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·.

•

~ge B 8 • The D•lly Sentinel

'

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, June 16, 2000

MONEY

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•

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

•
•

·'·••.

.
•'•.
'·

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•

'.

Eulllm Dhttolon ·

TMnl

W

A.tlonta ...........................41

L Pet.

Q8

24 .631
New '11&gt;111 .........................35 28 .556
5
Montrool ..........................33 29 .532 8 1/2
l'lorldo .............................30 38 .455 11 1/2
Phlladlllphla .................... 24 39 .381
16
Centro! Dhttolon
St. l.cuio .................... .......37 26 .569
Clncln- ..................... .32 32 .100 4 112
Plttoborgh .......................29 35 .453 7 1/2
Chicago .......................... 27 38 .415
10
Mllwoou!&lt;oe .......................27 38 .415
10
Houslon .......................... 24 41 .389
13
WHI DIYiolon
Arizona ...........................39 2:1 .591
~ .............. ...........35 27 .565
2
I,DoAngolee .....................35 29 .547
3
S.n Francisco ..................31 31 .500
8
San Diego ........................ 27 37 .422
11
•
Wed~o Gomoo
• N.Y. M&lt;llsiO, Chlcogo Cuba 8
Ben Fronclooo I, Clnc1Matl2
A1111111a 8, Plltllburgh 4
Florida 8, Philadelphia 1
Mllwaukoo 11. Montreal 2
; HOUI1on 8, Colorado 4
. , 51. Louis 3, san Diogo 1
.. Arizona 5, Los Anglin 1
Thunocloy.. Gomoa
Colorado 5, 'HouS1on 4
Piltllburgh 2, Allart1a 0
Los Angel01 4, Arizona o
Todoy'aGorneo
Montreal (Annas 2·3) at Chlcago Cubs
(Wood 2-4), 3:20p.m.
Florida (Comollus 1·1) at Plltsburgh (Cordo·
\il 4·3), 7:05p.m.
' Allanta (Giavlne 7·2) at Philadelphia
(SOhiRing 1-4), 7:35p.m.
N.Y, Meta (Leit• 7-1) at Mllwal.l&lt;ee (Haynaa
7-4). 8:~ p.m.
-~ Mtona (Ileal 2-7) at Colorado (Bohanon 2·
11. 9:05 p.m.
.. Cl~lnnoU (Porrlo 2-9} ot Son Olato
{M11da •• 1-1), t:os p.m.
. St. Louie (Hen!gen 5-e) ot Los Angol .. (H•·
.ohls4r 1-2), 10:10 p.m.
H.,_ (EII!non 4-2} at san Franclscc
(i&lt;llel 5-3), 10:35 p.m.
"'
a.tuna.f• Qamea
~ Montrool 81 ChiCago CUbs, 4:05 p.m.
.• St. Loulo 81 Los Angolos, 4:05 p.m.
-; Clnclnnotlotllon Diogo, 4:01p.m.
;tt Houlton at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
:. at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.
.• Florida at Pittsburgh, 7:05 p.m.
, :· ~.Y. Meta at MilWaukee, 8:05p.m.
·• Arizona 81 Colc!ado, 8:05p.m.

·..

.•
•
:
.,
.--r

..
.•
-:

Sunday'• Gll"r''M

Allama at Phlladalphla, 1:35 p.m.
Florida at Pllts~urgh, 1:35 p.m.
N.Y. Mete at Milwaukee, 2:05'p.m. ·
Momrealat Chicago CUbs, 2:20p.m.
.Arizona at Colorado, 3:P5 p.m.
Houston at San Francisco, 4:05p.m.
Clnclnnotlat Son Diogo, 5 p.m.
St. Louis at Los Angeles, 8:05p.m.
An:lerlcln L.Ngue

Eoottm Dlv'-lan
'I'Mm
W L
Naw York ........................ 34 26
,Boston ............................ 34 27
Toronto .. .......................... 35 32

'

Pet. GB
.567
.567
1/2
.522 2 1/2

SBIIImoro ........................ 29 34
Tampa Bay .......................25 39
Cennl DMelon
Chk:ago ..........................41 2~
Cl...loncl ...................... .34 21
Kansas City ..................... 33 31
Minnesota .......................29 38
OotroR ... .. .. ................ 24 37

.480 8 112
.39t
11
.831
.108 S 1/2
.ste 71/2
.433
13
.393
15

Welt Oivlalon

S8e111e · ........................... 35 28 .556
Oakland .
.. ...... 38 29 .554
Anaheim ........................33 32 .eo&amp;
3
Texas ..............................30 34 .488 5112
Wednoodly'o Gomoa
N.Y. Yankaas 2, Boston 1
Kansas City 5, Seattle 4
Tampa 68~ 3, Anaheim 2

Toronto 8, Detroit 1
Oakland 9, Minnesota 6
Baltimore 11 , Texas 10
Chk:ogo White Sax 11 , Cl-land 4
Thurodoy'o Gomoo
ChiCago WhRe SOx 12, N.Y. Yankees 3
Tampa Bay 2, Anahelm 1
Seattle 12, Minnesota 5
Baltimore 10, Texas 1
Todoy'o Gomoo
.
C,.,lloncl (Burbl7·1) at Detro" (Moohlor
W), 7:01 p.m.
Chk:ago Wlito SOx (Baldwin 9·1) 81 N.Y.
YankHS (Cone 1-6), 7:05p.m.

Toronto (Escobar 5-7) at Boston (Sct1ourek
2-e), 7:05p.m.
te&gt;&lt;U (Oliver 2·3) at Tampa Bay (Van 3-4),
7:15p.m.
Anah&amp;lm (SOhoeneweia 5-4) at Baltimore
(Musolna 4-11), 7:35p.m.

Oaklahd (otlvares 3-81 at Kansas City
(Suzuki 3-0J, 8:05p.m.
Seattie (Solo 7-2) ot Minnosota (Radke 3-8);
8:06 p.m.
•
Soturdoy'o
Cievetancllt Detroit, 1 :05 p.m.
Tel&lt;88 at Tampa Bay, 1:15 p.m.
Chloego White Sox 81 N.Y. Yankeaa, 4:35
p.m.
Toronto at ~ston, 5:05 p.m.
Seattle at Mrnnesota, 7:05 p.m.
Anaheim at eammore, 7:05 p.m.
Oakland a t Kansas City, 8:0$ p.m.
Sunday"a Garnea
Chicago White Sox 81 N.Y. Yankees, 1:05
p.m.
Toronto at Boston, 1:05 p.m.
ctovolond ot Detroit, 1:05 p.m.
TexasaiTampo Bay, 1:15 p.m.
Anaheim at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.
Oakland at Kansas City, 2:05p.m.
:seattle at Minnesota, 2:os p.m.

G•-

National Laoguo Stotlotlcol Laldoro
BATIING-Helton, Colorado, .392; Vldro,
Montreal, .389; Piazza, New York, .365: Guerrero, Montreal, .364; Castillo, Florida, .348;
Edmonds, St. Louis, .344; Owens, San Diego,
.343.
RUNS-Helton, Colorado, 63; Edmonds, St.
Louis, 62; Bonds, San Francisco, 58; Bagwell,
Houston, 55; Kent, San Francisco, 52;
Grudzlelanek, Los Angeles, 51; Alfonzo, New
YOI'k, SO.
ABI- Kent, San Francisco, 82; Giles, Pittsburgh, 61 ; Hekon, Colorado, 58; Soea, Chicago, S8; Karros, los Angeles, 57; Guerrero,
Montreal, 56; Shatli81d, Los Angeloo, 55.
HITS-VIdro, Montreal, 86; Guemsro, Mon·
treal, 88; Henon, Colorado, 85; EOYoung,

ChiCago, 84; Owens, San Diego, 92; Kent, san
Francieco, 82; Jones, Atlanta, 81 .
OOUBLES-VIdro, Montreal, 23;
Los
1\ngol... 23: Yaung, Chicago. 23: Clrilo, CoJ.
orado, 21 ; White, ~treat, 21 ; Kent, San Franolsoo, 21 ; Zeile, New York, 21.
TFIIPLE$-Uoodwln. Colorado, 7; Womack,
Arizona, 5; Shumpert, C'.olorado, 5; 8 are tied
With 4.
).'
HOME RUNS-Bonds, San Francisco, 25;"'';·
Mc:Gwire, St. Louis, 23; Hidalgo, Houston, 20;
Finle~. Arizona, 20: Guerrero, Montreal, 19;
Giles, Pinsbl.Jrgl'l, 19; Sosa, Chtcago, 19;
Shefflold, Los Angeles, 19.
.
STOLEN BASES-Goodwin, Colorado, 30; ·
LCaatillo, Flo&lt;lda, 26; Young. Chicago, 23;
~eras , Atlanta, 18; Reese, Cincinnati, 17;
Cedeno, Houston. 17: OWens, San Diego, 17.
PITCHING (9 Oeclslons)-Johnson, Ari ·
zona, 11·1, .917, t.40; Maddux, Atlanta, 9·1,
.900, 3.02; Graves, Cincinnati, 8·1• .889. 2.05;
Stephenson, St. Lollis, 9·2, ,818, 3.90: Glavine,
Atlanta, 7·2, .m, 3.84: Kilo, St. Louis, 10.3,
.789, 4.39; Pavalio, Momraal, 7-3, .700. 3.25.
STRIKEOUT5-Jrihnson, Arizona, 150;
A&amp;tacio, Colorado, 98; Dempster, Florida, 90;
Maddux, Allanta, QO; Kilo, St. Louis, 87: Ben·
son, Pittsburgh, 85; Person, Philadelphia, 85.
SAVE$-Aifonseca, FIOJida, 19; Benitez,
New York. 18: Hoffman, San Diego, 14: Agull·
era, Cnlcago, 13; Jimenez, Colorado, 11 :
Veres, St Louis, 11 ; Shaw, Los Angeles, 11 .

Gr-.

AmeriCin t..aague Statlatlcal Ludera

BATTING-Ro&lt;lriguez, Texas, .377; Erstad,
Anaheim, .373; Martinez, Seattle, .372;
Sweeney, Kansas City, .361; DelgadO, Toronto,
.353; Ro&lt;lrlguoz, Seallle, .345; Lawton, Min·
nesota, .340.
RUN5-Ro&lt;lrlguez, seanle, 63; Delgado,
Toronto, 5e; Mondesl, Toronto, 52; Glaus, Ana·
helm, 51; Damon, Kansas City, 50; Durham, ·
Chicago. so: Ro&lt;lrlguez, TOXlls, 50.
RBI- Mar1inez, SeaHie, 69; Sweeney,
Kansas City, 65: Ja. Giambi, Oakland, 65;
CDolgado, Toronto, 64; Rodriguez, Seattle, 60;
Everett, Boston, 60; Rodriguez, Texas, 58.
HIT5-Erstad, Anaheim. 104; ROdriguez,
Texas, 93; Sweeney, Kansas City, 92; Lawton,
Minnesota. 85; Delgado, toronto, 85;
Rodriguez .• Seattle, 81 ; ~ughn, Anaheim, 79.
DOUBLEs-Lawton, Minnesota, 231Glaus,
Anahefm, 21: Sweeney, Kansas City, 21 ;
Rodriguez, TOJCas, 21 : oye, Kansao City, 20;
Delgado, Toronto, 20: Segul, Texas, 19;
DeShieldS, Bahlmore, 19; OlenJd, Seattle, 19.
TAIPLE8-Guzman,
Minnesota,
10;
Durham, Chicago, 6; Hunter, Minnesota. 4;
Nixon, Boston, 4; V&amp;lentln, Chicago, 4; Mar·
!inez, New Yorll, 4; Alicea, Texas, 4. '
HOME RUN5-0elgildo, Toronto, 24;
Rodriguez, Texas, 22; Everett, Boston, 21; Ja.
Giambl, Oakland, 20; Vltughn, Anaheim, 19;
Martinez, Seattle, 19; 5 are tied with 19.
STOLEN BASE5-DeShields, Baltimore,
20; Monde91, TorontQ', 1a; Damon, Kansas. City,
17; Alomar, Clevolond, 18; Lawton, Minnesota,
15; McLemore, Seanle, 14; Cairo, Tampa Bay,
12; Jeter, New YOI'k, 12.
PITCHING (9 Declslons)-Baldwln, Chlca·
go, 9·1, .900, 3.28; Wells, Toronto, 10·2, .833,
3.48; Mortinez, Bollon, 9·2, .818, .99: Hudson.
Oak-.ncl, 7-2, .778, 4.10: sole, Seanle, 7-2,
.778, 3.83; Eldrad, Chicago, 7-2, .779, 4.19;
Colon, Cleveland, 6·3, .667, 4.03; Pettllte, New
York, 6-3, .867, 5.05; Heredia, Qalc.land, 8·4,
.667, 3.84; Appier, Oakland, 6·3, .667, 3.84.
STfiiKEOUTS-M&amp;nlnez, Boston, 121; Finley, Clovoiond, 89; Hudson, Oakland, 81:

N~o.

Detroit. 81 ; Clemenl, New "tb11, 81 i
Wels, Toronlo, 78; Buroa, C l - . 75.
SAVES-Jonas, Dolroit, 18; lsrtnghluaon,
Oa~ond , 16; Perclvai,Anahoim, 1B; Wettoiond,
Texas. 16; Foulke, Chicago, 15: Lowe, Booton,
15; Riv... , NewYOI'k, 15.

L~......:.::....:.&lt;:L.J..;..;::;.:..:;::...::~:~::..,

USOponScatwt

ortando .............................5

4
5
4
4

.!556 t 1/2
.375
3

Now 'll&gt;r1&lt; ...........................3
Detro" ...............................2
.333
3
Indiana ..............................2
.333
3
Miami .... ............ ................2 5 .288 3 1/2
Chl11otle .......... .................! 8 .143 41/2
t;
WMtemC01thtt~
Houston ............ ...... .......... 8 t .889
Mlnnaota .........................5 2 .714
2
-bi .............................5 ·2 .714 2
Los Angel......................... 4 2 .e67 2 1/2
Sooromento ......................4 3 .571
3
Utah ..................................4 5 .444
4
Soa111o. .............................. 2 8 .250 5 112
Porllond ............ ................! 5 .187 5112
,, Th.-y'IGo....
Wulllngton at Indiana, ppd., weath•
Minnooota 72, Orlando ee
Houaton 77, Miami 53
Utah 98, ChaiiOtte ee
sacramento S4, Soa111o so

PEBBLE BEACH, COIH. (AP) - Parltal
ocoras Thursday 1rom the flrot round of lhe
1001h u.s. Open on the par 35·se..,71, 8,8211yord Pebble Beach GoW Unks (a&lt;lanct.. oma·
tout). (Note: 75 go~ero unable to complato ftrat
round. ·Thev wHI complete round Friday moming).
33-32 - 85
Frlcltty'oGimo
ngarWOOds
31 ·35 - 66
Miguel Jimenez
Clovoland, 7 p.m.
33-34-87
~ 81turdoy'l
John Huston
32·38-66
Mlnnt!'lltall P~. 4 p.m. ·
Bobby Clarnpatt
CIMIInd ot Miami, 7 p.m.
31-38 - 88
Hal Sutton
Indiana 81 Orlandd, 7:30 p.m.
35-34 - 88
Angei Cabrera
'Naohlngton 81Utah, 9 p.m.
34-35 - ell
Roooo Madl81e
Charlotte at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
35-35 - 70
Thomas Bjorn
Loa Angelos at Portland, 10 p.m.
34-38 - 70
Brandet Chamblee
Sundly'o Gomoo
35-35 - 70
Jose MariaOiazabal
Minnesota at Houston, "' ~.m.
38-35 - 71
Lee Westwood
Indiana 01 DolrCJil, e p.m.
37·34 - 71
Phil Mickol&amp;on
Miami ot Now Vorl!, 7:30 p.m.
37-34 - 71
Mtchael Campbell
Utah at Saat11e. 9 p.m.
34-37 - 71
Tom Lehman
Charlotte ot Loa Angol... 10 p.m.
38-35-71
Paul Azlnger
38·34 -72
Brandt Jobe
34-38-72
Bob May
38-38-72
Jim Furyk
Robert Damron
37·35 - 72
39-34 - 73 .
Brent Geibefger
39-34-73
Jesper Pamevlk
MaJor Laoguo Soacor
34-38 - 73
Justin Leonard
Oufty Waldo~
37·38-73
W E-mDMoian
Jerry Kolly
38-37-73
Taom
i'.'
W L T Phi
35-38 - 73
Now Englarij:..............7 4 4 25
Padralg Harrington
Miami ........ ·,......,........ 5 a 4 19
Lany Mize
37·38-73
NY-NJ ....... ,.................6 7 0 18
Rick Har1mann
35·37 -73
D.C............................. 3 9 3 12
.
Centro! Olvlolan
ChiCago ......................8 7 1 25
TampaBay ..................8 6 o 24
Columbua ...................5 7 3 18
Dallu ......................... 5 8 2 17

Dotroft-'

a.....

38
30
22
24

31
20
29
31

1 3 33 27
3 6 24 20
8 0 21 22
7 •I 13 17

8
14
34
24

wootem Dlvloian
Plovalf Glonco
Ftn..a
(B-7)
Wednudoy, Jun11 7
L.A. Lakers 104, Indians 87
Friday, Juno I
L.A. Lakers 111, Indiana 104
Sunday, Juno 11
Indiana 100, LA. Lakers 9,1..
Wldnoedoy, JUno 1•
LA Lakers 120, Indiana 118, OT, LA. Lak·
ers lead series 3-1
Frlcloy, Juno 18
LA L.akers ot Indiana, 9 p.m.
Mondliy, June 11
Indiana 81 LA. Lak018, 9 p,m., necaasary
Wednudoy, Juno 21
Indiana 81 LA. Lak018, I p.m., necessary

n
n

Kanrlas City ...............10
LDsAng.Oeo ................6
Colorado ............... ..... 7
San Jooa .....................3

•

Notlonol Looguo
•
ARIZONA DIAMONOBI\CK5-Actlval)cl
RHP Todd Stolllemyre from the 15-day d!slibled ·11&amp;1. Optioned OF Tumor ward to Tucton
of the Pacific Coast League.
•
FLORIDA MARUN5-Signod AHP Philli!&gt;'
Akens, OF .Anthony BreWOJ, 2B David Eaottr·
day. 1B Daniel Hicks, I.HP Aoba1 Jones, OF
Jamn Kavounas, I.HP Chriltopnor Key, I~
Patrk:k Mognaas, RH~ Man Massingale, RH~
Michael McNUII, C Brian Rogers, AHP Sti!Ye
Sawyer, I.HP Timolhy SChilling, RHP B~
Sloan, IB William Smith, RHP Adam Sterrott.
INF-OF Jeffrey Steven! and SS Josh WINingham.
.., "
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIE5-Piaced RI:IP
Jason Boyd on lhe 15-day disabled ltlt.
Recalled AHP Steve SChrenk from SCrant&lt;MJ·
Wilkes-Barre pf lhe International Leagu.,. ;.
PITTSBURGH PIRATES-Piacad I.HP
Soott Seuer~ on the 15-day dlsablad l!ot.
Sent LHP Jimmy Anderson to.Naohvllle of ttie
Pacific Coast t.ao~ue. Recalled I.HP Chri o
Petert from Na&amp;h~;KETIIALL
·•
National ---11-ottan
SEATTLE SUPERSONIC~nouncad tti9
reUrement of Frank Furtado, trainer. Narn8d
Mike Shimensky trainer.
..,..
FOOTBALL
·
'
Notlanol f_,. I.Uguo
ARIZONA CAAOINAL~Signed TE Jay
Tant, to a three-year contract.
"'
BALTIMORE RAVEN5-SI~nad LB Q,~.
Bnganco. Agreed to terms with DT Cadrjc
Woodard on a thre.yeer contract.
.
·,
GREEN BAY PACKEA5-Signad NT StOVe
warren to a muhiyee.r contfact.
"
JACKSONVILLE JAGUAR5-Signad CB
Isaac HaNin.
~~
MIAMI DOLPHINs-Aoloased OL Jafl\)o
Brown and WA Tony Bown.
"'-..
MINNESOTA VIKINGS-Signed CB AcXfer·
ick MuUen to a one-year contract.
TENNESSEE TITANS-Signad Jail Asher,
coach, to a three-year contract extension.

, :~·1

p m.
.f.lj.
· Kansas C~.it Dellas, 4:30p.m.
DC Un~ad 81 Chicago, 8 p.m.
Calumbuo f ,CaiOflda, 8 p.m.
Tampa 8aY•iii.Lo• Angelos 9:30p.m.
Miami at Sati'Jo8a, 10 p.m.
Wldnoauy, Juno 21
Miami at Tam,p,!l B8y, 7:30p.m.
, DC Un"ed JJ ,Now YOI'k·NEiw Jersey. 7:30 ·

..,.!

•
Eaotom Conl.,...o
Tum

W L Pet.
1 .il33

Gl

2 .e67

1

All-star foolbaU:

Kanauga Drive-in
·- asummer treat

Roush leads Ohio
to all-star win

•

.,

tmts

.

Ohio Valley Publish ing Co.

'1.25

Ga llipoli s • Middle port • Pomeroy • Pl Pleasant • June 18, 2000

:NWS:.F·l tOmado touched down in .Patriot
"

,

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.

BY MIWIIIA RuSSELl
•

According to the scale, an F-2,
· d
• d ,('
on average, pro uces Wtn s ()J
attproximately HJ-157 miles
:r.
. per hour, does considerable
damage to mobile homes
an".,. u.,.roots
tf S, .
r
""

of the tornado at approximately 150

TIMESSENTINEL STAFF

: PATRIOI' ' ~ Lead Forecaster . Ray
, ... , Ch
Ar N . naJ
1 oung 9~ _
.,.,e · ar1eston ea . ana
~eather Service, along with co-workers
~icole Bell4 General Forecaster\ and
--~
da!, J Hafjield, ~o-qp Program
Manger, spent Friday afterpoon evaluat4n.·a the destrUction left behind by Thurs~iY evening's tornado ·in Patriot.
·: ··The group ·surveyed the d'amage,
• :~e,arcbing for the tornado's path and tryj ag to determine it's circumference.
"Wy have calculated the circumference
V:

. £.:

·~..Is across during the main ·part of the
y-u

storm, with a path of a litde ' over a mile
long." Young added, "!he twister also
'skipped' in some parts of the area, causing Jitde dalnage, but extending the path
·
1 2 5 il "
to appmx1mate Y • m es.
"We have classified Thurs&lt;!ay evenings
storm as an F-2 tornado." explained
Young. "The Fujita scale ranges from an
F-0 to an F-5, with the latter being the
strongest."·
Accordilfg to the seal~, an F-2, on aver-

The storm left a large debris path, scattering barn roofing throughout nearby
fields, taking the tops of several trees and
spiking 4' boards ·upright into the hard

88

.
age, produces winds of approximately
113-157 miles per hour, and does considerable 'damage to mobile homes and
uproots trees.
The twister blew through the ,Patriot

ground.
"It takes a lot of speed and force to
firive that into the gronnd." Hatfield
noted, pointing to the board.
Hatfield also pointed out that a large
tobacco barn had.J en blown complete-

[Ki,dS' Day

~lboasts
\.

MHS receives
$60,000 for Tech
Prep expansion

new

'" 't

'

'

·:· !pelfortnances
.

,,

TIME5-SENTINEL STAFF

]:&gt;erformances on
stage;
· on Wlieels/BMX Bil•~!'S·,
perform · twice on the t\rain stage; and there
:be as ¢ali.y as 12 hover~raftS taking over the'
riverfront,'
r
·
'·
,
~
•
.. r
• "Th~ River Rec Committee has re;Uiy made .an;
extra~Jrdinary ~ommitment to sprucing ,up ~ids'.~ '
· Day:• said·K\ds ' D~y· ?rgani+er Tom Hopkins.
...
' "The ·money they allotted for this day is Wori- .
derful and . in ·r eturn 'pron\ises to prodt.~ce the best'
Kl&lt;!s' D4y ever"
·.
.
..., · .,
•- Bryant briJ;J.gs, to life the io-orld of playful coil!. ,
•. flict and \'{onder in his ori~inal, fast-paced one- .
· ' ll)an physical c~;~pedy show. Vaudevillian in the
ol~est ;;traditi~n ,_.!bis show engages all ages. His ·
penormance mc!udes .an :lftful, blend of clown" ·
in~, mime, juggling, magic, ,puppetry, ].micycHng,
music and audjence•interactive improvisation.
· ':It's really neat to. have someone with Chip's
ability, talent and professionalism coming to Galli:pi&gt;lis," Hopkins sai11. "He's awe!ome - ' everyone will really ehjoy h,im."
•.Perfection on Whee'ls/.BMX Bikers ramp show
~I utilize a jump box and/or an 8-foot tall, 10fQot wide qt.~arter-pipe r~JilP -"no hands, 360s
and huge air!"
·
,
· The flatland show consists of freestyle biking
- rolls and spins with "the grace of figure skating and the energy ofgymriastics." · •
· 't 'The BMX performances )"ill be held by the
riverfront .and ar~ 't he best \1 the world. Their
ITYUN'qn
.Biker. ·bennis" shows off his flatland freestyle
extreme sport should · be ·a spectacular show,''·
. v
·stunt. The show will festure a jump box and .a 10-foot wide quarter pipe ramp. (Krls
..'· .
...........
Kids,..,.AI
Dotson photo)
·,···
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Aappimess _J~is
t

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POMEROY Grants of
,, $60,(!00 ,have. be·eq,,aw,\{ded to
Meigs High School \&gt;y the Ohio
Departmel)t of Educa\ion ·to be
used in expanding Tech, Prep
programs~·"whicll
,gelred ''fo
prQviding more students with
the techno\ogy education needed for to day's jobs.
The ' money comes through
the Washington-Morgan-Meigs
Ted! Prep Consortiqm whi.ch is
adm1nistered through Washington S~te Community Collegt'.
Meigs' two grants of$30,000
each are a part of $300,000 in
grants from the Depamneiu of
Education for use in expanding
technology programs at six
Southeastern
Ohio
high
·
Is
·
h
sc O(i) •
'
According to Mar)' ·Lou
Moegling, Tech Prep coordinator for the Consortium, the
money at Meigs will be used in
two areas - a new technology
based agriculture .program put
into the curriculum earlier this
yeat by Tim Simpson, and com. purer upgrading to ,allow for
more definitive skill development irt the lab of Suzanne
Bentz.
In the agriculture program, it
will mean "lots of new equipment" , according to MoegHng.
In the computer labs, it ·will
mean upgrading and expansion
of equipment and programs to

are'

facilitate skill development. This
will include the Microsoft
. Office Software program which
will prepare studentS to become
specialist certified.' Another part ,
will be used to develop skills of
artistic .students wh.o plan to
.
employment in the. marketing, animation, t&gt;roadcasting,
and other ~rtistic type areas.
Also included will be the
upgrading of networking systerns and trouble-shooting
equipment in the electro'nics
department.
Earlier this year Meigs High
School received grants . of
$60,000 which went into
changing a conventional vocationa! agriculture program into
a more technology based one,
and expansion and upgrading of
the traditional computer labs.
The agriculture program was
enhanced through the construction of a hydroponic plantped
S}'5tcm and ~ new greenhouse
which are being used to pro:vlde
trainif!g in growing and marketing flowers, one of Meigs County's largest industries .
"These grants will help
Meigs County be right on the
cutting edge of these activities:·
commented Moegling, who
noted that several local teachers
· have already started · the additionaJ.training they will need to
incorporate the new technology
into the regular classroom prol'fuM IH MHS. ..... A2 .
·

'enter

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the view fram · .-a ~r~·arl.ey~

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BY

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BRIAN J.

Good Morning!

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REED

TIMES:SENTIN~ STAFF '.

IDDLEPORT -. "Get your motor run. ning ... head out on the 'higl:lway."

· It might not have been an image conjured by the lyric's of
1
Born to Be Wild," and it might have missed the. "give 'em
; hell" freedom of "Easy Rider:· but residents of Overbrook
1Center still got a charge out of hitti.ng the streets of Middleport on the back of some of the hottest bikes in the are.a.
'•! .. Amiable .members of the Meigs County Bikers Associa1tion, aJway's ready to do a ·good deed in the community, took
!advantage of :Friday's warmth and sunshine .to take 'the
1 f lderly residents of this· Middleport nursing home
ort ,
motorcycle rides..
.
The event was the. idea of an association member who ·
works at another area nursing borne, and who has organized
motorcycle rides·there. , ·
Associatioh members who volunteered their time and
their rides, seemed to enjoy the. outing as much as the residents of Overbrook, afld agreed that it was a perfect addition to the number o( service projects that they undertak~
tbrougho1-1t the yeaJ;,
·
· "This is totally for fun; ' biker Barb Doczi said. "I never
would l)ave dreamed that we would have this kind of interest."

' :'

Urllll16 spark plugs dt 59¢. regular price thereofter.
Not valid with any other offer. Offer expires July 31. 2!XXl.

t.,

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iOIN TO II WILD - Genevieve DeMoskey. was one of

sellers I Overbrook Canter residents who anjoyed ·a surlny
motorcyciB ride compliments ot the ·Meigs County Bikers
~llocistlon o'n Friday. $he Is pictured with Arnold Priddy,
ohe of several association msmpers who voluntasrsd their
tlt11e !!ll'ld their bikes for the event. (Brian J. Reeifphoto)

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mileoge. Which will certainly save you a lot more
money down the road.
Odds are, everything you need to tune up your car
is in stock at your nearest AutoZone. Where you'll -also
find friendly, knowledgeable: people who'll go the
extra rnile to help-you out. Because taking care of
people who take care of cats is what we're all about.

POMEROY ·
698 Main St. next. to Food Land.......... 992·6391

Pluse see Tomedo, Pip A2

•

"

The right part. The right price. And good advice.

ly off of its foundation, while a smaller
stru cture right next to it bad not qeen
damaged.
"Storms like this have strange personalities." he added. ·
According to the Federal Emergency
Management Agency, each year over one
thousand tornadoes touch down in the
United States, but deaths and injurie's
from tornadoes have dropped dramatically in the past 50 years due to an early
warning system.
·

area just . before 6 p.m., completely
destroying three barns on the farm ofJim
Rose.

·'' .

We've just made your next tune-up more affordable.
Because right now, Bosch Super spark plugs are only
59¢ each at your local AutoZone store. And with the
p,rice of gas these days, a deal this good couldn't
come at a better time.
After all, a proper tune-up, starting with a fresh set
'
of Bosch spark plugs, will do wonders for your gas

Vol. 35, No. 17

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

JUST 59• EACH AT'

Highs: 80s Lows: 60s
Details 011 hp AI

See81

See D1

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today
992-2156

WaMin'a NllloNII BuUIIHIII Auoclltion

Clovlllnd ........................ .a
WashingiOn .......................4

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL SPORTS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS~

Movie business:

_S.C1

L.aague.

Soturdoy'o GamM
Now England· at Now YOlk-Now Joraey, 2

p.m.

.Cabins show Bob
·Evans farm history

,
DETROIT TIGERS-Named Glenn El,oll
ma~ o1 Toledo of t11e l(ltomalionai ~"'·
NEW YORK YANKEE5-Piacod RJoll'
Aogot Ctilmano on the 1&amp;-day d - lie.
Aecaled RHP Dorrell Elnertoon from COlumbuS
olthelntOJRBtional League.
••
SEATTLE MARINEAs-Ptacod C Dan Wil·
son on lhe 15-day disabled liot. Rocalleo C Jj&gt;e
Oliver from Tacoma of the Pacific Coa•t

NOTE: ThiN points for a win and one point

for a tie.

·.- Commaity:

Anw1cen lMgUI'

-:

GF GA
25 18
17 20
19 21
22 31

SPORTS

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A loc!!l man cools off at
Hayden RIJ'n Waterfall In
Columbus . (AP photo)
.,

.C tlt!HIIn
Claplfl••

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CalniCI

hwtd
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C 2000 Ohio Volley Publishing Co.

Gallipolis City Reserve .Officer Ksith Wilson prepsres to
' shoot" a perpetrator during a fire arms trslnlng slmvlatlon held last week at the Gallla·County 911. bulldln&amp;.
ThB simulation offers shoot or no shoot scenar!ba for
law enforcement agents to practice reaction time, ]Ud&amp;·
ment and aim during a high pressure situation. (Mllllssia Russell photo)
·

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... if'_____ - - ...

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Sundey, ".lui.1a, 2Clao
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolla, Ohio • Point Plnnnt, WV

BY CATHERINE HAMM

MIDDLEPORT - The OH Kan Coin Club will hold its
monthly meeting June 26 at the Trolley House, Middleport. The ·
meeting will begin at 7 p.m., and there will be a free and paid raffle, as well as an auction. .
Following the auction refreshments will be served. The meeting
is free and open to the public. New memberships are being accepted. Membership fees are S10 per year for adults and SS per year for
children under 16.
For information write to OH Kan Coin Club, 100 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769-1000.

GAHS transcripts now available
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy High School graduates from
the class of 2000 may pick up final copies of their academic transcripts from Career Passports in the Gallia Academy Main Office
durin~ regular office hours.
-

Immunizations scheduled
:

GALLIPOLIS · - The GaUia County Health Department will
provide free immunizations at the following locations this week:
• Monday at Kroger Pharmacy from 6-7 p.m.
• Wednesday at GaUia Metropolitan Estates from 2-3 p.m.
• Thursday'in the Courthouse Lobby from 4-6 p.m. ,
C hildren in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a
parent or legal guardian and bring a current immunization record
with them.
• The Health Department will offer free oneoporosis screenings to
Gallia ~qunty residents June 19-21 from 8:30-3:10 p.m.; free blood
pressure screenings at GaUia County Senior Resource Center on
Monday from II a.m until noon; and TB rests for the Fourth ofJuly
activities on Tuesday from 4-6 p.m. in the Courthouse Lobby.

Neighborhood Road dosed Monday
GALLIPOLIS - . Gallia County Engineer Glenn Smith
announces Neighborhood Road (CR 2) will be closed between
LeGrande Blvd. and State Route 141 from 7:30a.m. until3:30 p.m.
Monday, weather permitting. The closing is nec~ssary to instaU pipe
,, in various locations.
·

Divorce, dissolution filed
POMEROY - An action for divorce has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Mel odie Dawn Bissell, Long Bottom, against D'Angelo Thomas, Pomeroy.
An action for dissolution of marriage has been flied by Ryan S.
Jeffers and Lessie M. Jeffers, both of Middleport.

Foreclosures granted
POMEROY .- Foreclosures have been granted in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to Bank One, N.A., against Cora Mae
Smith; LaSalle National Bank against Donald K. Coheen Jr., and
others; and United States of America jlgainst ferry T. St: Glair and
) .
others.
A default judgment has been granted in the court to 'Beneficial
Mortgage Co. of Ohio against Kay McDaniel and others.

from'*&amp;aA1
"These folks are really enjoying themselves:' said Sara Parlow,
another member of the auociation said. "They've been 111'innins from ear-to-ear."
Many of the relidenll didn't
exactly "hop" on the bikn. In
fact, some needed con~derablt
a•ei.rance maneuwrins the
tailpipes and hi&amp;h ~tall, but once

MHS

flomPapA1
grams in the fall.
The emphasis ofWashington
State Community College,
according to the Tech Prep
cqordinator, is to "collaborate
with area high schools to create
opportunities to prepare stu·dents for college and careers."
"These grants will make it
possible for area high school students to access the latest technology, said Judith Taylor, who
worked with Moegling to coauthor the grants.
Phil Case who is chair of the
local Tech Prep stee ring committee said that "last fall the

'

they were $itting sq~arely on the
back of the, Hadey of their
choice, they were plenty comfortable, and ready to hit the
road.
Rides were short, speeds were
slow and curves were taken very
carefUlly. but no matter.
"One of the i"YI was ready
to stay on the bike and pt out of
town:• an Owrbrook stafFer said.
"It wu Ibn - • lot of Ibn:' a
resident said. "In aU my Ufe, I
never rode a motorcycle
before)"
consortium set an informal
objective of doubUng and then
doubling again the number of
students being prepared · for
information technology-related
careers."
"Adding the 150 or so students that these grants will support goes a long way toward
achieving that objective," he
added.
Tech Prep is a nationally recognized program that partners
two-year coUeges with area high
schools to prepare young people
for the technical jobs of the
future.
Meigs High School has been
in the Washington County
Community College consortium for Several years.

6unbap-Gtf~
:•
•

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Reader Services
Cortectlon Polley

••ke

, o.lllpolle
TIM •olo ilu•ber lo 4&lt;Mi·:&amp;342'•.
.,.,._..n&amp;tad_

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Newo---;:;s;;.E.ii;i!aa. u'
piCI'Ibuoe@&lt;a--.o.
HUM O.partment

The

main

Pomeroy
number lo 991 · 2155 .

Dtparlmenf utention• are:
Gtemll M••II"•---··---..-·Ell. 1101
Ne•"·------·-- · -· "- Eli. llll

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REGISTER COMMUNI'T'!' EDITOR

POINT PLEASANT
There's a new rule in town for
teens who like to socialize be at the basketball or tennis
courts after 11 p.m.- and you
could be guilty .of trespassing.
Citing problems with trash;
broken glass and the recent
break in of the concession stand
at the Ordnance softball field,
Point Pleasant City Police have
put an 11 p.m. cutoff time for
use of the county-owned basketball and tennis courts.
"We feel It o'clock is a reasonable hour," said Police Chief
Dale Humphreys. "We want to
be fair with people in the
neighborhoods around the
courts who have complained

0. "'iiMk .......................- ................... ., ......... Sl .25
0.. Yw •. ,.................................................... S65.00

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IINOUCOI'Y raJCE

:.0 ::Z;·;·~·i=b;';it'i';m;;iet~·ia·;e;·!~2;!
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r.:J: tate
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dlt r 1 I; L
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c:h8ntinl the durttton ol
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13 Wccts................................................... ,_..S27.l0
26 Wukl-...................................................... ,3.81

52 Wteb...................................................... sJ05.J6

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JJ Wctb...•,_ .................- ..........................$29.2!1
~ W..b. .............- ..........- .... ,_.................. 156.61
!2Weeb. ....... _ ................. -.....................1109.1l

Citing problems IVith trasl1, ·
brokt'fl glass and tl1e recent break .ill of the C~JIIcession
st~nd at the Orduancr. sl?ftball field, Point Pleasant
City Police ha1'e put an 11 p.m. ciltoj}'timr.Jor use of
the county-Cilvued f1asketl1all atl'd ten11is ~ourts.
aged the teens to gather at the
courts, said Officer J.D. Sallez.
"For the most part, we've got
good kids," Sallez said." And, we
don't want them to think we're
against them. But, there 's
underage drinking and drug
problems that's going on, not to
mention problems with all the
trash ." ·
Police also mentioned the
recent break-in of the softball
concession stand where candy
and beverages were stolen.
Police are still investigating, but

about noise and all the trash.
"Every morning we have
trash that needs to be picked up
and broken glass all over the
tennis courts ."
The basketball and tennis
courts have become a popular
hangout for area teens. But city
police say the teens are making
too much of a mess, and the
evercpresent sight of alcohol
bottles and cans means problems with underage drinking.
The ironic part is that it was the
city police who first encour-

they have identified. several
juveniles and adults in connection with the break-in.
.' '
Police will post the new
hours and given verbal w;lrnings about the trespassing. Citations will only be issued if the
teens refuse to leave.
Enforcement of the trespassing ordinance is the !~test ·
development in the ongoing
discussion
of what local
teenagers should do after dark.
One teen expressed frusaration: "Once when we were run
off from the coum, I asked' the
cop point blank, 'Where do you
want us to go and w hat do
expect us to do?' He had no
answer for us. No ·one doe~_.::
'

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lbe party is over for many dot-coms
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) AltaVista chief executive Rod
Schrock steps into his office, his
face bearing the strain of the turmoil in the Internet industry.
After rapidly expanding last year
and pouring millions into advertising, AltaVista in the past few
months has laid off 50 of its 800
employees, reassigned 60 and
admitted defeat in an effort to
dethrone Yahoo! as the world's
leading Internet search engine.
A shakeout is taking place
among the dot-c!'ms· At many
companies, stratospheric, stock
prices are f:illing back to Earth, and
financing is drying up. Instead of
dispensing stock options, many are
handing out pink slips.
"Frankly, my view is the Inter7
net industry, the craze around the
Internet,
ultimately
caused
unhealthy behavior:' Schrock' says,
his eyes red-rimmed from a long
week of strategy reviews. ''That
behavior was: 'Focus on acquiring
' ali audience at aU costs, re~ess
~
lis~ of troubled busin~s

jo f costs!"

i

At AltaVista, Schrock chafes ·at
being lumped in with those companies. He says chief stakeholder
CMGI remains committed to seeing AltaVista through its makeover, ·
despite stock turmoil that forced
AltaVista to postpone indefinitely
its initial public offering.
The company is now positioning itself as a "Web-wide knowledge resource" that allows people ·
around the world to search for
comprehensive information on a
topic before going to a partner site
to buy or.get'specific information.
lt is also licensing iu search technology to other e-cpnunerce sites,
an arrangement that ac,couilts for
nearly IS percent oqts annual revenue.
"There are going. to be several
Internet companies that are going
to have to consolidate or dramati=== '

One Stop Shop

caDy reshape their expectations;'
Schrock says. "Venture capitalists
have closed the golden doors right
now, but we ',:e backed by a company that has $500 million in cash.
T hey're fully · prepared to help us
develop iri the long-term."

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A system that Rose questioned
while meeting with the surveyors
Friday.
Young explained that the tornado was a small storm that developed . behind ~ larger thunderstorm, and that it did not show up
as a strong signature on the radar.
The National Weather Service
has two classifications for the
warning sy5tem, a Tornado Watch
is issued When a tornado is possible, and a Tornado Warning is
issued when a tornado has actually. been spotted, or is strongly
indicated on radar.
"Both classifications should be
taken very seriously." Young
noted.

'

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Police make an est in stabbing
CLEVELAND (AP) -A woman was found stabbed to death in
home Friday, and a man who was ordered to stay away from her
arrested on suspicion of aggravated murder.
Neighbors told police they heard screams for help as Mary Davis,
was being stabbed. A man was seen driving away in her pickup
u:ruc".
The suspect, who had previously lived with Davis, was arrested
.Friodav night in Conneaut.The suspect's mother told The Plain Deal;ci, '""'' he confessed to her before his arrest.
The suspect was jailed recently for domestic violerice and crimidamaging, and he had made threatening te)ephone caDs to Davis,
Lt. Sharon MacKay, a police · spokeswoman. City prosecutors
::ChaJi:ed him on Wednesday with violating a protection order not to
iii"c;ontact Davis. He was otit of jail on bail.
" '
: !:&gt;avis/ a WliilY sei-vice ~de for Cuyahoga County, Had lived with
::.ll!~ sus~ect for 20 years, and they had a 12-year-old daughter, neigh~ .~ors sa1d.
.
·
.

COLUMBUS (AP) - School
districts must offer summer classes to more than 53,000 fourthgraders who didn't pass this year's
fourth-grade reading rest, the
Department of Education said
Friday.
Reading scores on the statemandated test dropped 2 percentage points; one year before a law
takes effect that would bar any
fourth-grader who failed the test
from advancing to fifth-grade.
That law affects students completing the fourth-grade year in
the 2001-2002 school year. If that
law were in effect today, 53,490
fourth-graders would face the
possibility of repeating the grade.
State. law requires districts to
offer those children summer
intervention classes.
Overall, fourth-grade scores
feU in all but the writing portion
of the test, according to results
released Friday. The other subjects
tested are reading, ll\3th, citizenship and science.
Thirty-one pe rcent passed the
five subject areas, dowp from 32
percent last year.
"It's clear we stilf'have work to

Falmom teachen Nach deal

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~.

Thro{lghout the month of

'

JUly

:l

,,lj

· ~ "I think we have a very good, meaningful living wage that has the
a~ility to move people out of poverty," said John Ryan, executive
~cretary of the Cleveland AFL-CIO Federation of Labor. Ryan

Buy 1 regular monthly

(Smgle, ,OJu.ple, or Family) ·

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'

,' \ ~

For More Details

,·

c~ (740) 446-5502
Stay in Sh~pe For the Summer! .
I

'

the programs we have in place to reading te st, for example, commake the rest of the headway," he pared to 33 percent last year.
said.
" I think it's a tool of accountTaft's OhioReads program abili ty," superintendent Elvin
gave out $40 million in classroom Jones said. "Schools should be
grants to 7 40 elementary sc hools expected to develop young minds
this year, $5 million to communi- to pass a test."
ty groups to encourage partnerAlthough the fourth-grade
ships between schools and private reading law could hold students
organizations and $5 million in back , the law also gives teachers
areas.
Gov. Bob Taft" obviously wish- summer reading grants to comand administrators the ability to
es the fourth-grade results had munity organizations.
pass students they feel are capable
More than 129,000 fourthshown more progress, especially
of moving ahead.
in reading;· Taft spokesman Scott graders to ok the proficiency test
But the Educatio n Departin March. More than 126,000
Milburn said Friday.
ment intends to use OhioReads,
Milburn said the results under- took the sixth-grade test.
Superintendepts invited by the the summer classes and ~ther proscore what Taft has said about the
importance of early education Education Department to answer g rams to increase the number of
initiatives in kindergarten, first- , reporters' qu estions about the students passing the test, rather
second- and third-grades. They results defended the tests, even than relying on teachers' discretion , Bob Bowers, the depart:)(so underscore the importance when scores fell.
ment's
associate superintendent
Only 26 percent of East Cleveof the summer programs, he said.
"We'll continue to push with land fourth-graders passed the for assessment, said Friday.
1"

e!ltimated the legislation would affect 4,000 families.
::_If approved by council, the law would require the city and some
~"mpanies doing business with the city to pay the so-called livable
.
'
y.age.
·;But it would exempt most companies in Cleveland and nearly all
i~Pnprofit organizations.
·
:;The city-mandated wage would increase to $8.70 per hour on
Qct. 1; 2001 and $9.20 per houron Oct. I, 2002. Starting in Octo~r 2003, the wage wauld be adjusted annuaUy for inflation.

1

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Reg#l2748

Me=~M.c.s

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4th.&amp; Sycamore Street
Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-5502

Pauf'DaviesJewefe.rs

·~·

•

''

tors .

do Susan Tave Zelman state
sc hool superintendent, said. "The
performance of our fourth
graders draws attention to the
need for extra help for students."
Results of the sixth-grade test
were better, with an overall
increase in the number of students who passed the five subjec t

#

Holzer Sycamore Clinic

'

Cleveland eyes living wage law

!~LEVELAND (AP) -A "living wage"law is expected to come
~ore the full city council on Monday, after a joint committee Fri~y reduced the proposed hourly minimum from the $10 sought by
~roponents to $8.20 starting Jan. I.

'. 'j

seemed to be keeping some customers away.
"People are driving on fumes, probably,
postponing," Winter said.
Cincinnati taxi drivers, who must pay for
their own gasoline, have seen their income go
from $180 for a typical weekend shift to about
$110, said Jack Taylor, operations manager at'
Skyline Taxi .
Jack Edmond told The Columbus Dispatch
that higher prices forced him to cancel an
annual trip to DoUywood in Tennessee.
"We ca n't afford it," said ' the Columbus
man, who now has to pay $40 to fill up his
minivan . ''I'm driving as little as possible."
Officials of the Dayton Area Chamber of
Commerce have begun carpooling when they
make trips to Columbus to meet with legisla-

Fourth-grade reading scores drop, summer classes needed

t:·

membership :md ·g et the nex_t month free!

Tomado

· ' ' WILLARD (AP) - 1\vo teen-age boys and a woman were
injured in a lightning strike Friday while participating in an American Cancer Society Relay for Life fund-raiser at Willard High
School.
two 14-yea!-old boys were taken by medical helicopter to
Vincent ¥etcy Medical Center in Toledo. They were in stable
&lt;l.:.ondlition.
57-year-old woman was treated and released at Mercy Hasin Willard, said Pam Napier, nursing supervisor.
,
'
, Willard is about 60 miles southeast ofToledo.
were numerous reports of downed trees and power lines,
especially in Richland, Ashland '!Jld Ashtabula counties. Flood warne
ings were issued for Knox, Ashland and Hohnes counties, but no
major flooding was reported, said Frank Kieltylca, a meteorologist at
National Weather Servi.c e in Cleveland.
were no reports of flooding in southern Ohio, according to
w,eather service office in Wilmington.
.. -or~._ weather service in Charleston, W.Va., said it was considering
flood watch for some .southeastern Ohio counties because of con: tin•ued rainfaU.
There were reports of downed trees in the Columbus area and in
Alexandria west of Dayton.

~

Holzer Healdi &amp; Fitness Center

,

three InJured In lightning strike

Representatives of the reachers union have
~ached a ,tentative agreement with the city school bOard on a new
..contract.
,,
,;;·• "We have come to a tentative agreement that is good for kids, for
~,; t~chers, and good for the communitY;' schools Superintendent
\".:;. S~e Clition said after the deal was reached late Friday. "The agreement allows us to maintain strong fiscal integrity in the district."
~ "We made major movement in aU areas;• said Susan Chitty, nego• ti&amp;tions chairwoman for the Fairborn Education Association in this
!;layton suburb.
&lt; Terms were not disclosed, and union members must vote to ratify
-be new agreement. A meeting date has not been set.
t;~'l think our members will be very happy;' Chitty said. "We came
~.an agreement on a number of issues besides just salary, like prepatation time for teachers, and some nurse and tutor issues:·
;:The agreement came after two sessions held with the Federal
~ediation and Conciliation Services.
;:More than 300 . teachers at the seven city schools staged a "walkiii:' May 31, signaling they were willing to strike.
:~The teachers' contract expires June 30 and they had voted overytheimingly in May to submit a 10-day notice of intent to strike
.en the team determined it necessary.

·

nois, Indiana, Michigan , Minnesota , Wisconsin, Nebraska, Kansas, and North and South
Dakota, according to the American Automobile Association. Between May 15 and June
15, the prices in those states has jumped 20 to
46 cents a gallon.
NancyThickel, 48, of the Dayton suburb of
Oakwood, said her 17-year-old daughter's
Ford Escort has become the vehicle of choice
for her family instead of their Jeep C herokee.
"It gets better gas milage;'Thickel said.
She said her daughter has begun carpooling with her friends when they go shopping.
"She notices it because she has to put gas
in her car," Thicket said. "Where it once cost
her $15, it's now costing her $25."
Bill Winter, an attendant ai a Sunoco station in Cleveland, said the higher pnces

(AP) Ohioans are canceling trips. joining
car pools and even parking their gas guzzlers
and using more fuel -efficient vehicles to cope
with soaring gasoline prices.
Some gas stations in Cleveland, Cincinnati
and Columbus were charging more than $2 a
gaUon for regular, unleaded gas Friday.
"These prices are just insane;· said Ohio
AM spokeswoman Susan Stewart.
The prices have affected the driving habits
of many motorists.
"I put my Blazer in the garage, and I'm driving my little sports car because it gets 30
miles to the gallon," said Judy Cruea, 48, of
the Dayton suburb of Huber Heights.
The surge in gas prices seems to be concentrated in the Midwest. The price for a gallon of regular costs at least $1.70 in Ohio,llli-

\,· ~- · FAIRBORN (AP)-

SumMer Spec~ial

-

Ohio motorists try to coiJe with high gas prices

'

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;:~:

Pool ·

-

.COLUMBUS (AP) -Three children died and their mother was
critically injured in a house fire Saturday morning. Police believe the
fire may have been deliberately set. ·
·
... "· Killed were Christine Grennell,-4, Christopher GrenneU, 2, and
- Cassey. Grennell, 11 months. Firefighters ~aid they died at the scene.
· · The children's mother Cynthia &lt;4mpbell, 37, suffered burns on
' :half of her body and was in critical condition at the Ohio State University Medical Center, hospital spoke.man Jonathan Stewart said
,Saturday.
.• _. Columbus Police spo~swoman Sherry Jones said firefighters
caUed homicide detectives to the scene.
&gt;'· )ones said the children's father Christopher Grennellleft the home
' shortly before the fire and was not injured.
-: · Police and firefighters would not comment on .the caus~ of the .fire
. •chat started just before 1 a.m. and gutted the wood-framed duplex.
" . · "We are treating this as a crime scene and arson investigators are
",: gathering information," Jones said.
·

Prof 'miiC'Aia l:lpe1U...

Gallipolis, Ohio

Spas With~==
.. . Hard Cover .,

three children die In house fire

the pasl are wo~?

216 Upper River Rd.,

100 West.Main Street
·Pomeroy, Ohio

Finan.cing Available

Dave Yeu.l ftr WolllleiWr
'Mial y:Jur old Bul&amp;lo Nickels-,: 1
Indian Head Pennies, Silver
Dollars &amp; other coins from '-

Ucense CL 75oo48-000 and 001

The
is
long: Value America, DrKoop. com,
KBKids.com, Quepasa.com, Pet"
'
place.com,
Petstore.com,
Afs(fTanning Beds
CarOrder.com, Salon.com, Turbolinux. Even Amazon.com '~~~"
,,,
viewed as one of the most stable
'11 ~
Web companies - · is cutting the
fat.
"The first phase of the Intert)et,
characterized by little more than ·
90 Day Same As~
exuberance and. an uncertailtty
about what the industry - soinf
to look U)ce, II comlna to an end,'
•YI John Challenpr, chief execudw of Chlcaao-lmtd job-placement company Challenpr, Gray &amp; :~ooo---,;;.;-.,;;...-~..11
Chriltmu.
·
"~ow we'~e movina into the
11cond. plwe of the dlaital revolu~
don whe~e we're going to sort out
the companies that don't produce.
There's no doubt you're going to
see a summer littered with dotcom 1ayoes:•
PlanetRx.com, Autoweb.com,
CDNow,
Buy.com.
Drilgstore.com, Egghead ~ co,m,
Fogdog.com, Garden.com, HomeGroc~r.com and Streamline.com
are among those that will run out
of money in the next 12 months
unless they get more funding,
Goldman, Sachs &amp; Co. analyst
Anthony Noto said last month.
Forrester Research went even
further in the gloom-and- doom
predictions category, saying the
majority of dot-corns will go out
of business by 2001.
Among the first were London
retailer ~.com, APBNews.com,
which focused on crime and the
justice system, and, just in the past
week, Reel.com.

flom Page AI .

Our mola concer11 Ia 1111 otor1a It to be
•can.te. tr you know of an error I• •
- , , eoll the neworoo• 11 (140) 446l34l or PoMeroy: (740) 992-2155. We wlb
diKk your lnfona~~tlon and
a
eotJJ:cU..Itw•ll'llaled.

,._Du;a-

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

Police set 11 p.m curfeW for teens at Courts

VALLEY BRIEFS
Coin dub sets meeting

Harley

.:~~~u_n_d_·~~~J~u~n~e~1~8~,~~~~----------------------~P~o:m:•:ro~~y-·~M:I:d:d:le~po::rt~·~G:a:l:ll~po:l:ls~,~O:h~l~o!P~o:ln~t~P:I:ea:•:a~n~t,~WV::______________________~&amp;:u:n:b:~~~~~m:r:s:-&amp;:r~n~ti:nr~l~·!P!a~g=e~A~3~

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ukqh 7(imat: :;;J;f/J -

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• Address:

• Appointments:

788 North 2nd Street
Middleport, OH 45760

Accepting New Patients

(740) 992-4226

)

• Office Hours:
Monday - Friday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

�•

.
.
Sundey, ".lui.1a, 2Clao
'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolla, Ohio • Point Plnnnt, WV

BY CATHERINE HAMM

MIDDLEPORT - The OH Kan Coin Club will hold its
monthly meeting June 26 at the Trolley House, Middleport. The ·
meeting will begin at 7 p.m., and there will be a free and paid raffle, as well as an auction. .
Following the auction refreshments will be served. The meeting
is free and open to the public. New memberships are being accepted. Membership fees are S10 per year for adults and SS per year for
children under 16.
For information write to OH Kan Coin Club, 100 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769-1000.

GAHS transcripts now available
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy High School graduates from
the class of 2000 may pick up final copies of their academic transcripts from Career Passports in the Gallia Academy Main Office
durin~ regular office hours.
-

Immunizations scheduled
:

GALLIPOLIS · - The GaUia County Health Department will
provide free immunizations at the following locations this week:
• Monday at Kroger Pharmacy from 6-7 p.m.
• Wednesday at GaUia Metropolitan Estates from 2-3 p.m.
• Thursday'in the Courthouse Lobby from 4-6 p.m. ,
C hildren in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a
parent or legal guardian and bring a current immunization record
with them.
• The Health Department will offer free oneoporosis screenings to
Gallia ~qunty residents June 19-21 from 8:30-3:10 p.m.; free blood
pressure screenings at GaUia County Senior Resource Center on
Monday from II a.m until noon; and TB rests for the Fourth ofJuly
activities on Tuesday from 4-6 p.m. in the Courthouse Lobby.

Neighborhood Road dosed Monday
GALLIPOLIS - . Gallia County Engineer Glenn Smith
announces Neighborhood Road (CR 2) will be closed between
LeGrande Blvd. and State Route 141 from 7:30a.m. until3:30 p.m.
Monday, weather permitting. The closing is nec~ssary to instaU pipe
,, in various locations.
·

Divorce, dissolution filed
POMEROY - An action for divorce has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by Mel odie Dawn Bissell, Long Bottom, against D'Angelo Thomas, Pomeroy.
An action for dissolution of marriage has been flied by Ryan S.
Jeffers and Lessie M. Jeffers, both of Middleport.

Foreclosures granted
POMEROY .- Foreclosures have been granted in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to Bank One, N.A., against Cora Mae
Smith; LaSalle National Bank against Donald K. Coheen Jr., and
others; and United States of America jlgainst ferry T. St: Glair and
) .
others.
A default judgment has been granted in the court to 'Beneficial
Mortgage Co. of Ohio against Kay McDaniel and others.

from'*&amp;aA1
"These folks are really enjoying themselves:' said Sara Parlow,
another member of the auociation said. "They've been 111'innins from ear-to-ear."
Many of the relidenll didn't
exactly "hop" on the bikn. In
fact, some needed con~derablt
a•ei.rance maneuwrins the
tailpipes and hi&amp;h ~tall, but once

MHS

flomPapA1
grams in the fall.
The emphasis ofWashington
State Community College,
according to the Tech Prep
cqordinator, is to "collaborate
with area high schools to create
opportunities to prepare stu·dents for college and careers."
"These grants will make it
possible for area high school students to access the latest technology, said Judith Taylor, who
worked with Moegling to coauthor the grants.
Phil Case who is chair of the
local Tech Prep stee ring committee said that "last fall the

'

they were $itting sq~arely on the
back of the, Hadey of their
choice, they were plenty comfortable, and ready to hit the
road.
Rides were short, speeds were
slow and curves were taken very
carefUlly. but no matter.
"One of the i"YI was ready
to stay on the bike and pt out of
town:• an Owrbrook stafFer said.
"It wu Ibn - • lot of Ibn:' a
resident said. "In aU my Ufe, I
never rode a motorcycle
before)"
consortium set an informal
objective of doubUng and then
doubling again the number of
students being prepared · for
information technology-related
careers."
"Adding the 150 or so students that these grants will support goes a long way toward
achieving that objective," he
added.
Tech Prep is a nationally recognized program that partners
two-year coUeges with area high
schools to prepare young people
for the technical jobs of the
future.
Meigs High School has been
in the Washington County
Community College consortium for Several years.

6unbap-Gtf~
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Reader Services
Cortectlon Polley

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, o.lllpolle
TIM •olo ilu•ber lo 4&lt;Mi·:&amp;342'•.
.,.,._..n&amp;tad_

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The

main

Pomeroy
number lo 991 · 2155 .

Dtparlmenf utention• are:
Gtemll M••II"•---··---..-·Ell. 1101
Ne•"·------·-- · -· "- Eli. llll

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•

REGISTER COMMUNI'T'!' EDITOR

POINT PLEASANT
There's a new rule in town for
teens who like to socialize be at the basketball or tennis
courts after 11 p.m.- and you
could be guilty .of trespassing.
Citing problems with trash;
broken glass and the recent
break in of the concession stand
at the Ordnance softball field,
Point Pleasant City Police have
put an 11 p.m. cutoff time for
use of the county-owned basketball and tennis courts.
"We feel It o'clock is a reasonable hour," said Police Chief
Dale Humphreys. "We want to
be fair with people in the
neighborhoods around the
courts who have complained

0. "'iiMk .......................- ................... ., ......... Sl .25
0.. Yw •. ,.................................................... S65.00

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26 Wukl-...................................................... ,3.81

52 Wteb...................................................... sJ05.J6

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!2Weeb. ....... _ ................. -.....................1109.1l

Citing problems IVith trasl1, ·
brokt'fl glass and tl1e recent break .ill of the C~JIIcession
st~nd at the Orduancr. sl?ftball field, Point Pleasant
City Police ha1'e put an 11 p.m. ciltoj}'timr.Jor use of
the county-Cilvued f1asketl1all atl'd ten11is ~ourts.
aged the teens to gather at the
courts, said Officer J.D. Sallez.
"For the most part, we've got
good kids," Sallez said." And, we
don't want them to think we're
against them. But, there 's
underage drinking and drug
problems that's going on, not to
mention problems with all the
trash ." ·
Police also mentioned the
recent break-in of the softball
concession stand where candy
and beverages were stolen.
Police are still investigating, but

about noise and all the trash.
"Every morning we have
trash that needs to be picked up
and broken glass all over the
tennis courts ."
The basketball and tennis
courts have become a popular
hangout for area teens. But city
police say the teens are making
too much of a mess, and the
evercpresent sight of alcohol
bottles and cans means problems with underage drinking.
The ironic part is that it was the
city police who first encour-

they have identified. several
juveniles and adults in connection with the break-in.
.' '
Police will post the new
hours and given verbal w;lrnings about the trespassing. Citations will only be issued if the
teens refuse to leave.
Enforcement of the trespassing ordinance is the !~test ·
development in the ongoing
discussion
of what local
teenagers should do after dark.
One teen expressed frusaration: "Once when we were run
off from the coum, I asked' the
cop point blank, 'Where do you
want us to go and w hat do
expect us to do?' He had no
answer for us. No ·one doe~_.::
'

' ''
.,
''.

lbe party is over for many dot-coms
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) AltaVista chief executive Rod
Schrock steps into his office, his
face bearing the strain of the turmoil in the Internet industry.
After rapidly expanding last year
and pouring millions into advertising, AltaVista in the past few
months has laid off 50 of its 800
employees, reassigned 60 and
admitted defeat in an effort to
dethrone Yahoo! as the world's
leading Internet search engine.
A shakeout is taking place
among the dot-c!'ms· At many
companies, stratospheric, stock
prices are f:illing back to Earth, and
financing is drying up. Instead of
dispensing stock options, many are
handing out pink slips.
"Frankly, my view is the Inter7
net industry, the craze around the
Internet,
ultimately
caused
unhealthy behavior:' Schrock' says,
his eyes red-rimmed from a long
week of strategy reviews. ''That
behavior was: 'Focus on acquiring
' ali audience at aU costs, re~ess
~
lis~ of troubled busin~s

jo f costs!"

i

At AltaVista, Schrock chafes ·at
being lumped in with those companies. He says chief stakeholder
CMGI remains committed to seeing AltaVista through its makeover, ·
despite stock turmoil that forced
AltaVista to postpone indefinitely
its initial public offering.
The company is now positioning itself as a "Web-wide knowledge resource" that allows people ·
around the world to search for
comprehensive information on a
topic before going to a partner site
to buy or.get'specific information.
lt is also licensing iu search technology to other e-cpnunerce sites,
an arrangement that ac,couilts for
nearly IS percent oqts annual revenue.
"There are going. to be several
Internet companies that are going
to have to consolidate or dramati=== '

One Stop Shop

caDy reshape their expectations;'
Schrock says. "Venture capitalists
have closed the golden doors right
now, but we ',:e backed by a company that has $500 million in cash.
T hey're fully · prepared to help us
develop iri the long-term."

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'·

A system that Rose questioned
while meeting with the surveyors
Friday.
Young explained that the tornado was a small storm that developed . behind ~ larger thunderstorm, and that it did not show up
as a strong signature on the radar.
The National Weather Service
has two classifications for the
warning sy5tem, a Tornado Watch
is issued When a tornado is possible, and a Tornado Warning is
issued when a tornado has actually. been spotted, or is strongly
indicated on radar.
"Both classifications should be
taken very seriously." Young
noted.

'

.

Police make an est in stabbing
CLEVELAND (AP) -A woman was found stabbed to death in
home Friday, and a man who was ordered to stay away from her
arrested on suspicion of aggravated murder.
Neighbors told police they heard screams for help as Mary Davis,
was being stabbed. A man was seen driving away in her pickup
u:ruc".
The suspect, who had previously lived with Davis, was arrested
.Friodav night in Conneaut.The suspect's mother told The Plain Deal;ci, '""'' he confessed to her before his arrest.
The suspect was jailed recently for domestic violerice and crimidamaging, and he had made threatening te)ephone caDs to Davis,
Lt. Sharon MacKay, a police · spokeswoman. City prosecutors
::ChaJi:ed him on Wednesday with violating a protection order not to
iii"c;ontact Davis. He was otit of jail on bail.
" '
: !:&gt;avis/ a WliilY sei-vice ~de for Cuyahoga County, Had lived with
::.ll!~ sus~ect for 20 years, and they had a 12-year-old daughter, neigh~ .~ors sa1d.
.
·
.

COLUMBUS (AP) - School
districts must offer summer classes to more than 53,000 fourthgraders who didn't pass this year's
fourth-grade reading rest, the
Department of Education said
Friday.
Reading scores on the statemandated test dropped 2 percentage points; one year before a law
takes effect that would bar any
fourth-grader who failed the test
from advancing to fifth-grade.
That law affects students completing the fourth-grade year in
the 2001-2002 school year. If that
law were in effect today, 53,490
fourth-graders would face the
possibility of repeating the grade.
State. law requires districts to
offer those children summer
intervention classes.
Overall, fourth-grade scores
feU in all but the writing portion
of the test, according to results
released Friday. The other subjects
tested are reading, ll\3th, citizenship and science.
Thirty-one pe rcent passed the
five subject areas, dowp from 32
percent last year.
"It's clear we stilf'have work to

Falmom teachen Nach deal

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Thro{lghout the month of

'

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· ~ "I think we have a very good, meaningful living wage that has the
a~ility to move people out of poverty," said John Ryan, executive
~cretary of the Cleveland AFL-CIO Federation of Labor. Ryan

Buy 1 regular monthly

(Smgle, ,OJu.ple, or Family) ·

.

'

,' \ ~

For More Details

,·

c~ (740) 446-5502
Stay in Sh~pe For the Summer! .
I

'

the programs we have in place to reading te st, for example, commake the rest of the headway," he pared to 33 percent last year.
said.
" I think it's a tool of accountTaft's OhioReads program abili ty," superintendent Elvin
gave out $40 million in classroom Jones said. "Schools should be
grants to 7 40 elementary sc hools expected to develop young minds
this year, $5 million to communi- to pass a test."
ty groups to encourage partnerAlthough the fourth-grade
ships between schools and private reading law could hold students
organizations and $5 million in back , the law also gives teachers
areas.
Gov. Bob Taft" obviously wish- summer reading grants to comand administrators the ability to
es the fourth-grade results had munity organizations.
pass students they feel are capable
More than 129,000 fourthshown more progress, especially
of moving ahead.
in reading;· Taft spokesman Scott graders to ok the proficiency test
But the Educatio n Departin March. More than 126,000
Milburn said Friday.
ment intends to use OhioReads,
Milburn said the results under- took the sixth-grade test.
Superintendepts invited by the the summer classes and ~ther proscore what Taft has said about the
importance of early education Education Department to answer g rams to increase the number of
initiatives in kindergarten, first- , reporters' qu estions about the students passing the test, rather
second- and third-grades. They results defended the tests, even than relying on teachers' discretion , Bob Bowers, the depart:)(so underscore the importance when scores fell.
ment's
associate superintendent
Only 26 percent of East Cleveof the summer programs, he said.
"We'll continue to push with land fourth-graders passed the for assessment, said Friday.
1"

e!ltimated the legislation would affect 4,000 families.
::_If approved by council, the law would require the city and some
~"mpanies doing business with the city to pay the so-called livable
.
'
y.age.
·;But it would exempt most companies in Cleveland and nearly all
i~Pnprofit organizations.
·
:;The city-mandated wage would increase to $8.70 per hour on
Qct. 1; 2001 and $9.20 per houron Oct. I, 2002. Starting in Octo~r 2003, the wage wauld be adjusted annuaUy for inflation.

1

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..---

Reg#l2748

Me=~M.c.s

.. ----------------------------------------------------------------------~-----------------------------------------------------------------.

=··r
,.
~

4th.&amp; Sycamore Street
Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-5502

Pauf'DaviesJewefe.rs

·~·

•

''

tors .

do Susan Tave Zelman state
sc hool superintendent, said. "The
performance of our fourth
graders draws attention to the
need for extra help for students."
Results of the sixth-grade test
were better, with an overall
increase in the number of students who passed the five subjec t

#

Holzer Sycamore Clinic

'

Cleveland eyes living wage law

!~LEVELAND (AP) -A "living wage"law is expected to come
~ore the full city council on Monday, after a joint committee Fri~y reduced the proposed hourly minimum from the $10 sought by
~roponents to $8.20 starting Jan. I.

'. 'j

seemed to be keeping some customers away.
"People are driving on fumes, probably,
postponing," Winter said.
Cincinnati taxi drivers, who must pay for
their own gasoline, have seen their income go
from $180 for a typical weekend shift to about
$110, said Jack Taylor, operations manager at'
Skyline Taxi .
Jack Edmond told The Columbus Dispatch
that higher prices forced him to cancel an
annual trip to DoUywood in Tennessee.
"We ca n't afford it," said ' the Columbus
man, who now has to pay $40 to fill up his
minivan . ''I'm driving as little as possible."
Officials of the Dayton Area Chamber of
Commerce have begun carpooling when they
make trips to Columbus to meet with legisla-

Fourth-grade reading scores drop, summer classes needed

t:·

membership :md ·g et the nex_t month free!

Tomado

· ' ' WILLARD (AP) - 1\vo teen-age boys and a woman were
injured in a lightning strike Friday while participating in an American Cancer Society Relay for Life fund-raiser at Willard High
School.
two 14-yea!-old boys were taken by medical helicopter to
Vincent ¥etcy Medical Center in Toledo. They were in stable
&lt;l.:.ondlition.
57-year-old woman was treated and released at Mercy Hasin Willard, said Pam Napier, nursing supervisor.
,
'
, Willard is about 60 miles southeast ofToledo.
were numerous reports of downed trees and power lines,
especially in Richland, Ashland '!Jld Ashtabula counties. Flood warne
ings were issued for Knox, Ashland and Hohnes counties, but no
major flooding was reported, said Frank Kieltylca, a meteorologist at
National Weather Servi.c e in Cleveland.
were no reports of flooding in southern Ohio, according to
w,eather service office in Wilmington.
.. -or~._ weather service in Charleston, W.Va., said it was considering
flood watch for some .southeastern Ohio counties because of con: tin•ued rainfaU.
There were reports of downed trees in the Columbus area and in
Alexandria west of Dayton.

~

Holzer Healdi &amp; Fitness Center

,

three InJured In lightning strike

Representatives of the reachers union have
~ached a ,tentative agreement with the city school bOard on a new
..contract.
,,
,;;·• "We have come to a tentative agreement that is good for kids, for
~,; t~chers, and good for the communitY;' schools Superintendent
\".:;. S~e Clition said after the deal was reached late Friday. "The agreement allows us to maintain strong fiscal integrity in the district."
~ "We made major movement in aU areas;• said Susan Chitty, nego• ti&amp;tions chairwoman for the Fairborn Education Association in this
!;layton suburb.
&lt; Terms were not disclosed, and union members must vote to ratify
-be new agreement. A meeting date has not been set.
t;~'l think our members will be very happy;' Chitty said. "We came
~.an agreement on a number of issues besides just salary, like prepatation time for teachers, and some nurse and tutor issues:·
;:The agreement came after two sessions held with the Federal
~ediation and Conciliation Services.
;:More than 300 . teachers at the seven city schools staged a "walkiii:' May 31, signaling they were willing to strike.
:~The teachers' contract expires June 30 and they had voted overytheimingly in May to submit a 10-day notice of intent to strike
.en the team determined it necessary.

·

nois, Indiana, Michigan , Minnesota , Wisconsin, Nebraska, Kansas, and North and South
Dakota, according to the American Automobile Association. Between May 15 and June
15, the prices in those states has jumped 20 to
46 cents a gallon.
NancyThickel, 48, of the Dayton suburb of
Oakwood, said her 17-year-old daughter's
Ford Escort has become the vehicle of choice
for her family instead of their Jeep C herokee.
"It gets better gas milage;'Thickel said.
She said her daughter has begun carpooling with her friends when they go shopping.
"She notices it because she has to put gas
in her car," Thicket said. "Where it once cost
her $15, it's now costing her $25."
Bill Winter, an attendant ai a Sunoco station in Cleveland, said the higher pnces

(AP) Ohioans are canceling trips. joining
car pools and even parking their gas guzzlers
and using more fuel -efficient vehicles to cope
with soaring gasoline prices.
Some gas stations in Cleveland, Cincinnati
and Columbus were charging more than $2 a
gaUon for regular, unleaded gas Friday.
"These prices are just insane;· said Ohio
AM spokeswoman Susan Stewart.
The prices have affected the driving habits
of many motorists.
"I put my Blazer in the garage, and I'm driving my little sports car because it gets 30
miles to the gallon," said Judy Cruea, 48, of
the Dayton suburb of Huber Heights.
The surge in gas prices seems to be concentrated in the Midwest. The price for a gallon of regular costs at least $1.70 in Ohio,llli-

\,· ~- · FAIRBORN (AP)-

SumMer Spec~ial

-

Ohio motorists try to coiJe with high gas prices

'

f l~ •

;:~:

Pool ·

-

.COLUMBUS (AP) -Three children died and their mother was
critically injured in a house fire Saturday morning. Police believe the
fire may have been deliberately set. ·
·
... "· Killed were Christine Grennell,-4, Christopher GrenneU, 2, and
- Cassey. Grennell, 11 months. Firefighters ~aid they died at the scene.
· · The children's mother Cynthia &lt;4mpbell, 37, suffered burns on
' :half of her body and was in critical condition at the Ohio State University Medical Center, hospital spoke.man Jonathan Stewart said
,Saturday.
.• _. Columbus Police spo~swoman Sherry Jones said firefighters
caUed homicide detectives to the scene.
&gt;'· )ones said the children's father Christopher Grennellleft the home
' shortly before the fire and was not injured.
-: · Police and firefighters would not comment on .the caus~ of the .fire
. •chat started just before 1 a.m. and gutted the wood-framed duplex.
" . · "We are treating this as a crime scene and arson investigators are
",: gathering information," Jones said.
·

Prof 'miiC'Aia l:lpe1U...

Gallipolis, Ohio

Spas With~==
.. . Hard Cover .,

three children die In house fire

the pasl are wo~?

216 Upper River Rd.,

100 West.Main Street
·Pomeroy, Ohio

Finan.cing Available

Dave Yeu.l ftr WolllleiWr
'Mial y:Jur old Bul&amp;lo Nickels-,: 1
Indian Head Pennies, Silver
Dollars &amp; other coins from '-

Ucense CL 75oo48-000 and 001

The
is
long: Value America, DrKoop. com,
KBKids.com, Quepasa.com, Pet"
'
place.com,
Petstore.com,
Afs(fTanning Beds
CarOrder.com, Salon.com, Turbolinux. Even Amazon.com '~~~"
,,,
viewed as one of the most stable
'11 ~
Web companies - · is cutting the
fat.
"The first phase of the Intert)et,
characterized by little more than ·
90 Day Same As~
exuberance and. an uncertailtty
about what the industry - soinf
to look U)ce, II comlna to an end,'
•YI John Challenpr, chief execudw of Chlcaao-lmtd job-placement company Challenpr, Gray &amp; :~ooo---,;;.;-.,;;...-~..11
Chriltmu.
·
"~ow we'~e movina into the
11cond. plwe of the dlaital revolu~
don whe~e we're going to sort out
the companies that don't produce.
There's no doubt you're going to
see a summer littered with dotcom 1ayoes:•
PlanetRx.com, Autoweb.com,
CDNow,
Buy.com.
Drilgstore.com, Egghead ~ co,m,
Fogdog.com, Garden.com, HomeGroc~r.com and Streamline.com
are among those that will run out
of money in the next 12 months
unless they get more funding,
Goldman, Sachs &amp; Co. analyst
Anthony Noto said last month.
Forrester Research went even
further in the gloom-and- doom
predictions category, saying the
majority of dot-corns will go out
of business by 2001.
Among the first were London
retailer ~.com, APBNews.com,
which focused on crime and the
justice system, and, just in the past
week, Reel.com.

flom Page AI .

Our mola concer11 Ia 1111 otor1a It to be
•can.te. tr you know of an error I• •
- , , eoll the neworoo• 11 (140) 446l34l or PoMeroy: (740) 992-2155. We wlb
diKk your lnfona~~tlon and
a
eotJJ:cU..Itw•ll'llaled.

,._Du;a-

BUCKEYE BRIEFS

Police set 11 p.m curfeW for teens at Courts

VALLEY BRIEFS
Coin dub sets meeting

Harley

.:~~~u_n_d_·~~~J~u~n~e~1~8~,~~~~----------------------~P~o:m:•:ro~~y-·~M:I:d:d:le~po::rt~·~G:a:l:ll~po:l:ls~,~O:h~l~o!P~o:ln~t~P:I:ea:•:a~n~t,~WV::______________________~&amp;:u:n:b:~~~~~m:r:s:-&amp;:r~n~ti:nr~l~·!P!a~g=e~A~3~

f

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--

-•• .

---.

-....

T e

-

I

•

• •

eport C me

ukqh 7(imat: :;;J;f/J -

'

I

• Address:

• Appointments:

788 North 2nd Street
Middleport, OH 45760

Accepting New Patients

(740) 992-4226

)

• Office Hours:
Monday - Friday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

�••

PageA4
Sund.,,June11,2000

111 Court St., p.,_.,y, Ohio
7 -·215e • Fu: 11112·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles w. Govey
Publisher
Larry Boyar
Advertl•lng Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

n.,

Utt•n to lAc .tHJtw •n wclcdlllc.
dao~~:ld 1M lfts tlula JIJ() '11/ttrtb. AU Mturr fin I Mbjtct
to •dili~tl ertd mud"' tlfntd ud i11dlld1 Mi4rlll IUUI klcplwttc 1111mb1T. No IUUiflltd ldtcn wit/
&amp;t JHIIilillrN. Utters t llolil4 li• 111 pod Mile, IUltlrtluillf 11111611 not ptrsoNJIUMt.
Tit• opbtNnu upnuN ill 11-. tolwrut btlow en th• C:OIIJfiiSUtiJ/ til• Ollie VallcJ l'ubliJhing
Co.'s Hllon.l Hoanl. 1udtu ollltrwist notrd.

