday, May 3.
Depattment is a 5 on a scale of 1 to ~e issue of"paper money" and its·
At 7 :30 a.m. on Thursday there 10) .
mfluence on American politics.
will be. a prayer breakfast for public
The local fire hydrants are conNot SO, it seems.
With all the dders, amendments
officials and members· of the clergy sidered to be flush hydrants. Flush
at the Trinity Church. From 11:30 l).ydrants are not consider to be a and rhetorical manipulations, it
a.m.-12:30 p.m. we will unite in water source tha.t can be used by a seems that this proposed legislation
prayer at the courthouse steps in fire department without written would greatly favor ·the liberal
Pomeroy. Please plan to join us for permission (check with your ·n.e ws and entertainment media,
five minutes or for one .hour. Pub- trustee; the township does not have while gagging the Christian voice,
'lie prayers will be offered on behalf permission). This il)Surance rate is pro-life groups and private citizens,
of natwnal, state, and local govern- o~y on penon:aJ. property; the ·pre- ~m speaking their thoughts on
ment leaders, and for churches, nuum for a bus1ness such as Holzer 1ssues and candidates.
families, schools and communities. Hospital must be very expensive (if While doing little to restrict "big
At .7 p.m. a Concert of Prayer w~ll they_ can purchase ~policy).
. money," the legislative proposal
be_ held at the Ash Street Church m , ~~ll our taxes go up?~ ~opl~ say goes against the grain of the fourth
M1ddleport.
.
thts ts a 'very good poSSibility smce portion of Article 'I of the First
Abraham Lincoln had this to say there have already been requestS fo.r Amendment: "or the right of the
about .7alling upon the name of the donations fro~ some of the bu~i- people peaceably to assemble, and
Lo~: Unless the great G~d who nesses located 1_n Green Townshtp. to petition the government for · a
amsted · ~Pre~1dent ~ashmgton) . ~reen Townsh1p alre.ady has the r.edress of grievances:·
·
sh.all be w1_th me and aJd me,! ":Iusc highest.
rate _and 1s the largest
.cl~arly, the McCain-FeingoJd
fa1_l. But . 1f the ~arne ommsctent townsh1p m ,Gallia County. .
bill, m its present form, should not
mmd, and Alm1ghty . a~m, *a~ . I c~ecked &amp;nto what we pay Gal- be · approved. Our congressional
d1rected and protected h1m, shall lipolis for our cut rent fire coverage. representative, · Ted Strickland,
guide and support me, I shall not Green has.a yearly contract and the needs. to hear from you now while ~
f:iil ... Let us pray that the God-of amount is b~ed on the cost of the it is still allowed.. ·
'.
our .fathers· may not . forsake us fire runs from the previous year.
Bob Murphy
now.
' The current contract 1s $47,000
Vinton .

'One Nation Under God'

a

. MARTINSBURG (AP) - Human remains found by a
hiker on the Appalachian Trail last weekend have been identified as a 19-year-old Harpers Ferry man.- who disappeared a
year ago.
State Police troopers used dental records to identify the man .
·as Eric Cheeks, who had been missing since he attended
· party last year, said West Virginia State Police Sgt. S.E. Paugh.
Cheeks' mother had told The Journal in Martinsburg on
. Monday tha~ she suspected the remains were her son because·
a wallet, driver's license and pager belonging to her son were
found with the body.
State Police troopers ·confirmed Friday that some of Eric
'Cheeks' belongings were f0und at the site, which was about
' 300 feet off the trail and just inside the West Virginia state line.
'

a

Manchin unveils program

•

the Cedar Grove Exxon.
· Danny Young, the owner of the Park
Mart Sunoco in Charleston, said he
fired two employees, one third of his
work force, on Monday to prepare for
his losses when the state takes his 12
gray machines.
Young said he plans to apply for five
new machines, the maximum that bars
and clubs are allowed under the bill.
Fraternal organizations, like the Moose
Lodge, are allowed to ·have 10

32 percent.
"West Virginia doesn't do anything
simple; they have to make it complicated," said Charlie Gearhart, owner of
·Charlie's, a restaurant and bar in Cross
Lanes that has eight gray machines.
Bill Case, Wise's spokesman, said the
bill not only provides the state with
much-needed revenues, but it also
restricts illegal gambling that has
become rampant across West Virginia.
"We heard from many, many people
maChines .
that owners were using these machines
Others complain the bill is confusing for gambling," Case said. •• A lot of peoand requires owners to fork over too
muc h money to get the new machines. Ple wanted .it stopped."
They say owners will have to pay a
Video poker machines are .legal if
·
c
h
h
used
$1 ,000 annuaI pernut oor eac mac ine
"'oJ' an1useo11ent purposes. The
and a $500 annual licensing fee. Aho, problem, Wise and others have' said, is
they must provide 24-hour surveollance the machines have become illegal gamof any area that has a gray machine. bling· devices where players receive
Added to that is the cost of the wonnongs.
.
machines themselves, which can be as
Case said this bill wHI allow the state
much as $10 ,000, said Virgil Helton , to restrict and regulate· the illegal paydeputy director of finance at the West ours, while giving the state money for
Virginia Lottery. The revenues pro- . program s like the
merit-based
duced \:!y the machines will be taxed at · PROMISE scholarship.

CHARLESTON (AP) -The state Bureau of Employment
Programs has sued a Buxton County company for failing to
pay more than $39,000 in Workers' Compensa.tion and Unemployment Compensation premiums.
The bqreau said Friday 'it had .filed a lawsuit ·in Kanawha
County Circuit Court this week against Mid Pallet Corporation ;a wooden manufacturing firm.
Mid Pallet owes back taxes, interest and penalties of$29,650
to Workers' Compensation and $9,840 to Unemployment
Compensation, the bureau reported.
· The Iawsuit calls for Mid Pallet to stop doing business.

me.nts following last year's
release of more than 250 mil~
lion gallons of tar-like sludge
from a Keutucky refuse
impoundment operated by an
A.T. Massey CoaL Co. subsidiary.
The Oct. 11 release occurred
when the bottom fell out of the
70-acre pond operated by Martin County Coal Co., and
sludge rushed into an abandoned underground mine and~
into tributaries of the 'Big
NITRO (AP) -The state Division of Environmental Pro- Sandy river.
tection on Friday gave 51 companies 45 days to submit safety
information about coal ~fuse impoundments they operate.
The order is part ·of the agel'cy's review o( coal impound-

DEP wants coal dam data

Thank You

BECKLEY (AP) -Secretary of State Joe Manchin unveiled
·:his new voter education program on the 30th anniversary of
.lhe passage of the 26th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
, The · 26th Amendment, authored by the late Sen. Jennings
Randolph, D-W.Va., extended the right.to vote to 18-, 19- and
20-year-olds.
,
, . "West Virginia SHARES is about getting young adults
involved in the process," Manchin told students at Woodrow
Wilson High Scliool on Friday. "Currendy, only 15 percent of
18 to 24-year-olds are registered to vote."
.
SHARES, which stands for Sharing History and Reaching
Every Student, recruits volunteers, especially veterans and
senior citizens, to visit classrooms to share their life history ·
..with students, Mailchin said.

PRING S

SEARS

ERE!!!

Tb~~~~~o'::'nty Saturday, May 5th
M~sierGanleners

10:00 a.m. -1:00 p.m.

Bossard Memorial

at the Library

· ·

and '

" Library

FAIRMONT (AP) - Ten of 15 store clerks targeted by a
three-hour St~te Police sting operation in Marion County
have been cited for selling tobacco products to minors.
. Trooper Mark Kiddy said half the clerks targeted Wednesday
·hight asked the undercover teen-age buyers for identification,
11nd even checked th eir IDs, bur still went · ahead and sold
tobacco to the teens.
State law forbids the sale of tobacco products to anyone
.under the age of 18. ·
, Kidd said the number of citations resulting from the sting
;was higher than he had expe.cted.

.,

MANNINGTON (AP) .Molecular OptoElectronics
Corp.'s Marion County plant will lay off 38 workers next week
'because of slow demand for the company's high-tech product.
Molecular OptoElectronics announced the layoffs at its
fvtannington plant on Friday. The workers' last day on the job
will be May 4.
,
The company also eliminated 20 positions at its headquart~rs
.. ,. . fn·'Watervliet, N.Y. ), .-:: ~· ~ · ·- r :~- ~~:. .;. :,. ;...: ·.:"r"~~'i. ": (r..:..=;i-t..;·~ ,r-.:.....f--f '
President and Chief Executive Officer Randy Stewart said
the cutbacks ate due to a slow market. ·

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OUR READERS' VIEWS

,.

CHARLESTON {AP) - . Small
business owners say they will be forced
out of business if legislation regulating
video poker machines in West Virginia
becomes Jaw.
Gov. Bob Wise's video poker bill,
which eventually could produce an
estimated $112 millimi annually for the
state once it's signed into law, prohibits
grocery stores and convenience stores
from having the machines.
"Our governor· and our government
don't give a rat's ass ·about the small
businessman," said Dave Lawrence,
whose ,grocery store near Charleston
has seven gray machines.
Othe '&lt;Owners are equally outraged
by the blfi, which will ban all existing
gray ma~ hines on Jan. I. They will be
replace4.. by 9,000 new machines,
awarded· to bars and fraternal orgariizatimis through a bidding process that
will be regulated by the state .
"People don't understand that the
few cents you make from people playing these machines for amusement only
adds up.~· said Bob Rogers, owner of

•

•

Jet. Rt. 35 &amp; 160• Gallipolis, Ohlb

Rt. 2 Bypass, Pt. Pleasant, WV

740-446·2002

304-675-5200
Un1n-S:mt. 8·7 • :&gt;Un/aay

.

;

•

�Sundlly, April 29, 2001

Pomaroy • Mlddhpart • Gelllpall, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Obituaries

•

"It doem't take a rocket scientist to figure ·out that if you
don't have the staff. the job's
not getting done;· he said. ult's
AI
a consistent problem cwryat GDC.
where."
GDC is operated by . the
Although Gov. .Bob Taft said
Ohio Department of Mental last week the budget couldn't
FROM STAFF REPORTS
Retardation/Developmental
be cut any further, SE~ POMEROY - Funding
Disabilities, targeted for a 4.1 members found little comfort for pasture and hay serding,
percent spending cut in the in the statement. ·
fencing and other projects is
new budget.
"To some degree, some of it now available to landowners
Stare leadenhip's attention is political spin;'Ville said. "He within the Leading Creek
has focused on an education w:ants to, be re-el~."
watershed, which incorpoequalization plan mandated by
Blanton and Ville urged rates most of western Meigs
the state Supreme Court, more rallies, letter-writing County and portions of
which unions like SEIU have campaigns and presence at the Athens and Gallia counties.
disputed.
· Statehouse to make the case.
Conservation practices and
"Funding education is for DCs, staff and services cost-sharing t•tes for the
great, but it's a mess that lmown to legislators.
Leading Creek Improvement
· should have been ·cleaned up . "Start talking. Start talking Plan were approved during
years ago;' said Ville. "They today befote this reassessment Thursday afternoon's regular
meeting of the Meigs Soil and
want public services to suffer is completed," Blanton said.
DC
to make up their mistakes."
SEIU members at G .
Water · Conservation· District
Ville and other SEIU mem- issued a statemenr calhng Board of Supervisors.
·
bers were joined by loc•l downsizing at DCs "detnThe board approved 15
·d
t
Ohio Civil Service E mpIoyees ment al to t h e res1 en s conservation
practices,
.
d
d
k
Association officials wor mg presen Yserve ·
iiWluding pasture and hay
to restore funding before the · "These proposed
cuts see~!' •g. grazing land protec.~
budget' is approved .
include .the 75 percent tion , critical area seeding,
legislative hearings on the decrease m Soc1~l Secunty . str 1 bank protection, anispending plan started Thurs- workers (I :240 ratto) and the mal waste control facilities,
day in Columbus.
complete annihilation of the and fencing for livestock
Monry Blant-on, president of Soc_ial ~rogram Spee1ahst exclusion. Projects must
OCSEA 's
MH/MR/OV poSltlons, the statement sa1d. address water quality · or
Assembly, said reassessment of "These positions are directly aquatic habitat.
services and job reclassifica- linked to the educanon, faci11In addition, the Leading
nons ordered by MR/DD are tation and monitoring of o~r Creek Improvement Plan
"smoke and mirrors" disguis- individuals' successful transt- includes other conservation
ing a plan to reduce staff to tion into community set- practices such as payments for
the point developmental cen- rings."
the installation of filter strips,
ters like Gallipolis are renThe members said that and establishing perpetual
dered ineffective and ripe for when .clients and their families conservation easements'.
must make decisions about
Although
the
Meigs
Privatization.
Hiring freezes and allowing living options, "it is counter- SWCD is administering the
positions to go unfilled have productive to decrease ser- proiect, it is not limited to
"
contribute d to the problem, vi'ces w hi ch empower rh em to Meigs
County landowners,
he said.
make informed choices."
said Leading Creek Watershed
Coordinator Jim Fteernan.
Depending on the practice,
degr:ee from Wartburg Theo- landowners can receive reimlogical Seminary in Dubuque, bursement for up to 90 perIowa.
cent of the installation . cost,
from PapAl
He also served an internship according to· the . Leading
, at St. Peter's Luthera" Church Creek . Improvement Plan
association. He is also a for- in Baltimore, Md.
Cost Share Handbook. In
mer member of the Clergy
landowners
"Art has served Holzer addition,
Advisory Committee for the Medical Ceqter faithfully and installing streamside filter
Ohio American Cancer Soci- conscientiously for 26 years. strips can teceive a one-time
ety.
His ministry to our patients,
"I have reilly enjoyed my
families and staff has been
ministry at Holzer Medical
invaluable. He will be missed;'
Centennd will miss all of the
Wyse said.
great people on the hospital
Lund ·and his wife Corrine,
staff," Lund said. ''I'm looking
forward to continuing my an instructor at the University
ministry as a parish-pastor ·at a of Rio . Grande, have one
church somewhere in south- daughter, Rachael Bailey.
"We believe strongly in the
eastern Ohio," Lund said.
A native of Dawson, importance of the chaplaincy
WASHINGTON (AP) Minn., Lund received his program at Holzer Medical Fulfilling President Bush's probachelor of arts degree, magna Center, and have already posal to test every student in
cum ·laude, frpm Concordia begun the search to find a grades three through «ight
College in Moorhead, Minn., replacement for Rev. Lund," could cost states as much as S7
and his master of divinity Wyse said.
billion over the next seven
years, the National Association
of State Boan:ls of Education
says.
Ohio weathe.r
Spokesman David .Griffith
Sunday, April 29
said
education officials believe
AccuWeathe,.. forecast for d~me conditions, low/high temperatures
Bush's plan asks states to test
·'
~ICH.
/ ' · , , .. ' '-I
'
·
,,·• , ..
students mote than necessary
l
Ja:tY.:..y I (.
and, they fear, without adequate
.----~
funding.

Unions

; CHESHIRE - Geo~ Grover Cremeans, 78, of South
:Jlourth Stn:et. Cheshire, passed away at 6:15 o.m. on Saturday,
:April 28.'2001 in Overbrook Nursing Center in Middlepo~.
: He was born September 4, 1922 in the Kyger Conunwuty
pf Gallia County. He w.u the son of the late Bryan Cremeans
'and Goldie Roush Cremeons.
; He was a retired heavy equipment/ operator for the Ohio
9perating Engineers, a member of the Old Kyger Freewill
Baptist Church, and • Master Mason of Siloam Lodge No. 456
'&lt;If the Free ond Accepted Masons of Ohio.
He was a U.S. Army veteran ofWorld War II.
'
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his
wife of 62 years, Ermal J. Cremeans, on November 15, 2000; a
:son, Thomas J. Cremeans, on February 19, 1992; a sister, Ruby
1ewey; and a brother, Billy Cremeans.
. Grover is survived by two sons and daughters-in-law, Frank
'A. Cremeans and his wife, Carol, of Gallipolis, and Fred Cre.means and his wife, Betty, of Athens; 10 grandchildren, Fred A.
·Ctemeans of Athens, Martin Cremeans of Acworth, Georgia,
Tom (Liz) Cremeans of Belle, West Virginia, Kim (John) Bur'neU of Lakewood, Kari ())avid) Duvale of Richmond, Virginia,
Tim Cremeans of Bessemer, Alabama, John Cremeans of Gal.:lipolis, Connie Cremeans of Belle, West Virginia, Leigh Ann
:(Steve) Moore of Richmond, Virginia, and Jill Cremeans of
'Athens.
. Eight great-grandchildren also · survive, along with a sister,
'Wilma Swisher of Gallipolis; a daughter-in - law, Sharon K. Harrah of Belle, West Virginia; two sisters-in- law. Julia lee Cre·means of Cheshire, and Evelyn Roush of Merritt Island, Flori·da; and several nieces and nephews.
· Graveside services will be 2 p.m. on Monday, April 30, 2001
in Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire, with the Rev. Jamie Fortner officiating. There are no calling hours.
. Arrangements are by Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.
. Memorial contributions may be made in Grover's name to
Old Kyger Freewill Baptist Church, 16 Old Kyger Church
Road, Cheshire, Ohio 45620.

Lyle R. Sindair
GALLIPOLIS -lyle R. Sinclair, 51, of First Holzer Apartments in Gallipolis, died Thursday,
April 26, 2001 in Riverside Methodist.
Hospital in Columbus.
He was born May 3, 1949 in Athens
County, the son of the late Alba Sinclair
and Helen Van Nest Sinclair.
He was retired from the Athens Post
Office, and at the time of his death, he
was employed with the City of Gallipolis and First Holzer Apartments.
He was a member of AMVETS of
Athens, and also a member of VFW
Post No. 4464 of Gallipolis.
Surviving ate a daughter, Shelly Sinclair, and granddaughter
LeDeana Sinclair, of Pomeroy; a son, Kyle Sinclair, and granddaughter Alisha Sinclair, of Pomeroy; two sisters, Loreda Douof Athens, and Vicki (Francis) Jarvis of Athens; three brothers, Paul (Carolyn). Sinclair of Shade, Boyd Sinclair of Athens,
'and Kenny (Shirley) Sinclair of Shade; and several nieces and
'nephews.
: Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother,
David Sinclair; a brother-in-law, Walter Douglas; and a niece,
Janie Marie Sinclair. .
· Services will be I p.m. on Monday, April 30, 2001 in Bigony1.ordan Funeral Home in Albany. Burial wiD be in Burlingham
.C emetery, with military services. Friends may call at the funer'GI home on Sunday, April 29, 2001 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m .

Lund

"Those uses include, but ate
riot limited to watering of
lawns and gardens, washing of
vehicles, and hosing down sidehmPapAI
walks, driveways and parking
serve the families in letart lots," Poole said. "AU farming
Township, it would be disas- operations are asked to stop the
trous to several of the area's use of their broadcast sprin~ommercial operations if ser- klers, and to use only drip irriyice were to be curtailed gation."
.
because of such a ·high demand
The district can impose a
'for water."
Phase II water use ban, which
; The .district has placed a bans all use of water \vith spe:Phase I Voluntary Restriction cific notations as to where
.for all TP-C customers in water. can be used. A Phase Ill
tetartTownship. Customers are ban, the most extensive, limits
~ked to .voluntarily curtail the all water usage to human con' ~onsumption of water for. uses sumption and curtails sue to
'that are not absolutely neces- commercial operations· with
Sary.
specific notations, Poole said.

Water

f1omPapAI
With.
· Meld agreed, saying: "I think
it would be untealistic to expect
to see big increases every year, so
jr.oc'll take what we can get."
: The only major Appalachian
initiative . the House Republi!="ns left alone was Taft's tecommendation to spend $1 million
in 2002 and S1.5 million in
2003 to .create the Appalachian
New Economy Parmership. It
would'help the region catch up

-

f)·
·~&lt;

c~~
.

l-tlefd!42Ynw!.

IND.

AKRON (AP) - ·Thomas
Lavery, a father who is accused
of abusing his home-schooled,
high-achieving
children,
watched as two of his daughters spa:rted in court.
His 22-year-old da~ghter,
Mary, was in Akron Muncipal
Court on Thursday on a
charge that she attacked her
19-year-old sister, Marjory, at a
spelling l;&gt;ee in February.
,
The accusation was the latest
to wind up in court £9r the
Lavery family.
"The entire fatnily situation
is a tragedy," said municipal
Judge Carla Moore;

1

establish a conservation p Ia
an.
When the conservation p n
is completed, the landowner
then completes an application
for consideration by the
SWCD Board of Supervisors. .
Projects must be complete, ·
the landowner then fills out
an applicapon for consideration by the SWCD Board of
Supervisors. Projects must be
completed to specifications
established by the Natural
Resource Conservation Service.

"

... 42'rney

I Clnolnn.tl

'

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Finest quality Rock of
Ages memoriail
and markers are
·unconditj.onally

warranted against

"""" -

. . . ,, .t :@@'

I
Will be given In GALLIA COUNTY by ·
,I
I S'elt&amp;-re TM HEARING ~ID CENTER I
I
1
I
I
I
I Call Toll
:
I
M
I converalllon Ia Invited to have a .EBIE hurlng IHt to '"If I
1thla problem cen ba
thla coupon with you lor I
a $75.00 value.
I
.I
UMWA •
ALL
PROVIDERS
. .
·
· WAIJ(.INS
.• ,

Doctor sen•

tencecl in mur·
der plot
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
doctor was sentenced to 45
years in prison for plorting the
death of his ptegnant wife and
two others.
Anthony Andrejic, 30, a former Cleveland Clinic surgical
r:esident, did not speak dutjng
his sentencing Thursday in
Cuyahoga County' Common,
Pleas . Court. His attorney,
Michael O'Shea, 'said Andrejic
,~as innoce~t and that the jury
was not allowed to hear all the
facts.
"Anything that Andrejic. said
might be used against him later
if he wiils an appeal and gets a
new trial," O'Shea said ..
Prosecutors said Andrejic
tried to hire a hit-man to kill
his wife, her lover, her unborn
child and an informant while
he was waiting to be moved
from the Cuyahog:~ County
jail to state prison . on a drug
trafficking conviction .

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Debt Consolidation
New &amp;Used Vehicles
Home Improvements
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. For fast, friendly service on vour next loan,
see Peggy Watson, Branch Manager,

AN OAK HILL ,.INA.HC:IAL COMI'ANY '

Amish boy
hospitalized
AKRON (AP) - A pitchfork accident left a 5-year-old
Coshocton County boy hospitalized 'irt stable condition
Thursday at Children's Hospital Medical Center. '
Willis Yoder, ofFte'sno, about
55 miles southwest of Akron,
fell from a barn loft Wednesday
onto a pitchfork, injuring his
right arm.
His family found a driver to
'rake him to a doctor, who
called an ambulance. He was
·
taken to Union HospitaI m
Dover and was transferred by
· to th e Ak ron h osambulance
pi tal.

(AP). - A 'rorD·•·YTON
n
"
mer Bellbrodk High School
band dl.rector has entered a no
contest plea to a charge of dis"
orderly conduct in a plea
agreement with prosecutors,
who dismissed a count of pub.
leS
lie indecency.
.
David M. "Marty" Spitzer
was found guilty Thursday on
PORTSMOUTH (AP)
e disorderly conduct charge A teen-ager who ventured
d \vas fined $100 plus coun onto a railroad trestle with a
costs of $5d, said Pam Nipper, friend lost his footing as a train
a deputy ~Jerk in Dayton approached and fell about 50
Municipal Court.
feet.
The city prosec~tor's &lt;Yflice
Bryan J. Sowards, 14, ofWest
. had filed the charges in con- Portsmouth, was pronounced
nection with Spitzer's arrest dead at Southern Ohio Med,
- .. . .,...._. --·
.
I
.

een .d• •In
trestle fall

·.
57 Court st., Cllllpolls, 740-MI·IOOO

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
janitor was shot and killed ip a
late-night attack . as he left
work through a back door at
John Marshall High School,
police said Thursday.
Demetrius · Minifee, 33, was
shot as he left the school about
11:05 p.m. Wednesday. Coworkers who heard three shots
found him in the parking lot
with a gunshot wound to the
head.
He was pronounced dead.
about I a.m. Thursday by the
Cuyahoga County coroner. ..
Police !lave not found any
suspects or a motive, said a
police spokeswoman, Lt.
Sharon MacKay.

'Jl

Open Monclly, Tllftdly. WICinelclay, and Ft1dly from
s:so un111 s:oo, - lllqf1CIIY rrom s:so un111e:oo.

'

Nach• actOfd

Janitor

••

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Allallnl ..... ~to~

'

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- ·-

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·----

~·-.-- ·\-"'--. ~

.r ou

Second chance.
players miss ~

~.file' dll,litlot' .

bleeding, according to county
Coron~ r James Pritchard.

,,,,

EE HEARING TESTS

·ical Center Wednesday night.
His
16-year-old friend
climbed a signal ladder above
the track where h.e stood as the
~in passed.
Sheriff's Deputy Phil Malone said . there are warning
signs on the trestle, which
spans the Scioto River,

CLEVELAND (AP) Thousat1ds of people wanting
to play the Ohio Lottery's $1
million second-chance mail-in
game niissed their chance by
an eighth of an inch. ·
Enve\opes provi_ded by the
lottery are one-e1ghth of an
inch short of the post office's 3
1/2-inch minimum height.
Som~ get returned for ll cents
in extr:i postage and some .e nd
up in dead-letter bins.
"It :In comes down to oneeightli' ·of an inch," said Dan
Price, the lottery's online
products manager.
'
The Iottety contacted. the
postal · service, which agreed
Thursday to deliver the items
wt'thout' extra postage. "'T'e're
1
trying to accommodatew the
customer," said post office
spokeswomim
Jacquelyn
Anderson .

~~~~~~~~n tr:~:t'~ ab~o~i~a~ . Shootin1 slays

defects In workmanship,
a~ well a8 weather
dainage, cracks or stains.
Like your love,
this gllarantee Is fomer.

520 W. Main Street
· Po111eroy, Ohio
l Phone • 992·2588
Vinton • 388-8603
GallipOlis - 446·0852

114 Court Pomeroy

April 5 by ,undercover Dayton
police in Triangle Park during
a sex sting operation. Police
alleged Spitzer made physical
contact with an undercover
officer.
On Monday, the Sugarcreek
Local Board of Education
accepted Spitzer's tesignation
from his teaching and supplemental duti~s at the high
school, effecuve J\ug. 26.

*'~ftgible' ' f'~J:~

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INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC

n

done is to reiterate that very
Rnmg dete~tion · on our
part that there should not be a
reson to force by the mainland
in order to try~ pull Taiwan
closer," Cheney sa,\d.
On the energy policy that he
and a Cabinet-level task force
hope to announce by the end of
next month, Cheney held out
no hope of telief for California,
where an electricity crisis has
meant rolling blatkouts.
. It's a long-term problem, he
said. "There's almost nothing
you can do to produce a lot
more kilowatts short -term for
California. They're going to
have to go through a tough
summer."

Teen ind;cted in
toddler's death

I ..

b

I

He cited a Chinese buildup
of missiles aimed at niwon and
a "much more aggressive" treatment of U.S. survcillance ain:nft
off their coast, something the
Clinton administtation warned
China against in December.
. "Subsequent to that, we had
the accident where they actually Oew into one of our planes,
killed their • pilot and nearly
killed 24 of ours," Cheney said.
.Bush decided earlier this
week to sell Taiwon submarines,
desaoyers and aircraft and issued
a blunt reminder that Washing~
ton could use military force to
defend the island from Chinese
attack.
"What the president has

CINCINNATI {AP) - An
exclusive private school has
settled its complaint against
Steven Soderbergh's Oscarwinning film "Traffic" over the
use of the school's name in the
film .
The filmmaker, USA Filriu,
and Cincinnati Country Day
School reached the settlement
CANTON (AP) - A 17- Monday, a lawyer for the subyear-old baby sitter faces life in urban Cincinnati school said
prison if convicted of beating a Thursday.The school had be.e n
3-year-old girl to death.
prepared , to SQe if an agr:eeAntwuan Burton was indict- ment had not been reached,
ed Thursday on ·a charge of lawyer Stanley Chesley said.
agg~avated murder in the
Chesley declined to discuss
-Ieath pfShaywat;.~. 13urton the settlement'~ term1. A
Jn t ·
"aeO:ih' spokesman for USA Films
penalty under Ohio law releas"d a one-line statement.
because he was only 16 at the
"We have resolved the lawtime of the girl's death..
· suit amicably and have the
Burton was scheduled to be greatest respect for the Cincinarraigned May 4 in · Stark nati Country Day School," said
County
Common
Pleas USA Films spokesman Mark ·
Court.
.
Markline.
· The toddler died of a skull
'

•
I Youngotown l:10l1111Y I

7.te "1/. ~""

r
'

Dad ·watches
kids spar

Lire Home Car Business

this region can make up for the
signi6cant decline in federal and

(740) 448-7283
1

and Wildlife Service and AEP.
property located upstream of
the mouth of Parker Run,
near Dexter, will be considered first for LCIP funding.
Areas downstream should be
eligible for funding in the
near future, Freeman said.·
''I'm really excited about
this project;' said Freeman.
"This is a great opportunity
for landowners to do something both good for their
farms and for the environment."
.
To apply, landowners should
call the Meigs SWCD to
schedule a farm visit and

Auto- Owner&amp; [n&amp;urance

&lt;&gt;

70 Plneltreet
OH

WASHINGTON (AP) Vice PleSident Dick Cheney
says Californians wbo have suffered power blackouts can
expect "•· tough summer"
because energy shortages emnot be remedied quickly.
And he says President Bush's
tough talk on China is a reaction to incr:easing aggressiveness
by Beijing.
"'We've seen a number of
trends. that indicate ... they're
. not as committed or haven't
be~n as committed to the
notion of a peaceful process as
they have been in the past;'
Cheney said Friday in an interview on CNN's "Larry King
Live."

re•r:s·

'I

with more technologically
~-advanced areas of Ohio by
""""'Pt.
~
T-- ...,._
loo
emphasizing
small-business ,_,_
development, distance learning
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. will reach the 70s and 80s' by
and electronic coriunerce.
The
National
Weather
Serthe first part of next week. ·
Leslie Lilly, president and
vice
says
plenty.
of
sunshine
is
Sunrise Sunday is at 6:34
chief executive for the Nelsonville-based Foundation for expected Sunday. Highs will a.m.
be in the mid 70s.
Weathe~ forecast:
Appalachian Ohio, said the virAs an area of high pressure
Sunday... Sunny. High 74 to
tually static budget . for
moves farther out of the area; 79. ,East wind around 10 mph.
Appalachian progra,ms means · winds will become more
Sunday
night ... Mostly
.her charitable organization has southerly and temperatures
clear. Low in the upper 40s.
its work cut out for it.
,But, she warned, ''there's no
• • • • • • • • • • •
way the charitable institutions in
COUPON

stare doJiars through the Y"ars."

sign-up bonus and annual
renral payments for 15
Funding for rho;: Leading
Creek Improvement Plan is
provided by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service is
· administering funds from an
ongoing . settlement between ·
the federal government and
American Electric Power following an emergency. mine
dewatering in 1993. which
killed most of the aquatic life .
in Leading Creek.
.
Due to ongQing negotlations between the U.S. Fish

-:::·"1

992-6677

HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
· "We Care For You Like Family" 1

... ~

. {) .. ~~~.::- ,i.ji®·-·&gt;-o
·~

Su•dlf, Afll n, 2011

Californians in for a 'tough summer'

Bush's plan
will cost
states money FOREVER

gw

GOP

for landowners

l:c• ....

Ceorp enwer Cremeans

Nation • World

PageA7

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Franklin County Republican
Central Committee ignored
the recommendation of a ·
screening . committee and
named a former government
accountant as county tteas11rer,
Wade Steen, 39, of Columbus, outpolled the endorsed
candidate, Bank One Vice
President Steve Stivers, 66-to,
47; in the committee vote
Thursday night.
He will replace longtime
Treasurer Bobbie Hall, 73,
who stepped down on March
30 because of health problems.
Steen~ must stand fo~ electipn
in November 2002.
Usually, candidates follow
the wishes of the screening
committee and bow out
before the central committee
vote. But Steen, an accountant
who has served in the state and
county auditors' offices and
now has his own firm, said he
owed it to his supporters to let
the central committee decide.

'

Baa of money

• The current fairgrounds floods several times a
year. In the last 20 years it has flooded the day
after the fair, four days after the fair, one week
prior to the fair, and one year it closed early on
Saturday due to flooding.·
·
• The current fairgrounds and exhibit areas are
overcrowded and may present some safety
Issues for youth exhibitors and fairgoers in the .
future.
• Imagine the potential disaster if these heavy
rains would
occur during
.
. . the fair.

BETTER FACiliTIES TO:
• Showcase the efforts and accomplishments of our
·youth.
• Allow for future expansion and growth as the
number of exhibitors Increase.
• MAKE THE FAIRGROUNDS MORE HANDICAPPED
ACCESSIBLE.

nri~VIId~ a
••1" "

_......_~

-------- -

more outside people
Gallla County, thus
a positive economic Impact for the c:lrea.

HOW DO WE GET THERE;&gt;
• The Gallla County Agricultural Society Board of Directors
has secured additional land adjacent to the existing
fairgrounds by means of grants through the Ohio
·
., Department of Agriculture and FEMA.. and through some
donations~ ·
• The Gallla County Agricultural Society Board of Directors
Is using other FEMA dollars for the planning, designing,
site preparation, construction of roads, placement of
utilities, and construdlon of a new campground.
• We now are appeatfng to the voters of GoUla County to
approve a 1I 4% sales tax on taxable goods for the
construction of multiple purpose buildings and other
facilities as feasible.

......

not rea' thing
cpLUMBUS (AP) - A
bag filled with $10,000 that a
woman chucked out a car
window isn't what it seems,
according to the Secret Service.
The counterfeit money was
ditched by MadgeUe Clark, 25,
south of downtown Monday
as she tried to · escape Secret
Service agents and poli~e.
Clark, who police said sold
fake money to an informant, is
charged with passing counterfeit money.
. Authorities arrested Clark
less than 10 blocks away from
where she threw the money,
but when they returned to get
the bag of fake $20 and $50
bills, it was gone, Kurt Douglass, supervisor of the Columbus Secret Service office, said
Thursday. ·

camnnll'ftttnl'IC \Aj'hll''h W'OUilO

SOPPOI{r TttE YOOTtt OF GfiLLifl COO
VOTE YES 0" THIS 1/4°/o SALES TAX ISSUE 0" MAY ITII
For more information, contact any member of the Galtia County Fairboard.
Paid tor by:

GALLIA COUNTY AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY
P.O. Box 931 .
Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631

�Sundlly, April 29, 2001

Pomaroy • Mlddhpart • Gelllpall, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Obituaries

•

"It doem't take a rocket scientist to figure ·out that if you
don't have the staff. the job's
not getting done;· he said. ult's
AI
a consistent problem cwryat GDC.
where."
GDC is operated by . the
Although Gov. .Bob Taft said
Ohio Department of Mental last week the budget couldn't
FROM STAFF REPORTS
Retardation/Developmental
be cut any further, SE~ POMEROY - Funding
Disabilities, targeted for a 4.1 members found little comfort for pasture and hay serding,
percent spending cut in the in the statement. ·
fencing and other projects is
new budget.
"To some degree, some of it now available to landowners
Stare leadenhip's attention is political spin;'Ville said. "He within the Leading Creek
has focused on an education w:ants to, be re-el~."
watershed, which incorpoequalization plan mandated by
Blanton and Ville urged rates most of western Meigs
the state Supreme Court, more rallies, letter-writing County and portions of
which unions like SEIU have campaigns and presence at the Athens and Gallia counties.
disputed.
· Statehouse to make the case.
Conservation practices and
"Funding education is for DCs, staff and services cost-sharing t•tes for the
great, but it's a mess that lmown to legislators.
Leading Creek Improvement
· should have been ·cleaned up . "Start talking. Start talking Plan were approved during
years ago;' said Ville. "They today befote this reassessment Thursday afternoon's regular
meeting of the Meigs Soil and
want public services to suffer is completed," Blanton said.
DC
to make up their mistakes."
SEIU members at G .
Water · Conservation· District
Ville and other SEIU mem- issued a statemenr calhng Board of Supervisors.
·
bers were joined by loc•l downsizing at DCs "detnThe board approved 15
·d
t
Ohio Civil Service E mpIoyees ment al to t h e res1 en s conservation
practices,
.
d
d
k
Association officials wor mg presen Yserve ·
iiWluding pasture and hay
to restore funding before the · "These proposed
cuts see~!' •g. grazing land protec.~
budget' is approved .
include .the 75 percent tion , critical area seeding,
legislative hearings on the decrease m Soc1~l Secunty . str 1 bank protection, anispending plan started Thurs- workers (I :240 ratto) and the mal waste control facilities,
day in Columbus.
complete annihilation of the and fencing for livestock
Monry Blant-on, president of Soc_ial ~rogram Spee1ahst exclusion. Projects must
OCSEA 's
MH/MR/OV poSltlons, the statement sa1d. address water quality · or
Assembly, said reassessment of "These positions are directly aquatic habitat.
services and job reclassifica- linked to the educanon, faci11In addition, the Leading
nons ordered by MR/DD are tation and monitoring of o~r Creek Improvement Plan
"smoke and mirrors" disguis- individuals' successful transt- includes other conservation
ing a plan to reduce staff to tion into community set- practices such as payments for
the point developmental cen- rings."
the installation of filter strips,
ters like Gallipolis are renThe members said that and establishing perpetual
dered ineffective and ripe for when .clients and their families conservation easements'.
must make decisions about
Although
the
Meigs
Privatization.
Hiring freezes and allowing living options, "it is counter- SWCD is administering the
positions to go unfilled have productive to decrease ser- proiect, it is not limited to
"
contribute d to the problem, vi'ces w hi ch empower rh em to Meigs
County landowners,
he said.
make informed choices."
said Leading Creek Watershed
Coordinator Jim Fteernan.
Depending on the practice,
degr:ee from Wartburg Theo- landowners can receive reimlogical Seminary in Dubuque, bursement for up to 90 perIowa.
cent of the installation . cost,
from PapAl
He also served an internship according to· the . Leading
, at St. Peter's Luthera" Church Creek . Improvement Plan
association. He is also a for- in Baltimore, Md.
Cost Share Handbook. In
mer member of the Clergy
landowners
"Art has served Holzer addition,
Advisory Committee for the Medical Ceqter faithfully and installing streamside filter
Ohio American Cancer Soci- conscientiously for 26 years. strips can teceive a one-time
ety.
His ministry to our patients,
"I have reilly enjoyed my
families and staff has been
ministry at Holzer Medical
invaluable. He will be missed;'
Centennd will miss all of the
Wyse said.
great people on the hospital
Lund ·and his wife Corrine,
staff," Lund said. ''I'm looking
forward to continuing my an instructor at the University
ministry as a parish-pastor ·at a of Rio . Grande, have one
church somewhere in south- daughter, Rachael Bailey.
"We believe strongly in the
eastern Ohio," Lund said.
A native of Dawson, importance of the chaplaincy
WASHINGTON (AP) Minn., Lund received his program at Holzer Medical Fulfilling President Bush's probachelor of arts degree, magna Center, and have already posal to test every student in
cum ·laude, frpm Concordia begun the search to find a grades three through «ight
College in Moorhead, Minn., replacement for Rev. Lund," could cost states as much as S7
and his master of divinity Wyse said.
billion over the next seven
years, the National Association
of State Boan:ls of Education
says.
Ohio weathe.r
Spokesman David .Griffith
Sunday, April 29
said
education officials believe
AccuWeathe,.. forecast for d~me conditions, low/high temperatures
Bush's plan asks states to test
·'
~ICH.
/ ' · , , .. ' '-I
'
·
,,·• , ..
students mote than necessary
l
Ja:tY.:..y I (.
and, they fear, without adequate
.----~
funding.

Unions

; CHESHIRE - Geo~ Grover Cremeans, 78, of South
:Jlourth Stn:et. Cheshire, passed away at 6:15 o.m. on Saturday,
:April 28.'2001 in Overbrook Nursing Center in Middlepo~.
: He was born September 4, 1922 in the Kyger Conunwuty
pf Gallia County. He w.u the son of the late Bryan Cremeans
'and Goldie Roush Cremeons.
; He was a retired heavy equipment/ operator for the Ohio
9perating Engineers, a member of the Old Kyger Freewill
Baptist Church, and • Master Mason of Siloam Lodge No. 456
'&lt;If the Free ond Accepted Masons of Ohio.
He was a U.S. Army veteran ofWorld War II.
'
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his
wife of 62 years, Ermal J. Cremeans, on November 15, 2000; a
:son, Thomas J. Cremeans, on February 19, 1992; a sister, Ruby
1ewey; and a brother, Billy Cremeans.
. Grover is survived by two sons and daughters-in-law, Frank
'A. Cremeans and his wife, Carol, of Gallipolis, and Fred Cre.means and his wife, Betty, of Athens; 10 grandchildren, Fred A.
·Ctemeans of Athens, Martin Cremeans of Acworth, Georgia,
Tom (Liz) Cremeans of Belle, West Virginia, Kim (John) Bur'neU of Lakewood, Kari ())avid) Duvale of Richmond, Virginia,
Tim Cremeans of Bessemer, Alabama, John Cremeans of Gal.:lipolis, Connie Cremeans of Belle, West Virginia, Leigh Ann
:(Steve) Moore of Richmond, Virginia, and Jill Cremeans of
'Athens.
. Eight great-grandchildren also · survive, along with a sister,
'Wilma Swisher of Gallipolis; a daughter-in - law, Sharon K. Harrah of Belle, West Virginia; two sisters-in- law. Julia lee Cre·means of Cheshire, and Evelyn Roush of Merritt Island, Flori·da; and several nieces and nephews.
· Graveside services will be 2 p.m. on Monday, April 30, 2001
in Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire, with the Rev. Jamie Fortner officiating. There are no calling hours.
. Arrangements are by Cremeens Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.
. Memorial contributions may be made in Grover's name to
Old Kyger Freewill Baptist Church, 16 Old Kyger Church
Road, Cheshire, Ohio 45620.

Lyle R. Sindair
GALLIPOLIS -lyle R. Sinclair, 51, of First Holzer Apartments in Gallipolis, died Thursday,
April 26, 2001 in Riverside Methodist.
Hospital in Columbus.
He was born May 3, 1949 in Athens
County, the son of the late Alba Sinclair
and Helen Van Nest Sinclair.
He was retired from the Athens Post
Office, and at the time of his death, he
was employed with the City of Gallipolis and First Holzer Apartments.
He was a member of AMVETS of
Athens, and also a member of VFW
Post No. 4464 of Gallipolis.
Surviving ate a daughter, Shelly Sinclair, and granddaughter
LeDeana Sinclair, of Pomeroy; a son, Kyle Sinclair, and granddaughter Alisha Sinclair, of Pomeroy; two sisters, Loreda Douof Athens, and Vicki (Francis) Jarvis of Athens; three brothers, Paul (Carolyn). Sinclair of Shade, Boyd Sinclair of Athens,
'and Kenny (Shirley) Sinclair of Shade; and several nieces and
'nephews.
: Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a brother,
David Sinclair; a brother-in-law, Walter Douglas; and a niece,
Janie Marie Sinclair. .
· Services will be I p.m. on Monday, April 30, 2001 in Bigony1.ordan Funeral Home in Albany. Burial wiD be in Burlingham
.C emetery, with military services. Friends may call at the funer'GI home on Sunday, April 29, 2001 from 2-4 and 6-8 p.m .

Lund

"Those uses include, but ate
riot limited to watering of
lawns and gardens, washing of
vehicles, and hosing down sidehmPapAI
walks, driveways and parking
serve the families in letart lots," Poole said. "AU farming
Township, it would be disas- operations are asked to stop the
trous to several of the area's use of their broadcast sprin~ommercial operations if ser- klers, and to use only drip irriyice were to be curtailed gation."
.
because of such a ·high demand
The district can impose a
'for water."
Phase II water use ban, which
; The .district has placed a bans all use of water \vith spe:Phase I Voluntary Restriction cific notations as to where
.for all TP-C customers in water. can be used. A Phase Ill
tetartTownship. Customers are ban, the most extensive, limits
~ked to .voluntarily curtail the all water usage to human con' ~onsumption of water for. uses sumption and curtails sue to
'that are not absolutely neces- commercial operations· with
Sary.
specific notations, Poole said.

Water

f1omPapAI
With.
· Meld agreed, saying: "I think
it would be untealistic to expect
to see big increases every year, so
jr.oc'll take what we can get."
: The only major Appalachian
initiative . the House Republi!="ns left alone was Taft's tecommendation to spend $1 million
in 2002 and S1.5 million in
2003 to .create the Appalachian
New Economy Parmership. It
would'help the region catch up

-

f)·
·~&lt;

c~~
.

l-tlefd!42Ynw!.

IND.

AKRON (AP) - ·Thomas
Lavery, a father who is accused
of abusing his home-schooled,
high-achieving
children,
watched as two of his daughters spa:rted in court.
His 22-year-old da~ghter,
Mary, was in Akron Muncipal
Court on Thursday on a
charge that she attacked her
19-year-old sister, Marjory, at a
spelling l;&gt;ee in February.
,
The accusation was the latest
to wind up in court £9r the
Lavery family.
"The entire fatnily situation
is a tragedy," said municipal
Judge Carla Moore;

1

establish a conservation p Ia
an.
When the conservation p n
is completed, the landowner
then completes an application
for consideration by the
SWCD Board of Supervisors. .
Projects must be complete, ·
the landowner then fills out
an applicapon for consideration by the SWCD Board of
Supervisors. Projects must be
completed to specifications
established by the Natural
Resource Conservation Service.

"

... 42'rney

I Clnolnn.tl

'

I

Finest quality Rock of
Ages memoriail
and markers are
·unconditj.onally

warranted against

"""" -

. . . ,, .t :@@'

I
Will be given In GALLIA COUNTY by ·
,I
I S'elt&amp;-re TM HEARING ~ID CENTER I
I
1
I
I
I
I Call Toll
:
I
M
I converalllon Ia Invited to have a .EBIE hurlng IHt to '"If I
1thla problem cen ba
thla coupon with you lor I
a $75.00 value.
I
.I
UMWA •
ALL
PROVIDERS
. .
·
· WAIJ(.INS
.• ,

Doctor sen•

tencecl in mur·
der plot
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
doctor was sentenced to 45
years in prison for plorting the
death of his ptegnant wife and
two others.
Anthony Andrejic, 30, a former Cleveland Clinic surgical
r:esident, did not speak dutjng
his sentencing Thursday in
Cuyahoga County' Common,
Pleas . Court. His attorney,
Michael O'Shea, 'said Andrejic
,~as innoce~t and that the jury
was not allowed to hear all the
facts.
"Anything that Andrejic. said
might be used against him later
if he wiils an appeal and gets a
new trial," O'Shea said ..
Prosecutors said Andrejic
tried to hire a hit-man to kill
his wife, her lover, her unborn
child and an informant while
he was waiting to be moved
from the Cuyahog:~ County
jail to state prison . on a drug
trafficking conviction .

GJJL,IIItJ,ISI
We•re making loans fOr • • •
Debt Consolidation
New &amp;Used Vehicles
Home Improvements
Boats&amp;RVs
Furniture &amp; Appliances

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Ex·band director
pleads

: .• ana much moret
. For fast, friendly service on vour next loan,
see Peggy Watson, Branch Manager,

AN OAK HILL ,.INA.HC:IAL COMI'ANY '

Amish boy
hospitalized
AKRON (AP) - A pitchfork accident left a 5-year-old
Coshocton County boy hospitalized 'irt stable condition
Thursday at Children's Hospital Medical Center. '
Willis Yoder, ofFte'sno, about
55 miles southwest of Akron,
fell from a barn loft Wednesday
onto a pitchfork, injuring his
right arm.
His family found a driver to
'rake him to a doctor, who
called an ambulance. He was
·
taken to Union HospitaI m
Dover and was transferred by
· to th e Ak ron h osambulance
pi tal.

(AP). - A 'rorD·•·YTON
n
"
mer Bellbrodk High School
band dl.rector has entered a no
contest plea to a charge of dis"
orderly conduct in a plea
agreement with prosecutors,
who dismissed a count of pub.
leS
lie indecency.
.
David M. "Marty" Spitzer
was found guilty Thursday on
PORTSMOUTH (AP)
e disorderly conduct charge A teen-ager who ventured
d \vas fined $100 plus coun onto a railroad trestle with a
costs of $5d, said Pam Nipper, friend lost his footing as a train
a deputy ~Jerk in Dayton approached and fell about 50
Municipal Court.
feet.
The city prosec~tor's &lt;Yflice
Bryan J. Sowards, 14, ofWest
. had filed the charges in con- Portsmouth, was pronounced
nection with Spitzer's arrest dead at Southern Ohio Med,
- .. . .,...._. --·
.
I
.

een .d• •In
trestle fall

·.
57 Court st., Cllllpolls, 740-MI·IOOO

CLEVELAND (AP) - A
janitor was shot and killed ip a
late-night attack . as he left
work through a back door at
John Marshall High School,
police said Thursday.
Demetrius · Minifee, 33, was
shot as he left the school about
11:05 p.m. Wednesday. Coworkers who heard three shots
found him in the parking lot
with a gunshot wound to the
head.
He was pronounced dead.
about I a.m. Thursday by the
Cuyahoga County coroner. ..
Police !lave not found any
suspects or a motive, said a
police spokeswoman, Lt.
Sharon MacKay.

'Jl

Open Monclly, Tllftdly. WICinelclay, and Ft1dly from
s:so un111 s:oo, - lllqf1CIIY rrom s:so un111e:oo.

'

Nach• actOfd

Janitor

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Allallnl ..... ~to~

'

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·----

~·-.-- ·\-"'--. ~

.r ou

Second chance.
players miss ~

~.file' dll,litlot' .

bleeding, according to county
Coron~ r James Pritchard.

,,,,

EE HEARING TESTS

·ical Center Wednesday night.
His
16-year-old friend
climbed a signal ladder above
the track where h.e stood as the
~in passed.
Sheriff's Deputy Phil Malone said . there are warning
signs on the trestle, which
spans the Scioto River,

CLEVELAND (AP) Thousat1ds of people wanting
to play the Ohio Lottery's $1
million second-chance mail-in
game niissed their chance by
an eighth of an inch. ·
Enve\opes provi_ded by the
lottery are one-e1ghth of an
inch short of the post office's 3
1/2-inch minimum height.
Som~ get returned for ll cents
in extr:i postage and some .e nd
up in dead-letter bins.
"It :In comes down to oneeightli' ·of an inch," said Dan
Price, the lottery's online
products manager.
'
The Iottety contacted. the
postal · service, which agreed
Thursday to deliver the items
wt'thout' extra postage. "'T'e're
1
trying to accommodatew the
customer," said post office
spokeswomim
Jacquelyn
Anderson .

~~~~~~~~n tr:~:t'~ ab~o~i~a~ . Shootin1 slays

defects In workmanship,
a~ well a8 weather
dainage, cracks or stains.
Like your love,
this gllarantee Is fomer.

520 W. Main Street
· Po111eroy, Ohio
l Phone • 992·2588
Vinton • 388-8603
GallipOlis - 446·0852

114 Court Pomeroy

April 5 by ,undercover Dayton
police in Triangle Park during
a sex sting operation. Police
alleged Spitzer made physical
contact with an undercover
officer.
On Monday, the Sugarcreek
Local Board of Education
accepted Spitzer's tesignation
from his teaching and supplemental duti~s at the high
school, effecuve J\ug. 26.

*'~ftgible' ' f'~J:~

jZ1 )fir"

INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC

n

done is to reiterate that very
Rnmg dete~tion · on our
part that there should not be a
reson to force by the mainland
in order to try~ pull Taiwan
closer," Cheney sa,\d.
On the energy policy that he
and a Cabinet-level task force
hope to announce by the end of
next month, Cheney held out
no hope of telief for California,
where an electricity crisis has
meant rolling blatkouts.
. It's a long-term problem, he
said. "There's almost nothing
you can do to produce a lot
more kilowatts short -term for
California. They're going to
have to go through a tough
summer."

Teen ind;cted in
toddler's death

I ..

b

I

He cited a Chinese buildup
of missiles aimed at niwon and
a "much more aggressive" treatment of U.S. survcillance ain:nft
off their coast, something the
Clinton administtation warned
China against in December.
. "Subsequent to that, we had
the accident where they actually Oew into one of our planes,
killed their • pilot and nearly
killed 24 of ours," Cheney said.
.Bush decided earlier this
week to sell Taiwon submarines,
desaoyers and aircraft and issued
a blunt reminder that Washing~
ton could use military force to
defend the island from Chinese
attack.
"What the president has

CINCINNATI {AP) - An
exclusive private school has
settled its complaint against
Steven Soderbergh's Oscarwinning film "Traffic" over the
use of the school's name in the
film .
The filmmaker, USA Filriu,
and Cincinnati Country Day
School reached the settlement
CANTON (AP) - A 17- Monday, a lawyer for the subyear-old baby sitter faces life in urban Cincinnati school said
prison if convicted of beating a Thursday.The school had be.e n
3-year-old girl to death.
prepared , to SQe if an agr:eeAntwuan Burton was indict- ment had not been reached,
ed Thursday on ·a charge of lawyer Stanley Chesley said.
agg~avated murder in the
Chesley declined to discuss
-Ieath pfShaywat;.~. 13urton the settlement'~ term1. A
Jn t ·
"aeO:ih' spokesman for USA Films
penalty under Ohio law releas"d a one-line statement.
because he was only 16 at the
"We have resolved the lawtime of the girl's death..
· suit amicably and have the
Burton was scheduled to be greatest respect for the Cincinarraigned May 4 in · Stark nati Country Day School," said
County
Common
Pleas USA Films spokesman Mark ·
Court.
.
Markline.
· The toddler died of a skull
'

•
I Youngotown l:10l1111Y I

7.te "1/. ~""

r
'

Dad ·watches
kids spar

Lire Home Car Business

this region can make up for the
signi6cant decline in federal and

(740) 448-7283
1

and Wildlife Service and AEP.
property located upstream of
the mouth of Parker Run,
near Dexter, will be considered first for LCIP funding.
Areas downstream should be
eligible for funding in the
near future, Freeman said.·
''I'm really excited about
this project;' said Freeman.
"This is a great opportunity
for landowners to do something both good for their
farms and for the environment."
.
To apply, landowners should
call the Meigs SWCD to
schedule a farm visit and

Auto- Owner&amp; [n&amp;urance

&lt;&gt;

70 Plneltreet
OH

WASHINGTON (AP) Vice PleSident Dick Cheney
says Californians wbo have suffered power blackouts can
expect "•· tough summer"
because energy shortages emnot be remedied quickly.
And he says President Bush's
tough talk on China is a reaction to incr:easing aggressiveness
by Beijing.
"'We've seen a number of
trends. that indicate ... they're
. not as committed or haven't
be~n as committed to the
notion of a peaceful process as
they have been in the past;'
Cheney said Friday in an interview on CNN's "Larry King
Live."

re•r:s·

'I

with more technologically
~-advanced areas of Ohio by
""""'Pt.
~
T-- ...,._
loo
emphasizing
small-business ,_,_
development, distance learning
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. will reach the 70s and 80s' by
and electronic coriunerce.
The
National
Weather
Serthe first part of next week. ·
Leslie Lilly, president and
vice
says
plenty.
of
sunshine
is
Sunrise Sunday is at 6:34
chief executive for the Nelsonville-based Foundation for expected Sunday. Highs will a.m.
be in the mid 70s.
Weathe~ forecast:
Appalachian Ohio, said the virAs an area of high pressure
Sunday... Sunny. High 74 to
tually static budget . for
moves farther out of the area; 79. ,East wind around 10 mph.
Appalachian progra,ms means · winds will become more
Sunday
night ... Mostly
.her charitable organization has southerly and temperatures
clear. Low in the upper 40s.
its work cut out for it.
,But, she warned, ''there's no
• • • • • • • • • • •
way the charitable institutions in
COUPON

stare doJiars through the Y"ars."

sign-up bonus and annual
renral payments for 15
Funding for rho;: Leading
Creek Improvement Plan is
provided by the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service is
· administering funds from an
ongoing . settlement between ·
the federal government and
American Electric Power following an emergency. mine
dewatering in 1993. which
killed most of the aquatic life .
in Leading Creek.
.
Due to ongQing negotlations between the U.S. Fish

-:::·"1

992-6677

HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
· "We Care For You Like Family" 1

... ~

. {) .. ~~~.::- ,i.ji®·-·&gt;-o
·~

Su•dlf, Afll n, 2011

Californians in for a 'tough summer'

Bush's plan
will cost
states money FOREVER

gw

GOP

for landowners

l:c• ....

Ceorp enwer Cremeans

Nation • World

PageA7

COLUMBUS (AP) -The
Franklin County Republican
Central Committee ignored
the recommendation of a ·
screening . committee and
named a former government
accountant as county tteas11rer,
Wade Steen, 39, of Columbus, outpolled the endorsed
candidate, Bank One Vice
President Steve Stivers, 66-to,
47; in the committee vote
Thursday night.
He will replace longtime
Treasurer Bobbie Hall, 73,
who stepped down on March
30 because of health problems.
Steen~ must stand fo~ electipn
in November 2002.
Usually, candidates follow
the wishes of the screening
committee and bow out
before the central committee
vote. But Steen, an accountant
who has served in the state and
county auditors' offices and
now has his own firm, said he
owed it to his supporters to let
the central committee decide.

'

Baa of money

• The current fairgrounds floods several times a
year. In the last 20 years it has flooded the day
after the fair, four days after the fair, one week
prior to the fair, and one year it closed early on
Saturday due to flooding.·
·
• The current fairgrounds and exhibit areas are
overcrowded and may present some safety
Issues for youth exhibitors and fairgoers in the .
future.
• Imagine the potential disaster if these heavy
rains would
occur during
.
. . the fair.

BETTER FACiliTIES TO:
• Showcase the efforts and accomplishments of our
·youth.
• Allow for future expansion and growth as the
number of exhibitors Increase.
• MAKE THE FAIRGROUNDS MORE HANDICAPPED
ACCESSIBLE.

nri~VIId~ a
••1" "

_......_~

-------- -

more outside people
Gallla County, thus
a positive economic Impact for the c:lrea.

HOW DO WE GET THERE;&gt;
• The Gallla County Agricultural Society Board of Directors
has secured additional land adjacent to the existing
fairgrounds by means of grants through the Ohio
·
., Department of Agriculture and FEMA.. and through some
donations~ ·
• The Gallla County Agricultural Society Board of Directors
Is using other FEMA dollars for the planning, designing,
site preparation, construction of roads, placement of
utilities, and construdlon of a new campground.
• We now are appeatfng to the voters of GoUla County to
approve a 1I 4% sales tax on taxable goods for the
construction of multiple purpose buildings and other
facilities as feasible.

......

not rea' thing
cpLUMBUS (AP) - A
bag filled with $10,000 that a
woman chucked out a car
window isn't what it seems,
according to the Secret Service.
The counterfeit money was
ditched by MadgeUe Clark, 25,
south of downtown Monday
as she tried to · escape Secret
Service agents and poli~e.
Clark, who police said sold
fake money to an informant, is
charged with passing counterfeit money.
. Authorities arrested Clark
less than 10 blocks away from
where she threw the money,
but when they returned to get
the bag of fake $20 and $50
bills, it was gone, Kurt Douglass, supervisor of the Columbus Secret Service office, said
Thursday. ·

camnnll'ftttnl'IC \Aj'hll''h W'OUilO

SOPPOI{r TttE YOOTtt OF GfiLLifl COO
VOTE YES 0" THIS 1/4°/o SALES TAX ISSUE 0" MAY ITII
For more information, contact any member of the Galtia County Fairboard.
Paid tor by:

GALLIA COUNTY AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY
P.O. Box 931 .
Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631

�I

•I

..
'•

Inside:

'

Prep baseball &amp; sciftball, Page B2-4
The Cheap Seats, Page ij6
Dr. Sam: A1J stay away, Page B7
In the Open, Page B8

S!
, WASHINGTON (AP) - Two
pewly declassified official report&gt;
:concerning a aid on a Viemamese
yillage by Bob Kerrey's Navy SEAL
team make no ' mention of civilian
"Casualties that the former senator says
,he included in his initj.al after- action
.report on the incident.
: The reports, both dated Feb. 25,
:t 969- the day of the raid on Thanh
Phong, a coastal hamlet in the
Mekong Delta - were released Fri-

·SEALS "have gained a wdl-deserved the South China Sea, where the
spotligllt :aS a result of their successful communist forces controlled many
and highly productive openrions," populated ueas.
and pr.rises "th~ Kerrey Raiders of
The language is similar to that in a
Market Time;' saying they "not only later citation awarding then-Lt. 6g)
surprised the enemy in his own sanc- Kem:y, 25, the Bronze Star, the
tuary but struck him a severe and nation's fourth-highest 'award for

day by the Nawl Historical Center
in Washington. ·
They are not signed, .b ut ~
address coding~ suggest ,they are a
message from Kerrey's immediate
superior officer to the commander of
SEAL Task Force 1 15 and that officer's reply.
·
Both refer ~nly to " 21 VC KIA
(Bq;· meaning "21 Viet (Viet Cong)
killed in ~crion (body count)." The
senior commander's reply says the

fatal blow. Well done."
Market Time was the code name
for a U.S. Navy· effort to interdict
Viet Cong boats carrying ammunition and sqpplies along the coast of

wlor. Kerrey has said recendy that
because a dozen of the victims
turned out to be civilians, "the medal
means nothing to me."
Kerrey also claimed, most recendy

at a New York news confetence on
Thursday, that his written after-.
action report on the Thang Phong:
raid included the civilian casualties. :
Ktrrey, a Democrat who served
governor and senator fiom Nebraska:
and ran for president in 1992, pub-·
licly disclosed the incident this week. •
He said he has been haunted by the;
memory of the killing~ and has kept:
the details private, even fiom his chi!-:

Suntt.y. April :19. 1D01

as:

dren.

SUND\v's

•

WASHINGTON (AP)
The economy surprised the
,naysayers by turning in a solid
growth rate of 2 percent in the
'first quarter - double what
had been expected for' a period
in which there had been fears a
recession might be beginning.
The Bush administration
called the rebound "nothing
but good news." Private economists also found it encouraging
but expressed concern that the
recession tlueat was not over.
The adv:mce in the gross
domestic product.in the January-March · quarter was nl)t
only · bigger than anticipated
but also was double the 1 percent annual rate of growth registered in the last three months
of2000.
On Wall Street, the news lifted stocks. The Dow Jones
gained
indwtrial ~verage
117.70 points to close at
10,810.05.
"We're back from the
brink;.' said a hopeful Richatd
Yamarone, economist with.
Argus Research Corp. ''The
economy, however, remains
fragile. Looking ahead, people
shouldn't expect miracles. Economic growth will probably be
Weaker in the second and third
quarters."
GOP is the total output of

goods and service&lt; produced
within the U nired States and is
considered the broadest measure of the nation's eco~on:tic
health. The first-quarter figure ,
released Friday by the Commerce Department, marked the
government's most up-to-date
reading. ·
· Hardy spending by con~umers, especially on cosdy
manufactured goods, such as
cars and furniture, and an
improved trade performance
were major forces boosting .
first-quarter growth.

ster as an out-of-control
"monster" that should be
shui down if the company
can't make in · filters Work.
But her memorandum
Fri"
day notes that it remains the
record labels' burden as well
as Napster's to identify specific infringing song files.

OVP CORRESPONDENT

GLOUSTER - . The 1 5-win mark
is the benchmark of any outstanding
season-the mark of excellence for any
spom program.
Friday night, d~spite a 5-game
week, Eastern hit the standard with its
second consecutive win over Trimble.
The Eagles defeated the Tomcats, 8-4.
Thursday, Eastern put together a
defensive gem in posting a home win
over the Tomcats - seven error-free
innings. .
Friday, the Eagles booted the ball
around to the tune of eight errors, but

Dlvlllon IV

Aleunder Sectional
Mond8y, Aprll30
: Southern at Trimble, 5:00

•

constandy make them reappear. under different names.
This week, Napster began
'using even stronger screening
technology in an attempt to
comply with court orders
that copyright material .be
removed. -.
Patel bas desciibed Nap-

BY Seem Wou:E

Prep Softball

:

Labels are wrong ·on key part.of Napster renlecly :
-Economy turns in solid
'
growth rate in first quarter
the ever-changing network
before Napster is obligated to
remove copies of die song.
Napster says it has been
doing the best it can to
remove any' infringing songs
brought to in attention, but
this has proved ' exceptionally
difficult, since Napster users

es roll to 15th straight win

HIGHLIGHTS

••

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- A fedetal judge said the
record industry has misinterpreted a key appellate ruling
in the case against Napster
In c., and must do more to
help the file-swapping service prevent millions of
music fans from · trading
copyright song~.
U.S. D~trict Judge Marilyn Hall Patel's memorandum effectively means that
for now, Napster's interpretation holds that the
record labels must identify' at
least one infringing file on

:
:
'
:·
·
:
:
:·
'

Miller at Waterford, 5:00
Weclni 1 dey, May 2
Southern-Trimble
at
Crooksville, 5:00
· Miller-Waterford at Eastem, 5:00

.

Ironton Sectional ·
Tuaeday, May 1

..
'

.,

~

.,

"
j

'P

q

Dlvlelon II

Willeton Sectional ·
'
Tuelclay, May 1 '
· River Valley at Gallia Acad·

emy, 5:()() .
.
Friday, May 4

From 8:30 til 5:00
.
on Thursday May 3 &amp; Friday May 4
Have something to eat &amp; register
TO WIN FREE STUFFI

1403 Eastern

lli .. -~

....

ley at Warren, 5:00

'

• Vinton County at Meigs,

-

--~ ~

'

· Gallla Academy-River Val-

Grilling llt.IIIO if 11 :30

5:00

.

I

•'

'

t

• ,9'DI~ IV

....... .,., ., ...

;..

.,

·. ~-..w·aect~one~~·.,.~
Thyrwday, May 3
'.

In

I

Eastern at Southern, 5:00
Waterford .at T.rimble, 5:00

Minford Sectlonel .
Monday, April 30
South Gallla v. Beaver
Eastern at Minford, 6:00
Thilrwday, ~y 3
Beaver Eastern-South Gal·
lla at Symmes Valley, 5:00
. Green at Ironton St. Joe,
5:00

'

Minford tops

'.

GAHS netten
I

·;~

" .

•

'Call Tocl~r
1-877-INFOCIS
Ext. 1841

•

"'{ X fould you like to have a
V V.job that you enjoy, earn

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competitive wages, and abo make
a real difference? InfoCision is
the recopzed leader in the
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___

l~)
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:.__

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

STEWART .- Federal Hocking took advantage of
Southern errors and outdueled the Tornadoes in a 12-8
slugfest Friday.
Southern (11-4,TVC 9-4) is tied for second for Federal Hocking in the league with Trimble comin g on strong
late in the year with just three losses, holding th e upper
hand, in the Tri-Valley Conferen ce Hocking Division.
Fed~ral Hocking and Trimple sti~ have one meeting left
and SouJhern plays host to Trimble Monday.
Federal Hoclpng took a 2~0 lead on hit's by Jason
McCumbet and J.). Guess, two . Southern errors, two
walks and a sad:ifice fly by Ryan Gandy.
.
Southern went up 4-2 in the third when Matt Shain,
Brice Hill, Chad Hubbard, and Matt Ash hit consecutive
singles. Ash's blast was a two-run liner up the middle.
Brandon Pierce followed up with an RBI sin gle as
Southern took the lead.
Federal came back to tie the game at 4-all on two more
errors, a hit batter, a walk, and an RBI single by J.J. G~ess.
· The ceiling caved in t.h e four~h for .S outhem as Fed~r­
al plated siX runs. Three walks, a hit batter, a Guess single, and a Ron Delancy d.,subl e brought horne the runs to
·
make the score 10-4. ·
Federal added two more in the fifth on two waJks and
three more errors to run the score to 12-4.
Southern made a comeback on singles by Dally Hill,
Matt Shain, Brice Hill, C had Hubbard, and Matt Ash.
Aaron Ohlinger added a walk in between and SHS plated four runs to cut the score to 12-8.
With one out in the frame, B'rian Grimm came on to

PluM 1M Southem, B:S

PIIIIIIHM..p,BS

BY ScoTt WoLFE

'•

.. r· . .

,_

Meigs crushes Vinton Co•.
ROCK SPRINGS- Katie
Jeffers, Ashley Burbridge and
Jaynee Davis combined to
pitch a three hitter in leading
Mei gs to a t 4-1 TVC win
over Vinton County Friday.
Meigs scored a run in the
first inning. Shannon Price
walked a scored on a triple off
the bat of Steph ani e Wigal.
Meigs increased the lead in
the third inning to 2-0 on a·, .
Lindsay Bolin triple and a single off the bat of Kayte Davis.
Meigs blew the game open
in the fourth with five big·
runs. M eigs loaded the bases
. on a three walks, a Viking
error and a fielders choice.
But Bolin hit a triple to deep
right field to .dear the bases.
Bolin then scored o n a
ground o ut to make it 7-0.
Vinton , County scored in
the top of the fifth inning. R.
Mace singled, two walks later
B. Mace hit a sacri.fice fly for
the Vikings only run.
Meigs added four more
runs in the fifth inning for an
t 1-1 lead. Jaynee Davis
walked fo open up the inning
and . Alicia Werry followed

OVP CORRESPONDENT

'· Jessica Bias posted a pair 6f
second place finishes at the
Boone-J;.ogan
Invitational
and Ryan :Arrowood also
earned second place for the
Hannan track and field squad.
1
Bias was the runnerup in the
shot put and discus, while
Arrowood came in second in
the shot put.
.
: Arrowo:Jd finished fourth
jn the shot put Friday at Winpeld. Bias elai111ed fifth in the
1hot put and sixth in the discus at Winfield.

0

Ashley Pauon triple into the
ri ght-centerfield gap to tie the
LOGAN Log-Jn made game and force the extra
the SEOAL softball race a frame.
, great deal more compli cated
Logan's starting hurler,
Shaw, gave up just four hits to
for Point Pleasant Friday.
With a 3-2 win in eight the Lady Knights. She struck
innings, Logan puUs Point out out two, walked five and hit
of the league lead arid into one batter in picking up the
second place behind Warren, wm.
which defeated Gallia AcadePoint had trouble taking
my 11-0 on Friday.
advantage of the offensive
At 9-3 in the league, Point opportunities that Logan did
must now hope for another give them . Lady Knight hitters
team to knock off Warren, stranded eight runners, five of
while winning out to regain a those in scori ng position .
Shaw's opposite number, .
share of the SEOAL softball
· ride.
Kendra Riffie, gave up eight
Warren is 8-2 in league play. hits in her . fourth mound
Logan scored the winning appearance of the week . She
run in the bottom of the struck ou t three.
" It 's hard to play here.," said
eighth after a double by Nik.ki
Taylor, a fielder's choice off Point coach Danny Dewhurst.
the bat of Amanda Downs, "The field's different, and it's a
and a game-stopping single to strange place to play, but that's
center by Tisha Lehman.
· no excuse. The kids fought
Point gained the its first lead back and Kendra has pitched a
in the top of the seventh lot of games this week. We
inning. A . one-out walk to were hoping to get her rested .
Kendra Riffie, followed by
"The kids really fought back
Bridget Nibert's third single of and started to hit the ball. I
th e game gave the Lady was telling them to b e a little
Knights a pair of baserunncrs more patient in there, make
while trailing 1-0. A muffed the pitcher give them some
grounder and a throwing error good strikes . 1 think we were
allowed both runners to score chasing the balls early," he
·
and give Point a tenuous 2-1 1 added.
lead.
Logan scored the game's
The
Lady
C hi eftains first run in the third inning.
ROCK AND FIRE - Point Pleasant pitcher Kendra Riffle brings the heat .durlng Friday' s answered in their half with a
Plea.. see Point. 85
SEOAL softball game against Logan. The ady Chiefs won, 3-2. (Dan Polcyn)
.
Mallory Shaw si ngl e and an

Lancers hold
off.
.
Tornadoes, ·1~-8

Bias, AITowood
. pace Hannan

~ •hlfts ll¥llllbl•

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GALLIPOLIS - Minford
cdrted Gallia Academy's wiqning run Friday, defeating the
Blue' Devils 3-2 in nonleague tennis play.
·
~ Minford swept all three sin~
g!es matches, but the Blue
Devils took both doubles
matches played. ,
, Steve Noel swept Ryan
Matura 6-1, 6~ 1 in No. 1 singles. Eli Parkes was a 6-1, 6-1
winner over Cole Haggerty
in No.2 singles, and Bate
Franke defeated Travis McKinniss, 7-5, 6-4.
,
., Brett Sanders and Josh Stapleton salvaged a win for
GAHS in No. 1 doubles play,
winning 6-2, 6-1 against
Clint Lauderbrock and Warren Martin.
Perry Houchens and Scott
Davison defeated · Adam
O ' Neill and Wes Seibert 7-6,
6-2 in No. 2 doubles action.
. Gallia Academy (13-4-ri&gt;lays
at lrontoJl Monday "!J.d travels
to Point Pleasant Wednesday.

! ·''

BY DAN POLCYN

OVP SPORTS STAFF

'

Prep

•

PI•.. ~ EasWn. Bl

Logan knocks
Point·girls .out
of SEOAL lead

. S. Gallia-St. Joe at South
Webster, 5:00
Portsmouth E.-Green at
Symmes Valley, 5:00
I

5:00
'
. ' . ' . '' '
Meigs at River
· ·

'...,

a

ha.rd week, one I am glad we made it iri the bottom of the inning when
through. In weeks like this it is easy · Sikorski walked, Alisha Hooper sinfor someone to slip in and knock you gled, and Emily Giffin reached on an
off. We had three serious injuries, but error to score Sikorski. Vore then sinwere able to overcome them." ,
gled hom e both Hooper and Giffin.
Eastern . (15-1 , TV C 14- 0) scored
Eastern went back ah ead· while
three runs in the first when Kristen Tammy Bissell reached on an error,
Chevalier singled, stole second, and Janet Ridenour reached on an error,
Sandy PoweU reached on an error. Chevalier advanced the runners with
Janet Calaway reached on a fielder's a sacrifice fly, and Bissell scored on a
choice that scored Chevalier, Kass passed ball to make the score 4-1 in
Lodwick singled home Powell, and favor of Eastern.
Juli Bailey reached on an error to
After two scoreless frames, Calaway
scored Calaway.
walked, Bailey walked, Amanda YeaTrimble came back with three runs

: South Gallla at Ironton St.

