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Page~

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The Daily Sentinel

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BY 1HE •ssocwm PllfSS
Todd G~ is doing jiJS(
fine 6lling in Cor the New York
Yankees. Now the Boston
Red SoX need a replacement
cat.c:her, too.
pson Varitek homeml in the
second inning of Boston's 8-1
victory over Detroit on Thurscby night, then broke his right
elbow while making a sliding
catch of a foul ball in the sevend!.
Varitek avoided injury bst
Monday night in a 7-6 loss to .
the Yankees when he made a
catch on the top step of the
New York dugout and
grabbed a railing to avoid

friday. fq

eight innings, and Greene
doubled twice and drove in
three TUns.
Grt'ene, who hit a three-run
homer in his Yankees' debut
Wednesday night, came back
with three more bi3.
Clemens (7 - 1) earned his
267th victory, moving ahead
of Hall of Famers Bob Feller
and Eppa R.ruy for 30th place
on the career list.
" He's a gre2t pitcher, so he
makes my job easjer;' said
Greene, who wore a "RocketMan" T-shirt after dte game.
"It was a pleasant surprise. I
never worked with him, but it
was nice:•

Blue Jays 7,
Devil lblys 1

falling.

He overcame a slow start
offensively and batted .304 in
Shannon Stewart hit a twoMay, when he became the first
catcher in team history to hit run single in a three-run
three homers in one game.
eighth inning, lifting Toronto
The Red Sox said more tests over visiting Tampa Bay.
would be done Friday, and it's
After the Blue Jays scored
not known how long Varitek on an error by third baseman
will be sidelined. Boston's Aubrey Huff. Esteban Yan
backup catcher is Scott Hatte- relieved Travis Phelps (0-1)
berg, who's batting .172 in 58 and gave up the single to
at-bats.
Stewart, capping Toronto's
Carl Everett returned to the comeback from a 5-1 deficit.
Boston lineup and drove in
White Sax 5,
five runs. He sat out a day after
Royals 1
playing all 18 innings and
Mark Buehrle stretched his
striking out four times in scoreless streak to 24 2-3
Tuesday night's 4-3 Boston innings, allowing two hits in
victory.
eight shutout innings as
Everett hit a three-run dou- Chicago won at Kansas City.
ble in the second and an RBI the ninth win in 11 games for
triple in the founh against Vic- the White Sox.
tor Santos (1-2). He singled in
Magglio Ordonez was 4another run in the two-run for-4 with two doubles and
seventh.
went 9-for-13 in the threeTim Wakefield (4-0) took game series.
his regular turn in the rotation
Kansas City has lost five of
despite having pitched the six, dropping to 21-38, its
final inning and getting the worst record after 59 games.
victory in the game that ended Chad Durbin (3-5) gave up
at 12:58 a.m. Wednesday. In three runs and eight hits in six
Thursday's game, he allowed mmngs.
one run on four hits in six .
6,
innings.
4
New York stayed one game
behind the Red Sox in the AL
Pinch-hitter
Orlando
Palmeiro
keyed
a
five-run
East with its shutout o f Bal ti- . h . .
·th
~ore at Yankee Stadium.
suet mmng WI a two-ru1\
smgle,
and Troy Glaus homeR oger Clemenss trUck ou t
de h Anh '
10 and allowed three hits in · re •Or ost
a e1m.

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10 innings
San Diego at San Francioco, 3:35p.m.

SPOilS

Meigs man has
driving ambition

Lakers even

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Scott Schoeneweis (6-3)
won his third straight start,
allowing three runs and six
hits in 7 1-3 innings. He hit
four batters, rying a team
record and becoming the 23rd
major league pitchc;r since
1900 to hit four batters in one
game.
Oakland staner Barry Zito
(3-6) carried a two-hitter and
a 3,.0 lead into the sixth before
the Angels scored five times to
take the lead for good.

NATIONAL
LEAGUE
Atlanta is playing well for
the first time this year, winning a season-high six straight
and closing within four games
. of first-place Philadelphia in
the NL East..
"We ·won. We're happy for
it. And now we have to go and
face the American League,"
Braves starter Odalis Perez said

Thursday night after Atlanta
beat Montreal 4-3 in 11
innings.
Quilvio Veras broke a 2-all
tie in the 11th with a two-run
double offScott Strickland (03).
At Montreal, Jason Marquis
(1-0) gave up a game-tying
homer to Vladimir Guerrero
in the ninth, C!&gt;5ting Perez a
win.

PldNS 10, Ghats 1

At San Francisco, Barry
Bonds hit his 32nd homer but
·San Diego stopped an eightgame losing streak.
Bo~ds' 451-foot homer in
the seventh inning against
Brian Lawrence was the
longest ever at Pacific Bell
Park.
Bonds, who has 526 career
homers, has 32 in the Gian3'
first 60 games. Mark McGWire
hit 32 in the Cardinals' first 69
games in 1998, when he hit a
·
record 70.

Mels 6, PhUIIIs 5

with a double in the eighth :it
Wrigley Field, then scored t~ .
winning run on Rond~D
White's single in the 1Oth ~ff
Mike Timlin (2-3).
:
Chicago, which has :won 1~
straight games at Wrigley Fie)~
and 15of16. overaU,hasa~
game division lead ~~
largest · since the end of *e
1989 season.
:;

Shane Reynolds no-hit
Colorado
through
five
innings, and Jeff Bagwell's
two-run homer in the first
held up.
In a rare pitching duel at
Coors Field, Reynolds (6-4)
allowed seven hits in 7 2-3
innings, including a pinchhomer by Brooks Kieschnick
in the eighth. ·
Rookie Shawn Chacon (33) had a career-high 13 strike~
outs, giving up two runs and
five hits in eight innings.

Steve Finley homered, doU:.
bled and drove in three runs :it
Phoenix.
.:
Junior Spivey, who ha~'t
had a major league at-bat
before Thursday, was 2-for-~
with a home run, had tWp
RBis and three runs for Ari;zona. Erubiel Durazo hit .p.
three-run homer for the Di.;\~
mondbacks.
:'&gt;

Aslros 2, Rockies 1

Cubs 4. Clrdlnals :5

D-bldls 13,1Jod&amp;vs'

.McVeigh
~set to Clie
·Monday

BY IIRtu J. REED
TIMES-SENTINEl STAFF

POMEROY
An
advanced computer system
designed to provide real estate
data, exacting three-dimensional images, and other
information about Meigs
County real estate will be a
valuable resource for the public and local agencies, the
county engineer said.
Last month, county commissioners approved the
spending of $218,000 in Prevention, Retention and Contingency f!,nds through the
Ohio Department of•Job and
Family Services to purchase
the Geographic Information
System, a complex computer
system which will use a hightech digital orcho-rectified
photograph of Meigs County
which can be "zoomed in" on
particular parcels of real
•estate, and ' allow searches

.

BY Doua R•esm
CNHI NEWS SERVICE

S

honly after 7 a.m.
Monday, justice will
be served for many
Oldahomans.
: That's the time Timothy
.@mes McVeigh, the man
!r&lt;POnsible for the April 19,
1.995 bombing of the Alfred P.
Murrah federal building in
~ldahoma City, is schednled
to be executed.
·~ One hundred sixty-eight
people died as a result of the
~mbing. Hundreds of others
1&amp;-ere iqjured.
;..: Mcv..ioh, 33 •W ll! convicted
-:r
~:~··· coutt
·'·~ '• o'f~. ,etg
., · ht
m•.. ....
tcuo:J;ll
· counts \&gt;(first degree' munier,
conspiracy to use a weapon of
mass destruction and use of a
weapon of mass destruction.
Martin Cash, a former benefits counselor with the
Department of Veteran's
Affairs, said "he was convicted
of killing eight federal
employees, but there were
1'60 others who died as well."
: Nineteen children were
among the 168 killed in the
bombing. In a recendy published biography McVeigh
caUed the children's deaths
·:collateral damage."

Marlins 5, Pirates 1\

.··,

Sammy Sosa tied the game

Projed seen as
development tool
for community

•

.

· Kevin Millar hit a three-nip.
homer off Josias Manzanill!&gt;
(1 -2) .in a four-run eighth at
Florida.
;.

Brand New 2001 Chevy
S.Serles Pickup

• Rear Sjloller, CD System
• TI;t &amp; Cruiea

• Hera are some of the key
moments In ~me thtll have

Brand New 2002 CheVy
Trailblazer 4 Door 4x4

led [t) the scheduled exeeutiOn Of Timothy Mc\'e~Cn :

128'950*

1111
. : April 11 -

11:02 ..... ;.
4,800-potjnd fUel and ferUIIZ·
er bomb rips through the
nine-story Alfred P.. Murrah
flldeoal bultdlrc In downtown
Oklahoma City. 168 people,
lncludln&amp; 19 children, die as
a·result Of the eJqlloslon.

,; New 4200 1-8 Poww
•11" Alum. Whelll,
• CD Sptem, TIU

• Vortec 2200 Powered
• AMIFM Stereo System
• Nicely Equipped!

.

'

~

!OUr'•

==~=~~:~~S~alyers,
who was In the Journal Record building at the time of the
explosion, talks to Diane Leonard Feb. 19 prior to the dedication of the Oklahoma City
National Memorial Museum. (CNHI News Service photo by Bill Carter)

2090 Buick LeSabre

2000 Buick Century
Custom Sedan

Custom Sedan

2000 Old1moblle
Brav1da 4 Door AWD

2001 Chevy Blazer
LT 4 Door4x4

•

...,

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WI'LlM1tiRI'

llll't It ltMI ... 1 tHt urf'"

·~

west VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Pontlaci ·~lck, 0

I

Comics
pear Abby
Edjtorjals
Obituaries

CJ
M

A6

01

,........ ~Al

BY KEVIN KEUY

jnsert

' Stocks

plea bargain, Fortier pleads
guilty to a firearms charge ..
OCt. 20 - Prosecutors
announce they are [t) seek
the death penalty against
McVeigh and Nichols.
Nov. 21 - Defense attorneys argue the jury pool has
been tainted by Intense
media coverage and ask that
the trial be moved out of
Oklahoma.

TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

p2-7

B!-8

him on later dropped.
Auc. 2 - · Jennifer
Mc\'el&amp;h, sister of accused
bomber Timothy McVeigh,
testifies before a federal
grand jury.
Ale. a - Mcveigh friend
Michael Fortier and his w~e
testily before a federal grand
Jury.
Ale. 10 - McVeigh and
Nicholl are Indicted by the
grand jury on murder and coo;
&amp;piracy chargee. As part of a

POMEROY - During an
emergency situatio n, it is
extremely crucial that information be accessed and
retrieved in a timely fashion.
Minutes or eve n seconds
could be the difference
between life or death.
To help battle time constraints when faced with a
disaster or major emergency,
the Meigs County Emergency Management Agency
has invested in a vehicl e capable of transmitting information while on the scene,
The mobile communications vehicle, or Joint Mobile
Command Post, is a converted 198 1 school bus that was
purchased for $1,500 from
Rex Shennified of Edwin

.

c 2001 Ohio vaHoy PUbllshl"' eo.

GALLIPOLIS +- Ed Rusch's first job
came at 13 when he became an all' around helper at a central Ohio airport .
Now the new manager of GalliaMeigs Regional Airport; he brings to his
job a lifelong love of aviation and hopes
of expanding the airport's. role for its
users.
Rusch assumed duties last week and is

formulating a plan for the facility's oper~
ation .
"I don't know what its potential is yet,
but I think it can be made to grow," said
Rusch, a licensed pilot for 32 years.
"That's.the premise I came in under. I've
been familiar with airports like this for
many years and I like this airport."
Rusch said Gallia-Meigs, opened in
1967, has potential . in several areas,
including an increase in flight instruction

.......,.......
GZ) OldsmObile

I

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••
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IT'S MOBILJ; - Bob Byer,
Meigs County Emergency Management Agency director, ~
municates inside the EMA's
new Joint. Mobile Command
Post. (Tony Leach photo)
Davis Bus Sales. The bus has
been equipped with a vast
array of hi-tech communication equipment which proves

PleaH -Mobile, AI

and more mechanical repair trammg.
Since his main interest lies in fucing classic;: aircraft, he hopes some of those skills
can be made available to local flyers .
"i'm going to formulate a plan," he
said, "The idea of doing mechanical
work and restoration is hampered by
insurance, which is astronomical, but I
have every intention of doing it some-

Pluse ... Airport. AI

Saturday, June 16, 200 l ~ 0 ani - 2 pm

And

Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center
Free sc~nings, free heallh information, door prizes ond refreshments. Discover the Holzer DifferenCe..

•

'

For information, contact HMC Community Health and Wellness
Direclor Bonnie Mcfarland, RN, BSN, at (740) 446·1679
,/ .

:{

·,

....
·•

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Airport's new manager exploring potential

Low: ·!IOI
Details, A3

· Sports

Plllle . . . •sri.M

1 7th Annual Community
Health ·and Wellness Fair

• Taxn, Taga, Tille Fees extra. Aeball lndudeclln 181e price of new ve111c1s filled where applicable. ''On apjliO'i8d cracl!. On aelec!e&lt;l models. No! responllble lor Jypogripltlcal emn.
Prletl Good JtQ 11111 Through J111t 101!1.
.
CHIYROLit .

CITY BOMBING TIMELINE

Hlp: lis

.

through a database to find
specific real estate information about the parcels.
The digital onho-recti6ed
photo will be the most
expensive pan of the system
- costing about S180,000,
engineer Gene Triplett. The
photo is an overlapping aerial
view of the county which can
be viewed from a wide perspective or as close as jus.t · a
few feet at a time. ·
"If someone wanted to
search the county for all real
estate east of U.S. Route 33,
with a nearby water main and
three-phase power, located on
a main highway, those parameters or any others could be
used in a query and the GIS
could locate all of the properties which apply,"Triplett said.
"At first, the system will
provide pr~marily re3I estate .
data, but it can be used to
provide almost any other kind
of information, as well."
For example, soil maps, census data, watershed information, and house number and
address information relating

BY TONY M. WCH
TI~ES.SENTINEL STAFF

6enttnel

; Classifjeds
2000 Chevy
Lumlns Sedan

.

Converted bus
aids relief efforts

Ap1ll 11 - 1AI:a2 8.mc · Nichols and hiS brother
Mcveigh Ia arrested on a James are held as material
flreatma charge lifter a witnesses to the bombing.
~ne trafnc stop near Billings, .
MIIY 4 - Rescue and
Okla.
recovery efforts are s[t)pped.
Ap11121- Federal author·
M8y 10- Terry Nichols Is
ltles arrest MciJtlgh In coo; fonnally ch..-god In the bombnectlon with the1bomblng only lng.
,
hours before he was !o make
M8y ~ - The Mtxrah
ball on the firearms charge,
Bulld!ng Is bJ1)ugl1t down. The
Ap1ll 21 - After leamlrc . bodies of thl'lie bombing Ylopollce are looking for him, time remain In the rubble.
Terry Nichols aurrendefs to 'James Nichols 11 released
authOrl~es In Herington, Kan. · from )all . Chatges against

: ltftnd·
•'

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Vul u,, Nn II

real estate maps

.-

Tsuyoshi Shinjo hit a
tiebreaking leadoff homer in
the ninth off Jose Mesa (1-1)
as visiting New York rallied
fiom a 5-3 deficit in the seventh.
New York, swept at home by
Philadelphia from May 28-30,
took two of three in its last
series before the start of inter' league play.

s1.l5

high tech with

Families still coping with Okla. City bombing, AI

Y-

•

Meigs going

-.

811,150* q4,850* 110,9
• Automatic, Air Contlllonlng

EPO T

I McVeigh's death would break federal streak, A7

OKL.AHOM
Brand New 2001 Ponllac
Grind Am SE Coupe Or Sedan

C.lllipoli\ • Pnnwroy • Pt. l•lt•.a\.mt • hmt• I 0. JOIJ 1

CNHI SP CIAL

PlesH ... McVellft. A2

Brand New 2001 C!levy
Cavalier Coupe

mt

,.

Ohin Valley Publi .. hinJ.: Cu .

•

•

tmts

·''

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C&amp;J Productions
ready to rock

•

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Ar1zDnll at~ City, 8:CI5 p.m.
San Diogo (Jolllio 3-5) · - ( 4-2). 10:05 p.m.

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NBA Firials

C!Dgoc.QIIIQ-icOaO-SaK. 1:~·

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a..,_ Q.Cio 4, St. Louis 1
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govt'fiiD'IeRt is encroaching
on roo~ ~e'slives.

me

KHe's lbe real c.ollarenl."
Cash said. "The emphalis
should be on lbe vil:cims .-1
They'~ lbe ones

. The fedenl riCF of
Branch Davidian compound
near Waco, Texas in 1993
mnged McVeigh. . Especially
when the siege ended with
the deaths of · 80 Branch
Davidians, including 22 chil-

who~hurt.•

dren.

McVeigh. who is scheduled
ro die by lerhal injection at
the federal penitentiary at
Terre Haure, Ind., is 10 be lbe
lint fedenl prisoner executed

In a recendy published
biognpby based on houn of
inteniews, McVeigh said he
bombed the Murr.ah Building
aa a ~ of striking back at
the pe10ment for the Waco
disaste'r.
The Oldahoma City bombing happened on the second
anniversary of the Branch

survnon.

in38~.

His a110rney1 tried a lasl;minute appeal afier the FBI
disclosed it bad 110( II.U11ed
over sever.al thousans pages of
documents in the case. That
got McVeigh a delay liom the
original eXI!CUtion date but a

ty Courthouse when the

'

'Rieba•lfnl

spokesperson ILJ. Thompson.
"The director of the National

IIYPMILSitE

0

-0

ca' ClaiD.

~

cr• •

· 10 go home to Norman;• Hull

..
.

.

said. "I didn't lmow what was
just like any other Wednesday, going on, but while I was
Cash recalled.
going south on the highw:wy I
"I w.as standing in liont of saw what seemed co be hunmy desk and had just turned dreds of rescue vehicles rushto my right," he said."AU of a ing north."
sudden my vision went red
Hull's wife, Terry, had been
and I thought 'Oh, my God. at Univenity Hospital for
I'm having a stroke."'
routine tests. She lmew someBut it wasn't a stroke. thing awful had happened as
Instead, Cash was feeling the . she left the building. Dozens
impact of the 4,800-pound of gurneys wete lined up outfuel and fertilizer bomb going side of the hospital door, waitoff in liont of the building.
ing for the victims who wete
It w.as 9:02 a.m.
sure to come.
Explosives experts bter said
While stunned and injured
the blast wave from the victims stumbled from the
explosion moved at a speed of ruins of the building police
7,000 miles an hour. The blast cordoned. off the area. Firewas felt in Chandler, 45 miles fighters and ambubnce workaway.
ers rushed to help the many
Nine stories on the nint.h iiJiured and trapped people.
floor of the federal building
"Our
ambulance
was
collapsed. The heat liom the almost stripped of supplies in
blast welded · parked can . about 15 minutes," emer- ·
together.
.gency medical technician Jana
"The next thing I knew I Knox recalled. "I'd finish
was lying about 20 feet liom working on one person, then
whete I had been standing;' ·t urn around and find 20 more
Cash said.
who needed help:'
Cash suffered numerous
Paramedic Mike McElrriy
injuries from the explosion. "I · estimated the number of
lost my left eye and had a injured
people
walking
quarter-sized hole in mY around at 300. "It numbed
skull," he said. "My left wrist you," he said.
w.as shattered and I had glass
In the days following the
cuts all over me. . . . There initial explosion fire!jghters
were probably 400 people &amp;om across Oklahoma and
injured in the building."
liom eight other states joined
Many others died.
the rescue and recovery
"We had 32 full-time efforts.
employees at the federal credThose efforts were not
it union;· said Ray Stroud, without danger.
who now lives in Denver. "I
While victims trapped in
was lucky enough that I had the rubble screamed for help
to be in Aorida on business officials forced rescue workers
that day. If I hadn't been .•. :• to evacuate the area. There
His voice broke. "Eighteen were reports of a second
people worked for me at the bomb, bigger than the first.
credit union. They aU died. I
The reports were inacculoat.my entire section!' ·
rate, but other dangers still
AI si~ wailed and diut existed.
and smoke filled the air,
Rebecca Anderson, a 37&amp;tunned and injured survivon year-old nurse who had
began making their way liom dashed to the scene in the
the building.
minutes after the bomb went
Cash, Paul Heath and otT was hit by a falling piece of
George Dinker climbed from concrete. She died four days
the ruins of the building's fifth later.
floor. ·
"You could actually feel the
"It was kind of a case of the building swayinsseveral days
blind leading the blind,'' Cash after the explosion,'' Henryetsaid. "Paul had found a way ta Fire Chief Raymond
out. I couldn't see, so he was Eldridge said. "It wasn't a
leading me and I was leadins good feeling to think that
George." .
whole thing could come
down on you."

'lhllomber

AI smoke and dult bilfowed
into the sky above Oklahoma

Those who know him say
City rescue worken rushed · Timothy James McVeigh is a
toward the center of the city. polite and intelligent man but
Attorney Richard Hull had he does not like the federal
been at the Oklahoma Coun- government and feels the

6l!nbap -Gtfmn 6enttnel
Reader Services
Corrtctlon Polley
O.rllllll.....,. bo ol lllltlol.lt to IN
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pMrlbtute@&lt;lln.............

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Elttlrtd u second clan 111111111 matter at

. Mtlllltr:
"""""'' Oil~
The Alloclated PreM. 1nd tb• Oltlo

l'ollomc..

children killed in tire bombing aa NcoUateral damage" and
to bombing survivon and the
rebtives of victims as "the
woe is me crowd.,
MeVeiglt is spending the
6nal days of his life confined
23 hou~ a day in a 6-by-10foot cell. He reads newspaper
eli~. writes !etten, has a
few telephone calls and greets
a handful of visicon.
Novelist Gore Vidal is
among those who has
exchanged
!etten
with
McVeigh. "He is very inteUigent,"Vidal has said.

Mb£11111

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u

As the day for the execution
·draws nearer, officials at the
federal penitentiary in Thrre
Haute are bracing : for the
onslaught of an estimated
1,400 reporters, as well as for
a large influx of fXpected
death penalty supporters and
opponents.
Harley Lappin, warden of
the federal prison, said the
people coming into town
"want to build a city" on the
grounds outside of the peni!

-·

0:

schools canceling dwes and ·graduations.
Up and down Ohio's rural Route 62,
students and parents mode a prqcession
through makeshift inocubtion centen
set up ·at area schools on Friday. They
arrived grouped by alphabet or by cbss
for the shots recommended by state
health officials co stave off the outbreak.
But even the dispensing of the shots
dido 't ease all fears.
,
"I think they're giving us aU the disease," C assandra said after she JNas inoculated at a makeshift clinic set up at
Salem High School. "Somebody's goin g
to end up getting it."
lieder was one of about four dozen
students and parents who lined up ea rl y
Friday outside the school for the start of

*

O il.a•. ~••
...
~- clear, warmer on Sunday

health officials said Friday she does not have a confirmed case.
Dr. Paul ManJS, medical director of the Lorain cOunty GenerSimr PI.Cioudr Cloudy T- Snow
.. .
al Health District, and Kenneth Pearce, the county's health commissioner, visited the campus Friday mostly to dispel .concerns
about a possible Legionnaires' outbreak at the private, hberal arts
coUege with about 2,900 students.
. Oberlin College spokesman Scott Wargo said Friday night the
BY lHE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Monday. .. A chance of school has no comment and is leaving the matter in the hands of
·
.. The National Weather Ser- showers and thunderstorms county health officials.
He
did
~onfinn,
however,
that
a
woman
who is an administra: vice says a few more clouds are during the day, othe~ partforecast for Sunday aa a high ly cloudy. High in the mid 80s. tive assistant and became ill asked to be tested for the disease.
--\n:essure system moves off co
Tuesday. .. Mostly dear. Low
the .southeast.
in the lower 60s and high in
' , Highs Sunday will be in the the mid 80s.
COLUMBUS (AP) -A slow loss of cabin pressure and elec'mid80s. .
Wednesday... Mostly clear,
Sunrise Sunday will be at warmer :md more humid. Low trical problems forced a United Airlines flight from Philadelphia
;6:02a.m.
in the mid 60s and high in the . to Chie2go to make an unscheduled landing Friday night, an airport spokeswoman said.
Weather forec:ast:
upper 80s.
Sunday...Mosdy sunny. High
Thursday... Partly cloudy, · United flight 1273 landed safely at 6:05 p.m. and none of the
in the mid 80s. Southwest very warm and hunlid. A 101 people on board were hurt, said Angie Neal, spokeswoman at
~wind 5 to 10 mph.
chance of afternoon and Port Columbus International Airport.
She did not know the cause of the pbne's problems, but said the
· Sunday
night... Partly evening showers and thundercloudy. Low near 60.
storms. Low in the mid 60s Boeing 737 .was being checked by United mechanics at the airport.
Extended forecast:
and high in the upper 80s.
..
The airline was trying to find other flights for the passengers,
Neal said.
·

-

Members

of organized
militias also say they plan 10
steer ~ liom the fedenl
prison.
"I really don't think: you'D
see much activity aroun4
Terre Haute," said Martin
Liiutedt, a former senarorial
candidate 6um Mislouri who
has founded two militia
groups. "You might t - a
few government guys running around pretending ro be ·
militia members and trying 10
get thing~ stirred up. but I
doubt you '11 see any true
militia memben there.
''There might be some
leaderless resistance activity,
but the people the government is afiaid of are going to
be keeping a really low pro·file."
Paul Bresson, a spokesperson for the Federal Bu~u of
Investigation, said, "Most of
the militias don't seem to
want co associate themselves
with MeVeigh in any way."
Still, even if no one shows
up at the prison but the
expected reporters, Terre
Haute's 59,600 popubtion is
going to have a temporary
boom.
.,

Plane inakes forced landing

Polin~

.

0

h:.

.

.

lwlfNI' I

KY.

to

Terre Haute braces

-.0

· I Celt

W. VA.

••11•

-

I .

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

·" HIV victim charged

Brian Cox

Candace TIIUs

Becky Ashburn
Hilda Pearson

Pam Wt5t
Donnie fry

Jennie Canter
Betty Oliver
Roberta Wilt
USa Durst

Amanda Taylor

~ Dewees ·
Nancy Manley .:

' Anria Bareswllt
, Angela Stewart
Shirley Riffle
J

333 Page Street, Middleport, ()hlo 457~

992-6472.

'

"'

th~ sate's first mass inoculation against

a

meningitis-related outbreak. The state is
paying for the $55-per-dose v.occine.
Surrounding counties donated nurses
and needles.
The vaccine is up to 90 percent effective against four strai ns of the bacteria
Neisseria meningitidis, including . tl1e
one involved in th e outbreak, said D r.
Nancy R osenstein of the federal Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention.
An early mornin g rush built long lines
at the schools but the process, driven
largely by volunteer labor, was orderly. ·
At th e high 'chool, the post- in oculati on waiting area - which norn131l)'
serves as the school cafctena, qUickly
fill ed with about 200 people as custodians grabbed extra chaors.

Gays feel more welcome
CINCINNATI (AP) -The resu mption last year of an annua l
gay pride parade brought residen ts out on their front lawns, 'ome
giving a thumbs-up as the procession passed.
As this year's gay pride parade and festival ;~ pp roachcs. the momher of vendors committed to participate in the event Jnd the
number ofhits to the parade's Interne! site has more than doubled
from last year.
'
In Cincinnati, the only U.S. city with a charter amendment that
forbids even lobbying city officials for enactment Of laws based on·
sexual orientation, some gays are encouraged by the increased
interest in the event scheduled Sunday.
·

THANK YOU!
"A l!ipedal t.banks to the Instructors and staff
al GalllpoUs Caner Collego for their support in
btlpinl me obtain my Associates Degree in

Mfllkal

omce Admlnistraliun.

The lrainlng

bas enabled me lo pin omploymenl in my field,
tlos:e &amp;o home. The small dass sizrs, flexible
scbedulllll witlt morning or evening classes
helped make II possible. Thank.• GCC!"

Lori Williams
S«retary

FACTS I New Alternatives
GaUipolls I Jacksoil

Fatal shooting yields lawsuit

®

DAYTON (AP) -The grandmother of a black man shot and
killed by a white policeman filed a federal civil rights lawsuit
against the officer and the city Friday.
The lawsuit was filed in federal court by Mary .Craver, who said
the shooting of Cleophis Craver of Dayton violated his constitutional right to be free liom excessive force.
SprlDg Valley PlaZa . • Gallipolis
Officer,MitcheU Koogler fatally shot the 20-year-old on May 7
WEISITE
outside an apartment complex on the city's west side. Police said
wwlt.pRipolllcarHrcolltgo.com
Enutll
Koogler had been responding to a disturbance in the parking lot,
a•COII•IIIpolllc•reorcollogo.com
where several people were firing guns.
l...o~i:;:i~~
Koogler told investigators he conlionted Craver, who walked .
toward him, raised a large handgun and pointed it at the officer. . - - - - - - - . . . . . , - - - - - - - - - - - Police officials have said foUr
witnesses verified Koogler's
account.

6allipQlis
C;u•eet-Co[te~fe
·
'-'are~""To Home"

aboU t

. No l.elionnalres' disease found

Digital

OBERLIN (AP) -An Oberlin College employee has received
medical test results indicating possible Legionnaires' dise2se, but

lawyers ask Supreme Court
to throw out Scott sentence
: COLUMBUS (AP) - . Thursday set Scott's latest exe--l,awyers for condemned killer cution date after the 6th U.S.
Jay D. Scott asked the Ohio Circuit ' Court ·of Appeals
~upreme Court Friday to refused to grant another delay
throw out Scott's death sen- and sent the case back to U.S.
~ence and delay his execution, District Court in Cleveland.
scheduled for next Thursday.
That gave the high court the
: Scott's lawyers claimed two chance to set the new date.
previous delays of his execuScott's lawyers say he is ·
tion, including one that came schizophrenic and that killing a
, .. about 10 minutes before he mentally ill person is cruel and
; was to be killed, constituted unusual punishment under the
: cru'el and unusual punishment Eighth Amendment of the
: under the Constitution.
U.S. Constitution. The Ohio
The Supreme Court on · Supreme Court ruled May 11

that Scott, 48, was competent
to face executiqn.
The motion filed Friday
adds that !he cour~ should consider the 17 years Scott has
spent on death row and the
execution delays granted April
17 and May 15.
Both times, he was taken
from death row in Mansfield to
the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lu,casviUe,
offered a final meal and had
visits.with fatnily and his spiritual adviser.

'

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·

family
fmembers
~ found dead
I

I

!

: STRONGSVILLE {AP) ; A suspended lawyer who was
: described as mentally unstable
: in a state evaluation killed his
; wife and children, then him; self, police said.
; The family of four was
; found shot to death iri their
: 'kome Friday morning. 1
···: Police Chief Charles W. Goss
::Wd Daniel Todt, 45, apparently
' shot his 48-year-old wife,
~ Rebecca,
and
children
't&gt;ominique, 16, and Nathaniel, ..
' t3, before killing himsel£ The
: ~hief said a revolver was found
: dose to Todt's qody.
~ The husband and wife were
•
-:.' both attorneys, Dominique
bJad j11st finished 11th grade
:"lind Nathaniel had just finished
: eighth grade.

•'

'

assault

DAYTON (AP)' -A man accused of knowingly passing the
HIV virus to a mentally handicapped woman while the two were
J&gt;atients in a hospital psychiatric ward has been charged with felonious assault.
; NicholaS Williams, 21, of Dayton, w;15 arrested Friday and was
· l;&gt;eing held at. the Montgomery County jail. Police said that on
two occasions last July he bad sex with an 18-year-old woman
':\Vho has the mental capacity of an 8- co tO-year-old.
The woman has since tested positive for the virus that causes
, AIDS. said police Detective Carol Johnson.
Williams, who had been arrested previously for solicitllfg prostitution, acknowledged that he has known he is HIV-positive for
) couple of years,Johioon said.

are

fOS'I'MAS1'Eill Send lddrt• ~1011110 The
Siindly·nmu Scntl!lel, 82$ Th_ltd Ave.,
O.lllpolll,l)hlo 45631.

-

ed.

At McVeigh's request, Vidal
is to be among the five wit2001
•
nesses to watch the execution
...._ 28 - The ~ Bureau of
for the condemned man. The
Prisons notifies Mc\IBWIIn wrill~ of~a
IC!teOOied Mar 16 _ . , . , date,
reporren il'ld 10 survivon and
MINII 2:1.- A ~I judge rules
rebtives of bombing victims
Nlcl\ols can be J)IOSeCIJU!(I for murcler
are also scheduled
w.itch.
on. .....
- Cllarles2S - fOrmer Mcllelgh attorAn estimated 300 other surney
says he Is wllll~ to tes1lfy In a trtpl
vivon and rebtives have indiaplnst Nlcllols If he is subpoenaed.
.cated they Wished co view
Apll 30- Afederal judge refused
to alow Nichols to oonllnue ~s.
McVeigh's execution via a
:10 - Justice Departments
dosed-circuit broadcast.
rums O'o'8l' thousands ot FBI bombllllt
Many othen say they have
lrMdptlon doaments to Mcllei&amp;h's
no desire to do so.
~'
1
Mey 11 - A11alney General, Jolin
"I'm not interested in
Ashcroft delays McVe~Stt's executiOn
watching the execution," said
30days.
I
.
MQ
31
..-.
Mc""lgh
attorneys
Daniel Hollingsworth. "For
appeal for additional stay
me it's just not .necessary to
.Iuiie I - Federal ' judge rejects
see him die." ·
Victims and survivon say
request to delay execution.
'
.Iuiie
7
Federal
appeals
coun.
Me
Veigh's
execution
is
not"
HoUing~worth's sister, 45rejects request for stay. Mclleigh tells
year-old Diane Althouse; was going to bring any type of
attoneys to slop ftll~ appeals.
killed in the bombing.
closure to the families of
.lune11- Timothy MeW! scheduled to die In Terre Haute, lt.i., federal
"I'm not against the death those killed and injured by
prison at 7 a.m. CDT.
penalty by any means, but it's the bomb, but they
ready
not necessary for McVeigh to to try to put the past behind
actually die to get this behind them .
me," Hollingsworth said.~'The
"This might dose a chapfact that McVeigh got the ter;' Cash said. "When he dies
death penalty is OK, but if they close that chapter. Closthey .could h~ve locked him ing that chapter is as close to
up somewhere for the rest of closure as there is."
his life where he didn't have
"The very,· very few who
Nancy ~M.D.
access to the media, that came out with no serious
Boalfl Cflrlilled In Psychially .
injuries still have .those memwould have been OK too.
~ &amp; ChllcMdole~eant Psychiatry
"I just want him to go ories."
JoAnne Vnlbel, Plr.D.
"I'll just be glad when this
away::
lndtpetidtlnt PtychoiO(J/11 &amp;
paychofO(IICfl
, ••,.,
is
all
over,"
Templin
said.
"Not
Cash
echoed
CALL
Hollingsworth's sentiment. "I that the execution is soing to
N•l, MIW.UIW
7&lt;10 441 tiH
flleyelt/IIIIIC Soda/ ~r I
had the opportUnity to go (to make it any better. It's not.
the closed circuit showing) as But at least he'D never be able
Porlflfonnatlon • Cetflad Animal ANI•tH TMt-.p/at
did aU of those on the district to talk about (the bombinil)
·
attorney's .list, but I decided again."
(&gt;FI'ICE llOURll UV AI'I'C'IIN"IMI!Nf 1
Monday·.Thul"'day9am- 5pm, Friday 91111'• 3pm
not to. I really don't want to
Suitll,..lrtli 9Qm - Noon
give this jerk any more notorlety.''
Carolyn Templin, whose
son-ln~law Scott Williams was
killed by the bomb, said she
was afraid seeing McVeigh
would anger her. "I think him
crawlins up on a table and
getting a needle in his arm is
just too easy,'' she said. "I feel
Overbrook Center would like
the following nursing
like seeing it would only
assistants for their hard work, .
and for gMng the :
make me angry and I don't
resld~ts of Overbrook Center the out$tandlng care they deserve.
want to end up getting mad ·
·
'
all over again." ·
·
Jo Ann Smith
Amber Lyons · · ·
Lauren Reiss
Usa Hayes
•.
"I just wish this guy wouldJo Ann freemen Charlotte Grant ·
Marilee McDade R Ina I&lt;Im
~
n't get any more publicity,"
Cash said. "Of course, ·we .
Terry Ashburn Jane Madden
johnny BIIUngs T:ya
know that's not going to hapMargaret Blake Sharon Wickersham Ruby Fowler
Kerl Caldwell
pen. But I would prefer he·
June Marshall
Stephanie Hatdler Shanon jacks
jennifer Fife
was executed quiedy without
Alan Riffle
Betty Stanley
Cncty White
Joanna Nibert
any more notoriety."

w

SALEM - The shot that Cassandr.!
Lieder received in her arm Friday made
her grimace as if she were biting a
lemon. But it also should protect her and
thousands of otlien liom a meningitis-relared outbreak that has killed two teens
and sickened a third in northeast Ohio
in the past two weeks .
C•ssandr.a, 15, W2S one of about 5,800
area high school students and staff who
rolled up their sleeves and put on brave
faces as they. were inoculated against a
deadly bacteria. The outbreak has spread
fear and confusion throughout th is bluecollar area about 40 miles southeast of
C leveland with thousands standing in
line for preve ntive antibiotics and

In 'Ill...- I •

• - dlllll
Nlelx*'
d\11 .. Njlcf., -........
Plftlllr

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Inoculation against meningitis beginS
ASSOC1ATED PRESS WfVitR

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Sm01&amp;Jit .... 10

M.·---·--·
••-MDu•=·---·
..........
_...... ..
-··----...Ill!_,,

PageA3

Ohio weather

,._, .

bomb exploded. It smaahed

April 19, 1995, started out

'-

111.28e1

tentiuy;
"We doa't -n.. .. ecc 10
haw maay people to 10 THaub!,f f said Mm- Martin,
arnnnberoltheCbinao
chapter ol me C•mpaign 10
End tbe Dealh Penalty. "We
don't t - a chapter in Indi- ...... u.s. ......... lld&amp;d
MIDdiU..-11~1 ..... .....
ana, so we plan 10 do most of .............
, ... bJ ......
our demomtations at local . . . . CDI . . . . OILIIIGI&amp;
....... • - Nldlalo 11\d ..,, Wt
chapten."
Amnesty lnremational is
another group that is· wging
its memben to hold local
demonstrations. "I lmow we
don't haw any pWis for- any
major rallies at Terre Ha~"
said Amnesty International

.

- ~ ~L11e• .. jtadintl

.
Davidian compound disasrer. Program ro Abolish me Death Cllr -.,art.
A fonner soldier who w.JS Penalty, Ajamu Bar.ab, ia cllllh Plftlllrll ...............
the gbu liom the courthouse
. . . . . - ....... IJIIIswindowJ and forced an ev.ac- awarded the Bronze Saar for expected to go theR, but Gdaiad far lit:' ...... .nd NlchaiL
his actions in the GulfWar, other than that we . don't
federal judge rejected the ualion of the building.
expect much intenWional .
appeal, clearing .the ~ fo£
"I couldn't get lw:k to my McVeigh has expressed no
Monday.''ss •execution.
office because the downtown remone for ltilling 168 peo- participation at the prison
area w.as blocked. so I decided ple. lnsread, he refers co the itself."

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West
.West VIrginia weather
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BY Awl FRAM

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Galllpolle, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ol'llo
Point PI anent, W.YL

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shllwn 1Aw11
lllanllglng EciHor
Dlene Kay Hill
Conbolllt

larry Boyer
Advertielng Manager
l.&lt;~tltn to th~

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Inc.

NATIONAL VIEWS

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Be·fair
KILPATRICK'S VIEW

OUR READERS'
VIEWS

Explains budget
Dear Editor:
I had the opportunity to attend a county commissioners'
meeting on T hursday, June 7. While at the meeting I was able to
sit in on a budget conm1ittee meeting with the conunissioners
and learned some interesting facts.
The budget cmmnission is made up of Larry Betz, Gallia
Cuu nry auditor and chairman, Steve McGhee, treasurer and
Brent Sa1mdcrs, prosecutor. According to Mr. Betz, the county is
curre ntly $274,000 in the red for this year.
T he various departments and offices continue to spend and if
this continues, the counry will end the year with a negative balance. Ohio law doesn't pennit a local government to end the year
wi th a negative balance.
A meeting was scheduled for next Thursday, June 14, 2001
with the corrunissioners, the budget commission and all counry
dcpatrments receiving fundingthrough the county general fund.
The meeting is scheduled to start at 2 p.m.
I phm to be at the meeting and would urge all citizens that can
to also attend to see what and why we are in such a financial disaster,.in my. opinion.
Johnnie Ruaaell
Bidwell

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tbday i' Sunday, June 10, the l61st day of200l.There are
204 days left in the yea r.
Today\ Hi ghli ght in History:
On Jun e I 1) , I IJ35, Alcohol ics Anonymous was founded in
Akron , Ohio.
On this date :
In I 80 I, the nort h Afri can state ofTripoli declared war on
the Uni ted Swes.

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,WASHINGTON - Back in his
perch as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Sen. Robert Byrd
says he has no qualms about becoming a
target of Republicans in this year's budget fight.
"Already I hear the distant thunder of
political cannonry, and it's being leveled
of course at the new majority and the
appropriatorS in particular," he said Friday in an interview .witb The Associated
Press.
The 83-year-old West Virginia Democrat spoke just days after regaining the
chairmanship that he lost when Republicans took over the Senate in I 995.
Democrats recaptured the chamber's

Martin decision as dumb as tour's denial
In considering the Supreme Court's
opinion in the cise of Casey Martin,
three thoughts come to mind. First, the
case never should have been left to the
lawyers. Second, the court decided the
case wrongly. Filll\fiy, Justice John Paul
Stevens' misguided opinion will not
have the dire consequences that some
pessimists predict.
The facts are not disputed. Martin
suffers from a degenerative condition
that has terribly affected his right leg.
Rick Reilly, columnist for Sports lllustrated • ••;d
- that Maru'n's shin bone looks
"like a b aseball ba t somebodY had w· ed
to hit a thousand rocks." The pain is both
Cona·nual and 1"ntense. Beyond any question, Martin is disabled as defined by the
ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act).
As a professional golfer, Martin aspires
to compete at the highest levels of the
game, the PGA Tour and the NIKE
Tour. Under the . rules' of these events,
playeri may not use golf carts in the final
ror unds · Martin a· pplied "'or a Wlll·"er
• · The
powers-that-be denied his request, and
·
the lawsuit followed.
It was a dUmb denial. It has cost the
sponsors a bundle in legal fees and court
costs, and it has resulted in a Supreme
Court opinion exp:mdin~ the scope of
th.e AD~ to. new dimensions of uncertam. appl~caaon . AII, thiS co~d have be~n
avo1ded 1f th~ ~ur s execunve committee had exhibited the conunon sense
God ~ve. a cinder block. ~here is no
~orde of di~abled golfers seeking exem~bon. The mk of tournament upheaval IS
a scarecrow.
Stevens' opinion of May 29 was a
masterpiece of bad construction. The
jurist seized upon a line in Title III of
the act that specifically numbers "golf

The act conceivably may require the
PGA to make some reasonable accommodations for disabled players. I doubt
that it does, for the players are neither
employees nor spectators, bm the law
does not require the PGA to accept
changes that would "fundamentally
·
alter" a contest. The requirement that all
finalists in a PGA event walk the course
is surely "fundamental"' to the game. It
should not require seven justices of the
COLUMNIST
Supreme Court to conclude that (I) _a
uniform test of stamina is a fundamental
courses" among places of public accom- aspect of top tournament gol£, and (2)
modation. Fair enough. If a golf course the PGA's cart rule is a rule within the
welcomes any player who can pay a PGA's authority to impose on its own
,
events. On this not quite cosmic. quesgreens fee. the course is public. Gohers
may walk or ride as they wish. They can tion, described by dissenting Justice
play double mulligans and four-foot Antonin Scalia as "an incredibly difficult
ginunes, and who's to holler foul?
and incredibly silly question;• the court
Casey Martin's suit presented an majority looked not wise but ridiculous.
entirely different set of facts. The best
What of the consequences? Justice
analogy comes fiom the theater, in the Scalia, who delights in this sort of thing,
manifest distinction between actors on supposed that a Little League batter, suf, fering fiom attention deficit disorder,
stage and customers in the stalls. Disabled spectators are entitled to all the. might sue successfully for a right to four
benefits of the ADA. The owner of the strikes instead of three. I doubt it, but I
theater must make reasonable efforts to ne~er believed as a boy that the Ameriaccommodate their needs.
can League Yy"ould adopt the designated
Professional actors, like professional · hitter rule. You never know. The Casey
golfers, are not on stage to enjoy the Martin opinion might be a vehicle for a
,play. They are on stage to make a living. female placekicker to 'sue the WashingTo pursue the analogy, any aspiring actor ton Redskins· for sexual discrimination.
may audition for a part in a Broadway She might even· win, a good thing.
production and any qualified golfer who . · It would take a heart of stone not to
pays a fee ,;,ay enter a PGA event. Some sympathize with Casey Martin .
talented .hackers may make the cut at Metaphorically he plays every shot every
Pebble Beach, and some little-known day from a sand trap. But it is possible to
extra may win a speaking role on stage. be happy for his waiver without con~
But it would be patently absurd to insist cloning a piece of jurisprudence as inept
that someone with an uncontrollable as a monster hook or an awesome slice.
stanuner has a right under the ADA t'o
aames]. Kilpatrick is a columnih for Uniplay Rosencrantz or Guildenstern.
versal Press Syndicate.)
'

James

Kilpatrick

.

'HARDBALL'

Will Bush be master of the one-ring circus?:
8v CH• MATIMIWI
This ciry is a one-ring circus these
days. From the press seats high in the Big
Top, we watch as a lone lion raises his
paw in angry defiance at a lone tamer.
The lion is Sen. John McCain. The
.figure fending him off with his chair is
President Bush.
The match of man and feline carries
daunting stakes.
.
Will the ex-POW fiom Arizona succeed in his intimidation, forcing Bush to
sign campaign finance reform, a patient's
bill of rights and a closing of the gunshow loophole?
Or will the narrowly elected president
prove himself master of the ring, whipping McCain back into his cage? ·
As a D.C. political spectacle, this test of
. · wits between these bitter campaign
rivals is easily more exciting and
arguably more vital than the emerging
contest between Bush and the new Senate Majoriry Leader. South Dakota
.
Democrat Tom D~chle.
Why? Because a Bush veto of a bill
carrying McCain's seal of approval
would be far more costly than a veto of

DROP US ALINE.

one sporting only Daschle's partisan
label.
This goes 'for HMO reform and gun
control, but especially campaign finan ce
reform. It explains why McCain thinks
Bush will do everything he can to protect himself from the lose-lose predicament of having to either sign or veto a
bill that has teeth in it.
"He sent a dear message to the other
Republicans:' McCain tojd me in an
interview this week. "You're going to
have to take care of it before it comes to
my desk."
Bush wants Republicatfs in the House
leadership to kill the bill. Failing that, he
wants them to wound it so badly that
what survives the House-Senate conference carries the name of "reform" but
leaves the political s.ewets rampaging
with money from the big corporations
to the politicians'TV ad buyers.
John McCain is the only force in
America zealous enough to prevent that.
At this point in his career, qmpaign
reform looms as a life's work.There is no
abandoning the fight, 'no substitute for
victory. If Bush wins this battle, McCain

. . Third ...... Qolllpalll, OhiD

740-14eoaMa

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loses the war. The man who bombed
·him to merciless defeat in last year,'s
South Carolina primary will have killed
him twice.
McCain cannot let that happen., He
may have accepted Bush's invite to dinner this past Tuesday. H e Ii1ay have said
all kinds of nice things in public afterward about how the president is "growing in office," that he's "a smart man." ;
I don 't believe this palsy-walsy for :a
•
second. They are lion and tamer.
Only one can command the ring; ;
Harry Truman once said that a leader
is a person who gets other people to do
what th~y do!'l't want to do "and like it!"
If McCain gets Bush to sign a campaign reform bill with a smile on his
face, or Bush gets M cCain to accept
defeat with a smile on his, we will know
the winner and we will know the loser.

(Chris Matthews, a nationally syndicated columnist for the San Frands(o
Chronicle, is host of "Hardball" o,n
CNBC and MSNBC cable channels.
The 1999 edition of "Hardball" Wf!S
published by Touchstone Books.)

111 Court St, "-101'· Ohio
7oiC).IIII2-21SS

•

iloo Main St, Point Plualnt W.Va.
304-e'TI-1333
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maJonry this week
after Sen. James Jeffords of Vermont len
the GOP.
· From 1989 to 1995,
Byrd chaired the committee that oversees
the spending of onethird of the federal
budget. He spent the
previous 12 yea~s as
the Senate Democratic
leader, half in the majority.
Some House Republicans have said
privately that the silver lining of the
Democratic Senate takeover is that as this
year's spending fight heats up, it will be
easier to target Byrd as the culprit than it
would have been to blame a GOP-con-

Sentendng delay sought

MANNINGS,Va. (AP)- Less than two months after a hiker
BLUEFIELD (AP) - Federal prosecutors have asked a judge
found the skeleton remains of a missing West Virginia teen near to delay the sentencing of a former First National Bank of Keythe Virginia state line, the remains of a second body were found stone official who is expected to testift against two other former bank officials.
.
Friday in Loudoun County.
Sgt. Deke Walker of the West Virginia State Police said the
Michael Graham, 51, of Bluefield is scheduled to be. sen_,-emains coUld be those of a missing Jefferson County mident. tenced July 2 on bank fraud and money laundering charges. The
The remains were found at about 9 a.m. Friday by recruits U.S. Attorney's Office wants U.S. District Judge David Faber to
with the Northern Virginia Criminal Justice Academy, said Lt. · delay Graham's sentencing until after the Oct. 2 trial of Terry
Bob Brenda! of the Loudoun County Sheriff's Office. The Lee Church and Billie Jeat:~ Cherry.
recruits were scouring the wooded area, looking. for clues from
Church and Cherry were both charged in a 25-count indict. the recent shooting of a Virginia man, who lived near where the ment with bank embezzlement and mail fraud . Cherry also
faces 16 counts of money laundering.
remains Were found, Brenda! said.
Brenda! said a skull and other bones were found. He declined
The women are accused of conspiring to loot the bank
· to release the gender or approximate age of the deceased and accounts of Keystone's former president, the late J. Knox
would not say whether clothing was found or whether there McConnell, after his death in 1997. Cherry, 77, was the former
:were signs of foul play.
chairwoman of the board of directors, while Church, 48. was
senior executive vice president and chief operating officer.

Illness linked to sandwiches ·
· CLARKSBURG (AP)- Lab results implicate .turkey sand• wiches as the cause of a stomach ailment at a Harrison Coun.··ry eiemeiltary school where 94 children and staff members fell
-: ill last month.
. An ill food handler infected with the Norwalk virus is
'-,believed to have contaminated the sandwiches served at lunch
; 'May I at Wilsonburg Elementary School, according to a report
' release(! Friday by the state Bureau for Public Health.
A complete school· inspection was conducted by local sani' ' tarians, including dye testing of the sewer system and sampling
· •of water fountains. the report said•.
' The kitchen also was inspected and nothing suspicious Was
· ·found, the report said.
• .

Applied card plans expansid'n
HUNTINGTON (AP) - Applied Card Systems, which
:processes Visa and MasterCard accounts, plans to expand its
West Virginia operation and also double the number of people
-it employs in Kentudry.
The company hopes to double its total employment nation- wide from 4,000 to 8,000 before the end of 2002, Rocco
, Abessinio, president ofApplied Card, said Friday.
· Jim Purgerson, president of the Ashland Alliance, said he has
had some talks with Abessinio and other Applied Card .officials
) bout expanding the operations in the former Ashland Inc. and

.

E-MAIL YOUR ANNOUNCEMEN1S 10:

news@mydailytribune.com
news@mydailyregister.com
news@mydailysentinel.com

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.

Police seize poker machines
FAIRMONT (AP) -. · Fairmont police have seized eight
video poker machines and arrested two people in a raid at an
unlicensed bar.
Police raided Boboos at about I 1:30 p.m. Thursday. The bar
does not have a liquor license or a business license, Police Chief
Ted Olfutt said Friday. .
John Richard Shaffer, 32, of Fairmont and Roger Allen Vansickle, 43, of Shinnston were charged with illegally operating a
pool room, a misdemeanor.

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"As far as finger-pointing is concerned, that op-ed column didn't set a
very good example," said Byrd, who in a
43-year Senate career has proven to be a
formidable foe with whom to tangle.

BENWOOD (AP) - The prospect of subjecting residents to
the daily sounds and smells of 900 racing greyhounds doesn't
appeal to city police Chief Frank Longwell.
The Wheeling Downs Racetrack and Gaming Center co nfirmed Thursday it plans to buy 39.9 acres in the Marshall
Counrv Industrial Park tn huild a kennel. The property straddles the McMechen-Benwood line.
Longwell is opposed to the plan because, " they wouldn't pay
any business and occupation taxes because they aren't manufacturing anything on the site.That means that all we would get is
$3,600 a year in property tax."
·
Also, transporting the dogs to and .from the track would create excessive trafljc, and "I don 't think the residents will be very
happy about having 900 dogs barking all night or with the smell
of feces and urine," Longwell said.