OHIO VIEWS

....... ...

in'

··~··

··. ·dt~:

··•····· .,\e:•··
. .

Ohio changes how it
releases vital iriformation
• The Times-Reporter of Dover/New Philadelphia, June 5:
The idea th at anyone, for a price, could tap into the Ohio Bureau
of Motor Vehicles drivers' license data banks for personal information
was unsettling to many citizens.
;Most of those requesting such data were bulk mail distributors for
surveys, marketing or solicitations. Although
any driver could fill out a form to prevent
release of such information, termed the
"opt-out policy, this still was an inconveruence.
As of June 1, however, "opt-out" has
•
become "opt-in." Under House Bi11600 and
the Federal Driver's Policy Protection Act,
the OBMV will no longer relea&lt;e personal
tnformation such as person's name, date of birth and address. With the
new law, suc h information will only be released if the individual completes a form giving express consent for disclosure.
But the use of OBMV data as fodder for the mass mailers and telemarketers is no longer an option - unless they actually want to be a
re~ ipient. If that's the case, just fill out the form.
,. The (Toledo) Blade, May 31:
:Bill Clinton has confounded his critics before, but he caused tnore
than a few heads to spin after winning a remarkable legislative victorY on the China trade bill.
·
·
Not only did he win the House vote approving permanent normal
tr:ide relations with China by a wider margin than expected, but he
dill so with the help of the same people who impeached him last year.
't wasn't his own party that gave him what no doubt will be the
h&gt;jl.lrnark of his foreign policy legacy. He convinced even fewer
D):mocrats that open trade with China was a good idea than he did
on an earlier trade pact with Canada and Mexico. It was the Clintonh~ting Republicans, voting overwpelmingly for the C hina deal, who
handed the president his trade triumph.
Mr. Clinton will be long gone fi:om the White House before any
determination can be made on the prudence of his gamble with
China. But he prevailed in selling his post-cold-war thf'&lt;}ry that open
m;.rkets can lead to more open political societies because he could
show that a 20-year anti-Conununist policy of punitive trading measures produced few sweeping reforms in China.
• The Akron Beacon Journal, June 1:
The government of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak was pleased
to announce la&lt;t week that it .has fulfilled a major campaign promise:
It has withdrawn Israeli troops fi:om southern Lebanon. The government was just as pleased to note the troops had been evacuated without casualties.
The evacuation may have been free of bloodshed, but Israel and
~banon have paid dearly the past two decades in the millions of dollars in damage and the thousands killed and injured in continuous
conflict.
With Israel out of Lebanon, the focal point of this volatile period
becomes · the sincerity of Syrian President Hafez Assad in pursuing
peace with ISrael and stability in the region. ;

A look .at
what Ohio
newspapers
are saytng

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, June 18, the 170th day of 2000. T here are 196
days ·left in the year. This is Father's Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 18, 1940, during World War II, British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill urged his countrymen to behave in a manner
that would prompt future geqerations to say, "This was their finest

hour."
On this date:
In 1778, American forces entered Philadelphia as the British
withdrew during the Revolutionary War.
/
In 1812, the United States declared war on Britain. f
In 1815, British and Prussian troops defeated the Ftench under
Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo in Belgium.
In 1873, suffragist Susan B. Anthony was fined $100 for attempting to vote in the 1872 presidential election. (The fine was never
paid.)
In 1928, aviator Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly
across the Atlantic Ocean, completing a flight from Newfoundland
to Wales in about 21 hours.
In 1945, William Joyce, known as "Lord Haw- Haw," was charged
in London with high treason for his English-language wartime
broadcasts on German radio. (He was hanged the following January.)
In 1948, the U. N. CornrnisJion on Human Rights adopted its
International Declaration of Human Rights.
In 1979, President Carter and Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev signed the SALT II strategic arms limitation tr"aty in.Vienna.
In 1983, astronaut Sally K. Ride became America's first woman in
space, blasting off with four colleagues aboard the space shuttle
"Challenger."
·
ln 1984, Alan Berg, a Denver radio talk show host, was shot to
death outside his home. (Two white supn:rnacists were later convicted of civil rights vio.latiom in th e slaying.)

'

.MOUNTAIN BRIEFS

election year coincide with W.Va. Day·
CHARLESTON (AP) Politics has marked West Virginia Day si nce D ay One on
June 20, 1863.
This year an election
year - is no different.
West 'Virginia Day, which
w ill be officially celebrated
Tuesday with events beginning Saturday, is rh e high
point of a year; ]ong series of
events that are part of West
Virginia Celebration 2000 .
Candidates
for
public
offi ce, in cluding Gov. Cecil
Upderwood, Jim Humphreys;
th e Democratic candidate for
the 2nd Congressional District, and Republican rival
Shelley Moore Capito will use
the weekend's events to campaign.
"We're going to hit every
event we can," said Kevin
Geary, campaign manager for
Humphreys, who plans to
campaign in Putnam and
Mason counties.
Celebration 2000, proposed
by Underwood, marks the
start of the millennium in "a
nonpartisan, bipartisan effort,"
said Tom Heywood, co-chairman of the celebratory planning. "The year 2000 falls in

PSC ruling could open calling

..

•••

OUR READERS' VIEWS

CHARLESTON, (AP) - Residents of Gilmer and Calhoun
counties could enjoy expanded local phone service without
encountering long-distanc~ ~s under a plan approved by the
state Public Service Commission.
The PSC ruling released Friday authorizes Bell Atlantic-West Virginia to seek federal regulatory approval of a modification of a local
access boundary dividing the counties.
The boundary was established after the BeU System breakup. Bell
Atlantic normally is prohibited from carrying telecommunications
traffic across such boundaries.
In 1988, the PSC implemented a policy which expanded the calling areas of every local exchange in West Virginia to encompass
exchanges whose rate centers fall within a 22-ruile radius.
However, residents of Gilmer ·and Calhoun counti es do not have
.!he full benefits of the policy because of the local access boundary
'between the counties.

~

"I
I"
"

WVU wins truck-of-future contest

There are many veteran organizati ons to join
belonged to them and not CSX.
In a February 1999 trial in the Gallia Coun- . and every veteran should be a member of the
ty Common Pleas Court, the jury unani- organization he or she may be eligible for.
Dear Editor:
John K. Russell
Here we are in the fourth consecutive mously found that the right-of-way belonged
WW II Life Member DAV
weekend for holiday per gallon price increas- to the landowners bringing the lawsuit and
Bidwell ·. ·.
not
the
OOMPD.
es. This weekend's price raise doesn't make
The park district's atto,rneys then filed a
much sense; except it's the first weekend that
1
motion
in court of appeals, challenging the
student (normal grades, trade schools and col.,_,
leges) activity has not been constrained due to common pleas court's judgment. T he appeal's
Dear Editor:
the desire to go some place, any place away court upheld the judgment of the lower
court.
Gas prices? High? Do I like paying high '
from your home.
Attorneys for the park district then filed a prices? No - but neither do I li ke paying · '
Gas refineries and dealerships survey this
desire as a time to pad less profitable mid- motion in court of appeals "to certify· the high prices for a ho tel or motel or parking a
...
week per gallon costs. The federal govern- record in this case to the Ohio Supreme motor home.
Court
for
review
and
final
detern1ination."
Neither do !like paying S50 for a dress that '
ment desires not to see the pr_?!Jlem; they bid
on fuel costs with refineries/j obbers. The fed- This motion was ilenied by court of appeals should cost $25. Isn't it funny that we compl~in about gas prices, and yet some will drink 1
eral/ state/ county governmerqal agencies pay on March 20, 2000.
On
March
14,
2000,
attorneys
for
the
park
their beer, their wine and such, which I : '
below what the average person must pay.
district
filed
a
request
to
the
O
hio
Supreme
understand is not cheap, instead of drinking a ·
This look-the-other-way approach to price
fixing is allowed as one or two local stations Court that OSC "grant jurisdiction and agree nice cool glass of water, lemonade or a can of
(out of the dozens in the community) main- to hear this case."
pop.
,
1.
On May 3 1, 2000, the OSC declined
tain a "normal" cost margin factor; ·thus
Ah, yes, some of will go on vacation and
'spend crazy money for stupid things but com"
appearing to be the good guy. However, all · hear the case.
What's next? While many Gallia countians plain about paying the price to get there, and
major gas stations gave portrayed both "good"
live and drive on dusty roads, the park district, · most likely driving a .vehicle t hat costs a few
and "bad" guy attributes over the years.
Within the past month, gasoline. prices have in my opinion, has squandered thousands of - or a lot of- thousand dollars.Then there '
jumped from 1.399 in early May to 1.869 this dollars of your money in a worthless quitclaim are all those who would not think of not ' ·
weekend, fluctuating as much as 16.81 per- deed and legal maneuvering which seems to including cigan:ttes or some kind of tobacco , '
cent from week to weekend. Once the week- have lost its way.
o.n their grocery list.
Evelyn Mqrrdw
end (since when does ·a weekend constitute
How much does this junkie stuff like beer, .
Gallipolis
Thursday night to Sunday afternoon?) is over,
wine and tobacco cost? We. know this stuff is .
n
ood for our well-being or the well-being · ·
· prices creep ·downward to raise sharply the
following Thursday.
of o hers.
I used to get a big ice cream cone for five
This comment is not to take issue with anyDear Editor:
cents. Now I pay a dollar for the same size. I
body making a profit - only th ose profifs
There are so many laws to keep people from used to walk to school, but now our children
that ·seem to gouge the American public.
Countless publications have shown correla- killing de.er. Landowners should be able to kill got to drive a car.
tion betWeen car makers and fuel refineries them anytime.
Yes, and used to, people went to church on
We have (had) a nice garden started. Sunday, but now go everywhere else, even
who perpetrate low miles per gallon brought
about by new vehicles. SUVs, pickups, vans, Overnight, they ate most of the peas and all sporting a big boat on the waters.
mid to large passenger cars are souped up the tops off the potatoes. We try everything to
Oh, well, I'm glad to just. be able to write
wiih big engines sporting greattorq';l; or high keep thein away. Wh en· will there be a law to this letter and say, "God help us all."
horsepower culminating in low miles per gal- let us collect the damage they do?
Dorothy Whittington
It is hard enough for seniors citizens to
lon.
Gallipolis
I guess the buyer knows this but rationalizes work and get a garden to help with expenses.
prices will remain at a normal state. This we We think these laws are unfair.
Marie and Charles Bush
know is untrue; refineries will charge what
Racine
ihe driving public will bear.
Dear Editor:
I started thinking what if other businesses
S umrnerti~e is·. here again and parents,
·cfuucge for services th e way refineries and gas
· grandparents and friends grab their lawn
stations charge for gas. Some places have peak
chairs and make their way to the local baseball
sales at various times throughout the week or
Dear Editor:
fields.
even during the year; what if they jacked up
I read the article in the June 11 Times-SenIt's the til£le of year when youngsters, boys
the prices just when items might be sought tinel and must question the article and state- and girls alike, don the uniforms to play in the
after or needed the most?
ment by Mr. Roush. In this article Roush game.
.
Luckily for consumers, most business ven- states "A lot of veterans think they can't get to
The time when their hearts are broken,
tures desire to save the buying p'ublic money join the DAV because they're not disabled. spirits ·are crushed and their self-esteem vanby reducing prices or having sales on their But if you served and received an honorable ishes when, after being left out of the game,
primary products. Gas companies, on the discharge, you can join."
they try hard to hide their disappointment.
other hand, redu ce prices on associative prodI have been a member of the DAV since
It's that time when coaches are less conucts (soda , candy) but elevate their primary 1945.
cerned about teaching sportsmanship, team
·
stock fuel.
This was not the case then, I have looked at . spirit and the value of effort over performance
Soon the slogan "as American as Apple Pie" the current requirements for membership and and are more concerned about winning.
could be replaced by "as American as higher do not think Roush is correct in his state- Making sure each child gets equal playing
gas prices for the weekend."
rnent.
time may take some effort on tpe coaches'
Gregory V. Briggs
According to the National Headquarters, to parts, but that effort would be .w ork it if it
Gallipolis be eligible for membership the following prevented one child from crying.
must' be true:
Maybe the coach co uld rotate each team
1
"Any man or woman, who was wounded, member into the game by position giving
gassed, injured or ,llisabled in the line of dutt each the .opportunity to play two innings, or
Even th ough they have been rebuked fi:om during time of war, while in the service of if there are enough players, djvide them into
time and time again in the courts, the Land- either military ~r navel forces of the United two teams and not deny anyone a chance to
grabbers of Gallia County, fu eled with your States of America, and who has not been dis- play.
tax money, are still at it.
honorably discharged or separated from s ue~
Rules and regulations should be applied
The Landgrabbers are the 0.0. Mcintyre servi ce, or who may still be in active 'ervice in equally. regardless of whether the, coach feels
Park District.
the armed forces of the United States of one player has more skills th an another.
~ In 1993, the OOMPD purchased about 28 America is eligible for membership in DisWho knows, there may be a future star in
miles of abandoned csx right-of-way, most- abled American Veterans. Others who are dis- the making who is sitting oil the bench.Then,
ly in Gallia County, from CSX for $230,000. abled while serving with any of the armed too, it might be some youngster who only
The right-of-way was purchased on the basis forces of any nation associated with the Unit- wants to get his or her uniform dirty like the
of a quitclaim deed, which in the meantime, ed States of America as allies during any of its rest of the team.
has turned out to be worthless.
war periods who arc American citizens and
I realize that coaches volunteer their time
The right-of- way wa&lt; to be used by the who are honorably discharged are also eligi- and it is appreciated, but let's give encourageOOMPD fur th e development of a bicycle hie."
ment to "each child" and give them a pat on
and hiking trail.
I am certain that there are many men and the back.
A civil lawsuit was fil ed by several landown- women who meet these qualifications for
Cindy Shull
ers that claim ed ri ght-of- way property membership that feel the same as myself.
Pomeroy

Gouged at the purrp

God help us all'

to

MOR9ANTOWN, (AP) - Six West Virginia University students who built a hybrid electric vehicle have won a national contest for environmentally friendly sport-utility vehicles.
. WVU beat 14 other universities from the United States and
Canada to claim the Future Truck 2000 challenge T hursday night in
Mesa, Ari z.
Its converted Chevy Suburban, which finished first overall, had 23
percent fewer green house gas emissions than a traditional gas-powered vehicle, the lowest of any competitor.
Teams competed in more than a dozen events, including performance, safety, towing ability, gas emissions, fuel economy and consumer acceptability.
"This is certainly the best result we've ever had with a student
vehicle competition;• mechan,ica) and aerospace engineering professor Chris Atkinson said.
Participants were allowed to use hydrogen (uel cells, hybrid powe.rtrains that combined internal combustion engines with electricity, space age lightweight materials, alternative fuels and advanced
electronics.
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&amp; unbn!' tli:t m r~ -&amp;rnllnrl • Page A5

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CHARLESTON, (AP) - Attorney General DarreUV. McGraw
Jr. is warning state residents about an illegal pyramid scheme that
promises payments to consumers who recruit new distributors and
members.
The attorney general's office has received numerous complaints
fi:om central West Virginia about the scheme, known as the "Gifting
Club." The scheme has spread throughout the mid-Atlantic region
and the northwest United States, McGraw said Friday.
New members give cash to high -ranking members with the
promise that if they recruit additional members, they too will rise
to higher ranks and receive far more money than their initial paymeill.
Pyramid schemes are prohibited because they inevitably collapse
when recruitment of new distributors declines.
"Most members who paid to join never receive the financial gifts
they expected and lose everything they paid to join," McGraw said.
Residents who believe they have been victimized can call the
attorney general's Consumer Protection Hotline at (800) 368-8808.

'E.sto.6{isliLtf in 1948

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

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

Mdiraw wams of illegal scheme

Junba)l ea!hnts • tientintl
125 Third Ave., G811lpollo. Ohio
7--.23Q • Fu' ue 3001

Sunday, June 18, 2000

H

1

Marshall to help assess tracks

HUNTINGTON (AP) ' - Marshall u;uversity will use a
$250,000 federal grant to help assess the stability of railroad tracks.
"In West Virginia, the railroads carry everything from coal to
chemicals, and they travel through the state at all hours of the day;•
said U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va. "With this effort, Marshall
is working to speed products to market while reducing the number
of derailments and delays."
Byrd helped secure the Federal Railroad Admin!Siration grant
while Rep. Nic k J. Rahall, D-W.Va., worked the issue in the U.S.
House.

ffist Virginia Day, which will be officially celebrated
Tuuday with events beginning Saturdt~y, is the high
point of a year-long series of events that tire part of
l*st Virginia Celebration 2000.

the west with Virginia's ru ling
class in the Tid e wate r a nd
South Side reg io ns we re
" some thing that simply hung
the state up tim e and ti me
an election year, but it's driven famili es to stay in Wes t Vi r- aga in," he said .
. . "
by the fa ct it 's 2000."
gmJa.
President Abraham Lin col n
The Legi slature will spend
The purpose of Wes t Vir- seized t he o pportunity to
SSOO,OOO this year on event s gin ia Cele brati o n 2000 is to
establish a state that added to
throughout the state, Under- " ac ce ntu ate th e bright possiU nio n defe nses against Con wood cont ributed $80 ,000 bilities o f Wes t Virg in ia's
fede rate ar mie&gt;. The result,
froin the Governor's Contin- future," H eywood said .
gen cy Fund and businesses are
Virginians may d o so me W illiams sa id, was a furu re
expe cted to gJVe about celebrating of the ir ow n o n unspoiled by two section s of a
state tha t would have "spent
$100,000 .
West Virginia Day.
Up to 500 events for CeleAfter all, the loss of o n e- tim e fi ghti ng and fi ghting an d
bration 2000 are schedul ed third of th e Old Dominion fi ghting ."
throughout the year, including with the breakaway of we stern
G erry R eill y, direc to r of
festivals, a published poetry counti es on June 20 , 1863, was
West Virgi n ia Ind epe nd ence
anthology and a NASCAR car no loss, says D. Al an Willi ams,
H all in Wh eel ing , says West
display at the Capitol.
a retired professor ofVirgini a Virgi nians shou ldn't be lieve
For the year - rather than history at th e University of
the argum ents adva nce d by its
the one birthday celebration Virginia.
officially set in 1927 - West
"Sometimes divorces are fo rmer hom eland.
Virginians are being asked to not the worst things to hap'' To the lose rs, t hat's w hat
pay less attention to lagging pen," Williams said .
the reaction was to th e for maeconomic growth and a stagSectiona l divi sions between tion of the state ," he said.
nant population.
the anti-slavery counties in " They never did ge t it back ."
"West Virginia is in a transitional year because of the
economy," "said Dan Page,
0
Underwood's spokesman. " We
Avoid a 50% penalty each year
want West Virginians to come
back for j obs and we want
Building Notice
§ 5713.17 Duty to notify county auditor of Improvement
costing over $2000; entry for examination

AnENTION CONTRACTORS &amp;HOME OWNERS

§Vftl!L ()f Ttif Wfll\

\1

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1" Auto, air, Local One Owne~, Low Miles, 1
eExc. Condition . 'l'l,OOO e
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~SMITH'S GMC TRUCK~
~

CENTER, INC.

" 15 ~ 0 ~ r.;a
\1 W "" ~ l!. C$J u

~

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133 Pine Street,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

740-446-2532

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To enable the county auditor to determine the value and
location of buildings and other Improvements, any person,
other than a railroad company or public utility whose real
property Ia valued for taxation by the tax commissioner,
that constructs any building or other Improvement costing
more than two-thousand dollars upon any lol or land within
a town'lhlp or municipal corporation not having a system of
building registration and lnapectlon shall notify that the
building or Improvement has bean completed or Is In
process of construction. The nollca shall be In writing,
shall contain an estimate of the cost of the building or
Improvement, shall describe the lot or land and Its
ownership In a.manner reasonably calculated to allow the
county auditor to Identify the lot or lract of land on the tax
list, and shall be served upon the county auditor not later
than sixty days after construction of the building or
Improvement has commenced.
Upon the discovery of a building or Improvement .that haa
bean constructed but of which the county auditor has not
been notlflecl'as requlrad by this section, the county auditor
shall appralae It and place It upon the tax list and duplicate
at Its taxable value, together with a penalty equal to fifty
percent of the amount of taxes that would have been
charged against the building or Improvements from the
date of construction to the date of discovery had the
county auditor been notified of Its construction as required
by this section.

··

The county auditor, or his deputy, within reasonable
hours, may enter and fully examine all buildings and
Improvements that are either liable to or exempt from
taxation by Title LVII (sn of the Revised Code.

~

HOURS: M·F 8 to 6:30 Sat. 9 to 12c

LARRY M. BETZ
GALLIA COUNTY AUDITOR
446-4612

Laws are utifair

]im's Farm Equipment Center. Inc.

.

MASSIE FERGUSON

Massey Ferguson is a wholly
owned subsidary of AGCO
Corporation, Duluth, GA

MASSIE FERGUSON

.

2150 Eastern Ave. (St. Rt. 7), Gallipolis, OH

M0~~~~£?~~i~,~;:,i~~y

Let them, all play

(740) 446·9777.

Questions article

New And Used
And Industrial Equipment

New Massey Ferguson Tractors In Stock!

Beware Landgrabbers'

MASSEY FERGUSON

MASSEY
FERGUSON

• 231 s, 243, 263,
271,281,4253

New Tractors Arriving Daily

Over 90 good used
tractors like FORD,
Massey Ferguson,
John Deere.
F11llline of King Kutter
equipment.
Lots of good
used Balers.
·We also carry New Idea,
Farmhand and Rhino.

CALL FOR LOW PRICES
,_ We Stock All Parts
www.jimsfarm.com

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PageA4
Sund.,,June11,2000

111 Court St., p.,_.,y, Ohio
7 -·215e • Fu: 11112·2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charles w. Govey
Publisher
Larry Boyar
Advertl•lng Director

Diane Kay Hill
Controller

n.,

Utt•n to lAc .tHJtw •n wclcdlllc.
dao~~:ld 1M lfts tlula JIJ() '11/ttrtb. AU Mturr fin I Mbjtct
to •dili~tl ertd mud"' tlfntd ud i11dlld1 Mi4rlll IUUI klcplwttc 1111mb1T. No IUUiflltd ldtcn wit/
&amp;t JHIIilillrN. Utters t llolil4 li• 111 pod Mile, IUltlrtluillf 11111611 not ptrsoNJIUMt.
Tit• opbtNnu upnuN ill 11-. tolwrut btlow en th• C:OIIJfiiSUtiJ/ til• Ollie VallcJ l'ubliJhing
Co.'s Hllon.l Hoanl. 1udtu ollltrwist notrd.

OHIO VIEWS

....... ...

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Ohio changes how it
releases vital iriformation
• The Times-Reporter of Dover/New Philadelphia, June 5:
The idea th at anyone, for a price, could tap into the Ohio Bureau
of Motor Vehicles drivers' license data banks for personal information
was unsettling to many citizens.
;Most of those requesting such data were bulk mail distributors for
surveys, marketing or solicitations. Although
any driver could fill out a form to prevent
release of such information, termed the
"opt-out policy, this still was an inconveruence.
As of June 1, however, "opt-out" has
•
become "opt-in." Under House Bi11600 and
the Federal Driver's Policy Protection Act,
the OBMV will no longer relea&lt;e personal
tnformation such as person's name, date of birth and address. With the
new law, suc h information will only be released if the individual completes a form giving express consent for disclosure.
But the use of OBMV data as fodder for the mass mailers and telemarketers is no longer an option - unless they actually want to be a
re~ ipient. If that's the case, just fill out the form.
,. The (Toledo) Blade, May 31:
:Bill Clinton has confounded his critics before, but he caused tnore
than a few heads to spin after winning a remarkable legislative victorY on the China trade bill.
·
·
Not only did he win the House vote approving permanent normal
tr:ide relations with China by a wider margin than expected, but he
dill so with the help of the same people who impeached him last year.
't wasn't his own party that gave him what no doubt will be the
h&gt;jl.lrnark of his foreign policy legacy. He convinced even fewer
D):mocrats that open trade with China was a good idea than he did
on an earlier trade pact with Canada and Mexico. It was the Clintonh~ting Republicans, voting overwpelmingly for the C hina deal, who
handed the president his trade triumph.
Mr. Clinton will be long gone fi:om the White House before any
determination can be made on the prudence of his gamble with
China. But he prevailed in selling his post-cold-war thf'&lt;}ry that open
m;.rkets can lead to more open political societies because he could
show that a 20-year anti-Conununist policy of punitive trading measures produced few sweeping reforms in China.
• The Akron Beacon Journal, June 1:
The government of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak was pleased
to announce la&lt;t week that it .has fulfilled a major campaign promise:
It has withdrawn Israeli troops fi:om southern Lebanon. The government was just as pleased to note the troops had been evacuated without casualties.
The evacuation may have been free of bloodshed, but Israel and
~banon have paid dearly the past two decades in the millions of dollars in damage and the thousands killed and injured in continuous
conflict.
With Israel out of Lebanon, the focal point of this volatile period
becomes · the sincerity of Syrian President Hafez Assad in pursuing
peace with ISrael and stability in the region. ;

A look .at
what Ohio
newspapers
are saytng

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, June 18, the 170th day of 2000. T here are 196
days ·left in the year. This is Father's Day.
Today's Highlight in History:
On June 18, 1940, during World War II, British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill urged his countrymen to behave in a manner
that would prompt future geqerations to say, "This was their finest

hour."
On this date:
In 1778, American forces entered Philadelphia as the British
withdrew during the Revolutionary War.
/
In 1812, the United States declared war on Britain. f
In 1815, British and Prussian troops defeated the Ftench under
Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo in Belgium.
In 1873, suffragist Susan B. Anthony was fined $100 for attempting to vote in the 1872 presidential election. (The fine was never
paid.)
In 1928, aviator Amelia Earhart became the first woman to fly
across the Atlantic Ocean, completing a flight from Newfoundland
to Wales in about 21 hours.
In 1945, William Joyce, known as "Lord Haw- Haw," was charged
in London with high treason for his English-language wartime
broadcasts on German radio. (He was hanged the following January.)
In 1948, the U. N. CornrnisJion on Human Rights adopted its
International Declaration of Human Rights.
In 1979, President Carter and Soviet President Leonid I. Brezhnev signed the SALT II strategic arms limitation tr"aty in.Vienna.
In 1983, astronaut Sally K. Ride became America's first woman in
space, blasting off with four colleagues aboard the space shuttle
"Challenger."
·
ln 1984, Alan Berg, a Denver radio talk show host, was shot to
death outside his home. (Two white supn:rnacists were later convicted of civil rights vio.latiom in th e slaying.)

'

.MOUNTAIN BRIEFS

election year coincide with W.Va. Day·
CHARLESTON (AP) Politics has marked West Virginia Day si nce D ay One on
June 20, 1863.
This year an election
year - is no different.
West 'Virginia Day, which
w ill be officially celebrated
Tuesday with events beginning Saturday, is rh e high
point of a year; ]ong series of
events that are part of West
Virginia Celebration 2000 .
Candidates
for
public
offi ce, in cluding Gov. Cecil
Upderwood, Jim Humphreys;
th e Democratic candidate for
the 2nd Congressional District, and Republican rival
Shelley Moore Capito will use
the weekend's events to campaign.
"We're going to hit every
event we can," said Kevin
Geary, campaign manager for
Humphreys, who plans to
campaign in Putnam and
Mason counties.
Celebration 2000, proposed
by Underwood, marks the
start of the millennium in "a
nonpartisan, bipartisan effort,"
said Tom Heywood, co-chairman of the celebratory planning. "The year 2000 falls in

PSC ruling could open calling

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OUR READERS' VIEWS

CHARLESTON, (AP) - Residents of Gilmer and Calhoun
counties could enjoy expanded local phone service without
encountering long-distanc~ ~s under a plan approved by the
state Public Service Commission.
The PSC ruling released Friday authorizes Bell Atlantic-West Virginia to seek federal regulatory approval of a modification of a local
access boundary dividing the counties.
The boundary was established after the BeU System breakup. Bell
Atlantic normally is prohibited from carrying telecommunications
traffic across such boundaries.
In 1988, the PSC implemented a policy which expanded the calling areas of every local exchange in West Virginia to encompass
exchanges whose rate centers fall within a 22-ruile radius.
However, residents of Gilmer ·and Calhoun counti es do not have
.!he full benefits of the policy because of the local access boundary
'between the counties.

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WVU wins truck-of-future contest

There are many veteran organizati ons to join
belonged to them and not CSX.
In a February 1999 trial in the Gallia Coun- . and every veteran should be a member of the
ty Common Pleas Court, the jury unani- organization he or she may be eligible for.
Dear Editor:
John K. Russell
Here we are in the fourth consecutive mously found that the right-of-way belonged
WW II Life Member DAV
weekend for holiday per gallon price increas- to the landowners bringing the lawsuit and
Bidwell ·. ·.
not
the
OOMPD.
es. This weekend's price raise doesn't make
The park district's atto,rneys then filed a
much sense; except it's the first weekend that
1
motion
in court of appeals, challenging the
student (normal grades, trade schools and col.,_,
leges) activity has not been constrained due to common pleas court's judgment. T he appeal's
Dear Editor:
the desire to go some place, any place away court upheld the judgment of the lower
court.
Gas prices? High? Do I like paying high '
from your home.
Attorneys for the park district then filed a prices? No - but neither do I li ke paying · '
Gas refineries and dealerships survey this
desire as a time to pad less profitable mid- motion in court of appeals "to certify· the high prices for a ho tel or motel or parking a
...
week per gallon costs. The federal govern- record in this case to the Ohio Supreme motor home.
Court
for
review
and
final
detern1ination."
Neither do !like paying S50 for a dress that '
ment desires not to see the pr_?!Jlem; they bid
on fuel costs with refineries/j obbers. The fed- This motion was ilenied by court of appeals should cost $25. Isn't it funny that we compl~in about gas prices, and yet some will drink 1
eral/ state/ county governmerqal agencies pay on March 20, 2000.
On
March
14,
2000,
attorneys
for
the
park
their beer, their wine and such, which I : '
below what the average person must pay.
district
filed
a
request
to
the
O
hio
Supreme
understand is not cheap, instead of drinking a ·
This look-the-other-way approach to price
fixing is allowed as one or two local stations Court that OSC "grant jurisdiction and agree nice cool glass of water, lemonade or a can of
(out of the dozens in the community) main- to hear this case."
pop.
,
1.
On May 3 1, 2000, the OSC declined
tain a "normal" cost margin factor; ·thus
Ah, yes, some of will go on vacation and
'spend crazy money for stupid things but com"
appearing to be the good guy. However, all · hear the case.
What's next? While many Gallia countians plain about paying the price to get there, and
major gas stations gave portrayed both "good"
live and drive on dusty roads, the park district, · most likely driving a .vehicle t hat costs a few
and "bad" guy attributes over the years.
Within the past month, gasoline. prices have in my opinion, has squandered thousands of - or a lot of- thousand dollars.Then there '
jumped from 1.399 in early May to 1.869 this dollars of your money in a worthless quitclaim are all those who would not think of not ' ·
weekend, fluctuating as much as 16.81 per- deed and legal maneuvering which seems to including cigan:ttes or some kind of tobacco , '
cent from week to weekend. Once the week- have lost its way.
o.n their grocery list.
Evelyn Mqrrdw
end (since when does ·a weekend constitute
How much does this junkie stuff like beer, .
Gallipolis
Thursday night to Sunday afternoon?) is over,
wine and tobacco cost? We. know this stuff is .
n
ood for our well-being or the well-being · ·
· prices creep ·downward to raise sharply the
following Thursday.
of o hers.
I used to get a big ice cream cone for five
This comment is not to take issue with anyDear Editor:
cents. Now I pay a dollar for the same size. I
body making a profit - only th ose profifs
There are so many laws to keep people from used to walk to school, but now our children
that ·seem to gouge the American public.
Countless publications have shown correla- killing de.er. Landowners should be able to kill got to drive a car.
tion betWeen car makers and fuel refineries them anytime.
Yes, and used to, people went to church on
We have (had) a nice garden started. Sunday, but now go everywhere else, even
who perpetrate low miles per gallon brought
about by new vehicles. SUVs, pickups, vans, Overnight, they ate most of the peas and all sporting a big boat on the waters.
mid to large passenger cars are souped up the tops off the potatoes. We try everything to
Oh, well, I'm glad to just. be able to write
wiih big engines sporting greattorq';l; or high keep thein away. Wh en· will there be a law to this letter and say, "God help us all."
horsepower culminating in low miles per gal- let us collect the damage they do?
Dorothy Whittington
It is hard enough for seniors citizens to
lon.
Gallipolis
I guess the buyer knows this but rationalizes work and get a garden to help with expenses.
prices will remain at a normal state. This we We think these laws are unfair.
Marie and Charles Bush
know is untrue; refineries will charge what
Racine
ihe driving public will bear.
Dear Editor:
I started thinking what if other businesses
S umrnerti~e is·. here again and parents,
·cfuucge for services th e way refineries and gas
· grandparents and friends grab their lawn
stations charge for gas. Some places have peak
chairs and make their way to the local baseball
sales at various times throughout the week or
Dear Editor:
fields.
even during the year; what if they jacked up
I read the article in the June 11 Times-SenIt's the til£le of year when youngsters, boys
the prices just when items might be sought tinel and must question the article and state- and girls alike, don the uniforms to play in the
after or needed the most?
ment by Mr. Roush. In this article Roush game.
.
Luckily for consumers, most business ven- states "A lot of veterans think they can't get to
The time when their hearts are broken,
tures desire to save the buying p'ublic money join the DAV because they're not disabled. spirits ·are crushed and their self-esteem vanby reducing prices or having sales on their But if you served and received an honorable ishes when, after being left out of the game,
primary products. Gas companies, on the discharge, you can join."
they try hard to hide their disappointment.
other hand, redu ce prices on associative prodI have been a member of the DAV since
It's that time when coaches are less conucts (soda , candy) but elevate their primary 1945.
cerned about teaching sportsmanship, team
·
stock fuel.
This was not the case then, I have looked at . spirit and the value of effort over performance
Soon the slogan "as American as Apple Pie" the current requirements for membership and and are more concerned about winning.
could be replaced by "as American as higher do not think Roush is correct in his state- Making sure each child gets equal playing
gas prices for the weekend."
rnent.
time may take some effort on tpe coaches'
Gregory V. Briggs
According to the National Headquarters, to parts, but that effort would be .w ork it if it
Gallipolis be eligible for membership the following prevented one child from crying.
must' be true:
Maybe the coach co uld rotate each team
1
"Any man or woman, who was wounded, member into the game by position giving
gassed, injured or ,llisabled in the line of dutt each the .opportunity to play two innings, or
Even th ough they have been rebuked fi:om during time of war, while in the service of if there are enough players, djvide them into
time and time again in the courts, the Land- either military ~r navel forces of the United two teams and not deny anyone a chance to
grabbers of Gallia County, fu eled with your States of America, and who has not been dis- play.
tax money, are still at it.
honorably discharged or separated from s ue~
Rules and regulations should be applied
The Landgrabbers are the 0.0. Mcintyre servi ce, or who may still be in active 'ervice in equally. regardless of whether the, coach feels
Park District.
the armed forces of the United States of one player has more skills th an another.
~ In 1993, the OOMPD purchased about 28 America is eligible for membership in DisWho knows, there may be a future star in
miles of abandoned csx right-of-way, most- abled American Veterans. Others who are dis- the making who is sitting oil the bench.Then,
ly in Gallia County, from CSX for $230,000. abled while serving with any of the armed too, it might be some youngster who only
The right-of-way was purchased on the basis forces of any nation associated with the Unit- wants to get his or her uniform dirty like the
of a quitclaim deed, which in the meantime, ed States of America as allies during any of its rest of the team.
has turned out to be worthless.
war periods who arc American citizens and
I realize that coaches volunteer their time
The right-of- way wa&lt; to be used by the who are honorably discharged are also eligi- and it is appreciated, but let's give encourageOOMPD fur th e development of a bicycle hie."
ment to "each child" and give them a pat on
and hiking trail.
I am certain that there are many men and the back.
A civil lawsuit was fil ed by several landown- women who meet these qualifications for
Cindy Shull
ers that claim ed ri ght-of- way property membership that feel the same as myself.
Pomeroy

Gouged at the purrp

God help us all'

to

MOR9ANTOWN, (AP) - Six West Virginia University students who built a hybrid electric vehicle have won a national contest for environmentally friendly sport-utility vehicles.
. WVU beat 14 other universities from the United States and
Canada to claim the Future Truck 2000 challenge T hursday night in
Mesa, Ari z.
Its converted Chevy Suburban, which finished first overall, had 23
percent fewer green house gas emissions than a traditional gas-powered vehicle, the lowest of any competitor.
Teams competed in more than a dozen events, including performance, safety, towing ability, gas emissions, fuel economy and consumer acceptability.
"This is certainly the best result we've ever had with a student
vehicle competition;• mechan,ica) and aerospace engineering professor Chris Atkinson said.
Participants were allowed to use hydrogen (uel cells, hybrid powe.rtrains that combined internal combustion engines with electricity, space age lightweight materials, alternative fuels and advanced
electronics.
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&amp; unbn!' tli:t m r~ -&amp;rnllnrl • Page A5

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CHARLESTON, (AP) - Attorney General DarreUV. McGraw
Jr. is warning state residents about an illegal pyramid scheme that
promises payments to consumers who recruit new distributors and
members.
The attorney general's office has received numerous complaints
fi:om central West Virginia about the scheme, known as the "Gifting
Club." The scheme has spread throughout the mid-Atlantic region
and the northwest United States, McGraw said Friday.
New members give cash to high -ranking members with the
promise that if they recruit additional members, they too will rise
to higher ranks and receive far more money than their initial paymeill.
Pyramid schemes are prohibited because they inevitably collapse
when recruitment of new distributors declines.
"Most members who paid to join never receive the financial gifts
they expected and lose everything they paid to join," McGraw said.
Residents who believe they have been victimized can call the
attorney general's Consumer Protection Hotline at (800) 368-8808.

'E.sto.6{isliLtf in 1948

R. Shawn Lewla
Managing Editor

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

Mdiraw wams of illegal scheme

Junba)l ea!hnts • tientintl
125 Third Ave., G811lpollo. Ohio
7--.23Q • Fu' ue 3001

Sunday, June 18, 2000

H

1

Marshall to help assess tracks

HUNTINGTON (AP) ' - Marshall u;uversity will use a
$250,000 federal grant to help assess the stability of railroad tracks.
"In West Virginia, the railroads carry everything from coal to
chemicals, and they travel through the state at all hours of the day;•
said U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va. "With this effort, Marshall
is working to speed products to market while reducing the number
of derailments and delays."
Byrd helped secure the Federal Railroad Admin!Siration grant
while Rep. Nic k J. Rahall, D-W.Va., worked the issue in the U.S.
House.

ffist Virginia Day, which will be officially celebrated
Tuuday with events beginning Saturdt~y, is the high
point of a year-long series of events that tire part of
l*st Virginia Celebration 2000.

the west with Virginia's ru ling
class in the Tid e wate r a nd
South Side reg io ns we re
" some thing that simply hung
the state up tim e and ti me
an election year, but it's driven famili es to stay in Wes t Vi r- aga in," he said .
. . "
by the fa ct it 's 2000."
gmJa.
President Abraham Lin col n
The Legi slature will spend
The purpose of Wes t Vir- seized t he o pportunity to
SSOO,OOO this year on event s gin ia Cele brati o n 2000 is to
establish a state that added to
throughout the state, Under- " ac ce ntu ate th e bright possiU nio n defe nses against Con wood cont ributed $80 ,000 bilities o f Wes t Virg in ia's
fede rate ar mie&gt;. The result,
froin the Governor's Contin- future," H eywood said .
gen cy Fund and businesses are
Virginians may d o so me W illiams sa id, was a furu re
expe cted to gJVe about celebrating of the ir ow n o n unspoiled by two section s of a
state tha t would have "spent
$100,000 .
West Virginia Day.
Up to 500 events for CeleAfter all, the loss of o n e- tim e fi ghti ng and fi ghting an d
bration 2000 are schedul ed third of th e Old Dominion fi ghting ."
throughout the year, including with the breakaway of we stern
G erry R eill y, direc to r of
festivals, a published poetry counti es on June 20 , 1863, was
West Virgi n ia Ind epe nd ence
anthology and a NASCAR car no loss, says D. Al an Willi ams,
H all in Wh eel ing , says West
display at the Capitol.
a retired professor ofVirgini a Virgi nians shou ldn't be lieve
For the year - rather than history at th e University of
the argum ents adva nce d by its
the one birthday celebration Virginia.
officially set in 1927 - West
"Sometimes divorces are fo rmer hom eland.
Virginians are being asked to not the worst things to hap'' To the lose rs, t hat's w hat
pay less attention to lagging pen," Williams said .
the reaction was to th e for maeconomic growth and a stagSectiona l divi sions between tion of the state ," he said.
nant population.
the anti-slavery counties in " They never did ge t it back ."
"West Virginia is in a transitional year because of the
economy," "said Dan Page,
0
Underwood's spokesman. " We
Avoid a 50% penalty each year
want West Virginians to come
back for j obs and we want
Building Notice
§ 5713.17 Duty to notify county auditor of Improvement
costing over $2000; entry for examination

AnENTION CONTRACTORS &amp;HOME OWNERS

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To enable the county auditor to determine the value and
location of buildings and other Improvements, any person,
other than a railroad company or public utility whose real
property Ia valued for taxation by the tax commissioner,
that constructs any building or other Improvement costing
more than two-thousand dollars upon any lol or land within
a town'lhlp or municipal corporation not having a system of
building registration and lnapectlon shall notify that the
building or Improvement has bean completed or Is In
process of construction. The nollca shall be In writing,
shall contain an estimate of the cost of the building or
Improvement, shall describe the lot or land and Its
ownership In a.manner reasonably calculated to allow the
county auditor to Identify the lot or lract of land on the tax
list, and shall be served upon the county auditor not later
than sixty days after construction of the building or
Improvement has commenced.
Upon the discovery of a building or Improvement .that haa
bean constructed but of which the county auditor has not
been notlflecl'as requlrad by this section, the county auditor
shall appralae It and place It upon the tax list and duplicate
at Its taxable value, together with a penalty equal to fifty
percent of the amount of taxes that would have been
charged against the building or Improvements from the
date of construction to the date of discovery had the
county auditor been notified of Its construction as required
by this section.

··

The county auditor, or his deputy, within reasonable
hours, may enter and fully examine all buildings and
Improvements that are either liable to or exempt from
taxation by Title LVII (sn of the Revised Code.

~

HOURS: M·F 8 to 6:30 Sat. 9 to 12c

LARRY M. BETZ
GALLIA COUNTY AUDITOR
446-4612

Laws are utifair

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Massey Ferguson is a wholly
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,,

Sunday, June 18,2000

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

•

~-

Texas AltM
suspending
bonfire
.

•

NATIONAL BRIEFS ·
Nuclear secrets found on computers

.

Della Jackson

COLLEGE STATION, Texas thousands to campus 'on the eve sional construction site
(AP) - TeJUs A&amp;M University of A&amp;M's football game against fenc:es, security, cameras,"
is suspending its traditional" pre- its archrival, the University of Bowen said.
A task force of students, facgame bonfire for at least two Texas at Austin. It has been canmore years to give officials time celed only twice since it began ulty and staff will be formed in
to improve procedures follow- in 1909: in 1963 because of September to develop a plan ·for
ing an accident last ye·ar that President Kennedy's assassina- a 2002 bonfire. Their plan will
tion and last year because of the be due in Bowen's office in
killed 12 students.
April 2001.
" We will not have a bonfire collapse.
Michael Self, father of bonBowen's decision to keep the
this year," Texas A&amp;M President
Ray Bowen said Friday at a bonfire but modify it strikes a fire victim Jerry Don Self, critnews conference. When the tra- compromise between the feel- icized the decision to suspend
dition does resume, in 2002 at ings of zealous and tradition- the ceremony. He spoke after
the earliest, the bonfire will be rooted Aggies and voices of getting a letter from sc hool
far smaller and the construction caution calling for drastic officials but before Bowen's forwill be much more profession- change. It means the students of mal announcement.
''I'm not surprised because
who have kept the tradition
ally run, he said.
of
all the rumors I've been
The change resulted from alive for nearly a century will
hearing lat~ly," he said. "I'm
the collapse during construc- now have less control of it.
speaking
for my son, because
Modifications would include
tion of the 2 million-pound log
stack Nov. 18. In addition to the a professionally engineered he's not here to speak for himdeaths, 27 people were injured . design, an annual safety compli- self. As a father, it is hard, but I
"We can have a bonfire if it's ance review, expanded universi- know in my heart that Jerry
completely
restructured," ty oversight of the construction would want bonfire to burn this
Bowen said. "We will have a and a change in how student fall."
Richard Frampton, father of
bonfire if it's completely bonfire leaders are chosen.
restructured."
The bonfire would also 22-year-old victim Jeremy
But it is off for at least two return to ' a one-tier, teepee- Frampton, also said he felt the
years while the university and shaped log stack, a n early tradition should have remained
students hash out the necessary design, as opposed to the four- as is. '
"I think what was gained was
changes, Bowen said.
tiered, wedding-cake design
A five-member commission used in recent years. The fo ur- bonding and loyalty through
appointed by Texas A&amp;M to tier stack that collapsed last fall bonfire," he said. "The kids put
on such an amazing project. A
investigate the deaths blamed had was nearly 60 feet tall.
Constru ction would be lim- lot of unfortu"n ate things came
flawed construction techniques
and a lack of adequate supervi- ited to two weeks, logs would together thai ' ca used terribl e
sion of students assembling th e be provided instead of cut by disaster."
A student group collected
stack. -It said some students. students and tpe build site's
C: •• nk at th~ site, but that that atmosphere would be strictly 7,204 signatures on paper,
1,229 on its Web site and 841 ewas not the primary cause of controlled.
the collapse.
"The construction site will niails supporting the event.
"Each individual who sent us
The bonfire annually draws be managed more like a profe-

Della Jackson, 64, Troy, Mich., died Saturday, June 16, 2000, in Troy.
Jacklon is survived by four daughteo, Christine (Alan) Nord of New
Smyrna Beach. Fla., Donna (Wayne) Wright of Detroit, Mich., Sherrie
(Mike) Placido of Baltimore, Mich., and Catherine (Steven) Holt of
Madison Heights, Mich.; one son, James (Christina) Jackson, of Madison Heights, Mich.; twelve grandchildten; five great-grandchildren;
and one sister, Amanda Cranis.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Playford "Jack" Jackson.
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday at the McCoy- Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, with Alan Nord officiating. Burial will be in the
, Pendleton-Marcum Cemetery, Vinton.
Friends may call the funeral home Monday from 7-9 p.m. , and the
Desmond &amp; Sons Funeral Home, Troy, Michigan, Sunday from 2-6
;- p.m.
I

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Nathan Lee Utchfield

•

. , · APPLE GROVE - Nathan Lee Litchfield, Apple Grove, died in
: infancyThursday,June 15,2000, at Cabell Huntington Hospital, Hunt! ington. ·
Born Thursday, June 15,2000, he was the son ofJames W. Litchfield
and Bridgette Stover of Apple Grove.
He is survived by a sister, Shayla Litchfield and two brothen, J.C.
Litchfield and Jacob Litchfield, all of Apple Grove; maternal grandparents, Richard and Brenda Sydenstriker of Southside; maternal greatgrandmother Doshie Sydenstriker of Ohio; maternal great-grandfather, Robert Ross of Gallipolis, Ohio; paternal grandfather, Charles
Worthy Litchfield of Southside; paternal grandmother Phyllis J. Lithefield of Apple Grove; and paternal great-grandparents William and
Thelma Flora of Apple Grove.
He was preceded in death by his maternal great-grandmother, Anna
: Ross, and maternal great-grandfather, Warren Sydenstricker, and pater: nal grarldparents, Charles and Wilma Litchfield.
l . Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Sunday at Wyoma Church Cemetery in Gallipolis Ferry. Arrangements are being made by Deal Funer; al Home, Point Pleasant.

i

•

Hennan Redman
POMEROY - Herma'n Delbert Redman, 78, Pomeroy, died
Thunday,June 15,2000, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
He was born on March 12, 1922, in Charleston, W.Va., son of the
late James J. and Pearl D. Landis Redman. He was a retired machinist
from the Gravely Tractor Plant in Dunbar, W.Va., was a veteran of the
U.S. Army during World War II.
Surviving are four brothers and sisters-in-law: Fred and Ruby Red1
nun and Joseph and June Redman, all of Charleston, W.Va., the Rev.
Ronald and Beulah Redman of Cross Lanes, W.Va., and Herbert and
Janet Redman of Cheshire.
·.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his sister,
Wilma Harper and his brother, Delmar Redman.
There will be no funeral service and no calling hours. Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport was in charge of arrangements.

Gold·dolla·r with
·washington's face
could fetch $1 Q_
p,oo.o.
&lt;

-

MOUNTAIN HOME:· Ark.
(AP) - Three weeks after he
wrapped up a personal bankruptcy, Frank Wallis got some good
he found a
financial news misprinted gold dollar that could
be worth up to $100,000.
Wallis bought four rolls of
Show, The Queen's Parade and Sacagawea $1 gold coins a couple
Contest, the Kiwanis water ball of weeks ago. He opened one,
toss and obstacle course, the expecting to see the American
PapAl
Lions Club terrapin races, sack Indian guide's youthful face on
races and frog jump and much the coins inside. But one bore a
Hopkins said. "We're bringing more.
more familiar profile: George
Washington,
in a .pose usually
the 'X Games' to Gallipolis."
This year's featured musical
seen on quarters.
The hovercrafts are ships that
performance will be country
The error "is believed to be the
hover above water and can
group Shenandoah, starting on
fll'st of its kind in the 208-year
immediately come onto dry
the main stage at 9 p.m .
history of the U.S. Mint.
land. They will be performing
"I asked for Saturday for
Evep after spotting the misin and out of the water for two
Kids' Day because that's the take, Wallis didn't realize how
days .
"I ,tried to bring unique number one family day so valuable the coin, minted in
things to our local kids that when families come down . Philadelphia, might be.
"I decided probably at least it
they would normally have to This year they will have a day
to
remember
the
rest
of
their
was
a fun coin to own because of
travel to a big ciif to see," he
the Geor~ Washington ad camlives," Hopkins said.
said.
For information on the con- paign; • he said, referring to a $40
People also can count on
tests, contact Dina Eblin 441- million campaign in which
seeing some popular favorites.
There will be the Sparkler &amp; 1385. All other questions Washington, illustrated by his
Little Miss &amp; Mister Firecrack- should be directed to the Gal- portrait on the $1 bill, insists he
er contests, Baby Olympics, lia County Chamber of C om- doesn't mind being left off the
new coin.
Bass Busters, Youth Talent merce at 446-Q596 .
After contacting experts, Wallis
realized the coin was likely quite
valuable.
The mistake is known by collectors as a "double-denomina-

Kids

from

I

1

VALLEY WEATHER

Expect stormy Father's Day
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A cold front will become stationary over the tri-county
region Saturday night and trigger
showers and thunderstorms for
the remainder of the weekend,
forecasters said.
The National Weather Service
reported widespread rain expected for the entire region Sunday.
Temperatures will range be in
the lower 80s for highs and upper
60s for lows.
Sunset Saturday will be at 9:08
p.m . and sunrise on Sunday will
be at 6:08 a.m.
Forecast

Tonight...Showers and thunderstorms. Rain heavy at times.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Sunday... Showen and thunderstorms.Rain heavy at times.
C¢9ler with highs in the mid 70s.
Extendelf foreCI!IIt
Sunday night...Showers ending.
Lows in the mid 60s.
. Monday. .. Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 80s.
'The$day.. .Fair. Lows near 60.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Wednesday.. .A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in
the mid 60s. Highs in the mid
80s.

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Tfte ntistake is known by
collectors as a "doubledenomination mule error"
- two eurrencits 'stamped
on d«ferent sides.
editor of The Baxter Bulletin,
was completing a bankruptcy.
· " I was in ·financial ruin;' he
said, explaining that a hospital
stay in 1993 caused him to forfeit
two months' salary. Since then, he
has been trying to get caught up.
"Now, if the Lord wills, I can
pay the debts;' he said:
But he noted his fortune s may
again change.
"Today it's a valuable coin, but
if somebody l).as found several
more, it's not so valuable," Wallis
said. ~ It's just another error coin."
A dealer will auction the coin
during the American Numismatic Asso~iation's. convention in
Philadelphia in August.

From
Simple to
Simply
Magnificent
We offer the finest granites
in an assortment of colors

and coundess designs. We
can provide the memorial
that's right for you. Come
talk to our counselors. We'll
help you select. 'l,memorial to be
cherished.

Heart Matters•••
With Dr. Robert Holley
QUESTION-I run, exercise and
watch what I eat and I still can't get :
my cholesterol below 250. What else
can I do to reduce my risk?
ANSWER-It sounds like you are ·
making a real effort to control your
cholesterol, but some people just
can't do it With diet and exercise
alone. In some patients, what you
have inherited from your parents may
predispose you to a bean attack or
stroke, and diet and exercise alone
won't do the trick. In fact, exercise

ha s little or nb "effect on total
cholesterol, and LDL (BAD)
Cholesterol. In patient~ like y~u~elf,
you may requue certam mcdtcataons
that will lower your cholesterol and
other risk factors, because no mat!et
how hard you try, .you won't be able
to get to goal without them.
Remember too, theie are at least 25
risk factors t!)at can increase your
chances of a heart attack or stroke,
cholesterol is just one of them. I
would encourage you to come ,into
the Cholesterof Center for a Fl!.I;!E
· bean attack and stroke evaluation. We
could then work together to get you
on a personal plan to reduce· your
overall risk.

Doctor Robert Holley Is the areu
only cholesterol specialist, or
therothrombotic Dlse.a u
Specialist, which means he iuu'luul ·
SJHcla! training, and Is an expert In
filentifylng, and treating all the
•arious risk factors that le,.J:to a
heart attacfc or stroke.' 'Doctor
Holley operates the Robert M,
Holle¥ Cholesterol Center, located
in PomJ Pleasant.
For answers to your medical' questions
about heart attacks and strokes, mail them
to tho Robert M. Holley Choteslorot
Center at the address below.

Call today for a fm heart attatk
and 5lroke risk assessment.

''Reducing ;your risk Of tht unt.rp#cttd"

2500 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

520 W. Ma;;, St. -Pomeroy
Near the Mason Bridge

Phone 740-992-2588
Vinton 740-388-8603

304-675-1675

Gallipoli~ 740-446-08112

u.s.

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Logan, Ohio

For The Best Wheat
Price In Central
And Southem Ohio.
Call 1·800·513•1117

WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal investigaton are closely exam- .. ining two computer hard drives containing nuclear secrets that were
· ·· found at the Los Alamos weapons laboratory, believing they are the
· · ones missing for more than a month. They want to determine
· · whether the information has been compromised.
·
Authorities hoped to know by late Saturday whether the two
,. ' drives definitely are the same ones that disappeared and. after an
electronic examination, learn whether the contents have been
'· · copied or otherwise tampeted with, said one official, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
·
.
·
'• ' The two devices, each about the size of a deck of cards, contain
·. •highly technical information that would be used by a nuclear emeri· gency response team to locate and dismantle not only qs., but
' some Russian and other countries' nuclear devices in case of an
·· . accident or terrorist act.
"They were found in a secure area. The area is being treated as a
• . crime scene:• Energy Secretary Bill Richardson said at a news con/". ference in Phoenix, where he was informed of the discovery Friday
:,while holding a meeting on summer electricity reliability:
~ . Richardson said the two devices were found within the secuxe
· :"Division X" area of the New Mexico weapons lab in an area that
, had been searched previously. Another official, who spoke on con~" '·dition of anonymity, said they were discovered behind a copying
machine.
The highly restricted area includes the vault where the two drives, which belong to the Nuclear Emergency Search Team had been
... kept. They were last reported seen' April 7 and found missing a
· month later, although senior lab and Energy D.,epartrnent officials
wexe not informed until recendy.
·
While relieved that the drives were found within the secure area
of the lab, Richardson said "this is not a victory speech" and that the
FBI and the Energy Department "would continue to aggressively
punue" the criminal investigation. Even with the drives · re~overed
• · those responsible could face criminal charges for security breaches.

r

'·
'
~ ~ Convention could.draw protesterS
'

L

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The protesters who swarmed recent
: ·· world · trade and banking summits in Seattle and Washington now
: ;, are targeting the Democratic National Convention.
Some demonstration planners, hoping to rally 30,000 protesters,.
pro!Dising carnival-like convergence of activists for the Aug.
14-17 convention.
·
.
" "There will be people with giant puppets, there'll be street the• ; ater, folks in funny costumes and carrying giant banners," said orga~ ·'·.nizer Shawn McDougal.
' " But there co!lld be more disruptive actions as well. For example,
; :, groups such as the Berkeley-based Ruckus Society plan July train} &gt;ing camps to te~ch elaborate protest tactics including creating .vir,
C'.·tually impenetrable human blockades by having protesters link arms
~'.' through plaftic pipes.
\ i· Los Angeles police Lt. Horace Frank "said officers have met with
~ '. some activist groups .to discuss ways to keep the protests peaceful.
~~The department expects some, however, to seek attention by break' .ing windows or provoking confrontations.
"If people decide to break the law, we will have to take appro~ . priate actio~:· Frank said.
~ , Some police officials will travel to Philadelphia to monitor
~ ·,e~pe~t~dprotests ~uring the Republican convention two ,we~ks.
.; hbefote the Democrats gather in Los Angeles.

b

Fare

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~:Fcc gives ·dearance to phone merge~

~, WASHINGTON (AP) - With regulatory approval in hand, Beq
~ 'Atlantic and GTE are moving swiftly to complete a $65 billion deal
~ that will let them -offer a bundle of telecommunications services
:::.under the name Verizon Conununicationa.
;; · The companiea aaid they expect to cloae the merpr, announced
·: almoat two )'ean aao, by the end o( the month. The marrlap, they
: beUeve, will tranaform them from reponll companitl to a national ·
; and worldwldt powtrhouae.
:
ln tht wttkl co come, "You wW Itt more than juat 1 new loao:·
: llld Bell Atlantic Chairman Ivan St~dtnbtrs. "Wt ' " Verlzon aet; tin1 a new atandard."
! The merpr cleared lea flnll huldlt Friday with approval &amp;om the
' Fedenl Communication• CommlAion, conditioned ·on the compa• nit1 partially aplnnln1 oft' GTE'• Internet aoetl.
.
,i
Not ruling out future acquilitiona, company execUtives said they
·: will keep an eye 11pen to expand their reach even further.
l "We are going to be a global leader. We are going to stay a glob: a) leader:' said GTE chief Charles Lee, who will share with Seiden.
; berg the Verizon chief executive officer's job.
; As part of the approval, the companies promised to spend $500
"' milliol) to enter'local· phone marker; or serve 250,000 new customers outside of their current territories within three years of closing. That would make Verizon a rival to o~er Bell companies in
r some regions. If it fails to do SO, the company will pay the government $750 million.
·

'

·; Kfdsl .Enter the.
·curious Geo11e VIsits
·A Dairy ·auean Store•
story.contestl

INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC .

'

On the Net:
Texas A&amp;M . University:
http:/ /www.tamu.edu

On the Net:

Mint:
http:/ / www.usmint.gov
American Numismatic Association: http:/ /www.money.org
B?weq and Merena auctions:
http:/ /www.bowersandmerena.c
·o m
. ''
Coin
World
magazine:
tion mule' error" - two curren- · htrp:/ /www.coinworld.com
cies stamped on different sides.
Wallis' coin bears the front of
the Washington quarter and the Auto-Owner• lmurance
back of th-e Sacagawea dollar.
Life Home Car Business
It is not known whether other
coins with the same error are in
7le "1t. Atlt.. 1=1, ~le •
circulation; 500 million Sacagawea coins were minted. A
spokesman for the U.S. Mint did
not return a call seeking comment.
114 Court Pom~roy
TWenty days before he found
the coin, Wallis, the business page
992-6677

•

---

m~ssages supports Aggie bonfire," said Keep the Fire Burning spokesman Ryan Thompson. "There would be many,
many disappointed people (if it
stopped) . I' m sure there would
be a hole in people's hearts."
Two bonfire investigations
are pending.
Bill Turner, Brazos County .
district attorney, said his office
is determining whether to seek
criminal charges. His investigation has ruled out sabotage but
not negligence.
On Wednesday, the Texas
Board of Professional Engineers
voted to launch its own inquiry.
Board officials said the organization had jurisdiction over the
bonfire, calling it · a complex
structure requiring engineering
controls.

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

. Sunday, June 18, 2000

·.
1 HNallans call'telescopes Intrusion

.
.,
HONOLULU (AP) - For decades, astronomers have floc,ked to
the highest point in Hawaii to search the night skies with some of
the most powerfUl telescopes on the planet. '
Now a dispute is erupting a~ the 14,000-foot s~mmit of the dormant Mauna Kea volcano over the presence of those telescopes.
Native Hawaiian activists call them an unwelcome intrusion on
sacred Hawaiian land.
University of Hawaii o,fficials hope a master plan approved Friday for future telescope development will resolve that dispute.
• .1\.t stake, scientists say, is a top-notch window to the ~niverse.
"It's one of the best places on the entire earth to put a telescope;•
said Sreven Vogt, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the
University of California at" Santa Cruz, w)lo helped discover the first
planets smaller than Jupiter ever found outSide the solar system,
More major telescopes are located on Mauna Kea, or "White
Mountain;' than any other single peak - 12. They include the
. ~ world's largest optical and infrared telescopes at the W.M. Keck
Observatory.

=
~
=

i

Papers try Spanlsh·Eoallsh editions

NllWNAN, Ga. (AP) - Greeting readen with the headline,
'"Hola Coweta;' the Times-Herald in Coweta County has become
the latest newspaper attempting to attract the state's growing Hispanic population by printing news in English and Spanish.
Saturday's edition is one in a weekly series the newsp~p~r plans
to publish with a page in Spanish - with English translations on
subsequent pages - before looking into the possibility of starting a
~ " Spanish-language weekly, publish~r Sam 0. Jones said,
.
;.:: "I think we can do it and ptoVIde a semce to t.he populaaon and
:~t I think we have an opportunitY to make some money doing it,"
.
..~
, ~ones saa'd.
· ; The Georgia Press Association said it knows of only one other
;:;Engli~l) 7Janguage paper in the state that prints news in Spanish ':Th~ Daily Citizen of Dalton.

.

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·-···

·-- .

Son makes drive from Tenn. to Alaska for dad
MURFREESBORO,
Tenn.
(AP) -Wylie W Sensing Jr. died
of lun11 cancer before he could
realize one of his lifelong dreams
- to visit the Alaskan wilderness.
In his honor, his son, Scott
Sensing, is driving 10,000 miles in
a 1952 Chevy truck to the most
northern point on the continent
accessible by car - Prudoe Bay,
Alaska.
''I'm not doing this for fame or
recognition:· says Sensing, who
started his journey June 11. "This
is something my father always
dreamed of doing, and if I can
somehow fulfill that dream for
him, and raise money to fight the
disease he died from, then it's
something I have to do:•
Sensing, 36, a srudent services
officer at Tennessee Technology
Center in Murfreesboro, took a
one-year leave of absence from his
job for the journey:
While such cross-country pilgrimages are not unusual, traveling
in an old truck that averages 40
mph, has no radio and no modern
air-conditioning nukes the journey a test of human will.
"Being without an air-conditioner has.been a hard adjustment.
If your going across town that's
one thing, but eight ho11rs at 93
degrees without cool air is tough,"
Sensing said June 14 from his TeJUs
hotel room.
"I've never been someone who
needs music to drive. So far I've
done a lot of thinking to pass the
time, watching the changes in
scenery roll past:'
Sensing and his father renovated the truck, affectionately named
Shelley, after he discovere.d it near
his rural Middle Tennessee home
the summer after his 1982 high
school graduation.

"I said I was going to drive it to
Alaska \hat sununer. Bu.t of course
that was silly back then, and I dido't do it," he said.
His dreams of Alaska were
passed down to him by his father,
who fantasized about homesteading in the Alaskan wilderness
since he was a child.
A normally animated man,
Sensing is quiet as he talks about
his father. He stares into the disranee, fighting strong emotions.
"My dad was born about a
hundred ~ars too late;· said Sensing, noting his father owned every
Western novel written by Louis
L'Amour. "He was one of those
people who would have been fine
living back in the woods all alone.
fending for himself."
Friend Galen French said when
Sensing's father got ill with lung
cancer, the father and son used to
talk about a road trip to Alaska.
"I . think Mr. Sensing really
thought he was going to beat it;'
French said. "I think that was one
of his motivating factors, that they
would finally get to take that
father-son trip. But it wasn't meant
to be.~·
The elder Sensing died in May
1998 at age 65. It took the
younger Sensing .about ~ year
before he could commit himself to
making the trip for both of them.
"It was then I said, 'I'm going
to do this all the way, or I'm not
going to do it at all;" he said.
It took another year for him to
raise money anti find sponsors.
Corporate donatiohs - including
$1,000 for fuel from Kroger Fuel
Centen and a laptop donated by
Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Tennessee - have helped him finance
about 90 percent of the.trip.'
"It was our way of helping out

Clinton's
message
focuses
fathers ·

on

"I want to avoid all those huge
18-wheelers doing 80 mph on the
interstate," Sensing said. " Plus, you
see parts of the country you would
never know were there if ~ou
stayed on the interstate. ! think pty
dad would like that."
Sensing started his joim\ey
from Murfreesboro, following 'the
Natchez Trace Parkway, originatly
·an Indian trail. He wound through
Mississippi to Austin, Texas, the
hometown of his friend Freni:h,
who / will ride with him .' to
Phoenix.

'

Point Pleasant

.

SPECIAL SUMMER SESSION.::

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·

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ursdays. B AM to 2:30 PM. except
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plus s·u pply fee. Instructor will give
state certification tests to those
completing the class. Openings ar~
and on a first come first servca
Please apply in person on,,
June 15th or Monday, Junfi
no phone calls please.
Note: Staff will not be available
to ·process applications on
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Friday. June 16th.

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NEWYORK (AP) -The one
in ·three American childten wlro
live without their fathers should
not have to suffer financially or
emotionally, President Clinton
said Saturday in releaaing a report
that oft'en waya to help fathen pt
more Involved in their chlld'a
achoollns.
The l,'tport by the Bducation
and Health and Human Services
departmena five• teachen and
those who care for younpten
. information on the best waya to
help fathen have a strong role in
their children's education. And it .
highlights model programs and
provides
information
on
resources available.
P,.esearchers report that a
father's involvement during
infancy and the early years not
only contributes to a child's emotional security, but helps them
solve math problems and develop
verbal skills, Clinton said in his
weekly radio address, marking
Father's Day on Sunday.
"One study showed that the
chances of a child getting mostly
A's increased by over 40 percent
in two-parent families where the
father was highly involved," Cliotori said. "Even in families where
the father isn't living with his
child, but remains actively
involved, those odds of getting A's
increased lrY·a full third."
In his radio message, which he
taped Friday in New York where
he visited tWo schools, the president noted that child support col. lections have increased 10 percent
during the past year, reaching a
record of nearly $16 billion double the $8 billion collected in
1992.
Clinton also used his address tO
criticize the Ho.use for passing a
spending bill last week that fails
to include his $255 million
fatherhood initiative. It aims to
help at least 40,000 low-income
noncustodial parents - primarily
fathers - find work, meet support payments and re-establish
relationships with their children.
It would allow states to simplify child support and distribution
rules, give incentives to states that
pass more child support payments
directly to families and help noncustodial parents move into jobs,

what we believe is a worthwhile
cause;' said Sherri Tate, a Kroger
spokeswoman. "We get all kinds of
donation requests, but Mr. Sensing's request is definitely one that I
haven't seen before."
Sensing also raised over
$30,000 for the American Cancer
Society from about 40 antique car
clubs nationwide.
Sensing plans to keep a travel
journal that he will post on a Web
site, along with pictures, so his
family, friends and sponsors can
monitor his progress.
He says he's raking the back
roads of America for several rea-

•see
~ijiji~~ii...,.o~a:talls

01)t(AS111:S.SlYI.£S..WHOIIIYMW!l(
Store For Complete

�.....

.Pqe M • 6unllap llimtt -6tntintl
,,

Sunday, June 18,2000

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

•

~-

Texas AltM
suspending
bonfire
.

•

NATIONAL BRIEFS ·
Nuclear secrets found on computers

.

Della Jackson

COLLEGE STATION, Texas thousands to campus 'on the eve sional construction site
(AP) - TeJUs A&amp;M University of A&amp;M's football game against fenc:es, security, cameras,"
is suspending its traditional" pre- its archrival, the University of Bowen said.
A task force of students, facgame bonfire for at least two Texas at Austin. It has been canmore years to give officials time celed only twice since it began ulty and staff will be formed in
to improve procedures follow- in 1909: in 1963 because of September to develop a plan ·for
ing an accident last ye·ar that President Kennedy's assassina- a 2002 bonfire. Their plan will
tion and last year because of the be due in Bowen's office in
killed 12 students.
April 2001.
" We will not have a bonfire collapse.
Michael Self, father of bonBowen's decision to keep the
this year," Texas A&amp;M President
Ray Bowen said Friday at a bonfire but modify it strikes a fire victim Jerry Don Self, critnews conference. When the tra- compromise between the feel- icized the decision to suspend
dition does resume, in 2002 at ings of zealous and tradition- the ceremony. He spoke after
the earliest, the bonfire will be rooted Aggies and voices of getting a letter from sc hool
far smaller and the construction caution calling for drastic officials but before Bowen's forwill be much more profession- change. It means the students of mal announcement.
''I'm not surprised because
who have kept the tradition
ally run, he said.
of
all the rumors I've been
The change resulted from alive for nearly a century will
hearing lat~ly," he said. "I'm
the collapse during construc- now have less control of it.
speaking
for my son, because
Modifications would include
tion of the 2 million-pound log
stack Nov. 18. In addition to the a professionally engineered he's not here to speak for himdeaths, 27 people were injured . design, an annual safety compli- self. As a father, it is hard, but I
"We can have a bonfire if it's ance review, expanded universi- know in my heart that Jerry
completely
restructured," ty oversight of the construction would want bonfire to burn this
Bowen said. "We will have a and a change in how student fall."
Richard Frampton, father of
bonfire if it's completely bonfire leaders are chosen.
restructured."
The bonfire would also 22-year-old victim Jeremy
But it is off for at least two return to ' a one-tier, teepee- Frampton, also said he felt the
years while the university and shaped log stack, a n early tradition should have remained
students hash out the necessary design, as opposed to the four- as is. '
"I think what was gained was
changes, Bowen said.
tiered, wedding-cake design
A five-member commission used in recent years. The fo ur- bonding and loyalty through
appointed by Texas A&amp;M to tier stack that collapsed last fall bonfire," he said. "The kids put
on such an amazing project. A
investigate the deaths blamed had was nearly 60 feet tall.
Constru ction would be lim- lot of unfortu"n ate things came
flawed construction techniques
and a lack of adequate supervi- ited to two weeks, logs would together thai ' ca used terribl e
sion of students assembling th e be provided instead of cut by disaster."
A student group collected
stack. -It said some students. students and tpe build site's
C: •• nk at th~ site, but that that atmosphere would be strictly 7,204 signatures on paper,
1,229 on its Web site and 841 ewas not the primary cause of controlled.
the collapse.
"The construction site will niails supporting the event.
"Each individual who sent us
The bonfire annually draws be managed more like a profe-

Della Jackson, 64, Troy, Mich., died Saturday, June 16, 2000, in Troy.
Jacklon is survived by four daughteo, Christine (Alan) Nord of New
Smyrna Beach. Fla., Donna (Wayne) Wright of Detroit, Mich., Sherrie
(Mike) Placido of Baltimore, Mich., and Catherine (Steven) Holt of
Madison Heights, Mich.; one son, James (Christina) Jackson, of Madison Heights, Mich.; twelve grandchildten; five great-grandchildren;
and one sister, Amanda Cranis.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Playford "Jack" Jackson.
Services will be 11 a.m. Tuesday at the McCoy- Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, with Alan Nord officiating. Burial will be in the
, Pendleton-Marcum Cemetery, Vinton.
Friends may call the funeral home Monday from 7-9 p.m. , and the
Desmond &amp; Sons Funeral Home, Troy, Michigan, Sunday from 2-6
;- p.m.
I

•
•I

Nathan Lee Utchfield

•

. , · APPLE GROVE - Nathan Lee Litchfield, Apple Grove, died in
: infancyThursday,June 15,2000, at Cabell Huntington Hospital, Hunt! ington. ·
Born Thursday, June 15,2000, he was the son ofJames W. Litchfield
and Bridgette Stover of Apple Grove.
He is survived by a sister, Shayla Litchfield and two brothen, J.C.
Litchfield and Jacob Litchfield, all of Apple Grove; maternal grandparents, Richard and Brenda Sydenstriker of Southside; maternal greatgrandmother Doshie Sydenstriker of Ohio; maternal great-grandfather, Robert Ross of Gallipolis, Ohio; paternal grandfather, Charles
Worthy Litchfield of Southside; paternal grandmother Phyllis J. Lithefield of Apple Grove; and paternal great-grandparents William and
Thelma Flora of Apple Grove.
He was preceded in death by his maternal great-grandmother, Anna
: Ross, and maternal great-grandfather, Warren Sydenstricker, and pater: nal grarldparents, Charles and Wilma Litchfield.
l . Graveside services will be 11 a.m. Sunday at Wyoma Church Cemetery in Gallipolis Ferry. Arrangements are being made by Deal Funer; al Home, Point Pleasant.

i

•

Hennan Redman
POMEROY - Herma'n Delbert Redman, 78, Pomeroy, died
Thunday,June 15,2000, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
He was born on March 12, 1922, in Charleston, W.Va., son of the
late James J. and Pearl D. Landis Redman. He was a retired machinist
from the Gravely Tractor Plant in Dunbar, W.Va., was a veteran of the
U.S. Army during World War II.
Surviving are four brothers and sisters-in-law: Fred and Ruby Red1
nun and Joseph and June Redman, all of Charleston, W.Va., the Rev.
Ronald and Beulah Redman of Cross Lanes, W.Va., and Herbert and
Janet Redman of Cheshire.
·.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his sister,
Wilma Harper and his brother, Delmar Redman.
There will be no funeral service and no calling hours. Fisher Funeral Home in Middleport was in charge of arrangements.

Gold·dolla·r with
·washington's face
could fetch $1 Q_
p,oo.o.
&lt;

-

MOUNTAIN HOME:· Ark.
(AP) - Three weeks after he
wrapped up a personal bankruptcy, Frank Wallis got some good
he found a
financial news misprinted gold dollar that could
be worth up to $100,000.
Wallis bought four rolls of
Show, The Queen's Parade and Sacagawea $1 gold coins a couple
Contest, the Kiwanis water ball of weeks ago. He opened one,
toss and obstacle course, the expecting to see the American
PapAl
Lions Club terrapin races, sack Indian guide's youthful face on
races and frog jump and much the coins inside. But one bore a
Hopkins said. "We're bringing more.
more familiar profile: George
Washington,
in a .pose usually
the 'X Games' to Gallipolis."
This year's featured musical
seen on quarters.
The hovercrafts are ships that
performance will be country
The error "is believed to be the
hover above water and can
group Shenandoah, starting on
fll'st of its kind in the 208-year
immediately come onto dry
the main stage at 9 p.m .
history of the U.S. Mint.
land. They will be performing
"I asked for Saturday for
Evep after spotting the misin and out of the water for two
Kids' Day because that's the take, Wallis didn't realize how
days .
"I ,tried to bring unique number one family day so valuable the coin, minted in
things to our local kids that when families come down . Philadelphia, might be.
"I decided probably at least it
they would normally have to This year they will have a day
to
remember
the
rest
of
their
was
a fun coin to own because of
travel to a big ciif to see," he
the Geor~ Washington ad camlives," Hopkins said.
said.
For information on the con- paign; • he said, referring to a $40
People also can count on
tests, contact Dina Eblin 441- million campaign in which
seeing some popular favorites.
There will be the Sparkler &amp; 1385. All other questions Washington, illustrated by his
Little Miss &amp; Mister Firecrack- should be directed to the Gal- portrait on the $1 bill, insists he
er contests, Baby Olympics, lia County Chamber of C om- doesn't mind being left off the
new coin.
Bass Busters, Youth Talent merce at 446-Q596 .
After contacting experts, Wallis
realized the coin was likely quite
valuable.
The mistake is known by collectors as a "double-denomina-

Kids

from

I

1

VALLEY WEATHER

Expect stormy Father's Day
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A cold front will become stationary over the tri-county
region Saturday night and trigger
showers and thunderstorms for
the remainder of the weekend,
forecasters said.
The National Weather Service
reported widespread rain expected for the entire region Sunday.
Temperatures will range be in
the lower 80s for highs and upper
60s for lows.
Sunset Saturday will be at 9:08
p.m . and sunrise on Sunday will
be at 6:08 a.m.
Forecast

Tonight...Showers and thunderstorms. Rain heavy at times.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Sunday... Showen and thunderstorms.Rain heavy at times.
C¢9ler with highs in the mid 70s.
Extendelf foreCI!IIt
Sunday night...Showers ending.
Lows in the mid 60s.
. Monday. .. Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 80s.
'The$day.. .Fair. Lows near 60.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Wednesday.. .A chance of showers and thunderstorms. Lows in
the mid 60s. Highs in the mid
80s.

'•
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.

Tfte ntistake is known by
collectors as a "doubledenomination mule error"
- two eurrencits 'stamped
on d«ferent sides.
editor of The Baxter Bulletin,
was completing a bankruptcy.
· " I was in ·financial ruin;' he
said, explaining that a hospital
stay in 1993 caused him to forfeit
two months' salary. Since then, he
has been trying to get caught up.
"Now, if the Lord wills, I can
pay the debts;' he said:
But he noted his fortune s may
again change.
"Today it's a valuable coin, but
if somebody l).as found several
more, it's not so valuable," Wallis
said. ~ It's just another error coin."
A dealer will auction the coin
during the American Numismatic Asso~iation's. convention in
Philadelphia in August.

From
Simple to
Simply
Magnificent
We offer the finest granites
in an assortment of colors

and coundess designs. We
can provide the memorial
that's right for you. Come
talk to our counselors. We'll
help you select. 'l,memorial to be
cherished.