Rio Grande S1ctkmal .
Wed,.rdey, May 2 .
~· Gallla Acacjemy at. Warren;

.

got the job done offensively and relied
on Juli Bailey to get the out5 when
they needed them .
The Eastern girls programs have
been outstanding the past several seasons, and the softball team is continuing the trend in this, banner, 200001 school year.
"It was one of those ·nights," said
Eastern coach Pam Douthitt. "Where
both teams just couldnit make the
clean play."
Trimble commiued 10 errors on
the night.
Douthitt continued, "It was a long,

Joe, 5:00
· Green at Portsmouth East,
5:00
Thurwdayl May 3

Qlvi8Joft 'U

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Page 81

--~·-·

~~~

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. . . ..•

TAKING A HACK - Jaynee Davis of Meigs takes a cut at the
ball during the ly'larauders 14·1 victory over VInton County Friday at Rock Springs. (Dave Harris)

,,

�I

•I

..
'•

Inside:

'

Prep baseball &amp; sciftball, Page B2-4
The Cheap Seats, Page ij6
Dr. Sam: A1J stay away, Page B7
In the Open, Page B8

S!
, WASHINGTON (AP) - Two
pewly declassified official report&gt;
:concerning a aid on a Viemamese
yillage by Bob Kerrey's Navy SEAL
team make no ' mention of civilian
"Casualties that the former senator says
,he included in his initj.al after- action
.report on the incident.
: The reports, both dated Feb. 25,
:t 969- the day of the raid on Thanh
Phong, a coastal hamlet in the
Mekong Delta - were released Fri-

·SEALS "have gained a wdl-deserved the South China Sea, where the
spotligllt :aS a result of their successful communist forces controlled many
and highly productive openrions," populated ueas.
and pr.rises "th~ Kerrey Raiders of
The language is similar to that in a
Market Time;' saying they "not only later citation awarding then-Lt. 6g)
surprised the enemy in his own sanc- Kem:y, 25, the Bronze Star, the
tuary but struck him a severe and nation's fourth-highest 'award for

day by the Nawl Historical Center
in Washington. ·
They are not signed, .b ut ~
address coding~ suggest ,they are a
message from Kerrey's immediate
superior officer to the commander of
SEAL Task Force 1 15 and that officer's reply.
·
Both refer ~nly to " 21 VC KIA
(Bq;· meaning "21 Viet (Viet Cong)
killed in ~crion (body count)." The
senior commander's reply says the

fatal blow. Well done."
Market Time was the code name
for a U.S. Navy· effort to interdict
Viet Cong boats carrying ammunition and sqpplies along the coast of

wlor. Kerrey has said recendy that
because a dozen of the victims
turned out to be civilians, "the medal
means nothing to me."
Kerrey also claimed, most recendy

at a New York news confetence on
Thursday, that his written after-.
action report on the Thang Phong:
raid included the civilian casualties. :
Ktrrey, a Democrat who served
governor and senator fiom Nebraska:
and ran for president in 1992, pub-·
licly disclosed the incident this week. •
He said he has been haunted by the;
memory of the killing~ and has kept:
the details private, even fiom his chi!-:

Suntt.y. April :19. 1D01

as:

dren.

SUND\v's

•

WASHINGTON (AP)
The economy surprised the
,naysayers by turning in a solid
growth rate of 2 percent in the
'first quarter - double what
had been expected for' a period
in which there had been fears a
recession might be beginning.
The Bush administration
called the rebound "nothing
but good news." Private economists also found it encouraging
but expressed concern that the
recession tlueat was not over.
The adv:mce in the gross
domestic product.in the January-March · quarter was nl)t
only · bigger than anticipated
but also was double the 1 percent annual rate of growth registered in the last three months
of2000.
On Wall Street, the news lifted stocks. The Dow Jones
gained
indwtrial ~verage
117.70 points to close at
10,810.05.
"We're back from the
brink;.' said a hopeful Richatd
Yamarone, economist with.
Argus Research Corp. ''The
economy, however, remains
fragile. Looking ahead, people
shouldn't expect miracles. Economic growth will probably be
Weaker in the second and third
quarters."
GOP is the total output of

goods and service&lt; produced
within the U nired States and is
considered the broadest measure of the nation's eco~on:tic
health. The first-quarter figure ,
released Friday by the Commerce Department, marked the
government's most up-to-date
reading. ·
· Hardy spending by con~umers, especially on cosdy
manufactured goods, such as
cars and furniture, and an
improved trade performance
were major forces boosting .
first-quarter growth.

ster as an out-of-control
"monster" that should be
shui down if the company
can't make in · filters Work.
But her memorandum
Fri"
day notes that it remains the
record labels' burden as well
as Napster's to identify specific infringing song files.

OVP CORRESPONDENT

GLOUSTER - . The 1 5-win mark
is the benchmark of any outstanding
season-the mark of excellence for any
spom program.
Friday night, d~spite a 5-game
week, Eastern hit the standard with its
second consecutive win over Trimble.
The Eagles defeated the Tomcats, 8-4.
Thursday, Eastern put together a
defensive gem in posting a home win
over the Tomcats - seven error-free
innings. .
Friday, the Eagles booted the ball
around to the tune of eight errors, but

Dlvlllon IV

Aleunder Sectional
Mond8y, Aprll30
: Southern at Trimble, 5:00

•

constandy make them reappear. under different names.
This week, Napster began
'using even stronger screening
technology in an attempt to
comply with court orders
that copyright material .be
removed. -.
Patel bas desciibed Nap-

BY Seem Wou:E

Prep Softball

:

Labels are wrong ·on key part.of Napster renlecly :
-Economy turns in solid
'
growth rate in first quarter
the ever-changing network
before Napster is obligated to
remove copies of die song.
Napster says it has been
doing the best it can to
remove any' infringing songs
brought to in attention, but
this has proved ' exceptionally
difficult, since Napster users

es roll to 15th straight win

HIGHLIGHTS

••

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- A fedetal judge said the
record industry has misinterpreted a key appellate ruling
in the case against Napster
In c., and must do more to
help the file-swapping service prevent millions of
music fans from · trading
copyright song~.
U.S. D~trict Judge Marilyn Hall Patel's memorandum effectively means that
for now, Napster's interpretation holds that the
record labels must identify' at
least one infringing file on

:
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:
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Miller at Waterford, 5:00
Weclni 1 dey, May 2
Southern-Trimble
at
Crooksville, 5:00
· Miller-Waterford at Eastem, 5:00

.

Ironton Sectional ·
Tuaeday, May 1

..
'

.,

~

.,

"
j

'P

q

Dlvlelon II

Willeton Sectional ·
'
Tuelclay, May 1 '
· River Valley at Gallia Acad·

emy, 5:()() .
.
Friday, May 4

From 8:30 til 5:00
.
on Thursday May 3 &amp; Friday May 4
Have something to eat &amp; register
TO WIN FREE STUFFI

1403 Eastern

lli .. -~

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ley at Warren, 5:00

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• Vinton County at Meigs,

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Grilling llt.IIIO if 11 :30

5:00

.

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'

t

• ,9'DI~ IV

....... .,., ., ...

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.,

·. ~-..w·aect~one~~·.,.~
Thyrwday, May 3
'.

In

I

Eastern at Southern, 5:00
Waterford .at T.rimble, 5:00

Minford Sectlonel .
Monday, April 30
South Gallla v. Beaver
Eastern at Minford, 6:00
Thilrwday, ~y 3
Beaver Eastern-South Gal·
lla at Symmes Valley, 5:00
. Green at Ironton St. Joe,
5:00

'

Minford tops

'.

GAHS netten
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'Call Tocl~r
1-877-INFOCIS
Ext. 1841

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BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

STEWART .- Federal Hocking took advantage of
Southern errors and outdueled the Tornadoes in a 12-8
slugfest Friday.
Southern (11-4,TVC 9-4) is tied for second for Federal Hocking in the league with Trimble comin g on strong
late in the year with just three losses, holding th e upper
hand, in the Tri-Valley Conferen ce Hocking Division.
Fed~ral Hocking and Trimple sti~ have one meeting left
and SouJhern plays host to Trimble Monday.
Federal Hoclpng took a 2~0 lead on hit's by Jason
McCumbet and J.). Guess, two . Southern errors, two
walks and a sad:ifice fly by Ryan Gandy.
.
Southern went up 4-2 in the third when Matt Shain,
Brice Hill, Chad Hubbard, and Matt Ash hit consecutive
singles. Ash's blast was a two-run liner up the middle.
Brandon Pierce followed up with an RBI sin gle as
Southern took the lead.
Federal came back to tie the game at 4-all on two more
errors, a hit batter, a walk, and an RBI single by J.J. G~ess.
· The ceiling caved in t.h e four~h for .S outhem as Fed~r­
al plated siX runs. Three walks, a hit batter, a Guess single, and a Ron Delancy d.,subl e brought horne the runs to
·
make the score 10-4. ·
Federal added two more in the fifth on two waJks and
three more errors to run the score to 12-4.
Southern made a comeback on singles by Dally Hill,
Matt Shain, Brice Hill, C had Hubbard, and Matt Ash.
Aaron Ohlinger added a walk in between and SHS plated four runs to cut the score to 12-8.
With one out in the frame, B'rian Grimm came on to

PluM 1M Southem, B:S

PIIIIIIHM..p,BS

BY ScoTt WoLFE

'•

.. r· . .

,_

Meigs crushes Vinton Co•.
ROCK SPRINGS- Katie
Jeffers, Ashley Burbridge and
Jaynee Davis combined to
pitch a three hitter in leading
Mei gs to a t 4-1 TVC win
over Vinton County Friday.
Meigs scored a run in the
first inning. Shannon Price
walked a scored on a triple off
the bat of Steph ani e Wigal.
Meigs increased the lead in
the third inning to 2-0 on a·, .
Lindsay Bolin triple and a single off the bat of Kayte Davis.
Meigs blew the game open
in the fourth with five big·
runs. M eigs loaded the bases
. on a three walks, a Viking
error and a fielders choice.
But Bolin hit a triple to deep
right field to .dear the bases.
Bolin then scored o n a
ground o ut to make it 7-0.
Vinton , County scored in
the top of the fifth inning. R.
Mace singled, two walks later
B. Mace hit a sacri.fice fly for
the Vikings only run.
Meigs added four more
runs in the fifth inning for an
t 1-1 lead. Jaynee Davis
walked fo open up the inning
and . Alicia Werry followed

OVP CORRESPONDENT

'· Jessica Bias posted a pair 6f
second place finishes at the
Boone-J;.ogan
Invitational
and Ryan :Arrowood also
earned second place for the
Hannan track and field squad.
1
Bias was the runnerup in the
shot put and discus, while
Arrowood came in second in
the shot put.
.
: Arrowo:Jd finished fourth
jn the shot put Friday at Winpeld. Bias elai111ed fifth in the
1hot put and sixth in the discus at Winfield.

0

Ashley Pauon triple into the
ri ght-centerfield gap to tie the
LOGAN Log-Jn made game and force the extra
the SEOAL softball race a frame.
, great deal more compli cated
Logan's starting hurler,
Shaw, gave up just four hits to
for Point Pleasant Friday.
With a 3-2 win in eight the Lady Knights. She struck
innings, Logan puUs Point out out two, walked five and hit
of the league lead arid into one batter in picking up the
second place behind Warren, wm.
which defeated Gallia AcadePoint had trouble taking
my 11-0 on Friday.
advantage of the offensive
At 9-3 in the league, Point opportunities that Logan did
must now hope for another give them . Lady Knight hitters
team to knock off Warren, stranded eight runners, five of
while winning out to regain a those in scori ng position .
Shaw's opposite number, .
share of the SEOAL softball
· ride.
Kendra Riffie, gave up eight
Warren is 8-2 in league play. hits in her . fourth mound
Logan scored the winning appearance of the week . She
run in the bottom of the struck ou t three.
" It 's hard to play here.," said
eighth after a double by Nik.ki
Taylor, a fielder's choice off Point coach Danny Dewhurst.
the bat of Amanda Downs, "The field's different, and it's a
and a game-stopping single to strange place to play, but that's
center by Tisha Lehman.
· no excuse. The kids fought
Point gained the its first lead back and Kendra has pitched a
in the top of the seventh lot of games this week. We
inning. A . one-out walk to were hoping to get her rested .
Kendra Riffie, followed by
"The kids really fought back
Bridget Nibert's third single of and started to hit the ball. I
th e game gave the Lady was telling them to b e a little
Knights a pair of baserunncrs more patient in there, make
while trailing 1-0. A muffed the pitcher give them some
grounder and a throwing error good strikes . 1 think we were
allowed both runners to score chasing the balls early," he
·
and give Point a tenuous 2-1 1 added.
lead.
Logan scored the game's
The
Lady
C hi eftains first run in the third inning.
ROCK AND FIRE - Point Pleasant pitcher Kendra Riffle brings the heat .durlng Friday' s answered in their half with a
Plea.. see Point. 85
SEOAL softball game against Logan. The ady Chiefs won, 3-2. (Dan Polcyn)
.
Mallory Shaw si ngl e and an

Lancers hold
off.
.
Tornadoes, ·1~-8

Bias, AITowood
. pace Hannan

~ •hlfts ll¥llllbl•

I
I

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•

GALLIPOLIS - Minford
cdrted Gallia Academy's wiqning run Friday, defeating the
Blue' Devils 3-2 in nonleague tennis play.
·
~ Minford swept all three sin~
g!es matches, but the Blue
Devils took both doubles
matches played. ,
, Steve Noel swept Ryan
Matura 6-1, 6~ 1 in No. 1 singles. Eli Parkes was a 6-1, 6-1
winner over Cole Haggerty
in No.2 singles, and Bate
Franke defeated Travis McKinniss, 7-5, 6-4.
,
., Brett Sanders and Josh Stapleton salvaged a win for
GAHS in No. 1 doubles play,
winning 6-2, 6-1 against
Clint Lauderbrock and Warren Martin.
Perry Houchens and Scott
Davison defeated · Adam
O ' Neill and Wes Seibert 7-6,
6-2 in No. 2 doubles action.
. Gallia Academy (13-4-ri&gt;lays
at lrontoJl Monday "!J.d travels
to Point Pleasant Wednesday.

! ·''

BY DAN POLCYN

OVP SPORTS STAFF

'

Prep

•

PI•.. ~ EasWn. Bl

Logan knocks
Point·girls .out
of SEOAL lead

. S. Gallia-St. Joe at South
Webster, 5:00
Portsmouth E.-Green at
Symmes Valley, 5:00
I

5:00
'
. ' . ' . '' '
Meigs at River
· ·

'...,

a

ha.rd week, one I am glad we made it iri the bottom of the inning when
through. In weeks like this it is easy · Sikorski walked, Alisha Hooper sinfor someone to slip in and knock you gled, and Emily Giffin reached on an
off. We had three serious injuries, but error to score Sikorski. Vore then sinwere able to overcome them." ,
gled hom e both Hooper and Giffin.
Eastern . (15-1 , TV C 14- 0) scored
Eastern went back ah ead· while
three runs in the first when Kristen Tammy Bissell reached on an error,
Chevalier singled, stole second, and Janet Ridenour reached on an error,
Sandy PoweU reached on an error. Chevalier advanced the runners with
Janet Calaway reached on a fielder's a sacrifice fly, and Bissell scored on a
choice that scored Chevalier, Kass passed ball to make the score 4-1 in
Lodwick singled home Powell, and favor of Eastern.
Juli Bailey reached on an error to
After two scoreless frames, Calaway
scored Calaway.
walked, Bailey walked, Amanda YeaTrimble came back with three runs

: South Gallla at Ironton St.

Rio Grande S1ctkmal .
Wed,.rdey, May 2 .
~· Gallla Acacjemy at. Warren;

.

got the job done offensively and relied
on Juli Bailey to get the out5 when
they needed them .
The Eastern girls programs have
been outstanding the past several seasons, and the softball team is continuing the trend in this, banner, 200001 school year.
"It was one of those ·nights," said
Eastern coach Pam Douthitt. "Where
both teams just couldnit make the
clean play."
Trimble commiued 10 errors on
the night.
Douthitt continued, "It was a long,

Joe, 5:00
· Green at Portsmouth East,
5:00
Thurwdayl May 3

Qlvi8Joft 'U

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Page 81

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. . . ..•

TAKING A HACK - Jaynee Davis of Meigs takes a cut at the
ball during the ly'larauders 14·1 victory over VInton County Friday at Rock Springs. (Dave Harris)

,,

�..

•

13-12 Chiefs scalp Big Blacks

outlast
·. IITD.wiHAIIill
' rNP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS/ - Vinton County scqred an
unearned run in the top of the
sevmth inning and made it
•stand to post a 13-12 win over
Meigs in a wild one Friday.
The Vikings blew a 12-0
third innlng lead after plating
eight runs with two outs in
the second inning.
The M.orauders on the other
hand. got their bats working in
the third inning, and came
roaring bade only to fall short
of the Vikings.
The Vikings a~enged ail loss
to the Marauders by a 16-6
score on Thursday evening.
The two teams will meet
again next Friday at Meigs
High School in sectional tournament play.
The Viki'ngs sent 12 batters
to the plate in the second
inning to take a 8-0 lead. After
the first rwo batters were out,
Bartoe, Ferguson and Sims all
sihgled.
.
Three straight walks, and
back-to-back doubles by Norton and Lucik gave the Vikings
the big lead.

The Viltings added four
more runs in the third inning.
a Meigs error, a double off the
bat of Sims, and singles by
Cecil, Clary, Ruckel, a w;dlt
and another Lucilt double
gave the Vikings what looked
like an unsurmountable 12-0
lead
Meigs started their comeback in the fourth inning.
With rwo outs Eric Runyon
hit his first home run of the
season a solo shot to the opposite field.
John Stanley quickly made it
a 12-2 contest with a line shot
over the fence in left for his
fifth of the year.
Meigs seemed to come alive
after the fourth inning long
balls, and really got their bats
going in the fifth.
Adam Bullington walked to
lead off the inning, Josh Napper then hit a smash that
looked like a possible double
play ball, but it hit the base
umpire for a dead ball and a
single.
A walk and a force out plated a run and put runners on
first and third. Zach Bolin hit
a fly out to short left field for

~.April a, 2001

SUndlly, Aprtl a, 2001

Pomeloy • Mldlllport • 011Np !Ills, Ohio • Point Phuant, WY

LanceiS
..

LOGAN - Logan ripped
Point's other run came in
14 hits off Big Blacks pitching the 6fth after Nick Duncan
on the way to a 14-4 SEOAL singled and scored on a Sims
baseball ~ Friday.
single.
Logan (15-1-1) opened the . Chad Kratzenburg was 3game with six runs in the first for-4 for the Cheifuins. Jeese
inning. Point closed the gap to Henestofel had three hits.
6-3 in the third on hits by Johnny Conrad was 2-for4
Seth Hatfiled.Andrew Dennis, with a home run.
.
JoeY Loomis, Matt Warner and
Hadield and Sims each had
Jason Sims.
a pair of singles.
.
Logan added three more in
Garret Hudnall took the
the fifth and loss for Point.
the fourth~in
sixth to end the
Point (5- 11) will travel to
three in
contest.
Gallia Academy on Monday. :

the second out, with both · wallt, but the next Marauden
runners unable to advance.
grounded out to end the eonNick Dettwiller ar.d M.ott test.
·.
SteWart foUowed \\~th RBI
Ocil was the Viking starting
singles and Runyon wallted ~Jitcher, ferguson and Ruckel
brining up Stanley.
also saw mound duty. Ruckel
Stanley launched a one-one picked up the win in relief.
pitch deep over the left field Lucilt had a pair of doubles
fence for his sixth of the year, and a single to lead the
second of the night and third Vikings.
this week to bring the
Sims added a single. and
Marauder all the way bade and double, Ruckel and E~erts
tie the game at 12-all.
added rwo singles, Norton a
Meigs threatened in the double and Cecil, Clary, Barsixth inning, but the Vikings toe and Ferguson each added a
were able to work out of trou- single.
ble to keep the game tied at 12
For Meigs Darrick Knapp
heading into the final inning, was tagged with the loS$ in .
l n the top of the seventh, relief of Andy Davis and Josh
VINCENT - Brad VenLucik singled and Eberts fol- · Napper. The three combined
lowed with a base hit moving to give up 14 hits, strike out ham threw a 5-hitter as Warren defeated Gallia Academy
him to third.
five and walk five.
Lucik then scored on a wild
Stanley led the way \vith his 13-3 in five innings Friday.
The Warriors (9-8) blew
pick-off attempt at third base two home runs and a double,
open
a 3-3 game in the
to give the Viking a 13-12 Napper added a pair of singles,
lead.
Dettwiller a double and two fourth, scQring six runs, then
Meigs had one last chance singl~s, Runyon a home run, added four more in the fifth to
however, with two outs Sun- and Stewart, Skip Dodson and . end the game.
Venham helped his cause
ley came up again and wasted Derek Johnson each added a
with a.double and two RBI.
no time hitting a laser into the single.
Chris Hendricks was 2-forright . center field gap that
Meigs returns home on
bounced over the fence for a Monday to play Nelsonville- 4 with a homer and five RBI.
ground rule double.
York.
Bullington followed with a

Tomadoes

. STEWART- Getting rwo
runs in the last inning, Federal
, Hoelting got the insurance it
needed, scoring two runs on
:.back-to-hack singles by
Amanda Moore and Lacy
.Hornsby in the sixth en route
to a 4-2 win over Southern.
. Federal too.lt a 1-0 lead in
the third when Billy Jo Fo~tt
reached on a fielderis choice
and scored on two errors. Federal Hocking's next run was
nearly a carbon copy as Mary
Fossett reached on a walk and
, scored on an error, a hard hit
·'ball by Amanda Moore.
Although Southern made
'·only three errors, they were a
- huge factor in the game.
' Meanwhile, Lacy Hornsby
baffied the Southern hitters
~ 'after returning to action just
- Monday a~er missing the first
half of the season . Hornsby
"·walked six and struck out just
' ·one, but jammed several
Southern hitters into · slow
groundouts in taking command of the game.
r Southern left two stranded
:in the fourth and two ,runners
:stranded in the fifth with just
:one out and could not get
· them across the plate. South-·
; ern finally rallied in the sixth,
:getting the ·first two on, then
:Fryar grounded out to short
:initializing a 6-3-2 double

Warren stops GAHS
Derrick Wetz also homered
for the Warriors.
Nick Merola went 1-for-2
with a home run, while Raysean Allen was 1-for-2 with a
double and an RBI.
Allen Skinner and Scott
Nida also had doubles for the
Blue Devils (4-17).
·
Matt Bush took the loss for
GAHS. Kyle Brown pitched
one inning in relief.

. . . . . . ig inning powers Jackson past-Raiders
H COOPIR
OVP SPORTS STAFF

CHESHIRE- For the first
· four innings, River Valley
played a close ballgame with
one of the top teams in the
SEOAL.
The fifth inning, though,
was·a different story.
Jackson scored seven runs in
the fifth to beat the Raiders
10-0 in five inning Friday.
With the win, the lronmen
pretty much secured themselves no worse than thira
place in the final league standings at 9-3, 16·5 overall.
Austin Arthur scored the
fint run of the game for the
Ironmen to make it a I -0
game.
In the bottom of the first,
Charlie Hollanbaugh led off;

with a single and got to third
base on a stolen base and wild
pitch. Hollanhaugh was unable
to score as the next two batten were struck out by Jackson starter Ty Hoovet, and
;Blake M.orcum flew out to
deep left field.
River Valley had another
opportunity to score when
Eric Baker was walked, Dustin
Gibbs was hit by a Hoover
pitch and Ryan Spaulding singled to load the bases with
rwo outs.
But a groundout to Hoover
ended yet another RiverValley
threat. The Raiders had a total
of seven base runners stranded
on the afternoon.
Hoover pitched the four-hit
shutout, striking out six and
walking two.

Spaulding, the River Valley
starter, th~ew for the first four
innings with a strike out,
while allowing only three hits
and no walks.
Spaulding was also 2-for-2
at the plate.
It was off reliever Baker that
the Ironmen began to get a
hold of the ball.
Mter taking a 3-0 lead in
the third off of runs by
Hoover and Mike Holdren,
whose RBI single scored
Hoover, Jackson started to put
the game away for good when
T.J. McDonald and Arthur
were walked to lead off the
fifth.
McDonald then scored on
an error at first base hit by
Hoover that wen! into right
field.

A rwo-RBI double by Hoidren made it a 6-0 game with
no outs. · .
Holdren was 3-for-3 with
three RBI and rwo runs.
A sacrifice grounder by
Curtis Green gave the Raiden
their first out of the . inning,
but allowed another run to
score.
· After three straight Jackson
singles, Chris Jackson came in
to reliei(C Baker.
Jackson forced Patrick
Boothe to sround out to Hoi: lanbaugh at short. After Arthur
was Walked, Hoover popped
out to end the inning.
River Valley traVels to Warren Monday.
Jackson ·meets Marietta
Monday.

u..,...
.....
Rd.
Clallpalll, Ohio

2tl

the Silwer llrklp

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

Horner with two outs. LyndGallia Academy (0-1'3,
sey Lemon, Heather Call and SEOAL 0-1 I) managed to put
GALLIPOLIS - · Warren Tessa Nelson each drove in a just two runners on base for
the rest of the game as Lang
pitcher Carrie Lang threw a run for the Warriors.
4-hitter as the Warriors shut
Warren tallied three more and the Warren defense tightout Gallia Acade!Uy 11-0 in runs in the third with Nelson ened the screws. Donnally
SEOAL softball play Friday. , beltnig a two-run triple to left reached base in the sixth on a
Lang ·went the distance, that allowed Horner and Call single and Meghan Mooney
stri~ng out six_ Blue Angels to score. Dawn Yambor ripped walked in th seventh for
while walking JUSt tw~. She a single through the left side to GAHS, but both were left
reared the stde m order m the drive in Nelson with the third stranded ..
fourth arid fifth innings, strik- run of.the inning.
Nelson was 2-for-3 with
mg out the stde m the fourth.
Warren added a run in the three RBI and scored a run
' Lang benefited from a pair fourth with Lang scoring ori . for Warren. Horner finished 1of double plays pulled off by an error, and the Warriors for-3 with a home run, two
her ~arren teammates as the pushed two runs across in the RBI and scored twice. Call
Warnors turned m • solid fifth with Tiffany Lemon and was 1-for-3 and drove in one
~efenstve performance .collec- Lyndsey Lemon scoring on run.
uvely. She got out of a Jam m two more errors by Gallia
Tiffany Lemo!l went 1-forthe ~econd thanks to a 4-.6-3 Academy.
4 and s£ored twice. Lyndsey
Gallia Academy's best scor- Lemon was 1-for-5 with an
double play and left t-:vo
Angels stranded m the .thtrd ing opportunity came in the RBI and scored two runs.
when second baseman Ttffany third when the Blue Angels
Donnally took the Ieiss for
Lemon snared a line shot by loaded the bases. Gretchen the Blue Angels. She worked
Jessica Donnally then doubled Faudree singled with one out four innings and gave nine
up Whit~ey_Williams at first to and B.J. Wamsley followed runs on nine hits. Only five
end the mmng.
with another single. Williams runs were earned as the Angels
Warren (12-6; SEOAL 8-2) got aboard on an error but committed five errors in the
scored five runs .in the first on was erased on the daub!; play first four innings. She struck
five hits. The btg blast was a . initiated by Tiffany Lemon.
out two and walked two.
two-run homer by Amber
·

;

-~-

UO...CCiMIJ... _,OI1
-CITIIIIIIII ... II1

Haylie johnson came on in
the fifth and finished · the
game. She gave two runs, both
unearned, but held Warren
without a hit. Johnson walked
two batters.
Wamsley went 2-for-3 to
lead Gallia Academy. Dol\_nally
was 1-for-3 and Faudree finished 1-for-2.
Gallia Academy plays at
Point Pleasant on Monday.

this stellar season. Bailey had
eight strikeouts and eight
,
walks in picki!lg up the win,
Pap 81
while Trimble
pitching
1
fanned eight and walked five .
I Yeager doubled home both
Eastern hitters were Che\la: runners, · while an . error lier with a single, while lod: advanced Yeager to third. Bis- wick singled, Yeager doubled,
sell had an RBI single to score and Bissell singled. Trimble
· ~ansfield running for Yeager hitters were Alisha Hooper a
"for an 8-1 Eagle lead.
single,Vore a single, and Sim; TrimL)e came back with moo's 'a single. .
~·
0 'I
I
~ne {\ln aU on . walks .that
Eastern is off Monday but
ccq~a the .,run.
· ·
will play Wahama Tuesday at
,}'i~~nrJ~''B'allef."l!it2h~ 4 'Ea,t'l!(bf¥~as~rn· pla}'s7 'tile'
dng...\1'Fr ·fifth straight . game, Winner of Waterford-Miller
'ihurled7'another genl, bolster- on Wednesday, at Eastern.'
1
ing th~ E~gles. ~onfi!lence in
'
.
.
'

192-0461

441-2404

Warren ''D" shuts down Gallia Academy

Eastem .

204 w. 2Rd ltrett
Pon11roy, Ohio

'I• 1111• ..th of

play that got Chapman at. the
plate.
Brigette Barnes, who ·singled, came around to score on
an infield single by M.ocyn
Ervin.
Leading 2-1. Federal Hoelting got a crutial pair of runs
in the bottom of the sixth.
With two outs, Moore
knocked home B. Casde 'who,
had singled. then Hornsby
knocked home Moore, the
score 4-1.
The first two Southern batters went dow!). in the· last
inning.That came after Deana
Pullins walked~! was doubled off base on a Brandi Lane
double-play ball. Emily Hill,
Kati Cummins, and Rachel
Chapman each walked and
Hill scored when Barnes
reached on an error. A 4-3
ground out ended the game as
Southern left the potential
winning run stranded on base.
Still improving with every
game, Rachel Chapman
pitched a four hitter, walked
just three and struck out two.
Three of the four hits came
the last. inning.
Hornsby posted the win;
walking six and fanning just
one. ·
Southern opens sectional
tournament play at Trimble
Monday.

-CI1DIItlll

ftum

.

You may eJ:perience
brief 1ervice
interruption~. Plea1e
be tu1ured ue.uill do
everything to keep
interruption~ to a
• •
muumum.

•:----------------~--------------------------

;Southern

Hill 'combined :Cor Southern
with 11 walks, two hit batters
,,
and two strikeouts.
\
Federal Hocking pitchers
'
Delancy ,and Grimm struck
i get the next tWo puts and out five and hit three.
Southern plays hosi to
!three straight pop-ups in the·
Trimble Monday.
: s.even,~ to end the game.
I Brice Hill and Brandon

'
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COM~hAr.t:er
A WIIUO WORLD COMPANY

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

.

.'
. '

Ct~lllr-800-BOO·CABLE.

877-998-3407
GOAL • DIVelop a lllogen that exempllfle1 the mlulon r
''" itatement of Gallla Academy.
RULES..1) Any etudent, teicher, or community member
11 eligible.
2) Slogan muet ~ five (&amp;) worde or 1e11.
...(.:
'· ·• 3) Slogan muet be 1 grammatically correct phren
i
. acronym.
,
4)
Entrlaa
will
be
Judged on originality and the
4
lf
mell8ge conveyed.
5) All decl1lona of the Judgll will be final.
8) 'Deadline for antry 11 Tuelday, May 7.
7) Entrlll will be Judged by the OAHS North Cent111l
Mlaelon Statement CommlttH.
EXAMPLES: Northmont High Scttool:
.
"BEYOND THE BASICS"
Ander1on Middle Sl:hool:
"ANDERSON MEANS SUCCESS"
Worthington High School:
"SCHOOLS FOR TOMORROW"
,

A FARMERS BANK "Home Advantage" Equity
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340 Fourth Ave~ Galllpo!JI. Ohio 4563·1

(740) 992-2136
Gai!J~Ua

(740) 44·~265 .

Name:----~----------------~~~~

Address:------ Clly: - - - - - -

Ta'pefl PlaiDa

(7~)

667-3161

Zip:

(Ir IJ) Farmers Bank ·
~ We're Your Bank

for (ijiiU

• Ra1e Ia tlxed for the lint S yoars and subject to
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after !he 5th year. APR'• for
Home 1!4ulty lfnoa will nol ..ceod 18%. Min.
CTedlt line li ss,ooo. There ia a 599 clollna
- · Conault a tax advl10r ~q~rdlna doduCiibili·
ty of 1 -APR buod on roan amount of
550,000. AM._I membenh~SSO on anfiivll'
Ill)'. Member FDIC, Eqllll
nunll)' Lltldel.

..-n.

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•

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13-12 Chiefs scalp Big Blacks

outlast
·. IITD.wiHAIIill
' rNP CORRESPONDENT

ROCK SPRINGS/ - Vinton County scqred an
unearned run in the top of the
sevmth inning and made it
•stand to post a 13-12 win over
Meigs in a wild one Friday.
The Vikings blew a 12-0
third innlng lead after plating
eight runs with two outs in
the second inning.
The M.orauders on the other
hand. got their bats working in
the third inning, and came
roaring bade only to fall short
of the Vikings.
The Vikings a~enged ail loss
to the Marauders by a 16-6
score on Thursday evening.
The two teams will meet
again next Friday at Meigs
High School in sectional tournament play.
The Viki'ngs sent 12 batters
to the plate in the second
inning to take a 8-0 lead. After
the first rwo batters were out,
Bartoe, Ferguson and Sims all
sihgled.
.
Three straight walks, and
back-to-back doubles by Norton and Lucik gave the Vikings
the big lead.

The Viltings added four
more runs in the third inning.
a Meigs error, a double off the
bat of Sims, and singles by
Cecil, Clary, Ruckel, a w;dlt
and another Lucilt double
gave the Vikings what looked
like an unsurmountable 12-0
lead
Meigs started their comeback in the fourth inning.
With rwo outs Eric Runyon
hit his first home run of the
season a solo shot to the opposite field.
John Stanley quickly made it
a 12-2 contest with a line shot
over the fence in left for his
fifth of the year.
Meigs seemed to come alive
after the fourth inning long
balls, and really got their bats
going in the fifth.
Adam Bullington walked to
lead off the inning, Josh Napper then hit a smash that
looked like a possible double
play ball, but it hit the base
umpire for a dead ball and a
single.
A walk and a force out plated a run and put runners on
first and third. Zach Bolin hit
a fly out to short left field for

~.April a, 2001

SUndlly, Aprtl a, 2001

Pomeloy • Mldlllport • 011Np !Ills, Ohio • Point Phuant, WY

LanceiS
..

LOGAN - Logan ripped
Point's other run came in
14 hits off Big Blacks pitching the 6fth after Nick Duncan
on the way to a 14-4 SEOAL singled and scored on a Sims
baseball ~ Friday.
single.
Logan (15-1-1) opened the . Chad Kratzenburg was 3game with six runs in the first for-4 for the Cheifuins. Jeese
inning. Point closed the gap to Henestofel had three hits.
6-3 in the third on hits by Johnny Conrad was 2-for4
Seth Hatfiled.Andrew Dennis, with a home run.
.
JoeY Loomis, Matt Warner and
Hadield and Sims each had
Jason Sims.
a pair of singles.
.
Logan added three more in
Garret Hudnall took the
the fifth and loss for Point.
the fourth~in
sixth to end the
Point (5- 11) will travel to
three in
contest.
Gallia Academy on Monday. :

the second out, with both · wallt, but the next Marauden
runners unable to advance.
grounded out to end the eonNick Dettwiller ar.d M.ott test.
·.
SteWart foUowed \\~th RBI
Ocil was the Viking starting
singles and Runyon wallted ~Jitcher, ferguson and Ruckel
brining up Stanley.
also saw mound duty. Ruckel
Stanley launched a one-one picked up the win in relief.
pitch deep over the left field Lucilt had a pair of doubles
fence for his sixth of the year, and a single to lead the
second of the night and third Vikings.
this week to bring the
Sims added a single. and
Marauder all the way bade and double, Ruckel and E~erts
tie the game at 12-all.
added rwo singles, Norton a
Meigs threatened in the double and Cecil, Clary, Barsixth inning, but the Vikings toe and Ferguson each added a
were able to work out of trou- single.
ble to keep the game tied at 12
For Meigs Darrick Knapp
heading into the final inning, was tagged with the loS$ in .
l n the top of the seventh, relief of Andy Davis and Josh
VINCENT - Brad VenLucik singled and Eberts fol- · Napper. The three combined
lowed with a base hit moving to give up 14 hits, strike out ham threw a 5-hitter as Warren defeated Gallia Academy
him to third.
five and walk five.
Lucik then scored on a wild
Stanley led the way \vith his 13-3 in five innings Friday.
The Warriors (9-8) blew
pick-off attempt at third base two home runs and a double,
open
a 3-3 game in the
to give the Viking a 13-12 Napper added a pair of singles,
lead.
Dettwiller a double and two fourth, scQring six runs, then
Meigs had one last chance singl~s, Runyon a home run, added four more in the fifth to
however, with two outs Sun- and Stewart, Skip Dodson and . end the game.
Venham helped his cause
ley came up again and wasted Derek Johnson each added a
with a.double and two RBI.
no time hitting a laser into the single.
Chris Hendricks was 2-forright . center field gap that
Meigs returns home on
bounced over the fence for a Monday to play Nelsonville- 4 with a homer and five RBI.
ground rule double.
York.
Bullington followed with a

Tomadoes

. STEWART- Getting rwo
runs in the last inning, Federal
, Hoelting got the insurance it
needed, scoring two runs on
:.back-to-hack singles by
Amanda Moore and Lacy
.Hornsby in the sixth en route
to a 4-2 win over Southern.
. Federal too.lt a 1-0 lead in
the third when Billy Jo Fo~tt
reached on a fielderis choice
and scored on two errors. Federal Hocking's next run was
nearly a carbon copy as Mary
Fossett reached on a walk and
, scored on an error, a hard hit
·'ball by Amanda Moore.
Although Southern made
'·only three errors, they were a
- huge factor in the game.
' Meanwhile, Lacy Hornsby
baffied the Southern hitters
~ 'after returning to action just
- Monday a~er missing the first
half of the season . Hornsby
"·walked six and struck out just
' ·one, but jammed several
Southern hitters into · slow
groundouts in taking command of the game.
r Southern left two stranded
:in the fourth and two ,runners
:stranded in the fifth with just
:one out and could not get
· them across the plate. South-·
; ern finally rallied in the sixth,
:getting the ·first two on, then
:Fryar grounded out to short
:initializing a 6-3-2 double

Warren stops GAHS
Derrick Wetz also homered
for the Warriors.
Nick Merola went 1-for-2
with a home run, while Raysean Allen was 1-for-2 with a
double and an RBI.
Allen Skinner and Scott
Nida also had doubles for the
Blue Devils (4-17).
·
Matt Bush took the loss for
GAHS. Kyle Brown pitched
one inning in relief.

. . . . . . ig inning powers Jackson past-Raiders
H COOPIR
OVP SPORTS STAFF

CHESHIRE- For the first
· four innings, River Valley
played a close ballgame with
one of the top teams in the
SEOAL.
The fifth inning, though,
was·a different story.
Jackson scored seven runs in
the fifth to beat the Raiders
10-0 in five inning Friday.
With the win, the lronmen
pretty much secured themselves no worse than thira
place in the final league standings at 9-3, 16·5 overall.
Austin Arthur scored the
fint run of the game for the
Ironmen to make it a I -0
game.
In the bottom of the first,
Charlie Hollanbaugh led off;

with a single and got to third
base on a stolen base and wild
pitch. Hollanhaugh was unable
to score as the next two batten were struck out by Jackson starter Ty Hoovet, and
;Blake M.orcum flew out to
deep left field.
River Valley had another
opportunity to score when
Eric Baker was walked, Dustin
Gibbs was hit by a Hoover
pitch and Ryan Spaulding singled to load the bases with
rwo outs.
But a groundout to Hoover
ended yet another RiverValley
threat. The Raiders had a total
of seven base runners stranded
on the afternoon.
Hoover pitched the four-hit
shutout, striking out six and
walking two.

Spaulding, the River Valley
starter, th~ew for the first four
innings with a strike out,
while allowing only three hits
and no walks.
Spaulding was also 2-for-2
at the plate.
It was off reliever Baker that
the Ironmen began to get a
hold of the ball.
Mter taking a 3-0 lead in
the third off of runs by
Hoover and Mike Holdren,
whose RBI single scored
Hoover, Jackson started to put
the game away for good when
T.J. McDonald and Arthur
were walked to lead off the
fifth.
McDonald then scored on
an error at first base hit by
Hoover that wen! into right
field.

A rwo-RBI double by Hoidren made it a 6-0 game with
no outs. · .
Holdren was 3-for-3 with
three RBI and rwo runs.
A sacrifice grounder by
Curtis Green gave the Raiden
their first out of the . inning,
but allowed another run to
score.
· After three straight Jackson
singles, Chris Jackson came in
to reliei(C Baker.
Jackson forced Patrick
Boothe to sround out to Hoi: lanbaugh at short. After Arthur
was Walked, Hoover popped
out to end the inning.
River Valley traVels to Warren Monday.
Jackson ·meets Marietta
Monday.

u..,...
.....
Rd.
Clallpalll, Ohio

2tl

the Silwer llrklp

BY ANDREW CARTER
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

Horner with two outs. LyndGallia Academy (0-1'3,
sey Lemon, Heather Call and SEOAL 0-1 I) managed to put
GALLIPOLIS - · Warren Tessa Nelson each drove in a just two runners on base for
the rest of the game as Lang
pitcher Carrie Lang threw a run for the Warriors.
4-hitter as the Warriors shut
Warren tallied three more and the Warren defense tightout Gallia Acade!Uy 11-0 in runs in the third with Nelson ened the screws. Donnally
SEOAL softball play Friday. , beltnig a two-run triple to left reached base in the sixth on a
Lang ·went the distance, that allowed Horner and Call single and Meghan Mooney
stri~ng out six_ Blue Angels to score. Dawn Yambor ripped walked in th seventh for
while walking JUSt tw~. She a single through the left side to GAHS, but both were left
reared the stde m order m the drive in Nelson with the third stranded ..
fourth arid fifth innings, strik- run of.the inning.
Nelson was 2-for-3 with
mg out the stde m the fourth.
Warren added a run in the three RBI and scored a run
' Lang benefited from a pair fourth with Lang scoring ori . for Warren. Horner finished 1of double plays pulled off by an error, and the Warriors for-3 with a home run, two
her ~arren teammates as the pushed two runs across in the RBI and scored twice. Call
Warnors turned m • solid fifth with Tiffany Lemon and was 1-for-3 and drove in one
~efenstve performance .collec- Lyndsey Lemon scoring on run.
uvely. She got out of a Jam m two more errors by Gallia
Tiffany Lemo!l went 1-forthe ~econd thanks to a 4-.6-3 Academy.
4 and s£ored twice. Lyndsey
Gallia Academy's best scor- Lemon was 1-for-5 with an
double play and left t-:vo
Angels stranded m the .thtrd ing opportunity came in the RBI and scored two runs.
when second baseman Ttffany third when the Blue Angels
Donnally took the Ieiss for
Lemon snared a line shot by loaded the bases. Gretchen the Blue Angels. She worked
Jessica Donnally then doubled Faudree singled with one out four innings and gave nine
up Whit~ey_Williams at first to and B.J. Wamsley followed runs on nine hits. Only five
end the mmng.
with another single. Williams runs were earned as the Angels
Warren (12-6; SEOAL 8-2) got aboard on an error but committed five errors in the
scored five runs .in the first on was erased on the daub!; play first four innings. She struck
five hits. The btg blast was a . initiated by Tiffany Lemon.
out two and walked two.
two-run homer by Amber
·

;

-~-

UO...CCiMIJ... _,OI1
-CITIIIIIIII ... II1

Haylie johnson came on in
the fifth and finished · the
game. She gave two runs, both
unearned, but held Warren
without a hit. Johnson walked
two batters.
Wamsley went 2-for-3 to
lead Gallia Academy. Dol\_nally
was 1-for-3 and Faudree finished 1-for-2.
Gallia Academy plays at
Point Pleasant on Monday.

this stellar season. Bailey had
eight strikeouts and eight
,
walks in picki!lg up the win,
Pap 81
while Trimble
pitching
1
fanned eight and walked five .
I Yeager doubled home both
Eastern hitters were Che\la: runners, · while an . error lier with a single, while lod: advanced Yeager to third. Bis- wick singled, Yeager doubled,
sell had an RBI single to score and Bissell singled. Trimble
· ~ansfield running for Yeager hitters were Alisha Hooper a
"for an 8-1 Eagle lead.
single,Vore a single, and Sim; TrimL)e came back with moo's 'a single. .
~·
0 'I
I
~ne {\ln aU on . walks .that
Eastern is off Monday but
ccq~a the .,run.
· ·
will play Wahama Tuesday at
,}'i~~nrJ~''B'allef."l!it2h~ 4 'Ea,t'l!(bf¥~as~rn· pla}'s7 'tile'
dng...\1'Fr ·fifth straight . game, Winner of Waterford-Miller
'ihurled7'another genl, bolster- on Wednesday, at Eastern.'
1
ing th~ E~gles. ~onfi!lence in
'
.
.
'

192-0461

441-2404

Warren ''D" shuts down Gallia Academy

Eastem .

204 w. 2Rd ltrett
Pon11roy, Ohio

'I• 1111• ..th of

play that got Chapman at. the
plate.
Brigette Barnes, who ·singled, came around to score on
an infield single by M.ocyn
Ervin.
Leading 2-1. Federal Hoelting got a crutial pair of runs
in the bottom of the sixth.
With two outs, Moore
knocked home B. Casde 'who,
had singled. then Hornsby
knocked home Moore, the
score 4-1.
The first two Southern batters went dow!). in the· last
inning.That came after Deana
Pullins walked~! was doubled off base on a Brandi Lane
double-play ball. Emily Hill,
Kati Cummins, and Rachel
Chapman each walked and
Hill scored when Barnes
reached on an error. A 4-3
ground out ended the game as
Southern left the potential
winning run stranded on base.
Still improving with every
game, Rachel Chapman
pitched a four hitter, walked
just three and struck out two.
Three of the four hits came
the last. inning.
Hornsby posted the win;
walking six and fanning just
one. ·
Southern opens sectional
tournament play at Trimble
Monday.

-CI1DIItlll

ftum

.

You may eJ:perience
brief 1ervice
interruption~. Plea1e
be tu1ured ue.uill do
everything to keep
interruption~ to a
• •
muumum.

•:----------------~--------------------------

;Southern

Hill 'combined :Cor Southern
with 11 walks, two hit batters
,,
and two strikeouts.
\
Federal Hocking pitchers
'
Delancy ,and Grimm struck
i get the next tWo puts and out five and hit three.
Southern plays hosi to
!three straight pop-ups in the·
Trimble Monday.
: s.even,~ to end the game.
I Brice Hill and Brandon

'
'

COM~hAr.t:er
A WIIUO WORLD COMPANY

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

.

.'
. '

Ct~lllr-800-BOO·CABLE.

877-998-3407
GOAL • DIVelop a lllogen that exempllfle1 the mlulon r
''" itatement of Gallla Academy.
RULES..1) Any etudent, teicher, or community member
11 eligible.
2) Slogan muet ~ five (&amp;) worde or 1e11.
...(.:
'· ·• 3) Slogan muet be 1 grammatically correct phren
i
. acronym.
,
4)
Entrlaa
will
be
Judged on originality and the
4
lf
mell8ge conveyed.
5) All decl1lona of the Judgll will be final.
8) 'Deadline for antry 11 Tuelday, May 7.
7) Entrlll will be Judged by the OAHS North Cent111l
Mlaelon Statement CommlttH.
EXAMPLES: Northmont High Scttool:
.
"BEYOND THE BASICS"
Ander1on Middle Sl:hool:
"ANDERSON MEANS SUCCESS"
Worthington High School:
"SCHOOLS FOR TOMORROW"
,

A FARMERS BANK "Home Advantage" Equity
Line will make your dreams grow! .If you own
your own home, you can borrow against the equity
·
that's already built right into your house!

7.75o/oAPR*

New/Used Boat!

PRIZE: $100.00 Cuh priH for the wln,nlna 1101g1n.

With A Fixed

5Year Rate!
Limited
time offer.

----

'

•

Pomeroy

· Send entries to: Rodney TOlliver, GABS,
340 Fourth Ave~ Galllpo!JI. Ohio 4563·1

(740) 992-2136
Gai!J~Ua

(740) 44·~265 .

Name:----~----------------~~~~

Address:------ Clly: - - - - - -

Ta'pefl PlaiDa

(7~)

667-3161

Zip:

(Ir IJ) Farmers Bank ·
~ We're Your Bank

for (ijiiU

• Ra1e Ia tlxed for the lint S yoars and subject to
.Q.hlnae
after !he 5th year. APR'• for
Home 1!4ulty lfnoa will nol ..ceod 18%. Min.
CTedlt line li ss,ooo. There ia a 599 clollna
- · Conault a tax advl10r ~q~rdlna doduCiibili·
ty of 1 -APR buod on roan amount of
550,000. AM._I membenh~SSO on anfiivll'
Ill)'. Member FDIC, Eqllll
nunll)' Lltldel.

..-n.

Phone ,N umber:------

Slogan Entry:

•

"'-------------~--------Five words or less, due May 1, 2001
c

II

•.

•

l

2001 CHEVROLET CAMARO

Buy Now

S·18 995

__...£1'+.

�,. ,.•..,a

Baseball
xmo Appier (2-2)

aas

6w

'SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
-'- Kerry Wood is lo&lt;ting like .
the pitcher who won the NL
Rookie of lhe Year awud in

1998.
Wood

~It out

14 -

his
highest total sinc:e ·elbow
SII!J'efY rwo )'an ago - as
Chicago beat San franc:isco 73 Friday nigbt.
.
Wood (1-1) allowed three
runs and two hits in six
innings, retiring his 6nal 10
batten- eight by strikeout. It
was the most strikeouts for
Wood since he fanned 16 on
Aug. 26, I 998, aprut Cincinnati - eight months before
reconstructive elbow surgery.
Rondell White hit a threerun homer for lhe Cubs, who
won their second straight following a season-high threegame losing streak.
Jeff Kent drove in two runs
and J T Snow homered for the
Giants, who lost their seasonhigh fourlh straight.
Mark Gardner (0-3) allowed
five runs and four hits in six
innings.

Blaves 9, D ba cb 0.
John Burkett (1 -3) pitched a
three-hitter in his fint complete game in 97 starts since
July 2, 1997, as visiting Adanta
stopped Arizona's four-game
winning streak. It was liis lint
shutout since Aug. 11, 1996,
for Texas at Toronto.
Chipper Jones had his lint
career five-hit game, and
Andruw Jones and BJ. Surholf
homered
off .Armando
Reynoso (1-4) in a live-run
second inning. Reynoso is ~
10 against Atlanta.

Reds 12, Rodd11 9
Ruben Riven and Dmitri
Young hit consecutive tworun doubles in a six-run
eighlh as Cincinnati won its
eighlh straight road game.
Colorado led 9-6 going into
.!he eighlh, but Kelly Stinnett
hit an RBI single off Juan
Acevedo, and Riven tied the
game against Jose Jimenez,
who relieved Mike Myers (12). Young doubled for an 11-9
·
lead.
Hector Mercado
(1 -0)
allowed one run and two hits
in 3 1-3 innings, and Danny
Graves pitched a hidess ninth
for his eighth save.

Pirates 3, Padru 0
Jimmy Anderson (2-1) and
four relievers combined on an
eight-hitter at San Diego,
sending the Padres to their
lOth loss in 12 games .
Josias Mai'lZanillo, Scott
Sauerbeck,Jose Silva and Mike
Williams
finished,
with
Williams retiring Ryan Klesk,o
on a foul popup with the bases
loaded for his fourth save.
Bobby Jones (0-3) ·allowed
three runs - two earned and five hits in seven innings.

n1111

jnnjnp.

r·

F•iHII.II'IMMS I
Vladimir Guerrero, Orlando

·Cabrera and Andy Tracy
homered to bac:k Mike Thurman (2-3), who allowed one
run and four hits in seven
inning. Milwaukee had won
five straight borne games.
Mark Leiter (0-1), making
his lint start since Sept. 23,
1997. when he was with
Philadelphia, allowed only two
hits - both by Guererro and two runs in five inning..

,,.,..LAegue

&amp;.tDiul
WLI'et.O.
14
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san Otego 11. Philadelpllla o
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Eric Owens homered off
Billy Wagner (0-1) in the top
Los Angeles 6. Pittst&gt;urgh 3
Fnct.y'Iof the 1Oth inning for his
Fiorida 9. Hou$ton 8. 10 innings
career-high 6fth hit. Owens
Montreal 6, Milwaukae. 1
St Louis e. N.Y. Mots 0
also scored four runs.
Cincinnati 12, Colorado 9
Antonio Alfonseco (1-1)
AUaniB 9. Arizona 0
pitched two . innings for the
victory.
Cliff Floyd tied the score in Smith's April record set m
the eighth with · a two-run 1994.
homer off' Mike Jackson.
Julio Lugo's fourth-inning
grand slam off Bnd Penny
gave Houston, which trailed
Tino
Martinez hit a
5-0, a 6-5 lead.
tiebreaking home run in the
sixth inning as the Yankee
Doclpn ••
J snapped a th~-game losing
streak with a 3-2 victory.
Martinez hit . a 2-0 pitch
Alex Cora hit a ninthinning sacrifice fly off' Wayne fi
M k
ld
Gomes (2-1) at Dodger Stadi- rom ar Mu er (2- 2) into
urn, and Shawn Green had a the second deck in right field,
giving the Yankees a J-2 lead.
pair of run-scoring singles.
Pat Burrell and Marlo,n
Orlando Hernandez labored
Anderson hit solo homers for lhrough five innings in his first
the NL East-leading Phillies, appearance for the Yankees
who hav~ lost two in a row since missing his last start
following a six-game winning because of discomfort ill his
streak.
right elbow.
Terry Adams (2- I) pitched
Randy Choate (2-0) got the
two hidess innings, striking · Win, and Mariano Rivera got
out the side in .the eighth.
five outs for his fourth save for
the Yankees, who had lost
M's
Sox 3 eight of 11.

Yankees 3, Ns l

Ph...

a. White

'IWins

orioles

John 'Olerud homered and
6,
3
Aaron Sele (4-0) pitched seven
strong innings as the Mariners
Doug Mientkiewicz homewon !heir eighth straight game red twice and dro\re in four
- and tied a ~or league runs as Minnesota won for lhe
record with their 19th win in ninth time· in 10 home games.
April -:- with an 8-3 victory
Cal Ripken was back in Balover Chicago on Friday night. timore's . lineup after being
The visiting Mariners have benched in three of the previwan 12 df 13 and at 19- 4 are ous five games and went 2off' to baseball's best start since for-4, hitting a ninth-inning
Milwaukee won 20 of 23 to
solo homer against Bob Wells.
start the 1987 season.
Minnesota, which leads the
The defending AL Central
AL .Central by four games, is
champion White Sox, who
have dropped nine of 12, also off to a 16-5 start, its best since
lost slugger Frank Thomas, 1972.
who left the game after sprainDeline DeShields homered
ing his right triceps diving for twice off winner Joe Mays (3a ball. He planned to have an I), who allowed four hits in
MRI exam Saturday.
· seven ·
innings.
La Troy
IUzuhiro Sasaki came on Hawkins earned his seventh
with the bases loaded and one . save.
out in the ninth. Sasaki struck
out Harold Baines and got
Sox 9,
l
Ray Durham on a popup for
tying Lee
his I 2th save Manny Ramirez and Troy

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Greer . homered
twice, Gabe IUpler hit a grand
.slam and Alex Rodriguez ha4
a two-run shot as Texas
poun_ded rookie Tim DreW (01) for six runs in three-plus
innings at Cleveland.

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Reliever Pat Mahomes (1-2)
4,
Rays l
got out of a bases-loaded jam
in the fifth, and Jeff' ZimmerJose Macias homered and
man went 1 2~3 innings for his
scored three times as host
second save.
Detroit won consecutive
games for just the second time
12. Anpls 4 this season despite one error in'
the field and several on the·
Jose Cruz extended his hit- basepaths.
ting stre~ to a career-high 19
Dave Mlicki (1-2) -ended a·
games With a three-run homer four-start losing streak, alloi.v-•
as _Toronto won its third ing two runs in seven-plus;
stmght.
. innings. Todd Jones got his
Bnd Fullmer went 4-for-4 fifth sa\le.
·
with four runs scored as the
Ryan Rupe {1-3) gave up
~lue _Jays won for the 1Oth four runs in five innings.
tune m 13 home games.
Esteban
Loaiza
(4-0)
allowed lhree runs and nine
hits in seven-plus innings:

11prs

Devil

J-.1

ICICS GIMI'III Hartinger parkway
llldd~

Ohio 45780 .

96 Uncotn Town Car

River Valley
rally falls .··.
short against
Jackson . ·

---·

JACKSON Jackson being hit by a pitch and she
pushed across the winning run and Ferguson pulled off a
in the fifth inning and held on double steal to put runners iq
for a 3-2 victory against River scoring position agail! for
Valley Friday.
Jackson.
·
Jackson's Miranda Dameron
However, McFann stymied
and River Valley's Geri the threat by the lronladies by
Mcfann held opposing batters striking out Tara Riegel to
in check for the most part. end the inning.
Solid pitching and defense
Dameron gave up just four
hits to the i,:liders, while took over for the next three
McFann held the lronladies to innings with neither side able
only three hits.
to muster' a serious · threat.
Dameron had one strikeout · Both clubs went down in
and one walk.
order in the second and each
McFann -struck out 1 I bat- side put a runner on base in
ters, walked four and hit two. the third, but were shut out.
· For Mcf~nn, it was her fifth
Oameron
retired
the
straight outing of the week, Raiders in order in the fourth
with two more to play Satur- . and McFann struck out three
day as River Valley played host of the four batters she faced in
to Berne Union in a dciu~le- the bottom of the fourth to
keep the Raiders within strikheader at Cheshire.
River Valley (9~9, SEOAL ing distance.
Riv~r Valley tallied the tying
5-7) snatched a 1-0 lead in the
first inning. Mandy Baird run in' the top of the fifth after
tripled with one . out and Carrie Naylor . singled and
scored on an RBI single by scored.
However, Jackson scored
Tarra Minnis wilh two away
what proved to be lhe winto put the Raiders.on top.
Jackson pitcher Miranda ning run in the bottom of the
Dameron got out of the fifth. After !son · and Whitney
inning without further inci- Harless each grounded out to
dent after Mcfann popped second base, Blankenship sinout to the shortStop.
gled and stole second to spark
Jackson took the lead in the the offense for the Ironladies.
home half of the first, scoring
Lindsay Hughes then played
;two runs. Leadoff . · hitter the role of heroine for Jack~
!Mindy lsoq walked and Molly son, belting a double that
i£1ankenship drew walk with scored Blankenship and gave
'one out, setting the table for Jackson a 3-2 edge.
jennifer Ferguson, who ripped
Jackson's defense held off
:a single that drove in two the Raiders in the final two
•runs.
innings to earn the win.
,- Sallie Greer got on after

Nagy back with Tribe, at least for the weekend
Nagy was back at Jacobs
Field for the first time this season Friday, the latest step in his
improbable comeback from
elbow surgery. The right-hander threw an 11-rninute
bullpen session for Indians
pitching coaclt Dick Pole,
who lilted what he saw.
. Nagy, who has won 123
games in his 1 1 seasons \vith
the Indians, is · scheduled to
re(J!lrt to Triple-A Bulfalo and
will start for the Bisons on
Monday at Rochester. The 33year-old likely will be with
Buffalo until the Indians

CLEVELAND (AP)
There wasn't much for
Charles Nagy to do during a
boring month in Aorida at
extended . spring training
except lhrow fastballs. He did
manage to work in some fasr
food, though.
"I got to drive the team van
to one start," said Nagy. "I was
like camp leader. I took the
team to McDonald's on the
way home. They were like,
'Mr. Nagy, are Y11! going to eat
here or take the stuff' wilh us?'
We had our spikes on and
everything."

decide if he's ready to return and wanted to see more velocto the majors.
. iry on Nagy's fastball before
"I could be there all year as they considered adding him to
far as I know;' Nagy said. "It's their roster. In his last start•
out of my hands. I'm just . Nagy threw 99 pitches in 8 2going to pitch every fifth day. 3 innings and topped out at 88
Whatever happens, happens." mph on the radar gun in the
When the Indians broke ilinth inning.
spring training c:amp in Win"I have no idea," Nagy said
ter Haven, Aa., they lett Nagy when asked if he could pitch
behind. Although he didn't in the majors no\v. "I've just
miss a turn and did all his side been down there getting guys
work just like the other Jodi- out.
"You have a lot of time to
ans pitchers, the club wanted
to see more from Nagy.
. reflect and think about the
The Indians had their past," Nagy said. "You have a
doubts about his arm strength lot of rime on your hands ."

..

-=---::~

~"""'..,~

99 Ford Taun~l GL

=~~~~~-~S~po~~rt~=w~~~s~~-~ . ~~~-~~~-~:.~~~ ~. ~~:. ~~$11,995.

loi8Jibu 18772- Black, AT, tv:;;, 11n, Cruise,

.

..

Grand Am

, AC, Cr. , Red, Spoilef $12,995
• LOAOEDII ............................ $12,805
Red tRT7I • V-8 Engine, 5 Speed,
PW&amp;L, Sport Wheels .......................................$15,350
Gb'lll1dAM SE ft791 • 29;000 Miles, Bal of Fact

..

.;SOUTHERN ATHLETES HON~RED - In conjunction .with
',:the National Consortium for
:-Academics and Sports, the
~atlonal Federation of State
.High SchOol Associations and
the SOuthern athletic department, several student·ath'
.
•etes were honored for their
:Commitments to excellence in
academics, athletics, and
:Community service. Pictured
13re, front row. from left, Jeri
!Hill, Shauna Manuel, Sarah
iaall, · Emily Stivers, Macyn
Ervin,
Chad
Hubbard,

........~~
City National Bank

.
'
'

Point

from Pap 11
'
: Patton led off' with a single
:and was dr.iven in after singles
;by Tara Struble and Tisha
Lehman.
' Lehman had three singles
;for Logan. Patton had a triple
:and a single. Tucker had a sin:gle, as did Shaw and Struble.
· After racking up double-

The New All Purpose Utility
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1

.

'

M~ip

from Page 11

-(wiSTER.

l~te

PunMoy ,• lllddllpDit • Gelllpolla, Ohio • Point Pl••ant, WV

._..-.a.-

,__

N.Y.

O'Leary hit · consecutive
homen off Blake Stein (1-3),
and Carl Everett added his
second grand slam in lhree
days.
.
The Red Sox have won
eight of 11 and improved to
1 I -3 at Fen way · Park. The
Royals dropped to 3-I 1 on
the road.
Fnnlt .Castillo (3-1) allowed
two runs in 5 1-3 innings.

.811·

..

•

Royals

cardinals 9, Mets o
Matt Morris shut down visiting New York for seven
innings, and Jim Edmonds and
Placido Polanco each had
three hits.
The National League champions have lost four· straight
and nine of 13, dropping to 813 and falling into last place in
the NL East. .
Morris (3-2) allowed live
hits in seven innings, and Jason
Karnuth and Steve Kline combined for one-hit relief in the
Cardin_als' . first shutout this
season.

s•••.,. Apll2t, 2.1

AROUND THE DIAMOND

allowed
and 10 hits in 6w

S&amp;nfey, April29, 2001

Page84

with a double. Nikki
' Butche~ reached on a Viking
error and Burbridge walked.
:Bolin cleared the bases with
:her third triple of the g~me.
: Meigs add'e'd three more
' runs in the sixth to dose out
: the scoring, Mindy Chancey
tripled, Butcher walkcd 1 and
Burbridge singled and came
all the way around to score
when the right· fielder made
an error on the' play.

- Eacortad by
Mary Fowler,
Peoples Choice Director
(For Information

m Lumber
ROute 1•1 • Cllelter, OH

_call Mary at 674·1028)

(740) III·SSOI
'

Evans, ·
KimJonathan
McDaniel and Rachel ' Mar,
shall. S~cond row, from left,
Tommy Theiss, Stephanie
Bradford, Deana Pullins, J9ey
Manuel, Henrlcke Armbrust,
Tara Pickens, Katie Sayre and
Amy Lee. Back row, from left,
Tyler Little, Joe Cornell, Matt
Ash and Brandon Pierce. A
student must participate in
athletics and have a cumulative grade point average of
3.5 or be In the top 10 in their
class.

digit hitting numbers in the
previous 1to nights, Point
struggeld to generate hits.
Nibert had three of the four
Lady l{night hits. Amber
Curfman had a single for
Point.
·
Logan will take on Athens
next week.
The Lady Knights dose o.u t ·
league play with Gallia Academy and River Valley next
week.
·

I

·'

t

187815 -AT, AC,

.

4 Dr. Rtd 19707·'29,000 Miles, Bal
• Black, Slick, V-6, Sportwhsats.

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Green, AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, PL
Gi'1111dArn GT G-n 19684 ·AT, AC, 11H, Cruise,

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Sunroof. AM, FM, CD, Sport wheels .............. $12,810
Ho111d1 Civic LX 198815 • Silver, AT, AC, Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
SullflJOI. AM, FM, CD, Sport wheels .......... ................ $12,910
P~ Br-.19574 '~ AT., AC, Tilt, Cruise, AM/FM/
.

.

.r:~~~·;····a;e'd·i&gt;~i~IMJt:G;iie~:·eir:·ii·o-oo;:;;;~i~;;;!i;;,~.Jr.

~

~~~~::·::a:;T~~1981::. ·:04.~···,·::·~i:i~:;i:·v:a:·s·s;,;;;d:;;;c·:J~~:;.
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................................... $13,695
RS 18838 • Red, T·lops, Ay, AT, PW&amp;L, 1111,
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M32 ·VB, AT. AC, 11H, Cruise,
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Eclipse I tl873 .Sunroof, AM/FM/CD, Sportwheels,
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RS 184815 • 35,000 Miles, AT, AC, 11~. Cruise,
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wheels . ....................:................... ................................. $8.950
Chevy LUmlnell720- AT, AC, 11~. Cruise, PW&amp;L.. .... $5,164
Toyota Ttrotl 18788 • Green, AT, AC, CliSsene, Low Miles ..•
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LtSibrl 18751 ·AT, AC, 11n, Cruise, PW&amp;~. Sport
wh•"'IA .........................................: .......................................... $8,995
1111!15 MtrC!Jry Slblt 18755 ·AT, AC, Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L, Cassette
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15188 Oldo CutlMa Suprtmtl9198 • AT, AC, 11n. Cruise,
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PontiiC Gb'llndArn ft740- AT, AC, 11n. Cruise, ........... $4,650

Jeffers picked up the · win,
with help from Burbridge
and Jaynee Davis. The three
gave up three hits, struck out
three and walk five. Bolin's
three triples led the Marauders, Wigal added a double and
triple, Werry and single and '
double, Kayte Davis added
two singles, Chartcey a triple
and Burbridge and Harris
each added singles.
Eberts was the losing pitcher for the Vikings, she gave up,
. 12 hit5, struck out follt and
walked six. Jewett, R, Mace
and B. Ma ce had the Vikings
lVU all si,ngles.

I .
I

• 18,000 Miles, Red, AT, AC,

''

1813. Oldl815 ".780 -AT, AC,1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L, Cassette ... $3,995
1813 Pontile Gi'llndAm 18894 • Whtte, 4 Dr., AT,AC,1lh, Caas ........
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,111831'ord F-110 Rid 4X2118411· XLT,AT, AC, 8' Bed, PW&amp;L. .....
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1813 Ford 1 Ton Utility Tk ·AT, AC, V-8 Eng., Working' Man's
Truck ....................................,... :............................. :................ $7,995
1992 Ford P:110 18799- Red, AT, 8' Bad, Bad Uner, Tough trucl&lt;, ·
ready for wor1d ..............................................:........................ $3 ,995
1992 JHp CharakH 18820· Red, 4x4, 8 Cyl, AT. AC. Very Clean,
Very Nlcel ........ ...................................................................... $6,195
1990 Dodge Dyn11ty 1111111- Blue, AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, Loaded,
"Clean u a Pln' .... ................................ ................................. $3,695
1990 Cldllllc STS 11848 • LOAOEDI... ......:.......... ... :.......... $6,995
1990 ~ncotn Contlnontall9575 ·~OADED' SPECIAL ...... $2,995 ·
1~ Chevy
Van- JUST TRADED IN ...... $2,995

Subaru Outback AWD 19682 • Roof Rack, AT. AC, 11~.
AM/FM/CD, Sportwheels ......................................... $17,350
Dodge Dui'llngo Bleck 4x4119413· AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, V8
Sport wheels ............................................ .................... $19,995
Chavy Bluer Red 4X4 4 Dr 119660 · AT, AC, 11~. Alloy
. . . . ................................. ,..................................... $13,295
11197 Ford ExpiOI'III' SporU9475 2 Dr, AT, AC. Tslt, Cruise, Rf Rei&lt; ......
............................................................................................. $11 ,495
1996 Chevy Btaur 4X4 4 Dr. l9805 ·Green, AT, AC, 1111, Cruise,
PW'&amp;L Power Lea1her seal ..................... ., .................... ....... $14,920
Ford EKplorer 19407 ·Auto, Air, XLT, PW&amp;L, Cruise ..., .........
.............:................................ .......... :......... ........................... $11,495
Chtvy Bluer 4Dr 196711- Black/Silver. AT, AC, 1111. Cruise,
PW&amp;L.P Seats. Sport wheels ............................................ .$10,795
Explorar 4X2 N9590- Ar::,, AM/FM/Cass .. Sport
WhE&gt;els, Rear OefoggOI' ..................... .......~ ...........................'.$9,995.
11185 JtMPWI'Inglar 4X4 nne. Hard top, Sportwheols, Red,
..........................................................................$7,005
Ford Explol'llr H806 • Rod, 2 Dr, 4X4, AT, AC, Sportwheels
.................. : ........................................... ............................... $7.995.

Ford Rangtr X·Cib 19809 • 20,000 miles, Flareside, V6,
Alloy wheels, A-slider ....................... .................................. $16,995.
11187 Ford F-1504X4 XLT ,I9515 ·Off Road, AC, 11H, Cruise,
PW&amp;L, AM/FMJCD, Cassette, Sportwheals .................. ...... $15,995.
11187 F150 XCab *9839- Black, va. 4X4, AC, PW&amp;L, nn, Cruise,
Sportwheels .. ............................... ........................................$17,670

2000 F·150 4X2 Black 19744. Aareslde, XL, V-6 Eng, Sport

wheels ............................... :................ ............................. ...... $13,925
1999 Ford F·150 19nO ·Red, 28,000 Miles, B.O.F.W...... $12,650
11189 Toyota Tecoma XCab 191130- Maroon, AT, SR5 Pkg., AC ,
PW&amp;L, Low Miles................................................................ $15,995.
1998 Ford Rengar ft718- Gold, 4 Dr, V-6 Eng, AT, PW&amp;L$13,595
1998 Chavy 5·10 119472- Maroon. Flareslde. spof1wheels, AC ......
... :............................................................................................. $8.695
F·150 Su~rc.b 19611 ................................ .............. $14 ,295
Chovy 5·10 l!xtre Cab 4X219585- Super Cab, 2 Tone
AC, Sportwheels, 3rd Door, LS ....... ............................ $8,995.
5·10 X-cab 119689- Black, LA, AT, Casaatte, Sport
mlloa............................................... :............$8,995
5·10 19823 Red· LS Package, AT, AC , 1111. Cruise,
Alio'Y W11eeilll ......................... ....... ................... .. .......................... $:7195

Ford Wlndatar GL 19788- Groen,AT: AC ,Til1, Cruise, POwer
Leamer seat ....... ..... ................. ....................,......... ... ............ $11,695
Dodge Cartvln Sport 18797 ·AT. AC, 1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
Side Sliding Door ............................ ............................... $18,295
1111 Pontiac !o'lontane Whlto 18730. 4 Dr. AT, AC , 1111, Cruise,
PW&amp;L, PS •. AM/FM/CD ............................... ......................... $15,895
1996 Ford W:ndotlr 18381•, AT, AC . 1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L .... $7,995.
1995 Ford W:ndaler *8822 -Green, AT. AC. 1111. Qrulse. Sport
,,........ ,............ ,................................................. ......... $6,195
Dodge Ctraven 196111 ·AT, AC, 1111, Cruise. V·6 Engine,
.. ............................................ ., .......................... $4 ,995
Dodgo Caravan 19594- White, 7 Pass, V-6 Eng .. AT, AC .......
.................................. .... ..... ................ .......................... .. ...... $8,995
Ford Aorootlr v•n 19709 - V-6 Eng, AT, AC , 1111, Cruise,
PW&amp;L ............. ... .......................................................... ......... $8,750

I,

�,. ,.•..,a

Baseball
xmo Appier (2-2)

aas

6w

'SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
-'- Kerry Wood is lo&lt;ting like .
the pitcher who won the NL
Rookie of lhe Year awud in

1998.
Wood

~It out

14 -

his
highest total sinc:e ·elbow
SII!J'efY rwo )'an ago - as
Chicago beat San franc:isco 73 Friday nigbt.
.
Wood (1-1) allowed three
runs and two hits in six
innings, retiring his 6nal 10
batten- eight by strikeout. It
was the most strikeouts for
Wood since he fanned 16 on
Aug. 26, I 998, aprut Cincinnati - eight months before
reconstructive elbow surgery.
Rondell White hit a threerun homer for lhe Cubs, who
won their second straight following a season-high threegame losing streak.
Jeff Kent drove in two runs
and J T Snow homered for the
Giants, who lost their seasonhigh fourlh straight.
Mark Gardner (0-3) allowed
five runs and four hits in six
innings.

Blaves 9, D ba cb 0.
John Burkett (1 -3) pitched a
three-hitter in his fint complete game in 97 starts since
July 2, 1997, as visiting Adanta
stopped Arizona's four-game
winning streak. It was liis lint
shutout since Aug. 11, 1996,
for Texas at Toronto.
Chipper Jones had his lint
career five-hit game, and
Andruw Jones and BJ. Surholf
homered
off .Armando
Reynoso (1-4) in a live-run
second inning. Reynoso is ~
10 against Atlanta.

Reds 12, Rodd11 9
Ruben Riven and Dmitri
Young hit consecutive tworun doubles in a six-run
eighlh as Cincinnati won its
eighlh straight road game.
Colorado led 9-6 going into
.!he eighlh, but Kelly Stinnett
hit an RBI single off Juan
Acevedo, and Riven tied the
game against Jose Jimenez,
who relieved Mike Myers (12). Young doubled for an 11-9
·
lead.
Hector Mercado
(1 -0)
allowed one run and two hits
in 3 1-3 innings, and Danny
Graves pitched a hidess ninth
for his eighth save.

Pirates 3, Padru 0
Jimmy Anderson (2-1) and
four relievers combined on an
eight-hitter at San Diego,
sending the Padres to their
lOth loss in 12 games .
Josias Mai'lZanillo, Scott
Sauerbeck,Jose Silva and Mike
Williams
finished,
with
Williams retiring Ryan Klesk,o
on a foul popup with the bases
loaded for his fourth save.
Bobby Jones (0-3) ·allowed
three runs - two earned and five hits in seven innings.

n1111

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F•iHII.II'IMMS I
Vladimir Guerrero, Orlando

·Cabrera and Andy Tracy
homered to bac:k Mike Thurman (2-3), who allowed one
run and four hits in seven
inning. Milwaukee had won
five straight borne games.
Mark Leiter (0-1), making
his lint start since Sept. 23,
1997. when he was with
Philadelphia, allowed only two
hits - both by Guererro and two runs in five inning..

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Chicago Cu6s 7, c-.oo 2
CinclnnaU 7, San FrBAdiCO 5
san Otego 11. Philadelpllla o
Anzona13,AIIanta6

Mn+• 9, Aslros 8

Eric Owens homered off
Billy Wagner (0-1) in the top
Los Angeles 6. Pittst&gt;urgh 3
Fnct.y'Iof the 1Oth inning for his
Fiorida 9. Hou$ton 8. 10 innings
career-high 6fth hit. Owens
Montreal 6, Milwaukae. 1
St Louis e. N.Y. Mots 0
also scored four runs.
Cincinnati 12, Colorado 9
Antonio Alfonseco (1-1)
AUaniB 9. Arizona 0
pitched two . innings for the
victory.
Cliff Floyd tied the score in Smith's April record set m
the eighth with · a two-run 1994.
homer off' Mike Jackson.
Julio Lugo's fourth-inning
grand slam off Bnd Penny
gave Houston, which trailed
Tino
Martinez hit a
5-0, a 6-5 lead.
tiebreaking home run in the
sixth inning as the Yankee
Doclpn ••
J snapped a th~-game losing
streak with a 3-2 victory.
Martinez hit . a 2-0 pitch
Alex Cora hit a ninthinning sacrifice fly off' Wayne fi
M k
ld
Gomes (2-1) at Dodger Stadi- rom ar Mu er (2- 2) into
urn, and Shawn Green had a the second deck in right field,
giving the Yankees a J-2 lead.
pair of run-scoring singles.
Pat Burrell and Marlo,n
Orlando Hernandez labored
Anderson hit solo homers for lhrough five innings in his first
the NL East-leading Phillies, appearance for the Yankees
who hav~ lost two in a row since missing his last start
following a six-game winning because of discomfort ill his
streak.
right elbow.
Terry Adams (2- I) pitched
Randy Choate (2-0) got the
two hidess innings, striking · Win, and Mariano Rivera got
out the side in .the eighth.
five outs for his fourth save for
the Yankees, who had lost
M's
Sox 3 eight of 11.

Yankees 3, Ns l

Ph...

a. White

'IWins

orioles

John 'Olerud homered and
6,
3
Aaron Sele (4-0) pitched seven
strong innings as the Mariners
Doug Mientkiewicz homewon !heir eighth straight game red twice and dro\re in four
- and tied a ~or league runs as Minnesota won for lhe
record with their 19th win in ninth time· in 10 home games.
April -:- with an 8-3 victory
Cal Ripken was back in Balover Chicago on Friday night. timore's . lineup after being
The visiting Mariners have benched in three of the previwan 12 df 13 and at 19- 4 are ous five games and went 2off' to baseball's best start since for-4, hitting a ninth-inning
Milwaukee won 20 of 23 to
solo homer against Bob Wells.
start the 1987 season.
Minnesota, which leads the
The defending AL Central
AL .Central by four games, is
champion White Sox, who
have dropped nine of 12, also off to a 16-5 start, its best since
lost slugger Frank Thomas, 1972.
who left the game after sprainDeline DeShields homered
ing his right triceps diving for twice off winner Joe Mays (3a ball. He planned to have an I), who allowed four hits in
MRI exam Saturday.
· seven ·
innings.
La Troy
IUzuhiro Sasaki came on Hawkins earned his seventh
with the bases loaded and one . save.
out in the ninth. Sasaki struck
out Harold Baines and got
Sox 9,
l
Ray Durham on a popup for
tying Lee
his I 2th save Manny Ramirez and Troy

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bnpn 11, Ind.... 1
Rusty
Greer . homered
twice, Gabe IUpler hit a grand
.slam and Alex Rodriguez ha4
a two-run shot as Texas
poun_ded rookie Tim DreW (01) for six runs in three-plus
innings at Cleveland.

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,
Bolllmore (Hontgon 1·2) at M . . _ ·
(Romero 11-1), 2:05p.m.
Seattle (Gatdes 3-0) .. Clago So• (Buehrle 1-3). 2:0S p.m.

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4, T 2
Ootsolt

Ka-. Cll)' 2
lily

Y - 3,.01*nd 2

Reliever Pat Mahomes (1-2)
4,
Rays l
got out of a bases-loaded jam
in the fifth, and Jeff' ZimmerJose Macias homered and
man went 1 2~3 innings for his
scored three times as host
second save.
Detroit won consecutive
games for just the second time
12. Anpls 4 this season despite one error in'
the field and several on the·
Jose Cruz extended his hit- basepaths.
ting stre~ to a career-high 19
Dave Mlicki (1-2) -ended a·
games With a three-run homer four-start losing streak, alloi.v-•
as _Toronto won its third ing two runs in seven-plus;
stmght.
. innings. Todd Jones got his
Bnd Fullmer went 4-for-4 fifth sa\le.
·
with four runs scored as the
Ryan Rupe {1-3) gave up
~lue _Jays won for the 1Oth four runs in five innings.
tune m 13 home games.
Esteban
Loaiza
(4-0)
allowed lhree runs and nine
hits in seven-plus innings:

11prs

Devil

J-.1

ICICS GIMI'III Hartinger parkway
llldd~

Ohio 45780 .

96 Uncotn Town Car

River Valley
rally falls .··.
short against
Jackson . ·

---·

JACKSON Jackson being hit by a pitch and she
pushed across the winning run and Ferguson pulled off a
in the fifth inning and held on double steal to put runners iq
for a 3-2 victory against River scoring position agail! for
Valley Friday.
Jackson.
·
Jackson's Miranda Dameron
However, McFann stymied
and River Valley's Geri the threat by the lronladies by
Mcfann held opposing batters striking out Tara Riegel to
in check for the most part. end the inning.
Solid pitching and defense
Dameron gave up just four
hits to the i,:liders, while took over for the next three
McFann held the lronladies to innings with neither side able
only three hits.
to muster' a serious · threat.
Dameron had one strikeout · Both clubs went down in
and one walk.
order in the second and each
McFann -struck out 1 I bat- side put a runner on base in
ters, walked four and hit two. the third, but were shut out.
· For Mcf~nn, it was her fifth
Oameron
retired
the
straight outing of the week, Raiders in order in the fourth
with two more to play Satur- . and McFann struck out three
day as River Valley played host of the four batters she faced in
to Berne Union in a dciu~le- the bottom of the fourth to
keep the Raiders within strikheader at Cheshire.
River Valley (9~9, SEOAL ing distance.
Riv~r Valley tallied the tying
5-7) snatched a 1-0 lead in the
first inning. Mandy Baird run in' the top of the fifth after
tripled with one . out and Carrie Naylor . singled and
scored on an RBI single by scored.
However, Jackson scored
Tarra Minnis wilh two away
what proved to be lhe winto put the Raiders.on top.
Jackson pitcher Miranda ning run in the bottom of the
Dameron got out of the fifth. After !son · and Whitney
inning without further inci- Harless each grounded out to
dent after Mcfann popped second base, Blankenship sinout to the shortStop.
gled and stole second to spark
Jackson took the lead in the the offense for the Ironladies.
home half of the first, scoring
Lindsay Hughes then played
;two runs. Leadoff . · hitter the role of heroine for Jack~
!Mindy lsoq walked and Molly son, belting a double that
i£1ankenship drew walk with scored Blankenship and gave
'one out, setting the table for Jackson a 3-2 edge.
jennifer Ferguson, who ripped
Jackson's defense held off
:a single that drove in two the Raiders in the final two
•runs.
innings to earn the win.
,- Sallie Greer got on after

Nagy back with Tribe, at least for the weekend
Nagy was back at Jacobs
Field for the first time this season Friday, the latest step in his
improbable comeback from
elbow surgery. The right-hander threw an 11-rninute
bullpen session for Indians
pitching coaclt Dick Pole,
who lilted what he saw.
. Nagy, who has won 123
games in his 1 1 seasons \vith
the Indians, is · scheduled to
re(J!lrt to Triple-A Bulfalo and
will start for the Bisons on
Monday at Rochester. The 33year-old likely will be with
Buffalo until the Indians

CLEVELAND (AP)
There wasn't much for
Charles Nagy to do during a
boring month in Aorida at
extended . spring training
except lhrow fastballs. He did
manage to work in some fasr
food, though.
"I got to drive the team van
to one start," said Nagy. "I was
like camp leader. I took the
team to McDonald's on the
way home. They were like,
'Mr. Nagy, are Y11! going to eat
here or take the stuff' wilh us?'
We had our spikes on and
everything."

decide if he's ready to return and wanted to see more velocto the majors.
. iry on Nagy's fastball before
"I could be there all year as they considered adding him to
far as I know;' Nagy said. "It's their roster. In his last start•
out of my hands. I'm just . Nagy threw 99 pitches in 8 2going to pitch every fifth day. 3 innings and topped out at 88
Whatever happens, happens." mph on the radar gun in the
When the Indians broke ilinth inning.
spring training c:amp in Win"I have no idea," Nagy said
ter Haven, Aa., they lett Nagy when asked if he could pitch
behind. Although he didn't in the majors no\v. "I've just
miss a turn and did all his side been down there getting guys
work just like the other Jodi- out.
"You have a lot of time to
ans pitchers, the club wanted
to see more from Nagy.
. reflect and think about the
The Indians had their past," Nagy said. "You have a
doubts about his arm strength lot of rime on your hands ."

..

-=---::~

~"""'..,~

99 Ford Taun~l GL

=~~~~~-~S~po~~rt~=w~~~s~~-~ . ~~~-~~~-~:.~~~ ~. ~~:. ~~$11,995.

loi8Jibu 18772- Black, AT, tv:;;, 11n, Cruise,

.

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Grand Am

, AC, Cr. , Red, Spoilef $12,995
• LOAOEDII ............................ $12,805
Red tRT7I • V-8 Engine, 5 Speed,
PW&amp;L, Sport Wheels .......................................$15,350
Gb'lll1dAM SE ft791 • 29;000 Miles, Bal of Fact

..

.;SOUTHERN ATHLETES HON~RED - In conjunction .with
',:the National Consortium for
:-Academics and Sports, the
~atlonal Federation of State
.High SchOol Associations and
the SOuthern athletic department, several student·ath'
.
•etes were honored for their
:Commitments to excellence in
academics, athletics, and
:Community service. Pictured
13re, front row. from left, Jeri
!Hill, Shauna Manuel, Sarah
iaall, · Emily Stivers, Macyn
Ervin,
Chad
Hubbard,

........~~
City National Bank

.
'
'

Point

from Pap 11
'
: Patton led off' with a single
:and was dr.iven in after singles
;by Tara Struble and Tisha
Lehman.
' Lehman had three singles
;for Logan. Patton had a triple
:and a single. Tucker had a sin:gle, as did Shaw and Struble.
· After racking up double-

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1

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'

M~ip

from Page 11

-(wiSTER.

l~te

PunMoy ,• lllddllpDit • Gelllpolla, Ohio • Point Pl••ant, WV

._..-.a.-

,__

N.Y.

O'Leary hit · consecutive
homen off Blake Stein (1-3),
and Carl Everett added his
second grand slam in lhree
days.
.
The Red Sox have won
eight of 11 and improved to
1 I -3 at Fen way · Park. The
Royals dropped to 3-I 1 on
the road.
Fnnlt .Castillo (3-1) allowed
two runs in 5 1-3 innings.

.811·

..

•

Royals

cardinals 9, Mets o
Matt Morris shut down visiting New York for seven
innings, and Jim Edmonds and
Placido Polanco each had
three hits.
The National League champions have lost four· straight
and nine of 13, dropping to 813 and falling into last place in
the NL East. .
Morris (3-2) allowed live
hits in seven innings, and Jason
Karnuth and Steve Kline combined for one-hit relief in the
Cardin_als' . first shutout this
season.

s•••.,. Apll2t, 2.1

AROUND THE DIAMOND

allowed
and 10 hits in 6w

S&amp;nfey, April29, 2001

Page84

with a double. Nikki
' Butche~ reached on a Viking
error and Burbridge walked.
:Bolin cleared the bases with
:her third triple of the g~me.
: Meigs add'e'd three more
' runs in the sixth to dose out
: the scoring, Mindy Chancey
tripled, Butcher walkcd 1 and
Burbridge singled and came
all the way around to score
when the right· fielder made
an error on the' play.

- Eacortad by
Mary Fowler,
Peoples Choice Director
(For Information

m Lumber
ROute 1•1 • Cllelter, OH

_call Mary at 674·1028)

(740) III·SSOI
'

Evans, ·
KimJonathan
McDaniel and Rachel ' Mar,
shall. S~cond row, from left,
Tommy Theiss, Stephanie
Bradford, Deana Pullins, J9ey
Manuel, Henrlcke Armbrust,
Tara Pickens, Katie Sayre and
Amy Lee. Back row, from left,
Tyler Little, Joe Cornell, Matt
Ash and Brandon Pierce. A
student must participate in
athletics and have a cumulative grade point average of
3.5 or be In the top 10 in their
class.

digit hitting numbers in the
previous 1to nights, Point
struggeld to generate hits.
Nibert had three of the four
Lady l{night hits. Amber
Curfman had a single for
Point.
·
Logan will take on Athens
next week.
The Lady Knights dose o.u t ·
league play with Gallia Academy and River Valley next
week.
·

I

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t

187815 -AT, AC,

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Ho111d1 Civic LX 198815 • Silver, AT, AC, Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
SullflJOI. AM, FM, CD, Sport wheels .......... ................ $12,910
P~ Br-.19574 '~ AT., AC, Tilt, Cruise, AM/FM/
.

