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                  <text>Page 86

·The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 31, 1001

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Atlanta and Philadelphia
lose to bottom teams in .East
C';' "'f: I( ASSOtiAT[D PRC:.JS •

·be~causc

of·' naggmg abd-&gt;mlnal strain, Tsuyoshi Shinjo
went 3-for-4 and scored two
runs.
Steve Trachsel (8- 11 ) worked
seven inni nb"· givi ng up four

Only the Chicago C"bs
took advantage of playing a
losing team in the N L East.
The Atlanta Braves and
Philadelphia Phillies f.1iled to
do the same Thursday night hits and striking out nine . H e
and remained a game apart
did not walk a batter, improvatop the Eastern Division.
ing to h-1 with a 2.76 EllA in
Bill Mueller homered in the
his last nine, starts.
bottom of the ninth to lifi the
Philadelphia 's David Coggin
Cubs over slumping Florida .54, dropping the Marlins (62- (4-4), one of three rookies in
71) into fourth place in the the Phillics' rotation, gave up
fi ve runs and sev~:n hits in three
division.
Fred McGriff hit a three-run innings.
Montreal's Tomo Ohka ( 1 -:~)
shot as Chicago tied it 4-4 iri
the seventh. The Cubs over- allowed two· Atlanta runs and
six hits in 5 2-3 innings. Scott
came a four-run deficit their largest comeback of the Stri ckland got three outs for
year - and remained four his third save.
Giants 13, D-backs 5
games behind Houston in the
Rich Aurilia, John Vander
NL Central. The Astros beat
Cincinnati 6-1 on Thursday.
Wal and pitcher Jason Schmidt
Philadelphia lost 6-2 to the homered as S.1n Francisco
New York Mets (63-71), and avoid a three-game sweep at
Atlanta stayed a game ahead of Arizona.
the Phillies despite dropping a
Schmidt
(I 0- 7), . who
4-2 decision to last-place improved to 4-1 in six starts
Montreal (57-76).
since being acquired from
Atlanta has Jest II of 15 Pittsburgh, also had a broken-home games and is 33-36 at bat, RBI single and a sacrifice
Turner Field this season .. The bunt. He scored twice.
Braves are 4-6 on their 13Dodgers 5, Rockies 4
game homestand and lost two
Chad Kreuter's fifth-inning
of three to Montreal.
homer, Los Angeles' third
The Phillies also lost two of
home run of the game, salthree to the Mets.
vaged a win over Colorado.
Mueller's home run in
Chan Ho Park (13-9) strugC hi cago was certainly interesting Jnd important to the Cubs, gled, but earned the victory.
who maintained their half- · Adrian Deltre and Gary
game lead over San Francisco Sheffield also hmnered for the
Dodgers, who cut off th e tying
in the wild card race.
Cubs
reliever
Kyle run at the pbte in the ninth
Farnsworth (4-3) struck out inning. Sheffield reached 1,000
two and gave up a hit in one career RBis with his solo shot.
Cardinals 13, Padres 3
mmng.
Matt
Morris became th e
Ricky Bones (3-4) allowed
run and a hit in one-third of an major leagues' third 18-game
linning for Florida, which lost winner, and St. Louis scored in
for the 14th time in 17 games. double figur~s for the second
With N e.w York's All-Star straight game, beating San
catcher Mike Piazza sitting out Diego.

AROUND THE DIAMO .ND
Nallonal League
East

Atlanta
Philadelphia
Ne¥:..·,-....,.~.
Floricfa
Montreal

w

l

72

6t
62

71

-

l

78
55
74
59
72
6t
59
73
53
~
49
83
West

1

~

g',

.466

.429

10
15

Pet

GB

.•HV

71
62
76
57
Central

w

Ho\Jston
Chicago
St. Louis
Milwaukee
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh

GB

Pet.
54t
.534

.586
.556
.541
.447
.398

4
6
1B '2
25

.371

28'2

w

l
Pet
GB
Arizona
77 56 .579
3).
San Francisco 74
60 .552
4i.
Los Angeles
73
61
.545
San Diego
66 67 .496
11
Colorado
74
.439
IS'IJ
58
Thursday's Games
St. Louis 13, San 01ego 3
Chicago Cubs 5, Florida 4
Houston 6, Cincinnati 1
N.Y. Mets 6, Phlladelpt:lia 2
Montreal 4, Atlanta 2
San Francisco 13, Arizona 5
Los Angeles 5, Colorado 4
Friday 's Games
Montreal (Thurman 6· 10) at PhUadelphia
(Figueroa 4·4). 7:05 p. m .

Pittsburgh {Ritchfe 10..11) at ClncJnnatl
American League
N.Y. Yankees (Clemens 11· 1) al Boston
(Reitsma 6-13), 7o05 p.m.
Ent
(f'CastiiiO 8·7), 7:05p.m.
Florida {Penny 7·71 at N.Y. Mets ~Leiter g..
w l Pet GB Oakland (Udle 8-!1) at Tampa Bay (Relcar
10), 7: 10p.m.
New York
78
56 .582
t - 11J, 7:15p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Cruz 1-1) at Atlanta (Bur- Boston
71
61
.538
6 _ Anaheim (Valdes . 8-:,8) at Minnesota_
ken 11-8}. 7:35p.m.
- 13 ' (ABOt&lt;e 11·8), 8'05 p.m.
Toronto
6~
69 .485
Houston (MIIckl 4· 1) 81 Milwaukee Baltimore
79 .406
23:0,
54
Te•as (HeiNng 9·9) at Kansas Cily (K.Wil·
(Wright 9·8).J.:05 p.m.
Tampa Bay
48 86 .358
30
son 6-4), 8:05p.m.
Arizona (SChilling 18-6) at San Diego
Centr•l
Cleveland (Woodard 3-2) ol Chlcogo
(Jodie 0-0), 8 :05 p .m. 1 1st game
w l Pel GB White Sox (Wright 2·2), 8o05 p.m.
Arilona (B.Anderson 3-9) at San Diego Cleveland
76
57 .571
S.turday's Gamel
(J arvis 11-9) , 11 p.m ., 2nd game
· Minnesota
70
64 .522
6~
N.Y. Yankees (O.Hernandez 0·6) at
St. Louis (W.Wflliams 10·9) at Los Ange- Chicago
67
a·~
65 .508
Boslon (Martinez 7-2), 1:15 p.m.
les (Gagne 4-6), 10: 10 p m.
Detroit
54 78 .409
21 ~
Detroit (Wea11er 10-13) at Toronto (Lyon
Colorado (Thomson 1-5) at San Francis- Kansas City
22'o 3·2), 4o05 p .m .
54 80 .403
co (Ortiz 14-7), 10:35 p.m.
West
Seattle (Abbon 13-3) at Baltimore (MerSaturday's Ga.mes
w l Pel GB cedes 7-15), 4 :05p.m.
Chicago Cubs (Ta11arez 8·9). at Atlanta 'Seattle
96 38 .716
Oakland (Hiljus 8.-6) at Tampa Bay (Bier(Maddux 17·7), 1:15 p.m .
Oakland
78
56 .582
18
brodl1·3), 4o15 p.m.
Colorado (Hampton 13· 1{}) at san Fran- Anahekn
69
65 .515
27
Anaheim {Schoenewels 10-9) at Mincisco (Jensen 1·2), 4:05p.m.
Texas
74 .448
60
36
nesola (Lohse 4-6), 7o05 p.m.
Houston (Reynolds 11 - 10) at Milwaukee
Thursday's G•mes
Cleveland (Dreae 0-0) at Chicago
(Quevedo 3-2), 7:05p.m .
Seattle 4 , Tampa Bay o
While Sox (Dorland 8-4), 7:05 p.m.
Montreat (Pavano 0·2) at Philadelphia N.Y. Yankees 5, Toronto 4, 11 innings
Texas (Davis 8-8) at Kansas City (Byrd 6(Person 12-6), 7:05p.m .
Cleveland 3, Boston 1
5), 8:05p.m.
Pittlburgh (D.WIIIIama 1-6) at Clneln- Oakland 15, Baltimore 0
noll (Acevedo 4-5), 7o05 p.m.
. Detroit 3, Chicago White Sox 1
Florida (Bumell9-10) at N.Y. Mets (Appl· Texas 5, Minnesota 1
er 7·10), 7:10p.m .
Kansas City 2, Anaheim 1
Anzona (Lopez 3-4) at San Diego (Toll·
Friday'• Games
beig 7-4), 1M5 p.m.
Detroit (Sparks 9-8) at Toronto (Escobar
Sl. Louis (Hermanson 12-10) at Los 6·5J, 7o05 p.m.
Angeles (Adams 10-6). 10o10 p.m.
Seallle (Sele 13·4) at Baltimore (Maduro
2-4), 7o05 p.m.

TEMPO

SPORIS

lakin women's
prison update

Prep football
action highlights

•

•

•

tmts

star."

Alomar's 16th homer of the season put
Cleveland up 3-1 in _the second, ·and his
fielding in the fourth n1ade sure it stayed
that way.
Alomar threw out Shea Hillenbrand,
who was trying to stretch a double into a
tripl e, from short right. The next batter,
Scott Hatteberg, singled.

Bartolo Colon (1 1-10) won for the
first time since July 27. He allowed eight
hits and a run in six innings against the
slumping Red Sox. Bob Wickman
pitched a rocky ninth for his 26th save.
Boston, swept for the first time by
Cleveland since 1996, went 1-for-23
with runners in scoring position in the
series ~

Yankees 5, Blue Jays 4
Bernie Williams hit a sacrifice fly in the
11th inning off Scott Eyre (0- 1) as New
York matching its biggest division lead. ·
T he host Yankees trailed 3-0 after five
innings, then went ahead with a threerun seventh when Enrique Wilson
pinch-hitter
Chuck
homered, ·
Knoblauch had an RBI single and shortstop Felipe Lopez's throwing error
allowed Knoblauch to score.
Mariners 4, Devil Rays 0
Freddy Gar:cia (15-5) allowed eight hits
in 6 2- 3 innings, and Bret Boone drove
in three runs as Seattle pitched its leagueleading ninth shutout.
Tigers 3, White Sox 1
Shane Halter homered and scored
twice . as Detroit stopped a four-game
losing streak overall and a 10-game losing

streak against visiting Chicago.
Rookie Nate Cornejo (3-1) won his
third straight start, allowing one run and
six hits in seven innings.
Athletics 15, Orioles 0
Eric Chavez hit two homers, including
a grand slam, and drove in a career-high
eight runs as Oakland completed a threegame sweep at Baltimore.
Cal Ripken had two hits for the Orioles , who have lost six straight by a com~
bined 44-4 score.
Royals 2, Angels 1
Gregg Zaun singled home the winning
run with two outs ii1 the ninth inning as
Kansas City earned its first three-game
home sweep of Anaheim since 1989.
Jason Grimsley (1-5) pitched two
innings of one-hit relief for his first win
since June 14 last year.
Rangers 5, Twins 1
Rookie Aaron Myette allowed three
hits in seven innings •as Texas wori at
Minnesota.
Myette (3-2), a rookie who replaced
the injured Kenny Rogers in Texas' rotation July 28, struck out a career high
eight batters in his best start.

•

tntint

RALLYINTHE

NICE-

Festival
goers
view a
miniature ·
carousel
at Rally
_in the
Valley in
Gallipolis
City Park.
(Millissia
Russell)

- - ALLIPOLIS
Rally in the Val~
ley is an oldfashioned festival with Gal'polis ity Park being filled
· vintage band organs,
reModel &amp;, a quilt
enactors and other events.
"On Sunday afternoon
we will go way back in time
and have an old-fashioned
Songfest with sack races and
a picnic in the park," said
organizer
Marilyn
Pavlovsky, executive director
Gallia County Convention
:ind Visitors Bureau.
: "The state tells us that the
oiggest tourism grabber is
events. We need more events
and Statewide attention. AlJ
of this will '. bring economic ·
d-evelopment
improvet:nents. The downtOW1) fire
proved that Gallia County
~r[&lt;s very well together.
· " We can achieve our
go:ils and take care of our
econonii~ needs thro,~~ .
~veryone s efforts. Thuttsm fs
.i . ~~ in:::tl,~~ County; '
tlie 'eftorts of each individual
off."
are

Worken
strike at

Scenic Hills
FROM STAFF REPORTS

GALLIPOLIS - Workers
at Scenic Hills Nursing
Home struck early Friday
morning following a 52-4
vote.
The workers say they have
been trying to negotiate a
fair contract With management that includes better
health care benefits, but the
adm inistration refuses ro
bargain iri good faith.
u Management won 't even
listen to us in terms of the
health care coverage because
it was brought to them by
the union," said Carol
Young, administrative organizer for the Service ·
Emplpyees
International
Union/ District 1199.
The main issue the work-

show,

1.25

5

-,., 1t]61Na. 19

Gallipolis • Pomer·oy • Pt. Pleasant • September l, 1001

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Alomar is having an. MVP season - if people would notice
The Cleveland Indians want the rest of
the AL to take notice : R.oberto Alomar is
playing as well as anyone in the America n League.
Alomar hit a two-run homer, scored
twice and threw out a runner at third.
helping the Indians complete a threegame sweep with a 3-1 win over the
Boston Red Sox on Thursday night.
AJomar is batting .340 - second to
lchiro Suzuki - and is playing his usual
Gold Glove second base, but is rarely
mentioned as anAL MVP c~ndidate .
"I don 't know why," acting Indians
manager Grady Little said. "He does
things day in and day out that help us
win games. Whether it's on offense or
defense or with something he says to
somebody in the clubhouse, he's a super-

.

~-

AIVJERICAN LEAGUE
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Baum Lumber
keeping pace

ers are concerned about is
affordable heal th care b\'nefits. Workers have proposed a
health care plan to management that would not only
allow all workers to afford
coverage for themselves and
their families, but would sav,e
the facility about $4,000 a
month, Young said in a press
release.
The benefits also . were
made available to all nursing
homes in. the chain, which
Young said co uld save tens
of thousands of dollars in
health care costs that could
be put to higher wages tO
recruit more workers and
put back into the facility in
terms of patient care.

Please -

Strike, AI

Officials update Vinton·
residents on sewer plans
8\" KEVIN

ffoover.
'Fuller and Hoover aired

KEU.Y

TIMES:SENT1NEL STAFF

site of a sewage treatment
plant for Vinton would cause
additional costs and a higher
rate for customers, village
residents learned Thursday
during a public information
meeting on the . $2 million
project.
The plant will be offVan
Buren Street (Ohio 325
South) behind property
owned by C harles Fuller and
across the road from a residence owned by Tom

._IG BOAT - The Delta
Queen ·paid a visit to Rally
In the Valley Friday. (Dick
Thomas photo)'

location and
odor,
answered by representatives
from age ncies involved in
bringing the project to
fruitio n.
Hoover and his son John
asked if the plant could be
pbced further down the
field from its present site,
chosen in part because the
former CSX railroad line
can se rve as an emergency
en trance to the facility if a

Please SH VInton, M
•

Brand New 2001 Pontiac
Grand Ain SE Coupe

Brand New 2001 Buick
Century Custom Sedan

Brand New 2001
S·S1arie1 Extended Cab

1'1CKUD

Brand New 2001 Chevy
Silverado Ext. Cab 4 Dr. 4x4

Brand New 2001 Chevy
ZR2 Blazer 4x4 LS

~3,550* ~7 ,750* ~8,950* 822,950~ .
• Air Conditioning
• Power Locks, AMIFM Cass.
Delay Wipers, Tilt

Powei Seat, Windows, Locks
Tin Steering, Cruise Control
Heated Outside Mirrors

• V-6 Power, Automatic
• Power Windows, Locks, Mirrors
Keyless Entry, Locking Diff.
·

• V·8 Power, Automatic ·
• Air Conditioning, Tilt &amp; Cruise
.
Pkg., AMIFM

824,8
• Automatic, Sunroof
• Power Sea~ Windows, Locks ·
CD System, Till &amp; Cruise

Brand New 2001 Chevy
Tahoe LT 4 Door 4x4

838,950*
• Sunroof, Onatar System
• Leather, Heated Seats
Third Seal, Totally

'

Meigs elections bOard rejects 14 candidates
Cite .improperly
completed petitions

ship and village offices in Meigs
County have been disqualified.
Elections board directo r Rita
Smith said the board met last week
to certify petitions, and disqualified
the .1 4 candidates for a variety of
BY BRIAN J. RIID
TIME~ENTINEL STAFF
reasons, all relating to the way in
POMEROY - The petitions of which petitions were signed or oth14 candidates who filed for town- erwise submitted by candidates.

·6enttnel
m;·--

Hlp: IDI
Low: 50s

~·

2000 Chevy
Cavalier Sedan

2000 Chevy ,
Lumina Sedan

2000 Buick Century
Custom Sedan

2001 Oldsmobile
Intrigue GX Sedan

89.,950* q1,950* q2,950* q5,150*

• Automatic ·
• Air Conditioning
• AM/FM Stereo With Cass.

• V-6 Power, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks .
• Tilt Steering, Cruise Control

• Power Driver's Seat
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise

.

• Power Seat, Windows &amp; Locks
• CD System, Alum. Wheels
• Tilt Steering, Cruise Control

2000 Buick LeSabre
Custom Sedan

2001 Chevy Blazer
LT 4 Door4x4

~8,850*

q9,950"

• Power Seat, CD System
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
Tlh Steering, Cruise Control

• Power Seat, Windows &amp;Locka
• eo System, Alum. Wheels
Tilt Wheel, Cruise Control

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics ·
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Stocks

Details, A3

WI"LLHTHIII

'

~-*,m~,~'-!-;:".
"'"·"''~"'-

'0.".':'·.1;,,-'"

'f..--·

Buick

;~

it's a ll

goo'Ct

~Oldsmobile

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eoooe~·

West Virginia 's #1 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds, And Custom Van Dealer.

M. lEACH

years ago.
Village Administrator John Anderson
POMEROY - After months of spo- said Friday now that the new line is in
radic construction and questions concern- place village residents should experience
ing its progress, Pomeroy's new water line improved water reliability and increased
project is finished.
.water pressure.
The 12-inch line runs along Main Street
"The old line was very corroded and
from Plum Street to Butternut Avenue and was not performing to capacity like it was
replaces the former 8-inch cast-iron line intended," Anderson said. ''Water pressure
estimated to have been installed about 85 had dramatically decreased, and it was
TONY

02-7

insert
I
Friday. Spotts, 111

o 2001

Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

on
111..-l

Monday- Saturday 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday 1 pm - 8 pm
·CL9SED LABOR DAY

Olive; Steven Shuler, Syracuse BPA;
Lawrence
Johnston,
trustee,
Lebanon; Paul Life, trustee, O live;
Richard B. Hill, Southern Local
School Board ; Craig Hanning,
trustee, Scipio; C harlotte Wamsley,
Racine Village Counci l; Will i1m
Ayres, trustee, Olive; Gordon W u1e-

TIMES-SENTIN EL STAFF

·Taxes. Tags, Til~ Fees~xlra . Rebate included in sale price o1 new vehicle listed where applicable. "On approved cre~l. On seleoled models. Nol responsible for typographical errors.
Prices Good August 3tsl Through Seplember 3rd.
CHIVROLIT

rejected because they were, in one
way or another, completed incorrectly," Smith said.
c Candidates disqualified and the
office they sought were: Dick Fetty,
Rutland mayor; Cecil Stacy, trustee,
Salem; Lee Layne, Racine Board of
Public Affairs; Robert Bucher,

BY

cs
A4
A6
BI ·B
Dl

"All of the petitions rejected were · ttustee, Scipio; Joe Lantz, trustee,. brenner, Syracuse BPA;

~nd

Grover

Salser, Jr., tru'stee, Suttor•.
The petition of Aloysius Grueser
Jr., a candidate for Rutland village
clerk, also was rejected, Smith said,
because the unexpired term for the
clerk's position cannot, by law, be

Please see Rejldl, AI

Pom-eroy waterline finally completed

,

'

.

'

starting to becorne an inconvenience for
many residents.
"It was not economically feasible to
continue using the old water mail\ because
the probability of breaks in the line was
increasing every day.
"Repairs would have cost the village a
good sum of money. The installation of the

Please see Complete, AI

Men

FREE Prostate Screening
sponsored by Holzer Medical Center Community Health and Wei/ness and Holzer Clinic

Saturday, septe•ber a, .2001
8a30 am • 12 Noon
Second Floor Urology Clinic
Holzer Clinic • 90 Jackaon Pike, Gallipolis
To schedule your free screening, or lor inlor'malion on parlicipalion.requirements, call Susan Morgan al

.

(740) 446·531,

Regislrolion is limiled 10 the lirsl 100

men.

deadline is 9/6/01 ol4 PM.

MEDICAL CENTER

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www .holzer.org

�OJJ~------~~~-ag_e~_
Ae•.
o•-

Ohio

Sunday, September l, 2001

No papers Monday
GAI:LIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Publishing Co.'s three daily
newspapers - the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
Register and The Daily Sentinel - will not publish Monday
so employees can enjoy the Labor Day holiday.
In addition, offices in Gallipolis, Pomeroy and Point Pleasant,
W.Va., will be closed Monday. Normal publication and business
hours will resume Tuesday.

.lnfonnational meeting
Children's Center ~f Ohio announces an informational
meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Cadmus Community Center.
This meeting is for Walnut Township concerning any questions· regarding the Children's Center to be located in the
township.

Health board meeting
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Board of Health will meet
at 9 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 5 at the health department in the
Gallia County Service Center, 499 Jackson Pike.

·Rutland Soccer league forms for 2001
FROM STAFf.REPORTS

RUTLAND - Officers were elected
and agendas set during the recent meeting of the Rutland Soccer League.
Resignations from the previous soccer
league board were accepted and Anita
Sayre was elected as secretary/ treasurer,
Amanda Ramage as co-treasurer, and Jay
Dewhurst as vice-president.
The . board agreed Rutland's soccer
fields are ready for 'the· season and that
two more fields. are expected to be donat. ed for next year. Ra11_1age said teams in
Pomeroy and Middleport who ha~e
nowhere to practice can do so at the
Rutland fields.
Dewhurst said uniforms have to be
chosen now in order to get them before

the games begin. All Rutland teams will
have red-and-black shirts, except for 7- to
8-year-o[d,, who will have black-andgray uniforms. Pomeroy teams , ages 7-8
and 9-10, will have orange and black uniforms, while ages 4-6 and 11-12 will
wear teal and black and yellow and black
uniforms.
The board also:
• agreed the former league's bank
account be closed and a new account be
opened for the current league;
• accepted Linda and John Swanson's
offer to organize. the concession stand;
• scheduled a time to obtain practice
cones for teams without goals;
• agreed referees are still needed for the
games.

Sunday, Sept. 2
'·

r-

INO.

lso-nr l ·

0

0
•ICalumbue IH'/78' I

0
W. VA

KY

Celebrity waiter night
GALLIPOLIS - Shriners from the Gallipolis Shrine Club
will have a celebrity waiter night Sept. 10 from 5 to 7 p.m. at
Golden Corral, Upper River Roaq.
All tips and donations raised will go to the Shriner's Cincinnati Burns Hospital for Children.
For information, contact C harlie O'Bailey at 446-2889.

Free shots

LUBECK, W.Va. - The Smith-Moo.re reunion will be Sept.
9 at Lubeck Recreational Center. Potluck dinner will be at 1
p.m., with an auction and games planned .
.
Donations will be accepted for the cleaning of D ewitt
Cemetery on W.Va. 68 'in Murrasville. site of the Maj . Charles
Sm1th burial place.
Information is available by calling Mary Smith at 949-2033.
The public is welcome.

Dissolution filed
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage has
been filed in Meigs Co unty Common Pleas Court by Mark L.
Allen, Syracuse, and Heather R . Allen, Racine.
· A divorce has b een granted to Lois L. Shane and Timothy L.
Shane, Sr.

Meeting rescheduled

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Heal th Department will
provide free immunizations from 4 to 6 p.m. T hursday, Sept. 6
at the Gallia County Service Center, 499 Jackson Pike.
' Additional services, such as .blciod pressure checks and pregnancy tests, will be offered during the evening hours at the
POMEROY-· M arriage licenses have been issued in Meigs
health departn1'ent.
.
·
County Probate court to Michael Todd Wolfe, 40, and Lora Lee
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied by Hart, 35, boili of Shade; Adam Roach , 23, Hartford, W.Va. , and
a parent or legal guardian and bring a current immunization · Aja McGlothin, 19, Bluefield, W.Va. ; and Erjc Ray Larkins, 23,
record with them.
and Emily Suzanne Seabolt, 22, both ofTuppers Plains.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy Village Council will hold its
regular meeting Thursday at the Municipal Building du':·to the
fact Labor Day falls on the day the mee tmg was ongmally
scheduled.

Issued licenses

Parsons reunion
Out~each

Reschedule meeting
SYRACUSE - Due to the Labor Day hol iday, the regular
meeting of Syracuse Board of Public Affairs will be Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the water office.

Transfers approved

Pete and Margie Parsons reunion will be Oct. 7 at 0.0.
Mcintyre Park Shelter No. I. ,

Team coming

CHESHIRE - The Community O utreach Team from
C hillicothe VA Medical Center will be at DAV Chapter 53,
2805 1 Ohio 7, Ch eshire from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sept. 24-25.
The Outreach Team will enroll honorably discharged veter-

POMEROY The Meigs County Commissioners
approved transfers of funds during a recessed session on Friday
afternoon.
The transfers were approved as follows: $1,000 transfer for
the commissioners' budget, and S200 for the crafters' grant proj~.
.
The board also approved the payment .of bills in the amount
of $151,232.31.

..

Open meeting set
CHESTER - Chester Garden Club will hold an open
meeting for all . garden clubs and the public at Chester United
Methodist Church on Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
Pat Lane, regional garden club director, w ill be the guest
speaker and will ·present a question-and-answer session about
perennials. C hester club m embers should bring finger foods
and door prizes.

Buckeye Rural El~c ral~~.~~~ mem~~

·Oak Hill Banks

-

COLUMBUS (AP) -The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has turned
down a proposal to strip its state counterpart of authorit}r to enforce major
federal environmental laws.
The decision was announced Friday in
a letter sent by U.S. EPA regional director Thomas Skinner.
The letter has been posted on the U.S.
EPA's Web site.
It says a draft of .the decision will be
issued Tuesday and a hearing will take
.place in Columbus in October.
Four environmental groups - Ohio
Citizen Action, the Ohio Public Interest
Research Group, Rivers Unlimited and
the Sierra Club - had urged the federal agency to enforce major environmental.laws in Ohio.

Skinner's letter said Ohio's enforcement of the Clean Water Act, Clean Air
Act and Resource Conservation and
Recovery "rank among the top in the
nas,ion."
It said the federal agency wants a few
changes in enforcement of the programs,
but didn 'r specifY the nature of the
chan ges.
·
The decision comes as the Bush
administration is fighting to secure Senate confirmation of former Ohio EPA
Director Donald R. Schregardus for a
job as the federal EPA's top enforcer of
rules.
Environmemal groups have accused
Schregardus of being too lax with polluters while m Ohio. They formalized
their complaints last year with a petition

1

0 ···· ~-·

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

ShoW8B T-.tcrrn.

Rain

FlurTiel

Pleasant Labor Day weekend
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

38 of the tickets.
Marblehead consistently ranks as one of the busiest search and
rescue stations on the Great Lakes.
"Peoplejust get crazy on these islands ," said Jim Seaman, who
worked with the Put-in-Bay police marine patrol before joining the state as a Division ofWatercraft officer.

Man dies in ATV acddent

GALLIPOLIS - Oak Hill
• Banks has promoted long-time
· Gallipolis-area banker Connie
S. Freeman to vice president
and Assistant Branch Administrator.
A 31-year banking veteran,
Freeman joined Oak Hill
Banks in .1999 as: mana~r of
the Gallipolis branch. In 2000,
: she was named area manager
1 with responsibility for the
• bank's offices in Gallipolis,
i WeUstop, and Scioto County.
1
In her new position she will
.assist with the supervision of
Oak Hill Banks' entire branch
network, but will remain based
in the Gallipolis office.
"Connie has done a wonderful job in Gallipolis," said
Chief Operating Officer Scott
• J. Hinsch. "She's been . a
·: tremendous asset to the branch
I and the community; and we
look foiward to utilizing her
, skills throughout the compa,• ny."
Always active in the com. munity, si nce joining Oak Hill
· Banks Freeman has been elected to serve as president of
Main Street GaUipolis. She also
has joined the Board of Directors of the Community
Improvement Corp. of Gal-

Connie Freeman
lipolis.
A graduate of Symmes Valley
High School in Willow Wood,
Freeman has earned a bachelor's degree from Marshall
University. She and her husband, Johnnie, reside in Proctorville. The couple has one
son.
Oak H ill• Banks has 16 fullservice banking offices and
two loan production offices in
ten counties in central and
southern Ohio. The bank's
holding company, Oak Hill
Financial, Inc., also operates
Action Finance Co. in southern Ohio, and Towne Bank in
suburban Cincinnati.

&amp;unbap -Cimt~ &amp;tnttntl
Reader Services
· Correction Polley .
O~r

main concern In all stories Is lo be
accurate. Ir you know of an error In a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 446Z342 or Pomeroy: (740) !192·1155. We will
check your Information and make a
correction if warranted.

Newo Departments
GaiUpolll
· The main number Is 446·Z34Z .
Department ttllentions are:
Mana&amp;lng l'.dltor._ ..,_..., ..._ ..,_Exl ll8
City l'.dltor ....................-...- ...-.Ext.IZI
Llfestyle ..- ..........._... ,,.;,.,.,.,.,_.Ext.IZO
Sports ..............-.......-.............-.. Ext. IZZ
News "N"'""'''" ..." ....................... E.J:L 119
To Send E-Mail
gallribune@eurekanet.tom
Newa Department

Pomeroy
The main number Is 99Z·l ll5.
Department extensions are:

General Manager ..................... Ext 1101
News .....,,.,_,_,_,,,.,.,.,....,.,,., Ext, 1102

, ................................................ or Ext J106

(USPSllJ...~)

Co.maunlty Newsp~ per Holdlnp. lnc.
P11blished every Sunday, 82~ Thi rd Ave ..
Gallipol i1. Ohio, by thl:: Ollio Valley Publi&amp;hing
Company, Second class posllge paid at Gallipolis,

SINGLE COPV PRICE
SWlday ............................................................ $1.25
No 1ubacription try mail pennittcd in mas where
home urrier service is anilablt.
The Sund.y Timn·kntind will not be responsible
h .Jvanct paylllinu made 1o canien.
Publifher re5ei'Vn !he righllo adjust rates during
tlw: wbicription pmod. Subscriptton rate changes
m1y be imple-mented by chanzina the dunuion o(
the wbKriptioo.
O.lly aod Sunda}'

MA IL SUBSC RIPTIONS
Inside Gall Ia Couaty
I) Wteks ....................................................... S2JJO
26 Wteks. ...................................................... SB.82
52 Weeks...............,. .................................... 105.56

s

Raitt Outside Gallll County
JJ Weeh .......................................................J.29.25

- Uue music
• Pig Roast
• Chain Saw carver
.. magician
- Food 6 Drinks

0

NtWiplpCr Auociatio~ .

.I'OS'l'M:ASTER: Send addre~U com:clions lo The
Sunday-Times Se ~linel . 825 Third A~e ..
Gallipoli1,0hio -4.5611 .

One Year ..................................................... $63.00

"Everybody's heard about
the power crisis (in California). The reason it happened
is because they didn't build
enough power plants an d
they just ran out of power,"
Ahern said. "You· still have
your cooperative planning
for you on a colt-of-service,
not-for-profit basis."
Cooperative
m emb ers
were treated to dinner and
music from ilie band Last
Chantz before the start of the
business m eeting. Many
attendees, young and old,
walked away winpers of the
numerous door prizes awarded.
· Buc keye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Inc. serves more
than 18,000 members in
Athens, Gallia, Ja ckson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pik"", Ross,
Scioto and Vinton co,t.mties. •

Govemor rejects clemency

Paralyzed woman gets S1l million

Lake Erie deadliest lake

.. Panc;akes &amp; :,aiL!SOgj

$3.99

In order that our employees
can enjoy Labor Day, we will
be running ONE DAY delay .
for the entire ·week!

26 Wuh ............................................... J.56.68
52 Wcet s ............................. ·..................... , 109.72

THANK YOU

-Dunking Booth
-Big Bend Cloggers
- Riddle Tractor Pull
- Hrts 6 Crafts
- Karaoke Contest
A you

BFI CUSTOMERS

7 am - 11:30 am
Cool Country Farlt!S

'sRSO&amp;US7

Coolville, Ohio

..

740-667-6100

L.,----------------------~ L-~--~~~~~~~-~
. --~
•

Judge tells sheriff to stay.away from man
Ladies
Diamond
UP Clusters
TO
1/2
OFF

·.
.LUU

For Your ('oil\

University bus kills man .

•

Saturday, September 15,
All Day- Free Admission

Ohio.
Entered u second clan mailing mauer at
Pomei'O)'. Ohio POll: office.
Membu: The AsiOCiated Pren. and thtc Oltio

SUNDA'I ONU'
SUBSCRinlON RATES
By C~rrlu or Motor Roote
OncWed: . .. ...................................... SI.25

northwest Ohio.

Gordy, an attendant at a nearby Clark gas station. "People
around here c&lt;lme ·inside all the time. I cou:ld know him.''
The victim was identified as Ray Styer of Kent. City police
said Styer, who took medication for seizures, may have lost his
balance or had a seizure.
City pollee said they did not expect to file charges against the
driver.
Police said that despite afternoon rain, it was unlikely that
road conditions played a part in the accident.

tinued to move south of the
The National Weather Ser- region into ~entral Kentucky.
SOMERSET, Ky. (AP) - An Ohio man died Friday night
vice says skies will become Some clouds were moving off 0 after running his. ATV into a tree.
·
~lear Saturday night as a high Lake Erie in the north. TernEverett D. Carmack, 59, of Am elia, was riding a 1999 H onda
pressure system continues to · peratures at 5 a.m . ranged four-wheeler about 18 miles west of Somerset when he lost .
DAYTON (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft has rejected a clemency
dominate the weather. This from the mid 50s to the mid co ntrol of the vehicle, veering off the road and striking a tree,
request from a woman serving a 15-year-to-life prison term for
will allow overnight lows to 60s.
according to the Puiaski County Sheriff's Department. •
suffocating her infant daughter in 1994.
be rather cool, dropping into
Forecast
Carmack was pronounced dead at the scene shortly before II
Rebecca Lynn Hopfer, then 17, was convicted of murder in
the 40s in the north and the
. Sunday: Pardy cloudy. High p.m ., police said.
Montgomery County Co mmon Pleas Court in 1995 for
low 50s in the south.
SO, low 53.
secretly delivering her daughter at her Washington Township
Skies will be sunny to partMonday: Pardy cloudy.
. home and then suffocating her in a plastic trash bag.
ly cloudy on Sunday with High 81, low 55.
The Ohio 2nd District Court of Appeals rejected h er appeal,
highs in the 70s.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy.
CLEVELAND (AP) -A Cuyahoga Cou nty Common Pleas and the Ohio Supreme Court declined to hear the case. In
It will be sunny to partly High 82, low 62.
Court jury has awarded a paraplegic woman a $12 .2 million 1998, then-Gov. George Voinovich turned down a clemency
cloudy on Labor Day, with
Wednesday: Partly cloudy. medical malpractice judgment against two doctors and a hospi- request for Hopfer, who is. serving her sentence at the Ohio
temperatures in the 80s.
High 83, low 62.
tal.
Reformatory for Women in Marysville.
Skies continued to clear
Thursday.: Partly cl~udy.
The verdict was .issued Friday against Dr. Aaron Feldman and
Hopfer's father, Kenneth, said ilie family was disappointed
ov~ rnight as a cold front con- High 83,low 62.
his employer, . Cardiovascular Consultants of Cleveland;: Dr. and upset wiih Taft's de cision . He said his daughter has been
James Radack and his employer, Lakeland Emergency Associ- punished more harshly than other young women in similar
ates; and Euclid Hospital.
·
cases.
They had been sued by Mary Shafer, 78. Her lawyers said the
David Franceschelli, Montgomery County assistant prosecudoctors and the hospital misdiagnosed her spinal ble,eding, tor, disputed that.
"
CLEVELAND (AP) - Lake Erie has claimed 35 lives in which her lawyers said led to her paralysis in March 1999.
"This is simply fair compensation for the destructi on of
boating accidents, more than the other Great Lakes in the past
five years, and has more accidents combined than the other four Shafer and her family 's lives;' said Stephen C harms, an attorney
lakes.
for Shafer. "I think this jury sent :i message that doctors need to
While Lake Erie is one of the smallest of the Great Lakes, it talk to one another to explore what is going on with the patient
· is located· amid an. area of 12 million people and is the most instead of blowing the patients off.''
Radack's lawyer, Stephen Walters, and Maria Juki c, a Euclid
p6pular Great Lake 'among boaters and peopl: who fish, the
. Coast Guard says.
,
Hospital spokeswoman, said they disagreed with the ve,rdict and ·
199_6 thr_QI!gh _ would appeal._
- -1- - - on
four
other
Great
Feldman's
lawyer
could
not
be
reached
for
commen~.
enienre~
h
· Lakes, records analyzed by The Plain Dealer s ow.
·.· Hundreds of other accidents are not counted, including those
Every Tuesday Night from 5-7 p.in.
.. in · Canadian waters. Comparable statistics are not available
you can talk with University/Community College
there.
KENT (AP) -A Kent State University bus hit and killed a
representatives from these offices:
· This summer, the Coast Guard has cited 92 boaters in the 50-year-old man who apparently fell while attempting to cross
\ li llllll\ II If I
IHII llll " II Ill \ l I I \ l I I{
Great Lakes for boating under the influen~e. The station in the street Friday afternoon.
·
·, Admissions
• Campus Computing &amp;
Marblehead, which covers South Bass and Kelleys islands, issued
"It was one of the worst things I've seen in my life," said Kate
Networking Services
• Health Services
• CARS
\I I J,l \Ill II If I
• Bookstore
• College of Liberal Arts
1111\11111
&amp; Sciences-Rm. 122
• Records Office
1:11 1\ I I\\' l \1{1 1' If If I
• Human Resources
STEUBENVILLE (AP) -A judge ordered a of searching no other bodies have been found.
• College of Professional
• Finance
: . sheriff Friday to stay away frOm a murder suspect
Moorehead, and his alleged. accomplice, Fred
Studies·Rm. 229
• Financial Aid
. who claims to have killed as many as six people. Horner, 37, ofSteubenville, face charges of mur• MIS
jefferson County judge Michael Bednar der, felonious assault and discharging a firearm
• Community College
. 'g ranted defense attorneys' request that Sheriff into a residence. Both are being held without
"Tuesdays at Rio Grande"
Fred Abdalla be ordered to stay away from bail.
will continue tiJrougllouJ
I
Ill\
II
I{
I,
I
I
'l
IIIli
'
I
Steven Moorehead.
Fall Semester.
The charges include shots fired Aug. 17 into a
• Graduate Study
Bednar granted the request after Abdalla home outside Mingo Junction. A woman inside
admitted Friday he spoke with Moorehead after . the house was wounded.
FYI- Call
I IW&gt;,IW Ill ' IIIII I l·
· defense attorneys told him to leave him alone.
Abdalla said he won't resume the search 1,mless
740-245-5353
Moorehead, 39, of Brilliant, had his prelimi- there is a report of a body found and instead his
nary court hearing Friday in the killing of . officers will concentrate on processing blood
or
Becky Mitchell, 33, of Steubenville. Moorehead evidence to determine if there are other victims.
1-800-282-7201
Tawney Jewelers
told authorities where to find Mitchell's body
The sheriff said he is awaiting test results from
422 Second Avenue
and led Abdalla to areas where he claimed to blood from the back seat of Moorehead's
Gallipolis, OH
have left other bodies. Despite more than a week Chevrolet Cavalier and a Jaguar.

I -~ti:~v~e!s~~w.~i~t~h~·~t~h~e,ib~~u:il.d;•i·~n:~gt~o:::f_i a;~ I--~Jc~~~h~a~dtc5~9~~~~~o~nlteL~ak~e~~from

1meeting
Buckeye Rural Electric·
Cooperative Inc. at Buckeye
Hills Career Center;
Gene Nance, president of
the BREC Board of'Trustees,
announced the cooperative is .
embarking on a four-year,
S22 million plan to upgrade
equipment and improve service. As part of the plan, three
· substations will be added to
the system and another Will
be rebuilt. Also, sections of
old line will be replaced.
·
"With aU this should come
reduced outages and better
service," Nance said.
Nance also informed the
_
membership that a one-year - SPEAKER - General Manager Michael C. Bullock addressincrease
in
charges es th!;l membership at the Buckeye Rural Electric Coopersannounced last year to cover tive annual meeting.
a change in Ohio's tax law
has been put on hold as ried out by many other elecAhern spoke of plans to
favorable financial conditions tric cooperatives around keep a steady source of elechave allowed the cooperative Ohio and the nation, allows tricity for Ohio's co operato make up the -difference each member to co ntribute
from existing funds .
an amount they hardly
lf these factor~ continue · noti ce, an average of $6 a
for the rest of the year, "we'll year, but gives the cooperaprobably be able . to forget tive a chance to donate thouabout that (increase)," he sands to organizations and
said.
individuals in need of assisGeneral Manager Michael tance.
C. Bullock announced the
The membership also
cooperative would start . heard from Tony Ahern, vice
Operation Round-up. T he president for engineering
voluntary program is funded and power supply, ofBuckeye
by members having their bills Power, Inc. Buckeye Power is
rounded up to the nearest the generation cooperative
dollar and the extra change · which makes and supplies the
being pooled in a fund to electricity to Buckeye REC
and the other distribution
help the community.
The program, .which is car- coope ratives in Ohio.

that led to a review of Ohio EPA operations. Skinner's letter summarized the
results of that review.
Ohio EPA Director Christopher Jones
said agency offici'!)s still are reviewing
the 200-page draft decision sent to them
Friday.
" If you look at any state's programs,
you are going to find issues," jones to ld
The Col~mbus Dispatch in a story published Saturday. "We can do better, but
the bottom. line is U.S. EPA says our
programs are good."
Marilyn Wall, conservation chai rwoman for the Sierra Club, said, "1 find
the timing of their decision very interesting. r guess they felt they had to pat
Don Schregardus on the back somehow...

:0: 20(l1 AocuWeather, Inc.

Reunion set·

ans into the VA Health Care System and answer anyVA-related questions.
Please bring the following information:
• A copy of your discharge, separation or DD214;
• Spouse's! dependent's Social Security number.

Sunday, S•pamber :a. 2001

U.S. EPA rejects ·bid to limit state EPA

Ohio weather

Coaches for the Rutland teams are as
follows: Sarah Qualls, ages 4-6; Amanda
Ramage, ages 7-8; Chelsea Ray, ages 7-8;
Dallas Sayre, ages 9-1 0; Kelly Lee, ages 910; Tim Hood, ages 9-1 0; Sherry Wervey,
ages 11-12; Greg Browning, ages 11-12;
Larry Patterson, ages I 1-12.
Coaches for the Pomeroy and Middleport teams are Tome Roell, ages 4-6;
Mark Kimes, ages 7- 8; Lee Kimes, ages 78; Donnie Mohler, · ages 9-1 0; Linda
Chapman, ages 9·1 0; Mike Smith, ages
11-12; Cindy Smith, ages 11 -12.
. Every team will practice on Mondays
and Thursdays except for Mike Smith and
Sherry Wervey' team, which will practice
· ·
Mondays and Fridays.
Games will be announced later.

PageA3

be.

Recognization should given to this year's River Recreation Festival Committee for all their hard work and dedication: Mary Ann Yo~ng, Chairwoman; Carol Blaine; Ray McKinn.iss; Br~nt Eastman;
Brett Bostic; Sherry Maxwell; J"amie Back; Tom Hopkins; Ron Hudson; Missr Cottrell; Connie Robinson; Lorie Neal, staff; Dawn Lewts, staff; Tracy Call, staff; Rachel Bums, s~aff; and Dtck Northup,
.
.
staff. Special thanks to ALL VOLUNTEERS and Holzer Medtcal Center- Top Spons~r 2001
2001 River Recreatlpn Festjyal Sponsors:
McDonald's
Southeastern Equipment
101.5-TheRiver
XX.mocmticParty
GIX:
Mercerville
Convenience
Store
Steven
B. Chapman, C.P.A
Dr. Gary L. Clarke, Inc.
Gene Johnson Chevrolet
Access to Human Resources
Mike Allen
Subway of Gallipolis
AEP-Columbus Southern Power Co.
Dr. Mel Simon
Gills Faim, Gallipolis Feny, WV
Silas Johnson
Super 8 motel-Gallipolis
AEP-Ohio Power Company
Dr. WilliamB: Thomas
GKN Sinter Metals
O'Dell
LumberCon.,any
The
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
E. John Strauss Jr., DDS
Golden Corral
I• B th Rit
Ange s rea e- e
Earth Gnuns'
Grace United Methodist Church
Oak Hill Banks ·
The Gift ofLove Foundation
Auto Trim Center
Ohio Valley Electric Corp.
The Ohio Valley Bank Co.
El ·
Farmers Bank
Haffelt's Mill Outlet
Big River ectnc
Holzer Clinic
Ohio
Valley
Supermarkets,
Inc.
·
The Purple Turtle
Bill Bostic
Floral Fashions
Patty Hayes-Videoe&lt;! the Queen's Conte.st
The Put On Shop
Bob Evans Farms
French Art Colony
Home Town Water Depot
Paul Davies Jewelers, Inc.
The Wiseman Agency, Inc.
Bob Evans Restaurant of Gallipolis
French City Child Care
Image Gallery
Peoples
Bank,
National
Association
Thomas Do-It Center Inc.
Bob Hood
French Town Veterinary Clinic
Indian Creek Golf
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company
Toler &amp; Toler Insurance
JnfoCision Management Corp.
Bob Poling
Fruth Pharmacy
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Services
Jrvins Glass Service
Brittany's
Gallia Co. Children's Horne
Pt. Pleasant Lodge 731 Loyal Order of Moose Turnpike Ford-Gallipolis
Broughton Foods Company
· Gallia Co. Convention &amp; Visitor's Bureau J.E. Morrison and Associates
Randy Finney
University ofRio Grande
JakeBapst
Burlile Oil
Gallia Co. Safety Council
Rebeccas
US Cellular
Jeffrey E. Smith
Caldwell Miller Financial Group, Inc.
Galli a Health Partners, LLC .
Republican Party
Walker Machinery of Jacks&lt;ml
Joey Wilcoxon
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn
Gallipolis Area Jaycees
Reverend
Robert
D.
Grubb
Wal-Mart
Gallipolis #2605
Johnson's Grocery
Carmichaels Farm&amp; Lawn, Inc.
Gallipolis Chiropractic Center
Rockwell Automation·
JoyFM
Wee Cart' Day Care
City of Gallipolis
Gallipolis Emblem Club
Ron
Caudill
Karat
Patch
Welsh E'lectric
Coca Cola Enterprises Bottling Company Gallipolis EMS
Sew
Perfect
Kroger's of Gallipolis
William Ann Motel
•
Corbin and Snyder Furniture Co.
·
Gallipolis'Fire Dept.
SFS
Truck
Sales
·Kyger
Dental
Associates,
Inc.
Willis Tire Company.
Crown Excavating
Gallipolis Junior Women's Club
Materials,
Inc.
Shelly
Letart
Sand,
Gallipolis
Ferry,
WV
Wiseman Real Estate, Inc.
Gallipolis Police Dept.
' D &amp; L RV
Skyline'Lanes, Inc.
Lorobi 's Downtown
WV Electric Supply
Daolltx
Gallipolis Retail Merchants Ass~c.
Inc.
Smith
;

...

,,

/I

�OJJ~------~~~-ag_e~_
Ae•.
o•-

Ohio

Sunday, September l, 2001

No papers Monday
GAI:LIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Publishing Co.'s three daily
newspapers - the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
Register and The Daily Sentinel - will not publish Monday
so employees can enjoy the Labor Day holiday.
In addition, offices in Gallipolis, Pomeroy and Point Pleasant,
W.Va., will be closed Monday. Normal publication and business
hours will resume Tuesday.

.lnfonnational meeting
Children's Center ~f Ohio announces an informational
meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Cadmus Community Center.
This meeting is for Walnut Township concerning any questions· regarding the Children's Center to be located in the
township.

Health board meeting
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Board of Health will meet
at 9 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 5 at the health department in the
Gallia County Service Center, 499 Jackson Pike.

·Rutland Soccer league forms for 2001
FROM STAFf.REPORTS

RUTLAND - Officers were elected
and agendas set during the recent meeting of the Rutland Soccer League.
Resignations from the previous soccer
league board were accepted and Anita
Sayre was elected as secretary/ treasurer,
Amanda Ramage as co-treasurer, and Jay
Dewhurst as vice-president.
The . board agreed Rutland's soccer
fields are ready for 'the· season and that
two more fields. are expected to be donat. ed for next year. Ra11_1age said teams in
Pomeroy and Middleport who ha~e
nowhere to practice can do so at the
Rutland fields.
Dewhurst said uniforms have to be
chosen now in order to get them before

the games begin. All Rutland teams will
have red-and-black shirts, except for 7- to
8-year-o[d,, who will have black-andgray uniforms. Pomeroy teams , ages 7-8
and 9-10, will have orange and black uniforms, while ages 4-6 and 11-12 will
wear teal and black and yellow and black
uniforms.
The board also:
• agreed the former league's bank
account be closed and a new account be
opened for the current league;
• accepted Linda and John Swanson's
offer to organize. the concession stand;
• scheduled a time to obtain practice
cones for teams without goals;
• agreed referees are still needed for the
games.

Sunday, Sept. 2
'·

r-

INO.

lso-nr l ·

0

0
•ICalumbue IH'/78' I

0
W. VA

KY

Celebrity waiter night
GALLIPOLIS - Shriners from the Gallipolis Shrine Club
will have a celebrity waiter night Sept. 10 from 5 to 7 p.m. at
Golden Corral, Upper River Roaq.
All tips and donations raised will go to the Shriner's Cincinnati Burns Hospital for Children.
For information, contact C harlie O'Bailey at 446-2889.

Free shots

LUBECK, W.Va. - The Smith-Moo.re reunion will be Sept.
9 at Lubeck Recreational Center. Potluck dinner will be at 1
p.m., with an auction and games planned .
.
Donations will be accepted for the cleaning of D ewitt
Cemetery on W.Va. 68 'in Murrasville. site of the Maj . Charles
Sm1th burial place.
Information is available by calling Mary Smith at 949-2033.
The public is welcome.

Dissolution filed
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage has
been filed in Meigs Co unty Common Pleas Court by Mark L.
Allen, Syracuse, and Heather R . Allen, Racine.
· A divorce has b een granted to Lois L. Shane and Timothy L.
Shane, Sr.

Meeting rescheduled

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Heal th Department will
provide free immunizations from 4 to 6 p.m. T hursday, Sept. 6
at the Gallia County Service Center, 499 Jackson Pike.
' Additional services, such as .blciod pressure checks and pregnancy tests, will be offered during the evening hours at the
POMEROY-· M arriage licenses have been issued in Meigs
health departn1'ent.
.
·
County Probate court to Michael Todd Wolfe, 40, and Lora Lee
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied by Hart, 35, boili of Shade; Adam Roach , 23, Hartford, W.Va. , and
a parent or legal guardian and bring a current immunization · Aja McGlothin, 19, Bluefield, W.Va. ; and Erjc Ray Larkins, 23,
record with them.
and Emily Suzanne Seabolt, 22, both ofTuppers Plains.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy Village Council will hold its
regular meeting Thursday at the Municipal Building du':·to the
fact Labor Day falls on the day the mee tmg was ongmally
scheduled.

Issued licenses

Parsons reunion
Out~each

Reschedule meeting
SYRACUSE - Due to the Labor Day hol iday, the regular
meeting of Syracuse Board of Public Affairs will be Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the water office.

Transfers approved

Pete and Margie Parsons reunion will be Oct. 7 at 0.0.
Mcintyre Park Shelter No. I. ,

Team coming

CHESHIRE - The Community O utreach Team from
C hillicothe VA Medical Center will be at DAV Chapter 53,
2805 1 Ohio 7, Ch eshire from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sept. 24-25.
The Outreach Team will enroll honorably discharged veter-

POMEROY The Meigs County Commissioners
approved transfers of funds during a recessed session on Friday
afternoon.
The transfers were approved as follows: $1,000 transfer for
the commissioners' budget, and S200 for the crafters' grant proj~.
.
The board also approved the payment .of bills in the amount
of $151,232.31.

..

Open meeting set
CHESTER - Chester Garden Club will hold an open
meeting for all . garden clubs and the public at Chester United
Methodist Church on Wednesday at 7:30p.m.
Pat Lane, regional garden club director, w ill be the guest
speaker and will ·present a question-and-answer session about
perennials. C hester club m embers should bring finger foods
and door prizes.

Buckeye Rural El~c ral~~.~~~ mem~~

·Oak Hill Banks

-

COLUMBUS (AP) -The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has turned
down a proposal to strip its state counterpart of authorit}r to enforce major
federal environmental laws.
The decision was announced Friday in
a letter sent by U.S. EPA regional director Thomas Skinner.
The letter has been posted on the U.S.
EPA's Web site.
It says a draft of .the decision will be
issued Tuesday and a hearing will take
.place in Columbus in October.
Four environmental groups - Ohio
Citizen Action, the Ohio Public Interest
Research Group, Rivers Unlimited and
the Sierra Club - had urged the federal agency to enforce major environmental.laws in Ohio.

Skinner's letter said Ohio's enforcement of the Clean Water Act, Clean Air
Act and Resource Conservation and
Recovery "rank among the top in the
nas,ion."
It said the federal agency wants a few
changes in enforcement of the programs,
but didn 'r specifY the nature of the
chan ges.
·
The decision comes as the Bush
administration is fighting to secure Senate confirmation of former Ohio EPA
Director Donald R. Schregardus for a
job as the federal EPA's top enforcer of
rules.
Environmemal groups have accused
Schregardus of being too lax with polluters while m Ohio. They formalized
their complaints last year with a petition

1

0 ···· ~-·

Sunny Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

ShoW8B T-.tcrrn.

Rain

FlurTiel

Pleasant Labor Day weekend
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

38 of the tickets.
Marblehead consistently ranks as one of the busiest search and
rescue stations on the Great Lakes.
"Peoplejust get crazy on these islands ," said Jim Seaman, who
worked with the Put-in-Bay police marine patrol before joining the state as a Division ofWatercraft officer.

Man dies in ATV acddent

GALLIPOLIS - Oak Hill
• Banks has promoted long-time
· Gallipolis-area banker Connie
S. Freeman to vice president
and Assistant Branch Administrator.
A 31-year banking veteran,
Freeman joined Oak Hill
Banks in .1999 as: mana~r of
the Gallipolis branch. In 2000,
: she was named area manager
1 with responsibility for the
• bank's offices in Gallipolis,
i WeUstop, and Scioto County.
1
In her new position she will
.assist with the supervision of
Oak Hill Banks' entire branch
network, but will remain based
in the Gallipolis office.
"Connie has done a wonderful job in Gallipolis," said
Chief Operating Officer Scott
• J. Hinsch. "She's been . a
·: tremendous asset to the branch
I and the community; and we
look foiward to utilizing her
, skills throughout the compa,• ny."
Always active in the com. munity, si nce joining Oak Hill
· Banks Freeman has been elected to serve as president of
Main Street GaUipolis. She also
has joined the Board of Directors of the Community
Improvement Corp. of Gal-

Connie Freeman
lipolis.
A graduate of Symmes Valley
High School in Willow Wood,
Freeman has earned a bachelor's degree from Marshall
University. She and her husband, Johnnie, reside in Proctorville. The couple has one
son.
Oak H ill• Banks has 16 fullservice banking offices and
two loan production offices in
ten counties in central and
southern Ohio. The bank's
holding company, Oak Hill
Financial, Inc., also operates
Action Finance Co. in southern Ohio, and Towne Bank in
suburban Cincinnati.

&amp;unbap -Cimt~ &amp;tnttntl
Reader Services
· Correction Polley .
O~r

main concern In all stories Is lo be
accurate. Ir you know of an error In a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 446Z342 or Pomeroy: (740) !192·1155. We will
check your Information and make a
correction if warranted.

Newo Departments
GaiUpolll
· The main number Is 446·Z34Z .
Department ttllentions are:
Mana&amp;lng l'.dltor._ ..,_..., ..._ ..,_Exl ll8
City l'.dltor ....................-...- ...-.Ext.IZI
Llfestyle ..- ..........._... ,,.;,.,.,.,.,_.Ext.IZO
Sports ..............-.......-.............-.. Ext. IZZ
News "N"'""'''" ..." ....................... E.J:L 119
To Send E-Mail
gallribune@eurekanet.tom
Newa Department

Pomeroy
The main number Is 99Z·l ll5.
Department extensions are:

General Manager ..................... Ext 1101
News .....,,.,_,_,_,,,.,.,.,....,.,,., Ext, 1102

, ................................................ or Ext J106

(USPSllJ...~)

Co.maunlty Newsp~ per Holdlnp. lnc.
P11blished every Sunday, 82~ Thi rd Ave ..
Gallipol i1. Ohio, by thl:: Ollio Valley Publi&amp;hing
Company, Second class posllge paid at Gallipolis,

SINGLE COPV PRICE
SWlday ............................................................ $1.25
No 1ubacription try mail pennittcd in mas where
home urrier service is anilablt.
The Sund.y Timn·kntind will not be responsible
h .Jvanct paylllinu made 1o canien.
Publifher re5ei'Vn !he righllo adjust rates during
tlw: wbicription pmod. Subscriptton rate changes
m1y be imple-mented by chanzina the dunuion o(
the wbKriptioo.
O.lly aod Sunda}'

MA IL SUBSC RIPTIONS
Inside Gall Ia Couaty
I) Wteks ....................................................... S2JJO
26 Wteks. ...................................................... SB.82
52 Weeks...............,. .................................... 105.56

s

Raitt Outside Gallll County
JJ Weeh .......................................................J.29.25

- Uue music
• Pig Roast
• Chain Saw carver
.. magician
- Food 6 Drinks

0

NtWiplpCr Auociatio~ .

.I'OS'l'M:ASTER: Send addre~U com:clions lo The
Sunday-Times Se ~linel . 825 Third A~e ..
Gallipoli1,0hio -4.5611 .

One Year ..................................................... $63.00

"Everybody's heard about
the power crisis (in California). The reason it happened
is because they didn't build
enough power plants an d
they just ran out of power,"
Ahern said. "You· still have
your cooperative planning
for you on a colt-of-service,
not-for-profit basis."
Cooperative
m emb ers
were treated to dinner and
music from ilie band Last
Chantz before the start of the
business m eeting. Many
attendees, young and old,
walked away winpers of the
numerous door prizes awarded.
· Buc keye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Inc. serves more
than 18,000 members in
Athens, Gallia, Ja ckson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pik"", Ross,
Scioto and Vinton co,t.mties. •

Govemor rejects clemency

Paralyzed woman gets S1l million

Lake Erie deadliest lake

.. Panc;akes &amp; :,aiL!SOgj

$3.99

In order that our employees
can enjoy Labor Day, we will
be running ONE DAY delay .
for the entire ·week!

26 Wuh ............................................... J.56.68
52 Wcet s ............................. ·..................... , 109.72

THANK YOU

-Dunking Booth
-Big Bend Cloggers
- Riddle Tractor Pull
- Hrts 6 Crafts
- Karaoke Contest
A you

BFI CUSTOMERS

7 am - 11:30 am
Cool Country Farlt!S

'sRSO&amp;US7

Coolville, Ohio

..

740-667-6100

L.,----------------------~ L-~--~~~~~~~-~
. --~
•

Judge tells sheriff to stay.away from man
Ladies
Diamond
UP Clusters
TO
1/2
OFF

·.
.LUU

For Your ('oil\

University bus kills man .

•

Saturday, September 15,
All Day- Free Admission

Ohio.
Entered u second clan mailing mauer at
Pomei'O)'. Ohio POll: office.
Membu: The AsiOCiated Pren. and thtc Oltio

SUNDA'I ONU'
SUBSCRinlON RATES
By C~rrlu or Motor Roote
OncWed: . .. ...................................... SI.25

northwest Ohio.

Gordy, an attendant at a nearby Clark gas station. "People
around here c&lt;lme ·inside all the time. I cou:ld know him.''
The victim was identified as Ray Styer of Kent. City police
said Styer, who took medication for seizures, may have lost his
balance or had a seizure.
City pollee said they did not expect to file charges against the
driver.
Police said that despite afternoon rain, it was unlikely that
road conditions played a part in the accident.

tinued to move south of the
The National Weather Ser- region into ~entral Kentucky.
SOMERSET, Ky. (AP) - An Ohio man died Friday night
vice says skies will become Some clouds were moving off 0 after running his. ATV into a tree.
·
~lear Saturday night as a high Lake Erie in the north. TernEverett D. Carmack, 59, of Am elia, was riding a 1999 H onda
pressure system continues to · peratures at 5 a.m . ranged four-wheeler about 18 miles west of Somerset when he lost .
DAYTON (AP) - Gov. Bob Taft has rejected a clemency
dominate the weather. This from the mid 50s to the mid co ntrol of the vehicle, veering off the road and striking a tree,
request from a woman serving a 15-year-to-life prison term for
will allow overnight lows to 60s.
according to the Puiaski County Sheriff's Department. •
suffocating her infant daughter in 1994.
be rather cool, dropping into
Forecast
Carmack was pronounced dead at the scene shortly before II
Rebecca Lynn Hopfer, then 17, was convicted of murder in
the 40s in the north and the
. Sunday: Pardy cloudy. High p.m ., police said.
Montgomery County Co mmon Pleas Court in 1995 for
low 50s in the south.
SO, low 53.
secretly delivering her daughter at her Washington Township
Skies will be sunny to partMonday: Pardy cloudy.
. home and then suffocating her in a plastic trash bag.
ly cloudy on Sunday with High 81, low 55.
The Ohio 2nd District Court of Appeals rejected h er appeal,
highs in the 70s.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy.
CLEVELAND (AP) -A Cuyahoga Cou nty Common Pleas and the Ohio Supreme Court declined to hear the case. In
It will be sunny to partly High 82, low 62.
Court jury has awarded a paraplegic woman a $12 .2 million 1998, then-Gov. George Voinovich turned down a clemency
cloudy on Labor Day, with
Wednesday: Partly cloudy. medical malpractice judgment against two doctors and a hospi- request for Hopfer, who is. serving her sentence at the Ohio
temperatures in the 80s.
High 83, low 62.
tal.
Reformatory for Women in Marysville.
Skies continued to clear
Thursday.: Partly cl~udy.
The verdict was .issued Friday against Dr. Aaron Feldman and
Hopfer's father, Kenneth, said ilie family was disappointed
ov~ rnight as a cold front con- High 83,low 62.
his employer, . Cardiovascular Consultants of Cleveland;: Dr. and upset wiih Taft's de cision . He said his daughter has been
James Radack and his employer, Lakeland Emergency Associ- punished more harshly than other young women in similar
ates; and Euclid Hospital.
·
cases.
They had been sued by Mary Shafer, 78. Her lawyers said the
David Franceschelli, Montgomery County assistant prosecudoctors and the hospital misdiagnosed her spinal ble,eding, tor, disputed that.
"
CLEVELAND (AP) - Lake Erie has claimed 35 lives in which her lawyers said led to her paralysis in March 1999.
"This is simply fair compensation for the destructi on of
boating accidents, more than the other Great Lakes in the past
five years, and has more accidents combined than the other four Shafer and her family 's lives;' said Stephen C harms, an attorney
lakes.
for Shafer. "I think this jury sent :i message that doctors need to
While Lake Erie is one of the smallest of the Great Lakes, it talk to one another to explore what is going on with the patient
· is located· amid an. area of 12 million people and is the most instead of blowing the patients off.''
Radack's lawyer, Stephen Walters, and Maria Juki c, a Euclid
p6pular Great Lake 'among boaters and peopl: who fish, the
. Coast Guard says.
,
Hospital spokeswoman, said they disagreed with the ve,rdict and ·
199_6 thr_QI!gh _ would appeal._
- -1- - - on
four
other
Great
Feldman's
lawyer
could
not
be
reached
for
commen~.
enienre~
h
· Lakes, records analyzed by The Plain Dealer s ow.
·.· Hundreds of other accidents are not counted, including those
Every Tuesday Night from 5-7 p.in.
.. in · Canadian waters. Comparable statistics are not available
you can talk with University/Community College
there.
KENT (AP) -A Kent State University bus hit and killed a
representatives from these offices:
· This summer, the Coast Guard has cited 92 boaters in the 50-year-old man who apparently fell while attempting to cross
\ li llllll\ II If I
IHII llll " II Ill \ l I I \ l I I{
Great Lakes for boating under the influen~e. The station in the street Friday afternoon.
·
·, Admissions
• Campus Computing &amp;
Marblehead, which covers South Bass and Kelleys islands, issued
"It was one of the worst things I've seen in my life," said Kate
Networking Services
• Health Services
• CARS
\I I J,l \Ill II If I
• Bookstore
• College of Liberal Arts
1111\11111
&amp; Sciences-Rm. 122
• Records Office
1:11 1\ I I\\' l \1{1 1' If If I
• Human Resources
STEUBENVILLE (AP) -A judge ordered a of searching no other bodies have been found.
• College of Professional
• Finance
: . sheriff Friday to stay away frOm a murder suspect
Moorehead, and his alleged. accomplice, Fred
Studies·Rm. 229
• Financial Aid
. who claims to have killed as many as six people. Horner, 37, ofSteubenville, face charges of mur• MIS
jefferson County judge Michael Bednar der, felonious assault and discharging a firearm
• Community College
. 'g ranted defense attorneys' request that Sheriff into a residence. Both are being held without
"Tuesdays at Rio Grande"
Fred Abdalla be ordered to stay away from bail.
will continue tiJrougllouJ
I
Ill\
II
I{
I,
I
I
'l
IIIli
'
I
Steven Moorehead.
Fall Semester.
The charges include shots fired Aug. 17 into a
• Graduate Study
Bednar granted the request after Abdalla home outside Mingo Junction. A woman inside
admitted Friday he spoke with Moorehead after . the house was wounded.
FYI- Call
I IW&gt;,IW Ill ' IIIII I l·
· defense attorneys told him to leave him alone.
Abdalla said he won't resume the search 1,mless
740-245-5353
Moorehead, 39, of Brilliant, had his prelimi- there is a report of a body found and instead his
nary court hearing Friday in the killing of . officers will concentrate on processing blood
or
Becky Mitchell, 33, of Steubenville. Moorehead evidence to determine if there are other victims.
1-800-282-7201
Tawney Jewelers
told authorities where to find Mitchell's body
The sheriff said he is awaiting test results from
422 Second Avenue
and led Abdalla to areas where he claimed to blood from the back seat of Moorehead's
Gallipolis, OH
have left other bodies. Despite more than a week Chevrolet Cavalier and a Jaguar.

I -~ti:~v~e!s~~w.~i~t~h~·~t~h~e,ib~~u:il.d;•i·~n:~gt~o:::f_i a;~ I--~Jc~~~h~a~dtc5~9~~~~~o~nlteL~ak~e~~from

1meeting
Buckeye Rural Electric·
Cooperative Inc. at Buckeye
Hills Career Center;
Gene Nance, president of
the BREC Board of'Trustees,
announced the cooperative is .
embarking on a four-year,
S22 million plan to upgrade
equipment and improve service. As part of the plan, three
· substations will be added to
the system and another Will
be rebuilt. Also, sections of
old line will be replaced.
·
"With aU this should come
reduced outages and better
service," Nance said.
Nance also informed the
_
membership that a one-year - SPEAKER - General Manager Michael C. Bullock addressincrease
in
charges es th!;l membership at the Buckeye Rural Electric Coopersannounced last year to cover tive annual meeting.
a change in Ohio's tax law
has been put on hold as ried out by many other elecAhern spoke of plans to
favorable financial conditions tric cooperatives around keep a steady source of elechave allowed the cooperative Ohio and the nation, allows tricity for Ohio's co operato make up the -difference each member to co ntribute
from existing funds .
an amount they hardly
lf these factor~ continue · noti ce, an average of $6 a
for the rest of the year, "we'll year, but gives the cooperaprobably be able . to forget tive a chance to donate thouabout that (increase)," he sands to organizations and
said.
individuals in need of assisGeneral Manager Michael tance.
C. Bullock announced the
The membership also
cooperative would start . heard from Tony Ahern, vice
Operation Round-up. T he president for engineering
voluntary program is funded and power supply, ofBuckeye
by members having their bills Power, Inc. Buckeye Power is
rounded up to the nearest the generation cooperative
dollar and the extra change · which makes and supplies the
being pooled in a fund to electricity to Buckeye REC
and the other distribution
help the community.
The program, .which is car- coope ratives in Ohio.

that led to a review of Ohio EPA operations. Skinner's letter summarized the
results of that review.
Ohio EPA Director Christopher Jones
said agency offici'!)s still are reviewing
the 200-page draft decision sent to them
Friday.
" If you look at any state's programs,
you are going to find issues," jones to ld
The Col~mbus Dispatch in a story published Saturday. "We can do better, but
the bottom. line is U.S. EPA says our
programs are good."
Marilyn Wall, conservation chai rwoman for the Sierra Club, said, "1 find
the timing of their decision very interesting. r guess they felt they had to pat
Don Schregardus on the back somehow...

:0: 20(l1 AocuWeather, Inc.

Reunion set·

ans into the VA Health Care System and answer anyVA-related questions.
Please bring the following information:
• A copy of your discharge, separation or DD214;
• Spouse's! dependent's Social Security number.

Sunday, S•pamber :a. 2001

U.S. EPA rejects ·bid to limit state EPA

Ohio weather

Coaches for the Rutland teams are as
follows: Sarah Qualls, ages 4-6; Amanda
Ramage, ages 7-8; Chelsea Ray, ages 7-8;
Dallas Sayre, ages 9-1 0; Kelly Lee, ages 910; Tim Hood, ages 9-1 0; Sherry Wervey,
ages 11-12; Greg Browning, ages 11-12;
Larry Patterson, ages I 1-12.
Coaches for the Pomeroy and Middleport teams are Tome Roell, ages 4-6;
Mark Kimes, ages 7- 8; Lee Kimes, ages 78; Donnie Mohler, · ages 9-1 0; Linda
Chapman, ages 9·1 0; Mike Smith, ages
11-12; Cindy Smith, ages 11 -12.
. Every team will practice on Mondays
and Thursdays except for Mike Smith and
Sherry Wervey' team, which will practice
· ·
Mondays and Fridays.
Games will be announced later.

PageA3

be.

Recognization should given to this year's River Recreation Festival Committee for all their hard work and dedication: Mary Ann Yo~ng, Chairwoman; Carol Blaine; Ray McKinn.iss; Br~nt Eastman;
Brett Bostic; Sherry Maxwell; J"amie Back; Tom Hopkins; Ron Hudson; Missr Cottrell; Connie Robinson; Lorie Neal, staff; Dawn Lewts, staff; Tracy Call, staff; Rachel Bums, s~aff; and Dtck Northup,
.
.
staff. Special thanks to ALL VOLUNTEERS and Holzer Medtcal Center- Top Spons~r 2001
2001 River Recreatlpn Festjyal Sponsors:
McDonald's
Southeastern Equipment
101.5-TheRiver
XX.mocmticParty
GIX:
Mercerville
Convenience
Store
Steven
B. Chapman, C.P.A
Dr. Gary L. Clarke, Inc.
Gene Johnson Chevrolet
Access to Human Resources
Mike Allen
Subway of Gallipolis
AEP-Columbus Southern Power Co.
Dr. Mel Simon
Gills Faim, Gallipolis Feny, WV
Silas Johnson
Super 8 motel-Gallipolis
AEP-Ohio Power Company
Dr. WilliamB: Thomas
GKN Sinter Metals
O'Dell
LumberCon.,any
The
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
E. John Strauss Jr., DDS
Golden Corral
I• B th Rit
Ange s rea e- e
Earth Gnuns'
Grace United Methodist Church
Oak Hill Banks ·
The Gift ofLove Foundation
Auto Trim Center
Ohio Valley Electric Corp.
The Ohio Valley Bank Co.
El ·
Farmers Bank
Haffelt's Mill Outlet
Big River ectnc
Holzer Clinic
Ohio
Valley
Supermarkets,
Inc.
·
The Purple Turtle
Bill Bostic
Floral Fashions
Patty Hayes-Videoe&lt;! the Queen's Conte.st
The Put On Shop
Bob Evans Farms
French Art Colony
Home Town Water Depot
Paul Davies Jewelers, Inc.
The Wiseman Agency, Inc.
Bob Evans Restaurant of Gallipolis
French City Child Care
Image Gallery
Peoples
Bank,
National
Association
Thomas Do-It Center Inc.
Bob Hood
French Town Veterinary Clinic
Indian Creek Golf
Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company
Toler &amp; Toler Insurance
JnfoCision Management Corp.
Bob Poling
Fruth Pharmacy
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Services
Jrvins Glass Service
Brittany's
Gallia Co. Children's Horne
Pt. Pleasant Lodge 731 Loyal Order of Moose Turnpike Ford-Gallipolis
Broughton Foods Company
· Gallia Co. Convention &amp; Visitor's Bureau J.E. Morrison and Associates
Randy Finney
University ofRio Grande
JakeBapst
Burlile Oil
Gallia Co. Safety Council
Rebeccas
US Cellular
Jeffrey E. Smith
Caldwell Miller Financial Group, Inc.
Galli a Health Partners, LLC .
Republican Party
Walker Machinery of Jacks&lt;ml
Joey Wilcoxon
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn
Gallipolis Area Jaycees
Reverend
Robert
D.
Grubb
Wal-Mart
Gallipolis #2605
Johnson's Grocery
Carmichaels Farm&amp; Lawn, Inc.
Gallipolis Chiropractic Center
Rockwell Automation·
JoyFM
Wee Cart' Day Care
City of Gallipolis
Gallipolis Emblem Club
Ron
Caudill
Karat
Patch
Welsh E'lectric
Coca Cola Enterprises Bottling Company Gallipolis EMS
Sew
Perfect
Kroger's of Gallipolis
William Ann Motel
•
Corbin and Snyder Furniture Co.
·
Gallipolis'Fire Dept.
SFS
Truck
Sales
·Kyger
Dental
Associates,
Inc.
Willis Tire Company.
Crown Excavating
Gallipolis Junior Women's Club
Materials,
Inc.
Shelly
Letart
Sand,
Gallipolis
Ferry,
WV
Wiseman Real Estate, Inc.
Gallipolis Police Dept.
' D &amp; L RV
Skyline'Lanes, Inc.
Lorobi 's Downtown
WV Electric Supply
Daolltx
Gallipolis Retail Merchants Ass~c.
Inc.
Smith
;

...

,,

/I

�• •

\
•

PageA4

1n1on
•

sunday, September 1, 1001

·
W'

: Sunday, Sept. 2
: AccuWeather· forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures

OHIO

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Larry Boyer
Advertising Manager

f

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Letten to the tditor ar~ wtlcomt. TlttJ !ltould H kttlhdn JOO words. Alllttttn
art s11bjut ,, mitinr and mutt N siflttd anJ ilul11dt aJdrtn ami ttltphtmt munb.tr.
Nu 1uuig11ed lenen wiU be pllblUittd. Uttm sltoulil In /11 KfHIIi /lUll, Glldrtmng
iuues, 'wt peNontdititt.
The opiniom expnsstd ln tilt coluiiJII btlow tut tlrt tolf.w mu of tAt OhW W.llry
Publishing Co. 'I editori~l ~ unks,. otherwist 1tOied.

••

i /
•/

Martinsburg 56"n8"

' ./ 0'

/~

•. Ir..====;::-t/
Charleston /54'/84' I

(J
""\
kV.

/'-... . . . . ...........~

:

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"

,

Of

\) ~-/\_,/.._.1 Bl:;;.;:~ lwm• I

NATIONAL VIEW

....
_

0

.~

SIJnny pt_c~

...

......

• 2001 AccuWeather, Inc.

~ ollliillb:. ~ -

·~ · ~ '/~ ·.~.·
Cloudy

st'lowers T·slorrns

Rain

OUR READERS' VIEWS

• Times Unio,, Alba11y, NY., on the dwindling national surplus:
'
...
Democrats have good reason to excoriate the Bush adminiStration tor letting surplus money slip away by the billions.
But they can 't escape all the blame for the sudden reversal in .
Dear ·Editor,
financi"l fortune. They, too, must share the guilt for lending
This letter is in response to the "no
support to the $1.35 trillion tax cur that was pushed through
smoking" policy the Meigs County
Congress by President Bush. And they bear the blame for failHealth Departm~nt is trying to ram
ing to speak out earlier, when the warning signs were on the
down everyone's throat.
horizon.
Everybody who believes in individual
It was only last autumn, during the presidential campaign,
freedoms needs to mount up and be at
when politicians of both camps wei:e talking of national budthe Meigs High Schpol on Sept. 6 at .6
get surpluses stretching as far as the eye could see. But now,
p.m.
almo&gt;t in 4 blink, those rosy predictions have faded. On
I'm sure nobody has a problem with
Wednesday, the Bush administration announced that outside of
no smoking in places where people
Social Security, there will be no surplus to speak offor· the ~s~ ,
must go (e.g., hospitals, government
cal yt·ar ending Sept. 30. And there's more bad news: Things
buildings, lobbies, elevators and the
won't improve for the next three or four years.
like), but when. we elected bureaucrats
Just last spring, the White House had projected a non-Soc~al
who think they are so morally and
Security surplus of$122 billion. Now it expects only $600 nulintellectually superior that they tell
lion, which is woefully inadequate to fund any of the ambitious
individual business what to do, it's time
programs that the Bush administration favors, including
to stand up and put them io their place!
Medicare prescription drug coverage, or that the Democrats
Apparendy, there is too much free
themselves support.
time and money at the health departAt long last, leading Democrats are turning up the heat on
ment.
Mr. !lush. Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., sounds something like
·~-~"""""T avtd -SfoClirrian olilie Reagan era, w!ien lie lambastes Mr. -.--1-'ve-got-a few -questions:
(1) Will there be "no smoking" rooms
Bush for claiming "we_ could affori:l his massive tax cut, a major
at the Meigs Morel?
defense buildup, more money for education, while paying
(2) Will "mom and pop" businesses be
down the debt and protecting Social Security and Medican:."
·affeCted'
(3) Since you've got to be 20 feet
. All of this should cool Mr. Bush's enthusiasm for some of his
away from a building to smoke, are
big-ticket. agenda items, including a missile defense shield and
people who work on Court Street
· an $1 H billion increase in military spending next year. ·
going to go in the nriddle of Court
But so far, there are no signs of a change in priorities, much
Street to smoke?
·: less even a hint of revisiting the tax cur before a bad situation
(4) Since law enforcement is going to
: becomes worse ....
be involved, are the police going to
random search businesses to see if
they're marching lock-step? Is ·the
health department going to pay
"snitches'' to spy on businesses? What
else is in the fascist-like mind?
I know what I'd do if I had a small
business: I would post a "no trespassing"
sign for health depart'!'ent workers and
police.
Restaurants have "no smoking" sections. Most businesses have their own
smoking policy. T here isn't a problem
- . except with the health department.
On Aug. 23, I called the health
departmellt, asking for a copy of the
o~der. The lady wllo answered the teleplione said l could pick it up the next
day.
The following day, I went to pick up
the order, but rh&lt;iy said they weren't
giving any copies until the Sept. 6 high
school . meeting. Why the sudden
change? Bureaucrats make rules to suit
themselves, not the taxpayer.
The Mason County Health Department· tried this "no ' smoking" order· a
few months ago. The county commission and health department were put in
their place at Point Pleasant High
School.
I'll be at Meigs. Will you?
Live free!
Lowell W. Rogers
New Haven, WVa.

Valley." Her insurance agent told her who agree with me.
that her premiums are higher down
Tom Deeter
here because of the area.
Racine
I have been told the percentage of
c~ncer patients is higher here than any
Law ,....
other place in the United States. Do
not try and say this is from cigarettes, or
Dear Editor,
that cigarette smokers have caused the
Meigs County has many retail busic
hole to form in the ozone layer. Wake ness places and few Jaw enforcement
up to the fact that we live in a "high people. The health department's prorisk" area.
.
posed anti-smoking law will likely be
l would never encourage anyone to broken if it does, in fact, become a law.
take up smoking, but I have known . In 1999, the W~rld Health Organizamore than a few people in this area to tion released the results of a 10-year
succumb to cancer who never smoked study on second smoke. They found it
at all. My brother was one of them, and was not related to any disease or illness.
he lived his entire life in Meigs Coun- All of these facts should be considered
ty.
bef~re giving us one more silly law.
[n my lifetime, I have seen the govI'll end with a quote from 1771 by
ernment pass laws that have slowly but Samuel Adams: "If we suffer tamely an
surely taken away more of our rights as attack on our liberty, we encourage .it,
citizens. When they were passing laws and involve others in our doom."
. on the driver's responsibility, they said
Michael Grueser
people would nor ~os~ r~eir driving _
Pomeroy- privileges if they didn't carry the insurance, but I would like to see you try to
buy auto tags without having the insurance.
The seat belt Jaw! t · had a wife and
Dear Editor,
five children, and we managed to raise
Those in charge of the Meigs Counthem without a seat belt in the car. I ty Fair need to rethink their priorities.
wonder how? I consider driving ni.y car Although I visited the fair on no less
with or without a seat belt one of my than four separate occasions, not one of
rights.
•
those times was .the Junior Fair BuildIs the government really interested in ing open . .
our safety, or.is.it the revenue that the
Needless to say, my 11-year-old
seat belt violation brings in? (That is daughter was very disappointed that I
another law that they said would never never got to see her 4H club's exhibit,
be mandatory).
not to mention my own frustration at
My grand-daughter came to visit me being prevented from enjoying the fruit
with her baby and she strapped the of her efforts.
baby in the car according to scat belt
The straw that broke the camel's
Jaws. When she arrived home, the baby back, however, was the fact that one of
had gotten one of the ties from her hat the Junior Fair officials outright lied to
into her mouth and could have swal - me. After arriving Saturday afternoon
lowed or choked on it. The point I am and finding the. Junior Fair Building
making is that the way babies are closed yet again, I complained at the
required-to be fastened in seat belts, my secretary 's office, whereupon the buck
granddaughter could not see the baby's was passed to the Junior Fair Office,
face while driving. '
When my family and 1 went to the
To me the danger of having babies Junior Fair Office; I was promised the
vomiting or choking because the per- building would re-open from 8-10 p.m.
son driving the car cannot see the on Saturday night (we were also told
baby's face is a greater risk than if the we could come back Sunday from 1-3
baby faces the front of the car. But by p.m.). Of course, when we returned at
all means we must obey the seat belt 8 p.m. on Saturday .night the building
law!
was still closed.
We can't hunt, jish, drive a car or any
After waiting 35 minutes. for it to
other vehicle without a license. We canopen, we gave up and trudged back,
not own property without paying taxes only to find the Junior Fair Office
year after year. Years ago we voted on closed and not a soul around. On yt!"t
higher taxes for a nice hospital.:Where our final attempt on Sunday, we arrived
is the hospital 'now?
at 2 p.m. ro find an open Junior Fair
We have passed three levies for the Building with 95 .Percent of the
Meigs EMS. Now they've started
charging for their services. Before the exhibits gone (including my daughters).
Meigs EMS came into being, we had
On top of this, by 5 P·H?· Saturday, all
some · outstanding and caring people of the ammals at the fair_ had diSapwork'mg 0 n the Volunteer ' Emergency . dpeared dand on one of the highest attenSquads. They were volunteer, but they ance ays. . . .
,
,
were great people. R.acine had the
How Is thts JUStified. Why _can r peofinesr cNow, when we call the EMS per- pie sell ~nd re~ove t?e1r ammals after
son it is always the Meigs EMS. They the fa1r ts over. What s the rush to sell
will show up regardless of how long it during the fair?
Dear Editor,
takes them to get there, and whether
As fair officials ponder the drop in
Last week I read in The Daily . Sen- they help you or do not help you.
receipts this year, they need to consider
tine! about Pomeroy becoming a
l am 7"1 years old and I have seen fundamentals of customer value and the
smoke-free town. It also said 5 percent many changes, not all of them good. 1 foundations of rural county fair attenof the deaths in Meigs County are . feel that through the years we're being dance. If not for the 4H and FFA kids,
smoke-related.
told how to live our Jives, and my mes- there would be no fai~. And if not for
I wonder if the Meigs County Health sage to the merchants and business peo- parents and club organizer volunteers,
Department considered the fact that pie of Pomeroy is this: If I cannot there would be no 4H or FFA.
just maybe some of the deaths and sick- smoke a cigarette in your restaurant in
What did I get for my $14 season ·
ness m the county are related to the a smoking · area, after eating, then I'll pass? Dirty shoes, a disenchanted child,
. environmcllt here in the Ohio Valley. ' not shop in Pomeroy at all. I will not some wasted time, and a liar for a youth
A few years ago my daughter moved -shop for groceries, building materials, leader and role model.
to this area from Columbus. She soon gasoline, not even a pack of gum.
.I think I'll pocket the $14 next year.
l am not alone in these sentiments. I
D.B. Stua~t
started h.wing a lot of sinus problems.
Her dctctor said, "Welcome tp the Ohio have talked with quite a few people"
Syracuse

Freedom violated

Berry's WoJid
.

futile
~

'l

,

MORGANTOWN (AP) - The Occupational Safety and
Health Administration has closed the investigation into the
MOUNT OLIVE (AP) - Howard Painter retired Friday as deadly collapse of a power plant coal silo,
warden of the maximum-security Mount Olive Correctional
"We could nor conclude what caused the collapse, so we did
Complex, five months after suffering a mild heart attack.
nor issue any citations," Kate Dugan, an OSHA spokeswoman
Painter served 31 years in the Division of Corrections and in Philadelphia, said Friday.
was the prison's warden since August 1998. He had returned to
Something inside the Morgantown Energy Associates silo
gave way March 2, crushing Ronald E. Wolff, 32, of Morganwork in late May. ·
" It has been a challenge and a plea~ure working with the staff town beneath some 1,400 tons of coal and debris. ·
to open ihe first new penitentiary in West Virginia that has been
Wolff was a fuel handler, responsible for blending the crushed
coal as it was fed down a conveyor in the. silo.
built in over 50 years," Painter said.
Painter also worked at work-release .centers in Beckley and
No .safety violations were uncovered during the nearly sixCharleston, the Huttonsville Correctional Center, the correc- month investigation, Dugan said.
tions academy and the Regional Jail and Correctional Facility
Dominion .Energy is the majority owner of the silo,
Authority.
The power plant generates electricity for Allegheny Power
Painter's replacement was not ·immediately named. A deputy · and provides steam heat for West Virginia University.
warden, Lt. Col. Mike Coleman, was in charge of the prison
during Painter's recent illness.

Kmart removes price signs

•

•

FirsUacly coming to W.Va.

DETROIT (AP) - Kmart Corp. has removed its "Dare to
Compare" signs from its stores after being accused of deceptive
advertising il\ a lawsuit brought by its discount rival Target Corp.
As a result of Kmart's removal of the signs, Target withdrew its
request for a court order requiring Kmart to take them down.
Target has. not withdrawn the lawsuit, however.
. Target has charged that the signs comparing Kmart's prices
wlth those of its competitors often cited outdated or inaccurate
pnce.s.
.
. James T. Hale, Target executive vice president and general
counsel, hailed Kmarr's decision to remove the signs,
"It all had to do with competing honestly;• he said Friday.
Kmart said in a statement that the study on which Target
based its accusations was "serious!y flawed" and had numerous

. CHARLESTON (AP) - First lady Laura Bush will visit
West Virginia next month, U.S. Rep. Shelley Moore Capito said
•
Friday.
Capito, R-WVa., is sponsoring a Sept. 21 volunteer literacy
program event in Charleston in which Bush has agreed to participate. .
Reading is one 9f Laura Bush's favorite causes, according to
the White House Web site. ·
The literacy event is open to the public and will honor volunteers from around the stare. Details are still being worked out,
The visit wiD be Bush's lirst to Charleston since August 2000,
when she and the president stopped on their way to the
'
Republican Nation~! Convention.
'
errors.
·1
She was last in West Virginia a week .before the November
"It is unfortunate when a competitor has to resort to frivqlous
election, at a political rally at Morgan~own_ High Schoo~-pncmg
said Janet Kelley, Kmart
senior vice president and general counsel.

ELKINS (AP) - Elkins ·residents know they can have lousy
·weather. Now, a national publication agrees.
Their city is ranked as having the seventh-worst weather in
.the country by the 2002 Farmer's Almanac. ·
·
; "I believe it. I believe it," Norman -Lowman said Friday.
1 Kevin Wiseman said winters in Elkins are "usually nasty,
, slushy, rainy kind of weather."
·
Elkins averages 171 rainy days and 211 cloudy days per year,
ac.cording to the Farmer's Almanac's Web site. The Randolph
County city was tied with Syracuse, N.Y., for the fourth raini. est U.S. city.
Elkins recorded 8.78 inches in July, the sixth wettest July on
.. record, according to the National Weather Service.
~ }'!-just -left the -tanning-bed because -I can't find any sunny
days," Trisha Kelly said.
.
Jerry Siminons, a hardware store employee, said some. people
may not care for all the foul weather, but it is good for business.
CHARLESTON (AP) -· Former Gov. Cecil Underwood
"Things freeze, Things break. We have to sell and help people was back in the Capitol on Friday .for the unveiling of his secsurvive the winter. They all come to see us," he said,
ond official portrait.
Robert Cotrell said snow, clouds and rain do not bother him,
Underwood lost his bid for re-election last year to Gov. Bob
"I'm ready for it every ye~r." he said.
·wise, who also attended the ceremony.
"Governor Underwood is.a man who has spent his entire life
committed to public service and remains committed to helping
the people of our great state," Wise said.
MORGANTOWN (AP) -A Morgantown man was con- · Underwood is the only governor in We.st Virginia history to
·.' Victed of involuntary manslaughter Friday night in the shoot- have two portraits.
ing of a Pennsylvania man.
When elected to his first term in 1956, he was the youngest
: ' Ryan B. Nicholas, 28, face! up to a year in prison when sen- governor in state history. During his second term, he was the
: tenced in Monongalia County Circuit Court. He still faces an oldest.
·· aggravated robbery charge, which carries a penalty of up to I 0
The portrait, which will hang in the governor's reception
.
.
. years upon conviction.
room, was done by artist James Fox, whose father Charles J. Fox,
· . Nicholas was accused of fatally shootmg Benny H. Collms, painted the first Underwood portrait.
·130, of Uniontown, Pa., last October.
Prosecutors said Nicholas kept the body in his apartment for
' 11 days before dumping it !Jnder a bridge.
IUI1511
Nicholas said he shot Collins in self-defense during an arguOne Stop Shop
,·ment over· a stolen marijuana pipe. Nicholas said he kept the
For Tanning
'body in his apartment because he couldn't get a car to take it
Beds!
to Pennsylvania and dump it.

.

Underwood portrait unveiled

·Morgantown man convicted

--

Reel Cro$s chapter drops charter
BLUEFIELD (AP) -The East River Mountain Area Chap. ter of the American Red Cross has given up its charter after an
·· investigation uncovered administrative problems.
.
" The chapter's board of directors voted. 8-2 Thurday _to r«ch_n. quish the charter and become a certified dehve_ry sernce urut.
The-change allows the Red Cross to main tam a presence 111
· the region, but the operation's adnrinistrative d~ties will be handled elsewhere, said Chris Dale, state field services manager for
· · the American Red Cross.
"The importa'!t thing to remember is that the Red Cross has
been a part _of this. community for 80 years and the Red Cro~s
, isri't going to leave, whether it's a chartered chapter or a certified delivery unit," Dale, said.
Services will continue at the unit that serves Mercer County
and three ,counties in Virginia: Tazewell, Bland and Wythe.
The Bluefield office has two full-time employees and one
partcrime employee.
· ·
Charlene Meade, who had directed the Bluefield chap~er for
' the past 18 years, is no longer employed there. Dale had earlier
refused to say whether she was fired, but he did say she did not

qu~he changes resul~ed from a fa~t-finding visit initiated by t~e
Mid-Atlantic R.egional Office of the Amencan Red Cross

.

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~~~~~ .

111

Holzer Clinic

Announces Our Newest
Addition ofthe
Regional Orthopedic Center

HOLZER
CLINIC

His interests:
General Orthopecllca
Lower Extremity Surgery
Joint Replacement

Orthopedic Excellence for all
the Mid-Ohio Valley.

1 · Forgey Club Lambs
For Buying My
2001 Market Lamb

'

Dr. Shute joins orthop{!dic surgeons
. W(l}'ne Amendt, MD, Russell Clarke, MD.
Kenneth Hanington. MD, and Arnold ]&gt;enlx, MD.

.e~
'

Gerald Shute, MD

. ·Regional
Orthopedic Center

',f1114jt

"'1

'

created by the Legislature in 1934.
When lawmakers meet next year, the
PLC will ask them to adopt legislation to
require public input on possible leases and
how the money should be spent.
Another proposal would require the
state to involve mineral leasing experts
and niining engineers in drafting and
negotiating future leases.
"These policies accothplish the objectives and reform that the governor man~
dated for us and have a more open
process rhat involves communities and
individuals," Hamrick said.
Using leasing professionals, lawyers and
' nrining engineers .as consultants would
prevent the state from "entering into a
lease where we lose the ability to seek
damages and water '\'placement," Hamrick said.

OSHA wraps up investigation

Mount Olive warden retires

Elkins has worst weather

Fair disappointing

1,.

from its legal obligation to replace water
supplies that might be lost during mining.
The company also was given the right to
haul coal through th e stare forest.
The PLC's board agreed Friday ro send
Vantage a letter asking the company to
meet so both sides could renegotiate
some of the rroubling issues, said Ed
Hamrick, the PLC's board president and
director of the state Division of Natural
Resources.
Changes in how th e PLC conducts its
business was ordered by Gov. Bob Wise.
Also, a portion of the money earned
through the leases would benefit the forest.
The PLC, which manages real estate
owned by the DNR and the Division of
Forestry, has had the right to lease stateowned minerals and timber since it was

Hanover, Md .

OAK HILL (AP) - A Raleigh County man drowned after
his inflatable kayak became trapped against a rock as he was
negotiating a rapid on the New River.
,
The 29-year-old Beckley man has not been identified pend-ing notification of relatives, said Chief Ranger Gary Hartley
·
with the National Park Service.
Hartley said the man was one of three people who were
going down the river in inflatable kayaks Thursday evening.
One of the kayaks became pinned against a rock between
Cunard and Fayette Station, and the victim was pulled under
· the water.
·
The other boaters tried to free the trapped "boat, but gave up
after about an hour. They went on down the river to Fayette
Station, then drove to Fayetteville to call for help, Hartley said.
Park Service personnel, using ropes an'a pulleys, pulled the
~oat out Friday morning and recovered the body.

Opposes ban

.,

Sunday, September :z. 1001

Flurries

. Man d!Owns in New River

Democrats blaming Bush
for shrinking surplus

!.

HUNTINGTON, WVa. (AP) -West
Virginians would have greater say in how
state-owned minerals and land are leased
if the Legislature adopts changes proposed by the Public Land Corp.
. The policies adopted Friday stem from
complaints about how the PLC leased the
rights to mine coal under 8,123 acres of
Cabwaylingo State Forest in 1999. The
agency awarded leases without holding a
public meeting.
Money raised through the leases with
Massey Energy Co. subsidiary Vantage
Coal Co. and Pen Coal of Brentwood,
Tenn., was originally earmarked for a
new PLC building in Fairmont. The PLC
was to receive at least $5 nrillion.
Vantage's lease also included provisions
to keep itS royalty costs low, even as ·coal
prices increased. It also exempted V311tage

PA.

0

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

S

legislature could give resident~ more-say

: West Virginia weather
Gallipolis, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

ast v..cn_gl_•a
___- :. . . . :.. _Pag__..;.e_As
81!

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Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

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PageA4

1n1on
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sunday, September 1, 1001

·
W'

: Sunday, Sept. 2
: AccuWeather· forecast for daytime conditions, low/high temperatures

OHIO

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles W. Govey
Publisher
Larry Boyer
Advertising Manager

f

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

Letten to the tditor ar~ wtlcomt. TlttJ !ltould H kttlhdn JOO words. Alllttttn
art s11bjut ,, mitinr and mutt N siflttd anJ ilul11dt aJdrtn ami ttltphtmt munb.tr.
Nu 1uuig11ed lenen wiU be pllblUittd. Uttm sltoulil In /11 KfHIIi /lUll, Glldrtmng
iuues, 'wt peNontdititt.
The opiniom expnsstd ln tilt coluiiJII btlow tut tlrt tolf.w mu of tAt OhW W.llry
Publishing Co. 'I editori~l ~ unks,. otherwist 1tOied.

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NATIONAL VIEW

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• 2001 AccuWeather, Inc.

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Cloudy

st'lowers T·slorrns

Rain

OUR READERS' VIEWS

• Times Unio,, Alba11y, NY., on the dwindling national surplus:
'
...
Democrats have good reason to excoriate the Bush adminiStration tor letting surplus money slip away by the billions.
But they can 't escape all the blame for the sudden reversal in .
Dear ·Editor,
financi"l fortune. They, too, must share the guilt for lending
This letter is in response to the "no
support to the $1.35 trillion tax cur that was pushed through
smoking" policy the Meigs County
Congress by President Bush. And they bear the blame for failHealth Departm~nt is trying to ram
ing to speak out earlier, when the warning signs were on the
down everyone's throat.
horizon.
Everybody who believes in individual
It was only last autumn, during the presidential campaign,
freedoms needs to mount up and be at
when politicians of both camps wei:e talking of national budthe Meigs High Schpol on Sept. 6 at .6
get surpluses stretching as far as the eye could see. But now,
p.m.
almo&gt;t in 4 blink, those rosy predictions have faded. On
I'm sure nobody has a problem with
Wednesday, the Bush administration announced that outside of
no smoking in places where people
Social Security, there will be no surplus to speak offor· the ~s~ ,
must go (e.g., hospitals, government
cal yt·ar ending Sept. 30. And there's more bad news: Things
buildings, lobbies, elevators and the
won't improve for the next three or four years.
like), but when. we elected bureaucrats
Just last spring, the White House had projected a non-Soc~al
who think they are so morally and
Security surplus of$122 billion. Now it expects only $600 nulintellectually superior that they tell
lion, which is woefully inadequate to fund any of the ambitious
individual business what to do, it's time
programs that the Bush administration favors, including
to stand up and put them io their place!
Medicare prescription drug coverage, or that the Democrats
Apparendy, there is too much free
themselves support.
time and money at the health departAt long last, leading Democrats are turning up the heat on
ment.
Mr. !lush. Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., sounds something like
·~-~"""""T avtd -SfoClirrian olilie Reagan era, w!ien lie lambastes Mr. -.--1-'ve-got-a few -questions:
(1) Will there be "no smoking" rooms
Bush for claiming "we_ could affori:l his massive tax cut, a major
at the Meigs Morel?
defense buildup, more money for education, while paying
(2) Will "mom and pop" businesses be
down the debt and protecting Social Security and Medican:."
·affeCted'
(3) Since you've got to be 20 feet
. All of this should cool Mr. Bush's enthusiasm for some of his
away from a building to smoke, are
big-ticket. agenda items, including a missile defense shield and
people who work on Court Street
· an $1 H billion increase in military spending next year. ·
going to go in the nriddle of Court
But so far, there are no signs of a change in priorities, much
Street to smoke?
·: less even a hint of revisiting the tax cur before a bad situation
(4) Since law enforcement is going to
: becomes worse ....
be involved, are the police going to
random search businesses to see if
they're marching lock-step? Is ·the
health department going to pay
"snitches'' to spy on businesses? What
else is in the fascist-like mind?
I know what I'd do if I had a small
business: I would post a "no trespassing"
sign for health depart'!'ent workers and
police.
Restaurants have "no smoking" sections. Most businesses have their own
smoking policy. T here isn't a problem
- . except with the health department.
On Aug. 23, I called the health
departmellt, asking for a copy of the
o~der. The lady wllo answered the teleplione said l could pick it up the next
day.
The following day, I went to pick up
the order, but rh&lt;iy said they weren't
giving any copies until the Sept. 6 high
school . meeting. Why the sudden
change? Bureaucrats make rules to suit
themselves, not the taxpayer.
The Mason County Health Department· tried this "no ' smoking" order· a
few months ago. The county commission and health department were put in
their place at Point Pleasant High
School.
I'll be at Meigs. Will you?
Live free!
Lowell W. Rogers
New Haven, WVa.

Valley." Her insurance agent told her who agree with me.
that her premiums are higher down
Tom Deeter
here because of the area.
Racine
I have been told the percentage of
c~ncer patients is higher here than any
Law ,....
other place in the United States. Do
not try and say this is from cigarettes, or
Dear Editor,
that cigarette smokers have caused the
Meigs County has many retail busic
hole to form in the ozone layer. Wake ness places and few Jaw enforcement
up to the fact that we live in a "high people. The health department's prorisk" area.
.
posed anti-smoking law will likely be
l would never encourage anyone to broken if it does, in fact, become a law.
take up smoking, but I have known . In 1999, the W~rld Health Organizamore than a few people in this area to tion released the results of a 10-year
succumb to cancer who never smoked study on second smoke. They found it
at all. My brother was one of them, and was not related to any disease or illness.
he lived his entire life in Meigs Coun- All of these facts should be considered
ty.
bef~re giving us one more silly law.
[n my lifetime, I have seen the govI'll end with a quote from 1771 by
ernment pass laws that have slowly but Samuel Adams: "If we suffer tamely an
surely taken away more of our rights as attack on our liberty, we encourage .it,
citizens. When they were passing laws and involve others in our doom."
. on the driver's responsibility, they said
Michael Grueser
people would nor ~os~ r~eir driving _
Pomeroy- privileges if they didn't carry the insurance, but I would like to see you try to
buy auto tags without having the insurance.
The seat belt Jaw! t · had a wife and
Dear Editor,
five children, and we managed to raise
Those in charge of the Meigs Counthem without a seat belt in the car. I ty Fair need to rethink their priorities.
wonder how? I consider driving ni.y car Although I visited the fair on no less
with or without a seat belt one of my than four separate occasions, not one of
rights.
•
those times was .the Junior Fair BuildIs the government really interested in ing open . .
our safety, or.is.it the revenue that the
Needless to say, my 11-year-old
seat belt violation brings in? (That is daughter was very disappointed that I
another law that they said would never never got to see her 4H club's exhibit,
be mandatory).
not to mention my own frustration at
My grand-daughter came to visit me being prevented from enjoying the fruit
with her baby and she strapped the of her efforts.
baby in the car according to scat belt
The straw that broke the camel's
Jaws. When she arrived home, the baby back, however, was the fact that one of
had gotten one of the ties from her hat the Junior Fair officials outright lied to
into her mouth and could have swal - me. After arriving Saturday afternoon
lowed or choked on it. The point I am and finding the. Junior Fair Building
making is that the way babies are closed yet again, I complained at the
required-to be fastened in seat belts, my secretary 's office, whereupon the buck
granddaughter could not see the baby's was passed to the Junior Fair Office,
face while driving. '
When my family and 1 went to the
To me the danger of having babies Junior Fair Office; I was promised the
vomiting or choking because the per- building would re-open from 8-10 p.m.
son driving the car cannot see the on Saturday night (we were also told
baby's face is a greater risk than if the we could come back Sunday from 1-3
baby faces the front of the car. But by p.m.). Of course, when we returned at
all means we must obey the seat belt 8 p.m. on Saturday .night the building
law!
was still closed.
We can't hunt, jish, drive a car or any
After waiting 35 minutes. for it to
other vehicle without a license. We canopen, we gave up and trudged back,
not own property without paying taxes only to find the Junior Fair Office
year after year. Years ago we voted on closed and not a soul around. On yt!"t
higher taxes for a nice hospital.:Where our final attempt on Sunday, we arrived
is the hospital 'now?
at 2 p.m. ro find an open Junior Fair
We have passed three levies for the Building with 95 .Percent of the
Meigs EMS. Now they've started
charging for their services. Before the exhibits gone (including my daughters).
Meigs EMS came into being, we had
On top of this, by 5 P·H?· Saturday, all
some · outstanding and caring people of the ammals at the fair_ had diSapwork'mg 0 n the Volunteer ' Emergency . dpeared dand on one of the highest attenSquads. They were volunteer, but they ance ays. . . .
,
,
were great people. R.acine had the
How Is thts JUStified. Why _can r peofinesr cNow, when we call the EMS per- pie sell ~nd re~ove t?e1r ammals after
son it is always the Meigs EMS. They the fa1r ts over. What s the rush to sell
will show up regardless of how long it during the fair?
Dear Editor,
takes them to get there, and whether
As fair officials ponder the drop in
Last week I read in The Daily . Sen- they help you or do not help you.
receipts this year, they need to consider
tine! about Pomeroy becoming a
l am 7"1 years old and I have seen fundamentals of customer value and the
smoke-free town. It also said 5 percent many changes, not all of them good. 1 foundations of rural county fair attenof the deaths in Meigs County are . feel that through the years we're being dance. If not for the 4H and FFA kids,
smoke-related.
told how to live our Jives, and my mes- there would be no fai~. And if not for
I wonder if the Meigs County Health sage to the merchants and business peo- parents and club organizer volunteers,
Department considered the fact that pie of Pomeroy is this: If I cannot there would be no 4H or FFA.
just maybe some of the deaths and sick- smoke a cigarette in your restaurant in
What did I get for my $14 season ·
ness m the county are related to the a smoking · area, after eating, then I'll pass? Dirty shoes, a disenchanted child,
. environmcllt here in the Ohio Valley. ' not shop in Pomeroy at all. I will not some wasted time, and a liar for a youth
A few years ago my daughter moved -shop for groceries, building materials, leader and role model.
to this area from Columbus. She soon gasoline, not even a pack of gum.
.I think I'll pocket the $14 next year.
l am not alone in these sentiments. I
D.B. Stua~t
started h.wing a lot of sinus problems.
Her dctctor said, "Welcome tp the Ohio have talked with quite a few people"
Syracuse

Freedom violated

Berry's WoJid
.

futile
~

'l

,

MORGANTOWN (AP) - The Occupational Safety and
Health Administration has closed the investigation into the
MOUNT OLIVE (AP) - Howard Painter retired Friday as deadly collapse of a power plant coal silo,
warden of the maximum-security Mount Olive Correctional
"We could nor conclude what caused the collapse, so we did
Complex, five months after suffering a mild heart attack.
nor issue any citations," Kate Dugan, an OSHA spokeswoman
Painter served 31 years in the Division of Corrections and in Philadelphia, said Friday.
was the prison's warden since August 1998. He had returned to
Something inside the Morgantown Energy Associates silo
gave way March 2, crushing Ronald E. Wolff, 32, of Morganwork in late May. ·
" It has been a challenge and a plea~ure working with the staff town beneath some 1,400 tons of coal and debris. ·
to open ihe first new penitentiary in West Virginia that has been
Wolff was a fuel handler, responsible for blending the crushed
coal as it was fed down a conveyor in the. silo.
built in over 50 years," Painter said.
Painter also worked at work-release .centers in Beckley and
No .safety violations were uncovered during the nearly sixCharleston, the Huttonsville Correctional Center, the correc- month investigation, Dugan said.
tions academy and the Regional Jail and Correctional Facility
Dominion .Energy is the majority owner of the silo,
Authority.
The power plant generates electricity for Allegheny Power
Painter's replacement was not ·immediately named. A deputy · and provides steam heat for West Virginia University.
warden, Lt. Col. Mike Coleman, was in charge of the prison
during Painter's recent illness.

Kmart removes price signs

•

•

FirsUacly coming to W.Va.

DETROIT (AP) - Kmart Corp. has removed its "Dare to
Compare" signs from its stores after being accused of deceptive
advertising il\ a lawsuit brought by its discount rival Target Corp.
As a result of Kmart's removal of the signs, Target withdrew its
request for a court order requiring Kmart to take them down.
Target has. not withdrawn the lawsuit, however.
. Target has charged that the signs comparing Kmart's prices
wlth those of its competitors often cited outdated or inaccurate
pnce.s.
.
. James T. Hale, Target executive vice president and general
counsel, hailed Kmarr's decision to remove the signs,
"It all had to do with competing honestly;• he said Friday.
Kmart said in a statement that the study on which Target
based its accusations was "serious!y flawed" and had numerous

. CHARLESTON (AP) - First lady Laura Bush will visit
West Virginia next month, U.S. Rep. Shelley Moore Capito said
•
Friday.
Capito, R-WVa., is sponsoring a Sept. 21 volunteer literacy
program event in Charleston in which Bush has agreed to participate. .
Reading is one 9f Laura Bush's favorite causes, according to
the White House Web site. ·
The literacy event is open to the public and will honor volunteers from around the stare. Details are still being worked out,
The visit wiD be Bush's lirst to Charleston since August 2000,
when she and the president stopped on their way to the
'
Republican Nation~! Convention.
'
errors.
·1
She was last in West Virginia a week .before the November
"It is unfortunate when a competitor has to resort to frivqlous
election, at a political rally at Morgan~own_ High Schoo~-pncmg
said Janet Kelley, Kmart
senior vice president and general counsel.

ELKINS (AP) - Elkins ·residents know they can have lousy
·weather. Now, a national publication agrees.
Their city is ranked as having the seventh-worst weather in
.the country by the 2002 Farmer's Almanac. ·
·
; "I believe it. I believe it," Norman -Lowman said Friday.
1 Kevin Wiseman said winters in Elkins are "usually nasty,
, slushy, rainy kind of weather."
·
Elkins averages 171 rainy days and 211 cloudy days per year,
ac.cording to the Farmer's Almanac's Web site. The Randolph
County city was tied with Syracuse, N.Y., for the fourth raini. est U.S. city.
Elkins recorded 8.78 inches in July, the sixth wettest July on
.. record, according to the National Weather Service.
~ }'!-just -left the -tanning-bed because -I can't find any sunny
days," Trisha Kelly said.
.
Jerry Siminons, a hardware store employee, said some. people
may not care for all the foul weather, but it is good for business.
CHARLESTON (AP) -· Former Gov. Cecil Underwood
"Things freeze, Things break. We have to sell and help people was back in the Capitol on Friday .for the unveiling of his secsurvive the winter. They all come to see us," he said,
ond official portrait.
Robert Cotrell said snow, clouds and rain do not bother him,
Underwood lost his bid for re-election last year to Gov. Bob
"I'm ready for it every ye~r." he said.
·wise, who also attended the ceremony.
"Governor Underwood is.a man who has spent his entire life
committed to public service and remains committed to helping
the people of our great state," Wise said.
MORGANTOWN (AP) -A Morgantown man was con- · Underwood is the only governor in We.st Virginia history to
·.' Victed of involuntary manslaughter Friday night in the shoot- have two portraits.
ing of a Pennsylvania man.
When elected to his first term in 1956, he was the youngest
: ' Ryan B. Nicholas, 28, face! up to a year in prison when sen- governor in state history. During his second term, he was the
: tenced in Monongalia County Circuit Court. He still faces an oldest.
·· aggravated robbery charge, which carries a penalty of up to I 0
The portrait, which will hang in the governor's reception
.
.
. years upon conviction.
room, was done by artist James Fox, whose father Charles J. Fox,
· . Nicholas was accused of fatally shootmg Benny H. Collms, painted the first Underwood portrait.
·130, of Uniontown, Pa., last October.
Prosecutors said Nicholas kept the body in his apartment for
' 11 days before dumping it !Jnder a bridge.
IUI1511
Nicholas said he shot Collins in self-defense during an arguOne Stop Shop
,·ment over· a stolen marijuana pipe. Nicholas said he kept the
For Tanning
'body in his apartment because he couldn't get a car to take it
Beds!
to Pennsylvania and dump it.

.

Underwood portrait unveiled

·Morgantown man convicted

--

Reel Cro$s chapter drops charter
BLUEFIELD (AP) -The East River Mountain Area Chap. ter of the American Red Cross has given up its charter after an
·· investigation uncovered administrative problems.
.
" The chapter's board of directors voted. 8-2 Thurday _to r«ch_n. quish the charter and become a certified dehve_ry sernce urut.
The-change allows the Red Cross to main tam a presence 111
· the region, but the operation's adnrinistrative d~ties will be handled elsewhere, said Chris Dale, state field services manager for
· · the American Red Cross.
"The importa'!t thing to remember is that the Red Cross has
been a part _of this. community for 80 years and the Red Cro~s
, isri't going to leave, whether it's a chartered chapter or a certified delivery unit," Dale, said.
Services will continue at the unit that serves Mercer County
and three ,counties in Virginia: Tazewell, Bland and Wythe.
The Bluefield office has two full-time employees and one
partcrime employee.
· ·
Charlene Meade, who had directed the Bluefield chap~er for
' the past 18 years, is no longer employed there. Dale had earlier
refused to say whether she was fired, but he did say she did not

qu~he changes resul~ed from a fa~t-finding visit initiated by t~e
Mid-Atlantic R.egional Office of the Amencan Red Cross

.

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111

Holzer Clinic

Announces Our Newest
Addition ofthe
Regional Orthopedic Center

HOLZER
CLINIC

His interests:
General Orthopecllca
Lower Extremity Surgery
Joint Replacement

Orthopedic Excellence for all
the Mid-Ohio Valley.

1 · Forgey Club Lambs
For Buying My
2001 Market Lamb

'

Dr. Shute joins orthop{!dic surgeons
. W(l}'ne Amendt, MD, Russell Clarke, MD.
Kenneth Hanington. MD, and Arnold ]&gt;enlx, MD.

.e~
'

Gerald Shute, MD

. ·Regional
Orthopedic Center

',f1114jt

"'1

'

created by the Legislature in 1934.
When lawmakers meet next year, the
PLC will ask them to adopt legislation to
require public input on possible leases and
how the money should be spent.
Another proposal would require the
state to involve mineral leasing experts
and niining engineers in drafting and
negotiating future leases.
"These policies accothplish the objectives and reform that the governor man~
dated for us and have a more open
process rhat involves communities and
individuals," Hamrick said.
Using leasing professionals, lawyers and
' nrining engineers .as consultants would
prevent the state from "entering into a
lease where we lose the ability to seek
damages and water '\'placement," Hamrick said.

OSHA wraps up investigation

Mount Olive warden retires

Elkins has worst weather

Fair disappointing

1,.

from its legal obligation to replace water
supplies that might be lost during mining.
The company also was given the right to
haul coal through th e stare forest.
The PLC's board agreed Friday ro send
Vantage a letter asking the company to
meet so both sides could renegotiate
some of the rroubling issues, said Ed
Hamrick, the PLC's board president and
director of the state Division of Natural
Resources.
Changes in how th e PLC conducts its
business was ordered by Gov. Bob Wise.
Also, a portion of the money earned
through the leases would benefit the forest.
The PLC, which manages real estate
owned by the DNR and the Division of
Forestry, has had the right to lease stateowned minerals and timber since it was

Hanover, Md .

OAK HILL (AP) - A Raleigh County man drowned after
his inflatable kayak became trapped against a rock as he was
negotiating a rapid on the New River.
,
The 29-year-old Beckley man has not been identified pend-ing notification of relatives, said Chief Ranger Gary Hartley
·
with the National Park Service.
Hartley said the man was one of three people who were
going down the river in inflatable kayaks Thursday evening.
One of the kayaks became pinned against a rock between
Cunard and Fayette Station, and the victim was pulled under
· the water.
·
The other boaters tried to free the trapped "boat, but gave up
after about an hour. They went on down the river to Fayette
Station, then drove to Fayetteville to call for help, Hartley said.
Park Service personnel, using ropes an'a pulleys, pulled the
~oat out Friday morning and recovered the body.

Opposes ban

.,

Sunday, September :z. 1001

Flurries

. Man d!Owns in New River

Democrats blaming Bush
for shrinking surplus

!.

HUNTINGTON, WVa. (AP) -West
Virginians would have greater say in how
state-owned minerals and land are leased
if the Legislature adopts changes proposed by the Public Land Corp.
. The policies adopted Friday stem from
complaints about how the PLC leased the
rights to mine coal under 8,123 acres of
Cabwaylingo State Forest in 1999. The
agency awarded leases without holding a
public meeting.
Money raised through the leases with
Massey Energy Co. subsidiary Vantage
Coal Co. and Pen Coal of Brentwood,
Tenn., was originally earmarked for a
new PLC building in Fairmont. The PLC
was to receive at least $5 nrillion.
Vantage's lease also included provisions
to keep itS royalty costs low, even as ·coal
prices increased. It also exempted V311tage

PA.

0

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

S

legislature could give resident~ more-say

: West Virginia weather
Gallipolis, Ohio • Pomeroy, Ohio
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

ast v..cn_gl_•a
___- :. . . . :.. _Pag__..;.e_As
81!

•

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

�.•
• · Page A6 • 6unba!' ~imr• ·•rnrinrl
•

-.

