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MPO

River Rec ·
parade lineup

SPORIS

Still pla}ting after
all these years

Ripken's baseball
legaq .

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Accident closes·p rt of state highway

e1gs
1nes
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rema1n
n

Youth injured.in
separate incident

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Bv KEVIN KELLY
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

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GALLIPOLIS- Ohio 160
between the city limits and
Bulaville Pike was closed for
1-112 hours Friday as firefighters and emergency crews
coped with a one-car accident that n~ptured a pair of
natural gas lines ,next · to
Nationwide
Insurance
Agency.
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The .car's driver, Charles R.
Watson, 30, .(\partq1ent , 30
Bulaville Pike, Gall' olis, was
taken from the s ne of the 4
p.m. cc;ident' b Gallia County
o the Gallip'Olis
par}cfront, where he was transported to St. Mary's Hospital
in Huntington, W.Va., by
MedFlight.
The hospital had no record
of treatment on Watson when
contacted Saturday.
·Gallia-Meigs -Post of the
State Highway Patrol reported that Watson was northbound when the ca'r he drove
went off the right side ' of the
rnad. It struc~ the gas '!i{les, a EMERGENCY RESPONSE (top) ;_Gallipolis
telephone box ~nd a utility . firefighters Joe Carter, left, a~d Mike Fulks
. pole b~for~ commg. to a stop. _· sprayed w13ter on the wreckage of a car that
Galhpoh~ volunteer fire- broke .two gas lines before hitting a utility
fighters arnved as natyral gas pole on Ohio 1.60 near Gallipolis Friday..A
flow:ed from broken lmes.. portion of the highway was closed until the
EMS staff extracted Watson damaged lines were shut off. (Kevin Kelly
from the . c~r and R ed'• · .photo:;)
,.
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Ro!len Garage, Bidwell,
removed the vehicle before TAKEN RIOM SCEfiiE (rl&amp;ht) - Charles R.
Columbia Gas of Ohio Watson; 30, Gallipolis, was transported by
staffers coul~ shut off the 'Gallia County EMS to an ambulance aftet
lines.
the car he drove struck two_gas lines and a
. Gallipolis Fire 'Chief Bob utility pole Friday on Ohio 160. Watson was
Donnally said firefighters have airlifted to St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington,

PI•M IH Accident. AS

Business as
usual pending
AEPlCONSOL sale:
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BY BRIAN J •. REED
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

WILKESVILLE - American E;lectric
Power will operate Southetp Ohio Coal /
Co.'s Meigs Mines until a deal with
· CONSOL Energy is finalized, an AEP
spokesman said, who added Friday that
CONSOL will probably keep the mines : :
open.
AEP wa~ expected to close the mines .
effective Saturday.
Iri April, AEP announced the pending ..
sale of the Meigs operation to CONSOL, · · ·
and said employees had been given notice : .:
of the sale ·and notice of their termina- : :
tion as AEP ,employees effective "on o'r-- : :about .JI;Vle 30."
:
"O'n or about JUire 30 means just that
- on or_about," AEP's Vicki Michalski :
said Friday, "-AEP will continue to operate the mines as it. has been doing, until :· :
the~ deal with CONSOL is closed."
· ·
Michalski said Friday that a date for
closjng the sale is not yet known.
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PleaH ... Min•,AI

W.Va., authorities
.,. said. ' ·
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limits higher education·
Dorsey said.
"It's frustrating, it's sad
and it prevents our institu- ·•
tions 'from
providing
access," he said. "Ohio is
still · behind the national
average on those going to
college.
. "We've made some
progress, but Ohio is an
under-educated
state,"

RIO GMNDE -The _word on higher
education in Ohio as the state's new tw&lt;;&gt;year budget takes effect today is "frustrating,"
the president of University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College
believes.
·
A red~c'tio~ in funding for the state's 'colleges anci universi~ies impedes progress made
toward improving tM state's attendance rate
and is forcing tuition increases, Dr. Barry M.

l)orsey

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Festiyal contests ce·lebrate youth

.Dorsey:·New budget .
Bv KEVIN KELLY .
TIMES.SENTINEt STAFF .

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PJe•M He Budget. AI

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DoTSON

This year's early regi$tratiort
closed on June 23. However,
GALLIPOLIS -The River
organizers -wm still ai::cept
Recreation Festiv.il has been a
entries the day of the contest
place for kids to .shine and have
from 8:30 a.m. to 9:20 a.m., ·
fu.n .whether it's with the games
with the contest beginning
prompdy at 9:30 a.m.
and rides or participating in .the
Late entries can be ma4e for
Baby/ lot Sparkl"r and Little
. an entry fee of$15.'
Miss and Mr. Firecracker con~
Each child entered must be a
· tests. : · ·
.
·
The Sp~rkler contest was t.mts in 1996, and last year we resident of Gallia County. must
be dressed in sportswear or"Play
developed in 1996 by Sherry had 164 on the main stage clothes
(no frills or dressy outfits,
Maxwell, who continues to we are hoping to top this numplease).
chair the event.&lt; _
ber in 2001 :·said Maxwell.
The age ~roups for · the
"We started out with a mini- ·
The event this year is· sponstate in the park 'and 8Q contes- sore4 by ee Ca Day Care.
Ple•M ... Felllv81, AI.
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

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HIJh:IOs
Low: 101
Details, A3

POINT PLEASANT REGATTA
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UTTLE TWIRLERS'(Ieft)-

. calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

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Even the littlest members
of Mason County's USA
Twirlers kept marching and
twirling as the· end of the
parade dfew near Friday
night.

cs

02-7
insert
M

A6
B1-8

SPACESHIP. (right)- Shari
and Bekah Cochran enjoyed
the parade as they •flew·
ii-""-~ along Main Street in a golf
.:..:::...-_. cart spaceship .

v1ce ........""

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""St_..o._.c. ,ks..______,..D'-Ll :::C:::C.,~mp~,..,..;_

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Recreation Festival
The 36th Annual River Recreation Festival ·
will be held. in Gallipolis City Park July 4-7.

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MEDICAL CENTER

Free screenings and health. information will be
available at the Holzer Medical Center Mobile-Unit. '
We'll be looking for you!

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Discover the ·Holzer Difference.
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180 units set for July 7River Rec Festival parade
J~q

'time':' jmtineJ

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Brandeben'r (Second "venue)
2
Vl81nam Valllnlns of 1\rneriCounty Chamber of Com- ca Ctllor GUild (Dukes)
merce ahd the River Recre3
Parade Malshai-Samanarion Festival Coiil!llittee have 1ha KOlSIIY (Second "venue)
4
announced the line-up· ,for this
lnfoCialon
(Second
"venue)
year's Fourth of July Parade
5
VFW (Du!&lt;es)
scheduled to begin at 6 p.m.
6
Soulhem
"&amp;-llntique
Autos (Second "venue)
july 7 in downtown Gallipolis.
7
Soulhem
M-Mtique
Beginning at 4 p.m., parrici- f&lt;utos (Second "venue)
8
Soulhem
M-"ntique
Pants will line up at these'loca- f&lt;utos
(Second "venue) .'
___!(Qns:
_ g
_ SouiherrL...-Asull
• Aoats, trucks and other Autos (Second "venue)
I vehicles _ begt·nning at the
10
Soulhem
M-!.ntlque
"utos (Second Avenue)
·
·
intenecrion of Upper Second
11
Soulhem
As-,.ntique
Avenue and SyCllfllore Street, Autos (Second Avenue)
·12
Soulhem
As-Antique
continuing to Mill Creek and Autos (Second AveAue)
up Ohio Avenue (Second
13
Soulhem
As-Antique
Avenue). No vehicles will line Autos (Second Avenue)
up on Mill Creek.
.
14
Soulhem
M-Mtique
Autos (Second Avenue)
•·Motorcydes, horses, etc. 15
Soulhem
As-AAtique
th e ·.intersection of Spruce Autos (Second Avenue)
16
Street and Fourth Avenue.
Soulhem
Autos (Second
Avenue) A&amp;-llntique
• Walking units - Dl.lkes
17
Soulhem
As-Antique
.Cleaners, Second Avenue;
Autos (Second Avenue)
· 18
Soulhem
As-Antique
Parade coordinators ask par- Autoe (Second Avenue)
ricipants to maintain a courte19 · Soulhem
As-Antlque
.
d
d
r·
n
)'
d
Autos
(Second
Avenue).
ous attltu e ur g me-up an
20
Soulhem
As-Antique
parade. Participants also are Autos (Second Avenue) ·
expected to abide by the fol21
· Galla County Sheriffs Dept
(SecondAvenue)
Iowing rules:
22
Gallia Counly Sheriffs Dept
• Participants will not be (Second Avenue)
.ermitted to throw items of
23
Gallla Couniy Sheriffs Dept
(Second Avenue)
h
d
ny type to t e crow ;
24
Gallla County Sheriffs Dept
• No ~up shall be 'permit- (Second Avenue)
·
,ted to stop along the parade
25
Gallia Counly Sheriffs Dept
-"
($econdAvenue)
.
rou e an d penorm.
· 28
Gallia Couniy EMS UnK 1
rouP,S bre:ilciing these rules (Second Avenue)
will be subject to exclusions
27
Galli&amp; Counly EMS UnK 2
(Second Avenue)
fro m fu ture parades · Pa
. rki·ng · 28
Galli&amp; Couniy EMS UnK 3
will be available at First . (Second A11e11ue)
Church of the Nazarene for '
29
Gallla Fire Dept, Unit 1
.di
"
(Second
Avenue)
th ose n ng uoats. : ·
30
Gallla Fire Dept, UnK 2
The parade route IS as fol- (Second Avenue)
lows:·
,
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Guyan Fire Department
.
Second Avenue/
Spruce ~SecondAvenue)
. 32
Guyan _Fire Department
Stteet intersection down Sec- Second Avenue)
ond Avenue to Court Stteet.
33
Great Lakes Pro Jet Ski .
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cera (Second Avenue)
·
-Left on Court Street to Fmt
34
Gallipolis HOG-HMey
Avenue. Left on First Avenue Owne!8 Asaoolallon (Spruca/Fourth)
ending above·rivedlont.
35
Scenic Hilla (Second
r. th "A C . Avenue)
The line"up 10r. e
e138
Galla Couniy Shrtne Club
· ebrarion of Our ' River. Her- (Second Avenue) Uttle Cars
· "
d •
(Spruce/Fourth)
. ,tp.ge para e.
37
Gallpclla Chlropnldic Cen. 1
Chief of Pollc-Roger ter (Second Avenue)

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Cuiiiiiilssion

Youth talent
ly
sel Ju 7

Date

Baskets for sale

UICinge

K·9

Korp-4-H

Yard sale
CENTERVILLE .- Thurman Vega Parish's annual Giant
Yard Sale is July 6 and 7 from 9
a.m. until 3 p.m. at Thurman
Gran~.
·
Baked . goods and hot do(p
will also be sold. For inore information, call1-877-540-1100.

h

jng a dump truck @WOed by
Greep Township, was west.. bound when ·he lost control,
went of!: the right side of the _
road, crossed the center twice
and overturned onto its passenger side.
The truck then struck an
embankment, according 'to the

Driver inJUiad

report.

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The truck was severely damaged, and Barker was cited for
failwe to control.
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luMMII
Clearance

SALE
Going

No·w t

• ATV Imllqltry'~ ··ir~t .
Liquirl·(:ooled, 90; o33co .
V·Twin En~ine.
el\lo!lt I'ower anrl Moqt Torque.
• Automatic Tran•mi~~ion,
• Selecta1&gt;le 4WD.
• Aggre!i~Ive Stylhtj!.
e ATV ltuiltMtry'~ ·
Seale&lt;\
- )!ulti-Di!IC llraking Sy~l~mt .

......,•• It , •• kaow or .. '"'" Ia I
otol')', &lt;all the aewaroom 11 (7&lt;10) 4461342 or Po011roy: (741) 992-215!. We will
&lt;bock you lalol'llllllloa ud 11ako 1
&lt;Orroctloallwlmllled.

t
02001 Ktwuakl Malon Cofi»., U.S.A. Kawuakl ATVt
l&lt;riwuald also recommend~ IMtlll ATV rideta
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departtnent cQntfitCted with, 1\merican
Management' Systems. the report said.
. . al con o·tct-01..
. It suggests th at cnmm
mterest charges could be brought against
Tompkins, who held the Cabinet post
fro 1993
1998
d
h
m
.t o .
un er t en-Gov.
George V.Vomovtch, and Donna Givens,
a consultant who was "instrumental" in
facilitating the unbid contracts.
Charle~ forw~rded the 9:2-pag~&gt; report
to Franklin ·county Prosecutor Ron
O'Brien, who sai9,he·will decide within·
the next month whether to present it to
a grand jury.
"There's nothing that w.e didn 't
expect,"Tompkins' attorney, Larry James,
said·Friday."There's no criminal conduct
on the part of Mr. Tompkins."
, Accenture says it's in compliance with
state law. The company sa1d G1vens and

her attorney declined to be interviewed.
Charles began his investigation in
. . an anonymous
November after rece1vmg
1etter all egmg
·
t hat ..,.omp k.ms steere d a
Ia ·
_
rge welfare reform contract to Accenture.
.
Accenrure, formerly Andersen Consulun.g, has rece1ved a total of S60 malhon m unb1d state contracts, s?me of.
whiCh were steered by Tompkms, the
reP.Ort said.
Tompkins first hired Accenture in
1996 - through a $49,500 unbid contract - to help Ohio implement welfare
reform. The compa1iy later was hired to
develop Ohio Work&gt;, an Internet job· matching program that recently has been
criticized by both businesses and jobseekers as inefficient.

Inc.

&lt;&gt;~ •·· ~··K~: ·

Sunny Pt. C~

(AP) - A former
human _s erVICeS d~rector ~mg.ht have
been
trymg to get htrnself .3job
.
. . when he
steered multtmtllJOn-dollar
tmproperly
'd
u1 .
b
un 1 state contracrs to, a cons tmg
company for whtch he later worked th
.
.
., e
state government watchdog satd Fnday.
Mter leaving state government, Arnold
Tompkins also inappropriately tried to
lobby a top Taft a~ministration official to
ens11re future busmess for Chtcago-based
Accenture, state Inspector General
Thomas Char)es· wrote. .
"We were ·unable to conclude that his
acts were intended to be in the best
interest ~f the state," wrote Charles.
"Rather, It seemsclearthathewas merely attemptmg to c~~ry _favor and guaran- ·
tee future busmess Wtth Acce~ture and
another company Tompktns former

Cloudy •

Showert:

T·ltOI:ms

Rain

Flurries .

Snow

Absences concern court

Algae also had been found in Lake Shawnee, a private lake outside of nearby Jamestown, forcing officials to. close the lake.

Ice

CLEVELAND (AP) - A Cuyahoga County judge .who has
been criticized for missing nearly a year-and~a-half of work is now
under investigation by the Ohil' Supreme Court's disciplinary arm.
County Common Pleas Court officials told The Plain Dealer
CLEVELAND (AP) - A pastor was indicted Friday on charges
that they have received subpoenas from an investigator who is try- that she bilked a woman out of $160,000. The woman had won
BY THE ASSoCIATED PRESS
80s. West wind around 10 ing to determine how much work Judge Daniel 0. Corrigan has .the money as part of a settlement in a medical malpractice case
The National Weather Ser;- mph.
missed.
filed because she had lost her limbs.
vice says high pressure off the . Sunday night...Partly cloudy · Jonathan Coughlan, the Supreme Court's disciplinary counsel,
Merita D. White, 56, of East Cleveland, is accused in Cuyahoga
southeast coast will continue with a chance of showers and would not confirm whether his office had opened a case against County Common Ple.as Court of taking money from Mattie Cunc
to pump warm and humid air thunderstorms . Low 60 to 65. Corrigan, 67, of suburban Solon .
·
ningharn, 38, of Cleveland Heights. •
·
. into the tri-county area . this
Extended forecast:
The newspaper ~artier this year obtained records showing that
Cunningham said she lent the money to White in Novel)lber
d
Corrtgan
nussed
all
but
three
weeks
of
work
between
late
1999
weekend. A . cold front will · . Monday... Partly
1999.
White said it was a gift to Grace Apostqlic Church lor the
1
.d
c ou Y· and April 2001. He also missed about seven h10nths in 1998. ~o~- purchase of a parson~ge.
approach late Sunday. Cooler H. h . h
..
. WI·u settIe .m behind the Th
tg md t e pmt 80s. d A ngan
.
has bl arne d h'ts .a·bsences on heart probl ems.
atr
Assistant Prosecutor Dan Kasaris said White was indicted on a
1 1
fiont for the start of the new h es ayf...h ar t Y c odu hy.
·
~ore
s,erious theft charge because of a state law that carr1'es tough· er
.
-c ance o s owers an t unk
k
worwee.
d
d '
h
lift ·~
,penalties for bilking the elderly or the disabled . .
The cold front will increase erstorms u~mg t e night.
the chan ce of showers and Low m the mtd 60s and h1gh
CEDARVILLE (AP) - A water-boil advisory iss,ued for residents
in this southwest Ohio village after algae was found in its
thunderstorms Sunday. Highs in the lower 80s. ,
will in the mid 80s.
Fourth
of July... Partly reservoir has been lifted.
HAMILTON (AP) - · A former .county elections employee
The village's 3,200 residents had been told Tuesday not to drink
Sunrise Sunday will be at cloudy with a chance of showaccused of improprieties in political party fund-raising has been
6:07 a.m.
ers and thunderstorms. Low in their water after a municipal employee spotted algae in the reser- fined $1,000 by tlte Ohio Elecrions.Commission.
Weather forecast:
the mid 60s and high 80 86. vorr.
After Wright State University researchers determined that the · The state commission leviep the fine against Philip Morrical Jr.,
Sunday... Hazy sunshine. A -. Thur~day....Partly
cloudy
a furmer special assistant to the Butler County Board of Elections.
40 .percent chance of showers . with a chance of showers and algae bloom found in the village's water treatment plant Was nontold Wednesday to boil water for one minute. The commissimi said Morrical violated. Ohio elections law by
and thunderstorms in the thllnderstorms. Low 60 to 65 toxic, residents
using someon~ else's name when he trujde contributions to the
before drinking it or using it, to cook.
afternoon. High in the mid and high in the lower 80s.
county's Democratic Party.
·

Pastor faces theft charge

Warm, hazy weather continues

Authorities

Ex-elections worker fined

to

were

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C1nannati mayor says he was unaware of law finn's contrad
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"It stinks to high heaven. I don't know
Luken said Friday that he is not
if it's illeg;tl, but 'it's improper:'
. inmlved with the effort by - ihe 29Luken pushed six months ago to create employee firm KMK Consulting, where
a port authority to oversee $800 million he is a consultant.
in redevelopment along the cirys Ohio
"It's a big company and a big law firm .
River shore. Now; a subsidiary of Keating I never spoke to anybody about it," the
Muething &amp; Klekarnp has been aw.mled mayor said Friday. "I had nothing to do
a $30,000 contract to lobby for the with it."
agency.
In Api:il, the port authority hired KMK

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to lobby for state and federal funds.
- KMK also represents Cincinnati 2012
Inc., an organization trying to bpng the
2012 Olympic Garnes to the city, and
Lone Star Industries, which wants to
build a cement factory in the Cincinnati
neighborhood of Sayler Park. Each client
recently has had business before the City
Council, of which Luken is a member.

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£jtt'Md;"*
(/Ileal! it&amp;
at!~ SaJe/ .

fJ.t./4 ~4.

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Camp·explores hardship·
of teen-age par~nting .

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Polley

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02001

Sunday. July 1, 1001

on

A force lio huge. A fury M ~trong i~ packerl in~irle the KawaAaki
l'rairie~ 650 ATV. It's powererl by tfie_inrlu!!tty'A only liquifl-cooleil
V-Twin, M the mO!It torque anrl power come~~. nunbling frorQ itR pipe.
With ~~electallle 4WD and automatic traJl!llllisRion bnilt right in, a
Aingle tum Qf the key will tell you, domination i!l inevitable.

0.~ lllil....,.ro lot Ill !lOria II to bt

~BUS

CINCINNATI (AP) Mayor
Charles Luken says he. was unaware the
law firm where he w&lt;irks had ties with an
agency he helped create to·oversee development ·of the city's riverfront.
.
Luken's ties to a lobbyipg contract .
obtaine(! by the firm may noJ be illegal,
but it looks bad, said Chris Finney, a polit7
ical activist.

· CENTENARY :.._ A onevehicle accident on Ohio 141'
Thursday sent a Patriot man to
a local hospital, Gallia-Mei~
Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.
Paul F. Barker Sr., 31, 4704 .
Patriot Road, was transported to
Holzer Medical Center by private vehicle following the 4:47
p.m. accident, according to the
patrol.
Troopers said Barker, operat-

Reader Services

Sunday, July 1
forecast for

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Official may have used position .to secu·re fut~e job .

Ohio weather
.. .

Club

~RIEFS

divisions will be held.The giade Corrunittee will sell the same
of the oldest performer in a basket during the festival at an
group determines the age cate- additional cost. They will also
gory. Contestants are judged on have 250 baskets. The basket is
GALLIPOLIS- City Com- originality, stage presence, talent ·handmade by Royce Craft Bas: rnissiO!I~ regular monthly meet- and crowd appeal.
ket Co., Coshocton.
.
· ins is Tuesday at ·7 p.m. in th~ Costumes are optional. No Baskets are being sold on a
: Gallipo~s Municipal · cours- act can be longer than fuur min- 6nt-come, tint-serve basis.
room, City Manager E. V. Clarke utes. All cassettes or CDs mwt When all 500 are gone, they will
Jr. announc.ed.
. - be cued and ready.
not be II!Orde~. All proceeds
Each participant will be given fro~ the sale go to Gallia CounA work session will·be held at
6:15 p.m. with EmergenCy One a certificate: The top two place ty. Farm Bureau Scholarship
: on the purchase of a 6re winnen in each age category in Fund fur a Gallia County. stu: : · pumper, he added. .
~th solo and enJemble divi- · dent.
..
sions will be awarded a trophy
..
Orden c•n be taken by phone
AI:' .contestants mus_t check m at 1-800-777:.9226. The pickup
'L
,;.
·
)VIth the c~test director on~ date is July 6 fiom-3-6 p.m. at
. 5110\V
~ hour pnor to the shows C.H. McKenzie Agricultural
~tar1.
Center.
· GALLIPOLIS - The
· Any entr)' received after
ann~al you~ talent sh~
Monday will be disqualified For
...L'?alli~lis River Recrea?o
a complete list of contest rules,
rival IS July 7 at the pilrldi:ont, or questions, contact Kim CanaRIO GRANDE - Village
startingat 2:30 p.~. on ~e main day at 446-1875 (days), or 446- Council's regular monthly
stage. The event IS 'agam spon- 7538 (evening~) .
me~ring ~be July 10 at 7 p.m.
sored by Gallipolis Emblem
in the
Municipal Building,
Club 199.
Clerk Marva Peck announced.
Entry is free for all children
'
ages 3-18. Preregistration is
· GALLIPOLIS
Galli a
required · and the deadline is County Farm Bureau, in conMonday. Entry forms are avail- . junction with Bob Evans Farms,
hie at Empire furniture CO., is taking orders for the fourth
Gallia County Chamber of edition of the Bob Evans Farm
Commerce, Johnson's Super- Festival Commemorative Bar ..
market, area FQodlands and ket.
Kroger.
The "Mini Harvest" basket is
Age categories are preschool, $34, tax and protector included.
.3-5, and grades K-3, 4-7 and 8- Only 250 baskets are awilable.
12. Both solo and ensemble
The Bob Evans Farm Festival

¥

ondAvenue)
149 Green B·Ball Teams (Sec·
(Dukes)
•
112 Gallipolis Dairy Queen ondAvenye)
150 Green B-Ball Teams (Sac·
(Second Avenue)
113 Providence Missionary ondAvenue)
151 Green B·Bell Teams (Sac·
Baptist Church (Second Avenue)
ondAvenue)
114 ·UI Miss Gallia County152 Green B-Ball Teams (Sac·
Shalin Colmer (Second Avenue)
ondAvenue)
115 Lll Mr.• Gallla County
153 Gallia County Gospel Sing
Branson Barr (Second Avenue)
116 Miss Gallia Counly &amp; 2001 Association (Second Avenue)
154 Houcks Plumbing and
Conteslllf'IS (Second "venue)
117 Will . Power Gymnastics Heating (Second Avenue)
155 South Gallia Cheerleaders
(Second AvenUe) Walkere (Dukes)
(Second
Avenue)
118 WYVK The Frog (Second
156
Soulh Gallia HS Drill Team
Avenue)
(Second
Avenue)
119 Bidwell T-ballerS (Second
157 GalliaSoccerCiub (Dukes)
Avenue)
155 Green 3 T-ballers (Second
120 4H Junior Leaders (Second .
"venue)
Avenue)
159 Reds Bollen Garage (Sec·
121 VFW Ladies Auxiliary (Sec·
ond Avenue)
ondAvenue)
122 l;foward Mullen-Antique · 100 Reds Bollen Garage (Second Avenue)
Sheriffs Car (Second Avenue)
161 Reds Rolle!) Garage (Sac·
123 Soulhwest Junior High
ond
Avenue)
Cheerleaders (Second Avenue)
162 Southeastern Equipment
124 Superior Detailing (Second
Co. (Sacorld Avenue)
.
Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
163
Gallia
County
Heallh
125 GAP Power Tumbling (Sac·
Department (Second Avenue)
ond Avenue).
164 Cheer Stalion All Stars
128 :l/17 Fourtli Hawk Battalion
(Second
Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
Ohio National Guard (Second
165 Rodney Pike Church of
Avenue)
God (Second Avenue)
127 Adam Sick (Spruce)
· 186 . Rio Grande Fire Depa~- .
· 128 James McQuaid (Spruce)
ment (Second Avenue)
- 129 Erhie McKinney (Spruce)
167 Rio Grande Fire Depart·
130 Ronald Wolford (Spruce)
131 Kyger Creek Junior High ment (Sacorld Avenue)
1&amp;e Rio Grande Baseball A·ball
Cheerleaders (Second Avenue)
Team
(Second Avenue)
132 River Valley JV Cheertead169 Oh lhe Road to Reading
ers (Second Avenlie)
133 River Valley VarsKy Cheat· (Dikes)
170 Life Ambulance (Second
leaders (Sacoud Avenue)
134 River Valley VarsKy Cheer· Avenue)
171 Vinton Fire Depa~m ent
leaders (Second Avenue)
135 River Valley High SchoOl (Second Avenue)
172 Harrison Township Fire
Band (Dukes)
.
138 River Valley Dance &amp; Drill. Dept (Second Avenue)
173 Gallia Fire Oepa~ment ,
Team (Dukea)
137 ) Johnnie fl!leg.le . ·.(Second . 1Jnit3 (Second Avenue)·
Avenue ·
174 Gallia Fire Department,
138 Bill Peck (Second Avenue) · Unit4 (Second Avenue)
175 Gallla Fire Department,
139 Henry Myers (Second
UnH 5 (Second Avenue)
Avenue)
176 D &amp; L AVs (Second
140 Country Friends 4H Group
Avenue)
(Second Avenue)
177 Tribe 4·H Club (Second
141 Hannan Trace Athletics
Avenue)
(Second Avenue)
178 Faith Baptist Church (Sac·
142 Gallia Couniy Stars Chaar
Center (Second Avenue) Walkers ond Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
(Dukes)
·
179 Paul Shafter Equestrian
143 Gary Hartman (Second (Spruce/Four)h)
180 Jason
Clagg
Avenue)
144 UnlversKy of Rio Grande (Spruce/Fourth)
(Second A11e11ue)
145 UnlvemKy of Rio Gr~~nde
No vehicle traffic will be
(Second Avenue)
·
148 UnlversKy of Rio Grande allowed along the parade route
Swlm.Team (Second Avenue) Walkers after 5:15p.m. until ~he parade
(Dukes)
147 French CitY Twirlers (Sac· is finished.
ond Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
148 Green B·Ball Teams (Sac·
111

38
Gold Wing Road Riders Runner Up (Second Avenue)
74
2001 Miss River Rae 3rd
Aasoc. (Spn.a/Fourth)
39
Ohio River Dri~ers Jeep Runner Up (Second Avenue)
75
2001 Miss River Rae ConClub (Second Avenue)
· 40
Ohio River Drifters Jeep lestant (Second Avenue)
76
2001 Miss River Rae Con- .
Club (Second Avenue)
41
Ohio River Drifters Jeep testant (Second Avenue)
77
2001 Miss River Bee Con·
Club (Second Avenue)
42
Ohio River Drifters Jeep lostant (Second Avenue)
78
2001 Miss River Rae ConClub (Second Avenue)
43
Ohio River Drifters Jeep testant (Second Avenue)
79
2001 Miss River Rae Con·
Club (Second Avenue)
. 44
Ohio River, Drifters Jeep testant (Second Avenue)
80
2001 Miss River Rae ConClub (Second Avenue)
45
Ohio River Driftel'.i _,j§l!p testant (Second Avenue)
81
2001 'Miss River Rae ConClub Second Avenue)
Ohio River Drifters Jeep testant (Second Avenue)
82
Starlettes Baton Corps
"""YV&gt;rl
Avenue)
Ohio River Drifters Jeep (Second Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
83
Wee Care (Spruce)
/S&lt;lCOild Avenue) 84
Soapbox Derby Champion
Ohlo River Drifters Jeep~raun Lyn (Spruca/Fourth)
Clu SecondAvenue)
85
Slate Senator Michael
4
Ohio River Drifters Jeep
Shoemaker (Second Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
Congressman Ted Strick·
50
Ohio River Drifters Jeep . 88
land (Second Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
87
OelllOCilllic Party (Second
51
Ohio River Dri~ers Jeep
· Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
88
Gellis Co. Convention &amp;
52
Ohio River Drifters Jeep
Visitors Bureau (Second Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
89
GAHS Alumni Association
53
Ohio River Drifters Jeep
(Second Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
Club (Second Avenue)
.
90
GAHS Band (Dukes)
54 · Golden Corral Restaurant
91
GAHS Varsity Cheertead(Second Avenue)
·
55
Second Slory Theatre Sti~· ers (Sacorld Avenue)
92
GAHS VarsKy Cheerteadwalkers (Dukes)
55
Galla Counly Girt scouts, ers. (SecOnd Avenue)
93 ,GAHS Bth &amp; 9th Grade
walking (Dukes)
.
~7
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Cheerteaders (Dukes)
· 94 •
101.5 The River (Second
(Second Avenue)
.
55
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenue)
115
Gallla First (Second
(Second Avenue)
, 59
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
96
Gallla County Aepubl~n
tSecond Avenue)
00
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Party (Second Avenue)
97
Gallia Counly Republican
(Second Avenue)
61
Cerrnichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Party (Second Avenue)
(Second Avenua)
98
Ole C'ar Club (Second
'
62
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenue)
(Second Avenua)
99
Ole Car Club (Second
53
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenue;
(Second AvGt!ue)
100 Ole Car Club (SeCond
64
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenu&amp;
(Second Avenue)
101 Cub Scouts Pack 205
55 · Jill Burd &amp; Tim Howard (Spruce/Fourth)
(Second Avenue)
102 Cub Scouts Pack 204
86
Mountaineer 2-:cylinder (~Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
103 Boy Scout Troop 222 (Sac·
67 . Mountaineer . 2-:cyllnder ond Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
104 Belville Family (Second
&amp;e
Chamber . of Commerce Avenue)
Prasldeni-Ciyde Evans (Second
1OS Belville Family (Second
Avenue)
Avenuer
105 Belville 'Family (Second
69
2001 Ul' Mr. &amp; Miss Are·
Avenue)
cracker- (Second Avenue) · . ·
70
2000 Miss River Recre·
107 Belville Family (Second
ali&lt;Jr&gt;4jlcole Lucas
(Second Avenue)
Avenue)
108 Belville Family (Second ·
71
2001 Miss. River Rec Avenue)
Queen (Second Avenue)
109 Belville Family (Second
72
2001 Miss River Rae 1st Avenue)
110 Belville Family (Second
Runner Up (Second Avenue)
73• 2001 Miss River Rae 2nd Avenue)

TRI-COUNTY
_,.

~

OhiO

Sunday. July 1,1001

•

.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Hill said the program is
When baby Caleb threw up his funded through a wellness
lunch on the sweater of the block grant of federal and state
--'new camper, camp director money.
• Lowell Herschberger smiled.
Annie J. Ross-Womack
For Herschberger, the more teaches at the camp and runs a
'temperamental the tot and col- group home for pregnant
.icky the baby, the better.
teens, whe are required to
Herschberger's Baby Camp · attend the program.
program is designed to prevent
"These kids get to hear the
teen pregnancy by providing message from kids their own
at-risk teem chances to explore age," she said. "To see these
the difficulties ofparenting.
young moms lugging babieS
"They think babies are so ai\d baby-ba~ off the bus each
cute and how wonderful it morning and hearing about
would be to have a baby;' Her~ how hard· their lives are and '
·sc~berger said Friday. "You how easily it can happen to
have to give them a reality them makes a huge difference."
check:'
When Herschberger thinks a
Although the babies' moth- camper is getring,t_oo attached ers are nearby at all rimes, par- to a particular bab~ is not
• ticipants in the six-day "Oh, getting the intended message,
'Boy, Babies" program tel)d to he bri'.!~ in his secret weapon
all the babies' needs and C¥n - three-year-old Caleb.
,
. "Caleb is very .high mainteS40 stipends.
The ·program also pays teen nance and is running around
mothers ·an hourly rate to . getting into one kind of trou- ,
bring. in their babies and relai:e ble or another all the time,'' ·
·their stories of single parenting. Herschberger said as a camper
Jennifer, a '17-year-old · wqo , tried to pick up Caleb, w~o
didn't want her last name used had purposely gone limp on
for this story, got pregnant last the. fioor to make the task
year.
more difficult.
• "The hardest thing is the
loneliness," 'she told the
campers. " How much fuil is· a
.friend that always is carrying a .
baby around? I can't go to the
clubs:· •
Connie Hill, marketing
'director for Catholic Social
Services, said some campers are
selected from referrals by
school counselors. Others .
enroll after seeing advertisements in neighborhoods Y~ith
· high teen-pre'gnancy rates.•
COUrts also . sometimes order
teens to participate.

---

Corps schedules-hearings
to
ecosystem
HUNTINGTON (AP)Public hearirigs are scheduled
in six states this summer on a
$307 million proj ect to .'
restore · fi sh and wildlife to
pans of the Ohio River that
have been damaged by years
of commercial 'shipping.
" We developed it as a
superhighway of commerce.
It has served that purpose
very well," said Steve Wright,
public affairs officer · for the
corps's Huntington. District.
" Now we are taking a look at
bringing some of the ecosystems· back and trying to
improve on the Ohio River
.fdr environmental purposes."
Hearings · are scheduled
July 10 in Metropolis, Ill.,
July 12 in Evansville, Ind.,
July 31 in Parkersburg, Aug. 1
m Monaca, Pa., Aug. 6 in ·

Covington; Ky., and Aug. 7 in
~rtsmouth, Ohio.
The program involves• all
six Ohio River states: Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio,
West Virginia and Pennsylvama.
With its network of 20
locks and darns along its 981c
mile course, the Ohio is a
major commercial route for
shipping bulk commodities.
The river and its fioodplains have been altered over
the years, the corps concluded in a study last year. The
corps wants to repair some of
the damage ~y restoring
10,000 acres of bottomland
hardwood .forests · along the
river; 25,000 acres of wetlands; 100 miles of shoreline
habitat; and 40 'islands.

·There Is Still Time To Register
For Snmmer Quarter
Call Today!!
446-4367 · or 1-800-214-0452

Ga1JjM.nlls care~~ fnllePJe

~t4.Qalo ..

II~Cc~

ALL

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•

. · ~tareers Cl0se'1o HOme" ~
Spring Valley Plaz.a • GalllpoUa

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.
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'

'

�•

•

e•~~--------~~~
~ai~Oll~
'
--------~~h~g~e~~
180 units set for July 7River Rec Festival parade
J~q

'time':' jmtineJ

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Brandeben'r (Second "venue)
2
Vl81nam Valllnlns of 1\rneriCounty Chamber of Com- ca Ctllor GUild (Dukes)
merce ahd the River Recre3
Parade Malshai-Samanarion Festival Coiil!llittee have 1ha KOlSIIY (Second "venue)
4
announced the line-up· ,for this
lnfoCialon
(Second
"venue)
year's Fourth of July Parade
5
VFW (Du!&lt;es)
scheduled to begin at 6 p.m.
6
Soulhem
"&amp;-llntique
Autos (Second "venue)
july 7 in downtown Gallipolis.
7
Soulhem
M-Mtique
Beginning at 4 p.m., parrici- f&lt;utos (Second "venue)
8
Soulhem
M-"ntique
Pants will line up at these'loca- f&lt;utos
(Second "venue) .'
___!(Qns:
_ g
_ SouiherrL...-Asull
• Aoats, trucks and other Autos (Second "venue)
I vehicles _ begt·nning at the
10
Soulhem
M-!.ntlque
"utos (Second Avenue)
·
·
intenecrion of Upper Second
11
Soulhem
As-,.ntique
Avenue and SyCllfllore Street, Autos (Second Avenue)
·12
Soulhem
As-Antique
continuing to Mill Creek and Autos (Second AveAue)
up Ohio Avenue (Second
13
Soulhem
As-Antique
Avenue). No vehicles will line Autos (Second Avenue)
up on Mill Creek.
.
14
Soulhem
M-Mtique
Autos (Second Avenue)
•·Motorcydes, horses, etc. 15
Soulhem
As-AAtique
th e ·.intersection of Spruce Autos (Second Avenue)
16
Street and Fourth Avenue.
Soulhem
Autos (Second
Avenue) A&amp;-llntique
• Walking units - Dl.lkes
17
Soulhem
As-Antique
.Cleaners, Second Avenue;
Autos (Second Avenue)
· 18
Soulhem
As-Antique
Parade coordinators ask par- Autoe (Second Avenue)
ricipants to maintain a courte19 · Soulhem
As-Antlque
.
d
d
r·
n
)'
d
Autos
(Second
Avenue).
ous attltu e ur g me-up an
20
Soulhem
As-Antique
parade. Participants also are Autos (Second Avenue) ·
expected to abide by the fol21
· Galla County Sheriffs Dept
(SecondAvenue)
Iowing rules:
22
Gallia Counly Sheriffs Dept
• Participants will not be (Second Avenue)
.ermitted to throw items of
23
Gallla Couniy Sheriffs Dept
(Second Avenue)
h
d
ny type to t e crow ;
24
Gallla County Sheriffs Dept
• No ~up shall be 'permit- (Second Avenue)
·
,ted to stop along the parade
25
Gallia Counly Sheriffs Dept
-"
($econdAvenue)
.
rou e an d penorm.
· 28
Gallia Couniy EMS UnK 1
rouP,S bre:ilciing these rules (Second Avenue)
will be subject to exclusions
27
Galli&amp; Counly EMS UnK 2
(Second Avenue)
fro m fu ture parades · Pa
. rki·ng · 28
Galli&amp; Couniy EMS UnK 3
will be available at First . (Second A11e11ue)
Church of the Nazarene for '
29
Gallla Fire Dept, Unit 1
.di
"
(Second
Avenue)
th ose n ng uoats. : ·
30
Gallla Fire Dept, UnK 2
The parade route IS as fol- (Second Avenue)
lows:·
,
. ·•
31
Guyan Fire Department
.
Second Avenue/
Spruce ~SecondAvenue)
. 32
Guyan _Fire Department
Stteet intersection down Sec- Second Avenue)
ond Avenue to Court Stteet.
33
Great Lakes Pro Jet Ski .
.
•
cera (Second Avenue)
·
-Left on Court Street to Fmt
34
Gallipolis HOG-HMey
Avenue. Left on First Avenue Owne!8 Asaoolallon (Spruca/Fourth)
ending above·rivedlont.
35
Scenic Hilla (Second
r. th "A C . Avenue)
The line"up 10r. e
e138
Galla Couniy Shrtne Club
· ebrarion of Our ' River. Her- (Second Avenue) Uttle Cars
· "
d •
(Spruce/Fourth)
. ,tp.ge para e.
37
Gallpclla Chlropnldic Cen. 1
Chief of Pollc-Roger ter (Second Avenue)

~

.

Cuiiiiiilssion

Youth talent
ly
sel Ju 7

Date

Baskets for sale

UICinge

K·9

Korp-4-H

Yard sale
CENTERVILLE .- Thurman Vega Parish's annual Giant
Yard Sale is July 6 and 7 from 9
a.m. until 3 p.m. at Thurman
Gran~.
·
Baked . goods and hot do(p
will also be sold. For inore information, call1-877-540-1100.

h

jng a dump truck @WOed by
Greep Township, was west.. bound when ·he lost control,
went of!: the right side of the _
road, crossed the center twice
and overturned onto its passenger side.
The truck then struck an
embankment, according 'to the

Driver inJUiad

report.

.

The truck was severely damaged, and Barker was cited for
failwe to control.
·

. Corrtc:tlon

..

. •

'

luMMII
Clearance

SALE
Going

No·w t

• ATV Imllqltry'~ ··ir~t .
Liquirl·(:ooled, 90; o33co .
V·Twin En~ine.
el\lo!lt I'ower anrl Moqt Torque.
• Automatic Tran•mi~~ion,
• Selecta1&gt;le 4WD.
• Aggre!i~Ive Stylhtj!.
e ATV ltuiltMtry'~ ·
Seale&lt;\
- )!ulti-Di!IC llraking Sy~l~mt .

......,•• It , •• kaow or .. '"'" Ia I
otol')', &lt;all the aewaroom 11 (7&lt;10) 4461342 or Po011roy: (741) 992-215!. We will
&lt;bock you lalol'llllllloa ud 11ako 1
&lt;Orroctloallwlmllled.

t
02001 Ktwuakl Malon Cofi»., U.S.A. Kawuakl ATVt
l&lt;riwuald also recommend~ IMtlll ATV rideta
a

t•

•

I uanafteld Ias·IIIO' I •

-~·

departtnent cQntfitCted with, 1\merican
Management' Systems. the report said.
. . al con o·tct-01..
. It suggests th at cnmm
mterest charges could be brought against
Tompkins, who held the Cabinet post
fro 1993
1998
d
h
m
.t o .
un er t en-Gov.
George V.Vomovtch, and Donna Givens,
a consultant who was "instrumental" in
facilitating the unbid contracts.
Charle~ forw~rded the 9:2-pag~&gt; report
to Franklin ·county Prosecutor Ron
O'Brien, who sai9,he·will decide within·
the next month whether to present it to
a grand jury.
"There's nothing that w.e didn 't
expect,"Tompkins' attorney, Larry James,
said·Friday."There's no criminal conduct
on the part of Mr. Tompkins."
, Accenture says it's in compliance with
state law. The company sa1d G1vens and

her attorney declined to be interviewed.
Charles began his investigation in
. . an anonymous
November after rece1vmg
1etter all egmg
·
t hat ..,.omp k.ms steere d a
Ia ·
_
rge welfare reform contract to Accenture.
.
Accenrure, formerly Andersen Consulun.g, has rece1ved a total of S60 malhon m unb1d state contracts, s?me of.
whiCh were steered by Tompkms, the
reP.Ort said.
Tompkins first hired Accenture in
1996 - through a $49,500 unbid contract - to help Ohio implement welfare
reform. The compa1iy later was hired to
develop Ohio Work&gt;, an Internet job· matching program that recently has been
criticized by both businesses and jobseekers as inefficient.

Inc.

&lt;&gt;~ •·· ~··K~: ·

Sunny Pt. C~

(AP) - A former
human _s erVICeS d~rector ~mg.ht have
been
trymg to get htrnself .3job
.
. . when he
steered multtmtllJOn-dollar
tmproperly
'd
u1 .
b
un 1 state contracrs to, a cons tmg
company for whtch he later worked th
.
.
., e
state government watchdog satd Fnday.
Mter leaving state government, Arnold
Tompkins also inappropriately tried to
lobby a top Taft a~ministration official to
ens11re future busmess for Chtcago-based
Accenture, state Inspector General
Thomas Char)es· wrote. .
"We were ·unable to conclude that his
acts were intended to be in the best
interest ~f the state," wrote Charles.
"Rather, It seemsclearthathewas merely attemptmg to c~~ry _favor and guaran- ·
tee future busmess Wtth Acce~ture and
another company Tompktns former

Cloudy •

Showert:

T·ltOI:ms

Rain

Flurries .

Snow

Absences concern court

Algae also had been found in Lake Shawnee, a private lake outside of nearby Jamestown, forcing officials to. close the lake.

Ice

CLEVELAND (AP) - A Cuyahoga County judge .who has
been criticized for missing nearly a year-and~a-half of work is now
under investigation by the Ohil' Supreme Court's disciplinary arm.
County Common Pleas Court officials told The Plain Dealer
CLEVELAND (AP) - A pastor was indicted Friday on charges
that they have received subpoenas from an investigator who is try- that she bilked a woman out of $160,000. The woman had won
BY THE ASSoCIATED PRESS
80s. West wind around 10 ing to determine how much work Judge Daniel 0. Corrigan has .the money as part of a settlement in a medical malpractice case
The National Weather Ser;- mph.
missed.
filed because she had lost her limbs.
vice says high pressure off the . Sunday night...Partly cloudy · Jonathan Coughlan, the Supreme Court's disciplinary counsel,
Merita D. White, 56, of East Cleveland, is accused in Cuyahoga
southeast coast will continue with a chance of showers and would not confirm whether his office had opened a case against County Common Ple.as Court of taking money from Mattie Cunc
to pump warm and humid air thunderstorms . Low 60 to 65. Corrigan, 67, of suburban Solon .
·
ningharn, 38, of Cleveland Heights. •
·
. into the tri-county area . this
Extended forecast:
The newspaper ~artier this year obtained records showing that
Cunningham said she lent the money to White in Novel)lber
d
Corrtgan
nussed
all
but
three
weeks
of
work
between
late
1999
weekend. A . cold front will · . Monday... Partly
1999.
White said it was a gift to Grace Apostqlic Church lor the
1
.d
c ou Y· and April 2001. He also missed about seven h10nths in 1998. ~o~- purchase of a parson~ge.
approach late Sunday. Cooler H. h . h
..
. WI·u settIe .m behind the Th
tg md t e pmt 80s. d A ngan
.
has bl arne d h'ts .a·bsences on heart probl ems.
atr
Assistant Prosecutor Dan Kasaris said White was indicted on a
1 1
fiont for the start of the new h es ayf...h ar t Y c odu hy.
·
~ore
s,erious theft charge because of a state law that carr1'es tough· er
.
-c ance o s owers an t unk
k
worwee.
d
d '
h
lift ·~
,penalties for bilking the elderly or the disabled . .
The cold front will increase erstorms u~mg t e night.
the chan ce of showers and Low m the mtd 60s and h1gh
CEDARVILLE (AP) - A water-boil advisory iss,ued for residents
in this southwest Ohio village after algae was found in its
thunderstorms Sunday. Highs in the lower 80s. ,
will in the mid 80s.
Fourth
of July... Partly reservoir has been lifted.
HAMILTON (AP) - · A former .county elections employee
The village's 3,200 residents had been told Tuesday not to drink
Sunrise Sunday will be at cloudy with a chance of showaccused of improprieties in political party fund-raising has been
6:07 a.m.
ers and thunderstorms. Low in their water after a municipal employee spotted algae in the reser- fined $1,000 by tlte Ohio Elecrions.Commission.
Weather forecast:
the mid 60s and high 80 86. vorr.
After Wright State University researchers determined that the · The state commission leviep the fine against Philip Morrical Jr.,
Sunday... Hazy sunshine. A -. Thur~day....Partly
cloudy
a furmer special assistant to the Butler County Board of Elections.
40 .percent chance of showers . with a chance of showers and algae bloom found in the village's water treatment plant Was nontold Wednesday to boil water for one minute. The commissimi said Morrical violated. Ohio elections law by
and thunderstorms in the thllnderstorms. Low 60 to 65 toxic, residents
using someon~ else's name when he trujde contributions to the
before drinking it or using it, to cook.
afternoon. High in the mid and high in the lower 80s.
county's Democratic Party.
·

Pastor faces theft charge

Warm, hazy weather continues

Authorities

Ex-elections worker fined

to

were

.
.
.
C1nannati mayor says he was unaware of law finn's contrad
.

.

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"It stinks to high heaven. I don't know
Luken said Friday that he is not
if it's illeg;tl, but 'it's improper:'
. inmlved with the effort by - ihe 29Luken pushed six months ago to create employee firm KMK Consulting, where
a port authority to oversee $800 million he is a consultant.
in redevelopment along the cirys Ohio
"It's a big company and a big law firm .
River shore. Now; a subsidiary of Keating I never spoke to anybody about it," the
Muething &amp; Klekarnp has been aw.mled mayor said Friday. "I had nothing to do
a $30,000 contract to lobby for the with it."
agency.
In Api:il, the port authority hired KMK

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to lobby for state and federal funds.
- KMK also represents Cincinnati 2012
Inc., an organization trying to bpng the
2012 Olympic Garnes to the city, and
Lone Star Industries, which wants to
build a cement factory in the Cincinnati
neighborhood of Sayler Park. Each client
recently has had business before the City
Council, of which Luken is a member.

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'It

Ire

£jtt'Md;"*
(/Ileal! it&amp;
at!~ SaJe/ .

fJ.t./4 ~4.

11-J ~.~~

Camp·explores hardship·
of teen-age par~nting .

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Polley

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02001

Sunday. July 1, 1001

on

A force lio huge. A fury M ~trong i~ packerl in~irle the KawaAaki
l'rairie~ 650 ATV. It's powererl by tfie_inrlu!!tty'A only liquifl-cooleil
V-Twin, M the mO!It torque anrl power come~~. nunbling frorQ itR pipe.
With ~~electallle 4WD and automatic traJl!llllisRion bnilt right in, a
Aingle tum Qf the key will tell you, domination i!l inevitable.

0.~ lllil....,.ro lot Ill !lOria II to bt

~BUS

CINCINNATI (AP) Mayor
Charles Luken says he. was unaware the
law firm where he w&lt;irks had ties with an
agency he helped create to·oversee development ·of the city's riverfront.
.
Luken's ties to a lobbyipg contract .
obtaine(! by the firm may noJ be illegal,
but it looks bad, said Chris Finney, a polit7
ical activist.

· CENTENARY :.._ A onevehicle accident on Ohio 141'
Thursday sent a Patriot man to
a local hospital, Gallia-Mei~
Post of the State Highway Patrol
reported.
Paul F. Barker Sr., 31, 4704 .
Patriot Road, was transported to
Holzer Medical Center by private vehicle following the 4:47
p.m. accident, according to the
patrol.
Troopers said Barker, operat-

Reader Services

Sunday, July 1
forecast for

-

·PageA3

Official may have used position .to secu·re fut~e job .

Ohio weather
.. .

Club

~RIEFS

divisions will be held.The giade Corrunittee will sell the same
of the oldest performer in a basket during the festival at an
group determines the age cate- additional cost. They will also
gory. Contestants are judged on have 250 baskets. The basket is
GALLIPOLIS- City Com- originality, stage presence, talent ·handmade by Royce Craft Bas: rnissiO!I~ regular monthly meet- and crowd appeal.
ket Co., Coshocton.
.
· ins is Tuesday at ·7 p.m. in th~ Costumes are optional. No Baskets are being sold on a
: Gallipo~s Municipal · cours- act can be longer than fuur min- 6nt-come, tint-serve basis.
room, City Manager E. V. Clarke utes. All cassettes or CDs mwt When all 500 are gone, they will
Jr. announc.ed.
. - be cued and ready.
not be II!Orde~. All proceeds
Each participant will be given fro~ the sale go to Gallia CounA work session will·be held at
6:15 p.m. with EmergenCy One a certificate: The top two place ty. Farm Bureau Scholarship
: on the purchase of a 6re winnen in each age category in Fund fur a Gallia County. stu: : · pumper, he added. .
~th solo and enJemble divi- · dent.
..
sions will be awarded a trophy
..
Orden c•n be taken by phone
AI:' .contestants mus_t check m at 1-800-777:.9226. The pickup
'L
,;.
·
)VIth the c~test director on~ date is July 6 fiom-3-6 p.m. at
. 5110\V
~ hour pnor to the shows C.H. McKenzie Agricultural
~tar1.
Center.
· GALLIPOLIS - The
· Any entr)' received after
ann~al you~ talent sh~
Monday will be disqualified For
...L'?alli~lis River Recrea?o
a complete list of contest rules,
rival IS July 7 at the pilrldi:ont, or questions, contact Kim CanaRIO GRANDE - Village
startingat 2:30 p.~. on ~e main day at 446-1875 (days), or 446- Council's regular monthly
stage. The event IS 'agam spon- 7538 (evening~) .
me~ring ~be July 10 at 7 p.m.
sored by Gallipolis Emblem
in the
Municipal Building,
Club 199.
Clerk Marva Peck announced.
Entry is free for all children
'
ages 3-18. Preregistration is
· GALLIPOLIS
Galli a
required · and the deadline is County Farm Bureau, in conMonday. Entry forms are avail- . junction with Bob Evans Farms,
hie at Empire furniture CO., is taking orders for the fourth
Gallia County Chamber of edition of the Bob Evans Farm
Commerce, Johnson's Super- Festival Commemorative Bar ..
market, area FQodlands and ket.
Kroger.
The "Mini Harvest" basket is
Age categories are preschool, $34, tax and protector included.
.3-5, and grades K-3, 4-7 and 8- Only 250 baskets are awilable.
12. Both solo and ensemble
The Bob Evans Farm Festival

¥

ondAvenue)
149 Green B·Ball Teams (Sec·
(Dukes)
•
112 Gallipolis Dairy Queen ondAvenye)
150 Green B-Ball Teams (Sac·
(Second Avenue)
113 Providence Missionary ondAvenue)
151 Green B·Bell Teams (Sac·
Baptist Church (Second Avenue)
ondAvenue)
114 ·UI Miss Gallia County152 Green B-Ball Teams (Sac·
Shalin Colmer (Second Avenue)
ondAvenue)
115 Lll Mr.• Gallla County
153 Gallia County Gospel Sing
Branson Barr (Second Avenue)
116 Miss Gallia Counly &amp; 2001 Association (Second Avenue)
154 Houcks Plumbing and
Conteslllf'IS (Second "venue)
117 Will . Power Gymnastics Heating (Second Avenue)
155 South Gallia Cheerleaders
(Second AvenUe) Walkere (Dukes)
(Second
Avenue)
118 WYVK The Frog (Second
156
Soulh Gallia HS Drill Team
Avenue)
(Second
Avenue)
119 Bidwell T-ballerS (Second
157 GalliaSoccerCiub (Dukes)
Avenue)
155 Green 3 T-ballers (Second
120 4H Junior Leaders (Second .
"venue)
Avenue)
159 Reds Bollen Garage (Sec·
121 VFW Ladies Auxiliary (Sec·
ond Avenue)
ondAvenue)
122 l;foward Mullen-Antique · 100 Reds Bollen Garage (Second Avenue)
Sheriffs Car (Second Avenue)
161 Reds Rolle!) Garage (Sac·
123 Soulhwest Junior High
ond
Avenue)
Cheerleaders (Second Avenue)
162 Southeastern Equipment
124 Superior Detailing (Second
Co. (Sacorld Avenue)
.
Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
163
Gallia
County
Heallh
125 GAP Power Tumbling (Sac·
Department (Second Avenue)
ond Avenue).
164 Cheer Stalion All Stars
128 :l/17 Fourtli Hawk Battalion
(Second
Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
Ohio National Guard (Second
165 Rodney Pike Church of
Avenue)
God (Second Avenue)
127 Adam Sick (Spruce)
· 186 . Rio Grande Fire Depa~- .
· 128 James McQuaid (Spruce)
ment (Second Avenue)
- 129 Erhie McKinney (Spruce)
167 Rio Grande Fire Depart·
130 Ronald Wolford (Spruce)
131 Kyger Creek Junior High ment (Sacorld Avenue)
1&amp;e Rio Grande Baseball A·ball
Cheerleaders (Second Avenue)
Team
(Second Avenue)
132 River Valley JV Cheertead169 Oh lhe Road to Reading
ers (Second Avenlie)
133 River Valley VarsKy Cheat· (Dikes)
170 Life Ambulance (Second
leaders (Sacoud Avenue)
134 River Valley VarsKy Cheer· Avenue)
171 Vinton Fire Depa~m ent
leaders (Second Avenue)
135 River Valley High SchoOl (Second Avenue)
172 Harrison Township Fire
Band (Dukes)
.
138 River Valley Dance &amp; Drill. Dept (Second Avenue)
173 Gallia Fire Oepa~ment ,
Team (Dukea)
137 ) Johnnie fl!leg.le . ·.(Second . 1Jnit3 (Second Avenue)·
Avenue ·
174 Gallia Fire Department,
138 Bill Peck (Second Avenue) · Unit4 (Second Avenue)
175 Gallla Fire Department,
139 Henry Myers (Second
UnH 5 (Second Avenue)
Avenue)
176 D &amp; L AVs (Second
140 Country Friends 4H Group
Avenue)
(Second Avenue)
177 Tribe 4·H Club (Second
141 Hannan Trace Athletics
Avenue)
(Second Avenue)
178 Faith Baptist Church (Sac·
142 Gallia Couniy Stars Chaar
Center (Second Avenue) Walkers ond Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
(Dukes)
·
179 Paul Shafter Equestrian
143 Gary Hartman (Second (Spruce/Four)h)
180 Jason
Clagg
Avenue)
144 UnlversKy of Rio Grande (Spruce/Fourth)
(Second A11e11ue)
145 UnlvemKy of Rio Gr~~nde
No vehicle traffic will be
(Second Avenue)
·
148 UnlversKy of Rio Grande allowed along the parade route
Swlm.Team (Second Avenue) Walkers after 5:15p.m. until ~he parade
(Dukes)
147 French CitY Twirlers (Sac· is finished.
ond Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
148 Green B·Ball Teams (Sac·
111

38
Gold Wing Road Riders Runner Up (Second Avenue)
74
2001 Miss River Rae 3rd
Aasoc. (Spn.a/Fourth)
39
Ohio River Dri~ers Jeep Runner Up (Second Avenue)
75
2001 Miss River Rae ConClub (Second Avenue)
· 40
Ohio River Drifters Jeep lestant (Second Avenue)
76
2001 Miss River Rae Con- .
Club (Second Avenue)
41
Ohio River Drifters Jeep testant (Second Avenue)
77
2001 Miss River Bee Con·
Club (Second Avenue)
42
Ohio River Drifters Jeep lostant (Second Avenue)
78
2001 Miss River Rae ConClub (Second Avenue)
43
Ohio River Drifters Jeep testant (Second Avenue)
79
2001 Miss River Rae Con·
Club (Second Avenue)
. 44
Ohio River, Drifters Jeep testant (Second Avenue)
80
2001 Miss River Rae ConClub (Second Avenue)
45
Ohio River Driftel'.i _,j§l!p testant (Second Avenue)
81
2001 'Miss River Rae ConClub Second Avenue)
Ohio River Drifters Jeep testant (Second Avenue)
82
Starlettes Baton Corps
"""YV&gt;rl
Avenue)
Ohio River Drifters Jeep (Second Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
83
Wee Care (Spruce)
/S&lt;lCOild Avenue) 84
Soapbox Derby Champion
Ohlo River Drifters Jeep~raun Lyn (Spruca/Fourth)
Clu SecondAvenue)
85
Slate Senator Michael
4
Ohio River Drifters Jeep
Shoemaker (Second Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
Congressman Ted Strick·
50
Ohio River Drifters Jeep . 88
land (Second Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
87
OelllOCilllic Party (Second
51
Ohio River Dri~ers Jeep
· Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
88
Gellis Co. Convention &amp;
52
Ohio River Drifters Jeep
Visitors Bureau (Second Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
89
GAHS Alumni Association
53
Ohio River Drifters Jeep
(Second Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
Club (Second Avenue)
.
90
GAHS Band (Dukes)
54 · Golden Corral Restaurant
91
GAHS Varsity Cheertead(Second Avenue)
·
55
Second Slory Theatre Sti~· ers (Sacorld Avenue)
92
GAHS VarsKy Cheerteadwalkers (Dukes)
55
Galla Counly Girt scouts, ers. (SecOnd Avenue)
93 ,GAHS Bth &amp; 9th Grade
walking (Dukes)
.
~7
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Cheerteaders (Dukes)
· 94 •
101.5 The River (Second
(Second Avenue)
.
55
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenue)
115
Gallla First (Second
(Second Avenue)
, 59
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenue) Walkers (Dukes)
96
Gallla County Aepubl~n
tSecond Avenue)
00
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Party (Second Avenue)
97
Gallia Counly Republican
(Second Avenue)
61
Cerrnichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Party (Second Avenue)
(Second Avenua)
98
Ole C'ar Club (Second
'
62
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenue)
(Second Avenua)
99
Ole Car Club (Second
53
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenue;
(Second AvGt!ue)
100 Ole Car Club (SeCond
64
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn Avenu&amp;
(Second Avenue)
101 Cub Scouts Pack 205
55 · Jill Burd &amp; Tim Howard (Spruce/Fourth)
(Second Avenue)
102 Cub Scouts Pack 204
86
Mountaineer 2-:cylinder (~Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
103 Boy Scout Troop 222 (Sac·
67 . Mountaineer . 2-:cyllnder ond Avenue)
Club (Second Avenue)
104 Belville Family (Second
&amp;e
Chamber . of Commerce Avenue)
Prasldeni-Ciyde Evans (Second
1OS Belville Family (Second
Avenue)
Avenuer
105 Belville 'Family (Second
69
2001 Ul' Mr. &amp; Miss Are·
Avenue)
cracker- (Second Avenue) · . ·
70
2000 Miss River Recre·
107 Belville Family (Second
ali&lt;Jr&gt;4jlcole Lucas
(Second Avenue)
Avenue)
108 Belville Family (Second ·
71
2001 Miss. River Rec Avenue)
Queen (Second Avenue)
109 Belville Family (Second
72
2001 Miss River Rae 1st Avenue)
110 Belville Family (Second
Runner Up (Second Avenue)
73• 2001 Miss River Rae 2nd Avenue)

TRI-COUNTY
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Sunday. July 1,1001

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COLUMBUS (AP)
Hill said the program is
When baby Caleb threw up his funded through a wellness
lunch on the sweater of the block grant of federal and state
--'new camper, camp director money.
• Lowell Herschberger smiled.
Annie J. Ross-Womack
For Herschberger, the more teaches at the camp and runs a
'temperamental the tot and col- group home for pregnant
.icky the baby, the better.
teens, whe are required to
Herschberger's Baby Camp · attend the program.
program is designed to prevent
"These kids get to hear the
teen pregnancy by providing message from kids their own
at-risk teem chances to explore age," she said. "To see these
the difficulties ofparenting.
young moms lugging babieS
"They think babies are so ai\d baby-ba~ off the bus each
cute and how wonderful it morning and hearing about
would be to have a baby;' Her~ how hard· their lives are and '
·sc~berger said Friday. "You how easily it can happen to
have to give them a reality them makes a huge difference."
check:'
When Herschberger thinks a
Although the babies' moth- camper is getring,t_oo attached ers are nearby at all rimes, par- to a particular bab~ is not
• ticipants in the six-day "Oh, getting the intended message,
'Boy, Babies" program tel)d to he bri'.!~ in his secret weapon
all the babies' needs and C¥n - three-year-old Caleb.
,
. "Caleb is very .high mainteS40 stipends.
The ·program also pays teen nance and is running around
mothers ·an hourly rate to . getting into one kind of trou- ,
bring. in their babies and relai:e ble or another all the time,'' ·
·their stories of single parenting. Herschberger said as a camper
Jennifer, a '17-year-old · wqo , tried to pick up Caleb, w~o
didn't want her last name used had purposely gone limp on
for this story, got pregnant last the. fioor to make the task
year.
more difficult.
• "The hardest thing is the
loneliness," 'she told the
campers. " How much fuil is· a
.friend that always is carrying a .
baby around? I can't go to the
clubs:· •
Connie Hill, marketing
'director for Catholic Social
Services, said some campers are
selected from referrals by
school counselors. Others .
enroll after seeing advertisements in neighborhoods Y~ith
· high teen-pre'gnancy rates.•
COUrts also . sometimes order
teens to participate.

---

Corps schedules-hearings
to
ecosystem
HUNTINGTON (AP)Public hearirigs are scheduled
in six states this summer on a
$307 million proj ect to .'
restore · fi sh and wildlife to
pans of the Ohio River that
have been damaged by years
of commercial 'shipping.
" We developed it as a
superhighway of commerce.
It has served that purpose
very well," said Steve Wright,
public affairs officer · for the
corps's Huntington. District.
" Now we are taking a look at
bringing some of the ecosystems· back and trying to
improve on the Ohio River
.fdr environmental purposes."
Hearings · are scheduled
July 10 in Metropolis, Ill.,
July 12 in Evansville, Ind.,
July 31 in Parkersburg, Aug. 1
m Monaca, Pa., Aug. 6 in ·

Covington; Ky., and Aug. 7 in
~rtsmouth, Ohio.
The program involves• all
six Ohio River states: Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois, Ohio,
West Virginia and Pennsylvama.
With its network of 20
locks and darns along its 981c
mile course, the Ohio is a
major commercial route for
shipping bulk commodities.
The river and its fioodplains have been altered over
the years, the corps concluded in a study last year. The
corps wants to repair some of
the damage ~y restoring
10,000 acres of bottomland
hardwood .forests · along the
river; 25,000 acres of wetlands; 100 miles of shoreline
habitat; and 40 'islands.

·There Is Still Time To Register
For Snmmer Quarter
Call Today!!
446-4367 · or 1-800-214-0452

Ga1JjM.nlls care~~ fnllePJe

~t4.Qalo ..

II~Cc~

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Opinion
.

•

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-iunhq 'lmt•"' flead:bul ·

I'M~
'f&lt;D HAn DOESrtT ·
COVER YOOR

Oelllpolla, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point PI....nt. W.Va.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor ·

Charltt W. Govey

Publlaher

Page A4 -.
Sunct.y. July 1. 201t

-~·
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Sun~ay, July 1, 2001

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OUR VIEW

.~

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Budget deals blow to higher
education improvement
Ohio leaders' focus on submitting the latest solution to the
school funding dilemma by last month left behind 'another
. consideration higher education. The two-year budget
signed by the governor has reduced support for colleges and
universities.
.
We recognize thar'Ieaders had to make some hard decisions
because they were·under the gun from the Supreme Court to
develop a new funding plan for public schools. Revenues are
tight and looking to decline if the economy doesn't reverse its
slide. But shooting higher education in the foot won 'r be in the
1
state's best interest.
Distinguished; jf you want to call it that, with one of the
lower college-going rates in the nation, Ohio has made strides
toward bringing up attendance levels to ensure higher education is available to anyone who seeks it. Reduction in funds
makes that option- a bit more difficult for those who haven't
been graced with scholarships or some other form of financial
.
.
.
.
aid.
A cutback in funding also puts an ·onus on state and private
institutions to inake up the shortfall with increased tuition. If
those rates are already high, students are discouraged from
attending those institutions and are f0 rced to explore other
• schools . .
Out-of-•tate costs fo~ college are always high. It's a sad situ-·
a.tion when some schools become more expensive than those
in neighboring, states. .
_
·
.
The Board o( Regents hils pushed for increased emphasis on
technoi!IID'~ba:sed education. In other words, -making Ohioans
more pl'(l~tient with computer skills to meet the demands of
· the chansing workplace. The new budget put&gt; that endeavor
on the back burner.
We can hope for an improvement in the. stare's fo~tunes
when the n~ budget comes up - and that the additional
$1.4 billion for publi'c school education meets the high cdurr's
demanCb for equitable funding. If not, colleges and universities
are in for -~ tougher time, and Ohio slides furt.her away from
improving iis ~;is a state where higher education is valued.
.Right_""""· it's .o~ous the state can't afford certain things.
But we 'ctai) ~fford a.'growing loss of prestige? Now is the time
to s~_-cobl\de_ring our ai)Swer to tl;lat question.
' ." ·&gt;,(:·:~:·/.'&lt;:' ,.:.' ·~·:~: ,·.
•
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~ ~ n( ~.kx ,·
". . .
~
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•'

BY THE' ASSOCIATED PRESS

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Problems with
our country ·
'

Dear Editor:
I would like to bring some things to
the attention of all Americans, especially Ve$erans and their families. This is
the same country that we and many of
our fellow citizens fought for and
served, in order to protect our right to
freedom.
·
First, U.S. Reps. Cunningham (RCalif.), Thornberry (R-Texas), Johnson
(R- Texas) and Ellen Tauscher (DCalif.) ·have introduced a bill to Congress that will ensure the voting rights
of military members and their families.
Thjs will prevent persons such as those
elected in the last general election, from
denying the voting rights of Americans
serving overseas and out of their home
· of record.
This bill is called the Military Overseas Voter Bmpowerment(MOVE), and
' person wnre
. our local
I ask that each.
congressthan, Ted Strickland, and ask
him point blank whether he intends to
support or oppose this movement.
Second, U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (D- Texas) has introduced legislation ·into Congress that would
change Veterans Day into Election Day
·every four years. If her bill passes, Veterans Day would be moved from Nov.
11 to the f~rst Tuesday in November,
beginning in 2004 and in .every -presiden~ial election year thereafter.
The purpose. of this is to make Election Day into a federal holiday without
having to actu~lly create a new federal
holiday. Supporters say this would
make voting more convenient for more
people. How nice of her and-her supporters. Ask the brave soldiers ofWorld

War I who lie in the cold ground in credit requirements and attending
Europe and hear how they feel!
Home Ownership classes.
When Veterans Day was established,
Applications are screened for eligi- ,
it was to honor veterans of all wars.·-bility by the local lending institution
Now, just as Memorial Day has be~ome and USDA Rural Development office.
a starr' of a holiday instead .of a qay of Interest and down payment are deter~
remembrance she wants to change the mined on an individual basis by the
reason for \fererans Day every four criteria of, the lending institution and
Rural Development.
·
years. Leave Veterans Day alone!
Third, did you know that this past
No person can be discriminated
Sunday in Colmpbus, Ohio, two men against 'because of race, color, creed,
were arrested for destroying a flag of a sex, or place of employment.
Linda Plants' questions of improprigroup marching in a parade? This flag
was not an American flag but a flag ety &lt;egarding the applicants and the
representing a group of people in a project were referred to the Ohio
legal march. Why is it then that it is Department of Development. ODOD
against the law tq do this, but at the reviewed the program and found the
same time in our great country one can project met all guidelines and eligibiliburn the American flag which is not ty standards.
protected 'by law? I think this is wrong.
If Ms. Plants or any other Gallia or
But even one of our veterans, former Meigs resident is interested in the pro•
Sen .John Glenn, did not support pro- gram, they can make application at any,
tecting the flag. Do we have our wires &lt;lour offices.
crossed in America or what?
Trish McCullouih
Executive Director
Richard B. Roberts
Gallia-Meigs CM .
Gallipolis
Cheshire
P S. - If you or a loved one is suffering from Agent Orange exposure,
there is a new ho~ line for the Department ofVeterans Affairs at l-800-749-,
8387. Call Monday through Friday
Dear Editor:
·I
•
As a cancer survivor, I wish to thank .
from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. in order to speak
with a representative or call · iq the Holzer Medical Center and Holzer
evening· to .leave a voice mail message. Clinic for sponsoring the great event,
Relay for Life, on June 22, 201lt at the
Gallipolis City Park.
The ceremony was meaningful to all
survivors, and their families and
Dear Editor:
Gallia- Meigs · Cummllnit't'-- Action friends. I wish to thank all the staff and
Agency has offered an opportunity to volunteers who gave support through
purchase a new home within govern- time, money and prayers. Most families
ment- established guidelines to persons are touched by cancer and this event
of limited income who meet program gives hope for the healing process.
Donna Kent, RN .
eligibility. Interested persons may apply
Cheshire
by' submittil!g an application, meeting

•

Once more, court makes a bad .law out of a hard case ·

Kilpatrick

.'

•'

The court ditched the reasoning o(
Olmstead in Katz v. l)nired States . in
1';167. The case involved a professional
gambler who used a sidewalk telephone ·
booth to talk with ips clientele. Poljce .
eavesdropped with an, electronic device : ·
placed on the outside of the booth. The· · ·
court ruled 7-1 that the government had '
rhus violated Katz's reasonable expectac
•
tion of privacy. The evidence had to be ·
thrown out.
Suddenly we are thrown back to Katz.
Now it is not OK, withdut a warrant, to
use the sense-enhancing technology of :t
thermal imager. Justice John Pa~JI
Stevens, dissenting in the Kyllo cas~.
worried r~r the majority's rule would
make it unconstitutional for police to
use new devices to detect the odor pf
deadly bacteria or cheriticals for making
a new type of high explosive. .
.
Justice Scalia, for his parr, worrie&amp;•that
without a bright line, homeowners _ ·
could be _left at the mercy of advancing
technology. T e ''relatively crude'' device
used in the K lo case could disclose "a'l
what hour each ighr the lady of the
house take~ her ily sauna and bath.';
The court's new rule is intended "to take
account of more sophisticated systems
that are already in use or in develop- ·
ment."
It is an old rule that fire is sometimes ·
best fought with fire. In a world of crim-·
inals who present dangers far more serious than Danny Kyllo's attic plantation,
detectives have to have some freedom 'to
detect.
.'

ljames]. Kilpatrick i5 a wlumnist for Universal Press Syndi~ate.)
'
'
·

"

•

CONSOL is one of the
country's largest coal producers, · and specializes in
longwall operations. It is
also the nation's largest

Budget
from PapAl

added Dorsey, who's helmed
Rio Grande since 1991.
Higher education rook a hit
HARTFORD, W.Va.- David C. Warth, 67, Hartfond, died in the budget ,due partly to
Friday, June 29,2001 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
declining revenues and shiftBorn July 3, 1933 in Hartford, son of the late Robert W. ing of$1.4 billion to equalize
"Bob" Jr. and Freda H. Turley Warth, he was a retired coal puolii: school funding.
mine~ from Meigs Mine 2, a member of UMW,A Local 1886
Dorsey said one of the crit. ~nd attended Middleport Church of Nazarene. · ical areas cut was in Access
He was also preceded in de~th by his wife, Kathryn Florence Challenge, which provided
G1bbs Warth; a son, John Michael Warth; and two brothers, two-year
colleges
like
Fl6yd Warth and "Rog"Warth.
,
· RGCC and some f~ur-year
Surviving ·are eight daughters, Linda L: Games) Roush of instituri~ns such as Shawnee·
Reedsville, Reda F. (George) Brown of Chft~n, W.Va.,Tammy State University with money
V. (Wayne) Green and Helen D. (Troy) Dudding, both of Hartd .
..
'rord, Mary I}. (Chest~r) Rou~h an d Fre da L. Ea ki ns, b oth o f · to 1ower
rumon
an
mcrease
. ..
.
Middleport, Patricia A. (Dave) Reitmire ofPoctland, and Regi- accembihty..
na S. Camp of New Haven, W.Va.; two sons, Floyd L. (Vicki)
. The fundmg, Dorsey S31d,
Warth ofJacksonville, Fla., and David W Goyce) Warth of Hob- was
key
m
atrracrmg
son; 26 gran~children and 14 great-grandchildren; two sisters, Appalachian students.
Lora Mae (Frank) Imboden ofRudand, and Carolyn (Howard)
Under Access Challenge,
Brewer of Hartford; and a brother, Donald W~rth of Hartfond. RGCC h~ld tuition stable for
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in FO(!Iesong-Tucker Funer- two years and decreased it by
al Home, Mason, W.Va., .with the Rev. Allen D. Midcap ofliciatifig. Burial will be in Graham Cemetery, New Haven. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.

.David C. Warth

CAA responds

James

same time."

Juhe 2?, 2001 in Holzer Medical .Cenrer.
Arrangements will be announced by Cremeens Funeral
Chapel.

Great event

Today i.! Sunday,July 1, the 182nd day of2001.There are 183
days left in the yc;ar. This is Canada Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
Ori July 1, 1867, Canada became a self-governing dominion
of Great Britain as the British North America Act rook effect.
On this date:
Hard cases, they say, make bad law. The
In 1863, the Civil War Bartle of Gettysburg began.
case of Danny Kyllo was a hard case. On
In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, Theodore RooJune 11, sure enough , the Supreme
Court made some bad law our of it. •
sevelt and his "Rough Riders" waged a victorious assault on
The facts were never at issue. Federal
San Juan Hill in Cuba.
In 1943, "pay-as-you-go" income tax withholding began.
agents in Florence, Ore., received tips
. In 1946, the :United States exploded a 20-kiloron atomic
that, Kyllo was growing marijuana in his
bomb near Bikini Atoll in the Pacific.
home. A check of his utiliry bills added
In 1961, Diana, the ,princess of ~ales, was born near Santo their suspicion. The officers doubted
dringham,,England. (She died in a 1997 car crash in Paris at age
they had enough evidence to obtain a
36.)
search warrant, . so they resorted to a
COLUMNIST
In 1963, the U.S. Post Office inaugurated its five-digit ZIP
thermal imager. They set up the device
codes.
_
in a car across the .street, and aJ 3:20 on
In 1968, the United States, Britain, the Soviet U11ion and 58
a morning in January 1992 the instru- gifted jurist, but this was not his best
other nations signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.
ment recorded a high level of hear r~di- effort. He concluded that the federal
In 1969, Britain's Prince Charles was invested as the Prince
ating from the ga~a~e r?of.. · .
agents crossed -a forbidden line when
ofWales.
.·
Armed With this mforma!lon, the fed- . they turned on the thermal imager.
In 1971, the U.S. Post Office was replaced with the United
era! agents qbtamed a warrant to search . This was his .key sentence: "We think
States Postal Service.
Kyllo's home._ There they found mo~e that obtaining by sense- enhancing techthan 100 manJuana plants, the1r luxun- nology any information regarding the
In 1997, Hong Kong reve.rted to Chinese rule after 156 years
as a British colony.
ant growth promoted by the .warmth of interior of the home that could not nthTen years ago: President Bush nominated federal appeals
high-intensity halide lights. K;yllo moved erwise have been obtained 'without
court Judge Clarence Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court,
to suppress the thermal ' evidence, but physical intrusion into a constitutionally
beginning a confirmation process marked by allegations of sexeve~\ually h1s motion was demed. He · •protected area constit.utes a search _ at
ual harassment. Actor Michael Landon died ih Malibu, Calif.,
appe;ll~d, and the Suprem.e Court agr~ed le3lit where (as here) the technology in .
at age 54.
to decide whether ther_mal Jmagm-g VIO- .
t'
.
t-I bl'
"
.,
Five years '"go: President Clinton declared an emergency in
lares the Fourth Amendment.
ques 100 15 no m genera pu •c use.
• drought-!tricken par_ts of the Southwest. Aetress Ma=. ux
· 'Th F th A · d
t · t h t rh . It was a clumsy sentence, the produc_t'
-.., ·" --!--:: -.:.~~~-~n :;:" sayhs . _ah ~ of clumsy thought. More than 70 years
Hemingway was found dead in her Santa Monica, Calif., apartgovernmen, may nor v •v1:!te"t e ng t·o
- "--lieli-'am· 'x'
f
d
ment; .she was 41.
the pe.ople to be sefure in their house~ ago! m t e an 31' case 0 01 msrea _v.
One year-ago:Verll10)_1t's dl(il unions law, which granted gay
against unreasonabl~ searches. The ques- Umred States, the court first wrestled
tion before the .higjt court was decep- ~th the Four~ Amendmen~ ~~blem of
couples most of the rights, benefits and responsibilities of mar- ·
riage, went into effect. The Confederate flag was removed from
tively simple: Was th,e thermal imaging a s~nse-en~ncmg _technology. In 1928
.. atop South Carolina's Statehouse. Acto_£ Walter Matthau died in
search, and was it unreasonable? The th1s .was_ wuetappmg. The offense was
Santa Monica, Calif., at age 79.
high court ruled 5-4 that yes, rhe agents' bootleggi?~· The court voted 5-4 to let
Today's Birthdays: Actress Olivia de Havilland is 85. Actor
condu ct constituted an unreasonable Olmstead s conviction stand. There had
Farley Granger is 76. Actress-dancer 1-.eslie Caron is "70. Actress
search . The government may put Kyllo been no, physical inr~usion into the
Jean Marsh is 67. Movie director Sydney Pollack is 67. Movie
on trial again, bur withollt the agents' defendants home; the mtercepred conproducer-director Claude Berri is 67. Actor Jamie Parr is 67.
e~idence ·the government has no case.
vcrsatiqns were not tangible; and the
Comedy writer Pat McCormick is 67. Bluesman James Cotton
Justice Antonio Scalia wrote the Fourth Amendment does not protect
is 66. Actor David PrdW.se is 66.
.,
malority opinion. He is the court's most intangible things.
'-. ...

will

John M.Merk
'GALLIPOLIS -John
M. Merk, 75, Gallipolis: died Friday,

KILPATRICK'S VIEW-

.

Ronald 1ton'. McCias•·ey
.
11'1

"It's not going to happen
by June 30, bur it's going to
happen soon," Michalski
·said, noting that SOCCO
employees will remain in
AEP's employ until the
paperwork is finalized and
the sale is completed.
"In theory, at the end of
their shift on the day the
deal closes, the miners!
employment with AEP will
end, and those miners
be laid off," Michalski said,
"but that's just a technicality, and they ·could become
CONSOL employees at the

exporter of coal, having
exported nearly 13 million
BIDWELL- Ronald "Ron" McClaskey. 50, Lehigh Acres, tons of coal iri 1999.
. Fla., d1ed Sunday, June 24, 2001 at his residence, following an
The same year, CONSOL
extended illness.
· claimed revenues of" $2.2
Born Sept. 13, 1950, in Gallia County, son of the late Mar- · billion .
shall McClaskey, and Delcie Reynolds McClaskey of Bidwell,
"We
anticipate
that
he was a 1968 graduate of North Gallia High School, and a CONSOL will keep the
Vietnam veteran.
.
mines running," Michalski
Surviving in addition to his mother are his ~fe, Lori; a son, said. "It is our understand Shown of Naples, Fla.; a daughter, Sherry of Vienna, Va.; a irig that. the Meigs Mines
Jgrandson; and a sister, Barbara Sue O'Brien of Brentwood, will remain open, and that
Tenn.
the Windsor operation will
Arrangements wenfby American Family Funeral Home, Fort be reopened shortly after
Myers, Fla.
.
.
the sale is finaljjted."

Slidin
~~

f•omP8geA1

GALLIPOliS - Geneve Brown, 89, Gallipolis, died 'Friday,
June 29, 2001 m Heartland of Marietta, where she had been a
resident for seven months.
Born Dec. 17, 1911 in Meigs County, daughter of the late
William and Iva Sp1res Musser, she retired as a LPN from Gallipolis State Institute in 1971. She attended Langsville Christian Church.
She was also prec.eded in death on ]all. 1, 1991 by her husband, Fred Brown, whom she married Nov. 14, 1929; two
infant sons; and four brothers, William, Arthur, Raymond and
Hubert Musser.
Surviving are three -daughters, Aretta ~ob) Montgo!Tlery of
Crystal R1v,er, Fla., Dorothy (Murray) Haskins of Nelsonville, .
and Virginia (Bob) Smeltzer of New Matamoras; nine grand~ '
children, 15 gre~r-gr~ndchildren and tJu:ee great-great-grimd-1
chlldren; and a sJster-m-law, Glyrus Musser of Rutland.
Services will be 2:30p.m. Monday in Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home, with Pastor Robert E. Musser officiating. Buria l will be in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.

·.~

1At1nJ 10 tilt ftii~Dr drt wtkotu Tiley 1/tould bt ltn tlflln JOO.wortb. A.JlldltrJ
f t ••6./«f to tdld111 tutti"''"' b• rl&amp;tttd fltul i•cbult Dddrtu Gild ltltpllont numbtr.
No
ltfkrl ..wiU H publfJiftd. Utltl"' slloNid ~ 111 food ta!lt, addrmfng
l.uus, 11at ,nonalUUJ.
7Jur opiltibru upnuttl ill tltt column btlow Q/'1 till tOIISIIUIIS of tht Ohio Valli!J
P.Wi•1 c~~: wii~ boord, ,,,,, othtnvist nottd.

Mines

Geneve Brown

\

Margaret M. Wess

'

ss:

fiROVE CITY - Margaret Maud Brewer Wess,
Grove
City, died Friday, June 29, 2001 at her residence, following an
exiended illness.
•
She and her husband owned and operated Brooks Pastries for
24 years.
·
·
Surviving are 'her husband, Donald Wess Sr.; two sons, Donald Wess Jr. of Columbus, and· David (Mary) Wess of Grove
City; a daughter, Tracy (Mark) Clanin of Grove City; 10 grandchildren; two sisters, Dorothy (Dallas) Janey of Langsville, and
Martha (John) Wess of Grandview; three brothers, Walter.
. Brewer and Stuart (Carol) Brewer, both of Columbus; and
William (Bert) Brewer of Grove City; and several nieces and
nephews.
~he was preceded in death by her parents, Paul and Margaret
Br~wer; two sisters, Mary Brewer and Rosie Leonard; and a
brother, Thomas P. Brewer.
.
Services will l:)e noon Monday in. Schoedinger Norris
. Cliapel; 3920 Broadway, Grove City, with the Rev. Bernard
Ferrell officiating. Burial will be in Sunset Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 4-6 p.m. Sunday.
E-mail expressions of sympathy may be sent to wessScondolences@schoedinger.com.

· ~Accident
fnHn

Cited by pollee

ana·

5 percent in 2000-01. RGCC loss of $250 million from
and other colleges are now Gov. Bob Tali's recommendalooking at . increasing tuition tion, is disappointing because
to make up for the loss.
of the push the Board of
" It's inevitable, but we will Regents and Chancellor
.remain - Gompetitive -with Roderick Chu are making to
other institutions," Dorsey stress technology~based edusaid.
cation - which Dorsey and
Students attending the uni- other edu'cators believe is
versity receive private choice critical to keeping young
grants to help in meeting people in the state.
Cmt!t"i!l'l&lt;'io ·a · mo~mber • Of• IIU.. ••·•' ~~-~1&gt; •W&amp;S,.t&amp;&lt; •be .: •a •. •break~ · ·
dents receive scholarships, through biennial budget · in
Dorsey said.
technology;' Dorsey said. "I
He added that 85 percent Qf · think he's (Chu) right. We ·
Rio Grande's students get must be provided with
some kind of financial assis- resources to offer training to
tance.
the workforce of Ohio.
"It makes us cost-effective
"Not · funding education at
and we ,pride ourselves on a level that doesn't l'rovide
that," Dorsey said. "We have training for the future is truly
worked very hard to make shortsight~d," he added.
higher education available. We
Dorsey said an answer t n
have said and continue to say the problem is a commitmeJ, ,
we will work with any stu- by political, and especially
dent to ensure that they go to' business, leaders to adequately
.
funding colleges and universicollege."
The cutback, includins the ties.

'992-6677

"I've seen that when they
do support higher education,
it makes all the difference in
convincing legislators to support it," he said. "Ohio has yet
to find that level of support
on a continuing basis."
"I unllerstand the position
the governor is in," Dorsey
added. "Bur at some point,
business and political leaders .
must •. cWork "·, together ' ,to ·, .
improve the level of support
for higher education."
Stare Sen. Michael Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, agreed
with Dorsey's sentiments in a
recent visit with school board
members and administrators,
noting thin higher education
was "decimated" by the budget.
I
''They say the new budget
has no new taxes, but if you
have a kid in college and
tuition goes up 9 percent,
that~s a tax increase," Shoemaker said.

WB'fl mlkiRI

wonens, an ODor spokesman said

Friday.
CO\Iel'ed detour signs are already

'l

Board meets

Datedlanged

"

Damage listed .

ANTIQUITY- Ohio Depart-

FQr fast, friendly
senil~ on your
next loan, see
Peggy Watson
In Gallipolis.

57 Court St.
~ Gallipolis

740-446-8000
Phone 99~·2588
Vinton-· 388·8603
AN OAK HIU. FINANCIAl. COMI'f\NY
All JOin• are tubtect to approvtl
Galli hs_•_
446·0852
_ _ _ 1111!1 _ _ _ _ _

Advisory off

RUT~ - Leading Greek
poned the closing of Ohio 338 at . ConserVancy District has li1ied the
the upper end ofAntiquity until July boil advisory issued for Ohio 124,
16.
Bradbury 1!-oad. Middleport Will, '
The closing dare i&lt; subject ro Snowden, Dead Man's Curve and
change if an ac1ive slip in the area Wagner roads, Ohio143, Bailey

ment of Transponatlon has post-

. ·-··--

-

~!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!~~~

.

Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by

1

~Ire TM HEARING AID CENTER I

1this prol;!lem can be helpedl Bring thla j;oupon with you for 1
'YOilrfBEE HEARING TE§T, a $75.00 value.
. .
1
I. UMWA•UAW•AAMCO.AND
ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS

"We Care For You Like F'amily"
(740) .446-7283

---------------·~

OH
•

1

HEARING lESTS

I
131
I
lo
I
I
TUESDAY, JULY 3,· 2001
I
. 40 448-1744•8~4
.
I Call Toll Freet-81)0.834.5265 for an Immediate appointment I
I The te818 will be given by a Lk:enll8d Hearing Aid Specialist I
_Anyone who h.. trouble hearing or under•~ndlng
I
I converatlon Is Invited to have a~ hNrlng .tnt to see H

'

70 Pine Street

COUPON

.J

HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Pomeroy

•

Festival

tration fee of$15.
Each child will be judged on
their personali ty, ability to
answer questions, stage presence
from Page AI
and overall'appearance.
Sparkler contest are:
0-3
Judges for the event are
months, 4- 6 months, 7-12 Christi Lynch of l.:I.S. Rep, Ted
months, 13- 18 months, 19-23 Strickland's office, and Jim Lilly•
months, 2 years, 3 years and 4 of the Small Business Developyears .
ment Center oflronton.
The judges will be from our · Little Miss and Mister Fireof town and will pick a fim, sec- cracke~ will each receive a
ond, third and most patriotic photo sitting donated by Image
attire in each age group and for Gallery, a $50 savings bond
both girls and bo~ separately donated by Peoples Bank and
Each child who participates Farme~ Bank &amp; Savings Co., a
receives a winner's ribbon.
crown by the Karat Patch, a troEa,ch child who places first phy donated by the ,Put on
v.j]l be aw:lrded a trophy ~pon- . Shop, and sash. First and second
sored by Wee Care, each second attendants and first and second
and third place winner will be mates will each receive a sash,
awanled a triple ribbon rosette participation ribbon, and a troand each "most patriotically phy by the Put on Shop.
dressed" winner will receive a
Winners will represent the
large red, white and blue ribbon. festival in the queen's parade and
Pictures of the winners will the Fo.urth ofJuly parade. ·
be taken between 11- 11 :30 a.m.
. "It has been such a pleasure
on July 4 o~ the main • sr.lt,re. working with the River RecreMaxwell ·can be contacted at ation Committee, the parents,
_home 441-0528 or at work judges, sponsors, and everyone
446-4463.
else who has helped to make
"Good luck to everyone," she this year's festival a succels;' said
said.
event chairperson Rachel Burns
"And remember the old Eng- and Administrative Assistant
lish proverb: There is only one Gallia County Chamber of
beautiful child in the world and Commerce.
every mother has it," Maxwell
Burns is also looking for last
added
year's Little Miss and Mister
Participant&gt; in the Little Miss Firecfacker
woUld like The
and Mister Firecracker contests parents of those children to
have to be between the ages of 5 please contact her at 446-3662
and 9 and may register up to.the · as they will needed at the cereday of the contest~with a regis- mony this year. -

Run Road, Ball Run Road, Wolf
Pen Road, HoweR Hill, Hibnd
Road, Children's Home Road,
· GALLIPOLIS - Cired by Gal- in place for a closure whether it l2kes
Bunlette Road, Laurel Clift' and
lipolis City Police Friday and early place on the 16th or before, if neces· adjacent roads, Union Avenue and
Saturday were Jerome A. Gordon, sary. Slow traffic can now travel
44, Gallipolis, disonledy conduct through the worl&lt; zone despite con- Union Terrace.
aller warning; Curtis W Hubbard, tinued problems from the slip.
55, Gallipolis, failure to comply with
Kokosing Construction of
a warrant; Chadotte M.Timbermm, Colwnbus is the contractor on the
18, Gallipolis, warrant in Clade · $1 .75 million project, which calls for
SYRACUSE-· Syracuse Board
County; Joseph A. Pollock, V, Gal- tnoving the highway further from
of Public Affain will meet Monday
lipolis, no operator's bcense;John A. the river bank and shoring up the
Clonch, Gallipolis, failure to conll'O( slip area. ooor engineers are at 7 p.m. at the water board office.
and OUI; John Chaffin, 50, Gallipo- hopeful that by doing this, recurring
lis, expired registration; Ray A. Pear- problems of erosion and settling will
son, 46, Bidwell, open container; and be alleviated altogether, or, at least,
.. . d
Crage A. Reed, 42, Gallipolis, theft.
greatly mmmuze.
SYRACUSE - Regular meetThe closure is expected to last 100
ing of Syracuse Village Council will ·
days, during which time .the official
lle
July 12 rather than July 5 at 7
derour routes will be 338 and Ohio
p.m. at villag.; hall:
124.
CENTERVILLE - Linda M.
Copley. Thunnan, informed Gallia
County sheriff's deputies that sometime Friday night her mailbox was
beat&lt;n with a ball bat. ·
CHESTER ~ Tuppers PlainsSandra Stephous, Patriot, reported Chester Water District has li1ied a
to deputies her mailbox had been boil advisory issued for BaumAddilllken off the post and smashed. This tion Road, Warehouse Road, Lake
is the second time in the past month,, Wood Road and Pomeroy Pike. A
520 W. Main St. •
sample taken on June 28 has been
she said
Pomeroy, Ohio
deemed sali:.

Knapp, 33451 Happy Hollow
Road, foUowing the 6;20 p.m.
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cra.ih "on County Road 16
(Beech Grove).
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Troopers said Darlene A.
:eteived instruction in such Hoschar, 28, 34980 Beech
edtergencie;, · and Red's was Grove Road, Rutland, was
;ailed. due to its training in southbound, three-tenth• of a
~azardous materials situations.
mile north of Ohio 124, when
the
car she drove ·s truck
''We do get some training
)d this kind of situation," - Knapp's bicycle, -which was
traveling in the same , direc- _
.
DOnnally said. ·
'G VFD sent two trucks and tion.
The accident 'remains under
2'2 · fi(efignren to the mine,
1rid had another truck on investigation, troopers said. ·.'
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;tandby at the parkfronr as
'vii:dFiight approacped, he
Auto- Oaoner•ln~urance
1dded.
Lire Home Car Buslness
The accident remains under
tnvestigation, the patrol said.
71e "1f- At~&amp; A ~fie.
Troopers reported , that a
12-year-old Rpdand area boy. IJifSUJW(CE PLUS
.vas taken ro St. Mary:s by
\1edFiight following a colli- · AGENCIES, INC.
;'ion between a car and the
114 Court
Jicycle the youth rode -Friday.
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The hospital had no record
Jf admission
- on Dustin K.

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CONSOL will nor comment on the future of the
prope rties it purchased or
the future of the miners'
jobs, because of a confidenti5lity agreement which is a
term of the sale.
Windsor Coal Co. in West
Liberty, W.Va., and Central
Ohio Coal Co. in Cumberland were included in ·die
memorandum of understanding about the sale of
the mines.
The agreement between
AEP and CONSOL also
includes coal' supply agreements, under which AEP
will purchase approxi~'
~4 ton~ of coal from the
mines sold under the agreement and other CONSOL
affiliate mmes, through
2008.
The coal sold to AEP
under the agreement will
be used to fuel AEP's coalfired power plants, including th_s Gen. James M.
G~a~Piant in Cheshire,
r
IJ Musking\lm River
Pia
·and ·the Cardinal
Plant. ·
·
. SOCCO's Meigs Division
employs 680 coal miners
and other employees. The
Meigs County operation
includes two unde-rground
longwall coal mines, Meigs
2 and Meigs 31, as well as
a coal preparation plant and
a general office at Point
Rock.

TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • -Point Pleasant, WV

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EXECUTION.