.

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wheels . ....................:................... ................................. $8.950
Chevy LUmlnell720- AT, AC, 11~. Cruise, PW&amp;L.. .... $5,164
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PontiiC Gb'llndArn ft740- AT, AC, 11n. Cruise, ........... $4,650

Jeffers picked up the · win,
with help from Burbridge
and Jaynee Davis. The three
gave up three hits, struck out
three and walk five. Bolin's
three triples led the Marauders, Wigal added a double and
triple, Werry and single and '
double, Kayte Davis added
two singles, Chartcey a triple
and Burbridge and Harris
each added singles.
Eberts was the losing pitcher for the Vikings, she gave up,
. 12 hit5, struck out follt and
walked six. Jewett, R, Mace
and B. Ma ce had the Vikings
lVU all si,ngles.

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SUniiiay, Aptll 21, 2001

Pomeroy •lllcllihpOit • GIWpalla, Ohio • Paint P'IIIInt, WV

$WICMy, APrll29, 2001

Coaching... what is it good or?
Back in the day when I played ball,
not quire the dark •ges, but long
enough to make me cringe now, the
coach was considemi the boss.
The cooch was me big cheese, the
top dog. As a player. I had IeSpec:t for
my cooches 211d even lived in feu of
a couple of !hem.
Badt in me day, me coach was an
•uthority figure, • social standardbearer in some cases. You learned
how to play your sport under the
tutelage of me coach •nd maybe
even learned a bit about life on the
sKie.
.
For the most part, parents of pbyers supported me coach.
.It seems times, they may be achangin', though.
Nowadays, it seems that the coach
is regarded as a nuisance entity getting in the way of an athlete's pursuit
of individual glory. Coaches are
accused of" not using players correctly" or " holding players back" from
reaching their potential.
It seems we've ]pst the sense of

what it means to be patt of a team.
Though I can't quite put 211 enct
timeline together,"[ can at least finger
where some of me mentality originated: professional athletics.
Pro coaches can't even unpack or
look for at least a serui-permanent
d-Oing. The pressure to win is so
excruciating that me pro coach has
no security, other than the fact that
once you get into ~e pro ranks, you
can play the revolving door game,
making the circuit until you wear out
your weclome or become a color
analyst for television.
·
How many times did George
Steinbrenner fire and rehire Billy
Martin?
How many stops has Larry Brown
had?;\lbeit some of Brown's moves
have been voluntary.
Pro coaches are almost always the
scapegoats for a. lackluster balldub.
Despite their best,efforts at putting a
gamepbn t!)gelher, coaches can't go
out and execute for their players.
However, owners don't fire ys wim

Andrew

Caiter
THE CHEAP SEATS

guaranteed, multi-jillion dollu con.tracts. The coach gets me pink slip.
. From the pros, it has trickled down
to me.college ranks.
Larry Hunter spent 12 seasons ·at
Ohio University and did a solid job
for the Bobcats overall. His record
was above .500, but his apparent bck
of success in the postseason was just
one of the excuses used to sack him.
Hun.ter's firing was just one of
about 20 or so" coaching changes" in
college basketball this past season, ·a
ridiculous and sad state of affairs to
be sure.
It's no better for high school

coaches.
tive influence on young people.
Though prep sports is regarded as
It seems there's almost always 211
an "extracurricular activity," there's indiv:i41131 or group wim ~ political
way too much pressure on the prep agenda that W2Jits to hold swrt ower.
coach to "succeed."
a progranf and influence how the
So how do we measure success at coach doe5 the job. And usually the
the high school level?
overall good of me team isn't part of
Is it wins and losses? Is it champi- me equation, as long as the agenda is
onships?
met.
.
Don't get me wrong, I'm as comSome coaches are strong enough
petitive as, if not more man anyone I on !heir own or have enough allies to
know. Just ask my neph~.
withsund the assault and run a team
I believe wholeheartedly that the way !hey see fit. Others aren't so
when an athlete goes to battle, he or lucky. It becomes a vicious cycle ·
she should leave 100 percent of him- from which there is no relief.
The right kids play. but you don't
self or herself on me field of honor.
The individuals make sacrifices for win, you're out.
the benefit of the team, win, lose or
You win, but the right kids don't
draw.
play, you're out.
At least mat's the way I was taught
You run a clean program, a good .
to play the game.
pfOgram, but someone doesn't like
But I digress.
· your personality ·or style of play,
High school coaches in this c;Iay ply you 'rc out.
After all, coaches lose games, playtheir trade in a relatively hostile environment. Simply being a winner isn't ers win them, right'
al\vays good enough for fans, neither
Yeah, right.
is being a good role model or posi-

Prime nme Deion has
Sanders had arthroscopic
LOUISVIIl.E, Ky. (AP) appeal to him in life as a minor didn't put Junior on Pie disOutfielder Brady Clark was leaguer. He'll miss those things abled list is that mere's just too su_igery on his right knee
describing teammate Deion if the Reds, as expected, call much potential for him to do before ~e 2000 baseball seasomething big in a game. It's son and couldn't run during·
Sanders as "down-to-earth" · him up next week.
and "just a regular guy" when
"A guy that's been to the me same way with Deion.. He spring training bst year.
"Now, he's running as well
the two-sport star strutted places I've been and has the is a force. It's a real mental
shirtless into me minor league finances I have, sitting in a· boost for the team."
as· I've ever seen him;' said
Cincinnati manager Bob Miley. "He feels good, and a
locker room shouting like a minor-league locker room
Baptist preacher.
.
fully content- that's not nat- Boone said Sanders is hitting . lot of. times, when you . feel
"Can you give me the ural. But spiritually. I'm here as well as he was three seasons good, you become·a lot better
word?" said Sanders, a thick for a reason;' said Sanders. "I ago; when he batted .273 in between the lines."
gold necklace with a dia- love me5e guys.You should see 115 games with me Reds.
Sanders' current teammates
"It appears he's ba~k in his say mey1ve noticed a happy
mood-studded cross dangling the joy we have for one motharound his neck.
er, and the simple things you old form. He's doing really Deion, too - and one that's
"Jesus loves you!" a team- would think are nothing that well in Triple-A, really well," different from the cocky repumate responded.
we share."
·
Boone said.
· tation he earned for his flashy
His statistics reflect his
"Yes, he does," said Sanders,
Sanders said he hasn't wardrobe and on-field showa devout Christian who keeps apparent inner peace. Sanders adjusted his swing since last boating in football.
a leather-bound Bible at the leads the International League season, when he was hobbled
"He'd do anything for any
bottom of his locker in the with a .456 batting average by football injur'ies and batted guy on. this team," said Cbrk,
Louisville RiverB~ts club- through 18 games.
only .200. His on-base per- whose locker ·is next. to
house.
"Whenever they call me, I'll centage this· season is :491 .
Sanders' in the Clubhouse.
Try as his teammates might be prepared," Sanders said.
"I'm not a technical-type '.'When he got here, he wasn't
to paint him as an average joe,
The Reds may need him, dude, man. I just go up there, at all what I expected. He's
"Prime Time" will never be with center fielder Ken Grif- see the ball and then hit the. down-to-earth, just like ·anyjust another minor leaguer.
fey Jr. relegated to pinch-hitter ball," Sanders said. "The thing body else."
The eight-time Pro Bowl -duty while nursing a left ham- I worked on in spring training
Sanders insists that's who he
. cornerback is back with the string injury.
was just standing in a good really is.
: Triple-A affiliate of the
N'o return date has been set hitting position, just staying
"I'm an everyday dude.. But
Cincinnati Reds, while still for Griffey, and shortstop balanced and always being when I play my game, it's simunder contract ·to the W•sh- Barry Larkin, one .of Sanders' ready to hit."
ply different," he. said. '.'1 can't
best friends, said calling him .Louisville manager Dave be criticized for being excltington ~edskins.
He's the only RiverBat who up would be a logical step.
Miley said the only difference ing. I'm a regtilar guy that
had two police officers esrort · . "He's a spark," Larkin said. "I . in Sanders this year is his would like to stay in the 'house
. him from the clubhouse to his think one · of the reasons we healm.
every day but Sunday and
car after Louisville's 3-2 win
over Richmond on Tuesday
night.
A dozen autograph-seekers
. were waiting for him outside
Slugger Field an hour after the
· game.
· Sometimes, he travels sepa. rately to road games in his
. own custom-made bus.
"It's the nicest bus I've ever
e
been on:· sai,d pitcher Justin
, Atchley.
Yet the 33-year-old Sanders
says it's the little things that

Since it's spring, it's time to get
We know Mario was moved by
back to writing about sports.
love of the game and desire to save
' After all, if Michael Jordan is con- his investment in the Penguins.
'templating a comeback, why can't
I guess Jordan thinks he can turn
,l?
the Wizards into winners by
. In fact, I might have an advantage returning to the hardwood. He also
, on old Mike. I do not ha~e to con- misses playing the game!
cern myself with Allen Iverson's Jordan's return and the recent
-crossover or Kobe's speed and ath- NBA rule changes are both
lcticism.
designed to increase scoring and
: All I ha~e to do is continue to be fan interest.
. opinionated and obnoxious, and
In actuality, there are attempts to
that comes natural for me.
bring back those fair-weather fans
, Now that the playoff season has that used to appear at every game
_officially begun in the NHL and and during the playoffs to follow
, NBA, it's disheartening for Jordan MJ and the Bulls to their titles.
to attempt to steal the NBA's .limeFrankly, I don't miss them.
light by contemplating another
Those casual fans flocked to arecomeback.
nas wearing overpriced shoes and
Super Mario at least had the ·shirts to pay inflated prices to see da
coUrtesy to come back to the ice Bulls. Once Jordan left the game, so
during the season. Of course, some did these fans.
don't consider the Penguins' owner
They probably couldn't tell you
to be the best ever in his sport.
what happened to Scottie Pippert
So I guess· rank does have its priv- or what team he's floundering with
ileges.
at present.
In the battle for the almighty dolFrankly, I am bored with Jordan's
•antics. How many times can you Jar, the NBA will do anything tO
retire in a lifetime? Why retire in attract fans who want to spend theit
the first place?
· surplus income. on entertainment.
;, Mario initially retired because of It's bad enough to see the best
; concussions and injuric:S.Jordan, on seats at games being taken up by
.,. the other hand, didn't want anyone . corporations and occupied by over~
.: to sec him play with diminishing dressed Yuppies talking on ce,ll
. skills.
phones while the action on the
Talk about vanity!
court is being 1ignored.
.
So jordan makes an issue of wantNow I may have to once again
• ing to retire at the pinnacle of his fight these fans for the remaining
=·game, but he continues to regret his seats in the nose.:.bleed sections. I
·· decision by circulating all these just love it · when their children
••
J; comeback rumors.
keep interrupting me to go to the
,, It only distracts from the game, bathroom or the · souvenir stand
· which is doing fine despite all the while I'm trying to watch a g11Il.C,.
claims by journalists that the game
Jordan's comeback is also another
lacks stars and is in serious trouble. way of distracting attention away

•

Mr. Simplicity
Wednesday - . church days."
He prays before every at-bat
and has painted slerider silver
crosses . on the backs of his
shoes.
"I'm not . here by mistake,"
he said. ''I've had· a wonderful
career. With what Fve accomplished in sports, fdr the Lord
to pbce mt here. at this time is
more than just about the
desire to play the game."
As for football, Sanders is
still mum on whether he's pby
for the Washington Redskins
next season.

~

He signed a seven-year, S56
million contract with them
last surmner and coach Marty
Schottenheimer has said he
expects Sanders to be at training camp in July.
·
"Football is the last thing on
my mind," Sanders said. "Do
you think I'm thinking about
"football when I'm facing a
left-handed pitcher? I'm
thinking about getting a hit
and helping this team win,
man."

,,•.

Sam
Wilson

How ,out those

Twinkies!

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Sunday Times-Sentinel
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446-2342

wonderful to see them draw 50,000
MJ wants to b e re membered-.
What w o uld that do to the sale of fans to a· game after a year when
empty seats were the rule in th e
Air Jordam?
I know som e of you remember Metrodome.
It's even more remarkable when
when a young MJ took a back seat
. to Larry Bird and Magic Johnson. you think that 20,000 of those fa,ns
There WaS a time when these two were walkups who bought their
- - - - - -• players were the b est in the league. tickets at the gate that day.
T he problem is, Jordan. would be
Regardless of where they finish
SPORTS DR.
taking a back scat to players that this season, fans would do well to
from his moribund handling of the could never. be close to what watch Jacque Jones, Matt Lawton
Michael was in his prime.
and Tori Hunter roaming. the outWashington Wizards.
no
t
the
way
I
want
to
That's
field in Minnesota. I just like young
Yes, running and N BA fran chise
player.
ever.
remember
the
greatest
hungry teams with character.
is .a little more complicated than MJ
Who
th
en
would
want
to
be
like
Remember the late '80s and early
imagined. Dealing with Juwan
Mike?
'90s when they had players like
Howard and Rod Strickland as an
in
the
frmit
office
and
So
remain
executive is far more . trying that
Tom Brunansky, Kirby Puckett and
try
and
build
a
w
inner.
Sooner
or
dunking over them in game-time
Kent Hrbek and won two World
later
Super
M
ario
will
have
to
do
situations .
.
Series'
.
that
as
well
Building a winner · takes more
The only constant from these
Unfortunately,
these
two
are
than getting talented players. This
glory years is the steady leadership
president's
job
is
a
finding
that
the
year's Lakers are an example of how
of manager Tom Kelly.
far
more
difficult
task
than
the
one
important chemistry is to winning.
Today's Twins are like watc hing a
It's a situation the Zen master never they faced on the court or ice. In version of the film "Hoosiers." I
the front office, there are certain
faced in Chicago.
cheer for first baseman Doug
What Jordan doesn't seem to variables even· the . greatest can't Mientkiewicz. His name reads like
understand is that his real enemy is overcome.
he was born to play in Minnesota.
time. He's 39 and not at the peak of
He duplicated his entire 2000
his game. He would not be the best .
home run total this past weekend.
player in the game if he returned.
Now how's that for production?
Look at Pippen!
These Twins do have talent.
Injuries and more youthful playOne of the best early stories in
They won't · fade that quickly
crs have taken their toll on Jordan's baseball is the Minnesota Twins. 1 with a pitching staff that boasts Eric
once famous running mate.
know enough to realize t\l.at this Milton, Joe Mays, Brad Radke and
Could Jordan accept the reality situation won't last into June. Small Mark Redman. Look for them to
that he is not the best player in the market teams simply fade away in be competitive in the American
game? That he ruight not be in the
f
. h
League Central.
t11e eat o summer.
·
1
top fi ve.
.
B
·
·
f, 1
Their collective salary might not
It wouldn't be as bad as when he
ut ear1y-season romance IS . un.
· d to h 11
" th ose· WIC
· ke d Doubl e- A · After all, even the Cubs were m first equal A-Rod's for a year, but they
tne
lace this week. As a rule, they are will be responsible for more victocurve balls in Birmingham, but our p
ries in the lol)g run than the quar111eniories of MJ as the greatest ever out of the race by the first day of ter-billion dollar man.
would be tarnished.
summer.
Iverson leaving Jordan flat-footed
The Twins are a feel-good story
for all of us traditionalists. It was
on his wav to the basket is not how

..

•

•

CMI,

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Coaching... what is it good or?
Back in the day when I played ball,
not quire the dark •ges, but long
enough to make me cringe now, the
coach was considemi the boss.
The cooch was me big cheese, the
top dog. As a player. I had IeSpec:t for
my cooches 211d even lived in feu of
a couple of !hem.
Badt in me day, me coach was an
•uthority figure, • social standardbearer in some cases. You learned
how to play your sport under the
tutelage of me coach •nd maybe
even learned a bit about life on the
sKie.
.
For the most part, parents of pbyers supported me coach.
.It seems times, they may be achangin', though.
Nowadays, it seems that the coach
is regarded as a nuisance entity getting in the way of an athlete's pursuit
of individual glory. Coaches are
accused of" not using players correctly" or " holding players back" from
reaching their potential.
It seems we've ]pst the sense of

what it means to be patt of a team.
Though I can't quite put 211 enct
timeline together,"[ can at least finger
where some of me mentality originated: professional athletics.
Pro coaches can't even unpack or
look for at least a serui-permanent
d-Oing. The pressure to win is so
excruciating that me pro coach has
no security, other than the fact that
once you get into ~e pro ranks, you
can play the revolving door game,
making the circuit until you wear out
your weclome or become a color
analyst for television.
·
How many times did George
Steinbrenner fire and rehire Billy
Martin?
How many stops has Larry Brown
had?;\lbeit some of Brown's moves
have been voluntary.
Pro coaches are almost always the
scapegoats for a. lackluster balldub.
Despite their best,efforts at putting a
gamepbn t!)gelher, coaches can't go
out and execute for their players.
However, owners don't fire ys wim

Andrew

Caiter
THE CHEAP SEATS

guaranteed, multi-jillion dollu con.tracts. The coach gets me pink slip.
. From the pros, it has trickled down
to me.college ranks.
Larry Hunter spent 12 seasons ·at
Ohio University and did a solid job
for the Bobcats overall. His record
was above .500, but his apparent bck
of success in the postseason was just
one of the excuses used to sack him.
Hun.ter's firing was just one of
about 20 or so" coaching changes" in
college basketball this past season, ·a
ridiculous and sad state of affairs to
be sure.
It's no better for high school

coaches.
tive influence on young people.
Though prep sports is regarded as
It seems there's almost always 211
an "extracurricular activity," there's indiv:i41131 or group wim ~ political
way too much pressure on the prep agenda that W2Jits to hold swrt ower.
coach to "succeed."
a progranf and influence how the
So how do we measure success at coach doe5 the job. And usually the
the high school level?
overall good of me team isn't part of
Is it wins and losses? Is it champi- me equation, as long as the agenda is
onships?
met.
.
Don't get me wrong, I'm as comSome coaches are strong enough
petitive as, if not more man anyone I on !heir own or have enough allies to
know. Just ask my neph~.
withsund the assault and run a team
I believe wholeheartedly that the way !hey see fit. Others aren't so
when an athlete goes to battle, he or lucky. It becomes a vicious cycle ·
she should leave 100 percent of him- from which there is no relief.
The right kids play. but you don't
self or herself on me field of honor.
The individuals make sacrifices for win, you're out.
the benefit of the team, win, lose or
You win, but the right kids don't
draw.
play, you're out.
At least mat's the way I was taught
You run a clean program, a good .
to play the game.
pfOgram, but someone doesn't like
But I digress.
· your personality ·or style of play,
High school coaches in this c;Iay ply you 'rc out.
After all, coaches lose games, playtheir trade in a relatively hostile environment. Simply being a winner isn't ers win them, right'
al\vays good enough for fans, neither
Yeah, right.
is being a good role model or posi-

Prime nme Deion has
Sanders had arthroscopic
LOUISVIIl.E, Ky. (AP) appeal to him in life as a minor didn't put Junior on Pie disOutfielder Brady Clark was leaguer. He'll miss those things abled list is that mere's just too su_igery on his right knee
describing teammate Deion if the Reds, as expected, call much potential for him to do before ~e 2000 baseball seasomething big in a game. It's son and couldn't run during·
Sanders as "down-to-earth" · him up next week.
and "just a regular guy" when
"A guy that's been to the me same way with Deion.. He spring training bst year.
"Now, he's running as well
the two-sport star strutted places I've been and has the is a force. It's a real mental
shirtless into me minor league finances I have, sitting in a· boost for the team."
as· I've ever seen him;' said
Cincinnati manager Bob Miley. "He feels good, and a
locker room shouting like a minor-league locker room
Baptist preacher.
.
fully content- that's not nat- Boone said Sanders is hitting . lot of. times, when you . feel
"Can you give me the ural. But spiritually. I'm here as well as he was three seasons good, you become·a lot better
word?" said Sanders, a thick for a reason;' said Sanders. "I ago; when he batted .273 in between the lines."
gold necklace with a dia- love me5e guys.You should see 115 games with me Reds.
Sanders' current teammates
"It appears he's ba~k in his say mey1ve noticed a happy
mood-studded cross dangling the joy we have for one motharound his neck.
er, and the simple things you old form. He's doing really Deion, too - and one that's
"Jesus loves you!" a team- would think are nothing that well in Triple-A, really well," different from the cocky repumate responded.
we share."
·
Boone said.
· tation he earned for his flashy
His statistics reflect his
"Yes, he does," said Sanders,
Sanders said he hasn't wardrobe and on-field showa devout Christian who keeps apparent inner peace. Sanders adjusted his swing since last boating in football.
a leather-bound Bible at the leads the International League season, when he was hobbled
"He'd do anything for any
bottom of his locker in the with a .456 batting average by football injur'ies and batted guy on. this team," said Cbrk,
Louisville RiverB~ts club- through 18 games.
only .200. His on-base per- whose locker ·is next. to
house.
"Whenever they call me, I'll centage this· season is :491 .
Sanders' in the Clubhouse.
Try as his teammates might be prepared," Sanders said.
"I'm not a technical-type '.'When he got here, he wasn't
to paint him as an average joe,
The Reds may need him, dude, man. I just go up there, at all what I expected. He's
"Prime Time" will never be with center fielder Ken Grif- see the ball and then hit the. down-to-earth, just like ·anyjust another minor leaguer.
fey Jr. relegated to pinch-hitter ball," Sanders said. "The thing body else."
The eight-time Pro Bowl -duty while nursing a left ham- I worked on in spring training
Sanders insists that's who he
. cornerback is back with the string injury.
was just standing in a good really is.
: Triple-A affiliate of the
N'o return date has been set hitting position, just staying
"I'm an everyday dude.. But
Cincinnati Reds, while still for Griffey, and shortstop balanced and always being when I play my game, it's simunder contract ·to the W•sh- Barry Larkin, one .of Sanders' ready to hit."
ply different," he. said. '.'1 can't
best friends, said calling him .Louisville manager Dave be criticized for being excltington ~edskins.
He's the only RiverBat who up would be a logical step.
Miley said the only difference ing. I'm a regtilar guy that
had two police officers esrort · . "He's a spark," Larkin said. "I . in Sanders this year is his would like to stay in the 'house
. him from the clubhouse to his think one · of the reasons we healm.
every day but Sunday and
car after Louisville's 3-2 win
over Richmond on Tuesday
night.
A dozen autograph-seekers
. were waiting for him outside
Slugger Field an hour after the
· game.
· Sometimes, he travels sepa. rately to road games in his
. own custom-made bus.
"It's the nicest bus I've ever
e
been on:· sai,d pitcher Justin
, Atchley.
Yet the 33-year-old Sanders
says it's the little things that

Since it's spring, it's time to get
We know Mario was moved by
back to writing about sports.
love of the game and desire to save
' After all, if Michael Jordan is con- his investment in the Penguins.
'templating a comeback, why can't
I guess Jordan thinks he can turn
,l?
the Wizards into winners by
. In fact, I might have an advantage returning to the hardwood. He also
, on old Mike. I do not ha~e to con- misses playing the game!
cern myself with Allen Iverson's Jordan's return and the recent
-crossover or Kobe's speed and ath- NBA rule changes are both
lcticism.
designed to increase scoring and
: All I ha~e to do is continue to be fan interest.
. opinionated and obnoxious, and
In actuality, there are attempts to
that comes natural for me.
bring back those fair-weather fans
, Now that the playoff season has that used to appear at every game
_officially begun in the NHL and and during the playoffs to follow
, NBA, it's disheartening for Jordan MJ and the Bulls to their titles.
to attempt to steal the NBA's .limeFrankly, I don't miss them.
light by contemplating another
Those casual fans flocked to arecomeback.
nas wearing overpriced shoes and
Super Mario at least had the ·shirts to pay inflated prices to see da
coUrtesy to come back to the ice Bulls. Once Jordan left the game, so
during the season. Of course, some did these fans.
don't consider the Penguins' owner
They probably couldn't tell you
to be the best ever in his sport.
what happened to Scottie Pippert
So I guess· rank does have its priv- or what team he's floundering with
ileges.
at present.
In the battle for the almighty dolFrankly, I am bored with Jordan's
•antics. How many times can you Jar, the NBA will do anything tO
retire in a lifetime? Why retire in attract fans who want to spend theit
the first place?
· surplus income. on entertainment.
;, Mario initially retired because of It's bad enough to see the best
; concussions and injuric:S.Jordan, on seats at games being taken up by
.,. the other hand, didn't want anyone . corporations and occupied by over~
.: to sec him play with diminishing dressed Yuppies talking on ce,ll
. skills.
phones while the action on the
Talk about vanity!
court is being 1ignored.
.
So jordan makes an issue of wantNow I may have to once again
• ing to retire at the pinnacle of his fight these fans for the remaining
=·game, but he continues to regret his seats in the nose.:.bleed sections. I
·· decision by circulating all these just love it · when their children
••
J; comeback rumors.
keep interrupting me to go to the
,, It only distracts from the game, bathroom or the · souvenir stand
· which is doing fine despite all the while I'm trying to watch a g11Il.C,.
claims by journalists that the game
Jordan's comeback is also another
lacks stars and is in serious trouble. way of distracting attention away

•

Mr. Simplicity
Wednesday - . church days."
He prays before every at-bat
and has painted slerider silver
crosses . on the backs of his
shoes.
"I'm not . here by mistake,"
he said. ''I've had· a wonderful
career. With what Fve accomplished in sports, fdr the Lord
to pbce mt here. at this time is
more than just about the
desire to play the game."
As for football, Sanders is
still mum on whether he's pby
for the Washington Redskins
next season.

~

He signed a seven-year, S56
million contract with them
last surmner and coach Marty
Schottenheimer has said he
expects Sanders to be at training camp in July.
·
"Football is the last thing on
my mind," Sanders said. "Do
you think I'm thinking about
"football when I'm facing a
left-handed pitcher? I'm
thinking about getting a hit
and helping this team win,
man."

,,•.

Sam
Wilson

How ,out those

Twinkies!

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Sunday Times-Sentinel
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446-2342

wonderful to see them draw 50,000
MJ wants to b e re membered-.
What w o uld that do to the sale of fans to a· game after a year when
empty seats were the rule in th e
Air Jordam?
I know som e of you remember Metrodome.
It's even more remarkable when
when a young MJ took a back seat
. to Larry Bird and Magic Johnson. you think that 20,000 of those fa,ns
There WaS a time when these two were walkups who bought their
- - - - - -• players were the b est in the league. tickets at the gate that day.
T he problem is, Jordan. would be
Regardless of where they finish
SPORTS DR.
taking a back scat to players that this season, fans would do well to
from his moribund handling of the could never. be close to what watch Jacque Jones, Matt Lawton
Michael was in his prime.
and Tori Hunter roaming. the outWashington Wizards.
no
t
the
way
I
want
to
That's
field in Minnesota. I just like young
Yes, running and N BA fran chise
player.
ever.
remember
the
greatest
hungry teams with character.
is .a little more complicated than MJ
Who
th
en
would
want
to
be
like
Remember the late '80s and early
imagined. Dealing with Juwan
Mike?
'90s when they had players like
Howard and Rod Strickland as an
in
the
frmit
office
and
So
remain
executive is far more . trying that
Tom Brunansky, Kirby Puckett and
try
and
build
a
w
inner.
Sooner
or
dunking over them in game-time
Kent Hrbek and won two World
later
Super
M
ario
will
have
to
do
situations .
.
Series'
.
that
as
well
Building a winner · takes more
The only constant from these
Unfortunately,
these
two
are
than getting talented players. This
glory years is the steady leadership
president's
job
is
a
finding
that
the
year's Lakers are an example of how
of manager Tom Kelly.
far
more
difficult
task
than
the
one
important chemistry is to winning.
Today's Twins are like watc hing a
It's a situation the Zen master never they faced on the court or ice. In version of the film "Hoosiers." I
the front office, there are certain
faced in Chicago.
cheer for first baseman Doug
What Jordan doesn't seem to variables even· the . greatest can't Mientkiewicz. His name reads like
understand is that his real enemy is overcome.
he was born to play in Minnesota.
time. He's 39 and not at the peak of
He duplicated his entire 2000
his game. He would not be the best .
home run total this past weekend.
player in the game if he returned.
Now how's that for production?
Look at Pippen!
These Twins do have talent.
Injuries and more youthful playOne of the best early stories in
They won't · fade that quickly
crs have taken their toll on Jordan's baseball is the Minnesota Twins. 1 with a pitching staff that boasts Eric
once famous running mate.
know enough to realize t\l.at this Milton, Joe Mays, Brad Radke and
Could Jordan accept the reality situation won't last into June. Small Mark Redman. Look for them to
that he is not the best player in the market teams simply fade away in be competitive in the American
game? That he ruight not be in the
f
. h
League Central.
t11e eat o summer.
·
1
top fi ve.
.
B
·
·
f, 1
Their collective salary might not
It wouldn't be as bad as when he
ut ear1y-season romance IS . un.
· d to h 11
" th ose· WIC
· ke d Doubl e- A · After all, even the Cubs were m first equal A-Rod's for a year, but they
tne
lace this week. As a rule, they are will be responsible for more victocurve balls in Birmingham, but our p
ries in the lol)g run than the quar111eniories of MJ as the greatest ever out of the race by the first day of ter-billion dollar man.
would be tarnished.
summer.
Iverson leaving Jordan flat-footed
The Twins are a feel-good story
for all of us traditionalists. It was
on his wav to the basket is not how

..

•

•

CMI,

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MQRE LOCAL FOLKS.

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Pomeroy • Middleport • G.lllpolil, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

~

• Pow Lockl, AM1FM C...
Deily~· Tilt S1llrln

Brand New 2001 Chevy

Brand' New 2001 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedln

New 2001 Cllny Silverado

qJ,

• Automltlc, Air l~mlonlng
• Po- WlndoWI &amp;Loclll
TIUCiuiM

, p - WJndowl aLockl

•TIM aCtulle

• Power Seat, Wind., Lockl
• 4 Capl Chllrs, Rear

• Keyless Entcy, CD System
• Totally Loaded!

• Automatic Air Conditioning
Stereo, Till

;

••
•

•••

'•
•

V&amp;

•!

PL,

roof

-·ADyom Dnancial needs, aRm ooe place.
.

.

'

••

2000Chavy
Malibu Sedlln

2000 Cbevrolat

~1,150*

:=~~!:!~~~~-~-~.~.:.~.~:.~.~:. 53:495

..•

.

3,995

'
••
'

88CHEVY 1500 ·Tan; 2,tane paint, long bid._....... $

• Auto!nallc, Air ~Hionlng
• Power Window• &amp; Locke
Tilt &amp; Cruile

'"!Uel 1llgl 1118 Feeltlllrl Aebltt InclUded In 1111 price

PMlli Good Apr1271h Tllral9l Apt!~ M.

• Power WJ~d., Locks I
• Tilt a Cruise, CD System

: Power WI-I Loclll
Syttem, Till I Crulle

Baak-By Pboae.

TDDOaly

1-800-374-:6123

.740-376-7123

omail addreas: blnk@peoplewbanforp.com

'
websitll: 'www.peopJIIMIICOI'p.com

mile above
Pomeroy, Ohio I
Just scro111 from Speedway. Bank financing now
·
1 available, your last stop car shop;
· · Family owned and operated ·

I\

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Til~ C"!lse, CD System

d.;.., veNCit Nlled wllere appMc:abie. "On 8PPfMd Ctd. On aelected models. Not responsible lor typograph~l '"""'·
.

...

CHIVROLit

. C•ll for. tilt oJ!fce nearest you.

2000 Chevy Venture

2000 Buick Century

·

.

• Power Windows &amp; Locka
Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Power Windows a
• Tilt, Cruise, CD .

�'

..

Page II

0
(
Internet a-wealth o in ormation or outdoorsmen

Celebrations begin on C2
Recipes, C4
HapPenings, C8

S••f y, Ap .. H, 211.1

•

Ohio hunters and .anglers with
access to the internet should make a
regular habit of checlcing out the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resoun:es' Division ofWildlife webat
site
www.dnr.sute.oh.us/ odor/wildlife.
The page frequendy contains
news, information and photographs
abOut Ohio's hunting and fishing
, opportunities and upcomi ng events.
ln recent weeks, in preparation for
annual spring gobbler season, which
starts Monday morning, the Division
of Wildlife and the National Wild
Turkey Federation joined forces on a
15-page informational section complere wirh rurkey hunting poinrers,
safety tips, equipment and even a
wild turkey recipl·.
I'd like to share a few .ofthose with
you here. The follo\ving is from the
NWTF Turkey Huntin g Safety Task
Force:
Decoy Safety
Many turkey hunters incorporate
the use of decoys in their hunting
setups to up their chances for success.
R esponsible hunters employ the following tips to assure that their time
in the woods is safe as well.
Never carry an uncovered decoy
any distance. (Check local regulations
to be sure decoy use is legaL)
From a sea ted positio n, identifY the
clearest line of vision to your front.
Establish a sight line that allows 100
yards of visibility. Then set your
decoy(s) approximately 20 yards from
your position on the line.

If you are calling over decoys and
elect to move to a new location,
check carefully to ensure that no one
is stallcing your decoys. Check before
leaving your setup. Should you. see
someone in the area, (especially close 1
. to your line of sight) cal) out to them
in a loud, clear voice.
Defensive-Turkey
IN THE OPEN
Hunting Tactics
A safe turkey hunter, like a safe driver, is defensive minded. Below are good chance another hunter is movtips one should co nsider.
ing in on your bird.
I. Select the largest stump, blow7. Never move, \Vave or make
down , tree trunk or rock rhat is turkey sounds to alert another hun~r
wider than your shoulders and high- of your 'Jlresence. Remain still and
er than your head to place your back speak in a loud, clear voice to
against when calling; a hunter is announce your presence. T-hese tacmore likely to spot another hunter tics are safer than quick movemenn.
when moving to the front or side Use common sense.
than from behind.
"The NWTF has a long-standing
2. Eliminatt· the colors whi te, red. commitment to hunter · education
bla ck and blue from yo ur hunting and safety. The NWTF formed the
outfit; this includes handkerchiefs, National Turkey Hunting. Safety Task
socks, underwear, etc. These are the Force in 1991, and works coopera•
colors of a turkey gobbler's head and tively with organizations such as the
could be mistaken as suc h.
International Hunters Education
3. Selci:t yo ur c~llin g spot in open Association a!ld the National Shoottimber rather than thick brush; dim- ing Spotts Foundation. Spring turkoy
inatin g moven1ent is a key to success, hunting incidents have decreased
not concealment.
from a high of 8.1 per J OO,OOd in
4. Be discreet when imitating the 1991 to a low of 2.95 per 100,000
sound of a gobbling turkey.
last spring. Statistically, turkey hunt5. A good woodsman can always ing is four times safer than pingdetect movement in the forest by pong, and you are 50 times more
watching other game or listening for likely to take a trip to the emergency
the alarm cries of bluejays, crows, rooni if you play golf." - Rob Keele
squirrels or woodpeckers. Be alert.
Pick the Right Choke Thbe
6. When songbirds, crows or your
Today's turkey guns are specifically
turkey shuts up - look out; there's a niade to shoot heavy loads and give

Jim
.
Freeman

Buckeye State's
rarest natural
bouquet soon
to be on display

tight, denS&amp; patterns, and to get the
best performance from le2d turkty
loads, you need an extra-tight choke.
To get the best performance fiom
your gun, you may need to experiment with various choke sizes and
loads to get the top performance
from your gun.
A nornul12 gauge barrel measuret
. about .724 thousands of an inch. By
compariso.n, a factory full choke
squeetes down the muzzle to about
.700 of an inch. The normal way to
get til':"ter pat~rns is to reduce the
choke· size some more. For example,
many popular turkey guns come
equipped with chokes that measure
.665, and shoot turkey loads of No. 5
or 6 shot very tighdy.
You can have too much of a good
thing if you use a choke that's too
tight for your gun and load. Too
much choke constriction has the
tendency of creating ragged patterm
that leav~ large voids between pellets.
· A good place to start with a standard size 12-gauge barrel is with a
.660 tube. Back-bored barrels usually
do well with chokes that measure
around .680 thousands of an inch.
Try various choke sizes to get your
best performer and you'D up your
confidence for making a clean, ethical shot on that old Jongbeard next
season. -Jay Langston
Rever1e psychology
If you've ever heard the phrase, "say
the most with the least, • weD, it certainly applies to calling turkeys in
some situations.

S•dlf. Ap .. H. 2001

Spend a few days in succession trying to shoot the same gobbler by
hammering him senseless with the
same rendition of rude-and-nspy
yelping and cutting and you might
be ready to try something different.
Want to try something radical? Move
in on the roosted tom, set up and
keep quiet. Let the gobbler do his
thing, fly down and move olf. Use
your ears and foDow the bird~ natural travel pattern. If you can track his
progress by his gobbling, or his
escon's yelps, get up and follow at a
distance.
Ultimately, you are trying to learn
where the5e birds are likely to go to
feed. Put this mental barb in your
quiver and you may get on target to
killing this tough bird. ·
A double word of caution. Don't
stalk a turkey's calling to sneak \vithin range for a shot. It is dangerous for
you or anyone else hunting the area,
The second caution is that your foot•
steps in the leaves sound a lot like
walking turkey. Use some stealt!l and
be ready to drop into shooting position. At times, a gobbler will come
back to investigate 'the sound offoot~ .
s~ps.- Jay Langston
·
'
For information on the National
Wild Turkey Federation, call 803~
637-3106, or check out their website
at www.nwtf.org.
For infonwtion about hunting and
fishing in West Virginia, try
www.dnr.state.wv.us.

One Pack of Mail Pouch

Abby
ADVICE

DEAR ABBY: We are an
and a basketball player
writing to you to ask your help
in lighting a lamp of inspiration
for the 600,000 chilchen currently living in foster care.
May i5 National Foster Care
Awareness Month, and we
would like former foster children to join us in sharing their
personal stories.
We both grew up in the foster care system. Being a foster
child can be a painful·and isolating experience, leaving many
children without direction and
purpose in their · Jives. We
acknowledge that many foster
children have experienced
shame and felt "unattached"with I)O real sense ofbelonging
to a family or community. Yet,
we know firsthand that as
. painful as it is for children to
live without tlieir parents, foster
. care can also be the best thing
for a child in hatm s way. It was
for us.
We ·were blessed to receive
support and commitment fiom '
dedicated foster parents and
· mentors who believed we
could ful~ , our "greatest
·dreanu. And both of ul, as \Yell
as thousands of other foster
children, have gone on to lead
successful and productive lives.
We believe that the skills and
life lessons learned by former
foster children can serve to
light ·t he W:rf for those now in
foster care. They can inspire
current foster families and
social worken by reminding
them of the enormous rlilference their dedication ~.
and encourage other caring
individu;lls to become foster
parents.
By shatring our personal stories, we Can bring world of
promise to , children in foster
care, and provide the~ with
clear examples of how they can
live their lives to the fullest, and
in doing so, enricl). the lives of
!)then. It is a legaFY that all of us
who have been in foster care
miut leave for our chilchen and
, the future., - VICTORIA
actress

a.

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Hunting, fishing, hiking, biking,;..
We've got you covered!
·
Sunday Times-Sentinel
Subscribe • 446-2342

Iockiey Be&lt;l&lt;loy Crouing Shopping
11!..::1011 Elltt Pointt Shopping Clr.,
Cllllll dlo U.S. Calulor, 750 Western
C l l - In-Touch Wirtleso &amp; More,
E•lrlt 220 Third St .. 13041636-931 1
'""- 17 Middletown Rd., Routo73.13041383·7881
l!"'!llolls usee Wol-Man Kiollc, 2145 Eostom - · 17401441 ·1011 .
Cllaic Pllll, 408 E. Huron, (7401288-0018
·
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U.S. ColkJior, New Boston stopping Center. 4010 lltlodls Avt.,

continues

poetry -forum
BY IRIAN

13041754-3770
I
St. 13041~11-3211

;~~!~~il~=· 13041213-8755

I

FOSTER CARE
DEAR VICI'ORIA AND
ALONZO: You are living'
proof that with comistent mentoting; and with caring foster
pare.n~ witli an abunllance of
patience, foster children can
succeed. For them to achieve,
strong role models are ~tial
because ,'chilchen absorb what
they see around them.
That is ~hy I am joining
you in asking other successful
former foster , children to take
pen in hand and share their stories. What was it that worketl
for you? What forti6ed you
when times were difficult? Your
penonal experiences can bolster and enlighten current foster parents, inspire new ones
and improve the foster care system. I know I can count on
you. My readen are the most
generous people in the ,world
when it COil'ICS to giving of
themselves.
'
•
Please address your letters to;
Caiey Family Services, 1 (:b,.. .
porate Drive, Shelton, CT
. 06484. The toll-free number is
1-888-799-KIDS (54.37) . The
e-ma!l address is: dearnbbyrespomeroweUfosterchildren.org.
They're waiting to hear from
you.
.

{Dtar AIJlty is wril(tllliy Al~li11t
Phillips and Jeanne Phillip£)

•

...

'

J.

REED

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

IDDLEPORT - Local poets
gathered Tuesday at the Univer. sity ofRio Grande's Meigs -Cen.ter to share their works and their
love of poetry.

Walking Chaucer
beneath snow-laden cedars
past uneven ro~
of time-worn snow markets
and last summers &amp;ded flowers,
we walk this soli!:Ude
brisk and sure-footed,
listening intendy
for other signs of life
among tl)e dea.:i '

1965

Apr~ ~! N~tjqnal Poetry Month, and the center last year

began the tddition of hosting local poets and a celebration of

. ·~·... ~heir att. .

., ~ ' .

:. Jl!l(Y Klare, an Athens poec with 300 publications to her

.

cre~t,.W.. the featured artist at last week's "Evening of Poet-

The peripheral eye spies
White-tails bObbirlg
along pond's edge
with not a sound.
My companion charges forward
Stops - looks back he knows I'm not up for the run.
Resigned to my side,
·
uneasily
·
be stays.

ry,"·and shared a number of her works, many fiom "Searching for Universal Verbs," a. re.c ent anthology of her work.
.
Other local poets who were featured at the reading included:
~ Jack Hart, Pomeroy; a professor at the University of Rio ·
Grande, 'a nd a published poet, whose w6rks often reflect his
rural upbringing and farming life. Hart is also a playwright, c'

Plu............, C8

'
.
It is more than the dog's perked ears
than the faint snap that alerts me. ·
He holds. fast.
Then with violent suddenness,
a rabbit darts
as it to mock us
and Chaucer knOw. he must act give primal chase.
There is no pause for pe~tnission.

I stand silent
with a smoldering bundle of sage
. and.watcb my gray fellow bound
ligi\rer than his weight should allow
through the rough.
He knows as weD as I
The hQnt is futile.

ROWElL AND ALONZO .
MOURNING, NATIONAL
SPOKESPERSONS FOR

_,..------~---·--

" . plans lndude:
-caler 10

Meigs Center

a

.

COM 130

-Jack Hart, Pomeooy

:Dedimtedfoster
parents give
kids the tools
to succeed

1,300 minutes per ·
month for only
$2.9. 95/mo...

.....

"Just one will do;' J,.e said," ... today,"
And he brushed the other pack away,
Perplexing us all until
We found him hanged behind the mill.

Dear

I•

for this unique and hardy
daisy." ·. ·
·
A daisy, is a daisy, is a daisy
T he Lakeside daisy is the
unless it happens to be a Lake- rarest of more than 200 plants
side daisy!
currently listed as endangered ·
Marblehead Peninsula in in Ohio - a distinction due
Ottawa County is home to to its limited distribution bo'th
the only naturally grO\ying in the state and througho ut
population of Lakeside daisies the world.
in the United States and one
A resilient perennial, the
of only .four knO\vn places colorful dai·sy thrives amid
worldwide.
limestone bedrock. The Lake'Biooming JUSt once a year, side daisy's existence beca me
thousands of Lakeside daisies threatened " 'ith increased
·
decorate their otherwise )1'n1 esto 11 e quarrymg
an d
bleak, · sun-baked landscape destruction of prairie grasswith a blanket of bright yd- lands.
"Lakeside
Daisy
State
low blooms in early ·to midM~,.
Nt
a ure
preserve
usua IIy
A patch of datk green leaves requires a permit to visit, but
form the base of the plant and for one month each year
support a stem that grows to . ODNR opens the preserve,
an average of I 5 inches in providing everyone an opportunity to view these rare
height.
daisies in blqom," said Le~is.
Like its heliotropic kin such as the sunflower - the
1n celebration of the daisy's ••
Lakeside daisy turns its yellow annual splash of color, the
face skyward to follow the public is invited to the Lakesun's daily journey from east side Daisy Open House on
to west.
Saturday, May 12, from 10
Ohioans can view this rare a.m. to 3 p.m.
bloom at the 19-acre Lakeside
Division naturalists will be ••
Daisy State Nature Preserve, on site to answer questions
acquired in 1988 by the Ohio and provide information
Department
of Natural about th e daisy and other
Resources (ODNR) to pro- interesting plants-found at the
teet the distinctive daisy and preserve.
its habitat.
La keside Daisy State Nature
"This is not a place you'd Preserve is located on the east
expect to find a rate plant side of Alexanaer Pike (Towngrowing," said Stu Lewis, ship 142) 112 mile south of
Chief of ODNR's Division of'. State Ro~te 163 on the MarNatural Areas and Preserves. blehead Peninsula south of th
"I ts' . a d esoIate, non d_escnpt
·
e
vill.age of Marblehead.
locanon exposed to mtense
Additional
information
heat, cold and wind, but the · about visiting the natu re preabandoned quarry land pro- serve can be obtained bv call,v,des the perfect envuonment ' in g 419-98 1- 6319 .
·

PapC1

.

'

He lumben back.
"Next time," I assure him
with a good rttb to the ek,
Chaucer strQts home. ·
I have to smile at his bravado
and truth be told, admire it too.
You see,
I always stay on the path
careful not to stray w)l.ere briars may ·

He,
where random hole may hide

an4 I

~ever,

without permission,
· give chase.

__; Gina Pinel, Pomeroy

'

Yard Sale
Mama sits in her pink
plastic folding chair,
a cigar box beside her
on the grass,
twenty dollars inside: a
6ve, ten ones·,
6ve dollars silver
change.
On a sawhorse table:
empty Avon bottles,
some Depression glass,
a few hand-painsed
baskets,
two matching lamps,
one with no shade.
In th~ yard: baby Ray's car seat and 'playpen - he's five
now,
a rusted lawrunower, three nearly bald tires,
two storm windows, a door.
Four boxes of things left from Dad's shed don't know what, but someone might a dollar a box.
Sis's stuffed animals won at the county fair- .
she w011 't need them now..
All her clothes, save the ones she wore,
. · when she and Billy ran away.
__; Cathy Lentes, Rutland

We gardened early that spring
in southern Ohio:
five kinds of lettuce ho, what glorious salads
we made and .riots of carrots, onions and
beans,
parsley, basil thyme_and chives.
You built a fence to protect the
plot
from deer, to discourage moles you
tried
ordinary onions outlining the
Bermudas,
and for those rabbit multitudes bitter marigolds defining an inside
fence.
F~r

away, determined marchers
moved
'
toward Montgomery from a place
called Selma; fifiy-five chosen miles
along a valley to the Capitol steps,
a short jm~rney spanning bloody
years.
A letter from a son of friends
described
the scene when they arrived
at last mounted police circling the tired
·
crowd
(6re hoses stacked onto waiting
racks,
panting dogs in the background),
edgy officials shaking hands for TV
but, nonetheless, cheers went up.
Later, in our summ.e r garden we
found
mysterious holes in some toma. toes.
No fence down, or other criminal
oil'

evidence,
a clean hole registered in each
tomato
hanging low. A neighbor told us
. box turtles do this on their way to
water.
They only want a few bites .. .
-Judy Klare, Athens
(From Klare's anthology,
"Searching for Universal Verbs."
" 1965" first appeared in "The
Heartland Today.")

·•

Students offer their thoughts on Earth Day
"Please help the Earth by keeping
lOWELL - In a recent
dass project, Bidwell- the water clean. You can also help by
Porter
. Elementary going to recycle the litter. You could
School, students in , the even recycle the pop cans." . Grade 2C class of 'Jerri Amanda Luqs.
"There are many ways to help the
Jacks and Andrea Hall autho~d let- ,
ters about the significance of Earth Earth. You can keep water clean as
we have good water. I like to pick up
Day.
litter. I planted a tree." - · Ashley
These are their thoughts:
"Kee~ tl:ic:n park clean. Clean the · Hudson.
"There are Iilany ways to help the
water. Recycle pop cans." - .
Earth. Plant trees . . Pick up litter.
Richard Hurt.
.
"There •re many ways to clean, the Recycle cans." - Brittany Black.
"There are many ways to help the
Earth. I like to clean up' the Earth.
You need to plant trees." -· Jade .Earth. We need to ke·ep the water
· clean. We can pick up the trash. Try
Massie.
,(t ·

to walk · all the time." - Nichole all things to help the Earth." Megan Gleason.
Wise.
"You can help the Earth by pick"There are m~ ny ways to help die
ing up litter. We can recycle. You can Earth. We can help. Keep water clean.
also pick up pop cans." - Alyssa Pick up litter." - Chastity Hamm.
"There are many ways to help the
Smith.
"There are many ways to help our Earth. You can pick up trash. We can
Earth. You can clean up litter and recycle newspapers: Don't throw
recycle trash. I planted a tree to help trash in the ocean."- Jamil Stepney.
"Pick up lit\er that you see. Plant
the Earth. It was fun. You can help
clean the Earth too. Earth Day is spe- . trees. Keep water clean." -Jeremiah
ciaL" - C ree Stone.
Mullins.
. "There are so many ways to help
" Keep water clean and pick up litter in the ocean and sand. You can the Earth. Pick up litter. Keep water .
plant trees. You can recycle trash : And cl_ean . R ecycle. Plant trees."
if you see trash , pick it up.'These are Myrandia Taylor.
0
\

�'

..

Page II

0
(
Internet a-wealth o in ormation or outdoorsmen

Celebrations begin on C2
Recipes, C4
HapPenings, C8

S••f y, Ap .. H, 211.1

•

Ohio hunters and .anglers with
access to the internet should make a
regular habit of checlcing out the
Ohio Department of Natural
Resoun:es' Division ofWildlife webat
site
www.dnr.sute.oh.us/ odor/wildlife.
The page frequendy contains
news, information and photographs
abOut Ohio's hunting and fishing
, opportunities and upcomi ng events.
ln recent weeks, in preparation for
annual spring gobbler season, which
starts Monday morning, the Division
of Wildlife and the National Wild
Turkey Federation joined forces on a
15-page informational section complere wirh rurkey hunting poinrers,
safety tips, equipment and even a
wild turkey recipl·.
I'd like to share a few .ofthose with
you here. The follo\ving is from the
NWTF Turkey Huntin g Safety Task
Force:
Decoy Safety
Many turkey hunters incorporate
the use of decoys in their hunting
setups to up their chances for success.
R esponsible hunters employ the following tips to assure that their time
in the woods is safe as well.
Never carry an uncovered decoy
any distance. (Check local regulations
to be sure decoy use is legaL)
From a sea ted positio n, identifY the
clearest line of vision to your front.
Establish a sight line that allows 100
yards of visibility. Then set your
decoy(s) approximately 20 yards from
your position on the line.

If you are calling over decoys and
elect to move to a new location,
check carefully to ensure that no one
is stallcing your decoys. Check before
leaving your setup. Should you. see
someone in the area, (especially close 1
. to your line of sight) cal) out to them
in a loud, clear voice.
Defensive-Turkey
IN THE OPEN
Hunting Tactics
A safe turkey hunter, like a safe driver, is defensive minded. Below are good chance another hunter is movtips one should co nsider.
ing in on your bird.
I. Select the largest stump, blow7. Never move, \Vave or make
down , tree trunk or rock rhat is turkey sounds to alert another hun~r
wider than your shoulders and high- of your 'Jlresence. Remain still and
er than your head to place your back speak in a loud, clear voice to
against when calling; a hunter is announce your presence. T-hese tacmore likely to spot another hunter tics are safer than quick movemenn.
when moving to the front or side Use common sense.
than from behind.
"The NWTF has a long-standing
2. Eliminatt· the colors whi te, red. commitment to hunter · education
bla ck and blue from yo ur hunting and safety. The NWTF formed the
outfit; this includes handkerchiefs, National Turkey Hunting. Safety Task
socks, underwear, etc. These are the Force in 1991, and works coopera•
colors of a turkey gobbler's head and tively with organizations such as the
could be mistaken as suc h.
International Hunters Education
3. Selci:t yo ur c~llin g spot in open Association a!ld the National Shoottimber rather than thick brush; dim- ing Spotts Foundation. Spring turkoy
inatin g moven1ent is a key to success, hunting incidents have decreased
not concealment.
from a high of 8.1 per J OO,OOd in
4. Be discreet when imitating the 1991 to a low of 2.95 per 100,000
sound of a gobbling turkey.
last spring. Statistically, turkey hunt5. A good woodsman can always ing is four times safer than pingdetect movement in the forest by pong, and you are 50 times more
watching other game or listening for likely to take a trip to the emergency
the alarm cries of bluejays, crows, rooni if you play golf." - Rob Keele
squirrels or woodpeckers. Be alert.
Pick the Right Choke Thbe
6. When songbirds, crows or your
Today's turkey guns are specifically
turkey shuts up - look out; there's a niade to shoot heavy loads and give

Jim
.
Freeman

Buckeye State's
rarest natural
bouquet soon
to be on display

tight, denS&amp; patterns, and to get the
best performance from le2d turkty
loads, you need an extra-tight choke.
To get the best performance fiom
your gun, you may need to experiment with various choke sizes and
loads to get the top performance
from your gun.
A nornul12 gauge barrel measuret
. about .724 thousands of an inch. By
compariso.n, a factory full choke
squeetes down the muzzle to about
.700 of an inch. The normal way to
get til':"ter pat~rns is to reduce the
choke· size some more. For example,
many popular turkey guns come
equipped with chokes that measure
.665, and shoot turkey loads of No. 5
or 6 shot very tighdy.
You can have too much of a good
thing if you use a choke that's too
tight for your gun and load. Too
much choke constriction has the
tendency of creating ragged patterm
that leav~ large voids between pellets.
· A good place to start with a standard size 12-gauge barrel is with a
.660 tube. Back-bored barrels usually
do well with chokes that measure
around .680 thousands of an inch.
Try various choke sizes to get your
best performer and you'D up your
confidence for making a clean, ethical shot on that old Jongbeard next
season. -Jay Langston
Rever1e psychology
If you've ever heard the phrase, "say
the most with the least, • weD, it certainly applies to calling turkeys in
some situations.

S•dlf. Ap .. H. 2001

Spend a few days in succession trying to shoot the same gobbler by
hammering him senseless with the
same rendition of rude-and-nspy
yelping and cutting and you might
be ready to try something different.
Want to try something radical? Move
in on the roosted tom, set up and
keep quiet. Let the gobbler do his
thing, fly down and move olf. Use
your ears and foDow the bird~ natural travel pattern. If you can track his
progress by his gobbling, or his
escon's yelps, get up and follow at a
distance.
Ultimately, you are trying to learn
where the5e birds are likely to go to
feed. Put this mental barb in your
quiver and you may get on target to
killing this tough bird. ·
A double word of caution. Don't
stalk a turkey's calling to sneak \vithin range for a shot. It is dangerous for
you or anyone else hunting the area,
The second caution is that your foot•
steps in the leaves sound a lot like
walking turkey. Use some stealt!l and
be ready to drop into shooting position. At times, a gobbler will come
back to investigate 'the sound offoot~ .
s~ps.- Jay Langston
·
'
For information on the National
Wild Turkey Federation, call 803~
637-3106, or check out their website
at www.nwtf.org.
For infonwtion about hunting and
fishing in West Virginia, try
www.dnr.state.wv.us.

One Pack of Mail Pouch

Abby
ADVICE

DEAR ABBY: We are an
and a basketball player
writing to you to ask your help
in lighting a lamp of inspiration
for the 600,000 chilchen currently living in foster care.
May i5 National Foster Care
Awareness Month, and we
would like former foster children to join us in sharing their
personal stories.
We both grew up in the foster care system. Being a foster
child can be a painful·and isolating experience, leaving many
children without direction and
purpose in their · Jives. We
acknowledge that many foster
children have experienced
shame and felt "unattached"with I)O real sense ofbelonging
to a family or community. Yet,
we know firsthand that as
. painful as it is for children to
live without tlieir parents, foster
. care can also be the best thing
for a child in hatm s way. It was
for us.
We ·were blessed to receive
support and commitment fiom '
dedicated foster parents and
· mentors who believed we
could ful~ , our "greatest
·dreanu. And both of ul, as \Yell
as thousands of other foster
children, have gone on to lead
successful and productive lives.
We believe that the skills and
life lessons learned by former
foster children can serve to
light ·t he W:rf for those now in
foster care. They can inspire
current foster families and
social worken by reminding
them of the enormous rlilference their dedication ~.
and encourage other caring
individu;lls to become foster
parents.
By shatring our personal stories, we Can bring world of
promise to , children in foster
care, and provide the~ with
clear examples of how they can
live their lives to the fullest, and
in doing so, enricl). the lives of
!)then. It is a legaFY that all of us
who have been in foster care
miut leave for our chilchen and
, the future., - VICTORIA
actress

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continues

poetry -forum
BY IRIAN

13041754-3770
I
St. 13041~11-3211

;~~!~~il~=· 13041213-8755

I

FOSTER CARE
DEAR VICI'ORIA AND
ALONZO: You are living'
proof that with comistent mentoting; and with caring foster
pare.n~ witli an abunllance of
patience, foster children can
succeed. For them to achieve,
strong role models are ~tial
because ,'chilchen absorb what
they see around them.
That is ~hy I am joining
you in asking other successful
former foster , children to take
pen in hand and share their stories. What was it that worketl
for you? What forti6ed you
when times were difficult? Your
penonal experiences can bolster and enlighten current foster parents, inspire new ones
and improve the foster care system. I know I can count on
you. My readen are the most
generous people in the ,world
when it COil'ICS to giving of
themselves.
'
•
Please address your letters to;
Caiey Family Services, 1 (:b,.. .
porate Drive, Shelton, CT
. 06484. The toll-free number is
1-888-799-KIDS (54.37) . The
e-ma!l address is: dearnbbyrespomeroweUfosterchildren.org.
They're waiting to hear from
you.
.

{Dtar AIJlty is wril(tllliy Al~li11t
Phillips and Jeanne Phillip£)

•

...

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J.

REED

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

IDDLEPORT - Local poets
gathered Tuesday at the Univer. sity ofRio Grande's Meigs -Cen.ter to share their works and their
love of poetry.

Walking Chaucer
beneath snow-laden cedars
past uneven ro~
of time-worn snow markets
and last summers &amp;ded flowers,
we walk this soli!:Ude
brisk and sure-footed,
listening intendy
for other signs of life
among tl)e dea.:i '

1965

Apr~ ~! N~tjqnal Poetry Month, and the center last year

began the tddition of hosting local poets and a celebration of

. ·~·... ~heir att. .

., ~ ' .

:. Jl!l(Y Klare, an Athens poec with 300 publications to her

.

cre~t,.W.. the featured artist at last week's "Evening of Poet-

The peripheral eye spies
White-tails bObbirlg
along pond's edge
with not a sound.
My companion charges forward
Stops - looks back he knows I'm not up for the run.
Resigned to my side,
·
uneasily
·
be stays.

ry,"·and shared a number of her works, many fiom "Searching for Universal Verbs," a. re.c ent anthology of her work.
.
Other local poets who were featured at the reading included:
~ Jack Hart, Pomeroy; a professor at the University of Rio ·
Grande, 'a nd a published poet, whose w6rks often reflect his
rural upbringing and farming life. Hart is also a playwright, c'

Plu............, C8

'
.
It is more than the dog's perked ears
than the faint snap that alerts me. ·
He holds. fast.
Then with violent suddenness,
a rabbit darts
as it to mock us
and Chaucer knOw. he must act give primal chase.
There is no pause for pe~tnission.

I stand silent
with a smoldering bundle of sage
. and.watcb my gray fellow bound
ligi\rer than his weight should allow
through the rough.
He knows as weD as I
The hQnt is futile.

ROWElL AND ALONZO .
MOURNING, NATIONAL
SPOKESPERSONS FOR

_,..------~---·--

" . plans lndude:
-caler 10

Meigs Center

a

.

COM 130

-Jack Hart, Pomeooy

:Dedimtedfoster
parents give
kids the tools
to succeed

1,300 minutes per ·
month for only
$2.9. 95/mo...

.....

"Just one will do;' J,.e said," ... today,"
And he brushed the other pack away,
Perplexing us all until
We found him hanged behind the mill.

Dear

I•

for this unique and hardy
daisy." ·. ·
·
A daisy, is a daisy, is a daisy
T he Lakeside daisy is the
unless it happens to be a Lake- rarest of more than 200 plants
side daisy!
currently listed as endangered ·
Marblehead Peninsula in in Ohio - a distinction due
Ottawa County is home to to its limited distribution bo'th
the only naturally grO\ying in the state and througho ut
population of Lakeside daisies the world.
in the United States and one
A resilient perennial, the
of only .four knO\vn places colorful dai·sy thrives amid
worldwide.
limestone bedrock. The Lake'Biooming JUSt once a year, side daisy's existence beca me
thousands of Lakeside daisies threatened " 'ith increased
·
decorate their otherwise )1'n1 esto 11 e quarrymg
an d
bleak, · sun-baked landscape destruction of prairie grasswith a blanket of bright yd- lands.
"Lakeside
Daisy
State
low blooms in early ·to midM~,.
Nt
a ure
preserve
usua IIy
A patch of datk green leaves requires a permit to visit, but
form the base of the plant and for one month each year
support a stem that grows to . ODNR opens the preserve,
an average of I 5 inches in providing everyone an opportunity to view these rare
height.
daisies in blqom," said Le~is.
Like its heliotropic kin such as the sunflower - the
1n celebration of the daisy's ••
Lakeside daisy turns its yellow annual splash of color, the
face skyward to follow the public is invited to the Lakesun's daily journey from east side Daisy Open House on
to west.
Saturday, May 12, from 10
Ohioans can view this rare a.m. to 3 p.m.
bloom at the 19-acre Lakeside
Division naturalists will be ••
Daisy State Nature Preserve, on site to answer questions
acquired in 1988 by the Ohio and provide information
Department
of Natural about th e daisy and other
Resources (ODNR) to pro- interesting plants-found at the
teet the distinctive daisy and preserve.
its habitat.
La keside Daisy State Nature
"This is not a place you'd Preserve is located on the east
expect to find a rate plant side of Alexanaer Pike (Towngrowing," said Stu Lewis, ship 142) 112 mile south of
Chief of ODNR's Division of'. State Ro~te 163 on the MarNatural Areas and Preserves. blehead Peninsula south of th
"I ts' . a d esoIate, non d_escnpt
·
e
vill.age of Marblehead.
locanon exposed to mtense
Additional
information
heat, cold and wind, but the · about visiting the natu re preabandoned quarry land pro- serve can be obtained bv call,v,des the perfect envuonment ' in g 419-98 1- 6319 .
·

PapC1

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He lumben back.
"Next time," I assure him
with a good rttb to the ek,
Chaucer strQts home. ·
I have to smile at his bravado
and truth be told, admire it too.
You see,
I always stay on the path
careful not to stray w)l.ere briars may ·

He,
where random hole may hide

an4 I

~ever,

without permission,
· give chase.

__; Gina Pinel, Pomeroy

'

Yard Sale
Mama sits in her pink
plastic folding chair,
a cigar box beside her
on the grass,
twenty dollars inside: a
6ve, ten ones·,
6ve dollars silver
change.
On a sawhorse table:
empty Avon bottles,
some Depression glass,
a few hand-painsed
baskets,
two matching lamps,
one with no shade.
In th~ yard: baby Ray's car seat and 'playpen - he's five
now,
a rusted lawrunower, three nearly bald tires,
two storm windows, a door.
Four boxes of things left from Dad's shed don't know what, but someone might a dollar a box.
Sis's stuffed animals won at the county fair- .
she w011 't need them now..
All her clothes, save the ones she wore,
. · when she and Billy ran away.
__; Cathy Lentes, Rutland

We gardened early that spring
in southern Ohio:
five kinds of lettuce ho, what glorious salads
we made and .riots of carrots, onions and
beans,
parsley, basil thyme_and chives.
You built a fence to protect the
plot
from deer, to discourage moles you
tried
ordinary onions outlining the
Bermudas,
and for those rabbit multitudes bitter marigolds defining an inside
fence.
F~r

away, determined marchers
moved
'
toward Montgomery from a place
called Selma; fifiy-five chosen miles
along a valley to the Capitol steps,
a short jm~rney spanning bloody
years.
A letter from a son of friends
described
the scene when they arrived
at last mounted police circling the tired
·
crowd
(6re hoses stacked onto waiting
racks,
panting dogs in the background),
edgy officials shaking hands for TV
but, nonetheless, cheers went up.
Later, in our summ.e r garden we
found
mysterious holes in some toma. toes.
No fence down, or other criminal
oil'

evidence,
a clean hole registered in each
tomato
hanging low. A neighbor told us
. box turtles do this on their way to
water.
They only want a few bites .. .
-Judy Klare, Athens
(From Klare's anthology,
"Searching for Universal Verbs."
" 1965" first appeared in "The
Heartland Today.")

·•

Students offer their thoughts on Earth Day
"Please help the Earth by keeping
lOWELL - In a recent
dass project, Bidwell- the water clean. You can also help by
Porter
. Elementary going to recycle the litter. You could
School, students in , the even recycle the pop cans." . Grade 2C class of 'Jerri Amanda Luqs.
"There are many ways to help the
Jacks and Andrea Hall autho~d let- ,
ters about the significance of Earth Earth. You can keep water clean as
we have good water. I like to pick up
Day.
litter. I planted a tree." - · Ashley
These are their thoughts:
"Kee~ tl:ic:n park clean. Clean the · Hudson.
"There are Iilany ways to help the
water. Recycle pop cans." - .
Earth. Plant trees . . Pick up litter.
Richard Hurt.
.
"There •re many ways to clean, the Recycle cans." - Brittany Black.
"There are many ways to help the
Earth. I like to clean up' the Earth.
You need to plant trees." -· Jade .Earth. We need to ke·ep the water
· clean. We can pick up the trash. Try
Massie.
,(t ·

to walk · all the time." - Nichole all things to help the Earth." Megan Gleason.
Wise.
"You can help the Earth by pick"There are m~ ny ways to help die
ing up litter. We can recycle. You can Earth. We can help. Keep water clean.
also pick up pop cans." - Alyssa Pick up litter." - Chastity Hamm.
"There are many ways to help the
Smith.
"There are many ways to help our Earth. You can pick up trash. We can
Earth. You can clean up litter and recycle newspapers: Don't throw
recycle trash. I planted a tree to help trash in the ocean."- Jamil Stepney.
"Pick up lit\er that you see. Plant
the Earth. It was fun. You can help
clean the Earth too. Earth Day is spe- . trees. Keep water clean." -Jeremiah
ciaL" - C ree Stone.
Mullins.
. "There are so many ways to help
" Keep water clean and pick up litter in the ocean and sand. You can the Earth. Pick up litter. Keep water .
plant trees. You can recycle trash : And cl_ean . R ecycle. Plant trees."
if you see trash , pick it up.'These are Myrandia Taylor.
0
\

�•

p .. C2 . . .liMp ~ian-6tatiatl

~

PoiMtor • •ddlaport • Glllllpona, Ohio • Point Pla..ant, wv

.

:Sunday, April a, 2001

Sundlly, Apri121, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiUpolla, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

6unu, ~iatt ·6nli11tl • It n11 C3

USPS features scenic
American landmarks
11Y SW Kao1•1

To sing

envelope addressed to: Mount
McKinley S~p. Posanaster,
5400 Mail Trail, Fairbanks, AK
99709-9991. Orders must be
posbiiaiUd by May 17.
The Mount · McKinley
stamp and other USPS items
also m available by calling
(800) STAMP-24.

N' WEEJQ.Y ftATURES

The U.S. Posbl Service lw
issued a stamp featuring Alaska's Mount MciGnley as part
oC a series on America's scenic
landmarks.
The SO-cent, internationalrate stamp is intended for 1ounce letters mailed to all
• • •
countries other than Canada
The U.S. Postal Service
and Mexico.
promotes stamp collecting,
The sump features a color but it gives plenty of attention
photograph
of
~ount to other hobbies, too.
Last year, the postal service
McKinley taken by National
Geographic Society photo- hailed the hobby of cultiVlltjournalists John Eastcott and ing aquariums.
Y\111 Momatiuk..
Four
33-cent
sumps
The Mount McKinley depicted a reef tank. holding
stamp is the third internation- delicate co~. life-encrusted
al-me philatelic item issued live rock, various fish and
in 200 I.
other specimens that populate
Kimberly IUy Bamhll and Chflstopher a..ry Wilcoxon
The Badlands stamped reefs in different parts of the
posral card and the Nine-Mile world. ·
Prairie stamp also were issued . The featherduster worm,
this year.
· flame angelfish, longhorn
The USPS scenic series cowfish and red hermit crab
GALLIPOLIS - Perry and Kay Bar'!hill of Gallipolis are
began in 1999 with the Nia- arc shown on these stamps.
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Kimberly Kay
gara Falls stamp, the Mt.
·
• • •
Barnhill, to Christopher Barry Wilcoxon, son of Merrill and
Rainier stamped postal card,
An interesting note con- Judy Wilcoxon of Gallipolis.
the Voyageurs National Park cerning the recent problems
The bride-elect is a 1991 graduate of Prosser High School,
aerogramme and the Rio with energy in this country: currently studying elementary education at University of Rio
Grande sump.
The postal service issued four Grande, and wiD graduate in 2003. She is employed by Bossard
First-day postmarks are sumps in 1982 that portrayed Memorial Library.
available by mail. Buy the synthetic and fossil fuels.
Her fiance is a 1992 graduate of Gallia Academy High
Mount McKinley · stamp at
The stamps commemorated ·School. He is employed by French City Chiropractic, and is a
your local post office, affix the the 1982 World's Fair in 1997 graduate of Palmer College of Chiropractic Medicine.
stamp to an addressed enve- · Knoxville, Tenn., which had
The couple will exchange vows at Chapel in the Glen,
lope, and place in a larger "energy" as its theme.
Gatlinburg, Tenn., on May 4, 2001.

The Anchorman, a premier southern gospel group, will be
singing at the Second Baptist Church in Ravenswood. W.Va.,
Sunday from 2 to 3:30 p.rn. The concert will conclude the
church's Spring Into Action anniversary campaign started 10
weeks ago as the church celebrated its 44th anniversary. The
day's events will also celebrate . the first anniversary of the
pastor, David McClain.

AmJ D•lelle POllard to Ryan Lance Elam

GALLIPOLIS The
search is on for . the tide of
Mrs. Gallipolis 2001, an official tide for the Mrs. Ohio
International Pageant, to ·be
presented at the Franciscan
Theater on the campus of
Lourdes College in Sylvania
on June 2.
Cindy Sexton is the reigning Mrs. Gallipolis.
Mrs. Ohio International is
J??t a , l;JI'auty pageant. These
ire ·womc'n with careers out~dc or'liuide of the home but one thing they have in
common is a "platform issue,"'
Cindy lt11ton
a cause or idea they have
-Mrs. Gallipolis 2000
•
selected to support and bring
awareocn to during the year tion for the married women
a1 Mrs. Ohio 2001.
· of Ohio between the .agea of
These women have given
to schools, non-profiu anJ
community organizatiom.
They work for cause~ because
of their family, friends or personal experiences.
They will be saluted for
their contribution in making
a difference. Without them,
many voices wouldn't be
heard.' ·
The Mrs. Ohio lnterna. tiona! Pageant is a competi-

21 and 56. These women arc Mandrell Theater in Tenbright, active women. The nessee Great Smoky Moun1
Mrs. International Pageant rains.
began in 1985 to acknowl- · Married women living in
edge the contributions of the Gallipolis area should call
married women and to pro- 419-244-1811, fax 419-867mote the ideals of marriage, 1486, or visit the web site at
family and community stew- www.mrsohio.com, or submit
ardship.
at the earliest convenience a
There is no swimsuit com- • short biography, including
petition or rerforming talent date of birth, date of marriage
"' and recent photo to"~ow
required.
The women selected as Tech. Productions Inc., 927
Mrs. Ohio will receive a gen- N. Summit St., Toledo, Ohio
erous prize package (last year's 43604.
winner received a prize package that MS worth more than
$9,000).
Sh~ will represent the
Buckeye State at the 2001
national pageant at the Louise ·

Parker-Eblin engagement

Pollard-Elam engagement

Gerald and Bonnie Kelly

Jason Scott Eblin
\

Barnhill- Wilcoxon engagement

Entries sought .for Mrs. Gallipolis 2001 title

. Karen Latasha Partler and

Kelly 50th anniversary

GALLIPOLIS- Eddie and. Barbara Sweet of Amelia, Ohio,
POMEROY _. Gerald and Bonnie Kelly of Pomeroy will
~re announcing the engagement of their daughter, Karen celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on Saturday, May 12.
: Latasha Parker, to Jason Scott Eblin, son of Keith Eblin of GalTheir children and gra ndchildren will be hosting an open .
lipolis, and Chris Hartman of New Richmond, Ohio.
ho use fron\ I to 3:30 p.m . at the Meig; Senior Ce nter in
The bride-elect is a 2000 graduate of Amelia High School, Pomeroy.
· «nd is employed by Corning Precision Lens of Cincinnati.
They are the parents of Dennis (Mary) Kelly of l:lollywood,
· Her fiance is a 1994 graduate of River Valley High School, · Fla., and Darla (Doug) Sraats of Pomeroy. Their grandchildren
' «nd is also employed by Corning Precision Lens.
are Scott, Bobby and Cody Kelly, and Shannon Staats.
· The couple will exchange vows at 4:30 p.m , on Saturday, · Kelly 'is the son of the late Charles and G ~atu s Kelly, and his
.
,wife is the daughter of Polly Eichinger of Pomeroy and the late
, June 9, 2001, at First Baptist Chur~h' in Amelia .
The couple will reside in Cincinnati.
Allen Eichinger.
The couple requests that gifts be omitted.

GALLIPOLIS - Pastor Alvis and Brenda Pollard of Gallipolis arc announcing the engagement of their daughter, Amy
Danielle Pollard, to Ryan ·Lance Elam, son of Rolin and Bonnie Elam of Highland,lnd.
The bride-to-he is a I 996 graduate of Ohio Valley Christian
School in Gallipolis. She graduated from Cedarville University
in June 2000 with a bachelor of arts in finance and accounting.
She is currently employed with Wells Fargo Financial in
Cincinnati.
The bridegroom is a 1997 graduate of Calumet Baptist High .
School ill Highland. He is currently a senior at Cedarville University and will graduate in June 2001 with a bachelor of arts
in sports management.
The wedding will be July 7, 2001 at 2 p.m. in First Baptist
Church in Gallipolis.

Lane

Johnson
•
anntversary

*"NOW IS THE TIME"
Spiritual Renewal Week

Tllf .IIIDI,. OUt...

W. Now St/1 H/gfl OUI/Ity
Uv/ng Room SulfH by
Buthllnef

;

GALLIPOLIS - Eugene
! Johnson Sr. and Lola L John; son celebrated their 50th
: anniversary by renewing their
! wedding vows on March 24,
: 2001 at Eureka Church · of
: God.
: They have three children,
{ Sheila Jane Ratcliff, Eugene
; Johnson Jr., and Laura
! Katherine, They have also
; have nine 'grandchildren and
'• 11 great-grandchildren.
'

with Pastor Chris Longgrear
of Fresh Fire Ministry, Parkersburg

April 29 • May 5th
7 p.m. nightly
Hosud by: South Bt!thel Churr:h
Ht!IJ at: Tuppn-r Pkzins lrym ·
Spt!cilll Music Nightly • Drama by C O.R.E.
Nun'"! ProvUkd

•

I

I tell you, now 11 the flme of laocl'a favor,

.

i

now II the Clay otealvallon. ~ 2 Cor. 6:2

'

The
craft Barn

Eugene Johnson Sr. and Lola L. ·Johnion

ON MAY 131
Every mot~er It unique but all

have one thing In
common: no mltttr how buiY
they get, they're always there
for you. This Molher's Day,
•how mom how special she Is •
her day with love, laughter,

Do You Think Quality Of Care
In A Nursing Cinter Is A Thing
Of The Past? ..• Think Again.
. The Administration at Holzer Senior Ciue Center received the
followin~ letter applauding the facility and staff for excellence in
service:
You are truly to be commended for the excellent services at your
facility in ALL aspects of patient care. This I noted not only in the
· physical environment (that is cleanliness in all areas, tasteful interior
and exterior decoration, maintenance of the building and equipment,
the arrangement of patient rooms providing maximum comfort and
services required, etc.), but more important and impressively reassuring
is the MANNER in which these services are presented willingly,
cheerfully and compassionately with an attitude of genuine concern for
the patient, co-workers, families and visitors involved. I have 11ad
occasion to visit many medical facilities throughout the country (both
large and small) and it is always a pleasure to encounter one like this. .
If I had to select only ONE notable quality for public recognition I
~ould, without hesitation, choose the willingly cheerful co-operated of
all the staff working together for the good of everybody involved. Even
on a volunteer basis I am proud to be just a small part of all you are
doing to help others less fortunate.
Thank you so much one and all!!!!

Open Sun. · l'ri.,ll a.m.-6 p.m.
&amp; Sal., 9 a.m.-6 p.m. ,

~~the Craft B~r":: tor
f your g-ift r'v.ng
occas•ons-

·'

.

.

Most sincerely,
Dorothy Karashen, Hospice Volunteer

•

You'll find pottery, tin ware,
woven rugs, table runners,
quills, pillows, clothing, stained
glass, comhusk dolls, baskets,
woodworking, jewell}', soft
sculpture, geese clothing, wheat
weavings, lampshades, Hower
arrangements, candles, crocheting, ceramics, paintings and
drawings.
You'll also find baked goods
from the
\ Stan Evans Bakel}',
jams, jellies, honey, apple butter &amp;
Bob Evans Fann
logo merchandise .

."'-.·
~:

~

'

~

'

Visitors can also watch as Cynthia demonstrates her skill of making bread
dough roses and salt dough ornaments- a skill that she began perfecting in
the early I 970's.
P.O. Box 198, Rio Grande, OH 45674
8()(}994-3276 or 740-245-5305 - www .bobevans.com

..

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DIHECTIONS: From U S Route 35, exit onto State Route 325.
Go soulh
State Route)25 lo Stale Route 588 and tum left.
The Crall Bam is less than one mile ahead on State Route 588
behind the Bob Evans Restaurant.

on

~'

Q!IAJnY '
1-8()()-200-4005 or (740) 667·7388

Cynthia Kazmierczak from Toledo, Ohio is offering the first in a series ol
demonstrations at the Crall Barn this season. You will want to bring your
children, grandchildren or youth group to the Craft Barn and watch as they
create a "Hand Print Keepsake in Clay" that they can take home just in lime
for Mother's Day! Please call in advance for groups oliO or more. Allow
one hour (approx. 15 minutes to complete lhe project and 20 minutes baking
time). The cost lor each keepsake is $3.

·Orthopedic Excellence
·. for all of the
Mid.;.Ohit, .Valley

-.

-

'

co UNTRY GI f Ts,

Saturday, May 5 - 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

~·
'

380 Colonial Drive
Bidwell, OM

corne in 3111 see our un~ue ~ Of

MOTHER1S DAY
sPECIAL TAKE HOME PROJECt

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N.S.C.C.

liiiiPEDI

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MOM~S
THE ·WORD

Paul Davies Jewelers, Inc.

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www.myclailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com.
www.mydailytrlbune.com

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PoiMtor • •ddlaport • Glllllpona, Ohio • Point Pla..ant, wv

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:Sunday, April a, 2001

Sundlly, Apri121, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiUpolla, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

6unu, ~iatt ·6nli11tl • It n11 C3

USPS features scenic
American landmarks
11Y SW Kao1•1

To sing

envelope addressed to: Mount
McKinley S~p. Posanaster,
5400 Mail Trail, Fairbanks, AK
99709-9991. Orders must be
posbiiaiUd by May 17.
The Mount · McKinley
stamp and other USPS items
also m available by calling
(800) STAMP-24.