Heart Matters•••
With Dr. Robert Holley
QUESTION-I run, exercise and
watch what I eat and I still can't get :
my cholesterol below 250. What else
can I do to reduce my risk?
ANSWER-It sounds like you are ·
making a real effort to control your
cholesterol, but some people just
can't do it With diet and exercise
alone. In some patients, what you
have inherited from your parents may
predispose you to a bean attack or
stroke, and diet and exercise alone
won't do the trick. In fact, exercise

ha s little or nb "effect on total
cholesterol, and LDL (BAD)
Cholesterol. In patient~ like y~u~elf,
you may requue certam mcdtcataons
that will lower your cholesterol and
other risk factors, because no mat!et
how hard you try, .you won't be able
to get to goal without them.
Remember too, theie are at least 25
risk factors t!)at can increase your
chances of a heart attack or stroke,
cholesterol is just one of them. I
would encourage you to come ,into
the Cholesterof Center for a Fl!.I;!E
· bean attack and stroke evaluation. We
could then work together to get you
on a personal plan to reduce· your
overall risk.

Doctor Robert Holley Is the areu
only cholesterol specialist, or
therothrombotic Dlse.a u
Specialist, which means he iuu'luul ·
SJHcla! training, and Is an expert In
filentifylng, and treating all the
•arious risk factors that le,.J:to a
heart attacfc or stroke.' 'Doctor
Holley operates the Robert M,
Holle¥ Cholesterol Center, located
in PomJ Pleasant.
For answers to your medical' questions
about heart attacks and strokes, mail them
to tho Robert M. Holley Choteslorot
Center at the address below.

Call today for a fm heart attatk
and 5lroke risk assessment.

''Reducing ;your risk Of tht unt.rp#cttd"

2500 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

520 W. Ma;;, St. -Pomeroy
Near the Mason Bridge

Phone 740-992-2588
Vinton 740-388-8603

304-675-1675

Gallipoli~ 740-446-08112

u.s.

·Keynes Bros. Flour Mill
Logan, Ohio

For The Best Wheat
Price In Central
And Southem Ohio.
Call 1·800·513•1117

WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal investigaton are closely exam- .. ining two computer hard drives containing nuclear secrets that were
· ·· found at the Los Alamos weapons laboratory, believing they are the
· · ones missing for more than a month. They want to determine
· · whether the information has been compromised.
·
Authorities hoped to know by late Saturday whether the two
,. ' drives definitely are the same ones that disappeared and. after an
electronic examination, learn whether the contents have been
'· · copied or otherwise tampeted with, said one official, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
·
.
·
'• ' The two devices, each about the size of a deck of cards, contain
·. •highly technical information that would be used by a nuclear emeri· gency response team to locate and dismantle not only qs., but
' some Russian and other countries' nuclear devices in case of an
·· . accident or terrorist act.
"They were found in a secure area. The area is being treated as a
• . crime scene:• Energy Secretary Bill Richardson said at a news con/". ference in Phoenix, where he was informed of the discovery Friday
:,while holding a meeting on summer electricity reliability:
~ . Richardson said the two devices were found within the secuxe
· :"Division X" area of the New Mexico weapons lab in an area that
, had been searched previously. Another official, who spoke on con~" '·dition of anonymity, said they were discovered behind a copying
machine.
The highly restricted area includes the vault where the two drives, which belong to the Nuclear Emergency Search Team had been
... kept. They were last reported seen' April 7 and found missing a
· month later, although senior lab and Energy D.,epartrnent officials
wexe not informed until recendy.
·
While relieved that the drives were found within the secure area
of the lab, Richardson said "this is not a victory speech" and that the
FBI and the Energy Department "would continue to aggressively
punue" the criminal investigation. Even with the drives · re~overed
• · those responsible could face criminal charges for security breaches.

r

'·
'
~ ~ Convention could.draw protesterS
'

L

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The protesters who swarmed recent
: ·· world · trade and banking summits in Seattle and Washington now
: ;, are targeting the Democratic National Convention.
Some demonstration planners, hoping to rally 30,000 protesters,.
pro!Dising carnival-like convergence of activists for the Aug.
14-17 convention.
·
.
" "There will be people with giant puppets, there'll be street the• ; ater, folks in funny costumes and carrying giant banners," said orga~ ·'·.nizer Shawn McDougal.
' " But there co!lld be more disruptive actions as well. For example,
; :, groups such as the Berkeley-based Ruckus Society plan July train} &gt;ing camps to te~ch elaborate protest tactics including creating .vir,
C'.·tually impenetrable human blockades by having protesters link arms
~'.' through plaftic pipes.
\ i· Los Angeles police Lt. Horace Frank "said officers have met with
~ '. some activist groups .to discuss ways to keep the protests peaceful.
~~The department expects some, however, to seek attention by break' .ing windows or provoking confrontations.
"If people decide to break the law, we will have to take appro~ . priate actio~:· Frank said.
~ , Some police officials will travel to Philadelphia to monitor
~ ·,e~pe~t~dprotests ~uring the Republican convention two ,we~ks.
.; hbefote the Democrats gather in Los Angeles.

b

Fare

·l,

a

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i •'

'"~·:

~:Fcc gives ·dearance to phone merge~

~, WASHINGTON (AP) - With regulatory approval in hand, Beq
~ 'Atlantic and GTE are moving swiftly to complete a $65 billion deal
~ that will let them -offer a bundle of telecommunications services
:::.under the name Verizon Conununicationa.
;; · The companiea aaid they expect to cloae the merpr, announced
·: almoat two )'ean aao, by the end o( the month. The marrlap, they
: beUeve, will tranaform them from reponll companitl to a national ·
; and worldwldt powtrhouae.
:
ln tht wttkl co come, "You wW Itt more than juat 1 new loao:·
: llld Bell Atlantic Chairman Ivan St~dtnbtrs. "Wt ' " Verlzon aet; tin1 a new atandard."
! The merpr cleared lea flnll huldlt Friday with approval &amp;om the
' Fedenl Communication• CommlAion, conditioned ·on the compa• nit1 partially aplnnln1 oft' GTE'• Internet aoetl.
.
,i
Not ruling out future acquilitiona, company execUtives said they
·: will keep an eye 11pen to expand their reach even further.
l "We are going to be a global leader. We are going to stay a glob: a) leader:' said GTE chief Charles Lee, who will share with Seiden.
; berg the Verizon chief executive officer's job.
; As part of the approval, the companies promised to spend $500
"' milliol) to enter'local· phone marker; or serve 250,000 new customers outside of their current territories within three years of closing. That would make Verizon a rival to o~er Bell companies in
r some regions. If it fails to do SO, the company will pay the government $750 million.
·

'

·; Kfdsl .Enter the.
·curious Geo11e VIsits
·A Dairy ·auean Store•
story.contestl

INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC .

'

On the Net:
Texas A&amp;M . University:
http:/ /www.tamu.edu

On the Net:

Mint:
http:/ / www.usmint.gov
American Numismatic Association: http:/ /www.money.org
B?weq and Merena auctions:
http:/ /www.bowersandmerena.c
·o m
. ''
Coin
World
magazine:
tion mule' error" - two curren- · htrp:/ /www.coinworld.com
cies stamped on different sides.
Wallis' coin bears the front of
the Washington quarter and the Auto-Owner• lmurance
back of th-e Sacagawea dollar.
Life Home Car Business
It is not known whether other
coins with the same error are in
7le "1t. Atlt.. 1=1, ~le •
circulation; 500 million Sacagawea coins were minted. A
spokesman for the U.S. Mint did
not return a call seeking comment.
114 Court Pom~roy
TWenty days before he found
the coin, Wallis, the business page
992-6677

•

---

m~ssages supports Aggie bonfire," said Keep the Fire Burning spokesman Ryan Thompson. "There would be many,
many disappointed people (if it
stopped) . I' m sure there would
be a hole in people's hearts."
Two bonfire investigations
are pending.
Bill Turner, Brazos County .
district attorney, said his office
is determining whether to seek
criminal charges. His investigation has ruled out sabotage but
not negligence.
On Wednesday, the Texas
Board of Professional Engineers
voted to launch its own inquiry.
Board officials said the organization had jurisdiction over the
bonfire, calling it · a complex
structure requiring engineering
controls.

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&amp;unbap l!ttmt! ·&amp;rntinrl • Page ~7

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

. Sunday, June 18, 2000

·.
1 HNallans call'telescopes Intrusion

.
.,
HONOLULU (AP) - For decades, astronomers have floc,ked to
the highest point in Hawaii to search the night skies with some of
the most powerfUl telescopes on the planet. '
Now a dispute is erupting a~ the 14,000-foot s~mmit of the dormant Mauna Kea volcano over the presence of those telescopes.
Native Hawaiian activists call them an unwelcome intrusion on
sacred Hawaiian land.
University of Hawaii o,fficials hope a master plan approved Friday for future telescope development will resolve that dispute.
• .1\.t stake, scientists say, is a top-notch window to the ~niverse.
"It's one of the best places on the entire earth to put a telescope;•
said Sreven Vogt, a professor of astronomy and astrophysics at the
University of California at" Santa Cruz, w)lo helped discover the first
planets smaller than Jupiter ever found outSide the solar system,
More major telescopes are located on Mauna Kea, or "White
Mountain;' than any other single peak - 12. They include the
. ~ world's largest optical and infrared telescopes at the W.M. Keck
Observatory.

=
~
=

i

Papers try Spanlsh·Eoallsh editions

NllWNAN, Ga. (AP) - Greeting readen with the headline,
'"Hola Coweta;' the Times-Herald in Coweta County has become
the latest newspaper attempting to attract the state's growing Hispanic population by printing news in English and Spanish.
Saturday's edition is one in a weekly series the newsp~p~r plans
to publish with a page in Spanish - with English translations on
subsequent pages - before looking into the possibility of starting a
~ " Spanish-language weekly, publish~r Sam 0. Jones said,
.
;.:: "I think we can do it and ptoVIde a semce to t.he populaaon and
:~t I think we have an opportunitY to make some money doing it,"
.
..~
, ~ones saa'd.
· ; The Georgia Press Association said it knows of only one other
;:;Engli~l) 7Janguage paper in the state that prints news in Spanish ':Th~ Daily Citizen of Dalton.

.

.

-----.

·-···

·-- .

Son makes drive from Tenn. to Alaska for dad
MURFREESBORO,
Tenn.
(AP) -Wylie W Sensing Jr. died
of lun11 cancer before he could
realize one of his lifelong dreams
- to visit the Alaskan wilderness.
In his honor, his son, Scott
Sensing, is driving 10,000 miles in
a 1952 Chevy truck to the most
northern point on the continent
accessible by car - Prudoe Bay,
Alaska.
''I'm not doing this for fame or
recognition:· says Sensing, who
started his journey June 11. "This
is something my father always
dreamed of doing, and if I can
somehow fulfill that dream for
him, and raise money to fight the
disease he died from, then it's
something I have to do:•
Sensing, 36, a srudent services
officer at Tennessee Technology
Center in Murfreesboro, took a
one-year leave of absence from his
job for the journey:
While such cross-country pilgrimages are not unusual, traveling
in an old truck that averages 40
mph, has no radio and no modern
air-conditioning nukes the journey a test of human will.
"Being without an air-conditioner has.been a hard adjustment.
If your going across town that's
one thing, but eight ho11rs at 93
degrees without cool air is tough,"
Sensing said June 14 from his TeJUs
hotel room.
"I've never been someone who
needs music to drive. So far I've
done a lot of thinking to pass the
time, watching the changes in
scenery roll past:'
Sensing and his father renovated the truck, affectionately named
Shelley, after he discovere.d it near
his rural Middle Tennessee home
the summer after his 1982 high
school graduation.

"I said I was going to drive it to
Alaska \hat sununer. Bu.t of course
that was silly back then, and I dido't do it," he said.
His dreams of Alaska were
passed down to him by his father,
who fantasized about homesteading in the Alaskan wilderness
since he was a child.
A normally animated man,
Sensing is quiet as he talks about
his father. He stares into the disranee, fighting strong emotions.
"My dad was born about a
hundred ~ars too late;· said Sensing, noting his father owned every
Western novel written by Louis
L'Amour. "He was one of those
people who would have been fine
living back in the woods all alone.
fending for himself."
Friend Galen French said when
Sensing's father got ill with lung
cancer, the father and son used to
talk about a road trip to Alaska.
"I . think Mr. Sensing really
thought he was going to beat it;'
French said. "I think that was one
of his motivating factors, that they
would finally get to take that
father-son trip. But it wasn't meant
to be.~·
The elder Sensing died in May
1998 at age 65. It took the
younger Sensing .about ~ year
before he could commit himself to
making the trip for both of them.
"It was then I said, 'I'm going
to do this all the way, or I'm not
going to do it at all;" he said.
It took another year for him to
raise money anti find sponsors.
Corporate donatiohs - including
$1,000 for fuel from Kroger Fuel
Centen and a laptop donated by
Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Tennessee - have helped him finance
about 90 percent of the.trip.'
"It was our way of helping out

Clinton's
message
focuses
fathers ·

on

"I want to avoid all those huge
18-wheelers doing 80 mph on the
interstate," Sensing said. " Plus, you
see parts of the country you would
never know were there if ~ou
stayed on the interstate. ! think pty
dad would like that."
Sensing started his joim\ey
from Murfreesboro, following 'the
Natchez Trace Parkway, originatly
·an Indian trail. He wound through
Mississippi to Austin, Texas, the
hometown of his friend Freni:h,
who / will ride with him .' to
Phoenix.

'

Point Pleasant

.

SPECIAL SUMMER SESSION.::

WELDING

.

·

Starts. June 19th. will run Mondays t~
ursdays. B AM to 2:30 PM. except
of July 3-7. Will end August 9th
lto1ta I 150 hours. Cost - $375 tutti~~
plus s·u pply fee. Instructor will give
state certification tests to those
completing the class. Openings ar~
and on a first come first servca
Please apply in person on,,
June 15th or Monday, Junfi
no phone calls please.
Note: Staff will not be available
to ·process applications on
''
Friday. June 16th.

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LT 265!75R16 0owL...... $164.00
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OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE

sons.

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Career Center

PIBBnDRM
P195noA14 .........~ $63.oo
P205/65R15 .......... $69.00
P225nOR15 .......... $78.00

NEWYORK (AP) -The one
in ·three American childten wlro
live without their fathers should
not have to suffer financially or
emotionally, President Clinton
said Saturday in releaaing a report
that oft'en waya to help fathen pt
more Involved in their chlld'a
achoollns.
The l,'tport by the Bducation
and Health and Human Services
departmena five• teachen and
those who care for younpten
. information on the best waya to
help fathen have a strong role in
their children's education. And it .
highlights model programs and
provides
information
on
resources available.
P,.esearchers report that a
father's involvement during
infancy and the early years not
only contributes to a child's emotional security, but helps them
solve math problems and develop
verbal skills, Clinton said in his
weekly radio address, marking
Father's Day on Sunday.
"One study showed that the
chances of a child getting mostly
A's increased by over 40 percent
in two-parent families where the
father was highly involved," Cliotori said. "Even in families where
the father isn't living with his
child, but remains actively
involved, those odds of getting A's
increased lrY·a full third."
In his radio message, which he
taped Friday in New York where
he visited tWo schools, the president noted that child support col. lections have increased 10 percent
during the past year, reaching a
record of nearly $16 billion double the $8 billion collected in
1992.
Clinton also used his address tO
criticize the Ho.use for passing a
spending bill last week that fails
to include his $255 million
fatherhood initiative. It aims to
help at least 40,000 low-income
noncustodial parents - primarily
fathers - find work, meet support payments and re-establish
relationships with their children.
It would allow states to simplify child support and distribution
rules, give incentives to states that
pass more child support payments
directly to families and help noncustodial parents move into jobs,

what we believe is a worthwhile
cause;' said Sherri Tate, a Kroger
spokeswoman. "We get all kinds of
donation requests, but Mr. Sensing's request is definitely one that I
haven't seen before."
Sensing also raised over
$30,000 for the American Cancer
Society from about 40 antique car
clubs nationwide.
Sensing plans to keep a travel
journal that he will post on a Web
site, along with pictures, so his
family, friends and sponsors can
monitor his progress.
He says he's raking the back
roads of America for several rea-

•see
~ijiji~~ii...,.o~a:talls

01)t(AS111:S.SlYI.£S..WHOIIIYMW!l(
Store For Complete

�•

...•(
~

~·•
••
Sunday, June 18, 2000 .;

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pluaant, WV
;.
;.
~--~~~~~~~~~~~--------------------------------------~~~--~~~~ :

Page A8 • iounba!' l:imH -iotntinr!

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•

____________________________ ______ ______

••

n.e Univenity of Rio Grande and RGCC announce graduate list~j
RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College
gnduated the following Gallia
County students June 11 :
College of Gnduate Studiea
Master of Educatioa iD Claslroom Teac:hlDg
Deanm Sue Carpenter
Gallipo~s

Lolita M Casto
GallipoiU
Kelli Renae Davis
Gallipolis
Kevin R y:m Hager
Rio Gnnde
Jodi Lea Jones
GallipoiU
Trenda Jean Jon"'
GallipoiU
Nancy S Lanier
GallipoiU
Marva Lee Miller
Rio Gnnde
Cathy AM Petrie
Vinmn
Harreld Christian Scott
GallipoiU
Julie LyM Short
GallipoiU
Rita A Simmons
Bidwell
Lisa Dawn Wihon
Gallipolis ·
Eric ADen Wooten
GallipoiU
CoDege of Liberal Arts &amp; Sciences
School of Humanities
Bachelor of Arts Degree
Cheryl E Blanton
Crown City
College of Liberal Arts &amp; Sciences
School of Humanities
Bachelor of Scieace Degne
Eric Mulford
Cheshire
College of Liberal ArtS &amp; Scieo'"
School of Soci81 Scieaces
Bachelor of Scieace Degrees
· Erica Dawn Adkiru
Bidwell
Denni$ Thdd Breyfogle
Rio Gnnde
Dana Trichoile Casey
Rio Gnnde
·Jason Aaron Casey
GallipoiU ·
Rachd Elizabeth Cochran
BidwoU
Sunday AM Fnnldip
Gallipolis
Nikki Lynn Gteonloo
BidwoU
Wdliam Eric Hi'Y"s
·
ballipom
"
Ruth Dawn Keeton
Gallipolis
Ru .. v Moore
Gallipolis
Joohyock Parle
Thurman
Kelly Melissa Pope
Bidwell
Carey J Stanley
GallipoiU
Amber L Staton
Vinton
CoDege of Liberal Ana &amp; Sci·
eacea
School of Soci81 Sdencea
Bachelor of Silci81 Work Depe

Deb.-. K Adlcit~~
Thurman
Rebecca Gail Kauffinan
•
Rio Gnnde
Diana Lynn Wdiman Racer
Vinton
Hannah Elizabeth Rumley
Gallipolis
Lori LyM Siegen
Vinton
Kathleen jo Lamben Sturgill
GallipoiU .
Wanda Yvonne Gardner Thevenir
BidwoU
College of Profossioaal StudiM
School of Educ:ation
Bachelor of Science Degno
Victoria Marie Berz
GallipoiU
Andrew Dean Brurn6dd
Crown City
Keith Alan Caner
Vinton
Christina A Cogar
GallipoiU
William Todd Dee!
Thumun
Aimee Suzanne Henson
Gallipolis
Je~ Shane Hout
GallipoiU
S~cieLeahSNmrnrl.amben

Gallipolis
Laura Beth Neal
BidwoU Tanuny Lee Saunders
Crown City
Mamlee Boring Spencer
GallipoiU
Carrie Rachael Walton
Patriot
· Collep of Profellloul Stndln
SchoOl afFine Arts
Bep-!or of Arts Depe
•·
Stephen A Sisson .
GallipoiU
Nancy Vanco ·
GallipoiU
Col1ep of ProfeslliMel Scudiel
Sc.bool of FIDe Arts
Be ts'or .X SCI•= Daaiw
AJ90b L Barry

Gallipolis
Crai~Mkbae!Smith

College oC Uberal Arts &amp; Sci&amp;DCII

School of Scioace
Bachelor of Sdeace Degree
Byron Matthew Burlco
Bidwell
Megban AMo Kolcun
Gallipolis
Nathaniel James Lusher
Bidwell
Barry Chrysagon Thompson
Gallipolis
Bethany Mar~ Vollborn
Bidwell
EDen Christine Watson
Thurman
College of Profeuional Studies
Emonoa E. E'Ylllls School of
BusiDeu Management
Bachelor of Arts Degree
Amy Nicole Toler
BidwoU
CoUep of Professional Studios
Emenoa E. E'Ylllls School of
BuaiDou Maagement
l)ochelor of Science Degree
Jo EDen Fisher
Gallipolis
Loretta A Lawrence
Rio Gnnde
Kevin Peter Roynall!&gt;
Thurman
Travis K Saunders
Gallipolis
Tnvis K Saunders
GallipoiU
Jencie Elizabeth Swindler
Rio Grande
Wdliarn Alan Veazey
Thurman
CoUep of Liberal Arts &amp; Sdeaces
Holzer School of NuraiDg
Bachelor of Science jn NursiDg
Degree
Melissa Jean Burdette
Gallipolis
Elizabeth A Camday
Rio Grande
Angela F Cox
Patriot
Sheri J Foster
Gallipolis
Kimberle AM Greeno
Gallipolis
Lisa F Lasseter
' Vinton
Dorothy Louise Neutzling
BidwoU
Craig Henry Register
Gilllipolis
Angela Sayre Jljchards
G.UipoiU
.. R011oe A Ward
GallipoiU
CoUege of Profeuional Studios
. · School ofTe~hllolotios
Bachelor of klaace bl'mdnatriil
Teclmolol)' Depe
Michael Denver Me Carty
Vinton
CoUege of Liberal Arts &amp; Sci·
ence1

School of Soci81 Science
Associate of Arts Degree
Carey Leo Campbell
Bidwell
Andrea Hope Casey
RioGnnde
EUa Louise Drununond
Gallipolis
Suo Hope Engle
GallipoiU
Joy Abrenna Haynes
BidweU
Melissa Beth Phillips
GallipoiU
Karena Pearl Pope
Vinton
College of Profouional Studios
School of Education
Auodote of Applied Science
(Euly Chndhood Developmeat)
Heather Marie Haycook
Gallipolis
CoDep of Profeaaional Studies
School of Fine Arts
Auociate of Applied Science
(I'oehnical Theatre)
Terry Dale Chapman
Gallipolis
CoDege of Uberal Arts &amp; Scieaces
School of Sciaaces
Auociate of Arts Degne
Dobonh Lynn Chevalier
GaDipoiU
College of Liberal Arts &amp; Sdeacea
School of Sdeaces
Auoci!'te of Applied BuaiDou

PUIL!C NOTICI

Melee County bollrd ol
1111/DD Ia IIIIJitlng -lad
lllcle lor 1M fOllowing two

~•lalu:

1. 1111 lohool lua.
11'DNIIIII2P'VAOII21 217
oh. . ole. lold •• I•
oonllltlon. Pord lody and

r.-~·

lronoo 11.
1..-,14ILIUD 22:131
(llfr'a lerlal No.) v..
en1111e. Will lie eolci 1e II
condition. Neede body

--.
lelilell .... to ...

lent to:
lujlerlntendant.· llelge
COUftiY lolrll 01 1111/0D
'-0• lox $07 l)'taOUM,
Ohlo41m
lnvelop.. .. ... lllllrllft

Dope (Computer Opentions)
Daniel Leo Drununond
Vinton
College of ProfeuiODal Studies
Emenon E. Evaas School of
BuaiDeu Manogemeat
Associate of Applied BusiDeu
(Accounting)
Ingrid E Burnette
.Gallipolis
Lea Ann Carter

Gallipo~s

Crystal Gayle Moaige
GallipoiU
Jencio Elizabeth Swindler
Rio Grande
Amy Nicole Toler
Bidwell
CoUege of Liberal Arts &amp; Sciences
Holzer School of NuraiD1
Associate of Applied Scieace
(NuraiDc)
Amber Dawn Arrington
Gallipolis
Christie Renao Campbell
Vinton
Amy Beth Casto
Gallipolis
Lindsay Renee Fi1hor
BidwoU
KeUy Sue Kingery
Gallipolis
Elizabeth EDen Stansberry
Gallipolis
Donita Faith WaJd
Gallipolis
Jessica Renae Williams
Gallipolis
CoUege of Profeaaioaa!' Studies
School ofTedmoiOI)'

PatriOI

Peter A Smith
Crown City
Marisa Lynn Snodgra"
Parrio[
Chasidy R Wny
GallipoiU
College of Professioaal Studies
Emerson E. E'Ylllls School of
BuaiDeu MaDagement
Associate of Applied Business
(BuaiDess Management)
Renee Fisher
BidweU
Elizabeth Anne McCulcy
Gallipoli!
Crystal Gayle Meaige
Gallipolis
Christina A Richards
Thurman
Chad ADen Shamblin
Gallipolis
College of Professioaal Studies
Emerson E. Evans School of
Buslaess Management
Associate of Applied Bnsiness
(IDformetioa Techllology)
Lori Lynn Duhl
Thurman
College of Professional Studies
Emersoa E. Evans School of

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SUNDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Melptohold
physlalls June 20
. . ROCK SPRINGS - Physicals
I'?r all athletes interested in playing sports at Meigs Junior High
,School and Meigs •High School
,Will be held Tuesday, June 20, in
the clinic across from Veteran
Memorial Hospital.
~ . The physicals will be given
liom 10 a.m. until 2 p.m,
. Physical cards can be 'Picked up
the offices of Meigs Junior
H.i gh and Meigs High .Schools.

in

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

~

.~ .EAST MEIGS-

All Eastern
School athletes in seventh
through 12th grades will be provided free sports physicals
· Wednesday, June 28, at the clinic
.~
' ross from VMH in Pomeroy.
: . Physicals will be administered
from 8 a.m. until 11 a.m. on that
~igh

day.
. ' Physical cards and fall sports
·packets may be picked up at the
:Eastern High School office from
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through
l;riday.
·:·All students must obtain a
'sports packet in order to particiP.ate in fall sports.

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
· Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.
Our next clinic .date Is.July 7.
(614) Z21-63:J1 for an appointment.

Call

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.~: Donnie Jones hoop
·:, Cllmp June 27-H

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·-POINT PLEASANT - The
dates for the 14th annual Donnie
jones Basketball Camp .have been
'ii'mounced.
•
i All sessions wiD be held June
: 21-30 at the PDiDt Pleasant Mid- .
' die School. The session for ages 610 will froni 8:30a.m. until11:30
a,m,
-The 11-17 year old session will
from 11 a.m. until 2:30 p.m.
The
specialized
individual
instruction period will be from, 3
·
p.m. to 5 p.m.
• Applications Ca!J. be pii:ked up
a.t Fruth Pharmacy, Johnson
~ppermarket, Dairy Queen '3Jid
Village Pizza in Point Ple:tsa!lt.
They can also be obtained by
calling 304-675-4402.

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Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc. ha;;~ been serving the elec·
tric needs of southern Ohio since 1937. We came into existence
because the investor-owned utilities of the day thought it wouldn't be
profitable to serve an area as mountainous and unpopulated as this,
In some respects, they were right. It's not easy to string and
•
maintain 2,500 miles of line ·
... .......
through the rough terrain of
southern Ohio. But the people of
this area have always been known for standing up to a challenge.
So they banded together in 1937 and said enough is enough. If
nobody else will provide us with electricity we'll organize our
own electric cooperative and bring electricity to ourselves.
Over the years, that arrangement has worked pretty well. People
in this area have had a reliable source of electric power at a reasonable rate, But over the past few years, something happened.
Outages were on the increase - reliability and dependability
'·
were on the decrease.

·Gallipolis Baby Blue
: hoop Cllmp July 5·7

again.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Acade!UY basketball coach Jim Osborne
will offer the annual Baby Blue
, basketball camp July 5-7 at the
GDC.
The Baby Blue camp is open to
boys and girls who will be in the
first. through third grades in the
2000-01 school year. The camp
will be held July 5-7, from 1:15
p.m. to 2:15p.m. each day.
·
&lt; The cost is $30 per camper if
~gistration is completed by June
28. After that date, the cost is S35.
For more information, contact
Jifn Osborne at 446~9284.

••' THAT IS CHANGING
BREC is back on the right track. Many of you have noticed that outage time is drastically reduced. BREC has begun an extensive plan to '
clear trees and growth around our lines and it is having an impact More
.
than half of all outages are becauSe of trees and undergrowth damaging electric lines. We are in
,
the middle of a $3.5 million project to clear all2,500 miles of line on our system in a five-year
period:
'
·
.
In June of 1999, Buckeye changed our method of handling power outages. We now use a'service designed specifically to ·handle birge volumes of calls, something Buckeye's members
could not afford to have on their own. This servke provides up to 17 operator and 48. automated lines simultaneously. '!'his will result in fewer busy signals and possibly shorter outage times in big storm situations because th~ people who know where the problem is will be
able to get information to Buckeye. ,
We also are in the process ofinstalling automated mt'ter reading devices called Turtle meters
on our entire system. In addition to relieving,consumers from the chore of reading their own
meters, this electronic device will alert Buckeye REC to potential problems with lines, meters,
etc.
·
We realize we still have a way to go in our efforts to regain your confidence, but we are making
progress. In 1937, people were proud to say they were a member of Buckeye Rural Electric. We intend to make you
feel that way again.

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=Hoop-a-Hustle Cllmp
to be held It Han1111n
ASHTON - "The Second
Annual Charlie Hagley Hoop-nHusde Basketball Camp will be
lield July 17-20 at Hannan High
S&lt;:hool.
\
. Charlie Hagley (Hannan '90) is
c~rrently the administrative assisbnt with the Marshall Universiry
basketball program. He has previ:Ously coached at the high school
~ii.d college levels.
: · :The camp will be divided into
two sessions. The first session will
be from 8:3'0 a.m. until 11:30
for boys and girls ages 5-10. .
l'fle · second will be from 1:30
p;m, until 4:30 p.m. for ages 11-

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4K4.HSllilc R1M1Ic n~ S.i\lth
Rin Orunllc. 011 ~-~1•7-4

740-3711-2025 • SIMI-231-2732

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. • i'axTri-County sports and outo&lt;;~ors neW5 to the Sunday 'rin:'es- .
Sentinel at 740-446-3008.

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y, &gt;ur li&gt;uch~runc Encr~:y"Cnnpcrativc ~T

flt11,1t.a.a-.

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· : For more · information · or an
application, call Hagley at 304696-3587,

Buckeye REC

1 1 - . , ....... aoao 11
. . oiiiOM of ...... County
1i1n of IIIIWD.

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Page 81
sUnd-r.June11~2000

'

Ellstem physicals
set for June 21 ·

FID
CE
BUCKEYE_ .RURAL ,ELECTRIC,
you're going to
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To lft.,...c YeiiiOIM, oall
111....1 llurlnt ftOnllll
••1'111111 IIOura (I 1111 to 4

Bidwell

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If you've

:Eastern's Matt Boyles signs with URG, Page B3
,C:hurch softball results, Page B3
·
J::lockey is alive &amp; well in the Tri- County, Page B~
Polcyn's Point: So long, Young &amp; Moose, Page B6 -

v:

, Joint Replacement...
for all the things you
could be missing/

992·5479

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Inside:

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•Preferred ·AND high rlak
drlvera welcome

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CoUege of Profeasional Studies ;
School ofTeclmolozy
Associate of Applied Scieace • '
(Fine Woodworkinc)
'
Douglas S Rouster
f
'
Rio Grande
'
College of Profeuional Studiea •
School ofTechaology
Associate of Applied Science : •
.
.•
(Medical Laboratory 'Thchnology)
·;
Vanessa Dawn Cook
GallipoiU
Erica Leah Johnson
Gallipolis
.•'
Teresa Lynn Reynolds
••
IlidweU
•••
College of Profeuioaal Studies :
School ofTechaology
•;
Associate of Applied Scieace ;
tt
(Plant MaiDtenance Technology);l
Paul M Barry
Thurman
....

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•Low down payment
•L.ow monthly payments
•Immediate SA·22 flllnga

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Richard C Tipple
. Gallipolis
CoUege of Professioaal Studies
School ofTechaology
Auociote of Applied Sdeaee
(Electronics)
Douglas Roger Blain
Crown City
Daniel Lee Drummond
Vinton
Gregory L Fife Jr
Gallipolis

Call Us First
ForA Quote

tdiOfWFY
IOIJI\ VI lfl\lili\1.:\ll
! , '

Vinton

Cauc.Uod1
Rojoctodl
Accidmll1
Ticbtll
NewDriwri

BANKRUPTCY
1

Aslqcieta of Applied BusiDess
(OIBce TechDoiOI)')
Melinda Sue Gooldin
Gallipolis
Heather Nicole Saunders
Gallipolis
Jetlica Rae Wood
Vinton
Collep of Profeuional Studies
School ofTedmology
Anociate .of Appli"' Science
(Draftinc &amp; Desiga)
Bradley Stephen Harris
Gallipolis
Wesley Alan Smith

BuaiDeu Mauc-meat
Associate of Applied BuaiDeas
(Microcomputer Applicatioas Ia
BusiDeas)
Karen G Anderson

•

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Roush leads Ohio to win
BYANDRIWC~
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

Bevo joins
Lou Holtz
Hall of Fame

PARKERSBURG, W.Va.What was supposed to be a
grand display of offensive firepower deteriorated into an old
fashioned butt-kicking Friday
at the seventh ~ual Battle
Against
CystiG
Fibrosis
(BACF) Football Classic.
The
annual
aU-star
game/fundraiser
held
at
Parkerburg's Stadium Field
saw the Ohio All•Stars demolish the West Virginia All-Stars,
36-0.
The
much
anticipated
matchup between tailback
Justin Roush of Meigs High
School and fullback Scott
Davis of Class AAA ' siate
champion Parkersburg · High
never materializ~d.
Davis was hdd to 15 yards
on four carries. and left the
game halftime ~th a sprained
ankle, The higHly touted Penn
State recruit sp,~nt the intermission with his left foot in a
. bucket of ice and was on
crutches for tht final two perii
ods.
Roush held 'up his end of ·
the bargain, ~shing for 69
bruising yards on 16 carries
and scoring two touchdowns
on short, punishing runs. ·
The senior's · first carry was
typically Roush. He wrapped
the ball up with both hands
and pushed the pile for five
yards before-I the Mountain
State team finally dragged him

EAST LIVERPOOL - Universiry of Rio Grande basketball
legend Clarence 'Bevo' Francis is
one of seven to be enshirined in
the Lou Holtz/ Upper Ohio Valley Hall of Fame on June 25.
Francis is best known for his
basketball .playing career at then
Rio Grande College.
In 1952 he joined !lis high
school mentor Newt Oliver at
Rio.
While there, he established
standards for points in a game
scoring
average
(113),
(46.5/game). 50+ point games
(eight in '52-53 and 14 in '53-54),
and several others records.
After leaving Rio, he toured
with the Boston Whirlwinds and
played in the European Professional League.
After his basketball career, he
settled in Highlandtown, Ohio .
with his wife of 49 years, Jean.
He was one of 13 who helped
found that communiry's volunteer fire department,
Francis was also active as a basketball official and in the Little
League.
The Universiry of Rio Grande
annually holds the annual Bevo
Francis tournament to honor his
accomplishments.
Francis, Oliver and former
"Bevo Era" players attend the
event, which includes a banquet
and Rio Grande Athletic Hall of
Fame induction ceremonies.
SUPERBACK - Justin Roush of Meigs (24) rushed for 69 yards and scored two touchdowns to lead
Francis and the "Bevo Era'"
PIMM- All-stan, Pllp I:J Ohio to a 36-&lt;&gt; whitewashing of West VIrginia In the annual BACF Football Classic. (Andrew Carter photo)
team are the subject of a future
ESPN special, scheduled to air in
December of this year. ESPN
producers
have
conducted
, -. ·numerous interviews-in Gallipolis
and surrounding areas to gather
background information for the
'
documentary.
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) · - · Tig~r . . Woods had six birdies and four bogeys in .Love and Bernhard Langer on the sidelines
The Hall inducts individuals
WoodS had just made hl1tory 11t the U.S. . his second round, which began late Friday for the .final two rounds.
from
all fields of endeavor who
. Nicklaus made a poignant farewell to the
Open, finishing the second tpund with a and ended on a misry, mild Satu~ay mornare sucessful and can serve as posrecord six-shot lead, and all he could think ing, FOg delays Thursday and Fnday forced tournament he has won four times. He shot ·
itive role-models for young peoan 11-over 82 in the second round Friday,
about was breakfast.
the scheduling backup. .
ple,
.
Woods reached the tournament's halfWay
Woods and the rest .of the remaining field, leaving him at 13-over 155 and missing the
The
induction
ceremony will
mark Saturday at S-under 134, six -strokes cut to 63 players for the final two ·rounds, cut by six strokes. He was saluted by fans
take place at the Hall in East Livdear of Thomas Bjorn and Miguel Angel were scheduled to play the ·third round later and feitow players after his 44th consecutive
Ohio at 1:30 p.m.
erpool,
Open.
·
Jimenez. Kirk Triplett and Jose Ma,ria Olaz- Saturday.
Coach Lou Holtz will be preNicklaus, 60, who won a duel with
abal, the only tither players below par, were
"I'm going to .get something to eat,"
sent
for the induction. Other
all-under 141.
Woods said after completing the second Arnold Palmer to capture the 1972 Open
guests for the festivities will be
The record fbr a second-round lead at the round. "I'm hungry right now. And I'll let title at Pebble Beach and also won a U.S.
Jerome
Bettis· of the PittSburgh
Open had beerrfive strokes by Willie Andet- my mind ease. up· a bit, because I know it's Amateur championship on this course, iinSteelers, Steye Beuerline of the
ished the first round at 2-over 73 but knew
.
son at Baltusrol in 1903.The 134 by Woods going to be a long-afternoon,"
Carolina Panthers, and Reggie
also tied the iecord for the lowest score ' Todd Fischer had the shot of the morning by the end of the second round that he was
Jackson, who wiD all be present at
'
• through the first 36 hol~s of
Open, a Saturday, when his sand wedge at the 106- almost certain to miss the cut.
the Serbian American Curtural
When he got to the 18th hole, Nicklaus
mark held by three others i~;~cluding Jack yard seventh went into the cup for the 29th
Center Gala to close the celebraturned to his son and caddy and decided to
Nicklaus.
hole-in-one in U.S. Open history.
tion.
"I wouldn't say it's exciting. it's grinding,"
But Fischer missed the cut by one shot, gn out with a flourish by trying to reach the
Those wanting more informa;woods said. '"{li~'re working very hat?, to joining .players such as Nicklaus, G~g No~­ 545-yard hole in two shots.
tion
may contact the Hall of
keep your emotl9ns in check out there.
man, Corey Pavtn, Jesper Parnevtk. DavlS
Pluu - US Open. Pip B4
Fame at 330-386-5443.
1

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Tiger opens 6-stroke ·lead at.l?.ebble . ,
.

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Juan Gone

Mason Co•.Legio~ squad edges Charleston

batter5

BY

Cleveland

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Joe Marcum picked up his
second win in as many outings
as the Mason County Post 23
squad defeated the Charleston
Hawks, 8-5,
Marcum · (2-0) entered the
game with Charleston leading
5-4 in the fifth, but proceeded
to shut down the opposing bats,
not allowing another Hawks'
hitter to reach via a base hit.
In the top of the fifth, Mason
answered with four runs off
reliever Justin Lyttle to take the .
lead and set the final tally. Matt
Barbe led off that inning with a

DETROIT (AP) - Juan
Gonzalez, booed heavily earlier in the game, hit a rwo-run
homer in the bottom of the
ninth jnni~g and the Detroit
Tigers sent the 'Cleveland
Indians to their sixth straight
loss, 8-6 'Saturday; ,,
Bobby Higginso~ drew a
one-out walk in the ninth off
Steve Karsay (0-4). Gonzalez,
who had a previa~ RIJI single. drove a 1-1 pitch into the
left.field seats for ' his 11th
home run of the season and
second of the series.
Higginson an'd Wendell
Magee also hit two-run
homers for the Tigers, who
rallied from 4-0 and 6·3
deficits.
, Russell Branyan hit his first
career grand slam to ~ve the

walk.

}~~:::.s a~d~~b!;:od~~m~~ •
two-run homer m:ide it 6•3 in
the fifth.
f
Of the 21 runs scored in the
first two games of this series,
I9 have come on 10 hornets,
Doug l)rocail (3-3) 'Worked
one peifect inning for the win.

BIG HITTER - Mason County Post 23 outfielder Randall Shobe
swings for the first of his two singles in the fourth Inning of Friday's
game against the Charleston Hawks at Harmon Parle Mason County
won the game, 8-5. (Dan Polcyn photo)

.I
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DAN PoLCYN

OVP SPORTS STAfF

~·---··~_.....- - -.-~.-

A sacrifice, a groundout and a
Tim Greene single later, Barbe
scored on Randall Shobe's
infield hit.
The next hitter, catcher Matt
Warner, laced a ·double to the
gap in right-center to score
Greene and Shobe. He scored
on an infield hit by Brandon
Moore,
Charleston (2-4) mounted a
comeback threat in the seventh
and final inning when Marcum
handed out three free passes to
Hawks' hitters, but he struck out
two in that frame, including the
last hitter, to lock down the

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game for Mason Counry.
The Hawks built a 2-0 lead
off starter Andrew Kruk in the
first. Charles Seacrist led off the
game with a double to left. He
scored the easy way two bitten
later when Charleston shortstop
Brandon Halstead ripped the 3:
1 pitch over the fence in left.
Mason threatened in its half of
the first when Kruk and Andrew
Dennis got singles off Jonathan
McClung but were unable to
score.

Mason did get three in the
third to take a 3-2 ·1ead. Warner
and Kruk scored on Marcum's
liner over short. he scored on a
"
Matt Richmond single.
Charleston regained .the lead_
in the top of the fifth. Consecutive singles by Adam O'Connor
and Mark Gatewood generated
one run and ended Kruk's bid
for the victory.
Mason manager Randy Warner then brought on Brandon
Moore, who had earned the save
on Wednesday.
Moore's fourth pitch to
Seacrist rocketed out ofthe park
over left field before Moore left
the mound with stiffuess in his
pitching elbow, bringing on
Marcum.

I
PIIIH- .......... Pllp 11

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Sunday, June 18, 2000 .;

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pluaant, WV
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Page A8 • iounba!' l:imH -iotntinr!

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n.e Univenity of Rio Grande and RGCC announce graduate list~j
RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College
gnduated the following Gallia
County students June 11 :
College of Gnduate Studiea
Master of Educatioa iD Claslroom Teac:hlDg
Deanm Sue Carpenter
Gallipo~s

Lolita M Casto
GallipoiU
Kelli Renae Davis
Gallipolis
Kevin R y:m Hager
Rio Gnnde
Jodi Lea Jones
GallipoiU
Trenda Jean Jon"'
GallipoiU
Nancy S Lanier
GallipoiU
Marva Lee Miller
Rio Gnnde
Cathy AM Petrie
Vinmn
Harreld Christian Scott
GallipoiU
Julie LyM Short
GallipoiU
Rita A Simmons
Bidwell
Lisa Dawn Wihon
Gallipolis ·
Eric ADen Wooten
GallipoiU
CoDege of Liberal Arts &amp; Sciences
School of Humanities
Bachelor of Arts Degree
Cheryl E Blanton
Crown City
College of Liberal Arts &amp; Sciences
School of Humanities
Bachelor of Scieace Degne
Eric Mulford
Cheshire
College of Liberal ArtS &amp; Scieo'"
School of Soci81 Scieaces
Bachelor of Scieace Degrees
· Erica Dawn Adkiru
Bidwell
Denni$ Thdd Breyfogle
Rio Gnnde
Dana Trichoile Casey
Rio Gnnde
·Jason Aaron Casey
GallipoiU ·
Rachd Elizabeth Cochran
BidwoU
Sunday AM Fnnldip
Gallipolis
Nikki Lynn Gteonloo
BidwoU
Wdliam Eric Hi'Y"s
·
ballipom
"
Ruth Dawn Keeton
Gallipolis
Ru .. v Moore
Gallipolis
Joohyock Parle
Thurman
Kelly Melissa Pope
Bidwell
Carey J Stanley
GallipoiU
Amber L Staton
Vinton
CoDege of Liberal Ana &amp; Sci·
eacea
School of Soci81 Sdencea
Bachelor of Silci81 Work Depe

Deb.-. K Adlcit~~
Thurman
Rebecca Gail Kauffinan
•
Rio Gnnde
Diana Lynn Wdiman Racer
Vinton
Hannah Elizabeth Rumley
Gallipolis
Lori LyM Siegen
Vinton
Kathleen jo Lamben Sturgill
GallipoiU .
Wanda Yvonne Gardner Thevenir
BidwoU
College of Profossioaal StudiM
School of Educ:ation
Bachelor of Science Degno
Victoria Marie Berz
GallipoiU
Andrew Dean Brurn6dd
Crown City
Keith Alan Caner
Vinton
Christina A Cogar
GallipoiU
William Todd Dee!
Thumun
Aimee Suzanne Henson
Gallipolis
Je~ Shane Hout
GallipoiU
S~cieLeahSNmrnrl.amben

Gallipolis
Laura Beth Neal
BidwoU Tanuny Lee Saunders
Crown City
Mamlee Boring Spencer
GallipoiU
Carrie Rachael Walton
Patriot
· Collep of Profellloul Stndln
SchoOl afFine Arts
Bep-!or of Arts Depe
•·
Stephen A Sisson .
GallipoiU
Nancy Vanco ·
GallipoiU
Col1ep of ProfeslliMel Scudiel
Sc.bool of FIDe Arts
Be ts'or .X SCI•= Daaiw
AJ90b L Barry

Gallipolis
Crai~Mkbae!Smith

College oC Uberal Arts &amp; Sci&amp;DCII

School of Scioace
Bachelor of Sdeace Degree
Byron Matthew Burlco
Bidwell
Megban AMo Kolcun
Gallipolis
Nathaniel James Lusher
Bidwell
Barry Chrysagon Thompson
Gallipolis
Bethany Mar~ Vollborn
Bidwell
EDen Christine Watson
Thurman
College of Profeuional Studies
Emonoa E. E'Ylllls School of
BusiDeu Management
Bachelor of Arts Degree
Amy Nicole Toler
BidwoU
CoUep of Professional Studios
Emenoa E. E'Ylllls School of
BuaiDou Maagement
l)ochelor of Science Degree
Jo EDen Fisher
Gallipolis
Loretta A Lawrence
Rio Gnnde
Kevin Peter Roynall!&gt;
Thurman
Travis K Saunders
Gallipolis
Tnvis K Saunders
GallipoiU
Jencie Elizabeth Swindler
Rio Grande
Wdliarn Alan Veazey
Thurman
CoUep of Liberal Arts &amp; Sdeaces
Holzer School of NuraiDg
Bachelor of Science jn NursiDg
Degree
Melissa Jean Burdette
Gallipolis
Elizabeth A Camday
Rio Grande
Angela F Cox
Patriot
Sheri J Foster
Gallipolis
Kimberle AM Greeno
Gallipolis
Lisa F Lasseter
' Vinton
Dorothy Louise Neutzling
BidwoU
Craig Henry Register
Gilllipolis
Angela Sayre Jljchards
G.UipoiU
.. R011oe A Ward
GallipoiU
CoUege of Profeuional Studios
. · School ofTe~hllolotios
Bachelor of klaace bl'mdnatriil
Teclmolol)' Depe
Michael Denver Me Carty
Vinton
CoUege of Liberal Arts &amp; Sci·
ence1

School of Soci81 Science
Associate of Arts Degree
Carey Leo Campbell
Bidwell
Andrea Hope Casey
RioGnnde
EUa Louise Drununond
Gallipolis
Suo Hope Engle
GallipoiU
Joy Abrenna Haynes
BidweU
Melissa Beth Phillips
GallipoiU
Karena Pearl Pope
Vinton
College of Profouional Studios
School of Education
Auodote of Applied Science
(Euly Chndhood Developmeat)
Heather Marie Haycook
Gallipolis
CoDep of Profeaaional Studies
School of Fine Arts
Auociate of Applied Science
(I'oehnical Theatre)
Terry Dale Chapman
Gallipolis
CoDege of Uberal Arts &amp; Scieaces
School of Sciaaces
Auociate of Arts Degne
Dobonh Lynn Chevalier
GaDipoiU
College of Liberal Arts &amp; Sdeacea
School of Sdeaces
Auoci!'te of Applied BuaiDou

PUIL!C NOTICI

Melee County bollrd ol
1111/DD Ia IIIIJitlng -lad
lllcle lor 1M fOllowing two

~•lalu:

1. 1111 lohool lua.
11'DNIIIII2P'VAOII21 217
oh. . ole. lold •• I•
oonllltlon. Pord lody and

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lronoo 11.
1..-,14ILIUD 22:131
(llfr'a lerlal No.) v..
en1111e. Will lie eolci 1e II
condition. Neede body

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lelilell .... to ...

lent to:
lujlerlntendant.· llelge
COUftiY lolrll 01 1111/0D
'-0• lox $07 l)'taOUM,
Ohlo41m
lnvelop.. .. ... lllllrllft

Dope (Computer Opentions)
Daniel Leo Drununond
Vinton
College of ProfeuiODal Studies
Emenon E. Evaas School of
BuaiDeu Manogemeat
Associate of Applied BusiDeu
(Accounting)
Ingrid E Burnette
.Gallipolis
Lea Ann Carter

Gallipo~s

Crystal Gayle Moaige
GallipoiU
Jencio Elizabeth Swindler
Rio Grande
Amy Nicole Toler
Bidwell
CoUege of Liberal Arts &amp; Sciences
Holzer School of NuraiD1
Associate of Applied Scieace
(NuraiDc)
Amber Dawn Arrington
Gallipolis
Christie Renao Campbell
Vinton
Amy Beth Casto
Gallipolis
Lindsay Renee Fi1hor
BidwoU
KeUy Sue Kingery
Gallipolis
Elizabeth EDen Stansberry
Gallipolis
Donita Faith WaJd
Gallipolis
Jessica Renae Williams
Gallipolis
CoUege of Profeaaioaa!' Studies
School ofTedmoiOI)'

PatriOI

Peter A Smith
Crown City
Marisa Lynn Snodgra"
Parrio[
Chasidy R Wny
GallipoiU
College of Professioaal Studies
Emerson E. E'Ylllls School of
BuaiDeu MaDagement
Associate of Applied Business
(BuaiDess Management)
Renee Fisher
BidweU
Elizabeth Anne McCulcy
Gallipoli!
Crystal Gayle Meaige
Gallipolis
Christina A Richards
Thurman
Chad ADen Shamblin
Gallipolis
College of Professioaal Studies
Emerson E. Evans School of
Buslaess Management
Associate of Applied Bnsiness
(IDformetioa Techllology)
Lori Lynn Duhl
Thurman
College of Professional Studies
Emersoa E. Evans School of

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SUNDAY's

HIGHLIGHTS
Melptohold
physlalls June 20
. . ROCK SPRINGS - Physicals
I'?r all athletes interested in playing sports at Meigs Junior High
,School and Meigs •High School
,Will be held Tuesday, June 20, in
the clinic across from Veteran
Memorial Hospital.
~ . The physicals will be given
liom 10 a.m. until 2 p.m,
. Physical cards can be 'Picked up
the offices of Meigs Junior
H.i gh and Meigs High .Schools.

in

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

~

.~ .EAST MEIGS-

All Eastern
School athletes in seventh
through 12th grades will be provided free sports physicals
· Wednesday, June 28, at the clinic
.~
' ross from VMH in Pomeroy.
: . Physicals will be administered
from 8 a.m. until 11 a.m. on that
~igh

day.
. ' Physical cards and fall sports
·packets may be picked up at the
:Eastern High School office from
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through
l;riday.
·:·All students must obtain a
'sports packet in order to particiP.ate in fall sports.

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington
· Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.
Our next clinic .date Is.July 7.
(614) Z21-63:J1 for an appointment.

Call

,,

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.~: Donnie Jones hoop
·:, Cllmp June 27-H

·-

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·-POINT PLEASANT - The
dates for the 14th annual Donnie
jones Basketball Camp .have been
'ii'mounced.
•
i All sessions wiD be held June
: 21-30 at the PDiDt Pleasant Mid- .
' die School. The session for ages 610 will froni 8:30a.m. until11:30
a,m,
-The 11-17 year old session will
from 11 a.m. until 2:30 p.m.
The
specialized
individual
instruction period will be from, 3
·
p.m. to 5 p.m.
• Applications Ca!J. be pii:ked up
a.t Fruth Pharmacy, Johnson
~ppermarket, Dairy Queen '3Jid
Village Pizza in Point Ple:tsa!lt.
They can also be obtained by
calling 304-675-4402.

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Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc. ha;;~ been serving the elec·
tric needs of southern Ohio since 1937. We came into existence
because the investor-owned utilities of the day thought it wouldn't be
profitable to serve an area as mountainous and unpopulated as this,
In some respects, they were right. It's not easy to string and
•
maintain 2,500 miles of line ·
... .......
through the rough terrain of
southern Ohio. But the people of
this area have always been known for standing up to a challenge.
So they banded together in 1937 and said enough is enough. If
nobody else will provide us with electricity we'll organize our
own electric cooperative and bring electricity to ourselves.
Over the years, that arrangement has worked pretty well. People
in this area have had a reliable source of electric power at a reasonable rate, But over the past few years, something happened.
Outages were on the increase - reliability and dependability
'·
were on the decrease.

·Gallipolis Baby Blue
: hoop Cllmp July 5·7

again.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Acade!UY basketball coach Jim Osborne
will offer the annual Baby Blue
, basketball camp July 5-7 at the
GDC.
The Baby Blue camp is open to
boys and girls who will be in the
first. through third grades in the
2000-01 school year. The camp
will be held July 5-7, from 1:15
p.m. to 2:15p.m. each day.
·
&lt; The cost is $30 per camper if
~gistration is completed by June
28. After that date, the cost is S35.
For more information, contact
Jifn Osborne at 446~9284.

••' THAT IS CHANGING
BREC is back on the right track. Many of you have noticed that outage time is drastically reduced. BREC has begun an extensive plan to '
clear trees and growth around our lines and it is having an impact More
.
than half of all outages are becauSe of trees and undergrowth damaging electric lines. We are in
,
the middle of a $3.5 million project to clear all2,500 miles of line on our system in a five-year
period:
'
·
.
In June of 1999, Buckeye changed our method of handling power outages. We now use a'service designed specifically to ·handle birge volumes of calls, something Buckeye's members
could not afford to have on their own. This servke provides up to 17 operator and 48. automated lines simultaneously. '!'his will result in fewer busy signals and possibly shorter outage times in big storm situations because th~ people who know where the problem is will be
able to get information to Buckeye. ,
We also are in the process ofinstalling automated mt'ter reading devices called Turtle meters
on our entire system. In addition to relieving,consumers from the chore of reading their own
meters, this electronic device will alert Buckeye REC to potential problems with lines, meters,
etc.
·
We realize we still have a way to go in our efforts to regain your confidence, but we are making
progress. In 1937, people were proud to say they were a member of Buckeye Rural Electric. We intend to make you
feel that way again.

•
•

=Hoop-a-Hustle Cllmp
to be held It Han1111n
ASHTON - "The Second
Annual Charlie Hagley Hoop-nHusde Basketball Camp will be
lield July 17-20 at Hannan High
S&lt;:hool.
\
. Charlie Hagley (Hannan '90) is
c~rrently the administrative assisbnt with the Marshall Universiry
basketball program. He has previ:Ously coached at the high school
~ii.d college levels.
: · :The camp will be divided into
two sessions. The first session will
be from 8:3'0 a.m. until 11:30
for boys and girls ages 5-10. .
l'fle · second will be from 1:30
p;m, until 4:30 p.m. for ages 11-

aJil.
iS.

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

.....,

4K4.HSllilc R1M1Ic n~ S.i\lth
Rin Orunllc. 011 ~-~1•7-4

740-3711-2025 • SIMI-231-2732

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. • i'axTri-County sports and outo&lt;;~ors neW5 to the Sunday 'rin:'es- .
Sentinel at 740-446-3008.

~

y, &gt;ur li&gt;uch~runc Encr~:y"Cnnpcrativc ~T

flt11,1t.a.a-.

' ..

· : For more · information · or an
application, call Hagley at 304696-3587,

Buckeye REC

1 1 - . , ....... aoao 11
. . oiiiOM of ...... County
1i1n of IIIIWD.

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Page 81
sUnd-r.June11~2000

'

Ellstem physicals
set for June 21 ·

FID
CE
BUCKEYE_ .RURAL ,ELECTRIC,
you're going to
Fl D ·IT

To lft.,...c YeiiiOIM, oall
111....1 llurlnt ftOnllll
••1'111111 IIOura (I 1111 to 4

Bidwell

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If you've

:Eastern's Matt Boyles signs with URG, Page B3
,C:hurch softball results, Page B3
·
J::lockey is alive &amp; well in the Tri- County, Page B~
Polcyn's Point: So long, Young &amp; Moose, Page B6 -

v:

, Joint Replacement...
for all the things you
could be missing/

992·5479

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Inside:

·''

•

•Preferred ·AND high rlak
drlvera welcome

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111

CoUege of Profeasional Studies ;
School ofTeclmolozy
Associate of Applied Scieace • '
(Fine Woodworkinc)
'
Douglas S Rouster
f
'
Rio Grande
'
College of Profeuional Studiea •
School ofTechaology
Associate of Applied Science : •
.
.•
(Medical Laboratory 'Thchnology)
·;
Vanessa Dawn Cook
GallipoiU
Erica Leah Johnson
Gallipolis
.•'
Teresa Lynn Reynolds
••
IlidweU
•••
College of Profeuioaal Studies :
School ofTechaology
•;
Associate of Applied Scieace ;
tt
(Plant MaiDtenance Technology);l
Paul M Barry
Thurman
....

'

•Low down payment
•L.ow monthly payments
•Immediate SA·22 flllnga

,

·ttl ,

Richard C Tipple
. Gallipolis
CoUege of Professioaal Studies
School ofTechaology
Auociote of Applied Sdeaee
(Electronics)
Douglas Roger Blain
Crown City
Daniel Lee Drummond
Vinton
Gregory L Fife Jr
Gallipolis

Call Us First
ForA Quote

tdiOfWFY
IOIJI\ VI lfl\lili\1.:\ll
! , '

Vinton

Cauc.Uod1
Rojoctodl
Accidmll1
Ticbtll
NewDriwri

BANKRUPTCY
1

Aslqcieta of Applied BusiDess
(OIBce TechDoiOI)')
Melinda Sue Gooldin
Gallipolis
Heather Nicole Saunders
Gallipolis
Jetlica Rae Wood
Vinton
Collep of Profeuional Studies
School ofTedmology
Anociate .of Appli"' Science
(Draftinc &amp; Desiga)
Bradley Stephen Harris
Gallipolis
Wesley Alan Smith

BuaiDeu Mauc-meat
Associate of Applied BuaiDeas
(Microcomputer Applicatioas Ia
BusiDeas)
Karen G Anderson

•

.

Roush leads Ohio to win
BYANDRIWC~
OVP SPORTS EDITOR

Bevo joins
Lou Holtz
Hall of Fame

PARKERSBURG, W.Va.What was supposed to be a
grand display of offensive firepower deteriorated into an old
fashioned butt-kicking Friday
at the seventh ~ual Battle
Against
CystiG
Fibrosis
(BACF) Football Classic.
The
annual
aU-star
game/fundraiser
held
at
Parkerburg's Stadium Field
saw the Ohio All•Stars demolish the West Virginia All-Stars,
36-0.
The
much
anticipated
matchup between tailback
Justin Roush of Meigs High
School and fullback Scott
Davis of Class AAA ' siate
champion Parkersburg · High
never materializ~d.
Davis was hdd to 15 yards
on four carries. and left the
game halftime ~th a sprained
ankle, The higHly touted Penn
State recruit sp,~nt the intermission with his left foot in a
. bucket of ice and was on
crutches for tht final two perii
ods.
Roush held 'up his end of ·
the bargain, ~shing for 69
bruising yards on 16 carries
and scoring two touchdowns
on short, punishing runs. ·
The senior's · first carry was
typically Roush. He wrapped
the ball up with both hands
and pushed the pile for five
yards before-I the Mountain
State team finally dragged him

EAST LIVERPOOL - Universiry of Rio Grande basketball
legend Clarence 'Bevo' Francis is
one of seven to be enshirined in
the Lou Holtz/ Upper Ohio Valley Hall of Fame on June 25.
Francis is best known for his
basketball .playing career at then
Rio Grande College.
In 1952 he joined !lis high
school mentor Newt Oliver at
Rio.
While there, he established
standards for points in a game
scoring
average
(113),
(46.5/game). 50+ point games
(eight in '52-53 and 14 in '53-54),
and several others records.
After leaving Rio, he toured
with the Boston Whirlwinds and
played in the European Professional League.
After his basketball career, he
settled in Highlandtown, Ohio .
with his wife of 49 years, Jean.
He was one of 13 who helped
found that communiry's volunteer fire department,
Francis was also active as a basketball official and in the Little
League.
The Universiry of Rio Grande
annually holds the annual Bevo
Francis tournament to honor his
accomplishments.
Francis, Oliver and former
"Bevo Era" players attend the
event, which includes a banquet
and Rio Grande Athletic Hall of
Fame induction ceremonies.
SUPERBACK - Justin Roush of Meigs (24) rushed for 69 yards and scored two touchdowns to lead
Francis and the "Bevo Era'"
PIMM- All-stan, Pllp I:J Ohio to a 36-&lt;&gt; whitewashing of West VIrginia In the annual BACF Football Classic. (Andrew Carter photo)
team are the subject of a future
ESPN special, scheduled to air in
December of this year. ESPN
producers
have
conducted
, -. ·numerous interviews-in Gallipolis
and surrounding areas to gather
background information for the
'
documentary.
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. (AP) · - · Tig~r . . Woods had six birdies and four bogeys in .Love and Bernhard Langer on the sidelines
The Hall inducts individuals
WoodS had just made hl1tory 11t the U.S. . his second round, which began late Friday for the .final two rounds.
from
all fields of endeavor who
. Nicklaus made a poignant farewell to the
Open, finishing the second tpund with a and ended on a misry, mild Satu~ay mornare sucessful and can serve as posrecord six-shot lead, and all he could think ing, FOg delays Thursday and Fnday forced tournament he has won four times. He shot ·
itive role-models for young peoan 11-over 82 in the second round Friday,
about was breakfast.
the scheduling backup. .
ple,
.
Woods reached the tournament's halfWay
Woods and the rest .of the remaining field, leaving him at 13-over 155 and missing the
The
induction
ceremony will
mark Saturday at S-under 134, six -strokes cut to 63 players for the final two ·rounds, cut by six strokes. He was saluted by fans
take place at the Hall in East Livdear of Thomas Bjorn and Miguel Angel were scheduled to play the ·third round later and feitow players after his 44th consecutive
Ohio at 1:30 p.m.
erpool,
Open.
·
Jimenez. Kirk Triplett and Jose Ma,ria Olaz- Saturday.
Coach Lou Holtz will be preNicklaus, 60, who won a duel with
abal, the only tither players below par, were
"I'm going to .get something to eat,"
sent
for the induction. Other
all-under 141.
Woods said after completing the second Arnold Palmer to capture the 1972 Open
guests for the festivities will be
The record fbr a second-round lead at the round. "I'm hungry right now. And I'll let title at Pebble Beach and also won a U.S.
Jerome
Bettis· of the PittSburgh
Open had beerrfive strokes by Willie Andet- my mind ease. up· a bit, because I know it's Amateur championship on this course, iinSteelers, Steye Beuerline of the
ished the first round at 2-over 73 but knew
.
son at Baltusrol in 1903.The 134 by Woods going to be a long-afternoon,"
Carolina Panthers, and Reggie
also tied the iecord for the lowest score ' Todd Fischer had the shot of the morning by the end of the second round that he was
Jackson, who wiD all be present at
'
• through the first 36 hol~s of
Open, a Saturday, when his sand wedge at the 106- almost certain to miss the cut.
the Serbian American Curtural
When he got to the 18th hole, Nicklaus
mark held by three others i~;~cluding Jack yard seventh went into the cup for the 29th
Center Gala to close the celebraturned to his son and caddy and decided to
Nicklaus.
hole-in-one in U.S. Open history.
tion.
"I wouldn't say it's exciting. it's grinding,"
But Fischer missed the cut by one shot, gn out with a flourish by trying to reach the
Those wanting more informa;woods said. '"{li~'re working very hat?, to joining .players such as Nicklaus, G~g No~­ 545-yard hole in two shots.
tion
may contact the Hall of
keep your emotl9ns in check out there.
man, Corey Pavtn, Jesper Parnevtk. DavlS
Pluu - US Open. Pip B4
Fame at 330-386-5443.
1

.

Tiger opens 6-stroke ·lead at.l?.ebble . ,
.

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f.~

Juan Gone

Mason Co•.Legio~ squad edges Charleston

batter5

BY

Cleveland

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Joe Marcum picked up his
second win in as many outings
as the Mason County Post 23
squad defeated the Charleston
Hawks, 8-5,
Marcum · (2-0) entered the
game with Charleston leading
5-4 in the fifth, but proceeded
to shut down the opposing bats,
not allowing another Hawks'
hitter to reach via a base hit.
In the top of the fifth, Mason
answered with four runs off
reliever Justin Lyttle to take the .
lead and set the final tally. Matt
Barbe led off that inning with a

DETROIT (AP) - Juan
Gonzalez, booed heavily earlier in the game, hit a rwo-run
homer in the bottom of the
ninth jnni~g and the Detroit
Tigers sent the 'Cleveland
Indians to their sixth straight
loss, 8-6 'Saturday; ,,
Bobby Higginso~ drew a
one-out walk in the ninth off
Steve Karsay (0-4). Gonzalez,
who had a previa~ RIJI single. drove a 1-1 pitch into the
left.field seats for ' his 11th
home run of the season and
second of the series.
Higginson an'd Wendell
Magee also hit two-run
homers for the Tigers, who
rallied from 4-0 and 6·3
deficits.
, Russell Branyan hit his first
career grand slam to ~ve the

walk.

}~~:::.s a~d~~b!;:od~~m~~ •
two-run homer m:ide it 6•3 in
the fifth.
f
Of the 21 runs scored in the
first two games of this series,
I9 have come on 10 hornets,
Doug l)rocail (3-3) 'Worked
one peifect inning for the win.

BIG HITTER - Mason County Post 23 outfielder Randall Shobe
swings for the first of his two singles in the fourth Inning of Friday's
game against the Charleston Hawks at Harmon Parle Mason County
won the game, 8-5. (Dan Polcyn photo)

.I
.....

DAN PoLCYN

OVP SPORTS STAfF

~·---··~_.....- - -.-~.-

A sacrifice, a groundout and a
Tim Greene single later, Barbe
scored on Randall Shobe's
infield hit.
The next hitter, catcher Matt
Warner, laced a ·double to the
gap in right-center to score
Greene and Shobe. He scored
on an infield hit by Brandon
Moore,
Charleston (2-4) mounted a
comeback threat in the seventh
and final inning when Marcum
handed out three free passes to
Hawks' hitters, but he struck out
two in that frame, including the
last hitter, to lock down the

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game for Mason Counry.
The Hawks built a 2-0 lead
off starter Andrew Kruk in the
first. Charles Seacrist led off the
game with a double to left. He
scored the easy way two bitten
later when Charleston shortstop
Brandon Halstead ripped the 3:
1 pitch over the fence in left.
Mason threatened in its half of
the first when Kruk and Andrew
Dennis got singles off Jonathan
McClung but were unable to
score.

Mason did get three in the
third to take a 3-2 ·1ead. Warner
and Kruk scored on Marcum's
liner over short. he scored on a
"
Matt Richmond single.
Charleston regained .the lead_
in the top of the fifth. Consecutive singles by Adam O'Connor
and Mark Gatewood generated
one run and ended Kruk's bid
for the victory.
Mason manager Randy Warner then brought on Brandon
Moore, who had earned the save
on Wednesday.
Moore's fourth pitch to
Seacrist rocketed out ofthe park
over left field before Moore left
the mound with stiffuess in his
pitching elbow, bringing on
Marcum.

I
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Page 82 • 6 unbap llimtt-6tntind

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Sunday, June 11, 2000

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

TO DAY'S SCO 'R EBOARD

•

l!ootom Dlvlolon

•

... T•m
W L Pet. GB
: Atlanta ............ .... .... , ....... 41 25 .821
• - Yorlc ......................... 38 28 .583
4
- Montreal ..........................33 31) .5a4 5 1/2
.. Florida ................. ..... .......a1 ae .483 10 1/2
.. Philadelphia .. ..................25 39 .391
15
...
Central DMelon
St. Louio.................... .......38 28 .578
CinCinnati ... _.................32 33 .482 5 1/2
Pltl8burgh .......................29 36 .446 6 1/2
Chicago .........................28 ' 38 .424
tO
MHwe.ukee ....................... 21 38 .409
11
Houlton ........ ................ .24 • 2 .384
14
WtltDMolon
Mlooa ........................... 39 27 .591
• Colorado .............•...........35 27 .565
2
L.os Angoles .....................35 30 .838 3 l /2
• san Franci&amp;a&gt; .................. 32 31 .508 5 112
• san Diego ......,................. 28 37 ..:It 10 1/2
•
F~dey'e Gam~~
Chicago CubS D, Montreal B
Aoricla 8, Pl~sburgh 3

N.Y. Mats 7, Milwaukee 1

Arizona at COlorado, ppd., rain
Sen Dl- t, ClnciMttt s
St. Louis 8, Los AngeleS 3
San Francisco 7, Houst.on 4
Saturuy.. Gam11
Montreal at
Cubs, late
St. LOuis at lol
Ilea, lata
Cincinnati ot a., !ago, MoUlton at San Francllco, late
Ftonda at Plttotn•gh, 1111
Atlanta at Pl111adllphlo, loti
N.Y. Meta II Mllwaukll, latl
Atlzona at Colorldo. late

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treal. 22; Altonzo, New YM, 21 ; Clrllo, COl·
orado, 21; Kent, San Francisco, 21 : Zai1e, New
Yor1&lt;, 21.
TAIPLE5-Goodwin, Colorado, 7; Guerrero,
Montreal, 5; Womack, Nlzona, 5; ~mpart .
COkxado, 5; 7 are tied with 4.
HOME RUNS-Bonds, Sen Fronclooo, 28;
McGwlro, St. Louis, 23;·Hidalgo, HousiOn, 20;
Guerrero, Montreal, 20; Edmonda, St. Loulo,
20: sRnrer. Arizona, 20: GJM, l'ftDlrgn, te;
Karrot. Los Angeles, HJ: Sooa, Chloago. t8:
Shaftiekl, LOs Angeles, 19.
STOLEN BASES-Goodwin, Colorado, 30;
Castillo, Flo~da, 27; Young, Cnlcago, 23;

Ch:!i

Co-.

Taclr(8CI-

Allantt (Burkitt 4-3) at Pl1Hadllpnla (Poroon
e-2), I :38 p.m.
Florida (Penny 3-8) It Plttsburgn (Arforo O·
0), 1:311 p.m.
N.Y. Mltl (Riad 3·1) II MIIWIIA&lt;H (ko 4·
IS),
p.m.
Montroal (IIUquor 8-3) at a.rcago Cubs
(U- 11-4), 2:20p.m.
Arizona (Roynooo 4-5) at Colorado ('1011111
1·1), 3:05p.m.
Hout1ton (lloynolds 8·3) at San Fianciooo
. (Nathan 3·1), 4:08p.m.
. ClnolniNIII (1111 4-8) ot lon DI'IJO
• (C"-'t 1-1), I p.m.
St. LDulo (Kilo 10.3) at Lot Angtleo (Park I·
4), 8:05 p.m.
illon&lt;lty'l Cltfi!IO
Plttoburgn et Montroet, 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Florida, 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Pl11ladolphla, 7:35p.m.
Sen Oi'IJO at Nlzona, 10:05 p.m.

a:oe

-onal LAigue Statlatlctf Laadera
BATTING-He~on. Colorado, .3112; Vldro,
MomeN, .367; GoerrGro, Montreal, .3e7; Piazza. New Vorl&lt;, .3118; Edmonds, St Louis, .350;
Bonds, san Fninclsco, .348; Kent, San Fran·
cisco, .347.
RUNS-Edmonds, Si. Louis, 65; Helton,
Colorado, 83; Bonds, S.., Franci!ICO, 61; Beg·
well, Houston, 56; Attonzo, New York, 52;

1), 1ate

Chlcogo Whlla SO• (Eidred7-2) at N.Y. Yan(Westbrook ~). lite
Toromo (Wills 10.2) at Boston (R.Mortinez
5-3), 1111

k-

SMilie (Moyer 4-2) &amp;I Minnesota (MiHon

I ), late

e.

Vtr•.

1Nm
W L
Booten ............................ 30 2T
New "ttllrk ......................... 34 17
Toronto ............................ 31 33
Boltlmore ........................ 30 3&lt;1
Tampa llty .. .....................2e 311
Cenltal Dlvtllon
Chicago ...................... .... 42 2ol
CIIYII1nd ............." ........$4 •
l&lt;a'*lt City .....................33 32
Mlnn- ....................... 30 38
OatroH ............................. 21 37
WtotDiv~

SAVES-.Jonoo, 01Cro1t. I II; Lowo, Boston,
11; llltlngt.u-. Oaldond, t8: Percival. Anll·
helm, 1e: Wenaland, Texas, t6; Fo\jke, Chica·
go, 15; Rivera, New Yorlc, 15.

Anallolm (Boicher 0.0) at Baltimore (John.

Clakland (Appier 1-3) at K.ansao Oty (WIIa·
siclc I ·5), lott
Todey'aChicago White SO. (Patque (1.2) at N.Y.
Yanlle.. (Hernandez lf.5), 1:05 p.m.
Toronto (Castillo (2·51 at Booton (S&lt;hourek
2-8), 1:05 p.m.
·
Ctlvltand (Novarro 11-0) at Dottalt (Btalr
3-1~~~p.m.
.
(Helling 7-li) at Tampa Boy (Rel&lt;or 2·
4), 1:15 p.m.
Anehtlm (Etllanon 1·1) at Baltimore (Erlctl·
"""3-3), 1:Je p.m.
Oet&lt;itnd •(Heredia 8-4) at Kansu Citr
(Botiota 2-8), 2:05 p.m.
Seattle (M4Che 2-4) at Mlnneoota (Maya 3·
8), 2:05p.m.
,

PRO

Amartoan LAigue Btllltat1ctl L.oado,.
BATTING-Rodriguez, TO&gt;C81, .375; Mar·
dnez, Seattle, .371 , Erttad ,Anohell)l, .370, Daf.
gado, Toronto, .35Q: SWeeney. Kansu Citr,
.354; Lawton, Minnesota, .343; Rodriguez,
Sllttlo, .342.
.
RUNS-Rodrlguor, Soanla, 53; Oolgado,
Toronto, 57; Mond.. l, Toronto, 54; Gltue. Ana· ,
hHn, 51; Damon, Kania• City, 51; Durham,
Chloogo, 50; RodrfgUIZ, Tll&lt;AO, 50.
RBI-Mtrtlnez, Seattle. 18; Swtlney,
l&lt;anlao City, 85; Ja. Glambl, Clalctand,ll; Dat·
gldo, Toronto, 114; EvoreH, Boston. 82;
Rodriguez, Sllttlo, 110: Rodriguez, Toxu, 118.
HIT6-Entad, Anattalm, 106; Rod~guoz,
T•u. M; s-nev. .Kanlaa City, 82; Oolgldo,

U.S. OpenPEBBLE BEACH, Cetif. (Af') - Graded
soores Saturday from the seccnd round of the
1001n u.s, Open on tho 8,828-yard, per-11
Pebble Beech Go~ Uni&lt;s (a·denoteo a meteu~ :
roger Wooda
85-89 - 134
Tllomu Bjoni
71).10 - 1.0
Miauel Jimenez IIH4 - 1.0
Kltlc Triplett
71). 71 - I 41
Jose Mo~a0tazabal70.71 - 141
Hal Sulton
89-73 - 142
LeeWeotwoo&lt;t
71-11 - 142
John Huston
67-75 - 142
Nick Faklo
89-74 - 1..:1
Vllay Slngn
70.73 - t ..:~
Pl111 Mloketscn
11·73 - 144
Lee Porter
74-10 - 144
MikeBriOky
71·73 - 144
TedTryba
71·73 - 144
Lee Janzen
71 -73 - 144
Podralg Harrington 73-71-144
Tom L.ehman

71 -73 - 144

Paulilzilger
71 ·73 - 144
Robt~ Damron
72·73 - 145
AngaiCabr«a · 59-711 - 145
FrodCOupl•
71).711- 145
Bobby Clampan
118·77- 145
TomWotiCn
71 ·74-145
lallyMizo
73-12-145
RoaX&gt; Madloto
59-711- 145

Toronto, II; L.n'ton, MlnniiOta, 88; ROdriguez,

Amartotnf.Mgue

1-Divlolon

110.

Sllttlo, 81; Randa, Kan- City, 78; 1/aughn,

Nattonol loak_ll_fatton

Aneholm, 11.

Pot.

Gl

.1117
.515

1/2
3

•

•• •

.400 10 1/2
.131
.140 I 1/1
.1101 I 1/2
.441
13
.403
15

Oaldand .......................... 37 2U .1111
Slltlla ............................30 2U .1147
I
Anaheim .........................33 33 .500 31{2
TO&gt;IIS .............................. 30 35 .482
112

'rklar'•Gt.,.
0otrott 1, Clonllnd 2

e

Clllcago WMe SO• 3, N.Y. Yankeao t
Booton 7, Toronto 4
Tampa Bay 11, T"'"" 2
Baltimore 4, Anattalm 3
Minnesota 7, Seattle 2

Oakland 8, Kansas Cl1y 3

aaturuv··.
Ciavltand (Finley 1-C) It Oobon (Homo 2·

B),loto
Te,.. (Pertsno 1.0) at Tampa Bay (Lidle ().