NEMOURS (AP) - A Mercer Counry man who allegedly
beat a horse with a hammer has been charged with cruelry to
an animal.
The horse was found Sunday lying near a fence at the bottom of a IS-foot embankment in Nemours, Mercer County. Its
skull had been crushed in several places. A veterinarian who was
called to the scene euthanized the animal. said Mercer Counry
Sheriff"s Depury Perry Richmond.
.
Keith Roberts of Nemours wa~ arrested Thursday night and
released on bond. '
· Neighbors had contacted the Mercer County Humane Society and the Mercer County Sheriff's Department at I 0 p.m.
Sunday after they saw .a man beat the horse, Richmond said.

expenses. ·
Retirement Boani
:.J CHARLESTON (AP) He
also
wants
the
Legislature
Earlier this year, Wise said he
·Gov. Bob Wise on Friday called
the West Virginia Legislature to come up with more money . supported the goals of
into a special session to begin for higher education so that HB2852, but the title did not
Sunday to appropriate money . the state's colleges and univer- reflect all of its conten'ts, which
for flood relief and higher edu- sities can obtain matching made the bill constitutionally
research grants.
defective.
cation.
The bill would create a
Wise asked in his proclamaThe special legislative session
will be held in conjunction tion that lawmakers consider · board to study the feasibility of
with interim committee meet- clarifying and extending salary offering retired teachers cash
ings scheduled Sunday through · adjustments and addresslegisla- · paymems for unused sick leave
tion relating to the appoint- instead of providing medical
Thesday at the state Capitol.
In his proclamation, Wise ment of magistrate court benefits.
Retired teachers now have
called on lawmakers to supple- deputy clerks.
The
governor
did
not
spedthe
option of trading unused
; ment appropriations to the
· governor's .contingency fund, ft what salaries he wants law- sick leave for medical coverage.
The practice started about 20
: the Department of Military makers to address.
Wise also called on lawmak- years ago and is cited as one of
Affairs and Public S:lfety, the
Department of Administration ers to correct a technical deli- the reasons for risi!lg costs in
the . Public Employees ,Insur~d the Department of Agri- ciency in the title ofa bill relat, eulture to pay flood related ing to the Consolidated Public ance Agency.

. CHARLESTON (AP) . The West Virginia Library
1
Commission's executive direc-tor resigned Friday at a comffiission. meeting in Wheeling.
· David Price will leave his
post at the end ofJuly after less
than four years on the job to
·take a job in.the private sector,
' he said in a prepared state' 1,11ent.
.
Price was a bureaucratic,
~tterttive-to-details leader who
.stressed that he was bound by
. laws and regulations not of his
making.
·
: . He followed the flamboyant
Fred Glazer.

years."

City opposes kennel move

Horse beating ch•rge filed

.Wise calls special session on flooding

.library panel
head resigns

trolled Senate. Byrd has long been a
fierce and successful advocate of steering
government dollars to his home state.
"I never worry about targets," Byrd
said. "I don't use that word in my lexicon."
He also .took issue with comments by
White House budget chief Mitc hell
Daniels. In a Washington Post op-ed article this week, Daniels wrote that the
Democratic Senate takeover "threatens
... the first orderly, responsible budget
and appropriations process in many

Ashland Petroleum buildings at Russell. Ky.
Offutt said Shaffer owns the bar and Vansickle is a bartender
Applied Card has 750 employees in Russell, said Ron Dyke, there.
.
Huntington's human resources manager.

Body could be missing man

(Sopranos' works at being
equal opportunity offender
• Evansville (Ind.) Courier &amp;: Press, on "The Sopranos":
R ep. Marge Roukema, R - N.J., has prepared a congressional
resolution deno un cing HBO's hit series about the mob,"The
Sopranos," for "unfair stereotyping" of Italian-Americans.
Why stop there?
The se ries stereotypes Russian-American mobsters as corrupt, violent and crazy. And surely not all MercedeJ-Benz saleswomen are sexually kinky hysterics.The show is none too kind
to O rthodox Jewish motel operators. And mixed-race college
students. And Rutgers University dropouts. And plainclothes
police. And fast-food workers. And small businessmen who
gambl e. And black community leaders. And producers of pork
products. And Catholic high school administrators.
Ami how about the whole state of New· Jersey, which suffers from every negative stereotype fiom swamps to sprawl?
The only part of the state rreated as scenic is the Pine Barrens,
and that was only because the Italian-American mobsters were
trying w bury a Russian immigrant mobster there in winter.
When it comes to negative images "The Sopranos" is · an
equal-opportun;ty stereotyper. Perhaps Roukema should recast
her resolution to single out those the show doesn't rreat badly.
It would only take a sentence. Maybe less.
..
• The Times-Picayune, New Orlean1, on demise of XFL:
They may be part of a demographic that advertisers sali;vate
over. But statistiCians see them as potential rioters and vandals.
Insurance actuaries view them as speed demons. Hollywood
·targets them for movies like "Dude, Where's My Car?"
But 18- to 34-year-old men have gotten their revenge- at
least on NBC' and the World Wrestli.n g Federation, the
founders of the XFL. The quicJQ demise of the upstart football
league proves that the young men of America are far more discerning than sociery gives them credit for being....
In retrospect, it's hard to imagine that anyone would have
thought that a made-for-TV cross between football and pro
wrestling would be a viable business plan. But NBC and the
WW F clearly thought that young men would be taken in.
True, they're a relia\&gt;le audience for football and pro
wrestling alone. But othe~ than the age group and the sex of
the people who \vatch them most avidly, the two sports have
· little in common ....
It's rare that entertainment companies so nakedly reveal their
contempt for their intended audience. Fortunately, young men
saw right thropgh the bluster and the flashy colors - and
found better things to do.

5uftdar.June1~2001

Byrd doesn't mind being GOP target

"Sunclly, June 10

•

Chartee W. Govey ·
Publisher

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~ •llidcllpolt • 0 'II Dl•, Ohio • Paint PI

•

Steve Glllsple
..

GALLIPOLIS- ~Gillispie. 47. Gallipolis, died Saturday.
June 9, 2001 in Holzer Medical Center.
Arr.mgements will be announced by Willis Funenl Home.

~

from 6-8 p.m, mel at die church on Monday,Jum 11, 2001, one
hour prior to services.
In lieu of t1owen, contributions can be made to Rodney United Methodist Community Center, 661 I Sure Route 588, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Pallbearen will be Bob Gaylen, Lyle Gaylen, David Gaylen,
DWayne Gaylen, Larry Henry,Tre's Henry, Bill Swisher and Chad
Roberts.

•
•

how."
Gallia-M!Cigl. a 4,000-foot
runWay with several hanpn
and an operations office, is
home to 25 private aircraft,
but also serva as a haven for
business flyers coming to
work in the area.
AI,.ORI' IEHY'ICE - Galli&amp;"There'sa potential here for Meigs Regional Airport Manincreased use by commercial · aaer.Ed Rusch looked on ·as
travelers,"· Rusch said, noting Denny Meadows of Chesathe airport's use by nearby peake, w.va., fueled his selfGKN Sinter Metals. .
assembled Skybolt on Friday.
"We'~ here for those peo- Rusch was recently employed
pie," he said. "I understand to oversee the airport's operthat this airport is vital to atlons. (Kevin Kelly photo)
GKN."
Rusch has four pan-time
visiting Lake Erie islands. .
asaistants at the airport Rusch said he started m
Diana McCarley, Jason Cardaviation
at the counry airport
well, Chris Spradlin and Steve
Ebert - "flying enthusiasts near his hometown of
who have been invaluable in Delaware, supplying gas and
getting him settled into the doing other chores at 50 cents
an hour - "I thought that
manager's job.
An airport boosters dub has was big money then," he said
.
been organized · to lend fur- with a laugh.
The
airport
is
open
fiom 9
ther assistance, and has supplied some of the materials a.ni. until 5 p.m., but services
for the current ~furbishing of are provided if a flyer calls
ahead and plans a stop after
the operations office.
·
. Rusch came to Gallia- hours.
"A
sort
of
standani
proceMeigs after supervising an
overseas oil spectrometer dure is that if they call ahead,
operation for a subsidiary of. our services are available," ·
Texaco that took him to Rusch said.
The owner of a 1958 Piper
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, IndoneTriPacer, Rusch is offering
sia and Venezuela.
He's previously worked in plane rides for S10 per trip,.
freight hauling and for Port minimum of two passengers,
Clinton-based Island Airlines, under the banner of his own
a charter service for tourists company, Classic Aviation.

CIRCLEVILLE - Naomi F. Sines, 80, p ed zway Thursday.
June 7, 2001 at Pickawzy Manor in Cin:leville, where she l""ide&lt;l
Naomi had previously resided in Columbus and Gallipolis.
KNOXVILLE, Tenn.-. Jaclcie Lee Johnson, 52, Knoxville, died
.
S~e
was born September 23, 1920 in Mason County, WestVirThursday, June 7, 2001 at his residence.
He ~ a member of Masonic Berlin Lodge 895. He was also ~ ·
She was a member of the Ladies Auxiliary ofVFW Post No.
a veteran of the ViettWn War and the GulfWar.
He was preceded in death by his parenr:i., Grant and Freda John- 4464 and the Ladies Auxiiliary ofAmerican Legion Post No. 23.
She was preceded in death by her parents, John Franklin Vmson; and a sister, Linda Johnson.
Surviving are his wife of 24 years, Betty Johnson; a son, Sickle and Mary Flint VanSickle; a sister, Ruby Sheds; five brothChancey Johnson; a daughter, Amber Johnson; three brothen, ers, Isaac VanSickle, Charles VanSickle, Foster VanSickle, Henry
Terry, Larry and Johnny Johnson; a sister, Pat Hembree; and sev- VanSickle and Lee VanSickle; and three brothers and a sister in
infancy.
er:d nieces and nephews.
She is survived by her beloved husband of 53 years, James L
Services will be noon Monday in the Tennessee Veterans
Cemetery. The Wnily will receive .friends at We;zver Funeial "Lee" Sines of Circleville; a daughter, Patricia Patrick ofAshville;
a son, Rex A. Foster of Augusta, Georgia; two grandchildren,
Home, Knoxville, from 3-5 p.m. Sunday.
Robin R . Qohn) Hedrick of Ashville, and Shane A. Foster of
Columbus; two great-grandchildren, Lane Austin Hedrick and
fte5
Chance Garret Hedrick; three sisters, Magdaline (Fred) St. Clair
RACIN"En Irnfnamv..'ey'Mu" Jo nes.• 73, Racine, died Friday, June of Gallipolis, Marcenia Denny of Mason County, and Ernestine
8 • 200Tin·P
1
•t v:w vHosp1tal.
. Blake ofDebware, Ohio; two brothers, Marvin (Goldie)VanSickShe was the daughter of the late George Washington and le of Columbus; and John VanSickle of Columbus; many nieces
Bertha Gandee Jones, and was a homemaker.
and nephews; and very close sisters-in-law and brother-in-law,
She was also preceded in death by a daughter, Kimberly Lou Ernestine Dietz, and Caroll (Charles) Horn, all ofWesterville.
Jones;twosons,Aywan!CurtisJonesandJamesHarveyJones;and
Services will be 1 p.m. on Monday, June 11,2001 at O.R.
a grandson,RonaldV.Jones II.
Woodyard Company Chapel, 1346 South High Street,ColumSurviving are her husband, Aywanl C. Jones; two sons, Ronald bus, with Dr. William L. Snider officiating. Interm~t will be in
V. (Mary) Jones, and Roger Lee {Danette) Jones, both of Racine; Obetz cemetery. Friends may call at the. chapel on Sunday, june
four daughters, Patricia Ann McCoy of Newark, Wanda Sue 10,2001 from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
_j(Bob) Wood and Kay (Bill) Roberts, both of Racine, and Brenda
Joy Qack) Handley of Langsville; 23 grandchildren, 13 greatgrandchildren and seven stepgrandchildren; and two sisters, Mabej
{Wayne) Hatcher of rupley, WVa., and Violet Schoolcraft ofWalRUTLAND- June F. Stearns, 74, ofRudand, died Thursday.
ton,WVa.
Services will be 1 I a.m. Monday in Cremeens Funeral Home, June 7, 2001 at Arcadia Nursing center in Coolville.
Born March 31, 1927, in Fostoria, she was the daughter of
Racine, with the Rev. Larry Jones and Rusty Voiers officiating.
Burial will be in Shady Dale Cemetery; Harmony, WVa. Friends Mildred M. Serfoss Mergenthaler, and the late Charles Howard
Mergenthaler.
may call at the funer:d home from 2-4 and 7-9'p.m. Sunday.
She was a homemaker. She was also a member of St. John's
Lutheran Church on Pine Grove Road.
Along with her fat!Jer, she Was preceded in death by three
tant information."
BIDWELL - Dyrnple Louise Pasko, 73, Bidwell, died Friday, brothers-in-law, Delmon and Dale V. Stearns, and ~ Hill; and
The purchase was partially .
a sister-in-law, Ruth Stearns.
May.25, 2001 at Duke University Medical Center.
.
funded through a special pl'O'She is survived by he,r husband, Warren J. Stearns of Rutland;
In lieu of flowers, the family requests all donations be made in
jects
grant provided by the
fnNII Pllp AI
her name to Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center, DUMC two sons and daughters-in-law, Roger W. and Florence M.
Ohio EMA and FEMA. The
Stearns, and Charles J. and Chelcie Stearns, all of Rutland; a
3828, Durham, N.C. 2n1o.
brother, John Mergenthaler of Fostoria; a sister and brother-in- beneficial for commanders entire project was estitnated
law, Joan Ann and Victor Hoover ofTiffin; her mother, Mildred who are direcring a major to have cost $22,500, said
M. Mergenthaler of Fostoria; sever:d brothers-in-law and sisters- iJJcident within their jurisdic- . Byer, but through local volunteer help and donations,
in-law, Albert Stearns of Kansas, Delbert and Marguerite Stearns tion.
The vehicle's interior the bus was built and put into
of Pomeroy, Ester Stearns of Helena, Mildred Stearns ofWayne,
for
around
and Veronica Hill of Marshall, Arkansas; five grandchildren, Tim- includes two multi-channel operation
$12,000.
othy Stearns of Columbus, Albert and Nathan Stearns of Rut- UHF radios, one multi-chanThe unit's electrical system
land, and Marcus and Cinda Bratton, also ofRudand; and sever- nel VHF radio, one multiis
powered
by 10 40-amp batchannel marine band radiq,
RODNEY - Elva F. Roberts Holbrook, 85, of the Rodney .al nieces and nephews.
Services will be 2p.m. on Monday, June 11, 2001 at St.John's one multi-channel low band teries, which are good for a
Community, passed aWayThursday,June 7,2001 in Holzer MedLutheran Church on Pine Grove Road. Officiating will be Don- radio, a Davis weather station, 24-hour time span, and a
ical Center,following an accident and other .medical problems.
a GPS system, 10 "family 3.500-watt Honda generator.
ald Fritz.
She was born May 31,1916 in Rodney, to the late Earl R'6berts
Friends may call on Sunday, June 10, 2001 fiom 2-4 and 6-8 radios," a lap-top computer, A 6,500-watt Honda generaand Callie Catharine Mitchell Roberts.
an assortment· of county tor and several industrial
She lived most of her life in Rodney and was a member of p.m. at Fisher-Acree Funer:d Home in Pomeroy.
Memorial contributions may be made to Meig$ County IIJ.3ps, and a number of cellu- extension cords are also availRodney United Methodist Church, where she served as an offiable, depending on the severlar phones.
.
cer in many of the church's organizations. She was also a mem- Cooperative Parish, 311 Condor Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Bob Byer, Meigs County ity of the situation, he said.
ber of the former Rodney Grange.
To help illuminate the
Emergency
Management
During her working years, she was employed by Cotton's,
mobile
headquarters during
director and ·command post
Null's and Northup's Stores; and then worked for Gallipolis City
the digital photographs and director, said the unit is the night, a 1,000-watt outSchools before becoming the Postmaster of the Rodney Post
equipment.
designed to handle four side lighting system was
Office, from where she retired in 1982.
It will be a while before the . working personnel at the installed. Status boards were
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her
fnwnPIIpA1
system is operational.
same time and is . capable of added to keep officials and
husband, George Lee Holbrook, in 1950; a daughter, Katharine
"I see this as a 30-month delivering and receiving the press informed of tranEloise Holbrook; three brothers, John, Orin and Lor~n Roberts; to each of the· county's build- project:' Triplett said. "It will information through 12 func~ spiring events.
two sisters, Thelma Rees McClure and Irene Wise; and twO sons- ings could also be made .avail~ probably be early 2004 before tiona! work stations.
Byer said the mobile comin-law, Morgan Howard and Raymond GaylenJr.
able through the GIS.
it can be put into service.
"This mobile communica- munications vehicle can be
She leaves behind three children, Pat (Ray) Gaylen of Bealton,
The address information Because. we're using PRC tions vehicle will keep fire used by other emergency
~irginia, Dallas (Bethany) Holbrook of Kitts Hill, and Sharon could be helpful to agencjes funds for part of the cost, we departments, police depart- management agendes if a cri(Morgan) Howard of Rodney; two brothen, Robert Earl {Ruth) such as emergency medical ser- must have a contract for the ments, emergency personnel sis were to arise. The radios ·
-lRobens Jr. of Gallipolis, and Glenn (Giennamae) Roberts of Gal- vices, which could use the sys- digital ortho-rectified photos and county officials abreast of insMe the unit are prolipolis; two sisters, Mary (Eugene) Moore of Gallipolis, and tem to more easily locate rur:d in place by the end ofJune."
happenings ·during a major grammed for all frequencies
Sophia (Gordon) Swisher of Homosassa, Florida; six grandchil- addresses in the 'county.
Much of the data must be emergency," Byer
said. in areas surrounding Meigs
dren, Bob (Lynn) Gaylen, Lyle Qennifer) Gaylen and Donald
Using the· GIS in conjunc- gathered and entered into. the "Respo_nse
times
will County, including Washing{Tracey) Gaylen, all of Springfield, Thonia (Mike) Townsend, tion with a Global Positioning system, Triplett said, and four improve dramatically as will t!:&gt;n and Gallia counties, and
David Gaylen and Di..tnna (Larry) Henry ofBealton,Virginia; and System, ambulances could be staff members from the engi- the transmittance of impor- Wood and Mason counties in.
11 great-grandchildren, Kelly, Dwayne, Elizabeth, Michael, easily directed · to emergency neer's office will perform that
West Virginia.
Anthony, Kyle and Kaitilin Gaylen, Tre's and Cortney Henry, and 5cenes, Triplett said.
work at no additional cost to
Mike and Mark Townsend.
·
The GIS will be of particular the county.
Services will be 1 p.m. on Monday, June 11, 2001 at Rodney use to those businesses considOnce in place, the public will
COUPON
United Methodist Church, with Pastor Arland King officiating. ering a location in Meigs have access to the system, for
Burial will be in Mound Hill Cem~tery. Friends may call at County, and that is why PRC only the cost of reproduction
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeial Home on Sunday, June 10,2001 . funds will be used to purchase of documents.

Jadde Lee Johnson

PaftSJ •Mae• ·Jo

June .f. Steams

Dymple Louise Pasko

Mobile

Obituaries~

, WASHINGTON (AP)- Senate JJanoo ••• -tn- ing h- a
fisbt over a palimls' rigl1a plan. xc:wins the Bulb !dmP.fwo •i:Jil
1ofpushing tOr a weak law decigMd to pt&lt;*d J.eald. COIJ'I" .,• ..._
: In lbe Oemocrm' -sly llldio addres Sacn~ Sen. John
:Edw.vds, 0-N.C., said I'Mdem: Bush oeedl110 bleak his aJ1iance
:with big busines.
: 1oday. HMOs and insunnce (d•vania- aared dilliaendy
:dun just about any other businell or penon inAmcrif:a." Edward~
-said. "Unlike doctors, nunes and hulpitals, HMOI that mab:
deadly nojmkes cannot be held accouJII3Ne in a court offi"
The Republican biB .'MIIIId allow patie1111 110- health plans
when necessary medicalnmncnt is denied, but it limiD bnrin
to federal courtJ and caps damagn at $500,000. Supplllleti t:lf die
caps would bep insuren fi:om raising rata.

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At the Nlltlonal Center lor the Preaervatlon of llledlclnal
Herba and United Plant Severe In weatern Melga County,
Ohio. For more lnformetlon pleaae call
Cynthia 11t (740) 787·2080.
Rural Action, United Plant Saver• &amp; the Nlltlonal Center
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:Iargest

I line mnnlng out for prize

Bush conpatulates wlnneas

said.

HOUSTON {AP) - Drivm abandoned their can on dooded
freeways as torrential rain from the remnants of!~cal Sto~
Allison deluged southeast Texas and coastal LoUISW13, flooding
areas that had escaped the brunt of the stom1 when it swept ashore
earlier this week.
At least 200 people were MGU3~ from flooded homes Friday

I

•

NEW ORLEANS {AP) - .The wreckage of a sunkm World
War II German submarine has been discovered 5,000 teet below
die surface of the Gulf of Mexico, :md the find may rewrite a bit
of w.anime history. .
BP 3nd Shell Oil Co., which had been surveying the gulf floor
for an oil pipeline, announced the discovery Friday of the U-166,
which sank in 1942 after it destroyed an American ship.
''This is the find of a lifetime. It really is," said Robert Church.
a marine archaeologist with C.,CC Technologies, which identified
the wreckage in March. Video taken May.31 and June 1 con-

firmed the find, which lies about 45 miles fiom the mouth of the
Mississippi ruver.
Since 1942, an airplane was thought to have sunk the U-166.

E MAIL YOURANNOUNCEMENIS 10:

news@mydailybibune.com
news@mydailyrepter.com
news@mydailysentinel.cam

.

Court ovea tums price directive

L9oking for advice

on

401(k)

Dean.

. · Whelher)'OU're ciWIII!niJobe or entering retirement, your 40l(k)
distribution ~be th8 single largest and most critical smn of

Under th.e program. the state offered enroDees up to ·30 pen:.ent
dilcounts, then required pharmaceutical companies to make up
the difference..The initiative had been approved by the feder:d
govmunent.
.
.
.
the progr.un, which has been copied by several other ~·was
challenged in federal court by the trade group represennng the
pharmaceutical industry.

IIIOIII!)'you'lllaw ID 1111111888.

Tauzin concerned With federal
investigation of Firestone/Explorer

Plultclitii
Yoor&amp;llll

....

..... Of

...J WASHINGTON (AP) -

House Commerce Conunittee Chairman Billy Tauzin
told government safety officials be is concerned their
investigation into Firestone
ti~s is too limited to find the .
cause of failures that have been
blamed in at least 1?4 U.S. '
' deaths.
In a letter dated June 6,
:Tauzin told the National
·Highway Traffic
Safety
.Administration he is con:cerned that they are focusing
only on two tire models.
1
According to the letter,
., NHTSA officials told con: gressional investigat~n they
-:;ttre focusing on the Wilderness
·: AT P255/70R16 and the
•Wilderness AT P235175R15.
' Some of the later model made
at
:'~ those

___________________

.
. .

Bridgestone/Fireltone't plant
in Decatur, Ill.- were included in last summer's tire recall.
Ford Motor Co. announced
last month that it will replace
all .Firestone Wilderness AT
tires on itt vehicles because
they tend to .fall more often
than tires from other mallufacturen.
The announcement "may
make NHTSA's lnalyslt far
too litnited and of little current utility:' wrote Tauzin, RLa. ·
"In addition, the scope of
your investigation appears to
have always avoided one of the
key questions posed by last
year's controversy - whether
the problem with the Firestone tires ia solely a tire issue,
or whether it is a tire-vehicle
application issue," the letter

hlllilft

said.
Most of the 6.5 million tires
recalled by Bridgestone/Firestone and the 13 million being
replaced by Ford were sold liS
oriainal equipment on the
Explorer. Bridgestone/Firestonc claims the Explorer has a
defective design that caused
the sport utility vehicles to roll
over when the tires lost their
nads.
Last week, Bridgestone/
Firestone chief executive officer John Lampe met with
'Iransportation Secretary Norman Y. Mineta and asked that
NHrSA investigate the safety
of the Explorer.
The company paid for a
report that claimed the world's
best-selling SUV has a steering
problem that contributed to
the rollovers.

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Field Bupervlaor
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111 'M1111'

t6f. Usa Yehl, Administrator, would like to announce the

•

:Civil rights panel
•

appointment of Kerry Shepherd to Director of Nurses.
•

would like to announce the hiring of Sandra Rayburn,
OTR for Oc.cupatlonal Therapy.

•

;• wants meeting

WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S. Commission on
Civil Rights wants to meet
with Attorney Gener:d John
Ashcroft to ·discuss Florida
elections and is asking the Ju5tice Department to investigate
what the commission believes
were widespread violations of
the Voting Rights Act.

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The commission approved a
report Friday that s~id black
voteis' ballots were dispropor. ~ tionately tossed out in Flori~ da 's presidential elections.
I

IJ..Boid wredzp t.ncl in gulf

bodes weD fur democracy,m Peru. McCormack "lti a big win fur the pharmacy companies and a big loss for
;
Vermont's seniorS who need medicatio·n:• said Gov. Howatd

· Stonn re&amp;Jinants soak Texas

;
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'

An estimated 20,000 people, including
IIC'Wual hundml reporters, attended
Bethea's execution.. By COntraSt dnee
reportas allnded Feguer~ 1963 c:JIIe(Urion and n people outside of Iowa and
IDinois paid the story much atrcntion..The
federal 8ure3u of Prisons ec1......... than 1,400 reporten to descend on Terre
Haute fm McVeigh's ellleCUiion, including
reporters from foreign countries.
But only a few OR to actually wimess
McVeigh's death.
Thirty people, including 10 reporters,
are to be allowed to personally witness the
execution. Several hundred ocbm, bombing victims and their survivors, are eq.eaed to watch the execution through a
dosed-circuit television system.

B~ ~ ~ 19?~ ~,~~~~~\We~~ a·six- . MONTPELIER.Vt. (AP) -. A feder:d ap~ court on Friday
&amp;y EiUOpeari ciiP. ~ Sean MCcOi1Dadt siid.
barred Vermont from offering reduced drug pnces under a state
· Bwh abo~ Toledo oa an "~eaiw victorY' mel program.
·
;m elec.tion that

callcd m exanplary ....Jdjrr by his

Feguer died in reWiw obscurity.
McVeigh~ execution has piOtilpted a
media limzy WJtih any Km since tbe last
ptiic .C'P'C'•ri&lt;Ml in 1936 when Rainey
Bethea was hangrd in.Owerdboro, Ky.

Comair pilots to renew talks

opt.;,~!;"froC:~U.: ~;;,ute to Iowa. the president told

•

superioo.

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·•
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W2S

Mesa

Maps

Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by

McVeigh execution would break streak

WASHINGTON (AP) - A former 6ahnun at Galh.det
University. the nation's premier school fm die cleat pi ,.J...t inDocent Friday to charges of murdering t1M&gt; d 1 aces
Joseph Mesa Jr., 21, of Guam, was iOdictrd W,Vwdoy in die
deaths of Eric Plunkett ofBumsville, Minn., and Benjunin Varner of San Antonio. He was charged wid! mwdcr, armed robbery.
burglary and credit card fDud.Trial was sch...tn)cd for Nov. 5.
. District of Columbia police SZf Mesa confessed to lbe Sept 28
killing of Plunkett and die Feb. 3 murder o{Vatnet. tiom Sm
:Antonio. The 19-}'ear-old &amp;eshmen li\'ed in Gallaudtt's Copwdl
Hall dormitory;
fuoed in another dorm.
·
Police clwge that Mesa killed both SludclliS in their l\IOI1JI and
took ~ valuables. Within an hour of\Tamer's sabbing. a S650 nigbr in Houston, and dozens of can were stranded on ftooded
·check on his account was cashed. Plunba's debit ard was used
·several times after the time police believe he - beaten 110 death.
bigest problem is on the meets of our city. 1-10 is like a
parking lot. No one is IIIOIIing," Houston M2)W Lee Brown said
at a news conference just after midnight at a command center. He
said many of the slreet5 he had tried to ralrc to r=:h the com...J WASHII')IGTON (AP) - ·Comair and its sttiking pilocs .-cf
mand center were bloced.
Friday to retui:n to the bargaining table in hopes of~ a
No serious injuries were reported, but emergency dispatchers
two-month-old strike that has shut down the nations second- fielded more than 850 caDs for help late Friday, and nearly every
regionaJ airline.
1
major~ in the cjry was blocked by flooding.
. The agreement to reswnc; negotiations was announced after
company officials and representatives of the Air Line Piloa Association met for 3 112 hours with Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta.
MONTVALE, NJ. (AP) -Dresser drawers ate being dumped
Talks will resume Tuesday with fedenl mediators, and both sides out, laUndry baskea overturned, sofa cushions tossed aside.
agreed to try to reach agreement within 72 hours.
The ransacking isn't a thief at work. Lottery players throughout
"The parties have given me their firm assur:mce that they will northern New Jersey are scrounging around for an unclaimed
leave no stone unturned to reach an equitable agrmnmt," Mine- .winning Big Game lottery ticket wortl} $23.7 million - until
ta said
midnight Saturday. when it expires.
"Dude• I looked
EVERYWHERE;' said Danny Kelly ofHar.
riman, N.Y. "I tore the house ·apart, looked under the cat mats, in
the ashtray; the truck, .the glove compartment, under the visors,
WASHINGTON {AP)- President Bush called British Prime between the seatS."
·
Miillster Tony Blair and Peruvian President-elect Alejandro ToleThe winning ticket was sold June 9, 2000, at Krauser's conve.do on Friday to congratulate them on their election victories.
nience store in Montvale.. Store owner Hemang Patel gets his
-, Blair and his Labor Party swept to a second term, winning re- $10,000 commission even if the ticket isn't redeemed.
election Thursday by such a crushing margin that the leader ofthe

Elva F. Roberts Holbrook

----------REE HEARING TESTS

A7

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SuncMy, .kiiW 10, 2001

II,WY

. "

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. .• .•

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Sundlly. June 10, 2001 :'

Families of McVeigh's victims still coping ·with deaths ;•
'

. "What .._ cJawn, me;an?
gone on living cby by
.U,.And when Tan McVeigh is
gone, that won't stop what's
going on inside our hrD md
inside our IMs," she told him.

..

that bes going ID apologiR at
the last min* befilR he leaves
this life. He's noc: going to apologize.
"Second, tbey'R going ID
e qJtCt that be's going to say
SODidbing :ixJut his motivation .... E\'ftl if he does say
sorilethiug. it'll be so offensive
that tho5e of us who were
diRcdy invohal in the bombing- it will outrage people.
"The third thing they'e
going to eopect is ID be able to
teD other people later ~I w:as
there, and I can teD you he
can't get out of prison, he ean't
esape. no one can break him
out, he can't get out on a friv-

urew

&lt;

• •

'IaurE , ... ,....

BYC••Ccu
CNHI NEWS SOMCE

O

~OMATwo

forward.
One step back.
In the joumey rowml finding inner peace afier a ll2lJJIWic ~ expats. in grieving
and healing SZf there is dy
no such thing as closure.
The
steps

change

m

exKUUOII

Mize ;md orher profemonals
· said for tho5e diRCdy impacted
by the Okbhoma City bombing of April 19, 1995, the fed.ml exrc:ution of McVeigh
may~ lbem forwmi along
!heir path toward hcWng.
One family member Jus
gone 6om being one of those
being counseled to being a
volunteer helping those \Wilting through lhe grieying

process.