N' WEEJQ.Y ftATURES

The U.S. Posbl Service lw
issued a stamp featuring Alaska's Mount MciGnley as part
oC a series on America's scenic
landmarks.
The SO-cent, internationalrate stamp is intended for 1ounce letters mailed to all
• • •
countries other than Canada
The U.S. Postal Service
and Mexico.
promotes stamp collecting,
The sump features a color but it gives plenty of attention
photograph
of
~ount to other hobbies, too.
Last year, the postal service
McKinley taken by National
Geographic Society photo- hailed the hobby of cultiVlltjournalists John Eastcott and ing aquariums.
Y\111 Momatiuk..
Four
33-cent
sumps
The Mount McKinley depicted a reef tank. holding
stamp is the third internation- delicate co~. life-encrusted
al-me philatelic item issued live rock, various fish and
in 200 I.
other specimens that populate
Kimberly IUy Bamhll and Chflstopher a..ry Wilcoxon
The Badlands stamped reefs in different parts of the
posral card and the Nine-Mile world. ·
Prairie stamp also were issued . The featherduster worm,
this year.
· flame angelfish, longhorn
The USPS scenic series cowfish and red hermit crab
GALLIPOLIS - Perry and Kay Bar'!hill of Gallipolis are
began in 1999 with the Nia- arc shown on these stamps.
announcing the engagement of their daughter, Kimberly Kay
gara Falls stamp, the Mt.
·
• • •
Barnhill, to Christopher Barry Wilcoxon, son of Merrill and
Rainier stamped postal card,
An interesting note con- Judy Wilcoxon of Gallipolis.
the Voyageurs National Park cerning the recent problems
The bride-elect is a 1991 graduate of Prosser High School,
aerogramme and the Rio with energy in this country: currently studying elementary education at University of Rio
Grande sump.
The postal service issued four Grande, and wiD graduate in 2003. She is employed by Bossard
First-day postmarks are sumps in 1982 that portrayed Memorial Library.
available by mail. Buy the synthetic and fossil fuels.
Her fiance is a 1992 graduate of Gallia Academy High
Mount McKinley · stamp at
The stamps commemorated ·School. He is employed by French City Chiropractic, and is a
your local post office, affix the the 1982 World's Fair in 1997 graduate of Palmer College of Chiropractic Medicine.
stamp to an addressed enve- · Knoxville, Tenn., which had
The couple will exchange vows at Chapel in the Glen,
lope, and place in a larger "energy" as its theme.
Gatlinburg, Tenn., on May 4, 2001.

The Anchorman, a premier southern gospel group, will be
singing at the Second Baptist Church in Ravenswood. W.Va.,
Sunday from 2 to 3:30 p.rn. The concert will conclude the
church's Spring Into Action anniversary campaign started 10
weeks ago as the church celebrated its 44th anniversary. The
day's events will also celebrate . the first anniversary of the
pastor, David McClain.

AmJ D•lelle POllard to Ryan Lance Elam

GALLIPOLIS The
search is on for . the tide of
Mrs. Gallipolis 2001, an official tide for the Mrs. Ohio
International Pageant, to ·be
presented at the Franciscan
Theater on the campus of
Lourdes College in Sylvania
on June 2.
Cindy Sexton is the reigning Mrs. Gallipolis.
Mrs. Ohio International is
J??t a , l;JI'auty pageant. These
ire ·womc'n with careers out~dc or'liuide of the home but one thing they have in
common is a "platform issue,"'
Cindy lt11ton
a cause or idea they have
-Mrs. Gallipolis 2000
•
selected to support and bring
awareocn to during the year tion for the married women
a1 Mrs. Ohio 2001.
· of Ohio between the .agea of
These women have given
to schools, non-profiu anJ
community organizatiom.
They work for cause~ because
of their family, friends or personal experiences.
They will be saluted for
their contribution in making
a difference. Without them,
many voices wouldn't be
heard.' ·
The Mrs. Ohio lnterna. tiona! Pageant is a competi-

21 and 56. These women arc Mandrell Theater in Tenbright, active women. The nessee Great Smoky Moun1
Mrs. International Pageant rains.
began in 1985 to acknowl- · Married women living in
edge the contributions of the Gallipolis area should call
married women and to pro- 419-244-1811, fax 419-867mote the ideals of marriage, 1486, or visit the web site at
family and community stew- www.mrsohio.com, or submit
ardship.
at the earliest convenience a
There is no swimsuit com- • short biography, including
petition or rerforming talent date of birth, date of marriage
"' and recent photo to"~ow
required.
The women selected as Tech. Productions Inc., 927
Mrs. Ohio will receive a gen- N. Summit St., Toledo, Ohio
erous prize package (last year's 43604.
winner received a prize package that MS worth more than
$9,000).
Sh~ will represent the
Buckeye State at the 2001
national pageant at the Louise ·

Parker-Eblin engagement

Pollard-Elam engagement

Gerald and Bonnie Kelly

Jason Scott Eblin
\

Barnhill- Wilcoxon engagement

Entries sought .for Mrs. Gallipolis 2001 title

. Karen Latasha Partler and

Kelly 50th anniversary

GALLIPOLIS- Eddie and. Barbara Sweet of Amelia, Ohio,
POMEROY _. Gerald and Bonnie Kelly of Pomeroy will
~re announcing the engagement of their daughter, Karen celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on Saturday, May 12.
: Latasha Parker, to Jason Scott Eblin, son of Keith Eblin of GalTheir children and gra ndchildren will be hosting an open .
lipolis, and Chris Hartman of New Richmond, Ohio.
ho use fron\ I to 3:30 p.m . at the Meig; Senior Ce nter in
The bride-elect is a 2000 graduate of Amelia High School, Pomeroy.
· «nd is employed by Corning Precision Lens of Cincinnati.
They are the parents of Dennis (Mary) Kelly of l:lollywood,
· Her fiance is a 1994 graduate of River Valley High School, · Fla., and Darla (Doug) Sraats of Pomeroy. Their grandchildren
' «nd is also employed by Corning Precision Lens.
are Scott, Bobby and Cody Kelly, and Shannon Staats.
· The couple will exchange vows at 4:30 p.m , on Saturday, · Kelly 'is the son of the late Charles and G ~atu s Kelly, and his
.
,wife is the daughter of Polly Eichinger of Pomeroy and the late
, June 9, 2001, at First Baptist Chur~h' in Amelia .
The couple will reside in Cincinnati.
Allen Eichinger.
The couple requests that gifts be omitted.

GALLIPOLIS - Pastor Alvis and Brenda Pollard of Gallipolis arc announcing the engagement of their daughter, Amy
Danielle Pollard, to Ryan ·Lance Elam, son of Rolin and Bonnie Elam of Highland,lnd.
The bride-to-he is a I 996 graduate of Ohio Valley Christian
School in Gallipolis. She graduated from Cedarville University
in June 2000 with a bachelor of arts in finance and accounting.
She is currently employed with Wells Fargo Financial in
Cincinnati.
The bridegroom is a 1997 graduate of Calumet Baptist High .
School ill Highland. He is currently a senior at Cedarville University and will graduate in June 2001 with a bachelor of arts
in sports management.
The wedding will be July 7, 2001 at 2 p.m. in First Baptist
Church in Gallipolis.

Lane

Johnson
•
anntversary

*"NOW IS THE TIME"
Spiritual Renewal Week

Tllf .IIIDI,. OUt...

W. Now St/1 H/gfl OUI/Ity
Uv/ng Room SulfH by
Buthllnef

;

GALLIPOLIS - Eugene
! Johnson Sr. and Lola L John; son celebrated their 50th
: anniversary by renewing their
! wedding vows on March 24,
: 2001 at Eureka Church · of
: God.
: They have three children,
{ Sheila Jane Ratcliff, Eugene
; Johnson Jr., and Laura
! Katherine, They have also
; have nine 'grandchildren and
'• 11 great-grandchildren.
'

with Pastor Chris Longgrear
of Fresh Fire Ministry, Parkersburg

April 29 • May 5th
7 p.m. nightly
Hosud by: South Bt!thel Churr:h
Ht!IJ at: Tuppn-r Pkzins lrym ·
Spt!cilll Music Nightly • Drama by C O.R.E.
Nun'"! ProvUkd

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I tell you, now 11 the flme of laocl'a favor,

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now II the Clay otealvallon. ~ 2 Cor. 6:2

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The
craft Barn

Eugene Johnson Sr. and Lola L. ·Johnion

ON MAY 131
Every mot~er It unique but all

have one thing In
common: no mltttr how buiY
they get, they're always there
for you. This Molher's Day,
•how mom how special she Is •
her day with love, laughter,

Do You Think Quality Of Care
In A Nursing Cinter Is A Thing
Of The Past? ..• Think Again.
. The Administration at Holzer Senior Ciue Center received the
followin~ letter applauding the facility and staff for excellence in
service:
You are truly to be commended for the excellent services at your
facility in ALL aspects of patient care. This I noted not only in the
· physical environment (that is cleanliness in all areas, tasteful interior
and exterior decoration, maintenance of the building and equipment,
the arrangement of patient rooms providing maximum comfort and
services required, etc.), but more important and impressively reassuring
is the MANNER in which these services are presented willingly,
cheerfully and compassionately with an attitude of genuine concern for
the patient, co-workers, families and visitors involved. I have 11ad
occasion to visit many medical facilities throughout the country (both
large and small) and it is always a pleasure to encounter one like this. .
If I had to select only ONE notable quality for public recognition I
~ould, without hesitation, choose the willingly cheerful co-operated of
all the staff working together for the good of everybody involved. Even
on a volunteer basis I am proud to be just a small part of all you are
doing to help others less fortunate.
Thank you so much one and all!!!!

Open Sun. · l'ri.,ll a.m.-6 p.m.
&amp; Sal., 9 a.m.-6 p.m. ,

~~the Craft B~r":: tor
f your g-ift r'v.ng
occas•ons-

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Most sincerely,
Dorothy Karashen, Hospice Volunteer

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You'll find pottery, tin ware,
woven rugs, table runners,
quills, pillows, clothing, stained
glass, comhusk dolls, baskets,
woodworking, jewell}', soft
sculpture, geese clothing, wheat
weavings, lampshades, Hower
arrangements, candles, crocheting, ceramics, paintings and
drawings.
You'll also find baked goods
from the
\ Stan Evans Bakel}',
jams, jellies, honey, apple butter &amp;
Bob Evans Fann
logo merchandise .

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Visitors can also watch as Cynthia demonstrates her skill of making bread
dough roses and salt dough ornaments- a skill that she began perfecting in
the early I 970's.
P.O. Box 198, Rio Grande, OH 45674
8()(}994-3276 or 740-245-5305 - www .bobevans.com

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DIHECTIONS: From U S Route 35, exit onto State Route 325.
Go soulh
State Route)25 lo Stale Route 588 and tum left.
The Crall Bam is less than one mile ahead on State Route 588
behind the Bob Evans Restaurant.

on

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Q!IAJnY '
1-8()()-200-4005 or (740) 667·7388

Cynthia Kazmierczak from Toledo, Ohio is offering the first in a series ol
demonstrations at the Crall Barn this season. You will want to bring your
children, grandchildren or youth group to the Craft Barn and watch as they
create a "Hand Print Keepsake in Clay" that they can take home just in lime
for Mother's Day! Please call in advance for groups oliO or more. Allow
one hour (approx. 15 minutes to complete lhe project and 20 minutes baking
time). The cost lor each keepsake is $3.

·Orthopedic Excellence
·. for all of the
Mid.;.Ohit, .Valley

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co UNTRY GI f Ts,

Saturday, May 5 - 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

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380 Colonial Drive
Bidwell, OM

corne in 3111 see our un~ue ~ Of

MOTHER1S DAY
sPECIAL TAKE HOME PROJECt

-

N.S.C.C.

liiiiPEDI

'• ' .·

MOM~S
THE ·WORD

Paul Davies Jewelers, Inc.

.

www.myclailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com.
www.mydailytrlbune.com

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s..n.y, ApiU 29, 2001

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0 'llpcrll • Pom.vy • Point Pine arit

S.ltdiiJ, ..... Je, 2.1

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VEGETARIAN COOKING: LOW-FAT COOKING:.Asian Primavera Stir-Fry
Skillet Double ·combread
and Roasted Vegetables

er milk, oil and eag.Add liqBY THE A$SOCr.\TEO PA£SS
A cook in search of !»!)' uid to drY iapdiems, :dong
recipes for a meadeu meal with the cailQed com. Stir
may wish to consider thetoe untit :UI inpdients are
two: a rich, crunchy- tex- · moiltened and combined.
rured cornbread, and a Spoon into prepared and
hearry dish of ro.asted veg- . preheatcd·lllrillet or pan.
Bake until cornbread is
etables seasoned with honey
firm and gOlden, and pulls
musrard and ocmge.
They could be served for a aW..y fiom the 'sides, 20 to 25
lunch course, or combined minures. Let cool slighdy,
with other dishes for a vege~ · then cut into \W!dges or
taru n buffet spread. ·Note: squarts to serve warm or at
The cornbread includes the room temperature.
use of one egg.
{Ruipt from Cann~d Food
. The cornbread is best Alliana,.J
~
served from warm from the
skillet or pan, when it is still
The vegetables for roastcrusty around the edges. It is ing may be varied to taste .
good with butter for dinner Choose a selection of your
- bm is delicious slathered favorites ; use some you
with strawberry jam for already have at hand, or pick
breakfast, too.
those that look best in the
If you prefer, with this bat- market at. any given season.
ter you could make 12 Colorful choices: red or
muffins (bake 15 to 18 min- green bell peppen, yellow
utes) or 18 corn sticks (bakt squash, red onions and carabout 10 minutes).
' rots.
The vegetables may also
Skillet Double
Cornbread
be served over pasta, or with
Nonstick vegetable spray
rice and beans.
1}, cups all-purpose flour
Hooey-Mu1tard Onnge
%cup. yellow cornmeal
Roa1ted Vegetable•
2 tablespoons sup
(Preparation 10 minutes,
I tablespoon baking powder
cooking time 20 minutes}
6
cups assorted cut-up·veg~ teaspoon salt
~ teaspoon freshly ground
etables
pepper
2 tablespoons olive oil
I cup milk
1 teaspoon minced
'l, cup corn oil
1 teaspoon salt
1 egg
~. cup honey mustard
15 1/4-ounce can whole
2 tablespoons brmge juice
kernel corn, drained
I teaspoon grated orange
Preheat oven' to 400 F.
peel
Coat a 9- or 10-inch cast
Prehe.at oven to 450 E In
iron skillet, or heavy 9-inch routing pan, toss. vegetables
square baking pan, with with oil, garlic and sah.
nonstick vegetable spray. Bakt, uncovered, for 20
Place in oven for 5 minutes minutes, or until vegetables
to preheat.
are tender. Just before servIn a mixing bowl, use a ing, tosa vegetables with
whisk to combine flour, mustard, juice and orange
cornmeal, sugar, baking peel. .
·
powder, salt and pepper. In
Makes 6 servings.
another bowl, whisk togeth(Recipe from French~.)

game

QUICK COOKING:
Potato Crusted Salmon
with Cucumber-Feta Sauce
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

shredded fresh potatoes or
frozen shredded hash-brown
potatoes, thawed
1 tablespoon olive
Lemon wedges and kalamata olives, optional
In small bowl, combine
yogurt, feta cheese, cucumber and mint; set aside.
Pat fish dry with paper
towels; season with salt' arid
pepper. Place ~ cup potato
on top of each fillet, pressing
firmly to form an even layer.
In large nonstick skillet, heat
oil over medi11m heat until
hot. Carefully place fillets,
potato side down, in skillet.
Cook 8 to 10 minutes
(without moving fillets} .
until potatoes . are golden
brown. Using large spatula,
· tum fillets over; cook an
additional 4 to 6 minutes or
until fish is cooked to
desired doneness. Serve with
sauce and, if desired, lemon
and olives.
Makes 4 servings.
Nutrition information per
serving: 362 cal., 18 g fat, 75
mg chol., 3$1 mg sodium, ·
21 g carbo., 2 g fiber, 27 g
pro.

Take stylish sahnon fillets,
encrust them with down-toearth shredded spuds, and in
about half-an-hour a savory
dinner for four is on the
table.
The potatoes can be
shredded fresh, or pre-shredded frozen hash browns,
fried to a golden-brown
crust on the fish fillets. To
complement the salmon,
serve a low-fat cucumberfeta sauce, which adds a
fresh, tangy accent. To further streamline meal preparation, the sauce can be.
made a day in . advance and
refrigerated overnight in an
airtight container.
Potato Crulted ·Salmon
With Cucuinber-Feta
Sauce
(Preparation 10 minutes,
cooking time 20 mi'nutes}
I .
~ cup plain fat-free yogurt
~ cup crumbled feta cheese
, ~ cup chopped seeded
cucumber
~' teaspoon dried mint or
" dill weed
·
4 skinless salmon fillets
. (about 4 ounces each)
~. teaspoon ~alt
Recipe from ·National Potato
'l, teaspoon pepper
2 cups (about 10 ounces} . PrOmotion Board.

oil

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Honey- orange bean and
vegetable salad is a nutritious,
meatless -creation . that can
serve as. a main dish or a side
dish. Its j\licy slaw- style combination of beans, vegetables
and fruit makes it ideal for an
early spring menu.
Note that any kind of
canned or dry-packaged
beans may be substituted for
those suggested in the recipe
- you may vary the types
you use according to your
penonal preference.
Honey-Orange Bean .and
Vegetable Salad
IS-ounce can red kidney
beans or large lima beans, or
1 ~ cups cooked dry-packaged kidney or lima beans,
rinsed and drained
15-ounce can navy beans .or
chickpeas, or 1~' cups cooked
dry-packaged navy beans or
chickpeas, rinsed and drained ·
15-ounce can pinto or red '
beans, or I 'l, cups· cooked
dry-packaged pinto or red
beans, rinsed and drained
2 cups thinly sliced red cab ~
bage
,
1 cup small broccoli florets
/,cup raisins
~(, cup .sliced dried apricots·
~:.cup walnut pieces
Honey-Ora1tge Dressing
· (recipe follows)
·Combine all ingredients
except Honey-Orange Dressing in salad bowL Drizzle
Honey-Orange
Dressing
over, and toss.
Makes l 8 side-dish servings
.
of about /,cup each. .

SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(AP) - Picrte Brosnan joined
environmentalists to protest 'the
Navy's new . low-frequency
sonar, saying the equipment
adversely affects whales and
1narinc: animals.
"h's like a bad ·case of deja
vu ," Brosnan said Thunday. "I
thought we had already saved
the whales."
Brosnan ·spoke during a
news conference staged by the
Natural Resources Defense
• Council. ·

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Bob and Jewel Evans

VEGETARIAN COOKING:
Honey-Orange Bean
and Vegetable·Salad

University of Rio Grande basketball team
Tammy Brabham/Red's Rollen Garage
Bobbie Holw' in memory of Dr. William R. Smith
James A. and B. Louise Fraley/US &amp; CSales Inc.
Rockwell Automation
Charles Land Dawn M. Rupen
Aid Association for l.uJherans Branch 3%9
GaU/polis Emblem Club No. 199
Mite and Km-en Polcyn
Jessie Collins, amdidate for Gall/a CounJy Conunission
lAdies Auxiliary to the VFW Post 4464 ·
Rilx ofGallipolis
Rolling Acres Farm
Holur Clinic FoundatiOfl
Wilma Webster
Citizens for Carey
The Alcove Bookstore
Tawney Studio
Paul Davies Jewelers
'J'hat Special Touch
The 'Put On Shop
Lorobi's Piu.a .
· The Down Under
Catch of the Day
AAA Travel - Linda Carney, Lois Breech, Nola Kemper. Becky Lutz
Kathryn J. Cameron
••
~ · DaVid L.Mai'tin, Demixiatfor sheriff' •·
R. Shawn and Daivn J. Lew/S,in honor of BreelliiiiQ. and Zachary,r
River Bend ~erinary Hospital/Dr. Allan Boster
Delta Kappa Gamma Society, Beta Alpha Chapter
River Valley football /lUIS
South Gall/a football fans
GaUia Academy football /lUIS
Brown's 'lhlstwo11hy Hardware
William and Samantha Hatcher
Bill Davis, candidate for Gall/a County Commission
Bowman's Homecare Medical Center

'kp" .

Nutrition information per
serving: 297 cal., 8 g fat, 49 g
carbo., 412 mg sodium, 12 g
pro. , .tO g dietary fiber, 0 mg
chol.

· sAVIN~ .

New Wallcovering
Winttow
*New Carpet

Hoaey-Onnge Dretting
~ cup cider vinegar
~. to~ cup honey
3 tablespoons fiozen orange
juice concentrate
2 tablespoons canola oil
2 teaspoons poppy seeds ·
Mix all ingredients thoroughly.

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,2001

to receive
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POOLS AND

lnlllllldOIL
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Pleasant Valley
Obstetric Department~
(304) 675-4340,. Ext. 1230

HUNTINGTON, WV

.HOLIDAYPOOL.

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GA-LUA-

w1nner

Top 10 Ma~e a !liffe~ence
Day proJed 1n Oh1~
Governor's Commumty
· Servi~ Council

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2001 w1nner

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$2,000 state honoree

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National finalist
Make a Difference Day 1
USA Weekend magazine .

.I'EA-DS

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uit was the
single most
"E
significant
cg
c:
day I've
en
c
;!:
spent as first lady. And
!:(
.I've
attended
more
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than 400 events.·n
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"Think Ahead For A Healthy Baby,"

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Bidweii-Poner Elementary tetiChers and staff
Mt. Carmel Baptist Cluurh
Gallipolis City Schools' Academic Booster Club
Jessie Payne/SouthetJstem Ohio Branch NAACP
Philomathean Club
Annual Emancipation Day CelebratiOfllnc.
Harley Owners Group
The Pembroke Group
Central Supply Co.
T11110/hy H. and Angela D. Mills
Wal-Man Foundation
Rob and Kathy Yoong ·
Learn and Serve America
Big River E/ec/rif
Ohio Valley Christian School
Haffelts Mill Outlet
Charles I. and Marjorie A. Adkins
Pauline B. Wetherholl, in memory of Mamling Wetherlrolt
The Kiwanis Club of Gallipolis
Men Only Bible Study Group
Farmers Bank
People's Bank
Gallipolis City Schools Business Advisory CoWICil
God Squad Sunday School class
TOPS 1954 of Gallipolis
Dr. Daniel H. and Edna Whitely
. Borden,lnc.
Buckeye Hills Career Center
Gallipolis Chiropractic CenJer
Daniel M. Evans
1/Qben G. and Terri B. Marchi
GWRRA Chapter C-2
Bossard Memorial Library staff and Friends of the Library
George and Betty Jean Tyman
University ofRio Grande Society of Honor StudeTIIS
Wetnam Veterans ofAmerica
Simpson Chapel United Methodist ~n
John Gee Black Historicdl CenJer

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.Mane Designers Full Service Salon
\lbshingiOII ElemeirJary Schoolltudents
Max and Mabel Tawney
River Valley High School base students .
OFWC Galli[xJ/is Junior llbmen's Club
Gallipolis Career College
Gallipolis &amp;ss Busters
Ga/lia County Retired Teachers Association
University ofRio Grandt llbmen 's Club
Gall/a.Academy Key Club
Hannan Trace StudenJ Council
Golikn Co"al t! Gallipolis
DeMis Salisbury. Republican for sheriff
Wistman Real Estate and David Wiseman family
Martha E. Six
Places to Go Trave~ Beverly Schultz. l.ona McKoy
Soulhwestern Elementary School PTO
Dr. and Mrs. Balusamy Subbiflh
Toler and Toler Insurance Services
,.
Patricia Silk
French City Antique and Craft MaU
Gallipolis Elks Lodge I07
World Wrestling Fediration
Addaville Elemenwy School PTO
Gallipolis Lions Club
Rodney Supply Co.
· GaUia County 1.Jx;QJ Education Association
LaWmrce Tawirey, candidate for Gall/a County Commission
. Davis library/U{Iiversity ofRio Grande
,AJ/-Greek CoJliiCi/IUniversity ofRio Grande
Jessie Payne/Southeastern Ohio Branch NAACP
GaUipolis City Schools board members and administrators
Gallipolis Education AssociaiWn
Raymond C. and Wkki L. Lieving
Joan E. Schmidt
First-Step Mothers League
Kmart Good News Committee
Darkne Saunders' thbrl-graders/Bidweli-Porter Ekmt1116ry

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sherry, soy sauce, ginger and garlic; set:
aside.' .
Chicken, fettuccine, ginger and sugar
Lighdy coat a wok or lirge skillet: with
snap peas are among· the lively mix of
nonstick cooking spray. Heat .wok or
ingredienu in Asian Primavera Slir-Fry; a
dish that delivers taste and nutrition
skillet over ~um- high heat. Slir-fiy
sugar snap peas and carrots for 3 to 4
without an overload of fat.
minutes or until crisp-tender. Add green
The recipe is in the chapter headed
onions and stir- fry for I minute more.
"Wise Entrees," in Better Homes and
Gardens' "The Smart Diet The Right
Remove vegetables from wok; set
Approach · to Weight Loss" (Meredith,
aside. Add chicktn mixture to wolc. StirS24.95).
fry for 2 ro 4 minutes or until chicken is
The book suggests allowing younelf
no longer pink. Push chicktn fiom cenfreedom from diet mania by following
ter of wok. Stir cornstarCh mixture; add
what the editon call a nondiet approach,
to center of wok.
eating sensibly and following the USDA
Cook and stir until thicktned and
food pyramid advice on servings.
bubbly.
Plenty of recipes are lined up, many
In a small bowl, combine dried mush•
Return vegetables· to wok. Add mush\vith color photos, to help make thil eat- roonu and l cup warm water; let stand rooms and pasta. Stir to coat with sauce.
ing plan tasry and appealing. Tl~ey range for 15. minutes. Drain mushrooms, Cook and sti• for l minute or until heatfiom "Snurt Snacks" through "Satisfying squeezing out excess liquid; reserve liq- e d through. If desired, g:trnish with green
Soups" and "Skip the Meac;· to "No- uic!. Slice mushroom caps; discard stems. onion c urls.
Guilt Desserts."
Stir cornstarch into .reserved mushroom · Makes 4 servings.
liquid.
Nutrition information per se rving: 333
Asian Primavera Stir-Fry
Meanwhile, cook pas~ according to . caL , 3 gtotal fat (I g saturate d fat}, 45 mg
I ounce dried shiitake mushrooms
package directions. Drain ; keep warm.
. cho1., .324 mg sodium, 48 g carbo., 3 g
I tablespoon cornstarch
In a bowl, stir together the chicken, fiber, 25 g pro.
6 ounces dried fetru"ine
12 ounces skinless, boneles&amp; chickenbi'Q5t halva, cut into hire-Au pieces
• 2 tablespoons dry sherry
. 2 tablespoons light soy sauce
1 tablespoon grated fresh ginger
2 cloves garlic, minced
Nonstick cooking spray
1 cup sugar snap· peas (strings and tips
· removed)
8 ounces tiny whole carroiS with tops
(about 12}, trimmed
4 green onions, bias-sliced into 1- inch
p1eces
Green onion strips (optional)

BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

- Hope Taft. Ohio flnt lady
'

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�Page (4_

s..n.y, ApiU 29, 2001

,.-

0 'llpcrll • Pom.vy • Point Pine arit

S.ltdiiJ, ..... Je, 2.1

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VEGETARIAN COOKING: LOW-FAT COOKING:.Asian Primavera Stir-Fry
Skillet Double ·combread
and Roasted Vegetables

er milk, oil and eag.Add liqBY THE A$SOCr.\TEO PA£SS
A cook in search of !»!)' uid to drY iapdiems, :dong
recipes for a meadeu meal with the cailQed com. Stir
may wish to consider thetoe untit :UI inpdients are
two: a rich, crunchy- tex- · moiltened and combined.
rured cornbread, and a Spoon into prepared and
hearry dish of ro.asted veg- . preheatcd·lllrillet or pan.
Bake until cornbread is
etables seasoned with honey
firm and gOlden, and pulls
musrard and ocmge.
They could be served for a aW..y fiom the 'sides, 20 to 25
lunch course, or combined minures. Let cool slighdy,
with other dishes for a vege~ · then cut into \W!dges or
taru n buffet spread. ·Note: squarts to serve warm or at
The cornbread includes the room temperature.
use of one egg.
{Ruipt from Cann~d Food
. The cornbread is best Alliana,.J
~
served from warm from the
skillet or pan, when it is still
The vegetables for roastcrusty around the edges. It is ing may be varied to taste .
good with butter for dinner Choose a selection of your
- bm is delicious slathered favorites ; use some you
with strawberry jam for already have at hand, or pick
breakfast, too.
those that look best in the
If you prefer, with this bat- market at. any given season.
ter you could make 12 Colorful choices: red or
muffins (bake 15 to 18 min- green bell peppen, yellow
utes) or 18 corn sticks (bakt squash, red onions and carabout 10 minutes).
' rots.
The vegetables may also
Skillet Double
Cornbread
be served over pasta, or with
Nonstick vegetable spray
rice and beans.
1}, cups all-purpose flour
Hooey-Mu1tard Onnge
%cup. yellow cornmeal
Roa1ted Vegetable•
2 tablespoons sup
(Preparation 10 minutes,
I tablespoon baking powder
cooking time 20 minutes}
6
cups assorted cut-up·veg~ teaspoon salt
~ teaspoon freshly ground
etables
pepper
2 tablespoons olive oil
I cup milk
1 teaspoon minced
'l, cup corn oil
1 teaspoon salt
1 egg
~. cup honey mustard
15 1/4-ounce can whole
2 tablespoons brmge juice
kernel corn, drained
I teaspoon grated orange
Preheat oven' to 400 F.
peel
Coat a 9- or 10-inch cast
Prehe.at oven to 450 E In
iron skillet, or heavy 9-inch routing pan, toss. vegetables
square baking pan, with with oil, garlic and sah.
nonstick vegetable spray. Bakt, uncovered, for 20
Place in oven for 5 minutes minutes, or until vegetables
to preheat.
are tender. Just before servIn a mixing bowl, use a ing, tosa vegetables with
whisk to combine flour, mustard, juice and orange
cornmeal, sugar, baking peel. .
·
powder, salt and pepper. In
Makes 6 servings.
another bowl, whisk togeth(Recipe from French~.)

game

QUICK COOKING:
Potato Crusted Salmon
with Cucumber-Feta Sauce
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

shredded fresh potatoes or
frozen shredded hash-brown
potatoes, thawed
1 tablespoon olive
Lemon wedges and kalamata olives, optional
In small bowl, combine
yogurt, feta cheese, cucumber and mint; set aside.
Pat fish dry with paper
towels; season with salt' arid
pepper. Place ~ cup potato
on top of each fillet, pressing
firmly to form an even layer.
In large nonstick skillet, heat
oil over medi11m heat until
hot. Carefully place fillets,
potato side down, in skillet.
Cook 8 to 10 minutes
(without moving fillets} .
until potatoes . are golden
brown. Using large spatula,
· tum fillets over; cook an
additional 4 to 6 minutes or
until fish is cooked to
desired doneness. Serve with
sauce and, if desired, lemon
and olives.
Makes 4 servings.
Nutrition information per
serving: 362 cal., 18 g fat, 75
mg chol., 3$1 mg sodium, ·
21 g carbo., 2 g fiber, 27 g
pro.

Take stylish sahnon fillets,
encrust them with down-toearth shredded spuds, and in
about half-an-hour a savory
dinner for four is on the
table.
The potatoes can be
shredded fresh, or pre-shredded frozen hash browns,
fried to a golden-brown
crust on the fish fillets. To
complement the salmon,
serve a low-fat cucumberfeta sauce, which adds a
fresh, tangy accent. To further streamline meal preparation, the sauce can be.
made a day in . advance and
refrigerated overnight in an
airtight container.
Potato Crulted ·Salmon
With Cucuinber-Feta
Sauce
(Preparation 10 minutes,
cooking time 20 mi'nutes}
I .
~ cup plain fat-free yogurt
~ cup crumbled feta cheese
, ~ cup chopped seeded
cucumber
~' teaspoon dried mint or
" dill weed
·
4 skinless salmon fillets
. (about 4 ounces each)
~. teaspoon ~alt
Recipe from ·National Potato
'l, teaspoon pepper
2 cups (about 10 ounces} . PrOmotion Board.

oil

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Honey- orange bean and
vegetable salad is a nutritious,
meatless -creation . that can
serve as. a main dish or a side
dish. Its j\licy slaw- style combination of beans, vegetables
and fruit makes it ideal for an
early spring menu.
Note that any kind of
canned or dry-packaged
beans may be substituted for
those suggested in the recipe
- you may vary the types
you use according to your
penonal preference.
Honey-Orange Bean .and
Vegetable Salad
IS-ounce can red kidney
beans or large lima beans, or
1 ~ cups cooked dry-packaged kidney or lima beans,
rinsed and drained
15-ounce can navy beans .or
chickpeas, or 1~' cups cooked
dry-packaged navy beans or
chickpeas, rinsed and drained ·
15-ounce can pinto or red '
beans, or I 'l, cups· cooked
dry-packaged pinto or red
beans, rinsed and drained
2 cups thinly sliced red cab ~
bage
,
1 cup small broccoli florets
/,cup raisins
~(, cup .sliced dried apricots·
~:.cup walnut pieces
Honey-Ora1tge Dressing
· (recipe follows)
·Combine all ingredients
except Honey-Orange Dressing in salad bowL Drizzle
Honey-Orange
Dressing
over, and toss.
Makes l 8 side-dish servings
.
of about /,cup each. .

SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(AP) - Picrte Brosnan joined
environmentalists to protest 'the
Navy's new . low-frequency
sonar, saying the equipment
adversely affects whales and
1narinc: animals.
"h's like a bad ·case of deja
vu ," Brosnan said Thunday. "I
thought we had already saved
the whales."
Brosnan ·spoke during a
news conference staged by the
Natural Resources Defense
• Council. ·

'

Bob and Jewel Evans

VEGETARIAN COOKING:
Honey-Orange Bean
and Vegetable·Salad

University of Rio Grande basketball team
Tammy Brabham/Red's Rollen Garage
Bobbie Holw' in memory of Dr. William R. Smith
James A. and B. Louise Fraley/US &amp; CSales Inc.
Rockwell Automation
Charles Land Dawn M. Rupen
Aid Association for l.uJherans Branch 3%9
GaU/polis Emblem Club No. 199
Mite and Km-en Polcyn
Jessie Collins, amdidate for Gall/a CounJy Conunission
lAdies Auxiliary to the VFW Post 4464 ·
Rilx ofGallipolis
Rolling Acres Farm
Holur Clinic FoundatiOfl
Wilma Webster
Citizens for Carey
The Alcove Bookstore
Tawney Studio
Paul Davies Jewelers
'J'hat Special Touch
The 'Put On Shop
Lorobi's Piu.a .
· The Down Under
Catch of the Day
AAA Travel - Linda Carney, Lois Breech, Nola Kemper. Becky Lutz
Kathryn J. Cameron
••
~ · DaVid L.Mai'tin, Demixiatfor sheriff' •·
R. Shawn and Daivn J. Lew/S,in honor of BreelliiiiQ. and Zachary,r
River Bend ~erinary Hospital/Dr. Allan Boster
Delta Kappa Gamma Society, Beta Alpha Chapter
River Valley football /lUIS
South Gall/a football fans
GaUia Academy football /lUIS
Brown's 'lhlstwo11hy Hardware
William and Samantha Hatcher
Bill Davis, candidate for Gall/a County Commission
Bowman's Homecare Medical Center

'kp" .

Nutrition information per
serving: 297 cal., 8 g fat, 49 g
carbo., 412 mg sodium, 12 g
pro. , .tO g dietary fiber, 0 mg
chol.

· sAVIN~ .

New Wallcovering
Winttow
*New Carpet

Hoaey-Onnge Dretting
~ cup cider vinegar
~. to~ cup honey
3 tablespoons fiozen orange
juice concentrate
2 tablespoons canola oil
2 teaspoons poppy seeds ·
Mix all ingredients thoroughly.

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to receive
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POOLS AND

lnlllllldOIL
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Pleasant Valley
Obstetric Department~
(304) 675-4340,. Ext. 1230

HUNTINGTON, WV

.HOLIDAYPOOL.

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GA-LUA-

w1nner

Top 10 Ma~e a !liffe~ence
Day proJed 1n Oh1~
Governor's Commumty
· Servi~ Council

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2001 w1nner

a:

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$2,000 state honoree

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National finalist
Make a Difference Day 1
USA Weekend magazine .

.I'EA-DS

.

,,

uit was the
single most
"E
significant
cg
c:
day I've
en
c
;!:
spent as first lady. And
!:(
.I've
attended
more
~
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than 400 events.·n
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"Think Ahead For A Healthy Baby,"

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Bidweii-Poner Elementary tetiChers and staff
Mt. Carmel Baptist Cluurh
Gallipolis City Schools' Academic Booster Club
Jessie Payne/SouthetJstem Ohio Branch NAACP
Philomathean Club
Annual Emancipation Day CelebratiOfllnc.
Harley Owners Group
The Pembroke Group
Central Supply Co.
T11110/hy H. and Angela D. Mills
Wal-Man Foundation
Rob and Kathy Yoong ·
Learn and Serve America
Big River E/ec/rif
Ohio Valley Christian School
Haffelts Mill Outlet
Charles I. and Marjorie A. Adkins
Pauline B. Wetherholl, in memory of Mamling Wetherlrolt
The Kiwanis Club of Gallipolis
Men Only Bible Study Group
Farmers Bank
People's Bank
Gallipolis City Schools Business Advisory CoWICil
God Squad Sunday School class
TOPS 1954 of Gallipolis
Dr. Daniel H. and Edna Whitely
. Borden,lnc.
Buckeye Hills Career Center
Gallipolis Chiropractic CenJer
Daniel M. Evans
1/Qben G. and Terri B. Marchi
GWRRA Chapter C-2
Bossard Memorial Library staff and Friends of the Library
George and Betty Jean Tyman
University ofRio Grande Society of Honor StudeTIIS
Wetnam Veterans ofAmerica
Simpson Chapel United Methodist ~n
John Gee Black Historicdl CenJer

•

In

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.Mane Designers Full Service Salon
\lbshingiOII ElemeirJary Schoolltudents
Max and Mabel Tawney
River Valley High School base students .
OFWC Galli[xJ/is Junior llbmen's Club
Gallipolis Career College
Gallipolis &amp;ss Busters
Ga/lia County Retired Teachers Association
University ofRio Grandt llbmen 's Club
Gall/a.Academy Key Club
Hannan Trace StudenJ Council
Golikn Co"al t! Gallipolis
DeMis Salisbury. Republican for sheriff
Wistman Real Estate and David Wiseman family
Martha E. Six
Places to Go Trave~ Beverly Schultz. l.ona McKoy
Soulhwestern Elementary School PTO
Dr. and Mrs. Balusamy Subbiflh
Toler and Toler Insurance Services
,.
Patricia Silk
French City Antique and Craft MaU
Gallipolis Elks Lodge I07
World Wrestling Fediration
Addaville Elemenwy School PTO
Gallipolis Lions Club
Rodney Supply Co.
· GaUia County 1.Jx;QJ Education Association
LaWmrce Tawirey, candidate for Gall/a County Commission
. Davis library/U{Iiversity ofRio Grande
,AJ/-Greek CoJliiCi/IUniversity ofRio Grande
Jessie Payne/Southeastern Ohio Branch NAACP
GaUipolis City Schools board members and administrators
Gallipolis Education AssociaiWn
Raymond C. and Wkki L. Lieving
Joan E. Schmidt
First-Step Mothers League
Kmart Good News Committee
Darkne Saunders' thbrl-graders/Bidweli-Porter Ekmt1116ry

j

'

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Pierce Brosn1n

-

sherry, soy sauce, ginger and garlic; set:
aside.' .
Chicken, fettuccine, ginger and sugar
Lighdy coat a wok or lirge skillet: with
snap peas are among· the lively mix of
nonstick cooking spray. Heat .wok or
ingredienu in Asian Primavera Slir-Fry; a
dish that delivers taste and nutrition
skillet over ~um- high heat. Slir-fiy
sugar snap peas and carrots for 3 to 4
without an overload of fat.
minutes or until crisp-tender. Add green
The recipe is in the chapter headed
onions and stir- fry for I minute more.
"Wise Entrees," in Better Homes and
Gardens' "The Smart Diet The Right
Remove vegetables from wok; set
Approach · to Weight Loss" (Meredith,
aside. Add chicktn mixture to wolc. StirS24.95).
fry for 2 ro 4 minutes or until chicken is
The book suggests allowing younelf
no longer pink. Push chicktn fiom cenfreedom from diet mania by following
ter of wok. Stir cornstarCh mixture; add
what the editon call a nondiet approach,
to center of wok.
eating sensibly and following the USDA
Cook and stir until thicktned and
food pyramid advice on servings.
bubbly.
Plenty of recipes are lined up, many
In a small bowl, combine dried mush•
Return vegetables· to wok. Add mush\vith color photos, to help make thil eat- roonu and l cup warm water; let stand rooms and pasta. Stir to coat with sauce.
ing plan tasry and appealing. Tl~ey range for 15. minutes. Drain mushrooms, Cook and sti• for l minute or until heatfiom "Snurt Snacks" through "Satisfying squeezing out excess liquid; reserve liq- e d through. If desired, g:trnish with green
Soups" and "Skip the Meac;· to "No- uic!. Slice mushroom caps; discard stems. onion c urls.
Guilt Desserts."
Stir cornstarch into .reserved mushroom · Makes 4 servings.
liquid.
Nutrition information per se rving: 333
Asian Primavera Stir-Fry
Meanwhile, cook pas~ according to . caL , 3 gtotal fat (I g saturate d fat}, 45 mg
I ounce dried shiitake mushrooms
package directions. Drain ; keep warm.
. cho1., .324 mg sodium, 48 g carbo., 3 g
I tablespoon cornstarch
In a bowl, stir together the chicken, fiber, 25 g pro.
6 ounces dried fetru"ine
12 ounces skinless, boneles&amp; chickenbi'Q5t halva, cut into hire-Au pieces
• 2 tablespoons dry sherry
. 2 tablespoons light soy sauce
1 tablespoon grated fresh ginger
2 cloves garlic, minced
Nonstick cooking spray
1 cup sugar snap· peas (strings and tips
· removed)
8 ounces tiny whole carroiS with tops
(about 12}, trimmed
4 green onions, bias-sliced into 1- inch
p1eces
Green onion strips (optional)

BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS

- Hope Taft. Ohio flnt lady
'

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�PomleOJ •lllddl1part • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pl•nnt. WV

Offering goodbyes to pastor
and wife leaving the area
e're
all
going to
miss Oark
and Bonnie Baker,
· who will be leaving Middle. pon next month for a new
,pastorate in Hamilron.
The couple came ro rown
MEIGS
more than 20 years ago where
be p:aSrored the Middleport
Pentecostal Church, and she a community to lose a school
opened Tiny Tech, a pre- and Letart, Portland and Syra• school. Their two sons, Seth, cuse residents must be having
, now in college, and Andrew, a twinges of sadness as the last
junior at Meigs High, have day of school grows near.
Children
from
those
grown up here.
Residents became well schools will be going into a
acquainted with the genial brand new building at Racine
:;.. couple through . the pre- · next faD, and that's wonderful.
.-'school program and also It's just that a community
::through Rev. Baker and his without a school is somehow
~congregation's work parking diminished.
Residents of Salem Center
:;: cars at the Meigs County Fair.
1
; : It was a fund-raiser for the in the Meigs Local School
: church, with many members ·District are probably feeling
: taking their vacations to help the same way. Tuesday night,
- out, and the preacher right in the Board of Education voted
; there moving around the fair- to close that school and move
: grounds on a golf can super- the students and staff to the
Rutland building. It was a
: vising the whole operation.
; . Anyways, we 'II all have an decision based on declining
: opportunity to say goodbye to enroDment, building mainte: ·the Bakers at a reception nance, and utility costs.
In the faD of 2003, Meigs
: being planned for Wednesday
: -night &amp;om 7-9 at the church. Local will be making the
• Their friends and associates same transition, as Southern
; are invited to join the congre- will be making this fall, but
on a much larger scale. Ele: gation for the farewell. · .
mentaty schools in six com: . While many leave here for munities will be consolidated
: employment or opt to retire into one huge building near
; . in a warmer climate, they Rutland and the middle
; often leave · their heart in school now in Middleport
: Meigs County, returning will go into a new building to
: occasionally to visit friends be constructed near the high
school.
: and relatives.
. So it has been with Clayron
Just a reminder the
; and Virgene Bahr, who many
&lt;~nnual
benefit
dinner
to
raise
: yean ago moved to Florida.
. :. Wednesday, they will observe money to pay for the restora·. their 65th wedding anniver- tion of the Chester Court:: sary and for those· who want house will be held Friday
&gt;to remember them with a night at Royal Oak Resort.
Tickets at SI0 each for the
:: card, the address is 805 35th
:. Ave.,Vero Beach, Fla., 32960. dinner and entertainment by ·
:;
.
musician Moon MuDen are
:: We're waiting, we're waiting on ~ale around the county.
· :· - for those walls of the old There wiD also be an auction
:- burned out buildings on West of donated items.
Again this year, the Modern
:- Main in Pomeroy to come
Woodmen
will match every·· tumbling down.
:- Several weeks ago village thing made at the benefit din:: officials
reported
that ner up to $2,500. What that
:_arrangements had been made means to the restoration com· to clean up the mess which mittee is that the money dou:· has been a viDage eyesore for bles on everything up to that
:. more months than many of us limit. Can't , beat that .for
stretching a buck. .
;: care can remember.
(Ch~rlmc Hoifliclr is general
.· We're still waiting.
•

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&gt;'

...J

Charlene
Hoeflich

...

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...

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...

always disconcerting for

Sundlly, Ap11121, 2001
~. Aprtl29, 2001

Concrete advice for defensive driving
ALLIPOLIS
~&lt;:h of us

-

can expect to

be in a car
accident about
evety I() ~ars. For one in 20,
it will be a serious crash. You
.Collins
may be a sltilled driver but dn
you know how to avoid acciFAMILY
dent&gt; -caused by unexpected
situations and reclcless, inexperienced or drunken dri- right and left rear of your
vers?
c;ar.
People in car crashes often
• Be especially patient in
respond with, "I never saw it rush hour traffic. Prepare for
coming," or, "It happened so sudden stops, lane changes
fast there was nothing I and unhappy drivers. Feelcould do."
ing anxious and irritable can
Experts say there is some- · affect anyone's driving decithing people can do to avoid sions.
crashes - it's called defen• Respect traffic laws.
sive driving. Here are some They exist to protect your
tips to help improve your safety. Exceeding the speed
defensive driving skills.
limit, for example, or failing
• Start with a safe vehicle. to signal can increase your
For example, check your · risk of a collision .
vehicle's lights, belts, fluids
• Respect the dark. Driand tire treads periodically.
• Check your own condition. Don't drive after using
alcohol or when ·sleepy;·
these are the two most
cornmon factors involved
in fatal crashes
• Buclcle · up. That
includes yo~ and all passengen. Safety belts properly
used nearly double your
chances of survival in a
serious crash.
• Give yourself space.
Going 30 mph on a dry
road, give yourself rwo to
three seconds to stop, or
about five car lengths.
yourllody.
Increase the distance as
your speed increases.
• Always scan the road
ahead for hazards. Spotting
trouble early - even a split
second early - can _give
you time and space to react
to emergencies.
.
• Check the blind spots.
Before changing lanes, turn FURNITURE I · DESIGN
and look quiclcly to see ·1..-• ...•~'~~""""••·ro.cown.,~l
what's immediately to the
Gtrlllpollo ,,.,., WV 675-1371

Becky

ving at night is huardo111
because it's much hatder to
see other vehicles and road
obstacles. You're also more
apt to encounter drunk drivers at night. Slow down
and drive farther behind
other vehicles.
• Stay attentive. Traffic
authorities say the most
serious hazard to everyday
drivers is simple distractions
like smoking, eating,
using a car phone or fiddling with the car radio.
. Don't forget that driving
is a full-time, full-concentration activity.
• Watch those intersections. Half of aU in-city collisions happen at intersec. tions. Most occur because of
failure to yield right-of- way.
The · vehicle on the left

State proficiency testing reviewed for DAR chapters

always yields to the vehicle
on the righL
Rolling stops at interse~­
tions can be a bad hab1t
since driven can misjudge
what ~other vehicle will
do and collide.
The
most important
defense at an intersection is
to keep your eyes peeled for
driven who run red lights.
Approach the intersection
with caution and be alert
for pedestrians who cross
against the light.
(&amp;clcy Collins is Gallia
Counl)'~ /;xltnsion agnrt for
fonrily tmJ consumer sdmw,
Ollit~ Stat~ University.)

POMEROY - A talk on
state proficiency tests and
public concerns w:as given by
John W Milhoan, president of
the Retired Teachers Association, at .a recent meeting of
Return . Jonathan
Meigs
• Chapter, Daughters of the
America Revolution.
Milhoan said that currently
the tests are required for graduation, help determine · the ·
criteria for school report
urds, make students more
accountable, measure teacher
. competency, but fail to recogniu that all students are not
equal and do (lOt have equal
opportunities.
He talked about financial
differences in districts, the
advantage of more affiuent
districts, and charged that the
test suppresses teachers' creativity, are time-consuming,
· and put undo stress on stu. : d~ms preparing for and taking
; the tests.
He proposed an alternative
plan for vocational students
who have acadeluic subjects
only one-half day.
. The speaker 'also discussed
: the qualifications of the test

GOSPEL MEETING
Church of Christ at Rio Grande
Rio Grande, OH

Dr. Charles Aebi
from Parkersburg, WV

!Getting

~ strawberries

Morning 10:00 Bible Study
11:00 Worship, Evening 6:00
April30-May 2., Mon-Wed, 6:30p.m.

•
Dud!

&gt;

..

.,

nou•a
...
l ...liPII

291SEC-n,
Accepts Credit Cards

WE
TIE 11&amp;111 TO liMIT QUAi liliES
l'tiCES GOOD SUI 4/29111U SAT. 5/5

PEPSI, MT. DEW,

IOIILECOUPOIS

PEPPEl, 7 UP,.,
1001 IEEI,
OUIIIE SUCE,
LIPTON IIISI

il

2UTEAS

A box of mail-order straw- ·
a sorry sight: 25
stubby plants, leafless or near~ ly leafless, bound with a rub" her band. The plants are
shipped in a dormant state,
but given warmth and soil,
they will soon come to life.
Alth\)L!gh . wild strawberries
, often grow in dappled shade,
the plants thrive in full sun.
, They also need soil that is
l well-drained and rich in .
' organic matter. If you cannot
plant immediately, make sure
, the roots are moist and keep
: the package refrigerated.
~ Strawberry plants spread by
runncn, atenu that · creep
• along the IJround and form
: new plants at int~rvals along
' their length. The "matted
row" system of strawberry
; planting makes full use of
: these runncn. Set plants far
apart - four feet between
rows and two feet berween
: plants- arid let the spaces fiD
· in with runners. Wfien the
matted row tries to spread
beyond 'a two-foot width,
: keep it in bounds with a
: rototiUer or by hand.
The Qpposite extreme in
strawberry planting is the
~ "hill" system. Set plants in a
~ double row with 12 ainches
betWeen rows and ' between
, plal)ts. Pinch off e.very runner
: that forms so that the plants
' cannot spread at all.
The hill system is neater
and yields the most berries
the first ·bearing season : ,W ith
' a matted row, you need less
plants to ·start with. ·
•
• Before planting strawber: ries, regardless of the system,
trim the roots to four inches,
then drop the plants into a
; shaDow pan of wat~r to keep
' them moist.
Open a slit in the ground
for each plant, fan out its
: roots, then firm the soil.
' Plan;ing depth is important
- the ground line should· go
, right through the .middle of
·the crown.
' Set too shallowly,,the plants
dry out; set too deeply, they
suffocate.
t The plams will soon sprout
l new leaves, then £10\vers.
Pinch off any flowers that
, form the first thirty days after
. :planting so that as much energy as possible can be pumped
into growing new roots.
1 Alter that, everbearing types
~ wHI continue to flower, bearing fr~its later this sumn~er.
Tradition,!•
;u nebearmg
• stra\vberries wilk pnly gro':"
: leaves · and runners this year
and yield their first delectable
·
fruits next year.

ECKRICH

u.. . $239 DEL MONTE.
Smorgas Pac ••••••••••
·
SQUEEZE
ECKRICH
. .
$ 59 KETCHUP

~berry plants is

Everyone is Welcome!

..

L..----~~

Thanks To All Who Contributed In Any
Way To Bring_ing Tlte Power Team
Ministry to The Tr1-County Area
-The Ohio Valley Crusaae ·For ChristGod Added To The Khigdom Dally • O~er 10,000 People Attended The
Power Team Crusade, March 28 ·April 1 • 1,118 Souls Were Saved
P.D.K. ConttnJdion. Jnc.
Reed's Cpyptry SlQre
We1am'1 Conatructign. lnc1

Moynt Union Church

CHURCHES §&gt; ,
RELATED GROUPS
Middleport Cburch of Christ
Ladles for the Lord
Firlt Southern Baptiat Cbyrsb

BUSINESSES
Fprggyn &amp;; . Abbott
Pomerox Fopd Sbgp
Crow' p·Steak House

Aaape Life Center
.
L&amp;urel Cliff Free Methodist Churdt

Robed L. RuiJolph. M,D.

CocptbaJJ .. Simmonalnoyrance. Inc:.

Baum Lumber Co.

Jay Hal). IL
C.r Care Dqcton. Inc.
Y,.ughan' 1 Suwnnarket
Pepsi BoHling Cpmpany·Athcn•

Bernard y, Fultz
Gruener I; 5ml

Middleport Mlnl&amp;Jedal Assosiatigp
faith Chapel Open Bible Church

.

Brown's Taxidermy

Golden Comll

Mt. Hermon United Brethem Chord!
· CarJetgn Q!urcb
Carelton CbyJ'Sb Bulldin1 fund •

Qffl£1 Sgn1ce &amp;: Supply
Liltle. Sbeetl &amp;e Warner
Crow&amp;iCrow

Reedtyil!c United Metbodilt Churth
Pen!eg!stal Assembly

· Michael B. Swiger. Agent

Bob Eyana
MilUe's
.
Iydy f(av's
Pt. Pleasant Wellness Center
Qhig valley Bank

ML Ollye Sunday School
ReJoldDg Ule Chutcb

. fil2m §luul.

Syper 8 Mold

Entezprlle United Metbod!ot CburdJ
Mt. Moriah Baptist Cb»rdt

.Hgme NatiQnal Bank

!Abundant Gracel ·

.

!'l!gples Banis
fanner's Bank

Wcatmogland family Cm Center

HU! It Son Greenhoyte
SnowyUJe Cys!Qm Sawlna ·

Harvest Outreac:h Ministrica1
· Meta• Coynty
'
Mlnlttcdal Aasgcfatign
~ Epiuooal Church

PJrze Hut Pizy.

J2.l!&amp;

Hob19D CbrJstian FCJiowtblp Church
Pomcmy United Mctbgdlat Cbursh
Heath United McthodJst CburclJ
Soytb Bethel New Testament Cbun;h
Salem Center United
Mithodtat Church
Bey. CUbed 6; Patricia Cqig. Jr.
A1b Street Church

The Dally Scptlncl
Domino's Pizza
Deagle' 1 Pizza
P&amp;;MPizu

Ngrrla &amp; Son Greenhpysg

first Baptist CbyrclJ of Middleport

\1

Weber Construction. Ips.
Rutland BoWe Gat
·f!ther-Acree Fyneral Hgme
Dgwnng£bild• Agcnsy. Ins. ·
Dr. apd Mg. Douglas D. HunJer
Radne Ameri,an Lealan ·

Dpn Tate MpiQD, Inc.
Jd.. Cpunty Bgokkrepigs
Jobp Teeford Koyptrv Club ,
.
Mc;DguJd'1

•

~

OTHERS
FransgReed

Geome Wrlaht

Mr...ll Mg. Tpmmy I. Reed
William &amp; Syc Iubbo .
Jane Waltop
Melas Cauntv Sheriffs DepL ·

.

fire Departmegtl
Mgip HJBh Sshool

Melg• Lm;al

School

Dittdst

0 0

·-/

•

'"

1

Lunch Makerl·••~,.

1"

.

selves.
"Nancy Casteel was a dedicated pediatric nurse who
saw children as her mission,
not only children who were
patients on her unit, but all
children," Hart said. "Nancy
felt keeping them healthy
was as important as caring for
them when they were ill. It
was her passion."
Hart said it is this commitment that differentiates a
"job" from a "life work." In
her presentation, Hart will
focus on the commitment
Casteel made and its influence not only .on children's,
but also adult· lives, ·and how
everyone has that opportuni. ty to serve others, not just as
a nurse, but as a human
being.
.
Other membets of · the
seminar include Robert D.
Ingram, doctor of Ministry,
Grace United Methodist
Church in Gallipblis; Susan
Jenkins, RN, BS, MS, Ph.D,
senior program officer, the ·
Hitachi Foundation, and a
classinate of Nancy Casieel at
Holzer School ·of Nursing;
Carol M. Sholtis, M.D.,
Holzer Clinic Department of.
Oncology, retired; and Deanna L. Tribe, assistant professor,
OSU Family and Consumer
.Services,
For information or to
answer registration questions,
contact Sa~a A. Northup; at
' 245-0485.

.. •.,•....,

:

SA!i5(

·"
,•

RIO GRANDE-"Nurs~ ing:A Life of Service," a con:- tinuing educatiQn program
: for nurses, will be presented
:· May 12 in the Morris E.
': Haskins Auditorium, Bob
;. Evans Farms Hall, at the
&gt; University
of
Rio
: Grande/Rio Grande Com:- munity College.
.
• A portion of the registra·: tion fee is to be donated to
: the Nancy Casteel Memorial
· Fund, established in Septem: ber 2000·.
:- The seminar starts at 9 a.m.
: and continues until 3:30 p.m.
~ The theme' will focus on the
~ keys .to prolonging and
:: enriching nursing, as a life of
: service in Appalachia.
•· Included on the faculty is
: Sandra M . Hart, RNC, BSN,
:. director of Maternity/Family
:: Services at Holzer Medical
Center. In her role, Hart has
=: a special insight into how
:. stresses -mental, emotional
· · and physical - play out in
the lives of all health professionals, especially thos.e with
whom she works.
I'
"This is an opportunity to
define the essence of riursing
and how service to others
:. can become · a way to share
: the talents and abilities given
· to each· of us as a person,"
Hart said.
·I
Her presentation will be in
:. the context of nursing, but
:: can be applied to anyone
~ who decides to give of them-

MT. DEW
PRODUCTS

BY LEE REICH.
~ WEEKlY FEATURES

:.

[Nursing ,seminar
f: set at Rio Grande
:.

which officers for 2001..03
were named. They are Abbie
Stratton, regent; Emma Ashley, vice regent; Carol Sisson,
chaplain; Anna Cleland,
recording secretary; Patricia
Holter, - assistant recording
secretary; Peggy Moore, corresponding secretary; Karen
Werry, treasurer; Rae Moore,
registrar; Gljlce Warner, hisrorian; and Pauline Atkins,
librarian.
The May meetiog will be
held May 11 at the Eastern
Library, t p.m.

1good start

· '' --~--------;---

.

gade test to stiU receive a teachers are working to estabdiploma.
lish a fair and clear tw.luation
The speaker suggested that of students' prog~e~ss as is
anyone interested in umpling needed to chart reacher comthe state's practice high school petency and student accomgraduation enm log on to plishment.
·
the state eeb site at
In conclusion, Milhoan said
www.ode.state.oh.us .
that •tudents should always be
He indicated that he ·encouraged to do their veiy
believes inflated grades in the ,best, be given the opportunity
past have been intluential in for tutoring and summer
the introduction of the Profi- school, and other resources
ciency Test, but contended needed for a well-rounded
that the Ohio State Depart- educational experience.
ment of Education , loc:al
Peggy Moore, vice regent,
Boards of Education and presided at the meeting, in

'

urauaxcr af 11rc Daily Scrrtincl,
Pomcro)'.)

'

duL
Milltoan also discussed the
Senate bill ioooduced by Sen.
Robert Gardner on March 28
to abolish proficiency tests
and replace them with a series
of achievement exams, starting with reading in the thinl
grade and ending with a. 1Oth
grade graduation test.
The exams would replace
the current weelclong, five· subject fourth grade proficiency tesl and allow certain
students who failed one of the
five subjects on the I Oth

!off to a

lldl!!~ SfiZ
0

FLAIR

graders, the topics included
on the tests, and the pomble
ufleecing of the uxpayen"
when it comes to the 12th
grade proficiency teSt, which
is not required for graduation.
Milhoan noted that the
State Legislature reviewed md
voted to III2U the grul.uation
rest harder. Under the revised
test, according to the ipeaker,
stu!L;nts who don't pass all
five sections the ipring of
their sophomore year will
have more chances in the
summers and •prings after

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPOIS

April 19th

1.oc1tec1 on SFI325N
Approx.ISOO ft from SR35

Pomen.Jf • lllddl•port• G r'l~ OhJo • Point Pleasant, WV

ARMOUR CENTER CUT

.

.

Bacon •••••••••••• u,.,

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2401.

$229

c.

·

.,
Ham...........l.,.•.· 1
ECKRICH COOKED

.$

· ..

2001.

AUNT JANE'S
HAMBURGER
DILL CHIPS

• MAXWELL
HOUSE

1Doz.pkg

$
239

can

$ 59

HEALTHY
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Z1p Pac Meats••••• ·
SWIFT CANNED

31

Hams •••••••••••••••••••••
ECKRICH PILLOW PAC

•
Pepperon••••••••••••

5

$199

B~

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1hz. pkg

Cuts •••••••••••
AMERICAN

•

$129

Se....................
Boz.

$239

Bags ••••••••:;:::~ •••
oz. pk.

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3.9

UMIT 1 PLEASE ADD PURCH

$4.1111

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TUNA

oil or water

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1 ROLL

----

�PomleOJ •lllddl1part • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pl•nnt. WV

Offering goodbyes to pastor
and wife leaving the area
e're
all
going to
miss Oark
and Bonnie Baker,
· who will be leaving Middle. pon next month for a new
,pastorate in Hamilron.
The couple came ro rown
MEIGS
more than 20 years ago where
be p:aSrored the Middleport
Pentecostal Church, and she a community to lose a school
opened Tiny Tech, a pre- and Letart, Portland and Syra• school. Their two sons, Seth, cuse residents must be having
, now in college, and Andrew, a twinges of sadness as the last
junior at Meigs High, have day of school grows near.
Children
from
those
grown up here.
Residents became well schools will be going into a
acquainted with the genial brand new building at Racine
:;.. couple through . the pre- · next faD, and that's wonderful.
.-'school program and also It's just that a community
::through Rev. Baker and his without a school is somehow
~congregation's work parking diminished.
Residents of Salem Center
:;: cars at the Meigs County Fair.
1
; : It was a fund-raiser for the in the Meigs Local School
: church, with many members ·District are probably feeling
: taking their vacations to help the same way. Tuesday night,
- out, and the preacher right in the Board of Education voted
; there moving around the fair- to close that school and move
: grounds on a golf can super- the students and staff to the
Rutland building. It was a
: vising the whole operation.
; . Anyways, we 'II all have an decision based on declining
: opportunity to say goodbye to enroDment, building mainte: ·the Bakers at a reception nance, and utility costs.
In the faD of 2003, Meigs
: being planned for Wednesday
: -night &amp;om 7-9 at the church. Local will be making the
• Their friends and associates same transition, as Southern
; are invited to join the congre- will be making this fall, but
on a much larger scale. Ele: gation for the farewell. · .
mentaty schools in six com: . While many leave here for munities will be consolidated
: employment or opt to retire into one huge building near
; . in a warmer climate, they Rutland and the middle
; often leave · their heart in school now in Middleport
: Meigs County, returning will go into a new building to
: occasionally to visit friends be constructed near the high
school.
: and relatives.
. So it has been with Clayron
Just a reminder the
; and Virgene Bahr, who many
&lt;~nnual
benefit
dinner
to
raise
: yean ago moved to Florida.
. :. Wednesday, they will observe money to pay for the restora·. their 65th wedding anniver- tion of the Chester Court:: sary and for those· who want house will be held Friday
&gt;to remember them with a night at Royal Oak Resort.
Tickets at SI0 each for the
:: card, the address is 805 35th
:. Ave.,Vero Beach, Fla., 32960. dinner and entertainment by ·
:;
.
musician Moon MuDen are
:: We're waiting, we're waiting on ~ale around the county.
· :· - for those walls of the old There wiD also be an auction
:- burned out buildings on West of donated items.
Again this year, the Modern
:- Main in Pomeroy to come
Woodmen
will match every·· tumbling down.
:- Several weeks ago village thing made at the benefit din:: officials
reported
that ner up to $2,500. What that
:_arrangements had been made means to the restoration com· to clean up the mess which mittee is that the money dou:· has been a viDage eyesore for bles on everything up to that
:. more months than many of us limit. Can't , beat that .for
stretching a buck. .
;: care can remember.
(Ch~rlmc Hoifliclr is general
.· We're still waiting.
•

...

&gt;'

...J

Charlene
Hoeflich

...

:

•••

...

::
~

l~s

...

always disconcerting for

Sundlly, Ap11121, 2001
~. Aprtl29, 2001

Concrete advice for defensive driving
ALLIPOLIS
~&lt;:h of us

-

can expect to

be in a car
accident about
evety I() ~ars. For one in 20,
it will be a serious crash. You
.Collins
may be a sltilled driver but dn
you know how to avoid acciFAMILY
dent&gt; -caused by unexpected
situations and reclcless, inexperienced or drunken dri- right and left rear of your
vers?
c;ar.
People in car crashes often
• Be especially patient in
respond with, "I never saw it rush hour traffic. Prepare for
coming," or, "It happened so sudden stops, lane changes
fast there was nothing I and unhappy drivers. Feelcould do."
ing anxious and irritable can
Experts say there is some- · affect anyone's driving decithing people can do to avoid sions.
crashes - it's called defen• Respect traffic laws.
sive driving. Here are some They exist to protect your
tips to help improve your safety. Exceeding the speed
defensive driving skills.
limit, for example, or failing
• Start with a safe vehicle. to signal can increase your
For example, check your · risk of a collision .
vehicle's lights, belts, fluids
• Respect the dark. Driand tire treads periodically.
• Check your own condition. Don't drive after using
alcohol or when ·sleepy;·
these are the two most
cornmon factors involved
in fatal crashes
• Buclcle · up. That
includes yo~ and all passengen. Safety belts properly
used nearly double your
chances of survival in a
serious crash.
• Give yourself space.
Going 30 mph on a dry
road, give yourself rwo to
three seconds to stop, or
about five car lengths.
yourllody.
Increase the distance as
your speed increases.
• Always scan the road
ahead for hazards. Spotting
trouble early - even a split
second early - can _give
you time and space to react
to emergencies.
.
• Check the blind spots.
Before changing lanes, turn FURNITURE I · DESIGN
and look quiclcly to see ·1..-• ...•~'~~""""••·ro.cown.,~l
what's immediately to the
Gtrlllpollo ,,.,., WV 675-1371

Becky

ving at night is huardo111
because it's much hatder to
see other vehicles and road
obstacles. You're also more
apt to encounter drunk drivers at night. Slow down
and drive farther behind
other vehicles.
• Stay attentive. Traffic
authorities say the most
serious hazard to everyday
drivers is simple distractions
like smoking, eating,
using a car phone or fiddling with the car radio.
. Don't forget that driving
is a full-time, full-concentration activity.
• Watch those intersections. Half of aU in-city collisions happen at intersec. tions. Most occur because of
failure to yield right-of- way.
The · vehicle on the left

State proficiency testing reviewed for DAR chapters

always yields to the vehicle
on the righL
Rolling stops at interse~­
tions can be a bad hab1t
since driven can misjudge
what ~other vehicle will
do and collide.
The
most important
defense at an intersection is
to keep your eyes peeled for
driven who run red lights.
Approach the intersection
with caution and be alert
for pedestrians who cross
against the light.
(&amp;clcy Collins is Gallia
Counl)'~ /;xltnsion agnrt for
fonrily tmJ consumer sdmw,
Ollit~ Stat~ University.)

POMEROY - A talk on
state proficiency tests and
public concerns w:as given by
John W Milhoan, president of
the Retired Teachers Association, at .a recent meeting of
Return . Jonathan
Meigs
• Chapter, Daughters of the
America Revolution.
Milhoan said that currently
the tests are required for graduation, help determine · the ·
criteria for school report
urds, make students more
accountable, measure teacher
. competency, but fail to recogniu that all students are not
equal and do (lOt have equal
opportunities.
He talked about financial
differences in districts, the
advantage of more affiuent
districts, and charged that the
test suppresses teachers' creativity, are time-consuming,
· and put undo stress on stu. : d~ms preparing for and taking
; the tests.
He proposed an alternative
plan for vocational students
who have acadeluic subjects
only one-half day.
. The speaker 'also discussed
: the qualifications of the test

GOSPEL MEETING
Church of Christ at Rio Grande
Rio Grande, OH

Dr. Charles Aebi
from Parkersburg, WV

!Getting

~ strawberries

Morning 10:00 Bible Study
11:00 Worship, Evening 6:00
April30-May 2., Mon-Wed, 6:30p.m.

•
Dud!

&gt;

..

.,

nou•a
...
l ...liPII

291SEC-n,
Accepts Credit Cards

WE
TIE 11&amp;111 TO liMIT QUAi liliES
l'tiCES GOOD SUI 4/29111U SAT. 5/5

PEPSI, MT. DEW,

IOIILECOUPOIS

PEPPEl, 7 UP,.,
1001 IEEI,
OUIIIE SUCE,
LIPTON IIISI

il

2UTEAS

A box of mail-order straw- ·
a sorry sight: 25
stubby plants, leafless or near~ ly leafless, bound with a rub" her band. The plants are
shipped in a dormant state,
but given warmth and soil,
they will soon come to life.
Alth\)L!gh . wild strawberries
, often grow in dappled shade,
the plants thrive in full sun.
, They also need soil that is
l well-drained and rich in .
' organic matter. If you cannot
plant immediately, make sure
, the roots are moist and keep
: the package refrigerated.
~ Strawberry plants spread by
runncn, atenu that · creep
• along the IJround and form
: new plants at int~rvals along
' their length. The "matted
row" system of strawberry
; planting makes full use of
: these runncn. Set plants far
apart - four feet between
rows and two feet berween
: plants- arid let the spaces fiD
· in with runners. Wfien the
matted row tries to spread
beyond 'a two-foot width,
: keep it in bounds with a
: rototiUer or by hand.
The Qpposite extreme in
strawberry planting is the
~ "hill" system. Set plants in a
~ double row with 12 ainches
betWeen rows and ' between
, plal)ts. Pinch off e.very runner
: that forms so that the plants
' cannot spread at all.
The hill system is neater
and yields the most berries
the first ·bearing season : ,W ith
' a matted row, you need less
plants to ·start with. ·
•
• Before planting strawber: ries, regardless of the system,
trim the roots to four inches,
then drop the plants into a
; shaDow pan of wat~r to keep
' them moist.
Open a slit in the ground
for each plant, fan out its
: roots, then firm the soil.
' Plan;ing depth is important
- the ground line should· go
, right through the .middle of
·the crown.
' Set too shallowly,,the plants
dry out; set too deeply, they
suffocate.
t The plams will soon sprout
l new leaves, then £10\vers.
Pinch off any flowers that
, form the first thirty days after
. :planting so that as much energy as possible can be pumped
into growing new roots.
1 Alter that, everbearing types
~ wHI continue to flower, bearing fr~its later this sumn~er.
Tradition,!•
;u nebearmg
• stra\vberries wilk pnly gro':"
: leaves · and runners this year
and yield their first delectable
·
fruits next year.

ECKRICH

u.. . $239 DEL MONTE.
Smorgas Pac ••••••••••
·
SQUEEZE
ECKRICH
. .
$ 59 KETCHUP

~berry plants is

Everyone is Welcome!

..

L..----~~

Thanks To All Who Contributed In Any
Way To Bring_ing Tlte Power Team
Ministry to The Tr1-County Area
-The Ohio Valley Crusaae ·For ChristGod Added To The Khigdom Dally • O~er 10,000 People Attended The
Power Team Crusade, March 28 ·April 1 • 1,118 Souls Were Saved
P.D.K. ConttnJdion. Jnc.
Reed's Cpyptry SlQre
We1am'1 Conatructign. lnc1

Moynt Union Church

CHURCHES §&gt; ,
RELATED GROUPS
Middleport Cburch of Christ
Ladles for the Lord
Firlt Southern Baptiat Cbyrsb

BUSINESSES
Fprggyn &amp;; . Abbott
Pomerox Fopd Sbgp
Crow' p·Steak House

Aaape Life Center
.
L&amp;urel Cliff Free Methodist Churdt

Robed L. RuiJolph. M,D.

CocptbaJJ .. Simmonalnoyrance. Inc:.

Baum Lumber Co.

Jay Hal). IL
C.r Care Dqcton. Inc.
Y,.ughan' 1 Suwnnarket
Pepsi BoHling Cpmpany·Athcn•

Bernard y, Fultz
Gruener I; 5ml

Middleport Mlnl&amp;Jedal Assosiatigp
faith Chapel Open Bible Church

.

Brown's Taxidermy

Golden Comll

Mt. Hermon United Brethem Chord!
· CarJetgn Q!urcb
Carelton CbyJ'Sb Bulldin1 fund •

Qffl£1 Sgn1ce &amp;: Supply
Liltle. Sbeetl &amp;e Warner
Crow&amp;iCrow

Reedtyil!c United Metbodilt Churth
Pen!eg!stal Assembly

· Michael B. Swiger. Agent

Bob Eyana
MilUe's
.
Iydy f(av's
Pt. Pleasant Wellness Center
Qhig valley Bank

ML Ollye Sunday School
ReJoldDg Ule Chutcb

. fil2m §luul.

Syper 8 Mold

Entezprlle United Metbod!ot CburdJ
Mt. Moriah Baptist Cb»rdt

.Hgme NatiQnal Bank

!Abundant Gracel ·

.

!'l!gples Banis
fanner's Bank

Wcatmogland family Cm Center

HU! It Son Greenhoyte
SnowyUJe Cys!Qm Sawlna ·

Harvest Outreac:h Ministrica1
· Meta• Coynty
'
Mlnlttcdal Aasgcfatign
~ Epiuooal Church

PJrze Hut Pizy.

J2.l!&amp;

Hob19D CbrJstian FCJiowtblp Church
Pomcmy United Mctbgdlat Cbursh
Heath United McthodJst CburclJ
Soytb Bethel New Testament Cbun;h
Salem Center United
Mithodtat Church
Bey. CUbed 6; Patricia Cqig. Jr.
A1b Street Church

The Dally Scptlncl
Domino's Pizza
Deagle' 1 Pizza
P&amp;;MPizu

Ngrrla &amp; Son Greenhpysg

first Baptist CbyrclJ of Middleport

\1

Weber Construction. Ips.
Rutland BoWe Gat
·f!ther-Acree Fyneral Hgme
Dgwnng£bild• Agcnsy. Ins. ·
Dr. apd Mg. Douglas D. HunJer
Radne Ameri,an Lealan ·

Dpn Tate MpiQD, Inc.
Jd.. Cpunty Bgokkrepigs
Jobp Teeford Koyptrv Club ,
.
Mc;DguJd'1

•

~

OTHERS
FransgReed

Geome Wrlaht

Mr...ll Mg. Tpmmy I. Reed
William &amp; Syc Iubbo .
Jane Waltop
Melas Cauntv Sheriffs DepL ·

.

fire Departmegtl
Mgip HJBh Sshool

Melg• Lm;al

School

Dittdst

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•

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Lunch Makerl·••~,.

1"

.

selves.
"Nancy Casteel was a dedicated pediatric nurse who
saw children as her mission,
not only children who were
patients on her unit, but all
children," Hart said. "Nancy
felt keeping them healthy
was as important as caring for
them when they were ill. It
was her passion."
Hart said it is this commitment that differentiates a
"job" from a "life work." In
her presentation, Hart will
focus on the commitment
Casteel made and its influence not only .on children's,
but also adult· lives, ·and how
everyone has that opportuni. ty to serve others, not just as
a nurse, but as a human
being.
.
Other membets of · the
seminar include Robert D.
Ingram, doctor of Ministry,
Grace United Methodist
Church in Gallipblis; Susan
Jenkins, RN, BS, MS, Ph.D,
senior program officer, the ·
Hitachi Foundation, and a
classinate of Nancy Casieel at
Holzer School ·of Nursing;
Carol M. Sholtis, M.D.,
Holzer Clinic Department of.
Oncology, retired; and Deanna L. Tribe, assistant professor,
OSU Family and Consumer
.Services,
For information or to
answer registration questions,
contact Sa~a A. Northup; at
' 245-0485.

.. •.,•....,

:

SA!i5(

·"
,•

RIO GRANDE-"Nurs~ ing:A Life of Service," a con:- tinuing educatiQn program
: for nurses, will be presented
:· May 12 in the Morris E.
': Haskins Auditorium, Bob
;. Evans Farms Hall, at the
&gt; University
of
Rio
: Grande/Rio Grande Com:- munity College.
.
• A portion of the registra·: tion fee is to be donated to
: the Nancy Casteel Memorial
· Fund, established in Septem: ber 2000·.
:- The seminar starts at 9 a.m.
: and continues until 3:30 p.m.
~ The theme' will focus on the
~ keys .to prolonging and
:: enriching nursing, as a life of
: service in Appalachia.
•· Included on the faculty is
: Sandra M . Hart, RNC, BSN,
:. director of Maternity/Family
:: Services at Holzer Medical
Center. In her role, Hart has
=: a special insight into how
:. stresses -mental, emotional
· · and physical - play out in
the lives of all health professionals, especially thos.e with
whom she works.
I'
"This is an opportunity to
define the essence of riursing
and how service to others
:. can become · a way to share
: the talents and abilities given
· to each· of us as a person,"
Hart said.
·I
Her presentation will be in
:. the context of nursing, but
:: can be applied to anyone
~ who decides to give of them-

MT. DEW
PRODUCTS

BY LEE REICH.
~ WEEKlY FEATURES

:.

[Nursing ,seminar
f: set at Rio Grande
:.

which officers for 2001..03
were named. They are Abbie
Stratton, regent; Emma Ashley, vice regent; Carol Sisson,
chaplain; Anna Cleland,
recording secretary; Patricia
Holter, - assistant recording
secretary; Peggy Moore, corresponding secretary; Karen
Werry, treasurer; Rae Moore,
registrar; Gljlce Warner, hisrorian; and Pauline Atkins,
librarian.
The May meetiog will be
held May 11 at the Eastern
Library, t p.m.

1good start

· '' --~--------;---

.

gade test to stiU receive a teachers are working to estabdiploma.
lish a fair and clear tw.luation
The speaker suggested that of students' prog~e~ss as is
anyone interested in umpling needed to chart reacher comthe state's practice high school petency and student accomgraduation enm log on to plishment.
·
the state eeb site at
In conclusion, Milhoan said
www.ode.state.oh.us .
that •tudents should always be
He indicated that he ·encouraged to do their veiy
believes inflated grades in the ,best, be given the opportunity
past have been intluential in for tutoring and summer
the introduction of the Profi- school, and other resources
ciency Test, but contended needed for a well-rounded
that the Ohio State Depart- educational experience.
ment of Education , loc:al
Peggy Moore, vice regent,
Boards of Education and presided at the meeting, in

'

urauaxcr af 11rc Daily Scrrtincl,
Pomcro)'.)

'

duL
Milltoan also discussed the
Senate bill ioooduced by Sen.
Robert Gardner on March 28
to abolish proficiency tests
and replace them with a series
of achievement exams, starting with reading in the thinl
grade and ending with a. 1Oth
grade graduation test.
The exams would replace
the current weelclong, five· subject fourth grade proficiency tesl and allow certain
students who failed one of the
five subjects on the I Oth

!off to a

lldl!!~ SfiZ
0

FLAIR

graders, the topics included
on the tests, and the pomble
ufleecing of the uxpayen"
when it comes to the 12th
grade proficiency teSt, which
is not required for graduation.
Milhoan noted that the
State Legislature reviewed md
voted to III2U the grul.uation
rest harder. Under the revised
test, according to the ipeaker,
stu!L;nts who don't pass all
five sections the ipring of
their sophomore year will
have more chances in the
summers and •prings after

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPOIS

April 19th

1.oc1tec1 on SFI325N
Approx.ISOO ft from SR35

Pomen.Jf • lllddl•port• G r'l~ OhJo • Point Pleasant, WV

ARMOUR CENTER CUT

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.$

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2001.

AUNT JANE'S
HAMBURGER
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• MAXWELL
HOUSE

1Doz.pkg

$
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can

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HEALTHY
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Bags ••••••••:;:::~ •••
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BARB QUE

3.9

UMIT 1 PLEASE ADD PURCH

$4.1111

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TUNA

oil or water

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�PageCB

••ntq ~IIIUS- •.entiud
•

s•tny~

Mason
MINDAY, Aprll21
ASHTON Gospel River Boys

. . ling~
Moores Olapel Unit·

eel .......... Chord&gt;. .Rocky
fOlk Roed, 7 p.m.
~Y,Aprll30

SOUTHSIDE- Cldls weight
1oM support group, SoulhsidB
Comrru!ily Center. weigh-ins
5:30 1o 6 p.m. followed by a

Poems·

r....,.,..c,

0

POINT PLEASANT "'7'American
Legion Auxiliary Unit 23 meeli 1!J
7 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT- Quills 'N'
Things Guild, 9:30 a.m., court·
~annex.

Appabcbian Writen Cooperative and has ..,crived a number of prestigious natio.W
poetry awards.
• Gina Pines of Pomeroy,
rhc
director of the Meigs
and editor of"Ship of Fools,"
the univenity's poetry jour- Center, whose works have
appeued in a number of
nal.
• Cathy Lentes of Rurbnd, chapbooks.
• Joyce Richanison of
whose poetry has been pubAthens,
who, in addition to
lished in a number of journals
and anthologies. She is a her poetry, . has published a
member of tbe Southern novel and received a number

Pizza wil be

Ordered for lunch.
POINT PLEASANT- Point

Inside:

Apltl2•. 2001

Classified ads, l'dges .D2- 7

writen group. and some par·of writing awanis and gruus.
Following the readings. an ticipate in other eveniS ar rhe
open microphone period Middleport univenity branch.
all~d other local writers to
share their works, and poe!S
and poetry mavens murmured
their appreciation with
smiles, chuckles, and the oc:usional nodding of the head - ·
for their fellow writen.
W!vw.mydailytribune.com ·
Many of the poets who
shared their work at the g:ath- www. mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com
ering are memben of a local

~URF'~ UP!