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advartl•lng Manager

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WALK·INS WELCOME

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Opinion
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-iunhq 'lmt•"' flead:bul ·

I'M~
'f&lt;D HAn DOESrtT ·
COVER YOOR

Oelllpolla, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point PI....nt. W.Va.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor ·

Charltt W. Govey

Publlaher

Page A4 -.
Sunct.y. July 1. 201t

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Sun~ay, July 1, 2001

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OUR VIEW

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Budget deals blow to higher
education improvement
Ohio leaders' focus on submitting the latest solution to the
school funding dilemma by last month left behind 'another
. consideration higher education. The two-year budget
signed by the governor has reduced support for colleges and
universities.
.
We recognize thar'Ieaders had to make some hard decisions
because they were·under the gun from the Supreme Court to
develop a new funding plan for public schools. Revenues are
tight and looking to decline if the economy doesn't reverse its
slide. But shooting higher education in the foot won 'r be in the
1
state's best interest.
Distinguished; jf you want to call it that, with one of the
lower college-going rates in the nation, Ohio has made strides
toward bringing up attendance levels to ensure higher education is available to anyone who seeks it. Reduction in funds
makes that option- a bit more difficult for those who haven't
been graced with scholarships or some other form of financial
.
.
.
.
aid.
A cutback in funding also puts an ·onus on state and private
institutions to inake up the shortfall with increased tuition. If
those rates are already high, students are discouraged from
attending those institutions and are f0 rced to explore other
• schools . .
Out-of-•tate costs fo~ college are always high. It's a sad situ-·
a.tion when some schools become more expensive than those
in neighboring, states. .
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The Board o( Regents hils pushed for increased emphasis on
technoi!IID'~ba:sed education. In other words, -making Ohioans
more pl'(l~tient with computer skills to meet the demands of
· the chansing workplace. The new budget put&gt; that endeavor
on the back burner.
We can hope for an improvement in the. stare's fo~tunes
when the n~ budget comes up - and that the additional
$1.4 billion for publi'c school education meets the high cdurr's
demanCb for equitable funding. If not, colleges and universities
are in for -~ tougher time, and Ohio slides furt.her away from
improving iis ~;is a state where higher education is valued.
.Right_""""· it's .o~ous the state can't afford certain things.
But we 'ctai) ~fford a.'growing loss of prestige? Now is the time
to s~_-cobl\de_ring our ai)Swer to tl;lat question.
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BY THE' ASSOCIATED PRESS

OUR READERS' VIEWS
Problems with
our country ·
'

Dear Editor:
I would like to bring some things to
the attention of all Americans, especially Ve$erans and their families. This is
the same country that we and many of
our fellow citizens fought for and
served, in order to protect our right to
freedom.
·
First, U.S. Reps. Cunningham (RCalif.), Thornberry (R-Texas), Johnson
(R- Texas) and Ellen Tauscher (DCalif.) ·have introduced a bill to Congress that will ensure the voting rights
of military members and their families.
Thjs will prevent persons such as those
elected in the last general election, from
denying the voting rights of Americans
serving overseas and out of their home
· of record.
This bill is called the Military Overseas Voter Bmpowerment(MOVE), and
' person wnre
. our local
I ask that each.
congressthan, Ted Strickland, and ask
him point blank whether he intends to
support or oppose this movement.
Second, U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee (D- Texas) has introduced legislation ·into Congress that would
change Veterans Day into Election Day
·every four years. If her bill passes, Veterans Day would be moved from Nov.
11 to the f~rst Tuesday in November,
beginning in 2004 and in .every -presiden~ial election year thereafter.
The purpose. of this is to make Election Day into a federal holiday without
having to actu~lly create a new federal
holiday. Supporters say this would
make voting more convenient for more
people. How nice of her and-her supporters. Ask the brave soldiers ofWorld

War I who lie in the cold ground in credit requirements and attending
Europe and hear how they feel!
Home Ownership classes.
When Veterans Day was established,
Applications are screened for eligi- ,
it was to honor veterans of all wars.·-bility by the local lending institution
Now, just as Memorial Day has be~ome and USDA Rural Development office.
a starr' of a holiday instead .of a qay of Interest and down payment are deter~
remembrance she wants to change the mined on an individual basis by the
reason for \fererans Day every four criteria of, the lending institution and
Rural Development.
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years. Leave Veterans Day alone!
Third, did you know that this past
No person can be discriminated
Sunday in Colmpbus, Ohio, two men against 'because of race, color, creed,
were arrested for destroying a flag of a sex, or place of employment.
Linda Plants' questions of improprigroup marching in a parade? This flag
was not an American flag but a flag ety &lt;egarding the applicants and the
representing a group of people in a project were referred to the Ohio
legal march. Why is it then that it is Department of Development. ODOD
against the law tq do this, but at the reviewed the program and found the
same time in our great country one can project met all guidelines and eligibiliburn the American flag which is not ty standards.
protected 'by law? I think this is wrong.
If Ms. Plants or any other Gallia or
But even one of our veterans, former Meigs resident is interested in the pro•
Sen .John Glenn, did not support pro- gram, they can make application at any,
tecting the flag. Do we have our wires &lt;lour offices.
crossed in America or what?
Trish McCullouih
Executive Director
Richard B. Roberts
Gallia-Meigs CM .
Gallipolis
Cheshire
P S. - If you or a loved one is suffering from Agent Orange exposure,
there is a new ho~ line for the Department ofVeterans Affairs at l-800-749-,
8387. Call Monday through Friday
Dear Editor:
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As a cancer survivor, I wish to thank .
from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. in order to speak
with a representative or call · iq the Holzer Medical Center and Holzer
evening· to .leave a voice mail message. Clinic for sponsoring the great event,
Relay for Life, on June 22, 201lt at the
Gallipolis City Park.
The ceremony was meaningful to all
survivors, and their families and
Dear Editor:
Gallia- Meigs · Cummllnit't'-- Action friends. I wish to thank all the staff and
Agency has offered an opportunity to volunteers who gave support through
purchase a new home within govern- time, money and prayers. Most families
ment- established guidelines to persons are touched by cancer and this event
of limited income who meet program gives hope for the healing process.
Donna Kent, RN .
eligibility. Interested persons may apply
Cheshire
by' submittil!g an application, meeting

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Once more, court makes a bad .law out of a hard case ·

Kilpatrick

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The court ditched the reasoning o(
Olmstead in Katz v. l)nired States . in
1';167. The case involved a professional
gambler who used a sidewalk telephone ·
booth to talk with ips clientele. Poljce .
eavesdropped with an, electronic device : ·
placed on the outside of the booth. The· · ·
court ruled 7-1 that the government had '
rhus violated Katz's reasonable expectac
•
tion of privacy. The evidence had to be ·
thrown out.
Suddenly we are thrown back to Katz.
Now it is not OK, withdut a warrant, to
use the sense-enhancing technology of :t
thermal imager. Justice John Pa~JI
Stevens, dissenting in the Kyllo cas~.
worried r~r the majority's rule would
make it unconstitutional for police to
use new devices to detect the odor pf
deadly bacteria or cheriticals for making
a new type of high explosive. .
.
Justice Scalia, for his parr, worrie&amp;•that
without a bright line, homeowners _ ·
could be _left at the mercy of advancing
technology. T e ''relatively crude'' device
used in the K lo case could disclose "a'l
what hour each ighr the lady of the
house take~ her ily sauna and bath.';
The court's new rule is intended "to take
account of more sophisticated systems
that are already in use or in develop- ·
ment."
It is an old rule that fire is sometimes ·
best fought with fire. In a world of crim-·
inals who present dangers far more serious than Danny Kyllo's attic plantation,
detectives have to have some freedom 'to
detect.
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ljames]. Kilpatrick i5 a wlumnist for Universal Press Syndi~ate.)
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CONSOL is one of the
country's largest coal producers, · and specializes in
longwall operations. It is
also the nation's largest

Budget
from PapAl

added Dorsey, who's helmed
Rio Grande since 1991.
Higher education rook a hit
HARTFORD, W.Va.- David C. Warth, 67, Hartfond, died in the budget ,due partly to
Friday, June 29,2001 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
declining revenues and shiftBorn July 3, 1933 in Hartford, son of the late Robert W. ing of$1.4 billion to equalize
"Bob" Jr. and Freda H. Turley Warth, he was a retired coal puolii: school funding.
mine~ from Meigs Mine 2, a member of UMW,A Local 1886
Dorsey said one of the crit. ~nd attended Middleport Church of Nazarene. · ical areas cut was in Access
He was also preceded in de~th by his wife, Kathryn Florence Challenge, which provided
G1bbs Warth; a son, John Michael Warth; and two brothers, two-year
colleges
like
Fl6yd Warth and "Rog"Warth.
,
· RGCC and some f~ur-year
Surviving ·are eight daughters, Linda L: Games) Roush of instituri~ns such as Shawnee·
Reedsville, Reda F. (George) Brown of Chft~n, W.Va.,Tammy State University with money
V. (Wayne) Green and Helen D. (Troy) Dudding, both of Hartd .
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'rord, Mary I}. (Chest~r) Rou~h an d Fre da L. Ea ki ns, b oth o f · to 1ower
rumon
an
mcrease
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Middleport, Patricia A. (Dave) Reitmire ofPoctland, and Regi- accembihty..
na S. Camp of New Haven, W.Va.; two sons, Floyd L. (Vicki)
. The fundmg, Dorsey S31d,
Warth ofJacksonville, Fla., and David W Goyce) Warth of Hob- was
key
m
atrracrmg
son; 26 gran~children and 14 great-grandchildren; two sisters, Appalachian students.
Lora Mae (Frank) Imboden ofRudand, and Carolyn (Howard)
Under Access Challenge,
Brewer of Hartford; and a brother, Donald W~rth of Hartfond. RGCC h~ld tuition stable for
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in FO(!Iesong-Tucker Funer- two years and decreased it by
al Home, Mason, W.Va., .with the Rev. Allen D. Midcap ofliciatifig. Burial will be in Graham Cemetery, New Haven. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.

.David C. Warth

CAA responds

James

same time."

Juhe 2?, 2001 in Holzer Medical .Cenrer.
Arrangements will be announced by Cremeens Funeral
Chapel.

Great event

Today i.! Sunday,July 1, the 182nd day of2001.There are 183
days left in the yc;ar. This is Canada Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
Ori July 1, 1867, Canada became a self-governing dominion
of Great Britain as the British North America Act rook effect.
On this date:
Hard cases, they say, make bad law. The
In 1863, the Civil War Bartle of Gettysburg began.
case of Danny Kyllo was a hard case. On
In 1898, during the Spanish-American War, Theodore RooJune 11, sure enough , the Supreme
Court made some bad law our of it. •
sevelt and his "Rough Riders" waged a victorious assault on
The facts were never at issue. Federal
San Juan Hill in Cuba.
In 1943, "pay-as-you-go" income tax withholding began.
agents in Florence, Ore., received tips
. In 1946, the :United States exploded a 20-kiloron atomic
that, Kyllo was growing marijuana in his
bomb near Bikini Atoll in the Pacific.
home. A check of his utiliry bills added
In 1961, Diana, the ,princess of ~ales, was born near Santo their suspicion. The officers doubted
dringham,,England. (She died in a 1997 car crash in Paris at age
they had enough evidence to obtain a
36.)
search warrant, . so they resorted to a
COLUMNIST
In 1963, the U.S. Post Office inaugurated its five-digit ZIP
thermal imager. They set up the device
codes.
_
in a car across the .street, and aJ 3:20 on
In 1968, the United States, Britain, the Soviet U11ion and 58
a morning in January 1992 the instru- gifted jurist, but this was not his best
other nations signed the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.
ment recorded a high level of hear r~di- effort. He concluded that the federal
In 1969, Britain's Prince Charles was invested as the Prince
ating from the ga~a~e r?of.. · .
agents crossed -a forbidden line when
ofWales.
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Armed With this mforma!lon, the fed- . they turned on the thermal imager.
In 1971, the U.S. Post Office was replaced with the United
era! agents qbtamed a warrant to search . This was his .key sentence: "We think
States Postal Service.
Kyllo's home._ There they found mo~e that obtaining by sense- enhancing techthan 100 manJuana plants, the1r luxun- nology any information regarding the
In 1997, Hong Kong reve.rted to Chinese rule after 156 years
as a British colony.
ant growth promoted by the .warmth of interior of the home that could not nthTen years ago: President Bush nominated federal appeals
high-intensity halide lights. K;yllo moved erwise have been obtained 'without
court Judge Clarence Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court,
to suppress the thermal ' evidence, but physical intrusion into a constitutionally
beginning a confirmation process marked by allegations of sexeve~\ually h1s motion was demed. He · •protected area constit.utes a search _ at
ual harassment. Actor Michael Landon died ih Malibu, Calif.,
appe;ll~d, and the Suprem.e Court agr~ed le3lit where (as here) the technology in .
at age 54.
to decide whether ther_mal Jmagm-g VIO- .
t'
.
t-I bl'
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Five years '"go: President Clinton declared an emergency in
lares the Fourth Amendment.
ques 100 15 no m genera pu •c use.
• drought-!tricken par_ts of the Southwest. Aetress Ma=. ux
· 'Th F th A · d
t · t h t rh . It was a clumsy sentence, the produc_t'
-.., ·" --!--:: -.:.~~~-~n :;:" sayhs . _ah ~ of clumsy thought. More than 70 years
Hemingway was found dead in her Santa Monica, Calif., apartgovernmen, may nor v •v1:!te"t e ng t·o
- "--lieli-'am· 'x'
f
d
ment; .she was 41.
the pe.ople to be sefure in their house~ ago! m t e an 31' case 0 01 msrea _v.
One year-ago:Verll10)_1t's dl(il unions law, which granted gay
against unreasonabl~ searches. The ques- Umred States, the court first wrestled
tion before the .higjt court was decep- ~th the Four~ Amendmen~ ~~blem of
couples most of the rights, benefits and responsibilities of mar- ·
riage, went into effect. The Confederate flag was removed from
tively simple: Was th,e thermal imaging a s~nse-en~ncmg _technology. In 1928
.. atop South Carolina's Statehouse. Acto_£ Walter Matthau died in
search, and was it unreasonable? The th1s .was_ wuetappmg. The offense was
Santa Monica, Calif., at age 79.
high court ruled 5-4 that yes, rhe agents' bootleggi?~· The court voted 5-4 to let
Today's Birthdays: Actress Olivia de Havilland is 85. Actor
condu ct constituted an unreasonable Olmstead s conviction stand. There had
Farley Granger is 76. Actress-dancer 1-.eslie Caron is "70. Actress
search . The government may put Kyllo been no, physical inr~usion into the
Jean Marsh is 67. Movie director Sydney Pollack is 67. Movie
on trial again, bur withollt the agents' defendants home; the mtercepred conproducer-director Claude Berri is 67. Actor Jamie Parr is 67.
e~idence ·the government has no case.
vcrsatiqns were not tangible; and the
Comedy writer Pat McCormick is 67. Bluesman James Cotton
Justice Antonio Scalia wrote the Fourth Amendment does not protect
is 66. Actor David PrdW.se is 66.
.,
malority opinion. He is the court's most intangible things.
'-. ...

will

John M.Merk
'GALLIPOLIS -John
M. Merk, 75, Gallipolis: died Friday,

KILPATRICK'S VIEW-

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Ronald 1ton'. McCias•·ey
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"It's not going to happen
by June 30, bur it's going to
happen soon," Michalski
·said, noting that SOCCO
employees will remain in
AEP's employ until the
paperwork is finalized and
the sale is completed.
"In theory, at the end of
their shift on the day the
deal closes, the miners!
employment with AEP will
end, and those miners
be laid off," Michalski said,
"but that's just a technicality, and they ·could become
CONSOL employees at the

exporter of coal, having
exported nearly 13 million
BIDWELL- Ronald "Ron" McClaskey. 50, Lehigh Acres, tons of coal iri 1999.
. Fla., d1ed Sunday, June 24, 2001 at his residence, following an
The same year, CONSOL
extended illness.
· claimed revenues of" $2.2
Born Sept. 13, 1950, in Gallia County, son of the late Mar- · billion .
shall McClaskey, and Delcie Reynolds McClaskey of Bidwell,
"We
anticipate
that
he was a 1968 graduate of North Gallia High School, and a CONSOL will keep the
Vietnam veteran.
.
mines running," Michalski
Surviving in addition to his mother are his ~fe, Lori; a son, said. "It is our understand Shown of Naples, Fla.; a daughter, Sherry of Vienna, Va.; a irig that. the Meigs Mines
Jgrandson; and a sister, Barbara Sue O'Brien of Brentwood, will remain open, and that
Tenn.
the Windsor operation will
Arrangements wenfby American Family Funeral Home, Fort be reopened shortly after
Myers, Fla.
.
.
the sale is finaljjted."

Slidin
~~

f•omP8geA1

GALLIPOliS - Geneve Brown, 89, Gallipolis, died 'Friday,
June 29, 2001 m Heartland of Marietta, where she had been a
resident for seven months.
Born Dec. 17, 1911 in Meigs County, daughter of the late
William and Iva Sp1res Musser, she retired as a LPN from Gallipolis State Institute in 1971. She attended Langsville Christian Church.
She was also prec.eded in death on ]all. 1, 1991 by her husband, Fred Brown, whom she married Nov. 14, 1929; two
infant sons; and four brothers, William, Arthur, Raymond and
Hubert Musser.
Surviving are three -daughters, Aretta ~ob) Montgo!Tlery of
Crystal R1v,er, Fla., Dorothy (Murray) Haskins of Nelsonville, .
and Virginia (Bob) Smeltzer of New Matamoras; nine grand~ '
children, 15 gre~r-gr~ndchildren and tJu:ee great-great-grimd-1
chlldren; and a sJster-m-law, Glyrus Musser of Rutland.
Services will be 2:30p.m. Monday in Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home, with Pastor Robert E. Musser officiating. Buria l will be in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.

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1At1nJ 10 tilt ftii~Dr drt wtkotu Tiley 1/tould bt ltn tlflln JOO.wortb. A.JlldltrJ
f t ••6./«f to tdld111 tutti"''"' b• rl&amp;tttd fltul i•cbult Dddrtu Gild ltltpllont numbtr.
No
ltfkrl ..wiU H publfJiftd. Utltl"' slloNid ~ 111 food ta!lt, addrmfng
l.uus, 11at ,nonalUUJ.
7Jur opiltibru upnuttl ill tltt column btlow Q/'1 till tOIISIIUIIS of tht Ohio Valli!J
P.Wi•1 c~~: wii~ boord, ,,,,, othtnvist nottd.

Mines

Geneve Brown

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Margaret M. Wess

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fiROVE CITY - Margaret Maud Brewer Wess,
Grove
City, died Friday, June 29, 2001 at her residence, following an
exiended illness.
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She and her husband owned and operated Brooks Pastries for
24 years.
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Surviving are 'her husband, Donald Wess Sr.; two sons, Donald Wess Jr. of Columbus, and· David (Mary) Wess of Grove
City; a daughter, Tracy (Mark) Clanin of Grove City; 10 grandchildren; two sisters, Dorothy (Dallas) Janey of Langsville, and
Martha (John) Wess of Grandview; three brothers, Walter.
. Brewer and Stuart (Carol) Brewer, both of Columbus; and
William (Bert) Brewer of Grove City; and several nieces and
nephews.
~he was preceded in death by her parents, Paul and Margaret
Br~wer; two sisters, Mary Brewer and Rosie Leonard; and a
brother, Thomas P. Brewer.
.
Services will l:)e noon Monday in. Schoedinger Norris
. Cliapel; 3920 Broadway, Grove City, with the Rev. Bernard
Ferrell officiating. Burial will be in Sunset Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home from 4-6 p.m. Sunday.
E-mail expressions of sympathy may be sent to wessScondolences@schoedinger.com.

· ~Accident
fnHn

Cited by pollee

ana·

5 percent in 2000-01. RGCC loss of $250 million from
and other colleges are now Gov. Bob Tali's recommendalooking at . increasing tuition tion, is disappointing because
to make up for the loss.
of the push the Board of
" It's inevitable, but we will Regents and Chancellor
.remain - Gompetitive -with Roderick Chu are making to
other institutions," Dorsey stress technology~based edusaid.
cation - which Dorsey and
Students attending the uni- other edu'cators believe is
versity receive private choice critical to keeping young
grants to help in meeting people in the state.
Cmt!t"i!l'l&lt;'io ·a · mo~mber • Of• IIU.. ••·•' ~~-~1&gt; •W&amp;S,.t&amp;&lt; •be .: •a •. •break~ · ·
dents receive scholarships, through biennial budget · in
Dorsey said.
technology;' Dorsey said. "I
He added that 85 percent Qf · think he's (Chu) right. We ·
Rio Grande's students get must be provided with
some kind of financial assis- resources to offer training to
tance.
the workforce of Ohio.
"It makes us cost-effective
"Not · funding education at
and we ,pride ourselves on a level that doesn't l'rovide
that," Dorsey said. "We have training for the future is truly
worked very hard to make shortsight~d," he added.
higher education available. We
Dorsey said an answer t n
have said and continue to say the problem is a commitmeJ, ,
we will work with any stu- by political, and especially
dent to ensure that they go to' business, leaders to adequately
.
funding colleges and universicollege."
The cutback, includins the ties.

'992-6677

"I've seen that when they
do support higher education,
it makes all the difference in
convincing legislators to support it," he said. "Ohio has yet
to find that level of support
on a continuing basis."
"I unllerstand the position
the governor is in," Dorsey
added. "Bur at some point,
business and political leaders .
must •. cWork "·, together ' ,to ·, .
improve the level of support
for higher education."
Stare Sen. Michael Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, agreed
with Dorsey's sentiments in a
recent visit with school board
members and administrators,
noting thin higher education
was "decimated" by the budget.
I
''They say the new budget
has no new taxes, but if you
have a kid in college and
tuition goes up 9 percent,
that~s a tax increase," Shoemaker said.

WB'fl mlkiRI

wonens, an ODor spokesman said

Friday.
CO\Iel'ed detour signs are already

'l

Board meets

Datedlanged

"

Damage listed .

ANTIQUITY- Ohio Depart-

FQr fast, friendly
senil~ on your
next loan, see
Peggy Watson
In Gallipolis.

57 Court St.
~ Gallipolis

740-446-8000
Phone 99~·2588
Vinton-· 388·8603
AN OAK HIU. FINANCIAl. COMI'f\NY
All JOin• are tubtect to approvtl
Galli hs_•_
446·0852
_ _ _ 1111!1 _ _ _ _ _

Advisory off

RUT~ - Leading Greek
poned the closing of Ohio 338 at . ConserVancy District has li1ied the
the upper end ofAntiquity until July boil advisory issued for Ohio 124,
16.
Bradbury 1!-oad. Middleport Will, '
The closing dare i&lt; subject ro Snowden, Dead Man's Curve and
change if an ac1ive slip in the area Wagner roads, Ohio143, Bailey

ment of Transponatlon has post-

. ·-··--

-

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.

Will be given in GALLIA COUNTY by

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131
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lo
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I
TUESDAY, JULY 3,· 2001
I
. 40 448-1744•8~4
.
I Call Toll Freet-81)0.834.5265 for an Immediate appointment I
I The te818 will be given by a Lk:enll8d Hearing Aid Specialist I
_Anyone who h.. trouble hearing or under•~ndlng
I
I converatlon Is Invited to have a~ hNrlng .tnt to see H

'

70 Pine Street

COUPON

.J

HOME OYGEN &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Pomeroy

•

Festival

tration fee of$15.
Each child will be judged on
their personali ty, ability to
answer questions, stage presence
from Page AI
and overall'appearance.
Sparkler contest are:
0-3
Judges for the event are
months, 4- 6 months, 7-12 Christi Lynch of l.:I.S. Rep, Ted
months, 13- 18 months, 19-23 Strickland's office, and Jim Lilly•
months, 2 years, 3 years and 4 of the Small Business Developyears .
ment Center oflronton.
The judges will be from our · Little Miss and Mister Fireof town and will pick a fim, sec- cracke~ will each receive a
ond, third and most patriotic photo sitting donated by Image
attire in each age group and for Gallery, a $50 savings bond
both girls and bo~ separately donated by Peoples Bank and
Each child who participates Farme~ Bank &amp; Savings Co., a
receives a winner's ribbon.
crown by the Karat Patch, a troEa,ch child who places first phy donated by the ,Put on
v.j]l be aw:lrded a trophy ~pon- . Shop, and sash. First and second
sored by Wee Care, each second attendants and first and second
and third place winner will be mates will each receive a sash,
awanled a triple ribbon rosette participation ribbon, and a troand each "most patriotically phy by the Put on Shop.
dressed" winner will receive a
Winners will represent the
large red, white and blue ribbon. festival in the queen's parade and
Pictures of the winners will the Fo.urth ofJuly parade. ·
be taken between 11- 11 :30 a.m.
. "It has been such a pleasure
on July 4 o~ the main • sr.lt,re. working with the River RecreMaxwell ·can be contacted at ation Committee, the parents,
_home 441-0528 or at work judges, sponsors, and everyone
446-4463.
else who has helped to make
"Good luck to everyone," she this year's festival a succels;' said
said.
event chairperson Rachel Burns
"And remember the old Eng- and Administrative Assistant
lish proverb: There is only one Gallia County Chamber of
beautiful child in the world and Commerce.
every mother has it," Maxwell
Burns is also looking for last
added
year's Little Miss and Mister
Participant&gt; in the Little Miss Firecfacker
woUld like The
and Mister Firecracker contests parents of those children to
have to be between the ages of 5 please contact her at 446-3662
and 9 and may register up to.the · as they will needed at the cereday of the contest~with a regis- mony this year. -

Run Road, Ball Run Road, Wolf
Pen Road, HoweR Hill, Hibnd
Road, Children's Home Road,
· GALLIPOLIS - Cired by Gal- in place for a closure whether it l2kes
Bunlette Road, Laurel Clift' and
lipolis City Police Friday and early place on the 16th or before, if neces· adjacent roads, Union Avenue and
Saturday were Jerome A. Gordon, sary. Slow traffic can now travel
44, Gallipolis, disonledy conduct through the worl&lt; zone despite con- Union Terrace.
aller warning; Curtis W Hubbard, tinued problems from the slip.
55, Gallipolis, failure to comply with
Kokosing Construction of
a warrant; Chadotte M.Timbermm, Colwnbus is the contractor on the
18, Gallipolis, warrant in Clade · $1 .75 million project, which calls for
SYRACUSE-· Syracuse Board
County; Joseph A. Pollock, V, Gal- tnoving the highway further from
of Public Affain will meet Monday
lipolis, no operator's bcense;John A. the river bank and shoring up the
Clonch, Gallipolis, failure to conll'O( slip area. ooor engineers are at 7 p.m. at the water board office.
and OUI; John Chaffin, 50, Gallipo- hopeful that by doing this, recurring
lis, expired registration; Ray A. Pear- problems of erosion and settling will
son, 46, Bidwell, open container; and be alleviated altogether, or, at least,
.. . d
Crage A. Reed, 42, Gallipolis, theft.
greatly mmmuze.
SYRACUSE - Regular meetThe closure is expected to last 100
ing of Syracuse Village Council will ·
days, during which time .the official
lle
July 12 rather than July 5 at 7
derour routes will be 338 and Ohio
p.m. at villag.; hall:
124.
CENTERVILLE - Linda M.
Copley. Thunnan, informed Gallia
County sheriff's deputies that sometime Friday night her mailbox was
beat&lt;n with a ball bat. ·
CHESTER ~ Tuppers PlainsSandra Stephous, Patriot, reported Chester Water District has li1ied a
to deputies her mailbox had been boil advisory issued for BaumAddilllken off the post and smashed. This tion Road, Warehouse Road, Lake
is the second time in the past month,, Wood Road and Pomeroy Pike. A
520 W. Main St. •
sample taken on June 28 has been
she said
Pomeroy, Ohio
deemed sali:.

Knapp, 33451 Happy Hollow
Road, foUowing the 6;20 p.m.
~
,.
.
cra.ih "on County Road 16
(Beech Grove).
I
Page AI
Troopers said Darlene A.
:eteived instruction in such Hoschar, 28, 34980 Beech
edtergencie;, · and Red's was Grove Road, Rutland, was
;ailed. due to its training in southbound, three-tenth• of a
~azardous materials situations.
mile north of Ohio 124, when
the
car she drove ·s truck
''We do get some training
)d this kind of situation," - Knapp's bicycle, -which was
traveling in the same , direc- _
.
DOnnally said. ·
'G VFD sent two trucks and tion.
The accident 'remains under
2'2 · fi(efignren to the mine,
1rid had another truck on investigation, troopers said. ·.'
•
;tandby at the parkfronr as
'vii:dFiight approacped, he
Auto- Oaoner•ln~urance
1dded.
Lire Home Car Buslness
The accident remains under
tnvestigation, the patrol said.
71e "1f- At~&amp; A ~fie.
Troopers reported , that a
12-year-old Rpdand area boy. IJifSUJW(CE PLUS
.vas taken ro St. Mary:s by
\1edFiight following a colli- · AGENCIES, INC.
;'ion between a car and the
114 Court
Jicycle the youth rode -Friday.
•
The hospital had no record
Jf admission
- on Dustin K.

.

CONSOL will nor comment on the future of the
prope rties it purchased or
the future of the miners'
jobs, because of a confidenti5lity agreement which is a
term of the sale.
Windsor Coal Co. in West
Liberty, W.Va., and Central
Ohio Coal Co. in Cumberland were included in ·die
memorandum of understanding about the sale of
the mines.
The agreement between
AEP and CONSOL also
includes coal' supply agreements, under which AEP
will purchase approxi~'
~4 ton~ of coal from the
mines sold under the agreement and other CONSOL
affiliate mmes, through
2008.
The coal sold to AEP
under the agreement will
be used to fuel AEP's coalfired power plants, including th_s Gen. James M.
G~a~Piant in Cheshire,
r
IJ Musking\lm River
Pia
·and ·the Cardinal
Plant. ·
·
. SOCCO's Meigs Division
employs 680 coal miners
and other employees. The
Meigs County operation
includes two unde-rground
longwall coal mines, Meigs
2 and Meigs 31, as well as
a coal preparation plant and
a general office at Point
Rock.

TRI-COUNTY BRIEFS

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&amp;unbap 1limr&amp; -&amp;tntmd • Page A5

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • -Point Pleasant, WV

•

Deaths·

•'

EXECUTION.

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Larry Boyer
Advartl•lng Manager

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WALK·INS WELCOME

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· ;;...e.;;;;;;...;;;S;;_t.;;;;._V.;;;;..;;;;.irgi..;;;;.n.;;;o.i;;;...a.;;...;;;;;._·_ _ _ _ _ _

J. . .:~!r. .· ~~-'
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su_nct.y._Pa:;;..·

Sunday, July 1

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VA.

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c 2001 Accu\Neatner,

O ia.~- - ~-·~·
.

Cloudj

(,~, ,

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SMwe1&gt;

T-.-s

Rain

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Au!llol

~~¥~~·"·

~"'"

Soow

h:e

:

INSTITUTE (AP) - The state's ting substantially more money than they
Higher Education Policy Commission actually received. .
"We all have in Hating com that need
allocated $9.2 million to West Virginia's
public colleges and universities Friday, to be covered under sustained quality
· but delayed until Aug. 2 a decision on funding," Bradley said. "There needs to
funding for special projects and insur- be an equal amount in that column. I
ance premium~ :
r
think that is an important distinction to
The sta e 's Higher Education Policy make."
Commission, which oversees budgetary
However, Chancellor Michael MuUen
matters, awarded $2.9 million to West cautioned that the state Legislature ha.s
Virginia University, S2.5 miUion to Mar- · made it clear it will not fund inflationary
shall University, and about $115,000 to costs.
"The interest is in funding change," not
Glenville State.
Bluefield State got about $114,000, inflation," Mullen said.
the lowest amount awarded to a fourAlso Friday, the comniissi~n approved
year institution.
a proposal for a collaborative program
Funding was distributed to · schools between Marshall and . Glenville that
based on how· they compared to peer offers a master of arts &lt;!egree program
institutions in other states. Schools that for classroom teachers.
compared favorably ·received "sustained
The program, which will draw from
quality" funds. Schools that were under- about 1,200 educators in a I 0 county
funded in comparison got ".peer equity" . area ;erved by Glenville, offers a concendollars.
tratiorl in math, science and technology
But Dan ·Bradley, president of Fair- for elementary school teachers seeking
mont State, said the breakdown made it graduate training.
appear that ·some institutions were getStudents 'will take courses at Glenville

but receive their degree from Marshall.
"We're really e;.cited about this pfugram," Glenville President Thomas Pow-,
ell said. "This is no small accomplishment for central West Virginia."
.
The commission's proposals for paying
Board of Risk and Insurance Management premiums drew the most debate
during the meeting because total insurance costs exceed available funds. ·
;,
One proposal would penalize Manha:ij
and WVU for legislative allocation~
made to cover increasing medical malpractice premiums. Earlier this year, lawmakers earmarked S627 ,468 to Marshall's medical school and $1,277,799 to
'
WVU's medical school.
Under that proposal, the two unive~i=
ties would receive those allocations -:
~ut nothing else, which would leave thl!
schools with no money to pay nonrned..:
ical insurance costs. All remaining fundi
would be split among the other suto
schools, which would still have ~ coveia 7 percent increase in insurance preffii;
•

urns . .
-

••

Smith off critical list
CHARLESTON (AP) - 'Former Democratic Gov.
Hulett C. Smith has been taken off the critical co ndition list
at C harl eston Area Medical Center.
Smith, 82 and a resident of Beckley, was taken to the hospital's intensive care unit Thursday afternoon after he fell
down stairs at his home and suffered a head injury, said
Lewis N . McManus, a former spea~r of-the House of Delegates and a longtime friend of Smith.
Smith was upgraded from criti c-al to serious condition on
Friday.
Sfl\ith served as West Virginia's 27t h governo r after being
elected to a four-year term in 1964. He succeeded Gov.
WW Barron .
·

Man killed during oil change
CHARLESTON (AP) - A Wayne County man was
killed when he was hit by a pickup truck while changing
the oi!"in his vehicle off state Route 152 near Brush Creek.
Roger Robinso~ . 60, of Radnor was standing in his driveway with his daughter when they were stru ck by Christo- .
pher Daniel Copley, who apparently had lost conhol of his
truck.
·
Copley, 26, of Radnor, veered off the road Thursday night,
flipped the vehicle and hit two parked cars in addition to
Robinson and his daughter, said Captain T?dd Elliott of the
Wayne County Sheriff's Department.
. Copley a.nd Robinson's daughter, Sabrina Varney, 30, also
of Radnor, were taken to St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington .

Firm fights race track plans

New mayor unhappy with center

.,•

ERIE, Pa. (AP) -The owner of an off-track betting facil4
ity will oppose an application from a West Virginia compa~
ny to starf a thoroughbred race track in Erie County. , .
Joseph Lashinger, vice president and general counsel of
~Penn National Corp., said Thursday that the proposal to
open a track iJ1 Sun1nJit Township could potentially hurt his
company's Downs at Erie off-track betti.ng facility and "will
be bad fo 1 the horse racing industry in the state."
Mountaineer ·Race Track and qaming Resort of t hester,
W.Va., has said it is wi lling to invest $56 million over several yea rs to build Presque Isle Downs, A track there would
bring the sport back to Erie County for the first time in;
more than a de cade.
·
The State · R~c ing Commission plans to investigate · the
application and hold at least one public hearing in Erie
WEST UNION (AP) - An Ohio man was killed after his before voting on whether a horse racing license should b lO
•
all-terrain· vehicle overturned and landed on him, the third tpproved.
fatal ATV accideni in West Virginia this week.
bac~k
Daniel Ash Sr., 57, of Garrettsville, Ohio, was driving up
a steep embankment about 7:30 T hursday when the ATV . WHEELING (AP) - Form'e r vice president John W.'
flipped over and pinned him against a tree, State: Police Testa, who retired from Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp.
Troop;.r Mark W?ggamon said. .
. . .
last year, will return as senior vice president, cotpor~te s~c,.
Ash s brother- m-law found h1m . The vtctlm was not retary and chief restructuring officer, company offic1al~
wearmg a helmet, Waggamon sa1d.
.
.
announced Friday.
,
. Two re ~n-age boys, ages 15 and 16, were k11led m sepa rate· . Testa worked for Wheeling-Pitt for 36 years, 20 of those
ATV. acc1dents on Tuesday and Wednesday. Neither was as a vice president. H e h as been a. cofl,s1,1ltant t\) t~e compa~
wearmg a helmet.
l 1y since it filed for . Chapter '11 bankruptcy protection last
fall .
•
RAINELLE (AP) -. . Outgoing Mayor ~ugen· e McKenzie
accomphshed a maJor goal m the wam.ng hours of h1s
admumtrauon by ded1catmg a new mumc1pal center. but
the city government's residence in its n~w digs may . b.e
short- lived.
Mayor-elect Philip Adams does nor support th e project.
He ,said he plans to call a special meeting of the new
Rainelle City Co uncil on Tuesday to discuss the matte r.
. "There's a distinct possibility we may move everything
back ," Adams said Friday.
Adams said he and the new cou ncil may use the building
as a community center.

ATV

accident kills Ohioan

Executive

at steelmaker ·:.

.

-

W'~~H OF JULY.CELEBRATION

'

Agency issues shut down order to Elk Run Coal Co.

IDDLEPORT

·' and reclamation for the state Department the sediment control ponds and turn the
of Environmental Protection.
Coal River black," pe said.
CHARLESTON -The state ordered
The DEP wrote a notice of violation
. The com~can comply, appeal the
Massey Energy Co. on Friday to close for rhe coal opera tion in Sylvester, order to D · Cabinet Secretary Michael
down part of its Elk Run Coal Co. oper- Boone Co unty, on June 6 after an 0. Callag n or petition the Surface
ations after mining inspectors found that inspection revealed · the company had Mine Boaid to block the order.
a 40-acre coal waste impoundment con- raised the crest of the 1,497 - foot
A spokesman for Massey Energy ccmld'
tained 22 feet more sludge than its per- impoundment dam without prior not immediately be reached for commit allowed.
approval, Crum said .
ment.
"There is no threat of the dam collaps- .
The crest of the structure was reduced,
Another Massey subsidiary was
ing, but we are concerned that there is · but the company did noi reduce the responsible last fall fl?r the release of2SO
the potential for uncontrolled release of depth of the pool behind it, Crum said.
million gallons of coaL sludge after the
_Foal sludge into the Big Coal River," said • "Our field people were concerned that bottom fell out of a 72-acre coal waste
Matthew B. Crum, director of mining
..
bl•
.g•r•a•in•,•it•c•o•u•l•d•go
. .t•h•ro•u•g•h. . im•p•o•u•n•d•n•Je
.
•n•t•i•n•M
..
. ..K•y•·. . . .
BY MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•i•f•w•e~go•t•a

Tests start on Summersville
Dam hydro
project
SUMMERSVILLE (AP)
-Testing of a hydroelectric
plant owSummersville Dam
has · started but developers
say they will miss their tar·get date to ship ·electricity
to American Electric Power.
Gauley River Power Partners Ltd. was to start ship ping powe'r by June 30 or
lose its agreement with AEP.
· The contract was .Jater modified to extend the deadline,
but it imposed a $20,000-aday penalty' for the . days
electricity is npt supplied to
- lhe: utility.
"The clause ... is really
damages for not meeting the
contract," AEP spokeswoman . Jeri Matheney said
Friday. "It m~ans we need
alternative
supplies
of
power."
The $55 million, SOmegawatt
hydroelectric
plant is being developed by
Catamount Energy Corp. of
Rutland, Vt. Gauley River
-- -PGwe.r is owned by Catamount.

Page 81 .
Sunday. July 1. :Z001 ·

AccuWeather"' forecast for

S.nny Pt. Cloud!

Baseball roundup, Page 82
Jarrett hoping to still challenge, Page 84
Local sports bri¢, Page' 85
Outdoors, Page 86

Policy .commission allocates money to colleges:

. West ~irginia we.ather

J~q1rimts"'
ientitttl
..
.

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SUNDAY's
c

and getting
slapped

..

HIGHLIGHTS
Reds place

Larkin back
onDL

GINCINNATI (AP)
Shortstop Barry .Larkin went
back on the 15-day disabled
list Friday, a day after aggravating rhe strain~d groin that
has hobbled him since spring
training.
The Cincimiati Reds called
up infielder Bill Selby 'from
Triple-A Louisville to take his
place.
Larkin missed all but four
games during spring training
because of the injury and
spent nearly a month df the .
season on the disabled list. He
returned two weeks ago, but
had trouble moving 'on
defense and hitting.
Larkin went down while
fiel,ding
Sammy
Sosa's
grounder in th e sixth inning
of the 5-2 victocy over the
C hicago C ubs on Thursday
night. Larkin's leg slipped and
his leg stretched awkwardly, .
aggravating the strain.
In 12 games since returning
fr;om the d,isabled list, Larkin .
batted dnly .205 with one
homer ~nd three RBis. Since
May 2, he has hit only .149,
an ·indication the injury was
limiting his swing.
There's no indication how
long Larkin wjll be disabled
this time. The Reds don't
want to bring him back too
soon and wind up having him
aggravate the injury once
more.
Larkin, 37, is in th~ first year
of a $27 million, three-year
contract.

Romanowski
aequitted of
charges .
CASTLE ROCK, Colo.
(AP) - Saying his reputation
was restored, Denver BroncQs
linebacker Bill Romanowski
was acquitted of getting prescription diet pills illegally.
Romanowski, 35, was
accused of obtaining the
aP.petite suppressant phentermine from prescriptions written for his wife, Julie, and two
other people. Investigators
said he took phentermine to
enhance his play. The drug is
not banned by the NFL.

LEGACY - Balti~e ·s Cal Ripken stands in the on-deck circle prior to batting in the 2nd inning of a game
against the Toronto Blue Jays at Camden Yards on June 19. No one in baseball history defined the term ·· every·
day player" better than Ripken, who played in 2,632 consecutive games from 1982 to 1998. (AP)

RIPKEN'S LEGACY IRONCLAD
BY DAVID GINSBURG
AP SPORTS WRITER

n a sticky, humid
afternoon at Camden Yards last week,
opti0nal
batting
practice seemed 1like
a very bad idea.
.
Cal Rip ken Jr. was one of a handful of Baltimore Orioles to 'choose
the batting cage over chillin' in the
clubhouse, and now, after everyone
else had come and gone, .Ripken
worked f~verishly to get in a few
more hacks.
.
Eagerly tapping the bat handle
before· every pitch, Ripken laced
one line drive after another to the
opposite field.
" Look at that," Chicago White
Sox general mariager Kert Williams

said, shakin g his head. " He's · still
working on his hitting. That's amaz.mg."
Amazing is as good a word as any
to describe· Ripken, 'w ho will end
his 21-year major league career after
this season.
No one in baseball history defined
the term "everyday player" better
than Ripken , who played in 2,632
consecutive games from 1982 to
1998.
"That's a credit to his resolve and
his determination:' New. York Yanc
kees manager Joe Torre said ..
The Streak is what distinguishes
Ripken from anyone else who
played the game. He is, and always
will be, the Iron Man. The Streak is
his legacy.
And that's not necessarily a bad

BY DAVE

HARRIS

-

... -

Please see Lei•CJ• 85

· Jason Williams g~tl spanked
Jason Williams, the flashy point guard
from the former Dupont High School
in Kanawha County,ju1t got the biggest . ·
slap .in the face of his life ~n bein~ dealt ~
io the lowly Vancouver (soon-to-be- ·
Memphis) .Grizzlies.
·
Williams is used to being slapped .
Florida slapped him right out of school
and the NBA has slapped him f!!r violation of drug policy and for being unable
to resist fan baiting.
None of those have seemed ro wake
him up though. He's on the fast track to
~shing out.
Years ago, Charles Barkley noted, ...
am not a role model." Certainly off the
court, Sir Charles loved to shoot his
mouth off and got in to some trouble, : ·.
but a person could respect the effort and ·

PluS. ... Polcyn, 82

'Lancaster defeats Meigs with eight
rnn first inning attack

OVP CORRESPONDENT

LANCASTER - . Lancaster se nt
14 batters to the plate in a eight run
first inning en route to a 17-0 win
over Meigs in Eighth Distr-ict American Legion baseball action Wednesday
at Lancaster:
Lancaster pounded out 10 hits, and
took advantage of nine Meigs errors
enroute to .the win.
Adam Jacobs got things - going for
Lancaster in th e bottom of the first
inning with a double . .1\fter a walk,

Gressick singled.
· · Sollee was hi t by a pitch and
Kevelde followed with a sin gle. Three
Meigs errors later Jacobs had a single
and Rice a sacrifice fly. .
Lancaster added· single runs in the
second,• third and fourth innings . In
th e second, Messerly si ngled and he

crossed the plate three ·errors later.
Lancaster's third inning run came
on a Sollee sin gle and a Scott solo
home run in the fourth inning gave
the home team a 11-0 advantage.
' Kevelde had a two run home run
home run in the fifth, before Lancaster clos~d out the scoring in the sixth

inning with four runs coming on just ·
one hit, a Messerly double.
Everett g~ve up five hits to pick up
the win. Jacobs led the winners. with
a pair of doubles and a single, Kevelde
added a single and a home run, Scott
a double and hpme run and Messerly
liad a· double and single.
Stanley picked up the loss, he scattered 10 hits, but nine Meigs errors
didn't help matters much.
.
D.e ttwiller, Bush, Stanley, Brown·
and Davis had the Meigs hits, all singles.
I

WIMB ·L EDON

D-venport, Sampras.
advance to round of 16

Ohio Andrea Vernon, a freshman
' from Gallipolis and G~llia
Academy graduate, earned
her' first letter in women's .
outdoor track and field this
season·at Otterbein College.

SoulhemVB
: ·meeting
RACINE - There wiU be
a mandatory meeting for anyone interested in playing
junior high volleyball and
high_ scho ol volleyball at
Southern High School.
The meeting wiU be held
·Monday,July 2nd at 8:00 p.m.
at the high school.
For more information call
949-2196 or 949- 1062.

thing.
"W hat's wrong with being
remembered for ·doing th e most
unbelievable thing in sports? Do
you think Hank · Aaroll cares that
he's remembered most for hitting
755 home runs?" said Baltimore's
Brady Ander~on, Ripken's closest
friend on the team.
"People say 'The Streak' as if it's
just a streak," Anderson added.
"There are a hundred things that
define him, things that went into
accomplishing T he s·tieak."
Starting e.very game for 17 straight
seasons takes more than willpower,
luck and the · ability to shrug off
minot inju ries. Ripken had to be
relentless in his work habits in order

A few random thoughts from the
world 'of professional sports ...
Knowing all the angles
l'Jow is the summer of our discontent, made dark by the lack of football
to be analyzed, ~ tudi e&gt;! and loved .
Maybe t~Jilt's why I have ·actually
taken nord of the 1\lFL Europe broadcasts on Fox Sports. Actually, I confess·
that I would be watching them anyway,
but never mind.
Watching the telecasts, I've noticed
someth ing different in the production. I
have seen a lot more of the XFL's
behind- the-offense camera angle.
l liked that angle with Vince Mc Ma~
hon 's league, although th e only people
who have said that they like it are members of my family (who are footballpsychos) and a former high school
coach in the area who happens to have
a very respected offensive mind.
I like ·Seeing where everybody goes,
how they t;et there, the angles.
Fox ls learning to use the. angle on its
N FL Europe telecasts. Don't be surprised when the NFL telecasts .begin
and the names ,on the backs of the
offense are visible more often.

Early outburst leads to Meigs legion loss

~

Cor6in &amp; Snytler !Furniture

. _..,...

NFL Europe

•

"From Our Home To YoiU'I"'

....

I

DAN'S RANT

WE~TERVILLE,

•

-...

I.RONMAN

Ve1110n letters
atOttemein

loanyou want! Get either an adjustable rate
'years or a fixed rate of up _to 20 years.

'

Dan
Polcyn

•

Lock-~r

of up/

.

•

MOVING .ON - Lindsay Davenport returns to . Switzerland's
Patty Schnyder during their match Satur.day. (A
\

.

----------r-----1
' '

.

'

'

. ....,.. .• .

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - Lindsay
Davenport used ye,t another straight-set victory Saturday to move closer to regaining the
Wimbledon championship she lost last year
to Venus Williams.
T he much taller Davenport, seeded third,
beat No. 30 Patty Schnyder of Switzerland 62, 6-3 after a brief rain delay~ the third of the
tournament's first six days. ;
· Davenport reached the round of 16.by capitalizing on Schnyder's poor serving. She
br9ke Schnyder in the .first game of the second set whet;t Schnyder faulted on seven of
h e~ 10 serves. .
1
Schnyder got in only 47 percent of her first

serves, compared with 62 percent for Davenpo~t.
. •
Schnyder, in the third round for the first
time in her six Wimbledon appearances,
improved in the thi.V game -of the second set
with an ace and a service winner on the last
two points to make it 2-1. But Davenport
held her serve the entire match ..
D'avenport, the 1999 Wimbledon' champion and winner of last ybr's Australian Open,
missed . three months this year with a knee .
i)ljury. After sitting out the French Open, she :. : ·
won the Wimbledon tuneup at Eastbourne

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J. . .:~!r. .· ~~-'
·-

su_nct.y._Pa:;;..·

Sunday, July 1

•

VA.

•

c 2001 Accu\Neatner,

O ia.~- - ~-·~·
.

Cloudj

(,~, ,

.

SMwe1&gt;

T-.-s

Rain

•

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Soow

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:

INSTITUTE (AP) - The state's ting substantially more money than they
Higher Education Policy Commission actually received. .
"We all have in Hating com that need
allocated $9.2 million to West Virginia's
public colleges and universities Friday, to be covered under sustained quality
· but delayed until Aug. 2 a decision on funding," Bradley said. "There needs to
funding for special projects and insur- be an equal amount in that column. I
ance premium~ :
r
think that is an important distinction to
The sta e 's Higher Education Policy make."
Commission, which oversees budgetary
However, Chancellor Michael MuUen
matters, awarded $2.9 million to West cautioned that the state Legislature ha.s
Virginia University, S2.5 miUion to Mar- · made it clear it will not fund inflationary
shall University, and about $115,000 to costs.
"The interest is in funding change," not
Glenville State.
Bluefield State got about $114,000, inflation," Mullen said.
the lowest amount awarded to a fourAlso Friday, the comniissi~n approved
year institution.
a proposal for a collaborative program
Funding was distributed to · schools between Marshall and . Glenville that
based on how· they compared to peer offers a master of arts &lt;!egree program
institutions in other states. Schools that for classroom teachers.
compared favorably ·received "sustained
The program, which will draw from
quality" funds. Schools that were under- about 1,200 educators in a I 0 county
funded in comparison got ".peer equity" . area ;erved by Glenville, offers a concendollars.
tratiorl in math, science and technology
But Dan ·Bradley, president of Fair- for elementary school teachers seeking
mont State, said the breakdown made it graduate training.
appear that ·some institutions were getStudents 'will take courses at Glenville

but receive their degree from Marshall.
"We're really e;.cited about this pfugram," Glenville President Thomas Pow-,
ell said. "This is no small accomplishment for central West Virginia."
.
The commission's proposals for paying
Board of Risk and Insurance Management premiums drew the most debate
during the meeting because total insurance costs exceed available funds. ·
;,
One proposal would penalize Manha:ij
and WVU for legislative allocation~
made to cover increasing medical malpractice premiums. Earlier this year, lawmakers earmarked S627 ,468 to Marshall's medical school and $1,277,799 to
'
WVU's medical school.
Under that proposal, the two unive~i=
ties would receive those allocations -:
~ut nothing else, which would leave thl!
schools with no money to pay nonrned..:
ical insurance costs. All remaining fundi
would be split among the other suto
schools, which would still have ~ coveia 7 percent increase in insurance preffii;
•

urns . .
-

••

Smith off critical list
CHARLESTON (AP) - 'Former Democratic Gov.
Hulett C. Smith has been taken off the critical co ndition list
at C harl eston Area Medical Center.
Smith, 82 and a resident of Beckley, was taken to the hospital's intensive care unit Thursday afternoon after he fell
down stairs at his home and suffered a head injury, said
Lewis N . McManus, a former spea~r of-the House of Delegates and a longtime friend of Smith.
Smith was upgraded from criti c-al to serious condition on
Friday.
Sfl\ith served as West Virginia's 27t h governo r after being
elected to a four-year term in 1964. He succeeded Gov.
WW Barron .
·

Man killed during oil change
CHARLESTON (AP) - A Wayne County man was
killed when he was hit by a pickup truck while changing
the oi!"in his vehicle off state Route 152 near Brush Creek.
Roger Robinso~ . 60, of Radnor was standing in his driveway with his daughter when they were stru ck by Christo- .
pher Daniel Copley, who apparently had lost conhol of his
truck.
·
Copley, 26, of Radnor, veered off the road Thursday night,
flipped the vehicle and hit two parked cars in addition to
Robinson and his daughter, said Captain T?dd Elliott of the
Wayne County Sheriff's Department.
. Copley a.nd Robinson's daughter, Sabrina Varney, 30, also
of Radnor, were taken to St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington .

Firm fights race track plans

New mayor unhappy with center

.,•

ERIE, Pa. (AP) -The owner of an off-track betting facil4
ity will oppose an application from a West Virginia compa~
ny to starf a thoroughbred race track in Erie County. , .
Joseph Lashinger, vice president and general counsel of
~Penn National Corp., said Thursday that the proposal to
open a track iJ1 Sun1nJit Township could potentially hurt his
company's Downs at Erie off-track betti.ng facility and "will
be bad fo 1 the horse racing industry in the state."
Mountaineer ·Race Track and qaming Resort of t hester,
W.Va., has said it is wi lling to invest $56 million over several yea rs to build Presque Isle Downs, A track there would
bring the sport back to Erie County for the first time in;
more than a de cade.
·
The State · R~c ing Commission plans to investigate · the
application and hold at least one public hearing in Erie
WEST UNION (AP) - An Ohio man was killed after his before voting on whether a horse racing license should b lO
•
all-terrain· vehicle overturned and landed on him, the third tpproved.
fatal ATV accideni in West Virginia this week.
bac~k
Daniel Ash Sr., 57, of Garrettsville, Ohio, was driving up
a steep embankment about 7:30 T hursday when the ATV . WHEELING (AP) - Form'e r vice president John W.'
flipped over and pinned him against a tree, State: Police Testa, who retired from Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp.
Troop;.r Mark W?ggamon said. .
. . .
last year, will return as senior vice president, cotpor~te s~c,.
Ash s brother- m-law found h1m . The vtctlm was not retary and chief restructuring officer, company offic1al~
wearmg a helmet, Waggamon sa1d.
.
.
announced Friday.
,
. Two re ~n-age boys, ages 15 and 16, were k11led m sepa rate· . Testa worked for Wheeling-Pitt for 36 years, 20 of those
ATV. acc1dents on Tuesday and Wednesday. Neither was as a vice president. H e h as been a. cofl,s1,1ltant t\) t~e compa~
wearmg a helmet.
l 1y since it filed for . Chapter '11 bankruptcy protection last
fall .
•
RAINELLE (AP) -. . Outgoing Mayor ~ugen· e McKenzie
accomphshed a maJor goal m the wam.ng hours of h1s
admumtrauon by ded1catmg a new mumc1pal center. but
the city government's residence in its n~w digs may . b.e
short- lived.
Mayor-elect Philip Adams does nor support th e project.
He ,said he plans to call a special meeting of the new
Rainelle City Co uncil on Tuesday to discuss the matte r.
. "There's a distinct possibility we may move everything
back ," Adams said Friday.
Adams said he and the new cou ncil may use the building
as a community center.

ATV

accident kills Ohioan

Executive

at steelmaker ·:.

.

-

W'~~H OF JULY.CELEBRATION

'

Agency issues shut down order to Elk Run Coal Co.

IDDLEPORT

·' and reclamation for the state Department the sediment control ponds and turn the
of Environmental Protection.
Coal River black," pe said.
CHARLESTON -The state ordered
The DEP wrote a notice of violation
. The com~can comply, appeal the
Massey Energy Co. on Friday to close for rhe coal opera tion in Sylvester, order to D · Cabinet Secretary Michael
down part of its Elk Run Coal Co. oper- Boone Co unty, on June 6 after an 0. Callag n or petition the Surface
ations after mining inspectors found that inspection revealed · the company had Mine Boaid to block the order.
a 40-acre coal waste impoundment con- raised the crest of the 1,497 - foot
A spokesman for Massey Energy ccmld'
tained 22 feet more sludge than its per- impoundment dam without prior not immediately be reached for commit allowed.
approval, Crum said .
ment.
"There is no threat of the dam collaps- .
The crest of the structure was reduced,
Another Massey subsidiary was
ing, but we are concerned that there is · but the company did noi reduce the responsible last fall fl?r the release of2SO
the potential for uncontrolled release of depth of the pool behind it, Crum said.
million gallons of coaL sludge after the
_Foal sludge into the Big Coal River," said • "Our field people were concerned that bottom fell out of a 72-acre coal waste
Matthew B. Crum, director of mining
..
bl•
.g•r•a•in•,•it•c•o•u•l•d•go
. .t•h•ro•u•g•h. . im•p•o•u•n•d•n•Je
.
•n•t•i•n•M
..
. ..K•y•·. . . .
BY MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•i•f•w•e~go•t•a

Tests start on Summersville
Dam hydro
project
SUMMERSVILLE (AP)
-Testing of a hydroelectric
plant owSummersville Dam
has · started but developers
say they will miss their tar·get date to ship ·electricity
to American Electric Power.
Gauley River Power Partners Ltd. was to start ship ping powe'r by June 30 or
lose its agreement with AEP.
· The contract was .Jater modified to extend the deadline,
but it imposed a $20,000-aday penalty' for the . days
electricity is npt supplied to
- lhe: utility.
"The clause ... is really
damages for not meeting the
contract," AEP spokeswoman . Jeri Matheney said
Friday. "It m~ans we need
alternative
supplies
of
power."
The $55 million, SOmegawatt
hydroelectric
plant is being developed by
Catamount Energy Corp. of
Rutland, Vt. Gauley River
-- -PGwe.r is owned by Catamount.

Page 81 .
Sunday. July 1. :Z001 ·

AccuWeather"' forecast for

S.nny Pt. Cloud!

Baseball roundup, Page 82
Jarrett hoping to still challenge, Page 84
Local sports bri¢, Page' 85
Outdoors, Page 86

Policy .commission allocates money to colleges:

. West ~irginia we.ather

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SUNDAY's
c

and getting
slapped

..

HIGHLIGHTS
Reds place

Larkin back
onDL

GINCINNATI (AP)
Shortstop Barry .Larkin went
back on the 15-day disabled
list Friday, a day after aggravating rhe strain~d groin that
has hobbled him since spring
training.
The Cincimiati Reds called
up infielder Bill Selby 'from
Triple-A Louisville to take his
place.
Larkin missed all but four
games during spring training
because of the injury and
spent nearly a month df the .
season on the disabled list. He
returned two weeks ago, but
had trouble moving 'on
defense and hitting.
Larkin went down while
fiel,ding
Sammy
Sosa's
grounder in th e sixth inning
of the 5-2 victocy over the
C hicago C ubs on Thursday
night. Larkin's leg slipped and
his leg stretched awkwardly, .
aggravating the strain.
In 12 games since returning
fr;om the d,isabled list, Larkin .
batted dnly .205 with one
homer ~nd three RBis. Since
May 2, he has hit only .149,
an ·indication the injury was
limiting his swing.
There's no indication how
long Larkin wjll be disabled
this time. The Reds don't
want to bring him back too
soon and wind up having him
aggravate the injury once
more.
Larkin, 37, is in th~ first year
of a $27 million, three-year
contract.

Romanowski
aequitted of
charges .
CASTLE ROCK, Colo.
(AP) - Saying his reputation
was restored, Denver BroncQs
linebacker Bill Romanowski
was acquitted of getting prescription diet pills illegally.
Romanowski, 35, was
accused of obtaining the
aP.petite suppressant phentermine from prescriptions written for his wife, Julie, and two
other people. Investigators
said he took phentermine to
enhance his play. The drug is
not banned by the NFL.

LEGACY - Balti~e ·s Cal Ripken stands in the on-deck circle prior to batting in the 2nd inning of a game
against the Toronto Blue Jays at Camden Yards on June 19. No one in baseball history defined the term ·· every·
day player" better than Ripken, who played in 2,632 consecutive games from 1982 to 1998. (AP)

RIPKEN'S LEGACY IRONCLAD
BY DAVID GINSBURG
AP SPORTS WRITER

n a sticky, humid
afternoon at Camden Yards last week,
opti0nal
batting
practice seemed 1like
a very bad idea.
.
Cal Rip ken Jr. was one of a handful of Baltimore Orioles to 'choose
the batting cage over chillin' in the
clubhouse, and now, after everyone
else had come and gone, .Ripken
worked f~verishly to get in a few
more hacks.
.
Eagerly tapping the bat handle
before· every pitch, Ripken laced
one line drive after another to the
opposite field.
" Look at that," Chicago White
Sox general mariager Kert Williams

said, shakin g his head. " He's · still
working on his hitting. That's amaz.mg."
Amazing is as good a word as any
to describe· Ripken, 'w ho will end
his 21-year major league career after
this season.
No one in baseball history defined
the term "everyday player" better
than Ripken , who played in 2,632
consecutive games from 1982 to
1998.
"That's a credit to his resolve and
his determination:' New. York Yanc
kees manager Joe Torre said ..
The Streak is what distinguishes
Ripken from anyone else who
played the game. He is, and always
will be, the Iron Man. The Streak is
his legacy.
And that's not necessarily a bad

BY DAVE

HARRIS

-

... -

Please see Lei•CJ• 85

· Jason Williams g~tl spanked
Jason Williams, the flashy point guard
from the former Dupont High School
in Kanawha County,ju1t got the biggest . ·
slap .in the face of his life ~n bein~ dealt ~
io the lowly Vancouver (soon-to-be- ·
Memphis) .Grizzlies.
·
Williams is used to being slapped .
Florida slapped him right out of school
and the NBA has slapped him f!!r violation of drug policy and for being unable
to resist fan baiting.
None of those have seemed ro wake
him up though. He's on the fast track to
~shing out.
Years ago, Charles Barkley noted, ...
am not a role model." Certainly off the
court, Sir Charles loved to shoot his
mouth off and got in to some trouble, : ·.
but a person could respect the effort and ·

PluS. ... Polcyn, 82

'Lancaster defeats Meigs with eight
rnn first inning attack

OVP CORRESPONDENT

LANCASTER - . Lancaster se nt
14 batters to the plate in a eight run
first inning en route to a 17-0 win
over Meigs in Eighth Distr-ict American Legion baseball action Wednesday
at Lancaster:
Lancaster pounded out 10 hits, and
took advantage of nine Meigs errors
enroute to .the win.
Adam Jacobs got things - going for
Lancaster in th e bottom of the first
inning with a double . .1\fter a walk,

Gressick singled.
· · Sollee was hi t by a pitch and
Kevelde followed with a sin gle. Three
Meigs errors later Jacobs had a single
and Rice a sacrifice fly. .
Lancaster added· single runs in the
second,• third and fourth innings . In
th e second, Messerly si ngled and he

crossed the plate three ·errors later.
Lancaster's third inning run came
on a Sollee sin gle and a Scott solo
home run in the fourth inning gave
the home team a 11-0 advantage.
' Kevelde had a two run home run
home run in the fifth, before Lancaster clos~d out the scoring in the sixth

inning with four runs coming on just ·
one hit, a Messerly double.
Everett g~ve up five hits to pick up
the win. Jacobs led the winners. with
a pair of doubles and a single, Kevelde
added a single and a home run, Scott
a double and hpme run and Messerly
liad a· double and single.
Stanley picked up the loss, he scattered 10 hits, but nine Meigs errors
didn't help matters much.
.
D.e ttwiller, Bush, Stanley, Brown·
and Davis had the Meigs hits, all singles.
I

WIMB ·L EDON

D-venport, Sampras.
advance to round of 16

Ohio Andrea Vernon, a freshman
' from Gallipolis and G~llia
Academy graduate, earned
her' first letter in women's .
outdoor track and field this
season·at Otterbein College.

SoulhemVB
: ·meeting
RACINE - There wiU be
a mandatory meeting for anyone interested in playing
junior high volleyball and
high_ scho ol volleyball at
Southern High School.
The meeting wiU be held
·Monday,July 2nd at 8:00 p.m.
at the high school.
For more information call
949-2196 or 949- 1062.

thing.
"W hat's wrong with being
remembered for ·doing th e most
unbelievable thing in sports? Do
you think Hank · Aaroll cares that
he's remembered most for hitting
755 home runs?" said Baltimore's
Brady Ander~on, Ripken's closest
friend on the team.
"People say 'The Streak' as if it's
just a streak," Anderson added.
"There are a hundred things that
define him, things that went into
accomplishing T he s·tieak."
Starting e.very game for 17 straight
seasons takes more than willpower,
luck and the · ability to shrug off
minot inju ries. Ripken had to be
relentless in his work habits in order

A few random thoughts from the
world 'of professional sports ...
Knowing all the angles
l'Jow is the summer of our discontent, made dark by the lack of football
to be analyzed, ~ tudi e&gt;! and loved .
Maybe t~Jilt's why I have ·actually
taken nord of the 1\lFL Europe broadcasts on Fox Sports. Actually, I confess·
that I would be watching them anyway,
but never mind.
Watching the telecasts, I've noticed
someth ing different in the production. I
have seen a lot more of the XFL's
behind- the-offense camera angle.
l liked that angle with Vince Mc Ma~
hon 's league, although th e only people
who have said that they like it are members of my family (who are footballpsychos) and a former high school
coach in the area who happens to have
a very respected offensive mind.
I like ·Seeing where everybody goes,
how they t;et there, the angles.
Fox ls learning to use the. angle on its
N FL Europe telecasts. Don't be surprised when the NFL telecasts .begin
and the names ,on the backs of the
offense are visible more often.

Early outburst leads to Meigs legion loss

~

Cor6in &amp; Snytler !Furniture

. _..,...

NFL Europe

•

"From Our Home To YoiU'I"'

....

I

DAN'S RANT

WE~TERVILLE,

•

-...

I.RONMAN

Ve1110n letters
atOttemein

loanyou want! Get either an adjustable rate
'years or a fixed rate of up _to 20 years.

'

Dan
Polcyn

•

Lock-~r

of up/

.

•

MOVING .ON - Lindsay Davenport returns to . Switzerland's
Patty Schnyder during their match Satur.day. (A
\

.

----------r-----1
' '

.

'

'

. ....,.. .• .

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - Lindsay
Davenport used ye,t another straight-set victory Saturday to move closer to regaining the
Wimbledon championship she lost last year
to Venus Williams.
T he much taller Davenport, seeded third,
beat No. 30 Patty Schnyder of Switzerland 62, 6-3 after a brief rain delay~ the third of the
tournament's first six days. ;
· Davenport reached the round of 16.by capitalizing on Schnyder's poor serving. She
br9ke Schnyder in the .first game of the second set whet;t Schnyder faulted on seven of
h e~ 10 serves. .
1
Schnyder got in only 47 percent of her first

serves, compared with 62 percent for Davenpo~t.
. •
Schnyder, in the third round for the first
time in her six Wimbledon appearances,
improved in the thi.V game -of the second set
with an ace and a service winner on the last
two points to make it 2-1. But Davenport
held her serve the entire match ..
D'avenport, the 1999 Wimbledon' champion and winner of last ybr's Australian Open,
missed . three months this year with a knee .
i)ljury. After sitting out the French Open, she :. : ·
won the Wimbledon tuneup at Eastbourne

�..

,.

Baseball
._.Piazza breaks toe,
Dreifort sprains elbovv,
Bonds bruises hand ·

•
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Los Angeles . .
On Thursday night, Sheffield
Mike Piazza brojce his toe.
Darren Dreifort sprained his bit the first of three solo
elbow. Barry Bonds bruised his homers in the eighth that gave
hand.
the Dodgers 7-4 win at San
It sure was a busy Friday ,Diego.
night for team trainers.
Piazza fouled a ball oif his
left big toe and was forced out
of the NewYorkMets'.3-1 win
over Atlanta.
u'S He is expect- Sammy Sosa homered out of
'J ed to rrnss 7- Cinetp' Field and into the
to-1 0 days.
Reds new ballpark, highlight" It's
a ing Chicago's w1n at Cinci nshame . to be nati .
dealt a setback," Piazza said. " I
Sosa's 438~foot shot cleared
don't plan to be Superman. I'll the concrete flcod wall for the
just wait and see:' .
niiw stadium under construcPiazza is a shoo-in to be tion beyond the left-field
elected as the NL's starting fence ,- landing amid piles of
catchet for the All-Star game dirt and metal bars.
on July 10. He djd not play in
Sosa is 12-for-22 with two
last year's All-Star game, need- home runs and nine RB!s
ing time to recover after being against the Reds this season.
hit in the helmet by Roger
Clemens' fastball.
:
"Let's wait and see. I'll have
1
to ice it. If it feels good and I
1
....lfeel I can play, I'll play." Piazza
said.
:
Steve Trachsel and the Mets
Dreifort had to leave the Los stopped Atlanta's seven-game
Angeles Dodgers' 7-5 victory winnil'lg streak with a victory
over San Diego after hurting at Turner Field.
his right elbow.
Trachsel (2-9) ' won for the '
Trainer Stan Johnston said first time with 'New York since
Dreifort will undergo an ,M RI April 30. He had lost five
exam on Tuesday in Los Ange- straight decisions and spent
les and be re-evaluated by Dr. three weeks in the minors.
Frank Jobe.
,
Atlanta had not lost since
Dreifort injured the ulnar
trading John Rocker. The
collateral ligament, the same
Mets won on a day when
one that was repaired. during
manager Bobby Valentine and
"Tommy John" reconstructive
outfielder Darryl Hamilton
. surgery on March 14, 1995.
squabbled before the game.:-That operation siaelined him
the entire season.
Dreifort signed a $55 mil,lion, five-year contract in the· .
offseason. '
"I approached him a couple
Damo·n Minor singled
times and he said _he was fine,"
catcher Paul Lo Duca said. "He home the go-ahead run in the
showed more guts than I've eighth inning, lifting San
ever seen out there. It vias Francisco over St. Louis at
amaiiug. I called a fastball and Pacific Bell Park.
Bonds and Cardinals slugger
· he throws it 74 mph. He didn't
· want to come out of the Mark McGwire both went
hitless. Bonds, however, scored
game.
Bonds, leading the majors on Minor's single.
with 39 home runs, robbed St.
Louis rookie Albert Pujols of a
5,
· potential homer with a leaping
catch in left field of San Francisco's 3-2 win.
Randy Johnson ·rebounded
: . But Bonds hit the wall with
from
a rough outing at Coors
· his glove hand, and dropped to
his knees in pain as trainer Stan Field last weekend to beat
Colorado at Bank One Ball. Conte ran from the dugout.
Bonds remained in the park.
Johr\son struck out I 0 in
game, and his right hand was
eight
innings. He's fanned
X-rayed after it was over. The
results were negative and exactly 900 batters in 2 1/2
Bonds was listed as day-to-day. seasons for Arizona.
Dreifort left 'after striking Johnson has recorded 13
out Ben Davis to start the sixth double-digit strikeout games
inning, and exited with the this season and 161 in his
career, second ooly to -Nolan
. Dodgers down 5-4.
Gary Sheffield hit a two-run · Rya11's total of 2!5.
homer in the seventh to rally

Cubs 7,

. Reds I

Frida
(iames

Mets :S,

Braves

Giants :s,
cardinals]

•. fnHn Pip 11

and has had little trouble this fortnight.
Willi~ms, who beat 'Davenport in last year's
final, was scheduled to play later Saturday.
On Friday, Pete Sampras dominated Sargis
Sargsian 6-4, 6-4,7- 5 to move into the fourth
round, where he'll meet 15th-seeded Roger
Federer on Monday for a quarterfinal ber~-

Polcyn

tured Williams and Randy
Moss as being 'just ·good old
boys?" .
Williams .is what Moss
PlgeB1
would have become without
. comp'etitiveness of the man.· the Jedi Master influence of
, J ~ Rocker made some jerk Cris Carter: a punk with a big
statements, but1 he sprints to paycheck on his way to dribthe mound, ~es it 100 per- bling some of the best talent in
cent, and loves u he game ·of · years down the drain.
baseball:His on-field behaVior
Moss should thank his old
is at least respectable, maybe ·buddy for showing him where
even admirable.
he could have been.
Williams doesn'teven have ;a
I HATE THE NBA
upside. No
The NBA must be one of
most arrogant ' organiza:~~[7.~~~;n~ of hustle, the
tions in America.
Williams
As a case in point, take this
seems too
to care:' He'll quote
Miami Heat
still be too cool to care when eral manager Randy P nd
he's made the circuit an,d · concernil)g former Ohio S te
·: ··everybody il. done · with his center Ken Johnson: ·
antics. ·
. "Had he come out a year or
Remember the Nike com- two ago, I'm not so sure he·
mercial featuring the "Dukes woujdn 't have. been better otr
of Hazard" theme that fea- because he would have spent
j

flam

fronj

Sunday, July 1, :zoot

San Francisco 3, St. louis 2

Eall Dllttalon

w L Pel GB
45 34 .570
44 25 .557
I
FlOrida
41
.5,2
4~
New York
35 ·'
46 .432
It
Montreal
32 48 .400 13 ~
Cenlnol Dlvlolon
w L Pet GB
Chicago
46 32 .590
Houston
40 37 .520
5~
St. Louis
40 38 .513
6
Milwaukee
39 38 .507 6~
Cincinnati
31 47 • .397 15
• Pittsburgh
29 48 .377 16',1,
Wool Dlvlolon
• W L Pet GB
Arizona
48 31 .608
LOs Angeles
42 37 .532
6
San Francisco
42 37 .532
6
Colorado
38 41 .481
10
San. Diego
37 43 .463 11 'b
Thul'lday'o Games
Plttsburghr1, Milwaukee a
Philadelphia 6, Florida 5, lsi game
Philadelphia 8. Florida 7, 2nd game
Cincinnati 5, Chicago Cubs 2
Atianla 8, N.Y.Mels 2, 10 innings
Los Angelea 7, San Diego 4
Frlday'a Oarnu
Montreal 12, Pittsburgh 3
Chicago Cuba ~. Cincinnall1
Philadelphia 5. Florida 0
N.Y. Meta 3, Adanta .1
Philadelphia
Atlanla

Wllwaukee 6, Houston 1

a tiebreaking grand slam in the
eighth inning, to lead the
Toronto Blue Jays to an 8-6
win.

Scott Rolen hit a three-run
homer in the first inning and
Bruce Chen made it stand up,
pitching Philadelphia ·past
Florida at Veterans Stadium.
Chen gave up four hits in six
innings to win his second
straight start agail)st the Mar!ins.
The Phillies moved back
ahead of Atlanta for the NL
East lead.
&lt;!!&gt;

Expos 12,
Pirates :s

Vladimir Guerrero doubled
twi ce, singled and drove in five
runs to· lead Montreal over
Pittsburgh at Olympic S~di­
um.
Expos pitcher Troy Mattes
had three hits - as many as he
gave up in seven innings also scored three runs.
Pirates' reliever Omar Olivares hit the fifth home q.m of
his career.

Brewers 6,
Astros 1
.

~

Rookie Ben Sheets won his
sixth straight decision and
Milwaukee beat Houston at
Miller Park.
The Brewers stopped their
four-game losing streak: Lance
Berkman homered in his
fourth straight game for .the
Astros.

AL Roundup ·

Cleveland
Chicago
Delrolt
Kansas City

45 31
37 -39
32 44
32 o46
Wool Dlvlolon
w L
57 21
38 40
37 41
31 47

.592

.487
.421
.410

Yankees 7,
Devil Rays 5

Castillo left Thursday's game
in the second inning with a · Roger Clemens (11-1) had a
strained muscle in his side. He . 'shutout before allowing four
said it didn't feel any better runs in the seventh, winning
Friday and he joined a DL that his seventh straight start.
already included Pedto MarTina Martinez and Alfonso
tinez (inflamed right rotator Soriano hit two-run homers at
cuff), No mar Garciaparra New York, and Bernie Williams
(recovering from right wrist went 3-for-3 with a . pair of
surgery), Carl Everett Gammed RBI · singles as the Yankees
right knee) and Jason Va"ritek spurted to a 7-0 lead.
(fractured right elbow).
Clemens, who leads the AL
Boston has lost six of eight, in wins, improved to 20-3
and. its AL East lead over the since coming off the disabled
New York Yankees is down to a list last July 2. Mariano Rivera
half-game.
struck out the side in the ninth
At Toronto, Mondesi hit a for his 25th save.
grand slam ofT Bryce Rorie (01), who a night earlier pitched
in the majors for the .first time
since being hit in the face by a
line dri~e last September. J
lchiro Suzuki singled twice
during a six-run first and Carlos Guillen and Mike Cameron
hit two-run homers at Anaheim. The Mariners, whose 57At Arlington, Mike Mag- 21 record is baseball's best,
nante's bases-loaded wild pitch averted their first three-game
and an ensuing error by catch- losing streak this season..
Jamie Moyer (9-3) won for
er Ramon Martinez gave
Texas three seventh-inning the first time in four S!:!rts,
runs as the Rang~rs rallied allowing five runs and· eight
hits · in five innings. Scott
from a 6-5 deficit.
After Rafael Palmeiro 's Schoeneweis (6-7. was poundgame-tying single off Mag- ed for nine runs and 11 hits in
nante (0-1) , Ruben Sierra 2 2-3 innings.
doubled and Gabe Kapler was
walked intentionally to load .
5,
the bases.
·
Magnante's pitch to Mike
Lamb skipped to the backstop
John Rocker never left the
and Hernandez's throw heme
struck Palmeiro and bounced bullpen in his first home game
with the Indians.
into the Texas dugout.

Mariners 9.
Angels 5

Rangers 9,

Athletics 6

Royals
lndi•fls :S {

E. -

U::tmrB' -J§ornllnrl • Page 83

Jose Rijo makes
another comeback try

.

Kansas City hit four homers
off Dave Burba (8-5) in the
fourth inning - Jermaine
Dye hit a two-run bonier and .
Mike Sweeney, Raul Ibanez
and Carlos Beltran had solo
shots.
Jeff' Suppan (4-7) gave up .
three runs and five hits in
seven in~ings and won for just ·
the second time in II starts
since April 30. Roberto Hernandez pitched the ninth for
his 14th save. ·

Twins :s,
Tigers 2
Chad Allen, recalled from
the minor leagues before the
game; hit a tiebreaking homer
in the eighth off Heath Mur- ·
ray (0- 3), sending vtsttm.g
Detroit to its sixth straight
loss.
·
Allen went 3-for-4 in helping Minnesota move back into
first place in the AL Central,
ahead of Cleveland. Allen had
not played since straining his
r,ight quadriceps June 4.
Bob Wells (6-3) pitched the
eighth and LaTroy Hawkins
pitched' the ninth for his 19th
save.

Orioles 4,
White Soxo

YOUTH SWIMMING

Rookie Josh Towers (6-2)
allowed -six hits in seven
innings as visiting Baltimore •
won for the fourth time in five
games.
Mike Trombley pitched two ·
innings for his sixth save.

The Red Sox lost another
player and another game.
Hours after Frank Castillo
became Boston's ninth player
on the disabled list, Raul Mondesi homered twice, including
CELEBRATE FINISH - Members of the Rio Grande Swim Club
celebrate their ninth-place finish at the Northern Kentucky
Swim meet. Pictured are, from left are Mattie Lanham, Carissa Wolfe, Sarah Blodgett, Katie Blodgett; and Emily Thomas.
(Submitted photo)

Wofle paces top-ten finish
ERLANGER, Ky. _- The butterfly and I OO-ti1eter
University of Rio Grande backstroke.
Swim Team finished ninth at
Other point sco{ers were
the · Nprthern Kentucky Katie Blodgett (eight-andClippers' Arctio Splash Long under; tenth, 50-ineter butCourse Swim Meet at terfly; seventh, 100-meter
·frlanger, Kentucky on June breaststroke; ihird 50-meter
freestyle; tenth . 100-meter
1-3.
Eight year-old Carissa free~tyle; ninth, 50-meter
Wolf'e led the team .scoring backstroke) Lindsay Penningwid] 43 points. She was also ton (eight-and-under: ninth,
Rio G,rande's top age group 50-mete.r freestyle) and Laura
finisher ' with a third-place . Sojka (women's senior: tenth,
overall ·point total in the 8- I 00-meter butterfly).
and-under girls category.
In· addition, the S-andWolfe earned a second in under girls freestyle relay
the 50-meter breaststroke; . a. team; whkh included. Blodpair of thirds in the I 00- gett, Wolfe, Pennington and
meter breaststroke and 50- Allie Hamilton, took second
meter backstroke, and a pair place behind the c,h ampion _
of fourths in the 50-meter Clippers.

the last two seasons playing
against NBA guys learning to
play."
·
The reflected belief i.s that
the only way to learn basketball is to be in an NBA camp,
which explains why so many
prep playersjumped to straight
to the draft, rather than learn
skiUs '(like team defense) they
would never use in a college
program.
I do not like the NBA style
of basketball. When the new
season roles around, it'll be
interesting how many of the
NBA Gods adapt to a style of
basketball which allows the
more of a ~one defense and ,
fewer one-on-one matchups.
What good wiU aU that "NBA
Learnin "' be then?

of
Hso, e-mail your spc»rts news to

sports@mydallytitbune.com, _
sports@mydai~r.com or
sports@mydalysentinel.com today

And finally, ·the most
-

important·

.

-·

question of all •••

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2000 Ponilac Sunflre ....... , f...... ,,.; .............. ..... $9,950 ·
1996 Cadillac Eldorado ............ :................. S14,900
1997 Olds Della 88 ....................................... $6,650
'·

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2000 Buick LeSabre .............. ..................... S14,650
. ,2Q01 Buick ReQal ..................... ~ ................. $15,500
2000 Olds lntrtQue·: .................................... $11 ,9oo
1996 Buick Century ...................................... $5,950
1994 Lum.lna Z34 ................. ......................... $6,900

1991 ChevyS-1 0 Ext. Cob4X4 ...................... $6,950
19991 Ton Dually Dle~el..: ........... ,.......... :~ . $22,900
. 1987 cadillac Deville ........~ .................... ;..... $4,450

.....
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GMC:.
"Do One 1'11lng. .
Do ltw.ll.'

ls\'it football season yet?

·)

.·

BY TOM WITHERS
AP SPORTS WRITER
CINCINNATI (A'I') again .
• CLEVELAND (A~) - They loved
Jose Rijo is making another
He had four major elbow
Albert Belle, tt:rnper tantrums a11d 'all, and
comeback
try,
hoping
that
'
operations
in all, fOTcing
forgave .Roberto Alomar for spitting.
· this time he gets to say him to put those comeback
Cleveland has always embrac&lt;'d its
goodbye.
·
thoughts .on hold. He built a
sports stars, treating the Drowns, CavalieJ;s
With Cincinnati Reds developmen'tal
baseball
and Indian~ like adopted sons.
executives
gathered
around
camp
in
his
hometown
of
That adulatiolll! has never been tested
' the batting cage Thursday, San Cristobal in the
like this before -John Rocker now plays
Rijo threw three innings of Dominicatl Republic - the
· ·
for the home team.
·
·
a sim ulated · game ' and "Hill of Dreams" that
·The controversial closer, traded to the
impressed his former ream opened in 1999.
Indians last week for rwo relievers, could
enough to earn a chan ce.
His last forma l comeback
make his Cleveland .debut Friday ·night
General manager Jim . attempt was in 1998, when
when the · Indians open a · three-game
Bowden ~ who watched the he came to spring training
series against the Kansas .City Royals.
50-pitch sessibn, plans to on a minor league contract
Cleveland has spent the past week
give Rijo, 36, a · minor and had to give up because
dig~sting the trade, and now it's ready for
pain returned in his elbow.
league contract and
Rocker.
chance to prove himsdf at
"Two years ago, I decided
"I'm sure the reaction will be good,"
·
.to forget about baseball Class A Dayton .
Indians third baseman Travis Fryman said. ·
It's an extreme long shot, let me take my mind ofT th e
"The fans will probably view it like most
even for a . team that has game, see what happens, let
of us do that he has a chance to start new,
never · balked at giving my body heal and my mind
an opportunity to put the_;_past behind
Deion . Sanders and other get fresh and have some
him. I think the Cleveland fans will be
30-soniething players a fun ," Rijo said.
very supportive. I think that will be helpchimce to try again.
He still had , that 'naggii1g
ful for him."
"If this comeback doesn't feeling that he never got to
Baseball's Johnny Rotten should ~ feel
work, it's time for him to get say goodbye with the team
right home in Cleveland.
·
to the podium and retire," he led to a World Series
Bowden said.
sweep of Oakland in 1990.
Rocker isn't the first outrageous act to
come to town.
- That's not how the 1990 He started throwing again at
World Series MVP wants to his baseball camp this year
Mter all, this is home of the Rock and
go out.
and had his fastball clocked
Roll Hall of Fame where Rotten, the Sex
CLEVELAND
ROCK
CITYCleveland
Indians'
John
Rocker
delivers
a
piteh
to
a
New
He hasn't pitched in the at 90 mph .
fistols' spitting singer, the Rolling Stones
York
Yankees
batter
during
th~ ninth inning at Yankee Stadium in New York on Tuesmajors
since July 18, 1995,
When he approac hed the
· and some of rock's other bad boys are
day
(AP)
when the pain in his right Reds about another try, they
immortalized.
elbow got so bad that he agreed. A R eds warmup jer- ·
Rocker's stage, though, will be at th e
And another, "Give him a · chan ce. said in the past. '
couldn 't go on. Rijo gave up sey with his name and No.
"He's energy. He's action. He gets up
other end of East Ninth Street in Jacobs Haven't ' w.e all said something we later
a
leadoff si ngle to Padres 27 were waiting in the club·
regretted?" ·
.
into the b'&lt;~ me; ' Indians manager C h~rlie
Field.
pitcher Joey Hamilton to house. ·
Rocker's first week with the Indians Manuel said. "Our fans in Cleveland like
Rocker has been called a bigot and
start
th e third inning, then
He · threw a fastball that
.bra nded a clubhouse "cancer" ~y a former was pretty quiet until Thursday when he players like that. I think he'll be big in
called the trainer to th e topped out at 89 mph and a
Braves teammate in the afternwh of his· ripped from Braves teammate Chipper Cleveland."
mound.
split- finger fastball and a
Many wondered how Rocker would.be
interview in Sports lllustrat~d two years Jones during a radio interview, calling the
He walked ofT the field in slider to Kelly Stinnett,
accepted in the Indians' clubhouse that
ago when he bashed New Yorkers, immi-, t~ird baseman "white trash."
San
Diego holding his arm Brady Clark and batting
grants, homosexuals and others.
The two later patched things up in a has sizable La!ino contingent of players.
· and fighting back tears, coach Mike Greenwell, who
But so far, so good.
He was suspended and fined by com- 45-minute phone conversation.
knowing that reconstructive briefly tried a comeback of
"As a Latin player, you get offended,"
missioner Bud Selig, but Rocker is still _ Cleveland has forgiven players for their
elbow surgery was a he~d his own last spring.
shortstop Omar Vizquel said·. "But you
sins before.
'
paying in the court of public opinion.
and his career could be over.
"He looked · all right," ·
Indians fans put up with Belle's volatile realize .everyone makes mistakes.Tha1's all
Cleveland fans have spent the past week
"I don't want to end it · manager Bob Boone said
debating the Indians' decision to bring on temper as long as he was wearing the in the past. I hope this doesn't become a
like in San Diego, grabbing un e nthusia~ti ca lly. "It was
ltocker and his baggage.
ChiefWahoo logo and hitting h om~ runs. distraction.
my arm and crying," R ijo -ffitich oetter Hian. I thought ·
"We're winning, and . _we don't want
Sports talk shows were split with pro- Alomar was vilified for spitting at umpire
said. "That's nor a way for a it would be.You can tell he
-rnd anti-Rocker .callers, but the support John Hirschbeck, but has become one of anything weird to happen. But if he's
good pitcher to end his hasn't been out there a lot.
ready to play, If he's ready to win; he'll be
seemed to grow in favor _of the left-han- current club's most popular players.
career."
.
It"s ·probably worth a try.
der after he needed just 11 pitches to
Aloniar has refused to publicly coni- accepted."
Like it or not., it's the way He's been working on it for
Rocker is scheduled to meet the local
close out a win in New York this week.
menton Rocker's arrival, but the two had
Rijo's career ended. He had a long time."
In The Plain Dealer on Thursday, two a private. meeting shortly after th e reliev- media for the first time before the Indians
reconstructive surgery in
Bowden envisions Rijo
open their 1.0-game homestand, then·.
letters to the editor provided a sampling er joined the Indians.
August 1995, then came starting at Dayton · next
of the city's varied pulse.,
And it's a safe bet that once the Indians' could make his home debut a few hours
back in spring training the' week, then moving up to
Said one, "What a shameful trade. I Wil) bullpen door swings open and Rocker later in a .~ave situation .
next year and threw to o Triple• A &lt;L.oouisville if·things " · ,
Cleveland's
reaction
should
be
interesti' not be back to Jacobs Field any time ,bursts out and heads toward the mound,
hard, tearing up the elbow ·go well.
soon."
. most Cleveland fans won't care what he's mg.

a

.

Arizona 5, Cok&gt;rado 3
L~Angeles 7, San Diego 5

Phillles 5,
Marlins 0

,

~ Boston (ArTojo 1·2) at Toronto (Carpenter
7-4), 2:05p.m.
9
S.1urday'o0amn
Detroit (Blair 0·2) at Minnesota (San14
N.Y. Mots at Atlanta, late
15 lana 0-lJ), 2:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, late
Baltimore (Johnson 6·5) at Chica!lo
St. Louis at San Franel.co, late
White
Sox (Biddle t-4), 2:05p.m.
GB
Pet
Houston at Milwaukee, late
Seattle (Gan:i4·1) at Anaheim (Wise
.731
Sealila
FlOrida at Philadelphia, late
.487 19 1·1). 8:05p.m.
Anaheim
Pittsburgh at Montreal. late
Ooklend (Mulder 8-5) at T9J&lt;as (Helling
.474 20
Ookland
Colorado at Arizona, late
.397 26 5·7), 8:05 p.m.
Texas
Los Angeles at San Diego
Tod•y's O•mes
Today'o Leadero
Thursday'• G1mn
Chicago Cubs (Lieber 9-6) al Cincin·
•• of Friday's g1mes
Baltimore 5, Toronto 0
nati (Reitsma 4-6), 1:15 p.m.
~
NltlonaiLeogue
Chicago White Sox 6, Minnesota 3
Pittsburgh (Anderson 4-7) at Montreat
BATTING
- Atou, Houston, .361 ;
Kansas
City
9,
Detroit
2
(Thurman 3·5), 1:35 p.m.
·Ber1&lt;man, Houston, .357; l~zalez , Ari ·
Ookland 6, Seattle 3
Florida (Penny 7· 1) at Philadelphia
zona, .357; Aurilla, San FrarcJsco, .350;
Tampa Bay 4, Basion 3
-(Figueroa 0·0). 1:35 p.m.
Pujols,
St. Louis, .349: LWalker, ColoraOO,
Texas
6.
Anaheim
3
Houston (Miller 9-3) at Milwaukee
~· .344; Casey, Cincinnati, .336.
Frlday'a OamH
(Rigdon 3-4), 2:05p.m.
HOME RUNS - Bonds, San FrancisToronto 8, Boston 4
St. Louis (Benes 6·5) at San Francisco
co; 39; LGonzalez, Arizona, 32; SSosa,
N.Y.Yankees 7, Tampa Bay 5
(Gardner 4-5), 4:05p.m.
Chicago. 26: Hollon, Colorado, 25; LWaik·
Kansas City 5, Cl811eland 3
ColoradO (Hampton 9·4) at Arizona
8r, Colorado, 25: Berkman, Houston, 22;
Minnesota 3, Oolroll 2
(~nderson 2-3), 4:35 p.m.
Pujols, St. Louis, 21: Drew, St. Louis, 21,
Bal!lmora 4, Chicago White Sox 0
Los Angeles (Park 8-5) at San Diego
Floyd, Florida, 21 : CJones, Atlanta. 21 .
(Jarvis 4-7), s p.m.
•
To&gt;&lt;As 9, Qekland 6 .
Seattle 9, Anaheim 5
N.Y. Mats (Appier 4-8) at Ailanla (Bur·
American Le•gue
Salurday'oaaken 6·5). 8:05p.m.
----sATIING - Suzuki, Seattle, .351;
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, late
RAiomar, Cleveland, .350; JGonzalez,
Seattle al Anaheim, late
American League
Cleveland, .340: JaCllambi, Oakland,
Boston a1 Toronto, !ale
Eosl Division
:337; McGriff, Tampa Bay, .337:
Detroit at Minnesota, late.
w L Pot GB
MAamiret , Boslon, _.333: MJSweeney,_
Kansas Clly at Ci911eland.-late
Boston
45 33 .577
~
Baillmore at Chicago While Sox, late Kansas City, .326; BBoone. Seattle, .326
New York
44 33 .571
HOME RUNS - MAamfrez , Boston,
Ookland at Texas, late
Baltimore
38 41 .481 . 7~
24; AAodrlguez, Te&gt;C8s, 23: CDelgadO,
Today'oOameo
n
Toronto
38 41 .481
Tampa Bay (Siurtze 3-6) at N.Y. Van· Toronto, 22; Glaus, Anaheim, 20; BBoor)e,
Tampa Bay
24 55 .304 2 1 ~
Seattle, 20; ThOme, Cle~eland, 20;
kees
(Pettitte 7-4), 1:05 p.m.
Central Division
Kansas City (Reichert 6-6) at Cleve· GVaughn, Tampa Bay, 20; Burks, Cle11e·
w L Pel GB
land, 20; APalmelro, Texas, 20.
land (Finley 4-4), 1:05 p.m.
47 31 .603
Minnesota

NaiiCHIII Laague

&amp;unb~p

Pome_roy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

ClEvELAND

•

"The athlete usually does well" on grass, a ·
fast surface, the top-seeded Sampras said. "My
movement, I think, is something that is underrated. But when the game's there and you're
clicking on an cylinders, it's fun to play."
Starting in 1993, when he began his run of
seven championships in eight years, Sampras is
56-I at Wimbledon, losing only to Richard
· ·
Krajicek in the 1996 quarterfinals.
One more title and the American will break
Willie Renshaw's record set in the 1880s for
most .:hampion5hips, and tie Bjorn Borg's
· modern record ·of five in a row.

Davenport

Sunday, July 1, 2001

AROUND THE DIAMOND

..

Diamondbacks
Rockies :s

.Page 82

\_··;

@l'

BUICK.• •
•~tn't lttlml

lor • I'MI qw1'

�..

,.

Baseball
._.Piazza breaks toe,
Dreifort sprains elbovv,
Bonds bruises hand ·

•
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Los Angeles . .
On Thursday night, Sheffield
Mike Piazza brojce his toe.
Darren Dreifort sprained his bit the first of three solo
elbow. Barry Bonds bruised his homers in the eighth that gave
hand.
the Dodgers 7-4 win at San
It sure was a busy Friday ,Diego.
night for team trainers.
Piazza fouled a ball oif his
left big toe and was forced out
of the NewYorkMets'.3-1 win
over Atlanta.
u'S He is expect- Sammy Sosa homered out of
'J ed to rrnss 7- Cinetp' Field and into the
to-1 0 days.
Reds new ballpark, highlight" It's
a ing Chicago's w1n at Cinci nshame . to be nati .
dealt a setback," Piazza said. " I
Sosa's 438~foot shot cleared
don't plan to be Superman. I'll the concrete flcod wall for the
just wait and see:' .
niiw stadium under construcPiazza is a shoo-in to be tion beyond the left-field
elected as the NL's starting fence ,- landing amid piles of
catchet for the All-Star game dirt and metal bars.
on July 10. He djd not play in
Sosa is 12-for-22 with two
last year's All-Star game, need- home runs and nine RB!s
ing time to recover after being against the Reds this season.
hit in the helmet by Roger
Clemens' fastball.
:
"Let's wait and see. I'll have
1
to ice it. If it feels good and I
1
....lfeel I can play, I'll play." Piazza
said.
:
Steve Trachsel and the Mets
Dreifort had to leave the Los stopped Atlanta's seven-game
Angeles Dodgers' 7-5 victory winnil'lg streak with a victory
over San Diego after hurting at Turner Field.
his right elbow.
Trachsel (2-9) ' won for the '
Trainer Stan Johnston said first time with 'New York since
Dreifort will undergo an ,M RI April 30. He had lost five
exam on Tuesday in Los Ange- straight decisions and spent
les and be re-evaluated by Dr. three weeks in the minors.
Frank Jobe.
,
Atlanta had not lost since
Dreifort injured the ulnar
trading John Rocker. The
collateral ligament, the same
Mets won on a day when
one that was repaired. during
manager Bobby Valentine and
"Tommy John" reconstructive
outfielder Darryl Hamilton
. surgery on March 14, 1995.
squabbled before the game.:-That operation siaelined him
the entire season.
Dreifort signed a $55 mil,lion, five-year contract in the· .
offseason. '
"I approached him a couple
Damo·n Minor singled
times and he said _he was fine,"
catcher Paul Lo Duca said. "He home the go-ahead run in the
showed more guts than I've eighth inning, lifting San
ever seen out there. It vias Francisco over St. Louis at
amaiiug. I called a fastball and Pacific Bell Park.
Bonds and Cardinals slugger
· he throws it 74 mph. He didn't
· want to come out of the Mark McGwire both went
hitless. Bonds, however, scored
game.
Bonds, leading the majors on Minor's single.
with 39 home runs, robbed St.
Louis rookie Albert Pujols of a
5,
· potential homer with a leaping
catch in left field of San Francisco's 3-2 win.
Randy Johnson ·rebounded
: . But Bonds hit the wall with
from
a rough outing at Coors
· his glove hand, and dropped to
his knees in pain as trainer Stan Field last weekend to beat
Colorado at Bank One Ball. Conte ran from the dugout.
Bonds remained in the park.
Johr\son struck out I 0 in
game, and his right hand was
eight
innings. He's fanned
X-rayed after it was over. The
results were negative and exactly 900 batters in 2 1/2
Bonds was listed as day-to-day. seasons for Arizona.
Dreifort left 'after striking Johnson has recorded 13
out Ben Davis to start the sixth double-digit strikeout games
inning, and exited with the this season and 161 in his
career, second ooly to -Nolan
. Dodgers down 5-4.
Gary Sheffield hit a two-run · Rya11's total of 2!5.
homer in the seventh to rally

Cubs 7,

. Reds I

Frida
(iames

Mets :S,

Braves

Giants :s,
cardinals]

•. fnHn Pip 11

and has had little trouble this fortnight.
Willi~ms, who beat 'Davenport in last year's
final, was scheduled to play later Saturday.
On Friday, Pete Sampras dominated Sargis
Sargsian 6-4, 6-4,7- 5 to move into the fourth
round, where he'll meet 15th-seeded Roger
Federer on Monday for a quarterfinal ber~-

Polcyn

tured Williams and Randy
Moss as being 'just ·good old
boys?" .
Williams .is what Moss
PlgeB1
would have become without
. comp'etitiveness of the man.· the Jedi Master influence of
, J ~ Rocker made some jerk Cris Carter: a punk with a big
statements, but1 he sprints to paycheck on his way to dribthe mound, ~es it 100 per- bling some of the best talent in
cent, and loves u he game ·of · years down the drain.
baseball:His on-field behaVior
Moss should thank his old
is at least respectable, maybe ·buddy for showing him where
even admirable.
he could have been.
Williams doesn'teven have ;a
I HATE THE NBA
upside. No
The NBA must be one of
most arrogant ' organiza:~~[7.~~~;n~ of hustle, the
tions in America.
Williams
As a case in point, take this
seems too
to care:' He'll quote
Miami Heat
still be too cool to care when eral manager Randy P nd
he's made the circuit an,d · concernil)g former Ohio S te
·: ··everybody il. done · with his center Ken Johnson: ·
antics. ·
. "Had he come out a year or
Remember the Nike com- two ago, I'm not so sure he·
mercial featuring the "Dukes woujdn 't have. been better otr
of Hazard" theme that fea- because he would have spent
j

flam

fronj

Sunday, July 1, :zoot

San Francisco 3, St. louis 2

Eall Dllttalon

w L Pel GB
45 34 .570
44 25 .557
I
FlOrida
41
.5,2
4~
New York
35 ·'
46 .432
It
Montreal
32 48 .400 13 ~
Cenlnol Dlvlolon
w L Pet GB
Chicago
46 32 .590
Houston
40 37 .520
5~
St. Louis
40 38 .513
6
Milwaukee
39 38 .507 6~
Cincinnati
31 47 • .397 15
• Pittsburgh
29 48 .377 16',1,
Wool Dlvlolon
• W L Pet GB
Arizona
48 31 .608
LOs Angeles
42 37 .532
6
San Francisco
42 37 .532
6
Colorado
38 41 .481
10
San. Diego
37 43 .463 11 'b
Thul'lday'o Games
Plttsburghr1, Milwaukee a
Philadelphia 6, Florida 5, lsi game
Philadelphia 8. Florida 7, 2nd game
Cincinnati 5, Chicago Cubs 2
Atianla 8, N.Y.Mels 2, 10 innings
Los Angelea 7, San Diego 4
Frlday'a Oarnu
Montreal 12, Pittsburgh 3
Chicago Cuba ~. Cincinnall1
Philadelphia 5. Florida 0
N.Y. Meta 3, Adanta .1
Philadelphia
Atlanla

Wllwaukee 6, Houston 1

a tiebreaking grand slam in the
eighth inning, to lead the
Toronto Blue Jays to an 8-6
win.

Scott Rolen hit a three-run
homer in the first inning and
Bruce Chen made it stand up,
pitching Philadelphia ·past
Florida at Veterans Stadium.
Chen gave up four hits in six
innings to win his second
straight start agail)st the Mar!ins.
The Phillies moved back
ahead of Atlanta for the NL
East lead.
&lt;!!&gt;

Expos 12,
Pirates :s

Vladimir Guerrero doubled
twi ce, singled and drove in five
runs to· lead Montreal over
Pittsburgh at Olympic S~di­
um.
Expos pitcher Troy Mattes
had three hits - as many as he
gave up in seven innings also scored three runs.
Pirates' reliever Omar Olivares hit the fifth home q.m of
his career.

Brewers 6,
Astros 1
.