dates
for
Oklahoma

City bomber
Tunolhy
McVeigh and
~~~~ty
about
the
conanumg appeals process
knocked victims' &amp;milies and
surviwors otrbalance..
Those who work in the
. counseling field aR hearing
about a v:.riety of feelings
.Jiooding forth as the emotioo. al roller coaster rushes toWard
McVeigh's rescheduled execulion date Monday.
"Is it really going to happen
or is the appeals process going
to drag
said Danny Mize,
director ofThe Kids' Place, a
center for grieving children
founded in response to the
bombing.
Mize spoke this week to a
woman who lost her mother
in the bombing. He described
the general mood of victims
and survi'IIOn as "skepti~" a
sentiment he said he shares.
Those affected by the bombing are weary of temu such as
-i'closure" and of the constant
lnedia barrage focusing on
McVeigh. And Mize remem-

on:·

bers~ woman's lUOng wools.

~I

don't think you

e¥er

shut

the door:' said &lt;my Woodbridge. "I see the execution :as
another stq&gt;."
Woodbridge lost his 31year-old wife Ronota in the
explosion at the Alfred P. Murnh Feder.d Building. She w.as a
pavement materi2ls engilteer
.for the Federal HighW2)'
Administratioq.
The Edmond resident has
become a wlunteer at The
Kids' Place. Now he helps children and families work
through their 1~.
Getting there took rime.
"If this had been a normal
death, they say (healing) bkes
about one to two years:' he
said "But here in Oklahoma:,
. it's in our face every day. And
the bombing memorial downtown, it's alw:iys there. There's
alw3ys the constant reminder."
Woodbridge said he's past
the anger point, but it didn't
come quickly. · ·
"It was probably a good two
to three years."
But he said he still sees a lot
of anger with victims and survivors.
"That's where they are and
that's finC:' said Woodbridge,

olous appeal. he can Delo'lef hurt
- Loose c:hlqe fills the bollom of a memo- anyone else in your family or
•
rialwrealh b boil ibil tC llictim Paul lee left Oil the fence OIIISide the my family again:"
.
Oldlhma Clly National memorial in Oklahoma City. ft1ends and
Heath said one of the toughfanily of llicllms and IOt.lists leave all sorts of item!~ on the fence.
Alter a period« time a 3JI;errment ad1Mst ranoues the items, est things families will ' - to
deal with is the feeling that
C'8lillllg5 them and stores 1hem in pa
It waehouse. (CNHI
McVeigh's death by lethal
News Service photo ~Jerry l..aiue/Nomal TllllSCript)
injection is too easy, compared
to that of the 168 people who
emphasizing each person needs Place.
died in ~ bombing and hun.a dilferent amount of rime to
"Murder adds another dmis more who were injureQ,
deal with a traumatiC evmt.
dimension to lheir grief,
..They're going to say. •M
because they're asking 'Why?"' noc fair: It's not going to be
Tune does help.
"I think time is a very he Said. "The mind and emo- closure, and they're not going
important part of processing tions try to make sense out of to be satisfied But in rime, lhey
the trauma itself," said LuAnne the loss, any kind of loss. And are going to be able to say,'He's ·
Smith, consrituenls' affairs spe- when our loved ones have not going to hurt anybody
cialist · for the Oklahoma been mwdered and taken fiom else."' .
Department of Health."It does us violently and unexpectedly
Heath said if people underget better and we can get bet- ... that just compounds that stand that this is a realistic
ter aver rime. We'll never· be longing for some sense of expectation when they watch
otder to the deaths:'
'over it.' Its a part of us:·
the closed circuit broadcast,
Smith said "closure" is really
lhey won't be expecting more.
not a useful term when referGlut
"It's the last page of a middle
ring to the execution, and that
chapter of a very long book:'
the event may trigger images
One of the greatest chal- said Heath.
that victims and survivors saw lenges of the impending
that day and the days afterw.ud Me Veigh execution is the
"For some individuals; with anticipation of the event and
the execution, it may be a the expectations associated
Some victims of the bombsource of resolution that they with it.
.
ing believed moving away fiom
are getting tiJr:ough thd inci"People are going to go (to
Oklahoma City would bring
dent. For others, they, may the closed circuit broadcast)
.
wake up several days later and expecting three thing!," said them closure.
But fur many who moved,
realize that they don't feel bet- . Dr. Paul Heath, an Oklahoma
that did not bring them the
ter."
City psychologist and survi'IIOr
solace they sought. Because
Mize, a former pastor, has of the bombing. ''They are
traumatic e\'efitJ are imprinted
seen every kind ofloss irnagin- gomg
·
to on there expectmg'
on a person's senses, a' smell or
able in his work at The Kid&amp;'
..-

a •••e

eq e clalluns?

Seeld111 sallaa

a sigbc .o r a sound an ~
painful memories.
:
UMaving doesn't solYe any·
thing." said Smith. Mfm ~
who ~ 7.W1tf. some ~
~ back because they didj
n't baYe those support~
in other states."
;
And to make it worse, lb;
dfect of putting griefissues oq
a back burner can delay ~
grieving p~ she said That
can result fiom some familt
members putting presswe on
others to "get aver it."
"A lot of times we get
engrossed in~ so- don't

.'

Page 81
Sund-r.June10.2001

SUN!l\Y's

Capriati
•

:HIGHLIGIITS

' CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Catcher J.R. House
met with Pittsburgh Pirates
General Manager Cam Bonifay to discuss his future, but he
is srill pondering whether to
S!:IY il) baseball or return to
fOotball as a qll:!rtetback at
West Virginia University.
·~· House, a standout quarterback at Nitro High School, is
a catcher for Class AA
Altoona and the heir apparent
to Pittsburgh Pirates All-Star
catcher Jason Kendall. He told
the Charleston , Gazette that
he did not hear anydling fiom
Bonifay during Friday's meet• il}g in Altoona, Pa., that qe did
f!.Ot expect.
' "He said I'm a big part of
their plans. Said he didn't really understand the football
lhing:' House told the newspaper.
·., House had said earlier that
lie will make his decision by
the All Star break.
- He said his high school
- (ootball coach, Scott Tinsley, is
in Altoona helping the former
quarterback get into shape for
football.
·
Going into this weekend's
g;unes, House had a .255 battfng average with three home
i¥ns and 19 RBis in 37 games
for Altoona.
-: House holds numerous
· .fational high school football

.

reallY

get complicated," said Mize. !
In one victim's family. dim
are members who plan to wit:ness the execution at the closed
circuit broadcast. Others aJ
torn as to waiting outside th~
broadcast room to support
their family members after the .
viewing. And a thini group. the
victim's children, W2Jlt to
spend the rime down .at the
memorial close to their 10\'!Cd
ones chair.
.., think it's creating some
family tensions and they're trying to pull together;' said Mize.
· Family members may also
differ on death penalty issues.
"Some of the family members don't want (McVeigh)
executed," said Mize. "They
want him to rot.injm:'
(Cok is tht lltWS tditDr of'Tite .

Edmond 51411.)

Slam.

1998. 1

..
President Bush
throws out first
pltchatCWS

.

Holzer Home ·c are
'

flli(SI(IIIC/iiiS.:
:\'(' I'Vi('l' lo 0111' ('011111lllf1il~'
,"
~
~.
•

'

.

r•r~sidcm

'

,

I

l.al\·h1r W\. ~~;

and CJ:O. llolzcr M"~dical C~nh:r

OMAHA, · Neb. (AP) President Bpsh's pitch reached
home plate this rime.
His opening pitch at the
College World Se,ries even
'appeared to be . a strike as
Stanford catcher Ryan Garko
b.arely moved his glove. The
Cardinal played Thlane in the
opener.
It was a big improvement
fiom Bush's last attempt at a
fir,t pitch on the major
leagues~ opening day in April.
'f.hat pitch at Milwaukee's
Miller Park included a flamboyant '\Vindup and ended up
in the dirt before it thumped
into the catcher's mitt.
.. In the day's results, Cal State
F.ullerton beat Nebraska 5-4, '
and Stanford rallied to beat
Tulane 13-11 in the longest
nine-inning game in College
World Series histo'ry.

. 'Eastemy...

hoops camp
· · sctiecluled

EAST MEIGS -The East.ern Eagles will have a basket~~~
camp
for
grades
s~ven,eight and nine next
Monday-Friday at Eastern
High School. The camp is for
both ·boys and girls, cost of the
is $30 and ii includes tshirt and basketball, the camp·
Will be from 9 am until 12
. rfoon each day.
· The camp will be conducted by Coach Howi~ Caldwell
and his staff.

·4mP

.•'
.

•••••

:: If you have sports news, then
email it to the GalliJ&gt;9liS Daily
'tribune · at sports@mydailytril;june.com, The Daily Sentinel at
sports@mydailysentinel.com or
t&amp;e Point Plea!ant Register at
sj!orts@mydailyregi•ter.com.

'

•

• '·1.

Capriati took abnost 2 I /2
hours to beat Belgium's Kim
Clijsters 1-6, 6-4, 12-10 for
her second straight major
tide, closing out the victory
with a forehand wmner
down the line.
The Australian
Open
champion climbed up into
the stands to hug her father, .
Stefano, and her brother,
Steven, who pushed their
way down through the crowd
to meet her.
''I'm so happy, I can't even
describe it," Capriati said
after claiming the championship on the red day court
where she first made tennis
history 11 years ago.
The third set was the
longest last set in a French
Open women's final since
1956.
"I can't" believe I just won
two Grand Slams in a row,"
she said.
Next up in Captiari's
Grarid SJam· quest is Wimbledon this month, followed by
the U.S. Open later in the
sununer.
Orily thtee women have
won the Grand Slam, with
Steffi Graf the last in 1988.
Capriari is the first woman to
capture the year's first two
majors since Monica Seles in
1992.
The
victory
fortifies
Capriari's credentials as one
of the most donrin&lt;ltlt players
on the women's tour and
underlines a comeback fiom
drugs and burnout that once
threatened to end her career.

UP CLOSE- Philadelphia's Tyrone Hill, lower left, goes up for two as the Los Angeles Lakers' Shaqullle O'Neal, center,
defends In the third quarter of Game 2 of the NBA Anals In Los Angeles Friday. (AP)
·

eve·n

Yirginia itaier 1c~OhJ!Up
8ame ip his final prep game In

' .

.

PARIS (AP) - Jennifer
Capriati took another big
step in her comeback from
drugs and despair Saturday
Wilh a ·marathon victory in
the French Open to move
halfway to that rarest tennis
achievement a Grand

· ~t ·

famifie,\ togc:tfle-1' ny tli!lh'e:•l'ing hi~h-lflta/i~1' f."Wt' ill lilt•
co!ll.flwt (~lpatiem.~' mrn luum'8. I c.·ommclk.i Jh,• df.:dic£tl,.'d
Hol:~.·r Homil Cart.:' c;•mploy,•c.~· .fiw fmJvh/ing I hi. ~·

.

Open

t:ljiJ
·jj;rds.
He threw 10. .
.
.

"1/o/:cr /lom e Cw(' maimui11.,.11 rich fradition r~(k&lt;~epin.~

..

French

Smith. "There are ~ that
remind them of that, like the
exuution. It has a way of
reminding us what's on tha$
back burner. So if you don~
deal with it now, it will still ~
there several days &lt;or yeaq
down the road."
· .
• .
McVeigh's execution ~
also ~ rifts in a family pre;viously Unified to support ead;l
other in their grief after the
bombing.
:

Celebrating·3D Years o.f
Service to the Community

.

WinS

' - to IM&gt;rk through that
proc5. But it's still there," saHl

"Family dynamics can

'

•'

Baseball roundup, Page B2
.Reds defeat Indians, Page B3
Danj Rant, Page B3
NASCAR Standings, B4

~

Experts offer
. . help to those
•
stiU struggling
•

lnslde:

tOS ANGELES (AP)' - · Shaquille
O'Neal was at his be~. Kobe Bryant
was much better than last game and the
Los Angeles (akers built a big enough
lead to hold off the no-quit Philadelphia 76ers.
Tying the NBA record for blocked
shots in a,finals game, O'Neal had 28
points, 20 rebounds, nine assists and
eight blocks as the Lakers evened the
NBA Finals at one game apiece with a
98-89 victory Friday night.
Bryant had 31 points, eight rebounds
and six assists· ~ as well as an earful of
trash talk from Allen Iverson in the final

seconds.
The series grew more testy and confrontational in a game the Lakers controlled most of the way. But after
O'Neal picked up his fifth foul with
6:38 remaining, Philadelphia used a 133 run to close within three points with
2:22 left.
O'Neal then got his ninth assist on a
3-pointer by Derek Fisher, and Bryant
.fed Robert Horry for a basket from
close in that gave the Lakers a 94-86
lead with 1:19left. O'Neal'sjump ho\)k
with 28 seconds left gave Los Angeles
an eight-point lead that all but sealed

the victory.
The series resumes Sunday night in
Philadelphia, where Iverson will try to
make a bigger contribution, He was
held to 23 points, primarily because of
Fisher's defense, and missed all four of
his free throw attempts.
O'Neal tied the finals record for
blocks held by Bill Walton, Hakeem
Olajuwon and Patrick Ewing.
"They are playing at a high level. In
Philly, they will be playing at a higher
level;' said O'Neal, who seemed to be

Pleae see Laken. 17

Barbu.m-Brown camp and
golf
g .begins June 22
those scheduled to attend
the camp or golf tournaHUNTINGTON - ' Plans are being .
ment besides Bartrum and
,completed for the Mike Bartrum &amp; Troy
Brown will be New York Jet
Brown football camp and golf tournament to
and former Marshall All
be held on June 22 at Spring Valley High
American and Heisman
School in Huntington. The tournament will
Trophy Candidate Chad
be held on June 23 at the Spring ·Valley
Pennington, Jason Starkey
Country Club.
former Marshall All AmeriFormer Meigs High School s13-ndout, and
can of the Arizona CardiBrown
Philadelphia Eagle Mike Bartrum, has joined 1
nals, Marty Moore of the
forces with former Marshall and New Eng- Cleveland Browns, former Ohio State great
land Patriot teammate Troy Brown for the Tom Tupa of the New York Jets, Heat Irwin
camp and tournament.
of the Miami Dolphins, Sam &lt;:;ash of the
The camp will feature instruction from Patriots, Tim Hawk and Dave Akers of the
'!~most 50 NFL players and former Marshall
PIHH ... &amp;Utrum. 17
players, along with Marshall coaches. Among
BY DAVI HARRIS

OVP CORRESPONOENT

Mike Bartrum (above) will be holding a football camp beginning ·
June 22 at Spring Valley High Schooi.·(Submltted photo)

Gordon takes pole~ Robinson makes field at Brooklyn
I

BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP)
- Shawna Robinson would
love it if people would over-'
look that she's a woman trying to make it in NASCAR.
Sorry, can't be done.
Robinson began her drive
into the history book oil Friday by qualifying 321)d for
the Kmart 400. Her entry
into Sunday's event means
she'll be thQ first woman to
race on NASCAR's top citcult since 1989.
"I'm a racer who just hap'
lft,

.

~

pens to be a
girl,"
she
said. i''J grew
JlP · around
race tracks
and my dad
raised me to
be competitive:'
·
Rolllnlo!l
Wearing a
tiny T-shirt
that showed her navel and. a
pair of Capri pants, the 36year-old mother of two
·couldn't help but stand apart

from the 42 men in the field.
Srill, most of them were
proud of her, including pole
winner Jeff Gordon.
"I've always said it doesn't
matter if you're a male, a
female or what color your
skin is - if you have the talent t~ be out there, you
deservf! to be out there;'
Gordoh said. "She. proved she
deserves to be out there and
to me, she is the one who has
the talent and desire to be a
woman out there."
\\ I

Gordon, on a resurgence me," she said. " Nobody wanls
after a disappointing 2000 it more than I do. This isn't
season, turned a lap of about making one race, this is
188.250 mph around Michi- ab'out the future and racing
gan International Speedway full time next year."
to take his "third pole this seaWhile Gordon locked up
son and 36th of his career the pole as soon as he ran his
three of which have come on qualifying lap, Robinson had
to sweat it. out after turning a
this 2-mile oval.
That ties him with Alan lap at 185.529. More than an
Kulwicki for the t~ac k ' hour went by while she
record.
patiendy watched the scoring
But the feat was overshad- monitor to see how many
owed by Robinson's effort. . other cars were slower than
"This means everything to her Ford.
~

1.~ : I
""""'~"""""""'"- ~

..

�-.

-~-

:$undey,
.June 10, 2001
a

PageB2
SU•d•J· June 1o. 2001

.'

.

BY THE ASSOCIA1EO PRESS

..

'

.

'I

The San Diego Padres fared
no better against the Seattle
Mariners than American
League teams have this season.
On the first day of interleague play in 2001, the AL
dominated all around, winning 11 of 14 games.
Seattle stretched its winning streak to 15 games the longest by an AL squad in
10 years - by using three
home runs and solid pitching
to beat San Diego 7-1 Friday
night.
"When you're winning the
way we've been winning, you
get more confidence;' said
Edgar Martinez, 3-for-4 with
a homer and four RBis.
"Good things happen."
Beet Boone, who raised his
major league-leading RBI
total to 66, and John Olerud
...i.Uso hit home runs.
At 4 7-12, Seattle matched
the 1907 Chicago Cubs for
the second-best 59-game start
since 1900, trailing only the
1912 New York Giants (4811).
•
The Mariners' winning
streak is the longest in the AL
since the 1991 Minnesota
Twins had a 15-game run (in
the NL, Adanta won 15
straight from April 16 to May
2 last year). The AL record is
19, set by the White Sox in
1906, and tied by the Yankees
in 1947.
In other interleague action
Friday, it was Yankees 7,
1 Adanta 4; White Sox 7, Cum
3; Houston 5, Texas 4; Boston
3, Philadelphia 2; Cincinnati
7, Cleveland 4; Deaoit 9,
Milwaukee 4; Tampa Bay 7,
Mea 5.
Also, it was Baltimore 5,
Montreal 0; Minnesota ·8,
Pittsburgh 6; Toronto 7, Aorida 6; Arizona 11, Kansas City
4; Oakland 4, San Francisco
2; and Anaheim 1, Los Angeles 0.
Colorado beat St. Louis 9-1
in Friday's other game.
In Seattle, Paul Abbott (5-2)
won his third straight start,
allowing one run and five hits
in 7 2-3 innings.
Kevin Jarvis (3-6) gave up
seven runs and 10 hits in five
innings as San Diego lost for
· 10·
th · th ·
e run rune 10
games.
"1 don't care how good you
are. To have the record th ey
.)lave playing on the road and
here - I don't think anybody
. .. pad res
saw th at cormng,
manager Bruce Bochy said of
Seattle, which has won 11
straight at home.

Yankees 7,
Braves 4

· ·

Stadium since its World Series
sweep in 1999. Atlanta's season-high six-game winning
streak ended.

White Sox 7,

CUbsJ
Carlos Lee hit a grand slam
off' Courtney Duncan (3-2) in
the 1Oth inning as the White
Sox won for the 12th time in
14 games, taking the opener of
the Cromown Series at
Comiskey Park.
White Sox starter David
Wells. left with back spasms
after facing only five batters in
the shortest outing of his
career.
Keith Foulke (2-3) got the
win.

Narc ., &amp;.eagu.

Olnlt. ••

30 27 .542
28 31 .475
28

35

23 38

a._
S1. Loull
HoUIIon

.........
Clnc:lnnal

P1ftJIIurgh

~w l
36
32
30
28

.4211

.3n

4
8
11
14

PctGI

22
28
28
28

.621
.533 5
.517
8
.500 17
24 35 .40712 Q
18 40 .310 18

-w

37
33
31
30
28

l

"" Ga
. 24 .1101
28 .M1 14
29 .517 5 Q
31 .492
7
33 .458
e

r.t~

WLPctGI
35 24 .583 34 25 .578 11

-

-Vorl&lt;
Toronto

8IJtlmore
TIIIIPI Boy

CIIMiond
-

ChiciQo
Dl1rolt

frtclly'IColonldo 9, S1. Lcula 1
TORII1to7, Florida 8. 10 ~

Cindnnati7,~4

28 31 A83 8 Q
211 31 .475 17

---

-Ci1y

_ , _ 5, MontiNIO
N.Y. - 7 . A11an1a 4
Boolt&lt;ln 3. PhHadeiphia 2
Oolroi1 9, 4

w

l

ChiciQo C4.Cie .. ChiciQo -

12

TIIIIPI Bay 7. N.Y. Mots 5
-8.-.gh6
AtlzOM 11, KMIUI Ci1y 4
Chicago Whl1e Sox 7, Chicago Cubs
3,101Mngo

Ciuolllli • c-.~.1111

.

s.n F.........,mOelc*ld, 1111
Sin Diego •

Orlales 5,
ExposO
Josh Towers (3-1) pitched a
six-hitter and Jerrr, Hairston
went 3-for-3 with an RBI,
sending visiting Montreal to
its fourth straight loss. Matt
Blank (0-2) gave up three runs
in five innings.

..

...

-HouoiDn·
C11y,llll
.. - -.....

:

s.tae, . .

T..,..~
l ··Fiorldll
,.._....
4-1) · - (L.ooiZII
H), 1:05 p.m.
PlllllldeiPhlll (PMon &gt;WI) .. (Homo 11-3), 1:Q5 p.m.

Dan
Polcyn
DAN 'S RANT
terback or the even older myth that
women can't.be athletes, the myth of
the Japanese player · should just go
away nov;.
How about those Reds?
·Now at 58 games into the 2001
season, our fCarless Redlegs sit at 2335 and hopelessly out of the Central
Division race while the Cubs (the

..
...
.
~

~,

.•
.
.,
·-'
• •
.. i

Umpires and

CLEVELAND (AP) - Bill
Selby has always loved to hit in
Jacobs Field, he just never got
much of a chance to do it.
Selby, released by Cleveland
after last season, hit his first
holl)er in more than five years
and five former Indians players
, teamed up to lead the CinciQ. nati Reds to a 7-4 jnterleague
win Friday night.
Before the 'game, Selby, who
· spent three years in Cleveland's
system, said hello to old friends
, . and even gave Indians ~eneral
manager John Hart a big hug.
"This was the first time I've
been nervous before a game
since my first time up in . the
, big leagues," Selby said. "I had
'three great years here and stiU
have a lot of good memories
and friends here."
Alex Ochoa went 4-for-5
wiih three RBls and Dmitri
Young added three hits for the
Reds, whi&gt;se three-game winning streak is their longest
· since late April.
And they can thank their cast
of former Indians for making it
possible.
Jim Brower (3-3), traded to
Cincinnati this winter for
catcher Eddie Taubensee,
picked up the win. Sean Casey,
who began his career with
Cleveland, had an RBI
groundout and former Indians
relievers Chris Nichting and
·nanny Graves pitched the .final
2 1-3 innings, with Graves
working the ninth for his· 14th

.. • '!.

1

owners ask
judge to overtu~

·.:·•t1

.arbitrator

PHILADELPHIA (AP) ::;.., .
BasebaU owners and ump~
'·
asked a federal judge Frida.~
overturn an arbitrator's d
sion ordering that nine of
umpires who lost their jobs ·Vl
1999 be rehired.
·':··:
Neither side was happy v.i~
the decision arbitrator Alaiil
S~onette issued ~y 11:·~·
~·. ~·
MaJOr League Ump1res Ass ·
ation wants all 22 rehired, • i
baseball doesn't 'w:¥tt to .,
forced to take any . of thS!l

i

back.
.
Arbitrators' decisions are ·

ficult to overturn, with co
ruling a side must show b~.
Friday's lawsuits mean the &lt;ti(;;
pute is unlikely to be resoliJd:

INTERLEAGUE PLAY - New York Yankees pitcher Andy Pettltte delivers a pitch In the first
Inning against Atl.anta Friday at Yankee Stadium In New York. Pettitt&amp; left ~ game In the sixth
Inning with tightness In his left groin. (AP)
.
.·
1
inning grand slam as host
Minnesota avoided its first
four-game losing streak this
season. Reliever Hector Carcasco (3-2) pitched four scoreless innings and struck out a
career-high five.
Omar Oli~ (2-7) gave up
eight runs in 4 2-3 innings as
Pittsburgh lost for the eighth
time in nine games.

beat Kansas City for the ninth
straight time.
Gonzalez homered off Paul
Byrd (0-1) in the first and
fifth and against I?oug Henry
in the ninth to raise his total
to 25.
Johnson had 11 strikeouts,
raising his majorleague-lead. ing total to 148, and allowed
one run over seven innings.

G.._

Blue Jays 7,
Marlins&amp;

Athletics 4,

Shannon Stewart drove in
the winning run off Ricky
Bones (2-2) in the lOth inning
with the 14th double of the
game, the . sixth by Toronto.
Florida's eight doubles . set a
team record.
·Billy' Koch (1-2),' Toronto's
sixth pitcher, got four outs for
the win at SkyDome.

In Oakland, Jason Giambi
hit a solo homer and a sacrifice
Oy, and Terrence Lorig hit a
two-run homer.
Gil Heredia (4-5) all9WCd
two runs in six innings, and
Jason lsringhausen earned his
lith save,
Mark Gardner (1-5) gave up
four runs on six hits in six
innings.

:I

Diamondbacks
Royals4

Angels
DodpnO

four-hitter, and Garret Anderson hit a second-inning homer
off GiOYalUii Carrara (0-1) at
Los Angeles.

Denny Neagle (S-2) combined with three relievers on a
four-hitter, and Todd Helton,
Ron Gant, G~g Norton. and
Ben Petric.lt homered in Denver.
Neagle, who left after five
innings with a strained hamstring, had an RBI single in
the second off Mike Matthews
(2-2).

.1

'

this"The
year~
· ..:
. itratof exc~e~
the auth ty accolded him ·
the co ectiyc .,, P~pioilil
· agreement by ·... ~peniing til!
own brand of indmtrial jus~~
and substituting his judginent 1
. for the discretion and final aria ;
binding determination of til-: I
league presidents," the coni- ~
missioner's office said in 'its
lawsuit.
:. ;:; '
"The · opinion and aw:mf is:
contrary to, and CV1'd
ences. • a IIt
.
manifest disrega~ of. the t.e~ny 1
of the collecllve bargamu~ 1
agreement ... and, indeed;: J!,1
irrational...
.. ~
The case was assigned : te l
U.S. District Judge Edmund¥. •
Ludwig, who. in 1996 bloek;t j
umpires fro'!l striking duril!B ;
the playoffs after Roberto A!~4
mar spit at umpire Jolini ·
Hirschbeck.
• ·.f'
Syrnonette ruled five for~ ~
NL umpires - Gary Darling; •
Bill Hohn, Larry Poncino,
Larry Vanover and Joe West - should be rehired, with back
pay, because NL president Len
Coleman failed to articulate a
reason to accept their resignations.

.-

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Dianna"-, CFS

~,

CUBS for Pete's .sake!!!!!) have a
five-game lead and for once are
looking down their snouts and
laughing at the once proud Reds,
Pirates, and Cardinals.
It is difficult t-o want to follow a
tea~ that has been as abysmal as the
Reds have.
Their inability to stay healthy hasn't helped, though. Not ev.en Steinbrunner's money could keep the
Yankees from spiraling downward
after losing players the caliber of
Barry Larkin, Aaron Boone, and of
course,Junior Griffey.
That brings about the issue offan
loyalty. Many a voice has said that
covering the Reds' is a dead issue.
Having written them off (and yes, I
admit it would take somewhat of a

~

•

Red Sea parting to get them out of
the · funk that they're in), some fans
(term used very loosely) have commented that they don't want to see
how the team fares anymore.
That's what bugs me about
regional loyalties. Those who live in
Boston are much more resistant to
their team's failings that those Reds
fans based in Columbus or Point
Pleasant.
Local Red Sox fan's (or even Cum
fans living in Chicago) identifY with
their teams a lot more.
'Your team' can change awfully
quickly when you are not that closely tied to the teams.
And Finally, the most
importa.a t question of aU ...
Is it football season yet?

Reds win round one

•.

/-·,..

·

www.ltlhluaa.com

Those who have worked with
Japanese baseball md ics players have
noted that the work ethic is
unmatched. Players in the· Land of
the Rising Sun put in extensive
worlcouts prior to each day's game.
Players who have crossed the Pacific
compare it to having ~pring training
all season long. ExceUence is
achieved through repetition .
Somebody preaches hard work for
success and then says that some of
· the hardest workers don't have a
chance. That's what we call a contradiction,
Of course, some . naysayers have
said that Suzuki is a fluke, the only
one who could be that successful.
Give me a break.
Like the myth of the black quar-

.. . .'
·,
..

4-4),Mit·~···
1:05 p.m.~.WtatDlllralt(Hoft

'ftprs 9,
Brewtn4

Ryan Rupe (3-S) threw
seven shutout innings, and
Greg Vaughn · and Fred
McGriff' homered Cin consecutive pitches as Tampa Bay
built a 7-0 lead at home. Steve
Trachsel (1-7) ·allowed four
· · ·
· ·
runs m stX-p1us mmngs.

•

(Relclterl 5-5), 8:05 p.m.

David Cone (1-1) won for
the first time in 10 months,
and RandyWolf(4-6) gave up
solo homers to Manny
Ramirez, Dante Bichette and
Chris Stynes in Boston.

MeisS

. ..

Al1tOnl (EIIil 4-2) at 1&lt;ansa11 Cliy

Red Sox3,
Phlllles 2

Devl Rays 7,

- ( - H ) at N.Y. Yani&lt;Ms

2-5). 8:05 p.m.

Moises. Alou homered off
Tim Crabtree (0-4) in the
11th inning for visiting Houston in the Texas teams' first
regular-season game.
Octavio Dote! (3-4) got the
win, Mike Jackson the save.

Damion Easley became the
ninth Detroit player to hit for
the cycle, the first since Travis
Fryman on July 28, 1993.
Easley hit an RBI .d~le in
the third inning, a three-run
homer in host Detroit's sixrun fifth, a single in the sixth
and a triple in the eighth. Jeff
Weaver (5-6) won, Paul Rigdon (3-4) lost.

at Seattle
, .•

Hou11Dn (MIIIr 7-3) M T - (O,)ds

mlOIAngello,llll

N.Y. U. M TMipll Bly,lol8
Ml t ' I al Dlboit. IIIII
811111'101•, late

28 31 .A581112
24 33 .ol2113 .2
21 31

-

(Mutlina 5-0), 8:05 p.m.

__.,.., __ _
---at
~

2·2), 4:10p.m.

Sin Diego (Loowor ~
(HIIaml4-4). 4:35 p.m.

.

FlorldllaiT-. 1111

t-

.350 "
w l .... 08
47 12 .787
30 211 .508 17
29 30 .4112 18
2031 .338 27

Angello(~

Sox.

1110

Pet 08

38 20 .eea
38 21 .1144

2-2), 2:05p.m.
•
Sin F'rwiCioOO {Homllndoz 4-8) ·••
OOidlnd (Muldor 7-3), 4:05p.m.
. ••
Anaheim (WalhbUm 4-4) at ~!10
-Sox~

(

M N.Y. v..-,1111
Pl........... - . -

17 43 .213 18 Q

Reds sign 5even

•

(WI1Itot 2-0), 1:05 p.m.
•.
N.Y. (AI&gt;!Iil&lt; H) II T - Bay
~ 3-7), 1:15 p.m.
.
loblbllol (l/lzqUOZ 5-6) .. Bal1imore
(.....,_, 5-3), 1:35 p.m.
,, .
1'1-..gh (SCIWnldi2•2)M t.1lmooo\a
, _.1-2),2:05p.m.
"
Chlc8go CID (liiiJor &amp;-3) II CHcago

Asbos 5,
bnpn4

.........

CINCINNATI (AP) ~
The Cincinnati Reds haw
.signed seven of the p~
chosen in this week's amateur
draft, including right-hander
Daylan Childress, a fifthround pick from McLennon
Community College in
Texas.
The other six players
signed were Dave Molidor,
3B, UC-Santa Barbara; jeff
Bannon, SS, UC-Santa Barbara; Justin Davis, OF, Cal
Poly-Pomona; Jesse Gutierrez, C, St. Marys, Texas; Jay
Adams, RHP, Pepperdine;
and Domonique Lewis, 2B,
Southwest Texas State.

.. .......... ··--

Allu:i lwn u.gu.

, A few random thoughts from the
world of sports...
"· ·
Dispelling Myths
- .Seattle's lchiro Suzuki has done
.IJne of the greatest services imaginable to the g;une of baseball. For
"ltlany years, the whispered logic wu
that a Japanese position player could
never beak into the American basellall scene and have an impact.
• Listen. to ~ome of SuzUki's numhers: .361 batting average, 54 runs,
'96 hits (tops in the AL), five triples,
20 stolen bases (also the AL leader).
He's al$0 quickly established himself
as one of those guys that nobody
wants to try to take an extra base on.
Does that sound like a player who
d6esn 't belong in the starting outfield for a 46-12 team?

Clnolnnati , _ 2-5) .. C1owland

..

r.tw l. "" Gl
36 .'3 .610

Andy Pettitte (7 -4) t9ok a
three-hit shutout into the
sixth inning before leaving
with tightness in his left
11, .
groin.
1,.
'IWins~ar·
Bernie Williams and Scott
Brosius hom~. · and Tom ,
Luis Gonzalez hit three
Glavine (6-4) walked seven as ·
Ismael Valdes (4-3) com..,New York won the first game
Torii Hunter hit a fifth- homers for vi~iting Arizona,
bined
with three relievers on a
and Randy Johnson (7-4)
'between the teams at Yankee,'

draft piCks

I

6unbap ~rnn ·6mtintl • Page B3

A few .random thoughts from the world if sports. • •

••

AROUND THE DIAMOND

Seattle makes it 15
straight; AL teams go
11-3 against NL foes

•
•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point PI r aunt, WV

in baseball's Battle of Ohio.
Ellis Burks and Roberto Alamar homered for the Indians,
who entered with the majors'
best interleague record at 4126.
.
Charles Nagy, making his
first home start in his come-.
back from elbow surgery.
pitched well but didn't get the
decision.
With one out in the seventh,
Brady Clark batted for Deion
Sanders and singled off Rich
Rodriguez (2-2) . One out
later, Clark swiped second and
scored on Ochoa's single.
·Selby's ·home run in the sixth
off reliever Steve Reed gave
the Reds a 4-3 lead and denied
Nagy his second win.
Ochoa doubled leading off
the sixth and, after a passed ball,
groundout
Casey's · RBI
brought the Reds within 3-2.
Yoiu1g's single chased Nagy
and with two outs, Reed gave
up the homer to the light-hitting Selby, who last homered
on May 28, 1996, against Oakland.
..
"Sure I remember it," Selby
said. ···r re~ember just about
every hit I've got in the big
Ieagues." .
Selby never Oashed much
power with the Indians last season, imd Reed wasn't worried
about· giving up the long ball.
"It was a slider right down .

the middle. I wanted it in the
dirt," Reed said. "I overthrew it
badly. It's not much fun whenever you give up a homer."
Later, the Indians intentionally walked Selby. When he got
to first, Jim Thome asked him
about the homer.
"He said, ' How'd you do
that?' And I said, 'Watching
you'," Selby recalled.
Burks tied it in the bottom
of the inning with his 14th
homer and 12th in his last 29
games.

WB'nl making

s

anti much morel
For fast, friendly
service on your
· next loan, see
Peggy Watson
In Gallipolis.

save.

BAnLE OF OHIO - Bill Selby, center, Is greeted by his Cincinnati Reds teammates after a two-fun homer In the sixth Inning off Cleveland Indians reliever Steve Reed on Friday In Cleveland.
T~· .Reds defeated the Indians, 74. (AP)

"The Indians have had so
many good players, I guess
we're just getting 59me of their ·
castoffs," Reds manager · Bob
Boone said.
Ochoa drove in the go-ahead
run in the seventh inning and
added a two-run double in the
ninth as the Reds rallied from a
3-0 deficit to take Round One

57 Court St.
Gallipolis
740-446-8000
AN

--

G)
UI'IO-Ifl

OAK HILL FINANCIAL COMPANY
Allloana are JubJtct to approval

Toclay's Major League Leaders ,

r •'

., . •'·

o of Frldlty. Julll B
Florida, 12.
ASanchez, Kansas City, 4; Alicea, K•"l"'•
. NAnoNAL LEAGUE
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Cl\y, 4: RAiomar, Cleveland, 4.
BATTING-MAamlrez, , Boslon, .380;
HOME RUN8-MAamlrez , Boston, 21;
BATTING-Aurllfa, San Francisco;
.365; Alou, Houlton. .358; LWelkor, Col- SUzuki, SaaHio, .353; JaGiambl, Oakland, AAodrlguez, Texas, 19: CDolgado, Toran·
oralio, .353; PujOio, St. LOOta, .347; CUe~', .381; JGonzalez, Cleveland, .355; RAIO· lo, 19; Glaus, Anaheim, 17; JaGiambl,
¢1nclnnl!l, .346; Helton, Cololldoi .~; mar, Cleveland, .349; Stewart, Toronto, Oakland, 16; JGonzalez, Cleveland, 15;
!\Gonzalez, AriZona, .336.
• .335; Oierud, S.aHie, .335.
GVaughn. Tampa Bay, 15: APalmelro,
, RUNS4ief!on, Colorado. 81; LWafkor,
RUNs-Suzuki. Seal!le, 58; ARo· Texas, 15.
Colorado, 54; LGorwtltz, Arizona; 53;. drlguaz, Ta•as, 56; Mondasl, Toronto, 48:
STOLEN BASE5-Suzukl, Seattle, 20;
P.loyd, Fiolfda, 5 1 ; - · San ~. 60; MJ~-. Kansas City, ole: CDelgado, Knoblauch, New York. 20; McLemore,
lfOrid8. San Franctoco, 49; SSoea. Chlca· Toronto, 45; JGonzalez, Cla•aland, .U; SeaHie, 18; Soriano, New York, 17; Code·
go, 47.
Stewart, Toronto. 43.
no, Datroll, 16; CGuzman, Minnesota, 13;
, RSI-t IIfton, Cofo&lt;ado, 65; Bondi, Son
RBI-BBoone, SeaHia, 56; MRamlrez, Damon, Oaklarid, 13.
!llij;;anc~. 80; LWslker, Colorado, 57; Booton. 54; ARodrtg-, TeJ&lt;IB, 53: JGon·
PITCHING (8 Dectslons)-Solo, Seat·
w.., St. Loufl, S.; SSooa, Chicago, 54; ratez, CI&lt;Mtland, 53;. EMarflnez, SeaHta, tie 8 n 1 000 2 87· Moyer Seanlo 8-1
,...
SG ""'"· Los Ange- li
52: JaGtambf, Oakland, 60; RPalmalro, ,869,
· ~. · ' · •
'
'
•
Kleoko, San Diogo, 53;
4.24: PMartlnez. Bostoo, 7·1, .875.
47
I_., 51: LGonzafaz, .ArizSaonaF, 51 .
81 . iiJ&lt;IIHIT•s-s· "•ukl, e--l!le, - ·, MRamlroz, 1.66; Clemens, Now York, 7·1, .875, 4.00;
~ HITs-Aurllla,
n rancloco,
;
"'"'
..,
A
1 2 ne 3 59 e rba
'
· ••-· 78 P joll S! Loul1 Boot
87 Stewa• •oronto 84· J~---a
adka, Minnesota, • • ·
• · : u •
•
lllonllloz, ~~~. : u • ·
on, ;
"•"
• • ~~ • Cleveland, 7·2,
8.02; Sabathla,
-,7~; Hetron, COlorado, 74; LWalker, Cot· lez, Cleveland. n; RAlomar, Cleveland, C
·
2
6 14
O(lldo, 73: PWIIIOII, Florida, 72; VGu.,. 78; ARodrlguaz, Texas. 74; BBoona, seat· . les;=~E~UT~60Pt.iartlnez. Boston,
Mon!t.,.l, 70; Floyd, Florida, 70; Vlna, He, 74.
.
v ~
M I
Sl .Lout 70
· DOUBLEs-MJSwaanay, Kansas Clry, t31 ; Clemens, Now .o... 87 ; uss na,
ioou~LES-Hel1on, cotoradb. 21; 211; Greer. To•~•· 22: JaCllambl, Oakland. New York, 81 ; COlon, Cleveland, n; Zlro,
vouerrero, Montreal, 21: Kerir, Sen Frlin- 20; EMortlnez, SaaHJa, 20; EChavez, Qak·. Oaklend, 78: !'lomo, Boston, 75: PoHitte,
clioco, 20; Lowttt. Florida. 19; PWIIoon, land. 19: Stowart. Toronto. 18: Glaus. Ana· New York, 74.
Florlda.18:Abrau, Pltl_,..., 18; R&lt;Hn, helm, 17; OCruz, Detroit, 17; GWIIIIams,
SAVE$-Sasakl; S..anla, 24; MAlva;~·
P:hl-'phia, t8; BOIIH, Pft!lburgh, 18; To~ Bay, 17.
New York, 18; Hawkins, Minnesota,
:
• ._, e. D._....
TRIPLES-CGuzman,· Mlnnegota , 8 ; Percival, A...,
... •helm,
15; Wickman, Cleve,.,...,n.-n
,...., 18.
.
~ TRtPLES41Peraz, Colorado, 8; Vlna. Suzuki, Sea!!te. 5: Cedeno. Oo\rol!, 5: JEn- land. 13; Folilke. Chicago, t 1: lsr1ng·
Si. Loulo, 6; QCabrera, Montreal, 5; camaclon, Detroit, 4; CEvaran, Boston, 4; hausen , Oakland, 11.
u:as111c, Ftorldl, 5; Rotttno, Pltftadalphia,
Womacf&lt;, Artzoria, 4; 10 ora ttod with 3,
HOME RUNS Boo)dl. San Francl1100,
~; LGonzafaz, AriZona, 25; . Drew, St.
LO&lt;JII, 19; Hatton, Cotcndo, 19; LW.Ikttr,
Colorado. 18: Pujola, St. Lcula, 17; SSooa,

.na,

r+o.

41

ON YOUR SIDE FOR LIFE

~St~~- BASE$-I.CutltiO, Ftor~Qa,

28; Rollfnl, Pnttadetpllla, 17; Pia,., CoiOf!tdo',16; Goodwin. Lo1Angitn,15; F....
c41. i.tlanta, 14; Wort'lld&lt;, ·A~zona, 14;
ALiou, Pltfladllphla. 13; Kleeko, Sen
Oligo, 13.
.
.
! !'ITCHING (8 !)lulllooii)-Schilllng, Ariz~ 10.1, .1108, 2.80; Tapanl, Cltloago, a.
1 'i .881, 3.53i Hwnplon, ColoradO, 8-2,
2.ae; P~Q&lt;apee, Llll Angelltt, a-2,
.750. 3.90; RReed, New York. 8-2, .760,
2;)19; MMorrll, St. Loull, 8-3, .727, 2.83:
Eltton, San Diego, 7-3•. 700, 4.96; WMIIII&lt;,
- · 7•3, .100. 3.92.
· STRIKEOUTs-ADJohnoon, Arizona,
1-48; Wood, Clllclgo, 108; Schlllng, M
zqrta. 108; Park, Loe Angolal, 90: WOlf,
Pl"~ta ,. 81; Vazquez. Montreal, 79;
Aitacto, Colorado. 79.
' SAVE5-Shaw,l01 Angello, 18; Rack·
a/, A!lan!a, 18; MeN. Philadelphia, 16;
GN.ves, Clnclnnatl, 14; Nan, San Franda·
or1 14' BWagner, Houtt10n. 13; AllonMCI,
:J - '
.
I

.aoo.

··.4

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I

�Sundlly, ...... 10, 2001

- .....,, June 10, 2001

NASCAR .

Gordon back near to
of the NASCAR worl

•

••
•

•

said. "This schedule is so hec- there winning races and battic. Throw on top of it all the . ding fOr the champiombip, it's
resporuibilities of beins a vay graQfying."
champion and therei no doubt
Loomis :and the lftl of the
it takes a lot out of you."
crew fint sensed it liom GorBut the struJ!81e eventually don back in March, when he
made him hungrier, md now scored IUs 6nt win of the Jar
everything is back on IDCk. in Las Veps.
He's proven that in the last
"I'D newr forget it, he p
out oC the car and screaur-1
three races.
""'"
He · won The Winston, Loomis said. "It the most
NASCARs non-poinls all-star a11irmatiw show of support
race, in a backup car last he'd ever given this team and it
month. A pit-road accident rei- made us think we really aft
egated him to a 29th-place fin- goq to be on this Jar."
ish in a very fast car the next
Loomis, who stmcd as a
week in the Coca-Cola 600.
crew chief in 1991 with sewnThen he rebounded to lead · time champion Richard Petty
381 of 400 laps Sunday in u the driver, also has lleiiJed a
Dover, Del. He chose not to new confidence in Gotdon u
contest a bomu-points pass by well as a new ~on for
R usty Wallace early in the nee, the duM tides he won with
immediately passed him again. Ewrnham.
and was out of 6nt thereafter
"Now that Jeff is 29, I think
only when he pitted.
he's- at the point wheze he's
It was Gordon's 54th career tally starting to appreciate the
victory, tying him for sevmth thi:ngl he has and the thingl he
place with Wallace and stock wants," Loomis said. "I think
car pioneer Lee Petty.
. when he loob in the mirror,
Now, with renewed energy, he's starting to see a really good
Gordon heads into this week- driver.
end's K-mart 400 in second
"During his championships,
place, just SO points behind J:u- I think maybe he looked in the
rett. Last year, Gordon was mirror md saw Hendrick
lOth, 340 points behind Bobby Motonports, Ray EYa11ham, a
Labonte.
·
good car, good motors md a
"It was awful tough to go good crew. Now what he sea
through those tough times md back is how important he realface the criticism and the ly is to the pmceu."
doubts that everyone Ius," he
Others also see how imporsaid. "So to finally have it click- tant Gordon and his resuring and get it together md gence aft to NASCAR's suefinally get a team back out cess.

BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP)
-When Jeff Gordon won for
the first time this year, he
climbed out of the car, turned
to his crew ~nd emphatically
shouted, "We're back!"
That was jun over two
months ago, and with two
more victories in the last three
weeks, Gordon again is a domiruting force.
"To be competing for a
championship right: now - it
means more to me·to be a part
of this team than it ever has;•
he said. "I can honestly say this
is the best it has ever felt."
The driver once known as
The Kid isn't so young anymore. He'll be 30 in August,
enabling him to better :i.pp.reciate his quest for a fourth Winston Cup cham-pionship. It
took almost two years of struggle for Gordon to work hiS
way back to being a threat to
win each week.
..J He won the last of his champiomhips in 1998, then fen to
sixth in the standings when
crew chief Ray Evernham left
to start his own team. After the
1999 season, most of his heralded pit crew, the Rainbow
Warriors, jumped to Dale Jarrett's team.
New crew chief Robbie
Loomi~ came aboard in 2000,
and Gordon slumped to ninth
in the series standings - . his
lowest finish since 1994 - and
won just three times.
"I :was really burned out," he

.wn.

.:. ··

1001 Winston CUp Schedule, Results and Standings.

..
The 2001 NASCAR Winston Cup ached-

ule Winners in pafentheses) and driver point
standings:
_.
Feb. 18 - Daytona 500, Daytona lleac:h,
Fla. (Michael Waltrip)
Feb. 25 - Dura Lube 400, Rockingham,
N.C. (Steve Park)
March 4 - UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400,
Las Vegas. (Jeff Gordon)
March 11 - Cracker Barrel 500, Hampton, Ga. (Kevin Harvick)
March 18 - Carolina Dodge Dealers
400, Darlington, S.C. (Dale Jarrett)
March 25 - Food Cily 500, Bristol, Tenn.
(Elliott Sadler)
April 1 - . Harrah's 500. Fori Worth,
Texas. (Dale Jarrett)
April 8 - Virginia 500, Martinsville. (Dale
Jarrett)
April 22- Talladega 500, Talladega, Ala.
(Bobby Hamilton)

•'
'
)

April 29 -

NAPA Auto Pllfla&gt; 500,

Fontana, Cliff. (R~
·
May 5 - Ponti.:
400, . . .
monel, Va. (Tony SlewM)
May 2:1- Coca-Cola 81111, Col-d, N.C.
(Jell Burton)
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 400, oa-,
Del. (Jell Gonion)
June 1o - l&lt;lllaiMOO, Brooldyn, Mich.
June 17 - Pocono 1500, Long Pond, Pa.
June 24 - Dodge/Save Marl
8orJo.
rna, Cal~.
July 7 - f'epll400, Daytona lllactl, Fill.
July 15 - Troplcena, 400, Jo11e1, IM.
July 22 - New Engllnd 300. I.CM tdon,

aso,

N.H.

Aug. 25 .... Sltuple 1500, llltllol, Tenn.

9ljJL 2- Southlm 1500, ~S.C.
SlpL 8 - CIMMoiiC Mortie
400,
RlcliniOIId, va.
s.pt. 18 - New Harnp.tllra 3110,
Loudon.

. SlpL 23- MBNA.com 400, DcMr, Del.
Sept. 30 - Kat-. 400, Kat-. City,
ICiun. ·
.
Oct. 7 ~ UAW-GM Quallly 1500, Conconl;

N.C.
Oct. 14 . - Old Dominion 1500, Mar·
llnlvllle, Va.
.
Oct 21 - Alablma 500. Tlllldtgl
Oct 28 - Clltcktr AulD Petti 600k.

AWlr'&gt;dlle, Allz.
July 29- Peroll)'lvanla 500, Long Pond.
NOv. 4 - Poll Slcrlt MlcloH,. 400,
Aug. 5 -llltckYanl400, lnciMipalla.
Aocklngwn, N.C.
Aug. 12 - Glab.l Cn ltg at lie 0*1,
Nov. 1.1 - Pennzo11 400, tlon II' 1,

Walldne 0*1, N.Y.
~ 19- Pepei 400, Brooldyn, Mich.

Fla.
Nov. 18 - NAPA 500, filnll*n, Ga.

Drtwr Stlndlnge
1. Dale Jarrell. 1,861 .
2. Jell Gordon, 1,811.
3. Rully Wal*e, 1,728.
4. Tony~ 1,703.
5. Slet1ing Ma111n, 1,699.

8. Ricky Audd, 1,691 •

7. ~ Patk, 1.1154.
II. Johnny Beneon, 1,823.

9. Dale Eamhanll Jr., 1,560.
10. Kevin Hatvldc, 1,521.
11. Bobby Hamlllon, 1,503.
12. Bobby I fl)onte, 1,4811.
13. Man I'Cenaelh, 1,437.
14. Marl&lt; Marlin, 1,391.
15. Eltlolt s.cter. 1,383.

21 . Jell Burton, 1,290.
22. Ken Schrader, 1,270.
23. Kurt Buach, 1,289.
24. Jecemy Mayfield, 1,241.
25. Mike Slcinnilr, 1,233. .
26. Ricky Craven, 1,187.
2:1. Robelt Presalay, 1,140.
28. MIChael Waltrip, 1,120.
29. Dave Blaney, 1,105.
30. John Andlll1ti, 1,076.
31. Joe Nenii!Chel&lt;, 1,061.
32. Stacy Compton, 1,044.
. 33. Bnlll Bodine, 1,023.
34. Mike Wallace, 1,006.
35. Ron Hornaday, 997.

'

DAYTONA BEACH, Aa. friend pftbe court brief bppoa(AP) - Dale Earnhardt spent ing the new law.
his life building a persona as the
"It may be difficult for a lot
...powerful, hard-driving "lntim- of people to believe this, but
idator," and that's the way his this really has -little to do with
wife wants him remembered.
Dale Earnhardt and everything
Since the NASCAR legend to do with the people ofAoridied in february on the last lap da's right to governmental
of the Daytona 500, Teresa oversight," Petersen said.
Earnhardt has fo ught to protect
The hearing may also shed
her late husband's image and light on what ·role, if any,
his family's privacy by fighting NASCAR played in efforts to
to keep his autopsy photos seal the photos four days after
from public view.
Earnhardt's Feb. 18 death.
Monday, she is expected to
The Alligator Ius suggested
tak~ the witness stand for the that NASCAR may have perfirst time in a court hearing suaded Mrs. Earnhardt to have
that once again puts Florida's the photos seiled to protect
liberal open records law .under itself against a Wrongful death
scrutiny.
lawsuit and draw attention
The fndepe ndent Florida away -from safety issues.
Alligator, a student newspaper
"We don't know the critical
at the University of Florida, facts of why the lawsuit was
. 'and a Deland-based Web site fcled, who made the decision
are aski'ng a judge to dissolve an and what or if NASCAR said
inj unction barring the release to Teresa Earnhardt 'to file the
ofthe autopsy photos.
lawsuit ... whether the lawsuit
They are also questioning a wu filed to protect NASCAR's
new state law - passed just a int~IS or whether it \WI filed
month after the Earnhardt's to protect Teiesa Earnhardt's
death - that no longer treats privacy interest," said Tom
autopsy photos as public ' · op;~~OCUi:tJ:'C:~~:;
records and makes it a felony to I
release them without a j udge's
Clll Us-Today!
order.
"A family member shouldn't
. have to be embarrassed or
shocked b&gt;; seei ng their loved ,
ones on the front page of a '! :
tabloid or magazine," said
www.newatalt.vwll:ltfi.oom
Florida Senate Majority Leader
James E. King Jr. , R -JackCa1124 hours a
sonville, who champion ed the
Get your cred'it pnrJbleJilJS
law.
ro,versed ""'~L
. But Barbara Pete~en , executive director of the First
Amendment · Founda1ion in 1
Tallahassee, said the law '
removes an importa nt right. ·
The foundation has filed a

Julin, an attorney for The Aliigator.
'
One witness, Daytona speedway physician Dr. Steve
Bohannon, wq deposed last
week. Bohannon was one of
the medical personnel who
worked on ·Earnhardt after the
crash and was the only person
to view the autopsy photos
before they were sealed.
Bohannon said in the deposition that he knew of no
instance of NASCAR officials
pressuring Teresa Earnhardt to
have the photos sealed. ·
"It proves what we've been
saying all along that there's no
cPercion on Mrs. Earnhardt,"
said Skip Eubanks, an Earnhardt attorney. "It disproves ...
what otheri have been saying
that NASCAR played some
role in this."
In court filings, The Alligator
has argued that having access to
autopsy photos in the past has
served a variety of public purposes such as allowing independent investigations of insurance clainu, malpractice and

. . 19. Bill Ellioll, 1,318.
20. Teny Labonle, 1,294.

murders. The newipapet also
arguea that the new law can't
be applied tetroactively.
Earnhardt attorneys argue in
their &amp;lings that the only reason
access to the photos is being
sought is to grab public attention and sen newspapers.
Lawyers for the Florida
Attorney General's Office
argue that the law can be
applied tetroactively and that
access to public records isn't a
fundamental right in the state's
constitution.
The journey to Monday's
hearing has taken more twists
. and turns than your average
NASCAR race.
Teresa Earnhardt filed the
lawsuit seeking the injunction
four days afief the c~h.
The next day, NASCAR
oflicials held~ news conference
in North Carolina in which
they said a broken seat bek may
have contributed to his death,
coinments that have been disputed by paramedics at the
scene and the seat belt's manufacturer.

~ewstart

1·888-816-3713

For The Best W
Price In Central
and Southern Ohio

'

.

)

.,

1001 AII·Ohio High School _

Baseball Teams
,.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The Todd Brown, Washington CH; Adam ·
2001 All-Ohio High Schoof Baaebal Cox, V&amp;ndaHa Butler.
DIVISION Ill
Teams as voted by the Ohio High
School Baseball Coaches Assoc:laFfmT•m
P-Mike Greenhouse, Johnolown
don:

DIVISION I
Rm T•m
P-AuaUn Rhoads, Lakota Wesl;
' &gt;tiilck Wagner, Springfield North. C. ;e,an VIckers, Perrysburg. 1B(,:;rravls Boley, Celina. 21!-Brad
.r;cochran, Jackaon. 31!-Brandon
:izQodzlk, Buller, ss-Thomas Golfe!!Ala, Sidney. OF-Kur) Conkey,
:.'llolhena; Paul Frfelch, Oln. Moe.ler;
• 'l'hi! llojc, Euclid. DH-Scolt Bfllak,
~-~ Royaflon.
~ of lie Y•r: Nick Wagner,

The Sentinel, which had
been investigating NASCAR
safety, then challenged the
injunction, saying it wanted to
review the photos for its investigation.
Teresa Earnhardt and the
Sentinel reached a settlement
that would allow an independent medical expert to view
the photos, issue a report and
the. photos would be permanently sealed. The m~dical
expert later determined Earn-;
hardt didu 't die from striking
his head on a steering wheel
because of a malfunctioning
seat belt.

Congratulations,
Mike·Sergent
Gene Johhson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy..Qids .
has announced
·that Mike Sergent
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for

'-'•Y·
1818 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
448-3672

Northridge; Matt Hatfield, Heath. C- ·
Adam Bateson, BlOOmdale Elmwood.
1B-Galen Schumm. Rockford Parle·
way. 28-Jerry . Loy, Plain City
Jonathan Alder. 38-l&lt;ris Moorman,
St. Henry. SS Jason Greene, Mlnfo!d; Mike McPeek, Gnad. Indian Valfty. OF-Matt Foster, Granville; Bill
Thomas, New London; Ban Tuttle,
Minford; Barry Roe, Heath. DHTodd Boeckman, St. Henry.
Player of 1he Year: Matt Foster,
Granville.
~,...ld North.
Coach of lie Year: Dave Klontz,
•'
of the Y•r: Bruce Bolley, Heath.
~"Celina.
Second T•m
•-Second Team
P-Jason Greene, Minford; Matt Mai.,Ji-5cott Symes, Cln. Moeller; Todd oney, Huron. C-Malt Crawford,
· ~telnbrenner, Celina. C- Barl Chagrin Falls; Darek Stanfield,
·;, jlfunton, Dublin Coffman. 18-Jimmy Columbiana. 11!-Michael Branon, ·
~HIIams, Mansfield Madl1011. 21!- Wheelersburg. 21!-Kris Schuler,
.~an Parker, Hilliard Davldaon. 31!- Lucasville Valley. 38-Greg WHson,
·~ ndrew .Fries, Dublin Scioto. Ss- West Union. Ss-Ben Smith, Cha;, rlan Elkevlzth, Lodl Cloverleaf. grin Falls; Andrew Davis, Chill. Zane
CL!IF-.o.J. Avanl, Mayfield Village Trace; Ben Buehner, Germantown
':-Aayflold; Jamie Malvey, Cuyahoga Valleyvlew. OF- Rob Evlck, Middle·
· l'ella; Chris Coleman, Day. C&amp;rroll. town Madison; Dan Vincent, Zoarville
,, OH-Erlc Smith, Perrysburg.
· Tuac. Valey; Juslln Elmore, Sugar.1• •
H-rable Mendon ·
creek Garaway. DH-Matt Long,
. Jusun Riley, Grove Cily; Ryan Parle- Granville.
· :;,r, Hilliard Davidson; Scott Tourville,
Honorable Menllon
'Weateovllle North; Malt Green, Elyria; Justin Hll, Granville; Rob Marlin,
:Bryan Buck, Hudson; Jim Weller, Andover Pymatunlng V&amp;lley; Mike
'Canton GlenOak;John Johnson, Cln. Crescence, Ma88. 'ruslaw; Kyle
:Woodward; Brooka Purdy, Athena; Blachula, · Bloomdale Elmwood;
· r~slln Brown, Troy.
Justin Reynolds, Deftance 11nora.
i&lt;
DIVISION If
DIVISION IV
I'
Flral T•m
.
Flm Tum
;#&gt;-cameron Keys, OlmSted FaKs; P-Ryan Goldachmldl, Fl. Loramie;
·bk McKinney, Hebron Lakewood. John Zlnnlcker, Fairport Harbor Falr~dam Graves, St. Marya Memor· port Harding. C-llm Yenoer, D~f.
~Jal. 111-MIIte Antollnl, Chagrin Falla Ayeravllle. IB Doug Lueako, Toron:I&lt;enaton. 28-Jay Neill, Sandusky to. 21!-Shaun Cain, Toronto. 31!·f'erklna. 31!-Tom Luecke, Cola.. Jason Goddard, Crestline. SS'Walleraon. Ss-Joe •Tucker. C&amp;nlon Michael Penn, Jr., Worth. Christian.
:~mral Cath. OF-D11n Koal, Olmlt• OF~IInt AM!age, Fl. Loramie; Bart
'td Falls; Sieve Bond, llpp Clly HeckrNin, Marla Sleln Marion Local;
' &lt;nppecance; Jon Dollinger, Spl1ng. Derecl&lt; Ultto, Now Riegel. DH:I&lt;enton Ridge. DH-Cofln Gllberl, Justin Eichman, Warren Kennedy.
o8ryan.
Player of the V•r: Ryan Gold·
;ftlayer ollhe Year: Zack McKinne.y, achmldl, Ft. Loramie.
1iebron Lakewood.
Ct111ah of tha Y•r: Phil Faires,
~'touh of the Year: Don Thorp, Glouster Tril!lble.
' ebron Lakewood.
Becond T•m
&amp;.oond T•m
P- Matt Plunkett, Tlpp CitY Bethel;
~;;:had Billingsley, Defiance; Jason was Fenner, Greenwich South Cen·
lman, Cola. W8118raon. C-Rod · tral. c-oan Stier, Glouster Trimble.
:'l'aylor, Mllleraburg West Holmes. 18-Jason Lee, Warren Kennedy.
''8-Mike Ealey, Spring. Shawnee. 28-Jeb Phillips, N. Robinson
:eB-Jefl Lowe, BaUolontai'18 Ban- Colonel Crawford . 38-Justln
·Jamln Logan. 311--Nick Brant, Con- Guinther, Gloueter Trimble. SS-Jon
'neaut. Ss-Brian Bixler, Sandulky Halfleld, Creadlne: OF-Matt Everett,
1&gt;erldna. OF-Jeremy Bunnell, Con- Millersport; Sean Graves, S.
,neaut; Jon Douglas, St. Marya Chal1eaton SouiMastem; P~te Klko,
:tMmonal; Malt Steinke, St. Marya Danon. DH-Ty Dandlnger, Green;t-~emorla~onorable Mention
wlch South Central.
Hononble Mention
. Blandon Cornell, Cots. Watt.raon;
c 11
0
•l!randon Wheeler, London; _John Marcus Hefner, real ne; an
:floss, Avon Leke; Justin Boulder, Jamieson, Tot. Ottawa Hills; Ryan
:J,oulavllle; Tony Ebersole, Bryan; Barnett, Mowrystown Whiteoak.
•

.I

i

ning college.
Ohio State Ius come under
criticism for its graduation rate
of its football players. The
team had a gnduation rate of
28 percent, according to figures released in December by
the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
The participants in the ·program are either students who
completed their eligibility for
athletic scholarships or athletes
who left before exhausting
their eligibility to try professional sports.
" We've got some who come
back who work full time and
have families. We have some in
the NFL," Riffee said. "Sometimes, it's different situations
that motivate them. With
Scoonie, he was playing over
in Europe and broke his leg;"
The NCAA doesn't keep
track of how many colleges
have programs similar to Ohio
State's, spokeswoman Jane
Jankowski said. However, it
does provide assistance to students who have completed
their eligibility and are witliin
30 credit hours of a degtee.
More than 1,400 former
college athletes have been
awarded $6.6 million for the
program, which has a graduation rate of 96 percent,
Jankowski said. And the NFL's
player, development program
Ius assisted more than 100
athletes in acquiring degrees,
the league said.
George, the Buckeyes' second all- time leading rusher
with 3 ;668 yards from 199295, said he left Ohio State
with about 20. credit hours to
go toward his degree.
" It was like sitting at the 2yard line for about six years. I
chipped away at it and came
back here last year to finally
get it done; • he said.
George, of course, could
alford his own tuition but had

~·

36. Casey Atwood, 990.

37. Jason Leffler, 928.
36. Todd Bodine, 9~5.
39. Buckshot Jonas, 799.
40. Andy Houston, 756.

18. Jimmy Spencer, 1,373.
17. Ward Burton, 1,382.
18. Jeny Naife•n, 1,317.

Earnhardt's wid()w to testify in case that pits privac.y vs. public records

.,.

: : "It took a lot of persistence
: and hard work;' George said
• during the ceremony.
~ : Hard work
the attiJUde of former athletes who
: p!turn to schoo~ said Ohio
: $ tate athletics director Andy
; Geiger, who helped create a
: program in 1996 to help for: mer pbyers get their degtees.
: : "I don't always think that it's
possible or likely that student; a thletes will complete their
~ ilegree in a way that's concur~t with their eligibility.
• ey're busy. Maybe they took
~ some time, like many of us do,
' deciding what to do when
; ~ey grow up," Geiger said.
~· ~
~ Returning students volun•ieer 10 hours a week in the
~:athletics
department
in
~xchan~ for tuiti~n assis~ce, satd Kate Riffee, an
1 '"istant athletics director who
~9Yersees tlte program.
· ~~ Of the 63 former players
r who have taken part, 38 have
· graduated, including former
·'basketball star Scoonie Penn,
and six are currently enroll~d
fur summer or fall quarter, she
said •
Should the six current stu1dents graduate, it would give
the program a graduation rate
of 70 percent, compared.with
Ohio State's rate of 50 percent
of student-athletes who graduate within six years ofbegin-

mans

'

I

.

·: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
:- Pro Bowl running back
: Eddie George was one of four
: former pby~rs familiar to
: O hio State fans to receive a
: degree Friday, and they aren't
-the only ex-athletes back on
i:ampus.
: George, the Heisman Tro: p hy winner 1995 at Ohio
: State who now pbys for the
: Tennessee Titans, received his
: ~ in landscape architecture 5 1/2 years after pbying
his last down at Ohio Stadi-

HI'S IIACK- Jeff Gordon pauses as &lt;:rew members look under his car's hood after his mom- ·
1,. practice session at Michigan Speedway In Brooklyn, Mich. Friday. Gordon took the pole position f9r SUnday's !&lt;mart 400 with a qualifying speed of 188.250 mph. (AP)
• ·

••

6unllap 1Jimt1-6tntfntl • Page B5

helps fonner studentretum to

.ath

..
•
..•
...-

Pon•oy •lllddhjlOI't• o.lllpolls, Ohio • Point Ph·unt, WV

to do the work nonetheless.
His difficulty, and that of his
football-playing classmates,
was finding the time during
the long training camps and

season.
" It's j ust a matter of timing
because we live a hectic
lifestyle and we have a lot on
our plate. But if you have to
persistence to get it done,
you'll find a way," George said

as he attended his graduation
with his 4--year-old son,Jaire.
"I may never use my skills as
a landscape architect, but who
knows? At least I've opened
th.e wind ow of opportunity to
do something like that if I
choose to do it." ·
Besides George and Penn,
former football stars Dee
Miller and Buster T illman also
graduated on Friday.

SECOND CHANCE James ."Scoonle"
Penn, a former Ohio
St ate basketball
stand out, listens to
speaker Bill Cosby
during Ohio State

University's Spring
Commencement

Friday. (AP)

2001 Dodge ~ib pU ,..._ BOFW, 20.000 niles ................... $17.21 5
20o1 Pon... ar.ncl Am SE 11712 • 26,000 Miles, Bol ol Fact War..

Red, AT,AC, Till, Cruioe, PW&amp;L. Sport WheN ......................... $14,229
2000 Cllrylller Clrrua 117113 • 23,000 Mlell, BOFW ................. $14,485
2000 Fonl Tou,.. SE .... ·19,000 Miles, Bal of Fact War, ..............
..................................................................................................... $14,995

2000 Mercury MIWqula liNt ·21,000 miles, BOFW ............,.$16,995

200011ercurylllble19911 · 16,000 mles, BOFW ................. $16,430
2000 Olda Alero HIOII. 26,000 Miles, Bal of Fact war., AT, AC, nn,
Cruloe, PW&amp;L. ............................................................................$14,255
20oo Buick Century • 28,000 miles, Bal or Fact. war.. AT, AC, Till,
Ctuloe, Sportwheels...................................... :;, ........................$14,305
2000 Dodge,._,H121 · AT,AC, AMIFM/cess. More .......... $12,185
2000 Chevy Monte C8rlo LS 1111111 • .............~ .........................$16.415
2000 Chevy Caviller 19912 • 20,000 milel, BOFW ,..............$10,700.
2000 Chevy llllllbu 0801 - 29,000 mles, BOFW, ................. $14,405.
. '1QO- 62t LX 19928. 29,000 miles, BOFW, AM/FM/CO, AT,AC,
Tilt, Cruioe..........................................................................,........$14,645
111119 H - Civic EX 199541· "'ne owner, AT, AC, 1111, Cruloe, PW&amp;L,
Power Sun Roof ,,,,/ ,;,.:..:.......?. •.• I;;.,J~....... :o, ••••••••••••••. •• ••••••••. •. ..• $14.750 .

1199 ....m8L2-·AT. AC, 40oor.................................. $9,485
1199 Pon1leC Grand Am Whlllllll731- 15,000 Mlel, 1181 ot Fllll wa,,
AT, AC, Til~ Cruise, PW&amp;L. V-6 ...................................................$12,995
1199 Dodge lntrapld 18182 ~ Gold, AT,.AC, TIH, Crulae ............ $14,305
1199 Toyolll Camry-- AT, AC, TI~. Cruise, AMIFM/Cass, Y/h!llfs,
f&gt;W, POL ......................................................................................$15,495
19119 Chevy Malibu 18772- Black, AT, AC, 111t, CruiBB, PW&amp;L. Alloy
Wheela.....................................................................:...................$13,495
1999Pontlac GrandAmfMU.AT,AC, Cr., Red, Spoiler ....... $12,995
1999 Pontiac GrandAM SE H7111 - 29,000 Miles, Bal of Fact War.,
Black............................................................................................ $13,995
1999 Chevy Caviller 19915 • White, AC, AMIFM/Cau .......... S1 0,895.
1999 Ford Mulling 111121- 27,000 miles, BOFW, 5 Spd, 1111, Cruioe,
6Cyl, PW&amp;L ................................................. ..............................$14,950
1999
Conaard 119938- Green, AT. AC, Tilt, Cruloe. PW&amp;L.

c.;...

:ooo

·
~~ercu,Y
,:HI27- 21
miles, 8oi:W.·c;.;~e.' 5s¢. 6 ·
Cyl, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Caa .. .................................................. ........ $15,655
1999 VW helle ft82t- 13,000 miles, BOFW, AM/FM/CO, PW&amp;L,
Sport Wheels .............................................................................. $1 5,730
11199 Ford Tauruallt834- AT, AC, Tilt, Cruloe, PW&amp;L, 'AM/FM/Can ....
.... :....................."'" .......................:............................................. $12,995
11181 Hondo Civic LX IIH7- AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, 5 Speed, AMIFMI
Cai88He......................................................................................$14,995
11181 Chevy Cavallerftl02 ·18,000 Miles, Red. AT, AC, Till, Cruise, 5
epeed ...................................................... .. .........................,......... $10,250

11181 Pontt.c Grand Prix GT Htlllt • AT, AC, Tilt, Cruloe, PW&amp;L, P.
Mirror Alloy Wheels ........................................................ ............$14,995
11181Bulck "-1111 QI07 • 25th Annlveroary Ediilon. Po- Leather
Seale, LOAOED ................................................................ ..........$15,795
1181 Plymouth Neon 0795 ·AT. AC, Cauette...........................$8,995
1... Chevy Lumina 19950 • "'ne owner, AT. AC, Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L,...
.......................................................... ................. ... ....... ..... ............. $7,650

1181 Scclum sc-1 , _ • 32,000 miles, 5 Speed, AC, Cua..... $9,435
1997 Ford Mulling GT- Red, V.fJ, 5 Speed, AC, CaneHe,
Sportwneera.......................,........... .............................................. $13,695
1997-Chryaler Sebring Conwrtlble Rod 119930- V-6 Eng, AT, AC, Tilt,
Cruil8, AMIFM/C0 ......................................................................$14,975
1997 Ford Taurua - 1 - AT, AC, Tilt, Cruloe, PW&amp;L, Sport Wheels,
AM/FM/Cass ..'...................................................... ......................;.$8,850.
1996 Chevy Camero RS 19486 - 35,000 Miles, ('.T, AC, Till, Cruloe,
PW&amp;L, Sport wheels.................................................. ................. $12,995.
1998 Pontiac Grand Prix 4Dr Whtt. I i752- AT. AC, Tilt, Cruloe, ,
Sport wheels................................................................................. $8.850
1998 Mercury Cougar 19880- AT, AC, Tilt, Cruloe, PW&amp;L.
SportwhHIS, ......................................... ....................................... $9,495
1998 Pontiac Bonneville 111845- .... .......................................... $9,695
1996 Hyundlll Sonlllo- AT, AC, V6, Alloy Wheels, Tit, Cruise ..... ..
...................................................................................................... $4,995.
1996 N-n Ultima H848 -AT, AC, TII1, Cruloe, PW&amp;L.CasseHe........ ..
.................................................................................................. ...... $8150
1996 Bulok Century - 7 · AT, AC, nn, Cruile, PW&amp;L.............$7,lj95
1993 Ford F·150 8por1119960- 60,000 miles, AT, V·B, PW&amp;L, Alloy
Wheels ............ ............ ...................... .......................................... $7,995
1993 Ford Flrablrd TranaAm 1111105 ·Formula, V-6, Low Miles, AT .. ,.
$8995 .
.
.
11V3 Chevy 5·10 Slack 118882 • AC, Sport wheels, V6 ............ $5,995
1993 Pontiac Sunblrd fll75 .................................................... $3,995
i992 J•p Cherok• fllll20• Red, 4x4, 6 Cyl, AT, AC, Very Clean, Very
Nlctl ................ .. .......................... ..............................................,, .. $6,195
1990 Dodge Dynally 19818· Blue, AT, AC, llH, Cruloa, Loaded, "Clean
u 1 Pln' ............................................. .......... ................................. $3,615
1990 Cedlllao 8T81111148 · LOADEDI.. ................,...................... $6,995
1990 UncQin Contlnentaiii8571 "L0ADED' ............................. $1,995
2000 CHI!VY B~R 4X4 199111 -.........................................$20,650
2000 FORD WINDITAR LX 19911- ........................................ $18,995
2000 DODGE NI!ON i!X 19978·14,000 miles, BOFW ............. $13,250
11199 PONnAC GRAND AM 19872- V6, AT, AC, Tilt, Crulso, AMIFM
ca-ne .............. ...................................................................... $12,870
11199 FORD F·1fl0 4X4 XCAB , . .,_ "LOADED' and more · Lerlat, 4
Door ..... ,.................. ,.................................................................. $23,150
1999 FORD CONTOUR SE I 111113 ........................................... $1 0,995
1998 FORD EXPLORER SPORT t9t16- 27,000 miles, Bal. of Fact.
warr...... ............... .-...................................................................... $18,995
11199 MERCURY VILLAGER 1911114-.......... ............... .. ............ .. .$16.430
1181 DOOQI! DURANGO.H970 ·AT, AC, 111t, Cruloe, PW&amp;L, 4x4, v8
eng, Sportwheels, 35,000 miles ................................ ................. $20,620
19988ATURN SW2 11991111- 24,000 miles .............................. .. $11,21 5
19971 CHI!VY S-10 1997S. AT. AC, Till, Crulse, Spo~9ide ........ $12,B70
1998 DODGE STRATUS 19981 • Gray, AT. AC, Crui98,PW&amp;L .. $8,670
1998 FORD RANGER 4X4 19176- Supen:ab, Spo~wheei s .. ..... $9,450
1998 FORD EXPLORER 19977• 4X4, 4 Or., AT, AC , CruiBB .... $13,270
11181 QMC SAFARII9971- 62,000
AC, Tilt, Cruloe $1 0,695
1993 MERCURY TOPAZI9974................ $3,995

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

Mounllll-r 199111 • 28,000 mHes ..................$17,295
Spoci4X4 19939 - Convertible, 6 Cyl, AC.
................................................................... ........... $13,545

.'. . .

=~ ~~~;~~~.~~ ~ ~.~-~ -~ ~r.·. ~~~-~~~:-~"'_i_~:-~-~~~..."'.MI....FM/,Ca_l1

Suzuki X-110 4X4 Black 19933 • AT, AC, T·Tops.............. ---- ~"·""'
Ford Explorer -75 GraM • 2 Door, AT, AC&lt; Til~
Sport Wheels ..................
. ...
. ..
Ford Explorer 19407 · Tan 4X4, Auto, Air, XLT, PW&amp;l, vru,se.."

111a Ford Rocnger XLT 19884 - 21 ,000 miles, Bal, of Fac1, Warranty..
.. ....
....
.. . . . .. .
. . . .. .............. $18,395
Dodge Rom 1500 HU0 ...............................................:$21.725
Dodge Ram ltl02 · AT, AC, Tilt, Cruloe, AM/FM/Csss/CD, 2
LOADEDI.. ..................... ............... ........... .......................$19,995
Ford Ranger X.Cab 19809 · 20,00Q mHos. Aareslde, V6, Alloy
IWIM!eiB, R·sllder ........... ........................,................................... $16,995.
11199
4X4 Black 19931· SLT, 3rd Dr, Leather sears, Bed

~~ fh.vy Sllve..:~1x~~:S.,'!;;;;;btM·:·;a.'iiOO',:;;;i~~:si.2o:&gt;1,i.oE:o

.............. ........................................................................... .. .......$23,695
19ie Dodge R1J111500 H8M ............,_.................................... $18,B70
1997 Ford F·250 4X4 19955 • V·B, AT, AC,6' Bed ....................$17,B95
1997 Ford F150H8115 ...................................:............................ S18,015
Ford F·150 4X4 XLT 118515 • OH Road, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L.
IAMVFMICD, C&amp;aoeHe, Spo~wheels ........................................... $15,995.
,_39- Black, VB, 4X4, AC, PW&amp;L, 111t, Cruloe,
. .. ..
. . . . ......................... .......................$17,670
Larlltllupe""'b 199111- .......;....................................... $20,650
Dodge Dokota 4X419937 - Spo~ V6, 5 speed, tilt, cruise, sport
..... .......................................:..... .................................... $15,995
Ram 1500 4X4 SLT 19642 ·AT, AC, 111t, Cruise, Alloy
,., ... ........... ........... :.................................................. $16,985
11111'1 FC&gt;rcl F150 4X4 IIH1 -AT Topper, Bad Liner, Cass ....... $10,995

Dodge caravan 1111113.................................................... $14,305
Ford Wind- GL WTIIII- Green, AT, AI:., Tilt, Cruise, Power
Leather seal ........ ......................................................................... $11,695
111118 Dodge Caravan Sport 19797 · AT, AC, Till, Cruloe, PW&amp;L, Len
Side Sliding Door, Grand Sport, Quad seatlng$1 6,295
Ford Wlndalllr GL 111872 - AT, AC, PW&amp;L, AM/FM/Cus, 111t,
, RearAC,.................................................. ..................... $13,995
Wlndolllr f8381 -, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L .......... $6,995.
Ford Wlndo._ fll822 -Green. AT, AC, Tilt, Cru ioe, Sport Whooels ..
. . . . . .. .......................... .: ...................... ::.. ............ ................. $&amp;, 195
Dodge Caravan H881 · AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, V·6 Engine,
~~~~_!111~' ,;......................... ... ......................... .......................... $4,995
Dodge Caravan ft5M· White, 7 Pass, V·6 Eng .. AT, AC.$8,995
Ford Aoroalllr V.n 19708 · V-6 Eng, AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L

.......wi;;d~~~ ·oL:fil43·:· ~:r:..........i. :····

�. ..
Pomeroy •lllddllport. c;.lllpolla, Ohio. Point Plllllnt, wv

Sund8y, June 10, 2001

record time, and we had to
Teams of riders will attack .
turn away several hundred the 12-mile course one rider
teams," he says.
at a time, relay-style.
Competitors will face a 12The team that completes the
mile r:&gt;.ce course that includes most circuits in 24 hours wins
some of the most demanding the race.
terrain they've ever ridden.
Fifty die- hard bikers will
"We've toned down the dif- ride the 24-hour race solo,
ficulty a bit for this year, grinding out lap after lap with
because so many people com- no relay partners to relieve
plained about the difficulty of them.l'wo of the favorites hail
last year's course," Knight says. from West Virginia - Michael
Knight says this year's course Boyes of Milton in the Men's
will be "more fun and more Division and the three-time
easily ridden."
defending solo champion in
"We made two small modi- the Women's Division, Alice
fications to the course, built
more than 800 feet of bridging and boardwalk, and performed about 1,400 manhours of trail work on the
roadbed," he says.
The race was 10 begin at
noon Saturday and wiD end at
noon Sunday. Gov. Bob Wise
was slated to participate in the .
event's opening ceremonies
and drop the flag to start the
race. '

Vernon of Morgantown.
successful, but I never dreamed
"I think the 24 hours is it would tum out this wen:•
going to go by fast. At least I Knight says.
hope it does," says Boyes, who
Since the original 24 Hours
will be competing solo for the of Canaan was run in 1991 , 45
tinr time after seven years' more . 24-hour races have
experience on a four-man sprung up at locations
team.
throughout the country. The
[n addition to the 2,500 biggest of them all, however,
competitors, event organizers remains the original.
expect at least 13,000 to
"The location is different,
15,000 spectators to tum out · but the event is the same,"
for this year's decade-complet- Knight says. "And now it's 10
ing race.
yean old. Its success is a joy, .
"I always had a sense that despite the stress and the tired
the 24-hour format wonld be bones."