DOUBI.EII-Lao.ton, !ollnn.ota, 23; GltUI,
Anthllm, 21; sw-~ Klnoaa City, 21 ;
llodrlguu, Taxao, 21; ore, Kineta City, 20;
Oolgado, Toronto, 20; Sogul, Tlltla, 111;
DoShi• .-, llthlmoro, 111; Ot«Ud, 80tttlo, t 11.
TRIPLES-Guzman,
Minnesota,
11;

NIA 'lntle Qlonco
Pinola
~7)

WICinoHiy, JWIIT
L.A. Will I 04, lnditnll7
'rfdey, Junot
Durfttm, Chicago, I; Singleton. Chicago, 4;
L.A. Lakora 111,lndlana t04
Hunter, Mlnneeotl, -; Nixon, Bolton, 4;
lunay, Juno11
llllllntln, .Chloago, 4; Mlttlnoz. Now Vor1c, 4;
lndlano too, L.A. Lahora 8t
AUa.., TIUI, 4.
WICiftltdey, J1111 14
HOME RUN6-0olaodo, Toronto, 24;
L.A.
Lokn
I 20, lndltnl1t8, OT
Evorlft, Booton, 22; Rocfriguoz, Tow, 22; Ja.
frfdey, Juno11
Gltmbl, Clakiand, 20; lllughn, Anlholm. 1~; .
lnditnl 120, L.A. Wera 87, L.4. Lakera
J~. Clweland, 18; Martinez, Seetue, 18.
.
STOLEN BASE6-Mond•l. Toronto, 20: lllld-3-2
/
Monday,
Ju11118
DaSIIII!ds. lltlttmore. 20; Demon, r&lt;ansae City,
Indiana at L.A. Lakart1, 9 p.m.
18; Atomar, C-nd. 11; Lawlon, Mlnnoaota,
WICinoldey, Juno 21
15; Mclemore, SNtUe, 14; Jet•, .New York,
Indiana at L.A. Lakora, 9 p,m., Knecesoary
13.
PITCHING (8 Declalona)-Bald111n, Chfca.
go, 10·1, .909, 3.11; Wolt, Toronto, 1?'2• .833,
Woman•o NatlonollltaM!btlt Aoaocllllon
3.48, Martinez, Boston, 9·2, .818, .99, Hudson,
Oakland, 7·2, .778, 4.10; Eldred, cnlcago,7·2,
l!oatom COni.....,..
.778, ~ . 18; BuriNI, Cleveland, 7-2, .778, 5.13; TNril
W ~ Pet.
GB
Sale, Seante, 7--3, .700, 4.16.
·
Clwetond ..... - ..................a· 2 .714
STRIKEOUTS-Martinez. Booton, 121 ; Fin· W&amp;slllngton ................... .. ..4 2 .lle7
1{2
ley, CIBYIIand, 89; Hudeon, Oaldand, 8.1; Orlando ....................... ...... 5 4 .556
I
Nomo, Detroit, 81 ; Burba, Cleveland, 81; Detroit ......................... ...... 3 4 .429
2
ctemans, N.., York, 81 ; Muaslna, Baltimore, New Vorl&lt; ...........................3 5 .375 2 1{2

r ~~~~~~~~~~
~

••
•

...

..

lndlaM ....... !......................2
Miami ............... .................2
Chattotte ...........................I
W..._,. Conf..
Houston ............................ 8
MIM810ta ..................... .... 5

•

I

. 1..:1

•.c•1 .889

3
4

••
•'•

.714
2
............................. 5
.714
2
l.oo Angolas .......................4
.867 2 1{2
5acramonto ......................•
.571
3
4
Utah ..................................4
·Seante ........ l ..... r••••••••••••• •• 2
.250 5 1/2
Porlttnd ...... ~ ................... !. 5 .117 51{2
frtdey .. _
Ollrolt ... Cllvlland .,
Saturdoy's Gtii!IO
MiMeeota at Phoenix, late
Cilvlland at 111om1, 1...
Indiana at OMndO, late ' .
washington at utah, late

National L11gue
CHICAGO CUBS- Optl ont&lt;l RHP\!att
Karchner to Iowa of the Pac1flc Coa~t
League . Purchased the contract of ~HP
Steve Rain h om Iowa. Traneferred\)38

f!:- to

Shane Andrew• frorn the

th.-:-eo-

day diubled•liat.
"'
COLORADO ROCKIES- Signed RHP
Chris Buglovaky, C Dan Conway, SS
Clint Barmas, RHP Sean Green, AHP
William Vuqu.z, RHP Justin Hulsman ,
OF Jose Vasquez , LHP Charles Marricks, RHP Scotl Berney, llt'IP Joe A~ll .
38 Bryan Pack, C Josh· Pride , 38 c:rlc
Storey, SS Kevin Blocker and Lt-ll&gt; .Mikt

Charlotte at Saaamento, tate
LJ&gt;o AngeleS at Ponland, lato

Davies.

, Tocley'eGtii!IO

'

.,

2
2
2
3
5
8

•

.

HOUSTON ASTROS-Piacod 3B' i(on
Caminiti on the 15·day diSI!iblad 1111,, 1
LOS ANGELES OOPGERS- OpliO(\Od
RHP AI Alyea to Albuquerque of' 'fhe
Pacific Coaal League. Recalled C Adam

Minneso1a at Houston, 4 p.m.
Indiana at Detroit, 6 p.m.
Miami at N~ York, 7:30 p.m.
Utah at Seattle, 9 p.m.

ChortoM at Loo Angelol, 1o p.m.

Melhuaa.

1

MILWAUKEE BREWERS- Doslgnatod
INF Sean Berry for aulgnment. Actival·
ed OF Lyle Mouton from lhe 15-day .A-Is ·
abted list.
• •

AUTO RACING
Champlonehlp Auto Aeclng T•ama
CAR"T - Fired -And raw Craig , chairman
of the board and chief executive officer.
Named Bobby_ Rahal lnt•rlm pr11ldent
and chltf tlitcutlvt otflctr. Elected
Jame1 Hardyman Chilrman of the board .
' BAI!IIA~~
Amerloen League
ANAHEIM 4NGELS-Pi10td LHP
Scott Scnoenewels on the 11·doy dis·
tblad list. 4otlvatod · RHP Tim Bolcnor
from tne ts-da~ dlubled )let.
CLEVELANI! ' INDI4N8-Tronoltrred
RHP Jtrot Wright from 1n1 II· to tho 10·
day dlaabled 1101. Slgnod RHP Jomlo
Navarro end LHP Mike ~Ohler to a minor
league oontraot. Optioned RHP Kone
Davie ond RHP Wllllo Martlnoz to Buffa·
10 of tho International Lugue. Doslgnat·

td LHP M1rk .W atton for a11lgnment.
Purchllld tht contract of FIHP Brian

Williams from Buflolo.
NEW VORK V4NKEES-Atllgnod
RHP Mlng Wang to Slaton leland of tho
New York-Penn ~tagua .
MINNESOTA TWINS-Agreed to
terme with FIHP ·A.dam Johnson .
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-Signed CF;
Rocco Baldelli and SS Jace Brewer.
Moved RHP Juan Guzman from 15-day
to .IO·day disabled list.
TEXAS RANGERS-Claimed RHP .
Jared Camp otf •waivers from Clevela-nd
lndl8na and optlo·n·ed him to Tulu of the
Texas League. Moved OF Ruben Mateo
from 15· to 60·day DL. Announced OF
Jason McDonald has accepted l'lls
assignment to Oklahoma of the Pacific
Coast League. Si_gned SS Jason Bourgeois.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS - Placed C
Darrln Fletcher on the disabled list,
retroactive to June 10 . Moved OF

IIASKETBALL
N•tlon•l l11kettJeJI A1ebolltiD'ft
SAN ANTONIO SPURS-Annoul).ood
AIYI.n Gentry haa declined an offer to join
tht Atlanta Hawke, to bedom8 an ••~•·
tant

--

TRACK &amp; FIELD

Oewar no Wloo jrom tne 15· to tno- &amp;o.
da ~ DL. Purchu ed the contract o1 C
Cha rlie Grttne f rom Syraeuae ot th e
Internat ional League.
..

.333 2 1/2

5 .281

coacn with

tht Spurl.

'DOTIALL
National 'ootball Le•guo •
ARIZONA CAROIN4L8-81gnod 'Ill
Mao Toel to a thrtt•ytar oontraot. •.
CHICAGO BEARS- Signed LB Br 1on
Urlacl'lar to a tlvt-yttr contract.
PHILADELPHIA E.t.GLEI-Signod..WFI
Qarl Scott to 1 three-yaer ,cont'ract ~n~ K
Rlcn Muton to a lwo-year contract. ·

'

.

HDCKIV
N•tlonol Hookoy LIIIUI , ,
PHOENIX COYOTES-E•tonded ..tlll
contract of F Mlkt Alatalo lor the 2000·
01 aeaaon.
",
BOCCIA
Major League loooer
DALLAS
BURN-Named
BriOn
Haynea manager of communl~y ~ro·
1
grama and 111m 11a11on.
,'li

COLLEG!
•
ANDERSON, S.C .-Nomod DCI.Ck
Kelly wreatllng coach.
,
CALDWELL-Named Jamie Nash
rr'ltn's soccer coach.
·
FLORIDA INTERNATION'IL!...Nam,"d
Rick Mello athlellc dlreclor.
·
LOUISIANA·MONROE-Promotocl •'1
J.D. Malone from assistant to head t_ra,Ck
and field coach.
· ',
MINNESOTA- Signed Glenn&lt;l~r~~. ~ :
football eoach, to a contract e:
through 2006.
NORTH
CARO•LI~~b:J'~~~~~)~fr
Named Paut O'Neil bl
coach.

.: ~.astern's

Boyles
:· Stgns with RIO
: ~rande track squad

We want to hear from you!

'

ALL.STARS - Justin Roush and Jonathan Haggerty of Meigs represented the Tri.County area in seventh annual Battle Against Cystic
Fibrosis Football Classic Friday at Parkersburg High School's Stadium
Field . Roush and Haggerty's Ohio AII·Star team defeated West Virginia
36-0 in annual fundraiser to help cystic fibros is research. (Andrew
Carter photos)
quarterback Derek Griffith, the game's MVP, had 45 yards rushing.
Binegar finished with 25 yards on the ground . Samuels had 17 yards
rushing.
.
Griffith threw for a 31 yards , while Lockhart completed one pass for
14 yards.
Kipp Bodnar ofWilliamstown led West Virginia with 30 yards rushing. Harris had 22 yards and Robert Martino of Parkersburg had 11
yards on the ground.
Quarterback Ryan Smith of St. M arys co mpleted 5- of- 15 passes for
67 yards and one in.terception .
The 2001 BACF Football Classic is scheduled for June 15, at Stadium field in Parkersburg.
Event officials said that they will add a new facet to the fundraiser
next season with the formation of the BACF Basketball Classic, set for
June 16, at the Parkersburg High School Memorial Field House.

~b

,,;

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

JERRY. BIBBEE
a

Boytes of Eastern has signed lett11r of intBnt to compete in
· -~· field for the Unlver.slty of Rio Grande. Boyles Is shOwn with.
pa~nt$, Joe amf Laurie, i!rld Eastern principal Rick Edwards, URG
ooach Bob Willey and Eastern ·track and field coach Arch Rose.
Williams photo)
,.
·

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900 E. State Street,
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,,

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.

SOFTBA,LL

.!GalliPolis-·christian,
IFellowship Cha:pel
!to.
p
GCCSL
standings
.
GALLIPOLIS -Week four of Rodney rally to take the 19-18 vlci the Gallia County Church Softball tory.
Rodney, who wa; down 16-6;used
League continued Monday, as Galan
eight-run sixth to cut the lead to
Jipolis Christian's men and Fellowship Chapel's women remained 16-14.After Middleport put the lead
back to four at 18•14, Rodney
! undefeated to lead the standings.
j At Vinton Park Field, Vinton Bap~ scorea four ru~ in the top of the
i tist picked ~p iis i}Utd women's vic- . seventh. Brian Howard scor:Cd the
tory,8-4,ovet Living Water. The Li~­ winning run in the bottom of the
~ ing Water men won 12-7 for the1r . seventh to give Middleport the victory.
! thitd win.
Rodney was led . by Mike
At the Church of God fields,
Hemphill,
who . was 4-for-5 with
! Church of God defeated the
Nazarene Church women 10-3 for three runs. and Ryan Elliot, who was
: their first victory. C.O.G.'s Connie 2-for-3. Middleport was''Jed by Brian
,
; Saunders was 3-for-4 and Jessica Howard (S-for-5, five runs).
At Faith Baptist Field, Faith took
• Chaney was 3-3.
·
: In the men's contest, C.O.G. won on First Baptist. No score was report: its thitd straight, 6-I. For the victors, ed.
! M.:ark Haner was 2-for-3 and Muvin Play continues next week as Gallipolis Christian and Church of God
: Baird was 2-for-3.
! At Mcintyre ~rk, Fellowship battle 'tout fio the men's lead. Rod: Chapel's women remained undefeat- ney Methodist will take on Fellow~ ed after a I0-0 win over Gallipolis ship Chapel for the top spot in the
: C.hristiao. The men's game saw Gal- women's standings.
In other action, Living Water will
l lipolis ,~main undefeated and atop
take on Fpith Baptist, Finr Baptist
the standings with an 11-4 victory.
: :Also 'at · Mcintyre, Middleport takH on Vinton Baptist, and Middlechurch of Chri!t took on Rodney port takH on the Nazarene Church.
(Editor's note: Thanks to . Eric
~ Meth~st. The womel)'s game went
i to Rodney by foneit. In· the men's . Whitt of Rodney Methodist for sup: game, Middleport survived a late plyi_ng this report.)

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••
~•

All-Stars

down.
Roush scored th e game's fi rst touchdown late in. the second quarter,
hulling in from a yard out foll&lt;;&gt;wing a fumble by Anthony H arris of
Parkersburg Catholi c at the West Virgini a 30 yard line.
Belpre placekicker Scott Elzey, who is reportedly headed to Muskingum College this fall, gave the O hioans a 10-0 lead at halftime w hen
'
he nailed a 38-yard field goal.
Joe Westbrook of M arietta helped set up the second score with an
;: . RIO GRANDE- Head track
"it's a big relief to have it (the interception in the final minute.
.
_; Z,nd field coach Bob Willey again signing) all finalized and done and
Game offiCials delayed the start of the third quarrer for nearly half an
, .tapped into the Ohio Valley's tal- · I'm just really excited."
hour after seeing strokes of lightning in the area.
.
Several factors contributed to
,, ent pool, a$ Eastern's Matthew
Following the lengthy · postponement, it was the O hio side that
Boyles signed a natio~ letter of his choice. "First, I looked at the struck like lighming in a bottle.
" 1iitent to run for the University of program itself. I felt that Rio
The Buckeyes scored three touchdowns in the third quarter to blow
the
game wide open , building a 30-0 cushion as the fourth period
.· Rio Grande.
Grande had a well- established
, . , Willey found Boyles's attitude program and it was going to be a began .
'· to be an important factor in the good 6t for me.
Marietta's Mike Samuels scored on a two-yard scamper with 10: 17
' 'recruitment. "Matt's a very hard
"The fact that it's very close to to play in the third to boost the lead to 17-0. Ohio re covered a fumworker and seems to be a very where I live was just excellent for ble at the West Virginia five yard line to set up Samuels' run.
~olid young man. He's not afraid me."
Another turnover deep in its own half contr ibuted to the Mountain
':~o work. If you can get a young
Eastern track coach Arch Rose State side's woes and set up another Ohio score. Josh Lockhart of Fort
:; person today that is like that, they was pleased with his standout's Frye carried the package for Ohio, scoring from a yard away to give
decision." It makes us (Eastern's the Buckeyes a 24-0 lead at the 8:26 mark .
will succeed.
"He should be able to step in · program) feel very good.' This has
.F rontier's Jamie Binegar increased the lead to 30-0 for Ohio with
..and mix it up with a lot of the been a dream of Matt's ever since 1:17 left in the third, bolting into the end zone from five yards out.
.. · people we have."
he was a freshman.
Roush capped off the blowout in the fourth quarter, scoring on a
··"· 'Among Boyles's high school
'Tm very, very proud of him. rwo-yard run with 8: 15 to play.
"As a team, only after a week of practi ce, we played hard," said
. '·~ccomplishments wete winning a Everybody is; it's quite an acco~­
•' dlstrict championship in cross plishment.
Roush. "We played together real good, like we've playing together all
Rose added, "He's the kind of year.! met a lot of new kids, and have a lot more memories now. It's a
country and qualifying for the
state track and field champi- student that does not give up. great bunch of guys."
Roush wasn't the only Marauder player to be invited to play in the
····onships. He was also an All-TVC He'll continue to work and work ,
.r performer all four years and a
and he sets a good moral tone for game. Teammate Jonathan Haggerty was also a member of the ·Ohio
two-time All-district runner.
himself and for other people squad, and seemed to really savor the opportunity.
"It felt great, playing (to benefit) that disease; · Haggerty said. " It was
Boyles captured the Eastern around him.
•· :tJigh School high-points award
"He's just a hard working kid." nice to raise the money.
. "It was tough at the beginning, anger was flaring, but everybody
four times. He was also the Smoot
Boyles intends to major in busicalmed down and played a nice, cool football game."
Mile Division and Mountain ness ·management.
Ohio outgained West Virginia 199-85 in total yardage. Ohio rushed
·• .State Division Champion in
(Editor's note: Thanks to Mark
J 997.
Williams, URG sports informa- for 154 yards on 39 carries, while West Virginia managed just 18 .yards
.. ' About the decision to attend tion director, for providing back- rushing on 34 attempts .
Ohio had three turnovers (two fumbles and an interception). West
":'ORG,Boyles said,"!'~ excited to ground and photo for this story.)
Virginia fumbled the ball six times and lost five , and threw two inter, &amp;" to Rio Grande. They have a
ceptions.
·great program.
In addition to Roush's game-high rushing yardage, Monroe Central

//1/////~~ift':l PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

....
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Send Tri-County sports and outdoors news and notes
' ' ·'.
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to the Sun&lt;4Y, Times-Sentinel!
Fax: In Gallia County- 446-3008 ... .Ip Meigs County- 992-2157 .. :.In
• Maspn Co\inty: ·_. 675·-523~-..t~;· &lt; . ,,•..-,
,.J.&lt;-, '"'v:;"
- Email: In Gallia &amp; Meigs County~ gal.t~ibune@eurekanet:com ... .In Mason:-.
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County - ppregister@eurekanet.com!
' · ::

REBELS RED TAKES TITLE- The Rio Rebels Red team took the title in the Under-15 division at the MU
sanCtioned basketball tournament held over the Memorial Day weekend at the University of Rio Grande.
Members of the Red squad include Arrika Skonkwiler, Bevon Carter. Anna Ramey, Emily Hehl, Cara Dunkle, Chelsea Gooch, Erica Lawrence and Meredith Addington. They are coached by Dale Royce. Also pic·
tured is URG president Barry Dorsey. (Submitted photo)

6 unbap QI:imt!i ·iltntmtl • Page B3

..••

Feel the Thrill of

..
::
:
..~
..

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

•

11011 0-4), 11te

Veras , A11anta, 18; Reese, Cincinnati, 17;

Cedeno. HOUIIIon, 17; Owena. San Diego. 17.
PITCHING (8 Oeclsions)-Johnaon, Ali·
zona, 11 ·1, .1111. t ,40; Maddwc. At1ontlo, 8-t ,
.900, 3.02; Graves, Clnclnnari, &amp;.1, .888, 2.05;
Loltor, New Yortc , 1!-1, .889, 3.00; Stophtnoon,
St Louis, 8·2, .ate. 3.1i0; Kite, St. t.oulo, to-a,
.71111, 4.311; Pavano, Montreal, 7-3, .100, 3.25;
Gllvlno, Atian111, 7-3, .100, 3.!54.
STRikEOUTS-Jonnaon, Arizona, t50;
Altlclo. Cotorado, M; Demptter, Ftorlda, 80;
MU:ii.DC, Allllrrta, 80; Kile, St. LD&amp;i1, 87; Ben·
oon. l'lttlllut'gll, 115; Ptflon, Pl111adtlphll. 88,
BAVES-Aifonooca, Florida, t8; Blllltor,
Now Vor1c, II; Hollmln, Sen Diego, 15; AguM•
0&lt;11, a!ICaQO, 14;
St. LDuls,12; Jlmonoz,
H; Shaw, Loa~~~-. 11.

Philadalphll 2, Atlanta I
-~

Grudzlolanek, LOs AngeleS, 52; Kent, San
Francltco, 52.
RBI-KMll, San Francloco, 83; Gllol,. PlttJ.
burgh, 62; Sooa, Chicago, 8) ; G""'"'"', Montreal, SD; Helton, COIOraciO, 58; Kai'TOI, L.ot
An ~al eo, 58; Shelfteld, l.oo Angaloo, 55.
HITS-Guarrem, Montreol, 68; 'Mro, Monlroal, 87; Helton, Colorado, 85; Young, Chico·
go, 85; KAnt, San Francisoo, 85; Giles, Pitt$.
burgh, 83; Owena, San Diego, 83.
DOUBLES-Gr- . LOs Angeles, 24; Wro,
Montreal, 23; Young, Chicaigo, 23; Wlllto, Mon-

Sunday, Jun• 18,2000

t

IJ The Joe Gibbs owned #2Q Home Depot Car: Driver Tony SteYfart.:
IJ The AJ. Foyt owned #14 Conseco Car: Driver Mike Bliss
.&gt;I

1

.

.

.

~ BACK-TO BACK CHAMPS- The tBam of, from left to right, Zachery Morrison, Bernie Fulks, Curtis Waugh

,,

~ and Andrew Chapman won thBir second consecutive Chillicothe Gus MBCker Basketball title. With the win,
~ they qualify for the AI~Wor1d Championship to be held October 28-29 in Titusville, Florida. (Submitted

r-

:: photo)

..••~ ----------------------------------------------------~---------------

..~
....,.,.••

81

::, Shobe and Warner both record~
:: ed their second multi- hit games
" of the new season. Shobe w.u 2·
} for-3 with a RBI. Warner w.u 2$ for-3 (2B) with two RBI. In his
:,_lint nan of the season, John

(

Caldwell was 2-for-3 with a double.
Ktuk, Margum (three RBI),
Moore, Dennis, Richmond and
Greene each had a single.
For the Hawks, Seacrist recorded a double, a home ~n and two
RBI. Halstead Jud a liniJe, a
home run and two RBI . O'Connor and Gatewood each n!corded
a single.

Ktuk earned an no-decision in
four innings of work, giving up
four runs .
Hawks' starter McClung also
did not figure in the decision.
Lyttle picked up the lou in one
and two-thirds of an inning.
Mason County (2-0) will face
Putnam County on Thesday.

~ Jill: . f&lt;~itk;

-

f( ·~

-· ' I

..., .

.--::1''1, '

~-'{.ti.h

f'

(

- .~

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•;/
,
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• I'

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. .·

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I

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Power Moonroof. Spoiler, Adjustlble Pedals

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2000 FORD TAURUS

Fax 740· 593-562 I

:~ ~------------------------------------,

Follow your favorite tea!lls in
i ~ the Sunday Times-Sentinel!!!
.'

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•

JERRY BIBBEE
Phone
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461 S. Third

www.jerrybibbee.com

Middleport

Ave.

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�•

Page 82 • 6 unbap llimtt-6tntind

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Sunday, June 11, 2000

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

TO DAY'S SCO 'R EBOARD

•

l!ootom Dlvlolon

•

... T•m
W L Pet. GB
: Atlanta ............ .... .... , ....... 41 25 .821
• - Yorlc ......................... 38 28 .583
4
- Montreal ..........................33 31) .5a4 5 1/2
.. Florida ................. ..... .......a1 ae .483 10 1/2
.. Philadelphia .. ..................25 39 .391
15
...
Central DMelon
St. Louio.................... .......38 28 .578
CinCinnati ... _.................32 33 .482 5 1/2
Pltl8burgh .......................29 36 .446 6 1/2
Chicago .........................28 ' 38 .424
tO
MHwe.ukee ....................... 21 38 .409
11
Houlton ........ ................ .24 • 2 .384
14
WtltDMolon
Mlooa ........................... 39 27 .591
• Colorado .............•...........35 27 .565
2
L.os Angoles .....................35 30 .838 3 l /2
• san Franci&amp;a&gt; .................. 32 31 .508 5 112
• san Diego ......,................. 28 37 ..:It 10 1/2
•
F~dey'e Gam~~
Chicago CubS D, Montreal B
Aoricla 8, Pl~sburgh 3

N.Y. Mats 7, Milwaukee 1

Arizona at COlorado, ppd., rain
Sen Dl- t, ClnciMttt s
St. Louis 8, Los AngeleS 3
San Francisco 7, Houst.on 4
Saturuy.. Gam11
Montreal at
Cubs, late
St. LOuis at lol
Ilea, lata
Cincinnati ot a., !ago, MoUlton at San Francllco, late
Ftonda at Plttotn•gh, 1111
Atlanta at Pl111adllphlo, loti
N.Y. Meta II Mllwaukll, latl
Atlzona at Colorldo. late

·•

•
•

·-

treal. 22; Altonzo, New YM, 21 ; Clrllo, COl·
orado, 21; Kent, San Francisco, 21 : Zai1e, New
Yor1&lt;, 21.
TAIPLE5-Goodwin, Colorado, 7; Guerrero,
Montreal, 5; Womack, Nlzona, 5; ~mpart .
COkxado, 5; 7 are tied with 4.
HOME RUNS-Bonds, Sen Fronclooo, 28;
McGwlro, St. Louis, 23;·Hidalgo, HousiOn, 20;
Guerrero, Montreal, 20; Edmonda, St. Loulo,
20: sRnrer. Arizona, 20: GJM, l'ftDlrgn, te;
Karrot. Los Angeles, HJ: Sooa, Chloago. t8:
Shaftiekl, LOs Angeles, 19.
STOLEN BASES-Goodwin, Colorado, 30;
Castillo, Flo~da, 27; Young, Cnlcago, 23;

Ch:!i

Co-.

Taclr(8CI-

Allantt (Burkitt 4-3) at Pl1Hadllpnla (Poroon
e-2), I :38 p.m.
Florida (Penny 3-8) It Plttsburgn (Arforo O·
0), 1:311 p.m.
N.Y. Mltl (Riad 3·1) II MIIWIIA&lt;H (ko 4·
IS),
p.m.
Montroal (IIUquor 8-3) at a.rcago Cubs
(U- 11-4), 2:20p.m.
Arizona (Roynooo 4-5) at Colorado ('1011111
1·1), 3:05p.m.
Hout1ton (lloynolds 8·3) at San Fianciooo
. (Nathan 3·1), 4:08p.m.
. ClnolniNIII (1111 4-8) ot lon DI'IJO
• (C"-'t 1-1), I p.m.
St. LDulo (Kilo 10.3) at Lot Angtleo (Park I·
4), 8:05 p.m.
illon&lt;lty'l Cltfi!IO
Plttoburgn et Montroet, 7:05 p.m.
Milwaukee at Florida, 7:05 p.m.
Atlanta at Pl11ladolphla, 7:35p.m.
Sen Oi'IJO at Nlzona, 10:05 p.m.

a:oe

-onal LAigue Statlatlctf Laadera
BATTING-He~on. Colorado, .3112; Vldro,
MomeN, .367; GoerrGro, Montreal, .3e7; Piazza. New Vorl&lt;, .3118; Edmonds, St Louis, .350;
Bonds, san Fninclsco, .348; Kent, San Fran·
cisco, .347.
RUNS-Edmonds, Si. Louis, 65; Helton,
Colorado, 83; Bonds, S.., Franci!ICO, 61; Beg·
well, Houston, 56; Attonzo, New York, 52;

1), 1ate

Chlcogo Whlla SO• (Eidred7-2) at N.Y. Yan(Westbrook ~). lite
Toromo (Wills 10.2) at Boston (R.Mortinez
5-3), 1111

k-

SMilie (Moyer 4-2) &amp;I Minnesota (MiHon

I ), late

e.

Vtr•.

1Nm
W L
Booten ............................ 30 2T
New "ttllrk ......................... 34 17
Toronto ............................ 31 33
Boltlmore ........................ 30 3&lt;1
Tampa llty .. .....................2e 311
Cenltal Dlvtllon
Chicago ...................... .... 42 2ol
CIIYII1nd ............." ........$4 •
l&lt;a'*lt City .....................33 32
Mlnn- ....................... 30 38
OatroH ............................. 21 37
WtotDiv~

SAVES-.Jonoo, 01Cro1t. I II; Lowo, Boston,
11; llltlngt.u-. Oaldond, t8: Percival. Anll·
helm, 1e: Wenaland, Texas, t6; Fo\jke, Chica·
go, 15; Rivera, New Yorlc, 15.

Anallolm (Boicher 0.0) at Baltimore (John.

Clakland (Appier 1-3) at K.ansao Oty (WIIa·
siclc I ·5), lott
Todey'aChicago White SO. (Patque (1.2) at N.Y.
Yanlle.. (Hernandez lf.5), 1:05 p.m.
Toronto (Castillo (2·51 at Booton (S&lt;hourek
2-8), 1:05 p.m.
·
Ctlvltand (Novarro 11-0) at Dottalt (Btalr
3-1~~~p.m.
.
(Helling 7-li) at Tampa Boy (Rel&lt;or 2·
4), 1:15 p.m.
Anehtlm (Etllanon 1·1) at Baltimore (Erlctl·
"""3-3), 1:Je p.m.
Oet&lt;itnd •(Heredia 8-4) at Kansu Citr
(Botiota 2-8), 2:05 p.m.
Seattle (M4Che 2-4) at Mlnneoota (Maya 3·
8), 2:05p.m.
,

PRO

Amartoan LAigue Btllltat1ctl L.oado,.
BATTING-Rodriguez, TO&gt;C81, .375; Mar·
dnez, Seattle, .371 , Erttad ,Anohell)l, .370, Daf.
gado, Toronto, .35Q: SWeeney. Kansu Citr,
.354; Lawton, Minnesota, .343; Rodriguez,
Sllttlo, .342.
.
RUNS-Rodrlguor, Soanla, 53; Oolgado,
Toronto, 57; Mond.. l, Toronto, 54; Gltue. Ana· ,
hHn, 51; Damon, Kania• City, 51; Durham,
Chloogo, 50; RodrfgUIZ, Tll&lt;AO, 50.
RBI-Mtrtlnez, Seattle. 18; Swtlney,
l&lt;anlao City, 85; Ja. Glambl, Clalctand,ll; Dat·
gldo, Toronto, 114; EvoreH, Boston. 82;
Rodriguez, Sllttlo, 110: Rodriguez, Toxu, 118.
HIT6-Entad, Anattalm, 106; Rod~guoz,
T•u. M; s-nev. .Kanlaa City, 82; Oolgldo,

U.S. OpenPEBBLE BEACH, Cetif. (Af') - Graded
soores Saturday from the seccnd round of the
1001n u.s, Open on tho 8,828-yard, per-11
Pebble Beech Go~ Uni&lt;s (a·denoteo a meteu~ :
roger Wooda
85-89 - 134
Tllomu Bjoni
71).10 - 1.0
Miauel Jimenez IIH4 - 1.0
Kltlc Triplett
71). 71 - I 41
Jose Mo~a0tazabal70.71 - 141
Hal Sulton
89-73 - 142
LeeWeotwoo&lt;t
71-11 - 142
John Huston
67-75 - 142
Nick Faklo
89-74 - 1..:1
Vllay Slngn
70.73 - t ..:~
Pl111 Mloketscn
11·73 - 144
Lee Porter
74-10 - 144
MikeBriOky
71·73 - 144
TedTryba
71·73 - 144
Lee Janzen
71 -73 - 144
Podralg Harrington 73-71-144
Tom L.ehman

71 -73 - 144

Paulilzilger
71 ·73 - 144
Robt~ Damron
72·73 - 145
AngaiCabr«a · 59-711 - 145
FrodCOupl•
71).711- 145
Bobby Clampan
118·77- 145
TomWotiCn
71 ·74-145
lallyMizo
73-12-145
RoaX&gt; Madloto
59-711- 145

Toronto, II; L.n'ton, MlnniiOta, 88; ROdriguez,

Amartotnf.Mgue

1-Divlolon

110.

Sllttlo, 81; Randa, Kan- City, 78; 1/aughn,

Nattonol loak_ll_fatton

Aneholm, 11.

Pot.

Gl

.1117
.515

1/2
3

•

•• •

.400 10 1/2
.131
.140 I 1/1
.1101 I 1/2
.441
13
.403
15

Oaldand .......................... 37 2U .1111
Slltlla ............................30 2U .1147
I
Anaheim .........................33 33 .500 31{2
TO&gt;IIS .............................. 30 35 .482
112

'rklar'•Gt.,.
0otrott 1, Clonllnd 2

e

Clllcago WMe SO• 3, N.Y. Yankeao t
Booton 7, Toronto 4
Tampa Bay 11, T"'"" 2
Baltimore 4, Anattalm 3
Minnesota 7, Seattle 2

Oakland 8, Kansas Cl1y 3

aaturuv··.
Ciavltand (Finley 1-C) It Oobon (Homo 2·

B),loto
Te,.. (Pertsno 1.0) at Tampa Bay (Lidle ().

DOUBI.EII-Lao.ton, !ollnn.ota, 23; GltUI,
Anthllm, 21; sw-~ Klnoaa City, 21 ;
llodrlguu, Taxao, 21; ore, Kineta City, 20;
Oolgado, Toronto, 20; Sogul, Tlltla, 111;
DoShi• .-, llthlmoro, 111; Ot«Ud, 80tttlo, t 11.
TRIPLES-Guzman,
Minnesota,
11;

NIA 'lntle Qlonco
Pinola
~7)

WICinoHiy, JWIIT
L.A. Will I 04, lnditnll7
'rfdey, Junot
Durfttm, Chicago, I; Singleton. Chicago, 4;
L.A. Lakora 111,lndlana t04
Hunter, Mlnneeotl, -; Nixon, Bolton, 4;
lunay, Juno11
llllllntln, .Chloago, 4; Mlttlnoz. Now Vor1c, 4;
lndlano too, L.A. Lahora 8t
AUa.., TIUI, 4.
WICiftltdey, J1111 14
HOME RUN6-0olaodo, Toronto, 24;
L.A.
Lokn
I 20, lndltnl1t8, OT
Evorlft, Booton, 22; Rocfriguoz, Tow, 22; Ja.
frfdey, Juno11
Gltmbl, Clakiand, 20; lllughn, Anlholm. 1~; .
lnditnl 120, L.A. Wera 87, L.4. Lakera
J~. Clweland, 18; Martinez, Seetue, 18.
.
STOLEN BASE6-Mond•l. Toronto, 20: lllld-3-2
/
Monday,
Ju11118
DaSIIII!ds. lltlttmore. 20; Demon, r&lt;ansae City,
Indiana at L.A. Lakart1, 9 p.m.
18; Atomar, C-nd. 11; Lawlon, Mlnnoaota,
WICinoldey, Juno 21
15; Mclemore, SNtUe, 14; Jet•, .New York,
Indiana at L.A. Lakora, 9 p,m., Knecesoary
13.
PITCHING (8 Declalona)-Bald111n, Chfca.
go, 10·1, .909, 3.11; Wolt, Toronto, 1?'2• .833,
Woman•o NatlonollltaM!btlt Aoaocllllon
3.48, Martinez, Boston, 9·2, .818, .99, Hudson,
Oakland, 7·2, .778, 4.10; Eldred, cnlcago,7·2,
l!oatom COni.....,..
.778, ~ . 18; BuriNI, Cleveland, 7-2, .778, 5.13; TNril
W ~ Pet.
GB
Sale, Seante, 7--3, .700, 4.16.
·
Clwetond ..... - ..................a· 2 .714
STRIKEOUTS-Martinez. Booton, 121 ; Fin· W&amp;slllngton ................... .. ..4 2 .lle7
1{2
ley, CIBYIIand, 89; Hudeon, Oaldand, 8.1; Orlando ....................... ...... 5 4 .556
I
Nomo, Detroit, 81 ; Burba, Cleveland, 81; Detroit ......................... ...... 3 4 .429
2
ctemans, N.., York, 81 ; Muaslna, Baltimore, New Vorl&lt; ...........................3 5 .375 2 1{2

r ~~~~~~~~~~
~

••
•

...

..

lndlaM ....... !......................2
Miami ............... .................2
Chattotte ...........................I
W..._,. Conf..
Houston ............................ 8
MIM810ta ..................... .... 5

•

I

. 1..:1

•.c•1 .889

3
4

••
•'•

.714
2
............................. 5
.714
2
l.oo Angolas .......................4
.867 2 1{2
5acramonto ......................•
.571
3
4
Utah ..................................4
·Seante ........ l ..... r••••••••••••• •• 2
.250 5 1/2
Porlttnd ...... ~ ................... !. 5 .117 51{2
frtdey .. _
Ollrolt ... Cllvlland .,
Saturdoy's Gtii!IO
MiMeeota at Phoenix, late
Cilvlland at 111om1, 1...
Indiana at OMndO, late ' .
washington at utah, late

National L11gue
CHICAGO CUBS- Optl ont&lt;l RHP\!att
Karchner to Iowa of the Pac1flc Coa~t
League . Purchased the contract of ~HP
Steve Rain h om Iowa. Traneferred\)38

f!:- to

Shane Andrew• frorn the

th.-:-eo-

day diubled•liat.
"'
COLORADO ROCKIES- Signed RHP
Chris Buglovaky, C Dan Conway, SS
Clint Barmas, RHP Sean Green, AHP
William Vuqu.z, RHP Justin Hulsman ,
OF Jose Vasquez , LHP Charles Marricks, RHP Scotl Berney, llt'IP Joe A~ll .
38 Bryan Pack, C Josh· Pride , 38 c:rlc
Storey, SS Kevin Blocker and Lt-ll&gt; .Mikt

Charlotte at Saaamento, tate
LJ&gt;o AngeleS at Ponland, lato

Davies.

, Tocley'eGtii!IO

'

.,

2
2
2
3
5
8

•

.

HOUSTON ASTROS-Piacod 3B' i(on
Caminiti on the 15·day diSI!iblad 1111,, 1
LOS ANGELES OOPGERS- OpliO(\Od
RHP AI Alyea to Albuquerque of' 'fhe
Pacific Coaal League. Recalled C Adam

Minneso1a at Houston, 4 p.m.
Indiana at Detroit, 6 p.m.
Miami at N~ York, 7:30 p.m.
Utah at Seattle, 9 p.m.

ChortoM at Loo Angelol, 1o p.m.

Melhuaa.

1

MILWAUKEE BREWERS- Doslgnatod
INF Sean Berry for aulgnment. Actival·
ed OF Lyle Mouton from lhe 15-day .A-Is ·
abted list.
• •

AUTO RACING
Champlonehlp Auto Aeclng T•ama
CAR"T - Fired -And raw Craig , chairman
of the board and chief executive officer.
Named Bobby_ Rahal lnt•rlm pr11ldent
and chltf tlitcutlvt otflctr. Elected
Jame1 Hardyman Chilrman of the board .
' BAI!IIA~~
Amerloen League
ANAHEIM 4NGELS-Pi10td LHP
Scott Scnoenewels on the 11·doy dis·
tblad list. 4otlvatod · RHP Tim Bolcnor
from tne ts-da~ dlubled )let.
CLEVELANI! ' INDI4N8-Tronoltrred
RHP Jtrot Wright from 1n1 II· to tho 10·
day dlaabled 1101. Slgnod RHP Jomlo
Navarro end LHP Mike ~Ohler to a minor
league oontraot. Optioned RHP Kone
Davie ond RHP Wllllo Martlnoz to Buffa·
10 of tho International Lugue. Doslgnat·

td LHP M1rk .W atton for a11lgnment.
Purchllld tht contract of FIHP Brian

Williams from Buflolo.
NEW VORK V4NKEES-Atllgnod
RHP Mlng Wang to Slaton leland of tho
New York-Penn ~tagua .
MINNESOTA TWINS-Agreed to
terme with FIHP ·A.dam Johnson .
TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAYS-Signed CF;
Rocco Baldelli and SS Jace Brewer.
Moved RHP Juan Guzman from 15-day
to .IO·day disabled list.
TEXAS RANGERS-Claimed RHP .
Jared Camp otf •waivers from Clevela-nd
lndl8na and optlo·n·ed him to Tulu of the
Texas League. Moved OF Ruben Mateo
from 15· to 60·day DL. Announced OF
Jason McDonald has accepted l'lls
assignment to Oklahoma of the Pacific
Coast League. Si_gned SS Jason Bourgeois.
TORONTO BLUE JAYS - Placed C
Darrln Fletcher on the disabled list,
retroactive to June 10 . Moved OF

IIASKETBALL
N•tlon•l l11kettJeJI A1ebolltiD'ft
SAN ANTONIO SPURS-Annoul).ood
AIYI.n Gentry haa declined an offer to join
tht Atlanta Hawke, to bedom8 an ••~•·
tant

--

TRACK &amp; FIELD

Oewar no Wloo jrom tne 15· to tno- &amp;o.
da ~ DL. Purchu ed the contract o1 C
Cha rlie Grttne f rom Syraeuae ot th e
Internat ional League.
..

.333 2 1/2

5 .281

coacn with

tht Spurl.

'DOTIALL
National 'ootball Le•guo •
ARIZONA CAROIN4L8-81gnod 'Ill
Mao Toel to a thrtt•ytar oontraot. •.
CHICAGO BEARS- Signed LB Br 1on
Urlacl'lar to a tlvt-yttr contract.
PHILADELPHIA E.t.GLEI-Signod..WFI
Qarl Scott to 1 three-yaer ,cont'ract ~n~ K
Rlcn Muton to a lwo-year contract. ·

'

.

HDCKIV
N•tlonol Hookoy LIIIUI , ,
PHOENIX COYOTES-E•tonded ..tlll
contract of F Mlkt Alatalo lor the 2000·
01 aeaaon.
",
BOCCIA
Major League loooer
DALLAS
BURN-Named
BriOn
Haynea manager of communl~y ~ro·
1
grama and 111m 11a11on.
,'li

COLLEG!
•
ANDERSON, S.C .-Nomod DCI.Ck
Kelly wreatllng coach.
,
CALDWELL-Named Jamie Nash
rr'ltn's soccer coach.
·
FLORIDA INTERNATION'IL!...Nam,"d
Rick Mello athlellc dlreclor.
·
LOUISIANA·MONROE-Promotocl •'1
J.D. Malone from assistant to head t_ra,Ck
and field coach.
· ',
MINNESOTA- Signed Glenn&lt;l~r~~. ~ :
football eoach, to a contract e:
through 2006.
NORTH
CARO•LI~~b:J'~~~~~)~fr
Named Paut O'Neil bl
coach.

.: ~.astern's

Boyles
:· Stgns with RIO
: ~rande track squad

We want to hear from you!

'

ALL.STARS - Justin Roush and Jonathan Haggerty of Meigs represented the Tri.County area in seventh annual Battle Against Cystic
Fibrosis Football Classic Friday at Parkersburg High School's Stadium
Field . Roush and Haggerty's Ohio AII·Star team defeated West Virginia
36-0 in annual fundraiser to help cystic fibros is research. (Andrew
Carter photos)
quarterback Derek Griffith, the game's MVP, had 45 yards rushing.
Binegar finished with 25 yards on the ground . Samuels had 17 yards
rushing.
.
Griffith threw for a 31 yards , while Lockhart completed one pass for
14 yards.
Kipp Bodnar ofWilliamstown led West Virginia with 30 yards rushing. Harris had 22 yards and Robert Martino of Parkersburg had 11
yards on the ground.
Quarterback Ryan Smith of St. M arys co mpleted 5- of- 15 passes for
67 yards and one in.terception .
The 2001 BACF Football Classic is scheduled for June 15, at Stadium field in Parkersburg.
Event officials said that they will add a new facet to the fundraiser
next season with the formation of the BACF Basketball Classic, set for
June 16, at the Parkersburg High School Memorial Field House.

~b

,,;

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

JERRY. BIBBEE
a

Boytes of Eastern has signed lett11r of intBnt to compete in
· -~· field for the Unlver.slty of Rio Grande. Boyles Is shOwn with.
pa~nt$, Joe amf Laurie, i!rld Eastern principal Rick Edwards, URG
ooach Bob Willey and Eastern ·track and field coach Arch Rose.
Williams photo)
,.
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SOFTBA,LL

.!GalliPolis-·christian,
IFellowship Cha:pel
!to.
p
GCCSL
standings
.
GALLIPOLIS -Week four of Rodney rally to take the 19-18 vlci the Gallia County Church Softball tory.
Rodney, who wa; down 16-6;used
League continued Monday, as Galan
eight-run sixth to cut the lead to
Jipolis Christian's men and Fellowship Chapel's women remained 16-14.After Middleport put the lead
back to four at 18•14, Rodney
! undefeated to lead the standings.
j At Vinton Park Field, Vinton Bap~ scorea four ru~ in the top of the
i tist picked ~p iis i}Utd women's vic- . seventh. Brian Howard scor:Cd the
tory,8-4,ovet Living Water. The Li~­ winning run in the bottom of the
~ ing Water men won 12-7 for the1r . seventh to give Middleport the victory.
! thitd win.
Rodney was led . by Mike
At the Church of God fields,
Hemphill,
who . was 4-for-5 with
! Church of God defeated the
Nazarene Church women 10-3 for three runs. and Ryan Elliot, who was
: their first victory. C.O.G.'s Connie 2-for-3. Middleport was''Jed by Brian
,
; Saunders was 3-for-4 and Jessica Howard (S-for-5, five runs).
At Faith Baptist Field, Faith took
• Chaney was 3-3.
·
: In the men's contest, C.O.G. won on First Baptist. No score was report: its thitd straight, 6-I. For the victors, ed.
! M.:ark Haner was 2-for-3 and Muvin Play continues next week as Gallipolis Christian and Church of God
: Baird was 2-for-3.
! At Mcintyre ~rk, Fellowship battle 'tout fio the men's lead. Rod: Chapel's women remained undefeat- ney Methodist will take on Fellow~ ed after a I0-0 win over Gallipolis ship Chapel for the top spot in the
: C.hristiao. The men's game saw Gal- women's standings.
In other action, Living Water will
l lipolis ,~main undefeated and atop
take on Fpith Baptist, Finr Baptist
the standings with an 11-4 victory.
: :Also 'at · Mcintyre, Middleport takH on Vinton Baptist, and Middlechurch of Chri!t took on Rodney port takH on the Nazarene Church.
(Editor's note: Thanks to . Eric
~ Meth~st. The womel)'s game went
i to Rodney by foneit. In· the men's . Whitt of Rodney Methodist for sup: game, Middleport survived a late plyi_ng this report.)

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down.
Roush scored th e game's fi rst touchdown late in. the second quarter,
hulling in from a yard out foll&lt;;&gt;wing a fumble by Anthony H arris of
Parkersburg Catholi c at the West Virgini a 30 yard line.
Belpre placekicker Scott Elzey, who is reportedly headed to Muskingum College this fall, gave the O hioans a 10-0 lead at halftime w hen
'
he nailed a 38-yard field goal.
Joe Westbrook of M arietta helped set up the second score with an
;: . RIO GRANDE- Head track
"it's a big relief to have it (the interception in the final minute.
.
_; Z,nd field coach Bob Willey again signing) all finalized and done and
Game offiCials delayed the start of the third quarrer for nearly half an
, .tapped into the Ohio Valley's tal- · I'm just really excited."
hour after seeing strokes of lightning in the area.
.
Several factors contributed to
,, ent pool, a$ Eastern's Matthew
Following the lengthy · postponement, it was the O hio side that
Boyles signed a natio~ letter of his choice. "First, I looked at the struck like lighming in a bottle.
" 1iitent to run for the University of program itself. I felt that Rio
The Buckeyes scored three touchdowns in the third quarter to blow
the
game wide open , building a 30-0 cushion as the fourth period
.· Rio Grande.
Grande had a well- established
, . , Willey found Boyles's attitude program and it was going to be a began .
'· to be an important factor in the good 6t for me.
Marietta's Mike Samuels scored on a two-yard scamper with 10: 17
' 'recruitment. "Matt's a very hard
"The fact that it's very close to to play in the third to boost the lead to 17-0. Ohio re covered a fumworker and seems to be a very where I live was just excellent for ble at the West Virginia five yard line to set up Samuels' run.
~olid young man. He's not afraid me."
Another turnover deep in its own half contr ibuted to the Mountain
':~o work. If you can get a young
Eastern track coach Arch Rose State side's woes and set up another Ohio score. Josh Lockhart of Fort
:; person today that is like that, they was pleased with his standout's Frye carried the package for Ohio, scoring from a yard away to give
decision." It makes us (Eastern's the Buckeyes a 24-0 lead at the 8:26 mark .
will succeed.
"He should be able to step in · program) feel very good.' This has
.F rontier's Jamie Binegar increased the lead to 30-0 for Ohio with
..and mix it up with a lot of the been a dream of Matt's ever since 1:17 left in the third, bolting into the end zone from five yards out.
.. · people we have."
he was a freshman.
Roush capped off the blowout in the fourth quarter, scoring on a
··"· 'Among Boyles's high school
'Tm very, very proud of him. rwo-yard run with 8: 15 to play.
"As a team, only after a week of practi ce, we played hard," said
. '·~ccomplishments wete winning a Everybody is; it's quite an acco~­
•' dlstrict championship in cross plishment.
Roush. "We played together real good, like we've playing together all
Rose added, "He's the kind of year.! met a lot of new kids, and have a lot more memories now. It's a
country and qualifying for the
state track and field champi- student that does not give up. great bunch of guys."
Roush wasn't the only Marauder player to be invited to play in the
····onships. He was also an All-TVC He'll continue to work and work ,
.r performer all four years and a
and he sets a good moral tone for game. Teammate Jonathan Haggerty was also a member of the ·Ohio
two-time All-district runner.
himself and for other people squad, and seemed to really savor the opportunity.
"It felt great, playing (to benefit) that disease; · Haggerty said. " It was
Boyles captured the Eastern around him.
•· :tJigh School high-points award
"He's just a hard working kid." nice to raise the money.
. "It was tough at the beginning, anger was flaring, but everybody
four times. He was also the Smoot
Boyles intends to major in busicalmed down and played a nice, cool football game."
Mile Division and Mountain ness ·management.
Ohio outgained West Virginia 199-85 in total yardage. Ohio rushed
·• .State Division Champion in
(Editor's note: Thanks to Mark
J 997.
Williams, URG sports informa- for 154 yards on 39 carries, while West Virginia managed just 18 .yards
.. ' About the decision to attend tion director, for providing back- rushing on 34 attempts .
Ohio had three turnovers (two fumbles and an interception). West
":'ORG,Boyles said,"!'~ excited to ground and photo for this story.)
Virginia fumbled the ball six times and lost five , and threw two inter, &amp;" to Rio Grande. They have a
ceptions.
·great program.
In addition to Roush's game-high rushing yardage, Monroe Central

//1/////~~ift':l PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

....
••

•

Send Tri-County sports and outdoors news and notes
' ' ·'.
•
to the Sun&lt;4Y, Times-Sentinel!
Fax: In Gallia County- 446-3008 ... .Ip Meigs County- 992-2157 .. :.In
• Maspn Co\inty: ·_. 675·-523~-..t~;· &lt; . ,,•..-,
,.J.&lt;-, '"'v:;"
- Email: In Gallia &amp; Meigs County~ gal.t~ibune@eurekanet:com ... .In Mason:-.
.
County - ppregister@eurekanet.com!
' · ::

REBELS RED TAKES TITLE- The Rio Rebels Red team took the title in the Under-15 division at the MU
sanCtioned basketball tournament held over the Memorial Day weekend at the University of Rio Grande.
Members of the Red squad include Arrika Skonkwiler, Bevon Carter. Anna Ramey, Emily Hehl, Cara Dunkle, Chelsea Gooch, Erica Lawrence and Meredith Addington. They are coached by Dale Royce. Also pic·
tured is URG president Barry Dorsey. (Submitted photo)

6 unbap QI:imt!i ·iltntmtl • Page B3

..••

Feel the Thrill of

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

•

11011 0-4), 11te

Veras , A11anta, 18; Reese, Cincinnati, 17;

Cedeno. HOUIIIon, 17; Owena. San Diego. 17.
PITCHING (8 Oeclsions)-Johnaon, Ali·
zona, 11 ·1, .1111. t ,40; Maddwc. At1ontlo, 8-t ,
.900, 3.02; Graves, Clnclnnari, &amp;.1, .888, 2.05;
Loltor, New Yortc , 1!-1, .889, 3.00; Stophtnoon,
St Louis, 8·2, .ate. 3.1i0; Kite, St. t.oulo, to-a,
.71111, 4.311; Pavano, Montreal, 7-3, .100, 3.25;
Gllvlno, Atian111, 7-3, .100, 3.!54.
STRikEOUTS-Jonnaon, Arizona, t50;
Altlclo. Cotorado, M; Demptter, Ftorlda, 80;
MU:ii.DC, Allllrrta, 80; Kile, St. LD&amp;i1, 87; Ben·
oon. l'lttlllut'gll, 115; Ptflon, Pl111adtlphll. 88,
BAVES-Aifonooca, Florida, t8; Blllltor,
Now Vor1c, II; Hollmln, Sen Diego, 15; AguM•
0&lt;11, a!ICaQO, 14;
St. LDuls,12; Jlmonoz,
H; Shaw, Loa~~~-. 11.

Philadalphll 2, Atlanta I
-~

Grudzlolanek, LOs AngeleS, 52; Kent, San
Francltco, 52.
RBI-KMll, San Francloco, 83; Gllol,. PlttJ.
burgh, 62; Sooa, Chicago, 8) ; G""'"'"', Montreal, SD; Helton, COIOraciO, 58; Kai'TOI, L.ot
An ~al eo, 58; Shelfteld, l.oo Angaloo, 55.
HITS-Guarrem, Montreol, 68; 'Mro, Monlroal, 87; Helton, Colorado, 85; Young, Chico·
go, 85; KAnt, San Francisoo, 85; Giles, Pitt$.
burgh, 83; Owena, San Diego, 83.
DOUBLES-Gr- . LOs Angeles, 24; Wro,
Montreal, 23; Young, Chicaigo, 23; Wlllto, Mon-

Sunday, Jun• 18,2000

t

IJ The Joe Gibbs owned #2Q Home Depot Car: Driver Tony SteYfart.:
IJ The AJ. Foyt owned #14 Conseco Car: Driver Mike Bliss
.&gt;I

1

.

.

.

~ BACK-TO BACK CHAMPS- The tBam of, from left to right, Zachery Morrison, Bernie Fulks, Curtis Waugh

,,

~ and Andrew Chapman won thBir second consecutive Chillicothe Gus MBCker Basketball title. With the win,
~ they qualify for the AI~Wor1d Championship to be held October 28-29 in Titusville, Florida. (Submitted

r-

:: photo)

..••~ ----------------------------------------------------~---------------

..~
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81

::, Shobe and Warner both record~
:: ed their second multi- hit games
" of the new season. Shobe w.u 2·
} for-3 with a RBI. Warner w.u 2$ for-3 (2B) with two RBI. In his
:,_lint nan of the season, John

(

Caldwell was 2-for-3 with a double.
Ktuk, Margum (three RBI),
Moore, Dennis, Richmond and
Greene each had a single.
For the Hawks, Seacrist recorded a double, a home ~n and two
RBI. Halstead Jud a liniJe, a
home run and two RBI . O'Connor and Gatewood each n!corded
a single.

Ktuk earned an no-decision in
four innings of work, giving up
four runs .
Hawks' starter McClung also
did not figure in the decision.
Lyttle picked up the lou in one
and two-thirds of an inning.
Mason County (2-0) will face
Putnam County on Thesday.

~ Jill: . f&lt;~itk;

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JERRY BIBBEE
Phone
740-992 - 2196

461 S. Third

www.jerrybibbee.com

Middleport

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�Page 84 • 6unbar t!:imel-6tnlind

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

wv

Sunda~June18,2000

•

Sundliy, June18, 2000

..

SUNDAY COMMENTARY

.-

Division I, ages I 0 and under; Division
II, ages 11-13; Division III , ages 14-16;
cle on the Huntington"Blizzard's leaving and Division IV, ages 16 and over.
town.
I was told that there are currently 48
Apparently, there are ·more hockey fans players in the program.
out there than I realized.
I was impressed to discover that the
One of the benefits of having a team league holds tournaments each ·month
like the Blizzard in our community was where they travel to tournament sites to
the community service. they performed compete for points. Like professional
for our local children.
hockey, the point system is used to deter-·
When discussing the Blizzard with a mine the championship teams.
neighbor,! was informed of how inspiraI'm happy to report that last year our
tional it was when Ray Edwards, a play- local Division Ill team placed second in
er on the team, served as guest speaker the Chicago regional and advanced to
for their annual hockey banquet and Des Moines for national competition.
organized a hockey clinic for its teams.
This year, Division I also earned the
I knew the players and franchise were opportunity to play in the regional.
big on civic pride; however, I didn't
That's terrific!
know we had a local roller hockey league
Organized sports teach our children a
in our midst.
great deal about competition and sportsApparently, over the past few years a manship. It helps to prepare them for life.
roller hockey league has been in action at I'm just so disappointed that I never
Skatesville ·USA in Gallipolis without us knew about this league.
being aware of its presence.
Why don't they get the exposure they
The roller hockey team is a member of so richly deserve?
the Ohio Valley Roller League, which is
After all, I always know who has died ,
under the direction of Bob Penrod of who is turning forty and who is having a
Washington Courthouse. i was also birthday with a' Rug rats' .These kids also
informed the Skatesville USA owner deserve some press time.
Patricia Ross was "instrumental in the
The effort put into this effort is comformation of the league."
mendable. It was a local patron who
Good for her!
organized a league for our children.
Lik ~ little league, the roller hockey
It's parents taking the time to drive
team is organized into four age divisions: their children throughout the state to

Sam
Wilson
THE SPORTS DR.
compete with six other skating organizations in Lebanon, Washington Courthouse, and Jackson, Ohio; in Spencer,
West Virginia; and Ashland, Kentucky.
It's coaches putting forth the effort to
make a difference with our youth. It's our
kids putting forth the effort and commitment to compete on a national level.
One of the Division III players was
even recognized in 1998 by the hockey
·newsletter,' Power Play.'
Ray Edwards and the Blizzard thought
these kids and their efforts were special.
We should too!
I inquired and got their phone number
(446-2925) for those of you who would
like more information on the league.
My son turns three in August; unfortunately, they don't· make roller blades in
his size, so I'll have to wait a few years
before he joins.
I'm getting ready for Game Five of the

Youth basketball camp draws good numbers
GALLIPOLIS - About 70
Gallipolis area youngsters attended the recent Ga llipolis Area Basketball Camp at Gallia Academy.
The week's activities included
numerous skills competitions.
H ere are the winners of those
competitions.
One-on-One
, Fourth grade: Beau Whaley.
Fifth grade: Ian Lewis.
Sixth grade: Matt Caldwell.
' Seventh grade: Andrew Cook.
Eighth grade: Zack Shawver.
Ninth grade: Cody Caldwell. ·
FreeThrows
·
Fourth grade: Jon Kyger.
Fifth grade: Dave Rumley.

Sixth grade: Matt Caldwell.
Seventh g rade: Travis Stout.
Eighth grade: Kyle Hudson.
Ninth grade: Eric Taylor.
3-point Shooting
Fourth grade :Jon Kyger.
Fifth grade: Shawn Thompson.
Sixth grade: Matt Caldwell.
Seventh grade: Matt Mooney.
Eighth grade: Kyle Hudson.
Ninth grade: Eric Taylor.
Bump out
Fourth grade: Beau Whaley.
Fifth grade: Shawn Tho,mpson.
Sixth grade: David Hill.
Seventh grade:Travis Stout..
Eighth grade: Matt Wiseman.
Ninth grade: Nick Craft.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Schilling's back in business; Bonds strikes again; Hershiser's return
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I was p.leasantly surprised by the
amount of support I received for my arti-

Dribble Elimination
Fourth grade: Beau Whaley.
Fifth grade: Sam Shawver.
Sixth grade: Nico Martin.
Seventh grade: Andrew Cook.
Eighth grade: Zack Shawver.
Ninth grade: Andre Geiger.
CrabWallk
Fourth grade: Clint Saunders.
Fifth grade: Shawn Thompson.
Sixth gra de: Anthony Fowler.
Seventh grade: Alex Kyger.
Eighth grade: Tyler Barry.
Ninth grade: Nick Cfjlft.
Fourth gra4e1 campers
Beau Whal ey, Nick Wilson,
. Clint Saunders, Jarrod Wray, Jon
Kyger, Codie Ward, Robert

•

•

...

NBA playoffs.
Yes, I know my Pacers are down 3- I,
but I'm having a great time watching
them in the finals.
Game Four was special. It was the kind
of game that will be talked about for
years to come. With ~he exception of
Reggie Miller missing the last shot, all
was perfect.
This series has shown the world the
significance of Shaq. Without him, the
Lakers would be calleq the Detroit Pistons.
He's the difference!
Put Shaq on any other team and they
become an instant contender. Put him on
Detroit with Grant Hill and Jerry Stackhouse and they are the NBA champions.
Kobe Bryant proved that he's also the
real deal. The overtime period showcased
his talents.
Both he and Shaq have been intelligent
enough to buy into Phil Jackson's system
and that's the reason the Lakers will win
the champ ionship.
Both players are capable of much more
than we see on the court; however, basketball is a team game and sacrifice is
required for the good of the team.
Even Glen Rice, a prolific scorer, has
had difficulty adjusting to being the third
scoring option .
What I'm glad about is that the Lakers
were stupid enough to trade Eddie Jones

and Eldon Campbell last year. I can't
imagine what they would be li.ke if th~ "
players were around to play in the Jac~son system.
. .,·,
I also think that fans are now corning '
to appreciate Dale Davis. He's the type of .
player who wears his heart on his sleeve.
He gives a yeoman 's effort every time
he takes the court. He is well deserving '
of the all-star status he received this year.
As you can tell , I love this game arid '
the Finals.
I
.,

I hope that baseball will once agaj,n ..
have an unbalanced schedule next ye"f,. ,
The Cardinals-Reds series a couple qf
weeks ago was spectacular.
.,.
Now, they go at it again in a f~w·
weeks. It's divisional head-to-head competition that should determine champ£-•
ons. lnterleague play is nice, but nothing_
beats a good old fashioned pennant race.
It would also be a mistake for Bud
Selig to put the Reds in a division that
doesn't include the Cardinals, Pirates, at;td
the Cubs. Unfortunately, it's 1969 all ovei&gt;.
again.
T he Reds are going to be shipped out
for the good of the game, so we had better enjoy these rivalries w hile we can. .
·If Selig has his way, they will be a thing ·
of the . past.
''

Daniels.
Travis Stout, Zack Pugh, Chris
Fifth grade campers
Miller, Brad Caudill, Justin SaunLevi Canterbury, David Rum- ders, M att M ooney, Alex kyger,
ley, Eli Maher, Arlo Nichols, Jesse Michal Casey, Andrew Cook,
James, Ian Lewis, Tyler Duncan, Kory Cox, Jared Burnett, Nathan
Elijah Ingles, Sam Shawver, Joey Jones, Todd Sanders, Andrew
Roush, Shawn Thompson, Tyler Sanders, Greg Russell.
Adkins, Barrett St. Onge.
Eighth grade campers
Sixth grade campers
Brad Cline, Tim Kyger, Matt
R:ex M cKinniss, Daniel Hill, Wiseman, Jessy Patrick, Heath
Alex Abels, Joey Toppings, Patrick, Colly Reese, Kyle hudStep~en
Neff, Noah Clark, son, Zack· Shawver, Tyler Barry,
Anthony Fowler, Matt Caldwell, Jeff Payton, Tony Thompson, Eric
Cory Miller, Jhemy Roush, Nico Dingess.
·
· · '
Martin, Dane Black .
Ninth· grade campers _
Seventh grade campers
Nick Craft, Cody Caldwell,

Eric Taylor, Tom Bose, Tom Fra-.
zier, Scott Saunders, Don JohQ- ;
son, Andre Geiger.
Coaching staff
..
Jim Osborne, Gary H arrisol),
Josh Donley, Larry Howell, Jim
Niday, Jeff Mullins,Jon Lawho~n,o:
Allen Skinner.
.~ ,
Sponsors
. ,(1, ,
. Lorobi's, Subway, Put-on Shop~
Shake Shoppe, Dairy Quee11 1•
Haskins-Tanner, Zide's, Ron's
Trophies, Wendy's, Gallipolili
Parks &amp; Rec, Movie StatiO!!.·
Pepsi.
· ,.···

iounbn!' QJ:•mr!t -iornhnrl • Page 85

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

··curt Schilling didn't look like a batting practice
pitcher against the Atlanta Braves.
· Schilling won for the first time in nearly six
weeks, striking out 1I Friday night and leading the
P,hiladelphia Phillies to a 2-1 win over Tom Glavine
and the Braves.
.The Phillies ace began the game with the team's
highest ERA (6.34). His struggles prompted him to
tqrow extra batting practice Monday.
. Schilling (2-4) earned his first victory since pitchiQg a shutout May 6 at Atlanta.
·''You always get pumped up to face the Braves
because you know you'll be facing an ace, you know
you don't have chances to make a mistake and you
kt\'ow they can hit the ball,'' Schilling said. "This is
tile best hitting team they've'had in 10 .years, and
you're going to be in a tight game more times than
.
not."
- Schilling. pitched eight innings and gave up five
hits, including Chipper Jones' homer. Mike

Lieberthal hit a two-run homer offTom Glavine \7- St. Louis wrecked Ore! Hershiser's return to the Los That gave him home runs in three straight plate
appearan ces, malting him the first Mets player to do
Angeles rotation.
3).
·
The win at Dodger Stadium was the Cardinals' that since Gary Carter in 1985. .
Schilling was at his best in the eighth when the
Cubs 9, Expos 8
·
,
Braves, trailing by a run, put runners on first and fifth in a row.
third with no outs. He struck out Jones and Andres
Sammy Sosa, playing on the 11th anniversary of
Hershiser came back from his self-imposed stint
Galarraga and, after a walk to .Brian Jordan loaded in the minors and gave up five runs and six hits in his major league debut, hit a bases-loaded triple that
the bases, fanned Javier Lopez.
four-plus innings. He made his first appearance for gave him 1,002 RBis in his career.
"The eighth inning was vintage Curt Schilling,'' the Dodgers since pitching in relief on May 9.
·Sosa's hit capped a seven-run fourth inning that
Jones said. "He went to another gear.''
lifted
Chicago over Montreal at Wngley Field.
After Edmonds homered in the first inning, Mark
Giants 7, Astros 4
McGwire was hit by a pitch in the lower back. HerCubs starter Kerry Wood , pitch'l ng on his 23rd
Barry Bonds hit his major league-leading 26th shiser, once of baseball's best control pitchers, has birthday, gave up five runs in four innings and did
not get a decision.
home run 'and also tripled and doubled as San Fran- plunked 10 batters in 21 2-3 innings this year.
Mets 7, Brewers 1
Randell White had four hits, and his two home
cisco won at Pacific Bell Park. 1
Bonds scored three runs and drove in two. He
Al Leiter pitched eight strong innings and Mike runs gave him 100 in the majors.Vladi[\lir Guerrero
came up in the eighth inning needing a single for Piazza hit his 18th home run as New York beat Mil- hit his 20th homer, tripled and drove in three runs . .
the cycle, but flied out and returned to the dugout waukee for the ninth time in a row.
Marlins 8, Pirates 3
to a standing ovation .
Derrek Lee hit a grand slam and a two- run
Leiter is 4-0 against the Brewers since June 27,
The Giants won their fourth in a row. Moises 1994, when he was with Toronto and Milwaukee homer for Florida, which had lost five strai~ht at
Alou homered for Houston.
was in the AL.
Three Rivers Stadium.
·
·
Cardinals 6, Dodgers 3
Cliff Floyd added four hits for the Marlins, just
Benny Agbayani, moved up in the batting order,
homered
to
lead
off
the
game
at
County
Stadium.
13-28
at Pittsburgh since joining the NL in !993.
Jim Edmonds hit his 19th and 20th home runs as

AMERICAN LEAGUE

''..
)

Albert Belle continues to swing the big stic~; Indians .continue to lose ground
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
in 7 1-3 innings, reversing his only loss of the seaLike always, Albert Belle got hot when the weath- son. Chicago won its fifth straight overall and ninth
er ,did.
·
in a row on the road. Bobby Howry got 6ve outs for
' Belle, who began with another slow start this sea- his third save.
son, homered twice for the second straight night
Magglio Ordonez's sacrifice fly in the sixth,
and drove in four runs as the Baltimore Orioles pinch-hitter Tony Graffanino's RBI groundout off
extended their winning streak to six Friday night, Mike Stanton (1-1) and M ark Johnson's ninthinning single drove in Chicago's runs.
beating the Anaheim Angels 4-3 Friday.
"Albert is one of the few guys in the team who
A night after making three errors, Yankees second
can carry a team on his back;' Baltimore manager baseman Chuck Knoblauch was er,ror free. David
Mike Hargrove said..
Cone, winless in eight starts, allowed one run and
'· 'Belle, who hit grand slams on successive nights four hits in six innings.
a@llinst Texas on Wednesday and Thursday, has five
Red Sox 7, Blue Jays 4
Carl Everett and Brian Daubach hit back-to-back
homers and I 4 RBis in his last three games and nine
~omers in his last 13 games. His streak has given the homers at Fen way Park, and Hipolito Pichardo (20tioles (30-34) hope of climbing back into con- 0) pitched 2 1- 3 scoreless innings to rescue Pete
~dtion in the AL East.
·
Schourek from a shaky start.
:' ,''He's seeing the ball pretty good right now. It's
Raul Mondesi 4it a two-run homer in the first to
)Uhe, the weather's warmed up a little bit and he's give Toronto the lead, but Kelvim Escobar (S-8)
warmed up a little bit;' starter Mike Mussina said. gave back five runs in the bottom half.
" Hopefully, it'll stay warm the whole way till Oct.
Derek Lowe pitched the ninth for his 16th save.
,1, an~ he'll keep going the way he's going.''
Nomar Garciaparra drove in three runs as the Red
Mussina (5-6) allowed two runs and eight hits in Sox moved back into first place in the AL East, a half
'6 2-3 innings to win his fourth straight decision. game ahead of the Yankees.
!Sci:!&amp;~: .;Schoen'I!'Weis S:.S);-whOC"gave · up both of--; • .. ' ..,.. ··Devil Rays 9, Rlfn1ers :!·
.
:Belle's homers, left in the fourth inning with a · Jose Guillen tripled, homered and drove in two
m~ined right ribcage.
·
runs as v~iting Texas ·lost its ninth straight, the
·
White Sox 3, Yankees 1
.
ltangers' longest skid since a tO-game slide from
;
James Baldwin (10-1) alloweq one run and six hits July 17-26,1995.

Esteban Yan (4-4) allowed seven hits, struck out
four and walked two in 6 1-3 innings.
Tampa Bay scored five runs in the first off Darren
Oliver (2-4), four on consecutive doubles by John
Flaherty, Bobby Smith and Steve Cox. Fred M cGriff
also had a RBI single. ·
Tigers 5, Indians 2
Dave Burba (7 -2) gave up four home runs in hi s
first loss in seven career decisions against Detroit as
visiting Cleveland lost its fifth straight.
Bobby Higginson and Juan Gonzalez hit consecutive homers in the third inning, Tony Clark added
a two-run drive in the fifth and Dean Palmer hit a
solo shot in the seventh. Travis Fryman and David
Justice hit solo home runs for the Indians.
Brian Moehler (4-3) won his third straigh.t decision, giving up two runs on five hits in six innings.
Todd Jon·es pitched the ninth for his AL-leading
19th save.
~ 1\vins 7, Mariners 2
Cristian Guzman had a career-high four hits and
three RB!s, and Brad Radke (4-8) stopped his four-

game losing streak, winning for the first time since .
M ay 19, He gave up two runs and four hits in eight
innings at the M etroDome and struck out seven.
Three of Guzman's hits and all·three of his RBis
came off Aaron Sele (7-3), who lost for the first time
since May 5. He allowed five runs, 10 hits and four
walks in just four innings.
Athletics 8, Royals 3
Ben Grieve hit a thre e-run homer off Dan
Reichert (3-4) that broke a 2-all tie in the seventh
as visiting Oakland won for the 12th time in 15
games. Eric C havez, Migu el Tejada and Ramon'
Hernandez added consecutive homers off Dan ·
Murray in the eighth .
Doug Jones (2-1) allowed four hits in 2 2-3 .
shutout innings, and JeffTam pitched three innings
for his second save. Oakland .starter Omar Olivares
faced one batter, then left after straining his right
shoulder.

LARRY

SCHEY

•'

HAS YOUR
'

TICKET
'TO RIDE
GALLIPOLIS HOOP CAMP 2000 - Nearly 70 young people from the Gallipolis area participated in the
annual Gallipolis Area Basketball Camp. Gallia Academy head coach Jim Osborne and his staff operated
the week-long camp. (Andrew Carter photo)

US Open
from Pap II

I

tournament to his record 12-stroke victory in the
t 997 Masters.
"There's a long way to go,"Woods said. "This golf
course is a lot more demanding than Augusta.''

" I turned to Jackie and I said, 'You know, I have
not tried to knock it on the green in over 20 years,
so let's see if we can knock it on in two today,"'
Nicklaus said. "And lo and behold, it went on to the
putting ·surface."
Though he. ended up three-putting and settling
for a par, Nicklaus got a hero's welcome from the
crowd.
"It's been a great run of tournaments since I was
17 years old," Nicklaus said. " It's been a long time
and a lot of Opens, and it's been great.'' .
Nine minutes after Nicklaus walkeq off the 18th
green, Woods began his second round in a tournament that is turning into his coronation. He began
the round with a one-stroke lead, and built his margin to three shots with a 30-foot birdie at the par-3
I 2th hole just as qarkness halted play Friday.·
Woods thrust His right arm into the air to celebrate the birdie on his final shot of the day. It moyed
him to 9 under, three shots better than Jimenez.
Woods increased his margin Saturday, rolling in a
four-foot birdie putt at the par-4 15th while
Jimenez was struggling.
'
At the 18th, Woods showed he was fallible, hitting
his tee shot onto the slippery rocks along the ocean
and cursing in anger. He took a one-stroke penalty
and teed off again, and was able to finish the hole
with just a bogey.
.
"I hit • really poor shoe;· he said. "But I stepped
up there, collected my thoughts 1&gt;nd hit a second
shot like I intended the 6nt one to be.''
Woods, playing his 1OOth prof~sional tournament EYE oF THE TIGER - Tiger Woods took a six·
in·the centennial U.S. Open, is trying to become the stroke lead at the halfway mark of the 100th U.S.
first ~ire-to-wire Open champion since the late Open at Pebble Beach. Through two rounds. Woods
shot an S-under par 134. (AP)
Payne Stewart at Hazeltine in 1991 .

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wiN DIAMOND SKILLS COMPETinON Sunday, June 4 at Harmon Park in Point Pleasant. Contestants demonstated their talents in hitting, fielding and base-running. Age group winners were (L to R) Brandon Fowler of New Ha~n in the 11·12 group;
Harry Queen of Point Pleasant, 9-10; and Craig Blake of Glenwood, 7-8. By wln"Ing, each one qualifies for
ClllCinnati Reds Team Championship to be held at Ciner&amp;Y Field on Saturday, June ~4.
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�Page 84 • 6unbar t!:imel-6tnlind

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

wv

Sunda~June18,2000

•

Sundliy, June18, 2000

..

SUNDAY COMMENTARY

.-

Division I, ages I 0 and under; Division
II, ages 11-13; Division III , ages 14-16;
cle on the Huntington"Blizzard's leaving and Division IV, ages 16 and over.
town.
I was told that there are currently 48
Apparently, there are ·more hockey fans players in the program.
out there than I realized.
I was impressed to discover that the
One of the benefits of having a team league holds tournaments each ·month
like the Blizzard in our community was where they travel to tournament sites to
the community service. they performed compete for points. Like professional
for our local children.
hockey, the point system is used to deter-·
When discussing the Blizzard with a mine the championship teams.
neighbor,! was informed of how inspiraI'm happy to report that last year our
tional it was when Ray Edwards, a play- local Division Ill team placed second in
er on the team, served as guest speaker the Chicago regional and advanced to
for their annual hockey banquet and Des Moines for national competition.
organized a hockey clinic for its teams.
This year, Division I also earned the
I knew the players and franchise were opportunity to play in the regional.
big on civic pride; however, I didn't
That's terrific!
know we had a local roller hockey league
Organized sports teach our children a
in our midst.
great deal about competition and sportsApparently, over the past few years a manship. It helps to prepare them for life.
roller hockey league has been in action at I'm just so disappointed that I never
Skatesville ·USA in Gallipolis without us knew about this league.
being aware of its presence.
Why don't they get the exposure they
The roller hockey team is a member of so richly deserve?
the Ohio Valley Roller League, which is
After all, I always know who has died ,
under the direction of Bob Penrod of who is turning forty and who is having a
Washington Courthouse. i was also birthday with a' Rug rats' .These kids also
informed the Skatesville USA owner deserve some press time.
Patricia Ross was "instrumental in the
The effort put into this effort is comformation of the league."
mendable. It was a local patron who
Good for her!
organized a league for our children.
Lik ~ little league, the roller hockey
It's parents taking the time to drive
team is organized into four age divisions: their children throughout the state to

Sam
Wilson
THE SPORTS DR.
compete with six other skating organizations in Lebanon, Washington Courthouse, and Jackson, Ohio; in Spencer,
West Virginia; and Ashland, Kentucky.
It's coaches putting forth the effort to
make a difference with our youth. It's our
kids putting forth the effort and commitment to compete on a national level.
One of the Division III players was
even recognized in 1998 by the hockey
·newsletter,' Power Play.'
Ray Edwards and the Blizzard thought
these kids and their efforts were special.
We should too!
I inquired and got their phone number
(446-2925) for those of you who would
like more information on the league.
My son turns three in August; unfortunately, they don't· make roller blades in
his size, so I'll have to wait a few years
before he joins.
I'm getting ready for Game Five of the

Youth basketball camp draws good numbers
GALLIPOLIS - About 70
Gallipolis area youngsters attended the recent Ga llipolis Area Basketball Camp at Gallia Academy.
The week's activities included
numerous skills competitions.
H ere are the winners of those
competitions.
One-on-One
, Fourth grade: Beau Whaley.
Fifth grade: Ian Lewis.
Sixth grade: Matt Caldwell.
' Seventh grade: Andrew Cook.
Eighth grade: Zack Shawver.
Ninth grade: Cody Caldwell. ·
FreeThrows
·
Fourth grade: Jon Kyger.
Fifth grade: Dave Rumley.

Sixth grade: Matt Caldwell.
Seventh g rade: Travis Stout.
Eighth grade: Kyle Hudson.
Ninth grade: Eric Taylor.
3-point Shooting
Fourth grade :Jon Kyger.
Fifth grade: Shawn Thompson.
Sixth grade: Matt Caldwell.
Seventh grade: Matt Mooney.
Eighth grade: Kyle Hudson.
Ninth grade: Eric Taylor.
Bump out
Fourth grade: Beau Whaley.
Fifth grade: Shawn Tho,mpson.
Sixth grade: David Hill.
Seventh grade:Travis Stout..
Eighth grade: Matt Wiseman.
Ninth grade: Nick Craft.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Schilling's back in business; Bonds strikes again; Hershiser's return
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

I was p.leasantly surprised by the
amount of support I received for my arti-

Dribble Elimination
Fourth grade: Beau Whaley.
Fifth grade: Sam Shawver.
Sixth grade: Nico Martin.
Seventh grade: Andrew Cook.
Eighth grade: Zack Shawver.
Ninth grade: Andre Geiger.
CrabWallk
Fourth grade: Clint Saunders.
Fifth grade: Shawn Thompson.
Sixth gra de: Anthony Fowler.
Seventh grade: Alex Kyger.
Eighth grade: Tyler Barry.
Ninth grade: Nick Cfjlft.
Fourth gra4e1 campers
Beau Whal ey, Nick Wilson,
. Clint Saunders, Jarrod Wray, Jon
Kyger, Codie Ward, Robert

•

•

...