~

Rookie Ben Sheets won his
sixth straight decision and
Milwaukee beat Houston at
Miller Park.
The Brewers stopped their
four-game losing streak: Lance
Berkman homered in his
fourth straight game for .the
Astros.

AL Roundup ·

Cleveland
Chicago
Delrolt
Kansas City

45 31
37 -39
32 44
32 o46
Wool Dlvlolon
w L
57 21
38 40
37 41
31 47

.592

.487
.421
.410

Yankees 7,
Devil Rays 5

Castillo left Thursday's game
in the second inning with a · Roger Clemens (11-1) had a
strained muscle in his side. He . 'shutout before allowing four
said it didn't feel any better runs in the seventh, winning
Friday and he joined a DL that his seventh straight start.
already included Pedto MarTina Martinez and Alfonso
tinez (inflamed right rotator Soriano hit two-run homers at
cuff), No mar Garciaparra New York, and Bernie Williams
(recovering from right wrist went 3-for-3 with a . pair of
surgery), Carl Everett Gammed RBI · singles as the Yankees
right knee) and Jason Va"ritek spurted to a 7-0 lead.
(fractured right elbow).
Clemens, who leads the AL
Boston has lost six of eight, in wins, improved to 20-3
and. its AL East lead over the since coming off the disabled
New York Yankees is down to a list last July 2. Mariano Rivera
half-game.
struck out the side in the ninth
At Toronto, Mondesi hit a for his 25th save.
grand slam ofT Bryce Rorie (01), who a night earlier pitched
in the majors for the .first time
since being hit in the face by a
line dri~e last September. J
lchiro Suzuki singled twice
during a six-run first and Carlos Guillen and Mike Cameron
hit two-run homers at Anaheim. The Mariners, whose 57At Arlington, Mike Mag- 21 record is baseball's best,
nante's bases-loaded wild pitch averted their first three-game
and an ensuing error by catch- losing streak this season..
Jamie Moyer (9-3) won for
er Ramon Martinez gave
Texas three seventh-inning the first time in four S!:!rts,
runs as the Rang~rs rallied allowing five runs and· eight
hits · in five innings. Scott
from a 6-5 deficit.
After Rafael Palmeiro 's Schoeneweis (6-7. was poundgame-tying single off Mag- ed for nine runs and 11 hits in
nante (0-1) , Ruben Sierra 2 2-3 innings.
doubled and Gabe Kapler was
walked intentionally to load .
5,
the bases.
·
Magnante's pitch to Mike
Lamb skipped to the backstop
John Rocker never left the
and Hernandez's throw heme
struck Palmeiro and bounced bullpen in his first home game
with the Indians.
into the Texas dugout.

Mariners 9.
Angels 5

Rangers 9,

Athletics 6

Royals
lndi•fls :S {

E. -

U::tmrB' -J§ornllnrl • Page 83

Jose Rijo makes
another comeback try

.

Kansas City hit four homers
off Dave Burba (8-5) in the
fourth inning - Jermaine
Dye hit a two-run bonier and .
Mike Sweeney, Raul Ibanez
and Carlos Beltran had solo
shots.
Jeff' Suppan (4-7) gave up .
three runs and five hits in
seven in~ings and won for just ·
the second time in II starts
since April 30. Roberto Hernandez pitched the ninth for
his 14th save. ·

Twins :s,
Tigers 2
Chad Allen, recalled from
the minor leagues before the
game; hit a tiebreaking homer
in the eighth off Heath Mur- ·
ray (0- 3), sending vtsttm.g
Detroit to its sixth straight
loss.
·
Allen went 3-for-4 in helping Minnesota move back into
first place in the AL Central,
ahead of Cleveland. Allen had
not played since straining his
r,ight quadriceps June 4.
Bob Wells (6-3) pitched the
eighth and LaTroy Hawkins
pitched' the ninth for his 19th
save.

Orioles 4,
White Soxo

YOUTH SWIMMING

Rookie Josh Towers (6-2)
allowed -six hits in seven
innings as visiting Baltimore •
won for the fourth time in five
games.
Mike Trombley pitched two ·
innings for his sixth save.

The Red Sox lost another
player and another game.
Hours after Frank Castillo
became Boston's ninth player
on the disabled list, Raul Mondesi homered twice, including
CELEBRATE FINISH - Members of the Rio Grande Swim Club
celebrate their ninth-place finish at the Northern Kentucky
Swim meet. Pictured are, from left are Mattie Lanham, Carissa Wolfe, Sarah Blodgett, Katie Blodgett; and Emily Thomas.
(Submitted photo)

Wofle paces top-ten finish
ERLANGER, Ky. _- The butterfly and I OO-ti1eter
University of Rio Grande backstroke.
Swim Team finished ninth at
Other point sco{ers were
the · Nprthern Kentucky Katie Blodgett (eight-andClippers' Arctio Splash Long under; tenth, 50-ineter butCourse Swim Meet at terfly; seventh, 100-meter
·frlanger, Kentucky on June breaststroke; ihird 50-meter
freestyle; tenth . 100-meter
1-3.
Eight year-old Carissa free~tyle; ninth, 50-meter
Wolf'e led the team .scoring backstroke) Lindsay Penningwid] 43 points. She was also ton (eight-and-under: ninth,
Rio G,rande's top age group 50-mete.r freestyle) and Laura
finisher ' with a third-place . Sojka (women's senior: tenth,
overall ·point total in the 8- I 00-meter butterfly).
and-under girls category.
In· addition, the S-andWolfe earned a second in under girls freestyle relay
the 50-meter breaststroke; . a. team; whkh included. Blodpair of thirds in the I 00- gett, Wolfe, Pennington and
meter breaststroke and 50- Allie Hamilton, took second
meter backstroke, and a pair place behind the c,h ampion _
of fourths in the 50-meter Clippers.

the last two seasons playing
against NBA guys learning to
play."
·
The reflected belief i.s that
the only way to learn basketball is to be in an NBA camp,
which explains why so many
prep playersjumped to straight
to the draft, rather than learn
skiUs '(like team defense) they
would never use in a college
program.
I do not like the NBA style
of basketball. When the new
season roles around, it'll be
interesting how many of the
NBA Gods adapt to a style of
basketball which allows the
more of a ~one defense and ,
fewer one-on-one matchups.
What good wiU aU that "NBA
Learnin "' be then?

of
Hso, e-mail your spc»rts news to

sports@mydallytitbune.com, _
sports@mydai~r.com or
sports@mydalysentinel.com today

And finally, ·the most
-

important·

.

-·

question of all •••

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2001 Pontiac Grand Prix SE ...................~ ..... $14,900..
2001 Pontloc Grand Prix GT 2door ............. ;., $1.61000
1997 Chevy Suburban 4X4 ...... ,.................,.$17,950
19981 /lTon Ext. Cab CheVY. 4X4,
,
,
2tochoose from ................ :....:·..chw..... L .:.: .............. $ 17,950.
2000 Ponilac Sunflre ....... , f...... ,,.; .............. ..... $9,950 ·
1996 Cadillac Eldorado ............ :................. S14,900
1997 Olds Della 88 ....................................... $6,650
'·

'!'

•••

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2000 Buick LeSabre .............. ..................... S14,650
. ,2Q01 Buick ReQal ..................... ~ ................. $15,500
2000 Olds lntrtQue·: .................................... $11 ,9oo
1996 Buick Century ...................................... $5,950
1994 Lum.lna Z34 ................. ......................... $6,900

1991 ChevyS-1 0 Ext. Cob4X4 ...................... $6,950
19991 Ton Dually Dle~el..: ........... ,.......... :~ . $22,900
. 1987 cadillac Deville ........~ .................... ;..... $4,450

.....
"Wt'll h

•

'.

.

'

-.

••

I

'"*'·"

GMC:.
"Do One 1'11lng. .
Do ltw.ll.'

ls\'it football season yet?

·)

.·

BY TOM WITHERS
AP SPORTS WRITER
CINCINNATI (A'I') again .
• CLEVELAND (A~) - They loved
Jose Rijo is making another
He had four major elbow
Albert Belle, tt:rnper tantrums a11d 'all, and
comeback
try,
hoping
that
'
operations
in all, fOTcing
forgave .Roberto Alomar for spitting.
· this time he gets to say him to put those comeback
Cleveland has always embrac&lt;'d its
goodbye.
·
thoughts .on hold. He built a
sports stars, treating the Drowns, CavalieJ;s
With Cincinnati Reds developmen'tal
baseball
and Indian~ like adopted sons.
executives
gathered
around
camp
in
his
hometown
of
That adulatiolll! has never been tested
' the batting cage Thursday, San Cristobal in the
like this before -John Rocker now plays
Rijo threw three innings of Dominicatl Republic - the
· ·
for the home team.
·
·
a sim ulated · game ' and "Hill of Dreams" that
·The controversial closer, traded to the
impressed his former ream opened in 1999.
Indians last week for rwo relievers, could
enough to earn a chan ce.
His last forma l comeback
make his Cleveland .debut Friday ·night
General manager Jim . attempt was in 1998, when
when the · Indians open a · three-game
Bowden ~ who watched the he came to spring training
series against the Kansas .City Royals.
50-pitch sessibn, plans to on a minor league contract
Cleveland has spent the past week
give Rijo, 36, a · minor and had to give up because
dig~sting the trade, and now it's ready for
pain returned in his elbow.
league contract and
Rocker.
chance to prove himsdf at
"Two years ago, I decided
"I'm sure the reaction will be good,"
·
.to forget about baseball Class A Dayton .
Indians third baseman Travis Fryman said. ·
It's an extreme long shot, let me take my mind ofT th e
"The fans will probably view it like most
even for a . team that has game, see what happens, let
of us do that he has a chance to start new,
never · balked at giving my body heal and my mind
an opportunity to put the_;_past behind
Deion . Sanders and other get fresh and have some
him. I think the Cleveland fans will be
30-soniething players a fun ," Rijo said.
very supportive. I think that will be helpchimce to try again.
He still had , that 'naggii1g
ful for him."
"If this comeback doesn't feeling that he never got to
Baseball's Johnny Rotten should ~ feel
work, it's time for him to get say goodbye with the team
right home in Cleveland.
·
to the podium and retire," he led to a World Series
Bowden said.
sweep of Oakland in 1990.
Rocker isn't the first outrageous act to
come to town.
- That's not how the 1990 He started throwing again at
World Series MVP wants to his baseball camp this year
Mter all, this is home of the Rock and
go out.
and had his fastball clocked
Roll Hall of Fame where Rotten, the Sex
CLEVELAND
ROCK
CITYCleveland
Indians'
John
Rocker
delivers
a
piteh
to
a
New
He hasn't pitched in the at 90 mph .
fistols' spitting singer, the Rolling Stones
York
Yankees
batter
during
th~ ninth inning at Yankee Stadium in New York on Tuesmajors
since July 18, 1995,
When he approac hed the
· and some of rock's other bad boys are
day
(AP)
when the pain in his right Reds about another try, they
immortalized.
elbow got so bad that he agreed. A R eds warmup jer- ·
Rocker's stage, though, will be at th e
And another, "Give him a · chan ce. said in the past. '
couldn 't go on. Rijo gave up sey with his name and No.
"He's energy. He's action. He gets up
other end of East Ninth Street in Jacobs Haven't ' w.e all said something we later
a
leadoff si ngle to Padres 27 were waiting in the club·
regretted?" ·
.
into the b'&lt;~ me; ' Indians manager C h~rlie
Field.
pitcher Joey Hamilton to house. ·
Rocker's first week with the Indians Manuel said. "Our fans in Cleveland like
Rocker has been called a bigot and
start
th e third inning, then
He · threw a fastball that
.bra nded a clubhouse "cancer" ~y a former was pretty quiet until Thursday when he players like that. I think he'll be big in
called the trainer to th e topped out at 89 mph and a
Braves teammate in the afternwh of his· ripped from Braves teammate Chipper Cleveland."
mound.
split- finger fastball and a
Many wondered how Rocker would.be
interview in Sports lllustrat~d two years Jones during a radio interview, calling the
He walked ofT the field in slider to Kelly Stinnett,
accepted in the Indians' clubhouse that
ago when he bashed New Yorkers, immi-, t~ird baseman "white trash."
San
Diego holding his arm Brady Clark and batting
grants, homosexuals and others.
The two later patched things up in a has sizable La!ino contingent of players.
· and fighting back tears, coach Mike Greenwell, who
But so far, so good.
He was suspended and fined by com- 45-minute phone conversation.
knowing that reconstructive briefly tried a comeback of
"As a Latin player, you get offended,"
missioner Bud Selig, but Rocker is still _ Cleveland has forgiven players for their
elbow surgery was a he~d his own last spring.
shortstop Omar Vizquel said·. "But you
sins before.
'
paying in the court of public opinion.
and his career could be over.
"He looked · all right," ·
Indians fans put up with Belle's volatile realize .everyone makes mistakes.Tha1's all
Cleveland fans have spent the past week
"I don't want to end it · manager Bob Boone said
debating the Indians' decision to bring on temper as long as he was wearing the in the past. I hope this doesn't become a
like in San Diego, grabbing un e nthusia~ti ca lly. "It was
ltocker and his baggage.
ChiefWahoo logo and hitting h om~ runs. distraction.
my arm and crying," R ijo -ffitich oetter Hian. I thought ·
"We're winning, and . _we don't want
Sports talk shows were split with pro- Alomar was vilified for spitting at umpire
said. "That's nor a way for a it would be.You can tell he
-rnd anti-Rocker .callers, but the support John Hirschbeck, but has become one of anything weird to happen. But if he's
good pitcher to end his hasn't been out there a lot.
ready to play, If he's ready to win; he'll be
seemed to grow in favor _of the left-han- current club's most popular players.
career."
.
It"s ·probably worth a try.
der after he needed just 11 pitches to
Aloniar has refused to publicly coni- accepted."
Like it or not., it's the way He's been working on it for
Rocker is scheduled to meet the local
close out a win in New York this week.
menton Rocker's arrival, but the two had
Rijo's career ended. He had a long time."
In The Plain Dealer on Thursday, two a private. meeting shortly after th e reliev- media for the first time before the Indians
reconstructive surgery in
Bowden envisions Rijo
open their 1.0-game homestand, then·.
letters to the editor provided a sampling er joined the Indians.
August 1995, then came starting at Dayton · next
of the city's varied pulse.,
And it's a safe bet that once the Indians' could make his home debut a few hours
back in spring training the' week, then moving up to
Said one, "What a shameful trade. I Wil) bullpen door swings open and Rocker later in a .~ave situation .
next year and threw to o Triple• A &lt;L.oouisville if·things " · ,
Cleveland's
reaction
should
be
interesti' not be back to Jacobs Field any time ,bursts out and heads toward the mound,
hard, tearing up the elbow ·go well.
soon."
. most Cleveland fans won't care what he's mg.

a

.

Arizona 5, Cok&gt;rado 3
L~Angeles 7, San Diego 5

Phillles 5,
Marlins 0

,

~ Boston (ArTojo 1·2) at Toronto (Carpenter
7-4), 2:05p.m.
9
S.1urday'o0amn
Detroit (Blair 0·2) at Minnesota (San14
N.Y. Mots at Atlanta, late
15 lana 0-lJ), 2:05p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, late
Baltimore (Johnson 6·5) at Chica!lo
St. Louis at San Franel.co, late
White
Sox (Biddle t-4), 2:05p.m.
GB
Pet
Houston at Milwaukee, late
Seattle (Gan:i4·1) at Anaheim (Wise
.731
Sealila
FlOrida at Philadelphia, late
.487 19 1·1). 8:05p.m.
Anaheim
Pittsburgh at Montreal. late
Ooklend (Mulder 8-5) at T9J&lt;as (Helling
.474 20
Ookland
Colorado at Arizona, late
.397 26 5·7), 8:05 p.m.
Texas
Los Angeles at San Diego
Tod•y's O•mes
Today'o Leadero
Thursday'• G1mn
Chicago Cubs (Lieber 9-6) al Cincin·
•• of Friday's g1mes
Baltimore 5, Toronto 0
nati (Reitsma 4-6), 1:15 p.m.
~
NltlonaiLeogue
Chicago White Sox 6, Minnesota 3
Pittsburgh (Anderson 4-7) at Montreat
BATTING
- Atou, Houston, .361 ;
Kansas
City
9,
Detroit
2
(Thurman 3·5), 1:35 p.m.
·Ber1&lt;man, Houston, .357; l~zalez , Ari ·
Ookland 6, Seattle 3
Florida (Penny 7· 1) at Philadelphia
zona, .357; Aurilla, San FrarcJsco, .350;
Tampa Bay 4, Basion 3
-(Figueroa 0·0). 1:35 p.m.
Pujols,
St. Louis, .349: LWalker, ColoraOO,
Texas
6.
Anaheim
3
Houston (Miller 9-3) at Milwaukee
~· .344; Casey, Cincinnati, .336.
Frlday'a OamH
(Rigdon 3-4), 2:05p.m.
HOME RUNS - Bonds, San FrancisToronto 8, Boston 4
St. Louis (Benes 6·5) at San Francisco
co; 39; LGonzalez, Arizona, 32; SSosa,
N.Y.Yankees 7, Tampa Bay 5
(Gardner 4-5), 4:05p.m.
Chicago. 26: Hollon, Colorado, 25; LWaik·
Kansas City 5, Cl811eland 3
ColoradO (Hampton 9·4) at Arizona
8r, Colorado, 25: Berkman, Houston, 22;
Minnesota 3, Oolroll 2
(~nderson 2-3), 4:35 p.m.
Pujols, St. Louis, 21: Drew, St. Louis, 21,
Bal!lmora 4, Chicago White Sox 0
Los Angeles (Park 8-5) at San Diego
Floyd, Florida, 21 : CJones, Atlanta. 21 .
(Jarvis 4-7), s p.m.
•
To&gt;&lt;As 9, Qekland 6 .
Seattle 9, Anaheim 5
N.Y. Mats (Appier 4-8) at Ailanla (Bur·
American Le•gue
Salurday'oaaken 6·5). 8:05p.m.
----sATIING - Suzuki, Seattle, .351;
Tampa Bay at N.Y. Yankees, late
RAiomar, Cleveland, .350; JGonzalez,
Seattle al Anaheim, late
American League
Cleveland, .340: JaCllambi, Oakland,
Boston a1 Toronto, !ale
Eosl Division
:337; McGriff, Tampa Bay, .337:
Detroit at Minnesota, late.
w L Pot GB
MAamiret , Boslon, _.333: MJSweeney,_
Kansas Clly at Ci911eland.-late
Boston
45 33 .577
~
Baillmore at Chicago While Sox, late Kansas City, .326; BBoone. Seattle, .326
New York
44 33 .571
HOME RUNS - MAamfrez , Boston,
Ookland at Texas, late
Baltimore
38 41 .481 . 7~
24; AAodrlguez, Te&gt;C8s, 23: CDelgadO,
Today'oOameo
n
Toronto
38 41 .481
Tampa Bay (Siurtze 3-6) at N.Y. Van· Toronto, 22; Glaus, Anaheim, 20; BBoor)e,
Tampa Bay
24 55 .304 2 1 ~
Seattle, 20; ThOme, Cle~eland, 20;
kees
(Pettitte 7-4), 1:05 p.m.
Central Division
Kansas City (Reichert 6-6) at Cleve· GVaughn, Tampa Bay, 20; Burks, Cle11e·
w L Pel GB
land, 20; APalmelro, Texas, 20.
land (Finley 4-4), 1:05 p.m.
47 31 .603
Minnesota

NaiiCHIII Laague

&amp;unb~p

Pome_roy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

ClEvELAND

•

"The athlete usually does well" on grass, a ·
fast surface, the top-seeded Sampras said. "My
movement, I think, is something that is underrated. But when the game's there and you're
clicking on an cylinders, it's fun to play."
Starting in 1993, when he began his run of
seven championships in eight years, Sampras is
56-I at Wimbledon, losing only to Richard
· ·
Krajicek in the 1996 quarterfinals.
One more title and the American will break
Willie Renshaw's record set in the 1880s for
most .:hampion5hips, and tie Bjorn Borg's
· modern record ·of five in a row.

Davenport

Sunday, July 1, 2001

AROUND THE DIAMOND

..

Diamondbacks
Rockies :s

.Page 82

\_··;

@l'

BUICK.• •
•~tn't lttlml

lor • I'MI qw1'

�.._.

t .... ,.. .

,..

-

·

~

r

•

Pomeroy •

Middiep~rt • Ga;llpolls, Ohio • Point Pleasant, ~

NAS C.AR

1001 Winston

still hopes to challenge for title
SONOMA, Calif. (AP)

Th~re

was only so much Dale Jarrett could

..,

do about an agonizing torn c h ~st muscle. Heavy-duty painkillers are nor an
option in racing, where always bemg
alert is paramount.
Jarrett ~rashed his Ford in qualifYmg
. faS[ month in Concord, N.C . Smce
then, he has fo ught valiantly - albeit
gingerly - to stick near the top of the
Winston C up standings.
:·You just have to put it out of your
mind;' he said. " There was no way of
getting rid of all of the pain without
compromising something else."
The 1999 champion led the standings for nearly three months afte r wmning March 18 in Darlingt.o n, S.C.
· Jeff Gordon overtook him earher
this month with a victory in Brooklyn,
Mich ., and Jarrett knows th e three. time series champion is on the kind o f
roU that made him the best driver in
IN THE LEAD- Dale Jarrett in the UPS Ford and Jeff Gordon in the DuPont Chevrolet lead the pack for the pace .laps at
the sport for the last seven years.
the
start of the NASCAR Cracker Barrel 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton , Ga., in this March 11 photo. Jarrett
" He is definitely going to be the. one
we battle all year, and we're going to led the standings for nearly three months after winning March 18 in Darlington, S.C. Gordon overtook him earlie r this
do our besr to keep up and try to keep month with a victory in Brooklyn; Mich. (AP) '
him in sight," Jarrett said.
"It was just one thing after another," career. At a luncheon in San Francisco, hts sport's populanty, as well as his
· Jarrett has finished in the top four he sa1d.
he talked about hi s admiration for fo r- ow n, has grown. In the past four years,
for five straight seasons. He's deterDespite the poor showing, he m er 49ers quarterback Steve Yo ung.
he's seen his fan mail in crease by 25
mined that this season - despite the remamed second in the standings, I 26
Young waited behind Joe M o2tana percent and his fan club membership
jnjury - will be no d1fferent.
points behmd Gordon and 19 points before becoming a Hall of Fame-cal- double. Of course, the W inston C up
He.has quite a few more gray hairs ahead of Robert Yates R acing team- iber quarterback in h1s own n ght, th en championship helps.
than in years past, and gone is the mus- mate Ricky Rudd.
And those funny United Parcel Serbowed out of the game gracefully.
tache that enhanced his Good 01' Boy
Jarrett admitted he wasn't tOO per" I do 1t because I love to compete, vice commercials don 't hurt, either.
image. He now looks like what he is: a cent at Sears Pomt, but had improved and that's how I thmk he did it," Jarrett
In his first season of sponso rship by
44-year-oJd, father . l,l{ four •with a to the point where he didn't have to said,
UPS, Jarrett ltars in TV ads th at jokdown-to-earth ciet11eanor ~nd a love of bring along a doctor to momto r hts
Unhke Young, )arre t~ isn't about to ingly suggest he take one of those disgolf.
re tire.
tinctive brown trucks for a spin on the
pain.
.
During his trip last week to NorthAnd the problem at Sears Pomt wasT he son of two-ttme series champi- race track.
em California for the Dodge-Save n 't his chest.
on N ed Jarrett is stiU going strong 10
But Gordon knows when to tal(e
Mart 350, Jarrett lamented staying at a
" I had a. third gear, but 11 just kept years after gettin g h ts first Winston Jarrett seriously.
golf resort because the chest inJury popping out, so I was having to do Cup VICtory for the Wood Brothers.
" I just know that Dale Jarrett is
prevented him from bringing his clubs. something totally dtfferent," Jarrett Then, after a three- year stint at Joe going to be there at the end of the seaJarrett did not.fare weU in his tnp to said.
Gibbs R acing - · during which he got son because he's a good dnver and h e
the scemc wine country. He qu3lified
Tony Stewart won on the road the fir st of his three Daytona 500 vic- · has a real good team," Gordon satd.
in 35th for the road-course event at course, beating Robby Gordon by tones - Jarrett join~d Yates in 1995.
"He's won a champio'lship before and
Sears Point Race\vay, and managed just 1.746 seconds. Jeff' Gordon was third.
Now, Jarrett has 27 yictories and 12 he's been a part of all that before. That
a 26th. place finish. He spun out.oll the , The West Coast junket did give Jar- poles.
·
whole t«:am as a package has that ex:pefinal lap.
rett a chance to reflect a bit on his
He has watched with amazement as rience."

DRIVER WOES: Be sOn dealing with bad luck
SONOMA, Calif. (AP) .....:.·
After Johnny ,Benson surpnsed virtUally everyone with
a competitive 2000 season that
belied the lac~ of big-bucks
sponsorship, tii•.i'Jal for this
year was modest: corlsistency.
Now, )With the backing he
wanted- &amp;om Vahro.line, Benson has a~vanced six spots
from his stunning final finish
of 13th last year in the Winstan Cup ~tandings. But it
could be even better, because
the most consistent factor
lately has been his ·propensity
for bad luck.
That was never more evident than Sunday. After qualifyirig 14th for the Dodge-Save
,Mart 350 and running among
the leaders, Benson was penalized for speeding on pit road.
Then something broke ·~n his
Pontiac on the final tlirn of

the last.lap, relegating him

y, J rom another team ," he
29tli-place finish.
said. "That just put a crimp
"Today's how our luck's into our whole day."
been going the last couple of
After starting the season
weeks," Benson said. "We had with a finish of 28th in the
a top-five race car, but you've Dayrona 500, the consistency
got to finish to benefit."
• Benson was looking for
Benson has dropped four kicked in 'tor a while. H e had
positions in the· standmgs · seven top-seven finishes in the
since early May. aThe last next 10 races.
month has been particularly • The dnver from Grand
d1fficult, with Sunday's result Rapids, Mich., winless in 177
at Sears Point Raceway fol- career ~tarts, isn't consumed by
lowing finishes of 41st in trying to end that dro ught. It's
Dover, Del., and 12th and all about the quest for consis24,th the next two weeks.
tency.
I I'The last three weeks have
'' Y-ou start getting more
been pretty hard on us;• Ben- top-fives, top-! Os, it gives you.
son said. "We took a real good a better opportunity to win a
hit in the points. Dover was a race," Benson said . "We've
huge hit.
come close this year. When we
"We were running second get. there, we waot to be able
and had a sm31l problem in the to take advantage of the sltuapit and then hit a tire sitting tion and hopefully to be; able
out there in the road that got to get a v1ctory."

•
•
Sunday, July 1, 2001

Sunday, July 1, 2001

Even thmking llb'out a VIC-·
tory in 2001 was beyond optimistic a year ago, when sponsorship dried up and Benson
was working for prize money
alone in a car unadorned by
adventsing for much of the
season.
•
The plain white car was not
an attention-getting device,
Benson said.
"We didn't have nothmg to
put on it," he said. "But w hen
we looked back, we thought,
'You know, that car was highly VISible.' It was the right
tlting to do.
"We could have chosen any
color, but evidently they had
some wh1te paint sitting
around and that's what we
painted it."

Cup sd:edule
and standings

shortstop?
'
All of the above, and then
some.
"The way you're remembered is throu·gh the impressions you've left.'' he said. " I
would imagme the streak
would be part of 1t, I 1magine
that maybe I had a pan in
changing th e mindset of shortstop a little bit. And hopefully,
as someone who loved to play
the game."
Those who saw him play
couldn't possible thmk otherwtse.
"Because of what he's done,
he has tq be considered one of
the top ballplayers of all n me,"
Whtte Sox manager Jerry
Manu el satd. " H e's- dedicated
hiS life to playmg every day."
R tpken pu t up some
impressive num bers along the
way. H e IS one of only seven

from PageBl

The 2Q01 NASCAR WlnS1on Cup
·
·
d f1j
SJ;hedule (wlnnef8 in parontheles)
to convmco; mne
1 erent
and driver point stand1ngs:
manage rs to put him m the
Feb. t8- Oaytona 500, Daytona
hneup every smgle day.
Beach. Fla. (Michael WaHrip) .
Feb 25- oura Lube 400, Rod&lt;·
He's still at it, too, taking
lnghem, N.C. (Steve Part&lt;)
optional batting practice at age
March • - lJAW-Dalmle!Chryoler
40 in hopes of securmg a few
400, Las Vegas. (Jeff Gordon)
March 11 - Cracl&lt;e&lt; Ba""l 500,
extra starts m Ius uncomfortHampton, Ga. (KeVln HaiVIcl&lt;)
able new role as a part-time
March 18 - Carolina Dodge Cea~
ers 400, Danlngton, S C (Dale Jar·
player.
rett)
"I'll remember him for his
March 25 - Food City 500, Bristol,
I
h
Tenn. (Elliott Sadler)
,.
professiona approac , All-Star
April! -Harrah's 500, Fon Worth,
excellence, the .way he preTexas.
(Dlla~l.;e~~:;~:'b~~lo&lt;tlnsvUio.~-----1-- ~'re~ datly, and for bemg m
Ap1118(Dale Jarrett)
grea t sfiape -throughou t his
Aprll22- Talladega 500, Talladecareer," Toronto manager Buck
ga, Ala (Bobby HamiHon)
April 29 - NAPAAulo Parts 500,
· Martmez sa1d.
Fontana. Galli (Rusly Wallace)
So, how would Rtpken 'preMay 5- Pontiac Exc1tement -400,
b
b d?
Richmond, Va.,(Tony Stewart)
ler to e remem ere .
May 27 - Coca·Cola 600; Con·
Iron Man? Hard worker?
cord, N.C (Jeff Burton)
I'
d h 1.tte ? T d
June 3 - MBN'A Platinum 400,
.. ar
r.
ren sett mg
Dover, Del. (Jeff Gordon)
----------------~------June 10 - Kmart 400, Brooklyn,
Mlch (Jaff Gordon)
June 17 - Pocono 500, long
Pond, Pa. (Ricky Rudd)
South Gallla VB eummM achfdule
•7.30 a.m. and 2 30 p.m. to make other
June 24 - Dodge/Save Man 350,
MERCERVILLE - Clpon gym at Soulh arrangements
Sonoma, Galli. (Tony Stewart)
Galba H1gh School wMI be held for South Gaf..
Packets Will· not be sent home this year.
July 7 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
,.
11a 11olleyball on Tuesday's from 6·8 p m fOr Students will not be pennltted to panjclpate
Beach. Flo
g1rls grades 9· 12, while the weight room will on beginning day If paperwork 11 not camJuly 15- Troplcana, 400, Joiet,
be open from B-7 30 p.m. on Thurvday's.
ple1ed. ..

.

Ill.

July 22 - New England 300,

Loudon, N H

Juty 29- Pennsylvania 500, Long
Pond

Aug. 5 - Bnckyard 400,

.;

lnd~

anapot1s '

A Logan based team has
qualified for the national 12and-under AAU girls basketball tournament at various
:sites in Connecticut after
placing second in the state
1tournament in Cincinnati.
Jl The Team Ohio squad had
earlier won the Tri-State Classic in Cincinnati and the Capipl City Classic in "Columbus.
The team is coached by
Ron Conner and Dave Weber.
Members of the team
include Kristin Cassady of
Logan, Julie Trace ofTnmble,
Erin Weber of Reedsville
'
Eastetn, Amanda StoveF of
Federal H oeklrtg and Carolyn
Gripps and Sarah Gaskel, both
of Athens.
Others are Ashley Erwin
and
Tori
McNeal
of
Crooksville and Briana Hinkle and Alison Heister ofBex-'
ley. For the national tournament dtey will he joined by

Tenn.

Sept 2 - Southam 500, Oanlngton, S C.
Sept 8 - Chevrolet Monte Csno
400, Richmond, Va.
I
Sept. 16 - New Hampsh re 300,

ali

sent their Intensive 5-day residential camp
for intermediate and advanced players ages

dally•
This year a new form Is required tor an
Ohk&gt; High School Alhlelic Auociailon aludent-athletes
Phvslcal dates wHI be announced later.
0.1111 8occer ClUb lkllll CM'Ip
GALUF»OLIS - The GaUia Soccer Club
wrnaponsor a skills ~mp on Juty 18·19 from
6·30 to 8 p m.
The camp will be directed by Marahaii,Unl·
verslty coach Bob Gray and wiH cost $50 for
four days of lnatructton
For more Information contact Claudia Lyon

--o

and up

lnstructors are FIFA·IIc8n88d prolesslonal
~nr1 collewate otavers and coaches from
Enland, Ire land, Scotland and Wales
Numerous collegiate coaches also partiCi·
pa te
For more 1ntormatlon. or to receive a
brochure, contact Oa11e F»almer by email at
palmerdOoh1o edu or call the GBBS aff~ee
at t ·800·871.()834
Fourth of July 5K run 1nd Wllk Mt
JACKSON - The l1~h annual Jackson
county Spor1s Festival 5K Run and Walk will
be held Wednesday at 9 a m at Manpower
Part&lt; on East Main Street.
Entry fee for the run Is $12, $7 for the walk
lor those wishing to receive a t·shlrt. No pre·
registra tion 1s required and registration may
be made day of the race
·
For more Information, call the Jackson
A'f'ea Chamber ol Commerce at 286-2722.
Eastern fall 1port1 reglatndlon aet
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastem Local athletes grades seven through 12, play1ng fall
sports (football, volleyball, golf and cheer·
lead1ng) should register to play on June 26
.pr July 9, from 5 30 to 8:30p.m at the high •

Sept. 23 - MBNA.com 400,
Dover, Del.
· ·I
Sept. 30 - Kansas 400, Kansas
C1ly, Kan.
OCt. 7 - UAW-GM Quality 500,
Cooo&gt;rd, NC.
Oct. 14 - Old Dom1nlon 500, Martinsville, Va

OCt. 21 - Alabama 500, Tallade-

ga

OCt. 28 - Checker Auto Pans
500k, Avondale, Ariz
Nov. 4 - POll Secret Microwave
400, Rockingham, NC
Nov. 11 - Pennz&lt;&gt;l 400, Homestead, Fla

\ichoql off1ce.

•

A parent or legal guardian must accompa·
nv all athletes Students who cannot attend
one of the registration periods should con·
!act the 1 high school at 985-3329 between

..

~·

.. .

Point wight room open
POINT PLEASANT - The PPHS we~ght
room Is open Monday through Friday from 9
a m. until1 p.m. Speed and agility workouts
begil at 10 a.m.
There will be an Iron Man competition each
Friday beginning at 10 am
Wllhlml conditioning open
MASON -The Wahlma High SchOOl afh.
tetlc building will be open for training and
condllionlng on July .2,3, an e from noon until
5pm
The same time will apply on July 9,11, and
13. Ally WHS student may anand thei!IS 8$8·
sions.

Jr. High Voboll_, gym

GALLIPOLIS- Open gym for junior high
volleyball players wtll be held at Gallia Acad·
emy High SChool on July 12, 19, and 26 from
4:30 p m until 6 p.m•

W Va (AP) - The West flsh have been caught throughout tho lake •
flsl\lhg report relea!Mid Thiiriday ISy In the momlngo and evenings with goldfish

C H~ALESTON ,

Vl rgl ~a

the Ojv1slon oJNatural Resources:

Crappie fishing has-elowed down. Blueglt
redworms arotm fiSh anractora and shallow
areas where fish a., spawning J'he taitwa·
ter hae been good for trout wHh spinners

BEECH FORK - Lake Is al summer have been cauG!t on oman jlga anct

recreauon level Lake and tallwater are
clear
BLUESTONE - Lake IS at summer
recre•t1on level Lake and tallwater are

clear, Fishing on the lakt 10 good . Anglers

shoultt fish around any downed trees or
weed 1 beds while using worms, ama.U mtn·
nows or Jigs for sunfish. ~u anglers
should concentrate their efforts along areas

and powerbalt.

TYGART- Lake Ia approximately 1 foot

abcMI sunvner recreation laval Lake and
tallwater are clear. Water temperature is 82
degreee at the eurfaca Smallmouth ~as
can be caught either on the ehorellne or out

!hal may provule cooter water for lt1e bass lo the 10. to 2Q.fool deplho utlng a J.lnch
and rjxxJ structure such as downed timber,
rocky drops or weed beds. BtuegHI can prQ,
vide anglers wilh some last action with
wo nn!i and small jigs. Channel tarflsh are
srso tiiH1ng In the lake on chk:ken liver. Carp
and channel catfish are hitting In the taltwa-

Ier, wllh best

balls

being com and night·

crawlers.

'"'.'"."''"'."".'"'.: :

tube on a 1f8.ounce jig. White bau are

ab\lndant In the lake and can be caught with

a variety of artlfk:ial balta. Channel catfish
are wltNn casting distance from shore at
night with nlghtcrawtera or cut balta Wall·
eye prefer temperatui'H around 68 .. 70
degroH. Tho best walleye flahlng In lhe
lake starts at dusk when waJteya move Into

BURNSVILLE - Lake Is at summer llhllloW water al nigh! to feed.

recreation la~tel Lake and tallwaler are
dear All boat ramps are open. Largemouth
fiShing has been good. Try lube Jga doong
the day and lopwater In tho evenings. Spot·
led bass are being caugl'lt on the lower eeclion or the lake. Crappie have moved In to

MONONGAHELA RIVER - Ttla water
temperature II atilt low for thiS time of year.
Try lho Morgantown ancl Opoldska dam foilwaters for al opocfel. Jlga ~ with mint10WI or 3-tnch white or chartreuae power·
grubs are always goad balta In these areas.
about 12 · 15-taet of water and jlgo or min· White ball lind an occatlonallargor hyblfd
nows are the beat balta to use Some nk:e _ atrlped ball are afwl)'l In lhe tallwatar
lialhead caHish are being caught on steak areas. I.argo drum era holding along the
-lind live fish . Nice saugeyo and trout are· lhoroflno the Morgantown Lock
being caught from lhe tallwalor on power· lind tho mouth ol Oeckm Crook. Uolng
ba1t
buzzl&gt;alta or surface popporw along the

•

EAST LYNN - Lake Is at summer rocre-

allan revel Lake and tal/water arf dear.
R 'o. BAILEY - Lake Is at e..nmer recr&amp;allon level Lake Is clear and tallwaler Ia
muddy. Some large spotted bass are being

ahorlflne lhould also produce largomoutfl
and ~m&amp;llmoutn bass. The weed beds near
the elate line are ueuaNy good for large.

mouth bass wllh floating plasllc wonns and

white aplnnerbaita. Buubaltl are aleo a

·

er gOod spot GOOd bahs are plastk: jigs In
CHEAT LAKE - Ttle lake is normal and
blacK and chartreuse colors or live shad. .clear. The best weekend fllhlng will be at
Blutmlll are provld1ng consistent action In night when boat irafflc decreases. The two
the Standing limber using worms and small embayment&amp; at the Wttt Penn Recreatton
Jigs 1Hybnd striper and channel catfish flsti- Area near the dam provkla convenient
1ng IS good off shallow points at night. Bast shoreline or pier flahlng, Largemouth ball,
baitS are chicken liver and 10ft.:shell cfay- aunfllh and yeiOw perch are abundant In
l1sh Carp are also providing a lot of fun lor these areas. Shoreline arus "ttth fallen
nighl anglers with com and doughballs
trees uauatty attract largemouth Where

STONECOAL LAKE - Tho lake Is 3 feet
bel6w summer recreation level. The surface
temf?Orature or the lake ts 70 degrees. Crappie fishing has !!lowed In the lake Carp are
be1ng caught 1t1 the upper end or the lake
Wllh wonns ahd oom are workJng beat Try a
minnow on allg or a nlghlcrawlar bouncing

oHt~e bottom for walleye. BaSI fishing has
be011 good In the lake wllh plastics and live
1 bait arQ\Ind structures. Topwater Is working
best•for bass In the evenings Bluegill are
being caught on SpaWI'llng beds with small
1woiiJISand jigs Csllish have been caught In
the 6ver11ng on chicken liver. Trout fishing
has been good with powerbalt and sp!nners.

S'T;ONEWALL JACKSON - Lake Is at

wmmer recreation level. Lake and tallwater
are clear The surface temperature of lhe
take Is 75 degrees Boats can be launched
from all ramps A -few saugtS'e are being
cau~t off points In about 15- lo 20·feet of
water with minnows Cfttflsh are being
caught on goldfish In the mornings and
evenin gs A few musky have been reported

cau{tu lhiS week Largemouth fishing hal

prodUcing the blggesl fish Crappie have

been caught w1th m1nnows around standing
timber and bridges In about 10 feet of water.

shof811ne cover II absent, flah wMh tube jlga

In 10. to 20·feal of water off the shoreHne.
Also try buubaltl or popper&amp; along tne
lhorallne In the evening and Mrty momlng.
Walleye atodl:ed two ~,. ago shOuld be
12· to 13-lnchea long

"CENTRAL WEST VIRGINIA - Aroa

rivers 1re nortn~l and dear. Ptenty•-of trout

are 11111 remaining from the llocklng aeason

and only a few anglet'l are out on the
atream SmallmOuth and rock ball filhlng
haa been greal with buzzbaitl and 3-incfl
llgo Musky fishing has been good In Buck·
hannon River and Tygart backwatiiJ with
minnow imltallonl.

SOUTHERN WEST VIRGINIA - The

New and Greenbrier rtvera are providlog
some ~ filhlng for smatlmOuth baa&amp; with
while ilplnnerballe, white plalllc grubs or
small rapala1 In black and suvar or Hve ball
euch aa mlnnowa1 Below or above thoala
ar• good spotalo try Bau filhlng Ia good
early al\dlate In all
tHe small impound·
manti In IOUihtlm W81t Virginia. Try spots
at the end of polnta , weed beds or fallen timber with pllsttc worms fished slowty along
the bOttom. Splnnerbalts: are alto good
choices. Channel caHiahlng Is good In areas
like Hawke Nut lake and IOm8 of the other
small lmpoundmlfll:a. Ball time to fish Ia

!&amp;n

with nah being plcltad
crankballl
around drop-offo and ky ohorolln...
Wal~yo have aloo bHn
ght1n about 20
-Ltlll of water by angitf8 trolling with dftpdlvl~~mlnnow lmliallono. Catfish all hiHing
110u tht dom on gplcffish. BluegMI a,.
boln oaughtln shaNow a - of lht lakt on
omo 'llgoand wonno under a - · Aou~Mit It being put on tilt ftohlng jat1y at
lht ""ttlt Run t(11 lhlt - · ll't a gmt
Pilot from wltlch 1o lholl ~~~~.
SUlTON - l.akt 11 at tummtr reorealfor1
ltvtl. Lake an,d tallwaltr 111 o;,ar. All boat
11mpo .,. opon, 1111 ftshlng hu been
tiOOd. Tht bell octlon IIlia hU been
DlfWtllt e·oo p.m. lind dlrll. lpotlld btu
have.bHft oa,q,t on p1aattoa oil the main
lako :and 110unc1 fllh allriOfOrl, Fllhlng
olott to lhe bank with tube )lgo hu ~
bot! for llrgomoulh lind ttmaflmoufll, Cat•

For The
Whe
. Best
..

Price in Central
and Southern Oh i·o
Gallipolis' ~ometown Dealer

I

•

'

.. ~---- - · · -

.-.

- ~ -~

~

.'

~-

. . . ..
~

DOWN
PAYMENT
R•OUIRID, WI IVIN
..INANe• TAX &amp; TITLI

'With Select Lender'• A~roved CrediL

2001 Buick LaSlb" Sliver 110004- AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, Spon Wheels,
Power Seats,-PW&amp;L ............................ ..... .... .................... $19,995
2000 Dodge Neon ES lltt75 ·14K "'·· BOFW, Loadeal. .. ..... $12,250.
2000 Chrysler Clrrua 19793 • 23,000 M1ies, BOFW, LXI Leather Seals,
AT, AC, AMIFMICD, "LOADEDI".... .... ..... . .. .. . .. . . $14,495
2000 ~rcury Marqul1 11869 -21.000 miles. BOFW.............$16.995
2000 Mercury Sabia
1B,OOO miles, BOFW, AT, AC, Tilt,
PW&amp;L, V-6, Spon Wheels ..... . ...... . .... .. . .. . .. .. . .$16,430
2000 Old1 Alero 19909 • 26.000 Miles, Sal of Fact War.. AT, AC , Tilt
Crulae, PW&amp;L, ............................... ..................................... $13,755
2000 Buick Century 19911· 28,000 m11es, Balol Facl. War , AT, AC ,
Tilt, Crulae, Sponwheels. .......... ..... ..... .. . . .... ........ $14,305
2000 Dodge Neon 18821 • AT, AC, AM/FM/Cass, More ........ $12,1 95
2000 Nluan AHima GXE 11002Q.20K miles, BOFW ......... . .$14,750
2000 Mercury Cougor LS 110021· 29K m11es, OOFW ....... .$15,425
2000 Chevy Cavalier 19912 • 20,000 miles, BOFW ........... $1 0,700.
2000 Chevy Malibu 18808 • 29.000 miles. BOFW.. AM/FM/CD. AT,
AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L....... ....... ...... ....... . ................... $1 ,
2000 Mazda 626 LX 19928 • 29,000 miles, BOIFW, AMVF~IICI) , AT, AC,
Tilt, Crulae... ...... ....... ...... . .......
.
.
.
1899 Honda Civic EX 19958 • "'ne owner, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
Power Sun Roof.. ................. .......... .. ............. $13,750
1899 Ford Contour SS I 9983 -Red, AT, AC, lilt, PW&amp;L .. . $9,995
1899 PonUac Grand Am 19972- V6, AT. AC , Tilt, Cruise, AM/FM
Cassette ........... .............. ........ .............. .... ..... ....... $11 ,870
1899 Doc1go Intrepid 18892- Gold, AT, AC, Till, Crulae. ..... $13,305
1899 Ford Explorer Sport il8985- 24,000 miles, AST. AC, Tilt, Cruise.
PW&amp;L, Sunroof . .............. ".................... ................ ............ $10,715
1899 Mercury Cougar LS 1100111-26,000 miles, BOFW .... $14,950
1899 Doc1go Intrepid 110015 . ....
..... .... ... .. ........ $12,495
1899 Pontiac GrendAm H463- AT, AC, C, , Red, Spoiler......... $11 ,495
1899 Pontiac GrandAMSE 19781 • 29,000 Miles. Sal of Fact Wa, ,
Black, AT. AC, TiM, Cruise, Cassette . .. . . ..... .... .... .... . .. ... $12,995
1899 Chevy Cavalier 19915 • White, AC, AMIFM/Cass ..... .... $9,695.
1899 Chryoler Concord 19938 • Green, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise. PW&amp;L,
Sponwheels ..... .......1.... .......... .... .... .. ........... .... .......... . $13,995
1899 Ford Tauruaol8934 : AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L. AM/FM/Gass .

-6·

.................... ..... ...... . . . ........ ..... ......................,. . . .,·.:.

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

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

..

en 11\ler or IOft·shells. BkJiglll are spawning
411 arouna ltle ttate and they make an
excellent quany for a young ftaherpel"'on
OHIO RIVER - Ohio River angllrl are

doing wtll while flshlng lie with
Cf8nkbalta and oplnnm for black ball
Hlo1&gt;rld st!lpod ball af8 belnp c:augll1 on
mlnnowo wltlll catfflh a11 being taken on
ch~ken IIIIer lind nia!t101&amp;Wierl. Fllhlng at
tilt klofc lind dam lliliweltl' aiMI with CUI·
bill, chloken IIIIer and mlnnowa hU Pftll*l
wtll for cafdl~lfllh, wltlll IIUiJtr lind
IIUOI)It 111
oauG!t on mln.-•llnd
g&lt;Ub-ffpptG jlgl.
k illhlna with dough•
bllll, nlglilollwllr8 and ohltiktn IIYtr II
110011 tor oa1flalt, wltlla INiftwat.r diUm art
tiolna oauattt on nlahlln-.
KANAWHA ~IVPI-IoaflnO IIIGiert Ill
onlOVI'Ia ca- ot blaOk - arona "''
lhOftlilnn wltlll Ulfng tubtDofft. oranlibl111
and""""''"· ..uoer..._. and walltYt
a11 being llktn In lhllllllilttr a - ol tht
locfca and damll'whltlllina mlnnowa. Cat·
fflft are being caught on nlghlnwllrl and
chloken IIVtr lhlllllgiMHif lie - ·

$6,1,50

1995 Buick Can1ury 19857 ·AT, AC, Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L..... . .. $6 895
11198 Ford Probe 110011 ............................................ ..........$5,450
11198 Chryalar New Yorker 110011.: ...................................$3,995
11198 Ford Probe 110024 • Blue, Standard Transmission . ..... . $5,1SO

11111 Chevy Venture Van 11Q006. 29,000 mi., Rear AC, Tilt, Crwse,
BOFW, PW&amp;L, 4 Door,/WJFWCass. .................... c ...... $17,565
11111 Dodgo Caravan lltt13- left ilde sliding door. AT. AC , Seven
Passenger, Till, Cru1ii s........................,........................................... $13
11111 ~rcury VIllager 110022· Loacledf. . .. . . ...... . .... $16,695
1988 Ford \'llndllllr GL 119788- Green, AT, AC, 111~ Crulse.Power
Leather seat........................................................................ $1 t ,sgs
1988 Dodge Caraven Sport 19797 ·AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise,
Laft
Side Sliding Door, Grand Spon, Qued &amp;eating ...... ............... &gt;_~ •.••o
1988 Ford Wlnd1tar GL 18872 · AT. AC, PW&amp;L, AMIFM/Caas, I
CruiM, Rear AC,.......... .......... .... .............. .... .... ........ ....:..: $13,9115
11111 Ply!IICIIllh VoY1lger SE 19990- 3B,OOO mllt tf. AT, AC,
AMIFM/Cau, 7 Pa111nger.................... ...................................... :11D,;•1o ·
1187 Dodlt Carevan 11110012·, ......................................... 112,375
1988 ,ord Wlndatar . .22 .Orten,'AT, AC, Tilt,.CNIII, ........... $6,115
1• Dodgt Clrevan '"'1 • AT, M:., Tilt, Crullt,.V·8 Engine, 7
P1111n~r ,,,,.,,,,,, ................ ..t'"'' '"'' ''' ''''' '''' '' ''""''''" ' '''' ' ''"'''''' 14,885

1. . Dodge Ctnlytn ...1+ Whlft, 7 Pall, Voe Eng .. AT, AC .. $7,115
1. .
Aef'OIIIr Vln mot· V-8 Eng, AT, AC , Tilt, Crultt, PW&amp;L ..

,Ofll

0000U000!0•IO . . O!I . . U00 " ' " ' 00 OUOOO 00 00000 0001 ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' " 00 0

,,,1 , , o " ' 00 ooo•o 0 0 00 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " o o .,.,,.15,750

. Jl.

'·
0

Ford Explo"r Sport Tree 110017 . 14K miles, BOFW .$24,995
Chevy Bl-r 19988· 4X4, 4 Dr, Black, 1 Owner, ....... .... $20,650
1988 Dodge Durang~ 1110028- Silver, 3rd Seat, AT, AC, Till, Cruise,
PW&amp;L, Sponwheels. ..... ..... ....... ... ... ..... .... .. .... .$20,620
1899 Dodge Durango 1111025- White, U.ather 3rd Seat, AT, AC, 4X4,
eng, LOADEOI. .....................................................................$1 8,620
1999 Chevy Tracktr 19958 • 4X4 • AC, AT, Tilt, Cruise,
Sponwheels .. . .... ...... ...... .. .. : .... .... ....... .......................... , o,i&lt;\Jo
1889 Jup Wr~~nglor 4X4 Sport 19838 • Sahara Hard Top, 6
Till, Cru1se, 24,000 miles, BOFW .. ~...
.
.
1899 Ford Explorer Sport 119982 · 27Km1le, AT,
I,
1898 Toyota RAV 419947 • 31 ,000 miles,
AC. Sportwheels..... ............... ...... ............ . .
.
1898 Kla Spoilage 19784 • Graen, 4X4, Ext Pkg, AT, AC, Tilt, lirulae,
Sunroot, Whe!&gt;ls..... .... , .. ... ._ ................ ,..... ,...~ .....~
1998 Subaru Ou1back AWD 18682 • Root Rack, AT, AC, Tilt,

~~~~;~v ~:.w::~ ·4ii4'4' 1l;·;;s66o·:·:.\:r.·AAic~·:. · ;li1,; i::.:~i111 ~y';.li~~~i~:~
.. .. ... ... . . ...... ...... . ..... .... .. ...... ..:;;.·;:;';;;;;·.. ~: ~- ~~~
GMC Jimmy 4X44 Dr. 110005 ·Gray, Loaded &amp; More ....
11198 JMp Wrangfif sport CX4 lfi3g • Convertible; 8
Sportwheels ....................... ..
1997 Chevy Blazer 1110035· 4X4, 4 Or, AT. M;, Tilt. Cruise,
1997 JMp Cherokee 19923 • AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, t&gt;H.I'FMI
Cass, Spon Wheels ............ ·....... .... .... . ..... .............. ~ 15,5!15
1988 Chevy Blazer 11100211- Red AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L... ,
1988 Suburu lmpreg 110036 Bluf. AT. M;, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L ... $7,995
1988 Ford Explorer I 9977· 4X4 Tilt, Crulae, 4 Dr., AT, AC ... $13,995
1996 Suzuki X-90 4X4 Black 19933- AT, AC , T·Tops .... . .
,
Ford Explorer 19475 GrHn • 2 Door, AT, AC , Tilt, Cruise. Roof
Spon Wheels .... ............. . ..................................... $t0,995
Ford Explorer 19407. Tan 4X4, Auto, Air, XLT. PW&amp;L, " """"·:·:

~10' :•••

1899 Ford Eacort2x2 110000 • 22K m1lee, BOFW, PW&amp;L. Alloy
................. ... .... .... ..... ........... .... . . ..... ... ... ..... .. ... $10,690
19911 Ford Muatlng 110023 ·Black, AT, AC, Tilt, Crulae, V-6 .. $13,805
19911 Chevy Mon1e Ca~o ~~ 110007 • Red, t9K miles, Sport Wheels,
AT. AC, Tilt, Cruise, BOFW, PW&amp;L. ..... ·............... .............. $14,545
1,998 Toyota Corolla 110030 ·Red, 5 Speed, AC, Tilt, Cruise. $10,995
1998 Honda Civic LX 19957 • AT. AC, Til1, Cruise. 5 Speed,/WJFMI
Cassette ....... :...................... ....................... ............................ $13,995
1988 Chevy Cavallar 191102 • 1B,OOO M1tes, Red, AT, AC, Tift, Cruise, 5
speed. ... . .. ..... .... ... . ... ..... .. .. ... ... ... .. ............. $10,250
1998 Pontiac Grand Prix GT llt959- AT, AC. 111t. Cruise, PW&amp;L, P.
Mlr10r, Alloy Wheels......... .......... ....... . . .... ... .... ......... $14,995
11198 Buick Rogal 19907 • 25th Anniversary Edlllon, Power. ~eather
Seats, LOADED .............................................................. o. $15,785
1998 Plymou1h Neon 118715 · AT,AC, Casaelte &amp;More:............ $8,895
1998 Saturn SC2 1911411- 28,000 miles, Pwr Sunroof, AT, AC, Tilt,
PW&amp;L, Cru1se, Sponwheels ........................... ............. $1 2,145
1988 DODGE STRATUS - 1 • Gray, AT, AC , CNise, PW&amp;L $7,670
1988 Sltum SC.11!9941 • 32,000 miles, 5 Speed, AC, Cass . .$9,435
1997 Ford Mustang GT fiii804. Red, V-6 , 5 Speed, AC, Cassette,
Sponwheels ............................................................ ............... $t3.695
1998 VW lloetit 19999 • 33K miles, AC, 5 Speed ................ $13,245
1117 ~ord Taurus 19941 • AT, AC, Tilt, Oruli'e, PW&amp;L, Sport Wheela,
AM/FM/Cass .. ................................................................. $8,350.
1998 Pontiac Grand Am 110010 .... ...... : .... ........... ,,,. .......$8,9510 .
1988 Pontiac Grand P~x 4Dr Whlta I 9752 ·AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, ,
Sport wheels............................................. ..................:.......... $8,805
11111 ~rcury Cougar 19880 • AT. AC, TiM, CNise, PW&amp;L,
Sporiwheels, ...... . . . . ..... ...... ...... ..... ..... ...... .. ....... ..$8,995
1186 Pontiac Bonnavllle 111915- AT, AC, Tilt, CNiae, PW&amp;L ...$7,695
1995 Hyundal Sonato 119841· AT, AC, V6, Alkly Wheels, Tilt, .....$3,995
1115 Chevy Cavalier 119860- Blue, AT, AC .... ... ... ..... ...... $3,995
1996 Ford Muotang 19995 • VB, 5 Spd , AMIFMICD, PW&amp;L ... $7,650
1995 Nl1un Uttlma 118848 · AT. M:., Tilt. Crulsa, PW&amp;L,Casselte.......

or

Bluegill are hinlng small Jlga and wonns In lata nlgllt '-"" very n!IY morning with chlofl·

shallow coves Trout are being caught In the
tallwater on small spinners
SUMMERSVILLE - Lake is at summer
recreation level Lake and tallwater are
clear.-"Smallmoulh flohlng has been good,

•

the Hall
And there's really no q uestion for what he w1ll be
remembered most.
"It's a remarkable achievement, that consecutive- game
streak," Torre said "Even after
retirement, he 's st1ll gomg ' to
be htghly thought of."
For a long. long ttme.
'Tel' stop short ofi"'comparmg
him to Babe Ruth," sa1d Mtke
Gibbons, executive dJrector of
the Babe Ruth museum, "but a
hundred years from now he'll
be remembered more than
most players, ~,;d that's an
mcred1ble legacy."

(441.()6.13)or Pat Reco («HB13).

West Virginia Fishing Report

been good around standmg limber and
bea'41r huts PlastiC worms and l1ve bait are

. Subscribe today.
675-1333 -. .
J

101'

athletes planning on pardclparlng In any
sporting ae1Miy grades 7·121n the Soothom
localSchool Ollllrl&lt;:t can be picked up In tho

11

Loudon.

Nov. 18 - NAPA 500, Hampton,
Ga.
Drl- Standings
1. Jeff GordOn .... . ...... 2,351
2, oate Ji""tt ......1.. . 2,225
3. Ricky Rudd .. . .. ... 2,206
4 T9ny Stewart . .
. 2,117
5 Sterling Marlin . . . . . . 2,108
6 Rusly Wallace . .
2,038 •
7. Johnny Benson . .
. 1.922
8. Bobby Labonte.. .
. 1,906
9 Kevin Harvlck .. .
. 1,894.
10. Steve Part&lt; .....
.1 ,858
1t . DaleEamhardtJr
.1 ,825
12. Matt Kanseth .. . .. ... 1.810
13 Mart&lt; Marlin .... . . 1,801
14. Bobby Hammon . .. ... 1. 782
15 .• •t Bunon . . .
. .. f,7t2
16. J1mmy Spencer . ..... . 1,702
17. Bill Elliott .... ...... 1,87•
18. Elliott Sadler.. . .. .... 1,852
19. Ward Burton.... .. . 1,804
20· Ken Schrader· · · · · · · · 1,581
21 . Jeny Nadeau .. . .. . .. 1,572
22. Mike Skinner . . . . . . 1,524
23. Kun Busch ....... . ... 1,521
24. Teny Labonte .. .. .. 1,504
25. Jeremy Mayfield .. .. ... 1,502
26. Dave Blaney.... . . . t,-444
27. Ricky Craven . . . .. . . 1,384
28. Michael wa~rlp.
. . 1,an
29. Robert
I
. . . . 1,361

RACINE - Sports Physical tonne

tor the Great Brltaln·Buckeve Sooe&amp;r Camp

110mJuly 15-19 on the campus of Ohkl Unl·
versily. GBBS has boon selected by the
.!Southeast Ohio Soccer Assoc6atkM1 to p-3 30 p.m.
· ~ high -~-· fflce •-·--·~' 9 a.m.·:

Kristen Bradshaw and Tracy
Montgomery of McDermott
SciOto Northwest. Maggie
Cooper was a member of the
team in 'its earlier tournaments, but a conflict will prevent her from making the trip,
to the national tournament.
· Team Ohto· will be among
one of 74 teams participating
m the national. tournament.
The team will open fourteam pool play on Saturday by
facing East Bay Explosion of
San Francisco at Yale' University.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

"The one thing I can say is
that he helped me and gave me
the in~entive that as ' a b1g
shortstop, I can play the post-

Some say fltpken revtved
the game m 1995, when he
completed hts run at Lou
Gehng's mark of playmg 111
2,130 stratght gal'l'les and
blunted bmer memories of the
players' smke that short-circuited the 1994 season.
"After the stnke, he brought
back the fans He brought back
baseball," Orioles bullpen
coach Elrod Hendricks said
Ripken spent his entire
career With the Ono)es, a feat
m Itself m thiS era of ,free
agency. There will be no controversy as to wh ;ch team he
wtll represe!l when entenng

Cond1tiomng for the regular season wm
Ph)lsiCata wnt be conducted al Holzer
beg1n Jutv 23 from 6-8 p.m. with practices Meigs Clinic on J\Jle 30 at 7 a.m.
beginning Aug 6 at 9 a m
Physical forma wi ll be dlatrtbuted at regisFor mere lnfoiT'Ilatlon, call va~ty coach tratiOn. They are new forma, which paranta
Da!ney DaVIs at256·1364 or JV coach lina must complete and sign belore the athlete
Johnson at 256-6725.
• can see a doctor.
'""'\.
Soccer camp ochoctuted
Southom pflyalcol """'" ...liable "I ''

ATHENS- Registration is still being hold

Aug. 12 - Global Crossing atltle
Glen, Walkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug 19 - Peps1 400, Brooklyn,
Mich.
Aug 25 - Sharpie 500, Bristol,

Weber
on AAU qualifier
.
.
BY DAVE HARRIS

ru nts.

tion and not have my SIZe be a
handtcap," sa~d Rodriguez, 111
th e first year of a record $252
mtlhon contract. "There was a
symbol there-that someone has
done it, done it very elQ&lt;JH'emly and done It very well"
It's not JUSt Rtpken's me and
skills
that
tmpressed
Rodriguez.
"Ever smce I've been about
7 or S,l've been a huge admirer of Cal Rtpken. Not only
what he's done as a player, but
as a team and for hiS commumry," Rodnguez said "I thmk
Cal ts an unbelievable ambilSsador for baseball."

1

cauyht along rocky drops, with polnta anoth· uo&lt;&gt;d c:holcriround tha weed -

OVP CORRESPONDENT

players "lo have at l&lt;ast 3,000
hits and 400 homers, won two
M VP awards and next month
will play in his 19th All-Star
game. He also hit more home
runs (345) than any shortstop
m history.
Alex Rodriguez of the Texas
R~ngers ci'edits _the 6-foot-~
Ripken With breakmg the
mold for shortStops. Before
R ipken came along, shortstops
were rypecasl a~ slap-hjttmg·

&amp;unbn!'. fJI:ime!l -flrntinrl • Page 85

Local Sports Bri~

, Benson, wbo turned 38
d
h B
h
e nes ay, was t e
usc
series Rookie of the Year m
1994
h
·
I
, Its c amp1on a year ater
and the top Winston Cup
rookie in 1996.
So, he's used to winning,
and unofficially has done so in
a Winston Cup car.
He got a v1ctory _ · b~t no
points - by going fro m the
pole to the checker May t 9 in
.
O
I
Th e W mston
pen, a p re iminary to the top even t of
NASC:AR's aU-star we;ekel1d::·..-Hn~~ifc:
::~
"Winning that race w as
32. Ron Hornaday . . .. 1,231
33 ' Stacy Compton .. .. !,229
g ood for that day, but we
34. Casey Alwood .. .. .. .. 1,152
don't look at it like we won a
35. Todd Bodine .... . ... 1,114
.race this year," he said.
36. Jason Leffler . .. .. .. . . 1,074
r
37. Joe Nemechek
. 1,061
"We want to win a pomts
36. Mike Wallace .. .. .... 1.008
39 · Buci&lt;Bhot Jones · · · 95ol
race, and there's a lot of the
40. Hut Strlctdln. . . . . .. . .. . 900
racing season left."
W, d

Legacy

,

Pomeroy·• Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pteasant, WV

• •

1997 Ford F-250 4X4 19955 • V-8, AT. AC ,8' Bed ..... ..... ....
1997 Ford F150 t911115-3rd Door, AT; AC, Tilt, Cruise, Spt whl .. $17,01
1997 F150 XCab 1191139 ·Black, VB, 4X4, AC, PW&amp;L. Till, Cruise,
Sportwheels . ......................•. ..... ... . ..... ...... .......... ... ..... $1
1997 Lariat SuP'!rcab lltt1 II- 32K miles, V6, AT, AC, Tilt, I ,
Leather, sponwhoels, PW&amp;L ..................................................... $1
1997 Nlaaan King Cab 4X4 19994- 56K mi .. AC , Sponwheels,
AMIFM!Casaelte ............................ ................ ................... $1
11111 Dodge Ram 1500 4X4 SLT 19842 - AT, AC, Tilt, vru11so, '""'Y
Wheels, VB .... ... ...... ..... .............. ..... . ... .... .. . ... $1
1994 Ford F150 4X4 -1- AT Top~. Bed Uner, Cass ........ $1

MPOia B3000 111992· 29K mi .. BOF,W, AT, AC, Flareslde,
Spcirtwhliels,AMIFM/Casaette ..... .. .... .. .. . . . .. . . $1
Toyota Tacoma XCab 119830. Maroon, AT, SR5 P.kg , AC.

Low Miles •••• ,.. ............................................................................ $15,995

1998 Ford Ranger 19948 ·20,000 miles, AT, AC, Tilt, Cru1se,
Sportwheels, PW&amp;L.... .. . .
.. .. . $1 1
1998 Ford F150 19887. V6 , AT, AC. a·bed, reg cab.......... $1 .
1998 Ford F-150 18620 - Red, STX FlaresiCfe, 35,000 m1les, AT,
Tilt, Cru1se . . .... .. .. , ....
. . . .. ... $1
1998 Dodge Ram Quad Cab 19803 · AT. AC. Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
Remote Sian. LOADED ISH bed .... ............ ... .. ....... $17
1998 Chevy S·10 19996 • AT, AM/FMICass
1997 F-150 Suparcab 19611- AC, @ , cruiae, PW&amp;L. Spon wne,e1s.
Rear slider.......... ..... . ...... .... . ..... ..... .......

..

Ford Ranger Supercab 19943·
GMC Sonoma 110032 · Silver, Supercab, Loweted, Loadedl.....
............... . ................. ...: ......... ..................... $7,995
1995 5·10 X-cab 19942 · Black, LS Package, V6, Sponwheels,

S~10 19B23 R;;;i :·LSP~~kage, AT: AC, Tiit. C~lse
.....~"·"'u
Ford Rangar 4x4 lltt7B- Suporoab, Sportwheela ..... ....... $9,895
1993 Ford Fl,.blrd Tran1Am 11905 ·Formula, V-8 , Low Miles, AT ...
""'""'""'"" ..... """ ....... . .,.. . .... ..... .... ..... ... ............ $8,995

1113 Meroury Topu mn · Low miiH, AT, AC ...................... .$3,985
1880 Dodgt Dynu1y ..., •. Blut, AT, AC, Tilt, Crul11, ........... $3,815
1880 Cldlllao ITI 11141 • 85,000 mi., Leather, PWR Stat.. .. 18',115
1880 Lincoln Conllntn111118571 'L0AOED" ........................... 12,815

�.._.

t .... ,.. .

,..

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·

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r

•

Pomeroy •

Middiep~rt • Ga;llpolls, Ohio • Point Pleasant, ~

NAS C.AR

1001 Winston

still hopes to challenge for title
SONOMA, Calif. (AP)

Th~re

was only so much Dale Jarrett could

..,

do about an agonizing torn c h ~st muscle. Heavy-duty painkillers are nor an
option in racing, where always bemg
alert is paramount.
Jarrett ~rashed his Ford in qualifYmg
. faS[ month in Concord, N.C . Smce
then, he has fo ught valiantly - albeit
gingerly - to stick near the top of the
Winston C up standings.
:·You just have to put it out of your
mind;' he said. " There was no way of
getting rid of all of the pain without
compromising something else."
The 1999 champion led the standings for nearly three months afte r wmning March 18 in Darlingt.o n, S.C.
· Jeff Gordon overtook him earher
this month with a victory in Brooklyn,
Mich ., and Jarrett knows th e three. time series champion is on the kind o f
roU that made him the best driver in
IN THE LEAD- Dale Jarrett in the UPS Ford and Jeff Gordon in the DuPont Chevrolet lead the pack for the pace .laps at
the sport for the last seven years.
the
start of the NASCAR Cracker Barrel 500 at Atlanta Motor Speedway in Hampton , Ga., in this March 11 photo. Jarrett
" He is definitely going to be the. one
we battle all year, and we're going to led the standings for nearly three months after winning March 18 in Darlington, S.C. Gordon overtook him earlie r this
do our besr to keep up and try to keep month with a victory in Brooklyn; Mich. (AP) '
him in sight," Jarrett said.
"It was just one thing after another," career. At a luncheon in San Francisco, hts sport's populanty, as well as his
· Jarrett has finished in the top four he sa1d.
he talked about hi s admiration for fo r- ow n, has grown. In the past four years,
for five straight seasons. He's deterDespite the poor showing, he m er 49ers quarterback Steve Yo ung.
he's seen his fan mail in crease by 25
mined that this season - despite the remamed second in the standings, I 26
Young waited behind Joe M o2tana percent and his fan club membership
jnjury - will be no d1fferent.
points behmd Gordon and 19 points before becoming a Hall of Fame-cal- double. Of course, the W inston C up
He.has quite a few more gray hairs ahead of Robert Yates R acing team- iber quarterback in h1s own n ght, th en championship helps.
than in years past, and gone is the mus- mate Ricky Rudd.
And those funny United Parcel Serbowed out of the game gracefully.
tache that enhanced his Good 01' Boy
Jarrett admitted he wasn't tOO per" I do 1t because I love to compete, vice commercials don 't hurt, either.
image. He now looks like what he is: a cent at Sears Pomt, but had improved and that's how I thmk he did it," Jarrett
In his first season of sponso rship by
44-year-oJd, father . l,l{ four •with a to the point where he didn't have to said,
UPS, Jarrett ltars in TV ads th at jokdown-to-earth ciet11eanor ~nd a love of bring along a doctor to momto r hts
Unhke Young, )arre t~ isn't about to ingly suggest he take one of those disgolf.
re tire.
tinctive brown trucks for a spin on the
pain.
.
During his trip last week to NorthAnd the problem at Sears Pomt wasT he son of two-ttme series champi- race track.
em California for the Dodge-Save n 't his chest.
on N ed Jarrett is stiU going strong 10
But Gordon knows when to tal(e
Mart 350, Jarrett lamented staying at a
" I had a. third gear, but 11 just kept years after gettin g h ts first Winston Jarrett seriously.
golf resort because the chest inJury popping out, so I was having to do Cup VICtory for the Wood Brothers.
" I just know that Dale Jarrett is
prevented him from bringing his clubs. something totally dtfferent," Jarrett Then, after a three- year stint at Joe going to be there at the end of the seaJarrett did not.fare weU in his tnp to said.
Gibbs R acing - · during which he got son because he's a good dnver and h e
the scemc wine country. He qu3lified
Tony Stewart won on the road the fir st of his three Daytona 500 vic- · has a real good team," Gordon satd.
in 35th for the road-course event at course, beating Robby Gordon by tones - Jarrett join~d Yates in 1995.
"He's won a champio'lship before and
Sears Point Race\vay, and managed just 1.746 seconds. Jeff' Gordon was third.
Now, Jarrett has 27 yictories and 12 he's been a part of all that before. That
a 26th. place finish. He spun out.oll the , The West Coast junket did give Jar- poles.
·
whole t«:am as a package has that ex:pefinal lap.
rett a chance to reflect a bit on his
He has watched with amazement as rience."

DRIVER WOES: Be sOn dealing with bad luck
SONOMA, Calif. (AP) .....:.·
After Johnny ,Benson surpnsed virtUally everyone with
a competitive 2000 season that
belied the lac~ of big-bucks
sponsorship, tii•.i'Jal for this
year was modest: corlsistency.
Now, )With the backing he
wanted- &amp;om Vahro.line, Benson has a~vanced six spots
from his stunning final finish
of 13th last year in the Winstan Cup ~tandings. But it
could be even better, because
the most consistent factor
lately has been his ·propensity
for bad luck.
That was never more evident than Sunday. After qualifyirig 14th for the Dodge-Save
,Mart 350 and running among
the leaders, Benson was penalized for speeding on pit road.
Then something broke ·~n his
Pontiac on the final tlirn of

the last.lap, relegating him

y, J rom another team ," he
29tli-place finish.
said. "That just put a crimp
"Today's how our luck's into our whole day."
been going the last couple of
After starting the season
weeks," Benson said. "We had with a finish of 28th in the
a top-five race car, but you've Dayrona 500, the consistency
got to finish to benefit."
• Benson was looking for
Benson has dropped four kicked in 'tor a while. H e had
positions in the· standmgs · seven top-seven finishes in the
since early May. aThe last next 10 races.
month has been particularly • The dnver from Grand
d1fficult, with Sunday's result Rapids, Mich., winless in 177
at Sears Point Raceway fol- career ~tarts, isn't consumed by
lowing finishes of 41st in trying to end that dro ught. It's
Dover, Del., and 12th and all about the quest for consis24,th the next two weeks.
tency.
I I'The last three weeks have
'' Y-ou start getting more
been pretty hard on us;• Ben- top-fives, top-! Os, it gives you.
son said. "We took a real good a better opportunity to win a
hit in the points. Dover was a race," Benson said . "We've
huge hit.
come close this year. When we
"We were running second get. there, we waot to be able
and had a sm31l problem in the to take advantage of the sltuapit and then hit a tire sitting tion and hopefully to be; able
out there in the road that got to get a v1ctory."

•
•
Sunday, July 1, 2001

Sunday, July 1, 2001

Even thmking llb'out a VIC-·
tory in 2001 was beyond optimistic a year ago, when sponsorship dried up and Benson
was working for prize money
alone in a car unadorned by
adventsing for much of the
season.
•
The plain white car was not
an attention-getting device,
Benson said.
"We didn't have nothmg to
put on it," he said. "But w hen
we looked back, we thought,
'You know, that car was highly VISible.' It was the right
tlting to do.
"We could have chosen any
color, but evidently they had
some wh1te paint sitting
around and that's what we
painted it."

Cup sd:edule
and standings

shortstop?
'
All of the above, and then
some.
"The way you're remembered is throu·gh the impressions you've left.'' he said. " I
would imagme the streak
would be part of 1t, I 1magine
that maybe I had a pan in
changing th e mindset of shortstop a little bit. And hopefully,
as someone who loved to play
the game."
Those who saw him play
couldn't possible thmk otherwtse.
"Because of what he's done,
he has tq be considered one of
the top ballplayers of all n me,"
Whtte Sox manager Jerry
Manu el satd. " H e's- dedicated
hiS life to playmg every day."
R tpken pu t up some
impressive num bers along the
way. H e IS one of only seven

from PageBl

The 2Q01 NASCAR WlnS1on Cup
·
·
d f1j
SJ;hedule (wlnnef8 in parontheles)
to convmco; mne
1 erent
and driver point stand1ngs:
manage rs to put him m the
Feb. t8- Oaytona 500, Daytona
hneup every smgle day.
Beach. Fla. (Michael WaHrip) .
Feb 25- oura Lube 400, Rod&lt;·
He's still at it, too, taking
lnghem, N.C. (Steve Part&lt;)
optional batting practice at age
March • - lJAW-Dalmle!Chryoler
40 in hopes of securmg a few
400, Las Vegas. (Jeff Gordon)
March 11 - Cracl&lt;e&lt; Ba""l 500,
extra starts m Ius uncomfortHampton, Ga. (KeVln HaiVIcl&lt;)
able new role as a part-time
March 18 - Carolina Dodge Cea~
ers 400, Danlngton, S C (Dale Jar·
player.
rett)
"I'll remember him for his
March 25 - Food City 500, Bristol,
I
h
Tenn. (Elliott Sadler)
,.
professiona approac , All-Star
April! -Harrah's 500, Fon Worth,
excellence, the .way he preTexas.
(Dlla~l.;e~~:;~:'b~~lo&lt;tlnsvUio.~-----1-- ~'re~ datly, and for bemg m
Ap1118(Dale Jarrett)
grea t sfiape -throughou t his
Aprll22- Talladega 500, Talladecareer," Toronto manager Buck
ga, Ala (Bobby HamiHon)
April 29 - NAPAAulo Parts 500,
· Martmez sa1d.
Fontana. Galli (Rusly Wallace)
So, how would Rtpken 'preMay 5- Pontiac Exc1tement -400,
b
b d?
Richmond, Va.,(Tony Stewart)
ler to e remem ere .
May 27 - Coca·Cola 600; Con·
Iron Man? Hard worker?
cord, N.C (Jeff Burton)
I'
d h 1.tte ? T d
June 3 - MBN'A Platinum 400,
.. ar
r.
ren sett mg
Dover, Del. (Jeff Gordon)
----------------~------June 10 - Kmart 400, Brooklyn,
Mlch (Jaff Gordon)
June 17 - Pocono 500, long
Pond, Pa. (Ricky Rudd)
South Gallla VB eummM achfdule
•7.30 a.m. and 2 30 p.m. to make other
June 24 - Dodge/Save Man 350,
MERCERVILLE - Clpon gym at Soulh arrangements
Sonoma, Galli. (Tony Stewart)
Galba H1gh School wMI be held for South Gaf..
Packets Will· not be sent home this year.
July 7 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
,.
11a 11olleyball on Tuesday's from 6·8 p m fOr Students will not be pennltted to panjclpate
Beach. Flo
g1rls grades 9· 12, while the weight room will on beginning day If paperwork 11 not camJuly 15- Troplcana, 400, Joiet,
be open from B-7 30 p.m. on Thurvday's.
ple1ed. ..

.

Ill.

July 22 - New England 300,

Loudon, N H

Juty 29- Pennsylvania 500, Long
Pond

Aug. 5 - Bnckyard 400,

.;

lnd~

anapot1s '

A Logan based team has
qualified for the national 12and-under AAU girls basketball tournament at various
:sites in Connecticut after
placing second in the state
1tournament in Cincinnati.
Jl The Team Ohio squad had
earlier won the Tri-State Classic in Cincinnati and the Capipl City Classic in "Columbus.
The team is coached by
Ron Conner and Dave Weber.
Members of the team
include Kristin Cassady of
Logan, Julie Trace ofTnmble,
Erin Weber of Reedsville
'
Eastetn, Amanda StoveF of
Federal H oeklrtg and Carolyn
Gripps and Sarah Gaskel, both
of Athens.
Others are Ashley Erwin
and
Tori
McNeal
of
Crooksville and Briana Hinkle and Alison Heister ofBex-'
ley. For the national tournament dtey will he joined by

Tenn.

Sept 2 - Southam 500, Oanlngton, S C.
Sept 8 - Chevrolet Monte Csno
400, Richmond, Va.
I
Sept. 16 - New Hampsh re 300,

ali

sent their Intensive 5-day residential camp
for intermediate and advanced players ages

dally•
This year a new form Is required tor an
Ohk&gt; High School Alhlelic Auociailon aludent-athletes
Phvslcal dates wHI be announced later.
0.1111 8occer ClUb lkllll CM'Ip
GALUF»OLIS - The GaUia Soccer Club
wrnaponsor a skills ~mp on Juty 18·19 from
6·30 to 8 p m.
The camp will be directed by Marahaii,Unl·
verslty coach Bob Gray and wiH cost $50 for
four days of lnatructton
For more Information contact Claudia Lyon

--o

and up

lnstructors are FIFA·IIc8n88d prolesslonal
~nr1 collewate otavers and coaches from
Enland, Ire land, Scotland and Wales
Numerous collegiate coaches also partiCi·
pa te
For more 1ntormatlon. or to receive a
brochure, contact Oa11e F»almer by email at
palmerdOoh1o edu or call the GBBS aff~ee
at t ·800·871.()834
Fourth of July 5K run 1nd Wllk Mt
JACKSON - The l1~h annual Jackson
county Spor1s Festival 5K Run and Walk will
be held Wednesday at 9 a m at Manpower
Part&lt; on East Main Street.
Entry fee for the run Is $12, $7 for the walk
lor those wishing to receive a t·shlrt. No pre·
registra tion 1s required and registration may
be made day of the race
·
For more Information, call the Jackson
A'f'ea Chamber ol Commerce at 286-2722.
Eastern fall 1port1 reglatndlon aet
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastem Local athletes grades seven through 12, play1ng fall
sports (football, volleyball, golf and cheer·
lead1ng) should register to play on June 26
.pr July 9, from 5 30 to 8:30p.m at the high •

Sept. 23 - MBNA.com 400,
Dover, Del.
· ·I
Sept. 30 - Kansas 400, Kansas
C1ly, Kan.
OCt. 7 - UAW-GM Quality 500,
Cooo&gt;rd, NC.
Oct. 14 - Old Dom1nlon 500, Martinsville, Va

OCt. 21 - Alabama 500, Tallade-

ga

OCt. 28 - Checker Auto Pans
500k, Avondale, Ariz
Nov. 4 - POll Secret Microwave
400, Rockingham, NC
Nov. 11 - Pennz&lt;&gt;l 400, Homestead, Fla

\ichoql off1ce.

•

A parent or legal guardian must accompa·
nv all athletes Students who cannot attend
one of the registration periods should con·
!act the 1 high school at 985-3329 between

..

~·

.. .

Point wight room open
POINT PLEASANT - The PPHS we~ght
room Is open Monday through Friday from 9
a m. until1 p.m. Speed and agility workouts
begil at 10 a.m.
There will be an Iron Man competition each
Friday beginning at 10 am
Wllhlml conditioning open
MASON -The Wahlma High SchOOl afh.
tetlc building will be open for training and
condllionlng on July .2,3, an e from noon until
5pm
The same time will apply on July 9,11, and
13. Ally WHS student may anand thei!IS 8$8·
sions.

Jr. High Voboll_, gym

GALLIPOLIS- Open gym for junior high
volleyball players wtll be held at Gallia Acad·
emy High SChool on July 12, 19, and 26 from
4:30 p m until 6 p.m•

W Va (AP) - The West flsh have been caught throughout tho lake •
flsl\lhg report relea!Mid Thiiriday ISy In the momlngo and evenings with goldfish

C H~ALESTON ,

Vl rgl ~a

the Ojv1slon oJNatural Resources:

Crappie fishing has-elowed down. Blueglt
redworms arotm fiSh anractora and shallow
areas where fish a., spawning J'he taitwa·
ter hae been good for trout wHh spinners

BEECH FORK - Lake Is al summer have been cauG!t on oman jlga anct

recreauon level Lake and tallwater are
clear
BLUESTONE - Lake IS at summer
recre•t1on level Lake and tallwater are

clear, Fishing on the lakt 10 good . Anglers

shoultt fish around any downed trees or
weed 1 beds while using worms, ama.U mtn·
nows or Jigs for sunfish. ~u anglers
should concentrate their efforts along areas

and powerbalt.

TYGART- Lake Ia approximately 1 foot

abcMI sunvner recreation laval Lake and
tallwater are clear. Water temperature is 82
degreee at the eurfaca Smallmouth ~as
can be caught either on the ehorellne or out

!hal may provule cooter water for lt1e bass lo the 10. to 2Q.fool deplho utlng a J.lnch
and rjxxJ structure such as downed timber,
rocky drops or weed beds. BtuegHI can prQ,
vide anglers wilh some last action with
wo nn!i and small jigs. Channel tarflsh are
srso tiiH1ng In the lake on chk:ken liver. Carp
and channel catfish are hitting In the taltwa-

Ier, wllh best

balls

being com and night·

crawlers.

'"'.'"."''"'."".'"'.: :

tube on a 1f8.ounce jig. White bau are

ab\lndant In the lake and can be caught with

a variety of artlfk:ial balta. Channel catfish
are wltNn casting distance from shore at
night with nlghtcrawtera or cut balta Wall·
eye prefer temperatui'H around 68 .. 70
degroH. Tho best walleye flahlng In lhe
lake starts at dusk when waJteya move Into

BURNSVILLE - Lake Is at summer llhllloW water al nigh! to feed.

recreation la~tel Lake and tallwaler are
dear All boat ramps are open. Largemouth
fiShing has been good. Try lube Jga doong
the day and lopwater In tho evenings. Spot·
led bass are being caugl'lt on the lower eeclion or the lake. Crappie have moved In to

MONONGAHELA RIVER - Ttla water
temperature II atilt low for thiS time of year.
Try lho Morgantown ancl Opoldska dam foilwaters for al opocfel. Jlga ~ with mint10WI or 3-tnch white or chartreuae power·
grubs are always goad balta In these areas.
about 12 · 15-taet of water and jlgo or min· White ball lind an occatlonallargor hyblfd
nows are the beat balta to use Some nk:e _ atrlped ball are afwl)'l In lhe tallwatar
lialhead caHish are being caught on steak areas. I.argo drum era holding along the
-lind live fish . Nice saugeyo and trout are· lhoroflno the Morgantown Lock
being caught from lhe tallwalor on power· lind tho mouth ol Oeckm Crook. Uolng
ba1t
buzzl&gt;alta or surface popporw along the

•

EAST LYNN - Lake Is at summer rocre-

allan revel Lake and tal/water arf dear.
R 'o. BAILEY - Lake Is at e..nmer recr&amp;allon level Lake Is clear and tallwaler Ia
muddy. Some large spotted bass are being

ahorlflne lhould also produce largomoutfl
and ~m&amp;llmoutn bass. The weed beds near
the elate line are ueuaNy good for large.

mouth bass wllh floating plasllc wonns and

white aplnnerbaita. Buubaltl are aleo a

·

er gOod spot GOOd bahs are plastk: jigs In
CHEAT LAKE - Ttle lake is normal and
blacK and chartreuse colors or live shad. .clear. The best weekend fllhlng will be at
Blutmlll are provld1ng consistent action In night when boat irafflc decreases. The two
the Standing limber using worms and small embayment&amp; at the Wttt Penn Recreatton
Jigs 1Hybnd striper and channel catfish flsti- Area near the dam provkla convenient
1ng IS good off shallow points at night. Bast shoreline or pier flahlng, Largemouth ball,
baitS are chicken liver and 10ft.:shell cfay- aunfllh and yeiOw perch are abundant In
l1sh Carp are also providing a lot of fun lor these areas. Shoreline arus "ttth fallen
nighl anglers with com and doughballs
trees uauatty attract largemouth Where

STONECOAL LAKE - Tho lake Is 3 feet
bel6w summer recreation level. The surface
temf?Orature or the lake ts 70 degrees. Crappie fishing has !!lowed In the lake Carp are
be1ng caught 1t1 the upper end or the lake
Wllh wonns ahd oom are workJng beat Try a
minnow on allg or a nlghlcrawlar bouncing

oHt~e bottom for walleye. BaSI fishing has
be011 good In the lake wllh plastics and live
1 bait arQ\Ind structures. Topwater Is working
best•for bass In the evenings Bluegill are
being caught on SpaWI'llng beds with small
1woiiJISand jigs Csllish have been caught In
the 6ver11ng on chicken liver. Trout fishing
has been good with powerbalt and sp!nners.

S'T;ONEWALL JACKSON - Lake Is at

wmmer recreation level. Lake and tallwater
are clear The surface temperature of lhe
take Is 75 degrees Boats can be launched
from all ramps A -few saugtS'e are being
cau~t off points In about 15- lo 20·feet of
water with minnows Cfttflsh are being
caught on goldfish In the mornings and
evenin gs A few musky have been reported

cau{tu lhiS week Largemouth fishing hal

prodUcing the blggesl fish Crappie have

been caught w1th m1nnows around standing
timber and bridges In about 10 feet of water.

shof811ne cover II absent, flah wMh tube jlga

In 10. to 20·feal of water off the shoreHne.
Also try buubaltl or popper&amp; along tne
lhorallne In the evening and Mrty momlng.
Walleye atodl:ed two ~,. ago shOuld be
12· to 13-lnchea long

"CENTRAL WEST VIRGINIA - Aroa

rivers 1re nortn~l and dear. Ptenty•-of trout

are 11111 remaining from the llocklng aeason

and only a few anglet'l are out on the
atream SmallmOuth and rock ball filhlng
haa been greal with buzzbaitl and 3-incfl
llgo Musky fishing has been good In Buck·
hannon River and Tygart backwatiiJ with
minnow imltallonl.

SOUTHERN WEST VIRGINIA - The

New and Greenbrier rtvera are providlog
some ~ filhlng for smatlmOuth baa&amp; with
while ilplnnerballe, white plalllc grubs or
small rapala1 In black and suvar or Hve ball
euch aa mlnnowa1 Below or above thoala
ar• good spotalo try Bau filhlng Ia good
early al\dlate In all
tHe small impound·
manti In IOUihtlm W81t Virginia. Try spots
at the end of polnta , weed beds or fallen timber with pllsttc worms fished slowty along
the bOttom. Splnnerbalts: are alto good
choices. Channel caHiahlng Is good In areas
like Hawke Nut lake and IOm8 of the other
small lmpoundmlfll:a. Ball time to fish Ia

!&amp;n

with nah being plcltad
crankballl
around drop-offo and ky ohorolln...
Wal~yo have aloo bHn
ght1n about 20
-Ltlll of water by angitf8 trolling with dftpdlvl~~mlnnow lmliallono. Catfish all hiHing
110u tht dom on gplcffish. BluegMI a,.
boln oaughtln shaNow a - of lht lakt on
omo 'llgoand wonno under a - · Aou~Mit It being put on tilt ftohlng jat1y at
lht ""ttlt Run t(11 lhlt - · ll't a gmt
Pilot from wltlch 1o lholl ~~~~.
SUlTON - l.akt 11 at tummtr reorealfor1
ltvtl. Lake an,d tallwaltr 111 o;,ar. All boat
11mpo .,. opon, 1111 ftshlng hu been
tiOOd. Tht bell octlon IIlia hU been
DlfWtllt e·oo p.m. lind dlrll. lpotlld btu
have.bHft oa,q,t on p1aattoa oil the main
lako :and 110unc1 fllh allriOfOrl, Fllhlng
olott to lhe bank with tube )lgo hu ~
bot! for llrgomoulh lind ttmaflmoufll, Cat•

For The
Whe
. Best
..

Price in Central
and Southern Oh i·o
Gallipolis' ~ometown Dealer

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2001 Buick LaSlb" Sliver 110004- AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, Spon Wheels,
Power Seats,-PW&amp;L ............................ ..... .... .................... $19,995
2000 Dodge Neon ES lltt75 ·14K "'·· BOFW, Loadeal. .. ..... $12,250.
2000 Chrysler Clrrua 19793 • 23,000 M1ies, BOFW, LXI Leather Seals,
AT, AC, AMIFMICD, "LOADEDI".... .... ..... . .. .. . .. . . $14,495
2000 ~rcury Marqul1 11869 -21.000 miles. BOFW.............$16.995
2000 Mercury Sabia
1B,OOO miles, BOFW, AT, AC, Tilt,
PW&amp;L, V-6, Spon Wheels ..... . ...... . .... .. . .. . .. .. . .$16,430
2000 Old1 Alero 19909 • 26.000 Miles, Sal of Fact War.. AT, AC , Tilt
Crulae, PW&amp;L, ............................... ..................................... $13,755
2000 Buick Century 19911· 28,000 m11es, Balol Facl. War , AT, AC ,
Tilt, Crulae, Sponwheels. .......... ..... ..... .. . . .... ........ $14,305
2000 Dodge Neon 18821 • AT, AC, AM/FM/Cass, More ........ $12,1 95
2000 Nluan AHima GXE 11002Q.20K miles, BOFW ......... . .$14,750
2000 Mercury Cougor LS 110021· 29K m11es, OOFW ....... .$15,425
2000 Chevy Cavalier 19912 • 20,000 miles, BOFW ........... $1 0,700.
2000 Chevy Malibu 18808 • 29.000 miles. BOFW.. AM/FM/CD. AT,
AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L....... ....... ...... ....... . ................... $1 ,
2000 Mazda 626 LX 19928 • 29,000 miles, BOIFW, AMVF~IICI) , AT, AC,
Tilt, Crulae... ...... ....... ...... . .......
.
.
.
1899 Honda Civic EX 19958 • "'ne owner, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
Power Sun Roof.. ................. .......... .. ............. $13,750
1899 Ford Contour SS I 9983 -Red, AT, AC, lilt, PW&amp;L .. . $9,995
1899 PonUac Grand Am 19972- V6, AT. AC , Tilt, Cruise, AM/FM
Cassette ........... .............. ........ .............. .... ..... ....... $11 ,870
1899 Doc1go Intrepid 18892- Gold, AT, AC, Till, Crulae. ..... $13,305
1899 Ford Explorer Sport il8985- 24,000 miles, AST. AC, Tilt, Cruise.
PW&amp;L, Sunroof . .............. ".................... ................ ............ $10,715
1899 Mercury Cougar LS 1100111-26,000 miles, BOFW .... $14,950
1899 Doc1go Intrepid 110015 . ....
..... .... ... .. ........ $12,495
1899 Pontiac GrendAm H463- AT, AC, C, , Red, Spoiler......... $11 ,495
1899 Pontiac GrandAMSE 19781 • 29,000 Miles. Sal of Fact Wa, ,
Black, AT. AC, TiM, Cruise, Cassette . .. . . ..... .... .... .... . .. ... $12,995
1899 Chevy Cavalier 19915 • White, AC, AMIFM/Cass ..... .... $9,695.
1899 Chryoler Concord 19938 • Green, AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise. PW&amp;L,
Sponwheels ..... .......1.... .......... .... .... .. ........... .... .......... . $13,995
1899 Ford Tauruaol8934 : AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L. AM/FM/Gass .

-6·

.................... ..... ...... . . . ........ ..... ......................,. . . .,·.:.

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

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

..

en 11\ler or IOft·shells. BkJiglll are spawning
411 arouna ltle ttate and they make an
excellent quany for a young ftaherpel"'on
OHIO RIVER - Ohio River angllrl are

doing wtll while flshlng lie with
Cf8nkbalta and oplnnm for black ball
Hlo1&gt;rld st!lpod ball af8 belnp c:augll1 on
mlnnowo wltlll catfflh a11 being taken on
ch~ken IIIIer lind nia!t101&amp;Wierl. Fllhlng at
tilt klofc lind dam lliliweltl' aiMI with CUI·
bill, chloken IIIIer and mlnnowa hU Pftll*l
wtll for cafdl~lfllh, wltlll IIUiJtr lind
IIUOI)It 111
oauG!t on mln.-•llnd
g&lt;Ub-ffpptG jlgl.
k illhlna with dough•
bllll, nlglilollwllr8 and ohltiktn IIYtr II
110011 tor oa1flalt, wltlla INiftwat.r diUm art
tiolna oauattt on nlahlln-.
KANAWHA ~IVPI-IoaflnO IIIGiert Ill
onlOVI'Ia ca- ot blaOk - arona "''
lhOftlilnn wltlll Ulfng tubtDofft. oranlibl111
and""""''"· ..uoer..._. and walltYt
a11 being llktn In lhllllllilttr a - ol tht
locfca and damll'whltlllina mlnnowa. Cat·
fflft are being caught on nlghlnwllrl and
chloken IIVtr lhlllllgiMHif lie - ·

$6,1,50

1995 Buick Can1ury 19857 ·AT, AC, Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L..... . .. $6 895
11198 Ford Probe 110011 ............................................ ..........$5,450
11198 Chryalar New Yorker 110011.: ...................................$3,995
11198 Ford Probe 110024 • Blue, Standard Transmission . ..... . $5,1SO

11111 Chevy Venture Van 11Q006. 29,000 mi., Rear AC, Tilt, Crwse,
BOFW, PW&amp;L, 4 Door,/WJFWCass. .................... c ...... $17,565
11111 Dodgo Caravan lltt13- left ilde sliding door. AT. AC , Seven
Passenger, Till, Cru1ii s........................,........................................... $13
11111 ~rcury VIllager 110022· Loacledf. . .. . . ...... . .... $16,695
1988 Ford \'llndllllr GL 119788- Green, AT, AC, 111~ Crulse.Power
Leather seat........................................................................ $1 t ,sgs
1988 Dodge Caraven Sport 19797 ·AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise,
Laft
Side Sliding Door, Grand Spon, Qued &amp;eating ...... ............... &gt;_~ •.••o
1988 Ford Wlnd1tar GL 18872 · AT. AC, PW&amp;L, AMIFM/Caas, I
CruiM, Rear AC,.......... .......... .... .............. .... .... ........ ....:..: $13,9115
11111 Ply!IICIIllh VoY1lger SE 19990- 3B,OOO mllt tf. AT, AC,
AMIFM/Cau, 7 Pa111nger.................... ...................................... :11D,;•1o ·
1187 Dodlt Carevan 11110012·, ......................................... 112,375
1988 ,ord Wlndatar . .22 .Orten,'AT, AC, Tilt,.CNIII, ........... $6,115
1• Dodgt Clrevan '"'1 • AT, M:., Tilt, Crullt,.V·8 Engine, 7
P1111n~r ,,,,.,,,,,, ................ ..t'"'' '"'' ''' ''''' '''' '' ''""''''" ' '''' ' ''"'''''' 14,885

1. . Dodge Ctnlytn ...1+ Whlft, 7 Pall, Voe Eng .. AT, AC .. $7,115
1. .
Aef'OIIIr Vln mot· V-8 Eng, AT, AC , Tilt, Crultt, PW&amp;L ..

,Ofll

0000U000!0•IO . . O!I . . U00 " ' " ' 00 OUOOO 00 00000 0001 ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' " 00 0

,,,1 , , o " ' 00 ooo•o 0 0 00 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " o o .,.,,.15,750

. Jl.

'·
0

Ford Explo"r Sport Tree 110017 . 14K miles, BOFW .$24,995
Chevy Bl-r 19988· 4X4, 4 Dr, Black, 1 Owner, ....... .... $20,650
1988 Dodge Durang~ 1110028- Silver, 3rd Seat, AT, AC, Till, Cruise,
PW&amp;L, Sponwheels. ..... ..... ....... ... ... ..... .... .. .... .$20,620
1899 Dodge Durango 1111025- White, U.ather 3rd Seat, AT, AC, 4X4,
eng, LOADEOI. .....................................................................$1 8,620
1999 Chevy Tracktr 19958 • 4X4 • AC, AT, Tilt, Cruise,
Sponwheels .. . .... ...... ...... .. .. : .... .... ....... .......................... , o,i&lt;\Jo
1889 Jup Wr~~nglor 4X4 Sport 19838 • Sahara Hard Top, 6
Till, Cru1se, 24,000 miles, BOFW .. ~...
.
.
1899 Ford Explorer Sport 119982 · 27Km1le, AT,
I,
1898 Toyota RAV 419947 • 31 ,000 miles,
AC. Sportwheels..... ............... ...... ............ . .
.
1898 Kla Spoilage 19784 • Graen, 4X4, Ext Pkg, AT, AC, Tilt, lirulae,
Sunroot, Whe!&gt;ls..... .... , .. ... ._ ................ ,..... ,...~ .....~
1998 Subaru Ou1back AWD 18682 • Root Rack, AT, AC, Tilt,

~~~~;~v ~:.w::~ ·4ii4'4' 1l;·;;s66o·:·:.\:r.·AAic~·:. · ;li1,; i::.:~i111 ~y';.li~~~i~:~
.. .. ... ... . . ...... ...... . ..... .... .. ...... ..:;;.·;:;';;;;;·.. ~: ~- ~~~
GMC Jimmy 4X44 Dr. 110005 ·Gray, Loaded &amp; More ....
11198 JMp Wrangfif sport CX4 lfi3g • Convertible; 8
Sportwheels ....................... ..
1997 Chevy Blazer 1110035· 4X4, 4 Or, AT. M;, Tilt. Cruise,
1997 JMp Cherokee 19923 • AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L, t&gt;H.I'FMI
Cass, Spon Wheels ............ ·....... .... .... . ..... .............. ~ 15,5!15
1988 Chevy Blazer 11100211- Red AT, AC, 1111, Cruise, PW&amp;L... ,
1988 Suburu lmpreg 110036 Bluf. AT. M;, Tilt, Cruise, PW&amp;L ... $7,995
1988 Ford Explorer I 9977· 4X4 Tilt, Crulae, 4 Dr., AT, AC ... $13,995
1996 Suzuki X-90 4X4 Black 19933- AT, AC , T·Tops .... . .
,
Ford Explorer 19475 GrHn • 2 Door, AT, AC , Tilt, Cruise. Roof
Spon Wheels .... ............. . ..................................... $t0,995
Ford Explorer 19407. Tan 4X4, Auto, Air, XLT. PW&amp;L, " """"·:·:

~10' :•••

1899 Ford Eacort2x2 110000 • 22K m1lee, BOFW, PW&amp;L. Alloy
................. ... .... .... ..... ........... .... . . ..... ... ... ..... .. ... $10,690
19911 Ford Muatlng 110023 ·Black, AT, AC, Tilt, Crulae, V-6 .. $13,805
19911 Chevy Mon1e Ca~o ~~ 110007 • Red, t9K miles, Sport Wheels,
AT. AC, Tilt, Cruise, BOFW, PW&amp;L. ..... ·............... .............. $14,545
1,998 Toyota Corolla 110030 ·Red, 5 Speed, AC, Tilt, Cruise. $10,995
1998 Honda Civic LX 19957 • AT. AC, Til1, Cruise. 5 Speed,/WJFMI
Cassette ....... :...................... ....................... ............................ $13,995
1988 Chevy Cavallar 191102 • 1B,OOO M1tes, Red, AT, AC, Tift, Cruise, 5
speed. ... . .. ..... .... ... . ... ..... .. .. ... ... ... .. ............. $10,250
1998 Pontiac Grand Prix GT llt959- AT, AC. 111t. Cruise, PW&amp;L, P.
Mlr10r, Alloy Wheels......... .......... ....... . . .... ... .... ......... $14,995
11198 Buick Rogal 19907 • 25th Anniversary Edlllon, Power. ~eather
Seats, LOADED .............................................................. o. $15,785
1998 Plymou1h Neon 118715 · AT,AC, Casaelte &amp;More:............ $8,895
1998 Saturn SC2 1911411- 28,000 miles, Pwr Sunroof, AT, AC, Tilt,
PW&amp;L, Cru1se, Sponwheels ........................... ............. $1 2,145
1988 DODGE STRATUS - 1 • Gray, AT, AC , CNise, PW&amp;L $7,670
1988 Sltum SC.11!9941 • 32,000 miles, 5 Speed, AC, Cass . .$9,435
1997 Ford Mustang GT fiii804. Red, V-6 , 5 Speed, AC, Cassette,
Sponwheels ............................................................ ............... $t3.695
1998 VW lloetit 19999 • 33K miles, AC, 5 Speed ................ $13,245
1117 ~ord Taurus 19941 • AT, AC, Tilt, Oruli'e, PW&amp;L, Sport Wheela,
AM/FM/Cass .. ................................................................. $8,350.
1998 Pontiac Grand Am 110010 .... ...... : .... ........... ,,,. .......$8,9510 .
1988 Pontiac Grand P~x 4Dr Whlta I 9752 ·AT, AC, Tilt, Cruise, ,
Sport wheels............................................. ..................:.......... $8,805
11111 ~rcury Cougar 19880 • AT. AC, TiM, CNise, PW&amp;L,
Sporiwheels, ...... . . . . ..... ...... ...... ..... ..... ...... .. ....... ..$8,995
1186 Pontiac Bonnavllle 111915- AT, AC, Tilt, CNiae, PW&amp;L ...$7,695
1995 Hyundal Sonato 119841· AT, AC, V6, Alkly Wheels, Tilt, .....$3,995
1115 Chevy Cavalier 119860- Blue, AT, AC .... ... ... ..... ...... $3,995
1996 Ford Muotang 19995 • VB, 5 Spd , AMIFMICD, PW&amp;L ... $7,650
1995 Nl1un Uttlma 118848 · AT. M:., Tilt. Crulsa, PW&amp;L,Casselte.......

or

Bluegill are hinlng small Jlga and wonns In lata nlgllt '-"" very n!IY morning with chlofl·

shallow coves Trout are being caught In the
tallwater on small spinners
SUMMERSVILLE - Lake is at summer
recreation level Lake and tallwater are
clear.-"Smallmoulh flohlng has been good,

•

the Hall
And there's really no q uestion for what he w1ll be
remembered most.
"It's a remarkable achievement, that consecutive- game
streak," Torre said "Even after
retirement, he 's st1ll gomg ' to
be htghly thought of."
For a long. long ttme.
'Tel' stop short ofi"'comparmg
him to Babe Ruth," sa1d Mtke
Gibbons, executive dJrector of
the Babe Ruth museum, "but a
hundred years from now he'll
be remembered more than
most players, ~,;d that's an
mcred1ble legacy."