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elective 1ltern1tlve
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Under the 111ctlve
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e · local
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would pt ,...f from
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gr••t•r
pricing
flexibility for HIYian
ou-thlnbulctoc.l
IIChenp telephOIW
...,..,_,In
for committing to cep
exl1tlng ualc locel
exchlng• telephone
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provide from all
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territory
t!le
cepablllty to deliver
advanced
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LOCII
public hurlniJii 111111
- be IChldUied II

the offiCII of the
Commleelon, 11th
Floor.
Borden
Building, 110 Eut
Bro•d
Street,
CoiUmbUI, Ohio;
Clnclnn.tl
Thurecley, June 21,
2001, at 7:00 pm.,
City Hall, Council
Chlmbera, 101 Plum
Street, llh •net Plum,
Clnolnnllll, Ohio;

Public Notice

Tha
Joint
domml . . lon on
Accrectltallon of

th1n live working
deye before th•
lUrvey beglne. The
requeet . niuet 1110
lndleltl thii!I!Ure of
thllnlormllllon to 1M
provldld It the ,
lnteMew.
Such
reque1t1 ahauld be
llddrwlld to:
Dlvl1lon
of
Acc:redltellon
.Operllllona,

HNithcllre

Organization• will
conduct
an
·iCcrldlt.tlon 1Urviy
of . Holzar Medical
Center • Jackaon on
June:ZS.at, 2001.
The purpoee of 1111

aurvey will be to
IVIIUate
the
organlrllllon'l

compliance

with

Ntlonlllly

eetabllahed Joint
CommiHion

Standerdt.

The

... rvey rftUita will be

utecl to determine
and the
conditione wnd1r
which accredHaUon
thould be •warded
~.

lhiiiiJIIIniDtlon. ·

Joint CommiHion
ellnd•rd• dnl with
OfiJinllltiOIIII qllllllty
of c•re IIIUH •net
the aefety of the
envtronllllnlln which
Clrl 11 provlclect.
Anyone believing
.thet he or ehe h. .
pertinent •nd valid
lnformetlon ebout
euch m1tter• m•y
requ11t • . public
lnlormltlon Interview
with the Joint
Commlllllon'• field

...,.•• auvea at u.
time of the aurvey.
lnlolmllllon
praeented 11 the
Interview will be
oarefully ev•luated
tor rtlevlnce to the

aaa Nclitiltloil

p r - . Aeque111
tor
•
public
lnformltlon Interview
muat be m•d• In
writing and lhauld 1M

••nt to the Joint
ConimiHion no IIIIer

0rpn1a11on Llllleon,

Joint Commlllllon on
Accredltltlon or
Hellthclre
Org•nlzetlone, One
fllnii-IICI

Boulevard, Ollkrbook
T.,_,ILI0181.
The
Joint
CommlaeiOn will
lcknowledge ·•uch
req- In wrltlllll or
by telephone and will
Inform
the
org•nlutlon of the
requeet for 1ny
lnteulew.
The
org1nlatlon will, In
turn, notlly th•
lntervlewH of the
iiir.;'llme end
ollhiiiiHIIna.
Thle notlce 11
poetld In .-dance
with the Joint
Commllllon'l
·.requl..mente.

place

••chi•

followa:

Clevelend • Frldly,
J - 22, 2001, Ill 2:00

p.m., It LIUIChe
Stete Ollie• . T - ,
Second
Floor
Auditorium, 815 \V.
Superior Ave.,. lth
1nd
Superior,
C.......nd,Ohlo;
Manafleld
Mondlly, Jun• 21,
2001,11110:00 l.m., at
City Hill, Council ·
Chambera, 30 · N,
Diamond StrHt, 3rd
Floor, Manaflald,
Ohio;
Toledo • Monday,
June 25, 2001 Ill 7:00
p.m, l)overnmanl
Center, City Council
Chambera,
1
Government C.nllt,
Flret Floor, Toledo,
Ohio.

D•yton • Mond1y,
Julie 11, 2001, Ill 7:00
p.m., •t A11yton June 10, 2001
Municipal Building,
City Comml .. lon
May 27, 2001 .
Chambera, 101 W•
Juna 3, 10, 17, 24, Third 11..-t, 3rd •nd
2001
l,.udlow,
D•yton,
Ohio;
Public
.Notice__I June11,
Alhene2001,
• Tundly,
__
_.;...;,.;;.;.:
Ill 2:00
LEGAL NOTICE
p.m., at City Hill
Council Chlmbere,
Third Floor, I E11t
The Public Ulllltlel Weehlngton Street,
CommiHion of Ohio
h•• echedullcl locll Athene, Ohio;
Columbue
public heerlnge to w..o~.-. J
ao·
IHOrd CUitOIHrl In
-·--•• UIMI '
Class1fiel1s!
opportunity
to 2001, It 10:oo •• m.,lt .
comment on •n

it
all
in
the

BOWMAN'S HOMECARE

740-446-7283

a
s
s

«

record; DUI's speeding
tickets, etc.
Same Day SA-22's issued.
Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency
446-1960

Public Welcome
Gallia Co.
Conservation Club
Meeting Wednesday,
June 13th, Dinner 6:30

-'

• ,. ..... ,, ..,., .......4~

'

"

CRUISE.IN
Quality Farm &amp;Fleet
Silver BrKt Plaza
Saturday, une 16th
, 1:00 p.l'l). tiN 4:00 p.m.
Gallia Democrat Fundraiser
June 11th
at 0.0. Mcintyre Park
Speaker: State Senator
Michael Shoemaker
Time: 6:00 pm
Price: $10.00 per person
$20.00 per family
Conie picnic with the
Democrats

e

Trade
in the

Problems with your driving

Sale Berber Carpet
'5Wilf
Mollohan Carpet
202 Clark Chapel Rd.
Porter OH e 446-7444

i
f
i

Sell or

Auto Insurance
Monthly Payments

St. Martin's
Lutheran Church
Homecoming
German Ridge Road
Sunday, June 17 ·
Potluck Dinner
at 1:00 p.m.

c(.

Buy

-------1

GoodNews
Presents ·
Willy Church On
.· Sunday, June 17th
11:00 a.m.

II you 1118 currantly paying for
Albulerol, "puulers", etc, call us
to find 0111 how to get your
medication oovered by
insurance.

find

d
s!

Condo NGrth
Myrtle Beach for rent.
Call
(740} 446-8657
1998 NISSAN
fRONTIER

1001 PT CRUISER
On the lot Now! Preowned, 12,000 mn....

· 48,000 mllea

$12,987
WAY ONDER IOOKJ

1001 JEEP GR.
CHEROKEE
Save Thouaands Buylnjl
thJa Pre-Owned unit!

1001 DODGE
DURANGO

8 239/mo

1997 PLYMOUTH
&amp;REEZE
54,000mllu

$179/mo.

4,000mllea.

HUGE SAVJNGSI

1997 MERCURY
TRACER

1999 CHRYSLER
CIRRUS LXI

511,000 mllea

J3,000mllu

$159/mo.
1998 PONTIAC
SUNflRE
49,000 mllel

$157/Q\O,

11,111

8 189/mo

'

Arthritis Support Group
Thursday, June 14th
' 11me:3p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital Wellness
. and Rehabilitation Center,
Speaker: Eric Martin, Physiologist
For more information contact
Leslie Rizo, OTR/1 at
(304) 675-8639 or the Arthritis
Foundation at 1:800-358-0380

$177/mo.

Serenity House

1995DODGE
NEON

serves victims ol domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-9577 .

84,000 mllel

I Will, Supu Nice
·'

'

$7985
'

UJ89 S-10

~"'' ,tl '" "~'L '""""'nrv'
f;dfln""l"'l"" /1••'
C~l J' tytnr ttfl •" jj,, I
{l.,llndn ~~ vol"r ""II"''

R11y ""

l lu~•

., .. ~ ''

,·

I

'-

.

;

..

.

Lakers
from Page II

leading the Lakers to · a romp
before picking up his third; fourth
and fifth foub in the first · 5 1/2
minutes of the fourth quarter.
The Lakers made only two baskets over the next five minutes, 3pointers by Brian Shaw and Fisher
that kept the 76ers from catching
_j

Eight-year-old killed
a three-bearded 17
1I 4 pound turkey
Cody dropped the gobbler with a
single blast from his 20-gauge shotgun at about 20 yards.
"He came up on a high wall and [
shot him," Cody explained of the
hunt. "I knew he was coming. My
dad \Y:IS cutting and yelping with his
turkey call."
Not bad for an 8-year-old hunter.
up.
Iverson left the game with 19
seconds left and spent .the rest of
.the time yelling at the Lakers, wh~ ·
were again heavy favorites despite .
their loss in the opener.
Bryant bounced b,ack from his 7for-22 shooting performance in
Game 1, going 11-for-23 from the
field and 8-for-8 fiom the line.
Fisher, who · was scoreless in the
opene{, added 14.
Dikembe Mutombo had 16,

Bartrum.

a.m.-12:00 p.m., and incoming
ninth graders through 12th graders .
the camp will be from I :00 p.m.
through 4:00 p.m.
f1omPapBI
The cost of the camp is $25 for
. the Eagles, former Ohio State registration by June 15th, and $30
great Damon Moore of the Eagles, the day of the camp. For more than
Allen DeGralfenried formally of one child you will be charged $15
the Kansas City ·chiefS and for each additional child.
For more information on the
Cincinnati Bengals, Koy Detmer
of the Eagles and (ormer Manhall camp you can contact Spring ValAll Ametican John Wade of the ley High School at (304) 4291699, South Point Ford at (740)
Jacksonville Jaguars,
Also scheduled is several former 894-3673, Rich Gannon at (304)
Marshall graduates, along with 743-75.14 or Rick Edwards at
current Marshall head coach Bob Eastern l:iigh School at (7 40) 985Pruett and former· Marshal assis~ 3329.
The 2001 Bartrum &amp; Brown
tant and the head coach at James
Madison University, Mickey Celebrity Golf Classic will be held
1 Mathews.
on June 23, at the Spring Valley
First graders through eight grade Country Club. Several of ~e playthe camp will be held from 9:00 ers taking part in the football ~p

Eight years old and a pretty good
shot, according to the boy's uther,
Rich Catlett of Maple Fo!k.. "He's
patient and he loves to hunt,n the
elder Catlett explained. "He learn~
quickly. You only have to show him
once and he listens."
Cody says turkey hunting is only
the half of i~
He's been hunting since he was 2
years old.
That's when the boy's father took
him into the woods squirrel and
rabbit hunting. Nexi year the boy
hopes to take up deer and ·bear
hunting.

-All

-

I Tltondtly IJI' .. DMoian ol

.....,,ea

BEECHFORK-l..llutil ..
:!w1
- · ...... .,., tot 111 .,. ~ ney.. H)IIJttd
........ c:.ught ....... _
lfWl
-. . . . -- · _....,_
-.g~
--.,.,mil-.~ lfWl opal·

--.ding--.,.

todbuo_being.....,. ......- . .... ondMiber_,._fillinglhoatoolil- Tho
. . o1 onil•-ln roc1cy OIMOio good tor ••!QrJ'I
good

for

Cl1!fllllo.

Aaron McKie 14, Todd MacCulloch 13 and Eric Snow 12 for the
76ers, whose
balanced. scoring was
.
a surpnse.
The primary reason for it was
their inability to get the ball to
[venqn as much as they wanted
because of Fisher's tight defense.
lvenon missed his first four shots
before hitting a fast-break reverse
layup and then tossing a behindthe-back pass to Jumaine Jones for ·
a 3-pointer and a 13-10 lead. ·

will be at the golf tournament.
Entry Fee for the tournament is
$100, that includes Green Fees,
Riding Cart, Food and Refreshments during the Friday Evening
Auction and Saturday Golf Classic,
and Prizes.
For more information. on the
golf tournament you can contact
Spring Valley Country at (304)
429-5570.
Proceeds from the camp and golf
tournament will benefit Meigs
High School, Spring Valley High
School Athletics and the Huntington Boy's anc;l Girl's Clubs.
Locally camp applications can be ·
picked up at Locker 219 in Middleport, the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce in Pomeroy and
the SEC school, Mechanic Street
in Pomeroy.

_11111og . . . . jigllfWI_GII . . _

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BLUESTONE - .._ IIIII......... ... !' I
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ttnd p~u~~c _,. -.caug~~~olllholumOI-Inlhll . . . ." ' " " - - . good lor ..ty .,., loll In . . day. golcllilh. Clapple and llluegll'- caugl1l en
llluegiiW*Ig 11 good lhnJughaut tho day uo1ng ,,,_ttndjiglltOUndfilllalii**"L T h e . - . , . , ... bolt such u . -........ Tho ... hU _ . for .... .,.,..,. ........
- l o prucbjng -lorgo COil&gt; "" doo9&gt;- IIWI-balt.
_.,.,nicalltilg!IIOoldWinllcallioh,....,.ln
lYGAPT-Lakell-oxlm 'J'3Ittol~•*Ifill on •.Vibaalss; n
worn-. -..m. IKiiidiou tewl. Lake and talwlter are
1n . .
lo!npOntiUrelo atill70 ~ • . .

for--

,_--lor
bass,_-.....,.

T_......_

.. .._

I

---.,. -.g

rune.,.,- - ·-

-In
Cm!&gt;l*--

- " " ' ........ plutlcjigaand liYoltlll.
IIUPNSVUE-..-IooiiUIMWtW

•,

-

and

es ~ 11 30 teot.

-

.,. open. 'WIQIIIOI . . b11nQ caug111 on.,,_

-conblcoughl-onllw-oliltoO&lt;oullo
. , 10.1o 20-1oo1 dop4hs uo1ng a :J.lnch u.."" •
1 - . - jig. White bass (12-- 1o 1~) .,.
lhe...., and can be c:aughl- a ..,.

ond , , , - . SpoUecJ buo .,. being .....,. ..,

1ng •F , ""'11om ...,.

·_._.-.g o1 ...

.,,'11 .,., __.Chamol ..- . . - .....
_ .. _ _ .,.,_-.g.,.__
at ,.._ I\IVIICto-.o

oil polniL Llrgemoulh .,.

ir*l-

01

... - - olllw - ·
ln lo aboul12s lo 15-feiC CJI-. SonJ0 nice llot• cul-818good-forcallloh.lllebooleye llohlng In the lake lllf1lll """"- wolloye
on l*legll jual- , _
wa1or at night to feed. Tty Wlll&lt;·
dati&lt; In 11w - . TIUul 818 hltllng Gil lng the llooliloe and C85llng bbo jigl Of :J.lnch
powMioll.
grubo altar dart&lt;. L.atgo lloallng or ~ .
EAST LYNN - .._ io at ..,._ ,..,_, ntpllu wll ... be elloctMt. t.- for crllfllllo
' - · ...... .,., ... muddy. Anglota . . amtnllhe Chrtllmas baalllh - I n . . ca1ol1ing latgomouth .,., ~- .... tloNng . . Cove. ttnd - l h e boat l8fT4l at lhe I!Oot..olil&amp;wilh...,lllbolto,"*",.,..,.,,_ c..MWicllfa~At8a.
.
- · sa_. are being caug111GII
MONONGAHElA RIVER- Watef-.,.,
adlloh and hybrid llr1Jed .,. hilling ... 11 . . Iindy near normll. bUt water tam- · Croppfo oro being .....,. on min- -""loin lhe mlcHJO'I which llwllor8 Mwu a
nows. while ll!nlloh 818 going 1!111111w011110.
monlh ago. Tty lhe McJtgar.-. and OpoOJol&lt;a dam
FI.D. BAILEY - Lake is at oummer - - talwala&lt;l for aH opec:ies. Jigs tppad- ,.,.,_
- · T - II clear. Hybrid otrlfled bass 818 or 3-lnch white or c h a - _..,.,.,. .,.
baing
tfvooghout lhe u lhey chaM atwaya good - I n - areu. A fish
Cll ohad. Angletw , _ be o1ett for any found large diUtn along lhe lhorellne
commotion on lhe mace as lhe hybrido llult lhe between 111!1 MorgoMOwn look and lhe mouth ol
-olohad. Bell-arejigl,,_.andrat· DecMnt Cnlok. Thio io
*'""ellttolo fish
ttatrapa. some hybrido are being cough! Ill night on becaute o1 aaoct ...,.. "'"" t11a raillrlllf. The - · Sootled buo .,. hitting along lhe tJmo 1o fl8h lor drum will Ill hom 8 p.m. unt1 dal1&lt;
llhor8iine on jigl and small cranlcbal!8. A few trophy· using nlghlctawlttnl, mitmwo, or Jgo ttnd 3-lnc:h
lizlld spotted bua have been caught ,_,uy. Aloo, plastiC grubs. Ullng buubails or outface _.-.
oeverai I!OUI are still being caught fmm lhe tallwa· along "lhe llhor8ilno llllould also ~ largetor. Trout .,. bllng taken on cfl8ettl oggo .and · moulh and smailmoulh buo. The beds neor
powerbaH. Small minnows and Jigs have been lhe state line ata IJIKIIIIIy good for largemoulh bua.
offoctlve for Cf8jlflia when fiohed l!fi)UI1Ij otaroling
CHEAT· I.Al&lt;E - Tho IWO emblyrnel .. at lhe
tlmbttr. Bluegill filhfng II good mootly in lhe head Wet11 Penn Flacreation Area . . , lhe dam proYido
end of cowt. Anglots shoUld uoe 1!11111 ~ ~ llhor8ilno or flier flohing. Largemouth
and live belt IUCh as Willi worms.
bua. 111nfilh and yallow pon;h 818 abuOOant in
STONECOAL LAKE -The lake it 3 fMI billow . _ areu. S11oroi1no aroaa wltll fallen tr8M UIUIIU!I!IIIIII" """""lion - · The mace tomperature ally at1raet largemouth. Whent - n e c:cMtr II
o1 lhe lake Is 85 ~· Cripple haw bien abMnt, fllh- bbo Jigs In 1(). to 20-loet of watef
caught In the ._,endollhe lake on mfntiOWIIand off llw llhoralne. Allo Uy ~&gt;t•zbefll or _ .
11ga. carp ... a~ .. bllng caught 1n lhe ._,end o1 a1ong lhe ohor81ino in 1110 --.lng.
110 1aka on worms and oom. Try a mirmw on a jig
ceNTRAL WEST VIRGINIA - At8a rivetw 008
or a nlghtcre-. bouncing off lhe lor woi~ normal to high and milky. When- IMtra rotum to
11)'11, and dtfltinllwlh a on a light jig for normll flow ll!lldmouth and toek bua lilhing
Cl1!fllllo. Bullilhlng """-.,..tIn 111!11aka and shoUld be groat. A low mutky have been caught in
are hitting pluticl and ilve belt, Both tnlllfng and lhe lluclchannon River .-,uy. Tty minnow llnlta·
lhol8 Holling II paying off for trout with llano. Tho weather lookl groat for lhe -.nd.
powerbaH and """"""'· NfoHizod bluogll have
SOUTHERN WEST VIRGINIA - Smaiimoulh
alto been caught on amallligs.
bau filhing lhoold Ill good lhfl u long u
STONEWALL JACKSON - Lalla lo at 111mmor lhe water conditlona hold on the Now and G...,.
rocnoalion ieVof. l.akAl and tallwater are clOUdy. The brier rivers. Tho l!ll!llimouth are hitting apln,.,.
outface tomporature o1 t11a lau 11 112 dagriH. and rapatu, Some nico bua are bllng caught ""
Bolli can bO launchod 11om all rompo. A row oauo- buubalta aHor dal1&lt;. Anglora may wont to Uy
eye are bofng caught oil poinla in about 15- 10 20- Kanawlla Filii for musky. hybrlda. or callloh uling
· fMI o1 watef With mlnnowo. Largemoyth ore hot big chubl for bOH or lakl anglota can Uy one ollhe
light now in lhallow anta1ao bua move off opawn- omall lmpoundmenta in IOU1htlm Will VIrginia.
1ng aroaa. Ptutfc- and live ball are producing Tholelalcel a,. oflan . , . . - . . , and provide good
the blggeot lllh. Crlfllllo have caugllt on min- flohing "lcir laJVOf1IOUih buo. bluegill and ehannll
nowa around otandlng limber and btfdgoo. Bluegll callilh.

-.-.,__cough!

mil•-

cough!

an-

-IIIIo

"'·'

Triple J Fumilure Shop
In Addison
Only 5 min from Route 7
Soxsprings &amp; Mattress
Recliners • Dlnnettes
China Cabinets
Living Room &amp;
Bedroom Suiles
Picture Gallery
Jusl follow the sign off
Roule 7 onto Addison Pike
(740) 367:7237

ns Bulk Foods

5184 SR. ns, Patriot, Ohio 45658

Sale 13-14-15, Guggisberg ·
Baby Swiss Reg. $3.25 Sale
$2. 75, Will be closed Saturday,
June 16 for Amish School
Benefit Auction

Brand New 2001 Chevy .
C.WIIer Coupe

q1,1
•AMIFM

a..:W~'IC~D::=

Sporty Equipped!

Public welcome.
The Gallirolis Shrine Clubs
Annua Fishing Derby.
Saturday, June 16th, open to
kids 16 and under. Fishing
8am~11am. Free hot dogs and
pop for kids. All kinds of
fishing tackle prices.

Open House at the
.Gatlia Meijs Airport
Saturday, une 16th
starting at Noon
Meet the new ·

Aueonllllc, ~ CGnclllanlng
A.- SpgH1r, CD Syattm
1 11;t I Crulll

• Vorllc 2200PoWI!Id
• AfNFM Sllrto Syltem
• Nicely Equipped!

2000 Old~lle

2000 Buick Century.

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~2,350* ~2,550*

• V-41 Power, Air Colldltionl119 I
• Power Wlndowa I Locka

CD Syatem, Tilt I Crulu

Customer Appreciation Sale
. Boxed Card Sale
Buy 2 Boxes Get 1 Box Free
Now Thru June 3oth
Willa's Bible Book Store
416 Main Street
~.oint Pleasanl, WV
675-5833

Fun &amp; ood
Airplane rides offered
SP ( CUll WI 0 SIH Rtllll Till

BECKLEY, W.Va. Daniel
. Boone. Davy Crockett. Cody
:Catlett. What do these three names
have in common?
AU were enthusiastic big game
hunters in their youth.
You already know about Boone
and Crockett, but you might not
have heard much at Catlett - until
now.
· Catlett bagged a 17 1/4 pound
gobbler recently while hunting with
· his father near Plum Orchard Lake.
The bird sported three beards: one
10 inches long, another 5 1/4 inches and another 2 inches.

~W.Ya.(N')-llle,_.\IIJ9illl

llllf*'ll ._c 1 I

Hemsworth's Gulf Station
For Sale
Great place for repair shopl
Price reduced! Call Tim at
toll free 1-888-874-1994

mana~er .

WWW llflrriS II Drlfllllldllllllr. f.U III

Hunting is elementary for child

Yard Sale
1442 Millcreek Road
10:00 to 3:00
Monday; June 11

$135/mo.
1994GMC 1/l
PICKUP ·

W.VL fishinl Report

io¥11. Lakin rt •• .,. -

65and0ver
Public~

wv

OUTDOORS

Snowshoe celebrates 10 years of mud, sweat and gears with 24 hour race
SNOWSHOE, WVa. (AP) in the Canaan Valley National
- The 24 Hours of Snow- Refuge. Federal policy proshoe, an around- the-doc k hibits bike riding in a refuge.
mountain bike race that tests . "This nuy be the biggest
the endurance of even the mountain bike r:&gt;.ce in the
most die-hard sprocket jock- country right now," says Laird
eys, celebrates I 0 yean of Knight, the event's founder
mud, sweat and gears this and promoter. "For the sheer
weekend.
number of competitors and
"People come from all over spectators it dr:&gt;.ws, I can only
the country to ride in this think of two other r:&gt;.ces that
race;• says Amy Atkins of rival it."
South Charleston, who will be
Those events, the Sea Otter
pedaling for the Charleston's Classic and the National OffAngels team in the Women's Road Bicycle Association's
Expert division. "The coune is National Championship Series
classic West Virginia - techni- at Mammoth Mountain, are
cal singletrack, with tom of multiple- race compet111ons
roots and rocks to contend spread over several days. In
with. It's probably the best rid- terms of single-race events, the
ing in the state."
24 Hours of Snowshoe. reigns
The race, founded as the 24 supreme.
Hours of Canaan in 1991,
Knight says this year's race
moved to ~nowshoe Moun- will be the biggest yet.
tain last year after a 12- mile
The race is so popular that
section of the former race Knight had all 500 team slots
coune in Canaan Valley was 6lled just five weeks after he
sold to the U.S. Fish and began registering this year's
Wildlife Service for inclusion entrants. "We booked up in

Ponwoy •llldd'lport. G.ulpalla, Ohio. Point ,.....m,

Sundlly, June 10, 2001

Public Welcome
Gallipolis Shrine Club
Hillbilly Breakfast,
Saturday, June 16th,
6am-10am
.)

• Alilott Ilk, Air COnditioning
1 Power SNI, Windon, Locka
• CD Syatem, Tilt I Crulte

Cualom Sedln

113,3

• Power Drlvtr'l Seat
• Po- Window• I Locka
• Tilt, Crulu, CD Syltem

2000 Oldsmobile

Custom Sedan

~&amp;;850* ~1,8

• Po- SHt, CD System
• Power Window• I Lockl
• Tilt I Crul1e

• Taxes, Tags, m. FeN eJdra. RtOale lndud«&lt;ln l8lt price olnow vel'ide ltllld when! eppllcable. "On ll)llf(l'ltd eNd!. On &amp;elected modele. Not !tsponllble for ljpogmpNcal errors.
Pflcel Good Jtnl Blh Throuuh .llnl,1Olh.
'
.

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• V-41 Fully Power Equipped
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C:HIVaOLU
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••

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

�•

•

•

•

88

hbJ Su•- ieuthael

•

Inside:'

J:l•t ...,.... .. ieatind

I

Celebrations btgin on 2C

51 af "II • 1e.2111

Page Cl

•

•

the NeW River
CllUMPS BOITOM, W.Va.
(AI') -Take a childhood spent
on the edges o(Appalachia, mix
it wilh a reporter's unending· .
search for stories to tell, and
you might conclude it wu
inevitable that Noah Adams
would produce his recent
book, "Far Appalachia."
A National Public Radio
correspondent since 1975,
Adams is turning his hand to
longer narrative!, and in !his
volume he recounts his travels
down !he 350-mile course of
lhe New River, fiom its origins
on Snalte Mountain in North
Carolina to i~ end at Gauley
Bri. in WestVirginia.
Along !he way, he takes us
through the steepest, most
rugged terraitdn !he East, and
introduces us to its current residents, as well as soine of !hose
who braved its rapids and
waterfalls when they had no
idea what was lying around the

•

bend.

S••dq, Jue 10, 11111

ly poisonous shoes that weren't
part of the original tale, set in
Geoqpa.
"·I don't know whyWettVtt·
ginia geu hit so hard," Adams
said. •But Dickey's movie sort
of cast iu dark, gloomy shade
over the entire region.
•1-ve actually had people tell
me they are afraid · of
Appalachia."
In contrast, Adams' book is
filled with !he lighthearted,
generous people he met.
among them a Fayette County
pilot known as Five Dollar
Frank.
For $5 apiece, Frank Thomas
would take you and a friend in
his 5ingle-engine Cessna on a
llynver of !he steepest regions
of the ,New River Gorge. He
ftew fiom an airfield he built in
194(&gt; near Fayetteville.
· Thomas died this March, but
other characten • abound.
.Adams also met Eddie Bennett,
a retired teacher who is one of
Fayette County's rare Republicans - an emphatic one, at
that. Bennett maintains an
office on Main Street near !he
courthouse,
its
purpose
declared on a sign painted on
its storefiont window: G.
Edward Bennett: Opinions

.

nett went to a lwdw3re store
and bought two put beaches.

He loaned the teeDS his tools to
assemble the benches, !hen
donated the benches to the
rown on the condition that !he
teen-agers could use them.
Adams includes the story
because it illustrateS the kind of
people he met lhroughout his
journey: unf•ilingly polite, and
~uendy downright friendly.
That thought triggered a recollection of his early mission,
the one he abandoned to write
a ~ book.
"We will never break !hose
stereOtypes until people drive
into West Virginia for !hemselves, see how t-utiful it is
and how wonderful the people
aze," Adams said. "It's the only
way!'
He is already malting a den~
In a recent book reading. in
Phoenix, the bookstore w:aS
crowded with more than 150
people eager to hear about 1m
tra.vels.
Most of them were i.ntereitcct
in water sports, but !here were:
many with !heir own connections to Appalac~
~
"The same lhing happened
in Denwr and ~e," Adams
said. "West Virginians, really any
people who have . family in
Appalachia, are eager to heat:
about it.
~
"It's a wooderlW place. WhY
wouldn't someone in Arizona·
or New Mexico want to knOW:
more?"
•

"I wanted some ~nsibility of NATURAL NEW RIVER- The New River Gorge near Sandstone, W.Va.. Is veiled In fog on
what it would have been like to Wednesday. Noah Adam's book "Far Appalchla' tells the story of the author's modem journey
do it !he fint time," Adams said. along the banks of the New River. (AP)
Unlike early settlen, Adams !hat also is the probable source rhe edge of Appalachia.
tion that has not been
.Jwi map!, topographic sheets o( anolher great North Ameri- While very much a part of improved hy popular culture.
on which Crump! Bottom was can river, the Tennessee.
eastern Kentucky, Ashland has
•1 have 111et people whose
immediately recognizable as
"When the water got big more the flavor of a midwest- entire image of Appalachia has
one of the largest areas of flat · enough. I was in a solo canoe;' ern town, with an economy been formed by the movie
land along !he river's path.
Adams said. "When the water based on river and r:ail traffic, . made of James Dickey's novel, Expressed,
"I saw this place on lhe map, got bigger, I needed help and I chemical plants and steel milh. 'Deliverance; or olher similar · Occasionally, Bennett abanand knew it had to be special;' got a guide."
He grew up dose enough, tales;• he said.
dons rumination for action.
Adams said.
Ultimately, !he canoe had to however, to be aware of
lfDickey's novel weren't l:!ad
When lhe toWn elders tried
Most of Crumps Bottom give way to a whitew:~ter raft Appalachia's image in many enough, Adams said, !he film- ·to dispene local ·teen-agers
now lies beneath Bluestone with a helmsman and a crew, parts of the country, a reputa- makers added some gratuitous- fiom their hangout on the
shady courlhouse lawn, BenLake.
negotiating life-threatening
Adams is not the fint person rapids that Adams said were
to recognize it as a special clearly beyond his skill.
place. Native Americans used it
His experiencfS in West Viras a cross-tribal meeting ginia's New River Gorge
ground for centuries before National River convinced
·Col. Abraham Wood, in 1654, Adams that the approaching
became the fint European to roar of whitewater downstream
record !he "discovery" of New is something that will never get
River.
ld
0
-, Wood tried naming the river
,;, so 't ad rena1·me a grea t
Wood's River, but the name drug?" Adams laughs. "There's
didn't stick. OlheD who came nothing like that moment
later wrote. of lhe "new river;' when you're coming in at the
the first stream they found top of a rapid. It's a great feeltlowinJ north and west, and mg.
· ·" '
.
lihly to be a tributary of lhe
The book is much more than
Includes 300 anytime minutes and 2.000 night &amp; wee~end
great Mississippi, rather · than a whitew:~ter adven~ tale, ·
minotes With a new pne·year service agreernent.
flowing - as all othen seemed however. Adams said it had
to do - to the Atlantic.
been simmering in his mind for
The Rev. Charles Wood, a several years.
possible descendent of Wood's,
"I wanted to try to do someis one of the people Adams met thing about Appalachia, someon his trip. Wood grew up on thing that would counteract
Crump! Bottom, but len West the sterebtypes of the region;'
Virginia for the industrial Mid- he said. "But that's too big an
west, !hen returned when he area, too big a topic. It would
retired.
be like writing about Europe."
He now runs a dock museA friend's advice helped him
um in nearby Hinton, but he crystalize his idea. ·
still recalls the roUing bottom · "He told me, 'If you're on a
land as 'the most beautiful farm mission, you're going tQ fail.' It
'
lhe region ever had.
simplified things so much," h'e
"Crumm
r· Bottom was deep, saJ·d •
loamy soil, lhe best I ever saw.
"I decided simply to write a
There were rows of corn there travel book !hat would open up
_] mile long;• Wood recalled.
the region to people who don't
Adams' journey, taken in know anything about it."
installments over a year, began
Adams is a native of Ashland,
on foot and on a bicycle, 6n a Ky., an Ohio River town on
mountain in North Carolina

-------------------

.... )

·2,300 minutes per
month for only

•

. 0

$36.90/mo. ~

COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP, - Here II

the weekly Laka Erie flohlng report provided by the Dlvlalon of WlldiKe of the
. Ohio

Department

~rcet:

of

Natural

WESTERN IASIH

The water temperature off Toledo Ia

rlg.Anglera lhoukl note the legal bag
llmH lor smallmouth baa io five with a
minimum llze leng1h of 14 inchao. ·A
large majority of anglers releue small·
mou1h bass, which has helped sustain
this fishery.
,
CENTRAL BASIN
The water temperatura off Cleveland
ia 58 degrees. Smallmouto bela flahlng
In Central Basin harbors and lhoreUna
Jreu haa been good.Anglara are
catching 14· to 18-lnch amalilee lrom
Conneaut, Ashtabula, Geneva, and
Fairport In 15 to 30 feet of
water.Ai1gle111 have .s ilo been succ:eas·
fuiiiOUnd the Peny NUcleor Plant dis·
charge bubble In ~ feet of
water.Smallmoulh baae anglera drift
with Jlgat!pped with mlnnowt, tUbe Jigs,
email apinnara, crank INIIII, and c111y· .
fish.
Walleye fishing Ia reperted as
falr.a.atlocatlona ara 1 to 2 miles weat
of Eastlake and 1 to 3 miles nor111weat
of Alhtabula In 30 to 45 fnt of water,
end 1 to 3 milee north of Cleveland
Eut 72nd Street In 35 to 45 fMI of
watar.B&amp;st time. are Mrly morning and
IMKIIngs.Anglers are trolling jol dlvera,
(IOIIIe off planar boardl) with
opoons.Sizn are In the 18- to 28-lnoh

59 deareea. Walleye lishlng waa
ooporl8d on Thuraday but llCI*t·
811 to 1n1JR1V8 lor the weelcend with a
dtcent wuther ldracaston the hori·
zon.When lake condtlons are right and
the ~ bile Ia on, anglera hal/8
reported good SOJCC:til with lmH catch·
11 taken. Walleye are ranging In a varl~ ofliZM 1410 251nchH, U well as
IMny 'Filii Ohio" qualllln a1 28 Inch·
11 and goaater.The beet walleye fllhlng
has been boltwHn Wilt Slater lellnd
and
the
Toledo
Shipping
Channai.Otherl good areaa Include
nor111 and Mil ot Ralllllnau llland,
north of can, and the ~~end
of the Camp Peny Firing Aange.Moet
walleye are being caught IUip8nded ot
r1ghl oft the bottom.Drifters and tmlltrs
ha.. both been catching tloh.Anglers
drilling and . casting .,. uatng nlglol
aawlefa on welQid.furwanl lplnnora,
maylly rlgt, flippin' ha,_, and bot·
tcm bour!Cera With worm hamMHI.
Tlollera ara pulling deep diving crank range.
t.lta and apoona.The legal bag lmH lor
Yttlow Perofl flahlng hal been good
..n.y. Ia elx 1rom May thiaugh Febru- 2 to 4 mlltl northweal ol Fairport In 35
to 45 feet ol water. 1 to 3 milt&amp; north ol
ll'f·
Ytltow peteh anglera are reporting Alhtabuialn 30 to 45 fest of water, and
the bttl IUCICII&amp; -1 d Ma~d north of Clevelend East 72nd Street In
Ugl1111cMe In 28 to 32 feet of water, 25 to o40 fnt ol water.Petch ara all8rof Cltawba Slate Park In 20 feet aglng SID 111nches.Perch anglers fish
o f - . taa1 of Airport Reef In 41 ""' wHh perch riga tipped with lake lhlnera
of water, and Juat north of the Toledo or minnows.
-'
Hemor Ugl1t In 17 10 18 feet of water.
Anglera are also taking gOod numAnglers are using fake ahlners on bel1 of SID 11 Inch whHe bela around .
pen:h apraaders ljshed on ot near bot· the Eastlake CEI Planlln to to 20 feet
tom.The legal bag llmH for yellOw perch of water using agnatora with jigs,
Ia 30 tloh per angler.
11111111 apoona, and Jigs tipped with
SmaNmaulh IIIIa llthlng II good mlnnowe.
.
taa1 of Kelleyo loland off the airport, at
Deaplte the current trend In low
Nortl Bay at Kelleya lilland, eUI of wster laval&amp; on Lake Erie, all DONA
Parry'a r.tonYmenl, and West Reef In fishing end ramping facfiHiee
18to 22 feet of water.Anglera ars hav· ars open and fully c:&gt;era,tlonal at thll
lng the beet IUCCIII with eoiiCrawll time. Angtera should follow navigational)d large IItke lhlnera on a C&amp;loflna al charts closely.

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'DEAR. ABBY: I would like
tO pose a question to your ~
ei-s who are parents: Would you
hand your child a lighted
ll)ateh? The idea is absurd. Yet
e,ach Independence Day, thousands of parents don't gM a second thought to giving their
children sparklers - · lighted
siicks that can bum at a temperature up to · 1,200 degrees
Fahrenheit.
. Last )'t'at, more than 8,000
people in the United States
(most of them children)
received treatment at an emergency room for injuries related
~ fim.wrks. Keep in mind !his
figure does not include injuries
treated by private physicians or
those not treated .at all. I \Wuld
like to remind your readen ofall
ages that fireworks (sparklers
iJ1duded) are not toys. .Please
leave fireworks to !he profes' 'nals .
510
The number of people who
sustain serious burns, loss of eyesight or other disfiguring trauma
~ a result of fireworks is evic!ence that !here is no safe way
l9r amateurs to use them.
·July Fourlh and fireworks are

_i . - --

- -·
~ vowed ;omeday he would purchase one of the
vehi~les

for himself.
Unfortunately, that someday would turn into
several decades.
Wright said he did have several opportunities
to obtain a Model A during his lifetime, but
other priorities came about and his drearri of
owning one kept getting pushed ~o the back
burner in order to attended to more important
.. · matters.
.Howc:Ver, all that changed several monlhs ago
vastly diffetem
apydiliif traveling th~ when Wright finally decided to plunk _down
mads today. From its bulbo~ headlights to ~ , the money ~r the ve'?-icle that had eluded him
NJDble seat - or mothCW:.in-law seat, as it's for so long. , . , . ,.. ~. . .·~ .
.

fr:o;

~~f.~~~~~~~!i[, .~onlY
refenJd
·IUilquc a&amp;yle
all its toown. the Model A
' .1lisplays

co~mci!!l

i

presen~

At the
Wrtght
ts constructmg
cradle
_for the ~ar·same,
gas ~nk,
which
~s in ?e.e d a
Wright explained that he fine became inter- exteos1ve repatr followmg years of mactlvlty.
~ ia Model As during hi
days
"It's easy t&lt;? get parts for a Model A;' said
•
Edgar Atkins a
school Wright, liS he tinkered over the automobile's
chum,
"bUrn up the' roada
~ ~ur-cylinder en~ine-a!l engine that prodriving one ol'
the
to a maxunum speed ';£ 60 mph.
b}'1
a gas tank isn'-t one. of them ."
. . ' ' ' ( .1 • .
car has satidle for many yean
a very. succeSsful and
..
.
ilislde the gas tank
.,.......__
area and, -we"U, whatev-· ecd to.j)e remo\&gt;eq. .
.. ~. slid jokThe classi vehicle

~ at and- ~r: through an ol;~dor~:rl~:(;t:~·igq1al

~A

NATIONAL FIRE PROTECTION ASSOCIATION
DEAR GEORGE: HoW
iight you are! While we ate on
the subject of injuries sustained
on 'July Fourlh and other holitlays, let's not forget !he injuries
and dealhs caused by another
}cind of "fireworks'' - Pullets
jired into !he air by exuberant
celebrants.
: Allhough guns played a .part
in winnirig our independence,
. the deadly toll eX01Cted by gun- '
trying to enhance their cel'l:bration is unconscionable and
I!IegaL Readers, please report
ibis crime to !he police. Too
·lJ1311Y li)les have been lost as a
:lesult of gun accidents.This )'t'at,
· :let's not add to !he numbers as
:we celebrate our nation's hard-

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:. DEAR. ABBY: Ever since I
:Walked into our bedroom and
.found my wife; 'janice," naked
. with a naked man, my relations
· ~th her have been -.,. at the
~east - strairi.ed. I have tried to ·
:tJe mote in touch with her
needs, but we .have not made
love fur more !han a year
: My. )Vife is defensive and IUs
l?randished your column on
:"signs of abuse." Many of the
;points you make she has been
:guilty of herself, yet she blameS
·me for these behaviors. I have
:been to counseling, and Janice
~oined me a couple of tim~. but
refused to ~ bade ~use
•dJe counselor upset her.We 'have
~two beautiful girls whom we
;both want to raise - I think. I
'still love my wife and want to be
her best friend again.
I'm ready.to forgive and move
:on with my life, and I want it to
:be with my wife. If not, I'D take
:care of my girls. HoW can l per~ made Janice to return to coun.
seling? We need it. - TORN
·IN TENNESSEE

:. f?e

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MOIDEL ifENTI4UtiiAlST,.... George Wright of Pomeroy sits behind. the wheel of his 1930 Model
A FQt'd Coupe that he plans on u~ing In parades, festivals and' sightseeing tours following Its
~

restoration.
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;won freedom.

· - available in a variety
of colors

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names

~ .,.....,...cou:;:'•:••~u

_. firetrorks is
~.. - at a distance

·men

• phone directory stores up
to 75
and numbers

·ONiEcTING PEoPLE

: to enjoy

PRESIDENT,

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$35 and higher.

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ADVICE

not ~.that fm:wOrks be
banned, &amp;om the celebtation;
however, !he associ3tcd risks
lnust be . recognized - and
feduced. Professional pyrotechhlciaru &lt;Ire trained tri adhere to
state-of-the--art CCJde, for public
6reworks ' displays. The only
;"safe" way to enjuy tireworlcs
!his July is at one of lhese public
displays - tiom a diStance. GEORGE D. Mli.LER.,

.

'

Abby

~cally · )ynopyino~. l~.am

get a Nokia 252c
for only 1¢.

Lake Erie r11hlng Report

Dear

'

APplications available for River Rec contests
.

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GALLIPOLIS - Applications ate
WHAT: River Recreation Festival Little Miss
being accepted for the 2001 Little Miss
and Mister Firecracker Contest
and Mister Firecracker Contest on July
4 at 11:30 a.m.
WHEN: 11:30 a.m. July 4
Little Miss and Mister Firecracker
contestants will be judged on appearWHERE: Gallipolis City Park
ance and personality. They must wear
HOW: Registration cost is $10 per child; late applications $15.
plav:wear or casual. dolhing. Out of
town judges will be presiding. The
.
Registration deadline is June 23.
master of ceremonies will ask each
child a question and ~ briedy wilh
cost is SlOper child. Late applications Contest on July 4 at 9:30 a.m.
them.
•
Baby and Tot Sparkler contestants
On11 ~ and one girl Will ~ select- Will be accepted at'a cost of$15.·Pared '1$ Little Miss and Mister Firecrack~ .ents must pick up a child's number at will be judged on appearance arid in
er. Each winner will receive a $50 sav- 10:30 a.m. in !he City Park. The con- the judge's opinion , the cutest c:hild.
ings bof,id, a trophy, sash and te!t'will begin at 11 :30 a.m. and will be They must wear playwear or casual
clothing, such as rompers, sundresses
held on the main s~;~ge.
crown/scepter.
Applications are also being accepted and shorts outfits. Parents must hold
1Wo boys will be selected as first
mate and second mate. Two girls will for the 2001 Baby and Tot Sparkler child or child must stand.
be selected as fint and second attendant. First mate, second mate and
.One boy and one girl UJill be selected as Little Miss
attendants will receive a trophy and
sash. Each participant will receive a
and Mister Firecracker. Each winner will recei11e a
winner's ribbpn.
$50 savings bond, a trophy, sash and croum!scepter.
Registration deadline is June 23. The

No strollers .or baby carriers are
allowed during the contest. First, secon,d and third place prizes will be given
to those selected in each age group, as
well as a most patriotic award and each
participant will receive a winner's rib-

bon.

.

R egistration deadline is June 23.The
cost is $10 per child. Late applications
will be accepted at a cost of $15 . Parents must pick up child's number at
H:30 a. on. in the C ity Park .
The contest will begin at 9:30 a.m.
and will be held on the main stage.
Each age group will be judged individually. Boys and girls will be judged separately. Out of town judges will be
used.
No family members of the River
Recreation Festival Comminee, its
Sllbcommittees, or staff of the Chamber of Commerce may participate.
Applications can be obtained at the
chamber offices, 16 State St. Payment
must be included with application.
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Pomeroy • Middleport .• G.lllpoll•, Ohio • Point Pll,.~t, WV

p .. C2 ......, ~..,. -6tntintl

;Sund8y, June 10, 200'1

Sundey, June 10, 20Q1

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6unblp 1limtf -6tntinrl • Page C3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Qelllpolls, Ohio Point Pl•••ant. WV

~Celebrations

Celebrations

Meigs

...

Party meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Carleton School.

The Community C.lanct. 'publlshMIM I ,..IW\IIce to
11011-p!ollt groupa wlllllng to
~ n•Unge and lplclll Meal ill. The ~··nca.r Is
nol dellgned to promoll
. . . or
olany
typl. """' .,. printlld only
• space permits and cannot
. be gull'lrdled to be prinllld I
specific number ol dlys.

RACINE - Racine Board of
Public Affairs, 7 p.m. Monday,
municipal building.

fund.....,.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Ladles for
the Lord women's Bible study,
10 a.m. Tuesday, Abundant
Grace Church. Middleport.
Refreshments. Study on lhe
book of Ruth.

SUNDAY
RACINE ~Community of
Christ Church, PortlandRacine Road, 10:30 a.m. service. with guest speaker, Mary
Ann Chamberlain. Potluck to
follow. Counseling every
Wednesday evening 6 to 7
p.m. at the church.

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EAST MEIGS - Eastem
Band Boosters, Tuesday, 7:30
p.m in band room Meet the
new band director.
POMEROY- Meigs County
BOard of Elections, Tuesday,
8:30a.m.

POMEROY- No services will
be held at the Flatwoods United Methodist Church Sunday.