Deaths

.Obituaries

NonnaJ.Bunn

Jayden Nathaniel Cooper

Vallisha Ferguson

Ronald Earl Osbome

'

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. - Ronald Earl "Ozzie" Osborne,
84, of Parkersburg, died Friday, August 31, 2001, at St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg.
Born March 13, 1917, in Hazel. son of the late Mont and
Edith Stethen Osborne, he belonged to the local Carpenters
Union 899, Parkersburg for 50 years.
.
He was fire controlman third class in the U.S. Navy and
served on the U.S.S. L.S.T. 373 and· U.S.S. L.S.T. 163 in the
Atlantic and Pacific wars. H e served more than 25 years on the
Veterans Service Commission of Meigs County from 1973 to ·
1998.
He was baptized on July 1939 in the Christian Church in
Keno. He served as an Elder and taught Sunday School classes
for many years, contributing his skills and service throughout
his Christian membership. In later years, he attended Hickory ·
Hill C hurch of Christ. •
He is survived by his wife, Ella Queen Osborne; two daughters, Janet (E Edwin) Doherty of Belpre, Ohio, Ronaleen (Wil- .
. ford) Gapetz of Salisbury, Md.; two sons, Thomas (Nancy)
Osborne 9f Seward, Alaska, and Martin Osborne of Los Angeles, Calif.; five grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; anc;l a
!host of nieces, nephews and friends .
He also was prece&amp;d in death by an infant brother, Dorsel
Osborne.
A memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Monday at White's
Funeral Home in Coolville. Viewing hours will be from 2-4
P•m. and from 6- 8 ·p.m. Sunday.
Graveside rites will follow the service at Reedsville Cemetery with a VFW salute.

Payne, Philip L. Erwin, Sr.,
Bobby W Vance, Robert
. Butcher (write-in); Sutton:
Roy F. VanMeter, Kenneth R .
from Page AI
Guinther.
fill ed in this election.
SCHOOL BOARD
Candidates who will appear"
Southern -Local: T. Ron
o n the N ov. 6 general election Cammarata, Don P. Smith;
·
ballot are:
Meigs Local: Scott Walton,
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
Ron Logan, Cathy Morris,
Bedford: Robert E Hawk, James Soulsby, Wayne E.
Ronald L. Wood; Chester: Davis; Eastern Local: Roger.
Blair Windon, Alan Holter; Willford, Howard Caldwell, J.
Col umbia: Don Cheadle, Greg Bailey.
Granville Stout, Curtis A.
VIllAGE COUNCIL
Johnson; Lebanon: Keith E.
Middleport: Roger L. ManFitch, Timothy D. Lawrence, ley, R.obert M, Pooler, Kathy
John R. Krider, Charles R . Scott; Pomeroy: Todd Norton,
Lawrence, Lawrence H . Hay- Larry Wehrung, Jackie R .
man; Letart: Dave Graham, Welker, George L. Wright,
Bob Morris; Olive: Jackie L. !Donald Todd Smith; Rutland:
Westfall, Jerry L. Larkins, Ralph Bales, Danny Davis,
Mi chael Hayman, Garry Marie L. Birchfield, Ralph E.
Dowman,Jr., Brian Keith Bai- Searls; Syracuse: Donna Peterley, William R . Osborne; son, Michael R. VanMeter,
Orange: Roger Ritchie, Johri Eric D. Cunningham, Eber
A. Rankin; Rutland: Charles · Pickens, Jr., Jeffrey L. Bable;
D. ·Barrett, Jr., Steve Lambert, Racine: Robert E. Beegle,
Charles Williamson; Salem: H. Joseph L. Evans, David H.
Dannie
Lambert,
Keith Spencer, Henry W. Bentz. Hypes, Jack L. Ervin; SalisThose candidates who were
bury: Bill Spaun, Edward W. disqualified have been notiDurst, Bernard D. Gilkey; Sci- fied by certified mail, Smith
·
pio: Robert L. Jewell, Kevin said.

Rejeds

Nellie F. SiCiers
POINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Nellie E Siders, 79, of Point
Pleasant died Friday, August 31,2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Funeral Services will be Monday at 1 p.m. at Deal Funeral
Home. Friends may call Sunday from 6-8 p.m.

Ga judge plans
bi .for Helms' seat

Jennifer Lynne Snider
. COLUMBUS -Jennifer Lynne Snider (Nee: Baker), 50,
died Thursday, August 30, 200t.
BornAug. 1, 1951,in Columbus to John E. and Ruth Capehart Snider, she was a graduate of South High School in
Columbus.
She is survived by four daughters and three sons-in-law, Kelley and Edward Lawson ofRacine,Angel and Jason Shepard of
Lebanon, Heidi and Mark Lawso n of Middletown, Crissy
Smder of Lebanon; the girls' father, Charles R. Snider; two
brothers; seven "sisters; and six grandchildren.
Graveside services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Lebanon
Cemetery in .Lebanon. The Rev.Gordon Lawson will officiate.
Memorial contributions can be made to the Jennifer Snider
Trust Fund, c/o: First Star bank, 620 Columbus Ave., Lebanon,
Ohio 45036.
·
Arrangements were handled by Oswald-Hoskins Funeral
Home in Lebanon.

··
C HARLOtTE, N.C. (AP) tice of the state Supreme
- Superior Court Judge Ray Court in 1996. 'IWo yean
Warren, who announced his later, Warren lost another
homosexuality two years ago close race for the state court
and then quit the Republican of appeals.
Soon afterward, Warren
Party, said Friday he plans to
join the race to succeed Sen. announced he was homosexual, making him the first
Jesse Helms.
gay Judge and Repubopenly
Warren, now a Democrat,
was elected to a term that lican officeholder in the state's
runs until the end of2002. He history.
Warren said he doesn't
said he will resign frpm the
bench in about a month; until think his se&gt;~:nal orientation
th en, rules of judicial condu ct will be a major issue. "1.would
bar
him from qfficially think it would be of some
both village officials and the
M arietta- based conipany to announcing his candidacy for interest to some people, but
less in the Democratic primacease co nstruction so as not another office.
"
I
think
it's
going
to
hapry," he said. "While we are
to interfere with Pomeroy's
f1vm Page AI
merchants during one of the pen," he said. "Legally and thinking about the November
technically, I'm still consider- race, our focus right now is
replacement line was the best busiest times of the year.
· thing to do.
However, following the ing (making a bid). I'm antic- on the May primary."
The unly Democrat who
"We're extremely pleased h olidays, bad weather, con" ipating it will change."
Warren,
w
ho
lives
in
C
harhas.
formally declared is Secre-that the project is 6nished .and t ract dispu tes and missed
lo
tte,
began
his
political
career
tary of State Elaine Marshall.
can1 now focu s our attention deadlines kept the project
as
a
conservative
Republican
Among
Republicans, the only
on other projects within the from being finished.
member
of
the
state
House
of
declared candidate to succed
· village," he said.
·
Finally, after months of
Representatives
in
1985.
the conservative Republican
Since the project's incep- infrequent
constr uction
In 1996, he nearly unseated Helms is former Charlotte
tion in October 2000, the vii- · efforts and mounting conBurl
~y Mit~hell as chief jus- Mayor Richard Vinroot.
!age has had its share of ups cerns from res idents that the
and downs with Greenland projec t would never see com-·
Construction, the firm con- pletion, work crews returned
tracted to install the new line. to Pomeroy in the sprin g and
COUPON
The project was put on summer to finish installing
hold over the Thanksgiving the line, make connections
and Christmas holidays after and repair damaged sidewalks
·
an agreement was reached by .. and streets.
I

Complete

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OH

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I
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ate eppolntment. I
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~

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'

. r..,._.

them, provided through the •
Ohio Department of Devel- •i
opment, is for $600,000 and
includes $100,000 to assist
fawnPipA1
low-incom~ residents who
qualify
for financial assistance
flood occurs.
"I think it's a good project, in hooking up to the system.
one that is long ovrrdue, but · Karen Sprague, adminisqapersonally I think it should be tor for Gallia County comas far away as po,.ible if it missioners, said the 76 percent
would satisfy that problem," funding for the job is noteworthy because the last major
said John Hoover.
Adam Riehl of Woolpert sewer project completed in
at BidweU- ·I
LLP. the project engineering the county was 71 percent
firm ,' s;aid a location change Porter will increase the project's cost, financed through grants.
Most projects now get
with a resulting increase in
fees to cover the loan the vil- around half of their funding
lage received for the job, through grants, added Kurtis
·which represents 23 percent Strickland of Rural Community Assistance Program, an
of the funding package.
agency
assisting Vinton with
"This is about the only
place w~ can put it, otherwise the project.
One percent of funding,
it will be in the floodway,"
Riehl said. "Getting it doser around $20,000, will come
to the (Raccoon) creek is not locally through a $125 assessment from each customer.
better."
John Hoover said engineer- The assessment can be paid at
ing out the possible odor · $25 per month over a fivefrom a treatment plant is diffi- month period ending in
cult, while Fuller was con- October 2002.
Riehl and other officials
cerned about noise from the
said
the project is tentatively
mechanic~! apparatus treating
sewage."l'm not going to tell set for bidding in January or ·
you there won't be a problem, February of next year, with
but under proper operating construction to begin in the
procedures, it will be mini-· spring. The tentative date of
completion is March 2003.
mally obtrusive," Riehl said.
Payment of the monthly
The treatment system,
bill,
with proceeds targeted
known as biolac, is similar in
theory to the facility serving partly for debt service and
Rio Grande, Councilman operational costs, will .be
Flem Meade said, and no computed on the customers'
odor problem has been monthly water usage if they
noticed there or to one Vin- utilize Gallia County Rural
ton officials toured at Beaver. Water Association.
"This · rate schedule is
Riehl and Greg Wilson,
who's been retained by the something council looked
village to manage the plant into, and is not something
when it opens, assured they just jumped into," said
Hoover and FuUer that Vin- Strickland, who added that
ton's plant will cause few if care was taken to consider
residents with fixed incomes.
any difficulties.
Mayor Donna De Witt
The project affects 152 customers within the village, 15 expressed her apprec;iation for
beyond the village limits on the long-awaited project to
Bull Run Road and one resi- reach this stage.
"This has been an underdence past the corporation
taking that has uken well over
limit on Scenic Drive.
After years of planning and · a decade," she said. "I want to
application, funding has been congratulate council on its
lined up, with the bulk com- vision and for getting the ball
ing through grants. One of rolling."

·Nation • World

•

Vinton.

BIDWELL -Jayden Nathaniel Cooper, infant son ofNika
SABINA, Ohio - NormaJ. Bunn, 73, of Sabina died ThursKenyatta Cooper of Bidwell, died Wednesday evening August
day, August 30, 2001, at Hospice of Dayton .
Born Dec. 4, 1927 in Lawrence County, she was a daughter 29, 2001 at Children's Hospital in Columbus.
He was born August 21, 2001, in Pt.
ofJohn and Annis Kerr Baise.
Pleasant,
W Va.
She was preceded in death by her husband, James L. Bonn;
In addition to his mother, he is surbrothers, John Robert, Joe Mack, Ralph Kenneth and Donald
vived by his· grandparents Arnold and
Steven Baise.
Tina Cooper of Bidwell; great-grandSurvivors include daughters and son- in- law, Janet Fay Bunn
mothers, Imogene Borden of Gallipolis
of Kettering and Johna Jean and Frank Crump of Sabina; three
and Nancy Cooper of London; greatgrandchildren; one great-grandson; sisters, Annette Pauley of
grandfather, William "Bony Bill" ArmJamestown, Mary Hull of Montana, and Donna Barrett of
of Gallipolis; great-great- grandstrong
· Springfield; brothers, Danny Baise of New Orleans, La., Wayne
mother.Aurilla McWhorter of Springand Paul Baise of Jamestown, and Art Baise of Mo.
field;
aunt and uncle Tia and Michael
Service will be at the convenience of the famil y oo Saturday
at Littleton Funeral Home, Sabina. Burial will be in Silver L - - - - - - - . . . J Stevens of Columbus; uncle Matthew
Cooper of Bidwell; cousin, Devante
Creek Township Cemetery, Jamestown.
She was a member of Wilmington C hurch of Christ in Stevens of Columbus; godmother, Misty Mount of Crown
. Christian Union, to which contributions may be made in care City; and several great ants, un~les, cousins and friends.
He was preceded b1 his great~grandparents, Arnold and Sadie
ofJohnaJ. Crump, 86 W.Washington St., Sabina, Ohio 45169.
Cooper Sr.; great-great-grandparents, Owen and Sadie Cordell
and Edison and Nellie Galliamore; and great uncle, Stanley
Cooper.
Graveside services will be 1 p.m. Monday, September 3,
GALLIPOLIS - Vallisha Vandelia Vallynne Ferguson, 3
months, died Saturday, September 1; 2001 , at Holzer Medical 2001, at Pine Street Cemetery, with the R ev. Calvin Minnis
Center.
·
officiating.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the family to
Arrangements will be announced later by Willis Funeral
help with expenses.
Home.
Arrangements are under the direction of Waugh-HalleyWood funeral home.

•
•

Sunday, Sept. 2, aoot

Pomeroy • Middleport~ GallipOlis, Ohio • Polnt·Piu88nt, WV

•· . .

•

fromPapA1

"They would rather · throw
thousands of dollars down the
drain then to do what's right
and provide the workers
decent benefits and improve
wages and patient care," sh"e
said. "We really hope manage• ment opens their eyes and
puts away their pride and do
what is best for the residents,
the workers and Scenic Hills."
SEIU is the largest health
care union in the United
States, representing more than
. 700,000 workers. The union
has mo~e than 1.3 million
memb~rs worldwide.

District 11999
~~~*~~__:
more
01
Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky.
· Further information was
unavailable as of presstime .
Saturday evening.

AUy Sheedy aied out for a role
in A League af Their Own but
was turned down because she
couldn't play baseball well
enough.

Ufe Home Car Business

7if '7/. ~ul'/a I f!:l·~tr •
INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.
114 Court Pomeroy

·992-6677

HIV virus getting to.-gher
WASHINGTON (AP) - The share of HIV infections that
are drug-resistant will jump to 42 perceht in San Francisco by
2005, according to a team of researchers.
.
Estimating the cnrrent rate. of drug r;sistance at 28.5 percent,
the group used a mathematical formula to calculate its likely
.: mcrease "OVer the next few years.
HIV, human immunodeficiency Virus, is the agent that causes AIDS.
. The work of the. team, led by Dr. Sally M.Biowerofthe Uni. verstty of Cahforma at Los Angeles, is published in Friday's issue
. . of the JOUrnal Nature Medicine.
· . The scientists calculated the increase in drug~resistant HIV
;- smce 1997 and used that to extend their forecast into the
. future.
,.·
~. The primary reason for the incre~se, they said, is .the development of drug resistance in tlle virus during treatment. The
, , tran~m!SsiOn. of drug-resistant strains remains low, they said, esti... matmg that 1t w1ll account for just 16 percent of new HIV cases
by 2005.
~'The good news is that transmission of drug-resistant HIV
Will not become a major.public health problem," Blower said in
a statement. "The bad news is that the prevalence of drug-resis·' tant HI~ IS already high and will continue to substantially
· mcrease.

....

Feds paying dead people

;.
;,·, WASHINGTON (AP) - Social Security paid $31 million
v ,through the end of last year to dead people who were listed as
,:, deceased in the agency's own electronic files, auditors say.
One woman who died in November 1993 was still receiving
'"•benefit checks in May 2000, and audiiors said more than
,.]5100,000 in benefits had been paid after her death. Authorities
. _stopped the payments last November and now are trying to
.. determine who cashed her checks.
·
.;.'. The audit, completed earlier this summer by the Social Secu. rity Administration:• inspector general, has led to nearly 1,400
mvest•gat•ons resulnng so far in the identification of$11.5 mil. lion in i~proper payments, officials said Friday. Of that amount,
$6.1 m1lhon e1ther has been recovered or is scheduled for
.

;

"'

papers from President Bush 's father.
Discovery Channel · stores and The Nature Company stores
The papers were to have come out in January, 12 years after sold the lamps nationwide from September 1999 through July
Reagan left office as provided under law. The White House 2001 for between $18 and $24.
delayed the release to June 21, then to the last day in August.
Consumers shoul d stop using the lamps immediately and
On Frida~, Whit~ House counsel Alberto Gonzales so ught a return them to any Discovery Channel store or The Nature
thtrd extenSion, th1s time With no deadline, so the administra- Company store for a refund, the company said.
tion can review the records and consult representatives of forConsumers with questions can call The Discovery Channel
mer pres1dents Reagan, Bush and Clinton.
Store at 1-800-752- 1937 between noon and 7 p.m. EDT MonTh~ delay ~nopening the Reagan records ''has been necessary day through Friday.
for th1s admmlstratlon to review the many constitutional and
legal questions raised by (the) potential release of sensitive and
confidential presidential records," Gonzales wrote in letter to
the National Archives sent Friday.
MIAMI (AP) -. ~rapping up a summer on the road in
· He did not say why this examination was still incomplete, but · Flonda, Janet Reno 1s expected to reach a decision next week
the letter suggests the additional review will require "a few on .whether to run ~or governor - a move that could pit her
additional weeks."
.
agamst the pres1dent s brother and give Democrats a chance for
Reagan's records are the first set scheduled to be released payback for last November.
under the Presidential Records Act of 1978, which followed
The former attorney general's decisive lead in the polls over
Watergate and former President Nixon's attempts to hold on to other · potent1al Democratic candidates - plus the bad blood .
h1s papers and tape recordings.
from the election fiasco last year- could make a matchup with ·
Gov. Jeb Bush the most-watched political contest of 2002.
" I t~ink it would make the Super Bowl look like a preseason
game, sa1d Susan MacManus, a University of South Florida
WA~HINGTON (AP) - President Bush, a proud member political scientist. " It's going to be a major international media
~f the L1~tle League, Hail of Excellence, said Friday he was contest."
·
,
·
·
,
sorely d1sappomted that Little League star pitcher Danny
Ren? is expected to reach a decision early next we ek,
Almol'lte turned o ut to be older than the rules allowed.
accordmg to three sources close to Reno who spoke on condi" I'm .dis~ppoint?d that adults woul.d fudge the boy's age," tion of anonymity. While the sources said Reno has not made a
Bush sa1d. I wasn t d1sappomted m hiS fast ball and his slider. final decision, others said they expect her to seek the DemocThe guy is awesome. H e's a great pitcher."
ratic nomination.
··
'
An officiai in the Dominican Republic, where Danny was
born, sa1d Fnday that the boy was 14, two years too old for Little League, rather than 12 as his family and team had said. Little •League officials wiped out all of his team's victories and its
recent third-place title. ·
·
Bush·commented while unveiling a new White House Internet site for children.
·
·
"'l' 'was sorely disappointed that people felt like th ey could

Reno may challenge Jeb Bush

Bush 'sorely disappointed'

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~Hope responding well to pneumonia treatment ,
.

~

~..,

. (AP~ BURBANK, Cal1f.
.~: Bob Hope continued his
,~ recovery from pneumonia
.:: Friday and was expected to
.i ret"trn home within· three
:• days, his doctor said.
However, the 98-year-old
!; entertainer remained weak1.. ened and may need several
~ weeks to regain his full health,
;: Dr. Lee Kagan said .
·
Hope remaine.d in serious
but stable co ndition at Provi_: dence St. Joseph Medical
!;; Center, where he was taken
~ Sunday after having ·rrouble
:~ breathing at his Toluca Lake ..
~ home.
.
''I'm inipressed with how
· quickly he has responded,"
Kagan said at a hospital news
.conference. "H e has turned
around as quickly as I might

have expected from a much
younger person."
Hope has begun to speak,
al.t hough with limited ability,
Kagan said.
The .comic was receiving
antibiotic medication, intravenous fluids and respiratory
therapy.
Hope's wife and daughter,
Linda, have been by his side

!;.

f.

almost constantly since he vyas
admitted.
Pneumonia, an infection of
the l.ungs, is ca used primadly
by bacteria , although fungal ·
and viral pneumonia also
exist.'
Abo ut 2 million Americans
die of the illness each year,
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common cause of death.

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concerns of the new frontier."
Stem cells are created by removing an
inner cell mass from a 5- to 7 -day-old
embryo, a procedure that kills the
embryo. When properly . nurtured, the
cells are able to replicate, or divide, virtually forever, creating what is called a
stem cell line.
Clark was apparently also objecting to
legislation passed by the House of Representatives that would ban human
cloning - not just cloning for reproductive el)ds but also so-called therapeutic cloning.
Such cloning would produce stem
cells by creating embryos from the tells
of a single person, giving scientists an
exact tissue match to develop treatments
for that person:
.

·Reagan paper release stalls

Dragon Internet

,......_ WV, Alhlna. LAIHnDft. Oear,.aa.,, .. Olou~t«,
Moeane .... ,..le,endmortl
l'lnd Ul on tM WID II www.Cff8101 bba oorn
•laNd ert£7•1J lubNripUon r•t..

"It now seems that creating genetically compatible new skin cells for burn
victims, pancreas cells for diabetics, nerve
cells for those with spinal cord injuries
and many, many other potential advances
w11l soon be illegal in the United States,"
wrote Clark, a billionaire who also
founded Sili con Graphics, Healtheon
and MyCFO.
"Dr'JVen by· tgnorance,
·
conservative
".thinking and fear of the unknown our
political leaders have undertake~ to
make laws that suppress this type of
research." •
Earlier this month, Bush announced a
policy to limit federal funding for med;
1cal research on embryonic stem cells.
Bush , an abortion opponent, said it was
tmportant to "pay attention to the moral

·Discovery Channel ~calls la~ps

with

losal numbeQ incJude;

SAN
FRANCISCO
(AP)
Netscape founder Jim Clark is withholding $60 million he pledged to build
a biomedical research center at Stanford
University to protest President Bush's
restrictions on stem cell research and
congressional attempts to ban human
cloning.
"Our country risks being thrown into
a dark age of medical resR"
orch," Clark
""!&gt;"
wrote in all opinion column in The
New York Times on Friday.
·
Clark said he was suspending payment
of the balance of $150 million he
pledged in 1999 because it would be
futile for private funding to supplant
federal grants. He also cited recent decisions to limit research to existing stem
cell lines.

said
who has joked that his baseball
Eight people face criminal fraud charges, and more charges baseball of all
career
peaked
as
a
Little
League
player in Texas.
·are expected. In most cases, they involye people who had joint
I
bank accounts with the dead beneficiaries and converted the
"Social Security checks to their own use.
' Some of the payments have been recovered without any
W~SHIN~TON (AP) - The Discovery Channel Store,
charges bemg filed. In March, for example, investigaton in BalInc.,
11 recallmg 16,000 oil lamps because"the glass on the lamps
timore recovered $57,062 in uncashed Social Security checks
when the wick is lit, posing a tire hazard,
can
shatter
·
from the son of a beneficiary who died in 1994. ·
The company, based in Berkeley, Calif., has received four
reports of the. lamps shattering, according to the Consumer
Product Safety Commission. No one was hurt.
The ro,,alled lamps come in two shapes: a 16- by-7 inch recWASHINGTON (AP) - For the third time the Bush
an$1 a 7-inch square.
.
.
tangle
dminis~ratio"; has delayed release ~f 68,~00 p~ges' of Ronald
The top of the reciangle lamp has an opening for five wicks
eagan s Wh1te House records, mcludmg v1ce presidential
and the top of the square lamp has an opening for a single wick.

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Don9r protests Bush stem cell decision

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�.•
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•

-.

Deaths

.Obituaries

NonnaJ.Bunn

Jayden Nathaniel Cooper

Vallisha Ferguson

Ronald Earl Osbome

'

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. - Ronald Earl "Ozzie" Osborne,
84, of Parkersburg, died Friday, August 31, 2001, at St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg.
Born March 13, 1917, in Hazel. son of the late Mont and
Edith Stethen Osborne, he belonged to the local Carpenters
Union 899, Parkersburg for 50 years.
.
He was fire controlman third class in the U.S. Navy and
served on the U.S.S. L.S.T. 373 and· U.S.S. L.S.T. 163 in the
Atlantic and Pacific wars. H e served more than 25 years on the
Veterans Service Commission of Meigs County from 1973 to ·
1998.
He was baptized on July 1939 in the Christian Church in
Keno. He served as an Elder and taught Sunday School classes
for many years, contributing his skills and service throughout
his Christian membership. In later years, he attended Hickory ·
Hill C hurch of Christ. •
He is survived by his wife, Ella Queen Osborne; two daughters, Janet (E Edwin) Doherty of Belpre, Ohio, Ronaleen (Wil- .
. ford) Gapetz of Salisbury, Md.; two sons, Thomas (Nancy)
Osborne 9f Seward, Alaska, and Martin Osborne of Los Angeles, Calif.; five grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; anc;l a
!host of nieces, nephews and friends .
He also was prece&amp;d in death by an infant brother, Dorsel
Osborne.
A memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Monday at White's
Funeral Home in Coolville. Viewing hours will be from 2-4
P•m. and from 6- 8 ·p.m. Sunday.
Graveside rites will follow the service at Reedsville Cemetery with a VFW salute.

Payne, Philip L. Erwin, Sr.,
Bobby W Vance, Robert
. Butcher (write-in); Sutton:
Roy F. VanMeter, Kenneth R .
from Page AI
Guinther.
fill ed in this election.
SCHOOL BOARD
Candidates who will appear"
Southern -Local: T. Ron
o n the N ov. 6 general election Cammarata, Don P. Smith;
·
ballot are:
Meigs Local: Scott Walton,
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
Ron Logan, Cathy Morris,
Bedford: Robert E Hawk, James Soulsby, Wayne E.
Ronald L. Wood; Chester: Davis; Eastern Local: Roger.
Blair Windon, Alan Holter; Willford, Howard Caldwell, J.
Col umbia: Don Cheadle, Greg Bailey.
Granville Stout, Curtis A.
VIllAGE COUNCIL
Johnson; Lebanon: Keith E.
Middleport: Roger L. ManFitch, Timothy D. Lawrence, ley, R.obert M, Pooler, Kathy
John R. Krider, Charles R . Scott; Pomeroy: Todd Norton,
Lawrence, Lawrence H . Hay- Larry Wehrung, Jackie R .
man; Letart: Dave Graham, Welker, George L. Wright,
Bob Morris; Olive: Jackie L. !Donald Todd Smith; Rutland:
Westfall, Jerry L. Larkins, Ralph Bales, Danny Davis,
Mi chael Hayman, Garry Marie L. Birchfield, Ralph E.
Dowman,Jr., Brian Keith Bai- Searls; Syracuse: Donna Peterley, William R . Osborne; son, Michael R. VanMeter,
Orange: Roger Ritchie, Johri Eric D. Cunningham, Eber
A. Rankin; Rutland: Charles · Pickens, Jr., Jeffrey L. Bable;
D. ·Barrett, Jr., Steve Lambert, Racine: Robert E. Beegle,
Charles Williamson; Salem: H. Joseph L. Evans, David H.
Dannie
Lambert,
Keith Spencer, Henry W. Bentz. Hypes, Jack L. Ervin; SalisThose candidates who were
bury: Bill Spaun, Edward W. disqualified have been notiDurst, Bernard D. Gilkey; Sci- fied by certified mail, Smith
·
pio: Robert L. Jewell, Kevin said.

Rejeds

Nellie F. SiCiers
POINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Nellie E Siders, 79, of Point
Pleasant died Friday, August 31,2001 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Funeral Services will be Monday at 1 p.m. at Deal Funeral
Home. Friends may call Sunday from 6-8 p.m.

Ga judge plans
bi .for Helms' seat

Jennifer Lynne Snider
. COLUMBUS -Jennifer Lynne Snider (Nee: Baker), 50,
died Thursday, August 30, 200t.
BornAug. 1, 1951,in Columbus to John E. and Ruth Capehart Snider, she was a graduate of South High School in
Columbus.
She is survived by four daughters and three sons-in-law, Kelley and Edward Lawson ofRacine,Angel and Jason Shepard of
Lebanon, Heidi and Mark Lawso n of Middletown, Crissy
Smder of Lebanon; the girls' father, Charles R. Snider; two
brothers; seven "sisters; and six grandchildren.
Graveside services will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Lebanon
Cemetery in .Lebanon. The Rev.Gordon Lawson will officiate.
Memorial contributions can be made to the Jennifer Snider
Trust Fund, c/o: First Star bank, 620 Columbus Ave., Lebanon,
Ohio 45036.
·
Arrangements were handled by Oswald-Hoskins Funeral
Home in Lebanon.

··
C HARLOtTE, N.C. (AP) tice of the state Supreme
- Superior Court Judge Ray Court in 1996. 'IWo yean
Warren, who announced his later, Warren lost another
homosexuality two years ago close race for the state court
and then quit the Republican of appeals.
Soon afterward, Warren
Party, said Friday he plans to
join the race to succeed Sen. announced he was homosexual, making him the first
Jesse Helms.
gay Judge and Repubopenly
Warren, now a Democrat,
was elected to a term that lican officeholder in the state's
runs until the end of2002. He history.
Warren said he doesn't
said he will resign frpm the
bench in about a month; until think his se&gt;~:nal orientation
th en, rules of judicial condu ct will be a major issue. "1.would
bar
him from qfficially think it would be of some
both village officials and the
M arietta- based conipany to announcing his candidacy for interest to some people, but
less in the Democratic primacease co nstruction so as not another office.
"
I
think
it's
going
to
hapry," he said. "While we are
to interfere with Pomeroy's
f1vm Page AI
merchants during one of the pen," he said. "Legally and thinking about the November
technically, I'm still consider- race, our focus right now is
replacement line was the best busiest times of the year.
· thing to do.
However, following the ing (making a bid). I'm antic- on the May primary."
The unly Democrat who
"We're extremely pleased h olidays, bad weather, con" ipating it will change."
Warren,
w
ho
lives
in
C
harhas.
formally declared is Secre-that the project is 6nished .and t ract dispu tes and missed
lo
tte,
began
his
political
career
tary of State Elaine Marshall.
can1 now focu s our attention deadlines kept the project
as
a
conservative
Republican
Among
Republicans, the only
on other projects within the from being finished.
member
of
the
state
House
of
declared candidate to succed
· village," he said.
·
Finally, after months of
Representatives
in
1985.
the conservative Republican
Since the project's incep- infrequent
constr uction
In 1996, he nearly unseated Helms is former Charlotte
tion in October 2000, the vii- · efforts and mounting conBurl
~y Mit~hell as chief jus- Mayor Richard Vinroot.
!age has had its share of ups cerns from res idents that the
and downs with Greenland projec t would never see com-·
Construction, the firm con- pletion, work crews returned
tracted to install the new line. to Pomeroy in the sprin g and
COUPON
The project was put on summer to finish installing
hold over the Thanksgiving the line, make connections
and Christmas holidays after and repair damaged sidewalks
·
an agreement was reached by .. and streets.
I

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them, provided through the •
Ohio Department of Devel- •i
opment, is for $600,000 and
includes $100,000 to assist
fawnPipA1
low-incom~ residents who
qualify
for financial assistance
flood occurs.
"I think it's a good project, in hooking up to the system.
one that is long ovrrdue, but · Karen Sprague, adminisqapersonally I think it should be tor for Gallia County comas far away as po,.ible if it missioners, said the 76 percent
would satisfy that problem," funding for the job is noteworthy because the last major
said John Hoover.
Adam Riehl of Woolpert sewer project completed in
at BidweU- ·I
LLP. the project engineering the county was 71 percent
firm ,' s;aid a location change Porter will increase the project's cost, financed through grants.
Most projects now get
with a resulting increase in
fees to cover the loan the vil- around half of their funding
lage received for the job, through grants, added Kurtis
·which represents 23 percent Strickland of Rural Community Assistance Program, an
of the funding package.
agency
assisting Vinton with
"This is about the only
place w~ can put it, otherwise the project.
One percent of funding,
it will be in the floodway,"
Riehl said. "Getting it doser around $20,000, will come
to the (Raccoon) creek is not locally through a $125 assessment from each customer.
better."
John Hoover said engineer- The assessment can be paid at
ing out the possible odor · $25 per month over a fivefrom a treatment plant is diffi- month period ending in
cult, while Fuller was con- October 2002.
Riehl and other officials
cerned about noise from the
said
the project is tentatively
mechanic~! apparatus treating
sewage."l'm not going to tell set for bidding in January or ·
you there won't be a problem, February of next year, with
but under proper operating construction to begin in the
procedures, it will be mini-· spring. The tentative date of
completion is March 2003.
mally obtrusive," Riehl said.
Payment of the monthly
The treatment system,
bill,
with proceeds targeted
known as biolac, is similar in
theory to the facility serving partly for debt service and
Rio Grande, Councilman operational costs, will .be
Flem Meade said, and no computed on the customers'
odor problem has been monthly water usage if they
noticed there or to one Vin- utilize Gallia County Rural
ton officials toured at Beaver. Water Association.
"This · rate schedule is
Riehl and Greg Wilson,
who's been retained by the something council looked
village to manage the plant into, and is not something
when it opens, assured they just jumped into," said
Hoover and FuUer that Vin- Strickland, who added that
ton's plant will cause few if care was taken to consider
residents with fixed incomes.
any difficulties.
Mayor Donna De Witt
The project affects 152 customers within the village, 15 expressed her apprec;iation for
beyond the village limits on the long-awaited project to
Bull Run Road and one resi- reach this stage.
"This has been an underdence past the corporation
taking that has uken well over
limit on Scenic Drive.
After years of planning and · a decade," she said. "I want to
application, funding has been congratulate council on its
lined up, with the bulk com- vision and for getting the ball
ing through grants. One of rolling."

·Nation • World

•

Vinton.

BIDWELL -Jayden Nathaniel Cooper, infant son ofNika
SABINA, Ohio - NormaJ. Bunn, 73, of Sabina died ThursKenyatta Cooper of Bidwell, died Wednesday evening August
day, August 30, 2001, at Hospice of Dayton .
Born Dec. 4, 1927 in Lawrence County, she was a daughter 29, 2001 at Children's Hospital in Columbus.
He was born August 21, 2001, in Pt.
ofJohn and Annis Kerr Baise.
Pleasant,
W Va.
She was preceded in death by her husband, James L. Bonn;
In addition to his mother, he is surbrothers, John Robert, Joe Mack, Ralph Kenneth and Donald
vived by his· grandparents Arnold and
Steven Baise.
Tina Cooper of Bidwell; great-grandSurvivors include daughters and son- in- law, Janet Fay Bunn
mothers, Imogene Borden of Gallipolis
of Kettering and Johna Jean and Frank Crump of Sabina; three
and Nancy Cooper of London; greatgrandchildren; one great-grandson; sisters, Annette Pauley of
grandfather, William "Bony Bill" ArmJamestown, Mary Hull of Montana, and Donna Barrett of
of Gallipolis; great-great- grandstrong
· Springfield; brothers, Danny Baise of New Orleans, La., Wayne
mother.Aurilla McWhorter of Springand Paul Baise of Jamestown, and Art Baise of Mo.
field;
aunt and uncle Tia and Michael
Service will be at the convenience of the famil y oo Saturday
at Littleton Funeral Home, Sabina. Burial will be in Silver L - - - - - - - . . . J Stevens of Columbus; uncle Matthew
Cooper of Bidwell; cousin, Devante
Creek Township Cemetery, Jamestown.
She was a member of Wilmington C hurch of Christ in Stevens of Columbus; godmother, Misty Mount of Crown
. Christian Union, to which contributions may be made in care City; and several great ants, un~les, cousins and friends.
He was preceded b1 his great~grandparents, Arnold and Sadie
ofJohnaJ. Crump, 86 W.Washington St., Sabina, Ohio 45169.
Cooper Sr.; great-great-grandparents, Owen and Sadie Cordell
and Edison and Nellie Galliamore; and great uncle, Stanley
Cooper.
Graveside services will be 1 p.m. Monday, September 3,
GALLIPOLIS - Vallisha Vandelia Vallynne Ferguson, 3
months, died Saturday, September 1; 2001 , at Holzer Medical 2001, at Pine Street Cemetery, with the R ev. Calvin Minnis
Center.
·
officiating.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the family to
Arrangements will be announced later by Willis Funeral
help with expenses.
Home.
Arrangements are under the direction of Waugh-HalleyWood funeral home.

•
•

Sunday, Sept. 2, aoot

Pomeroy • Middleport~ GallipOlis, Ohio • Polnt·Piu88nt, WV

•· . .

•

fromPapA1

"They would rather · throw
thousands of dollars down the
drain then to do what's right
and provide the workers
decent benefits and improve
wages and patient care," sh"e
said. "We really hope manage• ment opens their eyes and
puts away their pride and do
what is best for the residents,
the workers and Scenic Hills."
SEIU is the largest health
care union in the United
States, representing more than
. 700,000 workers. The union
has mo~e than 1.3 million
memb~rs worldwide.

District 11999
~~~*~~__:
more
01
Ohio, West Virginia and Kentucky.
· Further information was
unavailable as of presstime .
Saturday evening.

AUy Sheedy aied out for a role
in A League af Their Own but
was turned down because she
couldn't play baseball well
enough.

Ufe Home Car Business

7if '7/. ~ul'/a I f!:l·~tr •
INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.
114 Court Pomeroy

·992-6677

HIV virus getting to.-gher
WASHINGTON (AP) - The share of HIV infections that
are drug-resistant will jump to 42 perceht in San Francisco by
2005, according to a team of researchers.
.
Estimating the cnrrent rate. of drug r;sistance at 28.5 percent,
the group used a mathematical formula to calculate its likely
.: mcrease "OVer the next few years.
HIV, human immunodeficiency Virus, is the agent that causes AIDS.
. The work of the. team, led by Dr. Sally M.Biowerofthe Uni. verstty of Cahforma at Los Angeles, is published in Friday's issue
. . of the JOUrnal Nature Medicine.
· . The scientists calculated the increase in drug~resistant HIV
;- smce 1997 and used that to extend their forecast into the
. future.
,.·
~. The primary reason for the incre~se, they said, is .the development of drug resistance in tlle virus during treatment. The
, , tran~m!SsiOn. of drug-resistant strains remains low, they said, esti... matmg that 1t w1ll account for just 16 percent of new HIV cases
by 2005.
~'The good news is that transmission of drug-resistant HIV
Will not become a major.public health problem," Blower said in
a statement. "The bad news is that the prevalence of drug-resis·' tant HI~ IS already high and will continue to substantially
· mcrease.

....

Feds paying dead people

;.
;,·, WASHINGTON (AP) - Social Security paid $31 million
v ,through the end of last year to dead people who were listed as
,:, deceased in the agency's own electronic files, auditors say.
One woman who died in November 1993 was still receiving
'"•benefit checks in May 2000, and audiiors said more than
,.]5100,000 in benefits had been paid after her death. Authorities
. _stopped the payments last November and now are trying to
.. determine who cashed her checks.
·
.;.'. The audit, completed earlier this summer by the Social Secu. rity Administration:• inspector general, has led to nearly 1,400
mvest•gat•ons resulnng so far in the identification of$11.5 mil. lion in i~proper payments, officials said Friday. Of that amount,
$6.1 m1lhon e1ther has been recovered or is scheduled for
.

;

"'

papers from President Bush 's father.
Discovery Channel · stores and The Nature Company stores
The papers were to have come out in January, 12 years after sold the lamps nationwide from September 1999 through July
Reagan left office as provided under law. The White House 2001 for between $18 and $24.
delayed the release to June 21, then to the last day in August.
Consumers shoul d stop using the lamps immediately and
On Frida~, Whit~ House counsel Alberto Gonzales so ught a return them to any Discovery Channel store or The Nature
thtrd extenSion, th1s time With no deadline, so the administra- Company store for a refund, the company said.
tion can review the records and consult representatives of forConsumers with questions can call The Discovery Channel
mer pres1dents Reagan, Bush and Clinton.
Store at 1-800-752- 1937 between noon and 7 p.m. EDT MonTh~ delay ~nopening the Reagan records ''has been necessary day through Friday.
for th1s admmlstratlon to review the many constitutional and
legal questions raised by (the) potential release of sensitive and
confidential presidential records," Gonzales wrote in letter to
the National Archives sent Friday.
MIAMI (AP) -. ~rapping up a summer on the road in
· He did not say why this examination was still incomplete, but · Flonda, Janet Reno 1s expected to reach a decision next week
the letter suggests the additional review will require "a few on .whether to run ~or governor - a move that could pit her
additional weeks."
.
agamst the pres1dent s brother and give Democrats a chance for
Reagan's records are the first set scheduled to be released payback for last November.
under the Presidential Records Act of 1978, which followed
The former attorney general's decisive lead in the polls over
Watergate and former President Nixon's attempts to hold on to other · potent1al Democratic candidates - plus the bad blood .
h1s papers and tape recordings.
from the election fiasco last year- could make a matchup with ·
Gov. Jeb Bush the most-watched political contest of 2002.
" I t~ink it would make the Super Bowl look like a preseason
game, sa1d Susan MacManus, a University of South Florida
WA~HINGTON (AP) - President Bush, a proud member political scientist. " It's going to be a major international media
~f the L1~tle League, Hail of Excellence, said Friday he was contest."
·
,
·
·
,
sorely d1sappomted that Little League star pitcher Danny
Ren? is expected to reach a decision early next we ek,
Almol'lte turned o ut to be older than the rules allowed.
accordmg to three sources close to Reno who spoke on condi" I'm .dis~ppoint?d that adults woul.d fudge the boy's age," tion of anonymity. While the sources said Reno has not made a
Bush sa1d. I wasn t d1sappomted m hiS fast ball and his slider. final decision, others said they expect her to seek the DemocThe guy is awesome. H e's a great pitcher."
ratic nomination.
··
'
An officiai in the Dominican Republic, where Danny was
born, sa1d Fnday that the boy was 14, two years too old for Little League, rather than 12 as his family and team had said. Little •League officials wiped out all of his team's victories and its
recent third-place title. ·
·
Bush·commented while unveiling a new White House Internet site for children.
·
·
"'l' 'was sorely disappointed that people felt like th ey could

Reno may challenge Jeb Bush

Bush 'sorely disappointed'

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~Hope responding well to pneumonia treatment ,
.

~

~..,

. (AP~ BURBANK, Cal1f.
.~: Bob Hope continued his
,~ recovery from pneumonia
.:: Friday and was expected to
.i ret"trn home within· three
:• days, his doctor said.
However, the 98-year-old
!; entertainer remained weak1.. ened and may need several
~ weeks to regain his full health,
;: Dr. Lee Kagan said .
·
Hope remaine.d in serious
but stable co ndition at Provi_: dence St. Joseph Medical
!;; Center, where he was taken
~ Sunday after having ·rrouble
:~ breathing at his Toluca Lake ..
~ home.
.
''I'm inipressed with how
· quickly he has responded,"
Kagan said at a hospital news
.conference. "H e has turned
around as quickly as I might

have expected from a much
younger person."
Hope has begun to speak,
al.t hough with limited ability,
Kagan said.
The .comic was receiving
antibiotic medication, intravenous fluids and respiratory
therapy.
Hope's wife and daughter,
Linda, have been by his side

!;.

f.

almost constantly since he vyas
admitted.
Pneumonia, an infection of
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by bacteria , although fungal ·
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exist.'
Abo ut 2 million Americans
die of the illness each year,
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common cause of death.

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concerns of the new frontier."
Stem cells are created by removing an
inner cell mass from a 5- to 7 -day-old
embryo, a procedure that kills the
embryo. When properly . nurtured, the
cells are able to replicate, or divide, virtually forever, creating what is called a
stem cell line.
Clark was apparently also objecting to
legislation passed by the House of Representatives that would ban human
cloning - not just cloning for reproductive el)ds but also so-called therapeutic cloning.
Such cloning would produce stem
cells by creating embryos from the tells
of a single person, giving scientists an
exact tissue match to develop treatments
for that person:
.

·Reagan paper release stalls

Dragon Internet

,......_ WV, Alhlna. LAIHnDft. Oear,.aa.,, .. Olou~t«,
Moeane .... ,..le,endmortl
l'lnd Ul on tM WID II www.Cff8101 bba oorn
•laNd ert£7•1J lubNripUon r•t..

"It now seems that creating genetically compatible new skin cells for burn
victims, pancreas cells for diabetics, nerve
cells for those with spinal cord injuries
and many, many other potential advances
w11l soon be illegal in the United States,"
wrote Clark, a billionaire who also
founded Sili con Graphics, Healtheon
and MyCFO.
"Dr'JVen by· tgnorance,
·
conservative
".thinking and fear of the unknown our
political leaders have undertake~ to
make laws that suppress this type of
research." •
Earlier this month, Bush announced a
policy to limit federal funding for med;
1cal research on embryonic stem cells.
Bush , an abortion opponent, said it was
tmportant to "pay attention to the moral

·Discovery Channel ~calls la~ps

with

losal numbeQ incJude;

SAN
FRANCISCO
(AP)
Netscape founder Jim Clark is withholding $60 million he pledged to build
a biomedical research center at Stanford
University to protest President Bush's
restrictions on stem cell research and
congressional attempts to ban human
cloning.
"Our country risks being thrown into
a dark age of medical resR"
orch," Clark
""!&gt;"
wrote in all opinion column in The
New York Times on Friday.
·
Clark said he was suspending payment
of the balance of $150 million he
pledged in 1999 because it would be
futile for private funding to supplant
federal grants. He also cited recent decisions to limit research to existing stem
cell lines.

said
who has joked that his baseball
Eight people face criminal fraud charges, and more charges baseball of all
career
peaked
as
a
Little
League
player in Texas.
·are expected. In most cases, they involye people who had joint
I
bank accounts with the dead beneficiaries and converted the
"Social Security checks to their own use.
' Some of the payments have been recovered without any
W~SHIN~TON (AP) - The Discovery Channel Store,
charges bemg filed. In March, for example, investigaton in BalInc.,
11 recallmg 16,000 oil lamps because"the glass on the lamps
timore recovered $57,062 in uncashed Social Security checks
when the wick is lit, posing a tire hazard,
can
shatter
·
from the son of a beneficiary who died in 1994. ·
The company, based in Berkeley, Calif., has received four
reports of the. lamps shattering, according to the Consumer
Product Safety Commission. No one was hurt.
The ro,,alled lamps come in two shapes: a 16- by-7 inch recWASHINGTON (AP) - For the third time the Bush
an$1 a 7-inch square.
.
.
tangle
dminis~ratio"; has delayed release ~f 68,~00 p~ges' of Ronald
The top of the reciangle lamp has an opening for five wicks
eagan s Wh1te House records, mcludmg v1ce presidential
and the top of the square lamp has an opening for a single wick.

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Don9r protests Bush stem cell decision

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Sund•y. September l, l001

Turbulent summer cou.ld lead to furi-ous fall on ma.rket
NEWYORK {AP) -The summer head of equity' management at Wilm- report Wednesday, also from the
of2001 will likely be a bitter memo- ington Trust. "Everyone has been Commerce Deparrrnent, showed ecory for investors who watched their hoping that this week will be the nomic growth during the second
already battered stock portfolios sink week it gets better, and if not then, the quarter at the most anemic level in
yet again as hopes of a business turn- next week, but it's not qappening."
eight years.
around evaporated.
· Indeed, this past week's selling was
Meanwhile, Sun Microsystems and
Unfortunately, the market's plunge rriggered by a spate of discouraging Advanced Micro Devices issued revthis past week, including a 503-point economic and corporate news.
enue warnings for the current quardrop in the Dow Jones industrials
Two economic reports - one . ter, citing sofrening demand for their
over four days, suggests an increasing- Tuesday from the Conference Board, products. And Gateway and Corning
ly bleak prognosis for September and the other Thursday from the Com- announced significant job cuts ·
perhaps beyond.
merce Department - suggested con- because of sluggish business.
"I think there's less optimism now sumer confidence and spending,
The result: By Thursday, the Dow
among investors than there was earli- which accounts for two-thirds of the and Nasdaq composite index had
er this summer," said Matt Brown, · economy, are weakening. Another recorded their lowest closes since

April 9. The Dow's four-day slide
sliced 4.8 percent from its value, while
the Nasdaq tumbled 125 points or 6.5
percent.
The selling eased Friday, pardy on
an expected rebound, but also because
of a government report showing
orders to U.S. factories inched up in
July.
Still, the respite stopped short of a
rally. Analysts blamed low volume
ahead of the Labor Day holiday and
also investors' growing exasperation.
After months of watching rallies fizzle, many investors have stopped buy-

keting job she loved at Allaire
Corp., an Internet sofrware
company that was bought by
Macromedia Inc.
"There was a lack of communication - nobody really
average of 3.5 years, according knew what was going on," she
co the latest numbers from the said of her first layoff "There
Labor Department's Bureau of was a lot of ~peculation and
rumors, and all of a sudden it
Labor Statistics.
hit.
It was tough- and to see
Hinojos got her latest pink
slip last week, from Computerworld magazine, where she
worked in the. events department. She had been there for
two months.
"I was the last one in, so it
just kind -of made sense," she
said.
The job was not a perfect fit
for Hinojos, so it was not devastating news. She took the joh
in almost a panic after being
laid QffApril 30 from the mar-

Gloomy economy m'!kes.for .
.
grump1er workers th1s Labor Day
WASHINGTON (AP) ' workers, according to a survey
The almost daily announce- of 2,785 workers returning
ments oflayoffi have created an questionnaires to Walker Inforuncertainty among America's mation,
an
Indianapolis
workers that dampens this research fi rm.
Labor Day for many.
Just 24 percent of the workFor Monica Hinojos, the ers responding said they were
headlines are more than just contnritted to the company
,depressing news - they are they work for and plan to sray
reality. Hinojos, 32, of Boston at least two years. Only about
has been laid off twice this half said they would recomyear, her jobs among' the thou- mend their employer to others
sands of casualties of a soften- seeking a job.
mg economy.
Today's worker makes an
"I wouldn't say I'm bitter, average of $14.27, works 34.2
but I don't see loyalty in the hours a week, gees an average
same way," she said.
of 9.3 paid holidays per year
That is true for a Joe of and has held the current job an

U.N. study finds
Americans work ·
more than others
' .W ASHINGTON (AP) Japan held the title for the
. U.S. workers pur in more most hours worked until the
. hours on the job last year than mid-1990s, when the United
the labor force of any other States · surged ahead. Now,
- industr-ial- nation-, outpacing ~ Americans- wo-rk almosC a
employees in Canada, France, month more than the JapanGerinany,Japan and the Unit- · ese and almost three months
ed Kingdom, a study by a more than Germans.
U.N. agency finds .
Economists
have
said
The average American Americans ace working more
worked 1,978 hours in 2000, because of the eco nomic
compared with 1, 942 hours boom of the 1990s and an
in 1990, according .to Jeff increas"e· in young workers
Johnson, the economist who looking to make a good
headed the study by the Inter- impression.
national Labor Organization.
Only workers in South
That comes to almost an Korea and the Czech Repubadditional 40-hour work lie outworked Americans,
week.
though neither nation is con"The increase in .the num- sidered industrial by the
ber of hours worked within United Nations.
the United States ·runs
South Koreans put in
counter to the trend in other almost 500 more hours than
industrialized nations where U.S. workers; the labor force
we see declining an~ual hours of the Czech Republic
worked," Johnson said.
clocked in 100 hours more.

'

a lot of people go who were

cent in October to 4.5 percent
in July. Many economists are
predicting the job!~ rate will
continue to rise, but remain at
or below 5 percent.

really solid was hard."
Layoffs have driven the
nation's unemployment rate
from a 30-ye:ir-low o£3.9 per-

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Team
SEQ All
Gallla Academy
o-o 2-o
Logan
0-0 2-0
Marietta
· o-o 2-o
Jackson
0-0 1-1
Warren
o-o H
Athens
0-0 1-1
Point Pleasant
0-0 H
River Valley
0-0 0-2
Friday's Reaulta
Point Pleasant 23, Roane Co.
15
Gallia Academy 62, Coal Grove
0
w~ 58, River Valley o
Wavertj 28, Jackson 0
Marietta 23, Cambridge 8
logan 50, Nelsonville-Vorl&lt; 6
Athans 29, Meigs 8
P!llkersbljrg 29, Warren 3 ·

All

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( toll-free USA feature included
with home state plans • ·

pound Fort Frye, 32-6 ·
BY BurcH CooPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio - Eastern sat
up the ambush, and it worked.
The Fort Frye Cadets, who defeated the
Eagles last year, came co Shade River Stadium, and Eastern was ready, even though it
took a quarter and a half to set th e trap.
RJ Gibbs and Garrett Karr each had a pa,ir
of rushing touchdowns as the Eagles beat the
Cadets, 32-6.
"We came out last year and they flat-out
embarrassed us," said Karr. "They dominated
us •m every way.

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"It's the second win of a I 0-0 season, hope- ·
fully. That's what we're trying for."
"That was a big win," added Eastern head
coach Scott Christman. " We felt that we didn't play our best game last year. We needed co
make up for that." ·
This rinie, the Eagles got the upper hand as
Karr broke loose for a touchdown run of 44
yards late in the third quarter and a fake in
the fourrh for 53 yards to put the game away
for the Eagles.
. "I felt the li ne did an excellent job for me TACKLED - Eastern's R.J. Gibbs is ,tackled by a FOrt Frye defender
during first-half action Friday at Tuppers Plains. The Eagles topped
Please see Eastem, as
FOrt Frye 32-6 to avenge last year's loss. (Bryan Long)

..

Blue Devils sting Homets

Non·.l.eague
Team
Ral(enswood
Ripley
Oak Hill
Wahama
Hannan
South Gallia

All
2-0
2-0
2-1
1-1
0-2
0-2

Frlday'a Raaulta
Wahama 34, Federal Hocking
0
Southern 35, Hannan 6
Waterford 53, South Gallia 8
Oak Hill 36, Unioto 6
Ripley 28, St. Albans 0
Ravenswood 21, Poca 14

can sta~r
suspensions
. CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) - The NCAA \vill wait
at least a week before hearing
Marshall's appeal of the suspension of a dozen football
players for receiving extra
work benefits.
·
The universiry, however,
will be allowed to stagger the
suspensions, meanirig only six
are expected to ntiss · Saturday's game against top- ranked
Florida, two newspapers
reported Saturday.
"The reins.ratement staff has
agreed that Marshall can sragger the suspensions," NCAA
spokesman Wally Renfro told
·the Charleston Daily MaiL "I
don't think that we care who
(the players) are (for what
contest), once the parameters
of the process is established."
. Marshall Coach Bob Pruett
told the Herald Dispatch of
Huntington that half of the
suspended pla~ers will be
· alloWed to play.The nahtes of
t!lose suspended will not
appear on the depth chart discributed before the game.
Renfro said the NCAA
infractions
committee
ail.owed Marshall to stagger
the suspensions over the season because there are so many.

White
Falcons
slay
lancers

Bobby Jones ·
rnns all over ·
Coal Grove

Nelsonville-York
0-0 H
· Wellston
0-0 1-1
BY R. SHAWN LEWIS
Alexander
0-0 0-2
OVP MANAGING EDITOR
Belpre
0-0 0-1
GALLIPOLIS - LightMeigs
0-0 0-2
ning-fast Bobby Jones
Vinton County
0-0 0-2
blitzed Coal Grove for 24 7
Hocking Dlvlalon
yards and five TDs on just
Team
~ All
nine carries Friday as th e
Eastern
0-0 2-0
Blue Devils stung the HerTrimble
0-0 H
ne ts , 62 - o.
Waterford
0-0 1-1
On a stormy night at
Southern
· 0-0 1-1
Memorial Stadium, it was
i'i!lller
0-0 0-2
tough to ceU the source of
Federal Hocking 0-0 0-2
the cool breeze- the fas tFriday's Results
moving weath ~r system
Wahama 34, Federal Hocking 0
that swept through the
Southem 35, Hannan 6
region or Gallipolis' elusive
Wellston 58, River Valley 0 .
senior halfback.
Watertord 53, South Gallia 8
"Bobby Jones is one of
Eastern 32, Fort Frye 6
the better tootball players
Athans 29, Meigs 8
to ever play. here," Blue
Rock Hlll20, Vinton County 0
Devils Coac h Brent Saun~ Millersport30;Miller 0 _ _,__lo ers said.
Trimble44,Alexander0
Jones has .amassed 373
Logan 50, Nelsonville-Yol1&lt; 6
yards arid eight couchBelpre at Steuben. Catholic !IVA
downs in Gallipolis' two

·NCAA says MU

plans $40 and up

. -

HIGHLIGHTS

Gibbs, Karr helps Eastern

BY GARY CLARK
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Thompson's hands.
"I was dropping back and the ball was
in the air and in slow motion," the
younger Thompson said. "It was a great
feeling when I got in the endzone. Everyone wa.' patting me on the back."
Although the Big Blacks made the big
, plays down the stretch to solidifY the win,
the Raiders cook an early 6-0 lead with an
84-yard opening-kickoff return .by sophomore Jason Alvis . .
Point responded with I :50 left in the
first qtlarter when Kevin Thompson rambled 26 yards to tie the score ill 6-6. Just

STEWART, Ohio
Adam Rickard scored a pair
of touchdowns and booted
four extra points to pace the
Wahama White Falcons to.
their
first
grid win of
the 2001 season with a
convincing
34-0 shutout
wtn
over
Federal
Hocking
Friday.
Rickard
Rickard
1-----~· ran 58 yards
for one score while hauling·in
a 25-yard Ryan Mitchell aerial for .another to help· coach
Ed Cromley's WHS 11 even
its slate at 1-1 on the year.
Fed Hock dropped its second consecutive outing to fall
to 0-2 on the season.
Wahama jumped out to an .'
early. 20-0 first half advanrage
before adding to its lead with
single touchdowns in each of
the third and fourth per,iods
to pick up the victory. The
White Falcon defense, led by
Rickard's 10 tackles, turned
back several Lancet threats to
pitch the shutout win.
Wahama enjoyed an outstanding first half to set the
tone of the contest with Gabe
Lambert putting the Falcons
on .the boa rd on the Bend
Area team's first possession
with . a one-yard plunge
through the middle. The short
jaunt cap ped a 14-play, 91yard driv_e with Rickard's kick
for th e PAT splitting the
up rights to give WHS an early
7-0 lead with 4: 14 remaining
in the opening quarter.
The White Falcons struck
again in the second period
after Rickard burst through
the line to stop a Lancer ball
on a fourth and one at the
Falcon seven- yard line. Six
plays and 90 yards later, Ryan
Mitchell received a bloc.k
from Shilo Staats and raced 49
yards to paydirt to stake the
Falcons to a 13-0 edge with

Please see Point. 85

Please see Falcons, IJ

lopsided early . season wins.
And he's done it on just 18
carnes.
Friday night, Jones took
it the house from 10, 60, 9,
61 and 45. On the 60-yard
tote, Jones did a spin move
that would make .James
Brown proud at the Coal
Grove . 30, causing · three
Hornet defenders to eat
· Gallia County mud.
Jones out-did . that performance by breaking four
tackles on the 61-yard
scamper. He also threw in a
Gallia Academy's Donnie jones carries the ball during the Blue Devils 62;0
romp over visiting Coal Grove Friday. (Doug Shipley)

DEVILS WIN -

PIHH see Devils, Bl

,

Thompson lifts Point ·over Roane

1

agr~menton

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Page 81
Sunct.y, September ], ]001

Ohio Dlvlalon

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plus, get a

Friday baseball roundups, Page 82
Prep football, Page 84-5
Outdoors, Page 87

TVC

'Extended Untii .Saturday
($20 value)

:Mosler Inc. worken
Diebold's director of human
relations.
Dl A · Central Inc., an Oak
Park, Mich. competitor, has
established an office in Cincinnati staffed by two former
Mosler employees.
. "Mosler always bent over
backwards to rake care of its
customers and customers loved
us," sai\1 Gary Akey, former
manager of Mosler's customer
service center and training.
With Mosler's · shutdown,
'bank officials and others who
relied on . the company for
secu rity equipment service are
wondering ~ho will ~ke care
of their equipment.
.
, "We're looking to step in
and fill that gap;' said Ken
Lightfoot, former Mosler
branch insrallation service
manager, who is heading D/A
Central's Cincinnati office.
Beyond their expertise,
Mosler's secqrity technicians
are sought because they provide access to the company's
customers.

guess."

FREE -ACTIVATION

Demand running
high for former

HAMILTON (AP)
Demand is steady for the skills
of employees who lost their
jobs when Mosler Inc., a major
manufacturer of electronic
security systems, suddenly
closed its doors on Aug. 3.
Some banks which use
Mosler's security systems are
reaching out to those employees for continuing service on
the products.
'
And competitors are hir'ing
at least some of the .1,800.
workers that Mosler dumped
into the ranks of ·the unemployed.
.
Diebold Inc., the N orth
Canton•based supplier of security systems and services, says it
got an estimated 1,500 calls
and applications from former
Mosler employees within days
of the shutdown. So many, in
tact, it opened a temporary hiring office in Hamilton for a
f~w days ro screen applicants.
"We think we will . accommodate a large number of
them," said K;evin Nadzam,

ing in a market that has so far defied
prediction . Even technology stocks,
responsible for much of the bull market of the late 1990s, have lost their
appeal.
"I think people don't feel any pressure to do anything now, to buy any
stocks," said Brown, the Wilmington .
Trust adviser. "They realize that in
time the market will turn and will
probably turn abrupdy llpward. But
the question is, will it be .next week or '
the end of the year? No one knows.
And a lot of investors aren't willing to

Inside:

rrf!.d~ the biggest play of the game."

BY IAN BECKER
OVP SPORTS

.

·.

SPENCER, W.Va.
It ght be a
earlr, m th_e se~o~: but c;ill til tg acks
the Catdiac Kids .
One week after opening _th
ason
With a 21-19 loss at Ripley, Pomt easant
needed an 85-yard mtercepnon remrn
from ~ophomore linebacker J.D. Thompson wtth 3:30 left m the fourth quarter to
se~ a 23-15 wm at Roane County Fnday.
,ThiS ts a contmumg process . where
we ve, got to grow up a little btt each
week, satd Pomt head coach Steve Safford. "Some of our young kids had to step
m there tomght and make plays, and J.D.

Not only did Thompson's touchdown
puc the Big Blacks ahead for good, but it
also made up for his older brother Kevin's
miscue.
With Point holding a nar(ow 16- 15
lead,junior quarterback Kevin Thompson
fumbled the ball, which was recovered by
Roane defensive back Tim Windland at
the Point 20-yard line.
On the R aiders' ensuing play, seruor
quarterback Gary · Nicholson dropped
back it) to the pocket where he was met by
Point defensive end Chris Ramey. Before
Ramey could dr•g him to the groimd,
Nicholson hastily threw the ball into J.D.

Boston College spoils Rodriguez debut
BOSTON (AP) - William
G reen ran for 204 yards and
three TDs in three quar!ers as
Boston Co ll ~ge beat West
Virginia 34- 10 Saturday,
spoiling Mountaineers coach
Rich Rodriguez's debut·.
The Eagles, who lost last
year's season-opener 34-14 at
West Virginia, recovered from
a 10-0 first-quarter deficit.
Green, who had runs of67,
57 and 30 yards, didn 't play

I

after Boston College scored
14 seconds into the fina l
quarter.
Rod.rigue2 , the offensive
co-ordinator at Clemson the
last two years, replaced Don
Nehlen, who retired after 21
seasons following a 7-5
record last year.
The Eagles cut it co .10-3
on Kevin McMyler's 35-yard
field goal 2:52 into the second quarter.

.

Boston College tied it on
Green's 2-yard scoring run
midway into the quarter. Five
plays earlier, Green broke
through the middle for 57
yards.
McMyler's 33- yard field
goal with 15 seconds left in
the quarter gave Boston College a 13-10 halftime edge.
On the Eagles' second pos- ·
session of the second half,
Green went down the right

•

sideline for a 67- yardTO run ,
making it 20-10.
Green's third TD of the day,
a !-yard run, made it 27-10
with 3 1/ 2 minutes remaining in the third quarter. He
had a 30-yard run four plays
earlier.
Brian St. Pierre, 11-for- 26
for 146 yards and one interceptioq, hit Dedrick Dewal(
fo r a 33-yard scori ng toss to
make it 34- 10 just 14 seconds

•

.into the fi,nal quarter.
Tbe Mountaineers jumped
ahead 3-0 on Brenden Rauh's
41-yard field goal.
On Boston College's next
possession, St. Pierre was hit
from behind and fumbled the
ball at th&lt;; Eagles' 42. Defensive end T im Love caught the
ball and returne~ it to the
Boston College · 1. Avon
Cobourne ran it ;., on the
next play, making it 10- 0.

•

�•
,_

•

_Page AS

Business

iunbKJI 1rintes- ieuthttl

Sund•y. September l, l001

Turbulent summer cou.ld lead to furi-ous fall on ma.rket
NEWYORK {AP) -The summer head of equity' management at Wilm- report Wednesday, also from the
of2001 will likely be a bitter memo- ington Trust. "Everyone has been Commerce Deparrrnent, showed ecory for investors who watched their hoping that this week will be the nomic growth during the second
already battered stock portfolios sink week it gets better, and if not then, the quarter at the most anemic level in
yet again as hopes of a business turn- next week, but it's not qappening."
eight years.
around evaporated.
· Indeed, this past week's selling was
Meanwhile, Sun Microsystems and
Unfortunately, the market's plunge rriggered by a spate of discouraging Advanced Micro Devices issued revthis past week, including a 503-point economic and corporate news.
enue warnings for the current quardrop in the Dow Jones industrials
Two economic reports - one . ter, citing sofrening demand for their
over four days, suggests an increasing- Tuesday from the Conference Board, products. And Gateway and Corning
ly bleak prognosis for September and the other Thursday from the Com- announced significant job cuts ·
perhaps beyond.
merce Department - suggested con- because of sluggish business.
"I think there's less optimism now sumer confidence and spending,
The result: By Thursday, the Dow
among investors than there was earli- which accounts for two-thirds of the and Nasdaq composite index had
er this summer," said Matt Brown, · economy, are weakening. Another recorded their lowest closes since

April 9. The Dow's four-day slide
sliced 4.8 percent from its value, while
the Nasdaq tumbled 125 points or 6.5
percent.
The selling eased Friday, pardy on
an expected rebound, but also because
of a government report showing
orders to U.S. factories inched up in
July.
Still, the respite stopped short of a
rally. Analysts blamed low volume
ahead of the Labor Day holiday and
also investors' growing exasperation.
After months of watching rallies fizzle, many investors have stopped buy-

keting job she loved at Allaire
Corp., an Internet sofrware
company that was bought by
Macromedia Inc.
"There was a lack of communication - nobody really
average of 3.5 years, according knew what was going on," she
co the latest numbers from the said of her first layoff "There
Labor Department's Bureau of was a lot of ~peculation and
rumors, and all of a sudden it
Labor Statistics.
hit.
It was tough- and to see
Hinojos got her latest pink
slip last week, from Computerworld magazine, where she
worked in the. events department. She had been there for
two months.
"I was the last one in, so it
just kind -of made sense," she
said.
The job was not a perfect fit
for Hinojos, so it was not devastating news. She took the joh
in almost a panic after being
laid QffApril 30 from the mar-

Gloomy economy m'!kes.for .
.
grump1er workers th1s Labor Day
WASHINGTON (AP) ' workers, according to a survey
The almost daily announce- of 2,785 workers returning
ments oflayoffi have created an questionnaires to Walker Inforuncertainty among America's mation,
an
Indianapolis
workers that dampens this research fi rm.
Labor Day for many.
Just 24 percent of the workFor Monica Hinojos, the ers responding said they were
headlines are more than just contnritted to the company
,depressing news - they are they work for and plan to sray
reality. Hinojos, 32, of Boston at least two years. Only about
has been laid off twice this half said they would recomyear, her jobs among' the thou- mend their employer to others
sands of casualties of a soften- seeking a job.
mg economy.
Today's worker makes an
"I wouldn't say I'm bitter, average of $14.27, works 34.2
but I don't see loyalty in the hours a week, gees an average
same way," she said.
of 9.3 paid holidays per year
That is true for a Joe of and has held the current job an

U.N. study finds
Americans work ·
more than others
' .W ASHINGTON (AP) Japan held the title for the
. U.S. workers pur in more most hours worked until the
. hours on the job last year than mid-1990s, when the United
the labor force of any other States · surged ahead. Now,
- industr-ial- nation-, outpacing ~ Americans- wo-rk almosC a
employees in Canada, France, month more than the JapanGerinany,Japan and the Unit- · ese and almost three months
ed Kingdom, a study by a more than Germans.
U.N. agency finds .
Economists
have
said
The average American Americans ace working more
worked 1,978 hours in 2000, because of the eco nomic
compared with 1, 942 hours boom of the 1990s and an
in 1990, according .to Jeff increas"e· in young workers
Johnson, the economist who looking to make a good
headed the study by the Inter- impression.
national Labor Organization.
Only workers in South
That comes to almost an Korea and the Czech Repubadditional 40-hour work lie outworked Americans,
week.
though neither nation is con"The increase in .the num- sidered industrial by the
ber of hours worked within United Nations.
the United States ·runs
South Koreans put in
counter to the trend in other almost 500 more hours than
industrialized nations where U.S. workers; the labor force
we see declining an~ual hours of the Czech Republic
worked," Johnson said.
clocked in 100 hours more.

'

a lot of people go who were

cent in October to 4.5 percent
in July. Many economists are
predicting the job!~ rate will
continue to rise, but remain at
or below 5 percent.

really solid was hard."
Layoffs have driven the
nation's unemployment rate
from a 30-ye:ir-low o£3.9 per-

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Prep Football
SEOAL

Team
SEQ All
Gallla Academy
o-o 2-o
Logan
0-0 2-0
Marietta
· o-o 2-o
Jackson
0-0 1-1
Warren
o-o H
Athens
0-0 1-1
Point Pleasant
0-0 H
River Valley
0-0 0-2
Friday's Reaulta
Point Pleasant 23, Roane Co.
15
Gallia Academy 62, Coal Grove
0
w~ 58, River Valley o
Wavertj 28, Jackson 0
Marietta 23, Cambridge 8
logan 50, Nelsonville-Vorl&lt; 6
Athans 29, Meigs 8
P!llkersbljrg 29, Warren 3 ·

All

~

_,..----·-----··--·- - - - --1

( toll-free USA feature included
with home state plans • ·

pound Fort Frye, 32-6 ·
BY BurcH CooPER
OVP SPORTS STAFF

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio - Eastern sat
up the ambush, and it worked.
The Fort Frye Cadets, who defeated the
Eagles last year, came co Shade River Stadium, and Eastern was ready, even though it
took a quarter and a half to set th e trap.
RJ Gibbs and Garrett Karr each had a pa,ir
of rushing touchdowns as the Eagles beat the
Cadets, 32-6.
"We came out last year and they flat-out
embarrassed us," said Karr. "They dominated
us •m every way.

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Oullida CGIIultlnll 111 avaiabll upon request.

"It's the second win of a I 0-0 season, hope- ·
fully. That's what we're trying for."
"That was a big win," added Eastern head
coach Scott Christman. " We felt that we didn't play our best game last year. We needed co
make up for that." ·
This rinie, the Eagles got the upper hand as
Karr broke loose for a touchdown run of 44
yards late in the third quarter and a fake in
the fourrh for 53 yards to put the game away
for the Eagles.
. "I felt the li ne did an excellent job for me TACKLED - Eastern's R.J. Gibbs is ,tackled by a FOrt Frye defender
during first-half action Friday at Tuppers Plains. The Eagles topped
Please see Eastem, as
FOrt Frye 32-6 to avenge last year's loss. (Bryan Long)

..

Blue Devils sting Homets

Non·.l.eague
Team
Ral(enswood
Ripley
Oak Hill
Wahama
Hannan
South Gallia

All
2-0
2-0
2-1
1-1
0-2
0-2

Frlday'a Raaulta
Wahama 34, Federal Hocking
0
Southern 35, Hannan 6
Waterford 53, South Gallia 8
Oak Hill 36, Unioto 6
Ripley 28, St. Albans 0
Ravenswood 21, Poca 14

can sta~r
suspensions
. CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) - The NCAA \vill wait
at least a week before hearing
Marshall's appeal of the suspension of a dozen football
players for receiving extra
work benefits.
·
The universiry, however,
will be allowed to stagger the
suspensions, meanirig only six
are expected to ntiss · Saturday's game against top- ranked
Florida, two newspapers
reported Saturday.
"The reins.ratement staff has
agreed that Marshall can sragger the suspensions," NCAA
spokesman Wally Renfro told
·the Charleston Daily MaiL "I
don't think that we care who
(the players) are (for what
contest), once the parameters
of the process is established."
. Marshall Coach Bob Pruett
told the Herald Dispatch of
Huntington that half of the
suspended pla~ers will be
· alloWed to play.The nahtes of
t!lose suspended will not
appear on the depth chart discributed before the game.
Renfro said the NCAA
infractions
committee
ail.owed Marshall to stagger
the suspensions over the season because there are so many.

White
Falcons
slay
lancers

Bobby Jones ·
rnns all over ·
Coal Grove

Nelsonville-York
0-0 H
· Wellston
0-0 1-1
BY R. SHAWN LEWIS
Alexander
0-0 0-2
OVP MANAGING EDITOR
Belpre
0-0 0-1
GALLIPOLIS - LightMeigs
0-0 0-2
ning-fast Bobby Jones
Vinton County
0-0 0-2
blitzed Coal Grove for 24 7
Hocking Dlvlalon
yards and five TDs on just
Team
~ All
nine carries Friday as th e
Eastern
0-0 2-0
Blue Devils stung the HerTrimble
0-0 H
ne ts , 62 - o.
Waterford
0-0 1-1
On a stormy night at
Southern
· 0-0 1-1
Memorial Stadium, it was
i'i!lller
0-0 0-2
tough to ceU the source of
Federal Hocking 0-0 0-2
the cool breeze- the fas tFriday's Results
moving weath ~r system
Wahama 34, Federal Hocking 0
that swept through the
Southem 35, Hannan 6
region or Gallipolis' elusive
Wellston 58, River Valley 0 .
senior halfback.
Watertord 53, South Gallia 8
"Bobby Jones is one of
Eastern 32, Fort Frye 6
the better tootball players
Athans 29, Meigs 8
to ever play. here," Blue
Rock Hlll20, Vinton County 0
Devils Coac h Brent Saun~ Millersport30;Miller 0 _ _,__lo ers said.
Trimble44,Alexander0
Jones has .amassed 373
Logan 50, Nelsonville-Yol1&lt; 6
yards arid eight couchBelpre at Steuben. Catholic !IVA
downs in Gallipolis' two

·NCAA says MU

plans $40 and up

. -

HIGHLIGHTS

Gibbs, Karr helps Eastern

BY GARY CLARK
OVP CORRESPONDENT

Thompson's hands.
"I was dropping back and the ball was
in the air and in slow motion," the
younger Thompson said. "It was a great
feeling when I got in the endzone. Everyone wa.' patting me on the back."
Although the Big Blacks made the big
, plays down the stretch to solidifY the win,
the Raiders cook an early 6-0 lead with an
84-yard opening-kickoff return .by sophomore Jason Alvis . .
Point responded with I :50 left in the
first qtlarter when Kevin Thompson rambled 26 yards to tie the score ill 6-6. Just

STEWART, Ohio
Adam Rickard scored a pair
of touchdowns and booted
four extra points to pace the
Wahama White Falcons to.
their
first
grid win of
the 2001 season with a
convincing
34-0 shutout
wtn
over
Federal
Hocking
Friday.
Rickard
Rickard
1-----~· ran 58 yards
for one score while hauling·in
a 25-yard Ryan Mitchell aerial for .another to help· coach
Ed Cromley's WHS 11 even
its slate at 1-1 on the year.
Fed Hock dropped its second consecutive outing to fall
to 0-2 on the season.
Wahama jumped out to an .'
early. 20-0 first half advanrage
before adding to its lead with
single touchdowns in each of
the third and fourth per,iods
to pick up the victory. The
White Falcon defense, led by
Rickard's 10 tackles, turned
back several Lancet threats to
pitch the shutout win.
Wahama enjoyed an outstanding first half to set the
tone of the contest with Gabe
Lambert putting the Falcons
on .the boa rd on the Bend
Area team's first possession
with . a one-yard plunge
through the middle. The short
jaunt cap ped a 14-play, 91yard driv_e with Rickard's kick
for th e PAT splitting the
up rights to give WHS an early
7-0 lead with 4: 14 remaining
in the opening quarter.
The White Falcons struck
again in the second period
after Rickard burst through
the line to stop a Lancer ball
on a fourth and one at the
Falcon seven- yard line. Six
plays and 90 yards later, Ryan
Mitchell received a bloc.k
from Shilo Staats and raced 49
yards to paydirt to stake the
Falcons to a 13-0 edge with

Please see Point. 85

Please see Falcons, IJ

lopsided early . season wins.
And he's done it on just 18
carnes.
Friday night, Jones took
it the house from 10, 60, 9,
61 and 45. On the 60-yard
tote, Jones did a spin move
that would make .James
Brown proud at the Coal
Grove . 30, causing · three
Hornet defenders to eat
· Gallia County mud.
Jones out-did . that performance by breaking four
tackles on the 61-yard
scamper. He also threw in a
Gallia Academy's Donnie jones carries the ball during the Blue Devils 62;0
romp over visiting Coal Grove Friday. (Doug Shipley)

DEVILS WIN -

PIHH see Devils, Bl

,

Thompson lifts Point ·over Roane

1

agr~menton

-stores 4P to 75 names and
numbers
-available in variety of colors
This· phone is available for
$19.95 when purchasing a
plan under $40' per month

SUNDAY's

Tum

161 Unn•~r River Road, Gallipolis , OH 45631

Page 81
Sunct.y, September ], ]001

Ohio Dlvlalon

Try Our Buffet!
Your atop lor aline dining
cuisine exp8rlencel

-·~ 500-minutes

plus, get a

Friday baseball roundups, Page 82
Prep football, Page 84-5
Outdoors, Page 87

TVC

'Extended Untii .Saturday
($20 value)

:Mosler Inc. worken
Diebold's director of human
relations.
Dl A · Central Inc., an Oak
Park, Mich. competitor, has
established an office in Cincinnati staffed by two former
Mosler employees.
. "Mosler always bent over
backwards to rake care of its
customers and customers loved
us," sai\1 Gary Akey, former
manager of Mosler's customer
service center and training.
With Mosler's · shutdown,
'bank officials and others who
relied on . the company for
secu rity equipment service are
wondering ~ho will ~ke care
of their equipment.
.
, "We're looking to step in
and fill that gap;' said Ken
Lightfoot, former Mosler
branch insrallation service
manager, who is heading D/A
Central's Cincinnati office.
Beyond their expertise,
Mosler's secqrity technicians
are sought because they provide access to the company's
customers.

guess."

FREE -ACTIVATION

Demand running
high for former

HAMILTON (AP)
Demand is steady for the skills
of employees who lost their
jobs when Mosler Inc., a major
manufacturer of electronic
security systems, suddenly
closed its doors on Aug. 3.
Some banks which use
Mosler's security systems are
reaching out to those employees for continuing service on
the products.
'
And competitors are hir'ing
at least some of the .1,800.
workers that Mosler dumped
into the ranks of ·the unemployed.
.
Diebold Inc., the N orth
Canton•based supplier of security systems and services, says it
got an estimated 1,500 calls
and applications from former
Mosler employees within days
of the shutdown. So many, in
tact, it opened a temporary hiring office in Hamilton for a
f~w days ro screen applicants.
"We think we will . accommodate a large number of
them," said K;evin Nadzam,

ing in a market that has so far defied
prediction . Even technology stocks,
responsible for much of the bull market of the late 1990s, have lost their
appeal.
"I think people don't feel any pressure to do anything now, to buy any
stocks," said Brown, the Wilmington .
Trust adviser. "They realize that in
time the market will turn and will
probably turn abrupdy llpward. But
the question is, will it be .next week or '
the end of the year? No one knows.
And a lot of investors aren't willing to

Inside:

rrf!.d~ the biggest play of the game."

BY IAN BECKER
OVP SPORTS

.

·.

SPENCER, W.Va.
It ght be a
earlr, m th_e se~o~: but c;ill til tg acks
the Catdiac Kids .
One week after opening _th
ason
With a 21-19 loss at Ripley, Pomt easant
needed an 85-yard mtercepnon remrn
from ~ophomore linebacker J.D. Thompson wtth 3:30 left m the fourth quarter to
se~ a 23-15 wm at Roane County Fnday.
,ThiS ts a contmumg process . where
we ve, got to grow up a little btt each
week, satd Pomt head coach Steve Safford. "Some of our young kids had to step
m there tomght and make plays, and J.D.

Not only did Thompson's touchdown
puc the Big Blacks ahead for good, but it
also made up for his older brother Kevin's
miscue.
With Point holding a nar(ow 16- 15
lead,junior quarterback Kevin Thompson
fumbled the ball, which was recovered by
Roane defensive back Tim Windland at
the Point 20-yard line.
On the R aiders' ensuing play, seruor
quarterback Gary · Nicholson dropped
back it) to the pocket where he was met by
Point defensive end Chris Ramey. Before
Ramey could dr•g him to the groimd,
Nicholson hastily threw the ball into J.D.

Boston College spoils Rodriguez debut
BOSTON (AP) - William
G reen ran for 204 yards and
three TDs in three quar!ers as
Boston Co ll ~ge beat West
Virginia 34- 10 Saturday,
spoiling Mountaineers coach
Rich Rodriguez's debut·.
The Eagles, who lost last
year's season-opener 34-14 at
West Virginia, recovered from
a 10-0 first-quarter deficit.
Green, who had runs of67,
57 and 30 yards, didn 't play

I

after Boston College scored
14 seconds into the fina l
quarter.
Rod.rigue2 , the offensive
co-ordinator at Clemson the
last two years, replaced Don
Nehlen, who retired after 21
seasons following a 7-5
record last year.
The Eagles cut it co .10-3
on Kevin McMyler's 35-yard
field goal 2:52 into the second quarter.

.

Boston College tied it on
Green's 2-yard scoring run
midway into the quarter. Five
plays earlier, Green broke
through the middle for 57
yards.
McMyler's 33- yard field
goal with 15 seconds left in
the quarter gave Boston College a 13-10 halftime edge.
On the Eagles' second pos- ·
session of the second half,
Green went down the right

•

sideline for a 67- yardTO run ,
making it 20-10.
Green's third TD of the day,
a !-yard run, made it 27-10
with 3 1/ 2 minutes remaining in the third quarter. He
had a 30-yard run four plays
earlier.
Brian St. Pierre, 11-for- 26
for 146 yards and one interceptioq, hit Dedrick Dewal(
fo r a 33-yard scori ng toss to
make it 34- 10 just 14 seconds

•

.into the fi,nal quarter.
Tbe Mountaineers jumped
ahead 3-0 on Brenden Rauh's
41-yard field goal.
On Boston College's next
possession, St. Pierre was hit
from behind and fumbled the
ball at th&lt;; Eagles' 42. Defensive end T im Love caught the
ball and returne~ it to the
Boston College · 1. Avon
Cobourne ran it ;., on the
next play, making it 10- 0.

•

�''\

Page 82

•

Sunday. September 2, 2001

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

.

.. .

Nelson Figueroa (4-5) hit
Guerrero in the left shoulder
with a pitch in the tim
inning. Guerrero took a few ·
steps toward the mound and
was stopped by home plate
umpire Chris Guccione and
Phillies catcher Todd Pratt.
Both ben ches and bullpens
emptied.
After calm was restored,
Phillies manager Larry Bowa
fi led a protest, claiming Guerrero should have been ejected.

Barry Bonds and Curt
Schilling ke~p imttirig up big
numbers.
The biggest of all right now
might be the four -game lead
Schilling and Arizona hold
' over Bonds and San Francisco
in ·the NL West.
' Bonds hit his 57th homer, a
· towering two-run shot that
' landed in the cove behind
righ t field, but the slumping
Giants lost 5-2 to Colorado
on Friday night.
"I t was just a mistake pitch
·that he capitalized on," Rockies starter John Thomson (25) said. "He's got 551 homers
- he's capitalized on other
people's mistakes, too."
Schilling allowed six hits in
· 8 1-3 innings for his majoc
league-leading 19th victory
and Luis Gonzalez hit his 51st
homer as the Diamondbacks
beat San Diego 4-1 in the first
. game of a doubleheader: The
_:Post Padres won the nightcap
6-5 . .
"This was the h~.rdest one, I
think," Schilling said of his
career-high 19th win. "When
you get to 18, you think, 'You
· know what, I'm two away
·from 20.'The one that bridges
18 and 20 is tough."
In other NL games, it was
Chicago 8,Atlanta 2; Montre,al 5, Philadelphia 1; Houston
!3, Milwaukee 2; St. Louis 5,
:Los Angeles 1; New York 6,
:Florida 1; and Cincinnati II,
;Pittsburgh 3.
·

8,
Braves 2
Cubs

Rookie Juan Cruz (2- 1)
gave up four hits · in six
inninbos and Matt Stairs hit a
two-run homer as Chicago
handed Atlanta another home
loss.
The Cubs have won five. of
six and remained four games
behind Houston in the NL
Central.
Javy ·Lopez drove in both
Atlanta runs as the Braves lost
for the 12th time in 16 home
games.

Astros 3,·
2

Brewers
Vinny Castilla hit a tworun homer with two outs in
the ninth inning off Jamey
Wright (9-9) to give visiting
Houston th e win.
Mike Williams
(4-4)
pitched the eighth for the
, win, and Billy Wagner got
three outs for his 32nd save.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, O~io. Point Pleasant, WV
I

YOUTH GALLERY

AROUND
THE DIAMOND
.

FRIDAY'S NL ACTION ·

Bo_nds, Schilling add
to their big numbers

Sunday,Sept.2,2001

itunba!' l!!:Imrs -&amp;rnunrl• Page 83

GAP power tumbling has a banner year

.

Nolionol LMgu&lt;t

East

Atlanta
Philadelphia
New York
Florida
Montreal
Houston
ChiCago
St. Louis
Milwaukee
Clnclnnetl
Pittsburgh

w

72
71

84
62

l
62
63
71

72
58 76
· Centi'JII
w L
79 55
75 59
73 61
59 74

54

80
84

49
West
IV
l
Arizona
78 57
san Francisco 74 61
Los Angeles
73 62
67 68
san Diego
Colorado
59 74

Pel.
.537
.530
.474
.463
.433
Pet
.590
.560
.545

.......

.403
368
Pel
.578
.548
.541
.496
.444

Thursday's Games
St. Louis 13, San Diego 3
Chicago Cubs 5, Florida 4
Houston 6, Clncinnatl1
N.Y. Mets 6, Philadelphia 2
Montreal 4, Atlanta 2
san Francisco 13, Ari zona 5
Los Angeles 5, CoiOfado 4

08

Arizona 4, San Diego t , 1st game
San Diego 6, Arizona 5, 2nd game
ChiCago Cubs 8, Alianra 2
Sl. Louis 5 , Los Angeles 1
Cotorado 5, San Francisco 2

I
S.turdoy'o~

8'•
10
14

Chicago Cubs (Tawuez 8·9) at Atlanta
(Maddux 17·7), 1:15 p.m. .
COlorado (Hampton t:J-.10) at San Fran·
08
cisco (Jensen 1·2), 4:05p.m.
Houston (Reynolds H-10) at Milwaukee
4
(Coppinger 1-4l) , 7:05p .m.
6
Montreal (Pavano 0-2) ar Philadelphia
19'1,
(Perscn 12~). 7:05 p.m.
25
PIHoburgh (D.WIIIIomo I~) 11 ClrJCin29 '/, . natl ~Acevedo •s), 7:05 p.m.
Florida (BumeH 9· 1O) at N.Y. Mats (Appi·
08 er7-10), 7:10p.m.
Arizona (Lopez 3-4) at San Diego (Toll4
berg 7-4), 10:05 p.m.
5
St. Louis (Hermanson 12·1 O) at Los
11
Angeles (Adams 10-6), 10:16 p.m.
18
Sunday'&amp; Games
Pittsburgh •t. Clnclnn•tl. 12:35 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Atlanta, 1:05 p.m.
Florida at N.V. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Montreal at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.
Houston at Milwaukee, 2:05p.m.
Colorado at San Francisco, 4:05p.m.
Arizona at San Oiego, 5 p.m.
St. Louis at Los Angeles, 8:10p.m.

Frldav's Games
Clnclnnat1 .11, Pmsburgh 3
N.Y. Mets 6, Florida 1
Montreal 5, Philadelphia 1
Houston 3, Milwaukee 2

Chicago WhHe Sox 1 t. Clevet•nd 8

Amerfeln Leegue
Eall

w
NewYotl
Boston
Toronto
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

79
71

65
55

L
56
62
70

79

-18 87
Cenb'al
w L
7&amp; 58
71
84
68 65
55 78
54 81
WHI
w L
96 39
79 56
69 66
61
74

Clevelend
Minnesota
Chico go

Detroit
Kansas City

Seattle
Oakland
Anaheim
Te~~:as

08

Pel.
.585
.534
.-181
.410

23'1:

.356

31

Pet
.5&amp;7
.526
.511
.414
.400

08

Pet
.711
.585
.511
.452

GB

7
' 14

17
27

Saturday'• O.mw
N.Y. Yankees (0 Hernandez 0-6) at
Booton (Marlinez 7-2). 1:15 p.m.
;
Detroit (Wee.ver 10· 13} at iOtOnto (Lyon
3-2), 4:05 p.m.
sean1e (Abbon 13-3) at Ballimo&lt;e (Me'rcodes 7-15), 4:05p.m.
·
Dakland (Hi~us 2-4l) a1 Tampa Bay (Eliftr·
brodt 1·3), 4 :15p.m.
Anaheim (Schoenewels 10·9) at Minnesola (Lohse 4-6) , 7:05 p. m.
.
Clevolond' (Dreoo Q-0) ol Chicago
Whlto Soli (Go~ond 6-ol), 7:05p.m.
Texas (Davis 8-8) at Kansas City (Wil son
6·4), 8 :05p.m.

Sunday's Games

Dutroit at Torooto, 1:05 p.m.
Qakland at Tampa Bay, 1: 15 p.m:

35 . Seanle at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.

Thuradly's Game.
Seattle 4, Tampa Bay 0
N.Y. Yankees 5, Toronto 4, 11 innings

Anaheim at Minnesota, 2:05p.m.
T&amp;QS at Kansas City, 2:05 p.m.
.
Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 2:05

p.m.
N.V. Yankees a1 Boston, 8:05 p.m.

Cleveland 3, Boston 1

OVAA CHAMPS -

The team from Bidwell recently won the
OVAA/Big Bend senior pony league title. Pictured, from left,
are Front:Josh eddy, Riley Rice, Dustin Ward, Pete Saunders,
Charlie Hollanbau!ih. Charley Nibert, Greg Phillips, Back;
coach Wayne eddy, coach Cory Camden, james Nickels, Ran,dall Sharrett, Robert Yost, Mike Wolford, Chrls Brown, Adam
Shultz, coach Jesse Saunders. (Submitted photo)

Oakland 15, Baltimore 0
Detroit 3, Chicago White Sox 1
Texas 5, Minnesota 1
Kansas City 2, Anaheim 1

Fridoy'o Games
Detrol"t 4, Toronto 3
N.Y. Yankees 3, Boston 1
Oakland 9, Tampa Bay 5
Battimore 3, seanle o
Texas 7, Kansas City 2 ·
Minnesota 4, Anaheim 1

v

FRIDAY'S AL ACTION

Clemen~ wins

again, Yankees keep Red Sox skidding
and Ray Durham also homered .
Cleveland's lead in the AL
Central was cut to 5 112
games by Minnesota. Indians
manager Charlie Manuel,
released from the hospital Friday, was expected to rejoin
the team Saturday.

game edge over Boston in the
wild card race.
·
Rangers

7,

GALLIPOLIS
GAP
Station, the Cheer Station &amp;
Tumbling Center's Power
Tumbling Team, completed
their 2000-2001 competition
.season after earning 15 First
Place wins, 18 Second Place
awards. more than dozen
Third Place finishes, and 4
team awards along the way.
Beginning at th e State
level, 12 GAP Station Power
Tumblers earned 30 top 5
wins in 3 different events.
Maggie
Bostic, Markle
Carter, Elisha
Straight,
Aubrie Rice, Casey Edwards,
Derek Harold, and Todd
Conn were all named State
Champions in at least one
event. Kayla Rose, Adriane
Eastman, Derek Harold, and
Todd Conn all earned State
Runner-up status in at least
one event. All 1'2 GAP Team
members placed in the top 5
in at least one event and in
doing so, all ·l-2 earned position to compete at the 2001
Nationals.
At the Ohio State Championships, GAP Station also
won four Team Awards. The
USTA presented them Team
Trophies in the events of
intermediate Double-mini,
Novice
Doubl e-mini;
Novice Trampoline, and Subnovice Floor. to the Gap Station Power Tumbling Team.
More than 2,500 athletes
representing nearly every
state in the nation competed
at the 2001 USTA National

TUMBLERS - ·Front, Elisha Streight. Middle row, left to right,
Kayla Rose, Maggie Bostic, Markle Carter, Aubrte rice, Derek
Harold. Back, Coach Henry Young. Not pictured, Casey
Edwards , Todd Conn and Adriane Eastman. (Sumbltted photo)

Competition
held
in
Louisville, KY. During the 3day event, five GAP Station
Power Tumblers won 10
National tides while competing on the rod floor, .the
trampoline, and the doublemini. Casey Edwards become
the first Power Tumbler ever,
from a Gallipolis team, to be
nam e&lt;! the N ational Champion in all three events. Maggie Bostic, age five, jumped
and tumbled her way into
becoming the
National
Runn er-up in all three
gvents. Both competitors are '
also the Ohio State TripleCrown C hampions, taking
First Pla ce on the floor,
trampoline and double-mini
events.· Kayla Rose was also
named National Runner-up
on the rod floor event.

Following the USTA
National Competition, four
GAP Station members continued on to compete at the
2001 Jr. Olympics held In
Hampton
Roads, VA ..
Although Casey Edwards was
unable to attend, Maggie
Bostic went on to win the
Gold Medal in all three of
her events. Mackie Carter
won a Gold Medal. for the
Floor, and a Silver Medal on
th e Trampoline.
Derek
Harold won the Silver Medal
in both the Double-mini and
the Trampoline events, and
Elisha Straight received the
Bronze Medal for the Floor
event.
In addition, Maggie Bostic
received two AAU Association Awards for contributing
to the Ohio Team Place-

ments for Double-mini and
Trampoline by being th e
"High Point" competitor in
her Division in both events ..
Power Tumbling and Trampoline Teams are among the
fastest growing athletic teams
in the USA for both males
and females . It is estimated
that over 2!-000 athletes
actively train and compete
on the Rod Floor, Doublemini, and Trampoline events
across the nation .
Cheer Station"s Power
Tumbling Coach , Henry t
Young, expanded into the
Gallipolis area fo llowing a
30-plus year domination in
the world of Kentucky tumbling.
.
After amassing hundreds of
ti.tles and awarcls, Mr. Young
and his wife Rosa have
moved to Ripley, W.Va . in
order to train athletes at the
Cheer Station &amp; Tumbling
Center in Gallipolis. Young
has served on numerous
boards and is currently on
the AAU Executive Board
for Tumbling and Trampoline.
Tryouts for the 2001-2002
GAP Station Power Tumbling Team will be held during the first two weeks of
September. Anyone interested in Power Tumbling or
who needs more information, should call the Cheer
Station ~ Tumbling Center
,at 446-9603 or toll free at ·
666-446-9603 .

UNDEFEATm- The KC Stingers 7-8 year old baseball team fin- .
Royals
lshed the regular season with a 12-0 record. They also won four
Rick Helling took a
more game sto take their league tournament title. Pictured are
(from left) front row: Derek Alnt, Brandon Cooper, Tyler Noble,
shutout into tlie ninth inning
Cheyenne Eblin, Trey Noble, Dexln Kirby. Second row: Cody Wimand Ruben Sierra hit his
mer, Matthew workman, Katelyn Birchfield, Branson Barr,
fourth career grand slam as
Austen Smith. Back row; coaches Willie Noble, Ray Wimmer,
Texas
won
at
Kansas
City.
Orioles _] ,
Vlkki
Birchfield. (Submitted photo).
Helling blanked the Royals
until Mike Sweeney hit a
Mariners
Calvin Maduro blanked t\vo-run homer with two
• GALLI A AUTO SALES • 2147 JACKSON PIKE • GALLI A AUTO SALES • 2147 JACKSON PIKE
Seattle for seven innings and outs in the ninth.
gave up·. one run in seven Baltimore stopped a six-game
Mike Lamb hit an insideinnings. His 278th career vic- losing streak.
the-par.k homer for the
tory came as the Yankees
The game at Camden Yards
began an 11-day stretch in was called because of rain
whic h.they play Boston seven with two outs in the ninth
times.
inning. The Mariners did not
Shut out on two hits for have a runn!'r on base when it
Angels
LINcoLN, N eb. {APJ eight times.
Dame.
seven mnings by Frank was stopped.
A.J. Pierzynski and Corey
Dahrran Diedrick rushed for
Eric Crouch and Thunder
Nutter, who had never
Castillo, the Yankees rallied on
The Orioles ended their Koskie homered, · leading
177 yards and three touch- Collins also scored for been sacked more than five
Posada's two-run homer in 10-game skid against Seattle. Brad Radke and Minnesota at
Check Out These Perfect Vehicles for "Tailgate" Parties!
downs in his first start and N ebraska, which had 457 times in three previous years
the eighth. Williams homered
the MetrodOJ11e.
No.4 Nebraska held Division yards ,of offense. .
as a starter, was 15-for-36 for
•
in the ninth.
Athletics
Twins
won.
fbr
the
fifth
J-A
newcomer
Troy
State
to
The
1
yards
with
a
touchdown
190
Crouch rushed for 48 yards
"It's pretty frustrating .. We
•
time in seven games. Anaheim
165 yards in a 42-1 4 victory
on
15 carries and was 8- for- for the Trojans (0- 1).
keep.. playing hard," Castillo
Devil Rays
lost its season-high f&lt;""o'."u:rt~h•'-'i"'n~a~.-il-- _j~IJ.!J~ay.
15 for .109 passing _yards.
It was the seeon,ct- srra:ight~ll---'l:
sa1p. R1ght now-we-ar&lt;Hev&lt;&gt;n - Errc Clraven:lroveiJnhree
TheH~rs~~.~o Collins had 11 carries for 52 solid defensive performance .
down and have six more to runs, Jer-maine Dye hit a
fell behind 7-0, allowed just 2 yards for the Huskers, who for Nebraska, which held
play against them."
three-run homer and Oakngers
yards of offense in the second are at home again next week- TCU to 186 yards in the sealand won its eighth straight
half and sacked Brock Nutter end against No. 18 Notre son opener.
road game.
Blue Jays
White Sox
C havez, who had eight
Randall Simon homered
Indians
RBls at Baltimore on Thurs- right after he was almost hit
vital role with his defensive play not to menRoyce Clayton hit a day, hit a two-run double a11d in the head by a pitch, lifting
tion his kicking and punting."
tiebreaking, three- run homer a sacrifice fly.
Detroit over Toronto.
"Ryan Mitchell also came through for us in
in the eighth inning and Jose
The Athletics have their
Simon connected one pitch
a big way, as did Shilo Staats with a crucial
Valentin homered twice as longest road winning string following a near-m iss by
from Page 81
block that sprung Mitchell free for our second
C hicago beat Cleveland at sinct;, taking nine straight in Pedro Borbon at SkyDome.
2:42
left
in
the
opening
half.
score,''
added Cromley. "Another big game
Comiskey Park.
1988. Oakland has won six in
Wahama would add yet another score to its player for us was Brandon Hankinson.
Valentin drove in five runs a row overall to take a seven40,000mlloo
.mounting total just before the half ended Although his statistics might. not indicate it,
r--------------------------------------------------.when Mitchell tossed a 25-yard scoring strike he played exceptionally well . in running the
:to
Rickard for a touchdown. Rickard's point- team and keeping everything running
make sure
get
.
:after kick was true, giving WHS a ?0-0 half- smoothly:"
your copy of the
·,
t
ime
bulge.
Staats, Scott Johnson, Justin Jordan, and
&amp;
In the third quarter, Rickard broke free R .T. Roush followed Rickard as defensive
Sebring
though the middle of the interior line on the stop leaders as WHS limited the Lancers to
for buying my
Falcon's second play from scrimmage and 200 yards in total offense. WHS tallied 327
buYin~
raced 58 yards for the score with his ensuing yards in total offense.
Wires paces Federal on the ground with 59
.PAT kick making it a 27-0 affair.
.
: Brandon Hankinson capped the night's yards in 16 carries while Cliht Sears caught
:scoring activity with a nice 24-yard TD scam- four passes for 71 yards to pace the Lancer
. Ho~.
·per with 3:47 remaining with Rickard once offense. Wahama received 92 rushing yards in
PROl~CT.
1997
six carries from Rickard while Mitchell added •
again booting the extra point kick .
.:/('(:: ·&gt;'~"/'.
7
4
yards
on
the
ground.
"We
played
an
outstanding
first
half,"
said
ZacharY
~.'-rt1' .
and get all the region's
'
. ,...,
Wahama will travel to Eastern (2-0) next
Cromley following the win. "Rickard was
~i
·,\/:'
'
MaYes
latest prep football
·~r
~-~fi·
·. ·
·simply sensational. He did it all for us. He ran Friday, while Federal Hocking hosts Zane
Sundance
Varlc_
e
· Pell~re
-the ball well, led us in receiving and played a Trace.
Kid a
results!!
/'"

2

0

TQ

Ranger~ns 4,

P 2 5 C 0 L LE GE F0 0 T B A L L

Cornhuskers roll over Troy St.

I

2000

g

5

=

4,

3

11.
8·

. anyway."

D·backs

4, ·

to

1;
Padres 6, D·
backs 5,
Padres

_j

I

•.

D'Angelo Jimenez hit an
RBI single with two outs in
the eighth inning to give San
Diego the split. Jimenez went
3-for-5, drove in two runs and
·
scored twice.
Jose Nunez (3-2) pitched a
perfect eighth for the win,
and Trevor Hoffman struck
out the side in the ninth for
his 34th save in 36 chances.
· Rickey Henderson had two
hits and scored twice. He
needs 13 runs to break Ty
Cobb's major league record of
2,245 and 20 hits for 3,000.
In the first game, Danny
Bautista hit two homers for
the Diamondbacks. Schilling
(19-6) took a four-hit shuto ut
into the ninth before Ryan
Klesko connected on the first
pitch for his 27th homer.
"I thought in the eighth
inning I threw the ball as well
as I've thrown in a while,"
Schilling said. "Pushing it for
another inning probably wasn 'r the right thing to do, but a
wm sawm.
'

I

'

11,
Pirates 3
Reds

Robin Jennings hit a grand
slam for his first major league
homer and also tripled with
the bases loaded, powering
Cincinnati past visiting Pittsburgh.
. Chris Reitsma (7-13) won
consecutive starts for the first
time. Todd Ritchie (1 0- 12)
took the loss.

Falcons

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Vladimir Guerrero, the center of a Phillies' protest in the
first inning, drove in two rui11
and scored another to lead
Montreal at Philadelphia.
The Phillies lost their third
straight game but remained
one game behind Atlanta in
the NL East.

HOLZER
CLINIC
(

Jackson
Gallipolis
Pomeroy

Point Pleasant
Proctorville

South Charleston

flomPipBl
45-yard non-scoring jaunt;
only the wet turf prevented
him from scoring on that one. .
The Blue Devils' defense
: also enjoyed another strong
-performance, . shackling the
· Hornets to 63 yards in 41
: plays. On a night of defensive
; : stars, none were .brighter than
- Nathan Kiskis.
: Kiskis made a living in the
: Coal Grove backfield, sacking
::Hornet signal-callers · twice
: and causing a fumble on
: another solid hit.
:: "There was no tight end on
• my side most of the time;' the
senior linebacker said. "I just
tried to get to the quarterback
as fast as I could."
Other stars included:
• Senior QB David
Brodeur, who completed a
44-yard bomb to Josh Perry,
: setting up fullback Clarke
:; ·saunders' second TD m as
,I

and have been for years:'
many games.
The Blue Devils echoed
• Blue Devil defender Justin
North broke up several passes their coach's sentiments.
'"they're tough," Kiskis
and ran, back a partially
blocked punt 10 yards for · a said.
" Ironton is a hard-nosed
touchdown.
• Backup QB/return man team that will just plain hit
Andre Geiger had several you,'' Jones said. "They're
good runs and caught a 4- probably the hardest-hitting
yard scoring toss from backup team we'll play this year." ·
: Kiskis agreed, recalling his
QB Travis McKinniss.
• Punter Shannon Shipley experience in last year's loss
bu'ried Coal Grove on its I when he lined up against
with a seeing-eye punt that Ohio State-bound Reggie
.trickled down to the Amen Arden .
"He was tough, but I had
Corner.
• Backup halfback Jesse fun," Kisk:is said. "I like hitting
Reitmire scored his second people that'U hit me back."
So what's it going to rake to
TD, rambling from IS yards
out late in the fourth quarter. beat Ironton? There's a comGallipolis expects its first mon accord in the Gallipolis
real test this Friday as they · locker room.
"No mistakes,'' Saunders
host longtime powerhouse
said.
Ironton.
"Execution. No mistakes,"
"Next week will be
lot
Jones said.
different," Jones said.
"No mistakes," Kiskis said.
"Ironton is a very good
"
We've
got a good team.
football team," Saunders said.
"'i'hey ma~e very few mis- We.'re confident that we're
takes. They're one of the best going to go·(ar.
"I think we can take them."
football programs in Ohio

a

' .

"

.

1998
.Taurus
Wagon

1998
Ford
Conwur

1992
Llneoln
Locol Trll&lt;lo

I LacoiOWnor

'7 495
1987
Ford

GALLIA AUTO SALE
DAVID MINK

ERNIE SHEESLEY

2147 JACKSON PIKE • 446·0724 • GALLIPOLIS OH
'•

�''\

Page 82

•

Sunday. September 2, 2001

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

.

.. .

Nelson Figueroa (4-5) hit
Guerrero in the left shoulder
with a pitch in the tim
inning. Guerrero took a few ·
steps toward the mound and
was stopped by home plate
umpire Chris Guccione and
Phillies catcher Todd Pratt.
Both ben ches and bullpens
emptied.
After calm was restored,
Phillies manager Larry Bowa
fi led a protest, claiming Guerrero should have been ejected.

Barry Bonds and Curt
Schilling ke~p imttirig up big
numbers.
The biggest of all right now
might be the four -game lead
Schilling and Arizona hold
' over Bonds and San Francisco
in ·the NL West.
' Bonds hit his 57th homer, a
· towering two-run shot that
' landed in the cove behind
righ t field, but the slumping
Giants lost 5-2 to Colorado
on Friday night.
"I t was just a mistake pitch
·that he capitalized on," Rockies starter John Thomson (25) said. "He's got 551 homers
- he's capitalized on other
people's mistakes, too."
Schilling allowed six hits in
· 8 1-3 innings for his majoc
league-leading 19th victory
and Luis Gonzalez hit his 51st
homer as the Diamondbacks
beat San Diego 4-1 in the first
. game of a doubleheader: The
_:Post Padres won the nightcap
6-5 . .
"This was the h~.rdest one, I
think," Schilling said of his
career-high 19th win. "When
you get to 18, you think, 'You
· know what, I'm two away
·from 20.'The one that bridges
18 and 20 is tough."
In other NL games, it was
Chicago 8,Atlanta 2; Montre,al 5, Philadelphia 1; Houston
!3, Milwaukee 2; St. Louis 5,
:Los Angeles 1; New York 6,
:Florida 1; and Cincinnati II,
;Pittsburgh 3.
·

8,
Braves 2
Cubs

Rookie Juan Cruz (2- 1)
gave up four hits · in six
inninbos and Matt Stairs hit a
two-run homer as Chicago
handed Atlanta another home
loss.
The Cubs have won five. of
six and remained four games
behind Houston in the NL
Central.
Javy ·Lopez drove in both
Atlanta runs as the Braves lost
for the 12th time in 16 home
games.

Astros 3,·
2

Brewers
Vinny Castilla hit a tworun homer with two outs in
the ninth inning off Jamey
Wright (9-9) to give visiting
Houston th e win.
Mike Williams
(4-4)
pitched the eighth for the
, win, and Billy Wagner got
three outs for his 32nd save.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, O~io. Point Pleasant, WV
I

YOUTH GALLERY

AROUND
THE DIAMOND
.

FRIDAY'S NL ACTION ·

Bo_nds, Schilling add
to their big numbers

Sunday,Sept.2,2001

itunba!' l!!:Imrs -&amp;rnunrl• Page 83

GAP power tumbling has a banner year

.

Nolionol LMgu&lt;t

East

Atlanta
Philadelphia
New York
Florida
Montreal
Houston
ChiCago
St. Louis
Milwaukee
Clnclnnetl
Pittsburgh

w

72
71

84
62

l
62
63
71

72
58 76
· Centi'JII
w L
79 55
75 59
73 61
59 74

54

80
84

49
West
IV
l
Arizona
78 57
san Francisco 74 61
Los Angeles
73 62
67 68
san Diego
Colorado
59 74

Pel.
.537
.530
.474
.463
.433
Pet
.590
.560
.545

.......

.403
368
Pel
.578
.548
.541
.496
.444

Thursday's Games
St. Louis 13, San Diego 3
Chicago Cubs 5, Florida 4
Houston 6, Clncinnatl1
N.Y. Mets 6, Philadelphia 2
Montreal 4, Atlanta 2
san Francisco 13, Ari zona 5
Los Angeles 5, CoiOfado 4

08

Arizona 4, San Diego t , 1st game
San Diego 6, Arizona 5, 2nd game
ChiCago Cubs 8, Alianra 2
Sl. Louis 5 , Los Angeles 1
Cotorado 5, San Francisco 2

I
S.turdoy'o~

8'•
10
14

Chicago Cubs (Tawuez 8·9) at Atlanta
(Maddux 17·7), 1:15 p.m. .
COlorado (Hampton t:J-.10) at San Fran·
08
cisco (Jensen 1·2), 4:05p.m.
Houston (Reynolds H-10) at Milwaukee
4
(Coppinger 1-4l) , 7:05p .m.
6
Montreal (Pavano 0-2) ar Philadelphia
19'1,
(Perscn 12~). 7:05 p.m.
25
PIHoburgh (D.WIIIIomo I~) 11 ClrJCin29 '/, . natl ~Acevedo •s), 7:05 p.m.
Florida (BumeH 9· 1O) at N.Y. Mats (Appi·
08 er7-10), 7:10p.m.
Arizona (Lopez 3-4) at San Diego (Toll4
berg 7-4), 10:05 p.m.
5
St. Louis (Hermanson 12·1 O) at Los
11
Angeles (Adams 10-6), 10:16 p.m.
18
Sunday'&amp; Games
Pittsburgh •t. Clnclnn•tl. 12:35 p.m.
Chicago Cubs at Atlanta, 1:05 p.m.
Florida at N.V. Mets, 1:10 p.m.
Montreal at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.
Houston at Milwaukee, 2:05p.m.
Colorado at San Francisco, 4:05p.m.
Arizona at San Oiego, 5 p.m.
St. Louis at Los Angeles, 8:10p.m.

Frldav's Games
Clnclnnat1 .11, Pmsburgh 3
N.Y. Mets 6, Florida 1
Montreal 5, Philadelphia 1
Houston 3, Milwaukee 2

Chicago WhHe Sox 1 t. Clevet•nd 8

Amerfeln Leegue
Eall

w
NewYotl
Boston
Toronto
Baltimore
Tampa Bay

79
71

65
55

L
56
62
70

79

-18 87
Cenb'al
w L
7&amp; 58
71
84
68 65
55 78
54 81
WHI
w L
96 39
79 56
69 66
61
74

Clevelend
Minnesota
Chico go

Detroit
Kansas City

Seattle
Oakland
Anaheim
Te~~:as

08

Pel.
.585
.534
.-181
.410

23'1:

.356

31

Pet
.5&amp;7
.526
.511
.414
.400

08

Pet
.711
.585
.511
.452

GB

7
' 14

17
27

Saturday'• O.mw
N.Y. Yankees (0 Hernandez 0-6) at
Booton (Marlinez 7-2). 1:15 p.m.
;
Detroit (Wee.ver 10· 13} at iOtOnto (Lyon
3-2), 4:05 p.m.
sean1e (Abbon 13-3) at Ballimo&lt;e (Me'rcodes 7-15), 4:05p.m.
·
Dakland (Hi~us 2-4l) a1 Tampa Bay (Eliftr·
brodt 1·3), 4 :15p.m.
Anaheim (Schoenewels 10·9) at Minnesola (Lohse 4-6) , 7:05 p. m.
.
Clevolond' (Dreoo Q-0) ol Chicago
Whlto Soli (Go~ond 6-ol), 7:05p.m.
Texas (Davis 8-8) at Kansas City (Wil son
6·4), 8 :05p.m.

Sunday's Games

Dutroit at Torooto, 1:05 p.m.
Qakland at Tampa Bay, 1: 15 p.m:

35 . Seanle at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.

Thuradly's Game.
Seattle 4, Tampa Bay 0
N.Y. Yankees 5, Toronto 4, 11 innings

Anaheim at Minnesota, 2:05p.m.
T&amp;QS at Kansas City, 2:05 p.m.
.
Cleveland at Chicago White Sox, 2:05

p.m.
N.V. Yankees a1 Boston, 8:05 p.m.

Cleveland 3, Boston 1

OVAA CHAMPS -

The team from Bidwell recently won the
OVAA/Big Bend senior pony league title. Pictured, from left,
are Front:Josh eddy, Riley Rice, Dustin Ward, Pete Saunders,
Charlie Hollanbau!ih. Charley Nibert, Greg Phillips, Back;
coach Wayne eddy, coach Cory Camden, james Nickels, Ran,dall Sharrett, Robert Yost, Mike Wolford, Chrls Brown, Adam
Shultz, coach Jesse Saunders. (Submitted photo)

Oakland 15, Baltimore 0
Detroit 3, Chicago White Sox 1
Texas 5, Minnesota 1
Kansas City 2, Anaheim 1

Fridoy'o Games
Detrol"t 4, Toronto 3
N.Y. Yankees 3, Boston 1
Oakland 9, Tampa Bay 5
Battimore 3, seanle o
Texas 7, Kansas City 2 ·
Minnesota 4, Anaheim 1

v

FRIDAY'S AL ACTION

Clemen~ wins

again, Yankees keep Red Sox skidding
and Ray Durham also homered .
Cleveland's lead in the AL
Central was cut to 5 112
games by Minnesota. Indians
manager Charlie Manuel,
released from the hospital Friday, was expected to rejoin
the team Saturday.

game edge over Boston in the
wild card race.
·
Rangers

7,

GALLIPOLIS
GAP
Station, the Cheer Station &amp;
Tumbling Center's Power
Tumbling Team, completed
their 2000-2001 competition
.season after earning 15 First
Place wins, 18 Second Place
awards. more than dozen
Third Place finishes, and 4
team awards along the way.
Beginning at th e State
level, 12 GAP Station Power
Tumblers earned 30 top 5
wins in 3 different events.
Maggie
Bostic, Markle
Carter, Elisha
Straight,
Aubrie Rice, Casey Edwards,
Derek Harold, and Todd
Conn were all named State
Champions in at least one
event. Kayla Rose, Adriane
Eastman, Derek Harold, and
Todd Conn all earned State
Runner-up status in at least
one event. All 1'2 GAP Team
members placed in the top 5
in at least one event and in
doing so, all ·l-2 earned position to compete at the 2001
Nationals.
At the Ohio State Championships, GAP Station also
won four Team Awards. The
USTA presented them Team
Trophies in the events of
intermediate Double-mini,
Novice
Doubl e-mini;
Novice Trampoline, and Subnovice Floor. to the Gap Station Power Tumbling Team.
More than 2,500 athletes
representing nearly every
state in the nation competed
at the 2001 USTA National

TUMBLERS - ·Front, Elisha Streight. Middle row, left to right,
Kayla Rose, Maggie Bostic, Markle Carter, Aubrte rice, Derek
Harold. Back, Coach Henry Young. Not pictured, Casey
Edwards , Todd Conn and Adriane Eastman. (Sumbltted photo)

Competition
held
in
Louisville, KY. During the 3day event, five GAP Station
Power Tumblers won 10
National tides while competing on the rod floor, .the
trampoline, and the doublemini. Casey Edwards become
the first Power Tumbler ever,
from a Gallipolis team, to be
nam e&lt;! the N ational Champion in all three events. Maggie Bostic, age five, jumped
and tumbled her way into
becoming the
National
Runn er-up in all three
gvents. Both competitors are '
also the Ohio State TripleCrown C hampions, taking
First Pla ce on the floor,
trampoline and double-mini
events.· Kayla Rose was also
named National Runner-up
on the rod floor event.

Following the USTA
National Competition, four
GAP Station members continued on to compete at the
2001 Jr. Olympics held In
Hampton
Roads, VA ..
Although Casey Edwards was
unable to attend, Maggie
Bostic went on to win the
Gold Medal in all three of
her events. Mackie Carter
won a Gold Medal. for the
Floor, and a Silver Medal on
th e Trampoline.
Derek
Harold won the Silver Medal
in both the Double-mini and
the Trampoline events, and
Elisha Straight received the
Bronze Medal for the Floor
event.
In addition, Maggie Bostic
received two AAU Association Awards for contributing
to the Ohio Team Place-

ments for Double-mini and
Trampoline by being th e
"High Point" competitor in
her Division in both events ..
Power Tumbling and Trampoline Teams are among the
fastest growing athletic teams
in the USA for both males
and females . It is estimated
that over 2!-000 athletes
actively train and compete
on the Rod Floor, Doublemini, and Trampoline events
across the nation .
Cheer Station"s Power
Tumbling Coach , Henry t
Young, expanded into the
Gallipolis area fo llowing a
30-plus year domination in
the world of Kentucky tumbling.
.
After amassing hundreds of
ti.tles and awarcls, Mr. Young
and his wife Rosa have
moved to Ripley, W.Va . in
order to train athletes at the
Cheer Station &amp; Tumbling
Center in Gallipolis. Young
has served on numerous
boards and is currently on
the AAU Executive Board
for Tumbling and Trampoline.
Tryouts for the 2001-2002
GAP Station Power Tumbling Team will be held during the first two weeks of
September. Anyone interested in Power Tumbling or
who needs more information, should call the Cheer
Station ~ Tumbling Center
,at 446-9603 or toll free at ·
666-446-9603 .