(441.()6.13)or Pat Reco («HB13).

West Virginia Fishing Report

been good around standmg limber and
bea'41r huts PlastiC worms and l1ve bait are

. Subscribe today.
675-1333 -. .
J

101'

athletes planning on pardclparlng In any
sporting ae1Miy grades 7·121n the Soothom
localSchool Ollllrl&lt;:t can be picked up In tho

11

Loudon.

Nov. 18 - NAPA 500, Hampton,
Ga.
Drl- Standings
1. Jeff GordOn .... . ...... 2,351
2, oate Ji""tt ......1.. . 2,225
3. Ricky Rudd .. . .. ... 2,206
4 T9ny Stewart . .
. 2,117
5 Sterling Marlin . . . . . . 2,108
6 Rusly Wallace . .
2,038 •
7. Johnny Benson . .
. 1.922
8. Bobby Labonte.. .
. 1,906
9 Kevin Harvlck .. .
. 1,894.
10. Steve Part&lt; .....
.1 ,858
1t . DaleEamhardtJr
.1 ,825
12. Matt Kanseth .. . .. ... 1.810
13 Mart&lt; Marlin .... . . 1,801
14. Bobby Hammon . .. ... 1. 782
15 .• •t Bunon . . .
. .. f,7t2
16. J1mmy Spencer . ..... . 1,702
17. Bill Elliott .... ...... 1,87•
18. Elliott Sadler.. . .. .... 1,852
19. Ward Burton.... .. . 1,804
20· Ken Schrader· · · · · · · · 1,581
21 . Jeny Nadeau .. . .. . .. 1,572
22. Mike Skinner . . . . . . 1,524
23. Kun Busch ....... . ... 1,521
24. Teny Labonte .. .. .. 1,504
25. Jeremy Mayfield .. .. ... 1,502
26. Dave Blaney.... . . . t,-444
27. Ricky Craven . . . .. . . 1,384
28. Michael wa~rlp.
. . 1,an
29. Robert
I
. . . . 1,361

RACINE - Sports Physical tonne

tor the Great Brltaln·Buckeve Sooe&amp;r Camp

110mJuly 15-19 on the campus of Ohkl Unl·
versily. GBBS has boon selected by the
.!Southeast Ohio Soccer Assoc6atkM1 to p-3 30 p.m.
· ~ high -~-· fflce •-·--·~' 9 a.m.·:

Kristen Bradshaw and Tracy
Montgomery of McDermott
SciOto Northwest. Maggie
Cooper was a member of the
team in 'its earlier tournaments, but a conflict will prevent her from making the trip,
to the national tournament.
· Team Ohto· will be among
one of 74 teams participating
m the national. tournament.
The team will open fourteam pool play on Saturday by
facing East Bay Explosion of
San Francisco at Yale' University.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

"The one thing I can say is
that he helped me and gave me
the in~entive that as ' a b1g
shortstop, I can play the post-

Some say fltpken revtved
the game m 1995, when he
completed hts run at Lou
Gehng's mark of playmg 111
2,130 stratght gal'l'les and
blunted bmer memories of the
players' smke that short-circuited the 1994 season.
"After the stnke, he brought
back the fans He brought back
baseball," Orioles bullpen
coach Elrod Hendricks said
Ripken spent his entire
career With the Ono)es, a feat
m Itself m thiS era of ,free
agency. There will be no controversy as to wh ;ch team he
wtll represe!l when entenng

Cond1tiomng for the regular season wm
Ph)lsiCata wnt be conducted al Holzer
beg1n Jutv 23 from 6-8 p.m. with practices Meigs Clinic on J\Jle 30 at 7 a.m.
beginning Aug 6 at 9 a m
Physical forma wi ll be dlatrtbuted at regisFor mere lnfoiT'Ilatlon, call va~ty coach tratiOn. They are new forma, which paranta
Da!ney DaVIs at256·1364 or JV coach lina must complete and sign belore the athlete
Johnson at 256-6725.
• can see a doctor.
'""'\.
Soccer camp ochoctuted
Southom pflyalcol """'" ...liable "I ''

ATHENS- Registration is still being hold

Aug. 12 - Global Crossing atltle
Glen, Walkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug 19 - Peps1 400, Brooklyn,
Mich.
Aug 25 - Sharpie 500, Bristol,

Weber
on AAU qualifier
.
.
BY DAVE HARRIS

ru nts.

tion and not have my SIZe be a
handtcap," sa~d Rodriguez, 111
th e first year of a record $252
mtlhon contract. "There was a
symbol there-that someone has
done it, done it very elQ&lt;JH'emly and done It very well"
It's not JUSt Rtpken's me and
skills
that
tmpressed
Rodriguez.
"Ever smce I've been about
7 or S,l've been a huge admirer of Cal Rtpken. Not only
what he's done as a player, but
as a team and for hiS commumry," Rodnguez said "I thmk
Cal ts an unbelievable ambilSsador for baseball."

1

cauyht along rocky drops, with polnta anoth· uo&lt;&gt;d c:holcriround tha weed -

OVP CORRESPONDENT

players "lo have at l&lt;ast 3,000
hits and 400 homers, won two
M VP awards and next month
will play in his 19th All-Star
game. He also hit more home
runs (345) than any shortstop
m history.
Alex Rodriguez of the Texas
R~ngers ci'edits _the 6-foot-~
Ripken With breakmg the
mold for shortStops. Before
R ipken came along, shortstops
were rypecasl a~ slap-hjttmg·

&amp;unbn!'. fJI:ime!l -flrntinrl • Page 85

Local Sports Bri~

, Benson, wbo turned 38
d
h B
h
e nes ay, was t e
usc
series Rookie of the Year m
1994
h
·
I
, Its c amp1on a year ater
and the top Winston Cup
rookie in 1996.
So, he's used to winning,
and unofficially has done so in
a Winston Cup car.
He got a v1ctory _ · b~t no
points - by going fro m the
pole to the checker May t 9 in
.
O
I
Th e W mston
pen, a p re iminary to the top even t of
NASC:AR's aU-star we;ekel1d::·..-Hn~~ifc:
::~
"Winning that race w as
32. Ron Hornaday . . .. 1,231
33 ' Stacy Compton .. .. !,229
g ood for that day, but we
34. Casey Alwood .. .. .. .. 1,152
don't look at it like we won a
35. Todd Bodine .... . ... 1,114
.race this year," he said.
36. Jason Leffler . .. .. .. . . 1,074
r
37. Joe Nemechek
. 1,061
"We want to win a pomts
36. Mike Wallace .. .. .... 1.008
39 · Buci&lt;Bhot Jones · · · 95ol
race, and there's a lot of the
40. Hut Strlctdln. . . . . .. . .. . 900
racing season left."
W, d

Legacy

,

Pomeroy·• Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pteasant, WV

• •

1997 Ford F-250 4X4 19955 • V-8, AT. AC ,8' Bed ..... ..... ....
1997 Ford F150 t911115-3rd Door, AT; AC, Tilt, Cruise, Spt whl .. $17,01
1997 F150 XCab 1191139 ·Black, VB, 4X4, AC, PW&amp;L. Till, Cruise,
Sportwheels . ......................•. ..... ... . ..... ...... .......... ... ..... $1
1997 Lariat SuP'!rcab lltt1 II- 32K miles, V6, AT, AC, Tilt, I ,
Leather, sponwhoels, PW&amp;L ..................................................... $1
1997 Nlaaan King Cab 4X4 19994- 56K mi .. AC , Sponwheels,
AMIFM!Casaelte ............................ ................ ................... $1
11111 Dodge Ram 1500 4X4 SLT 19842 - AT, AC, Tilt, vru11so, '""'Y
Wheels, VB .... ... ...... ..... .............. ..... . ... .... .. . ... $1
1994 Ford F150 4X4 -1- AT Top~. Bed Uner, Cass ........ $1

MPOia B3000 111992· 29K mi .. BOF,W, AT, AC, Flareslde,
Spcirtwhliels,AMIFM/Casaette ..... .. .... .. .. . . . .. . . $1
Toyota Tacoma XCab 119830. Maroon, AT, SR5 P.kg , AC.

Low Miles •••• ,.. ............................................................................ $15,995

1998 Ford Ranger 19948 ·20,000 miles, AT, AC, Tilt, Cru1se,
Sportwheels, PW&amp;L.... .. . .
.. .. . $1 1
1998 Ford F150 19887. V6 , AT, AC. a·bed, reg cab.......... $1 .
1998 Ford F-150 18620 - Red, STX FlaresiCfe, 35,000 m1les, AT,
Tilt, Cru1se . . .... .. .. , ....
. . . .. ... $1
1998 Dodge Ram Quad Cab 19803 · AT. AC. Till, Cruise, PW&amp;L,
Remote Sian. LOADED ISH bed .... ............ ... .. ....... $17
1998 Chevy S·10 19996 • AT, AM/FMICass
1997 F-150 Suparcab 19611- AC, @ , cruiae, PW&amp;L. Spon wne,e1s.
Rear slider.......... ..... . ...... .... . ..... ..... .......

..

Ford Ranger Supercab 19943·
GMC Sonoma 110032 · Silver, Supercab, Loweted, Loadedl.....
............... . ................. ...: ......... ..................... $7,995
1995 5·10 X-cab 19942 · Black, LS Package, V6, Sponwheels,

S~10 19B23 R;;;i :·LSP~~kage, AT: AC, Tiit. C~lse
.....~"·"'u
Ford Rangar 4x4 lltt7B- Suporoab, Sportwheela ..... ....... $9,895
1993 Ford Fl,.blrd Tran1Am 11905 ·Formula, V-8 , Low Miles, AT ...
""'""'""'"" ..... """ ....... . .,.. . .... ..... .... ..... ... ............ $8,995

1113 Meroury Topu mn · Low miiH, AT, AC ...................... .$3,985
1880 Dodgt Dynu1y ..., •. Blut, AT, AC, Tilt, Crul11, ........... $3,815
1880 Cldlllao ITI 11141 • 85,000 mi., Leather, PWR Stat.. .. 18',115
1880 Lincoln Conllntn111118571 'L0AOED" ........................... 12,815

�•

'

P~ge

B6

1, 2001

Lake Erie dn ciffordable ·destination for anglers
•

.

.

Big
Fish

.

to· compensate; when 1 felt a fish was
Like most other fishermen, I occasionalmouthing my lure - but no_t taking hol9 ly check out the Ohio Division of
I would pause my retrieve, for just the
Wildlife's fishing reports, including the
slightest instant, then resume reeling in.
fishing report for Lake Eri~. Sometimes, .
Sometimes the fish would strike 'again
however, there's-slo substitute for taking a
and
soon I'd be calling out, "Fish on!''Jay
look your self.
was great to help the youngsters and soon
Recently the Freeman .family took a
our youngest daughter, tired of fishing,
t~ree-day vacation ·to Ohio's north coast,
found a new job helping him tag the fish
taki1ig in Marblehead, Port Clinton and
IN THE OPEN
going into the boat's cooler.
Sandusky areas of Ohio in addit1on to &lt;IL...U
South Bass Island and Put-in- Oay.
.
Afterwards 1 took advantage of one of
An ~asy way !O start planning your Lake mitring, the view from Perry's Monument · the loCll fish cleaning services, mon~y I
Erie vacation is to call the Ottawa Coun- takes in all of South, M\ddle and North conSidered well spent. W~1le we wacted
ty Visitors at 1~800-441_-1271 and request Bass Islands, Kelley's Island, Pelee Island in for the fish to be cleaned, we Went to the
a Lake Erie Travel Planner. The travel Canada and a few other islands. 1 highly beach at East Harbor State Park.
planner contains information on planning recommend . it _unless you are . afraid of
l enjoyed the fact that there are no jelypur vacation, a map, inform~.tion on the heights. There is an elevator. The ne}\t day lyfish in Lake Erie (I enjoy the dubious
Lake Erie islands, fishing and boating we devoted mostly to walleye fishing.
honor of having been stung by Jellyfish m
information, and the low-down on things
At 7 a.m. we "hooked up" with Tibbels the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, Gulf of
. to see and do. In addition, the travel plan- Charter Service in Lakeside. The Tibbel Mexico acid Caribbean Sea).
ner includes a variety of Lake Erie Action family owns and operates a small fleet of
We stayed at the Surf Motel in MarblePack vacation packages deluxe, standard or walk-on fishing boats and smaller, private head. The Surf Motel - it ?lso has a campeconomy accommodations, roundtrip charter boats. Jay, captain that day of the groun·d - caters to anglers and ?ffers • ..batt
ferry tickets to South Bass Island (Put- in- Harbor Queen, took us from Lakeside to ·and tackle shop, a fish clea mng stanon,
Bay). a tram tour of South Bass Island and a spot near the Camp 'Perry Impact Area freezers for your catch and a place to park
Cedar Point amusement park tickets.
where other fishing boats. were already your boat and t.ailer. The Ritz it ain't, but
Prices vary based on accommodations congregating on the wa ll eye.
it met my requirements of clean, quiet, .
and dates. Children's discounts are also
Most of the people on the boat were comfortable and affordable lodging. . .
available.
able to catch their limit of six Walleye -Another option to consider for lodgmg
Eventually we decided to roll our own within the seven or so hours on the is East Harbor State Park or one of the
vacation package, based on friends' rec- lake.After catc hing a few fish m the 13- to- other state parks in the area. East Harbor
qmmendati!Jns and their experiences. Of 15-inch range on traditional Lake Erie State Park boasts the brgest campground
course I wanted to include some walleye, tackle including nightcrawler harnesses in the state park system, a marina and
Jfishing while I was there. Bear in mind and weight-forward. spinners, I switched many other amenities.
there are numerous fishing charter services over briefly to one of my favorite river
For- do"it-yourselfers, several public
and lodging options along Lake Erie.
fishing lures, a four-inch black and silver launch ramps can be found throughout
To get to the Port Clinton/Marblehead rubber shad on a plain lead jig head.
the area. One of the newest is the Mazurik
area from here, take U.S. 33 north to 1-270
My first cast with the lure, reeled in Access located on Northshor~ Boulevard.
north around Columbus, and then U.S. 23 with a slow retrieve, yielded the biggest
Although Lake Erie. is stiU called ~he .
north to State Route 53, which leads fish 'of the day, a 22-inch w~lleye: hardly a "Walleye Capital of the World," there are
directly . to Catawba Island and the Mar- FishOhio! contender, but a nice enough other fishin g opportunities there as well.
blehead peninsula. Finding your way fish , 11onetheless. I quickly switched back The lake is rapidly becoming known as
around the per\insula, once you get there, to a weight-forward spinner after the ruiJ.- one of the best Sn~allmouth Bas~. fisheries
is relatively easy.
.ber shad failed to produce any addition. Ill the world,and perch Jerkmg for YelWe left Meigs County around 7 a.m. fish .
low Perch is also a popular pastime.
and arrived at Catawba Island on the MarLake Erie is definitely an affordable desA side note, I found that I am more
blehead Peninsula shortly after 11 a.m.
accustomed'to fishing in the Ohio .River, tiriation for area anglers on a budget, but if
That first day we checked out Put-iii- where the sauger and hybrid striped bass you g&lt;1, remember to take a kid fishing
Bay, taking Miller's Ferry from. Catawba tenc! to ]ji.Lii.k~ gang bangers in the rush- . with you.
Island. We rented a golf cart for a few ·ing cu rrent below the dams.
ljim F'!'e!""" is wildlife speciaiist/watershed
hours, checked out the CTystal Cave,
On the lake, I found the fish to be sub- coordir~ator fo r the Meigs Soil and Water ConHeineman's Winery, and Perry's lnterna- der. I missed a few strikes until I learned ' servation District. He can be contacted at (740)
992-4282 or at jim:freeman@oll.nacdnet.org)
-,tional Peace Monument - weather per-

•

••
•

weetdy fllhlr1g report provided by the Oivt·
lion of Wlldllle ol the Ohio Oepanment of
Natural Auourcef:

· .

.,,. __ ·(:ENTfiJ.l_OHI9

,,, ,.,,.,,

Hoover R"ervolr- June Is an excelllnt
Hrne to try trOlling crank baits for all fish.
Once the nawty hatched forage fish (glzzard shadJ,begln.to appear on the surface,
try troiHng very small shallow-running crank
bails In chrome or ahacl pattema. They are
effective for many &amp;peciea of fi&amp;h. For the
less aggreSBive saugeye, try sm~ll Jigs
Upped with parts ot a worm and dnf1 over
sand/gravel bars and sunken Islands. June
Is the best lima of year to try surface ~lis
lor largemouth bass. 10 horsepower limit.
Madison Lake - Cast shallow-running
crank balta and spinner barts f~r larQemouth bass at this 104-acre !ake tn Madlson County. Fish the rock nprap on the
dam, Decent numbers of carp and catfish
are avalla~e using doughballs, cut bait,
and chicken livers on the bottom-near shore
or try . drifting 1n ~ boat. Crappies and
bluegill&amp; are holding In woody COVer around
the !stand and in the upper end on the east
e.lde. Electric motors only.
NORTHWEST OHIO
Huron and Vermllton Rivers- Currentty ·
83 degrees and clear with normal flow.
Good numbers of smallmouth bass are
being taken on small crank baits .and &amp;pin·
ners. Thre·e to 4·pound fish have bean
reported from deeper pools in the mornings
nd evenings.
Bucyn.11 Reservoir No . .c - Shore fisher·
man are having good success catching
largemouth basa. Channel cal fishing has

!

been excellent during the last two weeks.

'

Dear

Abby

•

•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

attorney who provides legal
assistance throughout the
!:Ountry to cemeteries, crematories,funeral homes and trade
associ2tioiis in the industry. I
.am writing to correct some
popular misconceptions that
were reflected in some of the
letters in your column in the
.
last few weeks.
First, all of the ·le«:er writers
used. ..the term "ashes" to
describe cremated human
remaim. The remains of a cremated body are not ashes as
#le term is commonly understood. The remains are bone \
fragments that, if not-mechanically reduced, can be too large
to scatter. They do not imme~
diately dissolve when scattered. They norm;illy cannot
be disbursed and blown away.
Unfortunately, the movies and
the media have misused the
term "ashes" for many years,
pot realizing the problems it
.causes survivors who attempt
to scatter remains in the man- ·
ner often depicted.
Second, while it i~ permissi. ble in all states to scatter cremated remaim, there are fegal
. . requirements. No state
law• &gt;Ill
I•
1
·, · .alloW$ theni:ro be "tattere-d on ·
priyate property, Without the
consent of . !hi! . property
.o wner. Many national and
state 'parks have specific '·rules,
permit requirements and,
sbmetimes, location limitationS
ror the scattering of those
remains. Several years ago, representatives of a national park
and the leader of an Iridian
tribe contacted an industry
assoCiation to complain about
illegal scattering of cremated
remains on the tribe's sacred
burial grounds, which were
located within the park. Most
' cemeteries also have rules and
regulations that must be .
observed.
Third, adding an additional
memorial for the cremated
' remaim of a second spouse on
the cemetery plot where the
first spouse is buried has legal
implications. When . burial
spaces are originally acquired,
· there is an expectation that a
surviving spouse will be ·
buried with the deceased
spouse in an appropriate manner. If a companion memo~ial
was purchased and installed
when the first spouse died, .
'chang!Pg tbe arrangement
.may require the legal consent
of all survivors. In addition,
most cemeteries have rules and
regulations dealing with burial
of cr~mated remains with
human remaim and the appropriate types of memorials·.
Finally, when sepaJ;ating cremated remains as a keepsake, it
is important to make sure that
everyone agrees y.rith the plan.
The individuals who have the
legal right to authorize a cremation usually have the right
to determine the disposition of
remainr. Als.o, any individual'
who takes a porti~n of those
remaim should be ca)ltioned
to treat them in a respectful
and proper manner. Unfominately, there have been incidents where cremated remains
have' been disposed of ,in .the
' same manner as garbage.
.
I hope this information will
allow your readerS to provide
meaningful memorialization .
for their loved ones without
violating any laws, rules and
,- regulations - or the lights of
other individuals. - · HAR-

•

~Oldsmobile.

2000 Chevy Express·.
Passenger Van

LS Package,Reaf-Air-.--·12 Passenger Seating

1997 Geo Tracker
LSI4X4

evenings and mornings .by the dam and

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~

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Convertible top, Air Conditioning,
Auto
Owned

1998 Che-vy
Monte Carlo Z-34

Rain has g·reater impact than
economy
on
boat
sales
•

,

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Leather Interior, Sun Roof, Power
Windows and Locks, LOADED! ·

200 I "Pontiac
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. ~ 480cc Briggs

&amp;tteritJg of
ashes is rwt ··
as simple as it
may seem
DEAR ABBY: I am an

good areas include the area from C-Can
Fish the southeast comer using chicken IIV· near thJ sailboat club when using top-water and Niagara Aeef to Ranlesnake Island,
ers after dark. Three- to &amp;pound cats ar' bails or by tmiiii)O with ~aner bOards using nor1h and east of West Sister Island, nonh·
being taken Ol') a regul~ basis. Boat fisher- m~~m. diving ~res .
. · ~ 1 ·,
;,.
east of Kelleys Island, and lhe &gt;J Ruggles
ffliiO. trp~llog , """!')i.b~m-.
aloo ' · , ' noy~&lt;t~g Alveo"r f,lpatong,!he.,ar!l&lt;lpll~e ReeiNennllion oroa. Drillers anjl trollers
reporled ~ saugey'e catches.
~ ~8ftx.\w&amp;en ~tlrprise and Logan se9Q1s ha~8 both been catching fish. $orne small·
NORTHEAST OHIO
to be the most pr6ductive,ldr catChing feilty mouth ar'e being taken around the Bass and
North ReseiVolr and Nlmislla Reservoir and chunky , 13·. to t~·lnch slnallmo~th Kelleys Islands. Sottcraws and leeche,t;
_some nice channet cats are being taken · bass. Most ~ec:uvalures are big crawt1sh · ha\le been working well. The dally bag limit
at both these lakes with the best bite com- divers, small sh~c;t 'div~rs, 2.5· to 3_1nch tor smallmouth is 5, and there Is a minimum
rng at night. Try shrimp or chicken livers as motor oil tube batts, white 318-ounce spin· length of 14 Inches.
ball. .
·
ner baits, Dally Prayer top-waters, and
'Central Basin - The walleye bite Was
LaDue _ Boat anglers at LaDue report bright Rooster Talis. Most fish are scattered reported as good 'and Improving on Tues·
taking walleye from the deeper waters, and throughout the river and are not being\\ day morning north ot Mentor Lagoon In 65 •
the best success has been achieved by loundl' in the usual areas or near structure. 68 reel of water. Fish were being 'tllken. in
anglers using weight-forward spinners with While lhB' river Is stU I slightly l)igh and tur- the top 30 teet of water. Anglers trolling Jet
night Crawlers.
bid, anglers can look forward to receding Divers with copper Stinger spoons were
East Branch _ Some crappies are still water levels an~ Improved clarity, making doing best. Steelhead fishing In the same
being caught around brushy areas by per· e)(Cellentlishlng conditions.
area using the same technique is excellent,
sistent angletll
SOUTHWEST OHIO
as welt. Smallmouth bass can be found
_
·
Great Miami River - Catfish and smalr- from Fairport Harbor east along the shore·
. Tappan Lake - A 68·pound channel c;a.t mouth bass are being taken along 'the line where it's rocky and there are humps.
was reportedly caught on June 17 by Ca~lz Great Miami River. For catfish, use chtcken The lower part of the Grand River Is yieldangler Rodney Hotyak. Rodnt~y was USing liver or night crawlers along the bonom. To lng good numbers ot large catfish. White
live bait, fishing near the darn area at 3 a.m. fish for smallmouth bass, use spinner baitS, bass are being caught at night from the
SOUTHEAST OHIO
crank bahs, or a hook and bObber with minl Eastlake seawall and some yellow perch
Wills Creek Reservoir- Chann.el catfish nows.
are being taken there as welt. Smallmouth
(8 tp 10 pounds) and flathead catflSh (up to
Adams Lake .- Bluegill are being taken bass anglers are also having some success
30 pounds) are being caught using chiCken • uSing red worms or mea!worms with bob~ near Ashtabula. Yellow perch can be found
livers, night crawlers, and live sunfish. Tight bers In 2 to 2 112 feet or water during the In 48-50 teet of water. Walleye fishing has
line the 'crawlers and livers with hook and morning and evening hours. Try fishing been spotty with the Perry and Gene\la
sinker. Use a hook and bobber In a deep along the south side of the lake near the areas the best bets for picking· up this fish.
pool tor llatheads and tlsh near brush and llshlng pier and along the palh.
OHIO RIVER
"root wads.
,,
LA'KE ERIE
Greenup Pool- Anglers are catching 3Seneca Lake ..,... Nice bluegllls are being
Westem Basin - Walleye fishing was to 4-pound hybrid striped bass oil minnows,
caught In S to 10 feet of water using wax good over the weekend, but slowed a II Hie shlnera, ahad, ·SBasy Shads; and silver
worms. magoots. worms. and minnows. on Monday. Fishing was especially good spoons. White bass are hiHing minnows
Usa a small hook, split shot, end small bob- along the Michigan line. Waleye are rang- and shiners. A few freshwater drum have
ber. Striped bass are being caught in the ing In size from 14 to 30 inches long. Other also been caught by these methods.

CHARLESTON, WVa. mu ch about what boaters are
About 75 out of 365 days, Dar- going for, because aU of their
ren Elder can be found on one statistics identify only boat
of his two bass boats in the length.
Kanawha River with a fishing ' This spring, however, high
pole in his hands. On rare·occa- gas prices" and high water have
sions, he'll be on the bank with combined to affect both boathis 8-year-old son, but· most of ing activity and sales.
the time, he's casting from the
Dave Morris, owner of Dave
· front of a boat.
·Morris Marine Inc., ·describes
· ., "I love it," he says. "It's the the market as "kind of flat." He
thrill of catching the!TI and does see the populariry of panthen turning them loose." ·
toon boats picking up, but he
During the· summer, he's sel- doesn't s~ll bass boats any more.
dorn alone. Fishermen and
Mountaineer Boat Sales is
boaters share the waters, Elder, ·. seeing decreases in sales of all
who owns a bass tackle business rypes. Mike Meador, th e owner,
called Catch 'em Lures, has says one reason for the decline
been doing this since 1984, and is that OMC, a major rnanufache has seen the water traffic get turer of bass boats, recently
heavier each year. He's noticed went broke, softening the marpenonal w~rercraft are l:iecom- ·ket
•
ing immensely popular, but just
"B.oating in general is slow,"
about every type of boat is Meado, ,says. "The slow economultiplying.
my and high gas prices aren't
"There's a W~()k .. YHi~t,y,_.... belping:: .........;,-·-··-···--·--· ...................
from huge to little, rich man's
From Roy Hughes' point of
to poor man's," Elder says. "It's view, though, orie type of
hard to ~h after I 0 or 11 in the watercraft i1 at the height of its
morning because there are so popularity. At ,his · marina in
many boats, especially in the Chesapeake,
Hughes
has
summer."
noticed more personal waterIn 2000, sales of fishing boats craft shooting throughout th e
were up in West Virginia when waterways.
compared to 1999,acconding to
" It's something new and it's
the Division of Motor Vehicles, better than skiing," he says. " It
where boats are registered . may die down in the future, but
Beyond that, they don't know they're everywliere right now."

Pag Cl

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jf---·-----"""======.:...: :::--·::;-·;-:·:::-··;;;··:-·:.
:·-·:·:·:··- - -

Baum Lumber
'State Route 248 • Chester, OH

(740) 985·JJO 1
'r

•.

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Sunday, July 1, 2oin

•

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

Ohio Fishing Report
Here is the

Celebrations begin on Page C2

ADVICE

EKLY
SPEC
e

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

Inside: .

Meigs County
resident David
Bigley caught
this 51 pound,
48 inch BI!Je
Catfish. (Submitted photo)

Jim .
Freeman

•

•

•

. VEY I, LAPIN, ESQ.,
NORTHBROOK, ILL.
---~-~-~--

•

Stl
...,
after all these years
BY CHARLENE

~here men from
Hi&gt;man has been . ersville,
the chuoch in horse and
buggy
church pianist . and takewouldhimmeetto · him
the
for nearly eight · schoolhouse · for worship
services
decades
It' was soon after the

HOEFLICH

TIME&amp;$ENTINEL STAFF

OMEROY
· Where
else but m
Meigs
County
could you find a church
which has had the same
pianist for the past 79
years?
At Forest R\ln United
Methodist Church, just
likC&lt; churches across the
coUntry, preachers come
and go ·and congregations
change:
But
unlike·
most
churches, the pianist at the
Forest Run Church hasn't
changed since 1922.
Kathleen Sco'tt, who
will be 96 on Oct. 6,
began playing piano on a
regular basis when she was
17, and has been providing music for church services and social events
there every .since.
She's : a spry, spirited
woman with a Jl.een sense
of humor who b~li~e$
th at Y!l~ " use ~'t or Iose l't"
when ' 1~ qqmes to talent
~ -~oo~~J..'ie~s alsh 0 9~ick
· tQ · mennorr 't at ,. nc~st
b
, .
·rr... ,
, ecat11e · ~o~ re '~¢~t,IDS·
older, doe~n t mean you
should rettt:e. ~.rn thmgs
you really enJoy.
.
And she really eDJoys

church dedication that
Kathleen,
eldest daughter
being th&amp;church pianist.
For her, the Forest Run of the Baileys, started takChurch is a "second ing piano lessons, certainhorne." She's been a mem- ly with no forethought of
ber there since it was built the decades of church service she would give. An
ip 1915.
Reared in the Forest aunt was taking music
Run community, she was lessons· at the same time,
one of four children of and Kathleen joined her
John and Aima Catherine and'' her husband for the
Baer Bailey, who attended buggy ride to Pomeroy.
"It was an a!l-day trip,"
worship services in ·a oneshe
said, ''and when we
room school building
uritil the church was built. got there my uncle would
¥rs. Scott remembers tie his horse up at the
those early years and a
preacher, a Rev. Switzer, . PI•••• SH Scott. Cl
for. his vision of a church
. building at Forest Run,
and the leadership he gave
the congregation as it
rnoyed into a building
program, as well as the
dedication
·ceremony
when it was finished.
At the time he pastored
not only Forest Run but ·
also .Bethany; .Church in ..
....- ·'
T.

t'omeroy. " ,. . .•

,'. Travel; waa:

HER SECOND HOME- "My second home" is how ~athleen
Scott describes Forest Run United Methodist Church. She
has attended the church since it was built In 1915.

.'

... . _.,.,,..oc':"ii

nlk1 easy
from one church to the
other. Switzer would
catch the streetcar at
Pomeroy and go to Min-

QUJLnNQ, A PASSION - At the church every Thursday and at home In between. Kathleen Scott spends
many happy hours quilting.
,;(""

STILL PLAYING - Kathleen Scott has been pianist at the Forest Run United Methodist
·Church for the past 79 years. She'll be 96 on Oct. 6. ·

D

Steps toward preventing heart problems
GALLIPOLIS -The first time it rn~ch that yo'u go to the nearest ER.
happened you were walking up a The doctor tells you you have had a
short flight of stair1. You felt a tight- h,eart attack, and the hospiral is going
. ening iit your chest, maybe a short- to keep you for a couple of days to
ness of breath. Nothing to worry do some tests. These are words that
about, you thought, I'll tell my doc- nobody wants to hear, but unfortutor at my next physical.
. nately it happens every· day.
The next time, you had just finCardiovascular disease is a term
ished mowing the lawn, when it hit used to describe several types of disyou. The pain was bad, it felt like eases of the heart. According to the
your chest w:is being crushed, and American Heart Association:
you broke into a cold sweat. It lasted
• Heart Disease is the leading cause
longer this time, but you didn't want of death in the U.S. today. Since
to bother anyone or scare the kids. 1900, CVD (cardiova!cular disease)
After ha!f-an-hour Or ev n less, xou has been the number one killer in
feel beite! and .life returns to normal. the U.S. every year except 1918.
Third time is a charm. right? Not
• More than 2,600 Americans die
exactly. The third time the pain starts of CVD each day, an average tif one
in the morning and gets wor~e by death every 33 seconds.
t~e minute. This time it scares you so ·
.• CVD claims almost 10,500. more

_

.,

_..._.,.. _~ --·-'···-----'I

-

...

·~---·.--

lives each year than the next 6 leading causes of death combined.
• More: than tSO,QOQ AmJ:rcians
killed each year by CVD are under
• ·..•
the age of 65.
• CVD claimed 949, 691 lives in
the U.S. in 1998. This is 40,6 percent
of ill: deaths or 1 out of every 2.5
deaths.
.
• CVD is the leading cause of
death in Gallia County, in fact out.of
the 88 counties in Ohio, Jackson .
County ranks No. 1 in death due to
heart disease and Gallia County is
No. 5.
, .
.
People need to kt\ow that by
making some very simple life
changes, it is possible to reduce their
chances of developing GVD/Heart
Disease:

- :--

I. Stop smoking. Smoking is a
major caus~ of heart disease and
stroke. The fact. is every year, more
than 400,000 deaths in the U.S. are
due to smoking. About 190,000,
thousand of these deaths are due to
heart and blood vessel diseases. Gallia
County Health Department has an .
assortment of p;unphle!S and othe~
literature available 1for free. As always,
see. your doctor if you Want to stop
smoking and need more help.
2. K.Aow your numbers. If there
is a history of high blood pressure
and/ or high cholestoral in your (amily it is even more important that
you know your blood pressure, ch&lt;&gt;=
!estero! and blood sugar levels, Galli~
County Hea:lth Department will

Pluse SH

..

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"•

·'

1

~rt.

Cl

••

�•

'

P~ge

B6

1, 2001

Lake Erie dn ciffordable ·destination for anglers
•

.

.

Big
Fish

.

to· compensate; when 1 felt a fish was
Like most other fishermen, I occasionalmouthing my lure - but no_t taking hol9 ly check out the Ohio Division of
I would pause my retrieve, for just the
Wildlife's fishing reports, including the
slightest instant, then resume reeling in.
fishing report for Lake Eri~. Sometimes, .
Sometimes the fish would strike 'again
however, there's-slo substitute for taking a
and
soon I'd be calling out, "Fish on!''Jay
look your self.
was great to help the youngsters and soon
Recently the Freeman .family took a
our youngest daughter, tired of fishing,
t~ree-day vacation ·to Ohio's north coast,
found a new job helping him tag the fish
taki1ig in Marblehead, Port Clinton and
IN THE OPEN
going into the boat's cooler.
Sandusky areas of Ohio in addit1on to &lt;IL...U
South Bass Island and Put-in- Oay.
.
Afterwards 1 took advantage of one of
An ~asy way !O start planning your Lake mitring, the view from Perry's Monument · the loCll fish cleaning services, mon~y I
Erie vacation is to call the Ottawa Coun- takes in all of South, M\ddle and North conSidered well spent. W~1le we wacted
ty Visitors at 1~800-441_-1271 and request Bass Islands, Kelley's Island, Pelee Island in for the fish to be cleaned, we Went to the
a Lake Erie Travel Planner. The travel Canada and a few other islands. 1 highly beach at East Harbor State Park.
planner contains information on planning recommend . it _unless you are . afraid of
l enjoyed the fact that there are no jelypur vacation, a map, inform~.tion on the heights. There is an elevator. The ne}\t day lyfish in Lake Erie (I enjoy the dubious
Lake Erie islands, fishing and boating we devoted mostly to walleye fishing.
honor of having been stung by Jellyfish m
information, and the low-down on things
At 7 a.m. we "hooked up" with Tibbels the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, Gulf of
. to see and do. In addition, the travel plan- Charter Service in Lakeside. The Tibbel Mexico acid Caribbean Sea).
ner includes a variety of Lake Erie Action family owns and operates a small fleet of
We stayed at the Surf Motel in MarblePack vacation packages deluxe, standard or walk-on fishing boats and smaller, private head. The Surf Motel - it ?lso has a campeconomy accommodations, roundtrip charter boats. Jay, captain that day of the groun·d - caters to anglers and ?ffers • ..batt
ferry tickets to South Bass Island (Put- in- Harbor Queen, took us from Lakeside to ·and tackle shop, a fish clea mng stanon,
Bay). a tram tour of South Bass Island and a spot near the Camp 'Perry Impact Area freezers for your catch and a place to park
Cedar Point amusement park tickets.
where other fishing boats. were already your boat and t.ailer. The Ritz it ain't, but
Prices vary based on accommodations congregating on the wa ll eye.
it met my requirements of clean, quiet, .
and dates. Children's discounts are also
Most of the people on the boat were comfortable and affordable lodging. . .
available.
able to catch their limit of six Walleye -Another option to consider for lodgmg
Eventually we decided to roll our own within the seven or so hours on the is East Harbor State Park or one of the
vacation package, based on friends' rec- lake.After catc hing a few fish m the 13- to- other state parks in the area. East Harbor
qmmendati!Jns and their experiences. Of 15-inch range on traditional Lake Erie State Park boasts the brgest campground
course I wanted to include some walleye, tackle including nightcrawler harnesses in the state park system, a marina and
Jfishing while I was there. Bear in mind and weight-forward. spinners, I switched many other amenities.
there are numerous fishing charter services over briefly to one of my favorite river
For- do"it-yourselfers, several public
and lodging options along Lake Erie.
fishing lures, a four-inch black and silver launch ramps can be found throughout
To get to the Port Clinton/Marblehead rubber shad on a plain lead jig head.
the area. One of the newest is the Mazurik
area from here, take U.S. 33 north to 1-270
My first cast with the lure, reeled in Access located on Northshor~ Boulevard.
north around Columbus, and then U.S. 23 with a slow retrieve, yielded the biggest
Although Lake Erie. is stiU called ~he .
north to State Route 53, which leads fish 'of the day, a 22-inch w~lleye: hardly a "Walleye Capital of the World," there are
directly . to Catawba Island and the Mar- FishOhio! contender, but a nice enough other fishin g opportunities there as well.
blehead peninsula. Finding your way fish , 11onetheless. I quickly switched back The lake is rapidly becoming known as
around the per\insula, once you get there, to a weight-forward spinner after the ruiJ.- one of the best Sn~allmouth Bas~. fisheries
is relatively easy.
.ber shad failed to produce any addition. Ill the world,and perch Jerkmg for YelWe left Meigs County around 7 a.m. fish .
low Perch is also a popular pastime.
and arrived at Catawba Island on the MarLake Erie is definitely an affordable desA side note, I found that I am more
blehead Peninsula shortly after 11 a.m.
accustomed'to fishing in the Ohio .River, tiriation for area anglers on a budget, but if
That first day we checked out Put-iii- where the sauger and hybrid striped bass you g&lt;1, remember to take a kid fishing
Bay, taking Miller's Ferry from. Catawba tenc! to ]ji.Lii.k~ gang bangers in the rush- . with you.
Island. We rented a golf cart for a few ·ing cu rrent below the dams.
ljim F'!'e!""" is wildlife speciaiist/watershed
hours, checked out the CTystal Cave,
On the lake, I found the fish to be sub- coordir~ator fo r the Meigs Soil and Water ConHeineman's Winery, and Perry's lnterna- der. I missed a few strikes until I learned ' servation District. He can be contacted at (740)
992-4282 or at jim:freeman@oll.nacdnet.org)
-,tional Peace Monument - weather per-

•

••
•

weetdy fllhlr1g report provided by the Oivt·
lion of Wlldllle ol the Ohio Oepanment of
Natural Auourcef:

· .

.,,. __ ·(:ENTfiJ.l_OHI9

,,, ,.,,.,,

Hoover R"ervolr- June Is an excelllnt
Hrne to try trOlling crank baits for all fish.
Once the nawty hatched forage fish (glzzard shadJ,begln.to appear on the surface,
try troiHng very small shallow-running crank
bails In chrome or ahacl pattema. They are
effective for many &amp;peciea of fi&amp;h. For the
less aggreSBive saugeye, try sm~ll Jigs
Upped with parts ot a worm and dnf1 over
sand/gravel bars and sunken Islands. June
Is the best lima of year to try surface ~lis
lor largemouth bass. 10 horsepower limit.
Madison Lake - Cast shallow-running
crank balta and spinner barts f~r larQemouth bass at this 104-acre !ake tn Madlson County. Fish the rock nprap on the
dam, Decent numbers of carp and catfish
are avalla~e using doughballs, cut bait,
and chicken livers on the bottom-near shore
or try . drifting 1n ~ boat. Crappies and
bluegill&amp; are holding In woody COVer around
the !stand and in the upper end on the east
e.lde. Electric motors only.
NORTHWEST OHIO
Huron and Vermllton Rivers- Currentty ·
83 degrees and clear with normal flow.
Good numbers of smallmouth bass are
being taken on small crank baits .and &amp;pin·
ners. Thre·e to 4·pound fish have bean
reported from deeper pools in the mornings
nd evenings.
Bucyn.11 Reservoir No . .c - Shore fisher·
man are having good success catching
largemouth basa. Channel cal fishing has

!

been excellent during the last two weeks.

'

Dear

Abby

•

•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

attorney who provides legal
assistance throughout the
!:Ountry to cemeteries, crematories,funeral homes and trade
associ2tioiis in the industry. I
.am writing to correct some
popular misconceptions that
were reflected in some of the
letters in your column in the
.
last few weeks.
First, all of the ·le«:er writers
used. ..the term "ashes" to
describe cremated human
remaim. The remains of a cremated body are not ashes as
#le term is commonly understood. The remains are bone \
fragments that, if not-mechanically reduced, can be too large
to scatter. They do not imme~
diately dissolve when scattered. They norm;illy cannot
be disbursed and blown away.
Unfortunately, the movies and
the media have misused the
term "ashes" for many years,
pot realizing the problems it
.causes survivors who attempt
to scatter remains in the man- ·
ner often depicted.
Second, while it i~ permissi. ble in all states to scatter cremated remaim, there are fegal
. . requirements. No state
law• &gt;Ill
I•
1
·, · .alloW$ theni:ro be "tattere-d on ·
priyate property, Without the
consent of . !hi! . property
.o wner. Many national and
state 'parks have specific '·rules,
permit requirements and,
sbmetimes, location limitationS
ror the scattering of those
remains. Several years ago, representatives of a national park
and the leader of an Iridian
tribe contacted an industry
assoCiation to complain about
illegal scattering of cremated
remains on the tribe's sacred
burial grounds, which were
located within the park. Most
' cemeteries also have rules and
regulations that must be .
observed.
Third, adding an additional
memorial for the cremated
' remaim of a second spouse on
the cemetery plot where the
first spouse is buried has legal
implications. When . burial
spaces are originally acquired,
· there is an expectation that a
surviving spouse will be ·
buried with the deceased
spouse in an appropriate manner. If a companion memo~ial
was purchased and installed
when the first spouse died, .
'chang!Pg tbe arrangement
.may require the legal consent
of all survivors. In addition,
most cemeteries have rules and
regulations dealing with burial
of cr~mated remains with
human remaim and the appropriate types of memorials·.
Finally, when sepaJ;ating cremated remains as a keepsake, it
is important to make sure that
everyone agrees y.rith the plan.
The individuals who have the
legal right to authorize a cremation usually have the right
to determine the disposition of
remainr. Als.o, any individual'
who takes a porti~n of those
remaim should be ca)ltioned
to treat them in a respectful
and proper manner. Unfominately, there have been incidents where cremated remains
have' been disposed of ,in .the
' same manner as garbage.
.
I hope this information will
allow your readerS to provide
meaningful memorialization .
for their loved ones without
violating any laws, rules and
,- regulations - or the lights of
other individuals. - · HAR-

•

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DEAR ABBY: I am an

good areas include the area from C-Can
Fish the southeast comer using chicken IIV· near thJ sailboat club when using top-water and Niagara Aeef to Ranlesnake Island,
ers after dark. Three- to &amp;pound cats ar' bails or by tmiiii)O with ~aner bOards using nor1h and east of West Sister Island, nonh·
being taken Ol') a regul~ basis. Boat fisher- m~~m. diving ~res .
. · ~ 1 ·,
;,.
east of Kelleys Island, and lhe &gt;J Ruggles
ffliiO. trp~llog , """!')i.b~m-.
aloo ' · , ' noy~&lt;t~g Alveo"r f,lpatong,!he.,ar!l&lt;lpll~e ReeiNennllion oroa. Drillers anjl trollers
reporled ~ saugey'e catches.
~ ~8ftx.\w&amp;en ~tlrprise and Logan se9Q1s ha~8 both been catching fish. $orne small·
NORTHEAST OHIO
to be the most pr6ductive,ldr catChing feilty mouth ar'e being taken around the Bass and
North ReseiVolr and Nlmislla Reservoir and chunky , 13·. to t~·lnch slnallmo~th Kelleys Islands. Sottcraws and leeche,t;
_some nice channet cats are being taken · bass. Most ~ec:uvalures are big crawt1sh · ha\le been working well. The dally bag limit
at both these lakes with the best bite com- divers, small sh~c;t 'div~rs, 2.5· to 3_1nch tor smallmouth is 5, and there Is a minimum
rng at night. Try shrimp or chicken livers as motor oil tube batts, white 318-ounce spin· length of 14 Inches.
ball. .
·
ner baits, Dally Prayer top-waters, and
'Central Basin - The walleye bite Was
LaDue _ Boat anglers at LaDue report bright Rooster Talis. Most fish are scattered reported as good 'and Improving on Tues·
taking walleye from the deeper waters, and throughout the river and are not being\\ day morning north ot Mentor Lagoon In 65 •
the best success has been achieved by loundl' in the usual areas or near structure. 68 reel of water. Fish were being 'tllken. in
anglers using weight-forward spinners with While lhB' river Is stU I slightly l)igh and tur- the top 30 teet of water. Anglers trolling Jet
night Crawlers.
bid, anglers can look forward to receding Divers with copper Stinger spoons were
East Branch _ Some crappies are still water levels an~ Improved clarity, making doing best. Steelhead fishing In the same
being caught around brushy areas by per· e)(Cellentlishlng conditions.
area using the same technique is excellent,
sistent angletll
SOUTHWEST OHIO
as welt. Smallmouth bass can be found
_
·
Great Miami River - Catfish and smalr- from Fairport Harbor east along the shore·
. Tappan Lake - A 68·pound channel c;a.t mouth bass are being taken along 'the line where it's rocky and there are humps.
was reportedly caught on June 17 by Ca~lz Great Miami River. For catfish, use chtcken The lower part of the Grand River Is yieldangler Rodney Hotyak. Rodnt~y was USing liver or night crawlers along the bonom. To lng good numbers ot large catfish. White
live bait, fishing near the darn area at 3 a.m. fish for smallmouth bass, use spinner baitS, bass are being caught at night from the
SOUTHEAST OHIO
crank bahs, or a hook and bObber with minl Eastlake seawall and some yellow perch
Wills Creek Reservoir- Chann.el catfish nows.
are being taken there as welt. Smallmouth
(8 tp 10 pounds) and flathead catflSh (up to
Adams Lake .- Bluegill are being taken bass anglers are also having some success
30 pounds) are being caught using chiCken • uSing red worms or mea!worms with bob~ near Ashtabula. Yellow perch can be found
livers, night crawlers, and live sunfish. Tight bers In 2 to 2 112 feet or water during the In 48-50 teet of water. Walleye fishing has
line the 'crawlers and livers with hook and morning and evening hours. Try fishing been spotty with the Perry and Gene\la
sinker. Use a hook and bobber In a deep along the south side of the lake near the areas the best bets for picking· up this fish.
pool tor llatheads and tlsh near brush and llshlng pier and along the palh.
OHIO RIVER
"root wads.
,,
LA'KE ERIE
Greenup Pool- Anglers are catching 3Seneca Lake ..,... Nice bluegllls are being
Westem Basin - Walleye fishing was to 4-pound hybrid striped bass oil minnows,
caught In S to 10 feet of water using wax good over the weekend, but slowed a II Hie shlnera, ahad, ·SBasy Shads; and silver
worms. magoots. worms. and minnows. on Monday. Fishing was especially good spoons. White bass are hiHing minnows
Usa a small hook, split shot, end small bob- along the Michigan line. Waleye are rang- and shiners. A few freshwater drum have
ber. Striped bass are being caught in the ing In size from 14 to 30 inches long. Other also been caught by these methods.

CHARLESTON, WVa. mu ch about what boaters are
About 75 out of 365 days, Dar- going for, because aU of their
ren Elder can be found on one statistics identify only boat
of his two bass boats in the length.
Kanawha River with a fishing ' This spring, however, high
pole in his hands. On rare·occa- gas prices" and high water have
sions, he'll be on the bank with combined to affect both boathis 8-year-old son, but· most of ing activity and sales.
the time, he's casting from the
Dave Morris, owner of Dave
· front of a boat.
·Morris Marine Inc., ·describes
· ., "I love it," he says. "It's the the market as "kind of flat." He
thrill of catching the!TI and does see the populariry of panthen turning them loose." ·
toon boats picking up, but he
During the· summer, he's sel- doesn't s~ll bass boats any more.
dorn alone. Fishermen and
Mountaineer Boat Sales is
boaters share the waters, Elder, ·. seeing decreases in sales of all
who owns a bass tackle business rypes. Mike Meador, th e owner,
called Catch 'em Lures, has says one reason for the decline
been doing this since 1984, and is that OMC, a major rnanufache has seen the water traffic get turer of bass boats, recently
heavier each year. He's noticed went broke, softening the marpenonal w~rercraft are l:iecom- ·ket
•
ing immensely popular, but just
"B.oating in general is slow,"
about every type of boat is Meado, ,says. "The slow economultiplying.
my and high gas prices aren't
"There's a W~()k .. YHi~t,y,_.... belping:: .........;,-·-··-···--·--· ...................
from huge to little, rich man's
From Roy Hughes' point of
to poor man's," Elder says. "It's view, though, orie type of
hard to ~h after I 0 or 11 in the watercraft i1 at the height of its
morning because there are so popularity. At ,his · marina in
many boats, especially in the Chesapeake,
Hughes
has
summer."
noticed more personal waterIn 2000, sales of fishing boats craft shooting throughout th e
were up in West Virginia when waterways.
compared to 1999,acconding to
" It's something new and it's
the Division of Motor Vehicles, better than skiing," he says. " It
where boats are registered . may die down in the future, but
Beyond that, they don't know they're everywliere right now."

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'State Route 248 • Chester, OH

(740) 985·JJO 1
'r

•.

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Sunday, July 1, 2oin

•

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

Ohio Fishing Report
Here is the

Celebrations begin on Page C2

ADVICE

EKLY
SPEC
e

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

Inside: .

Meigs County
resident David
Bigley caught
this 51 pound,
48 inch BI!Je
Catfish. (Submitted photo)

Jim .
Freeman

•

•

•

. VEY I, LAPIN, ESQ.,
NORTHBROOK, ILL.
---~-~-~--

•

Stl
...,
after all these years
BY CHARLENE

~here men from
Hi&gt;man has been . ersville,
the chuoch in horse and
buggy
church pianist . and takewouldhimmeetto · him
the
for nearly eight · schoolhouse · for worship
services
decades
It' was soon after the

HOEFLICH

TIME&amp;$ENTINEL STAFF

OMEROY
· Where
else but m
Meigs
County
could you find a church
which has had the same
pianist for the past 79
years?
At Forest R\ln United
Methodist Church, just
likC&lt; churches across the
coUntry, preachers come
and go ·and congregations
change:
But
unlike·
most
churches, the pianist at the
Forest Run Church hasn't
changed since 1922.
Kathleen Sco'tt, who
will be 96 on Oct. 6,
began playing piano on a
regular basis when she was
17, and has been providing music for church services and social events
there every .since.
She's : a spry, spirited
woman with a Jl.een sense
of humor who b~li~e$
th at Y!l~ " use ~'t or Iose l't"
when ' 1~ qqmes to talent
~ -~oo~~J..'ie~s alsh 0 9~ick
· tQ · mennorr 't at ,. nc~st
b
, .
·rr... ,
, ecat11e · ~o~ re '~¢~t,IDS·
older, doe~n t mean you
should rettt:e. ~.rn thmgs
you really enJoy.
.
And she really eDJoys

church dedication that
Kathleen,
eldest daughter
being th&amp;church pianist.
For her, the Forest Run of the Baileys, started takChurch is a "second ing piano lessons, certainhorne." She's been a mem- ly with no forethought of
ber there since it was built the decades of church service she would give. An
ip 1915.
Reared in the Forest aunt was taking music
Run community, she was lessons· at the same time,
one of four children of and Kathleen joined her
John and Aima Catherine and'' her husband for the
Baer Bailey, who attended buggy ride to Pomeroy.
"It was an a!l-day trip,"
worship services in ·a oneshe
said, ''and when we
room school building
uritil the church was built. got there my uncle would
¥rs. Scott remembers tie his horse up at the
those early years and a
preacher, a Rev. Switzer, . PI•••• SH Scott. Cl
for. his vision of a church
. building at Forest Run,
and the leadership he gave
the congregation as it
rnoyed into a building
program, as well as the
dedication
·ceremony
when it was finished.
At the time he pastored
not only Forest Run but ·
also .Bethany; .Church in ..
....- ·'
T.

t'omeroy. " ,. . .•

,'. Travel; waa:

HER SECOND HOME- "My second home" is how ~athleen
Scott describes Forest Run United Methodist Church. She
has attended the church since it was built In 1915.

.'

... . _.,.,,..oc':"ii

nlk1 easy
from one church to the
other. Switzer would
catch the streetcar at
Pomeroy and go to Min-

QUJLnNQ, A PASSION - At the church every Thursday and at home In between. Kathleen Scott spends
many happy hours quilting.
,;(""

STILL PLAYING - Kathleen Scott has been pianist at the Forest Run United Methodist
·Church for the past 79 years. She'll be 96 on Oct. 6. ·

D

Steps toward preventing heart problems
GALLIPOLIS -The first time it rn~ch that yo'u go to the nearest ER.
happened you were walking up a The doctor tells you you have had a
short flight of stair1. You felt a tight- h,eart attack, and the hospiral is going
. ening iit your chest, maybe a short- to keep you for a couple of days to
ness of breath. Nothing to worry do some tests. These are words that
about, you thought, I'll tell my doc- nobody wants to hear, but unfortutor at my next physical.
. nately it happens every· day.
The next time, you had just finCardiovascular disease is a term
ished mowing the lawn, when it hit used to describe several types of disyou. The pain was bad, it felt like eases of the heart. According to the
your chest w:is being crushed, and American Heart Association:
you broke into a cold sweat. It lasted
• Heart Disease is the leading cause
longer this time, but you didn't want of death in the U.S. today. Since
to bother anyone or scare the kids. 1900, CVD (cardiova!cular disease)
After ha!f-an-hour Or ev n less, xou has been the number one killer in
feel beite! and .life returns to normal. the U.S. every year except 1918.
Third time is a charm. right? Not
• More than 2,600 Americans die
exactly. The third time the pain starts of CVD each day, an average tif one
in the morning and gets wor~e by death every 33 seconds.
t~e minute. This time it scares you so ·
.• CVD claims almost 10,500. more

_

.,

_..._.,.. _~ --·-'···-----'I

-

...

·~---·.--

lives each year than the next 6 leading causes of death combined.
• More: than tSO,QOQ AmJ:rcians
killed each year by CVD are under
• ·..•
the age of 65.
• CVD claimed 949, 691 lives in
the U.S. in 1998. This is 40,6 percent
of ill: deaths or 1 out of every 2.5
deaths.
.
• CVD is the leading cause of
death in Gallia County, in fact out.of
the 88 counties in Ohio, Jackson .
County ranks No. 1 in death due to
heart disease and Gallia County is
No. 5.
, .
.
People need to kt\ow that by
making some very simple life
changes, it is possible to reduce their
chances of developing GVD/Heart
Disease:

- :--

I. Stop smoking. Smoking is a
major caus~ of heart disease and
stroke. The fact. is every year, more
than 400,000 deaths in the U.S. are
due to smoking. About 190,000,
thousand of these deaths are due to
heart and blood vessel diseases. Gallia
County Health Department has an .
assortment of p;unphle!S and othe~
literature available 1for free. As always,
see. your doctor if you Want to stop
smoking and need more help.
2. K.Aow your numbers. If there
is a history of high blood pressure
and/ or high cholestoral in your (amily it is even more important that
you know your blood pressure, ch&lt;&gt;=
!estero! and blood sugar levels, Galli~
County Hea:lth Department will

Pluse SH

..

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·'

1

~rt.

Cl

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�.

.

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Page C~ • &amp;unba!' ~imrli -&amp;entinr!

Sunday, July 1, 2001'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

GALLIPOLIS - Kelly Annette Bush and Michael Andrew
Hartsfield, both of Tallahassee, Fla., were- tn~rried April 17,
2001, in Ocho Rios; Jamaica.
The Rev. Millard Evans performed the ceremony. R eceptions were held in Taijahassee and in Gallipolis.
Following the wedding trip to Ocho Rios, the couple will
live in Tallahassee.
·
The bride graduated from Florida State· Universiry with a
bachelor of science in interior design and is a facilities planner
for DOCS Business interiors. She is th e daughter of Cheryl A.
Salisbury of Gallipolis, and James L. Bush of Gahanna.
The groom attended Florida State U niversiry and is an engineer technician for the Department of Environmental Protection.
He is the son of Mary K. Hartsfield of Tallahassee, and the
late Lamar Hartsfield.

McKnight anniversary

PORTLAND -, Jeremy Alan Smith and C hristina Dawn
Cooper were united in marriage May 26, 2001 , at Portland
First Ch~uch of the·Nazaren e.
,
The Rev. William D. Justis performed the double- ring ceremony.
The groom is the son of R ebecca and Dan Dudding of
Racine, and Terry Smith and Sherrie Ward of Belleville, W.Va.
H e is the grandson of Delbert and Ruth Sniith, Phyllis Baker.
and John and Martha Dudding, all of Racine. ·
T he bride is the dau~hter of Gary and Marilyn Coop er of
Portland, and the granddaughter of Julia Engle of Middleport.
For her wedding, the bride was escorted to the altar by her
father and given in marriage by her parents. ·
Connie Sauters was the ma id ~of-honor, and Kenda . Smith
and Jamie Hupp were bridesmaids. Savannah Bailey was flower
girl.
.
.
Best man was Jon Smith, and Tim Ryan and Gary Cooper
were grdornsmen, with Isaac Dunn serving as ring bearer.
Kelly Eichinger presented piano music with Kelly Bailey as
soloist.
,
I) reception was held at the Racine American Legion Post
following the ceremony.
·
The couple resides in Racine.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs."Leon (Patricia Gress) Mc Knight will celebrate their 50th wedcfuig anniversary on July 7.
Mr. and Mrs. McKnight was married July 7, 1951, at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy. They are the parents ·of
three daughters: Mrs. Judy (Rick) Triplett, Raven, Va.; ~heila
McK!fight, Pomeroy; and Mrs: B ~ th Qames) C lark, Middleport.
T hey also have six grandchildren Brian, Greg, Nicholas and
David T~iplett, Raven , Va.; Mrs. Megan (H oward) Ervin !II,'
Ra cine; and Jerry . Clark, Colunibus, and two great grand-'
daughters, Whitney and Tiffany Triplett, R aven, Va. ,
,
The family will host an ope(! house on July 7 in the soci~l .
room at the ' Stewart-Johnson Post· of the Veterans of Foreig~ :
Wars in Mason, W.Va. from 2-4 p.m. The couple requ ests n~. :
gifts .
·•·

Arana .after they tried to interfere
in a dfug-related arrest.
·
In t 982, Diana Ross kicked off
her first world solo tour with a
concert at Giants Stadium. Mil11s
Davis opened the show.
In 1991 , Guns N' Roses lead
singer Axl Rose sparked riot In
a. St. Louis suburb by jumping off
the stage and aHacklng a fan
videotaping the concert. Sixty
people were hurt and the venue
was wrecked.
In t995, members of TLC filed
for bankruptcy. Lisa "Left Eye"
Lopes faced a $t .3 million payment for burning down the manslof1 of her boyfriend, Andre
Rison.
In t999, 'Posh Spice' Victoria
Adams of the Spice Girls married
soccer star David Beckham.

Entertainment ·~ highlight~
during the week of July 1"7:
In 1955, the Lawrence Welk
television show debuted on ABC.
The program ran for 27 years,
both on the network and In syndication.
In· ·1956, Elvis Presley
appeared on Steve Allen's variety
show singing 'Hound ·Dog" to a
basset hound. He also was forbidden to dance.
.' in 1965, Marty Balin and Paul
Kantner formed a folk;rock group
that eventually became Jefferson
Airplane.
In 1968, The Yardbirds broke
up. Gultarlst Jimmy Page formed
Mellua Claire Brown and Adam Bradley Clark
the New Yardblrds, which
became Led Zeppelin.
. In 197t, Doors lead singer Jim
Morrison died of heart faill!r&amp; in
· 111111 CIIIIIV IIIIIIIII•L
Paris. He was found In his bathtub. News of Morrison's death
Well Child Clinic :
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jay and Martha was not made public until days
Doe1 your Child nHd
Brown of Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs. Mark and Lois Clark of after his burial in a Paris ceme1 well child checkup?
JGallipolis, are announcing the engagement and upcoming mar- tery, leading many fans to believe
Call446-8538 or 441-2968 1nd
m1ke an 1ppolntment
riage of their children, Melissa Claire Brown and Adam Bradley• he~~~~~~~~ ~~Captain and Ten·
lor our next clinic.
Clark.
nille received their first gold
The bride-elect is a 1997 graduate of the Ohio Valley Chris- record with "Love Will Keep Us
tian School and a 2001 .graduate of the Universiry of Rio . Together."
.
·h b h 1 f ·
d
·
h 1
·
In 1980, Bob Weir and Mickey
G ran d e, Wit
a ac e or o sc1ence egree m psyc o ogy.
' Hart of the Grateful Dead were
The groom-elect is a 1996 graduate of Gallia Academy High arrested for suspicion of inciting a
School and a -2001 graduate of the Universiry of Rio Grande, riot at the San Diego Sports
499 Jockaon Pike, SuiteD
with a bachelor ofscience in elementary ed11ca~ion.
L __JdJllii!*.Qb.l2...._:_:__j
The wedding ceremony will be at First Baptjst Church in
Gaijipolis on Aug. 11 ,2001, at 5:30p.m.

a

Brown-Clarl! engagement

..

of occurrence.
No · exceptions will be
made.
All material submitted for
publication is sub)ect to editmg. Articles will be published
as soon as possible.

\Bands

..

--

.. -

THE TOP FIVE
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TELEVISION
1. 'Who Wants to Be a Millionaire-TueSday,• ABC.
2. "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire-Thursday," ABC.
3. 'who Wants to Be a Millionaire-Sunday," ABC.
•
4. (tie) "20/20-Friday," ABC.
4. (tie) "48 Hours-Monday;
CBS.
(From
Nielsen
Media
Research)
FILMS

1. "The Fast and the Furious;
Universal.
2. "Dr. Dolittle 2," 20th Century
Fo•.
3. "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider;
Paramount.
4. 'Adantis: The Lost Empire;
Disney.
5. "Shrek,' DreamWorks.
(From Exhibitor Relations Co.)

·&amp;y
J1 RT(-i~~Y..t~t

Children Need 80% of
their vaccinations In the
first two years of life:

SW.&lt;.:t llXI

'

.

. •

Tr(~;o~ol~i~~=;d magazine)

.;:

·.·•

ALBUMS
· .•
1. "Take Off Your Pants Afltk

Jacket,• Blink-182. MCA.
: :
·2. "Break The Cycle," StaiAd.•

Flip/Eiektra.
: .:
3. "Survivqr," Destiny's Chlij.•
Columbia. (Platinum)
·• ;
4.
Soundtrack: "MoullitRouge.• Twentieth Century F'~
Film Corp.
·
• •
5. "Fear Factory," St. LunatiCs;
Fo' Reel.
(From Billboard magazine)

' Spring · &amp; Summer

merchandise

30% 0~~
SALE STARTS FRIDAY!!

r

The \~~~~~ ur+le
300

Second Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740 446-1998

•

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gibbs announ ce the
·hgagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Marme,. to Noah Hysell, son of Pauli ne and Roy Parker and the
ate O lan Hysell.

PO INT PLEASANT, WVa. - William and H elen Sydenstricker of Point Pleasant an nounce th e ·engagement of th eir
daughter, Sharon Sydenstricker of Huntington. to Phil Porter,
son of C alvin and Virnic Porter of Lincoln C ounry.
The wedding will be Aug. 18, 200 1 at 2 p.m. in Barboursville
,
at Spirit ofYictory Church .
· Sydenstricker gra'duated from Point Pleasant Hi gh School
and also is a graduate of M a r~ hall University. Her major was
administrative-office technology. Porter is a graduate of C uyan
Valley H igh SchooL
·

Barbie
makes
the ~ cover
NEW YORK (AP) - Barbie is the covergirl for a riew
series of "Girls Club Storybooks" (Golden Books) that
look like magazines.
.The sports edition covJr has
Barbie in her athletic gear
with teasers for a good-sport
quiz and a lesson designing a
trophy.
.
The issue's "Top 5" list
includes Barbie 's 'favorite Saturday afternoon activities:
practicing roller-skati11g backward, picking wildflowers
with her) ittle sisters, putting
on a skateboarding show in
the park, having a bike race
with a fri end and, if it's raining, playing music 'and dancing in the living room.
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. . Leland and Florence Bumgarner of
The Friends edition has
New H aven will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary best-friend advi ce, tips for a
today.
_ ,
fashion party and a feature
The Bumgarners were married July 3, 1951, at Gallipolis, by
story. on dealing with the
the. Rev. L.A. Donnally. Leland is retired from American Elec- summer school break when
tri c Power Phillip Sporn Plant, t:Iew H,aven, and -Florence is friends aren't around.
retired from Rocksprings Nursin g Home, Pomeroy.
·
Barbie 's "Top 5" list' for
I The Bumgarners are the parents of four children, Jenny
things to do with friends: gig(Roge~) Barrett, Lee (Debbie) Bumgarner, Gary (Marsha)
gling on the pho ne, walking
Bumgarner and John (Pam) Bumgarner. They have eight
dogs in the park, offering a
grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.
shoulder to lean on when
Friends and relatives are invited to attend a reception in their
times are tou gh, tryin g on
honor, given by their children, at N ew 'Haven Community
each other's clothes and
Center from 2-4 p.1J1. The couple requests no gifts'.
cheering eac h other on.

®
Pleasant Valley Hospital .
Arthritis Support &amp;,oup

Thursday, July 12, 5 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Well ness Center
Multi-purpose Room
(304) 675- 8639
Aphasia Aseoclatlon a
Stroke Su""'t Group

Tuesday, Juiy 17, 1 p.m . .
Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5250

Book helps.
calm kids

I!

~

~turday, July 7th from ·12:00 p.m. until 2:30 p.m., .Helicopter Flights ·
Incorporated will be at Overbrook Center giving nellcopter rides. Also . at this
time, Overbrook will be hosting a community picnic with comple~entary
fOod being provided and s~rved by Vaughan's Market.
,
· Overbrook'wo·uld like.to tha-n k the following contributors:
Flsher-Acree Funeral Home ·
Barbara Arnold Catering
Athens Medical Lab
Peoples Bank
Eastern Star

Lo Med Pharmacy
EdnaFench
Bowman's
Home
.
. Care
Farmers Bank
Sam Matson

·For More Information contact Mike Crites or Don Vaughan at (740) 992-6472.

•

1

-.

By A Moman~:
Lifehouse. DreamWdtks.
.
3: "My Beby," Lil' Romeo. Sool.:
ja/No Limit.
; ;
4. "Ride Wit Me," Nelly (feet.City Spud). Fo' Reel.
. - ·:
5. "Drops Of Jupiter (Tell Me);"

Call your Health care Provider or
the Gallia County Health
Department at
740-441-2950
For More Information.

•

Gibbs-Hysell engagem'ent

organs work.
.,.
Find
Out
Wh y
(http :/ /www.findoutwhy.org)
, which is cosponso'r ed by the
National Science Foundation
and features Disney characters
Timon and Pumbaa, not only
explains why noses run, why
· it rains and how a CD works,
it also offerS lists of even inore
que stion s the child hasn't
thought of yet - and the
answers:
KidsAstronomy.com
(http:/ / www.kidsastronomy.c
om) can help explain the concepts of space, the planets and
the
stars
to
young
astronomers with visual aids,
including photographs.
At Enchanted Learning
(http:/ / www.enchant·
edlearning.com), the Little
E)\plorers picture Jicti onary
will help explain more than
1,800 entries, ranging from
geog..phy to current events .

.Bumgczrner _5Oth

•

Tumpike Ford of Gallipolis
Mike McClery
. Candy Tillis
Ohio Valley Bank
Wheels and Deal~ ·

.

Marlene Gibbs and · Noah Hysell
•

lnt~~ging

Saturday, July
12:00 p.m. until 2:30 .·--~-·
. OVERBROOK CENTER
"" ,..

NEW YO.RK (AP)
Young children seem to be .
'curious about everything arid
they don't hesitate to ask
questions about it all.
I
~hy does my heart beat?
Where do babies come from?
What's a sneeze? Why do bees
buzz?
Family PC ma~azirie found
the answers, or at least it
found Web sites that have the
answers. A list of helpful sites
is in the July issue. ·
Parents and children can
look up the sites together and
go through the answer with a
combin ation of words, pictures and graphics that likely
will be dsier for the kids to
understand than a long, technical, fact-.fill e'd explanation.
Inner Learning Online
(http ://www.innerbody.com)
is a crash course in human
anatomy with animations of
how various systems and

Sydenstricker-Porter
engagement

•

HOT FIVE
• .
1. "Lady Marmalade," Christinjl:
Aguilera, Lit' Kim, Mya &amp;· Pin ~ .

REUNION 'POL CIES

C\V:eddlno ·

.

Sharon Sydenstrlcker and PhU Porter
'.

Smith wedding

.

'j),

Websites answer children's
curious 'why'. questions

Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy Smith

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

With the family reunion
season .quickly appr~achin.s
many w111' be subm1ttmg articles of family activities for
publication.
To ensure p"rompt publication, the Sunday Times-Sentinel requests that articles be
neatly typed and double
spaced for easy editing.
Reunion items should not
exceed 300 words a.,d must
be submitted within 30 days

· &amp;unba!' ~unr!J -&amp;rntinel • Page.C3

·,

FLASHBACKS

I.

.

.

•

_j

Pomeroy • Middleport_• Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

.Celebratio_ns

celebrations

Hartsfield wedding

Sunday, July 1, 2001

'

f

I

NEW YORK (AP) - To
children, doctors' offices are at
best . an unfamiliar ,Place. To
some, doctors' offices ate scary.
1 To make the experience a
little easier, the book "The
Doctor &amp; You" (An nick Press)
ai~s to explain the tools and
te~:hniques the doctor will use
so children can be better prepared for what will happen.
Pirst off, the book explains,
an pccasional trip to the doctor~ office is almost
- . unavoidable.
.
It says children visit doctors
"to get better" when they are
sick or injured and ''to keep
he.ilthy:'
· · · ·
Then it goes through a typical checkup, explaining the
scale the reflex hammer, the
'
· tongue
depressor and the
stethoscope.
Kids are given a "job" for
eac!h activiry - like keeping
th ~r legs " loose" for the retlex
test ·- that should be helpful
to •the doctor and help keep
the children's minds off whatever the doctor is doing!
-~~.-

..

•

Jackson Balles

. Dangers of U.V.
you ·tnr1w that many recent medical stu~ies have
cataracts and exposure to ultraviolet radiation?
C ~ta1!',ac ts,~ r the "clouding over· of th!-J naturl!llens within
can actually be cased by excess and unprotected
to U.V. This form of radiation Is mostly absorbed
t\)e\ ilens to protect th e retina, the sensitive·vision t~SM~ e
of the eye. Oltcn th e bad effecls of U.V. can be
1se1~n In people who have spent much time outdoors, such
farmers, athletes. and tradespeople.
To protect yourself from U.V., wear a hat and use.
lll&gt;erally. For the eyes, though , the best
protection Is an ultraviolet filter built Into your glasses.
Invisible shield acls to block transmission of all light
associated with U.V. Best prescrlbed.by your doctor.
filter should block 100% of the rays. Accept nothing
lles:s! Alter all, your good vlslon.ls invaluable and deserves
best protection .
I

,

or. A. Jackson Baile~ · o.d.
224 E. Main St. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Toll Free 1-877

,
,,

.·

-·

"

.I

.
Ple•ant Valley·Wellnea Center
(Closed on July 4)
Now open at 8 a.m ..
Every Saturday
(304) 675-7222

Ball Room D8nclng
~ Every Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$5/per session
~304) 675-7222 ..
0

Alzheimer's Support Group

Aerobics

Tuesday, July 17, 7 p.m.
PJeasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5236

Mondays and Wednesdays, 6 p.m.
Tuesdays, 5:30 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$2/members or $3/non-members
(304) 675-7222

Wings Grief Support Group

Thursday, July 19, 6:30 p.m.
Hartley Cdllference Room
(304) 675-7.400 . '
Cameo Ladies Breast

- . -·

Cancer Support Group

Monday, July 23, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Buxton Conference Room
(304) 615-7997

For more Info...
about o·:r new Low Vision Olinic
CC!II (~4)_ 6~ 5-g2gQ " ·. _ ... ..

�.

.

'

.

I

•

•

'

Page C~ • &amp;unba!' ~imrli -&amp;entinr!

Sunday, July 1, 2001'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

GALLIPOLIS - Kelly Annette Bush and Michael Andrew
Hartsfield, both of Tallahassee, Fla., were- tn~rried April 17,
2001, in Ocho Rios; Jamaica.
The Rev. Millard Evans performed the ceremony. R eceptions were held in Taijahassee and in Gallipolis.
Following the wedding trip to Ocho Rios, the couple will
live in Tallahassee.
·
The bride graduated from Florida State· Universiry with a
bachelor of science in interior design and is a facilities planner
for DOCS Business interiors. She is th e daughter of Cheryl A.
Salisbury of Gallipolis, and James L. Bush of Gahanna.
The groom attended Florida State U niversiry and is an engineer technician for the Department of Environmental Protection.
He is the son of Mary K. Hartsfield of Tallahassee, and the
late Lamar Hartsfield.

McKnight anniversary

PORTLAND -, Jeremy Alan Smith and C hristina Dawn
Cooper were united in marriage May 26, 2001 , at Portland
First Ch~uch of the·Nazaren e.
,
The Rev. William D. Justis performed the double- ring ceremony.
The groom is the son of R ebecca and Dan Dudding of
Racine, and Terry Smith and Sherrie Ward of Belleville, W.Va.
H e is the grandson of Delbert and Ruth Sniith, Phyllis Baker.
and John and Martha Dudding, all of Racine. ·
T he bride is the dau~hter of Gary and Marilyn Coop er of
Portland, and the granddaughter of Julia Engle of Middleport.
For her wedding, the bride was escorted to the altar by her
father and given in marriage by her parents. ·
Connie Sauters was the ma id ~of-honor, and Kenda . Smith
and Jamie Hupp were bridesmaids. Savannah Bailey was flower
girl.
.
.
Best man was Jon Smith, and Tim Ryan and Gary Cooper
were grdornsmen, with Isaac Dunn serving as ring bearer.
Kelly Eichinger presented piano music with Kelly Bailey as
soloist.
,
I) reception was held at the Racine American Legion Post
following the ceremony.
·
The couple resides in Racine.

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs."Leon (Patricia Gress) Mc Knight will celebrate their 50th wedcfuig anniversary on July 7.
Mr. and Mrs. McKnight was married July 7, 1951, at Sacred
Heart Catholic Church in Pomeroy. They are the parents ·of
three daughters: Mrs. Judy (Rick) Triplett, Raven, Va.; ~heila
McK!fight, Pomeroy; and Mrs: B ~ th Qames) C lark, Middleport.
T hey also have six grandchildren Brian, Greg, Nicholas and
David T~iplett, Raven , Va.; Mrs. Megan (H oward) Ervin !II,'
Ra cine; and Jerry . Clark, Colunibus, and two great grand-'
daughters, Whitney and Tiffany Triplett, R aven, Va. ,
,
The family will host an ope(! house on July 7 in the soci~l .
room at the ' Stewart-Johnson Post· of the Veterans of Foreig~ :
Wars in Mason, W.Va. from 2-4 p.m. The couple requ ests n~. :
gifts .
·•·

Arana .after they tried to interfere
in a dfug-related arrest.
·
In t 982, Diana Ross kicked off
her first world solo tour with a
concert at Giants Stadium. Mil11s
Davis opened the show.
In 1991 , Guns N' Roses lead
singer Axl Rose sparked riot In
a. St. Louis suburb by jumping off
the stage and aHacklng a fan
videotaping the concert. Sixty
people were hurt and the venue
was wrecked.
In t995, members of TLC filed
for bankruptcy. Lisa "Left Eye"
Lopes faced a $t .3 million payment for burning down the manslof1 of her boyfriend, Andre
Rison.
In t999, 'Posh Spice' Victoria
Adams of the Spice Girls married
soccer star David Beckham.

Entertainment ·~ highlight~
during the week of July 1"7:
In 1955, the Lawrence Welk
television show debuted on ABC.
The program ran for 27 years,
both on the network and In syndication.
In· ·1956, Elvis Presley
appeared on Steve Allen's variety
show singing 'Hound ·Dog" to a
basset hound. He also was forbidden to dance.
.' in 1965, Marty Balin and Paul
Kantner formed a folk;rock group
that eventually became Jefferson
Airplane.
In 1968, The Yardbirds broke
up. Gultarlst Jimmy Page formed
Mellua Claire Brown and Adam Bradley Clark
the New Yardblrds, which
became Led Zeppelin.
. In 197t, Doors lead singer Jim
Morrison died of heart faill!r&amp; in
· 111111 CIIIIIV IIIIIIIII•L
Paris. He was found In his bathtub. News of Morrison's death
Well Child Clinic :
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jay and Martha was not made public until days
Doe1 your Child nHd
Brown of Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs. Mark and Lois Clark of after his burial in a Paris ceme1 well child checkup?
JGallipolis, are announcing the engagement and upcoming mar- tery, leading many fans to believe
Call446-8538 or 441-2968 1nd
m1ke an 1ppolntment
riage of their children, Melissa Claire Brown and Adam Bradley• he~~~~~~~~ ~~Captain and Ten·
lor our next clinic.
Clark.
nille received their first gold
The bride-elect is a 1997 graduate of the Ohio Valley Chris- record with "Love Will Keep Us
tian School and a 2001 .graduate of the Universiry of Rio . Together."
.
·h b h 1 f ·
d
·
h 1
·
In 1980, Bob Weir and Mickey
G ran d e, Wit
a ac e or o sc1ence egree m psyc o ogy.
' Hart of the Grateful Dead were
The groom-elect is a 1996 graduate of Gallia Academy High arrested for suspicion of inciting a
School and a -2001 graduate of the Universiry of Rio Grande, riot at the San Diego Sports
499 Jockaon Pike, SuiteD
with a bachelor ofscience in elementary ed11ca~ion.
L __JdJllii!*.Qb.l2...._:_:__j
The wedding ceremony will be at First Baptjst Church in
Gaijipolis on Aug. 11 ,2001, at 5:30p.m.

a

Brown-Clarl! engagement

..

of occurrence.
No · exceptions will be
made.
All material submitted for
publication is sub)ect to editmg. Articles will be published
as soon as possible.

\Bands

..

--

.. -

THE TOP FIVE
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TELEVISION
1. 'Who Wants to Be a Millionaire-TueSday,• ABC.
2. "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire-Thursday," ABC.
3. 'who Wants to Be a Millionaire-Sunday," ABC.
•
4. (tie) "20/20-Friday," ABC.
4. (tie) "48 Hours-Monday;
CBS.
(From
Nielsen
Media
Research)
FILMS

1. "The Fast and the Furious;
Universal.
2. "Dr. Dolittle 2," 20th Century
Fo•.
3. "Lara Croft: Tomb Raider;
Paramount.
4. 'Adantis: The Lost Empire;
Disney.
5. "Shrek,' DreamWorks.
(From Exhibitor Relations Co.)

·&amp;y
J1 RT(-i~~Y..t~t

Children Need 80% of
their vaccinations In the
first two years of life:

SW.&lt;.:t llXI

'

.

. •

Tr(~;o~ol~i~~=;d magazine)

.;:

·.·•

ALBUMS
· .•
1. "Take Off Your Pants Afltk

Jacket,• Blink-182. MCA.
: :
·2. "Break The Cycle," StaiAd.•

Flip/Eiektra.
: .:
3. "Survivqr," Destiny's Chlij.•
Columbia. (Platinum)
·• ;
4.
Soundtrack: "MoullitRouge.• Twentieth Century F'~
Film Corp.
·
• •
5. "Fear Factory," St. LunatiCs;
Fo' Reel.
(From Billboard magazine)

' Spring · &amp; Summer

merchandise

30% 0~~
SALE STARTS FRIDAY!!

r

The \~~~~~ ur+le
300

Second Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740 446-1998

•

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gibbs announ ce the
·hgagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Marme,. to Noah Hysell, son of Pauli ne and Roy Parker and the
ate O lan Hysell.

PO INT PLEASANT, WVa. - William and H elen Sydenstricker of Point Pleasant an nounce th e ·engagement of th eir
daughter, Sharon Sydenstricker of Huntington. to Phil Porter,
son of C alvin and Virnic Porter of Lincoln C ounry.
The wedding will be Aug. 18, 200 1 at 2 p.m. in Barboursville
,
at Spirit ofYictory Church .
· Sydenstricker gra'duated from Point Pleasant Hi gh School
and also is a graduate of M a r~ hall University. Her major was
administrative-office technology. Porter is a graduate of C uyan
Valley H igh SchooL
·

Barbie
makes
the ~ cover
NEW YORK (AP) - Barbie is the covergirl for a riew
series of "Girls Club Storybooks" (Golden Books) that
look like magazines.
.The sports edition covJr has
Barbie in her athletic gear
with teasers for a good-sport
quiz and a lesson designing a
trophy.
.
The issue's "Top 5" list
includes Barbie 's 'favorite Saturday afternoon activities:
practicing roller-skati11g backward, picking wildflowers
with her) ittle sisters, putting
on a skateboarding show in
the park, having a bike race
with a fri end and, if it's raining, playing music 'and dancing in the living room.
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. . Leland and Florence Bumgarner of
The Friends edition has
New H aven will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary best-friend advi ce, tips for a
today.
_ ,
fashion party and a feature
The Bumgarners were married July 3, 1951, at Gallipolis, by
story. on dealing with the
the. Rev. L.A. Donnally. Leland is retired from American Elec- summer school break when
tri c Power Phillip Sporn Plant, t:Iew H,aven, and -Florence is friends aren't around.
retired from Rocksprings Nursin g Home, Pomeroy.
·
Barbie 's "Top 5" list' for
I The Bumgarners are the parents of four children, Jenny
things to do with friends: gig(Roge~) Barrett, Lee (Debbie) Bumgarner, Gary (Marsha)
gling on the pho ne, walking
Bumgarner and John (Pam) Bumgarner. They have eight
dogs in the park, offering a
grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.
shoulder to lean on when
Friends and relatives are invited to attend a reception in their
times are tou gh, tryin g on
honor, given by their children, at N ew 'Haven Community
each other's clothes and
Center from 2-4 p.1J1. The couple requests no gifts'.
cheering eac h other on.

®
Pleasant Valley Hospital .
Arthritis Support &amp;,oup

Thursday, July 12, 5 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Well ness Center
Multi-purpose Room
(304) 675- 8639
Aphasia Aseoclatlon a
Stroke Su""'t Group

Tuesday, Juiy 17, 1 p.m . .
Pleasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5250

Book helps.
calm kids

I!

~

~turday, July 7th from ·12:00 p.m. until 2:30 p.m., .Helicopter Flights ·
Incorporated will be at Overbrook Center giving nellcopter rides. Also . at this
time, Overbrook will be hosting a community picnic with comple~entary
fOod being provided and s~rved by Vaughan's Market.
,
· Overbrook'wo·uld like.to tha-n k the following contributors:
Flsher-Acree Funeral Home ·
Barbara Arnold Catering
Athens Medical Lab
Peoples Bank
Eastern Star

Lo Med Pharmacy
EdnaFench
Bowman's
Home
.
. Care
Farmers Bank
Sam Matson

·For More Information contact Mike Crites or Don Vaughan at (740) 992-6472.

•

1

-.

By A Moman~:
Lifehouse. DreamWdtks.
.
3: "My Beby," Lil' Romeo. Sool.:
ja/No Limit.
; ;
4. "Ride Wit Me," Nelly (feet.City Spud). Fo' Reel.
. - ·:
5. "Drops Of Jupiter (Tell Me);"

Call your Health care Provider or
the Gallia County Health
Department at
740-441-2950
For More Information.

•

Gibbs-Hysell engagem'ent

organs work.
.,.
Find
Out
Wh y
(http :/ /www.findoutwhy.org)
, which is cosponso'r ed by the
National Science Foundation
and features Disney characters
Timon and Pumbaa, not only
explains why noses run, why
· it rains and how a CD works,
it also offerS lists of even inore
que stion s the child hasn't
thought of yet - and the
answers:
KidsAstronomy.com
(http:/ / www.kidsastronomy.c
om) can help explain the concepts of space, the planets and
the
stars
to
young
astronomers with visual aids,
including photographs.
At Enchanted Learning
(http:/ / www.enchant·
edlearning.com), the Little
E)\plorers picture Jicti onary
will help explain more than
1,800 entries, ranging from
geog..phy to current events .

.Bumgczrner _5Oth

•

Tumpike Ford of Gallipolis
Mike McClery
. Candy Tillis
Ohio Valley Bank
Wheels and Deal~ ·

.

Marlene Gibbs and · Noah Hysell
•

lnt~~ging

Saturday, July
12:00 p.m. until 2:30 .·--~-·
. OVERBROOK CENTER
"" ,..

NEW YO.RK (AP)
Young children seem to be .
'curious about everything arid
they don't hesitate to ask
questions about it all.
I
~hy does my heart beat?
Where do babies come from?
What's a sneeze? Why do bees
buzz?
Family PC ma~azirie found
the answers, or at least it
found Web sites that have the
answers. A list of helpful sites
is in the July issue. ·
Parents and children can
look up the sites together and
go through the answer with a
combin ation of words, pictures and graphics that likely
will be dsier for the kids to
understand than a long, technical, fact-.fill e'd explanation.
Inner Learning Online
(http ://www.innerbody.com)
is a crash course in human
anatomy with animations of
how various systems and

Sydenstricker-Porter
engagement

•

HOT FIVE
• .
1. "Lady Marmalade," Christinjl:
Aguilera, Lit' Kim, Mya &amp;· Pin ~ .

REUNION 'POL CIES

C\V:eddlno ·

.

Sharon Sydenstrlcker and PhU Porter
'.

Smith wedding

.

'j),

Websites answer children's
curious 'why'. questions

Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy Smith

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

With the family reunion
season .quickly appr~achin.s
many w111' be subm1ttmg articles of family activities for
publication.
To ensure p"rompt publication, the Sunday Times-Sentinel requests that articles be
neatly typed and double
spaced for easy editing.
Reunion items should not
exceed 300 words a.,d must
be submitted within 30 days

· &amp;unba!' ~unr!J -&amp;rntinel • Page.C3

·,

FLASHBACKS

I.

.

.

•

_j

Pomeroy • Middleport_• Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

.Celebratio_ns

celebrations

Hartsfield wedding

Sunday, July 1, 2001

'

f

I

NEW YORK (AP) - To
children, doctors' offices are at
best . an unfamiliar ,Place. To
some, doctors' offices ate scary.
1 To make the experience a
little easier, the book "The
Doctor &amp; You" (An nick Press)
ai~s to explain the tools and
te~:hniques the doctor will use
so children can be better prepared for what will happen.
Pirst off, the book explains,
an pccasional trip to the doctor~ office is almost
- . unavoidable.
.
It says children visit doctors
"to get better" when they are
sick or injured and ''to keep
he.ilthy:'
· · · ·
Then it goes through a typical checkup, explaining the
scale the reflex hammer, the
'
· tongue
depressor and the
stethoscope.
Kids are given a "job" for
eac!h activiry - like keeping
th ~r legs " loose" for the retlex
test ·- that should be helpful
to •the doctor and help keep
the children's minds off whatever the doctor is doing!
-~~.-

..

•

Jackson Balles

. Dangers of U.V.
you ·tnr1w that many recent medical stu~ies have
cataracts and exposure to ultraviolet radiation?
C ~ta1!',ac ts,~ r the "clouding over· of th!-J naturl!llens within
can actually be cased by excess and unprotected
to U.V. This form of radiation Is mostly absorbed
t\)e\ ilens to protect th e retina, the sensitive·vision t~SM~ e
of the eye. Oltcn th e bad effecls of U.V. can be
1se1~n In people who have spent much time outdoors, such
farmers, athletes. and tradespeople.
To protect yourself from U.V., wear a hat and use.
lll&gt;erally. For the eyes, though , the best
protection Is an ultraviolet filter built Into your glasses.
Invisible shield acls to block transmission of all light
associated with U.V. Best prescrlbed.by your doctor.
filter should block 100% of the rays. Accept nothing
lles:s! Alter all, your good vlslon.ls invaluable and deserves
best protection .
I

,

or. A. Jackson Baile~ · o.d.
224 E. Main St. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
Toll Free 1-877

,
,,

.·

-·

"

.I

.
Ple•ant Valley·Wellnea Center
(Closed on July 4)
Now open at 8 a.m ..
Every Saturday
(304) 675-7222

Ball Room D8nclng
~ Every Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$5/per session
~304) 675-7222 ..
0

Alzheimer's Support Group

Aerobics

Tuesday, July 17, 7 p.m.
PJeasant Valley Rehabilitation Center
Sand Hill Road
(304) 675-5236

Mondays and Wednesdays, 6 p.m.
Tuesdays, 5:30 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Wellness Center
Multi-purpose Room
$2/members or $3/non-members
(304) 675-7222

Wings Grief Support Group

Thursday, July 19, 6:30 p.m.
Hartley Cdllference Room
(304) 675-7.400 . '
Cameo Ladies Breast

- . -·

Cancer Support Group

Monday, July 23, 7 p.m.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Buxton Conference Room
(304) 615-7997

For more Info...
about o·:r new Low Vision Olinic
CC!II (~4)_ 6~ 5-g2gQ " ·. _ ... ..

�•

!'

Page .C4 • itunb4p Cl'imtt ·ittntintl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio·• Point Pleasant,

Celebratioris

wV

engagement

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Bill and Connie Mitchem of
~oint "Pleasant, and Rodney "Butch" and Ava "Donna" Buck of
Leon, are announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their children, Laura Erin Mitchem and Jesse Wayne
Buck.
. Laura is the granddaughter of Charles "d'Dell" and No~ma
"Susie" Fisher of Point Pleasant, and Vivian Garnes of Pomeroy,
and the great-granddaughter of Helen Frances Fisher of Point
Pleasant. Jesse is the grandson of the late Clodus and Audren
Buck of Leon, and the late Eugene and Mary Ann Cossin of
Buffalo.
.·
The bride-to-be is a 200 I graduate from Point Pleasant High
· School and is an emp)oyee at the Iron Gate Restaurant. The .
bridegroom . is a graduate of 2000 from Point Pleasant High
School and is employed at the Iron Gate Cafe.
The Rev. Bill Banks will. perform the outdoor ceremony on
.July 8, 2001 at 4 p.m. at Krodel Park near the Clubhouse. A
covered dish reception will follow ·the ceremony. The couple
will reside in Buffalo.
·

'

MONDAY, July 2
SOUTHSIDE - Chubs weight
loss support group, Southside
. Community Center, weigh· ins
: 5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a'
: short meeting. ·

.

cherish this photo for the rest agree with ea~h other. The
of my life. Israel is a wonde!- future does not look good
ful country and it would be and I think many innocent
people will be killed.·
terrible to destroy it.
(Longtime Gallip'Olis business·
. P.S. I just read in the newsman
Max Tawney occasionally
paper where the Israel leader
Sharon says all violence must submits articles about his travels
stop before he will deal . Also atrd recollections &lt;if Gallipolis a11d
he and President Bush do not Gallia Coutrty.)