Pleasant High School Band
Boosters 7 p.m. in bandroorn.

lhcHt meeting.
POINT PLEASANT- KidS
Bille CUI, Wesleyan Holiness
Chun:h, 2300 lilcc*l Ave., 6:30
10 8 p.m., lor ages 6 to 12. For
inlonnation call Debbie Alexander at 675-5454 or Debbie

Peachey at 675-1187.

cookbook.

VINTON -There will be an
anointed service at Full Gospel
Church, behind Post OffiCe, 6
p.m., with Sister Joy Davis of
Olive HIU, Ky., and Pastor Robert
Parsons preaching. Prayer for
the sick.
ADDISON - Preaching seiVica
at Addison Freewill Baptist .
Church, 6 p.m., w~h Rick Barcus.
RIO GRANDE -There will be a
gospel sing at Calvary Baptist
Church, 7 p.m. Music by Charry
Ridge Band, Pam Matthews, and
Ruth Rees and Jean Vance.
Covered dish dinner before ser·
vice, 6J:t:m.
VINTON - Groundbreaklng service for Vinton Baptist Church,
noon, building s~e at 11818 Ohio
160, across from old North Gallia
!-llgh School.
CHESHIRE - Galvary's Story,
by Cantata, wiN be at Cheshire
Blptlat Church, 6:30 p.m. Pastor
Craig Furtick preaching.
GALLIPOLIS ,--There will be a
free meal at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, noon. Everybody wei·

come.

GALLIPOLIS - Proclaim Quartet wiU sing at Elizabeth Chapel
Chu~~:h, 6 p.m.

POINT PLEASANT- La Leche
League, 10:30 am., Presbyterian Church, 8th and Main
Streills. Topic. "The Advantages
ol Breastfeeding to Mother and
Baby."

POMEROY -County hymn
sing, Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, Sunday 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE - Builders Quar·
let, Syracuse Ch~rch of the
·Nazarene Sunday, 6 p.m.

+

THU.

TUE.

49~.

~land Inc.

FRI.
50

+

43

12

BankOne

+

SIL\'EB. SfO!'OORS:

-----,c;iiEFURNITURE
AoV£ST INV5TU£NTS
'Foxv" 8t G.Ao\'5 GRANT
IRWIN CilAss 5ERVIC£

PAUl DAVIES )Ew£LBIS

Bill CoNLEY, ATTORN£Y
O'DEll luMBER Co.
OHiO VALLEY SANK

DuPont

EVENING OF POETRY- Judy Klare , right, the featured poet at
last week's poetry reading, listens as fellow Athenian Arvin
Wells reads from his portfolio of work. (Brian J. Reed photo)

+·

44

44,,

44~

46

~~~~~~~~~+-~a~~~

SMITH-BuiCK PoNTIAC
8£RNA.DINES
HASKINS TANNEil CLOTHIBIS
81l££CH ENGINEERING
MA.IlcHI'S CARRY-()uT
I;lQwN UNo£1l RESTAURANT
TOLER 8t TOI.ER INSURANCE
RA.y BlowERs F"UILy
UsE HER85 INSTEAD
ALSO, SPECIAL THANKS TO CliffSIDE Golf CouRSE
101.5 AND 990 RADIO 5TA TIONS ·
G.\wrous DAILY TRIBUNE

LOTS TO OFFER -The new Sears _Dealer Store at 2200 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, has a little something for everyone,
Including a large selection of lawn and garden equipment, riding tractors from 13-25 horsepower, push mowers and se~­
propelled mowers, string trimmers and accessories. (MIIIIs~ia Russell photo)

·sears Dealer Store ·moves

SMOKER

FRIENDlY

Store relocates to new location at
2200 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis

..

BY MILLihiA RussELL

Revival a
EWINGTON -Revival at Ewington Church of Christ in Christian
Union, Apnl 24-28, 7 p.m.' nightly,
with Bud Allan preaching, and
singefl! Bub and Jody Norris, and
L.T. Preston and the Foundation.
GALLIPOLIS -Community-wide
revival, April 23-27, 7 p.m. nighdy
at Paint Creek BI!Piist Church,
w~h .the Rev. Joseph L. Coleman of Dayton as evangelist.
GALLIPOLIS - Revival at Fahh
V;llley Community Church April
23·28, 7 p.m., with Brother Jamie
Fontner preaching.

WOuld you like to see a stock &lt;if local interest Ust£d?
446-2342, ext. 23.

if so, contiJCI ·News Editor Kevi~ K£11y at (740)

CHESHIRE - Revival at Little
Kyger Congregational Christian
Church April 26·28, 7-8:30 p.m.
nightly, with preaching by Pastor ·
Robert Fetty and Richard Vinson.
Special singers each evening,
including Little Kyger Valley
Quartet, Gabriel Quartet, and
Vinton and MarceUa Rankin.

INVESTING

Are you investing your
401 (k) savings tvisely?

CROWN CITY- Revival at
Kings Chapel Church April 23-29,
7 p.m. nlghUy, with the F,!ev.
Matthew Henry preaching.
Singing by the Beaver FamKy on
Tuesday.

GALLIPOLIS -Your image
of a savvy, iRVestsr may be
someone who reads The WaD
Street Journal · every day and
carries a portable compute.r fur
up-to-the-minute stock quotes.
But reality is very different.
With a majority of companies
Gl,JEST
moving away fiom employerVIEW -.
directed pension plans, average
Americans are encouraged to
become proficient investors if to invest wisely. Here are some ·
they look forward to a comfort- 401 (k) investing tips to ·follow:
• Attend . your company's
able retirement.
And with the initiation 'of 401(k) enrollment meeting.You
404(c) regulations, employers will lea,rn how much you'D
are urged to offer employees need to save for retirement and
more investment alternatives ,bow mu' h your current savings
apd provide basic education will produce. It will help you
about the . potential risks and calculate how much money you
opportunities of investing. At should be putting into the 401
the same time, these employers (k).
• Contribute as soon as possimust be careful not to position
ble.
A 401 (k) plan enables you
themselves as investment advisto . contribute ·pre-taX dollars
ers. It is a difficultsituation.
Unfortunately,
personal that compound interest otl a
finance education is not as t&lt;PC-deferred basis. The sooner
prevalent in our 1society as per- you contribute co the plan, the •
haps it should be. Schools do more you will benefit from the
not nonnally require stuqents to · compounding of interest.
• Contribute as much as posstudy personal financial mansible.
Tl\C amount you con·
agement and the majority of
adults probably have little more tribu.te each pay period depends
than an elementary idea ofhow·
PIHM Ml Smith, Dl

CROWN CITY - Revival at
Crown City Wesleyan Church,
April 29- May 2. Sunday,
1,0:30a.m. and 6 p.m.; MonWed, 7:30 p.m., with Rev. Paul
Voss preaching.

Mark
Smith

REEDSVILLE - South Bethel
New Testament Church is hosting Spiritual Renewal week at
Tupper's Plains School gym, with
Pastor Chris Longrear speaking.
April 29·May 5, 7 p.m. nightly,
special music each night.

Me1gs
MIDDLEPOFfT ..:.:. Gospel sing,
Sunday, !):30 p.m. at the Middleport Church of the Nazarene.
'Delivered" will be singing. Paslor Allen Midcl!jl invites public.

MON.

41 '1.

••

SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - South
Bethel New Testament Church
hosting Spiritual Renewal
Week, Sunday through Satur·
day, 7 p.m. at the Tuppers
, Plains school gym. Chris Long·
grear of Fresh Fire Ministry of
Parkersburg, speaker; drama,
special mus,ic, nursery available.
·

17Us chart shows how local &amp;lOCks of inlerrst performed lilSt wu.t.
Each dlly's closing jigiii'U an provided by Nlvt!st of Gallipolis.

.

Gallia
Elyria.

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
AEP

'

BIDWELL- Layman Day ser·
vice at Mount Carmel Baptist
Church, 2:30 p.m. Guests will be
the Blossle Wright Choir from

Sundny. _.,,.H. 2111

GALLIPOLIS FERRY · Gallipolis
Ferry Community Center meet·
ing, 2:30p.m. Bring recipes for

POINT PLEASANT- Meeting
for Point Pleasanl ~
School eighth grade parents at
Point Ple-1 High School,
6:30 p.m. Counselors will be
POINT PLEASANT- Qui~s 'N'
there to disCuss registration
process lor incoming freshmen . . Things, Too, 5:30 p.m., courthouse annex.
TUESDAY, May 1
WEDNESDAY, May 2
LETART- HELP Diet Class,
POINT PLEASANT - WednesLetart Community Center.
day night Bible clubs for
We9!-ins from 5:30 lo 6 p.m.
preschool up through 12th
followed by short meeting.
grade,'lto 8:15p.m. at Gospel
U~t~lhouse Church, Neal Road.
FLATROCK- Clothing closet
For infonnation, call675-7229
give away every Tuesday at
or 675-6620.
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
APPLE GROVE • New C~y
Singers
will sing at Barton
POINT PLEASANT- Clothing
Chi!Jiel
Church,
7:30 p.m.
give away every Tuesday, 10
· a.m. 1o noon at Point Pleasant
THURSDAY, May 3
Presbylen. Church, 8th and
POINT PLEASANT- TOPS
Main. Clothing contributions
(Take
Off Pounds Sensibly) 5
appreciated . .
p.m. weigh in and meeting at
5:30p.m. at Trinity United
MASON - Community Cancer
Methodist Church. For informa·
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
lion call 675-3692.
United Methodist Church. All
area cancer patients, families
POINT PLEASANT- Shoot at
and caregivers invited.
Point Pleasant ·Gun Club, 6 p.m.
HENDERSON - Line dsncing,
Henderson Community Building, POINT PLEASANT- Weight
Watchers, Christ Episcopal
with inelructor Dawn Halstead.
Beginners 6 p.m. and advanced Church with weigh in at 4:45
p.m. and 5:15p.m.
7 p.m.

SUnday, April 21
GALLIPOLIS - Special singing
bv w-...roo. 6f?.m. at Faith ~
Valley CommunitY Church.

PaP, D1

MONDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education, 5 p.m.
Monday at Southern High
School, regular meeting.
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club, Monday, 1 p.m. home of
Marjorie Rice, New Lima Road.
TUESDAY
.
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustee·s , regular session, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. home of clerk,
Ollie Follrod.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Governing
Board, Athens-Meigs Educaiional SeiVIce Center•. special meeting Wednesday, 7 p.m. office at
507 Richland Ave., Athens. Purpose, 'to Interview candidates
for the posHion of treasurer.

,,

Have • busln•• news·ltlm7
· Give us • Qlll at (no) ••• u~ext. 1:1
1'

J

•

,,

•••

••

'

.l '

TIME$-SENTINEL STAFF
GALLIPOLIS- Bobby
and Vanessa Muncy, owners of the locally owned
and operated Sears Dealer
Stbre, have relocated to a
new location at 2200 Eastern Ave. , Gallipolis.
Their original store
opened in October 1996
at the Silver Bridge Plaza
location . .
"Tbe new store offe,rs
7,500 square feet of space,
a lot more room for a lot
more merchandise," said
Bobby .Muncy.
"We offer the top six
name brands in appliances,
Frigidaire, Amana, Maytag,
General
Electric,
KitcbenAid,
and
Whirlpool. Our selection
includes
refrigerators,
ranges, washers and dryers,
microwaves, and vacuums,
as well as all of your builtin needs, such as dishwash.ers and trash compactors."
~e added.
"We also offer a large
selection of lawn and gar-

den equipment, including
riding tractors from 13-25
horsepower, push mowers
and self-propelled mowers,
and weed eaters and accessories."
Craftsman tools, televisions from 13-inch to 60inch VCRs, DVDs, High
Definition TVs, stereos and
camcorders are also available.
"We have a large inventory, and some items are
· kept in stock so shoppers
can take their purchas ~
home that day," Vanessa
Muncy said. "We also offer
delivery and installation."
"Even though this is a
family run business, shoppers will find mall-store
prices," she added. " We
also ·offer price matching,
if you find the same product at a different store at a
cheaper price, we'll match
it, and a 30- day price
guarantee, so if you buy a
product and find it at a
cheaper price with in 30
days, we will · refund the
difference."

A review of
lawnmower safety
POMEROY - Lawnmower safety is everyone's
concern. The brown grass
of witlter has turned
q uickly into broad expanses of gr\:en lawn. The
dreaded laWn mowing season bas begun . .
Take the,time and effort
to review a few mower
safety tips as suggested by
the National Safety Council. Thousands of reported
accidents occur each year
involving lawnmowers.
Don't·you become part of
these statistics. Follow these
lawnmower safety tips.
Begin by reading the
owner's manual for your
lawnmower. Find out the
mower's capabilities and
safety features. Maintain
your mower. Make sure
that the oil and spark plugs
are changed frequently.
Make sure that safety

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW

.
shields . are on when the
.
.
.
engme tS runrung.
If using a . lawnmower
with . an electric motor
make sure you are using a
fun ctioning ground fault
cin:uit interrupter. Never
use an electric lawnmower
when the ground is wet or
it is raining. Never leave a
running mower unattended. Thrn off the mower
when not in use. Don't
refill a hot engine with gas, ·
wait until it cools down.

· Ple8H IH KnHn, Dl
t'j

.

'

.
TECH- Televisions from 13-inch to 60-lnch, VCRs,
DVDs, High Definition TVs, stereos and more are offered .
The Muncy's store is
truly a family- run . business. Their 12-year-old son
Cameron, who attends
Ohio Valley Christian
School, helps out on
weekends and bas been
· coined the "Jr. Sales Manage r."

They · have 12 etil ployees, two of whom have
been with them since the
beginning, Danny Sickles
and Jody Slone.
"We always wanted to
own our own business,"

Vanessa said. "Bobby had
worked with the Sears
company previously, so we
had some idea of what we
.
. . ''
were gettmg
mto.
"We looked at several
different locations before
deciding where to locate
our store," she added." And
we liked th e Gallia County area and the people, and
we would like to thank the
td-county area for the
. support it has given us in
the past five years."

Tent caterpillars
everywhere
GALLIPOLIS The
eastern tent caterpillar has
been a popular topic at th e
Extension Office over the
past week. Although these
Jennifer
pests have . been active for
over a month, the recent
Byrnes
severe defoliation is just now
making the nests obvious to
GUEST VIEW
some homeown ers.
Caterpillar control is easier
to accomplish than many
would believe. The issues of is different, the suggestions
chemical control are:
discussed below may or may
not work for you.
1.) apply an insecticide
such as Sevin, Malathion, or · If homeowner) are spraying in the early morning or
Diazinon to the body of the in the evening hours, the
caterpillars are likely to be
caterpillar.
2.) apply the insecticide concentrated in the nests.
with more pressure than JUSt Thus breaking open · the
a mist, because the tiny hairs nests with a sharp object ;md
on the caterpillar often pre- applying chemicals to the
vent or minimize chemical exposed caterpillars is a
contact. How homeowners viable option if the nests are
accomplish these two tasks is within reach or within
up to the individual. T h ~ re­
forc, because evc~itua~on
Plei!H .. .. Bynn 1,- De
0

•

-·----II

...

�PageCB

••ntq ~IIIUS- •.entiud
•

s•tny~

Mason
MINDAY, Aprll21
ASHTON Gospel River Boys

. . ling~
Moores Olapel Unit·

eel .......... Chord&gt;. .Rocky
fOlk Roed, 7 p.m.
~Y,Aprll30

SOUTHSIDE- Cldls weight
1oM support group, SoulhsidB
Comrru!ily Center. weigh-ins
5:30 1o 6 p.m. followed by a

Poems·

r....,.,..c,

0

POINT PLEASANT "'7'American
Legion Auxiliary Unit 23 meeli 1!J
7 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT- Quills 'N'
Things Guild, 9:30 a.m., court·
~annex.

Appabcbian Writen Cooperative and has ..,crived a number of prestigious natio.W
poetry awards.
• Gina Pines of Pomeroy,
rhc
director of the Meigs
and editor of"Ship of Fools,"
the univenity's poetry jour- Center, whose works have
appeued in a number of
nal.
• Cathy Lentes of Rurbnd, chapbooks.
• Joyce Richanison of
whose poetry has been pubAthens,
who, in addition to
lished in a number of journals
and anthologies. She is a her poetry, . has published a
member of tbe Southern novel and received a number

Pizza wil be

Ordered for lunch.
POINT PLEASANT- Point

Inside:

Apltl2•. 2001

Classified ads, l'dges .D2- 7

writen group. and some par·of writing awanis and gruus.
Following the readings. an ticipate in other eveniS ar rhe
open microphone period Middleport univenity branch.
all~d other local writers to
share their works, and poe!S
and poetry mavens murmured
their appreciation with
smiles, chuckles, and the oc:usional nodding of the head - ·
for their fellow writen.
W!vw.mydailytribune.com ·
Many of the poets who
shared their work at the g:ath- www. mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com
ering are memben of a local

~URF'~ UP!

Pleasant High School Band
Boosters 7 p.m. in bandroorn.

lhcHt meeting.
POINT PLEASANT- KidS
Bille CUI, Wesleyan Holiness
Chun:h, 2300 lilcc*l Ave., 6:30
10 8 p.m., lor ages 6 to 12. For
inlonnation call Debbie Alexander at 675-5454 or Debbie

Peachey at 675-1187.

cookbook.

VINTON -There will be an
anointed service at Full Gospel
Church, behind Post OffiCe, 6
p.m., with Sister Joy Davis of
Olive HIU, Ky., and Pastor Robert
Parsons preaching. Prayer for
the sick.
ADDISON - Preaching seiVica
at Addison Freewill Baptist .
Church, 6 p.m., w~h Rick Barcus.
RIO GRANDE -There will be a
gospel sing at Calvary Baptist
Church, 7 p.m. Music by Charry
Ridge Band, Pam Matthews, and
Ruth Rees and Jean Vance.
Covered dish dinner before ser·
vice, 6J:t:m.
VINTON - Groundbreaklng service for Vinton Baptist Church,
noon, building s~e at 11818 Ohio
160, across from old North Gallia
!-llgh School.
CHESHIRE - Galvary's Story,
by Cantata, wiN be at Cheshire
Blptlat Church, 6:30 p.m. Pastor
Craig Furtick preaching.
GALLIPOLIS ,--There will be a
free meal at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, noon. Everybody wei·

come.

GALLIPOLIS - Proclaim Quartet wiU sing at Elizabeth Chapel
Chu~~:h, 6 p.m.

POINT PLEASANT- La Leche
League, 10:30 am., Presbyterian Church, 8th and Main
Streills. Topic. "The Advantages
ol Breastfeeding to Mother and
Baby."

POMEROY -County hymn
sing, Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, Sunday 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE - Builders Quar·
let, Syracuse Ch~rch of the
·Nazarene Sunday, 6 p.m.

+

THU.

TUE.

49~.

~land Inc.

FRI.
50

+

43

12

BankOne

+

SIL\'EB. SfO!'OORS:

-----,c;iiEFURNITURE
AoV£ST INV5TU£NTS
'Foxv" 8t G.Ao\'5 GRANT
IRWIN CilAss 5ERVIC£

PAUl DAVIES )Ew£LBIS

Bill CoNLEY, ATTORN£Y
O'DEll luMBER Co.
OHiO VALLEY SANK

DuPont

EVENING OF POETRY- Judy Klare , right, the featured poet at
last week's poetry reading, listens as fellow Athenian Arvin
Wells reads from his portfolio of work. (Brian J. Reed photo)

+·

44

44,,

44~

46

~~~~~~~~~+-~a~~~

SMITH-BuiCK PoNTIAC
8£RNA.DINES
HASKINS TANNEil CLOTHIBIS
81l££CH ENGINEERING
MA.IlcHI'S CARRY-()uT
I;lQwN UNo£1l RESTAURANT
TOLER 8t TOI.ER INSURANCE
RA.y BlowERs F"UILy
UsE HER85 INSTEAD
ALSO, SPECIAL THANKS TO CliffSIDE Golf CouRSE
101.5 AND 990 RADIO 5TA TIONS ·
G.\wrous DAILY TRIBUNE

LOTS TO OFFER -The new Sears _Dealer Store at 2200 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, has a little something for everyone,
Including a large selection of lawn and garden equipment, riding tractors from 13-25 horsepower, push mowers and se~­
propelled mowers, string trimmers and accessories. (MIIIIs~ia Russell photo)

·sears Dealer Store ·moves

SMOKER

FRIENDlY

Store relocates to new location at
2200 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis

..

BY MILLihiA RussELL

Revival a
EWINGTON -Revival at Ewington Church of Christ in Christian
Union, Apnl 24-28, 7 p.m.' nightly,
with Bud Allan preaching, and
singefl! Bub and Jody Norris, and
L.T. Preston and the Foundation.
GALLIPOLIS -Community-wide
revival, April 23-27, 7 p.m. nighdy
at Paint Creek BI!Piist Church,
w~h .the Rev. Joseph L. Coleman of Dayton as evangelist.
GALLIPOLIS - Revival at Fahh
V;llley Community Church April
23·28, 7 p.m., with Brother Jamie
Fontner preaching.

WOuld you like to see a stock &lt;if local interest Ust£d?
446-2342, ext. 23.

if so, contiJCI ·News Editor Kevi~ K£11y at (740)

CHESHIRE - Revival at Little
Kyger Congregational Christian
Church April 26·28, 7-8:30 p.m.
nightly, with preaching by Pastor ·
Robert Fetty and Richard Vinson.
Special singers each evening,
including Little Kyger Valley
Quartet, Gabriel Quartet, and
Vinton and MarceUa Rankin.

INVESTING

Are you investing your
401 (k) savings tvisely?

CROWN CITY- Revival at
Kings Chapel Church April 23-29,
7 p.m. nlghUy, with the F,!ev.
Matthew Henry preaching.
Singing by the Beaver FamKy on
Tuesday.

GALLIPOLIS -Your image
of a savvy, iRVestsr may be
someone who reads The WaD
Street Journal · every day and
carries a portable compute.r fur
up-to-the-minute stock quotes.
But reality is very different.
With a majority of companies
Gl,JEST
moving away fiom employerVIEW -.
directed pension plans, average
Americans are encouraged to
become proficient investors if to invest wisely. Here are some ·
they look forward to a comfort- 401 (k) investing tips to ·follow:
• Attend . your company's
able retirement.
And with the initiation 'of 401(k) enrollment meeting.You
404(c) regulations, employers will lea,rn how much you'D
are urged to offer employees need to save for retirement and
more investment alternatives ,bow mu' h your current savings
apd provide basic education will produce. It will help you
about the . potential risks and calculate how much money you
opportunities of investing. At should be putting into the 401
the same time, these employers (k).
• Contribute as soon as possimust be careful not to position
ble.
A 401 (k) plan enables you
themselves as investment advisto . contribute ·pre-taX dollars
ers. It is a difficultsituation.
Unfortunately,
personal that compound interest otl a
finance education is not as t&lt;PC-deferred basis. The sooner
prevalent in our 1society as per- you contribute co the plan, the •
haps it should be. Schools do more you will benefit from the
not nonnally require stuqents to · compounding of interest.
• Contribute as much as posstudy personal financial mansible.
Tl\C amount you con·
agement and the majority of
adults probably have little more tribu.te each pay period depends
than an elementary idea ofhow·
PIHM Ml Smith, Dl

CROWN CITY - Revival at
Crown City Wesleyan Church,
April 29- May 2. Sunday,
1,0:30a.m. and 6 p.m.; MonWed, 7:30 p.m., with Rev. Paul
Voss preaching.

Mark
Smith

REEDSVILLE - South Bethel
New Testament Church is hosting Spiritual Renewal week at
Tupper's Plains School gym, with
Pastor Chris Longrear speaking.
April 29·May 5, 7 p.m. nightly,
special music each night.

Me1gs
MIDDLEPOFfT ..:.:. Gospel sing,
Sunday, !):30 p.m. at the Middleport Church of the Nazarene.
'Delivered" will be singing. Paslor Allen Midcl!jl invites public.

MON.

41 '1.

••

SUNDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - South
Bethel New Testament Church
hosting Spiritual Renewal
Week, Sunday through Satur·
day, 7 p.m. at the Tuppers
, Plains school gym. Chris Long·
grear of Fresh Fire Ministry of
Parkersburg, speaker; drama,
special mus,ic, nursery available.
·

17Us chart shows how local &amp;lOCks of inlerrst performed lilSt wu.t.
Each dlly's closing jigiii'U an provided by Nlvt!st of Gallipolis.

.

Gallia
Elyria.

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
AEP

'

BIDWELL- Layman Day ser·
vice at Mount Carmel Baptist
Church, 2:30 p.m. Guests will be
the Blossle Wright Choir from

Sundny. _.,,.H. 2111

GALLIPOLIS FERRY · Gallipolis
Ferry Community Center meet·
ing, 2:30p.m. Bring recipes for

POINT PLEASANT- Meeting
for Point Pleasanl ~
School eighth grade parents at
Point Ple-1 High School,
6:30 p.m. Counselors will be
POINT PLEASANT- Qui~s 'N'
there to disCuss registration
process lor incoming freshmen . . Things, Too, 5:30 p.m., courthouse annex.
TUESDAY, May 1
WEDNESDAY, May 2
LETART- HELP Diet Class,
POINT PLEASANT - WednesLetart Community Center.
day night Bible clubs for
We9!-ins from 5:30 lo 6 p.m.
preschool up through 12th
followed by short meeting.
grade,'lto 8:15p.m. at Gospel
U~t~lhouse Church, Neal Road.
FLATROCK- Clothing closet
For infonnation, call675-7229
give away every Tuesday at
or 675-6620.
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
APPLE GROVE • New C~y
Singers
will sing at Barton
POINT PLEASANT- Clothing
Chi!Jiel
Church,
7:30 p.m.
give away every Tuesday, 10
· a.m. 1o noon at Point Pleasant
THURSDAY, May 3
Presbylen. Church, 8th and
POINT PLEASANT- TOPS
Main. Clothing contributions
(Take
Off Pounds Sensibly) 5
appreciated . .
p.m. weigh in and meeting at
5:30p.m. at Trinity United
MASON - Community Cancer
Methodist Church. For informa·
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
lion call 675-3692.
United Methodist Church. All
area cancer patients, families
POINT PLEASANT- Shoot at
and caregivers invited.
Point Pleasant ·Gun Club, 6 p.m.
HENDERSON - Line dsncing,
Henderson Community Building, POINT PLEASANT- Weight
Watchers, Christ Episcopal
with inelructor Dawn Halstead.
Beginners 6 p.m. and advanced Church with weigh in at 4:45
p.m. and 5:15p.m.
7 p.m.

SUnday, April 21
GALLIPOLIS - Special singing
bv w-...roo. 6f?.m. at Faith ~
Valley CommunitY Church.

PaP, D1

MONDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education, 5 p.m.
Monday at Southern High
School, regular meeting.
RUTLAND - Rutland Garden
Club, Monday, 1 p.m. home of
Marjorie Rice, New Lima Road.
TUESDAY
.
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustee·s , regular session, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. home of clerk,
Ollie Follrod.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Governing
Board, Athens-Meigs Educaiional SeiVIce Center•. special meeting Wednesday, 7 p.m. office at
507 Richland Ave., Athens. Purpose, 'to Interview candidates
for the posHion of treasurer.

,,

Have • busln•• news·ltlm7
· Give us • Qlll at (no) ••• u~ext. 1:1
1'

J

•

,,

•••

••

'

.l '

TIME$-SENTINEL STAFF
GALLIPOLIS- Bobby
and Vanessa Muncy, owners of the locally owned
and operated Sears Dealer
Stbre, have relocated to a
new location at 2200 Eastern Ave. , Gallipolis.
Their original store
opened in October 1996
at the Silver Bridge Plaza
location . .
"Tbe new store offe,rs
7,500 square feet of space,
a lot more room for a lot
more merchandise," said
Bobby .Muncy.
"We offer the top six
name brands in appliances,
Frigidaire, Amana, Maytag,
General
Electric,
KitcbenAid,
and
Whirlpool. Our selection
includes
refrigerators,
ranges, washers and dryers,
microwaves, and vacuums,
as well as all of your builtin needs, such as dishwash.ers and trash compactors."
~e added.
"We also offer a large
selection of lawn and gar-

den equipment, including
riding tractors from 13-25
horsepower, push mowers
and self-propelled mowers,
and weed eaters and accessories."
Craftsman tools, televisions from 13-inch to 60inch VCRs, DVDs, High
Definition TVs, stereos and
camcorders are also available.
"We have a large inventory, and some items are
· kept in stock so shoppers
can take their purchas ~
home that day," Vanessa
Muncy said. "We also offer
delivery and installation."
"Even though this is a
family run business, shoppers will find mall-store
prices," she added. " We
also ·offer price matching,
if you find the same product at a different store at a
cheaper price, we'll match
it, and a 30- day price
guarantee, so if you buy a
product and find it at a
cheaper price with in 30
days, we will · refund the
difference."

A review of
lawnmower safety
POMEROY - Lawnmower safety is everyone's
concern. The brown grass
of witlter has turned
q uickly into broad expanses of gr\:en lawn. The
dreaded laWn mowing season bas begun . .
Take the,time and effort
to review a few mower
safety tips as suggested by
the National Safety Council. Thousands of reported
accidents occur each year
involving lawnmowers.
Don't·you become part of
these statistics. Follow these
lawnmower safety tips.
Begin by reading the
owner's manual for your
lawnmower. Find out the
mower's capabilities and
safety features. Maintain
your mower. Make sure
that the oil and spark plugs
are changed frequently.
Make sure that safety

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW

.
shields . are on when the
.
.
.
engme tS runrung.
If using a . lawnmower
with . an electric motor
make sure you are using a
fun ctioning ground fault
cin:uit interrupter. Never
use an electric lawnmower
when the ground is wet or
it is raining. Never leave a
running mower unattended. Thrn off the mower
when not in use. Don't
refill a hot engine with gas, ·
wait until it cools down.

· Ple8H IH KnHn, Dl
t'j

.

'

.
TECH- Televisions from 13-inch to 60-lnch, VCRs,
DVDs, High Definition TVs, stereos and more are offered .
The Muncy's store is
truly a family- run . business. Their 12-year-old son
Cameron, who attends
Ohio Valley Christian
School, helps out on
weekends and bas been
· coined the "Jr. Sales Manage r."

They · have 12 etil ployees, two of whom have
been with them since the
beginning, Danny Sickles
and Jody Slone.
"We always wanted to
own our own business,"

Vanessa said. "Bobby had
worked with the Sears
company previously, so we
had some idea of what we
.
. . ''
were gettmg
mto.
"We looked at several
different locations before
deciding where to locate
our store," she added." And
we liked th e Gallia County area and the people, and
we would like to thank the
td-county area for the
. support it has given us in
the past five years."

Tent caterpillars
everywhere
GALLIPOLIS The
eastern tent caterpillar has
been a popular topic at th e
Extension Office over the
past week. Although these
Jennifer
pests have . been active for
over a month, the recent
Byrnes
severe defoliation is just now
making the nests obvious to
GUEST VIEW
some homeown ers.
Caterpillar control is easier
to accomplish than many
would believe. The issues of is different, the suggestions
chemical control are:
discussed below may or may
not work for you.
1.) apply an insecticide
such as Sevin, Malathion, or · If homeowner) are spraying in the early morning or
Diazinon to the body of the in the evening hours, the
caterpillars are likely to be
caterpillar.
2.) apply the insecticide concentrated in the nests.
with more pressure than JUSt Thus breaking open · the
a mist, because the tiny hairs nests with a sharp object ;md
on the caterpillar often pre- applying chemicals to the
vent or minimize chemical exposed caterpillars is a
contact. How homeowners viable option if the nests are
accomplish these two tasks is within reach or within
up to the individual. T h ~ re­
forc, because evc~itua~on
Plei!H .. .. Bynn 1,- De
0

•

-·----II

...

�\

Sunday, Apctl21, 2001
Help YAw 1 II
lllill Clofia. 1iNoono1 e...

:· 110
: ,...,.,.

: pto;s:jii._ May-

Howt•-.. Every

1

=Ala""' -.g
. ir 10 lOin a~ .... lor . . -

Ala

Glh

II.
.. ' - - &amp; Found,

·v....-.., Mdw.nlrd

To Do Adt 111111 a. P8ld

ln,.,.a..

p

pmemiE;

2:1111 .......... ..., .....
........ torun.8und8y&amp;
IIG nclaV IIMIIIn 2:00 p,m.
Fr!Uy

MM'I'f' rreD!!tE;

1:GOp.lll.thacMybefore
....... to run......, &amp;
llol~My edition

t:CIO p.m.

l'l'lcMy.

•omu PF'flf!ME;
2 d8y8 blfare ........ to

run lip 4:30p.m. ......-y
&amp; "1 1118yeclllan·4:30
lJIIINeMy.

·o , .. ,.,1

rtto .

ctlft!lge due to IIIJM' ,..

ANNOUNCEh1ErHS

005

Ac.torabte puppin. I weeki Old.
Shepard . mix, weaned. tir5t SftDIS
and wormed . Please c:all

(740)258-9302

Adult Golden Retrjaver Mix,
Spa'f'8d FeNit. El.cenent Wa1Ch
Dog. Needs A Loving Countr~

Srlllaoy Spaniel Mlk, 6 Week 'Old
Puppies. Free To Good Home ,
(740)387~4

Free PuppieS. lab Mix . Gon1le &amp;
Calm , Rio Grande Area.

(740)24s-5801
60 LOll and Found

LOST- Wt\lte/ Grey
Large
Donkey - Male In Additon Area.
Catt (740)448-2124 Of (740)448-

9379

Meet New People The Fun Way

1·900·329·8850 Ext.
1216. $2.99 Per Minute. Sor•·U

Toda~ tl

(819)645-8434

DATING TONIGHT!

Have fun meeting eligible singles
In your area . Toll·free 1·800·

ROMANCE, ext.9735
Start dating 1onlght! Play tho Ohio
.Dating Game. Call 1011 free 1·800.
romance ext. 1621.

TALK TO GIIILI UVEf
JUSTCAU.
1·900-329-8130 Ext.7173
$3.99 Per Minute. Must Be 18
Years. 8etv·u (619)645-&amp;134

101
Buhl
Matton · Rol!d.
Jackson PUte, House On Hill

speaker. S1.200: 88 Otds 88. 4
caocels, 740-9115-4485.

Pt.- Pleasant

May 1st· 9:30- Rutland on

Noi50n
Rd. o1 NeW Lima Rd. LOIS ol items

May 2·3. 9am·7 Something for

&amp; Vicinity
May 2·3, 36000 Rod&lt;springs Rd. Cheap Garage Sale, 112 Milo Route 87. Off Junction, Roull 2.

and

tlalri items.

Pomeroy.

Syracuse. 2702 on t24, MAY 2·5.
9am--3pfn. Good refrigelaror, table.
chairs , anlique sewing machine.

and fTIOfe.
Tuesday Mar 1st, Roderick
Grimm's In Radno on Br~. 3
lamilies. a lollo pid&lt; from.

Thurs-Sat Somelhing For Every·

one

110 Help Wanted

Auction
and Flea Market

740-592·1842

Quality cloth ing and household
nems. $1 .00 bag sale e11ery
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

9:00.6:00.

ssoo.oo-se.ooo.001mo. PTIFT

-

... ACCESS TO ACOMPUTER?
Put it to -kl $251hr·S75/IV. FT/
PT. FREE Info. 888·603·0536

AISEMIILY. AT HOIIEfl Crahs

Toys, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing:

,.

'IW&gt;Ing...Great Pay! CALl

795-0380 Exit 201 (24hrs)

hours! Call U.S . Digest 1-617·
520-8071 24 hour recording.

111125WEEKLYfl

HUMAN RESOURCES

110

Help Wanted

SSOSIWK. working with ·lhe gov·
ernmEinl lrom home. Part-tlmelfull-

timo. 1-888·745·3772 Ext. At 1
(24 hrs.)

55 Hospital Drive
Athens, Ohio
592-9227

Friday· Saturday

EOE

Sunday, Till 8pm. 1153 Graham

110 Help Wanted

Road

Pool Supplies. Girls Clothes.
Toys, 0.6 Months Boys &amp; Misc.

NEEDED IMMMEDIATELY

PHARMACISTS
Candjdatos Wjth current Ohio ljconsyre Dleay contact ·

'

Paul W. Stackhouse, R. Ph., Director
Holzer Family Pharmacy, Gallipolis Store
90 ·Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563
Phone: (740) 446·5236

'

p.m.

FoOd flwllable

•

Would tlkt to thank all
who aont carda, food,
arid f(owera, all who
vl81tlled with ua during
the Iota of our Dad.
Thlnkato our Patllor
Andrew Pa,.ona and
hit ton• Dennlt and
Jack, and daughttrs
Peggy and Shtr(ty for
their help, Flaher &amp; ·
AcrH Funeral Home for
lhalr klndn..a and
graal work. To all the
churchta for whtllthty
done, but moat of all for
all your prayera ·they
wtregreatly
appreciated. Thank
you, may God biHI
each ana In o"'
prayara. Love you.

The Gallla County .Board of Commlulonere Invites
qualified applicant• lor the position of County Jobs lo
Family Servlcat Administrator 2. Under administrative
dlrectl'on of the Board of County Commlstloners,
plant, dlrectt, coordlna)es, and reviews all agency
program• and actlvltleo for both the Jobs and Family
Servlcet and the Child Support Enforcement Agency
(total of 50 employoer). Provides Indirect supervision
to all agency employees. Perform• and oversees fiscal
duties for the entire agency. Perform• public relations
duUet. repretentlng the entire agency.
Completion of a Bachelor's Degree in buslnen
administration, public administration, human tervices.
toclal service•. human resources or finance; .and
additional five yean uperlence working In
tupervltoryladmlnlstratlve position In human service•
organlzaUon required. Extensive knowledge In the
Ohio Department of Jobs lo Family Services (ODHS),
Including Ohio Work• 'First, aoclal services and Child
Support Enforcement Agency preferred.
Full benefit package (I.e., vacaUon. sick leave, health
Insurance , retirements ayttbms, etc.). Salary
negotiable, baaed on experience and qualifications.
Interested applicants can aublnll a resume to Barb
Unroe, Clerk of the Board ol Gallla County
Commlsslonen, at 18 Locust Street, Room 1292.
Galllpolla. Ohio 45631 , no later than May 18, 2001 at
4:00p.m.

Truckload

Sale

**

110 Help Wanted

Words written by: Michael Trent
We love you brother and always will.
From your: Mom,
and Brother.

10

POSITION ANN NCEMENT
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
DISTRICT COORDINATOR
Application• are being ._ptad for the potltlon of
Community Collage Dletrlct Coordlntllor.
Thlt tw.lvt month administrative position reports
directly to the VIce Praaldant of Financial and
Admln(atratlve Affaire with reaponalbllltlaa lnc(udlng
oHractlng new atudtnta, bOth traditional •nd non·
traditional, to the Community Col.tage.
.
The Coordinator Will be reaponalble lor marketing
the two·year Attoclata Degree programo of the
Community Collage wlthln the fOtllr county dletrlct,
Including aohool vlelta, market reaearch, public
reltlllone, preHnttlllona and communlcatlona with local
bueln ..a and lnduatry.
A lachalor'a Degratln Public RtlaUona, Education,
Marketing, or re(atad fla(d Ia required. A Maatlr'l
Dagr11 It preferred. Travel will be required throughout
the local fOur-county d(atrlct.
lnte18aled peraona ahould aand 1 ltHer of lnterlll
and reauma before the deadline of May 15, 2001 , to:

May 5, 2001
Buckeye Hills
Career Center
Rio Grande, Ohio

GLAS5llJAHE

Milk itus. stemw•re. aoblets. cmtal. rubY. cobalt.
Finton, salts. 6 Place set11na blue onion JlrG Meekln
Enaland, hall driP coffee Pot,sev. cat filiurlnes. Rutland.

(740) 245-5334
Tools./ Equipment
at 9:00a.m.

X-RAY TECH
·ARRT Uceasecl
X-ray Tech needed In
an Athens Medical
omce. Health
benefits available.
Please call
740-594-43oo
or
\
fax resume to
.

LUenne A. Bowman,
V.P. Financial &amp; Admlnlatratlva Affalro
Rio Granda Community College
P.O. Box 328, Rio Grandt, OH 45574
E·mlll Lbbwman@rlo.adu
FAX: (740) 24WCI35

Help Wan.l ed

ODMMUIIITY IIIUII'IDIII
CDIIIDIIIATIII

Team up with one of the
nalion's premier providers of
physical
rehabllllailon
programs. We currently
seek a self-motivated,
enthusiastic Individual for
our acute rehab unit at
Holzer Medical Center.

COLUCTABL.a8: eM. Cider.,...,

.,..., OOPtMW ... lceniM • a

loddw

IJ

"'"'lltril

com

~

a

w.....,

w.

.~-..

www.tand.com

..,.s::
a••na,.

!.E"

piMM, dNW lllrllfe•, AJMdln t.lue ftam~~
eaddl- (woMiet"n very n~), mltlc. leek,.

..,..... toa1 baoxN,_~ lg. MYI.., ¥1oM. ..,.,.. ctrNI., 411rou...- ......,.,...
oul - . oultlna tOnh outftl ooc 4i1te, atr ~...r ...,._ 8una.
WOOCI lftd .tutn1nutn - . .....,.., ehllln
bloWera,. aNin . Jtoul_,, llcC~ &amp; eto.) 7 hP motor, ~~ IMI"'P 101 011 ~1 1
. . , f« timber ~·-~ ohllln-.: ,.....,.. .net ot..ln btncNra, urn
IIPU:IIil
hot I fiiDU PM, mllddox"•, ~ tt.mm.n,
twnwuw:., t.toMt-. . pltahfarlta. poe~ttol.: 11...,., Mil Up, 1M4I rn.ttlng
pota. It• ros-eteo1.
oonll. and
to be fvund.

hoi.._

W..·..,..,...,

wer.,..........,

lot•""""

NOTE: Tlllo taluoi a .,.rttef llotfrig olo vary , _ aata,lhfa
gOnlloman hoe bean colleotlno ror 30+ reora: lhfo Ia o aafa you

I

'

is..-.No_..,. nocusary.-

Ill -10 ltarl frn.

-modlataly. $120(1.

mon11110 ttarl.
col: 740-992.Q3118 . .

4110-9450 24 tva.
HOMEWORKERS NEBlEDI

catl1·800

$800 WMidV pre Oil ling mil

Easy!Noaparlonce-.

can 1·800.· 755·2027 x539 (24

·

We. haven't had this nice. of selection of glass
for a goad while. so come. out and
e.nJoy this sale..
A very large selection of nice glassware to include
Green &amp; Pink Depression, Carnival, Fire King,
Imperial, WV glass , pressed glass cut glass,
Miracle Maze dish, Homestyle dishes, . Jewel tea
cream &amp; sugar, blue glass. cqke items, granite
ware, stone jugs &amp; crocks. Coins, Roth America Tuff
Boy baby swing, Milk cans, lamps, cookie jar, toys.
Sellers while kitchen cabinet (good shape) 4-very
nice brush .seat ladder back cha.lrs. Items in this
sale all
this.one.

tva.)

Housekeeper. To Clean Weekly.

Retertncea Aoqulred: (740)4'411018 Afltf •:aopm
INTERNATIONAl COMPANY
NEEDS HELP wf1h Mall OrdariE·
Commorco. $500·$7000 mo. PT1
FT ~om homo. Full Training. FrH
Booklet.
92tr·924·8400

abOYe. Mull llaoldo In Ohio At
Time 01 HI,. And Poo- Ohio
Driver~ Llc:anH. Annual Salary:
S27,560. State of Ohio benefits.
Walk·ln interviews Monday- Frl·
&lt;Illy 7am-4:30pm. Call (740)2232405 for more lnlonnollon. Continuous recruitment EOE

Laborer To Help With Tree Work
And Ot.her Outside Duties , DJiv·

ora llcanao A Must (740)4482422
~
library wort· Bool&lt;mobito Servlc·
es. Punctual. r11ponslble DRIV·

e~s

-

to offer mobile lbraly

services throughout Gallla Coun·
ty. Enthusiastic readers encour·
aged to apply. Apptlcallons can

be

plckoel up at Bossard library·

Bookmobile Department Musl
have Ohio liCense. COL prertrred,
clean driving record, 2 years col·
lege or comparable work e11peri·
ence. able to llfl 50 pounds and

be 25 yeo,. or - ·
Looking for a strong·mlnded.
self· motMIIIId lndlvldual to fill an
Assistant Manager Position .

Not ruponalbtolor

aaetdentl or loll of property. Announcemen.. day of nle take

"Trucks"

Help ~ lor tho _ , ,
Dar1t Group Home. now pa~ing
minimum wage, new lhifll: 7am3pn, 7am-5pn, ~"""'· llpm.

S635 ~ pre :1 rsing mel
Eay1 N o _ . . . , . . -·

llooclto~h AuctlonHrl"'f lorvtcoo
Au-r. 8111 Moodlopaugh ·Ohio Uc. 178113, WV Uc. 11388

'

8538 www.cnem2bfrM.com

For ..... -

a,..'"

--e.;'.... ---- _..,..- -·
~lev

~. hDrM •nd pony h•mt~•• •
Md~nrtore.

HELP1 Wort from llomol Mail-or·
f522..-.c PT
S1OOO·S-4000/n FT. 100·921·
ctor!E.commor...

In Criminology, Criminal Juallce.
Sociology Or Psychology or 12
Monlhs Experience In Sataly &amp;
security &amp; Treatment of Reslden·
lial Clients or 24 Months EJiperl·
ence as a Comm. Peace Officer
or 2 Years Mil itary Supervisory
Experience or a combinallon of

{ohum.. oroaka. Jer• &amp; lua•l· lronw•,. 1 rt•w.td a Wagnet1, oil .. m.-,
....,.,. oene, .....,.,.....,

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS

Fadlfty, 332 Merion- WlfliamiJ)Of1
Road . Marion , Ohio. Requires 2
Years Fult·llmo College Ed..,._

wood WDik benDtl w/Vioe, k,.ut llun.r.,
...,._.. (8lauJ, woOd whMt ......._~MINe, whHt . . .
....... ..,.,.. butitK ._..... •ltd etltTft, wtlieby .......... DOM
,
oow Milt: •illiM _....,., ._ ...... 101 OrMm .......,., wood -.m p..,_.,
cutuvatara. pu... pfowe, wood tiCiv. .0.... 1111 .._ plowl, IIIOull&gt;ltl
n..., _...,.. •~ pro..., ooal forb. ruc1
•aad pop orat.a,
OltiOken ~a
ttoa ~ '2ft.
• .......- w.gon (no
bH), Mtv. out iron tr..tor ...
tron Mel
......,. enG ~.,
...,.,., ml.o. iron ......,. (3 . ._, A.P. ~ha ~·· AallrOM IMI'nOI'albln•
{141mtrne, *ooU. oen•, oltef'e, • etc.), (2 •• · ..... • qt. chum•, ..._.~

Restaurant ••perlenee Is

precendence .of printed materiaL

1993 GMC 3/4 ton Pickup 2$110 auto., 1983 Chev. SO
Serln flalbed V8 gao w/4 speed. .

Refreehmente Provided
For tntorm011on: P1- can uo ot (740) 11119-2123 (homo'

1187-3788 auction houoo.

a pkts

but not required. Wage balld on
qualifications and ew:perlence. 11
Interested, send a resume to 999 .

or

E. Main suatt , Jackson , Ohio

45840 or fax to:(740)211&amp;-1907

"Equipment"

Auction

Two Totbo Blasten approved by EPA, 185 CFM Joy air
comp~eooeJ w/J.D. eJ181ne, 175 CFM Ingersoll Rand air
. comp~e~oer wiD. .w/3 cyL Deutz, Sclew lngenoU Rand
600 CPM Rolary vane air compresoer w/671 lnllne
engine, liuck mounttdlngenoU Rand screw type w/671
Ddlol~ 750 CpM SuUair. Fut IJack all comp~esser w
671/Detroit, 7SO Fast. lngenol Rand w/cuinmlno engine,
lngenooU Rand VliCuwn unit, 365 CFM Garden Denver

Management Opportunily. Career
Opportunity Wiln Major Company.
Complete

PUBLIC ·AUCTION

100 Hannan Trace Road In Patriot next to
Tradln' Post Treasures, Aml1h Furniture Store
Auctioneer Mike Massey, Licensed and
bondad In Favor In the State of Ohio. Phone
740-379-9133. Rain or Shine. Food served.

A public auction.will ba held to disperse of
the Ohio University Surplus llema. NOTE:
Each quarter Ia a completely new batch. of
aurplul Items to be sold. ALL ITEMS ARE
SOLD AS IS/NO GUARANTEE. VIsit the
WEB alte for a complatallatlng:
www.facllltlaa.ohlou •.adu, click on Moving &amp;
Surplus under Camr.u• Sarvlcea, then News,
Surplua Inventory n Stock Items. Preview
the week before - call 74()-593·0463 for an
appointment. DIRECTIONS: At. 33/50 to
Atharia to Rt. 682 axlt, go through light at
Richland Avenue, turn laft at The ~ldgea and
follow algna to Building 10.
·

Chlcap Pneu11111tic air compressor, 6000 Clark Fork
truck off Road.

10' ohoweJ unit dirty &amp;; dean roomt Iocken &amp;; benches,
27" ohoweJ unit.
·

"Misc."
32' office or 8\0Jage llaile~ 300 &amp; 350 Self contained fuel
tanlci, 8011W Blast Pot foJ parts, 18' aluminum oto1age
~ox, unaooembled metal building, 2.-:W' long x 2' wide
aluminum scaffold boardo, 2.-14' X2' aluminum oc•trold
bQard, 2.-14 X2 wide aluminum auffold boaJdo, 1·24' x
27" alum. tcaffold board, 1·37' x 20" olde aluminum
ocaffold bo11da, 1-17' Z 26", 1-32' x 1', 2.-12' X I'
illumlnum ocaffold boanlt, 4 mloc. extenolon laclclers, I
to 2 alwn .Onduct approx. :Z00.300 pieces, 1400' of Blast
ltMt, 1500' of 50 Chic"'l" house 1000' of 100' Chicago
hooe, .300' of 2" Bull ·hose, 2.'lW of 1 1/2" Bull hose, 4
SkycllmbH w/cable, 1 Sky cllmbeJ for parts, cable
ollmber, approx. 600' electric cable for Skydimben,
Skydlmber otlm~po w/wheels, 2 air,homs, 6 pc. of 12"
Jllexll;lle air duct, 3 l&gt;Jtst Collecton, Electric allleoo opJay
pump, 300#, Blast Pot, 6-600# Blast Pots (W~t 01 D,Y)
600# Schmldl Blast Pol, :Z.800# Blast Pot (tJaileJ type) 2
Exploslo~ Proof Ughts, mloc: electric cords 110, mil&lt;. ·
dead11111n cord, mia&lt;. Deadman switches, ado&lt; 318"
alrlno Palntune, mla&lt;. 1/2" aldeN paint line, 6 blllt .
hoodo, mtoc. dampo, oh.1&lt;kln I&lt; devlcn, mite. Hanging
acaffold itlrnlpt, mitt. 11ffold handrails, mia&lt;.
aaffaldlng wheeLs, ada&lt;. vaouum heads for 55 gtl.
dniDII, mio&lt;. 011glne &amp;; wmpmsoJ parll, mloc. pipe
fittinp, valveo, air Jeguhtors, aiJ water b:apo, safety
belts &amp;; hamellft. Sky cUmbe11 baskets, air spider &amp;
oagtt, :Z..IO X 10 blast tenta, 55 gal. drum of mloc. chain
link fence parts, 2 cylinder llftt, gas umpe1 and lots, lob

•

1$83 ford Explorer, 2·1H1 ford
111a1 Chevy Cot'IICI, 1110 010 llorm, 2· 1810 Ford Escort LX, 1888
Cherokee, 1MS \'otkawagOn Jttt., 1111 Chevy I·Ton Dump Truck, 1DI!
F100 2·Ton Dump True*, 1111 'ord leonollrM 150 Vtn, 3·vtn uatt,
yeHtcLj;a.gp be

yld ' ' Npgn);

BMW:m, 1•au1ck Rtlll.

:mQL1

MD IOU!PWNT·

Sheldon Chk~go 111M m.ehlne, Wo&gt;rthlo~

OOiilfNIIIOJ/pUmP. bctltlof 21 " bell drlwn PrMI, elef;trk:tl

~hOU•

dev1oa,
mllilmf*tl I VOtta !Mitt Gtvtcll,
bridge dtvlot, Wtldnghou.. lndusttltl anatyzer, FCR 250

I

1~;~~:; I

ohlnttf', Wetton lnetrvmtnte tool kit, prftlu,... 911111, tftter ldl,

pteeltlon tlr rntter, IIICtrlcat pyromtttr,. IIIII dtcldt MllnO kit,

meter, llorv.. IIIJtookmanJint.,ttiOntl cantrllug .., Rhino robot,

Chlc•o&gt;&gt; I

night • height IRIIII, UgM flxtur11, bulbt,. oil lamp globea, ••H
fbdUfH, HIIO Poww triO lllhtt, bolWI of b1Ht111k IT1II1r111.

COMPUTERS (to be .old lblrtlng tt 0:00 t .m .)

MIRQf' oANfP'JR· Iota of love aaata, hide+btdt, trm ohtlrt, Chtlrt on
whftll, co"" • end ltbl.., 28•full tlzl mtttre..t t I 11\41ttl tramea, IIVtrll
drMitrt, niCihlttlndt, ntortment of l1mpt, Sony ch!ldrtrte ca..tttt r1dla1,
1110rt1d wll\dow flnt, window air condiUontrt, franMd wa ll mlrrora,
Olrland I QE atov.., Samaung mlcrowavt, ltrge taborltory 1fltur, Whllti
frte•r, Whlrtj)ool dry.r, loti or cltanlng auppltea, end lott mo,-..

Dan Smith • Auctioneer,
Ohio #1344, WV #515

IiBIIJ.;. C11h or chiCle w/poti11Yt I.D. JtiYibll 10 OhiO Unlvtrllty. MC, VISA
Ia DISCOVER will be ICCipt.d. Ct»ckS over 11000 mual havt blink
tulf'IOrtiiUon of fundt IYIIIebtt. Not r11ponalble for 1011 or eccldenta.
Food will ttl l'llllbtt,

Terms: cash or good check day of sale with
ID, nothing to be removed until settled for.
Buyers must bring a Bank Letter
of Guarantee made out to ' ·
Dan Smith, Auctioneer.

OWNER: Ohio University
www.faclllttea.ohlou.edu, click on Moving &amp;
Surplus under Campus Services, News,
Surplus Inventory In Stock Items
SHAMROCK AUC110N SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Sheridan &amp; Chris Prater
PH: 740·592-4310 or 800·419·9122

·Refreshments Available
Note:
will be available.
~I

Training

Program,

hcellent Benerlls. Call 1·866·

Ohio Unlveralty Surplus Inventory
Saturday, May 19 • 9:00 a.m. • Athena, OH

air compre11ef Cal Z gas powered air movere, StaUonary

•

DRIVER· Don~ Miss This Oppor·
1uni1y 10 Run Flall&gt;ed Dedicated "'
Regiollall Must tiY&amp; In ll, IN. OH. or.
KY, or S. MI. Call Bruce 0 Tan·
ctem 1100-551·9057 Ext. 140

,...._, "ti'Oefl-htne meot~tne ..tt.tot, ~ mowrne pi•AN, blaak.a a.au1

- . rMOt ecr.toMrt,

Owner- Rock Whobrey - Pred.
(Work) 7\10·367-7442

EOE

Resumes to : Sherry Gordon ,

OXL3234

Manager of Human Resources, . 7am, c a l 7 -·5023.
Woodland Centers, 3081 Still.
HEU'WAHTED: Now...,_
Route 160, gafllpoUs, Ohio 45831,
Application doadttne Friday, - accopltog appfk'-lor
ller 18, 2001 . EOEIAA EmplOy· FULL TIME POSIT10NS. ~

outtow, wood..._.~ .. lard

........

~

TERMS: Caoh or gooctchoo' w/propor 1.D.

n3-&amp;785 or n3·S447
Exeoutrlx: Charlene Ho.tllch
Ca.. No. 31761 '

of community resourcea . Send

Domino's Now Taking Applica·
tiona For Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy
locations Only.

Govern-nt Jaloa $11 .00·
$33.00 per hour potenltof. Paid
Training/FuN 8anofft1. For more
Information call 1·888-874-11150

Juw-enlle Correctional OfficerMarion Juvenile Correctional

- .............. _ _............. ....

**
**

don't want to mlal.

Auction conducted by/
Rick Pearson Auction CO. #66

com·

municauons sldfls and lloowtedgl

Directions: Take 50 &amp; 7 North throug"
Coolville, Ohio to County Road 83, turn rlght,
follow County Road e3 to N. Cincinnati FUdge
Road, turn left, go approx. 1 mile, please
follow the signa.

&amp;om OaUipoUI, Ohio, take St. Rt. 7 Norih to
Addloqn, Ohio, then take Addloon Pike to 2 .mile
ma1ke1. Watch for audlon olgno. ·

'

tiona. Must have exceUenl

workers. Call Monday : 740·9920368.

0Np457W.

www.AchiaveOreamt.Com

mort:

NOTE: The Train S.lltion set UP must
viewed Prior to auction. Dlsmountlna 8r removal Is
ruPonslbllllll of buYer. For ulewlna call 304-113·
u:~•MI or 740·9112·5292. Vel'l' ill. amount of tools a.
RINGS.

ing. public telarions end opera·

Moodlspaugh's Auction House

·Pari D. Ho.er. Aucnon t.l~r
Hmrv M. Sc....y Ill, C/\1 Auctioneer .t Reil EDie BrWr

-n·

"""'"'"ling

·Saturday, May 5, 2001 at 10:00 a.m.

"Units"

Help Wanted

For more lnlormatlon, please
contacl · Barbara Snell,
RthabCare Group, 7733
Forsyth Blvd., Suite 1700,
' St. Louis, MO 63105.
1·800·877·1238, ext. 2218.
FAX: (314) 863·7751 .
Email:
baonell@rahabcare.com
~ RahabCare Group
www.rehllbcara.com

***

Located

control Power control box-multi control train muter
IIIPe z WTransformer 115 Volts· 60 CYcles· 275 Wa«s
Wide x 17' 7 112" lona real nice musi seell Train
ALC ElectrO· model D61ZT. Dresel RR Lantern red
alobe. Ad Lake ' ~arker llaht, aood old 41illllt RR l.ilht.
110, trains. Rallr,oad. train VCR tat&gt;es, caboose lantern,
brill ateam whistles, brass steam aauaes. lante~ns·
· NltW RR blue alobe· ClrO RR Red ilobe, U. collection
of POCIIet watches ouer 75- Waltham· Elain· Hamilton·
Burtlntton • Illinois· Camero· fqullll &amp; others some 15··
It lr 21 Jewels some aold cases, ladles It mens
costu~r~e lewelrll. books- The PeoPle War Book
AutoaraPbed Edition Dwlaltt D. Eisenhower· While
House Years· Reuan. Sev. RR Books &amp; more, 1936
Gal. Ohio RW11a Proaram Pictures. cow bells. carued
wooden elePhants. oriental ruas. linens, Radio Shack
walkie talkies. Realistic scanner. 4 channel coP scanner.
SharP uiew cam, Dixon Guitar, quilt must seell RCA
VIctor Porta Record PlaYer, Minolta 35 MM wlexfra
zooms. Bunn coffee POt, iood kitchen apPUances.
Reverware, old dinner bell, old flshlna rods. It reels,

Candldat11 should also have
general knowledge of
s~stems, delivery of health care,
Human Resource Management,
budgetary management. clinical
reeoras systems, martellng, program -'&lt;ot&gt;mont and grant wrK·

Antique Tool Auction

SATURDAY, MAY 5, 2001
10:00 A.M.

at 12:00 noon.

services adn have a workin g
knowledge of the Ohio Depart·
men1 ot Mental Heallll St.andlrds.

Public Sale and Auction

...___

.'

www.rtcarriers.com

97 Berch Sbeet
992·95&amp;3 OBioe • 992·0180 .Jim
Every Th~ N!Qht 6:00p.m.
Coulpmenta Welcome
·
WeclnesdaJ 10 am • 3 pm
Thrusdaf 10 am • 3

*

Modular House ·

Responsibilities
Include
marketing;
census
development; serving as
liaison to 3rd party payors,
physicians,
ana
case
managers; and · handling
patient
pre·admlsslon·
aorHnlngs. Prior healthcare
marketing
experience
required; cjlnlcal background
preferred.

:

MOOIU,N: Lg . • ~of c.-.ttem., twnd toot., ,~gtd 3 legged pipe v!o.,

AntiCiue droP leaf table. llurQUndY love seat 8r chair.
swivel rOcker. r~llner It offter chairs; Ia. coffee table.
Croslell bill screen 1V. 2 curio cabinets, desk. earlY
walnut lr curbl maPle laP desk. maPle cgrner cabinet.
IIIIPie dlne«e lr hutch. swlnaer 1DO electric oraan.
mah. buffet, 4 tic; BR suite, nlaht stand, 5 PC. white
fret!Ch ·Prov. BR suite, old trunk. oak file cabinet, TriStar swect&gt;er like ~~q~, Malllllll washer &amp; dr~~er, Pallo
set It more.
,.

Modular Ho115e and
Tools &amp; Equipment

110

Glassware to include: Gre«1 Depression, Carnival,
Amber, Blue. Black Colored glass, lots of misc.
creamers, one wJLazarus Co. (very old) boldes,
jars, vases, collej:tor plates &amp; cups.
An item of interest is a Welsh Bible between 17()()..
1800 Mynegal'R by Peter Wiliams &amp; John Ross
Approx. siZe Is 10 1/2 x 10/1/4 x 5 leather bound
falr cond. for age some pages missing. Misc.
household · furniture, patio fumiture, bedroom
suite's, refrigerator, washer, d,Yer, misc.
crates wood &amp; metal. DrMng Pari&lt; Dairy cooler, old
organ D.S. Johnston Co,, Wizard 14.5 h.p riding
mower.
Lots of
misc. household

**
* John 1. S.WIIt li Wm. J. Faalin.Jr.• Auc.tioneerslli: Realtors *
**********************·***********'****

.'

EOE

Oaycare-available in·Radna area.
Jennifer-. 740-949-2169.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Eain

...,...o:

'now1odgoabla regarding au ••·
podS ol dollwlry ol mental -

""'your

www.tt11c.om

Yiww.~MdFor-.com

=-

0&lt;

Distribution center opening new
location. No experWince required
due to company backed training.
Must be al leaSI 18 years old.
Qu ick advancement for hard

PUBLIC AUCTION
. Locat~ at the Auction Center on
Rt. 33 In Mason, WV. Due to location we
have moved the eat&amp;ite of Gerald Shuster
from Lincoln Hillin Pomeroy, Ohio to the
Auction Canter to be sold.

D

EarnUp1oS5oo-18ooo/Mo
PTIFT
.

L!l:.i ;:rs......::.:. r;d

(304)675-1809

«&amp;.

Resume 1o (304)67~
IAIFNI
Ferry. WV 25515.

-9-5Agaln

*•

Somettilng ror
Everyo.r•l

110

~

-

*

*

AUCTION

...._...
7 • 93-7600

Posting Date: Aprll27, 2001.

Oh Lord, take me by the hand
and lead me to the promise land
I know the time Is close at hand
I want so much to understand you, Lord.
Oh Lord, I must have you In my life.

Ba'lbwOwn .....,

*
*

** ..........

to Rout• 1. Box

;~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~Gatlloolls

*

.·

ESTATE

COUNTY JOBS AND FAMILY
SERVICES ADMINISTRATOR

years ago today.

Weell ,

*

ANTIQUE FURNITURE

John Veith

Prelor My Homo. 3-5
1· 3pm, Calf
(740)24s-5462
Babys-.

Days/

*

AucUon

110 Help Want~

Who left us 10

empto,_ resort in Ft. Myers
FL and our ..,._,aoye11 Inn
In Pigeon Forge. TN. Mall ~our

: Hilch ..... :'302"'n~o
~
* 41" - dock: JDhH{': ...Jo~,_....,.30
16$, .._..,--~d . . . . :
- a . d f: •
*: Ctilsiooa
4000 12 HP. 4 ..-d. 3 1 " - dock· «;:r~ls. iiOO *
14 HP. 6 ._.. w/42" deck. tta.11 Kina 12~ ~!,", 7 lfiOOl! wl *
* Bill
4~" - : Rally_ 12 HP 6 "--' . . . WI ll"
·Troy *
~ HP ,_uno~ tiller: - Tnoy Bilt 5 iiji pr** den
t~ler. uod 5 HF'el~ sM1t Troy B i l - ,_tile• · :
hiler. Ul8d 5 HP puU 111111 TB ,... line an1ee-. *
* den
TBhorw1illor.filr- WW chippasp-2 ti2'HP:2 p;;d *
'It uod' HP Bil Wheel pash IIIOWGI; 4 16 HP 11.s · - *·
. : NICE ANTIQUE Bia Wltool ...... oom Sheller. 460 Ford V-1
.** &lt;»mpreaor;
I D-4o Clllllk iilaft '!liuirat 6 HP yaticaJ ~ pi'"'* lwia cvl. oir :
new I 10ft 111010r ....,. . . . . . ltlllld; - o(lawn
aactor .decko to include 36" .t oM" dedto; 60 II ""' of I :
112 J:lydr. .lOOOoW hwc: llqo • • of- amoll •sine *
*: Crafto
~I' !PIIta. lawn llador. A: IIIIIWCI' ~ w/ ..
s:ria· 111W
..IIIChanic tool .... to include i&gt;llowina: 234 piec:C; 15· 1t
* 2? piece 3/1 clriY&lt;;. 12 .t. 19 piece 1/4 cJriye -d; 4,12 ~ *
., ~drive SO&lt;bt; tO piece 114 I&lt; l/1 Not oppx 2u 1111 l/1 :
lt.IWidard" _ , 114 deeD ...u - · l • 101 ~
1!4, l/1, !12 oocl&lt;et sets; 3 ..., ofU piece corn~. wu11dieo; 6
'It poece Quod&lt; wrendi; 7~J!i«oce COIIIb ..r.nch sets; 141&lt;11 t&gt;iCI!'!'
: ...."*IY• sots: new l.lt3 • - Crafts. pan, 1ool chooi: 10 *
* ~ C~. - d I pia:e COIIIb• ......,ha: 5 now Cr1fto. I :
1r poece-..: oomb. ....,.hea:- vises;-· 100 hom-.
all ll)'ln; Aviation lin saipl;
wrcnc1t set: bonel :
** of
pumpo: ' - " ' oocllot- ..,.,.h: OL·I/2" clootri&lt;: im- *
wrench in caw. 4 112 pindor
T handle hex sets; 4 112" *
: cui olf wheolo: 318, 112. 3/4 ex1entiono: drill bit ICIO: 10 new *
., - ' • 4" orindcn: nrmm• hondla; Drills inclode: meniblc
1r 112". 7 BED 311", Cr~lls. 311": Chain binder. ..,,...~-:Air
** suns:
body file wasp 2 112XI5 314: dual ac:tiCOI 318 air • , .: point :
1111. ~ up to 20X40: had! sowt: carded toolo; lawn *
mower ,..., shop rMdo folditttl DaiiiOIIIct lableo: lanlems; 21'
* alum. ladder.
·
.
TERMS: Cash or checlc: everytllina sold u is
10 hi hat biddCr.
. .•
% STANLEY &amp; SO~, INC. l740) 775-3330 :

• ......n·-

FAX: (740) 446·5215

"JACK" CLAGG

lhat f - s • 401(K) redntmonl
plan and tree vocation fo&lt;IOing at

*

Joint Venture Pharmacy, (nc., dba Holzer Family
Pharmacies with ttores located in Jackson and
Gallipolis, OH, is seeking qualified candidates to fill
both parl·lime and full·time openings.

P!;h j4-a,

poueta basic math all:illa. We

reaume

1r11o1nt1 .. 111 provrsr s - 111
- to wort nfl wllh -11.
-net. P.O.
·- loa~TIIo
721-03,Daly'"-roy.

liln.d Cantara. Inc. 11 1 priYile.
not·tor..prolit cofftmunHy mental
....... t h a 1 - Gallia.
Jacllaon. And ~ CounliH in
Southeailern Ohio. A Mastefl
degree In Bu1ineas Admln l1tra·
lion or In a Muter's DegrH In o
Health Care Field wilh fiWI or
more years expertence In man·
agemenl and administration tn a
health care uhlng 11 pre,.rred .
Qua!lflad applicants must be

• be..,.._, ... or·

1.

48113 Oopl I t 011

EXECUTIVE DIIIECTOII· -

curaey. The suceeaaful tan-

offer excenenl pay with benefits

** moved 1111 fvllowiJ!L!!""
Gallipolis be aold die..... !
bi
at t:tl A.M. II 1111
*
:
l'•ac..r~,... . SAnJUAYIIIAY,;ltll . *
* I : " . : . M -: ..,ooo, p._~ol .... *iw; 14HP *

May 3rd&amp;4th. 59 Redwood Drive
(Georges Creek Road. ) 3' Foot

Cllt.a1J0.951.2353

(4:00pm· 12:31Jam, Pre Cler-.
Must typo 2$-30 wlh ac-

.......

Eye _ . , on~eeo bUie bull·
nau alollla raquifod. todu!lco1

"Home~

111ic41&gt;• lor a Ful--. 2nd Shit!.

110

coli........ ~- .....

...,
...
.....
ed. FREE 1n1ernal. 1·100·2tf·

gani,led. computer literate, and

·················•*******************
ABSOLUTE AUCTION
!
*:*
"NIWT"'f·BiltTUicn :lltopT*
•
Cr~ftlmu ToobA w..-...
*
* AtaaatllfilrMr.,.,.D!!t'!!'&gt;'ulllbN-.-111.,. *

4

EMPLOYMENT
SE RVICES

OuaJj.

R+L ~• ..., o1 tho nation's
l•rgest f1rrtily owned LTL motor
freigl\1 caniefs, ia accepting ap.

-

Public Sale end AucUon

H'Uirtiiii~ on
12 Mlln South or Point Pluunt on WV Route 2
Consignments taken: Tlluraday, May 3, 2001
4pm-7pm
Friday May 4, 2001 8 am • 7 pm
Salurday lily 5, 2001 7 am • 9 am
Items &amp;Ire~ consigned:
Gehl Grinder- Mixer, John Deere Three Bottom Plow,
Ford 50t Mower, Locust Posts, Massey Ferguson 255
Dlesel Tractor- locally owned.
We need more consignments.
For Information
Joe Arrington 304-576-4009
Robert Cornell 304-576-2208
Eric conrad 304-743-4426 wv Uc 11194
Terms of Sale Cash only
Not responsible for accidents, theft or loss of property.
Announcements made on Auction Day· Take ·

I.OOKIIIG

Tllo IIG 1l'IDI. Mafllng Tllo BIG

.......... lallhaflol•i.otp

1·1100-449-4825 Ext. 5700

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Silver,
Gold Coins,. Proofsets, Diamonds.
Gold Rings, U.S. Currency,

67&amp;-5985.·

YOU

,..,....

10

Homo. cau 740-446-0175 er 304·

All~

FOR1 START YOUR NEW CA·
flEER TODAYfll t.ear To Drwe

PC required. Call Physician &amp;
Heallheare Developments toll ·
fnlo HIOO·m·5933 ext. 2070.

Mlilonlor·$800-18000 par mo. Pr/FT
Wil trait 1·800 815 0242

Make Money Halping People
RoceMI GoYOrnmenl Refunds
Free Detail&amp;! (24 tva)

www.lahomebiz.com

M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
A...... Gal!&gt;&lt;&gt;lis, 740-446-2842.
Wantod To Buy: Used Mobile

WHAT

-

110. Help W.tll II
EARN S25.tJOO.S50,otJOI'Wr. -

ClorW

excellent lncom•. Ea1y claims
processing. Full training. Home·

ATTEN110N!

1740)256-6989
90 ·wanted to BIIY

REGISTERED NURSES

HIOO·

-from homo.

Riverside Auction Barn , Sale
Every Saturday Night at &amp;p.m ..
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson

O'BLENBSS

......,. No Colt flalnlng "

24Hrs., Voyager Business AsSO: .

1529 WEEKlY maitipg letters

Information Call 1·800· 501 -6832
ext. 1300 www.projoctrolund.com

A New

Start For Debt Consolicla-.
Cd 1·888~3348 ToK Free

DANCE DISTRIBUTORS' 1·888·

·experience necessary. easy! Artr

Sconic -

Ar• You Looking For

m311ing teners from hOme. No experience necess.ary.. FT/PT. Help .
needed immedialely! Call ·suN-

from Mme. Full or part-time. No

ATTENTION: MOTHERS AND
OTHERS. Up 10 SSOO f&lt;?&amp;M pan
limo. Fulf·trainlftg. t ·100·17f•
-4801. - •.quicflulllno•.comt

Help w.nted

110

doyo, Monday tllrouah Flldoy

237·9381 .

Mai0rder/1n1eme4
Paid TralnlngNacations
catf 1.S00.228-0317

Experie~ Required. For FREE

nJ.57850r 304-n:J-5447.

l ots Of New Things, Tools, Misc.
Furniture

Sc~ool

!!!ArrENTION!!!

lnternatiooal Colnpany Exp;fldlng
Work From Home « Olioe

$987.85 WEEKlYf Proc.esoing
HUDIFHA Mor1gage Refuncls. No

.80

....

8:30 10 4:30. Thlo 11 a "" ......,
- a graal -""*11 The - '
clau wll begin May 71h. Step by
today for an applleallon or contact Stephanie Kempe1• lnstruc·
lor, a1 (740)448-7150

5. Box 1438, ANTIOCH. TN.
37011·1438 SlarllrrJITtOdoalell'.
$450,00·$1 .000.00 WEEKlY

Coll-801).211 ·8150

lilt "'*"''I

•

Help W.tiJ II

110

75 hour course. lasting for 11

12,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
brochures! Satlslac110n Guaran1-t PoSlage &amp; Supplies pro\lided! Rush Self·Addresnd
Slamped Enwt-' G1CO. DEPT.

- 8 7, Follow Signs

l ot's Of Stull! Friday, Sa turday &amp;

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson, AthenS

lnlemationaiC&lt;Jrrc&gt;anyE~

Wort! From Homo or 01fice
SSOO.OO.~.OOO.OO/mO. PTIFT
Mail Orderllnlemol
Paid Training/VacationS

www.cashOnlheT-.com

4

Community vard Sale. ShOestring
Ridge. lower Floute 1, May 4· 5,

t!'.ATTENT10N~!!

large 2 Family Garage Sale ,

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
ft.tll time auctioneer; complete
auction
servtce .
licensed
t66,0hto &amp; West Virginia , 304·

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES ·

I, Loon G. Gray, As 01 23 of April.
200 I. Am No Longer Responsible
Tha n

door new tires. runs good. high
miles. ale. laif body, $1 ,200. rain

Behind Foodland Tuesday May
1St· Thursday 3rd. 9-4pm
3 Family Yard Sate, May 1.2.3, 9·
·&amp;
?, 2011 Chootnut Street. Solne1h· ·
lngFor Ewryono
3 Family Yard Sale· Frida~· Sat· O'BLENESS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL hal
urday. May 41h 5th , Household,
Immediate patt-tlme and ruU-tlme openln91
Furnl1ure, Baby Items, Toddler
Clotnes . Much Moral Route 7.
In the Med/Suf9. and Emei"C)enCY Department.
Crown City S9&gt;.
We offer a wry competitive salary ranQe,
4/30 &amp; 5/H/4. 1.2 Miles Out compreheniiW
benellt
packaQe,
Route 218. Mowers, :rrlmm•r•J
Fans, Paper Back Books. Many
Individualized ortentaUOfi, as well as excellent
Other Items
educaUon and other related benefits.
Big Yard Sale. May 1,2,3,4 Applications can be plck8d up In:
"-cross From Kerr Post OHice.

30 Announpementa

Mysel1.

naine. -487

Galllpolll .
&amp; VIcinity

C8ntenary Area, Tuesday, May I ,
8·?. l015 Of Stuff.

For Any Debts Other

SR. 7 {across from Shady RWer
Ag) Hammond O&lt;gan double key·
boards, loot pedal w/Laslie

992.()587.

"""'·
Elmwood Terrace, Racine. Ohio.

Call (740)446-1711 Or (304)
675-4919
70
Yard Sale

Tuesda~.

May t 51, old Avon, some sllll in
originOI bOxeS. Homo Interior, colleclo&lt; plaleS, old gtuswaro. many

4

GirlaU
E•citingll
Pa~tiona tell Talk To ·em Uvell

1·90().329·8130 Ext. 7339 $3.99

Tuesday.

South 4th S~eel. Mid·
dleport . For more Info call 7.40·

" family. rain or ah1ne. garage
sale. Monday Ap&lt;H 30111, Tuesday
May 1st 3202 lor marly Jo's Gift
Shop, sYracuse. antique tfl..ldli. oil
tamp. · dishes. what·nots, nice
large &amp; small women's clothing,
blue jeans. very good children's
clothing, lots ol good toys, lot5 of

LOST (adlts Rolex Watch. reward 1f Found. VERY Sontimenlal,

50ie-

more items 100 numerous to

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

~·

Beautiful

Per MinUte, Must Be 18 Yean ,
Sorv-u (619)645-8434

LNge aslate yard

Tuesday. May tst , Wed. May
2nd. 2 Mites Out Bulavllle Pike
From 160. Crafts, Walso· Cardi
G&amp;de. Elc.

Home (740)041·12fi9

Personal• ·

STAAT

Y.-d Sale

70

Yard Sale ·
5/1, 9am·3pm. 35670

70

___

Allon1lon- Woril From-· 01&gt;.,.0rO...&amp; MoiOnlor. $6011-

N,.._
inti c.nw,. -..g ...... Aida
Training claiSea monthly. 11 11 a
eate lnduolry?

-

~

Help 'Wtwillid .

....,l·tCI0-784·
uS •soootmo. PTIFT.

:i;;d A-uo, Gotflpatta,'· OH

•June .... ol •

Pomeroy •lllddl1part • Gallpolla, Ohio Point Plea18nt, WV
110

..~o
.-DOlly
- TrID: CI.A 521
lklipolll

......_....

.

_

'

ANTIQUES: mantel clock, grandmother ·clock,
large 3-sectlon mirror, square oak stand table,
treadle sewing machine, ~ooden incubator, square
library table, wooden boxes, large assortment of
pictures, trunk, twin tubs on stand, jelly cabinet,
round pedestal table w/leaves, ice box, stone jars,
Severa! quilts, feed sacks, woad nail keg, lead jar
lids, Iron skillets (wagner), iron pot,
, o1d
I hay .knife, meat grinder on board, Hrn.t&lt;l~'"
dishes, collection of old knives, ail lamps, square
oak mirror, sm oak stand table, Gallipolis School
year books · t919, 1920, t92t , t924, 1930, Rio
Grande High School year books, t9t4, t922, Gallia
County Echo yearbooks, 1948, 1949, 1953, 1954,
rag rugs, cream cans. ·meat platters, pitchers, reel
type mower, 2 milk cans.
HOUSEHO!.D: Rcillaway bed, quilting frames
(new), 2 wooden lawn chairs, newer dining table
(round), lane cedar chest, 2 mauve swivel rockers,
coffee pot w/cups, correllewars, couch and chairs,
lamps, toaster oven, electric skillets. cookbooks,
baskets, suitcases, kroket set, plepans, metal bell,
child-sized wicker table &amp;chairs, 2 school desks, 2
chairs, bags of toys, large office desk.
FARM· 2" portable water pump, Several hundreds
of tobacco sticks, Ford square Baler, Farmall (M)
Tractor, 3-PT Boom Pole, 3·PT Past' Hole Digger,
Grain Drill, Gravity Bed (275 Killbros) 2-Gear, 2
new gas heaters, t Lot of Furnace Pipe (new).
assortment of new running boards for Pickups, one
office Desk, electric cook stove, 4 compartment
kitchen sink. 275 gal. fuel tank, pickup plastic tool
box, assortment of hand tools of all kinds, Store
counter, log chains, used doors.
.
MISC: 2 carvairs, t 6v92 Detroit Diesel Motor and
LOT MQRE .
I

206·5026 For Confidential In·
tervlew.

Manufacturing Representative
For 162 Year Old Industrial
Lubrlcainl Company To Work The
Gallipolis Area. Agricultural Com·
.merclal And Industrial Accounts.
Sales Experience Preferred Earn

30· 50K , Straight Commission
With Schaeffer, You Are 1n Bu&amp;l
ness For Yourself, But Not By
Yourself . Call Kyla Or Rich
4

(440)949-3551 EOE

McClure's Restaurant now hiring
all 3 locations , lull or parl·time,
pick up application at location &amp;
bring back between 9:30am &amp;
IO:OOam, Monday thru Saturday.

Mothers &amp; Olhers pul your com·

puter to work earn S500·S5000
342.0860 .
PT/FT, free Information, 1·140·

Need 10 Ladle s To San Avon .