UNDEFEATm- The KC Stingers 7-8 year old baseball team fin- .
Royals
lshed the regular season with a 12-0 record. They also won four
Rick Helling took a
more game sto take their league tournament title. Pictured are
(from left) front row: Derek Alnt, Brandon Cooper, Tyler Noble,
shutout into tlie ninth inning
Cheyenne Eblin, Trey Noble, Dexln Kirby. Second row: Cody Wimand Ruben Sierra hit his
mer, Matthew workman, Katelyn Birchfield, Branson Barr,
fourth career grand slam as
Austen Smith. Back row; coaches Willie Noble, Ray Wimmer,
Texas
won
at
Kansas
City.
Orioles _] ,
Vlkki
Birchfield. (Submitted photo).
Helling blanked the Royals
until Mike Sweeney hit a
Mariners
Calvin Maduro blanked t\vo-run homer with two
• GALLI A AUTO SALES • 2147 JACKSON PIKE • GALLI A AUTO SALES • 2147 JACKSON PIKE
Seattle for seven innings and outs in the ninth.
gave up·. one run in seven Baltimore stopped a six-game
Mike Lamb hit an insideinnings. His 278th career vic- losing streak.
the-par.k homer for the
tory came as the Yankees
The game at Camden Yards
began an 11-day stretch in was called because of rain
whic h.they play Boston seven with two outs in the ninth
times.
inning. The Mariners did not
Shut out on two hits for have a runn!'r on base when it
Angels
LINcoLN, N eb. {APJ eight times.
Dame.
seven mnings by Frank was stopped.
A.J. Pierzynski and Corey
Dahrran Diedrick rushed for
Eric Crouch and Thunder
Nutter, who had never
Castillo, the Yankees rallied on
The Orioles ended their Koskie homered, · leading
177 yards and three touch- Collins also scored for been sacked more than five
Posada's two-run homer in 10-game skid against Seattle. Brad Radke and Minnesota at
Check Out These Perfect Vehicles for "Tailgate" Parties!
downs in his first start and N ebraska, which had 457 times in three previous years
the eighth. Williams homered
the MetrodOJ11e.
No.4 Nebraska held Division yards ,of offense. .
as a starter, was 15-for-36 for
•
in the ninth.
Athletics
Twins
won.
fbr
the
fifth
J-A
newcomer
Troy
State
to
The
1
yards
with
a
touchdown
190
Crouch rushed for 48 yards
"It's pretty frustrating .. We
•
time in seven games. Anaheim
165 yards in a 42-1 4 victory
on
15 carries and was 8- for- for the Trojans (0- 1).
keep.. playing hard," Castillo
Devil Rays
lost its season-high f&lt;""o'."u:rt~h•'-'i"'n~a~.-il-- _j~IJ.!J~ay.
15 for .109 passing _yards.
It was the seeon,ct- srra:ight~ll---'l:
sa1p. R1ght now-we-ar&lt;Hev&lt;&gt;n - Errc Clraven:lroveiJnhree
TheH~rs~~.~o Collins had 11 carries for 52 solid defensive performance .
down and have six more to runs, Jer-maine Dye hit a
fell behind 7-0, allowed just 2 yards for the Huskers, who for Nebraska, which held
play against them."
three-run homer and Oakngers
yards of offense in the second are at home again next week- TCU to 186 yards in the sealand won its eighth straight
half and sacked Brock Nutter end against No. 18 Notre son opener.
road game.
Blue Jays
White Sox
C havez, who had eight
Randall Simon homered
Indians
RBls at Baltimore on Thurs- right after he was almost hit
vital role with his defensive play not to menRoyce Clayton hit a day, hit a two-run double a11d in the head by a pitch, lifting
tion his kicking and punting."
tiebreaking, three- run homer a sacrifice fly.
Detroit over Toronto.
"Ryan Mitchell also came through for us in
in the eighth inning and Jose
The Athletics have their
Simon connected one pitch
a big way, as did Shilo Staats with a crucial
Valentin homered twice as longest road winning string following a near-m iss by
from Page 81
block that sprung Mitchell free for our second
C hicago beat Cleveland at sinct;, taking nine straight in Pedro Borbon at SkyDome.
2:42
left
in
the
opening
half.
score,''
added Cromley. "Another big game
Comiskey Park.
1988. Oakland has won six in
Wahama would add yet another score to its player for us was Brandon Hankinson.
Valentin drove in five runs a row overall to take a seven40,000mlloo
.mounting total just before the half ended Although his statistics might. not indicate it,
r--------------------------------------------------.when Mitchell tossed a 25-yard scoring strike he played exceptionally well . in running the
:to
Rickard for a touchdown. Rickard's point- team and keeping everything running
make sure
get
.
:after kick was true, giving WHS a ?0-0 half- smoothly:"
your copy of the
·,
t
ime
bulge.
Staats, Scott Johnson, Justin Jordan, and
&amp;
In the third quarter, Rickard broke free R .T. Roush followed Rickard as defensive
Sebring
though the middle of the interior line on the stop leaders as WHS limited the Lancers to
for buying my
Falcon's second play from scrimmage and 200 yards in total offense. WHS tallied 327
buYin~
raced 58 yards for the score with his ensuing yards in total offense.
Wires paces Federal on the ground with 59
.PAT kick making it a 27-0 affair.
.
: Brandon Hankinson capped the night's yards in 16 carries while Cliht Sears caught
:scoring activity with a nice 24-yard TD scam- four passes for 71 yards to pace the Lancer
. Ho~.
·per with 3:47 remaining with Rickard once offense. Wahama received 92 rushing yards in
PROl~CT.
1997
six carries from Rickard while Mitchell added •
again booting the extra point kick .
.:/('(:: ·&gt;'~"/'.
7
4
yards
on
the
ground.
"We
played
an
outstanding
first
half,"
said
ZacharY
~.'-rt1' .
and get all the region's
'
. ,...,
Wahama will travel to Eastern (2-0) next
Cromley following the win. "Rickard was
~i
·,\/:'
'
MaYes
latest prep football
·~r
~-~fi·
·. ·
·simply sensational. He did it all for us. He ran Friday, while Federal Hocking hosts Zane
Sundance
Varlc_
e
· Pell~re
-the ball well, led us in receiving and played a Trace.
Kid a
results!!
/'"

2

0

TQ

Ranger~ns 4,

P 2 5 C 0 L LE GE F0 0 T B A L L

Cornhuskers roll over Troy St.

I

2000

g

5

=

4,

3

11.
8·

. anyway."

D·backs

4, ·

to

1;
Padres 6, D·
backs 5,
Padres

_j

I

•.

D'Angelo Jimenez hit an
RBI single with two outs in
the eighth inning to give San
Diego the split. Jimenez went
3-for-5, drove in two runs and
·
scored twice.
Jose Nunez (3-2) pitched a
perfect eighth for the win,
and Trevor Hoffman struck
out the side in the ninth for
his 34th save in 36 chances.
· Rickey Henderson had two
hits and scored twice. He
needs 13 runs to break Ty
Cobb's major league record of
2,245 and 20 hits for 3,000.
In the first game, Danny
Bautista hit two homers for
the Diamondbacks. Schilling
(19-6) took a four-hit shuto ut
into the ninth before Ryan
Klesko connected on the first
pitch for his 27th homer.
"I thought in the eighth
inning I threw the ball as well
as I've thrown in a while,"
Schilling said. "Pushing it for
another inning probably wasn 'r the right thing to do, but a
wm sawm.
'

I

'

11,
Pirates 3
Reds

Robin Jennings hit a grand
slam for his first major league
homer and also tripled with
the bases loaded, powering
Cincinnati past visiting Pittsburgh.
. Chris Reitsma (7-13) won
consecutive starts for the first
time. Todd Ritchie (1 0- 12)
took the loss.

Falcons

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Vladimir Guerrero, the center of a Phillies' protest in the
first inning, drove in two rui11
and scored another to lead
Montreal at Philadelphia.
The Phillies lost their third
straight game but remained
one game behind Atlanta in
the NL East.

HOLZER
CLINIC
(

Jackson
Gallipolis
Pomeroy

Point Pleasant
Proctorville

South Charleston

flomPipBl
45-yard non-scoring jaunt;
only the wet turf prevented
him from scoring on that one. .
The Blue Devils' defense
: also enjoyed another strong
-performance, . shackling the
· Hornets to 63 yards in 41
: plays. On a night of defensive
; : stars, none were .brighter than
- Nathan Kiskis.
: Kiskis made a living in the
: Coal Grove backfield, sacking
::Hornet signal-callers · twice
: and causing a fumble on
: another solid hit.
:: "There was no tight end on
• my side most of the time;' the
senior linebacker said. "I just
tried to get to the quarterback
as fast as I could."
Other stars included:
• Senior QB David
Brodeur, who completed a
44-yard bomb to Josh Perry,
: setting up fullback Clarke
:; ·saunders' second TD m as
,I

and have been for years:'
many games.
The Blue Devils echoed
• Blue Devil defender Justin
North broke up several passes their coach's sentiments.
'"they're tough," Kiskis
and ran, back a partially
blocked punt 10 yards for · a said.
" Ironton is a hard-nosed
touchdown.
• Backup QB/return man team that will just plain hit
Andre Geiger had several you,'' Jones said. "They're
good runs and caught a 4- probably the hardest-hitting
yard scoring toss from backup team we'll play this year." ·
: Kiskis agreed, recalling his
QB Travis McKinniss.
• Punter Shannon Shipley experience in last year's loss
bu'ried Coal Grove on its I when he lined up against
with a seeing-eye punt that Ohio State-bound Reggie
.trickled down to the Amen Arden .
"He was tough, but I had
Corner.
• Backup halfback Jesse fun," Kisk:is said. "I like hitting
Reitmire scored his second people that'U hit me back."
So what's it going to rake to
TD, rambling from IS yards
out late in the fourth quarter. beat Ironton? There's a comGallipolis expects its first mon accord in the Gallipolis
real test this Friday as they · locker room.
"No mistakes,'' Saunders
host longtime powerhouse
said.
Ironton.
"Execution. No mistakes,"
"Next week will be
lot
Jones said.
different," Jones said.
"No mistakes," Kiskis said.
"Ironton is a very good
"
We've
got a good team.
football team," Saunders said.
"'i'hey ma~e very few mis- We.'re confident that we're
takes. They're one of the best going to go·(ar.
"I think we can take them."
football programs in Ohio

a

' .

"

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Wagon

1998
Ford
Conwur

1992
Llneoln
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1987
Ford

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ERNIE SHEESLEY

2147 JACKSON PIKE • 446·0724 • GALLIPOLIS OH
'•

�•

..
Page B4 • itunba~ Q:imrt' -ittntinrl

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

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

·Sund•y, Sept. 2, 2001

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

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

WEEK TWO

Golden Rockets blast over Raiders, 58-0 Wildcats

Big plays help Bulldogs top Marauders

•

BY REBECCA THOMAS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

C HESHIRE -There were
mo re fl ags o n the field than in
the band, but despite eight
Wellsto n penalties for over 70
yards , th r Rockets bla~ted the
Ra iders 58-0 Friday mght.
Wellsto n rushed for over
450 yards to ca pture its first
vi cto ry of the 200 1 season .
"We knew it was gonna be
tou gh coming into the
game," said River Valley head
coach Larry Carter. "We just
couldn't match up with them
size wise."
The Rockets attacked early
taking a 7- 0 lead at the 9:16
mark in the first quarter off a
27-yard run by senior Brad
Young. Young would go on
to lead the Wellston offense
with over 160 yards.
The
Rockets
quickly
regained control of the
pigskin and despite a nullified
45-yard
touchdown,
increased their lead by six
with 5 :00 to play in the first
quarter.
The Rockets would strike
'one more time, this one off a
10-yard run by Young. Phillip
Osborne sealed up the extra
point to round out the first
quarter at 20-0.
The Raiders came out
strong in quarter two. Adam
Darst returned the Osborne
kickoff 20 y~rds to get the

RAIDERS FALL - River Valley quarterback Joe.v Graham
takes off with the ball during the Raiders loss to Wellston.
(Bryan Long)
Raiders started on their ·own intended for Young but
Raider sophomore Joey Gra34.
Four plays later, the ball was ham pounded Young, causing
the pass to be ruled incomback in the hands of the
plete.
Rockets, but River Valley
The Raider run didn't last
scrambled to hold on. Well- long, as Osborne picked up a
ston quarterback Dusty Fultz 17-yard TD at the 9:00 mark
launched a 30-yard pass

in the second quarter.
Five plays later, River Valley
punted back into the hands of
the Rockets' offense. It was a
quick trip to the end zone for
Rocket junior Thomas Mays,
who with a little help from
Fultz, took the ball 64 yards
in three plays to increase the
Wellston lead.
Once again, a strong return
by Darst started off the River
Valley attack, but the Raiders
could not convert.
The Rockets would see the
end zone one more time
before the break. At the end .
of two, Wellst~n held ttghtly
to a commandmg 33'-0 lead.
. The second half meant a
ltttle more passtng for the
River Valley offense. Graham
completed a 15-yard pass to
R
. W: d.
J eSSie ar . 11eammate yan
S
ld.
ld 1
. .
pauh mg V.:tohu h ' ater mum c
G raamwt
15
tsownW:
d
.
t
yard connec t ton o . ar .
Both ;&gt;lays earned t: .e Raiders
first down rights.
But the Rockets were on
fire, as Young galloped 84
yards to pick up' his third TD
of the contest.
Five plays later, a Raider
fumble put the ball back into
the hands of the Rockets, and
it didn't take long to get the
job done. Mike Floyd put his
first points on the board with
a 14-yard scramble to give
Wellston a 46-point advan-

itunbB!' 1lime1 -6enlintl • Page BS

tage.
Once again, Darst gave the
Raiders a strong return, but
River Valley could not
advance. Eleven plays later,
Wellston took over on downs
at their own 46 yard line.
The fourth quarter brought
with it lots of freshman action
as ·both teams offered their
younger athletes good minutes.
The Rockets paid another
visit to the end zone with
6:48 left in the contest. An
illegal procedure penalty
against the Rockets called
back the extra poil)t and a
Raider
block . deferred
attempt number two. Wellt . 1 d b 52
s ~iv:r Jane · ave it on·e
y g
· h
more run, but once agam t e
d
Rockets took over on owns
and with :19 remaining gave
.
.
the kmfe one last twtst as
.
B k
Chns Cox took a Q - eeper
five yards for the touchdown.
"We continued to play
hard," said Carter. "We kept
good spmts thr~ughou_t the
game. Now were JUSt gomg to
go g~t ready for next week."
Wtth the wm, the Rockets
improve to 1-1 on the season.
River Valley falls to 0- 2.
The Raiders take the short
ride up river to visit Meigs .
next Friday. Kick off is set
for 7:30.

•

crutse

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

THE PLAINS, Ohio - Brad Hart: ley had an 80-yard kickoff return for a
touchdown and .added a 66-yard interception return for another score to lead
Athens to a 29-8 win over Meigs in
non-_conference football action Friday
: evemng at Athens High School.
Meigs, for the second game in a row,
had problems getting their offense
rolling, and for the second game in a
row, most of the fiBt half was played in
Marauder territory.
Athens won the toss and deferred to
the second half, the Marauders had a
four and out and after a Buzzy Fackler
punt to over at their own 43. Seven
plays later, Grant Gregory hooked up
with Lance Spires for a 24-yard scoring
toss.The extra points were no good.
On the Marauders ens~ing possession, Spires picked off Kyle Hannan pass
d d
h
RUNNING MAN - Running back Jereon secon
own giving t e Bulldogs my Roush looks for a hole Friday at
the ball at the Marauder 37 .
.
Athens. The Marauders dropped their
. Athens drove to the Metgs two yard second straight of the young season
!me and on second and goal, the Bull- 29-8 to the Bulldogs in non-conference
dogs coughed up the football and Jere- action. (Dave Harris)
my Roush recovered for Mt:igs at their ·
On fourth and 14, Brandon Bobb
own four yard line to dodge the bullet.
After a Marauder punt, the Bulldogs came up with a big play for Meigs,
drove to the Meigs sb.-yard line, a Bull- tackling ·Corey Champlin for a sevendog penalty moved the ball back to the yard loss to turn the ball over to Meigs
11. Ross Stewart came up with a big on downs.The play proved to be a costplay for Meigs sacking Gregory for a ly one for Meigs, as Bobb injured his
six-yard loss to the Meigs 17.
knee on the play and was unable to

'past
Rebels·
FROM OVP SAFF REPORTS

· return to action.
Athens go t the ball bac k three plays
later when R yan Walker picked off a
Hannan pass giving the Bulldogs the
ball at the M eigs 43. The Bulld'ogs went
on a drive to the Meigs 15, but R oush
interceptio n a Gregory pass fo r Meigs at
th e IO~ya rd line to end the th reat.
Meigs fumbled the ball to the Bulldogs on th e second play with the BuUdogs, only to have Athens return the
favor, f o ur plays later with Fackler
recovering for Meigs at the Athens four.
O nce again the Marauder drive fi zzled, and C hris Hewitt returned Fackler's punt 30 yards to .give the Bulldogs
good field positio n . The Marauder
defense stiffened, and the Bulldogs had
to settle for a 33-yard field goal by
Hewitt with 3:13 left in the half and a
9-0 lead, and that is the way the score
stood at intermission.
The fans had just settled into their
seats after the half, when Hartley took
the second half kickoff SO yards for the
score. Gregory added the extra points
on a run and the Bulldogs had the
upper hand at 17-0.
Later in the period, .the Marauders
seemed to have a drive going, but Hannan's pass went off the hands of a
Marauder receiver and Hartley picked
the pass out of the air and won the foot
race to the end zone for the score. Once
again the kick was no good, but the
Bulldogs held a 23- 0 lead with 6: 15 left

The OVP

in the period.
Athens scored their final tou chdown
of the evening when Champlin scored
from seven yards out with 3:41 left in
the third period, the extra points were
no good. That score was set up by a 44yard punt return by Hewitt.
Meigs scored their tou chdown with
one minute . left in the game when
freshman Eric Collums threw a perfect
pass to classmate Eric Holley for a 16yard score. Doug Dill added the extra
points to end the scoring and a 29-8
Athens win.
Champlin led the Bulldogs on the
ground with 31 yards in 10 carries,
Hewitt added 29 in seven carries. Gregory was 5-of- i 3 in the air for 81 yards
and an interception. Dave Chapman
caught two for 41 yards, Spires added
two for 38.
Ross Stewart and Jeremy Roush both
had 26 yards to ·Jead Meigs, Stewart in
six carries and Roush in 12. Tyson Lee
added 21 in six tries. Hannan was two
of 12 with three interceptions for 14
yards, Cullumns was_one of two for 16
yards, and Roush three one pass and
that was intercepted. Holley caught one
for 16 yards and Stewart and Fackler
each had one for eight yards.
Meigs drops to 0-2 on the year. They
will host River Valley (0- 2) next week.
Athens is 1-1, they will travel to
Alexander next week.

A weekly look at how lhe lhe
region's top football teams
fared, as voted by Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. sports staffers.

Results

WATERFORD, Ohio
1. Ironton
beat Sou1h
Point, 6().()
- Waterford's Dan Doe2. Portsmoulh beat Chillicothe,
bereiner rolled for 225
55-12
yards and four touch3. Gallipolis beat Coal
downs as the Wildcats
Grove, 62.0
4.
Jad&lt;son
lost to Waveftt,
blasted
28.()
South
S. Logan
beat N·York,
GaUia
50-0
53-8 in
6. (tie)Eastem beat Ft. Frye,
32-6
nonPark~rg · beat Warren,
league
29-3
football
B. Fort Frye lost to Eastem,
action
32-6
9. Wellston beat River
Friday.
Valley, 58.0
It was
10. SE Ross played Symmes
Workman
Doevalley (nla)
bereiner's 58-yard scamper on
Waterford~s first play from
scrimmage that pretty
much took the suspense
out of the contest. Todd
McCutcheon scored just ,
Sports EXTRA ·
over a minute-and-a-half
later later .o n a two-yard
plunge.
McCutcheon
also ·
added
an . 11-yarder
before the first gun to
help the Wildcats to a 210 first quarter lead.
·
Doebereiner also had
ONoHIQIISchooiFoocbllt
Cirt:levilleLoganEtm7, WilliamsportWest·
Hami""'Badn48, Washlng!onC.H. &gt;.tan; lngValeyO
0
Zanes~lle
W.
Mustdngum
12,
Frldly'otall 0
Trace 32
MlddeODiw1 42, ~ 12
Spar1a Hiltland 28. Caroington-Unco 7
McCon- Morgan 0
scoring runs of 11, 36,
Al&lt;l. CoM!ntry 23, Al&lt;l. Ceromi-Hower 16
Clayton Norttvnoo &lt;7, Kettemg Failm0n1 3
Hamler Patricl&lt; Hervy 35, Swanton 0
lo\lan Edson 20, 0
Spmg. Kenkln Ridge 27, Spi 'II· N. 19
Zoarvilo TUOCOIIIwas Yalloy 28, c:;,_,.
and
three
yards.
Akr. Gartield20,Balbotton 13
Clo. Hls. 16.Akr, K""""""6 . ,
~
HamiboJRiver5t,l'll-*&gt;g(W. Va.)AcadMilltlulyl.ake22. NOOI1wood8
Spmg. NW42, N . Lowia~MgTrlod8
hutlentndlanVaJey7
Al&lt;l. .._,tO, Slow 7
Cotdwater2t, Maria Steln Marion local?
emy 20
Millefllpatal, HemlockMillerO
Spilgbotoal, Cin.Aiksn 6
W.va. higluchoOI IICOI'OI
McCutcheon also added
Akr. 19, Noo1oo 0
Cols. Eleech:lol1 53, Cols. Scuth 6
Hanoll8l1on UrOted 35, Aoolstown 20
MinfonJ 34, ProctoMie Falriand 6
St. Mai)'S Memorial 13, WBpakoneta 0
Berkeley Springs 20, Bishop Walsh, Md. 0
Ale. Spmg. t8, TalmadgoO
Cols. Brook1tawn 19, Fremont Ross t4
Heath a&gt;. Howald Eas!Krox 6
Minster 14, Versalios 13
SteWorMIIe 15, Brooke(W. Va.)O
Big Craek B, Mont:alm 6
another six-yard TD run.
Akr. SVSM 37, Akr. N. 8
,
Cots. Centennial 34, London Madison
Hebron Lakewood 21, AsiMie Tays Valley
Mogadofe 40, Au1018 3
Stlasburg-Franldln 15, Belalrv 5I. John's 0
Bridgeport a&gt;. ~r t 4
The Wildcat defense
AllianCe Marllnglon 28, AtwaterWatelfoo7 PtiUno22
0
Mogador8 Fleld41, Can. 'Orri&lt;en7
Struetsboro 19, Clo. Orange 7
Calhoun County-44, RICtlle CoontyO
Amanda-Cioelmlek 19, Newa11&lt; Ceth, 13
Cols. DeSales 20, - l e S. 7
Hickory (Pa.) 27, Broaktletd 20
MoiTat Ridgedale 42, Marion Elf)n 0
Strongs&lt;Jille 21, Euclid 17
Capitl; 7, South Chaltestcn 0
also controlled their part,
S - 14, Graltoo Mldvlew 0
Cots. Independence 22. Cots. Northland 15
Hillard Dalby 40, Day. Cot. WMe 6
N. Can. Hoover 42, Akr, Bud1tof 14
S&lt;JIIivan Black Rivor 28, Ashland Mapleton
Clay Gaonty 48, Braxton COtny 13
holding South Gallia to
Anna 42. Lewisburg T~-caunty N. 26
Cols. li1den 56, Cots. WDI1d HaM&gt;St 0
Hlliard Oal'idson 37, Troy 13
Nc Lima S. Range 56, Columbiana 8
East LiYetpoot, Ohio 14, Qak Glen 3
Ansonia 33, Union City Msslssinawa Valley
Cots. Milllln 40, Mount vernon 25
H&lt;&gt;gate 41, Tot. Christian 0
Crestview 0
Summit station Llcldng Htl. 17, centeoturg
FayattaYite B, Shady Spring 7 ·
30 yards of total offense.
0
Cots. Roact,/ 17, New At&gt;any 0
Holand SoMa. 32, Tot , Bowoher 20
N. Ornsted 28, Easllako N. 0
14
George Wasi'Olg1on 49, Helbelt - 2 1
Of the 28 players on
M:anum 40, Bladton1 8
Cols. St. ChaJies 38, Cols. Briggs 14
Hubbald 21 , Cie. E. 6
N. AklgeoAIIe 40, Tot. l.lblley B
Sycamore Mohawtc 25, Bucyrus \Vynt&lt;&gt;ltj
tian¢irv 53, TL.&lt;I&lt;or Co&lt;.1ty 18
Aohland
c.55.
o..tino
0
Cots.
Walnli Rklga '.fl, Patasl&lt;8ia Watf&lt;ins
HW5on 35, Paloesvitle ~ 7
Napoleon 47, Wauseon 14
22
Hedgesvile at James WOOd, Va., ppd, rail
the South Gall.a roster,
Ashtabula Edgewood 20, Burton Berkshire Memorial31
Independence 30, Obeotln 6
New Goncord John Glenn 47, Philo 6
Tlllin Cotunillan 20, Ct,od&amp;O
·
hldepeuclotooe 28. Sl1erman 0
I12
~ Station ~ 22, 1..8Grange
Ironton BO, S. Point 0
New L.obar&lt;ln IJixia 26, Yellow Spring&amp; 0
TIPP City Belhet 33, New Palts National
Keyoor 28, Jell"""'" 7
14 are sophomores.
As111abuta L.alolsldo 44, Clo. E. '1llch 6
Keystone 0
Ironton Rock Hill 20, McAith..- Vinton
New leJdngton 40, Crooksvlle 20
TIBit 14
Lewis County 35, GraJ1on t 6
Waterford led 41-0 at
AVOtl Lake43, Lorain KingO
Copley t7, 1Winsburg 0
CountyO
New M8lamoras Fmntiar 7, Yalloy W Tot. Cent. Ceth. 40, MallrnaoO
Uberty Hamocn 14, South Hamocn 13
8amesvit1e 21, Byesville Meadowtlluok 7
Cost-. 37, W, LB!ayette Ridgewood 0
James-. G . - 13, Cin. Counby (W.Va.) 0
Tot. Rogols 27, Sylvania S0uttMow 21
Logan tB, 5lssorwile 12, OT
the half.
Bascom HopeweHoudon 42, Kansae
Covlngtoo41, W. Alexandria TIWI Valley S. Day 6
New Pli~ 35. Clo, Collnwood 0
· lbl. Sl FIW'&lt;Is 20, lbl. W11tmor 10
Marhllurg 26, WOOdmw Wlson 7
South Gallia finally got
1..ak01a 7
·
6
Hilsdale 3, Lucas 0
New Washington Buci&lt;oye Cent. 42,
Tontogany 0aego 33, Haviland Wayr'l!
Mi&lt;land Trail 21, Bridge e
Bay Vilage 26, Oberlin Fil9lands 0
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA t6. Peninsula
Johns-..Monroe42, SugarGI0\'8 Berne Greem;ch S. Cent. 21
Trace 22
M&lt;&gt;ryan-. 43. Elkl1s B
on the board with eight
11o8ttsvt1ii 46, Blldgopolt B
Woodridge 6
Union 0
Newall&lt; 16, 2'.anesllllle 0
Tmnton Edgawcod 34, Harrillon Rosa 14
Mount VIew 48, Morl 7
seconds remaining in the
- - . t Ht1. Chane! 31, Clo. Ksnnody 8
Danville (Ky,) 47, Portsmouth No1ro Dame
. Jonathan Alder 35. Cols. Harnl""' Twp. 12
Newark Licking Valley 38, John$10wn
Troy Chrlstlaill9, ~ ~......... - W
Musoelmal38, S1.....-.:1o, Va. '6
Balelol......, tB, Silt1ey 15
7
Kelt9!fng Alter 24; Betl&gt;nlok 21
Northridge 7·
•
LAlricllslliU. Claymont t, - - • ·
New IAallmlras Frontlef, Ohio 7, VaJey
game with a four yard
Ba1teYiJe 42, Aa111and 0
Day. Chamlnade-Jiilenne 'ZI, Carmi 17
Kir11anc124, Folopott tiaJtlof Haning 0
· Newtluy 38, ~ Ledg&amp; ''"'t 7
Holmes 17
Wetzej 0
BaMie Clear Fork 34, F - . t4
Day. Qakwood 27. Spring. Ceth. Cent. 7
L.ak-llanbuly 28, N. Baltlroore 6
Newcome,.town
50, . Apple Creek
lkliontown Lake 34, Ale. Arestono 6
New Wilmington. Pa. 33, Unoty 17
run by Josh Waugh. Zach
BatoiLW..BrMch 21,.Youngs.~Aayen.8. _ _ _ 0efiancB 7, Van WertS ·
L.akewood.St. Edward 52, LBicowood 0- -·Waynedale..1A--~~3BN~-t~ - - -Nitiif'ZI; Huntcane 14 ~I;ee-added·the conversion- - - - Ba19a8t,Cie. S.6
DefianooAyemllet4,0ttawaHillst2
l.alcastert4,G""""""'·Madisoo7
NewtonF.-Isle42t'o~~!.,_ ..
.
·~-~ · cia ·
M"-~- W . NorthMarloo29,FI!ilm;lr1tSenior6
BeJdey33,Bioom-Carrot10
OetphoSSI.John's41 , St.Hemy16
Leban0n34,Bea-7
NilesMcKin Y .~-N~ 7
~·~~·•~
ymon1 21 • -~rg
·
QakHIIaJ,NicllotaSCOI&gt;'Ity6
to set the final tally at 53-

For the best in

prep football .

coverage. pick up
your copy of the
every Saturday
. moming!!! ·

OHIO/WEST VIRGINIA PREP FOOTBALL SCORES

Ash helps Tornadoes strom past Hannan •
Bv Scon WOLFE

pie tackles behind the line, made an
Southern's Anthony Coffman, Branelusive run to the end zone, with the don Pierce, Joe Cornell, and Andrew
ASHTON - Behind three Matt
score 21-6 after the failed extra point. Philson each had two sacks, and Joey
Ash touchdowns and 21 first quarter
At halftime, Shannon Gay had five }&gt;hillips had one. Matt Ash, B.J. Marnpoints, the Southern Tornadoes rolled
carries for 14 yards, Kirk Murray had hout and Tommy Sheppard each had
to a 35-6 non-league win over the
. four for 20, B.J. Nicely had three for .fumble recoveries. Shannon Gay and
Hannan Wildcats Friday night in area
11, Stacy Cooper was 6-for-negative B.J. Nicely had
interceptions for
non-league football action. Soc{thern
22 as the result of several Tornado Hannan, while Eugene Chapman,
is 1-1 and Hannan is 0.2.
sacks.
Michael Hughes, and Terry Schrock
Overall, Ash rushed 13 rimes for 113
Matt Ash had seven carries for 43 each had sacks ·
yards and three scores. The senior runva1ras. ' Brice Hill had two for 25,
Southern Coach Rusty Richards
ning_back_alw_was_a de!ensiY•:-st:an,d-_
three for sixSalci;"We-diOagoodjoo taking advanout at linebacker with twelve tackles
yards, and Aaron Ohlinger had one 23 tage _of their mistakes . and taking
in a great aU-around performance.
Southem'a Brandon Pierce
yards.
advantage of opportunities. We , tackSouthern's Brice Hill had ftve rushing
After a scoreless third quarter, Matt led better tonight and were able to
a~tempts for 52 yards with two catchAfter a couple possession changes
es for 76 yards and a touchdowli.
and a great battle in the trenches, Ash rambled nine yards to paydirt in pressure their quarterback which .
Hannan· was led by junior Kirk Southern again scored when Matt Ash the early portions of the final round. helped take away their passing game.
Murray with eight carries for 40 rambled 46 yards to paydirt for South- With 11:08 showing on the clock Ash This was a much improved effort and
yards, while Shannon Gay was 8-for- ern's second score. Anthony Coffinan broke a couple Hannan tackles off everyone started to assumed their
28 rushing with three catches for 51 added the extra point run for a 14-0 tackle to post the score. Brandon roles."
Coach Kent Price of Hannan said,
yards.
score. Southern then recovered an Pierce rolled out to pass, but then
Southern scored on the second play onside kick on the ensuing kick off. decided to run for the extra point and "The difference in the game may have
from scri.mmage when Brandon Moments later, Aaron Ohlinger scored a 29-6 SHS lead.
come down to our three fumbles and
Pierce rifle&lt;;! a 65-yard shot to Brice on a 23-yard reverse ramble and the
Matt Ash scored the final touch- the ·quick scores they got off the
Hill on a flag pattern to the left side- extra point run failed, but Southern down at the 4:29 mark in the fourth screen and the reverse. · That really
line. Hill rambled downfield for the · led 21-0.
quarter to push the score to 35-6 after hurt us early and took away our conscore at the 11:41 mark. Wes BurThat tally held until the :37 mark the failed extra point pass. That score fidence. It came down to a .couple of
roughs kicked the . extra point, the when Shannon Gay caught a Stacy stood to the finish as both clubs' sec- early plays, but overall our kids
Cooper pass, and after breaking a cou- and teams saw plenty of action.
score 7-0.
showed a lot of improvement."
OVP CORRESPONDENT

'

, .

Brucksvitle 24 p

JACKSO N, Ohio - Before
Friday's game, J~ckson coach
Randy Layton had said he
hoped that the rains might come
and slow down the Waverly passing attack.
He got half of that wish, as the
Jrains did come, but not until after
Waverly quarterback Jay Gullion

od. As Jackson quarterback 10-play. 68-yard ·drive ended at
Michael Holdren scrambled out the 6:0! mark with a five-yard
of the pocket to the right,Waver- fade paaern from Gullion .to
ly middle linebacker Lewis Creed Miller.
The Jackson (1-1) running
Copeland stripped him of the
ball. Defensive tackle Josh Lowe . game, which had . po'\t'd 394
fell on the ball at the Jackson 25- yards against Wellston . in last
yard line.
week's 44-33 victory, mustered
Gullion immediately hit Ben just 170 total yards against the
Martin ·on a streak pattern Tiger defense.
against a blown coverage down · "We just couldn't get anything

had torched the lrorunen for 251
yards and four touchdowns in a
28-0 win for the Tigers.
Gullion threw scoing passes to
three different recievers to give
Jackson's record its first blemish
of the season.
GuUio n's work was more
opportuni&lt;tic than dominating
however, as three of the ID's
came immediately after Jackson
turnovers.
"They capitalized on our mistakes and scored quick off our
fumbles and interceptions;• said
Layton." l'U say every game, 'The
team that makes the fewwest
mistakes is g(,nna
Tonight
we made the most mistakes, and
they capitalized on every one of
them."
Spending most of the game in
a three wide-receiver set, Waverly (2-0) made the most of its first
opportunity in the opening peri-

the right side to give the Tigers a going offensively;' said Layton.
6-0 lead at the 7:27 mark.
"They had a great game plan; we
The · second giveaway may thought we did going in. They
have been the most costly
though.Trailing 12-0 in the closing moments of the second
quarter, Holdren's pass over the
middle was intercepted by Tiger
linebacker Jeremy Peters at the
Jackson 30-yard line. He
returned it 17 yards to the 47 set- .
· ting up Gullion's deep slant to
AndreW Bodager which ended
at ti\.e goal line 53 yards later.
· The resulting point after, a pass
from Gullion to Martin, gave the
. Tigers a 20-0 halftime edge.
The third tumover~to-touch­
down came in the third period
after Jackson's Jamie Arthur fumbled on his own 28, resulting in
a 28-yard scoring pass to
Bodager.
·
Waverly's only sustained drive
came in the second period. The

Bv DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

..

win:

'

•

\

•

'

executed thcirs a little better."
The Tigers held the Jackson
ground game to zero net rushing
yards in the first period. Fullback
David Swisher tallied 108 yards
on 23 carries agaiiut a defensive
front that was keyed for the Jackson power running game.
Jackson tailback Erron Bren· nan totaled just 8 yards on five
carries in the first hal(

Ceina2S, Lima ShlrM1ee20
c::hogrln Faits 49, Brooklyn o

I.I
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Ophthalmologist

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•

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Holur Clinic Jackson

Slllfllllll Hultll Spum
(Akron Cily Hospital) In .Awn, OH.

(740) 395-8873

IS Cin. """"'llacon ot9, Cin, .,........., t3.

'"'~~"'

"'~'""'

Cin. St. Xovler 42, Cln. Withrow 14
Cln. Sycamore 14, Cin. La Salle 6
Cin. T...-pln tB, Cin. WaNt. Hils 15

from ~geB1

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

(7 40) 446-5411

,..,__'"-•--• W. Geauga 17, Mantua Crest·
..,.....,,....,
woodO
ChNtlcothe Zan&lt;i Trace 21 • McDarmotl
•~ NW O
~
14
28 '
Cin. Andenlon • Milord '
7
34
Cin. Deer Pat!&lt; ' Bethel-Tale22
44
Cin. Flnneylown • ~illslloro
Cin, 1-., HM 49, Cln. NOiwood 0
Cln. - r a 48, Gin. Hil~ Chr. Acad. 25
Cln. Mariemont tO, Cols. Harttey6
38
· Cin. Glen Ea1e 20
Cin. Gin. Ml -.y 34• Cin. Nolfhwest 9
Cin. N. COiege HIM 20, Cln, Taylor 14
Cin. Oak Hila 32, Cin. Wes1em Hil~ B
Cin. Prlncetoo28,UpperAI1ingtont4
Cln. Puo:ot1Marlan34,Cln.Wr~k&lt;1Woods
33
·
.
Cln. Aeodng 40, Cin. Summit Coun1ry Day

Eastem

FREE ESTIMATES

~

To

21

Canal Fulton NW 14, Na"'"" Falr1ess 6
Canal Wlnchester34, W. Jellerson6 .
carvy v. MI. Bland1ard Aiwlldale o
Carflsle56, Mld&lt;Jetown FenwickO
Ca.-n Mam1 Eas12t , W. MitonMillllrlUnion t4, 20T
~ u.~- 26 \'MaRl 14
Coclalvh20':"'~ c.8ek E. Clnton 0

I

Ironmen fall to Waverly·in non-league action

.\

Delta 56 Metamora Evergreen 14
DotaHMioNortnem39, Pandam-GIIOOaO
Dc&gt;1er t 4, OrNille 10
Qo.t;in Collman 22. Flllday 6
IM&gt;/in Sclolo 'ZI, Mai)'SVI!Ie 0
E. Can. 51, Ma~SondyValtey 7
E. LiYetpoot 14, Oak Glen (W. Va.) 3
Eimon&gt;Wun1Qe34, DeGralt Rivef&gt;ide6
Elyria :lB. Bedl01d3t
EiyliaCeth. 5t,l.oollnCath. 7
Fairlield 21 , Huber Hls. Wayne 6
Fairlield Union 28, Baltimore l.lbef1y Union

Normardy 0

c:-

Jake Workman was the
leading · SG rusher with
six carries for 23 yards.
The Wildcat offense
carried 42 times to build
up a ·gaudy 362-yard
total. Waterford QB Ben
Cunningham completed
two passes for 36 yards to
give his squad 398 yards
of total offense. Cunningham
added
his
team's other score on a
one-yard run in the third
quarter.

SEOAL FOOTBALL

I

a~k•le- ·Ea~
~43.
Can. s. 49, Akr. E. 28

8.

tonight," said Gibbs. "Nice
blocking all the way around"
Prior to the opening of the
game, the Eastern senior class
paid tribute to Josh Adams,
who died in a car accident•in
July.
Adams would have been a
senior lineman for the Eagles
this season.
After a scoreless first quarter as the flag flew at half
staff, the Cadets didn't take
long to draw first blood .
Earlier, Fort Frye had a
shot at scoring in the first
quarter after a fumble by
Ben Holter placed the
Cadets on their own 49-yard
line. Nine plays later, the
Cadets attempted a field goal
from less than 20 yards out,
but the snap went over the
kicker's head giving the
Eagles the ball back.
"That was . huge," said
Christman. "I wasn't sure
that they wasn't going to go
for it. You look at the final
score and say a field goal
wouldn't have helped, but
you never know about

Leetonia 41 , Berlil't Center Westem
Reserve 13
Lemon-Monroe 28, Dey. Northrklge 0
l.swis Center Oentangy 52, Delaware 6
LewistOWn Indian Lake 28, Sl Paris Gm·
ham 21
LlleftyCenter40, Montpelier t3
l..lsllon 20, L.sa-.g t.aBrae6

Logan 50. NetoorMie-York6
Lorain CleaMew 21, Gates Mils Qtmour
20
Lorain SOuthview 34, Paima 28
lou~ 33, Kent Roo ,...n6

21
Faif'llew Pat!&lt; Faif'llew 28, Avon 0
Fr.¥1~in 14; Little M- 0
G
9 L ' Cou
F""'klinFurnace rvent, OWlS
nty
(Ky.) 6
Galion 33, N, Robinson Cot. CrawfOfd 0
Galion Nolthrnor 27, tJolaware Bud&lt;eye
Valley 0
GaJ'-'is GaJIIa 62, CoW Grove Dawson·
a.~ ..
-•-"
44 Cots West 8

."1J'

Galloway Wes1land

•

·

Garlield HIS. 20, Panna Padua 13
Geroa 21 , ......_. Green 20
Gerrnan.,.,;;;v;;ik:Y VONI 48. W. CemJt1ton
0

~·~~·rg 30, Hicksville 14
;

i_ Conneaut 7 .

G•-~erT~44.'"'-•Aie""~·o
~
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Gllln&lt;MewHts 13, IN&lt;:asterFISherCath.

t 2 Granville .14, Utica 7
GIOOf1 21, Eitel 14
Gmenville 17, TIPP City TippOCaiiOO 14
G-- City 41 , Tl". SCOtt 19
'"'"
~
Heml""' 17, Spoing. S. 14

momentum ."
The Cadets opened the
second quarter with a drive
from the Eastern 39-yard
line after a Karr punt from
his own endzone.
A 18-yard run by Stephen
Reeder set up a 7 - yard
scamper by Josh Meek with
8:58 left in the. half.
· Eastern, though, didn 't
take ' long to strike back as
Chris Lyons returned the
following kickoff 83 yards
along the left side of the field
for the touchdown in ~ play
·that took momentum away
from the visitors .
Things continued to go
badly for the Cadets as the
Eastern kickoff was misfielded and re covered by the
Eagles at the Fort Frye 35 .
· "Last year in this game, the
special teams hurt us," .aid
Christman. "This year, the
special teams went our way.
That's a big part of tt m a
tough game like this where
both teams are pretty evenly
matched."
After a couple ·of short
passes by Karr, R.). Gibbs ran
the ball ,in from 24 yards out
for a second Eastern score.
"R.J.'s fast," said Christman. "He weighs 225 and

Ma&lt;Hoo 22, ~L
Mansfield 42, -~• 3
....~ .. ~--~,F~·•·t4

·-~-~·~ ~Q
MapietM Higlland 31, Medina Buckeye 8
Mar1e11a 23, Carrllridge 6

MarionHardng3t,ThomasWorttlngtonO
Marion Ploasanl59, Mt Gilead 14
Marion Rivor Valley 32, Rk:llwood N. l.llion
6

Malllns Feny 21. Bucl&lt;eyo Local 0
Mason t5, Kings Mils Kings 9
Maesll1on Jad&lt;aon 32, Aust.ln-..Flt:ll7
Mass11on Pony 21, Co1s. Eastrnoor 7
Maes111on Tuslaw tO, Da1tcn 7
Maesll1on Wasi'Olg1on 54, Piltsburgh (Pa.)
MI. lebanon 20

"-""""53\\1~20
•
·

,._,._

McColri&gt;29, Ctloy·
7
Mechanlcsllurg 40, FIMkton·Adena 8
Madna 43, lodi Cloverteal22
Miami E. 21, Mll1on-Union 14. 20T
Miaml!lburg 7, Cin. Loveland 6
Miamisburg 7, Loveland 6
Mlddtelietd Can!lna19t, Ant:lowlr Pymatun-

Oak Harbor 28, Rossford 20
Oak Hil36, Chillicothe UnloiD6
Old Washington Buckeye Trail4 1. CaktNel

e

Easllako N

Olmsted 28,
·0
Olmsted F.-Is 42. N. Aoyal1on 0
Ontario22, Bucyrus o
Orogon Cloy39, Tot. W.itll 7
Orwell Grand VaJey 28, Mineral Rklga 10
Ottawa-G1Mdol1 23, Eida 6
Parl&lt;et'Sburg (W. Va.) 29, Virooent Warren 3
PeiT'I&gt;ef'IIIIB Eastwood 7, Sandusky

Pett&lt;insO, OT

~ha42
g~~~EKenst
0 on 14
r~-·..,-·

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P'qua13,~~W•••fSOriO
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Pobnd Seminary 56, Jellemon 0
- 5 5 , Chiiootho 12

Holmes 17
Van I!Uian28, Ardayl..llerty·Benton 14
W.
t..ako!a W. 52, Day, Stellblno 0
W. l.lberty·Salem 41 , Ridgeway Ridgemont
0 W
,, ·~"""" Fals
10
ildsworth 13, _,_..,..
Wanen Howland42, c~~~~~WalsawRiverVMIW 13, "~·-~-~•
0
Washingllln C.H. 46, C l - 2 5
Wa1erlord 53, C"""' City S. GeJia 8
Wavet1y 28, Jacloion 0

Wrll'f"'8'Njle 'ZI, Clarksville Cinlcn-Massie
20 Wet'll!ln (W. Va.) Wejr 20, Cedz Han1soo
Cent6
Wellington 53, Cotlns W_, -rve 12
WesteiVille N. 33. Cols. Morion-Fran~ln 6
w.-let'Sburg3t,BetilllrldgePailtValley6
WlliteheJ~YOIIItlng 14, Cots. Franl&lt;lln His.

Union~'ZI

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Shef1iald- 55. Clo. Cent Catlt 6
She&lt;wood Fairview 32,
Ben-

Youngs. Chaney 13, Canfield 7
Youngs. Uberty 27, Gam!IIOYitlo Garlietd 7

Betlelon1a""

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r

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ng ·-~-• ·

Point

'"ltsooYculgsO· U"'"ine 54, Youngs. Woodrow
'"
Zanosvitle Maysville 21, ~ Tr1-Valley

7

he's 6-1, but he's fast. You
attempts to pass for a score,
look at him and say he's slow,
.Point kicker Branson Barkey
but he's not."
nailed a 22-yard field goal to
give the Big Blacks a 16-13
Gibbs finished with 74
from Page 81
halftime lead.
yards on seven carries for
before the first quarter ended,
Eastern (2-0), while Karr
In the end, it was . the Big
however,
the
Raiders
scored
had 12 carries for 11 7 yards
Black defense that made the
and Bryan Minear came in again with another big play.This difference Friday at County
late to carry the ball ·five time ·Nicholson connected Stadium. Point held Roane to
with senior receiver Matt Cox just one yard rushing· on 26
times f~r 21 yards.
· For Fort Frye (1-1), Scott for a 57-yard pass.
attempts, and 151 yards passing
Witten had 74 yards on 19
In the second quarter, the Big on 23 attempts, while snagging
carries, while Reeder had Blacks had possession for most two interceptions. Ramey led
seven carries for 44 yards and of the quarter, puaing together . the defense with 12 tackles
Meek had eight carries for an eight-minute 76-yard drive, including, four sacks and three
37 yards.
which was capped with a one- other tackles for losses.
"We got the ball in the yard tou chdown by Kevin
The Big Blacks (1 - 1) host
endzone and we got us a lit- Thompson, his second of the North Marion· Friday. .
tle momentum, and then halfThe Big Blacks then forced
they made that big play on Roane ~ punt from inside the
the kickoff," said Fort Frye 20-yard line, where Raider
coach B.J. Scott.
punter Jeremy Abboa slipped
The Eagles play host to and was called down at the
Waharna Sept . 7 .
, eight. After a couple of failed

Manlh Fork 6

p - 29 Wanan ~ Ohio 3
Pail&lt;e.sbu~ sOOth
v ;Ma~ (.

~

POifslrouth W. 35. Chllliootho Huntington '
Ross 0
Preble Shawnee 21, Middlelown Madison? 12
Aavanna SE 23, Ravenna 6
WllllehouseAnthonyWayne 28, Tol. Star16
~rg 28. Gahanna-l.lnooil2t
W1Ck111o 'ZI, Paii'IB!lVitte HaNey 9
Rich--• Edison 39. Mi-- 6
,.,._,~ 28 "-· •~~ O
nu..,
·-·•
, , , • .,._, • ~,. -·~"
Ai1rnan 8, Sugart:nlek Garaway 7, OT
Windham 28, McDonald 6
- d Parl&lt;way '.fl, Ft Flecowry 22
WntersW!e lrdan Creek 14, St. Clairsville
S. Chalttlston SE 14, MllfOid Center Fair·, t 3
bonks 0
Woodsfield Monroe Cent 47, Shadyside 1
Salem 24, l..lsllon Baa\1111' 20
Wooster 28. Rk:llliotd AeYefe 0
sarahs~llo ShenandOah 35, Bomont
~onKIIbOUme31,UmaSr.
6
,FIJ'~t3.

jamin Logan20
Silt1ey Lohman 13, New Bnmen 12
Smi!MIIe 39, Loudonville 16
Chlllke 'ZI Sebri .............

();;eana 52,

Pete!'Sburg at Pendle1on Coulty, ppd, rain
Pi&lt;eView 22, Bland Co!Mity, Ya. 12
PocahontasCounty26, G!merCounty 6
Point Pleasant 23• RooneCoorly 15
Plilip Barbour 22 , Prvslorl 19
P~ICO!ooi20. ~0
Aavenswood 21 , PocolA
A...._ 28 Sl Allans 0

R~· 38 • CabeiMi&lt;Did 15
RCltlortC. Byld 23, ~ 7
. 5ou111ern Local, Oho 35, Haman e
Spring VaJey 21 Hun"""~ 7

'
"'"-·
Sf.MafYSI4,NolroOame13
Sletbemlllle, Ohio 15, BIOOke 0
Va
East H rdy 12
~. · 34 '
a
1
Surnmeto County 2· Uberty Raleigh 6
Totsia 14• Wnlietd 13
Tug Valley 40. Soot1 35
Turkeyfoo&lt; v,-ley, Pa. 13, Hundred 0
University 47, East Fairmont 7
Valley Fa'- 32 c•-~•le 5
•-- • '""''- '""
'
Van 25, Hamln 6
Wehame 34 • Fedetal Hod&lt;lng, Ohkl O
Wayne 10. Chesapeake, Ohio 9
W - CoiMity 35, 1Ygar1s Vwley 6
Woir20,CedzHarrtsonCant.,Ohio6
"~ng~~• 13 ~--~·rgCathotic
, , _ -••w · ~-~
·
Po. 10
~liarrolon 38, Baileysvile 6

~~~~ty2~· ~~~~~

28

"'" ~·
• ~.....,. ~ ..,
W;ornlng East 52, Splngam, Wash., D.C.

Thank You
Ohio Valley Bank
for purchasing
my 2001
Market Hog

THANkVftl
10 VALLEY ISANf

Thank You
Carroll Caldwell and
CC Caldwell Trucking
buying my 2001
Market Steer.

•

For Buying My
200 1 Market Hoo
the GoUla County Jr. Fair•"'&lt;

.,

�•

..
Page B4 • itunba~ Q:imrt' -ittntinrl

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

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

·Sund•y, Sept. 2, 2001

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

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

WEEK TWO

Golden Rockets blast over Raiders, 58-0 Wildcats

Big plays help Bulldogs top Marauders

•

BY REBECCA THOMAS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

C HESHIRE -There were
mo re fl ags o n the field than in
the band, but despite eight
Wellsto n penalties for over 70
yards , th r Rockets bla~ted the
Ra iders 58-0 Friday mght.
Wellsto n rushed for over
450 yards to ca pture its first
vi cto ry of the 200 1 season .
"We knew it was gonna be
tou gh coming into the
game," said River Valley head
coach Larry Carter. "We just
couldn't match up with them
size wise."
The Rockets attacked early
taking a 7- 0 lead at the 9:16
mark in the first quarter off a
27-yard run by senior Brad
Young. Young would go on
to lead the Wellston offense
with over 160 yards.
The
Rockets
quickly
regained control of the
pigskin and despite a nullified
45-yard
touchdown,
increased their lead by six
with 5 :00 to play in the first
quarter.
The Rockets would strike
'one more time, this one off a
10-yard run by Young. Phillip
Osborne sealed up the extra
point to round out the first
quarter at 20-0.
The Raiders came out
strong in quarter two. Adam
Darst returned the Osborne
kickoff 20 y~rds to get the

RAIDERS FALL - River Valley quarterback Joe.v Graham
takes off with the ball during the Raiders loss to Wellston.
(Bryan Long)
Raiders started on their ·own intended for Young but
Raider sophomore Joey Gra34.
Four plays later, the ball was ham pounded Young, causing
the pass to be ruled incomback in the hands of the
plete.
Rockets, but River Valley
The Raider run didn't last
scrambled to hold on. Well- long, as Osborne picked up a
ston quarterback Dusty Fultz 17-yard TD at the 9:00 mark
launched a 30-yard pass

in the second quarter.
Five plays later, River Valley
punted back into the hands of
the Rockets' offense. It was a
quick trip to the end zone for
Rocket junior Thomas Mays,
who with a little help from
Fultz, took the ball 64 yards
in three plays to increase the
Wellston lead.
Once again, a strong return
by Darst started off the River
Valley attack, but the Raiders
could not convert.
The Rockets would see the
end zone one more time
before the break. At the end .
of two, Wellst~n held ttghtly
to a commandmg 33'-0 lead.
. The second half meant a
ltttle more passtng for the
River Valley offense. Graham
completed a 15-yard pass to
R
. W: d.
J eSSie ar . 11eammate yan
S
ld.
ld 1
. .
pauh mg V.:tohu h ' ater mum c
G raamwt
15
tsownW:
d
.
t
yard connec t ton o . ar .
Both ;&gt;lays earned t: .e Raiders
first down rights.
But the Rockets were on
fire, as Young galloped 84
yards to pick up' his third TD
of the contest.
Five plays later, a Raider
fumble put the ball back into
the hands of the Rockets, and
it didn't take long to get the
job done. Mike Floyd put his
first points on the board with
a 14-yard scramble to give
Wellston a 46-point advan-

itunbB!' 1lime1 -6enlintl • Page BS

tage.
Once again, Darst gave the
Raiders a strong return, but
River Valley could not
advance. Eleven plays later,
Wellston took over on downs
at their own 46 yard line.
The fourth quarter brought
with it lots of freshman action
as ·both teams offered their
younger athletes good minutes.
The Rockets paid another
visit to the end zone with
6:48 left in the contest. An
illegal procedure penalty
against the Rockets called
back the extra poil)t and a
Raider
block . deferred
attempt number two. Wellt . 1 d b 52
s ~iv:r Jane · ave it on·e
y g
· h
more run, but once agam t e
d
Rockets took over on owns
and with :19 remaining gave
.
.
the kmfe one last twtst as
.
B k
Chns Cox took a Q - eeper
five yards for the touchdown.
"We continued to play
hard," said Carter. "We kept
good spmts thr~ughou_t the
game. Now were JUSt gomg to
go g~t ready for next week."
Wtth the wm, the Rockets
improve to 1-1 on the season.
River Valley falls to 0- 2.
The Raiders take the short
ride up river to visit Meigs .
next Friday. Kick off is set
for 7:30.

•

crutse

BY DAVE HARRIS
OVP CORRESPONDENT

THE PLAINS, Ohio - Brad Hart: ley had an 80-yard kickoff return for a
touchdown and .added a 66-yard interception return for another score to lead
Athens to a 29-8 win over Meigs in
non-_conference football action Friday
: evemng at Athens High School.
Meigs, for the second game in a row,
had problems getting their offense
rolling, and for the second game in a
row, most of the fiBt half was played in
Marauder territory.
Athens won the toss and deferred to
the second half, the Marauders had a
four and out and after a Buzzy Fackler
punt to over at their own 43. Seven
plays later, Grant Gregory hooked up
with Lance Spires for a 24-yard scoring
toss.The extra points were no good.
On the Marauders ens~ing possession, Spires picked off Kyle Hannan pass
d d
h
RUNNING MAN - Running back Jereon secon
own giving t e Bulldogs my Roush looks for a hole Friday at
the ball at the Marauder 37 .
.
Athens. The Marauders dropped their
. Athens drove to the Metgs two yard second straight of the young season
!me and on second and goal, the Bull- 29-8 to the Bulldogs in non-conference
dogs coughed up the football and Jere- action. (Dave Harris)
my Roush recovered for Mt:igs at their ·
On fourth and 14, Brandon Bobb
own four yard line to dodge the bullet.
After a Marauder punt, the Bulldogs came up with a big play for Meigs,
drove to the Meigs sb.-yard line, a Bull- tackling ·Corey Champlin for a sevendog penalty moved the ball back to the yard loss to turn the ball over to Meigs
11. Ross Stewart came up with a big on downs.The play proved to be a costplay for Meigs sacking Gregory for a ly one for Meigs, as Bobb injured his
six-yard loss to the Meigs 17.
knee on the play and was unable to

'past
Rebels·
FROM OVP SAFF REPORTS

· return to action.
Athens go t the ball bac k three plays
later when R yan Walker picked off a
Hannan pass giving the Bulldogs the
ball at the M eigs 43. The Bulld'ogs went
on a drive to the Meigs 15, but R oush
interceptio n a Gregory pass fo r Meigs at
th e IO~ya rd line to end the th reat.
Meigs fumbled the ball to the Bulldogs on th e second play with the BuUdogs, only to have Athens return the
favor, f o ur plays later with Fackler
recovering for Meigs at the Athens four.
O nce again the Marauder drive fi zzled, and C hris Hewitt returned Fackler's punt 30 yards to .give the Bulldogs
good field positio n . The Marauder
defense stiffened, and the Bulldogs had
to settle for a 33-yard field goal by
Hewitt with 3:13 left in the half and a
9-0 lead, and that is the way the score
stood at intermission.
The fans had just settled into their
seats after the half, when Hartley took
the second half kickoff SO yards for the
score. Gregory added the extra points
on a run and the Bulldogs had the
upper hand at 17-0.
Later in the period, .the Marauders
seemed to have a drive going, but Hannan's pass went off the hands of a
Marauder receiver and Hartley picked
the pass out of the air and won the foot
race to the end zone for the score. Once
again the kick was no good, but the
Bulldogs held a 23- 0 lead with 6: 15 left

The OVP

in the period.
Athens scored their final tou chdown
of the evening when Champlin scored
from seven yards out with 3:41 left in
the third period, the extra points were
no good. That score was set up by a 44yard punt return by Hewitt.
Meigs scored their tou chdown with
one minute . left in the game when
freshman Eric Collums threw a perfect
pass to classmate Eric Holley for a 16yard score. Doug Dill added the extra
points to end the scoring and a 29-8
Athens win.
Champlin led the Bulldogs on the
ground with 31 yards in 10 carries,
Hewitt added 29 in seven carries. Gregory was 5-of- i 3 in the air for 81 yards
and an interception. Dave Chapman
caught two for 41 yards, Spires added
two for 38.
Ross Stewart and Jeremy Roush both
had 26 yards to ·Jead Meigs, Stewart in
six carries and Roush in 12. Tyson Lee
added 21 in six tries. Hannan was two
of 12 with three interceptions for 14
yards, Cullumns was_one of two for 16
yards, and Roush three one pass and
that was intercepted. Holley caught one
for 16 yards and Stewart and Fackler
each had one for eight yards.
Meigs drops to 0-2 on the year. They
will host River Valley (0- 2) next week.
Athens is 1-1, they will travel to
Alexander next week.

A weekly look at how lhe lhe
region's top football teams
fared, as voted by Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. sports staffers.

Results

WATERFORD, Ohio
1. Ironton
beat Sou1h
Point, 6().()
- Waterford's Dan Doe2. Portsmoulh beat Chillicothe,
bereiner rolled for 225
55-12
yards and four touch3. Gallipolis beat Coal
downs as the Wildcats
Grove, 62.0
4.
Jad&lt;son
lost to Waveftt,
blasted
28.()
South
S. Logan
beat N·York,
GaUia
50-0
53-8 in
6. (tie)Eastem beat Ft. Frye,
32-6
nonPark~rg · beat Warren,
league
29-3
football
B. Fort Frye lost to Eastem,
action
32-6
9. Wellston beat River
Friday.
Valley, 58.0
It was
10. SE Ross played Symmes
Workman
Doevalley (nla)
bereiner's 58-yard scamper on
Waterford~s first play from
scrimmage that pretty
much took the suspense
out of the contest. Todd
McCutcheon scored just ,
Sports EXTRA ·
over a minute-and-a-half
later later .o n a two-yard
plunge.
McCutcheon
also ·
added
an . 11-yarder
before the first gun to
help the Wildcats to a 210 first quarter lead.
·
Doebereiner also had
ONoHIQIISchooiFoocbllt
Cirt:levilleLoganEtm7, WilliamsportWest·
Hami""'Badn48, Washlng!onC.H. &gt;.tan; lngValeyO
0
Zanes~lle
W.
Mustdngum
12,
Frldly'otall 0
Trace 32
MlddeODiw1 42, ~ 12
Spar1a Hiltland 28. Caroington-Unco 7
McCon- Morgan 0
scoring runs of 11, 36,
Al&lt;l. CoM!ntry 23, Al&lt;l. Ceromi-Hower 16
Clayton Norttvnoo &lt;7, Kettemg Failm0n1 3
Hamler Patricl&lt; Hervy 35, Swanton 0
lo\lan Edson 20, 0
Spmg. Kenkln Ridge 27, Spi 'II· N. 19
Zoarvilo TUOCOIIIwas Yalloy 28, c:;,_,.
and
three
yards.
Akr. Gartield20,Balbotton 13
Clo. Hls. 16.Akr, K""""""6 . ,
~
HamiboJRiver5t,l'll-*&gt;g(W. Va.)AcadMilltlulyl.ake22. NOOI1wood8
Spmg. NW42, N . Lowia~MgTrlod8
hutlentndlanVaJey7
Al&lt;l. .._,tO, Slow 7
Cotdwater2t, Maria Steln Marion local?
emy 20
Millefllpatal, HemlockMillerO
Spilgbotoal, Cin.Aiksn 6
W.va. higluchoOI IICOI'OI
McCutcheon also added
Akr. 19, Noo1oo 0
Cols. Eleech:lol1 53, Cols. Scuth 6
Hanoll8l1on UrOted 35, Aoolstown 20
MinfonJ 34, ProctoMie Falriand 6
St. Mai)'S Memorial 13, WBpakoneta 0
Berkeley Springs 20, Bishop Walsh, Md. 0
Ale. Spmg. t8, TalmadgoO
Cols. Brook1tawn 19, Fremont Ross t4
Heath a&gt;. Howald Eas!Krox 6
Minster 14, Versalios 13
SteWorMIIe 15, Brooke(W. Va.)O
Big Craek B, Mont:alm 6
another six-yard TD run.
Akr. SVSM 37, Akr. N. 8
,
Cots. Centennial 34, London Madison
Hebron Lakewood 21, AsiMie Tays Valley
Mogadofe 40, Au1018 3
Stlasburg-Franldln 15, Belalrv 5I. John's 0
Bridgeport a&gt;. ~r t 4
The Wildcat defense
AllianCe Marllnglon 28, AtwaterWatelfoo7 PtiUno22
0
Mogador8 Fleld41, Can. 'Orri&lt;en7
Struetsboro 19, Clo. Orange 7
Calhoun County-44, RICtlle CoontyO
Amanda-Cioelmlek 19, Newa11&lt; Ceth, 13
Cols. DeSales 20, - l e S. 7
Hickory (Pa.) 27, Broaktletd 20
MoiTat Ridgedale 42, Marion Elf)n 0
Strongs&lt;Jille 21, Euclid 17
Capitl; 7, South Chaltestcn 0
also controlled their part,
S - 14, Graltoo Mldvlew 0
Cots. Independence 22. Cots. Northland 15
Hillard Dalby 40, Day. Cot. WMe 6
N. Can. Hoover 42, Akr, Bud1tof 14
S&lt;JIIivan Black Rivor 28, Ashland Mapleton
Clay Gaonty 48, Braxton COtny 13
holding South Gallia to
Anna 42. Lewisburg T~-caunty N. 26
Cols. li1den 56, Cots. WDI1d HaM&gt;St 0
Hlliard Oal'idson 37, Troy 13
Nc Lima S. Range 56, Columbiana 8
East LiYetpoot, Ohio 14, Qak Glen 3
Ansonia 33, Union City Msslssinawa Valley
Cots. Milllln 40, Mount vernon 25
H&lt;&gt;gate 41, Tot. Christian 0
Crestview 0
Summit station Llcldng Htl. 17, centeoturg
FayattaYite B, Shady Spring 7 ·
30 yards of total offense.
0
Cots. Roact,/ 17, New At&gt;any 0
Holand SoMa. 32, Tot , Bowoher 20
N. Ornsted 28, Easllako N. 0
14
George Wasi'Olg1on 49, Helbelt - 2 1
Of the 28 players on
M:anum 40, Bladton1 8
Cols. St. ChaJies 38, Cols. Briggs 14
Hubbald 21 , Cie. E. 6
N. AklgeoAIIe 40, Tot. l.lblley B
Sycamore Mohawtc 25, Bucyrus \Vynt&lt;&gt;ltj
tian¢irv 53, TL.&lt;I&lt;or Co&lt;.1ty 18
Aohland
c.55.
o..tino
0
Cots.
Walnli Rklga '.fl, Patasl&lt;8ia Watf&lt;ins
HW5on 35, Paloesvitle ~ 7
Napoleon 47, Wauseon 14
22
Hedgesvile at James WOOd, Va., ppd, rail
the South Gall.a roster,
Ashtabula Edgewood 20, Burton Berkshire Memorial31
Independence 30, Obeotln 6
New Goncord John Glenn 47, Philo 6
Tlllin Cotunillan 20, Ct,od&amp;O
·
hldepeuclotooe 28. Sl1erman 0
I12
~ Station ~ 22, 1..8Grange
Ironton BO, S. Point 0
New L.obar&lt;ln IJixia 26, Yellow Spring&amp; 0
TIPP City Belhet 33, New Palts National
Keyoor 28, Jell"""'" 7
14 are sophomores.
As111abuta L.alolsldo 44, Clo. E. '1llch 6
Keystone 0
Ironton Rock Hill 20, McAith..- Vinton
New leJdngton 40, Crooksvlle 20
TIBit 14
Lewis County 35, GraJ1on t 6
Waterford led 41-0 at
AVOtl Lake43, Lorain KingO
Copley t7, 1Winsburg 0
CountyO
New M8lamoras Fmntiar 7, Yalloy W Tot. Cent. Ceth. 40, MallrnaoO
Uberty Hamocn 14, South Hamocn 13
8amesvit1e 21, Byesville Meadowtlluok 7
Cost-. 37, W, LB!ayette Ridgewood 0
James-. G . - 13, Cin. Counby (W.Va.) 0
Tot. Rogols 27, Sylvania S0uttMow 21
Logan tB, 5lssorwile 12, OT
the half.
Bascom HopeweHoudon 42, Kansae
Covlngtoo41, W. Alexandria TIWI Valley S. Day 6
New Pli~ 35. Clo, Collnwood 0
· lbl. Sl FIW'&lt;Is 20, lbl. W11tmor 10
Marhllurg 26, WOOdmw Wlson 7
South Gallia finally got
1..ak01a 7
·
6
Hilsdale 3, Lucas 0
New Washington Buci&lt;oye Cent. 42,
Tontogany 0aego 33, Haviland Wayr'l!
Mi&lt;land Trail 21, Bridge e
Bay Vilage 26, Oberlin Fil9lands 0
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA t6. Peninsula
Johns-..Monroe42, SugarGI0\'8 Berne Greem;ch S. Cent. 21
Trace 22
M&lt;&gt;ryan-. 43. Elkl1s B
on the board with eight
11o8ttsvt1ii 46, Blldgopolt B
Woodridge 6
Union 0
Newall&lt; 16, 2'.anesllllle 0
Tmnton Edgawcod 34, Harrillon Rosa 14
Mount VIew 48, Morl 7
seconds remaining in the
- - . t Ht1. Chane! 31, Clo. Ksnnody 8
Danville (Ky,) 47, Portsmouth No1ro Dame
. Jonathan Alder 35. Cols. Harnl""' Twp. 12
Newark Licking Valley 38, John$10wn
Troy Chrlstlaill9, ~ ~......... - W
Musoelmal38, S1.....-.:1o, Va. '6
Balelol......, tB, Silt1ey 15
7
Kelt9!fng Alter 24; Betl&gt;nlok 21
Northridge 7·
•
LAlricllslliU. Claymont t, - - • ·
New IAallmlras Frontlef, Ohio 7, VaJey
game with a four yard
Ba1teYiJe 42, Aa111and 0
Day. Chamlnade-Jiilenne 'ZI, Carmi 17
Kir11anc124, Folopott tiaJtlof Haning 0
· Newtluy 38, ~ Ledg&amp; ''"'t 7
Holmes 17
Wetzej 0
BaMie Clear Fork 34, F - . t4
Day. Qakwood 27. Spring. Ceth. Cent. 7
L.ak-llanbuly 28, N. Baltlroore 6
Newcome,.town
50, . Apple Creek
lkliontown Lake 34, Ale. Arestono 6
New Wilmington. Pa. 33, Unoty 17
run by Josh Waugh. Zach
BatoiLW..BrMch 21,.Youngs.~Aayen.8. _ _ _ 0efiancB 7, Van WertS ·
L.akewood.St. Edward 52, LBicowood 0- -·Waynedale..1A--~~3BN~-t~ - - -Nitiif'ZI; Huntcane 14 ~I;ee-added·the conversion- - - - Ba19a8t,Cie. S.6
DefianooAyemllet4,0ttawaHillst2
l.alcastert4,G""""""'·Madisoo7
NewtonF.-Isle42t'o~~!.,_ ..
.
·~-~ · cia ·
M"-~- W . NorthMarloo29,FI!ilm;lr1tSenior6
BeJdey33,Bioom-Carrot10
OetphoSSI.John's41 , St.Hemy16
Leban0n34,Bea-7
NilesMcKin Y .~-N~ 7
~·~~·•~
ymon1 21 • -~rg
·
QakHIIaJ,NicllotaSCOI&gt;'Ity6
to set the final tally at 53-

For the best in

prep football .

coverage. pick up
your copy of the
every Saturday
. moming!!! ·

OHIO/WEST VIRGINIA PREP FOOTBALL SCORES

Ash helps Tornadoes strom past Hannan •
Bv Scon WOLFE

pie tackles behind the line, made an
Southern's Anthony Coffman, Branelusive run to the end zone, with the don Pierce, Joe Cornell, and Andrew
ASHTON - Behind three Matt
score 21-6 after the failed extra point. Philson each had two sacks, and Joey
Ash touchdowns and 21 first quarter
At halftime, Shannon Gay had five }&gt;hillips had one. Matt Ash, B.J. Marnpoints, the Southern Tornadoes rolled
carries for 14 yards, Kirk Murray had hout and Tommy Sheppard each had
to a 35-6 non-league win over the
. four for 20, B.J. Nicely had three for .fumble recoveries. Shannon Gay and
Hannan Wildcats Friday night in area
11, Stacy Cooper was 6-for-negative B.J. Nicely had
interceptions for
non-league football action. Soc{thern
22 as the result of several Tornado Hannan, while Eugene Chapman,
is 1-1 and Hannan is 0.2.
sacks.
Michael Hughes, and Terry Schrock
Overall, Ash rushed 13 rimes for 113
Matt Ash had seven carries for 43 each had sacks ·
yards and three scores. The senior runva1ras. ' Brice Hill had two for 25,
Southern Coach Rusty Richards
ning_back_alw_was_a de!ensiY•:-st:an,d-_
three for sixSalci;"We-diOagoodjoo taking advanout at linebacker with twelve tackles
yards, and Aaron Ohlinger had one 23 tage _of their mistakes . and taking
in a great aU-around performance.
Southem'a Brandon Pierce
yards.
advantage of opportunities. We , tackSouthern's Brice Hill had ftve rushing
After a scoreless third quarter, Matt led better tonight and were able to
a~tempts for 52 yards with two catchAfter a couple possession changes
es for 76 yards and a touchdowli.
and a great battle in the trenches, Ash rambled nine yards to paydirt in pressure their quarterback which .
Hannan· was led by junior Kirk Southern again scored when Matt Ash the early portions of the final round. helped take away their passing game.
Murray with eight carries for 40 rambled 46 yards to paydirt for South- With 11:08 showing on the clock Ash This was a much improved effort and
yards, while Shannon Gay was 8-for- ern's second score. Anthony Coffinan broke a couple Hannan tackles off everyone started to assumed their
28 rushing with three catches for 51 added the extra point run for a 14-0 tackle to post the score. Brandon roles."
Coach Kent Price of Hannan said,
yards.
score. Southern then recovered an Pierce rolled out to pass, but then
Southern scored on the second play onside kick on the ensuing kick off. decided to run for the extra point and "The difference in the game may have
from scri.mmage when Brandon Moments later, Aaron Ohlinger scored a 29-6 SHS lead.
come down to our three fumbles and
Pierce rifle&lt;;! a 65-yard shot to Brice on a 23-yard reverse ramble and the
Matt Ash scored the final touch- the ·quick scores they got off the
Hill on a flag pattern to the left side- extra point run failed, but Southern down at the 4:29 mark in the fourth screen and the reverse. · That really
line. Hill rambled downfield for the · led 21-0.
quarter to push the score to 35-6 after hurt us early and took away our conscore at the 11:41 mark. Wes BurThat tally held until the :37 mark the failed extra point pass. That score fidence. It came down to a .couple of
roughs kicked the . extra point, the when Shannon Gay caught a Stacy stood to the finish as both clubs' sec- early plays, but overall our kids
Cooper pass, and after breaking a cou- and teams saw plenty of action.
score 7-0.
showed a lot of improvement."
OVP CORRESPONDENT

'

, .

Brucksvitle 24 p

JACKSO N, Ohio - Before
Friday's game, J~ckson coach
Randy Layton had said he
hoped that the rains might come
and slow down the Waverly passing attack.
He got half of that wish, as the
Jrains did come, but not until after
Waverly quarterback Jay Gullion

od. As Jackson quarterback 10-play. 68-yard ·drive ended at
Michael Holdren scrambled out the 6:0! mark with a five-yard
of the pocket to the right,Waver- fade paaern from Gullion .to
ly middle linebacker Lewis Creed Miller.
The Jackson (1-1) running
Copeland stripped him of the
ball. Defensive tackle Josh Lowe . game, which had . po'\t'd 394
fell on the ball at the Jackson 25- yards against Wellston . in last
yard line.
week's 44-33 victory, mustered
Gullion immediately hit Ben just 170 total yards against the
Martin ·on a streak pattern Tiger defense.
against a blown coverage down · "We just couldn't get anything

had torched the lrorunen for 251
yards and four touchdowns in a
28-0 win for the Tigers.
Gullion threw scoing passes to
three different recievers to give
Jackson's record its first blemish
of the season.
GuUio n's work was more
opportuni&lt;tic than dominating
however, as three of the ID's
came immediately after Jackson
turnovers.
"They capitalized on our mistakes and scored quick off our
fumbles and interceptions;• said
Layton." l'U say every game, 'The
team that makes the fewwest
mistakes is g(,nna
Tonight
we made the most mistakes, and
they capitalized on every one of
them."
Spending most of the game in
a three wide-receiver set, Waverly (2-0) made the most of its first
opportunity in the opening peri-

the right side to give the Tigers a going offensively;' said Layton.
6-0 lead at the 7:27 mark.
"They had a great game plan; we
The · second giveaway may thought we did going in. They
have been the most costly
though.Trailing 12-0 in the closing moments of the second
quarter, Holdren's pass over the
middle was intercepted by Tiger
linebacker Jeremy Peters at the
Jackson 30-yard line. He
returned it 17 yards to the 47 set- .
· ting up Gullion's deep slant to
AndreW Bodager which ended
at ti\.e goal line 53 yards later.
· The resulting point after, a pass
from Gullion to Martin, gave the
. Tigers a 20-0 halftime edge.
The third tumover~to-touch­
down came in the third period
after Jackson's Jamie Arthur fumbled on his own 28, resulting in
a 28-yard scoring pass to
Bodager.
·
Waverly's only sustained drive
came in the second period. The

Bv DAN POLCYN
OVP SPORTS STAFF

..

win:

'

•

\

•

'

executed thcirs a little better."
The Tigers held the Jackson
ground game to zero net rushing
yards in the first period. Fullback
David Swisher tallied 108 yards
on 23 carries agaiiut a defensive
front that was keyed for the Jackson power running game.
Jackson tailback Erron Bren· nan totaled just 8 yards on five
carries in the first hal(

Ceina2S, Lima ShlrM1ee20
c::hogrln Faits 49, Brooklyn o

I.I
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441-0114 1-800-498-0076
Holzer Clinic welcomes

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CLINIC
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Holur M11ln Clinic

Holter Clinic Meigs

•

(7 40) 992-0060

Craig H. DodrJII. MD johu Holur CllitkfTtJIII

Holur Clinic Jackson

Slllfllllll Hultll Spum
(Akron Cily Hospital) In .Awn, OH.

(740) 395-8873

IS Cin. """"'llacon ot9, Cin, .,........., t3.

'"'~~"'

"'~'""'

Cin. St. Xovler 42, Cln. Withrow 14
Cln. Sycamore 14, Cin. La Salle 6
Cin. T...-pln tB, Cin. WaNt. Hils 15

from ~geB1

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

(7 40) 446-5411

,..,__'"-•--• W. Geauga 17, Mantua Crest·
..,.....,,....,
woodO
ChNtlcothe Zan&lt;i Trace 21 • McDarmotl
•~ NW O
~
14
28 '
Cin. Andenlon • Milord '
7
34
Cin. Deer Pat!&lt; ' Bethel-Tale22
44
Cin. Flnneylown • ~illslloro
Cin, 1-., HM 49, Cln. NOiwood 0
Cln. - r a 48, Gin. Hil~ Chr. Acad. 25
Cln. Mariemont tO, Cols. Harttey6
38
· Cin. Glen Ea1e 20
Cin. Gin. Ml -.y 34• Cin. Nolfhwest 9
Cin. N. COiege HIM 20, Cln, Taylor 14
Cin. Oak Hila 32, Cin. Wes1em Hil~ B
Cin. Prlncetoo28,UpperAI1ingtont4
Cln. Puo:ot1Marlan34,Cln.Wr~k&lt;1Woods
33
·
.
Cln. Aeodng 40, Cin. Summit Coun1ry Day

Eastem

FREE ESTIMATES

~

To

21

Canal Fulton NW 14, Na"'"" Falr1ess 6
Canal Wlnchester34, W. Jellerson6 .
carvy v. MI. Bland1ard Aiwlldale o
Carflsle56, Mld&lt;Jetown FenwickO
Ca.-n Mam1 Eas12t , W. MitonMillllrlUnion t4, 20T
~ u.~- 26 \'MaRl 14
Coclalvh20':"'~ c.8ek E. Clnton 0

I

Ironmen fall to Waverly·in non-league action

.\

Delta 56 Metamora Evergreen 14
DotaHMioNortnem39, Pandam-GIIOOaO
Dc&gt;1er t 4, OrNille 10
Qo.t;in Collman 22. Flllday 6
IM&gt;/in Sclolo 'ZI, Mai)'SVI!Ie 0
E. Can. 51, Ma~SondyValtey 7
E. LiYetpoot 14, Oak Glen (W. Va.) 3
Eimon&gt;Wun1Qe34, DeGralt Rivef&gt;ide6
Elyria :lB. Bedl01d3t
EiyliaCeth. 5t,l.oollnCath. 7
Fairlield 21 , Huber Hls. Wayne 6
Fairlield Union 28, Baltimore l.lbef1y Union

Normardy 0

c:-

Jake Workman was the
leading · SG rusher with
six carries for 23 yards.
The Wildcat offense
carried 42 times to build
up a ·gaudy 362-yard
total. Waterford QB Ben
Cunningham completed
two passes for 36 yards to
give his squad 398 yards
of total offense. Cunningham
added
his
team's other score on a
one-yard run in the third
quarter.

SEOAL FOOTBALL

I

a~k•le- ·Ea~
~43.
Can. s. 49, Akr. E. 28

8.

tonight," said Gibbs. "Nice
blocking all the way around"
Prior to the opening of the
game, the Eastern senior class
paid tribute to Josh Adams,
who died in a car accident•in
July.
Adams would have been a
senior lineman for the Eagles
this season.
After a scoreless first quarter as the flag flew at half
staff, the Cadets didn't take
long to draw first blood .
Earlier, Fort Frye had a
shot at scoring in the first
quarter after a fumble by
Ben Holter placed the
Cadets on their own 49-yard
line. Nine plays later, the
Cadets attempted a field goal
from less than 20 yards out,
but the snap went over the
kicker's head giving the
Eagles the ball back.
"That was . huge," said
Christman. "I wasn't sure
that they wasn't going to go
for it. You look at the final
score and say a field goal
wouldn't have helped, but
you never know about

Leetonia 41 , Berlil't Center Westem
Reserve 13
Lemon-Monroe 28, Dey. Northrklge 0
l.swis Center Oentangy 52, Delaware 6
LewistOWn Indian Lake 28, Sl Paris Gm·
ham 21
LlleftyCenter40, Montpelier t3
l..lsllon 20, L.sa-.g t.aBrae6

Logan 50. NetoorMie-York6
Lorain CleaMew 21, Gates Mils Qtmour
20
Lorain SOuthview 34, Paima 28
lou~ 33, Kent Roo ,...n6

21
Faif'llew Pat!&lt; Faif'llew 28, Avon 0
Fr.¥1~in 14; Little M- 0
G
9 L ' Cou
F""'klinFurnace rvent, OWlS
nty
(Ky.) 6
Galion 33, N, Robinson Cot. CrawfOfd 0
Galion Nolthrnor 27, tJolaware Bud&lt;eye
Valley 0
GaJ'-'is GaJIIa 62, CoW Grove Dawson·
a.~ ..
-•-"
44 Cots West 8

."1J'

Galloway Wes1land

•

·

Garlield HIS. 20, Panna Padua 13
Geroa 21 , ......_. Green 20
Gerrnan.,.,;;;v;;ik:Y VONI 48. W. CemJt1ton
0

~·~~·rg 30, Hicksville 14
;

i_ Conneaut 7 .

G•-~erT~44.'"'-•Aie""~·o
~
"'~
~·•
-~

Gllln&lt;MewHts 13, IN&lt;:asterFISherCath.

t 2 Granville .14, Utica 7
GIOOf1 21, Eitel 14
Gmenville 17, TIPP City TippOCaiiOO 14
G-- City 41 , Tl". SCOtt 19
'"'"
~
Heml""' 17, Spoing. S. 14

momentum ."
The Cadets opened the
second quarter with a drive
from the Eastern 39-yard
line after a Karr punt from
his own endzone.
A 18-yard run by Stephen
Reeder set up a 7 - yard
scamper by Josh Meek with
8:58 left in the. half.
· Eastern, though, didn 't
take ' long to strike back as
Chris Lyons returned the
following kickoff 83 yards
along the left side of the field
for the touchdown in ~ play
·that took momentum away
from the visitors .
Things continued to go
badly for the Cadets as the
Eastern kickoff was misfielded and re covered by the
Eagles at the Fort Frye 35 .
· "Last year in this game, the
special teams hurt us," .aid
Christman. "This year, the
special teams went our way.
That's a big part of tt m a
tough game like this where
both teams are pretty evenly
matched."
After a couple ·of short
passes by Karr, R.). Gibbs ran
the ball ,in from 24 yards out
for a second Eastern score.
"R.J.'s fast," said Christman. "He weighs 225 and

Ma&lt;Hoo 22, ~L
Mansfield 42, -~• 3
....~ .. ~--~,F~·•·t4

·-~-~·~ ~Q
MapietM Higlland 31, Medina Buckeye 8
Mar1e11a 23, Carrllridge 6

MarionHardng3t,ThomasWorttlngtonO
Marion Ploasanl59, Mt Gilead 14
Marion Rivor Valley 32, Rk:llwood N. l.llion
6

Malllns Feny 21. Bucl&lt;eyo Local 0
Mason t5, Kings Mils Kings 9
Maesll1on Jad&lt;aon 32, Aust.ln-..Flt:ll7
Mass11on Pony 21, Co1s. Eastrnoor 7
Maes111on Tuslaw tO, Da1tcn 7
Maesll1on Wasi'Olg1on 54, Piltsburgh (Pa.)
MI. lebanon 20

"-""""53\\1~20
•
·

,._,._

McColri&gt;29, Ctloy·
7
Mechanlcsllurg 40, FIMkton·Adena 8
Madna 43, lodi Cloverteal22
Miami E. 21, Mll1on-Union 14. 20T
Miaml!lburg 7, Cin. Loveland 6
Miamisburg 7, Loveland 6
Mlddtelietd Can!lna19t, Ant:lowlr Pymatun-

Oak Harbor 28, Rossford 20
Oak Hil36, Chillicothe UnloiD6
Old Washington Buckeye Trail4 1. CaktNel

e

Easllako N

Olmsted 28,
·0
Olmsted F.-Is 42. N. Aoyal1on 0
Ontario22, Bucyrus o
Orogon Cloy39, Tot. W.itll 7
Orwell Grand VaJey 28, Mineral Rklga 10
Ottawa-G1Mdol1 23, Eida 6
Parl&lt;et'Sburg (W. Va.) 29, Virooent Warren 3
PeiT'I&gt;ef'IIIIB Eastwood 7, Sandusky

Pett&lt;insO, OT

~ha42
g~~~EKenst
0 on 14
r~-·..,-·

• ·
~-

P'qua13,~~W•••fSOriO
~ -~
Pobnd Seminary 56, Jellemon 0
- 5 5 , Chiiootho 12

Holmes 17
Van I!Uian28, Ardayl..llerty·Benton 14
W.
t..ako!a W. 52, Day, Stellblno 0
W. l.lberty·Salem 41 , Ridgeway Ridgemont
0 W
,, ·~"""" Fals
10
ildsworth 13, _,_..,..
Wanen Howland42, c~~~~~WalsawRiverVMIW 13, "~·-~-~•
0
Washingllln C.H. 46, C l - 2 5
Wa1erlord 53, C"""' City S. GeJia 8
Wavet1y 28, Jacloion 0

Wrll'f"'8'Njle 'ZI, Clarksville Cinlcn-Massie
20 Wet'll!ln (W. Va.) Wejr 20, Cedz Han1soo
Cent6
Wellington 53, Cotlns W_, -rve 12
WesteiVille N. 33. Cols. Morion-Fran~ln 6
w.-let'Sburg3t,BetilllrldgePailtValley6
WlliteheJ~YOIIItlng 14, Cots. Franl&lt;lln His.

Union~'ZI

·~"

Shef1iald- 55. Clo. Cent Catlt 6
She&lt;wood Fairview 32,
Ben-

Youngs. Chaney 13, Canfield 7
Youngs. Uberty 27, Gam!IIOYitlo Garlietd 7

Betlelon1a""

5&lt;\Uihlngton

r

,

ng ·-~-• ·

Point

'"ltsooYculgsO· U"'"ine 54, Youngs. Woodrow
'"
Zanosvitle Maysville 21, ~ Tr1-Valley

7

he's 6-1, but he's fast. You
attempts to pass for a score,
look at him and say he's slow,
.Point kicker Branson Barkey
but he's not."
nailed a 22-yard field goal to
give the Big Blacks a 16-13
Gibbs finished with 74
from Page 81
halftime lead.
yards on seven carries for
before the first quarter ended,
Eastern (2-0), while Karr
In the end, it was . the Big
however,
the
Raiders
scored
had 12 carries for 11 7 yards
Black defense that made the
and Bryan Minear came in again with another big play.This difference Friday at County
late to carry the ball ·five time ·Nicholson connected Stadium. Point held Roane to
with senior receiver Matt Cox just one yard rushing· on 26
times f~r 21 yards.
· For Fort Frye (1-1), Scott for a 57-yard pass.
attempts, and 151 yards passing
Witten had 74 yards on 19
In the second quarter, the Big on 23 attempts, while snagging
carries, while Reeder had Blacks had possession for most two interceptions. Ramey led
seven carries for 44 yards and of the quarter, puaing together . the defense with 12 tackles
Meek had eight carries for an eight-minute 76-yard drive, including, four sacks and three
37 yards.
which was capped with a one- other tackles for losses.
"We got the ball in the yard tou chdown by Kevin
The Big Blacks (1 - 1) host
endzone and we got us a lit- Thompson, his second of the North Marion· Friday. .
tle momentum, and then halfThe Big Blacks then forced
they made that big play on Roane ~ punt from inside the
the kickoff," said Fort Frye 20-yard line, where Raider
coach B.J. Scott.
punter Jeremy Abboa slipped
The Eagles play host to and was called down at the
Waharna Sept . 7 .
, eight. After a couple of failed

Manlh Fork 6

p - 29 Wanan ~ Ohio 3
Pail&lt;e.sbu~ sOOth
v ;Ma~ (.

~

POifslrouth W. 35. Chllliootho Huntington '
Ross 0
Preble Shawnee 21, Middlelown Madison? 12
Aavanna SE 23, Ravenna 6
WllllehouseAnthonyWayne 28, Tol. Star16
~rg 28. Gahanna-l.lnooil2t
W1Ck111o 'ZI, Paii'IB!lVitte HaNey 9
Rich--• Edison 39. Mi-- 6
,.,._,~ 28 "-· •~~ O
nu..,
·-·•
, , , • .,._, • ~,. -·~"
Ai1rnan 8, Sugart:nlek Garaway 7, OT
Windham 28, McDonald 6
- d Parl&lt;way '.fl, Ft Flecowry 22
WntersW!e lrdan Creek 14, St. Clairsville
S. Chalttlston SE 14, MllfOid Center Fair·, t 3
bonks 0
Woodsfield Monroe Cent 47, Shadyside 1
Salem 24, l..lsllon Baa\1111' 20
Wooster 28. Rk:llliotd AeYefe 0
sarahs~llo ShenandOah 35, Bomont
~onKIIbOUme31,UmaSr.
6
,FIJ'~t3.

jamin Logan20
Silt1ey Lohman 13, New Bnmen 12
Smi!MIIe 39, Loudonville 16
Chlllke 'ZI Sebri .............

();;eana 52,

Pete!'Sburg at Pendle1on Coulty, ppd, rain
Pi&lt;eView 22, Bland Co!Mity, Ya. 12
PocahontasCounty26, G!merCounty 6
Point Pleasant 23• RooneCoorly 15
Plilip Barbour 22 , Prvslorl 19
P~ICO!ooi20. ~0
Aavenswood 21 , PocolA
A...._ 28 Sl Allans 0

R~· 38 • CabeiMi&lt;Did 15
RCltlortC. Byld 23, ~ 7
. 5ou111ern Local, Oho 35, Haman e
Spring VaJey 21 Hun"""~ 7

'
"'"-·
Sf.MafYSI4,NolroOame13
Sletbemlllle, Ohio 15, BIOOke 0
Va
East H rdy 12
~. · 34 '
a
1
Surnmeto County 2· Uberty Raleigh 6
Totsia 14• Wnlietd 13
Tug Valley 40. Soot1 35
Turkeyfoo&lt; v,-ley, Pa. 13, Hundred 0
University 47, East Fairmont 7
Valley Fa'- 32 c•-~•le 5
•-- • '""''- '""
'
Van 25, Hamln 6
Wehame 34 • Fedetal Hod&lt;lng, Ohkl O
Wayne 10. Chesapeake, Ohio 9
W - CoiMity 35, 1Ygar1s Vwley 6
Woir20,CedzHarrtsonCant.,Ohio6
"~ng~~• 13 ~--~·rgCathotic
, , _ -••w · ~-~
·
Po. 10
~liarrolon 38, Baileysvile 6

~~~~ty2~· ~~~~~

28

"'" ~·
• ~.....,. ~ ..,
W;ornlng East 52, Splngam, Wash., D.C.

Thank You
Ohio Valley Bank
for purchasing
my 2001
Market Hog

THANkVftl
10 VALLEY ISANf

Thank You
Carroll Caldwell and
CC Caldwell Trucking
buying my 2001
Market Steer.

•

For Buying My
200 1 Market Hoo
the GoUla County Jr. Fair•"'&lt;

.,

�•

Page 86 • &amp;unlla!' Vtunrli-&amp;rnlinrl

Winston Cup
Schedule and
Standings
The 2001 NASCAR Winston
Cup echedule (wi:mers in parentneses) and driver point stand·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pl....nt, WV

DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP)- It took Harvick made it a smooth transition by

Dura lube 400,

March - 4 UAW·DaimlerChryalor 400, Las Vegas. (Jeff
Gordon)

March 11 -Cracker BarreiSOO,
Hampton, Ga. (Kevin Harvick)

March t8 - Carolina Dodge
(Dale Jarrett)
Maroh 25 - Food City 500.
Bristol, Tenn. (Elliott Sadler)

Dealers 400, Darlington, S.C.

April 1 - Harrah's 500, Fort
Worth, Texas. (Dale Jarrett)
April 8 - Virginia 500, Marlinsville. (Dale Jarrett)
April 22 - Talladega 500, Tal-

ladega, Ala. (BoOby Hamilton)

April 29 - NAPA Auto Parts
500, Fontana, Calif. (Rusty Wal-

lace)

Pon tiac E)(citement

400, Richmond, Va. (Tony Stewa~)

May 27- Coca-Cola 600, ConcorcJ. N.C. (Jeff 9urton)
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 400,
Dover, Del. (Jeff Gordon)
June 10 - Kmart 400, Brooklyn, Mich. {Jeff Gordon)
June 17 - Pocono 500, Long

Pond, Pa. (A~ky Audd)

June 24 - DOdge/Save Mart
350, Sonoma, Ca!il. (Tony Slew-

art)

July 7 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
Beach, Fla. (Dale Earnhardl Jr.)
July 15- Tropicana, 400 , Joliet, Ill. (Kellin Harvick)
July 22 - New England 300,
Loudon, N.H. (Dale Jarrett)
July 29 - Pennsylvania 500,

Long Pond. (Bobby Labonte)

Aug. 5 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis. (Jetf Gordon)
Aug. 12 - Global Crossing at
the Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y. (Jeff
Gordon}
Aug. 19- Pepsl400, Broo.klyn,
Mlch (Sterling Marlin)
Aug. 25- Sharpie 500, 8r1stol,
Tenn. (Tony Stewaf'l) ·
Sept. 2 - Southern 500, Dar-

lington, S.C.

Sept. 8 - Che1.1rolet Monte
Carlo 400, Richmond, Va.
Sept. 16 - New Hampshire
300, Loudon.

Sept. 23 - MBNA.com 400,

1

Dover, Del.
Sept. 30 - Protection One 400,
Kansas City, Kan.

Oot. 7- UAW-GMQuality 500,
Concord, N.C.
Oot. t4 - Old Dominion 500,
Martinsville. \/a.
Oot. 2t - Alabama 500, Tal1

.

I

Richard Chi!~ a long time to stop winning in his third try. Childress found it
loolring for a blxk No.3 on the tr:lck. For to be a diflicult adjustment.
him, nces just didn't look the same with"It was tough to start with, not seeing

Roctd"ijham, N.C. (Stove Park)

.

WITHOUT EARNHARDT - Richard Childress watches the early laps of the DuraLube 400 race at the North Carolina Speedway near Rocklngham, N.C., In this
Feb . 26. It too Childress a long time to stop looking for a black No. 3 on the
track. For him, races just didn't look the same with out Dale Earnhardt. Six
months after Earnhardt's death, neither does Childress' company. (AP)

out Dale Earnhardt.
the black No. 3 on the track or in the
Six months after Earnhardt's death in an garage at the lint several races we went
accident in the final turn of the Daytona to;• Childress said. "You'd walk in the
500, neither does Childress' company.
garage area and )-UU'd look for the truck,
"Leaving Daytona, I didn't knoW if I you'd look for the ear - that's after doing
wanted to even see another race;• Chil- it for 16 years. it's just something that
dress said. "I jwt lost my best friend and doesn't go :rHay.
dido 't know what I wanted to do. But
"So it's hard for me sometimes to look
after talking to the guys at the shop, we out there and pick out the No. 29 car. But
knew ~ had to go forward. That's what We're beginning to make that transition
Dale would have wanted w to do."
and make it work."
He knew it wasn't going to be easy.
Part of that's come from success: HarWith Earnhardt's death, everything the vick has won two races, has, eight top 10
two of them had built since 1984 was in finishes and is ninth in the points.
danger, and the longtime car owner had
"He's the real deal and I keep saying
to act quickly to save it.
that," Childress said. "With Kevin and that
"The very lint thing I had to do was race team showing what they're made of,
take care of our foundation;• Childress it's a positive."
said. "T!1e COil)pany was.built on that race
But·at the same time, his second team is
team and we had to get it back and get it not having any success.
going."
.,
In five-plw seasons, Mike Skinner has
So he did.
yet to win a points race and Childress
Now, instead of competing for an decided last week to release him from his
eighth Winston Cup championship with contr:lct a year early.
Earnhardt this season, Childress is spend"Mike is one of the most ralented driing the year breaking in a rookie driver, vers out there but, for some reason, ·we
searching for a second driver and prepar- haven't been able to win;' Childress said ·
ing to expand his fleet to three cars in "We've had some great runs, but this sport
2002.
.
is about winning:'
The lint thing he did was put Kevin
So Childress is loolring for a new driver
Haivick in Earnhardt's rid~, a move that fur that car, which will also have a r.ew
carried heavy. risks.
sponsor because Childress is ending his ·
The plan was for Harvick to driire the association with Lowe's Home Improvethird Cup car when RCR expanded, and ment.
Childress was asking the unknown. 25Theres been speculation that Robby
year-old to pilot his strongest team.
Gordon, who drove the car in four races
"I told him I'd do whatever he needed last month as a replacement for the
me to do;' Harvick said. "But it was a lit- injured Skinner, could get the job.
tle scary, stepping into that job and with
But a chance to work (or one of the
how quickly it was happening. it was big best teams in the sport could also lure a
shoes to 6ll and I dido 't want ro look at it big-name driver to move over to RCR.
like that."
,..,
If that isn't enough for RCR, he 's got
Childress put no pressure on Harvick Busch series champion Jeff Green coming
and stripped Earnhardt's car ·of its trade- to work for him next year in the third car
marl:: black paint and No. 3. Although Harvick was originally set to drive.

tadega.

Oct. 28 - Cf1ecker Auto Parts

SOOk, Avondale·, Ariz.

Nov. 4- Pop Secret Microwave

400, Rockingham, N.C.

Nov. 11 - Pennzoll 400, Home, stead, Fla.
Nov. 18- NAPA 500, Hampton ,

Ga.

Orlvor Standlngo
t. JeffGordon
. · ..... 3,220.
3,528 ·
2.
Ricky Rudd .......
3. Dale Jarrett ....... 3. t49.
4. Sterling Marlin ···· · 3,tto.
6. Tony Stewan . . . . . . 3,050.
___a..Oale Eamhardi.-Jr.~~2,967. -· 1. Rusty Wallace .. . : . 2.963.
8. Bobby Labonte .. .. 2,947.
9. Kevin Harvick . .... 2,9t3.
to. Steve Park · · · · · · 2,859.
tt . Johnny Benson ... 2,843.
t2. Mark Martin. . .... 2,739.
t3. Jeff Bu~on ....... 2,69t.
14. Matt Kenseth ..... 2,6n
t5. Bill Elliott .. . ..... 2.650.
t6. Jimmy Spencer ... 2,826.
17. EUiott SOdler ..... 2,483
18. Ward Bu~on ..... 2,405.
19. Ken Schrader . ... 2,369.
20. Bobby Hamilton ... 2,366.
2t . Jeremy Maytleld .. 2,354.
22. Jerry Nadeau ..... 2,297.
23. Cave Blaney ..... ·2,201.

24. Kurt Busch ...... 2, t83.
25. Terry Labonte .... 2, 179.' ·
26. Ricky Craven ..... 2,166.
27. Michael Waltrip ... 2, t32. ·
26. Robert Pressley .. ·. ·2, t 32.
29. John Androtti . . . . . 2,04 t.
·30. Brett Bodine ..... 2,004.
31. Casey AtWOOd .
t ,943.

32. Todd Bodine . . . . . t,94 t.
33. Stacy Compton . . t, 790.
34. Mike Skinner .. . .. 1,771.

35. Joe i'lemechek . . . t, 755.
36. Ron Hornaday . . . .
37. Jason lEiHier . . . .
38. Mike Wallace . . . . .
39. Kevin L8p.3ge . . .
40. Buckshot Jones .

1,735.
1,687.
1,492.

1,3 12.
1,229.

NASCAR Opening new information highway
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The number even made Mauricio
.Gugelmin gulp. The CART driver's
engineer had just informed him the
impact from his crash at Chicago
Mater-Speedway-had-produced 123-G's
in·0.03 seconds.
·
u
,
.
Man, and all I ve got IS a headache
and some soreness in my shoulders;' the
C • n ·T d .
.
n.o.... nver sa1'd, shak'mg h'IS hea d m
wonder.
In recent years, teams in CART, the
rival Indy Racing League and Formula
One have all had virtually instantaneous
access to crash data, tljanks to "black
boxes" similar to those used to record
data in aircraft. ,
More importantly, the data is being
used to make the cars safer.
Beginning sometime in 2002,
NASCAR will join the crowd.
Mike Helton, NASCAR's president,
made that announcement Aug. 21 as
the circuit released results of its sixmonth investigation into the death of
Dale Earnhardt.
Dr. John Melvin, then working for
General Motors as • biomedical
research scientist, and John Pierce, then
a GM racing engineer, first developed

racing's black boxes in 1991 to support
the newly formed GM Racing Safety
Program.
'
Ea rly attempts at racing accident
reconstruction had shown only limited
results wereavaililile from analyzing
photographs, videos, tire skid marks and
car wreckage.
Accustomed · to working with
detailed da13 from highly instrumented
production vehicles subjected to barrier
tests, Melvin and Pierce, both now
independent safety consultants, knew a
suitable crash recorder was needed.
While writing a purchase order to
have specialized racil).g impact recorders
custom-built to their specifications,
they discovered a company in Okemos,
Mich., called Instru10ented Sensor
Techn&lt;llogy. The company produced a
battery-powered impact recorder that
was used to monitor shipments of sensitive and costly equipment such as
supercomputers and the space shuttle's
booster rockets.
After being adapted for use in race
cars, the crash recorders were formally
approved for the first time by the United States Auto Club for installation on
cars competing in the 1993 lndianapo-

'Humpy Bumper' gets first crash t~st
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) A Winston Cup car ~ecially
fit with an energy-absorbing
bumper is deliberately crashed
into a walL Instead of crum: piing on impact, it bounces
off and is only slightly damaged.
That's what happened this
week when researchers tested
the Humpy Bumper at Lowe's
Motor Speeqway. Initial projections deemed the crash a
success, but the damage and
data from a "black box" inside
the car still must be analyzed.
Humpy Wheeler, presid.ent
of the speedway, said · he
would meet with NASCAR
next week ·to discuss the
results.
" It's up to NASCAR f~om
· here," Wheeler said. "They'll
look at what we have and
either say, 'We like it, go
ahead and· start manufacturing it' or, 'We'd like for you to
·look at it further with some
more tests.'
" Ideally, they'll like it and
we can get it on the cars as
soon as possible."

Page 87

'mimts- itntin:el

Sunday, September l, 2001

'

Childress adjusts to life after Earnhardt "Squirrel hunters again enjoying early season

Feb. t8 - OoytOna 500, Daytona Beoeh. Fla. (IAichael Waltrip)

Ma~ 5 -

,mro~

NASCAR

l"ijo:

Ftb. 25 -

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

The Humpy Bumper is
designed to address concerns
about the ri gidity of the fro nt
of stock cars .and the lack of
any sort of bumper to absorb
the energy from a crash.
The stiffness in the cars has
been an issue the past year
because of the deaths of Adam
Petty, Kenny Irwin· and Dale
Earnhardt in wrecks.
The cars have grown
increasingly rigid over .the
years because it allows crew
chiefs to accura tely make suspension settings. But some
think the sritT front fails to
redu ce enough energy away
from a driver.

The bumper was developed
to address th ose concerns. It's
made by Paul Lew, a Las .·
Vegas-based composite materials engineer designer and
manufacturer, and is desjgned
to absorb the energy of 20 to·
30-degree frontal impacts.
The black box, similar to
those used in airplanes,
records data to help understand the forces within the
car.
To test the bumper, Lew
crashed a driverless Winston
Cup car by remote control
into the turn 3 wall at Lowe's
at a wall speed of about 40
mph.

lis 500 and were made mandatory for all
Indy car races later that year in the
CART series.
Since then, Delphi Automotive Systerns has introduced Accident Data
Loggers to Formula One and Formula
3000 and worked with GM on introduting them to the IRL, while Ford
and IST took on the program in
CART, calling them "blue boxes."
Glen Gray, Delphi's engineering
manager for motorsports, said, "The
boxes are intended to give medical and
biomedical information on what happens in an accident to the driver and
the car."
John Valentine, chief mgineer for Ford
said, "In safety terms, the G load record~d is not by itself a telling assessment of
an impact. The time or duration that the
load was applied is equally· critical."
Referring to a cruh earlier this year
in Long Beach, Calif., during a CART
race, Valentine said a 130-G impact was
dissipated through the car and driver
and there was no injury.
"Yet a load of as little as 10 G's, when
applied over a longer period of time,
could prove fatai,"Valentine added.
Delphi's boxes also read thing1 such as

the rate of the car's spin and have what
Gray called "external• inputs," which
give information on the strain on the
driver's seat belt harness and data on his
_head..mrurement.. _ _~_
Even more advance technology is
coming soon, according to Gray.
"We'll probably have more memory
available, and the boxes will not only
log the accident, but four, five, six laps
before the_ accident," he said. "Then
we'll be able to see if the driver drove a
different line and did that have something to do with the accident,"
NASCAR has made no decision on
which company will provide its new
technology, but Delphi made a proposa! and has begun prelimipary testing
with the Hendrick Motorsports team,
which already uses some ofh:s products.
"Our boxes are r,~ally built for the
purpose;' Gray said. "We've actually had
boxes come out of the car during accidents and still work. They're built to·
take that kind of punishment."
Although safety experts have prodded
NASCAR to use the boxes for years, it
resisted, · in part because of fears the
information might be used for compelitive advantages.

CALLAEP
ANVTIME,ANV ,DAY

WEST ALEXANDRIA,
.'Ohio (AP) - Less then two
hours into Ohio's squirrel
· hunting season, Jerry Cooper's
.n-caliber rifle barked unce,
.signaling the first squirrel of
.the year was headed to the
. ga_me bag and the 2001-2002
, hunting season was under way.
· "It's a young one, good fry' "h e sat'd .
. ing stze,
Cooper, a retired letter carrier from rhis small southwestern
·Ohio town, quickly field
dressed the squirrel and hiked
to his truck where he placed
the animal in an ice-filled
cooler.
"With the season starting in
August, there will be days of
high temperatures where
hunters will want to quickly
cool their harvest to keep it
fro m spoiling," said Mike
Reynolds, the Ohio Department of Natural Resource's
Division of Wildlife's squirrel
project leader.
For the second successive
year, Ohio's squirrel hunters
are enjoying an early season.
The Division of Wildlife has
Jsaid _the early opening allows
youths a chance to hunt before

1-800-277·2177

www.aep.com

rels are easy to hunt and are
great table fare . The season's
length and a liberal bag limit
this year provide plenty of
opportunities to learn the
sport.
The limit- which includes
fox squirrels, gray squirrels and
red squirrels - is four. The
squirrel~ may lk hunted from
one-half hour before sunrise to
sunset.

',

Secondly, sq&lt;1irrels are best
hunted by sitti!lg down, mak·ing it an ideal sport for both
the young and the not-soyoung. After a "quieting down

time" thl' bushy tails will be
seen scampering through tree
tops, running up and down
trunks and b&gt;athering food on
the forest floor, provide .1mple
shooting possibilities.
Small wood lots will hold a
good population of squirrels.
And squirrel hunting is viewed
by landowners as a more "passive'' hunting than rabbit or
deer hunting so hunters are
likely to receive permission to
squirrel hunt.
Squirrel hunters also will
find less pressure on public
hunting land. Cooper reports

JHE VERDICT
IS 1"1 _,

that during the first six weeks
of the season, he sometimes
hunt; on public lands and
never sees another hunter.
Squirrels, like any wildlife,
require a good supply of food,
shelter, water and space to survixe. Hunters must concentrate

food and result in improvep
winter survival .. and better
reproductive success.

"The mast crop index for
last year was up nearly 25 perc
cent
owr
1999,"
said
R.eynol(is.
"This shvuld be a good year
for Ohio squirrel hunters," he
said. "Last faU 's abundant crop
of acorns, beechnuts and hick~
ory nuts is a good indicator df
sq uirrel populations for thi~
season in most areas of thf

the hunt in that area, but food
supplies will change as the season progresses, and successful
hunters will watch the mast, or
acorns and other nuts, and
move with it.
When acorns and assorted State."
I
nuts are plentiful, they provide
Based on his openmg day
sq uirrels with storable winter hunt, Jerry Cooper agrees . I

..

' 1 9 Vehicles under
All Credit Appllcatlonsy ·
&lt;" •
.... ' $99 per month ·
.Will Be Accepted
., 49Vehlcles Under
F.or Processing

...

'

$10,000

SISSONVILLE, W.Va.
lem. But an important part of
Edgewood Country Club's the program is changing the
··
golf cou rse isn't just a great attitude of golfers .
"Over the last 20 years
place to play a ro und or two,
. it's a great place to call home there was a movement to
1_ if you are a duck.
have all the grasses perfec',t all .
The Sissonville area course of the time," Murray said. "lt '
is one of tliree in West Vir- took a lot of resources to do
gmia to be fully cettifi ed by that. Noo.v we do integrated .
Audubon International as a pest management. And now
cooperative ~an ctuary. Certi- golfe·rs understand that some
fied co urses undergo a pro- damage or imperfection is
gram of ecologically sound
"
land
Chuck Murray, grounds were taken out of.the mowsuperintendent at Edge- ing schedule and returned to
wood's 150-acre course, said wooded areas. Members have
his was the first course in the comm,ented they like the
state to become certified.The contrast of the added woods
others are at Snowshoe and with the greens.
The Greenbrier.
: Edgewood is now . so
"We have to monitor the healthy that wildlife has
water quality, including returned not just to visit, b11t '
where the water enters and to stay.
leaves the property," sa id • "We had two broods of
Murray, who has been over- mallards this year, and eight of .'
seeing Edgewood for 15 the fled~\mgs . are sull on.. the ·
years. "We do habitat man- property, Murray . satd. :"'e ·
agement, providi ng food and have wood ducks, a couple
cover for all wildlife and doz en bluebuds, herons that
we've reduced the total quan- fish in the pond~ and.. we:re ·
Jtity of pesticides by about 76 seeing several squirrels.
.
percent."
Members apprectate the
To be certifi ed, courses also renewal, Murray added. One
must have a long-term envi- member, a woodworker, has
ronmental plan, manage for crafted ~lenty_ of b1rdhouses
wildlife, gain the support of to accommodate the rtew
golfers, conserve water and neighbors. Another m~mber
use chemicals carefully for painted a poster featunng ·all
the safety ()[ golfers, ani:nals the songbirds that were iden_
' and nearby property ·owners. tified at the course.
~ Being part ofthe program, :·T~!s is a feel-g?o~. kmd ~f
, which is sponsored by the thmg, Mu~ray sa1d. .There s
: United States Golf Associa- no doubt m my mmd. the. ·
: tion, means ta king care of wildlife returning is linked to
: greens and ponds in a new these practice_s., But for m~
:way, Murray said.
and my staff, tt s s~ttsfymgto .
~ "Pretty much mything we know we are domg every~ want to do now we think thing we can with a thought
about the environmental to the environment.
~ mpact," Murray said. "And
Murray said the reduced
~when we discontinue some- u,;e of chemiCals and a reduc,; thing, we think about that, tio'n of the amount of acreage
: too."
·
mowed, plus water conserva: Ponds once treated with tion practices, has also result: copper ' sulfate to control ed in a cost saving1 tor Edge! algae now have fountains that wood.
;aerat~ and kee p the water "We've seen that our annu: moving. A computeriz_ed irri- al in creas~ m expenditures
·~ation system cut dowp water has not nsen as East as the
~sage by a.bout 25 percent, · mdustry standards.
.
: And instead of routinely ']oellen Zeh, staff ecologtst
~·spraying turf with chemicals, · with Audubon lnternattonal,
:Murray's staff fo cuses on sa~ d 1t takes courses an aver::keeping the grass thick and age of one ~o three years t.o
:healthy to deter weeds, fun- become certified. The. orga_m :Sus and pests.
zation also has cert1ficauo_n
, "We do veri-cutting
programs for schopls, busl~ertically slicing the grass to nesses and back yards .
':renew it " he said. "And we · "But people look at golf&gt;
1nonitor 'for proper fertility courses particularly ·u .a
~eveb . optimum nutrition, model of how they want th~1r
:Watet 'and drainage.' If you do own lawn t~ look," Zeh md.
~II thos~ thing1, the turf will "These cettlfied c.ourses are a
J!e able to withstand a lot of model for tbe enure co~mu­
,j nsects apd disease.''
niry for what sustamable
· Spraying is done only when resource , management looks
'necessary to control a prob- like."
·

.

Itt TttE VfiL,LEYI
..HAS
. THE LOWEST PRICES
For
Th ts Ad
Special Di scount

Parole Officers &amp; Judqcs With

·sanctuary fore birds;
County golf course
certified by Audubon

'

American Electric Power, America's Energy
Partner, provides 24-hour customer and
emergency rep~ir service. Call us anytime
of the day or night.

school begins.
Squirrel hunting opened
Aug. 18 and runs through Jan.
31, 2002, except during tlie
week of deer gun season:
which is Nov. 26 through Dec.
2.
Squirrels are the third most
popular game behind deer and
rabbit, · according to the
National Shooting Sports
Foundation of Riverside,
Conn. In a recent study, based
on a nationwide field survey,
66 percent of hunters reported
seeking squirrels, while 71 percent responded rabbits were
their prey and 81 percent were
after deer.
"It's unfortunate that more
hunters do not take advantage
of this great resource. Squirrel
hunting opportunities · are
excellent in Ohio and September-October is a prime time to
be out in the woods," said Bob
Stoll, supervisor . of the divisions' forest wildlife research
station in New Marshfield.
Going after squirrels is an
easy way to introduce a yo ung
person to hunting as well a5 a
great way for seniors to stay
active in _the outdoors. Squir-

2000 TOYOTA TACOMA XC•b 4X4 110128- Automatic, air,
BOFW ............................................................................. $19,995
2000 FORD F150 4X4 110112, Red ...............................$19, 120
111H TOYOTA TACOMA SUPER CAB 110184, 4x4, 23.000
miles, BOFW. SA5, air, sport wheels, TOR, off road ........$18,270
111H DODGE RAM 1500 CLUB CAB ft880- 4x4 quad doors,
VB, auto, air, tilt, cruise, PW&amp;L, Sport wheels, tow pkg .. 38,000
miles, AMIFM Cassette, tinted glass ................................ $20,725
1888 TOYOTA RAV4 4X4 110178 ·Green, auto., air, till, cruise,

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1ft7 FORD RANGER 4X4 110158,· 46,000 miles ........ $12,295
1W7 FORD F•1 50 SUPER CAB 414118838, Black, VB, air, PW,
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1W7 FORD F·250 4x4 ..1155- Air, aulo, B' bed, 351 VB, bedllner,
tow pkg ............................................................................$16,695
1996 DODGE DAKOTA 4x4 CLUB CABt1D155 ........... $11 ,650
1995 NISSAN 4x4 XE TRUCK 110055· 57,000 miles, green, air,
sport wheels ..................................................................... $1 0,695
1ft2 DODGE DAKOTA 4X4 110052- 5 speed, V6 engine, long
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1ft31SUZU TRUCK 110084, Red, 5 speed ..................... $4995
1W2 GMC JIMMY 11oot1 4x4 Aulo, air, VB engine, sport

II

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PW, Pl, rear air, sport. Wheels ....................................._... $17,995
1W9 FORD WINDSTAR LX 1110102, Blue, 37,000 m1les, 4 door,
auto, air, till. cruise, PW, PL.. ....................... :.................. $16,750
1899 FORD VAN CONVERSION 110142-23.000 miles, balance
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1998 CHEVY VENTURE VAN 110183· 4 door. auto., air, till, •
cruise, PW, PL, quad seats ............................._. ...............$13,995
1998 MERCURY VILLAGER GS 110103- White, 33,000 miles,
auto, air, till, cruise, PW, Pl,sport wheels ...................... $15,545
1998 FORD WINDSTAR ..872-Aulo, air, tilt, cruise, PW, Pl,
rear air .............................................. ............................... $12,995
1997 DODGE CARAVAN SE 110154- V6 engine, auto, air, till,
cruise, 1 passenger ......................................................... $10,150
1997 DODGE CARAVAN SE 110012- Automalic, air, till, cruise,
PW, PL, 4 door ...................... .......................................... $12,375
18911 FORD WINDSTAR 110087-55,000 miles, V6 engine, auto,

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�•

Page 86 • &amp;unlla!' Vtunrli-&amp;rnlinrl

Winston Cup
Schedule and
Standings
The 2001 NASCAR Winston
Cup echedule (wi:mers in parentneses) and driver point stand·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pl....nt, WV

DARLINGTON, S.C. (AP)- It took Harvick made it a smooth transition by

Dura lube 400,

March - 4 UAW·DaimlerChryalor 400, Las Vegas. (Jeff
Gordon)

March 11 -Cracker BarreiSOO,
Hampton, Ga. (Kevin Harvick)

March t8 - Carolina Dodge
(Dale Jarrett)
Maroh 25 - Food City 500.
Bristol, Tenn. (Elliott Sadler)

Dealers 400, Darlington, S.C.