GALLIPOLIS
"Six
pouches of air mail, containing 2,3~8 pieces and weighing 30.5 pounds, were dispatched from the Gallipolis
post office by the pick-up and
delivery service of All American Association Inc., when air
mail was inaugurated here on
HISTORY
Sunday. There were 53 pieces
of incoming air mail for Gal- .
lipolis on Sunday and 64 letters for stamp and cachet
~ieces today (Monday), the
collectors .. These pieces of ·
· memorabilia have been avail- THAT WAS THEN- This photo
postmaster reported."
"Despite a downpour of able on e-bay several times 1939, from Gallipolis, the day
much-needed rain that came just this past year.
routes were established.
shortly before the plane was
One of the large benefacdue, a crowd gaihered around tors of air mail service was the a busy airport. Earlier. in the
the airpC!rt and ., watche.d , DOI)ly.Tribune.The newspaper decade, commercial flights
Lloyd Juelson pilot a Stinson could receive Acme telephoto made regular stops at the Galplane over the pick-up stan- news pictures from distribut- lipolis airport.
0
dards for three perfect con- - ing points in Cleveland and
Then, in 1935, a flight
tacts. Because of .rhe rain he N.WYork.
school under ·Lt. Hodgson
had set the plane_down on the
This allowed for pictures to · was started in Gallipolis at
field lor a few .minutes before appear in the local paper Holzer Field.
he attempted to make his · within 24 hours of actually
On July 7, 1935,' Gallipolis'
pick-ups. The rain kept away a ·being shot. We note some big first ambulance plane made its
score of planes that were to changes in the layout of the appearance at Holzer Field. A
· come from Huntington."
newspaper beginning in the four-place cabin Waco plape
The above is how the Gal- middle of 1939. Not only was flown here from Troy,
lipolis Daily Tribune reported photos came this way but so Ohio. It was made especially
May 29,1939, on the first air did carcoons. The newspaper for Dr. Holzer Sr., by the
mail service to Gallipolis, already had a few cartoons in Western Aircraft Co.
which started Sunday, May 1939, but in a few months
This Waco plane coula· trav28, 1939. That same day the more popular c:irtoo·ns like el at 165 mpp,'which meant it
delivery service, owned th.en - Pop eye (first aypeared in ·the could be in Columbus in 30
by Richard C. DuPont, start- local. newspaper, Jan. 1, 1940) minutes, in Cincinnati in 40
ed airmail pick-up in the fol- could be made available. .
minutes and to Charleston or
lowing West Virginia cities:
While that first air mail Huntington in 20 to 25 minParkersburg, Point Pleasant, flight came on a Sunday, reg- utes.
Milton
Hurricane ·and ular air mail service did not
A large crowd also attended
Glenville. In 1939, first class stop here on Sunday· again. the first landing of this new
mail went for 3 cents and air Thereafter, the plane passed ambulance plane. According
mail for 6 cents. When :iir over the airport daily, except to the Daily Tribune:
Stephanie Harmon and Jamu Ditty
mail was started in the U.S. in Sundays and holidays. In the "Observers were impressed
about 1918, air mail was 24 early days of a'irrnail, the plane not alone by the obvious
cents per letter.
did not land. The plane flew excellence of the plane, bu1
One would guess that most in such·a fashion that it could also by its equipment for
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. - Stephanie Lynn Aarmon of the 2,368 piec~ of mail extract the mail bag from a ambulance service and they
· and James E. Ditty announce their engagement and forthcom- that left Gallipolis dn that first line attached between poles. · seemed to sense the fact that
In the 1930s, Gallipolis had its arrival here · doubtless
day for air mail service were
ing marriage.
Stephanieis the daughter of Stephen and Pam Riffie of Gallipolis Ferry, and Chuck Harmon of Henderson. James is the
son of Jim and Jenny Ditty of Canal Winchester, Ohio,
Stephanie is a 1999 graduate of Point l:lleasant High School.
She currently attends Marshall University, majoring in elementary education.
·1981 with a native served as a legislative
GALLIPOLIS - State Rep.
James is a 1997 graduate ofTaegu American High School in
lfl &gt; assistant for Miller in Washingdegree
John Carey will be speaking at
: ' South Korea. He plans to attend Hocking College to complete Fint Church of God, Garfield
ton,'and as his representative in
scipolitic~
·-fis computer science degree.
· .
'
Ohio.
ence.
Ave., Tuesday, July 3, at 7 p.m.
Both are employed by Wal-Mart of Gallipolis.
Carey
C~ is the son of John A.
The wedding will be at the First Church of God, Point Pleas- Carey Sr. and Sylvia Carey,
worked for
ant, on July 21 at 2:30p.m. A reception will follow at the Point . both ofWellston. He is a fifth
Pleasant Youth Center.
generation Wellston resident,
Clarence
The couple will reside in Point Pleasant.
· graduating from Wellston High
Miller 1981School in 1977. He graduated
88. The Jack•
from with Ohio University in
son County

~~-~-~~~ii~~~~i;i~ === !!!!'!~~

Harmon-Ditty engagement

In ·an effort to provide our occurrence.
.
All material submitted lor
readership with current
news, the Sunday Times-Sen- ·publication ~s su.bject to edittin·el will not accept wed· mg.
dings after 90 days from the
·
date of the evenL
Weddings submitted after
the 90-day deadline will
appear dunng the week in
The Daily Sentinel, Point
CAifTOOHtO
Pleasant Register and the.
IUHDlHn. tAU
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
_ _ _......,,..,o. -...
AttQINT~l"f1 ,
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society
• FREE
section must be submitted
within 60 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must be sub·
mitted within ~ days of the

CHESHIRE- Jacob and Mag·
gie Davis reunion will be held at
Kyger Creek Clubhouse, ,12:30
p.m.

LEON -The Baden Community old fashioned ice cream
social, Baden Community Cen·
ter, W.Va. 87, ·starting 4 p.m.

· POINT PLEASANT- Alco·
7:30p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side
entrance of C~sey Law Office.

POOLS AND

WEDNESDAY, July 4
POINT PLEASANT Wednesday night Bible clubs
for preschool up through 12th
grade, 7 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel
Lighthouse Church, Neal
Road. For information call 675·
• 7229 or 675-6620.

: ~olicsAno~mous,

TUESDAY, July 3
LETART- HELP Diet Class,
Letart Community Center.
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
followed by short meeting.
FLATROCK - Clothing closet
give away every Tuesday at ·
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

is of a letter mailed May 28,
experimental air mail pick-up

SUNDAY, July 8
POINT PLEASANT- .Gospel
music at Pioneer Days, Farm
Museum, with Beth Wilcox
Lake, Mercy, Family Circle,
Joyce Banks and Watchmen
for Jesus .

POINT PLEASANT - Alco·
holies Anpnymous, 7:30p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side
entrance of Casey Law Office.

POINT PLEASANT- Rainey
reunion, Krodel Park. Bring
covered dish for potluck dinner.-

THURSOAY, July 5
POINT PLEASANT - TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) 5
p.m. weigh in and meeting at
5:30p.m. at Trinity United
MethOdist Church. For informa·
lion call 675·3692.

REVIVALS
LEQN - Evangelistic services
at Shiloh Community Church,
Leon Baden Road, for 12 con-,
secutive Saturday nights
beginning April 7-at 7 p.m. with
Evangelist Stanley Shaffer and
special singing every service.

POINT PLEASAiiiT- Clothing
give a~ay every Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon at Potnt Pleasant
:.l'resbyterian Church, Bth.and_
Main. Clothing contributions.
appreciated.
MASON - Community Cancer
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
- United Methodist Church. All
area cancer patients, families
.and caregivers invited.

POINT PLEASANT - Branch·
es Adult Support Group, 1 p.m.
Fort Randolph Community
• Roo.in, Building 123. No fee.
For more information, call 675·
4968.
-pOINT PLEASANT- Recruit-

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

POINT PLEASANT- Old
Fashioned Tent Revival, June
25·30, at Krodel Park at 7 p.m.
Preaching by Darrell Johnson,
Truman Johnson and Donnie
Johnson . Special singing nightly.

'

POINT PLEASANT- Weight
Watchers, Christ Episcopal
Church with weigh in at 4:45
p.m. and 5:15 p.m.
.
NEW HAVEN- New Haven
Jr. OUAM 175 meeting, 7 p.m.

LEON - Revival at Harvey
Chapel Church, 10 Mile Creek
Road, July 5·7 with Evangelist
John Elswick at 7 p.m. Singers
wilt be ·Giorytand Believers,
Rollins Family and Messengers
for Christ.

LEON - Baden Community
will be freezing ice cream for
the social at the Community
Center at 6 p.m. All help
appreciated.

APPLE GROVE- Youth
Revival, Mount Carmel Church,
July 2·6, 7 p.m. with Joe Birch·
field, Woody Woods and Mark
Williams. Special singing nightly.

.

SATURDAY, July 7
SOUTHSIDE- Dance at
Southside Community Center,
Rocky Mountain Boys, 7 !o.tO
p.m.

CARD SHOWER
LEON -John Harmon will eelebrate his 80th birthday July 7.
His address is John Harmon,
At. 3, Box 71, Leon, W.Va.
25123.

POINT PLEASANT - Alco·
liolics Anonymous, 8 p.m ..
Point Pleasant Presbyterian
Church, corner of 8th and
Main, use side door.

.E,MAJL: -@mydallylrlbune.com
marked a new epoch in the
history of both the Holzer
Hospital and the Holzer Airport:'
.
That same day, George .
Kratz became the -seGond- af
Hodgson's students to fly solo.
Paul Graham was the first.
And on the same day the first
journalist, Miss Mary Scales of
the Logan, W.Va., Banner,
went aloft from the Holzer
Airport. Miss Scales was actually ah old hand at flying. She
had become the world's first
newspaper reporter to cover a
wedding that tool.c place
within .the cont'in.es of an airplane.
We are not sure· how long
piane
the
ambulance
remained a part of Holzer
Hospital. Air mail service to
Gallipolis actually lasted only
a few years. Regular passenger
service here also had a brief
history. The flight school continued on for several years,
however.
aames Sands is a speda/ correspondent for the Sunday TimesSentinel. He can be contacted by
writing to 346 Meadow Lane,
Circleville, Ohio 43113.)

neWs@mydallynclster.com
news@mydallysentlnel.com
•
.

Brand New 2001 Pontiac

New 2001

Brand New 2001 Chevy

~"3J5i*

iiJ,i5i .if2l5ii!

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Sunroof, CD System
• Keyless Entiy, Power Locks

• 3400 V-6 Power
• Power Wind.,
AMIFM Stereo W/ Casset111 ~

Carey to.address Gallipolis First Church ·of God.

-

ment meeting for Mason County's Fourth Annual American
KANAUGA- Dance at
Cancer Society Relay for Life.
AMVETS, 7:30 p.m.
7 p.m., Mason County He!lith
Department Conference Room. .POINT PLEASANT- Duncan
For more information, call Lauri and Kinnaird Reunion, noon,
B. Johnson at 304-675-7997.
Krodel Park large sheHer.

.HENDERSON - Line dancing,
Henderson Community Building, with instructor Dawn Hal·
·stead. Beginners 6 p.m. and
advanced 7 p.m.

James
Sands

lr-----------------------------------

Mason

SUNDAY, July 1.
ADDISON - Preaching service
at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus
preaching.

.

ARMED AND DANGEROUS - Max Tawney, left, toured the ..
Middle East in 1988 with his daughter Betsy. Max calls it a
•real historic- trip.· Of the Israeli soldier, Max recalls, "he let
me hold his gun." "'

.,.

Page CS
.1,1001

. SOUTHSIDE - The Rev.
Robert Hurley will speak at
:GALLIPOLIS F~RRY- GalBeech Hill United Methodist
·.church, 11 a.m. Potluck fellow· lipolis Ferry Community Center
· •ship to Jollow.
' meeting, 2:30p.m.

~

'

- Preaching ser·
Vice at Addison Freewill Baptist
_Church, 6 p.m. with Rick Bar·
: cus preaching.
APPLE GROVE - Gospel
· Sounds will sing at Millstone
Church, ~p. m .

Gallipolis celebrated
laun:ch if short-: lived air mail service
.
"

•

~DOlSON

Tawney

Mitchem~ Buck

I

SUNDAY, July 1
PLINY- Dunn Family Tribute.
10 a.m., Mount Union Church .

.

GALLIPOLIS - Recendy
'
I have been watching on TV
the trouble they are having in
Israel, and it looks as though it
is going to get worse.
The people in Lebanon,
Syria and Jordan hate the
Israelis and I think they always
will. ~ look for killing to go
GUEST VIEW
on for a long time. I sure hope
aqd p.ray ·the United States
,
does not get involved with there I have learned more histheir problems by sending sol- tory ·about the Bible times of
diers over· there a.nd be in a Israel. It . is wonderful. If you
war.
.
1 go there, you will want to go
It is beautiful country and it again ~nd I did, I only hope
would be a shame to keep on . they quit killing each other
killing each other and destroy over where Jesus was born,
the history of Jesus and the h'ung on the cross and was
Bible ~f that beautiful coun- · resurrected.
In the Bible, the descentry.
.
. I have been there several darits of Abrahanr are called
times, twice with my daugh- the Hebrews, or the Israelites.
ter Betsy, and she sure knows Citizens of modern Israel, no
the Bible. On one of our matter what their religion, are
tours.with a supposedly well- called Israelis."Most, but not
informed guide about the all are, Israelis are Jews. The
Bible my daughter corrected religion of the, Jews is
him two or fhtee times and he Ju&lt;i!ism. T~is was the first reliagreed 'l'{ith her.' He said it gion to express belief in one
was only his second day on God only.
,
the job..
·
This photo of my daughter
It ·is unbelievable the histo- Betsy and I with these friendry that is in .the land of Israel. . "ly soldiers who let me hold
All the times I. have, bee!! . his gun for the photo. I will

•

•

· ·junb~ ~imts· jtnthttl

Turmoil in Middle Ea:;t troubling for frequent flier
Mk

Laura Mitchem and JeSie Buck

., .

Sunday, July 1, 2001

•16" Aluminum Wheels
• Air Conditioning
Sport Suspension

GALLIPOLIS- GAHS class of j
'54 reunion potluck plCnlc at ol
p.m., Fortiification Hill Shelter·
house, Mcintyre Park, 'table service, bring food and/or beverages, scrapbooks etc. All GAHS
former students welcome.
PORTER -The Rev. Lucian
Nelson will preach at Clark
Chapel Churcl'l, 7 p.m.

from Cleafork, W.Va., will sing at
Debbie Drive Chapel, 7 p.m.
THURSDAY, July 5
GALLIPOLIS - GAHS class of
'54.brunch at Red Rooster
Restaurant, Jackson Pike. Ques·
lions, call Jean Allison at 446·
3969.
GALLIPOLIS - John Gee Black
Historical Center will be open to
the public from 10 &lt;1.m. • 2 p.m.
Registration for basket·weaving
available at this time.

ADDISON -There will be a
.MONDAY, July 2
..
GALLIPOLIS- John Gee Black prayer meeting, 7:30p.m., at
Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
Historical Center will be open to
with Jack Parsons preaching.
the public from 10 a.m.- 2 p.m.
Registration for basket weaving
. SUNDAY, July 8
classes available at this time.
ADDISON - There will be a
preaching service at Addison
TUESDAY, July 3
GALLIPOLIS - AI·Anon, support Freewill Baptist Church, 6 p.m.,
with Rick Barcus preaching.
group for friends and families of
alcoholics and addicts, meets 8
Tent meetings &amp; revivals
p.m. at St. Peter's Episcopal
There will be a revival at Lecta
Church.
'
Church of Christ in Christian
GALLIPOLIS - State Rep. John Union, intersection of Ohio 790
and n5, June 25· July 1' 7 p.m.
Carey will be guest speaker at
nightly. W.B. Harrison and 1st
First Church of God, Garfield
elder
Rev. Clarice Dillon preach·
Ave., 7 p.m.
ing; singers Beaver Family, For·
given 4 and others.
·
WEDNESDAY, July 4
GALLIPOLIS- Stewart family

.

SUNDAY, July 1
MIDDLEPORT- Celebration
25th anniversary, Middleport
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church,
Sunday. Dinner on the grounds
following morning service and
special se~ice at 2:30 p.m.
RACINE - Daniel and Catherine
Rose family reunion, Sunday, ·1
p.m., home of Jim and Karen
Weny, Court Street Road, mom·
ing Star, .Racine. Barbecue chick·
en provided along with table service. Family and friends. Rain will
not cancel.

budget hearing .
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
Trustees. 7:3Q p.m. Monday at
the Syracuse Village hall.
LETART FALLS - Letart Town·
ship Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m.,
office building.

. RACINE - Leonard and Susan
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Jane Roush reunion Sunday,
Local brd of Education, 7 p.m.,
Star Mill Park, 12:30 p.m. Bring
special meeting at administrative
covered dish and dessefl·~
. - - - ·-Office, to discuss budget personnel, and any other business that
may be legally addressed.
MONDAY, July 2 ·
RUTLAND- Rutland Township · .
TUESDAY, July 3
Trustees, 5 p.m. Monday, RutALFRED- Orange Township
land fire station following annual
0

New 200t Chevy

Brand New 2002 Chevy

Old fashioned tent revivat ·at
Krodet' Park, Point Pleasant,
June 25·30, 7 p.m. nighUy.· Revs.
Darrell, Truman and Donny John·
son preaching &amp; special singing.
Card Sho~rs

.·

A card shoWer is being held for .
Sybil French as she celebrates
her 89th birthday. Cards may be
sent to 17 Neil Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631
A car\f shower is

~ing held for
Mabel Ora Cheesebrew as she
celebrates her 90th birttyiay July
19th. Cards may be SEIPI to P.O.
Box 234, Rio Grande. Ohio
45674.

Aget-well card shower is being
held for Diana Gladman. Cards
may be sent to 516 Houlk Road .
Crown City, Ohio 45623.
Bible School
EWINGTON - Bible School at
Ewington Church, 176 Ewington
Road, July 9·13, 6:30-8 p.m.
Theme is "Jesus to the Rescue." ·
For more information, call 388·.
9895.
OAK HILL- Penial Community
Church is holding bible school
July 9-13, from 6-8 Jl.m. nightly.
Everyone welcome .

Trustees budget meeting, Tues·
day 7:30 p.m., followetl by regu·
far meeting, at the home of the
clerk Osie Follrod.
.MIDDLEPORT- American Red
Cross bloodmobile, 11 a.m. to 5
p.m., Middleport Church of .
Christ. Free Red Cross T-shirt
and hot dogs to donors:
•

Community Calendar Is published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to
·
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund·mlsers of any type.

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Page .C4 • itunb4p Cl'imtt ·ittntintl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio·• Point Pleasant,

Celebratioris

wV

engagement

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Bill and Connie Mitchem of
~oint "Pleasant, and Rodney "Butch" and Ava "Donna" Buck of
Leon, are announcing the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their children, Laura Erin Mitchem and Jesse Wayne
Buck.
. Laura is the granddaughter of Charles "d'Dell" and No~ma
"Susie" Fisher of Point Pleasant, and Vivian Garnes of Pomeroy,
and the great-granddaughter of Helen Frances Fisher of Point
Pleasant. Jesse is the grandson of the late Clodus and Audren
Buck of Leon, and the late Eugene and Mary Ann Cossin of
Buffalo.
.·
The bride-to-be is a 200 I graduate from Point Pleasant High
· School and is an emp)oyee at the Iron Gate Restaurant. The .
bridegroom . is a graduate of 2000 from Point Pleasant High
School and is employed at the Iron Gate Cafe.
The Rev. Bill Banks will. perform the outdoor ceremony on
.July 8, 2001 at 4 p.m. at Krodel Park near the Clubhouse. A
covered dish reception will follow ·the ceremony. The couple
will reside in Buffalo.
·

'

MONDAY, July 2
SOUTHSIDE - Chubs weight
loss support group, Southside
. Community Center, weigh· ins
: 5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a'
: short meeting. ·

.

cherish this photo for the rest agree with ea~h other. The
of my life. Israel is a wonde!- future does not look good
ful country and it would be and I think many innocent
people will be killed.·
terrible to destroy it.
(Longtime Gallip'Olis business·
. P.S. I just read in the newsman
Max Tawney occasionally
paper where the Israel leader
Sharon says all violence must submits articles about his travels
stop before he will deal . Also atrd recollections &lt;if Gallipolis a11d
he and President Bush do not Gallia Coutrty.)

GALLIPOLIS
"Six
pouches of air mail, containing 2,3~8 pieces and weighing 30.5 pounds, were dispatched from the Gallipolis
post office by the pick-up and
delivery service of All American Association Inc., when air
mail was inaugurated here on
HISTORY
Sunday. There were 53 pieces
of incoming air mail for Gal- .
lipolis on Sunday and 64 letters for stamp and cachet
~ieces today (Monday), the
collectors .. These pieces of ·
· memorabilia have been avail- THAT WAS THEN- This photo
postmaster reported."
"Despite a downpour of able on e-bay several times 1939, from Gallipolis, the day
much-needed rain that came just this past year.
routes were established.
shortly before the plane was
One of the large benefacdue, a crowd gaihered around tors of air mail service was the a busy airport. Earlier. in the
the airpC!rt and ., watche.d , DOI)ly.Tribune.The newspaper decade, commercial flights
Lloyd Juelson pilot a Stinson could receive Acme telephoto made regular stops at the Galplane over the pick-up stan- news pictures from distribut- lipolis airport.
0
dards for three perfect con- - ing points in Cleveland and
Then, in 1935, a flight
tacts. Because of .rhe rain he N.WYork.
school under ·Lt. Hodgson
had set the plane_down on the
This allowed for pictures to · was started in Gallipolis at
field lor a few .minutes before appear in the local paper Holzer Field.
he attempted to make his · within 24 hours of actually
On July 7, 1935,' Gallipolis'
pick-ups. The rain kept away a ·being shot. We note some big first ambulance plane made its
score of planes that were to changes in the layout of the appearance at Holzer Field. A
· come from Huntington."
newspaper beginning in the four-place cabin Waco plape
The above is how the Gal- middle of 1939. Not only was flown here from Troy,
lipolis Daily Tribune reported photos came this way but so Ohio. It was made especially
May 29,1939, on the first air did carcoons. The newspaper for Dr. Holzer Sr., by the
mail service to Gallipolis, already had a few cartoons in Western Aircraft Co.
which started Sunday, May 1939, but in a few months
This Waco plane coula· trav28, 1939. That same day the more popular c:irtoo·ns like el at 165 mpp,'which meant it
delivery service, owned th.en - Pop eye (first aypeared in ·the could be in Columbus in 30
by Richard C. DuPont, start- local. newspaper, Jan. 1, 1940) minutes, in Cincinnati in 40
ed airmail pick-up in the fol- could be made available. .
minutes and to Charleston or
lowing West Virginia cities:
While that first air mail Huntington in 20 to 25 minParkersburg, Point Pleasant, flight came on a Sunday, reg- utes.
Milton
Hurricane ·and ular air mail service did not
A large crowd also attended
Glenville. In 1939, first class stop here on Sunday· again. the first landing of this new
mail went for 3 cents and air Thereafter, the plane passed ambulance plane. According
mail for 6 cents. When :iir over the airport daily, except to the Daily Tribune:
Stephanie Harmon and Jamu Ditty
mail was started in the U.S. in Sundays and holidays. In the "Observers were impressed
about 1918, air mail was 24 early days of a'irrnail, the plane not alone by the obvious
cents per letter.
did not land. The plane flew excellence of the plane, bu1
One would guess that most in such·a fashion that it could also by its equipment for
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. - Stephanie Lynn Aarmon of the 2,368 piec~ of mail extract the mail bag from a ambulance service and they
· and James E. Ditty announce their engagement and forthcom- that left Gallipolis dn that first line attached between poles. · seemed to sense the fact that
In the 1930s, Gallipolis had its arrival here · doubtless
day for air mail service were
ing marriage.
Stephanieis the daughter of Stephen and Pam Riffie of Gallipolis Ferry, and Chuck Harmon of Henderson. James is the
son of Jim and Jenny Ditty of Canal Winchester, Ohio,
Stephanie is a 1999 graduate of Point l:lleasant High School.
She currently attends Marshall University, majoring in elementary education.
·1981 with a native served as a legislative
GALLIPOLIS - State Rep.
James is a 1997 graduate ofTaegu American High School in
lfl &gt; assistant for Miller in Washingdegree
John Carey will be speaking at
: ' South Korea. He plans to attend Hocking College to complete Fint Church of God, Garfield
ton,'and as his representative in
scipolitic~
·-fis computer science degree.
· .
'
Ohio.
ence.
Ave., Tuesday, July 3, at 7 p.m.
Both are employed by Wal-Mart of Gallipolis.
Carey
C~ is the son of John A.
The wedding will be at the First Church of God, Point Pleas- Carey Sr. and Sylvia Carey,
worked for
ant, on July 21 at 2:30p.m. A reception will follow at the Point . both ofWellston. He is a fifth
Pleasant Youth Center.
generation Wellston resident,
Clarence
The couple will reside in Point Pleasant.
· graduating from Wellston High
Miller 1981School in 1977. He graduated
88. The Jack•
from with Ohio University in
son County

~~-~-~~~ii~~~~i;i~ === !!!!'!~~

Harmon-Ditty engagement

In ·an effort to provide our occurrence.
.
All material submitted lor
readership with current
news, the Sunday Times-Sen- ·publication ~s su.bject to edittin·el will not accept wed· mg.
dings after 90 days from the
·
date of the evenL
Weddings submitted after
the 90-day deadline will
appear dunng the week in
The Daily Sentinel, Point
CAifTOOHtO
Pleasant Register and the.
IUHDlHn. tAU
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
_ _ _......,,..,o. -...
AttQINT~l"f1 ,
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society
• FREE
section must be submitted
within 60 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must be sub·
mitted within ~ days of the

CHESHIRE- Jacob and Mag·
gie Davis reunion will be held at
Kyger Creek Clubhouse, ,12:30
p.m.

LEON -The Baden Community old fashioned ice cream
social, Baden Community Cen·
ter, W.Va. 87, ·starting 4 p.m.

· POINT PLEASANT- Alco·
7:30p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side
entrance of C~sey Law Office.

POOLS AND

WEDNESDAY, July 4
POINT PLEASANT Wednesday night Bible clubs
for preschool up through 12th
grade, 7 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel
Lighthouse Church, Neal
Road. For information call 675·
• 7229 or 675-6620.

: ~olicsAno~mous,

TUESDAY, July 3
LETART- HELP Diet Class,
Letart Community Center.
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m.
followed by short meeting.
FLATROCK - Clothing closet
give away every Tuesday at ·
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

is of a letter mailed May 28,
experimental air mail pick-up

SUNDAY, July 8
POINT PLEASANT- .Gospel
music at Pioneer Days, Farm
Museum, with Beth Wilcox
Lake, Mercy, Family Circle,
Joyce Banks and Watchmen
for Jesus .

POINT PLEASANT - Alco·
holies Anpnymous, 7:30p.m.,
611 Viand St. Use side
entrance of Casey Law Office.

POINT PLEASANT- Rainey
reunion, Krodel Park. Bring
covered dish for potluck dinner.-

THURSOAY, July 5
POINT PLEASANT - TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) 5
p.m. weigh in and meeting at
5:30p.m. at Trinity United
MethOdist Church. For informa·
lion call 675·3692.

REVIVALS
LEQN - Evangelistic services
at Shiloh Community Church,
Leon Baden Road, for 12 con-,
secutive Saturday nights
beginning April 7-at 7 p.m. with
Evangelist Stanley Shaffer and
special singing every service.

POINT PLEASAiiiT- Clothing
give a~ay every Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon at Potnt Pleasant
:.l'resbyterian Church, Bth.and_
Main. Clothing contributions.
appreciated.
MASON - Community Cancer
Support Group, 7 p.m., Mason
- United Methodist Church. All
area cancer patients, families
.and caregivers invited.

POINT PLEASANT - Branch·
es Adult Support Group, 1 p.m.
Fort Randolph Community
• Roo.in, Building 123. No fee.
For more information, call 675·
4968.
-pOINT PLEASANT- Recruit-

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

POINT PLEASANT- Old
Fashioned Tent Revival, June
25·30, at Krodel Park at 7 p.m.
Preaching by Darrell Johnson,
Truman Johnson and Donnie
Johnson . Special singing nightly.

'

POINT PLEASANT- Weight
Watchers, Christ Episcopal
Church with weigh in at 4:45
p.m. and 5:15 p.m.
.
NEW HAVEN- New Haven
Jr. OUAM 175 meeting, 7 p.m.

LEON - Revival at Harvey
Chapel Church, 10 Mile Creek
Road, July 5·7 with Evangelist
John Elswick at 7 p.m. Singers
wilt be ·Giorytand Believers,
Rollins Family and Messengers
for Christ.

LEON - Baden Community
will be freezing ice cream for
the social at the Community
Center at 6 p.m. All help
appreciated.

APPLE GROVE- Youth
Revival, Mount Carmel Church,
July 2·6, 7 p.m. with Joe Birch·
field, Woody Woods and Mark
Williams. Special singing nightly.

.

SATURDAY, July 7
SOUTHSIDE- Dance at
Southside Community Center,
Rocky Mountain Boys, 7 !o.tO
p.m.

CARD SHOWER
LEON -John Harmon will eelebrate his 80th birthday July 7.
His address is John Harmon,
At. 3, Box 71, Leon, W.Va.
25123.

POINT PLEASANT - Alco·
liolics Anonymous, 8 p.m ..
Point Pleasant Presbyterian
Church, corner of 8th and
Main, use side door.

.E,MAJL: -@mydallylrlbune.com
marked a new epoch in the
history of both the Holzer
Hospital and the Holzer Airport:'
.
That same day, George .
Kratz became the -seGond- af
Hodgson's students to fly solo.
Paul Graham was the first.
And on the same day the first
journalist, Miss Mary Scales of
the Logan, W.Va., Banner,
went aloft from the Holzer
Airport. Miss Scales was actually ah old hand at flying. She
had become the world's first
newspaper reporter to cover a
wedding that tool.c place
within .the cont'in.es of an airplane.
We are not sure· how long
piane
the
ambulance
remained a part of Holzer
Hospital. Air mail service to
Gallipolis actually lasted only
a few years. Regular passenger
service here also had a brief
history. The flight school continued on for several years,
however.
aames Sands is a speda/ correspondent for the Sunday TimesSentinel. He can be contacted by
writing to 346 Meadow Lane,
Circleville, Ohio 43113.)

neWs@mydallynclster.com
news@mydallysentlnel.com
•
.

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Carey to.address Gallipolis First Church ·of God.

-

ment meeting for Mason County's Fourth Annual American
KANAUGA- Dance at
Cancer Society Relay for Life.
AMVETS, 7:30 p.m.
7 p.m., Mason County He!lith
Department Conference Room. .POINT PLEASANT- Duncan
For more information, call Lauri and Kinnaird Reunion, noon,
B. Johnson at 304-675-7997.
Krodel Park large sheHer.

.HENDERSON - Line dancing,
Henderson Community Building, with instructor Dawn Hal·
·stead. Beginners 6 p.m. and
advanced 7 p.m.

James
Sands

lr-----------------------------------

Mason

SUNDAY, July 1.
ADDISON - Preaching service
at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m., with Rick Barcus
preaching.

.

ARMED AND DANGEROUS - Max Tawney, left, toured the ..
Middle East in 1988 with his daughter Betsy. Max calls it a
•real historic- trip.· Of the Israeli soldier, Max recalls, "he let
me hold his gun." "'

.,.

Page CS
.1,1001

. SOUTHSIDE - The Rev.
Robert Hurley will speak at
:GALLIPOLIS F~RRY- GalBeech Hill United Methodist
·.church, 11 a.m. Potluck fellow· lipolis Ferry Community Center
· •ship to Jollow.
' meeting, 2:30p.m.

~

'

- Preaching ser·
Vice at Addison Freewill Baptist
_Church, 6 p.m. with Rick Bar·
: cus preaching.
APPLE GROVE - Gospel
· Sounds will sing at Millstone
Church, ~p. m .

Gallipolis celebrated
laun:ch if short-: lived air mail service
.
"

•

~DOlSON

Tawney

Mitchem~ Buck

I

SUNDAY, July 1
PLINY- Dunn Family Tribute.
10 a.m., Mount Union Church .

.

GALLIPOLIS - Recendy
'
I have been watching on TV
the trouble they are having in
Israel, and it looks as though it
is going to get worse.
The people in Lebanon,
Syria and Jordan hate the
Israelis and I think they always
will. ~ look for killing to go
GUEST VIEW
on for a long time. I sure hope
aqd p.ray ·the United States
,
does not get involved with there I have learned more histheir problems by sending sol- tory ·about the Bible times of
diers over· there a.nd be in a Israel. It . is wonderful. If you
war.
.
1 go there, you will want to go
It is beautiful country and it again ~nd I did, I only hope
would be a shame to keep on . they quit killing each other
killing each other and destroy over where Jesus was born,
the history of Jesus and the h'ung on the cross and was
Bible ~f that beautiful coun- · resurrected.
In the Bible, the descentry.
.
. I have been there several darits of Abrahanr are called
times, twice with my daugh- the Hebrews, or the Israelites.
ter Betsy, and she sure knows Citizens of modern Israel, no
the Bible. On one of our matter what their religion, are
tours.with a supposedly well- called Israelis."Most, but not
informed guide about the all are, Israelis are Jews. The
Bible my daughter corrected religion of the, Jews is
him two or fhtee times and he Ju&lt;i!ism. T~is was the first reliagreed 'l'{ith her.' He said it gion to express belief in one
was only his second day on God only.
,
the job..
·
This photo of my daughter
It ·is unbelievable the histo- Betsy and I with these friendry that is in .the land of Israel. . "ly soldiers who let me hold
All the times I. have, bee!! . his gun for the photo. I will

•

•

· ·junb~ ~imts· jtnthttl

Turmoil in Middle Ea:;t troubling for frequent flier
Mk

Laura Mitchem and JeSie Buck

., .

Sunday, July 1, 2001

•16" Aluminum Wheels
• Air Conditioning
Sport Suspension

GALLIPOLIS- GAHS class of j
'54 reunion potluck plCnlc at ol
p.m., Fortiification Hill Shelter·
house, Mcintyre Park, 'table service, bring food and/or beverages, scrapbooks etc. All GAHS
former students welcome.
PORTER -The Rev. Lucian
Nelson will preach at Clark
Chapel Churcl'l, 7 p.m.

from Cleafork, W.Va., will sing at
Debbie Drive Chapel, 7 p.m.
THURSDAY, July 5
GALLIPOLIS - GAHS class of
'54.brunch at Red Rooster
Restaurant, Jackson Pike. Ques·
lions, call Jean Allison at 446·
3969.
GALLIPOLIS - John Gee Black
Historical Center will be open to
the public from 10 &lt;1.m. • 2 p.m.
Registration for basket·weaving
available at this time.

ADDISON -There will be a
.MONDAY, July 2
..
GALLIPOLIS- John Gee Black prayer meeting, 7:30p.m., at
Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
Historical Center will be open to
with Jack Parsons preaching.
the public from 10 a.m.- 2 p.m.
Registration for basket weaving
. SUNDAY, July 8
classes available at this time.
ADDISON - There will be a
preaching service at Addison
TUESDAY, July 3
GALLIPOLIS - AI·Anon, support Freewill Baptist Church, 6 p.m.,
with Rick Barcus preaching.
group for friends and families of
alcoholics and addicts, meets 8
Tent meetings &amp; revivals
p.m. at St. Peter's Episcopal
There will be a revival at Lecta
Church.
'
Church of Christ in Christian
GALLIPOLIS - State Rep. John Union, intersection of Ohio 790
and n5, June 25· July 1' 7 p.m.
Carey will be guest speaker at
nightly. W.B. Harrison and 1st
First Church of God, Garfield
elder
Rev. Clarice Dillon preach·
Ave., 7 p.m.
ing; singers Beaver Family, For·
given 4 and others.
·
WEDNESDAY, July 4
GALLIPOLIS- Stewart family

.

SUNDAY, July 1
MIDDLEPORT- Celebration
25th anniversary, Middleport
Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church,
Sunday. Dinner on the grounds
following morning service and
special se~ice at 2:30 p.m.
RACINE - Daniel and Catherine
Rose family reunion, Sunday, ·1
p.m., home of Jim and Karen
Weny, Court Street Road, mom·
ing Star, .Racine. Barbecue chick·
en provided along with table service. Family and friends. Rain will
not cancel.

budget hearing .
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township
Trustees. 7:3Q p.m. Monday at
the Syracuse Village hall.
LETART FALLS - Letart Town·
ship Trustees, Monday, 5 p.m.,
office building.

. RACINE - Leonard and Susan
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern
Jane Roush reunion Sunday,
Local brd of Education, 7 p.m.,
Star Mill Park, 12:30 p.m. Bring
special meeting at administrative
covered dish and dessefl·~
. - - - ·-Office, to discuss budget personnel, and any other business that
may be legally addressed.
MONDAY, July 2 ·
RUTLAND- Rutland Township · .
TUESDAY, July 3
Trustees, 5 p.m. Monday, RutALFRED- Orange Township
land fire station following annual
0

New 200t Chevy

Brand New 2002 Chevy

Old fashioned tent revivat ·at
Krodet' Park, Point Pleasant,
June 25·30, 7 p.m. nighUy.· Revs.
Darrell, Truman and Donny John·
son preaching &amp; special singing.
Card Sho~rs

.·

A card shoWer is being held for .
Sybil French as she celebrates
her 89th birthday. Cards may be
sent to 17 Neil Ave., Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631
A car\f shower is

~ing held for
Mabel Ora Cheesebrew as she
celebrates her 90th birttyiay July
19th. Cards may be SEIPI to P.O.
Box 234, Rio Grande. Ohio
45674.

Aget-well card shower is being
held for Diana Gladman. Cards
may be sent to 516 Houlk Road .
Crown City, Ohio 45623.
Bible School
EWINGTON - Bible School at
Ewington Church, 176 Ewington
Road, July 9·13, 6:30-8 p.m.
Theme is "Jesus to the Rescue." ·
For more information, call 388·.
9895.
OAK HILL- Penial Community
Church is holding bible school
July 9-13, from 6-8 Jl.m. nightly.
Everyone welcome .

Trustees budget meeting, Tues·
day 7:30 p.m., followetl by regu·
far meeting, at the home of the
clerk Osie Follrod.
.MIDDLEPORT- American Red
Cross bloodmobile, 11 a.m. to 5
p.m., Middleport Church of .
Christ. Free Red Cross T-shirt
and hot dogs to donors:
•

Community Calendar Is published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to
·
announce meetings and special events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund·mlsers of any type.

Brand New 2001 Chevy
Tahoe LS 4 Door 4x4

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2001 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedan

2000 Chevy Blazer
· LS 4 Door 4x4

2000 Chevy Venture
Elit~tnded 4 Door Van

De Best Seleclill

He defeated the Wellston
Mayor in 1988 by a four-toone margin and took the chief
executive jobj

2000 Chevy
Cavalier Sedan

2000 Buick Century
. Custom Sedan

2000 Oldsmobile
Alero GL Sedan

-~8,950*. ~2,350* ~2,150* .
• Automatic
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• Automatic, Air Conditioning
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CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise

• Power Driver's Seat
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• Tilt, Cruise

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Aluminum Wheels

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows, Locks, Mirrors
Tilt, Cruise, CD System

···.-. •.. axes,,a,
• gs lille· Fees extra · Rebate included.in sale pnce of new vehidelisted wllere applicable. "On approved credl. On selected models. Not respoosible
, for typographical errors.
Prices Good June 27th Through August 1st.

.

.

·

.

H

- .

-

CHIVROLIT

(.~').~.)

l11lck
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_Page C7

'

sundiiJ, July 1, 1001

If yOu go to .

1

the Jemez Trail
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GEmNG THERE: Whether

New Mexico's laid-back lifestyle is conducive
for the clothing-optional policy at the· natural hot springs which

EASY GOING -

THE

bubble from mountain slopes near Jemez Springs, N.M ~ (AP
Photo/Pat Vasquez-Cunn ingham )

EMEZT

Savoring sights and smells along (wrong way) to Santa Fe·
--

BY JOHN 0. luMPKIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

JEMEZ · SPRINGS, New
Mexico - This is the wrong
way to Santa Fe if you plan to
set the cruise control at the
legal limit of 75 mph. 'it's the
right way if you want an early
'dose of sights and smells that
· often caress New Mexico.
The sights: two ducks rising
from the cold waten of the
Jemez River into a cloudless
· sky. The angular face of Batt!~
ship Rock that looms above
Route 4.. Or, perhaps, the
changing colors nf a mesa with
the movement of the autlimn
sun.
There is the smell of roasted
pinon nuts offered by an-.Indian vendor or the faint scent of
sulfur at Soda Dam. And, on a
WONDROUS SCENERY
winter afternoon, the musry
The Jemez Trail National
smoke from the fireplace at Los
Sqenic Byway which follows
Ojos Bar and Package Store in the meandering Jemez River,
Jemez Springs.
is shown here a few . miles
On this way to Santa Fe, South of Jemez Springs, N.M.
there is also a penetrating
silence that envelops a cross- orange rock toward the
country skier who stopped for entrance of Canon de San
rest in the pine forests in high Diego and the adobe village of
country. And, most of all, there Walatowa on the · Jemez
is the silence of the Vall_e Pueblo.
Grande, the vast remnant of a
The Jemez Indians arrived in
1
collapse of a volcano, blanketed the canyon more than 700
with three feet of snow.
yean ago. They built fortified
The slow road to Santa Fe villages 011 the high mesas fo r
starts north of Albuquerque at strategic reasons, becoming
the Bernalillo exit offlntentate among the most powerful
25 onto U.S. 550 west. It is an puebloan nations before the
alternative to following 1-25 Spanish conquistadors arrived
directly to New Mexico's cap- · in 1541 . There were 30,000
ita! from Albuquerque, th e members of the tribe . then;
closest major airport serving there are about 3,400 now.
'"northern New Mexico.
The Jemez Pueblo is one of
Tlie slow road has .a name: only two in New Mexico
the ]emezTrail National Scenic without gambling. Because of
Byway, one of 33 such routes that, it either suffers or sucauthorized by _C ongress in
ceeds, depending on whether
1998. It can be traveled in three the context is economic or
houn by -those not inclined to
~u ltural. A hand-painted sign
. dawdle among .its beautiful and introduces a visitor to Walahistorical distracrions.A full day
towa, warning against photog~s better, and a network of bedraphy, taping, sketc hing and
and-breakfasts or rugged cab- other intrusive activities. The
ins are available for those who
winding lanes surround or tertarry even long~r.
minate at the plaza, center of
Be patient as the mad crosses Walatowa's social activiry.
the Rio Grande and -passes the,
A crowd is gathered in the
housi~g developmentS in R.io
plaza. Chants and steady drumRancho, ,Albuquerque's mod~ '
beats fill'the air w hile adolesern-_day Levittown. To the
cents in costumes imitate deer
right is the new gambling casi- and buff.1lo in a. traditional
no of the Santa Ana .Indian .dance. Fami11es sit on stools
Pueblo, alo11g with the pueblo's and portable chairs to watch
golf course and a Hyatt resort. the performance, much .like
Suburban sprawl ends quick-, proud parents at the Little
ly. Chamisa and juniper dot the L~a gue baseball g~me. There is
arid pl:iin and the morning sun a major difference - there is
illuminates the foothills of the no applause at the end, anothJemez Mountains. A s the hills er important custom.
approach, so does the turnoff at
· "The d1nce you witnessed
_ the village of San Ysidro- and, on Sunday was a fun social
hence, the beginning of the dance," says R.ebecca GrandJemez Mountain Trail.
bois, the Jemez Pueblo director
· It is Sunday. 'Pickup trucks of tourism. Visitor&lt; from
are' parked outside San Ysidro's another pueblo parc_icipated.
small churches. Traffic is light .
" Pueblos do these types of
to nonexistent as State Route 4 dances for entertain~ent for
heads through walls of red and the people in ' the pueblo pri-

marily," she noted. "Because it
is not a private dance, visitors
are allowed to come into the
village."
The pueblo, however, pro- '
hibits any outside publication
about the darices, whether
public or private. There is
www.jemezpueblo:org, which
provides tribal history, etiquette, pueblo · landmarks,
schedu les for public celebrations and other information,
along with an e-mail link . A
relatively new visiton center
near Walatowa , is a recommended starting point.
Los Ojos Bar and Package
Store is up the road from the
p.ueblo in the town of Jemez
Springs. Like the town itself,
the Ojos is an odd-lot mosaic
often found in New Mexico,
with antique Winchester rifles
and animal trophies on its
wooden walls. Flames lie~ the
air in the massive fireplace,
while the click ''of pool 'balls
mix with the low conversations in. the airy main room. f.
band played the night before,
explaining the lingering smell
of cigarettes.
There are well-worn blue
jeans that have seen an honest
day of hard labor and leath er
pants that have not. Designer
sunglasses and hall caps. Pony
tails on both male and fema le,
so me fa,es reddened by a d1y·
of skiing and others by a day at
a construction site. Jemez
Springs is populated by fifthgeneration families and . refellt
etiugres from California ·and
the East Coast. The nearby hot
springs · can be visited ·with
bathing suits or without.
"We pander to anyone with
money", is the Ojos' motto.
Actually, it ta]&gt;es mere pock,t
change to feast on enchiladas
stacked New Mexico sryle or a
green chili che.Seburger with
frie.d potatoes. ''
The Ojos' neighbors include
other bars and restaurants, art
gallerieS, stores, rental cabins, a
couple of B&amp;B's and a Zen
Buddhist practice center, but
no gas station. The rcnmants of
an ancient pueblo and . the
ruins of a 17th-century Spanish mission are a part of the
Jemez S~1te Monument. nearby.
Following the Jemez Mountain Trail in dock wise fashion,
the road rises after . Jemez
. Springs ' toward the Santa' Fe
National Forest. On the right is
Soda Dam, a freak of nature
300 feet long that resembles an
abstract sculpture. Minerals
from a spring created the dam ,
but the.Jemez River would n"t
be completely denied . It&lt;
waters spew through a hol e in
the formidable structure, a fascinating study . of cement-like
waves, scallops and crevices.
:

"To the public, it is a paradise
lost," wrote AP writer Matt
C renson__in 1999 about what
was then the Baca Ranch, a
95,000-acre holding cifan Abilene, Texas, family. Renamed
the .the Valles Caldera National
Preserve after the federal gov. ernment purchased it for $101
million, a board of trustees
appointed by President Clinton is _piscussing what to do
with it.
. ·
We they decide, the publi c can access the panorama
through binoculars at highway
pullouts. Somewhere inside,
wrote Crenson, '~A golden
eagle preens in the dazzlirrg
autumn light. Elk graze damp
m eadows. Fi~ry aspens fleck
slopes carpeted with spruce, fir
and ponderosa pine."

your final destination Is . Albuquerque or Santa Fe, the
Jemez Mountain Trail is accessible to both. Major airlines fly
to Albuquerque, New Mexico's
largest city, and all major car
rental companies serve the airport.
Depending on the route, the
Jemez Trail is from 75 to t 25
miles long. It is two-lane pavement through mountainous terrain. Check the weather anll
road conditions from late fall
through early-spring.
The heart Qf the Jemez
Mountain Trail is State Highway 4 between San Ysidro and
Los Alamos, but there are offshoots to Ponderosa on NM
290 and to Seven Springs
through the Santa Fe National
Forest on NM t 26.
. The loop to the Bandelier
National Monument bypasses
Los Alamos.
A full tank of gas is prudent.
The only stations are at each
end of the Trail in San ·Ysidro
and Los Alamos and in
between at the Jemez Pueblo
visitors center.
The Jemez Pueblo visitor's
guide· says 1.5 million persons
annually drive along Highway 4
· and the state highway depart-,
me nt estimates 2,000 cars·use.
the road daily. With the creation
of the Jemez National Recreation Area and any future
development of the Valles
Caldera National Prese rve ,
those figures undoubtedly will
increase, compromising some
of the solitude of the region.
The highest priority of the
· Jemez Pueblo is a bypass for
the village of Walatowa, which
may limit casual visitation.
Still, 2,000 cars on almost
100 miles of highway in a 24hour period - it's not exactly
rush hour.
LODGING: The Jemez
Mountain Inn In Jemez Springs
has six rooms ranging from
$75 to $115 per night. If
Santa Fe is . too pricey, Los .
Alamos has a Holiday Inn,

1, 1001

•

'

'HUCK LEB.

.....&amp;..-.LA..

•••

Best Western and several
locally operated hotels and
bed-and-breakfasts. Return to
·Albuquerque for a full range of
accommodations.
DINING: Besides Los·~ojos,
Jemez Springs has the Laughing Lizard Cafe touting "some
great vegetarian dishes" in a
venerable adobe building.
Another optioh: Pack a picnic
before you leave Albuquerque
or Santa Fe and save dinner
for the Prairie Star, Casa Viejo
or El Pinto near Albuquerque or
the Pink Adobe in Santa Fe.

On the Net:

http://www.jemezpueblo.org:
The Jemez Pueblo site has a
comprehensive tribal history,
notification of. public dances
and other activities· and an "etiquette page" with guidelines for
visitors. "The Pueblos are not
'living museums' or theme
parKs, but are regular. communities," notes the Web site.
·
http://www.jemezsprings.co
m: Lodging , food, campgrounds, galleries and even a
winery along the Trail are listed.
.
http://www.newmexico.org: A
brief summary of Jemez Mountain Trail highlights is located
u'nder the extension /ScenicAttractions/byway-jemez. The
officiaL state· tourism site has
maps and other general information about travel in New
Mexico.
'
http://www.jemez.com/jara:
The · Jemez Area Residents
Association Web site provides
background on traffic, quality of
life, government regulation and
other issues from the residents'
perspective.
"The Jemez is probably
experiencing more change now
than it -has sin~e the Spanish
entered the area hundreds of
years ago," asserts one entry
from 1998.

'

New·boak continues fa»!ous adventures -efTwains classic characters
BY HIWE ITAUE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The Random House ver- "axe" in his manuscript, but an early draft. The wheresian, published in 1996, and the "e" was later dropped. a~uts of the actual . proofs
-~thec-c·un·enrllerkeley--ecliti1tlrt~•eGrnvinc: ed that a rypesetter s~nt. to the rypesetter ·remain
use the same · reclisc:overe'd ·had erred, Hint says the orig- unknown.
· mer, a new
"I don't think we'll ever
material, but in different'ways. inal'spelling is used in the curbook continRandom House, for example, rent Berkeley text.
have a definit\ve version ·uriless .
ues the advenplaces Jim's ghost story in -the
The second problem con-' someone finds that rypetures at " The Adventures of
actual narrative. Berkeley sets cerns the actual manuscript, script," Hint says.
Huckleberry Finn."
it aside in the appendix.
which was separated in two
Meanwhile, with thousands
An edition ·of the classic
"If we thought he had been and then lost.
of sf\ldents assigned the novel
novel has just been released by
forced to remove it, we would
Twain, who had lived each year, editions have prolifthe Mark Twain Proj.ect at the
have kept it in the body of the briefly in Buffalo, N.Y., don at- erated.
University of California Press
text:' Hirst says. "But from . ed the second half of the man'l'&lt;fhe copyright of the verat Berkeley. Based on Twain's
what v/e can tell, he decided u.script to the local libraty, sion first released has long
long-lost original manuscript,
the sto,.Y didn't work."now called the Buffalo and expired artd , a ·number of
the book contains numerous
"We thought it was interes(- \ Erie Counry Public Library. major publishers, along with· a
minor alterations and a ghost
, ing to put the story where _it The manuscript was sent in lot. of minor ones, have jssued
story told by the runaway
would have gone in the text," 1855, .shortly aJier the novel "Huckleberry Finn."
slave Jim.
says Daniel Menaker, senior was published, in response to a
It's questionabk whether
"We're trying to get the
literary editor at Random request from library curator nonacademic publishers will
book as dose as possible to
Hb use. "I have no problem James Fraser Gluck.
use the new material, which
how Twain would have wantwith the decision made by the
The first half, believed the Twain estate has copyed it," says the project's generBerkeley press, but our feeling destroyed at the printer's, righted. Not only would they
al.editor, Robert H . Hirst.
was to not to make our read- ·turned up a couple of years need permission, but the
The Berkeley editors aren't
ers wait fo r the small print in later, and Twain sent it on to commercial appeal seem~ limthe first to say this, and probathe back to ~ee the new mate- Cluck, who apparently kept it ited. Menaker, who declined'
Jbly won't be the last. Like rival
rial"
at his home.
. . to give exact figures, says the
explorers in search of a
Re-editing old literature is a
When Gluck died suddenly Random House text could
promised land, publishers keep
difficult
tradition.
As
at
age 45, the first half of the have "sold better" and that
oR issuing new editions of
"The ·Canterbury Tales," tnanuscript
disappeared • teac hers · apparently didn't
Twain 's novel, with each sup"Ulysses" and many 'Other arnong his papers and was want to switch.
posedly- nearing ·the elusive,
works,
no definitive version of believed lost.
Others in publishing indibut irresistible claim to the
"
Huckleberry
Finn
!'
exists.
'
ln
1990,
it
turned
up
in
an
cated
they would also stick
"definitive" text.
No one knows exactly what attic trunk at the California with the old text.
It's enough to confuse the
1\vain
wanted, what his editor home of one of Gluck's two
" You have to consider the
average bookstore browser.
wanted
and
what.was
changed
granddaughters,
who
put
it
up
author's
intention, but you
The current Berkeley book is
by
accident.
·
·
for sale through Sotheby's also have to consider the
~ advertised as "The Only
There
are
two
major
reaauction house.
impact of the book people
Authoritative Text," but it
sons. One is Twain's slangy · · The library sued to retrieve . have actually· read:' says Max
must compete with a Ran:narrative, which challenged it, claiming ownership because Rudin, publisher of the
dom House venien billed as
typesetters to decide whether Twain had intended to donate ·Library of America, which in
"The Only Comprehensive
the author had made a mistake the manuscript to the library, a single volume combines
Edition" and endorsed by
in
grammar or .spelling, or not Gluck himself. The law- "Huckleberry Finn" with
Twain's literary estate. Meanwhether that was simply suit was settled in 1992, with three other Twain books.
whil.e, an earlier . Berkeley
Huck Finn's way of expressing the Gluck family agreeing• to
''I'm interested in the origi-fublication is also called "The
himself.
turn
over
the
manuscript
in
nal
manuscript, but I frankly
Orily Authoritative Text."
"They do!1't '1113ke a very return for a portion of the think the material Twain left
· "When we say authoritagreat many mistakes," Twain income earned from its publi- out he left out wisely," says
tive, we mean as authoritative
of the rypesetten, cation.
complained
John Seelye, editor of the Penas you can be at the time,"
·" but those that qo occur are
Only in · 1995 were the , guin Classics edition.
·
Hirst explains. "In the previof
a
nature
to
make
a
man
MARK
TWAIN
-This
is
an
undated
file
photograph
of
Amerihalves officially reunited, as
"Besides, I don't se1e anyous edition, we only had half ·
of the original manuscript. can writer Samuel .Langhorne Clemens, better k~own by his curse his teeth loose:'
the ~;enterpiece of the li~rary's thing wrong with h3rving dift .
Hirst cites as au example the Mark Twain Room. And the ferent versions out. This is ~
This time, we had the whole pseJ,Jdonym Mark Twain. He Is the author of "The Adventures
•
of Huckleberry Finn,· 1B84."
·
. .
text." ·
word \ "ax:" Twain spelled it manuscript is technicaUy just democracy, isn't it?"

LET US OPEN YOUR
POOL THIS YEAR!
BUY NOW.. .
INSTALLING
NEW POOLS NOW

·Coffee table books: Tee off,
take off, or take ·in Tahiti

soothe
your body.

The Bureau for
Childrtn with
Medi~al Handicaps
·(BCMU) is avail'able
to help fami lies. '

opens to reve.al facsimiles of a
1930s brochure about lmperiWhen you pack your bags al Airways' intercontinental
for vacation, does one of those flights, and a selection of colorbags contain golf dubs? ·
ful airline labels, status symbols
Then you might want to for displaying on luggage,
stroll through "Fairways: trunks and .camera cases.
America's Greatest Golf
In another . envelope is
Resorts" (DK, 419 pages, Wilbur Wright's handwritten,
J50).
two-page letter to the SmithText and 400 color photos soniim Institution, dated 1899,
take readers to the top I 00 golf in which he expresses his
and travel resorts in America, interest in learning more about·
chosen by a panel of travel and flight and assures the Institugolf write!"!.
tion, "I am an enthusiast, but
The courses are di~ided into not a crank." .
six regions, from the Northeast
Readers can also flip
to Hawaii, each with essays by through the .pocket notebook
local authorities. Each resort is · kept by a replacement mail
rated in five categories. - ·- plane pilot; spin a mtating disc,
course challenge, course beau- like those issued in 1942. to
ry, lodging, cuisine and ameni- help pilots identifY U.S. milities - using~ five-star system. tary planes; and read a letter
For golfers, there's informa- home, complete with censor's
tion about the architect, par, marks, written by an f.rnerkan
yardage;· slope,. rating and tour pilot when he was a German
. stops for each coune.
prisoner of war during ;w'orld
The lush beaury of the War I.
·
.courses will appeal even to
• • •
l\hose who think a sand we~e
Even in blac]c and white,
,is somethmg made w1th two "Tahiti" (faschen, 160 pages,
slices of bread.
$29.99) looks better than most
• • •
places look in color.
This volume features !51
.Turn your coffee table into a
l at~ding strip for "If We Had photos (only a handful in
Wings: The ' Enduring color) of the earthly paradise,
Dream of Flight'' (Crown, taken by Adolphe Sylvain, a
32 pages, $32.50) by Rinket Parisian who· went to Tahiti at
Buck. age 26, fell in love with a native
Through text, _illustrations woman named Tehani, and
and several interactive ele- stayed. Throughout his life, -he
ments, Buck's book traces the documented his adopted
history and experience of homeland on film.
flight, from balloons 19 the
The
photo
selection
moon and beyond.
i-ncludes landscapes; portraits of
Topics include air mail, air native Tahitians - some wearwarfare, daredevils, barnstorm- . ing flowers in theit hair and lit~
ers and racers, long-distance . tie else - sailing, splashing in
flying, and space tra~el. Famous the water and soaking up the
names include Charles Lmd- sun; and visiting celebrities,
bergh , the Hindenburg,Amelia including Brigitte Bardot,
Earhart and Howard Hughes.
Ursula Andress, Marlon BranAmong the interactive fea~ do and Charles de Gaulle.
There is also , an illustrated
tures readers can play with is a
button-and-string envelope 'chronology of Sylvain's life and
bound into the book that · work.
BY RoN BERTHEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

If you have a child that has
special heallh care needs you inay
be eligible for assis lance.
Call the Gallia County Health
Department at 441-2039,

FLAIR

for more information.

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--- .!~ .

\...._.

•

•

�·- Page C~

_Page C7

'

sundiiJ, July 1, 1001

If yOu go to .

1

the Jemez Trail
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GEmNG THERE: Whether

New Mexico's laid-back lifestyle is conducive
for the clothing-optional policy at the· natural hot springs which

EASY GOING -

THE

bubble from mountain slopes near Jemez Springs, N.M ~ (AP
Photo/Pat Vasquez-Cunn ingham )

EMEZT

Savoring sights and smells along (wrong way) to Santa Fe·
--

BY JOHN 0. luMPKIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

JEMEZ · SPRINGS, New
Mexico - This is the wrong
way to Santa Fe if you plan to
set the cruise control at the
legal limit of 75 mph. 'it's the
right way if you want an early
'dose of sights and smells that
· often caress New Mexico.
The sights: two ducks rising
from the cold waten of the
Jemez River into a cloudless
· sky. The angular face of Batt!~
ship Rock that looms above
Route 4.. Or, perhaps, the
changing colors nf a mesa with
the movement of the autlimn
sun.
There is the smell of roasted
pinon nuts offered by an-.Indian vendor or the faint scent of
sulfur at Soda Dam. And, on a
WONDROUS SCENERY
winter afternoon, the musry
The Jemez Trail National
smoke from the fireplace at Los
Sqenic Byway which follows
Ojos Bar and Package Store in the meandering Jemez River,
Jemez Springs.
is shown here a few . miles
On this way to Santa Fe, South of Jemez Springs, N.M.
there is also a penetrating
silence that envelops a cross- orange rock toward the
country skier who stopped for entrance of Canon de San
rest in the pine forests in high Diego and the adobe village of
country. And, most of all, there Walatowa on the · Jemez
is the silence of the Vall_e Pueblo.
Grande, the vast remnant of a
The Jemez Indians arrived in
1
collapse of a volcano, blanketed the canyon more than 700
with three feet of snow.
yean ago. They built fortified
The slow road to Santa Fe villages 011 the high mesas fo r
starts north of Albuquerque at strategic reasons, becoming
the Bernalillo exit offlntentate among the most powerful
25 onto U.S. 550 west. It is an puebloan nations before the
alternative to following 1-25 Spanish conquistadors arrived
directly to New Mexico's cap- · in 1541 . There were 30,000
ita! from Albuquerque, th e members of the tribe . then;
closest major airport serving there are about 3,400 now.
'"northern New Mexico.
The Jemez Pueblo is one of
Tlie slow road has .a name: only two in New Mexico
the ]emezTrail National Scenic without gambling. Because of
Byway, one of 33 such routes that, it either suffers or sucauthorized by _C ongress in
ceeds, depending on whether
1998. It can be traveled in three the context is economic or
houn by -those not inclined to
~u ltural. A hand-painted sign
. dawdle among .its beautiful and introduces a visitor to Walahistorical distracrions.A full day
towa, warning against photog~s better, and a network of bedraphy, taping, sketc hing and
and-breakfasts or rugged cab- other intrusive activities. The
ins are available for those who
winding lanes surround or tertarry even long~r.
minate at the plaza, center of
Be patient as the mad crosses Walatowa's social activiry.
the Rio Grande and -passes the,
A crowd is gathered in the
housi~g developmentS in R.io
plaza. Chants and steady drumRancho, ,Albuquerque's mod~ '
beats fill'the air w hile adolesern-_day Levittown. To the
cents in costumes imitate deer
right is the new gambling casi- and buff.1lo in a. traditional
no of the Santa Ana .Indian .dance. Fami11es sit on stools
Pueblo, alo11g with the pueblo's and portable chairs to watch
golf course and a Hyatt resort. the performance, much .like
Suburban sprawl ends quick-, proud parents at the Little
ly. Chamisa and juniper dot the L~a gue baseball g~me. There is
arid pl:iin and the morning sun a major difference - there is
illuminates the foothills of the no applause at the end, anothJemez Mountains. A s the hills er important custom.
approach, so does the turnoff at
· "The d1nce you witnessed
_ the village of San Ysidro- and, on Sunday was a fun social
hence, the beginning of the dance," says R.ebecca GrandJemez Mountain Trail.
bois, the Jemez Pueblo director
· It is Sunday. 'Pickup trucks of tourism. Visitor&lt; from
are' parked outside San Ysidro's another pueblo parc_icipated.
small churches. Traffic is light .
" Pueblos do these types of
to nonexistent as State Route 4 dances for entertain~ent for
heads through walls of red and the people in ' the pueblo pri-

marily," she noted. "Because it
is not a private dance, visitors
are allowed to come into the
village."
The pueblo, however, pro- '
hibits any outside publication
about the darices, whether
public or private. There is
www.jemezpueblo:org, which
provides tribal history, etiquette, pueblo · landmarks,
schedu les for public celebrations and other information,
along with an e-mail link . A
relatively new visiton center
near Walatowa , is a recommended starting point.
Los Ojos Bar and Package
Store is up the road from the
p.ueblo in the town of Jemez
Springs. Like the town itself,
the Ojos is an odd-lot mosaic
often found in New Mexico,
with antique Winchester rifles
and animal trophies on its
wooden walls. Flames lie~ the
air in the massive fireplace,
while the click ''of pool 'balls
mix with the low conversations in. the airy main room. f.
band played the night before,
explaining the lingering smell
of cigarettes.
There are well-worn blue
jeans that have seen an honest
day of hard labor and leath er
pants that have not. Designer
sunglasses and hall caps. Pony
tails on both male and fema le,
so me fa,es reddened by a d1y·
of skiing and others by a day at
a construction site. Jemez
Springs is populated by fifthgeneration families and . refellt
etiugres from California ·and
the East Coast. The nearby hot
springs · can be visited ·with
bathing suits or without.
"We pander to anyone with
money", is the Ojos' motto.
Actually, it ta]&gt;es mere pock,t
change to feast on enchiladas
stacked New Mexico sryle or a
green chili che.Seburger with
frie.d potatoes. ''
The Ojos' neighbors include
other bars and restaurants, art
gallerieS, stores, rental cabins, a
couple of B&amp;B's and a Zen
Buddhist practice center, but
no gas station. The rcnmants of
an ancient pueblo and . the
ruins of a 17th-century Spanish mission are a part of the
Jemez S~1te Monument. nearby.
Following the Jemez Mountain Trail in dock wise fashion,
the road rises after . Jemez
. Springs ' toward the Santa' Fe
National Forest. On the right is
Soda Dam, a freak of nature
300 feet long that resembles an
abstract sculpture. Minerals
from a spring created the dam ,
but the.Jemez River would n"t
be completely denied . It&lt;
waters spew through a hol e in
the formidable structure, a fascinating study . of cement-like
waves, scallops and crevices.
:

"To the public, it is a paradise
lost," wrote AP writer Matt
C renson__in 1999 about what
was then the Baca Ranch, a
95,000-acre holding cifan Abilene, Texas, family. Renamed
the .the Valles Caldera National
Preserve after the federal gov. ernment purchased it for $101
million, a board of trustees
appointed by President Clinton is _piscussing what to do
with it.
. ·
We they decide, the publi c can access the panorama
through binoculars at highway
pullouts. Somewhere inside,
wrote Crenson, '~A golden
eagle preens in the dazzlirrg
autumn light. Elk graze damp
m eadows. Fi~ry aspens fleck
slopes carpeted with spruce, fir
and ponderosa pine."

your final destination Is . Albuquerque or Santa Fe, the
Jemez Mountain Trail is accessible to both. Major airlines fly
to Albuquerque, New Mexico's
largest city, and all major car
rental companies serve the airport.
Depending on the route, the
Jemez Trail is from 75 to t 25
miles long. It is two-lane pavement through mountainous terrain. Check the weather anll
road conditions from late fall
through early-spring.
The heart Qf the Jemez
Mountain Trail is State Highway 4 between San Ysidro and
Los Alamos, but there are offshoots to Ponderosa on NM
290 and to Seven Springs
through the Santa Fe National
Forest on NM t 26.
. The loop to the Bandelier
National Monument bypasses
Los Alamos.
A full tank of gas is prudent.
The only stations are at each
end of the Trail in San ·Ysidro
and Los Alamos and in
between at the Jemez Pueblo
visitors center.
The Jemez Pueblo visitor's
guide· says 1.5 million persons
annually drive along Highway 4
· and the state highway depart-,
me nt estimates 2,000 cars·use.
the road daily. With the creation
of the Jemez National Recreation Area and any future
development of the Valles
Caldera National Prese rve ,
those figures undoubtedly will
increase, compromising some
of the solitude of the region.
The highest priority of the
· Jemez Pueblo is a bypass for
the village of Walatowa, which
may limit casual visitation.
Still, 2,000 cars on almost
100 miles of highway in a 24hour period - it's not exactly
rush hour.
LODGING: The Jemez
Mountain Inn In Jemez Springs
has six rooms ranging from
$75 to $115 per night. If
Santa Fe is . too pricey, Los .
Alamos has a Holiday Inn,

1, 1001

•

'

'HUCK LEB.

.....&amp;..-.LA..

•••

Best Western and several
locally operated hotels and
bed-and-breakfasts. Return to
·Albuquerque for a full range of
accommodations.
DINING: Besides Los·~ojos,
Jemez Springs has the Laughing Lizard Cafe touting "some
great vegetarian dishes" in a
venerable adobe building.
Another optioh: Pack a picnic
before you leave Albuquerque
or Santa Fe and save dinner
for the Prairie Star, Casa Viejo
or El Pinto near Albuquerque or
the Pink Adobe in Santa Fe.

On the Net:

http://www.jemezpueblo.org:
The Jemez Pueblo site has a
comprehensive tribal history,
notification of. public dances
and other activities· and an "etiquette page" with guidelines for
visitors. "The Pueblos are not
'living museums' or theme
parKs, but are regular. communities," notes the Web site.
·
http://www.jemezsprings.co
m: Lodging , food, campgrounds, galleries and even a
winery along the Trail are listed.
.
http://www.newmexico.org: A
brief summary of Jemez Mountain Trail highlights is located
u'nder the extension /ScenicAttractions/byway-jemez. The
officiaL state· tourism site has
maps and other general information about travel in New
Mexico.
'
http://www.jemez.com/jara:
The · Jemez Area Residents
Association Web site provides
background on traffic, quality of
life, government regulation and
other issues from the residents'
perspective.
"The Jemez is probably
experiencing more change now
than it -has sin~e the Spanish
entered the area hundreds of
years ago," asserts one entry
from 1998.

'

New·boak continues fa»!ous adventures -efTwains classic characters
BY HIWE ITAUE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

The Random House ver- "axe" in his manuscript, but an early draft. The wheresian, published in 1996, and the "e" was later dropped. a~uts of the actual . proofs
-~thec-c·un·enrllerkeley--ecliti1tlrt~•eGrnvinc: ed that a rypesetter s~nt. to the rypesetter ·remain
use the same · reclisc:overe'd ·had erred, Hint says the orig- unknown.
· mer, a new
"I don't think we'll ever
material, but in different'ways. inal'spelling is used in the curbook continRandom House, for example, rent Berkeley text.
have a definit\ve version ·uriless .
ues the advenplaces Jim's ghost story in -the
The second problem con-' someone finds that rypetures at " The Adventures of
actual narrative. Berkeley sets cerns the actual manuscript, script," Hint says.
Huckleberry Finn."
it aside in the appendix.
which was separated in two
Meanwhile, with thousands
An edition ·of the classic
"If we thought he had been and then lost.
of sf\ldents assigned the novel
novel has just been released by
forced to remove it, we would
Twain, who had lived each year, editions have prolifthe Mark Twain Proj.ect at the
have kept it in the body of the briefly in Buffalo, N.Y., don at- erated.
University of California Press
text:' Hirst says. "But from . ed the second half of the man'l'&lt;fhe copyright of the verat Berkeley. Based on Twain's
what v/e can tell, he decided u.script to the local libraty, sion first released has long
long-lost original manuscript,
the sto,.Y didn't work."now called the Buffalo and expired artd , a ·number of
the book contains numerous
"We thought it was interes(- \ Erie Counry Public Library. major publishers, along with· a
minor alterations and a ghost
, ing to put the story where _it The manuscript was sent in lot. of minor ones, have jssued
story told by the runaway
would have gone in the text," 1855, .shortly aJier the novel "Huckleberry Finn."
slave Jim.
says Daniel Menaker, senior was published, in response to a
It's questionabk whether
"We're trying to get the
literary editor at Random request from library curator nonacademic publishers will
book as dose as possible to
Hb use. "I have no problem James Fraser Gluck.
use the new material, which
how Twain would have wantwith the decision made by the
The first half, believed the Twain estate has copyed it," says the project's generBerkeley press, but our feeling destroyed at the printer's, righted. Not only would they
al.editor, Robert H . Hirst.
was to not to make our read- ·turned up a couple of years need permission, but the
The Berkeley editors aren't
ers wait fo r the small print in later, and Twain sent it on to commercial appeal seem~ limthe first to say this, and probathe back to ~ee the new mate- Cluck, who apparently kept it ited. Menaker, who declined'
Jbly won't be the last. Like rival
rial"
at his home.
. . to give exact figures, says the
explorers in search of a
Re-editing old literature is a
When Gluck died suddenly Random House text could
promised land, publishers keep
difficult
tradition.
As
at
age 45, the first half of the have "sold better" and that
oR issuing new editions of
"The ·Canterbury Tales," tnanuscript
disappeared • teac hers · apparently didn't
Twain 's novel, with each sup"Ulysses" and many 'Other arnong his papers and was want to switch.
posedly- nearing ·the elusive,
works,
no definitive version of believed lost.
Others in publishing indibut irresistible claim to the
"
Huckleberry
Finn
!'
exists.
'
ln
1990,
it
turned
up
in
an
cated
they would also stick
"definitive" text.
No one knows exactly what attic trunk at the California with the old text.
It's enough to confuse the
1\vain
wanted, what his editor home of one of Gluck's two
" You have to consider the
average bookstore browser.
wanted
and
what.was
changed
granddaughters,
who
put
it
up
author's
intention, but you
The current Berkeley book is
by
accident.
·
·
for sale through Sotheby's also have to consider the
~ advertised as "The Only
There
are
two
major
reaauction house.
impact of the book people
Authoritative Text," but it
sons. One is Twain's slangy · · The library sued to retrieve . have actually· read:' says Max
must compete with a Ran:narrative, which challenged it, claiming ownership because Rudin, publisher of the
dom House venien billed as
typesetters to decide whether Twain had intended to donate ·Library of America, which in
"The Only Comprehensive
the author had made a mistake the manuscript to the library, a single volume combines
Edition" and endorsed by
in
grammar or .spelling, or not Gluck himself. The law- "Huckleberry Finn" with
Twain's literary estate. Meanwhether that was simply suit was settled in 1992, with three other Twain books.
whil.e, an earlier . Berkeley
Huck Finn's way of expressing the Gluck family agreeing• to
''I'm interested in the origi-fublication is also called "The
himself.
turn
over
the
manuscript
in
nal
manuscript, but I frankly
Orily Authoritative Text."
"They do!1't '1113ke a very return for a portion of the think the material Twain left
· "When we say authoritagreat many mistakes," Twain income earned from its publi- out he left out wisely," says
tive, we mean as authoritative
of the rypesetten, cation.
complained
John Seelye, editor of the Penas you can be at the time,"
·" but those that qo occur are
Only in · 1995 were the , guin Classics edition.
·
Hirst explains. "In the previof
a
nature
to
make
a
man
MARK
TWAIN
-This
is
an
undated
file
photograph
of
Amerihalves officially reunited, as
"Besides, I don't se1e anyous edition, we only had half ·
of the original manuscript. can writer Samuel .Langhorne Clemens, better k~own by his curse his teeth loose:'
the ~;enterpiece of the li~rary's thing wrong with h3rving dift .
Hirst cites as au example the Mark Twain Room. And the ferent versions out. This is ~
This time, we had the whole pseJ,Jdonym Mark Twain. He Is the author of "The Adventures
•
of Huckleberry Finn,· 1B84."
·
. .
text." ·
word \ "ax:" Twain spelled it manuscript is technicaUy just democracy, isn't it?"

LET US OPEN YOUR
POOL THIS YEAR!
BUY NOW.. .
INSTALLING
NEW POOLS NOW

·Coffee table books: Tee off,
take off, or take ·in Tahiti

soothe
your body.

The Bureau for
Childrtn with
Medi~al Handicaps
·(BCMU) is avail'able
to help fami lies. '

opens to reve.al facsimiles of a
1930s brochure about lmperiWhen you pack your bags al Airways' intercontinental
for vacation, does one of those flights, and a selection of colorbags contain golf dubs? ·
ful airline labels, status symbols
Then you might want to for displaying on luggage,
stroll through "Fairways: trunks and .camera cases.
America's Greatest Golf
In another . envelope is
Resorts" (DK, 419 pages, Wilbur Wright's handwritten,
J50).
two-page letter to the SmithText and 400 color photos soniim Institution, dated 1899,
take readers to the top I 00 golf in which he expresses his
and travel resorts in America, interest in learning more about·
chosen by a panel of travel and flight and assures the Institugolf write!"!.
tion, "I am an enthusiast, but
The courses are di~ided into not a crank." .
six regions, from the Northeast
Readers can also flip
to Hawaii, each with essays by through the .pocket notebook
local authorities. Each resort is · kept by a replacement mail
rated in five categories. - ·- plane pilot; spin a mtating disc,
course challenge, course beau- like those issued in 1942. to
ry, lodging, cuisine and ameni- help pilots identifY U.S. milities - using~ five-star system. tary planes; and read a letter
For golfers, there's informa- home, complete with censor's
tion about the architect, par, marks, written by an f.rnerkan
yardage;· slope,. rating and tour pilot when he was a German
. stops for each coune.
prisoner of war during ;w'orld
The lush beaury of the War I.
·
.courses will appeal even to
• • •
l\hose who think a sand we~e
Even in blac]c and white,
,is somethmg made w1th two "Tahiti" (faschen, 160 pages,
slices of bread.
$29.99) looks better than most
• • •
places look in color.
This volume features !51
.Turn your coffee table into a
l at~ding strip for "If We Had photos (only a handful in
Wings: The ' Enduring color) of the earthly paradise,
Dream of Flight'' (Crown, taken by Adolphe Sylvain, a
32 pages, $32.50) by Rinket Parisian who· went to Tahiti at
Buck. age 26, fell in love with a native
Through text, _illustrations woman named Tehani, and
and several interactive ele- stayed. Throughout his life, -he
ments, Buck's book traces the documented his adopted
history and experience of homeland on film.
flight, from balloons 19 the
The
photo
selection
moon and beyond.
i-ncludes landscapes; portraits of
Topics include air mail, air native Tahitians - some wearwarfare, daredevils, barnstorm- . ing flowers in theit hair and lit~
ers and racers, long-distance . tie else - sailing, splashing in
flying, and space tra~el. Famous the water and soaking up the
names include Charles Lmd- sun; and visiting celebrities,
bergh , the Hindenburg,Amelia including Brigitte Bardot,
Earhart and Howard Hughes.
Ursula Andress, Marlon BranAmong the interactive fea~ do and Charles de Gaulle.
There is also , an illustrated
tures readers can play with is a
button-and-string envelope 'chronology of Sylvain's life and
bound into the book that · work.
BY RoN BERTHEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

If you have a child that has
special heallh care needs you inay
be eligible for assis lance.
Call the Gallia County Health
Department at 441-2039,

FLAIR

for more information.

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

Cijll today and erase the stress.

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E- mail: res\!rvatio'hs@rtjgolf.com
For~ tompl•t• state vacation guide uii1.800.ALA84MA ur visit www.touralaliama.org

--- .!~ .

\...._.

•

•

�.

Page CB • &amp;unllap 1!rimt5 · &amp;rnltnel
•

Scott

j

.'·

Pomeroy • Middleport• Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant WV

One of her recent proJects
was quilting a signature quilt
prepared during the !75th
anniversary of Meigs County.
It no": hangs at the Meigs
Museum.
Then there's lier volunteer
work at the Senior Citizens
Center, activities with her.
daughter, Mary Jane Wise of
Middleport, her two grand- .. ...,
10

hitching post, which was on
what is now Powell's parking
lot, and wait fcor the two of us
'
to finish our lessons."

Sunday, July 1, 2001

I

Pardon sou

hm PageC1

for
N.C.
·legend.
.
.

,.

ORTH
W
I LKES- .
Bon ·0 N
"' ' .C.
{AP) - The '
ghost
of

Three years later while still
attending Pomeroy High
D I "
School, Mrs. Scott became
m 00 ey might soon
,daughters, and their families, be _able to lift up his head after
I h e regular church pianist.
reading and watching old aU
While being church pianist movies on television to fill
all these years has been a priome townspeople ~ are
mary contribution tp her her time.
. , •
seeking a posthumous pardon
church, it hasn't been the .
A widow since 1974, she for local legend Tom Dula,
exclusive one. She's been a lives alon e, does her own the charismatic ladies' man
member of the Forest Run housework, cooking and hanged more than 130 years
Quilters, which , has been · shopping, and drives her own ago for murdering his preg- .
· meeting every Thursday at the car.
nant girlfriend and burying
church fo~ more years than
As for getting lonesome or her in a shallow grave:
she can remember. ·.
bored, she says she never gets
They s.ay Dula, the man
While Thursdays are dedi- ei ther ~ "there's too much immcmalized in the folk halcared to quilting at the church to do for that" and then quor- lad "Tom Dooley." would not
Karlssa Ormond gazes out of a window in the jail cell where
. to raise money for special ed so mething she had read be. convicted today based on
• Anne Melton was jailed for two years as a suspect in the
projects, the former ·Meigs someplace: "The world is s~ev
1dence resented at his
murder of Laura Foster, in the Old Wilkes jail in Wilkesboro
tnai.
County ~chao! teacher also full of a number of things, I'
N.C. Ormond will play Melton In the upcoming play "To~
does .quilting for friends and sure we should all be happy as
e effort, led by the local
Dooley: A Wilkes County Legend, • written and directed by a
fa mily on frames set up at her , kings."
weekly newspaper, The
lo~al author. A group of townspeople are asking Governor
home.
And she seems to be.
Record, is based on a review
M1ke Easley for a pardon for local legend Tom Dula, who
l
. •
of 250 pages of documents, - was hanged for murdering laura F~ster. (AP Photo)
.
including court records and
40, have never exercised regu- historical material that resi- prepare a formal petition ask- ny and credibility problems
larly or have a chronic health dents in this western North ing Gov. Mike Easley for the with:key witnesses.
In addition, Welborn said,
problem, talk to your doctor Carolina town · have been pardon.
"We
want
people
to
know
fromPapC1
one of the judges suggested in
before starting an exercise arguing over since the case
program.
unfolded in the mid-19th both in the rest of the state a letter that the appeals judge
and all along the .Eastern omit certain testimony •that
take your blood press11re any4: Mainatain your ideal century.
..Pme during regular working weight. it is sometimes very
''I'm 69 years old, and it has seabaard that there are many could have helped Duia's case.
hours, i.e., 8-11:30 a.m. and difficult to shed those extra been .discussed all my life, folks here in Wilkes County . Dula was convicted of
1-3:30 p.m. Monday through pounds, but it is possible. since I was born," said North who feel he was unjustly con- murder in the stabbing death
Friday .for free. Watch your Being overweight increases Wilkesboro Mayor Conley · _victed,"Welborn said.
of Laura Foster, who is
Welborn
said
the
pardon
local newspaper for health fair ·your chan ces o f ·having 'a Call, who supports the parbelieved to have died May 28,
.information and locations for heart attack. stroke. or devel- don drive at least in part to r.~9lJest is based on several 1866. Dula had been involved
pomts - · that no murder in a love triangle with Foster
cholesterol and blood sugar oping diabetes. Are you eating put an end to the debate.
level screenings which are foods high in saturated fats?
Ken Welborn, the publisher weapon was found , there and her cousin,' Anne Foster
done throughout the year.
Then it would be wise to ofThe Record, has hired the were no eyewitnesses, and Melton,' his childhood sweet3. Start exercising. Start drop them. They add even local McElwee law firm to there was conflicting testimo- heart.
simple. Walking, gardening, more calories to your overal
biking and swimming are all diet. Minimizing salt use and
great forms of exercise that increasing fresh fruits and
most people can manage. vegetables are essential to a
.Walking at a brisk pace for . person trying to lose weight.
30-60 minutes at least three GCHD has some excellent
times a·week is the easiest and pamphlets and handouts, and
,cheapest vyay to begin an it's all free. '
exercise program. Start slow,
·For more information on
-'jlet realistic goals, don't get these and other health JSsues,
discouraged, and drink plenty call Gallia County Health
(first
of water. If you are over age Department at 441-2950.

Classified ads, Pages D2- 7

..
'

't.*,

I

'

Lyrics to "Tom Dooley" as pe~­
formed by The Kingston Trio in
1958:
SPOKEN:
Th ~oughout history, . there
have been many songs writlen
about the eternal triangle. This
next one tells the story of Mister
Grayson, a beautiful woman,
and a condemned man named
Tom Dooley. When the sun
· rises tomorrow, Tom Dooley
must hang.
CHORUS:
Hang down your head, Tom
Dooley.
Hang down your head and
cry.
Hanl! down your head, Tom
Dooley.
1
Poor boy, you're bound to
die.
I met her on the mountain.
There I took her life.
Met her on the mountain.
Stabbed her with my knife.
(Chorus)
This lime tomorrow.
Rackon where I'll be.
Hadn't-a been for Grayson,
l'd-a been i.n Tennessee.
(Chorus}
This time tomorrow.
Reckon where I'll be.:
Down In some lonesome val-.
ley
hangin' from a white oak lrer
(Chorus)

•

MON.

AEP

TUE.

WED.

THU.

FRI.

45'1:. . ' 46

Arch

+

Ashland Inc.

BankOne . _

BorgWarner

.

+
..

Chtlnnlng Shope

+

48'1:.

48~.

3

3

5~.

11

46'1:.
Flratar ..._
PENNY STOCK Ballard, right, arid Key
founders of Knoblas.com are shown In Jackson, Miss. They
talked about why their company Invested $2 million to upgrade Its services oeyond just a source of basic Information
on small-&lt;:ap securities that don't meet the listing requirements of the major stock ~xchanges. The duo Initially began
pennyPI.com In December 1999, to target individual Investors. They then realized they could pitch their product to brokerage flr!lls and other institutions If. they enhanced their offerings. (AP)

Harley Davidson

+

48~.

48

47

48
11

Kroger .

+

24'1.

25'1:.

25'1.

1.

25

I

'

.includes 300 anytime and 500 night &amp; weekend minutes per month

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Organizers are gearing ~p
for the American Cancer
Society Relay for Life in
Mason County.
Although the walk will r!ot
be until Sept. 22, corporate
sponsorship has already been
sougbt and teams are currently being recruited.
"
Accotding to Lauri Johnson, county chairperson, local·
residents may learn how they
Jllay become a team member
cir tea!IJ captain for this year's
Relay for Life by attending a
.
team recrmtment meeting on
July 2 at 7 p.m. in the conference room of the Mfton
County Health Departm.!ht.
Attendees are encouraged
to use the rear entrance of the
building. Individuals attending this meeting as a team
captain will receive tips. for
reaching your fund-raising
goal and ideas to get your
business 'or · organization
involved in the American
Cancer Society'~ signature
event.
In addition to team recruiti?ent, there are opportunities
for local businesses and corporations to be a sponsor on
the gold, silver, or bronze
. level. The gold level is a don~·

tion of $1,000, while the silver is $500, and the bronze
level is $250.
Sponsorship commitments
for 200 I have already been
received from Pleasant Valley
Hospital (gold),AKZO Nobel
. Chemical (silver), WBYG (silver), Peoples Bank, NA
(bronze), Pleasant Valley Hospita! Auxiliary (bronze), ana
· the Point Pleasant Register
(bronze) .
.
Any business or organiza- ·
tion interested in more infermation about becom1' ng a
corporate sponsor or team
captain may contact . Mrs.
Johnson at 675-7997.
Additionally, there
are
potential activities for corporatio.ns and organizations to
sponsor, such as tl}e survivor's
hospitality tent, fruit wagon,
children's activities including
face and pumpkin painting, a
Relay scavenger hunt and
hayrides.
Johnson noted sponsorship
of such events, as well as
donations of food, time and
talent allow the Mason County Relay planning committee
to provide an evening of fun,
free of charge, to everyone
attending the event.

Resort boasts some of
·the best fishing in W. Va.
ROANOKE (AP) - As shoreline at dusk. backlit by the
darkness falls over Stone~all la!1Jps of a parking lot. Others
Jackson Lake, a mist forms at "stand on · the decks of house\he surface. The sun is long boats to toss their lines. At the.
~ne, the air turned 'chilly.
marina store, small boys drop
And still, the fish are still bit" food pellets into the water, creillg.
ating a swarm of 20- to 30- ·
Blue~!f! and . h'!S5. Crappie pound carp.
·
and channel cats. The' 2,650- ·
"This has ·been the best of
acre lake in central West Vir- any of our impoundments for
ginia literally teems with life, II years," says Kevin Yokum,
offering anglers so me of the district fisheries biologist for
the Division of Natural
best fishing in the staJe.
Fishermen stand along the Resources ..

-or- ·
1,soo minutes
for $.46' $20 per month

..

Peoples

+.

19

19'1.

•

(

RD Shell
Shoney's

'

(•irst three months)

•

Wendy's

includes 500 anytime and 1,000 night &amp; weekend minutes per month

l%uld you like to sn n stock of lorn/ inltr!iSt listed?
lJ so, contact News Editor Kevin Kelly at (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.

- plus,. ~eta NO~ia ~52C tor 1¢ with

'

INVESTING

1,500 minute rate plan

Early distributions from
·retirement plans

'

N6kia252C
.

1·ewith a new

local digital plan

toll-free USA feature induded ,
with home state plans .

two-year seiVice
agreement on
plans $40 and up

,

·Stores up to 75 names and

numbers
-available in variety of colors
This phore is available for
$19.95 when purchasing a
plan under $40 per month

*for first three months on $30 plan
**for first three months on $40 plan
includes call waitin&amp; usee Message

center'" voice mail

------·----------

.* u~ Cellular

1-888-BUY-USCC

us cellular.com

•

·

•

We connect with yo~:

GALLIPOLIS - Qualified
retirement plans and individual
retirement accounts (IRAs) are
great vehicles to take advan' , . tage of tax- deferred growth
and save for retirement.
When an individual eventually _decides to tap into his or
GUEST
her retirement fu11d, withVIEW
drawals from these plans are
subject to regular ;income
The first exception applies
taxes. There's one_ catch, however, for people who are under only to · distributions f(om
59-1/2 years old. They~ pay qualified retirement plans like
an additional 10 percent tax profit sharing, 401 (k), pension
for premature distributions, in and certain other employer
addition to the regular income . sponsored plans .. Under this
tax - unless they can fit with- exception, a taxpayer who has
in one of the exceptions to this · "separated from· service" (i.e.,
they have retired, quit or been
penalty tax.
Of the exceptions to the I 0 laid of!) after attaining age 55
percent premature distribution may withdraw any amount
• tax allowed in 2000, all but from his or her employer's plan
two provide no real planning free of the 10 percen~ penalty
opportunities.
Most
are t:pc.
This exception to the I 0
designed to relieve the burden
percent
penalty rule· allows for
imposed by death, disability,
... serio1.1s illness, educatio0 costs, the greatest flexibility and is
first- time home purchase or ' very beneficial for many early
divorce. The two exceptions retirees. It can even be utilized
that do allow taxpayers. to if the taxpayer has left the
access their retirement tunds employ of one company ·at'ld
without · the . penalty tax makes the withdrawal from the
deserve closer examination. -·

Jay
Caldwell

a

Becldiy Beckley Cros~ng Shopping Ctr.; (304)255·3990

. Blidoepert East Pointe .Shopping Ctr., 154Emily Dr.. (304!622·2331
ClilllcGtho U.S. CeHu~r. 150 Westl)m Ave., {140)102·4812

Clitllcothe In-Touch Wireless &amp; More. 34 East Watar, (140) 179-6999
Eltlu 220 Thinf St., (3041636·9311 ·
fllinnelltt 17 Middletown Rd.,'Route 73, (3041363-1881
Gallipolis USCC Wai·Mart Kiosk, 2145 Eesteni Avenue, {140 1441-1066
Jacbon Classic Plaza. 40~E . Huron,(140128B·0016
•
Melgarrtown Morgootown Commons, 651B Mall Road,(304 983-2355
Morgantown #4 Suburban Cou~ Plaza. Chestnut Ridge Rd., 04159B-2450
Now Bostoo U.S. Cellular, New Boston Shoppillll Center, 4010
Av¥,
(7401456-B722
'
.
Por1smouUI Hilttop
l'llnceton i

Autlloriled Agerrti: ..
.
. •
lllllftlt4 The CelJiar Group, Mercer Mall,(3041324·2355
.
HedgeAIII Ctll P&amp;ae'Communications, 106 Willi Main SII1lllt (304)154·3710
Kllltwood Thomas Doian'OBA Peat Communications, 206 Morgantown St. 13041329-3299
IJuoiaiJI'1 Gary's Electtonics, 11B S. Jeflerlon $t.,(304)645·71l0 .
Martinlbtrt Cell Page Commll1ications, 'MriJiburii Mall; BOO foXIlroft Ave., (304126~-8755
Mlrtirolbrrrt Omni Cel, Martinslxrg Mail, BOO Foxcroft Ave., 13041263·9085

uMilfani·IOf.riiiiiMinfonf Telephone, 10l17lR. 139, (7401820-21,1
~
Shermacl Electconics, 507 N. Main St., 13041538-2371
Cellller Group, Crossroads Mall, (304]255-7137
Pawn, 120 W. Emmitt Ave., 17_401947-7101 "'

............;.oa

--~------------~----~~---------=- ~

Have • business news item?
•

•

Mississip.pi firm wants to legitimize
small-cap markets with :research -

ACKSON, Miss. (AP) - What
sta'rted in a commercial garage
as a venture to educate people
who trade penny stocks is no
longer a small-change operation.
.
.,_,.ckson-based
Knobias.com
has
1
vested S2 million to upgrade its services beyond just a · ~ource:ot: -basic
information on these low~ priced,
high- risk securmes that don't meet
the financial requirements to be listed
on the major stock exchanges.
The
company
began
as
pennyPI.com in December 1999 and
targeted individual investors looking
tor data. . The concept was good, but founders
Greg·Ballard and. Key Ramsey realized
that enhancing their product might
make it attractive to brokera' firms
and other ~nstitutions. · Thes firms
typically ign9re penp.y stocks ecause
little, if anything, is known about
. many of the comp!lnies offering
shares.
"There's been no legitimacy in ·the
past;' said Ramsey, the privately held
company's chief executive. "The. stocks

three
. months)

Plans
. . . . . in moti·0 n
for Relay for Life

Page Dt_

.

This chart shows how local 'stocks of interest perfomu!d last week.
Each day~ closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

..
·~-, for $3(1$15 ·per month
...

•

THE WEEK IN STOCKS

800 minutes

,,

..

Suftday. July 1.lQ01 ·

'llY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

·Heart

Inside:

•

.

Lyrics to the
song 'Tom
Dooley'

S

..

..

.

•

J .. 1

Give us·a call at (740) 446-1341, ext. 13 ·
. .........., '

'

~-·~...,..·

...

..._. . .

~

...

•

were moving on rumor and pro motThe researchers use any neW' inforers. Ther.e. was no credibility."
· marion as the basis of a report, which
. Knobias.com launched ·its ·new Web is added to the company's profile that
site in February for individual customers pay to see.
investors, who can buy reports on a
" We realized quicldy that having ·a
pay-per-view basis starting at S7 .95, database is eilSy;• said Ballard, who is
subscribe to market-monitoring tools chief operations officer. "Maintaining
. ~or $19.95 a l!nonth, and even take one is hard because data gets old daily. ·
•· ytdeo iom'!"of soml!~lllr.&gt;blp''I!O'r!tflll~·ot,t. ke! '&lt;l"'signititant ellbtt,.1!0~galtefi•
nies.
'
what little information there is."
.
The firm has 1!1so- upgraded it.s
The company's software is designed
image by moving from a large indus- to scour SEC and Slate documents,
trial storage shed ·to new offices in a Canadian filings and news releases.
trendy part ofJackson. About 60 percent of the data is gathEach morning, .a staff of about 20 ered that way. The rest is done manuresearcher~ logs in to the company's ally - making phone calls, watching
proprietary computet system to get the markets and other more laborthe latest on the 300 or so small-cap intensive ways.
companies that each of them moniLast month, the . ~ompany started
tors.
aggressively pitching its 'products to
If a chief executive resigned over · market makers and larger financial
·night, it's there.
.
institutions. Ballard and Ram_sey have
If someone has bought or sold a sig- lpent much of the past month in New
nificant number of shares, it's there. ' York meeting with several firms. Some
If the company has issued a press 50 institutions are using Knobias setrelease or filed a report with the Secu- vices on a trial basis.
rities and Exchange Commission Anurag Pandit, a vice president and
, which not all are required to do ~ it's ~mail-cap portfoliq manager for John
there.
·
Ple•se see Stodl. Dl

Eanvigs npt dangerous,
just a nuisdnce
POMEROY
Homeowners, a're you
· .finding insects with large
pincers at the end of their
bodies? These insects are
earwigs. Earwigs range in
size from one half to
three- quarters inch size
' and are light red-brown
to black in color.
Their name, ean.vig, is

..Hal
Kneen

•
along the house founda - 1
detived · ~m the Epro- tion . Rain gutters and
pean superstition that .
these insects .entered the spouting should carry
ears of a sleeping person water away from 'the·
and bored into their bouse foundation.
brain. This is completely,
Change landscaping by
untrue! Earwigs overwin- creating a c~ean , dry borter in your yard as adults der 1mmedtately around
or eggs in protected areas .. ~he
foundan o n wall
or six feet underground.
UIStead of mulch. Slope
They emerge .in early the landscafe away from
spring and begin · eating the foundatiOn .
mosses, lichens, algae, fun- . - Trap ~arwlgs outdoors
gus, insects, spiders, mites usmg Simple cardboard
and other plimt life. They box traps. ,Us~ used c~real
are active at night and try bo~s and punch penctl
to hide during the day in SIZe holes nea~ the bottom
moist, shady areas.
for the. earwtgs to chmb
Prevent their intrusion mto. Ba1t usmg oatmeal or
in your garden and home .btan . . Dispose of every
by "i~dul:ing exCessive mornmg by drowmng m
moisture. Eliminate damp,. water and a h~tle hq':'-1d
moist conditions in crawl so~p '" a contamer. L1ke
spaces under your home, with slugs, place a board
around faucets, around air · flat side down onto the
conditioni·n g units and
PII8HH8Kneen,DI
~

UK determines possible

1

-· caus~ offoal deaths
GALLIPOLIS
. In
recent weeks, the horse
industry in Kentucky and ·
Ohio have been troubled by
late term abortions in mares,
or what is being called M are
Reproductive Loss Syn-drome.
'
For several months, over
100 scientists and staff from
· University of Kentucky's
College of . Agriculture,
together. with veterinarians,
farm managers and equine
industry leaders have been
working to determine a
cause. for the problem.
According to an article
written by Laura Skillman
and posted by UK, offi,ial~
aniJ.ounced on May 20 that
their preliminary findings
suggested a strong associa'tion bei&gt;~een late and early
term aboJ1ions in mares and
a high population" of th e
Eastern tent caterpillar.
·
lJ"tis link was established
whe11 scientists determined
frotn early ti ssue sa mpl ~
"analysis that cyanide or
cyanogemc
compounds
were most likely the cause of
the foal deaths. It is well
know'l , that wilted wild
black cherry tree leaves car
be toxic to cattle and sheep

•••

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW '

due to concentrated levels of
cyanogenic compounds.
As a favorite ·food of the
Eastern tent caterpillar, wild
cherry leaves are being identified as the source of poison
and •the caterpillar as the
delivery method either
directly or indirectly to the ·
mare.
. Furthermore, scientists
were able to rule out ergot
alkaloids .from bluegrass or
orchard grass, fescue toxicosis' or mycotoxins, or white
clover as ·causes. According
to .Jinuny Henning, a wellknown UK agronomist and
forage
researcher,
the
hypothesis
strengthened
when Jt was recognized that
previous unexplained out
breaks of early and later
term abortions also correlat-

..

. ,.........,...••• Dl .

,.

�.

Page CB • &amp;unllap 1!rimt5 · &amp;rnltnel
•

Scott

j

.'·

Pomeroy • Middleport• Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant WV

One of her recent proJects
was quilting a signature quilt
prepared during the !75th
anniversary of Meigs County.
It no": hangs at the Meigs
Museum.
Then there's lier volunteer
work at the Senior Citizens
Center, activities with her.
daughter, Mary Jane Wise of
Middleport, her two grand- .. ...,
10

hitching post, which was on
what is now Powell's parking
lot, and wait fcor the two of us
'
to finish our lessons."

Sunday, July 1, 2001

I

Pardon sou

hm PageC1

for
N.C.
·legend.
.
.

,.