Earn 40'!.. Call (740)44&amp;-3358

Needed E,;pe rlanced Crew for
Setting and Finishing Seclional
Housing. Send Pricing Informa tion
"and e•perlence 10: Soulhern
Homu , PO Box 629. Jac kson.
OH~

NOW HIRING FOR
POINT PLEASANT OFFICE
EARN UPTO $10.00 AN HOUR
(Guarantied Selary)
Men and Women Need,ed To Do

Telephone Operator Work For

NATIONAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS
Homemakers work while
children In schOol

"DAV AND EVENING SHIFT
AVAILABLE
'FULL AND PAIIT·T1ME
OPENINGS
'NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED·
TRAINING PROGRAM
'COLlEGE &amp; H.S. STUDENTS
WELCOME
Apply InPerson At:
303 Main Street
Point Pleasant, WV

Mondoy, April 30th
Tuooclo~. Moy 111
. WodneiCioy,Moy 2nd
3'00pm Until 8:00pm ONLY .
Ask For Ms. Willis

Located at the Tradin ' Past in Patriot. From Ironton,
take SR t41 to Cadmus and turn right onto Patriot
Road. Go 3 miles. From Gallipolis, take SR 141 to
SA 775. Turn left onto S R 775 and go to Patriot
Road. Turn Right onto Patriot Road. From Oak Hill
or Ria Grande , take SR 325 S to SA 14t . Turn
right onto SR 14 1 and to to top of hill. Turn left onto
Gage Road . Go 1.5 miles an d turn left onto Patriot
Road. Watch for signs.

Call 740-379-2540
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property. .

Own a P.C.? Put lllo Workl For a
free booklet call: 800·429·5853 or
vtsu us online:

www.getpcwork .com
Part Time CNAI LPN tor In 'Home
Ca re· Female Patient. Send Re·
sume to: CL A 516 clo Gallipolis
Dai ly Tribune, 825 Thi rd Ave ..
Gallipolis. OhiO 45631
Po&amp;tal Job&amp; $48,323.00 yr. Now
hiring· No experience·paid trainlng· great benefits, c all 7 daya

800·429·3680 e~. J·38S.

1

�\

Sunday, Apctl21, 2001
Help YAw 1 II
lllill Clofia. 1iNoono1 e...

:· 110
: ,...,.,.

: pto;s:jii._ May-

Howt•-.. Every

1

=Ala""' -.g
. ir 10 lOin a~ .... lor . . -

Ala

Glh

II.
.. ' - - &amp; Found,

·v....-.., Mdw.nlrd

To Do Adt 111111 a. P8ld

ln,.,.a..

p

pmemiE;

2:1111 .......... ..., .....
........ torun.8und8y&amp;
IIG nclaV IIMIIIn 2:00 p,m.
Fr!Uy

MM'I'f' rreD!!tE;

1:GOp.lll.thacMybefore
....... to run......, &amp;
llol~My edition

t:CIO p.m.

l'l'lcMy.

•omu PF'flf!ME;
2 d8y8 blfare ........ to

run lip 4:30p.m. ......-y
&amp; "1 1118yeclllan·4:30
lJIIINeMy.

·o , .. ,.,1

rtto .

ctlft!lge due to IIIJM' ,..

ANNOUNCEh1ErHS

005

Ac.torabte puppin. I weeki Old.
Shepard . mix, weaned. tir5t SftDIS
and wormed . Please c:all

(740)258-9302

Adult Golden Retrjaver Mix,
Spa'f'8d FeNit. El.cenent Wa1Ch
Dog. Needs A Loving Countr~

Srlllaoy Spaniel Mlk, 6 Week 'Old
Puppies. Free To Good Home ,
(740)387~4

Free PuppieS. lab Mix . Gon1le &amp;
Calm , Rio Grande Area.

(740)24s-5801
60 LOll and Found

LOST- Wt\lte/ Grey
Large
Donkey - Male In Additon Area.
Catt (740)448-2124 Of (740)448-

9379

Meet New People The Fun Way

1·900·329·8850 Ext.
1216. $2.99 Per Minute. Sor•·U

Toda~ tl

(819)645-8434

DATING TONIGHT!

Have fun meeting eligible singles
In your area . Toll·free 1·800·

ROMANCE, ext.9735
Start dating 1onlght! Play tho Ohio
.Dating Game. Call 1011 free 1·800.
romance ext. 1621.

TALK TO GIIILI UVEf
JUSTCAU.
1·900-329-8130 Ext.7173
$3.99 Per Minute. Must Be 18
Years. 8etv·u (619)645-&amp;134

101
Buhl
Matton · Rol!d.
Jackson PUte, House On Hill

speaker. S1.200: 88 Otds 88. 4
caocels, 740-9115-4485.

Pt.- Pleasant

May 1st· 9:30- Rutland on

Noi50n
Rd. o1 NeW Lima Rd. LOIS ol items

May 2·3. 9am·7 Something for

&amp; Vicinity
May 2·3, 36000 Rod&lt;springs Rd. Cheap Garage Sale, 112 Milo Route 87. Off Junction, Roull 2.

and

tlalri items.

Pomeroy.

Syracuse. 2702 on t24, MAY 2·5.
9am--3pfn. Good refrigelaror, table.
chairs , anlique sewing machine.

and fTIOfe.
Tuesday Mar 1st, Roderick
Grimm's In Radno on Br~. 3
lamilies. a lollo pid&lt; from.

Thurs-Sat Somelhing For Every·

one

110 Help Wanted

Auction
and Flea Market

740-592·1842

Quality cloth ing and household
nems. $1 .00 bag sale e11ery
Thursday. Monday thru Saturday

9:00.6:00.

ssoo.oo-se.ooo.001mo. PTIFT

-

... ACCESS TO ACOMPUTER?
Put it to -kl $251hr·S75/IV. FT/
PT. FREE Info. 888·603·0536

AISEMIILY. AT HOIIEfl Crahs

Toys, Jewelry, Wood, Sewing:

,.

'IW&gt;Ing...Great Pay! CALl

795-0380 Exit 201 (24hrs)

hours! Call U.S . Digest 1-617·
520-8071 24 hour recording.

111125WEEKLYfl

HUMAN RESOURCES

110

Help Wanted

SSOSIWK. working with ·lhe gov·
ernmEinl lrom home. Part-tlmelfull-

timo. 1-888·745·3772 Ext. At 1
(24 hrs.)

55 Hospital Drive
Athens, Ohio
592-9227

Friday· Saturday

EOE

Sunday, Till 8pm. 1153 Graham

110 Help Wanted

Road

Pool Supplies. Girls Clothes.
Toys, 0.6 Months Boys &amp; Misc.

NEEDED IMMMEDIATELY

PHARMACISTS
Candjdatos Wjth current Ohio ljconsyre Dleay contact ·

'

Paul W. Stackhouse, R. Ph., Director
Holzer Family Pharmacy, Gallipolis Store
90 ·Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563
Phone: (740) 446·5236

'

p.m.

FoOd flwllable

•

Would tlkt to thank all
who aont carda, food,
arid f(owera, all who
vl81tlled with ua during
the Iota of our Dad.
Thlnkato our Patllor
Andrew Pa,.ona and
hit ton• Dennlt and
Jack, and daughttrs
Peggy and Shtr(ty for
their help, Flaher &amp; ·
AcrH Funeral Home for
lhalr klndn..a and
graal work. To all the
churchta for whtllthty
done, but moat of all for
all your prayera ·they
wtregreatly
appreciated. Thank
you, may God biHI
each ana In o"'
prayara. Love you.

The Gallla County .Board of Commlulonere Invites
qualified applicant• lor the position of County Jobs lo
Family Servlcat Administrator 2. Under administrative
dlrectl'on of the Board of County Commlstloners,
plant, dlrectt, coordlna)es, and reviews all agency
program• and actlvltleo for both the Jobs and Family
Servlcet and the Child Support Enforcement Agency
(total of 50 employoer). Provides Indirect supervision
to all agency employees. Perform• and oversees fiscal
duties for the entire agency. Perform• public relations
duUet. repretentlng the entire agency.
Completion of a Bachelor's Degree in buslnen
administration, public administration, human tervices.
toclal service•. human resources or finance; .and
additional five yean uperlence working In
tupervltoryladmlnlstratlve position In human service•
organlzaUon required. Extensive knowledge In the
Ohio Department of Jobs lo Family Services (ODHS),
Including Ohio Work• 'First, aoclal services and Child
Support Enforcement Agency preferred.
Full benefit package (I.e., vacaUon. sick leave, health
Insurance , retirements ayttbms, etc.). Salary
negotiable, baaed on experience and qualifications.
Interested applicants can aublnll a resume to Barb
Unroe, Clerk of the Board ol Gallla County
Commlsslonen, at 18 Locust Street, Room 1292.
Galllpolla. Ohio 45631 , no later than May 18, 2001 at
4:00p.m.

Truckload

Sale

**

110 Help Wanted

Words written by: Michael Trent
We love you brother and always will.
From your: Mom,
and Brother.

10

POSITION ANN NCEMENT
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
DISTRICT COORDINATOR
Application• are being ._ptad for the potltlon of
Community Collage Dletrlct Coordlntllor.
Thlt tw.lvt month administrative position reports
directly to the VIce Praaldant of Financial and
Admln(atratlve Affaire with reaponalbllltlaa lnc(udlng
oHractlng new atudtnta, bOth traditional •nd non·
traditional, to the Community Col.tage.
.
The Coordinator Will be reaponalble lor marketing
the two·year Attoclata Degree programo of the
Community Collage wlthln the fOtllr county dletrlct,
Including aohool vlelta, market reaearch, public
reltlllone, preHnttlllona and communlcatlona with local
bueln ..a and lnduatry.
A lachalor'a Degratln Public RtlaUona, Education,
Marketing, or re(atad fla(d Ia required. A Maatlr'l
Dagr11 It preferred. Travel will be required throughout
the local fOur-county d(atrlct.
lnte18aled peraona ahould aand 1 ltHer of lnterlll
and reauma before the deadline of May 15, 2001 , to:

May 5, 2001
Buckeye Hills
Career Center
Rio Grande, Ohio

GLAS5llJAHE

Milk itus. stemw•re. aoblets. cmtal. rubY. cobalt.
Finton, salts. 6 Place set11na blue onion JlrG Meekln
Enaland, hall driP coffee Pot,sev. cat filiurlnes. Rutland.

(740) 245-5334
Tools./ Equipment
at 9:00a.m.

X-RAY TECH
·ARRT Uceasecl
X-ray Tech needed In
an Athens Medical
omce. Health
benefits available.
Please call
740-594-43oo
or
\
fax resume to
.

LUenne A. Bowman,
V.P. Financial &amp; Admlnlatratlva Affalro
Rio Granda Community College
P.O. Box 328, Rio Grandt, OH 45574
E·mlll Lbbwman@rlo.adu
FAX: (740) 24WCI35

Help Wan.l ed

ODMMUIIITY IIIUII'IDIII
CDIIIDIIIATIII

Team up with one of the
nalion's premier providers of
physical
rehabllllailon
programs. We currently
seek a self-motivated,
enthusiastic Individual for
our acute rehab unit at
Holzer Medical Center.

COLUCTABL.a8: eM. Cider.,...,

.,..., OOPtMW ... lceniM • a

loddw

IJ

"'"'lltril

com

~

a

w.....,

w.

.~-..

www.tand.com

..,.s::
a••na,.

!.E"

piMM, dNW lllrllfe•, AJMdln t.lue ftam~~
eaddl- (woMiet"n very n~), mltlc. leek,.

..,..... toa1 baoxN,_~ lg. MYI.., ¥1oM. ..,.,.. ctrNI., 411rou...- ......,.,...
oul - . oultlna tOnh outftl ooc 4i1te, atr ~...r ...,._ 8una.
WOOCI lftd .tutn1nutn - . .....,.., ehllln
bloWera,. aNin . Jtoul_,, llcC~ &amp; eto.) 7 hP motor, ~~ IMI"'P 101 011 ~1 1
. . , f« timber ~·-~ ohllln-.: ,.....,.. .net ot..ln btncNra, urn
IIPU:IIil
hot I fiiDU PM, mllddox"•, ~ tt.mm.n,
twnwuw:., t.toMt-. . pltahfarlta. poe~ttol.: 11...,., Mil Up, 1M4I rn.ttlng
pota. It• ros-eteo1.
oonll. and
to be fvund.

hoi.._

W..·..,..,...,

wer.,..........,

lot•""""

NOTE: Tlllo taluoi a .,.rttef llotfrig olo vary , _ aata,lhfa
gOnlloman hoe bean colleotlno ror 30+ reora: lhfo Ia o aafa you

I

'

is..-.No_..,. nocusary.-

Ill -10 ltarl frn.

-modlataly. $120(1.

mon11110 ttarl.
col: 740-992.Q3118 . .

4110-9450 24 tva.
HOMEWORKERS NEBlEDI

catl1·800

$800 WMidV pre Oil ling mil

Easy!Noaparlonce-.

can 1·800.· 755·2027 x539 (24

·

We. haven't had this nice. of selection of glass
for a goad while. so come. out and
e.nJoy this sale..
A very large selection of nice glassware to include
Green &amp; Pink Depression, Carnival, Fire King,
Imperial, WV glass , pressed glass cut glass,
Miracle Maze dish, Homestyle dishes, . Jewel tea
cream &amp; sugar, blue glass. cqke items, granite
ware, stone jugs &amp; crocks. Coins, Roth America Tuff
Boy baby swing, Milk cans, lamps, cookie jar, toys.
Sellers while kitchen cabinet (good shape) 4-very
nice brush .seat ladder back cha.lrs. Items in this
sale all
this.one.

tva.)

Housekeeper. To Clean Weekly.

Retertncea Aoqulred: (740)4'411018 Afltf •:aopm
INTERNATIONAl COMPANY
NEEDS HELP wf1h Mall OrdariE·
Commorco. $500·$7000 mo. PT1
FT ~om homo. Full Training. FrH
Booklet.
92tr·924·8400

abOYe. Mull llaoldo In Ohio At
Time 01 HI,. And Poo- Ohio
Driver~ Llc:anH. Annual Salary:
S27,560. State of Ohio benefits.
Walk·ln interviews Monday- Frl·
&lt;Illy 7am-4:30pm. Call (740)2232405 for more lnlonnollon. Continuous recruitment EOE

Laborer To Help With Tree Work
And Ot.her Outside Duties , DJiv·

ora llcanao A Must (740)4482422
~
library wort· Bool&lt;mobito Servlc·
es. Punctual. r11ponslble DRIV·

e~s

-

to offer mobile lbraly

services throughout Gallla Coun·
ty. Enthusiastic readers encour·
aged to apply. Apptlcallons can

be

plckoel up at Bossard library·

Bookmobile Department Musl
have Ohio liCense. COL prertrred,
clean driving record, 2 years col·
lege or comparable work e11peri·
ence. able to llfl 50 pounds and

be 25 yeo,. or - ·
Looking for a strong·mlnded.
self· motMIIIId lndlvldual to fill an
Assistant Manager Position .

Not ruponalbtolor

aaetdentl or loll of property. Announcemen.. day of nle take

"Trucks"

Help ~ lor tho _ , ,
Dar1t Group Home. now pa~ing
minimum wage, new lhifll: 7am3pn, 7am-5pn, ~"""'· llpm.

S635 ~ pre :1 rsing mel
Eay1 N o _ . . . , . . -·

llooclto~h AuctlonHrl"'f lorvtcoo
Au-r. 8111 Moodlopaugh ·Ohio Uc. 178113, WV Uc. 11388

'

8538 www.cnem2bfrM.com

For ..... -

a,..'"

--e.;'.... ---- _..,..- -·
~lev

~. hDrM •nd pony h•mt~•• •
Md~nrtore.

HELP1 Wort from llomol Mail-or·
f522..-.c PT
S1OOO·S-4000/n FT. 100·921·
ctor!E.commor...

In Criminology, Criminal Juallce.
Sociology Or Psychology or 12
Monlhs Experience In Sataly &amp;
security &amp; Treatment of Reslden·
lial Clients or 24 Months EJiperl·
ence as a Comm. Peace Officer
or 2 Years Mil itary Supervisory
Experience or a combinallon of

{ohum.. oroaka. Jer• &amp; lua•l· lronw•,. 1 rt•w.td a Wagnet1, oil .. m.-,
....,.,. oene, .....,.,.....,

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS

Fadlfty, 332 Merion- WlfliamiJ)Of1
Road . Marion , Ohio. Requires 2
Years Fult·llmo College Ed..,._

wood WDik benDtl w/Vioe, k,.ut llun.r.,
...,._.. (8lauJ, woOd whMt ......._~MINe, whHt . . .
....... ..,.,.. butitK ._..... •ltd etltTft, wtlieby .......... DOM
,
oow Milt: •illiM _....,., ._ ...... 101 OrMm .......,., wood -.m p..,_.,
cutuvatara. pu... pfowe, wood tiCiv. .0.... 1111 .._ plowl, IIIOull&gt;ltl
n..., _...,.. •~ pro..., ooal forb. ruc1
•aad pop orat.a,
OltiOken ~a
ttoa ~ '2ft.
• .......- w.gon (no
bH), Mtv. out iron tr..tor ...
tron Mel
......,. enG ~.,
...,.,., ml.o. iron ......,. (3 . ._, A.P. ~ha ~·· AallrOM IMI'nOI'albln•
{141mtrne, *ooU. oen•, oltef'e, • etc.), (2 •• · ..... • qt. chum•, ..._.~

Restaurant ••perlenee Is

precendence .of printed materiaL

1993 GMC 3/4 ton Pickup 2$110 auto., 1983 Chev. SO
Serln flalbed V8 gao w/4 speed. .

Refreehmente Provided
For tntorm011on: P1- can uo ot (740) 11119-2123 (homo'

1187-3788 auction houoo.

a pkts

but not required. Wage balld on
qualifications and ew:perlence. 11
Interested, send a resume to 999 .

or

E. Main suatt , Jackson , Ohio

45840 or fax to:(740)211&amp;-1907

"Equipment"

Auction

Two Totbo Blasten approved by EPA, 185 CFM Joy air
comp~eooeJ w/J.D. eJ181ne, 175 CFM Ingersoll Rand air
. comp~e~oer wiD. .w/3 cyL Deutz, Sclew lngenoU Rand
600 CPM Rolary vane air compresoer w/671 lnllne
engine, liuck mounttdlngenoU Rand screw type w/671
Ddlol~ 750 CpM SuUair. Fut IJack all comp~esser w
671/Detroit, 7SO Fast. lngenol Rand w/cuinmlno engine,
lngenooU Rand VliCuwn unit, 365 CFM Garden Denver

Management Opportunily. Career
Opportunity Wiln Major Company.
Complete

PUBLIC ·AUCTION

100 Hannan Trace Road In Patriot next to
Tradln' Post Treasures, Aml1h Furniture Store
Auctioneer Mike Massey, Licensed and
bondad In Favor In the State of Ohio. Phone
740-379-9133. Rain or Shine. Food served.

A public auction.will ba held to disperse of
the Ohio University Surplus llema. NOTE:
Each quarter Ia a completely new batch. of
aurplul Items to be sold. ALL ITEMS ARE
SOLD AS IS/NO GUARANTEE. VIsit the
WEB alte for a complatallatlng:
www.facllltlaa.ohlou •.adu, click on Moving &amp;
Surplus under Camr.u• Sarvlcea, then News,
Surplua Inventory n Stock Items. Preview
the week before - call 74()-593·0463 for an
appointment. DIRECTIONS: At. 33/50 to
Atharia to Rt. 682 axlt, go through light at
Richland Avenue, turn laft at The ~ldgea and
follow algna to Building 10.
·

Chlcap Pneu11111tic air compressor, 6000 Clark Fork
truck off Road.

10' ohoweJ unit dirty &amp;; dean roomt Iocken &amp;; benches,
27" ohoweJ unit.
·

"Misc."
32' office or 8\0Jage llaile~ 300 &amp; 350 Self contained fuel
tanlci, 8011W Blast Pot foJ parts, 18' aluminum oto1age
~ox, unaooembled metal building, 2.-:W' long x 2' wide
aluminum scaffold boardo, 2.-14' X2' aluminum oc•trold
bQard, 2.-14 X2 wide aluminum auffold boaJdo, 1·24' x
27" alum. tcaffold board, 1·37' x 20" olde aluminum
ocaffold bo11da, 1-17' Z 26", 1-32' x 1', 2.-12' X I'
illumlnum ocaffold boanlt, 4 mloc. extenolon laclclers, I
to 2 alwn .Onduct approx. :Z00.300 pieces, 1400' of Blast
ltMt, 1500' of 50 Chic"'l" house 1000' of 100' Chicago
hooe, .300' of 2" Bull ·hose, 2.'lW of 1 1/2" Bull hose, 4
SkycllmbH w/cable, 1 Sky cllmbeJ for parts, cable
ollmber, approx. 600' electric cable for Skydimben,
Skydlmber otlm~po w/wheels, 2 air,homs, 6 pc. of 12"
Jllexll;lle air duct, 3 l&gt;Jtst Collecton, Electric allleoo opJay
pump, 300#, Blast Pot, 6-600# Blast Pots (W~t 01 D,Y)
600# Schmldl Blast Pol, :Z.800# Blast Pot (tJaileJ type) 2
Exploslo~ Proof Ughts, mloc: electric cords 110, mil&lt;. ·
dead11111n cord, mia&lt;. Deadman switches, ado&lt; 318"
alrlno Palntune, mla&lt;. 1/2" aldeN paint line, 6 blllt .
hoodo, mtoc. dampo, oh.1&lt;kln I&lt; devlcn, mite. Hanging
acaffold itlrnlpt, mitt. 11ffold handrails, mia&lt;.
aaffaldlng wheeLs, ada&lt;. vaouum heads for 55 gtl.
dniDII, mio&lt;. 011glne &amp;; wmpmsoJ parll, mloc. pipe
fittinp, valveo, air Jeguhtors, aiJ water b:apo, safety
belts &amp;; hamellft. Sky cUmbe11 baskets, air spider &amp;
oagtt, :Z..IO X 10 blast tenta, 55 gal. drum of mloc. chain
link fence parts, 2 cylinder llftt, gas umpe1 and lots, lob

•

1$83 ford Explorer, 2·1H1 ford
111a1 Chevy Cot'IICI, 1110 010 llorm, 2· 1810 Ford Escort LX, 1888
Cherokee, 1MS \'otkawagOn Jttt., 1111 Chevy I·Ton Dump Truck, 1DI!
F100 2·Ton Dump True*, 1111 'ord leonollrM 150 Vtn, 3·vtn uatt,
yeHtcLj;a.gp be

yld ' ' Npgn);

BMW:m, 1•au1ck Rtlll.

:mQL1

MD IOU!PWNT·

Sheldon Chk~go 111M m.ehlne, Wo&gt;rthlo~

OOiilfNIIIOJ/pUmP. bctltlof 21 " bell drlwn PrMI, elef;trk:tl

~hOU•

dev1oa,
mllilmf*tl I VOtta !Mitt Gtvtcll,
bridge dtvlot, Wtldnghou.. lndusttltl anatyzer, FCR 250

I

1~;~~:; I

ohlnttf', Wetton lnetrvmtnte tool kit, prftlu,... 911111, tftter ldl,

pteeltlon tlr rntter, IIICtrlcat pyromtttr,. IIIII dtcldt MllnO kit,

meter, llorv.. IIIJtookmanJint.,ttiOntl cantrllug .., Rhino robot,

Chlc•o&gt;&gt; I

night • height IRIIII, UgM flxtur11, bulbt,. oil lamp globea, ••H
fbdUfH, HIIO Poww triO lllhtt, bolWI of b1Ht111k IT1II1r111.

COMPUTERS (to be .old lblrtlng tt 0:00 t .m .)

MIRQf' oANfP'JR· Iota of love aaata, hide+btdt, trm ohtlrt, Chtlrt on
whftll, co"" • end ltbl.., 28•full tlzl mtttre..t t I 11\41ttl tramea, IIVtrll
drMitrt, niCihlttlndt, ntortment of l1mpt, Sony ch!ldrtrte ca..tttt r1dla1,
1110rt1d wll\dow flnt, window air condiUontrt, franMd wa ll mlrrora,
Olrland I QE atov.., Samaung mlcrowavt, ltrge taborltory 1fltur, Whllti
frte•r, Whlrtj)ool dry.r, loti or cltanlng auppltea, end lott mo,-..

Dan Smith • Auctioneer,
Ohio #1344, WV #515

IiBIIJ.;. C11h or chiCle w/poti11Yt I.D. JtiYibll 10 OhiO Unlvtrllty. MC, VISA
Ia DISCOVER will be ICCipt.d. Ct»ckS over 11000 mual havt blink
tulf'IOrtiiUon of fundt IYIIIebtt. Not r11ponalble for 1011 or eccldenta.
Food will ttl l'llllbtt,

Terms: cash or good check day of sale with
ID, nothing to be removed until settled for.
Buyers must bring a Bank Letter
of Guarantee made out to ' ·
Dan Smith, Auctioneer.

OWNER: Ohio University
www.faclllttea.ohlou.edu, click on Moving &amp;
Surplus under Campus Services, News,
Surplus Inventory In Stock Items
SHAMROCK AUC110N SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Sheridan &amp; Chris Prater
PH: 740·592-4310 or 800·419·9122

·Refreshments Available
Note:
will be available.
~I

Training

Program,

hcellent Benerlls. Call 1·866·

Ohio Unlveralty Surplus Inventory
Saturday, May 19 • 9:00 a.m. • Athena, OH

air compre11ef Cal Z gas powered air movere, StaUonary

•

DRIVER· Don~ Miss This Oppor·
1uni1y 10 Run Flall&gt;ed Dedicated "'
Regiollall Must tiY&amp; In ll, IN. OH. or.
KY, or S. MI. Call Bruce 0 Tan·
ctem 1100-551·9057 Ext. 140

,...._, "ti'Oefl-htne meot~tne ..tt.tot, ~ mowrne pi•AN, blaak.a a.au1

- . rMOt ecr.toMrt,

Owner- Rock Whobrey - Pred.
(Work) 7\10·367-7442

EOE

Resumes to : Sherry Gordon ,

OXL3234

Manager of Human Resources, . 7am, c a l 7 -·5023.
Woodland Centers, 3081 Still.
HEU'WAHTED: Now...,_
Route 160, gafllpoUs, Ohio 45831,
Application doadttne Friday, - accopltog appfk'-lor
ller 18, 2001 . EOEIAA EmplOy· FULL TIME POSIT10NS. ~

outtow, wood..._.~ .. lard

........

~

TERMS: Caoh or gooctchoo' w/propor 1.D.

n3-&amp;785 or n3·S447
Exeoutrlx: Charlene Ho.tllch
Ca.. No. 31761 '

of community resourcea . Send

Domino's Now Taking Applica·
tiona For Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy
locations Only.

Govern-nt Jaloa $11 .00·
$33.00 per hour potenltof. Paid
Training/FuN 8anofft1. For more
Information call 1·888-874-11150

Juw-enlle Correctional OfficerMarion Juvenile Correctional

- .............. _ _............. ....

**
**

don't want to mlal.

Auction conducted by/
Rick Pearson Auction CO. #66

com·

municauons sldfls and lloowtedgl

Directions: Take 50 &amp; 7 North throug"
Coolville, Ohio to County Road 83, turn rlght,
follow County Road e3 to N. Cincinnati FUdge
Road, turn left, go approx. 1 mile, please
follow the signa.

&amp;om OaUipoUI, Ohio, take St. Rt. 7 Norih to
Addloqn, Ohio, then take Addloon Pike to 2 .mile
ma1ke1. Watch for audlon olgno. ·

'

tiona. Must have exceUenl

workers. Call Monday : 740·9920368.

0Np457W.

www.AchiaveOreamt.Com

mort:

NOTE: The Train S.lltion set UP must
viewed Prior to auction. Dlsmountlna 8r removal Is
ruPonslbllllll of buYer. For ulewlna call 304-113·
u:~•MI or 740·9112·5292. Vel'l' ill. amount of tools a.
RINGS.

ing. public telarions end opera·

Moodlspaugh's Auction House

·Pari D. Ho.er. Aucnon t.l~r
Hmrv M. Sc....y Ill, C/\1 Auctioneer .t Reil EDie BrWr

-n·

"""'"'"ling

·Saturday, May 5, 2001 at 10:00 a.m.

"Units"

Help Wanted

For more lnlormatlon, please
contacl · Barbara Snell,
RthabCare Group, 7733
Forsyth Blvd., Suite 1700,
' St. Louis, MO 63105.
1·800·877·1238, ext. 2218.
FAX: (314) 863·7751 .
Email:
baonell@rahabcare.com
~ RahabCare Group
www.rehllbcara.com

***

Located

control Power control box-multi control train muter
IIIPe z WTransformer 115 Volts· 60 CYcles· 275 Wa«s
Wide x 17' 7 112" lona real nice musi seell Train
ALC ElectrO· model D61ZT. Dresel RR Lantern red
alobe. Ad Lake ' ~arker llaht, aood old 41illllt RR l.ilht.
110, trains. Rallr,oad. train VCR tat&gt;es, caboose lantern,
brill ateam whistles, brass steam aauaes. lante~ns·
· NltW RR blue alobe· ClrO RR Red ilobe, U. collection
of POCIIet watches ouer 75- Waltham· Elain· Hamilton·
Burtlntton • Illinois· Camero· fqullll &amp; others some 15··
It lr 21 Jewels some aold cases, ladles It mens
costu~r~e lewelrll. books- The PeoPle War Book
AutoaraPbed Edition Dwlaltt D. Eisenhower· While
House Years· Reuan. Sev. RR Books &amp; more, 1936
Gal. Ohio RW11a Proaram Pictures. cow bells. carued
wooden elePhants. oriental ruas. linens, Radio Shack
walkie talkies. Realistic scanner. 4 channel coP scanner.
SharP uiew cam, Dixon Guitar, quilt must seell RCA
VIctor Porta Record PlaYer, Minolta 35 MM wlexfra
zooms. Bunn coffee POt, iood kitchen apPUances.
Reverware, old dinner bell, old flshlna rods. It reels,

Candldat11 should also have
general knowledge of
s~stems, delivery of health care,
Human Resource Management,
budgetary management. clinical
reeoras systems, martellng, program -'&lt;ot&gt;mont and grant wrK·

Antique Tool Auction

SATURDAY, MAY 5, 2001
10:00 A.M.

at 12:00 noon.

services adn have a workin g
knowledge of the Ohio Depart·
men1 ot Mental Heallll St.andlrds.

Public Sale and Auction

...___

.'

www.rtcarriers.com

97 Berch Sbeet
992·95&amp;3 OBioe • 992·0180 .Jim
Every Th~ N!Qht 6:00p.m.
Coulpmenta Welcome
·
WeclnesdaJ 10 am • 3 pm
Thrusdaf 10 am • 3

*

Modular House ·

Responsibilities
Include
marketing;
census
development; serving as
liaison to 3rd party payors,
physicians,
ana
case
managers; and · handling
patient
pre·admlsslon·
aorHnlngs. Prior healthcare
marketing
experience
required; cjlnlcal background
preferred.

:

MOOIU,N: Lg . • ~of c.-.ttem., twnd toot., ,~gtd 3 legged pipe v!o.,

AntiCiue droP leaf table. llurQUndY love seat 8r chair.
swivel rOcker. r~llner It offter chairs; Ia. coffee table.
Croslell bill screen 1V. 2 curio cabinets, desk. earlY
walnut lr curbl maPle laP desk. maPle cgrner cabinet.
IIIIPie dlne«e lr hutch. swlnaer 1DO electric oraan.
mah. buffet, 4 tic; BR suite, nlaht stand, 5 PC. white
fret!Ch ·Prov. BR suite, old trunk. oak file cabinet, TriStar swect&gt;er like ~~q~, Malllllll washer &amp; dr~~er, Pallo
set It more.
,.

Modular Ho115e and
Tools &amp; Equipment

110

Glassware to include: Gre«1 Depression, Carnival,
Amber, Blue. Black Colored glass, lots of misc.
creamers, one wJLazarus Co. (very old) boldes,
jars, vases, collej:tor plates &amp; cups.
An item of interest is a Welsh Bible between 17()()..
1800 Mynegal'R by Peter Wiliams &amp; John Ross
Approx. siZe Is 10 1/2 x 10/1/4 x 5 leather bound
falr cond. for age some pages missing. Misc.
household · furniture, patio fumiture, bedroom
suite's, refrigerator, washer, d,Yer, misc.
crates wood &amp; metal. DrMng Pari&lt; Dairy cooler, old
organ D.S. Johnston Co,, Wizard 14.5 h.p riding
mower.
Lots of
misc. household

**
* John 1. S.WIIt li Wm. J. Faalin.Jr.• Auc.tioneerslli: Realtors *
**********************·***********'****

.'

EOE

Oaycare-available in·Radna area.
Jennifer-. 740-949-2169.

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Eain

...,...o:

'now1odgoabla regarding au ••·
podS ol dollwlry ol mental -

""'your

www.tt11c.om

Yiww.~MdFor-.com

=-

0&lt;

Distribution center opening new
location. No experWince required
due to company backed training.
Must be al leaSI 18 years old.
Qu ick advancement for hard

PUBLIC AUCTION
. Locat~ at the Auction Center on
Rt. 33 In Mason, WV. Due to location we
have moved the eat&amp;ite of Gerald Shuster
from Lincoln Hillin Pomeroy, Ohio to the
Auction Canter to be sold.

D

EarnUp1oS5oo-18ooo/Mo
PTIFT
.

L!l:.i ;:rs......::.:. r;d

(304)675-1809

«&amp;.

Resume 1o (304)67~
IAIFNI
Ferry. WV 25515.

-9-5Agaln

*•

Somettilng ror
Everyo.r•l

110

~

-

*

*

AUCTION

...._...
7 • 93-7600

Posting Date: Aprll27, 2001.

Oh Lord, take me by the hand
and lead me to the promise land
I know the time Is close at hand
I want so much to understand you, Lord.
Oh Lord, I must have you In my life.

Ba'lbwOwn .....,

*
*

** ..........

to Rout• 1. Box

;~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~Gatlloolls

*

.·

ESTATE

COUNTY JOBS AND FAMILY
SERVICES ADMINISTRATOR

years ago today.

Weell ,

*

ANTIQUE FURNITURE

John Veith

Prelor My Homo. 3-5
1· 3pm, Calf
(740)24s-5462
Babys-.

Days/

*

AucUon

110 Help Want~

Who left us 10

empto,_ resort in Ft. Myers
FL and our ..,._,aoye11 Inn
In Pigeon Forge. TN. Mall ~our

: Hilch ..... :'302"'n~o
~
* 41" - dock: JDhH{': ...Jo~,_....,.30
16$, .._..,--~d . . . . :
- a . d f: •
*: Ctilsiooa
4000 12 HP. 4 ..-d. 3 1 " - dock· «;:r~ls. iiOO *
14 HP. 6 ._.. w/42" deck. tta.11 Kina 12~ ~!,", 7 lfiOOl! wl *
* Bill
4~" - : Rally_ 12 HP 6 "--' . . . WI ll"
·Troy *
~ HP ,_uno~ tiller: - Tnoy Bilt 5 iiji pr** den
t~ler. uod 5 HF'el~ sM1t Troy B i l - ,_tile• · :
hiler. Ul8d 5 HP puU 111111 TB ,... line an1ee-. *
* den
TBhorw1illor.filr- WW chippasp-2 ti2'HP:2 p;;d *
'It uod' HP Bil Wheel pash IIIOWGI; 4 16 HP 11.s · - *·
. : NICE ANTIQUE Bia Wltool ...... oom Sheller. 460 Ford V-1
.** &lt;»mpreaor;
I D-4o Clllllk iilaft '!liuirat 6 HP yaticaJ ~ pi'"'* lwia cvl. oir :
new I 10ft 111010r ....,. . . . . . ltlllld; - o(lawn
aactor .decko to include 36" .t oM" dedto; 60 II ""' of I :
112 J:lydr. .lOOOoW hwc: llqo • • of- amoll •sine *
*: Crafto
~I' !PIIta. lawn llador. A: IIIIIWCI' ~ w/ ..
s:ria· 111W
..IIIChanic tool .... to include i&gt;llowina: 234 piec:C; 15· 1t
* 2? piece 3/1 clriY&lt;;. 12 .t. 19 piece 1/4 cJriye -d; 4,12 ~ *
., ~drive SO&lt;bt; tO piece 114 I&lt; l/1 Not oppx 2u 1111 l/1 :
lt.IWidard" _ , 114 deeD ...u - · l • 101 ~
1!4, l/1, !12 oocl&lt;et sets; 3 ..., ofU piece corn~. wu11dieo; 6
'It poece Quod&lt; wrendi; 7~J!i«oce COIIIb ..r.nch sets; 141&lt;11 t&gt;iCI!'!'
: ...."*IY• sots: new l.lt3 • - Crafts. pan, 1ool chooi: 10 *
* ~ C~. - d I pia:e COIIIb• ......,ha: 5 now Cr1fto. I :
1r poece-..: oomb. ....,.hea:- vises;-· 100 hom-.
all ll)'ln; Aviation lin saipl;
wrcnc1t set: bonel :
** of
pumpo: ' - " ' oocllot- ..,.,.h: OL·I/2" clootri&lt;: im- *
wrench in caw. 4 112 pindor
T handle hex sets; 4 112" *
: cui olf wheolo: 318, 112. 3/4 ex1entiono: drill bit ICIO: 10 new *
., - ' • 4" orindcn: nrmm• hondla; Drills inclode: meniblc
1r 112". 7 BED 311", Cr~lls. 311": Chain binder. ..,,...~-:Air
** suns:
body file wasp 2 112XI5 314: dual ac:tiCOI 318 air • , .: point :
1111. ~ up to 20X40: had! sowt: carded toolo; lawn *
mower ,..., shop rMdo folditttl DaiiiOIIIct lableo: lanlems; 21'
* alum. ladder.
·
.
TERMS: Cash or checlc: everytllina sold u is
10 hi hat biddCr.
. .•
% STANLEY &amp; SO~, INC. l740) 775-3330 :

• ......n·-

FAX: (740) 446·5215

"JACK" CLAGG

lhat f - s • 401(K) redntmonl
plan and tree vocation fo&lt;IOing at

*

Joint Venture Pharmacy, (nc., dba Holzer Family
Pharmacies with ttores located in Jackson and
Gallipolis, OH, is seeking qualified candidates to fill
both parl·lime and full·time openings.

P!;h j4-a,

poueta basic math all:illa. We

reaume

1r11o1nt1 .. 111 provrsr s - 111
- to wort nfl wllh -11.
-net. P.O.
·- loa~TIIo
721-03,Daly'"-roy.

liln.d Cantara. Inc. 11 1 priYile.
not·tor..prolit cofftmunHy mental
....... t h a 1 - Gallia.
Jacllaon. And ~ CounliH in
Southeailern Ohio. A Mastefl
degree In Bu1ineas Admln l1tra·
lion or In a Muter's DegrH In o
Health Care Field wilh fiWI or
more years expertence In man·
agemenl and administration tn a
health care uhlng 11 pre,.rred .
Qua!lflad applicants must be

• be..,.._, ... or·

1.

48113 Oopl I t 011

EXECUTIVE DIIIECTOII· -

curaey. The suceeaaful tan-

offer excenenl pay with benefits

** moved 1111 fvllowiJ!L!!""
Gallipolis be aold die..... !
bi
at t:tl A.M. II 1111
*
:
l'•ac..r~,... . SAnJUAYIIIAY,;ltll . *
* I : " . : . M -: ..,ooo, p._~ol .... *iw; 14HP *

May 3rd&amp;4th. 59 Redwood Drive
(Georges Creek Road. ) 3' Foot

Cllt.a1J0.951.2353

(4:00pm· 12:31Jam, Pre Cler-.
Must typo 2$-30 wlh ac-

.......

Eye _ . , on~eeo bUie bull·
nau alollla raquifod. todu!lco1

"Home~

111ic41&gt;• lor a Ful--. 2nd Shit!.

110

coli........ ~- .....

...,
...
.....
ed. FREE 1n1ernal. 1·100·2tf·

gani,led. computer literate, and

·················•*******************
ABSOLUTE AUCTION
!
*:*
"NIWT"'f·BiltTUicn :lltopT*
•
Cr~ftlmu ToobA w..-...
*
* AtaaatllfilrMr.,.,.D!!t'!!'&gt;'ulllbN-.-111.,. *

4

EMPLOYMENT
SE RVICES

OuaJj.

R+L ~• ..., o1 tho nation's
l•rgest f1rrtily owned LTL motor
freigl\1 caniefs, ia accepting ap.

-

Public Sale end AucUon

H'Uirtiiii~ on
12 Mlln South or Point Pluunt on WV Route 2
Consignments taken: Tlluraday, May 3, 2001
4pm-7pm
Friday May 4, 2001 8 am • 7 pm
Salurday lily 5, 2001 7 am • 9 am
Items &amp;Ire~ consigned:
Gehl Grinder- Mixer, John Deere Three Bottom Plow,
Ford 50t Mower, Locust Posts, Massey Ferguson 255
Dlesel Tractor- locally owned.
We need more consignments.
For Information
Joe Arrington 304-576-4009
Robert Cornell 304-576-2208
Eric conrad 304-743-4426 wv Uc 11194
Terms of Sale Cash only
Not responsible for accidents, theft or loss of property.
Announcements made on Auction Day· Take ·

I.OOKIIIG

Tllo IIG 1l'IDI. Mafllng Tllo BIG

.......... lallhaflol•i.otp

1·1100-449-4825 Ext. 5700

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Silver,
Gold Coins,. Proofsets, Diamonds.
Gold Rings, U.S. Currency,

67&amp;-5985.·

YOU

,..,....

10

Homo. cau 740-446-0175 er 304·

All~

FOR1 START YOUR NEW CA·
flEER TODAYfll t.ear To Drwe

PC required. Call Physician &amp;
Heallheare Developments toll ·
fnlo HIOO·m·5933 ext. 2070.

Mlilonlor·$800-18000 par mo. Pr/FT
Wil trait 1·800 815 0242

Make Money Halping People
RoceMI GoYOrnmenl Refunds
Free Detail&amp;! (24 tva)

www.lahomebiz.com

M.T.S. Coin Shop. 151 Second
A...... Gal!&gt;&lt;&gt;lis, 740-446-2842.
Wantod To Buy: Used Mobile

WHAT

-

110. Help W.tll II
EARN S25.tJOO.S50,otJOI'Wr. -

ClorW

excellent lncom•. Ea1y claims
processing. Full training. Home·

ATTEN110N!

1740)256-6989
90 ·wanted to BIIY

REGISTERED NURSES

HIOO·

-from homo.

Riverside Auction Barn , Sale
Every Saturday Night at &amp;p.m ..
Auctioneer Raymond Johnson

O'BLENBSS

......,. No Colt flalnlng "

24Hrs., Voyager Business AsSO: .

1529 WEEKlY maitipg letters

Information Call 1·800· 501 -6832
ext. 1300 www.projoctrolund.com

A New

Start For Debt Consolicla-.
Cd 1·888~3348 ToK Free

DANCE DISTRIBUTORS' 1·888·

·experience necessary. easy! Artr

Sconic -

Ar• You Looking For

m311ing teners from hOme. No experience necess.ary.. FT/PT. Help .
needed immedialely! Call ·suN-

from Mme. Full or part-time. No

ATTENTION: MOTHERS AND
OTHERS. Up 10 SSOO f&lt;?&amp;M pan
limo. Fulf·trainlftg. t ·100·17f•
-4801. - •.quicflulllno•.comt

Help w.nted

110

doyo, Monday tllrouah Flldoy

237·9381 .

Mai0rder/1n1eme4
Paid TralnlngNacations
catf 1.S00.228-0317

Experie~ Required. For FREE

nJ.57850r 304-n:J-5447.

l ots Of New Things, Tools, Misc.
Furniture

Sc~ool

!!!ArrENTION!!!

lnternatiooal Colnpany Exp;fldlng
Work From Home « Olioe

$987.85 WEEKlYf Proc.esoing
HUDIFHA Mor1gage Refuncls. No

.80

....

8:30 10 4:30. Thlo 11 a "" ......,
- a graal -""*11 The - '
clau wll begin May 71h. Step by
today for an applleallon or contact Stephanie Kempe1• lnstruc·
lor, a1 (740)448-7150

5. Box 1438, ANTIOCH. TN.
37011·1438 SlarllrrJITtOdoalell'.
$450,00·$1 .000.00 WEEKlY

Coll-801).211 ·8150

lilt "'*"''I

•

Help W.tiJ II

110

75 hour course. lasting for 11

12,000 WEEKLY! Mailing 400
brochures! Satlslac110n Guaran1-t PoSlage &amp; Supplies pro\lided! Rush Self·Addresnd
Slamped Enwt-' G1CO. DEPT.

- 8 7, Follow Signs

l ot's Of Stull! Friday, Sa turday &amp;

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson, AthenS

lnlemationaiC&lt;Jrrc&gt;anyE~

Wort! From Homo or 01fice
SSOO.OO.~.OOO.OO/mO. PTIFT
Mail Orderllnlemol
Paid Training/VacationS

www.cashOnlheT-.com

4

Community vard Sale. ShOestring
Ridge. lower Floute 1, May 4· 5,

t!'.ATTENT10N~!!

large 2 Family Garage Sale ,

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
ft.tll time auctioneer; complete
auction
servtce .
licensed
t66,0hto &amp; West Virginia , 304·

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES ·

I, Loon G. Gray, As 01 23 of April.
200 I. Am No Longer Responsible
Tha n

door new tires. runs good. high
miles. ale. laif body, $1 ,200. rain

Behind Foodland Tuesday May
1St· Thursday 3rd. 9-4pm
3 Family Yard Sate, May 1.2.3, 9·
·&amp;
?, 2011 Chootnut Street. Solne1h· ·
lngFor Ewryono
3 Family Yard Sale· Frida~· Sat· O'BLENESS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL hal
urday. May 41h 5th , Household,
Immediate patt-tlme and ruU-tlme openln91
Furnl1ure, Baby Items, Toddler
Clotnes . Much Moral Route 7.
In the Med/Suf9. and Emei"C)enCY Department.
Crown City S9&gt;.
We offer a wry competitive salary ranQe,
4/30 &amp; 5/H/4. 1.2 Miles Out compreheniiW
benellt
packaQe,
Route 218. Mowers, :rrlmm•r•J
Fans, Paper Back Books. Many
Individualized ortentaUOfi, as well as excellent
Other Items
educaUon and other related benefits.
Big Yard Sale. May 1,2,3,4 Applications can be plck8d up In:
"-cross From Kerr Post OHice.

30 Announpementa

Mysel1.

naine. -487

Galllpolll .
&amp; VIcinity

C8ntenary Area, Tuesday, May I ,
8·?. l015 Of Stuff.

For Any Debts Other

SR. 7 {across from Shady RWer
Ag) Hammond O&lt;gan double key·
boards, loot pedal w/Laslie

992.()587.

"""'·
Elmwood Terrace, Racine. Ohio.

Call (740)446-1711 Or (304)
675-4919
70
Yard Sale

Tuesda~.

May t 51, old Avon, some sllll in
originOI bOxeS. Homo Interior, colleclo&lt; plaleS, old gtuswaro. many

4

GirlaU
E•citingll
Pa~tiona tell Talk To ·em Uvell

1·90().329·8130 Ext. 7339 $3.99

Tuesday.

South 4th S~eel. Mid·
dleport . For more Info call 7.40·

" family. rain or ah1ne. garage
sale. Monday Ap&lt;H 30111, Tuesday
May 1st 3202 lor marly Jo's Gift
Shop, sYracuse. antique tfl..ldli. oil
tamp. · dishes. what·nots, nice
large &amp; small women's clothing,
blue jeans. very good children's
clothing, lots ol good toys, lot5 of

LOST (adlts Rolex Watch. reward 1f Found. VERY Sontimenlal,

50ie-

more items 100 numerous to

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

~·

Beautiful

Per MinUte, Must Be 18 Yean ,
Sorv-u (619)645-8434

LNge aslate yard

Tuesday. May tst , Wed. May
2nd. 2 Mites Out Bulavllle Pike
From 160. Crafts, Walso· Cardi
G&amp;de. Elc.

Home (740)041·12fi9

Personal• ·

STAAT

Y.-d Sale

70

Yard Sale ·
5/1, 9am·3pm. 35670

70

___

Allon1lon- Woril From-· 01&gt;.,.0rO...&amp; MoiOnlor. $6011-

N,.._
inti c.nw,. -..g ...... Aida
Training claiSea monthly. 11 11 a
eate lnduolry?

-

~

Help 'Wtwillid .

....,l·tCI0-784·
uS •soootmo. PTIFT.

:i;;d A-uo, Gotflpatta,'· OH

•June .... ol •

Pomeroy •lllddl1part • Gallpolla, Ohio Point Plea18nt, WV
110

..~o
.-DOlly
- TrID: CI.A 521
lklipolll

......_....

.

_

'

ANTIQUES: mantel clock, grandmother ·clock,
large 3-sectlon mirror, square oak stand table,
treadle sewing machine, ~ooden incubator, square
library table, wooden boxes, large assortment of
pictures, trunk, twin tubs on stand, jelly cabinet,
round pedestal table w/leaves, ice box, stone jars,
Severa! quilts, feed sacks, woad nail keg, lead jar
lids, Iron skillets (wagner), iron pot,
, o1d
I hay .knife, meat grinder on board, Hrn.t&lt;l~'"
dishes, collection of old knives, ail lamps, square
oak mirror, sm oak stand table, Gallipolis School
year books · t919, 1920, t92t , t924, 1930, Rio
Grande High School year books, t9t4, t922, Gallia
County Echo yearbooks, 1948, 1949, 1953, 1954,
rag rugs, cream cans. ·meat platters, pitchers, reel
type mower, 2 milk cans.
HOUSEHO!.D: Rcillaway bed, quilting frames
(new), 2 wooden lawn chairs, newer dining table
(round), lane cedar chest, 2 mauve swivel rockers,
coffee pot w/cups, correllewars, couch and chairs,
lamps, toaster oven, electric skillets. cookbooks,
baskets, suitcases, kroket set, plepans, metal bell,
child-sized wicker table &amp;chairs, 2 school desks, 2
chairs, bags of toys, large office desk.
FARM· 2" portable water pump, Several hundreds
of tobacco sticks, Ford square Baler, Farmall (M)
Tractor, 3-PT Boom Pole, 3·PT Past' Hole Digger,
Grain Drill, Gravity Bed (275 Killbros) 2-Gear, 2
new gas heaters, t Lot of Furnace Pipe (new).
assortment of new running boards for Pickups, one
office Desk, electric cook stove, 4 compartment
kitchen sink. 275 gal. fuel tank, pickup plastic tool
box, assortment of hand tools of all kinds, Store
counter, log chains, used doors.
.
MISC: 2 carvairs, t 6v92 Detroit Diesel Motor and
LOT MQRE .
I

206·5026 For Confidential In·
tervlew.

Manufacturing Representative
For 162 Year Old Industrial
Lubrlcainl Company To Work The
Gallipolis Area. Agricultural Com·
.merclal And Industrial Accounts.
Sales Experience Preferred Earn

30· 50K , Straight Commission
With Schaeffer, You Are 1n Bu&amp;l
ness For Yourself, But Not By
Yourself . Call Kyla Or Rich
4

(440)949-3551 EOE

McClure's Restaurant now hiring
all 3 locations , lull or parl·time,
pick up application at location &amp;
bring back between 9:30am &amp;
IO:OOam, Monday thru Saturday.

Mothers &amp; Olhers pul your com·

puter to work earn S500·S5000
342.0860 .
PT/FT, free Information, 1·140·

Need 10 Ladle s To San Avon .

Earn 40'!.. Call (740)44&amp;-3358

Needed E,;pe rlanced Crew for
Setting and Finishing Seclional
Housing. Send Pricing Informa tion
"and e•perlence 10: Soulhern
Homu , PO Box 629. Jac kson.
OH~

NOW HIRING FOR
POINT PLEASANT OFFICE
EARN UPTO $10.00 AN HOUR
(Guarantied Selary)
Men and Women Need,ed To Do

Telephone Operator Work For

NATIONAL RADIO
STATION PROMOTIONS
Homemakers work while
children In schOol

"DAV AND EVENING SHIFT
AVAILABLE
'FULL AND PAIIT·T1ME
OPENINGS
'NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED·
TRAINING PROGRAM
'COLlEGE &amp; H.S. STUDENTS
WELCOME
Apply InPerson At:
303 Main Street
Point Pleasant, WV

Mondoy, April 30th
Tuooclo~. Moy 111
. WodneiCioy,Moy 2nd
3'00pm Until 8:00pm ONLY .
Ask For Ms. Willis

Located at the Tradin ' Past in Patriot. From Ironton,
take SR t41 to Cadmus and turn right onto Patriot
Road. Go 3 miles. From Gallipolis, take SR 141 to
SA 775. Turn left onto S R 775 and go to Patriot
Road. Turn Right onto Patriot Road. From Oak Hill
or Ria Grande , take SR 325 S to SA 14t . Turn
right onto SR 14 1 and to to top of hill. Turn left onto
Gage Road . Go 1.5 miles an d turn left onto Patriot
Road. Watch for signs.

Call 740-379-2540
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property. .

Own a P.C.? Put lllo Workl For a
free booklet call: 800·429·5853 or
vtsu us online:

www.getpcwork .com
Part Time CNAI LPN tor In 'Home
Ca re· Female Patient. Send Re·
sume to: CL A 516 clo Gallipolis
Dai ly Tribune, 825 Thi rd Ave ..
Gallipolis. OhiO 45631
Po&amp;tal Job&amp; $48,323.00 yr. Now
hiring· No experience·paid trainlng· great benefits, c all 7 daya

800·429·3680 e~. J·38S.

1

�•

• O.Uipoi!A, Ohio • Point Plr 111nt, WY

I-

........... ,, ...........
""TAL JOBS

to

Ill. . .. llr-

1t0

HMpWMtlld

URGENTlY NEEDED- ~~­

iot tor 2001 . ................. , ... - - . . sa5 to seo 111r 2 or 3
!loin-,. Coli S...-Toc. 740-

Clllal ... 7-1Jot CST
72HOfSai70L

I'OSTAL JDIS· Up tO SII.JII
...... Himglo&lt; 2001 . ...... -

""·,..- ~----

11101.

DuiHty Orille· Awey IIIC.. OwMf
Operator: We D&lt;Mrl "4 ton. 1 1011 Pfeil·..,. Trucu to
pull RIY campero, 5th whooV
bumper l)ulla. · - tno eounlly
.... get poill ,.... do .... Cal

-.u.,..-,.......

1o
CoorcinM:w lOr OCI G , . . .,.

t-..st743

,_,_ ~-·

Humin Roooun:o or ltQ$1ol
Ptl qw ... dlgr.. and NfO yut1
......... in . . ~Wd.
E• ! IIMI oommuniCatiOI\ lftd t11•

AN and LPN to&lt; I DO bed Hilled
nursing f&lt;lcility. E1collont oppor·
luni1y II&lt; Cllallnglng and - lng oai&gt;Ofionco. Sign-on bonus,
Ofllt &amp;lllrt ra111, excellent regu~
111ory compli1nc1 history. lntlr-

gorizational. . . - tor· ...
dMdualwil bt retpOnllllt
..

e--

lltld _

iiUrviewillg. l*lng and ingoiTelomo-..

... -

RocUp
W. ~7"

1 RollabUitatlon Con~. ~

--Ohio
1110. RN.

I'*&gt;Cislon --~­
and
il1&lt;tUding
ftlallh. f.fo. disallility. 401
K, .-.1

II&gt;PIY to:

Dnctor ol H4nillg,
002-teOe. Equal Opportur&gt;ty EJn.
ployer Encouraging Workplace
DioMrlily.

paid vacatiOn and hOidllyS.

Sind )'OUt resume to:
lntoCislon Managemenl Co!p.
Atln: """'C. Gllkel
325 Springlide Drlwt
Ai&lt;ron, OH 44333

45761,

1'*

e..-

Solos ...r!IOn- Full-Torno.
lill, Rota&lt;l EIIPirllnct P . . -.
Apjlly Atllleltyle Furniture, No

Phone Call, AI&gt;PIY In ........

158 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,

--11851 . .

RT0 Oriooor1, Muot 8o At
Le111 23 Yeart Old . Have 1

e-ienco.

l!oriJicotiot•
Olo·
patdtod fntfll R...,..wOOd. WV

110 WllnledToDo

hir~ Owner/Operators
will! ,..., own 50' ..- larger lniilor
and your One Ton Pick-up· Truck
or Stmi-Trucll: to deliver Cargo
Trailers or Travel Trailers. Call 1·
100 195 9743 Ouaiity OrM&gt;-Away

!Hom

HRI);rocto&lt;OinloCilorl .... OU'
Web She at lnkJCilion.com
PH YSICS NEEDED for national
900 physic line. Must hiVI ••~
perilnee. Top pay, reasonable re.
quire ments. Recruiters alao
- 710-995-8528.
POSTAL JOBS to S18.351hr•
WILDLIFE JOBS to S21 .11011W Includes Benefits . No E•perlence
Necessary. For Appllcetlon aftd
Eum Info. call 1-800-992-705-6
11208 M·F 8:30-S:OOpm

Sales Person. Exper~nCI With
Aotoil SalOl And Knowlodgo 01
Building
Materl•ls. Apply 1ft
Po110n At Thomal Do-lt Center,
Glllpoll

Scenic Hllll Ia Now Hiring
STNA'I And Cortlllld Nurolng
A11lstants For All Shifts. Wo Ate
A PrGgiiiiiVI Flciiily Who Appreclllll Our Stiff. Vou Have
Groll Opportunillol AI Scenic

_,_can __

At (740)448-7150 Tocllyl Or
Stop By And Fill Out An Appliee-

Bu1ln11e

210

Opporiunlty

Willl'l&gt;wooWiah Trdl&lt;l.
And RV'I . Conllel Ron At
(740)446:.01$1 or 338·0950. 11
NoAnsMt~f s
•
Will Repair AutOMOtlllll. IJWfl
Mowers , and Farm Tractors,

11.000 WEEKlY! Wot1i at 11on1a
l)rOCelsino automotive pam·
phlolll No 11periencel W.ol11f
~ Ewrythlna " 21U1 dJ
1-100-551·311!1

Lowest Rate~o In Town. Certified
MeGhani(:. call (740j«t...019t

l~:z.oo.a;oeon2«l3.:MivL

"'*""

--~

hopp ng

350 Lots l Actnge
13 Acr•s With Beaulilul Lake

View Sites S50.000. 18 Acres
With Large Lake, MObile Home
Wllh Add On $79.500. Gallia
County On Blacktop Road.
(740)311H1618

10 Acres Developed Lend In
Mason County, Natural Spring,

City - · A C1Mk At Tlio Bottom, Asking $50 .000 . Already
(304)1117-5927

taaam.d.com

.,........ Notwt.....,

w.tlltool),
~ oene IIIIM'rrl rooldnl
oM; as 'p t , . . . . . . . , . lllllt,
Wllftul .... INf ................................... lrUnl&amp;. ........

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Co'ilPt fWd polttlr, C.D. lwlfll lion,.,..........., lllltiW I Mr ?t'A:w&amp;
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aao ttcMtt (Ciupwt~• ·••n• o.....,_. "" a •• ou Alhlnl
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filM...,_,, IIIMlllllli&amp;....-. .........,
MMtorooll•lue. woMen-~ ..................... Mid,
poMty pleCII. niMinlhlrll.

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7-1·14112

-Co--~- ·-

$1 t .500 or 20 Acrll $19.oDOI
Kerr Road, 8 - $2t ,OOO Dr 5
Aals Wltf18aml $31.000. Rio
Grande, 6Aals. SI9.000Dr 13

W'e ••.

--AiilU*II
w-

441..0114 1-800-498-0076'
N e\.v l

www.91tdiet.com
II you have 10 lo 75 pounds to
..... ... pay you $$$ . 1-888·2:l7·

r){

.

Business
Training

....

$26.900. Eureka. 33 01
$31.000. Tya~on t.a1111

.1tror, · 1 lhfl Jctck•,orl P1k£'

Single Parent Program . Special
Financ ing Available , (304)7557191

Joanna's Computer Applications
Tr1lnlag. Microsott Office User
Specialist, Cerlifiecl Instructor. In
Tht Comfort Of Your Home Or
Bulirioll. (740)«1-1555

Golilpolla ca- cot~ege
(Coreors Ctooe To H....)

Stock Model Clearanc. all 2000
models must go. New nome payments as low as $150 .32 per
month and only $750.90 down.
Call740-385-4367.

Mid-Ohio Valley Tr;-uck
Driver Training
COL CertlftC8tlon 5 W-k Cou,...
Mon &amp; Frl 7:00-3:30 W-kend
Set &amp; Sun e :oa-. :30 12 weeks
. Financing end Funding
Aveileble B .• - d On Eligibility

Cl••-•

Schools
Instruction

..Job placem•nt on Ct•••A t~Wintng•
Contact Ed Adams 1-800-648-3695
or (740) 373-3966

'
Rutllnd
home oilers a
2/3 SA , 2
Kit., Utilily.

180 Wanted To Do
Babyaltttng In my Home, children
2-to, M·F &amp;am-5:30pm, call

230

(7~)388-8193

Oevld'a General Contractors,
Plumbing. _
Electric. Painllng
Oecli&amp;, Misc. Worli, All Home AePii11, Lawn Car&amp;. Call (740)2569373 Or Coil Phone t -304·633·
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
hsul your ·togo to lhl mill just coli
304&gt;61'5-t957.
'

I US NEED CASH?? WE pay

, cash ·tor remaining payments on

Repairing Lawn Mowers And

Property SQkll Mongagesl Annul·
ties! Settlements! Immediate
Ouotea!ll •Nobody beats our prlces . • National Cpnuact Buyers
(600) 490·073t ext. tOI www.na·

And

Delivery Available . For Quality
5ervice can (740)44&amp;-7604

Lawn Mowing; Weed Eating ;
Deck Cleaning,
Refinishing :
R1moval Of Unwanted. Items
From Buildings Call (740j446 7604

t10nalcofllraCibuy8rs.com

REDUCED AGAINII
POMEROY· One of the nlc1astl
homes ln a beautiful
with a great view!
Junct. SR
Baths, LA,
,
car garage, 2.5 acres.

'"*'-""• ...... .....,, ......,.

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QUtln l t . INd, ...,.. twin .... -

much morel

. IFPl

Nowa1klng

top pOrCh teblltJohlq wloofiM &amp; _,.. .... I I ewlclll,...... water oo1or
Pllnii.A bootla. 01rcl . . . . wlohllra, JCmll•an IlOilo

Pull llflll Dn 1C1M. .....,.. a
c:&amp;-:u:l • ,_,lOCI71Ill·_....)
rldlniiiWn ......, Toto

- . hal-,--log--·-·""""'- _.,.1,
.....,.lrillt, lrtoyOioa.

goo Hlumor

. CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
. OUT OF .DEBTI Reduce monthly
payments. Pay one bill/month.
EASY to get started . Financial
Freedom Christian Counseling,
800·841-9757 ,
e&lt;t .
CC3
www.debtccs.org (non proiH)
· CREDIT PROBLEMS?· CALL THE
; CREDIT EXPERTS, LICENSED/
, BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
,BAD CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY,
LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS. AAA
RATING. 1·888·8t 1-0902.

EfPbld·-'Ht«ne ~eatt,

Illllll; Cooh ore- w-1.0. - - f 1 0 Q O - 111w...horlutlon ot Iunde 8VIIIIatll. NM r&amp;tJII" m· tor ,... or IUISal'ltl.
food will be evallllale.

, di4 Second Ave., Galltpoli1, Ohio 45631-0li4
740-446-0008 740-441-1111
•
evantmoo.zoomnel.nel www.evans-moore.com

OWNER: l!vr Brown .
SHAMROCfK AUCTION ·SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pit Sherldln &amp; Chrll Preter
· Llcenred &amp; Bonded In State of OhioMember Ohio &amp; Nlt'l Auctlonet... Aaroc.
· PH: 740.582-4310 or 8C!Q-41N12.2

Formerly BlaeHum R•o.hy

us.,...

Soulh.m. ohk, For ON,. A Quare.,. Centnry ..

. .Joe A. Moor-Broker 441·1616
, Sarah L. Evana-Moore, Broker 441·1616
Patricia Haya- 446-3884 Cera Caaey-245-9430

~

11083 Beautiful counlty Hltlngl
2.5 acres of plush country
meadows and . a stocked pond
. surround lhla 3 BR ranch home.
. Total 17 acres for

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
ro $500 instantly by phonal 1·
677-EARLYP~Y . LICI 750005, lsi
A[)IIANCE FREEl
NEED MONEY $$$$? Too many
bills? Debt consolidation. Min .
$2,000.00 &amp; Up. Free Call 1·866·
895·8477 Good/bad eredll apply

now.

Public Bale 111d Auction

ESTATE AUCTION

I.
I
with I
Iorge building to hold your
buaintas? This 3 BR 1 t/2 BA
home comas with' a 30 x 72
Insulated .motli pole bam wllh
office space, gas heater &amp; 220
electric Una. Great deal In the
$70'8 .
.

THUR S. EVE M AY 3 • 5:30 P.M.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 18817
No Fta Unless,Wa Wlnl
1-888,582-3345

REAL ESTATE

Real Eatate Orneral

for 1 g.t-e-way
1 :: 7~::
Resting on 29 AC mil this

t BA cabin bum in 1997
1801ualon and breath taking
of nilture and Is located from
public access to thl Ohio
ba..rtllilui
ttory
le
In tho quill vlllge o1
Mlddlepon. Older homO thlt hit
been wondorfully taken caro oft
Oak trlm.. H1rdwood prlvocy
doors oak pocklt door. 2·3 BR,
I 1/2 BA, one car attochod
garags, 2 porchtl, comer lol.
Only $8S,OOO

homo prlco, bu1
oxtrroal Nawer rool.
coverlnge, heat pumj:),
I , Smhh'a custom oak
replaCement windows,

-~~~ UIICTUIIS
Log Homo
8ulldl111 CompoQuolfty ., _ , .
orU-Ifoot ·

forcall
yourtOOav
-qu6te'..

totownl
8A homo
nict covered
olde dock. eomo hardwood
lind lull - . n f on I ICII 11'111.
$73,800

800458 9990

"oo"

JOHN

L AJiiNO'IT • Admlnlllrllar

DAN IMmt • AUCTIONIIII OHIO 1'!344
CAIH ·• fOOIITIW 10 • IIII'RIIHMINTS
NOTE: Trclotorl, ~.I . . .lprnent to Hll It 7:00p.m.
" Not ro•ponelblelar aaalllentt or loll al PfOperly •

JVVIW

1f'fll

II ' ' ' 111

.........
~

I

I

'&lt;

RENTAL S

330 Farms for Sale

2 Bedroom House For Rani In

410 Houses for Rent ·
2

Bidwell, l'ncludes
(7401441420

Lots.

3 Bedroom House. $300 Per
Month, $300 Doposil, Euroka, Alter 5pm (740)~2580

balhl, 740.949-3004 aHer 5pm.
14x70 Southern Dream, free De·
livery lree Setup only $9995 1·
888·928·3426

OFFICE

16 Wide . Only $195.00 Per
Month, 8.99% Fixed Interest Flate
Wllh ~lr ~nd
Underpinning
1·888·928·3426
...;.;.:._:.;.;..;.;:;:__ _;_ __
1974 Nashua 12x70 , 2-3 bed·
rooms. new furnace, new hot wa· tar tank. $4000, call 740 -985::.36:.;5;;.5.;;a..;lter:..6;;:pm;.;_., - - - , - -

992-2259
1184
loautllul r~nch homo wHh
2 bedrooms, I belh, kHchen
and living room on a level
lot. Approx. 1100 sq. ft. 01
I
space. Call lor your
lshoWi1,a oll183. ·

-

For Sale. Hos Island In Middle Of
Kitchen With Stove Bull! ln . Cantral Air &amp; Most Appliances Go .
Must Seal Very Low Price . Call
Anytime And Ask For Tammy.
(740)368-8914 .

"NEW USTING • JACKSONVILLE ·A nice
starter home. A smaller one story home wHh
living room. kHchen 2 bedrooms, 1 beth and a
a laundry room. H also includes an enclosed
1ron1 PQrch and a small shed all on a .17 acre
lot.
. .
ASKING $34,900

Real Eat.te General

rl~ rD
_- R.
~·

'-"P"u,- .
.

446•6806
.

Fr8e MOney NOw! It's True! No
repayment Guaranteed. For J:)ersonal needs. education, busl·
ness. t-800·724·8047 (24 hrs.) ·

~

Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don't H... Lind? W. Dolll Hurry
Only 10 Loll Left. 304-138-1205.

'99 mobile home lor sale, must
·sell, 14x70. three bedrooms, two

958 Clark Chapel Ad.
Bidwell Ohio 45814
•

Banktuptcy $195
Adoption $225
Not do-it-yourself-kit!
CALL t -800·303-1170
FREE inlormalionl
Bankruptcy nla in TNIKY

lfumtnum
atenllon
llddlt,
...
_llod
-·
- _.., tuM,
llolMW....,
- · ,.....
1trint COIIrMn
- · ....,.,,
II ft.

Camp
Sitas F&lt;&gt;r Ront On Ka·
nawha River, 8 miles lrom point
PIOO$ant, eloctric only. (304)8751722, (304)875-4144 Aller 5pm.

4230

1981 14x70 Admirallon ' Trallar '

Divorce $150

mQJ.I Mil M'"~~~IMta·
fniiiM Mddlll,

Property Marko.!&gt;-

'

es. Pond. In-ground Pool. Several
Bama. Garage, FrUit Trees. Close
To HoiZf!r. $2t5,000. (740)44&amp;-

CASH LOANS $2000·$5000.
Consolidation to $200,000. Badf
No Credll. Credll Cards. Mortgages . For lntormatlon : 1· 800·
· 335-7612.ext.3622
·

Announcement

Many More, Cal- For Mapel
Owner Anancing With 8iighl

Professional
Services

$$$ CREDIT CARD PROBLEMS?
FREE Debl Consolidation. Cut
Payments, Reduce Interest. NonProfit . 800- 268-633t Exl. 15.
www.goldcoastcc.com
.
.

6285

Nice-

WOW New Ft8erwood Double
Wide 281180, 4 BR. Only 39.990 al
Fleetwood Homes of Proctorville,
ToM Froe1-888-565-0167

Farm House. Beautllully Ramodeilld, 2963 Squoro FHt. 11 Acr·

$ FREE CASH NOW$ lrom
weallhy families unloading millions
of dollars, to help minimize their
taxes. Write Immediately: WIND·
FALLS. 3010 WILSHIRE 8LVD.
188, LOS ANGELES. CALIFOR·
NIA 90010

9
n. P1M ...,. , N
I &amp;
?lttlll GNrll
en p'Dorrd &amp; llill NMS. Ql
ltaai'IM?rl, miiOIIIInFDIM . . . . . ~ IIMI ~ ip;IIIIUIII,
• • •rtO tlhor!&gt; Hatll'illlllloo
11,

"l''Od ,....

Subdivision
Canceled New
Models Direct From Factory·
Only 2 LeH Cali '(740)44&amp;-3093

WORK FROM lfoMEI Earn
$500-$7000/month PT/FT. Full
Training . Free Information . Call
Nowl1-800-290-89t4
www.attainurdreama.com

gllll....,....
-·-·...-m-~~~-----·--·
HQUM'D rye=
•hill
comp?ett,

81111 A Trove! Agency: Receive
Training, Business support, Your
own Travel Website and Travel
Discounts/Perks. Earn big SSS.
Nomlnol Startup Costl 1-888-6990901 or www.EarnBucksFrom·
Start Your Business Today .. .
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Affordable Rate.
Spring Valilly Plaza, Call 740-4460tOI .

OED
Get your HS equivalency diploma
with our tlly hon'le study course.
t -600-559-2163 ""'~10

Engine . Plck-uj:)

STOP RENTING 'I OWN FOR
LESSI $0 or tow OOwfll OK crtd~t
For llsrlng call 1·800-501-1777
0Xl962t.

Homo.com

"AS IS" $35,800. '·'

Sm111

Area. 10 Ac&gt;e.S11.0DOI
llolgiCo, T._l'laln&amp;SR681. NiCe Hilt! 5Aooo On
Sliado- $12,000, 7Aoll
with POlo 8orn $23.000.
Road, 6 Ac&gt;OI $12,000 Or 511(:r01WithHorleBaml 125.500.
Danvile.
5 foan
S13.500.R..Wnd. 9 foanS8.5001

carr

Announcement

cow ..... old .._

I

~LNIII

.·

""-woRK FROM~···
S50CHt500 por mo. Pff
$2000-$8000 por mo. FfT
No~-Training proyided.
1-800-390-4930.

Care Of Elderly/ Housekeeping.
$6.00 Per Hour, Ask For Bonnie.

1M--·_,"'*••-• 11M.-""' Ik
~

r-

or visit our website:

-.amerlcancornmun

t-·

a.m. - . .

1: Wllh 86
Acroo - For S120.100.
O p - 1:
Everything
In Option t plus Putur•. Pond.
Anc1 A TOiai 01 120 Acrll Prieod
AI $189,900. Shown 8y Appoinl·
ment Only. Call EwentnQs
(740)300-0259
.

(304)895·3723

!IIDQI"' AND cne, 'C!W u·

lonl.....,_..

(-AIN~II
·('Wid IIIlA. KY. ~OK}

1-800-821-8139

Saturday, May 5 • 10:00 a.m. ·

for llglll.

Fam.3-..... - - . .

COllinge, Olk TriM. And A lMga
Kitchen. Buildings Include A
Largo ll'lrn And Gorlgo. Euei-

ContaCt us at:

PUBLIC AUCTION
jlrap1rty
ol Eva II'OW!I 1ncllllma frOnt Oilier lndMd11111 WIQ De
IOid 11 public 1uctlan. DIRI!C'IIONI: Pram RL :t3 8auth
of Alhtnl, .... thin I mllll fn1rn lllltt IICIIon of
Rlchllncl Avenue and RL :t311t l'ofr.ov RCNtd), .......,

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
recommends that you do butl~
Mil wiU'l peop5e you ll:now_and
NOT to Hlld onc&gt;ney trvough thl
mail un?d roo have •nvestiQated

The American
Community
Advertising Network

WORKF-HOIIE
SS00·$1 ,500 Mo. Part time.
$1200-SIIOOO mo. FIJI r..-.
1'1110 VACATIONS
t -I00-490-30t9

150

Due to moving and llllng ltonll, lite perwaual

roo.·-

A VENDING
101
GREAT IO&lt;atlono! Eorns big U/
wk!l $1995. Financing ovaiablo.

For All Your Advertising Nead• ·

CIITodayl 740-448-4367,
1·1100-214-0452.
Rog 190-05-1274B.

Athens, OH

FA .. W FOR SAlEII Wo Hive
M . - And Art SOHing Our

Opportunlty-=----

IIIO'IICEI

top

(740~7

140

Butlneu

Announcement

Weddings, Treasured Photos
Copturad For lbur We&lt;k!tng In
A Computerized Audio! Visual
·Siidelhow PrltMntalton. Oetai?s-

t381.

210

Opportunity

W1dea COfttltuctiO.n, Olnaral
L.lwt\ MaintenMCI, Lll • • .....
(140)7C9 11.

ONo.

Or email to

Butlneu

210

(304)51f-:!e44 F&lt;&gt;r Locoi. Or1-ln·M0-4900 Promp 680.11•
For long Dioax:e.

WI are

Sunday, Apltl 21, 2001

r;/mttf
f"l;1)

~

Bl
A~/14

~

Branch Ofllee
Locust St
23
Gallipolis Ohio
4583,1

*

-

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BRDKEI'I ...- .....- ... 411 8101
GAIL IIELVILlE.............................- ... 111 1208
TIISH INYDER...................................-M1-t411
JOHNNIE RU88&amp;LL ... _.................., ..3f7-0313
DAVID SNYDER ................................... 441-MII
OUR WEB F'AGE IS:www..tamilnrooi-to.com
e-mail: vterealeltlleOzoomnet.net

m
111•1'00

.

14015 CHARMING COMFORT
CDNYENIINCI Roomy 2 sty.
home welcom11 you lo thl lovely
. LR, formal DR, oak cablnela in kk..
tat floor •-•room &amp; laund
·
.
ry
wlbalh. 2 large bedrml &amp;balh on

~~

:{famwoge·,.!"

Carpeted throughout 2 car
allacl1od gor., 2 trocka of land,
'+tomo &amp; .720 /11: + extra lot. 3.156
/11:. Fronting on SR 141 . Groen
Twp.OnePrice$165,000VLS
•••11 RAISED IIANCH A
wonderful
family
home,
4
bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, oqulppod kll,
loads of storage space, extra lg.
Mast• bedrm. OWner has made
many Improvements. New carpol
&amp; lighting, Your children need
extra lot for playground. l.g. 2 car
: ; o c a l l d in Addlso.n.. VLS

WILL HILL ROAD .Just outside ol Pomeroy.
A 2 year old two story Randall Home with 6
rooma, 3 bedrooms, 1'/• beths. 12x16 deck,
HP/CA and ceiling lans. 1'/• acres, nice
garden area. Vary nice home. Owner has
relocated.
ASKING $75,000.

APPLE GROVE· RIVER FRONT LOt •
150' river frontage. Great camping and
boating lot. Lot runs from SA 338 to lhe
river. Agent Owned.
ASKING $20,000

PORTLAND BUFFINGTON LANDING· Ali
executive subdivision designed lor horse
lovers and boaters! You won 't believe the
features. Access to the beautiful Ohio for~~
lovers. 100' b'o at dock, rldlng · ring, plcn!c
sheller, riding' trails and much more. Certain
restrlctloni apply. Lo1 prices and acreage vary
according to the particular amenities . Lol N3t .650 acres plus share Lot 112. Land- 6,600,
Improvements • 8,000, Malnlenance Fund
3,000 • Price lor Lot 13 II $(1,900 PIUI lot 12
eh11e • $27,600.

13380 FAIULOUI IAIIGAIN·
Brick &amp; vinyl 6 BR. 2 8A homo on
ptiveta I acre lot. Family room.
!lYing room w/flreplaco, OFI, and
Iorge ullllty room In this one with
f\oll baeement. Attached 2 car
garage and detached 2 car garage
as wall could ba used for atorage.
Priced tor a quick sala. ses,ooo
A FEW MINUTES OF
VOUR TIME COULD PAV DFFI
VIew thll lovely all brick home
w~hree bedrooms, 2 balho, formal
dlnl~g rm., living rm., family rm .,
with fireplace.. Patio, above .
ground PQOt, 2 car attached
gorage and blsemsnl. VERY
UVABLE HOME FDA THE
MONIV. ti21.000.00Vll ·
~14 KING IIZE fAMilY HOMI
Grill 2 oty. 4 bedrms., 2 t/2
bathl, formal LR &amp; DR, Fam Rm. · ·
w{brlokftroplooo,lllltrgenns.. 13'
• 25' mutor bedrm. Ill/bath. 2 car
,nached garage. 1.25 Ao 11'111
$140,000. Additional lot available.
VLS
14017 L.ooltad 31311L Ca~ol Rd.
3 bodroo- • ·-•. CEDAR
"" • _,..
CONTEMPORARY HOME Olk
kttchln, ceramic tllo In kitchen &amp;
bathl. NEW CARPET through oul,
nolurll d'lcor. ~ ACRES M/1.
$105,()QO. Trllh or Dave
•
140018 HOME &amp; INCOMI!
INVESTMENT 126 x 130 Bulavllle
Pk. 3 bedrm, 3 bath living quarters .
Also 18' x 32' gorage plus 30' x 20 .
building 1/2 ac. of land. good aaloo
lac. Priced to sell. VLS

I·

~""""""

•

140011 A THING OF BEAUTY 18 A 14004 Tr8CIIII 9 /11: 11'1111.ocated 4
JOY FOREVER. 4 BR, All mi. ~om Gallipolis on SR 588. Buy
BRICK HOME, I 1/2 balhs, run ali lhree lracts of land or pan
basement Fireplace In- LR. also In Virginia L. Smllh 448·6808
·
one BR, formal OR, garage In roor.
Privacy fence
around
the t33t7 IN THE CITY Huge tamlly
landscaped lot. 3rd floor flniBI1od home w/4 BRa, 2 bathl, ~1. LR,
and Is lovely. All naw carpol, DR, porchel, partial -..nt.
remodeled bath room. Don'l take Priced nght- see this outstanding
my word lor H· SEE IT FOR offer! Vacanl, ready to welcome
YOURSELF. VLS •
you. VlS ~68()6
.
14000- 171 Edoma Tnol~ Tycoon 133C11 Large home In town, new
lake- 2 Lola St2,500 eoch. root 1999, 4 BR, 2.5 SA, 2 car
vinyl
skiing,
nice
Moblill home, building . &amp; lot garage,
$15,000 an lor $33,000
neighborhood. Neodl some TLC
133«1 CAARYDUT IIUSINES8 bul priced rlltil aC 17UOO
lnd CONVENIENCE STORE 13311 CITY LOT 43' x 170'
FOR SALE. New alarm system. located 39 VIne St.
Building built to tta.te code.
Contlnuouo operation since 19116. 13311lol on Lylo D~VI $7100
Price Includes inventory. Call 13355 AUTHENTIC lOG HOME
Johnnie 367-0323 01446-11806.
WITH CHARACTER. 11 you like
13375
LOOK AT THISIIII
3 ·Individuality--hire II lsi 3,020 oq.
Bedroom 2 bath ranch over full ft. more or Ina, 3 bodrrno., 2 t/2
balanenl wnh 2 car garage and balhs, Kit .. LRm, Ofllce rm .. and
flnlohed family room. Home ails on much more. Wrap porch front &amp; 2
2 AC . 11'1111n Hannan Trace Scl1ool8. aides. 167 ACres m{l. ROiling
Jull mlnules from downtown Puture and 3 Largo Bllml &amp;
Gallipolis. Thla home features a Feed Lot eliae, 2· nice ponds.
baauliful landscaped lawn, wood Land Is moat all clean &amp; hal some
pellet stove and cenlral air. fencing. Eteclrlc &amp;~oot free water
Located ·jusl off Rock Lick Rd. on In the barn. Feed 101 s11es.
Mabie Dr. In nice neighborhood. Formeny used tor V•al ca~
Have a garden and raise some operation. Located near Rio
"ow111 bul make sure lo look at Grande. Appointment Only. Call
lhls. Call Johnnie at 367-0323 Virginia L. Smith 740·448·6806.
today tor an ap~l ntment.
1335,000
NVESTMENT DR MOVE 14012· Groot loollion- Starter
13372 I_
IN 1967 Mobile Home ·BO'x12', 2 home 3 BR, 1 balh w{Worklhop
bedrooms, 1 bath, fumltura , range with ba&amp;ement. Situated on .3
&amp; ref.. Heat . pump, central air. aclot and @lr\la11ecllon ol St. AI.
Llrge building 70'xt4' also 20~10' 160 &amp; 554. Owner hll remodeled
bldg., Corner 101 Hy10ll &amp; Oliver, home and pul rww roof on
Middleport, 111,000.00
· gorage/Worklhop. May 1110 lle
, _ D~LUXE
COUNTRY commercial. Prlced@ $65,000
LIVING 4 bedrml, 2 bathl, MOte
COMMERCIAL LOT·
g11age &amp; 2 10 11'111. Immaculate JICksonPk. GIIIIpoila,OHComer
condition 2000
ft. &amp; 10 enjOy lot wilh great potentlll.
family llkt 1o fulloat, Large rms, Lovely homo on the 811ullfUI
throultl out· flreplace In LR, sky Ohio l'llvorl This homo n11 been
llghta, biautlful kitchen . . Sun completely remodeled. All . hll
p..-ch w/Window walls. Gal &amp; been done wllh,ln tho ul lour y11.
eloc heal central llr &amp; lovely New roof, lnsulaled wlndowo, new
.
0/C &amp; f\ornace, aN now appliances,
·
•
carpel. GrHn Sclloos. Thll one central Vao. system. Homo hu lull
w11 wor1h Wilting tor, just a balemont w/WOrklhop. New guell
phone coli awoy. VLS 448-teOe cabin c:IOMI' to river, bul above
flOOd plain. Bock ~arc! fenced.
MAKE OFFER
ft3l2 uo IIIII Rt. 211 In tho Panoramlo view of tho Ohio River
Vllloga of Thurman. Nice 2 br., from almoat ail rooma and cabin. A
cottogo, bolh, kllchen/dlnlng room parediH for boating &amp; fishing.
and · ulll~
room.
lnsulaled Prlcad for quid&lt; sale 1103,000
windows, steel doora with storm 1113 REDUCED PAICEM117
doora. Nlco lot with oulbulldlng . acraa clo10 to naw Fwy., hOipltei,
Public water and soon to ba public shop e1r. Water, gao, s -.
s.Wage. l45,000
Adjoining Plnacrnt Nu111ng Ho111a.

i&lt;!:

EASTERN SCHOOL DISTRICT· This
execullve home has many features. 4
bedrooms, lull finished basement, garage,
W.B.F.P.. 6hed, in ground pool, deck, 2 . 12+
ai:rea of ground . Quiet country setting, C/A,
equipped kitchen, all modern, Hard Wood
floors, and carpet &amp; tile. Even the washer. &amp;
dryer 8layl OWner Moving •
PRICED
TO SELL@ $145.000.
.