April 1 - Harrah's 500, Fort
Worth, Texas. (Dale Jarrett)
April 8 - Virginia 500, Marlinsville. (Dale Jarrett)
April 22 - Talladega 500, Tal-

ladega, Ala. (BoOby Hamilton)

April 29 - NAPA Auto Parts
500, Fontana, Calif. (Rusty Wal-

lace)

Pon tiac E)(citement

400, Richmond, Va. (Tony Stewa~)

May 27- Coca-Cola 600, ConcorcJ. N.C. (Jeff 9urton)
June 3 - MBNA Platinum 400,
Dover, Del. (Jeff Gordon)
June 10 - Kmart 400, Brooklyn, Mich. {Jeff Gordon)
June 17 - Pocono 500, Long

Pond, Pa. (A~ky Audd)

June 24 - DOdge/Save Mart
350, Sonoma, Ca!il. (Tony Slew-

art)

July 7 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
Beach, Fla. (Dale Earnhardl Jr.)
July 15- Tropicana, 400 , Joliet, Ill. (Kellin Harvick)
July 22 - New England 300,
Loudon, N.H. (Dale Jarrett)
July 29 - Pennsylvania 500,

Long Pond. (Bobby Labonte)

Aug. 5 - Brickyard 400, Indianapolis. (Jetf Gordon)
Aug. 12 - Global Crossing at
the Glen, Watkins Glen, N.Y. (Jeff
Gordon}
Aug. 19- Pepsl400, Broo.klyn,
Mlch (Sterling Marlin)
Aug. 25- Sharpie 500, 8r1stol,
Tenn. (Tony Stewaf'l) ·
Sept. 2 - Southern 500, Dar-

lington, S.C.

Sept. 8 - Che1.1rolet Monte
Carlo 400, Richmond, Va.
Sept. 16 - New Hampshire
300, Loudon.

Sept. 23 - MBNA.com 400,

1

Dover, Del.
Sept. 30 - Protection One 400,
Kansas City, Kan.

Oot. 7- UAW-GMQuality 500,
Concord, N.C.
Oot. t4 - Old Dominion 500,
Martinsville. \/a.
Oot. 2t - Alabama 500, Tal1

.

I

Richard Chi!~ a long time to stop winning in his third try. Childress found it
loolring for a blxk No.3 on the tr:lck. For to be a diflicult adjustment.
him, nces just didn't look the same with"It was tough to start with, not seeing

Roctd"ijham, N.C. (Stove Park)

.

WITHOUT EARNHARDT - Richard Childress watches the early laps of the DuraLube 400 race at the North Carolina Speedway near Rocklngham, N.C., In this
Feb . 26. It too Childress a long time to stop looking for a black No. 3 on the
track. For him, races just didn't look the same with out Dale Earnhardt. Six
months after Earnhardt's death, neither does Childress' company. (AP)

out Dale Earnhardt.
the black No. 3 on the track or in the
Six months after Earnhardt's death in an garage at the lint several races we went
accident in the final turn of the Daytona to;• Childress said. "You'd walk in the
500, neither does Childress' company.
garage area and )-UU'd look for the truck,
"Leaving Daytona, I didn't knoW if I you'd look for the ear - that's after doing
wanted to even see another race;• Chil- it for 16 years. it's just something that
dress said. "I jwt lost my best friend and doesn't go :rHay.
dido 't know what I wanted to do. But
"So it's hard for me sometimes to look
after talking to the guys at the shop, we out there and pick out the No. 29 car. But
knew ~ had to go forward. That's what We're beginning to make that transition
Dale would have wanted w to do."
and make it work."
He knew it wasn't going to be easy.
Part of that's come from success: HarWith Earnhardt's death, everything the vick has won two races, has, eight top 10
two of them had built since 1984 was in finishes and is ninth in the points.
danger, and the longtime car owner had
"He's the real deal and I keep saying
to act quickly to save it.
that," Childress said. "With Kevin and that
"The very lint thing I had to do was race team showing what they're made of,
take care of our foundation;• Childress it's a positive."
said. "T!1e COil)pany was.built on that race
But·at the same time, his second team is
team and we had to get it back and get it not having any success.
going."
.,
In five-plw seasons, Mike Skinner has
So he did.
yet to win a points race and Childress
Now, instead of competing for an decided last week to release him from his
eighth Winston Cup championship with contr:lct a year early.
Earnhardt this season, Childress is spend"Mike is one of the most ralented driing the year breaking in a rookie driver, vers out there but, for some reason, ·we
searching for a second driver and prepar- haven't been able to win;' Childress said ·
ing to expand his fleet to three cars in "We've had some great runs, but this sport
2002.
.
is about winning:'
The lint thing he did was put Kevin
So Childress is loolring for a new driver
Haivick in Earnhardt's rid~, a move that fur that car, which will also have a r.ew
carried heavy. risks.
sponsor because Childress is ending his ·
The plan was for Harvick to driire the association with Lowe's Home Improvethird Cup car when RCR expanded, and ment.
Childress was asking the unknown. 25Theres been speculation that Robby
year-old to pilot his strongest team.
Gordon, who drove the car in four races
"I told him I'd do whatever he needed last month as a replacement for the
me to do;' Harvick said. "But it was a lit- injured Skinner, could get the job.
tle scary, stepping into that job and with
But a chance to work (or one of the
how quickly it was happening. it was big best teams in the sport could also lure a
shoes to 6ll and I dido 't want ro look at it big-name driver to move over to RCR.
like that."
,..,
If that isn't enough for RCR, he 's got
Childress put no pressure on Harvick Busch series champion Jeff Green coming
and stripped Earnhardt's car ·of its trade- to work for him next year in the third car
marl:: black paint and No. 3. Although Harvick was originally set to drive.

tadega.

Oct. 28 - Cf1ecker Auto Parts

SOOk, Avondale·, Ariz.

Nov. 4- Pop Secret Microwave

400, Rockingham, N.C.

Nov. 11 - Pennzoll 400, Home, stead, Fla.
Nov. 18- NAPA 500, Hampton ,

Ga.

Orlvor Standlngo
t. JeffGordon
. · ..... 3,220.
3,528 ·
2.
Ricky Rudd .......
3. Dale Jarrett ....... 3. t49.
4. Sterling Marlin ···· · 3,tto.
6. Tony Stewan . . . . . . 3,050.
___a..Oale Eamhardi.-Jr.~~2,967. -· 1. Rusty Wallace .. . : . 2.963.
8. Bobby Labonte .. .. 2,947.
9. Kevin Harvick . .... 2,9t3.
to. Steve Park · · · · · · 2,859.
tt . Johnny Benson ... 2,843.
t2. Mark Martin. . .... 2,739.
t3. Jeff Bu~on ....... 2,69t.
14. Matt Kenseth ..... 2,6n
t5. Bill Elliott .. . ..... 2.650.
t6. Jimmy Spencer ... 2,826.
17. EUiott SOdler ..... 2,483
18. Ward Bu~on ..... 2,405.
19. Ken Schrader . ... 2,369.
20. Bobby Hamilton ... 2,366.
2t . Jeremy Maytleld .. 2,354.
22. Jerry Nadeau ..... 2,297.
23. Cave Blaney ..... ·2,201.

24. Kurt Busch ...... 2, t83.
25. Terry Labonte .... 2, 179.' ·
26. Ricky Craven ..... 2,166.
27. Michael Waltrip ... 2, t32. ·
26. Robert Pressley .. ·. ·2, t 32.
29. John Androtti . . . . . 2,04 t.
·30. Brett Bodine ..... 2,004.
31. Casey AtWOOd .
t ,943.

32. Todd Bodine . . . . . t,94 t.
33. Stacy Compton . . t, 790.
34. Mike Skinner .. . .. 1,771.

35. Joe i'lemechek . . . t, 755.
36. Ron Hornaday . . . .
37. Jason lEiHier . . . .
38. Mike Wallace . . . . .
39. Kevin L8p.3ge . . .
40. Buckshot Jones .

1,735.
1,687.
1,492.

1,3 12.
1,229.

NASCAR Opening new information highway
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The number even made Mauricio
.Gugelmin gulp. The CART driver's
engineer had just informed him the
impact from his crash at Chicago
Mater-Speedway-had-produced 123-G's
in·0.03 seconds.
·
u
,
.
Man, and all I ve got IS a headache
and some soreness in my shoulders;' the
C • n ·T d .
.
n.o.... nver sa1'd, shak'mg h'IS hea d m
wonder.
In recent years, teams in CART, the
rival Indy Racing League and Formula
One have all had virtually instantaneous
access to crash data, tljanks to "black
boxes" similar to those used to record
data in aircraft. ,
More importantly, the data is being
used to make the cars safer.
Beginning sometime in 2002,
NASCAR will join the crowd.
Mike Helton, NASCAR's president,
made that announcement Aug. 21 as
the circuit released results of its sixmonth investigation into the death of
Dale Earnhardt.
Dr. John Melvin, then working for
General Motors as • biomedical
research scientist, and John Pierce, then
a GM racing engineer, first developed

racing's black boxes in 1991 to support
the newly formed GM Racing Safety
Program.
'
Ea rly attempts at racing accident
reconstruction had shown only limited
results wereavaililile from analyzing
photographs, videos, tire skid marks and
car wreckage.
Accustomed · to working with
detailed da13 from highly instrumented
production vehicles subjected to barrier
tests, Melvin and Pierce, both now
independent safety consultants, knew a
suitable crash recorder was needed.
While writing a purchase order to
have specialized racil).g impact recorders
custom-built to their specifications,
they discovered a company in Okemos,
Mich., called Instru10ented Sensor
Techn&lt;llogy. The company produced a
battery-powered impact recorder that
was used to monitor shipments of sensitive and costly equipment such as
supercomputers and the space shuttle's
booster rockets.
After being adapted for use in race
cars, the crash recorders were formally
approved for the first time by the United States Auto Club for installation on
cars competing in the 1993 lndianapo-

'Humpy Bumper' gets first crash t~st
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) A Winston Cup car ~ecially
fit with an energy-absorbing
bumper is deliberately crashed
into a walL Instead of crum: piing on impact, it bounces
off and is only slightly damaged.
That's what happened this
week when researchers tested
the Humpy Bumper at Lowe's
Motor Speeqway. Initial projections deemed the crash a
success, but the damage and
data from a "black box" inside
the car still must be analyzed.
Humpy Wheeler, presid.ent
of the speedway, said · he
would meet with NASCAR
next week ·to discuss the
results.
" It's up to NASCAR f~om
· here," Wheeler said. "They'll
look at what we have and
either say, 'We like it, go
ahead and· start manufacturing it' or, 'We'd like for you to
·look at it further with some
more tests.'
" Ideally, they'll like it and
we can get it on the cars as
soon as possible."

Page 87

'mimts- itntin:el

Sunday, September l, 2001

'

Childress adjusts to life after Earnhardt "Squirrel hunters again enjoying early season

Feb. t8 - OoytOna 500, Daytona Beoeh. Fla. (IAichael Waltrip)

Ma~ 5 -

,mro~

NASCAR

l"ijo:

Ftb. 25 -

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

The Humpy Bumper is
designed to address concerns
about the ri gidity of the fro nt
of stock cars .and the lack of
any sort of bumper to absorb
the energy from a crash.
The stiffness in the cars has
been an issue the past year
because of the deaths of Adam
Petty, Kenny Irwin· and Dale
Earnhardt in wrecks.
The cars have grown
increasingly rigid over .the
years because it allows crew
chiefs to accura tely make suspension settings. But some
think the sritT front fails to
redu ce enough energy away
from a driver.

The bumper was developed
to address th ose concerns. It's
made by Paul Lew, a Las .·
Vegas-based composite materials engineer designer and
manufacturer, and is desjgned
to absorb the energy of 20 to·
30-degree frontal impacts.
The black box, similar to
those used in airplanes,
records data to help understand the forces within the
car.
To test the bumper, Lew
crashed a driverless Winston
Cup car by remote control
into the turn 3 wall at Lowe's
at a wall speed of about 40
mph.

lis 500 and were made mandatory for all
Indy car races later that year in the
CART series.
Since then, Delphi Automotive Systerns has introduced Accident Data
Loggers to Formula One and Formula
3000 and worked with GM on introduting them to the IRL, while Ford
and IST took on the program in
CART, calling them "blue boxes."
Glen Gray, Delphi's engineering
manager for motorsports, said, "The
boxes are intended to give medical and
biomedical information on what happens in an accident to the driver and
the car."
John Valentine, chief mgineer for Ford
said, "In safety terms, the G load record~d is not by itself a telling assessment of
an impact. The time or duration that the
load was applied is equally· critical."
Referring to a cruh earlier this year
in Long Beach, Calif., during a CART
race, Valentine said a 130-G impact was
dissipated through the car and driver
and there was no injury.
"Yet a load of as little as 10 G's, when
applied over a longer period of time,
could prove fatai,"Valentine added.
Delphi's boxes also read thing1 such as

the rate of the car's spin and have what
Gray called "external• inputs," which
give information on the strain on the
driver's seat belt harness and data on his
_head..mrurement.. _ _~_
Even more advance technology is
coming soon, according to Gray.
"We'll probably have more memory
available, and the boxes will not only
log the accident, but four, five, six laps
before the_ accident," he said. "Then
we'll be able to see if the driver drove a
different line and did that have something to do with the accident,"
NASCAR has made no decision on
which company will provide its new
technology, but Delphi made a proposa! and has begun prelimipary testing
with the Hendrick Motorsports team,
which already uses some ofh:s products.
"Our boxes are r,~ally built for the
purpose;' Gray said. "We've actually had
boxes come out of the car during accidents and still work. They're built to·
take that kind of punishment."
Although safety experts have prodded
NASCAR to use the boxes for years, it
resisted, · in part because of fears the
information might be used for compelitive advantages.

CALLAEP
ANVTIME,ANV ,DAY

WEST ALEXANDRIA,
.'Ohio (AP) - Less then two
hours into Ohio's squirrel
· hunting season, Jerry Cooper's
.n-caliber rifle barked unce,
.signaling the first squirrel of
.the year was headed to the
. ga_me bag and the 2001-2002
, hunting season was under way.
· "It's a young one, good fry' "h e sat'd .
. ing stze,
Cooper, a retired letter carrier from rhis small southwestern
·Ohio town, quickly field
dressed the squirrel and hiked
to his truck where he placed
the animal in an ice-filled
cooler.
"With the season starting in
August, there will be days of
high temperatures where
hunters will want to quickly
cool their harvest to keep it
fro m spoiling," said Mike
Reynolds, the Ohio Department of Natural Resource's
Division of Wildlife's squirrel
project leader.
For the second successive
year, Ohio's squirrel hunters
are enjoying an early season.
The Division of Wildlife has
Jsaid _the early opening allows
youths a chance to hunt before

1-800-277·2177

www.aep.com

rels are easy to hunt and are
great table fare . The season's
length and a liberal bag limit
this year provide plenty of
opportunities to learn the
sport.
The limit- which includes
fox squirrels, gray squirrels and
red squirrels - is four. The
squirrel~ may lk hunted from
one-half hour before sunrise to
sunset.

',

Secondly, sq&lt;1irrels are best
hunted by sitti!lg down, mak·ing it an ideal sport for both
the young and the not-soyoung. After a "quieting down

time" thl' bushy tails will be
seen scampering through tree
tops, running up and down
trunks and b&gt;athering food on
the forest floor, provide .1mple
shooting possibilities.
Small wood lots will hold a
good population of squirrels.
And squirrel hunting is viewed
by landowners as a more "passive'' hunting than rabbit or
deer hunting so hunters are
likely to receive permission to
squirrel hunt.
Squirrel hunters also will
find less pressure on public
hunting land. Cooper reports

JHE VERDICT
IS 1"1 _,

that during the first six weeks
of the season, he sometimes
hunt; on public lands and
never sees another hunter.
Squirrels, like any wildlife,
require a good supply of food,
shelter, water and space to survixe. Hunters must concentrate

food and result in improvep
winter survival .. and better
reproductive success.

"The mast crop index for
last year was up nearly 25 perc
cent
owr
1999,"
said
R.eynol(is.
"This shvuld be a good year
for Ohio squirrel hunters," he
said. "Last faU 's abundant crop
of acorns, beechnuts and hick~
ory nuts is a good indicator df
sq uirrel populations for thi~
season in most areas of thf

the hunt in that area, but food
supplies will change as the season progresses, and successful
hunters will watch the mast, or
acorns and other nuts, and
move with it.
When acorns and assorted State."
I
nuts are plentiful, they provide
Based on his openmg day
sq uirrels with storable winter hunt, Jerry Cooper agrees . I

..

' 1 9 Vehicles under
All Credit Appllcatlonsy ·
&lt;" •
.... ' $99 per month ·
.Will Be Accepted
., 49Vehlcles Under
F.or Processing

...

'

$10,000

SISSONVILLE, W.Va.
lem. But an important part of
Edgewood Country Club's the program is changing the
··
golf cou rse isn't just a great attitude of golfers .
"Over the last 20 years
place to play a ro und or two,
. it's a great place to call home there was a movement to
1_ if you are a duck.
have all the grasses perfec',t all .
The Sissonville area course of the time," Murray said. "lt '
is one of tliree in West Vir- took a lot of resources to do
gmia to be fully cettifi ed by that. Noo.v we do integrated .
Audubon International as a pest management. And now
cooperative ~an ctuary. Certi- golfe·rs understand that some
fied co urses undergo a pro- damage or imperfection is
gram of ecologically sound
"
land
Chuck Murray, grounds were taken out of.the mowsuperintendent at Edge- ing schedule and returned to
wood's 150-acre course, said wooded areas. Members have
his was the first course in the comm,ented they like the
state to become certified.The contrast of the added woods
others are at Snowshoe and with the greens.
The Greenbrier.
: Edgewood is now . so
"We have to monitor the healthy that wildlife has
water quality, including returned not just to visit, b11t '
where the water enters and to stay.
leaves the property," sa id • "We had two broods of
Murray, who has been over- mallards this year, and eight of .'
seeing Edgewood for 15 the fled~\mgs . are sull on.. the ·
years. "We do habitat man- property, Murray . satd. :"'e ·
agement, providi ng food and have wood ducks, a couple
cover for all wildlife and doz en bluebuds, herons that
we've reduced the total quan- fish in the pond~ and.. we:re ·
Jtity of pesticides by about 76 seeing several squirrels.
.
percent."
Members apprectate the
To be certifi ed, courses also renewal, Murray added. One
must have a long-term envi- member, a woodworker, has
ronmental plan, manage for crafted ~lenty_ of b1rdhouses
wildlife, gain the support of to accommodate the rtew
golfers, conserve water and neighbors. Another m~mber
use chemicals carefully for painted a poster featunng ·all
the safety ()[ golfers, ani:nals the songbirds that were iden_
' and nearby property ·owners. tified at the course.
~ Being part ofthe program, :·T~!s is a feel-g?o~. kmd ~f
, which is sponsored by the thmg, Mu~ray sa1d. .There s
: United States Golf Associa- no doubt m my mmd. the. ·
: tion, means ta king care of wildlife returning is linked to
: greens and ponds in a new these practice_s., But for m~
:way, Murray said.
and my staff, tt s s~ttsfymgto .
~ "Pretty much mything we know we are domg every~ want to do now we think thing we can with a thought
about the environmental to the environment.
~ mpact," Murray said. "And
Murray said the reduced
~when we discontinue some- u,;e of chemiCals and a reduc,; thing, we think about that, tio'n of the amount of acreage
: too."
·
mowed, plus water conserva: Ponds once treated with tion practices, has also result: copper ' sulfate to control ed in a cost saving1 tor Edge! algae now have fountains that wood.
;aerat~ and kee p the water "We've seen that our annu: moving. A computeriz_ed irri- al in creas~ m expenditures
·~ation system cut dowp water has not nsen as East as the
~sage by a.bout 25 percent, · mdustry standards.
.
: And instead of routinely ']oellen Zeh, staff ecologtst
~·spraying turf with chemicals, · with Audubon lnternattonal,
:Murray's staff fo cuses on sa~ d 1t takes courses an aver::keeping the grass thick and age of one ~o three years t.o
:healthy to deter weeds, fun- become certified. The. orga_m :Sus and pests.
zation also has cert1ficauo_n
, "We do veri-cutting
programs for schopls, busl~ertically slicing the grass to nesses and back yards .
':renew it " he said. "And we · "But people look at golf&gt;
1nonitor 'for proper fertility courses particularly ·u .a
~eveb . optimum nutrition, model of how they want th~1r
:Watet 'and drainage.' If you do own lawn t~ look," Zeh md.
~II thos~ thing1, the turf will "These cettlfied c.ourses are a
J!e able to withstand a lot of model for tbe enure co~mu­
,j nsects apd disease.''
niry for what sustamable
· Spraying is done only when resource , management looks
'necessary to control a prob- like."
·

.

Itt TttE VfiL,LEYI
..HAS
. THE LOWEST PRICES
For
Th ts Ad
Special Di scount

Parole Officers &amp; Judqcs With

·sanctuary fore birds;
County golf course
certified by Audubon

'

American Electric Power, America's Energy
Partner, provides 24-hour customer and
emergency rep~ir service. Call us anytime
of the day or night.

school begins.
Squirrel hunting opened
Aug. 18 and runs through Jan.
31, 2002, except during tlie
week of deer gun season:
which is Nov. 26 through Dec.
2.
Squirrels are the third most
popular game behind deer and
rabbit, · according to the
National Shooting Sports
Foundation of Riverside,
Conn. In a recent study, based
on a nationwide field survey,
66 percent of hunters reported
seeking squirrels, while 71 percent responded rabbits were
their prey and 81 percent were
after deer.
"It's unfortunate that more
hunters do not take advantage
of this great resource. Squirrel
hunting opportunities · are
excellent in Ohio and September-October is a prime time to
be out in the woods," said Bob
Stoll, supervisor . of the divisions' forest wildlife research
station in New Marshfield.
Going after squirrels is an
easy way to introduce a yo ung
person to hunting as well a5 a
great way for seniors to stay
active in _the outdoors. Squir-

2000 TOYOTA TACOMA XC•b 4X4 110128- Automatic, air,
BOFW ............................................................................. $19,995
2000 FORD F150 4X4 110112, Red ...............................$19, 120
111H TOYOTA TACOMA SUPER CAB 110184, 4x4, 23.000
miles, BOFW. SA5, air, sport wheels, TOR, off road ........$18,270
111H DODGE RAM 1500 CLUB CAB ft880- 4x4 quad doors,
VB, auto, air, tilt, cruise, PW&amp;L, Sport wheels, tow pkg .. 38,000
miles, AMIFM Cassette, tinted glass ................................ $20,725
1888 TOYOTA RAV4 4X4 110178 ·Green, auto., air, till, cruise,

c• ...tte, ........................................................................$17,070

1ft7 FORD RANGER 4X4 110158,· 46,000 miles ........ $12,295
1W7 FORD F•1 50 SUPER CAB 414118838, Black, VB, air, PW,
PL, till, cruise, sport wheels ........................................... $16,670
1W7 FORD F·250 4x4 ..1155- Air, aulo, B' bed, 351 VB, bedllner,
tow pkg ............................................................................$16,695
1996 DODGE DAKOTA 4x4 CLUB CABt1D155 ........... $11 ,650
1995 NISSAN 4x4 XE TRUCK 110055· 57,000 miles, green, air,
sport wheels ..................................................................... $1 0,695
1ft2 DODGE DAKOTA 4X4 110052- 5 speed, V6 engine, long
bed ................................ '.. ".' ..... ' ........................................ $6650
1W3 FORD RANGER 4x4 SUPER CAB 119978- V6, air, sport
wheels ................................................................................ $9995
1ft31SUZU TRUCK 110084, Red, 5 speed ..................... $4995
1W2 GMC JIMMY 11oot1 4x4 Aulo, air, VB engine, sport

II

2000 FORD WINDSTAR 110131 ,4 door, auto, air, tilt, cruise,
PW, Pl, rear air, sport. Wheels ....................................._... $17,995
1W9 FORD WINDSTAR LX 1110102, Blue, 37,000 m1les, 4 door,
auto, air, till. cruise, PW, PL.. ....................... :.................. $16,750
1899 FORD VAN CONVERSION 110142-23.000 miles, balance
of factory warranty, loaded .............................................. $16,995
1998 CHEVY VENTURE VAN 110183· 4 door. auto., air, till, •
cruise, PW, PL, quad seats ............................._. ...............$13,995
1998 MERCURY VILLAGER GS 110103- White, 33,000 miles,
auto, air, till, cruise, PW, Pl,sport wheels ...................... $15,545
1998 FORD WINDSTAR ..872-Aulo, air, tilt, cruise, PW, Pl,
rear air .............................................. ............................... $12,995
1997 DODGE CARAVAN SE 110154- V6 engine, auto, air, till,
cruise, 1 passenger ......................................................... $10,150
1997 DODGE CARAVAN SE 110012- Automalic, air, till, cruise,
PW, PL, 4 door ...................... .......................................... $12,375
18911 FORD WINDSTAR 110087-55,000 miles, V6 engine, auto,

~:;.~ ~'Ei.C'~'Y· vii:i:Aii'iiii'·ca.,,o11·ii ··::::::.~·:.~·. :::::. :::.-.·.~ ~~~~g

1WI FORD WINDSTAR 119922, Green, automatic, air. till, cruise,
aport wheel a ,., .................................................................... $61 95
1114 CHEVY ASTRO VAN 110187,.Brown, EXItndtd ......$7650

PRICES HAVE
BEEN
DRASTICALLY
BEDUCEDl

�Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

Inside:
Celebrations begin on C2

·pageCl
Sund.y, September l, 1001

Dear

Abby
ADVICE

Man finds
love in the air
but loses it
:after landing
DEAR ABBY: No live-in
mother-in-law, no boom-box
neighbors; nevertheless, I've
got a problem .
. I was flying home from a
European vacation · recently,
when I realized fate had
plunked down beside me the
answer to my prayers. A graduate of ·Brown, "Janis" had
been working in an olive
grove in Italy. She was everything: pretty, demure, Irish,
intelligent, svelte, "with it." All
that and a great sense of
h.umor as well. We talked, we
l~ughed, and during the
movie our arms accidentally
touched more than a chance
would dictate. We were falling
in love at 37,000 feet as
clouds raced past beneath us.
Too soon, the image on the
screen told us we were . nearing New York's Kennedy Airport and the end of our "sump1er romance." As we
)JJ!loaded the overhead bins,
Janis said, "I guess we won't
pe seeing each other ·again ,unless it's at the baggage
carousel?" A definite opening.
She looked stunned when I
rel1}ied, "Have a nice life,

ONE BRICK AT A TIME- The new Lakin Correctional Facility is nearing com- end of the complex. Completion is anticipated for summer of 2002 . (Pam
pletlon as the maximum security area is being constructed on the southern

Williamson photos)

CORRECTIONAL FACIL'ITY

JanlS."

____c:.__A:bby, now c6Lil01:-ha.VeS:a!a-l-~
such a stupid thing? What
possessed me after God had
gone to all that trouble setting
up the right day, the right
flight, the right seat, next to
the right woman? I rationalize
that maybe it was the geography. She in Seattle; I in L.A.
More likely it was fear of
rejection.
Balzac wrote something
like: "No lady, no matter how '
chaste, is ever really offended
by an overture oflove." I keep
forgetting that at crucial
moments. And unlike streetcars, another Janis won't come
along in 20 minutes.
It would be interesting to
know, Abby, how many of
your readers have lost a love; a
"happily ever after," because
they were too shy, too governed by propriety, to reveal
what wa$ in their hearts.
/ Probably thousands. When
you think .a bout it, what's to
lose? Really nothing compared with what's to gain. -

ATE
Wlil. Division of Correctional Fadlities
hopes Lakin will solve over-crowding
.

BY PAM WILLIAMSON
TU)IES-SENTINEL STAFF

PARK, CAJ.IF.

Drive Through Our Website at: www.davissubQru.com .

-•
. •. .

-8·' Sat 9-6·'
.

.

SUBARU ·
The&amp;aug'ojAIJ.Whee/Dmi
'

ING: Please stop kicking
yourself. It has happened to
everybody. I'm sure many of
:my readers will agree.
P. S. If your airplane angel
sees this letter and writes to
me, I'll see what I can do.
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I are planning to
have a child, We've been told
we're an attractive couple, and
my husband often mentions
what a "good-lo&lt;;&gt;king" child
we will have. He also discusses the " cute pug nose" that
runs on his side of the family.
When I was a teen-ager I
had nasal surgery to .correct a
deviat~&lt;l, septum and shorten
a J;:!t~et prominent nose. I've
!lever told my husband about
!tl)' surgery.
Abby, do you think I should
tell him our child may inherit a large, bumped and/ or
crooked nose - or take my
chances and see what "physical characteristics" our son or
daughter inherits? - LOS-

ING BY A NOSE IN
PENNSYLVANIA

.

"The world has
to be contained within
these walls, because
this is the world to
these inmates. "

OINT
PLEASANT,
WVa.-With
the number of
women comSteve Canterbury
mitting serious crimes on
the rise, the need for specialized facilities ·to house technology.
female .inmates
has
The West Virginia Regional
Jail and Correctional Facility
b~come a problem.

STILL
KICKING
MYSELF IN FRAZIER
DEAR STILL KICK-

.

DErAILS. ....... Chilton Lilly, construction manager for the
regional jail system, and Mark Stutler of G&amp;G Builders
have to make sure every detail Is considered In the construction of the Lakin Correctional Facility to ensure the
safety of Its future residents.

The West Virginia Division
of Correctional Facilities
hopes the construction of the
new Lalcin Women's Correctional Facility will be part of
the solution.
The correctional facility
will be the first state female
prison ever built and will
implement top-of-the; line

Authority is in charge of creating the 125,000-square-foot
facility but will turn over
operation of Lakin to rhe
Division of Corrections upon
completion.
The property contains
classroo ms, a chapel, a
kitchen, a' laundry area, dining
halls, a hair care salon, a commissary, holding cells, a med-

ical area, indoor/ outdoor visitation areas, a dental facility,
medical cells, a pharmacy, a
staff area, conference rooms, a
public entrance and more.
"The world has to be contain ed w ithin these walls,
because thi s is the world to
. the se inmates," said Steve
Canterbury, the authority's
exec utive director.
Part of the existing Lakin
Hospital has been meld ed
into the north end of new
faciliry, now serving as an
indoor exercise area and classrooms.
C lasses will be offered
through the Department of
Education and will focus on
basic adult education , life
skills and vocational courses
to try and prepare the inmate

Pleese see Lakin, C7

Women in the Outdoors' program coming to Gallia
BY KRII DOTSON
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

. GALLIPOLIS - The great outdoors. It's not just for the adventurous
male nowadays.
· "Women in the Outdoors" is a new
program through the National Wild
Turkey federation that is dedicated
to providing interactive educational
outdoor opportunities for women 14
and older.
It targets women who want to
leamoutdoor skills through inexpensive courses addressing camping, fish ing, botany, turkey hunting, ca'!oeing,
birdwatching, archery and shooting
sports.
"Women in the Outdoors" is coming to Gallia County Sept. 29 at 0.0.

..,

,

Mcintyre Park. R egistration begins at
8 a.m. with coffee and doughnuts,
and the events start at 9 a.m.
For $35, each participant will . get
lun ch, drinks, a one-year membership
in NWTF, a T-shirt, and th e day's
activities.
"We'll also be giving away door
prizes and having .a silent auction,"
said event coordinator Rhonda
Pitchford.
T he NWTF is a 300,000-member,
grass-roots, 501 (c)(3) non-profit conservation organization with ·members
in 50 states and 11 foreign countries.
Its goal is ro teach the importance
of responsible . wildlife management,
in c.rease participation in outdoor

. .:.

TEACHING THE SKILLS -

"Women
in the Outdoors" will give ladies a
chance to learn archery techniques
and other hunting skills. (Contributed
photo)

related opportunities and to preserve
the hunting tradition.
" We're also trying to raise a little

extra cash to help offset. the ~ost for
those that can't afford the full $35,"
Pitchford said. .
"The most important thing is we
want to let woman know hunting
and other outdoor sports aren't jus( a
guy thing." '
Pitchford has been hunting with
h er husband Ron for three years.
Although she likes turkey hunting the
best so far, she said deer hunting provides the unique experience of being
invisible both to the senses of smell
and sight.
"There's so much to see in the
woods that you can't experience
unless you're. hunting," she said.

PIMse see Outdoors, C7

�Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

Inside:
Celebrations begin on C2

·pageCl
Sund.y, September l, 1001

Dear

Abby
ADVICE

Man finds
love in the air
but loses it
:after landing
DEAR ABBY: No live-in
mother-in-law, no boom-box
neighbors; nevertheless, I've
got a problem .
. I was flying home from a
European vacation · recently,
when I realized fate had
plunked down beside me the
answer to my prayers. A graduate of ·Brown, "Janis" had
been working in an olive
grove in Italy. She was everything: pretty, demure, Irish,
intelligent, svelte, "with it." All
that and a great sense of
h.umor as well. We talked, we
l~ughed, and during the
movie our arms accidentally
touched more than a chance
would dictate. We were falling
in love at 37,000 feet as
clouds raced past beneath us.
Too soon, the image on the
screen told us we were . nearing New York's Kennedy Airport and the end of our "sump1er romance." As we
)JJ!loaded the overhead bins,
Janis said, "I guess we won't
pe seeing each other ·again ,unless it's at the baggage
carousel?" A definite opening.
She looked stunned when I
rel1}ied, "Have a nice life,

ONE BRICK AT A TIME- The new Lakin Correctional Facility is nearing com- end of the complex. Completion is anticipated for summer of 2002 . (Pam
pletlon as the maximum security area is being constructed on the southern

Williamson photos)

CORRECTIONAL FACIL'ITY

JanlS."

____c:.__A:bby, now c6Lil01:-ha.VeS:a!a-l-~
such a stupid thing? What
possessed me after God had
gone to all that trouble setting
up the right day, the right
flight, the right seat, next to
the right woman? I rationalize
that maybe it was the geography. She in Seattle; I in L.A.
More likely it was fear of
rejection.
Balzac wrote something
like: "No lady, no matter how '
chaste, is ever really offended
by an overture oflove." I keep
forgetting that at crucial
moments. And unlike streetcars, another Janis won't come
along in 20 minutes.
It would be interesting to
know, Abby, how many of
your readers have lost a love; a
"happily ever after," because
they were too shy, too governed by propriety, to reveal
what wa$ in their hearts.
/ Probably thousands. When
you think .a bout it, what's to
lose? Really nothing compared with what's to gain. -

ATE
Wlil. Division of Correctional Fadlities
hopes Lakin will solve over-crowding
.

BY PAM WILLIAMSON
TU)IES-SENTINEL STAFF

PARK, CAJ.IF.

Drive Through Our Website at: www.davissubQru.com .

-•
. •. .

-8·' Sat 9-6·'
.

.

SUBARU ·
The&amp;aug'ojAIJ.Whee/Dmi
'

ING: Please stop kicking
yourself. It has happened to
everybody. I'm sure many of
:my readers will agree.
P. S. If your airplane angel
sees this letter and writes to
me, I'll see what I can do.
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I are planning to
have a child, We've been told
we're an attractive couple, and
my husband often mentions
what a "good-lo&lt;;&gt;king" child
we will have. He also discusses the " cute pug nose" that
runs on his side of the family.
When I was a teen-ager I
had nasal surgery to .correct a
deviat~&lt;l, septum and shorten
a J;:!t~et prominent nose. I've
!lever told my husband about
!tl)' surgery.
Abby, do you think I should
tell him our child may inherit a large, bumped and/ or
crooked nose - or take my
chances and see what "physical characteristics" our son or
daughter inherits? - LOS-

ING BY A NOSE IN
PENNSYLVANIA

.

"The world has
to be contained within
these walls, because
this is the world to
these inmates. "

OINT
PLEASANT,
WVa.-With
the number of
women comSteve Canterbury
mitting serious crimes on
the rise, the need for specialized facilities ·to house technology.
female .inmates
has
The West Virginia Regional
Jail and Correctional Facility
b~come a problem.

STILL
KICKING
MYSELF IN FRAZIER
DEAR STILL KICK-

.

DErAILS. ....... Chilton Lilly, construction manager for the
regional jail system, and Mark Stutler of G&amp;G Builders
have to make sure every detail Is considered In the construction of the Lakin Correctional Facility to ensure the
safety of Its future residents.

The West Virginia Division
of Correctional Facilities
hopes the construction of the
new Lalcin Women's Correctional Facility will be part of
the solution.
The correctional facility
will be the first state female
prison ever built and will
implement top-of-the; line

Authority is in charge of creating the 125,000-square-foot
facility but will turn over
operation of Lakin to rhe
Division of Corrections upon
completion.
The property contains
classroo ms, a chapel, a
kitchen, a' laundry area, dining
halls, a hair care salon, a commissary, holding cells, a med-

ical area, indoor/ outdoor visitation areas, a dental facility,
medical cells, a pharmacy, a
staff area, conference rooms, a
public entrance and more.
"The world has to be contain ed w ithin these walls,
because thi s is the world to
. the se inmates," said Steve
Canterbury, the authority's
exec utive director.
Part of the existing Lakin
Hospital has been meld ed
into the north end of new
faciliry, now serving as an
indoor exercise area and classrooms.
C lasses will be offered
through the Department of
Education and will focus on
basic adult education , life
skills and vocational courses
to try and prepare the inmate

Pleese see Lakin, C7

Women in the Outdoors' program coming to Gallia
BY KRII DOTSON
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

. GALLIPOLIS - The great outdoors. It's not just for the adventurous
male nowadays.
· "Women in the Outdoors" is a new
program through the National Wild
Turkey federation that is dedicated
to providing interactive educational
outdoor opportunities for women 14
and older.
It targets women who want to
leamoutdoor skills through inexpensive courses addressing camping, fish ing, botany, turkey hunting, ca'!oeing,
birdwatching, archery and shooting
sports.
"Women in the Outdoors" is coming to Gallia County Sept. 29 at 0.0.

..,

,

Mcintyre Park. R egistration begins at
8 a.m. with coffee and doughnuts,
and the events start at 9 a.m.
For $35, each participant will . get
lun ch, drinks, a one-year membership
in NWTF, a T-shirt, and th e day's
activities.
"We'll also be giving away door
prizes and having .a silent auction,"
said event coordinator Rhonda
Pitchford.
T he NWTF is a 300,000-member,
grass-roots, 501 (c)(3) non-profit conservation organization with ·members
in 50 states and 11 foreign countries.
Its goal is ro teach the importance
of responsible . wildlife management,
in c.rease participation in outdoor

. .:.

TEACHING THE SKILLS -

"Women
in the Outdoors" will give ladies a
chance to learn archery techniques
and other hunting skills. (Contributed
photo)

related opportunities and to preserve
the hunting tradition.
" We're also trying to raise a little

extra cash to help offset. the ~ost for
those that can't afford the full $35,"
Pitchford said. .
"The most important thing is we
want to let woman know hunting
and other outdoor sports aren't jus( a
guy thing." '
Pitchford has been hunting with
h er husband Ron for three years.
Although she likes turkey hunting the
best so far, she said deer hunting provides the unique experience of being
invisible both to the senses of smell
and sight.
"There's so much to see in the
woods that you can't experience
unless you're. hunting," she said.

PIMse see Outdoors, C7

�Page Cl
Sunday. September l, lOOl

There's value to knowing when to say (I'm sorry'

•

• They're two of the hardest words to
iay, according.to recent studies. In fact,
in relationship surveys, most people
admit that they haven 't_really learned
how to say, " I'm sorry."
Many people
apologizing as a
sign of weakness, when actually the
opposite is closer to the truth. A study
of Fortune 500 CEOs reveals they
consider a sincere apology as ·a sign of
strength and character that requires '
courage.
According to psychologists, there
are four reasons why we apologize:
• Because we really want to. We
realize that we have hurt someone, we
know how that feels and we're truly
sorry.
• To restore a relationship. After saying or doing something that hurt
someone (even unintentionally), an

Becky
Collins

see

•
-~

tb. .,._
,,'ft

\t} - ~ _,
\\\\\

\\\l.

'"'

I

U~ ·

Mr. and Mrs. Milford Jordan

Sherr! Lynn Ramsburg and Kevin Scott Edwards

MeHssa Whaley and Kevin Romine

Jordan 50th

Ramsburg-Edwards engagement

U'haley- Romine engagement

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ramsburg of MidMOUNT ALTO, W.Va. - Mr. and Mrs. Milford Jordan of
dleport
and Mr. and Mrs. R andall Edwards of Gallipolis
Mo un t Alto recently celebrated 50 years of marriage at th e
an nounce the engagement and upcoming marriage o f their
.
home of Bob and Linda Taylor of Millwood.
Milford is the son of the late C)yde and Myrtle Morgan Jor- children, Sherri Lynn Ramsburg and Kevin Scott Edwards.
The bride-elect is a 1995 graduate of M eigs High School
1dan. Jean is the daughter of the late Foreman and Hattie Wiland a 2000 graduate of Shawnee State University, with an assofong Radcliffe.
.
The Rev. Foreman Radcliffe, father of the bride. united the ciate's degree in occupational therapy. ·
She is employed by Rocksprings R.ehabilitation Center and
couple in marriage on July 21, 195 1, in Leon. _
.
AZ
Diversified Health Care.
Milford is retired from Vanadium Corp., Kaiser Alummum
The groom- elect is a . 1997 gra.duate of River Valley High
and Ravenswood Alumihum with a total of 40 years of service.
School and will receive an associate's degree in business admmJean is a dedicated homemaker.
They have three children: Mrs. Robert " Linda" Taylor of istration. He is employed by Huhtinb'lon National Bank.
An open church wedding will be Sept. 22 at 2 p.m. at RutMillwood, Mrs. Floyd "Kathy" Watts of Wayne, and Milford
land
Freewill Baptist Church. A reception will follow at the
"Bub" Jr. of Moun t Alto.
·
· They have 1-five grandchildren: Melissa Burdette, Martha Moose Lodge in Point Pleasant, W.Va. .
Watts, Seth Rardin; Zack Rardin and Scott Bird; and one greatgrandson, Corey Watts.
Family and fri ends in attendance incl uded R ose Jordan ,
Ci ndy Jordan,JetfWatts, Christopher Watts, Ashley and Jimmie
Wood an d Tre.s Wood.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Robert and Dorothy Watson
celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary Aug. 4.
For their anniversary trip, the couple went to Lancaster, Pa.,
and the Amish Country to see the play " Noah.''
The couple has one daughter and son-in-law, Sue and
Chester Plants . of South Charleston. Their grandchildren
include Robert and Jenna Plan ts, Jessica and Robbie of South
Charleston; Drs. Brian and Betsy Plants and Rachel of Birmingham, Ala. ; Matthew and Traci Plants of AbbeyviJle, S.C.;
Mark Plants and Allison Plants of Morgantown.
The couple attend the Church of God, Jefferson Avenue:

. E·.MAIL YOUR NEWS
news@

Jayme LaRae Miller and Dean Vance Hill Jr. ·

Miller-Hill engagement

mydailytribune.com
·mydailyregister.com
mydailysentinel.com

PORTLAND Denise 2001 graduate ofWashington
Miller and James Miller, both State Community College
of Portland , and Lori Hill and with an associate of applied
Dean H ill , both of Apple science degree in chemical
Grove, annou nce _the engage- processes. He is employed by
ment of their childrrn, Jayme PDK Co nstru ction Co.,
La Rae Miller and D can Vance Pomeroy.
An open church wedding
Hill Jr.
Mens &amp; Ladies 14k Wedd ing ·
The bride-elect is the wi ll be held on Se pt. 22, 200 1
Bands All 40% OFF
granddaughte r of Estelle ar 3:30 p.m. at St. Matthew's
Discount
On Al i Diamonds
Werry of Mason, W.Va., an d Catholic
Churc h
in
th e late Walter Werry, an d · R avenswood.
Tawney Jewelers
Blondell
Miller .
of
The coupl e plans to reside
422 Second Avenue
· Gallipolis, OH
ll'l..avenswood, W.Va ., and the in Appl e Grove following th e
late Ray M iller. She is a 1998 ceremony.
graduate of So uthern High
School and a 2001 grad uate
ofWashington State Community College, with an associate
of app lied science degree in
medical laborator y technology. She is employed at Jackson
Genera l Hospital in Ripl ey,
W.Va.
Ohio Health
Her fiance is the grandson
of Dallas and Donna Hill of
Apple Grove, and Robert and
Beverly C hapman of Syracuse. He is a 1998 graduate of
So uth ern High School and · a• ·
For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.

I had always wanted to walk
~he road to Mandalay. Also
known as the Burma Road,
many Americans were killed
there while fighting the Japan,Jese. In the 1980s, I had the
opportunity.
Burma is the. largest country
in Southeast Asia. It borders
Thailand, Laos, China, India
and Bangladesh. It is surrounded on the north, east and west ..
by mountain ranges that have
elevations up to 15,000 feet, on
the south by the Andaman Sea
:ind the Bay of Bengal. This
iSolates Burma fiom neighbor, ing countries.
;!
Burma Road was built by
• -,; the Chinese as a military supply route in 1937-38. it is
about 700 miles long and
extends from the railhead of
Lashio, Burma, to Kumming,
lthe capital ofYunnan Province,
China.
. It was used by the Allies
during the early part ofWorld
War II. The supplies for China

strict rules to abide by. Food
and service at the hotel were
terrible.

going on in Burma when I was
there. I hope it is not like that
today. because it is a beautiful

All material submitted for publication is subj'ect to editing.
Articles
will be published
as soon as possible.
No exceptions
will be made.
·
•

shipped by rail to Lashlo: In
April 1942, the Japanese· cap-

least 12 to 15 years old. I found
that Burma was ruled by a mil-

.The ruler is inviting tourists
to come to Burma now and

r-Meigs
- - - -County
- --...Tobacco
- - - - -Risk
- - , l.·

trol of the
. was not
reopened until Jan. 20, 1945.
"Burma has a tropical monsdon climate similar to Mexico. Buddhism is practiced by
80 percent of the people. Only
a smaU percentage of the peapie are Christian. Buddhist
temple schools provide basic
skills for primary school chi!dren. Many people speak English,largely due to the fact that
the British annexed Burma
during the Anglo-Burmese
wars. There is still a large
British population in Burma.
In September 1958, General
U Ne Win took over; he
...1-etired in 1981. Then San U
came to . power. His successor
was General Saw Maung
(1988) . At this time, they abo!ished all elections. Burma is
now ruled by the top generals,
and many innocent people are
being jailed without. a trial.
Burma is known for a nar. cotics and opium. I saw many '
fields of poppies growing and·
being harvested. I have an
opium pipe that I purchased in
the open market in Rangoon.
The people smoke opium like
people in the U.S. used tQ
smoke cigarettes. When we
landed at the outdated airport
in Rangoon, we were over two
-pours going through customs.

who were cruel. They reportedly killed innocent people
andplacedpeopleinjailswithout a trial
In 1991, the Nobel Peace
Prize was awarded to- u Sun
San's daughter, Daw Aung San
Suu Kyi, who had been under
house arrest since her party
won more than 80 percent of
the votes in free elections.
Writers and politicians are sentenced to long prison terms for
any expression of dissent.
. Tourism has long been a pi!Jar of the economy in .Burma;
it is one of Asia's poorest
nations. The country has no
maior
industry. Most of its
,
income comes fiom teakwood,
rice and gemstones. I went into
a teakwood forest and watched
the elephants stack teakwood
like they do in Thailand. ·
One experience I will never

and gemstones.
But the tourist trade . largely
.contributes to "the big . shots
who are stealing much Of the
profits.
Forthe time there were joint ·
ventures with Singapore, Japari
and Western investors who
tried to get more to.urists to
come back to boost their
economy. However, on Feb. 2,
1995, The Wall Street Journal
said investors were pulling out.
"Citing public opposition to
its trade with Burma's military
regime, Eddie Bauer joined a
growing list ofWestern sportswear and apparel importers
pulling their business out of
that Southeast Asian country."
· WSJ quoted Eddie Bauer:
"After several months of
researching the situation, we
deemed that the political elimate ·and growing opposition

.

.

In an effort to provide our readership with c~rrent ne~:
the Sunday Times-Sentinel will not accept weddmgs after 9()_
days from the date of the event
· .
.
,
Weddings submitted aft~r the ~0-day ~eadhne w11i appea_r
during the week in The Da1ly Sentmel, Pomt Pleasant Reg1stet
and tne Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
.
.
.
'
All club meetings and other news art1cles m the soc1ety sec•:
tion must be submitted within 60 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must. be submitted within 60 days . of the·
occurrence.

•••

Specialized Care for Total Knee
and Hip Replacement

Bouncing checks

.. .

Our ·next clinic date is

LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) Joh nath on Hudson's $300 tax
refund check was in the mail,
but the construction worker
still co uldn't bank on the
mo ney because th e check
bounced.

Friday, Sept. 21, 2001.
Call (614) 221· 6331
for an appointment.

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS

"

•

.,.

Max
Tawney
TRAVEL

to trade in Burma posed a ·
potential threat to our lijture
manufacturing opportunities."
Bauer .continued by saying it
would not renew its contracts
with Bu;mese facto ries when
they expire later this year. Liz
Claiborne, Levi Strauss and
Reebok · Interna tional have
already left Burma. I must say
this was un e experience I will

never forget.
(Longtime Gallipolis busitressman Max Tawney occasiotrally
Slrbmits articles to tire Swrday
Times-Serrt.inel about his travels

and memories of Gallipolis and .
Gallia County.)

&lt;\V:eddlna

cn,mds

THANK YOU

M_ye r s
r g
xcav~ In

E

for Buying
My_2001
Market Hog

• All size e&gt;ctra long
for added comfort

aoothe

your body.

&amp;y
II RTC1~.Y.ttt' .
JIU.~l!

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, . , _ ~ ·' _ /
,,~
~ _ ··-· .J__ •
-~

,~~=,,-,- c l-~we;r~e~J~an~d~e~d~ ~-n~Ra~ng~o~o;,n~an~d~ ~Th;e~a~u~to~m~o~bi l~e~s~we~re~al ~a~t~c~p~un~try~-~j~:E~~~~~·~·t:~~~~~~~~;J~~~~~~~;~~~tlc.~;·~ . ,~ ~-~~F~e~rr~y,~w~vr6~7~S-~13~71t--·
~ad,

I
I
Reduction Coalition
I:
I Movement For a Meigs County I..
I Smoke-Free Air Regulation I':

Detach and return to give your approval
.
I for
1
a 100% smoke-free public regulation
I i!l Meigs
County. Add your name to the
I•·
1 hst of county residents who have given I ·
thei'r approval. The children ·of Meigs
I County deserve this and thank you for it! I
'
.
I ·
1
Name:

I
1
L

.

Mall to: Meigs County Tobacco Risk Reduction
Coalition,
112 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy' OH
45769

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

1•.
I.

.J ·

.

"Making A Difference" .

1
~. ,_·
't [
i

I

"

THANK. YOU

MIKE FORTNER
MCFAssociATES

Davis Chrysler
Jeep Subaru

for purchumg

for PurchulnJ My

my2001

2001 Market Lamb.

Market Lamb.