'

Connolly 63rd

LONG B0Tf9M -The 63rd wedding anniversary ofJoe
and Eloise Connolly was observed during Christian Home
Month at Long Bottom United Methodist Church.
The Connollys have been faithful members of the church for
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Charles Houdashelt of . 50 years, with both serving as Sunday School teachers as well
Pomeroy announce the engagement and approaching marriage as holding various offices.
of their daughter, Betsy Annette, to Harry A. Rice, also of
They were presented with a certificate of appreciation, a gift
Pomeroy. He is the son of Bill and Carol Bennett of Montea- certificate for a dinner out, and a bouquet of flowers.
_gle, Tenn.
Family members attending were their daughter and son-inThe bride-elect is a 1997 graduate of Meigs High School Jaw, Mary and Ken Frecker, son and daughter-in-law, Okey and
and is currendy employed by Veterans Memorial Hospital in Janet Connolly, grandson Brian and his wife Tonya Connolly,
Pomeroy.
granddaughter Brenda and husband Jay Lowers, granddaughter
The prospective bridegroom is employed by Gallia-Meigs . Paula and husband Tim Buckley, great-grandchildren, Tori and
Head Start
Tyler Lowers, Breea and Brad Buckle¥, Karissa .and Zachary
An open-church wedding is planned for June 23 at 3 p.m: at Connolly; Mrs. Connolly's brother and sister-in-law, Bill and
Carleton Church on Kingsbury Road, with a reception imme- Mary Price, and their daughter Debbie and grandson Joe
diately following in the church basement.
Howard.

Houdashelt-Rice engagement

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POMEROY - Elizabeth
Renee Downie and Philip
--u'vlatthew Swatzel were · mar~
ried March 3 at 4:30 p.m. at
the
Richland
United
Methodist Church in Athens.
Pastor Norm Coleman and
the Rev. Roger Sayre, uncle of
the groom, performed the
double-ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Allen and Janet Downie of
Pomeroy. Maternal grandparents are Edison and Bernice
Baker of Middleport. Paternal
grandparents are Dorothy
Downie of Pomeroy and the
late Ted Downie.
The groom is the son of
Mike Swatzel ofLitde Hocking, and ·Paula Welker of
Pomeroy. Maternal grandparents are Brooks and Nne
Sayre. Paternal grandparents
are the late Charles -and Jane
Swatzel.
Matron of honor was Debbie Person, sister of the bride,
,Middleport, and maid of
~onor was Erin White, friend
of the bride, from Cleveland.
Bridesmaids were Alison
Boger and Mandy Uribes,
both of Columbus, and Terra
Niederoest of New Jersey.
Junior bridesmaid was Shauna
Clark, special friend of the
bride and groom.
Best man was Joe Davis,
friend of the groom. Serving
as groomsmen were Scott
Bauerbach, of Belpre, and
Arthur Krauer of Athens, both
., fi·iends of the groom. Also

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Del Ogdln ·

Persons- Ulnce engagement

, PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

E-MAIL YOUI ANNOUNCEMENIS:
· news@mydals:sentinel.com
.news@mycla
er.com
news@mydailytri une.com

.;

serving as groomsmen were
brothers of the groom Don
Swatzel ofTuppers Plains, and
Steve Swatzel of Pomeroy.
Junior Groomsmen was Ryan
Beegle, nephew of the bride.
Vocalists for the wedding
· were Richard Boger and Dora
Inskeep, bot11 of Columbus,
and Manoj Shanmugham of
Michigan~Pianist was Nathan
Booth of Wheelersburg.
Readers were Tamara Kaufman and Bethaney Moody,
both of Columbus. Greeters .
were Allison Barnett, TupJlers
Plains, and Miranda Spangler,
Lancaster.
A dinner reception was held

"The hospital's ann.ual Wellness Fair provides easy
GALLIPOLIS-. The 17th
Annual Holzer Medical Community Health and · access to this data, and the
Center Community Health Wellness Fair is always a ideal opportunity to learn
and Wellness Fair will be . highlight of the year with more about the various
June 16, from 10 a.m. until2 hundreds of area residents departments that provide
p.m. in the hospital's Educa- from the multi county area · both inpatient and outpation and Conference Center served by the hospital com- tient care to the community.
on the ground floor of the ing to take advantage of the We are very pleased to share
Charles E. Holzer Jr., MD many screenings, and find _ this _opportunity ',\'ith otJve:
healthca~~
Surgery Center, said Com- v3luable information on how .. community
they
can
·
m
aintain
a
healthy
providers.
,
munity Health and W~llness
11 ,., ,_ 1:)
"Mark your calendars ('?~
Director Bonnie McFarland, lifestyle," McFarland said.
"New
information
.-Jnd
this
Saturday, June lp. bri1jg
RN,BSN.
Free and open to the pub- services are constandy being ~your families, and plan ~\),
,;tt
lic, the fair will feature more added at the hospital," she come to the fair."
For information, c~\
than 30 displays by hospital added.
"The Annual Health and McFarland at 44~5679 . c,,
departments, community
busines1es and organizations.
This year's fair, which
will be held for the first
time on a Saturday, will
focus on health care for the
cw:~adtno
entire family.
Several health screenings
will be available, including
blood pressure, glucose,
cholesterol, height/weight,
pulse oximetry, and body
fat analysis checks, along
with other valuable health
information.
Information will also be
on hand about liome care,
hospice, nutrition, stress,
skin care, therapeutic ·massage, as well as a variety of
other. topics.
This year, a special display sponsored by the
HMC Pediatric Department will provide activities
and screenings such as face
paintings, Kid Care IDs,
FURNITURE&amp;
blood pressure and height
Rl. 2, GIIUpollt FelT)', WV
and weight.

·~

Mr. and Mrs. Philip Matthew lwatzel

at Nelson Commons in
Athens. Iil keeping with the
theme of the wedding, the
reception hall was decorated
in pink and lavender with silver accents.
The bride is a graduate of
MeigS High School and Ohio
~~e Unive~ity with a bache11&gt;r.s degree Jh &lt;;:hild and Family Studies and·masters in education.

The bridegroom is a graduc
ate of.Walton High School
and Ohio University wi.th a
degree in civil engineering,
and is currently employed at
Ohio University. The couple
resides at Hemlock Grove .

es bones to rub against each
other, causing pain and loss of
movement. Most commonly
affecting middle-aged and
older people, osteoarthritis
can ranB!: from very mild to

very severe.
It affects hands and weightbearing joints such as knees,
hips, feet and the back. A
question . and answer session
will follow Sattler's formal

Cfiands

&amp;y

, RTC1!Y.ur
........

National Nurainj Assistant
Ia June 7-l4!l
Scenic HUll Nunillg Center would like to take this
OJIIIorlunity to recognize, coniratulaU, and gire our
~q~,i'recillti&lt;~n to 1111 of our dtdlcattd nursing assl~tan1ts.
. Scenic HUll Nursing Center would also like to
ricognlze all of you who have dtdkaJed your lives to
talclng care of our elihrly, we would _like to say .

presentation with refreshments provided by Holzer
Senior Care Center.
For more information, call
Amber Johnson of Holzer
Senior Care at 446-5001.

Nursing Assistants employed at
Scenic Hills Nursing Center are:
Lha Jeffers, Mary Myers, Mary Dunlap, Carol Co~e,
Co11nk Hagen, Sue Washington, Unda Gibbs,
Lori Mautz, To11ya Lewis, Tracy Hinkle,
Crystal Shephard, Angel Collins, Shannon uport,
Many Jo/JMon, Connie Siders, Carol Cox,
· SuU~nne Shiposlcy, Mary N~t~l, Amy Allbright,
Jenka Smith, Sam Mllhr, Rhonda Morris, Lohl
Cremeans, StelhJ Blllnton, Phyllis Lane, Justin
Johnson, Dottk Crosby, Earl Dunlap, Mary Gne~,
JoAnn Haskins, Dow/Ill Rainey, Krlsti Q 'Dell,
Jamk l..amm, Sherry Clonch, Amanda Stapleton,
Ashley Jon11, Stacie Walters, Jenny Haskins, .
FaUh Lamm, Bmndle Wllllllms, Amanda B,~~rd,
EWI Duncan, Betty Fink, Shirley Beaver, Mary
Shllton, Mqfy Birclifield, Teri Blrc/ifield, Jerry Day,
Cortlltl Saundm, Brian Ebert and Sharon we,.t.

FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 6 P.M. - ?.? ?AND 8ATvRDAY, JUNE 16, 1 P.M.-???
at the Union Campground, New Haven, WV (Rain or Shine)
FREE Admission ~ Concession Stand ~ Watch for Slgnsll

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news@mydailysentinel.com

J\1atthews wedding

• Money
starting at

•Tie Tacks
starting at $11.95

• Gent's Rings
· starting at $59.00

Gallia Chamber salutes local businesses

-'

" GASLLIPOLIS - Gallia
Business Moment, introduced
last year by the Gallia County
Chamber 9f Coqunercc; Promotions' Committee, . gives
free prom!ltion to a selection
. of chamber members each
month. Learn more about
these businesses by visiting
the Gallia County Chamber
of Commerce Web Site at

the company is a registered including building contract- Wilburn Candles is also availinvestment advisor and a full ing - siding, roofing, &amp; win- able at the French 500 Flea
sewice . broker-dealer · and dows. For more information Market in the Activities
member of NASD &amp; SIPC. about Rio Hardware Supply, Building at the Gallia County
Owner, Jim Mor~ison, is a call (740) 245-9745.
,
Junior Fairgrounds. For inforcertified financial planner
• Black Eagle Farm- mation, call (740)2561290.
(CFP) and a registered repre- located at 790 Herman Road
sentative of Walnut Street in Gallipolis, Black Eagle
Securities, Inc. of St. Louis, Farm offers chemically clean
Missouri. For more informa- beef. The fum was established
tion, call (740) 446~1986 or in 1994 by Dan and Michelle
Black. Beef can be ordered by
8 8
Supply appointment only. For more
l!romotions
Corim1ittee Owned by Mark Neal I information, piease call (740)
-&amp;auld like to salute the fol- .and Mark Neal ll- ·located 446-8976.
. 16Wing chat)lber members:
at 102 E. College Street in
• Wilburn . Candle• &amp;
, ; .J.E. Morrison &amp; Aleo- .Rio Grande. Established in More - In 1999 Evelyn
98te1- Established in 1986, 1996, the company offers Fowler established Wilburn
J;E. Morrison &amp; Associates ·feed, heating &amp; cooling, and , Candles and More, offering, as
offers financial planning, · general hardware. In July the name suggests, more than
investment 3dvising, and bro- 2000, Rio Hardware Supply just candles. She offers candle
J(erage services by Walnut moved into a 2000 square re6lls, crafts, and ·fundraisers.
$treet Securities. Located at foot building to provide more Located in Crown City at
~30 Second Ave. in Gallipolis, services to its customers,
3565 · Teens Run Road,

• Pulsar &amp; Seiko Watches
starting ai.SS9.99

• Cross Pens &amp; Sets
starting al $14.80

A /Umi•thr from your

... "Romance Atlvuor" ...

• Chains lOKI &amp; 14Kt

fgou Birtbttoner .,,.. Pe11rl
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• Bracelets lOKt &amp; 14Kt

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• Key Chains

s1aning at $199.00

,.,.,J

starting at $86.00

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flf· "m;,~~~j.iollS !JiM Jewelm

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COIINERS£COND AND GWE. GAWPOUS 146·1841
j/ MJU STREET. MIDDLEPORT 99)..&amp;150

OPEN

g..JO. SDODclllv
l'.lO • S:JO Monday

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liil __ .,
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• Expm P..,lty lllp•ir Sn-vk•

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~-~~ia;~~r:·~~~ne,the ( ~ ~:6-~~~are

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Channel· Islands go postal with set

'
8Y SYD KRONISH
vice honored carousel art with
New collectors might want
•
AP WEEKLY FEATURES
four 32-cent stantps dedicated to put some thought into
: The British Channel Islands to American folk art. The choosing a stamp album. Some
:ire small in size but big in 1he stamps featured a golden horse albums feature · specific care•
quality of their stamps.
with roses, black horse with gories with pictures of the
• The island of Alderney has gold bridle, horse with armor stamps bp each page. You may
¢leased a set of six stamps ded- and brown horse with green want to select one with loose¢a1ed to health care. Alderney, bridle.
leaf pages so you can add pages
i.vhich has a population of
as your collection grows.
'itbout 2,400, is proud to show
the advancement of its health
services with these stamps.
"The Mignot Memorial Hos1pita! was established in 1926,
h1~d in 1957 Queen Elizabeth
' Jl':iaid the foundation of a larger: building. .
.· _
:Now this modern hosp1tal
s~rves the island with efficient
.

•••

: The island of Guernsey has
islued a set of six stamps
d~picting its local breed _of
dQgs. Depicted are the _Cavalier
King Charles · Spamel, the
rhiniature schnauzer, the Gern\an shepherd, the cocker
spaniel, the West Highland
White terrier and the dachshimd.
: 'Stamps are available -at your
local dealer.
l

•••

•

:: Wooden carousel animals,
~rved by master craftsmen,
flourished in the United States
from the late 19th century
through the 1920s, but e.co!IOmic pressures have 1 made
metal animals more common.
::: In 1988, the U.S. Postal Set-

STOREWIDE

Alfred Dunner 25%
OFF
&amp;Koret
Jantzen
25%
.Batlling Suits OFF
Groups of 25%to
Dresses 50% 0FF
filreat Seleetion of
Summer Shoes

Reg.

$so

SS9·15

QUALITY FURNITURE~PLUS

42U3 State Route 7 • Thppers Plains, OH 4~783 • 1-800-200-4005 or (740) 667-7388

iii•

Hours: Mon - Thurs 9-5 Fri

,_
(

UST YOUR MEIGS COUNTY EVENT:

RACINE -Tara Linden· Michael and Larry bel Ogdin
were married May 12 at Mount Moriah Church of God,
Racine.
The bride is the daughter of Raymond and Debora Michael
of Racine. She is the granddaughter of Robert Lawson Sr., and
-GALLIPOLIS - J. Michael Matthews wed Re!Jecca Louise the )ate Eva Lawson.
The groom is the son of Del and Carol Ogdin of Langsville.
Stump on May 23, 2001 at the Palazzo Vecchio in Florence,
Italy.
He is the grandson Paul and Sue Sigman of Middleport.
The bride's uncle, Robert LawsonJr:, performed .the double- ·
' ·The couple honeymooned in Zer'matt, Switzerland.
The groom is the son ofJack Matthews of Louisville, Ky., apd ring ceremont. Tara Davis of Middleport was maid-of-honor,
Diane Matthew• Runyon ofWorthington. He is the grandson and Josh Leach of Pomeroy was best man. Destiny Hysell of
, Syracuse, flower girl, is the daughter of the groom.
of B.B. and Estivaun Matthews.
A reception ·was held following the wedding at Mount
He is a senior at the University of Kentucky, majoring in
physical geography, and presendy works for a landscape design Moriah Fellowship Hall. Cake and refreshments were served.
firm .
The bride is a 1998 graduate of Meigs High School and is
The bride graduated with honors from the University of currendy studying at University of Rio Grande, where she will
Kentucky. with a degree in international communications in receive an associate's degree this·Dec.ember.
JUJle 2000.
·
The groom is also a 1998 graduate of Meigs High SchooL
She is a web designer for Host International. The couple He is currently enlisted in the U.S. Army studying communications and ·. electronic skills.
resides in Winchester, Ky.
·
The couple reside in. Gallipolis with their son, Riley Ogdin.

~

I

Republi~n

Mr. and M111. J. Michael Mlltthawa

care.

THANK YOU/

19TH ANNUAL
2-DAY
OUTDOOR
GOSPEL SING·

Ogdin wedding

•

' •

Subscribe today. 740-446-2342

'

•

POMEROY - Dennis and Pam Persons of Pomeroy
announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their
daughter, Marsha Nicole, to Christopher Matthew Vance, son
of Mike and Angel Vance of Gallipolis.
The bride-elect is a 2001 graduate of Eastern High School
and plans to attend Hocking College for a degree in nursing.
Her fiance is a 1999 graduate of River Valley High School am{' ·
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
'
The open church :wedding will be held on Aug. ll at 1:30
p.m. at Syracuse Nazarene Church. .

_Osteoarthritis information program-set T4esday
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
. County Arthritis Advisory
Group invites the puqlic to
attend a free informational
program on osteoarthritis on
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at tbe Holzer Senior Care Center.
Featured speaker for . the
event will be 'Dr. Arnold J.
Satder. Sattler, board certified
in Internal Medicine, will
present information about
osteoarthritis, one of the most
common types of arthritis,
characterized by the brea)c-·
down of the joint's cartilage.
Cartilage breakdown caus-

•

·HMC fair focuses on care for family:l·

Swatzel
·wedding

MONDAY
SYRACUSE -

POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees, 7 p.m. Tuesday
at meeting hall on McGrath
Road.

•''

•

Sat

.•

�\
P-oe C4 • itunlla!' «imH ·6tntintl

Sw~c~~Y. June 10, 2001

Pon•Of •llhi&lt;llpart • Gllllp all, Ohio • Point Ph Alint, WV

brations

Temporary food licenses
a must for summer festivals
GALLIPOLIS - Sumrner
is on its ~- Aea Markets, fes...
tiv.ols, &amp;in, ball games, auclions, rummage and yard sales.
bean dinnets and vmous fund
raisers .- people are outside
and they are hungry.
Changes in food bws and
rules are aimed at making
dlese small opentionslfunclions safer for the consumer.
Many operations/functimu
that were not required to be
licensed in the past must noW
be licensed (such as those selling pre-packaged pop, chips,
candy. and the like in displays
&lt;M:r 100 cubic feet) and must
meet certain requirements to
reduce me potential for foodborne illnest
Most of us are accustomed
to seeing mobile food units at
fairs and festivals. These units
must be licensed with a local
health department in Ohio.To
do this; they must meet and
maintain minimum standars
set forth in Ohio Revised
Code and are ionspected on a
yearly basis.
The licensing of temporary
food operations is much the
same but is modified to make
allowances for · the lack of a
permanent stru¢~re, equipment, utilities, etc. Some of
these requirements are:
• Completion of application, temporary · food service?establishment data sheet,
and payment of appropriate
fee.
• Access to safe drinking
water. If using public water, a
food- grade hose must be
used. If using containers, they
must be properly sanitized
and 10 gallons of water must
be ·on hand.
• /t.. means for heating water
(cofFee pot, rnicrwave, hot
plate).
• A 3-compartment sink
and a hand w:WUng sink, or 4
containers/dishpans for washing, rinsing. and sanitizing of
cooking and serving utensils,
and washing hands.
• Sanitizer (household
bleach 5.25 percent is fine) .
· • Hand soap and paper

Brow.n-Stapleton engagement
.

.

GALL!POLIS - Randy and Linda Brown of Gallipolis are
announcmg th~ engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Knsne, to Terry Stapleton. He is the son of Allen and
Lois Stapleton of Gallipolis.
The bride-elect is a graduate "of GaUia Academy High
School, class of 1999, and is presently attending the University
ofRio Grande.
Her fiance graduated from GaUia Academy High School,
class of 1998, and is presently employed at the Bob Evans
Sausage Pbnt in Bidwell.
The couple will exchange vows in a 3:30 p.m., open church
ceremony on July 7, 2001 at Gallipolis Christian Church.

Mr. and Mrs. Engllsll

English 25th
PATR IOT- Mr. and Mrs. English will celebrate their 25th
an niversary June 5, 200 I. T hey married June 5, 1976 in Grove
City by Charles Manison. They are the parents of Kelly and
Wendy Enghsh. They have one grandchild, Robbie English.

Meaige 50th
CHESHIRE - Nick and Lavina Meaige will be celebrating
theit 50th wedding anniversary on june 17,2001.
The~ children and family will be hosting a celebration at the
Kyger Creek Clubho11se on June 17,2001 from 2-5 p.m. Family and friends are welcome to attend.

. JIJWels.

•A probe thertl10DIIeter f9r
for checking cooking ternper.WlRS and lhern~
in aD coolers or ice chesu. ,
• All surfaces must be easily
cleanable. Vinyl tableclotlis
usually a good sur£ac.e ti&gt;r
tables.
.
• All utensils must be singleuse except cooking and serv-

ing utensils. .
.'
• GlOYeS must be wo~
when touching any food that
will not be further cooked. •
• TempOrary license and
choking poster must be ~­
ed at the licemed location. '
The process of obtaining•a
temporary license is rdalively .
painless if you go through the
right steps. Go to the healih
department at least a few ~
before the event and obtain
the necessary application add
information. You
also
pertinent questions while }'9u
are there. When )'OU have tJ.te
paperwork completed, submit
it to the health department
with the appropriate fee
(GCHD charga $15 per d3y
for a temporary food license).
You will be contacted • if
there are any problems with
your application. If everything
is in order, a sanitarian will
visit ·your operation for
inspection when you are set
up and ready to operate. During this inspection, the samtarian will check to see that aD .
of the information on your
application is accurate, food is
6om approved sourte, tliat
you have the required supplies, and may make suggestions to aid you in food-safe
operation. ·
At that point. if aD requiJ;ements have been met, you will
be given a copy ofthe insp~­
tion, · a choking poster, aild
issued a temporary licell$e.
Follow-up inspections ate
sometimes conducted. ·
For information about
temporary licensing, caD or
visit GCHD ·at 499 JacksOn
Pike Suite D, Gallipolis, 44t2945, Monday-Friday from- 8
a.m. until 4 p.m.
· ·

*

em

/

Mr. and Mrs. Don Carter

Carter anniversary
MIDDLEPORT - Mr._ and Mrs. Don and Ruth (Wood)
Carter of Middleport Wlll celebrate their 50th wedding
anmvefS! ty on June 17, 2001. ·
T hey are the parents of three daughters, Debbie
(R1clmd)Evans and Yvette (Frank) Dantonio, both ofWesterville, and R obin (Michael) Saum of Rio Grande. They have
four grandchildren.
•

r Sundly, June 10,

Cfipand

In an effort to provide our
readership with current
news, the Sunday Times-Senti~el will not acq!pt weddmp after 90 days from the
date of the event
,
Weddinp submitted after
the 90-cfay deadline will
appear dunng the week in
The Daily Sentinel and the .
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
~I birtJ:ld~ys must be submmed wilh•n 60 days of the
occurrence. All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.

save
on a .
great selection· ·
ofla-Z-Boy·

recliners!

'•

PhysicianS

2001

. ,$ATURDAY, June 8
SOUTHSIDE - Dance at
Southside Community Center
.· 7 to 10 p.m. with Cherry RidQ8
BlueGrass.

..

• ~INT PLEASANT - A1coo
• hol_lcs Anonymous, 8 p.m.,
P01nt Pleasant Presbyterian
Church, corner of 81h and
Main, use side door.
KANAUGA Dance at
Amvefs, 7:30 p.m. wilh Coumry
·'GniSII.

POINT PLEASANT - Mason
JCounty &lt;;:EOS Home

and Gar·
Tour, 1 to 5 p.m. For infor·
malion call 675-8199.

~

'· GALLIPOLIS FERRY- Open
· House at Gallipolis Ferry Com" p1UIIily Center, 4 to 6 p.m. The
.,community can view improve. lnente at the center, especially
· oow handicap ramp.
POINT PLEASANT - GEO
, test registration. Mason County
.J.lbrary, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Test
~ wll be given June 16 from 8
· i .m. to 5 p.m.
MASON - Faith Baptist
Church Vacation Bible School
. ldck-olf 'Dig In'. 4 to 6 p.m.
•"fhere will be an archaeological
. ~dig. scavenger hunt and many
·· other games. For into. call VBS
,, director Wilma Hannon 882·
~ or Pastor Ron Branch

..,.,773-5429.
•''ASHTON - Open house at
. ·Hannan Public Library; 1 to 3
,p.m.

,.

.

SUNDAY, June 10
.
"'GALLIPOLiS- Preaching ser·
· :.Vice at Addison Freewill Baptist
,, Church, 6 p.m. with Rick Bar·

.,c. us.

Support Group, 1 p.m., Mason
United Methodist Church. All
' area cancer patients, families
i and caregivers Invited. (No
i meeting June 12 and 19)

I Henderson

pr. Sattler completed his postgraduate training in the USA

m 1957. ~e has been practicing medicine in Gallipolis since
1967 and JUSt returned to his offlice practice at Holzer Clinic
after a short retirement break.

Don't.miss your chance .at
,

big savings on America's favorite

.

_,.

__..This lecture will be held at Hol~er-Senior Care Center ·
.380 Colonial Dr. Sidwell, OH 45614
~

Please feel free to contact, Amber Johnson, Holzer Senior
· Care Center with any questions regarding
this event, 740-446-5001.
·
. .I

I

'

I

NEW HAVEN - New Haven
Jr. OUAM 175 meeting, 7 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT- Grace, a
group from Georgia, will sing at
Gospel Tabernacle Church, 7
p.m.

SINGING IN THE PINES
NEW HAVEN - The 19th
Annual Singing In the Pines will
be held Friday, June 15 (6
p.m.) and Saturday, June 16 (1
p.m.) at the Union Camp·
ground. near New Haven . .
About 60 singing . groups and
soloists are expected lo partie·
ipate. The family of tha late
Darren · Smith, sploist, has
donaled his remaining tapes
and COs to the Singing in lhe
Pines and they will be available
both days. Proceeds from the
tape sales will be applied to lhe
lund for constructing new
restrooms at lhe Pines.
REVIVALS
LEON - Evangelistic services
at Shiloh Community Church,
Leon Baden Road, for 12 con·
secutive Saturday nights
beginning April 7 at 7 p.m. wnh
Evangelist Stanley Shaffer and
special singing every service.

•••

•••

POINT PLEASANT - Branch·
es Adult Support Group, 1 p.m.
Fort Randolph Community
Room, . bid. 123. No fee. For
l more Information call 675·
1 4968.

MASON- VBS ABu lit On The
RockS at Christian Brethren
Church June 11· 15, noon to 3
p.m.

I WEDNESDAY, June 13

I

selection of colors, now at special
coupon savings. Hurry in today...
;and cut yourself in on the savings!

; POINT
PLEASANT
1 Wednesday night Bible clubs
I for preschool up through 12th
grade, 7 to 8:15p.m. ill Gospel
1
1 Lighthouse Church, Neal
1 Road. For Information call 675·
1 7229 or 875~0.

M.aso·n Furniture Co.

''

•

3rd Street

(304) 773 5592

Mason,.wv

0110111
•I

•'

'

,.

•••

Building a house from trash sounds
like a cheap way to go, and is certainly
the ultimate in recycling. But will it really work.
To show that it will, a workshop will
be held June 23 and 24 by Candice and
Jay Warmke at their "home of trash"
located near Duncan Falls. It is Ohio's
first "Earrhship" and was constructed
with tires, cans and bottles.
At the workshop the Warmkes, owners and builders of the structure, will be
showing the house and teaching some of
the techniques necessary to construct
walls out of "pre-cycles" from start to
finish.
While you may not be interested in
living in a "howe of trash," you might
like to know how to build an outbuilding for your chickens or pigs, a retaining
wall, or a surround of sorts for garden
areas.
The goal, of course, is to use existing
materials (trash) to create a comfortable
and environmentally friendly home or
other structure.
You can find out more about the
process and . the workshop at
cwarmke@earthlink.net.
(Charlene Hotiflich is heneral managtr of
The Daily Sentinel in Pomtrt&gt;}')

New version ofpopular puzzle a serious challenge
now available for the N64, is pieces are medicine capsules
one entertaining example.
that are solid red, yellow, or
Great videogame puzzles are
Like Tetris, "Dr. Mario 64" blue, or with . different colors
rare. Programmers have been uses falling puzzle pieces. on either end.
looking for another niagical There's an interesting twist
The object is to attach three
creation since "Tetris" arrived with "Dr. Mario 64" that pill ends of the same color to a
more than a decade ago.
increases the challenge.
demon, malting it disappear.
Not too many have succeedWhen the screen opens,
The addition of the viruses
ed. Instead, they've turned to . there are a number of"viruses" makes a tough game tougher,
variations on the "Tetris" - little demon faces in red, since it's easy to let the unused
theme. "Dr. Mario 64;' Nin- blue or yellow - scattered half of the pill faD. If it falls on
tendo's update of an SNES title around. The falling puzzle · a virus of another color, you

Br WIWAM

Si:HIFFMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

can stymie your ability to dear
that demon, or others on the
boai1!.
Game over.
There are a number of ways
to play alone, including the
original "Dr. Mario" game, a
story mode, score attack and
versus the computer. In fWh
mode, you have to destroy all
flashing viruses before the
computer does.

POINT PLEASANT\ - Alco·
holies Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.,
611 Viand Street. Use aide
entrance of Casey Law Office.

Is it easy to apply?
YES/ You can call the Meigs County Department of
. Job and Family Services .(formerly Meigs County
Department of Human Services) at 992-2117 or /-800·
292 -2608 to apply or you can have the application sent
to you. The Agency is open Monday Through Friday
from 8 a.m. to 4:30p.m. and Thurst:kly until6:30 p.m.

,.

Healthy Families
Use the Chart Below to see if
you qualify:
•Monthly Income .
Guidelines

Family Size

2 -------············ $968

''

There is no face-to-face interview.

,..

!

3 ----------·-----· $1,220
4 ----------------· $1,471
5 ······-·······-·· $1,723
$1,975

6----------·-----·

Healthy Start

POINT PLEASANT - VBS al
GOspel Lighthouse Church, on
Neal Road behind Krodel Park,
June 11· 15, 6 to 8:30p.m.
HENDERSON - VBS al Hen·
derson Church of Christ. class·
es for all ages from 6:30 • 8
p.m: June 11·15,

With Credible Insurance

Without Credible Insurance

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

(Physician &amp; Inpatient health coverage)

Family Size
1

•Monthly Income
Guidelines

2 ·-----~---······· $1,452
3 -················ $~,829
4 ~--------~---··-- $2,207
s··········---~--- $2,S84
6 -·-------------- $2,962

Community calendar Ia
published aa a free service
10 non·profl1 groups wishing
to announce meetings and
apeclal lftnta.
The calendar Ia prlntlcl 11
apace permits and cannot be
guaraa:ttead to run 1 apecHic
number of days .

•Monthly Income
Guidelines

Family SiZI!

2.................. $1 935
.
'
. 3-----------------$2,439
4 --··------··----- $2,942
s···-------·-~---- $3,445
6 --·--------·-----$3,949

' If your famlly'l Income le higher, you may 1tlll be able to get free Healthy Start coverage for your klda.
• Even

USJ YOUR MASON COUNTY EVENT:
news@mydallyreglster.com

!

Healthy Start
Healthy Families

]

APPLE GROVE- VBS al Bar·
lon Chapel Church, June 11·
15, from 6:30 lo 9 p.m. Pro·
gram Friday at 7 p.m. Picnic
Saturday at 4:30 p.m. at the
locks.
•Jesus to the Rescue•, Jordan
Baplist Church, June 10· 15 at .
6:30 p.m. Kickoff day June 9 at .
4p.m.

POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County Board of Education,
8:30p.m.

recliners! Choose from three great
La-Z-Boy• styles in an exciting

You are cordially invited to attend this event.
Refreshments will be served.

POINT PLEASANT - Weight
Watchers, Christ Episcopal
Church with weigll in at 4:45
p.m. and 5:15p.m.

Community Build·
1 lng, with Instructor Dawn Hal·
)!lead. Beginners 6 p.m. and
advanced 7 p.m.

I

~

Dr. Sattler will be lecturing on OsteDarthrits on Tu~~day '

May 12, 2001
. at 7p~t.n-·/

p.m.

i' HENDERSON- Line dancing, GALLIPOLIS FERRY - VBS

Dr. Arnold J. Sattler, is certified. by the Board of Internal
Medicine with a medical degree from the University of
Vienna, Australia. ·
·
·

·.

POINT PLEASANT- Shoot at

Poinl Pleasant Gun Club 6

' 50s rock and roll night being pbnned.
The Swingin' Seniors will dance at 5:30
p.m. and the popular Elvis impersonator
Dwight Icenhower will sing at 6 p.m.
Dinners are served from 4:45 to 6
p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays.

I

1
• 1

.

lion call 675-3692 .

Heritage Sunday will be observrd thi&lt;
afternoon at the Meigs Museum with an
open house, plenty of mwic played by
·Myron Duffield on his calliope, and a
variety of special exhibits, including an
art dispby.
Donna Davidson will be there with
her loom weaving rugs, and upstain in
the kitchen. women will be demonstrating the art of bread making.
Friday night, the annual Heritage dinner was held .with Under Construction; a
Before the diniter the Wnily stopped
barbershop quartet, entertaining the din~ by a local photography studio for·a famers with some of the old songs.
ily portrait.
Joining the group for dinner were
Bernice Riflle of Pomeroy, a cousin, and
Surprise, surprise.
. Ro Grueser of Middleport, long-time
I'm sure Hazel Wilson was really sur- family friend.
prised when every member of her fami,
ly - yes, both daughters, aU the grandchildren and the three great-grandchilFor a few years now, dinner has been
dren - came to Middleport for a cele- served a couple of ·nights a week at the
·
. btation of her 80th birthday.
Senior Citizens Center as a &gt;Nay of proA dinner was served last night at the viding nutritional meals as well as proRiverbend Arts Council, and this morn- viding some socializing time for adults.
ing it was planned for the entire family to
The meals have been ofFered on a
attend services at the Middleport Church "suggested donation" basis, but with the
of Christ. l'&lt;ow that will take a pew or cost of food and the help required to
two.
prepare it, that amount has recently been
Here for the occasion are her daugh- increased to $5.
ter, Coleen Ohlinger of Zanesville, her
Beginning this month, attendance
husband, Terry, sons, Jay and his wife, cards are being provided to those who
Melanie of Columbus, Jon of New York take some of their evening meals at the
City, and Joshua, of Mooresville, N .C.; center. Tlie card will be punche~ each
and daughter, Carla Lohrer, and her hus- time the person eats at the center and
band, Bill, of Troy, their daughter, Shari then after paying for nine meals, the 1Oth
· Lefiak and her children, Sarah and Trey, will be free.
of Medina, and son, Mich:lel and his
Special events ate held each month
wife, Kelly, and their son, Jackson.
and for June it will be Thursday with a

-·1'01NT PLEASANT - Faith
:' Promise Service, First Church POMEROY- Revival at F~tilh
•' of the Nazarene, 2500 MI. Ver· Valley Tabernacle Church,
non Avenue, wilh guest speak· Bally Run Road, June 7·10 at7
·"er Peggy Perry, a retired p.m. with Evangelist J.R.
•. Nazarene minister of Alabama. Holsinger and Rev. Emmett
•'Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. Rawson.
_)lnd momlng worship at 10:50
, a.m. Covered dish luncheon POINT PLEASANT - Wes·
.lollowlng morning service. leyan Holiness Association of
;Evening service at 6:30 p.m.
Churches, 22nd General Con·
'
terence and camp, June 7-12,
GALLIPOLIS FERRY - The Wesleyan Holiness Bible Col·
• 1 Compton's of Ft. Gay, WeVa.
lege. Special services· Friday
. ,~Ill alng al Collage Hill Church,
afternoon youth service with
6 p.m.
Rev. Nathan · Shockley; Satur·
day afternoon, WHBC service 1
· '• .
- GALLIPOLIS FERRY-"- Mount • with Or. David Jones; Sunday
&gt;; Olive Quartet, MI. .Carmel a.m., Sunday School with Rev.
Church, Bp.m. .
Arman Rhoades, Suhday
morning worship, Rev. John A.
,.POINT PLEASANT - Gospel Brewer; Sunday afternoon mls·
' Lighthouse Church will have sions service with Rev. Steve
: special singing by Dorsey Hight; and Sunday evening,
preservice, home missions.
•Johnson, 1 p.m.
I
'
The
Victory Trio will be partlci·
I
paling. .
' MONDAY, June 11 ·
ISOUTHSIDE - C.ltubs weight
l loss support group, Southside BIBLE SCHOOLS
, Community Center, weigh-ins POINT PLEASANT- One day
: 5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a Vacation Bible School, June 9,
St. Paul U.M. Church. Class
1 short meeting.
.
will be for grades K·6 from 9:30
POINT PLEASANT - Alco· a.m. until 2 p.m.
, holies Anonymous, 7:30 p.m.,
i 611 Viand Sireet. Use side POINT PLEASANT - Bible
, entrance of Casey Law Office. School at First. Church of the
Nazarene, June '11·15, 6 to
•
•• TUESDAY, June 12
8:30p.m.
and program Juna 17
·
at
10:50
a.m.
For children ages
: LETART - HELP Diet Class,
through sixth
kindergarten
; Letart Community Center.
grade.
Workers
are Jim and
. Weigh-Ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
Cherry
Morris
of Soulh
:JOl~wed by short ~ling.
Charleston. For transportation
: FLATROCK -'- Clothing closet or Information call 675·3423.
• give . away every Tuesday at
; Good Shepherd U.M. Church, MASON - V!'!S at Faith Bap·
tist Church, Mason, 'Truth
: Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Trackers
and the Secret oflhe
I
Stone
Tablets'
June 11· 15 ·
. I POINT PLEASANT- Clothing
from
6
to
9
p.m.
Classes
will be
, give away every Tuesday, 10
held
from
toddler
to
12th
grade.
; a.m. to noon at Point Pleassnt
' Presbyterian Church, 8th and For Info. call VBS director
. ; Main. Clothing contrlbullons Wilma Harmon 882·3886. or
Pastor Ron Branch n3·5429.
1 appreciated.

i' MASON- Community Cancer

.

THURSDAY, June 14
POINT PLEASANT - TQPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) 5
p.m. wei{;! in and meeting at
5:30 p.m. at Trinity United
Methodist Church. For lnfonna·

wv

Meigs.pauses ·today to celebrate heritage

Mason

•

1

Pomeroy • Mlcldlepolt • Gllllpoll1, Ohio • Point Phnant,

992•211 .7

Call now for more Information.

1_800_9g 2.2608

v.

•

�Suncley, June 10, 2001

Sundey, June 10, 2001

Pomeloy • Mlddl1port • Gelllpolll, Ohio • Point PIIUant, WV

Miller's Home For Funerals passed away recently

Gallia
SUndliy, J - 10

ADDISON - Pllllldling ser-

vice at Addison Freewill eap.
tisl Church, 6 p.m., with Rick
Barcus preaching.

GALLIPOLIS- A"bon voyage• party will be held for the
Hirschmugl _lamily as they are
leaving for Sandy, Utah, 4-6
p.m. al Sl. Louis Catholic
Church tent for snacks and
refreshments sponsored by
Knights of Columbus.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va.
- Special service at College
Hill Church, 6 p.m., featuring
the Comptons from Mount
Gay, W.Va.
VINTON -Deer Creek
Church will be having a home·
coming service at 10 a.m.,
with lunch al noon. The Pre·
ston family will be singing . .
Brother Mickey Maynard will
be preaching. Everyone welcome.

Shayla Huffman and Jason Eades

VINTON ~ Sunset service at
Bethel Baptist Church, 7 p.m.,
featuring singers The Uplifters,
Mary Armstrong, Shiriey Tay·
lor, The Swicks, Minnie Miller
and John Duncan. The Rev.
Evemeather Scott will preach.

Ht.iffman-Eades engagement

.

LETART - Delton and . Brenda Huffman of Letart and
Doug and Susan Eades of Cottageville announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their children, Shayla Marie
Huflinan and Jason Scott Thomas Eades.
Shayla is a 1998 graduate ofWahama High School and is a
WATERFORD, Ohio- Larry and Sharon Hinton ofWater- student at Marshall University, where she is majoring in eleford, announce the upcoming wedding of their daughter, Sheri mentary education. She is employ~d by Dr. Troy L. McGrew,
·
Lynn Hinton, to Brandon "Scott" Yonker, son of Nathan and DDS, MS of Hurricane.
Jason is a 1997 graduate of Point Pleasant High School. He
Mickey Yonker of New Haven.
attended
WVU-Parkersburg and is employed by Quality
The bride-to-be is the granddaughter of Bernard and June·
Hinton of Waterford, and Bill and Alice Waite of Stockport, Woods of Eleanor.
The wedding is planned for June 30 at Parchment Valley
Ohio.
Baptist
Church; Ripley, at 3:30 p.m. The gracious custom of an
She is a 1997 graduate ofWaterford High School and a 2000
graduate of Hocking College, with a degree in medical assisting open church wedding will be observed.
and an associate degree in applied science. She is employed with
Athens Family Family Practice, Athens, Ohio.
The prospective groom is the grandson of Donald and Shirley
Kay of New Haven, and Charles "Buck" and Doris Yonker of
Letart. He is a 1997 graduate ofWahama High School and a
2000 graduate of Hocking CoUege. He is employed at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens as a nurse.
·
An open church wedding is planned for Saturday,June 16 at 4
man, are divorcing after more
p.m. at Fifth Street Chnrrh ;,.. rh,.;co,. nAHA.,.1,, 0h1"'
than a decade of marriage.
NEW YORK (AP) _
Each tiled a divorce petition
Here's a columnist you can't in Superior Court on Thursrefuse:Victoria Gotti.
day, citing irreconcilable"differThe daughter of impriso.ned ences. They married in June
mob boss John Gatti makes 1990 and have two young sons.
her debut as a columnist this . Lieberman, who directed
Sunday in the New York Post, several ~\ms, indud!ng "Fire in
where she will write a weekly . the Sky, TV ~ovt~.s and the
·piece, Post Editor-in-Chief shor.~-hved senes, Med1cme
Col Allan said.
Ball, seeks JOint custody of
Allan pursued Victoria• Gotti ~tcholas, 7, and Joseph, 5. He
for the paper, where slit will
so wants _spousal support.
Henner ts ·asking for fuU cus. write stories about the city and
its residents.
tody of the boys.
Gotti, 36, is the author of
three best-selling romancemystery novels; the most recent
was last year's "Superstar:" She
split last year with her husband
of 16 years, Carmine AgneUo,
who goes on trial in September on federal racketeering
charges. ·
Gotti 's riew employer had
one of the most unforgettable
newspaper headlines involving
her father. In I 986, John Gotti
was acquitted of an assault
charge when the alleged victim
Mr. and M111. Glen Dale Watt11110~ Sr.
after discovering Gotti
headed the Gambino crime
family - . suffered a sudden
case of amnesia.
"I FORGOTTI;' the Post
headline
announced.
POINT PLEASANT -Anna Stowers and Glen Dale Watterson Sr.·were united in marriage on Sunday, June 3.
Pastor Bill Banks performed the ceremony at ' Gospel Lighthouse Church.
.
LOS ANGELES (AP) Marilu Henner and her husband, director Robert LieberSheri Hinton and Scott Yonker

Hinton- Yonker engagement

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Med·
leal will be holding a sibling
class from 1:30·2:30 p.m.,
hospital's fifth-floor classroom,
and an iilfanVchild CPR class
from 3:30·5:30p.m., hospital's
5th Hoor classroom. Please
· call 446·5030 for more information or to register.
GALLIPOLIS - Southern
Gospel quartet Forgiven 4 will
sing at Faith Baptist Church, 6
p.m. Afreewill offering will be
taken.
GALLIPOLIS - Homecoming
at Dickey Chapel Church, 1Q
a.m. The Rev. Junior Birchfield
will preach durtng the morning
service and the Rev. Robert
Hershman will preach in the
aHernoon.

NAMES IN
THE NEWS

Victoria Gotti .

BIDWELL- Sprinafiekl Baptist Church or The Old Brick
Church will feature special
slngen~ Earthen Vessels at 6
p.m.
.
GALLIPOLIS -Holzer Med- .

_ caiCenwrD~~esS~rt

Group, 2 p.m., French 500
Rocim.
Tue1d1y, June 12
ENO- Eno Grange 2080,
7:30p.m.
Wedntllday, June 13
GALLIPOLIS - Grief Support
Group will meet in the Mcln·
tyre Room at Bossard Memori·
al Library at noon. Bring a
lunch.
Sunday, June 17
PATRIOT- Homecoming at
St. Martin's Lutheran Church,
with potluck dinner at 1 p.m.
Card Showers
A·card shower is being held
for Juanita Bias, who is recu·
perating from surgery. Caids
can be sent to her at Room
226, Holzer Medical Center,
100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 .
A card shower is being held
for Mabie M. Halley, who will
celebrate her birthday June
10. Cards can be sent to her
at 254 Lanes Branch Road,
Crown City, Ohio 45623.
A card shower is being held
lor Sybil French as she cele·
brates her 89th birthday:
Cards may be sent to 17 Neil
Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.
The Community Calendar Ia
published as a free service
to nonprofit groupe wlehlng
to announce meetings and
special events. The calendar
Is not designed to promom
sales or fund·relsers of any
type. Items are printed as
apace permlt11 and cannot
be guaranteed to appear.

LIST YOUR GAWA COUNTY EVENT:

news@mydailytribune.com
One Stop Shop
For Tanning
'Beds!

ALL SOFAS 30%- 50% OFF
Chairs, Loveseats, and Recliners

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which includes:
• Total Cholesterol
• HDL (Good cholesterol)
• LDL (Bad cholesterol)
• Triglycerides

Saturday, June 16, 2001
as a part of the 17th Annual Health Fair

10:00 am • 2:00pm

HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
Non-fasting cholesterol and glucose
screenings will also be available.
No appointment necessary.

,
'

'

Free •
'

FOR THIS SPECIAL
SCREENING, YOU MUST
PRE-REGISTER BY 3 PM ON
THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 2001.

• MINI BLINDS
• PLEATED SHADES

• WOOD BLINDS
PROFESSIONAL
INSTALLATION!

-Re!iidentinl or Commerctal

Mohawk • World • Milliken

car1et SAVE
20%·25%

CALL 446-5311
SCREENING INCLUDES A
12-HOUR FAST BEFOREHAND
1

Do not eat or drink for the 12 hours
prior to your scheduled screening
(except water). May take medic~tion.

Call today! Limited spaces!!
I

James

Sands
HISTORY

was located on the spot now

housing the Warehime Buildmg.
It was believed Henry and ·
Sons constructed more than
60 houses in and around Gallipolis in the 19th century.
Gilman taught his sons the
fine art of swapping. In fact all
four sons were aUowed at any
time to draw money from the
Gilman account for the
express purpose of buying a.
farm, a city lot, a horse or
whatever/whenever the need
arose. The boys were given
this privilege even when they
were quite young.
Wrote the Gallipolis Journal once about this ·unusual
banking arrangement: "If a
bad bargain is made, there is
no scolding, the moral is
worked out by the one who
conducted · the trade. The
young ladies of the family are
equally noted for industry and ·

LANDMARK NO MORE - Miller's HorM' For Funerals was
recently razed.
DepaJittllent. The first departthrift and lead active lives."
The two young Gilman . ment was designed for girls
women ·connected with the ages 6 to 12. Here were
recently razed building were taught the ordinary English
Anna and Roma. Anna was' branches. The Senior Departone of the first Gallipolis resi- · · ment offered most of the scidents to graduate from the. ences, mathematics, Greek,
prestigious Vassar College. It Latin, French and German.
was Anna who ran the female
The advertisemel)t read:
seminary. Sister Roma was the "Piano, organ and vocal music
music teacher at the school.
will be taught in the most
1877 approved manner. InsrrumenAccording to
advertisement in the local tal music for pupils over 10
newspapers, the school was years ofage is $10 per term
divided into a Preparatory and for pupils under 10 years
Department and a SeJ;~ior of age, $8 per term. Vocal

music lessons will be taught not leave the building except
in company with Teachers."
free to the pupils."
The Female Seminary was
The goal of the school was
mentioned in the ad." A four- open only for a few years
year course has been chosen whereupon· it was turned into
with a view to thoroughness a piano studio. Roma Gilman
and practicality. The great sold pianos here and also gave
object is to obtain knowledge lessons. A dance studio was
of practical use. Any pupil can also conducted here about
choose any or all of these. The that same time. In the early
school year is divided into 1900s the Gilmans. like a lot
three terms of thirteen weeks of other Gallians, invested in
real estate where oil was likeeach."
Students could also board at ly to be found. Land prices
the school. The ad also men- plummeted instead of rising
tioned those arrangements: when the so called "Gallia Oil
"All pupils wishing either to Boom" became a bust. By
board .or rent rooms and 1906 the Gihnans had lost
board themselves in the Sem- much of the wealth that they
. inary, will find ample rooms had in the 19th century. It was
and accommodations. The in the early 20th century that
price for bo~ per week is the Female Seminary then a
$2.50. Each scholar will fur- private dwelling was turned
nish her o~n towels and nap- into a funeral home.
kins. All boarding pupils will
be under the direct supervi- . (Jim Santls i.s a gutsl co/umni.st
sioti of the Teachers and will for tht Suntlay Times-Sentinel.)

an

TIIRtPEDIC

Lane

_Outage could putftozen food at risk
GALLIPOLIS - Summer
storms can often knock out
the power supply. If the power
is off for more than a few
hou{s some precautions need
to be taken with food in the
freezer. Is the food still safe?
-1 In most cases, frozen food
will be OK after most power
outages of a few hours. Freezers that are fuU and set to be
colder will stay colder longer.
111 fact, nearly full chest-type
ti:e1zers, that are set at 0
degrees Fahrenheit or lower
can keep food cold for 24
hours or more, as long as you
keep the freezer door closed
and dodt let warm air in.
The cutoff point for safety
is 40 degrees. Perishable food
~hat's stored between 40
~egrees and 140 degrees F for
more than two hours should
~e considered unsafe and
~brown away. Although it's
:usually difficult to tell how
~ong a food has been at a cer-

~pril

-E ARE OVERSTOCKED!

Marilu Henner

Passing from the sce~e in
the past year was the building
that for nearly half of a century was Miller's Home For
Funerals and for perhaps
another three or four decades
prior to that a funeral home
under a different name.
While there were at least
two additions while the unit
served as a funeral home, the
oldest pan of that building
was put up in 1875 as The
Young Ladies Seminary
Boarding and Day School.
Tills school was one of the
last female seminaries in Gallipolis history, the first being
established in the 1820s.
Today the word seminary
connotes persons studying for
a church related career, but in
the 19th century the word
was just as often associated
with a female academy. And,
of course, because in most
denominations women were
banned from ministry, the
women in these female academies were not preparing for
a church-related career.
The seminary school that
was held in what most people
know as Miller's Funeral
~orne was established by
members of the Gilman family. Henry Gilman and his
four sons built the seminary as
well as their large home that

·Becky
Collills
·

ADVICE

tain temperature, there are
clues you can use.
•
• After the outage, check the
food.An: there still ice crystals
on it? Does it feel very cold?
If you can, we a food ther•
. mometer that measures cool
temperatures. If the food il
less than 40 degrees, it should
be safe to refreeze.
.Sometimes, you can leave
the freezer door closed after
the outage, allowing the cpmpartment to resume to its
• proper_ temperature quickly.
However, that's only recommended for shott outages, or

those less than 24 hours for
chest freezers set at 0 degrees
For lower.
Some other guidelines:
• Meats, poultry and frozen
vegetables. If they're only partially thawed, check . for off
odors. If they smell normal,
they're safe to refreeze. Quality might be affected; you
might want to consider cooking the meat or vegetables and
freezing them for use later. If
any meat or vegetables are
fully thawed but are still cold,
and you feel confident they
.haven't warmed to 40 degrees
for more than two hours,
. cook them before eating or
returning them to the refrigerator or freezer.
• Combination dishes. Potpies, casseroles, stews or whole
meals that are even partiaUy
thawed should be considered
unsafe. Throw them out.
• Soup. If partially thawed,
heat to at least 165 degrees F

and reqeeze~ If completely
thawed, throw it ouL
. ' Fruit juice. The quality
could be affected, but it
should be safe even if fully
thawed. The juice may separate or start to ferment. Neither is a safety problem,
though.
(Becky Collins is Gallia
County~ Extension agent for
family and consumer sciences,

Ohio Srare University.)

Young pe~ple
are beautiful
acts of nature.

,HMC's weight-loss center names

.

.Stowers- Watterson wedding

Pomeroy • Mldcllport • o.lllpolll, Oh1o • Point Pluunt, WV

McClain program·director

GALLIPOLIS - Specialty
Health Services Management
has announced that April
McLain, RN, BS, MBA, has
:been appointed director of
the Holzer Center for Comprehensive Weight Loss.
The center is a unique partnership between HMC and
Specialty Health Services, and
:Specializes in providing a
:multi-disciplinary hospital
approach to weight loss.
Nutritional and fitness counseling and behavior modifica-;tion support the gastric bypass
;surgery.
: With aU these components
:working together, patients can
·reach the goal of l&lt;;&gt;sing at
.)east 75 percent ofrheir excess
:body weight and develop a
:healthy lifestyle to help keep
,
:it off permanently. ,
: Before joining Specialty
Health, McLain had been.
' chief nursing executive and
,interil!l vice president • of
•patient Care Services at the
;Holzer Medical Center,
; responsible for all aspects of
:patient care services!
• Previously, she had been
; associate administrator for
, nursing at Morrow County
: Hospital from February 1994
: through January 2000.
~
"The success of this pro: gram reflects the compassion; ate commitment of not only
~ our doctors, but of the pro; gram director to provide sert vice in the best manner p~i-

ble and has resulted in an
excellent resource that is
available to the community,"
said Duane A. Bernard, executive vice president of Specialty Health Services Management.
"April has all of the attributes we were looking for
including an extensive clinical
background, as weD as a passion for excellence. "We are
excited to have her on boaid
and look forward to her
developing the program."
"The weight loss· program ,
being developed .at Holzer
will be the region's leader in
surgical weight loss and . is
comparable to programs at
the Mayo Clinic and Harvard
Medical School, " said LaMar
Wyse, president ' and chief
executive officer of HMC. '
"We are pleased that April
has been selected to become
the program director and we
are certain she will continue
the outstanding level of
patient service that she has
brought to Holzer," he added.
The surgery is endorsed by
U.S.
Government's
the
National Institutes on Health,
is recognized by the American
College of Surgeons and is
covered by most insurance
companies.
"This is not stomach stapling," said Bernard "After
ready 20 years and thousands
of procedures, the Roux-eny Gasnic Bypa5!o has demon-

strated a track record of success and is considered the
gold standard for the surgical
solution to long-term weight
loss."
According to actuarial data,
300,000 Americans die prematurely from obesity-related
complications each year.
"Only bariatric surgical
pro_cedures result in marked,
lasting weight reduction in
the majority of clinically
severely overweight patients
when assessed five years after
operations. I am excited
about this new opportunity
and challenge;• said McLain.
The number of overweight
Americans has increased
steadily and will continue to
increase because more than
25 percent of today's children.
are overweight or obese,
according to the American
College of Surgeons.
"Most patients have failed
at all prior attempts to lose
weight," said McLain.
"Diet or drug therapy pro. grams have been consistently
disappointing in many cases
and fail to bring about significant, sustained weight loss for
these clinically severely overweight persons."
Obesity costs the U.S. about
$100 billion annually in direct
health care expenses and in
lost productivity.
For information, or to
schedule a consultation! call
toll free 1-866-821-4541.