'·

sq

It, home needs some work .·
ASKING

$34,1100.

POMEROY· Here Is a cute little 3 bedroom home. Including equipped kitchen , lull basement
reo. room , carpet and hardwood floors throughout One car garage and off street
loearklr1a..
.
. ASKING $29,1100.
Commercial Investment Prime location ln Pomeroy. lt Is never too latelo make
owrtllrta
own business come true. The hard work has been done, Ills an
~~~~~::~s~~~ Gllaveilly Snapper service and sales with stock and equipment, building and
II
In or call for details on lhls deal.

1--------------------------------1
MIDDLEPORT • A cute, cozy, and clofl to local grocery and so convenient This one floor
I froome home offers 2 bedrooms , bath, part basement &amp; appliances. Nice tronl porch &amp; chain
link lenced back yard. Immediate poueaalonl This home Is 'move In condition .
POMI!ROY - Approximately one acre with a 1 '/• story brick/stuCCO/block home. 3 ~==~
equipped kitchen, and two bathe. All new berber carpel, attic space, ceil ing lana, bay
In dlnlng room . In house vacuum system. Attached 1 car garage , detached 2 car garage
attic storage. Nice coverCKl lront cement porch .
· ASKING Sl1,1100,

Cleland ·Realty, Inc. Offlce .............992·2259
Henry E. clrland ...........................992-2259
Sherrl L. Hilrt ..~ ............................... 742·2357

�•

• O.Uipoi!A, Ohio • Point Plr 111nt, WY

I-

........... ,, ...........
""TAL JOBS

to

Ill. . .. llr-

1t0

HMpWMtlld

URGENTlY NEEDED- ~~­

iot tor 2001 . ................. , ... - - . . sa5 to seo 111r 2 or 3
!loin-,. Coli S...-Toc. 740-

Clllal ... 7-1Jot CST
72HOfSai70L

I'OSTAL JDIS· Up tO SII.JII
...... Himglo&lt; 2001 . ...... -

""·,..- ~----

11101.

DuiHty Orille· Awey IIIC.. OwMf
Operator: We D&lt;Mrl "4 ton. 1 1011 Pfeil·..,. Trucu to
pull RIY campero, 5th whooV
bumper l)ulla. · - tno eounlly
.... get poill ,.... do .... Cal

-.u.,..-,.......

1o
CoorcinM:w lOr OCI G , . . .,.

t-..st743

,_,_ ~-·

Humin Roooun:o or ltQ$1ol
Ptl qw ... dlgr.. and NfO yut1
......... in . . ~Wd.
E• ! IIMI oommuniCatiOI\ lftd t11•

AN and LPN to&lt; I DO bed Hilled
nursing f&lt;lcility. E1collont oppor·
luni1y II&lt; Cllallnglng and - lng oai&gt;Ofionco. Sign-on bonus,
Ofllt &amp;lllrt ra111, excellent regu~
111ory compli1nc1 history. lntlr-

gorizational. . . - tor· ...
dMdualwil bt retpOnllllt
..

e--

lltld _

iiUrviewillg. l*lng and ingoiTelomo-..

... -

RocUp
W. ~7"

1 RollabUitatlon Con~. ~

--Ohio
1110. RN.

I'*&gt;Cislon --~­
and
il1&lt;tUding
ftlallh. f.fo. disallility. 401
K, .-.1

II&gt;PIY to:

Dnctor ol H4nillg,
002-teOe. Equal Opportur&gt;ty EJn.
ployer Encouraging Workplace
DioMrlily.

paid vacatiOn and hOidllyS.

Sind )'OUt resume to:
lntoCislon Managemenl Co!p.
Atln: """'C. Gllkel
325 Springlide Drlwt
Ai&lt;ron, OH 44333

45761,

1'*

e..-

Solos ...r!IOn- Full-Torno.
lill, Rota&lt;l EIIPirllnct P . . -.
Apjlly Atllleltyle Furniture, No

Phone Call, AI&gt;PIY In ........

158 Third Avenue, Gallipolis,

--11851 . .

RT0 Oriooor1, Muot 8o At
Le111 23 Yeart Old . Have 1

e-ienco.

l!oriJicotiot•
Olo·
patdtod fntfll R...,..wOOd. WV

110 WllnledToDo

hir~ Owner/Operators
will! ,..., own 50' ..- larger lniilor
and your One Ton Pick-up· Truck
or Stmi-Trucll: to deliver Cargo
Trailers or Travel Trailers. Call 1·
100 195 9743 Ouaiity OrM&gt;-Away

!Hom

HRI);rocto&lt;OinloCilorl .... OU'
Web She at lnkJCilion.com
PH YSICS NEEDED for national
900 physic line. Must hiVI ••~
perilnee. Top pay, reasonable re.
quire ments. Recruiters alao
- 710-995-8528.
POSTAL JOBS to S18.351hr•
WILDLIFE JOBS to S21 .11011W Includes Benefits . No E•perlence
Necessary. For Appllcetlon aftd
Eum Info. call 1-800-992-705-6
11208 M·F 8:30-S:OOpm

Sales Person. Exper~nCI With
Aotoil SalOl And Knowlodgo 01
Building
Materl•ls. Apply 1ft
Po110n At Thomal Do-lt Center,
Glllpoll

Scenic Hllll Ia Now Hiring
STNA'I And Cortlllld Nurolng
A11lstants For All Shifts. Wo Ate
A PrGgiiiiiVI Flciiily Who Appreclllll Our Stiff. Vou Have
Groll Opportunillol AI Scenic

_,_can __

At (740)448-7150 Tocllyl Or
Stop By And Fill Out An Appliee-

Bu1ln11e

210

Opporiunlty

Willl'l&gt;wooWiah Trdl&lt;l.
And RV'I . Conllel Ron At
(740)446:.01$1 or 338·0950. 11
NoAnsMt~f s
•
Will Repair AutOMOtlllll. IJWfl
Mowers , and Farm Tractors,

11.000 WEEKlY! Wot1i at 11on1a
l)rOCelsino automotive pam·
phlolll No 11periencel W.ol11f
~ Ewrythlna " 21U1 dJ
1-100-551·311!1

Lowest Rate~o In Town. Certified
MeGhani(:. call (740j«t...019t

l~:z.oo.a;oeon2«l3.:MivL

"'*""

--~

hopp ng

350 Lots l Actnge
13 Acr•s With Beaulilul Lake

View Sites S50.000. 18 Acres
With Large Lake, MObile Home
Wllh Add On $79.500. Gallia
County On Blacktop Road.
(740)311H1618

10 Acres Developed Lend In
Mason County, Natural Spring,

City - · A C1Mk At Tlio Bottom, Asking $50 .000 . Already
(304)1117-5927

taaam.d.com

.,........ Notwt.....,

w.tlltool),
~ oene IIIIM'rrl rooldnl
oM; as 'p t , . . . . . . . , . lllllt,
Wllftul .... INf ................................... lrUnl&amp;. ........

whMI. ~&lt;CIIIIMiy CQ

,e

E'l\ ...., Oflltl 11101 ~ 11411 fLJI ...
ohlfrt. otd WOOd ..... eo.ntr ... -. 4 .......... ~

..,.. ........ ,... ...................................... ....
_...
...__.. ......... _.......

~

.................
friiMIII......,.

old ... -- -.
........
?ton............
....,..
. . . .. . . ..,,,. 9 ............
,.,._.....,. ....._. Mrt. old
?a• lwk• Mil tta'),
lid ltOna. ...., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mill bMrd, . . . Alnlnl Dftk?

;m

Co'ilPt fWd polttlr, C.D. lwlfll lion,.,..........., lllltiW I Mr ?t'A:w&amp;
OOIIICIIItiN, Llkl ....... .,.._ .......... ~................RIW),
aao ttcMtt (Ciupwt~• ·••n• o.....,_. "" a •• ou Alhlnl
ywtaate,
AlhiM OlliiMIIr; ll&amp;CkMtr.......,., .....,.. 11111t No.

Oltiit.-

1-

1""
r-._111M),
-·o- .... --·----.,.. ... .

-··------- .... •• - o l d ..... -

•••• ran a c:.ml\rel a
I' r 6t., . . . (IIIII?W, . . _
. ...,. ......, Courtw • . . . . . . ...,. oeu ......_ ••••• a ~nc~~n

filM...,_,, IIIMlllllli&amp;....-. .........,
MMtorooll•lue. woMen-~ ..................... Mid,
poMty pleCII. niMinlhlrll.

• •1&amp;1' .••nt•

.....

II •••

7-1·14112

-Co--~- ·-

$1 t .500 or 20 Acrll $19.oDOI
Kerr Road, 8 - $2t ,OOO Dr 5
Aals Wltf18aml $31.000. Rio
Grande, 6Aals. SI9.000Dr 13

W'e ••.

--AiilU*II
w-

441..0114 1-800-498-0076'
N e\.v l

www.91tdiet.com
II you have 10 lo 75 pounds to
..... ... pay you $$$ . 1-888·2:l7·

r){

.

Business
Training

....

$26.900. Eureka. 33 01
$31.000. Tya~on t.a1111

.1tror, · 1 lhfl Jctck•,orl P1k£'

Single Parent Program . Special
Financ ing Available , (304)7557191

Joanna's Computer Applications
Tr1lnlag. Microsott Office User
Specialist, Cerlifiecl Instructor. In
Tht Comfort Of Your Home Or
Bulirioll. (740)«1-1555

Golilpolla ca- cot~ege
(Coreors Ctooe To H....)

Stock Model Clearanc. all 2000
models must go. New nome payments as low as $150 .32 per
month and only $750.90 down.
Call740-385-4367.

Mid-Ohio Valley Tr;-uck
Driver Training
COL CertlftC8tlon 5 W-k Cou,...
Mon &amp; Frl 7:00-3:30 W-kend
Set &amp; Sun e :oa-. :30 12 weeks
. Financing end Funding
Aveileble B .• - d On Eligibility

Cl••-•

Schools
Instruction

..Job placem•nt on Ct•••A t~Wintng•
Contact Ed Adams 1-800-648-3695
or (740) 373-3966

'
Rutllnd
home oilers a
2/3 SA , 2
Kit., Utilily.

180 Wanted To Do
Babyaltttng In my Home, children
2-to, M·F &amp;am-5:30pm, call

230

(7~)388-8193

Oevld'a General Contractors,
Plumbing. _
Electric. Painllng
Oecli&amp;, Misc. Worli, All Home AePii11, Lawn Car&amp;. Call (740)2569373 Or Coil Phone t -304·633·
Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
hsul your ·togo to lhl mill just coli
304&gt;61'5-t957.
'

I US NEED CASH?? WE pay

, cash ·tor remaining payments on

Repairing Lawn Mowers And

Property SQkll Mongagesl Annul·
ties! Settlements! Immediate
Ouotea!ll •Nobody beats our prlces . • National Cpnuact Buyers
(600) 490·073t ext. tOI www.na·

And

Delivery Available . For Quality
5ervice can (740)44&amp;-7604

Lawn Mowing; Weed Eating ;
Deck Cleaning,
Refinishing :
R1moval Of Unwanted. Items
From Buildings Call (740j446 7604

t10nalcofllraCibuy8rs.com

REDUCED AGAINII
POMEROY· One of the nlc1astl
homes ln a beautiful
with a great view!
Junct. SR
Baths, LA,
,
car garage, 2.5 acres.

'"*'-""• ...... .....,, ......,.

__
- -··-- -- . ,.._ """""'"-

-----II1MI
. . . . TVo.--IIM
""-"""-""" --.... ., ___
.,
....

--.Ill-. .........

QUtln l t . INd, ...,.. twin .... -

much morel

. IFPl

Nowa1klng

top pOrCh teblltJohlq wloofiM &amp; _,.. .... I I ewlclll,...... water oo1or
Pllnii.A bootla. 01rcl . . . . wlohllra, JCmll•an IlOilo

Pull llflll Dn 1C1M. .....,.. a
c:&amp;-:u:l • ,_,lOCI71Ill·_....)
rldlniiiWn ......, Toto

- . hal-,--log--·-·""""'- _.,.1,
.....,.lrillt, lrtoyOioa.

goo Hlumor

. CONSOLIDATE YOUR WAY
. OUT OF .DEBTI Reduce monthly
payments. Pay one bill/month.
EASY to get started . Financial
Freedom Christian Counseling,
800·841-9757 ,
e&lt;t .
CC3
www.debtccs.org (non proiH)
· CREDIT PROBLEMS?· CALL THE
; CREDIT EXPERTS, LICENSED/
, BONDED CORRECT/REMOVE
,BAD CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY,
LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS. AAA
RATING. 1·888·8t 1-0902.

EfPbld·-'Ht«ne ~eatt,

Illllll; Cooh ore- w-1.0. - - f 1 0 Q O - 111w...horlutlon ot Iunde 8VIIIIatll. NM r&amp;tJII" m· tor ,... or IUISal'ltl.
food will be evallllale.

, di4 Second Ave., Galltpoli1, Ohio 45631-0li4
740-446-0008 740-441-1111
•
evantmoo.zoomnel.nel www.evans-moore.com

OWNER: l!vr Brown .
SHAMROCfK AUCTION ·SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pit Sherldln &amp; Chrll Preter
· Llcenred &amp; Bonded In State of OhioMember Ohio &amp; Nlt'l Auctlonet... Aaroc.
· PH: 740.582-4310 or 8C!Q-41N12.2

Formerly BlaeHum R•o.hy

us.,...

Soulh.m. ohk, For ON,. A Quare.,. Centnry ..

. .Joe A. Moor-Broker 441·1616
, Sarah L. Evana-Moore, Broker 441·1616
Patricia Haya- 446-3884 Cera Caaey-245-9430

~

11083 Beautiful counlty Hltlngl
2.5 acres of plush country
meadows and . a stocked pond
. surround lhla 3 BR ranch home.
. Total 17 acres for

NEED AN EARLY PAYDAY?? Up
ro $500 instantly by phonal 1·
677-EARLYP~Y . LICI 750005, lsi
A[)IIANCE FREEl
NEED MONEY $$$$? Too many
bills? Debt consolidation. Min .
$2,000.00 &amp; Up. Free Call 1·866·
895·8477 Good/bad eredll apply

now.

Public Bale 111d Auction

ESTATE AUCTION

I.
I
with I
Iorge building to hold your
buaintas? This 3 BR 1 t/2 BA
home comas with' a 30 x 72
Insulated .motli pole bam wllh
office space, gas heater &amp; 220
electric Una. Great deal In the
$70'8 .
.

THUR S. EVE M AY 3 • 5:30 P.M.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 18817
No Fta Unless,Wa Wlnl
1-888,582-3345

REAL ESTATE

Real Eatate Orneral

for 1 g.t-e-way
1 :: 7~::
Resting on 29 AC mil this

t BA cabin bum in 1997
1801ualon and breath taking
of nilture and Is located from
public access to thl Ohio
ba..rtllilui
ttory
le
In tho quill vlllge o1
Mlddlepon. Older homO thlt hit
been wondorfully taken caro oft
Oak trlm.. H1rdwood prlvocy
doors oak pocklt door. 2·3 BR,
I 1/2 BA, one car attochod
garags, 2 porchtl, comer lol.
Only $8S,OOO

homo prlco, bu1
oxtrroal Nawer rool.
coverlnge, heat pumj:),
I , Smhh'a custom oak
replaCement windows,

-~~~ UIICTUIIS
Log Homo
8ulldl111 CompoQuolfty ., _ , .
orU-Ifoot ·

forcall
yourtOOav
-qu6te'..

totownl
8A homo
nict covered
olde dock. eomo hardwood
lind lull - . n f on I ICII 11'111.
$73,800

800458 9990

"oo"

JOHN

L AJiiNO'IT • Admlnlllrllar

DAN IMmt • AUCTIONIIII OHIO 1'!344
CAIH ·• fOOIITIW 10 • IIII'RIIHMINTS
NOTE: Trclotorl, ~.I . . .lprnent to Hll It 7:00p.m.
" Not ro•ponelblelar aaalllentt or loll al PfOperly •

JVVIW

1f'fll

II ' ' ' 111

.........
~

I

I

'&lt;

RENTAL S

330 Farms for Sale

2 Bedroom House For Rani In

410 Houses for Rent ·
2

Bidwell, l'ncludes
(7401441420

Lots.

3 Bedroom House. $300 Per
Month, $300 Doposil, Euroka, Alter 5pm (740)~2580

balhl, 740.949-3004 aHer 5pm.
14x70 Southern Dream, free De·
livery lree Setup only $9995 1·
888·928·3426

OFFICE

16 Wide . Only $195.00 Per
Month, 8.99% Fixed Interest Flate
Wllh ~lr ~nd
Underpinning
1·888·928·3426
...;.;.:._:.;.;..;.;:;:__ _;_ __
1974 Nashua 12x70 , 2-3 bed·
rooms. new furnace, new hot wa· tar tank. $4000, call 740 -985::.36:.;5;;.5.;;a..;lter:..6;;:pm;.;_., - - - , - -

992-2259
1184
loautllul r~nch homo wHh
2 bedrooms, I belh, kHchen
and living room on a level
lot. Approx. 1100 sq. ft. 01
I
space. Call lor your
lshoWi1,a oll183. ·

-

For Sale. Hos Island In Middle Of
Kitchen With Stove Bull! ln . Cantral Air &amp; Most Appliances Go .
Must Seal Very Low Price . Call
Anytime And Ask For Tammy.
(740)368-8914 .

"NEW USTING • JACKSONVILLE ·A nice
starter home. A smaller one story home wHh
living room. kHchen 2 bedrooms, 1 beth and a
a laundry room. H also includes an enclosed
1ron1 PQrch and a small shed all on a .17 acre
lot.
. .
ASKING $34,900

Real Eat.te General

rl~ rD
_- R.
~·

'-"P"u,- .
.

446•6806
.

Fr8e MOney NOw! It's True! No
repayment Guaranteed. For J:)ersonal needs. education, busl·
ness. t-800·724·8047 (24 hrs.) ·

~

Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don't H... Lind? W. Dolll Hurry
Only 10 Loll Left. 304-138-1205.

'99 mobile home lor sale, must
·sell, 14x70. three bedrooms, two

958 Clark Chapel Ad.
Bidwell Ohio 45814
•

Banktuptcy $195
Adoption $225
Not do-it-yourself-kit!
CALL t -800·303-1170
FREE inlormalionl
Bankruptcy nla in TNIKY

lfumtnum
atenllon
llddlt,
...
_llod
-·
- _.., tuM,
llolMW....,
- · ,.....
1trint COIIrMn
- · ....,.,,
II ft.

Camp
Sitas F&lt;&gt;r Ront On Ka·
nawha River, 8 miles lrom point
PIOO$ant, eloctric only. (304)8751722, (304)875-4144 Aller 5pm.

4230

1981 14x70 Admirallon ' Trallar '

Divorce $150

mQJ.I Mil M'"~~~IMta·
fniiiM Mddlll,

Property Marko.!&gt;-

'

es. Pond. In-ground Pool. Several
Bama. Garage, FrUit Trees. Close
To HoiZf!r. $2t5,000. (740)44&amp;-

CASH LOANS $2000·$5000.
Consolidation to $200,000. Badf
No Credll. Credll Cards. Mortgages . For lntormatlon : 1· 800·
· 335-7612.ext.3622
·

Announcement

Many More, Cal- For Mapel
Owner Anancing With 8iighl

Professional
Services

$$$ CREDIT CARD PROBLEMS?
FREE Debl Consolidation. Cut
Payments, Reduce Interest. NonProfit . 800- 268-633t Exl. 15.
www.goldcoastcc.com
.
.

6285

Nice-

WOW New Ft8erwood Double
Wide 281180, 4 BR. Only 39.990 al
Fleetwood Homes of Proctorville,
ToM Froe1-888-565-0167

Farm House. Beautllully Ramodeilld, 2963 Squoro FHt. 11 Acr·

$ FREE CASH NOW$ lrom
weallhy families unloading millions
of dollars, to help minimize their
taxes. Write Immediately: WIND·
FALLS. 3010 WILSHIRE 8LVD.
188, LOS ANGELES. CALIFOR·
NIA 90010

9
n. P1M ...,. , N
I &amp;
?lttlll GNrll
en p'Dorrd &amp; llill NMS. Ql
ltaai'IM?rl, miiOIIIInFDIM . . . . . ~ IIMI ~ ip;IIIIUIII,
• • •rtO tlhor!&gt; Hatll'illlllloo
11,

"l''Od ,....

Subdivision
Canceled New
Models Direct From Factory·
Only 2 LeH Cali '(740)44&amp;-3093

WORK FROM lfoMEI Earn
$500-$7000/month PT/FT. Full
Training . Free Information . Call
Nowl1-800-290-89t4
www.attainurdreama.com

gllll....,....
-·-·...-m-~~~-----·--·
HQUM'D rye=
•hill
comp?ett,

81111 A Trove! Agency: Receive
Training, Business support, Your
own Travel Website and Travel
Discounts/Perks. Earn big SSS.
Nomlnol Startup Costl 1-888-6990901 or www.EarnBucksFrom·
Start Your Business Today .. .
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Affordable Rate.
Spring Valilly Plaza, Call 740-4460tOI .

OED
Get your HS equivalency diploma
with our tlly hon'le study course.
t -600-559-2163 ""'~10

Engine . Plck-uj:)

STOP RENTING 'I OWN FOR
LESSI $0 or tow OOwfll OK crtd~t
For llsrlng call 1·800-501-1777
0Xl962t.

Homo.com

"AS IS" $35,800. '·'

Sm111

Area. 10 Ac&gt;e.S11.0DOI
llolgiCo, T._l'laln&amp;SR681. NiCe Hilt! 5Aooo On
Sliado- $12,000, 7Aoll
with POlo 8orn $23.000.
Road, 6 Ac&gt;OI $12,000 Or 511(:r01WithHorleBaml 125.500.
Danvile.
5 foan
S13.500.R..Wnd. 9 foanS8.5001

carr

Announcement

cow ..... old .._

I

~LNIII

.·

""-woRK FROM~···
S50CHt500 por mo. Pff
$2000-$8000 por mo. FfT
No~-Training proyided.
1-800-390-4930.

Care Of Elderly/ Housekeeping.
$6.00 Per Hour, Ask For Bonnie.

1M--·_,"'*••-• 11M.-""' Ik
~

r-

or visit our website:

-.amerlcancornmun

t-·

a.m. - . .

1: Wllh 86
Acroo - For S120.100.
O p - 1:
Everything
In Option t plus Putur•. Pond.
Anc1 A TOiai 01 120 Acrll Prieod
AI $189,900. Shown 8y Appoinl·
ment Only. Call EwentnQs
(740)300-0259
.

(304)895·3723

!IIDQI"' AND cne, 'C!W u·

lonl.....,_..

(-AIN~II
·('Wid IIIlA. KY. ~OK}

1-800-821-8139

Saturday, May 5 • 10:00 a.m. ·

for llglll.

Fam.3-..... - - . .

COllinge, Olk TriM. And A lMga
Kitchen. Buildings Include A
Largo ll'lrn And Gorlgo. Euei-

ContaCt us at:

PUBLIC AUCTION
jlrap1rty
ol Eva II'OW!I 1ncllllma frOnt Oilier lndMd11111 WIQ De
IOid 11 public 1uctlan. DIRI!C'IIONI: Pram RL :t3 8auth
of Alhtnl, .... thin I mllll fn1rn lllltt IICIIon of
Rlchllncl Avenue and RL :t311t l'ofr.ov RCNtd), .......,

OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
recommends that you do butl~
Mil wiU'l peop5e you ll:now_and
NOT to Hlld onc&gt;ney trvough thl
mail un?d roo have •nvestiQated

The American
Community
Advertising Network

WORKF-HOIIE
SS00·$1 ,500 Mo. Part time.
$1200-SIIOOO mo. FIJI r..-.
1'1110 VACATIONS
t -I00-490-30t9

150

Due to moving and llllng ltonll, lite perwaual

roo.·-

A VENDING
101
GREAT IO&lt;atlono! Eorns big U/
wk!l $1995. Financing ovaiablo.

For All Your Advertising Nead• ·

CIITodayl 740-448-4367,
1·1100-214-0452.
Rog 190-05-1274B.

Athens, OH

FA .. W FOR SAlEII Wo Hive
M . - And Art SOHing Our

Opportunlty-=----

IIIO'IICEI

top

(740~7

140

Butlneu

Announcement

Weddings, Treasured Photos
Copturad For lbur We&lt;k!tng In
A Computerized Audio! Visual
·Siidelhow PrltMntalton. Oetai?s-

t381.

210

Opportunity

W1dea COfttltuctiO.n, Olnaral
L.lwt\ MaintenMCI, Lll • • .....
(140)7C9 11.

ONo.

Or email to

Butlneu

210

(304)51f-:!e44 F&lt;&gt;r Locoi. Or1-ln·M0-4900 Promp 680.11•
For long Dioax:e.

WI are

Sunday, Apltl 21, 2001

r;/mttf
f"l;1)

~

Bl
A~/14

~

Branch Ofllee
Locust St
23
Gallipolis Ohio
4583,1

*

-

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BRDKEI'I ...- .....- ... 411 8101
GAIL IIELVILlE.............................- ... 111 1208
TIISH INYDER...................................-M1-t411
JOHNNIE RU88&amp;LL ... _.................., ..3f7-0313
DAVID SNYDER ................................... 441-MII
OUR WEB F'AGE IS:www..tamilnrooi-to.com
e-mail: vterealeltlleOzoomnet.net

m
111•1'00

.

14015 CHARMING COMFORT
CDNYENIINCI Roomy 2 sty.
home welcom11 you lo thl lovely
. LR, formal DR, oak cablnela in kk..
tat floor •-•room &amp; laund
·
.
ry
wlbalh. 2 large bedrml &amp;balh on

~~

:{famwoge·,.!"

Carpeted throughout 2 car
allacl1od gor., 2 trocka of land,
'+tomo &amp; .720 /11: + extra lot. 3.156
/11:. Fronting on SR 141 . Groen
Twp.OnePrice$165,000VLS
•••11 RAISED IIANCH A
wonderful
family
home,
4
bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, oqulppod kll,
loads of storage space, extra lg.
Mast• bedrm. OWner has made
many Improvements. New carpol
&amp; lighting, Your children need
extra lot for playground. l.g. 2 car
: ; o c a l l d in Addlso.n.. VLS

WILL HILL ROAD .Just outside ol Pomeroy.
A 2 year old two story Randall Home with 6
rooma, 3 bedrooms, 1'/• beths. 12x16 deck,
HP/CA and ceiling lans. 1'/• acres, nice
garden area. Vary nice home. Owner has
relocated.
ASKING $75,000.

APPLE GROVE· RIVER FRONT LOt •
150' river frontage. Great camping and
boating lot. Lot runs from SA 338 to lhe
river. Agent Owned.
ASKING $20,000

PORTLAND BUFFINGTON LANDING· Ali
executive subdivision designed lor horse
lovers and boaters! You won 't believe the
features. Access to the beautiful Ohio for~~
lovers. 100' b'o at dock, rldlng · ring, plcn!c
sheller, riding' trails and much more. Certain
restrlctloni apply. Lo1 prices and acreage vary
according to the particular amenities . Lol N3t .650 acres plus share Lot 112. Land- 6,600,
Improvements • 8,000, Malnlenance Fund
3,000 • Price lor Lot 13 II $(1,900 PIUI lot 12
eh11e • $27,600.

13380 FAIULOUI IAIIGAIN·
Brick &amp; vinyl 6 BR. 2 8A homo on
ptiveta I acre lot. Family room.
!lYing room w/flreplaco, OFI, and
Iorge ullllty room In this one with
f\oll baeement. Attached 2 car
garage and detached 2 car garage
as wall could ba used for atorage.
Priced tor a quick sala. ses,ooo
A FEW MINUTES OF
VOUR TIME COULD PAV DFFI
VIew thll lovely all brick home
w~hree bedrooms, 2 balho, formal
dlnl~g rm., living rm., family rm .,
with fireplace.. Patio, above .
ground PQOt, 2 car attached
gorage and blsemsnl. VERY
UVABLE HOME FDA THE
MONIV. ti21.000.00Vll ·
~14 KING IIZE fAMilY HOMI
Grill 2 oty. 4 bedrms., 2 t/2
bathl, formal LR &amp; DR, Fam Rm. · ·
w{brlokftroplooo,lllltrgenns.. 13'
• 25' mutor bedrm. Ill/bath. 2 car
,nached garage. 1.25 Ao 11'111
$140,000. Additional lot available.
VLS
14017 L.ooltad 31311L Ca~ol Rd.
3 bodroo- • ·-•. CEDAR
"" • _,..
CONTEMPORARY HOME Olk
kttchln, ceramic tllo In kitchen &amp;
bathl. NEW CARPET through oul,
nolurll d'lcor. ~ ACRES M/1.
$105,()QO. Trllh or Dave
•
140018 HOME &amp; INCOMI!
INVESTMENT 126 x 130 Bulavllle
Pk. 3 bedrm, 3 bath living quarters .
Also 18' x 32' gorage plus 30' x 20 .
building 1/2 ac. of land. good aaloo
lac. Priced to sell. VLS

I·

~""""""

•

140011 A THING OF BEAUTY 18 A 14004 Tr8CIIII 9 /11: 11'1111.ocated 4
JOY FOREVER. 4 BR, All mi. ~om Gallipolis on SR 588. Buy
BRICK HOME, I 1/2 balhs, run ali lhree lracts of land or pan
basement Fireplace In- LR. also In Virginia L. Smllh 448·6808
·
one BR, formal OR, garage In roor.
Privacy fence
around
the t33t7 IN THE CITY Huge tamlly
landscaped lot. 3rd floor flniBI1od home w/4 BRa, 2 bathl, ~1. LR,
and Is lovely. All naw carpol, DR, porchel, partial -..nt.
remodeled bath room. Don'l take Priced nght- see this outstanding
my word lor H· SEE IT FOR offer! Vacanl, ready to welcome
YOURSELF. VLS •
you. VlS ~68()6
.
14000- 171 Edoma Tnol~ Tycoon 133C11 Large home In town, new
lake- 2 Lola St2,500 eoch. root 1999, 4 BR, 2.5 SA, 2 car
vinyl
skiing,
nice
Moblill home, building . &amp; lot garage,
$15,000 an lor $33,000
neighborhood. Neodl some TLC
133«1 CAARYDUT IIUSINES8 bul priced rlltil aC 17UOO
lnd CONVENIENCE STORE 13311 CITY LOT 43' x 170'
FOR SALE. New alarm system. located 39 VIne St.
Building built to tta.te code.
Contlnuouo operation since 19116. 13311lol on Lylo D~VI $7100
Price Includes inventory. Call 13355 AUTHENTIC lOG HOME
Johnnie 367-0323 01446-11806.
WITH CHARACTER. 11 you like
13375
LOOK AT THISIIII
3 ·Individuality--hire II lsi 3,020 oq.
Bedroom 2 bath ranch over full ft. more or Ina, 3 bodrrno., 2 t/2
balanenl wnh 2 car garage and balhs, Kit .. LRm, Ofllce rm .. and
flnlohed family room. Home ails on much more. Wrap porch front &amp; 2
2 AC . 11'1111n Hannan Trace Scl1ool8. aides. 167 ACres m{l. ROiling
Jull mlnules from downtown Puture and 3 Largo Bllml &amp;
Gallipolis. Thla home features a Feed Lot eliae, 2· nice ponds.
baauliful landscaped lawn, wood Land Is moat all clean &amp; hal some
pellet stove and cenlral air. fencing. Eteclrlc &amp;~oot free water
Located ·jusl off Rock Lick Rd. on In the barn. Feed 101 s11es.
Mabie Dr. In nice neighborhood. Formeny used tor V•al ca~
Have a garden and raise some operation. Located near Rio
"ow111 bul make sure lo look at Grande. Appointment Only. Call
lhls. Call Johnnie at 367-0323 Virginia L. Smith 740·448·6806.
today tor an ap~l ntment.
1335,000
NVESTMENT DR MOVE 14012· Groot loollion- Starter
13372 I_
IN 1967 Mobile Home ·BO'x12', 2 home 3 BR, 1 balh w{Worklhop
bedrooms, 1 bath, fumltura , range with ba&amp;ement. Situated on .3
&amp; ref.. Heat . pump, central air. aclot and @lr\la11ecllon ol St. AI.
Llrge building 70'xt4' also 20~10' 160 &amp; 554. Owner hll remodeled
bldg., Corner 101 Hy10ll &amp; Oliver, home and pul rww roof on
Middleport, 111,000.00
· gorage/Worklhop. May 1110 lle
, _ D~LUXE
COUNTRY commercial. Prlced@ $65,000
LIVING 4 bedrml, 2 bathl, MOte
COMMERCIAL LOT·
g11age &amp; 2 10 11'111. Immaculate JICksonPk. GIIIIpoila,OHComer
condition 2000
ft. &amp; 10 enjOy lot wilh great potentlll.
family llkt 1o fulloat, Large rms, Lovely homo on the 811ullfUI
throultl out· flreplace In LR, sky Ohio l'llvorl This homo n11 been
llghta, biautlful kitchen . . Sun completely remodeled. All . hll
p..-ch w/Window walls. Gal &amp; been done wllh,ln tho ul lour y11.
eloc heal central llr &amp; lovely New roof, lnsulaled wlndowo, new
.
0/C &amp; f\ornace, aN now appliances,
·
•
carpel. GrHn Sclloos. Thll one central Vao. system. Homo hu lull
w11 wor1h Wilting tor, just a balemont w/WOrklhop. New guell
phone coli awoy. VLS 448-teOe cabin c:IOMI' to river, bul above
flOOd plain. Bock ~arc! fenced.
MAKE OFFER
ft3l2 uo IIIII Rt. 211 In tho Panoramlo view of tho Ohio River
Vllloga of Thurman. Nice 2 br., from almoat ail rooma and cabin. A
cottogo, bolh, kllchen/dlnlng room parediH for boating &amp; fishing.
and · ulll~
room.
lnsulaled Prlcad for quid&lt; sale 1103,000
windows, steel doora with storm 1113 REDUCED PAICEM117
doora. Nlco lot with oulbulldlng . acraa clo10 to naw Fwy., hOipltei,
Public water and soon to ba public shop e1r. Water, gao, s -.
s.Wage. l45,000
Adjoining Plnacrnt Nu111ng Ho111a.

i&lt;!:

EASTERN SCHOOL DISTRICT· This
execullve home has many features. 4
bedrooms, lull finished basement, garage,
W.B.F.P.. 6hed, in ground pool, deck, 2 . 12+
ai:rea of ground . Quiet country setting, C/A,
equipped kitchen, all modern, Hard Wood
floors, and carpet &amp; tile. Even the washer. &amp;
dryer 8layl OWner Moving •
PRICED
TO SELL@ $145.000.
.

'·

sq

It, home needs some work .·
ASKING

$34,1100.

POMEROY· Here Is a cute little 3 bedroom home. Including equipped kitchen , lull basement
reo. room , carpet and hardwood floors throughout One car garage and off street
loearklr1a..
.
. ASKING $29,1100.
Commercial Investment Prime location ln Pomeroy. lt Is never too latelo make
owrtllrta
own business come true. The hard work has been done, Ills an
~~~~~::~s~~~ Gllaveilly Snapper service and sales with stock and equipment, building and
II
In or call for details on lhls deal.

1--------------------------------1
MIDDLEPORT • A cute, cozy, and clofl to local grocery and so convenient This one floor
I froome home offers 2 bedrooms , bath, part basement &amp; appliances. Nice tronl porch &amp; chain
link lenced back yard. Immediate poueaalonl This home Is 'move In condition .
POMI!ROY - Approximately one acre with a 1 '/• story brick/stuCCO/block home. 3 ~==~
equipped kitchen, and two bathe. All new berber carpel, attic space, ceil ing lana, bay
In dlnlng room . In house vacuum system. Attached 1 car garage , detached 2 car garage
attic storage. Nice coverCKl lront cement porch .
· ASKING Sl1,1100,

Cleland ·Realty, Inc. Offlce .............992·2259
Henry E. clrland ...........................992-2259
Sherrl L. Hilrt ..~ ............................... 742·2357

�SUndlly, Apr1128, 200

tton.'oy •Middleport • GallipOlis. Ohio • Point 9luunt, WV
411 Ha 111 for"-"
:IIIII

J . - &amp; T - P M I,

a-. -il8f.tO&lt;. CIA. $425
~ Dll

euv

t B d"""' ., eourwy, - · lie-

~~::'~:"(i:l:::

', 110 , _ (740__.

Forlduild Home•

8371

from

StO- llopo'o a -...,.cy-a. 1 bedroom. $200 per month, 2
l'w Uolitlgll-3tt-33ZI &amp;L bedroom, $250 plus depooH &amp;
111Jf
uliiKIOI. 3ld SliHt. llacino, Oh.
740-247-4292.
, . . - 01 . ..

torvo

'-oorn.

2 batll, 2 car garage, - -· 2 Badroom Furollhed, UtHities
MOO......_ 740 116 6363, 304- Include&lt;!. s•oolmo. limit Of 2
....... (740)3117~11

727-&amp;111.

:Q~o~.,~~~-~G~I~rl~e~O~p~p:o~rt~u~n~l~ty~
-~
e..,,
Woman.
Would Uce
To Slllte l.Mge
On Rae- Paid
fm

coon

2 BR A.paruntnl In Centenary.

Appliancts Furnished. UlilitiH
~ ElecWic. Clean. $2151

.W,

3 Room Upolairo Ajot., One - room At e51 SeeoftCI lwenue.

Gatt¥olio. O..,.,.;t ~- &amp;u
UOftllll l.eiM, UtilitiM Not lnp

-~-- Cal­
...,ros.r

Ctwialilln "-lOs. Privata Bad·

rooms, 2 lath. Large kilchen, 4 room, Downstairs, Water paid,
Dining, Large Livi119room. No Perl. ' ' Cedar St. (740)3118-

l c r - Dedi. Covered Patio/ t tOO
-113 · BY WatM. $225/mo. Plus BEAUTIFUL APAIITIIEHTS AT
- H You Love Nature. BUDGET PRICES AT JACK•
1
Mondlly
"""""'
•- Good-.ty
..........
,.....
c.l SON ESTATES, 52 Wtltwoocl
Linda Sonders. Wollt 1· Drtv. lr0110 S297 to 1383. Walk to
100- eu• Elll. 3214....,. ohop • m011ieo. can 740-4'6_..2561. EIJialltJuAlg ()slportriy.
:P::!..ilot..:P.::•oor::::!o_m
__
_Aen
__..,-,---d-11&lt;1-. 1 Chtioty's Family Living. 331•0
31M-73B-72tll.
-Lima lid. ROlland. OhiO. 740742· 7403. Apartment. horne and
Tokift9 opptlcltions lor 3-&lt; bed· trailef rental&amp;. Commercial storerOOfl"' home in Midd'-Pon. reler-

fronts availab&amp;e tor lease. Vacan*

for Rent •.

490

ForLIIU

Beauliflll,1600 Sq. - . 2nd Floor Apartmenl In Historic
District. Ideal For Professional

All Modern Amenilioo. 3
Bedroom&amp;; Spacious LMng; t -t/2
Baths. Rear Deck. HVAC. $6001
mo. Plus Utilities Securiry And
Kay Depooit. No ...... _...,..
Required . (7.tO).U6-U25 Or

~-

(700)448-31138

pad.

no-.

740-742-2714.

2 bedroom mobfle home or 600
sq. h. olftce space, Riverpart, Mi........ $300/mo. ...... -

Riverside Apartments in Middleport. From $278-$348. can 740992·5084.' Equal Houling Oppor-

rent for handy pa110n who can
mow the grau in the park, 81..._
178-1661.

.-.

2 Bedroom Trailer For Aen1 In

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmenrs. Includes Water

- · (740)368-9061
C-. 2 Bedroom. w.-1 Ory·

•

GlacloUo living. 1 and 2 bedroom
8jl8rlftHKIIO at Vllage Manor and

Goods
Almond Whirlpool &amp; GE Wash·
ero. $60 Each; White Maytag
Washer. $65; 3 Dryers. 560
Each. (740J"B 9066
Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers. Aange1. Refri·
grators. Up To 90 Oayt Guaranteed! We Sel New Maytag Appliances. French City Mayrag ,
For Sale : RecondillonecJ washers, dryers and rtfrigeralors.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407

tr, W1ter &amp; Trash Included, 5

••a oooa.

Milo&amp; South 216, Gallipolis.
(740)oUI-G540 (700)2SI--e719

River Send Place Now Accepting

Applications lor 1 Badroom Hud

w»
40 Gallon, In Good Condition.

Nlca

Subsided Apartment for Elderly

(740~

Clean

3

Bedroom

Mobile Home Near Mercerville.

(740)256--e57•
Rent/ Bale On Payments, Mobile
Home In Centenary. For Rent, 3
8R -141. (740)448-1810

440

.Aplrtments
torRent

t anc1 2 bedroom apartments. furnished and unfurnished, HQJrity
dtpolk required, no pets, uo-

112·2218.

1 Bedroom Garage AparlmentKanagua, $250/ Month + Utilities
And Dopoolt. (740)88&amp;-7t02
1 Bedroom Furnished Apartment
In Point Pleasant, Very Nice &amp;

Clean, No 1'1110, (304)67S.13118

- · ~304)e75-7388.
Four Gao Hot
Healers.

-

and Oioabled, EOH, (304)8823121 Or (304)882-3274
Tara Townnouse Apartments.
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms. 2

Floors. CA, t t/2 Bath. Fully Cor·
peted. Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool .
Patio, Stan S3851Mo. No Pets,
Lease Plus Security Deposit Required, Oayo: 740-446·3481.
Evenings: 740-367-0502. 7404411-0101.
1\rin River'Towll&gt; ,_ aa:opling
applications lor 1 BR.
HUO subsidiZed apl. lor -.,y
and disablorl. EOH. (304)675-

Aif

Sporting

Goods

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryeu, refrigerators,
ranges. Sllaogs Appliances, 76

Vine Slraet, Call 740·446·7398,
1-8118-818-0 t 28.
Mollohan Carpet , 202 Clark

Chapel Rd. Purter. OH. Free Esti·
mates. Eaoy Financing or 90 days
same as cash. Visa. Maatercard
Accepted, ~740)4"6-7•4• or 1·
Bn-830-9t62
Main SlrHI Furniture

(304)67S.1422
515 Mains.-. Point Pleasant

-a. U&amp;ad Furniture

6679.

New 2 Piece Llvlngroom Suites,

$399. Buy. Sell. Tllldo.

,

Upstairs Apartment 3 Rooms.
Furnished, Utilities Patd, 1280. Per

New And Used Furniture Store

Month Plus Deposit. (740)448-

Below Holiday Inn, l&lt;anauga, We

1340

Sell Grave Monuments

And

Vases. (740)440-4782

---·- ·-

CIIEDIT CARD EQUIPIIEIIT
We'll supply you wilh Merchant
Accounr and EquipmenL Low
coat lease. Sales depOiitect into
your Cl1eCkinO """"""- C8ll Carll
Solulioros t-3811-321-72411.

Oeot $150; Couch $50; Glaso
Colfoo Tablo $25; End Tables
$20; Bookcase 115; Pipovloe
$60; Old S!nger Sewing Machine
S25 Eacft; Air CGndhioner
$75. (304)e75-4352

AntiquO ~

1111&lt;1. Complote •

In Good CondHion S350. &amp;
Antique Solid Walnut Bad. $100.

OBO
(304)695·336•
(304)895-3441

Or

11 ,000 BACK 2 Ton Air Condi·
tioner. 2 Ton COil, 1 Une 5el, In·
Slallod. $2 .295 . $1 ,000 Back,
$1295 Net PriCe. Free Estimates.
Call For Quotes On Other Sizes.
If

You

Don't

us. We

Call

8oth Lose! Mobile -Our
Speciality 1·740-446-6308 1·000:
29Hl0911
18 HP Yardman Riding Lawn

-

· Loolls Good. Rune Good.
5550. {740)388 9325
19115 All AutomatiC Frick 5awmift·
Computerized HMC Oebarker &amp;
Chip Pack· wJI oepa ..te.
Call-7:00pm. (740)446-6763

~gN';:,P:E~
Buy Facloty Direct
&amp;cellenl 5ervk:e
Fto•iblo Fmaneing
Home !Co...,.n:ial Units
FREE COlor Coliltog
CoiToday-1·1100-71 t -ot 58
www.np.etsan.eom

Avo-

ASTHMA ALLEIIOV NEEDED,
10.15 PEOPLE Who Oaslro
lmmediale Relief. To Try. Evalual8
A NEW Compact Slate 01 Tho
Art. Home Or Business Air
Purifica1ion System. No Cost Or
Obligation. Free 3 Day Trial. Mel
Ross (304)67S.3379
AUTOS FROM S500:00
Police lmpoundo &amp; Reposl
Toyotas. Chevy's. Jeeps!
Please CaH lor Lislings,
1-800-45 HlSOO Ed. C9811
Baby Bed, Car Seat, High Chair
That You Can Make Into Tabla &amp;

Char (304)67S.2801

UMd WIJJ'h.*, Good CcJn.
· $175.00 (740}44-~ 01:

Mobi'- Home SuP9Iy. 740~9411MYRTLE BEACH. S.C. 213111R's
on/off ocean . 5650·$1200 per
weak. now· BarelootVaca·
lions8AOLCOM

lion.mm

(1A0)2A5-5812

Antiques

630

Plumbing ' ElocD:al Pans. Furnaees &amp; ...., P-•· Sennollt

5120.00 (304)675-!1127
~.,.,. , WE FIIIANCE DELL
COMPUTERS! Eve• with ....
than perlect credit! 1-800-477·
vote. C&lt;&gt;cle ACII ...,_..,.......,..

IIEW AND UIED STEEL Steel
Seomo. Pipe fol Concnoto.
Anole. Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating For Drains, Driveways &amp;
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap MetalS
(7-10)446-7300
NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·
ERS- Almost weryone approved
whh $0 down! Low monthly permenll! 1-800-617-34768111.330.
Nice
Usod
Furnilur8. cal
Anytime, (740)446-1004 Or
(740)446-C75
Nice railer, 4•8. Leal Sprift9S,
•6
.,_...
(7ot01' "
""

ca-

··-.oo

EZPETRX.COM. Saw up lo 50%
on ALL pot medications and supplies. Including Heartgard. Inter·

Pool Pump. Laddtr, &amp; Diving
Boanl fol ........ ground Pool For
Sale.
1300 For All Or Offer.
(304)675-51117

Floor Model TV, $50; Couch.

·SBO: Entertairvnent: Center. 150;

Kitchen Table &amp; Chairs~ $100:
Washer/ Otyer. $250; 5 HP Tiller,

R- Bklg&amp;.· due to Hooding In
M-Il factorY haa (2) an:ll style
otetl btclgs. lor Immediate sale,
(tl40•60 (still crated), call Jeoo
01100-581-5843.

FREE CASHI $10,000 or mora
possible In 58 days or leu. NevM repayt New ptogramsl Free information .
1·800·308-6147
www.visionq2000.oom

242.()363 pt. 4009.
FREE OSTOMY PROOUCTSI
Manufacturer offers a rwo week
supply- of col05tomy or urostomy
brand name products wllh one
simple phone call. No obligation&amp;.

IIESIIJEII1IAL HOllE OWJIEIIS
Tappan Hi Ellictency 90% Gas
Fumacea. Oil Furnaces. 12 Sear
Heat Pump 1 Air Conditioning

Systems Free a Year Warranty
Bennelto Heating &amp; C00lift9, 11100-672-5987
. . ..orvb.c:Omlbennell

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

Building

550

Supplies
B -. brk:k, ,..,., pipet, wlndows. umets. etc: Ctaudo Winters.
Rio Grande. OH ca·l l 740·24551 21.
Steel Buildings. New Must Sell,
40•BOK12 Woo 117,500. Now
$10,971 ;
50•100K18
Was
S27.1SO,
Now
119.990;
10x135x18 W11 $79,850, Now

$44,990; I00•175K20 Was
1129.650. Now t94 ,990 1·800·
oiOB-5121

sao

.,.._for sale

3 CKC Adult Chihuahua's, 1
Black And Tan Smooth · Mate
(Small). t Red. lAng HH Femalo.
1150 Each Or $400 For All.
Phono(740)38l-7684
AKC Bostoo T.- PuppieS,
4 Females. 2 Mateo. Shots &amp;
" - ' · $250 (740)441H)A95

AKC Black Lab. Female, 6
Monthl, Champion SIOOdtlnea.

Loves Children. S125 (740)258681•
AKC Reglotorod Malo C~ineoe

Puppy. Shots. Wormed,

HOIISEIHOEING,

Drwna- Tama Roct Sra11 • lzMjian cymb•la. too much to Ji&amp;t
5t,0000807«1-992-9083.
•

-

Conili&lt;id

Famer, Fred Queen. {740)2561330

'ltUig- (7001251--e510

NOBOOY'S FATHER CO by Kellin Jones . ...., chepln Corpon-

t., &amp; Ace

Livestock

640

Smith gueat. on ta.J:-

.........._

Hay &amp; G111ln

Someone with machinery

to haron shares. Squire Batos

-1181'
u Hay For Sale (740)379-2931)

rAf11,, S UPPLIES

~ &amp; Bright Wire Toe swaw. -

"'L :VE:: :O TQC,(

Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis·
count Available. Heritage Farm. .

(304)57s-5724.

610 Farm Equipment
I · I.H . 1420 Square Baler, 1Sprayer. 3pt Nook up, 1- J.D.
t1 12 Lawn Tractor, (7o10J&lt;I460500 """'5:30pm
.

With Motor, $1200; 550 Fuel

94 Ntssan Altima, 4 dr.,

710 Autos for Sale
$0 DOWN CARS! POLICE IMPOUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LOW AS $29/
MO. 24 MO'S e19 .9% . FOR
liSTINGS. CALL 1·600·45Hl050
Olii.C-91112
'89 lincoln COntinental, exceHant
condition, 1 t 2.000 mlle5, $2000

gine. (740)258--6574

630

firm. 740-742·2614.

LIVIItock

'92 Mustang GT, 5 speed, 5.0 V·

18 year old Quaner horse with

bridle and saddle. $500.
(740)+'1-9513
FAIR PIGS FOil SALE. BORN
IN GALLIA COUNTY. (740)441- ·
DtiBI OR (740)411 4312

:S~..o,~~·· 80k miles,
'95 Cavalier, 4 cylinder eutomalic.
two door. $2BOO, 740-742·2357.
t984 Z-26, Automatic Trans·
mission, Ne" Tires. Till Wheel.
Air

Brakes , Paint , Has Alarm

4-H And FFA Club Pigs, Hamp, System, Runs Good. S3000
York &amp; Duroc Cross (740)386- {304)882·3971
oom
~==~~~--~--

Taking Oopoolto To $425.00
Accepl Payments (740)388-9325
C_ockor SpanioU Siberian HuSky
puppies, unintentional cross. two
females ton, block and while. tool&lt;
like Cocker spaniels. vary nice.

sawmills, edgers and skidders .

lovea kids, and lntelltg•nl. 12

consignments welcome, hauling 5750. (740)245-6812

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwil Drive. Buffalo, NY 14225.

weeks old. wormed, reduced to
$50 each. 740-992-5144.

available, Cattle accepted startIng at 4pm on Friday (740t592- 1989 Mazda 323, Excellent Con2322 Of (740)698-3531
dition, (740)4411-7925

GMC Fiberglass Bod Cover, 86·
98, Full Silo, Shon Wheal Base.
$200, Twin Bonprings $25,
Loveseat $200, (740)388- 8267
after 3:00pm
Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp; Repairs.
Problems? Need T""""7 Call The
Plano Or. 740-446-4525
Independent Herballle Dislribulor,

Call For Product Or Opportunity.
(740)44t-1982

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. Now &amp; Rebuln In Slod&lt;.
CaM Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528.'
lawnboy mower, 21", self pro·
pelled, electric start, 740-949·

2674.

FREE Information 1-800-578-

1383EXT.200-U

Pekapoo Tiny Mala, 7 weeks,
shots

Attention. Attention!! Stanley
Home PrcdUcto And Fullef Brush
Available. To Order Products Or
Request catalogs. Please can
(304)117li-8903Arr,olirne
STEEL BUILDING : 4 only: 2)
25x30, 30•40. 45d0, must mover
SOiling tor balance owedl 1-800·
411-5705 •·37.
STEEL-BUILDING . Now. Must
sell. 40x&amp;Ox12 was $17,500 now

and

wormed.

$125,

{700)251H181A
To Good Home Only. ' Year Old
Male AKC Black Lab. E•collont
Watch Oog. Not GOOd With
Children Or Other Pets. $200Includes 20•20 Kennel, Dog
Houoo And Feeder. Call
(304)n3-,5212 Aller 6:00pm
Too Cute 112 Cocker 112 Wainer
Dog Pupt, 4 Girls. 1 Boy, Had 1St
Shots &amp; Wormed .' $10 Each,
(304)1175-7398

19&amp;8 4-Door Buick Skyhawk.

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES $1000 QBO
Grass Cattle Solo. Saturday. May Anytime

(304)875·2827

5th, 1:OOprn, Salling stoctcer cattle ~=:___ _ _' - - - ' bred, COWl &amp; COWS/ CaiVII. All 1988 Honda, 5 ll)led, 40 MPG,

CWB GOATS. Boer Maar GoalS, 1992 Buic:ic Century, 4 door. all
Born ThiS Year. Great Fair options, extra good condilton, 3 3
Projects, Pure Bred And Percent- V-6, vary ntee. $3400, 740-992ago. (740)245-«85 Aller 8pm
6719.
Fair Show Pigs- Contact Harold 1994 Chevy Camaro, V-B. 2 Door,
Taylor In Evenings At (740t245- 81K, T·Tops, Full
Loaded,
9047
Excellent Condition, $8,000 .
Feeder Fair Pigs, 30-70 Pounds,

$50. (304)578-2579
Horses for Sale : 1 Morgan, 4

Mtr;alures, (740)448--6763

(304)67S.7790
Grand Am, $1900, Both Have
High Mile&amp;. 92 Geo Metro. 5
Speed, $700 Firm , (304)697·
5927

fu~:l

Heavy Duty 601nch Finishmg
Mower. Pull Behind 4-Wheeler,
14HP, Electric Start, Kohler En·

2136.

lncrea.se Allotments Mean Exira
Plants. Thank You For Your Susi*
ness . Can Danny Dewhurst*

TRAtiSPO RTAT IO N

Or

...-tible.

9t Plymouth Reliant. 12000; 91

2000 Gallon Water Tank. $650;

TranSit. (740)643-2918
(740)843-2644

CERTIFIED CHECK.

6783

Guaranteo E'arty Spring Plantings.

Tank With Gu Motor. S750:

Tank For Waste Oil. $250;
All Size Hoe Bucll:ets That Fils
215 Cat Hoe, Misc . Pumps &amp;
Generators. Tamper Fits -416 Cat
Back Hoe. M1sc. Steal Beams,
Jadt Hammer &amp; Air drills. Level &amp;

(740)+'1-10113

1999 Ford £xpedilion. Loaded,
E•cellent Condition, (740)4415-

86 Ford Crowtt VICtoria, 11300

Or (304)895-3719

v-,

86 Celebrity Eurosport, New
Tires, Brakes &amp; Exhaust, Very
Cl4tan Inside/ Out, $1200 080,.

$13,9001 1995 S·tO. SA295 ;
199e ~ $3795; t99t And
Two 1993 Covallers. COOK
MOIOIIS (740)44-Dt03

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

leave Message (300)895-3740

lor, 1650: Fuel Tank 2000 Gallon

______,

710 Autos for s.le

Olw&gt;
Bant&lt; ... - l o r by Public
Auction A 1995
Ni11an Outsl 1855929 at 1o:oo
am. on 5112/01 At Ohio Valley
lillnll Annex, 143 31d Ave., Gatllpolis. Ohio. Sold to lhe higMst
biddet ·as is- where ... wiU\out
e•ptessed or implied warranty &amp;
may be - n by caHing tho Col$eelion Department at (nO)U 11038. OVB reserves the right to
accept! reject any &amp; an bids, &amp;
withdfaw items from sa6e p.-ior 10
&amp;ate. Terms of Sale : CASH OR

na. $4895; 19M SilveradO, E•*
tended Cab, 4k4, Th1 hat .

86 Oodge 800 .
turbo.
good shape, $1300, 7.fi0-9.C9-

Tobacco Pllints- Order Now To

t 967 John Oaart 110 lawn
Tractor WHh Deck &amp; ffont Blade,
Excellent
Condition S 1000
(304)895-3360 Or (304)895-3441
Fuel tank. 1000 Galtom Willi Mo-

710 Autos for Sale
1995 Berena. $31195: 199S Lumi-

Tobacco Plugs For Sale, TN90 &amp;
NC3, Locally Grown . {740)2 A55193
-

Rough Cui Lumber and Mutch·
Bulk Loads. Call after 7:00pm.
(700)446-81B3
sawml" $3,695. New Super Lumbermate 2000. larger capocities.
· more options. Manufacturer or

Gateway Performance Pent 3
Desk Top Computer. Prinler,
Scanner &amp; Video Camera, PriCed
To Selft (304)67S.:161 1

1000 01 CordS (304)!17s-7790

Wo Need Your Dirt, Rocks. And
Bauldera. Oump ffee C111
(7oiO)oU1-o&amp;26

Pug

Caiiii00-75HIBO.

Ball C~ard Collector I&amp; Selling

CondiliOn Otlorl (740144f2205 or (7&lt;10)4 IB 11515, Ask For
VIgilia
Wattrli.. Spoc:lal: 31~ 200 PSI
$21.85 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100; All Stau Com. . - fillinDIIn Slocl
liON EVANS EHTEIIPIIIIEI
. -.OhiO. 1-100-537-85211

Blatk &amp; Tan Smooth Female. I

S125; Push Lawn Mowr, 1100;
(740)387-DISO (740)387-7272

Free governrMnt &amp; private monert Never repay. All worthwhile
requests considered. Must be
given out IO awid Ia.... Funding
for ectueatlon, houSing, buainell.
travel . debta, artt and more.
www.granls-dOr..com.com 1*800-

a-·

OTIS Forklllt, Gu powered
$1200 {700)44B-8519

ceptor, Frontline, more!!f FREE
SHIPPING,. Order online www.Ez·
peiiiJLCOm 1-801H144-1427

'

SUnday, Aprtl28, 2001

540M~

~"'*IOWJiBlt

-

Dale Earnhart Pro Bass GM.
Limited Edition Caro (Several)
(304)6112·3!167 Alllrlpm

530

-

540......._
111 c:tt.nche

--~-s.aty
Poslurepedic
Manressl 8oltHugo
1..-..y.
Dilcounl
~85~6~5-~~~fol~
..~··:·~iL~:f
V'-"
Skirting,
Doors,Prien.
Wlnd- 1;~(1~40)~~~~~6
!oo
llfin0s, $325.00, Edger/ T - On
U.lld T~ Ut t.mo• E•···· II
Willl Brigga Strlltoll Motaf, EK· owa. "A'~hors, water Heaters.

Magnum R~r. BlaCkhawk,
Sllll in eo•. S325.00; 357 Ruger
With Holster I Shells. 1325.00

«

540 Miscellaneous
MerchandiH

Houlehold

740-448-7795.

Sewage, Trash, $350/Mo .. 740-

Unil

112' East Main oa SR 124 E. Pof!lllfliV, 740-992·2526 or 740-11921539. Russ Moote, owrw.

r.IER CHM&lt;DI SE

510

(700).WII-1519

WindOw

Buy or sell. Ri verine Antiques.

cat74D-

1.fx70 10111 electric, two bed ...,..., 1300 month plus $150 do-

UUd

520

Rental. Oozer,
Blckho.. BObelt, Farm Traetor
And £qulpmont. (740)+'1~19

~t:~-et54 .

Furntshed 2 &amp; 3 Room Apattments. Ctoan. No - · No Smok·
lng, Reterenees &amp; ()eposit Re·
quired. Ut11ili11 Furnished .

(304)575-5770

Equipment

=:..;;;=--------1
For r -- one bedroom lurnished
420 Mobile HpmH
apartmontln Middteport.

-----------1

$150·

w-.

-and doposit required. 740- ciosrvw.

992-S23t .

uin W-Dilh
E•ceUenl
Condition.-

or JuDy AI (7A0)44&amp;-7323 (Li· , Con&lt;lilion•s. 90 Day ouer-.
{740)Mf-7531 (T.OC)I" 0041
U..An Aoi&gt;*aru:t.
Whirlpool Wu... r, Whill. S95:
460 Spece for Rent
Whirlpool Drye r, White, $95:
Mobile Ho.,. LOI. -Will Take Electric Range, 30•. Avocado.
12'o- t4'o, t ..,
1125/mo. 1150: Smal Chest Fteow. $1511;
S100tdep., Ne..S Reterencet , RelrJoerator. Frost Free, S150;
llelrigefaW, frOII free, Atmond.
(7411)446-017$
1195; Suggs Applianc:n. 7t
v... Skeel. (740)44-73911
480
Equlpuent

House
C.eok Witll2 Olhor . . _ . mocai(740)25B-tt35

for Rent .

Houlltlold
Goa ell

510

t~

one own-

or, $3800, 740.949-2045 or 740·
949-:1836.

CARS $29/MONTHI POliCE 1M·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S.
CHEVY. 24 MO'S et9.9%. FOR
LISTINGS! CALL 1·800·941·
8m EXT. c-9814.
Honda's From $5001 Pollee
Impounds. Call Now For Ust:

1-800-319-3323 E&gt;rt. M71

Ohio Valley Bank wilt off« !of aato
by

Public

Ford
10:00

Auction A 1991

Taurus

am.

1175092

at

on !5/12/01 At Ohio

Valley Bank Anne•. t43 3rd Ave ..
Gallipolis, Ohio. Sold to me nlg~t-­
est btdder •aa is· where Ia• without e'II'Ossed or Implied warranty
• may be .... by calling the ColltCiion Department a1 (740)«1·
1038. OVB reserves the right to
accepll ntjecl any &amp; all blda, &amp;
withdraw items from sale prior to
sale. Terms of Sale : CASH OR

CERTIFIED CHECK.
Ohio VOlley Bank wHI oDor lor sale
by Public
Auction A 1988

Oldsmot&gt;lle 88 t35315B at 10:00
am, on 5112101 AI Ohio Valley
Ban~ AMex. 143

3rd AIJa., Gallipolis, Ohio. Sold to the highest
bidder •as Is- where Is" without
expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Col·
lection Department at (740)441·
1038. OVS reserves lhe right to ·
accepU reject any &amp; all bids , &amp;
withdraw Items from sale prior lo
sale. Terms ot Sale : CASH OR

v...,

Ohio
Bank will """ lor ....
by Public:
Auc:tion A 1990
Ford Escort 1145690 at 10:00
am . on 5/12/01 At Onio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave., Galli·
PQiis. Ohio. Sold to the nighest
bidder "as is- where is• without
expre:ISed or Implied warranty &amp;
may ~ seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)441 ·
1038. OVB reserves the right to
accept/ reject aoy &amp; all bids , &amp;
withdraw items from sale prior to
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

CERTIFIED CHECK.
Ohio Valley BaNI Wll ofler 1or sale
by Public Auctio n A 198-4
Crown Victoria t1 13898 at 10:00

am, on 5112101 AI Ohio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave .• Gallipolis, Ohio. Sold to the highest
bidder ~as is- where Is~ without
expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)4411038. OVB reserves the rlghl to
accepU reject any &amp; all bids, &amp;
withdraw Items from sale ptlor to
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

CERTIFIEQ CHECK.

720 Trucks for Sale
1982 Chevy 4 door Utility truck, ·

(740)446-8763
1993 5-10. E•tended Cab. Load·
ed, low Miles, Fibergfaas Topper
And Visor· Excellent Condl11on,

1995 Dodge
(740)446-8783

Ram

Diesel,

1996 Ford F· 1SO XLT. Loaded
69.000 Milas. Asking $9.495
(304)773-5746
1999 Dakota Sport Truck, 4WD.
V-8. 1500 miles , rebuilt title,

For ·

Sate

570

Loaded. $6600, Days (740)2455060. Evenings (740)682- 7512.

CERTIFIED CHECK.

Brand Now Drum Set. tiOOO Or
Beat Offer. Includes Stool And

WVELY 1WO STORY HOME DECORATED AS
AiJ A DOLL HOUSE • Features a SPACIOUS
BEDROOM SUITE W/ SITI1NO ROOM &amp; BATH. ON
TilE MAIN LEVEL. Wife approved kitchen w/ lots of

PRETI'Y

cuatom deai,aned 01k cabinets. La. dinina room, 5 more DRs,
3 1dditional balba, Fireplace in the LR. Charming entry
w/1taircase leadlna to 2nd level, Laundry room on the main
level, Finished basement, Det"hed 2 car aaraae. On 3.35
landiCIIped acres m/1. Lots of plants &amp;c. trce.s.
NO. 189

room with ftrtplace, formal dining
ares. 2 lull bltt)t, 3 badroomo,
lamlly room. hut pump, ottached 2
car gerege. l.ota of updoteo here.
1oday to toke e peek insldel

can

NEW ON MAAKETI CHECk IT
OUTI $20,900.001 Almost one acre
lot complete wRh public sewer.
mobile home and garaoe. Nice lot.
Mull not ijioltal to calL lor an
apPointment to view lhis propertyl
Wonllaol to long. ll2109
ACREAOE ... 30 acres fTI/1 loll ol
woods, Ideal hunllng land, Harrloon
Town~lp. $30,000.00 ft1Dtl

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST!

or

~OOKINO FOR A LOT? Hero
2 level Iota wllh public waler
oowage available, . Not lor a
price. $14,500 lor them both
owner 11 requeltlng your offer.
1:1071

810,000.00 City Uvtng wHh
o1 eonvontenae. one cfle.oolrroo'"n;il
ranch with baaement, 3 ts

1 112 bath&amp;, carpon nlco level
Quick pououlonll2112

mud room,
BAs and 2 112
baths. Updated llama Include
betho. wiring, 2 fu(OlCe&amp;,
siding, roof and
more.
$104,900. Owner' amclous to
oell ...make an onerlll209

open to
0\/er 1400 sq.
baliement, 3 fireplaces, 2 car
garage, in-ground pool, 4 1/2
acres, m/1, located only
mlnules from town in the city
achol system. Pricect at
$137,00011807

'

111
FHch IIOIId•
City
convenience Is found with !his
4 BR, 4 bath home re1111ng on
over 2 1/2 acres and offers a
large .,_.io and wood deck
right on the edoe 1own. The
24' x 48' pole barn w~h
concrelo floor allows for
garage perking, plenty of
storage and a workshop area.
It's a lot of houae for only

or

$89,900. 1301

712!1 BR 110- l.ocated on a
prtvata 8 ecro, m/1, oeffing, you ·
will ftnd this lovely Cape Cod 1
l1ome featuring a '10\/ely great I
room
with
woodbumlng
~pi-, ronn.t DR, gourmet
kHchen with eating aroa
OV81100klng the pond, 5 BRa. 3
ba1ha, uf)stltlro 11tt1nQ area, 2
..- garage end above ground
pool $23&amp;.000 1101
.

Only 4 to 5 miles from
a Ranch style home.
lcadin . '
larae • · ~
/II
relax I • \ I ! ,\ ''\ I
Green

on

2.2S

a.....

Twp.ll
end street,
182A sq.
,large FR

Also Includes
remodeled
baths and
.
2 car garage
24 x
building and 14 x
storage building provide
grnt utility. Largo lot waicomaa
outalde activftl... $139,&amp;0?

ANN DRIVE - Don't
drive by, stop and take 1
peek at this lovely home that
has so much character. 3

BRa
2 baths, fortnol
dinln1, LR, ·complete
kitchen, lara• FR, flnl•hod
buemenlh otora&amp;e bulldinJ.
A quality omo.
NO.a91

Before ihopping for your New Addrus ... stgp by ours:
Cheryl Lemley

742-3171

www.wi semanrealestate.com
,David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker 448-9555
Carolyn Wa~ch, GRI 44,1 ·1007 Sonny Garnll 448·2707
Rob1rt Bruce 448-o621 Rita Wl••man 446-91555

Auction A 1999
Polaris 400 1095580 a1 10:00 am.
on 5112/0 I At Ohio Valley Bank
Annex , 143 3rd Ave., Gallipolis ,

Ohio Valley Bank will Ollar lor sate
by Public
Auction A 1994
Oadge Ram 1652178 at 10:00

· as is- where is• wilhOut expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)441·
1038. OV8 reserves the righl to
accept/ reject any &amp; all bic;ls, &amp;
withdraw Items from sale pr)or ta
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

Bank Anne•. 143 3rd Ave , Gallipolis. Ohio. Sold to the highest
bidder •as iS· where is'" withou1
expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)441·
1038. OVB reserves the right to
accepU reject any &amp; all bids. &amp;
withdraw ilems tram sale prior to

CERTIFIED CHECK.
Orlio Valley Bank

will ollor lor sate
by Public
Auction A 1999
Yamaha YZF 1000714 at 10·00
am, on 5112/01 At Ohio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave., Galli·
polis , Ohlp. Sold to lhe highest
bidder •as is- where Is• without
expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calllrig the Collection Department at (740)441·
1038 OVB reserves the right to
accep11 reject any &amp; all bids, &amp;
withdraw ilems from sale prior to
sale. Terms o~ Sale : CASH OR

sale. Terms of Sale: CASH. OR
CERTIFIED CHECK.
Ohio Valley Bank will ollor lor sale
by Public Auc~on A 1985
Ford F150 '"29882 at 10·00
am, on 5/ 12101 At Ohio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave., Gallipolis . Ohio, Sold to the htghest
bidder •as rs- where is" without
expreued or implied warranty &amp;
may be nan by calling the Collection Department at (740)441 ·
1038. OVB reserves the right 10
acceptl reject any &amp; all bids, &amp;
withdraw items lrom &amp;ale prior. to
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

CERTIFIED CHECK
Ohio Valley Bank will after for sale
by Public Auction A 1998
Suzuki 1104521 at 10:00 am, on
5/12/01 At Ohio Valley Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave .• Galllpoll&amp;,
Ohio. Sold 10 the highest bidder
•as is· where is" without expressed or implied warranty &amp;
ma~ be seen by calling the Collection Department a1 (7401441·
t038. OVB reserves the right to
accept/ reject any &amp; all bids. &amp;
withdraw Items from sale. prior to
sale. Terms ol Sale : CASH OR

CERTIFIED CHECK .

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1989 Chevy Astro Van, Work

Van, Standard, $2500, 6 Cylinder,
(740)446- 1837 Or (740)446.

1989 Suburu Wagon, All Time

4K4, Runs GOod. (304)675-4456
1995 F- 150 Extended Cab. 4WO,
long bed, 65,000 miles. automatic,
many extras. S11 ,500, 740-992-

Ohio Valley Bank will otter for sale
by Publk: Auc110n A 1998 Yama·
ha 350 11072368 at 10:00 am, on
5/ 12/01 At Ohio Valley Bank An nex, 143 3rd Ave ., Gallipolis,
Ohio. Sold to the highest bidder
·as is- where •s" withoul ex·
pressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)441 1038. ova reserljes the right to
accept! reje ct any &amp; ali bids. &amp;
Withdraw 1tems from sale prior to

1995 Ford Wlndstar GL van
Teal Blue, 39,000 m1les, loaded:
Exoollent CondiUon, Garage Kept,
V~6 , Front Wheel Drive, $8500,
Truc:k ,

Astra

4x4 ,

van. $750

99 F-450 Power Stroke 4x4, 6 sp.,
steel flatbed, 5,000 miles, 740·

992-6223.

A 1 1/2 story

with aluminum siding, and has

2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen; bath, and laundry room
downstairs, and 2 smell bedrooms upstairs. has a nice view
of the Ohio River.
NOW REDUCED TO $15,000

40) 446·3644

VIEW You can tee u
Partially wooded. 6 to 7 acroa

NO. 305

i

RIVERVIEW DRIVE • Need lots of room In your homo? This
one has Ill 3 bedrooms upstairs (one being 24 It) and a 24 ft
living room/dining room. the basement also has a finished
room. There Ia a large enclosed porch and a newer
outbuilding. Really nice home, Come and look! $70,0C!CJ.DO
BROWN ALLEY - Approximately 1 acre. This home has
vinyl siding, blown-In Insulation, and a shingled roof.
3 bedrooms and 1 bath. A bargain by the housafull Uve in 11
or rant It out Come see and give us an offer.
~5,000.00

h ie. Terms ol Sale: CASH OR
CERTIFIED CHECK.

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Tires. $850.
(740)534-2589

Stock Wheels $400. (740)6•32771 (740)534-2589
Auto Parts Swap MeeHl
B:OOam.. :OO pm.
Fairgrounds, Wapakoneta. Ohio
Into. 1-019-394-8464

Budgel Priced Tr•nemlaalona
All Types, Access To Over
10,000 Transmissions, Transfer

Cases. 740-24S.S677 . Cell: 3393765.

790

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1968 Mallard 21 ' mo!O&lt; home, low
m11eage. 'llery good conaitlon.
$9.000. 740-992·5963 8YOftings.
1990 Class A Gull Stream. 37
Foot, 460 Ford/ OshKosh Chassiel Fully Equipped. Including A
1996 Saturn Pull Car. Both Excel-

lent. Anct Low Mieage. (740)2455752
1995 Allegro, 31 Foot Class A
MotorhOme , low Miles, Loaded .

(740)446-.1352
35 It Coachman Gooseneck
Campl!lr, Excellent Condition ,
$7500. (740)44e-6763
94

Cobra Popup Camper By

Flagstaff, Excellent cor\diliOn, Air,
Furnace, Tinted Windows. Asking
$3000 (304)67H7t 3

SERVICE S

810

Home
Improvement•
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

unconditiOnal lifetime guarantee.
local references furnished . Es-

lablshed t975. can 24 Hrs. (740)
446·0870. 1-600·267-0578. Rog·
ers Waterproofing.

All types ol masonry brick, block
&amp; stone . Frea estimates, 304-

773-9550.
C&amp;C General Home MaintenanCe· Painting, vinyl siding ,
carpentry, doors , WindOws, baths .
mobile home repair and more. For
tree estimate carr Chet, 740-992-

6323.

1985 Procraft, 17· 112 Foot Bass
Boat- W1th 1988 Johnson 150HP.
Good
Condition .
$3,800.

Dodson Builders
Your complete hOme remodeling ,
repair &amp; mamtenance contractor.
Pamling , vmyl s1d1ng , decks,

baths, kitchens. electncal, plumb·
lng., many 'other services to su11
your need&amp;. No Job to big or small,
30 years expenence . Free esti-

mates, 740·698-6783, 140-591·

(740)256-1329

1384

1995. 19 Foot Rinker, Call For
More Oetails, (304)675-1298 or

livingston's

1304)675·5770
1997 Four Winds Horizon AS, 19
Fool. (304)895·3929

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propoaala
will be received by RIO
Grande Community
Colloga, 206 Allen Hall,
218
N.
College
Avenue, Rio Grande,
Ohio 45874 until
Tuaeday, May 22, 2001,
at 2:00 p.m., then they
wlll be opened and
read. The General
Contractor ae Lead
Contractor ahall be
ruponelble ·
for
coordinating
tht
Contractora,
echedullng
the
Project. and providing
other
aervlcu
epecllled In
the
contract documenta.
ProJect Title: New
Entrance Road
Owner; Rio Grande
Community College
City, County: Rio
Orenda. Ohio
Gallla County ·
In accordance with
the Drawlnga and
Speclflcatlons
prepared by Burgess
&amp; Nlple, Limited, 5085
Reed
Road,
Colum·bua,
Ohio
43220, (614] 459-2050;
aealad blda will be
received for the
following trades:
Contact, Eetlmate of

208 Allen Hall
21S N. College Avenue
Rio, Grande, Ohio
Burgea &amp; Nlpla,
Umtt.d
5085 AHd Road
Cotumbue, Ohio
Burgua I Nlple,
Umlted
4424 Emereon Avenue
Ptlrkeraburg, WV

(740)643·277 1

4-265175 R 16 GOOdyear AIS on
1998 Dodge Ram 1500 Aluminum

2245

Public Notlca

1. General ContractBoat Bid ...... $41D,OOO
Alternate C·l,
Deduct ............$1 B,OOO
CREEK RD • Here's a 48.6 acre parcel of land
Alternate L-1.
building sites on both sides of the road, both sides
· Dtduct...........$20,000
ra1i1road,, and borders the creek . Beautiful laying home
2. 'Eitctrtcal Contract
sitos. There Is also woods lor hunting.
The scheduled date
of completion of the
roadway conatructlon
LINCOLN HI~L- A one slory home with a large L·shaped
portion of the project
living room, dining room, kitchen, big bedroom, and a bath
Ia august 28, 2001,
on one floor and the basement Is all finished with
applicable to all
kitchen, family room, and one beth . There Is
blddere. Completion of
acres with most laying nice and a view of
the ramalndar of the
proJect ahall
ba
EAGLE RIDGE
October 15, 2001,
I
beautiful 5 bedroom home
a view of
Bidding document•
Home Ia not quite a year old and has a 2 car ant1ch&gt;&amp;d
may be obtained by
garage. Sitting on aP9rox1mate1y 12.9 acres
Prima Contractore,
A MUST SEE AT~~~w from Burgeaa &amp; Nlple,
~lmlted, 5085 Read
Road, Cotumbue, Ohio
43220, telephone (614)
459·2050 by placing a
nonrefundable dapoalt .
ol $75.00 par eel
payable to Burge. . &amp;
Nlpla, Limited. No
more than three aata
CAOUIEA AD • Approx,
will be grovlded to a
Bidder. na copy ot all
that hu 3 bedrooma, 1
addenda wlll
be
rooin, and a big family room.
provided
to
all
1
building, rear -~ 7 ,., _,
planholdere at no
additional coat. The
bidding document•
may be reviewed
without charge during
bualne . . houra at tha
loltowtnglocatlone:
Rio Orande
Com~unlty College

•· 36x14.50 R15
Rad1a1
Groundhog Mounted On t5x10
Alumlmun Wheels, 500 Miles On

16 Foot, Deep V Aluminum Boat
&amp; Trailer. t 998 15 HP Motor With
About 20 Hours On It Electric
Motor Goes With lt . (304)675 -

Public NoUce

C1111t

Auto Parts &amp;
Ac:ceuorles

760

CERTIF IED CHECK

1640.