AsHLEY CLARY

of

BRYCE CLARY

ud Spareo

4-H

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The
.
Joint Implant Center
~~~Grant Medical Center

.

Our travel agent was very upset
about the way we were treated;
he felt it was because we were
Americans.
They made us open all of
our luggage, and left it in bad
shape tor us to put together
again.
We finally got to our Inya
Lake Hotel in Rangoon. It was
not first class by any means. AU
of the men and boys wore long
skirts. They were not allowed
to wear trousers as we do. But
they were nic.e to us. They had

POMEROY - M; lissa Coleen Whaley and Kevin Edwar~
Romine announce their engagement.
'.
.
,
The bride-elect is the daughter of Donald "Eddie" and
Cole en Whaley of Pomeroy, and the groom-elect is the son o(
Gene and Kathy Romine of Pickerington.
·
Wedding plans are incomplete ..

91olzer Oenior CtJre.Center
.

apology may put the relationship back
on an even keeL.
,
• To relieve a guilty conscience. We
have done something that undermines our self-respect and self-image
something that we consider "beneath
us.
• To avoid punishment. We've aU
seen this at home, at work and in public life. ''I'm so sorry for what I did. I'll

forget was seeing a 'man lying
in the ,:reet, covered in blood,
he had been shot by. the police
for criticizing the arrest of his
son. His son had sold some
teakwood for $8 in order to
feed his children, and Hadn 't
reported it. The police assumed
it 'was stolen without checking
· it out. They killed the father
and just walked away.
When we left the hotel, we
saw a dead man beside a car.
We did not know what happened. I was just glad to be
leaving.
One of the boys at the hotel
told me the police had come at
2 a.m. one morning to their
home and taken his dad away.
The police had not given them
a reason when his mother
cried and asked why they were
doing this.
,
AU of the people live in fear.
It was unbelievable what was

~1~-c--

Watson 40th

FAMILY

ness reveals that hurting someone else
means something to us.
Of course, sometimes an apolob'Y i&lt;
not enough. If we honestly don't
know how to even the score, we
mrght say, "Please tell me if there is
anything I can do."
These are just guidelines not a precise recipe for when and how to say,
'' l'm sorry."
.
After aU, an apology is sort-of a
negotiated deal that is emotionally
satisfactory to aU parties involved. A
successful apology ca n have great
social value as weU .
An apology that brings harmony to
a relationship is more important that
the victory of any individual.
(Collins is a.r Olrio Stale University
£·&lt;tension agenr, Family and Consrmrer
Scienas &amp; Community Developmetrt.)

This trip on the road to Mandalay is one never to be forgotten

,
•
With the family reunion season upon us many will be sub,
mitting articles of family activities for publication.
'
To ensure prompt publication, ·o hio Valley Publishing Co.'
reguests articles be neatly typed and double spaced for easy
editing. Reunion items should not exceed 300 words and :
must be submitted within 30 days of occurrence.
•·

Robert. and Dorothy Watson
.

never do it again. Please don't punish • not defensive, making the point that
me.
what we did wrong is not representaWhatever the motiws, there ar,• tive of the person we really are. " I was
some elements of an apolO!,'Y that are tired after a long day.""! was feeling a
essential. We have to &gt;ecept responsi- lor of stre,, with aU extra responsibilibility that w~ haw -violated an under- ties at work (or home).'
standing or a moral norm. It's not
In some situations where you think
enough to say, "I'm sorry for what I there is mutual responsibility for what
did . We have to be specific and name happened, it might be appropriate to
the offense.
take a problem-solving approach,
For example, " I betrayed you by "Let's sir down and talk about how to
repeating what you told me in confi- prevent this from happening 330in."
dence."" Jlet you down when I forgot
We have to show thot we really feel
that important meeting."
sorry. Unless we can communicate
We also have to show .that we feelings of b'llilt, shame or genuine
understand the nature of our wrong- regret, our apology may not be taken
doing and how it affected th,, other as sincere.
person . " I realize that you were
Guilt shows that hurting someon e
embarrassed by what 1 said."
else reaUy bothers us. Shame shows
We should try to explai n why we . that we're disappointed with ourselves
did it in the first place in a way that is over what happened. Regret. or sad-

Holzer Senior Care Center
380 Colonial Dr
Bidwell, Oh 456•4

( l .{)l'll t ~ •ppn~ ~lmatrly

.'

'

..:

Because we have a nurse on duty 24-hours a day as well
as around the clock personal assistants,· Wyngate can
provide Qursing care when needed along with medication
administration and a host of other services.
Most people do not need continuous 24-hour- a-day
·nursing care but only sporadic or episodic nursing and a
lot of supportive care. Wyngate is licensed to provide
these services in homelike, residential surroundings.

Please call us for more information. We are here to
care for the elderly and their families. We can help
you and yours.
------ ~- ------------------~--II .

w
fli 1!:41!;1,

"

..,.._1U11MCDftll

Please send me
more information
about yourcommunity

'
· "Make tht

·

caUthat
·co11/d change

.

WJ'I/fllft

. .MED TERM 11- PM
ACCOUNTING I - PM

~:-.:~SUPV

your life!"

I.

..

~.

street address
city

state

zip

phone number

300

Briarwood

•

•

last namtt ·

first name

OF GALLIPOLIS

PROF DVLPMT - PM

11101 7 111111•1 I I -

oM quaner milt Wn1 or Holur Medtr.l Ontrr)

nev·er_put her in. a nursing ho_· me.
N
d 't h
t
ow you on ave 0.

We hope you will consider Wyngate of Gallipolis, the
area's newest choice in long term healthcare.

GaUlnrlis
tAit~~t rnll,~9&amp;
r~areeTS'C!oSiYo Ge
Marjorie Wheeler is a resident of Wellston OH. She was admitted to Holzer Senior
Care Center related to her need for rehabilitation. When asked how she felt when .her
physi~ian recommended nursing home placement, she gave the .following response:·"You
hear so many negative things about Nursing Homes, but this faclllty Is diiTerent.than the
others. It's not home, but I feel at home because they treat .me like family. The nursing
staff are so caring and attentive to my needs. I teel safe here. The therapists are skilled
and encouraging. The staff have all been good to me; They're the reason I'm going
home." The staff at Holzer Senior Care Center have assisted 27 residents in returning to
their home in the year 2001. We are honored to have been able to make a_difference In
the lives of so many. We welcome your visit to H.S.C.C. where you can actually see the
lifestyle or comfort and care we provide to our residents. Call Amber Johnson, Director
of Admissions, at (740) 446-5001 to ar.range a personal tour or stop by at your
convenience.

V~~ U promised y 0 U r -lVI 0 m y 0 U 'd

'

••

Drive •

Gallipolis, OH 45631 • (740) 441-9633
,.

�Page Cl
Sunday. September l, lOOl

There's value to knowing when to say (I'm sorry'

•

• They're two of the hardest words to
iay, according.to recent studies. In fact,
in relationship surveys, most people
admit that they haven 't_really learned
how to say, " I'm sorry."
Many people
apologizing as a
sign of weakness, when actually the
opposite is closer to the truth. A study
of Fortune 500 CEOs reveals they
consider a sincere apology as ·a sign of
strength and character that requires '
courage.
According to psychologists, there
are four reasons why we apologize:
• Because we really want to. We
realize that we have hurt someone, we
know how that feels and we're truly
sorry.
• To restore a relationship. After saying or doing something that hurt
someone (even unintentionally), an

Becky
Collins

see

•
-~

tb. .,._
,,'ft

\t} - ~ _,
\\\\\

\\\l.

'"'

I

U~ ·

Mr. and Mrs. Milford Jordan

Sherr! Lynn Ramsburg and Kevin Scott Edwards

MeHssa Whaley and Kevin Romine

Jordan 50th

Ramsburg-Edwards engagement

U'haley- Romine engagement

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ramsburg of MidMOUNT ALTO, W.Va. - Mr. and Mrs. Milford Jordan of
dleport
and Mr. and Mrs. R andall Edwards of Gallipolis
Mo un t Alto recently celebrated 50 years of marriage at th e
an nounce the engagement and upcoming marriage o f their
.
home of Bob and Linda Taylor of Millwood.
Milford is the son of the late C)yde and Myrtle Morgan Jor- children, Sherri Lynn Ramsburg and Kevin Scott Edwards.
The bride-elect is a 1995 graduate of M eigs High School
1dan. Jean is the daughter of the late Foreman and Hattie Wiland a 2000 graduate of Shawnee State University, with an assofong Radcliffe.
.
The Rev. Foreman Radcliffe, father of the bride. united the ciate's degree in occupational therapy. ·
She is employed by Rocksprings R.ehabilitation Center and
couple in marriage on July 21, 195 1, in Leon. _
.
AZ
Diversified Health Care.
Milford is retired from Vanadium Corp., Kaiser Alummum
The groom- elect is a . 1997 gra.duate of River Valley High
and Ravenswood Alumihum with a total of 40 years of service.
School and will receive an associate's degree in business admmJean is a dedicated homemaker.
They have three children: Mrs. Robert " Linda" Taylor of istration. He is employed by Huhtinb'lon National Bank.
An open church wedding will be Sept. 22 at 2 p.m. at RutMillwood, Mrs. Floyd "Kathy" Watts of Wayne, and Milford
land
Freewill Baptist Church. A reception will follow at the
"Bub" Jr. of Moun t Alto.
·
· They have 1-five grandchildren: Melissa Burdette, Martha Moose Lodge in Point Pleasant, W.Va. .
Watts, Seth Rardin; Zack Rardin and Scott Bird; and one greatgrandson, Corey Watts.
Family and fri ends in attendance incl uded R ose Jordan ,
Ci ndy Jordan,JetfWatts, Christopher Watts, Ashley and Jimmie
Wood an d Tre.s Wood.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.- Robert and Dorothy Watson
celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary Aug. 4.
For their anniversary trip, the couple went to Lancaster, Pa.,
and the Amish Country to see the play " Noah.''
The couple has one daughter and son-in-law, Sue and
Chester Plants . of South Charleston. Their grandchildren
include Robert and Jenna Plan ts, Jessica and Robbie of South
Charleston; Drs. Brian and Betsy Plants and Rachel of Birmingham, Ala. ; Matthew and Traci Plants of AbbeyviJle, S.C.;
Mark Plants and Allison Plants of Morgantown.
The couple attend the Church of God, Jefferson Avenue:

. E·.MAIL YOUR NEWS
news@

Jayme LaRae Miller and Dean Vance Hill Jr. ·

Miller-Hill engagement

mydailytribune.com
·mydailyregister.com
mydailysentinel.com

PORTLAND Denise 2001 graduate ofWashington
Miller and James Miller, both State Community College
of Portland , and Lori Hill and with an associate of applied
Dean H ill , both of Apple science degree in chemical
Grove, annou nce _the engage- processes. He is employed by
ment of their childrrn, Jayme PDK Co nstru ction Co.,
La Rae Miller and D can Vance Pomeroy.
An open church wedding
Hill Jr.
Mens &amp; Ladies 14k Wedd ing ·
The bride-elect is the wi ll be held on Se pt. 22, 200 1
Bands All 40% OFF
granddaughte r of Estelle ar 3:30 p.m. at St. Matthew's
Discount
On Al i Diamonds
Werry of Mason, W.Va., an d Catholic
Churc h
in
th e late Walter Werry, an d · R avenswood.
Tawney Jewelers
Blondell
Miller .
of
The coupl e plans to reside
422 Second Avenue
· Gallipolis, OH
ll'l..avenswood, W.Va ., and the in Appl e Grove following th e
late Ray M iller. She is a 1998 ceremony.
graduate of So uthern High
School and a 2001 grad uate
ofWashington State Community College, with an associate
of app lied science degree in
medical laborator y technology. She is employed at Jackson
Genera l Hospital in Ripl ey,
W.Va.
Ohio Health
Her fiance is the grandson
of Dallas and Donna Hill of
Apple Grove, and Robert and
Beverly C hapman of Syracuse. He is a 1998 graduate of
So uth ern High School and · a• ·
For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.

I had always wanted to walk
~he road to Mandalay. Also
known as the Burma Road,
many Americans were killed
there while fighting the Japan,Jese. In the 1980s, I had the
opportunity.
Burma is the. largest country
in Southeast Asia. It borders
Thailand, Laos, China, India
and Bangladesh. It is surrounded on the north, east and west ..
by mountain ranges that have
elevations up to 15,000 feet, on
the south by the Andaman Sea
:ind the Bay of Bengal. This
iSolates Burma fiom neighbor, ing countries.
;!
Burma Road was built by
• -,; the Chinese as a military supply route in 1937-38. it is
about 700 miles long and
extends from the railhead of
Lashio, Burma, to Kumming,
lthe capital ofYunnan Province,
China.
. It was used by the Allies
during the early part ofWorld
War II. The supplies for China

strict rules to abide by. Food
and service at the hotel were
terrible.

going on in Burma when I was
there. I hope it is not like that
today. because it is a beautiful

All material submitted for publication is subj'ect to editing.
Articles
will be published
as soon as possible.
No exceptions
will be made.
·
•

shipped by rail to Lashlo: In
April 1942, the Japanese· cap-

least 12 to 15 years old. I found
that Burma was ruled by a mil-

.The ruler is inviting tourists
to come to Burma now and

r-Meigs
- - - -County
- --...Tobacco
- - - - -Risk
- - , l.·

trol of the
. was not
reopened until Jan. 20, 1945.
"Burma has a tropical monsdon climate similar to Mexico. Buddhism is practiced by
80 percent of the people. Only
a smaU percentage of the peapie are Christian. Buddhist
temple schools provide basic
skills for primary school chi!dren. Many people speak English,largely due to the fact that
the British annexed Burma
during the Anglo-Burmese
wars. There is still a large
British population in Burma.
In September 1958, General
U Ne Win took over; he
...1-etired in 1981. Then San U
came to . power. His successor
was General Saw Maung
(1988) . At this time, they abo!ished all elections. Burma is
now ruled by the top generals,
and many innocent people are
being jailed without. a trial.
Burma is known for a nar. cotics and opium. I saw many '
fields of poppies growing and·
being harvested. I have an
opium pipe that I purchased in
the open market in Rangoon.
The people smoke opium like
people in the U.S. used tQ
smoke cigarettes. When we
landed at the outdated airport
in Rangoon, we were over two
-pours going through customs.

who were cruel. They reportedly killed innocent people
andplacedpeopleinjailswithout a trial
In 1991, the Nobel Peace
Prize was awarded to- u Sun
San's daughter, Daw Aung San
Suu Kyi, who had been under
house arrest since her party
won more than 80 percent of
the votes in free elections.
Writers and politicians are sentenced to long prison terms for
any expression of dissent.
. Tourism has long been a pi!Jar of the economy in .Burma;
it is one of Asia's poorest
nations. The country has no
maior
industry. Most of its
,
income comes fiom teakwood,
rice and gemstones. I went into
a teakwood forest and watched
the elephants stack teakwood
like they do in Thailand. ·
One experience I will never

and gemstones.
But the tourist trade . largely
.contributes to "the big . shots
who are stealing much Of the
profits.
Forthe time there were joint ·
ventures with Singapore, Japari
and Western investors who
tried to get more to.urists to
come back to boost their
economy. However, on Feb. 2,
1995, The Wall Street Journal
said investors were pulling out.
"Citing public opposition to
its trade with Burma's military
regime, Eddie Bauer joined a
growing list ofWestern sportswear and apparel importers
pulling their business out of
that Southeast Asian country."
· WSJ quoted Eddie Bauer:
"After several months of
researching the situation, we
deemed that the political elimate ·and growing opposition

.

.

In an effort to provide our readership with c~rrent ne~:
the Sunday Times-Sentinel will not accept weddmgs after 9()_
days from the date of the event
· .
.
,
Weddings submitted aft~r the ~0-day ~eadhne w11i appea_r
during the week in The Da1ly Sentmel, Pomt Pleasant Reg1stet
and tne Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
.
.
.
'
All club meetings and other news art1cles m the soc1ety sec•:
tion must be submitted within 60 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must. be submitted within 60 days . of the·
occurrence.

•••

Specialized Care for Total Knee
and Hip Replacement

Bouncing checks

.. .

Our ·next clinic date is

LOUISVILLE. Ky. (AP) Joh nath on Hudson's $300 tax
refund check was in the mail,
but the construction worker
still co uldn't bank on the
mo ney because th e check
bounced.

Friday, Sept. 21, 2001.
Call (614) 221· 6331
for an appointment.

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS

"

•

.,.

Max
Tawney
TRAVEL

to trade in Burma posed a ·
potential threat to our lijture
manufacturing opportunities."
Bauer .continued by saying it
would not renew its contracts
with Bu;mese facto ries when
they expire later this year. Liz
Claiborne, Levi Strauss and
Reebok · Interna tional have
already left Burma. I must say
this was un e experience I will

never forget.
(Longtime Gallipolis busitressman Max Tawney occasiotrally
Slrbmits articles to tire Swrday
Times-Serrt.inel about his travels

and memories of Gallipolis and .
Gallia County.)

&lt;\V:eddlna

cn,mds

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My_2001
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,~~=,,-,- c l-~we;r~e~J~an~d~e~d~ ~-n~Ra~ng~o~o;,n~an~d~ ~Th;e~a~u~to~m~o~bi l~e~s~we~re~al ~a~t~c~p~un~try~-~j~:E~~~~~·~·t:~~~~~~~~;J~~~~~~~;~~~tlc.~;·~ . ,~ ~-~~F~e~rr~y,~w~vr6~7~S-~13~71t--·
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I
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Reduction Coalition
I:
I Movement For a Meigs County I..
I Smoke-Free Air Regulation I':

Detach and return to give your approval
.
I for
1
a 100% smoke-free public regulation
I i!l Meigs
County. Add your name to the
I•·
1 hst of county residents who have given I ·
thei'r approval. The children ·of Meigs
I County deserve this and thank you for it! I
'
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I ·
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Name:

I
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Mall to: Meigs County Tobacco Risk Reduction
Coalition,
112 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy' OH
45769

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

1•.
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"Making A Difference" .

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THANK. YOU

MIKE FORTNER
MCFAssociATES

Davis Chrysler
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for purchumg

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.

Our travel agent was very upset
about the way we were treated;
he felt it was because we were
Americans.
They made us open all of
our luggage, and left it in bad
shape tor us to put together
again.
We finally got to our Inya
Lake Hotel in Rangoon. It was
not first class by any means. AU
of the men and boys wore long
skirts. They were not allowed
to wear trousers as we do. But
they were nic.e to us. They had

POMEROY - M; lissa Coleen Whaley and Kevin Edwar~
Romine announce their engagement.
'.
.
,
The bride-elect is the daughter of Donald "Eddie" and
Cole en Whaley of Pomeroy, and the groom-elect is the son o(
Gene and Kathy Romine of Pickerington.
·
Wedding plans are incomplete ..

91olzer Oenior CtJre.Center
.

apology may put the relationship back
on an even keeL.
,
• To relieve a guilty conscience. We
have done something that undermines our self-respect and self-image
something that we consider "beneath
us.
• To avoid punishment. We've aU
seen this at home, at work and in public life. ''I'm so sorry for what I did. I'll

forget was seeing a 'man lying
in the ,:reet, covered in blood,
he had been shot by. the police
for criticizing the arrest of his
son. His son had sold some
teakwood for $8 in order to
feed his children, and Hadn 't
reported it. The police assumed
it 'was stolen without checking
· it out. They killed the father
and just walked away.
When we left the hotel, we
saw a dead man beside a car.
We did not know what happened. I was just glad to be
leaving.
One of the boys at the hotel
told me the police had come at
2 a.m. one morning to their
home and taken his dad away.
The police had not given them
a reason when his mother
cried and asked why they were
doing this.
,
AU of the people live in fear.
It was unbelievable what was

~1~-c--

Watson 40th

FAMILY

ness reveals that hurting someone else
means something to us.
Of course, sometimes an apolob'Y i&lt;
not enough. If we honestly don't
know how to even the score, we
mrght say, "Please tell me if there is
anything I can do."
These are just guidelines not a precise recipe for when and how to say,
'' l'm sorry."
.
After aU, an apology is sort-of a
negotiated deal that is emotionally
satisfactory to aU parties involved. A
successful apology ca n have great
social value as weU .
An apology that brings harmony to
a relationship is more important that
the victory of any individual.
(Collins is a.r Olrio Stale University
£·&lt;tension agenr, Family and Consrmrer
Scienas &amp; Community Developmetrt.)

This trip on the road to Mandalay is one never to be forgotten

,
•
With the family reunion season upon us many will be sub,
mitting articles of family activities for publication.
'
To ensure prompt publication, ·o hio Valley Publishing Co.'
reguests articles be neatly typed and double spaced for easy
editing. Reunion items should not exceed 300 words and :
must be submitted within 30 days of occurrence.
•·

Robert. and Dorothy Watson
.

never do it again. Please don't punish • not defensive, making the point that
me.
what we did wrong is not representaWhatever the motiws, there ar,• tive of the person we really are. " I was
some elements of an apolO!,'Y that are tired after a long day.""! was feeling a
essential. We have to &gt;ecept responsi- lor of stre,, with aU extra responsibilibility that w~ haw -violated an under- ties at work (or home).'
standing or a moral norm. It's not
In some situations where you think
enough to say, "I'm sorry for what I there is mutual responsibility for what
did . We have to be specific and name happened, it might be appropriate to
the offense.
take a problem-solving approach,
For example, " I betrayed you by "Let's sir down and talk about how to
repeating what you told me in confi- prevent this from happening 330in."
dence."" Jlet you down when I forgot
We have to show thot we really feel
that important meeting."
sorry. Unless we can communicate
We also have to show .that we feelings of b'llilt, shame or genuine
understand the nature of our wrong- regret, our apology may not be taken
doing and how it affected th,, other as sincere.
person . " I realize that you were
Guilt shows that hurting someon e
embarrassed by what 1 said."
else reaUy bothers us. Shame shows
We should try to explai n why we . that we're disappointed with ourselves
did it in the first place in a way that is over what happened. Regret. or sad-

Holzer Senior Care Center
380 Colonial Dr
Bidwell, Oh 456•4

( l .{)l'll t ~ •ppn~ ~lmatrly

.'

'

..:

Because we have a nurse on duty 24-hours a day as well
as around the clock personal assistants,· Wyngate can
provide Qursing care when needed along with medication
administration and a host of other services.
Most people do not need continuous 24-hour- a-day
·nursing care but only sporadic or episodic nursing and a
lot of supportive care. Wyngate is licensed to provide
these services in homelike, residential surroundings.

Please call us for more information. We are here to
care for the elderly and their families. We can help
you and yours.
------ ~- ------------------~--II .

w
fli 1!:41!;1,

"

..,.._1U11MCDftll

Please send me
more information
about yourcommunity

'
· "Make tht

·

caUthat
·co11/d change

.

WJ'I/fllft

. .MED TERM 11- PM
ACCOUNTING I - PM

~:-.:~SUPV

your life!"

I.

..

~.

street address
city

state

zip

phone number

300

Briarwood

•

•

last namtt ·

first name

OF GALLIPOLIS

PROF DVLPMT - PM

11101 7 111111•1 I I -

oM quaner milt Wn1 or Holur Medtr.l Ontrr)

nev·er_put her in. a nursing ho_· me.
N
d 't h
t
ow you on ave 0.

We hope you will consider Wyngate of Gallipolis, the
area's newest choice in long term healthcare.

GaUlnrlis
tAit~~t rnll,~9&amp;
r~areeTS'C!oSiYo Ge
Marjorie Wheeler is a resident of Wellston OH. She was admitted to Holzer Senior
Care Center related to her need for rehabilitation. When asked how she felt when .her
physi~ian recommended nursing home placement, she gave the .following response:·"You
hear so many negative things about Nursing Homes, but this faclllty Is diiTerent.than the
others. It's not home, but I feel at home because they treat .me like family. The nursing
staff are so caring and attentive to my needs. I teel safe here. The therapists are skilled
and encouraging. The staff have all been good to me; They're the reason I'm going
home." The staff at Holzer Senior Care Center have assisted 27 residents in returning to
their home in the year 2001. We are honored to have been able to make a_difference In
the lives of so many. We welcome your visit to H.S.C.C. where you can actually see the
lifestyle or comfort and care we provide to our residents. Call Amber Johnson, Director
of Admissions, at (740) 446-5001 to ar.range a personal tour or stop by at your
convenience.

V~~ U promised y 0 U r -lVI 0 m y 0 U 'd

'

••

Drive •

Gallipolis, OH 45631 • (740) 441-9633
,.

�•

SUNDAY, September 2
POINT PLEASANT - 52nd
annual Greer Reunion, Stephenson Grove, W.Va. 2. Dinner bell
at 1 p.m. Covered dish.
POINT PLEASANT WV
Knapp · Reunion , W.Va. State
Farm Museum. Coffee 9:30a.m.
and cove red dish lunch at 1 p.m.
MT. ALTO- Homecoming at Mt.
Hebron- Jackson Chapel, 12:30
p.m. Sargent Family will sing.
Cove red d1sh.
GALLI POLIS ~ Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m. with Rick Barcus
preaching.
MASON - Annual Johnson
reunion, Mason City Park. Pot
luck dinner at 1 p.m. Bring item
for auction.
SOUTHS IDE
Newberry
Reun1on, 4-H Camp, 1 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT - Kinsey
Durst reunion, Krodel Park, covered dish dinner at noon.
GALLIPOLIS FER BY- Jim and
Gabby Ross will s ~ng at Mt.
Carmel Church, 6 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT - David
Washington will be preaching at
Gospel Tabernacle, beside the
library, 6 p.m.
ROBERTSBURG - Homecom·
ing on Manilla Chapel Church,
noofl, with speaker Adam NUll
..Jand Builders Quartet.
·
SOUTHSIDE - Homecoming at
Hambrick Church , Little 16
Road , with Higti Mountain R'am·
biers, Wayne County Rocky
Mountain Boys and others. No
evening service.
MASON - Wahama Alumni
Band practice, 2 p.m. in bandroom to prepare for Sept. 28
homecoming. For information
ca ll Martha Varian at 882-3832
or Rex Howard at 882-8240.

Mason
toss support group, Southside
Community Center, weigh-ins
5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a short
meeting.

Legion Auxiliary Un~ 23 at 7 p.m.
at Post Home.

WEDNESDAY, September 5
POINT PLEASANT - WednesPOINT PLEASANT -Alcoholics day night Bible clubs for
Anonymous, 7 : ~0 p.m., 611 preschool up through 12th
Viand St. Use side entrance of . grade, 7 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel
Casey Law Office.
Lighthouse Church, Neal Road.
For information call 675-7229 or
GALLIPOLIS
Addison 675·6620.
Freewill Baptist Church Labor
Day Sing at Kyger Creek Shel· POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics
terhouse, 4 p.m. Groups to sing Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., 611
God's Ambassadors·, Gloryland Viand Street. Use side entrance
Believers. Johnso.n Family, Addi· of Casey Law Office.
. son Quartet, Addison Choir and
THURSDAY, September 6
New City Singers.
POINT PLEASANT - TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) 5
TUESDAY, September 4
LETART - HELP Diet Class, p.m. weigh in· and meeting at ·
Letart
Community
Center. 5:30 p.m. at Trinity United
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m. Methodist Church. For infonma·
tlon call 675·3692.
followed by short meeting.
FLATROCK - Clothing closet
give away every Tuesday at
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to I p.m.
POINT PLEASANT ~ Clothing
give away ellery Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon at Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church, 8th 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.
HENDERSON - L.lne dancing,
Henderson Community Building,
with instructor Dawn Halstead.
Beginners 6 p.m. and advanced
7p.m.

POINT PLEASANT - Shoot at
Point Pleasant Gun Club 6 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT - Weight
Watchers , Christ Episcopal
Church whh weigh in at 4:45
p.m. and 5:15p.m.
NEW HAVEN - New Haven .Jr.
OUAM 175 meeting, 7 p.m.
REVIVALS
POINT PLEASANT- Revival at
Lifeline Apostolic Church with
Evangelist Jerry Mullens Sunday, August 26 at 1 p.m. and
August 27· September 2 at 6:30
p.m.
HARTFORD - Revival at True
Gospel Church, Gibbstown
Road, beginning September I , 6
p.m. Different speakers and
singers.

POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County Fair Board will met at 8
p.m. (Meeting moved from Monday due to Labor Day.)

POINT PLEASANT- Gathering
2001 Aug. 31· Sept. 1, 7 p.m.
and I 0 a.m. Saturday and Sun·
day, Willing Heart Outreach,
BIDWELL - . Poplar Ridge GALLIPOLIS FERRY- Meeting .1081 Oshel Road. Speakers will
Freewill Church will have a, at Gallipolis Ferry Community be Pastor W.R. Banks Jr., Pastor
gospel sing, 2 p.m. , featuring the Center, 2 p.m. Discussion will be Dan Freeman and evangelists
Randy Patterson and Margaret
Brildy Family from Parkersburg on September 8 quilrshow.
Hill.
.
and the New Horizon of Bar·
boursville. Services will begin at POINT PLEASANT - Quilt TNU
6:30 p.m.' with Pastor. John Things Guild, Mason County LEON - Revival at Shiloh ComCourthouse Annex, 9:30 a.m. munity Church, Leon- Baden
lEiswick.
Pizza will be ordered for lunch.
Road. September 1·8 with Evangelist
Sampy Hart at 7 p.m. SpeMONDAY, September 3
cial
POINT
PLEASANT
-American
singers.
·
SOUTHSIDE - Chubs weight

Page C4

Page CS

l, 2001

Sunday, September l. 1001

lia

Sunday, September 2
ADDISON -There will be a
preaching service at Addison
Freewin Baptist Church, al6
p.m., With Rick Barcus preachIng.
.

GALLIPOLIS- Fellure family
reunion will be held at Raccoon
Creek County Park, Shaner 2,
Ruffled Grouse. Dinner at 12:30.

GALLIPOLIS - Calvin Minnis
will preach at Bell Chapel at 6
p.m.
G,ALUPOLIS - Samuel Lewis
reunion at Raccoon Creek
Count.y Park "Bluebird Sheltet.
From 10 a.m.- 3 p.m., d1nner at
noon: Call Ramona Lewis at
441·8576 with questions.

BIDWELL- Garden of my
Heart tabernacle is holding Old
11mers' Day at the new Shenerhouse, 2 p.m., 4550 Ohio 850,
Bidwell. Wear Old 11mers' outlits
and bring a covered dish. Pastor Charles T. Glassburn , special gospel singing.
NORTHUP - Descendants of
Henry 'Doc" and Angeline Tope
Cremeens will hold their reunion
at Northup Baptist Church. Basket lunch at 12:30.
Descendants of John and Ann
Richards will hold thei~ reunion
at Tyn Rhos Church. Basket
dinner at noon.
.POPLAR RIDGE - Gospei
sing at Poplar Ridge Freewill
Baptist Church, Poplar Ridge
Road, off Ohio 554, wHh Brady
family and New Horizons
singing. The Gospel sing will
begin at 2:00 p.m. Everyone
welcome.

GALLIPOLIS - Annual reunion
for the family of the late Arnold
and Goldie Sanders will be held
at First Church of God at Le
Grande Blvd.

REEDSVILLE- Homecoming
at Eden United Brethren
Church, Sunday at 10 a.m.
Peter and Betsy Martindale
and family will conduct the service and music. Carry-in din·
ner, 12:30 in the fellowship
hall, and special music by
RDellvered,S 2 p.m.
CHESHIRE - The Brady
Family of Parkersburg, W.Va .,
and New Horizon of Bar- ·
boursville, W.Va., will sing at
Poplar Ridge Freewill Baptist

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Weekly charts for rhe
nation's best-selling recorded music as they appear in
next week's issue of Billboard magazine.

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinis
Retirees will meet at noon at the
Holiday Inn for lunch. Any questions, call Rose Stoney at 4463256.
Tuesday, September 11
GALLI POLIS _.: Gallia County
District Library Bopard of
Trustees will meet at 6 p.m. at .
Bossard Memorial Library.
Revivals
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Revival at Lifeline Apostolic
Church, W.Va. 2. Point Pleasant, with Evangelist Jerry Mul·
lens, Aug . 26 at 1 p.m. , and
Aug. 27-Sept. 2 at 6:30p.m.

Monday, September 3
!\DOlSON - Addison Freewill
. Baptist Church will hold its
, Gospel meeting at Church of
annual Labor Day sing at Kyger , Christ, Bethel Congregation,
Sept. 2· 7, at 7:30 p.m. with
Creek Shelterhouse at 4 p.m.
Bobby Holmes. Sunday morning
Singers include God's Ambasservice at 10 a.m.. 5:45p.m.
sadors, Gloryland Believers,
and 6 p.m.
Johnson family and more. Free
food and·door prizes.
Holy Ghost tent revival at Manpower Party, Jackson, Sept. 7-8,
GALLIPOLIS -. Bossard
10, 11,1 3, and I 4, 7 p.m. night·
Memorial Library will be closed
ly. Evangelist Danny Logue and
for Labor Day holiday.
Pastor Dan Neal will be speak·
ing. Everybody welcome.
Tuesday, September 4

SUNDAY
MASON, W.Va. - The Annual
Johnson Reunion is scheduled
for Sunday at the Mason City
Park in Mason, W.Va. A pot
luck dinner will take place at I
p.m. and those attending are
asked to bring an item ior the
auction.
'

AUDIO FILE

Church on S.R. 554 on Sunday
.at 2 p.m . Pastor John Elswick
invites the public.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees, Monday, 7:30
p.m., Syracuse Village Hall.

MONDAY
CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees, Monday,
7:30p.m., firehouse.

TUESDAY
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, regular meeting,
Tues ., 7:30p.m., home of
Clerk Osie Mae Follrod.

REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees, Monday, 7:30
p.m. Call clerk at 378-6149 to
be placed on agenda.

ROCKSPRINGS - Salisbury
Township Trustees, Tues., 6
p.m,, township building.

LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.
Monday, office building.

POMEROY - Meigs Local
Band Boosters, Tues., 6:30
p.m. at Meigs County Annex.

E·MAIL YOUR ANNOUNCEMENTS

news@mydailytrlbune.com news@mydailysentinel.com
news@mydailyregister.com

Billboard Top 10
1c-.ompiled

from a national sample of
collected, compiled and
provided by SoundScan; rad1o
playlisls; and monitored radio by
Broadcast Data Systems)
1. "I'm Real," Jennifer Lopez (feat. Ja
Rule). Epic.
2 ·catlin'," Alicia Keys.. J.
3 "Someone To Call My LO\Ier,"
Janel. Virgin.
4. "H~ 'Em Up Style (Oops!)," Btu
Cantrell. RedZone.
5. "Lei Me Blow Ya Mind," Eve (feat.
Gwen Stefani). Ruff Ryders.
6. 'Where The Party At," Jagged
Edge With Nelly. So So Def.
7. "U Remind Me," Usher. Arista.
a. "It's Been Awhile," Staind.
Flip/Eiektra.
9. "Drops Of Jupiter (Tell Me)," Train.
· Columbia.
to. "Hanging By A Moment," Lifehouse. DreamWOrks.
Copyright 2001 , BPI Communica·
tions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
·
The Billboard Top Albums
(Compiled from a national sample of
sales reports collected, compiled and
provided by SourdScan)
1. "Now," Maxwell. Columbia/GAG.
2. "Project English," Juvenile. Cash
-Money/Universal.
3. "Now 7," Various Artists. EMIAJni·
versaVSonyiZomba/Virgin.
4. "Songs in A Minor." Alicia Keys. J.
(Platinum - certified sales of 1 mil_jion units)
5. 'Celebrfly." 'N Sync. Jive. (Platinum)
6. "Eternal." The Isley Brothers (leal.
RonakliE,fey AKA Mr. B9gs). DreamWorks.
7. "(Hybrid Theor;)," Linkin Park.
WRm&lt;tr Bros. (Platinum)
8. "8701," Usher. Arista.
9. "Break The Cycle," Slaind.
Flip/Eiektra. (Platinum)
1o.'J.Lo," Jenn~er Lopez. Epic. (Platinum)
Copyright 2001, BPI . Communications Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
Hot Adult Contemporary
(Compiled from a national sample ol
airplay supplied by Broadcast Data
Systems)
1. "There You'll Be," Faith Hill. Warn··
er Bros.
2. "Thank You," Dido. Arista.
3. 1f You're Gone." matchbox twenty.
lava.
4. "I Hope You Qance," Lee Ann
Womack With Sons Of The Desert.
fiC-A Nashville.
5. "Only Time,· Enya. Warner Sunset.
6. "More Than That," Backstreet
Boys. Jive.
7. "One More Day," Diamond Rio.
Arista Nashville.
· 8. "Follow Me," Un&lt;;le Kracker. Top
~"lie~ reports

Curb.
9. 'Where I Come From," Alan Jack·
son. Arista Nashville.
10. 'When I Thonk About Angels."
Jamie O'Neal. Mercury.
Copyright 2001, BPI Communica·
tions Inc and SoundScan Inc.
Top Country Albums
(Compiled lrom a national sample of
sales reports collected , compiled and
provided by SoundScan)
1. Soundtrack: "0 Brother. Where Art
Thou?" Mercury. (Platinum)
2. Soundtrack: "Coyote Ugly." Curb.
(Platinum)
·
3. "Set This Circus Down." Tim
McGraw. Curb. (Platinum)
4.

~ New

Favorite ,· Alison Krauss &amp;

Union Stalk)n. Rou ndernOJMG.
5. "I Hope You Dance." Lee Ann
Womack. MCA Nashville. (Platinum)
6. "I'm Already There." Lonestar.
BNA. (Gokl)
7. "Greatest Hrts," Kenny Chesney.
BNA. (Piabnum)
·
S. "Greatest

Hils ,~

Tim McGraw.

Curb. !Platinum)
9. "Blake Shenon; Blake Shelton.
Warner Bros.IWRN.
10. "Lovjng Every Minute," Mark
Wills. Mercury.
Copyright 2001, BPI Communica·
tions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
.
Hot R&amp;B!Hip-Hop Singles
(Compiled from a national sampkl of
sales reports and radio playlists)
1. "Fallin'." Alicia Keys. J. ·
2. 'Tm Real," Jennifer Lopez (feat. Ja
Rule). Epic.
3. "Contagious." The lskly Brothers
(feat. Ronald Isley AKA Mr. Biggs).
DreamWorks.

4. "lzzo (H.O.V.A.),' Jay-Z. Roc·A·

Fella/Def JarrVIOJMG.
5. 'Where the Party At," Jagged Edge
with Nelly. So So Def.
6.

~Diffe rences,~

Ginuwine. Epic

7. "FamilyAffair," Mary J. Bilge. MCA.
8. "U Remind Me.," Usher. Arista.
9. "I'm A Thug ," Trk:k Daddy. Slip NSiideiAtlanlic.
1o. "One Minute Man," Missy "Misdemeanor" Elliott. The Gold Mind/Eiektra/EEG.
Copyright ~001 , BPI Communications Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
Top R&amp;B!Hip-Hop Albums
(Compiled from a national sample of
sales reports collected, eoo&gt;pited and
provided by SoundScan)
1. "Now," Maxwell. ColumbiaiCRG.
2. "Project English," Juvenile. Cash
Money/Universal.
·3. "Eternal," The Isley Brothers (feat.
Ronakl Isley f&gt;JC.A Mr. Biggs). Dream· .
Works.
4. "Songs In A Minor," Alicia Keys. J.
· (Platinum)
5. "Kiss Tha Game Goodbye,"
Judakiss. Ruff Rydersllnterscope.
6. "8701 ," Usher. Arista.
7. "Aahyah," Aaliyah. Blackground.
(Gold)
8. ' Duces 'N Trayz - The Old Fashioned Way," Snoop Dogg Presents
Tha Eastsldaz. Doggy StyleflVT.
9. "So Btu."
Btu Cantrell.
RedZoneiArista.
10. "J.Lo," Jenn~er Lopez. Epic.
Copyright
2001 . BPI Communica: CJoWt.avatAIIanlic.
tions
Inc.
and
SoundScan Inc.
• • 9. 'This I Promise You," 'N Sync. Jive.
Hot
Rap Stngtas
: • 10. "Ghost Of You And Me," BBMak.
(Compiled
!rom
a national sample of
I
I

Ali among great hopes for Hollywood
'Thanksgiving, basl'd on d1e
opening book of J. K . Rowl-

BY DAVID GERMAIN
AP MOV IE WRIT ER

LOS ANGELES - One of
Hollywood's ono re forgetta ble
summers of quality- bereft

tng 'c;

ac tion f.1re give · \v:ty to rhe
season of style and sophisti cation .
Instead of tomb raiders, apes
and dmosaurs, audiences will
be tn!Jted to ch:uacter pie"-'es
with elegant titles such as
"Hearts in Atbnti s," " Th e
Athir of the Necklace" and
" Tiie Royal Tene nbaum&lt;."
This fall is heavy on litcro ry
adaptations with " The Shij.&gt;ping News," "The Time
Machine" and· "The Musketeert" .a new take on "TI 1e
T hree Musketeers."
Marti"n Scorsesc returns to
th e m ean streets, but in 19th
century costume-drama style
with "Gangs of New York."
With "Shallow H al," the Farrelly bro th ers class th emselves
up by casting Gwyneth Paltrow (or Paltrow dumbs herself down; it's probably a little
of both) in · a movie about a
mJn who see s an obese
woman as his ideal n•ate.
Will Smi th segues from
action and comedy to hearywe tght drama with "A li ,...
which focu ses on the primr
fightin g years and the person al and political struggles of
Muhammad Ali . Smith bulked
up to 222 pounds, addi;,g 30
pounds of mu scle. H r went
through intensive trainin g and

fanta"y

ph'"llOll~l'llOIJ.

A week bdore C hnstnm
comes " Lord of rhr R m;,rs:
The Fellowship of th e Rm~,''
p:trt one of a fi lm trilot-,ov
JClaptrd foom J.R .R . Tulk1m\
classic about hobbit&lt; and dark
lord s.
Other bi g fall releases
include · the realit y-bl' ndit.Jg
dram~ " Vanilla Sky," Tom

LORD OF THE SCREEN? Actor
ian McKellen is th e wizard
Gandalf in this scene from
Columbia Pictures' "Lord of
the Rings: The Fellowsh ip of
the Ring." {AP)
had the benefit of frequent set
visits bv Al i.
" [ ;!ways felt there was
nobody in the world to p"lay
Muhammad Ali but m e. I just
know him. I can't ewn say
w hy," Smith said. " It wasn't
that big of a stretch for me to
say. 'I'm the greatest.' I started
in rap mu sic, and that's based
on rhe con ce pt that you're th e
best. R appers are np strangers
to procla imin ~ their personal
superiority."
Two of the season's biggest
release s haw their roots in
tasteful old Britain. A l ittle
ditty called " H arry Potter and
the Sorcerer's Stone" breezes
into th ea ters ·ju st before

der scheme; Mark W.•hlherg as
a frtbme-band "illl bl'r gl\'t,:n .1
&lt;hot .tt f.une in "Rod. :O,t,,r· ;
and "The A cc ident.Ji Spy,"
wit h Jackle Chan ·" ,\ ,.tics-

C ruise's reuni on with "j erry
MJguire" c reator Ca. m eron
C. rowe ; "Windtalkcrs," starring
Nico las Cage in a drama
about Navajo co de- keepc•rs 1n
World War II ; Johnny Depp
and H eather Graham in the
Jack -the-Ripper tal e "From
Hell ": Steven Sodcrbergh's
casino ca per"Ocean's Eleven,"
featming George Clooney,
Brad Pott and Julia Roberts;
David Lynch 's enigmatic H olly vood story " Mulh oll and

Dr ive";

"Sere ndipity,"

a

romantic comedy with John
C us;~ ck and Kate 13ccki nsale;
and Hilary Swank's pal ace
intrigue " The Affi1ir of the
N ecklace."
Also,
the
Arno ld
revenge ·
Schwa rzenegger
· thriller "Collateral Damage";
K eanu Reeves as a reluctant
baseball co ach 111 "Hardball";
" Black Knight," with Martin
Lawrence zapped back to 16th
century· England ; "Novoca ine,'' starring Steve Martin
as a dentist lured into a mur-

!

nan -nt n t•.:d -J ge n r.

Tolki en Ems h,l\'L'

L' f ,I\'L'l l

Frodo llJ ggin~. 'i.ud tiH' wait
was .,,;·urth 1t. ToLb y\ vi . . u.1l
effects. resulted in -1 morl' TL' J ! isti c renderin g of rolklen\
Middle- earth, Wood s.ml. And
the epi c no lnngl'r Ll f l"ll'"~
politi cal bagg:.•gc· rt pic h·d np
30 o r 40 ye,trs ago. he &lt;.nd.
" I don 't thm k rim co~dd
have been done any c:trlier,''
Wood said. ''In th e "&lt;oils .tnd
'70s, there w"' a lot of pop
cul ture that. re fc ren cTd ' Lord
of th e Rings." It W.\1 mcd ·in

re ference to Vi etn am .md wa&lt;;
embraced . by . rhc hippie
mm;ement. If tiH~ ti lm were
done back then. you wo uld
have had social issues of th or
time tacked on to it.
" Nov..r we're free of those
tie-i ns, so i t makes for·' clea rer depiction oiTolki en and his
story."
Wood's cast mares include
!an Me Kell en, Ca te Ulan chert,
i an Holm , Viggo l'vl urtt'n&lt;cn
and LivTyler.A il three lilms in
the trilogy were shot sillluitaneoosly i n N ew Zealand, wi th
part two due our Lire nrxt .
year and part thre e sc heduled
for full 2003

I

a national sample of
I reports collected, compiled and
rovlded b So ndSca )
•P
Y u
n
·
: 1. "Live In london And More..." Oon·
. nle McClurkin. Verity. (Gold)
2. 'CeCe Winans." CeCa Winans.
Wellspring Gospel.
; 3. "Thankful." Mary Mary. C21Colum• bla. (Gold)
4. "Beverly." Beveriy Crawford. Dex·
terity Sound&amp;'EMI Gospel.
.
5. "Still Tremaine," Tremaine
Hawkins. Gospo centric.
6. "Persuaded _ Live in D.C.,"
• Richard Smallwood With Vision. Ver-

Brand New 2001

Brand New 2001 Pontiac

Brand New 2001 Chevy

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• Power Locks, AMJFM Cau.
• Delay Wipers, Tilt

Power Seat, Windows, Locka
Tm Steering, Cruise Control
Heated Outside Mirrors

• V-6 Power, Automatic
• Power Wlndowa, Lockl, Mlrron
Keylels Entry, Locking Dlff.

~~(85~

• V-8 Power, Automatic
• Air Conditioning, Tlh &amp; Cruise
Pkg., AMIFM

• Automatic, Sunroof
• Power Seat, Windows, Locks
CD System, Tilt &amp; Cruise

Brand New 2001Chevy
Tahoe LT 4 Door 4x4

838,950*
• Sunroof, Onstar System
• Leather, Heated Seats
Third Seat, Totally

and
i by
1. "My Projilcts," Coo Coo I lnfi.nile/Tommy Boy.
2. "Raise Up," Petey Pablo. Jive.
p • Wh' T h &amp;
3. "Po' Punch," o
lie ras
The Trailer Park Symphony. Pocket
Change.
4. "Purple Hills," D-12. Shady.
5. "let's Be Friends.~ Ta Ta Branda
(feat. Larry Poteat Of The Donz).
Heartless.
6. "Y'all Don't Wanna;" Skillz. Eastern
Conference/Rawkus.
7. "Grippin Grain," The Young Millionaires. UrtJan Spears/UrtJan Dreams.
~!Zomba .
8. "All My Thugs," Young Phantom.
. hop T D Heartless.
7. "The Stollll Is Over," Bos
· · 9. "Make It Vibrate," Rising Son.
Jakes &amp; the Potter's House Mass Darkside.
C~r. Dexterity Sounds/EM! Gospel. . 10. "Candy," Fo~ Brown (feat. Ketis).
8. "Awesome Wonder," Kurt Carr &amp; Def Jam. IOJMG.
The Kurt Carr Singers. Gospo Can· Copyright 2001, BPI Communica·
~rici.vow Gospel 2001 : The Year's 30 tions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
Hot Dance Music
. Top Gospel Artists And Songs," Vari- (Compiled from a national sample of
• _pus Artists. EMIJWord. (Gold)
dance club playlists)
• 10. "The Experience," Yolanda 1_..1 Feel LOlled ," Depeche Mode.
Mute/Reprise.
. Adams. Elektra.
Copyright 2001 , BPI Communica· 2 . "Running (RemiKes)," lnfolll18tion
lions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
. Society. Tommy Boy Silver
Matnlll'ellm Rock Tracks
.
at
f
L.abeVTonvny Boy.
1 o
(Comptled from a nation sampe
'Tell Me· Who, " lamia ..
3
wrplay supplied by Broadcast Data . Elektra/EEG.
~ys~) Been Awhile," Staind. 4 . "Absolutely ~ot," De~ah CoK. J.
A"p!Etekt
5. "Thank You , D1do. An. Ia.
r
"How~
A
d
Me
.
Nickel6. 'Stand Still," Aubrey. Groovili1
2
~ck Roecl~nne~m n
'
cious'Sirictly Rhythm.
.
-&amp;t,·
•
Tool
Tool
DissectionaJ
7.
"Name
Of
The
Game,'
Crystal
3
~:·.
p
ddkl
Of
Mudd
Fla;..
Mothod.
OutposVGeffenllnterscope.
·
4
' tu
·
8. "Keep It' Coming." 7 (feat. Mona
Ie·ss/G effenll
n erscope.
M l K' St t
5. "Crawling," Unkin Park. . Warner
on~IR. ong .. r~~sement Jaxx.
9.
B(OS
omeo,
·
·
• Di
XUAstrelwerks.
.
6. "Down With Ire Sickness, s- 10 "Someone To Call My Lover,"
turbed. Giani/Repnse.
·
.
7 "Astounded " Tanlric Maverick
Janet. Virgin.
• · "Bod" • D• . Pool Wtnd up
Hot Lalln Tracks
8. , 1es, rowrnng
;
· · (Compiled from national latin radio
9. t \Msh Y\)U Were Here, Incubus. airplay reports)
lmmortai!Epte
"Como Se C U H rida • J ·
10. "Greed," Godsmack. Republic.
1.
ura na e , OC1
Modem Rock Tracks
ll"!asqu~z. SonY Discos .
.JCom .1ed f
at samp'te 0 f 2. Azul, Cnstian. Ariola.
,
PI
rom 8 na
3 "Como Olviclar" Olga Tanon. WEA
• airplay supplied by Broadcast Oata t..i.tina.
'
• •Sty~Sterns)th Criminal " Allen Ant Farm. 4: "0 Me Voy 0 Te Vas," MarcoAntot t' o n

...

· moo
•
.
N~w Nolz"(DreamWorks.

2000 Chevy
Cavalier Sedan
'

89,950*

· back. Roadrunner.

:
:

:
'

• Automatic
• Air Conditioning
• AM/FM Stereo With Cass.

•

· Taxes. Tags, Til~ Fees exira. Rebate included In sate pflce ol new velliCte i~led where applicable. "On approv~ credt. On selected models. Not resPon~ble for typographical errors.
Pnoos Good Augosl 31 sl Through September 31d.
·
.

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9 "Sesame • Ricardo Monlaner.
WEA Latina. '
10: "Abrazame Muy Fuerte." Juan
Gabriel. Ariola.
Copyright 2001. BPI Communica·
lions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
The Billboard Latin 50 ·
(Compiled from a national sample of
sates reports collected, compiled and
provided by SoundScan)
1 "Uniendo Fronteras " Los T~gres
Del Norte. Fonovisa. '
2. "Historia Musical Romanlica."
Grupe Bryndis Disa.
3. "Historia Musical." Los Angeles
Azules. Disc..
4. "Paulina," Paulina Rubio. Universal
Latino. (Gold)
5. "Shhhl" A.B. Quintanolla Y Los
Kumbla Kings. EMI latin.
6. "Historia De Un Idola Vol. 1."
VICente Fernandez. Sony Discos
7. "Despreciado." Lupillo Rivera.
Sony Discos. (Gold)

It's fast and simple.

2. . Fat Up, Sum 41 . Island.
D'
·
3. "Clint Eastwood," Goritlaz. Virgin.
·~Pueden
Decir
"
Gilberta
Santa
6
4. "Scl1ism," Toot Tool Di~al. _
Sony Di~.
.
5. "How You Remond Me, NICkel . 7. "Me vas A Extranar," Pepe Agwlar.

•
:•
·:
•

6. "I \Msh You Were Here." Incubus.
tmmortaiiE~w7. "Control, Puddle Of Mudd. Fla
less/Geftenllnterscope.. ,
.
8.. •trs Been Awhile, Stalnd.
Alp/Eklktra. •
,
9. "Hash P1pe; Weeze': Geffen;
10. "Down With The Sickness, .Otsturbed. Gtani/Reprise.
Hot Country Singles
(Complltoredled trom,~, nadtilonbyal ~=:
mon
coun., ra o
Data Systems)
.
l."~stln," Blake S~on . Gtant •
2. I m Just Talkin AboUt Tonght,
Toby Keith. OreamWorl&lt;s.
, .
3. 'Where ~ Blacktop Ends, Keith
Urban. Capitol.
•
4. "What I Really Meant To Say,
Cyndi Thomson .. Capitol.
5. _"Only In Amenca, Brool&lt;s &amp; Ounn.
Arista Nashville.
•
6.. , Would've Lolled You ""!yway,
Tnsha Yearwood. MCA Nashvi!kl·
7. ' Angray All The lime . Tim
McGraw. Curb.
8. "Downtime," Jo Dee Messina .

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SUNDAY, September 2
POINT PLEASANT - 52nd
annual Greer Reunion, Stephenson Grove, W.Va. 2. Dinner bell
at 1 p.m. Covered dish.
POINT PLEASANT WV
Knapp · Reunion , W.Va. State
Farm Museum. Coffee 9:30a.m.
and cove red dish lunch at 1 p.m.
MT. ALTO- Homecoming at Mt.
Hebron- Jackson Chapel, 12:30
p.m. Sargent Family will sing.
Cove red d1sh.
GALLI POLIS ~ Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, 6 p.m. with Rick Barcus
preaching.
MASON - Annual Johnson
reunion, Mason City Park. Pot
luck dinner at 1 p.m. Bring item
for auction.
SOUTHS IDE
Newberry
Reun1on, 4-H Camp, 1 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT - Kinsey
Durst reunion, Krodel Park, covered dish dinner at noon.
GALLIPOLIS FER BY- Jim and
Gabby Ross will s ~ng at Mt.
Carmel Church, 6 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT - David
Washington will be preaching at
Gospel Tabernacle, beside the
library, 6 p.m.
ROBERTSBURG - Homecom·
ing on Manilla Chapel Church,
noofl, with speaker Adam NUll
..Jand Builders Quartet.
·
SOUTHSIDE - Homecoming at
Hambrick Church , Little 16
Road , with Higti Mountain R'am·
biers, Wayne County Rocky
Mountain Boys and others. No
evening service.
MASON - Wahama Alumni
Band practice, 2 p.m. in bandroom to prepare for Sept. 28
homecoming. For information
ca ll Martha Varian at 882-3832
or Rex Howard at 882-8240.

Mason
toss support group, Southside
Community Center, weigh-ins
5:30 to 6 p.m. followed by a short
meeting.

Legion Auxiliary Un~ 23 at 7 p.m.
at Post Home.

WEDNESDAY, September 5
POINT PLEASANT - WednesPOINT PLEASANT -Alcoholics day night Bible clubs for
Anonymous, 7 : ~0 p.m., 611 preschool up through 12th
Viand St. Use side entrance of . grade, 7 to 8:15 p.m. at Gospel
Casey Law Office.
Lighthouse Church, Neal Road.
For information call 675-7229 or
GALLIPOLIS
Addison 675·6620.
Freewill Baptist Church Labor
Day Sing at Kyger Creek Shel· POINT PLEASANT- Alcoholics
terhouse, 4 p.m. Groups to sing Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., 611
God's Ambassadors·, Gloryland Viand Street. Use side entrance
Believers. Johnso.n Family, Addi· of Casey Law Office.
. son Quartet, Addison Choir and
THURSDAY, September 6
New City Singers.
POINT PLEASANT - TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly) 5
TUESDAY, September 4
LETART - HELP Diet Class, p.m. weigh in· and meeting at ·
Letart
Community
Center. 5:30 p.m. at Trinity United
Weigh-ins from 5:30 to 6 p.m. Methodist Church. For infonma·
tlon call 675·3692.
followed by short meeting.
FLATROCK - Clothing closet
give away every Tuesday at
Good Shepherd U.M. Church,
Flatrock, 9 a.m. to I p.m.
POINT PLEASANT ~ Clothing
give away ellery Tuesday, 10
a.m. to noon at Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church, 8th 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.
HENDERSON - L.lne dancing,
Henderson Community Building,
with instructor Dawn Halstead.
Beginners 6 p.m. and advanced
7p.m.

POINT PLEASANT - Shoot at
Point Pleasant Gun Club 6 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT - Weight
Watchers , Christ Episcopal
Church whh weigh in at 4:45
p.m. and 5:15p.m.
NEW HAVEN - New Haven .Jr.
OUAM 175 meeting, 7 p.m.
REVIVALS
POINT PLEASANT- Revival at
Lifeline Apostolic Church with
Evangelist Jerry Mullens Sunday, August 26 at 1 p.m. and
August 27· September 2 at 6:30
p.m.
HARTFORD - Revival at True
Gospel Church, Gibbstown
Road, beginning September I , 6
p.m. Different speakers and
singers.

POINT PLEASANT - Mason
County Fair Board will met at 8
p.m. (Meeting moved from Monday due to Labor Day.)

POINT PLEASANT- Gathering
2001 Aug. 31· Sept. 1, 7 p.m.
and I 0 a.m. Saturday and Sun·
day, Willing Heart Outreach,
BIDWELL - . Poplar Ridge GALLIPOLIS FERRY- Meeting .1081 Oshel Road. Speakers will
Freewill Church will have a, at Gallipolis Ferry Community be Pastor W.R. Banks Jr., Pastor
gospel sing, 2 p.m. , featuring the Center, 2 p.m. Discussion will be Dan Freeman and evangelists
Randy Patterson and Margaret
Brildy Family from Parkersburg on September 8 quilrshow.
Hill.
.
and the New Horizon of Bar·
boursville. Services will begin at POINT PLEASANT - Quilt TNU
6:30 p.m.' with Pastor. John Things Guild, Mason County LEON - Revival at Shiloh ComCourthouse Annex, 9:30 a.m. munity Church, Leon- Baden
lEiswick.
Pizza will be ordered for lunch.
Road. September 1·8 with Evangelist
Sampy Hart at 7 p.m. SpeMONDAY, September 3
cial
POINT
PLEASANT
-American
singers.
·
SOUTHSIDE - Chubs weight

Page C4

Page CS

l, 2001

Sunday, September l. 1001

lia

Sunday, September 2
ADDISON -There will be a
preaching service at Addison
Freewin Baptist Church, al6
p.m., With Rick Barcus preachIng.
.

GALLIPOLIS- Fellure family
reunion will be held at Raccoon
Creek County Park, Shaner 2,
Ruffled Grouse. Dinner at 12:30.

GALLIPOLIS - Calvin Minnis
will preach at Bell Chapel at 6
p.m.
G,ALUPOLIS - Samuel Lewis
reunion at Raccoon Creek
Count.y Park "Bluebird Sheltet.
From 10 a.m.- 3 p.m., d1nner at
noon: Call Ramona Lewis at
441·8576 with questions.

BIDWELL- Garden of my
Heart tabernacle is holding Old
11mers' Day at the new Shenerhouse, 2 p.m., 4550 Ohio 850,
Bidwell. Wear Old 11mers' outlits
and bring a covered dish. Pastor Charles T. Glassburn , special gospel singing.
NORTHUP - Descendants of
Henry 'Doc" and Angeline Tope
Cremeens will hold their reunion
at Northup Baptist Church. Basket lunch at 12:30.
Descendants of John and Ann
Richards will hold thei~ reunion
at Tyn Rhos Church. Basket
dinner at noon.
.POPLAR RIDGE - Gospei
sing at Poplar Ridge Freewill
Baptist Church, Poplar Ridge
Road, off Ohio 554, wHh Brady
family and New Horizons
singing. The Gospel sing will
begin at 2:00 p.m. Everyone
welcome.

GALLIPOLIS - Annual reunion
for the family of the late Arnold
and Goldie Sanders will be held
at First Church of God at Le
Grande Blvd.

REEDSVILLE- Homecoming
at Eden United Brethren
Church, Sunday at 10 a.m.
Peter and Betsy Martindale
and family will conduct the service and music. Carry-in din·
ner, 12:30 in the fellowship
hall, and special music by
RDellvered,S 2 p.m.
CHESHIRE - The Brady
Family of Parkersburg, W.Va .,
and New Horizon of Bar- ·
boursville, W.Va., will sing at
Poplar Ridge Freewill Baptist

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Weekly charts for rhe
nation's best-selling recorded music as they appear in
next week's issue of Billboard magazine.

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinis
Retirees will meet at noon at the
Holiday Inn for lunch. Any questions, call Rose Stoney at 4463256.
Tuesday, September 11
GALLI POLIS _.: Gallia County
District Library Bopard of
Trustees will meet at 6 p.m. at .
Bossard Memorial Library.
Revivals
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Revival at Lifeline Apostolic
Church, W.Va. 2. Point Pleasant, with Evangelist Jerry Mul·
lens, Aug . 26 at 1 p.m. , and
Aug. 27-Sept. 2 at 6:30p.m.

Monday, September 3
!\DOlSON - Addison Freewill
. Baptist Church will hold its
, Gospel meeting at Church of
annual Labor Day sing at Kyger , Christ, Bethel Congregation,
Sept. 2· 7, at 7:30 p.m. with
Creek Shelterhouse at 4 p.m.
Bobby Holmes. Sunday morning
Singers include God's Ambasservice at 10 a.m.. 5:45p.m.
sadors, Gloryland Believers,
and 6 p.m.
Johnson family and more. Free
food and·door prizes.
Holy Ghost tent revival at Manpower Party, Jackson, Sept. 7-8,
GALLIPOLIS -. Bossard
10, 11,1 3, and I 4, 7 p.m. night·
Memorial Library will be closed
ly. Evangelist Danny Logue and
for Labor Day holiday.
Pastor Dan Neal will be speak·
ing. Everybody welcome.
Tuesday, September 4

SUNDAY
MASON, W.Va. - The Annual
Johnson Reunion is scheduled
for Sunday at the Mason City
Park in Mason, W.Va. A pot
luck dinner will take place at I
p.m. and those attending are
asked to bring an item ior the
auction.
'

AUDIO FILE

Church on S.R. 554 on Sunday
.at 2 p.m . Pastor John Elswick
invites the public.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees, Monday, 7:30
p.m., Syracuse Village Hall.

MONDAY
CARPENTER - Columbia
Township Trustees, Monday,
7:30p.m., firehouse.

TUESDAY
ALFRED - Orange Township
Trustees, regular meeting,
Tues ., 7:30p.m., home of
Clerk Osie Mae Follrod.

REEDSVILLE - Olive Township Trustees, Monday, 7:30
p.m. Call clerk at 378-6149 to
be placed on agenda.

ROCKSPRINGS - Salisbury
Township Trustees, Tues., 6
p.m,, township building.

LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.
Monday, office building.

POMEROY - Meigs Local
Band Boosters, Tues., 6:30
p.m. at Meigs County Annex.

E·MAIL YOUR ANNOUNCEMENTS

news@mydailytrlbune.com news@mydailysentinel.com
news@mydailyregister.com

Billboard Top 10
1c-.ompiled

from a national sample of
collected, compiled and
provided by SoundScan; rad1o
playlisls; and monitored radio by
Broadcast Data Systems)
1. "I'm Real," Jennifer Lopez (feat. Ja
Rule). Epic.
2 ·catlin'," Alicia Keys.. J.
3 "Someone To Call My LO\Ier,"
Janel. Virgin.
4. "H~ 'Em Up Style (Oops!)," Btu
Cantrell. RedZone.
5. "Lei Me Blow Ya Mind," Eve (feat.
Gwen Stefani). Ruff Ryders.
6. 'Where The Party At," Jagged
Edge With Nelly. So So Def.
7. "U Remind Me," Usher. Arista.
a. "It's Been Awhile," Staind.
Flip/Eiektra.
9. "Drops Of Jupiter (Tell Me)," Train.
· Columbia.
to. "Hanging By A Moment," Lifehouse. DreamWOrks.
Copyright 2001 , BPI Communica·
tions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
·
The Billboard Top Albums
(Compiled from a national sample of
sales reports collected, compiled and
provided by SourdScan)
1. "Now," Maxwell. Columbia/GAG.
2. "Project English," Juvenile. Cash
-Money/Universal.
3. "Now 7," Various Artists. EMIAJni·
versaVSonyiZomba/Virgin.
4. "Songs in A Minor." Alicia Keys. J.
(Platinum - certified sales of 1 mil_jion units)
5. 'Celebrfly." 'N Sync. Jive. (Platinum)
6. "Eternal." The Isley Brothers (leal.
RonakliE,fey AKA Mr. B9gs). DreamWorks.
7. "(Hybrid Theor;)," Linkin Park.
WRm&lt;tr Bros. (Platinum)
8. "8701," Usher. Arista.
9. "Break The Cycle," Slaind.
Flip/Eiektra. (Platinum)
1o.'J.Lo," Jenn~er Lopez. Epic. (Platinum)
Copyright 2001, BPI . Communications Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
Hot Adult Contemporary
(Compiled from a national sample ol
airplay supplied by Broadcast Data
Systems)
1. "There You'll Be," Faith Hill. Warn··
er Bros.
2. "Thank You," Dido. Arista.
3. 1f You're Gone." matchbox twenty.
lava.
4. "I Hope You Qance," Lee Ann
Womack With Sons Of The Desert.
fiC-A Nashville.
5. "Only Time,· Enya. Warner Sunset.
6. "More Than That," Backstreet
Boys. Jive.
7. "One More Day," Diamond Rio.
Arista Nashville.
· 8. "Follow Me," Un&lt;;le Kracker. Top
~"lie~ reports

Curb.
9. 'Where I Come From," Alan Jack·
son. Arista Nashville.
10. 'When I Thonk About Angels."
Jamie O'Neal. Mercury.
Copyright 2001, BPI Communica·
tions Inc and SoundScan Inc.
Top Country Albums
(Compiled lrom a national sample of
sales reports collected , compiled and
provided by SoundScan)
1. Soundtrack: "0 Brother. Where Art
Thou?" Mercury. (Platinum)
2. Soundtrack: "Coyote Ugly." Curb.
(Platinum)
·
3. "Set This Circus Down." Tim
McGraw. Curb. (Platinum)
4.

~ New

Favorite ,· Alison Krauss &amp;

Union Stalk)n. Rou ndernOJMG.
5. "I Hope You Dance." Lee Ann
Womack. MCA Nashville. (Platinum)
6. "I'm Already There." Lonestar.
BNA. (Gokl)
7. "Greatest Hrts," Kenny Chesney.
BNA. (Piabnum)
·
S. "Greatest

Hils ,~

Tim McGraw.

Curb. !Platinum)
9. "Blake Shenon; Blake Shelton.
Warner Bros.IWRN.
10. "Lovjng Every Minute," Mark
Wills. Mercury.
Copyright 2001, BPI Communica·
tions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
.
Hot R&amp;B!Hip-Hop Singles
(Compiled from a national sampkl of
sales reports and radio playlists)
1. "Fallin'." Alicia Keys. J. ·
2. 'Tm Real," Jennifer Lopez (feat. Ja
Rule). Epic.
3. "Contagious." The lskly Brothers
(feat. Ronald Isley AKA Mr. Biggs).
DreamWorks.

4. "lzzo (H.O.V.A.),' Jay-Z. Roc·A·

Fella/Def JarrVIOJMG.
5. 'Where the Party At," Jagged Edge
with Nelly. So So Def.
6.

~Diffe rences,~

Ginuwine. Epic

7. "FamilyAffair," Mary J. Bilge. MCA.
8. "U Remind Me.," Usher. Arista.
9. "I'm A Thug ," Trk:k Daddy. Slip NSiideiAtlanlic.
1o. "One Minute Man," Missy "Misdemeanor" Elliott. The Gold Mind/Eiektra/EEG.
Copyright ~001 , BPI Communications Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
Top R&amp;B!Hip-Hop Albums
(Compiled from a national sample of
sales reports collected, eoo&gt;pited and
provided by SoundScan)
1. "Now," Maxwell. ColumbiaiCRG.
2. "Project English," Juvenile. Cash
Money/Universal.
·3. "Eternal," The Isley Brothers (feat.
Ronakl Isley f&gt;JC.A Mr. Biggs). Dream· .
Works.
4. "Songs In A Minor," Alicia Keys. J.
· (Platinum)
5. "Kiss Tha Game Goodbye,"
Judakiss. Ruff Rydersllnterscope.
6. "8701 ," Usher. Arista.
7. "Aahyah," Aaliyah. Blackground.
(Gold)
8. ' Duces 'N Trayz - The Old Fashioned Way," Snoop Dogg Presents
Tha Eastsldaz. Doggy StyleflVT.
9. "So Btu."
Btu Cantrell.
RedZoneiArista.
10. "J.Lo," Jenn~er Lopez. Epic.
Copyright
2001 . BPI Communica: CJoWt.avatAIIanlic.
tions
Inc.
and
SoundScan Inc.
• • 9. 'This I Promise You," 'N Sync. Jive.
Hot
Rap Stngtas
: • 10. "Ghost Of You And Me," BBMak.
(Compiled
!rom
a national sample of
I
I

Ali among great hopes for Hollywood
'Thanksgiving, basl'd on d1e
opening book of J. K . Rowl-

BY DAVID GERMAIN
AP MOV IE WRIT ER

LOS ANGELES - One of
Hollywood's ono re forgetta ble
summers of quality- bereft

tng 'c;

ac tion f.1re give · \v:ty to rhe
season of style and sophisti cation .
Instead of tomb raiders, apes
and dmosaurs, audiences will
be tn!Jted to ch:uacter pie"-'es
with elegant titles such as
"Hearts in Atbnti s," " Th e
Athir of the Necklace" and
" Tiie Royal Tene nbaum&lt;."
This fall is heavy on litcro ry
adaptations with " The Shij.&gt;ping News," "The Time
Machine" and· "The Musketeert" .a new take on "TI 1e
T hree Musketeers."
Marti"n Scorsesc returns to
th e m ean streets, but in 19th
century costume-drama style
with "Gangs of New York."
With "Shallow H al," the Farrelly bro th ers class th emselves
up by casting Gwyneth Paltrow (or Paltrow dumbs herself down; it's probably a little
of both) in · a movie about a
mJn who see s an obese
woman as his ideal n•ate.
Will Smi th segues from
action and comedy to hearywe tght drama with "A li ,...
which focu ses on the primr
fightin g years and the person al and political struggles of
Muhammad Ali . Smith bulked
up to 222 pounds, addi;,g 30
pounds of mu scle. H r went
through intensive trainin g and

fanta"y

ph'"llOll~l'llOIJ.

A week bdore C hnstnm
comes " Lord of rhr R m;,rs:
The Fellowship of th e Rm~,''
p:trt one of a fi lm trilot-,ov
JClaptrd foom J.R .R . Tulk1m\
classic about hobbit&lt; and dark
lord s.
Other bi g fall releases
include · the realit y-bl' ndit.Jg
dram~ " Vanilla Sky," Tom

LORD OF THE SCREEN? Actor
ian McKellen is th e wizard
Gandalf in this scene from
Columbia Pictures' "Lord of
the Rings: The Fellowsh ip of
the Ring." {AP)
had the benefit of frequent set
visits bv Al i.
" [ ;!ways felt there was
nobody in the world to p"lay
Muhammad Ali but m e. I just
know him. I can't ewn say
w hy," Smith said. " It wasn't
that big of a stretch for me to
say. 'I'm the greatest.' I started
in rap mu sic, and that's based
on rhe con ce pt that you're th e
best. R appers are np strangers
to procla imin ~ their personal
superiority."
Two of the season's biggest
release s haw their roots in
tasteful old Britain. A l ittle
ditty called " H arry Potter and
the Sorcerer's Stone" breezes
into th ea ters ·ju st before

der scheme; Mark W.•hlherg as
a frtbme-band "illl bl'r gl\'t,:n .1
&lt;hot .tt f.une in "Rod. :O,t,,r· ;
and "The A cc ident.Ji Spy,"
wit h Jackle Chan ·" ,\ ,.tics-

C ruise's reuni on with "j erry
MJguire" c reator Ca. m eron
C. rowe ; "Windtalkcrs," starring
Nico las Cage in a drama
about Navajo co de- keepc•rs 1n
World War II ; Johnny Depp
and H eather Graham in the
Jack -the-Ripper tal e "From
Hell ": Steven Sodcrbergh's
casino ca per"Ocean's Eleven,"
featming George Clooney,
Brad Pott and Julia Roberts;
David Lynch 's enigmatic H olly vood story " Mulh oll and

Dr ive";

"Sere ndipity,"

a

romantic comedy with John
C us;~ ck and Kate 13ccki nsale;
and Hilary Swank's pal ace
intrigue " The Affi1ir of the
N ecklace."
Also,
the
Arno ld
revenge ·
Schwa rzenegger
· thriller "Collateral Damage";
K eanu Reeves as a reluctant
baseball co ach 111 "Hardball";
" Black Knight," with Martin
Lawrence zapped back to 16th
century· England ; "Novoca ine,'' starring Steve Martin
as a dentist lured into a mur-

!

nan -nt n t•.:d -J ge n r.

Tolki en Ems h,l\'L'

L' f ,I\'L'l l

Frodo llJ ggin~. 'i.ud tiH' wait
was .,,;·urth 1t. ToLb y\ vi . . u.1l
effects. resulted in -1 morl' TL' J ! isti c renderin g of rolklen\
Middle- earth, Wood s.ml. And
the epi c no lnngl'r Ll f l"ll'"~
politi cal bagg:.•gc· rt pic h·d np
30 o r 40 ye,trs ago. he &lt;.nd.
" I don 't thm k rim co~dd
have been done any c:trlier,''
Wood said. ''In th e "&lt;oils .tnd
'70s, there w"' a lot of pop
cul ture that. re fc ren cTd ' Lord
of th e Rings." It W.\1 mcd ·in

re ference to Vi etn am .md wa&lt;;
embraced . by . rhc hippie
mm;ement. If tiH~ ti lm were
done back then. you wo uld
have had social issues of th or
time tacked on to it.
" Nov..r we're free of those
tie-i ns, so i t makes for·' clea rer depiction oiTolki en and his
story."
Wood's cast mares include
!an Me Kell en, Ca te Ulan chert,
i an Holm , Viggo l'vl urtt'n&lt;cn
and LivTyler.A il three lilms in
the trilogy were shot sillluitaneoosly i n N ew Zealand, wi th
part two due our Lire nrxt .
year and part thre e sc heduled
for full 2003

I

a national sample of
I reports collected, compiled and
rovlded b So ndSca )
•P
Y u
n
·
: 1. "Live In london And More..." Oon·
. nle McClurkin. Verity. (Gold)
2. 'CeCe Winans." CeCa Winans.
Wellspring Gospel.
; 3. "Thankful." Mary Mary. C21Colum• bla. (Gold)
4. "Beverly." Beveriy Crawford. Dex·
terity Sound&amp;'EMI Gospel.
.
5. "Still Tremaine," Tremaine
Hawkins. Gospo centric.
6. "Persuaded _ Live in D.C.,"
• Richard Smallwood With Vision. Ver-

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and
i by
1. "My Projilcts," Coo Coo I lnfi.nile/Tommy Boy.
2. "Raise Up," Petey Pablo. Jive.
p • Wh' T h &amp;
3. "Po' Punch," o
lie ras
The Trailer Park Symphony. Pocket
Change.
4. "Purple Hills," D-12. Shady.
5. "let's Be Friends.~ Ta Ta Branda
(feat. Larry Poteat Of The Donz).
Heartless.
6. "Y'all Don't Wanna;" Skillz. Eastern
Conference/Rawkus.
7. "Grippin Grain," The Young Millionaires. UrtJan Spears/UrtJan Dreams.
~!Zomba .
8. "All My Thugs," Young Phantom.
. hop T D Heartless.
7. "The Stollll Is Over," Bos
· · 9. "Make It Vibrate," Rising Son.
Jakes &amp; the Potter's House Mass Darkside.
C~r. Dexterity Sounds/EM! Gospel. . 10. "Candy," Fo~ Brown (feat. Ketis).
8. "Awesome Wonder," Kurt Carr &amp; Def Jam. IOJMG.
The Kurt Carr Singers. Gospo Can· Copyright 2001, BPI Communica·
~rici.vow Gospel 2001 : The Year's 30 tions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
Hot Dance Music
. Top Gospel Artists And Songs," Vari- (Compiled from a national sample of
• _pus Artists. EMIJWord. (Gold)
dance club playlists)
• 10. "The Experience," Yolanda 1_..1 Feel LOlled ," Depeche Mode.
Mute/Reprise.
. Adams. Elektra.
Copyright 2001 , BPI Communica· 2 . "Running (RemiKes)," lnfolll18tion
lions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
. Society. Tommy Boy Silver
Matnlll'ellm Rock Tracks
.
at
f
L.abeVTonvny Boy.
1 o
(Comptled from a nation sampe
'Tell Me· Who, " lamia ..
3
wrplay supplied by Broadcast Data . Elektra/EEG.
~ys~) Been Awhile," Staind. 4 . "Absolutely ~ot," De~ah CoK. J.
A"p!Etekt
5. "Thank You , D1do. An. Ia.
r
"How~
A
d
Me
.
Nickel6. 'Stand Still," Aubrey. Groovili1
2
~ck Roecl~nne~m n
'
cious'Sirictly Rhythm.
.
-&amp;t,·
•
Tool
Tool
DissectionaJ
7.
"Name
Of
The
Game,'
Crystal
3
~:·.
p
ddkl
Of
Mudd
Fla;..
Mothod.
OutposVGeffenllnterscope.
·
4
' tu
·
8. "Keep It' Coming." 7 (feat. Mona
Ie·ss/G effenll
n erscope.
M l K' St t
5. "Crawling," Unkin Park. . Warner
on~IR. ong .. r~~sement Jaxx.
9.
B(OS
omeo,
·
·
• Di
XUAstrelwerks.
.
6. "Down With Ire Sickness, s- 10 "Someone To Call My Lover,"
turbed. Giani/Repnse.
·
.
7 "Astounded " Tanlric Maverick
Janet. Virgin.
• · "Bod" • D• . Pool Wtnd up
Hot Lalln Tracks
8. , 1es, rowrnng
;
· · (Compiled from national latin radio
9. t \Msh Y\)U Were Here, Incubus. airplay reports)
lmmortai!Epte
"Como Se C U H rida • J ·
10. "Greed," Godsmack. Republic.
1.
ura na e , OC1
Modem Rock Tracks
ll"!asqu~z. SonY Discos .
.JCom .1ed f
at samp'te 0 f 2. Azul, Cnstian. Ariola.
,
PI
rom 8 na
3 "Como Olviclar" Olga Tanon. WEA
• airplay supplied by Broadcast Oata t..i.tina.
'
• •Sty~Sterns)th Criminal " Allen Ant Farm. 4: "0 Me Voy 0 Te Vas," MarcoAntot t' o n

...

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•
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N~w Nolz"(DreamWorks.

2000 Chevy
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'

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• AM/FM Stereo With Cass.

•

· Taxes. Tags, Til~ Fees exira. Rebate included In sate pflce ol new velliCte i~led where applicable. "On approv~ credt. On selected models. Not resPon~ble for typographical errors.
Pnoos Good Augosl 31 sl Through September 31d.
·
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9 "Sesame • Ricardo Monlaner.
WEA Latina. '
10: "Abrazame Muy Fuerte." Juan
Gabriel. Ariola.
Copyright 2001. BPI Communica·
lions Inc. and SoundScan Inc.
The Billboard Latin 50 ·
(Compiled from a national sample of
sates reports collected, compiled and
provided by SoundScan)
1 "Uniendo Fronteras " Los T~gres
Del Norte. Fonovisa. '
2. "Historia Musical Romanlica."
Grupe Bryndis Disa.
3. "Historia Musical." Los Angeles
Azules. Disc..
4. "Paulina," Paulina Rubio. Universal
Latino. (Gold)
5. "Shhhl" A.B. Quintanolla Y Los
Kumbla Kings. EMI latin.
6. "Historia De Un Idola Vol. 1."
VICente Fernandez. Sony Discos
7. "Despreciado." Lupillo Rivera.
Sony Discos. (Gold)

It's fast and simple.

2. . Fat Up, Sum 41 . Island.
D'
·
3. "Clint Eastwood," Goritlaz. Virgin.
·~Pueden
Decir
"
Gilberta
Santa
6
4. "Scl1ism," Toot Tool Di~al. _
Sony Di~.
.
5. "How You Remond Me, NICkel . 7. "Me vas A Extranar," Pepe Agwlar.

•
:•
·:
•

6. "I \Msh You Were Here." Incubus.
tmmortaiiE~w7. "Control, Puddle Of Mudd. Fla
less/Geftenllnterscope.. ,
.
8.. •trs Been Awhile, Stalnd.
Alp/Eklktra. •
,
9. "Hash P1pe; Weeze': Geffen;
10. "Down With The Sickness, .Otsturbed. Gtani/Reprise.
Hot Country Singles
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mon
coun., ra o
Data Systems)
.
l."~stln," Blake S~on . Gtant •
2. I m Just Talkin AboUt Tonght,
Toby Keith. OreamWorl&lt;s.
, .
3. 'Where ~ Blacktop Ends, Keith
Urban. Capitol.
•
4. "What I Really Meant To Say,
Cyndi Thomson .. Capitol.
5. _"Only In Amenca, Brool&lt;s &amp; Ounn.
Arista Nashville.
•
6.. , Would've Lolled You ""!yway,
Tnsha Yearwood. MCA Nashvi!kl·
7. ' Angray All The lime . Tim
McGraw. Curb.
8. "Downtime," Jo Dee Messina .

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�ealth Beat

Page C&amp;
Sunday, September 2, 2001

..

~esearchers .discover why aspirin
I;;'ASHINGTON (AP)- In a disto new therapies
for type 2 diabetes, researchers have
solved a decades-old mystery of why
high doses of aspirin lower blood
sugar levels and make cells more sen-

•

large doses of aspirin. But nobody
knew why this happened and there
was no follow up.
Until now. Researchers at Harvard
University and the University of California, San Diego, report Friday in
sitive to insulin.
the journal Science that in srudies
In 1876,a doctor discovered that his using diabetic mice they have found
diabetic patients improved with doses that high doses of aspirin block the
of an aspirin-like drug. He reported· action of an enzyme called ik.B kinase
the r6ult, but there was little interest Beta, or ikk.Beta, and that this, ih turn,
by others.
causes the body to be more sensitive
In 1901 and later in the l&lt;i50s, still to insulin. The result is that blood
other doctors also found that diabetics sugar levels drop.
seemed to get better for a time on
"This study helps ·us understand

covery that may lead

Follow the rnles

helps type 2 diabetics

BY lARRY BLASKO

what causes insuli.-! insensitivity due for some disorders, can cause serious
to obesity and a high fat diet," said Dr. side effects, such as intestinal bleeding,
Steven E. Shoe!son, a resc&gt;rcher at the dizziness and nausea.
Joslin Diabetes Center and the Har"We strongly recommend against
vard Medical School in Boston and anybody considering treating their
lead author of the srudy.
diabetes with aspirin," Shoelson said.
Although aspirin can have some
What Shoelson and his co..workers
effect against diabetes over time, are looking for is a chemical molecule
Shoelson said the dosage required is that · blocks the action of ikkBeta
dangerous. To lower blood sugar in a without the sid~ effects of aspirin.
diabetic, he said, would require 6-8
"We now h•ve a defined protein
grams of aspirin for long periods of target and we are trying to find drugs
time. Two regular ·aspirin tablets are against it," he said.
about 0.65 grams.
. Some preliminary studies in mice
High doses of aspirin, although used have been promising, said Shoelson,

"Most students get here
and think, 'Oh, it's freedom. I
ca n do whatever I want
without .mom ·and dad find.ing out,"' said Kelly Hill, a
junior at Michigan." A lot of
them don't know what their
limits are."
LSU is the nation's No. 2
party school behind the University of Tennessee, according to an annual list released
last week by The Princeton
Review. School officials
hope to rid themselves of the
image, particularly after the
August 1997 death of a
freshman who celebrated his
acceptance into a fraternity
with a night of drinking.
The stereotype is hard to
shake because Louisiana fosters its fun-loving image to
attract tourists. The state's
legal drinking age was raised
from 18 to 21 only in 1995
a law · the Louisiana
Supreme · Court declared
unconstitutional before it
reversed itself.
Tailgating before · LSU
football games, Mardi Gras ·
parades and crawfish boils
typically involve beer. When
. the drinking age was 18 only
a few years ago, students

but it will take years of research before
any result can be tried in humans.
Dr. Maljorie Mau, a diabetes
researcher at the University of
Hawaii, said "it would be exciting" if
the researchers develop a new enzyme
target for a diabetes drug, but she cautioned that much more study is needed before such a drug could ever be
offered to patients.
"There is a lot of stuff' that looks
promising in mice that just doesn't
pan out over time," she said. "It is a
long way to the clinic and mice are
not humans."

Health .insurers fight back against
phamaceutical marketing clout
NEWYORK (AP) - Phar- paigns that pharmaceutical Louisville, Ky-based insurer.
maceutical makers ~pend hi!- companies use to tout their "We have to give them information so they can be engaged ".
lions of dollars a year to adver- drugs.
tise their name brands, and to
Health insurers say market- in the process and have power
counter that clout, some health ing creates a demand for drugs to choose."
Aerming said that's not easy
insurers are more aggressively that have less expensive equivtrying to switch patients to alents. The problem, health because pharmaceutical comcheaper medicines.
executives say, is thai most doc- panies spend huge amounts
Insurers are writing letters to tors and consumers with annually on marketing.
consumers and doc'tors, asking employer-provided insurance
Last year, the pharmaceutical
them to reconsider their pre- don't realize the real cost of companies spent S15.7 billion
,,
·scription choices and call their drugs. Eniployers offer plans on marketing; a 13· percent
attention to cheaper alterna- where consumers pay only a increase over 1999, according
. lives. They are also planning to small portion of the price.
to IMS Health, a market
substantially increase the co"We can't continue to pro- research firm. Of that amount, : 1
payment for new ·drugs and · teet consumers from the costs," direct-to-consumer advertising
medicines for which effective said William Fletming, vice - . via television, radio and
alternatives exist at lower cost. president of H umana Inc., a print - toraled $2.5 billion.
. Prescription drug costs rose
16.3 percent last year and
expected to grow nearly 20
percent both this year and in
THANK YOU
2002, according to Segal Co., a ~ JIVIDEN'S FARM
New York~based employee
. David Shaffer
~ EQUIPMENT
benefits consulting firm.
&amp;.. Larry Miller
&amp; JIVIDEN'S
Pharmacy costs are climbing ~
of Ohio Valley Bank
for many reasons, among them ~ PERFORMANCE
for Purchasing My
HORSES
a huge variety of new treat- ~
200 I Market Hog.
~
for
purchasing
my
~
ments and an aging population
that uses more drugs. But ~ · 2001 Market Rog. ~
ASHLEY CLARY
health insurers also point to the
~BRYCE
CLARY~
Pairs and Spares 4·H
expe nsive marketing cam- , Palrl!f and S are8 &lt;I·H t'

THANK YOU

---------

---- ---

THIS FORM MAY RE CI.II'P&gt;:Il OUT AND SENT OR VOU MAV COPY OR OTIIERWISE REPRODUCE IT.

Area Agency on Aging ·
District 7's 2001 Senior Expo

. Health Promotion - Disease Prevention Service
FREE J:tEALTH SCREENS: Cholesterol Screens, Body Fat
Analysis, Personal Wellness Profile, Hearing Screens,
Blood Pressures, Osteoporosis Screens, Oxymetrles,
Glucose Testing, Mobite Health Unit to provide breast
exams, plus give vouchers for mammograms to those that
qualify, and more. A pharmacist will be .there all day to
answer any medication questions. Information about a
pharmacy program, for free prescription medications, If you
qualify (income eligible).

CASE NO. C·2·98-373

behalf of themselves and
aJI others similarly situated,
Plaintiffs
vs.
GALLIA METROI'OLITAN HOUSING
AUTHORITY. et ol..

MAGISTRATE JUDGE KING

-~11~-1

Defendants.

: Name:
,
Soc. Sec. No.: _ _ _ _ _ _ __
(List all names used at any times you lived at GME)
1
I

Current Address: ___________________

Tele.: (

),_ _ _ _ _ __

I

E-mail:--:----:-:---Name, Address and Phone Number of persons who will also know where you live:

As best you can remember, list the apt. nos. and approximate dates·during which you lived a•
GMH.
Continue on another sheet if necessary.
Apt. No.
rom About _ _ _ _ _To about----Apt. No.
From About
To about----'--Apt. No.
rom About
To about----Apt. No.
. rom About
To about-----

Platinum Sponsors-for EXPO 2001 are-Best · Choice
Homecare, Family Senior Care Inc., Heartland Home Care,
Lawrence County CAO, Neal Hatcher Real Estate, PepsiCola Bottling Company of Portsmouth, and VRI.

Do you have any papers about maintenance or repair charges which you paid or GMHA
wanted you to pay , while you lived there or when you moved out?
'
YES
NO
.

Gold Sponsors for EXPO 2001- ate Comprehensive Health
Care, USSA, Inc. Multi-Purpose Senior Citizens Center, Life
Ambulance, Tri-State Security Systems, Inc., Tim Horton's
of Portsmouth, Ultimate Health Care, Inc.

IF YOU DO, THOSE PAPERS ARE IMPORTANT TO YOUR CLAIM. MA~
. CERTAIN YOU ATTACH A COPY OF THEM TO THIS 'cLAIM FORM BEFORE
YOU SEND IT IN!
.

ENTERTAINMENT • "Tribute to Elvis" by Dwight Icenhower,
Singer
.
·
·
Steve Dawes from Central Church of Christ, plus more.

Date

A new addition this year will be an Antique/Old Car Exhibit.

Signature

FILL OUT, SIGN 'AND RETURN THIS CLAIM TO:
EQUAL JUSTICE FOUNDATION (800-898-0545)
'
Suite 300 36 West Gay Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215
Attn: Claim Form

For an exhibit booth or for more information,
:.

ALL CLAIMS MUST BE RECEIVED BY 5:00P.M. ON OCTOBER 8, 2001

----··················-·· ...•...........

.'

--·

froze tht.t m::tchine. No mouse,

no keyboard, nothing - · just
the bing-bing-buzz sounJ .1
system makes wh~n it's telling
you to get losr. l got the s.1me
result after rebooting six
times . The only option was to
uninstall the new· software
·and use the backup CDROM .
The problem was,] co uldn't
find that CD. An hours-long
search yielded an older backup disc from February 2000.
I worked around the problem by installing. Microsoft
Money, another checkbook
and personal-finance.. program. I converted the data
that I had, downloaded the
last three months of transactions from the banks and

rummaged ·throu gh filt· c:tbinets for more than a year of
p.tper records.
The next couple of weekends will be spent re-entering
that data, while th e CompuDevil snickers.
Is Quicken· to blame'
Nope. The software · functioned perfectly on a different
machine.
After I enter all the •data
into Microsoft Money - and
back it up to the teeth - I'll
try to install Quicken again .
But this time, I'll follow The
R(l]es.

•••

Questions and comments
are welcome. Send them to
Larry Blasko, AP, 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY
10020-1666. Or e- mail
lblasko@ap.org.

·Single-use cameras
are better than ever
get more of the subject in
focus. Some high-e nd modWhen you don't want to els are now equipped with
take your expensive cam- lenses that rival those on 35. era out in the rain, sleet or nlnl cameras.
SJJoW, single- use cameras
No
matter
which
help you capture your mem- single-use
camera
you
ories. These small, practical choose, here are a few tips on
cameras are producing bethow to get the most out of
ter pictures than ever before. your tiny wonder.
and they are gaining popuRead the ins tructions
larity.
printe.d on the back ~f the
According to a study by camera, where you 'll find the
the Photo Marketing Associminimum flash and miniation International , a trade mum camera-to-subject disorganization, the sale of sin- tances. If you di sregard these
gle-use cameras is on the rise guidelines, the pictures will
in the United States: In be
overexposed
and
1999,
approximate- 04t-of-focus.
ly 138,000,000 units were so
When
shooting outPOINT AND SHOOT- Single-use cameras are great for when .
ld. Last year, almost 165,000, doors, use your hand to
y ou want to keep your expensive camera out of the rain, sleet,
000 were sold. That's a lot of shade any sunlight that falls
sand or snow. A weatherproof model was used to photograph
little cameras.
on the lens. This problem
this boy playing in the rain. (AP Photo).
Single-use cameras come comes up often if you are
loaded with film, and the shooting into the sun or
~
minimum security dorm and entire camera is brought to when the su n is above you or
'•
a prison industries building. .. the ~ photofinisher for devel- offto·your side. If you don't
"I think that Senator Craigo oping. APS (Advanced Photo provide shade, the 1'
_f(Om Page Cl._~ identified, not onl}'.-lhaLthis .System) and 35-mm cam- · cause ·"lens !Jar·L__m~iQ!JlL
eras are available, as- well as picture
will
was something that needed to
waterproof,
panoramic,
flash
soft
and
blurry.
:co return into the community. get done, but that this was the
To ·soften the light from
"; "This is a correctional facil- right pl:ice to do it, because and no-flash models.
Today's
single-use'.
camthe
camera's flash when tak:ity. We're actually trying to the state already owned the
eras use ISO 800 film, which ing a portrait, hold a piece of
·:find ways to get people reha- land, there was at least one
offers better color and less
tissue paper over the flash .
bilitative tools, so they don't building we could make use of
grain than the ISO 400 film
~repeat and end up back · in and that there was obviously used in older models. The This also will reduce the
~prison," Canterbury said. an issue of the need for jobs in faster film allows single-use maximum flash range, which
is usually 12 to 15 feet. You
•"After all, it's not called the
cameras to freeze action and will have to get doser to
:Division of Punishment, it's this area," Canterbury said.
:called the Division ·ofCorrec"And these are career jobs.
your
subject,
probably
·tions."
People spend their lives doing
around six· to eight feet.. ·
The faci lity also will house a these jobs."
.courtroom that will use cutCanterbury reassured that
.;ting edge asynchronous trans- . the historical graveyard locat:;fer mode technology to trans- ed on the property is protect.from Page Cl
:;mit video and audio via tele- ed from construction and that
) hone line with television public access will remain
"I had this beautiful red
•: quality so inmates do not have available. He also added one of squirrel playing at my feet for
:to be transported to the cour- the class of inmates allowed to to · minutes oblivious that I
;chouse.
'
do work around the grounds . was there: you see nature at
:· With this system, closed cir- also will maintain the ceme- it'S&gt; best."
~:Cuit arraignments, evidentiary tery.
The Pitchfords say they
~'hearings, bond reduction
The Regional Jail Authority enjoy hunting together.
"He's experiencing the
)hearings, and other court hopes to open the facility in
excitement
and thrill of being
$processes that don't involve the summer of 2002 and
~full trials can be conducted on anticipates hiring to begin a new hunter through me and
1
it's ·so much fun," Rhonda
:.site.
within the next few months.
~ The facility will house
"At this point, we feel we Pitchford said.
"This event will allow
\medium and maximum secu- will fill159 positions," jim said
~ity inmates and is being con- Reubenstein, commissioner of women the chance to go out
and try some of these outdoor
~~eructed to maximum security the Division of Corrections.
sports
and activities to see if
~~tandards including fencing · Jobs will range from cooks,
:Ond structural reinforcements. maintenance workers, support they like it without the
• "Our
outer
exterior staff and correctional officers expense of buying your own
~erimeter walls, for security to business managers, coun- equipment.
, "All of the equipment ·will
~.purposes, amountsr to a 14· ·
-;r
se 1ors, d entists, phySictans,
and be provided so just bring
"inch block," said Chilton Lilly, .
I
.
·
accountin g technicians.
yourself and dress in some
.:construction manager.
Hires will come from the comfortable clothes."
.
&amp;
; He noted that even using a Division of Corrections. diviTo register, call Pitchford at
~hammer drill, it took one of
245-5110; or e-mail her at
,:the electricians two days to sian of personnel register.
.~emove just one block.
Upon completion, the women-n&amp;
~ A lot of thought went into Regional Jail Authority will outdoors@yahoo.com.
~he design of the building and hold an open house.
:architectural detailing, inci!Jd.~ ng th~ vau lted ceiling in the
~ublic foyer.
.
·
BY RICK SAMMON

AP WEEKLY FEATURES

poo•·sAND SPAS . .,. _, ,.

I

I further swear "Dr affirm under penalty that the facts listed above are true to the best of my
knowledge.
'' ·

BINGO- CAKE AUCTION - DOOR PRIZES -AND MOREl

P\'Devil's rorture be!}ln .
Openin~ those accounts

The Gardener~ Guide:
Weeding brings immediate
and long-term rewards
BY LEE REICH
AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Hot weather may not
inspire any more gardening activity than plucking
a juicy tomato off the
vine, but don't neglect
weeding.
Untended
' weeds become worse
troublemakers later.
Autumn is just around
the corner, and its cool,
moist weather is just
what
horse
nettle,
bindweed, and other
perennial weeds need to
firmly establish a home in
your
garden.
Weeds
weaken garden plants,
diminishing the show of
flowers and' the yields of
vegetables.
Killing weeds now not
only cuts the amount of
weeding you'll have ro
do next spring, it also
will leave some bare soil
in which to sow seeds in
the coming weeks. Many
· perennial flowers - delphinium, clematis, and
evening primrose, for
example ~ dc:i well if
sown in autumn. Seeds of
annuals suc h as snapdragon, poppy, and pansy can
· lie in the ground through
winter, ready to come to
life with the first breath
of spring.
Autumn · is a bountiful
time in the garden. The
cool weather brings out
the best in cabbages,
Brussels sp routs, lettu ces,

mustard
greens
and
turnips. Flowers such as
stonecrop sedum, delphinium, vio la , and, of
course, chrysanthemum
will burst into bloom.
Even annuals like calen'dula,
snapdragon.,
alyssum, and petunia
continue their show until
the mercury plummets
well below fr~ezing.
But you 're not going tO
be able to see your flow~
ers if th ey're lost in a sea
of weeds. You can kill the
weeds with a hoe or a
rototiller, or you can just
J?end down a11d rip them
out with your bare hands,
roots and all. You also can
smother them beneath
mulch . Four .layers of wet
newspaper, topped by
wood chips or straw t(l
hide the paper and hold
it down, effectively kills
weeds.
.
Weeding need not be a
.
k S
aunnng tas . tart at
one end of the garden, .
'" then slowly and methodJcally make your way
across to the other side.
Keep an eye on what you
are doing, not what you
have left to do. Work in
the cool of early morn in¥
or evening, pleasant times
to be in the garden, even
if you are weeding.
·
d

THE PIIINC!88 DIAIIIU (Gl
7:00 I 1:20 OAILY
MATNEE8 SAT· IUN'1:DO· 3:20

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

We at BioEnergetics for Balanced Living are proud to offer
all area residents a superior health program to help feel your
very best!! A painless, I hour BioEnergetic Evaluation,
performed by Dr. Nick W. Robinson, can help address the
majority of today's health concerns:

p••·····-~---··-··········--···············-------

I

or the CompuDevil Will get you!

Don't Let Energy Deficiencies Keep
You from Feeling Your Best!!

1

1
I

&amp;unbaP tt:nnrs -ilrntmrt • Page C7

·Outdoors

HAVE YOU EVER LIVED AT GALLIA MET ESTATES, 3814 BUCK RIDGE ROAD, BIDWELL, OHIO?
If so, you may be entitled to share in a class action settlement Agreement made on behalf of all persons who did or willliYe at Gallia Met Estales
at any time lifter September I, 1980.
~
·
.
ro·apply, you must fill out ~his fonn as completely as you can, attaCh documents you have as described below, sign the fonn and mail it to the
Equal Justice Foundation, The fonn must be received by Equal Justice Foundation by 5:00PM on October 8, 2001. If you do not file a claim by
thai deudline, you will give up all rights to any share of the seulement
If filed, your claim and any documents sent with it will be reviewed along with ·GMHA documents concerning you. An independent master,
the supervision of·thc Coun, will recommend what share of the settlement fund, if 8fly, you might receive as a result. You will be nolificd
that recommendation by mail. It is not known precisely how long this process will take.
THEREFORE IT IS VERY IMPORTANT TO NOTIFY THE EQUAL JUSTICE FOUNDATION IN WRITING IF YOUR' ADDRESS
TELEPHONE NUMBER CHANGES.

This event is sponsored by the ·Area Agency on Aging
District 7 and cosponsored by McNelly Patrick Insurance
and Ohio Valley Bank.
·

call Sharon Bowman at 1-800-582-7277.
Booths are free, Come join the fun.

HEATHER ARMSTRONG and
CHASTITY JAMISON, on

ddleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Lakin ·

GMHA CLASS MEMBER CLAIM FORM

,_---~n;~e~ar~'Jy~fro~:n~;e:~-:fu~·u~r~th~o~f~th~o~se~~:!~n~a·~~n~ig~h!~tu~o~f1t:d~r~in~k~i~n~g~,-~re~m~~em~~b~er~,p~ro~re=s~so~r:s~h~o~ld~in~g~--~----------~~=~lffi~U~~~~~~]) STATES UIS'f.RIC'f- C()lJRT-FOR THE SOUTHERN mSTRICT OF OHIO
EASTERN ])IVISION

WHEN: Friday, September 7, 2001
TIME: _
9:00 a.m . .;. 3:00 p.m.
·WHERE: Scioto County Fairgrounds
in Lucasville, Ohio

If: .

••

Pomerov •

Quicken 98, worked perfectly.
There are two cardinal ruks
If I h.. d fullowed Rule 2 in personal computing, and and the advice of Quicken,
the CompuDevil inflicts hor- which urges users to back up
rible punishment if they're all data - perhaps my week-broken.
end would have been more
Rule 1: If it ain't broke, enjoyable.
'
don't fix it.
But I listened to the ComRule 2: If you· ignore Rule puDevil. " Feeding five flopI, back · up all your data.
pies into that thing is a waste
I violated both commands of tinte," the devil said.
one recent Friday, resulting in "Besides, you made a CDa weekend of frustration.
ROM copy of that whole
Intuit senr a review copy of directory just a couple of
Quicken Deluxe 2002. I have months ago."
·
used versions of the check· I installed the new . probook and personal-finance gram . Fifteen years of data
software for more than IS appeared: three checking
years.
accounts,
two
savmgs
The CompuDevil said, accounts, a 40 l K retirement
"Let's upgrade, Big Guy!"
account and three mortgageNever · mind that the pro- record accounts.
gram I was already using,
That was when the ComASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'

Study shows parents fret over binge
drinking; colleges say they should .
BATON ROUGE, La.
. "Four drinks in an hour?
(AP) - The bars line each That's when I'm taking my
side of Louisiana State Uni- time," said Monson, a 20versity's campus, offering free year-old junior at LSU.
shots and other drink spe- · "That is a lot, but that's pretcials. So many. ,choices, but ty average for a lot of college
Rebekah lvionson knows the students. When I go to bars, I
secret- drink fast and move don't see people nursing
on.
beers. I see people throwing
J As college students head b~ck shots and chasing it
back to school, an American with beers."
Medical Association survey
Mpnson hopes to develop
released Wednesday shows responsible drinking habits,
binge drinking is among but she said that's pretty
their parents' top concerns: tough to do as a college stu95 percent said excessive dent. "One of my friends was
drinking is a serious threat to hospitalized for alcohol poitheir children and 85 percent soning, and she still goes out
said easy access to alcGhol in and throws them back with
college communities con- the best of us," Monson said.
tributes to the problem.
College students don't
"We can no longer treat seem dissuaded by drinkingbinge drinking as a rite of related deaths, including sevpassage. It's a major health ' era! fatalities during the last
!hreat not only to binge school year.
drinkers but also to the peoA University of Michigan
pie around them," said Dr. J. student celebrating his 21st
Edward · Hill, AMA's chair- birthday died after downing
man-elect.
his 20th shot in I 0 minutes.
Binge drinking often is An Old Dominion Universidescribed as four drinks ty student choked to death
-wi thin an hour for a female on his own vomit during a
pr five drinks in an hour for pledge-week drinking binge.
a male. An estimated 44 per- A Colgate University student
tent of college students is facing four years in prison
.admit [0 binge drinking, and after crashing intO a tree dur-

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

,.
.'f

' "Especially with women, ...,...'t:.:d
~mny of their children will be ll'W'~
•
" " " '''
~oming through. a11d th~re's
GROUND POOL a»V
~10 reason to make it look like
•;a forbidding place," Canter- .
1~~:~~~
-""-."'
............ ........$19.~
;bury said.
r~
15' ................. ~~-w10' .................... $32.99
' "They already know mom
24'
.................... $52.99
.:is in jail, they already know
15X30
OVAL.. .... $47.99
,:that that's not a good thing, so
:there's no reason to make
1'1 GROutiD POOL COVERS
:chem worry that there's some..... .$53.99 IBX36 ........ $63.99 20X•O ........ $74.99
thing about this facility is
;going to hurt her."
·
2973 PIEDMONT RD.
;: The state is hoping to
HUNfiNGTON, WV
:obtain SS0-60 million in bond
rnOI~eys thi's f.1lJ to construct a

POOLS, INC. ·

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* natural defense
* .stress management
* mental performance
*joint bone support
* detoxification
* energy vitality
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* children's needs
It is time now for you to feel better and regain control of

your life. We can help! Call 740.339.1028 now and leave
your name, number and a description of your major health
concern. We will call you and expla-in to you how our
program is designed to meet your specific needs. *The
· Doctor will call you back personally! * You must hurry and
call now because Dr. Robinson ·has only 17 appointments
left for September. Call. now 740.339.1028 and start feeling
your very ·best!

•

.•

�ealth Beat

Page C&amp;
Sunday, September 2, 2001

..

~esearchers .discover why aspirin
I;;'ASHINGTON (AP)- In a disto new therapies
for type 2 diabetes, researchers have
solved a decades-old mystery of why
high doses of aspirin lower blood
sugar levels and make cells more sen-

•

large doses of aspirin. But nobody
knew why this happened and there
was no follow up.
Until now. Researchers at Harvard
University and the University of California, San Diego, report Friday in
sitive to insulin.
the journal Science that in srudies
In 1876,a doctor discovered that his using diabetic mice they have found
diabetic patients improved with doses that high doses of aspirin block the
of an aspirin-like drug. He reported· action of an enzyme called ik.B kinase
the r6ult, but there was little interest Beta, or ikk.Beta, and that this, ih turn,
by others.
causes the body to be more sensitive
In 1901 and later in the l&lt;i50s, still to insulin. The result is that blood
other doctors also found that diabetics sugar levels drop.
seemed to get better for a time on
"This study helps ·us understand

covery that may lead

Follow the rnles

helps type 2 diabetics

BY lARRY BLASKO

what causes insuli.-! insensitivity due for some disorders, can cause serious
to obesity and a high fat diet," said Dr. side effects, such as intestinal bleeding,
Steven E. Shoe!son, a resc&gt;rcher at the dizziness and nausea.
Joslin Diabetes Center and the Har"We strongly recommend against
vard Medical School in Boston and anybody considering treating their
lead author of the srudy.
diabetes with aspirin," Shoelson said.
Although aspirin can have some
What Shoelson and his co..workers
effect against diabetes over time, are looking for is a chemical molecule
Shoelson said the dosage required is that · blocks the action of ikkBeta
dangerous. To lower blood sugar in a without the sid~ effects of aspirin.
diabetic, he said, would require 6-8
"We now h•ve a defined protein
grams of aspirin for long periods of target and we are trying to find drugs
time. Two regular ·aspirin tablets are against it," he said.
about 0.65 grams.
. Some preliminary studies in mice
High doses of aspirin, although used have been promising, said Shoelson,

"Most students get here
and think, 'Oh, it's freedom. I
ca n do whatever I want
without .mom ·and dad find.ing out,"' said Kelly Hill, a
junior at Michigan." A lot of
them don't know what their
limits are."
LSU is the nation's No. 2
party school behind the University of Tennessee, according to an annual list released
last week by The Princeton
Review. School officials
hope to rid themselves of the
image, particularly after the
August 1997 death of a
freshman who celebrated his
acceptance into a fraternity
with a night of drinking.
The stereotype is hard to
shake because Louisiana fosters its fun-loving image to
attract tourists. The state's
legal drinking age was raised
from 18 to 21 only in 1995
a law · the Louisiana
Supreme · Court declared
unconstitutional before it
reversed itself.
Tailgating before · LSU
football games, Mardi Gras ·
parades and crawfish boils
typically involve beer. When
. the drinking age was 18 only
a few years ago, students

but it will take years of research before
any result can be tried in humans.
Dr. Maljorie Mau, a diabetes
researcher at the University of
Hawaii, said "it would be exciting" if
the researchers develop a new enzyme
target for a diabetes drug, but she cautioned that much more study is needed before such a drug could ever be
offered to patients.
"There is a lot of stuff' that looks
promising in mice that just doesn't
pan out over time," she said. "It is a
long way to the clinic and mice are
not humans."

Health .insurers fight back against
phamaceutical marketing clout
NEWYORK (AP) - Phar- paigns that pharmaceutical Louisville, Ky-based insurer.
maceutical makers ~pend hi!- companies use to tout their "We have to give them information so they can be engaged ".
lions of dollars a year to adver- drugs.
tise their name brands, and to
Health insurers say market- in the process and have power
counter that clout, some health ing creates a demand for drugs to choose."
Aerming said that's not easy
insurers are more aggressively that have less expensive equivtrying to switch patients to alents. The problem, health because pharmaceutical comcheaper medicines.
executives say, is thai most doc- panies spend huge amounts
Insurers are writing letters to tors and consumers with annually on marketing.
consumers and doc'tors, asking employer-provided insurance
Last year, the pharmaceutical
them to reconsider their pre- don't realize the real cost of companies spent S15.7 billion
,,
·scription choices and call their drugs. Eniployers offer plans on marketing; a 13· percent
attention to cheaper alterna- where consumers pay only a increase over 1999, according
. lives. They are also planning to small portion of the price.
to IMS Health, a market
substantially increase the co"We can't continue to pro- research firm. Of that amount, : 1
payment for new ·drugs and · teet consumers from the costs," direct-to-consumer advertising
medicines for which effective said William Fletming, vice - . via television, radio and
alternatives exist at lower cost. president of H umana Inc., a print - toraled $2.5 billion.
. Prescription drug costs rose
16.3 percent last year and
expected to grow nearly 20
percent both this year and in
THANK YOU
2002, according to Segal Co., a ~ JIVIDEN'S FARM
New York~based employee
. David Shaffer
~ EQUIPMENT
benefits consulting firm.
&amp;.. Larry Miller
&amp; JIVIDEN'S
Pharmacy costs are climbing ~
of Ohio Valley Bank
for many reasons, among them ~ PERFORMANCE
for Purchasing My
HORSES
a huge variety of new treat- ~
200 I Market Hog.
~
for
purchasing
my
~
ments and an aging population
that uses more drugs. But ~ · 2001 Market Rog. ~
ASHLEY CLARY
health insurers also point to the
~BRYCE
CLARY~
Pairs and Spares 4·H
expe nsive marketing cam- , Palrl!f and S are8 &lt;I·H t'

THANK YOU

---------

---- ---

THIS FORM MAY RE CI.II'P&gt;:Il OUT AND SENT OR VOU MAV COPY OR OTIIERWISE REPRODUCE IT.

Area Agency on Aging ·
District 7's 2001 Senior Expo

. Health Promotion - Disease Prevention Service
FREE J:tEALTH SCREENS: Cholesterol Screens, Body Fat
Analysis, Personal Wellness Profile, Hearing Screens,
Blood Pressures, Osteoporosis Screens, Oxymetrles,
Glucose Testing, Mobite Health Unit to provide breast
exams, plus give vouchers for mammograms to those that
qualify, and more. A pharmacist will be .there all day to
answer any medication questions. Information about a
pharmacy program, for free prescription medications, If you
qualify (income eligible).

CASE NO. C·2·98-373

behalf of themselves and
aJI others similarly situated,
Plaintiffs
vs.
GALLIA METROI'OLITAN HOUSING
AUTHORITY. et ol..

MAGISTRATE JUDGE KING

-~11~-1

Defendants.

: Name:
,
Soc. Sec. No.: _ _ _ _ _ _ __
(List all names used at any times you lived at GME)
1
I

Current Address: ___________________

Tele.: (

),_ _ _ _ _ __

I

E-mail:--:----:-:---Name, Address and Phone Number of persons who will also know where you live:

As best you can remember, list the apt. nos. and approximate dates·during which you lived a•
GMH.
Continue on another sheet if necessary.
Apt. No.
rom About _ _ _ _ _To about----Apt. No.
From About
To about----'--Apt. No.
rom About
To about----Apt. No.
. rom About
To about-----

Platinum Sponsors-for EXPO 2001 are-Best · Choice
Homecare, Family Senior Care Inc., Heartland Home Care,
Lawrence County CAO, Neal Hatcher Real Estate, PepsiCola Bottling Company of Portsmouth, and VRI.

Do you have any papers about maintenance or repair charges which you paid or GMHA
wanted you to pay , while you lived there or when you moved out?
'
YES
NO
.

Gold Sponsors for EXPO 2001- ate Comprehensive Health
Care, USSA, Inc. Multi-Purpose Senior Citizens Center, Life
Ambulance, Tri-State Security Systems, Inc., Tim Horton's
of Portsmouth, Ultimate Health Care, Inc.

IF YOU DO, THOSE PAPERS ARE IMPORTANT TO YOUR CLAIM. MA~
. CERTAIN YOU ATTACH A COPY OF THEM TO THIS 'cLAIM FORM BEFORE
YOU SEND IT IN!
.

ENTERTAINMENT • "Tribute to Elvis" by Dwight Icenhower,
Singer
.
·
·
Steve Dawes from Central Church of Christ, plus more.

Date

A new addition this year will be an Antique/Old Car Exhibit.

Signature

FILL OUT, SIGN 'AND RETURN THIS CLAIM TO:
EQUAL JUSTICE FOUNDATION (800-898-0545)
'
Suite 300 36 West Gay Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215
Attn: Claim Form

For an exhibit booth or for more information,
:.

ALL CLAIMS MUST BE RECEIVED BY 5:00P.M. ON OCTOBER 8, 2001

----··················-·· ...•...........

.'

--·

froze tht.t m::tchine. No mouse,

no keyboard, nothing - · just
the bing-bing-buzz sounJ .1
system makes wh~n it's telling
you to get losr. l got the s.1me
result after rebooting six
times . The only option was to
uninstall the new· software
·and use the backup CDROM .
The problem was,] co uldn't
find that CD. An hours-long
search yielded an older backup disc from February 2000.
I worked around the problem by installing. Microsoft
Money, another checkbook
and personal-finance.. program. I converted the data
that I had, downloaded the
last three months of transactions from the banks and

rummaged ·throu gh filt· c:tbinets for more than a year of
p.tper records.
The next couple of weekends will be spent re-entering
that data, while th e CompuDevil snickers.
Is Quicken· to blame'
Nope. The software · functioned perfectly on a different
machine.
After I enter all the •data
into Microsoft Money - and
back it up to the teeth - I'll
try to install Quicken again .
But this time, I'll follow The
R(l]es.

•••

Questions and comments
are welcome. Send them to
Larry Blasko, AP, 50 Rockefeller Plaza, New York, NY
10020-1666. Or e- mail
lblasko@ap.org.

·Single-use cameras
are better than ever
get more of the subject in
focus. Some high-e nd modWhen you don't want to els are now equipped with
take your expensive cam- lenses that rival those on 35. era out in the rain, sleet or nlnl cameras.
SJJoW, single- use cameras
No
matter
which
help you capture your mem- single-use
camera
you
ories. These small, practical choose, here are a few tips on
cameras are producing bethow to get the most out of
ter pictures than ever before. your tiny wonder.
and they are gaining popuRead the ins tructions
larity.
printe.d on the back ~f the
According to a study by camera, where you 'll find the
the Photo Marketing Associminimum flash and miniation International , a trade mum camera-to-subject disorganization, the sale of sin- tances. If you di sregard these
gle-use cameras is on the rise guidelines, the pictures will
in the United States: In be
overexposed
and
1999,
approximate- 04t-of-focus.
ly 138,000,000 units were so
When
shooting outPOINT AND SHOOT- Single-use cameras are great for when .
ld. Last year, almost 165,000, doors, use your hand to
y ou want to keep your expensive camera out of the rain, sleet,
000 were sold. That's a lot of shade any sunlight that falls
sand or snow. A weatherproof model was used to photograph
little cameras.
on the lens. This problem
this boy playing in the rain. (AP Photo).
Single-use cameras come comes up often if you are
loaded with film, and the shooting into the sun or
~
minimum security dorm and entire camera is brought to when the su n is above you or
'•
a prison industries building. .. the ~ photofinisher for devel- offto·your side. If you don't
"I think that Senator Craigo oping. APS (Advanced Photo provide shade, the 1'
_f(Om Page Cl._~ identified, not onl}'.-lhaLthis .System) and 35-mm cam- · cause ·"lens !Jar·L__m~iQ!JlL
eras are available, as- well as picture
will
was something that needed to
waterproof,
panoramic,
flash
soft
and
blurry.
:co return into the community. get done, but that this was the
To ·soften the light from
"; "This is a correctional facil- right pl:ice to do it, because and no-flash models.
Today's
single-use'.
camthe
camera's flash when tak:ity. We're actually trying to the state already owned the
eras use ISO 800 film, which ing a portrait, hold a piece of
·:find ways to get people reha- land, there was at least one
offers better color and less
tissue paper over the flash .
bilitative tools, so they don't building we could make use of
grain than the ISO 400 film
~repeat and end up back · in and that there was obviously used in older models. The This also will reduce the
~prison," Canterbury said. an issue of the need for jobs in faster film allows single-use maximum flash range, which
is usually 12 to 15 feet. You
•"After all, it's not called the
cameras to freeze action and will have to get doser to
:Division of Punishment, it's this area," Canterbury said.
:called the Division ·ofCorrec"And these are career jobs.
your
subject,
probably
·tions."
People spend their lives doing
around six· to eight feet.. ·
The faci lity also will house a these jobs."
.courtroom that will use cutCanterbury reassured that
.;ting edge asynchronous trans- . the historical graveyard locat:;fer mode technology to trans- ed on the property is protect.from Page Cl
:;mit video and audio via tele- ed from construction and that
) hone line with television public access will remain
"I had this beautiful red
•: quality so inmates do not have available. He also added one of squirrel playing at my feet for
:to be transported to the cour- the class of inmates allowed to to · minutes oblivious that I
;chouse.
'
do work around the grounds . was there: you see nature at
:· With this system, closed cir- also will maintain the ceme- it'S&gt; best."
~:Cuit arraignments, evidentiary tery.
The Pitchfords say they
~'hearings, bond reduction
The Regional Jail Authority enjoy hunting together.
"He's experiencing the
)hearings, and other court hopes to open the facility in
excitement
and thrill of being
$processes that don't involve the summer of 2002 and
~full trials can be conducted on anticipates hiring to begin a new hunter through me and
1
it's ·so much fun," Rhonda
:.site.
within the next few months.
~ The facility will house
"At this point, we feel we Pitchford said.
"This event will allow
\medium and maximum secu- will fill159 positions," jim said
~ity inmates and is being con- Reubenstein, commissioner of women the chance to go out
and try some of these outdoor
~~eructed to maximum security the Division of Corrections.
sports
and activities to see if
~~tandards including fencing · Jobs will range from cooks,
:Ond structural reinforcements. maintenance workers, support they like it without the
• "Our
outer
exterior staff and correctional officers expense of buying your own
~erimeter walls, for security to business managers, coun- equipment.
, "All of the equipment ·will
~.purposes, amountsr to a 14· ·
-;r
se 1ors, d entists, phySictans,
and be provided so just bring
"inch block," said Chilton Lilly, .
I
.
·
accountin g technicians.
yourself and dress in some
.:construction manager.
Hires will come from the comfortable clothes."
.
&amp;
; He noted that even using a Division of Corrections. diviTo register, call Pitchford at
~hammer drill, it took one of
245-5110; or e-mail her at
,:the electricians two days to sian of personnel register.
.~emove just one block.
Upon completion, the women-n&amp;
~ A lot of thought went into Regional Jail Authority will outdoors@yahoo.com.
~he design of the building and hold an open house.
:architectural detailing, inci!Jd.~ ng th~ vau lted ceiling in the
~ublic foyer.
.
·
BY RICK SAMMON

AP WEEKLY FEATURES

poo•·sAND SPAS . .,. _, ,.

I

I further swear "Dr affirm under penalty that the facts listed above are true to the best of my
knowledge.
'' ·

BINGO- CAKE AUCTION - DOOR PRIZES -AND MOREl

P\'Devil's rorture be!}ln .
Openin~ those accounts

The Gardener~ Guide:
Weeding brings immediate
and long-term rewards
BY LEE REICH
AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Hot weather may not
inspire any more gardening activity than plucking
a juicy tomato off the
vine, but don't neglect
weeding.
Untended
' weeds become worse
troublemakers later.
Autumn is just around
the corner, and its cool,
moist weather is just
what
horse
nettle,
bindweed, and other
perennial weeds need to
firmly establish a home in
your
garden.
Weeds
weaken garden plants,
diminishing the show of
flowers and' the yields of
vegetables.
Killing weeds now not
only cuts the amount of
weeding you'll have ro
do next spring, it also
will leave some bare soil
in which to sow seeds in
the coming weeks. Many
· perennial flowers - delphinium, clematis, and
evening primrose, for
example ~ dc:i well if
sown in autumn. Seeds of
annuals suc h as snapdragon, poppy, and pansy can
· lie in the ground through
winter, ready to come to
life with the first breath
of spring.
Autumn · is a bountiful
time in the garden. The
cool weather brings out
the best in cabbages,
Brussels sp routs, lettu ces,

mustard
greens
and
turnips. Flowers such as
stonecrop sedum, delphinium, vio la , and, of
course, chrysanthemum
will burst into bloom.
Even annuals like calen'dula,
snapdragon.,
alyssum, and petunia
continue their show until
the mercury plummets
well below fr~ezing.
But you 're not going tO
be able to see your flow~
ers if th ey're lost in a sea
of weeds. You can kill the
weeds with a hoe or a
rototiller, or you can just
J?end down a11d rip them
out with your bare hands,
roots and all. You also can
smother them beneath
mulch . Four .layers of wet
newspaper, topped by
wood chips or straw t(l
hide the paper and hold
it down, effectively kills
weeds.
.
Weeding need not be a
.
k S
aunnng tas . tart at
one end of the garden, .
'" then slowly and methodJcally make your way
across to the other side.
Keep an eye on what you
are doing, not what you
have left to do. Work in
the cool of early morn in¥
or evening, pleasant times
to be in the garden, even
if you are weeding.
·
d

THE PIIINC!88 DIAIIIU (Gl
7:00 I 1:20 OAILY
MATNEE8 SAT· IUN'1:DO· 3:20

ALL AGES, ALL TIMES $4.00

We at BioEnergetics for Balanced Living are proud to offer
all area residents a superior health program to help feel your
very best!! A painless, I hour BioEnergetic Evaluation,
performed by Dr. Nick W. Robinson, can help address the
majority of today's health concerns:

p••·····-~---··-··········--···············-------

I

or the CompuDevil Will get you!

Don't Let Energy Deficiencies Keep
You from Feeling Your Best!!

1

1
I

&amp;unbaP tt:nnrs -ilrntmrt • Page C7

·Outdoors

HAVE YOU EVER LIVED AT GALLIA MET ESTATES, 3814 BUCK RIDGE ROAD, BIDWELL, OHIO?
If so, you may be entitled to share in a class action settlement Agreement made on behalf of all persons who did or willliYe at Gallia Met Estales
at any time lifter September I, 1980.
~
·
.
ro·apply, you must fill out ~his fonn as completely as you can, attaCh documents you have as described below, sign the fonn and mail it to the
Equal Justice Foundation, The fonn must be received by Equal Justice Foundation by 5:00PM on October 8, 2001. If you do not file a claim by
thai deudline, you will give up all rights to any share of the seulement
If filed, your claim and any documents sent with it will be reviewed along with ·GMHA documents concerning you. An independent master,
the supervision of·thc Coun, will recommend what share of the settlement fund, if 8fly, you might receive as a result. You will be nolificd
that recommendation by mail. It is not known precisely how long this process will take.
THEREFORE IT IS VERY IMPORTANT TO NOTIFY THE EQUAL JUSTICE FOUNDATION IN WRITING IF YOUR' ADDRESS
TELEPHONE NUMBER CHANGES.

This event is sponsored by the ·Area Agency on Aging
District 7 and cosponsored by McNelly Patrick Insurance
and Ohio Valley Bank.
·

call Sharon Bowman at 1-800-582-7277.
Booths are free, Come join the fun.

HEATHER ARMSTRONG and
CHASTITY JAMISON, on

ddleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

Lakin ·

GMHA CLASS MEMBER CLAIM FORM

,_---~n;~e~ar~'Jy~fro~:n~;e:~-:fu~·u~r~th~o~f~th~o~se~~:!~n~a·~~n~ig~h!~tu~o~f1t:d~r~in~k~i~n~g~,-~re~m~~em~~b~er~,p~ro~re=s~so~r:s~h~o~ld~in~g~--~----------~~=~lffi~U~~~~~~]) STATES UIS'f.RIC'f- C()lJRT-FOR THE SOUTHERN mSTRICT OF OHIO
EASTERN ])IVISION

WHEN: Friday, September 7, 2001
TIME: _
9:00 a.m . .;. 3:00 p.m.
·WHERE: Scioto County Fairgrounds
in Lucasville, Ohio

If: .

••

Pomerov •

Quicken 98, worked perfectly.
There are two cardinal ruks
If I h.. d fullowed Rule 2 in personal computing, and and the advice of Quicken,
the CompuDevil inflicts hor- which urges users to back up
rible punishment if they're all data - perhaps my week-broken.
end would have been more
Rule 1: If it ain't broke, enjoyable.
'
don't fix it.
But I listened to the ComRule 2: If you· ignore Rule puDevil. " Feeding five flopI, back · up all your data.
pies into that thing is a waste
I violated both commands of tinte," the devil said.
one recent Friday, resulting in "Besides, you made a CDa weekend of frustration.
ROM copy of that whole
Intuit senr a review copy of directory just a couple of
Quicken Deluxe 2002. I have months ago."
·
used versions of the check· I installed the new . probook and personal-finance gram . Fifteen years of data
software for more than IS appeared: three checking
years.
accounts,
two
savmgs
The CompuDevil said, accounts, a 40 l K retirement
"Let's upgrade, Big Guy!"
account and three mortgageNever · mind that the pro- record accounts.
gram I was already using,
That was when the ComASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'

Study shows parents fret over binge
drinking; colleges say they should .
BATON ROUGE, La.
. "Four drinks in an hour?
(AP) - The bars line each That's when I'm taking my
side of Louisiana State Uni- time," said Monson, a 20versity's campus, offering free year-old junior at LSU.
shots and other drink spe- · "That is a lot, but that's pretcials. So many. ,choices, but ty average for a lot of college
Rebekah lvionson knows the students. When I go to bars, I
secret- drink fast and move don't see people nursing
on.
beers. I see people throwing
J As college students head b~ck shots and chasing it
back to school, an American with beers."
Medical Association survey
Mpnson hopes to develop
released Wednesday shows responsible drinking habits,
binge drinking is among but she said that's pretty
their parents' top concerns: tough to do as a college stu95 percent said excessive dent. "One of my friends was
drinking is a serious threat to hospitalized for alcohol poitheir children and 85 percent soning, and she still goes out
said easy access to alcGhol in and throws them back with
college communities con- the best of us," Monson said.
tributes to the problem.
College students don't
"We can no longer treat seem dissuaded by drinkingbinge drinking as a rite of related deaths, including sevpassage. It's a major health ' era! fatalities during the last
!hreat not only to binge school year.
drinkers but also to the peoA University of Michigan
pie around them," said Dr. J. student celebrating his 21st
Edward · Hill, AMA's chair- birthday died after downing
man-elect.
his 20th shot in I 0 minutes.
Binge drinking often is An Old Dominion Universidescribed as four drinks ty student choked to death
-wi thin an hour for a female on his own vomit during a
pr five drinks in an hour for pledge-week drinking binge.
a male. An estimated 44 per- A Colgate University student
tent of college students is facing four years in prison
.admit [0 binge drinking, and after crashing intO a tree dur-

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

,.
.'f

' "Especially with women, ...,...'t:.:d
~mny of their children will be ll'W'~
•
" " " '''
~oming through. a11d th~re's
GROUND POOL a»V
~10 reason to make it look like
•;a forbidding place," Canter- .
1~~:~~~
-""-."'
............ ........$19.~
;bury said.
r~
15' ................. ~~-w10' .................... $32.99
' "They already know mom
24'
.................... $52.99
.:is in jail, they already know
15X30
OVAL.. .... $47.99
,:that that's not a good thing, so
:there's no reason to make
1'1 GROutiD POOL COVERS
:chem worry that there's some..... .$53.99 IBX36 ........ $63.99 20X•O ........ $74.99
thing about this facility is
;going to hurt her."
·
2973 PIEDMONT RD.
;: The state is hoping to
HUNfiNGTON, WV
:obtain SS0-60 million in bond
rnOI~eys thi's f.1lJ to construct a

POOLS, INC. ·

.HOLIDAYPOOL. COM,......,....

J

"

· * weight management
* natural defense
* .stress management
* mental performance
*joint bone support
* detoxification
* energy vitality
* digestive health
* children's needs
It is time now for you to feel better and regain control of

your life. We can help! Call 740.339.1028 now and leave
your name, number and a description of your major health
concern. We will call you and expla-in to you how our
program is designed to meet your specific needs. *The
· Doctor will call you back personally! * You must hurry and
call now because Dr. Robinson ·has only 17 appointments
left for September. Call. now 740.339.1028 and start feeling
your very ·best!

•

.•

�Inside:
Classifieds, Page D2-7

Page Dl
Sund11J, September 2, 2001

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
199!5 MERCURY
SABLE

2000 TAURUS SE

AUTO· AIR
CRUISE • TILT
• POWER EQUIPMENT
WAS 8,95000

AUTO • AIR • CRUISE •
TILT· .AM/FM CASS •
POWER LOCKS • POWER
WINDOWS

2001 MUSTANG ST

1999 CHEVY EXTENOED CAB

This chart shows how local stocks of interest performed lost week.
Each days closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

'

"BUU_. 1 I I

AUTO • AIR • 4X4 ·
CRUISE • TILT •
SILVERADO LS • 3 DOOR
• POWER EQUIPMENT

N

AEP

TUE.

WED.

THU.

FRI.

46'!.

• "

1

AmTechiSBc ·

t

44

44 ~.

44Y.

42

42

42

42'!.

42%

19

19!1.

19~.

18\

19

WAS 26,95000

WAS 19,96500

$11,97700

MON.

$22,97700

"'N STOCK"

ATAT

•

11

.

BankOne

..

.ONLY THE NAME HAS CHANGED. Sill I .. THE GREAT
SALES AND SERVICE YOU'VE ALWAYS RECEIVED.
STOP IN TODAY AND SEE THE NEW MODELS.

+

Bob Evans

36

+
51

Champion

Col

• .,

3

3

3

3

3

••
EVER GROWING- Baum's Lumber of Chester is a real growth story In Meigs County. It was established about 50 years
ago In a 3Q.by-5Q-foot building and has now expanded into nine buildings and offers a diversity of products and services.
{Charlene Hoeflich photos)

Baum Lumber keeps pace
2000 E3!50 1!5 PASSEN6ER

DUAL AIR &amp; HEAT •
CRUISE· TILT· CD PLAYER
• POWER WINDOW •
POWER LOCKS • SUPER
CLEAN • LOW MILES

WAS 29,863°

0

'$22 9/700
. I

.

vn lASER SPORT

2000 F3!50 DUMP

2001 Fl!Kl FLARESIDE

2001

AIR CONDITIONING •
STEREO • XL PKG • HD
SERVICE PKG • WHEEL
SIMULATORS

4X4 • AIR CONDITIONING • VB ENGINE •
CRUISE '• TILT • POWER
WINDOWS • LOCKS

WAS 31,640°0

WAS 25,48000

LEATHER· QUAD
BUCKETS • TV • VCP •
CRUISE • TILT ·.POWER
EQUIPMENT GRQUP

$24,97700

'·

+

16~.

$19 97700

Oak Hill Fin.

$19,97700

'

.

·•
I

2000 FORD ESCORT, FULL POWER_!!!!!!................ mum•m..............._$:10,4~
2000 MERCURY SABLE WAGON, LOW MILES, LOADED ................... $14,9n00
1999 FORD EXPLORER,V·8, ALL WHEEL DRIVE, LOADED ...............; $16,9n00
1997 T·BIRD, AUTO, AIR ......................................................................... $8,97700
1998 CHEVY ASTRO CONVEaSION, FULL LOADED, RAISED ROOF $13,4n00
2001 ESCORT 4DOOR, AUTO, AIR POWER ......................................... $11 ,8Tf00
1999 RANGER SUPERCAB, AIR ..............................~ ............................. $10,9n00
2000 CONTOUR, AUTO, AIR, POWER ...,.. ~............;............................... $9,97700
u ...

s

+ 48\

48

48

47

48:.

16~.

16Y.

16

16

37

37

36%

36'·

WAS 26,800.0°

I

1~99 .EXPLORER SPORT, 4x4, AUTO, MOONROOF, 18,000 MILES .... 16,9noo
1999 RANGER SPORT' AIR CONDITIONING ......................................... $9'977oo
2001 ZX2; AIR, STEREO, CHROME ..................;..................................... $10,9noo
2001 WINDSTAR, 4DR, AIR, BRIGHT RED ............................................ $18,9n00
2000 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LS, FULL POWER LOADED ....... $1U7700
2000 LINCOLN LS, EVERY OPTION ............~.......................................... $29,snoo

Harley Davidson

BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH ·
_TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

BB&amp;T
-

21
building in which his late father,
~~~p~~~~g~~t~~~~1~~JJ
1i:ld~ln~g~:b::ac;k;:wl;arr:dt;s:·:·r his1;T~h:e~co~m~~p[:le~x~d~e~ve~~lo~~p~e~d~fro~~m!~a:~:s:i:n~-.-~t:he:id::a:n~;ge~~r~o:~f:s

~

'

Sears

+

44

43~

43~

42:.

42~

so~.

50

50

47'1.

48

28'/a
13~.

14

SMART MONEY

Senior likes
entering contests

2000 MUSTANG
CONVERTIBLE

2001 F2!JO 4x4

2001 RAN6ER XLT

AIR CONDITIONING • .
PTO PROV • CHROME
BUMPERS·
WHEEL COVERS
WAS 26,13000

AIR CONDITIONING •
CRUISE • TILT· AM/FM
CASS • XL T GROUP
CHROME PKG

4X4 • AUTOMATIC • AIR
SUPERCAB ·POWER
WINDOWS • POWER
LOCKS • CRUISE • TILT

WAS 15,355°0

WAS 23,986 00

AUTO· AIR~ CRUISE·
TILT • ALUM WHEELS •.
POWER SEAT • POWER
WINDOWS • POWER .
LOCKS

WAS 24,06500 .

$12,97700

$1~,977 00

Bv BRUCE WIWAMI
mailing lists unsuccessfully.
DEAR BRUCE: I tried to What recourse do I have? e-mail my question b!:!t" AOL M.D., Borger, Texas
did
not .
recognize
DEAR M.D.: Given the
facts that you have shared with
http:/ /www.brucebrucewilliams.com, so I'm reduced to me, I doubt if you have any
letter writing. fv1y 94-year-old recourse. What you didn't indlwidowed father has · given cate is how the $6,000 affects
more than $6,000 to over 140 his standard of living. I suspect
different charities this year. that it does not and if this is his
Some are ·sweepstakes con- only vice, he is almost a vice
neated. I can't imagine that
free man. Many people his age
legitllnate charity would use spend more money than that
this method of fund-raising . . · on cigarettes. As long as his
He loves to fill out .question- contest involvement is a relanaires· and enter contests. I'm tively minor part of his
sure that his name and address income, why would you want
are passed around freely. My to take that away from him?
brother and I spend a good What would you suggest that
· deal of time with our dad. He's he d&lt;;&gt; to fill his dme? I'd walk
in good health, is mentally softly .on this issue; however, I
alert and generally manages certainly understand your con~
very well alone, We don't want cern. By the way, my correct eto take charge of his financial mail
address
is
affairs. He has invested in the bruce@brucewilliams.com.
market for years and has a nice
DEAR BRUCE: Unlike
retirement fund. He is defiant- many folks, like yourself, who
ly not ready to let go of the want to live in a warmer elimanagement qf his affairs. I mate, I prefer the cool. I'm
have tried to g!!t his name off
Pluse ... Contests, Dl

a

'

-

Have a business news item?
Give us · ·~11 at (740} 44&amp;-2342, ext 23
...

CHESTER - "You can never
stand still, you either move forward or
slide backwards."
Tim Baum said someone gave him
that bit of advice years ago and spoke
of the influence it has had on his management of Baum Lumber since taking over in 1980.
The direction taken is apparent just
by looking around at the numerous _MOVING FORWARD _ Tim Baum's
buildin&lt;&gt;&lt;
, . which line both sides of the philosophy for the business estatJ.
road coming into Chester. It hasn't II shed by his father, the late Delmar
happened overnight but has come as a Baum, Is one of always •moving forsteady "move forward" over the years. ward, never standing still because of

'

home. He started building houses
soon afier and before long found himself in the lumber and supply business
in a 30-by-50cfoot building on the
site of the present business.
In fact that original building, which
at one time was a gas station, is now

about 50 years ago, to nine structures
now housing about anything anyone
could ever want to built, repair, maintain, relax, work or play with. ·
When Delmar returned from 'VJorld
War II he worked construction for a
while then started a cabinet making

time
for the expo!
· It~

r..

part of the current retail hardware
showroom and office building.
Right after graduation in 1974 Tim
joined his father in the business and
his focus was on developing the retail
side. That initiated some changes -in
direction and contributed to · the
steady growth which created the need
for more space.
Two buildings across the street from
the retail store, one being the old feed
mill, were purchased some years back.
The most recent structure added was
the old Gaul's Market building which
has been converted into a showroom
for hot tubs, a relatively new sales
The retail
showroom area has• been
product
for Baum's_
enlarged-to-accommodate an expand-ed line of hardware and other merchandise, including sporting goods
and equipment.
To expand .the company's truss constructJon busmess, a new truck w1th a
crane was recendy purchased to be
....... see Baulll, Dl

Help with tobacco
applications Sept. 18

By now, most of you """"
POMEROY The
probably received this year's
sixth . annual Big Bend
tobacco settlement applica. Town &amp; Country Expo
tion.
'
2001 will be Sept. 15-16 at
For those who have lost
Rocksprings Fairgrounds.
track of the -sources of
Hal
This annual event was
tobacco related dollars, this
...
Kneen
started to highlight the
money oragmates from
positive attributes of living
Phase II 1obacco Settlement
in the Big Bend region.
funds that were designated
GUEST'IIEW
This free event provides
specifically for tobacco provarious business displays, baskets of preserves, vegducers by the tobacco commusical
entertainment,
panies.
etables, flowers or fruit to
new &amp; old automobile disThis marks the third year
demonstrate how you can
plays, wildlife mount disof
the 12-year distribution
design using items from
plays, antique tractors &amp;
program.
the garden. An open class
equipment, quilts, crafts,
Some key points . to
Dahlia Show is being fealocal club activities, flower
remember when completing
tured this year, so bring in
arrangement show, agricul~
the
application are:
your favorite dahlias to disture display, horticultural
• The Farm Service
play.
display, local upcoming fes·.
Agency
is not responsible
All of these items will be
tivals and much more.
for this program, rather the
on · display in the Senior
Food is available at reaOhio Department of AgriFair Building along with
sonable pdces for those
culture has hired First
tbe annual quilt display.
who wish to enjoy sevecil
Unioh Bank to handle the
Plant specimens may be
hours of ac-tivities.
application process;
transported in on Sept. 14
There is still an opportu' Questions can be
from noon to 7 p.m. or
nity for anyone in the Big
answered by trained, qualiBend area to participate in carried in on Sept. 15.
before 10 a.m. Judging · tied individuals who have
the fun and activities of this
access to your quota history
occurs at 10:45 a.m.
event. Bring in your tallest
at 1-877-319-8944;
If you want to find out
stalk of corn, longest ear of
• On Sept. 18 application
corn, largest diameter sun- · about participating as a
assistance will be available at
vendor or to put up a disflower, largest pumpkin or
the C. H. McKenzie Agriculplay
please
call
the
extenlargest squash to exhibit.
tural Center from 10 a.m.
· Last year, one stalk of sion office at 9n-6696 for
until 4 p.m. and then again
corn shown by Henry funher details.
at a formal informational
· Bahr of Chester, 0 hio was
meeting at South Gallia
Now is the time to apply
High School beginning at 7
over 12 feet in length. Who
50
pounds
of
actual
nitrop.m. on the same day;
knows, this year's champigen
per
acre
to
fescue
grass
' Applications must be
o,n may be yours! Other
'post-marked by Oct. 15.
horticulture categories that pasture that will be allowed
This year's payment will
can be shown include veg- to grow on as stockpiled
grass
for
late
f~
or
..yinter
be
distributed using a histoetables, nuts and fruits from
grazing.
ry of a farm's effective quoia
your garden.
Ohio
State
University
to capture a grower's intent
Some homeowners may ·
to produ ce. Thus, those
want to bring in display
PluseseeKnHn,DI

b

~

.

.

.~

•••

.'

I

•

-"

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

farms with ·effective quota
will be paid based on the
average of the 1999 and
2000 effective quota. Those
farms that leased away quota
and thus have a "0" effective
quota wiU he paid on an
average of the 1999 and
2000 basic quota.
The application itself is
· slightly different than last
year as weU. In addition to a
signature section, there are
three sections to the application, each pertaining to different
ownership/ leasing/ sharecrop arrangements.
Section one of the application is only for quota
owners who leased their
quota away to someone else,
and therefore were left with
a "0" effective quota. Thus,
Gallia/Lawrence County
quota owners who lease
away their entire quota will
only receive section. one of
the application and the signature section .
Section two of the application is for those who grow
tobacco by producing their
own quota and/ or leasing

Pluse ... Byrnn, D8

�Inside:
Classifieds, Page D2-7

Page Dl
Sund11J, September 2, 2001

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
199!5 MERCURY
SABLE

2000 TAURUS SE

AUTO· AIR
CRUISE • TILT
• POWER EQUIPMENT
WAS 8,95000

AUTO • AIR • CRUISE •
TILT· .AM/FM CASS •
POWER LOCKS • POWER
WINDOWS

2001 MUSTANG ST

1999 CHEVY EXTENOED CAB

This chart shows how local stocks of interest performed lost week.
Each days closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

'

"BUU_. 1 I I

AUTO • AIR • 4X4 ·
CRUISE • TILT •
SILVERADO LS • 3 DOOR
• POWER EQUIPMENT

N

AEP

TUE.

WED.

THU.

FRI.

46'!.

• "

1

AmTechiSBc ·

t

44

44 ~.

44Y.

42

42

42

42'!.

42%

19

19!1.

19~.

18\

19

WAS 26,95000

WAS 19,96500

$11,97700

MON.

$22,97700

"'N STOCK"

ATAT

•

11

.

BankOne

..

.ONLY THE NAME HAS CHANGED. Sill I .. THE GREAT
SALES AND SERVICE YOU'VE ALWAYS RECEIVED.
STOP IN TODAY AND SEE THE NEW MODELS.

+

Bob Evans

36

+
51

Champion

Col

• .,

3

3

3

3

3

••
EVER GROWING- Baum's Lumber of Chester is a real growth story In Meigs County. It was established about 50 years
ago In a 3Q.by-5Q-foot building and has now expanded into nine buildings and offers a diversity of products and services.
{Charlene Hoeflich photos)

Baum Lumber keeps pace
2000 E3!50 1!5 PASSEN6ER

DUAL AIR &amp; HEAT •
CRUISE· TILT· CD PLAYER
• POWER WINDOW •
POWER LOCKS • SUPER
CLEAN • LOW MILES

WAS 29,863°

0

'$22 9/700
. I

.

vn lASER SPORT

2000 F3!50 DUMP

2001 Fl!Kl FLARESIDE

2001

AIR CONDITIONING •
STEREO • XL PKG • HD
SERVICE PKG • WHEEL
SIMULATORS

4X4 • AIR CONDITIONING • VB ENGINE •
CRUISE '• TILT • POWER
WINDOWS • LOCKS

WAS 31,640°0

WAS 25,48000

LEATHER· QUAD
BUCKETS • TV • VCP •
CRUISE • TILT ·.POWER
EQUIPMENT GRQUP

$24,97700

'·

+

16~.

$19 97700

Oak Hill Fin.

$19,97700

'

.

·•
I

2000 FORD ESCORT, FULL POWER_!!!!!!................ mum•m..............._$:10,4~
2000 MERCURY SABLE WAGON, LOW MILES, LOADED ................... $14,9n00
1999 FORD EXPLORER,V·8, ALL WHEEL DRIVE, LOADED ...............; $16,9n00
1997 T·BIRD, AUTO, AIR ......................................................................... $8,97700
1998 CHEVY ASTRO CONVEaSION, FULL LOADED, RAISED ROOF $13,4n00
2001 ESCORT 4DOOR, AUTO, AIR POWER ......................................... $11 ,8Tf00
1999 RANGER SUPERCAB, AIR ..............................~ ............................. $10,9n00
2000 CONTOUR, AUTO, AIR, POWER ...,.. ~............;............................... $9,97700
u ...

s

+ 48\

48

48

47

48:.

16~.

16Y.

16

16

37

37

36%

36'·

WAS 26,800.0°

I

1~99 .EXPLORER SPORT, 4x4, AUTO, MOONROOF, 18,000 MILES .... 16,9noo
1999 RANGER SPORT' AIR CONDITIONING ......................................... $9'977oo
2001 ZX2; AIR, STEREO, CHROME ..................;..................................... $10,9noo
2001 WINDSTAR, 4DR, AIR, BRIGHT RED ............................................ $18,9n00
2000 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LS, FULL POWER LOADED ....... $1U7700
2000 LINCOLN LS, EVERY OPTION ............~.......................................... $29,snoo

Harley Davidson

BY CHARLENE HoEFUCH ·
_TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

BB&amp;T
-

21
building in which his late father,
~~~p~~~~g~~t~~~~1~~JJ
1i:ld~ln~g~:b::ac;k;:wl;arr:dt;s:·:·r his1;T~h:e~co~m~~p[:le~x~d~e~ve~~lo~~p~e~d~fro~~m!~a:~:s:i:n~-.-~t:he:id::a:n~;ge~~r~o:~f:s

~

'

Sears

+

44

43~

43~

42:.

42~

so~.

50

50

47'1.

48

28'/a
13~.

14

SMART MONEY

Senior likes
entering contests

2000 MUSTANG
CONVERTIBLE

2001 F2!JO 4x4

2001 RAN6ER XLT

AIR CONDITIONING • .
PTO PROV • CHROME
BUMPERS·
WHEEL COVERS
WAS 26,13000

AIR CONDITIONING •
CRUISE • TILT· AM/FM
CASS • XL T GROUP
CHROME PKG

4X4 • AUTOMATIC • AIR
SUPERCAB ·POWER
WINDOWS • POWER
LOCKS • CRUISE • TILT

WAS 15,355°0

WAS 23,986 00

AUTO· AIR~ CRUISE·
TILT • ALUM WHEELS •.
POWER SEAT • POWER
WINDOWS • POWER .
LOCKS

WAS 24,06500 .

$12,97700

$1~,977 00

Bv BRUCE WIWAMI
mailing lists unsuccessfully.
DEAR BRUCE: I tried to What recourse do I have? e-mail my question b!:!t" AOL M.D., Borger, Texas
did
not .
recognize
DEAR M.D.: Given the
facts that you have shared with
http:/ /www.brucebrucewilliams.com, so I'm reduced to me, I doubt if you have any
letter writing. fv1y 94-year-old recourse. What you didn't indlwidowed father has · given cate is how the $6,000 affects
more than $6,000 to over 140 his standard of living. I suspect
different charities this year. that it does not and if this is his
Some are ·sweepstakes con- only vice, he is almost a vice
neated. I can't imagine that
free man. Many people his age
legitllnate charity would use spend more money than that
this method of fund-raising . . · on cigarettes. As long as his
He loves to fill out .question- contest involvement is a relanaires· and enter contests. I'm tively minor part of his
sure that his name and address income, why would you want
are passed around freely. My to take that away from him?
brother and I spend a good What would you suggest that
· deal of time with our dad. He's he d&lt;;&gt; to fill his dme? I'd walk
in good health, is mentally softly .on this issue; however, I
alert and generally manages certainly understand your con~
very well alone, We don't want cern. By the way, my correct eto take charge of his financial mail
address
is
affairs. He has invested in the bruce@brucewilliams.com.
market for years and has a nice
DEAR BRUCE: Unlike
retirement fund. He is defiant- many folks, like yourself, who
ly not ready to let go of the want to live in a warmer elimanagement qf his affairs. I mate, I prefer the cool. I'm
have tried to g!!t his name off
Pluse ... Contests, Dl

a

'

-

Have a business news item?
Give us · ·~11 at (740} 44&amp;-2342, ext 23
...

CHESTER - "You can never
stand still, you either move forward or
slide backwards."
Tim Baum said someone gave him
that bit of advice years ago and spoke
of the influence it has had on his management of Baum Lumber since taking over in 1980.
The direction taken is apparent just
by looking around at the numerous _MOVING FORWARD _ Tim Baum's
buildin&lt;&gt;&lt;
, . which line both sides of the philosophy for the business estatJ.
road coming into Chester. It hasn't II shed by his father, the late Delmar
happened overnight but has come as a Baum, Is one of always •moving forsteady "move forward" over the years. ward, never standing still because of

'

home. He started building houses
soon afier and before long found himself in the lumber and supply business
in a 30-by-50cfoot building on the
site of the present business.
In fact that original building, which
at one time was a gas station, is now

about 50 years ago, to nine structures
now housing about anything anyone
could ever want to built, repair, maintain, relax, work or play with. ·
When Delmar returned from 'VJorld
War II he worked construction for a
while then started a cabinet making

time
for the expo!
· It~

r..

part of the current retail hardware
showroom and office building.
Right after graduation in 1974 Tim
joined his father in the business and
his focus was on developing the retail
side. That initiated some changes -in
direction and contributed to · the
steady growth which created the need
for more space.
Two buildings across the street from
the retail store, one being the old feed
mill, were purchased some years back.
The most recent structure added was
the old Gaul's Market building which
has been converted into a showroom
for hot tubs, a relatively new sales
The retail
showroom area has• been
product
for Baum's_
enlarged-to-accommodate an expand-ed line of hardware and other merchandise, including sporting goods
and equipment.
To expand .the company's truss constructJon busmess, a new truck w1th a
crane was recendy purchased to be
....... see Baulll, Dl

Help with tobacco
applications Sept. 18

By now, most of you """"
POMEROY The
probably received this year's
sixth . annual Big Bend
tobacco settlement applica. Town &amp; Country Expo
tion.
'
2001 will be Sept. 15-16 at
For those who have lost
Rocksprings Fairgrounds.
track of the -sources of
Hal
This annual event was
tobacco related dollars, this
...
Kneen
started to highlight the
money oragmates from
positive attributes of living
Phase II 1obacco Settlement
in the Big Bend region.
funds that were designated
GUEST'IIEW
This free event provides
specifically for tobacco provarious business displays, baskets of preserves, vegducers by the tobacco commusical
entertainment,
panies.
etables, flowers or fruit to
new &amp; old automobile disThis marks the third year
demonstrate how you can
plays, wildlife mount disof
the 12-year distribution
design using items from
plays, antique tractors &amp;
program.
the garden. An open class
equipment, quilts, crafts,
Some key points . to
Dahlia Show is being fealocal club activities, flower
remember when completing
tured this year, so bring in
arrangement show, agricul~
the
application are:
your favorite dahlias to disture display, horticultural
• The Farm Service
play.
display, local upcoming fes·.
Agency
is not responsible
All of these items will be
tivals and much more.
for this program, rather the
on · display in the Senior
Food is available at reaOhio Department of AgriFair Building along with
sonable pdces for those
culture has hired First
tbe annual quilt display.
who wish to enjoy sevecil
Unioh Bank to handle the
Plant specimens may be
hours of ac-tivities.
application process;
transported in on Sept. 14
There is still an opportu' Questions can be
from noon to 7 p.m. or
nity for anyone in the Big
answered by trained, qualiBend area to participate in carried in on Sept. 15.
before 10 a.m. Judging · tied individuals who have
the fun and activities of this
access to your quota history
occurs at 10:45 a.m.
event. Bring in your tallest
at 1-877-319-8944;
If you want to find out
stalk of corn, longest ear of
• On Sept. 18 application
corn, largest diameter sun- · about participating as a
assistance will be available at
vendor or to put up a disflower, largest pumpkin or
the C. H. McKenzie Agriculplay
please
call
the
extenlargest squash to exhibit.
tural Center from 10 a.m.
· Last year, one stalk of sion office at 9n-6696 for
until 4 p.m. and then again
corn shown by Henry funher details.
at a formal informational
· Bahr of Chester, 0 hio was
meeting at South Gallia
Now is the time to apply
High School beginning at 7
over 12 feet in length. Who
50
pounds
of
actual
nitrop.m. on the same day;
knows, this year's champigen
per
acre
to
fescue
grass
' Applications must be
o,n may be yours! Other
'post-marked by Oct. 15.
horticulture categories that pasture that will be allowed
This year's payment will
can be shown include veg- to grow on as stockpiled
grass
for
late
f~
or
..yinter
be
distributed using a histoetables, nuts and fruits from
grazing.
ry of a farm's effective quoia
your garden.
Ohio
State
University
to capture a grower's intent
Some homeowners may ·
to produ ce. Thus, those
want to bring in display
PluseseeKnHn,DI

b

~

.

.

.~

•••

.'

I

•

-"

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW

farms with ·effective quota
will be paid based on the
average of the 1999 and
2000 effective quota. Those
farms that leased away quota
and thus have a "0" effective
quota wiU he paid on an
average of the 1999 and
2000 basic quota.
The application itself is
· slightly different than last
year as weU. In addition to a
signature section, there are
three sections to the application, each pertaining to different
ownership/ leasing/ sharecrop arrangements.
Section one of the application is only for quota
owners who leased their
quota away to someone else,
and therefore were left with
a "0" effective quota. Thus,
Gallia/Lawrence County
quota owners who lease
away their entire quota will
only receive section. one of
the application and the signature section .
Section two of the application is for those who grow
tobacco by producing their
own quota and/ or leasing

Pluse ... Byrnn, D8

�•

~age 02 • &amp;

unba!'

~un rs :i&gt;rntmrl------~P.;o~m~e;_r.;o_;y•••M~id.;d.le~p;_o;_rt_·.G•a•ll.;ipo-l•is~,•O•h•lo-•.PIIIolllln~t•P•I•eal.sl.alln•t•,W-V--------~
,

m:rihune- Sentinel..
"
CLA-SSIFIED
;;

Sundav.

Sect. 2. '2001

Sunday,

.~
:·.·:=c~~~~~~''lro . __.n~,.~

l\~ .....

tuDUT

to buy Ulld mo1&gt;i1o1
homH. call (740...--o\75
I \ 11'1

.we

I 1\ 'II \ I
'I H\ 11 I ...,

Cove

Counties Like
No

One

Else

Can!

Or Fax To

Or Fax To

(740) 446-3008

(740) 992·2157

·

Or Fax To

f(Q./1-rlcfo.l'e-.r
Monday thru Friday

8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW

P-~c~~tAdt~

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In - Col u mn : 1 :00 p . m .
Monday - Fr iday ro r I nser tion
In Ne•t Oay!s Paper
Sunday I n -Column : 1: 00 p.m .
1
For Sundays Pa-p er

All Di splay : 12 Noo n l
Bustn es 5 Day s Prior To
PubllCIH IM
Su nd~v Ols pl ey: 1:00 p .m .
Thursday for Sund ays

.r GJVFAWAYIF t~

r'-------_.1·

1r ~~

12

Year Old lemale Calico 622 Jay Dnve, September
Cal. Spayed and Declawed. 6lh and 7 th, 98 m·Spm, Se~
(740)44&amp;-7730
tember 8th. 9am· •2.30pm,
- : - -- -- - - - Aaln or shine Ill! Ladderbaek

•

FREE SEARCH!
www.SINGLES.com

==-=-:====-=

Free Puppies. 7 weeks Old.
Mixed Breed. Mother Is

START DATING TONIGHT! Slack and Tan. (740)379·
Have lun meeting eligible 9278
singles In your area. Toll·
free 1·800·ROMANCE , ext To give away- used roofing
membrane. Pomeroy area,
9735

==-------(740)992-6810.

Why wall ? Start meeting
Oh6o singles tonight. call toll To goOd home 10.mon. old
free ,.BQ0-766·2623 ext puppy, part Husky/German
1621.
Shepperd, · housebroken,
.
gentle , loving. Needs space
run,
all shots' , . Is
ANNouNCEMENTS
nuetered call 304-674·0073

llo

~~-""'-----'"·
Advocale For Children
Become a Foster Parent
Call wv Youth Advocale
Progrem

r

has

losT AND
Fol.JND
'

LOST· Ma!!!on Area

c~lrs.

oak chairs, various

~~ ~tems, 8~0:1 ~~r:P~·J~~

IS es. n
I
• d
calendars, too s, woo en
boxes , melai toys , P_ens,
clothing, bOoks . magaz1nes.
milk bottles, misc . bottles,
old radio, washstand. small

desk, wooden ironing board,

w ~~J~

906 Founh Avenue &amp; 9 Vln·
ton Avenue, Augusl 31·
S t b
1 2 3 9am· 7
F~~i~~e urck:ltheS appllan.'
ce9 blk~s mowe;.., porce·
latn' doll Collection, doora,
wi~dows many more Items.
'
925 4th Ave Back Yard .
· .
E ·
Linens, ExerCISe
qu•p·
menl TV/ Stereo Stand
'
B~S
'
LOIS misc . Tuesday

h-u 11rk

··

Free Yard Sale Sign!$
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

r
r

I Michael W. Price, will no
longer be responsible lor
any debts. other than my __
own.
New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athens

1

9·00-?
Kid
5
1
•
•
'
clothes, toys, high chair,
toddler b~. new .baby mattress, clannet, blinds, adu"
clothing, mi~. lor everyone,
Cindy Onva, 2nd road IO
right past Komer off 160.

195

Huge Yard Sale· Mons, September 2,3 at Sassy
womens , . boys clothes, Scissors •~ear Centenaryhome lntenor, furniture, ap- e•ercis3 equipment, wood
pllances, etc. 3314Georges burner crafts. bumpar lor
Creek A.d. Wednesday Au· . truck. clothes, misc. Items.
gust 29th- Tu&amp;&amp;day Sep- 8 •5pm.
.·
tember 4th.

Huge Yard SaJe· Something
Augusl 31 , September 1·3, tor evaryo.ne, baby furniture,
Male 46 BumeHe Road, Kanauga dishes, toys, August 31·

I

YARD SALE

2346 Founh Street, Syra- 3 Family Yard 5ale. Boys &amp; Rick Poaroon Auction Com·
Large Porch Sale- Saturday
September 1st &amp; Monday
September 3rd. 9am-4pm,
Lots of Household Items .
4480 ~tate Route 325
South, R1c Grande.
.
Mov•ng Sale· ~Tuesday September 4th o.. Wednesday
5th, 6339 &amp; 6309 State
Route 588 , 9am-4pm. All
kinds of items!

mile out oH Evergreen.

Centenary, Past Jumbo. g.
, 5, Sept 4-5 . Door, Womuns

cuse, In back, Mon . Sept, Girls clothes, newbom-3T
name brand. &amp; miac. Fri·
' .
Sat. 5th Street In Mason
9/3, 914, 915, 931 Hysell St.,
Middleport, something for Back Porch Sale Fri.-Sat.
e11eryone, too much to list.
8am·4pm CQmer of Mt. Ver•
non &amp; 23rd. New Women
sl:loes size 10, clothes, size
COLLECTIBLE SALE, ,Sun, 18, household Items, bed·
Sept 2, Mon. Sept 3, Sam· spreads, etc.
4pm, Rusll~ Hills, Syracuse,
II it's a TREASURE we
MAY have it. Glass, Fen·
ton, Pottery, Toys, Dolls, Garage Sale Friday August
Nascar, Tools, Planters, Ar·
&amp; s
d
S t 1
.my Blankets Jewelrv etc
31
atur ay ap · "
'
.,,
.
(9am-4pm) located on At.
September 3 &amp; 4, Syracuse 33 in Letart last hOuse on
roadside park, cassette the right before you go up
tapes, records, &amp; misc.
the big hill to Mt. AII:O.
.
3rd 9'30 till 7

pany, full lime aU&lt;:tloneer,
complete auction seNice.
Licensed N66,0hlo &amp; West
Virginia, 304·n3-5785 Or

r

304- 77~5447 ·
WANJlD
.

ro BUY
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
SMver, Gokt Coins, Proofsets.

446·2842.
- - - ,----,------,Building site, any aiza from
a level lot to 5 acres, either
in Green or Perry Township
(Gallla County) Cash Paid.
(740}379·26~5

We alao wont -to
thank lhoae that
provided
foDd,
tranaportatlon for
ua to
go to
Florida, took care
of our yard and
animals while we
were gone, and
numerous other
good deeds, far
too
many
to
mention. ~

September 2nd, (f1am5pm) at State Route 160, 2
miles north of Holzer Hospital. Items oHered: computer,
lools, clean twin mattres&amp;
set, chandelier, haalthrider,
old kltct1en dropleaf lable &amp;
2 chairs, Laura Ashley twin
bed se1s. cultured Marble
sink vanity top, 3 wicker
chairs, some anllques &amp; collectibles, good clean cloth·
lng aU sizes, books, toys
and much more.

844 1st Ave. 914-916. 9•007, 4 Family. Lots of nice
Womens shoes 8·8.5, Nlce
Large

Size

Womens

clothes. Coats, Old Tools,
Canalng Jars, Lots More.

Happy Ad

Fax: . 724-228-2888

Call Today

c•r..r•Oa.i;lumber.com

1·866·475·7223

ext. 1911

We
want
to
express
our
1lncere
appreciation for
.the
thoughtfulness of
our
friends,
neighbors
and
loved ones. ·

COMPANY
Attn: Bill Dove
Building 114
1019 Route 519
Eighty Four, PA
15330· 2813

NANCY CASTEEL, RNC
God uw th.ll Nan wu glt1ing rilfd, and 1 cu~ Wllftol fo bt.
So H1 put hi11nn1 around h11 and whi1pmd, ' 1ometo mr'.

'Y
"

With tm·filltd
w1 walrhtd ht~ 10 quic~y fldtaway.
All hough w1 lovtd Mr dttply, iv1 could not mike htr suy.
Agolden hurt slopptd btatin~ hard working hand1 pull af!ll
Cod broke our hurt! lo jli'JYI lo111, H1 only llitt1lht bt!L

fJ-fo---S.,·to

''"f. tOOO. I.sMlfo-

- ""- """""""""" .........""-p.,a ....
?-1~

I

llrne. Mallorder. CALL: 888·
.;:438:;;.;·30:::.;.:12:_______
,.OOV'T
POSTAL
P1ELDI" Job Opporiunl·
Uta. Fret Call for !lflPllca·
tiQn/oxamtnatlon lnforma·
tlon. Flderal Hlr.'Full BanIfill 1-800-842·1704 txt
0!50 7...,.10prn cot: 7 Otyo
..OOV"T POITAL .lOIS*
1o 18.38/hour. free Call for.
Apfltlcatlon/Examlnatlon In·
!ormation. flderal Hire,
Full Banoflla 1-800·842·
1858, ext. 125, 7om·10pm
cat. 1 dlya
"Work From Honio•• eam
$50CJ.$25001PTmo. 12SOCJ.
$8000/FTmo. Paid Vaco·
1tont1-888-302·23117
www.dwhomeblz.com

974JOBS
coo Management, LLC

WEST
SHADE
BARBER
SHOP ··

_:_:_c.==.=-=-:=-:.:=·- ..___,
"""''·International Businoso
expanding. $25/175hr. PIT
FIT 888 588 3713.
www.megabnck&amp;4you net

Ba Your Own Bossi
From Homel
Earn up., S500-$900Q/Uo
PT/FT
Cell TcNI Free

·
1-868-736-80n
AMBITION
REOUIREO www.Sirr1JieCuh81z.com
Eam Income from home.
.
SS00-17000 · mo. PT/FT. COL-A Orivara: ExpenMall-orderlfl·commerce . ..ncedl'lnexperlenced West

Complete tntinlng lnforrno- Coul Runt &amp; More. Exl:tilion•
920-924-8400. lent Poy, Bantfita &amp; Home
www.AchleveDroama.com llme, 1·800-348-1380.
CIVIL EHGINIIIIIING

F1EL~_3ECHNE1CI~~~·

try •·~ and lip&amp;·-~ .
prelsr Asscclatot Degree In
Civil Englneanng Technolo-

'II ancu or certllicatlons

"'-'=------ (ODOT Levell oo ACI
ATTENllOH
WE NEEO HELPI
S800-$t800 PT
$2,CJ00.$6,000 FT
Free Tr!llnlng
1-.eo7-RICH

CMiflcatlon). Perform conatructlon ma1erit11s teatlng and
-•11on of concrete,
IOIIa ond aaphol! . Position
It

and resume to Educa•e
Grant. PO Box 393, Pt.
Pleasant, _WV 25550. AHor·
mat!Yt ActK&gt;n/ Equal Qpportuni!y.
Counselor· An out . tier1t alcoho! nd othe dpa
cy is :eeking ~ ~~~;

DRIVERS-

NEW PAV PLA N. Ho.,e
mosl weekends, $1 ,5{KJ:
Sign-on bonus. Start up to
s 351 mlle lOaded and empty
plus tarp, sa 1ety, re 1erra1
and Idle Incentives. Notouch freoglot. BCJBS. De&lt;&gt;-

pre$$.

Services include bul are not OH

ll•lJ' WAtorllill

11.,s

llarWAMm

f

E•- GOV"T POSTAL JOBS. Up McClure a Restauran1 ·now Horne Hoaftll Agency seekto $4 7·57 8 or more per hiring all 3 locationl. fuH or ing Ful!·ttmel Part-lime/ Pet"
y~ar. Now_hlt&gt;~tQ. Full Ben- part-time, P'Ck up appltca· Diem/ Weekend AN's comel~ts &amp; Retirement. For Ap- lion at location &amp; bring bllck petitive Salary witn benehts.
piiC8tJOO and Info 1-800- between
9 :30am
&amp; No home health
expert337·97300ept.P·829
10.00am, Monday thru 0(11
"·t· once nece•••ru.
• ~ at
.....-.,
.......,.r
GROWI NG

Rider P10gram. Paid vae

NEEDS HELP! W011&lt; f10m

Jns. avail

hOme!

Students Wek:ome.

www.cannone~~;p.-ess.com .
1·800-845-9390

merce.

BUSINESS urday

750 First Avenue , GaiUpoli5

or phone t -866-U 1·1393

Mall-order/E-Com. Homeworket'a NMded

$522+/wHk

PT $8 35

(toll free)

weeki'(

processing :___ _:__ _ _--,-$1()()()..$-«&gt;00/wk
FT. mall 1
Homewottc.ar&amp; NeMed S635
www.Ama zing Goa ls .c om E
edasy
. . No experience need- Weekly Proceuing Mail.
(8001 2n 5843
Easyl
fife
El!llGrie&lt;'ce
CaU1-800-•90-9450 24 hrs. Needed. Cal 1.80().{;52• ·

EARN $25,QOO-S50.000/yr,
Medicel Insurance Biliong, GROWING
BUSINESS -------,:-c-_:_8726.::.:- Ext
_ ._20
-:770.,;._24_H_rs__
7
Needed Immediately! Home NEEDS HELPI _ . lrom •
Computer Needed. FREE home! Mail-or&lt;ltr/E-Com·
Public Sale and Auction
Website, 1-800·291-4683 merce. S522+/week PT. _ __:_.::;::.:,::..;:.::,:.;:_::..;..::.__;..;..._ _ __
_
D..::.;t.,_l,_
ep 1.;c09:__ _ _ _ $1 000·$4000/wk FT. 800·
9 2 1 - 8 5 3 8
www.dream2bfree.com
r - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , . . . . . . . ,•

--:-==----

·

FUNDRAISINO

Hea&gt;Jy Equ ipme nt Opera-

OIRECTDR

tors needed NOWII Back-

evaluaUons: diagnosis: indl- YOUR HOMEI MAIL OA·

Needed !or your area

hOe, Trackhoe &amp; Dozer.

viduel and/ 01 gmup coun·
&amp;eli~. Bachelor's ...__a
..•
- ·must eeoc. or liSW and
k.............._ n chemicel de·~.....,.
pendency prelorred. 8end

·D E R 1 I N T E R N E T ,
to wa&lt;k with schools,
$ ' 200
PT
PTI'is and coeches.Est. CO.
1
''
+.mo.,
0
Avg •st
s·A ..AW
$7,200+mo. FT. 1·866-812·
' • yr. _..fiVft
540-1148 6540
8078 -""".home-buso······buikMir.com
Garbage Service NeedS De·
resume by September 7 '
pendable d . /load8 .th
2001 to: FACTS, 45 Oltve Full lime and PAN RN staff
nv~~
' . WI
COL Expenence dnvlng
Slreet, Gallipolis, Ohio needed lor agresslvely
•
k
1
1
5
45631 or Fax (740'446- growing local home health t{op 'h)!~~966S
740 ~ ruc a pus.
'
8014. EOE. MfFIH
agency, Medl Home Heanh. ':-="-'=..:..___
send resumes : Att. Usa Governmem Job•
EARN $250-SSOO Per Dayl Ehman- Chapman, RN Su- $11 .Q0.$33.00 per hour poFill out forms from home, pe1Y1sor, 430 2nd Ave, PO tentlal. Paid Training/Full
No e•perience necessary Box 987 Gallipolis Oh. Benefits. For more lnlorma C8111-877·535·1179.
· 45631
lion call 1-888-674-9150
=:.:.:::..:.-=::_:_:.:.:::_ _ or call 1-800-481 -6334.
ext. 3234
EASY WORKI EXCELLENT
":G"'-"·e=m::.me.:_nt_P_o_st_ai-JOb
_ s_
PAYI Assemble Produc&lt;s.
"'
Coli Toll Free 1·800·467Up To $18.35/Hr.
5566 EKt 11577
Hiring for 2001192
BenelltsiPension

You can be trained and certified in 21 days. No money

1

A UCT'F'O'IV
A •

TUESDAY, SEPT 4, 2001
5:00P.M.

down. Transpol1ation end
n...

Master today I 1·866-432~

8937.
HELP WANTED
FREE INF0 !1

~·

.

• ;&amp; ·

lodging avoitable. ..,...ro1ors
are standing by! Call Skill

Located at the Auction Center on Rt
In Mason, WV, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gaul
have aold their farm &amp; will be
aelllng the following along with the
Brook
estate from Pt.

33

WORK IN YOUR HOMEI

MAIL ORDER /INTERNET.
$1200=1mo.,
PT
to
$7,200tlmo. FT
Hl66·8f2-8076
www.home·buslness·builder.com
Help wantOd canng lor the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paying minimum wage,

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - t-868 726-9083 E•r. 2000
Public Sale and Auction
7:30am-11 :00pm CST

PUBL .£rc

new shifts: 7am·3pm, 7am5pm, 3pm-11pm , 11pm7em, call 74().992·5023.

Public Sale and Auction

chairs,
pc. twin BR suite, early 2 pc.
cabinet, old shoe shine bench. 4
pc. Walnut BR suite, oak lamp
table. oak Hoosier style cabinet,
rockers. tables. Magic Chef gaa
range. outstanding oak Pump
,,..,,,n_ chairs. twin Iron &amp; brass bed

5

lo CTL Engineering Inc.
2880 Fisher Road, Columbus, OH 43204 (fax 614276-6377) amoll:
orutegOcnleng com
EOE .
AN EMPLOYEE OWNED
COMPANY.
~ nd w ill offe r for sa le the following

AVOf&gt;l· Looking for· higher
DATA ENTRY
Income? More 11eKible
FTIPT, No Experience
hours? . lndopendertce? Noedld. Training Provldldl
AVON hll what you're look· Medicel Billing. Up to $80K
lng for. Let's talk. (868)!e1· ·
Computer required.
2886.
.
1·800-240-1548, Dept. 926
091
llall)'littor 1or 3 112 yHr old
WWW !l!li!Dtd
Friday ...nlngo &amp;-7:30pm. Domino'• ,_ hlnng maJ&gt;o
Must hlvo ,.tlable tranopor· agomont and sale dnvers,
tallon.
{304)773·5459. Gtlllpotle and Pomeroy toPIIIMioove mo"""go.
cat1ona only. Appty In per·
lOft

r--~-=...,.,=""""=...,.=...,.,=,.---.

A REM IN DE R
·

.

The Emancipation Procllmatlon
Queen Contest at t!W Gsllls County
Fairgrounds on Sept. 22, 2001, Ia not
far 1w1y. To enter, contact Jana V.
Harper at (740) 441·1548 or (740)
441·8006 for Entry Form. Pleue
return Entry form back to Jane V.
Harper1 6287 SR 588, Gallipolis, OH
45631 oy Sept. 8, 2001. Mall or bring
It to J1ne. No swimsuit or talent
required. Age 16·25 years of age.
Please enter.
Let's make thla a

Saturday,
September 8, 7:00

items at publi c a uction .

tiiYHiOCii

I '•II , I
•
acate, 501 FOfd alctcle btl' mower,

p.m.

~.,, MFI10 bllef (plrta,, 3 round ball ''"""~­
Partial list: Minion Oak 5 ahelf book
fwder-., new ld. . aptndM u.Mr, good hay
t.dtr, ct11 puller, CGbl 1C20R N!uogen Hmln
style kHchen cabinet (oo to),
!5hp rototlller, Murray lawn tr.clor, pintle
buffet.
ahow boa, old com ..,_.ler, new Kl lnground
IGirossto Include: pink and green dOIIrOitslcon,l
new 22,000 ITU hllttr. 2 whttl can. rolla of new
alore dlepl&amp;y, S gatloon deg,.....,, ur rampa. 275
Fenton, Shawnee, approx. 29 pea. Jewel
t.nk, Iota ol new twnd toot., Crtftemln .ocket
Fire King. Red Ruby, crocks, Ice
boxll, PrDtO drill blttlftd eu~ outa.
g.tllona ot .,... p~lnt, p.lnl brUiih tate, Iota ot •~•• ,.,.._,, Universal and Griswold grlndera, br•aa
copper Items, aliver plato graniteware.
Mrdware, new high prw:aaure hoH, boaes of n•w
abraatve grinding whetll, plul much mqrtt
Tonka · Volkawagon cars
Furp!tym: Like new larg• wood tabla wllh Bentwood

milk bottloa, oil lamps, c~st Iron

~[~w:•:·~·:~~~~

verv tanoy
cheatllble,
and wall
IUIII,
largeMtarfall
01k library
llrtt knick knack shelf, oak porch .wtng,
I
antique at.noU Ht, small pool tabla, told up

tcllctten cablneta, boxes of computer paper

oupjoltoo, plue muct:t mora.
1;~::.' Show Me !lxtO aluminum box trtller,. very

Her·rln!~bo•ne·
Creamer &amp; Sugar- Vase-Bowls,
Pfaltzgraft, Green Depression, over
pos Pope Gosser china. Fenton •
Homer Laughlin China. &amp; more.

MI S C
Indian girl Puppet, lg. amount of old
games-Monopoly- Game of the
States· Checkers-Dominoes &amp;
more. Battery operated remote
control capital airliner toy airplane,
Favorite Funnies Printing set, pots,
Pans, sm. appliances. fishing rod &amp;
reels,
rigionar
ahampooer,
Polisher,
Eureka
sweeper,
aluminum Christmas tree, linens.
and box Iota autoharp, MTD
rototiller &amp; much more.
Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction
Co.

1166

773-5785 or 773-5447 .
TERMS: CASH OR CH CK WITH 10

~~~cen.

Free

A "BIG THANKS"
to

Estimates

Sgt. Chuck Kassee

&amp; Insured
Pllnt, Flooring,
Electrical

All Home Needs

Rep1irs, Etc.

740-949-1521

25 Yeart Ex,.rlence

1'111! ESTIMATI!S •

Owner:
Wolfe

(740) 388.0141

Your Girls,
Karla, Crls,
Heather&amp;
Rachel ·

LO'ol•e

WALK IN HOURS
Friday H
Saturday 9-noon
ather tlmea by
lap•pollntmtent only.

985-3345
$3.00oH
any hair cut from
Chrlo Parlw wHh
hr. or 112 hr.
moaaage

Help Wanted

of the Gallla County
Sheriff's Office for his
Defensive D
Skills.

Eleclrfcal, Plumbing

SpeclllllOI In Deep
Tlllue, Swedlah,
Shllllau,
Cranloaacral, Yoga
·$45 lull hour
$30 hall hour

Rosie Ward, VP of Human Resources
Holzer Medical Center ·
I00 J!Xkson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio A563l
. ....., (740) 446·5105
filii (740) 446·51 06
110

45769

Cannon

Owner Op/Lea$e
Program. Your !ruck or ours
.83e+lmt COmpany drivers
start1ng up to .34c/mi wJin.
creaseo u p to .'"•
.;~""' . p a~
raise evety 6 mos Bonus-

limited to: scree ning and FREE INFO!! WORK IN

MAINTENANCE

Nuclear Mtcllcl•e Tech•ologlst
Plnonal Care Aide•
Therapy Service• Ml•ag.-. (Physical Therapy)
Occ•patlonal ll11raplst
·
Physical Th~raplst

Help Wanted

1

Drivet

:___:__ _ _ _ _ _
FAST GROWING BUSI·
NESS NEEOS CASHIERS
A COOKS, PART liME,
FULL nME, ALL SHIFTS,
SEND RESUME TO: THE
DAILY SENTINEL, PO
BOX 729-00, POMEROY,

j,O
1a
!!!N
!!fa._,.r
'IlD 11
11"J!!II!I•Ifapi'!!!!!!!!V!!!VA

Ht:LP WAN1Hl

In GaJtlpolla area. Reaume

Time, Part Time, Per Diem)

Pulmonary Care Unit and Emergency Department
LPNs

11

11.,s

Public Sale and Auction

Located 7 miles west
on
at1he Jackson County Fairgrounds.
Owners Don and Leanna Lipscomb have
been collec1ing for over 50 years and are
ready to sell their 1reasures.
Call for lis1ing .
Sale held indoors with no sealing available,
bring your lawn chair. Camping available on
pr~mises with full hookup. Many Surprises!
TEAMS: Caah or local check with posltlve 10

1'10 OUT OF STATE CHECKS ACCEPTED WITHOUT
BANK LETTER OF GUARANTEE

AUCTIONEER: EDWIN WINTER
PHONE:

Volley Truck Driver Training
COL (ttiflcM s~ IOW!e

#334

ALL NEW MERCHANDISE
~ash Give-A-Way Every Auction
Lon Neal- Auctioneer #386
Behind Posl Office In Henderson, WV

(304) 273·3447

~~en' Frl 7:00.3:30 w.ln .tuslal' 11111:00-4:30 12M!

•l'vtaldag IIIII ftl1tlngiii'IIWie bllllli ~~~•Job pltxtmtnt Ill &lt;lass Akaitllng'
Cenlad Karl Lttnll.aoo.641-369S oi 1740)373-3966

Public

Sale end Auction

•

Vt•lt our web•lte at:
www.841umber.com
Equ•l Opportunlly Employ•r
WFIOV

· We wish to eXpress our sincere
gratitude to our Immediate family.
relatives . and friends for making our
50th Wedd1ng Anniversary a memorable
occasion . While spending the recent
weekend tn the Gatltnsburg and Pigeon
forge Tenn. area with family members.
children and spouses, grandchildren ,
1!:~ :rna a great grandchild. We enjoyed the
companionship of family while sightseeing. shopping and dtntng together.
We also had a friendly encounter with
a bear at the lodge where we stayed.
Upon returning home we were gtven

WE MISS YOV

A WORK AT HOME OPPORTUNITYI Eam up to
$50CJ.I50001mo.
PT/FT
Free Info. Toll Free 11!66)
839-RICH - -Oihomo4av-

or.com

·

Obstetrics, Rehab, 4West, 2Wes( Pediatrics, Critical Care, ·

···c·
Ill

tfEuo\V,\1\TEJ)

03

E~mall:

50th Anniversary
· Recognize~
40and Fine
~-~

'

(Full

Immediate openings are available at The Pillsbury Company. a prominent lpod
manufacturing facility in Wellston, Ohio, for the _
f ollowing positions;
' '- ·

Card of Thanks

Andy P.

Coorofna101r' Soc:lal W-·
.,.._ Mason ~~u.nty Eartv
~hildhood lnitlallve .s~ks
highfV motivated •nd•v1dual

~.NJ

No
84 LUMBER

~~.=:1~= ~~

Opening•~

50 New
Positions
Now
Available
$7/hour +
weekly
bonus

fundraising,
sales, or
collections
Full
Benefits
Paid
.Training ,

_

ATTENTION: WORK FROM
HOME : Mail Order Business. Need Help immedi·
etoly, $522+/week PT.
$l000·$4_
000/waek
FT.
www MCFinanctafLibertyco
m 1·8oo.898·6359
.