ORTH
W
I LKES- .
Bon ·0 N
"' ' .C.
{AP) - The '
ghost
of

Three years later while still
attending Pomeroy High
D I "
School, Mrs. Scott became
m 00 ey might soon
,daughters, and their families, be _able to lift up his head after
I h e regular church pianist.
reading and watching old aU
While being church pianist movies on television to fill
all these years has been a priome townspeople ~ are
mary contribution tp her her time.
. , •
seeking a posthumous pardon
church, it hasn't been the .
A widow since 1974, she for local legend Tom Dula,
exclusive one. She's been a lives alon e, does her own the charismatic ladies' man
member of the Forest Run housework, cooking and hanged more than 130 years
Quilters, which , has been · shopping, and drives her own ago for murdering his preg- .
· meeting every Thursday at the car.
nant girlfriend and burying
church fo~ more years than
As for getting lonesome or her in a shallow grave:
she can remember. ·.
bored, she says she never gets
They s.ay Dula, the man
While Thursdays are dedi- ei ther ~ "there's too much immcmalized in the folk halcared to quilting at the church to do for that" and then quor- lad "Tom Dooley." would not
Karlssa Ormond gazes out of a window in the jail cell where
. to raise money for special ed so mething she had read be. convicted today based on
• Anne Melton was jailed for two years as a suspect in the
projects, the former ·Meigs someplace: "The world is s~ev
1dence resented at his
murder of Laura Foster, in the Old Wilkes jail in Wilkesboro
tnai.
County ~chao! teacher also full of a number of things, I'
N.C. Ormond will play Melton In the upcoming play "To~
does .quilting for friends and sure we should all be happy as
e effort, led by the local
Dooley: A Wilkes County Legend, • written and directed by a
fa mily on frames set up at her , kings."
weekly newspaper, The
lo~al author. A group of townspeople are asking Governor
home.
And she seems to be.
Record, is based on a review
M1ke Easley for a pardon for local legend Tom Dula, who
l
. •
of 250 pages of documents, - was hanged for murdering laura F~ster. (AP Photo)
.
including court records and
40, have never exercised regu- historical material that resi- prepare a formal petition ask- ny and credibility problems
larly or have a chronic health dents in this western North ing Gov. Mike Easley for the with:key witnesses.
In addition, Welborn said,
problem, talk to your doctor Carolina town · have been pardon.
"We
want
people
to
know
fromPapC1
one of the judges suggested in
before starting an exercise arguing over since the case
program.
unfolded in the mid-19th both in the rest of the state a letter that the appeals judge
and all along the .Eastern omit certain testimony •that
take your blood press11re any4: Mainatain your ideal century.
..Pme during regular working weight. it is sometimes very
''I'm 69 years old, and it has seabaard that there are many could have helped Duia's case.
hours, i.e., 8-11:30 a.m. and difficult to shed those extra been .discussed all my life, folks here in Wilkes County . Dula was convicted of
1-3:30 p.m. Monday through pounds, but it is possible. since I was born," said North who feel he was unjustly con- murder in the stabbing death
Friday .for free. Watch your Being overweight increases Wilkesboro Mayor Conley · _victed,"Welborn said.
of Laura Foster, who is
Welborn
said
the
pardon
local newspaper for health fair ·your chan ces o f ·having 'a Call, who supports the parbelieved to have died May 28,
.information and locations for heart attack. stroke. or devel- don drive at least in part to r.~9lJest is based on several 1866. Dula had been involved
pomts - · that no murder in a love triangle with Foster
cholesterol and blood sugar oping diabetes. Are you eating put an end to the debate.
level screenings which are foods high in saturated fats?
Ken Welborn, the publisher weapon was found , there and her cousin,' Anne Foster
done throughout the year.
Then it would be wise to ofThe Record, has hired the were no eyewitnesses, and Melton,' his childhood sweet3. Start exercising. Start drop them. They add even local McElwee law firm to there was conflicting testimo- heart.
simple. Walking, gardening, more calories to your overal
biking and swimming are all diet. Minimizing salt use and
great forms of exercise that increasing fresh fruits and
most people can manage. vegetables are essential to a
.Walking at a brisk pace for . person trying to lose weight.
30-60 minutes at least three GCHD has some excellent
times a·week is the easiest and pamphlets and handouts, and
,cheapest vyay to begin an it's all free. '
exercise program. Start slow,
·For more information on
-'jlet realistic goals, don't get these and other health JSsues,
discouraged, and drink plenty call Gallia County Health
(first
of water. If you are over age Department at 441-2950.

Classified ads, Pages D2- 7

..
'

't.*,

I

'

Lyrics to "Tom Dooley" as pe~­
formed by The Kingston Trio in
1958:
SPOKEN:
Th ~oughout history, . there
have been many songs writlen
about the eternal triangle. This
next one tells the story of Mister
Grayson, a beautiful woman,
and a condemned man named
Tom Dooley. When the sun
· rises tomorrow, Tom Dooley
must hang.
CHORUS:
Hang down your head, Tom
Dooley.
Hang down your head and
cry.
Hanl! down your head, Tom
Dooley.
1
Poor boy, you're bound to
die.
I met her on the mountain.
There I took her life.
Met her on the mountain.
Stabbed her with my knife.
(Chorus)
This lime tomorrow.
Rackon where I'll be.
Hadn't-a been for Grayson,
l'd-a been i.n Tennessee.
(Chorus}
This time tomorrow.
Reckon where I'll be.:
Down In some lonesome val-.
ley
hangin' from a white oak lrer
(Chorus)

•

MON.

AEP

TUE.

WED.

THU.

FRI.

45'1:. . ' 46

Arch

+

Ashland Inc.

BankOne . _

BorgWarner

.

+
..

Chtlnnlng Shope

+

48'1:.

48~.

3

3

5~.

11

46'1:.
Flratar ..._
PENNY STOCK Ballard, right, arid Key
founders of Knoblas.com are shown In Jackson, Miss. They
talked about why their company Invested $2 million to upgrade Its services oeyond just a source of basic Information
on small-&lt;:ap securities that don't meet the listing requirements of the major stock ~xchanges. The duo Initially began
pennyPI.com In December 1999, to target individual Investors. They then realized they could pitch their product to brokerage flr!lls and other institutions If. they enhanced their offerings. (AP)

Harley Davidson

+

48~.

48

47

48
11

Kroger .

+

24'1.

25'1:.

25'1.

1.

25

I

'

.includes 300 anytime and 500 night &amp; weekend minutes per month

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Organizers are gearing ~p
for the American Cancer
Society Relay for Life in
Mason County.
Although the walk will r!ot
be until Sept. 22, corporate
sponsorship has already been
sougbt and teams are currently being recruited.
"
Accotding to Lauri Johnson, county chairperson, local·
residents may learn how they
Jllay become a team member
cir tea!IJ captain for this year's
Relay for Life by attending a
.
team recrmtment meeting on
July 2 at 7 p.m. in the conference room of the Mfton
County Health Departm.!ht.
Attendees are encouraged
to use the rear entrance of the
building. Individuals attending this meeting as a team
captain will receive tips. for
reaching your fund-raising
goal and ideas to get your
business 'or · organization
involved in the American
Cancer Society'~ signature
event.
In addition to team recruiti?ent, there are opportunities
for local businesses and corporations to be a sponsor on
the gold, silver, or bronze
. level. The gold level is a don~·

tion of $1,000, while the silver is $500, and the bronze
level is $250.
Sponsorship commitments
for 200 I have already been
received from Pleasant Valley
Hospital (gold),AKZO Nobel
. Chemical (silver), WBYG (silver), Peoples Bank, NA
(bronze), Pleasant Valley Hospita! Auxiliary (bronze), ana
· the Point Pleasant Register
(bronze) .
.
Any business or organiza- ·
tion interested in more infermation about becom1' ng a
corporate sponsor or team
captain may contact . Mrs.
Johnson at 675-7997.
Additionally, there
are
potential activities for corporatio.ns and organizations to
sponsor, such as tl}e survivor's
hospitality tent, fruit wagon,
children's activities including
face and pumpkin painting, a
Relay scavenger hunt and
hayrides.
Johnson noted sponsorship
of such events, as well as
donations of food, time and
talent allow the Mason County Relay planning committee
to provide an evening of fun,
free of charge, to everyone
attending the event.

Resort boasts some of
·the best fishing in W. Va.
ROANOKE (AP) - As shoreline at dusk. backlit by the
darkness falls over Stone~all la!1Jps of a parking lot. Others
Jackson Lake, a mist forms at "stand on · the decks of house\he surface. The sun is long boats to toss their lines. At the.
~ne, the air turned 'chilly.
marina store, small boys drop
And still, the fish are still bit" food pellets into the water, creillg.
ating a swarm of 20- to 30- ·
Blue~!f! and . h'!S5. Crappie pound carp.
·
and channel cats. The' 2,650- ·
"This has ·been the best of
acre lake in central West Vir- any of our impoundments for
ginia literally teems with life, II years," says Kevin Yokum,
offering anglers so me of the district fisheries biologist for
the Division of Natural
best fishing in the staJe.
Fishermen stand along the Resources ..

-or- ·
1,soo minutes
for $.46' $20 per month

..

Peoples

+.

19

19'1.

•

(

RD Shell
Shoney's

'

(•irst three months)

•

Wendy's

includes 500 anytime and 1,000 night &amp; weekend minutes per month

l%uld you like to sn n stock of lorn/ inltr!iSt listed?
lJ so, contact News Editor Kevin Kelly at (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.

- plus,. ~eta NO~ia ~52C tor 1¢ with

'

INVESTING

1,500 minute rate plan

Early distributions from
·retirement plans

'

N6kia252C
.

1·ewith a new

local digital plan

toll-free USA feature induded ,
with home state plans .

two-year seiVice
agreement on
plans $40 and up

,

·Stores up to 75 names and

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This phore is available for
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includes call waitin&amp; usee Message

center'" voice mail

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.* u~ Cellular

1-888-BUY-USCC

us cellular.com

•

·

•

We connect with yo~:

GALLIPOLIS - Qualified
retirement plans and individual
retirement accounts (IRAs) are
great vehicles to take advan' , . tage of tax- deferred growth
and save for retirement.
When an individual eventually _decides to tap into his or
GUEST
her retirement fu11d, withVIEW
drawals from these plans are
subject to regular ;income
The first exception applies
taxes. There's one_ catch, however, for people who are under only to · distributions f(om
59-1/2 years old. They~ pay qualified retirement plans like
an additional 10 percent tax profit sharing, 401 (k), pension
for premature distributions, in and certain other employer
addition to the regular income . sponsored plans .. Under this
tax - unless they can fit with- exception, a taxpayer who has
in one of the exceptions to this · "separated from· service" (i.e.,
they have retired, quit or been
penalty tax.
Of the exceptions to the I 0 laid of!) after attaining age 55
percent premature distribution may withdraw any amount
• tax allowed in 2000, all but from his or her employer's plan
two provide no real planning free of the 10 percen~ penalty
opportunities.
Most
are t:pc.
This exception to the I 0
designed to relieve the burden
percent
penalty rule· allows for
imposed by death, disability,
... serio1.1s illness, educatio0 costs, the greatest flexibility and is
first- time home purchase or ' very beneficial for many early
divorce. The two exceptions retirees. It can even be utilized
that do allow taxpayers. to if the taxpayer has left the
access their retirement tunds employ of one company ·at'ld
without · the . penalty tax makes the withdrawal from the
deserve closer examination. -·

Jay
Caldwell

a

Becldiy Beckley Cros~ng Shopping Ctr.; (304)255·3990

. Blidoepert East Pointe .Shopping Ctr., 154Emily Dr.. (304!622·2331
ClilllcGtho U.S. CeHu~r. 150 Westl)m Ave., {140)102·4812

Clitllcothe In-Touch Wireless &amp; More. 34 East Watar, (140) 179-6999
Eltlu 220 Thinf St., (3041636·9311 ·
fllinnelltt 17 Middletown Rd.,'Route 73, (3041363-1881
Gallipolis USCC Wai·Mart Kiosk, 2145 Eesteni Avenue, {140 1441-1066
Jacbon Classic Plaza. 40~E . Huron,(140128B·0016
•
Melgarrtown Morgootown Commons, 651B Mall Road,(304 983-2355
Morgantown #4 Suburban Cou~ Plaza. Chestnut Ridge Rd., 04159B-2450
Now Bostoo U.S. Cellular, New Boston Shoppillll Center, 4010
Av¥,
(7401456-B722
'
.
Por1smouUI Hilttop
l'llnceton i

Autlloriled Agerrti: ..
.
. •
lllllftlt4 The CelJiar Group, Mercer Mall,(3041324·2355
.
HedgeAIII Ctll P&amp;ae'Communications, 106 Willi Main SII1lllt (304)154·3710
Kllltwood Thomas Doian'OBA Peat Communications, 206 Morgantown St. 13041329-3299
IJuoiaiJI'1 Gary's Electtonics, 11B S. Jeflerlon $t.,(304)645·71l0 .
Martinlbtrt Cell Page Commll1ications, 'MriJiburii Mall; BOO foXIlroft Ave., (304126~-8755
Mlrtirolbrrrt Omni Cel, Martinslxrg Mail, BOO Foxcroft Ave., 13041263·9085

uMilfani·IOf.riiiiiMinfonf Telephone, 10l17lR. 139, (7401820-21,1
~
Shermacl Electconics, 507 N. Main St., 13041538-2371
Cellller Group, Crossroads Mall, (304]255-7137
Pawn, 120 W. Emmitt Ave., 17_401947-7101 "'

............;.oa

--~------------~----~~---------=- ~

Have • business news item?
•

•

Mississip.pi firm wants to legitimize
small-cap markets with :research -

ACKSON, Miss. (AP) - What
sta'rted in a commercial garage
as a venture to educate people
who trade penny stocks is no
longer a small-change operation.
.
.,_,.ckson-based
Knobias.com
has
1
vested S2 million to upgrade its services beyond just a · ~ource:ot: -basic
information on these low~ priced,
high- risk securmes that don't meet
the financial requirements to be listed
on the major stock exchanges.
The
company
began
as
pennyPI.com in December 1999 and
targeted individual investors looking
tor data. . The concept was good, but founders
Greg·Ballard and. Key Ramsey realized
that enhancing their product might
make it attractive to brokera' firms
and other ~nstitutions. · Thes firms
typically ign9re penp.y stocks ecause
little, if anything, is known about
. many of the comp!lnies offering
shares.
"There's been no legitimacy in ·the
past;' said Ramsey, the privately held
company's chief executive. "The. stocks

three
. months)

Plans
. . . . . in moti·0 n
for Relay for Life

Page Dt_

.

This chart shows how local 'stocks of interest perfomu!d last week.
Each day~ closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

..
·~-, for $3(1$15 ·per month
...

•

THE WEEK IN STOCKS

800 minutes

,,

..

Suftday. July 1.lQ01 ·

'llY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

·Heart

Inside:

•

.

Lyrics to the
song 'Tom
Dooley'

S

..

..

.

•

J .. 1

Give us·a call at (740) 446-1341, ext. 13 ·
. .........., '

'

~-·~...,..·

...

..._. . .

~

...

•

were moving on rumor and pro motThe researchers use any neW' inforers. Ther.e. was no credibility."
· marion as the basis of a report, which
. Knobias.com launched ·its ·new Web is added to the company's profile that
site in February for individual customers pay to see.
investors, who can buy reports on a
" We realized quicldy that having ·a
pay-per-view basis starting at S7 .95, database is eilSy;• said Ballard, who is
subscribe to market-monitoring tools chief operations officer. "Maintaining
. ~or $19.95 a l!nonth, and even take one is hard because data gets old daily. ·
•· ytdeo iom'!"of soml!~lllr.&gt;blp''I!O'r!tflll~·ot,t. ke! '&lt;l"'signititant ellbtt,.1!0~galtefi•
nies.
'
what little information there is."
.
The firm has 1!1so- upgraded it.s
The company's software is designed
image by moving from a large indus- to scour SEC and Slate documents,
trial storage shed ·to new offices in a Canadian filings and news releases.
trendy part ofJackson. About 60 percent of the data is gathEach morning, .a staff of about 20 ered that way. The rest is done manuresearcher~ logs in to the company's ally - making phone calls, watching
proprietary computet system to get the markets and other more laborthe latest on the 300 or so small-cap intensive ways.
companies that each of them moniLast month, the . ~ompany started
tors.
aggressively pitching its 'products to
If a chief executive resigned over · market makers and larger financial
·night, it's there.
.
institutions. Ballard and Ram_sey have
If someone has bought or sold a sig- lpent much of the past month in New
nificant number of shares, it's there. ' York meeting with several firms. Some
If the company has issued a press 50 institutions are using Knobias setrelease or filed a report with the Secu- vices on a trial basis.
rities and Exchange Commission Anurag Pandit, a vice president and
, which not all are required to do ~ it's ~mail-cap portfoliq manager for John
there.
·
Ple•se see Stodl. Dl

Eanvigs npt dangerous,
just a nuisdnce
POMEROY
Homeowners, a're you
· .finding insects with large
pincers at the end of their
bodies? These insects are
earwigs. Earwigs range in
size from one half to
three- quarters inch size
' and are light red-brown
to black in color.
Their name, ean.vig, is

..Hal
Kneen

•
along the house founda - 1
detived · ~m the Epro- tion . Rain gutters and
pean superstition that .
these insects .entered the spouting should carry
ears of a sleeping person water away from 'the·
and bored into their bouse foundation.
brain. This is completely,
Change landscaping by
untrue! Earwigs overwin- creating a c~ean , dry borter in your yard as adults der 1mmedtately around
or eggs in protected areas .. ~he
foundan o n wall
or six feet underground.
UIStead of mulch. Slope
They emerge .in early the landscafe away from
spring and begin · eating the foundatiOn .
mosses, lichens, algae, fun- . - Trap ~arwlgs outdoors
gus, insects, spiders, mites usmg Simple cardboard
and other plimt life. They box traps. ,Us~ used c~real
are active at night and try bo~s and punch penctl
to hide during the day in SIZe holes nea~ the bottom
moist, shady areas.
for the. earwtgs to chmb
Prevent their intrusion mto. Ba1t usmg oatmeal or
in your garden and home .btan . . Dispose of every
by "i~dul:ing exCessive mornmg by drowmng m
moisture. Eliminate damp,. water and a h~tle hq':'-1d
moist conditions in crawl so~p '" a contamer. L1ke
spaces under your home, with slugs, place a board
around faucets, around air · flat side down onto the
conditioni·n g units and
PII8HH8Kneen,DI
~

UK determines possible

1

-· caus~ offoal deaths
GALLIPOLIS
. In
recent weeks, the horse
industry in Kentucky and ·
Ohio have been troubled by
late term abortions in mares,
or what is being called M are
Reproductive Loss Syn-drome.
'
For several months, over
100 scientists and staff from
· University of Kentucky's
College of . Agriculture,
together. with veterinarians,
farm managers and equine
industry leaders have been
working to determine a
cause. for the problem.
According to an article
written by Laura Skillman
and posted by UK, offi,ial~
aniJ.ounced on May 20 that
their preliminary findings
suggested a strong associa'tion bei&gt;~een late and early
term aboJ1ions in mares and
a high population" of th e
Eastern tent caterpillar.
·
lJ"tis link was established
whe11 scientists determined
frotn early ti ssue sa mpl ~
"analysis that cyanide or
cyanogemc
compounds
were most likely the cause of
the foal deaths. It is well
know'l , that wilted wild
black cherry tree leaves car
be toxic to cattle and sheep

•••

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW '

due to concentrated levels of
cyanogenic compounds.
As a favorite ·food of the
Eastern tent caterpillar, wild
cherry leaves are being identified as the source of poison
and •the caterpillar as the
delivery method either
directly or indirectly to the ·
mare.
. Furthermore, scientists
were able to rule out ergot
alkaloids .from bluegrass or
orchard grass, fescue toxicosis' or mycotoxins, or white
clover as ·causes. According
to .Jinuny Henning, a wellknown UK agronomist and
forage
researcher,
the
hypothesis
strengthened
when Jt was recognized that
previous unexplained out
breaks of early and later
term abortions also correlat-

..

. ,.........,...••• Dl .

,.

�..

Sunday, July 1, 2001

~ribune

•

'

- SentinelWe

WEARE
EXPANDING OUR
ADVERTISING
The University of Rio
SALES STAFF
J3rande is taking appllca- Are you a person that enJ:Ions for part-time faculty joys meet1ng people? Are
rnembel'!l for the Academic you self mot1vated a~ en;tear 2001 -2002
joy being creative? Are you
look1ng ror a career w1th a
jnstructors are needed In tong
established
and
the areas of English, Read- growing company? Are you
lng and Leamlng Strategies, 1nrerested 1n a pos111on that
_Basic Wnting, Composition 1 otters msurance, 401 ·K.plan
.lind II A Bachelor's degree • and paid vacatiOn time?
ls
1ed Ma
•
h h
requ r
ster's prelm- ....re you a person I at as
fed Classes begin August sales expenence? If so It
"j.7, 2001
Will be beneftelal II not, We
..
w1t1 tra1n For Interview con~
All candidates shoUld sub- slderallon send your re~
m•t a letter of Interest cur· sume With a co~ar letter tellrent resume and the names ing us why you are the perand addresses of three ref- son we need to: '
.erences. Resumes 'Mil be Chartes Govey, Publisher
fev1ewed as received lnlor...
Ohio Valley Publishing
?nallon must be submitted
(ThB Da1ly Tri bune) ,
Jo PhylliS Mason, SPHR.
825 Third Ave
01rector of Human ResourGalhpohs, Ohio 4563 1
t:es, University of A1o
tltande, PO Box F27, R10 1116
.
Bl51Nl'S'i
Grande, 0~ 45874 E-ma11
p!llasonllrlo edu EEO/AA ·--TRAtNiiiiiioiiJNGiii-_.1
l;jnployor
'

Cove

And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

C.&amp;Ua Cuvnty, OH

In one week With us

REACH OVE.R 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ON.LINE

Sentinel

Call TOday...

or Fax To

Offe~ lfo~~

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or Fax To C7.,4...
o)_9_92_·2_157_ _-::---:-o_r_F_ex
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7

. [)earl/1;,~
Word Ads
O•llv tn· Col•mn I 00 p m
Mondav-Frlday for Insertion
'"Ne xt oar'• Pap"
S•nd•v ln·Col•mn: 1 oo p.m
For sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

Display Ads
All Olsol•v . 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
••bllcotlon
•
S•nd•v Dlsplav . •' oo p.m.
Tnursday ror Sunoays

t

!::t====~~

\.VIu

YUI

10am Mt Umon church Pli- alt dnll1n case, around Tup-

ny V'N singing , dlnmg fN- pars Pla.ns &amp; 681, reward, Garage- Mov1ng sale- rain
eryone welcome
(740)667-9774
or aNne. 2447 Bulavltte P1ke
Gallipolis (2 4 miles from
Rout§ 160) Saturday, June
New To You Thnlt Shoppe
YARD SALE 30, Sunday, July 1. Sam·??
9 West Stimson, Athens
..__ _ _ _ _ __./ Some ant1ques, tw1n box
740·592·1842
Quality clothmg and house- "'l'l"'"'"':'~~~-....., spring &amp; mattress, old
hold Items $1 00 bag sale
YARD SAJ...E..
trunkS, furniture, bedding·
every Thursday Monday
sheets, blankets, comfortGALUP01JS
ers, pillows, kllchen baking
lhru Saturday 9 00·6 00
d1shes, pots &amp; pans, kitchen
~~-..,..-----, 112 Green Terrace Court Items, Iron, books, tapes,
Fnday 6th &amp; Saturday- Jth: picture frames , bookcases,
GIVEAWAY
crafts and more.
~
wedding dress, many more
~-------,..1
11ems MovIng, everyt hmg
3 1am•hes, Monday 2nd, 927 mus1 go- Che ap Ill ·'
,....... ho
Free pupp~es to~
me, Fourth Avenue, 9.00am till ?
Border Collie &amp; Australian Lots 01 thmgs
July 3rd, 830 1st Avenue,
Sheppard, cal! (740)388· :::::-::::::-:"-:::----:::- boys, g1rls &amp; adutn clothes,
9033 af1er Bpm
6130-713, 5 miles out Route misc.
- - - - - - - - 218 S from Route 7 Good - - - - - - - Free pups, part Rottweller children summ$r, school Thursday, Fnday &amp; Satur~
(740)992·3868
clothes, adult also misc. day, 9am-4pm, 155 Hub- -'-="--=.;_- et,.. 9am-?
bard Avenue appliances,
To a good home, tovmg TV, tools , a1r conditioner,
black long ha1red female oat 71r:. , 3, Kelley Drive AI 7 clothes, glass ware, etc
304·675·5892
Off u eorges Creek Ad , Ex·
cellent Clothes Numerous Monday· July 2 &amp; Tuesday
Two yellow tong-haired kit· household ItemS, 8am-4pm July 3 9-Spm, 2 m•les north
tens to g1ve away, must be
olf Holzer Hosp1ta1 on Route
taken together (740)992· B1g Yard Sate across from 160_ Q 1nmg mom set l!v1ng
3575
J&lt;err post office Saturday, room lurn1lure, men &amp; womMonday and Tuesday 9- en's cloth1ng , p1us-s 1ze
5pm
clothing, baby clothes, mise
baby Items shoes, s1ze 9,
lce coolers, sheets, dishes,
Sleepmg bags, sewmg machine, misc. household
In Memory
Items, dolly and old stuff
Rain or shine.

r

I
I

r

I

In Mematy

of

who Jl..,od away July I,

t997

Gong It tha faca I lo11ad S'O do.at
~llon1 lo th o val•• liovod to ho••·

Tio oad but huo I wond" why
TIM! but are alway~: f1ttt to die!
A pogo In tho book of mornory ollontly lu•n• todoy,
l=or mAmotJu live fotaVC!t to tno you ara fuRI•way.

No one~ know~: the ~:ileht futarteehO£ Ohly thota who
have loved ~h tell
Tho g•lof I """ In ollonoe

r

olf

Pau I L. rellute '

~

to• tho ono I loved oo

'· '"· '

tnll:s:ad by hit wlfa Vlvl'lh l=alhnt

~;:::=~:;~~~;;~~~;::!~=~

YARD SAL&amp;
PoM£Royll\1n:iou:

s

15

Words

M

us

3

Days

•

$

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 words 7 Days. Each Item Priced
• No Commerc i al Ad s
'
/ p
b
d A 1
1
• No Tickets
ure re
n ma s
Or Garage/Yard Sales
all To : Ohio Valley Publish
Avenue Gallipolis, OH

•

20¢

t B p
e

Per Word
ld
repa

•

~+

PJr' 7u ?-'4 -1 ~
r' {Je4t4 1/(ae ~ .'f!
,

Would like to expreaa our alncere
appreciation to ollr frlenda and nelghborl
for their many acta of klndneee during thla
difficult time. Special thanka to the Mt.
Carmel Baptlat Church family, the Bidwell
community membera, and Galllpolla and
surrounding area, and the
McCoy-Moor~ Funeral Home._ _ J
5&lt;ut &amp; z:lr(.- ~

&amp;&amp;...tu~~

21 5 Unon,
I Pomeroy, 812 , re~
frlgeratOJ, Army bunkbeds,
childs desk, beanbag chair,
baby clothes, and M1sc
•
3 family garage sale, 295
Wrlght Street, near Pamer·
oy Eleri1en1ary, July 2nd,
rain or shine

====-----

r,:

A family
of

Donald lae Hanloon
ld 111.wou
~to up~c~
out ~lncete

BJl~taclatlon to all
friend• a'lod nelghboro

th~t have holpod lh
OU' tlino of lo" by
o""•lng •••ye~
.,
""
r • ••
b@a"tiful
flowo...
04
·~,
food, vlolto ~nd mdo.
n
.:.pee/a I lh~nko to;
~OhllgnQit William

· IJo.

7. and
Pallbe~tero

t!ewt D/ 71.4d~.
Thanks to fnends and relatives
!heir love and support during
sickness and death of my d"'"•
husband M1ffl10 Dale Moore.
For your prayers , cards, calls and
VISitS.
To Rev . Gary Warner for ·his
consoling words, to Emma Lee
Waugh and Sharon Ebl1n for the
beautiful music. To Dr. Morgan , Dr.
Ayers, nurses and staH at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. To Dr.
I
nurses and staH at the Holzer
Care Center. Ohio , Valley Hbme
Health, (:1fe Ambulance and others
f or transportation . Waugh-Halley·
Wood Funeral Home

e/QTt~iJ/Ig QriJirlful
CW!fo CJ&gt;tJu!fnrJ

·

Waugh·H~IIey Wood

runGt~l Ho:;a

I

Oh1o valle',~ Publlsh1ng Co
Is lOOking lor sports cone·
spondents for the In-county
region Interested applicants
should call (740)446--'.342
E)Ct. 1. , set up an Inter·

I

1110 HELP W

~lew

lnfoCislon Off8t'8

Bonuses

And

Benefits Including

monthly

Excellent
Health ,

D1sabil11y, 401 K, And Paid
AN1ID
Domino's Pizza now taking Vacat1on And Holidays
• _ _ _ _ _ _ _,... applications at Pomeroy
•••srARSEARCH....
and Ga!l1poi1S 1ocat1ons only If You Would llke -1o Con·
tnbute To Our SLICCess At
lnfoCISIOn In Gallipolis,
s
d5 &amp; v
1 Onver
"2001"
8
mgers, an
oca
NEW PAY PACKAGE
Send Your Resume To
Groups, All Styles/ Ages
lnfoCis1on Management
MaJOr Record Label Seek- START $0 33·$0 35 PER
Corp
1ng New Artists Coming
MILEIII
Attn Sam Gaskel
To
Huntington,
WV Loaded or Empty w/EMp.
325 Spnngside Or
(90t)427-2639
or
Akron, OH 44333
•rarp Flay
Home Interior, clothing, fur- (901)427- 9514
~ ~·
nlture, m1sc Short Leading
Or Email To.
Creek, beside Clonch Ae- Adolescent
Counselor · •safety and Idle Bonus
hrd1rectora lnfoCislon com
pa1r, 6/28, 712, 7/3.
needed Working w1th mafe'S •ec/BS Hea1h &amp; Den1al
VISit Our Web S1te At
Jay Rees home, July 2 nd· 8; 18 years. cpntact Andy
__,_n,_o_c_ls_l
o_
n _co_m_ __,
•Satellite Dispatch
3rd 9·4 At 338 abo~e Ra- Thompson at (740)533·
r
'
'
f
3140
•conventional Assigned
c1ne 0 am, an1IQUes, uml·
0/o:.:1:.:hl:..:ng!.:...____ An people earn senous In·
;:tu:..:r•::.·:.:
July 1_2, At 143, Hamson- come around your schedule •EXCELLENT Home Time!
Students Welcome
ville, 2 family, color TV, , 2 earn $100 weekly just for
Wi1hCDLA
bed, lots ol m•sc
m a~hng our post cardf llm1t·
Coli HORNADY
ed offer toll free (866)270·
1-800-441-4271
JULY 2-3, 8am, near Mason 3194 wwwn'lallordermarketExtWET292
Golf course, portable dlsh- place com Mpm num 2915"
washer, lul1-s1ze bed, apet1onal sofa, computer desk, Amazing Opportunity! Work
Home lntenors, kitchen from home, PT/FT tree
Items, 1ts all gotta got
booklet. 1-800-259-2998
Dnvers
wwwdontworrybench net
H&amp;W Trucking Co.
Immediate Openings
July 5-6, huge patio sate,
Company Drivers
our Political Call
som~ antiques, stereo &amp; Are you IOokmg for the op% or Ml)eage
much more Something lor por1un• ty to JOin a Winning
Ins plans, fu ll benefitS &amp;
Center...
e\l&amp;f)'Qr'e first house past team and become part of a
holiday pay
church In Chester, At 248
fdasl growSc•ng health care In·
Home 90% of weekends
ustry 7 e:n1c H1Us Nursing
Direct Deposit and
July 6·7, State Route 143, Center IS offenng Nurse
weekly Pay
three miles from AT 7, A1de Tra1nui'g Classes
Orientation Pay
mens, women, baby, ruml- monthly It 1s a 75 hour Be 22 years, Clean MVA
ture, toys
course, lasting for 11 days,
A COL, Hazmal
Plus bonus and
Monday through Friday 8 30
..0/0 Pkg1. Avan: •
Ne•ylers next to Legion Halt to 4 30 Th•s Is a great op.
1..aoo-B2e.3580 Ext.19
Racine, July 2nd-3rd, 9-4, portun~tyl The n~xt class will
Talk to Randy
girls clothing household begin In July Stop by today
WNW hwtruck com
J
ilems, lots more.
lor an applteallon or contact
• Set
::R"oy:;:Joc..:.:n.::es-'R:;:d=,R
- a-c-In-e, lot-s Stephania Kemper, tnstruc- Someone to take care of
• Weekly B.onus
of baby ttems, June 30, July t~o:':
r. ::
a1c'('::
74ll
=)44.,-=6-::·7,-1.:.50:.,--_ etderty man Jn his home
2&amp;3
ATTENTION! S~lled, Un· I740 144B-4051

In

$7.00 per hour
overtime.·

Frkt&amp;y, 29th, Saturday,
30th, at 341 Page St , below
OVerbrook.
s
s
Mo
T
- - - - - - -- at,
un,residence,
n , Tack·
ues,
Card of Thanks
McNickle
ji~~~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;; keMIIe "Ad , Raclne, household, baby &amp; children's
~ Items

aAyote, Motnfng
,;
D awn .. aoonl• Lod&amp;•

Card of Thanks

Garage sale, 2 fam1ly, June
30, July 1 &amp; 2, 9-4, FNe
Points, take Flatwooeds Rd
toward Aoyar Oak, top of hill
tum nght, follow signs
Garage 0818• 6130 &amp; 712 ,
boVR. &amp; n1rls 12mo ·5, 1oys,
~~
•
b1kes, HP pnnter, camcordar, mise 9-4 Noble-Sum
m1t, Durst

i

Bartender wanted Days,
Sonny's Bar &amp; Gnlt
(740)367·0850
:_=;;.:..:..:.:.:...__ _ __
--.::
CMA needed busy PhySIc1ans Ol11ce Copy of Certlhcalion preferred Please
send resume to Pt Pleasant
Chol Center 2500 Jefferson
Ave Pt Pleasant, WV
25550 Fax to (304)675·
_3:::71:::3:==c:-c-:---,-- COME GROW WITH USI

Super ,large garage sale, 62
S 41h S1ree1, Cheshire,
dishes, fumlture, kids ololh·
ing, you name ltll July 2nd3rd 9·5
Tuesday 6th, Main Street,
f~41ddtepor1 , Cales', jeans,
housewares,
wallpaper,
d1shes. lawn chairs, 1oys.
810

.r

6

YARD SAlEPr. PI
• ..EASANf

sche&lt;lule

skilled, lmmedfate Open1ngs, M81gs coun1y 1/rm has - - - - - - - - lull and part·t1me positions 110 Help Wanted
evattable Appltcat1ons be·
1ng taken Tuesday July 3rd
only Complete Training for
all po51110ns All non-exporl·
anced should apply All ap·
pllcants must be able to
slart work Immediately. Ex·
cellen1 s1art1ng pay s1ruclure $1200/mO to start Vacat1on, bonuses &amp; benefits
available Also training fOr
maf!agement and superviso.y levels Call Monday tor
details. 1·74li-992-Q368

summER
JoBS

S6 $7/HR

Atlonhon·
Work
From
Homo, $500/S1500 Per
Mon1h PT. $2,000/$7,000
Per Mon1h FT, Ma~l Order.
2228 Mount Vernon Ave· 1·888438·3012
nae, teen girls ctoth1ng,
b1kes &amp; more 9-4pm, Fnday AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
7 Sa1urday
S&amp;ll
Sh1riey Spears, 3Q4·
675·1429
9;7July 2·3 2 ml1es out Bud
Chal11n Rd 125 Yamaha, AVON· Looking lor higher
baby clothes teens clothes, mcome? More flexible
motor, lawn mower, wee· hours?
Independence?
k
AVON has what you're look·
dealers 1ruc 1opper, 101s Inn lor Lers lalk. (8681581 .
more
2

Easy Indoor
WOrk fleXIble

hours full/part
time hum•!
• • ::11
pOSltl ODS
filiing QU1Ckly,I

• Every Fri!Jay
and Saturday off
• Paid holidays
• Paid vacations
• Health Insurance
• Disability Insurance
Full-ume Permanant
Posil10ns Available

1-888-237-5342
ext. 2311

na11 1echs
fast grow1ng
1n town Call
for 1nforma1
, leave message 1
1 no
answer
Homeworke1s Needed $635
Weekly Processmg Ma11.
Easy! No
E.xpenence
Needed
Call 1-800·652·
8726 Ext 2070, 24Hrs
Housekeeper and care giver
for ambutator,o elderly gentleman 40 hours, weekdays, Rio Grande area
(740)245-5203 e~en• ngs .
lmmedlo1o Openlngo
Local area business
NEEDS dependable people
In the area ol
telephone sales
lor the marketing of
Gill Cor!Hicote Pocklgoa
Eam up $10 00 an hour
employees paid weekly
Apply 1n person at
Elite Promotions
424 Main Slreet
Point Pleasant, WV
Monday through Friday
9·00am to 3 OOpm
5.00pm10 900pm

NQ phone calli please
Individual needed for re·
g1ona/ EMS Field Opera·
tlons Supen~1sor Experl·
ence 1n EMS managemen!
ol Oh1o public employee~
and labor relations Is essential Supervisor plans, manages and coordinates operatlons of stat.on ch1efs, held
personnel, vehicles and 13
stations throughout southeast Ohio Excellent verbal
and wrlnen commun1caUons
sl&lt;ills an~ word processmg
skills required Paramedic
cert1f1cat1on preferred Full
public employee benefit
package ava1lable. In accordance wlth ORC 124 11,
ll Is ant1c1pated that this w1ll
be an unclassified position
reporting exclusively to the
executl~e director Send resume to Human Resources
Director P.O Box 527,
Kerr, OH 45643 by July 13,
2001
----~----

~:~~~~=-~:":::-:"":':::----;-card 0 f ,Thanks

®

H

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL

'

currently has openings for a

we the coaches of Green 3
- T·ball and Plallers would like
thank the followinll
sponsors:
Elks Lodlle 1O'l. Stutes
Realbl. Prime Automotive
for SUPPortinll our T·ball
team for 2001.

full-time Radiology Tech.
Excellent pay and b
t
ene I S.
Send resume to:

f

Pleas ant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources

2520 Valley

Drive

25550
to : (304) 675-6975
AAIEOE,

Pt. Pleasant., WV
or fax

""

FEe.

"

parienced In chemical dependency Is a plus. LPCC P'ric1ng

ortgln, or lilY lnt1nuon to
lllllkt •ny auch
preference, llmH.aHon 01

dlac:rtmlnatlon."
Thl1 u.w1paper will not

knowlngty .ccept
adnrtl.. menta for real

i

or t/SW required

Send resume by July 16,
2001 ro FACTS, 45 Olive
Street, Goll/pol/s, Ohio
45631 or fax to (740)446·
8014 EOE, MIFIH

patiencePO to
Sou1horn
Homes,
Box 629,
Jackson, OH 45840
,--:..,-.....:.:....:._ __
Needed
RN/Phyalcal
Thereplet lor fast growing
Home
Heal1h Agency
Send Reaume or Fax to:
~:~.=~e;,..l1h A n
PO Box 987 GalllpollgoOcyH
31 Fax 1 • 7 4Q-4o!l~i

.55

979

Brush hogmg' mow1ng, can
(.7_4.:.;0)'-'2-45'·5_56_0
_ _.:.__
Georges Portable Sawmill.
don't haul your togs to the
mill JUSt call 304-675-1957

InfoCision
Management
Corporation
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom. Only $345 00 Per Month
8
99% F•xed lnleros1 Raoe,
1·868-928·3426

Carryout &amp; delivery p1zza
rranch1s&amp; 11nancmg available for quallhed 1nd1V1dual.
cal! Lance or Ne11 1-8D0310·8848

3 bedroom, on rented lot
$3,500, &amp; 2 b!droom &amp; /o1
In Middleport $20,000
(740)992-()215

Public Sale and Auction

LEMLEY'S
AUCTION BARN

We offer :
• Full-lime evenmg
sh1fl· 40 hrslwk
• F1x.ed schedule
• Up to $7/hr +weekly
bonus potential

No Sale During July 4th Week!
Next Sale Tuesday, July

I0

(-Estate of Beulah Hook).
Watch for ad later!

• Pa1d trainmg

N oce collection of old co1ns 1 BOO's •
1900's, 2 pc . wicker (rough) 4 thrush
bottom chairs, 6 leg table. kitch en table
w/drawer, Jenny lind bed, w agon
bed , ladies Side saddle, wood crate,
wood boxes, wood b a rre n, m1lk cans ,
sadd 11ons, granite ware. kitchen ute nsils,
wash board, rug beaters, metal s1gns ,
stone bowl, stone c rocks, p1c ture frames,
1965 B~atles lunch bag w/thermos.
Dep ressoo n glass , Fenton , lnd 1ana
Carnoval, Ste1H toy (gray &amp; whit e cat), old
magaz1nes &amp; papers.
For more Info please 'call
Ike &amp; Reanle 740.388·8741 388· 9370
Isaac's Feed Store 388-8880
Finis Ike Isaac (Auctioneer)

Have a great holiday!

• Complete benefits
package after 90 day

..

MOBILE HOMES
I'OR SAJ. E

3 bedroom, on rented lot
$3,500, &amp; 2 bedroom &amp; 101
14x70 Sou1hern Dream, In Middleport $20,000,
free Del1very free Setup on· (7 40)992-0215
ly $9995 1·888·928-3426
AMAZING Lmle or No Cred·
16 W1de Only $195 00 Per 11 Ne~ed. Special Govem·
fl/lont.h. 8 99% F1 xed Interest menl F'inanclng (304)755Rate With Air And Un· 7191
derpinn•ng 1·888-928-3426
Beauttful spacious slngte1982 141170 Fa1rmont To wn· wldes- $499 down Pay·
house, 2 bedroom, 1 targe ments as low as S199/mo
bath w1\h heat pump &amp; ale, only 0 Oakwood- Gallipolis
$7,500. 740·591 40 43 ot (740)448·3093
740·992·0938
Factory
Goof
32x80
1994 Noms 14~~: 76 , total $10,000 Discount only
electnc, l1ke new central a1r, $1000 00 Down, Detlvery,
$15900 740· and setup paid by Factory
1·800·691·6777

-

740-388-0823 Home

• Paid vac'ationlpa1d

Overbrook Center, 333
Page Street, Middleport, is
now accepting applications
for Its upcoming nursing ast lltant class The class wiU
begin Thursday July 12 ~
2001 II you have any questions, please contact Krlstle
Madden a1 (74())992-9472.
E.O.E.

740-245-9866Auctlon Barn

Real Estate General

NO
FUND RAISING!
Call today to S&lt;heilule

,

Consii!Mienb Welcome
'
WEDNESDAY- 10 am • 3 pm
THRUSDAY- 10 am. 3 pm or by appointment
AUCTIONEER: DEAN JE1T

an Interview:

1-866-475-7223
Ext.l901

···c··••

Public Sale and Auction

.

.Ill

The Athens·Melgs Educe·
t10na1 Service Center is
seeking a qualified leacher
for a hall-t1me public pre~
school unit
Applicants
must hold appropriate II·
cena,. Submit a letter of in·
terest, resume, references
and copy ot a current cert1tl·
cate 1o Sally Hocking, Preschool Coordinator, AthensMeigs ESC. 507 Richland
Ave , Suite 108, Athens,
Ohio 45701. Deadline 15 July 9 The ESC Is an Equal
Opponumty Employer/Provider

$67,900 #504

•

Gibson refngerator, Maytag alec. range,
washer &amp; dryer, Kenmore small deep
freeze, l1vmg room su1ts, reclmer,

1-800-585-7101 or 44~-7101

Judy D eWm
I Mernll Carter
Tammie D eWitt ..
Ruth Barr

new you Ill can
add your ftn1shm'J touches! 3
Years young 1 112 story home with
basement and 2 5 acres m/1 Main
level has appro)C 1,280 sq tt and
upper level 650 ooq ft 1he1 haa not
been compledy finished Let us tell
you tho res1 *2111

&amp; Weedeater mowers, trimmer,
(never picked up), new
cart, 25-new refrigerator gaskets,
of unknown wrtnger washer parts, 112 hp
~~;~~::..e dlspoaals, 112 hp pedestal eump

NEW FARM l/STINQI LOTS OF
PASTURE Included w~h 1hiS 98
acre pi'-" farm Along with plenty
wooded land too Large 30 x
bam , several shed &amp; pond 6
that
was
home
tm 1995 Good
spot and lots of road
along three roads Galt
llshng on th1s one
one llttle ad 1212b

pots &amp; pans, Hoover sweeper, p1ctures,
corner shelf and etc
~

wicker porch set, wood

chest, folding cha1rs, fans , luggage, lots of
clothes &amp; shoes, metal shelving, lots &amp; lots
of paper back books , wood &amp; alum step
ladders, metal cabinet, mise hand tools ,
lots &amp; lots of cook books, oHice chair &amp;

Hard
true
sect1onal
home
30 acres mil 3
2 baths, lots ot
above grOl.lhd pool and
but

more

3614 Georges Creek
$86,500 Nice bl·levo/
home th.:U has large tam11y
&amp; dlfllng area that opens to
rear deck and pnvate bacK
Eat-In kitchen 3 bedrooms
family ro:~m, garage ,
J.cx•ncr·ete dnve and morel
LOTS! Little 1f any e11.cual1ng
needed! Manufactured homes
welcome M2103 "'

LARGE PUBLIC

THEIR
LOSS
SOMEONE
ELSE'S GAIN/ WANT SOLD
NOW!
Immaculate • 1998
sect1onal home, large k1tchen
w1th Island and appliances open
tO fam11y room, formal l1V1ng
Avenue- 534,900.00 1 room, 3 bedrooms 2 lull baths,
home that has be~n laundry Over 1800 sq 11 of llvmg
l re1mocleled. 3 bedrooms llvmg space t21 04
11
roqrn,
close
l convenio1
11 tocat1on j2059
1

TUESDAY EVEMING, JUL

4:30PM
Located at ' the Auction Center on Rt. 33 In Mason.
u.. Sell ina a II!. amount of Antique i!lassware from a
Kanawha Count~ estate &amp; o!hers.
PC. LR suite, 1920's 4 PC. BR suite. lanc11 oak
retarY , Press back oak rocker. VIet. l~vneat .
lwlcker chair, set of Ro~al M Dishes. Haruml china
Pes. Green &amp; Vellow DePression comPote. fenton,
Plus oth~r tUauware. sev sliver Pcs .. Picture frames.
afuns. &amp; much more.

MEIGS · COUNTY

IT!oRII.tS ; Caah or check w/posltlve 1.0.
Chocks over S 1 000 must have bank
authorization ol lunda available. Not
responsible tor loll or accidents. Food will
be available.
OWNER: C

&amp; E by, Jerry Jones

St-JAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE

RICK PEARSON AUOION CO. #66

AUCTIONEERS : Pat Sheridan &amp; Chris Pra ter
Licensed

MIDDLEPORT Older tlame w1th
charm and gre at locatiOn nea r
school. grocery. etc Lots of room
,t'lere IOf the tam1iy g1ve Cheryl a
call tor more deta1ls 112110

PH : 740-592·4310 or 1·800·419·9122

'

,,
•

In State of Ohio

&amp; Nat' I Auctioneers

Assoc.

•

Terms: Cash or check with ID.

I

&amp; Bonded

Me.mber Ohio

30..·773·1781 OR
30..·773·1ot"'7

t089 Tlodoro
Chock It
OUt! Quick possess1on Nice
corner lot &amp; 3 bedroom, 1 112
bath home With oversized garage
and lull basement t2t15
ATTENTION/
HUNTERS
&amp;
NATURE LOVERS/ Approx 84
acres of mostly all wood land w1lh
nice meadow W11dl1fe galore
Lots of road lrontage and adjoins
Wyne National Forrest 12125

MAKE
ASKING $57,500 001
SETTL~
ESTATE/
Pnva1oly
Sltujlted on 3/4 acre lOt, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, Flonda room,
large open liVIng room &amp; format
d1nmg area, mce detached
garage ptus seperate shop Close
to publiC fishing and m1nutes from
Rio Grande &amp; 35 bypass f2060

12084
tOO
Chatry
Street. $69,500 One of the best
v1ews m Gallipolls'from the porch
of this 1 1/2 story home Uv1ng
room, d1mng or family room, over
2 acres \
COMMERCIALJINVESTMENT
Commerc1al building w1th 3
apartments and bu smess rental
gOOd Income 12124
LOOKING FOR A LOT? Here
are 2 level tots With public water
and sewage available Not for a
b1g pnce $14 500 for them bOth
arid owner l s req uesl1nQ yolJr '
offer 12079

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP
A FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET!

~

I

N!W LISTING/ Your Not Going
to Behave the Space that thls
Home offers! New In ,20001
"Large slzed rooms 1n this 5
bedroom ranch style home
Uvmg room OR , den, ki[chen,
over 2000 sq ft olll\1100 space
13 acres Included with 2 car
garage and mlsc sheds Close
to Addavll/e Elem 12131

IAl: RioA(JE ... 30 acrns mn lots of
1deat hunting land
Towns h ~
530,000 00

AUCTION
•

Russell El. Wood, Broker 446-4618
441 ·0262
.Cheoyl Lemley ............ :.................... 742-3171
379-2184
DanaAtha ............. .... . .. ..... , 379-9209
245-1)022
446-0722 Kenneth Amsbaoy....... .. • . . . . . .145-5855

Maytag appllancea, many repaired
Hoover &amp; Eureka sweepers and

Regency sc;anner, cabinet base for
dishw~sher, lots of Tupperware , dishes,

4 pc

~

chalnsawa, and Amana, Magic

entertainment center, double &amp; single beds,
dressers, chest of drawers, Pole &amp; table
lamps, m1sc. linen , lois of kn~ck-knacks,

Classic rad1o ,

, 1~ee~

mowera, trlmnoeroi, .l

Located at 2475 Lee - Circle , Syracuse,
Ohio. Watch for s1gns on St. Rt. t 24 at the
Fire Stat1on.
•• "Household"

" Mise"

Reai 1Estate Genaral

&amp; EQUIPMENT: Huaquvarna
blowers lrlmmer1, graaa catcher,
for Crafteman, Murray,

Mrs. Russell IS moving out of state so w1ll
sell the follow1ng items.

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

OH

Owner Reduced Pnce , Says , "Make
Me An Offer!! ! Thi s home off e rs a
floti&gt;r plan perfect for families 3 BRs ,
2 baths , LR &amp; FR w 1th f1replace. t:at·· 1
kitchen . Covered patio for
i
enjoyment. 2 car garage. Gas heat,
central
a1r
Fam1ly
011e nted
neighborhood on Jay Driv e . Pnced at

B't Be~Ut

C &amp; E, Richland Avenue, stock
room Is over stocked and over
flowing. The following Items will be
offered at public auction,
DIRECTIONS: From Rt. 33150 In
Athens, exit on Rt. 682, turn west
on Richland Avenue, through light
to C &amp; E Hardware on laft, plenty of
parking, watch for signs • •

PUBLIC AUCTION
Sat. July 7, 2001
I O:OOa.m.

ext. 2-201

Gallipolis,

===~~~~==-=~====::::::=
R 1E tat G
I
;;;;;;;;;;;;;e;;;a;;;;;;s;;;;;;e;;;;;;e;;;n~e;;;r;;;a;;;;;;;;;;

www.BIG-BENDREALTY.COM

97 Beech Street

992·9553 Office 992-0560 Jim
Every Thursday Night 6100 p.m.

1·888-237·5342

242 Third Avenue

New ;4
3 Bedroom s,ngle Paron1 Program,
Only $19 850 Free DeliverY- Spec1al Financing Ava1lable,
&amp; Set Up 1·868·928 2426
(304)755·7191

~'IUfJraAe
•

OLD
AUCTION DOUSE

pos1tions Involve

..

Or, atop by:

Pnvate Properf'l And New
Doubt8Wide , One Payment
(304)738·7295
SChult mobile home 2 bed•
room, excellent condition,
range, refrigerator washer,
dryer central a1r condltton·
1ng (740)446·9470

• Friendly, profession al

organizations. These

The Athens-Meigs Educa- ·
tlonal Serv1ce Center 1s an- '
t~e lpatln g a pos1tion opening as Out-Of-School H1gh
School Severe Behavior
Handicapped Teacher lor
the Me1gs County Schools
lor the 2001-2002 School
Year Apphcants must haVe SBH Cer1111cauon or be w11t· mg to get a Temporary ·
Toachmg Certificate ln that ·
area Salary w111 be based
on experience and ce rtlf1ca- tlon accordmg to salary
scale and will have lull benellis Submit letter of Interest to John D Costanzo Su·
perlnteodent Athoos Meigs ·
Educational SeNice Center,
507 RIChland Avenue Suite
f108, A1hens, Ohio 45701
appllcallon deadline July '
13,•2001 The AMESC Is an
Equal 0ppor1umty EmptoyeriProvldor

Interview: .

~Ide '

~

Only 1- New OW r
SO
down to qualified buye Ofl·
ly 0 Oakwood· Gall polls
(740)446 -3093

Flnal Days Nationwide Inventory
Reductlonl
(304)736-3409

holidays

phone for major nonprofit heal1h

Partlme off1ce worker needed- computer, typmg and
other off1ce related skills
Applications to be plc~d up
and returned at Middleport
Public WorKs Olf1ce, 237
Race S1ree1 Middleport. by
4 pm July 6, 2001 EOE.

.schedule en

0

Must Sell 1994 Liberty
141170, 3 bedroom/1 bath ,
good cond1t1on, Call Harold
740-_
385·.4367
New 14 ft Wide $499 down
only $ t 99 per tnon call
now 1 BOO 691 6777

I

AAA GREETING CARD
ROUTE Super H1 Prof1 t
Loc's Local Free tnlo 800277-9424 24 hours

Help us recruit

====--...,-- ' --

Cell now to

MofORBDXsl!~

L.~-----~
--,..1.

volunteers over the

Part1me help In local reta1l
flower business, must be
able to run cash reg1ster &amp;
do physical labor, call Tracy
at (740)843·1249 a1 ~IOXIS
Taylor Gardens

• Set achedule
• WHkly Bonus
• Every Friday and
Saturday off
• Paid Vacation
Every 8 Months
• Seven Paid
Holldaya

Lol model clearance, one
2000 sec!lonal save $9,625,
lor 2000 model singles, 5
pre owned singles must go
by- May 31 , no reasonable
offer refused. these homes
won't last long , so stop •n
and check us out, we're
dealing , Coles Mobi le
Homes Athens Qh 1o, Open
M· W g. 7, Thur!-Fn , 9-6,
Sat 10-5

color, religion, atx

fllmlllal atlitut or national

..

,,

1

New double Wlde' 3 br 2 ba
S99800 down only $295
per mon call now 1-800691 •m
::.:.~.:.:,..:.:..~--:-::~--:::=
New Double Wide $195
Per Month! 3 Bedroom. 2
Bath. Free Oe!l\let')l &amp; setup 1-888-928-3426

office environment

URGENTLY,
NEEDED·
plasma donors, earn $45 to
$60 for 2 or 3 hours weekly
Cal! Sera-Tee 740·592·
6651

Full-time
Permanent
Positions
Available

Provontlon
Educatot·
Seeking an enorgo11c lndl·
vldual 1o woric wl!h lho you 1h
and adults ln Gallla and
Jackaon counties Reopon:
s!blllea incl~ but are' not
llml11d 10. alcOhol, tobacco
and 01h11 drug ptooen1a·
tlono, tralnlnQI, la/ra, com·
munl1y even11, 11c "'mini·
mum of a Bachelors Degree
wnh knowledge ol a~hol.
1obacco and o1hora. Experi·
once In developing and lm·
ptementlng new programa Ia
a plus

Pleasant Valley Hospital

New bank repo- $499 dOwn
Easy terms, free delivery &amp;
sot-up 3 bedroom. 2 bath,
(74())448-3583

lnfoCIS1on Management
Corporatoon
242 Thord Avenue
Galhpohs, Ohio 45631

1-888·974-JOBS
COG
ffiilllilgement, llC

W

Now 2001 FleolwOOd only
$148 46 per mont'h. Call
Karena 740·385-4367

";~~==~==~
l'l

location:

K/1chen Help Apply In par·
son, Holiday lm, Gall1pohs.
LPN'I
Are you Interested In a fle)Cibte schedll!ing, great bene·
fits, compeihi..ve wages, shift
differential , wage expe rl·
Are you
ence, and attendance bonuses? Don't mlss thls opportuni1y 1o begin or contln· looking for an • •
ue an exciting career at
Explosive
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
We are a progressive, long·
Career?
term care and rehabilitative
center that Specializes In
Join lnfoCI1Ion In mlklng
Alzheimer's care. We have
c•ll•
on beh11f af nonprofit
the followmg open1ngs 2
Full Tlme LPN's. 11p m. 1o argMiullon• ta r•IH fund•
1o1nd ,.,.w m~beratllpl .
7a m fill-ln, Pan-Time fill-In
for all sh1fts, and 3p m to
11 p.m on our Rena•s.sanc:e
•
(Alzheimer's) unit. For more
information, stop by and,
pick up an application, or
call Stephanie Kemper at
(740)448·7150 1oday

- - ' - - - - - - ==------:-:-::--:-:-.;~=;:::;:==~
Big Yard Sale Front St Mason Fol1ow signs June
29th-30th &amp; July 2nd-3rd
L010 ol New &amp; cheap s1uH
Chea~. ]OYJl, l&lt;!Oihlng s,a,,
new CD Bumner, lots ol
mise Items 9-6

~L

and tra•lers call (7«J)446·
SERvicEs
0151 ask for Ron or call cell
phone (740)339-0050 II no
answer, leave message
'rUANED DOWN ON
_ _.;__ _ _....:..__ SOCIAL SECURITY JSSI?
W11t pressure wash houses, No Fee Unless We Win!
trailers. decKs, boats, any1-888-582·3345
thing Call Ron at (740)4460151 or (740)441 ·4238 If
/U \1 t· SI Ill
no answer, leave message

'

We are currently hlrin
call center
~ommunicalors to wor
at our convenient

Oil/co Monogor Um1ed
Plant Savers a national con·
servation
organization,
working with native mediclnal pfants, seeks a h1ghl'1
self motivated well organ1zed Individual w1th profi·
c1ent computer skills and
commumcatlon sKllls, to run
the local office Must be
able to work Independently
have good understanding of
plant conservation 1ssues &amp;
herballsm &amp; el&lt;cellent peopte sKUis Must have · a
broad range of off1ce expenence This person witt be
working Wllh &amp; taking dJrec-.
tlon from staff and management Please send resume
to lnfo@plantsavers Ofg

McClure s Restaurant now
h1rlng all 3 locat1ons,
part-lime, p~k up apJ&gt;Iicrr-11""""
tlon at location &amp; bring
between
9·Goam
&amp;
10 OOam, Monday 1hru Sat·
Family AddiC110n Communi· urday
1y Trea1ment S&amp;~VIcos· An
outpatient Alcohol and Drug Mediqal billing, No expe rl·
counseling agency Is DC· ence needed, training provided, FTIPT computer recep1 1ng resumes lor 1he II&gt;· quired, excellent 1ncome polowing posll!ons
tential,
1-800-998·7094
dept. 831.
Therapist· Supel'llsory poI'
d
slllon Responsible lor as- Need 7 Ladles to Sell Avon
;===:1:1:0:::e::::p:::a:n:t:e:::===::. sessmools, diagnosing, ro· Coll(74ll)448·3358
v1ew ol client charts, consulCrew

B'w

r

New 2001 Fleetwood 1~x70
three BA, 2 Batn, already
set up ready to move In
$995 down, $198 per mon1h
740-992·2167

••tate which 11 In
vlotatton or the IIW. Our
reacMrtart hereby
Informed that 111
dwe11lngt •d'lartlud In
thla newaptper Ire
l'llllabte on an equ•l
oppoftunlty b8lta.

Positions

available nowl

POUCIEI: Ohfo V.lley Publl•hlng ,........ lhl right to edit. Njact, or~ •ny l1d .t .,.Y tlma. !rror. must be NpOitM an the flrat d.ly or
Ttibunt-lentiMI-Rq61ter wilt 1M reeponalblt ror no mON thin thl 0011 oi 1M IPIOI oooup!N by the erfOf' and only the nr.t lnMI'tlon W•
•ny tou ar •• ,.,... thlt ,..ults from the pt.ibUcatkMI or amluton ar .n .ctw.."tt..,..il Corrdon will be madilln tM flrllt av•ll.ttle Hltlon
.,. 1lwaya confldenll.r. • Cul'f'lnt NIW c.-d IIPPin • All rMI
:
: ~; . . 1ubttct to the Federll F•lr Hautlng Acl or 1MI
~tt only http wtntM ildl meeting ICE ltlncs.cft. We
'
ICI\Wtltlrtg In vloll1fon ol tM l•w.

ENTRY LEVEL
MANAGEMENT
lnfoCiaion M1n1g1ment
Cewp. Is Seeking lndlvidu·
als For Entry· Le~el Management To Add To Our
Team In Our Galhpohs
Call Center
Responsl·
bll1hes Include Managing A
Team Of 7 To 15 Commun1cators, Cltent And Pro
gram Knowledge, And
Some Report
Wnling
Qualified Candidates Must
Have A 4·Year Degree,
Strong Interpersonal Communlcatlon, And Leader·
ship Skills

W•ll power wash houses

Start Your Business To- 3 Bedroom, 1 bath, outday Pnme Shopping Cen· building 3 IC tll~ country
ter Space Avanabkt At AI seu"'ll· (74ll)378.-213ol
lorOable Rate Spring Valley
Plaza, Caii740-446-Q101

:STUDENTS Why sallie lor
mlmmum wage? Summer
~rk available w1th looat
~ompany Must be neat in
appearance and Scholarship money August Call
Monda'/ for details 7409!12-()368

-h-ee llrk

S a I e 51 gn 1.

I

.....llili;iiiioiiiil-lii'il;.l

Th

CarJI of Thanks.

.·

15

Over
Ad

L,R•I•k•P•iiiio A 1o Co
c earson uct n m·
pany, full · time auctioneer,
complete auction service
Licensed #66,0hlo &amp; West
V1 rgm1a, 30 4-773-5785 Or
304-773-5447
Anna ElliS, 241 Lincoln St '
w·~~
Middleport Oh. Monday Ju·
"-'"' •u.~
ly 2nd, bedspreads, cur·
TO Qt.jY
ta1ns, doors, rugs, mise
B
I
I U
Absolute Top Dollar US
1g sa e corner o
mon Silver, Gold Coins, Proof~
Ave and At 7, Monday
2nd, Tues. 3rd , 9am·7pm
sets, Diamonds,
Gold
Rings
US Currency-,Fnday, 133 Butternut. chest M TS Com Shop, 151 Sec·
of drawers, ftre place set ond Avenue, Gal!lpoUs, 74D(new), clocks, flower stands, 446·2842
lamps. draftmg table, new
blinds, drapes, collectibles,
much more

7 family. July 2 &amp; 3. Ska1e·
tamlly
at
1
A· Way A1nk, 9·5, lots of furport Road Ic1ose 1o Krogers) n1ture, 2 anttque bedboys and g•rls clothes, com- spreads, Avon , summer
puter desk, and may extras clothes, toys truck toot box,
8-6pm
blinds, ffiiSC

FOUND· Female Beagle,
near Fruth's and Holzer
Why walt? Start meet1ng Hospital Call (740)441 ·
Ohio singles tonight, call loll 9a14
•
lree 1-800-766-2623 ext
1621
Found Black and White
bobbed tan terrier tooklng Furniture Sale· headboards,
dog on State Route 850 footboards,
n1ghtstand s,
Wearing yellow collar end tabJes, lamps, lamp
(740)245·5506
shades and much more
18
··-•t
-~1018
Dew·
JDurlvlye2
&amp; 3 only 34
• 1 Circle
•
Dunn fa m1ly tnbute July 1, lo.1

~dly

F ree Yar d
Up To
Words,

Weed Eating .Hillsides.
D1tctfes, ~ E tc
Mow•ng,
Clean-up, Removal 01 Un·
wa.nted IIams Odd JObs
Call Stove (74())44&amp;-7604

mother In my home full t1me
Pr part t1me, 74D-367-Q302

'I'-~

PERsoNALS

r

I nc I u d es

New 16 ft wide $49!1 per
mon only $270 per mon
call now 1-800-691 ·6777

50meone to take care of my

(304) 675-,_5o;:2.:...34------'---.

rv-rlcfo.fe4

• Stert Your Ads With A t&lt;:eyword • Include comp lete
Description • Includ'e A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Num be r And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\\'\IH \(I \II

l\egister

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992~2156 (304) 675-1333

Your Ad,

itunba!' ~tmrlf· itrntmrl • Page 03

Part-tm1e Faculty
Posting date June 27, 2001

Meigs, Gallia,

~ribune

wv

· PoaltJon Announcement

CLASSIFIED

To Place

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

HOME HAS HAD LOTS
OF TLC Situated on a litt le over
one acre 1t teatu rs 3 bedroom s,
liVIng roo m, kit chen and bath
The home, 1s a Wmds or horus
w1th vmyl sidmg, shmgle root,
thermo w1ndows artd attached
carport Call today gr$.at locatiOn
on Te)(as
Road
Eastern
School s Askln'il $47,00012120

BY FOR

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171·
LOTS, Of HOUSE FOR THE
MONEY1 L1~e new Cape Cod
home wlth lull rear dormer ottenng
more space upsta1rs 3 BR , 2
baths formal LA, toyer, FA and
formal d• rtmg area, large s1zed
deck1ng area, large SIZed deck1nQ
on rear, over 2 acre lot and much
morel OWNERS RELOCAl'ING
• SAID ""SE LL NOW"I
t2094

�..

Sunday, July 1, 2001

~ribune

•

'

- SentinelWe

WEARE
EXPANDING OUR
ADVERTISING
The University of Rio
SALES STAFF
J3rande is taking appllca- Are you a person that enJ:Ions for part-time faculty joys meet1ng people? Are
rnembel'!l for the Academic you self mot1vated a~ en;tear 2001 -2002
joy being creative? Are you
look1ng ror a career w1th a
jnstructors are needed In tong
established
and
the areas of English, Read- growing company? Are you
lng and Leamlng Strategies, 1nrerested 1n a pos111on that
_Basic Wnting, Composition 1 otters msurance, 401 ·K.plan
.lind II A Bachelor's degree • and paid vacatiOn time?
ls
1ed Ma
•
h h
requ r
ster's prelm- ....re you a person I at as
fed Classes begin August sales expenence? If so It
"j.7, 2001
Will be beneftelal II not, We
..
w1t1 tra1n For Interview con~
All candidates shoUld sub- slderallon send your re~
m•t a letter of Interest cur· sume With a co~ar letter tellrent resume and the names ing us why you are the perand addresses of three ref- son we need to: '
.erences. Resumes 'Mil be Chartes Govey, Publisher
fev1ewed as received lnlor...
Ohio Valley Publishing
?nallon must be submitted
(ThB Da1ly Tri bune) ,
Jo PhylliS Mason, SPHR.
825 Third Ave
01rector of Human ResourGalhpohs, Ohio 4563 1
t:es, University of A1o
tltande, PO Box F27, R10 1116
.
Bl51Nl'S'i
Grande, 0~ 45874 E-ma11
p!llasonllrlo edu EEO/AA ·--TRAtNiiiiiioiiJNGiii-_.1
l;jnployor
'

Cove

And Mason
Counties Like
No One
Else Can!

C.&amp;Ua Cuvnty, OH

In one week With us

REACH OVE.R 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ON.LINE

Sentinel

Call TOday...

or Fax To

Offe~ lfo~~

446-3008

•

or Fax To C7.,4...
o)_9_92_·2_157_ _-::---:-o_r_F_ex
. ..,l-'o

7

. [)earl/1;,~
Word Ads
O•llv tn· Col•mn I 00 p m
Mondav-Frlday for Insertion
'"Ne xt oar'• Pap"
S•nd•v ln·Col•mn: 1 oo p.m
For sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

Display Ads
All Olsol•v . 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
••bllcotlon
•
S•nd•v Dlsplav . •' oo p.m.
Tnursday ror Sunoays

t

!::t====~~

\.VIu

YUI

10am Mt Umon church Pli- alt dnll1n case, around Tup-

ny V'N singing , dlnmg fN- pars Pla.ns &amp; 681, reward, Garage- Mov1ng sale- rain
eryone welcome
(740)667-9774
or aNne. 2447 Bulavltte P1ke
Gallipolis (2 4 miles from
Rout§ 160) Saturday, June
New To You Thnlt Shoppe
YARD SALE 30, Sunday, July 1. Sam·??
9 West Stimson, Athens
..__ _ _ _ _ __./ Some ant1ques, tw1n box
740·592·1842
Quality clothmg and house- "'l'l"'"'"':'~~~-....., spring &amp; mattress, old
hold Items $1 00 bag sale
YARD SAJ...E..
trunkS, furniture, bedding·
every Thursday Monday
sheets, blankets, comfortGALUP01JS
ers, pillows, kllchen baking
lhru Saturday 9 00·6 00
d1shes, pots &amp; pans, kitchen
~~-..,..-----, 112 Green Terrace Court Items, Iron, books, tapes,
Fnday 6th &amp; Saturday- Jth: picture frames , bookcases,
GIVEAWAY
crafts and more.
~
wedding dress, many more
~-------,..1
11ems MovIng, everyt hmg
3 1am•hes, Monday 2nd, 927 mus1 go- Che ap Ill ·'
,....... ho
Free pupp~es to~
me, Fourth Avenue, 9.00am till ?
Border Collie &amp; Australian Lots 01 thmgs
July 3rd, 830 1st Avenue,
Sheppard, cal! (740)388· :::::-::::::-:"-:::----:::- boys, g1rls &amp; adutn clothes,
9033 af1er Bpm
6130-713, 5 miles out Route misc.
- - - - - - - - 218 S from Route 7 Good - - - - - - - Free pups, part Rottweller children summ$r, school Thursday, Fnday &amp; Satur~
(740)992·3868
clothes, adult also misc. day, 9am-4pm, 155 Hub- -'-="--=.;_- et,.. 9am-?
bard Avenue appliances,
To a good home, tovmg TV, tools , a1r conditioner,
black long ha1red female oat 71r:. , 3, Kelley Drive AI 7 clothes, glass ware, etc
304·675·5892
Off u eorges Creek Ad , Ex·
cellent Clothes Numerous Monday· July 2 &amp; Tuesday
Two yellow tong-haired kit· household ItemS, 8am-4pm July 3 9-Spm, 2 m•les north
tens to g1ve away, must be
olf Holzer Hosp1ta1 on Route
taken together (740)992· B1g Yard Sate across from 160_ Q 1nmg mom set l!v1ng
3575
J&lt;err post office Saturday, room lurn1lure, men &amp; womMonday and Tuesday 9- en's cloth1ng , p1us-s 1ze
5pm
clothing, baby clothes, mise
baby Items shoes, s1ze 9,
lce coolers, sheets, dishes,
Sleepmg bags, sewmg machine, misc. household
In Memory
Items, dolly and old stuff
Rain or shine.

r

I
I

r

I

In Mematy

of

who Jl..,od away July I,

t997

Gong It tha faca I lo11ad S'O do.at
~llon1 lo th o val•• liovod to ho••·

Tio oad but huo I wond" why
TIM! but are alway~: f1ttt to die!
A pogo In tho book of mornory ollontly lu•n• todoy,
l=or mAmotJu live fotaVC!t to tno you ara fuRI•way.

No one~ know~: the ~:ileht futarteehO£ Ohly thota who
have loved ~h tell
Tho g•lof I """ In ollonoe

r

olf

Pau I L. rellute '

~

to• tho ono I loved oo

'· '"· '

tnll:s:ad by hit wlfa Vlvl'lh l=alhnt

~;:::=~:;~~~;;~~~;::!~=~

YARD SAL&amp;
PoM£Royll\1n:iou:

s

15

Words

M

us

3

Days

•

$

Private Party Ads Under $100
20 words 7 Days. Each Item Priced
• No Commerc i al Ad s
'
/ p
b
d A 1
1
• No Tickets
ure re
n ma s
Or Garage/Yard Sales
all To : Ohio Valley Publish
Avenue Gallipolis, OH

•

20¢

t B p
e

Per Word
ld
repa

•

~+

PJr' 7u ?-'4 -1 ~
r' {Je4t4 1/(ae ~ .'f!
,

Would like to expreaa our alncere
appreciation to ollr frlenda and nelghborl
for their many acta of klndneee during thla
difficult time. Special thanka to the Mt.
Carmel Baptlat Church family, the Bidwell
community membera, and Galllpolla and
surrounding area, and the
McCoy-Moor~ Funeral Home._ _ J
5&lt;ut &amp; z:lr(.- ~

&amp;&amp;...tu~~

21 5 Unon,
I Pomeroy, 812 , re~
frlgeratOJ, Army bunkbeds,
childs desk, beanbag chair,
baby clothes, and M1sc
•
3 family garage sale, 295
Wrlght Street, near Pamer·
oy Eleri1en1ary, July 2nd,
rain or shine

====-----

r,:

A family
of

Donald lae Hanloon
ld 111.wou
~to up~c~
out ~lncete

BJl~taclatlon to all
friend• a'lod nelghboro

th~t have holpod lh
OU' tlino of lo" by
o""•lng •••ye~
.,
""
r • ••
b@a"tiful
flowo...
04
·~,
food, vlolto ~nd mdo.
n
.:.pee/a I lh~nko to;
~OhllgnQit William

· IJo.

7. and
Pallbe~tero

t!ewt D/ 71.4d~.
Thanks to fnends and relatives
!heir love and support during
sickness and death of my d"'"•
husband M1ffl10 Dale Moore.
For your prayers , cards, calls and
VISitS.
To Rev . Gary Warner for ·his
consoling words, to Emma Lee
Waugh and Sharon Ebl1n for the
beautiful music. To Dr. Morgan , Dr.
Ayers, nurses and staH at Pleasant
Valley Hospital. To Dr.
I
nurses and staH at the Holzer
Care Center. Ohio , Valley Hbme
Health, (:1fe Ambulance and others
f or transportation . Waugh-Halley·
Wood Funeral Home

e/QTt~iJ/Ig QriJirlful
CW!fo CJ&gt;tJu!fnrJ

·

Waugh·H~IIey Wood

runGt~l Ho:;a

I

Oh1o valle',~ Publlsh1ng Co
Is lOOking lor sports cone·
spondents for the In-county
region Interested applicants
should call (740)446--'.342
E)Ct. 1. , set up an Inter·

I

1110 HELP W

~lew

lnfoCislon Off8t'8

Bonuses

And

Benefits Including

monthly

Excellent
Health ,

D1sabil11y, 401 K, And Paid
AN1ID
Domino's Pizza now taking Vacat1on And Holidays
• _ _ _ _ _ _ _,... applications at Pomeroy
•••srARSEARCH....
and Ga!l1poi1S 1ocat1ons only If You Would llke -1o Con·
tnbute To Our SLICCess At
lnfoCISIOn In Gallipolis,
s
d5 &amp; v
1 Onver
"2001"
8
mgers, an
oca
NEW PAY PACKAGE
Send Your Resume To
Groups, All Styles/ Ages
lnfoCis1on Management
MaJOr Record Label Seek- START $0 33·$0 35 PER
Corp
1ng New Artists Coming
MILEIII
Attn Sam Gaskel
To
Huntington,
WV Loaded or Empty w/EMp.
325 Spnngside Or
(90t)427-2639
or
Akron, OH 44333
•rarp Flay
Home Interior, clothing, fur- (901)427- 9514
~ ~·
nlture, m1sc Short Leading
Or Email To.
Creek, beside Clonch Ae- Adolescent
Counselor · •safety and Idle Bonus
hrd1rectora lnfoCislon com
pa1r, 6/28, 712, 7/3.
needed Working w1th mafe'S •ec/BS Hea1h &amp; Den1al
VISit Our Web S1te At
Jay Rees home, July 2 nd· 8; 18 years. cpntact Andy
__,_n,_o_c_ls_l
o_
n _co_m_ __,
•Satellite Dispatch
3rd 9·4 At 338 abo~e Ra- Thompson at (740)533·
r
'
'
f
3140
•conventional Assigned
c1ne 0 am, an1IQUes, uml·
0/o:.:1:.:hl:..:ng!.:...____ An people earn senous In·
;:tu:..:r•::.·:.:
July 1_2, At 143, Hamson- come around your schedule •EXCELLENT Home Time!
Students Welcome
ville, 2 family, color TV, , 2 earn $100 weekly just for
Wi1hCDLA
bed, lots ol m•sc
m a~hng our post cardf llm1t·
Coli HORNADY
ed offer toll free (866)270·
1-800-441-4271
JULY 2-3, 8am, near Mason 3194 wwwn'lallordermarketExtWET292
Golf course, portable dlsh- place com Mpm num 2915"
washer, lul1-s1ze bed, apet1onal sofa, computer desk, Amazing Opportunity! Work
Home lntenors, kitchen from home, PT/FT tree
Items, 1ts all gotta got
booklet. 1-800-259-2998
Dnvers
wwwdontworrybench net
H&amp;W Trucking Co.
Immediate Openings
July 5-6, huge patio sate,
Company Drivers
our Political Call
som~ antiques, stereo &amp; Are you IOokmg for the op% or Ml)eage
much more Something lor por1un• ty to JOin a Winning
Ins plans, fu ll benefitS &amp;
Center...
e\l&amp;f)'Qr'e first house past team and become part of a
holiday pay
church In Chester, At 248
fdasl growSc•ng health care In·
Home 90% of weekends
ustry 7 e:n1c H1Us Nursing
Direct Deposit and
July 6·7, State Route 143, Center IS offenng Nurse
weekly Pay
three miles from AT 7, A1de Tra1nui'g Classes
Orientation Pay
mens, women, baby, ruml- monthly It 1s a 75 hour Be 22 years, Clean MVA
ture, toys
course, lasting for 11 days,
A COL, Hazmal
Plus bonus and
Monday through Friday 8 30
..0/0 Pkg1. Avan: •
Ne•ylers next to Legion Halt to 4 30 Th•s Is a great op.
1..aoo-B2e.3580 Ext.19
Racine, July 2nd-3rd, 9-4, portun~tyl The n~xt class will
Talk to Randy
girls clothing household begin In July Stop by today
WNW hwtruck com
J
ilems, lots more.
lor an applteallon or contact
• Set
::R"oy:;:Joc..:.:n.::es-'R:;:d=,R
- a-c-In-e, lot-s Stephania Kemper, tnstruc- Someone to take care of
• Weekly B.onus
of baby ttems, June 30, July t~o:':
r. ::
a1c'('::
74ll
=)44.,-=6-::·7,-1.:.50:.,--_ etderty man Jn his home
2&amp;3
ATTENTION! S~lled, Un· I740 144B-4051

In

$7.00 per hour
overtime.·

Frkt&amp;y, 29th, Saturday,
30th, at 341 Page St , below
OVerbrook.
s
s
Mo
T
- - - - - - -- at,
un,residence,
n , Tack·
ues,
Card of Thanks
McNickle
ji~~~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;; keMIIe "Ad , Raclne, household, baby &amp; children's
~ Items

aAyote, Motnfng
,;
D awn .. aoonl• Lod&amp;•

Card of Thanks

Garage sale, 2 fam1ly, June
30, July 1 &amp; 2, 9-4, FNe
Points, take Flatwooeds Rd
toward Aoyar Oak, top of hill
tum nght, follow signs
Garage 0818• 6130 &amp; 712 ,
boVR. &amp; n1rls 12mo ·5, 1oys,
~~
•
b1kes, HP pnnter, camcordar, mise 9-4 Noble-Sum
m1t, Durst

i

Bartender wanted Days,
Sonny's Bar &amp; Gnlt
(740)367·0850
:_=;;.:..:..:.:.:...__ _ __
--.::
CMA needed busy PhySIc1ans Ol11ce Copy of Certlhcalion preferred Please
send resume to Pt Pleasant
Chol Center 2500 Jefferson
Ave Pt Pleasant, WV
25550 Fax to (304)675·
_3:::71:::3:==c:-c-:---,-- COME GROW WITH USI

Super ,large garage sale, 62
S 41h S1ree1, Cheshire,
dishes, fumlture, kids ololh·
ing, you name ltll July 2nd3rd 9·5
Tuesday 6th, Main Street,
f~41ddtepor1 , Cales', jeans,
housewares,
wallpaper,
d1shes. lawn chairs, 1oys.
810

.r

6

YARD SAlEPr. PI
• ..EASANf

sche&lt;lule

skilled, lmmedfate Open1ngs, M81gs coun1y 1/rm has - - - - - - - - lull and part·t1me positions 110 Help Wanted
evattable Appltcat1ons be·
1ng taken Tuesday July 3rd
only Complete Training for
all po51110ns All non-exporl·
anced should apply All ap·
pllcants must be able to
slart work Immediately. Ex·
cellen1 s1art1ng pay s1ruclure $1200/mO to start Vacat1on, bonuses &amp; benefits
available Also training fOr
maf!agement and superviso.y levels Call Monday tor
details. 1·74li-992-Q368

summER
JoBS

S6 $7/HR

Atlonhon·
Work
From
Homo, $500/S1500 Per
Mon1h PT. $2,000/$7,000
Per Mon1h FT, Ma~l Order.
2228 Mount Vernon Ave· 1·888438·3012
nae, teen girls ctoth1ng,
b1kes &amp; more 9-4pm, Fnday AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
7 Sa1urday
S&amp;ll
Sh1riey Spears, 3Q4·
675·1429
9;7July 2·3 2 ml1es out Bud
Chal11n Rd 125 Yamaha, AVON· Looking lor higher
baby clothes teens clothes, mcome? More flexible
motor, lawn mower, wee· hours?
Independence?
k
AVON has what you're look·
dealers 1ruc 1opper, 101s Inn lor Lers lalk. (8681581 .
more
2

Easy Indoor
WOrk fleXIble

hours full/part
time hum•!
• • ::11
pOSltl ODS
filiing QU1Ckly,I

• Every Fri!Jay
and Saturday off
• Paid holidays
• Paid vacations
• Health Insurance
• Disability Insurance
Full-ume Permanant
Posil10ns Available

1-888-237-5342
ext. 2311

na11 1echs
fast grow1ng
1n town Call
for 1nforma1
, leave message 1
1 no
answer
Homeworke1s Needed $635
Weekly Processmg Ma11.
Easy! No
E.xpenence
Needed
Call 1-800·652·
8726 Ext 2070, 24Hrs
Housekeeper and care giver
for ambutator,o elderly gentleman 40 hours, weekdays, Rio Grande area
(740)245-5203 e~en• ngs .
lmmedlo1o Openlngo
Local area business
NEEDS dependable people
In the area ol
telephone sales
lor the marketing of
Gill Cor!Hicote Pocklgoa
Eam up $10 00 an hour
employees paid weekly
Apply 1n person at
Elite Promotions
424 Main Slreet
Point Pleasant, WV
Monday through Friday
9·00am to 3 OOpm
5.00pm10 900pm

NQ phone calli please
Individual needed for re·
g1ona/ EMS Field Opera·
tlons Supen~1sor Experl·
ence 1n EMS managemen!
ol Oh1o public employee~
and labor relations Is essential Supervisor plans, manages and coordinates operatlons of stat.on ch1efs, held
personnel, vehicles and 13
stations throughout southeast Ohio Excellent verbal
and wrlnen commun1caUons
sl&lt;ills an~ word processmg
skills required Paramedic
cert1f1cat1on preferred Full
public employee benefit
package ava1lable. In accordance wlth ORC 124 11,
ll Is ant1c1pated that this w1ll
be an unclassified position
reporting exclusively to the
executl~e director Send resume to Human Resources
Director P.O Box 527,
Kerr, OH 45643 by July 13,
2001
----~----

~:~~~~=-~:":::-:"":':::----;-card 0 f ,Thanks

®

H

PLEASANT VALLEY
HOSPITAL

'

currently has openings for a

we the coaches of Green 3
- T·ball and Plallers would like
thank the followinll
sponsors:
Elks Lodlle 1O'l. Stutes
Realbl. Prime Automotive
for SUPPortinll our T·ball
team for 2001.

full-time Radiology Tech.
Excellent pay and b
t
ene I S.
Send resume to:

f

Pleas ant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources

2520 Valley

Drive

25550
to : (304) 675-6975
AAIEOE,

Pt. Pleasant., WV
or fax

""

FEe.

"

parienced In chemical dependency Is a plus. LPCC P'ric1ng

ortgln, or lilY lnt1nuon to
lllllkt •ny auch
preference, llmH.aHon 01

dlac:rtmlnatlon."
Thl1 u.w1paper will not

knowlngty .ccept
adnrtl.. menta for real

i

or t/SW required

Send resume by July 16,
2001 ro FACTS, 45 Olive
Street, Goll/pol/s, Ohio
45631 or fax to (740)446·
8014 EOE, MIFIH

patiencePO to
Sou1horn
Homes,
Box 629,
Jackson, OH 45840
,--:..,-.....:.:....:._ __
Needed
RN/Phyalcal
Thereplet lor fast growing
Home
Heal1h Agency
Send Reaume or Fax to:
~:~.=~e;,..l1h A n
PO Box 987 GalllpollgoOcyH
31 Fax 1 • 7 4Q-4o!l~i

.55

979

Brush hogmg' mow1ng, can
(.7_4.:.;0)'-'2-45'·5_56_0
_ _.:.__
Georges Portable Sawmill.
don't haul your togs to the
mill JUSt call 304-675-1957

InfoCision
Management
Corporation
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom. Only $345 00 Per Month
8
99% F•xed lnleros1 Raoe,
1·868-928·3426

Carryout &amp; delivery p1zza
rranch1s&amp; 11nancmg available for quallhed 1nd1V1dual.
cal! Lance or Ne11 1-8D0310·8848

3 bedroom, on rented lot
$3,500, &amp; 2 b!droom &amp; /o1
In Middleport $20,000
(740)992-()215

Public Sale and Auction

LEMLEY'S
AUCTION BARN

We offer :
• Full-lime evenmg
sh1fl· 40 hrslwk
• F1x.ed schedule
• Up to $7/hr +weekly
bonus potential

No Sale During July 4th Week!
Next Sale Tuesday, July

I0

(-Estate of Beulah Hook).
Watch for ad later!

• Pa1d trainmg

N oce collection of old co1ns 1 BOO's •
1900's, 2 pc . wicker (rough) 4 thrush
bottom chairs, 6 leg table. kitch en table
w/drawer, Jenny lind bed, w agon
bed , ladies Side saddle, wood crate,
wood boxes, wood b a rre n, m1lk cans ,
sadd 11ons, granite ware. kitchen ute nsils,
wash board, rug beaters, metal s1gns ,
stone bowl, stone c rocks, p1c ture frames,
1965 B~atles lunch bag w/thermos.
Dep ressoo n glass , Fenton , lnd 1ana
Carnoval, Ste1H toy (gray &amp; whit e cat), old
magaz1nes &amp; papers.
For more Info please 'call
Ike &amp; Reanle 740.388·8741 388· 9370
Isaac's Feed Store 388-8880
Finis Ike Isaac (Auctioneer)

Have a great holiday!

• Complete benefits
package after 90 day

..

MOBILE HOMES
I'OR SAJ. E

3 bedroom, on rented lot
$3,500, &amp; 2 bedroom &amp; 101
14x70 Sou1hern Dream, In Middleport $20,000,
free Del1very free Setup on· (7 40)992-0215
ly $9995 1·888·928-3426
AMAZING Lmle or No Cred·
16 W1de Only $195 00 Per 11 Ne~ed. Special Govem·
fl/lont.h. 8 99% F1 xed Interest menl F'inanclng (304)755Rate With Air And Un· 7191
derpinn•ng 1·888-928-3426
Beauttful spacious slngte1982 141170 Fa1rmont To wn· wldes- $499 down Pay·
house, 2 bedroom, 1 targe ments as low as S199/mo
bath w1\h heat pump &amp; ale, only 0 Oakwood- Gallipolis
$7,500. 740·591 40 43 ot (740)448·3093
740·992·0938
Factory
Goof
32x80
1994 Noms 14~~: 76 , total $10,000 Discount only
electnc, l1ke new central a1r, $1000 00 Down, Detlvery,
$15900 740· and setup paid by Factory
1·800·691·6777

-

740-388-0823 Home

• Paid vac'ationlpa1d

Overbrook Center, 333
Page Street, Middleport, is
now accepting applications
for Its upcoming nursing ast lltant class The class wiU
begin Thursday July 12 ~
2001 II you have any questions, please contact Krlstle
Madden a1 (74())992-9472.
E.O.E.

740-245-9866Auctlon Barn

Real Estate General

NO
FUND RAISING!
Call today to S&lt;heilule

,

Consii!Mienb Welcome
'
WEDNESDAY- 10 am • 3 pm
THRUSDAY- 10 am. 3 pm or by appointment
AUCTIONEER: DEAN JE1T

an Interview:

1-866-475-7223
Ext.l901

···c··••

Public Sale and Auction

.

.Ill

The Athens·Melgs Educe·
t10na1 Service Center is
seeking a qualified leacher
for a hall-t1me public pre~
school unit
Applicants
must hold appropriate II·
cena,. Submit a letter of in·
terest, resume, references
and copy ot a current cert1tl·
cate 1o Sally Hocking, Preschool Coordinator, AthensMeigs ESC. 507 Richland
Ave , Suite 108, Athens,
Ohio 45701. Deadline 15 July 9 The ESC Is an Equal
Opponumty Employer/Provider

$67,900 #504

•

Gibson refngerator, Maytag alec. range,
washer &amp; dryer, Kenmore small deep
freeze, l1vmg room su1ts, reclmer,

1-800-585-7101 or 44~-7101

Judy D eWm
I Mernll Carter
Tammie D eWitt ..
Ruth Barr

new you Ill can
add your ftn1shm'J touches! 3
Years young 1 112 story home with
basement and 2 5 acres m/1 Main
level has appro)C 1,280 sq tt and
upper level 650 ooq ft 1he1 haa not
been compledy finished Let us tell
you tho res1 *2111

&amp; Weedeater mowers, trimmer,
(never picked up), new
cart, 25-new refrigerator gaskets,
of unknown wrtnger washer parts, 112 hp
~~;~~::..e dlspoaals, 112 hp pedestal eump

NEW FARM l/STINQI LOTS OF
PASTURE Included w~h 1hiS 98
acre pi'-" farm Along with plenty
wooded land too Large 30 x
bam , several shed &amp; pond 6
that
was
home
tm 1995 Good
spot and lots of road
along three roads Galt
llshng on th1s one
one llttle ad 1212b

pots &amp; pans, Hoover sweeper, p1ctures,
corner shelf and etc
~

wicker porch set, wood

chest, folding cha1rs, fans , luggage, lots of
clothes &amp; shoes, metal shelving, lots &amp; lots
of paper back books , wood &amp; alum step
ladders, metal cabinet, mise hand tools ,
lots &amp; lots of cook books, oHice chair &amp;

Hard
true
sect1onal
home
30 acres mil 3
2 baths, lots ot
above grOl.lhd pool and
but

more

3614 Georges Creek
$86,500 Nice bl·levo/
home th.:U has large tam11y
&amp; dlfllng area that opens to
rear deck and pnvate bacK
Eat-In kitchen 3 bedrooms
family ro:~m, garage ,
J.cx•ncr·ete dnve and morel
LOTS! Little 1f any e11.cual1ng
needed! Manufactured homes
welcome M2103 "'

LARGE PUBLIC

THEIR
LOSS
SOMEONE
ELSE'S GAIN/ WANT SOLD
NOW!
Immaculate • 1998
sect1onal home, large k1tchen
w1th Island and appliances open
tO fam11y room, formal l1V1ng
Avenue- 534,900.00 1 room, 3 bedrooms 2 lull baths,
home that has be~n laundry Over 1800 sq 11 of llvmg
l re1mocleled. 3 bedrooms llvmg space t21 04
11
roqrn,
close
l convenio1
11 tocat1on j2059
1

TUESDAY EVEMING, JUL

4:30PM
Located at ' the Auction Center on Rt. 33 In Mason.
u.. Sell ina a II!. amount of Antique i!lassware from a
Kanawha Count~ estate &amp; o!hers.
PC. LR suite, 1920's 4 PC. BR suite. lanc11 oak
retarY , Press back oak rocker. VIet. l~vneat .
lwlcker chair, set of Ro~al M Dishes. Haruml china
Pes. Green &amp; Vellow DePression comPote. fenton,
Plus oth~r tUauware. sev sliver Pcs .. Picture frames.
afuns. &amp; much more.

MEIGS · COUNTY

IT!oRII.tS ; Caah or check w/posltlve 1.0.
Chocks over S 1 000 must have bank
authorization ol lunda available. Not
responsible tor loll or accidents. Food will
be available.
OWNER: C

&amp; E by, Jerry Jones

St-JAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE

RICK PEARSON AUOION CO. #66

AUCTIONEERS : Pat Sheridan &amp; Chris Pra ter
Licensed

MIDDLEPORT Older tlame w1th
charm and gre at locatiOn nea r
school. grocery. etc Lots of room
,t'lere IOf the tam1iy g1ve Cheryl a
call tor more deta1ls 112110

PH : 740-592·4310 or 1·800·419·9122

'

,,
•

In State of Ohio

&amp; Nat' I Auctioneers

Assoc.

•

Terms: Cash or check with ID.

I

&amp; Bonded

Me.mber Ohio

30..·773·1781 OR
30..·773·1ot"'7

t089 Tlodoro
Chock It
OUt! Quick possess1on Nice
corner lot &amp; 3 bedroom, 1 112
bath home With oversized garage
and lull basement t2t15
ATTENTION/
HUNTERS
&amp;
NATURE LOVERS/ Approx 84
acres of mostly all wood land w1lh
nice meadow W11dl1fe galore
Lots of road lrontage and adjoins
Wyne National Forrest 12125

MAKE
ASKING $57,500 001
SETTL~
ESTATE/
Pnva1oly
Sltujlted on 3/4 acre lOt, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, Flonda room,
large open liVIng room &amp; format
d1nmg area, mce detached
garage ptus seperate shop Close
to publiC fishing and m1nutes from
Rio Grande &amp; 35 bypass f2060

12084
tOO
Chatry
Street. $69,500 One of the best
v1ews m Gallipolls'from the porch
of this 1 1/2 story home Uv1ng
room, d1mng or family room, over
2 acres \
COMMERCIALJINVESTMENT
Commerc1al building w1th 3
apartments and bu smess rental
gOOd Income 12124
LOOKING FOR A LOT? Here
are 2 level tots With public water
and sewage available Not for a
b1g pnce $14 500 for them bOth
arid owner l s req uesl1nQ yolJr '
offer 12079

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP
A FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR BOOKLET!

~

I

N!W LISTING/ Your Not Going
to Behave the Space that thls
Home offers! New In ,20001
"Large slzed rooms 1n this 5
bedroom ranch style home
Uvmg room OR , den, ki[chen,
over 2000 sq ft olll\1100 space
13 acres Included with 2 car
garage and mlsc sheds Close
to Addavll/e Elem 12131

IAl: RioA(JE ... 30 acrns mn lots of
1deat hunting land
Towns h ~
530,000 00

AUCTION
•

Russell El. Wood, Broker 446-4618
441 ·0262
.Cheoyl Lemley ............ :.................... 742-3171
379-2184
DanaAtha ............. .... . .. ..... , 379-9209
245-1)022
446-0722 Kenneth Amsbaoy....... .. • . . . . . .145-5855

Maytag appllancea, many repaired
Hoover &amp; Eureka sweepers and

Regency sc;anner, cabinet base for
dishw~sher, lots of Tupperware , dishes,

4 pc

~

chalnsawa, and Amana, Magic

entertainment center, double &amp; single beds,
dressers, chest of drawers, Pole &amp; table
lamps, m1sc. linen , lois of kn~ck-knacks,

Classic rad1o ,

, 1~ee~

mowera, trlmnoeroi, .l

Located at 2475 Lee - Circle , Syracuse,
Ohio. Watch for s1gns on St. Rt. t 24 at the
Fire Stat1on.
•• "Household"

" Mise"

Reai 1Estate Genaral

&amp; EQUIPMENT: Huaquvarna
blowers lrlmmer1, graaa catcher,
for Crafteman, Murray,

Mrs. Russell IS moving out of state so w1ll
sell the follow1ng items.

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

OH

Owner Reduced Pnce , Says , "Make
Me An Offer!! ! Thi s home off e rs a
floti&gt;r plan perfect for families 3 BRs ,
2 baths , LR &amp; FR w 1th f1replace. t:at·· 1
kitchen . Covered patio for
i
enjoyment. 2 car garage. Gas heat,
central
a1r
Fam1ly
011e nted
neighborhood on Jay Driv e . Pnced at

B't Be~Ut

C &amp; E, Richland Avenue, stock
room Is over stocked and over
flowing. The following Items will be
offered at public auction,
DIRECTIONS: From Rt. 33150 In
Athens, exit on Rt. 682, turn west
on Richland Avenue, through light
to C &amp; E Hardware on laft, plenty of
parking, watch for signs • •

PUBLIC AUCTION
Sat. July 7, 2001
I O:OOa.m.

ext. 2-201

Gallipolis,

===~~~~==-=~====::::::=
R 1E tat G
I
;;;;;;;;;;;;;e;;;a;;;;;;s;;;;;;e;;;;;;e;;;n~e;;;r;;;a;;;;;;;;;;

www.BIG-BENDREALTY.COM

97 Beech Street

992·9553 Office 992-0560 Jim
Every Thursday Night 6100 p.m.

1·888-237·5342

242 Third Avenue

New ;4
3 Bedroom s,ngle Paron1 Program,
Only $19 850 Free DeliverY- Spec1al Financing Ava1lable,
&amp; Set Up 1·868·928 2426
(304)755·7191

~'IUfJraAe
•

OLD
AUCTION DOUSE

pos1tions Involve

..

Or, atop by:

Pnvate Properf'l And New
Doubt8Wide , One Payment
(304)738·7295
SChult mobile home 2 bed•
room, excellent condition,
range, refrigerator washer,
dryer central a1r condltton·
1ng (740)446·9470

• Friendly, profession al

organizations. These

The Athens-Meigs Educa- ·
tlonal Serv1ce Center 1s an- '
t~e lpatln g a pos1tion opening as Out-Of-School H1gh
School Severe Behavior
Handicapped Teacher lor
the Me1gs County Schools
lor the 2001-2002 School
Year Apphcants must haVe SBH Cer1111cauon or be w11t· mg to get a Temporary ·
Toachmg Certificate ln that ·
area Salary w111 be based
on experience and ce rtlf1ca- tlon accordmg to salary
scale and will have lull benellis Submit letter of Interest to John D Costanzo Su·
perlnteodent Athoos Meigs ·
Educational SeNice Center,
507 RIChland Avenue Suite
f108, A1hens, Ohio 45701
appllcallon deadline July '
13,•2001 The AMESC Is an
Equal 0ppor1umty EmptoyeriProvldor

Interview: .

~Ide '

~

Only 1- New OW r
SO
down to qualified buye Ofl·
ly 0 Oakwood· Gall polls
(740)446 -3093

Flnal Days Nationwide Inventory
Reductlonl
(304)736-3409

holidays

phone for major nonprofit heal1h

Partlme off1ce worker needed- computer, typmg and
other off1ce related skills
Applications to be plc~d up
and returned at Middleport
Public WorKs Olf1ce, 237
Race S1ree1 Middleport. by
4 pm July 6, 2001 EOE.

.schedule en

0

Must Sell 1994 Liberty
141170, 3 bedroom/1 bath ,
good cond1t1on, Call Harold
740-_
385·.4367
New 14 ft Wide $499 down
only $ t 99 per tnon call
now 1 BOO 691 6777

I

AAA GREETING CARD
ROUTE Super H1 Prof1 t
Loc's Local Free tnlo 800277-9424 24 hours

Help us recruit

====--...,-- ' --

Cell now to

MofORBDXsl!~

L.~-----~
--,..1.

volunteers over the

Part1me help In local reta1l
flower business, must be
able to run cash reg1ster &amp;
do physical labor, call Tracy
at (740)843·1249 a1 ~IOXIS
Taylor Gardens

• Set achedule
• WHkly Bonus
• Every Friday and
Saturday off
• Paid Vacation
Every 8 Months
• Seven Paid
Holldaya

Lol model clearance, one
2000 sec!lonal save $9,625,
lor 2000 model singles, 5
pre owned singles must go
by- May 31 , no reasonable
offer refused. these homes
won't last long , so stop •n
and check us out, we're
dealing , Coles Mobi le
Homes Athens Qh 1o, Open
M· W g. 7, Thur!-Fn , 9-6,
Sat 10-5

color, religion, atx

fllmlllal atlitut or national

..