NBA playoffs.
Yes, I know my Pacers are down 3- I,
but I'm having a great time watching
them in the finals.
Game Four was special. It was the kind
of game that will be talked about for
years to come. With ~he exception of
Reggie Miller missing the last shot, all
was perfect.
This series has shown the world the
significance of Shaq. Without him, the
Lakers would be calleq the Detroit Pistons.
He's the difference!
Put Shaq on any other team and they
become an instant contender. Put him on
Detroit with Grant Hill and Jerry Stackhouse and they are the NBA champions.
Kobe Bryant proved that he's also the
real deal. The overtime period showcased
his talents.
Both he and Shaq have been intelligent
enough to buy into Phil Jackson's system
and that's the reason the Lakers will win
the champ ionship.
Both players are capable of much more
than we see on the court; however, basketball is a team game and sacrifice is
required for the good of the team.
Even Glen Rice, a prolific scorer, has
had difficulty adjusting to being the third
scoring option .
What I'm glad about is that the Lakers
were stupid enough to trade Eddie Jones

and Eldon Campbell last year. I can't
imagine what they would be li.ke if th~ "
players were around to play in the Jac~son system.
. .,·,
I also think that fans are now corning '
to appreciate Dale Davis. He's the type of .
player who wears his heart on his sleeve.
He gives a yeoman 's effort every time
he takes the court. He is well deserving '
of the all-star status he received this year.
As you can tell , I love this game arid '
the Finals.
I
.,

I hope that baseball will once agaj,n ..
have an unbalanced schedule next ye"f,. ,
The Cardinals-Reds series a couple qf
weeks ago was spectacular.
.,.
Now, they go at it again in a f~w·
weeks. It's divisional head-to-head competition that should determine champ£-•
ons. lnterleague play is nice, but nothing_
beats a good old fashioned pennant race.
It would also be a mistake for Bud
Selig to put the Reds in a division that
doesn't include the Cardinals, Pirates, at;td
the Cubs. Unfortunately, it's 1969 all ovei&gt;.
again.
T he Reds are going to be shipped out
for the good of the game, so we had better enjoy these rivalries w hile we can. .
·If Selig has his way, they will be a thing ·
of the . past.
''

Daniels.
Travis Stout, Zack Pugh, Chris
Fifth grade campers
Miller, Brad Caudill, Justin SaunLevi Canterbury, David Rum- ders, M att M ooney, Alex kyger,
ley, Eli Maher, Arlo Nichols, Jesse Michal Casey, Andrew Cook,
James, Ian Lewis, Tyler Duncan, Kory Cox, Jared Burnett, Nathan
Elijah Ingles, Sam Shawver, Joey Jones, Todd Sanders, Andrew
Roush, Shawn Thompson, Tyler Sanders, Greg Russell.
Adkins, Barrett St. Onge.
Eighth grade campers
Sixth grade campers
Brad Cline, Tim Kyger, Matt
R:ex M cKinniss, Daniel Hill, Wiseman, Jessy Patrick, Heath
Alex Abels, Joey Toppings, Patrick, Colly Reese, Kyle hudStep~en
Neff, Noah Clark, son, Zack· Shawver, Tyler Barry,
Anthony Fowler, Matt Caldwell, Jeff Payton, Tony Thompson, Eric
Cory Miller, Jhemy Roush, Nico Dingess.
·
· · '
Martin, Dane Black .
Ninth· grade campers _
Seventh grade campers
Nick Craft, Cody Caldwell,

Eric Taylor, Tom Bose, Tom Fra-.
zier, Scott Saunders, Don JohQ- ;
son, Andre Geiger.
Coaching staff
..
Jim Osborne, Gary H arrisol),
Josh Donley, Larry Howell, Jim
Niday, Jeff Mullins,Jon Lawho~n,o:
Allen Skinner.
.~ ,
Sponsors
. ,(1, ,
. Lorobi's, Subway, Put-on Shop~
Shake Shoppe, Dairy Quee11 1•
Haskins-Tanner, Zide's, Ron's
Trophies, Wendy's, Gallipolili
Parks &amp; Rec, Movie StatiO!!.·
Pepsi.
· ,.···

iounbn!' QJ:•mr!t -iornhnrl • Page 85

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

··curt Schilling didn't look like a batting practice
pitcher against the Atlanta Braves.
· Schilling won for the first time in nearly six
weeks, striking out 1I Friday night and leading the
P,hiladelphia Phillies to a 2-1 win over Tom Glavine
and the Braves.
.The Phillies ace began the game with the team's
highest ERA (6.34). His struggles prompted him to
tqrow extra batting practice Monday.
. Schilling (2-4) earned his first victory since pitchiQg a shutout May 6 at Atlanta.
·''You always get pumped up to face the Braves
because you know you'll be facing an ace, you know
you don't have chances to make a mistake and you
kt\'ow they can hit the ball,'' Schilling said. "This is
tile best hitting team they've'had in 10 .years, and
you're going to be in a tight game more times than
.
not."
- Schilling. pitched eight innings and gave up five
hits, including Chipper Jones' homer. Mike

Lieberthal hit a two-run homer offTom Glavine \7- St. Louis wrecked Ore! Hershiser's return to the Los That gave him home runs in three straight plate
appearan ces, malting him the first Mets player to do
Angeles rotation.
3).
·
The win at Dodger Stadium was the Cardinals' that since Gary Carter in 1985. .
Schilling was at his best in the eighth when the
Cubs 9, Expos 8
·
,
Braves, trailing by a run, put runners on first and fifth in a row.
third with no outs. He struck out Jones and Andres
Sammy Sosa, playing on the 11th anniversary of
Hershiser came back from his self-imposed stint
Galarraga and, after a walk to .Brian Jordan loaded in the minors and gave up five runs and six hits in his major league debut, hit a bases-loaded triple that
the bases, fanned Javier Lopez.
four-plus innings. He made his first appearance for gave him 1,002 RBis in his career.
"The eighth inning was vintage Curt Schilling,'' the Dodgers since pitching in relief on May 9.
·Sosa's hit capped a seven-run fourth inning that
Jones said. "He went to another gear.''
lifted
Chicago over Montreal at Wngley Field.
After Edmonds homered in the first inning, Mark
Giants 7, Astros 4
McGwire was hit by a pitch in the lower back. HerCubs starter Kerry Wood , pitch'l ng on his 23rd
Barry Bonds hit his major league-leading 26th shiser, once of baseball's best control pitchers, has birthday, gave up five runs in four innings and did
not get a decision.
home run 'and also tripled and doubled as San Fran- plunked 10 batters in 21 2-3 innings this year.
Mets 7, Brewers 1
Randell White had four hits, and his two home
cisco won at Pacific Bell Park. 1
Bonds scored three runs and drove in two. He
Al Leiter pitched eight strong innings and Mike runs gave him 100 in the majors.Vladi[\lir Guerrero
came up in the eighth inning needing a single for Piazza hit his 18th home run as New York beat Mil- hit his 20th homer, tripled and drove in three runs . .
the cycle, but flied out and returned to the dugout waukee for the ninth time in a row.
Marlins 8, Pirates 3
to a standing ovation .
Derrek Lee hit a grand slam and a two- run
Leiter is 4-0 against the Brewers since June 27,
The Giants won their fourth in a row. Moises 1994, when he was with Toronto and Milwaukee homer for Florida, which had lost five strai~ht at
Alou homered for Houston.
was in the AL.
Three Rivers Stadium.
·
·
Cardinals 6, Dodgers 3
Cliff Floyd added four hits for the Marlins, just
Benny Agbayani, moved up in the batting order,
homered
to
lead
off
the
game
at
County
Stadium.
13-28
at Pittsburgh since joining the NL in !993.
Jim Edmonds hit his 19th and 20th home runs as

AMERICAN LEAGUE

''..
)

Albert Belle continues to swing the big stic~; Indians .continue to lose ground
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
in 7 1-3 innings, reversing his only loss of the seaLike always, Albert Belle got hot when the weath- son. Chicago won its fifth straight overall and ninth
er ,did.
·
in a row on the road. Bobby Howry got 6ve outs for
' Belle, who began with another slow start this sea- his third save.
son, homered twice for the second straight night
Magglio Ordonez's sacrifice fly in the sixth,
and drove in four runs as the Baltimore Orioles pinch-hitter Tony Graffanino's RBI groundout off
extended their winning streak to six Friday night, Mike Stanton (1-1) and M ark Johnson's ninthinning single drove in Chicago's runs.
beating the Anaheim Angels 4-3 Friday.
"Albert is one of the few guys in the team who
A night after making three errors, Yankees second
can carry a team on his back;' Baltimore manager baseman Chuck Knoblauch was er,ror free. David
Mike Hargrove said..
Cone, winless in eight starts, allowed one run and
'· 'Belle, who hit grand slams on successive nights four hits in six innings.
a@llinst Texas on Wednesday and Thursday, has five
Red Sox 7, Blue Jays 4
Carl Everett and Brian Daubach hit back-to-back
homers and I 4 RBis in his last three games and nine
~omers in his last 13 games. His streak has given the homers at Fen way Park, and Hipolito Pichardo (20tioles (30-34) hope of climbing back into con- 0) pitched 2 1- 3 scoreless innings to rescue Pete
~dtion in the AL East.
·
Schourek from a shaky start.
:' ,''He's seeing the ball pretty good right now. It's
Raul Mondesi 4it a two-run homer in the first to
)Uhe, the weather's warmed up a little bit and he's give Toronto the lead, but Kelvim Escobar (S-8)
warmed up a little bit;' starter Mike Mussina said. gave back five runs in the bottom half.
" Hopefully, it'll stay warm the whole way till Oct.
Derek Lowe pitched the ninth for his 16th save.
,1, an~ he'll keep going the way he's going.''
Nomar Garciaparra drove in three runs as the Red
Mussina (5-6) allowed two runs and eight hits in Sox moved back into first place in the AL East, a half
'6 2-3 innings to win his fourth straight decision. game ahead of the Yankees.
!Sci:!&amp;~: .;Schoen'I!'Weis S:.S);-whOC"gave · up both of--; • .. ' ..,.. ··Devil Rays 9, Rlfn1ers :!·
.
:Belle's homers, left in the fourth inning with a · Jose Guillen tripled, homered and drove in two
m~ined right ribcage.
·
runs as v~iting Texas ·lost its ninth straight, the
·
White Sox 3, Yankees 1
.
ltangers' longest skid since a tO-game slide from
;
James Baldwin (10-1) alloweq one run and six hits July 17-26,1995.

Esteban Yan (4-4) allowed seven hits, struck out
four and walked two in 6 1-3 innings.
Tampa Bay scored five runs in the first off Darren
Oliver (2-4), four on consecutive doubles by John
Flaherty, Bobby Smith and Steve Cox. Fred M cGriff
also had a RBI single. ·
Tigers 5, Indians 2
Dave Burba (7 -2) gave up four home runs in hi s
first loss in seven career decisions against Detroit as
visiting Cleveland lost its fifth straight.
Bobby Higginson and Juan Gonzalez hit consecutive homers in the third inning, Tony Clark added
a two-run drive in the fifth and Dean Palmer hit a
solo shot in the seventh. Travis Fryman and David
Justice hit solo home runs for the Indians.
Brian Moehler (4-3) won his third straigh.t decision, giving up two runs on five hits in six innings.
Todd Jon·es pitched the ninth for his AL-leading
19th save.
~ 1\vins 7, Mariners 2
Cristian Guzman had a career-high four hits and
three RB!s, and Brad Radke (4-8) stopped his four-

game losing streak, winning for the first time since .
M ay 19, He gave up two runs and four hits in eight
innings at the M etroDome and struck out seven.
Three of Guzman's hits and all·three of his RBis
came off Aaron Sele (7-3), who lost for the first time
since May 5. He allowed five runs, 10 hits and four
walks in just four innings.
Athletics 8, Royals 3
Ben Grieve hit a thre e-run homer off Dan
Reichert (3-4) that broke a 2-all tie in the seventh
as visiting Oakland won for the 12th time in 15
games. Eric C havez, Migu el Tejada and Ramon'
Hernandez added consecutive homers off Dan ·
Murray in the eighth .
Doug Jones (2-1) allowed four hits in 2 2-3 .
shutout innings, and JeffTam pitched three innings
for his second save. Oakland .starter Omar Olivares
faced one batter, then left after straining his right
shoulder.

LARRY

SCHEY

•'

HAS YOUR
'

TICKET
'TO RIDE
GALLIPOLIS HOOP CAMP 2000 - Nearly 70 young people from the Gallipolis area participated in the
annual Gallipolis Area Basketball Camp. Gallia Academy head coach Jim Osborne and his staff operated
the week-long camp. (Andrew Carter photo)

US Open
from Pap II

I

tournament to his record 12-stroke victory in the
t 997 Masters.
"There's a long way to go,"Woods said. "This golf
course is a lot more demanding than Augusta.''

" I turned to Jackie and I said, 'You know, I have
not tried to knock it on the green in over 20 years,
so let's see if we can knock it on in two today,"'
Nicklaus said. "And lo and behold, it went on to the
putting ·surface."
Though he. ended up three-putting and settling
for a par, Nicklaus got a hero's welcome from the
crowd.
"It's been a great run of tournaments since I was
17 years old," Nicklaus said. " It's been a long time
and a lot of Opens, and it's been great.'' .
Nine minutes after Nicklaus walkeq off the 18th
green, Woods began his second round in a tournament that is turning into his coronation. He began
the round with a one-stroke lead, and built his margin to three shots with a 30-foot birdie at the par-3
I 2th hole just as qarkness halted play Friday.·
Woods thrust His right arm into the air to celebrate the birdie on his final shot of the day. It moyed
him to 9 under, three shots better than Jimenez.
Woods increased his margin Saturday, rolling in a
four-foot birdie putt at the par-4 15th while
Jimenez was struggling.
'
At the 18th, Woods showed he was fallible, hitting
his tee shot onto the slippery rocks along the ocean
and cursing in anger. He took a one-stroke penalty
and teed off again, and was able to finish the hole
with just a bogey.
.
"I hit • really poor shoe;· he said. "But I stepped
up there, collected my thoughts 1&gt;nd hit a second
shot like I intended the 6nt one to be.''
Woods, playing his 1OOth prof~sional tournament EYE oF THE TIGER - Tiger Woods took a six·
in·the centennial U.S. Open, is trying to become the stroke lead at the halfway mark of the 100th U.S.
first ~ire-to-wire Open champion since the late Open at Pebble Beach. Through two rounds. Woods
shot an S-under par 134. (AP)
Payne Stewart at Hazeltine in 1991 .

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38 partlciapnts took place in, the M.]..B. Diamond Skills event

wiN DIAMOND SKILLS COMPETinON Sunday, June 4 at Harmon Park in Point Pleasant. Contestants demonstated their talents in hitting, fielding and base-running. Age group winners were (L to R) Brandon Fowler of New Ha~n in the 11·12 group;
Harry Queen of Point Pleasant, 9-10; and Craig Blake of Glenwood, 7-8. By wln"Ing, each one qualifies for
ClllCinnati Reds Team Championship to be held at Ciner&amp;Y Field on Saturday, June ~4.
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Pomeroy· Middleport • Galilpolia, Ohio • Point Pleasant, wv

Sunda~June18,200D

'Sunday, June 11, 2000

OVP STAFF COMMENTARY

, Bits-n-Pieces

NFL loses good ones in Young &amp;The Moose

GOLF

. T houghts o n th e week 's h appenmgs ...
Two m ore NFL to ugh guys hung
up their cleat s this week, as
' Moos e' John ston o f th e Cowboys
and Steve Young o f the 49ers
announ ced their retirements .
In the past year, I the le ague has
lost three of the toughest figure s in
football .
Chris Speilman retired last fall
and now I wonder who ' ll step up
the be the head- knockin' hard
cases on Sunday.
Johnston was a big-time blocker
and pass catcher.
He hit others more than they hit
him . That's why I loved him; he
was a punisher.
Young was the toughest guy to
take snaps in the past several years.
He was never afraid to run when
trouble came along, and he was
very unlikely to do the sliding
thing to avoid taking a shot .
His competitive nature knew that
he helped his team by getting that
extra yard or two.
Speilman wasn't the sheer athlete
that a Dick Butkus or L.T. was, but

h e didn't just ta ckle ball carri ers
a nd try to slid e und er bloc ks like
so many of th e current star lin ebacke rs. He tr ied to hit them, n o t
j ust wrap them up.
Of course, all thre e paid the price
for their toughne ss.
Ne c k
su r geries,
p aralyti c
ep isodes, and dazed , concussed
looks all come with that ki nd of
football, but I think that many of
the ' old- timers' might have ended
up that way too.
How long would have Butkus
continued to play and use his head
as a torpedo if his knees could have
been rebuilt like they can be
today?
SSAC power play
The WVSSAC Board voted not
to renew the contract of Director
Mike Hayden, just weeks after he
became the c entral figure in the
' Pole Vault Gate.' The board main tains that the decision had nothing
to do with the 'happenings at the
state track and field champi onships.
Instead, it was basically claimed
that he was bad at the job, citing a

Dan
Polcyn
POLCYN'S POINT

•

review that cla imed h is performance ranked as b e low a v e r~ge in
every cat egory, including media
relations.
I h ave spoke n to Hayden on two
occasions by telephon e. He was
courteous and tried to answer my
qu estions to th e best of his ability.
A Charleston-based sports editor
also noted the he was very su rprised by the evaluation of Hayden's media dealings .
Hayden also handled th e asinine
decision of the state meet management with as much tact as he
could ..
When the decision was made in
Charleston no1 to hold th.e pole
vault, the Parkersburg-bas ed Hay-

den co uldn't reverse th eir decision
w ith ou t sparking t alk o f 'co nfli c ted
intere sts' b eca use th e eve nt w o ul d
h ave give n . Pa r kers bur g Hi g h
School a really good sh o t at t akin g
th e title from Ca p ital.
So , he stood b e hi nd .th ei r call
right up through a judge's de cision
to reschedule the eve nt .
He prote cted the party line and
still got n ailed for it. Bure aucr aci es, like revolution s, eat th eir chil dren .·
Hey, now, you're an All-Star!
Several Mason athletes will com pete in all-star games thi s month .
Jill Barnett and Ashley Raw son
from th e Point Ple asant softball
squad were selected to play in th e
North - South softball game o n Jun e
24 .
Rawson will not participate , but
Barnett will play. The game will b e
played at West Virginia State Col lege starting at noon .
Point Pleasant offen ~ ive guard
and Hannan fullback Josh Cordell
will play in the North - South Foot ball game.
That game will b e played at Lai-

dley Field in C harleston,1 al so on
Ju ne 24.
'
Memories , light the co ~nero
of Dan's mind!
:
With th e sp ri ng sp o rts season
fin ished , I sa t down and made a 1\st
of t h:e m os t mem o rable events,, I
wit nesse d i n th e sc ho lasti c spo~ ts
sce ne.
• Hannan se nding its first -ever
qualifier to the state tra ck meet . .'
• Po int's Jo hn Bone cutter taking
th e SEOAL tO O- meter title for the
third strai ght season .
• Jarre d Long pi cking up his first
varsity win fo r th e Wahama base ball team .
• Ashley R aw son's p erfect softball
game again st Mar ietta .
• The wonderful weather that
seemed to follow Hannan to track
mee ts at River Valley, Poca and
Winfi eld .
• Raw son and Missy Roese CO!llbining for 19 consecutive hitless
innings.
.
• Joe Marcum , Matt Warner, Jason
Pyle s and co mpany with the Bonecutter mask s at Laidley fi eld,

iounbn!' tr:untll ·i&gt;tnunrl • Page' ~7

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

\Vebble1ds

Evlan Mastin
· EVIAN, France (AP) - Karrie
Webb shot an even-par 72 to ~ke
J, a 1-stroke lead over Annika
:,.. Sorenstam and Silvia Cavalieri
~ after the third round of the Evian
'· Masters.

6
• PRICES&amp;
CLEARLY MARKED ON WINDSHIELDS _

Webb, the Australian star seek•' ing her fifth LPGA Tour tide and
seventh worldwide victory this
"' year, had a 9- under 207 total.
'.
"

ACCEPTED FOR PROCESSING

Gibson taps sac
Senior bcNird

;.
~:

• ALL CREDIT APPUCAITONS WILL BE

.

FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT

, SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Fred
•• Gibson shot a tournament-record
~ 9-under-par 63 to take a 4-stroke
· iead after the fint round of the
Senior.PGA Tour's SBC Champi.• onship.

FOR SERVICE AFTER THE SALE

· . Walter Hall opened with a 67,
,and three-time winner Lee Trevi• no was five strokes back along
.with Ray Floyd and Gary
McCord.

..
'..

.• RACING
•

:' Rlhll new CART chief
••

lakers ho e to
rebound rom
Hoosier beating
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Lakers awoke in their own city
Saturday with a 33-point hangover, not yet champs but not
quite chumps. ·
Sure, they lost Game 5 to the
Indiana Pacers by the most lopsided margin they've had all season. But no one will remember
that debacle for long if the Lakers, leading 3-2 in the best-ofseven series, can win one of the
. next two games on their home
court ..
''I'm upset, but the Indiana
Pacers shot the hell out of the
ball;' Shaquille O'Neal said.
"They played vety, very inspired
basketball." .
Indeed they did, shooting 15for-20 in the first peri&lt;;&gt;d, including 6-fot-6 from 3-point range,
to take a commanding lead they
never relinquished.
Game 6 is·set for Monday night
and Game 7, if necessary, will be
Wednesday.
The sense of desperation that
the Pacers exhibited will need to
make a 'return appearance at the
Staples Center, where Indiana has
never won. The Pacers are 0-3
there against the Lakers, including
losses in Games 1 and 2 C&gt;f the
finals, and they even lost a game
there to the Clippers in early Jan-

~~il

2000 RANGER XLT

nary.
The Pacers were at their best
playing in the coinfy confines of
Conseco Fieldhouse, drawing
energy from the roars of the
Hoosier housewives and their
husbands who seemed to make
up 80 percent of the crowd. .
But they've been a different
team under the bright lights ·of
tbe Staples Center, where the
courtside celebrities wear sunglasses indoorS and sing the
cheesy song "I Love L.A." during
li1ueouts.
"There's no intimidation factor," Indiana guard Mark Jackson
said. "I think in Game 1 We probably weren't ready for what hit us.
Just the hjipe, the intensity of the
finals, and we played on our heels.
In Game 2, I thought we played
well. We gave ourselves an opportunity but we didn't take advantage of when Kobe (Bryant) went
down. But we're a team that feels
· very confident in going into
someone else's building and winning. We have a history of doing
just that:'
Both teams took the day off
Saturday, the Pacers catching an
afternoon flight to the West Coast
after the Lakers .flew home
immediately following Friday
night's 120-87 loss.

LPGA

~~

~til2000 ESCORT lX2

2000 CONTOUR SE

. o~ $11,950°0

~ $14,9$000

our battles:· Sorenstam said.
worked hard over ·the winter to
try to catch Karrie. It's so nice
seeing it work out like this."
The winner's checli: boosts
Sorenstam to seCOIJd on the tour
money list with $678,750.
Webb's $180,107 runner-up
check keeps her atop the money
list with $923,624.
Sorenstam trailed Webb by one
stroke after three rounds, but
pulled even by firing a 4-underpar 68 at the Royal Evian Club
coune Saturday.
Both pla.yets finished at 12under 276.
Webb pulled e,ven with a 'birdie
at the . 17th, then 'both players
birdied the final hole to send the
world's second-richest women's
tournament to a playoff.
"The best player thh week
ended up winning:' Webb said.
"Losing always hurts but if you
lose to an eagle at the first playoff
hole, well, you can'r feel coo bad
about yourself."

••

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:Craig is out and Bobby Rahal,
~me of his sternest critics, is in as
~ead of Championship Auto
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: Craig, who has run CART
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Rahal, a three-time CART dri.ving champion and owner of his
own racing team, Will serve as
interim president and CEO while
the Indy-car cireuit seeks a new
leader.
' James Hardyman, another
board member, was elected chairman of the board. Hardyman was
formerly chairman and CEO of
Textron, Inc.

9soo•

"I've

EVlAN, France (AP) - Annika Sorenstam won this duel
against Karrie Webb in style.
Sorenstam topped her rival.
with an eagle putt on the first
playoff hole Saturday to capture .
the S1.8 million Evian Masters
LPGA Tour golf tourname11t.
The Swede had 172 yards to
the pin and hit her 7 -iron to 5
feet, while Webb wound up in a
greenside trap.
"This was definitely in the top
five o( my victories," Sorenstam
said. "The way she played and the
way I finished it, it was my best
golf in a long time. My heart's
been pumping ·all day: •
It was her third LPGA Tour
tide of the year and the 21st of
her career. She pocketed
S270,000.
Sorenstam also earned a mea.sure of ~ge. She lost a onehole piayoff to Webb at the Takefuji Clusic in March.
"Karrie beat me in a playoff
and I've won this one. We've had

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Sorenstam wins Evian Masters

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1117 FORD F-150 FLAIRBIOE SUPER CAB, 18775, Air, spon
power- I locks, bed Nner, Ill, cruile .......................... ...................,...$17,41111
111H FORD RANGER SPLASH,I8781, VS, air, AMIFMICD,
windows &amp; locks, sport wheelS, super cab .............................$10,41111
111H FORD F•150, 1111144, XLT, air, l~r. sport wheels,
un, cruise, powar windows &amp; locks .. ........................................ :.........$10,885
DOOOE DAKOTA CLUB CAB, 111038, Automatic, air, tilt,

~~~~;~~:~~":'"""""""""""''""" "'"""""""""""""'10,11H

TENNIS
S.mpn~sln

11121,
. ve,.
baloii1C8 o! factory warnnty, spoil wheels, AMIFWCD, Super Csb ............. $18, 185
FORO RANGER 4X4, i8793, 24,000 miles, balance of
factc&gt;rv warraniy,
wheels, tonneau COller,
$13,11115

Queen's

~bsemls

aPort

ve ...........................

RANGER 4X4 SUPER CAB SI'LASH OFF ROAD, 11050,
tilt, cruhl''· AMIFMICD, sport wheels .. ........ .............. ......$11,115
o&amp;X4 TRUCK,.III032, a!r,
cuaeite, 'apon ..t~ee~s .....................................................................$11,800
1113 FORD F-150 4X4, ,...., Air, c:assetle, 8' bed,
S10,tt5

LONDON (AP) - Six-time
Wimbledon champion Pete Sampras eased into the Queen's Club
semifinals, beating Bob Bryan 64, 6-4.
· Sampras will face Davide Sanguinetti, a 3-6, 7-6 (5), 6-3 win- . ·
ner over Andrei Pavel. In the
. other quarterfinals, Gianluca
Pozzi beat Marat Salin 7-5, 7-6
(4) and Lleyt~n Hewitt (6)
defeated Cedric Pioline 6-4, 6-4.

apon-.-.. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . .

KraJcek meets Chene

ACCORD,III042, l.X,
.
, poW6r windows &amp; locks. cassette ......................... ..................$3,tt5
oOI)QE DAKOTA, -79, l.or4l bed. V6. aulomalic. ~r.

. In W8er semis

.NissANca=;iiA: ftOiiii... . .. . ... ... .. . . .....

!

HALLE, Germany (AP) Richard 'Krajicek overpowered
defending champion Nicolas
Kiefer with 25 aces in a 7-5, 5-7,
7-f/ (3) victory in the quarterfinals of the Gerry Weber Open.
Krajicek will face Michael
Chang in the semifinals. Chang
beat Roger Federer 7-5, 6-2. In
the other quarterfinals, top-seeded Yevgeny Kafelnikov beat
Nicolas Escude 7-6 (9}, 6-3, and
David Prinosil edged Nicolas
Lapentti 6-3, 7-6 (3).

Ca;.tdf•lls
In DFSG111k
BIRMINGHAM,
England .
(AP) -Jennifer Caprlatl's preparations for Wimbledon hit a snag
with a 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 lou to Liu
Raymond in the quarterfinals of
the DFS Clastic.
. .

I

'

I

. 8,1815

automatic, air,

I•

...S4,tt5

...... .. ..... ... ......... .. .................................. .......... .
.. ... ..................$3,tt5
FORO TEMPO, 111020, Automatic, air, tilt, cruise,
windows, V6 .............................................. ..............................$3,tt5
QMC C·1500 4x4, ..-r3,
~e:,:~~~~~~co~~~::;; .A.'Pv vi.N','Iit35... .. .... .......... ....... .. ...........,485
aut.... \&gt;ower Wlndowa &amp; locl&lt;s, sport wheels ........... ..............

se.m

1•1 C'HE\rr 8-10, 11011,- Sport whello, air,
euoot~~ ............ :....... :........ ...... ............................. ...... ... .............$10,800
1117 DODO! INTRI!PtD,IIOIJ3, Automatic, air, till, cruise.
power Windows a locks, cassette ........ ................................. ......$10,800
1. . FORD AEROSTAR VAN, 11087
.
tt5

................................. .. ., .................................................................$1,
1 - FORD ESCORT SE, AIIIOI1, 24,000 miles,
balance ol factOrY warranly ... ......... ..... ......... ·.. ····......... ·... ·..........111 ,200
1 -.CHI!VY C·1500 4X4, - · 29.000 miles,
balance of fiiCIOiy warraniy ..................... ... .... .................... ..........$22,355

1-I'ORD P'·150 LOIIIAn 4X4, 111088
.: ..................................... ......... ..................... .. .............................$21,370

;.-.......... ~1"''"'"·~~~~ ~~~-..-

Aut&lt;&gt;malic. air, rear alr,V6, 7 passenger .... .. .......................................$4,tt5
CHEVY LUMINA APV, 11131
Aub&gt;malic, air, V6 ... : .................... ........ ....... $8,485

FORD 1'AURUS

...................$3,tt5

........................................... ........... .. ....... ................ ..................$7,185

�'
Page B&amp; • 6unbap 1Jimrl·llrntinrl

Pomeroy· Middleport • Galilpolia, Ohio • Point Pleasant, wv

Sunda~June18,200D

'Sunday, June 11, 2000

OVP STAFF COMMENTARY

, Bits-n-Pieces

NFL loses good ones in Young &amp;The Moose

GOLF

. T houghts o n th e week 's h appenmgs ...
Two m ore NFL to ugh guys hung
up their cleat s this week, as
' Moos e' John ston o f th e Cowboys
and Steve Young o f the 49ers
announ ced their retirements .
In the past year, I the le ague has
lost three of the toughest figure s in
football .
Chris Speilman retired last fall
and now I wonder who ' ll step up
the be the head- knockin' hard
cases on Sunday.
Johnston was a big-time blocker
and pass catcher.
He hit others more than they hit
him . That's why I loved him; he
was a punisher.
Young was the toughest guy to
take snaps in the past several years.
He was never afraid to run when
trouble came along, and he was
very unlikely to do the sliding
thing to avoid taking a shot .
His competitive nature knew that
he helped his team by getting that
extra yard or two.
Speilman wasn't the sheer athlete
that a Dick Butkus or L.T. was, but

h e didn't just ta ckle ball carri ers
a nd try to slid e und er bloc ks like
so many of th e current star lin ebacke rs. He tr ied to hit them, n o t
j ust wrap them up.
Of course, all thre e paid the price
for their toughne ss.
Ne c k
su r geries,
p aralyti c
ep isodes, and dazed , concussed
looks all come with that ki nd of
football, but I think that many of
the ' old- timers' might have ended
up that way too.
How long would have Butkus
continued to play and use his head
as a torpedo if his knees could have
been rebuilt like they can be
today?
SSAC power play
The WVSSAC Board voted not
to renew the contract of Director
Mike Hayden, just weeks after he
became the c entral figure in the
' Pole Vault Gate.' The board main tains that the decision had nothing
to do with the 'happenings at the
state track and field champi onships.
Instead, it was basically claimed
that he was bad at the job, citing a

Dan
Polcyn
POLCYN'S POINT

•

review that cla imed h is performance ranked as b e low a v e r~ge in
every cat egory, including media
relations.
I h ave spoke n to Hayden on two
occasions by telephon e. He was
courteous and tried to answer my
qu estions to th e best of his ability.
A Charleston-based sports editor
also noted the he was very su rprised by the evaluation of Hayden's media dealings .
Hayden also handled th e asinine
decision of the state meet management with as much tact as he
could ..
When the decision was made in
Charleston no1 to hold th.e pole
vault, the Parkersburg-bas ed Hay-

den co uldn't reverse th eir decision
w ith ou t sparking t alk o f 'co nfli c ted
intere sts' b eca use th e eve nt w o ul d
h ave give n . Pa r kers bur g Hi g h
School a really good sh o t at t akin g
th e title from Ca p ital.
So , he stood b e hi nd .th ei r call
right up through a judge's de cision
to reschedule the eve nt .
He prote cted the party line and
still got n ailed for it. Bure aucr aci es, like revolution s, eat th eir chil dren .·
Hey, now, you're an All-Star!
Several Mason athletes will com pete in all-star games thi s month .
Jill Barnett and Ashley Raw son
from th e Point Ple asant softball
squad were selected to play in th e
North - South softball game o n Jun e
24 .
Rawson will not participate , but
Barnett will play. The game will b e
played at West Virginia State Col lege starting at noon .
Point Pleasant offen ~ ive guard
and Hannan fullback Josh Cordell
will play in the North - South Foot ball game.
That game will b e played at Lai-

dley Field in C harleston,1 al so on
Ju ne 24.
'
Memories , light the co ~nero
of Dan's mind!
:
With th e sp ri ng sp o rts season
fin ished , I sa t down and made a 1\st
of t h:e m os t mem o rable events,, I
wit nesse d i n th e sc ho lasti c spo~ ts
sce ne.
• Hannan se nding its first -ever
qualifier to the state tra ck meet . .'
• Po int's Jo hn Bone cutter taking
th e SEOAL tO O- meter title for the
third strai ght season .
• Jarre d Long pi cking up his first
varsity win fo r th e Wahama base ball team .
• Ashley R aw son's p erfect softball
game again st Mar ietta .
• The wonderful weather that
seemed to follow Hannan to track
mee ts at River Valley, Poca and
Winfi eld .
• Raw son and Missy Roese CO!llbining for 19 consecutive hitless
innings.
.
• Joe Marcum , Matt Warner, Jason
Pyle s and co mpany with the Bonecutter mask s at Laidley fi eld,

iounbn!' tr:untll ·i&gt;tnunrl • Page' ~7

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

\Vebble1ds

Evlan Mastin
· EVIAN, France (AP) - Karrie
Webb shot an even-par 72 to ~ke
J, a 1-stroke lead over Annika
:,.. Sorenstam and Silvia Cavalieri
~ after the third round of the Evian
'· Masters.

6
• PRICES&amp;
CLEARLY MARKED ON WINDSHIELDS _

Webb, the Australian star seek•' ing her fifth LPGA Tour tide and
seventh worldwide victory this
"' year, had a 9- under 207 total.
'.
"

ACCEPTED FOR PROCESSING

Gibson taps sac
Senior bcNird

;.
~:

• ALL CREDIT APPUCAITONS WILL BE

.

FULL SERVICE DEPARTMENT

, SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Fred
•• Gibson shot a tournament-record
~ 9-under-par 63 to take a 4-stroke
· iead after the fint round of the
Senior.PGA Tour's SBC Champi.• onship.

FOR SERVICE AFTER THE SALE

· . Walter Hall opened with a 67,
,and three-time winner Lee Trevi• no was five strokes back along
.with Ray Floyd and Gary
McCord.

..
'..

.• RACING
•

:' Rlhll new CART chief
••

lakers ho e to
rebound rom
Hoosier beating
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Lakers awoke in their own city
Saturday with a 33-point hangover, not yet champs but not
quite chumps. ·
Sure, they lost Game 5 to the
Indiana Pacers by the most lopsided margin they've had all season. But no one will remember
that debacle for long if the Lakers, leading 3-2 in the best-ofseven series, can win one of the
. next two games on their home
court ..
''I'm upset, but the Indiana
Pacers shot the hell out of the
ball;' Shaquille O'Neal said.
"They played vety, very inspired
basketball." .
Indeed they did, shooting 15for-20 in the first peri&lt;;&gt;d, including 6-fot-6 from 3-point range,
to take a commanding lead they
never relinquished.
Game 6 is·set for Monday night
and Game 7, if necessary, will be
Wednesday.
The sense of desperation that
the Pacers exhibited will need to
make a 'return appearance at the
Staples Center, where Indiana has
never won. The Pacers are 0-3
there against the Lakers, including
losses in Games 1 and 2 C&gt;f the
finals, and they even lost a game
there to the Clippers in early Jan-

~~il

2000 RANGER XLT

nary.
The Pacers were at their best
playing in the coinfy confines of
Conseco Fieldhouse, drawing
energy from the roars of the
Hoosier housewives and their
husbands who seemed to make
up 80 percent of the crowd. .
But they've been a different
team under the bright lights ·of
tbe Staples Center, where the
courtside celebrities wear sunglasses indoorS and sing the
cheesy song "I Love L.A." during
li1ueouts.
"There's no intimidation factor," Indiana guard Mark Jackson
said. "I think in Game 1 We probably weren't ready for what hit us.
Just the hjipe, the intensity of the
finals, and we played on our heels.
In Game 2, I thought we played
well. We gave ourselves an opportunity but we didn't take advantage of when Kobe (Bryant) went
down. But we're a team that feels
· very confident in going into
someone else's building and winning. We have a history of doing
just that:'
Both teams took the day off
Saturday, the Pacers catching an
afternoon flight to the West Coast
after the Lakers .flew home
immediately following Friday
night's 120-87 loss.

LPGA

~~

~til2000 ESCORT lX2

2000 CONTOUR SE

. o~ $11,950°0

~ $14,9$000

our battles:· Sorenstam said.
worked hard over ·the winter to
try to catch Karrie. It's so nice
seeing it work out like this."
The winner's checli: boosts
Sorenstam to seCOIJd on the tour
money list with $678,750.
Webb's $180,107 runner-up
check keeps her atop the money
list with $923,624.
Sorenstam trailed Webb by one
stroke after three rounds, but
pulled even by firing a 4-underpar 68 at the Royal Evian Club
coune Saturday.
Both pla.yets finished at 12under 276.
Webb pulled e,ven with a 'birdie
at the . 17th, then 'both players
birdied the final hole to send the
world's second-richest women's
tournament to a playoff.
"The best player thh week
ended up winning:' Webb said.
"Losing always hurts but if you
lose to an eagle at the first playoff
hole, well, you can'r feel coo bad
about yourself."

••

'

2000 MUSTANG

~~ *10,9~0'-··

o~-.;$15,950 00

USED VEHICLE LISTINGS
tOOO MERCURY VILJ.AIER, rnm ""· Lllllll, "·rca. L~n.
'
tOOO FORD RA'NI~R SUPERCAI•.,,, ..... o.um ,.,••• '18,
99. FORD rsco.Rr wAtoN
,.u " .............;·10.,· .... ' O~ftotil
~~il
2000 FtSO SUPERCAI
99 FORD E'PlORER SPORT S91Aw•o.-•~•.'2t,
1
.
.
*ft:O~ib"l
EISO CARlO YAM
lARIAT PKI, 5.4 EMiliE, LEATIEI,
99'TAURUS
FIII.NIII, Alii llllli·, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,;.,,
AIR OO.tlfrHIII, liiiTit ILIP
U REAl AilE, liAHt
uu, uo• ~n11
MIRP TOTAL IEFORE DISCOUNTI 99 FORt RAilER INIT Puun. Alt..:................... :......
,.
·
• ,
'
TOTAL 'IEFORE DISCIOUIITI
'"o~ '29,160"
tt•FORD ~~~~~ t"ERCAI ILT, 414, FLARIIIII ••:.....,
~oil *2t 70S"
0
~-.;'22,
tt FORD mo 4i4. ·,.,, t1uu, ~tslL.........:..... *26,
~..;J. .• ,
17
91 FORD FtSO, 414, --··WilT, AlltdfATifR, "'~·.....*21
'··
FORD w111tsraa, .......Af•• ara• AIR, Fuu ....... •t5,
91 FORD lAIIlER XLT, FLAIIIItr, Al1 ..........................*10,
'
91 FORD FtSO SUPERCAI, LARin, m, 1.4 VttOA:.Et...*JJ~O~~~~~~
.
.
il) . •
O~ftH•I
,. FORD FISO XLT,
AUTO, FUlL POIII ...................,........ 14,
97 FORD F·tSO SUPERCAI, m, 414, FUll Nllt;,,,;.,,*1
,
.
,·
n ,• t
~~il
96 FORD f·tSO, 414, m. FlU Nlll, JJ,too IlLia :,,,, ... 14,95000
'
ll ' ,'
2000 FtSO 4X4 FLARESI
96 MERCURY MYSTIQUE, AUTO, FUll nwra .. ,,,,;,,,,,, 17,45001
CIUIII, TILT, All, LOAm
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOINTS 96 FORD F.tsO 414, Ala ...................................... ,:......... :.'11 ,45001
~0· '24;250"
FORD TAURUS, AutO,
All, Fill Nlll ........................... 7I
.
'
'

·

'

, '

A'"·

~I

'

•to,

9S0°

~ DETROIT (AP) - Andre:w
:Craig is out and Bobby Rahal,
~me of his sternest critics, is in as
~ead of Championship Auto
1t;lcingTeams.
: Craig, who has run CART
~ince 1994, resigned under presc
;sure from the open-wheel racing
:organization Friday. He was
:CCplaced on an interim basis by
:Rahal, one of nine CART board
members.
·

•

"")18,.95000

•

•

'

0

FORD THUIIDERIIRD, v.. IIAtn .................:............ '8,0~1~ 001
'

Un, cruiH, sport wheels .. ·.... ... .. .. . .. . ..... ... ... .. . . .. $12,485
11M CHEVY BLAZER 4X4, 11818, Automatic, air,
cruise, power Windows &amp; locl&lt;s, sport wheels .. ....... .... .................$10,415
1814 FORO EXPLORER 4X4 UMITED,I8888, Automatic, air, tin,
cruise, power Windows$ locks, leather seats, .....................................$11,11H

sport wheels ...................... .......$12,255

-!2,20,000 miles,
air, AMIFM CD, sport wheels .............. $12,155

19021,25,000 miles,

lbaltiiiCII of factory warranly, air, AMIFM CD, sport wheels ....,.........$12,275
1118 FORti'F-150, 18M1, 26,000miles,bo!anceo!
1ac1o1y warranty, ~r, 1n. CN!ae ................ .............. ............. .......................................$18,420
1118 FORD F-150 XLT, illll48, 15,000 miles, balance of factOf'l warranly,
ae!lrt wheeif!, power windows &amp; locks ........................................$14,840
1
FORD RAnGER,-· 18,000 mHes, balance at
l·f::'6;;wa~rran:~. spon wheels, air, AM/FM .......................................$12,495
111
DAKOTA, 111071, Sport
'
.

· Word of Craig's ouster circulat·e d all morning around Belle Isle,
site of this weekend's Tenneco
IA.itomotive~' Giallo 1&gt;rix of
'Detroit. Still, Rahal and other
CART officials denied Craig was
'fired.

v:..

.................... .... ..... .. : .......... ..... .. ........... .... .. ........$11,985

oc.::·,;.o;.:._ F-150 SUPER CAB,~. Air,
&amp; locks, sport wheels, ~ilsette, bed liner .......... .. $15,885
~H,III038,

Rahal, a three-time CART dri.ving champion and owner of his
own racing team, Will serve as
interim president and CEO while
the Indy-car cireuit seeks a new
leader.
' James Hardyman, another
board member, was elected chairman of the board. Hardyman was
formerly chairman and CEO of
Textron, Inc.

9soo•

"I've

EVlAN, France (AP) - Annika Sorenstam won this duel
against Karrie Webb in style.
Sorenstam topped her rival.
with an eagle putt on the first
playoff hole Saturday to capture .
the S1.8 million Evian Masters
LPGA Tour golf tourname11t.
The Swede had 172 yards to
the pin and hit her 7 -iron to 5
feet, while Webb wound up in a
greenside trap.
"This was definitely in the top
five o( my victories," Sorenstam
said. "The way she played and the
way I finished it, it was my best
golf in a long time. My heart's
been pumping ·all day: •
It was her third LPGA Tour
tide of the year and the 21st of
her career. She pocketed
S270,000.
Sorenstam also earned a mea.sure of ~ge. She lost a onehole piayoff to Webb at the Takefuji Clusic in March.
"Karrie beat me in a playoff
and I've won this one. We've had

.

All, Cl CNAMOEI, ILT
AUfll AIR, Ct CIIAMIER
All COtltlfiOtll.l, et CMAtleiR, AIR, Ct CMAtiOER, CRGISE TILT, POWER,
60140 ClOTI SEAT
KlfLIII ltiTRY. POWIR, LOAtlt
1 tHR COUPI
SPORT OROUP, lOAtu
MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS MSRP TOTAL BEFORE DISCOUNTS
~o~ 1tS,Ot0"
"o~ 1t&amp;,~to" .
~~ *tJ,46S"
~o~ 'tl,tJS" ·

•

Sorenstam wins Evian Masters

~til

.. .....................$17,11111

cruile, P!IW'windowl &amp; loeb, oport- .......... ,............................$13,11111
P'ORD EXPLORIR 4X4, ·11111134, A~. lir, till,
'.,_ WlndoWt &amp; loclcl, aport Wlleell,. cloor .................. .. .. .............$18,485
JI!EP WRANGLER 4X4 ,111021,
convel1ible, &amp;pOll whM~ .................................................... .... .. ............ $11,230
111H OEO TRACKER, .nooe, Low niles,
.
llr, IPOit o!\otll..:..... ,................. :...... ................................................................................................S8,41111
111H CHEVY BLAZER 4X4, mze, Automatic, air,
.
r.~ t.:Jv·ai:AZEi'i.4x4;·liili&amp;;·Fi&amp;d:·&amp;uiDiiiiiiii:;iilr .................s,z.495

•.

.NBA FINALS

"""''•r ........

liner, raar alklar, sport wheels.........................$12,800
XLT SUPER CAB, f1025, V8, Automallc, air,
Wlr)dowe &amp; locka, eport wheels ...................................$11,1115

1117 FORD RANGER SPLASH, llllt

-Is.

Air, sportwheels ...............................................,................................ $10,IIH
1117 FORD F-150 FLAIRBIOE SUPER CAB, 18775, Air, spon
power- I locks, bed Nner, Ill, cruile .......................... ...................,...$17,41111
111H FORD RANGER SPLASH,I8781, VS, air, AMIFMICD,
windows &amp; locks, sport wheelS, super cab .............................$10,41111
111H FORD F•150, 1111144, XLT, air, l~r. sport wheels,
un, cruise, powar windows &amp; locks .. ........................................ :.........$10,885
DOOOE DAKOTA CLUB CAB, 111038, Automatic, air, tilt,

~~~~;~~:~~":'"""""""""""''""" "'"""""""""""""'10,11H

TENNIS
S.mpn~sln

11121,
. ve,.
baloii1C8 o! factory warnnty, spoil wheels, AMIFWCD, Super Csb ............. $18, 185
FORO RANGER 4X4, i8793, 24,000 miles, balance of
factc&gt;rv warraniy,
wheels, tonneau COller,
$13,11115

Queen's

~bsemls

aPort

ve ...........................

RANGER 4X4 SUPER CAB SI'LASH OFF ROAD, 11050,
tilt, cruhl''· AMIFMICD, sport wheels .. ........ .............. ......$11,115
o&amp;X4 TRUCK,.III032, a!r,
cuaeite, 'apon ..t~ee~s .....................................................................$11,800
1113 FORD F-150 4X4, ,...., Air, c:assetle, 8' bed,
S10,tt5

LONDON (AP) - Six-time
Wimbledon champion Pete Sampras eased into the Queen's Club
semifinals, beating Bob Bryan 64, 6-4.
· Sampras will face Davide Sanguinetti, a 3-6, 7-6 (5), 6-3 win- . ·
ner over Andrei Pavel. In the
. other quarterfinals, Gianluca
Pozzi beat Marat Salin 7-5, 7-6
(4) and Lleyt~n Hewitt (6)
defeated Cedric Pioline 6-4, 6-4.

apon-.-.. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . .

KraJcek meets Chene

ACCORD,III042, l.X,
.
, poW6r windows &amp; locks. cassette ......................... ..................$3,tt5
oOI)QE DAKOTA, -79, l.or4l bed. V6. aulomalic. ~r.

. In W8er semis

.NissANca=;iiA: ftOiiii... . .. . ... ... .. . . .....

!

HALLE, Germany (AP) Richard 'Krajicek overpowered
defending champion Nicolas
Kiefer with 25 aces in a 7-5, 5-7,
7-f/ (3) victory in the quarterfinals of the Gerry Weber Open.
Krajicek will face Michael
Chang in the semifinals. Chang
beat Roger Federer 7-5, 6-2. In
the other quarterfinals, top-seeded Yevgeny Kafelnikov beat
Nicolas Escude 7-6 (9}, 6-3, and
David Prinosil edged Nicolas
Lapentti 6-3, 7-6 (3).

Ca;.tdf•lls
In DFSG111k
BIRMINGHAM,
England .
(AP) -Jennifer Caprlatl's preparations for Wimbledon hit a snag
with a 6-2, 4-6, 7-5 lou to Liu
Raymond in the quarterfinals of
the DFS Clastic.
. .

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�•'

Page B8.

•

Inside:
Celebrations, Pages C2-4, 6
Max Tawney column, Page CB

BUCKEYE FISHING REPORT

•

Bass &amp;sunfish abundant in ·Lake Alma
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) largemouth, smillmouth, white 25 inches are taken during the spinners and live baits.
Adams Lake - Good fishing
Here is the weekly fishing report and hybrid striped bass this time S\)mmer, though most of these
fish measure 8 to 12 inches. Fly- opportunities exist in this 37-acre
provided by the Division of of year.
fishing is a popular activity on the Adams Counry lake for anglers
Wildlife of the Ohio Department
.
Central Ohio
of Natural Resources:
Antrim Lake - Summer offers Clear Fork and is one of the few seeking channel catfish and
·
·
Southeast Ohio
very light fishing pressure in this locations in Ohio where brown bluegills. ·
Use traditional catfish baits
trout may be found.
Lake Alma - Fish concentra- north Columbus lake.
The daily bag limit is two trout 1 fished along the lake bottom at
tion devices were added to this . Channel catfish measuring up
73-acre Vinton County lake last to 15 inches can be taken at night with a 12-inch minimum length night for best results.
Bluegills can be taken from
year and they provide good fish- from the shoreline when fishing limit. Good fishing opportunities
along the bottom with traqitional are also found here when seelting shoreline areas on larval baits, wax
ing spots for bass and sunfish.
A high density of aquatic vege- baits such as chicken lived night smillmouth bass, white bass and worms and red worms fished
beneath a bobber.
tation limits fishing pressure in crawlers, cut baits and prepared channel catfish.
Largemouth bass and rainbow
Northeast Ohio
·mid to late summer.
baits.
Clendening Lake - Bluegills trout are also found in this lake.
Rainbow trout measuring 10 to
Most bass measure 8-22 inches
Lake Erie
and can be caught on a variery of 14 inches can be taken when are abundant in this 1,800-acre
Yellow perch measuring 8 to 1 1
live baits, soft plastic baits, small using small spinners, miniature • Harrison County lake, but genqinches
were being caught on
ally
average
about
six
inches
in
crank baits and spinners. marshmallows and worms.
·
spreaders tipped with shiners and
Bluegills, redear sunfish and chanHoover Reservoir - · This length.
minnows in 30 to 40 feet of water
fish
can
be
taken
on
larThese
nel catfish provide additional fish- 3,845-acre lake is located in
ing opportunities that are rated northeast Franklin and southern val baits and small worms fished offShore from Ashtabula, Fairport
beneath a bobber in areas with Harbor and . Cleveland. Perch
good this year.
Delaware counties.
fishing was also good at the FairBlue Rock Lake - Shoreline · Areas with shoreline cover in weedy cover.
Flathead catfish can be taken at port Harbor pier.
areas that have aquatic vegetation the central and upper basins are
Top perch spots in the western
and submerged structures are good locations to fish for crappies night when using live bait such as.
good locations to fish for bluegills when using minnows beneath a chubs and sunfish. Sai.Igeyes mea- basin included Green, Kelleys and
and sunfish when using small bobber. Shoreline cover through- suring 15 to 24 inches provide Rattlesnake islands and the Marblehead/Catawba area.
worms and larval baits beneath a out the lake produces good fish- good fishing opportunities.
Smallmouth bass measuring 14
Check with area bait shops for
bobber.
ing action when seeking bluegills
the latest fishing tips and lake to 18 inches were being caught
Some of these areas are ROod and largemouth bass.
Night fishing with lanterns at conditions.
by anglers drifting with jigs and
spots to fish for largemouth bass
when using imitation baits, spin- the causeway is a good time to
Dale Walborn Reservoir minnows, tube. jigs and small
ners, small crank baits and live fish for white bass.
Channel catfish provide excellent spinners in and near the Ashtabubaits.
Northwest Ohio
night fishing opportunities for la, Geneva and Conneaut harbors.
Channel catfish and rainbow
Beaver Creek Reservoir In the western basin, anglers
anglers visiting this 885-acre lake
trout are also present in this This 120-acre upground reservoir in Stark Counry.
can take smallmouth bass over the
is located in Seneca County.
Use traditional baits fished reef complex, around the Bass
Muskingum County lake.
Ohio River
Anglers here will find an excel- along the bottom for best results. Islands and near Kelleys Island
The Markland Pool is com- lent population of blue gills mea- The outlook this year is rated when fishing at depths of 14 to
.
prised off 55 river ·miles through suring 5 to 9 inches.
excellent for anglers seeking 24 feet.
Hamilton and Clermont counThese fish can be taken from largemouth bass.
Walleye fishing. remains slow
ties.
most shoreline locations on wax
Sampling surveys have indicat- across the lake. Central basin
Anglers can take flathead catfish worms, red worms and larval baits ed that about two-thirds of the anglers are using jet planers with
on live bait such as chubs, gizzard fished beneath a bobber at depths bass caught here measure .15 Hot-N-Tots and spoons west of
shad and small sunfish when of 2 to 6 feet. Largemouth and inches or more.
Fairport Harbor and just offshore
fished along the bottom at night smallmouth bass can be taken
There is a 15-inch minimum from Geneva at depths of 25 to
along the rocky shoreline, near throughout the month and mea- length limit for keeper bass in 45 feet.
·
effect.
warmwater discharges and below sure 10 to 17 inches.
In the wes~rn basin, the top
the Meldahl tailwaters.
Drift a worm harness tipped
locations include at the end of the
Southwest Ohio
Warmwater discharges, stream with a night crawler when seekClark Lake - Easy shoreline Toledo Shipping Channel, the
and river confluences and the ing walleyes.
access provides go~d fishing area southwest of West Sister
tailwaters are good locations to
Yellow perch an: . numerous as opportunities for rainbow trout Island, the Kelleys Island shoill, Atake channel catfish.' at night well and measure up to 13 inch- through the month. Use kernel Can and Crib Reef. ,,._
when fishing with chicken liven, es.
Trolling with deep' 4iving lurel
corn, small worms ~nd small spinnight crawlers and cut baits.
Crappies and channel catfish ners for best results.
and spoons has produced better
Crappies measuring 6 to 14 offer additional fishing opportuTrout measure 10 to 13 inches. success when compared to drift~
inches can be taken on minnows, nities.
Low numbers of!argemouth bass ing worm harnesses, bottom
spinners, small jigs and wax
Clear Fork River- The Clear offer fair fishing action for bouncers and mayfly rigs.
worms along the rocky shoreline Fork branch of the Mohican anglers. Look for areas that have
Walleye catches are measuring
River extends for 20 miles drop-off points and submerged 16 to 24 inches.
and near stream confluence,.
The Markland pool also offers through Richland County.
structure.
..
good fishing opportunities for
Brown trout measuring up to
Use 6-inch plastic worms, small

w.v-.

· CHARLESTON,
(AP)
- The West Virginia fishing
report released Thursday by the
Division of Natural Resouoces:
BEECH FORK - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwater are clear. Catfish anglers
are using nightcrawlers and
chicken liver to catch some nice
catfish in the late evening.
Some hybrid striped bass are
being caught on chicken liver and
minnows. Minnow-and grubtipped jigs are being used to take
saugeye and hybrid striped bass.
Bass anglers are trolling the
shorelines with crankbaits and
spinners with good success.
BLUESTONE - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwater are clear. Fishing is
good. Anglers should fish around
any downed trees or weed beds
using small minnows or jigs for
sunfish.
'
Bass anglers should concentrate
their efforts along areas that may
provide cooler water for the bass
and good structure such as
downed timber, rocky drops or
weed beds. Top water baits such as
rapalas, tiny torpedoes and sluggoes are excellent choices. but
anglers must fish early or late to
have the most action. Bluegill can
provide anglep with some fast
action.
Best baits are worms and small
jigs. Flyfishermen can have a blast
fishing for the sunfish. Mayflies
come off the lake during the
summer and many fish can been
seen feeding on the· small iruecu.
Channel catfish are also hitting in
the lake on chicken liver.
Carp and channel catfish are
hitting in the tailwater; with best
baits being corn and nightcrawlers. Again, anglers ate

encouraged to fish early and late
during these days of intense heat.
BURNSVILLE - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwater are clear. Several large
crappie have been caught lately.
Crappie are often found near
fish attractors and blow-downs.
Big crappie are being caught deep
on minnows and by trolling minnow-imitations. A few channel
catfish and flatheads are also being ·
caught. Saugeye fishing is best in
the evenings with the most productive locations being around
sandy points. .
All boat launches are opened.
Bass (spotted and largemouth) are
being caught on spinnerbaits and
plastics. Some trout are still being
caught in the tailwater.
EAST LYNN - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and ·
tailwater are murky. Black bass
anglers are using lizards, rubber
worms and crankbaits along the
shorelines to catch some nice fish.
Minnow-and grub-tipped jigs
are working well on saugeye and
hybrid striped bass. Catfish are
being caught in the late evening
on nightcrawlers and chicken
liver.
Sunfish are being caught on
mealworms and small pieces of
nightcrawlers.
R .D. BAILEY - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwarer are clear. Some large
spotted bass are being caught. The
bass will be found along the
rocky drops, with points another
good spot to try.
Good baits are plastic jigs in
black and'chartreuse colon or live
shad. Bluegill are providing consistent action in the standing timber. Best baits are worms and
small jigs.
.

Hybrid striper and channel ·catfish fishing is good off of shallow
points at night. Best baits are
chicken liver and soft crayfish.
Anglers should concentrate their
efforts early and late during periods of extreme heat.
Carp are also providing a lot of
fun for night anglers. Best baits
are corn and doughballs.
·
. STONECOAL LAKE - The
lake is 5 feet below summer
recreation level and·clear. Surface
temijerature of the lake is 68
degrees. Some nice bass are being
caught on spinnerbaits and plastic
baits.
A few walleye are being caught
on nightcrawler rigs and minnow-tipped. jigs. Try using jigs
around beaver huts and shallow
coves for crappie. Small jigs and
poppers on the surface in shallow
coves has worked well for spawning bluegill.
·
Trout fishing has been good for
anglers using powerbait ·Or
trolling small spinners. Trolling
large plugs or spinners for musky
may produce trophy fish.
STONEWALL JACKSON Lake is at summer recreation
level. Lake and tailwater are clear.
The surface temperature of the
lake is 70 degrees.
Bass are being cauglit around
standing timber and rip-rap. Bass
fishing has slowed some during
the past week. with the majoriry
of the fish being caught on
weighted soft plastics.
Catfish are hitting chicken liver
and store-bought bait at night as
the days heat up. Crappie are
being caught with live minnows
and jig$. Fish shallow coves for
spawning bluegill.
Saugeye are hitting jigs tipped
with live bait and on small

'.

Su~.June1~2000

"

"

ac
•

Auto Trarie., Air Conditioning, Tilt, Cruise, Onlt 28,000 Mll81
• Super Sharp!

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE

1114 UNCOLN TOWN CAR

A son
remembers
his father

Cabins add history
to Bob Evans Farms
Locally Owned and Loaded with Leather, Power Windows,
I P.ow1•r LOcka, Tilt, Cruise, va Engine and More.

1888CH£VY CAVAU£114

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Still In Effect.•.

DR•. ''•
'

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'•''
•

MOUNTAIN STATE FISHING REPORT

Fishing's good in West Virginia lakes

Cl

. ..

International Sarlea, Loaded with Power Seat, Power
Wlndowa; Power Locks, AM/FM Ca11ette, Aluminum
Whl81e, ve Engine and Mor•.

'•
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crankbaits.
SUMMERSVILLE - Lake is
4z4EXT.CAa
at summer recreation level. Lake
and tailwater are clear. A ·few
walleye are still being caught, but
action has slowed. Try trolling or
bottom bouncing with a nightcrawler rig.
Smallmouth bass fishing is good
with fish hitting plastics and topwater lures. Bluegill are on the
beds and .concentrated. Try small
jigs tipped with grubs in shallow 'LS Package with Power . Windows, Power Locks, Tilt,
water for bluegill.
.Cruise, ~300 Vortec V8 Eng!ne, Locally Owned with Factory
Crappie fishing is good aroun&lt;J · Warranty, Remaining.
lish attractors. ·A few catfish are
being caught off the boat launches at night with chicken liver.
Fishing for trout in the !ailwa••
ter has been fair-to-good.
SUTTON - Lake is at sum'
mer recreation level. ' Lake and
''
tailwater are clear. Largemouth
•
bass fishing has slowed down
some, but some anglers ate having
r
success with weighted worms and
other soft plastics.
Power ·Windows, Power Locka, Tilt, Crulee, V6 Engine,
Crappie are hitting minnow
and jigs. Look for spawning
Loc:~~llv Owmed.
bluegill in shallow areas of the
lake caught around submerged
trees and fish attractors from boat
•.
and shore.
Trout are still being caught in .
the tai!water including some over
25 inches.
IL..,...,. ~r "'~=.:r''Jiin\iii;-'
TYGART - Lake is at summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwater are clear. Bass fishing has
been good while using crankbaits
or tube jigs along the shoreline.
Watermelon is a successful
color for tube jigs now. Jigs and
minnows or 3-inch powergrubs,
Galllpolla' Hometown Dealer •
or large floating rapalas will be
effective.
Large channel catfish are being
caught on live or cut baits from
the shoreline.

1881

EXPLOR!R 4 DR. 4z4

RIO GRANDE -News flash!
'A time \nachine has been discovered iri Rio
Gran'de on the Bob Evans Farms. Anyone at any
UQte can be transported back to the early 1800s.
: How? By visiting the Adamsville Cabins.
It was this settlement that gave the village of
Rio Grande its name.
"The village of Adamsville was first settled in
1800 when Adam Rickabaugh, a Revolutionary
. :War veteran, brought his family from Virginia to
th:e valley that he had seen while in service:' said
Village Director Karen Dempsey.
," He applied to the federal government for this
!arid and his bounty from th~ war. The deed is
signed by Thomas Jefferson, president, and James
Madison, secretary of state."
.. Rickabaugh built a grist mill on the creek, and
!.&lt;&gt;on there were two grocery stores, a meat market, two blacksmith shops ~nd a livery in the village. In 1805 Nehemiah Wood bought the grist
in,ill from Adam Rickabaugh and later added a
fulling and saw mill.
.. War headlines with Mexico inspired Sylvester
Wood, the son of Nehemiah Wood, to suggest a
r,ame for their new post office. "I'll bet no one
:'?"ould have a Rye-0-Grand post office," he said.
Hence the "Rio Graade" post 'office was established in 1846.
Adamsville was the first overnight s~&gt;~ge CQ:~Fh
stop fr,Qm.!)allii?o~ to · GQillico~e.
. &lt;&gt;&lt;
''!-eg~!ld ha,s. .it that the forest was so thick
between .here to Chillicothe, it was said a squirrel
could make the trip without ever touching the
ground," Dempsey said.
.
Apparent)y, many frontier women were often
driven crazy or suffered major depression because
there was no sunlight and it was always overcast.
Karen Dempsey has made the Adamsville Vil. !age Tour a personal crusade as her husband Jack
':Poppy" Dempsey and daughter Beth Kelly also
-?olunteer .there daily.
·
, The Dempseys recently moved and actually live
on site in the heart of the village.
·.:'It's like living in the middle of history," Karen
Dempsey said.
·The 'Village ~liiit"(:Orisis!S' of six cabins and a
Revolutionary War cemetery. The tour begins•at
the 'Stormont cabin, which is the hub of the vil@ge.
Bob Condee donated this cabin to the Bob
Evans Farm in 1971. This two-story log house is
estimated to be more than 150 years old. Today it
is used as a crafts building during special events
and as a lodging facility for overnight canoe
excursions.
The Dempseys and Kelly also !femonstrate
weaving and spinriing daily.
"An interesting side note is the removable ladder was used instead of the new stairs, beq.'use it .
was able to be quickly removed in case of an
Iridian attack:' Karen Dempsey said.
"They would hide their children in the loft for
safety."
·

Toll Free 1-800-521-0084
(740) 446- 3672

KNrrnN' nME - Karen Dempsey sitS by the fire knitting In
the Stormont Cabin.

PleaH ... c.blu. P8p C5

DOWN ON THE FARM .,.. The Hurt Cabin where one
man raised nine daughters.

STORY AND PH01!0S .BY KRIS DOTSON +TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

.

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

DEAR ABBY: After my

.

'

stays busy singing praises to Lord

:Point Pleasant
8Y CATHIRINI
.

HAMM

OVP NEWS STAFF

POINT PLEASANT - Dale Blake
knew his dreams of fame and a recording
contract were overtaking his desire for a
Christian ministry as a music evangelist
when three Elvis impersonators got out of
a Volkswagen bus to compete against him
jn a Nashville music contest.
, "I didn't have a good feeling about being
in this contest in the first place and when I
saw these guys, I knew this was not for me.
I tell people I'm in this for the ministry, not
a competition, and they shouldn't forget
~hat they're called for."
Blake, the' son of Francis . .Sizemore of
Point Pleasant and Erva Blake ·of Ashton, is
former Mason. County resident who has
spent years building a ministry of malting
music for God. From his home in
Wintlabow, N.C., he makes music for the
j:,ord. He doesn't .sit down to write songs;

a

he
says
God
inspires him with a
passage of scripture
or an event that
shows him who is
in control of his
life.
, So far the 1970
Point
Pleasant
High School gtadl.iate has been very
1·· in:spiDed as he prepares to record his
third album of
southern ~s~:~l~~~~:·.
"God ,;:
Spirit lead me. Peopie ask me
so many of my songs are
about heaven, "i'd I tell them its !Jecause
that's where I'm going. That account was
settled a long time ago."
He began as al·~nister, but that experience was short lived.
CYAN
\lloi

"I was sure God had called me to preach,
I was ready to tell Billy Graham to slide on
over. But, once I got up there and starte, it
was the biggest mess you'd ever seen." ·
Instead his role would be as a.
singer/songwriter. His first album, "To
God Be The Glory," and the second, "He
Chose Me," arc. testimonies to the faith
that has been with him since his childhood
. in Mason ~ounty.
"I remember services at Glenwood
United Methodist Church; no air conditinning ... hot S\lmmertime. But, you could
hear the sweetest music coming out of
those windows. You knew church was
going on:'
Blake and wife, Theresa, daughter of
Frank and Bobbi Smith formerly of Point
Pleasant, are the parents of three sons.
While meeting the needs of a family was
· hard, Blake knew God would provide.
Once 'invited to sing at a campground,

he traveled nearly an hour only to be met
by a woman who led him into an empry
·
building. .
"She told me to go ahead and. set up and
she'd go out and invite people to come
hear me sing. I thought what in the world
is going on and wondered if! should leave.
"But she came back with her husband, a
man and his wife and 11-year-old son. I
said to the Lord, I'd go a full concert for
them. After it was over, the boy came up
and asked,' Mister, how do I get to heaven?'
Believe me, it was worth the trip."
Once inVited to an evangelist crusade in
Venezuela, he saw more than 1,200 come
·to Christ. "This is about winning souls. I
just pray some how, someone will hear the
gospel or have their spirit lifted."
Blake himself is an example of God's
provision.When he started his ministry, he

,................... cs

dad died several years ago, I
wrote a tribute to him. My
friends, some of them former
Marines like me, said it
expressed what they felt and
remembered
about their
fathers.
I seldom see published tributes by sons to their fathers.
Perhaps it's not macho to·write
such poems. If you feel this
amateurish effort should be
shared with others, I'd be honored to see it in your column
on
Father's
Day.
WILLIAM W. BARTSCH
JR., KINGS PARK, N.Y.
DEAR WILLIAM: You
have written a beautiful tribute, and I'm pleased to share it
with my readers on this holiday. Read on:
REMEMBERING DAD
A soft scratch of whiskers
pressed on my face,
Bear-hugging squeezes
A rough gentle grace.
Running and racing, letting
me win,
•
Falling asleep
My cheek on his chin.
The strong smell of work, of
tools and of sweat,
Of dust and of rust
I'll never forget.
After-shave lotion, paint cans
and pails,
Tie clips and cufflinks,
Galvanized nails.
Basemeiu~ and attics, out-ofdate ties,
Oceans and rivers
Fished at sunrise.
Whiskers gre:-v grayer, yet
scratched just the same,
And wrinkles were etched
On a more fragile frame.
Oh, how I long for that
rough-whiskereclkiss,
That 1weet scratch oflove
So dearly I miss.
DEAR ABBY: Raising
children takes patience and a
lot of hu.mor. I'm pa.•sing this
tongue-in-cheek tribute to
. fathers along to you hoping
that you will print it for
Father's Day. - A FRIEND
IN IRVINE, CAUF•
DEAR FRIEND: It is both
humorous and touching, and
oh, so true. I'm pleased to share
it:
A TRIBUTE TO FATHERS
My father when I was age ...
4: My daddy can do anything.
5: My daddy knows a whole
lot.
6: My dad is smarter than
your dad.
8: My dad doesn't exactly
know everything.
10: :n the olden days when
my dad grew up, things were
sure different.
12: Oh, well naturally, Father
doesn't know anything about
that. He is too old to remember his childhood.
14: Don't pay attention to
my father. He is so old-fashioned!
21: Him? My Lord, he 's
hopelessly out-of-date.
25: Dad knows a little bit
' about it, but then he should
because he has been around so
long.
3(): Maybe we should ask
Dad what he thinks. After all,
he's had a lot of experience.
35: I'm not doing a single
thing until I talk to Dad.
40: I wonder how Dad
would have handled it. He was
so wise and had a wodd of

Pleaie ... AllbJ. ,.,. cs

�•'

Page B8.

•

Inside:
Celebrations, Pages C2-4, 6
Max Tawney column, Page CB

BUCKEYE FISHING REPORT

•

Bass &amp;sunfish abundant in ·Lake Alma
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) largemouth, smillmouth, white 25 inches are taken during the spinners and live baits.
Adams Lake - Good fishing
Here is the weekly fishing report and hybrid striped bass this time S\)mmer, though most of these
fish measure 8 to 12 inches. Fly- opportunities exist in this 37-acre
provided by the Division of of year.
fishing is a popular activity on the Adams Counry lake for anglers
Wildlife of the Ohio Department
.
Central Ohio
of Natural Resources:
Antrim Lake - Summer offers Clear Fork and is one of the few seeking channel catfish and
·
·
Southeast Ohio
very light fishing pressure in this locations in Ohio where brown bluegills. ·
Use traditional catfish baits
trout may be found.
Lake Alma - Fish concentra- north Columbus lake.
The daily bag limit is two trout 1 fished along the lake bottom at
tion devices were added to this . Channel catfish measuring up
73-acre Vinton County lake last to 15 inches can be taken at night with a 12-inch minimum length night for best results.
Bluegills can be taken from
year and they provide good fish- from the shoreline when fishing limit. Good fishing opportunities
along the bottom with traqitional are also found here when seelting shoreline areas on larval baits, wax
ing spots for bass and sunfish.
A high density of aquatic vege- baits such as chicken lived night smillmouth bass, white bass and worms and red worms fished
beneath a bobber.
tation limits fishing pressure in crawlers, cut baits and prepared channel catfish.
Largemouth bass and rainbow
Northeast Ohio
·mid to late summer.
baits.
Clendening Lake - Bluegills trout are also found in this lake.
Rainbow trout measuring 10 to
Most bass measure 8-22 inches
Lake Erie
and can be caught on a variery of 14 inches can be taken when are abundant in this 1,800-acre
Yellow perch measuring 8 to 1 1
live baits, soft plastic baits, small using small spinners, miniature • Harrison County lake, but genqinches
were being caught on
ally
average
about
six
inches
in
crank baits and spinners. marshmallows and worms.
·
spreaders tipped with shiners and
Bluegills, redear sunfish and chanHoover Reservoir - · This length.
minnows in 30 to 40 feet of water
fish
can
be
taken
on
larThese
nel catfish provide additional fish- 3,845-acre lake is located in
ing opportunities that are rated northeast Franklin and southern val baits and small worms fished offShore from Ashtabula, Fairport
beneath a bobber in areas with Harbor and . Cleveland. Perch
good this year.
Delaware counties.
fishing was also good at the FairBlue Rock Lake - Shoreline · Areas with shoreline cover in weedy cover.
Flathead catfish can be taken at port Harbor pier.
areas that have aquatic vegetation the central and upper basins are
Top perch spots in the western
and submerged structures are good locations to fish for crappies night when using live bait such as.
good locations to fish for bluegills when using minnows beneath a chubs and sunfish. Sai.Igeyes mea- basin included Green, Kelleys and
and sunfish when using small bobber. Shoreline cover through- suring 15 to 24 inches provide Rattlesnake islands and the Marblehead/Catawba area.
worms and larval baits beneath a out the lake produces good fish- good fishing opportunities.
Smallmouth bass measuring 14
Check with area bait shops for
bobber.
ing action when seeking bluegills
the latest fishing tips and lake to 18 inches were being caught
Some of these areas are ROod and largemouth bass.
Night fishing with lanterns at conditions.
by anglers drifting with jigs and
spots to fish for largemouth bass
when using imitation baits, spin- the causeway is a good time to
Dale Walborn Reservoir minnows, tube. jigs and small
ners, small crank baits and live fish for white bass.
Channel catfish provide excellent spinners in and near the Ashtabubaits.
Northwest Ohio
night fishing opportunities for la, Geneva and Conneaut harbors.
Channel catfish and rainbow
Beaver Creek Reservoir In the western basin, anglers
anglers visiting this 885-acre lake
trout are also present in this This 120-acre upground reservoir in Stark Counry.
can take smallmouth bass over the
is located in Seneca County.
Use traditional baits fished reef complex, around the Bass
Muskingum County lake.
Ohio River
Anglers here will find an excel- along the bottom for best results. Islands and near Kelleys Island
The Markland Pool is com- lent population of blue gills mea- The outlook this year is rated when fishing at depths of 14 to
.
prised off 55 river ·miles through suring 5 to 9 inches.
excellent for anglers seeking 24 feet.
Hamilton and Clermont counThese fish can be taken from largemouth bass.
Walleye fishing. remains slow
ties.
most shoreline locations on wax
Sampling surveys have indicat- across the lake. Central basin
Anglers can take flathead catfish worms, red worms and larval baits ed that about two-thirds of the anglers are using jet planers with
on live bait such as chubs, gizzard fished beneath a bobber at depths bass caught here measure .15 Hot-N-Tots and spoons west of
shad and small sunfish when of 2 to 6 feet. Largemouth and inches or more.
Fairport Harbor and just offshore
fished along the bottom at night smallmouth bass can be taken
There is a 15-inch minimum from Geneva at depths of 25 to
along the rocky shoreline, near throughout the month and mea- length limit for keeper bass in 45 feet.
·
effect.
warmwater discharges and below sure 10 to 17 inches.
In the wes~rn basin, the top
the Meldahl tailwaters.
Drift a worm harness tipped
locations include at the end of the
Southwest Ohio
Warmwater discharges, stream with a night crawler when seekClark Lake - Easy shoreline Toledo Shipping Channel, the
and river confluences and the ing walleyes.
access provides go~d fishing area southwest of West Sister
tailwaters are good locations to
Yellow perch an: . numerous as opportunities for rainbow trout Island, the Kelleys Island shoill, Atake channel catfish.' at night well and measure up to 13 inch- through the month. Use kernel Can and Crib Reef. ,,._
when fishing with chicken liven, es.
Trolling with deep' 4iving lurel
corn, small worms ~nd small spinnight crawlers and cut baits.
Crappies and channel catfish ners for best results.
and spoons has produced better
Crappies measuring 6 to 14 offer additional fishing opportuTrout measure 10 to 13 inches. success when compared to drift~
inches can be taken on minnows, nities.
Low numbers of!argemouth bass ing worm harnesses, bottom
spinners, small jigs and wax
Clear Fork River- The Clear offer fair fishing action for bouncers and mayfly rigs.
worms along the rocky shoreline Fork branch of the Mohican anglers. Look for areas that have
Walleye catches are measuring
River extends for 20 miles drop-off points and submerged 16 to 24 inches.
and near stream confluence,.
The Markland pool also offers through Richland County.
structure.
..
good fishing opportunities for
Brown trout measuring up to
Use 6-inch plastic worms, small

w.v-.

· CHARLESTON,
(AP)
- The West Virginia fishing
report released Thursday by the
Division of Natural Resouoces:
BEECH FORK - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwater are clear. Catfish anglers
are using nightcrawlers and
chicken liver to catch some nice
catfish in the late evening.
Some hybrid striped bass are
being caught on chicken liver and
minnows. Minnow-and grubtipped jigs are being used to take
saugeye and hybrid striped bass.
Bass anglers are trolling the
shorelines with crankbaits and
spinners with good success.
BLUESTONE - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwater are clear. Fishing is
good. Anglers should fish around
any downed trees or weed beds
using small minnows or jigs for
sunfish.
'
Bass anglers should concentrate
their efforts along areas that may
provide cooler water for the bass
and good structure such as
downed timber, rocky drops or
weed beds. Top water baits such as
rapalas, tiny torpedoes and sluggoes are excellent choices. but
anglers must fish early or late to
have the most action. Bluegill can
provide anglep with some fast
action.
Best baits are worms and small
jigs. Flyfishermen can have a blast
fishing for the sunfish. Mayflies
come off the lake during the
summer and many fish can been
seen feeding on the· small iruecu.
Channel catfish are also hitting in
the lake on chicken liver.
Carp and channel catfish are
hitting in the tailwater; with best
baits being corn and nightcrawlers. Again, anglers ate

encouraged to fish early and late
during these days of intense heat.
BURNSVILLE - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwater are clear. Several large
crappie have been caught lately.
Crappie are often found near
fish attractors and blow-downs.
Big crappie are being caught deep
on minnows and by trolling minnow-imitations. A few channel
catfish and flatheads are also being ·
caught. Saugeye fishing is best in
the evenings with the most productive locations being around
sandy points. .
All boat launches are opened.
Bass (spotted and largemouth) are
being caught on spinnerbaits and
plastics. Some trout are still being
caught in the tailwater.
EAST LYNN - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and ·
tailwater are murky. Black bass
anglers are using lizards, rubber
worms and crankbaits along the
shorelines to catch some nice fish.
Minnow-and grub-tipped jigs
are working well on saugeye and
hybrid striped bass. Catfish are
being caught in the late evening
on nightcrawlers and chicken
liver.
Sunfish are being caught on
mealworms and small pieces of
nightcrawlers.
R .D. BAILEY - Lake is at
summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwarer are clear. Some large
spotted bass are being caught. The
bass will be found along the
rocky drops, with points another
good spot to try.
Good baits are plastic jigs in
black and'chartreuse colon or live
shad. Bluegill are providing consistent action in the standing timber. Best baits are worms and
small jigs.
.