...ACCESS TO A COM•PUTER? Put It to Work!
:112Mfr.S75/hr. FTIPT. FREE
;Info.
868·937·7128
.www.drakehockjey 0 ~arth· www.comeworkwlthme.com
~lnk.nt1
.
BARTENDERS CAN mitke
"' .. ACCESS TO A COM· over $250 per llllftl No Ex·
PUTER? Put It To Wor1&lt;1 " " " - Ntceaa Call1·
..-~ry.
12S.I7~r. PTJFT. 1·886- 800'509-3830
!SOCJ.9e75 FREE Training/In·
fo. www.workfromhomotl&amp;5. AVON! AH Araaol To Buy or
com
Sol. Snl~oy Spoara, 304·
, ..ATTENTION! Work At -"67~5·.,;.1429=·;...._ __,_ _

lmmedi,te Job

a:

call and prayer
has made this
difficult
lime
easler to bear.

www.-tureabound.com

Help Wanted

GAU1POLIS

lii"'"""'"""'"""""""""'"""''m

Gold

\J\,1

---~----

*JOBS*
*JOBS*

.11na

to oversee the Educare pt().-

www.Gooii2Sucoosa.com

FT/PT. (24nrs)

~FREE Into. 1-868-385-2754

$8/HR .
Light
Indoor
Work
1-888-

ond Avenue, GallipoUs, 740-

Clothes, Crafls, Pictures , ;;:;;:::;~:;:;;:;;~;::;;;~
Coats, and muc:h more.

yARD SAL&amp;

Diamonds,

MRI_nTg.Ss.• ,..._i~S-Shop
. C' ¥5rrfnSeccy,:

110

Help Wanted

Help wanted " ·
COMPANY
Oualily clothing and house- .
• . .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.l
hold Items. $1.eM;) bag sale 2 Family, 2489 Mill c•r&lt;ree~;k~r-:;::;=;;~;:;:::;~~:1~
---;--~~~:~·;~a,r:,~n:;-"~"~d•y._Monda)Laoad.-912.-9/4, 9•00· 7,
lhru
9:00·6:00.
or Shine. Lots of IIams.
84 Lu01ber
S&lt;llrchlng [or
:.1 family yard sale· August
indlvldu;ls ror oor
31, September 1&amp;3, 2560
Train« Progrnm.
State Route 141, 8:30am till
5:00pm.
We want indl•iduab
Card of Thanks
looking ror ' &lt;aretr
3 family, Stale Route 850,
Includes customer mvice.l
Bidwell, 41h, 5th, 6th.
hands-on work , g
6 family yard sale, rain or
salu, and mllnaiem&lt;,nt: l
shine, Salurday, September
Trainees
1st, (9am·Spm) &amp; Sunday

card, letter, phone

• $25/hr·$75/Hr.

-----,--,..,.-,,.-=---:._---

_.,;·------:~-:-:-=,.---:-----

110

aat-814~n8

H llP WANro&gt;

W)NW.b-at-hame.oom

ASSEMBLY AT HOME11
Crafts, Toys, Jewelry,
Wood,
Sowing,
: •••ACCESS TO A COM· l'yplng ...Greet Payl CALL 1•
•PUTER? Put It to Worid 800·795.0380 Ex1J 201

Private Porty Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ad s
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Pe.rson
Mall To : Oh io Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis , OH 45631

740-592 -1842

We
want
to
express
our
THANKS to each
Individual
lor
their
thoughtfulness.
Coping with tho
death
of
our
Beloved
Becky
has been very
difficult; but each

$WORK AT HOME AND
LOVE ITII C - SUCCfitl
and
Eam
$1700.
•$5000/monthly For FREE
; tnformatton Cali (800) 232·
. 0375.

(304) 67iii5-,;52;::34:.;__ _ _ _- - : - - . - .

1e~:~1r J;~ It~~

2

misc.

9 3-915

Phone1 -800-575-6008
chocolate lab &amp;mate bnndle
.
1&amp;3, 9em-? 136 LeGrande
or 304·345·6897
striped lab, both with chain Big Yard 5ale september Blvd.
- - - - - - - - c o l l a r s. (304)m-5202
1,2,3 Hemlock Road, 9/10

~

:ssa

· • Ads Shou ld Run 7 Days

\\\()1 \( 1· \11-\1"'

.
r·

DANCE OISTRtBUTORS'
••• 717 ..23 E"T
1"QVV"
._
,.
61.
. (24 HAS.)
WEEKLY maNing let·
k - ~ ~- F II
.. ..,.. "UI' ' ....... ,... u Of part".time. No ... ..-B....... ·neces.....,..., · •IllY· Easy! Mt houral CaJ1
-u.s . ·DigHil-617-520-8071
.•24 hour recording.

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Incl ude Comp le te
Descript ion • Include A Price • Avo id Abbreviatio ns
• Include Phone Number And Add rer. s When Needed

Should In
To Help

PERsoNALS

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

,...
1..ft01 ·2&amp;&amp;·5625

•$4!50.00.$1 ,000.00 WEEK·

l\.egister
~rtbune
Sentinel
{740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333 -

Call Today•••

11.,s

: Lv Mailing lenere From Access To A Computer'?
1-to&lt;M. No oxporitnce nee- ••Put It To WOI1&lt;.. Up to Babyslner for 7 yeer old afesury. FTIPT. Help Need- 125-$75 hr. PT/FT FREE ler school. can after 6.00
ed lmmodlalelyl CaM 'SUN- Booldl!lll 868-679-4331 .
pm. (740)44 H l870

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW
Your Ad,

llarWANtm

100 WORKIRS NEEOEO ATTENTION• WORK FROM
A&amp;wnbae crafts, wood
HOME! Out chlk!ren Come
itema. Material proyided. To The Ottlce Everyday.
To $ot80+ wk.
$50().$7,000fmo PIT-FIT f ·

Frwlnfonnetion .wg. 24 Hr.

Suppiltt provided! Rulh
Stff-Addroued S1ampad
Envolopol GICO, DEPT. 5,
·BOX 1438, ANTIOCH, TN.
~:.1·f438 Start lmrntdf·

In one week With us

Place

na
11
• •

-~
~-" · JobentoJiscolla""-t
"'Y'~ •
IRQ and networking Wtth
A PTIFT Wort&lt; FIMI Homo ATTENTION: WORK FROM agencieS Ia&lt; earty cNidhood
~~~!_:•PTmiFTup ,,to_ HOME!! $500·$2.500/mQo. devefopmen t, budgeting, tal tree life ins... and as·
........,.~rnu.
.a PT S3 OCI0--$7 0001
FT granl wntlng skins and abili- siQned eonvent1onal you·
•
eationl
&amp;
BonuM~.
,.;
El·
;
'
'
mo
ty lo prCMde own transpor~ drive home. Satellite dis·
:U,ooo WEEKLY1 Mailing perience/Step By Step rar:,::'~ww;v.::· taliOI'I.
Position is $UppO(ted patched. 1-800~« 1-4271
400 - 1 5atllfae·
0709
by grant funds. Sef1CI loner "" WET292
lion Guaramoectt Poatego l Tralr*lg. 888-75&lt;0-~.

And Mason

en nbo1p ~1111r11- i&gt;rni i n r l • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Oh io Point Pleasant, WV

our

• •

:wantod

Meig s, Gallla,

·To

Sept. 2, 2001

the opportunity again to v1111t with
friends, relatlves. and Immediate family
a gathering at the Raccoon County
Park.
food and drinks were provided W1th a
vtdeo presented of family and friends of
the past 50 years.
We wish to thank all those who look
the opportunity to recognize our
relations and friendships of the past 50
years.
We e•peclally want to hank and
recognize our children and their .
spouses who planned. coordinated . and
sponsored the enUre occa•ton .

Thank You
Sincerely, Don and Phyllis Stidh am .

Kick off a
successful
career with
InfoCision!
Would you like

Fridays and
Sa1urdays off1
Would you like
Medical Benelits7
Would you like o
professional work
environment?

Would you like to do

a job where you help
others7
We offer all this

and more...

Call
1-888-237-5342
ext. 2201

Certified Welder
Individual must be_able to TIG weld and purge stainless steel sanitary fittings, be able
to work from bluepnnts and dr"wlngs, and be either certified or previously certified on
pipe . Some knowledge of lathes and milling machines would be helpful . Incumbent
should be willing and able to pass Forklift training, have good problem solving abilities,
and be able to work without close supervision. A minimum ol three· years experience or
equivalent education is required. Extensive testing will be required _to show qualifications.
Incumbent must be willing to work any shift, however. off shift hours are the norm. Pay
rat~ of $11.20 to $15.25 per hour, depending on experience. This Is a union 1\0urly
posttlon .
Eltctrlc•l Contral• Technician
This person is responsible for closely ~lrectlng maintenance on Instrumentation, PLC
·process controls, and electrical equipment to ensure that the equipment Is In proper
operattng condttton. Individual must work with management, engineering , operations ad
electrical personnel to maintain and troubleshoot existing equipment, as well as provide·
support on the development and Installation of new process and utility control and
Instrumentation systems.
,
With limited direction, this Individual will conduct maintenance and training pertaining
to PLC process control, instrumentation, and electrical and related equipment. This
tralntng will employ classroom and hands·on approach. Individual will apply Innovative
procedures, to lmprove product quality and production. Candidate must have effective
communleation skills In order to Interface with both plant personnel and management on
technical Issues. This Individual must work closely with plant management to ensure
ongoing reliability of plant process controls and Instrumentation and wlll.be available to
analyze and troubleshoormajor electrical problems working with the plant electrician,.
Five years eKperlence In an Industrial process control&amp; environment (Including PLCs)
Is required. Minimum two-year technical degree In electronics using programmable logic
controllers or equivalent Is a must. A high school diploma or GED Is required. Allen
Bradle¥ equipment experience Is required. Servo control eKperlence Is a plus .- Tills Is a
nan-umon hourly position. Salary Ia commensurate with experience.
·
Pillsbury offers a competitive wage package, Including medical and dental benefits,
prescription plan, paid vacation and holidays, pension and profit sharing plana.
Please send resume, making particular mention as to position applying to:
THE PILLSBURY COMPANY
S. Pennsylvlnla Avenue, Wellston, _Ohlo 45682
Attention: WELDER POSITION or ELEC. TECH.
.
EEOIAA Employer

*

T-

r' 'UANITUIII· Clot&gt; 1111- l a,
&amp; 4, Gllll top b1r &amp; a 110o11, 8unk Bids w/
Btddng, 1100V 810, COr illd, Bldtoom So&gt;tt comp., 01k - ·· Ooublo Chill of

er-,

*8ofl'l, - · * ~- o:lllny Enf-lfiiOIIIItl

• OUCCI TO•- ( - ) • O.E.

-01!11• DtiNEY- • COINS

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"""-"""'•po- T.V., - Corp« Cfoonlr,GM
Oilt ~IV""""' CftrM&lt;
&lt;C 0'1 (Hp Hop, Ccoun1Jy, ~ • CIIDHIIOW

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Dip--·

r' COI.U!~ • Old .MI. Flag WI 41 Btn. W- Ototolo, WV F&lt;OOI PllcMt l julol ~. W-01111""'
of 111M1 gtuo,.
Soli c .......
Honk
8&lt;. 1f4H041, Honk Jf., Wayton. Hoeglnj. 30 y11. of - · Fiaft a flon.lggl, mony mony """"· KNII'I!I • Old
lu&gt;llt, - · ~lUI -IIJyont l&lt;nHt,

*-

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*

• f1AMDII'UOI (P- Shldl, Cotlt. ""') • ~UNCHINO lAO o IIOX LOT'I.

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""'{f'ltl), ClmlfiiNna ,- . - - - · 311101 .._

1•1811111,FitNng--HII-0..0...0. l'fl.o NtwTOOII

*1'MJICIO ·MO til NIW . . . . MOIIIJ,HT 10 rt'CI 6r """"I NN CALL *

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES - Poater bed with mettren &amp; box aprlnha, telephone table, 3-log~td wall table, 4 1011ged bible, 3 bible tampa,
merblotop dreuer with mirror (1850-1855), dreuer with mirror (1940'1, 1950 calendar (complete), 2 Pepol crateo, picture of child wl1h rabblto
(copyright 1881), ahavlng mug with bruah, achool deak, round toble w th claw feet, aot of McGuHy Readera, 2 achoololotea, coal bucket and
ahD¥01, chlld'a acooter, cltcorotlve leg table, army aaddle (doted 1885), 3·1egged atool, railroad lantern, old car light, old lantern, Gilbert clock,
old atove, amall round tabla with frUit and leave• on top, g1111 cabinet, hfgh choir, Civil War bayonet, leather thot pouch. crocko chlld'a
atroller, dlnfng table (Engllah pub otyle with 2 loav81). 4 can•bottom chalro, omall colfu grinder. child'• button·up shoes, Prince lllbert
tobacco cane, 3 Iron• (extra heada), guitar, lingle tree, scates, rua beater, wash board, 2 ca1t Iron Aunt Jemima flgurel, cheeM ellcera, buHer
mold, match holder•, wall coffee·grlndor, touter, mlac. milk bo1tlea (Including Galllpollo Oolry milk bottle, Spring Hill Oalry milk bottle, Harper
Dolry Farm milk bottle (Jackaon, Ohio), Chautouquo Creamery milk bOttle with lid), deak, cane bottom high chalr, mirror, amoll child'• hutch,
power hom, View Malter, cowboy boot bruah, several toy guns and holsters, Red Ranger gun, atralght razore, aoap, ehavlng bruah, old hymn
booko, old aewlng machine baao with drawers &amp; table top, Weotlnghouae radio, Victrola phonograph, pump organ, 78 rpm records, 45 rr. 33
113 recorda, porcelain dollo , old plano sheet music, bolls, inualc boxoa, 1938 Wea1 VIrginia rood map, Point Pleaaoni/Muon City Telephone
Oirectory (1934), Red top glua chum, Oalay Red Ryder toy gun, Doloy aB gun, Army web bolt and leather holater, wooden rake, pulley, razor
atrap, child'• ball glove, box of old pootcarda, Turrey's razor ttrap &amp; caoa, tin type pho1oa, amall wooden barrel, Cobbler'• otanda, ohoea &amp;
hammer, quilting rock, oak wooden leo bo•, whitt pantry, kitchen cabinet with llour blri, kraut cutter, while granite coffee pot, kltchan tabla
with 8 cone bottom chalro, wooden bucke1s, Rumford baking powder can. cookie jar with lid, me1ol meoourlng lin with handle, pickle lor, molal
alfter with grean handle, Evans coffee Can, brown teapot, strawberry teapot, 5C Pep1l atraw container, blue granite lea pot, Watt creamer •
apple dealgn, butter dlahea, old tin, wooden benchee, cane bottom chalra, croll cut aaw, lanterna, cow klckere, com ahucker, cream
aeparotor, catt Iron kattlaa, woDden barrel , knife, whoto1one with seat, 12 Ilona water coft!alnor with apout (blue &amp; whl1e), carbide tampa,
railroad lantern, old wsah boitrda, pitcher &amp; gloBtea, hand 11w1, marble lamp (pink), Fanton gloaawore, toy antiquo atove (coat Iron), canea,
Smoke Yeller OOgo cigar boxea, cigar box of wooden opoolo, Coco Cola thermomoter (metal), wooden trunka with traya, ilttla book• grun
daprelllon gloila juicer, 11lt &amp; pepper ahakera, green &amp; pink depreaalon gloao Hema, Lone Ranger gla11e1, Lillie Red Riding Hoocr' glsaa,
Hopalong Caoaldy coffu cupa, ctocka llo old bowlo. pota1o maohara wllh green hondl81, antiquo cabinet, atone lara, atand table• with
decorative lega, mantle clock, cast Iron bean kettle, cao1 Iron tea kettle, rolling pin, wooden barrel, chamber polo. Oonaho alone 1ar
Parkoroburg, WV), wooden .plenea, Cadmua achool deak, porch love aeat, hand carved pump organ with llon'o head and feet with mirror
dated 1856) wl1h matching atool, Edison cylinder type record player with horn, old booka. atrslght bock chalro, oplltoon, HoP.olong Caaoldy
milk bottle, Occupied Japan Items, hoy knife, Civil war aaddle, old hanging scales, wooden wringer, wooden ox yoke, baker a cablnet, Watt
apple pitcher 1*1&amp;), Holiday Barblea (never opened) mlac. Barbleo (never opened), old Hot Wheels toya, Matchbox 1oya, and many more ltema
too numerouoto mention.
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS - Waaher &amp; dryer, couch, wing back chair, recliner with heat &amp; massage, coffee table, glasses, mugs, pots &amp; pana
Tupporware ltema, blanke1a, qullto, Home Interior llama, knick knacka, Roy Acuff plate, allilorware, dlahoa, wooden qull1 holder, mlac. kitchen
llama, Christmas Items, concrete goo1e, towels, dlah towels, dish clotha, curio cabinet, blender, electric chopper, Longenberger bllakela,
teapoto, wino gtouoa, white wicker furniture all wllh cuohlono (2 high back chalra, I rocker, llovoaeat, I coffee 1ablo, I end tllble), wrought Iron
bench, Soundealgn 8·track stereo, AM/FM caasette stereo, decorative wooden shelvea, TV with VCR .\ radio anaehed, planter, round table
wtth dr~wer, magazine t1older, Dlaney VCR movies, table lamps, floor lamps, record cablneta, S-track tapes, end many mare ltema too
numerouoto mention .
TOOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS - Drill preas. Crottaman acroll aaw, 61' bench viae, Rockwall 1oble aaw, Sears Craltaman bible oaw Skill router
etock &amp; Oecker bell under, Block &amp; Decker finishing 011/lder, Black &amp; Docker llg sow, Wh"l borrow, ~ btcvcleo, Lowoa 5/p puoh mower~-·
work), Keroaun heater, Lakewood electric apae&amp; heater, sun ahelter, ml1cellaneoua rtea market ltema, ehop vac, queen alze air l'ftllttreea with
pump, Oremol (Iota of attachments), 2·ton floor lack. carpet klck,r, Porter router &amp; table, Power paln1 roller, lawn chair cuahlona, goa grill.
numeroue hand toole, bolta, acrewa, ahovela, end many more llema too numerou• to mention.
·
•

l

2403

TEIIM OJ'lUI,£ • CUff 0./'flE • ,4JI'IIWI!JII:B£t,'A· ll\U

l'br A.eeldenl"tt or ......_ ..

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,

m:rihune- Sentinel..
"
CLA-SSIFIED
;;

Sundav.

Sect. 2. '2001

Sunday,

.~
:·.·:=c~~~~~~''lro . __.n~,.~

l\~ .....

tuDUT

to buy Ulld mo1&gt;i1o1
homH. call (740...--o\75
I \ 11'1

.we

I 1\ 'II \ I
'I H\ 11 I ...,

Cove

Counties Like
No

One

Else

Can!

Or Fax To

Or Fax To

(740) 446-3008

(740) 992·2157

·

Or Fax To

f(Q./1-rlcfo.l'e-.r
Monday thru Friday

8:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW

P-~c~~tAdt~

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In - Col u mn : 1 :00 p . m .
Monday - Fr iday ro r I nser tion
In Ne•t Oay!s Paper
Sunday I n -Column : 1: 00 p.m .
1
For Sundays Pa-p er

All Di splay : 12 Noo n l
Bustn es 5 Day s Prior To
PubllCIH IM
Su nd~v Ols pl ey: 1:00 p .m .
Thursday for Sund ays

.r GJVFAWAYIF t~

r'-------_.1·

1r ~~

12

Year Old lemale Calico 622 Jay Dnve, September
Cal. Spayed and Declawed. 6lh and 7 th, 98 m·Spm, Se~
(740)44&amp;-7730
tember 8th. 9am· •2.30pm,
- : - -- -- - - - Aaln or shine Ill! Ladderbaek

•

FREE SEARCH!
www.SINGLES.com

==-=-:====-=

Free Puppies. 7 weeks Old.
Mixed Breed. Mother Is

START DATING TONIGHT! Slack and Tan. (740)379·
Have lun meeting eligible 9278
singles In your area. Toll·
free 1·800·ROMANCE , ext To give away- used roofing
membrane. Pomeroy area,
9735

==-------(740)992-6810.

Why wall ? Start meeting
Oh6o singles tonight. call toll To goOd home 10.mon. old
free ,.BQ0-766·2623 ext puppy, part Husky/German
1621.
Shepperd, · housebroken,
.
gentle , loving. Needs space
run,
all shots' , . Is
ANNouNCEMENTS
nuetered call 304-674·0073

llo

~~-""'-----'"·
Advocale For Children
Become a Foster Parent
Call wv Youth Advocale
Progrem

r

has

losT AND
Fol.JND
'

LOST· Ma!!!on Area

c~lrs.

oak chairs, various

~~ ~tems, 8~0:1 ~~r:P~·J~~

IS es. n
I
• d
calendars, too s, woo en
boxes , melai toys , P_ens,
clothing, bOoks . magaz1nes.
milk bottles, misc . bottles,
old radio, washstand. small

desk, wooden ironing board,

w ~~J~

906 Founh Avenue &amp; 9 Vln·
ton Avenue, Augusl 31·
S t b
1 2 3 9am· 7
F~~i~~e urck:ltheS appllan.'
ce9 blk~s mowe;.., porce·
latn' doll Collection, doora,
wi~dows many more Items.
'
925 4th Ave Back Yard .
· .
E ·
Linens, ExerCISe
qu•p·
menl TV/ Stereo Stand
'
B~S
'
LOIS misc . Tuesday

h-u 11rk

··

Free Yard Sale Sign!$
15 Words, 3 Days
Words 20¢ Per Word
Must Be Prepaid

r
r

I Michael W. Price, will no
longer be responsible lor
any debts. other than my __
own.
New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Stimson, Athens

1

9·00-?
Kid
5
1
•
•
'
clothes, toys, high chair,
toddler b~. new .baby mattress, clannet, blinds, adu"
clothing, mi~. lor everyone,
Cindy Onva, 2nd road IO
right past Komer off 160.

195

Huge Yard Sale· Mons, September 2,3 at Sassy
womens , . boys clothes, Scissors •~ear Centenaryhome lntenor, furniture, ap- e•ercis3 equipment, wood
pllances, etc. 3314Georges burner crafts. bumpar lor
Creek A.d. Wednesday Au· . truck. clothes, misc. Items.
gust 29th- Tu&amp;&amp;day Sep- 8 •5pm.
.·
tember 4th.

Huge Yard SaJe· Something
Augusl 31 , September 1·3, tor evaryo.ne, baby furniture,
Male 46 BumeHe Road, Kanauga dishes, toys, August 31·

I

YARD SALE

2346 Founh Street, Syra- 3 Family Yard 5ale. Boys &amp; Rick Poaroon Auction Com·
Large Porch Sale- Saturday
September 1st &amp; Monday
September 3rd. 9am-4pm,
Lots of Household Items .
4480 ~tate Route 325
South, R1c Grande.
.
Mov•ng Sale· ~Tuesday September 4th o.. Wednesday
5th, 6339 &amp; 6309 State
Route 588 , 9am-4pm. All
kinds of items!

mile out oH Evergreen.

Centenary, Past Jumbo. g.
, 5, Sept 4-5 . Door, Womuns

cuse, In back, Mon . Sept, Girls clothes, newbom-3T
name brand. &amp; miac. Fri·
' .
Sat. 5th Street In Mason
9/3, 914, 915, 931 Hysell St.,
Middleport, something for Back Porch Sale Fri.-Sat.
e11eryone, too much to list.
8am·4pm CQmer of Mt. Ver•
non &amp; 23rd. New Women
sl:loes size 10, clothes, size
COLLECTIBLE SALE, ,Sun, 18, household Items, bed·
Sept 2, Mon. Sept 3, Sam· spreads, etc.
4pm, Rusll~ Hills, Syracuse,
II it's a TREASURE we
MAY have it. Glass, Fen·
ton, Pottery, Toys, Dolls, Garage Sale Friday August
Nascar, Tools, Planters, Ar·
&amp; s
d
S t 1
.my Blankets Jewelrv etc
31
atur ay ap · "
'
.,,
.
(9am-4pm) located on At.
September 3 &amp; 4, Syracuse 33 in Letart last hOuse on
roadside park, cassette the right before you go up
tapes, records, &amp; misc.
the big hill to Mt. AII:O.
.
3rd 9'30 till 7

pany, full lime aU&lt;:tloneer,
complete auction seNice.
Licensed N66,0hlo &amp; West
Virginia, 304·n3-5785 Or

r

304- 77~5447 ·
WANJlD
.

ro BUY
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
SMver, Gokt Coins, Proofsets.

446·2842.
- - - ,----,------,Building site, any aiza from
a level lot to 5 acres, either
in Green or Perry Township
(Gallla County) Cash Paid.
(740}379·26~5

We alao wont -to
thank lhoae that
provided
foDd,
tranaportatlon for
ua to
go to
Florida, took care
of our yard and
animals while we
were gone, and
numerous other
good deeds, far
too
many
to
mention. ~

September 2nd, (f1am5pm) at State Route 160, 2
miles north of Holzer Hospital. Items oHered: computer,
lools, clean twin mattres&amp;
set, chandelier, haalthrider,
old kltct1en dropleaf lable &amp;
2 chairs, Laura Ashley twin
bed se1s. cultured Marble
sink vanity top, 3 wicker
chairs, some anllques &amp; collectibles, good clean cloth·
lng aU sizes, books, toys
and much more.

844 1st Ave. 914-916. 9•007, 4 Family. Lots of nice
Womens shoes 8·8.5, Nlce
Large

Size

Womens

clothes. Coats, Old Tools,
Canalng Jars, Lots More.

Happy Ad

Fax: . 724-228-2888

Call Today

c•r..r•Oa.i;lumber.com

1·866·475·7223

ext. 1911

We
want
to
express
our
1lncere
appreciation for
.the
thoughtfulness of
our
friends,
neighbors
and
loved ones. ·

COMPANY
Attn: Bill Dove
Building 114
1019 Route 519
Eighty Four, PA
15330· 2813

NANCY CASTEEL, RNC
God uw th.ll Nan wu glt1ing rilfd, and 1 cu~ Wllftol fo bt.
So H1 put hi11nn1 around h11 and whi1pmd, ' 1ometo mr'.

'Y
"

With tm·filltd
w1 walrhtd ht~ 10 quic~y fldtaway.
All hough w1 lovtd Mr dttply, iv1 could not mike htr suy.
Agolden hurt slopptd btatin~ hard working hand1 pull af!ll
Cod broke our hurt! lo jli'JYI lo111, H1 only llitt1lht bt!L

fJ-fo---S.,·to

''"f. tOOO. I.sMlfo-

- ""- """""""""" .........""-p.,a ....
?-1~

I

llrne. Mallorder. CALL: 888·
.;:438:;;.;·30:::.;.:12:_______
,.OOV'T
POSTAL
P1ELDI" Job Opporiunl·
Uta. Fret Call for !lflPllca·
tiQn/oxamtnatlon lnforma·
tlon. Flderal Hlr.'Full BanIfill 1-800-842·1704 txt
0!50 7...,.10prn cot: 7 Otyo
..OOV"T POITAL .lOIS*
1o 18.38/hour. free Call for.
Apfltlcatlon/Examlnatlon In·
!ormation. flderal Hire,
Full Banoflla 1-800·842·
1858, ext. 125, 7om·10pm
cat. 1 dlya
"Work From Honio•• eam
$50CJ.$25001PTmo. 12SOCJ.
$8000/FTmo. Paid Vaco·
1tont1-888-302·23117
www.dwhomeblz.com

974JOBS
coo Management, LLC

WEST
SHADE
BARBER
SHOP ··

_:_:_c.==.=-=-:=-:.:=·- ..___,
"""''·International Businoso
expanding. $25/175hr. PIT
FIT 888 588 3713.
www.megabnck&amp;4you net

Ba Your Own Bossi
From Homel
Earn up., S500-$900Q/Uo
PT/FT
Cell TcNI Free

·
1-868-736-80n
AMBITION
REOUIREO www.Sirr1JieCuh81z.com
Eam Income from home.
.
SS00-17000 · mo. PT/FT. COL-A Orivara: ExpenMall-orderlfl·commerce . ..ncedl'lnexperlenced West

Complete tntinlng lnforrno- Coul Runt &amp; More. Exl:tilion•
920-924-8400. lent Poy, Bantfita &amp; Home
www.AchleveDroama.com llme, 1·800-348-1380.
CIVIL EHGINIIIIIING

F1EL~_3ECHNE1CI~~~·

try •·~ and lip&amp;·-~ .
prelsr Asscclatot Degree In
Civil Englneanng Technolo-

'II ancu or certllicatlons

"'-'=------ (ODOT Levell oo ACI
ATTENllOH
WE NEEO HELPI
S800-$t800 PT
$2,CJ00.$6,000 FT
Free Tr!llnlng
1-.eo7-RICH

CMiflcatlon). Perform conatructlon ma1erit11s teatlng and
-•11on of concrete,
IOIIa ond aaphol! . Position
It

and resume to Educa•e
Grant. PO Box 393, Pt.
Pleasant, _WV 25550. AHor·
mat!Yt ActK&gt;n/ Equal Qpportuni!y.
Counselor· An out . tier1t alcoho! nd othe dpa
cy is :eeking ~ ~~~;

DRIVERS-

NEW PAV PLA N. Ho.,e
mosl weekends, $1 ,5{KJ:
Sign-on bonus. Start up to
s 351 mlle lOaded and empty
plus tarp, sa 1ety, re 1erra1
and Idle Incentives. Notouch freoglot. BCJBS. De&lt;&gt;-

pre$$.

Services include bul are not OH

ll•lJ' WAtorllill

11.,s

llarWAMm

f

E•- GOV"T POSTAL JOBS. Up McClure a Restauran1 ·now Horne Hoaftll Agency seekto $4 7·57 8 or more per hiring all 3 locationl. fuH or ing Ful!·ttmel Part-lime/ Pet"
y~ar. Now_hlt&gt;~tQ. Full Ben- part-time, P'Ck up appltca· Diem/ Weekend AN's comel~ts &amp; Retirement. For Ap- lion at location &amp; bring bllck petitive Salary witn benehts.
piiC8tJOO and Info 1-800- between
9 :30am
&amp; No home health
expert337·97300ept.P·829
10.00am, Monday thru 0(11
"·t· once nece•••ru.
• ~ at
.....-.,
.......,.r
GROWI NG

Rider P10gram. Paid vae

NEEDS HELP! W011&lt; f10m

Jns. avail

hOme!

Students Wek:ome.

www.cannone~~;p.-ess.com .
1·800-845-9390

merce.

BUSINESS urday

750 First Avenue , GaiUpoli5

or phone t -866-U 1·1393

Mall-order/E-Com. Homeworket'a NMded

$522+/wHk

PT $8 35

(toll free)

weeki'(

processing :___ _:__ _ _--,-$1()()()..$-«&gt;00/wk
FT. mall 1
Homewottc.ar&amp; NeMed S635
www.Ama zing Goa ls .c om E
edasy
. . No experience need- Weekly Proceuing Mail.
(8001 2n 5843
Easyl
fife
El!llGrie&lt;'ce
CaU1-800-•90-9450 24 hrs. Needed. Cal 1.80().{;52• ·

EARN $25,QOO-S50.000/yr,
Medicel Insurance Biliong, GROWING
BUSINESS -------,:-c-_:_8726.::.:- Ext
_ ._20
-:770.,;._24_H_rs__
7
Needed Immediately! Home NEEDS HELPI _ . lrom •
Computer Needed. FREE home! Mail-or&lt;ltr/E-Com·
Public Sale and Auction
Website, 1-800·291-4683 merce. S522+/week PT. _ __:_.::;::.:,::..;:.::,:.;:_::..;..::.__;..;..._ _ __
_
D..::.;t.,_l,_
ep 1.;c09:__ _ _ _ $1 000·$4000/wk FT. 800·
9 2 1 - 8 5 3 8
www.dream2bfree.com
r - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , . . . . . . . ,•

--:-==----

·

FUNDRAISINO

Hea&gt;Jy Equ ipme nt Opera-

OIRECTDR

tors needed NOWII Back-

evaluaUons: diagnosis: indl- YOUR HOMEI MAIL OA·

Needed !or your area

hOe, Trackhoe &amp; Dozer.

viduel and/ 01 gmup coun·
&amp;eli~. Bachelor's ...__a
..•
- ·must eeoc. or liSW and
k.............._ n chemicel de·~.....,.
pendency prelorred. 8end

·D E R 1 I N T E R N E T ,
to wa&lt;k with schools,
$ ' 200
PT
PTI'is and coeches.Est. CO.
1
''
+.mo.,
0
Avg •st
s·A ..AW
$7,200+mo. FT. 1·866-812·
' • yr. _..fiVft
540-1148 6540
8078 -""".home-buso······buikMir.com
Garbage Service NeedS De·
resume by September 7 '
pendable d . /load8 .th
2001 to: FACTS, 45 Oltve Full lime and PAN RN staff
nv~~
' . WI
COL Expenence dnvlng
Slreet, Gallipolis, Ohio needed lor agresslvely
•
k
1
1
5
45631 or Fax (740'446- growing local home health t{op 'h)!~~966S
740 ~ ruc a pus.
'
8014. EOE. MfFIH
agency, Medl Home Heanh. ':-="-'=..:..___
send resumes : Att. Usa Governmem Job•
EARN $250-SSOO Per Dayl Ehman- Chapman, RN Su- $11 .Q0.$33.00 per hour poFill out forms from home, pe1Y1sor, 430 2nd Ave, PO tentlal. Paid Training/Full
No e•perience necessary Box 987 Gallipolis Oh. Benefits. For more lnlorma C8111-877·535·1179.
· 45631
lion call 1-888-674-9150
=:.:.:::..:.-=::_:_:.:.:::_ _ or call 1-800-481 -6334.
ext. 3234
EASY WORKI EXCELLENT
":G"'-"·e=m::.me.:_nt_P_o_st_ai-JOb
_ s_
PAYI Assemble Produc&lt;s.
"'
Coli Toll Free 1·800·467Up To $18.35/Hr.
5566 EKt 11577
Hiring for 2001192
BenelltsiPension

You can be trained and certified in 21 days. No money

1

A UCT'F'O'IV
A •

TUESDAY, SEPT 4, 2001
5:00P.M.

down. Transpol1ation end
n...

Master today I 1·866-432~

8937.
HELP WANTED
FREE INF0 !1

~·

.

• ;&amp; ·

lodging avoitable. ..,...ro1ors
are standing by! Call Skill

Located at the Auction Center on Rt
In Mason, WV, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Gaul
have aold their farm &amp; will be
aelllng the following along with the
Brook
estate from Pt.

33

WORK IN YOUR HOMEI

MAIL ORDER /INTERNET.
$1200=1mo.,
PT
to
$7,200tlmo. FT
Hl66·8f2-8076
www.home·buslness·builder.com
Help wantOd canng lor the
elderly, Darst Group Home,
now paying minimum wage,

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - t-868 726-9083 E•r. 2000
Public Sale and Auction
7:30am-11 :00pm CST

PUBL .£rc

new shifts: 7am·3pm, 7am5pm, 3pm-11pm , 11pm7em, call 74().992·5023.

Public Sale and Auction

chairs,
pc. twin BR suite, early 2 pc.
cabinet, old shoe shine bench. 4
pc. Walnut BR suite, oak lamp
table. oak Hoosier style cabinet,
rockers. tables. Magic Chef gaa
range. outstanding oak Pump
,,..,,,n_ chairs. twin Iron &amp; brass bed

5

lo CTL Engineering Inc.
2880 Fisher Road, Columbus, OH 43204 (fax 614276-6377) amoll:
orutegOcnleng com
EOE .
AN EMPLOYEE OWNED
COMPANY.
~ nd w ill offe r for sa le the following

AVOf&gt;l· Looking for· higher
DATA ENTRY
Income? More 11eKible
FTIPT, No Experience
hours? . lndopendertce? Noedld. Training Provldldl
AVON hll what you're look· Medicel Billing. Up to $80K
lng for. Let's talk. (868)!e1· ·
Computer required.
2886.
.
1·800-240-1548, Dept. 926
091
llall)'littor 1or 3 112 yHr old
WWW !l!li!Dtd
Friday ...nlngo &amp;-7:30pm. Domino'• ,_ hlnng maJ&gt;o
Must hlvo ,.tlable tranopor· agomont and sale dnvers,
tallon.
{304)773·5459. Gtlllpotle and Pomeroy toPIIIMioove mo"""go.
cat1ona only. Appty In per·
lOft

r--~-=...,.,=""""=...,.=...,.,=,.---.

A REM IN DE R
·

.

The Emancipation Procllmatlon
Queen Contest at t!W Gsllls County
Fairgrounds on Sept. 22, 2001, Ia not
far 1w1y. To enter, contact Jana V.
Harper at (740) 441·1548 or (740)
441·8006 for Entry Form. Pleue
return Entry form back to Jane V.
Harper1 6287 SR 588, Gallipolis, OH
45631 oy Sept. 8, 2001. Mall or bring
It to J1ne. No swimsuit or talent
required. Age 16·25 years of age.
Please enter.
Let's make thla a

Saturday,
September 8, 7:00

items at publi c a uction .

tiiYHiOCii

I '•II , I
•
acate, 501 FOfd alctcle btl' mower,

p.m.

~.,, MFI10 bllef (plrta,, 3 round ball ''"""~­
Partial list: Minion Oak 5 ahelf book
fwder-., new ld. . aptndM u.Mr, good hay
t.dtr, ct11 puller, CGbl 1C20R N!uogen Hmln
style kHchen cabinet (oo to),
!5hp rototlller, Murray lawn tr.clor, pintle
buffet.
ahow boa, old com ..,_.ler, new Kl lnground
IGirossto Include: pink and green dOIIrOitslcon,l
new 22,000 ITU hllttr. 2 whttl can. rolla of new
alore dlepl&amp;y, S gatloon deg,.....,, ur rampa. 275
Fenton, Shawnee, approx. 29 pea. Jewel
t.nk, Iota ol new twnd toot., Crtftemln .ocket
Fire King. Red Ruby, crocks, Ice
boxll, PrDtO drill blttlftd eu~ outa.
g.tllona ot .,... p~lnt, p.lnl brUiih tate, Iota ot •~•• ,.,.._,, Universal and Griswold grlndera, br•aa
copper Items, aliver plato graniteware.
Mrdware, new high prw:aaure hoH, boaes of n•w
abraatve grinding whetll, plul much mqrtt
Tonka · Volkawagon cars
Furp!tym: Like new larg• wood tabla wllh Bentwood

milk bottloa, oil lamps, c~st Iron

~[~w:•:·~·:~~~~

verv tanoy
cheatllble,
and wall
IUIII,
largeMtarfall
01k library
llrtt knick knack shelf, oak porch .wtng,
I
antique at.noU Ht, small pool tabla, told up

tcllctten cablneta, boxes of computer paper

oupjoltoo, plue muct:t mora.
1;~::.' Show Me !lxtO aluminum box trtller,. very

Her·rln!~bo•ne·
Creamer &amp; Sugar- Vase-Bowls,
Pfaltzgraft, Green Depression, over
pos Pope Gosser china. Fenton •
Homer Laughlin China. &amp; more.

MI S C
Indian girl Puppet, lg. amount of old
games-Monopoly- Game of the
States· Checkers-Dominoes &amp;
more. Battery operated remote
control capital airliner toy airplane,
Favorite Funnies Printing set, pots,
Pans, sm. appliances. fishing rod &amp;
reels,
rigionar
ahampooer,
Polisher,
Eureka
sweeper,
aluminum Christmas tree, linens.
and box Iota autoharp, MTD
rototiller &amp; much more.
Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction
Co.

1166

773-5785 or 773-5447 .
TERMS: CASH OR CH CK WITH 10

~~~cen.

Free

A "BIG THANKS"
to

Estimates

Sgt. Chuck Kassee

&amp; Insured
Pllnt, Flooring,
Electrical

All Home Needs

Rep1irs, Etc.

740-949-1521

25 Yeart Ex,.rlence

1'111! ESTIMATI!S •

Owner:
Wolfe

(740) 388.0141

Your Girls,
Karla, Crls,
Heather&amp;
Rachel ·

LO'ol•e

WALK IN HOURS
Friday H
Saturday 9-noon
ather tlmea by
lap•pollntmtent only.

985-3345
$3.00oH
any hair cut from
Chrlo Parlw wHh
hr. or 112 hr.
moaaage

Help Wanted

of the Gallla County
Sheriff's Office for his
Defensive D
Skills.

Eleclrfcal, Plumbing

SpeclllllOI In Deep
Tlllue, Swedlah,
Shllllau,
Cranloaacral, Yoga
·$45 lull hour
$30 hall hour

Rosie Ward, VP of Human Resources
Holzer Medical Center ·
I00 J!Xkson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio A563l
. ....., (740) 446·5105
filii (740) 446·51 06
110

45769

Cannon

Owner Op/Lea$e
Program. Your !ruck or ours
.83e+lmt COmpany drivers
start1ng up to .34c/mi wJin.
creaseo u p to .'"•
.;~""' . p a~
raise evety 6 mos Bonus-

limited to: scree ning and FREE INFO!! WORK IN

MAINTENANCE

Nuclear Mtcllcl•e Tech•ologlst
Plnonal Care Aide•
Therapy Service• Ml•ag.-. (Physical Therapy)
Occ•patlonal ll11raplst
·
Physical Th~raplst

Help Wanted

1

Drivet

:___:__ _ _ _ _ _
FAST GROWING BUSI·
NESS NEEOS CASHIERS
A COOKS, PART liME,
FULL nME, ALL SHIFTS,
SEND RESUME TO: THE
DAILY SENTINEL, PO
BOX 729-00, POMEROY,

j,O
1a
!!!N
!!fa._,.r
'IlD 11
11"J!!II!I•Ifapi'!!!!!!!!V!!!VA

Ht:LP WAN1Hl

In GaJtlpolla area. Reaume

Time, Part Time, Per Diem)

Pulmonary Care Unit and Emergency Department
LPNs

11

11.,s

Public Sale and Auction

Located 7 miles west
on
at1he Jackson County Fairgrounds.
Owners Don and Leanna Lipscomb have
been collec1ing for over 50 years and are
ready to sell their 1reasures.
Call for lis1ing .
Sale held indoors with no sealing available,
bring your lawn chair. Camping available on
pr~mises with full hookup. Many Surprises!
TEAMS: Caah or local check with posltlve 10

1'10 OUT OF STATE CHECKS ACCEPTED WITHOUT
BANK LETTER OF GUARANTEE

AUCTIONEER: EDWIN WINTER
PHONE:

Volley Truck Driver Training
COL (ttiflcM s~ IOW!e

#334

ALL NEW MERCHANDISE
~ash Give-A-Way Every Auction
Lon Neal- Auctioneer #386
Behind Posl Office In Henderson, WV

(304) 273·3447

~~en' Frl 7:00.3:30 w.ln .tuslal' 11111:00-4:30 12M!

•l'vtaldag IIIII ftl1tlngiii'IIWie bllllli ~~~•Job pltxtmtnt Ill &lt;lass Akaitllng'
Cenlad Karl Lttnll.aoo.641-369S oi 1740)373-3966

Public

Sale end Auction

•

Vt•lt our web•lte at:
www.841umber.com
Equ•l Opportunlly Employ•r
WFIOV

· We wish to eXpress our sincere
gratitude to our Immediate family.
relatives . and friends for making our
50th Wedd1ng Anniversary a memorable
occasion . While spending the recent
weekend tn the Gatltnsburg and Pigeon
forge Tenn. area with family members.
children and spouses, grandchildren ,
1!:~ :rna a great grandchild. We enjoyed the
companionship of family while sightseeing. shopping and dtntng together.
We also had a friendly encounter with
a bear at the lodge where we stayed.
Upon returning home we were gtven

WE MISS YOV

A WORK AT HOME OPPORTUNITYI Eam up to
$50CJ.I50001mo.
PT/FT
Free Info. Toll Free 11!66)
839-RICH - -Oihomo4av-

or.com

·

Obstetrics, Rehab, 4West, 2Wes( Pediatrics, Critical Care, ·

···c·
Ill

tfEuo\V,\1\TEJ)

03

E~mall:

50th Anniversary
· Recognize~
40and Fine
~-~

'

(Full

Immediate openings are available at The Pillsbury Company. a prominent lpod
manufacturing facility in Wellston, Ohio, for the _
f ollowing positions;
' '- ·

Card of Thanks

Andy P.

Coorofna101r' Soc:lal W-·
.,.._ Mason ~~u.nty Eartv
~hildhood lnitlallve .s~ks
highfV motivated •nd•v1dual

~.NJ

No
84 LUMBER

~~.=:1~= ~~

Opening•~

50 New
Positions
Now
Available
$7/hour +
weekly
bonus

fundraising,
sales, or
collections
Full
Benefits
Paid
.Training ,

_

ATTENTION: WORK FROM
HOME : Mail Order Business. Need Help immedi·
etoly, $522+/week PT.
$l000·$4_
000/waek
FT.
www MCFinanctafLibertyco
m 1·8oo.898·6359
.

...ACCESS TO A COM•PUTER? Put It to Work!
:112Mfr.S75/hr. FTIPT. FREE
;Info.
868·937·7128
.www.drakehockjey 0 ~arth· www.comeworkwlthme.com
~lnk.nt1
.
BARTENDERS CAN mitke
"' .. ACCESS TO A COM· over $250 per llllftl No Ex·
PUTER? Put It To Wor1&lt;1 " " " - Ntceaa Call1·
..-~ry.
12S.I7~r. PTJFT. 1·886- 800'509-3830
!SOCJ.9e75 FREE Training/In·
fo. www.workfromhomotl&amp;5. AVON! AH Araaol To Buy or
com
Sol. Snl~oy Spoara, 304·
, ..ATTENTION! Work At -"67~5·.,;.1429=·;...._ __,_ _

lmmedi,te Job

a:

call and prayer
has made this
difficult
lime
easler to bear.

www.-tureabound.com

Help Wanted

GAU1POLIS

lii"'"""'"""'"""""""""'"""''m

Gold

\J\,1

---~----

*JOBS*
*JOBS*

.11na

to oversee the Educare pt().-

www.Gooii2Sucoosa.com

FT/PT. (24nrs)

~FREE Into. 1-868-385-2754

$8/HR .
Light
Indoor
Work
1-888-

ond Avenue, GallipoUs, 740-

Clothes, Crafls, Pictures , ;;:;;:::;~:;:;;:;;~;::;;;~
Coats, and muc:h more.

yARD SAL&amp;

Diamonds,

MRI_nTg.Ss.• ,..._i~S-Shop
. C' ¥5rrfnSeccy,:

110

Help Wanted

Help wanted " ·
COMPANY
Oualily clothing and house- .
• . .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_.l
hold Items. $1.eM;) bag sale 2 Family, 2489 Mill c•r&lt;ree~;k~r-:;::;=;;~;:;:::;~~:1~
---;--~~~:~·;~a,r:,~n:;-"~"~d•y._Monda)Laoad.-912.-9/4, 9•00· 7,
lhru
9:00·6:00.
or Shine. Lots of IIams.
84 Lu01ber
S&lt;llrchlng [or
:.1 family yard sale· August
indlvldu;ls ror oor
31, September 1&amp;3, 2560
Train« Progrnm.
State Route 141, 8:30am till
5:00pm.
We want indl•iduab
Card of Thanks
looking ror ' &lt;aretr
3 family, Stale Route 850,
Includes customer mvice.l
Bidwell, 41h, 5th, 6th.
hands-on work , g
6 family yard sale, rain or
salu, and mllnaiem&lt;,nt: l
shine, Salurday, September
Trainees
1st, (9am·Spm) &amp; Sunday

card, letter, phone

• $25/hr·$75/Hr.

-----,--,..,.-,,.-=---:._---

_.,;·------:~-:-:-=,.---:-----

110

aat-814~n8

H llP WANro&gt;

W)NW.b-at-hame.oom

ASSEMBLY AT HOME11
Crafts, Toys, Jewelry,
Wood,
Sowing,
: •••ACCESS TO A COM· l'yplng ...Greet Payl CALL 1•
•PUTER? Put It to Worid 800·795.0380 Ex1J 201

Private Porty Ads Under $100
20 Words 7 Days • Each Item Priced
• No Commercial Ad s
• No Tickets/Purebred Animals
Or Garage/Yard Sales • Limit 3 Per Pe.rson
Mall To : Oh io Valley Publishing, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis , OH 45631

740-592 -1842

We
want
to
express
our
THANKS to each
Individual
lor
their
thoughtfulness.
Coping with tho
death
of
our
Beloved
Becky
has been very
difficult; but each

$WORK AT HOME AND
LOVE ITII C - SUCCfitl
and
Eam
$1700.
•$5000/monthly For FREE
; tnformatton Cali (800) 232·
. 0375.

(304) 67iii5-,;52;::34:.;__ _ _ _- - : - - . - .

1e~:~1r J;~ It~~

2

misc.

9 3-915

Phone1 -800-575-6008
chocolate lab &amp;mate bnndle
.
1&amp;3, 9em-? 136 LeGrande
or 304·345·6897
striped lab, both with chain Big Yard 5ale september Blvd.
- - - - - - - - c o l l a r s. (304)m-5202
1,2,3 Hemlock Road, 9/10

~

:ssa

· • Ads Shou ld Run 7 Days

\\\()1 \( 1· \11-\1"'

.
r·

DANCE OISTRtBUTORS'
••• 717 ..23 E"T
1"QVV"
._
,.
61.
. (24 HAS.)
WEEKLY maNing let·
k - ~ ~- F II
.. ..,.. "UI' ' ....... ,... u Of part".time. No ... ..-B....... ·neces.....,..., · •IllY· Easy! Mt houral CaJ1
-u.s . ·DigHil-617-520-8071
.•24 hour recording.

• Start Your Ads With A Kevword • Incl ude Comp le te
Descript ion • Include A Price • Avo id Abbreviatio ns
• Include Phone Number And Add rer. s When Needed

Should In
To Help

PERsoNALS

Includes
Up To
Over 15
Ads

,...
1..ft01 ·2&amp;&amp;·5625

•$4!50.00.$1 ,000.00 WEEK·

l\.egister
~rtbune
Sentinel
{740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333 -

Call Today•••

11.,s

: Lv Mailing lenere From Access To A Computer'?
1-to&lt;M. No oxporitnce nee- ••Put It To WOI1&lt;.. Up to Babyslner for 7 yeer old afesury. FTIPT. Help Need- 125-$75 hr. PT/FT FREE ler school. can after 6.00
ed lmmodlalelyl CaM 'SUN- Booldl!lll 868-679-4331 .
pm. (740)44 H l870

REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW
Your Ad,

llarWANtm

100 WORKIRS NEEOEO ATTENTION• WORK FROM
A&amp;wnbae crafts, wood
HOME! Out chlk!ren Come
itema. Material proyided. To The Ottlce Everyday.
To $ot80+ wk.
$50().$7,000fmo PIT-FIT f ·

Frwlnfonnetion .wg. 24 Hr.

Suppiltt provided! Rulh
Stff-Addroued S1ampad
Envolopol GICO, DEPT. 5,
·BOX 1438, ANTIOCH, TN.
~:.1·f438 Start lmrntdf·

In one week With us

Place

na
11
• •

-~
~-" · JobentoJiscolla""-t
"'Y'~ •
IRQ and networking Wtth
A PTIFT Wort&lt; FIMI Homo ATTENTION: WORK FROM agencieS Ia&lt; earty cNidhood
~~~!_:•PTmiFTup ,,to_ HOME!! $500·$2.500/mQo. devefopmen t, budgeting, tal tree life ins... and as·
........,.~rnu.
.a PT S3 OCI0--$7 0001
FT granl wntlng skins and abili- siQned eonvent1onal you·
•
eationl
&amp;
BonuM~.
,.;
El·
;
'
'
mo
ty lo prCMde own transpor~ drive home. Satellite dis·
:U,ooo WEEKLY1 Mailing perience/Step By Step rar:,::'~ww;v.::· taliOI'I.
Position is $UppO(ted patched. 1-800~« 1-4271
400 - 1 5atllfae·
0709
by grant funds. Sef1CI loner "" WET292
lion Guaramoectt Poatego l Tralr*lg. 888-75&lt;0-~.

And Mason

en nbo1p ~1111r11- i&gt;rni i n r l • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Oh io Point Pleasant, WV

our

• •

:wantod

Meig s, Gallla,

·To

Sept. 2, 2001

the opportunity again to v1111t with
friends, relatlves. and Immediate family
a gathering at the Raccoon County
Park.
food and drinks were provided W1th a
vtdeo presented of family and friends of
the past 50 years.
We wish to thank all those who look
the opportunity to recognize our
relations and friendships of the past 50
years.
We e•peclally want to hank and
recognize our children and their .
spouses who planned. coordinated . and
sponsored the enUre occa•ton .

Thank You
Sincerely, Don and Phyllis Stidh am .

Kick off a
successful
career with
InfoCision!
Would you like

Fridays and
Sa1urdays off1
Would you like
Medical Benelits7
Would you like o
professional work
environment?

Would you like to do

a job where you help
others7
We offer all this

and more...

Call
1-888-237-5342
ext. 2201

Certified Welder
Individual must be_able to TIG weld and purge stainless steel sanitary fittings, be able
to work from bluepnnts and dr"wlngs, and be either certified or previously certified on
pipe . Some knowledge of lathes and milling machines would be helpful . Incumbent
should be willing and able to pass Forklift training, have good problem solving abilities,
and be able to work without close supervision. A minimum ol three· years experience or
equivalent education is required. Extensive testing will be required _to show qualifications.
Incumbent must be willing to work any shift, however. off shift hours are the norm. Pay
rat~ of $11.20 to $15.25 per hour, depending on experience. This Is a union 1\0urly
posttlon .
Eltctrlc•l Contral• Technician
This person is responsible for closely ~lrectlng maintenance on Instrumentation, PLC
·process controls, and electrical equipment to ensure that the equipment Is In proper
operattng condttton. Individual must work with management, engineering , operations ad
electrical personnel to maintain and troubleshoot existing equipment, as well as provide·
support on the development and Installation of new process and utility control and
Instrumentation systems.
,
With limited direction, this Individual will conduct maintenance and training pertaining
to PLC process control, instrumentation, and electrical and related equipment. This
tralntng will employ classroom and hands·on approach. Individual will apply Innovative
procedures, to lmprove product quality and production. Candidate must have effective
communleation skills In order to Interface with both plant personnel and management on
technical Issues. This Individual must work closely with plant management to ensure
ongoing reliability of plant process controls and Instrumentation and wlll.be available to
analyze and troubleshoormajor electrical problems working with the plant electrician,.
Five years eKperlence In an Industrial process control&amp; environment (Including PLCs)
Is required. Minimum two-year technical degree In electronics using programmable logic
controllers or equivalent Is a must. A high school diploma or GED Is required. Allen
Bradle¥ equipment experience Is required. Servo control eKperlence Is a plus .- Tills Is a
nan-umon hourly position. Salary Ia commensurate with experience.
·
Pillsbury offers a competitive wage package, Including medical and dental benefits,
prescription plan, paid vacation and holidays, pension and profit sharing plana.
Please send resume, making particular mention as to position applying to:
THE PILLSBURY COMPANY
S. Pennsylvlnla Avenue, Wellston, _Ohlo 45682
Attention: WELDER POSITION or ELEC. TECH.
.
EEOIAA Employer

*

T-

r' 'UANITUIII· Clot&gt; 1111- l a,
&amp; 4, Gllll top b1r &amp; a 110o11, 8unk Bids w/
Btddng, 1100V 810, COr illd, Bldtoom So&gt;tt comp., 01k - ·· Ooublo Chill of

er-,

*8ofl'l, - · * ~- o:lllny Enf-lfiiOIIIItl

• OUCCI TO•- ( - ) • O.E.

-01!11• DtiNEY- • COINS

o-

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"""-"""'•po- T.V., - Corp« Cfoonlr,GM
Oilt ~IV""""' CftrM&lt;
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Dip--·

r' COI.U!~ • Old .MI. Flag WI 41 Btn. W- Ototolo, WV F&lt;OOI PllcMt l julol ~. W-01111""'
of 111M1 gtuo,.
Soli c .......
Honk
8&lt;. 1f4H041, Honk Jf., Wayton. Hoeglnj. 30 y11. of - · Fiaft a flon.lggl, mony mony """"· KNII'I!I • Old
lu&gt;llt, - · ~lUI -IIJyont l&lt;nHt,

*-

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*

• f1AMDII'UOI (P- Shldl, Cotlt. ""') • ~UNCHINO lAO o IIOX LOT'I.

."r-..-....

""'{f'ltl), ClmlfiiNna ,- . - - - · 311101 .._

1•1811111,FitNng--HII-0..0...0. l'fl.o NtwTOOII

*1'MJICIO ·MO til NIW . . . . MOIIIJ,HT 10 rt'CI 6r """"I NN CALL *

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES - Poater bed with mettren &amp; box aprlnha, telephone table, 3-log~td wall table, 4 1011ged bible, 3 bible tampa,
merblotop dreuer with mirror (1850-1855), dreuer with mirror (1940'1, 1950 calendar (complete), 2 Pepol crateo, picture of child wl1h rabblto
(copyright 1881), ahavlng mug with bruah, achool deak, round toble w th claw feet, aot of McGuHy Readera, 2 achoololotea, coal bucket and
ahD¥01, chlld'a acooter, cltcorotlve leg table, army aaddle (doted 1885), 3·1egged atool, railroad lantern, old car light, old lantern, Gilbert clock,
old atove, amall round tabla with frUit and leave• on top, g1111 cabinet, hfgh choir, Civil War bayonet, leather thot pouch. crocko chlld'a
atroller, dlnfng table (Engllah pub otyle with 2 loav81). 4 can•bottom chalro, omall colfu grinder. child'• button·up shoes, Prince lllbert
tobacco cane, 3 Iron• (extra heada), guitar, lingle tree, scates, rua beater, wash board, 2 ca1t Iron Aunt Jemima flgurel, cheeM ellcera, buHer
mold, match holder•, wall coffee·grlndor, touter, mlac. milk bo1tlea (Including Galllpollo Oolry milk bottle, Spring Hill Oalry milk bottle, Harper
Dolry Farm milk bottle (Jackaon, Ohio), Chautouquo Creamery milk bOttle with lid), deak, cane bottom high chalr, mirror, amoll child'• hutch,
power hom, View Malter, cowboy boot bruah, several toy guns and holsters, Red Ranger gun, atralght razore, aoap, ehavlng bruah, old hymn
booko, old aewlng machine baao with drawers &amp; table top, Weotlnghouae radio, Victrola phonograph, pump organ, 78 rpm records, 45 rr. 33
113 recorda, porcelain dollo , old plano sheet music, bolls, inualc boxoa, 1938 Wea1 VIrginia rood map, Point Pleaaoni/Muon City Telephone
Oirectory (1934), Red top glua chum, Oalay Red Ryder toy gun, Doloy aB gun, Army web bolt and leather holater, wooden rake, pulley, razor
atrap, child'• ball glove, box of old pootcarda, Turrey's razor ttrap &amp; caoa, tin type pho1oa, amall wooden barrel, Cobbler'• otanda, ohoea &amp;
hammer, quilting rock, oak wooden leo bo•, whitt pantry, kitchen cabinet with llour blri, kraut cutter, while granite coffee pot, kltchan tabla
with 8 cone bottom chalro, wooden bucke1s, Rumford baking powder can. cookie jar with lid, me1ol meoourlng lin with handle, pickle lor, molal
alfter with grean handle, Evans coffee Can, brown teapot, strawberry teapot, 5C Pep1l atraw container, blue granite lea pot, Watt creamer •
apple dealgn, butter dlahea, old tin, wooden benchee, cane bottom chalra, croll cut aaw, lanterna, cow klckere, com ahucker, cream
aeparotor, catt Iron kattlaa, woDden barrel , knife, whoto1one with seat, 12 Ilona water coft!alnor with apout (blue &amp; whl1e), carbide tampa,
railroad lantern, old wsah boitrda, pitcher &amp; gloBtea, hand 11w1, marble lamp (pink), Fanton gloaawore, toy antiquo atove (coat Iron), canea,
Smoke Yeller OOgo cigar boxea, cigar box of wooden opoolo, Coco Cola thermomoter (metal), wooden trunka with traya, ilttla book• grun
daprelllon gloila juicer, 11lt &amp; pepper ahakera, green &amp; pink depreaalon gloao Hema, Lone Ranger gla11e1, Lillie Red Riding Hoocr' glsaa,
Hopalong Caoaldy coffu cupa, ctocka llo old bowlo. pota1o maohara wllh green hondl81, antiquo cabinet, atone lara, atand table• with
decorative lega, mantle clock, cast Iron bean kettle, cao1 Iron tea kettle, rolling pin, wooden barrel, chamber polo. Oonaho alone 1ar
Parkoroburg, WV), wooden .plenea, Cadmua achool deak, porch love aeat, hand carved pump organ with llon'o head and feet with mirror
dated 1856) wl1h matching atool, Edison cylinder type record player with horn, old booka. atrslght bock chalro, oplltoon, HoP.olong Caaoldy
milk bottle, Occupied Japan Items, hoy knife, Civil war aaddle, old hanging scales, wooden wringer, wooden ox yoke, baker a cablnet, Watt
apple pitcher 1*1&amp;), Holiday Barblea (never opened) mlac. Barbleo (never opened), old Hot Wheels toya, Matchbox 1oya, and many more ltema
too numerouoto mention.
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS - Waaher &amp; dryer, couch, wing back chair, recliner with heat &amp; massage, coffee table, glasses, mugs, pots &amp; pana
Tupporware ltema, blanke1a, qullto, Home Interior llama, knick knacka, Roy Acuff plate, allilorware, dlahoa, wooden qull1 holder, mlac. kitchen
llama, Christmas Items, concrete goo1e, towels, dlah towels, dish clotha, curio cabinet, blender, electric chopper, Longenberger bllakela,
teapoto, wino gtouoa, white wicker furniture all wllh cuohlono (2 high back chalra, I rocker, llovoaeat, I coffee 1ablo, I end tllble), wrought Iron
bench, Soundealgn 8·track stereo, AM/FM caasette stereo, decorative wooden shelvea, TV with VCR .\ radio anaehed, planter, round table
wtth dr~wer, magazine t1older, Dlaney VCR movies, table lamps, floor lamps, record cablneta, S-track tapes, end many mare ltema too
numerouoto mention .
TOOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS - Drill preas. Crottaman acroll aaw, 61' bench viae, Rockwall 1oble aaw, Sears Craltaman bible oaw Skill router
etock &amp; Oecker bell under, Block &amp; Decker finishing 011/lder, Black &amp; Docker llg sow, Wh"l borrow, ~ btcvcleo, Lowoa 5/p puoh mower~-·
work), Keroaun heater, Lakewood electric apae&amp; heater, sun ahelter, ml1cellaneoua rtea market ltema, ehop vac, queen alze air l'ftllttreea with
pump, Oremol (Iota of attachments), 2·ton floor lack. carpet klck,r, Porter router &amp; table, Power paln1 roller, lawn chair cuahlona, goa grill.
numeroue hand toole, bolta, acrewa, ahovela, end many more llema too numerou• to mention.
·
•

l

2403

TEIIM OJ'lUI,£ • CUff 0./'flE • ,4JI'IIWI!JII:B£t,'A· ll\U

l'br A.eeldenl"tt or ......_ ..

'•

•

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••

I.

,,

�Page 04 • ituubar ll&gt;uurs 1\tulmrl

~.,1•"! ! 1u•r.•l•P.w.ANIID
_ _.,JII
1 10

HOMEWORKERS • GOOD
WEEKLY INCOME! Proc
essmg lnqu1ry Envelopes'
$3 00 Envelope• Free SuppUesl GenUine Opportun.t)''
HIOO 755 2027 I24Hrs)
KVC A Behav•o,al Health
care NetworK 1S accept.ng
appliCations for the follow1ng
pos1t1on 111 our Mason County offiCe

Iheraptst AppliCants must
ha11e a Masters degree '"
Soc1a1 Work Psychology or

Counseling and be hcensa.
ble
Salary
starts at
$28 000 to $30 000
KYt pro vides 1n home serv
•ces to ch•ldren and la•rnhes
kVC oHers excellent tram
tng and benehts Sehd re
sumes to Human Resource
Dept , PO Bm 510 Atploy
Wv 25271 or ~ease call
372 5145 or lax resumes to
372 1883 You may e mall
us
at
kvccorpra te@c,ty net net
EOE

no-·lfi.:Lp-•W,-ANJl,-iiJ_.Illi•O ~ WAHI'tD
'
The
Educe·
Days

110

HaP WAN'JlD
Needed 83 People to k)se

Library Cieri( 20hrs/week
The Me•gs Coumy L brary 1s
now accep11ng apphca!IOns
lor a pert t1rne cler~ Must
be ava laDle to wor k days
ovemng s and weekends 010 seeks OTR dnver wtth
$5 29 pe r hour Apply at any 3 years experience East to
West COast for auto trans
Me•gs County L•brary
port (740)258-1021

A.tt'lena·MeiOS
trona! Service Center ts
leMIOQ a qualrlled appliCant
to work four(") days a wee+!
as • Pre-~ EdlJcation..
il Aide lor 8SiiQf'lnlef'lt at
Beacon MAOO for lhe Fedoral Hocking Local Schoo&lt;
Diotritt QUALIFICATIONS
Applicants must be Willing to
be fingerprinted to have a
criminal record check hold
a valid edueaHonat aide per~
mit tbltity to work well w1th
tlatr, student and publrc
and must pro~o~ide own
tronsponallon Pleooe IUI&gt;-

Overbrook Cenrer
333
Page Street Middleport
()h, IS currentlytaktng appH
caUons for 1ts upcoming
nursing ass1stant class
which Will begin on Septem~
b&amp;r ,Oth and will run
lhrouyh September 21
2001 Apphcaloons woll be
accepted until September 6,
2001 Please stop by our
front office lor an appliCatiOn
or contact KrisUe Madden at
(740) 992-6472 for morA In
formation E 0 E

._l"..

~~~~~~~~~
:
Tramed
POSTAL JOBS UiJ to
H
f
$ 18 35/hour
lnng
or
2001 Pa1d lralnmg Full
benefits No expen ence re
QUifed Toll free 7 30am
11pmCST 1 888726·9083

JUSt below the Church of God

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

londenl, Alhens·Melgs Edu·
catlonal Servtoe Center, 507
Richland Avenue, SUite
1108 Alheno, Ohoo 45701
The AMESC Ia ., equal op.
portunlty employer/provider
APPliCATION DEADLINE
SEPTEMBER 10 2001
Tum your PHONE BILL inlo
PAYCHECK No Invest·

a

menta

or

Fees

COM-

PLETELY FREEl For free
Into visit www talldreeemencalnc oorMI84you or call 1·
888·21S.0014
lo World Eam $25
hour WIIITraln

to

FOR SALE BY OWNER
3 bedroom house, 1,700 sq. ft., 2 full
baths, large dining room, large
living room, utility room, 2 car
garage, on 1 acre lot. in Porter area.
New roof, new carpet all through the
house. Nice neighborhood. Price
Call after 5:00 p.m.
388-8838.

DALE E. TAYLOR, REALTY

e~~lls.noo®zootnnel.net ~ www.evans .. Jnoore.co•ml

lnt......UOnof
US33 &amp;585
Juat South of

Fonrwrly Bla&lt;'kbur11 Realty "Senws Smdl1eTt1 0/uo fur Over A Qutlrtflr CentiU}'"

.Joe A. Moore-Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1616
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cara Casey-245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379-2990
Candace
446-7412

I.Dgan.

M-F 8:»11:00
S.t.8:~:00

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

~

GALLIO- ADNEY ROAD
Beauutul dream home located
42 acres w1th newer barn and
1slc&gt;ck&lt;!d pond. Th1s 4 BR, 4 Bath
hot,ne has a formal d1mng room, tile
floors and much more Th1s home
was butlt With many extras.
A MUST SEE AT $150,000

liJ.4 Second A, e., Gulllpolio, Ohio 45631-0~
Ll1 740-446-0008 740-441-1111
•

CloMd Sunday

446·3644

Call Now 1 877 83TRAIN

6651

:::::-=-:--=::-:-:--cc---

~~8~~:~~~~; ~:::::::R:e:a:I:E::s:ta:t~e~G~e:n:e:r:a:l::::::~

Remodeled 1o perfecti on

from Large fife p1t completes th•s property as 1 one of 11
lund rver prope rty Plus an affordable price of only $85 000
ill!i 19 DI RECTIONS located at 50~1 State Route 7

TU1t1on to Quahf•ed Appll

cants No up front money

'U4- fJ~~t At

www.BIG-BENDREALTY.COM

, ~.e,

Be9 Bewet

l-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

12037 Ow,.r Wanta An Olio~
Your own prlv11o relr11t1 6
acres mn , opaciouo Uvtng 213
BR and 2 BA plua another smau
dwelling with 1 room and a bath
A true gourmet a kitchen with
cherry cabinata, gazebo wtth
llrepll, heal pump &amp; much morel
REDUCED TO $130,000

~

12054 Clreal Sllrtor homel
rent when you CAn own
adorable home on Bnck St1hool
Road? N1ce spac1ous sectional
home on1an acre m/1 of levlitl
Iandi 3 BR 2 BA
wolh 2 car
27 x 40
and

colonial on 9+ acres Custom
country home wtth 3 BR 2 1/2
BA Smtih custom cab1nets two
car attached garage 30 x 40
detached metal bulldmg, hot tub
and above ground pool
$1

Sunday, SepL 2, 2001

r

10

L_....l.=~_.J ~

NEEOED

WORK FROM HOME!
- - - - -- - NOEXPERIENCE
&gt;~1705
Off1ce worker pan ttme
NEEDED!
pos1bve punctual energeltC COMPANY EXPLODING
Salesperron needed furnl person Apply 1n person
EARN S1QOO--S80001Mo
ture store 1mmed1ate open c omplete c are Ch1ropract1C
PTFT
1ng tu1lt1me PQS!I1on Apply beh nd Burger Kmg
, 888~446-1510
Ulestyle Furniture
856
VNIW EXMoneuTQdau com
Thud Avenue Ga llipolis
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;,'_...:,'..:.:_:_
OH 9 30 5 00 No Phon e Calls
Real Estate General

740·385.4367

Ma•n home offers bright 1nd
chel!ry LR With dm1ng area FR cozy ll1ll;hen 2 BRI 1 hth
plus. full basement Large 101 that goes to the river featur1ng
Ont'l room cabm w•th bath and large deck to enJO'f the view

URGENTLY

and Employed rn plasma donors eam $45

14 16 days Full benehts
to
S60 lor 2 or 3 hours weekly
35 4CK 1st YR No Cos1 Call Sera Tee 740 592

mit a letter of lnl.et'elll re- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

ACOMPUTER?

Only Water Lovers Need Apply!!

a_•..IELP-'.v.,\~.ii'FD-•II..,n~o'!"lfi.:Lp"!"•w-ANrED_~

I 10

HEIJ' WANJ'ED

1.,.

NOW HIRING
Part· ltme Ward Clcuk
30 lbs by October 151
Hours 5pm- 8pm 7
a
Brand
week Duties to Include anNew Just ~atented' t lost
swemg phone filing. l~t
23 tbS in one Month! 1-800- clark:al t..tedleal Records
57().9828
Respontibthflft If y0u al'8
Interested contact Tarau
Med•cal Bilhng Ass1stant
wwwbshm4tlfe com
needed '"""""'aletyl FTIPT NOW HIRINQ.. STIIA'S We wotsqn at (7.00~5001 "'
ol Hotzot
W1a Tram Excetlent tncome presently have openlnQS for apply In PC required 1 888 449- Stale Tested Nursmg Assis SeniOr Care Centtr 380
9773 Ext 222
lants Availabte Ia a fud time Colonial Dove Bidwell, OH
- - - - - -- -posttlon 3 11 30pm and 45614
MEOICAUOENTAL BILL parl·llme poaltlonl on all
lNG COMPANY has lmme- sruftl If you are slncet'ely Nurses are you ~ fOf
dlate Opentngs for People mteresttd tn a career In a challenge?
Career
to Process Clatms $15· tong term health care are a Growth? A brlght future
$45/hr ~Otential Will train canng dediCated 1ndfvidu- with an exceptional facility
PC ReqUired Can Nowl 7 al, please apply at Holzer and company? We want to
Days 1 800·935 3971 E:.:t Sen10r Care Center 380 meet youl Great benefita,
~t219
Coloma! Dnve
Bidwell, exceptiOnal history of reguQhJo between the hours of latory comphance, stable
MYSTERY
SHOPPERS a ooam and 4 00pm or call management loam pro.NEEOED0 I,JP )o $14/hour us at (740)446·5001 and gressova Inpatient and out·
No e:.:penence necessary ask lor E.uta or Martie
patient rihab and cnnical
call toil free 1 888-478 1342 - - - - - - - - - sorvlcea and sign-on bonus
ext ACN2192
OVerbrook Center Now ac tool Interested candidates
, 3 ceptlng applications for • should apply to
Rock·
2
Need bab)'SIIIer
lor a lull tome 11·7 LPN .......·""""- springs Rehablhlation Gan·
F
11
1
year old
u ~ tme In my nons may be picked up al 1
35759 A k "
nome 1740)441 9667 ahor 333 Page Sl'"l Moddle· or
oc spoongs
6pm
po• Oh or oon••ct Krlst1... Road
Pomeroy
Ohkl
~
~ 45769
Equal Opportunity
"
Job
Security Madden lor more 1nforma· Employer
encouraging
Need
$1 0001$5 000 +
Month hoo, E 0 E
worf&lt;place diversity
Work From Home Free In· ----------~~;;;:,;~;,;;;;:;;:;,..__ _
lo 1 868 447 7813
Manag1ng Cosmetotog•sr
full &amp; paJt·t~me, comiTIISSIOO
pay owner pays laMes
work own hours Reply to
~a•r Salon Bo~e 58 ~omer
oy ONo 45769

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plea$ant, WV

12078 Slorter homo prlct, bul
with all the extraa! Newer roof
newer floor coverings, heat
pump central air Smiths custom
oak cabinets
rep lacement
windows, all for $64,900.

'

acre plus farm Along
of wooded land too Large
bam several shed &amp; pond
bedroom
home
that
was
constructed n 1995 Good garden
spot and lots of road frontage
along three roads Call lor
complete 1 1 on this one Too
much
11

TIDY
Ranch home w1th
bedrooms hvtng room dtnlng and
kitChen Plus 14 x 70 mob1le home
1n excellent condition presently
used as a rental Lots of fruit trees
and landscaping *2123

JUST LISTED! 36 ACRES WITH
VINYL SIDED RANCH STYLE
HOME 1 200 oq 11 of living space
area w1th an add1t•onal 2000 sq ft
wh ~eh Is used presently as
carpenters shop but could be
eas•ly con ve rted mto addtllonal
ltv1ng area Metal pole oam 30 x
60 w th 16 :.: 60 add!t on on each
s1d e ParMIJy wooded Fenced
pasture Ti llable acreage Private
12138

I and office rental spaca plus
2 upatall'e apartments comer lot
Nice Income propotl)' Call and 111
uo Is II you lhe reall 12135

looks like new
home with 3 bedrooms
balhs Largo eal·ln kitchen with
toads of cabinets and ope to
oversized tamlly room Owners
must sam
WITHIN MINUTES OF HOLZER
HOSPITAL Located al 6153 SR
160 you will find this 0\lar 1 7 acre
lot and multiple uoe dwelling Ideal
for residential or commercial usa
Unlimited potential MJ&amp;I call for
complolellstlngl 12143

1 112 Story home
1
on n1ce level lot 3
bedro oms enclosed front porch
large knc hen &amp; d1n1ng area Side
porch Detached garage OWNER
WANTS
SOLD!
MAKE
AN
OFFER! 12035
IMMACULATE BRICK t RANCH
WITH LOTS OF STYLE Foyer
open to spacious formal ll~Jing
room Md d1mng area step-saving
k1tchen tam ly room with fireplace,
overs1zM master beQroom with
pat10 area that leads to 1nground
pool master bath 3 addlllOnal
bearooms and bath Approx 2
acres concrete ctrcular drive To
much to ment1on in th1s ad call lor
an apporntment "2050

' ·t ·::r·;:::-,
F

TWO ACRE LOTS! Rio Grande
areal County wafer ava1lable
12133
NEW
LISnNOI
LOVELY
8ET11NO lor lhlo 2 o1ory home
that Ia only 2 3 yeara young
resting on approx 2 a&lt;:rea Living
room
kitchen
8 bedrooms,
basement
Low
e~rtor
maintenance, detached 24 x 30
garage largo fiOnt porch and
morel f2142
NEW USTINGI CON.YmNIENTLY
LOCATED
RAISED
RANCH
STYLE HOMEI Living room,
dining room ki1ohen, don lamlly
room 3 bedrooms, 2 baths buill~
In 2 car garago pluo large rae
room In basement! Central air
12141

II
PIIICI
ra111oc1 nolghborhood oettlng
olona with lho baok drop of
country living oon 11a found In
lhlo 4 bodroom 2 112 bo1h
r1nch. Located In Green
townohlp lhlo remodeled one
level home offer• iarga open
space• enrtched with a central
khchen and famlly/aun room A
large level lot with ahaded deck
area In the back of the home
addl
the
appeal Let
thla
llat of
MUST BELLI DROPP~~ PRICE
TO
1115,000.00 _,- aEU.ER
OIYINO
BUYER
11,000
TOWAREDI CLOSING COITSI
Pnvaloly altualed 3 bedroom, 2
balh largo slzed living roam &amp;
tonnal dining com~.nAtl'on, rear
deck Florida room, d81aohed 2
car garage and morel IMMEDIATE
POSSESSIONI12010
RIO GRANDE AREAl Roomy
almost new home with approx
2,580 aq ft 3 bedrooma 2 full
baths, formal dining room, kl1ohen
and morel Nice olzod rooma Large
fronl pomh bam &amp; allop and 3 29
acres m'l H133
11148 8R 211 165,000 00 1 otory
vinyl sldod ranch homo Living
room, dining area, kitchen family
room and 2 balho. 2 car alloohod
garage Control air Cl1y oohac&gt;ol
121U
NEW LOT LllnNCII $20 000 00 5

Acres

approx

lituated

In

Golipollo Handy klcaUonl 12144
NEW ACREAGE UBnNGI 114 112
oorao m11 wl1h road trontaoo
-~ farm land and ldool
hunting land lhal lo adjacent to
Woy,. Notional Forreol 112140

36812 SR 124 S79 000 3 29
acres comes along with thl&amp; ranch
home Llvtng room dining room
kitchen 3 bedrooms 2 baths 2
Car detached garage Lovely
pond lrutt trees &amp; berries Lets go
soolf2130

CHEAP CHEAPI $21 000 001
Investment/starter Ranch
style
home situated at 738 Ma1n
Street 2 bedrooms
equ1pped
kftchen living room, balhl 12121

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
REDUCED
PRICE 145,000
TEXAS ROAD TLC lo whel lhlo
home hal had Little over 1 acre 3
bedrooms living room kltc:hen
balh, anoohed carport Easll&gt;m
Schools I 12120

•
~106 Thle prlvale

1105 Downlown Historic
District don 1 let this opportunity
pass you by with an established
retail storefront many posslbillttes
can be realized Call for details
~- •
~tl~ '

&amp; eecluded

two~story colonial offers lake
views outs1de and a refrned classy
look lnstde all on 2 acres Located
at 100 Lakeview offers lour
bedrooms and 2 112 baths large
formal dinning and llvtng rooms
along w1th a cozy fami ly room
featuring a gas log ftreplace Wl ltl
an Oak crafted kttchen and top
quallt)l kitchen appliances this
quret country sethng Is a must see

1115 New lletlng located on a
qulot country rood odlolnlng
81111 Owned Foroot. Thlo 2 BR
1 BA with a nice family room 011

out!
2 BA
home on 112 acre mil Quiet
peaceful selling and only 10
mlnutaa from town Immediate
posoeulonl

copa
3 BR &amp; 2 BA All clly ulohtoos
schools, living room with
wood burning fireplace full
b~eement large wood dock and
large patio In back
Very
affortlabtel

Will provide day..care In my
home,
Monday Fnday
(740)949·2169

Vlsh usenllne at

o:=rv

you re
peaceful 1etttng cloae
work,
school ond ploy then lhlo brick
ranch ehould be on thellat With
a beautifully landscaped setting
outside and an open floor plan
with large family/dining room
combinalton Inside thla 3 bedf'O&lt;lm
1 112 bath oNors tranquillity In a
netghborllood sentng $118,000

1132 Convenient Green
Town1hlp loe~tlon for only
$55,900 Brick ranch on large
le¥el lot with many fruit treea,
grapevtnes and nice garden spot
Don t let th1s great deal pasa

by I

........., log wol oylitm
• Gtodod, bordo P""""
l!toltd 25 .,..r -.amy
• Qua1iy windawo and doon
• "'-' upo...l boam loft w~
h61oogut and groovt """"
' lofhr reol wilo ohoolhins. fd
and 25 ywr ohingfo•
' hiwior ... lromitt
·0....~

t NJALACHIAN"
~
IIIUCTUIII

CAiliiOWfOIINFOIMAOON
F£1

800-280-2574

•

WV

Newly constructed smgle
story 1600 sq loot home
Located 10 minutes from
Holzer Hospttat 20 mmutes
from Pleasant Wiley Hosp1
tal off SA 160 on a pnvale
1·1/2 acre lot 3 bedroom
2 1/2 baths big kitchen
w/oak cabmets DR LA
wtgas log fire_place central
a1r laundry room front
porch &amp; 2 112 car garage
Immediate possess•on Ap
praised at $125 500 ask1ng
$125 500 Call (740)446
4514 from 8 5pm M·F or
(740)446 3248 altar 5pm

J;l!J

New 16)(80 3 bedroom 2
bath only $500 down call
Nokko1740)38 5 4367
New 2002 Fleetwood only
$771; dOWn and s150 as per
month
call
Cheryl
(740)385 4367

Mounx: Ho"~o:s
IURSAU

New 2002 Fleetwood single
Wrde Only $149 month only
at Fleetwood Homes ot
Proctorville Toll Free 1
888 565.()167

·SIZZLIN
Hot summer deals
· fREE·
Heat pump or central a1r
w1th the purchase of select
in stock models
•WHERE·
Coles Mob1le Homes 15266
US 50 East
A t hens ~
Oh 45701
·PHONE
(740)592 1972

New banlc repo- 14x70 3
bedcoono 2 bath· Pay $499
&amp; move ln Oakwood Galllp
olo s (740!446 3093
New Doulnil Wide $195
Per Month! 3 Bedroom 2
Bath Free Delivery &amp; Set
up I 888 928 3426

16 W1de Only $195 00 Per Nice Fleetwood Mob1le
Month 8 99% F1xed Interest Home 2 Bedroom 2 Bath on
Rate With A1r And Un 1 A&lt;:rs ground on Rt 62
derp1nn1ng 1 888 928 3426 overlooking rtver between
Leon &amp; Pomt Pleasant Pas
1982 14x70 Falfmont Town stble
Owner
Ftnance
house 2 bedroom 1 large $35 000 (304)343 4143 or
balh w1th heat pump &amp; ale (304)4&gt;fl.1 Q52
$7 500 740 591 4043 oc
740 !.192 0938
TOPOOLLAR
On MobUe Home
1995 Clayton 14)(70 280
trade-int
2BA Vmyt Siding Sh1ngle
We have
Roof , Must be Moved
Cuslomers
(304)675 1388
wa1llng
1996
Oakwood
Home
The Home Show
14ll80 new porch 10xt6
St Albans
Central air system 3 bed
1.SOO.II48-5878
rooms 2 baths Must have
pay ott Call (740)256 ~ 387
or (740)339 2502
Your cho1ce 3 or 4 Bed1st Time Buyers· Call Oak room 16M80 $247 00 per
month Also 7 used homes
G 11 11 9
wood
a lpo
today! at cost Call for pre-appro·
Gov I backed program buy
val 1 888 736 3332
local ( 740 )446 3093

r

28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom On
ly $345 00 Per Month
8 99% F xed Interest Rate
1 888 928 3426

MIDDI. EPORT

Pme

JUSt reduu:dl T h1s I In

story hume 1s loc att:d on
Broudw ny Home off..:rs 2
or ' DR Bath l R DR
Klt Utilit y Rm ctllar
Reully IHCI! fenced m yard
lor IS 1 'i~t 1:!:4 lm nedJ Jte
p o~st ss1011 1 Now in ttlr
mid 4Us

CIIESTF.R AREA Grr:ut
pl11&lt;:e to ra1 ~e your funHt y•
Re ally ou.:~ sph1 entr)
home w/4 BR 2 Oaths Ku
I R DR Deck 2 cur g.ara@e
I argc lm Pm~e has been
red uced and we w1tl Iaten
to
n:asunuPie offers 1
Mid IIOs
POMEROY AREA Jllst
ofT SR 7 &amp; 1\ Really great
home onl y a couple of
years old Henullful VIew
Th111 home offen !ro many
extra~ you h11ve tn ~ee to
apprec tutr: Prt(C has JU St
been redu c ed agu1n 11
Call for apf.Kllntmenl

MIIJDI H'4tHI I tu k Sr
Rcull y 11 1.,;~ hllllll nUl r&gt; '
IIR 1 112 13aull:. I H. DR
l lt 1l tv Hm ... lar ~1uugr
A p phan ~ es r-.&lt;~o. , prn ate
bud:. 'ITII \ .; r \- "rll
m uuuam&lt;; U Mid 90s

Pomrrm
l lnlo n AH
M1.1 ~ t see 1n •ppit' lllll c I
l oc!!l t d t)ll I 'i ~k r¢, mil
House rcmodrld NcO),
curpr! &amp; fhl\ nnt Nc"'
CA New !tcrllll ")'tcm
Rutty good bu y nt
$49,500
MIDVItPUHI
Oldn
hnme thm h D~ been S\1
completely rem xkkd thal
you WOII t be J a~\1,"" II IS the
same house I o&lt;:utcd tm S
2nd ttu ~ h(unt offer~ &lt;I
OR 2 P •Its Lfo{ F.K K1t
lJitl
e 1 Nn.o, ~nrJ1e l
GrcUl
w ood llll r kl
Musl St.c!

RUTLAND New hstmg Need~ so n~ 1 t ( hul C!\uld he
Mrcut hnme Bem1o: sold AS IS Only a.~klnK $27 000
MIDDLEPORT N1ce starter or rctm;ment l1u1nc Btt t h

1

Prl.:e reduced to $29,.11100
POMF.ROY B111ldmg lots Ill u very e ~ch SI\C arcn
111 stze !rom l 5 ucrl! lo 3 9 acre m/1
RACINF ~ Bu smess oppor1Uillllt:s M u~h m ~
Anot her 1er~attle bldg w/npprm. 1500 'q !1

...::.:.::.:.:.::.:..::.;;;;'c'----'-- 57 acre farm 7 bedroom
Abandoned
Doublew•de· and 3 bedroom houses
lree set up &amp; del1very Hur horse bam 32x64 shop ga·
rage hay lteld pasture.
ry 1 only (740)446 3093
wOOds stocked pond good
Final Days Nationwide In~ huntmg Sell houses togeth
ventory
Reduct 1onl er or separate Between
(30 4 73 3409
Mercervtlle and Patnol
) 6-3489 Hannan Trace Road

~111

p

MIUOI F.POR r Severill rental propertu;, Ill d bit:: I I
home duplex bu smess butld1ng Agent O\\ ned V.dlmg
deu l'

POMERO\ lois more room th111 LUi ll r" t 1 p r~ un n
home' 2DR l Balh Klt LR Office Full bsmt &lt;i&lt;IS 1){)(1
MIDDLEPOR1 Real ly great hnme 4 BR ~ II" I ll.
Ktl w/sume upphu.n~.: C' ~ grrut wurkmun sh1p /(ll 11 fl&lt;IHI
~aruge pnv.lle courtyard all len..: eJ lm rll' ll}
matntcnan~.:e

MillY OTHER USTIMISI STOP Ill UALKTO USI

-----'------------H_e_n_rv_Hershberge:r===j~~~~~~~~~L::::---.1
Real Estate General

_

REAL ESTATE
St~eee 1943

spot or a g reat place
the
kods to play Home boasts a
very ntce kMc hen With oak
cabinets lots of co).J nter space
bar area and panlry all open to
a dtnlng area/FA W1th vau lted
cetllng formal LR, 3 BAs &amp; 2
baths,
new e r
carpe t
throughout Pnced al $89 900
t605

992-2259

PRICE REDUCED .. ATIENTION
INVESTORS!
Located In lhe
village of Chester an older 2 slor}'
lrame home with 3 bedrooms 1112
balhs all on a 102X125 1ol Nolan
Investor but wants an affordable
home don t waotl Call to make an
appointment to see thiS one
Immediate Possession!
REDUCED TO $24,900

POMEROY • HYSELL RUN ROAD·
1 story ran ch style home whiCh
Includes ltvlng room tully equtpped
kitchen, dtnlng area 3 bedrooms ,
lull bath A larger 44x1 0 covered
pat1o overlooks a n1ce landscaped
back yard wllh pond A 30x54 B
four·car garage fmtshes up lhis
package It all stls on a 1+ acre lol
ASKING $77,000

OUTSTANDING
LAVING
LAND
Near Ato Grande thi s 80 acres
plus lays excepttonally well
and has great road frontage
Lo1s of polen11al ~u ldlng si tes
Some pasturo Some wooded
pond Great opportur ty

upper with potenl ta l Thts 4
BR
house
needs
some
attent1on, but haR lots of
potential to be a very n ce
home 9 rooms 1n all mctud ng
LR DR FR 2 bath s eat on
kitchen Could be converted to
a duplex fat rly eastly N1ce
yard
Off st1eet park ng
$47,90011 1110

pat o for
outs ide en Joyme nt ?. car
garage Gas heat central a1r
Famil y ortented netghborhood
on Jay Dnve $67,9001 1504

825
Beach
Streel,
Middleport· 3 Bedroom home
offeng approx 1600 sq It
Includes 20 x 24 ltvtng room
kttchen parttal basement and
2 car carport $89 900 1127
Oui,Siandlng Building LoiS In
Green Twp 5 acre lots and
larger wtth ternftc panoram c
views Loca ted along SA 588
just mtnutes lrom lawn and
hospttal Some woods on most

SACRIFICE •
owners
have malntatned and Improved
th1s 3 bedroom bnck fe atunng
a remodeled kttchen, large FA
w1th vaulted ceilings and pellet
stove 2 baths and more The
kids wtll love th e sw tmmmg
pool and Mom &amp; Dad Will love
the conven1ent location Green
Schools
Pric ed at an
affordable $73 500 1123

I

PORTLAND
BUFFINGTON
LANDING· An execullve sub·dtvlslon
designed for horse lovers and
boaters!
You won t believe the
features
Access to the beaultlul
Ohio for boat lovers 100 boal dock,
nding ring, piCnic shelter ndtng tra ils
and mucfl more Cer1a1n restr!ctlons
apply Lol pnces and acreage varv
according to the parttcular amentttes
can for more detattof
WILL HILL ROAD· lmagtne A
Story house wlth 3 bedrooms
baths , 1tv1ng room fam1ly
kitchen, decking and alllc space
1'/2 acre yard with storage bwldtng &amp;
paved dnveway Imagine all thts and
only m1nutes from town Now lmag1ne
an
affordable prtce now stop
Imagining and come tn to make an
appotnlmenl to see the reallhlng at lho
unimaginable redu ced pnce of
$73 000 Hurry or lhe dream woll
be gone!

cute
ThiS one floor frame home offers 2
appliances Ntce front porch &amp; chatn
possession I Thts home Is 1n move 1n

so
part basement &amp;
yafd Immediate
ASKINCI $27,000

· Woym

' Gallo wallfooonine

Informed that all
dwellings advertised ln
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity basea
..

New 14 Wide 3 Bedroom
Only $ 19 850 Free Oel•very
&amp; Set Up 1-888 928 2426

LENDER

I

'6"o.logpr&gt;&lt;~and

This newspaper will not
knowing!~ accept
actverusements for real
eatate which Ia In
violation cf the law Our
reader&amp; are hereby

Ranch Style Home- lor sale
3 Mths 2 car ga
rage close to high school
19 Oakwood OR Gall
Oh can between 6 c J
11 00 pm m good cond w
cen1ra1 a1r &amp; heat S78 000
reduced 304 727 3318
4 bdrm

LUT11Ied Or No Cred1t1 Gov
ernment Bank F1nance Only
AI Qaltwood In BarbOurs
votle WV 304 736 3409

EQIII. HDUIIIII

LOG HOME PACKAGE
THE MT. VERNON

~IPL lY

•

P1ano tun1ng &amp; repa1r de
pendable service s1nce
1965 formerly with Bruni

All real estate advertising
In this neWipaper Is
subiect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
ad\lertlse any
prelflrenca limitation or
dlscrlmtnaUon based on
race color religion , se•
lamlhat status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such
preference limitation or
discrimination

Land home packages all
areas Prequahfy by phone
1740)446 3583

G)

PRICE REDUCED • CHESTER
TOWNSHIP- Just mlnules from lhe
voltage of Chester nghl off SA 248
Approxtmat ely 10 028 acres
Electrtc TPC water available Great
for a homestte you can see for
mtles Call1oday
REDUCED TO $21.000.

THIS PACKAGE INCIUD£5:
' SoA.Ifoor ,,....

G:t

r-----:'----,

New Brw;k Ral"l(:h Home on
2 4 acres 5 m1nutes I rom
HQIZef 3 Bedrooms 3
Baths Opt..on K1tchen.l Faml
ty Room Oen Mud Room
Basement In ground Pool
Storage BL.nldlnQ Smiths
Cabmets (740)446 Ot49

Real Estate General

BUILDING SYSTEM
townl One of the
BEST cared for hom11 In
areal Huge living room and
m-ster bedroom overlooking the
Ohio River This home Is a rare
find with many unique features
Including beautiful hardwood
floors trim, corwn moldmg and
pocket doors
Beautifully
landscaped lot lhat runs all the
way to the river You ve teen the
r.est, schedule X~'~-~lppolnlm••nt
now to

FORECLOSED
GOV T
HOMES' $0 OR LOW
DOWN I TA X REPO S &amp;
BAN KAU PTCIES 1
OK
CREDtTl FOR USTING1
CALL 1 600 501 1777 ext
98 13
------·--Land Contract Pome1oy 3
bedroom 100% remodeled
SSSNEED
CASH??? tf $2000 down $350 month
you ve sold property on land {740)698-6783
contract and are recelvrng
payments I !I buy those
payments lor cash l lmmadt·
ate quo1es1 {NICk) 800 776
-8752 or 419 394 131 7

NEED AN EARLY PAY
DAY??
Up to $500 ln51anlly by
phone!
1 (877) EAAYPAY
LICII 750005
1sl ADVANCE FREEt

.s

M!lliiU' Hm..
f'OR SAI.F.

llo Mt:S
f l)R SAt .f

For sale by owner NICe bi
level hqme on 1 acre neaf
Chester
Three bedroom
lwo baths one car gara~
tam 11y room w1th ltreplae:e
sun room New cenlrat heat·
tng &amp; ale system One m1
nute off Route 7 but ll&gt;tlll pn
va1e (740)985 398 1

Working too much or JUSt
cant keep up with your
house cleaning? Call for an
lntorvlow (740)446·9271 or
(740)441 1859

lllranJanl Motlolo
r.... 960" 2280 .. ~

acres m/1 wnh• 180 leet
water
frontage located 1 mile from
public boat ramp access Also
Included IS an Immaculate 2 BR
mob1le home w1th central heat
and atr

r

., FREE CASH NOW$ lrom
wealthy famll1es unloading
mtlllons of dollars to help
rntmmlze the11 taxes Wnte
lmmed tately WINDFALLS
3010 WIL SHIR E BLVD
1188 LOS ANGE LES CALl
FORNIA 900 10
- - - - - -- -$$S NEED CASH?? WE
pay cash for romaonlng pay
ments on Property Sold!
Mortgages! Annurt1esl Set
\lementsl
1mmed1ate
Ouotes l!t ' Nobody beats
our pnccs ~ National Con
tract Buyers {8 00) 490 0731
ext 10 1 www na t1onalcon
tractbuyers com

lln'n"'

mRS \It

Earn $90 000 YEARLY re ~:~~~m;~~8:~~ky Work (:~g);42 2~~~e
Daniels
pamng
NOT replactng 1 877-629-4900 ewt 594
M&amp;EIIANEOUS
Long cracks on Wondshoelds
STOP FOR.ECLOSUREI I
:1
Free v•deo 1 800 826 8523
MONI-...'V
Behrnd on Mortgage? Don t
TO LoAN
F le Bankruptcy-Save Your
US/Canada www glassme
.. Complete Beauty Salon for chanhc com
·--oiiiioiiiiiiiiil-..,t Homet Guaranteed Serv~ce
sale
2 Tannrng beds
800 9,5 9704 x500
HOME BASEO TRAVEL PROBLEMS
PAYING
shampoo bowls, drvors &amp; AGE~CYI $4 995 00 Work BILLS OR LOANS loans TAX PROBLEMS? tRS
many extras S5000 ftrm FT/~T 80% 20% comm1s Available Call Toll Free 1 AND
STATE
Troubles
call (740)367"0612
stan Spilt lull tra1mng sup 877 745-1049 Good 8ad or Solved! Past &amp; Present No
one Kulck a Electnc Wheel .,_..;)rt travel d1scounts &amp; No Cred1t or Bankruptcy Cost lnlormat1on get Monl#y
cha 1r, like new (740)992· more VtSII our webstte at Welcome Fast Reliable Back Hurry Call Bob Myer
www aacrulsesandtravel co Serv1ce
1 800 487·1992
2838
r.'!:!""-~~~--., m Then call Adnonne at ~ l'ruJFE'&gt;'iiONAL
TAX PROBLEMS? IRS
180
WANJ'ED
1800 365 8497 x 110
SERVIO.:S
AND
STATE
Troubles
1
"·---oi'I1itoiioiDoitiit--r Lifestyle change/Fmanctal
S~vedl Past &amp; Present No
SBGurlty
TURNED DOWN ON
Costlnformat1on get Money
8 year experienced nurse My Personal story
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? Back Hurry Call Bob M.yer
arde Will &lt;:are for elderly Earned $5000/mo In tess
No Fee Unless We Wrnl
1~800 487 1992
Mon Frl Day a Have Refer than 6 mos
1.-888 582·3345
1&lt;1 . IUS! Ill·
ences Call (740}446·7331 Paid vacat1ons (Hawaii
or (740)446 65~9
2001) "Home w1th Children•
CREDIT PROBLEM? CALL riO
HOMES
- - - - - - - - 1 800 221·7740
THE CREDIT EXPERTS
•~JR Su ~
All Make Mowers Lawn www successandlife com
LICENSED/BONDED COR ·--io"iiiiiiiii"iii~ito-"'
Tractors Tillers Repaired
RECT/REMOVE
BAD '
MEDICAL BILLING
Free plck·up, Delivery Avail·
CREDIT
BANKRUPTCY $0 DOWN HOMES! GOV T
able 21 Years Experlenqe Unlimited Income potenttal
LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS &amp; BANK FORECLOSURES&lt;
No experience reqwretl
Gall Moke (740)446-71104
AAA RATING
LOW OR NO MONEY
Act now1L1m1ted Licenses
1 aae·567 7345
DOWN I OK CREDITI FOR
Country llme Daycare has Avatlable Investment
USTINGSI CALL 1 800
2 openings
any shift $2 4951$9 995 Fin Avail
(740)843·5576
Island Automated Med1cal
Free Money Newt Its True1 338 0020 oxt 981 1
:._..:________ Services Inc
No repayment Guaranteed
O&amp;S roofing siding exterior (BOO) 322·1139 Dept 050
For personal needs educa· 3 bedroom house lor sale 1n
&amp; Interior patnllng gutter, www business starlup com tlon tius1ness 1 SQ0-724 Middleport can Tom Ander
drywall and most home re
6047 (24 hrs)
son altar 5pm (740)992
pairs
Free
Estlma1es MEDICAL BILLING
3348
(304)675 6829
Unlimited tncome potent1ai
Get Cash Fastl t $100 $500
::..:.:.:.:.:...=:..;_____ No experience requ1red
Easy Ouahflcat1ons Apply 3 Bedroom on Floute 2
Full service house cleanmg Act nowl Limited Licenses
By Phonal Never Lea~Je (304)675·5332
$7 00 hour very honest ref~ Avatlable Investment
Home! funds Depostted· FIRST TIME HOME
erences available
Call $2 4951$9 995 Fin Avari
Checking Account Next BUYERS!
(740)446 2977
island Automated Medical
Day Loans By county Bank $O Down
'--'------'",.-~- S
1
1
Member FDIC/EOL 1 800
erv cos nc
No Credit Neededf
Georges Portable Sawmill (800) 322 •1, 39 Dept 050
882 0644
don't haul your Jogs to the www busmess startup &lt;:om
HUD VA FHA
mill lust call 304-675 1957
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,...._ _ __:1,;:8;::00~·~5:e,01:..:..:.1777 exl 9826

'"WORK FROM HOME'
$500
to
$1500/mo
PartTime
$2000
to
$7500+/mo FuiiTima Pard
Vacat1ons Call 1~800·479
7471

n ~~~~~~~: over 4 acres of wooded land
• low
It
Ideal for lhe person locking lo gel
maintenance ranch with low
awayl Trails through the property
utility &lt;:oata on a level lot In a
lead to 2 natural springs All this
convenient location? Look no
priced In tho 40 s
further this is 1t This home has 3
3 ecre building toll North bedrooms 2 bathu 2 car garage
newer roof newer vmyl s1d1ng
Eollllo. $39,900
newer heat pump fenced backyard
1121 Bollludo ' -luolon near
and12x14
Great
a 700+ ecre 9tete Park!
Getaway retreat located next to
Tycoon Lake down a tree lined
dead end road Also gel a bonus
with 2 extra building lots included
112t Now
al $32,900
LOCATION!
LOCATION! You will
BR 1 Balh gam In a qulal
neighborhood cloae to echoola
New
,
and shopping Call aoon, m1y
Quiet wooded I I
home and
not llllatthlo prlct.
7 8 acres on Smokey Row Road
3 bedroom s 1 bath beautiful
great
with woodburner and

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY FOR A
FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR B OOKLf T'

MEIGS COUNTY

Not only does th1s 1 79 AC Green
township pr("'perly ha\le a cute 2
bedroom and a bath home, but
extra Income can be generated
from the well kept mob tle home
with 2 bedroom and a bath In
addition to all this an extra
bulldtng lot can be either used or
uold to help off set the cost of

01'1'\lR'I\JNm

I

83,6
170

eo
Neal
3
with anached
car
carport
Owner
relocating needs
to
sell
Con~teniemly located at the edge or
Gallopollslt2132

10

l'ROf'I'$KlNAI
SEIIVIQ S

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
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FREE 1nformauon booklet forn1a 95823
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umverstty
1 800
964 ~
Occas1onsl Recerve free

Kountry Ktds Chnst1an
Chlldcarq Limited openings
available Aelerences pro·
vlded tor more Information
please coli (740)992 7532

just on
4 BR
,
Impressive home offers a custom
kttchen wllh breakfast nook a
large formal dining room large
open famtly room with gas log
fireplace and a master suite on
the mam level Unsurpassed
coo,sto·ucottclm elevates this home

BUSINI:Nl

ARE YOU CONNECTED?
INTERNET USERS
WANTED
$25 $75/liR PTIFT

OoiUpollo career College
(Careers Close To Home)
cau Todayi740 446 4367
1·800-214.()452
AD!! 19()-()5-12748

Will haul away clean out
clean up move almost any
thing Other odd lobs Gall
(740)446 7604

corner: of the world? Retreat to
this home located only 5 minutes
from Holzer but lu&lt;:ked away on
private Charola1s Lake N1ce 4
BA 3 BA redwood sided home
with 2 car attached garage and
private deck ove rlooking the
lake Paddle around the lake In
~iiOirld your own paddle boat or fiSh
1
'
from your own dock Rela&gt;~ In the
peacefulness of the country Call
I

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

.. Laurel Streel Vacant lol, 45X133+
BAILEY RUN ROAD • 2 acre vacant ground Seploc waler &amp;
available Great home or mobtle home Site Driveway tn place
ASKING $1 7,900
POMEROY· CARMEN ROAD • Great sectuded homesole or cabin 120
ASKING $1 ,
SR 33 left on Long Hollow, nghl on Carmen Road

Realty,
0Hice .............992-2259
Henry E. Cleland ........................... 992-2259
Sherrl L.. Hart ......................,........... 742-2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992-2818
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-6191

==:.I

One ol the Proltleel Places
Aroundlf Thais what lhe
owner told us and we ha\le to
agree
Well
buill and
remodeled to perfection 11
offers II all large LR wolh gas
log fireplace l o rmal DR
efficient kitchen with breakfast
nook 4 5 BRs 2 1/2 baths
offlca sun room, basem ent FR
wth gas log fireplace and bar
area 2+ detached garage and
a
beauttflfl l y
mature
landscaped lot located In the
convement Sprmg Valley ar.ea
and ppced al $172 500 1623

I
I
story w1th more
than tradtMnal appeal This 4
BR home 1s JUSt wa1ttng for the
perfec1 fa m ~ly Lots of re cent
tmprov~tments
make
this
home worry free lor a long
hme New furnace carpet
bathroom rool Siding and
sepltc
Charmmg
appeal
doesn t end at the curb
Oualtty netghborhood w1th
famtly almosphere $164 900
1104

Fantas tic
SetUngll Wtlh a v ew that you
cant QUite gel enough of and
a location th at Is botll pn vate
and conven •ent Th 5 2 story
home IS a must see home 4
BAs all generously stzed 3
baths, LA formal DR FA eat
m kitchen Quality constru cllOn
throughout lots of custom
features Wtlhtn a m1le of the
hospital Call Cave lor more
Information

Quollly Suburban Llvtngfl This
well ca red for ITlUIIJ level home
offers a htgh quality of hvtng you
are sure to enJOY The kitchen
and family room {where most
ttme 1s spent) are really mce
The kitchen features custom oak
cablne ts with tots al extra
features The lamtly room 1s very
cozy &amp; has a gas log ·llreplace
Also 3 4 BAs 2 112 baths large
screened tn porch 2 car garage
&amp; more $139 900 Located In
Spnng Valley Subdlvlston 1230

Owner Ia Ready to Sell, so
now rs the ttme to make th1s
bnck
ranch
ftllcd
w1th
homeownershtp pnde yours
OHenng LA with ltrepiace
open to dtmng area cozy FA
woth foreplac• 3 BRs 2 112
baths over 1400 sq fl 1n
basement wtth rec room and
lots ol spacJ to grow 2
garage &amp; lnground pool
mmutes from town Pnced
$137,000 Call loday and
make yourself the proud
owner of thos lovely prcopeo
rly..
1807

J

An Affordable
Prtcelf Thl! roomy b•·level has
as many as 5 BAs tf needed
Also , has 3 balhs Over 2000
sq ft of 1Niflg space Features
also mcluue large LA eat 1n
kttchen w1th d1nmg area deck
and 2 ca r garage Oual1t y
locatiOn In Spnng Valley area
at a n affordable pn ce at
$1150001135

~

New Llsllngl Cozy log home
1n move m" condtuon Only 2
1/2 yrs old lhts home sets on
money! Older 2 storv on good
a n•ce flat lo1 with room to
cond1t1pn featur1ng large LA
roam Large spacious kitchen
and FA combtna\IOtl wtth open dln1ng area or could be used
as a den/FR, cozy ktlchen 3
bearr1 cet1 1ng 3 mce SIZe BAs
BAs, , bath n 1ce above
w1th the master BA hav1ng a
ground
pool (Just 1n ttme to
lull bath !lelached 2&lt; x 36
garag e plus another bwldmg enJOY the upcoming summer
days) located on 68 of an
lor stonnA 1rac tor or lawn
YOU'LL
BE
REALLY
acre, m/1 and pnced to sell at
eq~o:
•
pmenl
Home
&amp;
7
1/2
ac
SURPRISED! Thts land ts
mil lor $130 000 or home &amp; 2 only $59 500 1810
beautt fu! Super vtew 1n any
112 ac mi l lor $115 000 Only
dtrectton ONly mtnutes from
7
m1las from Gallipolis thts
town Jn the heart of Green
won !last long!! t40,
Twp 27 acres as a whole or
split G1ve us a call for more IS IT A CHURCH OR AN OPPORTUNITY? Us defonllely a church
but can easily be retrofitted Into a great opportunity with very little
1nlo ~225
tmagrnat1on Privately settled on nearly 7 acres there ts room for
expans1on There are many posslbtlt1tes tor the propetty 1n addtt•on
10 beong a wondertul church Pnced al $189 900 N120

•

BA home wtth 1 5
Largo famo ly room LR
kitChen E.xtra deep lot
mground pool N115

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

www.wisemanrealestate.com
David Wiseman, GAl, CAS Broker 446-9555
•
Carolyn Wasch, GRi 441-1007 Sonny Garnes 446-2707
Robert Bruce 446:.0621 Rita Wiseman 446-9555

(740) 446 3644

lH. t3r
11(~1

on

OI'I'OATUNII"i'

•

�Page 04 • ituubar ll&gt;uurs 1\tulmrl

~.,1•"! ! 1u•r.•l•P.w.ANIID
_ _.,JII
1 10

HOMEWORKERS • GOOD
WEEKLY INCOME! Proc
essmg lnqu1ry Envelopes'
$3 00 Envelope• Free SuppUesl GenUine Opportun.t)''
HIOO 755 2027 I24Hrs)
KVC A Behav•o,al Health
care NetworK 1S accept.ng
appliCations for the follow1ng
pos1t1on 111 our Mason County offiCe

Iheraptst AppliCants must
ha11e a Masters degree '"
Soc1a1 Work Psychology or

Counseling and be hcensa.
ble
Salary
starts at
$28 000 to $30 000
KYt pro vides 1n home serv
•ces to ch•ldren and la•rnhes
kVC oHers excellent tram
tng and benehts Sehd re
sumes to Human Resource
Dept , PO Bm 510 Atploy
Wv 25271 or ~ease call
372 5145 or lax resumes to
372 1883 You may e mall
us
at
kvccorpra te@c,ty net net
EOE

no-·lfi.:Lp-•W,-ANJl,-iiJ_.Illi•O ~ WAHI'tD
'
The
Educe·
Days

110

HaP WAN'JlD
Needed 83 People to k)se

Library Cieri( 20hrs/week
The Me•gs Coumy L brary 1s
now accep11ng apphca!IOns
lor a pert t1rne cler~ Must
be ava laDle to wor k days
ovemng s and weekends 010 seeks OTR dnver wtth
$5 29 pe r hour Apply at any 3 years experience East to
West COast for auto trans
Me•gs County L•brary
port (740)258-1021

A.tt'lena·MeiOS
trona! Service Center ts
leMIOQ a qualrlled appliCant
to work four(") days a wee+!
as • Pre-~ EdlJcation..
il Aide lor 8SiiQf'lnlef'lt at
Beacon MAOO for lhe Fedoral Hocking Local Schoo&lt;
Diotritt QUALIFICATIONS
Applicants must be Willing to
be fingerprinted to have a
criminal record check hold
a valid edueaHonat aide per~
mit tbltity to work well w1th
tlatr, student and publrc
and must pro~o~ide own
tronsponallon Pleooe IUI&gt;-

Overbrook Cenrer
333
Page Street Middleport
()h, IS currentlytaktng appH
caUons for 1ts upcoming
nursing ass1stant class
which Will begin on Septem~
b&amp;r ,Oth and will run
lhrouyh September 21
2001 Apphcaloons woll be
accepted until September 6,
2001 Please stop by our
front office lor an appliCatiOn
or contact KrisUe Madden at
(740) 992-6472 for morA In
formation E 0 E