,,

1

New double Wlde' 3 br 2 ba
S99800 down only $295
per mon call now 1-800691 •m
::.:.~.:.:,..:.:..~--:-::~--:::=
New Double Wide $195
Per Month! 3 Bedroom. 2
Bath. Free Oe!l\let')l &amp; setup 1-888-928-3426

office environment

URGENTLY,
NEEDED·
plasma donors, earn $45 to
$60 for 2 or 3 hours weekly
Cal! Sera-Tee 740·592·
6651

Full-time
Permanent
Positions
Available

Provontlon
Educatot·
Seeking an enorgo11c lndl·
vldual 1o woric wl!h lho you 1h
and adults ln Gallla and
Jackaon counties Reopon:
s!blllea incl~ but are' not
llml11d 10. alcOhol, tobacco
and 01h11 drug ptooen1a·
tlono, tralnlnQI, la/ra, com·
munl1y even11, 11c "'mini·
mum of a Bachelors Degree
wnh knowledge ol a~hol.
1obacco and o1hora. Experi·
once In developing and lm·
ptementlng new programa Ia
a plus

Pleasant Valley Hospital

New bank repo- $499 dOwn
Easy terms, free delivery &amp;
sot-up 3 bedroom. 2 bath,
(74())448-3583

lnfoCIS1on Management
Corporatoon
242 Thord Avenue
Galhpohs, Ohio 45631

1-888·974-JOBS
COG
ffiilllilgement, llC

W

Now 2001 FleolwOOd only
$148 46 per mont'h. Call
Karena 740·385-4367

";~~==~==~
l'l

location:

K/1chen Help Apply In par·
son, Holiday lm, Gall1pohs.
LPN'I
Are you Interested In a fle)Cibte schedll!ing, great bene·
fits, compeihi..ve wages, shift
differential , wage expe rl·
Are you
ence, and attendance bonuses? Don't mlss thls opportuni1y 1o begin or contln· looking for an • •
ue an exciting career at
Explosive
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
We are a progressive, long·
Career?
term care and rehabilitative
center that Specializes In
Join lnfoCI1Ion In mlklng
Alzheimer's care. We have
c•ll•
on beh11f af nonprofit
the followmg open1ngs 2
Full Tlme LPN's. 11p m. 1o argMiullon• ta r•IH fund•
1o1nd ,.,.w m~beratllpl .
7a m fill-ln, Pan-Time fill-In
for all sh1fts, and 3p m to
11 p.m on our Rena•s.sanc:e
•
(Alzheimer's) unit. For more
information, stop by and,
pick up an application, or
call Stephanie Kemper at
(740)448·7150 1oday

- - ' - - - - - - ==------:-:-::--:-:-.;~=;:::;:==~
Big Yard Sale Front St Mason Fol1ow signs June
29th-30th &amp; July 2nd-3rd
L010 ol New &amp; cheap s1uH
Chea~. ]OYJl, l&lt;!Oihlng s,a,,
new CD Bumner, lots ol
mise Items 9-6

~L

and tra•lers call (7«J)446·
SERvicEs
0151 ask for Ron or call cell
phone (740)339-0050 II no
answer, leave message
'rUANED DOWN ON
_ _.;__ _ _....:..__ SOCIAL SECURITY JSSI?
W11t pressure wash houses, No Fee Unless We Win!
trailers. decKs, boats, any1-888-582·3345
thing Call Ron at (740)4460151 or (740)441 ·4238 If
/U \1 t· SI Ill
no answer, leave message

'

We are currently hlrin
call center
~ommunicalors to wor
at our convenient

Oil/co Monogor Um1ed
Plant Savers a national con·
servation
organization,
working with native mediclnal pfants, seeks a h1ghl'1
self motivated well organ1zed Individual w1th profi·
c1ent computer skills and
commumcatlon sKllls, to run
the local office Must be
able to work Independently
have good understanding of
plant conservation 1ssues &amp;
herballsm &amp; el&lt;cellent peopte sKUis Must have · a
broad range of off1ce expenence This person witt be
working Wllh &amp; taking dJrec-.
tlon from staff and management Please send resume
to lnfo@plantsavers Ofg

McClure s Restaurant now
h1rlng all 3 locat1ons,
part-lime, p~k up apJ&gt;Iicrr-11""""
tlon at location &amp; bring
between
9·Goam
&amp;
10 OOam, Monday 1hru Sat·
Family AddiC110n Communi· urday
1y Trea1ment S&amp;~VIcos· An
outpatient Alcohol and Drug Mediqal billing, No expe rl·
counseling agency Is DC· ence needed, training provided, FTIPT computer recep1 1ng resumes lor 1he II&gt;· quired, excellent 1ncome polowing posll!ons
tential,
1-800-998·7094
dept. 831.
Therapist· Supel'llsory poI'
d
slllon Responsible lor as- Need 7 Ladles to Sell Avon
;===:1:1:0:::e::::p:::a:n:t:e:::===::. sessmools, diagnosing, ro· Coll(74ll)448·3358
v1ew ol client charts, consulCrew

B'w

r

New 2001 Fleetwood 1~x70
three BA, 2 Batn, already
set up ready to move In
$995 down, $198 per mon1h
740-992·2167

••tate which 11 In
vlotatton or the IIW. Our
reacMrtart hereby
Informed that 111
dwe11lngt •d'lartlud In
thla newaptper Ire
l'llllabte on an equ•l
oppoftunlty b8lta.

Positions

available nowl

POUCIEI: Ohfo V.lley Publl•hlng ,........ lhl right to edit. Njact, or~ •ny l1d .t .,.Y tlma. !rror. must be NpOitM an the flrat d.ly or
Ttibunt-lentiMI-Rq61ter wilt 1M reeponalblt ror no mON thin thl 0011 oi 1M IPIOI oooup!N by the erfOf' and only the nr.t lnMI'tlon W•
•ny tou ar •• ,.,... thlt ,..ults from the pt.ibUcatkMI or amluton ar .n .ctw.."tt..,..il Corrdon will be madilln tM flrllt av•ll.ttle Hltlon
.,. 1lwaya confldenll.r. • Cul'f'lnt NIW c.-d IIPPin • All rMI
:
: ~; . . 1ubttct to the Federll F•lr Hautlng Acl or 1MI
~tt only http wtntM ildl meeting ICE ltlncs.cft. We
'
ICI\Wtltlrtg In vloll1fon ol tM l•w.

ENTRY LEVEL
MANAGEMENT
lnfoCiaion M1n1g1ment
Cewp. Is Seeking lndlvidu·
als For Entry· Le~el Management To Add To Our
Team In Our Galhpohs
Call Center
Responsl·
bll1hes Include Managing A
Team Of 7 To 15 Commun1cators, Cltent And Pro
gram Knowledge, And
Some Report
Wnling
Qualified Candidates Must
Have A 4·Year Degree,
Strong Interpersonal Communlcatlon, And Leader·
ship Skills

W•ll power wash houses

Start Your Business To- 3 Bedroom, 1 bath, outday Pnme Shopping Cen· building 3 IC tll~ country
ter Space Avanabkt At AI seu"'ll· (74ll)378.-213ol
lorOable Rate Spring Valley
Plaza, Caii740-446-Q101

:STUDENTS Why sallie lor
mlmmum wage? Summer
~rk available w1th looat
~ompany Must be neat in
appearance and Scholarship money August Call
Monda'/ for details 7409!12-()368

-h-ee llrk

S a I e 51 gn 1.

I

.....llili;iiiioiiiil-lii'il;.l

Th

CarJI of Thanks.

.·

15

Over
Ad

L,R•I•k•P•iiiio A 1o Co
c earson uct n m·
pany, full · time auctioneer,
complete auction service
Licensed #66,0hlo &amp; West
V1 rgm1a, 30 4-773-5785 Or
304-773-5447
Anna ElliS, 241 Lincoln St '
w·~~
Middleport Oh. Monday Ju·
"-'"' •u.~
ly 2nd, bedspreads, cur·
TO Qt.jY
ta1ns, doors, rugs, mise
B
I
I U
Absolute Top Dollar US
1g sa e corner o
mon Silver, Gold Coins, Proof~
Ave and At 7, Monday
2nd, Tues. 3rd , 9am·7pm
sets, Diamonds,
Gold
Rings
US Currency-,Fnday, 133 Butternut. chest M TS Com Shop, 151 Sec·
of drawers, ftre place set ond Avenue, Gal!lpoUs, 74D(new), clocks, flower stands, 446·2842
lamps. draftmg table, new
blinds, drapes, collectibles,
much more

7 family. July 2 &amp; 3. Ska1e·
tamlly
at
1
A· Way A1nk, 9·5, lots of furport Road Ic1ose 1o Krogers) n1ture, 2 anttque bedboys and g•rls clothes, com- spreads, Avon , summer
puter desk, and may extras clothes, toys truck toot box,
8-6pm
blinds, ffiiSC

FOUND· Female Beagle,
near Fruth's and Holzer
Why walt? Start meet1ng Hospital Call (740)441 ·
Ohio singles tonight, call loll 9a14
•
lree 1-800-766-2623 ext
1621
Found Black and White
bobbed tan terrier tooklng Furniture Sale· headboards,
dog on State Route 850 footboards,
n1ghtstand s,
Wearing yellow collar end tabJes, lamps, lamp
(740)245·5506
shades and much more
18
··-•t
-~1018
Dew·
JDurlvlye2
&amp; 3 only 34
• 1 Circle
•
Dunn fa m1ly tnbute July 1, lo.1

~dly

F ree Yar d
Up To
Words,

Weed Eating .Hillsides.
D1tctfes, ~ E tc
Mow•ng,
Clean-up, Removal 01 Un·
wa.nted IIams Odd JObs
Call Stove (74())44&amp;-7604

mother In my home full t1me
Pr part t1me, 74D-367-Q302

'I'-~

PERsoNALS

r

I nc I u d es

New 16 ft wide $49!1 per
mon only $270 per mon
call now 1-800-691 ·6777

50meone to take care of my

(304) 675-,_5o;:2.:...34------'---.

rv-rlcfo.fe4

• Stert Your Ads With A t&lt;:eyword • Include comp lete
Description • Includ'e A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Num be r And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\\'\IH \(I \II

l\egister

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992~2156 (304) 675-1333

Your Ad,

itunba!' ~tmrlf· itrntmrl • Page 03

Part-tm1e Faculty
Posting date June 27, 2001

Meigs, Gallia,

~ribune

wv

· PoaltJon Announcement

CLASSIFIED

To Place

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

HOME HAS HAD LOTS
OF TLC Situated on a litt le over
one acre 1t teatu rs 3 bedroom s,
liVIng roo m, kit chen and bath
The home, 1s a Wmds or horus
w1th vmyl sidmg, shmgle root,
thermo w1ndows artd attached
carport Call today gr$.at locatiOn
on Te)(as
Road
Eastern
School s Askln'il $47,00012120

BY FOR

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171·
LOTS, Of HOUSE FOR THE
MONEY1 L1~e new Cape Cod
home wlth lull rear dormer ottenng
more space upsta1rs 3 BR , 2
baths formal LA, toyer, FA and
formal d• rtmg area, large s1zed
deck1ng area, large SIZed deck1nQ
on rear, over 2 acre lot and much
morel OWNERS RELOCAl'ING
• SAID ""SE LL NOW"I
t2094

�,

)

Page

-

04 • itunbap l11mrf ·iltntintl

'

l..t__

16

Ailum.mons
.;FOR-·R00·
·- - 1

STOP READ. DEMO SALE
all 200 f models , Reduced
The Home Show St Albans
2 BA, All Electric, No Pets.
1.ao&lt;).948-5678
$300
plus
deposit,
Unbellevab.. new 16 ~de ~(7_:40.:;)'-=36.:;7:..{)6:.:.;1.:;1_ _ _ _
3 br $499. down $218. a

o:;:;:: ~opobedsrrn~!1.~8~~~mon~

r

BeautHul River Vl8w Ideal
6or 1 Of 2 People,,ReterenFOR SAUl
ces, DepoSit, No Pe1s, Foe·
•
ter- l.raller Pari&lt;, 7.0-«1·
Farrn House, Beautifully 0181
Remodeled, 2963 Square
Feel 17 Acres, Pond, In· Located In Point Pleasant
ground P.ool, Several Bams, Bahlnd Fox Pizza on Sand·
Garage. Frutt Trees Close hill Road Call (304)675·
To Holzer
$215,000 3423
740)446-4230
Mobile homa 1, Racine

B~

r

Beaultlul· Recently Reno- Tw6n RlverTowers OOtN ac· ,
voted 2,000 Square FOOl, 3
ceptfng
Bedroom Ptus Storage,
Day Bed Complete, Twin
BPP'k:ationllor 1 BR
New Kitcherl, S60Qt Month
Bed Complete, Full Box
HUO subaldozed apt fo•
Downtown GallipoliS, Con- elderly and dfoatlled EOH Spring and mattress, Queen
Box Spnng and manreu,
tact Kelly (740)~48 9981
(304)675~79
Table and Cllalrt, Want.Fumlahed 2 &amp; 3 Room Nice one BR unfurnished ~r•-(7.0)44&amp;9742
Apartments, - Ctean. No apartment Range and ,._
WANDD
Pets, No Smokmg, Aeferen- lrlgerator prOVIded Waler
10 JlDtr
For ~Is Reconchtioned
cea &amp; Deposit Aeqwed and gart&gt;age paid Oepo~Ut ___
washerS, dryers and refng·
Utlhllet
Furnished . requ1red Call (740)446· House In Country Ohio
:~:S ~';~~~ ~:
(740)44&amp;-1519
~345 a~er 6pm
cfnm. (740)441·1155 after nuo, (304)67'7388
.. , :.r
Fumtshed 2 bedroom apart· Now Taking Appncabont- ~
ment across from park, 35 West 2 Bedroom TowhJO"n. .... _""
GOOD USED APPLIAN·
AJC no pets References. house Apartments, lndudea
~..--~" 1
CES Washers, dryelll, redeposil,
$32 5
month Water
Sewage, Trash,
FOR RENr
rrlgerators, , ranges Skaggs
(740)4"6 823
0)
~&lt;'liUIII.•- 7
--• .ann~,ancet 76 Vine Street
5 74 446
(
Equopment
Rental Doz. Cl;!l' 740-44&amp;-7398, 1-asi
• ~~' 40-«B.OOOS
Tara Townhouse Apart· er Backhoe Bobcat Fa
818-0128.
Gracious living 1 and 2 menta, Very Spacloua, 2 Tractor And Equip' me rmt
bedroom apanments at VII- B&amp;drooms 2 Floors, CA. 1 (
n Uka new Almond Whirlpool
lege Manor and Rovers&lt;» 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, 740)«1-{)619
washer, $100, 2 late model
Apartments In Middleport Adult POOl &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
While Whirlpool Washera,
From $278·$348 Call 740- ttQ&gt;, Slart $365/Mo No Pets,
$65 each, Dryers, SSO each,
992·5064 Equal Housing Lease Plus Securfly Oapooil riO
Call after ~pm, (740)448·
Opportunlllet..
Required, oau8 ,.740·446·
•I\JlRIUIULU
9068, 116 Orchard Hill
_:.:________
'
,
Goons
Road Gallipoll
348 1, Evenings 740-387·
•
s
0602. 740-446.0101
'
,
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Appliances Reoondllloned Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio
Announcement
Washo10, o~
... Aa~a.
Frea Estimates, 90 Daya
• r"'
•'¥""
Refrlgrators, Up To 90 Days Same As Caah. Fonanclng
Guaranteed! We 5elt New Avallabte Vl&amp;a And Master·
Appliances. French card,
1•877•830•9182
Maylag
One Stop
hopping
Clly Maylag, 7-·n95 (740)«&amp;-7444
For All Your ,Advertising Needs

u--·-· _

AND BUIUJJN&lt;;S
c~-':"'-----,
·-iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiililo,.l
~
APAlm.tmrs

I

Business rental property for
FOR ruo.n 1
sate- M•ddleport Desire ~------,.1
quick sale ~rlced below appraisal, at $55,000 Bnnga 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
$1 000/mo rental income mants, furnished and unfurnished, secunly deposit re·
(740)339-1028
qulred, no peto, 740.992·
Owner Retiring· Building 2218
Fo• Sale In Gaflopolls, Ohkl,
On Route 7, Has Large 1 Bedroom Apartment, A..
frtgeralor, Range, AIC InPalklng Lot Has 4 Rentals,
cluded,
$289 Plus Deposit &amp;
Also Lots Of Floor Space,
Reference. HUO Approved
Good
Income
Call
(740)441-1519

r

.'

•·~~~

~•JV'..I~

Framed Mtnora, Truckload
sale, great price See at lr·
Yin's Glass Servtce, 1273
B~- a new full orthopedic Eastem Avenue, GallipoliS
mattress set, st•ll In plastte, (740)~442;3
sacnfoco $129 304·360· ' - - ' - - ' - - " - - - - - Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
0233
Repairs Problems? Need
Cemetery Lots for Sale 5 Tuned? Call The Plano Dr
together in Providence 740·446-4525
C
t
l ns R n ;_:;,o_;o,...:__;__ _- , eme ery on ee
u lndei'\Qndenl trferbahfe o:s.
tnbut;;; Call For Product 01
Road («O)S&lt;ll-2285

.
Buy or sell Rovenne Anti·
quea, 1124 East Mam on
SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740992·2526 Russ Moore,
owner

Hartford, WV, stone jar
$760, China Cabinet $250
old pinball machtne $100,
pia eafe $100, Vlctonan
mantle shelf with mirror
$160 bo 1 ··•1 1
: tte.....,.eclon. great
lor obayal money
d maker
rt
5600
•
so • ve ISong
wood boxes, metal advertiS·
lng 10gns and much more
I'
(740)992·5088

414 Cherry Ridge,
45674
,

Approximately one-hall mile on Cherry
Rldga from Rio Grande village.

A.,,,,

14,000 BTU Air conditioner,
(740)448·1124

IIJ.all.ae. • Air CendltJ•nJa•
IUIII 111111 TIAI IT IAI f1 11

441·0114 1·800·498-0076

Valley Truck Driver Training ·
COL CertilkM sWIOUI!I

, 8 cu rt Kelvnator refnger·
ator,
like new, glass
shelves,
Ice
maker
$200,(740)992·5818

Black Ftbergla.!ls Century
Cargo Co\ler Fits Chevy
SB, $360 (740)446·2360

Mon &amp; fri 700.3·30We~hlllm Sal &amp;Sun 8:110-4:30 12wetks
• f~~andng tnl footing 1111iltlle ltased on ·~~
'Jor\ plaomen1 on !lass htining'
Coolad Karl lam~ 1-801J.648.J69S or (740137).3966

Real Estate General

t~ee

Divide 25 X 34 Was $8,640. Sell $2,980 .
Larger 45 X 160 Was $25,780. Sell $15,780
BtnldinS-51 X 280 Was $38,470. Sell $26,470.

G)

HOUSES

·--

FORRFNT
1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8 5%
APR • Fo1 Listings, 800·J19·
3323 EXI 1709

~:.Ti

balh8, LA, FA, DR
eat~n
kitchen Very nice woodworlc,
hardwood
floors
and
beautllul slalrcase. Garage,
several oulbulldlngs and 4

LENDER

OFFICE
I

2 bedroom, Gat1 1polta C1ty,
$4001 month (710)441·
1519

~~:~..~3~:56~.

1a•ccres,

mil.

992~2259

2 BA with attached garage
New Carpeting and AJC
References and Depostt
Aequ1red $41 OJ month In·
d udes water No Pets 5 mt·
nutea from Holzer Hospital.
(740)446·6114
'

basement With rec. room and
loiS of space to grow, 2 cer
garage &amp; lngrO\Ind pool, only
minutes tram town. Priced al
$137,000. Call today and
make youreell the prOud
owner ot thla lovely proparly.

1807,77'""1+-.."';,·~

NEW LlSTING ·RACINE· TACKEAVILLE
ROAD
• This 1989 modular hae 3
bedrooms, 2'1• balhs, lamlly room has a
flraptace &amp; built-In bookshelves. A nice
open kllchen with Island &amp; lots of cabinet
space . -some new carpet, drywall,
wallpaper and many other great fealurea.
A newer 48X 12 back deck &amp; medium size
polo bam, all nicely landacapod. II aH sits
on approximately 1.5 acres
'
ASKING

3 bedroom home Mlnersv•lle
area, river view, references
required, deposll required, •
no pets 740·992-6777 after
5pm

Owner Is Re. .y lo Sell, so
now Is lhe lime to make this
brick ' ranch
filled
wllh
homeownerehlp pride yours
Oflertng LA With llreplace
opan to dining area, Mzy FA
with llreplace, 3 BAs, 2 112
baths, over 1400 sq. ft In

7121 SA 180- Located on a
private 8 acre, mil, sett1ng,
you will find lhla lovely Cape
Cod home featuring a lovely
greal room w1lh woodbumlng
fireplace, fonnat DR, gourmel
kltcllen with eallng area
OVBrtooklng lhe pond, 5 BAs,
3 baths, Ufl6lalrs sitting area,
2 car garage and above
ground pool $235,000 1101

3 Bedroom House in Syracuse, Ohio, $450/ Month
HUO App1oved (304)875·
5332 or (740)992-6119
weekends only

the lnterest Ftateo
Dropping and tho Price
Reducllon
on
thll
beautifully reatortd 2 etory
with original woodwork
throughout, now's the time
to make . lh1s home yours
Localed at lhe edge of town
and boas11ng approx 2500
sq ft of hv1ng area w1th
lormal LA. lonna! DR with
bu1ft-1n corner hutch, FA, all
w1th lovely hardwood floors,
3·4 BAs, 2 baths lreshly
pa1nted krlcllen w1th new
appliances, sun room, large
mud/laundry, room, enclosed
porch, 1 car dot garage w1th
workshop area Situated on a
maturely landscaped 1 aero,
m/1, lol and new reduced
pnce ol $125,000 S6D3

f'ORSAU:

n&gt;MSAJ.t:

.

.I

RESIDENTIAL HOME
OWNERS

9325
lhasa Apso Puppies AKC
8wks old 1st shots, wormed
S251J.$300 (740l797 •1911
Long Hatred Chthuahua
pupp.es for sate (304)8953815
'

a

riO

Shop Smi th, Mark V, has
band saw table saw, dnll
press plainer slides &amp; .....,
more $600 (740)446·4 122
Steel gU1tar, 1 flat top gUitar,
electnc gu1tar piices vary,
(740)387-0302
'---'------Top
Soli
For
Sale
(740)441-{]619

•

Upr~ ght

freezer. 10 inch ta,ble saw, large m•crowava
oven, large microwave oven
-storage cart, large jewelry
chest on Jags, (740)4461865

INMUSICAL

Sell or

tJIPMENT

sage
·
_:.:..________
1986 Pontiac 2 door auto,
runs good &amp; looks good,
$850 (740)441 · 1083
1987 Cavalier Z-24, clean
runs and dn\leS very well
good looking, $2100 OBO
Call (?40)38S.0 113
1991 Mercury Marqu1s, 4
amlfm casselle, high miles,
but all road mtles, looks
good, runs good i2500
call (740)992 2064
•
199 1 Oldsmobolo Soerra
81,000 m1les, 4 door, 6 cyl·
' lnder, a1r. AM/FM, $3200
080 {740)44 1-0172 or
(740)446·3044
'--'-------1993 Cad•llac Fleetwood
Broughman, 49 K M1les
Monl, Loaded (740)446·
4191

tu , van
an onowor.
to lyaecond
level.
:====ii=~~;;t.;;::;;;;;;;;;ij"'"___!~ ~i~:w:~:r::pooleading

CHECK

"i"'lO,....____,;,...__,
VANS &amp;

4--WDs
·-----~-,.1

1544

tached gilage/ opener. CIA
City Schools References/
DepoSit Required No Pets
$5251 month Includes wa·
ter (740)446·8114

BR 124 • MAPLE GROVE
SUBDIVISION • OHIO RIVER
FRONTAGE • Approximately 2 acre
Iota • 10 • to chilose from. Great
camping tols can tOday for more
delalls.
• ASKING $20,000.

Flnllttlc Setttngtt Wllh a
view that you can'l qufte gel
enough of and a location thai
Ia both prtvale and convenient
This 2 S10ry home Is a must
4
BRs, all
see home.
generouely arzed, 3 baths, LA,
formal DR, FA, eal·ln kitchen.
Quality
conatruCIIon
throughout LoiS of custome
lealureo. Wffhln a mile of lhe
hospital, CaH Dave tor more
lnformallon. 1103

Pilot Program, Renters
Needed, 304 ·736-~295
Small 2br CottBQfJ very quiet wtth deck, $325 + Oepos·
II and references No Pets
Htstonc Dtstricl (304)675·
6678

r M%~J:xr~

1

2 .bedroom mobile home
located
In
Kanauga
(740)«1 -0219

•

'

PORTLAND • This one story
home lncludel living room, dining
room, k1lchen, 4 bedrooma &amp; 2
baths. II also Includes a part
baaemenl &amp;
attic space.
The
a detaclled
one
a small shed.
on a 48 acre
Thla I
lot, a

1 4,000

tr

Newer 3
1 bath,
·qut-buildlng, 3 acres,
country setting.

446-6806*

379-2134
,.

958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

Branch Office
23 Locust St
Gallrpolrs, Oh1o
45631

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFF,ERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER.. .. ....-446-6808
GAIL BELVILLE ................................. 446-9209
TRISH SNYDER ... .... .... ... ... 441 ·9458
JOHNNI£i RUSSELL..........................36NI323
DAVID SNYDER ... ...........................441·9458
OUR WEB PAGE IS www vle.mllhrealestale com
e mail vlsrealeslate@zoomnel net

.

2 story
full basement
Home
a beautiful liVIng rm
w!f~replace, fromal dining rm , eat
1n lot &amp; 112 bath on 1s1 floor 3
large bedrms , loads o1 closet
s~e &amp; bath on 2nd floor 2 large
barns and tiu1ldmgs 17 ac of land
mil Call V1rg1n1a 446·4802 or 446·
8808

www.evans- moore.ccm11l

Fon11erly Bluckbrmt Renlty ..Servi116 Soathem Ohio f'or Over A Quarter Cenlr,ry"

.Joe A . Moore--Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441'-1616
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cara

I
new
copper plumb1ng &amp; bath
new roof pnvacy fence Fm1shed
3rd floor, 4 bedrms, 1 112 baths
full basem t hvmg rm will replace
formal dining rm, 3 bedrooms on
2nd lloor 1 w/t~reptace, gar'ge &amp;
landscaped
Call for appotnt
Vi rgl n1a 44€1·6606

,,Y'

~

••
••

.........
•.:J.-

03382 CARA~OUT BUSINESS
and CONVENIENCE STORE
FOR SALE. New alarm sysjem
Building built to stale code
Continuous operatiOn since 1986
Price mcludes Inventory Call
Johnnle 367·0323 or 446·6806

._
.

•y

•4004 9 ACRE TRACT of vacant I
land Land $75,000 00 Located
on SA 588 Vlrgonla 446·6808

• Jusl mlnules
town 3 bedrooms, newer
I roof Aerator sepllC, public water. Cute home,
.
ASKING $20,000

log Homo
llooldlng Compon""'

'

'

I

• OuolityPrHut
or Unoal Fool

Call tOOay
for your qu6te!
,oo.4S~~
www

applog.rom

'

• A l:ol'llmerclal building located on 3rd Sfleet. one
piullcttng On approxlmalely 50X100 level lot Addlflonal rear oSIIkln1a.
Public watar, eleclrlc and sewage on s1te Has been used 11
bull~lng and upholstery shop. Greal for small
room.

and out
teaiUres 2 112
with ftreptace, FA,
rec. room. eat· ln kitchen,
downstalrt
BA and much,
much more
It has been
completely remodeled Inside
and 0\/t and 11 ~n move on
condition. Great quality Large
lronl pon:h and covered patio
In the back 1 car garage Lota
of _ off streel parfilng Greal
locallon close to lcllools. Call
for an appt and let lhla home
self lfsolf lo you . Won'l lasl
long $179,000 t10S

at $49,900. 1302

Cleland Realty, Inc.

992·2259

David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker

Sherr.l L. Hart..................................742-2357

Carolyn Wasch, GRI

Anna M.

Robert Bru,c :

Kathleen

Chap~ao ..................... : ... 992·2818

M. Cleland

191

. ...

.•

Income

over full
basement with 2 car garage and
f1mshed lam1ly room Home s1ts on
2 Ac ml11n Hannan Trace Schools
Just mmutos from downtown
Gallipolis This home features a
beaut1lul landscaped lawn, wood
pellet '§lOVe and central a1r
located JUSt off Aock ltek Ad on
Mable Or. 1n nice ne1ghborhood
Have a garden and raise some
flowers but make sure to look at
thts Call JohMie at 367..0323
today for an appointment

little
of the world? Retreat
Country Colonial located near 10 th1s home located only 5
RIO Grande.! thiS 4 BR 3 112. bath m•nutes from Holzer, but lucked
masterp•ece, cherry molding, solid away on pnvate Charola•s
panel doors, tu1tur1ous master Lake Noce 4 BR 3 BA 1edwood
su1te, screened In porch custom s1ded home wtth 2 car anached
cherry k1tchen cab1nets, and a fun ·
garage and pnvate deck
basement part1aUy finished! The
overlooking the take Paddle
owner pas red uced the pnce bf the
around the lake 1n your own
home w1th 2 Acres mil to $219 000 paddle boat or f1sh from your
but may be wtl}1ng to sell as much
own dock
Aetax In the
25·30 Acres surrounding the
peacefulness ol the country
Call today!

AC mil
ne;or,C:hellhii•B. 4 BR 2 SA
'
SEocurlorv
a new above
S79.9&lt;J&lt;Q,

I

If
~.

:.,:.

ron1Wtled 2 stOIY
home w/3 BR'!, 2 balhs Perfect
home for someone looking for a
good deal. Being' sj)ld Way urii:lerthe appraisal value Hurry, th1s
one won't last I
$89.000

•

446-9555

441·1007 Sonny Garnes 446-2707
446-0621 RHa Wiseman 446-9555

L(J

40) 446·3644
\

1101 Thlo private • MCiuded
lwo-atory colonial otters ftko
views outside and • refined
claaay look lnalde all on two
1ree tilted ocr... Localed at 100
Lake View Court thl&amp; pnvate
reetncted seHihg offers four
badrooms and 2 112 balhs, large
fonnal dlnn•ng and 11vtng rooms
along wtlh a cozy fam1ly room
featunng a gas tog fireplace With
an Oak crafted k1lchen and top
quailly kitchen appliances thts
quiet country setting Is a must see

'

.

"

...

Jl·40lt2 Walch lhl Alvar from
biGkyird? Enjoy the VJUW
your boat dock or back deck
this 1+ ac m/1 with a 2 BR 1 bath
mob1le homel11acai10n camper ts
just the thing for stress May be
room for a garden Located at
7183 St At 7 SOuth and prtced at
$59,500

6806

I I ··) ~

13397 IN TH~ CITY Huge
home w/4 BAs. 2 baths,
DR, porches, partoal basement
PriCed nght· see this outstandmg
offer' Vacant ready to welcome
you VLS 446-6806

13390 FABULOUS
Br1ck &amp; v1nyl 6 BA, 2 BA
pn\late 1 acre lot Family
lh11ng room wfft replace, DR,
large ulltlly room m thiS one
full basement Allached 2
garsge and detached 2 car gar,age'
as well could be used lor storaoe.
Pnced for a qutck sale $85 000

13367 Lal'ge home 1n town, new
rool 1999, 4 BR, 2 5 BA, 2 car
garage,
v1nyl
Stdmg
mce
netghborhood Needs, some n.c
but proced nght at $79,900
13366 CITY LOT 43
located 39 Vono St

'

170'

I

14005 A FEW MINUTES
YOUR TIME COULD P'AY OFF!
V1ew lh1s lo\lely all briCk home
wlthre e bedroom$, 2 baths formal
dln1ng rm , llvmgl rm fam11y _rm ,
w1th f1replace
PatiO, above
ground 'pool, 2 car attached
garage and basement ~ 'VERY
LIVABLE
HOME FOR THE
MONEY $125,000 00 VLS
14014 KING SIZE FAMILY HOME
Great 2 sty 4 bedrms, 2 1/2
baths formal LA &amp; OR. Fam Rm
wlbnck fJreptaco, all large rms , 13
x 25' master bedrm wlbath 2 car
al!ached garage ' 1 25 Ac mfl
$140 000 Add1t1onel lot available
VLS

140016
HOME &amp;
INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulavolle
Pk 3 bedrm 3 bath 1tv1ng quarters.
Also 'I 8' X 32' garage plus 30' X 20
bu1ldong 112 ac of land good sales
Great
Starter loc Pnced to sell VLS
hOme ~ BA, 1 bath w/workshep
wtth bilsement Situated on 3
aclot and ~•ntersect•on o1 St Rt
160 &amp; .554 Owner has remodeled
home and put new roo! on
garage/workshop May also be
commercial Pnced @. $65 000
14019
COMMERCIAL
LOT·
JaCksOn P~ Gathpohs OH Comer
1
lot w1th great potential

14023 OUT POSSUM TROT RD.
You'll hnd a great 1mmaculate 2
bedrm. 1 bath mob1le heme
shmgle roof, deck, out-buildings lor
storage ~ P1ctureque land that rolls
&amp; also 15 Ac mit wfflshmg pond
What a n1ce sot fo bu1ld or subREDUCED PRICE-117 acres diVIde Property has good frontage
lo new ~wy, hoSpital, shop Call VLSrmth 446 6806
, sewer AdJOining
Pi~.; r~~i N,;;,;~g Home

on an
acre of land just mtnutes from the
hospital on SR 1601 3 bedroom 2
bath home, fu ll basement w1th
walkout and 2 car attached
garage $149,900 Calllodeyl

0

.~te~Bon
~1 NG
RANCH
HOME 1 ~
Hed gewood
Dnve, 3/4 bedrooms, 2 bath s,
beautiful cabmets m equipped
kitchen, llvmg room, formal dm1ng
room family roo m 1st floor
laundry, full basement attached
garage and outbuilding There IS
more than what meets the eye
Look for yourself! V1rgmta 446-

'·

AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER. H you hke
mdtVJduahty---here It lSI .3 029 sq
fl more or less 3 bedrms 2 1/2
13372 INVESTMENT OR MOVE baths Kit LAm. Office rm and
IN 1967 Mobile Home 60'x12', 2 much more Wrap porch front &amp; 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, fumJture, range s1des . 167 Acres mil, Rollmg
&amp; ref , Heat pump certral air Pasture and 3 Large Barns &amp;
La•~• bulldong 70'x14' also 20'x 10' Feed l:ot s1tes 2 n1ce ponds
Comer lot Hysell &amp; Oliver Land 1s most all clean &amp; has some
fencmg Electnc &amp; frost free water
Mi,ddleport, $15,000.00
'" the bam Feed lot s1tes
Formerly used lor Veal call
opera tion
Located near R•o
;J;;.;.\::!1~ Grande Appointment Only Call
V1rQ1naa L Sm1th 7 40·446-6806
$335,000

I

Town ConYtllllnce to whl* . .lls this cute little 3 BR, 1 home. Polentlal for 2nd balh
room has flxt~res bul no lnslalfed. Buill In the late 1800'a, but remodeled laat tn 1990. 11 haS
... .,,.~,.,I and windows Pr
rly haa farge outbuilding with electric. tnvealore may want to look

: Cute homa with 2 bedrooms, balh, kitchen wllh
newer· painI, carpet and ceiling fans Double
, new fronl
• Close to everything Jull move ln. Immediate

Henry E. Cleland .... .................. : ••••

Beautiful MCtlonal home
In a country seltlrtg woth 3 BR, 2
BA, cathedral ce1ilng ar-d hrepfac::e
in fam1ly room, lots of decking
surrounds above ground pool and
a 28 M 28 barn/garage on 1 2 acres
mn

I
Elegant m·lown lwlngl 4 BR 2
~ 12 BA colortlal style home,
beaut1fully
tandsclfped,
tastefuNy decorated, one car
detached garage and the extra
storage space of a lull
basement IN ADDITION the
seller IS •ncludmg lhe vacant lot
next door ALL for only
$167,0001
SELLER
OFFERING
HOME
WARRANTY'

~-~.

"Fun For All Home" En1oy
Only Weier Lo-.r Need your summer and QOOI off In
Appfyl
Remodeled
to thiS beautrtul free·lorrn on· Remodeled to Perfection
pertecllon. Marn home offers ground pool with a •great lor and just walling for you to
brtghl and cheery LA .,Yrth enlertam1ng" patio area with move your lam1ly 1nto lhrs
dining area, FA, cozy kitcllen, ·pnvacy, beautoful landscaped home and en1oy family llv1ng
2 BRe, 1 bath plus lull lot Large family home With al its best Convenlenlly
basement Large lol thai goes privacy,. beaulrful landscaped located 1n lhe Spring Valley
Largo
family
home area and offenng approx
to the river featunng one room lot
cabin wtlh balh and farge deck boasting over 2300 sq ft woth 2800 sq ft featuring LA wllh
lo enloy the view from Large farge, slep.down LA open to gas log lrreplace, lomral DR,
lire pit CtJmpletes .thls properly fonnal DR with cozy fireplace, 4·5 BAs, 2 112 bafhs, olflce,
as a one of a kind river 4 generous BAs, 3 lull balhs, 2 aun room, basement FA wllh
properly. Plus an affordable car garage plus 16 x 22 gas log fireplace and ber area,
Convenlentiey 2+ lfBrtUe Rlus _a be!!utllully
price of only $85,000 , Call ~".~~
toeateo at 44 Beech Skeet and landscaped tot ,complete liils
Carolyn lodayl H18
priced at $174,900 Sure lo lovely property Priced at
d~lrghllft109
$172.60011623

sq. ft.

Call or stop by our office tor a free Quality Homes Guicte in color.

•1063 Beautiful country aettlng1
2.5 acres ol plush country
meadows and a stocked pond
surround th1s 3 BA ranch home
$69,000 Total 17 acres for
$89,000

)

Route

Real J:state General

~~Jtz4

.

~ orner

e

lOe tUIICUIII

2nd Avenue Locattonlt Frxer
upper wllh potenlial Thts 4
BA
house
needs some
attention, but hllll lots of
polenllal to be a very n1ce
home 9 rooms m allmclud1ng
LA, DR, FA, 2 balhs, eat·ln
kitchen . Could be converted 10
a duplex la1rty easily. N1ce
yard
Off street pill1&lt;rng.
$53,0001110

86" Chevy Blazer Full Size
VB 4 wheel Dnve,
Runs Good Alter 5 6757216
305

can 740·446·4 1 19

~~&lt;?t Q/md ~

lii

Now LIIUng River Front
Property With 3 BR home In
great condllton MaJntenance
lree home offers 3 BAs, 1 112
balhs, 6111-in kitchen, LR and
large FR with balcony. Very
nrce woodwork &amp; doors 2 car
garage plus large oUibulldlng
2 4 acres plus along lhe river.
Extra building lot Large play
area for kids $149,9001107

1993 Ntssan Pathftnder 4x4
V-6 Auto, Air loaded, ex·
celtenl condtt ton $4800
740·992-7584

warehouse space
with s offices

Real Estate General

12085 Want your

HAPPY HOLLOW
to town yet prlvale
and country. This ccmven1ent one
floor plan ranch has 4 bedrooms,
bath, newer shingle roof, public wafer,
lnsulaiiOn and a special bonus "free
gas•t Thla tuat may be the one you
are looking Iori • Call lor an
appo1ntmen~
ASKING $51,10(1.

WILL HILL ROAD -Jual outside of Pomeroy A 2 year old two
Randall Home wllh
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1'11 baths
12x16
HPICA and ceiling fans. 1'/, acres, nice garden area Very nice non1e. o
Owner has relocated and wants lhls sold ASKING $75,000.

-~~-

New~

,;.::_;._;_:.:..;..c.;.:.;._ __

'·800·42 3·4!99

1997 Ford Thunderbird LX,
V-8 auto, a1r, power, w/1,
loaded, very nice, 61 000
mtles, $7,800, 740·9927·:::584:_:_:_ _ _ _ _ __
T-Tops,
88
Camara

Affordable lot 1n !he BidWell area approx 1 acre pnced at
$4,900. No restnct1ons Call today 11610

Traditional
stoiy wllh more
than traditional appeal. Th1s 4
BA home It lust wa(llng lor lhe
partecl lemlly Lois of recenl
lmprovementa make lhls home
worry free for a long 11me. New
lumace, carpet, balhroom,
roof,
sldlng
and
septiC
Channing appeal doesn't end
at
lhe
curb
Quakflly
neighborhood
with
family
almosphere $184.9001104

1991 Ford Bronco, 4x4 full
s1ze excellent condition. 1n
s1de and out, garage kept
Call (740)245 5560

7 North
Calllpolls, Ohio

(~)675 ·5 162

New 3 BR Homa wltl1 at·

.
1978 Chevy 4WD 48.000
ong~pal m1tes Great shape
$3700 (740)256·6215
-1-990
-:-F2- 5-0:..,-x-4 -d,..oe_se_I_X_L_T
Lanai 123 ooo m1tes Alu·
mtnum mns w1th overs,ze
11res Call (740)256 1647

1984 CJ 7 Jeep $4000
(740)379-9257
----,,------------Real Estate General

pan
OJI
3 more

2 car garage. Too many amenltlea

Clean 2br House reteren·
cas, depoSit, No Peta

PRICE REDIICI!DII SA 110 •
OALLlA COUNTY· A ranch home
with approximately 2 acres,
3 bedrooms, auachod garage,
fireplace, newer carpet &amp; wallpaper.
A real cute home
lmmedfate
possessionll
ASKING $58,1100.

y~

&amp; bath plus a parlor lype area. Fro~

Real Estate General

EXCITING NEW LISTINGS

House for rent 1n Waterloo,
Depos•t
&amp;
references.
(740)643-2916

I'JO

05

CLASSIFIEDS!I ·

' 4 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994
""'~
7 40-446-0008 7 40-441-llll

27 Acrea In Green Twp. Great views on several very mce
building s1tes Pond Barn. Just pasl SA 775 n SA 141 Must
see the whole properly lo apprecoate W1if.conslder splitting Call
Dave for more mforma11n •220

Oh10 Valley Sank w111 oIt er
tor sale by Pub~c
Auchon a 1978 Ford Dump
Truck IIBBl 308 at 1o00
am, on 7/1 4/01 At Oh1o val·
loy Bank Annex 143 3rd
Ave · GallipoliS, Ohto Sold
to the h1ghest b1dder "as ts·
h
•
h
d
w ere 1s Wit out expresse
or lmphed warrarty &amp; may
be seen by calling the Col·
1ect1on
Department
at
(740)44 1-1038 OVB reserves the nght 10 accept/
reJect any B. all b1ds &amp; w1th·
draw items tram sale pnor
to sale Terms of Sale
CASH OR CERTIFitO

est
btdder
"as IS· where
•s" draw
1temsTerms
from sale
pnor i~=:~~~~~;;;;~~:~:~e
wtthoul
expressed
or tm·
to sale
of Sale
piled warranty &amp; may be CASH OR CERTIFIED
seen by cellmg the Collec-C
_H..:E::C.:;K_:__ _ _ _ __
tlon
Department
at (740)441·1038 ova re- Oh1o Valley Bank w11t offer
serves the nght to accept/ for sale by Public
Auc·
reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; With- liOn a 1997 Chell)' Blazer
draw Items from sate prior #109168 at 1000 am, on
to sale TEirms of Sale 7/14"/01 At Ohio Valley Bank
CASH OR CERTIFIED Annew:, 143 3rd Ave, Galhp·
CHECK
oils, Ohoo Sold to lhe high·
.:.c::.::.:..:..______ est bidder •as 1s- where 1s•
Oh1o Valley Bank Will otter w11hout expressed or amfor sale bv Public
Auc- plied warranty &amp; may be
lion a 1992 Chevy Cavalier seen by calhng lhe Coffee.
#263706 at 10 00 am, on lion
Department
at
7/14101 At Ohoo Valley Bank (740)441·1038 OVB ra·
Annex, 143 3rd Ave, Gal11p- serves the nght to accept/
oils, Ohio SOld to the htgh· reject any &amp; all b1ds, &amp; With·
est btdder "as Is· where 1s• draw 1tems from sale prior
without expressed or lm· 10 sale Terms of Sale
pl&lt;ed wa,.anty &amp; may be CA.SH OR CERTIFIED
seen by calling the Collec- CHECK
\.
lton
Department
at
&amp; meadows. One year old Cape
home
(740)441·1038 OVB re· Volvo Classoc 1980 Sports QUALITY BUILT HOME. All oak Interior paneled
serves the right to accept/ Sedan, excellent condit•on, doors, and lots of oak trim &amp; oak cabinets In this
reJect any &amp; all b•ds, &amp; 'Mih· $2000 OBO, Must seal
draw 11ems from 6818~ pr'iod304)675-161B
complete " wife approved" kitchen Formal LA
1o sale Terms of Sele
and DR w/ hardwood floor&amp;. Spacious family
CASH OR CERTIFIED
room w/ French doo11. Main bedroom and bath
CHECK
hi I
I b
I
d ·•
D
k

Real Estate, Gen!!!ral

I

.

Page

,raue ,

0

EQ

TRUCKS

€;&gt;rnt111rl •

fn the

1994 Cors1ca, bOdy m ex·
co11o n1 shapa, engone needs
Spmet P18no, great for be· wo•k ~ust selll $500 oao
gmner $150 New electnc (740)446 9471
keyboard Wilh stand less
old
$ 150 1995 Oldsmobile, Eoghly·
e1ght Royale, leather seats
(30•1171'3-5;343
ongmal owner 43,000 ac·
tual m1tes, $7500, Charlene
Hoeflocn,
(740)992·2155
t:!:ll:';;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,; daytime,
(740)992 5292
FAm1
eventngs

rlD

1!:unr~

HIRSA!f

be

,
lnterne.honal, 40HP,
Tractor with fro.nt end loadUsed Bricks lor sale &amp; Hay or, (740)379·9381
1n the field to be mowed
(304)675·1096
Tn axle 14' traclor w1th 2'
:' - ' - - - - - - - - dove &amp; ramp, a plntel hotch, (740)379-~374
Walerlone Special 3/4 200 (740)949·7000
Oids Cutlass Sle••a
PSI $21 95 Per 100, 1" 200 ~~~;.;,;;,.;,;.;__ _..., 88
,;PSi $31 00 Per 100 All
WANTID
- ~ !Leeds §qme work 82 Cadol·
'Brass Compress 1on Flttmgs
BUY
lac C1maron runs good
10
In Stock
__
needs some work $700 lor
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS..
both or trade tor runmng
ES Jackson Ohio, 1-800· lJsoQ. ~Qtlorota J&gt;locks,_bcQ,•• Rir;iwp,(30&lt;1)576·3181
537-9528
ken concrete or rock,
=_.:.:::;:__ _ _~_ (740)379·9061

What'a
The
Price
For
Prlvocy?
Loss
of
convenience? High costs lor a
lot of land? Maybe these are
some malnlenance costs lor a
long dnveway? Maybe IMss
are some trade offs you have
lo make woth some properties,
but not this rambling ranch
Loca1ed on !he edge of town,
th1s home Is very convenient
lor schools and shopping. With
over 3000 sq ft of living
space, you'll enjoy !he open
lloor plan and large wlndows.•4
BAs, 3 full balhs, LA, DR, den
and large FA, also an enclosed
pon:h.
Newly
remodeled
kllchen w1lh attraCIIve oak
cabinets 3 ftreplaces 2 car
garage. $159,90011218

20

TRUCKS
mRSALt

r

SI'RUMEN'IS

---~----- 444

1943

1'20

I

Tappan HI Efftclency 90%
Gas FUrnaces. 011 Furna·
cas, 12 Seer Heat Pump &amp;
A1 r Conditioning Systems
Free 8 Year Warranty Bennetts Heat1ng &amp; Coolmg, 1- Poodle puppies tiny toy
800-872-5967
teacu~. cream, AKC,
wks
www oNb com/bennett
old, (740)667·3404

~~----~~~~--~-­

Ill \I \I ...

IriO

Auros

r

i

Real Estate General

n&gt;RSALE

I ~~0

•
AlmlS

2

~m_:os.:sa:;;:,ge':-:,..,----- take payments (740)388- dr • V-8, auto, all power, aJc,

1-888·568-9350

Lookmg To Buy A New
Home? Don't Have Land?
We Ooltl Hurry Only 10 lots
Left. 304·736·7295

AI!IUS

•

7 ear old w lk M
• 2000 Chevv s .10 low m1V
a er orgc,n 90 Crown Vtctoria LTD pis,
ONE OWNER
tage CO player alloy wheels
G9ldlng Black Wllh blaze pJw, mce luxury car, wont Ohio vanev Bank w1n offer 1993 Dodge Daytona car, aJc 3 04--675 -6 515
aM 3 socks, 7 year old last long runs good, askmg tor sate by PubliC Auc- 30 ft Av1on camper Doth tn
~~fga~r~;e(7~6,·~~~~ $1200, {740)992·1532
uoo a 1993 Olds Ach1eva ~~~ c(~~g;~ ~~~W992· 96 Grand CherOkee L!m1ted
304 -6 75" 1879 Leave mes
(740}256·1147 must leave a 94 Dodge Shadow, 5 , " 01 B3S3 at 10 00 am on
or
•
message and . will return speed a~r $1000 Yamaha 7114' 01 At Ohio Valley Bank
, ONE OWNER
sage
'
:
Annex 143 3rd Ave , GalltpD
..calt •
,
, motor scooter, new t1res. oils Ohto Sold 10 the htgh· 1993 Dodge aytona car. On1o Valley Bank wilt offer
$1000 (740)441·0181
·
•
• 30 rt Avlon camper bol.h 1n 10 sal b
P bl
A
HAY &amp; u
est bidder as IS· where IS
ood
dt
(740)992
r
e y
u IC
uc
Ohto Valley Bank Will oHer wt1hout expressed or lm· ~ 5 0~(~ 4 ~)~~ 2 6155
• hon aJ 97 B Brockway Dump
GRAIN ·
for sale by Pubhc
Auc· phed warranty &amp; may be
truck 11864482 at 10 00
uon A 1991 Chell)' Lumma seen bv calling the Collec·
am, on 7/14/01 At OhiO Val·
Bated straw for sale. out ol 1#207130 at 10 00 am, on liOn
Department
at
TRucKS
ley Bank Annex 143 Jrd
field 675·4308
'
7/14t01 At OhiO Valley Bank (740)441 1038 OVB recv'"Rc-'LL~
Ave.. GallipoliS. Ohio Sold
10 the highest bidder "as IS·
Annew:, 143 Jrd Ave , Gal1 1p- serves the nght to accepV
rv L3A r.
Hay &amp; Bnght Wire Tle oi1s, OhiO Sold to the hiQh· re.190t any &amp; all bids &amp; With·
.:
where ts" Without expressed
Slraw Year 'Round Oehvery est bidder ~as tS· where ts" draw !lams !rom sale pnor 1969 314 ton two wheel or •mphed warranty &amp; may
&amp; Volume Otscount Avalla· w1thout expreued- or tm· to sale Terms of Sale dnve Chevrolet ptck·up ~e ~een b{) cattmg tt:e Col·
ble
Heritage
Farm plied warranty &amp; may
CASH OR CERTifiED {740)992·2482.
eel on
apartment
at
(304)G 75- 5724
seen by calhn_g the Collec· CHECK
(740)441 ·1038 OVB retion
Department
at
1985 Ford 3!4 ton piCkup serves the nght lo accepV
(740)441 1038 OVB re- Ohio Valley Bank wtR offer $1700 OBO (740)367..()632 reJect any &amp; all btds &amp; With
serves the nght to accepl/ for sale by Public
Aucdraw atems from sate pnor
~iO
Avros
reect an~ &amp; all b•ds &amp; with t1on a 1990 Ford PT 1985 Ford F 700 Dumptruck to Si).le Terms of Sale
S
dr~w ttems from ~Ia pnor 11847372 at 10 00 am on 10sp w1th 2sp AJ~Ie, asktng CASH OA CERTIFIED
FOR ALE
to sale Terms of 'Sate 7114/01 At Oh•o Valley Bank $6500 or trade for Chevy CHECK
CASH OA CERTIFIED Annex, 143 3•d Ave Gallop- 4x4 truct&lt; 675·5828 .
1966 Dodge Monaco, 4 CHECK
oils OhiO Sold to the htgh
' Duou
dOOI, Good
Condltoon, -:_:::.::..:.._--+--- - ,
•
: 1988 Silverado 4x4 S3895:
p ,,
est bidder as Is--- where IS 1994 S-10 $3695 1991
Ti
II
$1250 (740)256·6098
Ohio Valley Bank w111 offer Without expres!ed or 1m· G
T k • 4 4 51995 :
- - - - - - - - - lor sale by PubliC
Auc· phed warranty &amp; may be 1~ ~~fa er~ll:l;nded c~:
1
tJon A 1995 Chevy Lumina seen by call•ng the COIIec· 52795 COOK MOTORS
0
8
1
r: (740l«6·0103 ·
New In Box 42J~60 white males $300 each: 36 gallon $1800
Adult
driven, Annew: 143 3rd Ave, Galllp- serves the .nght to accept!
oval garden lub for mobile aquanum, 55 aquanum, sell (740)256·6741 Leave mes· oils Ohoo Sdld 1o the hogh· •eject any &amp; all bods, &amp; with·
Real Estate General

-

REAL ESTATE

3 STEEL BUILDINGS 1

IriO

'

!i;&gt;unb,w

.

Middleport • Gallipolis Ohio • Point Pleasant WV

'

K1mball plano $800 00. Yamaha Ke boa d 4 y,
handmade wedding gown Old Cost V Ne~ · $ 1 :~
ve1t wl pearls &amp; sequins s1ze Used Onlv. 6 Monihs 5600·
7-8$10000 304·675-1831 {304)6 75 ~ 982 Anyti,;e
·
K1ng alze water b&amp;d fQr sale~ ~r~~~B;;;;,;.;;;:.;;;;;;.-tl
(740)992·5937 or (740)992SUIJ,.DING
IIDDI IL~
6583
--··~
•
MOBILE HOME OWNERS 81 k b k
OC • rtc , sewer ptpes
Huge lnvenlory, Discount Windows lintels etc Claude
Pr~ces, On VInyl Sktrt• ng, Wmters RIO Grande, OH
Doors, Wtndows, Anchors, Cat/ 7 40·2 45·5121
Water Heaters, P1umb1ng &amp;
Electrical Parts, Furnaces &amp; Cedar boards, over 200
Heal Pumps Bennetts Mo- doors. lntenor and extenor
btle Home Supply 740·446- Windows, cabinets, lots of
9416 www orvb oom!ben- butld•ng supplies, all new,
nett
"
off Catt (740)441..0279
after 6pm
•
NEW ANiJ USED STEEL
~
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For Concrete, Angle Char\FOR":'1ALE
nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
For Drams Dr~veways &amp;
Walkway"$ New 55 Gallon Adorable 7 month old fnale
Drums Wllh Lod &amp; Rong, monoalure Schnauze• handsome black Wllh SliVer trim
$ 7 00 Each L&amp;l Scrap Met· just
a little too fnsky tor hts
als Open Monday TueSday,
Wednesday &amp; Frtday, Bam- 67 year old owner, eke pa4 30pm Closed Thursday, pers $200, (304)773·5166
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday

~=~,'Y~~d·i:=~e~l~~n~ -A-KC__:_:Rc.e_g.:.ls_:te-r'"ed...:.;C:..h_ln_e_s~8
p
$
d ~ 1on (740)388·9415 lea"e
•
ug puppies
350 Will

Two-story home of approximately 4200
square feet of space, wtth seven and
one-half acres. House IS gray wtth brown
shutters, and has wraparound porch and
two-cor garage Property includes pond
with dock, and two-vehicle pole barn.
Home has ltvtng room, formal dining
room, k1tchen/famtly room combined,
four bedrooms, three full baths, and full
basement
Marry · other
features
accompany this qual ttY, home.
Location One-hiilf mile on Cherry Ridqe
rn R1o Grande, Ohio 45674. GO!IipoTis
City School Dtstrict. Approximately
f1fteen mrnutes from Holzer Hospttal.
If lntarested, call 74G-245·5858 day;
74G-245·5992 evening or
Fax 74G-245·5174
Real Estate General

f ·

Llv•:srtlCK

home4pm
$85, {740)245·5122 nes
or tradeCall
Both wltt1
alter
afleraccesso4pm
(740)256·6505
New K1ng Plllowtop mallress :..:..:.:::::.:.;:::;:;_____
set, suggested value $900, AKC Registered Basset
sacnfk:e $300 w/warranty, Hound Puppl8s 1st shots
304·360·0233
and wormed
M'"1ature
=..::.:::..::::.:=-::-_ _-'- dachshund 1 male, 2 fa.
Playstataon 2 w/3 games, 1 male, (740)367·7705

Rio Grande. OH

FREE ESTIMATES
FREE 10 YR WARRANTY ·

MEilrnANDisE

IP""

MtSO:LLl\NF.ot.5
MJ.l1CHA~111SE

=::..::::;:______

Serious Inquiries Only

Announcement

MlscEu..\Nmus

. Pomeroy •

·~(7_4.:.0l:..4_4e-=-=-7300=--..,..- ~~~ksc~:.er3 ~~~n~f~!: ~ ~;,,;::"~~"~·~;.:':. ~!t';~~~ A:~rn~ v~te~Ba~~ ('7;0l 441~~g;"8rtm~~ 8

====::;:::::;:;::;;:;:::;;===:::;~
For Sale By Owner

www amencancommunityclassified.com

r

1; 2001

r

Real Estate General

Homa and Acraage-

Sunday, July

50%

central Air w1th A-co1l, 2 112 Opportumty (740)441-1982
ton $400 Used 1 year, -'-'---'--'--'----(740)256-6871
JET
AERATION MOTORS •
Cherry sletgh bed, p1llow Repaired New &amp; Rebu ilt In
top mattress set, new. still Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
boxed Can separate, ap- 800·537 9528
prox value $1400 sacnftee
----~---$555 304·360·0233

Announcement

'Will

Craftsman Rldtng lawn
Mowe•, Pnce SEOO, asl&lt; fo1
Jr. (740)256· 11 02
Four Cemetery lots at Ohio
Valley Memor1at Gardens
Asldng $450 a lot (740)388·
9023

I

or visit our website:

Baech St, Middleport, 2
bedroom furmthed apart·
ment, utilities pad, deposit
&amp; roftlonc81, no pets, 740992.0185

Ft~e acre mil with trailer,
county water, no septic;
Dexter $601/0 (740)669·
0107

'

j

1-800-821-8139

1 Room Fumtshed EffiCienl..tmi&amp;
cy, All Utilities Paid, Shared
ACREAGE
Bath, 919 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis, OH $125/mo
112 acre lot on Oshal road (740)j446-3945
No single w•dea $7000. 3 bod1oom, Thl1d Stroel.
875-7756 after 6pm
Racine, Hud approved,
(740)247.ol2g2
2 Lots, Zoned Commercial,
Within The Village Of Rio Apartment for rent, I BR, ref
Grande (740)245-5858
&amp; stove, $225 per month
2 prime lots ready lor build- plus ulllll1es plus $125 de·
posit (740)247-4292
ing on- located 10 minutea
fro~ hospllal , 5 minutes! BEAUTIFUL
APART·
from Chartals Hilla , (I) 2 5 MENTS AT BUDGET PA~
acres. $20,000 and (I) 1 ~ CES AT JACKSON ES.
' acres, $15,000, or take both TATES, 52 Weslwood Drive
lots lor $30,000
Call fmm $297 10 $383 Walk to
(740)446·~14 from 8·5pm, shop &amp; movies Call 740·
M·F, (740)448·3248 aller 448·2568 Equal Hous•ng
5pm
Opportunlly

Camp
S1tes.For Rent On
Kanawha River, 8 miles
from ,Poml Pleasant, electric
(304 )675·1722,
only
(30&lt;1)675·4144 After 5pm

New And Used Furniture
Store Below Holtday Inn,
Kanauga We Sell Grave
Monuments And Vases
(7-40)446-4782

The American Community
Classified Advertising Network
Contact Us At

(740)367-7~

80 Acres US At 35 End ol
new Four Lane In Hender·
son CttY Water,and Mineral
rights $175,000 (304)937·
2518 or (304)545-6491

1

osn • .

area, no pets, 740-992·
5858

n--

AMAZ1NGLY LOW PRICES
(~)675-1422
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
515 Main Street, Point
Buy Facta&lt;y Dllecl
Pleasant
Excellent Semce
Rex1ble Flnanctng Available
New &amp; Used Fum1ture
Home /Commerc•al Un.ts
New 2 Poece Uvingroom
FREE ColOr Catalog
Suotes, $399 Buy, Sell, Call Today 1.ao&lt;).71HI158
Trade
www flJ et~n com

1, 2001

== L.

•

Main Street Fumlture

I

FARMS

Sunday, July

~.5EHOI-·L!l-,l.l ro H~ Ir ~ Ir

v,.

pets E\lirgreen, near 160
(740)446-6189

•

lior._"....

...----.I

~:!~ ~~:ro ~

5885 Dnve a little sa\le a

WV

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohl9 • Point Pleasant,

I

cab1nets w:~e Fo'rmat
&amp; DR, 3
bedrms, 1 full bath &amp; 2 half baths
Bonus
of
a
mother-In-law
apar1ment w/LA, kit, 1 BA &amp; bath
All appliances stay Enjoy the v1ew
of ihe Ohto R1ve r w/a boat dock
Close b)' Huge 4 car garage &amp;
cement dnveway Workshop 1nthe
qarage It's time for act1on Shown
by apPQtnlmenl

Located 363 MI. Carmel Ad. 3 beqroom, 2 baths, CEDAR CON I tMe,~ARY HOME Oak kofChen,
l e&lt;rranlic lole on rtchen &amp; baths NEW CARPET through OUI, netural decor 5 AGnES MIL $105,000. Trlsh

.,
•

�,

)

Page

-

04 • itunbap l11mrf ·iltntintl

'

l..t__

16

Ailum.mons
.;FOR-·R00·
·- - 1

STOP READ. DEMO SALE
all 200 f models , Reduced
The Home Show St Albans
2 BA, All Electric, No Pets.
1.ao&lt;).948-5678
$300
plus
deposit,
Unbellevab.. new 16 ~de ~(7_:40.:;)'-=36.:;7:..{)6:.:.;1.:;1_ _ _ _
3 br $499. down $218. a

o:;:;:: ~opobedsrrn~!1.~8~~~mon~

r

BeautHul River Vl8w Ideal
6or 1 Of 2 People,,ReterenFOR SAUl
ces, DepoSit, No Pe1s, Foe·
•
ter- l.raller Pari&lt;, 7.0-«1·
Farrn House, Beautifully 0181
Remodeled, 2963 Square
Feel 17 Acres, Pond, In· Located In Point Pleasant
ground P.ool, Several Bams, Bahlnd Fox Pizza on Sand·
Garage. Frutt Trees Close hill Road Call (304)675·
To Holzer
$215,000 3423
740)446-4230
Mobile homa 1, Racine

B~

r

Beaultlul· Recently Reno- Tw6n RlverTowers OOtN ac· ,
voted 2,000 Square FOOl, 3
ceptfng
Bedroom Ptus Storage,
Day Bed Complete, Twin
BPP'k:ationllor 1 BR
New Kitcherl, S60Qt Month
Bed Complete, Full Box
HUO subaldozed apt fo•
Downtown GallipoliS, Con- elderly and dfoatlled EOH Spring and mattress, Queen
Box Spnng and manreu,
tact Kelly (740)~48 9981
(304)675~79
Table and Cllalrt, Want.Fumlahed 2 &amp; 3 Room Nice one BR unfurnished ~r•-(7.0)44&amp;9742
Apartments, - Ctean. No apartment Range and ,._
WANDD
Pets, No Smokmg, Aeferen- lrlgerator prOVIded Waler
10 JlDtr
For ~Is Reconchtioned
cea &amp; Deposit Aeqwed and gart&gt;age paid Oepo~Ut ___
washerS, dryers and refng·
Utlhllet
Furnished . requ1red Call (740)446· House In Country Ohio
:~:S ~';~~~ ~:
(740)44&amp;-1519
~345 a~er 6pm
cfnm. (740)441·1155 after nuo, (304)67'7388
.. , :.r
Fumtshed 2 bedroom apart· Now Taking Appncabont- ~
ment across from park, 35 West 2 Bedroom TowhJO"n. .... _""
GOOD USED APPLIAN·
AJC no pets References. house Apartments, lndudea
~..--~" 1
CES Washers, dryelll, redeposil,
$32 5
month Water
Sewage, Trash,
FOR RENr
rrlgerators, , ranges Skaggs
(740)4"6 823
0)
~&lt;'liUIII.•- 7
--• .ann~,ancet 76 Vine Street
5 74 446
(
Equopment
Rental Doz. Cl;!l' 740-44&amp;-7398, 1-asi
• ~~' 40-«B.OOOS
Tara Townhouse Apart· er Backhoe Bobcat Fa
818-0128.
Gracious living 1 and 2 menta, Very Spacloua, 2 Tractor And Equip' me rmt
bedroom apanments at VII- B&amp;drooms 2 Floors, CA. 1 (
n Uka new Almond Whirlpool
lege Manor and Rovers&lt;» 112 Bath, Fully Carpeted, 740)«1-{)619
washer, $100, 2 late model
Apartments In Middleport Adult POOl &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
While Whirlpool Washera,
From $278·$348 Call 740- ttQ&gt;, Slart $365/Mo No Pets,
$65 each, Dryers, SSO each,
992·5064 Equal Housing Lease Plus Securfly Oapooil riO
Call after ~pm, (740)448·
Opportunlllet..
Required, oau8 ,.740·446·
•I\JlRIUIULU
9068, 116 Orchard Hill
_:.:________
'
,
Goons
Road Gallipoll
348 1, Evenings 740-387·
•
s
0602. 740-446.0101
'
,
Mollohan Carpet 202 Clark
Appliances Reoondllloned Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio
Announcement
Washo10, o~
... Aa~a.
Frea Estimates, 90 Daya
• r"'
•'¥""
Refrlgrators, Up To 90 Days Same As Caah. Fonanclng
Guaranteed! We 5elt New Avallabte Vl&amp;a And Master·
Appliances. French card,
1•877•830•9182
Maylag
One Stop
hopping
Clly Maylag, 7-·n95 (740)«&amp;-7444
For All Your ,Advertising Needs

u--·-· _

AND BUIUJJN&lt;;S
c~-':"'-----,
·-iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiililo,.l
~
APAlm.tmrs

I

Business rental property for
FOR ruo.n 1
sate- M•ddleport Desire ~------,.1
quick sale ~rlced below appraisal, at $55,000 Bnnga 1 and 2 bedroom apart·
$1 000/mo rental income mants, furnished and unfurnished, secunly deposit re·
(740)339-1028
qulred, no peto, 740.992·
Owner Retiring· Building 2218
Fo• Sale In Gaflopolls, Ohkl,
On Route 7, Has Large 1 Bedroom Apartment, A..
frtgeralor, Range, AIC InPalklng Lot Has 4 Rentals,
cluded,
$289 Plus Deposit &amp;
Also Lots Of Floor Space,
Reference. HUO Approved
Good
Income
Call
(740)441-1519

r

.'

•·~~~

~•JV'..I~

Framed Mtnora, Truckload
sale, great price See at lr·
Yin's Glass Servtce, 1273
B~- a new full orthopedic Eastem Avenue, GallipoliS
mattress set, st•ll In plastte, (740)~442;3
sacnfoco $129 304·360· ' - - ' - - ' - - " - - - - - Grubb's Plano· Tuning &amp;
0233
Repairs Problems? Need
Cemetery Lots for Sale 5 Tuned? Call The Plano Dr
together in Providence 740·446-4525
C
t
l ns R n ;_:;,o_;o,...:__;__ _- , eme ery on ee
u lndei'\Qndenl trferbahfe o:s.
tnbut;;; Call For Product 01
Road («O)S&lt;ll-2285

.
Buy or sell Rovenne Anti·
quea, 1124 East Mam on
SR 124 E Pomeroy, 740992·2526 Russ Moore,
owner

Hartford, WV, stone jar
$760, China Cabinet $250
old pinball machtne $100,
pia eafe $100, Vlctonan
mantle shelf with mirror
$160 bo 1 ··•1 1
: tte.....,.eclon. great
lor obayal money
d maker
rt
5600
•
so • ve ISong
wood boxes, metal advertiS·
lng 10gns and much more
I'
(740)992·5088

414 Cherry Ridge,
45674
,

Approximately one-hall mile on Cherry
Rldga from Rio Grande village.

A.,,,,

14,000 BTU Air conditioner,
(740)448·1124

IIJ.all.ae. • Air CendltJ•nJa•
IUIII 111111 TIAI IT IAI f1 11

441·0114 1·800·498-0076

Valley Truck Driver Training ·
COL CertilkM sWIOUI!I

, 8 cu rt Kelvnator refnger·
ator,
like new, glass
shelves,
Ice
maker
$200,(740)992·5818

Black Ftbergla.!ls Century
Cargo Co\ler Fits Chevy
SB, $360 (740)446·2360

Mon &amp; fri 700.3·30We~hlllm Sal &amp;Sun 8:110-4:30 12wetks
• f~~andng tnl footing 1111iltlle ltased on ·~~
'Jor\ plaomen1 on !lass htining'
Coolad Karl lam~ 1-801J.648.J69S or (740137).3966

Real Estate General

t~ee

Divide 25 X 34 Was $8,640. Sell $2,980 .
Larger 45 X 160 Was $25,780. Sell $15,780
BtnldinS-51 X 280 Was $38,470. Sell $26,470.

G)

HOUSES

·--

FORRFNT
1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homes From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8 5%
APR • Fo1 Listings, 800·J19·
3323 EXI 1709

~:.Ti

balh8, LA, FA, DR
eat~n
kitchen Very nice woodworlc,
hardwood
floors
and
beautllul slalrcase. Garage,
several oulbulldlngs and 4

LENDER

OFFICE
I

2 bedroom, Gat1 1polta C1ty,
$4001 month (710)441·
1519

~~:~..~3~:56~.

1a•ccres,

mil.

992~2259

2 BA with attached garage
New Carpeting and AJC
References and Depostt
Aequ1red $41 OJ month In·
d udes water No Pets 5 mt·
nutea from Holzer Hospital.
(740)446·6114
'

basement With rec. room and
loiS of space to grow, 2 cer
garage &amp; lngrO\Ind pool, only
minutes tram town. Priced al
$137,000. Call today and
make youreell the prOud
owner ot thla lovely proparly.

1807,77'""1+-.."';,·~

NEW LlSTING ·RACINE· TACKEAVILLE
ROAD
• This 1989 modular hae 3
bedrooms, 2'1• balhs, lamlly room has a
flraptace &amp; built-In bookshelves. A nice
open kllchen with Island &amp; lots of cabinet
space . -some new carpet, drywall,
wallpaper and many other great fealurea.
A newer 48X 12 back deck &amp; medium size
polo bam, all nicely landacapod. II aH sits
on approximately 1.5 acres
'
ASKING

3 bedroom home Mlnersv•lle
area, river view, references
required, deposll required, •
no pets 740·992-6777 after
5pm

Owner Is Re. .y lo Sell, so
now Is lhe lime to make this
brick ' ranch
filled
wllh
homeownerehlp pride yours
Oflertng LA With llreplace
opan to dining area, Mzy FA
with llreplace, 3 BAs, 2 112
baths, over 1400 sq. ft In

7121 SA 180- Located on a
private 8 acre, mil, sett1ng,
you will find lhla lovely Cape
Cod home featuring a lovely
greal room w1lh woodbumlng
fireplace, fonnat DR, gourmel
kltcllen with eallng area
OVBrtooklng lhe pond, 5 BAs,
3 baths, Ufl6lalrs sitting area,
2 car garage and above
ground pool $235,000 1101

3 Bedroom House in Syracuse, Ohio, $450/ Month
HUO App1oved (304)875·
5332 or (740)992-6119
weekends only

the lnterest Ftateo
Dropping and tho Price
Reducllon
on
thll
beautifully reatortd 2 etory
with original woodwork
throughout, now's the time
to make . lh1s home yours
Localed at lhe edge of town
and boas11ng approx 2500
sq ft of hv1ng area w1th
lormal LA. lonna! DR with
bu1ft-1n corner hutch, FA, all
w1th lovely hardwood floors,
3·4 BAs, 2 baths lreshly
pa1nted krlcllen w1th new
appliances, sun room, large
mud/laundry, room, enclosed
porch, 1 car dot garage w1th
workshop area Situated on a
maturely landscaped 1 aero,
m/1, lol and new reduced
pnce ol $125,000 S6D3

f'ORSAU:

n&gt;MSAJ.t:

.

.I

RESIDENTIAL HOME
OWNERS

9325
lhasa Apso Puppies AKC
8wks old 1st shots, wormed
S251J.$300 (740l797 •1911
Long Hatred Chthuahua
pupp.es for sate (304)8953815
'

a

riO

Shop Smi th, Mark V, has
band saw table saw, dnll
press plainer slides &amp; .....,
more $600 (740)446·4 122
Steel gU1tar, 1 flat top gUitar,
electnc gu1tar piices vary,
(740)387-0302
'---'------Top
Soli
For
Sale
(740)441-{]619

•

Upr~ ght

freezer. 10 inch ta,ble saw, large m•crowava
oven, large microwave oven
-storage cart, large jewelry
chest on Jags, (740)4461865

INMUSICAL

Sell or

tJIPMENT

sage
·
_:.:..________
1986 Pontiac 2 door auto,
runs good &amp; looks good,
$850 (740)441 · 1083
1987 Cavalier Z-24, clean
runs and dn\leS very well
good looking, $2100 OBO
Call (?40)38S.0 113
1991 Mercury Marqu1s, 4
amlfm casselle, high miles,
but all road mtles, looks
good, runs good i2500
call (740)992 2064
•
199 1 Oldsmobolo Soerra
81,000 m1les, 4 door, 6 cyl·
' lnder, a1r. AM/FM, $3200
080 {740)44 1-0172 or
(740)446·3044
'--'-------1993 Cad•llac Fleetwood
Broughman, 49 K M1les
Monl, Loaded (740)446·
4191

tu , van
an onowor.
to lyaecond
level.
:====ii=~~;;t.;;::;;;;;;;;;ij"'"___!~ ~i~:w:~:r::pooleading

CHECK

"i"'lO,....____,;,...__,
VANS &amp;

4--WDs
·-----~-,.1

1544

tached gilage/ opener. CIA
City Schools References/
DepoSit Required No Pets
$5251 month Includes wa·
ter (740)446·8114

BR 124 • MAPLE GROVE
SUBDIVISION • OHIO RIVER
FRONTAGE • Approximately 2 acre
Iota • 10 • to chilose from. Great
camping tols can tOday for more
delalls.
• ASKING $20,000.

Flnllttlc Setttngtt Wllh a
view that you can'l qufte gel
enough of and a location thai
Ia both prtvale and convenient
This 2 S10ry home Is a must
4
BRs, all
see home.
generouely arzed, 3 baths, LA,
formal DR, FA, eal·ln kitchen.
Quality
conatruCIIon
throughout LoiS of custome
lealureo. Wffhln a mile of lhe
hospital, CaH Dave tor more
lnformallon. 1103

Pilot Program, Renters
Needed, 304 ·736-~295
Small 2br CottBQfJ very quiet wtth deck, $325 + Oepos·
II and references No Pets
Htstonc Dtstricl (304)675·
6678

r M%~J:xr~

1

2 .bedroom mobile home
located
In
Kanauga
(740)«1 -0219

•

'

PORTLAND • This one story
home lncludel living room, dining
room, k1lchen, 4 bedrooma &amp; 2
baths. II also Includes a part
baaemenl &amp;
attic space.
The
a detaclled
one
a small shed.
on a 48 acre
Thla I
lot, a

1 4,000

tr

Newer 3
1 bath,
·qut-buildlng, 3 acres,
country setting.

446-6806*

379-2134
,.

958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

Branch Office
23 Locust St
Gallrpolrs, Oh1o
45631

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFF,ERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER.. .. ....-446-6808
GAIL BELVILLE ................................. 446-9209
TRISH SNYDER ... .... .... ... ... 441 ·9458
JOHNNI£i RUSSELL..........................36NI323
DAVID SNYDER ... ...........................441·9458
OUR WEB PAGE IS www vle.mllhrealestale com
e mail vlsrealeslate@zoomnel net

.

2 story
full basement
Home
a beautiful liVIng rm
w!f~replace, fromal dining rm , eat
1n lot &amp; 112 bath on 1s1 floor 3
large bedrms , loads o1 closet
s~e &amp; bath on 2nd floor 2 large
barns and tiu1ldmgs 17 ac of land
mil Call V1rg1n1a 446·4802 or 446·
8808

www.evans- moore.ccm11l

Fon11erly Bluckbrmt Renlty ..Servi116 Soathem Ohio f'or Over A Quarter Cenlr,ry"

.Joe A . Moore--Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441'-1616
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cara

I
new
copper plumb1ng &amp; bath
new roof pnvacy fence Fm1shed
3rd floor, 4 bedrms, 1 112 baths
full basem t hvmg rm will replace
formal dining rm, 3 bedrooms on
2nd lloor 1 w/t~reptace, gar'ge &amp;
landscaped
Call for appotnt
Vi rgl n1a 44€1·6606

,,Y'

~

••
••

.........
•.:J.-

03382 CARA~OUT BUSINESS
and CONVENIENCE STORE
FOR SALE. New alarm sysjem
Building built to stale code
Continuous operatiOn since 1986
Price mcludes Inventory Call
Johnnle 367·0323 or 446·6806

._
.

•y

•4004 9 ACRE TRACT of vacant I
land Land $75,000 00 Located
on SA 588 Vlrgonla 446·6808

• Jusl mlnules
town 3 bedrooms, newer
I roof Aerator sepllC, public water. Cute home,
.
ASKING $20,000

log Homo
llooldlng Compon""'

'

'

I

• OuolityPrHut
or Unoal Fool

Call tOOay
for your qu6te!
,oo.4S~~
www

applog.rom

'

• A l:ol'llmerclal building located on 3rd Sfleet. one
piullcttng On approxlmalely 50X100 level lot Addlflonal rear oSIIkln1a.
Public watar, eleclrlc and sewage on s1te Has been used 11
bull~lng and upholstery shop. Greal for small
room.

and out
teaiUres 2 112
with ftreptace, FA,
rec. room. eat· ln kitchen,
downstalrt
BA and much,
much more
It has been
completely remodeled Inside
and 0\/t and 11 ~n move on
condition. Great quality Large
lronl pon:h and covered patio
In the back 1 car garage Lota
of _ off streel parfilng Greal
locallon close to lcllools. Call
for an appt and let lhla home
self lfsolf lo you . Won'l lasl
long $179,000 t10S

at $49,900. 1302

Cleland Realty, Inc.

992·2259

David Wiseman, GRI, CAS Broker

Sherr.l L. Hart..................................742-2357

Carolyn Wasch, GRI

Anna M.

Robert Bru,c :

Kathleen

Chap~ao ..................... : ... 992·2818

M. Cleland

191

. ...

.•

Income

over full
basement with 2 car garage and
f1mshed lam1ly room Home s1ts on
2 Ac ml11n Hannan Trace Schools
Just mmutos from downtown
Gallipolis This home features a
beaut1lul landscaped lawn, wood
pellet '§lOVe and central a1r
located JUSt off Aock ltek Ad on
Mable Or. 1n nice ne1ghborhood
Have a garden and raise some
flowers but make sure to look at
thts Call JohMie at 367..0323
today for an appointment

little
of the world? Retreat
Country Colonial located near 10 th1s home located only 5
RIO Grande.! thiS 4 BR 3 112. bath m•nutes from Holzer, but lucked
masterp•ece, cherry molding, solid away on pnvate Charola•s
panel doors, tu1tur1ous master Lake Noce 4 BR 3 BA 1edwood
su1te, screened In porch custom s1ded home wtth 2 car anached
cherry k1tchen cab1nets, and a fun ·
garage and pnvate deck
basement part1aUy finished! The
overlooking the take Paddle
owner pas red uced the pnce bf the
around the lake 1n your own
home w1th 2 Acres mil to $219 000 paddle boat or f1sh from your
but may be wtl}1ng to sell as much
own dock
Aetax In the
25·30 Acres surrounding the
peacefulness ol the country
Call today!

AC mil
ne;or,C:hellhii•B. 4 BR 2 SA
'
SEocurlorv
a new above
S79.9&lt;J&lt;Q,

I

If
~.

:.,:.

ron1Wtled 2 stOIY
home w/3 BR'!, 2 balhs Perfect
home for someone looking for a
good deal. Being' sj)ld Way urii:lerthe appraisal value Hurry, th1s
one won't last I
$89.000

•

446-9555

441·1007 Sonny Garnes 446-2707
446-0621 RHa Wiseman 446-9555

L(J

40) 446·3644
\

1101 Thlo private • MCiuded
lwo-atory colonial otters ftko
views outside and • refined
claaay look lnalde all on two
1ree tilted ocr... Localed at 100
Lake View Court thl&amp; pnvate
reetncted seHihg offers four
badrooms and 2 112 balhs, large
fonnal dlnn•ng and 11vtng rooms
along wtlh a cozy fam1ly room
featunng a gas tog fireplace With
an Oak crafted k1lchen and top
quailly kitchen appliances thts
quiet country setting Is a must see

'

.

"

...

Jl·40lt2 Walch lhl Alvar from
biGkyird? Enjoy the VJUW
your boat dock or back deck
this 1+ ac m/1 with a 2 BR 1 bath
mob1le homel11acai10n camper ts
just the thing for stress May be
room for a garden Located at
7183 St At 7 SOuth and prtced at
$59,500

6806

I I ··) ~

13397 IN TH~ CITY Huge
home w/4 BAs. 2 baths,
DR, porches, partoal basement
PriCed nght· see this outstandmg
offer' Vacant ready to welcome
you VLS 446-6806

13390 FABULOUS
Br1ck &amp; v1nyl 6 BA, 2 BA
pn\late 1 acre lot Family
lh11ng room wfft replace, DR,
large ulltlly room m thiS one
full basement Allached 2
garsge and detached 2 car gar,age'
as well could be used lor storaoe.
Pnced for a qutck sale $85 000

13367 Lal'ge home 1n town, new
rool 1999, 4 BR, 2 5 BA, 2 car
garage,
v1nyl
Stdmg
mce
netghborhood Needs, some n.c
but proced nght at $79,900
13366 CITY LOT 43
located 39 Vono St

'

170'

I

14005 A FEW MINUTES
YOUR TIME COULD P'AY OFF!
V1ew lh1s lo\lely all briCk home
wlthre e bedroom$, 2 baths formal
dln1ng rm , llvmgl rm fam11y _rm ,
w1th f1replace
PatiO, above
ground 'pool, 2 car attached
garage and basement ~ 'VERY
LIVABLE
HOME FOR THE
MONEY $125,000 00 VLS
14014 KING SIZE FAMILY HOME
Great 2 sty 4 bedrms, 2 1/2
baths formal LA &amp; OR. Fam Rm
wlbnck fJreptaco, all large rms , 13
x 25' master bedrm wlbath 2 car
al!ached garage ' 1 25 Ac mfl
$140 000 Add1t1onel lot available
VLS

140016
HOME &amp;
INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulavolle
Pk 3 bedrm 3 bath 1tv1ng quarters.
Also 'I 8' X 32' garage plus 30' X 20
bu1ldong 112 ac of land good sales
Great
Starter loc Pnced to sell VLS
hOme ~ BA, 1 bath w/workshep
wtth bilsement Situated on 3
aclot and ~•ntersect•on o1 St Rt
160 &amp; .554 Owner has remodeled
home and put new roo! on
garage/workshop May also be
commercial Pnced @. $65 000
14019
COMMERCIAL
LOT·
JaCksOn P~ Gathpohs OH Comer
1
lot w1th great potential

14023 OUT POSSUM TROT RD.
You'll hnd a great 1mmaculate 2
bedrm. 1 bath mob1le heme
shmgle roof, deck, out-buildings lor
storage ~ P1ctureque land that rolls
&amp; also 15 Ac mit wfflshmg pond
What a n1ce sot fo bu1ld or subREDUCED PRICE-117 acres diVIde Property has good frontage
lo new ~wy, hoSpital, shop Call VLSrmth 446 6806
, sewer AdJOining
Pi~.; r~~i N,;;,;~g Home

on an
acre of land just mtnutes from the
hospital on SR 1601 3 bedroom 2
bath home, fu ll basement w1th
walkout and 2 car attached
garage $149,900 Calllodeyl

0

.~te~Bon
~1 NG
RANCH
HOME 1 ~
Hed gewood
Dnve, 3/4 bedrooms, 2 bath s,
beautiful cabmets m equipped
kitchen, llvmg room, formal dm1ng
room family roo m 1st floor
laundry, full basement attached
garage and outbuilding There IS
more than what meets the eye
Look for yourself! V1rgmta 446-

'·

AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER. H you hke
mdtVJduahty---here It lSI .3 029 sq
fl more or less 3 bedrms 2 1/2
13372 INVESTMENT OR MOVE baths Kit LAm. Office rm and
IN 1967 Mobile Home 60'x12', 2 much more Wrap porch front &amp; 2
bedrooms, 1 bath, fumJture, range s1des . 167 Acres mil, Rollmg
&amp; ref , Heat pump certral air Pasture and 3 Large Barns &amp;
La•~• bulldong 70'x14' also 20'x 10' Feed l:ot s1tes 2 n1ce ponds
Comer lot Hysell &amp; Oliver Land 1s most all clean &amp; has some
fencmg Electnc &amp; frost free water
Mi,ddleport, $15,000.00
'" the bam Feed lot s1tes
Formerly used lor Veal call
opera tion
Located near R•o
;J;;.;.\::!1~ Grande Appointment Only Call
V1rQ1naa L Sm1th 7 40·446-6806
$335,000

I

Town ConYtllllnce to whl* . .lls this cute little 3 BR, 1 home. Polentlal for 2nd balh
room has flxt~res bul no lnslalfed. Buill In the late 1800'a, but remodeled laat tn 1990. 11 haS
... .,,.~,.,I and windows Pr
rly haa farge outbuilding with electric. tnvealore may want to look

: Cute homa with 2 bedrooms, balh, kitchen wllh
newer· painI, carpet and ceiling fans Double
, new fronl
• Close to everything Jull move ln. Immediate

Henry E. Cleland .... .................. : ••••

Beautiful MCtlonal home
In a country seltlrtg woth 3 BR, 2
BA, cathedral ce1ilng ar-d hrepfac::e
in fam1ly room, lots of decking
surrounds above ground pool and
a 28 M 28 barn/garage on 1 2 acres
mn

I
Elegant m·lown lwlngl 4 BR 2
~ 12 BA colortlal style home,
beaut1fully
tandsclfped,
tastefuNy decorated, one car
detached garage and the extra
storage space of a lull
basement IN ADDITION the
seller IS •ncludmg lhe vacant lot
next door ALL for only
$167,0001
SELLER
OFFERING
HOME
WARRANTY'

~-~.

"Fun For All Home" En1oy
Only Weier Lo-.r Need your summer and QOOI off In
Appfyl
Remodeled
to thiS beautrtul free·lorrn on· Remodeled to Perfection
pertecllon. Marn home offers ground pool with a •great lor and just walling for you to
brtghl and cheery LA .,Yrth enlertam1ng" patio area with move your lam1ly 1nto lhrs
dining area, FA, cozy kitcllen, ·pnvacy, beautoful landscaped home and en1oy family llv1ng
2 BRe, 1 bath plus lull lot Large family home With al its best Convenlenlly
basement Large lol thai goes privacy,. beaulrful landscaped located 1n lhe Spring Valley
Largo
family
home area and offenng approx
to the river featunng one room lot
cabin wtlh balh and farge deck boasting over 2300 sq ft woth 2800 sq ft featuring LA wllh
lo enloy the view from Large farge, slep.down LA open to gas log lrreplace, lomral DR,
lire pit CtJmpletes .thls properly fonnal DR with cozy fireplace, 4·5 BAs, 2 112 bafhs, olflce,
as a one of a kind river 4 generous BAs, 3 lull balhs, 2 aun room, basement FA wllh
properly. Plus an affordable car garage plus 16 x 22 gas log fireplace and ber area,
Convenlentiey 2+ lfBrtUe Rlus _a be!!utllully
price of only $85,000 , Call ~".~~
toeateo at 44 Beech Skeet and landscaped tot ,complete liils
Carolyn lodayl H18
priced at $174,900 Sure lo lovely property Priced at
d~lrghllft109
$172.60011623

sq. ft.

Call or stop by our office tor a free Quality Homes Guicte in color.

•1063 Beautiful country aettlng1
2.5 acres ol plush country
meadows and a stocked pond
surround th1s 3 BA ranch home
$69,000 Total 17 acres for
$89,000

)

Route

Real J:state General

~~Jtz4

.

~ orner

e

lOe tUIICUIII

2nd Avenue Locattonlt Frxer
upper wllh potenlial Thts 4
BA
house
needs some
attention, but hllll lots of
polenllal to be a very n1ce
home 9 rooms m allmclud1ng
LA, DR, FA, 2 balhs, eat·ln
kitchen . Could be converted 10
a duplex la1rty easily. N1ce
yard
Off street pill1&lt;rng.
$53,0001110

86" Chevy Blazer Full Size
VB 4 wheel Dnve,
Runs Good Alter 5 6757216
305

can 740·446·4 1 19

~~&lt;?t Q/md ~

lii

Now LIIUng River Front
Property With 3 BR home In
great condllton MaJntenance
lree home offers 3 BAs, 1 112
balhs, 6111-in kitchen, LR and
large FR with balcony. Very
nrce woodwork &amp; doors 2 car
garage plus large oUibulldlng
2 4 acres plus along lhe river.
Extra building lot Large play
area for kids $149,9001107

1993 Ntssan Pathftnder 4x4
V-6 Auto, Air loaded, ex·
celtenl condtt ton $4800
740·992-7584

warehouse space
with s offices

Real Estate General

12085 Want your

HAPPY HOLLOW
to town yet prlvale
and country. This ccmven1ent one
floor plan ranch has 4 bedrooms,
bath, newer shingle roof, public wafer,
lnsulaiiOn and a special bonus "free
gas•t Thla tuat may be the one you
are looking Iori • Call lor an
appo1ntmen~
ASKING $51,10(1.

WILL HILL ROAD -Jual outside of Pomeroy A 2 year old two
Randall Home wllh
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 1'11 baths
12x16
HPICA and ceiling fans. 1'/, acres, nice garden area Very nice non1e. o
Owner has relocated and wants lhls sold ASKING $75,000.

-~~-

New~

,;.::_;._;_:.:..;..c.;.:.;._ __

'·800·42 3·4!99

1997 Ford Thunderbird LX,
V-8 auto, a1r, power, w/1,
loaded, very nice, 61 000
mtles, $7,800, 740·9927·:::584:_:_:_ _ _ _ _ __
T-Tops,
88
Camara

Affordable lot 1n !he BidWell area approx 1 acre pnced at
$4,900. No restnct1ons Call today 11610

Traditional
stoiy wllh more
than traditional appeal. Th1s 4
BA home It lust wa(llng lor lhe
partecl lemlly Lois of recenl
lmprovementa make lhls home
worry free for a long 11me. New
lumace, carpet, balhroom,
roof,
sldlng
and
septiC
Channing appeal doesn't end
at
lhe
curb
Quakflly
neighborhood
with
family
almosphere $184.9001104

1991 Ford Bronco, 4x4 full
s1ze excellent condition. 1n
s1de and out, garage kept
Call (740)245 5560

7 North
Calllpolls, Ohio

(~)675 ·5 162

New 3 BR Homa wltl1 at·

.
1978 Chevy 4WD 48.000
ong~pal m1tes Great shape
$3700 (740)256·6215
-1-990
-:-F2- 5-0:..,-x-4 -d,..oe_se_I_X_L_T
Lanai 123 ooo m1tes Alu·
mtnum mns w1th overs,ze
11res Call (740)256 1647

1984 CJ 7 Jeep $4000
(740)379-9257
----,,------------Real Estate General

pan
OJI
3 more

2 car garage. Too many amenltlea

Clean 2br House reteren·
cas, depoSit, No Peta

PRICE REDIICI!DII SA 110 •
OALLlA COUNTY· A ranch home
with approximately 2 acres,
3 bedrooms, auachod garage,
fireplace, newer carpet &amp; wallpaper.
A real cute home
lmmedfate
possessionll
ASKING $58,1100.

y~

&amp; bath plus a parlor lype area. Fro~

Real Estate General

EXCITING NEW LISTINGS

House for rent 1n Waterloo,
Depos•t
&amp;
references.
(740)643-2916

I'JO

05

CLASSIFIEDS!I ·

' 4 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994
""'~
7 40-446-0008 7 40-441-llll

27 Acrea In Green Twp. Great views on several very mce
building s1tes Pond Barn. Just pasl SA 775 n SA 141 Must
see the whole properly lo apprecoate W1if.conslder splitting Call
Dave for more mforma11n •220

Oh10 Valley Sank w111 oIt er
tor sale by Pub~c
Auchon a 1978 Ford Dump
Truck IIBBl 308 at 1o00
am, on 7/1 4/01 At Oh1o val·
loy Bank Annex 143 3rd
Ave · GallipoliS, Ohto Sold
to the h1ghest b1dder "as ts·
h
•
h
d
w ere 1s Wit out expresse
or lmphed warrarty &amp; may
be seen by calling the Col·
1ect1on
Department
at
(740)44 1-1038 OVB reserves the nght 10 accept/
reJect any B. all b1ds &amp; w1th·
draw items tram sale pnor
to sale Terms of Sale
CASH OR CERTIFitO

est
btdder
"as IS· where
•s" draw
1temsTerms
from sale
pnor i~=:~~~~~;;;;~~:~:~e
wtthoul
expressed
or tm·
to sale
of Sale
piled warranty &amp; may be CASH OR CERTIFIED
seen by cellmg the Collec-C
_H..:E::C.:;K_:__ _ _ _ __
tlon
Department
at (740)441·1038 ova re- Oh1o Valley Bank w11t offer
serves the nght to accept/ for sale by Public
Auc·
reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; With- liOn a 1997 Chell)' Blazer
draw Items from sate prior #109168 at 1000 am, on
to sale TEirms of Sale 7/14"/01 At Ohio Valley Bank
CASH OR CERTIFIED Annew:, 143 3rd Ave, Galhp·
CHECK
oils, Ohoo Sold to lhe high·
.:.c::.::.:..:..______ est bidder •as 1s- where 1s•
Oh1o Valley Bank Will otter w11hout expressed or amfor sale bv Public
Auc- plied warranty &amp; may be
lion a 1992 Chevy Cavalier seen by calhng lhe Coffee.
#263706 at 10 00 am, on lion
Department
at
7/14101 At Ohoo Valley Bank (740)441·1038 OVB ra·
Annex, 143 3rd Ave, Gal11p- serves the nght to accept/
oils, Ohio SOld to the htgh· reject any &amp; all b1ds, &amp; With·
est btdder "as Is· where 1s• draw 1tems from sale prior
without expressed or lm· 10 sale Terms of Sale
pl&lt;ed wa,.anty &amp; may be CA.SH OR CERTIFIED
seen by calling the Collec- CHECK
\.
lton
Department
at
&amp; meadows. One year old Cape
home
(740)441·1038 OVB re· Volvo Classoc 1980 Sports QUALITY BUILT HOME. All oak Interior paneled
serves the right to accept/ Sedan, excellent condit•on, doors, and lots of oak trim &amp; oak cabinets In this
reJect any &amp; all b•ds, &amp; 'Mih· $2000 OBO, Must seal
draw 11ems from 6818~ pr'iod304)675-161B
complete " wife approved" kitchen Formal LA
1o sale Terms of Sele
and DR w/ hardwood floor&amp;. Spacious family
CASH OR CERTIFIED
room w/ French doo11. Main bedroom and bath
CHECK
hi I
I b
I
d ·•
D
k

Real Estate, Gen!!!ral

I

.

Page

,raue ,

0

EQ

TRUCKS

€;&gt;rnt111rl •

fn the

1994 Cors1ca, bOdy m ex·
co11o n1 shapa, engone needs
Spmet P18no, great for be· wo•k ~ust selll $500 oao
gmner $150 New electnc (740)446 9471
keyboard Wilh stand less
old
$ 150 1995 Oldsmobile, Eoghly·
e1ght Royale, leather seats
(30•1171'3-5;343
ongmal owner 43,000 ac·
tual m1tes, $7500, Charlene
Hoeflocn,
(740)992·2155
t:!:ll:';;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,; daytime,
(740)992 5292
FAm1
eventngs

rlD

1!:unr~

HIRSA!f

be

,
lnterne.honal, 40HP,
Tractor with fro.nt end loadUsed Bricks lor sale &amp; Hay or, (740)379·9381
1n the field to be mowed
(304)675·1096
Tn axle 14' traclor w1th 2'
:' - ' - - - - - - - - dove &amp; ramp, a plntel hotch, (740)379-~374
Walerlone Special 3/4 200 (740)949·7000
Oids Cutlass Sle••a
PSI $21 95 Per 100, 1" 200 ~~~;.;,;;,.;,;.;__ _..., 88
,;PSi $31 00 Per 100 All
WANTID
- ~ !Leeds §qme work 82 Cadol·
'Brass Compress 1on Flttmgs
BUY
lac C1maron runs good
10
In Stock
__
needs some work $700 lor
RON EVANS ENTERPRIS..
both or trade tor runmng
ES Jackson Ohio, 1-800· lJsoQ. ~Qtlorota J&gt;locks,_bcQ,•• Rir;iwp,(30&lt;1)576·3181
537-9528
ken concrete or rock,
=_.:.:::;:__ _ _~_ (740)379·9061

What'a
The
Price
For
Prlvocy?
Loss
of
convenience? High costs lor a
lot of land? Maybe these are
some malnlenance costs lor a
long dnveway? Maybe IMss
are some trade offs you have
lo make woth some properties,
but not this rambling ranch
Loca1ed on !he edge of town,
th1s home Is very convenient
lor schools and shopping. With
over 3000 sq ft of living
space, you'll enjoy !he open
lloor plan and large wlndows.•4
BAs, 3 full balhs, LA, DR, den
and large FA, also an enclosed
pon:h.
Newly
remodeled
kllchen w1lh attraCIIve oak
cabinets 3 ftreplaces 2 car
garage. $159,90011218

20

TRUCKS
mRSALt

r

SI'RUMEN'IS

---~----- 444

1943

1'20

I

Tappan HI Efftclency 90%
Gas FUrnaces. 011 Furna·
cas, 12 Seer Heat Pump &amp;
A1 r Conditioning Systems
Free 8 Year Warranty Bennetts Heat1ng &amp; Coolmg, 1- Poodle puppies tiny toy
800-872-5967
teacu~. cream, AKC,
wks
www oNb com/bennett
old, (740)667·3404

~~----~~~~--~-­

Ill \I \I ...