Older people
are beautiful
works of art.
They've worked hard all their lives, and their
character and values are priceless assets. We
bel(? them retain their dignity and control
over their lives while offering 24 hour assistance. Private apartments, home cooked ,
meals, medication supervision and administration, outstanding social programs, assistance with bathing and dressing- these are
just a few of the services offered.

Call tis at 441-9633 or mail us this coupon.

--------------------------Please send me more
information about your
community.

last name

first name

I

meet address

\

' \ Wj'lylf/( - ~-,-:--ity- - - s t a t e - - z r : - - pOFGALUPOUS

phone number

v,...

300 Briarwood Dr. Gallipolis OH 45631

•

•;,J

'

•

'

.

-~~

..

,,

�Pill Cl• A .•Nr ~.,.- 6ntiwd

Ambition
·~· P .CI

•

that he inlends to show off the
car in local parades and festivals, and is even considering
taking passengers on rides
through historial areas of
Pomeroy.
"I'll probably bring #te car
out during special eveilts, like
the Meig~ County Fair and
River£est 2001 , so that people
can either take a ride or get a
picture posing with it," said
Wright.

•
•

•

•

Pomeroy • lllcllllport • Qellfpoll8, Ohio • Point Pln .. nt, WV

"I think the yougger generation will find the 5r interesting because you don't see
maoy Model &amp; around and.
it's a piece of history that you
can actually see and touch,"
added Wright. "It's very different from can being made

today."
Wright said he is anxious to
get the automobile's restora-

tion completed so that he can
climb into the driver's seat and
get back to "burning up the
roads" like he did so many
yean ago.
Somewhere, Edgar Atkins is
smiling.

•

Sunct.y, June 10, 2001'

Class!fitd ads, Page D2-7

Italian bread salad is cool summer treat
BY THE Allocwm Plllll
Among the dishes offered at this
year's Napa Valley Wine Auction is a
panzanella, devised by the one of the
che1i cooking at the charity event,
Annie Roberts, of the Robert Mondavi
Winery.
.The auction, the 21st in an annual
serie&gt;, runs from June 7-I 0, at the
Meadowood Napa Valley J:Csort, St.
Helena, Calif. Last year the event r.Used
$8.8 million, distributed to nonprofit
health care, housing and youth-development organizations in Napa Valley.
Roberts' panzanella is a refreshing
version of the traditional Italian bread
salad, and it's part of the al fresco spread
that follows the wine sale on Saturday,
June 9. ChefWolfgang Puck will also
prepare a dinner for visitors to the auction, which includes wine tasting,

music, dancing and other entertainment.
Panzanella (Italian Bread Salad)
'I, pound crustless day-old Italian
bread, tom into t -inch pieces
2 tablespoons olive oil
I medium English cucumber, peeled,
~eded. and cut into );.inch cubes

Salt

pieces
1 head baby frisee (pale, feathery
salad green), trimmed and cut into 2inch pieces
1 cup feta cheese, crumbled
Toss the bread pieces with 2 tablespoons olive oil. Toast them in a 375 F.
oven until golden.
Spread the cucumber pieces on a
paper rowel and sprinkle with 1 teaspoon salt. Let stand about 20 minutes.

Su•""'Y·•••• 11. 2811

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chtJn shows how local sloe/a i1f inkiest perfomwl 1a.rt week.
&amp;ch day:r closing figuru ore provided by Advest of GDJlipoltr.

2 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
I tablespoon sherry vinegar
I teaspoon minced garlic
Pat dry.
In a large bowl whisk together the
~ cup e_xtra-virgin ·olive oil
Freshly ground black pepper
· . vinegars, garlic and!!. cup extra-virgi~
1~ pounds ripe tomatoes (about 5), olive oil. Season with salt and pepper to
taste. Add the cucumbecs, tomatoes,
seeded and, cut into );.inch cubes
onions,
basil, radicchio, olives•.frisee and
~ medium red onion, thinly sliced .
'I, cup kalamata olives, pitted and cut the bread.Toss to combine.
in half
Makes 8 serving,.
Y, cup basil chiffonade (very finely
Nutrition information per serving:
410 a!., 27 g fat, 14 g pro., 28 g carbo.,
minced basil) .
·
'I, head radicchio, torn into bite-size 50 mg chol., 880 mg sodium.

FRI.

MON. TUE.
49

49

•

LOW-FAT COOKING

Pork Tenderloin and
Grilled Vegetable Salad

Chlnnktg Shope
DuPont

BY THE AlloclmD PREss
"Hot off the grill" sounds
great, but for those watching
their weight, the phrase doesDlno Chicken Chompers Nuggets, breaded, baked chicken
n 't have the same welcome
nuggets shaped like dinosaurs, are a new product from Fran's
ring if it adds up to a high fat .
Hea!tlly Helpings, designed for children ages 2 to 8, Introcontent.
duced at the recent Chicago Food Marketing Institute show.
~ • Pork tenderloin can be the
Fran's Healthy Helpings produces frozen, microwavable meals
basis ·of an easily prepared ·
that adhere to the Food and Drug Administration's strict definition of healthy. (AP Photo)
dish with a grilled salad
included, as this recipe shows. 1-o-Iive-.
_o_ii_=_.._....;__-J
•
It's fiom the Gourmet Every
Day feature in the June issue
2 cups trimmed baby
of Gourmet magazine, and it's arugula (I ounce)
a low-calorie treat.
Many packages of pork
tenderloin contain two tenderloins weighing about ~.
pound each, as described in
CHICAGO (AP) -What's fruits, papayas from Hawaii are
the recipe's ingredient list. If
new in food, set out in color- back in supermarkets. A new
you happen to get a package
,ful variety, vied for the atten- variety called Rainbow has
with one larger tenderloin,
tion of visitors to the Food . been genetically modified to
the
magazine says, simply
Marketing Institute's recent resili ~ virus that nearly wiped
cook it a little while longer.
show. There were also forecasts out the papaya industry in
Pork Tenderloin and
Ha~ . .
of new ~ of shop~ing. •
. ptill11d Vegetable Salad
The papaya is sweet, with a
The meeting, ad annual
(Preparation 1 hour, startevent, drew 35,000 food man- pleasing texture, and is now
to-finish
time 3 hours)
ufacruren and retail buyers the preferred variety in .
Two ~...pound pork tenfrom the United States and Hawaii, making up 50 percent
derloins
·
around the world to Chicago. of the crop. The original
I cup dry red wine
Here's a -preview of some of Kapoho Solo variety also is
2-inch sprig fresh rosethe products seen there that available, making up the other
mary
plus t teaspoon finely
manufacruren hope nly take half of production. Hawaiian
chopped
·
their place among the '34,000 papayas are available year1
garlic
clove,
smashed
·
items stocked by the typical round, with peak shipments
y, teaspoon dried hot red
American supermarket- and from September to Novem. pe~per flakes ·
an update on developments in ber.
r. cup red-wine vinegar
Ukuva iAfrica is introducshopping technology.
1 tablespoon mild-flavored
•
ing a line of four authentic
•
honey
Ncj:i.fust cooking
African sauces: Zulu 1 Fire
2 medium red bell pepMeal kits, complete pack- Sauce, Swazi Mamma M~mba,
.pers, quartered
ages of ingredients ready to Malawi Gold and Xhosa
~ medium. .zucchini (I
heat and eat, are currently a Umsobo Iyababa. The sauces,
pound total), trinuned · and
more than $350 rniflion busi- sold in handsome bottles with
cut lengthwise into Y...inch
ness, according to Tyson, one handcrafted stoppers, can be
slices
of the manufacturers. ·
used for dipping, in marinades
1 medium onion, cut
Among this year's ' new and in salad dressing~.
lengthwise into 6 wedges,
_,roducts is a line of P,ICSO 's
leaving root ends intact
Functional foods
Pasta Btke Sauces. You • take
2 teaspoons extra-virgin
.
. th e ' sauce
Drinks enhanced with ginfive rrunutes
to nux
with uncooked pasta, water seng, ech.cea, yerba mate
and cheeSe, then bake 40 min- and other ~ u-pplemenu are
utes. Campbell's Supper Bakes many and diyerse, with a wide
consists of a canned sauce; sea- range of brands, tlavon and
soning packet; rice, pasta or supplements available.
sruffing; and a crumb topping.
Soybeans were found in
Simply add fresh meat and maoy forms. Several suppliers
offer edamame, boiled soy.bake 30 minutes.
Also widely seen . at the beans in the pod, a popular '
show were precooked beef, Japanese bar snack. Other
chicken, pork and turkey forms of soybeans at the show
products, J:Cady to heat and included shelled soybeans,
eat. Even raw meats aiC being roasted soy nuts, and soy butmade more convenient by ter, which tastes quite like
premarinating or preseason- peanut butter.
Spectrum Foods Inc. introing. ·
I
duced a colle.ction of new soy
under · the brand
products
On the go11nnet front
With more exposure to name, Premier flarvest. The
restaurant dining an'd wide- collection includes breakfast
spread travel, Americans are cereals, meatless meal kits; soyacquiring a taste for bigger, enriched baking mixes, and
uniCfined soybean cooking oil
bolder flavors.
" ' o
no
o or.,, ,
McCormick's ,
new and nonstick spray
Gourmet Collection features
22 new herbs, spices and
blends, including garam
rnasala {an Indian spice blend),
lemon grass, wasabi powder,
chipode chili pepper and red
curry seasoning.
Bell-Carter Foods, ·makers
of Lindsay olives, is breaking
new ground with Lindsay
Olivada (olive spreads) in lr
three .tlavors: Taste ofTu5cany,
Taste of Sicily and Taste of
Greece. Not as intense as
European tapenades, these ·'
spreads aiC designed for massmarket appeal.
Just in-time to capitalize on
the curiCnt interest in exotic

.Manufacturers show off
what's ·new in food

1\&lt;,1

POOLS AND

•,

1

1

"'

*

6
---11---o.,.,---+-'-

+

Flratar .• .,

.

.

Whopper

Harley Dllvldeon

Junior~

+

46Y.

11

Kroger
•'

• .,

25
MUSIC FOR ALL- Corey and Jenny Hatflel&lt;! display some of the equipment their company, C&amp;J Productions, provides
as live disc jockeys for events throughout the trl-county area. (Contributed photo)
·

Ltd.
OVB

•

25

• .,

Peoplea

25

25

25

25

C&amp;l·Productions still entertaining

51

ALLIPOLIS - Corey
and Jenny Hatfield own
and operate C&amp;J Productions, a mobile disc
jockey ~ice.
"It was easy for us to entertain with
music," said Corey. "We were iri oand
in school and continue by volunteering as assistant . hand directors for
Southern High School."
· The two attribute their success thus
far to the demand for a mobile disc
jockey service in the area.
C&amp;J Productions average three
"gigs" a week and sometimes have to
refer potential clients to what they call
their professional partners, other DJs
in the area.
"The demand is so great, that we .
turned down live opportunities for
Memorial Day weekend alone," Jenny ·
said..''The business gets referrals from
other OJ and radio stations in our area
all the time."
·

+

Rockwell

•

•
f

~~., i -H:

..

Limited
Time Only!

Shoney'a

Good only at
Burger King
in Gallipolis, Ohio

.

••
51 .

'. '

Wendy'a

+

Would you like to see a stock of lMll interest listed?
If so, wptt/Jlt News Editor Kevin Kelly at (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.
--~----------------------~----------------~·-·

INVESTING
-• .•

.• -•
-•• .•

Charter Communications
will
.
'
be upgrading the cable system
starting with -the Pomeroy&amp; ·
Middleport, OH areas.
You may be contacted by a
Charter contractor
to
.
exchange your.current
-- equipme·nt and receive the
1
new digital equipment.
Watch for more. information
as we move into your area!

*

+

'

1-800-8
A WIRIO WORLD COM,ANV

.• '•

......••-'

I·

Coping in the
Sandwich Generation

••
GtJ_LlPOLIS · - Let's start
: : with a definition. What is the
Sand\llich Generation?
SGs are the group of people 1
most 6ften in their 40s and 50s '
who are squeezed between ·
raising the children they may
have waited to have (or helpGUEST
ing young adult children who
VIEW
are having a rough time getting started) and tending to the
needs of their now aging par- decisions should their faculties
ents. Taking care of the emo- deteriorate.
tional, financial and he,alth
Understandably, it can be
needs of three generations (the difficult to ask a parent for
children, the SGs themselves, power of attorney, but it's vital
and the aging parents) can in maintaining control of thdr
become a very stressful jug- accounts and helping them
gling act.
later on. When talking about
If you are feeling the pinch this important issue .with your
as a member of the Sandwich parents, "you should point out
,. Generation, there are several that power of attorney will
critical ~teps you should take. give you one of the critial
First of all, see that your par- tools necessary to take proper
ents have a will. Secondly, care of them should the need
arrange to get their durable
arise. Of course, implementing
-power of attorney. That way,
important estate planning steps
you wiU have access to their
will be easy if your parerits
assets to pay for various medremain in good health, but
ical and nursing home or hospower
of attorney covers you
pital expenses in the event that
they be~ome unable to handle should it become necessary for
things themselves. It also allows you to make serious choices

Mark
Smith

I

, you to make legal and financial ·

PlaiiH ... Slnlth. Dt

· ----------------------------------

,.

..

Have a business news .item?
Give us I CIH at (740) Ul-l:J42. ext. 23

Knowing how school budget~ are,
the duo recently mailed out forms
granting local high schools a free
dance of their choice. They wanted to
offer something for area students that
was positive and free.
"Not too many schools in Gallia
County took us up on our offer, hut
towards the end of the school Yrar,
over half of them commended our
services," Corey said. "We are one of
the most inexpensive DJ services
around, offering competitive rates for
the quality of service provided."
"One of the best qualities of C&amp;J
Productions is our written contract,"

Jenny said. "It is extremely important
for brides and grooms. All terms are in
writing to avoid any misunderstandings and every booking is confirmed
· a contract, agreed upon an d
by usmg
signed by the client and us.
"As part of the wedding contract,
the bride and groom are completely in

'

Tips for preventing
rose diseases
POMEROY Are
you having growing
problems with your
roses?
Wet and cool te,mperatures assist in the devel. opment of diseases in
roses. The most common
diseases this spring have
been black spot and
powdery mildew. Both
are fungus diseases that
survive over winter ·on
prior years' leaves, flower
stems and buds scales.
Black spot ·also survives on infected rose
canes, · so early spring
pruning of canes is very
important.
Black spot starts off as
circular black spots on
loWer leaves, frequently
surrounded by yellow
halos. Severe infestatior;ts
almost completely defoliate the rose plant of its
leaves.
· Weekly
fungicide
sprays are necessary,
especially . if foliage is
wet for more than six
hours at a time. For
powdery mildew to
form, the foliage doesn't
need to be wet, but does
need high humidity levels. ·

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW

Powdery mildew looks
like powdered sugar has
been applied to the rose
leaves, Both diseases may
·· be controlled by using
good sanitation and
fungicides like Triforine,
Funginex, Cleary's 3336,
Domain,
Bayleton,
Dithane, Duosan or
Zyban.
Homeowners
who
wish to minimize fungicide sprays should look
into the following recommendations: improve
air circulation around
roses by providing adequate space between
rose plants. Limit other
flower and shrub plantings in and around your
rose garden. Maximize
the amount of sunlight
they receive. Water in
the
early
mornmg

,._..neKneen.DI
\'

charge of bow the reception goes." she
added. "They fill out a five-page contract that allows them to set the night,
their night, as they choose."
"The last page of"the contract is the
song list page," Corey said. "Any song
on that page will be played the night
of i:he event as long as the 30 day
notice is abided by. That is one unique
· service offered by C&amp;J Productions."
"Some DJs are only known for loud
music, that is not at all what you may
want to hear during a dinner party or
3 banquet," he added. "C&amp;J Productions offers light dinner music and soft
musiC for those events. We play dinner
music at a respectful volume so you
and your guests can talk to your
friend~. and family without raising
VOICes.

"The majority of our work this year
has been wedding receptions." Jenny
Please- W. D8

Excessive rain brings
unexpected decisions
GALLIPOLIS - Because
nothing written in the Sunday paper will dry the fields
any faster, no topics seemed
suitable this week. Restoring
hope and confidence is
timely. but an individual
achievement.
As you reevaluate this season's fhrm plan,let your first
decision be to focus on
something positive on the
farm everyday. The follow-·
ing topics may be important
in subsequent decisions.
Assessing Nitrogen Losses: The nitrogen source in
tobacco fertilizer is not subject to rapid losses, however,
after 3 weeks, fields that
were fertilized but not set,
can expect 15-30 percent in
nitrogen losses, depending ·
on the degre e and typ e of
flooding.
Fields with set tobacco
have experienced minimal
losses, if the plant was able to
·take up the nitrogen. Many
will decide on additional
side dressing anyway based
on past experience, which is
often the best teacher. In
cor;l, th e following figures
describe the predicted loss ,
based on the source of nitro~·
gen: anhydrous ammonia
with· Nserve, 5- 10 percent

.'

. Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

loss; without N -serve. in
well-drained fields, 10~20
percent; without N-serve in
poorly drained fields, 20-50
percent; and with urea, 3060 percent losses.
Purpling in Corn: Finally,
some good news. Purpling
in field and sweet corn is
associated with phosphorus
deficiencies, however any
stress that inhibits root
development can cause purpling including: disease and
insect problems; nutrient
deficiency; carryover herbicide; genetic predisposition
of the variety; and most likely in this case coot saturated
soils.
Current soil conditions
restri cted root development,
allowing sugars to build up
in th e plant tissues, which
triggers a chemical reaction

Please see Bymn, D8

�Sunday, June 10,2001

• •I

-:

Pon.-oy •lfiddleport • O.Uipolls, Ohio Point Pleaunt, WV

~

.•

:: :
~

110

••

•·•
to!• :,.

HalpWtwtl d

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CONSTIU::TIOH

Tho Ouondol Gouup, Inc. • - ing con•ttuclion services firm

• ...• ... throughout U!t Mid-Atlantic re~

• ,. Qkln, ha ln'llnldiatt ~ • • tot
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110

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lfMg for 2001

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EXPANJING Pff.f/T $25-486/
HA POTENTlAL

to work Oft 1 large comrMICial

Art you-.; for ... _ . .
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ing Canr.r II olllflng Ntne Aide
Training Cllooooo monlhly. II ie a
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career for you.

Join us In recruiting
volunteer~ for Major
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organlutlonl. You
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EI.1Pl OY1.1UIT
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MHJ'JUIII 11.'1 'd ::,

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FREE IENICHI
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48831·, Apimltllt 403

START DATING TONIGHT!
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30

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8 Wool Sllmton,-1

740-5112·1842
Quality clothing and houoohold
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Phone: 1·360-813·1099 De
5889 "' hllp:/lwww,modelrep.co ...
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Addreasers Wanted Immediately!

ceptlng applications for all shifts.

lnga Throughout Tri·State Area,

We offer excellent benetlts that
Include Heallh tnswrance, .t01 K,

The family of
Charles L. (C.L.) .
Spurlock

Dad, Brother

&amp;. Sister

flowers.

Sadly missed by

ration

Entry Level Svc/

would lilu to express
our thanks and
sincere appreciation
to aU family and
friends for the
kitulness shown to us
upon his tragic
dell/h. Thimks to
everyone for their
prayen, cards, phone
caUs, food, visiJs,
monelluy gifts, and

on the 5th Anniversary
of his death
Fond Memories
linger everyday.
Remembrance
keeps him near.

Co

Graduate~ ,

NEEDED IN JUNE. Experltnotd
Orlvers+800·S68·2353 · Need
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Clolhes, 0.24 Moolhs, Milo.
TODAY.1-800-448-6689.
Pomeroy,
Middleport
8r VIcinity
Multi-family yard sale, June 8-10,
Baahan &amp; Carmel Rd. Plckena

lnfoCialon
Management

Altontlon RN a LPN'o

A Ntw Career! 400+ DRIVERS

ATTENTION:
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Life Insurance, competitive wag-es and opportunllles for advancement. If you are a tearn player
who enJoys working with the elderty, please appty In person bet-

Shlrtoy Spetro, 304-el'&amp;-1428.

AVON· Looking lor hlghtr In·
oomo? Mort lltxlblo llourw'l 1fldo.

pondtnco? AVON hao. whet
you're lOOking tor. Ltt'a ~alk.

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East Main Slreel

Coolville, Ohio
' (7401887·3158
EOE

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and- rthabililo1fon
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to: Cindy Slmpeon c/o Sotnlo
Hills Ntnlng Center, 311
Buckrldge Aotd, BidWOII, OH
45814. Sotnic HllltlloAn EEO
EIT'j)loyor.

Communliy Aotlon Ia aaaklng two
laborer• for the Wealherizatlon
crew. This Ia a temporary full lima
position. Send or deliver re1ume
and references to GMCAA, at·

The Ouandel Group, Inc. a lead~
ing construction eervicea firm
throughout the Mid Atlantic re·
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motivated, experienced Superln·
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8181 Wonhlngton Road,

or fax

Woolervlllli, Ohio 43082

tree 1·800-772-5933 Ext. 2070.

10: 614·885·9001, Attn: Hu·
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COL-A Drivers: EMperlenced/ln·
tllperienced Weal Coa11 Run a•
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dei·Ohlo.com Pteaoo llol tho lob
code: SUP In tho aubjecl line.
EOE Building lnlegrlly Since
1882

DRIVERS: Paid 2 Week COL
Training. No experience nudad.

$34,000/yr. plus Full benolllo.
Drivers based In Midwaat. P.A.M.

Tranop0r1. 1·877·230·6002. Sun·
day 9am·Spm, Moo·Frt. 8am-5pm.

Would llkee tto~~::~:.~
our sincere &amp;J
to aU who have helped
In our time of loss by
offering prayers, cards,
support , and love.
Thanks for the C.US,
food, Dowers and

-

Item momborl, and pertiolpelo In

To quollly, you muet bt on . - .
10n1 -unlcllor -

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yoara or oxpertonc:o In a manu·
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Applicants must be energetic.

ooH-dlrac1ad, and mollvalad """"'
playoro. Full limo pooHiona oome
with and excellent benefit pack·

ago thai includeo • ohlft dflleren·
lor PM ltllfto, health &amp; tie In·

llol

aurance. 401 K, paid v,.catlon, 7

Clollpolo, OH Gl1JIMIIDI21W

Ptrt

AI a
Ollila 0011 produot de" ' - ' 111m. rou wm dOYolop

e oomllflhonllvt quality olralogy
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you will
'"""'
proc!UCI roqulno-

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Or stop by our Gallipolis location:
lnfoCislon Management Corp.
242 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

every
- more
- and
on. and
.. Hourly
wagaholiday
oom·
menaurate

define and

Jarney will be receiving
his Associates Degree
Electronic Engineering

June 10, 2001
He has already
received several
Certificates of
Academic Excellence.
are so proud of you!
Mom, Marty, Brittany,
Corrie, 5honnon, Oolfon,
511elbl &amp; Angle

A (ard shower Is
being held to honor
VktorCasto
as he (elebrates his
90th birthday
on June 12.
Send Birthday
wishes to hbn at

178 Keystone Road
Vinton, Ohio 45686

the NelsonvWe DlallysiJi I
· Stall'; Dol:tors North
Hoopltal CCU Statr,
Bev
Tammy
Taylor and Violet (;rat:el
for the beautiful musi(;
Matthew Donahue,
WilHam Donahue;
Dan Lantz, Ron Vance,
Allen WIJUams and
Rodney Wright for

servtna u pdbearers;
P11Stor Sam Bayse; and

Jacobi Winston
Brandeberry
The Bell Llttt. Dennll The
....,_Around II

Tho lllg "5"
Arid Kl""-rg.orten Bound!

,.,.,

Happy Birthday
~-'-

"'--- ~. . _,. 2:&gt;4"' '~

to Fisher-Acree
Funeral Home.
"He hath delhered my
soul In peace from the
battle that wiiS aplnat
me: tor there were
many with me''

Ps. 55:18
Gone from us but at
home with his Lord.
The Donahue Family:
Raymond, Doolon,.:
Angle, lla&lt;heal, Gerrald.l
Brenda, Dennis, Linda,
Kenda, and families.

experience.

pluo.

(Text formal only pleooel or moM
1o: Rockwell Automation· Dopt.
774 S. P.O. Box 2088. Mllwa-.
wr 53201·2086. An
Equal
Oppartunlly Employer Supporting

110

su

---Corp.

To OUr &amp;IMMI N.lnloCilion In
o111 Send Your ReNno To:
lnloCiolon

a'

Altn; Sam lloobl

325 Spoklglitlo Dr.
-.OH44333

Or Email To:

JOBS

$6 57188
-

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1~
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JIUI•
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Bring your own truck!
We Mrvlcl q10 tf'!Mlkl

•

anct ae11 diiCOunt perta.

•.•

counted on Iince 19561

SOD-S43 S92a

Experloncad Caahlor Needed

110

Ilona, troalmtnl and naodod day.
to-day aervlceo. Excellent oppor·
lunily 10 bt par1 ole progrlllive
rehab dtpt, providing both lnpe·
llonl and oulpalienl aorviceo.
Faolllly hal excetlonl complionc:o
history, """""tlonal monagomonl
111m and poalllvo ropulotlon In
referral community. lnterealed
candidates ahould apply to :
Rookoprtngo
Rehabllltallon
tar,
38759 Roc:lcapringt
Rood,Can·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45789; Allloon Bam·
tH. MPT, Rehab Sorvlcoo Dlroo·
tor.
Equal Opportunity E.-proyar
Encouraging Workplice Oiversl·
ty. ·
Gaillpolla Area, Janitor. Floor

care. Colt HIS&amp;-661-0540

Help Wanted

"
110 Help Wanted

•-=========::::~~~~::;:~:..--,
·

lalin 1mm1. . .1J. Plllllll lin 1111111.

-·-y

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

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

----~~~~====~~-.

11111-·C-CI:

PROJECT ENOINEERICONSTAUCTION MANAGER needed at THE
PILLSBURY COMPANY, a prominent food manufacturing faclllly in
Southern Ohio.
·
·
This posltlon requires 1 self·motlvated individual with knowledge of
techniques, contract administration and budgetary management.
Incumbent will provide supervision to all alta contractors, manage the care and
maintenance of thlneen acrea of roof, and execute minor/major capital projects. Will
also
conatrllcllon managemant for larger projects. .
englneerl!lll degree aa well 18 a minimum of two years experience in
A
lcc1mrna~clal or Industrial construction Is required or a mlnlmum of 7·10 years in
I commren:lia( or Industrial conatructlon If non-degreed. Knowledge and experience of
slngle ply roofing material and conetructlon Ia also required. Preference will be given
candidates with a food and/or project management background. Candidate must

.....:1-810-828-8880

..

EOEIAOA Employer

~:.~:=:~:;~anand
ablllly to manage multiple priorities,
an axcellenl technical aptHude.

110 Help Wanted

good verbal and written
·
maetlng'the above quellflcatlone may submit their resumes to:
The Pllllbury Company
2403 s. tt.nneylvanla Avenu., Wolllton, 'OH 45892
Attn: HrEnglneor/CM

• Professional Work
Environment
• Family Atmosphere
• Every Friday and
Saturday Off
i Seven Paid
Holidays A Year
• One Week of
Vacation Every Six
Months
Full-time Pennanent
Positions Available

1-888-237-5342
ext. 2311

·'
ltJr -

Rt

lrrji1rrrwtfDit:

MilT lSI

.........

111-71

-

Now Taking ADDIIcatlona for:
Managers
Assistant Managers .
Cuatomer Sales Reps
Account Managers
Delivery Specialist

Call the 24-hour Rent-2-0wn
Career Hot Line!
1·800-526-5606
Extension 111
,\.J

11tmng
MUll lor
c:ompanyin,.
and
our peopte.
We011' pr«Wtde

cliooOVef -

diflerOfiCO,

, ··Z

.. -r•

G·

'·
~lrld It .... Auction Center of Rl331n Muon,
wv. will be aolllng .... I'OIIIIIInlng IIMII lor ....
lllldtecl GIIIW _....along with 2 other 111ta1ee.

Pul I 10 Wo&lt;1d lor 1
1roo caD: 1100-429-5653 or
lrililuo..-:

-·~

POSTAL JOSS $48,323.00 YR.
Now hlrlng·No oxperionco·pald
tralnlng·graat btnolill. Call 7
doyl: --.:11180 oxt.: J-3115

furniture. 6aasware &amp; misc. Plus CMr

boll

150

lots. IJ. slliPmenf of fallC!I Picture framea. stertlnt
silver, Bohemia IIW. C1111tal PIPet wellllfs. old

POSTAL JOBS $48.323.00 YR.

railroad luaue can. oak cburcll bench. old silver

Now hlrlng·No exparlence·PIId

dollars. Plua several IPOrt Plaquea rEambean.
Elwl!l, Jordan &amp; others. Plus much more.

lrolnlng·Great btnollll. Celt 7
dayo: 800-4211·3880 oxt.: J·586
FREE INFQ!WATION

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

110 Help Wanted

you """ maXI a

773-5715 or n3-5447

II· alia. OHBur-GT01--0l033115

Responsibilities
include de~
veloplng short and long term
sourcing strategies and purchasing assigned commodities
and services. This antalls Identifying coal reduction oppoftunl·
lies: negotiating pricing , l.,nll &amp;

oondliOns ol quallly and on· tmo
delivery, and maintaining lnvan·
10r1es supporting MAP requir•

menta.
We seek an energetic Individual
able to form strong relationships
with cllanta and a 4-yaar degree
in Business Admlnistratfon or
Engineering, or equivalent A.
purchasing background and the
ability to read .engineering drawings Ia preferred. proficiency with
Microsoft programs is a plus.

Buyer/ Planner

TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WrTH 10.

1::=::=:::!::::::==============~

..;;;

Auction

.PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, June 16 - 10:00 a.m.
The Plains, OH
The pe,.onal property of the tall Ann Baldwin will be
aold at public auction. DIRECTIONS: From m. 33 north
of Athonl, lum on m. 682 to The Plaine, tum on Mound
Slnlet-IIIICond llrael on right aCIWI from CHgo, then
1urn right to 508 Adena Drive, watch tor sign e.
IIU G11C Cobolloro (£1 Comlnollo , ........
Uty

......

clo&lt;k,

Galllpalltl, OH QT01-GOD3311
In this anintegral
will
ensure
orderiV role,
fiQw ofyou
material
and value· added assemblies ,
as well as e11pedlling. material
delivery, releasing requirements
tQ suppliers and arranging
transportation.
If
you're a self- motivated,
assertive individual with at least 2
years ot scheduling experience
or knowledge of MAP and ·RMC
products, we want to meet you .
E•cellent Interpersonal, analytical
and problem sotving skills are
required . The ability to read
engineering drawingS, 2 years of
college coursework and proficient
with Microsoft Programs Is

benellclal.
To ensure consideration for !his
pos!tlon, you must indicate lhe
corresponding coda, on the ~op of
your resume . Please email you

resume 10:
reS&amp;.mesOhr.ra .rockweU.c:om
(Texl formal only please) or mail
to ; Rockw ell Automation- Dept .
774 S, P.O. Box 2086, Milwaukee,

WI 53201 -2086. An

Equal

Opportunity Employer Supporting
Diversity In The Workplace

ROCKWELLAUTOMAnON
Sales Person·
Full-Time, Bene·
fila, Retail EMperlence Preferred .
Apply At Lifestyle Furniture, "No
Phone G:alls, Apply In Person.
856 Third Avenue , Gallipolis ,

Atbars at Gallipolis Is seeking dependable,
lerl8f1jetic, caring Individuals, to join our ~eam.
pan·time poanlons are available.

1Pf·eril·eire wages Including pay lor experience.

Ohki.

BenEJIHsll

WORK FROM HOME! Earn
$1500 PTIMO or $5000 FT/Mo .
BFHome81z.com Call Today! 800·
955·3049 FREE Information:

Include heaHh, vision &amp; dental Insurance, and 401
IPI,ease call Lisa Short (740) 441·8320 II interested,
.f'aflply in person.
ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
.
110 Plnacrelt.Drlvo, Galllpolll, Ohio 45631
Phone (740) 446-71t2
Fax: ~40) 446-9088

bl•v.U.bll.

· OWNER: Dan Baldwin
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Sheridan &amp; Chris Prater
Uco- &amp; Bondtd to SIIIO ot Ohio
MMnblr Ohio I Nllt'l AucU011M11 Aaeoc.

Public Sale and Auction

GLORY
AUCTION
HOUSE

EVENING AUCTION

992·9553 Office
992-0560 Jim

PH: 740.592-4310 or 800.419-9122

O',BLENB&amp;S

MEDICAL.SOCIAL
SERVICE ASSISTANT

O'BLENNES MEMORIAL HOSPITAL has
an Immediate part-time opening In the Social
Services
Department.
. The · qualified
candidate
Counselor

will

be licensed by the Ohio
and
Social
Work
Board.

Experience as a social worker in a health care
environment Is required. We offer a very
competitive salary range, comprehensive
benefit package, Individualized orientation, as
well as excellent education and other related

In

Human Resources .
55 Hospital Drive
Athens, Ohio

592-9227

rr IS possiBLE m LovE youR

Plus weekly
bonus and
overtime

4

a P.C.1

EOE

$7.00 per hour

a

www.aulomltlon.rockwell.com

Motivated People To Work In OUf
FastPaced Retail Environment

Check It Out!

Rockwell Automation has buiH

'

_:::::::::::;;::::=::;:;;;::::::..._.,

WE'RE LOOKING FOR

JOB AND H~VE ...
Great Pay
Employee I Family Health Ins.
$15,000.00 Life Insurance
401-K Retirement Plan
Qualified 100%.Educatlonal
Assistance
Training and Development Programs
Paid Vacations &amp; Holidays
Employee Discounts
Bonus Opportunities
·
Profit Sharing

Building Ill - . ono ~
lime....
·~ .the clftel•a til in h makilg.

·at •

ahead of the curve and make u1
a global leader. Wa earned our
r..,utation fOf excellence through
dodicatod pocpie like yoo. So we
offer a world of oppOrtunity to
thOII inter11ted in buitding a
power1ul career. Join u1 and

".,

$2W7~ per hour. PTIFT
1-800-616-881" Or see our weboilt rnoov~nup...,.

applicants lor the full-tima poattion of Custodial Worker.
Under direction of the board of County Commissioners
1 he
ty B 'ldi
and the immediate supervision o I
coun
ur ng
Mlintenanca SUperintendent, this position will Include
the following duties; perfonns general custodial work to
f
1 -~~·
d sts
maintain appearance o county act ,.1es, e.g., u •
and wet mops floors, waxes lloors, dusts furniture,
vacuums carpeta, cleans and sanitizes restrooms,
washes glass windows and doors, replaces lightbulbs,
moves furniture, etc. Perfonns grounds maintenance
tasks to maintain appearance and safely of county
grounds, e.g., mows lawns, trims bushes, removes
snow and lea, sweeps sidewalks, etc.
Completion of ninth (9th) school grade or equivalent.
Valid Driver's Ucense required.
Full benel~ package (I.e., vacation, sick leave, hsatth
insurance, retirement systems, etc.) Salary based on
experience and qualifications.
·
Interested applicants can submn an application to:
S.rb Unroa
Clerk of the BOird of Ollila County
Commlnlonet'll
11 Loculi! Street, Room 1292
Galllpolll, Ohio 45631
no lalar than June 20, 2001 al4:00 p.m. ·

Puo:fluing

world~

ESTATE
AUQ'ION
.
.TUESDAY,

WORt&lt;.

benefits.
Applications can be picked up

EASY WORK! EXCELLENT PAy!
Assemble Producla. Call Toll .
Frt~l-600-4117·5588 Ext. tt577 .

pMAil*lll.

lnn,llallipollo

.

IIIZir IXIrl Clre
IIIDIIaiCIL CEITEI
100 Jl"s• Rkl
811118111, •• 41131

Pro_... Soietfllanl Counaetor.
Paf1·11mo a Full·lln\0. Flo•lblo
Work Schedule. Call OVMG
(7-'01441-11221 For lnltrYiew •

vallYo Industrial
automatiOn
ooto companies
around the
;=====Pu==bl=lc=Sa=le:i;:;and::;:;;A:uctlot::::n==~~=- luliona
Solutions that keep them

OWN A COMPUTER PUT IT

Own

110

---------...!.---------_.:

To~

........... IMIIIJ fir llllif Eldrl 111'111

Help Wanted

888-72&amp;«111311705.

-.~.com

(aa.)8115-3803
Full 11ma phyalcal lharaplol nood- Ii1_
od lor 100 bed' akilled nursing
CUSTODIAL WORKER
laolllly,
to provide aalolanco to The Gallia County Board of CommissionBtS invites
rehab services director, evalua·

HOUEft EI1IA Cllt

Dlv:~::L:=~· 1·888·974~JOBS
www.boydb;os.~om
MN-~~~~.~~~al~l~·~~~~~e·~~~~~L~~~J!===-~E~o:e~~J

-.llid-

......10-HIIIIInlng

Malnlonanoa, Full·llmo, Apply In

. lroloCilllon.com

part·Ome poaltlon1. We currently ere utilizing
twelve-hour shlfta. Muat be a t•m player.
Premiere wagoa Including pay for experience.
Benefits InClude health ln1urance, dental
ln1urance, vleton, 401 k, and paid vacation.
Plene apply In peraon.
Arbora at Galllpolla, 170 PlnecrHt Drive
·
Galllpolla, Ohio 45831
(740) 448-7112 • FAX (740) 448-9088

•'

:An 11\11 It 1 company
that drlvera have

-·---

plurrting ort11fn1. Kreo It !go In
..-..-andllloly . . . .

~

HROittc:WO"*&gt;CCIIon.oom
VIlli Our- Silo At

The Arbol'll at Gallipolis II Meldl)g dependable,
energetic, caring lncllvlduala for full-time and

• Plenty of mille .,•·.

CIUI rr&amp;J•icll. MNIICIIInd

Cenlor, 311 Buckr1clgo
wol, OH 45814. Alln: Conely
Sin1ltoft. H11 ie an EEO

LPN's/RN's

monetaryaifts.
Special thanks to:
Lawson's

Iion, .................. -

cor·

Wt a mollvallod 1oM! - 5 or moro ot produot or
proooao dovoloprnant experlenoo,
exctllonl lnlerporoonal and nego.
tiallon lkllla, and PC proflcllncy.
Strong prcjtcl· management and
probllfll. solving abHhleo, 111 Will
at a Bachelo~o degree In Engl·
naarlng (preferably Etecuioal) lo
eooenllol. Fomlllorlly with AC. DC,
And BDC motor product dOYtiopment, and an advanced loc:hnlt:al

l

-... andplln- ...
per~~ilbt. Kncal •.111n CCWiipiN-

olonallnlervlew. E.O.E.

- and promote lnnovt·
licin lrom Improving timelo merkeL

111 1

--aminlnunol3-

8A-4:30P to schedule an profes·

.... -

..,..

with

Ploaso call 740·787·4581 M·F

mtnte are conalttent wllh cut·
tomer nMdt and documented,
review d11ignt,

tll~ln

long-term oare 7A-3P/
3P·11P, t part limo day shift RN
time

Call now to schedule an interview:
1-888-237-5342 ext. 2211

lr. Qulllly•- · -

a-

e:eptlng applicallona for. ANa,

Mechanical.

-

er...

Hickory Cree' of Alhono, A 158
bed skilled nurolng lat:llily, Ia ac·

Professional Work Environment!
Every Friday and Saturday Offl
Seven Paid Holidays A Year!
A Week of Paid Vacation
. Every Six Monthsl

lual-o Procell tmprovtmtnt

IIAINTEIWICE P08ITIOH
AVU••F

1~

Overtime

meeeurement sy1t1m1, guide

P.O. Bel 857, - -· WV

25604 or Fax (31M)522-3812

1You-U.10~

:" WANTED, Experionc:od Flatbed
, Company Drtvoro. Starling Par
Balld. Upon Experience Up To
1.311 Milt, 'Lalo llodoi Traotors
'Tarp Par. 'Slop Pay, 'Layover
Par. 'V...Oiion Pay, 'BCBS, •
Oual Comm. H Yoo w.nt To
For Tho Boll, Colt
Cordlnol Flllbtd Cmlora,

And

ability evaluallona and product
lllolr mltwo. Addlllonally, rou
wtll dtvtlop qualflr plano end

........o~v....,..,......oom

CAREER OPPORTUNITY! Earn

(/"" 11, 195Z ·May l7, l(}(I/J

dlnallon, producllon rlold lm·

. . , . , _ aotlvllloa, talluro/ rail-

ConlllruCIIon
Projoot SuPiflnlondonll

e,_. Excellent Salory and benofha

The Family of
Stephen R.
Donahue

oyllornt

lor non oonlonnlng ..-tel coor·

lanlion S. Edwardo, 80f0 N. Slate
Route 7, Choohlre, Ohio, 45820
by 6-1 ~1 . GMCM 1o an EOE.

package. Send reaume and sal·
ary history, In coolltlonoo 10:
The Ouindol Group,lno.,

COL Training Available.
1-80().348·1380

lmplomtr4 and -

~

$7.00 Per Hour
Plus Weekly Bonus

-~

To onouro conoldoroliof\lol thlo
poolllon, you muol lndlcalo tho
·c orr_..,. coda, on 111t top ol
=~~mo. Plaao• amall you

www.BeBouFrae.com
e~~:cellent lnoome. Easy claims
proceaa lng. Full training. Home·
PC required. Call Physician - &amp;
Healthcare Development• toll -

lind ....

Be"""'
OwnNlovor g lo 5 Again

$50().$800I)Itn

B onu';' Benefrts' Bonus' Benef1ts'

I""·" ~ yau . .

.. procludlon,

(8881581·28118.

ween 9-.4 or call Diana Harleaa,

AN, Olreclor of Nurolng.

-

Phy--·

110

Ing. FulliOnofill. No 'llpotieiiCO
flqllirod. Cd IDIIroo 7.,..1pm 1·

- To:
ant. Plea••Olllce
SendInReaum•

coda: SUP In tho oubjool llno.
• E.O.E. Building Integrity Since
1882

a...,•= am•at•
a,=·
,OHam

AIIIIIILY AT NOIIEII Crana.
Toy1, Jewelry. Wood, Sewing,
Typlng ...GfNI Port CALL 1-801).
7115-03110 Extit 201 (241nl

MAIL ORDER

···c··
Ill II

miM aclf.&amp;;awiDday.

LPN Or CMA Wanted In Buoy

to: . TH Quandel Group,
lnc .•11a1 Wortlllln1ton Rd.,
w tl .... Cih-Grflxllo:
111 Ill IIIII, Alln: Hu- Raaourcea. 1 ...11.: brloiiiJncltl·
Oftlp ega Pl1111 Hat the job

to txJHd llleir ...,.,, Join
uo and .....,. .. ._ you oon

Needed Expertenc;:ed Crew tor
Setting and Finl.tling Sectional
- . g. Sand Pricing l n al\d 111:perlence to: Southern
Hom••· PO Box 829, Jackson,

Help Waillacl

POSTAL JOSS Up 10 $11.351
hour. Hiring lor 2001 . Paid train-

Own A eon.,.Mt? Pul n

aalvera. Excellent salary and
bontflla packago. lOAd rHUmt
and llllary hlolory, in OOIL'IdotiCe,

-

Nood 7 ~ To Sol A-; Call
(7.., ... 335ft

110

OH45840

ltnglng oppty- • ~or·
ganizellon f o r - ...-..

110 Help

global In our liold. So wa
oHer a world of opportunity to

Adds~

Corporation.

1-888 475-7223
axt.1801

Individual• like you· make ut a

ARE YOU WILLING TO INVEST
10 MINUTES IO chongo JOUr
lie?7? PTIFT at homo. 820-1124·

Management

AI Homo. Call j4D5144N13&amp;7

j304)552-4014

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

career opportunities
available at lnfoCislon

Coming To Hunllngton. WV
(801142748311 or (9011427-11514

lilts. Condlllona Apply. Open·

Yard Sale

out more about the

"'ACCESS TO A COMPtlTEA? fl00.337·5320
PT. FREE Into. 888·887·4184 ACTORS/MODELS! Network Hlr·
wwwJMHomolliz.oom
lng all agea! No Experlen•"''

To Good Home, 2 Year Spayed, Appl." College Students! '01 HS
Female Ronweller, Needs Room

Cell TODAY to find

Put M10 Wo&lt;1d $25/hr·$75/Hr. FT/

Slngert, Bands &amp; Vocal Groups,
Free kitlena 10 a good horne, 7ol0- · All Styles/ Ages. Major Record
Label Sa8klng New Artieta .
&amp;&amp;2·3004 after Spm. ·

(304j675-3528

plus weekly bonuses
and a full time shift
wllh Friday and
Saturday off.

'"ACCESS TO A COMPUTER?
Put " to - 1 $25/llr-$75/Hr. FT/ ACHIEVE THE AMERICAN
PT. FREE Info. 888·803·0732 DREAM! HIOU mutl WO!II. al

- ·-·-.com

Giveaway

With

110

We offer up to $7/hou'r

~

Qouau tlltJIM
gram. Ptoid YlQ, !no. .....
$11.1)1).$33.00 p.. hOUr potential. Sludentl·.v ' me.
lnnovallva ttdlnologlel prov1t1e Paid Training/Full Bonomo. For www.canflOIMtli)IW.com.
cor-lioo lRIUfldlho -Jd with . mort informaliort oal11-1188-674· 1-801).348-1380
lnduatrlalautomadon IOiuliona t150e&gt;d.3234
lhal kaop lhom on lop. Talonlod

application or oontaot Stopi1onla
Kamper, lnetruotor, al (7-'01448·
7150 .

ATTENTION: MO.THERS AND
OTHERS. Up 10 ........,. 1'00 part.
limo. Full·lralnlng. 1·800·871·
4808. www.qulckcaohnow.com/

. . . il

NO EXPERIENCE rECESS'RY
MAIL ORDER
CAll.. TOll. FREE
1118551tolf

liaft e·m4on.
PM+dvily
mgml.
·
- · conotruo·
~ and llloly, Cllol-

No.._....

-lo 111111bte
Au1ornallonhow
lltOng futur•. Our

por1unilyt Tho next d111o will begin In July. Stop by IOOiy tor on

(WOO...

'
In ... ..-...
... -

EASY WORK! Graa1 Pa1ll Earn DRIVERS· Cannon Expro$$.
ssoo Plua a WeH A11embling Ownar Opllaaoo Provram. Your
1ruck "' ount ,83C+Imi. Company
- . Homa.
Nar:o111ry. Call Tol F - 1·800· drivlra atarting up to .34clml. w/
increaHI up to .31¢. Pay ra.ise
:57-1&lt;138
every 6 mot Bonus-Rider Pro-

dayo, MOnday through Frida1
8:30 10 4:30. Thit II a grill op-

Management
Corporation has the

'II'*., .... -4

$•
10 PfDIIuot - I n projad . . .
fling, acllocluilng. COtob'"*" c:oor-

110

$1 . . . . ,......,

INTERNA'IIOIW. COlii'Nl'f

1....7pmcsr

Help WMied

McClure'•
now hiring
all 3 loc:allons. lull or part-lime.
pick up applicalion et IOoalion &amp;
bring beck bolwaon t :30am &amp;
10:00am. . . . . . ""'SoluftltW.

' og-

Up Toi1UMtr.

110

A.,,,...,.,

Ibu co""*• ......_.

prO(oc:t in Southo811om Ohio

f'

HelpWa lad

6unll4!' a:imrt · 6rnlinrl • Page D3

UICf PRESIDtOT Of PRTIEDT CRRE SERUICtS
Holzer Medical Center, a regional medical center.
located in Gallipolis, Ohio is seeking a qualified
individual for 'the position of Vice President of Patient
Care Services . This position provides progressive
leadership lor patient care through planning,
organizing, staffing, directing, and evaluating services
to patients. lndiyldual serving In lhls position Is pan of
the Strategic Planning team for Holzer medical Center
as well as System affiliates.
A dynamic lndlvldual wllh previous heallhcare
administrative
as well as an ·Ohio license
nurse and a B.S. in Nursing, Is
degfeB In a health-related lleld is
. Qualified candidate must possess
leadership and exceptional customer relations
skills and the ability to work In a collaborative role with
the board of trustees, Administrative Staff, Medical
Staff, and other hospital employees. Understanding of
the complex lssue,s lacing patient care professionals
and creative problem·solvlng must be demonstrated.
Holzer Medical Center Is a 249-bed acute care
facility wlth a 23·bed CARE acredited inpall(lnt rehab
unit Gallipolis, , located along the Ohio River, oilers
many opportunities to those interested in a small town
atmosphere.
Excellent wage and benelil packa~e.
.
)f interested, send resume along wrlh salary hrstory to :
Roele Ward
VIce Prealdant of Human Re1ource1
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jack•on.Pike, Galllpolle, OH 45631·t563
Phone: ,(740) 446-5105
Fax!TDD:
446·51 06
I

97 Beech Street

Thursday, June 14 - 5:30 p.m.
Albany, OH
Due to moving from the area the
personal property of Wanda Brunk
will be sold at public auction.
DIRECTIONS: From Rt. 50 west of
Athens, turn on Hooper Road (near
Bob's PlcPac) just past BasseH Road
on right turn left to 9546 Hooper
Road. watch for signs.
ANTIQUES AN.D COLLECTIBLES: 2·0id IChool desk w/2
flip seats, 2 gal. Crock, small cast lronpot on tripod
eland, 2·corn jobbers, 2·Fenton baakats, some
glaoaware, 8-1982 American League &amp; Cincinnati Reds
baoabell and 3-football (Baltimore Colto, San Francisco
48erl LA Rams) "Bobbing Heads" figures.
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: Ridgeway Grandlether
Clock, Maytag waaher &amp; dryer, Harmon upright vacuum,
Hoover 1team vec, Electrolux canloter vacuum, 4-oak
dining chair• on Casters, newer marbla top hall stand
w/mlrror, wall ahell/mlrror/aconcee, 2·maple arrowback
chairs, bench, sola, occa1lone1 chairs, end_ tables,
lampe, oeveral chest ol drawers, 3-student desks, large
·wood desk 4-dr. wood filing cabinet, single beds, queen
al.za Hollywood bed, night stand, dehumidifier, por1able
TV, dlneHe set, Signature electric Ice cream freezer,
Presto preoaure canner, Iota of canning jars, amall
kitchen appllancea, · dlahea, pots, pans, etc., set or
Anchor Hocking glasses In varying sizes, dorm size
refrigerator folding chalra, large loldlng table, small
bathroom vanity/sink, Hammond electric organ, some
kid's toys, amall wood wagon &amp; metal wagon , sleds,
volleyball net &amp; aaeorted game bella, croquet set Xmas
dacoratlon1 &amp; set of Xmas; china, redwood lounge
chalra, Thermos grill, curtain stretchers.
TOOLS AND MISCELLANEOUS; Shop Vac, some yard
and g.orden tools, whool berroVf, bar clampa, wood &amp;
metal 11w horoas, lawn fertilizer 1preader, aluminum
1tep laddera &amp; extenllon ladder, McCulloch Mac 160S
ahaln uw, pu1h mower, 2-wheel dollays, Sears 4 hp.
Roto-~pster, 2-overhead door aysl1m1, stairway wood
aplndlll,.oaveralamell electric motora,llactrlc boxe1. .
T1rme:Caeh or check w/poaltlve J.D. Checka over $1000
mu1t hav1 bank authorization of lunda available. Not
101ponslble for 1011 or accldenta. Food will be available.
OWNER: Wanda Brunk by Michael Brunk
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Pat Sheridan &amp; Chris Prater
Licensed 8r bonded In State of Ohio· Member
Ohio &amp; Nat' I Auctioneers Assoc •.
PH; 740.592-4310 or 800-419-9122
I,

Every Thursday

6:00p.m.
Consignments Welcome

WEDNESDAY
10am-3pm

THAUSDAY
10 am· 3 pm
or by appointment

AUCTIONEER:
DEANJE1T
Licensed 81. Bonded
in Favor the
Stale of Ohio

AUCTION
Am vets
Post 23
Truck Load
Sale

Thursday,
June 14th

7:00p.m.
Flnnls "Ike" Isaac
Auctioneer

MISCELLANEOUS

CONSIGNMENT
AUCTION
Antiques, Collectibles,
Household , Toys... ·
Little bit of everything
for everyone!