._l"..

~~~~~~~~~
:
Tramed
POSTAL JOBS UiJ to
H
f
$ 18 35/hour
lnng
or
2001 Pa1d lralnmg Full
benefits No expen ence re
QUifed Toll free 7 30am
11pmCST 1 888726·9083

JUSt below the Church of God

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

londenl, Alhens·Melgs Edu·
catlonal Servtoe Center, 507
Richland Avenue, SUite
1108 Alheno, Ohoo 45701
The AMESC Ia ., equal op.
portunlty employer/provider
APPliCATION DEADLINE
SEPTEMBER 10 2001
Tum your PHONE BILL inlo
PAYCHECK No Invest·

a

menta

or

Fees

COM-

PLETELY FREEl For free
Into visit www talldreeemencalnc oorMI84you or call 1·
888·21S.0014
lo World Eam $25
hour WIIITraln

to

FOR SALE BY OWNER
3 bedroom house, 1,700 sq. ft., 2 full
baths, large dining room, large
living room, utility room, 2 car
garage, on 1 acre lot. in Porter area.
New roof, new carpet all through the
house. Nice neighborhood. Price
Call after 5:00 p.m.
388-8838.

DALE E. TAYLOR, REALTY

e~~lls.noo®zootnnel.net ~ www.evans .. Jnoore.co•ml

lnt......UOnof
US33 &amp;585
Juat South of

Fonrwrly Bla&lt;'kbur11 Realty "Senws Smdl1eTt1 0/uo fur Over A Qutlrtflr CentiU}'"

.Joe A. Moore-Broker 441-1616
Sarah L. Evans-Moore, Broker 441-1616
Patricia Hays- 446-3884 Cara Casey-245-9430
Cynthia Siciliano- 379-2990
Candace
446-7412

I.Dgan.

M-F 8:»11:00
S.t.8:~:00

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

~

GALLIO- ADNEY ROAD
Beauutul dream home located
42 acres w1th newer barn and
1slc&gt;ck&lt;!d pond. Th1s 4 BR, 4 Bath
hot,ne has a formal d1mng room, tile
floors and much more Th1s home
was butlt With many extras.
A MUST SEE AT $150,000

liJ.4 Second A, e., Gulllpolio, Ohio 45631-0~
Ll1 740-446-0008 740-441-1111
•

CloMd Sunday

446·3644

Call Now 1 877 83TRAIN

6651

:::::-=-:--=::-:-:--cc---

~~8~~:~~~~; ~:::::::R:e:a:I:E::s:ta:t~e~G~e:n:e:r:a:l::::::~

Remodeled 1o perfecti on

from Large fife p1t completes th•s property as 1 one of 11
lund rver prope rty Plus an affordable price of only $85 000
ill!i 19 DI RECTIONS located at 50~1 State Route 7

TU1t1on to Quahf•ed Appll

cants No up front money

'U4- fJ~~t At

www.BIG-BENDREALTY.COM

, ~.e,

Be9 Bewet

l-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

12037 Ow,.r Wanta An Olio~
Your own prlv11o relr11t1 6
acres mn , opaciouo Uvtng 213
BR and 2 BA plua another smau
dwelling with 1 room and a bath
A true gourmet a kitchen with
cherry cabinata, gazebo wtth
llrepll, heal pump &amp; much morel
REDUCED TO $130,000

~

12054 Clreal Sllrtor homel
rent when you CAn own
adorable home on Bnck St1hool
Road? N1ce spac1ous sectional
home on1an acre m/1 of levlitl
Iandi 3 BR 2 BA
wolh 2 car
27 x 40
and

colonial on 9+ acres Custom
country home wtth 3 BR 2 1/2
BA Smtih custom cab1nets two
car attached garage 30 x 40
detached metal bulldmg, hot tub
and above ground pool
$1

Sunday, SepL 2, 2001

r

10

L_....l.=~_.J ~

NEEOED

WORK FROM HOME!
- - - - -- - NOEXPERIENCE
&gt;~1705
Off1ce worker pan ttme
NEEDED!
pos1bve punctual energeltC COMPANY EXPLODING
Salesperron needed furnl person Apply 1n person
EARN S1QOO--S80001Mo
ture store 1mmed1ate open c omplete c are Ch1ropract1C
PTFT
1ng tu1lt1me PQS!I1on Apply beh nd Burger Kmg
, 888~446-1510
Ulestyle Furniture
856
VNIW EXMoneuTQdau com
Thud Avenue Ga llipolis
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,;,'_...:,'..:.:_:_
OH 9 30 5 00 No Phon e Calls
Real Estate General

740·385.4367

Ma•n home offers bright 1nd
chel!ry LR With dm1ng area FR cozy ll1ll;hen 2 BRI 1 hth
plus. full basement Large 101 that goes to the river featur1ng
Ont'l room cabm w•th bath and large deck to enJO'f the view

URGENTLY

and Employed rn plasma donors eam $45

14 16 days Full benehts
to
S60 lor 2 or 3 hours weekly
35 4CK 1st YR No Cos1 Call Sera Tee 740 592

mit a letter of lnl.et'elll re- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

ACOMPUTER?

Only Water Lovers Need Apply!!

a_•..IELP-'.v.,\~.ii'FD-•II..,n~o'!"lfi.:Lp"!"•w-ANrED_~

I 10

HEIJ' WANJ'ED

1.,.

NOW HIRING
Part· ltme Ward Clcuk
30 lbs by October 151
Hours 5pm- 8pm 7
a
Brand
week Duties to Include anNew Just ~atented' t lost
swemg phone filing. l~t
23 tbS in one Month! 1-800- clark:al t..tedleal Records
57().9828
Respontibthflft If y0u al'8
Interested contact Tarau
Med•cal Bilhng Ass1stant
wwwbshm4tlfe com
needed '"""""'aletyl FTIPT NOW HIRINQ.. STIIA'S We wotsqn at (7.00~5001 "'
ol Hotzot
W1a Tram Excetlent tncome presently have openlnQS for apply In PC required 1 888 449- Stale Tested Nursmg Assis SeniOr Care Centtr 380
9773 Ext 222
lants Availabte Ia a fud time Colonial Dove Bidwell, OH
- - - - - -- -posttlon 3 11 30pm and 45614
MEOICAUOENTAL BILL parl·llme poaltlonl on all
lNG COMPANY has lmme- sruftl If you are slncet'ely Nurses are you ~ fOf
dlate Opentngs for People mteresttd tn a career In a challenge?
Career
to Process Clatms $15· tong term health care are a Growth? A brlght future
$45/hr ~Otential Will train canng dediCated 1ndfvidu- with an exceptional facility
PC ReqUired Can Nowl 7 al, please apply at Holzer and company? We want to
Days 1 800·935 3971 E:.:t Sen10r Care Center 380 meet youl Great benefita,
~t219
Coloma! Dnve
Bidwell, exceptiOnal history of reguQhJo between the hours of latory comphance, stable
MYSTERY
SHOPPERS a ooam and 4 00pm or call management loam pro.NEEOED0 I,JP )o $14/hour us at (740)446·5001 and gressova Inpatient and out·
No e:.:penence necessary ask lor E.uta or Martie
patient rihab and cnnical
call toil free 1 888-478 1342 - - - - - - - - - sorvlcea and sign-on bonus
ext ACN2192
OVerbrook Center Now ac tool Interested candidates
, 3 ceptlng applications for • should apply to
Rock·
2
Need bab)'SIIIer
lor a lull tome 11·7 LPN .......·""""- springs Rehablhlation Gan·
F
11
1
year old
u ~ tme In my nons may be picked up al 1
35759 A k "
nome 1740)441 9667 ahor 333 Page Sl'"l Moddle· or
oc spoongs
6pm
po• Oh or oon••ct Krlst1... Road
Pomeroy
Ohkl
~
~ 45769
Equal Opportunity
"
Job
Security Madden lor more 1nforma· Employer
encouraging
Need
$1 0001$5 000 +
Month hoo, E 0 E
worf&lt;place diversity
Work From Home Free In· ----------~~;;;:,;~;,;;;;:;;:;,..__ _
lo 1 868 447 7813
Manag1ng Cosmetotog•sr
full &amp; paJt·t~me, comiTIISSIOO
pay owner pays laMes
work own hours Reply to
~a•r Salon Bo~e 58 ~omer
oy ONo 45769

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plea$ant, WV

12078 Slorter homo prlct, bul
with all the extraa! Newer roof
newer floor coverings, heat
pump central air Smiths custom
oak cabinets
rep lacement
windows, all for $64,900.

'

acre plus farm Along
of wooded land too Large
bam several shed &amp; pond
bedroom
home
that
was
constructed n 1995 Good garden
spot and lots of road frontage
along three roads Call lor
complete 1 1 on this one Too
much
11

TIDY
Ranch home w1th
bedrooms hvtng room dtnlng and
kitChen Plus 14 x 70 mob1le home
1n excellent condition presently
used as a rental Lots of fruit trees
and landscaping *2123

JUST LISTED! 36 ACRES WITH
VINYL SIDED RANCH STYLE
HOME 1 200 oq 11 of living space
area w1th an add1t•onal 2000 sq ft
wh ~eh Is used presently as
carpenters shop but could be
eas•ly con ve rted mto addtllonal
ltv1ng area Metal pole oam 30 x
60 w th 16 :.: 60 add!t on on each
s1d e ParMIJy wooded Fenced
pasture Ti llable acreage Private
12138

I and office rental spaca plus
2 upatall'e apartments comer lot
Nice Income propotl)' Call and 111
uo Is II you lhe reall 12135

looks like new
home with 3 bedrooms
balhs Largo eal·ln kitchen with
toads of cabinets and ope to
oversized tamlly room Owners
must sam
WITHIN MINUTES OF HOLZER
HOSPITAL Located al 6153 SR
160 you will find this 0\lar 1 7 acre
lot and multiple uoe dwelling Ideal
for residential or commercial usa
Unlimited potential MJ&amp;I call for
complolellstlngl 12143

1 112 Story home
1
on n1ce level lot 3
bedro oms enclosed front porch
large knc hen &amp; d1n1ng area Side
porch Detached garage OWNER
WANTS
SOLD!
MAKE
AN
OFFER! 12035
IMMACULATE BRICK t RANCH
WITH LOTS OF STYLE Foyer
open to spacious formal ll~Jing
room Md d1mng area step-saving
k1tchen tam ly room with fireplace,
overs1zM master beQroom with
pat10 area that leads to 1nground
pool master bath 3 addlllOnal
bearooms and bath Approx 2
acres concrete ctrcular drive To
much to ment1on in th1s ad call lor
an apporntment "2050

' ·t ·::r·;:::-,
F

TWO ACRE LOTS! Rio Grande
areal County wafer ava1lable
12133
NEW
LISnNOI
LOVELY
8ET11NO lor lhlo 2 o1ory home
that Ia only 2 3 yeara young
resting on approx 2 a&lt;:rea Living
room
kitchen
8 bedrooms,
basement
Low
e~rtor
maintenance, detached 24 x 30
garage largo fiOnt porch and
morel f2142
NEW USTINGI CON.YmNIENTLY
LOCATED
RAISED
RANCH
STYLE HOMEI Living room,
dining room ki1ohen, don lamlly
room 3 bedrooms, 2 baths buill~
In 2 car garago pluo large rae
room In basement! Central air
12141

II
PIIICI
ra111oc1 nolghborhood oettlng
olona with lho baok drop of
country living oon 11a found In
lhlo 4 bodroom 2 112 bo1h
r1nch. Located In Green
townohlp lhlo remodeled one
level home offer• iarga open
space• enrtched with a central
khchen and famlly/aun room A
large level lot with ahaded deck
area In the back of the home
addl
the
appeal Let
thla
llat of
MUST BELLI DROPP~~ PRICE
TO
1115,000.00 _,- aEU.ER
OIYINO
BUYER
11,000
TOWAREDI CLOSING COITSI
Pnvaloly altualed 3 bedroom, 2
balh largo slzed living roam &amp;
tonnal dining com~.nAtl'on, rear
deck Florida room, d81aohed 2
car garage and morel IMMEDIATE
POSSESSIONI12010
RIO GRANDE AREAl Roomy
almost new home with approx
2,580 aq ft 3 bedrooma 2 full
baths, formal dining room, kl1ohen
and morel Nice olzod rooma Large
fronl pomh bam &amp; allop and 3 29
acres m'l H133
11148 8R 211 165,000 00 1 otory
vinyl sldod ranch homo Living
room, dining area, kitchen family
room and 2 balho. 2 car alloohod
garage Control air Cl1y oohac&gt;ol
121U
NEW LOT LllnNCII $20 000 00 5

Acres

approx

lituated

In

Golipollo Handy klcaUonl 12144
NEW ACREAGE UBnNGI 114 112
oorao m11 wl1h road trontaoo
-~ farm land and ldool
hunting land lhal lo adjacent to
Woy,. Notional Forreol 112140

36812 SR 124 S79 000 3 29
acres comes along with thl&amp; ranch
home Llvtng room dining room
kitchen 3 bedrooms 2 baths 2
Car detached garage Lovely
pond lrutt trees &amp; berries Lets go
soolf2130

CHEAP CHEAPI $21 000 001
Investment/starter Ranch
style
home situated at 738 Ma1n
Street 2 bedrooms
equ1pped
kftchen living room, balhl 12121

Cheryl Lemley

742-3171
REDUCED
PRICE 145,000
TEXAS ROAD TLC lo whel lhlo
home hal had Little over 1 acre 3
bedrooms living room kltc:hen
balh, anoohed carport Easll&gt;m
Schools I 12120

•
~106 Thle prlvale

1105 Downlown Historic
District don 1 let this opportunity
pass you by with an established
retail storefront many posslbillttes
can be realized Call for details
~- •
~tl~ '

&amp; eecluded

two~story colonial offers lake
views outs1de and a refrned classy
look lnstde all on 2 acres Located
at 100 Lakeview offers lour
bedrooms and 2 112 baths large
formal dinning and llvtng rooms
along w1th a cozy fami ly room
featuring a gas log ftreplace Wl ltl
an Oak crafted kttchen and top
quallt)l kitchen appliances this
quret country sethng Is a must see

1115 New lletlng located on a
qulot country rood odlolnlng
81111 Owned Foroot. Thlo 2 BR
1 BA with a nice family room 011

out!
2 BA
home on 112 acre mil Quiet
peaceful selling and only 10
mlnutaa from town Immediate
posoeulonl

copa
3 BR &amp; 2 BA All clly ulohtoos
schools, living room with
wood burning fireplace full
b~eement large wood dock and
large patio In back
Very
affortlabtel

Will provide day..care In my
home,
Monday Fnday
(740)949·2169

Vlsh usenllne at

o:=rv

you re
peaceful 1etttng cloae
work,
school ond ploy then lhlo brick
ranch ehould be on thellat With
a beautifully landscaped setting
outside and an open floor plan
with large family/dining room
combinalton Inside thla 3 bedf'O&lt;lm
1 112 bath oNors tranquillity In a
netghborllood sentng $118,000

1132 Convenient Green
Town1hlp loe~tlon for only
$55,900 Brick ranch on large
le¥el lot with many fruit treea,
grapevtnes and nice garden spot
Don t let th1s great deal pasa

by I

........., log wol oylitm
• Gtodod, bordo P""""
l!toltd 25 .,..r -.amy
• Qua1iy windawo and doon
• "'-' upo...l boam loft w~
h61oogut and groovt """"
' lofhr reol wilo ohoolhins. fd
and 25 ywr ohingfo•
' hiwior ... lromitt
·0....~

t NJALACHIAN"
~
IIIUCTUIII

CAiliiOWfOIINFOIMAOON
F£1

800-280-2574

•

WV

Newly constructed smgle
story 1600 sq loot home
Located 10 minutes from
Holzer Hospttat 20 mmutes
from Pleasant Wiley Hosp1
tal off SA 160 on a pnvale
1·1/2 acre lot 3 bedroom
2 1/2 baths big kitchen
w/oak cabmets DR LA
wtgas log fire_place central
a1r laundry room front
porch &amp; 2 112 car garage
Immediate possess•on Ap
praised at $125 500 ask1ng
$125 500 Call (740)446
4514 from 8 5pm M·F or
(740)446 3248 altar 5pm

J;l!J

New 16)(80 3 bedroom 2
bath only $500 down call
Nokko1740)38 5 4367
New 2002 Fleetwood only
$771; dOWn and s150 as per
month
call
Cheryl
(740)385 4367

Mounx: Ho"~o:s
IURSAU

New 2002 Fleetwood single
Wrde Only $149 month only
at Fleetwood Homes ot
Proctorville Toll Free 1
888 565.()167

·SIZZLIN
Hot summer deals
· fREE·
Heat pump or central a1r
w1th the purchase of select
in stock models
•WHERE·
Coles Mob1le Homes 15266
US 50 East
A t hens ~
Oh 45701
·PHONE
(740)592 1972

New banlc repo- 14x70 3
bedcoono 2 bath· Pay $499
&amp; move ln Oakwood Galllp
olo s (740!446 3093
New Doulnil Wide $195
Per Month! 3 Bedroom 2
Bath Free Delivery &amp; Set
up I 888 928 3426

16 W1de Only $195 00 Per Nice Fleetwood Mob1le
Month 8 99% F1xed Interest Home 2 Bedroom 2 Bath on
Rate With A1r And Un 1 A&lt;:rs ground on Rt 62
derp1nn1ng 1 888 928 3426 overlooking rtver between
Leon &amp; Pomt Pleasant Pas
1982 14x70 Falfmont Town stble
Owner
Ftnance
house 2 bedroom 1 large $35 000 (304)343 4143 or
balh w1th heat pump &amp; ale (304)4&gt;fl.1 Q52
$7 500 740 591 4043 oc
740 !.192 0938
TOPOOLLAR
On MobUe Home
1995 Clayton 14)(70 280
trade-int
2BA Vmyt Siding Sh1ngle
We have
Roof , Must be Moved
Cuslomers
(304)675 1388
wa1llng
1996
Oakwood
Home
The Home Show
14ll80 new porch 10xt6
St Albans
Central air system 3 bed
1.SOO.II48-5878
rooms 2 baths Must have
pay ott Call (740)256 ~ 387
or (740)339 2502
Your cho1ce 3 or 4 Bed1st Time Buyers· Call Oak room 16M80 $247 00 per
month Also 7 used homes
G 11 11 9
wood
a lpo
today! at cost Call for pre-appro·
Gov I backed program buy
val 1 888 736 3332
local ( 740 )446 3093

r

28x60 3 Or 4 Bedroom On
ly $345 00 Per Month
8 99% F xed Interest Rate
1 888 928 3426

MIDDI. EPORT

Pme

JUSt reduu:dl T h1s I In

story hume 1s loc att:d on
Broudw ny Home off..:rs 2
or ' DR Bath l R DR
Klt Utilit y Rm ctllar
Reully IHCI! fenced m yard
lor IS 1 'i~t 1:!:4 lm nedJ Jte
p o~st ss1011 1 Now in ttlr
mid 4Us

CIIESTF.R AREA Grr:ut
pl11&lt;:e to ra1 ~e your funHt y•
Re ally ou.:~ sph1 entr)
home w/4 BR 2 Oaths Ku
I R DR Deck 2 cur g.ara@e
I argc lm Pm~e has been
red uced and we w1tl Iaten
to
n:asunuPie offers 1
Mid IIOs
POMEROY AREA Jllst
ofT SR 7 &amp; 1\ Really great
home onl y a couple of
years old Henullful VIew
Th111 home offen !ro many
extra~ you h11ve tn ~ee to
apprec tutr: Prt(C has JU St
been redu c ed agu1n 11
Call for apf.Kllntmenl

MIIJDI H'4tHI I tu k Sr
Rcull y 11 1.,;~ hllllll nUl r&gt; '
IIR 1 112 13aull:. I H. DR
l lt 1l tv Hm ... lar ~1uugr
A p phan ~ es r-.&lt;~o. , prn ate
bud:. 'ITII \ .; r \- "rll
m uuuam&lt;; U Mid 90s

Pomrrm
l lnlo n AH
M1.1 ~ t see 1n •ppit' lllll c I
l oc!!l t d t)ll I 'i ~k r¢, mil
House rcmodrld NcO),
curpr! &amp; fhl\ nnt Nc"'
CA New !tcrllll ")'tcm
Rutty good bu y nt
$49,500
MIDVItPUHI
Oldn
hnme thm h D~ been S\1
completely rem xkkd thal
you WOII t be J a~\1,"" II IS the
same house I o&lt;:utcd tm S
2nd ttu ~ h(unt offer~ &lt;I
OR 2 P •Its Lfo{ F.K K1t
lJitl
e 1 Nn.o, ~nrJ1e l
GrcUl
w ood llll r kl
Musl St.c!

RUTLAND New hstmg Need~ so n~ 1 t ( hul C!\uld he
Mrcut hnme Bem1o: sold AS IS Only a.~klnK $27 000
MIDDLEPORT N1ce starter or rctm;ment l1u1nc Btt t h

1

Prl.:e reduced to $29,.11100
POMF.ROY B111ldmg lots Ill u very e ~ch SI\C arcn
111 stze !rom l 5 ucrl! lo 3 9 acre m/1
RACINF ~ Bu smess oppor1Uillllt:s M u~h m ~
Anot her 1er~attle bldg w/npprm. 1500 'q !1

...::.:.::.:.:.::.:..::.;;;;'c'----'-- 57 acre farm 7 bedroom
Abandoned
Doublew•de· and 3 bedroom houses
lree set up &amp; del1very Hur horse bam 32x64 shop ga·
rage hay lteld pasture.
ry 1 only (740)446 3093
wOOds stocked pond good
Final Days Nationwide In~ huntmg Sell houses togeth
ventory
Reduct 1onl er or separate Between
(30 4 73 3409
Mercervtlle and Patnol
) 6-3489 Hannan Trace Road

~111

p

MIUOI F.POR r Severill rental propertu;, Ill d bit:: I I
home duplex bu smess butld1ng Agent O\\ ned V.dlmg
deu l'

POMERO\ lois more room th111 LUi ll r" t 1 p r~ un n
home' 2DR l Balh Klt LR Office Full bsmt &lt;i&lt;IS 1){)(1
MIDDLEPOR1 Real ly great hnme 4 BR ~ II" I ll.
Ktl w/sume upphu.n~.: C' ~ grrut wurkmun sh1p /(ll 11 fl&lt;IHI
~aruge pnv.lle courtyard all len..: eJ lm rll' ll}
matntcnan~.:e

MillY OTHER USTIMISI STOP Ill UALKTO USI

-----'------------H_e_n_rv_Hershberge:r===j~~~~~~~~~L::::---.1
Real Estate General

_

REAL ESTATE
St~eee 1943

spot or a g reat place
the
kods to play Home boasts a
very ntce kMc hen With oak
cabinets lots of co).J nter space
bar area and panlry all open to
a dtnlng area/FA W1th vau lted
cetllng formal LR, 3 BAs &amp; 2
baths,
new e r
carpe t
throughout Pnced al $89 900
t605

992-2259

PRICE REDUCED .. ATIENTION
INVESTORS!
Located In lhe
village of Chester an older 2 slor}'
lrame home with 3 bedrooms 1112
balhs all on a 102X125 1ol Nolan
Investor but wants an affordable
home don t waotl Call to make an
appointment to see thiS one
Immediate Possession!
REDUCED TO $24,900

POMEROY • HYSELL RUN ROAD·
1 story ran ch style home whiCh
Includes ltvlng room tully equtpped
kitchen, dtnlng area 3 bedrooms ,
lull bath A larger 44x1 0 covered
pat1o overlooks a n1ce landscaped
back yard wllh pond A 30x54 B
four·car garage fmtshes up lhis
package It all stls on a 1+ acre lol
ASKING $77,000

OUTSTANDING
LAVING
LAND
Near Ato Grande thi s 80 acres
plus lays excepttonally well
and has great road frontage
Lo1s of polen11al ~u ldlng si tes
Some pasturo Some wooded
pond Great opportur ty

upper with potenl ta l Thts 4
BR
house
needs
some
attent1on, but haR lots of
potential to be a very n ce
home 9 rooms 1n all mctud ng
LR DR FR 2 bath s eat on
kitchen Could be converted to
a duplex fat rly eastly N1ce
yard
Off st1eet park ng
$47,90011 1110

pat o for
outs ide en Joyme nt ?. car
garage Gas heat central a1r
Famil y ortented netghborhood
on Jay Dnve $67,9001 1504

825
Beach
Streel,
Middleport· 3 Bedroom home
offeng approx 1600 sq It
Includes 20 x 24 ltvtng room
kttchen parttal basement and
2 car carport $89 900 1127
Oui,Siandlng Building LoiS In
Green Twp 5 acre lots and
larger wtth ternftc panoram c
views Loca ted along SA 588
just mtnutes lrom lawn and
hospttal Some woods on most

SACRIFICE •
owners
have malntatned and Improved
th1s 3 bedroom bnck fe atunng
a remodeled kttchen, large FA
w1th vaulted ceilings and pellet
stove 2 baths and more The
kids wtll love th e sw tmmmg
pool and Mom &amp; Dad Will love
the conven1ent location Green
Schools
Pric ed at an
affordable $73 500 1123

I

PORTLAND
BUFFINGTON
LANDING· An execullve sub·dtvlslon
designed for horse lovers and
boaters!
You won t believe the
features
Access to the beaultlul
Ohio for boat lovers 100 boal dock,
nding ring, piCnic shelter ndtng tra ils
and mucfl more Cer1a1n restr!ctlons
apply Lol pnces and acreage varv
according to the parttcular amentttes
can for more detattof
WILL HILL ROAD· lmagtne A
Story house wlth 3 bedrooms
baths , 1tv1ng room fam1ly
kitchen, decking and alllc space
1'/2 acre yard with storage bwldtng &amp;
paved dnveway Imagine all thts and
only m1nutes from town Now lmag1ne
an
affordable prtce now stop
Imagining and come tn to make an
appotnlmenl to see the reallhlng at lho
unimaginable redu ced pnce of
$73 000 Hurry or lhe dream woll
be gone!

cute
ThiS one floor frame home offers 2
appliances Ntce front porch &amp; chatn
possession I Thts home Is 1n move 1n

so
part basement &amp;
yafd Immediate
ASKINCI $27,000

· Woym

' Gallo wallfooonine

Informed that all
dwellings advertised ln
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity basea
..

New 14 Wide 3 Bedroom
Only $ 19 850 Free Oel•very
&amp; Set Up 1-888 928 2426

LENDER

I

'6"o.logpr&gt;&lt;~and

This newspaper will not
knowing!~ accept
actverusements for real
eatate which Ia In
violation cf the law Our
reader&amp; are hereby

Ranch Style Home- lor sale
3 Mths 2 car ga
rage close to high school
19 Oakwood OR Gall
Oh can between 6 c J
11 00 pm m good cond w
cen1ra1 a1r &amp; heat S78 000
reduced 304 727 3318
4 bdrm

LUT11Ied Or No Cred1t1 Gov
ernment Bank F1nance Only
AI Qaltwood In BarbOurs
votle WV 304 736 3409

EQIII. HDUIIIII

LOG HOME PACKAGE
THE MT. VERNON

~IPL lY

•

P1ano tun1ng &amp; repa1r de
pendable service s1nce
1965 formerly with Bruni

All real estate advertising
In this neWipaper Is
subiect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes It Illegal to
ad\lertlse any
prelflrenca limitation or
dlscrlmtnaUon based on
race color religion , se•
lamlhat status or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such
preference limitation or
discrimination

Land home packages all
areas Prequahfy by phone
1740)446 3583

G)

PRICE REDUCED • CHESTER
TOWNSHIP- Just mlnules from lhe
voltage of Chester nghl off SA 248
Approxtmat ely 10 028 acres
Electrtc TPC water available Great
for a homestte you can see for
mtles Call1oday
REDUCED TO $21.000.

THIS PACKAGE INCIUD£5:
' SoA.Ifoor ,,....

G:t

r-----:'----,

New Brw;k Ral"l(:h Home on
2 4 acres 5 m1nutes I rom
HQIZef 3 Bedrooms 3
Baths Opt..on K1tchen.l Faml
ty Room Oen Mud Room
Basement In ground Pool
Storage BL.nldlnQ Smiths
Cabmets (740)446 Ot49

Real Estate General

BUILDING SYSTEM
townl One of the
BEST cared for hom11 In
areal Huge living room and
m-ster bedroom overlooking the
Ohio River This home Is a rare
find with many unique features
Including beautiful hardwood
floors trim, corwn moldmg and
pocket doors
Beautifully
landscaped lot lhat runs all the
way to the river You ve teen the
r.est, schedule X~'~-~lppolnlm••nt
now to

FORECLOSED
GOV T
HOMES' $0 OR LOW
DOWN I TA X REPO S &amp;
BAN KAU PTCIES 1
OK
CREDtTl FOR USTING1
CALL 1 600 501 1777 ext
98 13
------·--Land Contract Pome1oy 3
bedroom 100% remodeled
SSSNEED
CASH??? tf $2000 down $350 month
you ve sold property on land {740)698-6783
contract and are recelvrng
payments I !I buy those
payments lor cash l lmmadt·
ate quo1es1 {NICk) 800 776
-8752 or 419 394 131 7

NEED AN EARLY PAY
DAY??
Up to $500 ln51anlly by
phone!
1 (877) EAAYPAY
LICII 750005
1sl ADVANCE FREEt

.s

M!lliiU' Hm..
f'OR SAI.F.

llo Mt:S
f l)R SAt .f

For sale by owner NICe bi
level hqme on 1 acre neaf
Chester
Three bedroom
lwo baths one car gara~
tam 11y room w1th ltreplae:e
sun room New cenlrat heat·
tng &amp; ale system One m1
nute off Route 7 but ll&gt;tlll pn
va1e (740)985 398 1

Working too much or JUSt
cant keep up with your
house cleaning? Call for an
lntorvlow (740)446·9271 or
(740)441 1859

lllranJanl Motlolo
r.... 960" 2280 .. ~

acres m/1 wnh• 180 leet
water
frontage located 1 mile from
public boat ramp access Also
Included IS an Immaculate 2 BR
mob1le home w1th central heat
and atr

r

., FREE CASH NOW$ lrom
wealthy famll1es unloading
mtlllons of dollars to help
rntmmlze the11 taxes Wnte
lmmed tately WINDFALLS
3010 WIL SHIR E BLVD
1188 LOS ANGE LES CALl
FORNIA 900 10
- - - - - -- -$$S NEED CASH?? WE
pay cash for romaonlng pay
ments on Property Sold!
Mortgages! Annurt1esl Set
\lementsl
1mmed1ate
Ouotes l!t ' Nobody beats
our pnccs ~ National Con
tract Buyers {8 00) 490 0731
ext 10 1 www na t1onalcon
tractbuyers com

lln'n"'

mRS \It

Earn $90 000 YEARLY re ~:~~~m;~~8:~~ky Work (:~g);42 2~~~e
Daniels
pamng
NOT replactng 1 877-629-4900 ewt 594
M&amp;EIIANEOUS
Long cracks on Wondshoelds
STOP FOR.ECLOSUREI I
:1
Free v•deo 1 800 826 8523
MONI-...'V
Behrnd on Mortgage? Don t
TO LoAN
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US/Canada www glassme
.. Complete Beauty Salon for chanhc com
·--oiiiioiiiiiiiiil-..,t Homet Guaranteed Serv~ce
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2 Tannrng beds
800 9,5 9704 x500
HOME BASEO TRAVEL PROBLEMS
PAYING
shampoo bowls, drvors &amp; AGE~CYI $4 995 00 Work BILLS OR LOANS loans TAX PROBLEMS? tRS
many extras S5000 ftrm FT/~T 80% 20% comm1s Available Call Toll Free 1 AND
STATE
Troubles
call (740)367"0612
stan Spilt lull tra1mng sup 877 745-1049 Good 8ad or Solved! Past &amp; Present No
one Kulck a Electnc Wheel .,_..;)rt travel d1scounts &amp; No Cred1t or Bankruptcy Cost lnlormat1on get Monl#y
cha 1r, like new (740)992· more VtSII our webstte at Welcome Fast Reliable Back Hurry Call Bob Myer
www aacrulsesandtravel co Serv1ce
1 800 487·1992
2838
r.'!:!""-~~~--., m Then call Adnonne at ~ l'ruJFE'&gt;'iiONAL
TAX PROBLEMS? IRS
180
WANJ'ED
1800 365 8497 x 110
SERVIO.:S
AND
STATE
Troubles
1
"·---oi'I1itoiioiDoitiit--r Lifestyle change/Fmanctal
S~vedl Past &amp; Present No
SBGurlty
TURNED DOWN ON
Costlnformat1on get Money
8 year experienced nurse My Personal story
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? Back Hurry Call Bob M.yer
arde Will &lt;:are for elderly Earned $5000/mo In tess
No Fee Unless We Wrnl
1~800 487 1992
Mon Frl Day a Have Refer than 6 mos
1.-888 582·3345
1&lt;1 . IUS! Ill·
ences Call (740}446·7331 Paid vacat1ons (Hawaii
or (740)446 65~9
2001) "Home w1th Children•
CREDIT PROBLEM? CALL riO
HOMES
- - - - - - - - 1 800 221·7740
THE CREDIT EXPERTS
•~JR Su ~
All Make Mowers Lawn www successandlife com
LICENSED/BONDED COR ·--io"iiiiiiiii"iii~ito-"'
Tractors Tillers Repaired
RECT/REMOVE
BAD '
MEDICAL BILLING
Free plck·up, Delivery Avail·
CREDIT
BANKRUPTCY $0 DOWN HOMES! GOV T
able 21 Years Experlenqe Unlimited Income potenttal
LAWSUITS, JUDGMENTS &amp; BANK FORECLOSURES&lt;
No experience reqwretl
Gall Moke (740)446-71104
AAA RATING
LOW OR NO MONEY
Act now1L1m1ted Licenses
1 aae·567 7345
DOWN I OK CREDITI FOR
Country llme Daycare has Avatlable Investment
USTINGSI CALL 1 800
2 openings
any shift $2 4951$9 995 Fin Avail
(740)843·5576
Island Automated Med1cal
Free Money Newt Its True1 338 0020 oxt 981 1
:._..:________ Services Inc
No repayment Guaranteed
O&amp;S roofing siding exterior (BOO) 322·1139 Dept 050
For personal needs educa· 3 bedroom house lor sale 1n
&amp; Interior patnllng gutter, www business starlup com tlon tius1ness 1 SQ0-724 Middleport can Tom Ander
drywall and most home re
6047 (24 hrs)
son altar 5pm (740)992
pairs
Free
Estlma1es MEDICAL BILLING
3348
(304)675 6829
Unlimited tncome potent1ai
Get Cash Fastl t $100 $500
::..:.:.:.:.:...=:..;_____ No experience requ1red
Easy Ouahflcat1ons Apply 3 Bedroom on Floute 2
Full service house cleanmg Act nowl Limited Licenses
By Phonal Never Lea~Je (304)675·5332
$7 00 hour very honest ref~ Avatlable Investment
Home! funds Depostted· FIRST TIME HOME
erences available
Call $2 4951$9 995 Fin Avari
Checking Account Next BUYERS!
(740)446 2977
island Automated Medical
Day Loans By county Bank $O Down
'--'------'",.-~- S
1
1
Member FDIC/EOL 1 800
erv cos nc
No Credit Neededf
Georges Portable Sawmill (800) 322 •1, 39 Dept 050
882 0644
don't haul your Jogs to the www busmess startup &lt;:om
HUD VA FHA
mill lust call 304-675 1957
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,...._ _ __:1,;:8;::00~·~5:e,01:..:..:.1777 exl 9826

'"WORK FROM HOME'
$500
to
$1500/mo
PartTime
$2000
to
$7500+/mo FuiiTima Pard
Vacat1ons Call 1~800·479
7471

n ~~~~~~~: over 4 acres of wooded land
• low
It
Ideal for lhe person locking lo gel
maintenance ranch with low
awayl Trails through the property
utility &lt;:oata on a level lot In a
lead to 2 natural springs All this
convenient location? Look no
priced In tho 40 s
further this is 1t This home has 3
3 ecre building toll North bedrooms 2 bathu 2 car garage
newer roof newer vmyl s1d1ng
Eollllo. $39,900
newer heat pump fenced backyard
1121 Bollludo ' -luolon near
and12x14
Great
a 700+ ecre 9tete Park!
Getaway retreat located next to
Tycoon Lake down a tree lined
dead end road Also gel a bonus
with 2 extra building lots included
112t Now
al $32,900
LOCATION!
LOCATION! You will
BR 1 Balh gam In a qulal
neighborhood cloae to echoola
New
,
and shopping Call aoon, m1y
Quiet wooded I I
home and
not llllatthlo prlct.
7 8 acres on Smokey Row Road
3 bedroom s 1 bath beautiful
great
with woodburner and

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTINGS &amp; INFORMATION CALL OR STOP BY FOR A
FREE QUALITY HOMES IN COLOR B OOKLf T'

MEIGS COUNTY

Not only does th1s 1 79 AC Green
township pr("'perly ha\le a cute 2
bedroom and a bath home, but
extra Income can be generated
from the well kept mob tle home
with 2 bedroom and a bath In
addition to all this an extra
bulldtng lot can be either used or
uold to help off set the cost of

01'1'\lR'I\JNm

I

83,6
170

eo
Neal
3
with anached
car
carport
Owner
relocating needs
to
sell
Con~teniemly located at the edge or
Gallopollslt2132

10

l'ROf'I'$KlNAI
SEIIVIQ S

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OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
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you know and NOT to send
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elor's Master's Doctorate by Opportunity' Free lnforma ter Space Avarlable AI AI
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1 800
964 ~
Occas1onsl Recerve free

Kountry Ktds Chnst1an
Chlldcarq Limited openings
available Aelerences pro·
vlded tor more Information
please coli (740)992 7532

just on
4 BR
,
Impressive home offers a custom
kttchen wllh breakfast nook a
large formal dining room large
open famtly room with gas log
fireplace and a master suite on
the mam level Unsurpassed
coo,sto·ucottclm elevates this home

BUSINI:Nl

ARE YOU CONNECTED?
INTERNET USERS
WANTED
$25 $75/liR PTIFT

OoiUpollo career College
(Careers Close To Home)
cau Todayi740 446 4367
1·800-214.()452
AD!! 19()-()5-12748

Will haul away clean out
clean up move almost any
thing Other odd lobs Gall
(740)446 7604

corner: of the world? Retreat to
this home located only 5 minutes
from Holzer but lu&lt;:ked away on
private Charola1s Lake N1ce 4
BA 3 BA redwood sided home
with 2 car attached garage and
private deck ove rlooking the
lake Paddle around the lake In
~iiOirld your own paddle boat or fiSh
1
'
from your own dock Rela&gt;~ In the
peacefulness of the country Call
I

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

.. Laurel Streel Vacant lol, 45X133+
BAILEY RUN ROAD • 2 acre vacant ground Seploc waler &amp;
available Great home or mobtle home Site Driveway tn place
ASKING $1 7,900
POMEROY· CARMEN ROAD • Great sectuded homesole or cabin 120
ASKING $1 ,
SR 33 left on Long Hollow, nghl on Carmen Road

Realty,
0Hice .............992-2259
Henry E. Cleland ........................... 992-2259
Sherrl L.. Hart ......................,........... 742-2357
Anna M. Chapman ......................... 992-2818
Kathleen M. Cleland ..................... 992-6191

==:.I

One ol the Proltleel Places
Aroundlf Thais what lhe
owner told us and we ha\le to
agree
Well
buill and
remodeled to perfection 11
offers II all large LR wolh gas
log fireplace l o rmal DR
efficient kitchen with breakfast
nook 4 5 BRs 2 1/2 baths
offlca sun room, basem ent FR
wth gas log fireplace and bar
area 2+ detached garage and
a
beauttflfl l y
mature
landscaped lot located In the
convement Sprmg Valley ar.ea
and ppced al $172 500 1623

I
I
story w1th more
than tradtMnal appeal This 4
BR home 1s JUSt wa1ttng for the
perfec1 fa m ~ly Lots of re cent
tmprov~tments
make
this
home worry free lor a long
hme New furnace carpet
bathroom rool Siding and
sepltc
Charmmg
appeal
doesn t end at the curb
Oualtty netghborhood w1th
famtly almosphere $164 900
1104

Fantas tic
SetUngll Wtlh a v ew that you
cant QUite gel enough of and
a location th at Is botll pn vate
and conven •ent Th 5 2 story
home IS a must see home 4
BAs all generously stzed 3
baths, LA formal DR FA eat
m kitchen Quality constru cllOn
throughout lots of custom
features Wtlhtn a m1le of the
hospital Call Cave lor more
Information

Quollly Suburban Llvtngfl This
well ca red for ITlUIIJ level home
offers a htgh quality of hvtng you
are sure to enJOY The kitchen
and family room {where most
ttme 1s spent) are really mce
The kitchen features custom oak
cablne ts with tots al extra
features The lamtly room 1s very
cozy &amp; has a gas log ·llreplace
Also 3 4 BAs 2 112 baths large
screened tn porch 2 car garage
&amp; more $139 900 Located In
Spnng Valley Subdlvlston 1230

Owner Ia Ready to Sell, so
now rs the ttme to make th1s
bnck
ranch
ftllcd
w1th
homeownershtp pnde yours
OHenng LA with ltrepiace
open to dtmng area cozy FA
woth foreplac• 3 BRs 2 112
baths over 1400 sq fl 1n
basement wtth rec room and
lots ol spacJ to grow 2
garage &amp; lnground pool
mmutes from town Pnced
$137,000 Call loday and
make yourself the proud
owner of thos lovely prcopeo
rly..
1807

J

An Affordable
Prtcelf Thl! roomy b•·level has
as many as 5 BAs tf needed
Also , has 3 balhs Over 2000
sq ft of 1Niflg space Features
also mcluue large LA eat 1n
kttchen w1th d1nmg area deck
and 2 ca r garage Oual1t y
locatiOn In Spnng Valley area
at a n affordable pn ce at
$1150001135

~

New Llsllngl Cozy log home
1n move m" condtuon Only 2
1/2 yrs old lhts home sets on
money! Older 2 storv on good
a n•ce flat lo1 with room to
cond1t1pn featur1ng large LA
roam Large spacious kitchen
and FA combtna\IOtl wtth open dln1ng area or could be used
as a den/FR, cozy ktlchen 3
bearr1 cet1 1ng 3 mce SIZe BAs
BAs, , bath n 1ce above
w1th the master BA hav1ng a
ground
pool (Just 1n ttme to
lull bath !lelached 2&lt; x 36
garag e plus another bwldmg enJOY the upcoming summer
days) located on 68 of an
lor stonnA 1rac tor or lawn
YOU'LL
BE
REALLY
acre, m/1 and pnced to sell at
eq~o:
•
pmenl
Home
&amp;
7
1/2
ac
SURPRISED! Thts land ts
mil lor $130 000 or home &amp; 2 only $59 500 1810
beautt fu! Super vtew 1n any
112 ac mi l lor $115 000 Only
dtrectton ONly mtnutes from
7
m1las from Gallipolis thts
town Jn the heart of Green
won !last long!! t40,
Twp 27 acres as a whole or
split G1ve us a call for more IS IT A CHURCH OR AN OPPORTUNITY? Us defonllely a church
but can easily be retrofitted Into a great opportunity with very little
1nlo ~225
tmagrnat1on Privately settled on nearly 7 acres there ts room for
expans1on There are many posslbtlt1tes tor the propetty 1n addtt•on
10 beong a wondertul church Pnced al $189 900 N120

•

BA home wtth 1 5
Largo famo ly room LR
kitChen E.xtra deep lot
mground pool N115

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

www.wisemanrealestate.com
David Wiseman, GAl, CAS Broker 446-9555
•
Carolyn Wasch, GRi 441-1007 Sonny Garnes 446-2707
Robert Bruce 446:.0621 Rita Wiseman 446-9555

(740) 446 3644

lH. t3r
11(~1

on

OI'I'OATUNII"i'

•

�Page 06 • itunba!' QJ:imts -li!trntmrl

fDD

I ;
.
•

i
1~

FARMS
mR SALE

:...,l r

MOBILE HOMN&gt;

.

1. r·\'l•o~"""~Hoosllllou&gt;:":"'~~
...

FOR RFNr

,

r

MISlE.LANHJUS
MEII&lt;:HANIIISE

GoOIJs

MlscEJ.IAM.:OCS

1
.

M•:RCHANDISF.

1

PEt CARERX.COM Save
Poplar Grove Fann in Gal· Beaur1tut River View Ideal
Bathroo m la~atory .~•th up i.O 50% on Al l pel medllipolls Ferry. 1663 acres For 1 Or 2 People , Aeferen- ApPliances:, Reconditioned dark wood vamty, medJt7•ne catiPnS and supplies, In·
with pre- cMI war t'louH , ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos- Washer$, Dryers:. Ranges. cabinet and three bulb light clud1ng Heartgartt, tntercep-.
outbuildings • beaut1ful .1 6 ter Tra1ter Parte., 740-« 1- Refrigrators, Up To 90 Days ftxlure. $40. (740}446·0931

million for more info. call 01 81 .
Davis &amp; Asaoclaln Inc.
W11ma Davis broker 304· Mobile hOrne lOt tent and
716-t340.
mobile home tot lor rent.
(740}U6· 1279
B~
Nice ruean 3 bedroom In
AN08uJLDINC;.&lt;i
country. ( 7 4o) 2 ~ 574 '

I

r

r

~

F..IN'.i"-

VI " '

FOR n - . Al!.r'f •

• ....

central B!r &amp; hea1.1ocout. of
flood platn, grHt
allon,
StAte 124 &amp; Ty_ree Blvd..
$72,000 (740)949 2217
- - - -- - -Office buildtng 1n Miners·
ville. 600 OQ. ft .. ale, cov·
ered partcing, ceiling tan,
S2751mo.• 614-876·1661

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, tumlshed and unfur~
nlshed security deposit r&amp;qu1rect.' no pets, 74()..992~
2218 .
-------1 Bedroom Apartment, Aelrlgerator, Range, AIC Ineluded, 2 a9 Plus DepoSit &amp;
Roloronco. HUD Approved.
(740)441-1519
~::.:...~=~-~1 bedroom near Holzer. Ale
economical gas heat QUiet
location. , 279 month' tease
&amp;
deposit
required
(7401448 ,2957

s

iLw--·CIIEAiiiiliiiiGiiE-.,1I
~

APARTh'IFM'S

Alnrs&amp;

100 .crw1 ONLY $48,000
or
273 •crea ONLY
$1~00 Recreation proper·
ty on KY and WV. Great lor

the Outdoor Loverl Also 5 ~::.:....::...:=---. acre to 6 acre tracts availa- 1 Bedroom Upstairs Apt. on
ble In Ptke and Jackson Co.
sccossible to 40 aero to 200
acre or Public hunting. For
more Info end FAEE maps
contact
Anthony Und Co., Ltd.
t--800-213-8365.
WWI!(.elctand.com

Second Ave. S300 par
month. (740)446.()855.

2 "bedroom upstairs !part·
ment, $275/mo. $150 deposit, pay ~r own U1llltles.
37·1/2 Smither's Avenue.
(740)446·9061 .
2nd floor apartment juat
renovated, 2 bedroom: WID
hook·up 2nd avenue $350
deposit, 's3so rent. RoJeren·
ces required. (740)446·
3117
·
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET PR~
CES AT JACKSON ES.
TATES 52 westwood Drive
lrom s297to $383 Walk 10
shop ·4 movies. Can 74o446·2568. Equal Housing
Opportunity
·
Christy's Family Living
33140 New Lima Ad., Aut~
lancl, OhiO, 740-742· 7403
Apartment, home and trailer
rentals. Commercial storefronts available lor lease
Vacancies now
·
·
For Lease One bedroom,
unfurnished, second floor
apartment, at corner of Second and Pine. A/C, $300
per month; water Included.
Security and key deposit.
References required. No
pets. (740 )446-4425

Acreage. In City, Great Localion with beaulllul bulldong
Mea. phone (7401446-1162
BRUNER LAND
.
(740)441-1482

Clllllo Co.· Kerr Rd., still a
couple off goodoes loftl 5
acres $22,500 or 8 acres
$21,0001 Rio Grande, pri·
. vale, 13 acres $26,500.
Cheshire, 5 acres, $10,000
or hunters, 37 acres now
$30,0001 Clay Twp.. 11
acres $17,5001
Tycoon
Lake alea
14 acres
$13,500.
.
Melga Co.· Tuppers Pla1ns·
Carr Ad. 5 acres with bam/
stalls $28,000 or 6 acres,
$12.5001 SA681. 5 acres
on Shade River, $12,000 or
7 acres with pole bam,
$23,000. Danville, 5 acres,
$10,5001 Rutland, 9 acres

S8,5001

Just a lew of the parcels
available. C811 now tor maps
and other llatlngsl Owner II·

Guaranteed! We SeU New Coast 20-20 11re changer,
Maytag Appliances, French large air compressor, 1999
City Maytag, 7~-7795. 1211. aluminum boat with
t
(3041 675
1 If
Couch and lOve seat cream ~ng moor.
•
background w/ floral patlem
$500.00 . Farmnouse style COBRA 29LTO classic CB
table and cha~rs. $150.00 radio, peaked, 565; Wtl.son
both In brand new cond. 1000· Magnet mount CB
304-67§..3805
antenna, handles, 1000
tt
$35
11
For Sale: Reconditioned ~)6 • ~~c: ent
'
washers, dryers and refrigerators. Thompsons Appli· COMPUTERS : WE Fl·
anca. 3407 Jackson Ave- NANCE DELL COMPUT·
nue. {304)675-7388
ERS! Even with less than
perfect credit! 1-800·477Hotpoint washer, $75; 9016.
Code
AC36
W~trlpool. dryer, $75; GE www.omcsolution.com
30 electnc r~nga, like n~w.
$175. GE relngerator, whtte, Firewood for sale. $150
7401441 9476
5175
150
was
· $';'5w A~ ~,20' load. (
gas range,
.
ap an- FREE CASHI $10,000 or
cas guaranteed. Skaggs
Appltances. 76 v1ne Street, more possible In 58 da~s or
(740)446~7398
less. Never Repay! New
.:........:__ _ _ _ _ _ programs! Free Information
Main Street Furniture
1-800-308-6147
(304)675·1422 '
www.vlsionq2000.com
515 Main Street, Point
Generac 5 ,000 wan Gener~
Pleasant
ator. Like New. E.11tras.
Now &amp; Used Furniture
$350. (740 1446-2350

I

;m~,;.;;..;.;.;;;.;.;..;.;;...;.._,

Building in Racine, 301(8(),
"'-~ &amp; •~k. was chu-h,

75 1

New . 2 Piece Uvingroom
Suites, $399. Buy, Sell,
Trade.

~-:---::::-:--:::c,-

Refrigerator/Freezer
(304)675-8795

$50.

Two Bedroom Sets, Electric
Hospital Bed and Llk Chair,
Aasoned household Items.
(740)256-1426.

r

SPORTING

GoOIJs
Guns Sako heavy barrel
with Leupold scope 22·250
caliber. Remlnoton mod.
141 slide action rltle with
scopa. 35 caliber. (740)446·
1162
Remington 700 30·06, 4x
Weaver, $425; ~emington
870, 20 gauge_ Wmg Master,
$425; Browmng A-500 A
Belgium 12 gauge two bar·
rels, $650. {740)367~7693

j

ANTIQUF.S

Buy or sell
ques, 1124
SR 124 E.
992-2526
.

I

Riverine AntiEast Main on
Pomeroy, 7~0·
Russ Moore,

~:;.,::..;.:,c..;,;;_;,c:.:..__ r:~~~~;[]

nenclng wllh slight property Gracious living. 1 and 2
maol&lt;up.
bedroom apartments at VII·
lage Manor and Riverside
Commercial Lola wl email Apartments In Middleport.
home lor sale, 4 lots 262' From $278.,348 Call 740•
long over an aero in heart of 992·5064. Equal Housing
PI Pleasant located at 141 o Opportunltteo.
Lewis St., price neg.
$62,000. call 304-727-33,8 Nice 2 bedroom apartment
between 8:00 to 11 :00 pm. with garage, Harrisonville,
all electric, no smoking &amp; no
Looklno To Buy A Naw pets $375 per month plus
Home? Don't Have Land? utllitlea. (740)742·3033
We Colli Hurry Only10 Loi s
Loft, 304·738·7295.
N~e one bedroom furnish·
eel, utilities paid, beautitul
0~10 Rive~ lot, gorgeou~, country location, (740)992·
90 by 430 .. Syracuse, 60 · 4451 alter 4
deep ltet area wllh targe :--=-...:,:.::....::..·-..,.--''"' on river. real above Now Taking AppllcellonaflOOd plain, $:W,OOO call 35 Wool 2 Bodroom -Town·
(937)390-()380.
house Apartments, Includes

SO DOWN HOMES NO
CREDIT OKI H_UD, VA
FHA. Call lor Llatonos
1-800·501 ·1777 Ex19Q18
-------1988 24' gooseneck horse
trailer, 3 compartments; 22'
pull behind camper sleeps
6, evenings (740)24S·5622

I \1-l.\1 "' 1'1'1 II"
,\JI\I..,I!IIh

Water &amp;
Sewer Available. Avg.
60&gt;&lt;1110 Call (304)862·2807
or (304)a82·2686
.
l~i

\ I \ I '-1

~;=:;;;:===~
io HOOiEl I

r

...__,.;FORtiiiliRtNriitiioo-,.1
--.
1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homeo From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
APR For Li011ngs, 800·31 93323 Ext. 1709.

F.Quw:1oo

FARM

coax, mounted on a
vise grip bracket, $20.
04
67..:.
795
5..:.·a..:.
.:_(3..:.
..:.1..:.
:.:...._ _ _
aSOOE. 16H", V·lw'n OHV.
c.
296 hours . $900 (740)3799257
-------AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy Factory Direct
Twin RlverTowers now acExcellent Service
ceptlng
Flexible Financing Available
applications lor 1 BR.
Home/Commercial Units
HUD subsidized apt. for
FREE Color Catalog
elderly and disabled. EOH. Call Today 1-800·711·015a
(304)675·6679.
www.np.etstan com

*

3 miles.

turn l eft on Winterplace,

I s1 house

on right

.

feet of living apace. Fonnal living room
and dining. Lots Df beautHul woodwork.

~UITLIIL")

1

0

I MPDU~DS &amp; REP~St·
HONDA S,
CHEVY S,
JEEP'S. LOW"AS $29/MO,
24 MO'S . @19.9%. FOR
LISTINGS, CALL 1•800·
451 -0050 olll. C-9at2

$100,000.00 Ranch home w ilh full
basement and 2 car attached garage plus
12.35 acres mil with road frontage alon g
Kerr Road not far from US 35 on/off
ramp! 3 Bedrooms , living room, family
room and lots morel Owners looking for
an offerl #21 08

•.
TO APPRECIATE WHAT IT OFFERS!
Lots of remodeling including newer roof,
siding, windows, carpeting, kitchen
cabinets and more. 3 bedrooms, large
sized kitchen, living room, lauoldry,
detached 2 car garage all situated within
a hop, skip &amp; jump to town! Priced at
$47,900 and DW'1ers WANT AN OFFER!
12136
~

BEECH STREET- Here's the home lor you! It's
a beautifully decorated one story ranch thai
was recenHy remodeled. Has 3 bedrooms,
central air, and a lanced back yard. Just
waitiirto lor
$41,000.00
POMEROY - Need a building lor your
business? Here's a business building with 2
stores or use as one big one . Also has 4
apartments, being two 4 rooms and bath, and 2
6 rooms and bath apartmenls. Has had some
ol tha remodeling already done. $45,000.00

r'lil

MUSICAL

L._..,;INmuJMJ;Nr.i-iiliiiiiiiiiii':;.,..l

PRICED DROPPED $25,0001 O~rNE:R
MEANS BUSINESSIII Loads
1 'd
f h ' Ilk
I I
ns1 e o t IS
e new sect ona norllll .

8 0 0 • 8
2 • 5 9
www.orvb.com/bennett
Sawmill $3,895. New Super
Lumbormete 2000, larger
capacities. more options.
Manufacturer or sawmills,
edgers and skldders NOR·
WOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Drive, Buffa!~, NY
14225. FREE lnformatoon 1·
800·579~ 1363 EXT. 200·U

Lowery Pagenl Electric or·
D,!ln. Full size, like now.
( · ~ 0 )387 · 0688

I

dining
living

''

I

510 2n d Ave., Ga ll'tpo l'IS, Oh'10
(740) 446-710.1

Plano &amp; bench excellent
candlllon, $950; Yamaha
fuN-eize ll:evboard and
stli.nd has wave memory ~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
excelionl condition, s 450 : _
(740)446·9227

.

.:.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

e:;J.h4

I

•

ACRES. HOME· BUILDINGS Old
fashion
charm
wkh
modem
convenience In this 4 BR. 2 story
home, 2 ba1hs, (whirlpool tub).
Lovely equipped kitllamily rm
combo w/hardwood floors, cherry
cabinets. Enjoy viewing the country
!rom tvery window. Formal dining
rm &amp; LR wlbeamed ceilings . Porch
&amp; patio. 72 ACRES of beau.li!ul
13390 FABULOUS BARGAIN·
Brick &amp; vinyl a BR, 2 BA home on
private 1 acre lot. Family room,
living room wntreplace, DR, and
large utility room in this one with full
basement. Attached 2 car garage
and dotsched 2 cor garage ao wen
could be used loraloraga. Priced lor
a quiCk sate. SB5,000
t4005 A FEW MINUTES OF YOUR
TIME COULO PAY OFFI VIew this
lovely all brick homo wllhroo
bedrooms, 2 bath&amp;, formal dining
rm., living nn., Jamlly rm.. wllh
fireplace., Patio, above ground pool,
2 car attached garage and
basement. VERY LIVABLE HOME
FOR THE MONEY. $125,000.00
VLS
·
140tl
HOME
•
INCOME
INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulavlllo
Pk. 3 bl!dnn, 3 balh living quarter&amp;.
Also ta• x 32' garage plus 30' x 20
building 11:2 ac. olland. Good sales
loc. Priced 1o seH. VLS
t4017
LOCATED
383
MT.
CARMEL RD. 3 bedroo
, m, 2 bathS,
CEDAR CONTEMPORARY HOME
Oak ~Iehan , caramlc tile in kitchen
&amp; b th NEW CARPET th
h
a s.
roug
o:;r~ri~h~~!eACRES MIL
,
.
• 4027 INVESTMENT L
.
·,.
ocated In
Aro Grande 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
kllch8ns, basement &amp; garage. 70' x
172' lot. 280 College St. Great
Income &amp; Locallon. Priced lo sell
Call VLS 448·6806.
14031 .$$ will be all yours w~ou can
'
run an ACTIVE BUSINESS. Buy
building, trucks, equipment; stock
and customers all for a b&amp;:rgaln
price. Great location in Aio Grande.
Money making proposition for the
ambitious. VLS 448·6806 .
14019
COMMERCIAL
LOT
Jacl&lt;son Pk. Gallipolis. OH Corner•
1ol with great potential.

ms

1'996 Lincoln Towncar, mini
condition, low m1leage,
( 15.000 lirm, one owner,
(740)992·3102
1996 Ponua.C Sunfire, dark
r~d. automatic, AM/FM, CD
player, new tires, dual elr·
b"ags, wall maintained and
&lt;:Jean. $5000. OBO Call
(t40)446·9230

9,1 Cavalter AS 4 ·((yt., auto,
cold air, nice car, $1500,
(1'40)367~78 19

':--:'--.:...:._ _ _ _
g4 Flrebird, V-6, 5 speed,
Wh .." e, New T1 res. 89K , A•1
~ dll'oon, BookS $7125 w111
von
tpko $6500. (740)448·4822
after 5pm

POMEROY· A two-story home with three
apartments. One unit has 5 rooms and a bath,
one unit has 4 rooms and a bath, and the last
unit has 3 rooms and a bath. Live In the big
apartment and rent the olher two. $85,000.00

--'---~---

$6 Geo: 90,000 miles,
40mpg, air, auto, $2600.
(740)446-9564
-.:......_ _ _ _ _ _
L1vely's Auto Sales- 1988
~ord Escort, $800. 1992
F.ord Ranger Pickup, 5
speed, $800. 1986 Ford
Crown Victoria, $650 1989
Otds cutlass supremo,
$1000. 1989 Ford Taurus
SW, $600 1992 Eagle Pre·
mlere, saoo. 1990 Plymouth
• d
$650
1985
,un ance,
.
Dodge 800 Convortable,
5600 1989 Chevy Baratta,

STAR AREA , A 12X65 mobile
wllh 2 bedrooms . Thare Is approx. 8
that lias on Court S1reet and both aides of
Cave Road.
$22,1500.00

o~

•1200. 1992 Dodge 8·250,
Van , $1000. .19a9 Olds
Coera, $1000. 1992 Dodge
Shadow, $600 1987 Pon·
tiac Grand-Am, 5450 . 1988
Olds Clera, 1oo. 1gsa
Dodge Omnl, $500. 1988
Chevy G·20 Van, $1000.
1992 Mercury Topaz, SBOO.
1990 Ford Mustang, $500.
19a5 Chevy cavallor, 5250.
1990
Chevy
Corsica,
StOOO. 1960 Ford Pinto,
$500, 1988 Plymouth Sundance, $500. 1989 Ford
Tempq, $6.00. 1989 Chevy
€ava lier, $600. 1987 Chevy
S-10 Pickup, $900. 1aa9
Plymouth Horizon, $500.
Call (740)388·9303, Mon·
aay 1hrough Friday 9ain·
Spm. Saturday 9Sm· 3pm .
Closed Sundays.

s

EMBRACED BY SCENIC HILLS, nestled in
tall trees with natural seclusion. A lovely 2
old h9me on 4 acres more or ies.,.. Wrap aro&lt;md
decking and 2nd level balcony. Formal entry w/
hardwood' flooring all oak trlm and solid oak
mterior doors throughout. Large ramily room wl
Y'ent less fireplace. A free flowing floor plan 9f
spact: &amp; function. Private bedroom suite &amp; bath.
Several waU•~in cl osets, large kilchen with lots of
oak cabinets. 3 additional bedrooms. Basement
and.detachcd 2 car garage. NO. 320
ONLY 5165,000.

BUTTERNUT AVENUE • A two story home with
vinyl siding. Has 3 apartments with a good
Income . There ls _a part basement. One
apartmen1 has 4 rooms and a bath, one
apartment has 3 rooms and a beth, and the
other apartment lias 3 rooms plus 2 enclosed
porches, and a bath.
$31,000.00
SOUTH ntiRO AVE. • This 2 story home haa
6 rooms , 2 to 3 bedrooms, 1112 baths and
basemen!, · Thera Ia an enclosed back yard
and pnvate drive.
$48,100.00

OR HOME
PIKE. 6.91 acres. Only 5
Need a new place 10 stDrt
Coli for more details
NO.
Good bui lding
on Pleasant Hill Road, Green
Green Ele m entary Sc hool.
Only $17,500. NO. 305

DOTTIE TURNER, BrDker........ 992-5692
JERRY SPRADLING ................ 848-2131
CHARMELE' SPRADLING...j .....849-2131 .
BETTY JO COLLINS .................849-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ...................892-3058

OFFICE ...................................... 992·2886

r

81,

who lives in ·

Rome, aided financier Martin Frankel,
who is accused of buying up insurance
companies , 1hen looting them of more
th an

$200

million .

Col agiovanni, who has served on the
board that provides legal

II,

Pope John Paul

counsel

was charged Thurs-

money

laundering. He

arrested in Cleveland as his family was
for his sis1er.

'

He appeared Friday in federal court
in Connecticut and was released af1er
securing $500,000 bond. He will be
1
under house arrest and must wear a
monitoring device.

A probable
uled for Sept.
His

lfsalsoyour
best source for
the news and ·
information
you need
everyday.

cause hearing was sched-

19.

attorney,

Paul

Mancino,

Ohio Valley Bank will offer
lpr sale by Public Aucllon
A 19~7 Chevy Suburban
lrn;181398 at 10:00 am, on
01 AI Ohio Valley Bank
nnex, 143 3rd A.v.e., Galllp·
Plls, Ohio. Sold 10 lho high·
est bidder •as laa where ls"
Without tlq)rtased or im·
plied warran1y &amp; may be
seen by calling the Collet·
Oepanment
at
lion
(740)441 ·103a. OVB re·
servos tho right to accept/
rejoot any &amp; all bids. &amp; with·
draw Items from sale prior
to sale Terms of Sale:
CASH . OR ' CERTIFIED
CHEt;K.

said

Col agiovanni ha s done nothing wrong,
and the

FBI

and IRS merely want to

secure his testimony against Frankel.

"I

1hink he was duped and 1aken

.advantage of," M ancino said.
Colagiovanni is accused of h elp ing

C)IARGED- Mon s ignor Emilio Colaglovanni leaves court In Bridgeport , Conn., after

Frankel use the financier's St. Francis of
Assisi Foundation to acquire insurimce

a detention hearing. .Colagiovanni is charged with wire fraud and conspiracy to com·
mit money laundering. Federal prosecutors said they have linked Colagiovanni to

companies, while concealin g Frankel 's

financier Martin Frankel, who is accused of scamming several insurance companies

involvement, according 10 a complai n! .

cut of more than

Colagiovanni

To subscribe,
calt
1-740·446·2342

alle gedly

pledged

at

r an as collateral for Frankel's purchases

Co nn .

$40,000
promised $5

iunba~·[lmrs

and

was

later, an

ienttnel

affidav it

... .....

i

CAMI'IlRS &amp;

MoroR H&lt;JM&amp;Ij

I

I

------=-::::

10

1

---::-:==:=---

o: o

i

r

billion to the St. Francis of Assisi Foundation, which had a bank account in
1he Brilish Vir gin i slands.

journal of Roman Catholic 'canon law,

charity, accordtng to t h e affidavit, but

Int ernal

Colagoovanni contro lle d an account in

its r eal purpose was to mask Frankel's

a Vatican City bank that 9erves religious

· involvement in the pu~chase of asse1s

the

began

working

when they m et

The St. Francis foundation posed as a ·

belon g ing to various American msur-

groups and their members.
At Frankel's behest, he told r egulator s
and comp anies that h e lransferred

ance co mpanies.

$1

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY 446-2342
.

"'

.....·. BING-O

~

2

Su

FOR SALE

Serenity House

2 Kilns,

serves victims of domestic
violence call

446-6752

Upst~irs

..,

Glaze$, disque and

7 40·379·2514

at the
Gallia County Health

Gallipolis' Elks Lodge

Graham's Upholstery is

Departmenl

Annual Labor Day Sing at

Presents

looking for an individual

Women's Health Month

interested in learning the

"Join us and be a W.I.N .N.E.R."

craft of upholstery.

Kyger Creek Shelterhouse
Monday, Sept.

"

Pouring Table, Drain

Table, Molds I nice selection) ,

or

Starts at 1 p.m.

3

(Women Incorporating Necessary
Nutntion, Exercise &amp; Relaxation.)
A FREE interac1ive semtnar for women
and adolescenl girls. September 10,
2001 6:30 p.m . · 6:30 p.m.
Gallia County Service Center
Conference Room

· 4 pm

Groups to Sing are: ·
God's Ambassadors
Gloryland Believers
Johnson Family ·

New City Singers

RESERVATIONS ARE REQUIRED
Conlacl the Gallia County Heal1h
Department (740) 441 · 2950

TO ALL AREA FIREMEN:

Support provided by OOH, Bureau oH
Health Promotion and R1sk Reducllon. _
Women 's Heal1h Sectoon &amp; Ohio AHEC

Addison Choir

Mon. •

Fri.

Call for an appointment

MOVING SALE
CASH ONLY
King Bed with wooden
head board and foot
boards, Orbitrack Pro by
Thane Fitness, Yard
Machine, Push Mower

With love and

446-3538
or 441-.1113

FOR SALE

appreciation, we would

families to a Cook-Out at

1993 27' Ford Motor Home
Sleeps 6, Full bath, Excellent
Condition, 41 ,000 miles , Great

the United Methodisl Church

for deer Hunters.

like to invite you and your

located on St.

9-4

Hours

Addison Quartet

Call Don Hubbard

Rt. 141

16,' at 6:00 p.m.
740-446-2323

Call

LADIES VFW AUX 4464
DUES ARE DUE. $16:00

740·992-5776

Sept.

Fresh Night Crawlers

Send to: Patsy Campbell

1062 Second Ave.

Robbie's BP
4th

1992 BLAZER S10 SPOR
Good Condition $3400
740·446·4474.

•

Vine St.

Gallipolis, Otiio

45631

O'DELL LUMBER
61

FOR SALE

3 Piece

St., Gallipolis
446-1276
634 E. Main, Pomeroy

BLACKBURN'S
TREE SERVICE

Vine

Living room Suite

Good Condition

$200.00
446-2117 after 5:00

992-5500

10·4
Labor Day 8·4

Open Sunday
ppeo

Top, Trim , Removal

&amp; Stump

&amp;

441-1500 .

Grinding

•

Services Available

Monday,
September

3, 2001 ,

Chester Vol. Fire Dept.

•

will have the annual

Eric Blackburn

Chicken and Spare Rib

446-2422

BBQ with homemade
ice cream . Serving

11 :30 a.m.,
parade 1:30 p .m .

will be
Construction Laborers
Needed
Local Work

992·7943, 591·7002; 591·4641

_. I

'I' .,

Greenw1ch,

more

~

1974 Winnebago (Brave).
Good Condl11on $3,000.
Call (740)388-8473
_ _:__:.__ _- : - 33' Fleetwood Prowler
camper, f4U
bedroom,
1
MOTORCYCLES
shower &amp; living room, stein~------_.1. less steel stove &amp; double
..,
sink, new
refrigerator,
1994 Honda 250NX orJ off $3,800, 740·992-4183.
road, electric start, water
cooled.
7,000
miles, 99 model camper, Sprinter,
36' long, Pull out rooms, air,
$1400 (740)245·5934
stereo, queen maHresses, 2
bedrooms,
bath
tub,
1998 Honda Recon 250 CC, (740)245·5535
good condition 4-wheeler,
has 2 wheel dnve, $1800. Open all aluminum tratlar for
,("3:::04~)6::7:::5·.::586=6_ _ _ _ sale .. Aluma LTD, 18 II.
long, GVWR 7,000 lbs.,
l-londa 450 • ES Foreman. electnc brakes, tandem
$4SOO, (7401742 -2a21
axles, 1500 miles, I year
old- $3100. (740)949·2217
SII(\ I(IS
1999 Honda 400 Foreman .
Askmg $4200. (740)256- iiir;i;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;.._,
1579 ·
·
HOME
·
IMPRoVEMENt'S
2000 Polaris 500 4x4, au(o- r....,;iiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiii_.l
matic, winch &amp; snow plow.
223 inlles, l'oko new. $1l000, All lypes ol masonry brick,
20
(304)773·5099
block &amp; stone
yrs. expo·
rience, free
est1mate,
Harley
Davidson
(304)77.3-9550
2001
Sportster a83 Hugger, lor·
ward controls, ato miles,
BASEMENT
o (740)742
asking $800 ,
WATERPROOFING
4506
Unconditional lifetime guar.
antee. Local references furOhio Valley Bank. w~l offet nished. Established 1975.
for sale by PubliC Auction C 11 24 Hrs (740) 446A 1999 Yamaha 350
1·800·287·0576.
7
1158372 at 10:00 am, on
'
f
916101 AI Ohio Valley Bank Rogers- Waterproo ong.
Annex, 143 3rd Ave., Galllpo- - - - - - - : - . . , . . oils, Ohio. Sold to the high· C&amp;C General Home Malnte·
est bidder "as is· where Is• nence- Palnllng. vinyl sid·
without e~epressed or im- lng, carpentry, ·doors, winplied warranty &amp; may be doWs. baths, mobile home
seen by calling •the Collec· repair and more. For free
lion
Deparlmenl
at estimate call Chet, 740·992·
(740)441-1038 . OVB ro· a323
eervea the rlghl to accepV :=::·~------:-:­
reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; with- lnlerlor &amp; Exta~or remodel·
draw items from sale prior ing, chain link fence, homa
to sale. Terms of Sale: repairs, custom wood worl&lt;
CASH OR CERTIFIED &amp; deoks. Mr R x Ill
CHECK
,(.304:::.::1:;87::5-:·3:;.733==--:::::;-::;:· ·
:c
BoA'I'S &amp; MoToRli ll.Mngs1on'o Baoemonl We·
FOR SALE
11r Proollng, all banmenl
~------·
ropalra done, tree eotl·
..,
mates, lifetime guarantee.
2002 waoo aluminum flllh- Hyra on lob experience.
ing boat wicenter conaole, (304)895-3887.
50 horse Mercury &amp; traHer.
J
$9800; 2002 Waoo 17' ahr
Eu:crRI'-""
mlnum' bass ~oat w/60
REAHGEHATION
horse Merc ury &amp; trailer, - $10,300; 2001 Hydra bass Aeaidentlal or commercial
flbarglass bass bOBt, w/150 wiring, new service or re~
horae Mercury &amp; 1raller, palra. Master Licensed elec::·
$15,600: other assortmenl' trlclan. Ridenour Electrical,
of beals, Call Tom at Marine WV000306, 304-675·1786.
Service&amp;, 740·992-6520

in

million

from

1998,

mansion

asticus Foundation, which publishes a

According to a probable cause affiwith Frankel in

Frankei's

for lhe work,

Revenue Service said.
dav it , Colagiovanni

million. (AP Photo)

A s president of the M oni1or Ecclesi-

of insurance company asse t s.
He was paid

$200

$1

billion from a charitable foundation he

The Village of Rio
Grande Board of
Public Affairs regular
monthly meeting will
be hal d
Tuesday,
September 4 at 6 p .m.
In the Rio Grande
1990 Chevy Aslro Van. Au- Municipal Building.
The meeting Ia
to, AJC, (740 )992-6 137
1990 lsuzu truck, 4x4, 4 open to the public.
cyl., 5 sp .. new ti res &amp; bal·
tery, aluminum wheels, September 1, 2001
n~e. $2000• (7401·2474292·
1991 Chevy Suburban 4WD ~rr•A:-UI"Ooo~::l\tm
~&amp;:""',
66,000 miles, loaded, very
good condit,on. (740)446·
ACCESSORI&amp;'i
310a
.
14
195175
4
1995 Windslar LX, dark ( 1
R
llreo, $80.
blue, loaded, 118.000 miles. (3041675- 161 a
~

r

was

preparing to ~ttend a memorial Mass

1987 Chevy 314 Ton, 4x4,
$4400· (7401441 ' 1892
1988 F·150 XLT Lariat 4x4
truck. ExcaUent Condition,
a8,000 mllee, (7 40)441·
1716 anytime
.

2001 Ford F-250, diesel, ex·
tended cab, long bed, 4x4,
6 disc CID player, will sell
tor pay oft. low moles,
(740)742·1011 or 740-742·
3135.

to

day wi1h wire fraud and c onspiracy to
commit

1993 Sat urn SL1 $2500. Lw-....i4-ioWDstiii--_.l
1990 Corsloa $1200 19aa ~
Ford Van 314' Ton. $1500. 1986 Ford Bronco, Edd1e
(!40)388·9906
Bauer, Two-tone; Medium
Mocha/Light Mocha, 4x4,
302. VB, EFI, Automatic , - - - - - - - a8.500 mttos, t&lt;JC, Cruise,
PUblic NOtiCe -- ·' '
Tilt, Power Windows/locks,------~4M Suspension L1ft, Alpine
Stereo
. $6.000.
NOTICE

1999 Olds Alloro, bright red
Loaded, 100,000 mile war·
ranly. $12,000. (304)675·
~406 after 5pm.
:!oo 2 Trans Am Ram Ai r,
loaded, (740)36 7•0326

NEAR PAGEVILLE • ·Behind Wells Cemetery
Is this 59.1 acres mil lha1 has a reclaimed
grassy field and a secluded building alta. Most
of acreage Is woodland. Really good

":A~C::R':!'E":T::R:':A~C::T•ol":""v"'ac'"a'".nt~,-4·009-•A•L•L..;•~o:"~;.
; ·IC•K-•C•LA-SS•I•C~I403~":'1)."!1T~'":'S":P~E::R":'SO!':NALI~~TY~PW~~S~I

Emilio Colagiovanni,

Monsignor

r

1999 Monte Carlo LS, ex·
cellent condition, loaded,
3.9,000 miles. $10,500 EC, $7500. Well maintsined
(740)446-3117
(740)448·3467 evenings.

[B

mes.
Federal prosecutors say

1989 Ford Ranger 4x4 exa
tended cab, 48,000 m1les.
Good condition, needs 5
speed manual transmission
:;:.c__:_:_' - - - -- - $1500. (740)386-0436 after
1989 Dodge Shadow, Good 5:00pm
Wor&lt; Cor $750. (740)448·
7730
1999 Dodge Dakota Sport.
- - -- - - -Aulo, Air, Loaded, 2a.ooo
19B9 Olds Cutlass Su- miles. Rebuilt Title, Like
preme, red'grey, run's good, New May Take Older
!2,000, (740)643·1125.
Trade. sa,750. (740)256·
9161
1990 Lincoln Town Car
good cond~lion AJC not Ohio Valley Bank will offer
working . $2700.
OBO for sale by Public Auclion
(304)675·7285
A 1985 Ford Dump truck
NA45156 at 10 00 am, on
1990 Z24 Cavalier, goOd
condition,
runs
good, 916/01 At Ohio Valley Bank
Annex, 143 3rd Ave , Gallip(140)386·1509
olis, Ohio. Sold lo the high1992 25th Anniversarv Ca- est bidder ·as is- where ISM
mara, Green, LM 82,000 without expressed Or imnjiles. t&lt;JC. (740)446·4237 plied warranty &amp; may be
Leave a message. ,5000 seen by calling lhe Collection
Oepartm~nt
at
OBO.
(740)441·1038. OVB ro1992 Oldsmobile Cutlass serves the nght to accepV
G1era, 6 cyl., 4 door, auto, reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; withatnllm ca~sette, Tilt, Cruise, draw Items from sale prior
ft\N. PL. $2500. 1994 Rang- 10 sate . Terms of Sate:
er 4x4, 4 cyt. , 5 speed, one CASH OR CERTIFIED
~ ner. sharp· truck. lots of CHECK
extras $5800 . (740)379· l!!lr-~~~-....,
0085
V.w; &amp;

-,..,.-M-az_d_
a_M-Ia-,.-.--a-.o-oo
995
8
rcotes. Runs and looks
~real. $6100 or trade.
(740)339-3089.
"'
_M_o_n-te_C_a-rl_o_Z- .
19-9-'5
34
!14,000 moles (740)992·3008

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

appeared in court Friday

ties to help an international financier

for~ .

cyl., auto, $900. t964 CJ7
Jeep 4 cyt 4 &amp;pd $3500
'
.
'
.
1987 Dodge Rem 150 4x4.
Looks Good, Runs Good.
(740)256·6997

Pope

scam millions from insuranc e compa-

._-==:..;...-:==--'

LINCOLN STREET· Middleport •
A 2 &amp;lory
home with big ston" accents on the
~~~~~~-~.There are three bedrooms, dining room,
I'
1 112 baths, family room and a sun
lull basement, and a large garage with
at1ached carport. Has new
In some

Tanning canopy w/bench, Trumpet, Trombone In
$350. Kohler blue couch &amp; Good Condition. (740)441 ·
toveseal, $100. (740)388· a574 alter G pm.
0438 aNor 5pm.

cr;

THEY READ

1987 Chrysler LeBaron, 4
cylinaer, 25mpg, new tires,
battery, etc. Excellent small~
er car, (740)388-8997

0 1

has c oun seled

on charges alleging he used his Vatican

r

4 Bedrooms, 2112 Baths over 3000 square

BUIIlliNG

lr!lll"_...,____.,

3 Bedroom l"ouse In Syra· t,::-:4:'!:004:":"":'9
cuoe, Ohio. $4501 Month land. Land $75,000.00. Located on Updates Include new carpet, copper
HUO
Approved only
(304)a75·. SA 588. VIrginia 448·6aoe.
5332 weekends
PIumbl ng &amp; beth , new rooI , prlvacy
13362 CARRYCUT BUSINESS fence. Finished 3fd lloor, 4
Cozy 1·2 bedroom Cottage ond CONVENIENCE STORE FOR bedrooms, 1 112 baths, Jull basem'l,
$250. Lincoln Ave. Call SALE. New alarm system . Building · li\llng rm w/fireplace, formal dining
Homestead
Realty built 1o state code. continuous rm, 3 bedrooms on 2nd floor 1
(304)675·5540 ask lor Nan- operation sln'ce 1986. Price Includes wlflreplace, garage &amp; landscaped
"'·
lnventory..Ca!l Johnnie 367-0323 or yard. Call for appoint. Virginia 446New 2 bedroom duplex, 446-8806.
6Boe
Harriscnvllle area. all elec· 13375
LOOK AT THISIIII
3 13397 IN THE CITY Huge Family
Inc, energy efficient, no Bedroom 2 bath ranch over lull home w/4 BAs, 2 belhs, kll, LR, DR,
omoklng, no pete, $375 per besemenl with 2 car garage and porches, partial baaemenl. Priced
utllltiea, flntshed family room. Home slls on 2 right· see this outstanding offer!
month
plus
(740)742·3033.
!&gt;.c. m/1 In Hannan Trace Schools. Vacant, ready 10 welcome you. VLS
Just minutes from doWntown 446·6806
Pilot Program, Renters Gallipolis. This home features a
Needed. 304·738-7295.
beautWul landscaped lawn, wood 13387 Large home in town, new
STOP
RENTING!
$0 pelle1Stove and central air. Localed roof 1999, 4 BA, 2.5 BA_ 2 car
DOWN! No credk okl Go\11. just off Rock Lick Rd. on Mabie Dr. garage,
vinyl
siding,
nice
Homes.
1-800·296· In nice neighborhood. Have e neighborhood. Needs some TLC but
m4x6i541
garden and .Wao some !lowere but priced right al $78,900
make sure to too~ at lhls. Call 14038 RIO GRANDE BEAUTY· 3
MOIIILEFORnl!~
Johnnie at 367.()323 today for an Bed roo me, 2 Baths, Ranch home.
"""''
• appointment. REDUCED PRICEII
Kitchen w1 ea:lng area, formal
dining room, garden tub, FirePlace
•·
14021 TRULY OELICIHTFUL HOME ·
R
14x70, 2BR lnlller, $3008 Pretty as a picture. Vary well In L , Cathedral celllnga, covered
•-•
• s so dopoaft, 1o1e1 planned alone and • frame ranch bulld&lt;lg,
deck, above ground pool, cellar wl
.. ~··• ~ 1
slorage shed, 3 car
electric, no pots (740)742· home offers 3 bedrooms, walk-In dotsched
garage,
black1op
2714
closet, 2 lull balho. charming living driveway fenced tot 2 2 scres mil
room wmreplaco. New oak cablne1s Appolnt,.;ent only. ·
.
2 bedroom, 14x65, CIA, line the kitchen. Range, refrigerator,
101a1 ol001rtc, ol!oolutoly no . dishwesher, and compactor ell stay. "033 THIS HOME FITS THE
pels. $350/mo. pluo dtpooll. Ullllly room Ia extra large. 211er deck HISTORIC
PICTURE
OF
Call (740)245·9491
or In the rear with 38' In-ground pool. GALLIPOLIS • Homo leatureo ~
(740)245-5175. No collo al· Many fruit trees. llowers. and BR, and 1 bath with cuatom
ter 9pm.
shrube. Sprinkler system in the rear. cabinets In kitchen, very large lot
2 car aIIac hed garage an d a carport. that has potentia! for hi Hveral
bedroom
no
2
on Rout. 35 •
1ana, lei us show you t s home
bam bulid.orog. Bt ack1 op • nd opt
-Iorance 2 .Ioryt dl
1 1. od ay 1
,....,•· deposit &amp; ••
' h
'll be wllh greatocatont
required . (740)245·5a90 cemon r vaways. n orne you
(7401441.9060
proud to own. VL Smith 446·6606
LOTS FOR SALE SR 5fll. Baauttlut
hill top lot with 5 acres
14022
WATCH THE RIVER FROM mll .. .$40,000. Lot 12 offers 5 acree
2 Bedroom Tra iler on Addl·
eon Pike . $220/ month. rouR IIACboKV,AdRO! Enjobythkedvtewk m~ ...$40,000.
$100 deposit No Pets .
rom your a oc or ac ec .
(7401448. 1837 or (740)"•· this 1+ ac mil withe 2 BR 1 beth t4034 12282 ST. RT. 160- Quiet
-rw
mobile home/vacation camper Is living but not too far out -This 1995
3437
just the thing for stress. May be manufactured home on foundation
2 BA. all electric, air, carpet; room for 1 garden . Located at 7183· Is just what you are looking for.
very, very nice, no polo, In St. Rt. 7 South. Reduced!
Home rests on a acrao mil with
Galllpollo. (740)446·2003 14014 KING SIZE FAMILY HOME bern, oulbulldifliJ, and all fenced,
and (740)446-1409
Oreal 2 e1y. 4 bedroom• .. 2 112 Great lor hof88 or cowa. Owner
betho, formal LR &amp; OR, Fam Am . wants to move and will let his 2000
2 BR, CIA, quiet setting. w/brick fireplace, all large rms., 13' x riding mower stay so you can ride
Call
lor
Appolntmenl, 25' ma01er bedrm. wlbeth. 2 car the ranch. Priced al $90,000 this
(740)992·2167
attached garage. 1.25 Ac mil cou ld be just what you needl
3 BR, CIA, all electriC, nice, $140· 000 · Additional lor B'w'ai Iable. 140271NVESTMENT Located in Alo
call
for
appointment, VLS
Grande. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
(740J992·21a7
14028 SUBURBAN BUILDING kitchens, basement and garage' 70'
LOT. Located on SA 5a8 end x 172' lot. ~90 Cottage St. Great
All electric,
$300/mo
+ de- m
~ •,tchell Ad. Pe•ect lor a luxurious
.1
( 7401367
"
Income and location. Priced to sell
1
posr
- home. 1 acre mil. Priced to sell. VIrginia 446-6606
oe11 ' no PEl s.
$30,000.00

C

approximately

II

John Paul

c

588

50

&lt;?!. ((/,."' . \iJ

446•6806

Sta.te Route

Page 07

A

(AP) -

BRIDGEPORT, C o nn·.
monsignor who

What else can
educate and
1,~-------~·· lo
drawsale
ItemsTerms
!rom sale
prior inspire like the
of Sale
t \100 tbs round bales, CASH OR CERTIFIED
store d 1nside . bam, $18 CHECK.
newspaper?
oach (7 40)446·0103
t;~--=~--....,
Thl)CKS
lfswhat
Buck a bale sale, square'
FOR SAL.E
bales $1.00 other hay up to ..__,.;tiiiitiiiiiiliii-.,1
people turn to
$2.00, round bales $15 00
(1) 1969 GMC 1-112 Ton
each 304·675-4869
dump truck. steel bed sinHay &amp; Bri ght Wire Tie gle aite,.S speed, 30S V-6. for the latest
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery fa1r cond1t1on, lair tires Aska
&amp; Volume Discount Availa- ing $2,000 (1) 1973 Chevy features on
ble
Heritage
Farm. 1-1 12 Ton dump ' truck, alu(304)675·5724
minum bed , single axle, 5 whafshot
speed w/splint8r, 366 V-8,
Til 1:\SI't 1111 I IH 1\
good conditton, good tires. andwhafs
Asking $2,800. No COL re~10
Auros
quired on either. Call
lL.,_...,;foiii'OiiiRoiiiSiiiAJ..Eiiiiio-,.1 (740)446-45t4 a-5pm or coolin today's
(740)446·324a aNer 6pm.
world.
10 DOWN CARSI POLICE 1982 Chevy Pickup 250 6

Gallipolis, Ohio

r "---

0

Boer Goats- 5 months 1993 lincoln Town Car

sa:

Sunday, September 2, 2001
From 2:00 • 4:00 o'clock
Directions: 94 Winterplace

~unbar ~nnrs · &amp;rnlmrl •

Vatican monsignor arrested in Ohio on wire
fraud charges.in intemational insurance scam

r;.,;:.o_,.;n.AJRiOl!fOSii:ISAiili:i £-.,.1

.ach
Guardian Llama, ed, excellent
condiuon
1150- Serious Inquires 'On. (740)448-3 108
s-.~740)446-091 0
.
1993 Mazda MX-6, L S v.
&amp;eautirul Registered Ouar- 6 , loaded , auto., 83,000 'mi
(or Horse Mare,$taoo. Black, $5000. 304-675-3893
51eg1stered Gelding Ouaner
.
l'torse.$1700. bul( both for Ohio Valley Bank will oNer
$2.-.:_900c__.:(7
_40-'l7_42_·a_3_2_7_ _ lor sale by Public Auction'
A 1991 Chevy Cavalier
U1mature Jack Donkey, 6 lr200608 at 1o·oo am
months old, {740)992-2460 9/8/01 At Oh1o V~lle~
Nanny goats. some with ~~nek, ~ 4 3 3rd Ave. Gallipleids. diHerent prices. Young
s, Ohio. ~old. to the highroos ters.
Lakenvelders, ~~:hbl dder as IS- where _is"
Oom1niques, Dark Corn1sh r out expressed or tm ~ 00 each. Two pair adult Pled warranty &amp; may be
tavender gwneas, $101 ~en by call1ng the Collec·
ila" (7 40)256·1399
(~;0)44 t~1e0p3a8rtment
at
:;:;;;,;.;..~~~::---,
· OVB re flAy &amp;
l sor\ies the nghl to accepv
GRAIN
reJect any &amp; all bids, &amp; with·

OPEN HOUSE

Working Electnc Dryer,
Real Estate General
Maytag $25 .. 2·611, molal _ _ _....:;:;:::.:..::::::::::::....::::;:.::.:..:::.__ _ __
bread shelves $35. each.
old lawn mowers not work·
tng $20. (304)773-5696

JET
~~h':'~~oc~) 9~~ ~
AERATION MOTORS
door/ primed tor painting,
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In perfect condition, $350.
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· New doors· (1)16x7 14050/
800·537·9528
INS/WHIPL Glaos/ No lock
$650, (1) 16x7 11000/INSI
Kitchen table and 4 chairs, While/ No lock $500. (3)
mce wooden set 565 ,00 8x7 11000 INSIWHI Sunray
glass/ Lock $350 each, (1)
304 -675- 1618
c.:c.._:_.:_.:__ _ _ _ 8x6'6
••300/
INS/
Loke New Professional Heir Almontiii.HA Exl.·$300, (1)
Dryer. $100. Call (304)675· Bx7 143001 INSIWHIPL
2365
gtass $300. Call (740)446·
MOBILE HOME OWNERS 4514 M·F 8am-5pm.
EnnlnHred Metlil Bulldlnn
•
•
Huge Inventory, Discount Syatema, Low Rise Com·
Prices, 0!" Vinyl Skirting, mercia! and Industrial any
Doo~, Wtndows, Anchors, custom size, Include. AvlaWater Heaters. Plumbing &amp; tiou~turawareeahfJu: er ~7sc
d Au~ns·
Electrical Parts, Furnaces &amp;
Heat Pumps. Bannens Mo- AB Contracting, Inc. (304)
bile Home Supply, 740·446· 674..0100
9416 www.orvb.comiben_ne:-tt:--::::-::-:=-:--:.--.
Molorola Prol'le 300 Analog
Cellular phone, bought new,
- Pion: .
l1ke new, Including 2 batter~ ..__ _FOII'lJili'iiiii..n.EiiiO;.._.I
ies and a battery charger, -,
$40. (304)65-a795
NEW •NO USED FUR· AKC Reglotered Boxer Pup"
pies, DOB 6·28, Fawn, 1
NANCES FOR SALEI We male 2 tomales. Tall&amp;
Install, Free Estimates, U Docked Dew Claws re·
you doni Call us, We both moved, wormed, S300.. Call
Loose I (740)446·6306, 1· (304)675-4156 alter 6:00
::~ll0-=2o:9_1.0c:O:c:9c:8;...~=--:-- pm. M·F, all day weekends.
Parade Indian Outfit, clothing, head dress. breasl AKC registered English
h &amp; h 1 Bulldogs, males &amp; females.
1 t etc
pae,
.; couc
car 9 wks . old, (740)992·1435
7401446 2222
(
'
WATER WELLS DRILLED.
(740)fl86.7311

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

~ · 1 female. 2 male. $85 56,000 m11es, klather! load:

r

7

2 bedroom home close 10 .-====R:e:;a;l:;Es;:ta::,:te::G:;e;:n;:e;:ra:;I:::;::;::=-:===R=e:ai;:E;:s:;t;:a:;te:::;G;:e;:n;:e:;ra;:l;::;::;:::;
town, basement. River view,
$4251 month; 3 bedroom In
J~
town, 1· 112 baths. GOod lo·
~
·
. .
·
•
1f1iU1,.
•,
cation. $500( month References and depostt required
~
A
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............... 448-t806
(740)448·3844.
'-:/('.eat:
GAIL BELVILLE .................................. 44f.t208
TRISH SNYDER ................................... 441-94&amp;8
3 bedroom home Mlnerovllle
Branch OHice
JOHJ'!NIE RUSSELL ........................... 387.0323
area, river \/lew, references
23 Locust St.
DAVID SNYDER .................................. 441-8458
required, deposit required,
956 Clark Chapel Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio
OUR WEB PAGE IS.www.vlamilhrealaatale.com
740
992
8777
no
pots,
'
'
aNer
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
45631
e-mail: ~taraalestateOzoomnat net
Spm.

CUe

.,.12

816 New Holland forage.
wagon, 27 · New Holland
1994 12 ft. Stock Trailer. blower. (740)949-2072.
tor. Frontline. morel! FREE Good ConditKlll. (740)388·
·
13 11.
J.D. 6600 combine.
SHIPPING. Order online 98 t 5
G H (740)446·3648
www.PetCareRX.com
1·
800;-8«-1427.
1994 Massey Ferguson Oie- YANMAR YM 1500 Tractor,
- -----...,.-....,-:- sel Farm Tractor, mOdel diesel, 3 point hitch. $2,150.
Waterline Special: 314 200 2832 type 5210. 557 hours, Also. new 4' linish mower,
PSI $21 .95 Per 100; 1" 200 $12,500 . can Vince Rica or still in crate, $850. Shipping
PSI $37.00 Per 100; All Pam W'kls al Firat Federal available. Located just out·
Brass Compression Fittings Savings Bank of Ironton. •Side of Huntsville, AI (256)
In Stock
(740)532-6845
716·9435 www.maynarde·
RON EVANS ENTERPAIS..
qulpment.com
Ohio 1 800 60 HP 1nternational _tractor
~ -~~~son,
' - • with front end loader. Call
WAN"IID
c:..::..._;,c;c__ _ _ _ _ (740)379·9381
rolluY
Wheelchair, 2 walkers.
walking cane. potty chair, 8' International three poin1
make best otter. (740)446- hitch rotary cutler and 6' 2Q..24ft.. Aluminum goose3870
pull-type
rotary cutter. neck stock trailer, Good
c:..::.....;__ _ _ _ _ _ ' (740)446-1856
Condt11on . (304)773·5898
Woodbuming Buck stove lor
sale, $500 OBO, (740)9853601.

-=-------

menta, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
112 Bath. Fully Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
too, Start $365/Mo. No Pols,
LeesePtusSecurlly Deposit
Requi red, Days: 740·446·
3481 : Evenings: 740·367·
0502 , 740, 446•01 Ol.

.r~---L•iVFSTOC--K-.,11

Real Estate General

FARM

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp; windows. lintels. etc. Claude
Repairs. Problems? Need Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr. Call740.245-5121.
740-446 4525
•
Clopay brand garage door
Independent Herbalile Dis- close out sale· Cash &amp; car·
tnbutor, Gall For Product 01 ry- several models choose
0 pportuno1y· (740)441 - 1982 from · (2) 8x7 110001

201b Propane tanks, bought
new- never used. overlill
prolectlon· barbecue grill
RESIDENTIAL HOME
size, 1-full $30. 1-empty $20
OWNERS
(3041675·161a
.;._..:._______
3 piece Ba88eH living room Tappen · HI Efficiency 90%
suite, good condition, 5450 , Gas Fumaces, Oil Furna-

.

· sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

EQUIPMtNT

43 $350/Mo., 740""*a-ooo
1 ,":~·CJ~~~~n~~
11 0
8 , _!411
----'c~P~ro~per1)1~~o~n~S~t~R~t.~t~
~T~re~s;h~
(7~4~0)~9~92~
-34~93~~~::_;~e~
"'"·call (304)a62·298at·;,'o;.rJW~e~te~r~~S~ew~a~g~•~·
Francis
CB antenna, Free
a ~, ~r~n~i: '~ga~t~ P~u:m:~P~~&amp;_;~~·~~~~~;~~-~Bedrooms,
kitchen

~

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasan\ WV

For More Info, ..
•

446-2342 or 99.2-2156
'.

'

I

�Page 06 • itunba!' QJ:imts -li!trntmrl

fDD

I ;
.
•

i
1~

FARMS
mR SALE

:...,l r

MOBILE HOMN&gt;

.

1. r·\'l•o~"""~Hoosllllou&gt;:":"'~~
...

FOR RFNr

,

r

MISlE.LANHJUS
MEII&lt;:HANIIISE

GoOIJs

MlscEJ.IAM.:OCS

1
.

M•:RCHANDISF.

1

PEt CARERX.COM Save
Poplar Grove Fann in Gal· Beaur1tut River View Ideal
Bathroo m la~atory .~•th up i.O 50% on Al l pel medllipolls Ferry. 1663 acres For 1 Or 2 People , Aeferen- ApPliances:, Reconditioned dark wood vamty, medJt7•ne catiPnS and supplies, In·
with pre- cMI war t'louH , ces, Deposit, No Pets, Fos- Washer$, Dryers:. Ranges. cabinet and three bulb light clud1ng Heartgartt, tntercep-.
outbuildings • beaut1ful .1 6 ter Tra1ter Parte., 740-« 1- Refrigrators, Up To 90 Days ftxlure. $40. (740}446·0931

million for more info. call 01 81 .
Davis &amp; Asaoclaln Inc.
W11ma Davis broker 304· Mobile hOrne lOt tent and
716-t340.
mobile home tot lor rent.
(740}U6· 1279
B~
Nice ruean 3 bedroom In
AN08uJLDINC;.&lt;i
country. ( 7 4o) 2 ~ 574 '

I

r

r

~

F..IN'.i"-

VI " '

FOR n - . Al!.r'f •

• ....

central B!r &amp; hea1.1ocout. of
flood platn, grHt
allon,
StAte 124 &amp; Ty_ree Blvd..
$72,000 (740)949 2217
- - - -- - -Office buildtng 1n Miners·
ville. 600 OQ. ft .. ale, cov·
ered partcing, ceiling tan,
S2751mo.• 614-876·1661

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, tumlshed and unfur~
nlshed security deposit r&amp;qu1rect.' no pets, 74()..992~
2218 .
-------1 Bedroom Apartment, Aelrlgerator, Range, AIC Ineluded, 2 a9 Plus DepoSit &amp;
Roloronco. HUD Approved.
(740)441-1519
~::.:...~=~-~1 bedroom near Holzer. Ale
economical gas heat QUiet
location. , 279 month' tease
&amp;
deposit
required
(7401448 ,2957

s

iLw--·CIIEAiiiiliiiiGiiE-.,1I
~

APARTh'IFM'S

Alnrs&amp;

100 .crw1 ONLY $48,000
or
273 •crea ONLY
$1~00 Recreation proper·
ty on KY and WV. Great lor

the Outdoor Loverl Also 5 ~::.:....::...:=---. acre to 6 acre tracts availa- 1 Bedroom Upstairs Apt. on
ble In Ptke and Jackson Co.
sccossible to 40 aero to 200
acre or Public hunting. For
more Info end FAEE maps
contact
Anthony Und Co., Ltd.
t--800-213-8365.
WWI!(.elctand.com

Second Ave. S300 par
month. (740)446.()855.

2 "bedroom upstairs !part·
ment, $275/mo. $150 deposit, pay ~r own U1llltles.
37·1/2 Smither's Avenue.
(740)446·9061 .
2nd floor apartment juat
renovated, 2 bedroom: WID
hook·up 2nd avenue $350
deposit, 's3so rent. RoJeren·
ces required. (740)446·
3117
·
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS AT BUDGET PR~
CES AT JACKSON ES.
TATES 52 westwood Drive
lrom s297to $383 Walk 10
shop ·4 movies. Can 74o446·2568. Equal Housing
Opportunity
·
Christy's Family Living
33140 New Lima Ad., Aut~
lancl, OhiO, 740-742· 7403
Apartment, home and trailer
rentals. Commercial storefronts available lor lease
Vacancies now
·
·
For Lease One bedroom,
unfurnished, second floor
apartment, at corner of Second and Pine. A/C, $300
per month; water Included.
Security and key deposit.
References required. No
pets. (740 )446-4425

Acreage. In City, Great Localion with beaulllul bulldong
Mea. phone (7401446-1162
BRUNER LAND
.
(740)441-1482

Clllllo Co.· Kerr Rd., still a
couple off goodoes loftl 5
acres $22,500 or 8 acres
$21,0001 Rio Grande, pri·
. vale, 13 acres $26,500.
Cheshire, 5 acres, $10,000
or hunters, 37 acres now
$30,0001 Clay Twp.. 11
acres $17,5001
Tycoon
Lake alea
14 acres
$13,500.
.
Melga Co.· Tuppers Pla1ns·
Carr Ad. 5 acres with bam/
stalls $28,000 or 6 acres,
$12.5001 SA681. 5 acres
on Shade River, $12,000 or
7 acres with pole bam,
$23,000. Danville, 5 acres,
$10,5001 Rutland, 9 acres

S8,5001

Just a lew of the parcels
available. C811 now tor maps
and other llatlngsl Owner II·

Guaranteed! We SeU New Coast 20-20 11re changer,
Maytag Appliances, French large air compressor, 1999
City Maytag, 7~-7795. 1211. aluminum boat with
t
(3041 675
1 If
Couch and lOve seat cream ~ng moor.
•
background w/ floral patlem
$500.00 . Farmnouse style COBRA 29LTO classic CB
table and cha~rs. $150.00 radio, peaked, 565; Wtl.son
both In brand new cond. 1000· Magnet mount CB
304-67§..3805
antenna, handles, 1000
tt
$35
11
For Sale: Reconditioned ~)6 • ~~c: ent
'
washers, dryers and refrigerators. Thompsons Appli· COMPUTERS : WE Fl·
anca. 3407 Jackson Ave- NANCE DELL COMPUT·
nue. {304)675-7388
ERS! Even with less than
perfect credit! 1-800·477Hotpoint washer, $75; 9016.
Code
AC36
W~trlpool. dryer, $75; GE www.omcsolution.com
30 electnc r~nga, like n~w.
$175. GE relngerator, whtte, Firewood for sale. $150
7401441 9476
5175
150
was
· $';'5w A~ ~,20' load. (
gas range,
.
ap an- FREE CASHI $10,000 or
cas guaranteed. Skaggs
Appltances. 76 v1ne Street, more possible In 58 da~s or
(740)446~7398
less. Never Repay! New
.:........:__ _ _ _ _ _ programs! Free Information
Main Street Furniture
1-800-308-6147
(304)675·1422 '
www.vlsionq2000.com
515 Main Street, Point
Generac 5 ,000 wan Gener~
Pleasant
ator. Like New. E.11tras.
Now &amp; Used Furniture
$350. (740 1446-2350

I

;m~,;.;;..;.;.;;;.;.;..;.;;...;.._,

Building in Racine, 301(8(),
"'-~ &amp; •~k. was chu-h,

75 1

New . 2 Piece Uvingroom
Suites, $399. Buy, Sell,
Trade.

~-:---::::-:--:::c,-

Refrigerator/Freezer
(304)675-8795

$50.

Two Bedroom Sets, Electric
Hospital Bed and Llk Chair,
Aasoned household Items.
(740)256-1426.

r

SPORTING

GoOIJs
Guns Sako heavy barrel
with Leupold scope 22·250
caliber. Remlnoton mod.
141 slide action rltle with
scopa. 35 caliber. (740)446·
1162
Remington 700 30·06, 4x
Weaver, $425; ~emington
870, 20 gauge_ Wmg Master,
$425; Browmng A-500 A
Belgium 12 gauge two bar·
rels, $650. {740)367~7693

j

ANTIQUF.S

Buy or sell
ques, 1124
SR 124 E.
992-2526
.

I

Riverine AntiEast Main on
Pomeroy, 7~0·
Russ Moore,

~:;.,::..;.:,c..;,;;_;,c:.:..__ r:~~~~;[]

nenclng wllh slight property Gracious living. 1 and 2
maol&lt;up.
bedroom apartments at VII·
lage Manor and Riverside
Commercial Lola wl email Apartments In Middleport.
home lor sale, 4 lots 262' From $278.,348 Call 740•
long over an aero in heart of 992·5064. Equal Housing
PI Pleasant located at 141 o Opportunltteo.
Lewis St., price neg.
$62,000. call 304-727-33,8 Nice 2 bedroom apartment
between 8:00 to 11 :00 pm. with garage, Harrisonville,
all electric, no smoking &amp; no
Looklno To Buy A Naw pets $375 per month plus
Home? Don't Have Land? utllitlea. (740)742·3033
We Colli Hurry Only10 Loi s
Loft, 304·738·7295.
N~e one bedroom furnish·
eel, utilities paid, beautitul
0~10 Rive~ lot, gorgeou~, country location, (740)992·
90 by 430 .. Syracuse, 60 · 4451 alter 4
deep ltet area wllh targe :--=-...:,:.::....::..·-..,.--''"' on river. real above Now Taking AppllcellonaflOOd plain, $:W,OOO call 35 Wool 2 Bodroom -Town·
(937)390-()380.
house Apartments, Includes

SO DOWN HOMES NO
CREDIT OKI H_UD, VA
FHA. Call lor Llatonos
1-800·501 ·1777 Ex19Q18
-------1988 24' gooseneck horse
trailer, 3 compartments; 22'
pull behind camper sleeps
6, evenings (740)24S·5622

I \1-l.\1 "' 1'1'1 II"
,\JI\I..,I!IIh

Water &amp;
Sewer Available. Avg.
60&gt;&lt;1110 Call (304)862·2807
or (304)a82·2686
.
l~i

\ I \ I '-1

~;=:;;;:===~
io HOOiEl I

r

...__,.;FORtiiiliRtNriitiioo-,.1
--.
1 -3 Bedrooms Foreclosed
Homeo From $199/Mo., 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
APR For Li011ngs, 800·31 93323 Ext. 1709.

F.Quw:1oo

FARM

coax, mounted on a
vise grip bracket, $20.
04
67..:.
795
5..:.·a..:.
.:_(3..:.
..:.1..:.
:.:...._ _ _
aSOOE. 16H", V·lw'n OHV.
c.
296 hours . $900 (740)3799257
-------AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy Factory Direct
Twin RlverTowers now acExcellent Service
ceptlng
Flexible Financing Available
applications lor 1 BR.
Home/Commercial Units
HUD subsidized apt. for
FREE Color Catalog
elderly and disabled. EOH. Call Today 1-800·711·015a
(304)675·6679.
www.np.etstan com

*

3 miles.

turn l eft on Winterplace,

I s1 house

on right

.

feet of living apace. Fonnal living room
and dining. Lots Df beautHul woodwork.

~UITLIIL")

1

0

I MPDU~DS &amp; REP~St·
HONDA S,
CHEVY S,
JEEP'S. LOW"AS $29/MO,
24 MO'S . @19.9%. FOR
LISTINGS, CALL 1•800·
451 -0050 olll. C-9at2

$100,000.00 Ranch home w ilh full
basement and 2 car attached garage plus
12.35 acres mil with road frontage alon g
Kerr Road not far from US 35 on/off
ramp! 3 Bedrooms , living room, family
room and lots morel Owners looking for
an offerl #21 08

•.
TO APPRECIATE WHAT IT OFFERS!
Lots of remodeling including newer roof,
siding, windows, carpeting, kitchen
cabinets and more. 3 bedrooms, large
sized kitchen, living room, lauoldry,
detached 2 car garage all situated within
a hop, skip &amp; jump to town! Priced at
$47,900 and DW'1ers WANT AN OFFER!
12136
~

BEECH STREET- Here's the home lor you! It's
a beautifully decorated one story ranch thai
was recenHy remodeled. Has 3 bedrooms,
central air, and a lanced back yard. Just
waitiirto lor
$41,000.00
POMEROY - Need a building lor your
business? Here's a business building with 2
stores or use as one big one . Also has 4
apartments, being two 4 rooms and bath, and 2
6 rooms and bath apartmenls. Has had some
ol tha remodeling already done. $45,000.00

r'lil

MUSICAL

L._..,;INmuJMJ;Nr.i-iiliiiiiiiiiii':;.,..l

PRICED DROPPED $25,0001 O~rNE:R
MEANS BUSINESSIII Loads
1 'd
f h ' Ilk
I I
ns1 e o t IS
e new sect ona norllll .

8 0 0 • 8
2 • 5 9
www.orvb.com/bennett
Sawmill $3,895. New Super
Lumbormete 2000, larger
capacities. more options.
Manufacturer or sawmills,
edgers and skldders NOR·
WOOD INDUSTRIES 252
Sonwlll Drive, Buffa!~, NY
14225. FREE lnformatoon 1·
800·579~ 1363 EXT. 200·U

Lowery Pagenl Electric or·
D,!ln. Full size, like now.
( · ~ 0 )387 · 0688

I

dining
living

''

I

510 2n d Ave., Ga ll'tpo l'IS, Oh'10
(740) 446-710.1

Plano &amp; bench excellent
candlllon, $950; Yamaha
fuN-eize ll:evboard and
stli.nd has wave memory ~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
excelionl condition, s 450 : _
(740)446·9227

.

.:.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

e:;J.h4

I

•

ACRES. HOME· BUILDINGS Old
fashion
charm
wkh
modem
convenience In this 4 BR. 2 story
home, 2 ba1hs, (whirlpool tub).
Lovely equipped kitllamily rm
combo w/hardwood floors, cherry
cabinets. Enjoy viewing the country
!rom tvery window. Formal dining
rm &amp; LR wlbeamed ceilings . Porch
&amp; patio. 72 ACRES of beau.li!ul
13390 FABULOUS BARGAIN·
Brick &amp; vinyl a BR, 2 BA home on
private 1 acre lot. Family room,
living room wntreplace, DR, and
large utility room in this one with full
basement. Attached 2 car garage
and dotsched 2 cor garage ao wen
could be used loraloraga. Priced lor
a quiCk sate. SB5,000
t4005 A FEW MINUTES OF YOUR
TIME COULO PAY OFFI VIew this
lovely all brick homo wllhroo
bedrooms, 2 bath&amp;, formal dining
rm., living nn., Jamlly rm.. wllh
fireplace., Patio, above ground pool,
2 car attached garage and
basement. VERY LIVABLE HOME
FOR THE MONEY. $125,000.00
VLS
·
140tl
HOME
•
INCOME
INVESTMENT 128 x 130 Bulavlllo
Pk. 3 bl!dnn, 3 balh living quarter&amp;.
Also ta• x 32' garage plus 30' x 20
building 11:2 ac. olland. Good sales
loc. Priced 1o seH. VLS
t4017
LOCATED
383
MT.
CARMEL RD. 3 bedroo
, m, 2 bathS,
CEDAR CONTEMPORARY HOME
Oak ~Iehan , caramlc tile in kitchen
&amp; b th NEW CARPET th
h
a s.
roug
o:;r~ri~h~~!eACRES MIL
,
.
• 4027 INVESTMENT L
.
·,.
ocated In
Aro Grande 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
kllch8ns, basement &amp; garage. 70' x
172' lot. 280 College St. Great
Income &amp; Locallon. Priced lo sell
Call VLS 448·6806.
14031 .$$ will be all yours w~ou can
'
run an ACTIVE BUSINESS. Buy
building, trucks, equipment; stock
and customers all for a b&amp;:rgaln
price. Great location in Aio Grande.
Money making proposition for the
ambitious. VLS 448·6806 .
14019
COMMERCIAL
LOT
Jacl&lt;son Pk. Gallipolis. OH Corner•
1ol with great potential.

ms

1'996 Lincoln Towncar, mini
condition, low m1leage,
( 15.000 lirm, one owner,
(740)992·3102
1996 Ponua.C Sunfire, dark
r~d. automatic, AM/FM, CD
player, new tires, dual elr·
b"ags, wall maintained and
&lt;:Jean. $5000. OBO Call
(t40)446·9230

9,1 Cavalter AS 4 ·((yt., auto,
cold air, nice car, $1500,
(1'40)367~78 19

':--:'--.:...:._ _ _ _
g4 Flrebird, V-6, 5 speed,
Wh .." e, New T1 res. 89K , A•1
~ dll'oon, BookS $7125 w111
von
tpko $6500. (740)448·4822
after 5pm

POMEROY· A two-story home with three
apartments. One unit has 5 rooms and a bath,
one unit has 4 rooms and a bath, and the last
unit has 3 rooms and a bath. Live In the big
apartment and rent the olher two. $85,000.00

--'---~---

$6 Geo: 90,000 miles,
40mpg, air, auto, $2600.
(740)446-9564
-.:......_ _ _ _ _ _
L1vely's Auto Sales- 1988
~ord Escort, $800. 1992
F.ord Ranger Pickup, 5
speed, $800. 1986 Ford
Crown Victoria, $650 1989
Otds cutlass supremo,
$1000. 1989 Ford Taurus
SW, $600 1992 Eagle Pre·
mlere, saoo. 1990 Plymouth
• d
$650
1985
,un ance,
.
Dodge 800 Convortable,
5600 1989 Chevy Baratta,

STAR AREA , A 12X65 mobile
wllh 2 bedrooms . Thare Is approx. 8
that lias on Court S1reet and both aides of
Cave Road.
$22,1500.00

o~

•1200. 1992 Dodge 8·250,
Van , $1000. .19a9 Olds
Coera, $1000. 1992 Dodge
Shadow, $600 1987 Pon·
tiac Grand-Am, 5450 . 1988
Olds Clera, 1oo. 1gsa
Dodge Omnl, $500. 1988
Chevy G·20 Van, $1000.
1992 Mercury Topaz, SBOO.
1990 Ford Mustang, $500.
19a5 Chevy cavallor, 5250.
1990
Chevy
Corsica,
StOOO. 1960 Ford Pinto,
$500, 1988 Plymouth Sundance, $500. 1989 Ford
Tempq, $6.00. 1989 Chevy
€ava lier, $600. 1987 Chevy
S-10 Pickup, $900. 1aa9
Plymouth Horizon, $500.
Call (740)388·9303, Mon·
aay 1hrough Friday 9ain·
Spm. Saturday 9Sm· 3pm .
Closed Sundays.

s

EMBRACED BY SCENIC HILLS, nestled in
tall trees with natural seclusion. A lovely 2
old h9me on 4 acres more or ies.,.. Wrap aro&lt;md
decking and 2nd level balcony. Formal entry w/
hardwood' flooring all oak trlm and solid oak
mterior doors throughout. Large ramily room wl
Y'ent less fireplace. A free flowing floor plan 9f
spact: &amp; function. Private bedroom suite &amp; bath.
Several waU•~in cl osets, large kilchen with lots of
oak cabinets. 3 additional bedrooms. Basement
and.detachcd 2 car garage. NO. 320
ONLY 5165,000.

BUTTERNUT AVENUE • A two story home with
vinyl siding. Has 3 apartments with a good
Income . There ls _a part basement. One
apartmen1 has 4 rooms and a bath, one
apartment has 3 rooms and a beth, and the
other apartment lias 3 rooms plus 2 enclosed
porches, and a bath.
$31,000.00
SOUTH ntiRO AVE. • This 2 story home haa
6 rooms , 2 to 3 bedrooms, 1112 baths and
basemen!, · Thera Ia an enclosed back yard
and pnvate drive.
$48,100.00

OR HOME
PIKE. 6.91 acres. Only 5
Need a new place 10 stDrt
Coli for more details
NO.
Good bui lding
on Pleasant Hill Road, Green
Green Ele m entary Sc hool.
Only $17,500. NO. 305

DOTTIE TURNER, BrDker........ 992-5692
JERRY SPRADLING ................ 848-2131
CHARMELE' SPRADLING...j .....849-2131 .
BETTY JO COLLINS .................849-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ...................892-3058

OFFICE ...................................... 992·2886

r

81,

who lives in ·

Rome, aided financier Martin Frankel,
who is accused of buying up insurance
companies , 1hen looting them of more
th an

$200

million .

Col agiovanni, who has served on the
board that provides legal

II,

Pope John Paul

counsel

was charged Thurs-

money

laundering. He

arrested in Cleveland as his family was
for his sis1er.

'

He appeared Friday in federal court
in Connecticut and was released af1er
securing $500,000 bond. He will be
1
under house arrest and must wear a
monitoring device.

A probable
uled for Sept.
His

lfsalsoyour
best source for
the news and ·
information
you need
everyday.

cause hearing was sched-

19.

attorney,

Paul

Mancino,

Ohio Valley Bank will offer
lpr sale by Public Aucllon
A 19~7 Chevy Suburban
lrn;181398 at 10:00 am, on
01 AI Ohio Valley Bank
nnex, 143 3rd A.v.e., Galllp·
Plls, Ohio. Sold 10 lho high·
est bidder •as laa where ls"
Without tlq)rtased or im·
plied warran1y &amp; may be
seen by calling the Collet·
Oepanment
at
lion
(740)441 ·103a. OVB re·
servos tho right to accept/
rejoot any &amp; all bids. &amp; with·
draw Items from sale prior
to sale Terms of Sale:
CASH . OR ' CERTIFIED
CHEt;K.

said

Col agiovanni ha s done nothing wrong,
and the

FBI

and IRS merely want to

secure his testimony against Frankel.

"I

1hink he was duped and 1aken

.advantage of," M ancino said.
Colagiovanni is accused of h elp ing

C)IARGED- Mon s ignor Emilio Colaglovanni leaves court In Bridgeport , Conn., after

Frankel use the financier's St. Francis of
Assisi Foundation to acquire insurimce

a detention hearing. .Colagiovanni is charged with wire fraud and conspiracy to com·
mit money laundering. Federal prosecutors said they have linked Colagiovanni to

companies, while concealin g Frankel 's

financier Martin Frankel, who is accused of scamming several insurance companies

involvement, according 10 a complai n! .

cut of more than

Colagiovanni

To subscribe,
calt
1-740·446·2342

alle gedly

pledged

at

r an as collateral for Frankel's purchases

Co nn .

$40,000
promised $5

iunba~·[lmrs

and

was

later, an

ienttnel

affidav it

... .....

i

CAMI'IlRS &amp;

MoroR H&lt;JM&amp;Ij

I

I

------=-::::

10

1

---::-:==:=---

o: o

i

r

billion to the St. Francis of Assisi Foundation, which had a bank account in
1he Brilish Vir gin i slands.

journal of Roman Catholic 'canon law,

charity, accordtng to t h e affidavit, but

Int ernal

Colagoovanni contro lle d an account in

its r eal purpose was to mask Frankel's

a Vatican City bank that 9erves religious

· involvement in the pu~chase of asse1s

the

began

working

when they m et

The St. Francis foundation posed as a ·

belon g ing to various American msur-

groups and their members.
At Frankel's behest, he told r egulator s
and comp anies that h e lransferred

ance co mpanies.

$1

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY 446-2342
.

"'

.....·. BING-O

~

2

Su

FOR SALE

Serenity House

2 Kilns,

serves victims of domestic
violence call

446-6752

Upst~irs

..,

Glaze$, disque and

7 40·379·2514

at the
Gallia County Health

Gallipolis' Elks Lodge

Graham's Upholstery is

Departmenl

Annual Labor Day Sing at

Presents

looking for an individual

Women's Health Month

interested in learning the

"Join us and be a W.I.N .N.E.R."

craft of upholstery.

Kyger Creek Shelterhouse
Monday, Sept.

"

Pouring Table, Drain

Table, Molds I nice selection) ,

or

Starts at 1 p.m.

3

(Women Incorporating Necessary
Nutntion, Exercise &amp; Relaxation.)
A FREE interac1ive semtnar for women
and adolescenl girls. September 10,
2001 6:30 p.m . · 6:30 p.m.
Gallia County Service Center
Conference Room

· 4 pm

Groups to Sing are: ·
God's Ambassadors
Gloryland Believers
Johnson Family ·

New City Singers

RESERVATIONS ARE REQUIRED
Conlacl the Gallia County Heal1h
Department (740) 441 · 2950

TO ALL AREA FIREMEN:

Support provided by OOH, Bureau oH
Health Promotion and R1sk Reducllon. _
Women 's Heal1h Sectoon &amp; Ohio AHEC

Addison Choir

Mon. •

Fri.

Call for an appointment

MOVING SALE
CASH ONLY
King Bed with wooden
head board and foot
boards, Orbitrack Pro by
Thane Fitness, Yard
Machine, Push Mower

With love and

446-3538
or 441-.1113

FOR SALE

appreciation, we would

families to a Cook-Out at

1993 27' Ford Motor Home
Sleeps 6, Full bath, Excellent
Condition, 41 ,000 miles , Great

the United Methodisl Church

for deer Hunters.

like to invite you and your

located on St.

9-4

Hours

Addison Quartet

Call Don Hubbard

Rt. 141

16,' at 6:00 p.m.
740-446-2323

Call

LADIES VFW AUX 4464
DUES ARE DUE. $16:00

740·992-5776

Sept.

Fresh Night Crawlers

Send to: Patsy Campbell

1062 Second Ave.

Robbie's BP
4th

1992 BLAZER S10 SPOR
Good Condition $3400
740·446·4474.

•

Vine St.

Gallipolis, Otiio

45631

O'DELL LUMBER
61

FOR SALE

3 Piece

St., Gallipolis
446-1276
634 E. Main, Pomeroy

BLACKBURN'S
TREE SERVICE

Vine

Living room Suite

Good Condition

$200.00
446-2117 after 5:00

992-5500

10·4
Labor Day 8·4

Open Sunday
ppeo

Top, Trim , Removal

&amp; Stump

&amp;

441-1500 .

Grinding

•

Services Available

Monday,
September

3, 2001 ,

Chester Vol. Fire Dept.