Hybrid striper and channel ·catfish fishing is good off of shallow
points at night. Best baits are
chicken liver and soft crayfish.
Anglers should concentrate their
efforts early and late during periods of extreme heat.
Carp are also providing a lot of
fun for night anglers. Best baits
are corn and doughballs.
·
. STONECOAL LAKE - The
lake is 5 feet below summer
recreation level and·clear. Surface
temijerature of the lake is 68
degrees. Some nice bass are being
caught on spinnerbaits and plastic
baits.
A few walleye are being caught
on nightcrawler rigs and minnow-tipped. jigs. Try using jigs
around beaver huts and shallow
coves for crappie. Small jigs and
poppers on the surface in shallow
coves has worked well for spawning bluegill.
·
Trout fishing has been good for
anglers using powerbait ·Or
trolling small spinners. Trolling
large plugs or spinners for musky
may produce trophy fish.
STONEWALL JACKSON Lake is at summer recreation
level. Lake and tailwater are clear.
The surface temperature of the
lake is 70 degrees.
Bass are being cauglit around
standing timber and rip-rap. Bass
fishing has slowed some during
the past week. with the majoriry
of the fish being caught on
weighted soft plastics.
Catfish are hitting chicken liver
and store-bought bait at night as
the days heat up. Crappie are
being caught with live minnows
and jig$. Fish shallow coves for
spawning bluegill.
Saugeye are hitting jigs tipped
with live bait and on small

'.

Su~.June1~2000

"

"

ac
•

Auto Trarie., Air Conditioning, Tilt, Cruise, Onlt 28,000 Mll81
• Super Sharp!

Abigail
Van
Buren
ADVICE

1114 UNCOLN TOWN CAR

A son
remembers
his father

Cabins add history
to Bob Evans Farms
Locally Owned and Loaded with Leather, Power Windows,
I P.ow1•r LOcka, Tilt, Cruise, va Engine and More.

1888CH£VY CAVAU£114

Special GM Factory Purchase, Auto Trans., Air
Condltlonlrfg, AM/FM Stereo, Factory Warranty, Still
Remaining. ~
·

1881 QI£VY MAUBU 4 DR.
I '

&gt;

I

Super CLean with Auto Trans., Tilt, Crulie, AM/FM
Caeaatte, Power Steering, Power Brakes, Factory Warranty .
Still In Effect.•.

DR•. ''•
'

•

•

•

•'
~

'•''
•

MOUNTAIN STATE FISHING REPORT

Fishing's good in West Virginia lakes

Cl

. ..

International Sarlea, Loaded with Power Seat, Power
Wlndowa; Power Locks, AM/FM Ca11ette, Aluminum
Whl81e, ve Engine and Mor•.

'•
'

''

1888 CHEVROLET
crankbaits.
SUMMERSVILLE - Lake is
4z4EXT.CAa
at summer recreation level. Lake
and tailwater are clear. A ·few
walleye are still being caught, but
action has slowed. Try trolling or
bottom bouncing with a nightcrawler rig.
Smallmouth bass fishing is good
with fish hitting plastics and topwater lures. Bluegill are on the
beds and .concentrated. Try small
jigs tipped with grubs in shallow 'LS Package with Power . Windows, Power Locks, Tilt,
water for bluegill.
.Cruise, ~300 Vortec V8 Eng!ne, Locally Owned with Factory
Crappie fishing is good aroun&lt;J · Warranty, Remaining.
lish attractors. ·A few catfish are
being caught off the boat launches at night with chicken liver.
Fishing for trout in the !ailwa••
ter has been fair-to-good.
SUTTON - Lake is at sum'
mer recreation level. ' Lake and
''
tailwater are clear. Largemouth
•
bass fishing has slowed down
some, but some anglers ate having
r
success with weighted worms and
other soft plastics.
Power ·Windows, Power Locka, Tilt, Crulee, V6 Engine,
Crappie are hitting minnow
and jigs. Look for spawning
Loc:~~llv Owmed.
bluegill in shallow areas of the
lake caught around submerged
trees and fish attractors from boat
•.
and shore.
Trout are still being caught in .
the tai!water including some over
25 inches.
IL..,...,. ~r "'~=.:r''Jiin\iii;-'
TYGART - Lake is at summer recreation level. Lake and
tailwater are clear. Bass fishing has
been good while using crankbaits
or tube jigs along the shoreline.
Watermelon is a successful
color for tube jigs now. Jigs and
minnows or 3-inch powergrubs,
Galllpolla' Hometown Dealer •
or large floating rapalas will be
effective.
Large channel catfish are being
caught on live or cut baits from
the shoreline.

1881

EXPLOR!R 4 DR. 4z4

RIO GRANDE -News flash!
'A time \nachine has been discovered iri Rio
Gran'de on the Bob Evans Farms. Anyone at any
UQte can be transported back to the early 1800s.
: How? By visiting the Adamsville Cabins.
It was this settlement that gave the village of
Rio Grande its name.
"The village of Adamsville was first settled in
1800 when Adam Rickabaugh, a Revolutionary
. :War veteran, brought his family from Virginia to
th:e valley that he had seen while in service:' said
Village Director Karen Dempsey.
," He applied to the federal government for this
!arid and his bounty from th~ war. The deed is
signed by Thomas Jefferson, president, and James
Madison, secretary of state."
.. Rickabaugh built a grist mill on the creek, and
!.&lt;&gt;on there were two grocery stores, a meat market, two blacksmith shops ~nd a livery in the village. In 1805 Nehemiah Wood bought the grist
in,ill from Adam Rickabaugh and later added a
fulling and saw mill.
.. War headlines with Mexico inspired Sylvester
Wood, the son of Nehemiah Wood, to suggest a
r,ame for their new post office. "I'll bet no one
:'?"ould have a Rye-0-Grand post office," he said.
Hence the "Rio Graade" post 'office was established in 1846.
Adamsville was the first overnight s~&gt;~ge CQ:~Fh
stop fr,Qm.!)allii?o~ to · GQillico~e.
. &lt;&gt;&lt;
''!-eg~!ld ha,s. .it that the forest was so thick
between .here to Chillicothe, it was said a squirrel
could make the trip without ever touching the
ground," Dempsey said.
.
Apparent)y, many frontier women were often
driven crazy or suffered major depression because
there was no sunlight and it was always overcast.
Karen Dempsey has made the Adamsville Vil. !age Tour a personal crusade as her husband Jack
':Poppy" Dempsey and daughter Beth Kelly also
-?olunteer .there daily.
·
, The Dempseys recently moved and actually live
on site in the heart of the village.
·.:'It's like living in the middle of history," Karen
Dempsey said.
·The 'Village ~liiit"(:Orisis!S' of six cabins and a
Revolutionary War cemetery. The tour begins•at
the 'Stormont cabin, which is the hub of the vil@ge.
Bob Condee donated this cabin to the Bob
Evans Farm in 1971. This two-story log house is
estimated to be more than 150 years old. Today it
is used as a crafts building during special events
and as a lodging facility for overnight canoe
excursions.
The Dempseys and Kelly also !femonstrate
weaving and spinriing daily.
"An interesting side note is the removable ladder was used instead of the new stairs, beq.'use it .
was able to be quickly removed in case of an
Iridian attack:' Karen Dempsey said.
"They would hide their children in the loft for
safety."
·

Toll Free 1-800-521-0084
(740) 446- 3672

KNrrnN' nME - Karen Dempsey sitS by the fire knitting In
the Stormont Cabin.

PleaH ... c.blu. P8p C5

DOWN ON THE FARM .,.. The Hurt Cabin where one
man raised nine daughters.

STORY AND PH01!0S .BY KRIS DOTSON +TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

.

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE

DEAR ABBY: After my

.

'

stays busy singing praises to Lord

:Point Pleasant
8Y CATHIRINI
.

HAMM

OVP NEWS STAFF

POINT PLEASANT - Dale Blake
knew his dreams of fame and a recording
contract were overtaking his desire for a
Christian ministry as a music evangelist
when three Elvis impersonators got out of
a Volkswagen bus to compete against him
jn a Nashville music contest.
, "I didn't have a good feeling about being
in this contest in the first place and when I
saw these guys, I knew this was not for me.
I tell people I'm in this for the ministry, not
a competition, and they shouldn't forget
~hat they're called for."
Blake, the' son of Francis . .Sizemore of
Point Pleasant and Erva Blake ·of Ashton, is
former Mason. County resident who has
spent years building a ministry of malting
music for God. From his home in
Wintlabow, N.C., he makes music for the
j:,ord. He doesn't .sit down to write songs;

a

he
says
God
inspires him with a
passage of scripture
or an event that
shows him who is
in control of his
life.
, So far the 1970
Point
Pleasant
High School gtadl.iate has been very
1·· in:spiDed as he prepares to record his
third album of
southern ~s~:~l~~~~:·.
"God ,;:
Spirit lead me. Peopie ask me
so many of my songs are
about heaven, "i'd I tell them its !Jecause
that's where I'm going. That account was
settled a long time ago."
He began as al·~nister, but that experience was short lived.
CYAN
\lloi

"I was sure God had called me to preach,
I was ready to tell Billy Graham to slide on
over. But, once I got up there and starte, it
was the biggest mess you'd ever seen." ·
Instead his role would be as a.
singer/songwriter. His first album, "To
God Be The Glory," and the second, "He
Chose Me," arc. testimonies to the faith
that has been with him since his childhood
. in Mason ~ounty.
"I remember services at Glenwood
United Methodist Church; no air conditinning ... hot S\lmmertime. But, you could
hear the sweetest music coming out of
those windows. You knew church was
going on:'
Blake and wife, Theresa, daughter of
Frank and Bobbi Smith formerly of Point
Pleasant, are the parents of three sons.
While meeting the needs of a family was
· hard, Blake knew God would provide.
Once 'invited to sing at a campground,

he traveled nearly an hour only to be met
by a woman who led him into an empry
·
building. .
"She told me to go ahead and. set up and
she'd go out and invite people to come
hear me sing. I thought what in the world
is going on and wondered if! should leave.
"But she came back with her husband, a
man and his wife and 11-year-old son. I
said to the Lord, I'd go a full concert for
them. After it was over, the boy came up
and asked,' Mister, how do I get to heaven?'
Believe me, it was worth the trip."
Once inVited to an evangelist crusade in
Venezuela, he saw more than 1,200 come
·to Christ. "This is about winning souls. I
just pray some how, someone will hear the
gospel or have their spirit lifted."
Blake himself is an example of God's
provision.When he started his ministry, he

,................... cs

dad died several years ago, I
wrote a tribute to him. My
friends, some of them former
Marines like me, said it
expressed what they felt and
remembered
about their
fathers.
I seldom see published tributes by sons to their fathers.
Perhaps it's not macho to·write
such poems. If you feel this
amateurish effort should be
shared with others, I'd be honored to see it in your column
on
Father's
Day.
WILLIAM W. BARTSCH
JR., KINGS PARK, N.Y.
DEAR WILLIAM: You
have written a beautiful tribute, and I'm pleased to share it
with my readers on this holiday. Read on:
REMEMBERING DAD
A soft scratch of whiskers
pressed on my face,
Bear-hugging squeezes
A rough gentle grace.
Running and racing, letting
me win,
•
Falling asleep
My cheek on his chin.
The strong smell of work, of
tools and of sweat,
Of dust and of rust
I'll never forget.
After-shave lotion, paint cans
and pails,
Tie clips and cufflinks,
Galvanized nails.
Basemeiu~ and attics, out-ofdate ties,
Oceans and rivers
Fished at sunrise.
Whiskers gre:-v grayer, yet
scratched just the same,
And wrinkles were etched
On a more fragile frame.
Oh, how I long for that
rough-whiskereclkiss,
That 1weet scratch oflove
So dearly I miss.
DEAR ABBY: Raising
children takes patience and a
lot of hu.mor. I'm pa.•sing this
tongue-in-cheek tribute to
. fathers along to you hoping
that you will print it for
Father's Day. - A FRIEND
IN IRVINE, CAUF•
DEAR FRIEND: It is both
humorous and touching, and
oh, so true. I'm pleased to share
it:
A TRIBUTE TO FATHERS
My father when I was age ...
4: My daddy can do anything.
5: My daddy knows a whole
lot.
6: My dad is smarter than
your dad.
8: My dad doesn't exactly
know everything.
10: :n the olden days when
my dad grew up, things were
sure different.
12: Oh, well naturally, Father
doesn't know anything about
that. He is too old to remember his childhood.
14: Don't pay attention to
my father. He is so old-fashioned!
21: Him? My Lord, he 's
hopelessly out-of-date.
25: Dad knows a little bit
' about it, but then he should
because he has been around so
long.
3(): Maybe we should ask
Dad what he thinks. After all,
he's had a lot of experience.
35: I'm not doing a single
thing until I talk to Dad.
40: I wonder how Dad
would have handled it. He was
so wise and had a wodd of

Pleaie ... AllbJ. ,.,. cs

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point PINsant, WV

,

Sunday, June

.,-_.

"'a, 2GDO

tltunbap 1!timt• ·tlttntinrl • Page C3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

--· .

•

,: Engagements

Meeker-Hartung engagement
POMEROY ~ Amy Meeker
and Jed Hartung will be married on July I at Jensen Beach,
Fla.
The bride- elect, daughter of
Fred and Kit Meeker of Jensen
Beach, Fla. is a graduate qf
Martin County High School
and Florida State University
where she received bachelor
degrees in -elementary education
and speech language pathology.
She currently teaches first grade
in Indianapolis, Ind .
Her fiance is the son of Ed
and Sharon Hartung of Avon
Lake, and the grandson of Laura

Mae Hartung nice of Pomeroy
and the la te William E. Hartung,
and -Marigole Ritchie Wilson of
Circleville and the late H. Alvin
Ritchie.
He is a graduate of Avon
Lake High School and Ohio
University where he received a
degree in electrical engineering
and computer science. He was a
military inteUigence officer in
the U. S. Army for four years,
leaving active military service
with the rank of Captain. He is
currently a project manager for
Thomson Consumer Electronics in Indianapolis, Ind.

Harbour-Lindsay engagement
•

~Treua

Dena Greene and Philip Way _

Alfred ROUih and Cynthia Roulh

· ~oush-l{oush

Greene- Way engagement
Todd Miller and

GALLIPOLIS Dannie
Meghan Kolcun
and Carlene Greene, of Gallipolis, announce the engagement and upcoming wedding
of their daughter, Dena Noele
has a degree-in Biology/Chemistry. Greene to Jonathan Philip
James is a 1987 graduate of Gallia Way, son of Gary and
Academy and a 1992 graduate of the Ruthann Way, of Millersburg,
UnivelsityofRio Grande. He is cur- Ohio.
rendy employed at Holzer Medical
The bride-elect is a 1992
Clinic.
graduate of Gallia Academy
The wedding will take place July and a 1996 graduate of Ohio
14,2000,at 5:30p.m at Gr.~ce Unit- Wesleyan Univ4111ity. She is
ed Methodist Chun::h. Monsignor employed as ·a ta(Cher for the
William Meyers will officiate.
Coach Hilliard City School

District.
POMEROY - Cynthia Ann
The groom-elect is a 1991 Roush and Alfred Lewis Roush
graduate of West Holmes exchanged wedding vows June 3
High School and a 1995 grad- at Enterprise United ,Methodist
uate of Ohio Wesleyan Uni - Church in Pomeroy. The bride is
versity. He is a member of the the daughter of Harold and Sue
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Roush of Ru!land. The groom is
. He is employed as a teacher the son of Rusty and Sharon
Roush of Mason.
for Delaware City Schools
and coaches at Ohio Wesleyan
University. He is the grandson
of On eta Way.
the wedding will be held
July I, 2000, at First Presby· MARIETTA The
terian Church, Gallipolis.
Friends of Front Street and
Bank One, Marietta present
the 6th Annual Red, White
and ~Blues' Festival Friday,
june 30 from 6 p.m. to midnight at the Lafayette Hotel,
101 Front Street in historic
•'*"""
downtown Marietta.
The
CROWN CITY -Revival at
festival will feature Chicago
Kings Chapel Church, June 11-18,
Blues legend, Shirley King.
7:30 ilighdy, Witli the Rev. Bob
Also performjng will ' be
Thompson as evangelist. Special
Haywire Dog, the Edwardssinging each night.
Tobar band, Mad River,
De_n nis Tarman and the
CROWN CITY- Kings
Blues Cannibals, and Jive 5.
Chapel Chun:h will hold revival
June 11-18,7:30 p.m. nishtl}l with
Rev. Bob Thompson preachina.
Singen include: Monday - Beavier .
Family;'Thaday - Bluearaa
Gospei;Wednesday- Church
Singen;Thunday - French Family;
Friday - Singen for Christ; Saturday - Hayes Family: and Sunday Headed Home.

Kolcun-Miller engagement _
G.AILIPOUS - Andrew and
Debol2h Kocun, of Gallipolis,
announce the engagement and
upco~ wedding of their daughter Meghan Ann Kolcun to James
Todd Millet, son of J.O and Carla
Miller, of Gallipolis,
Megban is a 1995 graduate of Gallia Aeaderny and a 2000 graduate of
- the Univmity of Rio Grande, She

***
Sunday, June 18
***
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Nan:otics Anonymous _Tti-coUnty
group meeting. 611 Viand St., 7:30

P.lll-

·•**

KANAUGA-Wonhip servjce
at Silwr Memorial FWB Chun:h; 6
p.m., putor Aridrew Plnolll,

'

***

~ RIO GRANDE -The Church
, of Christ, a non-denolnlnational
· church located at SR 325 North,
:. will meet for bible llUdy at 10 a.m.,
' wonhip service at 11 a.m. and 6
; p.m.
•
I

•

t

***

BIDWEll - Poplar Ridge
Freewill Baptist Church will hold

\ Sunday morning service at I 0 a.m.,
· ~Mning service, 6:30 . p.m. with
: interim pastor John Elswick.

''

.; ***

; ADDISON -Preaching service
: at Addison Freewill Baptist Church
: at 6 p.m. with Rick Barcus preach:. ing.

***

BULAVILLE - Bulaville
: Chu~~:h, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.;Wonhip service- 10:30 a.m.,
6 p.m. with Rev. Bob Hood
preaching.

***
MERCERVILLE- Edna
Chapel Sunday School services
begin at I 0 a.m.

***

-.

MIDDLEPORT- Hope Baptist Chun::h will have services at 11
a.m. and 6 p.m.

*"""
CADMUS-. Homecoming at

• St. Martin's Luthetan Chit~~:h, Ger• man Ridge Road with poduck at
1 p.m.

*"""
GALLIPOLIS- Songfest, 7
p.m., at New Life Chun::h of God,
offAirport Rd behind Car Quest
Auto Parts warehouse, with 'the
Kings Harmony'. Refrffiunents
served afterwml.

Anonymous Miracles in Recovery
Group, St Peter's Episcopal
Church, 7:30 p.m.
"'*11
"
CHESfi!RE -TOPS Cfike
OffPounds Sensibly) meeting,
Cheshire United Methodist
Chun:h, 10- ti a.m. CaD Ann
Mitchell at 388-8004 for information.

-

***
VINTON - Huntington
Grange #731 will hold their regular meeting at 7:30 p.m , with
poduck to foDow.

'

"'"'"'

IUUDion

GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolia
chapter TOPS (lake 0!' Pounds

25, at Raccoon C111ek County
Park Shelcemowe #S. Call 256Senaibly) meetina. Fine Church of . 6028 f'or information.
the Numne, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Call
Shirley Boster 446-1260.
The George and Emma
(Williams) Swain family reunion
GALLIPOLIS -John Gee
wiD~ held june 18 at o.a
Black Historical Center, Inc. open • Mcintyre Park fiom 11 a.m.-dark.
to· the public, 10 a.m.-2 p.m
Potluck dinner at 1 p.m. Bring
lawn chai,n. •
C:::HESHIRE .:... Horne ownenhip education classet will be
Rio Grande High School alumni
held today through Friday 6om 6- and former teacher reunion at the
9 p.m. at the Cheshire GalliaJames A. Rhodes Student Center
Meigs Community Action Agency on the University of Rio Grande
office, 8010 SR 7 N.You must
campus. Registration will be at I 0
attend to _
ljuaiify for special
a.m. at $2 per family - SI single,
reduced interest r.1te offer. For
lunch at noon. Bring a covered
information, call367-7341.
dish per family and table service.
. So_ft' drinks provided.

""""'

""""'

.

*"""

***
RJO GRANDE -The Cherry
Ridge Band will provide music as
part ofthe Fathen Day celebration

: at Calvaty Baptist Chu~~:h. Pastor

: ]aoe Lang will be preaching. The
: chu~~:h is located at the comer of
: East College and SR 588.
*"""
•
• BIDWElL - Rev. Jake Fry will
: preach at Clark Chapel at 7 p.m.
•

I

•

I

•

••

I

I

*""" 19
Moadlry,Jun•
*"'*
GALLIPOLIS- Natcotics

•

fimd roiMn of Ill)' type. ltmu ..._
prlnlod 11 opace permltl _..d cannot
be ponnteed to run a opedlic number ofdayo.

***

Bible School

Anonymous meeting, St. Peter's ·
Episcopal Chu~~:h, 8 p.m.

CROWN CITY -Victory
Baptist Church, June 19-23,6:308:45 p.in. nightly, with theme; On ·
Christian Soldiers.

"'"'*

GALLIPOLIS- ChooseTh
Lose Diet Group, 9 a.m. at Grace
United Methodist Church. For
information call256-1535.

*"'*
GALLIPOLIS - Al--Anon
meeting at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, 8 p.m.

***

GALLIPOLIS- New Life
Lutheran Chu~~:h 12 Step Spiritual
Growth Program, 6:45 p.m.

***
GALLIPOLIS - Prayer/praise
meeting, 7 p.m., Fint Church of
the Nazarene.

~I'"·.

***

\IL"'

i {!~:~.

~- ·,· "~;,.:
l' ." •'~ ...

"'"'*

hiE .,

.'

.

RA.CINE -- Constmce Mowery . Parker-Campbell of Racine and the
'- 'ruld Nicholas Adams are announcing late Roger Adams. He is a 1993 grad:: tileir engagement and upcoming uate of Southern High School and is
''1ilairiage.'
.
. abo currendy serving in the U S. Air
The bride-elect is the ~ghter of Foll:e.
Mr. and Mn. Dennis E. Swei~ of
The open church wedding will be
Elysburg. Pa. She is a 1998 graduate of July 8 at 2 p.m. at the Reorganized
~Qthem Columbia High School, Church ofJesus Christ of Latter Day
'teitawma, Pa. and is currendy serving Saints, Pordand. A reception will
r i!_1 the U, S.Air Fon:e.
·
i:mmediatdy follow at McCoy's Inn
.:; "Her fiance is the sop of.Nancy Best Western, Ripley,WVa.

'' ~.

~tetPity

\'r-"-

0

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h-.. ..
"c ,

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PUPPETS &amp;. BIBLE STORIESREFRES
S

Hfzrd was the husband iff Meigs native, Carlotta

Ramona Compton Uizrd, who now lives in the Los

·Diamonds
· Solitaires
· Engagement Rings
· 14K Gold Chains
·Watches

!JLCQfliS1tiiO!I(S !II~ Jf£/W£.£!1/Y

.
'•

CH

High Quality· Grut S.rvlcflo Lowe•t Price
TWO LOCATIONS
· 151 2nd Ave. Gallipolis· 446-2842
!51 Mill St·

:·

·E
J elr
Xper1 8W Y

Repair Service

.,

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

of God's Word .

SUNDAY, June 18
RACINE Theiss family
reunion planning committee
meeting, Sunday, 2 p.m at David
Yost residence. Tenth annual
reunion will be held July 9, at Star
Mill Park, Racine.

•••

MONDAY,June 19

'
actors, radicr, television and
stage performers, and other

LETART - Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m., office
building.

show business celebrities.
Below the " name of each

BRADBURY Vacation
Bible School, Bradbury Church
of Christ, 9 to 1:30 each day for
ages 2 to 16. Theme, "Stay on
Track with Jesus." Crafts, music,
recreation, refreshments and study

celebrity on th~ five pointed
star is :i small round emblem
which illustrates the celebrity's category of honor with
one of five symbols.

•••

TUESDAY, June 20
CHESTER Shade River
Lodge 453, special meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m. Work in the EA
degree.
POMEROY - Meigs County Health Department immunization clinic, Tuesday, Each child to
be accompanied by parent or
legal guardian, Shot records to be
provided.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
446-2342 or 992-2156

rtfie rtfiougfits Of1Jad
.'If simple small town fol#.,
'Dad, #.new nothing about
Jfomer, Sfia#.espeare, Xipling or :Keats,
!J3ut, fie #.new it all too well,
Jfow to grow rice, cotton or corn;
rtoiled all fiis life tilling tfie fields,
Undisturbed by tfie fieai ojtfie tropical sun.
So well fie #.new, fiow to love,
:And fiow to care; anytime,
Jfe was a sugarcane for tfie needy;
If motfier expressed fier concerns about
'(fie extravaganza of fiis giving sprees,
Jfe would just look at fier and smile.

..

:Never I can forget, tfie way fie toucfied
:My deepest senses, on tfie day I left fiome
'for medical scfiool, witfi tfie pearls of fiis soul:
"lt's tfie people in your fiearl tfiat will
mali.e you ricfi, not tfie money in tfie banli.. "
rtfie man wfio fiad spent fiis life growing
rpeanuts, never fiad a peanut in fiis soul.
years since fit departed
'10 anotfier world; fie still sfiows up,
'During tfie time of my distress, or need,
.'As tfie grace in mama's lovesoml! smiles,
Or, tfie sparfi.le in £.ily's awesome eyes.
It is

•

I

Imagination is an important quality
to encourage. Children tend to be
happier and more motivated when
they are able to use their
imagination constructively! Call a
Holzer Medical Center RN for any
health care concern you have
'''
,.'
about those you care about.

/ I

1100 Fourth Avenue .
r

BY CHARLENE HDEFI.ICH
.
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

' POMEROY - The late
area. She was the dauohter oif,the late Uizlter
··Jay Ward, creator and produc- Anoeles
&lt;&amp;
6
er of syndicated cartoon feaand Norma Compton and the sister of the late Dr.
,,~res -,.a~ - -well -.as. several
Norbert Compton, all ofPomtroy. ·
i national brand cartoons, will
.. ~e given a star on the Holly- her husband, Lee Jacobs of
In addition to cartoon fea' wood Walk of Fame next Pomeroy,
received
an tures, Mr. Ward also develweek.
engrayed invitation to the oped cartoons for brand
, • Ward was the husband of unveiling but will be unable names like Quisp and Quake
~¥eigs
native, - Carlotta to attend due to business and Captain Crunch .
t 'B-:amona Compton Ward, who commitments.
The Hollywood Walk of
~ow lives in the Los Angeles _ Mr. Ward is being honored Fame, the world\ most
~a. She was the daughter of for his many syndicated car- famous sidewalk, is a star"'tlj.e late Walter and Norma toon features including ·the studded 18 block area on
• Cumpton and the sister of
"tlre late Dr: Norbert Comp- popular Rocky and Bullwin- Hollywood Boulevard and
l;j'on, all of Pomeroy.
Ide, George of the Jungle, and adjacent streets .
The renowned sidewalk
· _:; _T he unveiling of Mr. Crusader Rabbit. A couple of
~ard's star at . 7080 Holly- his cartoons were made into stars salute celebrities which
,..,\rood Boulevard will take movies. Rocky and Bullwin~ made Hollywood great from
"Place at 11:30 a.m. Wednes- kle is just now being releaseil the silent film stars of yester;;.day.
while George of the Jungle year to the modern action
~_, Ramona Kay Compton,
was in theaters a couple of heros of today's blockbusters.
The stars honor movie
1\lece of the Mrs. Ward, and years ago.

"

:I

6 am until2 am •

\i

c§IJ{alesfi 'Patel
Compliments of .

:Nicole fR_asfiid

?days a week

~; :1-800-462-5255

GallipoUs, Ohio

I

I

.

·

STC

versity. She is employed by the
Hillsborough County School
District of Tampa, Fla., as a
speech-language pathologist . .
Craig is a 1992 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School, and a
1997 graduate o( Ohio University, with dual bachelor degrees
in management information sys.tems and organizational communications. He is employed by
Kforce.com of Tampa as an
independent computer consultant.
Their wedding will be held
July 8, 200b.

::cartoon creator Jay Ward to receive a Walk of Fame star

HUGE SAVINGS ON FINE JEWELRY

CALL 446-0324 -TRANSPORTATION

'13" per hundred

Mowery-Adams engagement

:.f:
...

EVERYONE IS WELCOME

.i..-.... ...., )'. - ·- - ..... _ ....... ,f" ••• .,..-:...... ~"""'.hl.::f6:....,.,..;.-...;;~
Iring Thll Ad In 1nd Get A Loen For

'•

e· .

-

,

740-992-CASH
'
2274
1' E·Mall: lnsta_cae~@~otmall.com
~~,,.,.., .Jt-.-

'

"

GALLIPOLISWedzel
Kingery and Cheryl 'Kingery'
Smith, of Gallipolis, announce
the engagement and upcoming
wedding of their son, Craig, to
Tressa Shields, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Shields Jr. of
Cadiz, Ohio.
Tressa is a 1992 graduate of
Buckeye Local High School and
a 1996 graduate of Ohio University with a bachelor's degree
in hearing and speech sciences
and a master's degree in c~m­
munication disorders
from
Southern Conneticut State Uni-

9:30 -NOON

'.r"''":'.'.-.'"'..0::&lt;\,

Bring your
*Laet checking statement • last pay checkoo;;;~~"·~
• Pholo 10 • Uti»ty bill with name &amp; ac
· 1111 Wtlt Meln Street
Pomeroy, OH 4575

?OO(A

E 19,_

***

Payday Loans a Check Cashing

,. ;;ce4

~~ ' ' \

..

YOUR BIG EVENT .

•'

GALLIPOLIS'- Gallipolis
Church of Christ in Christian
Union, June 26-July 1, 6:30 - 9
p.m., ages 1-16. For information,
call446-0730.

INSTA·CA$H

\?LAC

Ask for'Angie .

~~0~

Chqn::h wiD hold Vacation Bible
School,June 17,19 and 20 from
'tO a.m.-2 p.m. daily. Theme: Outback Games: Hope of Glory Jesus In You.

~-.

Bring your lawn chair ,a'rid
join us for a whole lot of
Blues, Brews, &amp; Barbecues at
the 6th annual Friend~ .-of
,..
Front Street, Bank OJTi!,
Marietta - Red, White and
'Blues' Festival. , Admission
is $5; all proceeds benefit
downtown
Marii'Ha
enhanceme-n t projects.
,:
For general informa-ticln
call (740) 374-6206; 'fc)r
press information call M'ilce
Mullen at (740) 374-943~:·

Nicholas Adams and Constance Mowery

'.

"""*
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Baptist

CASH IN 15 MINUTES

•

,

992-6566 or 992-6316

v~s

"'**
GALLIPOLIS -Alcoholics

Cynthia is a 199:j graduate of
Heigs High SchOQl and a 1998
graduate of Hocking College
with an Associate degree in
Applied Science.
The groom is a 1989 gradu,• te
of Waham:i High School an~, is
employed at Kyger Creek ~:r,er
. Plant.

Spa IIVallbie for llllller pdll (Op to 20)
\l?e

R±MWM

*"'*

Thesday,June 20

engagen1ent

Trays-Veglfllble, Melt, Ole11e
(Akes lld Plel
OIOOie from • '-II' vnty
en OUJ' men1 or Cl1llle your own IT1Inl.

Tho Communlcy C~ II publbhod 11 • &amp;.a ..me. to nonpradt
pups wbhlna: to 111110unce mootlnp allll opeclol ......... 'The colondar
II DDt dooiJihod to prom- oaleo or

**"'

*"'*
GALLIPOLIS -Bell Chapel
will host 1Wo for Jesus at 7 p.m.

"'**

***
The St10ud and Nellie Houck
family 111union will be held June

"'"'"'

Shields-Kingery engagement

Blues festival set for June :So

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Shield&amp; and Craig Kingery

LETART- Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Harbour of Letart announce the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Aimee
Renee, to J. Ryan Lindsay, son of Mr. and Mn. Peter Lindsay of Morgaqtown.
The bride-to-be is a 1995 graduate ofWaharna High School and a
2000 graduate ofWestVirginia University with a master of science in
industrial relations. She is employed by Resource Consultants, Inc. in
Capitol Heights, Md.
The prospective groom is a 1993 graduate of Morgantown High
School. He is a 2000 graduate of WVU with a degree in business
administration with an emphasis in accounting. He is employed by
Reznick, Fedder and Silverman of Bethesda, Md.
The wedding will be at 4 p.m. Aug. 12 at Suncrest United Methodist
Church (Drummond Chapel) in Morgantown.

'

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admirer of poetry

Ask your physician
about
medication concerns

�•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point PINsant, WV

,

Sunday, June

.,-_.

"'a, 2GDO

tltunbap 1!timt• ·tlttntinrl • Page C3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

--· .

•

,: Engagements

Meeker-Hartung engagement
POMEROY ~ Amy Meeker
and Jed Hartung will be married on July I at Jensen Beach,
Fla.
The bride- elect, daughter of
Fred and Kit Meeker of Jensen
Beach, Fla. is a graduate qf
Martin County High School
and Florida State University
where she received bachelor
degrees in -elementary education
and speech language pathology.
She currently teaches first grade
in Indianapolis, Ind .
Her fiance is the son of Ed
and Sharon Hartung of Avon
Lake, and the grandson of Laura

Mae Hartung nice of Pomeroy
and the la te William E. Hartung,
and -Marigole Ritchie Wilson of
Circleville and the late H. Alvin
Ritchie.
He is a graduate of Avon
Lake High School and Ohio
University where he received a
degree in electrical engineering
and computer science. He was a
military inteUigence officer in
the U. S. Army for four years,
leaving active military service
with the rank of Captain. He is
currently a project manager for
Thomson Consumer Electronics in Indianapolis, Ind.

Harbour-Lindsay engagement
•

~Treua

Dena Greene and Philip Way _

Alfred ROUih and Cynthia Roulh

· ~oush-l{oush

Greene- Way engagement
Todd Miller and

GALLIPOLIS Dannie
Meghan Kolcun
and Carlene Greene, of Gallipolis, announce the engagement and upcoming wedding
of their daughter, Dena Noele
has a degree-in Biology/Chemistry. Greene to Jonathan Philip
James is a 1987 graduate of Gallia Way, son of Gary and
Academy and a 1992 graduate of the Ruthann Way, of Millersburg,
UnivelsityofRio Grande. He is cur- Ohio.
rendy employed at Holzer Medical
The bride-elect is a 1992
Clinic.
graduate of Gallia Academy
The wedding will take place July and a 1996 graduate of Ohio
14,2000,at 5:30p.m at Gr.~ce Unit- Wesleyan Univ4111ity. She is
ed Methodist Chun::h. Monsignor employed as ·a ta(Cher for the
William Meyers will officiate.
Coach Hilliard City School

District.
POMEROY - Cynthia Ann
The groom-elect is a 1991 Roush and Alfred Lewis Roush
graduate of West Holmes exchanged wedding vows June 3
High School and a 1995 grad- at Enterprise United ,Methodist
uate of Ohio Wesleyan Uni - Church in Pomeroy. The bride is
versity. He is a member of the the daughter of Harold and Sue
Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Roush of Ru!land. The groom is
. He is employed as a teacher the son of Rusty and Sharon
Roush of Mason.
for Delaware City Schools
and coaches at Ohio Wesleyan
University. He is the grandson
of On eta Way.
the wedding will be held
July I, 2000, at First Presby· MARIETTA The
terian Church, Gallipolis.
Friends of Front Street and
Bank One, Marietta present
the 6th Annual Red, White
and ~Blues' Festival Friday,
june 30 from 6 p.m. to midnight at the Lafayette Hotel,
101 Front Street in historic
•'*"""
downtown Marietta.
The
CROWN CITY -Revival at
festival will feature Chicago
Kings Chapel Church, June 11-18,
Blues legend, Shirley King.
7:30 ilighdy, Witli the Rev. Bob
Also performjng will ' be
Thompson as evangelist. Special
Haywire Dog, the Edwardssinging each night.
Tobar band, Mad River,
De_n nis Tarman and the
CROWN CITY- Kings
Blues Cannibals, and Jive 5.
Chapel Chun:h will hold revival
June 11-18,7:30 p.m. nishtl}l with
Rev. Bob Thompson preachina.
Singen include: Monday - Beavier .
Family;'Thaday - Bluearaa
Gospei;Wednesday- Church
Singen;Thunday - French Family;
Friday - Singen for Christ; Saturday - Hayes Family: and Sunday Headed Home.

Kolcun-Miller engagement _
G.AILIPOUS - Andrew and
Debol2h Kocun, of Gallipolis,
announce the engagement and
upco~ wedding of their daughter Meghan Ann Kolcun to James
Todd Millet, son of J.O and Carla
Miller, of Gallipolis,
Megban is a 1995 graduate of Gallia Aeaderny and a 2000 graduate of
- the Univmity of Rio Grande, She

***
Sunday, June 18
***
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Nan:otics Anonymous _Tti-coUnty
group meeting. 611 Viand St., 7:30

P.lll-

·•**

KANAUGA-Wonhip servjce
at Silwr Memorial FWB Chun:h; 6
p.m., putor Aridrew Plnolll,

'

***

~ RIO GRANDE -The Church
, of Christ, a non-denolnlnational
· church located at SR 325 North,
:. will meet for bible llUdy at 10 a.m.,
' wonhip service at 11 a.m. and 6
; p.m.
•
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BIDWEll - Poplar Ridge
Freewill Baptist Church will hold

\ Sunday morning service at I 0 a.m.,
· ~Mning service, 6:30 . p.m. with
: interim pastor John Elswick.

''

.; ***

; ADDISON -Preaching service
: at Addison Freewill Baptist Church
: at 6 p.m. with Rick Barcus preach:. ing.

***

BULAVILLE - Bulaville
: Chu~~:h, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.;Wonhip service- 10:30 a.m.,
6 p.m. with Rev. Bob Hood
preaching.

***
MERCERVILLE- Edna
Chapel Sunday School services
begin at I 0 a.m.

***

-.

MIDDLEPORT- Hope Baptist Chun::h will have services at 11
a.m. and 6 p.m.

*"""
CADMUS-. Homecoming at

• St. Martin's Luthetan Chit~~:h, Ger• man Ridge Road with poduck at
1 p.m.

*"""
GALLIPOLIS- Songfest, 7
p.m., at New Life Chun::h of God,
offAirport Rd behind Car Quest
Auto Parts warehouse, with 'the
Kings Harmony'. Refrffiunents
served afterwml.

Anonymous Miracles in Recovery
Group, St Peter's Episcopal
Church, 7:30 p.m.
"'*11
"
CHESfi!RE -TOPS Cfike
OffPounds Sensibly) meeting,
Cheshire United Methodist
Chun:h, 10- ti a.m. CaD Ann
Mitchell at 388-8004 for information.

-

***
VINTON - Huntington
Grange #731 will hold their regular meeting at 7:30 p.m , with
poduck to foDow.

'

"'"'"'

IUUDion

GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolia
chapter TOPS (lake 0!' Pounds

25, at Raccoon C111ek County
Park Shelcemowe #S. Call 256Senaibly) meetina. Fine Church of . 6028 f'or information.
the Numne, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Call
Shirley Boster 446-1260.
The George and Emma
(Williams) Swain family reunion
GALLIPOLIS -John Gee
wiD~ held june 18 at o.a
Black Historical Center, Inc. open • Mcintyre Park fiom 11 a.m.-dark.
to· the public, 10 a.m.-2 p.m
Potluck dinner at 1 p.m. Bring
lawn chai,n. •
C:::HESHIRE .:... Horne ownenhip education classet will be
Rio Grande High School alumni
held today through Friday 6om 6- and former teacher reunion at the
9 p.m. at the Cheshire GalliaJames A. Rhodes Student Center
Meigs Community Action Agency on the University of Rio Grande
office, 8010 SR 7 N.You must
campus. Registration will be at I 0
attend to _
ljuaiify for special
a.m. at $2 per family - SI single,
reduced interest r.1te offer. For
lunch at noon. Bring a covered
information, call367-7341.
dish per family and table service.
. So_ft' drinks provided.

""""'

""""'

.

*"""

***
RJO GRANDE -The Cherry
Ridge Band will provide music as
part ofthe Fathen Day celebration

: at Calvaty Baptist Chu~~:h. Pastor

: ]aoe Lang will be preaching. The
: chu~~:h is located at the comer of
: East College and SR 588.
*"""
•
• BIDWElL - Rev. Jake Fry will
: preach at Clark Chapel at 7 p.m.
•

I

•

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•

••

I

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*""" 19
Moadlry,Jun•
*"'*
GALLIPOLIS- Natcotics

•

fimd roiMn of Ill)' type. ltmu ..._
prlnlod 11 opace permltl _..d cannot
be ponnteed to run a opedlic number ofdayo.

***

Bible School

Anonymous meeting, St. Peter's ·
Episcopal Chu~~:h, 8 p.m.

CROWN CITY -Victory
Baptist Church, June 19-23,6:308:45 p.in. nightly, with theme; On ·
Christian Soldiers.

"'"'*

GALLIPOLIS- ChooseTh
Lose Diet Group, 9 a.m. at Grace
United Methodist Church. For
information call256-1535.

*"'*
GALLIPOLIS - Al--Anon
meeting at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, 8 p.m.

***

GALLIPOLIS- New Life
Lutheran Chu~~:h 12 Step Spiritual
Growth Program, 6:45 p.m.

***
GALLIPOLIS - Prayer/praise
meeting, 7 p.m., Fint Church of
the Nazarene.

~I'"·.

***

\IL"'

i {!~:~.

~- ·,· "~;,.:
l' ." •'~ ...

"'"'*

hiE .,

.'

.

RA.CINE -- Constmce Mowery . Parker-Campbell of Racine and the
'- 'ruld Nicholas Adams are announcing late Roger Adams. He is a 1993 grad:: tileir engagement and upcoming uate of Southern High School and is
''1ilairiage.'
.
. abo currendy serving in the U S. Air
The bride-elect is the ~ghter of Foll:e.
Mr. and Mn. Dennis E. Swei~ of
The open church wedding will be
Elysburg. Pa. She is a 1998 graduate of July 8 at 2 p.m. at the Reorganized
~Qthem Columbia High School, Church ofJesus Christ of Latter Day
'teitawma, Pa. and is currendy serving Saints, Pordand. A reception will
r i!_1 the U, S.Air Fon:e.
·
i:mmediatdy follow at McCoy's Inn
.:; "Her fiance is the sop of.Nancy Best Western, Ripley,WVa.

'' ~.

~tetPity

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PUPPETS &amp;. BIBLE STORIESREFRES
S

Hfzrd was the husband iff Meigs native, Carlotta

Ramona Compton Uizrd, who now lives in the Los

·Diamonds
· Solitaires
· Engagement Rings
· 14K Gold Chains
·Watches

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High Quality· Grut S.rvlcflo Lowe•t Price
TWO LOCATIONS
· 151 2nd Ave. Gallipolis· 446-2842
!51 Mill St·

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Repair Service

.,

COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

•••

of God's Word .

SUNDAY, June 18
RACINE Theiss family
reunion planning committee
meeting, Sunday, 2 p.m at David
Yost residence. Tenth annual
reunion will be held July 9, at Star
Mill Park, Racine.

•••

MONDAY,June 19

'
actors, radicr, television and
stage performers, and other

LETART - Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.m., office
building.

show business celebrities.
Below the " name of each

BRADBURY Vacation
Bible School, Bradbury Church
of Christ, 9 to 1:30 each day for
ages 2 to 16. Theme, "Stay on
Track with Jesus." Crafts, music,
recreation, refreshments and study

celebrity on th~ five pointed
star is :i small round emblem
which illustrates the celebrity's category of honor with
one of five symbols.

•••

TUESDAY, June 20
CHESTER Shade River
Lodge 453, special meeting, Tuesday, 7 p.m. Work in the EA
degree.
POMEROY - Meigs County Health Department immunization clinic, Tuesday, Each child to
be accompanied by parent or
legal guardian, Shot records to be
provided.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
446-2342 or 992-2156

rtfie rtfiougfits Of1Jad
.'If simple small town fol#.,
'Dad, #.new nothing about
Jfomer, Sfia#.espeare, Xipling or :Keats,
!J3ut, fie #.new it all too well,
Jfow to grow rice, cotton or corn;
rtoiled all fiis life tilling tfie fields,
Undisturbed by tfie fieai ojtfie tropical sun.
So well fie #.new, fiow to love,
:And fiow to care; anytime,
Jfe was a sugarcane for tfie needy;
If motfier expressed fier concerns about
'(fie extravaganza of fiis giving sprees,
Jfe would just look at fier and smile.

..

:Never I can forget, tfie way fie toucfied
:My deepest senses, on tfie day I left fiome
'for medical scfiool, witfi tfie pearls of fiis soul:
"lt's tfie people in your fiearl tfiat will
mali.e you ricfi, not tfie money in tfie banli.. "
rtfie man wfio fiad spent fiis life growing
rpeanuts, never fiad a peanut in fiis soul.
years since fit departed
'10 anotfier world; fie still sfiows up,
'During tfie time of my distress, or need,
.'As tfie grace in mama's lovesoml! smiles,
Or, tfie sparfi.le in £.ily's awesome eyes.
It is

•

I

Imagination is an important quality
to encourage. Children tend to be
happier and more motivated when
they are able to use their
imagination constructively! Call a
Holzer Medical Center RN for any
health care concern you have
'''
,.'
about those you care about.

/ I

1100 Fourth Avenue .
r

BY CHARLENE HDEFI.ICH
.
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

' POMEROY - The late
area. She was the dauohter oif,the late Uizlter
··Jay Ward, creator and produc- Anoeles
&lt;&amp;
6
er of syndicated cartoon feaand Norma Compton and the sister of the late Dr.
,,~res -,.a~ - -well -.as. several
Norbert Compton, all ofPomtroy. ·
i national brand cartoons, will
.. ~e given a star on the Holly- her husband, Lee Jacobs of
In addition to cartoon fea' wood Walk of Fame next Pomeroy,
received
an tures, Mr. Ward also develweek.
engrayed invitation to the oped cartoons for brand
, • Ward was the husband of unveiling but will be unable names like Quisp and Quake
~¥eigs
native, - Carlotta to attend due to business and Captain Crunch .
t 'B-:amona Compton Ward, who commitments.
The Hollywood Walk of
~ow lives in the Los Angeles _ Mr. Ward is being honored Fame, the world\ most
~a. She was the daughter of for his many syndicated car- famous sidewalk, is a star"'tlj.e late Walter and Norma toon features including ·the studded 18 block area on
• Cumpton and the sister of
"tlre late Dr: Norbert Comp- popular Rocky and Bullwin- Hollywood Boulevard and
l;j'on, all of Pomeroy.
Ide, George of the Jungle, and adjacent streets .
The renowned sidewalk
· _:; _T he unveiling of Mr. Crusader Rabbit. A couple of
~ard's star at . 7080 Holly- his cartoons were made into stars salute celebrities which
,..,\rood Boulevard will take movies. Rocky and Bullwin~ made Hollywood great from
"Place at 11:30 a.m. Wednes- kle is just now being releaseil the silent film stars of yester;;.day.
while George of the Jungle year to the modern action
~_, Ramona Kay Compton,
was in theaters a couple of heros of today's blockbusters.
The stars honor movie
1\lece of the Mrs. Ward, and years ago.

"

:I

6 am until2 am •

\i

c§IJ{alesfi 'Patel
Compliments of .

:Nicole fR_asfiid

?days a week

~; :1-800-462-5255

GallipoUs, Ohio

I

I

.

·

STC

versity. She is employed by the
Hillsborough County School
District of Tampa, Fla., as a
speech-language pathologist . .
Craig is a 1992 graduate of
Kyger Creek High School, and a
1997 graduate o( Ohio University, with dual bachelor degrees
in management information sys.tems and organizational communications. He is employed by
Kforce.com of Tampa as an
independent computer consultant.
Their wedding will be held
July 8, 200b.

::cartoon creator Jay Ward to receive a Walk of Fame star

HUGE SAVINGS ON FINE JEWELRY

CALL 446-0324 -TRANSPORTATION

'13" per hundred

Mowery-Adams engagement

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Iring Thll Ad In 1nd Get A Loen For

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1' E·Mall: lnsta_cae~@~otmall.com
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"

GALLIPOLISWedzel
Kingery and Cheryl 'Kingery'
Smith, of Gallipolis, announce
the engagement and upcoming
wedding of their son, Craig, to
Tressa Shields, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Shields Jr. of
Cadiz, Ohio.
Tressa is a 1992 graduate of
Buckeye Local High School and
a 1996 graduate of Ohio University with a bachelor's degree
in hearing and speech sciences
and a master's degree in c~m­
munication disorders
from
Southern Conneticut State Uni-

9:30 -NOON

'.r"''":'.'.-.'"'..0::&lt;\,

Bring your
*Laet checking statement • last pay checkoo;;;~~"·~
• Pholo 10 • Uti»ty bill with name &amp; ac
· 1111 Wtlt Meln Street
Pomeroy, OH 4575

?OO(A

E 19,_

***

Payday Loans a Check Cashing

,. ;;ce4

~~ ' ' \

..

YOUR BIG EVENT .

•'

GALLIPOLIS'- Gallipolis
Church of Christ in Christian
Union, June 26-July 1, 6:30 - 9
p.m., ages 1-16. For information,
call446-0730.

INSTA·CA$H

\?LAC

Ask for'Angie .

~~0~

Chqn::h wiD hold Vacation Bible
School,June 17,19 and 20 from
'tO a.m.-2 p.m. daily. Theme: Outback Games: Hope of Glory Jesus In You.

~-.

Bring your lawn chair ,a'rid
join us for a whole lot of
Blues, Brews, &amp; Barbecues at
the 6th annual Friend~ .-of
,..
Front Street, Bank OJTi!,
Marietta - Red, White and
'Blues' Festival. , Admission
is $5; all proceeds benefit
downtown
Marii'Ha
enhanceme-n t projects.
,:
For general informa-ticln
call (740) 374-6206; 'fc)r
press information call M'ilce
Mullen at (740) 374-943~:·

Nicholas Adams and Constance Mowery

'.

"""*
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Baptist

CASH IN 15 MINUTES

•

,

992-6566 or 992-6316

v~s

"'**
GALLIPOLIS -Alcoholics

Cynthia is a 199:j graduate of
Heigs High SchOQl and a 1998
graduate of Hocking College
with an Associate degree in
Applied Science.
The groom is a 1989 gradu,• te
of Waham:i High School an~, is
employed at Kyger Creek ~:r,er
. Plant.

Spa IIVallbie for llllller pdll (Op to 20)
\l?e

R±MWM

*"'*

Thesday,June 20

engagen1ent

Trays-Veglfllble, Melt, Ole11e
(Akes lld Plel
OIOOie from • '-II' vnty
en OUJ' men1 or Cl1llle your own IT1Inl.

Tho Communlcy C~ II publbhod 11 • &amp;.a ..me. to nonpradt
pups wbhlna: to 111110unce mootlnp allll opeclol ......... 'The colondar
II DDt dooiJihod to prom- oaleo or

**"'

*"'*
GALLIPOLIS -Bell Chapel
will host 1Wo for Jesus at 7 p.m.

"'**

***
The St10ud and Nellie Houck
family 111union will be held June

"'"'"'

Shields-Kingery engagement

Blues festival set for June :So

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Shield&amp; and Craig Kingery

LETART- Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Harbour of Letart announce the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Aimee
Renee, to J. Ryan Lindsay, son of Mr. and Mn. Peter Lindsay of Morgaqtown.
The bride-to-be is a 1995 graduate ofWaharna High School and a
2000 graduate ofWestVirginia University with a master of science in
industrial relations. She is employed by Resource Consultants, Inc. in
Capitol Heights, Md.
The prospective groom is a 1993 graduate of Morgantown High
School. He is a 2000 graduate of WVU with a degree in business
administration with an emphasis in accounting. He is employed by
Reznick, Fedder and Silverman of Bethesda, Md.
The wedding will be at 4 p.m. Aug. 12 at Suncrest United Methodist
Church (Drummond Chapel) in Morgantown.

'

.

•

•

'

'"

admirer of poetry

Ask your physician
about
medication concerns

�Sunday, Juno 18,2000

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

\IVhat will become of Conn.
Jnan's homage.to his faith?

cabins
from Plge'C1

•

,_.

Rae Ellen and Bnldd Schultz

Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Jack O'Bryar:rt

Gregory- 0' Bryant wedding
POMEROY - Leigh Ann Gregory
and Matthew Jack O'Bryant
Mr. and Mra. Keith Allen Weaver
were united in marriage on March
It at Sharon Baptist Chun:h in
Ironton.
The bride is the daughter of
.
NEW . HAVEN Keith Mason, W.Va. and a 19 95 grad- Toney and Connie Gregory of Kitt5
, Allen Weaver and Jennifer Lynn uate of West Virginia Universi- Hill, a 1997 graduate of Ironton
Naslund were married at the ty-Parkersburg, with an AAS in High School, and the attending
Immanuel Lutheran Church in engineering technology. He is Ohio University Southern Campus
Altona, HI. on Jan . 15 at 2 p.m .
where she is majoring in education.
currently employed by Triple
Pastor Tim Anderson perThe groom, son of Lamar and
formed the ceremony for the Crown Services as a transporta- Joyce •o'Bryant of Pomeroy, is a
son of Lee and Marie Weaver of tion specialist. Jennifer is a 1996 graduate of Meigs High
: New Haven, W. Va . and the Cemral College, Naperville, Ill, School and also currently attending
daughter of Ron and Bonnie with a bachelor of arts in mar- the Ohio University Southern
Naslund of Altona, Ill.
keting and is employed by Wal- Campus majoring in education.
The bride was escorted by
The ceremony was performed
Mart as a jewelry sales associher father and given in marby Rev. Lamar O'Bryant and Rev.
riage by her parents, Ronda ate.
Steve Harvey with music provided
A reception honoring the by Lee McCormack, cousin of the
McQueen , sister of the bride,
was . maid of honor. Doug newlyweds will be held July IS bride, Kathy Filkins, friend of the
Naslund, brother of the bride, from 2 to 4 p.m. at the New groom, Brooke O'Bry:mt, niece of
was
best
man.
Kaitlyn Haven Community Center. the groom, and Mike and Marty
McQueen , niece of the bride, The couple currently resides in O'Bryant, brothers of the groom.
served as flower girl, and
Maid of honor was Sara Malone
Matthew Naslund, nephew of Fott Wayne, Ind. They are plan- and the flower girl was Kaylee
nina a September honeymoon McCormack, cousin of the bride.
the bride, was ringbearer.
The groom is a 1992 gradu- to Walt Disney World and The best man was John Jeffers, and
ate of Wahama High School, Washington, D. C.
ushers were Ben and Andrew

O'Bryant, nephews of the groom. ·
The bride, escorted by,. her
father, wore a long white shortsleeved dress with empire wais~ H er
bouquet, made by her mother, was
of white roses and tiger lilies with
an accent of pink rose buds, silver
ribbon, and pink butterflies. She
wore a headpiece of white silk
leaves and roses accented with pearls
from which fell shoulder-length
veiling of tulle.
·
The maid of honor was in da
long A-line pink gown and carried
a bouquet of pink roses and lilies
accented with pink and silver ribboos and butterflies. The flower girl
wore a tea length ice pink dress decorated in pink rosebuds and carried
two rosebuds with a pink lily in the
center.
·
A reception followed in the
church fellowship hall. The hostesses
were Kathy O'Bryant, sister-in-law
of the groom, and Mary Beth and
Brooke O'Bryant, nieces of the
groom.
'l'he couple honeymooned in
Gatlinburg, Tenn.
'l'hey reside in Ironton .

Naslund- Tttaver wedding

(j

Schultz ceremony
BIDWELL Rae Ellen of Washingtonvill e, Ohio, i s a
Keen.e Schultz, Second .Lieu- 1999 graduate of th e U niversitenant, United States Army, ty of Rio Grande .
and Bradd Allen Schultz, First
Bradd , the son of Roger and
Lieutenant, United
States
Army, of Fort Bliss, Texas , will Beverly Schultz of BidweJI,
have a ceremony to renew Ohio, is a 1997 graduate of the
their vows before family and University of Rio Grande. :
friends, on Saturday, July 1 at 2
A reception will be held fqlp.m. at the Ewington · Church
lowing the ceremony at the
of Christ in Christian Union .
Rae Ellen, the daughter of University of Rio Grande
Randy and Mary Ann Keene Rhodes Student Center.

Window

GRANDFATHER

Treatment
20%· 30%

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Sheers
Verticals
Verosil!s

Wood D!lnds

E! takes a funny new turn with its 'Hollywood Off-Ramp' anthology
NEW YORK (AP) - A lot of
TV talk these days is about digitized
this, satellite-fed that
In such a high-tech climate, it's
ironic that TV's brain trust has done
a fa•t rewind to the medium's infancy for creative inspiration.
Or so it seems. Consider the
new-found fascination with live
dramas, such as CBS' April airing of
"Fail Safe" (live and in black-andwhite, to boot 1). Professional
wmtling, a mainstay ofTV's formative years, is kicking rump on both
cable and broadcast neti.vorks. And
ABC's smash-hit "Who Wants to Be
a Millionaire" is a throwback to the
big-money quiz shows of the 1950s,
Maybe these seeming echoes
from yesteryear are anomalies. But if
the TV Community is really living in
the past, here's one other old-time

idea worth trying anew: the TV
anthology.
While the luster of the anthology-dominated "Golden Age" of
television has somehow taken on a
greater sheen with the passage of
time, today the term "anthology" is
scorned, if not forgotten.
Even so, its modern-day potential
is here for all to see thanks to E!
Entertainment · Television, which
three weeks ago unveiled a comedy
anthology, "Hollywood Off-Ramp:'
Airing Monday at 10 p.m. Eastern, "Hollywood Off-Ramp" is not
only fresh and fun , but also serves as
a penuasive argument for how the
anthology form could be adapted in
numerous other ways to revitalize
network lineups.
Anthologies abounded on TV in
the 1950s. Series like "U.S. Steel

Hour" and "Armslj,rong Circle Theater'' were showcases for stand.-alone
teleplays by some of the nation's
finest writers. The only continuity
from week to week was the series'
impririurur and, sometimes, a host.
The "anthology" term also
applies to such long-ago fare as
'"Twilight Zone;•"Alfred Hitchc~ck ,
Presen~" and the Ronald Reaganhosted "General ElecrricTheater:'
Since the early 1960s, the anthology form has hung on mostly
thank. to linle-watchcd, short-lived
series with "story" in their titles
(remember "Ghost Story;' "Medical
Story,'' "Love Story;' "Lifestories,"
"FBI: The Untold Stories" or
"Amazing Stories''?).
Now "Hollywood Off-Ramp"
suggest5 that anthologies are ripe for
a comeback, at least as an alternative

to the creatively barren half-hour
sitcom.
"Off-JUmp," the first fictional
series E! has mounted, stays true to
that network's sensibilities by focus-

- Includes

Installation
Res!deqtlal or

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12 MONTH S. SAME AS CASH
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.SECOND &amp; GRAPE ST.

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• INTERIOR DESIGN
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• WAVERLY DEALER
• FINE FURNITURE

The large denomination is
preparing a supplement to the
hypmal and has. sent 70,000 samplers to give an advance look to
delegates at regional conferences

due in December.
The 285 pieces in the S10 softcover will include contemporary
Christian "ptaise choruses:"

Blake

thiid album, due out next year, he
hopes to retutn to West Virginia
for more ministry. He ministry
involves special music services,
concerts, revivals, lay renewal
weekends, crusades and other
local church events.
His music is getting air play on
local radio stations and his tapes
and CDS are available at Willa's
Bible Bookstore in Point Pleasant
or by contacting his mother at
675-53,44.
To book a ministry appearance
call 1-9W-371-9239.
In the eqd, fame and fortune
isn't what Blake is sc:eking.
"This isn't about making
money, its about serving and giving praise to God.",

• NEW DELHI, India (AP) :&gt;After the beating death of a
~Roman Catholic priest, security
;t'orces India's most populous state
,.are providing protection for all
;t.christian missionary schools, the
·' ress Trust of India report5.
,. Police in Uttar Pradesh continue
oto investigate the June 6 murder of
PapC1
; the Rev. George Kuzhikandan by
:unidentified attackers in Mathura,
only had one Sunday off a
~~90 miles southeast ofNew Delhi.
month. Now his job affords him.
Two days later there were four
14 days off. He asks for no salary
church bombings in India, though
when he travels to churches or
I i10 deaths resulted.
meetings, accepting only Jove
; Archbishop Alan de Lastic, presioffe(ings.
•dent of the national Catholic bish"In the beginning I wanted to
iops' conference, said India's Chrishave a big tour bus and sing auto(tia~s face their worst challenge in
g~aphs. I gel so ~rapped up iri
l6ve decades.
paying bills. I just said Lord !' m
\
praying for a job, you work out
'
~
the rest. Now, 99.9 percent of the
time when ever I'm asked to
come sing, I'm already oi!Work."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) As he continues to work on his
:The United Methodist Hymnal,

from

446-0332 •

~--------·------~·--------------------------------~
;,

··.

: Methodists
look at
: hymnal supplement

.;

••

"·.=-::.=:.:...:...:.:.:.:.:.:.:..:.....=.:.::.:,:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____,

Holzer Clinic
lung line
Ask a professional. ..
Q: What it a Farmer's Lung?

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44~~7

Enjoy Summer's Best

••

GaWpolil Career CoUege
·'1fl/fl

www.courtstreet rlll.com

446·7619

www.eurekanet.com/-lisa
hfl index.html

JlWIURI

www.ejew~le!1.colll/lawneyjewelers

www.vellmar.com

Santpal S. Mavl, MD
lntern111 Medlclne/Pulmonology

If you have questions you would like answered in the ·
Holzer Clinic Lung Line, mail them to:
Black Lung/Occupational Lung Disease Clinic
90 Jackson Pike *Gallipolis, OH 45631
~--------·-----,_..-__j

'

expenence.
50: I'd give anything if Dai:l
we re here now so [ could ta lk this
over with him. Too bad [ didn:t
appreciate how smart he was. ;!
co uld have learned a lot fro m
him.
- ANONYMO US

Dad worked·hard
planning for your
future.
Now it's time to
plan his.
•

The Great Depression shaped many lives in many ways, but
through it all your father hoped you'd have a better chance .
It's hard to admit it, but some grandparents today can't always
cope. The house that made so much sense at one time suddenly
becomes a burden. Medications can get confusing when you're
taking a lot. Meals aren't as pleasant when you're eating by
yourself. And often here's an element that people don't like to
talk about- loneliness .
Now there is a sensible,·affordable alternative. We have nurses
and around-the-clock resident assistants, horne cooked meals, a
homelike atmosphere, and plenty of residents to share things
with. Dad arid you can start living again.

v

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tvleals on trego
o Safe fun in tre !:til
Heroals.Jppktnetlts -Fact or Fiction

Be Sure To Attend:

Middleport, Ohio

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

THURSDAY JUNE22

www.ohlorlverbears.com ;

Please send ma.IJlOre
Information about your
community.

7:00TO 9:00p.m.

last name

first name

C. H. McKenzie .AgricUltural Center

street address

Wj'lylllt
OF GALLJPOUS

•

state

city

zip

phone number

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis OH 45631

. '

•

from PageCl

o

•

Ohio River Bear
Company

·list Your Web Address
Jenv
Ford Call Matt Rodgers 446~2342 Ext. 17\
ww~.;::;~~~~b~e~~:m or Matt
992·2156 E.xt. 105:
..

Abby

0 Foods that Prevent Di~ee
'

de composing siloge. Symptoms include fever, ch ills , m'uscle oches , shortness
of breath ond we ight loss . Steroids such os prednisone ore usua lly the
treatment of c hoice . Inha lers ore also helpful lor patient comfo r t. The
prognosis lor someone with Former's lung is exce llent with eorly diagnos is
ond treotment.

" Poppy" shows VlSltOI~ how to
make cedar shingl~~ and how to
plant a "three sisters" garde n.
"You plant squash to shade the
ground, corn to grow through it,
and pole beans for the corn w
climb up," he said. " !ndiaqs
believe if you honored the th~
sisters you'd never go hungry." ;
T he Adamsville Village provided 36 free school tours in 28 days
this year. ·
T he village is open to the public Me morial Day to Labor Day.
Mo nday through Sunday 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m.

. . · · Hmlthy Seasonal Ideas

GRILL IN HEARING

Pomeroy, 'Ohio

A . Former 's Lung is o diseose related lo the inho lo tion of fungus , dust or

•

security for schools

•
•
'•

Expert lnatallat!on

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

The Hurt Cabin bas always
remained in the va.lley; its first
reported location was along
"Granny's Branch" near the Shelter house road crossing. It's probably the oldest building in the village.
"Nehemiah Wood built cabins
around the farm to ho use the 100
freed slaves that came with him
and hi~ family in 1805,"-she said.
At one time, a man named
Thompson raised nine girls in
this home. Rio Grande College
srudents often Jived in the house,
the last in 1952. The log house
was moved in 1979 to its present
locationr11t is used today as a smaU
crafts building.
"The Ingles Cabin is the only
cabin where visitors can go
upstain;' she said .
The two-story log structure
with rough V-notching is probably one of the largest original log
structures of it5 kind. Erected
arou9d 1860, ·it served as a
schoolhouse from 1860-1918.
The upstairs was most likely used
as living quarters for the teacher.
In later years it served as a general store, residence and, finally, a
barn.
"Kids and adults alike get a kick
out of ringing the school beD."
The Log Crib Barn was moved
to its current location from a strip
mine in Muskingham County.
"This is where the blacksmith
shop is located. We would love w
find someone to volunteer to be
our blacksmith."
The Phillips Cabin became the
first log building reconstructed
on the site of the Adamsville village in 1974-75. Previously, a
canoe livery business operated on
the site from a small metal building. Phillips replaced the metal
building in 197 4 until 1986,
when a new canoe livery was
constructed on the south side of
U.S.35.
The cabin ts used as a crafts
building during special events and
as a lodgins facility for overnight
canoe excunions.
The Evans Cabin was donated
to the Bob Evans Farm by
Robert L. "Bob" Evans in 1992.

Measuring '2 1-x-16, this cabin is
constructed of pine, poplar and
oak which was grown on the
original 130-acte property. All of
the logs are original from 1880.
"This is where ' Poppy' demonmates pe riod farm tools,"
Dempsey said.
Jn the R evolutio nary War
Cemetery there are many 1800s
grave sites, incl uding th at of
Adan1 Rickaba ugh (176 1-1836)
who founded the forme r settlement of A&lt;\amsviUe on Raccoon
Creek and fought in the R evolutionary War from 1777-8 1.
The cemetery is also the fin al
resting place of several m embers ·
of the N ehemiah Wood family
and H .S. French (1833-191 4).
The cemetery is gu arded by a
U.S. cannon of 1781.
" Some o f the furni shings
throughout th e village are on
loan from Helen Lewis of Cora
Mill;' Dempsey said.
The mothe r- daughter team
says it's a pleasure to spend time
together. "l love history and children and want to help pass on traditional arts and crafts," Kelly said.

cs

___ ____

Carpet· Save 20%-25%

ing
Hollywood-. ~ast, p~nt
and future - and muung 115 nch
comic possibilities. The host is Brian
Unger (best k'nown as a correspondent on Comedy Central's "The
Daily Show"), who lends the perfect
macabre touch that Rod Serling
brought to "TWilight Zone;' plus the
dry wit of Alfred Hitchcock on his
longrunning series.

•.
ATERBURY, Conn. (AP) were factory- made church starues, including the
; ::
Nearly every clay for 30 years, contents of the Vatican booth at the 1964 World's
; ·:
John Greco would close his law Fair. The pieces considered most valuable were pro'' •
practice in th~ mid-afternoon tected from vandals with chicken wire.
:; :
and make his way up a rocky hill
"Everything John Greco did at Holy Land was
; :~erlooking the city.
the opposite of what is recblll1)1ended for liturgical
,: • A diminutive man who once considered hilnself arc;· said Marek Czarnecki, an ic,onographer who
:,.'tho frail for the priesthood, Qreco would cart con- admires the site. "But he did it with divine inspira. ~:Q:ete, scrap metal, discarded church starues and tion. He just war.ted to ·bring the experience of
~;Qeparrrnent store mannequins to his plot of land.
Holy Land to the people:'
:.~ • At an age when his peers were retiring, Greco
As Greco's health faded, so did Holy Land's. Ply' ~gan his life's work: a miniature representation of wood and plaster, the main ingredients of many dis·.:J~rusalem and walk-through catechism he called plays, became \varped with exposure. The Grotto
. floly Land USA. Busloads of church groups - an and other structures became shelter fot the homeless
visited Holy as the neighborhood grew poorer.
1 estimated 40,000' people annually : Land after it opened in 1958.
The site was dosed for renovations in 1984 and
.;. But when Greco died in l986· at the age of90, no never reopened.
· poe knew how to tend his labor of love. The 17-acre
A few years before his death, Greco turned over
···site, willed to an order of nun·s, has been battered by the property to the Religious Teachers Filippini.The
; ~eather, vandals and neglect and is slowly being nuns, who cared for Greco in his small shingled
.:,destroyed.
·
home outside Holy Land's .gates, have often been
·,.:- Its loss is mourned by admirers of American folk blamed for its demise.
"They did nothing to protect it and didn't have
art. who consider it a rreasure, and by others inspired
spiritually by Greco's creation. ·
the vision to have a plan;' said Salvatore Scalora, a
" This was a service to the people;' said the Rev. University of Connecticut art professor whose classStanley Smolenski, who once celebrated Mass in es in the early 1980s often received guided toun
makeshift chape~ at Holy Land. "I don't think it from Greco.
. should just be relegated to the past."
Others say it is unfair to criticize the nuns, whose
The most enduring piece of Holy Land remaining priorities are caring for their aging sisters and the
· is a 50"foot cross still lights the night over this city of poor. They have restored the Holy Land chapel.
106,000, a struggling industrial center once known where Masses are sometimes held, but don't have the
: (or the number of priests it turned out.
resources for an all-out restoration, said Czarnecki.
.. At i~ peak, Holy Land contained 150 buildings. A
The nuns have. mainly shunned outside input and
'cave-like grotto, 8 feet hi~~;h bv 18 feet wide and decline to comment on the charges of neglecting the
·~ousing a Nativity scene, was the centerpiece. on site. Sister Christine Spirito, the leader of the aider,
the hill rising behind it were crammed dozens of said the site would reopen later this year as a "center
structures representing Bethlehem and Jerusalem. for spiriruality." She would not give details.
'
Beyond that stood a rudimentary Egypt, complete
For a few years, a loosely organized group tried to
with tiny pyramids and a sphinx.
· save Holy Land. A $100-a-plate gala taised funds, and
A Roman Catholic Stations of the Cross wound a million-dollar restoration plan was proposed. It
through the site, ending with a life-size hilltop rep- went nowhere.
rcsentation ofJesus' cruciUxion.
.
"Response from officials was, 'Yeah, this is great;
"You could be standing UJl" to your knees in but no one ever took hold of it and moved forward;'
J~rusalern and the buildings out in Waterbury looked said Frank Davino, a retired city planner who still
~' li!ce toy houses:• said Sandy Maineri, who as a child pushes for the revitalization of Holy Land.
:; ~tched Holy Land develop.
Today Holy Land stands eerily deserted. Some dis;;: :The exhibit5 Were far from orthodox. In the 200- plays, including the catacombs, have been dismantled
1• fOot-long catacombs, stories of rnartyn were told for safety. The gates are chained shut. A sign still pro. ' !Wng headless mannequins laid in makeshift tombs. cliims "Welcome to Holy Land."
(.: The inn in Bethlehem where Mary and joseph were
The site enters the news now and then. In 1993 an
~ turned away in the story· of Jesus' birth had a No independent candidate for mayor included in his
~: Vacancy sign in motel-style lettering.
·
platform a vow to restore the site. The region's
;~ The Garden of Eden was a trailer with its side tourism center still gets several calls a month.
&lt;:.- removed;wigged mannequins represented Adam and
On a recent visit, Czarnecki said sadly, "This was
ij;Eve,. .
,
.
John Greco's personal project and no one knew
~ Mlni!;leii with the materials rescued from the trash what to do with it when he was gone."

..
:'·-----,-----------------.--'-----...;_
...:,.
...:·.".,
RELIGIOUS BRIEFS ·
,.
,,...
•
las~ revised in 1989, is already out from May through July. The full
Indian state orders
·. ~
song book, "The Faith We Sing;• is
of date.

Topes Quality

00

eu nbllP ~unrs -!itrntmrl • Page

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

:sunday, June 18, 2000

'

,,

•
•

OWHP

�Sunday, Juno 18,2000

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

\IVhat will become of Conn.
Jnan's homage.to his faith?

cabins
from Plge'C1

•

,_.

Rae Ellen and Bnldd Schultz

Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Jack O'Bryar:rt

Gregory- 0' Bryant wedding
POMEROY - Leigh Ann Gregory
and Matthew Jack O'Bryant
Mr. and Mra. Keith Allen Weaver
were united in marriage on March
It at Sharon Baptist Chun:h in
Ironton.
The bride is the daughter of
.
NEW . HAVEN Keith Mason, W.Va. and a 19 95 grad- Toney and Connie Gregory of Kitt5
, Allen Weaver and Jennifer Lynn uate of West Virginia Universi- Hill, a 1997 graduate of Ironton
Naslund were married at the ty-Parkersburg, with an AAS in High School, and the attending
Immanuel Lutheran Church in engineering technology. He is Ohio University Southern Campus
Altona, HI. on Jan . 15 at 2 p.m .
where she is majoring in education.
currently employed by Triple
Pastor Tim Anderson perThe groom, son of Lamar and
formed the ceremony for the Crown Services as a transporta- Joyce •o'Bryant of Pomeroy, is a
son of Lee and Marie Weaver of tion specialist. Jennifer is a 1996 graduate of Meigs High
: New Haven, W. Va . and the Cemral College, Naperville, Ill, School and also currently attending
daughter of Ron and Bonnie with a bachelor of arts in mar- the Ohio University Southern
Naslund of Altona, Ill.
keting and is employed by Wal- Campus majoring in education.
The bride was escorted by
The ceremony was performed
Mart as a jewelry sales associher father and given in marby Rev. Lamar O'Bryant and Rev.
riage by her parents, Ronda ate.
Steve Harvey with music provided
A reception honoring the by Lee McCormack, cousin of the
McQueen , sister of the bride,
was . maid of honor. Doug newlyweds will be held July IS bride, Kathy Filkins, friend of the
Naslund, brother of the bride, from 2 to 4 p.m. at the New groom, Brooke O'Bry:mt, niece of
was
best
man.
Kaitlyn Haven Community Center. the groom, and Mike and Marty
McQueen , niece of the bride, The couple currently resides in O'Bryant, brothers of the groom.
served as flower girl, and
Maid of honor was Sara Malone
Matthew Naslund, nephew of Fott Wayne, Ind. They are plan- and the flower girl was Kaylee
nina a September honeymoon McCormack, cousin of the bride.
the bride, was ringbearer.
The groom is a 1992 gradu- to Walt Disney World and The best man was John Jeffers, and
ate of Wahama High School, Washington, D. C.
ushers were Ben and Andrew

O'Bryant, nephews of the groom. ·
The bride, escorted by,. her
father, wore a long white shortsleeved dress with empire wais~ H er
bouquet, made by her mother, was
of white roses and tiger lilies with
an accent of pink rose buds, silver
ribbon, and pink butterflies. She
wore a headpiece of white silk
leaves and roses accented with pearls
from which fell shoulder-length
veiling of tulle.
·
The maid of honor was in da
long A-line pink gown and carried
a bouquet of pink roses and lilies
accented with pink and silver ribboos and butterflies. The flower girl
wore a tea length ice pink dress decorated in pink rosebuds and carried
two rosebuds with a pink lily in the
center.
·
A reception followed in the
church fellowship hall. The hostesses
were Kathy O'Bryant, sister-in-law
of the groom, and Mary Beth and
Brooke O'Bryant, nieces of the
groom.
'l'he couple honeymooned in
Gatlinburg, Tenn.
'l'hey reside in Ironton .

Naslund- Tttaver wedding

(j

Schultz ceremony
BIDWELL Rae Ellen of Washingtonvill e, Ohio, i s a
Keen.e Schultz, Second .Lieu- 1999 graduate of th e U niversitenant, United States Army, ty of Rio Grande .
and Bradd Allen Schultz, First
Bradd , the son of Roger and
Lieutenant, United
States
Army, of Fort Bliss, Texas , will Beverly Schultz of BidweJI,
have a ceremony to renew Ohio, is a 1997 graduate of the
their vows before family and University of Rio Grande. :
friends, on Saturday, July 1 at 2
A reception will be held fqlp.m. at the Ewington · Church
lowing the ceremony at the
of Christ in Christian Union .
Rae Ellen, the daughter of University of Rio Grande
Randy and Mary Ann Keene Rhodes Student Center.