EVERY
THURSDAY
·6:30PM
Howery Auction House
Rouie 32 West of Alhen
594·3780
Terms: Cash or Check
Auctioneer:

RODNEY HOWERY

••

�!

Page D4 •.6unba!' tr::imn -6tnrintl
Help Wam.d

110

110 Help W.rhd

ParHime to tult•hf'lt physk:al

The Athens-MeiQt Edueettona&amp;

s.n,a CentM . . . . , . . for •
-"''Y
-· - lacilily.""
100
bod otci!od
""'""'V
ExcoiQualitied eo .. ,u•., lenlce
""'' Oj)p()rtunlly lor..., Qfod to Tochnlclon t o - tlle·FIIPkl
beCome part Of a plogtHSl'H r•
deploymern ol tecftnology for
dopt. and lniOQ&lt;OI """ "' ,. teac:tmg. lean*tg and . . . . . . .
hab turn. tnteresled e&amp;ndtda t.s
Uon in .AAiandllr and ..,.. • .. .
lhOUkl aptjfy 10 Rockspringo R•
Yo&lt;!&lt; School Cistrlclo. Thlt teoll·
habiktahon CMtter. 31759 Roc::k·
spnngs Rd

nieian l"'•td&amp; to ftavt lhe akllla
necessary to troub..ahoot and
repa ir probl ema with deaklC$
computers, as well 111 SOlving

Pomeroy. Ohio

45769. AH1son Bametl , MPT, At·
hab S&amp;tVu-s 01rect0f Equal Oppo.rtuntry Emptoyer Encou ragtng
Wo&lt;1oplac:a Ooversor,.

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110

.............
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••• ON045131

Tht Athtni·lletot Edueaotlolloil

Piuenthood Of South·
eut Otno Has An Openk'tg For A
Fuil-t1me Nurse Prael•ll()ner Thta

Posil ton Wtll Pro vme Heahh
Screenings F01 PPSEO'a Male
And Female Chents Throughout
The Serv·ce Area Candidate
Must Be Commi ned To The ~e­
produclron HeaHh o·f Men And
Wo men And Maintam A Pro·
Choice: Phllcsophy Send Cover
Leu er Anct 'F\esu/Tie Personnel,
3 98 R•chlaod Avenutt . A th ens ,
Oh.o 45701 EOE
PAN Ph~JSicar Therapy Ass1slant
nefitde(J for orog•ess eve rehab
departmenl ;n 100 bed sktlled
nurs•ng lacil1ty. ptovl d ~ng both in·
palient and ou tp atient ll"terapy
serviCes E• cellem opporlunity lor
the r•gh1 cand1date, great team,
uce!lenl regul;;t.tory comp t1ance
hisrory, mteresred canchd ates
should apply to Rocksprtngs Re·
habiHta \lon Center. 36759 Rock·
springs Road. Pom eroy, Ohio
45 769 , AIIISQn Barn ett, MPT, Re·
nao Se,..,•ces Ouector Equal Op portunity Emptoy~r Encouraging

C.Ooltr .. enllolpollng •

-

poo1t1on opooliiOG u ..... lo-

c:

ltawter ....,lclpps• Teec•
tor 11!0 S8lt CoJtel.t '"-a~
at
Soo- Loool tor

"

Wonted: Ovor TM road Driver.
Mutt Be At Lout 23 YM111 Old.

200t ·2001 - --,..
plleanlo- .... 8IIH ~
lion or lot
10 1101 a T_.
rary T-1110 Certificate In - . Solary • l o t - on • ·
PIMa lind ...,_. "on, 8CCOtdo
tng 10 -.y
Ullotl A - - a l -·
01110Jolon0. ~·I ~·
londenl, Athona·Mtlgo EduCt·
tlonat c.&lt;IIOf, 507 Rlcllltlld - · SUllo t t O I , Ohio 45701. ~-­
Jino: .JuiJ 13, _ , , TM AIIESC
11 an Equal ~ Etooplojoeo1

-"*'

t-877.-..100 - · M07t4
""' Lonv c· t a . locll o.n..

- ·end ........

--...,...1_

c... Colegl

• (~ Clooo To Homo)
Q

-

X

Co1Todty!7~.
Hl00·21~

180 wanted To Do

7804

Tha Athono·llolga Educational
Service Center hal a position
oPif'ltnQ u IJC andlry CurrkKIhiM
In llliga Coun·
ty. Appllconto mutll llevo o Moo·
.... Oogroo and ' - ..... Cer·
· Tllllll • t2 month ....
tiiCI poaltion, _ , . . lot on experience and training according to ...., acolo, and will

-~~~~
· Beginning
wlllot AuguM
e. 200t.
a.-data
•

,., c1 -

to Jolon D. CootonSuperintendent, Athens·
llelgt Ed-uontl Strvtc. contor, 507 Rlcltlond Avonuo, Suitt
t10e, ....... Ol1lo o4570t. AppiiCIIIIIon d lloe: July 11, 2001.
Tho AMESC lion Equol Oppor·
tunlly Empbfii/PIChldlr.

za,

ent , 507 Richland A.venue, Suite
1108, Athens Ohio 4570t . Coedline lor application: June 22. 200t .
The AMESC Is an Equal Opportunity Employer/PI'Ovldel.

URG ENTLY NEEDED- plasma
"""""· oam 1&lt;5 to seo tor 2 or 3
hours weekly. Call Sera·Tec, 740-

Workplace 0• 'ers1t~

- - ' - - --

WORK FROM HOME
$25-$751 hr PT1 FT
lnleme!IMa•l Order 800--435-8086
www.1ncomeanddre ams.com

I

230

Pelntlng. Free EaUmares. Call

Oavld'a Oener.. COi'lttactora.
Plumbing, E1tctriC, Painting
O.Ckt, Mlooc. Work, Call
(7&lt;10)256-t313 Or Col t•
3JOH33-

AilE YOUR CREDiT CARD BillS
OVERWHELMING YOU 17 FREE
OEBT CONSOLIDATION can
conaolldate your bills into oM
monthly poyment. Roduc. lntor·
tot, Avoid loto 'charges &amp; Stop
hortllmont. Llctntod/Bondod.
fobrf'nAlL ~288-U31 Ext 15.

1 ' - EIIQfllll Riding -..,.

www.goldcoll'•..cam

(30o1)1~7131- 5pn

For All Your Advertising Needs

(l)l C.6albl 5... aM'II

The American
Community
Adverti sing Network
Co ntact us at

. h&amp; Fri7:00-3:30w..l.t-Sat&amp;S.l-G0-4:3012...U

• Fi1ncita IIIIW.,.II'flilltltltatl• . . .
'lilt pPINf 1111 O.A lniill'

·

•••u••.••·
441.0114 1-800-498.0076

c..t Karl liD uoa 641369511 74111313-3966

1-800- 821-8139
or vis it

CONSOLIDATE BILLS/LOANS
O.A.C. from $2,500-$125,0001
9% 4varage rate. Ofte-hour apptovat. Cll1 F.c .c .s ., toll-lroo t·
IIIIIHIOS-33111

~$1115

Adoptbo$225
Not~
CAU.1~tt70

FREE illormotion!

llenknototcy n/aln TM&lt;Y

.

Free Mone~ Nowl lt'a True! No
rapaymont. Guorantood~ For por·
aonal needa, education , bual-

nllura, Other Valuables.

:

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will Mil

fellowi•t

011

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\ \I. II "'-I U • 14 :• • \ H

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.,__2 ... . 1S . . . . . . .
271, vt- Ca.

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AUCIIOII #Z
hlO , . G toe ... .... ••
VI-C.. l•tlool.oiiUS SO_rz_of

: -ldtri1111 crllltb, so- ,.m"'
t1M lots of rvcut

.L-.
-·

fr•••••·

t AUCTION "! 3,00 PM
;:
·l l WMCIH eues oflel SR 613
'! n Mur,lly.le•y R... Vlwt~•
! Co. , West ol McArlltw. Grtlt
: locniol far th t111tw, •lktr .,

* ,._ ,...1"11 .... "'" pri! hi _ _,'""'· OwHr ll•o•h• L------~
: oHitahlo oo 113. 11gs lor
.,....... , lt.MUI .._ •
: """ of sal" 10% ho-t &amp; l yr. T.... c - - • 171111

: 's~4·t911. lenm fa r hrtiHIMI ....... .... "
a
* 2.500.00 ••••
7/16/20011 ....... &amp;
: dtur of liens or morfgotef~ ne CCIIII. . . . . . aht RIIF.fll ,..
! diner obtcl•int fln11KiM.
(AU,. #IIII.MOaiWIII
•
STANlEY &amp; SON, lilt !1,40117l·H20 .,,. 1U ••

@fl-., ..,., ..... "'

I

Located at 2019 North Main St. In Pt.
Pleasant. wu. will be selllna the eatate of
Bill Wellman.
URNI TU RE

Antique Jeweler cabinets, 12 dr1w1r, II
drawer. lr otbera. loveaeat. cb1lr lr
ottoman. recliner. brass lr 11111 coffee
tablf! lr end tables. oa~ entertainment
center. comPuter desk lr chair. Porta
rr'lhllc:o 25" color TU Emerson UCR, queen
size bed, dreiser. cedar cheat. bunk beds,
chest. wardrobe. oak file cabinet, 5 PC.
oak dlnet w/awlvil cbllra. TIPPen
mh:ro1nu'•· am. uPrllbt deeP freeze. metal

' 1OO'a Iof watcbea, Ia.
Stemware. dlabes,

collection of Pocket knifes· c111 XX lr
Boker. R.R. lantern. oil ·lamPs, lunn
n.
Maker, kitchen aPPIIancea. qualltll
:: ~e
.~T.!.l.":";..,~
.....b.:::::::"•e.
...• Coffee
A;\
, ....t •• lh...,,
,....._
cookware, Pots • Pans. bran Items.
"' ......... *' ····-·· •••~~r••····
....•••••• ••••••••••••••.,_, llnnens. Tr-Star. sweeper. Klrb11 aweCP~r.
I
watch Parts •. coffee arlnder, bn1a ~orna,
Iron skllleta lr more
Public Sale and
TO Ol S &amp; MISC .

Basement Is loaded wltb Ia. •mount of
tools. Haas loa SPlitter Jll10301, mlac
tools. C-clalnPI. nuts. bolts. acrewa, I"
ShoP mate, bench arlnder, drop cord, old
tool bi'JdiMI;!~Ni
Lawn Tractors- JO #61, Bolen G1 0, Bolen
1254. Blade deck, PUSh PlOW, PIOII lr diiC
for
3 am. one wheel trailer. 11wn
tr
rea Br wheels. motor scooter.

J

Nflfi BF.II

'AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY
740-388-0823 (HOME) OR .
740·245·9866 (BARN)
"LICENSED &amp; BONDED
BY STATE OF OHIO"
CASH/APPROVED CHECK ONLY
" NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR
ACCIDENTS OR LOST PROPERTY!"
GOOD FOOD

Rfrll

t~TAT! \~ Ill

Public Sale end Auction

STORE
EQUIPMENT

AUCTION

4 Burroutlba c:hlcklanes.

[\£ 0111 HIll

AT I.':UO NOON

. •,-V·~~-

DAN SMITH - AUCTIONEER
Ohlo#1344
Cash • Positive ID • Refreshments

l..oclttd 1 mll1 north qf Pt. Plelnnt on At. 82. Will
be ••lllng the etore equipment of the former Save
A Lot Food Store.

1981 ford Brl)nco- Auto, .4 wblll drhte
1988· Subaru- Auto. 4 wheel drive
**'* THIS IS AN EXTRA NICE SALEII
DON'T MISS THIS ONE!! ****

Located on St. Rt. 124 In Portland,
Ohio.
These Items have been consigned: .
Tools: New wrenches, Craftsman,
Proto &amp; SK, 3 Pipe benders, 3 Meter
bases, 3-Phase Square D Box, Bolt
cutter, Work Bench, Push mower, Yard
and Hand_. tpols, Aluminum _Step
Ladder, Shelving, Storage Cabinet,
Electrical Boxes, Lots of Electrical
Items, Extension cordQdger, Nails,
Bolts, Wire, VIce, Grinder...
·
This Is a small list. Will take more
consignments at 8:00 a.m. Saturday.

)

Nice home coulltlna of L.R. Kltcbln. D.R,
2 lfi. laundrll room • Porchu. S1t1 on 1
40 X I 00 lot mil· Dlld lOok 301 PI, 314
LT II· Rnl htate bllna aold 11 11 with
own1r1 conformation • Ruerv1 1111wlntf
wll.l be hlld on frld111, June 15 from 10:00
am to 2 Pm or call or look on Wlb lite
www.ICottwellman.com.
·* AUCTIONEERS NOTE: Auction will be
held undu a bll tint w/2 auction rlnU.. Io
brlna a friend.

5 L Tee M2~00 Scanner
S)IStem. Auonment of 2/'f drawer file cabinets.
misc. office cleakl f4J. assorted Hoban scales.
cub flllliand drawers. man11 food Picture murals
for Will decor, aat. waterfall sfllle banana tables
4116. 1·5' diameter banana tlble. 1·4' 2-fler
banana table. asst. caae waterfall tables. a·
diiPIIII. 8' Clndll binlfwlreJ. 51116' oak
5' aelfaerve Euroafllll donut case. 5'
.ref1~rat1~d rotatlna cake cue misc.
fl!lll~-'~ alum. doora. conv111or Br stands.
cans. uat. clarett• ra~kl. video taPe
comPirtment. wooden baker's table 3' x
• new bulk cand11 dlaPenaer. asst. Ice machine
blna 1r Plrta. like new 6' 2-door bu lea
marc:handlllr. 6' triPII deck oveniPiua oven GE.
lilt chicken Pruaure fr111r1 (Partll. asst. Proof
bolltl fParW. I·&amp;' cuttlnll t1ble. 1·4' cuttlna table.
I·Hobart aaw, I·HOblrt aUcer. I·SS 3-bowl link.
4' Husaman botfooda caae. IPProx. 12' x 12'
cook1r, uat. meat Platter cans. 8-door maater
built frazer caae. 36' 1\ller meat caae. 25 door
'Mir fooz•n food call. 6' x 14' Huaam•n Produce
Island, 24' Husaman dlll'll ~111, I2' Huaaman
amokl4 meat, I door Wll.kln mUk cooler aPProx.
14' x 24', 24' Husaman meat case. 24' Huaaman
Produce call wtmlrrora. lilt. lots of usecl
conduit, m1n11 other 1t1ma

AUOION CONDUmD BY
RICK PEARSON AUOION CO. 166

Auction,conducted by ·
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #88

304·771•1711 OR 304·771•1-447.

773-1711 or 773-5447

•••outora loott Woll111an
Terms: Cuh or check with ID.
Terms on rul eat at• I 0% down on lilt
da11 non refundable. Balance due In 30 d111

OWNER: Roblt E11tm1n
· TERMS: CASH OR CHI!Ci&lt; WITH ID. MUST HAVE
· BANK LIETT!R 01" CREDIT UNLESS KNOWN TO
AUCTION CO.

•

www.ppicash.com Best Prictl.
Cal PPie 800-435-3248 -.57

310

-Crtllll-t2-

-caloii-S;-

310 Honwsfoi'Sale
.

tower payments; Registered/

- C o;
CoiCRIO -517·1345
~DCMNON

10C1AL SECURITY-?
No-~WoWinl

t-881-582-3)15

SO DOWN HOliESt GOV'T •
BANK FORECLOSURES! LOW
OR NO' MONEY DOWNI OK
CREDIT! FOR USTINOSI CALL
t~ e011.11111t
Houna For Sa... 2 Bedroom. 1
Both, $750 oo- Poymont, Near
Goltlpolla, Ohio. Coli CaYid
~0

Hauling. Eaporltncod And Do·
pondtblt. AttldonUOV Commor·
clol. Cll1 (100)0.41-83U For FPIIct Quoloo.

Caunlly ........ -

e

t•

3 Bedroom 8rlclt Ranch. Living
Room &amp; Dining Roortl With Frr.pi&amp;Cf &amp;. Patio. Kitchen w/Applloncoa. F.. Roc
Room. Family Room wfWood
Burner &amp; Big ScrHft . Large
Docko Whh Jacuul, Fenced In
Baclo Yant, Paved Drivo, Mainten•nc• Free. 2.200 Sqft
Living

Arel,

Rouah

L1ne,

CheiiWo, (700)3SHl221
BeautifUl Roiling Fann Land Wotlo

with full
basement and 4 car

fe8!1J!ed on 2 acres. .
WANTS $175,000.

. NEWLISTING

WHd Eating Hllltldtt. Ditchoo,
Etc. -lng, Claon-up, ROIIIO'Ill
01 Unwanttd 1tomo. Odd Jobo.
Co1l Sttvo(1&lt;10......7804

Large business building
on good State Route
near Pomeroy. With 2
officeS, carpeted show
room, 2 restrooms and
firewalls. Has central
heat and air
conditioning.

... ond Fonn Tractoro, A1oo

nrmodeled
tolartlng In
to preeent.
This lovely .affolllable home
Clflero Ul wtth open dining
and kitchen area, pi-nt
and sunny FR. 3 BRs, I t 12
baths, 1 ~r garage and nlca
decl&lt; make lhio , property a
lovely place to call home.
Priced at only St 05,000, call
today then start pacldng.
1117

ground. Ovor t 800 lt]. ft. oJ
living opaco includot buiH
klk:hron,
trim lhnlughoutm
2·3 BRa,
2
bathe ond more ,_, that il
unfinllhetl.
Brici&lt;Mnyl
ccetouction. Priced to sell at
51 t9,0Cl. 1113

AGOODBUVAT
$100,000.

Mochonlc.

By Owner- Capa Cod. Formal
Living Room And Dining With
Har- floorl. Large K -.

3 112 Miloo Out Sandhill Rood,
(31)-1)875-2507

3 Bedroom Hou•• With Full

laundry· Main Floor. 2 Mil••
Foorn City. Greon Lots Of Extra'l Call Evenings,

17401-44--3780, oayt (1.0)0.4112885
.

01 Land On Rodmond Ridge . FORECLOSED OOV'T HOMES!
(304)875-711U
SO OR LOW DOWNI TAX
REPD'S &amp; SANKRUPTCIESI OK
• Bodmom - I n Rio Grande, CRECITI FOR LISTING! CALL 1·
Could Be Used AI Rental
100-501-tm lllllllflt3.
Poot&gt;tr1y. (740)24H858

-onnMriyan~~a~~al

Stay at homo morn • bODytllln
my !lome. lor dllldron ago 4 or
- - 74Q.t4t.31a
Wtnted To Open A I 01'
11ct Clunlng Sorvlce, In Muon
County. II You NHd Thlt
Sorvlco. Pl..tt Wrltt To: 125
Wlotta Pill6, Ptlny, wv 25012.
Emlll1 At: Atont-.com

SUNDAY,JUNE17TH

FINMKIAL

210

Hom II for ....

Basa,ent &amp; G1raga On 1 Acre

1l1o

Or.- laogo, _ . . . .. bl·

1:00PM- 2P.M.

Butlllffl

Opportunity
RIVERFRONT

recommend• that you do bualnau with people you know, and

2 acre lot in Pomeroy
Village. Priced
according to size you
need.

NOT to aond monor through tho
mall until you have Investigated
loeolftolng.

Quality Neighborhood •
Quality Loco8onx Quality
Llvlngll L.ocated within a
mile of HolZer. this brick
ranch features a step down
lammily room, eat-In kitchen,
large
living
,_,,
3
bedrooms and t t 12 batho.
Also. 2nd family ,_, with
WOOdbumer In baSement. 2
car garage. Fenced yard.
Ceod end st-. $120.000

bath home situated on
acres. Very Private!
6 acres are wooded.
M\ll't see to appreciate.

AMAZING OPPORTUNITY! In· ·
ternet Casino. Poker I Sporta·
boOk. Complete tumkty ttarto at
$35,000. High lncomo ]iotontlol,
www.. . .lanl.com Coli Toll Fo•

ASKING $130,000
tha

t--778-2808

• t il'.

fHAif ',TAI[

S.rvlees

-

sns?!Pdue

1'ruh

Public Sale and Auction
.......... * ••••• ·::::·····~!:!!~~
HUilltAUa!OIIS
2001

ProlesilOilll

REAL ESTATE
$t.u 1943

t217

:

230

LUMP SUM CASH NOW· Wo
Buy Structlited ln&amp;urono:e Settlomenta, lna:uranoe Annuitift. lot·
tory I CuinO Joct&lt;pot winnlngo,

Hauling Strvlcn, lndudlno Fur·

our website :

• Sot.,,_,..
!too-·-

IJMII

81NICII

Servlcee

Dioorot S11l0

PIOfl

(31)-1)543-55-'-4

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
•~~t~~•m••r..

Slr\-..~11

230

Plafell'-1

-

Ctrlllltd
ASl:
(740)0.4t-0180

Mid-Ohio Valley Trude Driver Training

230

• Bedroom, 3 llath Houu. City
Water On 8 AcrH With 10 Mort
AcrHAvatllbto, On NOIIh Route
2. Mllon County $155,000

Engine And Tronamllllon Ropalr.

ng

ul~

..... 1-800-n4-1047 (24 hrs.)

Will· Repair Automobiles, lawn

Total YeZtr Round Comfort
FREE ESTIMATES
FREE 1~YR WARRANTY

Prcr

O_,.ol Weakly Hou-lng,
Roll • -· Col (1&lt;10....._
t305 II NO Ant-, Leave u..

-

Announcement

230

e

Will do general housecltanlng,
·have references, call 740·1&amp;2·
8111.

592-6651.

Prot1nloolll
S.n.icea

- . g, -

tor, $15/ Hour. Cot1 AJ111H
(7_,)0.41-0tiM

Rtg-t21411.

All 1o1atoe
· Lown
-.
Tiller•
Repaired.
Frn T
pick·up,
Dellwry Available. 21 Ytort Ex·
poritnce. CaiiMiko. (7•ol••e-

" ' c:-.to.- .11&amp;1 Colooll OIO

PaiMtoy • Mldcl1port• Ga"lpola, Ohio • Point Pleeaant, WV

:·· SuncMy, June 10, 2001

110 Wa1eed To Do

lklslnllt

JOANNA'I COio.,UTIII AP·
I'LICATlOH TRAI- Mk:n&gt;aoh Olllc:e Utor Sj,. 111111, c.rt~-·
fiod " ' -· In Tho Comtort 01
Your HolM Or But'ntn Sa* to
(7&lt;10)0.41-15156

-.a

· Have 1 Year VerHiabl• Expert·
..... Call 1304)57e-~ t.ocM.

be salt·motivated and willing to
learn emerging ttchnologifl.
Know!~ of common peripher·
... such I I printetl and monitor~
is a datln ite plua. Muat have
WO&lt;lling koowlodge ol DOS. Windows 95196 ME 2000 Ctlont. NOool,
fit eMaker end Otftct 2000. Mut1
hOve ability 10 lilt and carry I1Mvy
objects. and be wiNing to won. In
len than ideal envi ronm•ntt
such as overhead and tub floor
areas lOt" wiring purposes. Apptieams must have a valkt driver~ license, re liable lranaportation,
and be willing to lravel. A degree
.n com puter technol ogy it de·
Sirecl, ~ a mtnimum of 2 yams at
quality e;~~per i ence at a service
technician may be considered In
lieu ol a degree. Salary will be
based upon training and experience. Submit kttter of tnternt, re·
sume, and recommen dations to
Jonn 0 . Coaranzo. Superintend·

Plann~d

140

Training

Wentod DiftltiO- . . . . _, -.tii'HCIIE
lWOJI \41111l
f .. tOO+ - · - PTifT . . . ..•1110.
eroncot To CLA 124: c/O Qolbi'IIEE IOQICLfT
On'' 4t lloiJ T - . 125 Tnltd

~0

110 HllpWwtl d

• •

Sunday, June 10, 2001

Pomeroy • .. dd'lpcNt• Gtllp ol.., Ohio • Polnf'PI1 FIMI, WV

of In-Town
l.ocallon.. .ls what you wiU
llrtd at this property located
at 112 4th Avenue, lolturing
3 BRa, t beth, LA, DFI, eat-In
kitcf1en and 1 112 car garage.
Priced at $68,900. 1802

AT&amp;T· Sprint l'lypl1cne Roulos
50 HI Ptollt Loc't, Local. $1500
Potent1al Wetldy. 1100-81»3470.
CASH NOW Payday Loan Fran·
ditto Eam $t 0,000·$20,000 ptr
month. Comploto turnkty Full
Training. No oXptriOnct noodod;
lnvtlatment Required. www.calh·
nowuto.com TolllrH t -8116-773·

Befo~e

2808

REOUCED TO
L.ocated on a deed end
street, thla roon1Y ranch
olfera t824 sq. «. of living
apace. The large FA with
fireplace will aocortonoda1e
various layouts. Also Includes
Iorge recently remodeled
kitchen, 3 BAs. 3 baths and
Ul. "Drive through" 2 car
garage plus 24 x 32 bunding
and t4 K t8 storage building
provide great utility. l.arge lot

oanch
2t00
apace with
large living
lormal Ul, ·
large kitchen and. dining area
and ovelllized lamlty ,_,
with gas log nowploce. 3
generoos llRs, 2 betha and
big 2 car plus garage. Pallo &amp;
deck create very ntc. ouldoor
enJollment. Flat lol with
outbuilding &amp; good utlllly. This
t 0 yr. Old houee Is In graat
condition.
do but
rn&lt;lV8In.

you'oe
looking lor a spacious home
whera everyone can ilave
their own space, this Is ttl
3800 sq. ft. lncludeo 5 BFis
and 3 baths. And H's all on
one floor plant Huge master
bedroom !hat's XIIJl! nice.
Beautllully ramodeled kitchen
with Smilh oak calnets.
Formal Ul, formal DR, FA
with ·s.e through' fireplace, .
large rec. room and 2 car
garage. Jnground pool. Huge
yard. Fontastlc pnvacy, cloee You Will Love spending your
to Holzer. · Reduced to sumor ovenlnge enjOying this
$275,11001115
lovely landscaped lawn located
at 83 Myrtle Avenue. Home
ollera large Ul wtth beamed
cathodral calling, OR, nice
kitchen, 3 BRa, 2 batha, 2 ear
carport, newly ramodeled and
ready tor you at $74,800. 1113

-outside actMtles.

1365 JOHNSON

RIDGE ROAD

Country settln9 surrounds this brick ranch.
Llvln9 room, dlnln9 room, kltchan with
formal dlnln9 area, 3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths,
basemen! and attached QOraQe. Come tat us
show &amp; tell you about the rest!
Finally, A p._rty Prlc:eclln
lha 80'• and all you have to do
lo move ln. L.ocated ill t309
Bulavlle Pike offering an
Immaculate ranch with 3 BRa,
t beth, etc1ra l'rge kitchen
open to dlnlno area, LR, cor;
FR, 20 x 32 building. All
811uated on 2.9 acreo, m'l.
Priced at $97,000. Call today
tor your private vlewing. l811

shopping. for your New Address ... -stop by ours:

BIG BEND REALTY, INC .
510 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446-7101
FOR MORE It-FORMATION 6IVE US A CALL

Real Estate General

www .wisemanreolestate.com

Choote Your Own Houro. Work
- From Home. llall Ordorn~temot
$1500·$•500 PT/FT. Froa lnlor-

740-992-3325

natlon. t-212-8t2-5491.

www.o11aln.........,a.com

S. Bruce Teaford

EARN S500 to SIOO per wttk In
your bathrobO 6 allppera. Groot
-'""''Y to oocurt your lutura.
. Low lnlo'Oootmont. t-800-272.0113.

Brolcer

Wendi R. Miller

'David Wlaeman, GRI, ~AS Broker 448-9565

..

(740) 446•3644

Carolyn W11ch, GRI 441·1007 Sonny Games . 446-2707
Robert Bruce 446-0621 Rite Wileman 446-9555
~

UJ

·

.

www.--ntnga.com

Middleport, OH

Eom $110,000 YeARLY rapalrlng,
NOT replacing, Long cracko In
Wlndahloldo. Frat vldao t -800821-8123 US/Conodro, www.glut·
mochonlx.com
ORQWINO BUSINESS NEEDS
HELPI Wo&lt;t&lt; from homo. Mall-or·
der/E.COmmon:e $522+iwellt PT.
St000-$4000/wk FT 800·92t ·
8538 www.d.-rn2blrea

Et14«4;-1/tDMe ~eatt,

GROWING BUSINESS NEEDS .
HELPI Work lrom homo. Mall·or·
dtriE-Cornmerce $522+/wHk PT.
St000·$4000/woek
PT.
www.AmtzlngOoola.cam
(800) 272-5843

,U4 Second Ave., Gallipolla, Ohio 45631-0i4
~
740-446.0008 740-441-1111
;'vanamooezoomnet.nel www.eVIIIU·moore.com

VINE STREET· A t •t, slory 3 bedroom home wHh a full
basement This home also has a fenced backyard. It's Just
waiting lor a lamHy.
NOW JUST 128,100

FonMrly Blac:lclaiU'IIIIetdty uSuw41V So•Ae,.,. 0/Uo For OHr A Qaarc•r CelliiU')'"

MEDICAl BILLING
Untmltodlncomt potontlll.
No ellptrittoca roqulnod.
A&lt;! nowt Umllod LiconlOI
A v -. lnvolllmtnt
$2,495/h,805, Fin. Avrd.
,...ndAlmnatodModleal
Sorvlcttt, Inc.
(800) 322·1138 Dlpl: 050
www.btltlrtetHtarlup.com

,Joe A. Moor-Broker 441-1618
Sarah L. Evana-Mqore, Broker 441-1618
Patricia Haya- 448,3884 Cara Cat••~y~:Z4l5·1ll~l0

EAGLE RIDGE • Building sites that are approx. 2 acres with
utilities available..
· $12,000.00 • 111,000.00
MIDDLEPORT· Route t24 - A t4X70 2 bedroom mobile
home with the third bedroom built on. Sitting on appro•.
2 acres. Close to the new school being built"
$34,000.00
12037 Your
8 acrea mil ,
I
213
BR and 2 BA plus anotller oman
dwelling with t room and a bath.
A true gourmet'a kitchen with

MQTHEFIS 6 OTHERSI Eor1i Ex·
Cllltnt lncomo INOiklng lrom homo
around your ochadulo PT/FT. 1•
800-8t3-58110.
PEPSI/COKE/FFIITO
LAY
SNACK AND SOOA VENDING
ROUTE. BE YOUR OWN BOSS.
UALL CASH BUSINESS$$ IN·
CREASE YOUR INCOME NOW.
SMALL INVESTMENT/EXCEL·
LENT PROFITS. 1-1100·731-7233
EXT. 2!03.

your own little place on the

wottr? Build your own dock and
have ac::cea.e to the river from vour
back yard. 2 BA I BA house wtth
newer oldlng and roof lor only
$29,900.

cherry cabinets, gazebo with
flrepit, heat pump &amp; much morel

REDUCED TO $130,000

HUDSON STREET • A 2 story home with 3 rooms, a bath
and utility room down, and 2 bedrooms upstairs. Hao a lront
porch and a lull basement Would make a greal rentall
.
$11,800.00

llort A Trovol AJJinoy: Eam Big
US. Flaotlva Raloranoo lletorl·
Ill, Bualnttl Support, Your own
Travel Webtltt and Travol Dlt·
oounta/Porko. Nominal Startup
Coot!
t •8U-80g·Ot0t
01

otory homo 11
tho quiet vlllgo of
Older homo that hat
takon cart oil
privacy
door. 2·3 BR,
car oHaChtd

www.Eirn-rornHomt.cam
VENDING ROUTE. 80 PIGIII otn·
. lora! Do you tern UOO In ona
day? 100 ue mo. lnv. req.

Sarvlctt
IUN!!D CASH??? It you'vt
told property on land oontraot
and ara rtctlvlng paymontl. I'll
buy peymonttlor eathl lm·
modlote quotaol (Niok) 100-778·
1112 or 4tNt4-t3t7.
UOO VISA CARD. tOO'II Cluar·
ontotd Approval. No Crtdlt
·Chaok. No Socurlty Dopooltt. No
lnoomt Vtrlllcallon. Muol bo t8
or Oldll. For lmmodlalt ~provo!
Call: t-aoo-m,7taa.