IriO

Auros

r

i

Real Estate General

n&gt;RSALE

I ~~0

•
AlmlS

2

~m_:os.:sa:;;:,ge':-:,..,----- take payments (740)388- dr • V-8, auto, all power, aJc,

1-888·568-9350

Lookmg To Buy A New
Home? Don't Have Land?
We Ooltl Hurry Only 10 lots
Left. 304·736·7295

AI!IUS

•

7 ear old w lk M
• 2000 Chevv s .10 low m1V
a er orgc,n 90 Crown Vtctoria LTD pis,
ONE OWNER
tage CO player alloy wheels
G9ldlng Black Wllh blaze pJw, mce luxury car, wont Ohio vanev Bank w1n offer 1993 Dodge Daytona car, aJc 3 04--675 -6 515
aM 3 socks, 7 year old last long runs good, askmg tor sate by PubliC Auc- 30 ft Av1on camper Doth tn
~~fga~r~;e(7~6,·~~~~ $1200, {740)992·1532
uoo a 1993 Olds Ach1eva ~~~ c(~~g;~ ~~~W992· 96 Grand CherOkee L!m1ted
304 -6 75" 1879 Leave mes
(740}256·1147 must leave a 94 Dodge Shadow, 5 , " 01 B3S3 at 10 00 am on
or
•
message and . will return speed a~r $1000 Yamaha 7114' 01 At Ohio Valley Bank
, ONE OWNER
sage
'
:
Annex 143 3rd Ave , GalltpD
..calt •
,
, motor scooter, new t1res. oils Ohto Sold 10 the htgh· 1993 Dodge aytona car. On1o Valley Bank wilt offer
$1000 (740)441·0181
·
•
• 30 rt Avlon camper bol.h 1n 10 sal b
P bl
A
HAY &amp; u
est bidder as IS· where IS
ood
dt
(740)992
r
e y
u IC
uc
Ohto Valley Bank Will oHer wt1hout expressed or lm· ~ 5 0~(~ 4 ~)~~ 2 6155
• hon aJ 97 B Brockway Dump
GRAIN ·
for sale by Pubhc
Auc· phed warranty &amp; may be
truck 11864482 at 10 00
uon A 1991 Chell)' Lumma seen bv calling the Collec·
am, on 7/14/01 At OhiO Val·
Bated straw for sale. out ol 1#207130 at 10 00 am, on liOn
Department
at
TRucKS
ley Bank Annex 143 Jrd
field 675·4308
'
7/14t01 At OhiO Valley Bank (740)441 1038 OVB recv'"Rc-'LL~
Ave.. GallipoliS. Ohio Sold
10 the highest bidder "as IS·
Annew:, 143 Jrd Ave , Gal1 1p- serves the nght to accepV
rv L3A r.
Hay &amp; Bnght Wire Tle oi1s, OhiO Sold to the hiQh· re.190t any &amp; all bids &amp; With·
.:
where ts" Without expressed
Slraw Year 'Round Oehvery est bidder ~as tS· where ts" draw !lams !rom sale pnor 1969 314 ton two wheel or •mphed warranty &amp; may
&amp; Volume Otscount Avalla· w1thout expreued- or tm· to sale Terms of Sale dnve Chevrolet ptck·up ~e ~een b{) cattmg tt:e Col·
ble
Heritage
Farm plied warranty &amp; may
CASH OR CERTifiED {740)992·2482.
eel on
apartment
at
(304)G 75- 5724
seen by calhn_g the Collec· CHECK
(740)441 ·1038 OVB retion
Department
at
1985 Ford 3!4 ton piCkup serves the nght lo accepV
(740)441 1038 OVB re- Ohio Valley Bank wtR offer $1700 OBO (740)367..()632 reJect any &amp; all btds &amp; With
serves the nght to accepl/ for sale by Public
Aucdraw atems from sate pnor
~iO
Avros
reect an~ &amp; all b•ds &amp; with t1on a 1990 Ford PT 1985 Ford F 700 Dumptruck to Si).le Terms of Sale
S
dr~w ttems from ~Ia pnor 11847372 at 10 00 am on 10sp w1th 2sp AJ~Ie, asktng CASH OA CERTIFIED
FOR ALE
to sale Terms of 'Sate 7114/01 At Oh•o Valley Bank $6500 or trade for Chevy CHECK
CASH OA CERTIFIED Annex, 143 3•d Ave Gallop- 4x4 truct&lt; 675·5828 .
1966 Dodge Monaco, 4 CHECK
oils OhiO Sold to the htgh
' Duou
dOOI, Good
Condltoon, -:_:::.::..:.._--+--- - ,
•
: 1988 Silverado 4x4 S3895:
p ,,
est bidder as Is--- where IS 1994 S-10 $3695 1991
Ti
II
$1250 (740)256·6098
Ohio Valley Bank w111 offer Without expres!ed or 1m· G
T k • 4 4 51995 :
- - - - - - - - - lor sale by PubliC
Auc· phed warranty &amp; may be 1~ ~~fa er~ll:l;nded c~:
1
tJon A 1995 Chevy Lumina seen by call•ng the COIIec· 52795 COOK MOTORS
0
8
1
r: (740l«6·0103 ·
New In Box 42J~60 white males $300 each: 36 gallon $1800
Adult
driven, Annew: 143 3rd Ave, Galllp- serves the .nght to accept!
oval garden lub for mobile aquanum, 55 aquanum, sell (740)256·6741 Leave mes· oils Ohoo Sdld 1o the hogh· •eject any &amp; all bods, &amp; with·
Real Estate General

-

REAL ESTATE

3 STEEL BUILDINGS 1

IriO

'

!i;&gt;unb,w

.

Middleport • Gallipolis Ohio • Point Pleasant WV

'

K1mball plano $800 00. Yamaha Ke boa d 4 y,
handmade wedding gown Old Cost V Ne~ · $ 1 :~
ve1t wl pearls &amp; sequins s1ze Used Onlv. 6 Monihs 5600·
7-8$10000 304·675-1831 {304)6 75 ~ 982 Anyti,;e
·
K1ng alze water b&amp;d fQr sale~ ~r~~~B;;;;,;.;;;:.;;;;;;.-tl
(740)992·5937 or (740)992SUIJ,.DING
IIDDI IL~
6583
--··~
•
MOBILE HOME OWNERS 81 k b k
OC • rtc , sewer ptpes
Huge lnvenlory, Discount Windows lintels etc Claude
Pr~ces, On VInyl Sktrt• ng, Wmters RIO Grande, OH
Doors, Wtndows, Anchors, Cat/ 7 40·2 45·5121
Water Heaters, P1umb1ng &amp;
Electrical Parts, Furnaces &amp; Cedar boards, over 200
Heal Pumps Bennetts Mo- doors. lntenor and extenor
btle Home Supply 740·446- Windows, cabinets, lots of
9416 www orvb oom!ben- butld•ng supplies, all new,
nett
"
off Catt (740)441..0279
after 6pm
•
NEW ANiJ USED STEEL
~
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For Concrete, Angle Char\FOR":'1ALE
nel, Flat Bar, Steel Grating
For Drams Dr~veways &amp;
Walkway"$ New 55 Gallon Adorable 7 month old fnale
Drums Wllh Lod &amp; Rong, monoalure Schnauze• handsome black Wllh SliVer trim
$ 7 00 Each L&amp;l Scrap Met· just
a little too fnsky tor hts
als Open Monday TueSday,
Wednesday &amp; Frtday, Bam- 67 year old owner, eke pa4 30pm Closed Thursday, pers $200, (304)773·5166
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday

~=~,'Y~~d·i:=~e~l~~n~ -A-KC__:_:Rc.e_g.:.ls_:te-r'"ed...:.;C:..h_ln_e_s~8
p
$
d ~ 1on (740)388·9415 lea"e
•
ug puppies
350 Will

Two-story home of approximately 4200
square feet of space, wtth seven and
one-half acres. House IS gray wtth brown
shutters, and has wraparound porch and
two-cor garage Property includes pond
with dock, and two-vehicle pole barn.
Home has ltvtng room, formal dining
room, k1tchen/famtly room combined,
four bedrooms, three full baths, and full
basement
Marry · other
features
accompany this qual ttY, home.
Location One-hiilf mile on Cherry Ridqe
rn R1o Grande, Ohio 45674. GO!IipoTis
City School Dtstrict. Approximately
f1fteen mrnutes from Holzer Hospttal.
If lntarested, call 74G-245·5858 day;
74G-245·5992 evening or
Fax 74G-245·5174
Real Estate General

f ·

Llv•:srtlCK

home4pm
$85, {740)245·5122 nes
or tradeCall
Both wltt1
alter
afleraccesso4pm
(740)256·6505
New K1ng Plllowtop mallress :..:..:.:::::.:.;:::;:;_____
set, suggested value $900, AKC Registered Basset
sacnfk:e $300 w/warranty, Hound Puppl8s 1st shots
304·360·0233
and wormed
M'"1ature
=..::.:::..::::.:=-::-_ _-'- dachshund 1 male, 2 fa.
Playstataon 2 w/3 games, 1 male, (740)367·7705

Rio Grande. OH

FREE ESTIMATES
FREE 10 YR WARRANTY ·

MEilrnANDisE

IP""

MtSO:LLl\NF.ot.5
MJ.l1CHA~111SE

=::..::::;:______

Serious Inquiries Only

Announcement

MlscEu..\Nmus

. Pomeroy •

·~(7_4.:.0l:..4_4e-=-=-7300=--..,..- ~~~ksc~:.er3 ~~~n~f~!: ~ ~;,,;::"~~"~·~;.:':. ~!t';~~~ A:~rn~ v~te~Ba~~ ('7;0l 441~~g;"8rtm~~ 8

====::;:::::;:;::;;:;:::;;===:::;~
For Sale By Owner

www amencancommunityclassified.com

r

1; 2001

r

Real Estate General

Homa and Acraage-

Sunday, July

50%

central Air w1th A-co1l, 2 112 Opportumty (740)441-1982
ton $400 Used 1 year, -'-'---'--'--'----(740)256-6871
JET
AERATION MOTORS •
Cherry sletgh bed, p1llow Repaired New &amp; Rebu ilt In
top mattress set, new. still Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·
boxed Can separate, ap- 800·537 9528
prox value $1400 sacnftee
----~---$555 304·360·0233

Announcement

'Will

Craftsman Rldtng lawn
Mowe•, Pnce SEOO, asl&lt; fo1
Jr. (740)256· 11 02
Four Cemetery lots at Ohio
Valley Memor1at Gardens
Asldng $450 a lot (740)388·
9023

I

or visit our website:

Baech St, Middleport, 2
bedroom furmthed apart·
ment, utilities pad, deposit
&amp; roftlonc81, no pets, 740992.0185

Ft~e acre mil with trailer,
county water, no septic;
Dexter $601/0 (740)669·
0107

'

j

1-800-821-8139

1 Room Fumtshed EffiCienl..tmi&amp;
cy, All Utilities Paid, Shared
ACREAGE
Bath, 919 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis, OH $125/mo
112 acre lot on Oshal road (740)j446-3945
No single w•dea $7000. 3 bod1oom, Thl1d Stroel.
875-7756 after 6pm
Racine, Hud approved,
(740)247.ol2g2
2 Lots, Zoned Commercial,
Within The Village Of Rio Apartment for rent, I BR, ref
Grande (740)245-5858
&amp; stove, $225 per month
2 prime lots ready lor build- plus ulllll1es plus $125 de·
posit (740)247-4292
ing on- located 10 minutea
fro~ hospllal , 5 minutes! BEAUTIFUL
APART·
from Chartals Hilla , (I) 2 5 MENTS AT BUDGET PA~
acres. $20,000 and (I) 1 ~ CES AT JACKSON ES.
' acres, $15,000, or take both TATES, 52 Weslwood Drive
lots lor $30,000
Call fmm $297 10 $383 Walk to
(740)446·~14 from 8·5pm, shop &amp; movies Call 740·
M·F, (740)448·3248 aller 448·2568 Equal Hous•ng
5pm
Opportunlly

Camp
S1tes.For Rent On
Kanawha River, 8 miles
from ,Poml Pleasant, electric
(304 )675·1722,
only
(30&lt;1)675·4144 After 5pm

New And Used Furniture
Store Below Holtday Inn,
Kanauga We Sell Grave
Monuments And Vases
(7-40)446-4782

The American Community
Classified Advertising Network
Contact Us At

(740)367-7~

80 Acres US At 35 End ol
new Four Lane In Hender·
son CttY Water,and Mineral
rights $175,000 (304)937·
2518 or (304)545-6491

1

osn • .

area, no pets, 740-992·
5858

n--

AMAZ1NGLY LOW PRICES
(~)675-1422
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
515 Main Street, Point
Buy Facta&lt;y Dllecl
Pleasant
Excellent Semce
Rex1ble Flnanctng Available
New &amp; Used Fum1ture
Home /Commerc•al Un.ts
New 2 Poece Uvingroom
FREE ColOr Catalog
Suotes, $399 Buy, Sell, Call Today 1.ao&lt;).71HI158
Trade
www flJ et~n com

1, 2001

== L.

•

Main Street Fumlture

I

FARMS

Sunday, July

~.5EHOI-·L!l-,l.l ro H~ Ir ~ Ir

v,.

pets E\lirgreen, near 160
(740)446-6189

•

lior._"....

...----.I

~:!~ ~~:ro ~

5885 Dnve a little sa\le a

WV

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohl9 • Point Pleasant,

I

cab1nets w:~e Fo'rmat
&amp; DR, 3
bedrms, 1 full bath &amp; 2 half baths
Bonus
of
a
mother-In-law
apar1ment w/LA, kit, 1 BA &amp; bath
All appliances stay Enjoy the v1ew
of ihe Ohto R1ve r w/a boat dock
Close b)' Huge 4 car garage &amp;
cement dnveway Workshop 1nthe
qarage It's time for act1on Shown
by apPQtnlmenl

Located 363 MI. Carmel Ad. 3 beqroom, 2 baths, CEDAR CON I tMe,~ARY HOME Oak kofChen,
l e&lt;rranlic lole on rtchen &amp; baths NEW CARPET through OUI, netural decor 5 AGnES MIL $105,000. Trlsh

.,
•

�•

eo

~unbq- ~im.es .. itntin:tl

N

TIc E 5

·

Pubiic Notices in ·Newspapers.

e
Your Right to Know, •
·
Delivered Right to Your Door.
(7~~~~3-~12~~~~~~~~======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~==~0~h~&lt;o~N~•~w~,~~pr~r~~~»~~~~~u~un~========~

M
WS+S
1976
Harley Davidson 1000
Sportster Custo

tras, 5 gat tank

Public Notice

Public N6tlce

Public Notice

25 and 26. Tloe permll

Wllkeavllle, Ohio.
The application
propoaea to make a
post·mlnlng land uaa
change to provide lor
the permanent

( 740)643-12~

1990 Blue 1500 GL Gold

PUBLIC NOTICE

Pu~lic Notice

Southam Ohio Coal
Compariy, P.O. eox
490, Athans , Ohio
45701 , has aubmlllad
an application to
retention of a office tevls8' coal mining
bathhouae tllllldlng,- Permit R-o354·31 to
potabl'e
water the Ohlo Department
systems Including a of Natural Resources,
The application
Division of Mineral
prop 0808 1o' ma k e a water storage tank
paved and sto~ed Resources
post-mining land use · access road,. and Management . This
change to provide for
parking areas.'rhe 13 permit Ia located In
warn winch, lots e)(tras , Senior citizens are ' the
permanent
acre area aesoclated Meigs County, Salem
$4,000 lirm, 1740}985-391 7 Invited to altend the retention
of
a
with tlie revision
Township, Sections
2001 450 Foreman s. ex- hearing.
maintenance building
had a pre·mlnlng 13 and 18. The penmlt
cellent condition, warranty,
and stoned access
1and . u 18
of area encompasses
(740}446-4025
(7) 1, 2001
roads and parking
"'paslureland", but approximately twelve
1tc
areas, The 4 ~85 acre
will now be changed (12) acres and Ia
Otlio Valley Barik will offer ...:..:::__ ___;,____ area associated with
to
allow lor pool located
on • the
lor sate by Public AucPublic Notice
the revision had a
mining land use Ia 8 Wilkesville 7.5 mlnuta
tion a 1998 Honda CA9 -----~l202275 at to:oo am, on
pre-mining land use
U.S.G.S. quadrangle
" commercial aile".
7114/0 1 At Ohio Valley Bank .,NOTICE TO BIDDERS of
"unmanaged
The surface owner map, In Danville,
Annex,. t43 3rd Ave., Gallip-' (;ARP~T PURCHASE woodland
and
lor tho property Ohio.
ol ~ . Ohio. Sold to the high- ·
FOR
unmanaged
_.
· aaaoclated with this
The application
est bidder 'as is- whore is' MEIGS COUNTY JOB pastureland", but will
application
Is proposes to change
without ••pressed or . 1m- &amp; FAMILY SERVICE$ now be changed to
Southern Ohio coal the melhod of mining
plied warranty &amp; may be
allow for post·mlnlng
. Colnpeny.
to allow full coal
seen by calling the CoHee·
lion
oepanment
at
Sealed bids will be land use as a
The application Ia mining by longwall
(740}441-1038. OVB ro - received by the Meigs "residential site",
on' fila for public methoda and room
serves th~ right to accept/ County Board of
The surface owner
viewing at Melga and pillar mining
reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; with· Commissioners In · for the property
County
Recorder's (lo~gwall
draw items from sale pnor their dfflce located In assoclale'd with thla .
·Office, Melga county development). The
to sakJ. Terms ot Sa le: the
Courthouse , •ppllcatlon
Ia
Court Houaa, Second area to be mined has
CASH OR CERTIFIED · Second
Street Southern OhiO Coal
Street, Pomeroy, prtvloualy been
CHECK.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Company,
'
Ohio 45769 and ahall approved for mining
BoATS &amp; MuruRS until 10:00 AM on the •The appl)catlon Is remain so for at least by room and pillar
FOR SALE
12th day of July 2001 , on file for public
thirty (30) daya methods and Is being
and at that time viewing al Meigs
following the last revised ·for full coal
opened by the Clerk County Recorder's
dale ol publication of _ extraction mining.
16' Bass Tra cker, 8HP
Johnson, Trolling Motor, of said Board and Office, Meigs Counly
this notice. Written
The surface owners
, Depth
Finder,
Traiier, read aloud lor the Court House, Second
comments
or aaapclated Wth this
purchase
and Street, Ohio 45769
$2600, (740)367-7693
requests for an applicaton are aa .
Installation of carpel and shall remain so
Informal conferenca follows: Ryan &amp;/or
1989 Strate's Open Bow lor the Meigs Counly for at least thirty (30) •
may 'be flied with 1118 Amy Holden, Terry
With trailer, Seats 6; E~e.ce l · Job
&amp;
Family days following the
Division
of Mineral &amp;/or Sandy Napper;
lent Condilion. OMC 3.0 Services.
last
date
of
Robert
E
&amp;/or
Resources
160 HP
In-Board With Specifications . for publication of this
Management, 18S5 Dorothy M. Davis,
Cobra Ot.~ t Drive. Asking
carpet and notice,
Written
$4800. Call
E'ienings said
Fountain Squara Fred E. &amp;/or Judy L.
Installation may be comments
or
(740)44&amp;4140
Court, Columbus Davia,
Danville
obtained from the requests for an·
Ohio
43244,
wlthl~
Holiness
Church,
24ft. Pontoon boat, Play· Clerk of tho Board of Informal conference
thirty (30) days alter Dorothy Smith, Carl
·bOuy Yachtman 3.0 Lilre in- Meigs
County rllay bellied with the
the last date of Eugene &amp;/or Dorothy
board Mercruise low hours
Commissioners
or Division of - Mineral
128. Power Trim, sis prop,
ptjbllcatlon of this Ann Smith, Steve .
26 gal gas tank, depth find· Jane Banks of the Resources
notice.
·
&amp;lor Saundra Buah .
er, seat covers, amlfm ra - Department of Job &amp; Managemant, 1855
Bruner Lend Co.,
Square
dio, tilt steering, 24 inch Family ' Services Fountain
Sebert
Belcher,
24,
2001
(6)
17,
pontoons, dual axle drive on during
normal Court, Columbus,
Herman
&amp;/or
Darlene
(7) 1. 8, 2001
trailer, $13000.00. 740-742· working
hours, 43244, within thirty
Ashby,
Randy
L. &amp;/or
4tc
293&amp;
Monday through (30) days alter the
Denise L. Williams,
of
T h a last · dale
Sea Doo 1999 GSX-AFt w/ Friday.
·an.d Southern Ohio
Public Notice
trailer, co1.1er. 35 hrs., Mini Commleeloners
publication of this
Coal Company.
Condition, $6500, (216}233· reserve the right to notice.
Th• appllcatlo~ Ia
4264
ADDENDUM TO
reject any and all (8) 17, 24,2001
o~ file for public
ITEM N0.8
blda and/or accept (7) 1, 8, 2001
'viewing . at Meigs .
SOUTHERN OHIO
the bast bid for the 41c
County Recorder's
COAL COMPANY
Intended purpose.
Office, Meigs County
MEIGS MINE 31
Public
Notice
Court House, Second
Are You Looking For En· Gloria Kloes, Clerk
DANVILLE AREA
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
ginas Or Transmissions?
PERMIT D-o354-6
County ADDENDUM TO ITEM
45789 and shall
Give Me A Call At 740·446· Meigs
Commissioners
0519.
N0.8
SOUTHERN OHIO
Real Estate General
Budget Priced Tranomto- (7) 1, 2, 2001
COAL COMPANY
1lona All Types, Access To 2tc
RACCOON MINE NO.
Over 10,000 Transmissions, - - - - - - 3 • SALEM SHAFT
Translor Cases, 740-245Public Notice '
·
PERMIT D-o483
5677, Cett: ~9-3765 .
wing 35,000 m1les·c a. Ex-

area

tens, 2 Hetmets17500 682Racine VIllage will
2626
hold the hearing on
the year 2002 budgol,
1996 1200 Sport star. Lot~ July 2 2001 7 :00
~re~tr~~n;,~:~~ms:.~~: p.,m ., at' the mu'ntclpal
(740)446-7351 ca ll 7pm- building. The bldgel
will be on view at the
9pm
.::::_.:__ _ _ __
.municipal building
2000 Honda 400 EX Show from 9 :00a.m. to 4:00
· room condition. $4500 675·
P.m., June 29 , 2001 ,
1278
through July 18,
2000 Kawasaki Prairie 2000 2001.

eneompaasea

approxlmattly 4,8~
acres end Is located
on the Wilkesville 7.5
minute
U.S.G.S.
quadrangle map,
approximately 3.2
miles southeast al
Wilkesville, Ohio.

r.

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

I

CwPERs &amp;
MuruR Hollmi .

ADDENDUM TO ITEM
NO. 8 SOUTHERN OHIO
1978 Nomad self cootained
COAL COMPANY
camper. $_1800. (304)675- MEIGS MINE NO. 31 •
8555 or (304}674-4626
EAST MAINS SHAFT
PERMIT D-o354
1984 motor home, 1993
Dodge PiCk-up, 8' utility
Southern Ohio Coal
trailer. (740)682-7830
Company, P.O. Box
Co;leman Shenandoah "pop- 490, Athans, Ohio

=

~P camper, excellent candi·

remain so for at least
thirty (30) do.ys ·
following the laot
date of publication of
thla notice. Written
commenta
or
requeau for an
Informal conlerence
may be Iliad with the
Dlvls) on of Mineral

WASHINGTON (AP) - Vice
President Dick Cheney had ; special
pacemalCer implanted in his chest Saturday to con1rol a potentially dangerous heart rhythm. President Bush said,
''I'm told the operation went well:'
Bush announced Cheney's .procedure during a news conference at:
Camp David in Maryland with visiling Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi. H e said he planned to talk
with the vice president later:
The president said he did not think
Cheney needed to curtail' his duties

ResourceS

Management, 1855
Fountain Square
Columbus,

Ohio 43244, wllhln
thirty (30) days alter the last date of
publication of thla
notice.
(8) 24, 2001
(7) 1, 8,15, 2001
4tc

r,

HoME

IMPRoV~MFNrS

Southern Ohio Coal
Company, P.O. Box
490, Athena, Ohio
45701, has submitted
an application , to
revise coal mining
Permit R-0463-50 to
the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources,
Division ol Mineral
· Resources
permit Is .located In
Meigs Counly, Salam ·
Township, Section 32.
The permit area
encompasses
lhlrtean' (13) acres
and Ia located on .the
Wllkeavllle 7.5 minute ·
U.S.G,S. quadrangle
map, approximately 2
miles aoutheaat of

•

Real Estate General

WOOD.HEJLTf.INC
32 LOCUST STREff, GALLIPOLIS, OAIO 45631

Allen C. Wood, Broker . 446-4523
Ken Morgan,Broker •446;0971
Jeanette Moore,. 256·1745
Palrk:ia
746-446·1 066
~~~~':,li~~:·~·~~:l This is a mus1 seel This

11

on S..acres olland m/1.
has 5 bedrooms , 2
lbv~:r~~~~~~~•~·',,Hft.a IItwoyoucararegarage
with a
lv
looking lor a
style and ·class look no further.
lo view f194.

Llatlngl Enjoy the sunsh ine on 54
••-- --- ol land along with a 2 bedroom and 1
lbaolhnmm mobile home, and on those really
summer days enjoy th e convenience of

l
BEECH STREET- Here's · home for you! It's
a beautifully decorated one story ranch thai
was recently remodeled . Has 3 bedrooms,
central air,. and a lanced . back yard. Just
waHing for you.
$49,000.00

FROM: 1:00 TO 2:30PM
State Route 7 South Approximately·
5 'fo 6 Miles, Turn Right At Raccoon
BllaQ, Then Left At Clearview Estates

COLUMBIA
TOWNSHIP- CARP~NTER­
DYESVILLE ROAD - A big house with 7 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 2'/, balhs, and a dining room . A
big bedroom, really big living room, and a 2 car
attached garage. Also has an
1 I and
sits on
3 .~9-!a~cr:!eS!;-_ _,2~~~

REI)UCED!! REDUCED!! REDUCED!!
OWNER WANTS THIS HOUSE SOLD!!

C&amp;C General Home Malnte·.

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • Live In one side and
rentlho other. This well kepi duplex has lois of

No.~!

nence· Painting, v!nyl sid·

newer updates. One side has 2 bedrooms and

ing, carpentry, doors. win·

a~

dows, baths, mobile home

0

Uvingston's Basement Water Proofing, all ·basement
repairs done, free esti·

equiP,ped kitchens, thermrlpane windows.
newer doors cthd storms , plus

extras.· The patio, porches. and land-s&lt;:ap••d
yard make the outside enjoyable

LRIDA combo w/lirepiace,

nice homes In

3 BR, 2 Baths, Utility AM.

mates, l!leUme guarantee.

2 Porches.

14yrs on job experience.

long.l $49,500

(304)895-3887.'

updated bath . The other has 3 bedrooms

w1th an updated kitchen ar;d bath . Both have
Union Ave- Just
sntit-A•"ivl Pomeroy corp. limits
1.5 acres m/t Remodeled.

one,

with

a din ing roqm , living room, 2
porches thai could be used for
and 2 hall balhs. Has its own drilled
I newer cenlral air, and a big fenced-In side
.
.
.$45 ,00.00

POME~OY- Butternut Ave . : Would make a
great place for a business downstairs and live
upstairs. Or you could'live downstairs and rent
the ups!elrs, or you could live in the enllre
house. Has
roqms , 4- 6 bedroom s, 21 /2
balhs. , Has ~ front and rear
. and a full

19

BROADWAY
MIDDLEPORT·
park.

.

~~;~r:s,~~~~~~~l aAmini
quiet, peaceful home
.
larm, at an aHordable

OKINAWA CITY, Jap~n
(AP) - . Police spent a·second
day Saturday questioning a
U.S. Air Force sergeant about
the alleged rape of a Japanese
woman he spent the night
drinking with near the American -military base on Oki- .
_Jlawa.
No charg~ ,have been filed
against the s~~geant, said tt.
"'-C mdr. Jeff D:l(fis, a Pentagon
spokesman. Okinawan police
also have questioned as many
as seven other U.S. servicemen , most as possible witriesses, he said.
· The hlleged incident was
front- page news in both local
newspapers on Okinawa,
where a spate of crimes over
the years by .American servicemen - many of them
sexual assaults - has stoked
'

home offers 4 bedrooms and 2
ball1rOCimS. This home also has a steel out
ou"?"'ll:.~. bam and a carQPrt. .Must seal Call
92 $140,000
.
•

public opposition ·to the large
U.S. military presence on the
'island.'
·
The rape accusations came a
day before Saturday's planned
talks between Japanese Prime
Minister Junichiro Koi;umi
and President Bush at Camp
David. Reducing the U.S. military presence on Okinawa
was expected to be a main
topic of discussion.
•.. "We are not going to stand
for this violence," Akira
Nakane, 69, who served on
the Okinawa state council
from 1972-95, said Saturday."I
would rather have (the U.S.
military) off the island. ... As
long as American bases occuPY 10 percent of our land,
there will be proble~ .
·
"There are more incidents
than we can count. This is just

,,

213 BA , bath, LA,
Mid 40"s .

RIDGE ROAD- Approximately
lor a ~ew home. We have 2 lots with 'etlo,IO ,;;~ I
and waler available. One lot is $12,000.00,
lhe olher is $18,000.00.

.
DALLAS (AP) - A moth- the oldest, 7 years.
Kennedy said his family '
er charged with drowning
her five children in a bathtub had been increasingly wortold family members from jail ried about hi~ sister's mental
that she thinks the devil is in health over the last six
months, and one of lier longher, her brother said.
Andrea Yates, 36, asked vis- time friends was concerned .
iring siblings' on Wednesday enough that she kept _a
whether her children had detailed diary of her emobeen buried and told them tional decline.
The family · feared she
duri~]g a Sunday visit that she
teared she. was possessed, her might kill herself, but "we
brother Andrew Kennedy never dreamed she'd kill our
told.. The Dallas Morning kids ," he said.
Yates told police that she
News in Saturday's editions.
killed
the children because
"She asked me and my
brother, 'How long do you she thought she was a bad
think the devil's been in · mother and they were hoReJlle?"' Kennedy said. "I guess lessly developmentally dam·
she's looking for answers as to aged.
Her husband, NASA engiwhy she did what she did." · ..
neer
Russell Yates, has said he
Yates told police that she.
drowned her children one by believed his wife was · suffer. one last week in their subur-· . ing from "psychotic side
ban Houston home. The effects" of post-partum
youngest was 6 months old; . depression. •

New Llatlngl This beautifully maintained
home has plenty to offer. II has 3 SA's and 1
1/2 baths. This home also has a n&amp;w metal
roof, new heat pump, 'au new and·Insulated
windows and a new septic system. It also
has a separate building designed Into an
apartmen~ Interested in selling last Call to
view f190.
Lux:ut"' Homel Have the home ol your
~re11ms in this luxurious 4 BR, 3 1/2 bath
Live in
with hard· wood floors, a
cocooer oiurnbi110 and oak doorsl You
10 view f189 ·

Whole Famllyl Located In a
i area, this new cape cod home
lealun•s 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. Also has a
garage and tO x 25 8 x 18 deck. Call to
f188 $175,000
Chttck this outl Located ;lght In town I You
lall in love wilh this 4 BR, 2 1/2 bath
. 0811 to viewl f187
looking for alfordabllity and
lo~=~~~n~Check oulthis cozy home offering
and 1 1/2 baths. Have all lhe
3
corwei1ienoces of living In town. Call to view
Beautiful ranch home wilh 2 bedrooms, 1
balh, kllchen and living room on a level lot
Approx. 1100 sq. fl. of living space. Call
your showing ol.)f.183.

NOW OPEN

I family? Well we have the Ideal home
a, bath. It sets on 1
mil. Located in Crown Cily. This home
is priced to sell. Calllo view 11112

heart attacks, the most recent a minor
one .last N ovember. In March he had
an angioplasty to clear a d ogged
artery.
•
Pacemakers help regulate a heartbeat by providing .a small electtical
current when needed. Abou1 the-size
of ·a. small pager, they are battery·powered and -usually implanted under
a collarbone. They last five to eight
years, but then can be e~ily replaced
by a surgical procedure. More than
' 150,000 Americans have such devices.

~·

comlorta and
of living In town In this 1 t/2
home with 2 bedrooms and a bath .
comfMs include a stroll through lhe
\~,~~~i~~~ or going to the movies
s1
are within walking dislance.
.
information on this home, Give Allen a
I Ask lor f172

., .

(740) 446-3519
the River Recreation Festival!

out of Gallipolis (Green Twp.), we
have 2-acre tracts to 6-acre tracts M/L.
County water .also available. Thete are some
restrictions , Call and ask lor 112022.

0 ENING
·J UNE
29th
-

Looking for land? We have Ill Available In
5-acre lracts more or less. Public water
available. Driveways &amp; culverts already
p~sanl . G,lve Allen a- call. 112023. '

.

We have eeveral 5 acre plue tracts
available.for building that dream home. 'All
your ul!ht1es are available and each lot has
road lronlage . Restricted. Near Holzer
•
Hospilal. Ask lqr 82028.

COMMERCIAL OR HOME BUILDING
ON JACKSON PIKE. 6.91 acres. Calf for
NO. 301

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker.. ......992·5692
JERRY SPRADLING ................ 949-2131
CHARMELE SPRADL1NG ....... :.949-2131
BETTY JO COLLINS .... :............949-2049
BRENDA.JEJ'FERS .............. .....992·3056

992-2886

lfyou a re looking lqr investme nt prope rty

have several to offer. Call and

as~ lor Allen.

aen

Qr
We are alwaya glad 1o·help you
buy property. Rental property Ia alao
eve liable. Give Ull a call, we can help,

JCPenney

serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942·95n

336 SeCond Avenue

11unters. Safety Course

Treva Caldwell

July 7 &amp; 8

Now taking appts at

'•

338 Second Avenue • Gallipolis
,ttour.s: Mon ·Sat.10 a.m .... 6 p.m.

140~446-3525 .

446-8235
Nail

Tech

Noon til5 pm

Summer Image

Registration required
Call Noreen Saunders

Hair Nails and Tanning
. Salon
Call 446·6959

New 7 week summer classes at the Art
School include-piano for
young beginners and
· . Mom &amp; Me dance
' classes. Call (740)
441-1988 for more
information. Fall ~
registration is Thursday,
August 3oth, 4~8 p.m. at
the Art School. . ,
•

YARD · SALE
July 2 &amp;'3, 9 a.m. to
'---

5 p.m. 1 mile West
of Rodney, little bit ot'
everything!
•

CHANNEL
MARKER

Baughman Farm
Cattle Hoof Trimm
6/29

.,

YARD SALE

CONDOS
North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 8 , fully fumished, 2nd
row, ocean yiew, washer/dryer.
, , Openings now thru Sept.
446-2206 Moo thru Fri .
Evenings&amp;_weekends

, BASKET BINGQ
July 7, 2001 . Tuppers Plains
Fire House, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Sponsored by Alfred Uvestock
4-H Cl4b &amp; Tuppers Plains
·
Firemen , featuring
Longaberger® Baskets

'

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Gallipolis, Ohio

446-4612

Registerd nurse will care
for an elderly person part
time. Excellent care and
references. 446-2732.

3 FamilY. July 6 &amp; 7, 9 a :m.
to? Baughman Farm, 71/2
mile's South of Gallipolis on
St. Rt. 7 - Clothing, infant.
items, af)tiques, toys &amp; _
housebold items.
(740) 256-6535.

5.00% Guaranteed
for years 1-3
-Principal &amp;:
Interested
Guaranteed
-No Service Fees ·
The Lynch Agency

Serenity House

Moving Sale ·
One day only
MO!lday, July 2
9:00.5:00
414 Cherry Ridge, Rio Grande
Approximately one-half mile on
Cheriy Ridge from
Rio Grande Village
Furniture, clothes, tools,
household items,
·miscellaneous.items

446-1960

Catalog
Merchant

s·Year Maturity-

A New Beginning
With Quality You Can Afford
• New Homes • Additions • Roofing
• Siding • Windows • Porches &amp; Decks
• Electrical • Plumbing
. Call Today For A FREE ESTIMATE
(140) 256-6900 or
TOLL FREE (866) 556-6900
Ucensed &amp; Insured
Serving lhe Ohio Valley with over 75
Yrs. ~xperien&lt;ie
· ·
Sam &amp; Mindy Sm~h . Owners

L&amp;L SCR1P METALS
will be closed on Thursdays ~
beginning July 5th
until further notice.
. Hours Mon. Tues. Wed. Fri 8-4:30

Auto Insurance .
Monthly Payments
Problems with your driving
record; DUI's speeding.
tickets, etc.
Same Day SA·22's issued.
· Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency

CD Owners

HORIZON
CONSTRU-CTION

304-675-592~

~Antiques ~Gifts ~Collectables

Come Visit Us ·

FAMILY REUNION
Nolan &amp; Swain &amp; Campbell
Juiy 29
00 Mclntrye.Park
• More inlonnation at later date

Clothing, furn~ure, baby Hems, etc.

338 Second Avenue • GaUipolis
Hours Mon •Sat 10 a.m. - 6p.m:

1

(740) 446-2342.·or (740) 992-21

reduction Sale stHigoing on till
the 7th of July

'

commercial building le looking lor a
bualnesa lo 1111 its 1760 sq/. ft . Located
lhe . edge of town. Call · for more
inlo•rmlllii on . Ask for t5012.
Sale: Six lots in Wallar's Hill
ISubdivisi'on Call today and ask lor f2018

NEWYORK (AP) -Wall market back into disarray, Microsoft is that the current
Street wrapped up irs second forcing a longer shutdown:
(presidential) administration
quarter with two days of , For the first time in the · is pro business, and that 's
technical ~roubles that shut N asdaq's 30-year· history, good," said Arthur Hogan,
down the Nasdaq and a trading was extended by an chief market analysl at Jefdelayed reaction to the latesl hour Fril:lay to make up for feries &amp; Co. "That combinainterest rate cut from the the lost time as money man- tion of.news is going to spark
agers scrambled to . perfect a summer rally."
·
Federal Reserve.
end- of- the-quarter · Analysts v1eren't surprised
An interest rate cut is usu- th~
.' . by the . initially cautious
ally caU.e for ~elebration 9n portfolios.
On
the
last
day
of
a
dismal
response to the interest rate
Wall Street, but investors had
to sleep on it before sending quarter, some · analysts said cut; the marker has become
the market up the day after the market was beginning to increasingly convinced that
look ahead. With six interest beuer corporate earnings,
Fed's sixth rate cut this year.
At the same time, the com- rate outs Ibis year - the ]at- no1 Fi:d policy, will presage
any business iurnarou'n d.
puterized Nasdaq market's est deliyered Wednesday " We still haven't seen the ' ·
trading systems shut down investoR believe business
could
indeed
turn
around
in
effect
of the initial rate cuts,
after a quote seniice began
so it's harder to get excited
malfunctioning. The disrup- the second half of 2001.
"We are seeing signs that about the sixth one," said
tions Thursday lasted only
about 20 minutes, but on • the economy is stabilizing, Rafael Tamargo, director of
and that is great news. And equity research at \Vilmingfri~y an unrelated techni cian's error threw the Nasdaq what we are seeing vis-a- vis ton Trust.

Woodyard Mini Mall

The Stone jar

~on,;J,o,eynlenth1ct•11 many

Arl yw lookln;. for vacant lan~? we may
have whal you need. Just a lew miles lrom
town are 35 acres more or less in Clay
Township. Call and ask for f2027. $45,000

'

•

•

I

details

T he type of pacemaker that
C heney pie! he expected to get is an
implantable catdioverter defibrillator,
or lCD. It is a cardiac pacing device
that also includes a defibrill~tor used
to stabilize an irregular fast heartbeat.
C heney called it a "pacemaker- plus."
C heney, 60, said he did not expect
his latest bout with heart !rouble to
affect his ability to continue as 'vice
president, but said he would " follow
my docrors' adyice in that regard ."
,
The vice president has a 25-year
history of heart disease, including four

beth. Bush announced the implant
about three ho uf' Ja1er.
T he vice preside n t smiled and
waved as he y;alked into George
Washin gton University H ospital.
As\ce'd whether ' he were anticipating
an easy day;he Said, "Yes I am. But you
never kno\v Until ies over."
Th e examination Che.n ey' had
checked the heart fro m the inside,
analyzing the elettrical waves that
control tlte beat rhythm . Thin wires
with sensors are threaded through a
vein into the heart.

one of mapy that will continue as long as the American
military people are here."
' While it didn't mention the
aUeged rape, th e Okinawa
Times repeated irs long-standing call to reduce U.S. troops.
"We hope that Prime Minister Koizumi in his summit
.talks will teU the United Stares.
that the only" solution is the
..reduction and wilhdrawal of
the Marines. Many experts
have pointed ou¥ hat from !he
military standpomt this is possible:' the paper said Samrday.
Davis said the rape aUegedly
took place shordy after 2 a.m.,
in a parking lot in the town of
Chatan, in ari area of restaurants and bars known as
"American ViUage," , no1 far
· from several us. m'ilitary
bases.

.lMother charged with ,.
killing children-in bathtub
believes ·'devil' is in her·

Llsllngf Check out this affordable lwo
home offering 3 bedrooms and 2 baths.
home has lois lo see . Very nice. Call to
., 91. $59,900

ILookh1g for land In a nlca location? Justa

place lor a family. Nice
back yard and close to

harclwocld l utility

-.

2 bedrooms and

Won't

t~l

because of his heallh problems, which
included four heart attacks in 25
years .
"No, I don't think he ought to slow
· down: ' Bush said."I think he ough! to
listen to his body, which he has been
doing."
Bush also said Cheney should listen
to the adVice o f his doctors, but said
he ·expecte'd Cheney to be back to
work on Monday.
.
C heney arrived at the hospital
around 8 a.m. EDT, accompanied by
his wife, Lynne, and daughter, Eliza-

'

Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870,
1-800-287-0576.
Rogers W~terproofing.

6323.

owfl swimming pool . Acreage great for 'a
hobby farm or any usa you have in inlnd. Call
i .*193. $80,000. .

I

LINCOLN STREET· Middleport :
A 2 slory
brick home with big stone secants on lha
corner. There are three bedrooms, dining
room, kUchen , 1 1/2 baths, lamily room and a
sun room. A full basamenl, and a large garage
with an allached carport. Has new carpel In
some rooms.
OWNER WANTS AN
OFFERii $74,000.00

UI'ICOndltlonal lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished . Established 1975.

Real

1~

165 Ann Drive • Don't just drive by • 51op In
and take a .pct.ok at this lovelY home that has so
much character. 3 BRs, 2 baths, formal dinln&amp;,
LR, complete "-'tchen, large FR, llnlsbed
basement. Storage buUdlng. A Quality Home.

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG

repair and more. For tree
estimate call Chat, 740.992·

~state General
( ~~~~
/'.

OPEN
HOUSE
SUNDAY, JULY 2001
DIRECTIONS:

Sunday; July 1. 1001

Sergeant questioned in connection with ,Wall 5~ end dismal quarter·
alleged rape of woman on Okinawa ·
with Nasdaq._technical trouble~

45701, has submitted Management. Thla

loon , (740)446-9470
·
an application to
. - - - - - - - - revlae coal mining
99 Sprinter, 36', ajr condi- Permit R-o354-29 to
tlon, stereo, 2 bodroom,Jhe Ohio Department
queen size mattresses, nev- of Natural Resources,
or been licensed, Slide out Dlvlalon of Mineral
room,
hardly · used. Reaources
17401245-5535
Management. This
permit Is •located In
" I H\ H I "
Meigs County, Salem
i,lio;;;;;;~~==:::;l 'Township, Sections

•

Public N9tlce

Court ,

"-ge D7

impla

.•

I

i

Nation •World

-

I

MaroRCYtus

19i5 Harley Da+idson
1000 SponSler CuSiom,
many ~xtras , 5 gat tank,

•

'

Sunday, July 1, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Page 06 • &amp;unba!' il!:imr!I -JI&gt;tntintl

..

J

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�•

eo

~unbq- ~im.es .. itntin:tl

N

TIc E 5

·

Pubiic Notices in ·Newspapers.

e
Your Right to Know, •
·
Delivered Right to Your Door.
(7~~~~3-~12~~~~~~~~======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~==~0~h~&lt;o~N~•~w~,~~pr~r~~~»~~~~~u~un~========~

M
WS+S
1976
Harley Davidson 1000
Sportster Custo

tras, 5 gat tank

Public Notice

Public N6tlce

Public Notice

25 and 26. Tloe permll

Wllkeavllle, Ohio.
The application
propoaea to make a
post·mlnlng land uaa
change to provide lor
the permanent

( 740)643-12~

1990 Blue 1500 GL Gold

PUBLIC NOTICE

Pu~lic Notice

Southam Ohio Coal
Compariy, P.O. eox
490, Athans , Ohio
45701 , has aubmlllad
an application to
retention of a office tevls8' coal mining
bathhouae tllllldlng,- Permit R-o354·31 to
potabl'e
water the Ohlo Department
systems Including a of Natural Resources,
The application
Division of Mineral
prop 0808 1o' ma k e a water storage tank
paved and sto~ed Resources
post-mining land use · access road,. and Management . This
change to provide for
parking areas.'rhe 13 permit Ia located In
warn winch, lots e)(tras , Senior citizens are ' the
permanent
acre area aesoclated Meigs County, Salem
$4,000 lirm, 1740}985-391 7 Invited to altend the retention
of
a
with tlie revision
Township, Sections
2001 450 Foreman s. ex- hearing.
maintenance building
had a pre·mlnlng 13 and 18. The penmlt
cellent condition, warranty,
and stoned access
1and . u 18
of area encompasses
(740}446-4025
(7) 1, 2001
roads and parking
"'paslureland", but approximately twelve
1tc
areas, The 4 ~85 acre
will now be changed (12) acres and Ia
Otlio Valley Barik will offer ...:..:::__ ___;,____ area associated with
to
allow lor pool located
on • the
lor sate by Public AucPublic Notice
the revision had a
mining land use Ia 8 Wilkesville 7.5 mlnuta
tion a 1998 Honda CA9 -----~l202275 at to:oo am, on
pre-mining land use
U.S.G.S. quadrangle
" commercial aile".
7114/0 1 At Ohio Valley Bank .,NOTICE TO BIDDERS of
"unmanaged
The surface owner map, In Danville,
Annex,. t43 3rd Ave., Gallip-' (;ARP~T PURCHASE woodland
and
lor tho property Ohio.
ol ~ . Ohio. Sold to the high- ·
FOR
unmanaged
_.
· aaaoclated with this
The application
est bidder 'as is- whore is' MEIGS COUNTY JOB pastureland", but will
application
Is proposes to change
without ••pressed or . 1m- &amp; FAMILY SERVICE$ now be changed to
Southern Ohio coal the melhod of mining
plied warranty &amp; may be
allow for post·mlnlng
. Colnpeny.
to allow full coal
seen by calling the CoHee·
lion
oepanment
at
Sealed bids will be land use as a
The application Ia mining by longwall
(740}441-1038. OVB ro - received by the Meigs "residential site",
on' fila for public methoda and room
serves th~ right to accept/ County Board of
The surface owner
viewing at Melga and pillar mining
reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; with· Commissioners In · for the property
County
Recorder's (lo~gwall
draw items from sale pnor their dfflce located In assoclale'd with thla .
·Office, Melga county development). The
to sakJ. Terms ot Sa le: the
Courthouse , •ppllcatlon
Ia
Court Houaa, Second area to be mined has
CASH OR CERTIFIED · Second
Street Southern OhiO Coal
Street, Pomeroy, prtvloualy been
CHECK.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Company,
'
Ohio 45769 and ahall approved for mining
BoATS &amp; MuruRS until 10:00 AM on the •The appl)catlon Is remain so for at least by room and pillar
FOR SALE
12th day of July 2001 , on file for public
thirty (30) daya methods and Is being
and at that time viewing al Meigs
following the last revised ·for full coal
opened by the Clerk County Recorder's
dale ol publication of _ extraction mining.
16' Bass Tra cker, 8HP
Johnson, Trolling Motor, of said Board and Office, Meigs Counly
this notice. Written
The surface owners
, Depth
Finder,
Traiier, read aloud lor the Court House, Second
comments
or aaapclated Wth this
purchase
and Street, Ohio 45769
$2600, (740)367-7693
requests for an applicaton are aa .
Installation of carpel and shall remain so
Informal conferenca follows: Ryan &amp;/or
1989 Strate's Open Bow lor the Meigs Counly for at least thirty (30) •
may 'be flied with 1118 Amy Holden, Terry
With trailer, Seats 6; E~e.ce l · Job
&amp;
Family days following the
Division
of Mineral &amp;/or Sandy Napper;
lent Condilion. OMC 3.0 Services.
last
date
of
Robert
E
&amp;/or
Resources
160 HP
In-Board With Specifications . for publication of this
Management, 18S5 Dorothy M. Davis,
Cobra Ot.~ t Drive. Asking
carpet and notice,
Written
$4800. Call
E'ienings said
Fountain Squara Fred E. &amp;/or Judy L.
Installation may be comments
or
(740)44&amp;4140
Court, Columbus Davia,
Danville
obtained from the requests for an·
Ohio
43244,
wlthl~
Holiness
Church,
24ft. Pontoon boat, Play· Clerk of tho Board of Informal conference
thirty (30) days alter Dorothy Smith, Carl
·bOuy Yachtman 3.0 Lilre in- Meigs
County rllay bellied with the
the last date of Eugene &amp;/or Dorothy
board Mercruise low hours
Commissioners
or Division of - Mineral
128. Power Trim, sis prop,
ptjbllcatlon of this Ann Smith, Steve .
26 gal gas tank, depth find· Jane Banks of the Resources
notice.
·
&amp;lor Saundra Buah .
er, seat covers, amlfm ra - Department of Job &amp; Managemant, 1855
Bruner Lend Co.,
Square
dio, tilt steering, 24 inch Family ' Services Fountain
Sebert
Belcher,
24,
2001
(6)
17,
pontoons, dual axle drive on during
normal Court, Columbus,
Herman
&amp;/or
Darlene
(7) 1. 8, 2001
trailer, $13000.00. 740-742· working
hours, 43244, within thirty
Ashby,
Randy
L. &amp;/or
4tc
293&amp;
Monday through (30) days alter the
Denise L. Williams,
of
T h a last · dale
Sea Doo 1999 GSX-AFt w/ Friday.
·an.d Southern Ohio
Public Notice
trailer, co1.1er. 35 hrs., Mini Commleeloners
publication of this
Coal Company.
Condition, $6500, (216}233· reserve the right to notice.
Th• appllcatlo~ Ia
4264
ADDENDUM TO
reject any and all (8) 17, 24,2001
o~ file for public
ITEM N0.8
blda and/or accept (7) 1, 8, 2001
'viewing . at Meigs .
SOUTHERN OHIO
the bast bid for the 41c
County Recorder's
COAL COMPANY
Intended purpose.
Office, Meigs County
MEIGS MINE 31
Public
Notice
Court House, Second
Are You Looking For En· Gloria Kloes, Clerk
DANVILLE AREA
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
ginas Or Transmissions?
PERMIT D-o354-6
County ADDENDUM TO ITEM
45789 and shall
Give Me A Call At 740·446· Meigs
Commissioners
0519.
N0.8
SOUTHERN OHIO
Real Estate General
Budget Priced Tranomto- (7) 1, 2, 2001
COAL COMPANY
1lona All Types, Access To 2tc
RACCOON MINE NO.
Over 10,000 Transmissions, - - - - - - 3 • SALEM SHAFT
Translor Cases, 740-245Public Notice '
·
PERMIT D-o483
5677, Cett: ~9-3765 .
wing 35,000 m1les·c a. Ex-

area

tens, 2 Hetmets17500 682Racine VIllage will
2626
hold the hearing on
the year 2002 budgol,
1996 1200 Sport star. Lot~ July 2 2001 7 :00
~re~tr~~n;,~:~~ms:.~~: p.,m ., at' the mu'ntclpal
(740)446-7351 ca ll 7pm- building. The bldgel
will be on view at the
9pm
.::::_.:__ _ _ __
.municipal building
2000 Honda 400 EX Show from 9 :00a.m. to 4:00
· room condition. $4500 675·
P.m., June 29 , 2001 ,
1278
through July 18,
2000 Kawasaki Prairie 2000 2001.

eneompaasea

approxlmattly 4,8~
acres end Is located
on the Wilkesville 7.5
minute
U.S.G.S.
quadrangle map,
approximately 3.2
miles southeast al
Wilkesville, Ohio.

r.

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

I

CwPERs &amp;
MuruR Hollmi .

ADDENDUM TO ITEM
NO. 8 SOUTHERN OHIO
1978 Nomad self cootained
COAL COMPANY
camper. $_1800. (304)675- MEIGS MINE NO. 31 •
8555 or (304}674-4626
EAST MAINS SHAFT
PERMIT D-o354
1984 motor home, 1993
Dodge PiCk-up, 8' utility
Southern Ohio Coal
trailer. (740)682-7830
Company, P.O. Box
Co;leman Shenandoah "pop- 490, Athans, Ohio

=

~P camper, excellent candi·

remain so for at least
thirty (30) do.ys ·
following the laot
date of publication of
thla notice. Written
commenta
or
requeau for an
Informal conlerence
may be Iliad with the
Dlvls) on of Mineral

WASHINGTON (AP) - Vice
President Dick Cheney had ; special
pacemalCer implanted in his chest Saturday to con1rol a potentially dangerous heart rhythm. President Bush said,
''I'm told the operation went well:'
Bush announced Cheney's .procedure during a news conference at:
Camp David in Maryland with visiling Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro
Koizumi. H e said he planned to talk
with the vice president later:
The president said he did not think
Cheney needed to curtail' his duties

ResourceS

Management, 1855
Fountain Square
Columbus,

Ohio 43244, wllhln
thirty (30) days alter the last date of
publication of thla
notice.
(8) 24, 2001
(7) 1, 8,15, 2001
4tc

r,

HoME

IMPRoV~MFNrS

Southern Ohio Coal
Company, P.O. Box
490, Athena, Ohio
45701, has submitted
an application , to
revise coal mining
Permit R-0463-50 to
the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources,
Division ol Mineral
· Resources
permit Is .located In
Meigs Counly, Salam ·
Township, Section 32.
The permit area
encompasses
lhlrtean' (13) acres
and Ia located on .the
Wllkeavllle 7.5 minute ·
U.S.G,S. quadrangle
map, approximately 2
miles aoutheaat of

•

Real Estate General

WOOD.HEJLTf.INC
32 LOCUST STREff, GALLIPOLIS, OAIO 45631

Allen C. Wood, Broker . 446-4523
Ken Morgan,Broker •446;0971
Jeanette Moore,. 256·1745
Palrk:ia
746-446·1 066
~~~~':,li~~:·~·~~:l This is a mus1 seel This

11

on S..acres olland m/1.
has 5 bedrooms , 2
lbv~:r~~~~~~~•~·',,Hft.a IItwoyoucararegarage
with a
lv
looking lor a
style and ·class look no further.
lo view f194.

Llatlngl Enjoy the sunsh ine on 54
••-- --- ol land along with a 2 bedroom and 1
lbaolhnmm mobile home, and on those really
summer days enjoy th e convenience of

l
BEECH STREET- Here's · home for you! It's
a beautifully decorated one story ranch thai
was recently remodeled . Has 3 bedrooms,
central air,. and a lanced . back yard. Just
waHing for you.
$49,000.00

FROM: 1:00 TO 2:30PM
State Route 7 South Approximately·
5 'fo 6 Miles, Turn Right At Raccoon
BllaQ, Then Left At Clearview Estates

COLUMBIA
TOWNSHIP- CARP~NTER­
DYESVILLE ROAD - A big house with 7 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 2'/, balhs, and a dining room . A
big bedroom, really big living room, and a 2 car
attached garage. Also has an
1 I and
sits on
3 .~9-!a~cr:!eS!;-_ _,2~~~

REI)UCED!! REDUCED!! REDUCED!!
OWNER WANTS THIS HOUSE SOLD!!

C&amp;C General Home Malnte·.

SOUTH THIRD AVE. • Live In one side and
rentlho other. This well kepi duplex has lois of

No.~!

nence· Painting, v!nyl sid·

newer updates. One side has 2 bedrooms and

ing, carpentry, doors. win·

a~

dows, baths, mobile home

0

Uvingston's Basement Water Proofing, all ·basement
repairs done, free esti·

equiP,ped kitchens, thermrlpane windows.
newer doors cthd storms , plus

extras.· The patio, porches. and land-s&lt;:ap••d
yard make the outside enjoyable

LRIDA combo w/lirepiace,

nice homes In

3 BR, 2 Baths, Utility AM.

mates, l!leUme guarantee.

2 Porches.

14yrs on job experience.

long.l $49,500

(304)895-3887.'

updated bath . The other has 3 bedrooms

w1th an updated kitchen ar;d bath . Both have
Union Ave- Just
sntit-A•"ivl Pomeroy corp. limits
1.5 acres m/t Remodeled.

one,

with

a din ing roqm , living room, 2
porches thai could be used for
and 2 hall balhs. Has its own drilled
I newer cenlral air, and a big fenced-In side
.
.
.$45 ,00.00

POME~OY- Butternut Ave . : Would make a
great place for a business downstairs and live
upstairs. Or you could'live downstairs and rent
the ups!elrs, or you could live in the enllre
house. Has
roqms , 4- 6 bedroom s, 21 /2
balhs. , Has ~ front and rear
. and a full

19

BROADWAY
MIDDLEPORT·
park.

.

~~;~r:s,~~~~~~~l aAmini
quiet, peaceful home
.
larm, at an aHordable

OKINAWA CITY, Jap~n
(AP) - . Police spent a·second
day Saturday questioning a
U.S. Air Force sergeant about
the alleged rape of a Japanese
woman he spent the night
drinking with near the American -military base on Oki- .
_Jlawa.
No charg~ ,have been filed
against the s~~geant, said tt.
"'-C mdr. Jeff D:l(fis, a Pentagon
spokesman. Okinawan police
also have questioned as many
as seven other U.S. servicemen , most as possible witriesses, he said.
· The hlleged incident was
front- page news in both local
newspapers on Okinawa,
where a spate of crimes over
the years by .American servicemen - many of them
sexual assaults - has stoked
'

home offers 4 bedrooms and 2
ball1rOCimS. This home also has a steel out
ou"?"'ll:.~. bam and a carQPrt. .Must seal Call
92 $140,000
.
•

public opposition ·to the large
U.S. military presence on the
'island.'
·
The rape accusations came a
day before Saturday's planned
talks between Japanese Prime
Minister Junichiro Koi;umi
and President Bush at Camp
David. Reducing the U.S. military presence on Okinawa
was expected to be a main
topic of discussion.
•.. "We are not going to stand
for this violence," Akira
Nakane, 69, who served on
the Okinawa state council
from 1972-95, said Saturday."I
would rather have (the U.S.
military) off the island. ... As
long as American bases occuPY 10 percent of our land,
there will be proble~ .
·
"There are more incidents
than we can count. This is just

,,

213 BA , bath, LA,
Mid 40"s .

RIDGE ROAD- Approximately
lor a ~ew home. We have 2 lots with 'etlo,IO ,;;~ I
and waler available. One lot is $12,000.00,
lhe olher is $18,000.00.

.
DALLAS (AP) - A moth- the oldest, 7 years.
Kennedy said his family '
er charged with drowning
her five children in a bathtub had been increasingly wortold family members from jail ried about hi~ sister's mental
that she thinks the devil is in health over the last six
months, and one of lier longher, her brother said.
Andrea Yates, 36, asked vis- time friends was concerned .
iring siblings' on Wednesday enough that she kept _a
whether her children had detailed diary of her emobeen buried and told them tional decline.
The family · feared she
duri~]g a Sunday visit that she
teared she. was possessed, her might kill herself, but "we
brother Andrew Kennedy never dreamed she'd kill our
told.. The Dallas Morning kids ," he said.
Yates told police that she
News in Saturday's editions.
killed
the children because
"She asked me and my
brother, 'How long do you she thought she was a bad
think the devil's been in · mother and they were hoReJlle?"' Kennedy said. "I guess lessly developmentally dam·
she's looking for answers as to aged.
Her husband, NASA engiwhy she did what she did." · ..
neer
Russell Yates, has said he
Yates told police that she.
drowned her children one by believed his wife was · suffer. one last week in their subur-· . ing from "psychotic side
ban Houston home. The effects" of post-partum
youngest was 6 months old; . depression. •

New Llatlngl This beautifully maintained
home has plenty to offer. II has 3 SA's and 1
1/2 baths. This home also has a n&amp;w metal
roof, new heat pump, 'au new and·Insulated
windows and a new septic system. It also
has a separate building designed Into an
apartmen~ Interested in selling last Call to
view f190.
Lux:ut"' Homel Have the home ol your
~re11ms in this luxurious 4 BR, 3 1/2 bath
Live in
with hard· wood floors, a
cocooer oiurnbi110 and oak doorsl You
10 view f189 ·

Whole Famllyl Located In a
i area, this new cape cod home
lealun•s 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. Also has a
garage and tO x 25 8 x 18 deck. Call to
f188 $175,000
Chttck this outl Located ;lght In town I You
lall in love wilh this 4 BR, 2 1/2 bath
. 0811 to viewl f187
looking for alfordabllity and
lo~=~~~n~Check oulthis cozy home offering
and 1 1/2 baths. Have all lhe
3
corwei1ienoces of living In town. Call to view
Beautiful ranch home wilh 2 bedrooms, 1
balh, kllchen and living room on a level lot
Approx. 1100 sq. fl. of living space. Call
your showing ol.)f.183.

NOW OPEN

I family? Well we have the Ideal home
a, bath. It sets on 1
mil. Located in Crown Cily. This home
is priced to sell. Calllo view 11112

heart attacks, the most recent a minor
one .last N ovember. In March he had
an angioplasty to clear a d ogged
artery.
•
Pacemakers help regulate a heartbeat by providing .a small electtical
current when needed. Abou1 the-size
of ·a. small pager, they are battery·powered and -usually implanted under
a collarbone. They last five to eight
years, but then can be e~ily replaced
by a surgical procedure. More than
' 150,000 Americans have such devices.

~·

comlorta and
of living In town In this 1 t/2
home with 2 bedrooms and a bath .
comfMs include a stroll through lhe
\~,~~~i~~~ or going to the movies
s1
are within walking dislance.
.
information on this home, Give Allen a
I Ask lor f172

., .

(740) 446-3519
the River Recreation Festival!

out of Gallipolis (Green Twp.), we
have 2-acre tracts to 6-acre tracts M/L.
County water .also available. Thete are some
restrictions , Call and ask lor 112022.

0 ENING
·J UNE
29th
-

Looking for land? We have Ill Available In
5-acre lracts more or less. Public water
available. Driveways &amp; culverts already
p~sanl . G,lve Allen a- call. 112023. '

.

We have eeveral 5 acre plue tracts
available.for building that dream home. 'All
your ul!ht1es are available and each lot has
road lronlage . Restricted. Near Holzer
•
Hospilal. Ask lqr 82028.

COMMERCIAL OR HOME BUILDING
ON JACKSON PIKE. 6.91 acres. Calf for
NO. 301

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker.. ......992·5692
JERRY SPRADLING ................ 949-2131
CHARMELE SPRADL1NG ....... :.949-2131
BETTY JO COLLINS .... :............949-2049
BRENDA.JEJ'FERS .............. .....992·3056

992-2886

lfyou a re looking lqr investme nt prope rty

have several to offer. Call and

as~ lor Allen.

aen

Qr
We are alwaya glad 1o·help you
buy property. Rental property Ia alao
eve liable. Give Ull a call, we can help,

JCPenney

serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942·95n

336 SeCond Avenue

11unters. Safety Course

Treva Caldwell

July 7 &amp; 8

Now taking appts at

'•

338 Second Avenue • Gallipolis
,ttour.s: Mon ·Sat.10 a.m .... 6 p.m.

140~446-3525 .

446-8235
Nail

Tech

Noon til5 pm

Summer Image

Registration required
Call Noreen Saunders

Hair Nails and Tanning
. Salon
Call 446·6959

New 7 week summer classes at the Art
School include-piano for
young beginners and
· . Mom &amp; Me dance
' classes. Call (740)
441-1988 for more
information. Fall ~
registration is Thursday,
August 3oth, 4~8 p.m. at
the Art School. . ,
•

YARD · SALE
July 2 &amp;'3, 9 a.m. to
'---

5 p.m. 1 mile West
of Rodney, little bit ot'
everything!
•

CHANNEL
MARKER

Baughman Farm
Cattle Hoof Trimm
6/29

.,

YARD SALE

CONDOS
North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 8 , fully fumished, 2nd
row, ocean yiew, washer/dryer.
, , Openings now thru Sept.
446-2206 Moo thru Fri .
Evenings&amp;_weekends

, BASKET BINGQ
July 7, 2001 . Tuppers Plains
Fire House, 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Sponsored by Alfred Uvestock
4-H Cl4b &amp; Tuppers Plains
·
Firemen , featuring
Longaberger® Baskets

'

L-----------------------J •
I

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-4612

Registerd nurse will care
for an elderly person part
time. Excellent care and
references. 446-2732.

3 FamilY. July 6 &amp; 7, 9 a :m.
to? Baughman Farm, 71/2
mile's South of Gallipolis on
St. Rt. 7 - Clothing, infant.
items, af)tiques, toys &amp; _
housebold items.
(740) 256-6535.

5.00% Guaranteed
for years 1-3
-Principal &amp;:
Interested
Guaranteed
-No Service Fees ·
The Lynch Agency

Serenity House

Moving Sale ·
One day only
MO!lday, July 2
9:00.5:00
414 Cherry Ridge, Rio Grande
Approximately one-half mile on
Cheriy Ridge from
Rio Grande Village
Furniture, clothes, tools,
household items,
·miscellaneous.items

446-1960

Catalog
Merchant

s·Year Maturity-

A New Beginning
With Quality You Can Afford
• New Homes • Additions • Roofing
• Siding • Windows • Porches &amp; Decks
• Electrical • Plumbing
. Call Today For A FREE ESTIMATE
(140) 256-6900 or
TOLL FREE (866) 556-6900
Ucensed &amp; Insured
Serving lhe Ohio Valley with over 75
Yrs. ~xperien&lt;ie
· ·
Sam &amp; Mindy Sm~h . Owners

L&amp;L SCR1P METALS
will be closed on Thursdays ~
beginning July 5th
until further notice.
. Hours Mon. Tues. Wed. Fri 8-4:30

Auto Insurance .
Monthly Payments
Problems with your driving
record; DUI's speeding.
tickets, etc.
Same Day SA·22's issued.
· Call for a quote.
Brown Insurance Agency

CD Owners

HORIZON
CONSTRU-CTION

304-675-592~

~Antiques ~Gifts ~Collectables

Come Visit Us ·

FAMILY REUNION
Nolan &amp; Swain &amp; Campbell
Juiy 29
00 Mclntrye.Park
• More inlonnation at later date

Clothing, furn~ure, baby Hems, etc.

338 Second Avenue • GaUipolis
Hours Mon •Sat 10 a.m. - 6p.m:

1

(740) 446-2342.·or (740) 992-21

reduction Sale stHigoing on till
the 7th of July

'

commercial building le looking lor a
bualnesa lo 1111 its 1760 sq/. ft . Located
lhe . edge of town. Call · for more
inlo•rmlllii on . Ask for t5012.
Sale: Six lots in Wallar's Hill
ISubdivisi'on Call today and ask lor f2018

NEWYORK (AP) -Wall market back into disarray, Microsoft is that the current
Street wrapped up irs second forcing a longer shutdown:
(presidential) administration
quarter with two days of , For the first time in the · is pro business, and that 's
technical ~roubles that shut N asdaq's 30-year· history, good," said Arthur Hogan,
down the Nasdaq and a trading was extended by an chief market analysl at Jefdelayed reaction to the latesl hour Fril:lay to make up for feries &amp; Co. "That combinainterest rate cut from the the lost time as money man- tion of.news is going to spark
agers scrambled to . perfect a summer rally."
·
Federal Reserve.
end- of- the-quarter · Analysts v1eren't surprised
An interest rate cut is usu- th~
.' . by the . initially cautious
ally caU.e for ~elebration 9n portfolios.
On
the
last
day
of
a
dismal
response to the interest rate
Wall Street, but investors had
to sleep on it before sending quarter, some · analysts said cut; the marker has become
the market up the day after the market was beginning to increasingly convinced that
look ahead. With six interest beuer corporate earnings,
Fed's sixth rate cut this year.
At the same time, the com- rate outs Ibis year - the ]at- no1 Fi:d policy, will presage
any business iurnarou'n d.
puterized Nasdaq market's est deliyered Wednesday " We still haven't seen the ' ·
trading systems shut down investoR believe business
could
indeed
turn
around
in
effect
of the initial rate cuts,
after a quote seniice began
so it's harder to get excited
malfunctioning. The disrup- the second half of 2001.
"We are seeing signs that about the sixth one," said
tions Thursday lasted only
about 20 minutes, but on • the economy is stabilizing, Rafael Tamargo, director of
and that is great news. And equity research at \Vilmingfri~y an unrelated techni cian's error threw the Nasdaq what we are seeing vis-a- vis ton Trust.

Woodyard Mini Mall

The Stone jar

~on,;J,o,eynlenth1ct•11 many

Arl yw lookln;. for vacant lan~? we may
have whal you need. Just a lew miles lrom
town are 35 acres more or less in Clay
Township. Call and ask for f2027. $45,000

'

•

•

I

details

T he type of pacemaker that
C heney pie! he expected to get is an
implantable catdioverter defibrillator,
or lCD. It is a cardiac pacing device
that also includes a defibrill~tor used
to stabilize an irregular fast heartbeat.
C heney called it a "pacemaker- plus."
C heney, 60, said he did not expect
his latest bout with heart !rouble to
affect his ability to continue as 'vice
president, but said he would " follow
my docrors' adyice in that regard ."
,
The vice president has a 25-year
history of heart disease, including four

beth. Bush announced the implant
about three ho uf' Ja1er.
T he vice preside n t smiled and
waved as he y;alked into George
Washin gton University H ospital.
As\ce'd whether ' he were anticipating
an easy day;he Said, "Yes I am. But you
never kno\v Until ies over."
Th e examination Che.n ey' had
checked the heart fro m the inside,
analyzing the elettrical waves that
control tlte beat rhythm . Thin wires
with sensors are threaded through a
vein into the heart.

one of mapy that will continue as long as the American
military people are here."
' While it didn't mention the
aUeged rape, th e Okinawa
Times repeated irs long-standing call to reduce U.S. troops.
"We hope that Prime Minister Koizumi in his summit
.talks will teU the United Stares.
that the only" solution is the
..reduction and wilhdrawal of
the Marines. Many experts
have pointed ou¥ hat from !he
military standpomt this is possible:' the paper said Samrday.
Davis said the rape aUegedly
took place shordy after 2 a.m.,
in a parking lot in the town of
Chatan, in ari area of restaurants and bars known as
"American ViUage," , no1 far
· from several us. m'ilitary
bases.

.lMother charged with ,.
killing children-in bathtub
believes ·'devil' is in her·

Llsllngf Check out this affordable lwo
home offering 3 bedrooms and 2 baths.
home has lois lo see . Very nice. Call to
., 91. $59,900

ILookh1g for land In a nlca location? Justa

place lor a family. Nice
back yard and close to

harclwocld l utility

-.

2 bedrooms and

Won't

t~l

because of his heallh problems, which
included four heart attacks in 25
years .
"No, I don't think he ought to slow
· down: ' Bush said."I think he ough! to
listen to his body, which he has been
doing."
Bush also said Cheney should listen
to the adVice o f his doctors, but said
he ·expecte'd Cheney to be back to
work on Monday.
.
C heney arrived at the hospital
around 8 a.m. EDT, accompanied by
his wife, Lynne, and daughter, Eliza-

'

Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870,
1-800-287-0576.
Rogers W~terproofing.

6323.

owfl swimming pool . Acreage great for 'a
hobby farm or any usa you have in inlnd. Call
i .*193. $80,000. .

I

LINCOLN STREET· Middleport :
A 2 slory
brick home with big stone secants on lha
corner. There are three bedrooms, dining
room, kUchen , 1 1/2 baths, lamily room and a
sun room. A full basamenl, and a large garage
with an allached carport. Has new carpel In
some rooms.
OWNER WANTS AN
OFFERii $74,000.00

UI'ICOndltlonal lifetime guarantee. Local references furnished . Established 1975.

Real

1~

165 Ann Drive • Don't just drive by • 51op In
and take a .pct.ok at this lovelY home that has so
much character. 3 BRs, 2 baths, formal dinln&amp;,
LR, complete "-'tchen, large FR, llnlsbed
basement. Storage buUdlng. A Quality Home.

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG

repair and more. For tree
estimate call Chat, 740.992·

~state General
( ~~~~
/'.

OPEN
HOUSE
SUNDAY, JULY 2001
DIRECTIONS:

Sunday; July 1. 1001

Sergeant questioned in connection with ,Wall 5~ end dismal quarter·
alleged rape of woman on Okinawa ·
with Nasdaq._technical trouble~

45701, has submitted Management. Thla

loon , (740)446-9470
·
an application to
. - - - - - - - - revlae coal mining
99 Sprinter, 36', ajr condi- Permit R-o354-29 to
tlon, stereo, 2 bodroom,Jhe Ohio Department
queen size mattresses, nev- of Natural Resources,
or been licensed, Slide out Dlvlalon of Mineral
room,
hardly · used. Reaources
17401245-5535
Management. This
permit Is •located In
" I H\ H I "
Meigs County, Salem
i,lio;;;;;;~~==:::;l 'Township, Sections

•

Public N9tlce

Court ,

"-ge D7

impla

.•

I

i

Nation •World

-

I

MaroRCYtus

19i5 Harley Da+idson
1000 SponSler CuSiom,
many ~xtras , 5 gat tank,

•

'

Sunday, July 1, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Page 06 • &amp;unba!' il!:imr!I -JI&gt;tntintl

..

J

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�·.

.

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'

Page 08 • &amp;unbap ¢ime9 ·il&gt;entinrl

Jay

)
Pomeroy • Middleport • G~lllpollf!, Ohio • point Pleasa

be~eficiary) are penalty free.

-

__

'

Kneen
t
.

Th es~ su bsta ntially equ al
payments must extend for the
longer of five years or until
from PajeD1
PageD1
·· the taxpayer. turns 59- 112
first employer's plan while. an years 9ld. Once that require- soil and collect earwigs each
employee or another.
ment has been .satisfied, tax- morning as they hide. und.,r
For some, it's a good reason payers can change th e amou nt th e board to avoid th e hot
to ! ~ave their retirem ent ·plan ·they are ~e ce iv i ng . If th e sun.
· balances with their form er amount withdrawn is altered,
Insecticides are available to
employer since withdrawals the penalty tax. appli es control earwigs. Studies by
from IRAs (even if the ta"- retroac tively to the first sub- Doug Caldwell of Davey Tree
· over 55 an"d not stan;ial ly equa1 wi.thdrawa1.
· Expert C::o., Kent, found that
payer ts
~
work .m g) wt·u no t quaJ'fy
I
10r
Avoiding th e 10 perce nt Safer's soap or M- Pede is 77
·
.
t h ts exception.
penalty fo r early di ~tr.•ibutions percent effec tiv:e . in killing·
:rh
, ere are,· h owever, d"sad
I
c.an mean th e diffe rence ·ear\vigs in th e first rwo hours, ,
vantag·es to · this exception. b
, d then effectiveness dissipates.
etween a successm1 an
C b 1 hi
·c
d
fi I
..
.
ar ary , c oropyruos an
First, fo rmer employees are at
the mercy of their former unsu ccess u transt tton mto cyfhithrin take longer to kill,
.
with · respec t to carl_y retirement.
h
1Thed . excep-d · but within 18 hours are
employers
~-- 1 ng
· h ts firom tions to t e ru ed tscusse
almost 100 effective and lasts ·
. their wit h .._..wa
d
die plan. Employer sponsored here must be tonsi ere care- for several days:
full y and incorporated into an
•
... ,
.d
.
Ia
h
Pf ns .chadn ave] a w_t e van.ety overall irivestn1ent and fina iTab.out
w1t rawa opttons, some . .
Have you thought
0
· ]"b 1 d h
b
eta1 P1an.
owning and operating a
very 1 era. a'_! p t,.':~l'l:.~ ....:.Be"t:au~e of the importance
f h d ..
d h
. portable sawmlll? Ohio' State
very restncttve. ;,econa, an
inveStor who leaves a form er 0 t e _ ecftstohn an t e com- University Extension is holdem ]o er also cedes ·invest- pl extty 0 t e ru1es, many ing a workshop on portable
me~t : antral to the form e'r thoughtful taxpayer.s consult sawmills on July 14 at Bruce
ell':-Ioyer.
professional finan cial planners Tree Farm in ·Monroe CounThe other exception "to the and tax adviSors before mak- cy:
10 percent penalty rule mg . what· could be a cnttcal
The workshop will start at
applies to all types of retire~ decmon .
.
.
9:30 a.m . and conclude
ment plans, including IRAs
ljay Caldwell IS, a certified around 3:30 p.m. This workand SEPs. Under this excep- fir~anCial planner at Raymond shop will indud.e an overview
tion, withdrawals that repre- Jam es . Fittattcial Services, 441 of features to. consid~r when
sent ''substantially equal pay- Second Ave., Gallipolis, 446- purchasing a mill, demonstra~
ments" over the life of ·the 2 125 or 1-800-487-2129,
taxpayer .(or joint ~ife with a member NASD and SIPC.)

fawn

,j.

Stock

from Page Dl
Hancock Financial Services in
Boston, said there's a definite
.1eed for credible information
)n penny stocks. However, he
;aid, Knobias faces the chalenge of building credibility.
· "There's a lot of suspicion
111 the research in that arepa'."
1e said. "They'll have to over~
:ome the stigma::
Ballard and Ramsey said
Knobias takes no payment
-ji'om companies they provide
cesearch on, and no one who
(Works for the firm can trade
·;hares of any company listed
tn their database.
Andre DiMino, executive
•ice president and chief opertting officer at ADM Tronics
Inc. in Northvale, N.J., said he
was apprehensive when Kno)ias ~pproached him about
'ilming a segment for an
)nline video tour.

Bymes
froin Page Dl

ed with high numbers of East~
erntent caterpillar.
Article author Laura Skillman pointed out. t)lat UK
cautioned the public that
these were preliminary findings and that the research was
Jcontimiing. However, Dr.
David Powc:ll commented
that the investigative team was
confident enough to recommend re-establishing horses
on previously graze pastures.
For more information on
Mare Reproductive Loss Syndrome, please visit UK's web
site at WWW.ca.uky.edu or call
the OSU Extension Office at
446-7007.
Ag news
· Bltu mold forecast -As
of Thursday, blue mold had
still noi been confirmed in
Gallia County. This area has
been under a blue mq)d wat~h
for several weeks due to blue
mold in Brown County and
Central Kentucky. If you suspect blue mold in your iobac-

" But they weren't promising anything," said' DiMino,
whose company deals in hightech medical devices. "It's
information pe,ople can 'rely
on because they don't take
fees or stock options or anything else. They have the right
concept."
Knobias eventually hopes to
cover all publicly traded com~
panies, but . the ne~t move
depends on how much money
the company can raise. So far,
that total is about $6 million.
The company is als'? conscious of the importance of
· moving quickly to stay ahead
of any firms that try to duplicate its offerings. ·
" ] had one guy in he
industry tell me that to "copy
Knobias, it would take $15
million to $20 million in 12
· to 24 months," Ramsey said.
"If we get market penetration,
it's going to be hard for some"body to catch up."

co crop, please call the OSU
Extension office.
Tobacco virus - University of Kentucky is already
receiving· samples of tobacco
plants infected with Tomato
Ring Spot Virus, w h ic h aIso

___....

Term limits helpeCI drive
pudget compromises ~

per persori and includes the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) lators into the House in Ja~
cost oflun ch. Pre- registration _ When Gov. Bob Taft in uary. Pushing a more conser;
is requested by contacting the January announced his pro- vati~ agenda, but also seen~
OSl) Extensic;m Office in posal to fix Ohio's school- more independent individu;
Monroe County at 472- 0810. funding system,,the plan last- ally, they elected Lar'l
R egistration forms are avail- ed exactly one day before Householder, a R.epublical'
abl e locally at our office. The Senate President R.ichard from Glenford,. as House
Bruce Tree Farm is located 10 Finan pitched his own ideas. ~eaker:
~
miles nortli,;est of Lewisville
The disagreemen t between
"From a historical stand;in Monroe County.
two Republican leaders s.et point 'you saw 'some. shiftint
.. •••
th e tone for six months of of power from the ex~cutivt"
Garden ers , t~ke time to topsy- turvy · deliberatip ns branch to the legislative, an~
enjoy your gardening efforts over the. state budget, which I think mostly in the House!'
this week with your neigh- concluded with another said Rep. Jack Ford, a Toledo
bors. Share the bounty of your standoff, this time over the Democrat who just s~ppea
garden whether it be a few · use of federal welfare money ' down · as House minoriry
vegetables, cut . flowers or a to fund state socia) service lead~r. "The speaker estab';.
few plants".
programs.
lished a beachhead."
'
Rem ember the 4th of July
After Taft vetoed the use of
Both Finan and Houseis Wednesday and there are the federal money, the House . holder ·struggled to identify
plenty of celebrations going and Senate - both GOP- any Taft victories in the twoon within our communities. I controlled threatened . year budget. Finan praised
alw\lys ]ot&gt;k fonvard to seeing overrides:! Eventually, a com• the fact that the budget is
who wins the annual Middle- promise was reached which balanced, but that's a requireport porch and entryway con- limits the use of federal dol- . men(under state law. test.
Iars if they aren't provided by · Householder cited Taft's
. (Hal Kneen is Meigs County 's President Bush 's budget.
· strong advocacy for higher
Extensiott agent ofor ·agriculture
While leaders from the e,ducation funding, but in_the
and ttatura't resourres Ohio State same political party would be end htgher ed rec.etved httle
'
. expected to coordinate their new money. Lawmakers also
U · "t )
""''""Y·
bd
· · · the contm·
dr
u get pnonttes,
e1eate d'""fi'
,a t s attemp t to
ui.n g influence-of term limits keep the 6 percent tuitio11
• on the legislative process has caps in place.
,
created a new, sometimes
"There's a lot of provisions
divisive dynamic,.ana)ysts and in there Bob Taft has advostate "officials say.
cated for for months,"
"Certainly in ·terms of Householder said finally.
executive-legislative · rela- "While you can say, 'Well he
tions, the Legislature was didn't get 100 percent,' I
He sqid l1e plans to
viewed
as · unusu'!lly don't think anybody got 100
assertive," said William Bin- percent in this budget. It
11se his neuiformd
ning, a Youngstown State wasn't a 100 percent type
wealth t11 help his
University political science budget."
.
daughters throt~g/1
professor. "It's new people, it's
When Taft first introduced
new politics . in Ohio. There· his budget, "he felt · it was a
graduate school. His
might have been a different good budget, but he recogwife, Carmen, said
outcome if they were playing nized that the Senate and
they may also give
under .· the· old rules ,· but House ·leaders were certainly
to community
they're playing with new going to . have their say in
rules."
term! .CJ.f what they thought
organizations and
Term
.limits,
which
hold
were
budget priorities," said
start a scholarsiJip.
lawmakers to eight-year "Taft spokeswoman Mary
tenures, swept 45 .new legis- . Anne Sharkey
~wife, "and she started getting
~ys~~rii::al and started dane•

· SAN JQSE, Calif. (AP) Silicon Valley's newest multi. millionaire is not a computer
whiz with a killer application
but a retired grocery store
clerk who won the biggest
s!ngle-state lottery jackpot in
U.S. history: $141 million.
Alcario Castellano, 66,
stepped forward Thursday to
claim the prize.
Castellano moved with his
family to California from
New Mexico to pick crops at
age 9 and is now active in.San
Jose's
Mexican-American

c~~:s':l\;e plans. to use his

~we_ek~ ~g;.

•

•

He's smiling all the time." .
·Wang's· smiling, . too : He
.
.
gets $705,000 for . selling the
. cover other 'osis of McVeigks • t!cket Saturday. ·~
defense until his execution. ·. .
Castellano satd that on.
· McVeigh, 3J, was executed Sunday, the !TIOrning after the
by injection June 1l at a feder- drawmg, he awoke at daw.n,
a]· •
· .,
and
plucked
· pnson 111
.erre ·H aute, In d ., hbrewed
. . k coffee
h
fi .
0
h
fi
·
b
d
ts
he
et
tram
t
e
re
.t e rst mmate to e execute
h. .
dngera. h.
.
tor w ere tt was paste wtt
by the government m 38 years.
·
t H
·d h
.
·.
a magne . e sat
e sat
The bt&gt;mbmg ktlled 1.6 8 down to read the pape
d
people ~nd injured hundreds b~gan matching the~nu~b~~s.
more.
".Now, what's going on
1
Stephen Jones, who repre- ·here?", he said to himself. "Is
sen ted McVeigh at trial, said this real~ 1 .c:m 't believe it/'
before · the figures were
He said "he went outside for
released that the expenses were a· walk, came back into the
justified' and that McVeigh go! kitchen and checked the
a good defense.
· numb!'rs again . He awoke his

'

e

&lt;enh ·July 2. 2001 ·Vol

~I . No 11!1

•

so

~ speak ,r

Angela
Roach,
Pomeroy:
Realistically,
what kinds ol
activities are
there? Every
year it's
alWays the
same thing:
barbecues, a
parade and fireworks. I feel
that there needs to be more
things to do, especially for
the children. However, I'll
probably get with friends and
watch the .fireworks.

Melp County's
.
.

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

""'"' fn\&lt;i.HI \'&lt;·nttn.·l

..

WASHINGTON . (AP) - Vice
vtews and sitting
President Dick Cheney ren1rned to
down with "staff
work Monday with a new h~art vacemembers to disc~ss
maker in his chest. H e was promoting
a range of pohcy .
the energy strategy he assembled for
issues, said spokesthe administration and att_endin~ his
wo man Juleann a
usual series ofWhite House mee tings.
Glover Weiss.
Ch'e~ey entered the White House
"It's a typical day,"
she
·said.
through the northwest gate about 7:45
.
C heney planned
a.m. and walked into die building.
no pu blic appearAfter meeting with President Bush
ances,
and wa~ no t
on Monday morning, C heney was
headed to Capito l Hill, she said.
fielding energy questions' fro m
C heney is a key contact between the
reporters in ·at least three radi o 'inter-

administration and lawmakers, but denly surges to a da ngero us, highCongress is in recess this week .
speed beat, the defibrillator kicks in. It
A dual- purpose pacemaker was send1 an electrical jolt to the lower
implanted ih Cheney's chest in an chamber. of the heart and causes it to"
hourl ong pr9Gedure Saturd ay at slow down. Sometimes this will caus~
George Washington University Hospi-~' the heart to slow too much, and that is
tal. He was hom e a few hours later. · whcp the pacemake r turns on and
It works like ·any ot her pacemaker adjust' the rhythm.
.
by assuring that his heart does not beat
That jolt COljld be j arring fat:
I I
too sow y. W 11en it detects the beat Cheney, said D r. pouglas Zipes, presi~
b
s1mving elow a certain level, it sends dent of the America.n College of C ara 1mld electr ic charge to pace the beat diology and an .authority on irregular,
at a·minimum level.
.
heart rhythms who has consulted wirh·
More dra matically, if the heart sud- the vice president's docto~s.

Communities;
plan July 4 ..
activities
;'

. .'

FROM STAFF REPORTS

Keith
French, Mid·
dleport: I'm '
not
to

...
town
,r"

and relax: ·

C.D. Ellie,
Pomeroy:
I'm going to
be, pretty
busy. I have,
to perform at
a show with
my band and
1hen I'm
going to
watch-the
fireworks with ·
family and friends.· After that,
I'll probably go night fishing.
Andy Pack·
er, Athene:
I'm going 1tg
be working
all d!ly. so l ·
won't be
doing too .
much. After
work, I'll get
together with ·
some friends
and watch the fireworks.

'

~·

Sentinel
2 Sedlo.,. - 12 , .... .

POMEROY - Parades, musical entertainment,
contests and, of cou..St:, fireworks displays, are all part
of the July 4 activities planned in Meigs County. :
Middleport, Racin~ and Rutland will have their·
annual events Wednesday America celebrates iti
2?5th birthday.
MIDDLEPORT
Edison Baker, co-owner of the former Baker
Furniture Store, will be honored as the' grand marshal of Middleport's July.4 Parade. . ·
Baker and his brother, John, opened the store in
1952. He has been a Middleport resident since
1_934, and was an original member of the Middle"port Planning Conm1ission, Middleport Chamber
of Commerce, the Middleport Merchants Association, Meigs County Regional Planning Commission and'Meigs County CoTIIll\unity lmprovemen(
Corp. . ,..
.
• •.
•
The ~arade begins at 6 p.m., and.travels fiom Ash
Street to Beech Street, on to General Hartingc,r.
South Second and North Second, before ·disbanding near King Hardware.
Prizes will be awarded to the best walking unit,
best float1 best patriotic unit and best bicycle. Everyone is invited to participate in the parade, but partiCipants are asked not to perform along the para"de
route.
' ·
Questions about the parade should be directed to
Paul Gerard at 992-581 5. TJ. King will serve as
ma.1ter of ceremonies at the evening ceremonies in
Dave Diles Park, which will get under way ~t ?
p.m.
An openit~g ceremony will be conducted by the
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion in
Middleport, (oUowed by tll,l! J'.lational Anth~_ ,th~.
0

Qt st!IY home

..

P

OMEROY - Guitarist
and folk singer Peter .
Keane performed to an
appreciative crowd Friday night in the first of the summer concer~' series "Rhythm on
the River" in Riverfront
Amphl. theater
· Blues and Jazz
The Pomeroy
Society - · a group of residents
interested · in bringing quality
live music to historic Pomeroy
- is sponsoring concerts in the
amphitheater every Friday night

through July 27 . Th e series will of entertainment ~
climax, with the Big Bend Blues
Opening for th.e headline perBash on July 28, an all- day former was Union Blooze, a
music, arts and crafts festivaL All · local group usiQg drums and
of the concerts are fre e.
guitar, and performing a mix of
Several
hundred
people music including the oldies.
turned ou t on a warm night to
·
•
This
.,
Friday,
Baillie and the
enJ·oy Friday's concert" program,
filling the ainphitheater seating, Boys with th eir three - part, harand overflowing onto the park- monies and strong instrumental
ing lot wall and th e stage area. skills will perform at 7 p.m. This
Those· on land were joined by · is . a return engagem ent for the
boaters in a dozen or so ,boats group whq was in rhe. lin eup last
which pulled. in for the evening year. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

Pleise -

L
...

-

July 4. A:S

Battle shifts to H.ouse; GOP leaders ·push their version
WASHINGTON (AP) - House
Republican leaders predict that a
patients' rights bill passed in the
Democratic- run Senate last week will
fail in their chamber .and that a GOP
.•
version is one that President Bush
could sign. ·
•

Hlp: 7os
Low: 50i
Details. A2

Speaker Dennis Hastert, R - IlL, said
Sunday that he and oth er R epubli-cans would not try to block a vo te on
i House bill similar to the Senate's,
but he offered more hope for a GOP
plall.J:hat "will be much more bal.. . d
apce d.

.~ea:!""'le~n~d!lila":r----:---:-="A~S OHIO
·~C:ula!is~sifiwl!!ie,.d,..s_ _ __,8,.,2':::-4=:' .Pidc 3: 7-2-3; Pldc 4: 4-4-1-6
:.,C~o~lt!!CjC':"s!.:-----:-~8~5 - 5upa IJiliiO: lr2+:i6.32-411
~E~d~"ttO~.truiali!l~s'--------"M~':
· t&lt;ldlr.~ .
~O~bwit~ulllawritsoe~s---::-::-::-'A3~ W.VA.
~S~I)OI!JI'tS~
· ;L__ _ _B......,J."'3"'-4":'.~6 Dally]: 6-4-7 Dally 4: 8-0-S-6

T he
Hou se\ second- ranking
Republican , Majority leader Dick:
Armey of Tcxas, urged S·enate Major-·
iry Leader To m Dasc hle, D-S.D., to·
co mpromi~e and ~ark with t~ e G.O P
to produce a btll Bu~h wtll stgn.;
Please see GOP, A3

tas price.loWe.,. but
.
n
ot
at
the·
pumps&gt;
.
.

Lotteries

The Senate version, approved 5936 Friday with nine Republi cans in
support, wo uld increase the number
of America ns without health inslir~~
ance cove rage because employers"
might drop fo r fear of lawsuits over
medical deci!ions, Ha.stert contend ed .

'

..

BY BRAD Foss

sumer is used to the high price."
Industry watchers , expect intense retail
competiti Qn and steeper price cuts after the
July 4 holid;ty, typically a heavy rime for
travel.
"I would not be surprised tO see gimmicky prices of S1 a gallon in a coupl e of
s~1tes," said Tom Kloza, director of O il
Pricing Information Servi ce, a Lakewood,
NJ., publisber of oil industry da~1 .-"R etai!

' PJ' BUSINESS WRITER

Wholesale gas prices have dropped nearly 25. percent in recent weeks, but retail ers
- with the July 4 holiday in their sights have been slow. to pass along the savings.
&gt;!there is some avari ce at work, as there
is everywhere in our economy," sa:ld Peter

publisher of the pewsletter Daily
L~W:e:a~t~h~e~r=====::A2:._C:-..:200:J·~O=hi:•:V•:IIey:..Pub:li:sh:.in~s..Co._J : Beutel;
Energy . H edger. "They figure th e con-

prices have a lot of catchit1g up to do." •
The average retail price for a gallon of
regular unleadeCI gas is around $1.4~
nationwide, down from the year's high C?f
$1.66 on May 14, according to fedetar' · ·
Energy Department statistics.
During the same period, wholesalo
prices. on New York Harbor's spot marke~
feU 23 percem, fi:om 89.6 cents a gallon to·
68!7
~. ' ·..
. cen·
'

Recreation Festival
· The 36th Annual River Recreation Festival
will· be held in ·Gallipolis·City Park July 4-7.
Free screenings and health information will be
available at the Holzer Medical
Center .Mobile Unit.·
•
.
We'll be ,looking for you!

MEDICAL CENTER
DiScover the Holzer Difference.
,.

•

l

.

L .

wrn

•

Patsy Ward,
Pomeroy: I'll
probably
make a visit
to Rutland to
see what
kind of festivlties they
have and
then I'll travel
to Gallipolis .
to watch the firewQrkS. l ..
might even have a cook9ut. I
haven't really decided yet.

te~ry~_.••••..;.•••••;~;;;::::::;;;;~~;~;;~~
•

Are you fatigued?: How about
depressed? Weak and sluggish? Or
are you suffering from ·a disease ·or
condition that just isn't getting: any .
~Her?
. ·
.. .
.
BBL can help you! We .are offering
you the .o pportunity to take .c ontrol.
·we . will help you regain 'you'r
optimum level of good health with a
·painless, inexpensive aioEnergetic
evaluAtion, arid with natural
remedies, selected to . meet your
specific· needs! Call today and take
the first step, towards better health
and . increased enjoyment of life!
Leave a·.message at (740) 339-1'028
.a nd ~~~ wilL call you ·back to
schedule
your evaluation.
.

•

..

--

Robinson

a1·

'.

What are you
doin~ for the
Fourt of July?·

·J

BioEnergetics
for .-Balanced ·
L·iving
Dr. NickW.

•-

Cheney surgery a successful one

Out

Books-··-1
v.,;kM

._

Monday

L

'

··~Alcove··

l

81

•

'!'*wo
the couple · [
-was thiplcing q~&gt;' 1J~g.-ihe!tL 1 Anno~ncet thilt they are-a
Cilfdl'fWt lll8f'ket 1
house and ~9ving sopth, the •
tor new fragrancee.· Try Pineapple Per~~diM 1~
:
newspaper . reported. Now
Tro.e_lcal Guava; available only In thll area et
they · plan to stay, enjoying
17 Ohjo River Plaza • 446-7653
their three grandchildren.
··-··--·-··-··
•
·--···
· k
· · s
.The btggest
.
. J•c pot m
. U. . .
One Stop Shop
htstory was m · 1998 m the
For Tanning
multtstate. Powerball lottery:
Badal
$295.7 nitllton, shared by 13
machinists in Westerville,
Ohio. In 1999, a nanny in
Boston claimed ·the largest
U.S. jackpot ever won by an
individual: $197 million in 1

newfound wealth 1 help his '
daughters through graduate
schooL His wife, Carmen,
satd they may a~so _g,ve to
commum ty org~mzattons and
start a scholarshtp.
Inste~ d o f .ta k"mg .t h e .
money in annual installments,
Castellano chose to accept a
lump sum of$70.8 million, or
about $42.3 million after'
taxes.
.
.
The Castellanos stayed with
relatives eariy Friday as news
crews. "descended on their
i"nodest brick home, with its
sign saying "Mi casa es su , the multistate Big Game .lot-

affected the Gallia County casa." Next-door neighbor
crop Jast year.
Sheil;i Reno said she chatted
This virus is spread by thrips with Castellano on Thursday,
that feed on infected forages and he ·never mentioned his
and then pass the 'virus along • new millions.
to tobacco plants, typically . A'n Army veteran, Castelaround field edges. Signs of lano heads a local .Hispanic
Tomato Ring Spot Virus have veterans , · group. His . wife
been identified in Gallia serves on community boards,
County as well, and although including a Mexican folk
there is no cure, rotation dance group.
should · be implemented next
They brought the winning
year, thus it is important to ticl&gt;et to a lottery office in
have the virus identified.
.San Francisco, accompanied
Lives.tock inventory by a San Jose Mercury News
By now, livestock producers columnist and several family
should have received their mell'lbers, one of whom
livestock inventory cards. · videotaped the exchange.
Please take a moment to fill
The newspaper reported
them out and retqrn the that Castellano invited the
postage paid card to the columnist along and gave him
SWCD office.
an exclusive account in hopes
aennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia of fending off a media .circus.
County's Extension •gent for He later relented ana agreed
to a news conference Friday.
agriculture •nd ·n•t..,al resources,
"I'm very haJ?PY for him," .
Ohio Stare University.)
said Alex Wang, owner of the
liquor store where Castellano
has bought tickets for 15
years. "We've known 'each
·
•
other so long. He's a nice guy:

"...... ,., ...............:., ..•.• •·. ···~·····

tion of a mill and maintenance considerations. D icf yqu
realize th'at there are over 80
firm s
maki ng
po rtable
sawmills?
The registration fee is S1 0

_.

SPORIS: Cubs slam Reds,

1, 200~

Retired.grocery store
clerk wins $14l million

rnment ·spent $1•3 8 ,
Gove
·
de'ense
ml"lll"on· o_n Mcuel"gh
.VI
'I'
DENvER (AP) - The federa! government spent $13.8
million in public funds to
d~fend Timothy McVeigh in
c
the 1995 bom b ing of the .ed'eraJ b ut"]d'mg m
· Okl ahoma
City, a federal judge said Fri·
day.
.
U.S. District, Judge Richard
Matsch, who presided over
McVeigh\ trial, released figures
cqmpiled· by the U.S. Justice
Department.
The federal government
spent a totalof$13,780,835.83
to hire private atiorneys and

Sunday, July

..

/

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