Window

GRANDFATHER

Treatment
20%· 30%

CLOCKS
Save 40%-~0%
Stock or special
order
Shown:
Golden Oak
Triple chime
Ref!.$1810

Sheers
Verticals
Verosil!s

Wood D!lnds

E! takes a funny new turn with its 'Hollywood Off-Ramp' anthology
NEW YORK (AP) - A lot of
TV talk these days is about digitized
this, satellite-fed that
In such a high-tech climate, it's
ironic that TV's brain trust has done
a fa•t rewind to the medium's infancy for creative inspiration.
Or so it seems. Consider the
new-found fascination with live
dramas, such as CBS' April airing of
"Fail Safe" (live and in black-andwhite, to boot 1). Professional
wmtling, a mainstay ofTV's formative years, is kicking rump on both
cable and broadcast neti.vorks. And
ABC's smash-hit "Who Wants to Be
a Millionaire" is a throwback to the
big-money quiz shows of the 1950s,
Maybe these seeming echoes
from yesteryear are anomalies. But if
the TV Community is really living in
the past, here's one other old-time

idea worth trying anew: the TV
anthology.
While the luster of the anthology-dominated "Golden Age" of
television has somehow taken on a
greater sheen with the passage of
time, today the term "anthology" is
scorned, if not forgotten.
Even so, its modern-day potential
is here for all to see thanks to E!
Entertainment · Television, which
three weeks ago unveiled a comedy
anthology, "Hollywood Off-Ramp:'
Airing Monday at 10 p.m. Eastern, "Hollywood Off-Ramp" is not
only fresh and fun , but also serves as
a penuasive argument for how the
anthology form could be adapted in
numerous other ways to revitalize
network lineups.
Anthologies abounded on TV in
the 1950s. Series like "U.S. Steel

Hour" and "Armslj,rong Circle Theater'' were showcases for stand.-alone
teleplays by some of the nation's
finest writers. The only continuity
from week to week was the series'
impririurur and, sometimes, a host.
The "anthology" term also
applies to such long-ago fare as
'"Twilight Zone;•"Alfred Hitchc~ck ,
Presen~" and the Ronald Reaganhosted "General ElecrricTheater:'
Since the early 1960s, the anthology form has hung on mostly
thank. to linle-watchcd, short-lived
series with "story" in their titles
(remember "Ghost Story;' "Medical
Story,'' "Love Story;' "Lifestories,"
"FBI: The Untold Stories" or
"Amazing Stories''?).
Now "Hollywood Off-Ramp"
suggest5 that anthologies are ripe for
a comeback, at least as an alternative

to the creatively barren half-hour
sitcom.
"Off-JUmp," the first fictional
series E! has mounted, stays true to
that network's sensibilities by focus-

- Includes

Installation
Res!deqtlal or

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The large denomination is
preparing a supplement to the
hypmal and has. sent 70,000 samplers to give an advance look to
delegates at regional conferences

due in December.
The 285 pieces in the S10 softcover will include contemporary
Christian "ptaise choruses:"

Blake

thiid album, due out next year, he
hopes to retutn to West Virginia
for more ministry. He ministry
involves special music services,
concerts, revivals, lay renewal
weekends, crusades and other
local church events.
His music is getting air play on
local radio stations and his tapes
and CDS are available at Willa's
Bible Bookstore in Point Pleasant
or by contacting his mother at
675-53,44.
To book a ministry appearance
call 1-9W-371-9239.
In the eqd, fame and fortune
isn't what Blake is sc:eking.
"This isn't about making
money, its about serving and giving praise to God.",

• NEW DELHI, India (AP) :&gt;After the beating death of a
~Roman Catholic priest, security
;t'orces India's most populous state
,.are providing protection for all
;t.christian missionary schools, the
·' ress Trust of India report5.
,. Police in Uttar Pradesh continue
oto investigate the June 6 murder of
PapC1
; the Rev. George Kuzhikandan by
:unidentified attackers in Mathura,
only had one Sunday off a
~~90 miles southeast ofNew Delhi.
month. Now his job affords him.
Two days later there were four
14 days off. He asks for no salary
church bombings in India, though
when he travels to churches or
I i10 deaths resulted.
meetings, accepting only Jove
; Archbishop Alan de Lastic, presioffe(ings.
•dent of the national Catholic bish"In the beginning I wanted to
iops' conference, said India's Chrishave a big tour bus and sing auto(tia~s face their worst challenge in
g~aphs. I gel so ~rapped up iri
l6ve decades.
paying bills. I just said Lord !' m
\
praying for a job, you work out
'
~
the rest. Now, 99.9 percent of the
time when ever I'm asked to
come sing, I'm already oi!Work."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) As he continues to work on his
:The United Methodist Hymnal,

from

446-0332 •

~--------·------~·--------------------------------~
;,

··.

: Methodists
look at
: hymnal supplement

.;

••

"·.=-::.=:.:...:...:.:.:.:.:.:.:..:.....=.:.::.:,:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____,

Holzer Clinic
lung line
Ask a professional. ..
Q: What it a Farmer's Lung?

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Enjoy Summer's Best

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lntern111 Medlclne/Pulmonology

If you have questions you would like answered in the ·
Holzer Clinic Lung Line, mail them to:
Black Lung/Occupational Lung Disease Clinic
90 Jackson Pike *Gallipolis, OH 45631
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'

expenence.
50: I'd give anything if Dai:l
we re here now so [ could ta lk this
over with him. Too bad [ didn:t
appreciate how smart he was. ;!
co uld have learned a lot fro m
him.
- ANONYMO US

Dad worked·hard
planning for your
future.
Now it's time to
plan his.
•

The Great Depression shaped many lives in many ways, but
through it all your father hoped you'd have a better chance .
It's hard to admit it, but some grandparents today can't always
cope. The house that made so much sense at one time suddenly
becomes a burden. Medications can get confusing when you're
taking a lot. Meals aren't as pleasant when you're eating by
yourself. And often here's an element that people don't like to
talk about- loneliness .
Now there is a sensible,·affordable alternative. We have nurses
and around-the-clock resident assistants, horne cooked meals, a
homelike atmosphere, and plenty of residents to share things
with. Dad arid you can start living again.

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Heroals.Jppktnetlts -Fact or Fiction

Be Sure To Attend:

Middleport, Ohio

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

THURSDAY JUNE22

www.ohlorlverbears.com ;

Please send ma.IJlOre
Information about your
community.

7:00TO 9:00p.m.

last name

first name

C. H. McKenzie .AgricUltural Center

street address

Wj'lylllt
OF GALLJPOUS

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city

zip

phone number

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis OH 45631

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de composing siloge. Symptoms include fever, ch ills , m'uscle oches , shortness
of breath ond we ight loss . Steroids such os prednisone ore usua lly the
treatment of c hoice . Inha lers ore also helpful lor patient comfo r t. The
prognosis lor someone with Former's lung is exce llent with eorly diagnos is
ond treotment.

" Poppy" shows VlSltOI~ how to
make cedar shingl~~ and how to
plant a "three sisters" garde n.
"You plant squash to shade the
ground, corn to grow through it,
and pole beans for the corn w
climb up," he said. " !ndiaqs
believe if you honored the th~
sisters you'd never go hungry." ;
T he Adamsville Village provided 36 free school tours in 28 days
this year. ·
T he village is open to the public Me morial Day to Labor Day.
Mo nday through Sunday 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m.

. . · · Hmlthy Seasonal Ideas

GRILL IN HEARING

Pomeroy, 'Ohio

A . Former 's Lung is o diseose related lo the inho lo tion of fungus , dust or

•

security for schools

•
•
'•

Expert lnatallat!on

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

The Hurt Cabin bas always
remained in the va.lley; its first
reported location was along
"Granny's Branch" near the Shelter house road crossing. It's probably the oldest building in the village.
"Nehemiah Wood built cabins
around the farm to ho use the 100
freed slaves that came with him
and hi~ family in 1805,"-she said.
At one time, a man named
Thompson raised nine girls in
this home. Rio Grande College
srudents often Jived in the house,
the last in 1952. The log house
was moved in 1979 to its present
locationr11t is used today as a smaU
crafts building.
"The Ingles Cabin is the only
cabin where visitors can go
upstain;' she said .
The two-story log structure
with rough V-notching is probably one of the largest original log
structures of it5 kind. Erected
arou9d 1860, ·it served as a
schoolhouse from 1860-1918.
The upstairs was most likely used
as living quarters for the teacher.
In later years it served as a general store, residence and, finally, a
barn.
"Kids and adults alike get a kick
out of ringing the school beD."
The Log Crib Barn was moved
to its current location from a strip
mine in Muskingham County.
"This is where the blacksmith
shop is located. We would love w
find someone to volunteer to be
our blacksmith."
The Phillips Cabin became the
first log building reconstructed
on the site of the Adamsville village in 1974-75. Previously, a
canoe livery business operated on
the site from a small metal building. Phillips replaced the metal
building in 197 4 until 1986,
when a new canoe livery was
constructed on the south side of
U.S.35.
The cabin ts used as a crafts
building during special events and
as a lodgins facility for overnight
canoe excunions.
The Evans Cabin was donated
to the Bob Evans Farm by
Robert L. "Bob" Evans in 1992.

Measuring '2 1-x-16, this cabin is
constructed of pine, poplar and
oak which was grown on the
original 130-acte property. All of
the logs are original from 1880.
"This is where ' Poppy' demonmates pe riod farm tools,"
Dempsey said.
Jn the R evolutio nary War
Cemetery there are many 1800s
grave sites, incl uding th at of
Adan1 Rickaba ugh (176 1-1836)
who founded the forme r settlement of A&lt;\amsviUe on Raccoon
Creek and fought in the R evolutionary War from 1777-8 1.
The cemetery is also the fin al
resting place of several m embers ·
of the N ehemiah Wood family
and H .S. French (1833-191 4).
The cemetery is gu arded by a
U.S. cannon of 1781.
" Some o f the furni shings
throughout th e village are on
loan from Helen Lewis of Cora
Mill;' Dempsey said.
The mothe r- daughter team
says it's a pleasure to spend time
together. "l love history and children and want to help pass on traditional arts and crafts," Kelly said.

cs

___ ____

Carpet· Save 20%-25%

ing
Hollywood-. ~ast, p~nt
and future - and muung 115 nch
comic possibilities. The host is Brian
Unger (best k'nown as a correspondent on Comedy Central's "The
Daily Show"), who lends the perfect
macabre touch that Rod Serling
brought to "TWilight Zone;' plus the
dry wit of Alfred Hitchcock on his
longrunning series.

•.
ATERBURY, Conn. (AP) were factory- made church starues, including the
; ::
Nearly every clay for 30 years, contents of the Vatican booth at the 1964 World's
; ·:
John Greco would close his law Fair. The pieces considered most valuable were pro'' •
practice in th~ mid-afternoon tected from vandals with chicken wire.
:; :
and make his way up a rocky hill
"Everything John Greco did at Holy Land was
; :~erlooking the city.
the opposite of what is recblll1)1ended for liturgical
,: • A diminutive man who once considered hilnself arc;· said Marek Czarnecki, an ic,onographer who
:,.'tho frail for the priesthood, Qreco would cart con- admires the site. "But he did it with divine inspira. ~:Q:ete, scrap metal, discarded church starues and tion. He just war.ted to ·bring the experience of
~;Qeparrrnent store mannequins to his plot of land.
Holy Land to the people:'
:.~ • At an age when his peers were retiring, Greco
As Greco's health faded, so did Holy Land's. Ply' ~gan his life's work: a miniature representation of wood and plaster, the main ingredients of many dis·.:J~rusalem and walk-through catechism he called plays, became \varped with exposure. The Grotto
. floly Land USA. Busloads of church groups - an and other structures became shelter fot the homeless
visited Holy as the neighborhood grew poorer.
1 estimated 40,000' people annually : Land after it opened in 1958.
The site was dosed for renovations in 1984 and
.;. But when Greco died in l986· at the age of90, no never reopened.
· poe knew how to tend his labor of love. The 17-acre
A few years before his death, Greco turned over
···site, willed to an order of nun·s, has been battered by the property to the Religious Teachers Filippini.The
; ~eather, vandals and neglect and is slowly being nuns, who cared for Greco in his small shingled
.:,destroyed.
·
home outside Holy Land's .gates, have often been
·,.:- Its loss is mourned by admirers of American folk blamed for its demise.
"They did nothing to protect it and didn't have
art. who consider it a rreasure, and by others inspired
spiritually by Greco's creation. ·
the vision to have a plan;' said Salvatore Scalora, a
" This was a service to the people;' said the Rev. University of Connecticut art professor whose classStanley Smolenski, who once celebrated Mass in es in the early 1980s often received guided toun
makeshift chape~ at Holy Land. "I don't think it from Greco.
. should just be relegated to the past."
Others say it is unfair to criticize the nuns, whose
The most enduring piece of Holy Land remaining priorities are caring for their aging sisters and the
· is a 50"foot cross still lights the night over this city of poor. They have restored the Holy Land chapel.
106,000, a struggling industrial center once known where Masses are sometimes held, but don't have the
: (or the number of priests it turned out.
resources for an all-out restoration, said Czarnecki.
.. At i~ peak, Holy Land contained 150 buildings. A
The nuns have. mainly shunned outside input and
'cave-like grotto, 8 feet hi~~;h bv 18 feet wide and decline to comment on the charges of neglecting the
·~ousing a Nativity scene, was the centerpiece. on site. Sister Christine Spirito, the leader of the aider,
the hill rising behind it were crammed dozens of said the site would reopen later this year as a "center
structures representing Bethlehem and Jerusalem. for spiriruality." She would not give details.
'
Beyond that stood a rudimentary Egypt, complete
For a few years, a loosely organized group tried to
with tiny pyramids and a sphinx.
· save Holy Land. A $100-a-plate gala taised funds, and
A Roman Catholic Stations of the Cross wound a million-dollar restoration plan was proposed. It
through the site, ending with a life-size hilltop rep- went nowhere.
rcsentation ofJesus' cruciUxion.
.
"Response from officials was, 'Yeah, this is great;
"You could be standing UJl" to your knees in but no one ever took hold of it and moved forward;'
J~rusalern and the buildings out in Waterbury looked said Frank Davino, a retired city planner who still
~' li!ce toy houses:• said Sandy Maineri, who as a child pushes for the revitalization of Holy Land.
:; ~tched Holy Land develop.
Today Holy Land stands eerily deserted. Some dis;;: :The exhibit5 Were far from orthodox. In the 200- plays, including the catacombs, have been dismantled
1• fOot-long catacombs, stories of rnartyn were told for safety. The gates are chained shut. A sign still pro. ' !Wng headless mannequins laid in makeshift tombs. cliims "Welcome to Holy Land."
(.: The inn in Bethlehem where Mary and joseph were
The site enters the news now and then. In 1993 an
~ turned away in the story· of Jesus' birth had a No independent candidate for mayor included in his
~: Vacancy sign in motel-style lettering.
·
platform a vow to restore the site. The region's
;~ The Garden of Eden was a trailer with its side tourism center still gets several calls a month.
&lt;:.- removed;wigged mannequins represented Adam and
On a recent visit, Czarnecki said sadly, "This was
ij;Eve,. .
,
.
John Greco's personal project and no one knew
~ Mlni!;leii with the materials rescued from the trash what to do with it when he was gone."

..
:'·-----,-----------------.--'-----...;_
...:,.
...:·.".,
RELIGIOUS BRIEFS ·
,.
,,...
•
las~ revised in 1989, is already out from May through July. The full
Indian state orders
·. ~
song book, "The Faith We Sing;• is
of date.

Topes Quality

00

eu nbllP ~unrs -!itrntmrl • Page

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

:sunday, June 18, 2000

'

,,

•
•

OWHP

�•
•

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

Ptge'CI• 6unb1p Cl:imt1 ·6tnlintl

Sunday, Jllfle 18, 2000

.••..

..

~·
'•

.

COMMUNITY
CORNER

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY

,

"All those kids under one
roof:' sighed a parent of two
whose children will attend the
new Meigs Local Elementary
School when it opens in 2002.
-~She was expressing some
·.• concern about the recent decision by the Meigs Local Board
of Education to build one enor• mous elementary building
instead of two as was originally '
planned for the more than 950
elementary students of the dis., trict.
Adequate land, out of flood•. ing, in a central location, were
among the considerations in site
selection, and one location after
another was eliminated for one
reason or another, according to
one of the board members.
. When it finally came down to a
• decision, the general consensus
of the board was that there real. ly wasn't a "just right" site for a
second building.
Besides that the old Campbell farm along Route 124 with
· its nearly 100 acres is more than
adequate for a building large
" enough to house all the students. It's out of floods and it's
centrally located in the district
. which helps when it comes to
•· transporting students, particular' ly as it relates to how much time
; they spend on buses.
'
While all the elementary students will, indeed, be "under
·· one roof", the structure will
'· have two wings - one for
· kindergarlen through· second
· grade students, and the other for
third through fifth graders kind of two buildings in one
with a center shared areas.

::
.'
',
,

Charles L. and Wanda L. Hively

Hively 45th anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hoffman

Charles L. and Wanda L. Hively
celebrated theit 45th wedding
anmver.ary, Sunday, June 4, 2000.
They were marri ed June 4, 1955
POINT PLEASANT - John pany, and was a former meat-cut- by the Rev. Alfred Holley at the
· and Denise Ameel Bonecutter of ter. She has been a homeiTldker, home ofWanda's parents in GalPoi nt Pleasant celebrated their home school instructor and moti- lipolis, Ohio. T hey are the parents
of three daughter., Sharon (John)
2 ~... wedding anniversary June vational speaker for ladies conferSanders, Gallipolis, Charlene
14.
ences and retreats.
(Ca~lto n) Stroop, · Circleville, and
The couple were married on
The couple attends the Gospel Doris (Mark) Irwin, Proctorville.
Saturday, June 14, 1975, in New Lighthouse Church . They have T hey have six grandc hildren
Baltimore, Mich., at the home of sung gospel music for over two Travis
Sanders,
Ga llipolis,
the bride's mother, by the Rev. decades and are members of the Christopher and Devon Stroop,
Gary E. Beeker.
gospel quartet Eternity.
H e has been a chemical operaThe Bonecutters are the partor for the past 20 years for the · ents of three children,Johnathan,
Goodyear/ Shell Chemical Com- David, and Candy.
John and Denlae Bonecutter

Bonecutter 25th anniversary

Hoffman anniversary
CHESTER - Paul and Max- Janet Chafin of Crestline.
ene Hoffman., Chester, married Another daughter, Myrna Caron May 31, 1940 at Ashland, Ky. penter is deceased. They have 11
cele.b rated their 60th wedding grandchildren and eight greatanmversary recently with a fam- grandchildren.
ily picnic.
Hoffinan is the son of the late
The picnic was hosted by Peter and Estella Betzing Hofffamily members at the couple's man, and his wife is the daughhome on June 4.
ter . of the late Oris and Lucy
Mr. and .Mr.. Hoffman are the Srruth Gaul. He retired from
parents of Stephen and Terry Foote Mineral Corporation in
Hoffman. Chester; Beth Sher- New Haven. His wife is a homeman of Canal Winchester; and maker.

Circleville, Matt Irwin, · Ashton,
WVa., Jamie and Amy Irwin,
Proctorville.
C harles is a minister, and he and
Wanda are active members at Old
Kyger Free Will Baptist Church,
C heshire. He retired from Kyger
C reek power plant in 1992 with
34 1/2 years service. Wanda is a
homemaker. They live on ~ small
farm on Johnson Ridge Road,
Gallpolis.

SUBCRIBE
TODAY!

· Foragen reap bounty of wild edible plants
LINCOLN, Vt. (AP) - It was
the tail end of morel season and
the black flies were out, but
Robert Fuller wanted to check a
~ patch of woods,just in case.
·~
With a knife in hand and a
; v.:oven-woi:x:l basket strapped ~o
; his arm, Fuller crept among old
D?Ples and overgrown stone walls
• · on a Vermont hillside. He stepped
carefully amid matted brown
leaves and tender green ferns.
• Then he stc;&gt;pped abruptly.
"This feels like the riglit kind of
habitat," he said, surveying a sandy.
mossy spot below an opening in
the canopy. "It's like a sixth sense."
Seconds later, he spotted three
h~fty morels, spongy and coppercolored. Then others appeared:
One cluster was a few feet away.
another hid beneath a fern.
• ; It's the kind of discovery that
•• -~ drive foragers into a frenzy.
:-:f1)ller, a chef in Burlington, was
. 'nqticeably stirred.
:::~- "This is the most morels I've
~ seen since I've been in Vermont,"
~ he said.
.
.,: Fuller is part of a quiet subcul•· ·ture of modern-day gatherers who
: scour America's fields and forests
~ for wild edibles. Where others see
·~ .orily leaves . and sticks, they find
.
.vegetative treasures: mushrooms
.
'
• lnjnt, ginseng, berries.
••,;: Some forage purely for plea:. sure; others for profit. Nearly all
~. seem to share an enthusiasm not
•; just for the bounty secured but for
: th!' thrill of the hunt.

....

..
~

•

"When you find a lot of
morels, you jump up and down,"
said ~obert Resnik, treasurer of
the Vermont Mycology Association. "Black trumpets make me
just go crazy."
He and other members ofhis
local mushroom hunting group
hold outings every other Sunday
in the summer.
Resnik, a musician and a director of the Fletcher Free Library,
recalled how magical it was when
he spotted his first big find of
morels. Returning to Burlington
from a mushroom hunt in Benson •
he and his friends decided to make
another stop.
"We couldn't bear to go inside
because we'd had such a magical

•

MORE

day," he said. "We walked almost as
if we were being drawn by an
invisible arm .. • over a stream,
walked up to a huge elm."
There, they found so many
morels he had to take his shirt off
to carry them.
Successful hunts are the payoff
for learning where and when to
find the best. wild plants and
mushrooms while avoiding the
poisonous ones, such as the death
cap and o ther amanita mushrooms.
" People are scared of it, and
rightfully so. You can really get
into trouble;',said Resnik, who has
been foraging for 14 yean and has
read about 100 books on rnushr:boms,

Subscribe today:

LOCAL FOLKS

992-2156 or' 446-2342

...

•••

• •••

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Sunftre SE Coupe

Songs
Snach
Games
Bible Stories

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo
• Rear

NEW YORK (AP)- First it
was Kathie Lee Gifford and
sweatshops.
Now labor activists have
accused her morning show cohost Regis Philbin of attaching
his name to a clothing line made "
by a company with a history of
production at abusive foreign
factories.
Philbin appeared at Macy's
earlier this week to introduce a
shirt and tie line called "Regis
by the Van Heusen Company."
On Friday, members of the
UNITE garment workers'
union demonstrated inside
Macy's near a display of the
$77.50 cotton shirt and satin tie
ensembles that have become
Philbin's trademark attire on his
quiz show, "Who Wants to be a
Millionaire."
·
"We're giving him a chance

• Automatic, Air Co~lditlclnlnal

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
·

~1,150*
• Air Conditioning
• AM/Ffd Stereo

PlacQ:

Wheels

~ellow!:hip

Bapti!:t
Church

'Taxes. Tags, r~ Fees extra. Rebate 1ncluded In sale pr~e of new vehicle llsled where applicabkl. "On approved credit.
On selected rroclels Nol •esponsible lor lypograph~al errors . Prices Good June 141h Through June 161h.

$200 Coupon good
towll'd the pun:'-e
on 1ny lldJu!118bll bed

·-·----------·-"'"'1
·FLAIR
FURNrTUREA
l, Golllpulto Forrr, WV

6'75-13'71
'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Wearing aD black and .his signature.Kangol
hat. Samuel L. jackson was clearly the
coole.t cat On Hollyv.ood Boulewrd.
. About 500 tans gathered cwbside
Friday to w.w:h the "Shaft"star WJVeil
his sidewalk st2r, the 2,195ch dedicated along the f.uoolLI Hollywood
'IWt of Fame.
"Who \\Wida thunk it?" jackson
a*ed ., remember coming here in
1969 and looking at aD the names on

OH

448-704-4

'
VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,

~_.-j Dat~:

JunQ 19-2g
Tirn9: 9:00 ll.rn. - ~oon
AgfM:: 5-8th GtadQ

n~, · ...,~ ~~
, • . , ..

~

I

"''

West
And Custom Van Dealer.

Monday· Saturday 9 am • 9 pm
-8 pm

.,,
•

James
Sands
In 1874 and 1875 at least 15 different steamboats stopped at Gallipolis every week. Some even
used Gallipolis a~ homeport.
For instance, the Wild Gazelle
with Jonathan Hamilton as captain sailed between Gallipolis on
the south and Syracuse on the
north. It took the boat three hours
to go upriver and 3.5 hour.; to go
down river. The boat made more
stops going down river than
upriver.
The West Virginia left Gallipolis
every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday with a destination of Coalburg on the Kanawha River. The
boat left Coalburg .on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays. The
Frank Willard ran between Gallipolis and Ironton leaving Gallipolis every other day at 8 a.m.
The Ironton, Gallipolis, and
Pomeroy Tri-Weekly U.S. Mail
.Packet boat named the Billy
Collins traveled 3 times a week
down river and three times a
week upriver.
Stopping twice a week were the
James E. Rankin that ran between
Marietta and Cincinnati, the Salt
Valley that ran between Huntington and. Pittsburgh, the Julia No. 2
that went from Charleston to
Cincinnati, the Ohio No. 4 connecting Cincinnati to Pomeroy,
the St. James that went from
Cincinnati to Pomeroy, the Andes
that traveled from Pittsburgh to
Cincinnati and the Telegraph that

ran from Cincinnati to Pomeroy.
Capt. Sanford of the Salt Valley
later ran steamboats in Central
and South Amerka.
Other boats that came here in
1874-75 included the Clara Scott,
the Chesapeake and the Emma
Graham. The Enuna Graham was
known as the Regular Parker.burg, Pomeroy and Gallipolis TriWeekly U.S. Mail Packet, but it
actually went between Huntington and Parker.burg. It left Parkersburg every Monday,Wednesday
and Friday at 9 a.m. It left Gallipolis every Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at 3 a.m. It went
south to Huntington with the
mail, picked up the mail going
north and ended up in Parker.;burg later that day.
In 1874 most packets carried
passengers, freight and the mail.
Since the railroad did not reach
Gallipolis until 1880 most everything sold in Gallipolis stores
came here by boat. Included in
'the list c;&gt;f the most popul~rly
shippefl items would be glass,
sugar, molasses, tea, coffee, nails,
salt, soap and candles.
Items shipped out of Gallipolis
would have included agricultural
products like beans, butter, cheese,
fruit, eggs, flo ur, meat and grains
as well as manufactured items like
furniture, stoves, plo~. woolen
products, pumps and motor..
Steamb oats even brought to
town entertainment. In 1875 a
steamboat pushed the Barnum
circus on . a barge here. Once
docked the circus apparatus was
loaded on w~gons and taken to
the show grounds. In the 1870s
and 1880s most circuses in town
used the spot that now houses
First Baptist C hurch (old golf
course) or the fairgrounds on
eastern Avenue. Barnum played
here in 1875 and again in the
1880's. On the latter trip the

STEAMBOATS - The Emma Graham at one time ran between ~al­
Ii polls and Parkersburg. It was known as the regular Parkers~g.
Pomeroy and Gallipolis Tri-Weekly U.S . Mail Packet . In 1875, som~ -!15
steamboats stopped at Gallipolis: The picture is from a painti~(. by
William Reed .
·:

famous Jumbo the elephant was
with the Barnum circus.
In 1875 Barnum advertised that
he had 1000 men and horses plus
1500 birds, beasts and reptiles.
Among Barnums' unusual animals
were the only giraffes, Ethiopian
Horned Horses, Elants, and sea
lions in captivity in America in
1875. The amphitheater housed
. some 10,000 spectator.. The stars
in 1875 included the great Brazilian trick rider, T he Great Martino,
Elisha Dockrill, bareback artist,
Tony, the Centaur Child Hero,
R .H. Dockrill. the master of the
menage, Nathalia Lowande, the
Leopard Athlete, inter national
gymnasts, the Leslies, and renown
clown William H. Porter.
In the summer of 187 5 a new
packet boat named the Luella was
docked at the end of Grape Street.
The wooden work had been done
in Pt. Pleasant. Upon completion
of that, the boat was towed to

Gallipolis. where th e Enos, 1-l~t &amp;
Co. installed the boilers, en~n c
and machinery. In the late St1ln•.
mer persons who gathered ~\&gt;th e
Grape Street landing were ~'£en
the privilege of taking a ~Jt 't
drive" on the boat up to Pt. pJd,_
ant and back. The Brown broth,·r'
of Gallipolis built the Luella. Aho
coming out in 1875 w a&lt; .•
reva mped Katydid and a boo.l t
called the Hunuuin gbird.
During the summer mo11 th,
some of the steamboats in .. &gt;b,·
Gallipolis area gave excursions _,,,
Sundays to Sunday school clas~&lt;·s.
ball teams, and bands. T he . t \\ u
most popular bands in Gallif"!'II'
in 1875 were the Colored Cornet
Band and the N aomi B~tJ d
.formed new in 1875 was G,il\c•,"
Brass Band which featured ho lll&lt;
designed by Robert Gates of_G&lt;&gt;l
lipolis. These horns could pia)\ ~' 'Y
degree of the chromatic scale, l•y
using a combination of va l ve ~ .

•••

Aleta Lyoo Russell Wells still
awaits a: kidney donor for her"
needed transplant. Meanwhile,
with the assistance of her husband, lhe doea dialysis morning
and ni$ht ul.ina home equip•
ment.
Traveling co DeLeon Spriilp
florida earlier thlJ month for a
vilit with Aleta and her family
were her mother, Pead L. R.ua·
sell of Racine, and her aon, Karl
and his wife, Linda, of Pomeroy.
They were joining there by one
of Pearl's granddaughters, ;Erika
Burton.
· Aleta's heaith was such that
she was able to join her family
· on several outings 'during the
visit. That was nice.

not to ·put his name.on clot!Ung
made by a company with ties 'to
labor abuses;• said UNITE
spokeswoman Jo-Ann Mort .
A caD to the Phillips-Van
Heusen offices in New York was
not returned Friday.
Last year, the company was
named in a class-action lawsuit
claiming that worker. on the
Pacific island of Saipan worked
in
sweatshop
conditions.
Phillips-Van Heusen, and other
garment =kers, promised to
establish a fund tO· finance an
independent monitoring program and provide money to the
workers.
Gifford, in response to accusations that her clothing line is
produced in sweatshops, has
hired monitor. and joined a
national task force that acts as a
watchdog for labor conditions.

Jackson gets Walk of Fame star

800 McCotmick Road
Galli~oli!:,

Gallipolis was once a steamboat hub and homeport

accusedof
sweat.shop involvement

Brand New 2000 Chevy
Silverado Shortbed 4x4

~

itunbn!' 1!!:unt!l ·6tnllnrl• Page £:1

R~s

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedan

~0,750* ~1,550* ~8,950*
• Air Condltlo~lng
• AM/FM CD System
• Aluminum Wheela

•••

Up Racine way plans are
moving right along for the
annual July 4 celebration.
Kicking off the day's activities
will be a parade to leave the
high school at tO a.m. and move
through down town. Again this
year Marilyn Powell is in charge
of entries, so just giVe her a call
if you'd like to be a part. The
number is 949-2676. Awards
will be given for three places in
the categories of religious and
patriotic floats, walking units,
and bicyclbs, as well hone
entries.
At t 1 a.m. the firemen will
have a chicken barbecue, and at
nqon entertainment will get
underway on the stage in Star
. Mill Park. Karaoke by Golden
Melodies Productions will
begin at noon and continue
until 4 p.m. when "Never on
Thursday", "Country Pride
Express" and "Harvest Time"
will begin the evening entertainment.

Everything was a 1'fint" for
the 30 Meigs Middle School
sruclents who traveled to NeW
York City last month.
None of them had ever been

Brand New 2000 Chevy
S·Serles LS Pickup

Crafts

to the City. so just imagine the
level of excitement of those 13
and 14 year olds, and the chal·
lenge of keeping track of everyone.
This is the second year a trip
by chartered b11s has been
arranged by Julie Randolph and
a couple other middle school
teachers. Several fund r~ising .
projects were carried out and
each student contributed to his
or her own expenses.
The group stayed at . the
Wellington Hotel in downtown
Manhattan. In addition to the
usual places every tourist visits,
like the Empire State Building
and the Statue of Liberty, this
year Chinatown and the Metropolitan Museum of Art were
added.
And next year? Well Julie says
you learn as you go along and
there's one thing for sure fund raising will begin earlier in
the year to avoid that scramble
for money at the last minute. .

Sara Cammarata has been
sl!'uted by the Ohio House of
Representatives as one of
"Ohio's finest young citizens."
She received a c:ommenda.;.
tion from the Hou~e, 1i1111ed by
Jo Ann Davicbon, apeaker, and
John Cmy, rep for the 94th
. Hou11 Dllrrlct, In recognition
of Bnilhlng fint in the Melp
County spelling bee for three
consecutive yean. We add our
c:ongratulatlona to this talented
atudent.

A Place fo Find God's Plan for You.

Vocation ~~~n~
Bible School

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

: Sunday, June 18, 2000

.

'

-

the boul&lt;Mrd. It newt came across
Ill}' mind that I \\UUid be a part of this
e\1!1'-· even ifl was in the business."
Jackson, 51, was surrounded by
fiunily members who abo """"' in
town fur his daughters high school
gtadualion. Friend; at the ceremony
included William Friedkin, who
directedJackson in "Rules ofEngagement," and DWiin Hoffi1Ja11 .
•

I

�•
•

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

Ptge'CI• 6unb1p Cl:imt1 ·6tnlintl

Sunday, Jllfle 18, 2000

.••..

..

~·
'•

.

COMMUNITY
CORNER

Charlene
Hoeflich
COMMUNITY

,

"All those kids under one
roof:' sighed a parent of two
whose children will attend the
new Meigs Local Elementary
School when it opens in 2002.
-~She was expressing some
·.• concern about the recent decision by the Meigs Local Board
of Education to build one enor• mous elementary building
instead of two as was originally '
planned for the more than 950
elementary students of the dis., trict.
Adequate land, out of flood•. ing, in a central location, were
among the considerations in site
selection, and one location after
another was eliminated for one
reason or another, according to
one of the board members.
. When it finally came down to a
• decision, the general consensus
of the board was that there real. ly wasn't a "just right" site for a
second building.
Besides that the old Campbell farm along Route 124 with
· its nearly 100 acres is more than
adequate for a building large
" enough to house all the students. It's out of floods and it's
centrally located in the district
. which helps when it comes to
•· transporting students, particular' ly as it relates to how much time
; they spend on buses.
'
While all the elementary students will, indeed, be "under
·· one roof", the structure will
'· have two wings - one for
· kindergarlen through· second
· grade students, and the other for
third through fifth graders kind of two buildings in one
with a center shared areas.

::
.'
',
,

Charles L. and Wanda L. Hively

Hively 45th anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hoffman

Charles L. and Wanda L. Hively
celebrated theit 45th wedding
anmver.ary, Sunday, June 4, 2000.
They were marri ed June 4, 1955
POINT PLEASANT - John pany, and was a former meat-cut- by the Rev. Alfred Holley at the
· and Denise Ameel Bonecutter of ter. She has been a homeiTldker, home ofWanda's parents in GalPoi nt Pleasant celebrated their home school instructor and moti- lipolis, Ohio. T hey are the parents
of three daughter., Sharon (John)
2 ~... wedding anniversary June vational speaker for ladies conferSanders, Gallipolis, Charlene
14.
ences and retreats.
(Ca~lto n) Stroop, · Circleville, and
The couple were married on
The couple attends the Gospel Doris (Mark) Irwin, Proctorville.
Saturday, June 14, 1975, in New Lighthouse Church . They have T hey have six grandc hildren
Baltimore, Mich., at the home of sung gospel music for over two Travis
Sanders,
Ga llipolis,
the bride's mother, by the Rev. decades and are members of the Christopher and Devon Stroop,
Gary E. Beeker.
gospel quartet Eternity.
H e has been a chemical operaThe Bonecutters are the partor for the past 20 years for the · ents of three children,Johnathan,
Goodyear/ Shell Chemical Com- David, and Candy.
John and Denlae Bonecutter

Bonecutter 25th anniversary

Hoffman anniversary
CHESTER - Paul and Max- Janet Chafin of Crestline.
ene Hoffman., Chester, married Another daughter, Myrna Caron May 31, 1940 at Ashland, Ky. penter is deceased. They have 11
cele.b rated their 60th wedding grandchildren and eight greatanmversary recently with a fam- grandchildren.
ily picnic.
Hoffinan is the son of the late
The picnic was hosted by Peter and Estella Betzing Hofffamily members at the couple's man, and his wife is the daughhome on June 4.
ter . of the late Oris and Lucy
Mr. and .Mr.. Hoffman are the Srruth Gaul. He retired from
parents of Stephen and Terry Foote Mineral Corporation in
Hoffman. Chester; Beth Sher- New Haven. His wife is a homeman of Canal Winchester; and maker.

Circleville, Matt Irwin, · Ashton,
WVa., Jamie and Amy Irwin,
Proctorville.
C harles is a minister, and he and
Wanda are active members at Old
Kyger Free Will Baptist Church,
C heshire. He retired from Kyger
C reek power plant in 1992 with
34 1/2 years service. Wanda is a
homemaker. They live on ~ small
farm on Johnson Ridge Road,
Gallpolis.

SUBCRIBE
TODAY!

· Foragen reap bounty of wild edible plants
LINCOLN, Vt. (AP) - It was
the tail end of morel season and
the black flies were out, but
Robert Fuller wanted to check a
~ patch of woods,just in case.
·~
With a knife in hand and a
; v.:oven-woi:x:l basket strapped ~o
; his arm, Fuller crept among old
D?Ples and overgrown stone walls
• · on a Vermont hillside. He stepped
carefully amid matted brown
leaves and tender green ferns.
• Then he stc;&gt;pped abruptly.
"This feels like the riglit kind of
habitat," he said, surveying a sandy.
mossy spot below an opening in
the canopy. "It's like a sixth sense."
Seconds later, he spotted three
h~fty morels, spongy and coppercolored. Then others appeared:
One cluster was a few feet away.
another hid beneath a fern.
• ; It's the kind of discovery that
•• -~ drive foragers into a frenzy.
:-:f1)ller, a chef in Burlington, was
. 'nqticeably stirred.
:::~- "This is the most morels I've
~ seen since I've been in Vermont,"
~ he said.
.
.,: Fuller is part of a quiet subcul•· ·ture of modern-day gatherers who
: scour America's fields and forests
~ for wild edibles. Where others see
·~ .orily leaves . and sticks, they find
.
.vegetative treasures: mushrooms
.
'
• lnjnt, ginseng, berries.
••,;: Some forage purely for plea:. sure; others for profit. Nearly all
~. seem to share an enthusiasm not
•; just for the bounty secured but for
: th!' thrill of the hunt.

....

..
~

•

"When you find a lot of
morels, you jump up and down,"
said ~obert Resnik, treasurer of
the Vermont Mycology Association. "Black trumpets make me
just go crazy."
He and other members ofhis
local mushroom hunting group
hold outings every other Sunday
in the summer.
Resnik, a musician and a director of the Fletcher Free Library,
recalled how magical it was when
he spotted his first big find of
morels. Returning to Burlington
from a mushroom hunt in Benson •
he and his friends decided to make
another stop.
"We couldn't bear to go inside
because we'd had such a magical

•

MORE

day," he said. "We walked almost as
if we were being drawn by an
invisible arm .. • over a stream,
walked up to a huge elm."
There, they found so many
morels he had to take his shirt off
to carry them.
Successful hunts are the payoff
for learning where and when to
find the best. wild plants and
mushrooms while avoiding the
poisonous ones, such as the death
cap and o ther amanita mushrooms.
" People are scared of it, and
rightfully so. You can really get
into trouble;',said Resnik, who has
been foraging for 14 yean and has
read about 100 books on rnushr:boms,

Subscribe today:

LOCAL FOLKS

992-2156 or' 446-2342

...

•••

• •••

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Sunftre SE Coupe

Songs
Snach
Games
Bible Stories

• Air Conditioning
• AMIFM Stereo
• Rear

NEW YORK (AP)- First it
was Kathie Lee Gifford and
sweatshops.
Now labor activists have
accused her morning show cohost Regis Philbin of attaching
his name to a clothing line made "
by a company with a history of
production at abusive foreign
factories.
Philbin appeared at Macy's
earlier this week to introduce a
shirt and tie line called "Regis
by the Van Heusen Company."
On Friday, members of the
UNITE garment workers'
union demonstrated inside
Macy's near a display of the
$77.50 cotton shirt and satin tie
ensembles that have become
Philbin's trademark attire on his
quiz show, "Who Wants to be a
Millionaire."
·
"We're giving him a chance

• Automatic, Air Co~lditlclnlnal

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
·

~1,150*
• Air Conditioning
• AM/Ffd Stereo

PlacQ:

Wheels

~ellow!:hip

Bapti!:t
Church

'Taxes. Tags, r~ Fees extra. Rebate 1ncluded In sale pr~e of new vehicle llsled where applicabkl. "On approved credit.
On selected rroclels Nol •esponsible lor lypograph~al errors . Prices Good June 141h Through June 161h.

$200 Coupon good
towll'd the pun:'-e
on 1ny lldJu!118bll bed

·-·----------·-"'"'1
·FLAIR
FURNrTUREA
l, Golllpulto Forrr, WV

6'75-13'71
'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Wearing aD black and .his signature.Kangol
hat. Samuel L. jackson was clearly the
coole.t cat On Hollyv.ood Boulewrd.
. About 500 tans gathered cwbside
Friday to w.w:h the "Shaft"star WJVeil
his sidewalk st2r, the 2,195ch dedicated along the f.uoolLI Hollywood
'IWt of Fame.
"Who \\Wida thunk it?" jackson
a*ed ., remember coming here in
1969 and looking at aD the names on

OH

448-704-4

'
VIrginia's 11 Chevy, Pontiac, Buick, Olds,

~_.-j Dat~:

JunQ 19-2g
Tirn9: 9:00 ll.rn. - ~oon
AgfM:: 5-8th GtadQ

n~, · ...,~ ~~
, • . , ..

~

I

"''

West
And Custom Van Dealer.

Monday· Saturday 9 am • 9 pm
-8 pm

.,,
•

James
Sands
In 1874 and 1875 at least 15 different steamboats stopped at Gallipolis every week. Some even
used Gallipolis a~ homeport.
For instance, the Wild Gazelle
with Jonathan Hamilton as captain sailed between Gallipolis on
the south and Syracuse on the
north. It took the boat three hours
to go upriver and 3.5 hour.; to go
down river. The boat made more
stops going down river than
upriver.
The West Virginia left Gallipolis
every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday with a destination of Coalburg on the Kanawha River. The
boat left Coalburg .on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays. The
Frank Willard ran between Gallipolis and Ironton leaving Gallipolis every other day at 8 a.m.
The Ironton, Gallipolis, and
Pomeroy Tri-Weekly U.S. Mail
.Packet boat named the Billy
Collins traveled 3 times a week
down river and three times a
week upriver.
Stopping twice a week were the
James E. Rankin that ran between
Marietta and Cincinnati, the Salt
Valley that ran between Huntington and. Pittsburgh, the Julia No. 2
that went from Charleston to
Cincinnati, the Ohio No. 4 connecting Cincinnati to Pomeroy,
the St. James that went from
Cincinnati to Pomeroy, the Andes
that traveled from Pittsburgh to
Cincinnati and the Telegraph that

ran from Cincinnati to Pomeroy.
Capt. Sanford of the Salt Valley
later ran steamboats in Central
and South Amerka.
Other boats that came here in
1874-75 included the Clara Scott,
the Chesapeake and the Emma
Graham. The Enuna Graham was
known as the Regular Parker.burg, Pomeroy and Gallipolis TriWeekly U.S. Mail Packet, but it
actually went between Huntington and Parker.burg. It left Parkersburg every Monday,Wednesday
and Friday at 9 a.m. It left Gallipolis every Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at 3 a.m. It went
south to Huntington with the
mail, picked up the mail going
north and ended up in Parker.;burg later that day.
In 1874 most packets carried
passengers, freight and the mail.
Since the railroad did not reach
Gallipolis until 1880 most everything sold in Gallipolis stores
came here by boat. Included in
'the list c;&gt;f the most popul~rly
shippefl items would be glass,
sugar, molasses, tea, coffee, nails,
salt, soap and candles.
Items shipped out of Gallipolis
would have included agricultural
products like beans, butter, cheese,
fruit, eggs, flo ur, meat and grains
as well as manufactured items like
furniture, stoves, plo~. woolen
products, pumps and motor..
Steamb oats even brought to
town entertainment. In 1875 a
steamboat pushed the Barnum
circus on . a barge here. Once
docked the circus apparatus was
loaded on w~gons and taken to
the show grounds. In the 1870s
and 1880s most circuses in town
used the spot that now houses
First Baptist C hurch (old golf
course) or the fairgrounds on
eastern Avenue. Barnum played
here in 1875 and again in the
1880's. On the latter trip the

STEAMBOATS - The Emma Graham at one time ran between ~al­
Ii polls and Parkersburg. It was known as the regular Parkers~g.
Pomeroy and Gallipolis Tri-Weekly U.S . Mail Packet . In 1875, som~ -!15
steamboats stopped at Gallipolis: The picture is from a painti~(. by
William Reed .
·:

famous Jumbo the elephant was
with the Barnum circus.
In 1875 Barnum advertised that
he had 1000 men and horses plus
1500 birds, beasts and reptiles.
Among Barnums' unusual animals
were the only giraffes, Ethiopian
Horned Horses, Elants, and sea
lions in captivity in America in
1875. The amphitheater housed
. some 10,000 spectator.. The stars
in 1875 included the great Brazilian trick rider, T he Great Martino,
Elisha Dockrill, bareback artist,
Tony, the Centaur Child Hero,
R .H. Dockrill. the master of the
menage, Nathalia Lowande, the
Leopard Athlete, inter national
gymnasts, the Leslies, and renown
clown William H. Porter.
In the summer of 187 5 a new
packet boat named the Luella was
docked at the end of Grape Street.
The wooden work had been done
in Pt. Pleasant. Upon completion
of that, the boat was towed to

Gallipolis. where th e Enos, 1-l~t &amp;
Co. installed the boilers, en~n c
and machinery. In the late St1ln•.
mer persons who gathered ~\&gt;th e
Grape Street landing were ~'£en
the privilege of taking a ~Jt 't
drive" on the boat up to Pt. pJd,_
ant and back. The Brown broth,·r'
of Gallipolis built the Luella. Aho
coming out in 1875 w a&lt; .•
reva mped Katydid and a boo.l t
called the Hunuuin gbird.
During the summer mo11 th,
some of the steamboats in .. &gt;b,·
Gallipolis area gave excursions _,,,
Sundays to Sunday school clas~&lt;·s.
ball teams, and bands. T he . t \\ u
most popular bands in Gallif"!'II'
in 1875 were the Colored Cornet
Band and the N aomi B~tJ d
.formed new in 1875 was G,il\c•,"
Brass Band which featured ho lll&lt;
designed by Robert Gates of_G&lt;&gt;l
lipolis. These horns could pia)\ ~' 'Y
degree of the chromatic scale, l•y
using a combination of va l ve ~ .

•••

Aleta Lyoo Russell Wells still
awaits a: kidney donor for her"
needed transplant. Meanwhile,
with the assistance of her husband, lhe doea dialysis morning
and ni$ht ul.ina home equip•
ment.
Traveling co DeLeon Spriilp
florida earlier thlJ month for a
vilit with Aleta and her family
were her mother, Pead L. R.ua·
sell of Racine, and her aon, Karl
and his wife, Linda, of Pomeroy.
They were joining there by one
of Pearl's granddaughters, ;Erika
Burton.
· Aleta's heaith was such that
she was able to join her family
· on several outings 'during the
visit. That was nice.

not to ·put his name.on clot!Ung
made by a company with ties 'to
labor abuses;• said UNITE
spokeswoman Jo-Ann Mort .
A caD to the Phillips-Van
Heusen offices in New York was
not returned Friday.
Last year, the company was
named in a class-action lawsuit
claiming that worker. on the
Pacific island of Saipan worked
in
sweatshop
conditions.
Phillips-Van Heusen, and other
garment =kers, promised to
establish a fund tO· finance an
independent monitoring program and provide money to the
workers.
Gifford, in response to accusations that her clothing line is
produced in sweatshops, has
hired monitor. and joined a
national task force that acts as a
watchdog for labor conditions.

Jackson gets Walk of Fame star

800 McCotmick Road
Galli~oli!:,

Gallipolis was once a steamboat hub and homeport

accusedof
sweat.shop involvement

Brand New 2000 Chevy
Silverado Shortbed 4x4

~

itunbn!' 1!!:unt!l ·6tnllnrl• Page £:1

R~s

Brand New 2000 Pontiac
Grand Prix SE Sedan

~0,750* ~1,550* ~8,950*
• Air Condltlo~lng
• AM/FM CD System
• Aluminum Wheela

•••

Up Racine way plans are
moving right along for the
annual July 4 celebration.
Kicking off the day's activities
will be a parade to leave the
high school at tO a.m. and move
through down town. Again this
year Marilyn Powell is in charge
of entries, so just giVe her a call
if you'd like to be a part. The
number is 949-2676. Awards
will be given for three places in
the categories of religious and
patriotic floats, walking units,
and bicyclbs, as well hone
entries.
At t 1 a.m. the firemen will
have a chicken barbecue, and at
nqon entertainment will get
underway on the stage in Star
. Mill Park. Karaoke by Golden
Melodies Productions will
begin at noon and continue
until 4 p.m. when "Never on
Thursday", "Country Pride
Express" and "Harvest Time"
will begin the evening entertainment.

Everything was a 1'fint" for
the 30 Meigs Middle School
sruclents who traveled to NeW
York City last month.
None of them had ever been

Brand New 2000 Chevy
S·Serles LS Pickup

Crafts

to the City. so just imagine the
level of excitement of those 13
and 14 year olds, and the chal·
lenge of keeping track of everyone.
This is the second year a trip
by chartered b11s has been
arranged by Julie Randolph and
a couple other middle school
teachers. Several fund r~ising .
projects were carried out and
each student contributed to his
or her own expenses.
The group stayed at . the
Wellington Hotel in downtown
Manhattan. In addition to the
usual places every tourist visits,
like the Empire State Building
and the Statue of Liberty, this
year Chinatown and the Metropolitan Museum of Art were
added.
And next year? Well Julie says
you learn as you go along and
there's one thing for sure fund raising will begin earlier in
the year to avoid that scramble
for money at the last minute. .

Sara Cammarata has been
sl!'uted by the Ohio House of
Representatives as one of
"Ohio's finest young citizens."
She received a c:ommenda.;.
tion from the Hou~e, 1i1111ed by
Jo Ann Davicbon, apeaker, and
John Cmy, rep for the 94th
. Hou11 Dllrrlct, In recognition
of Bnilhlng fint in the Melp
County spelling bee for three
consecutive yean. We add our
c:ongratulatlona to this talented
atudent.

A Place fo Find God's Plan for You.

Vocation ~~~n~
Bible School

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

: Sunday, June 18, 2000

.

'

-

the boul&lt;Mrd. It newt came across
Ill}' mind that I \\UUid be a part of this
e\1!1'-· even ifl was in the business."
Jackson, 51, was surrounded by
fiunily members who abo """"' in
town fur his daughters high school
gtadualion. Friend; at the ceremony
included William Friedkin, who
directedJackson in "Rules ofEngagement," and DWiin Hoffi1Ja11 .
•

I

�Page CB • &amp;unllap 1Jimtl' . &amp;tntintl

'

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

Sunday, June 18, 200Q. : •

-·
~·

Bottles everywhere: Perry,family shares,~ ·and
8v JEJIEMY W. ScHNEID!R

is free and the public is invited

cause su1n~ l'Xcit&amp;:lncnt because

of tit&lt;• r:l rity of the item &gt;nd the
l&lt;t&lt;·t that is a lm·al pic•e&lt;·. The
st&lt;'ll&lt;' jar was t(&gt;uHd by Jason
Arnold fr,lll l PonJ&lt;•roy &gt;nd a
mc.•mhl' r of tlw colk•cto rs club.

So how mauy bottles docs the
l'c·rry 1:unily haw? " I would say
:th()tll a co uple of thous~nd,"

STONE WORK - Jason Arnold
from Pomeroy is shown display·
ing the stone jar piece that is
expected to draw attention at bot·
tie show Saturday.
their hobby. They belong to the
West Virginia Bottle Club, a local
group with approximately 20
members. The club is hosting a
bottle show and sale at the
National Guard Armory Saturday,
June 24, 2000, during the Regatta, starting a 9 a.m.
This is the fifth show hosted

Cha rlie says, and th e Perry's
in w rporatc thc•ir bottle collection imo the decor of the house,
which, according to Leisa, is also
turn of the ce ntury.
Wh en asked why he enjoys
collecting bottles, Charli e stated
that, "Its l ike findmg buned treasure, you can be walking along
the river bank after a hard rain or
flood and find bottle."
But Charlie does not leave his
entire hobby to the chan ce finding. "I go to flea markets and
bottle shows to look for bottles,"
but, according to Leisa, the going
tate for bottles is so high, it is
sometimes hard to find a good
price, The internet has also help ed

A FAMILY AFFAIR -The Perry falnlly shows off their favorite bottles.
Pictured from left to right, Charlie! Perry, Seth Perr-y and Leisa Perry.
The Perry's have been collecting bottles for around 20 years.

a

Business Highlights, Page D2
·Classified ads, Pages D3-D8

Page Dl .

•

by the group and a new feature
this year will be a silent auction.
On&lt;' item that will be sold, a
stmw j:~r pkce, is c·xpccted to

REGISTER NEWS STAFF

Middleport, Ohio - Different
people collect different things.
Some collect ball cards, some colle&lt;:t model trains, but Charlie
Perry makes collecting bottles a
family affair.
Perry and his wife Leisa have
been collecting bottles for over
20 years and their son, Seth , age 9,
is well on his way starting a collection. " If the whole family is
involved," says Perry, "It makes it
easier when I go to flea markets
and bottle shows, I don't feel
guilty if the family is looking for
different things."
So, what does the Perry's look
for? " I enjoy collecting old pop
bottles," says Charlie, "Especially
the one's that were bottled locally, but, I collect any bottle that
was used locally,'' he added.
Leisa's collection favors the
bottles used for perfumes and
makeup in the late Victorian period, as . well as, medicine bottles
used by druggist in the turn of
the century. Seth, following in his
fathers foot,teps, collects pop bottles.
T he Perry family isn't alone in

bottle collecti.on ;·

Inside:

,G

according to Charlie, with web
sites like ebay.com, finding rare
and hard to find bottles becomes
a little easier.
"But, the new thing in finding
bottles is digging in places where
there was old outhouses ," says
Charlie. He explained that dur- ·

ing the late 1800s, the outhouse
was also the gatbage heap. Charlie added, "They also threw things
away that they didn't want people
to find, like a husband who may
sneak a whiskey bottle and didn't
want his wife to find it."
Admission to the bottle show

t~

bring their old bottles to th~
show for appraisement fro~
members of the club. The show
will feature local items, such a~
Coca-Cola bottles that were usea
at the Point Pleasant bottling
company. The Coke-Cola bot;
tling plant · was not . in service
long; said Perry, and there only 30
or 40 known pieces. There wiU
also be bottles used by druggist it)
the town, as well as, local dairy
bottles and local brewecy bottles~
The show will last until 3 p.m.;.
but, the silent auction will end at
noon. The group is also lookin~
for individuals owning houses
built during the turn of the ce ntury, for possible sites to dig for
bottles.
When Charlie was asked to
summarize his collecting he saiCl,
"[People] might think I'm obse~;­
sive, but bottles is just what I like
to collect."
'

SPRIIIG V,\11 IYCIIIP.I,\
446·4524

Sund-r,June1~ZOOO

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chart shows how local stocks of interest peiformed last week.
Each days closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

MON.

WED.

THU.

FRI.

AEP

GUEST VIEW

Keep eye
on container
gardens

AmTech/SBC

-.

City Holding

i

: ,,';' ...... ,'

TUE.

Hal
Kneen

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LO€AL FOLKS.

A MOMENT WITH MAX

you J,ike to join us on a trip to me that lasted unit! 1 a.m. It world trips with Jack. He .called
TITAN A. E. (PG)
the Fiji Islands?" I said, '.' I sure was like a dream.
me the other day and said that
7:15 SAT ONLY
SUN·THURS
would," so we chartered a plane
I would love to go back to he and his wife, Suzie were
1:1s a a:1s
to fly us there. The plane didn't that beautiful country again, coming down and spending the
look too good but the pilot told
but I am 86 years old. Is is too · day with me soon . J~ck has anius it was a good plane. We took
late for cild Max 'io hit the road mal shows that are on T.V. every
his word, loaded the luggage,
got aboard and headed for Fiji. again. But if I did hit the road week now. They are w6'nderful. '
As we prepared to land on again, I would want to go with Don't miss them: I sure think
Fiji, the plane started having my good friend Jack Hanna. I Jack knows more about wild
problems, the motor stopped have had several wonderful animals than anyone.
I have been reading about the several times and we would fall
trouble they are having on the' some distance before the pilot
Fiji Islands. The leader of armed got it going again. w~ circled
rebels is holding many of Fiji's the small airport several times
government of fi cials hostage. with the motor stopping and us
This rebel leader is George falling. We all were screaming or
Speight, who wants the tribal crying, even Max. I thought for .
ABOVE
chiefs to make him prime min- sure we would be killed. The
ister. He set no time for releas- pilot finally landed and when
ing more than '&gt;30 hostages, we did, we hit tile ground so
which includes Prime Minister h:ird the plane bounced afl: tlie
• Mahendra Chaudary.
ground several times damaging
Speight wants to rule Fiji, and a wing. When we finally slowed L~~~~~~!:~~~
·.•
said he is confident all of the · d&lt;lwn; tlit {(.ing came ,off, theri .... ·
chiefs will support hiin. Speight the pilot brought the plane to a
and his rebels want to kick the complete \top.
Indians out of political power
Seven lucky people got off of
to install a civilian government the plane. We were thankful to
ruled by the indigenous Fijians. be alive. As each one of us got
So I can only wait and see what off the plane we gave the pilot a
happens in that beautiful coun- hug, money and other items. I
try.
gave him the watch off of my
Just this past Monday, soldiers arm. One of the passengers on
shot at the car in which Speight the flight was a part tinie .
was riding. His supporters preacher at his church, so when
accused the military of trying we got off the plane, we all held
to assassinate him. The military hands and he said a long prayer.
apologized for ·the shooting We then checked into a hotel,
s~ying it was a mistake, but had a meal and tried to get over
Speight and his supporters something. that almost took our
don't believe it was.' A planned lives. I thought to myself it just
120-mile march through Fiji wasn't my time to go.
was called off last Monday
It was gorgeous there. The
because people were afraid of law does not require children to
reprisals.
go to school; however, 85 per. Indians, who make up 44 per- cent of them, between 6-15
cent of the population, migrat- years old do attend school.
ed to Fiji about 100 years ago
Volcanoes formed · most of
to . work on the sugar planta- Fiji islands. The temper~ture is
tions rented from the poorer · always between 60 - 90 degrees.
Fijians. These indigenous Fijians Heavy rains and tropical storms
h:ave become the rebel group occur from December to April.
led by Speight. Melanesians Their main crops are sugar
migrated to Fiji thousands ·of cane, tobacco and coconuts.
years ago and probably came
I have traveled in 60 foreign
from Indonesia. Also, many countries and I have been very
prisoners escaped from Australia fonun:~.te to be living today and settled there.
this was just one of my terrify: Several years ago, I had the ing experiences .
·
honor of visiting this beautiful
Fiji is one of the most beauti- ·
country, which consists of many ful countries I have ever visited.
small islands. It is only a two- I will never see a more beautihour flight from New Zealand. ful sunrise in any other part of
'/'
When ,I was there, the popula- the world as the ones I saw in
I .
tion was 750,000. They speak Fiji.
If
English because it was ruled by
The people treated us so nice
Great Britain for 50 years. I and were so kind it was hard to
spent five very happy days believe. We · were in heaven . . I
there.
made friends with a young boy
When I was in New Zealand, who worked at our hotel. He
Tilt WIV' f1«Jp/l kJik .,..,.1 ,..,..,.
I had met a group of six nice took me to his home to meet
people and they ask me, "Would his dad, and they had a party for
1
Pict up mail·in itntr~ form 1t 1ny U.S. Cellular ~tion, and you ~ld wln 1 trip for two to tht Brickyard oit:JO- It tndilnapalll Motof Spttdwty on Augus1 5, 2ooO. Entrlts must be rtctiYtd ..., J .... 17 zooo

FAMILIAR SCENE - The Kanauga Drive In Theatre has been entertaining trklounty residents since the
1950s. (Krls Dotson photo)

Max
Tawney

OLIDAY
OOLS INC.

Sti an o

INGROUND AND
ABOVE GROUND

Kanauga Drive In still packing 'em in

POOLS JN STOCK

BY KRII DemoN
TIMES-SENTINEL NEWS .sTAFF

· KANAUGA- A half-century of great
moviell, good food and lots of fun con.
,tinues,to .be h:~.d at the Kanauga Drive
·J

...... .

~ .~50 minutesfor$37.95
2 /5 . 1··~ . b ~· ~inutes for $54.95

*us. cenuiftr.

for your cbokt to win one of more than 100 pru:ts. No purd!IH necmarv ro wk'l. Brkty1rd 4oo- is ·I rtfllttrtd't'Tadtmark of inclilnapotis Motor Sptedway Corporation. used with pmnlss~. u,,

ChllllciiiHI

U.S. Cellular
Zent Plea Shopping Conttr .
1080 N. Bridge St.
17401702-4872
.

CltllticetiJo

In-Touch Wirt111s &amp; Mole
34 !111 Water

17401779·6999

3:C~·Mert Kiosk

2145 Eostem Avenue
17401441 ·1066

FUI - These natives in Fiji are makln&amp; some kind of drink. 1took one
swallow and thought I was going to choke to death.

.'I I

J•bon

Clt11lc PIIZI
406 E. Huron

rl'.
·oil

(140IZ88.001&amp;

NlwleiiOII

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'.

U.S. Cttlillar
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4010 RllotiH Ailt.
1740)456·8722
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l'orll.-dJ

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2738 Scioto Tnil
17401355·0058

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usee W.I·Mart Kiosk

.

900 Wtst Emmit Avenue
1740)947.(]069

llldl'iti!DII af- WII-MIIIIoclliono: New Boston, Jockson.

for your convtniencl we have avlf 80 1uthoriztd agent locations.
Outside coniuftlnts oro IYiillblo upon roqunt.

'

Would you like to see a stock of local interest listed? If so, contact

&gt; News Editor Kevin Kelly at (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.

..
. ·- -------------------------------LIVESTOC~
• Fe.eder Cattle - Higher
, 200-3()9#ST 105-115 HF
,: 94-106 325-450# ST 97-117
HF 93- 105
- 475-625# ST 92-105 HF
82-101 65!)-800# ST 77-93
HF 68-87
Steers Heifers
Choice 69-75 67-72
•• Select 64-6 7 62-66
Holsteins 62-65.50
• Cows - Steady
• Well Muscled I Fleshed 45·
•

•

52 Medium I Lean
43-48
Thin I Light
-35-42 Bulls
52-56
Back To The Farm
Cow/CalfPairi $510-1025
Bred Cows $475-750
Baby Calves $15-260
Goats $10-100
Upcoming Sped~s:
Herd bull Leas~ Program
Available
High Quality.Angus Bull
Call Brian at 446~9696

~----------~----------~---•

INVESTING .

•

~

'(,nT,jjdrre.:.'·• · ' · '' ~

·

"My dad built this drive-in in 1-950," said son
:~.nd owner Tom Wheeler.
Officially, Wheel~r has worked at .the theatre
.since 197 4 but has been at his fathe('s side since he
was a kid. The drive-in is a
dying breed, with only 532
left in the United States today
as opposed to 8,000 in the
mid-1970s.
•
"Real estate has become
more valuable than the business itself, and the home
video has hurt us, too,"
Wheeler said.
. But iiot enough to closeJ
Kanauga Drive In is alive and
kicking. '
The drive-in is a unique
experience.What does it offer
th:~.t you can't get at the theatre?
"Well, the kids get to go in their pajamas, you
can sit outside and talk, smoke, and walk around,"
he said. "It's much more of a social setting."
And as far as unruliness goes - it's just not happening.
"We don't have probletns like that here. I always
have a uniformed officer for prevention," he said. ·
It is a seasonal business, though. We:~.ther definitely plays a factor.
"My father's favorite story was of our opening
day,'' Wheeler said. "Apparently, it was in late September and we had a full house - then c:~.me the

rain."
"Torrential rains. And you have to remember
that the ground is still very soft and new. Dad said
every tow truck in Gallia County was ther.e pulling
evc;ryone out ,ofth~ mud."
• The business also has been·snowed out'inApril. ·
"Last year was a good year, considering we had
one evening that was 114 degrees at 8 :30p.m."
The drive-in holds 478 cars and has a snack bar
with hamburgers, hot dogs, fries, candy and more.
'Surprisingly, though, the
technology hasn't changed
much from when Thomas
Edison was around.
The average film is 90 minutes, and if stretched out it
would be two miles long.
It takes a 4,000-watt quartz
bulb to get the picture to the
screen, as opposed to the
1,500 watts needed to run
the projector at the Colony
OWnS)'.
Theater (which the family
also owns).
When the tornado hit
downtown Gallipolis several years ago, Wheeler
was being bounced around in his Blazer in front of
Gallia Academy thinking, "Oh, no! There goes the
business!"
But when he finally made it down State Route .
7, he found not a drop of rain had fallen . "Whew!"
The Kanauga Drive In Theatre is open Friday
through Monday. dusk (around 9 p.m.) until the
end of the last movie .
Entrance ~ill cost those 12 and up $4 each, 6 to
11 years $1 each, and 5 years and under can enter
for free. On Monday evenings admission is $5 per
vehicle.

It takes a 4, 000-watt
quartz bulb to get the
h
ptcture to t e screen, as
opposed to the 1,500
watts needed to run the
proiector at the Colony
Theater (which t.he
fiamily also

Dipping into your IRA
If you own an Individual
Retirement Account (IRA),
the purpose is to accumulate
assets to provide an income
sour~e during retirement.
In the accumulation phase,
, you may contribute to an IRA
:. on a tax-deductible basis (with
some exceptions) with the
earnings growing tax deferred.
Upon withdrawal, distributions will be included in
· - income and taxed accordingly.
:- In addition, for those wishing
' to access their IRAs "early",
. distributions prior to age 59~
iwill be subject to a 10 percent
1
• • premature distributjon penalty
:tax, unless an exception .
· applies.
' · . You may have thought there
· is no way to withdraw funds
from your IRA "early", before
age 59~ to avoid the 10 percent p~nalty: This is not ·true.
The IRS permits an individual
under 59:&gt; to make distribu. tions from his IRA and avoid
; ·t he 10% early withdrawal
' : penalty if the distributions are
•

Jay
Caldwell
GUEST
VIEW
,,
I,

due to one of the IRS exceptions, one of which is a series
of substantially equal periodic
·
payments.
As you may have guessed,
there are several requirements
that apply when claiming the
substantially equal paym~nt
exception.
For example •. once distribu-.
tions are deemed to have
begun from the IRA under the
substantially equal payment
exception, the payment ' must
continue at le~st annqally,
unmodified, the longer of five
years or until the: IRA partici-

PI•••- Maner.

,....Dl

Are your potted flowers growing and blooming?
If not, chec k these essential
items: water, fertilizer, light, container ·size and soil. Water thoroughly in the morning hours
while temperatures are cool.
Avoid watering the plant's leaves
and allow plants to dry off during ·
the day to reduce diseases. Allow
water to leach out of the bottom
of the pot. Rain water is best, but
inconvenient if watering more
than a .few plants.
·
Fertilizer is necessary on .a regular basis as the soil in the container is limited and we need to
water more frequently thus leaching out soil nutrients. Water soluble fertilizers are normally applied
while watering on a weekly basis.
Most hanging baskets and containers can benefit from the addition of slow release fertilizers (i.e.
Osmocote, MagAmp) which provide a steady release of necessary
nutrients throughout the growing
season. One exception is New
Guinea impatiens, which are
intolera.nt of high salts in the soil
which build up in the soil if
plants are not watered w the
runoff stage. Organic fertilizers
like composted manures may be
used as top dressings to containerized plants thus providing
nutrients and a mulch .
Keep track of the amount and
intensity of light you are providing your plants. In the spring
most plants need as much sunlight exposure as possible. However, as we get into the summer
months some plants need the
high light levels, but need to
avoid the hot afternoon temperatures, 59 place plants like ferns ,
New Guinea Impatiens, impatiens, coleus and fuchsias in an
eastern or south eastern exposure.
Petunias and geraniums prefer the
hotter temperatures and additional sunlight provided in west and
southern exposures.
Pot size, especially if too small,
may make container gardening a
challenge. If you are having to
water two or three times a day
now, just wait until mid-summer.
Think about repotting plants into
larger containers, thus increasing
the root system and water storage
capacity of soil available to your

PleaH- K11een, Pap Dl

tips WorldCom pulls ads
from WWF shows
uwarning."

ALLIPOLIS Pesticides are a necessary part
of most farming operations today and like
other tools on a farm,
pesticides and other farm chemicals
can be dangerous if certain precautions are not heeded.
Gallia County Farm Bureau Safety
Coordinator Jaclcie Graham reminds
anyone who works around farm
chemicals to take these precautions:
• Pesticides can enter the body
through many different routes. The
most common route is through the
skin.
People working with chemicals
should wear protective equipment and
clothing to prevent cont:~.ct and
inhalation.
• Wash your hands with soap and
water if they touch containers, equipment ' or clothes that have come in
contac.t with the chemical.
• Always wear unlined, elbowlength gloves when handling any pesticide concentrate or chemicals that
carry the words "Danger,""Poison" or

·I

··----··-·'" -*- - - - - -----·---

,

Never wear cotton or leather gloves
because they can absorb the chemi.cals.
·
Always check gloves carefully for
leaks before wearing them by filling
the gloves with water and squeezing.
• Wear unlined, lightweight rubber
boots that cover your ankles. Also
wtar trouser legs on the outside so the
pesticide cannot drain down into the
boots.
• Wear tight-fitting, non-fogging,
chemical splash gOggles or a full face
shield when pouring, mixing or
applying pesticides.
• Do not store or wash contaminated clothing with the family laundry.
• Respirators prevent inhal:~.tion of
toxic chemicals.
Read pesticide labels to see if they
call for respirators.
• The hair and skin on your neck
should be protected.
There are several availaple types of
head gear: waterproof rain hats, washable wide-brimmed hard or bump
hats or caps.

,
___
__ __ _ _______ -·- -·-·
,

,.

...

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -There won't be any more
body slams paid for by WorldCom Inc.
The Mississippi-based telecommunications company
said Thursday it has pulled its advertising from "WWF
Smackdown," .a nationally televised program that features
wrestlers with the World Wrestling Fe&lt;leration.
The company was criticized by entertainer-turned-TVreformer Steve Allen at its annual meeting June I for
advertising on the program. Allen is honorary chairman of
the Parents Television Council.
In a letter dated June 9 to the PTC, Bernie Ebbers,
WorldCom president and chief executive said he and the
company "agree wholeheartedly that advertising on
'WWF Smackdown' is not appropriate." He said the
brawling "is not the kind of progranuning MCI WorldCom wants to be associated with."
Gary Davis, a spokeliman for Stamford, Conn.-based
WWF Entertainment Inc., said he respects the decision.
"Companies make their decisisons on advertising
changes. We continue to have a strong stable of advertisers
who do find 'Srnackdown' to be an effective advertising
vehicle in reaching their target audiences," he said.
Allen said he is happy WorldCom "has joined the other
ranks of other corporate giants who refuse to sponsor programming that not only glamorizes violence to small children, but alSo treats them tci heavy doses of violence, racial
stereotyping, foul language. graphic sexual innuendo ·and
sexist comments."

�Page CB • &amp;unllap 1Jimtl' . &amp;tntintl

'

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

Sunday, June 18, 200Q. : •

-·
~·

Bottles everywhere: Perry,family shares,~ ·and
8v JEJIEMY W. ScHNEID!R

is free and the public is invited

cause su1n~ l'Xcit&amp;:lncnt because

of tit&lt;• r:l rity of the item &gt;nd the
l&lt;t&lt;·t that is a lm·al pic•e&lt;·. The
st&lt;'ll&lt;' jar was t(&gt;uHd by Jason
Arnold fr,lll l PonJ&lt;•roy &gt;nd a
mc.•mhl' r of tlw colk•cto rs club.

So how mauy bottles docs the
l'c·rry 1:unily haw? " I would say
:th()tll a co uple of thous~nd,"

STONE WORK - Jason Arnold
from Pomeroy is shown display·
ing the stone jar piece that is
expected to draw attention at bot·
tie show Saturday.
their hobby. They belong to the
West Virginia Bottle Club, a local
group with approximately 20
members. The club is hosting a
bottle show and sale at the
National Guard Armory Saturday,
June 24, 2000, during the Regatta, starting a 9 a.m.
This is the fifth show hosted

Cha rlie says, and th e Perry's
in w rporatc thc•ir bottle collection imo the decor of the house,
which, according to Leisa, is also
turn of the ce ntury.
Wh en asked why he enjoys
collecting bottles, Charli e stated
that, "Its l ike findmg buned treasure, you can be walking along
the river bank after a hard rain or
flood and find bottle."
But Charlie does not leave his
entire hobby to the chan ce finding. "I go to flea markets and
bottle shows to look for bottles,"
but, according to Leisa, the going
tate for bottles is so high, it is
sometimes hard to find a good
price, The internet has also help ed

A FAMILY AFFAIR -The Perry falnlly shows off their favorite bottles.
Pictured from left to right, Charlie! Perry, Seth Perr-y and Leisa Perry.
The Perry's have been collecting bottles for around 20 years.

a

Business Highlights, Page D2
·Classified ads, Pages D3-D8

Page Dl .

•

by the group and a new feature
this year will be a silent auction.
On&lt;' item that will be sold, a
stmw j:~r pkce, is c·xpccted to

REGISTER NEWS STAFF

Middleport, Ohio - Different
people collect different things.
Some collect ball cards, some colle&lt;:t model trains, but Charlie
Perry makes collecting bottles a
family affair.
Perry and his wife Leisa have
been collecting bottles for over
20 years and their son, Seth , age 9,
is well on his way starting a collection. " If the whole family is
involved," says Perry, "It makes it
easier when I go to flea markets
and bottle shows, I don't feel
guilty if the family is looking for
different things."
So, what does the Perry's look
for? " I enjoy collecting old pop
bottles," says Charlie, "Especially
the one's that were bottled locally, but, I collect any bottle that
was used locally,'' he added.
Leisa's collection favors the
bottles used for perfumes and
makeup in the late Victorian period, as . well as, medicine bottles
used by druggist in the turn of
the century. Seth, following in his
fathers foot,teps, collects pop bottles.
T he Perry family isn't alone in

bottle collecti.on ;·

Inside:

,G

according to Charlie, with web
sites like ebay.com, finding rare
and hard to find bottles becomes
a little easier.
"But, the new thing in finding
bottles is digging in places where
there was old outhouses ," says
Charlie. He explained that dur- ·

ing the late 1800s, the outhouse
was also the gatbage heap. Charlie added, "They also threw things
away that they didn't want people
to find, like a husband who may
sneak a whiskey bottle and didn't
want his wife to find it."
Admission to the bottle show

t~

bring their old bottles to th~
show for appraisement fro~
members of the club. The show
will feature local items, such a~
Coca-Cola bottles that were usea
at the Point Pleasant bottling
company. The Coke-Cola bot;
tling plant · was not . in service
long; said Perry, and there only 30
or 40 known pieces. There wiU
also be bottles used by druggist it)
the town, as well as, local dairy
bottles and local brewecy bottles~
The show will last until 3 p.m.;.
but, the silent auction will end at
noon. The group is also lookin~
for individuals owning houses
built during the turn of the ce ntury, for possible sites to dig for
bottles.
When Charlie was asked to
summarize his collecting he saiCl,
"[People] might think I'm obse~;­
sive, but bottles is just what I like
to collect."
'

SPRIIIG V,\11 IYCIIIP.I,\
446·4524

Sund-r,June1~ZOOO

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
This chart shows how local stocks of interest peiformed last week.
Each days closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

MON.

WED.

THU.

FRI.

AEP

GUEST VIEW

Keep eye
on container
gardens

AmTech/SBC

-.

City Holding

i

: ,,';' ...... ,'

TUE.

Hal
Kneen

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LO€AL FOLKS.

A MOMENT WITH MAX

you J,ike to join us on a trip to me that lasted unit! 1 a.m. It world trips with Jack. He .called
TITAN A. E. (PG)
the Fiji Islands?" I said, '.' I sure was like a dream.
me the other day and said that
7:15 SAT ONLY
SUN·THURS
would," so we chartered a plane
I would love to go back to he and his wife, Suzie were
1:1s a a:1s
to fly us there. The plane didn't that beautiful country again, coming down and spending the
look too good but the pilot told
but I am 86 years old. Is is too · day with me soon . J~ck has anius it was a good plane. We took
late for cild Max 'io hit the road mal shows that are on T.V. every
his word, loaded the luggage,
got aboard and headed for Fiji. again. But if I did hit the road week now. They are w6'nderful. '
As we prepared to land on again, I would want to go with Don't miss them: I sure think
Fiji, the plane started having my good friend Jack Hanna. I Jack knows more about wild
problems, the motor stopped have had several wonderful animals than anyone.
I have been reading about the several times and we would fall
trouble they are having on the' some distance before the pilot
Fiji Islands. The leader of armed got it going again. w~ circled
rebels is holding many of Fiji's the small airport several times
government of fi cials hostage. with the motor stopping and us
This rebel leader is George falling. We all were screaming or
Speight, who wants the tribal crying, even Max. I thought for .
ABOVE
chiefs to make him prime min- sure we would be killed. The
ister. He set no time for releas- pilot finally landed and when
ing more than '&gt;30 hostages, we did, we hit tile ground so
which includes Prime Minister h:ird the plane bounced afl: tlie
• Mahendra Chaudary.
ground several times damaging
Speight wants to rule Fiji, and a wing. When we finally slowed L~~~~~~!:~~~
·.•
said he is confident all of the · d&lt;lwn; tlit {(.ing came ,off, theri .... ·
chiefs will support hiin. Speight the pilot brought the plane to a
and his rebels want to kick the complete \top.
Indians out of political power
Seven lucky people got off of
to install a civilian government the plane. We were thankful to
ruled by the indigenous Fijians. be alive. As each one of us got
So I can only wait and see what off the plane we gave the pilot a
happens in that beautiful coun- hug, money and other items. I
try.
gave him the watch off of my
Just this past Monday, soldiers arm. One of the passengers on
shot at the car in which Speight the flight was a part tinie .
was riding. His supporters preacher at his church, so when
accused the military of trying we got off the plane, we all held
to assassinate him. The military hands and he said a long prayer.
apologized for ·the shooting We then checked into a hotel,
s~ying it was a mistake, but had a meal and tried to get over
Speight and his supporters something. that almost took our
don't believe it was.' A planned lives. I thought to myself it just
120-mile march through Fiji wasn't my time to go.
was called off last Monday
It was gorgeous there. The
because people were afraid of law does not require children to
reprisals.
go to school; however, 85 per. Indians, who make up 44 per- cent of them, between 6-15
cent of the population, migrat- years old do attend school.
ed to Fiji about 100 years ago
Volcanoes formed · most of
to . work on the sugar planta- Fiji islands. The temper~ture is
tions rented from the poorer · always between 60 - 90 degrees.
Fijians. These indigenous Fijians Heavy rains and tropical storms
h:ave become the rebel group occur from December to April.
led by Speight. Melanesians Their main crops are sugar
migrated to Fiji thousands ·of cane, tobacco and coconuts.
years ago and probably came
I have traveled in 60 foreign
from Indonesia. Also, many countries and I have been very
prisoners escaped from Australia fonun:~.te to be living today and settled there.
this was just one of my terrify: Several years ago, I had the ing experiences .
·
honor of visiting this beautiful
Fiji is one of the most beauti- ·
country, which consists of many ful countries I have ever visited.
small islands. It is only a two- I will never see a more beautihour flight from New Zealand. ful sunrise in any other part of
'/'
When ,I was there, the popula- the world as the ones I saw in
I .
tion was 750,000. They speak Fiji.
If
English because it was ruled by
The people treated us so nice
Great Britain for 50 years. I and were so kind it was hard to
spent five very happy days believe. We · were in heaven . . I
there.
made friends with a young boy
When I was in New Zealand, who worked at our hotel. He
Tilt WIV' f1«Jp/l kJik .,..,.1 ,..,..,.
I had met a group of six nice took me to his home to meet
people and they ask me, "Would his dad, and they had a party for
1
Pict up mail·in itntr~ form 1t 1ny U.S. Cellular ~tion, and you ~ld wln 1 trip for two to tht Brickyard oit:JO- It tndilnapalll Motof Spttdwty on Augus1 5, 2ooO. Entrlts must be rtctiYtd ..., J .... 17 zooo

FAMILIAR SCENE - The Kanauga Drive In Theatre has been entertaining trklounty residents since the
1950s. (Krls Dotson photo)

Max
Tawney

OLIDAY
OOLS INC.