your own 111110
aorner of tile wo~d? Rotraat to
·thll homo located only 5 mlnuteo
from HOizor, but tucked away on
privata Chlrolalo Lake. Nice 4 BFI
3 BA ltdwOOd tldod home wllh 2
car onachod garogt ond privata
dock ovenooklng tho loko. Paddle
around lhs loko In your own
paddlo boat or nah from you1 own
,d!)Ok. Relax In tho poaoalulntto ol

~~~:~~~~rchto, comar lot.

WORK FROM HOME I Moll. Or·
dorllnttrntt. For a fREE
lroollura Phone TOll Fret: 1-IN·
Z34·7H2 Wtll Known Company.
Great Eamlnge Potolbla. Port
T1mt or FUll '11r!it.

230 PrDfuiiONJI

BROWN ALLEY • Approximately t acre. This home has
vinyl siding, blown-In insulation, and a shingled roo1.
3 bedrooms and 1 bath. A bargain by the houselull Live In H
or rent n out Come see and give us an offer.
12&amp;,000.00
MIDDLEPORT • Just out oltown sits this 4 bedroom 1'/, bath
home on approx. t 'I• acres of land. It has C.A. and several
small buildings.
$60,000.00

Storl Your Buolntto Todoy ...
Primo Shopping Conlor Space·
Avollablt At Affordobla Rato .
Spring Vallty Plaza, Co11 '740-4410t01.

WOWI 1 toll ao lbe. In 30 dayel
oo oan raul All natural. doolcr
racommondad. Fri'a oounHIIng.
or
vloit
1-800•301·7421
www.t111tlll8rlltiiUI..

CROUSER AD • Approx. t.B acres with a ranch style homo
that has 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, large eat-In kitchen, living
room, and a big lamily room. Has a partly fenced nice back
yard. a S!orage building, rear deck, and newer windows.
Nice appearing home.
NOW ONLY $53,000.00

'
BFI can
In thlo
convontlntty locolld ranoh Juot 3
mlnulltlrom Holzer. largo walk·
out bailment, newer porch and
dtck and a two oar detached

'i.r~:~:~\~~~

.
lind b•
landocaped our
comp~e with poronnlalt,
and natural rock
addition to a
neighborhood
.
acrea to
on thl1
malllrliltot olltro tho owner oat·
In knchen, tcrmal dining room,
living room and family room wiUI
orante mantel worQ are just a
aample of the extrll found
thtoughout tho homo. ADDED
BONUS: IHIChed to tho bock
entryway Is a tulle lor vloltoow or
oddltlonallomlly offering complete
kitchen/family room combo.
bodroom and bath. S159,000.

tM ocomtry. Calllodayl

Clrwot
to-ni
SA home
olde deck, oomo
llooro
1nd full blaement on 1 acre m/1.
$73,500

SOUTH THIRD AYE. • Live In one tide and rtnt tht 01htr.
Thlt well kept duplex hao toto of nawer updatet. One tlda
hu 2 bedroom• and an updated bath. Tho other hat
3 bedroom• with an updated kitchen and both . . Both have
equipped kltchena, thermopano wlndowo, newer dooro and
ttorma, plua many more extraa . The patio, porchaa, and
landacaped yard make the outside enJoyable alto . Two
very nice homes In one. with an efficient hutlng tys1em.
.
$71,500.00
MAIN STREET· A 1•/, alory home with aluminum oldlng,
and has 2 bedrooms. living room, kitchen, bath and laundry
room downalalrs, and 2 small bedroom• upa~Jirs . Has a
nice view olthe Ohio River. NOW REDUCED TO 815,000

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker ..........................llll2·5882
JERRY SPRADLING ............................... ;.. 11411-2131
CHARM~LE SPRADLING ...........................9411-2131
BETTY JO COLLINS ...................................II411-20411
BRENDA JEFFERS .........................../.........1182-30118

OFFICE ........................................................ 992·2818

�•

-

Page Dl•.

..., a:IIU'f aeminrl

310 llan II tar ....
E

'~

340 "•'nut 81CI
Bulldlngt

.......... On-110

lotw_, Gllllpollo And Holzer
I' ' • a
co :a, Bill. LMno
Room.
FM!Iy Aoonl. tqlcNn App*'aroet, Fun Size 8uetMnl,
24•24 Finlohod Garago, 8&amp;10
WOOd Slorago Building, CIA &amp;
Gat Heal. hcollont Nolgl\bor·
hOOd. Too Much To Mtntlon.
AOIIdr Ta 11oft inlo. Col Fot Ap(740}118 15tl

'*'

350 Lott ' Acrllge

.,.,_willupalliroapanmon•
tor aaio, 241 Salem Stroot. Ru·
lind, Cillo, $35,000, cal 7oCH42·
2572. Good ........
Oflil» bUilc!Wig In Mlnt!l1litle, 800
oq. ft.. ole. cow.red parldng, e.ilinO ion, $3001m0.• 811-876-1881 .

poi*•••

Owner Retiring-· 8ulldinQ For Salt
In Gallipolis, OhiO. On Roule 7.
Has Large Parking 'Lot. Hat •
Rentall , AltO LOll Ot Floor

G-• Nelghboftlaad. Good Con·
dltlon,- Hol&gt;dyman,Church, 150,000 Mako Offer.

Spa~;e , Good
(700)387·7886

~)875-teta

Income.

Call

Houle For Sale In Maaon,
{300)773-5821

350

-homo 3.675 ....... 58&amp;28'8'

10 Acre1, More Or tess (Moslly

LOIS

&amp; Acrage

Hillll&lt;la), Only $10,000! Or 12
Acre• With 1999 Model 1h70
Mobile Home For 138.000.
Mobile Home : 2 Bedrooms, 2
Baehrooms. Torat Eleclflc With
Air. located On Morgan Center
Area . Call (740)367-7084 Allar
• :oopm, Or leave Message.
Mobile Home Is Cuuen11y Being
Ranlo&lt;l.

3 bedloorn, 2 bam callltdral ool·
inga throughout, county water,
heat pump, 740-742-244o &lt;tay- . 740-742·1807
Nlco three bedroom capo cod,
basement, garage, fireplace,
country aning. TPC ·water,

-·'Of.

- -· !&lt;10-992-8347.
Prl~

reduced for quick sale, 2
homes aehing on one lot m Midclopart. 105.000. 740-9112~154 .

Rli&lt;TALS

... I. . I.NID
7-1·1-

30 Ytars al a.5% APR. For Lisl·
Wlgt. II00-311H323 ExL 1709.

1092 Sunset Drive, Very Good
Condition. Deposit &amp; Flofe&lt;onces
Roquiracl. No - - Cal (740)C08-4tta •

T_.

$18,5000.31

3 bedroom home Minereville
area, river view. references re-

- . $27,500. Con · til
$23,000 Or " Polo Bam On 6 - . 130,500.
~.
$10,500.
Rulloncl, t Acreo. $8.500.

5-.

Just

u.v-

quired, dopoli1 roquiro&lt;l, no po,.,
7oo-992~ma11ar5pn.

Condo For Rent, Nonh Mynte

Beach, Sloops a. 2nd Row,
(700)44&amp;-81157

• .... 01 ... polt8is

· -· Cal , _ lor_ ....
llstingsl Owner lnanc:ing
~ pmparly maltwp.
Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don~ Have Land? Wo 00!11 Huny
Only 10 Lois Left, 300·736-7295.

Is Your Ron! $400? New 3
Bedroom . 2 Balh Ranch Style
Home From Rent To Own.
(700)448--3583

•

420 MobNI Helmet
for Rent

socon&lt;t Avenue, Galllpallo. OH
S125/m0. (700)44e 39&lt;'5

420 Mobile Homll
for Rent

polt,70Q-992-6858.

2 Badraam. 1-1/2 Bath. All
Electric. In Porter Area , You
Pay
Deposit &amp;
Ulilltloo.
(700)388-9162

1 Bedroom Apartment In New
{300)882-3131

2 Bedroom Trailer, Located Behind The laCantlna In Galipotll
F•rry, WV. $250 Per Monlh
Plus Doposil, (740)992-1387
(304)675-7115

t ...t 2 btcfoOC&gt;II aparlrnerlts, fur·
nilhed and unfumilhed. taCUrity
d~lt required, no pels, 7ot0-

992·2218.

Rio

Grande,

Beautiful River View tdeal For 1
Or 2 People, Retereoces, Dopooit,
No POlS, Foster Tnlilar Park. 74004Hl181 .

G...- llvlnQ. ' anct 2 bodroam

4 Bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, large Jiving room, family
room. large kitchen &amp; dining room, finished
basement, two car detached garage with 2
bedroom apartment. Great for extra income.
Large back yard, located close to schools. Both
are in excellent condition.

Split-level home in Eastern Local Dl•:trlt~l
near Five Points. 4 bedrooms, 1112 bat'hs.l
room, total electric,
garage, central air, 1 plus acre lot,
above ground pool, covered deck,
storage building, all this for only ~t:J,IAIU·I
Call nowl 992-7504
·
·

llveiy free Setup only $9995 1-

888-928-3428

Date: June 10, 2001

• New Home

• 3 W'aoms

•llOO+Squareleel

•2fuUiaths

• Lolslzeapp. 90'x 75' • New Appliances

Call for appointment
(740) 446-2300

......._OH_
1010NSIII7

PMne: 74GMIMB
Fax 740a7-'1W11
EIMI: ....... Utte,__,OOII'I

Real Ettate General

lr-----===::::==~====:;:=========------.
n~ Oil_ v-..t .,,,
~ PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

1971 Bonanza , t2x85 mobile
toorne, $2,000, 740-IMII-2072.
1998 Flo.olwoM High lana Park
Doublawldo. 28•44, 3 Bedrooms,
2 Bath, Central Air &amp; Heal, Ap·
pllances (Stove, Refrlgeralor)
Front &amp; Back Decks, Reasonable
Priced. (304)675·4876 (304)675·
5030

958 Clark Chapel Ad
Bidwell Ohio 45614 •

*

23 locust 'St
G llipoll
·
a
s, .
4563 1

Reel Ettete General

MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

JOHNNIE RU88ELL..........................38Nl323
DAVID SHYDER .................... ,_......... 441-.,
OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.vtlmllhreaieolale.cam
a-mall: vlsrealeatateOzoomnet.nel

OFFICE

--

992-2259

Rnance.

Factory Gool 32x80 $10,000 Dis·
count only $1000.00 Down, Depaid by Factory

HI00-591-6n7
Final Days, Nationwide Inventory
Re&lt;tuctlonl (304)736-3409

INTRODUCTORY
Salt Prlcl
114004 8 ACRE TRACT ot vacant
(Now) 08'1125', 3 bedroom, 2 bath,·
Land $75,000.00. Located
e· exterior wals, vynel wlndowa, SA 588. Virginia 446-6806.
loto ol goodloo. {Only) $31.31
equara toot. We're dealing
Coles's Mobile Homes, Stale Ro·
uta 50 East Athens, Ohio, 740~ lt4CJOO. 171 Edoma Trail- Tycoon
592·1872 ..
2 lots $12,500 each.
IMclbile home, building &amp; lot
all lor $33,000
limited Or No Credit? Govern·
ment Bank Finance Only At Qak·
wood In Barbouravllle, WV 304·
738-3409.

Must sell 1995 Shult 16)(80, 3
bodrocm, 2 bath. Excaflonf condl·
lion. Cal Cheryl, 740-365-4367.
New 14 It wide $499. down only

$199. per mon . call now 1·80089t-6m.

Now 14 Wide, 3 Bedroom. Only
$19,850. Froo Delivery &amp; Sot Up.
1·888-92a·2428
New 16 n. wide $499. per mOn .
only $270. per mon . call now 1-

800-89Hm.
New 2000 14x60 Front Kitchen,

IUII0~-:::!!1

13397 IN THE CITY Huge Family
home w/4 BRa, 2 baChe, kit, LA,
DR, porehto, partial basement
Priced right- - this outstanding
olferl Vacant, ready 1o welcome
wau, VLS 448 6806

Brick &amp; vinyl 8 BR, 2 BA homo
private ~ icre lot. Family
living room wlllroplaoo, DR,
large · Ullllty room In Chis one
tuU baoamont. Anaetlad 2

MIDDLEPORT· HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD
• Close to town yet private and country.
This corwenlant one floor plan ranch has 4
bedrooms, bath, newer shingle roof, public
water, lnsulatlon and a special bonus 'free
gas'! Thls just may be the one you are
looking lorl Call foj:'an appolnlment.
ASKING S58,110Ck

PRICI! REDUCED! LONG BOTTOM-

New log cabin with bath &amp; kitchen area.

·Located on Curtis Hollow Road In M~ga
County. Just 3/4 mile Iron\ Forked Run Stale
Park where there Is great flshlngl Only . 4
miles from the Ohio River. Adjacent Ia over
· 200' acres of public hunting, such as squirrel,
dear and turkey.
REDUCED TO $36,000.

town,
root 1999, 4 BR, 2.5 BA. 2 car
garage, vinyl
siding,
nice
nelghborlioo&lt;l. Needs some TLC
but priced right at.$78,t00
13388 CITY LOT 43' • 170•
·
localad 39 Vine St.

14005 A , FEW MINUTES OF
YOUR TIME COULD PAY OFFI
View lhia lovely all Mck homo
wllhroo bodroomo, 2 baCho, lormal
&lt;lining rm., llvklg rm., family rm.,
'j •
with fireplaoo., Patio, above
~
~.;
'•'
gtound
pool, 2 cer altacl1ed
.
garage and baaoment. VERY
LIVABLE . HOME FOR THE
. '
MONEY. St25,000.00VLS
13355 AUTHENTIC LOG HOME t00t4 KING SIZE FAMILY HOME
WITH CH,t,RACTER. II you like Great 2 sty. 4 bodnnl., 2 112
1ndlvkluailly--hero It lsi 3.029 oq. batha, formal LA &amp; DR, Fani lim.
tt. more or leaa, 3 bedrma., 2 112 · wmrlck fireplace, allarge rms.1 1-3'
balho, Kit., LAm, Office rm., and x 25' maater badrm. wlbafh. 2 car
much mora. Wrap porch lront &amp; 2 altached garage. 1.25 A1J mJ1
Sides. 167 Acres mn. Rolling $140,000. Additional lot avollable.
Pasture and 3 Large Barns &amp; VlS
Feed · Lol eites, 2 nice ponde.
Land Is most all clean &amp; hae oome 14017 Locotfld 313 MI. Carmel
fencing. El8clnc &amp; frost trot water Rd. 3 bedroom, 2· ~aths, CEDAR
In lho barn. Faed lot aifea CONTEMPORARY HOME Oak
Forrneny ulod lor Veal caH kitchen, ceram1e Hie In kitchen &amp;
oporaHon. Located near Rio baths. NEW CARPET IIYough out,
Grande': Appointment Only Call naiUral decor. 5 ACRES 1M.
~~:~~~~
- L. SmiCh 740 -446:e&amp;oe. $105,000. Trlsh or Dave

.

B~:';~c 2 DaHl ranch over lull

b1
with 2 ear garage ana
finlshe&lt;llamfly room. Home sits on
2 Ac. mJIIn Hannan Trace SchoOls.
Just minutes from downtown
Gallipolis. This heme features a
boaufllul lanascapo&lt;t lawn, wooa
pellet stove and central air.
Located jusl o~ Rock Lick Rd. on
Mabie Dr. in nice neighborhood.
Have a garden and rai se . some
Howera but make sure to looK at
this. Cell Johnnie at 367.0323
today for an appointment.

Must Go, Only $19,9.90 . Fleelwood Homt~, Proctorville, Toll
Free Hl88·565-0167
'New 2001 Fleetwood only
$148 .46 per monlh . Call Nikki
740-365-4367.

Now Taking Appllcallono- 35
Wnt 2 Bedroom Townhouoe
Apanmonto, lncludoo Water
S~wago, Traoh, $350/Mo., 740-Ul-oootl.
Tara Townhoutt Apartmonto,
Very Spaclout , 2 Bedrooma. 2
Floorl. C,t, 1 1/2 Bam, Full)' Carpete&lt;! , AduU Pool I Baby Paal.
Pallo. Starti385/Mo. No Poto,
Le11e Plus Security Dopolit Roqulro&lt;l , Oayo: 740·446-3411;
Evonlngo: 740·387·0502, 740·
+tl-0101.

Twin RlverTowers naw acoop11ng
appllcatior1s fort BR.
HUD 10-ed apt. for ak1arty
and &lt;1illbiod. EOH. {304)8758879.
Two 2 bedroom apartments for
rent In
$325 por monlll
plul $200dopooit, 740-37H11t.

sw-.

.

510

"·

garage and &lt;tatachod 2 ~:.~~~
ao well eculd ba ulod lor
· Prlotd lor a quick aalo. $85.000

Lol modal clearance, one 2000
oocUonal aav. $9.825. tor 2000
model aingles, 5 pre owned slngloa muol go bw May 31, no rea·
eonable offer refused, these
long, so .stop In
homes won't
and check us
we're dealing,
Cole'a Mobile H~-~.e~h~:~:~~~ I
Ohio, Open M·W. 9·7,
11-6, Sat. 10.5.

North 4th Ave., Middleport, 2
room tfflency, uiiiHioo paid, dapoll! &amp; relor-. no pots, 740992-G185.

MERCHANDISE

Lot model clearance,
$8,1125 wiCh an,
out wert dealing,
1
Homer~, US SO Eat, ACheno, Oh.

Kllnaugo. We

Sell Grave Monurnanll

-(7~712

And

Utod Konmoro Wllhor. 175 far
P*-Ce1(740)118 . ,

Used Whirlpool Rofrlgarolor,
fluns Good; 5,0001 to,ooo BTU
AIC; Eloctrlc Dryer, Elactlfc 0..0
wlllui• On Microwllvo; Soart, 30
Gallon HIW Haollr. Eloctrlc EllcBfc. {300)675-7002

Sporting
Goa de

I"';;;;:;====---

&amp;40 Mlecellaneoilt

Merchancllte

11,000 lACK 2 Ton Air Condl·
aoroor, 2 Ton Colt, 1 uno Sal, In·
1 tallod, $2,295, It ,OOD Book,
$1295 Not Prtot. Fnoo E-110.
Coli For Quata On Olhfi Slzoa.
It You Don't Call Ul, WI

-.._.--Our
Spoeial"" t·74D
291 .oo8i{

ua 8308 1.101).

to DOWN-~~
No Crodll OKt HUO, v,t,
FHA. Coil lor l..istlngl.
t-II00-50t-tmEJct.ta18

1 room air conditioner, 1 rNr
bumper ror oalo, 3 anllquu for
Nit, 4 spoke whoalo, t antique
grinder, 740-817-3254.
13' Color TV, 135: t3' Black &amp;
Whitt TV, SIS: RC,t, Sleroo LP
Record Player, With Oyer 100
LP'1 In Claoolc IO's I 70'1 Col·
toctlon, 175; Living Roorn Chalro,
Flntl Fumbure, Nioll Rocovortrog,
$25 Each, (700)041-9385
15 Far Flbergl••• Bo•t, Motor~
Trailer;
Flbargluo Pop·up
Camper, 4&amp;8 Llllllly Trellar, 12000
OBO {304)578•3238 Leave

ae.sasge

.

2 Jaogor lnduttrtal Air CornpraoTrailer Lot For R.ent, Centenary ·.
ooro: 1 lluno Good, Hu - On LincOtn Pika. (700)3Ba 8453
tor, Tho Other II In Palla, But II
Robulldoble, 1100 Both; 4 Hora
480 Equipment
Goooonock Trailer. SISOO: Ap·
pollOI. 00 Rolnlld .... 18.00 Eadl;
for Rent
380 ford Engine And Tranomlo·
Equipment
Rental. Dozer,
lion. 75 - · R1111 $300; IV 53
Backhoe, Bobcat, Farm Tractor
Dalloll DiiMI Englno R,... Good,
Anct Equipment. (700)4tt-llett
$550; Antiquo Dout&gt;io Tub Wnh·
lng Machine- Fairbanks Ana
4110
For LMM
- · t300; Cal {700)048-8721
Or (700)371--t007 Alter 5:00pm
'-'!lful,1tl00 Sq. Feet, Rnlo ed
Or L.eawAt11 ge.
2nd Floor Apartment In Hlttark:
Dlslrlcl. Ideal For Pro.,oolonal
24 Foot f!ound Above Ground
' Couple. All Modem Amen~leo. 3
Pool. Good Condition, $500 CaD
'Badrooma; Spoclol,. LMng; 1·112 (304)773-6 tfS6 Afiior Spm
Bafha, ROll Dtcll. HVAC. 11001
o'Xfl' Round- Ground Poet.
mo. Plua Utllllloo . Security And
Kow Dapootf. H&lt;&gt; Poll. - ...... · Sand Flltor, .Pump, Skimmer, VI·
cuum Included. Nlodl Liner And
Required. (740)448-4425 Or
·Ladder, 1200. Phone {304)a75·
{700)048-31136
85CM lNVI UetttQ«'

LENDER

28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom, Only
$345 .00 Per Monlh 8.99% Fixed
Interest Aate, 1~928-3-'26

and se,up

New And 'Uud Furniture Store
- . , Holklay lm,

1531. RuMMOoro.-.

Mobile homo .lot for ront In Mid·
&lt;1ioporl, $125 por month, silo ono
lol lor doubltwldo. $150 por
month, 70Q.992-3tll4.

~

................:..................~1 -..

2 Used Mobile . Home, Payments

livery,

New 2 .._ LMngooorn S&lt;MM,
$391. 11uJ, Sol, Trodt.

apartmonto al vtMage Manot and 530
Antiques
Rlvaraklo Apartments In Middle- . :::::-:-~:::-:::-,_;;..;..==port. From $278·1348. Call 740-- Bur or toll. Rlvorlno Anliquoo,
992·5080. Equal Hau1inQ Oppor· 1120 Eut on SR 120 E. Po-·
motay, 740-1112-2521 or 7&lt;1MD2·

480 Spwce for R""t

VIRGINIAIMITH,8110KER ............... 4111808
~JINYELVIDELLE.R ................................ ~

'""'"

Time: 1:00 to 5:00 pal

Appllcatlons will be available
Persoonel will be on band for questions

..

\,/tva,.
~· ".:!/tnUARl
~
446-6806 ~~&amp;
lh
Branch Office

Chapol-. - ·Ohio.

Singlo Shol, Youlll MOdel, 20
Gouge, (304)875-1584

Don't Miss This Bargain!

14x70 Southern Dream, free De·

Mollolwt Corpal, 202 Clarll
fntt
Eotlmaloo; 10 Daya lo1118 AI
Cath, Financin11 Aya-. Visa

520

541 Fourth Ave. Gallipolis, OH

14x60 Kirkwood Mobile Home
With Stove, Refrigerator, AJC,
And All Blinds. All Eioctric, $5500
080 {304)675-8069

~ St. Mir'rMepon, 2 bldc"""*n
fumlshod - - . . . poid
depoait &amp; references. no pete'
740-992-GI85.
'

(700~15tt

Walnut Plaee.Subdlvlsloo located on Colle11• Road
behind Waters £die Apts. In SyraC'DSe, Ohio

{4) 2000 Mo&lt;lol Singles Leftover.
Save Thousands. Fleetwood
Homes Of Proctorville, Toll Free,
1-888-565-0167

Hoeuhold
Goa de

_.,.,_

Furnished 2 &amp; 3 Room Apart·
mon,., Clean, No POlS, No Smak·
ing, Reference• &amp; Oapollt Re·
qulred . Ulililie1 Furniahed.

THE RENT YOU PAY MONTHLY COULD BE YOUB
MONTHLY MORTGAGE PAYMENT ON TIDS
HOUSE!!

'STOPI'
Don't
Purchase A
New
Manufacturing Hom~ Without
Coiling Hl88·864· 7258. We Can
Save You ThouSandS On A
New Palm Harbof Home. Call
Today! Over 20 Homes On
Display.

~. Refrigo&lt;a.

t -

510

PoiMroy • Mlt:ldlepart. Gallipolis.
·540 IIICIIIIAIOUI
540 llllcellaneoua
llln:hlndiM
Me dlandiM

lor, Range, AIC Included. $211
Pluo Dopolil &amp; RoforeiiCO. HUD
~ (700)041·1511
• And u a rcan:~. 1..an-ao..t112
(700)0411-7404
IEAUTIFUL APAIITMENTI AT
IUDGET PRICEI AT ~ACK·
~}875-1422
ION ESTATES, 52 Wastwooct
OIM r.om $2117 ta $383. Walt to
515- Slnttl. - ohdp &amp; mavlu. Call 740·44l·
2581. Equot t-.gllpporlnty_

eiot-.

4 8e&lt;lraom. 2 Ball. $50.995.
Now $'2,997· Price Good Til
8-25·01 , Hurry To Oakwoo&lt;l·
GalipoCis, (740~

0 $145 MonCh. WIN
Hl88-736·3332

In

Apll buarlt
for Rent

Chrlsty'o Family living, 33140
..... Rei, Flutlond, OhD 740702-7003. Apartmtnl, ..... and
trailer rental&amp;. Commercialstore· Vacanlronlo available tar -

'1' Only· LOI Modal Doublowi&lt;la·

9 34

Route 325

Ohla TOOl
{41t)528-G488
OHicol {740)245· 1170. Equal
Hou1ing Opportunity. Handl·
c:appod..
., ..

Real Ettwte General

320 Mobile Hornet
for Sale

16 Wide. Only $195.00 Per
ManCil, 8.99% Fixed CntereSI Rale
f:. ~ ~11 Underpinning

Affordable Hauling. Vatiow VieW
Aparlllltnlo. lOt W. College
Slroot, Rio Grondo, Ohio. t I 2
8edroomt, Kitchen furnished,
Water Paid. Laundry Facilitlet,
Conlnl
All. Appiiealions Con
Be
Picked Up
SetJlllln
8:00am &amp; 8:00pm. LocaliOn:

Ohlo,;•iPol~nt~PI~e~s~e~ant,~~WV~1iiiiiii.i.ui1p!1tt~llltf~~
.
- at~m~~~·m~·~P~~~ge~~D:!_7
l54o Mlecellaneous
710 A11tiD1 for Bile
'f,
W.Chandlle

Sund8y, June 10, 2001
440

· t Room Fumllllod Eoftfticicloloo'""""''· All
UtUhiol Paid, Shared Balli, tiD

Mobile home in Racine area. no

..

Holzer EmployHa Looking For
An Acre Of Flat Ground To Set
Doubiowide Modular Homo And
Ga-. (740)408-0780

Home. Very Nice, Consider
T.-.ln, (7401146 9t88

14•70 w/Expondo, 2 Bedroom. 2
Bam, CIA, SIR, !304)675-n:JO

440 AJ*b••••
for Rent

Real Ettate General

Rill E1tate
Wanted

360

410 t4ou... for Alnt

t ·3 ledrooma Forecloted Thraa bedroom house far rlifu ln
Homot,F...., $ 1 -.• 4% Down. Pomoroy, nopoli,740-9112·5858.

a-.

SR881 , 7 -

Sunc:18y, June 10,2001

Pilor Program. Rentera Needed.
00&lt;0-736-1295.

-Oeo&lt;IEnd-.13Co.· Rio - " " '
- . $27,000. 1C.trrRoo&lt;t. a
Acroo.$21 ,0000r5ArnoPoncl $25.000. ()t&gt;oo~Q,
111 ,500or20Arno- Hugo
Bam, $31,0001 Cloy Toornohip.
8am+-On31$32,000. T - LIN Aloe.
14 AaOI, ··~.tOO.
llolgt Co.·
Plain-

2 LOts. Zoned Commercial, Within
The Village Of Rio Grande.
(740)245-5858

Route 7 South, Newer, Larger

Mldlleport • O.llpollt, Ohio • Point Pfuunt, Wv

Pomeroy •

Houtehold
Goodt

5 Ploco Dining Room, Black &amp;
Gol&lt;l, Glaoo Top; Kldo Bedroom
Sat, TWin Bunka, I·Niohiltancl, 2·
Chaoto, Winnie Pooh Shoot Sato,
Comrorter, Curtalna, Decato; I Sat
Swag CUrtains In Teall, tOO'•IO';
Computerized Cash Rogtolor,
Wernet A!Jeeulblo. (740)338·
2787 (700)317--o502
Appliances:
Reconditioned
Walhero, Oryero, Rangeo, Refrl·
grstore, Up To 90 Days Guar·
antotdl We Sell New Moytig Appliances, French CUy Maylag,
. 740-448-77t5.
For Slit: Reconditioned waah,,., dryers end refrlgeralora.

Thompoona Appliance . 3o07
Jaoklan Averouo. (304)875-7388.

.

CIODD USED

APPLIANCII

Wa1htrt, dryers, refrlgerltort,

rangu. Skagg• Appllsncao, 78
VIne Stroot. Call 740·446·7318,
1-888-816-0128.
Brand new Lane Queen Anne r•
cinor, counlry blue with oa~ logo,
tago still on chair, $400, 700·9418400.

MIDDLEPORT • Here Is a home with·
polential, could be a two unit rental, or live )n
one, rent one or live In the whole house.
.Total of 4 bedr()Oms, 11/2 baths up, 1112
baths
F.P. declls and porches.
rural residential.

SYRACUSE· A view of the river, a 11/2110ry
frame wit~ lois of storage space. Garden
area, garage, callar,.3·4 bedrooms equipped
kitchen.
Enclosed front porch, 2 elde
porches for R&amp;R.
PRICED TO SELL AT $34,000.

Late Madel Whirlpool Frost Fru
Rolrlgerator. $75; R-ndllloned
Washoro, Ill Each; Oryoro, $80
Each. All Whitt. Call ,t,ttor apm.
(7«)).18 GOea

Exc

-

$199/mo· Hurry En&lt;la Juno 25th,
Oakwoo&lt;l· Gallipolis {740)4463093
Take Over Pa~ments, 3 Bedroom,
2 Bath Oakwood, Call For Details
(740)046-3570
Wo Tallo Trado-lnol ·
Singlewl&lt;taa, Ooublewlaos, Any
Vear, Any Make. Top Dollar Paid
. With Purchase 01 A New Pa lm
Harbor. Cell t -888-864-7256

330 Farms for Sale
Farm H0ua8', ~eautlfully Remodeled, .2963 Square Feet. 17 Acr·
es, Pond. ln·ground Pool, Several
Barna, Garage, Fruit Trees, Close
To Holzer. $215,000. . (740)4464230
Sixty ·Acres, Two Rental Trailers,
Rural Water, Paslure &amp; Hay
Ground. (740)286--4621

.,

133114
LIVINCI 4 bodrms, 2 balha,
garage &amp; 2 ac mil. immaculate
condlllon 2000 eq. ft. &amp; 10 enjoy
family Ilk&amp; to lulleel, Large rms,
through out· fireplace In Lfl , sky·
lighla, beautiful kitchen. Sun
porch wlwlndow walls. Gas &amp;
aloe. heat, een~al air &amp; lovely
carpet. Green Sc;hoola. This one
waa worth walling lor, juat a

phone call away. VLS 446-8806
MAKE OFFER REDUCED
14022 W•tch lhe River from
your backyard? En,lov the view
from your boat dock or back deck.
lhla 1+ ac m/1with a 2 BA 1 bath
mobile home/vacation . camper is
the thing for stress. May be
for a garden . LOcated at
St. At. 7 SouCh and priced at
$59,500

10024 DOWN BY ·THE OHIO
RIVER Big 1011~ly brick &amp; vinyl
wlsmall price. Baautlful oak
cabinets wlbar. Formal LA &amp; DR, 3
bodrms, I full bath &amp; 2 ha~ baths.
Bonus
of a
mother-In-law
apartment w!I.A, kit, 1 BR &amp; bath.
All appUances stay. EnjOy Che view
of the Ohio River w/B boat dock
close by. Huge 4 car garage &amp;
c;ernent driveway. Worl&lt;shop lnlhe
garage. lfs Hme tor action. Shewn'
bw appointment.

'

'I

www.wilbq2.000.com
F - G!Mrnmont &amp; private Mone y ! - ~Y- All Worthwtllla
Roquoslo Canlidored. Musl be
Ia AW&gt;Id TIUI. fund·

-OUt
=:.=:o-

Cleland Realty, Inc. Offlce............. 992-2259
Henry E. Cleland ........................... 992·2259
Sherrl L. Hart........................;......... 742-2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992-2818
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-6191

':'d
...... _.,......-oom.com I·
:.~~~~

800-202
-o383 Elct. &lt;40111
Gao hoaior. t yr old. Stoo, 700•

Graveiy Tillo&lt; RGiary Plow

O

I

•

WHY WEIGHT? lose 2·1 lbo.

onllna:www.healthylmage.nel or
c a l l o r -:888-235-1518
•

::"..!.':'~~
cancort

II Vitit

~www.t)sl:::"

,· co- us

orrllne

Yamaha Koybaar&lt;l. 4 Yoaro Old.
Cooc Now. $1000, Used Only e
Monlha. 1800, {304)a75·5182

AnPM
550

Building
Supplies

Bl-

·~

pi

~·

- · ~~·. -or pol, •oN'
OWl, llntotl, otc. Claude Wlnt8fl.
Rio Gran&lt;to, OH Call 700·205·

I~Or::.:;fi::00:;:)387~·.;:12~72~=-::-:,..,.~ 512t.
Aer:ondlllonod Washer &amp; Dryers,
$100 Each. AIC, 5,000 To 23,000
BTU For Salt, Siarting AI $75.00.
Thompson Appliance Repair,
Jack- A - . {304)675-

tlll2-!iCM3.

=

0 ,.._

• -•·

..:.,~~=:~'r.~a~:.•;:,;

Uarcury Topaz, $550; Wln&lt;tow
Air COnd~lonor. $80 &amp; 2 Micro$25.00 Each. Call After,
• :30pm, Tr-Ill, oldor, Works
Good, $30. (700)041...()972

•••u,

Tappan HI Eflicloncy 90% Gas
Fumacoa, Oil Fumacoa, 12 Soar
He1t Pump I Air Conditioning
Sya1e1111 FrH I Year Warranty
Bonnoftl Healing I CoaUng, t •
IOIH72-5t87 -.ONb.OOI!&gt;'bon·
110ft

PlanoI Cd
Ropalro.
PI • ·
7 iM?
NMdTuninQ
Tw.d?
The
Plano Dr. 740 ttl 1525
Htwlolt Packard. Windows 98 ,
Comot Wllft lnk!Ot Printar, Cam·
era, I Scanner. Cook &amp; Choir,
1100. {700,...171

_,for oalt, Big Horn, T Tan I othlrl. wiU trade for gun.
7-7204.

lncloporldlrot Dlotrlbutor,
Call for Product Or Opponunlty.
(700)041-11182

Slwmlll $3,885. Now Supor Lumblrmoto 2000, larger capaclllto,
more options. Manufacturer of
tawmlllo, odQoro and okl&lt;lders.
NORWOOD INDUSTRIES 252
~will Drive, Buflala, NY 14225.
FREE Information t ·100·578-

1383 EXT. 200-U
Catt,
SIOO-Each. (304)675-48
Klng Stzo
· Baal Drotm
15

Largo compoatar at vtrgll't Sorry
Patch on Rt. t24 Eaot o1 Swra·

Stanley Homo Praduc\o An &lt;I
Fuller Brulh ,t,vollablt. To Order
Productl Or Raquoal Calaloga.
Ploo.. Call {30&lt;1)875·8to3 Any·

OUH,7&lt;10-992-7....

-

U.. 27 boot IOiar b1anka1 for
f!IGIII&lt;1-.mtng pool,

STEEL· BUILDINGS.
NEWI
Ctoaranea. 4DK80at 2 woo
phonofoo-992-311t0.
$17,500 new 110,971. 50xt00x16
WOI 127,850 ROW $11,990.
UajlaGwuhOf, 12000 BTU wind·
80xl35xt8 .was $71,850 . now
ow alr-con&lt;tlllonar, bolh In tiCCtl· . $44,990. tOOxl75x20 wao
font condition, StOO uch: trot
$121,850 now $84,980. 1-800·
aafa &amp; choir, fak condlfion, 740·
006-5128.

sao

11112·780'1.
IIOIIIU! 110111! OWN!RS
Hugo lnvtniO(W, OIICOUnt Prieta,
On VInyl Skirting, Dooro, Wind·
ow a, Anehoro, Water Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; Eloctrlctl Porto, Fur·
naco• Heat Pumpo. Banntfil
Mobllo Homo .Supply, 740·44e11418-orvb.oorNIII'ooall
NIW AND UIED ITIIL Stool
IINrnt, Plpt For c:anc-,
Anglo, Channel, Flat Bar, Slltl
Graung For Dralno, Drlvawawo&amp;
w.tllwop. Now 55 Gillan Drumo
With Ltd I RinQ, 17.00 Each. l&amp;L
8c:rap (700)446-7300

a

-~,.;;;~1aowlldidll!i;;"'l;cc;,_;;.,;;;IOO;-30x30- 58.1180. Sal $3,81:

ooxso- Sit ,aoo, ttl $5,900;
51•120- $28.900, ttl St4,900
Soli Con Do1MM1
Greg 1-8»3112-7808

- H O l l E OWNEIII

Storao Solid State Conoote
Rooord And 8 Track T - Player,
AMIFM Radio By Captltart.
N - Minor R&amp;plllro. Make Offer.
(740,._ Altar 8pm

I

Tablt and e chalro, 700·992·
:858::::.;7·- - - - - - - Top
Boll
Far
Sale
(740)441-otl11
Wate~lne s...,lol: 314 200 PSI
$2l .l5. Per 100; 1' 200 PSI
537.00 Per tOO; All Bra11 com·
. , - Flninglln Sux;tc
RON IVANI INTIIIPIIIIEI

560

610 Fenn Equipment
f i ft&amp;di4 On Nlw Jchl
Dooro - • r Condillonors And
Bater• With John Bnra Credit
Appfovll. Cal Or SloP By Nowfl
Carm&amp;cha•l'a Farm &amp; Lawn
(700)41&amp;-2012

1-

Field
~ {Wil

·---1111
a-

T-

And Silagt
Rof Smal Hay
Ialor). 800 lb. 3/4 Horelord, t/4
- - ~- (700)3117-7031
2 Holland Ca_, Tobacca
- · Utad t Souon. (700~
2012

John Deere Comp•ct Tractors
from 20 to 08 HP, 5.8%, 60 me fi.
nan&lt;:lng available with JD credit
approval. Carmioh•el's Farm &amp;
IAIIIII, Galllf&gt;OIIs, Ohio {700)0462412

620 W.nbld to Buy
Looking To Buy A Co1chins Or
JapaneMI Old English Bantams
(304)1137-3348

Pets for Sale

1 Year Old Mate Weim1rener,

1250. (700~1581

Wanted To Buw. Sat Of Ulod Plllol Forko. (304)675-2043

AKC A I - . I I - Old, ArOI
Shato, Wa&gt;mod. $250 Malto,
$200 FOIIIIlot. {700)256-1'183

Wanllng To Tra&lt;lo A Pair Of
8amtd Rock Bantams For Ancfh.
or Pair Of Pure Breed Banty Of
Any Kind. {304)1137-3348

AKC Himalayan Porolan Cat, t,
Yoor Old, Fomolo, UOO OBO,

830

(700~·-

AKC Sholllo pupa. trio, bl blackl.
Ublllwhlto, VII Chocked, Cham.
pion - · 1350. 70Q.t88-1085.
Pupo, 1-t/2 Yoaro 01&lt;1,
Each: Chow/ Lab Pupa. 8 Wotka
01&lt;1.
1700)446-11147
·

csao.

sso

French City Pot Graamlng Hao
Moved To Point Pleasant, Now
Called A-'• Pat Grooming. Col
For Aj&gt;poiobntnl {304)675-5010
Jack Ruaaen Terr&amp;er pupa, pure
brad. no paporo, It 50 oach. 7401198-7\)115.

Llvutock

1 I Month Old Hamp Shoot, 3
Young Hamp Borao, 5 a Walk
Old Pigs, (740)258-1018

140

Hay I Grain

Hay &amp; Brlghl Wire Tit Straw. Yoar
'Round Dollvary &amp; Volume Dlt·
count Avallabt.. Herlt•g• F1rm.
{304)875-5724.

TRAt JSf'ORTATION

· 710 Autol for Sale

$0 OOWN CARS! POLICE IM·
POUNDS &amp; REPOSI HONDA'S,
Purabrad J1ck Ruaae/1 Terrier CHEVY'S, JEEP'S. LOW AS $291
Pupploo, 7 Weeks Old, ·Talis MO. 24 MO'S 019.8%. FOR
Docked, Wormed, Firat Shota, LISTINGS, CALL t-800-451-0050. ext. C-11812
·
$250 {304)875-3388
Registered Lab
Pupplu.
Chocolate &amp; Black, Excellent
Hunting Proopocts. {740)448·

00110

580

Frultt &amp;
Vegetablet

S~awbtrrios,

Pick Your Own. Call

Clou&lt;ll Wintorl, (700)2~121

1111 T1uru1, v~e, auto, good
toady ' ...- . gaod pralocl call
tsoO. 740-702-2357

7-

ttto Ford Probl, 3 lllor, auto,
nooc1s toady wort 10 run or coukl
be ........ .,.., S500 finn,
3117.

ttto Pontiac Flreblrd Formula
350, V-11, OliiD, 111.000 miloo, red,
....,., call $2,t50, 740-742·2357.
1991 Flrebird Formula. Tuned
Port 30~. 5-Spoe&lt;t, T· Top, CD ,
M1ny New Parts. Wetl Main·
talnod, $2700; 1978 Chevy 112
Ton L.W.B. 4•4. 35xt4.50 Thom·

· 350.
Auto.8881
Man~'
12800
(700)38a

-

1999 Grand ~rix GT, While, 4
door, 24,500 rnilerl, CD, .... cared
lor, (740)""1--G216, {7o0)581·
7110

2000 Chryliar Sol&gt;ring LXI, Sunroof, Loodod, Extoa Sharp, Excellent COndition, l15,t00 Firm, Col
(700)38H710 Altarllpm.
2000 VW Bootie, Rod. Aulo
Tr•namllllon. Turbo, Sunroof,
Leather Saala, Shcwroam Condl·
liOn, Garage Kopt, 117,100. 2000
SSEI, Loodod, &amp;unmol,
CO , Ltlther Seats, Cuatom
Wh11l1, Showroom Condition,
Garage Kept, $23,t00. (700~
2927

114 Coman&gt; z.28. 350 LTt onglnt,
auto, pw, pi, T-topo, Baoo aaund
syotom, 70,000 mllu, garaga
kepi, oxcollonl ohapo , $t,500,
740-~tll .

95 Chryolar Concord. 89,500
Highway Miles, A· t Condition,
$8500 (740)041-1559
.
95 Dadgo Noon, 103,000 Mliol, 5
Spofld, Cola Air, Notds Palnltd.
$1800 080 (740)2511-1233
98 Chryolor So bring LXI, v-a,
Auto, Asking $8200, {7o0)256·
0252 Or (700)256-1818

tt85 Cavalier, Gruc Shapo,
(304)875-5182

11183 Dodge Ol4, Shon Bod, 380,
4 SpMd, Extra 318 Engine,
Outlaw II Rims, 33·1250 Tireo,
$3500 (700)38H725

tt97 Ford Crown Vlelorla LX,
43,000 MIIH, Eaotllent COndillon,
Ca1Anerllpm,{300)875-t778
- - - - - -......- -

Rill Ettate Gen1ral

tffHID
IIEALTI', INC
32 LOCUST STREET, GALUPOLIS, OIDO 45631

-·OhiO, t-1100-W-9528

Alan c. \\Wd, Broker • 446-4523
.
Ken Morgan, Broker • 446-0971
Jeanette Moore,· 256-1745
Patricia Ross · ~
740 4461061
liiil

-

,..

you

can

add your ltnllhlng .touchtll 3
Vaaro young t 112 atory home with
boaamont and ·2.5 acru nVJ. Main
level hat appro•. 1,280 aq. ft. and
uppo~ 850 oq ft. that hto not
boon complelly finioloed. lal U8ioli
you the 1Ht.l21ta

- .np......

Anno 01 Groen Gablao ana Tho
conllnulng otory Factory Baolod
VHS Movlao SIO.tt+S&amp;H'. Call
Toll Froe t-888·8245. (PIGTAIL)
Princa E&lt;lwordloland, Canodl.

1011 !_Motarw
Oull
poltlsalo!&gt;. Nice
corner lol &amp; 3 --bodroorn, t t/2
ball! homo with ovarsizad garage
and full baoomonl. 12115
.

ATTENTION!
HUNTERS
•
NATURE LDVERSI Approx. 84
acroo ot moscty all wood land wiCh
nlot moadow. WII&lt;IIHe goloro.
Loll of road ~ontage and adjoins
Wyno Natlanol Forrest. 12125

Botutlful -inO .... whitt rourod
.58 caret IOihalra dllmond In 14K
gold oottlng, olzo 4·112, tan.
701).1112-3602.
COMPUTERS: WE FINANCE
DELL COMPUTERS! Evon with
1111 lhan porfact oro&lt;lltl HOD·
4n·8018. Code AC24 www.ome· ·
1011111on.com

a~~~~i1

EARl( your College Dogrot
QUIC~LVI Baohelor'o Maalor'o
Doctorate by corruponde~et
baud upon prior aduoatlon ~n&lt;l
ohort otudy coullo. For Fraj ln.formallon booktll phono Com·
Stall Unlvoralty. t-100·
18.

=::;

c-

home lhat hat large lamlly
• &lt;lining .... lhat to
raor dock and prillalt back
Eat-In kltcloon 3 bodrooma.
....;:.ot~'""''ly roam, 011100.
,...
drive and morel
LoTal um. n any t,.,;,alinfl

Mi..,._

I .•..
N 1Qjaolfidl l
1' 1
niOI

licorMI
.

HEYI
CALL
APPOINTMENT TO
NICE RANCH with ove~zed
roorno and over 8.7 acroo 01
Iandt Modom 3 bedroom 2 baCh
1tomo with living room, kllchtn
with lonntl lining araa, above
ground pool with docking and
morel Ownora analeuo to
tall, can toctatt2107

Privately
on 314 acre lot, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, Aorlda room,
largo opon living room &amp; tormal
&lt;lining area, nice dolachod
garage pluo oaporato shOp. Ciooa
to public flsl1lng ...t mlnuleo tom
Rio Grande &amp; 36 bwpaoa. 12010

11Ntt...&amp;at,500 One ol
views In Gallipolis trom the porch
of this I 112 atory !tome. Uvlng
room, dining or family room, over

2acre1.

,COMMERCIALJINVESTMENT
Cornmorclol bulking wiCh 3
apartmenta and bualneaa i'entll.
goo&lt;llncomo. 121 :14
LOOKINO FOR A LOT? Hor11
are 2 ltvol lata with public witer
and 18Wig&amp; IVIIIIble. Not for a
big prlct. $14,500 for them both
and Owrl!lr lo 'roquooting wour
oftor. 1207t

I Olll\lilllllrHJI\1 II~WJr;c; ,, IJJFOilMAliON CAll Oil :;TOP BY FOR
1\ I Iii I •J/11\//11' II' II,// SIN t '(II 0/i /101 Ill/ I rr

lS 1S KERR ROAD
Ranch etvte home Mltttcl on 12 plue octel
wooclecllancl with frontate cdono Kerr RoQd.
3 !Mdroomt, U bolhl, bcllement, 2 car
attached 9ara~:~e. Must come and'" the rut.
#2108

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
GllllpoJ\t, OH 41831

(740) 446-7101
f'OR MORE INFORMATION iiVE US A CALL

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
LOTI Of' HOUII FOR THE
MONEY! Ll~o now capo Cod
!tome wltlllull rear dormer offering
mora &amp;plica upo!llrs. 3 BR, 2
batha, lonna! LR. toyer, FR and
lormal dining area, large sized
decking aroa, largo alzod &lt;locking
on rear, CNer 2 acre lot and much
moral OWNERS RELOCATING
SAID "SELL NOW'1
12014

.

Art your looking for •"ordab.lllly and loclllan? Chock
out this cozy home offering 3 bedrooms and t 112
Haw all the conveniences of living In town. Call to

,

•(

82 Subaru SW, $500 OBO,
{740)408-4328 Lea•• Mtttagt
HNo-.

720 Trucke for Sale

Slrawborrln, v'ou Pick· Wt Pick.
Tawlor'o Sorry Pitch, 2860. Kerr
Road. Open 8·8 Mon&lt;lay, Wed·
nuday &amp; Frl&lt;tay, 8·0 Saturday,
Clotod Sunday. (740)24$-9047

i

Pana.

'9t Ponllsc Sunblrd, V·8, 5 sp.,
air, nlco cor, $2500, 740·849·
2700.
.

Real Ettate Oenlr81

111.1100 Nlot bl-lowl

510 second Avenue

\

Pronure Troafed Dock, IO'x2a'
$700, Paid $1500; 200 Amp Dis·
oonnoct llol&lt;,l100, 100 Amp OilC0M0C1 ao., $50, Kllcl1en Table,
a Chalro. I tOO .. {700)387...0e5o

H0mt ICOfiNI . . cial lJnltt
. PillS Color Cafelog
. Cal Tocloy 1-II00-71t.Ot151
com

RACINE • A commercial bulidlng located on 3rd Street. One
approximately 50x100 level lot. Additional rear parking. Public water, el&amp;&lt;:trlc
site. Has been used as a church building and upholstery shop. Great tor
This on~ story home Includes living room, dlnl~ room, kitchen, 4
Includes a part basement &amp; some attic apace.
e property also has
&amp;
small shad. This Ia all localed on a .48 ·acre lot, a chain
property. All of this could be yours for

$11100:3 Section, TV Anl..,no
T - . $40; H-rt Gao Wolder
On kiO Troiior &amp; Tools, 11700;
Uioll KonrnorO Dish-shor, $50. '
(740)441-7558
PETCARERX.COM Save up to
50% an ALL pol-liOnS ...t
1''111'""' ·Including Heartgard, I"'
~.F-. motell FREE
SHIPPING.
anine -CaroRX.comOrder
1-800M4-1027.

FREE CASH! 110,000 or mort
p
No In 58 llayl or 1oM. Nov·
• Rlpojl poogrWI.. Fntt tnlormallon.
t-100 -301-11147

Mt4 Cllotgll

REDUCED PRICE--117 acres close to new Fwy., hospllal, shop ctr. Water, gas, oower. A~olnlng
Nursing Home.

ll

St•.

••tnt SeMce

blowlde, One Payment. {304)736·
7295
Lovely home on thl Be•utltul
OhCo Rlvort This heme hao been
completely remodele!S. All has
been done wilhintne last tour yra.
New roof, Insulated windows, new
AIC &amp; tumaee, all new appllsnooe,
oon1ra1 Vao. system. Homo haa lull
baaomonl wfworkahop. Now guo81
cabin closer to river, but above
. floo&lt;t plain .. back yard fenoed .
Panoramic view ol Cho Ohio river
trom almost all rooms and cabin. A
para&lt;tlae lor boating &amp; llshlng.
Priced for quick &amp;ale.
,
14023 OUT POSSUM TROT RD.
You'll lln&lt;t a gleat ImmacUlate 2
bodrm, 1 bath mobile !tome,
shingle root, deck, out-buildings tor
storage. Plctureque land that mils
&amp; also 15 AIJ mil wNishlng pond.
Whal a nice act to bull&lt;l or subdivide. Property haa good frontage.
Call VLSmifh 446-8806.

- Y· $-Mck Guarantee. shop

FlnanclngAvalat&gt;lo

Commercial I Special purpose building. Garage or business, 6,520 sq. fl.,
, block and steel construction. Heal Ia provided by gas space/ceiling furnace
.
ASKING $88,000.'
side, Two, hall baths, AIC unit.

Single Secllon Lot Cloaranca- All

-llpm
Onan GeneralOf Pro 4000 Witt,

1ta7 CINyelt&lt; Ltloron, 4 Cylln·
dar, 25MPG. Auto. PS, P8, Cold
All, Ta, CtuiM, AU1FU ea zt1e,
1Qny New Partl, 185,000 Milot.
(70C)3" 11187

AiiAZINaLY LOW PRICES
WOLI'FT- RDI
8uW FICIOfY 01-

Private Property And New Oou·

Models Reduced. Payments From

1--------'--

8' Whlll F~:&amp;::~· Truok Top·
por, Good
, WI Fll1187
Chevy Or Older, $50 Firm.
(700)21S6-4tl1

a

New Double Wide . $195 Per
Month! 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Free
Delivery &amp; Set-up. 1·888·928·
3428

Oak l f'oiMMr Lumber. Cal For
...,. -lion. (3041812·3258

S•uFPl
'ci.EST'_I(e,

8 Foot Wldt lnolde, ta Foot
Long, o Whtll Trailer, &amp;a50, Col
(740)418 0128

APPLE GROVE· Approximately 29.935 acres of great hunting ground. Home site out of
J.IUin. Septic, electric and your own water well Md gas well on this property. Could
gas to your home plus small royalties. What a view of the Ohio River. Ask about an ~~·~l~l&gt;lal
river front lot also. Agent Owned.
ASKING $46,000.

Now double wide 3 br. 2 ba.
$998.00 down only $295 . per
mon. call now 1·800·69t-en7.

Fora Jayco, I HI , 2a H. Motor
Homo 7.5UGu Engine, Onan
G-ralor, Roof l Doth AC,
Cruiat, SIMps
C:O..ploto
&amp; 8all, 2 Yr. 01&lt;1 AM1inQ,
10.000 Mlln. Ono Ownor.
$22,S)O Coll-229-17115

fA~r.1

Wa • • alwaye glad lo help you aell or buy pn)l)4111y
Renlll property Ia llso available.
Give ua a call, we can help.

I

\

�j

•

smith
•
without their input.
Once you have the power
of arromey. you should make
seva-al copies of the original
to gi~ to the perl(&gt;ns you
transact business with on
behalf of your parents. Banks,
insurance companies and othm sometimes insist that their
own power of attorney form
be used. Find out what forms
they require while your parents are still competent and
able to sign other documents,
and keep. a list of those to
whom you have given· copies
of the power of attorney.
If your parents have assets,
trUS!J are another option for
all of you to consider.
Although there can be fees
inherent in setting up a trust,
trusts can enable your parents'
assets .to be passed on to you
smoothly in order to help ease
some of the family's financial
burden in mel!lin~he needs
of aging family members.
Should your parents still be
in fairly good health, you may
want to look into getting
them long-term care insurance. While the premiums can
sometimes seem dauntingly
high. they may appear very
reasonable when you consider
that more than half of Americans over age 65 wiU need
some kind of extended care,
according to The New Yolk
Times.
Add that to the fact that tl!e
cost of nursing home cllre
regularly runs into the tens of
thousands of doUars annually.

•

•

..

·

•
•

While we're on insurance,
consider having your parents
get Medigap coverage, which
is supplemental insurance that
can help P"J medical bills that
Medicare ~n't fuUy cover.
One advantage to being a
baby boomrr is you have
plenty of company. When a
lot of people have similar
problems. they oli:en band
together to develop solutions.
In this case, there are oli:en
community ~treach programs like adult day care
enabling working SGs to
place eldc;rly parents , in safe,
daytime environments.
See if a similar program
exists in your community. You
can contact local religious and
civic organizations to find out
what might be available. You
can also rurit to your live-in,
older children for help with
caring for aging parents. You ·
cannot alford to bear the burden alone. Besides, enlisting a
child's help sends a great message about family roles up an~
down the generations.
WhiJ! being in the Sandwich Generation can be
stressful, try to reme~ber it
won't last forever.Your parents
will be gone one day and
your children will leave the
nest. For now though, it's a
rime for the extended family
to be together. Just make sure
that 'ou take care of yourself
itl the interim. Eat wiU, get
eno~ rest and exercise, take
a litttJ time for yourself once
in a while and try to enjoy the
positives.
(Mark Smith is an iniNOIImenl

Kneen
flU• l'a&amp;C Dl

dleport (Dave Diles Park).
If possible, to help in the
coordination, stop in it the
Recycling Office located in
the Meigs County Annex,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,
or call 992-6360. Liability
waiver forms are n~eded for
all partkipants.
• • •
Reservations
still
being taken ·for die First
Meigs County M•r Gardeners' "Garden Party" on
June 16 from 5 to 8:30 p.m.
at the Meigs County Annex
located
on
Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy,
The keynote ·speaker will
be Frank Porter, proprietor
of Riverview Herbs, presenting a program on "Creative Landscaping." ri.earn
about landscape layout, the
use of native plants and
diverse plant material.
In addition, four breakout
sessions will be presented by
local Master Gardeners on
"Container
Gardening,"
"Garden Design," "Shade
Gardens" and . "Making
Soil."
,
The five presentations
and dinner are included in
the registration cost of $10
per person. Room is liniited. Registration forms ,'are
a-.ailable at the M, ·~
County Extension Ollie •.so
stop on by or call.
Pre-register by June 11 ·::.r
the Meigs Councy Extension Office. This program ' is
open to the general public.

hours. Plant roses that have
some reported resistance to
black spot.
For further information,
give our office a call at 9926696 for our Extension Fact
Sheet 3063, "Controlling
Rose Diseases."
• • •
Vegetable g(Owers, mark
your calendars to attend the
Annual Meigs/Washington
Counties Twilight Vegetable
Tour on June 13 fiom 6
.p.m. to dark.
This year's event will be
held at the Norbert Huck ·
Farm in Waterford, Washington County.
This multi-generational
vegetable farm supplies a
broad range of crops (romatoes, beans, squash,. melons,
peppers and sweet corn) to
the local populace. This
event is open to the public
- no preregistration needed, just show up. Directions
are available from the
Extension Office.
• • •
Volunteers are needed to
help clean up the Ohio
River bank in Meigs County.
,
The 13th Annual Ohio
River Sweep is scheduled
for June 16 from 9 a.m. to
noon. The Meigs County
Recycling &amp; Litter Pr~vention program will be &lt;;oor(Hal Kneen is Meigs Coun·
dinating clean-up sites m ty's Extension agent for agri·
executive with Smith Partntrs at Racine (old ferry landing). culture and natural resources,
Advest Inc. 1n its Gallipolis Pomeroy (levee) and Mid- Ohio State University.)
Q

office.)

Sundey, June 10,2001

720 1hlckl far ....
1111 et.wy . . . . . 2WD. 350
AUIOfftatic. 1•.000 Uilll, New
Tlroo. I' led With Cab. 14500
(1~

XLT. 4 CJI., 5 liP•• a/
1M7 0oc1go Da~&lt;o~~~. •
qt .• 5 op., no ruot, $1,000. 7&lt;10lt2·33114 . . .tdoyo. 740· 742·
11M

740

.

.

· '·
..,
•
•

Extru. SS.OOO

010.

Monday

81

(740)441-

~

c. ss.aoo:
3020.

7f .O UC. 1·Ton Wroekor. 440
-

With-

un. 350 en.

gino. 4 Speed, 12700 (740)448301111

13 Dodgo Rolli. 8 Cyllndor. 2.25
- · &amp;1200080 ~J87"132

15 F·tl50 - · Tnx:k, 4 W11oo1
Drive. Ociod ~. (304)17514511
•

aa Food ~. mo. 4 Cylndor.

Autoftlatlc, Runo Good. $1400
080(740)44Hm

1N1 Dodge Ram 1500, 4WO, 318

V-1, SLT. PW. Pl,. CruiH. 72.000

-

(304)17lHI040

-

Dodgo Dokofa Spall. Ex1onded
Clb, 4x4, CruiH, Tilt, 5 Speed.

"

43K Mlloo. 118,000 (740)245-

Baoo Boat, 18' Gru..,..n C.,.l·
lonvor Wllh IOHP Uorc-Forco
And T - . (10014"8-1017

710

MllpCe•nlJ'I

Auto Parts •
ACCIIIIII'lll

so tent\ ·June

Ato You loOI&lt;ing For Enginol Or
Tranomloolonaf Glvo Uo A Call
At740 ue 0518.

... Mcod Tron_l_o
All typea, ACCIII To Over
10.000 Tronomloolono, Tran....
Coo... 740-2&gt;&amp;5-M77, Colt 33137e5.
New

Engine

(304)175-t !564

Stand,

•
I

Out

S40,

-Of Poll'•odon ATR Tno, 3151

75/R18; Almoll Brand Now. Fit
Moll 314 Ton &amp; 1 Ton plckupa, .
Eopoclolly Willi RaiMd Su-·
alon. Sot Ot 2 For Only &amp;150.
(7001441-1315

ASSOCIATED PRES$ WRITER

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. - The government Timothy McVeigh so despised
executed him by chemical injection
Monday. taking his life in exchange for
the 168 lives lost when he blew up the
Oklahoma City federal building six
years ago. He died silendy, with his eyes
open.
Instead of making an oral statement,
McVeigh, 33, issued a copy of the I ~75
poem "lnvictus," which concludes with
the lines: "I am the master of my fate; I
am the captain of my soul."
He was pronounced dead at 8:14a.m.
EDT by Warden Harley Lappin, becom-

Cindy
28' 11185 Dull:hmon eamper wltll
expando, $10,000 finn. 7&lt;10-lta·

$2500080.

7731.

1884 FO«&lt; F·2150. 4x4, 4·Speod.
Flat Bod, 300 8 Cylinder. Runa
Good, 174,000 Mlieo. 12100
(740)371HI278 .

810

1915 Chevy S·10, 4x4. 4 Speed,
2.8 V8, Now Tlroo. Solid Naw
Mexico Truck, 135,000 Mllet
$2400, (700)37H27B
1987 Plymouth VOjegar, New
Tlr11, New Alternator; Runs
Good; Naoda Brake Wort; $800.
(100)245-5844

1111 Cllryalor Town &amp; Country, Lim·
ltod. All Loothor. 4 Captalno
Chalro, Totally Loaded, 58K.

Homl

.n't fair what
happened
to the children and
others who were killed In
Oklahoma City. I don't
wish bad lor anyone, but I
think McVeigh deserves
his punishment.•

"'WaJorproollng.
C&amp;C General Home Main·
tanence- Painting, vinyl siding,
carpentry, doors, windowa, balha,
homo rwpolr and ...... For
lrte eollmalo c:aH Chef, 740-lli2·

For Solo Or Trade, 1889 Ford
Clubwagon XLT. FuMy tfandleap
~Ill. Fully Automatle, Hand Controll; Rolled Root, Tilt. Cruloo,
Po- Wlndowa, Good CGndltlon,

Llvlngaton'e Baaement Water
Proofing, all baaement repair.

840 Elec:trlcal 1ncl

740

Rlfrlget'ltlon
Aaoldentlal or commercial wiring.

ing the first federal prisoner executed in
38 yean;.
In Oklahoma City. about 300 survivors
and victims' relatives gathered to watch a
dosed-circuit TV broadcast of the execution, sent from Terre Haute in a feed
encrypted to guard against interception.
Others embraced each other at the
memorial marking the bombing site.
The lethal injection was administered
to McVeigh's ·right leg. McVeigh made
eye contact with his four wimcsses, then
with the 10 media wimesses, then squinted toward the tinted window shielding
the 10 victims• witnesses from his view.
McVeigh looked pale as he awaited

death. His hair was cropped short. A white
was puUed up to his chest as he lay on the
gurney.
When the first drug was administered,
he let out a couple of deep breaths, then a
fluttery breath. His head moved back, his
gaze fixed on the ceiling. and his eyes
were glassy.
In Oklahoma City, Kathleen Treanor,
whose 4-year-old daughter, Ashley. and
her husband's parents died in the bomb·
ing, watched ·the execution on dosed-circuit TV. Afterward, she held up a picrure
of her daughter and said:"J thought of her.
every step of the way." She said there w.i&amp;:

PI•--Mdl!p.U

lWo-car aash

,

, done, tree eatlmat11, lifetime
guarantee. 14yra on Job. experl·
eneo. (304)8115-3887.

(140)245-8212

2000 Warrior, Exeollont Condl•
tlon, 13700.(304)578-2!06

. SL!rely we&amp;-

IIAIEMEHr

WAlERPIIOOfiNQ
unconditional litollmo vuarontae.
Local reference• fumlahed. E•·
te75. cart 24 Hrw. (740)
«8-0870, 1-800-2117.()578. Roil·

6323.

1fB3 Ha~oy Davldoon Sportater.
$6,500 (1001441-952t

Pomeroy:
"I think the
punishment
is fair. It

Improvement.

(140)245-824e

Motorcyc:IM

Smith,

www.myd ai lys entinel.com

ies at 8:14a.m•
BY REx W. HUPPIIE

Vlt11at's your opinion of
the nniothy McVeigh
death sentence?

730 VIM • 4-WO.

'87 Chevy, 2 dr. van. 314 ton.
good olllpa. , _ tranoml.....,,
noodlllltlo work. 740·..2·1388

Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh io

1 1. 1001 • VoL 51. No . 128

·speak

-

- Hrvlce Of -lrw. Ma- 1J.
c:enaed electrician. Ridenour
Electrical. WV0003041, 30-t-175·

1788.

Tracy
Lllwlon,

MlddJeo.
port: "for
killing 188
people?
Yes, he
deserVes
the death '
penalty."

supp~ssing

"Our music selection is
very large and completely on
compact disc. We cater to
each individual, without having to repeat songs over and·
over again. Our library reflects
music liom ~ig Band, '50s to
the top 40fli0m last week's
countdown." "
Corey is a full-time state
employee and Jenny quit her
job .to stay at home with their
two sons, Jacob and Joshua.
The two are planning a trip to
C hicago later this month for
the Mobile Beat Summer DJ
show and Conference.
"We hope to bring back
some great ideas and new
equipment," Corey said.
C&amp;J Productions can be
reached by calling 140-2561265 or by e-mail at
candj_production,@yahoo.co

said. ''But our services. have
also included Southern High
School, Southern Junior
High, Meigs Local High
School, Beal School, River
Valley Band Boosters, South
Gallia High School, Hannan
Trace Elementary, the Elks of
Gallipolis and union rallies for
the Gallipolis Developmental
Center. We also have a system
located every Thursday, Fridal!;
and Saturday at the Courtsid!!
Bar and GriU (formerly the
City Perk). There you can
· check out first hand what we
sound like and offer."
Jenny noted that the music
selection is also a contributor
to the business' success.
m.

Ave individuals were treated Saturday and one flown via
medical helicopter to Cabell Huntington Hospital In Hunting,
ton, W.Va. following a two-car accident near Ave Points on
Ohio 7. Amanda Curtis of Pomeroy was flown to the hospi- ,
tal after sustaining Injuries In the wreck. The accident Is,
under Investigation by the Ga111a-Meigs Post of Ohio State
Highway Patrol. (Dave Harris ·photo)
·

Kevin
Thom•.
Rutllncl:
"I don't
think he

deserves
10 ,018.

J

.

'thl·•" he

----'---'------'---;-:-----..;;
·

..

··Sjracuse COundi.
he
!lave
people,
I think
he ne~s to be punished,
but life In prison would be
a batter punishment. He
didn't have a right to kill
anyone, but we don't have
that right, either." .

THE OLD lONGSfllleq the 111r SuhdaY,·Bf\emoon as Myron Duffield entertained at his
calliope with the old songs, a part of Herit~ D«Y festivities Sunday. (Charlene Hoeflich photos)

Heritage Day - a festival
with an old-fashioned flavor ·.

Brl•n
Johnton
Pomeroy:

BY~

POMEROY ;_ Visitors to
the Meigs Museum in Pomeroy
Sunday afternoon were treated
to the sites and sounds of yesteryear along with a look ~t
some of today's creative talents.
Entertaining wi~h the old
songs at his calliope in its colorful red-and-gold circus wagon
was Myron Duffield of Middleport. His next stop will be t~e

..........
Sentinel
2 hlllrl- 12 ,..._

Calendar
c;;lassifie~s

comics
Editorials
ObitUaries

Sports
Weather

HOI!FUCit

SENTINEl NEWS STAFF

"Lethal
Injection
Isn't good
enough.
Anyone
who would
refer to
Innocent
children as
"collateral" deserves the
electric chair- or worse."

0

f1om PageDI

9-3,

1121'8

l~--~.~·------------------------------

Cl.l

se~ies

' 1N1 300EX. Runo G-t, lola Of

.

.

SPORIS: Reds win Ohio

lllc*lrcyclll

them first and finishing thelll.off with the second ~ppli~Cj.on.
Those ' with
standard
faomPip!D1
hyb{ids should resist the urge
that discolors the plani. This to rush in with post-emergent
piscoloration should fade herbicides when fields are
when .nprmal soil conditions passable. The ability for. these '
return, p,rovided that none of · pl;m~ to tolerate chemical
the othea 6Lctors mentioned applications is greatly reduce9
·are the cause.
'foUowing the stress of the lait
• Weed _s::ontrol in Tobacco: three weeka.Nlow growth to
U' not already developil)g resume, ani"purple color to
weed problems, those who set fade before }pplying pqgtwbacco.prior to the rains may emergent hernicides.
·
be wondering how long the
lo the meantime, Jnok for
herbicide will hold. out. Spar- the positive. As .in previous
tan users are likely to see years,. a few hours of duty at
more injury than usbal, which 4-H camp last week reorgais common for Spa~tan i~ wet · nized my perspective on the
conditions.
import&lt;jnt things. Look for
Plants almost
.. always grow family time at home to do the
out of this .injury. Do not same.
confuse .Spartan injury with
Agnews
vrrus infectiQn, which will
Blue mold forecast -As of
only beeome worse as the Thursday, blue mold had not
• • In cases w here been confirmed in Gallia
plant ma1pres.
fields were prepared, but County. However, with contobacco was not set, applying firmations in the Kentucky
more srartan is not recom- counties bordering Lawrence,
mended.
·
we can assume that blue mold
However, depending on the is here. Please help me find it,
cn~micals and rates already so that producers can take
.!applied, label permittipg, a action if .they desire, and we
half rate of Command may can attend to other issues .
control some of the grasses
To find out if confirmation
and ragweed, which are weak have·been made since Thursareas for Spartaf! · anyway. day, ph!Jse &lt;:heck the bulletin
Those with weed •nfestations boards at one of these cooperin set tobacco can count on ating businesses: Altizer's in
Poast to kill the grasses. The Thurman, Pope and Pope in
nuts edge and broadleaves that Lecta, S&amp;L Mini Mart in
are left, may be' limited to MercerviUe, and Owsley's in
mechanical contro1.
Crown City. D~ not )lesitate
Weed Control in Row to call the Extension Office at
Crops: In Round Up Ready 446-7007 if you suspect blue
fields. if weeds are large, rates mold in your plants.
should be increased to match
(Jennifer L. Byrnes is GaUia
the weed size, according to County's Extension agent for
the label. It is more efficient agriculture
and
natural
to kill larger weeds with the resources, Ohio State Univerfirst applil;ation rather than · sity.)

~es

•

.,.

PcJmliroy •llldcllport • Gllllpolil, Ohio • ~nt Pit RJ 1 11, WY

HIP=•••

~=Details, A2 ·

Lotteries

A3

OHIO
82=4 PICks: 4-2·1; Pick 4: li-5r:5-0
85 5uplr F.aFFIIX I &amp;-19-20-22-3&amp;45
M IOdlr. 9-7·344-7
A3 W.VA.:

81.3,6 Daly S: 9-!H Dilly 4: 7+2-5
A2 c ~001 Ohio Volley Publlthins eo.

Fourth of July parade down
Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C., where he will be
representing Meigs County
. The festival with an old-fashioned flavor got a look at sever- ·
al pio'leer"skills.
Donna Davidson was there
making rag rugs on an oldfashioned loom, Sherry and
Jennifer Grady demonstrated
the art of creating candles from

aCidresses park
vanda m
Bv KAnE CROw
SENTINEL CORRESPONDENT

wicks dipped in hot wax, and
Margaret Parker showed how
to make butter using cream in a
jar and vigorously shaking it for
10 or so minutes. The butter
was th en served to those
attending on hot rolls made in
the museum kitchen during the
afternoon.
Special Heritage Day exhibits
featured artif.1cts and memora-

SYRACUSE Problems with park vandalism and
progress on the upgrading of the tennis courts were discussed at length Thursday by Syracuse Village Council.
Mayor Larry Laven dar said the Wildwood Ga.r den Club of
Syracuse has been working diligently on a beautification
project for the village. and has planted 13 dogwood trees in
front of London Pool.
On Wednesday evening, the mayor said, the pool was vandalized and items taken. One of the dogwood trees was
uprooted and bark was stripped from another.
. The mayor said the culprits, if found, will be prosecuted to
the fullest extent of the law, and he will enforce the curfew
ordinance with the help of local police and sheriff's
deputies.
The mayor asked residents report to the sheriff's department if suspicious activity is witnessed. The sheriff's department will, in turn, contact village police. Residents also may

PIHH- Herlt.p, A3

PIHse SH CoundL A3l

State budget includes courthouse renovations:.
,j

~&gt;-·- J REED
BY .

SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POMfROY The ,tate budget
1 approve4 ( last week by Gqv. Bob Taft
fncludes 1$75,000 for the renovation of the
Meigs County Courthouse.
State Rep. John Carey. R-Wellston, said
Friday the state's bien~ General Revenue
Fund Bu~et, as subn\itred by the Finance
Committee, includes $75,000 ih the first
year of the bu~t for improvements to the

19th-century building in Pomeroy. The
original budget as submitted to the govcr. nor, Carey said, included $75,000 for each
of the budgee, two years for the project.
Now, Carey said. tlie county wiD receive
only $75,000 in the first year.
"However, there \vill likely be funding
made available for Meigs County through
the stare capital budget, which will be submitted next year, so that the commissioners
can complete the job," he said.

30 years

of Ho1111e Care.
'

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446:22821'
1900 EASTERN AVE.
I

ToD Free l-877l446-2282
I

l

BUICK

PONTIAC

·

Holzer Home Care of Holzer Medical
Center is celebrating 30 y~rs of service
· . to our commumty.

JeffThornton, Meigs County Commis..
sion president, said last week the board has
received estimates from a number of con- .
tractors for the sandblasting and painting of:
the courthouse exterior. He estimates the : :
cost at about $35,000.
The balance of the state funds will be
used to renovate the interior of the court.:
house with paint and carpeting. to light the

Plene- ludpt. U

(

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference.

•

For more information on Home Care services,
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,,

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