•

will have the annual

Eric Blackburn

Chicken and Spare Rib

446-2422

BBQ with homemade
ice cream . Serving

11 :30 a.m.,
parade 1:30 p .m .

will be
Construction Laborers
Needed
Local Work

992·7943, 591·7002; 591·4641

_. I

'I' .,

Greenw1ch,

more

~

1974 Winnebago (Brave).
Good Condl11on $3,000.
Call (740)388-8473
_ _:__:.__ _- : - 33' Fleetwood Prowler
camper, f4U
bedroom,
1
MOTORCYCLES
shower &amp; living room, stein~------_.1. less steel stove &amp; double
..,
sink, new
refrigerator,
1994 Honda 250NX orJ off $3,800, 740·992-4183.
road, electric start, water
cooled.
7,000
miles, 99 model camper, Sprinter,
36' long, Pull out rooms, air,
$1400 (740)245·5934
stereo, queen maHresses, 2
bedrooms,
bath
tub,
1998 Honda Recon 250 CC, (740)245·5535
good condition 4-wheeler,
has 2 wheel dnve, $1800. Open all aluminum tratlar for
,("3:::04~)6::7:::5·.::586=6_ _ _ _ sale .. Aluma LTD, 18 II.
long, GVWR 7,000 lbs.,
l-londa 450 • ES Foreman. electnc brakes, tandem
$4SOO, (7401742 -2a21
axles, 1500 miles, I year
old- $3100. (740)949·2217
SII(\ I(IS
1999 Honda 400 Foreman .
Askmg $4200. (740)256- iiir;i;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;.._,
1579 ·
·
HOME
·
IMPRoVEMENt'S
2000 Polaris 500 4x4, au(o- r....,;iiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiii_.l
matic, winch &amp; snow plow.
223 inlles, l'oko new. $1l000, All lypes ol masonry brick,
20
(304)773·5099
block &amp; stone
yrs. expo·
rience, free
est1mate,
Harley
Davidson
(304)77.3-9550
2001
Sportster a83 Hugger, lor·
ward controls, ato miles,
BASEMENT
o (740)742
asking $800 ,
WATERPROOFING
4506
Unconditional lifetime guar.
antee. Local references furOhio Valley Bank. w~l offet nished. Established 1975.
for sale by PubliC Auction C 11 24 Hrs (740) 446A 1999 Yamaha 350
1·800·287·0576.
7
1158372 at 10:00 am, on
'
f
916101 AI Ohio Valley Bank Rogers- Waterproo ong.
Annex, 143 3rd Ave., Galllpo- - - - - - - : - . . , . . oils, Ohio. Sold to the high· C&amp;C General Home Malnte·
est bidder "as is· where Is• nence- Palnllng. vinyl sid·
without e~epressed or im- lng, carpentry, ·doors, winplied warranty &amp; may be doWs. baths, mobile home
seen by calling •the Collec· repair and more. For free
lion
Deparlmenl
at estimate call Chet, 740·992·
(740)441-1038 . OVB ro· a323
eervea the rlghl to accepV :=::·~------:-:­
reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; with- lnlerlor &amp; Exta~or remodel·
draw items from sale prior ing, chain link fence, homa
to sale. Terms of Sale: repairs, custom wood worl&lt;
CASH OR CERTIFIED &amp; deoks. Mr R x Ill
CHECK
,(.304:::.::1:;87::5-:·3:;.733==--:::::;-::;:· ·
:c
BoA'I'S &amp; MoToRli ll.Mngs1on'o Baoemonl We·
FOR SALE
11r Proollng, all banmenl
~------·
ropalra done, tree eotl·
..,
mates, lifetime guarantee.
2002 waoo aluminum flllh- Hyra on lob experience.
ing boat wicenter conaole, (304)895-3887.
50 horse Mercury &amp; traHer.
J
$9800; 2002 Waoo 17' ahr
Eu:crRI'-""
mlnum' bass ~oat w/60
REAHGEHATION
horse Merc ury &amp; trailer, - $10,300; 2001 Hydra bass Aeaidentlal or commercial
flbarglass bass bOBt, w/150 wiring, new service or re~
horae Mercury &amp; 1raller, palra. Master Licensed elec::·
$15,600: other assortmenl' trlclan. Ridenour Electrical,
of beals, Call Tom at Marine WV000306, 304-675·1786.
Service&amp;, 740·992-6520

in

million

from

1998,

mansion

asticus Foundation, which publishes a

According to a probable cause affiwith Frankel in

Frankei's

for lhe work,

Revenue Service said.
dav it , Colagiovanni

million. (AP Photo)

A s president of the M oni1or Ecclesi-

of insurance company asse t s.
He was paid

$200

$1

billion from a charitable foundation he

The Village of Rio
Grande Board of
Public Affairs regular
monthly meeting will
be hal d
Tuesday,
September 4 at 6 p .m.
In the Rio Grande
1990 Chevy Aslro Van. Au- Municipal Building.
The meeting Ia
to, AJC, (740 )992-6 137
1990 lsuzu truck, 4x4, 4 open to the public.
cyl., 5 sp .. new ti res &amp; bal·
tery, aluminum wheels, September 1, 2001
n~e. $2000• (7401·2474292·
1991 Chevy Suburban 4WD ~rr•A:-UI"Ooo~::l\tm
~&amp;:""',
66,000 miles, loaded, very
good condit,on. (740)446·
ACCESSORI&amp;'i
310a
.
14
195175
4
1995 Windslar LX, dark ( 1
R
llreo, $80.
blue, loaded, 118.000 miles. (3041675- 161 a
~

r

was

preparing to ~ttend a memorial Mass

1987 Chevy 314 Ton, 4x4,
$4400· (7401441 ' 1892
1988 F·150 XLT Lariat 4x4
truck. ExcaUent Condition,
a8,000 mllee, (7 40)441·
1716 anytime
.

2001 Ford F-250, diesel, ex·
tended cab, long bed, 4x4,
6 disc CID player, will sell
tor pay oft. low moles,
(740)742·1011 or 740-742·
3135.

to

day wi1h wire fraud and c onspiracy to
commit

1993 Sat urn SL1 $2500. Lw-....i4-ioWDstiii--_.l
1990 Corsloa $1200 19aa ~
Ford Van 314' Ton. $1500. 1986 Ford Bronco, Edd1e
(!40)388·9906
Bauer, Two-tone; Medium
Mocha/Light Mocha, 4x4,
302. VB, EFI, Automatic , - - - - - - - a8.500 mttos, t&lt;JC, Cruise,
PUblic NOtiCe -- ·' '
Tilt, Power Windows/locks,------~4M Suspension L1ft, Alpine
Stereo
. $6.000.
NOTICE

1999 Olds Alloro, bright red
Loaded, 100,000 mile war·
ranly. $12,000. (304)675·
~406 after 5pm.
:!oo 2 Trans Am Ram Ai r,
loaded, (740)36 7•0326

NEAR PAGEVILLE • ·Behind Wells Cemetery
Is this 59.1 acres mil lha1 has a reclaimed
grassy field and a secluded building alta. Most
of acreage Is woodland. Really good

":A~C::R':!'E":T::R:':A~C::T•ol":""v"'ac'"a'".nt~,-4·009-•A•L•L..;•~o:"~;.
; ·IC•K-•C•LA-SS•I•C~I403~":'1)."!1T~'":'S":P~E::R":'SO!':NALI~~TY~PW~~S~I

Emilio Colagiovanni,

Monsignor

r

1999 Monte Carlo LS, ex·
cellent condition, loaded,
3.9,000 miles. $10,500 EC, $7500. Well maintsined
(740)446-3117
(740)448·3467 evenings.

[B

mes.
Federal prosecutors say

1989 Ford Ranger 4x4 exa
tended cab, 48,000 m1les.
Good condition, needs 5
speed manual transmission
:;:.c__:_:_' - - - -- - $1500. (740)386-0436 after
1989 Dodge Shadow, Good 5:00pm
Wor&lt; Cor $750. (740)448·
7730
1999 Dodge Dakota Sport.
- - -- - - -Aulo, Air, Loaded, 2a.ooo
19B9 Olds Cutlass Su- miles. Rebuilt Title, Like
preme, red'grey, run's good, New May Take Older
!2,000, (740)643·1125.
Trade. sa,750. (740)256·
9161
1990 Lincoln Town Car
good cond~lion AJC not Ohio Valley Bank will offer
working . $2700.
OBO for sale by Public Auclion
(304)675·7285
A 1985 Ford Dump truck
NA45156 at 10 00 am, on
1990 Z24 Cavalier, goOd
condition,
runs
good, 916/01 At Ohio Valley Bank
Annex, 143 3rd Ave , Gallip(140)386·1509
olis, Ohio. Sold lo the high1992 25th Anniversarv Ca- est bidder ·as is- where ISM
mara, Green, LM 82,000 without expressed Or imnjiles. t&lt;JC. (740)446·4237 plied warranty &amp; may be
Leave a message. ,5000 seen by calling lhe Collection
Oepartm~nt
at
OBO.
(740)441·1038. OVB ro1992 Oldsmobile Cutlass serves the nght to accepV
G1era, 6 cyl., 4 door, auto, reject any &amp; all bids, &amp; withatnllm ca~sette, Tilt, Cruise, draw Items from sale prior
ft\N. PL. $2500. 1994 Rang- 10 sate . Terms of Sate:
er 4x4, 4 cyt. , 5 speed, one CASH OR CERTIFIED
~ ner. sharp· truck. lots of CHECK
extras $5800 . (740)379· l!!lr-~~~-....,
0085
V.w; &amp;

-,..,.-M-az_d_
a_M-Ia-,.-.--a-.o-oo
995
8
rcotes. Runs and looks
~real. $6100 or trade.
(740)339-3089.
"'
_M_o_n-te_C_a-rl_o_Z- .
19-9-'5
34
!14,000 moles (740)992·3008

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

appeared in court Friday

ties to help an international financier

for~ .

cyl., auto, $900. t964 CJ7
Jeep 4 cyt 4 &amp;pd $3500
'
.
'
.
1987 Dodge Rem 150 4x4.
Looks Good, Runs Good.
(740)256·6997

Pope

scam millions from insuranc e compa-

._-==:..;...-:==--'

LINCOLN STREET· Middleport •
A 2 &amp;lory
home with big ston" accents on the
~~~~~~-~.There are three bedrooms, dining room,
I'
1 112 baths, family room and a sun
lull basement, and a large garage with
at1ached carport. Has new
In some

Tanning canopy w/bench, Trumpet, Trombone In
$350. Kohler blue couch &amp; Good Condition. (740)441 ·
toveseal, $100. (740)388· a574 alter G pm.
0438 aNor 5pm.

cr;

THEY READ

1987 Chrysler LeBaron, 4
cylinaer, 25mpg, new tires,
battery, etc. Excellent small~
er car, (740)388-8997

0 1

has c oun seled

on charges alleging he used his Vatican

r

4 Bedrooms, 2112 Baths over 3000 square

BUIIlliNG

lr!lll"_...,____.,

3 Bedroom l"ouse In Syra· t,::-:4:'!:004:":"":'9
cuoe, Ohio. $4501 Month land. Land $75,000.00. Located on Updates Include new carpet, copper
HUO
Approved only
(304)a75·. SA 588. VIrginia 448·6aoe.
5332 weekends
PIumbl ng &amp; beth , new rooI , prlvacy
13362 CARRYCUT BUSINESS fence. Finished 3fd lloor, 4
Cozy 1·2 bedroom Cottage ond CONVENIENCE STORE FOR bedrooms, 1 112 baths, Jull basem'l,
$250. Lincoln Ave. Call SALE. New alarm system . Building · li\llng rm w/fireplace, formal dining
Homestead
Realty built 1o state code. continuous rm, 3 bedrooms on 2nd floor 1
(304)675·5540 ask lor Nan- operation sln'ce 1986. Price Includes wlflreplace, garage &amp; landscaped
"'·
lnventory..Ca!l Johnnie 367-0323 or yard. Call for appoint. Virginia 446New 2 bedroom duplex, 446-8806.
6Boe
Harriscnvllle area. all elec· 13375
LOOK AT THISIIII
3 13397 IN THE CITY Huge Family
Inc, energy efficient, no Bedroom 2 bath ranch over lull home w/4 BAs, 2 belhs, kll, LR, DR,
omoklng, no pete, $375 per besemenl with 2 car garage and porches, partial baaemenl. Priced
utllltiea, flntshed family room. Home slls on 2 right· see this outstanding offer!
month
plus
(740)742·3033.
!&gt;.c. m/1 In Hannan Trace Schools. Vacant, ready 10 welcome you. VLS
Just minutes from doWntown 446·6806
Pilot Program, Renters Gallipolis. This home features a
Needed. 304·738-7295.
beautWul landscaped lawn, wood 13387 Large home in town, new
STOP
RENTING!
$0 pelle1Stove and central air. Localed roof 1999, 4 BA, 2.5 BA_ 2 car
DOWN! No credk okl Go\11. just off Rock Lick Rd. on Mabie Dr. garage,
vinyl
siding,
nice
Homes.
1-800·296· In nice neighborhood. Have e neighborhood. Needs some TLC but
m4x6i541
garden and .Wao some !lowere but priced right al $78,900
make sure to too~ at lhls. Call 14038 RIO GRANDE BEAUTY· 3
MOIIILEFORnl!~
Johnnie at 367.()323 today for an Bed roo me, 2 Baths, Ranch home.
"""''
• appointment. REDUCED PRICEII
Kitchen w1 ea:lng area, formal
dining room, garden tub, FirePlace
•·
14021 TRULY OELICIHTFUL HOME ·
R
14x70, 2BR lnlller, $3008 Pretty as a picture. Vary well In L , Cathedral celllnga, covered
•-•
• s so dopoaft, 1o1e1 planned alone and • frame ranch bulld&lt;lg,
deck, above ground pool, cellar wl
.. ~··• ~ 1
slorage shed, 3 car
electric, no pots (740)742· home offers 3 bedrooms, walk-In dotsched
garage,
black1op
2714
closet, 2 lull balho. charming living driveway fenced tot 2 2 scres mil
room wmreplaco. New oak cablne1s Appolnt,.;ent only. ·
.
2 bedroom, 14x65, CIA, line the kitchen. Range, refrigerator,
101a1 ol001rtc, ol!oolutoly no . dishwesher, and compactor ell stay. "033 THIS HOME FITS THE
pels. $350/mo. pluo dtpooll. Ullllly room Ia extra large. 211er deck HISTORIC
PICTURE
OF
Call (740)245·9491
or In the rear with 38' In-ground pool. GALLIPOLIS • Homo leatureo ~
(740)245-5175. No collo al· Many fruit trees. llowers. and BR, and 1 bath with cuatom
ter 9pm.
shrube. Sprinkler system in the rear. cabinets In kitchen, very large lot
2 car aIIac hed garage an d a carport. that has potentia! for hi Hveral
bedroom
no
2
on Rout. 35 •
1ana, lei us show you t s home
bam bulid.orog. Bt ack1 op • nd opt
-Iorance 2 .Ioryt dl
1 1. od ay 1
,....,•· deposit &amp; ••
' h
'll be wllh greatocatont
required . (740)245·5a90 cemon r vaways. n orne you
(7401441.9060
proud to own. VL Smith 446·6606
LOTS FOR SALE SR 5fll. Baauttlut
hill top lot with 5 acres
14022
WATCH THE RIVER FROM mll .. .$40,000. Lot 12 offers 5 acree
2 Bedroom Tra iler on Addl·
eon Pike . $220/ month. rouR IIACboKV,AdRO! Enjobythkedvtewk m~ ...$40,000.
$100 deposit No Pets .
rom your a oc or ac ec .
(7401448. 1837 or (740)"•· this 1+ ac mil withe 2 BR 1 beth t4034 12282 ST. RT. 160- Quiet
-rw
mobile home/vacation camper Is living but not too far out -This 1995
3437
just the thing for stress. May be manufactured home on foundation
2 BA. all electric, air, carpet; room for 1 garden . Located at 7183· Is just what you are looking for.
very, very nice, no polo, In St. Rt. 7 South. Reduced!
Home rests on a acrao mil with
Galllpollo. (740)446·2003 14014 KING SIZE FAMILY HOME bern, oulbulldifliJ, and all fenced,
and (740)446-1409
Oreal 2 e1y. 4 bedroom• .. 2 112 Great lor hof88 or cowa. Owner
betho, formal LR &amp; OR, Fam Am . wants to move and will let his 2000
2 BR, CIA, quiet setting. w/brick fireplace, all large rms., 13' x riding mower stay so you can ride
Call
lor
Appolntmenl, 25' ma01er bedrm. wlbeth. 2 car the ranch. Priced al $90,000 this
(740)992·2167
attached garage. 1.25 Ac mil cou ld be just what you needl
3 BR, CIA, all electriC, nice, $140· 000 · Additional lor B'w'ai Iable. 140271NVESTMENT Located in Alo
call
for
appointment, VLS
Grande. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
(740J992·21a7
14028 SUBURBAN BUILDING kitchens, basement and garage' 70'
LOT. Located on SA 5a8 end x 172' lot. ~90 Cottage St. Great
All electric,
$300/mo
+ de- m
~ •,tchell Ad. Pe•ect lor a luxurious
.1
( 7401367
"
Income and location. Priced to sell
1
posr
- home. 1 acre mil. Priced to sell. VIrginia 446-6606
oe11 ' no PEl s.
$30,000.00

C

approximately

II

John Paul

c

588

50

&lt;?!. ((/,."' . \iJ

446•6806

Sta.te Route

Page 07

A

(AP) -

BRIDGEPORT, C o nn·.
monsignor who

What else can
educate and
1,~-------~·· lo
drawsale
ItemsTerms
!rom sale
prior inspire like the
of Sale
t \100 tbs round bales, CASH OR CERTIFIED
store d 1nside . bam, $18 CHECK.
newspaper?
oach (7 40)446·0103
t;~--=~--....,
Thl)CKS
lfswhat
Buck a bale sale, square'
FOR SAL.E
bales $1.00 other hay up to ..__,.;tiiiitiiiiiiliii-.,1
people turn to
$2.00, round bales $15 00
(1) 1969 GMC 1-112 Ton
each 304·675-4869
dump truck. steel bed sinHay &amp; Bri ght Wire Tie gle aite,.S speed, 30S V-6. for the latest
Straw, Year 'Round Delivery fa1r cond1t1on, lair tires Aska
&amp; Volume Discount Availa- ing $2,000 (1) 1973 Chevy features on
ble
Heritage
Farm. 1-1 12 Ton dump ' truck, alu(304)675·5724
minum bed , single axle, 5 whafshot
speed w/splint8r, 366 V-8,
Til 1:\SI't 1111 I IH 1\
good conditton, good tires. andwhafs
Asking $2,800. No COL re~10
Auros
quired on either. Call
lL.,_...,;foiii'OiiiRoiiiSiiiAJ..Eiiiiio-,.1 (740)446-45t4 a-5pm or coolin today's
(740)446·324a aNer 6pm.
world.
10 DOWN CARSI POLICE 1982 Chevy Pickup 250 6

Gallipolis, Ohio

r "---

0

Boer Goats- 5 months 1993 lincoln Town Car

sa:

Sunday, September 2, 2001
From 2:00 • 4:00 o'clock
Directions: 94 Winterplace

~unbar ~nnrs · &amp;rnlmrl •

Vatican monsignor arrested in Ohio on wire
fraud charges.in intemational insurance scam

r;.,;:.o_,.;n.AJRiOl!fOSii:ISAiili:i £-.,.1

.ach
Guardian Llama, ed, excellent
condiuon
1150- Serious Inquires 'On. (740)448-3 108
s-.~740)446-091 0
.
1993 Mazda MX-6, L S v.
&amp;eautirul Registered Ouar- 6 , loaded , auto., 83,000 'mi
(or Horse Mare,$taoo. Black, $5000. 304-675-3893
51eg1stered Gelding Ouaner
.
l'torse.$1700. bul( both for Ohio Valley Bank will oNer
$2.-.:_900c__.:(7
_40-'l7_42_·a_3_2_7_ _ lor sale by Public Auction'
A 1991 Chevy Cavalier
U1mature Jack Donkey, 6 lr200608 at 1o·oo am
months old, {740)992-2460 9/8/01 At Oh1o V~lle~
Nanny goats. some with ~~nek, ~ 4 3 3rd Ave. Gallipleids. diHerent prices. Young
s, Ohio. ~old. to the highroos ters.
Lakenvelders, ~~:hbl dder as IS- where _is"
Oom1niques, Dark Corn1sh r out expressed or tm ~ 00 each. Two pair adult Pled warranty &amp; may be
tavender gwneas, $101 ~en by call1ng the Collec·
ila" (7 40)256·1399
(~;0)44 t~1e0p3a8rtment
at
:;:;;;,;.;..~~~::---,
· OVB re flAy &amp;
l sor\ies the nghl to accepv
GRAIN
reJect any &amp; all bids, &amp; with·

OPEN HOUSE

Working Electnc Dryer,
Real Estate General
Maytag $25 .. 2·611, molal _ _ _....:;:;:::.:..::::::::::::....::::;:.::.:..:::.__ _ __
bread shelves $35. each.
old lawn mowers not work·
tng $20. (304)773-5696

JET
~~h':'~~oc~) 9~~ ~
AERATION MOTORS
door/ primed tor painting,
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In perfect condition, $350.
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1· New doors· (1)16x7 14050/
800·537·9528
INS/WHIPL Glaos/ No lock
$650, (1) 16x7 11000/INSI
Kitchen table and 4 chairs, While/ No lock $500. (3)
mce wooden set 565 ,00 8x7 11000 INSIWHI Sunray
glass/ Lock $350 each, (1)
304 -675- 1618
c.:c.._:_.:_.:__ _ _ _ 8x6'6
••300/
INS/
Loke New Professional Heir Almontiii.HA Exl.·$300, (1)
Dryer. $100. Call (304)675· Bx7 143001 INSIWHIPL
2365
gtass $300. Call (740)446·
MOBILE HOME OWNERS 4514 M·F 8am-5pm.
EnnlnHred Metlil Bulldlnn
•
•
Huge Inventory, Discount Syatema, Low Rise Com·
Prices, 0!" Vinyl Skirting, mercia! and Industrial any
Doo~, Wtndows, Anchors, custom size, Include. AvlaWater Heaters. Plumbing &amp; tiou~turawareeahfJu: er ~7sc
d Au~ns·
Electrical Parts, Furnaces &amp;
Heat Pumps. Bannens Mo- AB Contracting, Inc. (304)
bile Home Supply, 740·446· 674..0100
9416 www.orvb.comiben_ne:-tt:--::::-::-:=-:--:.--.
Molorola Prol'le 300 Analog
Cellular phone, bought new,
- Pion: .
l1ke new, Including 2 batter~ ..__ _FOII'lJili'iiiii..n.EiiiO;.._.I
ies and a battery charger, -,
$40. (304)65-a795
NEW •NO USED FUR· AKC Reglotered Boxer Pup"
pies, DOB 6·28, Fawn, 1
NANCES FOR SALEI We male 2 tomales. Tall&amp;
Install, Free Estimates, U Docked Dew Claws re·
you doni Call us, We both moved, wormed, S300.. Call
Loose I (740)446·6306, 1· (304)675-4156 alter 6:00
::~ll0-=2o:9_1.0c:O:c:9c:8;...~=--:-- pm. M·F, all day weekends.
Parade Indian Outfit, clothing, head dress. breasl AKC registered English
h &amp; h 1 Bulldogs, males &amp; females.
1 t etc
pae,
.; couc
car 9 wks . old, (740)992·1435
7401446 2222
(
'
WATER WELLS DRILLED.
(740)fl86.7311

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

~ · 1 female. 2 male. $85 56,000 m11es, klather! load:

r

7

2 bedroom home close 10 .-====R:e:;a;l:;Es;:ta::,:te::G:;e;:n;:e;:ra:;I:::;::;::=-:===R=e:ai;:E;:s:;t;:a:;te:::;G;:e;:n;:e:;ra;:l;::;::;:::;
town, basement. River view,
$4251 month; 3 bedroom In
J~
town, 1· 112 baths. GOod lo·
~
·
. .
·
•
1f1iU1,.
•,
cation. $500( month References and depostt required
~
A
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ............... 448-t806
(740)448·3844.
'-:/('.eat:
GAIL BELVILLE .................................. 44f.t208
TRISH SNYDER ................................... 441-94&amp;8
3 bedroom home Mlnerovllle
Branch OHice
JOHJ'!NIE RUSSELL ........................... 387.0323
area, river \/lew, references
23 Locust St.
DAVID SNYDER .................................. 441-8458
required, deposit required,
956 Clark Chapel Rd.
Gallipolis, Ohio
OUR WEB PAGE IS.www.vlamilhrealaatale.com
740
992
8777
no
pots,
'
'
aNer
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
45631
e-mail: ~taraalestateOzoomnat net
Spm.

CUe

.,.12

816 New Holland forage.
wagon, 27 · New Holland
1994 12 ft. Stock Trailer. blower. (740)949-2072.
tor. Frontline. morel! FREE Good ConditKlll. (740)388·
·
13 11.
J.D. 6600 combine.
SHIPPING. Order online 98 t 5
G H (740)446·3648
www.PetCareRX.com
1·
800;-8«-1427.
1994 Massey Ferguson Oie- YANMAR YM 1500 Tractor,
- -----...,.-....,-:- sel Farm Tractor, mOdel diesel, 3 point hitch. $2,150.
Waterline Special: 314 200 2832 type 5210. 557 hours, Also. new 4' linish mower,
PSI $21 .95 Per 100; 1" 200 $12,500 . can Vince Rica or still in crate, $850. Shipping
PSI $37.00 Per 100; All Pam W'kls al Firat Federal available. Located just out·
Brass Compression Fittings Savings Bank of Ironton. •Side of Huntsville, AI (256)
In Stock
(740)532-6845
716·9435 www.maynarde·
RON EVANS ENTERPAIS..
qulpment.com
Ohio 1 800 60 HP 1nternational _tractor
~ -~~~son,
' - • with front end loader. Call
WAN"IID
c:..::..._;,c;c__ _ _ _ _ (740)379·9381
rolluY
Wheelchair, 2 walkers.
walking cane. potty chair, 8' International three poin1
make best otter. (740)446- hitch rotary cutler and 6' 2Q..24ft.. Aluminum goose3870
pull-type
rotary cutter. neck stock trailer, Good
c:..::.....;__ _ _ _ _ _ ' (740)446-1856
Condt11on . (304)773·5898
Woodbuming Buck stove lor
sale, $500 OBO, (740)9853601.

-=-------

menta, Very Spacious, 2
Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
112 Bath. Fully Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool, Pa·
too, Start $365/Mo. No Pols,
LeesePtusSecurlly Deposit
Requi red, Days: 740·446·
3481 : Evenings: 740·367·
0502 , 740, 446•01 Ol.

.r~---L•iVFSTOC--K-.,11

Real Estate General

FARM

Block, brick, sewer pipes,
Grubb's Piano- Tuning &amp; windows. lintels. etc. Claude
Repairs. Problems? Need Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Tuned? Call The Piano Dr. Call740.245-5121.
740-446 4525
•
Clopay brand garage door
Independent Herbalile Dis- close out sale· Cash &amp; car·
tnbutor, Gall For Product 01 ry- several models choose
0 pportuno1y· (740)441 - 1982 from · (2) 8x7 110001

201b Propane tanks, bought
new- never used. overlill
prolectlon· barbecue grill
RESIDENTIAL HOME
size, 1-full $30. 1-empty $20
OWNERS
(3041675·161a
.;._..:._______
3 piece Ba88eH living room Tappen · HI Efficiency 90%
suite, good condition, 5450 , Gas Fumaces, Oil Furna-

.

· sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

EQUIPMtNT

43 $350/Mo., 740""*a-ooo
1 ,":~·CJ~~~~n~~
11 0
8 , _!411
----'c~P~ro~per1)1~~o~n~S~t~R~t.~t~
~T~re~s;h~
(7~4~0)~9~92~
-34~93~~~::_;~e~
"'"·call (304)a62·298at·;,'o;.rJW~e~te~r~~S~ew~a~g~•~·
Francis
CB antenna, Free
a ~, ~r~n~i: '~ga~t~ P~u:m:~P~~&amp;_;~~·~~~~~;~~-~Bedrooms,
kitchen

~

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasan\ WV

For More Info, ..
•

446-2342 or 99.2-2156
'.

'

I

�Page

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

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

8 •itunbap 111:nntf -iwttmrl

think ot .. nv remictiom on a they are for regular homes. mortgage simply is not availretirement · program that On the contrary, our mobile able, although it may have
would not allow you to col- home was purchased in 197B been called a mortgage. I suplect ' your money wherever with a mortgage payment for pose a loose definition of a
PageD1
Page D1
you choose to live. Whether 20 years. I enjoy reading your mortgage simply means a loan
wondering if there are any ihere is an advantage to living column, and I love mobile- against some item. In general,
used in setting trusses. Th at
H.G., though, when the word
advantages of living in one of in New Hampshire or Nova home living. truck is one of six used in
"mortgage" is used, it involves
the Atlantic provinces of Scotia, I couldn't say, but a RoseviUe, Calif.
delivering building material
"real property." Congt'arulaDEAR
H.G.:
am
Canada) I will establish resi- cursory investigation of the
orders in a several county
dence in New Hampshire, two locations could make that delighted that things worked tions on finding a lifestyle that
area.
where there is no state determination for you. I do out well for you. In general, you are in love with. You are
Curre~tly there are 15 fullincome tax, but probably live wish you well with your cool- mobile homes are considered blessed.
rime and four part-time peo(Se11d your questions to: Smart
in Nova Scotia. Can I receive er · weather, but I leave you vehicles unless they are perple employed by Baum's- all
my pension, reriren.lcnt plan with this thought: No one manently fixed to the ground ,Money, P.O. &amp;x 503, Elfer~ FL
living withii1 a 10-mile radius
and Social Security with this ever threw his or her back our on real estate that the owner 34680. E-mail to: bnuebrurewilof the unit owns. If that liams.com . Questions ~general
arrangement' - ,L.S, Lyn• · shoveling sunshine.
DEAR BRUCE: In the describes your case, then I can interest will be answered in future
negrove, Iowa
Wont to see some local field
DEAR L.S.: People col- Sacramento Bet!, you say .that understand 1he morq~age. If, wlum11s. Owi11g to the volume ~
crop [rials?
lect Social Security retirement mortgages are usually not however, you are in a mobile mail, prrsot.al replies alnnot be
Plan on attending Shade all over the world. I can't available on mobile homes, as home park, a traditional provided.)
Page D1
River Ag Service's annual field
research has shown that late trials on Sept. 5 starting at 6.
application and the signature year is that the percent of remember that it is the comJ\ugust or early September p.m. at the Starling ~assar
farm •payment pounds going plexities of the U.S. Tobacco
section.
application of nitrogen returns Farm, Chester. Look at second
This leaves section thre_!! of to each party must be equal to Program, rather than program
the best investment per dollar year trial plots of alfalfa, orchard
the application specifically for the percent of marketings administration, which makes
PageDl
return due to increased yields, grass, clover and perennial rye
those . with
crop
share received by each party for any .alloca ting this money so chalhigher crude proteih levels in grasses as well as 200 I field
quota onto their farm. Most arrangements as indicated on tobacco marketed in the crop lenging and sometimes comfescue and greater digestibility. corn trials.
plicated for the growers,
Stay around for a meal as var- . of the growers in Gal,lia and their MQ- 38 at the FSA year 200U.
In the fact sheet, "Stockpiling
(}etlllifer L. Byrnes is a Gal/ia
As you wade through the
Tall Fescue for Winter Graz- ious · trade represeptatives go Lawrence Counties will only office. The notable requireing" written by C. Penrose, H . over their latest findings. The receive section two of the ment for sljarecroppers this process agam this year, Coomty ExteiiSion agent.)
Bartholomew and R. M . Sulc, Massar Farm is located just on
they suggest ,using urea only if the north side of Eastern High
a half-inch of rain .or more i.s School at 39 128 Ohio 7.. Help
expected within hourli of urea us get a preliminary head count
by calling Shade River Ag Serapplication.
Urea-based fertilizers, if not vices at 985-3831 if you are
with a forthcoming rain fiont, planning to attend.
(Harold K11eet1 is the Meigs
amn1onium nitrate is suggestCou11ty
Agriwlt1iral a11d Natural
..Jed, due to its lower surface
Penton. CEO T homas Kemp
NEWYORK (AP) -Interof the many fac to r~. but it
ATLANTA (AP)
applied nitrogen volatilization Resources AgetJt, Ohio State Uui- net World magazine is cu tting said recendy that the number of
Philip Kent, the N o. 2 wasn't th e only factor " i n
versity Extensio11.}
losses.
its publishing schedule by near- jobs ruts could increase as the
execu tive at Cable New s his· -decision. H e said ·he
ly half and has laid off 11 company reorga mzes its busiN etwork, is . resigning at has not deci ded what his
employees, reflecting a scramble ness.
the end of September as next caree r move will be.
T
he
cutbacks
at
Internet
by its parent company to adjust
president and chief operatI saacson said he was
World reflect a slump across
to a drop in advertising.
ing officer of th e Turner sorry to see Kent leave.
The cuts are the first specilied magazine publishing, as adverBroadcasting System news " H e has done a great job
by Cleveland-based Penton tisers have ratcheted back
group.
.
at CN N. I appreciate the
Media Inc. since it announced spending. The downturn has
Ken t was appomted '. great t eam he helped build
last month it was eliminating already killed The In dustry
CNN president a year ago h
..
'd
.
ffi
b .
b .
ere, 1saacson sat .
Standard,
a
New
Economy
170
jobs
companywide
and
111 an e ort w rm g ustSAN FRANCISCO (AP) . below the work force at the
Kent and a handful of
wonder
that
s
hriveled
in
size
as
seeking
ways
to
restructure
ness
Jeadershtp
to
the
netbeginning
of
200
1,
the
com- O nline brokerage Charles
C NN executives launched
advertising by dot-com compamoney-losing businesses.
work. H owever, his power
Schwab
Corp.,
w hich pany said.
.
Ne;w York-based Internet nies collapsed. ·
was diminished earlier this a . m aj or reor ganization
T he
l atest
redu ctions
. announced up t&lt;? 3,400 job
Standard M edia Internationyear w hen Time Inc. edi- that i ncluded reducing the
cuts in M arch, said Thursday include 1,600 to 1,900 full- World, which has a circulation
tor ial
dir ector Walter payroll by 400 employees.
it plans to eliminate up to time positions and about 200 of about 225,000 and caters pr i- al, the corporate parent of the
Isaacson became C NN 's T hey also began overh aulcomracted j obs by_ the end of marily to a business readership, Industry Standard,_ filed for
2,400 more positions.
chairman and chief execu- i ng CNN 's sagging prime. T he combined cuts are October, as well as a reduc- w ill cut its publishing schedule Chapter 11 bankruptcy protecti me programming as well
. rive.
'expected to result in a year- tion of 200 to 300 full-time .f iom 22 rimes a year to month- tion M onday and hopes to find
as
the H eadline News netKen t, 46, said Wednesday
end staffing l evel of. about posi tions through voluntary ly, Penton spokeswoman M ary a buyer for the failed Internet
that the change "was one work,
business magazine.
Abood said Thursday.
20,000 - nearly 25 percent attrition.

Baum

from

Kneen

of Chester.
While Tim is dedicated to
expanding the family business,
he is al;o committed to the
development of the community.
On the four acres where the
business is located, a section
near the bridge has been
made into a public park and
another section on the other
side of the road is used for Little League baseball games.

Contests
from

.II.

Television Listings For The .
ber 2, 2001 - Septembe~ 8, 2001·

from

Times-Sentinel And The Point

Bymes
from

•

I Page 3 I

I Page 5 I

CNN's No.2 executive
publishing schedule, staff stepping down

Internet magazine cuts

·Charles Schwab to slash
up to 2,400 more jobs

SMOKER
fRIENDlY

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F

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I Page 3 I

Today's
Homes

·Silly One On
One Is Fall's
First New Sitcom

I Page 6 I

•

Weekly
Puzzler

I Page 3 I

I Page 6 I.

·When A Compass
And Map
Aren't Enough:
NBC's Lost

Advice On
Home
Repairs
I Page 6 I

I Page 4 I
-.

Nancy and EmilY,, Rob and Brenn.m, Brend~ and Pat, Drew and KevJn, Leslie and Kim, Margarita a·n d Frank,
Ana "''d M~H (bMOk·I'OW, IJom left); LeiU)y m d Kary n...W..Ud,Blll, Paul and Arnie, and David an!'· Margaretta
(frOnt row, from lefll 'rilii'The Ailla11ng Race'tieglhning'Wodnesa1y-ilb CBS. tSeo story trn'Pisnl ~" ·

Comedy Central searches lanes for laughs with 'Let's Bowl' ·

Our Name Says It All!!

&amp;

Soap Talk

..........

CASHG

TV
Crossword

TV Pipe Line

By JEFF BAENEN
commentator, get to laugh at them. when they get a gutter
Ansoclated Preaa Wrltar
ball. I laugh at them and call them names ."
WHITE BEAR LAKE, Minn. (AP) -As cheesy organ music
Thanks to its retro cool, bowling is having a resurgence in
blares, two contestants prepare to settle their grudge match popularity. NBC's "Ed" is set in a small-town bowling alley
on the bowling lanes. On cue, the crowd in the bleachers where a former New York City lawyer has set up his law
cheers.
practice. And bowling shoes are a hot fashion item.
Twci women in tiaras and sequined red dresses - the
But "Let's Bowl" isn't looking to attract trendy fans.
Queen Pins - rotate a giant bowling pin to reveal the "We want, like, real Minnesota people. We'd love, like, two
comP.etltors. The bowlers square off to settle a dispute car mechanics in their 60s to bowl," Kronfeld says. "But what
they re having and win a chance at the grand prize - a we're finding is, we're getting all these total hipsters with
1973 Dod~e Charger or a used snowmobile.
tattoos."
Yes, Jt s time to play '~ Let's Bowl," a show that looks for
On came~a. Kronfeld is paired with Steve Sedahl, who
·
laughs between the gutter balls.
plays the straight man to Kronfeld's neurotic commentator.
· After six years of bouncing around Minnesota TV The two wear powder-blue polyester suits, bright yellow ties
stations, "Let's Bowl" now airs Sundays at 10:30 p.m. EDT adorned with designs of bowling ball s and pins , and
on Comedy Central. The half-hour show has a prime slot oversized headsets.
between "The Man Show" and "South Park."
Sedahl plays it smooth while Kronfeld jeers the
Bowling shows have long been a staple of television cont~tants and gripes throughout the broadcast.
.
programmrng, going back to the late 1940s and including
"fils mission is to just get th rough the show," Kronfeld
ABC's popular Saturday afternoon coverage of the pro tour says. "And my mission is to derail it.... We have great
in the 1970s. "Let's Bowl" is an affectionate spoof of such . chemistry."
shows as "Bowling for Dollars." and it doesn't matter if the
"Let's Bowl" features a regular 10-frame game with the
bowlers are good or not
action in some frames condensed to a recap. When a polka"It works both ways," says CO·producer Rich Kronfeld, dotted kingpin appears in a "pol.ka frame." the bowler who
who portrays play·by·play announcer Wally Hotvedt. "If rolls a &amp;,trike Wins 500 pounds of Polish sausage or a quarter.·
they're good bowlers, you 're watching It because, wow, cow. ..,
these guys are good. Jf they're bad bowlers, I, as the
Onde per game, a bowler can use 'the "distraction option"

·Earl Scruggs jams with S

Martin, Elton John and Sting on new album

Revue. Over 12 songs, he collaborate's with an impressive as well as scoring a hit with the show's theme song.
By JIM PATTERSON
The group rode the folk .music revival in the 1960s,
stable of admirers.
Aaaoclated Preas Writer
Eltorl John , Dwight Yoakam , Travis Tritt , Sting, Melissa scoring another hit when "Foggy Mountain Breakdown" was
NASHVILLE, Tenn. - When Earl Scruggs waxes fondly
about the old days, he doesn't dwell long on his role in Etheridge, Leon Russell , Vince Gill, Rosanne Cash , John featured in th e 1967 fil.m "Bonnie and Clyde."
Flatt and Scruggs broke up in 1969, with Flatt sticking
inventing bluegrass with Bill Monroe, or his long and Fogerty, Don Henley, Johnny Cash and actor Steve Martin
·
(on
banjo)
are
all
featured
.
Randy
Scruggs
produced
the
with
bluegr!ISS u_ntil his death in 1979. Scrug~s went into
succef!Sful partnership with Lester .Flatt.
album,
and
Gary
Scruggs
performs
on
it.
Steve
Scruggs
died
country-rock
with his sons, with the act lastmg until he
Sitting In his spacious contemporary home - a former
.
retired from touring in 1980 because of back problems.
·
residence of George Jones and Tammy Wynette - . the 77- in 1992.
The album could be a disappointment to those who yearn
In 1996, Scruggs suffered a heart attack 1n the recovery
year-old Scruggs weaves tales from his days In the 1970s
·
as •patriarch of The Earl Scruggs Revue. The country-rock for .more bluegrass revelations from a key member of room of a hospital shortly after hip,replacement surgery.
"Coming out of that, all of a sudden as the recuperation
outfit W!IS .popular on college campuses, but is generally Monroe's Blue Grass. Boys, and half of the seminal Flatt &amp;
.• started happening. I was just watching his playing grow and
Scruggs.
'
considered a footnote In Scruggs' career.
Except for a burning all-star "Foggy Mountain grow," said Randy Scruggs. "He was playing like he was in
Three of his sons - Randy, Gary and Steve - played
Breakdown," the album is contemporary rock and country his 20s.
in the band.
"All of a sudden, as that was nappening, we wanted to
"I remember we would open with a tune called music. Scraggs is more interested in seeing how his banjo
can
lit
into
a
Sting
or
Etheridge
song
than
revisiting
past
do
another
album. We asked, 'What can we do that dad
'Nashvlll'e Skyline Rag,"' said Scruggs, grinning at the
•
·
would
enjoy
doing?'
·
glories.
memory. "Randy did the first verse with acoustic guitar, but
"He's not interested in re-creating something he's already
"And dad has always loved collaborating and playing
the real energy kicked In whan he went to the electric.
.
with other artists and musicians ." ·
"It was powerhouse. That was the kind of energy I \vas done," said Randy Scruggs.
"It's about saying that at this moment, this is what I truly ·
It wasn't difficult to nab the collaborators.
feeling with the group."
Although the hybrid music of The Earl Scrupgs Revue feel like doif'l~ - ... That's what's great about creating "Getting to play 'Foggy Mountain Breakdown' with Earl
Scruggs was such a thril l," said David Letterman
waen't completely embraced by either lradltiona bluegrass something yO\Iii}OPe will have a long life - taking chances."
. Scruggs ha!5 been a musical innovator his entire life.
bandleader Paul Shaffer. "It was like getting to meet
or counlry f!!.ctlons .- an(:! rarely got radio airplay - it's a
. Born in Flint Hill , N.C., he took up the banjo as a child, Beethoven and jamming with him on 'The F-ifth."'
source of great pride for Scruggs,
and
had forged 't\is own style by the time he was a teen-ager.
Martin called his invitation "a dream lor me bpyond
The group played on bills with rock acts like
When
Scruggs
joined
Flatt
in
Monroe's
band
in
1945,
the
comprehension."
·
·
Steppenwolf and folkles like James Taylor. Sometimes they
combination - including fiddler Chubby Wise and bassist
Russell said Scruggs "is not only a 11reat player, but an
played festivals before 40,000 people.
"To me, It was the most exciting thing that I've ever Cedric Rainwater - was so potent that 11 spawned imitators inventor of music, with a quiet power ins1de his humility that
is not unlike the Zen masters of the East."
done," he said. "At my age, playing with my own kids and and launched the bluegrass movement.
Flatt and Scruggs broke away fro m Monroe in 1948 to
Sc rug~s sees things from a different perspective.
the energy they had. I hadn't played with that kind of energy
"I don t know what sets it off, but I rust get wanting to
form Flatt &amp; Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys. That
before In my life. It was really an exciting time for me."
His new CD, "Earl Scruggs and Friends," is his fi rst group was also popular and influential, with Flatt &amp; Scruggs pick once in a while."
album in a decade. It's an extension of The Earl Scruggs featured periodically on the TV sitcom ''The Beverl y Hillbillies"

All Yo·
J

)

and blow an air horn to rattle the other contestant. Corned~.
sketches, s·uch as "How to Dispose of an Old Bowling B.all,
break up the action.
In one installment of "Let's Bowl ." bowlers Tim
Carnahan and Gregg Mau settled their disa~reement that
stemmed from Mau loaning Carnahan a stat1on wagon so
he could get to the child-care center where they both work.
Problem 'was: the battery died and the tickets started piling
up. Carnahan insisted he shouldn't have to pay them. But
•
Mau won the game.
"The best thing about this show is that we don't have to
talk about this anymore," Carnahan says.
Tim Scott, 36, crea.ted "Let's Bowl" and co-produces the
show with Kronfeld. Scott had previous TV experience as a
technical supervisor on "Mystery Science Theater 3000,"
the defunct Twin Cities-based series formerly carried by
Comedy Central.
·
Scott says his experience at "MST3K" put "the fire in my
belly to have my own show." About six years ago he started
"Let's Bowl" and got the show on a Sl. Cloud UHF station ,
the Twin Cities' WB station and eventually on the NBC
affiliate in Minneapolis and in syndication.
Now picking up "Let's Bowl" for 10 weeks, Comedy
Central has caught on to what Scott . knew all along :
"Knocking stuff over, it's just inherently fun ."

Fav

�Page

Sunday, Sept. 2, 2001

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

8 •itunbap 111:nntf -iwttmrl

think ot .. nv remictiom on a they are for regular homes. mortgage simply is not availretirement · program that On the contrary, our mobile able, although it may have
would not allow you to col- home was purchased in 197B been called a mortgage. I suplect ' your money wherever with a mortgage payment for pose a loose definition of a
PageD1
Page D1
you choose to live. Whether 20 years. I enjoy reading your mortgage simply means a loan
wondering if there are any ihere is an advantage to living column, and I love mobile- against some item. In general,
used in setting trusses. Th at
H.G., though, when the word
advantages of living in one of in New Hampshire or Nova home living. truck is one of six used in
"mortgage" is used, it involves
the Atlantic provinces of Scotia, I couldn't say, but a RoseviUe, Calif.
delivering building material
"real property." Congt'arulaDEAR
H.G.:
am
Canada) I will establish resi- cursory investigation of the
orders in a several county
dence in New Hampshire, two locations could make that delighted that things worked tions on finding a lifestyle that
area.
where there is no state determination for you. I do out well for you. In general, you are in love with. You are
Curre~tly there are 15 fullincome tax, but probably live wish you well with your cool- mobile homes are considered blessed.
rime and four part-time peo(Se11d your questions to: Smart
in Nova Scotia. Can I receive er · weather, but I leave you vehicles unless they are perple employed by Baum's- all
my pension, reriren.lcnt plan with this thought: No one manently fixed to the ground ,Money, P.O. &amp;x 503, Elfer~ FL
living withii1 a 10-mile radius
and Social Security with this ever threw his or her back our on real estate that the owner 34680. E-mail to: bnuebrurewilof the unit owns. If that liams.com . Questions ~general
arrangement' - ,L.S, Lyn• · shoveling sunshine.
DEAR BRUCE: In the describes your case, then I can interest will be answered in future
negrove, Iowa
Wont to see some local field
DEAR L.S.: People col- Sacramento Bet!, you say .that understand 1he morq~age. If, wlum11s. Owi11g to the volume ~
crop [rials?
lect Social Security retirement mortgages are usually not however, you are in a mobile mail, prrsot.al replies alnnot be
Plan on attending Shade all over the world. I can't available on mobile homes, as home park, a traditional provided.)
Page D1
River Ag Service's annual field
research has shown that late trials on Sept. 5 starting at 6.
application and the signature year is that the percent of remember that it is the comJ\ugust or early September p.m. at the Starling ~assar
farm •payment pounds going plexities of the U.S. Tobacco
section.
application of nitrogen returns Farm, Chester. Look at second
This leaves section thre_!! of to each party must be equal to Program, rather than program
the best investment per dollar year trial plots of alfalfa, orchard
the application specifically for the percent of marketings administration, which makes
PageDl
return due to increased yields, grass, clover and perennial rye
those . with
crop
share received by each party for any .alloca ting this money so chalhigher crude proteih levels in grasses as well as 200 I field
quota onto their farm. Most arrangements as indicated on tobacco marketed in the crop lenging and sometimes comfescue and greater digestibility. corn trials.
plicated for the growers,
Stay around for a meal as var- . of the growers in Gal,lia and their MQ- 38 at the FSA year 200U.
In the fact sheet, "Stockpiling
(}etlllifer L. Byrnes is a Gal/ia
As you wade through the
Tall Fescue for Winter Graz- ious · trade represeptatives go Lawrence Counties will only office. The notable requireing" written by C. Penrose, H . over their latest findings. The receive section two of the ment for sljarecroppers this process agam this year, Coomty ExteiiSion agent.)
Bartholomew and R. M . Sulc, Massar Farm is located just on
they suggest ,using urea only if the north side of Eastern High
a half-inch of rain .or more i.s School at 39 128 Ohio 7.. Help
expected within hourli of urea us get a preliminary head count
by calling Shade River Ag Serapplication.
Urea-based fertilizers, if not vices at 985-3831 if you are
with a forthcoming rain fiont, planning to attend.
(Harold K11eet1 is the Meigs
amn1onium nitrate is suggestCou11ty
Agriwlt1iral a11d Natural
..Jed, due to its lower surface
Penton. CEO T homas Kemp
NEWYORK (AP) -Interof the many fac to r~. but it
ATLANTA (AP)
applied nitrogen volatilization Resources AgetJt, Ohio State Uui- net World magazine is cu tting said recendy that the number of
Philip Kent, the N o. 2 wasn't th e only factor " i n
versity Extensio11.}
losses.
its publishing schedule by near- jobs ruts could increase as the
execu tive at Cable New s his· -decision. H e said ·he
ly half and has laid off 11 company reorga mzes its busiN etwork, is . resigning at has not deci ded what his
employees, reflecting a scramble ness.
the end of September as next caree r move will be.
T
he
cutbacks
at
Internet
by its parent company to adjust
president and chief operatI saacson said he was
World reflect a slump across
to a drop in advertising.
ing officer of th e Turner sorry to see Kent leave.
The cuts are the first specilied magazine publishing, as adverBroadcasting System news " H e has done a great job
by Cleveland-based Penton tisers have ratcheted back
group.
.
at CN N. I appreciate the
Media Inc. since it announced spending. The downturn has
Ken t was appomted '. great t eam he helped build
last month it was eliminating already killed The In dustry
CNN president a year ago h
..
'd
.
ffi
b .
b .
ere, 1saacson sat .
Standard,
a
New
Economy
170
jobs
companywide
and
111 an e ort w rm g ustSAN FRANCISCO (AP) . below the work force at the
Kent and a handful of
wonder
that
s
hriveled
in
size
as
seeking
ways
to
restructure
ness
Jeadershtp
to
the
netbeginning
of
200
1,
the
com- O nline brokerage Charles
C NN executives launched
advertising by dot-com compamoney-losing businesses.
work. H owever, his power
Schwab
Corp.,
w hich pany said.
.
Ne;w York-based Internet nies collapsed. ·
was diminished earlier this a . m aj or reor ganization
T he
l atest
redu ctions
. announced up t&lt;? 3,400 job
Standard M edia Internationyear w hen Time Inc. edi- that i ncluded reducing the
cuts in M arch, said Thursday include 1,600 to 1,900 full- World, which has a circulation
tor ial
dir ector Walter payroll by 400 employees.
it plans to eliminate up to time positions and about 200 of about 225,000 and caters pr i- al, the corporate parent of the
Isaacson became C NN 's T hey also began overh aulcomracted j obs by_ the end of marily to a business readership, Industry Standard,_ filed for
2,400 more positions.
chairman and chief execu- i ng CNN 's sagging prime. T he combined cuts are October, as well as a reduc- w ill cut its publishing schedule Chapter 11 bankruptcy protecti me programming as well
. rive.
'expected to result in a year- tion of 200 to 300 full-time .f iom 22 rimes a year to month- tion M onday and hopes to find
as
the H eadline News netKen t, 46, said Wednesday
end staffing l evel of. about posi tions through voluntary ly, Penton spokeswoman M ary a buyer for the failed Internet
that the change "was one work,
business magazine.
Abood said Thursday.
20,000 - nearly 25 percent attrition.

Baum

from

Kneen

of Chester.
While Tim is dedicated to
expanding the family business,
he is al;o committed to the
development of the community.
On the four acres where the
business is located, a section
near the bridge has been
made into a public park and
another section on the other
side of the road is used for Little League baseball games.

Contests
from

.II.

Television Listings For The .
ber 2, 2001 - Septembe~ 8, 2001·

from

Times-Sentinel And The Point

Bymes
from

•

I Page 3 I

I Page 5 I

CNN's No.2 executive
publishing schedule, staff stepping down

Internet magazine cuts

·Charles Schwab to slash
up to 2,400 more jobs

SMOKER
fRIENDlY

STOP BY YOUR NEAREST SMOKER FRIENDLY LOCATION, AND SIGN
UP FOR YOUR CHANCE TO WIN IN OUR $15,000 CASH GIVEAWAY.
($1 ,000 given away at each store)

uchief Not
WEAKEST LINK,
Chief smart,
he shop
smoker Friendly
tJ;!onsutneJrs are smart, estleciia
Cigal' and
That's why
~~id more are coming to
l aii'ea Smoker Friendly for nLI•J;il
pyt~_l!' tobi•cco needs.

SAVE BIG!

·FRIEN

•ts
,..
................
'

. ....
_.
F

,.

'"'' ~~.. '

I Page 3 I

Today's
Homes

·Silly One On
One Is Fall's
First New Sitcom

I Page 6 I

•

Weekly
Puzzler

I Page 3 I

I Page 6 I.

·When A Compass
And Map
Aren't Enough:
NBC's Lost

Advice On
Home
Repairs
I Page 6 I

I Page 4 I
-.

Nancy and EmilY,, Rob and Brenn.m, Brend~ and Pat, Drew and KevJn, Leslie and Kim, Margarita a·n d Frank,
Ana "''d M~H (bMOk·I'OW, IJom left); LeiU)y m d Kary n...W..Ud,Blll, Paul and Arnie, and David an!'· Margaretta
(frOnt row, from lefll 'rilii'The Ailla11ng Race'tieglhning'Wodnesa1y-ilb CBS. tSeo story trn'Pisnl ~" ·

Comedy Central searches lanes for laughs with 'Let's Bowl' ·

Our Name Says It All!!

&amp;

Soap Talk

..........

CASHG

TV
Crossword

TV Pipe Line

By JEFF BAENEN
commentator, get to laugh at them. when they get a gutter
Ansoclated Preaa Wrltar
ball. I laugh at them and call them names ."
WHITE BEAR LAKE, Minn. (AP) -As cheesy organ music
Thanks to its retro cool, bowling is having a resurgence in
blares, two contestants prepare to settle their grudge match popularity. NBC's "Ed" is set in a small-town bowling alley
on the bowling lanes. On cue, the crowd in the bleachers where a former New York City lawyer has set up his law
cheers.
practice. And bowling shoes are a hot fashion item.
Twci women in tiaras and sequined red dresses - the
But "Let's Bowl" isn't looking to attract trendy fans.
Queen Pins - rotate a giant bowling pin to reveal the "We want, like, real Minnesota people. We'd love, like, two
comP.etltors. The bowlers square off to settle a dispute car mechanics in their 60s to bowl," Kronfeld says. "But what
they re having and win a chance at the grand prize - a we're finding is, we're getting all these total hipsters with
1973 Dod~e Charger or a used snowmobile.
tattoos."
Yes, Jt s time to play '~ Let's Bowl," a show that looks for
On came~a. Kronfeld is paired with Steve Sedahl, who
·
laughs between the gutter balls.
plays the straight man to Kronfeld's neurotic commentator.
· After six years of bouncing around Minnesota TV The two wear powder-blue polyester suits, bright yellow ties
stations, "Let's Bowl" now airs Sundays at 10:30 p.m. EDT adorned with designs of bowling ball s and pins , and
on Comedy Central. The half-hour show has a prime slot oversized headsets.
between "The Man Show" and "South Park."
Sedahl plays it smooth while Kronfeld jeers the
Bowling shows have long been a staple of television cont~tants and gripes throughout the broadcast.
.
programmrng, going back to the late 1940s and including
"fils mission is to just get th rough the show," Kronfeld
ABC's popular Saturday afternoon coverage of the pro tour says. "And my mission is to derail it.... We have great
in the 1970s. "Let's Bowl" is an affectionate spoof of such . chemistry."
shows as "Bowling for Dollars." and it doesn't matter if the
"Let's Bowl" features a regular 10-frame game with the
bowlers are good or not
action in some frames condensed to a recap. When a polka"It works both ways," says CO·producer Rich Kronfeld, dotted kingpin appears in a "pol.ka frame." the bowler who
who portrays play·by·play announcer Wally Hotvedt. "If rolls a &amp;,trike Wins 500 pounds of Polish sausage or a quarter.·
they're good bowlers, you 're watching It because, wow, cow. ..,
these guys are good. Jf they're bad bowlers, I, as the
Onde per game, a bowler can use 'the "distraction option"

·Earl Scruggs jams with S

Martin, Elton John and Sting on new album

Revue. Over 12 songs, he collaborate's with an impressive as well as scoring a hit with the show's theme song.
By JIM PATTERSON
The group rode the folk .music revival in the 1960s,
stable of admirers.
Aaaoclated Preas Writer
Eltorl John , Dwight Yoakam , Travis Tritt , Sting, Melissa scoring another hit when "Foggy Mountain Breakdown" was
NASHVILLE, Tenn. - When Earl Scruggs waxes fondly
about the old days, he doesn't dwell long on his role in Etheridge, Leon Russell , Vince Gill, Rosanne Cash , John featured in th e 1967 fil.m "Bonnie and Clyde."
Flatt and Scruggs broke up in 1969, with Flatt sticking
inventing bluegrass with Bill Monroe, or his long and Fogerty, Don Henley, Johnny Cash and actor Steve Martin
·
(on
banjo)
are
all
featured
.
Randy
Scruggs
produced
the
with
bluegr!ISS u_ntil his death in 1979. Scrug~s went into
succef!Sful partnership with Lester .Flatt.
album,
and
Gary
Scruggs
performs
on
it.
Steve
Scruggs
died
country-rock
with his sons, with the act lastmg until he
Sitting In his spacious contemporary home - a former
.
retired from touring in 1980 because of back problems.
·
residence of George Jones and Tammy Wynette - . the 77- in 1992.
The album could be a disappointment to those who yearn
In 1996, Scruggs suffered a heart attack 1n the recovery
year-old Scruggs weaves tales from his days In the 1970s
·
as •patriarch of The Earl Scruggs Revue. The country-rock for .more bluegrass revelations from a key member of room of a hospital shortly after hip,replacement surgery.
"Coming out of that, all of a sudden as the recuperation
outfit W!IS .popular on college campuses, but is generally Monroe's Blue Grass. Boys, and half of the seminal Flatt &amp;
.• started happening. I was just watching his playing grow and
Scruggs.
'
considered a footnote In Scruggs' career.
Except for a burning all-star "Foggy Mountain grow," said Randy Scruggs. "He was playing like he was in
Three of his sons - Randy, Gary and Steve - played
Breakdown," the album is contemporary rock and country his 20s.
in the band.
"All of a sudden, as that was nappening, we wanted to
"I remember we would open with a tune called music. Scraggs is more interested in seeing how his banjo
can
lit
into
a
Sting
or
Etheridge
song
than
revisiting
past
do
another
album. We asked, 'What can we do that dad
'Nashvlll'e Skyline Rag,"' said Scruggs, grinning at the
•
·
would
enjoy
doing?'
·
glories.
memory. "Randy did the first verse with acoustic guitar, but
"He's not interested in re-creating something he's already
"And dad has always loved collaborating and playing
the real energy kicked In whan he went to the electric.
.
with other artists and musicians ." ·
"It was powerhouse. That was the kind of energy I \vas done," said Randy Scruggs.
"It's about saying that at this moment, this is what I truly ·
It wasn't difficult to nab the collaborators.
feeling with the group."
Although the hybrid music of The Earl Scrupgs Revue feel like doif'l~ - ... That's what's great about creating "Getting to play 'Foggy Mountain Breakdown' with Earl
Scruggs was such a thril l," said David Letterman
waen't completely embraced by either lradltiona bluegrass something yO\Iii}OPe will have a long life - taking chances."
. Scruggs ha!5 been a musical innovator his entire life.
bandleader Paul Shaffer. "It was like getting to meet
or counlry f!!.ctlons .- an(:! rarely got radio airplay - it's a
. Born in Flint Hill , N.C., he took up the banjo as a child, Beethoven and jamming with him on 'The F-ifth."'
source of great pride for Scruggs,
and
had forged 't\is own style by the time he was a teen-ager.
Martin called his invitation "a dream lor me bpyond
The group played on bills with rock acts like
When
Scruggs
joined
Flatt
in
Monroe's
band
in
1945,
the
comprehension."
·
·
Steppenwolf and folkles like James Taylor. Sometimes they
combination - including fiddler Chubby Wise and bassist
Russell said Scruggs "is not only a 11reat player, but an
played festivals before 40,000 people.
"To me, It was the most exciting thing that I've ever Cedric Rainwater - was so potent that 11 spawned imitators inventor of music, with a quiet power ins1de his humility that
is not unlike the Zen masters of the East."
done," he said. "At my age, playing with my own kids and and launched the bluegrass movement.
Flatt and Scruggs broke away fro m Monroe in 1948 to
Sc rug~s sees things from a different perspective.
the energy they had. I hadn't played with that kind of energy
"I don t know what sets it off, but I rust get wanting to
form Flatt &amp; Scruggs and the Foggy Mountain Boys. That
before In my life. It was really an exciting time for me."
His new CD, "Earl Scruggs and Friends," is his fi rst group was also popular and influential, with Flatt &amp; Scruggs pick once in a while."
album in a decade. It's an extension of The Earl Scruggs featured periodically on the TV sitcom ''The Beverl y Hillbillies"

All Yo·
J

)

and blow an air horn to rattle the other contestant. Corned~.
sketches, s·uch as "How to Dispose of an Old Bowling B.all,
break up the action.
In one installment of "Let's Bowl ." bowlers Tim
Carnahan and Gregg Mau settled their disa~reement that
stemmed from Mau loaning Carnahan a stat1on wagon so
he could get to the child-care center where they both work.
Problem 'was: the battery died and the tickets started piling
up. Carnahan insisted he shouldn't have to pay them. But
•
Mau won the game.
"The best thing about this show is that we don't have to
talk about this anymore," Carnahan says.
Tim Scott, 36, crea.ted "Let's Bowl" and co-produces the
show with Kronfeld. Scott had previous TV experience as a
technical supervisor on "Mystery Science Theater 3000,"
the defunct Twin Cities-based series formerly carried by
Comedy Central.
·
Scott says his experience at "MST3K" put "the fire in my
belly to have my own show." About six years ago he started
"Let's Bowl" and got the show on a Sl. Cloud UHF station ,
the Twin Cities' WB station and eventually on the NBC
affiliate in Minneapolis and in syndication.
Now picking up "Let's Bowl" for 10 weeks, Comedy
Central has caught on to what Scott . knew all along :
"Knocking stuff over, it's just inherently fun ."

Fav

�PAGE THREE
PAGE TWO

I MONDAY

I SUNDAY

SEPTEMBER 3 I
Pauley expected back on Dateline
By Taylor Michaels
CTVData Features Syndicate

Q: Where is Jane Pauley? My

wife and I haven't seen her on
Dateline for several months
now. - Peter Vibbert, Port
.Richey, Fla.

MoNDAY

Jane Pauley
A: "Jane is due back on Sept. 5,
after Labor Day," NBC publicist
Caryn Mautner reports. "She has
been working on a book, and she
took an extended sabbatical for
that."
Q: When The Rockford Files
first started, dido 'I someone
else play James Gamer's dad
before Noah Beery ·Jr.? -Eugene Goldfarb, Clovis, N.M.
A: Yes and no. Beery played
Joseph "Rocky" Rockford when
the NBC series premiered on
Sept. 13, 1974, but an actor
named Roben Donley had played
Rocky in the original TV movie
pilot for the series.
Q: Did Reese Witherspoon
play Tess on Stark Raving Mad?
And why did NBC cancel that
show anyway? It was weU-mst
and wiUy! -Ruth Bate, Colum-.
bus, Ohio.
A: Dorie Bruton played Tess on
Stark Raving Mad, which was
canceled after o~e season because more than 25 percent'of the
audience from its Thursday leadin, Frasier, runed out when Mad
came on, then returned for ER.
All you have to do is scan the
current TV lineup to notice that
quality has very little to do with .
what survives (or doesn't) on tele-

Debra (Patricia Heaton) Is taken aback by her brotherIn-law's choice of a new girlfriend In Everybody
Love~; Raymond Monday on CBS.

ITUESDAY
League -

Dell~

Indy

League -- Delpli Indy

P~ladelprua

Eaglea

By John Crook
TVData Features Syndicate
CBS sends 11 pairs of
teammates sprinting and
spaning around the world in
pursuit of $1 million in The
Amazing Race, a new reality
program from · Hollywood
mogul Jerry Brutkheimer
(CSI:
Crime
Stene
Investigation) and former
Cops producer Bertram van
Munster.
. Professional adventurer
Phil Keoghan (Keoghan's
Heroes) hosts the 13-week
series, which premieres
Wednesday, Sept. 5.
The competition spans
the globe, as its 22 players
match wits and temperament
to complete their 30- to 40-

pressure of racing, the
pressure of competing
against other teams, the
stresses of dealing with
changing time zories and
cultures. And that was really
their toughest challenge, I
·would say; dealing with a
. cultural difference that was
so out of the ordinary for
them that It really threw some
of them into a spin, simply
because it was something
they were not used to." .
. The very first episode
supports Keoghan, as we
·see some of the players
beginning to unravel during
the very · first leg of the
journey, including one
woman who tearfully snaps
at her partner, ··
we are
so

I

Advertise in·the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

The contestants range in age
from 21 to 64, an ethnic
cross section that pairs
roommates, best friends,
engaged couples, life
partners and longtime
grandparents. And any one
of these teams is capable of
winning this competition,
Keoghan insists.
·: The contestants always
were
pushed
more
emotionally than they were
physically," · he explains.
"This race was not mainly
about the physical, and
everything was accessible.
. There was nothing there that
was a life-threatening stunt
: or put anyone in danger, and
. it was designed so that any
of the teams could win.
"It was about how the
players dealt with the

The contestants are:
Drew and Kevin, best
pals sirwe college;
Grandparents David and
Margaretta, the · oldest
competitors; .
Kim and Leslie, teachers
and roommates;
;Joe and Bill, life partners;
Frank and Margarita·;
separated parents who are
considering reuniting;
Nancy and Emily, a
mother-daughter team;
Working rnothers Pat and
Brenda;
Paul and Arnie, who are
engaged;
Matt and Ana, a 20something married couple;
Lenny and Karyn, who
are dating;
Rob and Brennan,
lawyers and best frie~ds.

The first program opens
in New~York's Central Park,
where Keoghan gives the
.. go" signal and the teams
pick up their limited luggage
and money, as well as
instructions to their fir st
destination, a long airline
flight away. As it tums out,
however, some of the
teammates can't agree on
which
of the three
metropolitan airports they
need to head for -- or even
_what mode of transportation
they should use to get there.
And all the while the
clock is ticking, because the
last team .to
reach
Wednesday's ultimate checkin point will be eliminated.
.. The race affected every

1: The 5101'1 of American

Educalioo. Equalily!The BOIIom L~e (CC)
CABLE STATIONS

Handbag

Cou•

SOAP TALK

Nuptial news .for former
GH, 90210 star
been in years. They should def-

.Silly One on One is fall's first new sitcom
By John Crook
CTVOata Features Syndicate

Writer-producer Eunena T
Boone isn't clearing her calendar
for next year's Emmy Awards.
She just hopes her series. One on
One. hits viewers' funny bones.
The first new sitcom of the
200 1-02 TV &gt;CJson. which premi ere&gt; Monday. Sept. J, on Unit-

trying to do it differently. because
he thinks he's a young. hip. cool
dad. What we find out ... is that
the porents were tight. that you
have to set boundaries and you
have to discipline your kids:''

The show airs on the only network lhat currently features an
entire night of programming that
highlights black actors, but Boone
shnrgs o'lf suggestions that· her
show· is bei ng "ghettoized."
"l th in k l"m in good company."
she says. "I don't mind being on
Monday, the night with the other
Afri c an ~ A mcri can -cen rered

comedies .... The hardest thing to
do in tit is busi ness is to get a show
on any night. at any lime."
She bri stles mild ly a1 protestsmany from her own ethnic com·
mun.ity - that too many black sitcoms feature broad stereotypes of
lhei r characters.
•
"Ultimately, what it comes
down to is what's funny, and then
defining funny in a way that is de·

Flex Alexander stars as a single dad who learns that being
the sole parental figure to his daughter Isn 't as easy as he
first thought In One on One, premiering Monday on United
Paramount Network.

•

'•

(

Louise.
· Q: I know that James Amess
and Peter Graves are brothers,
but have they ever acted together in a movie or TV series?
-Paul "Funn" Dunn, Bloomington, DL
A: No.
Q: Who is Jolm Ritter's father? I say it Is the famed cowhoy singer Tex Ritter. Does
John have any other siblings?
-GJ., Ellsworth, Wis.
A: John is indeed the son of
Woodward Maurice ''Tex" Ritter,
who died in 1974 of a bean attack. John has helped raise funds
to fight cerebral palsy because his
older brother, Tom, an attorney,
beat the disease himself.

mother could cost two people their lives In Judging
Amy Tuesday on CBS.

stand-up comk Flex Alexander as
divorced ·spon~wtiler Fl ~x Washington, whose carefree life takes a
sharp tum fur the unexpected
, when he smugly ns~umes full cusiody of his daughter. Brcanna.
Th e comedy that fo llows is
played L•·oadly, in keeping with
U?N's other Monday sitcoms, but
Boone hopes il rings true as well.
" !'his is a show about altema·
tr ve rarcnting," she says . "It's
abt11 :t t 1y whose parents raised
him an old-fashioned• way. He's

PriCe Is Righi

\

that put affluent young people in
front of the TV sets to see their
commercials, regardless of the ac·
tual quality of those shows.
Q: I remember Alan Hale Jr.
(GiHigan :V Island) from an early '50s show called Bif! Baker,
Private Eye. Wben and where
did the show air, and who
played his girlfriend? --C.F.
Eckhardt, Seguin, Texas.
A: I believe you must be think·
ing of Bi/f Baker U.S.A .. a CBS
adventure series that aired from ·
Nov. 13, 1952, to March 26,
1953. Hale played the title character, a successful imponer who
often found himself swept up in
espionage while traveling the
.wmld. The only other regular cast
meml&gt;er was actress Randy Stu-

I I
the
some for the
worse," Keoghah says , while
declining to reveal many
specifics about how th e
competition played out " It
brought some teams
extremely closely together
and drove some teams
completely apart, although
sometimes they would come
back together again, You
have the whole gamut.
" You're taking people
who know one another
extremely well and putting
them under extreme stress. It
was a true test of each
relationship, of how strong it
was. That is the key of this
show."
• Several pressure points
are evident in the premiere
episode, nowhere more than
in the volatile relationship
Continued on Page 3

PriM Is Righi

\

TuEsDAY

vision. Advertisers want shows

ed Param ount Netwmk, stars

Peq&gt;~'s

SEPTEMBER 4 I

meaning and what's not," she .
says finnly. ''The difficult thing
is. lake a character like Joey on
Friends. He's hilarious, and I love
him. But you put that person in a
black face, and suddenly he be·
comes a stereotype."

.Aptly
Contlnu"d from page 2
between separated parents
Frank and Margarita. The
latter comes across as smart
and resourceful, the former
like a grandstanding rageaholic who throws a temper
tantrum every lime another
team comes in before them.
Also looking vulnerable:
the mother-daughter team of
Nancy and Emily, unless the
former gets her passiveaggressive streak under
control quickly.
Looking good in the first ,
episode: ·buddies Rob and
Brennan, golden agars David
and Margaretta, and · life
partners Joe and Bill, three
teams who clearly know the
merits of flying under the
radar of competitors.
Aware of .the negative
press so many ·· reality"
programs have attracted
through their !itillating or
gross content, Keoghan says
he turned down a number of
projects before signing on for
The Amazing Race. Although
he averaged only two hours
of sleep a night while the
show was in production, he
says the series was a .. mindblowing experience."
" I have a 5-year-old
daughter
and
some
principles, you know?" he
says, laughing.

By Candace Havens

ini te ly win some awards this

· CTVData Features Syndicate

year. - Chri s Haas. Naples. Fla .
Dear Reader: The Toms are
brother and sister.
Dear Candace: Has Kirsten
Storms ever been on any of the
episodes of 7th Heaven? If so,
what year was she on? How old
was she when she was on it?
- Kathl ee n Sawyer, Ooltewah,
Tenn .
.
Dear Reader: Stonns (Belle
Brady, Days of Ou r Lives)
played Laura Cummings on ?rlr
Heaven in 1996. She was 12
when she did the show. ·

Fonner General Hospital star
Vanessa Marcil (Brend a Ba rrett) is engaged to Brian A.
Green, who co-starred with her
on Beverly Hills, 90210. No
date has bee n set for the wedding.
Now that he is mak ing his
way into Harmony, Christopher
Douglas (ex -.Sean The Yormg
and the Restless ; ex- Dylan,
One Life to Live) is goin g to stir
up some real trouble. The actor
first appears as Brian on Passions Sept. 24.
..Brian is a character who is
abruptly thrust into the Jives of
the citizens of Harmony. We
won ·1 know much about him at

first, but we will immediately
see his impact on the lives of
four of our characlers. and the
consequences will be major,"
says Passiorrs creator and head
writer James E. Reill y.
Dear Candace: Can you
please tell me what happened
to Julla Snyder on A.&lt; tire World
Turns? Is she off of the show
for good? -L.R. via the Internet.
Dear
Reader:'
Annie
Pariss«'s final air date o n
ATWTwas Aug . 22. The actress
is pursuing other interesls.
Dear Candace: I was elected
by my friend s to write to you
and find out what happened to
the beautiful theme mu sic for
Y&amp;R. My friends and I always
loved to hum along. --Cam ille
Ferguson, Cape Cora l, Fin.
Dear Reader: Y&amp;R updated
the music in keeping with the
more modem tone of the show.
Dear Candace: I have a
question and a statement. First
of all, I'd like to know if David
and Heather Tom (Billy Abbott,
Victoria Newman) are related.
They both appear on Y&amp; R.
Then , I'd like to tell the wril ers of Guiding Light that I lhink
the show is better than it has

Send quesUons of g'-oerallnte.-.st
· to TV Piptllne, TVData· Features
Syndleare, 333 Glen St, Glens
Falls, NY ll801, or e-mail to
tvpipelioe@tvdata.com. Only
questions selected for this column
wiD be answered. Personal replies
ifsmnot be sent

Channel Listings
Channel

Service

Channel

2 WSAZ Hunlinglon -Charleslon (NBC)
3 QVC
4 WGN-Chicago
5 Fami ly Channel
6 WSYX Columbus (ABC)

Service

27 C-Span
28 The Learning Channel

12 WOWK Huntinglon· Charleslon (CBS)'
13 WTAP Parkersburg (N BC)
' 14 HBO

29 E!
30 TNN
31 TNT
32 ESPN
33 Nickelodeon
34 Wealher Channel
35 MTV
36 Lifetime
37 A&amp;E
38 Headline News
39 CNN

•1s Cinemax

40 America 's Heulth Net.

•t7 Showtime

41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49

7 Prevue

8 WCHS Hu ntington-Charleston (ABC)

.

9 WPBY Hu nlinglon (PBS)
10 WBNS Colu mbus (CBS)
tl WVAH Huntin gLon (FOX)

WTBS (Atla•ta)
C-NBC
USA
Discovery
Fox News Network.
CMT
VH-1
TV Land
Disney
50 MSNBC
'
51 FX

18 Sneak Prt.!vue

19 Communi'ty Bulletin Boa rd
•20 Starz!
'21 Plex(s)
'22 HB0-2(S)
23 Communit y Watch 23
•
'24 HBO Fam ily (s)
25 WOUB (Athens) PBS
2~ Trinily Br~ adcasl Nclwork
• Denotes premium channels

•'

�PAGE THREE
PAGE TWO

I MONDAY

I SUNDAY

SEPTEMBER 3 I
Pauley expected back on Dateline
By Taylor Michaels
CTVData Features Syndicate

Q: Where is Jane Pauley? My

wife and I haven't seen her on
Dateline for several months
now. - Peter Vibbert, Port
.Richey, Fla.

MoNDAY

Jane Pauley
A: "Jane is due back on Sept. 5,
after Labor Day," NBC publicist
Caryn Mautner reports. "She has
been working on a book, and she
took an extended sabbatical for
that."
Q: When The Rockford Files
first started, dido 'I someone
else play James Gamer's dad
before Noah Beery ·Jr.? -Eugene Goldfarb, Clovis, N.M.
A: Yes and no. Beery played
Joseph "Rocky" Rockford when
the NBC series premiered on
Sept. 13, 1974, but an actor
named Roben Donley had played
Rocky in the original TV movie
pilot for the series.
Q: Did Reese Witherspoon
play Tess on Stark Raving Mad?
And why did NBC cancel that
show anyway? It was weU-mst
and wiUy! -Ruth Bate, Colum-.
bus, Ohio.
A: Dorie Bruton played Tess on
Stark Raving Mad, which was
canceled after o~e season because more than 25 percent'of the
audience from its Thursday leadin, Frasier, runed out when Mad
came on, then returned for ER.
All you have to do is scan the
current TV lineup to notice that
quality has very little to do with .
what survives (or doesn't) on tele-

Debra (Patricia Heaton) Is taken aback by her brotherIn-law's choice of a new girlfriend In Everybody
Love~; Raymond Monday on CBS.

ITUESDAY
League -

Dell~

Indy

League -- Delpli Indy

P~ladelprua

Eaglea

By John Crook
TVData Features Syndicate
CBS sends 11 pairs of
teammates sprinting and
spaning around the world in
pursuit of $1 million in The
Amazing Race, a new reality
program from · Hollywood
mogul Jerry Brutkheimer
(CSI:
Crime
Stene
Investigation) and former
Cops producer Bertram van
Munster.
. Professional adventurer
Phil Keoghan (Keoghan's
Heroes) hosts the 13-week
series, which premieres
Wednesday, Sept. 5.
The competition spans
the globe, as its 22 players
match wits and temperament
to complete their 30- to 40-

pressure of racing, the
pressure of competing
against other teams, the
stresses of dealing with
changing time zories and
cultures. And that was really
their toughest challenge, I
·would say; dealing with a
. cultural difference that was
so out of the ordinary for
them that It really threw some
of them into a spin, simply
because it was something
they were not used to." .
. The very first episode
supports Keoghan, as we
·see some of the players
beginning to unravel during
the very · first leg of the
journey, including one
woman who tearfully snaps
at her partner, ··
we are
so

I

Advertise in·the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 Households

The contestants range in age
from 21 to 64, an ethnic
cross section that pairs
roommates, best friends,
engaged couples, life
partners and longtime
grandparents. And any one
of these teams is capable of
winning this competition,
Keoghan insists.
·: The contestants always
were
pushed
more
emotionally than they were
physically," · he explains.
"This race was not mainly
about the physical, and
everything was accessible.
. There was nothing there that
was a life-threatening stunt
: or put anyone in danger, and
. it was designed so that any
of the teams could win.
"It was about how the
players dealt with the

The contestants are:
Drew and Kevin, best
pals sirwe college;
Grandparents David and
Margaretta, the · oldest
competitors; .
Kim and Leslie, teachers
and roommates;
;Joe and Bill, life partners;
Frank and Margarita·;
separated parents who are
considering reuniting;
Nancy and Emily, a
mother-daughter team;
Working rnothers Pat and
Brenda;
Paul and Arnie, who are
engaged;
Matt and Ana, a 20something married couple;
Lenny and Karyn, who
are dating;
Rob and Brennan,
lawyers and best frie~ds.

The first program opens
in New~York's Central Park,
where Keoghan gives the
.. go" signal and the teams
pick up their limited luggage
and money, as well as
instructions to their fir st
destination, a long airline
flight away. As it tums out,
however, some of the
teammates can't agree on
which
of the three
metropolitan airports they
need to head for -- or even
_what mode of transportation
they should use to get there.
And all the while the
clock is ticking, because the
last team .to
reach
Wednesday's ultimate checkin point will be eliminated.
.. The race affected every

1: The 5101'1 of American

Educalioo. Equalily!The BOIIom L~e (CC)
CABLE STATIONS

Handbag

Cou•

SOAP TALK

Nuptial news .for former
GH, 90210 star
been in years. They should def-

.Silly One on One is fall's first new sitcom
By John Crook
CTVOata Features Syndicate

Writer-producer Eunena T
Boone isn't clearing her calendar
for next year's Emmy Awards.
She just hopes her series. One on
One. hits viewers' funny bones.
The first new sitcom of the
200 1-02 TV &gt;CJson. which premi ere&gt; Monday. Sept. J, on Unit-

trying to do it differently. because
he thinks he's a young. hip. cool
dad. What we find out ... is that
the porents were tight. that you
have to set boundaries and you
have to discipline your kids:''

The show airs on the only network lhat currently features an
entire night of programming that
highlights black actors, but Boone
shnrgs o'lf suggestions that· her
show· is bei ng "ghettoized."
"l th in k l"m in good company."
she says. "I don't mind being on
Monday, the night with the other
Afri c an ~ A mcri can -cen rered

comedies .... The hardest thing to
do in tit is busi ness is to get a show
on any night. at any lime."
She bri stles mild ly a1 protestsmany from her own ethnic com·
mun.ity - that too many black sitcoms feature broad stereotypes of
lhei r characters.
•
"Ultimately, what it comes
down to is what's funny, and then
defining funny in a way that is de·

Flex Alexander stars as a single dad who learns that being
the sole parental figure to his daughter Isn 't as easy as he
first thought In One on One, premiering Monday on United
Paramount Network.

•

'•

(

Louise.
· Q: I know that James Amess
and Peter Graves are brothers,
but have they ever acted together in a movie or TV series?
-Paul "Funn" Dunn, Bloomington, DL
A: No.
Q: Who is Jolm Ritter's father? I say it Is the famed cowhoy singer Tex Ritter. Does
John have any other siblings?
-GJ., Ellsworth, Wis.
A: John is indeed the son of
Woodward Maurice ''Tex" Ritter,
who died in 1974 of a bean attack. John has helped raise funds
to fight cerebral palsy because his
older brother, Tom, an attorney,
beat the disease himself.

mother could cost two people their lives In Judging
Amy Tuesday on CBS.

stand-up comk Flex Alexander as
divorced ·spon~wtiler Fl ~x Washington, whose carefree life takes a
sharp tum fur the unexpected
, when he smugly ns~umes full cusiody of his daughter. Brcanna.
Th e comedy that fo llows is
played L•·oadly, in keeping with
U?N's other Monday sitcoms, but
Boone hopes il rings true as well.
" !'his is a show about altema·
tr ve rarcnting," she says . "It's
abt11 :t t 1y whose parents raised
him an old-fashioned• way. He's

PriCe Is Righi

\

that put affluent young people in
front of the TV sets to see their
commercials, regardless of the ac·
tual quality of those shows.
Q: I remember Alan Hale Jr.
(GiHigan :V Island) from an early '50s show called Bif! Baker,
Private Eye. Wben and where
did the show air, and who
played his girlfriend? --C.F.
Eckhardt, Seguin, Texas.
A: I believe you must be think·
ing of Bi/f Baker U.S.A .. a CBS
adventure series that aired from ·
Nov. 13, 1952, to March 26,
1953. Hale played the title character, a successful imponer who
often found himself swept up in
espionage while traveling the
.wmld. The only other regular cast
meml&gt;er was actress Randy Stu-

I I
the
some for the
worse," Keoghah says , while
declining to reveal many
specifics about how th e
competition played out " It
brought some teams
extremely closely together
and drove some teams
completely apart, although
sometimes they would come
back together again, You
have the whole gamut.
" You're taking people
who know one another
extremely well and putting
them under extreme stress. It
was a true test of each
relationship, of how strong it
was. That is the key of this
show."
• Several pressure points
are evident in the premiere
episode, nowhere more than
in the volatile relationship
Continued on Page 3

PriM Is Righi

\

TuEsDAY

vision. Advertisers want shows

ed Param ount Netwmk, stars

Peq&gt;~'s

SEPTEMBER 4 I

meaning and what's not," she .
says finnly. ''The difficult thing
is. lake a character like Joey on
Friends. He's hilarious, and I love
him. But you put that person in a
black face, and suddenly he be·
comes a stereotype."

.Aptly
Contlnu"d from page 2
between separated parents
Frank and Margarita. The
latter comes across as smart
and resourceful, the former
like a grandstanding rageaholic who throws a temper
tantrum every lime another
team comes in before them.
Also looking vulnerable:
the mother-daughter team of
Nancy and Emily, unless the
former gets her passiveaggressive streak under
control quickly.
Looking good in the first ,
episode: ·buddies Rob and
Brennan, golden agars David
and Margaretta, and · life
partners Joe and Bill, three
teams who clearly know the
merits of flying under the
radar of competitors.
Aware of .the negative
press so many ·· reality"
programs have attracted
through their !itillating or
gross content, Keoghan says
he turned down a number of
projects before signing on for
The Amazing Race. Although
he averaged only two hours
of sleep a night while the
show was in production, he
says the series was a .. mindblowing experience."
" I have a 5-year-old
daughter
and
some
principles, you know?" he
says, laughing.

By Candace Havens

ini te ly win some awards this

· CTVData Features Syndicate

year. - Chri s Haas. Naples. Fla .
Dear Reader: The Toms are
brother and sister.
Dear Candace: Has Kirsten
Storms ever been on any of the
episodes of 7th Heaven? If so,
what year was she on? How old
was she when she was on it?
- Kathl ee n Sawyer, Ooltewah,
Tenn .
.
Dear Reader: Stonns (Belle
Brady, Days of Ou r Lives)
played Laura Cummings on ?rlr
Heaven in 1996. She was 12
when she did the show. ·

Fonner General Hospital star
Vanessa Marcil (Brend a Ba rrett) is engaged to Brian A.
Green, who co-starred with her
on Beverly Hills, 90210. No
date has bee n set for the wedding.
Now that he is mak ing his
way into Harmony, Christopher
Douglas (ex -.Sean The Yormg
and the Restless ; ex- Dylan,
One Life to Live) is goin g to stir
up some real trouble. The actor
first appears as Brian on Passions Sept. 24.
..Brian is a character who is
abruptly thrust into the Jives of
the citizens of Harmony. We
won ·1 know much about him at

first, but we will immediately
see his impact on the lives of
four of our characlers. and the
consequences will be major,"
says Passiorrs creator and head
writer James E. Reill y.
Dear Candace: Can you
please tell me what happened
to Julla Snyder on A.&lt; tire World
Turns? Is she off of the show
for good? -L.R. via the Internet.
Dear
Reader:'
Annie
Pariss«'s final air date o n
ATWTwas Aug . 22. The actress
is pursuing other interesls.
Dear Candace: I was elected
by my friend s to write to you
and find out what happened to
the beautiful theme mu sic for
Y&amp;R. My friends and I always
loved to hum along. --Cam ille
Ferguson, Cape Cora l, Fin.
Dear Reader: Y&amp;R updated
the music in keeping with the
more modem tone of the show.
Dear Candace: I have a
question and a statement. First
of all, I'd like to know if David
and Heather Tom (Billy Abbott,
Victoria Newman) are related.
They both appear on Y&amp; R.
Then , I'd like to tell the wril ers of Guiding Light that I lhink
the show is better than it has

Send quesUons of g'-oerallnte.-.st
· to TV Piptllne, TVData· Features
Syndleare, 333 Glen St, Glens
Falls, NY ll801, or e-mail to
tvpipelioe@tvdata.com. Only
questions selected for this column
wiD be answered. Personal replies
ifsmnot be sent

Channel Listings
Channel

Service

Channel

2 WSAZ Hunlinglon -Charleslon (NBC)
3 QVC
4 WGN-Chicago
5 Fami ly Channel
6 WSYX Columbus (ABC)

Service

27 C-Span
28 The Learning Channel

12 WOWK Huntinglon· Charleslon (CBS)'
13 WTAP Parkersburg (N BC)
' 14 HBO

29 E!
30 TNN
31 TNT
32 ESPN
33 Nickelodeon
34 Wealher Channel
35 MTV
36 Lifetime
37 A&amp;E
38 Headline News
39 CNN

•1s Cinemax

40 America 's Heulth Net.

•t7 Showtime

41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49

7 Prevue

8 WCHS Hu ntington-Charleston (ABC)

.

9 WPBY Hu nlinglon (PBS)
10 WBNS Colu mbus (CBS)
tl WVAH Huntin gLon (FOX)

WTBS (Atla•ta)
C-NBC
USA
Discovery
Fox News Network.
CMT
VH-1
TV Land
Disney
50 MSNBC
'
51 FX

18 Sneak Prt.!vue

19 Communi'ty Bulletin Boa rd
•20 Starz!
'21 Plex(s)
'22 HB0-2(S)
23 Communit y Watch 23
•
'24 HBO Fam ily (s)
25 WOUB (Athens) PBS
2~ Trinily Br~ adcasl Nclwork
• Denotes premium channels

•'

�PAGE FOUR

I WEDNESDAY

PAGE FIVE

map aren't enough: NBC's Lost
SEPTEMBER 5 I When a compass and
way home.
By Jacqueline Culler

CTVOata Features Syndicate

Some people spend their lives
perpetually lost; a detour around
the comer from home can trigger
an odyssey. Yet other folks can
glance skyward and find their

ISATURDAY

Contestan'-'i in the NBC reality
show wsr, premiering Wednesday, Sept. 5, will be helped if they
possess geographical intuition,
but the show also requires players
to rely on ingratiating themselves
and cadging major favors from
stnmgers.

. Notre Dame a! Nebraska (live)

H~(CC)

iCC)

Conan O'Brien

or

ITHURSDAY

SEPTEMBER 6 I

Bart can't believe hiS' :eyes when his food-loving
father goes on a hunger strike In The Slmpsons
Wednesday on Fox.

THURSDAY

Operative Tiffany Bolton and host Michael lan Black pull pranks on ordinary people and capture their reactions on tapa In Spy TV Thursday on NBC.

Weekly Puzzler Answer .

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 ·Households

I FRIDAY

SEPTEMBER 7 I

Weekly Puzzler On Page 6 ·

Six players, .in three teams of
two, will leave from a Cleveland
airpon aboard a Gulfstream jet.
They will be taken to an undis·
closed land, says executive producer A.J. Morewitz. Then !hey
will be blindfolded and tmnsport·
ed to tile hinterlands. This may
sound like kidnapping, but these
people volunteered.
Once the players are released
into the wilds of an unknown
counuy, tlley have a mission: to
get to the Statue of Liberty. The
frrst team to reach Lady Liberty
shares $200,000.
The hitch is how to get there.
· Contestants are given a backpack
with only a tent and a sleeping
bag, a couple of days worth ofastronaut food, and $100. Try eating, sleeping and getting around
the island near the Statue of LibCity for that amount a day; it's
pretty difficult. But traveling
around the world to get there
should prove quite a challenge,
and tllat's why Morewitz and Conan O'Brien, whose production
company brought this idea over ·
from Britain, were intrigued.
"We are asking these people to
recalibrate their brains, to forget
the ATM card and tile Mercury
Mountaineer SUV and McDonald's and the credit cards," Morewitt says. "Forget all these things
and rely on each other as team·
mates and rely on their instincts
and ingenuity and luck to get
tllem through."
Essentially, they will have to
rely on the kindness of strangers.
''That's where the ingenuity
comes into play," Morewitz says.
"It's not only about outdoor sur- ·
vival skills. It's about urban survival skills, communicating with
people and befriending them."
As welcoming and gracious as
poverty-stricken indigenous people are, tllere's a possibility that
they either might not be able to
feed Americans passing through
their villages for a lark or write a
check so the contestants could
txiard a plane.
"People say, 'I wish I could help,
but I can't,' '' Morewitz says.

SATURDAY

Alabama at Var&lt;l&lt;!rt;H (live)

II: Regional Coverage ·or Braves at Cubs

U.S. Open Tennrs. Men's Semlinals (Live) (CCI

Eric Crouch and the Cornhuskers ol Nebraska host
i'jotre Dame In a college football matchup Saturday

)I

~-on~AB - .

adding~they-also-say.-''--1""""-off,-­

rich Americans."
The producers winnowed down
a list of about 6,000 applicants to
12 finalists, who were sent to survival sehool in Utah.
There will be two separate
groups, and the action chronicling
t!Je travels of each group of six
players will air over tllree weeks.
When the first team reaches New
York Bay, the network will then
run the adventures from the second group of six, beginning from
a different remote locale.
Each two-member team will
have a camera operator, who is
prohibited from helping. Should
someone become injured, however, the cameraperson will call the
nearest hospital.
"What I really want to do is tru·
ly depart from our predecessors to
show there is still fodder to be
mined in the reality genre," More- ·
witt says. 'There's-more than one
cop show or lawyer show or doctor show on tile air. This falls into
the reality genre, and I hope it's
unique .... I truly think (the players) are fantastic people at)d will
be well-loved."

IN

Trammell,

Henke) take
in a
slaughterhouse to pay for
damaging a grave in Going to
California
Thursday
on
Showtime.

TV CROSSWORD

George Clooney (Ow of Sight)
.was the firs t guest to be interviewed by Rosie O'Donnell
when her TV talk show premiered in 1996.

The identity of the featured celebrity Is found within lhe .
answers In the puzzle. In order lo take the TV Challenge,
unscramble lhe letters noted with aslerisks within the puzzle.
ACROSS
6. " ... farm h.!' had a pig, _
1. Weakest Link emcee
"
5. 1995 AI Pacino movie
7. 86 or 99, on Get Smart :
9. _ and Present Danger ;
abbr.
'94 Harrison Ford film
8. '70·'75 sitcom.about iwo
10. Number of seasons for
friends (3)
Bewitched
9. Caesar &amp; _; early stage
12. Peggy or Brenda
names of Sonny &amp;Cher
13. Actor Will
-11. Ms. Lipinski
16. • ... Oil, that isl Black gold,
14. _Condor ; '70 Jim Brown

Focus

FRIDAY

Texas !"
17. Maris, to Niles
18. Hannity &amp; _;political

movie
15. Ride :...__ Cowboy; '42
Abbott &amp; Costello film
18. Family-taw actress

discussion series
20. Conjunction
21 . Edible pod
23. Co-star with Swit and
'
Farrell

19.
22.
24.
29.

25. Suffix for boss or curl
26. 1963 Paul Newman movie
27. Mr. Cole
28. Peter Jennings' employer
29. Make goo-goo eyes at
·30. Speedwagon and Royale
32. Just the Tan of_ ('88·

31. High-tailed It .
34. Actress Judith
35. Number of seasons for

33.

Regis Philbin keeps conteslants on their toes - and
their fast fingers - as host of Who Wants to Be a Mil·
1/onalre, airing Fridays on ABC.

Skater Michelle Kwan gives
her fans a sneak preview of her
2002 Olympic program at the
Goodwill Games. Coverage of
the skating competition from
Brisbane, Australia, airs Thursday, Sept. 6, on· TNT.
K wan is the defending
women's skating champion at .
the Goodwill Games, having
won tile gold medal in 1998 ..
Russian skater Irina Slutskaya
is also scheduled to premiere
the program she plans to perform at tile Olympics in Salt
Lake City this winter.

John Wayne film .
42. Juno rival, for short
44. Verdugo's monogram
46. Setting for Madigan Men :

abbr.

42 . Thumbed animal
43. I'd Like __ ('48·'4i)
45. Ju1t __ SMII Song ;
'78 TV movie
47, McHIII'I _ ('82·'e8)
48. Sgt. VInce Carttr'l bane

In NBC'• Loet premiering Wedneeday, alx conteetant• - Courtllnd, Lindo, Joe, Celeate, C1rla and Taml (clockwlle from top
left) _ are dro'pped off In 1n unknown country with few auppllel and divided Into two-perton llama. Thlllratteam to find
Ita way to the Statue of Liberty wl11a $200,000.

.

'

{

Get rid of

40. Cable network letters

38. NMovln' on _"; theme
from The Jeffarsons
39. The_ Erwin Show ('50'55)
41. · Miami_ ('84·'89)

1,
2.
3.
4.

Oil's partner, In phrase

CHiPs
36. Clapton's initials
37,. _ the Wild Wind ; '42

'90)
Live

~

'83 Brooke Shields movie
_ People ('79·'84)

•

.

A01rese on ER (2)
Beea Truman _ Wallaoe
Sha_ Na (1977-81)
Conaequently
5. ~ ana Now (1992·93)
\.

'

�PAGE FOUR

I WEDNESDAY

PAGE FIVE

map aren't enough: NBC's Lost
SEPTEMBER 5 I When a compass and
way home.
By Jacqueline Culler

CTVOata Features Syndicate

Some people spend their lives
perpetually lost; a detour around
the comer from home can trigger
an odyssey. Yet other folks can
glance skyward and find their

ISATURDAY

Contestan'-'i in the NBC reality
show wsr, premiering Wednesday, Sept. 5, will be helped if they
possess geographical intuition,
but the show also requires players
to rely on ingratiating themselves
and cadging major favors from
stnmgers.

. Notre Dame a! Nebraska (live)

H~(CC)

iCC)

Conan O'Brien

or

ITHURSDAY

SEPTEMBER 6 I

Bart can't believe hiS' :eyes when his food-loving
father goes on a hunger strike In The Slmpsons
Wednesday on Fox.

THURSDAY

Operative Tiffany Bolton and host Michael lan Black pull pranks on ordinary people and capture their reactions on tapa In Spy TV Thursday on NBC.

Weekly Puzzler Answer .

Advertise in the TV Times and
Reach Over 16,000 ·Households

I FRIDAY

SEPTEMBER 7 I

Weekly Puzzler On Page 6 ·

Six players, .in three teams of
two, will leave from a Cleveland
airpon aboard a Gulfstream jet.
They will be taken to an undis·
closed land, says executive producer A.J. Morewitz. Then !hey
will be blindfolded and tmnsport·
ed to tile hinterlands. This may
sound like kidnapping, but these
people volunteered.
Once the players are released
into the wilds of an unknown
counuy, tlley have a mission: to
get to the Statue of Liberty. The
frrst team to reach Lady Liberty
shares $200,000.
The hitch is how to get there.
· Contestants are given a backpack
with only a tent and a sleeping
bag, a couple of days worth ofastronaut food, and $100. Try eating, sleeping and getting around
the island near the Statue of LibCity for that amount a day; it's
pretty difficult. But traveling
around the world to get there
should prove quite a challenge,
and tllat's why Morewitz and Conan O'Brien, whose production
company brought this idea over ·
from Britain, were intrigued.
"We are asking these people to
recalibrate their brains, to forget
the ATM card and tile Mercury
Mountaineer SUV and McDonald's and the credit cards," Morewitt says. "Forget all these things
and rely on each other as team·
mates and rely on their instincts
and ingenuity and luck to get
tllem through."
Essentially, they will have to
rely on the kindness of strangers.
''That's where the ingenuity
comes into play," Morewitz says.
"It's not only about outdoor sur- ·
vival skills. It's about urban survival skills, communicating with
people and befriending them."
As welcoming and gracious as
poverty-stricken indigenous people are, tllere's a possibility that
they either might not be able to
feed Americans passing through
their villages for a lark or write a
check so the contestants could
txiard a plane.
"People say, 'I wish I could help,
but I can't,' '' Morewitz says.

SATURDAY

Alabama at Var&lt;l&lt;!rt;H (live)

II: Regional Coverage ·or Braves at Cubs

U.S. Open Tennrs. Men's Semlinals (Live) (CCI

Eric Crouch and the Cornhuskers ol Nebraska host
i'jotre Dame In a college football matchup Saturday

)I

~-on~AB - .

adding~they-also-say.-''--1""""-off,-­

rich Americans."
The producers winnowed down
a list of about 6,000 applicants to
12 finalists, who were sent to survival sehool in Utah.
There will be two separate
groups, and the action chronicling
t!Je travels of each group of six
players will air over tllree weeks.
When the first team reaches New
York Bay, the network will then
run the adventures from the second group of six, beginning from
a different remote locale.
Each two-member team will
have a camera operator, who is
prohibited from helping. Should
someone become injured, however, the cameraperson will call the
nearest hospital.
"What I really want to do is tru·
ly depart from our predecessors to
show there is still fodder to be
mined in the reality genre," More- ·
witt says. 'There's-more than one
cop show or lawyer show or doctor show on tile air. This falls into
the reality genre, and I hope it's
unique .... I truly think (the players) are fantastic people at)d will
be well-loved."

IN

Trammell,

Henke) take
in a
slaughterhouse to pay for
damaging a grave in Going to
California
Thursday
on
Showtime.

TV CROSSWORD

George Clooney (Ow of Sight)
.was the firs t guest to be interviewed by Rosie O'Donnell
when her TV talk show premiered in 1996.

The identity of the featured celebrity Is found within lhe .
answers In the puzzle. In order lo take the TV Challenge,
unscramble lhe letters noted with aslerisks within the puzzle.
ACROSS
6. " ... farm h.!' had a pig, _
1. Weakest Link emcee
"
5. 1995 AI Pacino movie
7. 86 or 99, on Get Smart :
9. _ and Present Danger ;
abbr.
'94 Harrison Ford film
8. '70·'75 sitcom.about iwo
10. Number of seasons for
friends (3)
Bewitched
9. Caesar &amp; _; early stage
12. Peggy or Brenda
names of Sonny &amp;Cher
13. Actor Will
-11. Ms. Lipinski
16. • ... Oil, that isl Black gold,
14. _Condor ; '70 Jim Brown

Focus

FRIDAY

Texas !"
17. Maris, to Niles
18. Hannity &amp; _;political

movie
15. Ride :...__ Cowboy; '42
Abbott &amp; Costello film
18. Family-taw actress

discussion series
20. Conjunction
21 . Edible pod
23. Co-star with Swit and
'
Farrell

19.
22.
24.
29.

25. Suffix for boss or curl
26. 1963 Paul Newman movie
27. Mr. Cole
28. Peter Jennings' employer
29. Make goo-goo eyes at
·30. Speedwagon and Royale
32. Just the Tan of_ ('88·

31. High-tailed It .
34. Actress Judith
35. Number of seasons for

33.

Regis Philbin keeps conteslants on their toes - and
their fast fingers - as host of Who Wants to Be a Mil·
1/onalre, airing Fridays on ABC.

Skater Michelle Kwan gives
her fans a sneak preview of her
2002 Olympic program at the
Goodwill Games. Coverage of
the skating competition from
Brisbane, Australia, airs Thursday, Sept. 6, on· TNT.
K wan is the defending
women's skating champion at .
the Goodwill Games, having
won tile gold medal in 1998 ..
Russian skater Irina Slutskaya
is also scheduled to premiere
the program she plans to perform at tile Olympics in Salt
Lake City this winter.

John Wayne film .
42. Juno rival, for short
44. Verdugo's monogram
46. Setting for Madigan Men :

abbr.

42 . Thumbed animal
43. I'd Like __ ('48·'4i)
45. Ju1t __ SMII Song ;
'78 TV movie
47, McHIII'I _ ('82·'e8)
48. Sgt. VInce Carttr'l bane

In NBC'• Loet premiering Wedneeday, alx conteetant• - Courtllnd, Lindo, Joe, Celeate, C1rla and Taml (clockwlle from top
left) _ are dro'pped off In 1n unknown country with few auppllel and divided Into two-perton llama. Thlllratteam to find
Ita way to the Statue of Liberty wl11a $200,000.

.

'

{

Get rid of

40. Cable network letters

38. NMovln' on _"; theme
from The Jeffarsons
39. The_ Erwin Show ('50'55)
41. · Miami_ ('84·'89)

1,
2.
3.
4.

Oil's partner, In phrase

CHiPs
36. Clapton's initials
37,. _ the Wild Wind ; '42

'90)
Live

~

'83 Brooke Shields movie
_ People ('79·'84)

•

.

A01rese on ER (2)
Beea Truman _ Wallaoe
Sha_ Na (1977-81)
Conaequently
5. ~ ana Now (1992·93)
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P~GESIX

Family room at design's heart

:.---

Master Suite
14' X 17'

Kitch~en Vaulted
Vaulted
Great Room
17'4" X 16'8"

Nook

9'6" X 10'4"

Dining
12'10" -x 12'

'

Garage
27' X 26'6"

Saginaw
PLAN 10-251

Living Areo 2568 sq.h..
Screened Porch 110 sq.ft.
Garage
659 sq.h.
Dimensions 90'9" X nT
2000 SERIES
www.odMontplans.rom
C 2001 Aalociatod Designs. Inc.

How colors speak to you
s1ttmg rooms . If, however,
your home is in a cold climate, the cool colors might be
too
"chilly," so you might
What colors make you
happy? Which ones help you want to add some visual
relax after a busy day? The warmth with sunny accents to
colors you choose to decorate 'Spark your spirit.
Neutral colors, such as
with really do influence your
beige, gray, white and taupe,
emotions.
To stimulate conversation help bridge other colors and
when guests visit, for exam- rooms. Dark neutrals tone
ple, choose active colors such down other colors. whilt! crisp
white intensifies them.
~n~~~mi~~~~~ ~Vi_ha poW!!r do various col-um•rnh
.
an upbeat attitude.
· ors have in home decorating?
Colors play off your mood Their strength might surprise
in three basic ways _ active, you . Some clues:
• Pink·· soothes·• promotes
passive and neutral. These are
important factors when affability and affection.
choosing colors for various
• Yellow: expands the space,
cheers your spirit,· increases
rooms and how you plan to
use those rooms in your · energy.
home.
• Black: disciplines, authorAccents of red can greet izes, strengthens what's
guests in an entry or add a around it; encourages in decozy touch to a den. Yellows, pendence.
good for home offices and
• White: purifies, energizes,
kitchens, .can inspire creativ- unifies; in combination, makes
. ity.
all other.colors stropger.
Need a room to rejuvenate
• Orange: cheers, comyour soul? Passive colors, such mands; stimulates appetites
and conversation.
as blue, green and purple, help
pacify and restore . They work
• Red: empowers, stimuwell in bedrooms or restful Iates, dramatizes; symbolizes
BY CAROL McGARVEY
BETTER HOMES
AND GARDENS BOOKS
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

A spacious family room fs at
the heart of the Sagmaw: a
nud"s1ze . family home With
the pomblitty of five bedrooms . The wide porch that
spans the front of this rambling ranch-style home gives
it a friendly, open look.
Wmdows nm most of the
rear wall of the family room
and k1t~hcn, the natural center
of fanuly actlv~ty. Vaulted
cc1hngs make th1s large space
feel even larger. Flames in the
fireplace brighten chilly wintcr evenings.
The kitchen has two work
islands, one with a built-in
cooktop. The other could be
outfitted as an eating bar.- But
there arc plenty of places to
cat already. Namely, the skyJit

vaulted nook, . and a fon~1al
dmmg room With bayed wmdow scat. The hvmg room/hbrary has a bay window, too,
but no scat. It also boasts a
second fireplace.
The master suite is huge and
luxurious. It has another
bayed wmdow seat- a great
place to curl up with a book
or magazme, well _away from
the _ busy fam1ly hvmg area.
Tim plan has two roomy
walk-in closets and a sumptuous bathroom .brightened by
two skylights. Other luxury
amenities include: a doublesized shower, two vanities, spa
tub and totally private toilet.
Four rooms are located in
the left wing. All can be bedrooms, if needed. Or the

room adjacent to the great
room can have skylights and
serve as a screened porch. The
room across the hall has a
built-in desk . It could be a
~ome office, guest room or
both.
The Saginaw is designed to
include a basement.
For a review plan, including
scaled floor plans, elevations,
section and artist's conception,
send $25 to Associated De.
signs, 1 i 00 Jacobs Drive, .
Eugene, Ore. 97402. Please
specify the Saginaw 10-251
and include a return ·addreu
when· ordering. A catalogul:
featuring more than 350
home plans is available for
$15. For more information,
call 1-800-634-0123.

Mildew is easy to remove
BY MORRIS
AND JAMES CAREY
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Q. Julie asks: I have a mildew problem on the ceiling
above my shower. I do not
have a window in the bathroom. I want to paint, but am
worried it might just be covering a problem instead of re- ·
pairing it. I usc bleach about
every two weeks to clean the
ceiling and walls, and it does
make the appearance of the
mildew go away for a few
days. What would be the best
thing for me to do?
A. Mildew in your home is
easy to remove. Just mix onethird cup of powdered laundry detergent (less if concentrated) and 1 quart of liquid
chlorine bleach with 3 quarts
of warm water. Add the

bleach to the water first and
then the detergent. Scrub
with a bristle brush, and in
minutes the mildew will disappear. Rinse the area thoroughly and towel-dry. Although this reasonably mild
solution can be used for most
painted surfaces, you'll want
rubber gloves, eye protection
and plenty of ventilation.
But why spend time removing mildew y;hen you can
prevent it? Mildew can't grow
without a food source, and
the food source that mildew
thrives on is moistu-re. Mildew
spores are in the air everywhere. They look for moist
places to settle, feed and grow.'
How do you prevent mildew from growing? Reduce
or eliminate the food source
by cutting down on the

amount of moisture, usually
condensation, which settles on
walls, floors and ceilings. This
might not be as simple for
someone who lives in Florida
as for a family· in west Texas,
but, given varying degrees of
attention, eradication is possible even in relatively humid
climates.
That you don't have a window in your bathroom means
that . ventilation might be
poor. Moreover, the lack of
natural light provides optimal
conditipns for
mildew
grow.th.
According to the Building
Code, a bathroom without a
window must have an exhaust
fan to remove moisture and
odors. Unfortunately, bath
fans are often undersized, broken or simply not used.

WEEKLY PUZZLER

paSSIOn.
• Green: balances, normalizes, refreshes; encourages
emotional growth..
ACROSS
81 . Buns
96 --de-sac
181 Suspends
• Purple: comforts, spiritual97 English festival
182 Yearned
82 Fierce fish
99 Lamb's pen name
84 Conversation
izes; creates mystery and
1 Aper
DOWN ,
87 Den
· 100 Variation
draws out intuition.
6 Carpenter or
Valentine
103 'Actor Wallach
89 Take legal action
• Blue: relaxes, refreshes,
1 Code Inventor
11 Bicycle part
105 Not canned and not
91 Bravo!
2 Newlon or Azimov
cools; produces tranquil feel16 Evidence
frozen
93 Ice hockey venue
· 3 Walk
107 Grows togethe'r
95 Does nothing
ings and peaceful' moods.
21 City in Japan
4 Presidential
110 Part ot ETA
98 Curved letter
Don't be shy about playing , 22 Black-wood
nickname
111 Foray
100 LogiCally sound
23Jlatonwith color. Choosing com- 24 Insect stage
5 Complain
113 Stem
101 Decay
6 Grain
115 Addition result
102 Nothing
patible colors is as easy as tak- 25 Less common
---7-Honest-~--- - 104-"--a-boyl~
---1-1-7'-Recognize ·
ing-a look- at the- colm-w'h'e-e·J-. - 2&amp;-Suggested8 Fabulous bird
,
. h
h
h
28 Wrath
118 Cut of meat
105 Drift
It s a cmc w en you c oose
9 Baseball's Slaughter
120 Level
108 Island dance
29 Plant pouch
10 Nature goddess
122 Marquee notice
108 Cities
smular or analogous colors,
30 Skillet
11 Salty snack
109 Native of
123 Destiny
those located side-by-side on ' 32 Leopard .teature
12
Very
long
time
Stockholm
125
Sheep
33
the
color
moisture
13 'clothing
h
f: wheel.
.
I Simolv 35 HBeavyhw;th
ranc
112 TV's Rather
126 Standards of
14 Antique: hyph .
c oose a avonte co or as your
36 Repeat
perfection
114 Curved line
15 Projecting ridge
116 Tasty bits
128de
plume
mam one, then look on ·e1thfr
38 Office
16
Drama
130
Beret
119 Bare
s1de of 1t for accent colors.
communication
F
I
.
I. h
41 Thin tog
17 Jogged
121 Commotion: hypH,
132 "Zhivago" girl
or c loosmg ug -energy
43 Zodiac sign
18 Pipe or barrel
124 Bugle call
133 Conclusion
schemes, consider comple44 Emmets
19 Not hidden
127 Drug letters
134 ClassFoom items
20
Works
the
soil
129 Charts
135
Pop
mentary colors, hues oppoSite
45 Substitute
27 Watery trench
131 Photo
137 Turner, the singer
h 0 th
th
I
48 Lukewarm
eac
er on
e co or
31 Make louder
132 Superman's Lois
· 139 Not dense
50 Water barrier
wheel. .Red and green, blue
52 Breakfast tare .
34 Zeus is one
136 Express
141 Publishing people:
37 Mineral
disapproval
abbr.
and orange, and yellow and
55 Particular
39
Make
crippled
138
Presently
143
Lassoed
purple are examples. In these
57 Box top
40 Fall mo.
140 Powdery residue
145
Admit
to
schemes, warm and cool hues
~~ ~ppro~=~~ee
42 Long story
142 "To-, Whh Love'
wrongdoing
• 44 In the company of
play off each other for interDoodle dandy ..."
143 One's good neme
14 7 Degree recipient,
46 Facilitate
144 Fashion name
for short
estmg results.
63 Thailand, formerly
47 Moray
146 F'at bottles
150 Frost
•••
65 Table part
49 False god
147 Flowers, tor short
"Better Homes and Gardens
67 Bed
152 Roasting rod
51 Playing card
69 Lady of Spain
148 Vestige
154 Healthy
52 Stogie
149 •:....- is Born"
New Decorating Book"
70 Mil. people
155 Nimbus
53 -Zola
(Meredith Books, $34.95).
71 New1
151 Seashore
159 "-Miserable&amp;"
54 Red or black fruits
72 Youngster
160 Cuts short,
153- Va.n Devere
56 Cantaloupe
74 Singing bird
162 Learning
156 Ot bees
59 Alps climber
76 Spiritual guide
164 Invite
157 At liberty
60 A~tor Flynn
77 Mont Blanc's range
166 Burst
158 Chose
61 Fry
79- Kippur
167 Make different
160 Ship's company
64
Tiny
particle
81
Kimonos
169
Experts
161 Laurel or Kenton
Huessy also advises home66 Chat
83·Pummel
173
George
or
T.S.
163
Singer James
owners to keep a watchful eye
68 Bar bill
85 Believe it or -1
175 Keaton or Sawyer
165 Marine plant
on change orders, the mid-job
69 Glide over ice
176 Step
86 Freedom tighter
168 Opp. of WSW
73 Morning moisture
88 Gardner's Perry
177 Barren
changes in materials that can
170 Towel insignia
75 Legal matter
90 A pronoun
178 Rental contract
171 Writer Fleming
drive budgets up. Those
78 Hardens
179 Hardware Item
92 Surprise
172 Work unit
amoUT!ts should be itemized
eo Name tor a strpnger
94 Abbr. in footnotes
180 On edge
174 Flower necklace
and figured into payments to
contractors.

How to -cut contractor liens
FROM HOME SERVICE STORE
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Liens from contested home
improvement projects are unnerving to many homeowners. They risk legal fees, poor
credit ratings, and lose their
ability to sell their home if the
lien is not resolved.
According to attorney Hans
Huessy, there are steps homeowners can take to reduce the
chances of contractors filing
liens. Or, once a lien is filed,
there are remedies to defend'
themselves. · Huessy is chief
counsel for the Home Service
Store, a national home improvement service provider.
Huessy says homeowners
should require contractors and
subcontractors to provide lien
waivers as part of a . written
project contract. The contract
should require a lien waiver
be issued before payment for
services. If payments arc made
to a general contrac tor in
stages for work performed by
subcontractors, the home owner should ask for lien
waivers from the various subcontractors as their part of the
project is completed.
Reputable contractors will
have waiver forms readily
available. If not, local or state
cons.u mer advocate ".organizatiO'ns may have sample waivers.

Homeowner diligence
shouldn't stop once lie!) waivers are signed. Huessy says
homeowners should keep accurate records of what has
been paid to contractors and
who has worked on the job
site and when. Such astute record keeping bn help the
homeowner ensure that
he /s he obtains lien waivers
from all necessary parties.
Unethical contractors sometimes file liens for false
amounts, hoping to intimidate
the homeowner into paying
the disputed amount rather
than spending the time and
money to fight the lien.
In most jurisdictipns, liens
expire after a set period of
time so a homeowner may sit
tight if the lien is not affecting
their use of the property.
If the lien disrupts use of
their property, homeowners
can counter a lien by posting
the amOtint claimed with the
court. This removes . the lien
from land records and frees up
the homeowner' s property.
This puts the ball back in the
contractor's court. The contractor has a limited amount
of time to enforce the lien, often at great legal expense. If
he fails to do so within the
time period, the court returns
the homeowner's money.

•

In some cases homeowners
may also request general contractors to post a performance
bond. The bond is like an insurance policy to ensure contractors honor their contract,
including obligations to pay
all subcontractors and suppliers on time.
The b.cs.t dcle'nse agamst
liens, says Huessy, is to avoid
disputes early on. The best
way is to clearly state expectations in a written contract before the project starts. On
large projects, especially if
subcontractors arc involved,
the contract should require
the contractor to give the
homeowner lien waivers
signed by all subcontractors as
they coll)piete their work and
·before paying for the services.

(77re Home Sen,i'f?'os-n,"t:.
ages /rome maintenance, r air
mrd improvement tasks in 111 e
than I 30 markets nationwide mr
ca n
be
jou11d
at
wrVtl'. TrustHSS.com.)

Pul.zle answer on Page 4
.•

•

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