Jeep

Public

Ohio. Sold to tho highest bidder

am, on 5/12101 AI Ohio Valley

92 Chevy Conversion Can, V-8,
Mileage.
Burgundy,
Low

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • Uve In one side and rem the olher.
This well kept duplex has lots of newer updates. One aide
has 2 bedrooms and an upda1ed ba1h. The other has
3 bedrooms wHh an updated kitchen and bath. Both have
equipped kitchens, thermopane windows, newer doors and
plus many extras. The patio,
and
maRl! the outside
·
Two

living

NEW USTINOI PARMI 28
moo1iy all tillable and PMt'~t.l
land. Nice 1 112
home with large I
badroomo, 2 baths, ba.em;;iit:
car detached garage,
bam 7 misc. buildings. Plus
bedrooms mobile home. 13111

Ohio Valley Bank will offer lor sate

91 Chevy 2-10 Blazer 4x4, V-6,
auto. ale. $3650, 740·949-2732.

privacy 20 acrea more or less. Features a lovely Uvina:
erown moldln,;. loll of booklhelves, and fireplace. Formal
room with raised panel wains~ting, larp kitchen whh lots
beautifut .Oak Smith cabinets &amp; island, 1\Yo spacious bedrooms
upper level with bullt-in·dcsb, bedroom suile and
walk-in clotet, Jacuzzi tub. Family rOom In
·
21/t batha. Thia home hiBIOIS of beautiful oak woodwork,
floors, tile and berber. Jnaround pool 16XJ2. 16X12
all fenced. Lots of flower beds and bloom ina plantl. NO&gt;, 3(14

PRICE
DROPPED
P,OOOI
.Remodeled ranch home reoting on

WE Alii TALKING IIAJOII
REDUCTION
HEREI
REAOY...avwr 120,0001 Owner
meondo buoineoo. Quality home
· that hoe low maintenance. Brick
ranch with 4 bfxlroome, forinal
living room, otop-oavlng kMchon,
remtty room with flrepieco, owtr
.2.000 oquero fell of living opoce. 2
car attached garage, bam, shad
and looda more rooting on 2 acres
m,ol. PriVate showlngo ...call to set
up yourel ~2050

by

'as Chevy

NEW LlmNG • CHRIS LANE - 'lUcked sway 11 the
Jane is a beaut~y decorated story and a half home,

o-n
New Uatlng In
Townahlpl ~-shaped ranC\1
offers plenty of room . Z100 sq.
ft. of living spoee wl1h large
living areas: formal LR, large
knchen and Dining area and
oversl•ed lamily room with gas
log fireplace. 3 generous BRa,
2 baths and big 2 car plus
garage. Patio &amp; deck create
very nice outdoo1 enjoyment.
· Flat lot with outbuilding &amp; gOod
utility. Th)ls 10 yr. old house Is
In great condition. Nothing to
do but move ln. $98,900 1208

-

CERTIFIED CHECK.

(740)446-8217 Days Belore 2pm
Or Leave Message

1943

$89.900 1200

ewer 1 acre treed level tot.

99 XR70 · E - ~.
$900. (7-10)446-3545

Cruise, CO, Remote Starter,
10,000 Miles, Excellent Condition,

SYRACUSE • Collage Streel · A 1'/• slory home with a full
basement. Has a front and back porch. There is 6 rooms.
3 bedrooms, &amp; one beth. Has a newer roof and niCe
.

Foreman 450S. 300

1038 . ova reserves the rJght to
ac:cepl/ reject any &amp; all bids. &amp;
w;&amp;hdraw items from safe prior to
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

(740)446-®94 Call After 6pm

story home
loti of
cherac1er. 4 f!!Ra, 2 baths &amp; 2
stalrwayt. ~R. CR. FR, kitchen
anct portia! basement Grea1 In
town
looation
offering
convenience. 2 car geroge
plus oulbulldlng. Large front 1203
porch plua aida ·balcony.

kitchen 3 bedrooms, large famiiV
room, garage, concrete drive and
morel

taction Depanmenl at (740!+'1-

2000 Ford F-150 . 4x4 , 4 Door.

...

4a4,

Miles, Still Under Warranty,
$4,300 (700)448-3t 17

Super Cab, 5 4 VB. POL, PW, Tltt,

==:=..!. Drum cas... (740)446-7637

0.-t flllorter H Evergreenll Easy to affordl
At $44,900, your paymenta
will be cheaper than rent 3
BR home with l bath on a
nice lot. Several outbulldlnge.
Ou'-1 country location. Donl
healtate..won't IllS! long.

I2Cif5 31114 Ooorget Creek R'*'
-.600 Nloo bl·l,..l otyle home
that has large tamlly room &amp; dining
area lhat opens to large reer deck
and private back lawn. Eat-In

2000 Honda

pressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Col·

1990

.:600=·582=-D09=7=e="'=
· 1:;;03;:'=·

Fotoma~ 5450.

360 Miles, Hardly Used. Hardly

(740)245-5812

teneel Only $69.00 per momh, 1·

20' Pontoon Boat, 40HP MercU&lt;y
Motor &amp; Trailef. $7000 (740)4463CJ&amp;.(

Used $4800 (740)258-1329

(304)862·3173

~s.c$1~~~~7:;:.~;6~,000

1995 Harley Davidson. FlHTCU
With Extras. St6.000 Firm, Call

1999 -

(740)992-6t50

1999 Ponliae Grand Am, excel-

Breeze $1 , 500

and Trailer, Excefent ConditiOO,
Ready lor s.,nmer (304)11112-31110

(740)44t-t0t 6

Phio. Sold to tho highest bidder
'"as ia- where is• w ithout eJ-

fl-oe 07

1997 5Niloo GTI. 3 Seo1. .tot SOl

Motorcyclll

125 Yahama

Ohio Valey Bant&lt; will Ollar lor sale
by PubUc
Auction A 1994
TIJI'Oia 4&gt;4 ~ o11 10:00 am.
oo 5112/01 At Ohio Valley Bank
Anne•. 143 3rd Ave•• GallipOlis,

Negotlal!le. (304)67s-7974

REAL ESTATE

antique &amp; old

(740)446-8763

92 Chevy Silverado, Short Bed,

(304)67S.2861

. R•l &amp;tate Glnenll

NEW utiTINQI Sill alm011 ,_ &amp;
you o1ill can add your finishing
touchHI 3 Veers young 1 1/2 otory
homo with basement and 2.5 acres
ITI/1. Main Ievit hu approx. 1,280
sq. ft. and upper level 850 sq. ft.
lhal has not been completly
finished. Let uo tell you the rest,
13111

91 F-150 B1acL 5pon. .._ 6 ey.
tinder. 5 Speed, Sharp Truck.
Payoll. $10.400. (740)016 3!515

1995 Ford Ranger. XlT 4Jt4 AJC,
CD Player. Standard Shift. E•cel·
lent Condifjon, 79,000 Miles, Prk:e

Mualcal
Instruments

Unlimited Nationwide Long Ois·

Stt~ee

740

$13.000. (740)379--9047

S10.971. 50•100•16 was $27,850
now $19,990. 8Dx135x16 was
$79.880 now $44,990. 100•75&gt;20 Yorkshire Terrier Puppies, AKC,
was $129,650 now $84,990. 1Excellel)t Bloodline, Pe'rfact Gift,
!!00-408-5121.
. (7ol0)37t--9061
Top
Soli
!740J-Ut-Oet9

720 Trucks for Sale

3437

(740)367-75!2

il&gt;udl!' 1li111H- iklllind ~

Basem~nt Water
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, lree estrmales , lifetime
guarantee . 14yrs on job ••peri,

once (304)89S.38B7

840 EIBctrlcal and
Refrigeration
Residential or commerc;:lal wlpng,
new serv1ce or repairs Master Licensed electrician. Ridenour

Electrical. WV000306. 304·875·
1786

Public

Notice

withdraw hla bid
within 60 daya alter
the actual data ol the
opening thereof. The
Owner reaarvea the
right to waive any
28104
lnformalltlea or to
Cotumbua Bulldare
reJect anyJir all bide.
Exchange
A prebld meeting will
Columbua, Ohio
be held on Friday, May
F.W.Dodge
11, 20D1, at 10:00 at
Cotumbua, Ohio
Room 218 In Bob
F.W.Dodge,
Evans Farma Hell, Rio
Charlalton,
Orande Community
Weet VIrginia
Subcontractor• and College, Alo Grande,
material auppllar• 1111y Ohio.
acquire; for their April 29, May 6, 13,
2001
convenience~
Drawing•
.and
Public Notice.
Speolfloatlone by
paying for the coat ol
reproduotlon
and .
Notice of Funding
handling, the eame
AvallabHity Stele
nonrefundable depoelt
Flacel Yur 2002 ·
•• Prime Contrectora.
Santor Facllltlaa
All question a
Program Funda
regarding
the
Aru Agency on
D ra WIn Ill
8 n d Aging ot.trlct 7, Inc. II
Speclflcatlona ahould pleaaad to announce
ba addreaaed to the that, contingent on the
Aaaoclate, ettentlon: 0 h 1o
General
Charyl Green, Project Aeaombly approval of
Manager, (814] 459· the Dhlo Department
20~.
, ol Aging's (ODA)
Each bid must ba budget, ODA
te
accompanied by a Bid making available
Guaranty meeting the $381.832 trom the
raqulrementa
of Santor facllltlea line
Section 153.54 ol the Item In 1he State of
Ohio Revised Code. Ohlo'e
biennium
Bid Guaranty and Budget
for
the
·Contract bond laaued conatructton,

muet

m11t · the renovation,

requlremanlll ol Artlcla
2 at tho lnatructlon to
Blddera.
Bldl 111111 ba aealed
and eddreaaad to:
Attention: Ma. Luanne
Bowman, Rio Orand•
Community Collage,
206 Allen Hall, 211 N.
College Avenue, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45874.
Envelope shall be
eealad ·a nd clearly

mlrktd "BID'
Minimum Wagu
Ratea and Equal
Employment
Opportunity
Aequlramenta ora
applicable to thla bld.
Invitation per Bate ol
Ohio requlremenlll.
Domaatlo 11. .1 uea
requlramenta · aa
apaclllad ln Beotton
153.011 of the AaviMd
code apply to thla
project. Coplu ol
Section 153.011 of the
Aavlaad Code can be
obtained form any ol
the offlou of the
department
of
Admlnlatretlve
sarvleea.
No blddar may

acqulaltlon and repair
of aenlor facllltlaa.
Thla
Notlca
Ia
Intended to asalat
potential applicants
to: C1J declda whether
they are eligible to
apply for lundlng, (2)
determine whether
their
propoaed
project(l) are eligible
lor funding, and (3)
u nderatand
the
application process.
Eligible Appllcama
In order to apply for
Senior
Facility
Program lunda, .the
project aponaor muat
meet
aeveral
requlrementa.
Key
requtremanta lnolude:
1. An applicant muat
either be dealgnated
aa a focal point by the
PSA In which tha
facility Ia located, or
muat currently r
propoaa to provide

aoclal or recr1atlonal
actlvltlu .and two
additional home and
community bued
11rvlcea to tenlora In
their community.
2. An oppllcant muat
Contlnuad On A-3

I

�SUndlly, Apr1128, 200

tton.'oy •Middleport • GallipOlis. Ohio • Point 9luunt, WV
411 Ha 111 for"-"
:IIIII

J . - &amp; T - P M I,

a-. -il8f.tO&lt;. CIA. $425
~ Dll

euv

t B d"""' ., eourwy, - · lie-

~~::'~:"(i:l:::

', 110 , _ (740__.

Forlduild Home•

8371

from

StO- llopo'o a -...,.cy-a. 1 bedroom. $200 per month, 2
l'w Uolitlgll-3tt-33ZI &amp;L bedroom, $250 plus depooH &amp;
111Jf
uliiKIOI. 3ld SliHt. llacino, Oh.
740-247-4292.
, . . - 01 . ..

torvo

'-oorn.

2 batll, 2 car garage, - -· 2 Badroom Furollhed, UtHities
MOO......_ 740 116 6363, 304- Include&lt;!. s•oolmo. limit Of 2
....... (740)3117~11

727-&amp;111.

:Q~o~.,~~~-~G~I~rl~e~O~p~p:o~rt~u~n~l~ty~
-~
e..,,
Woman.
Would Uce
To Slllte l.Mge
On Rae- Paid
fm

coon

2 BR A.paruntnl In Centenary.

Appliancts Furnished. UlilitiH
~ ElecWic. Clean. $2151

.W,

3 Room Upolairo Ajot., One - room At e51 SeeoftCI lwenue.

Gatt¥olio. O..,.,.;t ~- &amp;u
UOftllll l.eiM, UtilitiM Not lnp

-~-- Cal­
...,ros.r

Ctwialilln "-lOs. Privata Bad·

rooms, 2 lath. Large kilchen, 4 room, Downstairs, Water paid,
Dining, Large Livi119room. No Perl. ' ' Cedar St. (740)3118-

l c r - Dedi. Covered Patio/ t tOO
-113 · BY WatM. $225/mo. Plus BEAUTIFUL APAIITIIEHTS AT
- H You Love Nature. BUDGET PRICES AT JACK•
1
Mondlly
"""""'
•- Good-.ty
..........
,.....
c.l SON ESTATES, 52 Wtltwoocl
Linda Sonders. Wollt 1· Drtv. lr0110 S297 to 1383. Walk to
100- eu• Elll. 3214....,. ohop • m011ieo. can 740-4'6_..2561. EIJialltJuAlg ()slportriy.
:P::!..ilot..:P.::•oor::::!o_m
__
_Aen
__..,-,---d-11&lt;1-. 1 Chtioty's Family Living. 331•0
31M-73B-72tll.
-Lima lid. ROlland. OhiO. 740742· 7403. Apartment. horne and
Tokift9 opptlcltions lor 3-&lt; bed· trailef rental&amp;. Commercial storerOOfl"' home in Midd'-Pon. reler-

fronts availab&amp;e tor lease. Vacan*

for Rent •.

490

ForLIIU

Beauliflll,1600 Sq. - . 2nd Floor Apartmenl In Historic
District. Ideal For Professional

All Modern Amenilioo. 3
Bedroom&amp;; Spacious LMng; t -t/2
Baths. Rear Deck. HVAC. $6001
mo. Plus Utilities Securiry And
Kay Depooit. No ...... _...,..
Required . (7.tO).U6-U25 Or

~-

(700)448-31138

pad.

no-.

740-742-2714.

2 bedroom mobfle home or 600
sq. h. olftce space, Riverpart, Mi........ $300/mo. ...... -

Riverside Apartments in Middleport. From $278-$348. can 740992·5084.' Equal Houling Oppor-

rent for handy pa110n who can
mow the grau in the park, 81..._
178-1661.

.-.

2 Bedroom Trailer For Aen1 In

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartmenrs. Includes Water

- · (740)368-9061
C-. 2 Bedroom. w.-1 Ory·

•

GlacloUo living. 1 and 2 bedroom
8jl8rlftHKIIO at Vllage Manor and

Goods
Almond Whirlpool &amp; GE Wash·
ero. $60 Each; White Maytag
Washer. $65; 3 Dryers. 560
Each. (740J"B 9066
Appliances:
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers. Aange1. Refri·
grators. Up To 90 Oayt Guaranteed! We Sel New Maytag Appliances. French City Mayrag ,
For Sale : RecondillonecJ washers, dryers and rtfrigeralors.
Thompsons Appliance. 3407

tr, W1ter &amp; Trash Included, 5

••a oooa.

Milo&amp; South 216, Gallipolis.
(740)oUI-G540 (700)2SI--e719

River Send Place Now Accepting

Applications lor 1 Badroom Hud

w»
40 Gallon, In Good Condition.

Nlca

Subsided Apartment for Elderly

(740~

Clean

3

Bedroom

Mobile Home Near Mercerville.

(740)256--e57•
Rent/ Bale On Payments, Mobile
Home In Centenary. For Rent, 3
8R -141. (740)448-1810

440

.Aplrtments
torRent

t anc1 2 bedroom apartments. furnished and unfurnished, HQJrity
dtpolk required, no pets, uo-

112·2218.

1 Bedroom Garage AparlmentKanagua, $250/ Month + Utilities
And Dopoolt. (740)88&amp;-7t02
1 Bedroom Furnished Apartment
In Point Pleasant, Very Nice &amp;

Clean, No 1'1110, (304)67S.13118

- · ~304)e75-7388.
Four Gao Hot
Healers.

-

and Oioabled, EOH, (304)8823121 Or (304)882-3274
Tara Townnouse Apartments.
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms. 2

Floors. CA, t t/2 Bath. Fully Cor·
peted. Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool .
Patio, Stan S3851Mo. No Pets,
Lease Plus Security Deposit Required, Oayo: 740-446·3481.
Evenings: 740-367-0502. 7404411-0101.
1\rin River'Towll&gt; ,_ aa:opling
applications lor 1 BR.
HUO subsidiZed apl. lor -.,y
and disablorl. EOH. (304)675-

Aif

Sporting

Goods

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryeu, refrigerators,
ranges. Sllaogs Appliances, 76

Vine Slraet, Call 740·446·7398,
1-8118-818-0 t 28.
Mollohan Carpet , 202 Clark

Chapel Rd. Purter. OH. Free Esti·
mates. Eaoy Financing or 90 days
same as cash. Visa. Maatercard
Accepted, ~740)4"6-7•4• or 1·
Bn-830-9t62
Main SlrHI Furniture

(304)67S.1422
515 Mains.-. Point Pleasant

-a. U&amp;ad Furniture

6679.

New 2 Piece Llvlngroom Suites,

$399. Buy. Sell. Tllldo.

,

Upstairs Apartment 3 Rooms.
Furnished, Utilities Patd, 1280. Per

New And Used Furniture Store

Month Plus Deposit. (740)448-

Below Holiday Inn, l&lt;anauga, We

1340

Sell Grave Monuments

And

Vases. (740)440-4782

---·- ·-

CIIEDIT CARD EQUIPIIEIIT
We'll supply you wilh Merchant
Accounr and EquipmenL Low
coat lease. Sales depOiitect into
your Cl1eCkinO """"""- C8ll Carll
Solulioros t-3811-321-72411.

Oeot $150; Couch $50; Glaso
Colfoo Tablo $25; End Tables
$20; Bookcase 115; Pipovloe
$60; Old S!nger Sewing Machine
S25 Eacft; Air CGndhioner
$75. (304)e75-4352

AntiquO ~

1111&lt;1. Complote •

In Good CondHion S350. &amp;
Antique Solid Walnut Bad. $100.

OBO
(304)695·336•
(304)895-3441

Or

11 ,000 BACK 2 Ton Air Condi·
tioner. 2 Ton COil, 1 Une 5el, In·
Slallod. $2 .295 . $1 ,000 Back,
$1295 Net PriCe. Free Estimates.
Call For Quotes On Other Sizes.
If

You

Don't

us. We

Call

8oth Lose! Mobile -Our
Speciality 1·740-446-6308 1·000:
29Hl0911
18 HP Yardman Riding Lawn

-

· Loolls Good. Rune Good.
5550. {740)388 9325
19115 All AutomatiC Frick 5awmift·
Computerized HMC Oebarker &amp;
Chip Pack· wJI oepa ..te.
Call-7:00pm. (740)446-6763

~gN';:,P:E~
Buy Facloty Direct
&amp;cellenl 5ervk:e
Fto•iblo Fmaneing
Home !Co...,.n:ial Units
FREE COlor Coliltog
CoiToday-1·1100-71 t -ot 58
www.np.etsan.eom

Avo-

ASTHMA ALLEIIOV NEEDED,
10.15 PEOPLE Who Oaslro
lmmediale Relief. To Try. Evalual8
A NEW Compact Slate 01 Tho
Art. Home Or Business Air
Purifica1ion System. No Cost Or
Obligation. Free 3 Day Trial. Mel
Ross (304)67S.3379
AUTOS FROM S500:00
Police lmpoundo &amp; Reposl
Toyotas. Chevy's. Jeeps!
Please CaH lor Lislings,
1-800-45 HlSOO Ed. C9811
Baby Bed, Car Seat, High Chair
That You Can Make Into Tabla &amp;

Char (304)67S.2801

UMd WIJJ'h.*, Good CcJn.
· $175.00 (740}44-~ 01:

Mobi'- Home SuP9Iy. 740~9411MYRTLE BEACH. S.C. 213111R's
on/off ocean . 5650·$1200 per
weak. now· BarelootVaca·
lions8AOLCOM

lion.mm

(1A0)2A5-5812

Antiques

630

Plumbing ' ElocD:al Pans. Furnaees &amp; ...., P-•· Sennollt

5120.00 (304)675-!1127
~.,.,. , WE FIIIANCE DELL
COMPUTERS! Eve• with ....
than perlect credit! 1-800-477·
vote. C&lt;&gt;cle ACII ...,_..,.......,..

IIEW AND UIED STEEL Steel
Seomo. Pipe fol Concnoto.
Anole. Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Grating For Drains, Driveways &amp;
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap MetalS
(7-10)446-7300
NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT·
ERS- Almost weryone approved
whh $0 down! Low monthly permenll! 1-800-617-34768111.330.
Nice
Usod
Furnilur8. cal
Anytime, (740)446-1004 Or
(740)446-C75
Nice railer, 4•8. Leal Sprift9S,
•6
.,_...
(7ot01' "
""

ca-

··-.oo

EZPETRX.COM. Saw up lo 50%
on ALL pot medications and supplies. Including Heartgard. Inter·

Pool Pump. Laddtr, &amp; Diving
Boanl fol ........ ground Pool For
Sale.
1300 For All Or Offer.
(304)675-51117

Floor Model TV, $50; Couch.

·SBO: Entertairvnent: Center. 150;

Kitchen Table &amp; Chairs~ $100:
Washer/ Otyer. $250; 5 HP Tiller,

R- Bklg&amp;.· due to Hooding In
M-Il factorY haa (2) an:ll style
otetl btclgs. lor Immediate sale,
(tl40•60 (still crated), call Jeoo
01100-581-5843.

FREE CASHI $10,000 or mora
possible In 58 days or leu. NevM repayt New ptogramsl Free information .
1·800·308-6147
www.visionq2000.oom

242.()363 pt. 4009.
FREE OSTOMY PROOUCTSI
Manufacturer offers a rwo week
supply- of col05tomy or urostomy
brand name products wllh one
simple phone call. No obligation&amp;.

IIESIIJEII1IAL HOllE OWJIEIIS
Tappan Hi Ellictency 90% Gas
Fumacea. Oil Furnaces. 12 Sear
Heat Pump 1 Air Conditioning

Systems Free a Year Warranty
Bennelto Heating &amp; C00lift9, 11100-672-5987
. . ..orvb.c:Omlbennell

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

Building

550

Supplies
B -. brk:k, ,..,., pipet, wlndows. umets. etc: Ctaudo Winters.
Rio Grande. OH ca·l l 740·24551 21.
Steel Buildings. New Must Sell,
40•BOK12 Woo 117,500. Now
$10,971 ;
50•100K18
Was
S27.1SO,
Now
119.990;
10x135x18 W11 $79,850, Now

$44,990; I00•175K20 Was
1129.650. Now t94 ,990 1·800·
oiOB-5121

sao

.,.._for sale

3 CKC Adult Chihuahua's, 1
Black And Tan Smooth · Mate
(Small). t Red. lAng HH Femalo.
1150 Each Or $400 For All.
Phono(740)38l-7684
AKC Bostoo T.- PuppieS,
4 Females. 2 Mateo. Shots &amp;
" - ' · $250 (740)441H)A95

AKC Black Lab. Female, 6
Monthl, Champion SIOOdtlnea.

Loves Children. S125 (740)258681•
AKC Reglotorod Malo C~ineoe

Puppy. Shots. Wormed,

HOIISEIHOEING,

Drwna- Tama Roct Sra11 • lzMjian cymb•la. too much to Ji&amp;t
5t,0000807«1-992-9083.
•

-

Conili&lt;id

Famer, Fred Queen. {740)2561330

'ltUig- (7001251--e510

NOBOOY'S FATHER CO by Kellin Jones . ...., chepln Corpon-

t., &amp; Ace

Livestock

640

Smith gueat. on ta.J:-

.........._

Hay &amp; G111ln

Someone with machinery

to haron shares. Squire Batos

-1181'
u Hay For Sale (740)379-2931)

rAf11,, S UPPLIES

~ &amp; Bright Wire Toe swaw. -

"'L :VE:: :O TQC,(

Round Delivery &amp; Volume Dis·
count Available. Heritage Farm. .

(304)57s-5724.

610 Farm Equipment
I · I.H . 1420 Square Baler, 1Sprayer. 3pt Nook up, 1- J.D.
t1 12 Lawn Tractor, (7o10J&lt;I460500 """'5:30pm
.

With Motor, $1200; 550 Fuel

94 Ntssan Altima, 4 dr.,

710 Autos for Sale
$0 DOWN CARS! POLICE IMPOUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LOW AS $29/
MO. 24 MO'S e19 .9% . FOR
liSTINGS. CALL 1·600·45Hl050
Olii.C-91112
'89 lincoln COntinental, exceHant
condition, 1 t 2.000 mlle5, $2000

gine. (740)258--6574

630

firm. 740-742·2614.

LIVIItock

'92 Mustang GT, 5 speed, 5.0 V·

18 year old Quaner horse with

bridle and saddle. $500.
(740)+'1-9513
FAIR PIGS FOil SALE. BORN
IN GALLIA COUNTY. (740)441- ·
DtiBI OR (740)411 4312

:S~..o,~~·· 80k miles,
'95 Cavalier, 4 cylinder eutomalic.
two door. $2BOO, 740-742·2357.
t984 Z-26, Automatic Trans·
mission, Ne" Tires. Till Wheel.
Air

Brakes , Paint , Has Alarm

4-H And FFA Club Pigs, Hamp, System, Runs Good. S3000
York &amp; Duroc Cross (740)386- {304)882·3971
oom
~==~~~--~--

Taking Oopoolto To $425.00
Accepl Payments (740)388-9325
C_ockor SpanioU Siberian HuSky
puppies, unintentional cross. two
females ton, block and while. tool&lt;
like Cocker spaniels. vary nice.

sawmills, edgers and skidders .

lovea kids, and lntelltg•nl. 12

consignments welcome, hauling 5750. (740)245-6812

NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwil Drive. Buffalo, NY 14225.

weeks old. wormed, reduced to
$50 each. 740-992-5144.

available, Cattle accepted startIng at 4pm on Friday (740t592- 1989 Mazda 323, Excellent Con2322 Of (740)698-3531
dition, (740)4411-7925

GMC Fiberglass Bod Cover, 86·
98, Full Silo, Shon Wheal Base.
$200, Twin Bonprings $25,
Loveseat $200, (740)388- 8267
after 3:00pm
Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp; Repairs.
Problems? Need T""""7 Call The
Plano Or. 740-446-4525
Independent Herballle Dislribulor,

Call For Product Or Opportunity.
(740)44t-1982

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired. Now &amp; Rebuln In Slod&lt;.
CaM Ron Evans, 1-800-537-9528.'
lawnboy mower, 21", self pro·
pelled, electric start, 740-949·

2674.

FREE Information 1-800-578-

1383EXT.200-U

Pekapoo Tiny Mala, 7 weeks,
shots

Attention. Attention!! Stanley
Home PrcdUcto And Fullef Brush
Available. To Order Products Or
Request catalogs. Please can
(304)117li-8903Arr,olirne
STEEL BUILDING : 4 only: 2)
25x30, 30•40. 45d0, must mover
SOiling tor balance owedl 1-800·
411-5705 •·37.
STEEL-BUILDING . Now. Must
sell. 40x&amp;Ox12 was $17,500 now

and

wormed.

$125,

{700)251H181A
To Good Home Only. ' Year Old
Male AKC Black Lab. E•collont
Watch Oog. Not GOOd With
Children Or Other Pets. $200Includes 20•20 Kennel, Dog
Houoo And Feeder. Call
(304)n3-,5212 Aller 6:00pm
Too Cute 112 Cocker 112 Wainer
Dog Pupt, 4 Girls. 1 Boy, Had 1St
Shots &amp; Wormed .' $10 Each,
(304)1175-7398

19&amp;8 4-Door Buick Skyhawk.

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES $1000 QBO
Grass Cattle Solo. Saturday. May Anytime

(304)875·2827

5th, 1:OOprn, Salling stoctcer cattle ~=:___ _ _' - - - ' bred, COWl &amp; COWS/ CaiVII. All 1988 Honda, 5 ll)led, 40 MPG,

CWB GOATS. Boer Maar GoalS, 1992 Buic:ic Century, 4 door. all
Born ThiS Year. Great Fair options, extra good condilton, 3 3
Projects, Pure Bred And Percent- V-6, vary ntee. $3400, 740-992ago. (740)245-«85 Aller 8pm
6719.
Fair Show Pigs- Contact Harold 1994 Chevy Camaro, V-B. 2 Door,
Taylor In Evenings At (740t245- 81K, T·Tops, Full
Loaded,
9047
Excellent Condition, $8,000 .
Feeder Fair Pigs, 30-70 Pounds,

$50. (304)578-2579
Horses for Sale : 1 Morgan, 4

Mtr;alures, (740)448--6763

(304)67S.7790
Grand Am, $1900, Both Have
High Mile&amp;. 92 Geo Metro. 5
Speed, $700 Firm , (304)697·
5927

fu~:l

Heavy Duty 601nch Finishmg
Mower. Pull Behind 4-Wheeler,
14HP, Electric Start, Kohler En·

2136.

lncrea.se Allotments Mean Exira
Plants. Thank You For Your Susi*
ness . Can Danny Dewhurst*

TRAtiSPO RTAT IO N

Or

...-tible.

9t Plymouth Reliant. 12000; 91

2000 Gallon Water Tank. $650;

TranSit. (740)643-2918
(740)843-2644

CERTIFIED CHECK.

6783

Guaranteo E'arty Spring Plantings.

Tank With Gu Motor. S750:

Tank For Waste Oil. $250;
All Size Hoe Bucll:ets That Fils
215 Cat Hoe, Misc . Pumps &amp;
Generators. Tamper Fits -416 Cat
Back Hoe. M1sc. Steal Beams,
Jadt Hammer &amp; Air drills. Level &amp;

(740)+'1-10113

1999 Ford £xpedilion. Loaded,
E•cellent Condition, (740)4415-

86 Ford Crowtt VICtoria, 11300

Or (304)895-3719

v-,

86 Celebrity Eurosport, New
Tires, Brakes &amp; Exhaust, Very
Cl4tan Inside/ Out, $1200 080,.

$13,9001 1995 S·tO. SA295 ;
199e ~ $3795; t99t And
Two 1993 Covallers. COOK
MOIOIIS (740)44-Dt03

650 Seed &amp; Fertilizer

leave Message (300)895-3740

lor, 1650: Fuel Tank 2000 Gallon

______,

710 Autos for s.le

Olw&gt;
Bant&lt; ... - l o r by Public
Auction A 1995
Ni11an Outsl 1855929 at 1o:oo
am. on 5112/01 At Ohio Valley
lillnll Annex, 143 31d Ave., Gatllpolis. Ohio. Sold to lhe higMst
biddet ·as is- where ... wiU\out
e•ptessed or implied warranty &amp;
may be - n by caHing tho Col$eelion Department at (nO)U 11038. OVB reserves the right to
accept! reject any &amp; an bids, &amp;
withdfaw items from sa6e p.-ior 10
&amp;ate. Terms of Sale : CASH OR

na. $4895; 19M SilveradO, E•*
tended Cab, 4k4, Th1 hat .

86 Oodge 800 .
turbo.
good shape, $1300, 7.fi0-9.C9-

Tobacco Pllints- Order Now To

t 967 John Oaart 110 lawn
Tractor WHh Deck &amp; ffont Blade,
Excellent
Condition S 1000
(304)895-3360 Or (304)895-3441
Fuel tank. 1000 Galtom Willi Mo-

710 Autos for Sale
1995 Berena. $31195: 199S Lumi-

Tobacco Plugs For Sale, TN90 &amp;
NC3, Locally Grown . {740)2 A55193
-

Rough Cui Lumber and Mutch·
Bulk Loads. Call after 7:00pm.
(700)446-81B3
sawml" $3,695. New Super Lumbermate 2000. larger capocities.
· more options. Manufacturer or

Gateway Performance Pent 3
Desk Top Computer. Prinler,
Scanner &amp; Video Camera, PriCed
To Selft (304)67S.:161 1

1000 01 CordS (304)!17s-7790

Wo Need Your Dirt, Rocks. And
Bauldera. Oump ffee C111
(7oiO)oU1-o&amp;26

Pug

Caiiii00-75HIBO.

Ball C~ard Collector I&amp; Selling

CondiliOn Otlorl (740144f2205 or (7&lt;10)4 IB 11515, Ask For
VIgilia
Wattrli.. Spoc:lal: 31~ 200 PSI
$21.85 Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
$37.00 Per 100; All Stau Com. . - fillinDIIn Slocl
liON EVANS EHTEIIPIIIIEI
. -.OhiO. 1-100-537-85211

Blatk &amp; Tan Smooth Female. I

S125; Push Lawn Mowr, 1100;
(740)387-DISO (740)387-7272

Free governrMnt &amp; private monert Never repay. All worthwhile
requests considered. Must be
given out IO awid Ia.... Funding
for ectueatlon, houSing, buainell.
travel . debta, artt and more.
www.granls-dOr..com.com 1*800-

a-·

OTIS Forklllt, Gu powered
$1200 {700)44B-8519

ceptor, Frontline, more!!f FREE
SHIPPING,. Order online www.Ez·
peiiiJLCOm 1-801H144-1427

'

SUnday, Aprtl28, 2001

540M~

~"'*IOWJiBlt

-

Dale Earnhart Pro Bass GM.
Limited Edition Caro (Several)
(304)6112·3!167 Alllrlpm

530

-

540......._
111 c:tt.nche

--~-s.aty
Poslurepedic
Manressl 8oltHugo
1..-..y.
Dilcounl
~85~6~5-~~~fol~
..~··:·~iL~:f
V'-"
Skirting,
Doors,Prien.
Wlnd- 1;~(1~40)~~~~~6
!oo
llfin0s, $325.00, Edger/ T - On
U.lld T~ Ut t.mo• E•···· II
Willl Brigga Strlltoll Motaf, EK· owa. "A'~hors, water Heaters.

Magnum R~r. BlaCkhawk,
Sllll in eo•. S325.00; 357 Ruger
With Holster I Shells. 1325.00

«

540 Miscellaneous
MerchandiH

Houlehold

740-448-7795.

Sewage, Trash, $350/Mo .. 740-

Unil

112' East Main oa SR 124 E. Pof!lllfliV, 740-992·2526 or 740-11921539. Russ Moote, owrw.

r.IER CHM&lt;DI SE

510

(700).WII-1519

WindOw

Buy or sell. Ri verine Antiques.

cat74D-

1.fx70 10111 electric, two bed ...,..., 1300 month plus $150 do-

UUd

520

Rental. Oozer,
Blckho.. BObelt, Farm Traetor
And £qulpmont. (740)+'1~19

~t:~-et54 .

Furntshed 2 &amp; 3 Room Apattments. Ctoan. No - · No Smok·
lng, Reterenees &amp; ()eposit Re·
quired. Ut11ili11 Furnished .

(304)575-5770

Equipment

=:..;;;=--------1
For r -- one bedroom lurnished
420 Mobile HpmH
apartmontln Middteport.

-----------1

$150·

w-.

-and doposit required. 740- ciosrvw.

992-S23t .

uin W-Dilh
E•ceUenl
Condition.-

or JuDy AI (7A0)44&amp;-7323 (Li· , Con&lt;lilion•s. 90 Day ouer-.
{740)Mf-7531 (T.OC)I" 0041
U..An Aoi&gt;*aru:t.
Whirlpool Wu... r, Whill. S95:
460 Spece for Rent
Whirlpool Drye r, White, $95:
Mobile Ho.,. LOI. -Will Take Electric Range, 30•. Avocado.
12'o- t4'o, t ..,
1125/mo. 1150: Smal Chest Fteow. $1511;
S100tdep., Ne..S Reterencet , RelrJoerator. Frost Free, S150;
llelrigefaW, frOII free, Atmond.
(7411)446-017$
1195; Suggs Applianc:n. 7t
v... Skeel. (740)44-73911
480
Equlpuent

House
C.eok Witll2 Olhor . . _ . mocai(740)25B-tt35

for Rent .

Houlltlold
Goa ell

510

t~

one own-

or, $3800, 740.949-2045 or 740·
949-:1836.

CARS $29/MONTHI POliCE 1M·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S.
CHEVY. 24 MO'S et9.9%. FOR
LISTINGS! CALL 1·800·941·
8m EXT. c-9814.
Honda's From $5001 Pollee
Impounds. Call Now For Ust:

1-800-319-3323 E&gt;rt. M71

Ohio Valley Bank wilt off« !of aato
by

Public

Ford
10:00

Auction A 1991

Taurus

am.

1175092

at

on !5/12/01 At Ohio

Valley Bank Anne•. t43 3rd Ave ..
Gallipolis, Ohio. Sold to me nlg~t-­
est btdder •aa is· where Ia• without e'II'Ossed or Implied warranty
• may be .... by calling the ColltCiion Department a1 (740)«1·
1038. OVB reserves the right to
accepll ntjecl any &amp; all blda, &amp;
withdraw items from sale prior to
sale. Terms of Sale : CASH OR

CERTIFIED CHECK.
Ohio VOlley Bank wHI oDor lor sale
by Public
Auction A 1988

Oldsmot&gt;lle 88 t35315B at 10:00
am, on 5112101 AI Ohio Valley
Ban~ AMex. 143

3rd AIJa., Gallipolis, Ohio. Sold to the highest
bidder •as Is- where Is" without
expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Col·
lection Department at (740)441·
1038. OVS reserves lhe right to ·
accepU reject any &amp; all bids , &amp;
withdraw Items from sale prior lo
sale. Terms ot Sale : CASH OR

v...,

Ohio
Bank will """ lor ....
by Public:
Auc:tion A 1990
Ford Escort 1145690 at 10:00
am . on 5/12/01 At Onio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave., Galli·
PQiis. Ohio. Sold to the nighest
bidder "as is- where is• without
expre:ISed or Implied warranty &amp;
may ~ seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)441 ·
1038. OVB reserves the right to
accept/ reject aoy &amp; all bids , &amp;
withdraw items from sale prior to
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

CERTIFIED CHECK.
Ohio Valley BaNI Wll ofler 1or sale
by Public Auctio n A 198-4
Crown Victoria t1 13898 at 10:00

am, on 5112101 AI Ohio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave .• Gallipolis, Ohio. Sold to the highest
bidder ~as is- where Is~ without
expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)4411038. OVB reserves the rlghl to
accepU reject any &amp; all bids, &amp;
withdraw Items from sale ptlor to
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

CERTIFIEQ CHECK.

720 Trucks for Sale
1982 Chevy 4 door Utility truck, ·

(740)446-8763
1993 5-10. E•tended Cab. Load·
ed, low Miles, Fibergfaas Topper
And Visor· Excellent Condl11on,

1995 Dodge
(740)446-8783

Ram

Diesel,

1996 Ford F· 1SO XLT. Loaded
69.000 Milas. Asking $9.495
(304)773-5746
1999 Dakota Sport Truck, 4WD.
V-8. 1500 miles , rebuilt title,

For ·

Sate

570

Loaded. $6600, Days (740)2455060. Evenings (740)682- 7512.

CERTIFIED CHECK.

Brand Now Drum Set. tiOOO Or
Beat Offer. Includes Stool And

WVELY 1WO STORY HOME DECORATED AS
AiJ A DOLL HOUSE • Features a SPACIOUS
BEDROOM SUITE W/ SITI1NO ROOM &amp; BATH. ON
TilE MAIN LEVEL. Wife approved kitchen w/ lots of

PRETI'Y

cuatom deai,aned 01k cabinets. La. dinina room, 5 more DRs,
3 1dditional balba, Fireplace in the LR. Charming entry
w/1taircase leadlna to 2nd level, Laundry room on the main
level, Finished basement, Det"hed 2 car aaraae. On 3.35
landiCIIped acres m/1. Lots of plants &amp;c. trce.s.
NO. 189

room with ftrtplace, formal dining
ares. 2 lull bltt)t, 3 badroomo,
lamlly room. hut pump, ottached 2
car gerege. l.ota of updoteo here.
1oday to toke e peek insldel

can

NEW ON MAAKETI CHECk IT
OUTI $20,900.001 Almost one acre
lot complete wRh public sewer.
mobile home and garaoe. Nice lot.
Mull not ijioltal to calL lor an
apPointment to view lhis propertyl
Wonllaol to long. ll2109
ACREAOE ... 30 acres fTI/1 loll ol
woods, Ideal hunllng land, Harrloon
Town~lp. $30,000.00 ft1Dtl

COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST!

or

~OOKINO FOR A LOT? Hero
2 level Iota wllh public waler
oowage available, . Not lor a
price. $14,500 lor them both
owner 11 requeltlng your offer.
1:1071

810,000.00 City Uvtng wHh
o1 eonvontenae. one cfle.oolrroo'"n;il
ranch with baaement, 3 ts

1 112 bath&amp;, carpon nlco level
Quick pououlonll2112

mud room,
BAs and 2 112
baths. Updated llama Include
betho. wiring, 2 fu(OlCe&amp;,
siding, roof and
more.
$104,900. Owner' amclous to
oell ...make an onerlll209

open to
0\/er 1400 sq.
baliement, 3 fireplaces, 2 car
garage, in-ground pool, 4 1/2
acres, m/1, located only
mlnules from town in the city
achol system. Pricect at
$137,00011807

'

111
FHch IIOIId•
City
convenience Is found with !his
4 BR, 4 bath home re1111ng on
over 2 1/2 acres and offers a
large .,_.io and wood deck
right on the edoe 1own. The
24' x 48' pole barn w~h
concrelo floor allows for
garage perking, plenty of
storage and a workshop area.
It's a lot of houae for only

or

$89,900. 1301

712!1 BR 110- l.ocated on a
prtvata 8 ecro, m/1, oeffing, you ·
will ftnd this lovely Cape Cod 1
l1ome featuring a '10\/ely great I
room
with
woodbumlng
~pi-, ronn.t DR, gourmet
kHchen with eating aroa
OV81100klng the pond, 5 BRa. 3
ba1ha, uf)stltlro 11tt1nQ area, 2
..- garage end above ground
pool $23&amp;.000 1101
.

Only 4 to 5 miles from
a Ranch style home.
lcadin . '
larae • · ~
/II
relax I • \ I ! ,\ ''\ I
Green

on

2.2S

a.....

Twp.ll
end street,
182A sq.
,large FR

Also Includes
remodeled
baths and
.
2 car garage
24 x
building and 14 x
storage building provide
grnt utility. Largo lot waicomaa
outalde activftl... $139,&amp;0?

ANN DRIVE - Don't
drive by, stop and take 1
peek at this lovely home that
has so much character. 3

BRa
2 baths, fortnol
dinln1, LR, ·complete
kitchen, lara• FR, flnl•hod
buemenlh otora&amp;e bulldinJ.
A quality omo.
NO.a91

Before ihopping for your New Addrus ... stgp by ours:
Cheryl Lemley

742-3171

www.wi semanrealestate.com
,David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker 448-9555
Carolyn Wa~ch, GRI 44,1 ·1007 Sonny Garnll 448·2707
Rob1rt Bruce 448-o621 Rita Wl••man 446-91555

Auction A 1999
Polaris 400 1095580 a1 10:00 am.
on 5112/0 I At Ohio Valley Bank
Annex , 143 3rd Ave., Gallipolis ,

Ohio Valley Bank will Ollar lor sate
by Public
Auction A 1994
Oadge Ram 1652178 at 10:00

· as is- where is• wilhOut expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)441·
1038. OV8 reserves the righl to
accept/ reject any &amp; all bic;ls, &amp;
withdraw Items from sale pr)or ta
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

Bank Anne•. 143 3rd Ave , Gallipolis. Ohio. Sold to the highest
bidder •as iS· where is'" withou1
expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)441·
1038. OVB reserves the right to
accepU reject any &amp; all bids. &amp;
withdraw ilems tram sale prior to

CERTIFIED CHECK.
Orlio Valley Bank

will ollor lor sate
by Public
Auction A 1999
Yamaha YZF 1000714 at 10·00
am, on 5112/01 At Ohio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave., Galli·
polis , Ohlp. Sold to lhe highest
bidder •as is- where Is• without
expressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calllrig the Collection Department at (740)441·
1038 OVB reserves the right to
accep11 reject any &amp; all bids, &amp;
withdraw ilems from sale prior to
sale. Terms o~ Sale : CASH OR

sale. Terms of Sale: CASH. OR
CERTIFIED CHECK.
Ohio Valley Bank will ollor lor sale
by Public Auc~on A 1985
Ford F150 '"29882 at 10·00
am, on 5/ 12101 At Ohio Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave., Gallipolis . Ohio, Sold to the htghest
bidder •as rs- where is" without
expreued or implied warranty &amp;
may be nan by calling the Collection Department at (740)441 ·
1038. OVB reserves the right 10
acceptl reject any &amp; all bids, &amp;
withdraw items lrom &amp;ale prior. to
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

CERTIFIED CHECK
Ohio Valley Bank will after for sale
by Public Auction A 1998
Suzuki 1104521 at 10:00 am, on
5/12/01 At Ohio Valley Bank Annex, 143 3rd Ave .• Galllpoll&amp;,
Ohio. Sold 10 the highest bidder
•as is· where is" without expressed or implied warranty &amp;
ma~ be seen by calling the Collection Department a1 (7401441·
t038. OVB reserves the right to
accept/ reject any &amp; all bids. &amp;
withdraw Items from sale. prior to
sale. Terms ol Sale : CASH OR

CERTIFIED CHECK .

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
1989 Chevy Astro Van, Work

Van, Standard, $2500, 6 Cylinder,
(740)446- 1837 Or (740)446.

1989 Suburu Wagon, All Time

4K4, Runs GOod. (304)675-4456
1995 F- 150 Extended Cab. 4WO,
long bed, 65,000 miles. automatic,
many extras. S11 ,500, 740-992-

Ohio Valley Bank will otter for sale
by Publk: Auc110n A 1998 Yama·
ha 350 11072368 at 10:00 am, on
5/ 12/01 At Ohio Valley Bank An nex, 143 3rd Ave ., Gallipolis,
Ohio. Sold to the highest bidder
·as is- where •s" withoul ex·
pressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Collection Department at (740)441 1038. ova reserljes the right to
accept! reje ct any &amp; ali bids. &amp;
Withdraw 1tems from sale prior to

1995 Ford Wlndstar GL van
Teal Blue, 39,000 m1les, loaded:
Exoollent CondiUon, Garage Kept,
V~6 , Front Wheel Drive, $8500,
Truc:k ,

Astra

4x4 ,

van. $750

99 F-450 Power Stroke 4x4, 6 sp.,
steel flatbed, 5,000 miles, 740·

992-6223.

A 1 1/2 story

with aluminum siding, and has

2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen; bath, and laundry room
downstairs, and 2 smell bedrooms upstairs. has a nice view
of the Ohio River.
NOW REDUCED TO $15,000

40) 446·3644

VIEW You can tee u
Partially wooded. 6 to 7 acroa

NO. 305

i

RIVERVIEW DRIVE • Need lots of room In your homo? This
one has Ill 3 bedrooms upstairs (one being 24 It) and a 24 ft
living room/dining room. the basement also has a finished
room. There Ia a large enclosed porch and a newer
outbuilding. Really nice home, Come and look! $70,0C!CJ.DO
BROWN ALLEY - Approximately 1 acre. This home has
vinyl siding, blown-In Insulation, and a shingled roof.
3 bedrooms and 1 bath. A bargain by the housafull Uve in 11
or rant It out Come see and give us an offer.
~5,000.00

h ie. Terms ol Sale: CASH OR
CERTIFIED CHECK.

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

Tires. $850.
(740)534-2589

Stock Wheels $400. (740)6•32771 (740)534-2589
Auto Parts Swap MeeHl
B:OOam.. :OO pm.
Fairgrounds, Wapakoneta. Ohio
Into. 1-019-394-8464

Budgel Priced Tr•nemlaalona
All Types, Access To Over
10,000 Transmissions, Transfer

Cases. 740-24S.S677 . Cell: 3393765.

790

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1968 Mallard 21 ' mo!O&lt; home, low
m11eage. 'llery good conaitlon.
$9.000. 740-992·5963 8YOftings.
1990 Class A Gull Stream. 37
Foot, 460 Ford/ OshKosh Chassiel Fully Equipped. Including A
1996 Saturn Pull Car. Both Excel-

lent. Anct Low Mieage. (740)2455752
1995 Allegro, 31 Foot Class A
MotorhOme , low Miles, Loaded .

(740)446-.1352
35 It Coachman Gooseneck
Campl!lr, Excellent Condition ,
$7500. (740)44e-6763
94

Cobra Popup Camper By

Flagstaff, Excellent cor\diliOn, Air,
Furnace, Tinted Windows. Asking
$3000 (304)67H7t 3

SERVICE S

810

Home
Improvement•
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

unconditiOnal lifetime guarantee.
local references furnished . Es-

lablshed t975. can 24 Hrs. (740)
446·0870. 1-600·267-0578. Rog·
ers Waterproofing.

All types ol masonry brick, block
&amp; stone . Frea estimates, 304-

773-9550.
C&amp;C General Home MaintenanCe· Painting, vinyl siding ,
carpentry, doors , WindOws, baths .
mobile home repair and more. For
tree estimate carr Chet, 740-992-

6323.

1985 Procraft, 17· 112 Foot Bass
Boat- W1th 1988 Johnson 150HP.
Good
Condition .
$3,800.

Dodson Builders
Your complete hOme remodeling ,
repair &amp; mamtenance contractor.
Pamling , vmyl s1d1ng , decks,

baths, kitchens. electncal, plumb·
lng., many 'other services to su11
your need&amp;. No Job to big or small,
30 years expenence . Free esti-

mates, 740·698-6783, 140-591·

(740)256-1329

1384

1995. 19 Foot Rinker, Call For
More Oetails, (304)675-1298 or

livingston's

1304)675·5770
1997 Four Winds Horizon AS, 19
Fool. (304)895·3929

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propoaala
will be received by RIO
Grande Community
Colloga, 206 Allen Hall,
218
N.
College
Avenue, Rio Grande,
Ohio 45874 until
Tuaeday, May 22, 2001,
at 2:00 p.m., then they
wlll be opened and
read. The General
Contractor ae Lead
Contractor ahall be
ruponelble ·
for
coordinating
tht
Contractora,
echedullng
the
Project. and providing
other
aervlcu
epecllled In
the
contract documenta.
ProJect Title: New
Entrance Road
Owner; Rio Grande
Community College
City, County: Rio
Orenda. Ohio
Gallla County ·
In accordance with
the Drawlnga and
Speclflcatlons
prepared by Burgess
&amp; Nlple, Limited, 5085
Reed
Road,
Colum·bua,
Ohio
43220, (614] 459-2050;
aealad blda will be
received for the
following trades:
Contact, Eetlmate of

208 Allen Hall
21S N. College Avenue
Rio, Grande, Ohio
Burgea &amp; Nlpla,
Umtt.d
5085 AHd Road
Cotumbue, Ohio
Burgua I Nlple,
Umlted
4424 Emereon Avenue
Ptlrkeraburg, WV

(740)643·277 1

4-265175 R 16 GOOdyear AIS on
1998 Dodge Ram 1500 Aluminum

2245

Public Notlca

1. General ContractBoat Bid ...... $41D,OOO
Alternate C·l,
Deduct ............$1 B,OOO
CREEK RD • Here's a 48.6 acre parcel of land
Alternate L-1.
building sites on both sides of the road, both sides
· Dtduct...........$20,000
ra1i1road,, and borders the creek . Beautiful laying home
2. 'Eitctrtcal Contract
sitos. There Is also woods lor hunting.
The scheduled date
of completion of the
roadway conatructlon
LINCOLN HI~L- A one slory home with a large L·shaped
portion of the project
living room, dining room, kitchen, big bedroom, and a bath
Ia august 28, 2001,
on one floor and the basement Is all finished with
applicable to all
kitchen, family room, and one beth . There Is
blddere. Completion of
acres with most laying nice and a view of
the ramalndar of the
proJect ahall
ba
EAGLE RIDGE
October 15, 2001,
I
beautiful 5 bedroom home
a view of
Bidding document•
Home Ia not quite a year old and has a 2 car ant1ch&gt;&amp;d
may be obtained by
garage. Sitting on aP9rox1mate1y 12.9 acres
Prima Contractore,
A MUST SEE AT~~~w from Burgeaa &amp; Nlple,
~lmlted, 5085 Read
Road, Cotumbue, Ohio
43220, telephone (614)
459·2050 by placing a
nonrefundable dapoalt .
ol $75.00 par eel
payable to Burge. . &amp;
Nlpla, Limited. No
more than three aata
CAOUIEA AD • Approx,
will be grovlded to a
Bidder. na copy ot all
that hu 3 bedrooma, 1
addenda wlll
be
rooin, and a big family room.
provided
to
all
1
building, rear -~ 7 ,., _,
planholdere at no
additional coat. The
bidding document•
may be reviewed
without charge during
bualne . . houra at tha
loltowtnglocatlone:
Rio Orande
Com~unlty College

•· 36x14.50 R15
Rad1a1
Groundhog Mounted On t5x10
Alumlmun Wheels, 500 Miles On

16 Foot, Deep V Aluminum Boat
&amp; Trailer. t 998 15 HP Motor With
About 20 Hours On It Electric
Motor Goes With lt . (304)675 -

Public NoUce

C1111t

Auto Parts &amp;
Ac:ceuorles

760

CERTIF IED CHECK

1640.

Jeep

Public

Ohio. Sold to tho highest bidder

am, on 5/12101 AI Ohio Valley

92 Chevy Conversion Can, V-8,
Mileage.
Burgundy,
Low

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • Uve In one side and rem the olher.
This well kept duplex has lots of newer updates. One aide
has 2 bedrooms and an upda1ed ba1h. The other has
3 bedrooms wHh an updated kitchen and bath. Both have
equipped kitchens, thermopane windows, newer doors and
plus many extras. The patio,
and
maRl! the outside
·
Two

living

NEW USTINOI PARMI 28
moo1iy all tillable and PMt'~t.l
land. Nice 1 112
home with large I
badroomo, 2 baths, ba.em;;iit:
car detached garage,
bam 7 misc. buildings. Plus
bedrooms mobile home. 13111

Ohio Valley Bank will offer lor sate

91 Chevy 2-10 Blazer 4x4, V-6,
auto. ale. $3650, 740·949-2732.

privacy 20 acrea more or less. Features a lovely Uvina:
erown moldln,;. loll of booklhelves, and fireplace. Formal
room with raised panel wains~ting, larp kitchen whh lots
beautifut .Oak Smith cabinets &amp; island, 1\Yo spacious bedrooms
upper level with bullt-in·dcsb, bedroom suile and
walk-in clotet, Jacuzzi tub. Family rOom In
·
21/t batha. Thia home hiBIOIS of beautiful oak woodwork,
floors, tile and berber. Jnaround pool 16XJ2. 16X12
all fenced. Lots of flower beds and bloom ina plantl. NO&gt;, 3(14

PRICE
DROPPED
P,OOOI
.Remodeled ranch home reoting on

WE Alii TALKING IIAJOII
REDUCTION
HEREI
REAOY...avwr 120,0001 Owner
meondo buoineoo. Quality home
· that hoe low maintenance. Brick
ranch with 4 bfxlroome, forinal
living room, otop-oavlng kMchon,
remtty room with flrepieco, owtr
.2.000 oquero fell of living opoce. 2
car attached garage, bam, shad
and looda more rooting on 2 acres
m,ol. PriVate showlngo ...call to set
up yourel ~2050

by

'as Chevy

NEW LlmNG • CHRIS LANE - 'lUcked sway 11 the
Jane is a beaut~y decorated story and a half home,

o-n
New Uatlng In
Townahlpl ~-shaped ranC\1
offers plenty of room . Z100 sq.
ft. of living spoee wl1h large
living areas: formal LR, large
knchen and Dining area and
oversl•ed lamily room with gas
log fireplace. 3 generous BRa,
2 baths and big 2 car plus
garage. Patio &amp; deck create
very nice outdoo1 enjoyment.
· Flat lot with outbuilding &amp; gOod
utility. Th)ls 10 yr. old house Is
In great condition. Nothing to
do but move ln. $98,900 1208

-

CERTIFIED CHECK.

(740)446-8217 Days Belore 2pm
Or Leave Message

1943

$89.900 1200

ewer 1 acre treed level tot.

99 XR70 · E - ~.
$900. (7-10)446-3545

Cruise, CO, Remote Starter,
10,000 Miles, Excellent Condition,

SYRACUSE • Collage Streel · A 1'/• slory home with a full
basement. Has a front and back porch. There is 6 rooms.
3 bedrooms, &amp; one beth. Has a newer roof and niCe
.

Foreman 450S. 300

1038 . ova reserves the rJght to
ac:cepl/ reject any &amp; all bids. &amp;
w;&amp;hdraw items from safe prior to
sale. Terms of Sale: CASH OR

(740)446-®94 Call After 6pm

story home
loti of
cherac1er. 4 f!!Ra, 2 baths &amp; 2
stalrwayt. ~R. CR. FR, kitchen
anct portia! basement Grea1 In
town
looation
offering
convenience. 2 car geroge
plus oulbulldlng. Large front 1203
porch plua aida ·balcony.

kitchen 3 bedrooms, large famiiV
room, garage, concrete drive and
morel

taction Depanmenl at (740!+'1-

2000 Ford F-150 . 4x4 , 4 Door.

...

4a4,

Miles, Still Under Warranty,
$4,300 (700)448-3t 17

Super Cab, 5 4 VB. POL, PW, Tltt,

==:=..!. Drum cas... (740)446-7637

0.-t flllorter H Evergreenll Easy to affordl
At $44,900, your paymenta
will be cheaper than rent 3
BR home with l bath on a
nice lot. Several outbulldlnge.
Ou'-1 country location. Donl
healtate..won't IllS! long.

I2Cif5 31114 Ooorget Creek R'*'
-.600 Nloo bl·l,..l otyle home
that has large tamlly room &amp; dining
area lhat opens to large reer deck
and private back lawn. Eat-In

2000 Honda

pressed or implied warranty &amp;
may be seen by calling the Col·

1990

.:600=·582=-D09=7=e="'=
· 1:;;03;:'=·

Fotoma~ 5450.

360 Miles, Hardly Used. Hardly

(740)245-5812

teneel Only $69.00 per momh, 1·

20' Pontoon Boat, 40HP MercU&lt;y
Motor &amp; Trailef. $7000 (740)4463CJ&amp;.(

Used $4800 (740)258-1329

(304)862·3173

~s.c$1~~~~7:;:.~;6~,000

1995 Harley Davidson. FlHTCU
With Extras. St6.000 Firm, Call

1999 -

(740)992-6t50

1999 Ponliae Grand Am, excel-

Breeze $1 , 500

and Trailer, Excefent ConditiOO,
Ready lor s.,nmer (304)11112-31110

(740)44t-t0t 6

Phio. Sold to tho highest bidder
'"as ia- where is• w ithout eJ-

fl-oe 07

1997 5Niloo GTI. 3 Seo1. .tot SOl

Motorcyclll

125 Yahama

Ohio Valey Bant&lt; will Ollar lor sale
by PubUc
Auction A 1994
TIJI'Oia 4&gt;4 ~ o11 10:00 am.
oo 5112/01 At Ohio Valley Bank
Anne•. 143 3rd Ave•• GallipOlis,

Negotlal!le. (304)67s-7974

REAL ESTATE

antique &amp; old

(740)446-8763

92 Chevy Silverado, Short Bed,

(304)67S.2861

. R•l &amp;tate Glnenll

NEW utiTINQI Sill alm011 ,_ &amp;
you o1ill can add your finishing
touchHI 3 Veers young 1 1/2 otory
homo with basement and 2.5 acres
ITI/1. Main Ievit hu approx. 1,280
sq. ft. and upper level 850 sq. ft.
lhal has not been completly
finished. Let uo tell you the rest,
13111

91 F-150 B1acL 5pon. .._ 6 ey.
tinder. 5 Speed, Sharp Truck.
Payoll. $10.400. (740)016 3!515

1995 Ford Ranger. XlT 4Jt4 AJC,
CD Player. Standard Shift. E•cel·
lent Condifjon, 79,000 Miles, Prk:e

Mualcal
Instruments

Unlimited Nationwide Long Ois·

Stt~ee

740

$13.000. (740)379--9047

S10.971. 50•100•16 was $27,850
now $19,990. 8Dx135x16 was
$79.880 now $44,990. 100•75&gt;20 Yorkshire Terrier Puppies, AKC,
was $129,650 now $84,990. 1Excellel)t Bloodline, Pe'rfact Gift,
!!00-408-5121.
. (7ol0)37t--9061
Top
Soli
!740J-Ut-Oet9

720 Trucks for Sale

3437

(740)367-75!2

il&gt;udl!' 1li111H- iklllind ~

Basem~nt Water
Proofing, all basement repairs
done, lree estrmales , lifetime
guarantee . 14yrs on job ••peri,

once (304)89S.38B7

840 EIBctrlcal and
Refrigeration
Residential or commerc;:lal wlpng,
new serv1ce or repairs Master Licensed electrician. Ridenour

Electrical. WV000306. 304·875·
1786

Public

Notice

withdraw hla bid
within 60 daya alter
the actual data ol the
opening thereof. The
Owner reaarvea the
right to waive any
28104
lnformalltlea or to
Cotumbua Bulldare
reJect anyJir all bide.
Exchange
A prebld meeting will
Columbua, Ohio
be held on Friday, May
F.W.Dodge
11, 20D1, at 10:00 at
Cotumbua, Ohio
Room 218 In Bob
F.W.Dodge,
Evans Farma Hell, Rio
Charlalton,
Orande Community
Weet VIrginia
Subcontractor• and College, Alo Grande,
material auppllar• 1111y Ohio.
acquire; for their April 29, May 6, 13,
2001
convenience~
Drawing•
.and
Public Notice.
Speolfloatlone by
paying for the coat ol
reproduotlon
and .
Notice of Funding
handling, the eame
AvallabHity Stele
nonrefundable depoelt
Flacel Yur 2002 ·
•• Prime Contrectora.
Santor Facllltlaa
All question a
Program Funda
regarding
the
Aru Agency on
D ra WIn Ill
8 n d Aging ot.trlct 7, Inc. II
Speclflcatlona ahould pleaaad to announce
ba addreaaed to the that, contingent on the
Aaaoclate, ettentlon: 0 h 1o
General
Charyl Green, Project Aeaombly approval of
Manager, (814] 459· the Dhlo Department
20~.
, ol Aging's (ODA)
Each bid must ba budget, ODA
te
accompanied by a Bid making available
Guaranty meeting the $381.832 trom the
raqulrementa
of Santor facllltlea line
Section 153.54 ol the Item In 1he State of
Ohio Revised Code. Ohlo'e
biennium
Bid Guaranty and Budget
for
the
·Contract bond laaued conatructton,

muet

m11t · the renovation,

requlremanlll ol Artlcla
2 at tho lnatructlon to
Blddera.
Bldl 111111 ba aealed
and eddreaaad to:
Attention: Ma. Luanne
Bowman, Rio Orand•
Community Collage,
206 Allen Hall, 211 N.
College Avenue, Rio
Grande, Ohio 45874.
Envelope shall be
eealad ·a nd clearly

mlrktd "BID'
Minimum Wagu
Ratea and Equal
Employment
Opportunity
Aequlramenta ora
applicable to thla bld.
Invitation per Bate ol
Ohio requlremenlll.
Domaatlo 11. .1 uea
requlramenta · aa
apaclllad ln Beotton
153.011 of the AaviMd
code apply to thla
project. Coplu ol
Section 153.011 of the
Aavlaad Code can be
obtained form any ol
the offlou of the
department
of
Admlnlatretlve
sarvleea.
No blddar may

acqulaltlon and repair
of aenlor facllltlaa.
Thla
Notlca
Ia
Intended to asalat
potential applicants
to: C1J declda whether
they are eligible to
apply for lundlng, (2)
determine whether
their
propoaed
project(l) are eligible
lor funding, and (3)
u nderatand
the
application process.
Eligible Appllcama
In order to apply for
Senior
Facility
Program lunda, .the
project aponaor muat
meet
aeveral
requlrementa.
Key
requtremanta lnolude:
1. An applicant muat
either be dealgnated
aa a focal point by the
PSA In which tha
facility Ia located, or
muat currently r
propoaa to provide

aoclal or recr1atlonal
actlvltlu .and two
additional home and
community bued
11rvlcea to tenlora In
their community.
2. An oppllcant muat
Contlnuad On A-3

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extended reach.
For infestations located high
in ~. a high-pressure hose
nuy open the nest enough to
expose the caterpillars to an
insecticide applied through a
hose-end sprayer.
If opening the nests is not
possible, just spraying the
foliage of the tree will prevent
the caterpillars from feeding
. on the leaves, ho\vever they
will move quickly to the next
closest food soutce of choice.
Keep in · mind that spraying
overhead foliage will cause the
pesticide to settle back on the

early in the season, the tree

will typically set new leaves
after caterpillar damage, however, the tree does this at the
expense of its energy reserves.
These caterpillars prefer
wild cherry trees, but are
commonly seen in crabapple,
oaks, maples, hawthorns and
other ornamental and shade
trees. Last year by the first
week in May, many of these
caterpillar
colonies
had
worked their way through
desirable trees in their area and
moved on to small ornamentals shrubs and rose bushes.
Reports coming into the
Extension Office this week
are alarmingly similar to that
of the lady beetle, as some
colonies of caterpillars are

making their way to home
foundations and siding. Spray
the caterpillaR when they hit
the ground around the foundation, and then spray the
foundation and siding with ,
the same insecticide. .
Always read the pesticide
label for precautions and make
sure that your target plant is
listed on the label. This Will
become increaslngly important in the coming \veeks as
these caterpillars move onto
more sensitive ornamental
hosts. Keep in mind that some
plants cannot tolerate chemicals such as Malathion , and
may require a weaker chemical, such as Sevin.
We can be thankful t~at tent
caterpillars produce only one

with a long horizon and a solid
financial plan. The stock IIL1r-

fund including charges and
expenses, and read it carefully
nies offer 111atching contribu- k.et, with it~ volatiJity and risks. before investing.)
• Consult \vith an investtions.
To get the most out of scares nwiy investors. But thl' ·
fromPegeD1
your 401 (k), contribute at least potential reward for inwsting ment executive or finaricial
advise r who is qualified to
on how much your employer the amount that will enable in equirles can br convincing.
Historically, even \vith cycli~ assess your situation and review
allows - usually between 2 you to receive the ·maxinlum
cal
downturns, large company your risk tolerance. Based on
percent and 15 petcent.You are matching contribution.
• Invest for the long term. stocks have returned an average this review, you wiU have to
allowed to make a maximum
contribution to your 401 (k) of Yo11r savings should accumu- 10.3 percent a year before deCide which investment
15 petcent of your annual late first frorF,l simply portici- infhtion. This does not mean choices best fit your .needs.
pating -in your company's you should put all your 4D1 (k)
Stick \vith the plan. Even. if
salary up to a maximum of
401 (k) 'plan, than from having savings into stocks. Instead, you you become temporarily
$10,000 (indexed for 1998), an the right investtnent mix. To might want to conside r the uncomfortable with the iliVestIRS-mandated index that is outpace inflation and the professional management and ment choices in your plan, stay
adjusted annually. (Be sure to volatility of the markets, you diversification of stock mutual in it. The advantages of particiconsult a tax advisor prior to need to become more than a funds. (Be sure to obtain a fund pating can be more powerful
determining your contribution saver.
prospectus, which includes than investment choices that
You need to be an investor detailed information about the fluctuate. ·
amount.)
•Take advantage oflllatching
contributions. Many . compa-

Smith

Kneen
fromPapD1
Make sure all toys, sticks,
stones, bottles, cans and twine
are picked up in the yard. Keep
children and pets away from
the area to be mown and never
allow children to ride with you
on lawn
If using a push bwnmower,
temember to use proper foot
attire. This means no bare feet
or sandals. Remember that
injuries occur when you pbce
your mina in neutral and the
lawnmower in gear.

•••
Farmers, have you checked
the calibration of your spray
equipment? Misapplication of
spray material may be mini(. mized if certain precautions are
followed in yearly checkups.
H. Erdal Ozkan, Ohio State
University professor of agricultural engineering, suggests the
following procedures in his fact
sheet "Bqom Sprayer Calibra-

Have you noticed the purple clusters qf bell-like flowers
high in the trees · along the
Ohio River? The Princess tree
or Royal Paulowni:i, Paulown.ia toinentosa, is beginning to
bloom 15 to 40 feet in the air
along its leafless branches.
This 19th century imported
tree from China was named ·
after Princess Paulownia from
the Netherlands. Its wood has
been valued for small furniture
and carvings.
Do you want to propagate
thiS· tree? Start from either seed
in the fall or from stem or ·root
cuttings in the late summer or
early winter ·months. Young
plants or plants cut down often
send up sprouts JO to 12 feet in
height with large three foot

generation per season . This
generation will eventually
become moths and lay eggs
that will become next year's
infestation. Destroying the egg
masses that will be laid on tiny
branches later this summer i1
an effect approach to preventing an infestation next year.
For a fact sheet on identifying
these egg masses, call the OSU
Extension office at 446-7007.
Ag news
Perennial plant exchange
- The Gallia County Master
Gardeners and the Bossard
Memorial Library invite the
gardening community to the
library for a perennial plant
exchange on May 5, 2001
from .10 a.m. to I p.m.
This is an opportunity for

homeowners to thin out over··
crowded
perennials and
exchange them for spmething
new. Furthermore, this event ~
an excellent opportunity t,Q
share. information with your
friends and peers. Please tell
your neighbors and fellow
gardeners we hope to see yo11 .
on May 5.
Last chance for tobacco
grants - May I, 2001 is the
deadline for Farm Income
Improvement -Foundation
grants on tobacco production
equipment. Call or stop by the
office for an application.
aennifor L. Bymes is Gallia
County's Extension a~ent fqr
agriculture and narural resourres,
0/rio Stare Ut1iversiry.)

• DiversifY. Most employers mance regularly can direcd'y
offer several choices for invest- affect the balance of your saV,ing your 401 (k) contributions. ings at retirement. Learn tb
For example, you may be able expect and accept market flu cto allocate your contributions tuations. You may want to
among bonds and stocks. The make adjusmtents to reflect
closer you get to retirement, major market. or lifestyle
the less risk you should take ·changes.
(Mark Snlitlr is all i11vestment
and the more you .should consider fixed income investments. rxemtive witlr Smitlr Partners at
;.. Monitor your investments Adi!t!St !trc. i11 its Gallip&lt;•fis 11jfice.)
regularly. Monitoring perfor-

across leaves in the first year. is at its northern climatic zone
Later tree growth is half as so don't look for it much furgreat in continuing years with ther north of our region.
leaves only a foot or so in size.
(Hal Kneen is Meigs County's
It prefers well drained, fertile Extension agetrt for agriculture at1d
soil with ample sumrrier mois- . natr~ral reso11rces, Olrio State Uniture and shelter from strong versity.)
winds. The Ohio River Valley

One Stop Shop
For Tanning
Beds!

: Simpson signs with URG Redmen, 81

Sunday, April 29, 2001;

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleaeant, WV

applicator.
Thus, it is recommended
that applicators always foUow
the bbel and wear long sleeves
and protective eye and head
wear during the application
process.
In the daylight hours, caterpillars are out of their nests,
feeding on tree leaves. Thus,
daytime sprays could be made
to the tree foliage, trunk and
limbs to target exposed caterpillars. This approach wiU also
protect the foliage from any
caterpillars that are not eliminated in the spraying.
Active until June, the eastern tent caterpillar is very
destructive and can completely defoliate small trees. Since
most of the damage is done

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l'l'l

Libra
boar
slashed
further
COU.,JMBUS . (AP) The budget for the State
Library Board, slashed by
one-third in Gov. Bob Taft's
$45 billion two-year budget proposal, faces further
cuts in the House Republicans' version of the spending plan.
· House Democrats will
attempt to restore some of
the aid in amendments they
are preparing to offer Tuesday, the deadline imposed
by House Finallce Com.,mittee •Chairman John
Carey, a Wellston Republican, for recommending the
spending plan for passage
by the full House.
To help meet that deadline, the committee held a
rare Sunday hearing on the
bill. It heard testimony
from advocates for battered
women who oppose the
elimination of the Women's
Policy and Research Comjllission, which majority
Republicans have proposed
as a way of saving $521,000
over two years.
Republican lawmakers
are reviewing spending by
all agencies as they ·try to
:~fund a S1.4 billion in,crea:oe
~ in ,~p~~ding on primary
,sc:,c,on~ry. scho.ols.
·The statt! must respond
by June · 15 to an · Ohio
Supreme Court ruling that
the way it funds schools is
unconstitl'tional, primary
because its reliance on local
property taxes creates disparities 'among Ohio's 612
public school disn:icts.

."!Ia

Attomey
gets Bar

distinction
POMEROY -Linda R. Warner of Pomeroy won
district honors from the Ohio State &amp;r Foundation
as this year's recipient of the Award for Community
Service by Attorneys 4D and Under.
She is a member of the Ohio
State Bar Association District 17,
which encompasses Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Morgan, Noble
and Washington counties.
Warner is an attorney with Litde, Sheets &amp; Warner and was
r:tominated by Foundation Fellow
and Hocking County Municipal
Court Judge Richard Wallar.
Warner regularly lectures to various schools, civic and small business groups on legal topics such as the Constitution,
estate planning, the criminal law system and the practice of law generally.
For year.;, Warner haS been active on the local boatd
for the American Heart Association, org;rnizing walk-.
ing teams and rai•ing funds for the association's annual fund-raiser. As a member of the Micro-Enterprises
Loan Committee, she and other profesSionals help
disadvantaged persons ·initiate small businesses
through training and start-up loans.
She has served on the Veteran's Memorial Hospital
Home Health Board, Mei~ County Board of Mental Retatdation and Developmental Disabilities, Meigs
County Community • Improvement Corporation,
Chamber of Commetce, and for the past 10 years she
has been a member of the Citizen's Advisory Committee for SEPTA- Center (Southeastern Probation
Th!atment Aitem'ative 'E:enkr) in Nelsonville.
Recently, warn~r was appointed an Ohio Departl'ltnt ofTransportation Cltb!t!IB':A:dvi!il~­
tei, which met to address issues raised by the members of the public opposing the new U.S. 33 corridor
between Athens and Darwin.
·

JUNIOR/HIGH SCHOOL SCHOLARS - Southern High School and Junior High School students shown
here were recognized Thursday evening for academic ac,hievement. They are, from left, front row, Bethany
Amberger, Codi Davis, Sarah Hawley, Ratl Sayre, Ashton Brown, Heather Jones and John Bentz; second
row, Rachel Marshall, Travanna Moore, Lori Sayre, Amy Wilson, Crystal Cottrill, Mariam EIDabaja, Brandon Smith and Tom Theiss; third row,. Emily Stivers, Matt Ash, Carolyn Bentz, Joe Cornell, Sheri Cummins, Tyler Little, Kim McDaniel and Joey Manuel; back row, Sarah Ball, Macyn Ervin, Jonathan Evans,
Chad Hubbard, Jessica Janey, Shauna Manuel, Kayla Pullins and Brenna Sisson.

Top students-recognized at banquet
BY JIM

FREEMAN

SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

RACINE -"We treasure your success because you will make the world a
better and brighter place for all."
"Treasure Your Success" was the
theme for Thursday's Southern Local .
Academic Award Banquet, and was also
the· message guest speaker Dr.· John
Costanzo liirected toward the 65 students ,recognized. Costanzo is superin- '
tendent of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center.
James Lawrence, Southern Local
superintendent, introduced Costanzo
following the invocation by the Rev.
Tom GiU and the Pledge of Allegiance
by th~ second-grade students.
Cosianzo is ho stranger ~o Southerq, .
He formerly taught science at, South. errt Junior 1l'Iigh and reading at Portland Elementary School. He also
served as elementary supervisor for the
Meigs County Board of Education .
before becoming Athens-Meigs ESC
superintendent.
· He passed along three rules for success: "Have faith in God, have faith in

PI•H ... Studanls, AJ

ELEMENTARY SCHOLARS - Southern Local elementary stu·
dents shown here were recognized Thursday at the Southern
Local Academic Awards Banqu~t;. They a!e, from }.!1!\t tr.ont row,
Dakota libboden, Dalton lrnbq(/'en, Ratey Patterson, Katelynn
Smith, Eric Buuard, Scott Gilbride, Jonathan Powell, Cyle Rees
and Lynz~e Tucker; second row, Victoria Freeman, Breanna Taylor, Catherine Woods, Bryan Harris, Chris Holter, Brittany Meldau, Merrl Collins, Alex Hawley and Emma Hunter; third row,
Chelsea Pape, Samantha Patterson, Jaime Warner, Ratle Pat·
terson, Whitney Riffle Stephen Shouldls, Morgan Brown, Lind·
sey Buuard and Heather Cundiff; fourth row, Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah EIDabaja, Bethany Vance, Mallory Hill, Jacob Hunter,
Allie Rees and Ashlee Teaford. (Jim Freeman photos)

Proni royalty

Nbfthstar, V-8, Leather, CD Playw, Zln $lock- low ~a.t

Meigs' Flower Festival
kickS off big season ·

tion."

Fill the sprayer tank with
pbin water. Run the sprayer,
inspect it for leaks and make
sure all hoses and seals function
correctly. Calculate the flow
rate of spray using your tractor
speed and nozzle type at a
given pre5sure.
·
Application rates can then be
changed based on tractor
speed, pump pressure and
changing nozzle type. Copies
of Edzal's "Boom Sprayer Calibration," which provides a
step-by-step description of
spray rig calibration and needed calibration formulas, are
available ·from the extension
office.
Inconsistencies in spray
application may be due to several reasons. Check the spray
nozzles. If old and worn out,
buy new nozzles. Check for
nozzles which are clogged up
with old spray material.
Clean out nozzles and spray
tanks using recammended ·
cleaning agents. Recommended cleaning materials can beobtained from the extensi01i
office, ask for "Oeaning Field
Sprayers to Avoid Crop Injury,"
a Missouri .University guide.
Check the aligrtment of the
nozzles.
FoUow chemic:U label recommendations for mixing
chemicals. Note specifications
as to water pH, type of material the spray tank should be
composed of and the amount
of time tank mixes may be
stored in spray tank before
spra)'lng.
Make sure that you have .
properly identified the pest so
that the appropriate chemical
has been selected. Remember
that some chemicals need constant agitation to keep them in
solution.

Monday

BY CHARLENE

HOEFLICH

SENTINEL NEWS STIIFF

FESTIVAL QUEEN - Mia Bass was crowned 2001 Flower Festival Queen In ceremonies held Saturday noon. She was crowned
by last year's queen early Crow. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

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Sentinel
,,
2S•dl--12 ......

Calendar
Classifleds

Comics
Edjtorja!s
Objtuarjes

Details, A2

Lotteries
OHIO

Pick :s: 8-2-8; Pldl4: 5·2·~

,...l.altll:
ICicMr:

J-15-22-27-31-32

1+7~1·5

W.VA.

DillY :S: 3-4-0 o.ly 4: 1-6-5-7

RACINE Meigs County
kicked off the 2001 festival season
Saturday with the Racine Area
Community Organization's eighth
annual Plower ..Festival.
Sunny skies and comfortable
temperatures contributed to the
success of the event·, which included a parade through downtown.
Featured in the parade were the
festivah'tueen candidates riding on
open convertibles, the Soucpern

High School marching band, seventh-grade cheerleaders, a few
floats, fire and emergency vehicles
from Racine and Syracuse, the
D.A.R."E. car, antique tractors·, a
couple of 'motorcycles and two
walking politicians, Ohio Sen.
Mike Shoemaker and U.S. Rep.Ted
Strickland.
First place in the float judging
with a wagon filled with fern and
flowers, birdhouses and other gar-

Kristen Chevalier was named prom queen and
Jason Warner prom king at Eastern High School's
annual junlor;senior prom on Saturday night. The
theme for the event was • Hanging by .a Moment."
(Brian J. Reed photo)

.PIHH
... Fatlv•l. AJ ·
I .

CRAZY HATKatie Dalley,
daughter of
Jennl Dalley,
Reedsville,
enjoys Saturday's festlvl·
ties while wearIng her "crazy
hat;• a fun
head piece created by members of
ACCESS Head
Start.

Annual Family Fun Fest
receives large turnout
BY ToNY M. lEAcH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS - "Something for everyone" was the main
idea for the third annual .family Fun
Fest Saturday at Eastern Elementary
School near Tuppers Plains .
Despite a momentary power out-

age, which occurred after a tractor
trailer snapped power lines while
turning around in the school's parking lot, more thi!n 1,000 individuals
turned out for the event, which
co mbines
both education · and
•

Pluse ••· F•mlly, A:J

Holzer Health Hotline

5255
If you have health queslions or concerns, call the Holzer Health Ho~ine .
and speak to a specially train~ Holzer Medical Cenler R.N.

6 am

2

••1, 7 clap a week

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.
\

Check with your physician about medlcation concerns.

'

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