Sti an o

INGROUND AND
ABOVE GROUND

Kanauga Drive In still packing 'em in

POOLS JN STOCK

BY KRII DemoN
TIMES-SENTINEL NEWS .sTAFF

· KANAUGA- A half-century of great
moviell, good food and lots of fun con.
,tinues,to .be h:~.d at the Kanauga Drive
·J

...... .

~ .~50 minutesfor$37.95
2 /5 . 1··~ . b ~· ~inutes for $54.95

*us. cenuiftr.

for your cbokt to win one of more than 100 pru:ts. No purd!IH necmarv ro wk'l. Brkty1rd 4oo- is ·I rtfllttrtd't'Tadtmark of inclilnapotis Motor Sptedway Corporation. used with pmnlss~. u,,

ChllllciiiHI

U.S. Cellular
Zent Plea Shopping Conttr .
1080 N. Bridge St.
17401702-4872
.

CltllticetiJo

In-Touch Wirt111s &amp; Mole
34 !111 Water

17401779·6999

3:C~·Mert Kiosk

2145 Eostem Avenue
17401441 ·1066

FUI - These natives in Fiji are makln&amp; some kind of drink. 1took one
swallow and thought I was going to choke to death.

.'I I

J•bon

Clt11lc PIIZI
406 E. Huron

rl'.
·oil

(140IZ88.001&amp;

NlwleiiOII

'"

'.

U.S. Cttlillar
Nlw Bollon Shoppinv Contir
4010 RllotiH Ailt.
1740)456·8722
Aloo, -

l'orll.-dJ

Hilltop C111111

2738 Scioto Tnil
17401355·0058

W...tr

usee W.I·Mart Kiosk

.

900 Wtst Emmit Avenue
1740)947.(]069

llldl'iti!DII af- WII-MIIIIoclliono: New Boston, Jockson.

for your convtniencl we have avlf 80 1uthoriztd agent locations.
Outside coniuftlnts oro IYiillblo upon roqunt.

'

Would you like to see a stock of local interest listed? If so, contact

&gt; News Editor Kevin Kelly at (740) 446-2342, ext. 23.

..
. ·- -------------------------------LIVESTOC~
• Fe.eder Cattle - Higher
, 200-3()9#ST 105-115 HF
,: 94-106 325-450# ST 97-117
HF 93- 105
- 475-625# ST 92-105 HF
82-101 65!)-800# ST 77-93
HF 68-87
Steers Heifers
Choice 69-75 67-72
•• Select 64-6 7 62-66
Holsteins 62-65.50
• Cows - Steady
• Well Muscled I Fleshed 45·
•

•

52 Medium I Lean
43-48
Thin I Light
-35-42 Bulls
52-56
Back To The Farm
Cow/CalfPairi $510-1025
Bred Cows $475-750
Baby Calves $15-260
Goats $10-100
Upcoming Sped~s:
Herd bull Leas~ Program
Available
High Quality.Angus Bull
Call Brian at 446~9696

~----------~----------~---•

INVESTING .

•

~

'(,nT,jjdrre.:.'·• · ' · '' ~

·

"My dad built this drive-in in 1-950," said son
:~.nd owner Tom Wheeler.
Officially, Wheel~r has worked at .the theatre
.since 197 4 but has been at his fathe('s side since he
was a kid. The drive-in is a
dying breed, with only 532
left in the United States today
as opposed to 8,000 in the
mid-1970s.
•
"Real estate has become
more valuable than the business itself, and the home
video has hurt us, too,"
Wheeler said.
. But iiot enough to closeJ
Kanauga Drive In is alive and
kicking. '
The drive-in is a unique
experience.What does it offer
th:~.t you can't get at the theatre?
"Well, the kids get to go in their pajamas, you
can sit outside and talk, smoke, and walk around,"
he said. "It's much more of a social setting."
And as far as unruliness goes - it's just not happening.
"We don't have probletns like that here. I always
have a uniformed officer for prevention," he said. ·
It is a seasonal business, though. We:~.ther definitely plays a factor.
"My father's favorite story was of our opening
day,'' Wheeler said. "Apparently, it was in late September and we had a full house - then c:~.me the

rain."
"Torrential rains. And you have to remember
that the ground is still very soft and new. Dad said
every tow truck in Gallia County was ther.e pulling
evc;ryone out ,ofth~ mud."
• The business also has been·snowed out'inApril. ·
"Last year was a good year, considering we had
one evening that was 114 degrees at 8 :30p.m."
The drive-in holds 478 cars and has a snack bar
with hamburgers, hot dogs, fries, candy and more.
'Surprisingly, though, the
technology hasn't changed
much from when Thomas
Edison was around.
The average film is 90 minutes, and if stretched out it
would be two miles long.
It takes a 4,000-watt quartz
bulb to get the picture to the
screen, as opposed to the
1,500 watts needed to run
the projector at the Colony
OWnS)'.
Theater (which the family
also owns).
When the tornado hit
downtown Gallipolis several years ago, Wheeler
was being bounced around in his Blazer in front of
Gallia Academy thinking, "Oh, no! There goes the
business!"
But when he finally made it down State Route .
7, he found not a drop of rain had fallen . "Whew!"
The Kanauga Drive In Theatre is open Friday
through Monday. dusk (around 9 p.m.) until the
end of the last movie .
Entrance ~ill cost those 12 and up $4 each, 6 to
11 years $1 each, and 5 years and under can enter
for free. On Monday evenings admission is $5 per
vehicle.

It takes a 4, 000-watt
quartz bulb to get the
h
ptcture to t e screen, as
opposed to the 1,500
watts needed to run the
proiector at the Colony
Theater (which t.he
fiamily also

Dipping into your IRA
If you own an Individual
Retirement Account (IRA),
the purpose is to accumulate
assets to provide an income
sour~e during retirement.
In the accumulation phase,
, you may contribute to an IRA
:. on a tax-deductible basis (with
some exceptions) with the
earnings growing tax deferred.
Upon withdrawal, distributions will be included in
· - income and taxed accordingly.
:- In addition, for those wishing
' to access their IRAs "early",
. distributions prior to age 59~
iwill be subject to a 10 percent
1
• • premature distributjon penalty
:tax, unless an exception .
· applies.
' · . You may have thought there
· is no way to withdraw funds
from your IRA "early", before
age 59~ to avoid the 10 percent p~nalty: This is not ·true.
The IRS permits an individual
under 59:&gt; to make distribu. tions from his IRA and avoid
; ·t he 10% early withdrawal
' : penalty if the distributions are
•

Jay
Caldwell
GUEST
VIEW
,,
I,

due to one of the IRS exceptions, one of which is a series
of substantially equal periodic
·
payments.
As you may have guessed,
there are several requirements
that apply when claiming the
substantially equal paym~nt
exception.
For example •. once distribu-.
tions are deemed to have
begun from the IRA under the
substantially equal payment
exception, the payment ' must
continue at le~st annqally,
unmodified, the longer of five
years or until the: IRA partici-

PI•••- Maner.

,....Dl

Are your potted flowers growing and blooming?
If not, chec k these essential
items: water, fertilizer, light, container ·size and soil. Water thoroughly in the morning hours
while temperatures are cool.
Avoid watering the plant's leaves
and allow plants to dry off during ·
the day to reduce diseases. Allow
water to leach out of the bottom
of the pot. Rain water is best, but
inconvenient if watering more
than a .few plants.
·
Fertilizer is necessary on .a regular basis as the soil in the container is limited and we need to
water more frequently thus leaching out soil nutrients. Water soluble fertilizers are normally applied
while watering on a weekly basis.
Most hanging baskets and containers can benefit from the addition of slow release fertilizers (i.e.
Osmocote, MagAmp) which provide a steady release of necessary
nutrients throughout the growing
season. One exception is New
Guinea impatiens, which are
intolera.nt of high salts in the soil
which build up in the soil if
plants are not watered w the
runoff stage. Organic fertilizers
like composted manures may be
used as top dressings to containerized plants thus providing
nutrients and a mulch .
Keep track of the amount and
intensity of light you are providing your plants. In the spring
most plants need as much sunlight exposure as possible. However, as we get into the summer
months some plants need the
high light levels, but need to
avoid the hot afternoon temperatures, 59 place plants like ferns ,
New Guinea Impatiens, impatiens, coleus and fuchsias in an
eastern or south eastern exposure.
Petunias and geraniums prefer the
hotter temperatures and additional sunlight provided in west and
southern exposures.
Pot size, especially if too small,
may make container gardening a
challenge. If you are having to
water two or three times a day
now, just wait until mid-summer.
Think about repotting plants into
larger containers, thus increasing
the root system and water storage
capacity of soil available to your

PleaH- K11een, Pap Dl

tips WorldCom pulls ads
from WWF shows
uwarning."

ALLIPOLIS Pesticides are a necessary part
of most farming operations today and like
other tools on a farm,
pesticides and other farm chemicals
can be dangerous if certain precautions are not heeded.
Gallia County Farm Bureau Safety
Coordinator Jaclcie Graham reminds
anyone who works around farm
chemicals to take these precautions:
• Pesticides can enter the body
through many different routes. The
most common route is through the
skin.
People working with chemicals
should wear protective equipment and
clothing to prevent cont:~.ct and
inhalation.
• Wash your hands with soap and
water if they touch containers, equipment ' or clothes that have come in
contac.t with the chemical.
• Always wear unlined, elbowlength gloves when handling any pesticide concentrate or chemicals that
carry the words "Danger,""Poison" or

·I

··----··-·'" -*- - - - - -----·---

,

Never wear cotton or leather gloves
because they can absorb the chemi.cals.
·
Always check gloves carefully for
leaks before wearing them by filling
the gloves with water and squeezing.
• Wear unlined, lightweight rubber
boots that cover your ankles. Also
wtar trouser legs on the outside so the
pesticide cannot drain down into the
boots.
• Wear tight-fitting, non-fogging,
chemical splash gOggles or a full face
shield when pouring, mixing or
applying pesticides.
• Do not store or wash contaminated clothing with the family laundry.
• Respirators prevent inhal:~.tion of
toxic chemicals.
Read pesticide labels to see if they
call for respirators.
• The hair and skin on your neck
should be protected.
There are several availaple types of
head gear: waterproof rain hats, washable wide-brimmed hard or bump
hats or caps.

,
___
__ __ _ _______ -·- -·-·
,

,.

...

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) -There won't be any more
body slams paid for by WorldCom Inc.
The Mississippi-based telecommunications company
said Thursday it has pulled its advertising from "WWF
Smackdown," .a nationally televised program that features
wrestlers with the World Wrestling Fe&lt;leration.
The company was criticized by entertainer-turned-TVreformer Steve Allen at its annual meeting June I for
advertising on the program. Allen is honorary chairman of
the Parents Television Council.
In a letter dated June 9 to the PTC, Bernie Ebbers,
WorldCom president and chief executive said he and the
company "agree wholeheartedly that advertising on
'WWF Smackdown' is not appropriate." He said the
brawling "is not the kind of progranuning MCI WorldCom wants to be associated with."
Gary Davis, a spokeliman for Stamford, Conn.-based
WWF Entertainment Inc., said he respects the decision.
"Companies make their decisisons on advertising
changes. We continue to have a strong stable of advertisers
who do find 'Srnackdown' to be an effective advertising
vehicle in reaching their target audiences," he said.
Allen said he is happy WorldCom "has joined the other
ranks of other corporate giants who refuse to sponsor programming that not only glamorizes violence to small children, but alSo treats them tci heavy doses of violence, racial
stereotyping, foul language. graphic sexual innuendo ·and
sexist comments."

�Page D2 • 6unllap ~imrs-&amp;rnlintl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plaaunt,

Time ·warner agrees to
carry statewide news
network for one year
-

~

COLU~US

(AP) -Time
Warner Conununications will
carry a 24-hour state news network throughout Ohio for one
year, but only on a digital cable
system not yet available to many
of its customers.
The Dispatch Printing Co.,
which owns the Ohio News
Network, announced the agreement Friday after six months of
negotiations with Time Warner.
The state's biggest cable TV
provider has refused to carry
ONN on one of the 61 channels in its standard programming
package. In a showdown last
year, tile Dispatch group threatened to pull its CBS affiliate
WBNS- TV from Time Warner's
Columbus-area lineup.
But in late December, the
companies agreed that WBNS
would remain with Time Warner for rwo years, and discussions
over ONN would continue.
OfTime Warner's 1.4 million
customers in Ohio, 861,350 are
offered digital service but only
about 80,000 subscribe. The rwo
companies said it is being
expanded and marketed aggres-

•·
:.
•·••
-

;
•

l

.
..

·,
·,

sively and will be available to all
customers by this time next
year.
The turning point in the talks
was an offer by Time Warner to
include ONN on its digital system in its Akron, Dayton and
Cincinnati divisions as well as
the Columbus market, said
Michael F. Curtin, president of
The Dispatch Printing Co.,
which also publishes The
Columbus Dispatch.
While Curtin acknowledged
that the Dispatch group didn't
get exacdy what it wanted, he
said: "Late in the negotiations .
we had an opportunity for
statewide digital and that's
important because ONN covers
the entire state."
The digital service has 180
channels, with more planned,
and provides sharper images and
sound.
Time Warner maintained that
is older, analog system had no
room for"ONN.
But it is making room in the
Colpmbus market in July for
M,SNBC, a national all-news
channel.

Kneen
framPipD1

plants. Use high organic based
soils to repot with.A.dding perlite,
vermiculite and sand can improve
drainage. Don't allow soils to dry
out especially if under high fertilizer regimes as high soluble salt
levels may cause roots to die and
become an entry point for root
diseases.
Remember to water in the
morning, fertilize weekly, place
the plant in the proper light
exposu~e, provide a large enough
container and enjoy the beaury of
"!your gardening effortS! · "· '

•••

Did you miss the Meigs/Washington counties 1\vilight Vegetable tour held Tuesday at the
O'Brien Farm in Letart Falls?
Plan on attending the annual
Horticulture Field Night on July
8 fiom 5 to 9 p.m. at Ohio State
Universiry's Piketon Research
Center located at 1864 Shyville
Road, Piketon, Ohio. Learn
about the latest Horticultural
research projects being conducted
using your tax doDars and indus-

Money·
la0111PapDI

l

pants reaches age 59~ In other
words, if a 50-year-old IRA participant begins distributions
under this exception, distribu- .
tions must continue ·until the
individual attains age 59 i, before
the amount could be modified.
On the other hand, if a 58-yearold IRA participant begins distributions under this exception, distributions must continue until the
individual artains ' age 62 before
the amciunt could be modified.
The amount that can be withdrawn each year is calculated by
using one of three IRs approved
methods: annuity, amortization and
.life expectancy. The variables
include&lt;\ in the calculation are the
individual's age, the IRA account
value and a "reasonable" interest
rate. Each method will allow a different amount to b.e withdrawn
fiom your IRA and most individuals simply choose the method
allowing for the distribution
amount closest to what they need,
Generally, a tax or financial
advisor with the use of software
can perform these calculations for
you.
The substantially equal payment exception does allow for
you to access your IRA "early"
but is it the beat alternative?
It is important to note that if
the payment amount .before the
later of five years or attairunent of
age 59'1. ia modified, a 10 percent
penalty will be applied retroactively to all c:umnt and previoua
distribution• intended to qualify
under the aubttantially equal pay. ment exception. Before electina
aubatantial.IY equal paymenta from

Bell Atlantic·GTE
deal gets OK
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal regulators gave their blessing
to the merger of Bell Adantic and
GTE Corp., a $65 billion unio~
that transforms one of the off- ·
spring of the old BeD system into
the nation's largest local phone
company and wireless provider.
The approval alloW1 the companies to complete a deal announced
almost two years ago and launch a
combined business under the new
name Verizon Conununications.
The l'ederal Conununications
Commission signed off on the deal
after accepting a plan by the companies to partially spin off GTE's
long-distance assets.

Re~:Firm

tobuy1WA

Tobacco chief

denies lying

aar

ainton expected
to sign \ill .
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton is expected to sign
the electronic signature legislation
that cleared the Senate on Friday
by an 87-0 vote. He has said it will
marry the old value of consumer
protection with the newest technologies so "we can achieve the
full measure of the benefits that ecomme.rce has to offer!' '
The bill, which the House
passed earlier in the week by 4264, sets a national framework for
giving online signatures legal statu~ With that, consumers who
shop online for a new car or a ·
home mortgage will also be able to ·
seal the deal &lt;tVer their computers.

Pipeline
acdclents up
WASHINGTON (AP) - Acci- .
dents are increasing on the 2.2 million miles of pipelines carrying
natural gas and other hazardous

materials nationwide, as the federal
government slacked off on enforcing many safety regulations, investigators say.
An average of 22 people died
annually fiom 1988 to 1998 when
the number of acci&lt;lents was
increasing 4 percent per year,
according to the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of
Congress.
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich.,
who requested the GAO investigation, said the report "paints a picture of an agency that places discurbing amounts of faith in the
industry it is supposed to regulate."

court filings fiom the company
and lhe government over legal
minutiae, the government said
Microsoft violated Rule 8 of the
Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure by not waiting for U.S. Distrier Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson.
Earlier this week, Microsoft
· asked the appeals court for a stay
.after Jackson d~ferred decision on a
stay. On Thursday, Microsoft filed a
brief in the circuit court arguing
that it was not required to wait for
Jackson's ruling.

•rts

Housing
drop in May

Newsy~tem

working

WASHINGTON (A.P) - A
new system designed to improve
the flow of air traffic during severe
weather helped reduce delay&gt; W7
percent last month, the head ofthe
Federal Aviation Administration
said.
But the weather has made this
week a "particularly difficult" one
for keeping planes on time, Jane
Garvey admitted. And she warned
that "we've got a long, hot summer
ahead of us, with plenty o( storms."
The new Spring-Summer 2000
initiative was announced in March,
launching a cooperative effort
between the FAA., airlines and airports to find ways to cut down the
growing number of delays for air
travelers.
·

, WASHINGTON (AP)
Housing construction last month
dipped to its lowest level in almost
year, providing fresh evidence
hat the Federal Reserve's six intetst rate increases are beginning to
low the economy.
Builders began work on new
homes at a

.-

annual rate of 1.59 million ~ in
May, a 3.9 percent drop' .~m
April's level. the Com.mtrce
Department reported. .
, ..
The
decline left housing starts
lowest level since last
the Fed's latest cycle of interest~ralle
increases began.

ESPN Cllltlc IS Produc ing A

oH

.. J r: 4_56~1.

STAAT DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·
gl&amp;s In Your .ftrea. Call For More
lnfo~mation , 1-800-AOMANCE

Dow Jones ·: ~
takes tumble:'"·

Ext.9735.

'

W~y walt? Start meeting Oh io

singles ton ight. Call toll tree I ·
SD0-766·2623, exlenslon 6176.
-1 .Jaul: To Girls Live! 1·900·656·
-;.. ~100 Ext. 8400. $3.99 Pet Minut&amp;
... Mllst Be 18 Years, Sery·U 619~
~~-8434 .

•I

· .. 30 Announcements
~ .• "GOT

ACAMPGROUND Mem-

bership Or T imeshare?" WE'LL
) ;, t .TA!CE ITI America's Mos1 Suc -

C'essful Campground And Time·
~·t ; stfare Resale Clearinghouse. Call

&lt;r r.AESORT SALES INTEANATION·
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'

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"

Sale

2 Seven Year Old fh:ld Cats To

Bevo Prancls. Interested In Acqu iring Arch ival Mattrlal (Film,
Photos, Calls , Programs) Please

3 lOng ha ired kittens, 7 wks. old

On The Llle Of

Call Vln Cannamela At 860·766·
U41 Or Ema il vln .canname·

laOespn.oom

304-61!&gt;-5043.

6 Pupplell. 100%

7 K1ttens, 3 Bobtail. 6 Weeks Old,

To good home kiHtnl 304·675·

Ll~orTraloed , 740.446-8059.

::=13.:;.54~.

Floral Arrangements , Unfinished
w.ood Cratts, Beads , Doll SuP·
plies , Books, Fabrics, Sugar Free

Cnow Puppy Female. 12 Weeks
Oki, Aott /Pitbull 0 3 Months Old.

Wolf Pup 6 Months Old. Female.
Black Lab, 1 Year Old Male, GOOCl

Malo, 740·441 ·0118.

Candy, Ml&amp;e.

740-592·1842

Free Kltten_s. about 7 weeks old .

Quality clothing and household
items . $1 .00 bag sale e11er~
Thursday. Monda~ thru Sa1urday

(304

Free Puppies: 2 Males, 1f2 Bea·
gle &amp; 112 Collie. Raccoon Creek
Road , On St. At. 7, 740-441-0417,

9:()().5:30.

Aller 6.

40

Giveaway

1 Year Old Male Coliie Mix . Very
Friendly Needs GOOd Home, 740·
44H286.
1 Yr old Husky &amp; German Shep-

pard Mix. (304)675·6615. To good
home in country.

Tired of Payl ng Rent?
• Your monthly rant
payment could bt
your mcKtgage
payment
• Your down payment
might be 1e1a than a
rent41i deposit
• You will actually
OWN It and be
creating equltyl

'

Justice: Microsoft
violated niles -

Community

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Justice Departinent told a federal
appeals court Friday that Microsoft
violated federal rules of procedure
by . asking that court to stay
antitrust penalties against it before
the trial judge ruled on the same
request.
In the latest of a daily volley of

·on A ency

Call NowII! II

Tel:

Home Ownership Education Class will be held Monday, 6/19/00 thrO'u~
Friday 6123/00 from 6:00 pm to 9:00pm at the Cheshire Office 801 o SA
7 N, Cheshire. You must attend to
·
·
'
.•'• :

•.••,•

, ;FI

.

Coolant

UP. to· 5 quarts GM oil
ant:t AC filters most GM '
·cars &amp; Light duty trucks

$16.95' ~::

*21.8·1Tu '

,,

I

AC . Inspection .:

Alignment ·

any repairs extra

Most GM cars
any repairs extra

$54.95 ~:: $21.81
.As your GM Parts

supplier, we're your
source for GM
· Goodwrench• new arid
remanufactured englries .
and new transmissions~ ·

I

Plua

Tax

ront
Alignments

GM carslight duty trucks
any repairs eXtra

~24.95.~:

· The l'lrM, LII'Otll, l'alttlt, Internet ltrvlce In Melge
Ill Cnll•nl •Ill IIPIUIII'I 7 Ill IIIII lill IUPIIIU

''

C.ll te Ill• Up TH.y
118·1UUICA•7
~AI

.

Vou've found
www.e11rek

'

'I
'

IJ

j

u1e 1 South. Lovod Family Pel,
740·446.0910.

'I •

9866 , Fu ll Service. References

~~F;;j~~~~~~~~~~f;;~
and

Kittens to give away. (304)773·

ANTIQUE FURNITURE:
4 stack bookcase w/drawer, Secretary book
case. upright showcase, dresser w/mirror, wicker
fern stand, library table w/drawer and shelf,
kitchen cabinet, rockers, wall mirror, 3 drying
racks, school desk, Duncan Phyfe dining table, 6
leg oak dining table, other furniture ...
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS:
Lanterns, Sad irons, washboards, milk crocks,
graniteware, glass churn, 3 gal. stone chum,
stone jars and jugs, Chenille spread, quilt, misc.
linens, old plc;tures &amp; frames, . kitchen items,
Silver trays, Royal Doulton . Rip Van Winkle
pitcher, Rookwood vase (1908 #950D),
Blue/White stoneware bowl, depression glass,
Harker, glass rolling pins, Wall mount coffee
grinder, copper pot, kettle and ladle 1 Steriopiic
cards, Ohio License Plates (1915, 16, 17, 19),
wood Firkin (has documentation) , lin type, Boy
Scout items, wood block planes (Ohio Tool Co.
Thistle Brand), military items (Hat, buttons,
ribbons, bars, two 13 lb. practice bombs WWI)
old Fire Chief hat, old glass . plate slides of
various places ·a· subjects (color), Powels &amp;
Satety Squibs used in mining (Pat. Date 1891),
Good selection of country antiques ...
· ANTIQUE TOYS
aui',illllllif: •Tollacco Balling Boxes •1 U.U'UUII Arabian #5 tin windup (horse, sulky, driver, West
Germany, orig. box, mint cond) , tin windup
Sticks •Platform Scales •One
post • 2 Calf Creep Feeders motorcycle/rider, gas engine #21 Ray CoxThimble Drome Race Car, childs wringer WCl.Sher
&gt;Palpll,atlton qage • 2 Fuel Tanks •Utili
machine (tin w/glass body) , collection of Dime
•Cu~tlng Torch •Calf Pullers
;har!!Elr •Air Grease Gun and Reel •Vertical Star~ metal soldiers, army camp set w/tents &amp;
ressor •Electric Welder · •Lincoln ace., military figures by Mancil, Beton. Barclay,
Auburn Tank, old metel dump trucks (some
wc1.uer •Part Washer •Bolt Bin •Chain
wood wheels,) other cars &amp; trucks. Sch,oe!)l(ut
Eater •Transfer Purnp •
childs plano, official Boy Scout
Sprayers •1 Large lot of farm
(orig box), games and old puzzles, J inr-An
nd tools •1 00 Round Bales Hay •4
other tin and wood toys.
··nre~~S•T
~Bati e F~eders •Som e Furniture
ITEMS OF LOCAL 1r
'"··h••M R. Dillon, Owner
Gallipolis Bol11es
I
Sil\rerrnan-1
III,,Cfilon•~er Not•: ·rhls Is one of the cle1mee1tl Levi), milk bottle (Casto Da!irv! .~.
most complete lines of farm macrun{:J'YI Bovie metal plaque...
we have had the opportunity to sell . ** This sale has an out:star1dyjlg grouping of small
'IPI'ac l;tca everything has been stored Inside: antique &amp; collectible ilems
AUCTIONEER: L.C'il''-'cA. LEMLEY
has
the best ca re. and Is field ready.
740-3811-0823 (Home) 740.245-9868 (Barn)
Tsrm1: Cash. or Check wltti proper I. D.
:'Licensed and
by State of Ohio"
r."•oh/Jinnrn\JI•~ Check Onlyll

90

D

Page 03

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: AU U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Prootsets ,

Diamonds , .t.nlique Jewelry. Gold
Rings, Pre - t930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling. Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry

• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 second

A111nue. Gallipolis. 7~·28&lt;2 .
Want To Buy: Used Mobile

Hom~~ ,

740-446.0175, 3().4-67!&gt;-5965.

Wanted to Buy

Complete HousehOld Or Estates !
Any Type Of Furniture, Applianc·
es, Antique's, 'Etc. Also Appraisal

Avallablol7.0.379-2720.

992-9107,140-989-2823.

Sund1y 6 Monday edition·
1 1\1\.o. F ld
:"""'m r ay.

Dir~cfiDIII: From Gallipolis rollow S~ate Route

~

Bill Moodi~paugn Auclloneerlng:
buy/sell es11!1tu : consignment
auction· Thursdays. 6pm, Middle·
port, Oh io .&amp; wv License , 740·

Lost: Beagle * Female Age 2,
Leather Collar. &lt;Jarfleld Area . Ao-

SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 2000
Lunch Avsilsbls!IO:OO.· s.m.

South to Junction 218. Turn right. 'Fo
lt:ita1te Route 218 to 790. Turn right. Go 4
I"""'" near Lecta.
ue to selling my rarm, the following farm
maehtnery will be sold:
•Case 450 Doxer. Case 580
Both are In very good condition .
20' Gooseneck Trailer wltb ramps .
;.lOiltmper •16' stock trailer (bumper hitch)
Tr1etort: •Ford 7710 AC and Cassette 920
• lhrmr~ . •Zetor 6245 4-wheel drive 960 hours.
I•Sutper "A" with cultivators, Case 990. ·
IMltiJhlns·rll: •9' Lely mower • 2 Row Tol&gt;ac~col
•MF .124 Square Baler •New
lso:rav,er •Vermeer 504 Round Bal.e r •6' Rot:arvl
lfnower •New Holland side delivery Hayrakes
. 5' ~o.tary mower •2 Round Bale Movers •3
post driver •30' Hay Conveyor. •3 pt.
spreader •4 Flatbed wagons •Pull
fe rtilizer spreader ··4-14" John
IPin\11 •Hydraulic Wood Spllter •3-14 Ford
HPlow • 3 PIJnt Dirt Scoop •John Deer 20 fold
disc •Post Hole Auger •16' Harrlgato
EI-Cultlpacker •Field s prayer •Boom pole •
manure Spreader •One row tob·ac!JO II

AuCtion
and Flea Market

Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm the Available, Licensed &amp;·Bonded,
day oelore 1he ad Ia to run. "Our Place Or 'rbilt5f'

PUBLIC AUCTION

'

R, L.EE JOHc~!~~;~~£TIONEER;t

I'

Parking Lol. Thursday P.M. Call

Owner • Belly Moore·Hayes

I

I

80

To Describe. 740.245·5130.

Om Smilh . fwdianeer Ohio #1344 W. Va.# 515
Cash Positive ID Rafreshm8nh
'No! responsible for tKcidanls or loss ol propaly'

••J

Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
GaiUpolis, Ohio 740·379·2720.

Household

on1o, 740-992-7502.
·
Leslie Lemley, Lemley's Auclion
Barn , 740·388·0823, 740·245·

All Yard Sa1el Mutt Be Paid In

!•

!

740·367·7341 Ol' · :
740·992·6629 .'.;

Found : lad les Watch. Wal-Mart

.llnfi•Ue
.llaadiOft
,.
..
I'
.llf ••:GO .II M
S8 t UrdR'J, JUftt 25 I" II• ,..,,..

Public Sale and Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY JUNE 24TH 2000 10 OOA M
•
•
•·
COOL
"ILLE, t OHIO :
~~EC:~~l;, Tak S ''R 7
·
•

e

t.

t. , 2 miles South of Coolville.

hio,loleftAuclion
on Troy. 1\vp.
go ..5Signs
miles. pos1ed.
lcfl on Troy
1\vp.
158
Easy 468C
to find
Reducing

444 hrs. w/72 in. Dirt Bucket, Bobtat 20 Post Hole Digger

~pe~ra~tiio~ns~·~w~ill~oiffJe~
rt~~~!uoijllo~wcii~ng~
: • Bob&lt;at 873 Skid Steer

C

llachment, Front Forks Attachment, Boom Pole
llochment, Attachments offered separately, 7xl9
onollne.6tonTiltLandscaplnR GOOseneckTrailer, King
;lllbanr, Ohio
uller 8 fl. Heavy Duty Tilt Blade, 3 pl. 2 Row Cultivalor
gle Truss Assembly System, 42 n. Walk Through Fully
Take us so B. 32 west of Athens, Ohio and exit
cijuslable JlgginR System w/Overhead Hydraulic Press
onto so west towards McArthur. Auction is
/Extras. Tllndem Truss Trailer, 3 New llxlS Galvanized
etal Unassembled Carports
quarter mile on left signs posted.
IOQLS;
Lincoln
Weldanpower
GSOOO
k h II
d
1•
L
k
elder/Generator Sev. Extras (Near New), Black Max Gas
0a a seat; ressers Wmirror,; uOO cues; .5 ~P · Honda Air Compressor, Dewall 16 in. 5 hp. lnduslrial
kitchen cupboards; 14 Persian and Oriental style
ad1al Arm Saw w/extras, Ryobi Power Miter, Me1al
rugs; church pews; marble top dressers; 20 in.
andmg Machine, Lincoln SPIOO Wire Feed Welder, Black
ax 6hp. Uprighl Air Compressor (New), Oxygen
in dUttria I pIaner; 8 f t. WOOd lathe; feW lndiln
celylene, 16ft Scaffle Alum. Pick, Truck Tool Box, Lg.
artifacts; depression glau; Hull bow knot vases;
nvil, Insulation Blower, Sev. Shop Carts, 3 Desks, 2 Hvy.
d
h
1
t'
DUly Nylon Commercial Slings 80 ft Long, 2 pc. Roll-A·
an muc mora a very trge IUC lOft •
Round Tool Box, Floor Jack, Rolled Fiberglass Insulation,
Terms cuh or check with· positive ID. S% buyer's
hain Falls. Vises, llench Grinder, Lots of Melal Shelving,
fee waived for cash or checks. food available. Eoncrele Tools, Tarps, Ext Cords, Wheel Barrels, J.D. Top
mail mhutchjnson@frognet.net, View pictures at
i~~~e~~d ~~fse ~:~~::d Tools, All small Shop Tools,
WWW.frognet.net/-mhutchjn pictures Will be ~[O'lQJ~~·i.J~I:E&lt;· Large Variety of Tools &amp;
labeled at, a2, etc.
quipruen( iri Great Condition. Be prompl. Slarting with
uality. Lol's Unadverlised. Lunch Served. Checks Accepted

ifRs~~~~I.~~LL OWNER: GRANT NEWLAND 740-667-

1&amp;ucfion.. r: JWark fCufchiniOR

7"·698•6706

271

J:lctnlld and Bonded Ia Ohio
Partner iranlc fCutchlnaon

CORDRAY'S AUCTION SERVICE
· J.K.CORDRAY AUCTIONEER

740-592·4349

~pprtntlct

MISCELLANEOUS
Lots oUishlng Tatkle, Records, lupes, Lawn Chairs, Fishing
Poles, Misc. tools, Chain Saw, Trimmer All kinds of new
Items, Painted slale &amp; Ironing boord, (;;(.man stove, Boxes
of 2x4 ceiling lila, Wood chipper (needs dutch), Old dump
'rake w/Iron whools &amp; LDts Morel
·

I

•. '

60 Lost and Found

HOUSEHOLD
Uvlng room suite, Baldwin organ, Chest, Baby begs, Folding
chairs, Dotble &amp; single beds, Cradle, Vanity, Tables, White
lltchen cabinet, Electric stove top, Dish washer, Stove vent,
End Tables, Large Dresser, Steiea &amp; speakers, dresser, Glhler,
Plalform rocker, Stands &amp; Morel

'

18th. Roush· Ferrell Or., Camp

Billy Goble Auctioneer, Pomeroy,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS
BuHet, Oak Ubrary table, chest ol drawers, cabinet base,
racking chair, wood chairs, 11lrror, dinner butkat, dishes
(Crystal, Depression, Currier &amp;!vas, Falsgrafl ware, ·
Crooksville, Avon, Ruby), Brass Items, Lots &amp;Lots of dishes,
Botlles, Jugs, S&amp;H Groon stamps, Teardrop &amp;Art DBCo
lamps, Old lools, Brass door knobs, wood boxes, Sllvartone
radio cast, Graa•l-s.·Playlf pla110 rolls, Lard press, Iron
skillets, Country song boo~s, (CKa Cola bottles, Two show
cases &amp; Lots Morel

~

· · C...a\\ia _:Meigs

Home0nly,140·441.Q118.

Belly has kttt a colltclll' tmd now wants to dean her
bulldlttg. I.Dtated from St. Rt. Bypan of Po111roy, Ohio take
J.P. Roatl207 lo Audloll.

..

Community Action &amp; Ohio vaJiey
Bank are offering a reduced " :
interest rate for a fixed term of wp
to 30 years,
:
wit~ no down
:
payment ·:~
I
requirement
for the stick
built homes
being constructed I~ Ga!lia an.d
Meigs County
-.
•
Opportunities are limlted·and on a llret c~me
first serve basis according to ellglblli'l

Moving Sale Everything Must Go:
6f30 First Holzer Apartments
12 03 Second Avenue, 740·446 ·
4726 After 3:30 P.M. Monday ·
Friday.

2 Black' Kittens, long Haired, Lit·
ter Trained, Good Hom e Only
740·446·1906.
.

Home -:l
Ownershllp:: ~:l
..

=---------

9131.
--------.:...,_------~
PubliC Sale and Auction

.

'

•

German Shepherd PUppies. Call
Aller 5 P.M. 740·256·1 274.

~

.

)682·2&lt;147/S82-2405.

Moving Sale. srartlng Sunday,

• t :30 1.m. Slturd•~-

446-8806.

•

.

tdhlon ·2:00p.m.
Friday. Mondlly odltlon

Free Kittens To Good Home, 740·

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Sllmson. Athen&amp;

"'SS.Aet
ILUEj
••
At""' u equarw In etootc
••
•
VIlli our web 11te@ www.onctan.coin

304-67S.2780 •

Small Go ld en Retriever, Tw o 3

Rick Pearson A-uction Company,
I time auctioneer, complele
auc11on
service .
Licensed
f66 ,0hio &amp; West Virg inia , 304·

na.s7850r 304-n:J.wr.

Conley. Various
Items/Antiques.

QEAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
the d.y befor. the 1d
11 to ~n. Sunday

90

Yard Sale

70

Yard Sale
Pt. Pleaaant
&amp; VIcinity

Be Paid In Advance.

Month Old Pupp lu . 740 -367·

G.ltts and Craft Supplies . 1201
V1and Street . Pl. Pleasant. 10·6
Monday thru Sit. Dreamcalchers.

New Localion: Poppy's Place

.,.,

" " 1511 Klnawhl Stntt

Ma le Shepherd Like Pup. To A
Good Home. 141).«6-34 13.

Sunday, June 18,2000
70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yor&lt;i Sileo Mu•t

Kitten s· some white, some bob1a~ .
one black bObtail, 740·992·3201 .

0624.

$1149..-,Tr
.:
•811Mtl'f.3'"'·"'·'
· i6l Point Pltalllll, WV 25550

Pure Heinz 51. 5

70

Giveaway

40

Section

mtmes -~entinel

Months Old, Healtny, Good Na·
lured, Attractive, 740·441 -1105.

:

___

Giveaway

40

. ·I'

WHITE "'ROWN "RII!tf
"GRAY "GREEN
TAN

~unba!'

Giveaway, To Good Home Only, 1
Male, 1 Female, 740-367-7166.

Docum_tntar~

1 Gentleman Seeking Companlon, l';.ah-., From· Nice Female For Talks
, 1• ~aUis &amp; Friendsh ip. Send Re~
'Pl ies To: 553 Second Avenue
. !" .APartment 403, Gal lipolis,

740-962-4575

pat Ball

•·mail: cordra auctlon@mn .net

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY
Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems with
your driving record; DUI's
speeding tickets, etc:
Same Day SA.22's issued.
Call for a quote .
Brown Insurance Agency
446,1960
University of Rio Grande
is offering free enrichment
classes for kindergarten
children entering school
this fall. Classes begin
June 26 to July 12 M·F
10:30 · 12:30 Call,
1-740·245· 7373 to register
Gatlinburg, Tennessee.
Gatlinburg Town Square Resort,
Condo Re.ntal Available,
2 BR , 2 baths, sleeps 6.
Avg. 1e-2s. $7oo
(614) 436·2255

,Serenity House .
serves victims of. dom.estic
violence
call 446·6752 or
1-800-942-95n
Top Soil Fill Dirt Bank Run
Delivered or Picked Up
Min Loader
CHG$35.00
Call
Cremeans Concrete
&amp; Supply, Co.
1-740-446·1142
Monday - Saturday
Delong's Groom Shop
Now Open
For Quick Appointments
Call Howard Delong

740-441·1602

Father's Day Brunch At
The Elks Lodge
• 11:30 • 1:00 p.m.

Free·Vacation Getaway,
For the 1st 100 People to
Purchase , 20 Piece Set
Waterless Stainless Steel
Cookware,
.Lifetime Guarantee,
Perfect Gift For Weddings,
Anniversary, or Just Because.
12 Months Free Financing ·
Available thru June, After
: 90 Days Same As Cash,
. Call 740·367 •7760
A Li111e Save A Lot

Mollohan Furn &amp;
Carpets
Clark Chapel Ad. Porter, OH

All

Your Favorites and
Plen

Medicare Approved
Get your Albuterol or other
breathing medication billed
to Medicare. Save money.
Free Home Delivery. Call

Bowman's Homecare
740-446-7283

Looking
For

Peace?
Come
HOME
To Us!
Coming
July 2000

OfThem

CHRISTY'S
FAMILY LIVING
Now has Home
Improvement
Services
Janitorial- Maid,
Maintenance &amp;
Home Remodeling

1-740-992-4514
By the hour or
by the job

~ee~ls

6 Available July 1
and Aug. 19·26
Phone 446·49~3

Wanted to do:
Job
. working
with horses.

e
Junior Golf Game
June 26-30
9:00 am-2:00 pm
IAot~s

10-18 Cosl $100

Lunch Provided Daily
Instruction by PGA
Professional
*Rules *Full Swing
*Etiquette *Short Game
*Tournament, Games,
Prizes
Call 446-GOLF
Limited Space, Call Todlavl

For ore
In for at ion
446· 342 or
9 2·2156

Phone 256·6740
Not

'

IN SEAACH OFIEVO

Personals

' 011

The Dow Jones industrial·
age plunged Friday by .&lt;:o:.&gt;.:&gt;&lt;
points, or 2.5 percent, to close
10,449.30 - its worst drop -.
the stunning 617-point drop ·
April14.
: ,..
Blue-chip stocks feU steeply:ifte:
Xerox and a regional b~~~i
company issued profit \\
that resonated throughout :·. ·
market. Technology stocks were
lone source ofstrength, helpirg
Nasdaq rise a modest 14.82
3,860.56.

30 Announcements

ANNOUNCEMENTS

•Fast, easy Installation . ;
•Goes directly over old roqf
•Won't rust or corrode
•Reduces noise
•.•
•Provides added Insulation
•Lifetime limited warranty:;

DIAMOND BAR, Calif. (AP)
- Southern California's air-quality agency voted to require· nearly
11,000 transit buses and garbage
trucks to convert to cleaner-burning alternative fuels, serting what
environmentalists hope will be an
exam~le for !4e rest of the country.
Engme 1nanufacturers inunediately warned that they will fight
the rules unless cleaner-burning
diesel IS added to the list of allowable fuels.
"' ". .
The regulations cover government agencies, universities and
transit companies in Los Angeles,.
Orange, Riverside and San
Bernardino counties.

4

' ~i

.ROOFING SAL~

Apncywants
cleaner air

Oil, Lu

~lassifieds .

Sunday, June 18, 2000

BUSINESS HIGHLIGHTS

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Air'Tran
Holdings Inc. of Orlando, Fla., the
small airline formerly known as
Valujet, il in the early stages of talks
about buying St. Louis-based
TWA., according to reports published in the Adanta journal-Constitution and The Wall Street Journal.
Analysts say the proposed merger between United Airlines, the
world's biggest airline, and No. 10
US Airways has prompted many of
try's self-imposed check off the nation's carriers to examine
research monies.
similar strategies.
Projecti inciude Thornless · But until now, No. 16 TWA
Blackberries, Thorny Blackber- seemed o.ut of the loop. possibly
ries, Fall &amp; Summer Raspberries, due to the fact it hasn't turned an
Blueberry Production Trials, annual profit since 1988. The comBlueberry Mulch Comparisons . pany lost $76.1 million in the first
Thornless Blackberry production.. quarter and $353.4 million last
Demonstration, High Tunnel year.
Strawberry Vermicompost Production Trials, Black Raspberry
Vermicompost 'frials, Evaluation
of Vermicompost Soil Amendments for Tomatoes and Peppers,
MIAMI (AP) -The head of the
Cover Crops for Weed Control
nation's
third-largest cigarette
and Soil Amendment in PuOlpkins and Sweet Corn Crops, U.S. maker denied that the company
Regional Paw Vaw Genotype lied to customers about the health
Screening Trials, New Produce risks of smoking, and said cosdy
Marke.ting Opportunities and leghl' batdes have hurt the firm's
Fruit &amp; Vegetabl~ Internet sites ability to pay a large punitive
and webs. In addition, "Ask The awan:!.
It was the second day of testimoExperts" as growers, university
ny
for Nicholas BrQokes, chairman
and industry personnel will be
available for questions. Admission · and chief executive of Brown &amp;
is free and open to the public! Williamson Tobacco Corp., in a
Supper will be provided for class-action lawsuit representing
everyone. For more information 300,000 to 500,000 smokers.
The jury earlier determined that
please call Brad Bergefurd at 800the
nation's five largest cigarette
297-2072.
makers conspired to produce a
deadly
product. It awarded $12.7
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs County
Agriwlture &amp; Nat11ral Resources million in compensatory damages
agent, the Ohio State University to three people representing the
class.
,, Extension.)
the IRA, ask yourself, ·Will I be
able to maintain the amount
withdrawn for the necessary time
period?
Consider the use of this
method in difficult financial
times. If you have been temporarily unemployed, the amount 9f
the .payment may not be sufficient to sustain your lifestyle during. a prolonged work stoppage.
Individuals applying this strategy
have been known to dip back
into the IRA for more money,
thus modify the payment schedule and subjecting all distributions to the retroactive 10%
penalty.
This article illustrates just a few
of the many issues to consider
before beginning a series of substantially equal paymems from·
your IRA. These issues and alternative solutions should be carefully examined with your financial advisor or tax professional
before making any decisions.
Caldwell is a certified financial
planner at Raymond James Financial
Services, 441 Second Ave., Gallipolis.)

wv

I

I

••

I.

�Page D2 • 6unllap ~imrs-&amp;rnlintl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ohio • Point Plaaunt,

Time ·warner agrees to
carry statewide news
network for one year
-

~

COLU~US

(AP) -Time
Warner Conununications will
carry a 24-hour state news network throughout Ohio for one
year, but only on a digital cable
system not yet available to many
of its customers.
The Dispatch Printing Co.,
which owns the Ohio News
Network, announced the agreement Friday after six months of
negotiations with Time Warner.
The state's biggest cable TV
provider has refused to carry
ONN on one of the 61 channels in its standard programming
package. In a showdown last
year, tile Dispatch group threatened to pull its CBS affiliate
WBNS- TV from Time Warner's
Columbus-area lineup.
But in late December, the
companies agreed that WBNS
would remain with Time Warner for rwo years, and discussions
over ONN would continue.
OfTime Warner's 1.4 million
customers in Ohio, 861,350 are
offered digital service but only
about 80,000 subscribe. The rwo
companies said it is being
expanded and marketed aggres-

•·
:.
•·••
-

;
•

l

.
..

·,
·,

sively and will be available to all
customers by this time next
year.
The turning point in the talks
was an offer by Time Warner to
include ONN on its digital system in its Akron, Dayton and
Cincinnati divisions as well as
the Columbus market, said
Michael F. Curtin, president of
The Dispatch Printing Co.,
which also publishes The
Columbus Dispatch.
While Curtin acknowledged
that the Dispatch group didn't
get exacdy what it wanted, he
said: "Late in the negotiations .
we had an opportunity for
statewide digital and that's
important because ONN covers
the entire state."
The digital service has 180
channels, with more planned,
and provides sharper images and
sound.
Time Warner maintained that
is older, analog system had no
room for"ONN.
But it is making room in the
Colpmbus market in July for
M,SNBC, a national all-news
channel.

Kneen
framPipD1

plants. Use high organic based
soils to repot with.A.dding perlite,
vermiculite and sand can improve
drainage. Don't allow soils to dry
out especially if under high fertilizer regimes as high soluble salt
levels may cause roots to die and
become an entry point for root
diseases.
Remember to water in the
morning, fertilize weekly, place
the plant in the proper light
exposu~e, provide a large enough
container and enjoy the beaury of
"!your gardening effortS! · "· '

•••

Did you miss the Meigs/Washington counties 1\vilight Vegetable tour held Tuesday at the
O'Brien Farm in Letart Falls?
Plan on attending the annual
Horticulture Field Night on July
8 fiom 5 to 9 p.m. at Ohio State
Universiry's Piketon Research
Center located at 1864 Shyville
Road, Piketon, Ohio. Learn
about the latest Horticultural
research projects being conducted
using your tax doDars and indus-

Money·
la0111PapDI

l

pants reaches age 59~ In other
words, if a 50-year-old IRA participant begins distributions
under this exception, distribu- .
tions must continue ·until the
individual attains age 59 i, before
the amount could be modified.
On the other hand, if a 58-yearold IRA participant begins distributions under this exception, distributions must continue until the
individual artains ' age 62 before
the amciunt could be modified.
The amount that can be withdrawn each year is calculated by
using one of three IRs approved
methods: annuity, amortization and
.life expectancy. The variables
include&lt;\ in the calculation are the
individual's age, the IRA account
value and a "reasonable" interest
rate. Each method will allow a different amount to b.e withdrawn
fiom your IRA and most individuals simply choose the method
allowing for the distribution
amount closest to what they need,
Generally, a tax or financial
advisor with the use of software
can perform these calculations for
you.
The substantially equal payment exception does allow for
you to access your IRA "early"
but is it the beat alternative?
It is important to note that if
the payment amount .before the
later of five years or attairunent of
age 59'1. ia modified, a 10 percent
penalty will be applied retroactively to all c:umnt and previoua
distribution• intended to qualify
under the aubttantially equal pay. ment exception. Before electina
aubatantial.IY equal paymenta from

Bell Atlantic·GTE
deal gets OK
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal regulators gave their blessing
to the merger of Bell Adantic and
GTE Corp., a $65 billion unio~
that transforms one of the off- ·
spring of the old BeD system into
the nation's largest local phone
company and wireless provider.
The approval alloW1 the companies to complete a deal announced
almost two years ago and launch a
combined business under the new
name Verizon Conununications.
The l'ederal Conununications
Commission signed off on the deal
after accepting a plan by the companies to partially spin off GTE's
long-distance assets.

Re~:Firm

tobuy1WA

Tobacco chief

denies lying

aar

ainton expected
to sign \ill .
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Clinton is expected to sign
the electronic signature legislation
that cleared the Senate on Friday
by an 87-0 vote. He has said it will
marry the old value of consumer
protection with the newest technologies so "we can achieve the
full measure of the benefits that ecomme.rce has to offer!' '
The bill, which the House
passed earlier in the week by 4264, sets a national framework for
giving online signatures legal statu~ With that, consumers who
shop online for a new car or a ·
home mortgage will also be able to ·
seal the deal &lt;tVer their computers.

Pipeline
acdclents up
WASHINGTON (AP) - Acci- .
dents are increasing on the 2.2 million miles of pipelines carrying
natural gas and other hazardous

materials nationwide, as the federal
government slacked off on enforcing many safety regulations, investigators say.
An average of 22 people died
annually fiom 1988 to 1998 when
the number of acci&lt;lents was
increasing 4 percent per year,
according to the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of
Congress.
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich.,
who requested the GAO investigation, said the report "paints a picture of an agency that places discurbing amounts of faith in the
industry it is supposed to regulate."

court filings fiom the company
and lhe government over legal
minutiae, the government said
Microsoft violated Rule 8 of the
Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure by not waiting for U.S. Distrier Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson.
Earlier this week, Microsoft
· asked the appeals court for a stay
.after Jackson d~ferred decision on a
stay. On Thursday, Microsoft filed a
brief in the circuit court arguing
that it was not required to wait for
Jackson's ruling.

•rts

Housing
drop in May

Newsy~tem

working

WASHINGTON (A.P) - A
new system designed to improve
the flow of air traffic during severe
weather helped reduce delay&gt; W7
percent last month, the head ofthe
Federal Aviation Administration
said.
But the weather has made this
week a "particularly difficult" one
for keeping planes on time, Jane
Garvey admitted. And she warned
that "we've got a long, hot summer
ahead of us, with plenty o( storms."
The new Spring-Summer 2000
initiative was announced in March,
launching a cooperative effort
between the FAA., airlines and airports to find ways to cut down the
growing number of delays for air
travelers.
·

, WASHINGTON (AP)
Housing construction last month
dipped to its lowest level in almost
year, providing fresh evidence
hat the Federal Reserve's six intetst rate increases are beginning to
low the economy.
Builders began work on new
homes at a

.-

annual rate of 1.59 million ~ in
May, a 3.9 percent drop' .~m
April's level. the Com.mtrce
Department reported. .
, ..
The
decline left housing starts
lowest level since last
the Fed's latest cycle of interest~ralle
increases began.

ESPN Cllltlc IS Produc ing A

oH

.. J r: 4_56~1.

STAAT DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meeting Eligible Sin·
gl&amp;s In Your .ftrea. Call For More
lnfo~mation , 1-800-AOMANCE

Dow Jones ·: ~
takes tumble:'"·

Ext.9735.

'

W~y walt? Start meeting Oh io

singles ton ight. Call toll tree I ·
SD0-766·2623, exlenslon 6176.
-1 .Jaul: To Girls Live! 1·900·656·
-;.. ~100 Ext. 8400. $3.99 Pet Minut&amp;
... Mllst Be 18 Years, Sery·U 619~
~~-8434 .

•I

· .. 30 Announcements
~ .• "GOT

ACAMPGROUND Mem-

bership Or T imeshare?" WE'LL
) ;, t .TA!CE ITI America's Mos1 Suc -

C'essful Campground And Time·
~·t ; stfare Resale Clearinghouse. Call

&lt;r r.AESORT SALES INTEANATION·
- ~L. 1·600 ·4~3-5961, 24 Hours.

1 ·.~ r . ; www.resortsales.com

'

·-~-=----:--­
.,, ·, $tQP C utt ing Coupons . 1-800 . " 205-8499, ext. 615.

"

Sale

2 Seven Year Old fh:ld Cats To

Bevo Prancls. Interested In Acqu iring Arch ival Mattrlal (Film,
Photos, Calls , Programs) Please

3 lOng ha ired kittens, 7 wks. old

On The Llle Of

Call Vln Cannamela At 860·766·
U41 Or Ema il vln .canname·

laOespn.oom

304-61!&gt;-5043.

6 Pupplell. 100%

7 K1ttens, 3 Bobtail. 6 Weeks Old,

To good home kiHtnl 304·675·

Ll~orTraloed , 740.446-8059.

::=13.:;.54~.

Floral Arrangements , Unfinished
w.ood Cratts, Beads , Doll SuP·
plies , Books, Fabrics, Sugar Free

Cnow Puppy Female. 12 Weeks
Oki, Aott /Pitbull 0 3 Months Old.

Wolf Pup 6 Months Old. Female.
Black Lab, 1 Year Old Male, GOOCl

Malo, 740·441 ·0118.

Candy, Ml&amp;e.

740-592·1842

Free Kltten_s. about 7 weeks old .

Quality clothing and household
items . $1 .00 bag sale e11er~
Thursday. Monda~ thru Sa1urday

(304

Free Puppies: 2 Males, 1f2 Bea·
gle &amp; 112 Collie. Raccoon Creek
Road , On St. At. 7, 740-441-0417,

9:()().5:30.

Aller 6.

40

Giveaway

1 Year Old Male Coliie Mix . Very
Friendly Needs GOOd Home, 740·
44H286.
1 Yr old Husky &amp; German Shep-

pard Mix. (304)675·6615. To good
home in country.

Tired of Payl ng Rent?
• Your monthly rant
payment could bt
your mcKtgage
payment
• Your down payment
might be 1e1a than a
rent41i deposit
• You will actually
OWN It and be
creating equltyl

'

Justice: Microsoft
violated niles -

Community

WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Justice Departinent told a federal
appeals court Friday that Microsoft
violated federal rules of procedure
by . asking that court to stay
antitrust penalties against it before
the trial judge ruled on the same
request.
In the latest of a daily volley of

·on A ency

Call NowII! II

Tel:

Home Ownership Education Class will be held Monday, 6/19/00 thrO'u~
Friday 6123/00 from 6:00 pm to 9:00pm at the Cheshire Office 801 o SA
7 N, Cheshire. You must attend to
·
·
'
.•'• :

•.••,•

, ;FI

.

Coolant

UP. to· 5 quarts GM oil
ant:t AC filters most GM '
·cars &amp; Light duty trucks

$16.95' ~::

*21.8·1Tu '

,,

I

AC . Inspection .:

Alignment ·

any repairs extra

Most GM cars
any repairs extra

$54.95 ~:: $21.81
.As your GM Parts

supplier, we're your
source for GM
· Goodwrench• new arid
remanufactured englries .
and new transmissions~ ·

I

Plua

Tax

ront
Alignments

GM carslight duty trucks
any repairs eXtra

~24.95.~:

· The l'lrM, LII'Otll, l'alttlt, Internet ltrvlce In Melge
Ill Cnll•nl •Ill IIPIUIII'I 7 Ill IIIII lill IUPIIIU

''

C.ll te Ill• Up TH.y
118·1UUICA•7
~AI

.

Vou've found
www.e11rek

'

'I
'

IJ

j

u1e 1 South. Lovod Family Pel,
740·446.0910.

'I •

9866 , Fu ll Service. References

~~F;;j~~~~~~~~~~f;;~
and

Kittens to give away. (304)773·

ANTIQUE FURNITURE:
4 stack bookcase w/drawer, Secretary book
case. upright showcase, dresser w/mirror, wicker
fern stand, library table w/drawer and shelf,
kitchen cabinet, rockers, wall mirror, 3 drying
racks, school desk, Duncan Phyfe dining table, 6
leg oak dining table, other furniture ...
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS:
Lanterns, Sad irons, washboards, milk crocks,
graniteware, glass churn, 3 gal. stone chum,
stone jars and jugs, Chenille spread, quilt, misc.
linens, old plc;tures &amp; frames, . kitchen items,
Silver trays, Royal Doulton . Rip Van Winkle
pitcher, Rookwood vase (1908 #950D),
Blue/White stoneware bowl, depression glass,
Harker, glass rolling pins, Wall mount coffee
grinder, copper pot, kettle and ladle 1 Steriopiic
cards, Ohio License Plates (1915, 16, 17, 19),
wood Firkin (has documentation) , lin type, Boy
Scout items, wood block planes (Ohio Tool Co.
Thistle Brand), military items (Hat, buttons,
ribbons, bars, two 13 lb. practice bombs WWI)
old Fire Chief hat, old glass . plate slides of
various places ·a· subjects (color), Powels &amp;
Satety Squibs used in mining (Pat. Date 1891),
Good selection of country antiques ...
· ANTIQUE TOYS
aui',illllllif: •Tollacco Balling Boxes •1 U.U'UUII Arabian #5 tin windup (horse, sulky, driver, West
Germany, orig. box, mint cond) , tin windup
Sticks •Platform Scales •One
post • 2 Calf Creep Feeders motorcycle/rider, gas engine #21 Ray CoxThimble Drome Race Car, childs wringer WCl.Sher
&gt;Palpll,atlton qage • 2 Fuel Tanks •Utili
machine (tin w/glass body) , collection of Dime
•Cu~tlng Torch •Calf Pullers
;har!!Elr •Air Grease Gun and Reel •Vertical Star~ metal soldiers, army camp set w/tents &amp;
ressor •Electric Welder · •Lincoln ace., military figures by Mancil, Beton. Barclay,
Auburn Tank, old metel dump trucks (some
wc1.uer •Part Washer •Bolt Bin •Chain
wood wheels,) other cars &amp; trucks. Sch,oe!)l(ut
Eater •Transfer Purnp •
childs plano, official Boy Scout
Sprayers •1 Large lot of farm
(orig box), games and old puzzles, J inr-An
nd tools •1 00 Round Bales Hay •4
other tin and wood toys.
··nre~~S•T
~Bati e F~eders •Som e Furniture
ITEMS OF LOCAL 1r
'"··h••M R. Dillon, Owner
Gallipolis Bol11es
I
Sil\rerrnan-1
III,,Cfilon•~er Not•: ·rhls Is one of the cle1mee1tl Levi), milk bottle (Casto Da!irv! .~.
most complete lines of farm macrun{:J'YI Bovie metal plaque...
we have had the opportunity to sell . ** This sale has an out:star1dyjlg grouping of small
'IPI'ac l;tca everything has been stored Inside: antique &amp; collectible ilems
AUCTIONEER: L.C'il''-'cA. LEMLEY
has
the best ca re. and Is field ready.
740-3811-0823 (Home) 740.245-9868 (Barn)
Tsrm1: Cash. or Check wltti proper I. D.
:'Licensed and
by State of Ohio"
r."•oh/Jinnrn\JI•~ Check Onlyll

90

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Page 03

Wanted to Buy

Absolute Top Dollar: AU U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins, Prootsets ,

Diamonds , .t.nlique Jewelry. Gold
Rings, Pre - t930 U.S. Currency,
Sterling. Etc. Acquisitions Jewelry

• M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 second

A111nue. Gallipolis. 7~·28&lt;2 .
Want To Buy: Used Mobile

Hom~~ ,

740-446.0175, 3().4-67!&gt;-5965.

Wanted to Buy

Complete HousehOld Or Estates !
Any Type Of Furniture, Applianc·
es, Antique's, 'Etc. Also Appraisal

Avallablol7.0.379-2720.

992-9107,140-989-2823.

Sund1y 6 Monday edition·
1 1\1\.o. F ld
:"""'m r ay.

Dir~cfiDIII: From Gallipolis rollow S~ate Route

~

Bill Moodi~paugn Auclloneerlng:
buy/sell es11!1tu : consignment
auction· Thursdays. 6pm, Middle·
port, Oh io .&amp; wv License , 740·

Lost: Beagle * Female Age 2,
Leather Collar. &lt;Jarfleld Area . Ao-

SATURDAY, JUNE 24, 2000
Lunch Avsilsbls!IO:OO.· s.m.

South to Junction 218. Turn right. 'Fo
lt:ita1te Route 218 to 790. Turn right. Go 4
I"""'" near Lecta.
ue to selling my rarm, the following farm
maehtnery will be sold:
•Case 450 Doxer. Case 580
Both are In very good condition .
20' Gooseneck Trailer wltb ramps .
;.lOiltmper •16' stock trailer (bumper hitch)
Tr1etort: •Ford 7710 AC and Cassette 920
• lhrmr~ . •Zetor 6245 4-wheel drive 960 hours.
I•Sutper "A" with cultivators, Case 990. ·
IMltiJhlns·rll: •9' Lely mower • 2 Row Tol&gt;ac~col
•MF .124 Square Baler •New
lso:rav,er •Vermeer 504 Round Bal.e r •6' Rot:arvl
lfnower •New Holland side delivery Hayrakes
. 5' ~o.tary mower •2 Round Bale Movers •3
post driver •30' Hay Conveyor. •3 pt.
spreader •4 Flatbed wagons •Pull
fe rtilizer spreader ··4-14" John
IPin\11 •Hydraulic Wood Spllter •3-14 Ford
HPlow • 3 PIJnt Dirt Scoop •John Deer 20 fold
disc •Post Hole Auger •16' Harrlgato
EI-Cultlpacker •Field s prayer •Boom pole •
manure Spreader •One row tob·ac!JO II

AuCtion
and Flea Market

Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm the Available, Licensed &amp;·Bonded,
day oelore 1he ad Ia to run. "Our Place Or 'rbilt5f'

PUBLIC AUCTION

'

R, L.EE JOHc~!~~;~~£TIONEER;t

I'

Parking Lol. Thursday P.M. Call

Owner • Belly Moore·Hayes

I

I

80

To Describe. 740.245·5130.

Om Smilh . fwdianeer Ohio #1344 W. Va.# 515
Cash Positive ID Rafreshm8nh
'No! responsible for tKcidanls or loss ol propaly'

••J

Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
GaiUpolis, Ohio 740·379·2720.

Household

on1o, 740-992-7502.
·
Leslie Lemley, Lemley's Auclion
Barn , 740·388·0823, 740·245·

All Yard Sa1el Mutt Be Paid In

!•

!

740·367·7341 Ol' · :
740·992·6629 .'.;

Found : lad les Watch. Wal-Mart

.llnfi•Ue
.llaadiOft
,.
..
I'
.llf ••:GO .II M
S8 t UrdR'J, JUftt 25 I" II• ,..,,..

Public Sale and Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY JUNE 24TH 2000 10 OOA M
•
•
•·
COOL
"ILLE, t OHIO :
~~EC:~~l;, Tak S ''R 7
·
•

e

t.

t. , 2 miles South of Coolville.

hio,loleftAuclion
on Troy. 1\vp.
go ..5Signs
miles. pos1ed.
lcfl on Troy
1\vp.
158
Easy 468C
to find
Reducing

444 hrs. w/72 in. Dirt Bucket, Bobtat 20 Post Hole Digger

~pe~ra~tiio~ns~·~w~ill~oiffJe~
rt~~~!uoijllo~wcii~ng~
: • Bob&lt;at 873 Skid Steer

C

llachment, Front Forks Attachment, Boom Pole
llochment, Attachments offered separately, 7xl9
onollne.6tonTiltLandscaplnR GOOseneckTrailer, King
;lllbanr, Ohio
uller 8 fl. Heavy Duty Tilt Blade, 3 pl. 2 Row Cultivalor
gle Truss Assembly System, 42 n. Walk Through Fully
Take us so B. 32 west of Athens, Ohio and exit
cijuslable JlgginR System w/Overhead Hydraulic Press
onto so west towards McArthur. Auction is
/Extras. Tllndem Truss Trailer, 3 New llxlS Galvanized
etal Unassembled Carports
quarter mile on left signs posted.
IOQLS;
Lincoln
Weldanpower
GSOOO
k h II
d
1•
L
k
elder/Generator Sev. Extras (Near New), Black Max Gas
0a a seat; ressers Wmirror,; uOO cues; .5 ~P · Honda Air Compressor, Dewall 16 in. 5 hp. lnduslrial
kitchen cupboards; 14 Persian and Oriental style
ad1al Arm Saw w/extras, Ryobi Power Miter, Me1al
rugs; church pews; marble top dressers; 20 in.
andmg Machine, Lincoln SPIOO Wire Feed Welder, Black
ax 6hp. Uprighl Air Compressor (New), Oxygen
in dUttria I pIaner; 8 f t. WOOd lathe; feW lndiln
celylene, 16ft Scaffle Alum. Pick, Truck Tool Box, Lg.
artifacts; depression glau; Hull bow knot vases;
nvil, Insulation Blower, Sev. Shop Carts, 3 Desks, 2 Hvy.
d
h
1
t'
DUly Nylon Commercial Slings 80 ft Long, 2 pc. Roll-A·
an muc mora a very trge IUC lOft •
Round Tool Box, Floor Jack, Rolled Fiberglass Insulation,
Terms cuh or check with· positive ID. S% buyer's
hain Falls. Vises, llench Grinder, Lots of Melal Shelving,
fee waived for cash or checks. food available. Eoncrele Tools, Tarps, Ext Cords, Wheel Barrels, J.D. Top
mail mhutchjnson@frognet.net, View pictures at
i~~~e~~d ~~fse ~:~~::d Tools, All small Shop Tools,
WWW.frognet.net/-mhutchjn pictures Will be ~[O'lQJ~~·i.J~I:E&lt;· Large Variety of Tools &amp;
labeled at, a2, etc.
quipruen( iri Great Condition. Be prompl. Slarting with
uality. Lol's Unadverlised. Lunch Served. Checks Accepted

ifRs~~~~I.~~LL OWNER: GRANT NEWLAND 740-667-

1&amp;ucfion.. r: JWark fCufchiniOR

7"·698•6706

271

J:lctnlld and Bonded Ia Ohio
Partner iranlc fCutchlnaon

CORDRAY'S AUCTION SERVICE
· J.K.CORDRAY AUCTIONEER

740-592·4349

~pprtntlct

MISCELLANEOUS
Lots oUishlng Tatkle, Records, lupes, Lawn Chairs, Fishing
Poles, Misc. tools, Chain Saw, Trimmer All kinds of new
Items, Painted slale &amp; Ironing boord, (;;(.man stove, Boxes
of 2x4 ceiling lila, Wood chipper (needs dutch), Old dump
'rake w/Iron whools &amp; LDts Morel
·

I

•. '

60 Lost and Found

HOUSEHOLD
Uvlng room suite, Baldwin organ, Chest, Baby begs, Folding
chairs, Dotble &amp; single beds, Cradle, Vanity, Tables, White
lltchen cabinet, Electric stove top, Dish washer, Stove vent,
End Tables, Large Dresser, Steiea &amp; speakers, dresser, Glhler,
Plalform rocker, Stands &amp; Morel

'

18th. Roush· Ferrell Or., Camp

Billy Goble Auctioneer, Pomeroy,

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS
BuHet, Oak Ubrary table, chest ol drawers, cabinet base,
racking chair, wood chairs, 11lrror, dinner butkat, dishes
(Crystal, Depression, Currier &amp;!vas, Falsgrafl ware, ·
Crooksville, Avon, Ruby), Brass Items, Lots &amp;Lots of dishes,
Botlles, Jugs, S&amp;H Groon stamps, Teardrop &amp;Art DBCo
lamps, Old lools, Brass door knobs, wood boxes, Sllvartone
radio cast, Graa•l-s.·Playlf pla110 rolls, Lard press, Iron
skillets, Country song boo~s, (CKa Cola bottles, Two show
cases &amp; Lots Morel

~

· · C...a\\ia _:Meigs

Home0nly,140·441.Q118.

Belly has kttt a colltclll' tmd now wants to dean her
bulldlttg. I.Dtated from St. Rt. Bypan of Po111roy, Ohio take
J.P. Roatl207 lo Audloll.

..

Community Action &amp; Ohio vaJiey
Bank are offering a reduced " :
interest rate for a fixed term of wp
to 30 years,
:
wit~ no down
:
payment ·:~
I
requirement
for the stick
built homes
being constructed I~ Ga!lia an.d
Meigs County
-.
•
Opportunities are limlted·and on a llret c~me
first serve basis according to ellglblli'l

Moving Sale Everything Must Go:
6f30 First Holzer Apartments
12 03 Second Avenue, 740·446 ·
4726 After 3:30 P.M. Monday ·
Friday.

2 Black' Kittens, long Haired, Lit·
ter Trained, Good Hom e Only
740·446·1906.
.

Home -:l
Ownershllp:: ~:l
..

=---------

9131.
--------.:...,_------~
PubliC Sale and Auction

.

'

•

German Shepherd PUppies. Call
Aller 5 P.M. 740·256·1 274.

~

.

)682·2&lt;147/S82-2405.

Moving Sale. srartlng Sunday,

• t :30 1.m. Slturd•~-

446-8806.

•

.

tdhlon ·2:00p.m.
Friday. Mondlly odltlon

Free Kittens To Good Home, 740·

New To You Thrift Shoppe
9 West Sllmson. Athen&amp;

"'SS.Aet
ILUEj
••
At""' u equarw In etootc
••
•
VIlli our web 11te@ www.onctan.coin

304-67S.2780 •

Small Go ld en Retriever, Tw o 3

Rick Pearson A-uction Company,
I time auctioneer, complele
auc11on
service .
Licensed
f66 ,0hio &amp; West Virg inia , 304·

na.s7850r 304-n:J.wr.

Conley. Various
Items/Antiques.

QEAQLINE: 2:00p.m.
the d.y befor. the 1d
11 to ~n. Sunday

90

Yard Sale

70

Yard Sale
Pt. Pleaaant
&amp; VIcinity

Be Paid In Advance.

Month Old Pupp lu . 740 -367·

G.ltts and Craft Supplies . 1201
V1and Street . Pl. Pleasant. 10·6
Monday thru Sit. Dreamcalchers.

New Localion: Poppy's Place

.,.,

" " 1511 Klnawhl Stntt

Ma le Shepherd Like Pup. To A
Good Home. 141).«6-34 13.

Sunday, June 18,2000
70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yor&lt;i Sileo Mu•t

Kitten s· some white, some bob1a~ .
one black bObtail, 740·992·3201 .

0624.

$1149..-,Tr
.:
•811Mtl'f.3'"'·"'·'
· i6l Point Pltalllll, WV 25550

Pure Heinz 51. 5

70

Giveaway

40

Section

mtmes -~entinel

Months Old, Healtny, Good Na·
lured, Attractive, 740·441 -1105.

:

___

Giveaway

40

. ·I'

WHITE "'ROWN "RII!tf
"GRAY "GREEN
TAN

~unba!'

Giveaway, To Good Home Only, 1
Male, 1 Female, 740-367-7166.

Docum_tntar~

1 Gentleman Seeking Companlon, l';.ah-., From· Nice Female For Talks
, 1• ~aUis &amp; Friendsh ip. Send Re~
'Pl ies To: 553 Second Avenue
. !" .APartment 403, Gal lipolis,

740-962-4575

pat Ball

•·mail: cordra auctlon@mn .net

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY
Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems with
your driving record; DUI's
speeding tickets, etc:
Same Day SA.22's issued.
Call for a quote .
Brown Insurance Agency
446,1960
University of Rio Grande
is offering free enrichment
classes for kindergarten
children entering school
this fall. Classes begin
June 26 to July 12 M·F
10:30 · 12:30 Call,
1-740·245· 7373 to register
Gatlinburg, Tennessee.
Gatlinburg Town Square Resort,
Condo Re.ntal Available,
2 BR , 2 baths, sleeps 6.
Avg. 1e-2s. $7oo
(614) 436·2255

,Serenity House .
serves victims of. dom.estic
violence
call 446·6752 or
1-800-942-95n
Top Soil Fill Dirt Bank Run
Delivered or Picked Up
Min Loader
CHG$35.00
Call
Cremeans Concrete
&amp; Supply, Co.
1-740-446·1142
Monday - Saturday
Delong's Groom Shop
Now Open
For Quick Appointments
Call Howard Delong

740-441·1602

Father's Day Brunch At
The Elks Lodge
• 11:30 • 1:00 p.m.

Free·Vacation Getaway,
For the 1st 100 People to
Purchase , 20 Piece Set
Waterless Stainless Steel
Cookware,
.Lifetime Guarantee,
Perfect Gift For Weddings,
Anniversary, or Just Because.
12 Months Free Financing ·
Available thru June, After
: 90 Days Same As Cash,
. Call 740·367 •7760
A Li111e Save A Lot

Mollohan Furn &amp;
Carpets
Clark Chapel Ad. Porter, OH

All

Your Favorites and
Plen

Medicare Approved
Get your Albuterol or other
breathing medication billed
to Medicare. Save money.
Free Home Delivery. Call

Bowman's Homecare
740-446-7283

Looking
For

Peace?
Come
HOME
To Us!
Coming
July 2000

OfThem

CHRISTY'S
FAMILY LIVING
Now has Home
Improvement
Services
Janitorial- Maid,
Maintenance &amp;
Home Remodeling

1-740-992-4514
By the hour or
by the job

~ee~ls

6 Available July 1
and Aug. 19·26
Phone 446·49~3

Wanted to do:
Job
. working
with horses.

e
Junior Golf Game
June 26-30
9:00 am-2:00 pm
IAot~s

10-18 Cosl $100

Lunch Provided Daily
Instruction by PGA
Professional
*Rules *Full Swing
*Etiquette *Short Game
*Tournament, Games,
Prizes
Call 446-GOLF
Limited Space, Call Todlavl

For ore
In for at ion
446· 342 or
9 2·2156

Phone 256·6740
Not

'

IN SEAACH OFIEVO

Personals

' 011

The Dow Jones industrial·
age plunged Friday by .&lt;:o:.&gt;.:&gt;&lt;
points, or 2.5 percent, to close
10,449.30 - its worst drop -.
the stunning 617-point drop ·
April14.
: ,..
Blue-chip stocks feU steeply:ifte:
Xerox and a regional b~~~i
company issued profit \\
that resonated throughout :·. ·
market. Technology stocks were
lone source ofstrength, helpirg
Nasdaq rise a modest 14.82
3,860.56.

30 Announcements

ANNOUNCEMENTS

•Fast, easy Installation . ;
•Goes directly over old roqf
•Won't rust or corrode
•Reduces noise
•.•
•Provides added Insulation
•Lifetime limited warranty:;

DIAMOND BAR, Calif. (AP)
- Southern California's air-quality agency voted to require· nearly
11,000 transit buses and garbage
trucks to convert to cleaner-burning alternative fuels, serting what
environmentalists hope will be an
exam~le for !4e rest of the country.
Engme 1nanufacturers inunediately warned that they will fight
the rules unless cleaner-burning
diesel IS added to the list of allowable fuels.
"' ". .
The regulations cover government agencies, universities and
transit companies in Los Angeles,.
Orange, Riverside and San
Bernardino counties.

4

' ~i

.ROOFING SAL~

Apncywants
cleaner air

Oil, Lu

~lassifieds .

Sunday, June 18, 2000

BUSINESS HIGHLIGHTS

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Air'Tran
Holdings Inc. of Orlando, Fla., the
small airline formerly known as
Valujet, il in the early stages of talks
about buying St. Louis-based
TWA., according to reports published in the Adanta journal-Constitution and The Wall Street Journal.
Analysts say the proposed merger between United Airlines, the
world's biggest airline, and No. 10
US Airways has prompted many of
try's self-imposed check off the nation's carriers to examine
research monies.
similar strategies.
Projecti inciude Thornless · But until now, No. 16 TWA
Blackberries, Thorny Blackber- seemed o.ut of the loop. possibly
ries, Fall &amp; Summer Raspberries, due to the fact it hasn't turned an
Blueberry Production Trials, annual profit since 1988. The comBlueberry Mulch Comparisons . pany lost $76.1 million in the first
Thornless Blackberry production.. quarter and $353.4 million last
Demonstration, High Tunnel year.
Strawberry Vermicompost Production Trials, Black Raspberry
Vermicompost 'frials, Evaluation
of Vermicompost Soil Amendments for Tomatoes and Peppers,
MIAMI (AP) -The head of the
Cover Crops for Weed Control
nation's
third-largest cigarette
and Soil Amendment in PuOlpkins and Sweet Corn Crops, U.S. maker denied that the company
Regional Paw Vaw Genotype lied to customers about the health
Screening Trials, New Produce risks of smoking, and said cosdy
Marke.ting Opportunities and leghl' batdes have hurt the firm's
Fruit &amp; Vegetabl~ Internet sites ability to pay a large punitive
and webs. In addition, "Ask The awan:!.
It was the second day of testimoExperts" as growers, university
ny
for Nicholas BrQokes, chairman
and industry personnel will be
available for questions. Admission · and chief executive of Brown &amp;
is free and open to the public! Williamson Tobacco Corp., in a
Supper will be provided for class-action lawsuit representing
everyone. For more information 300,000 to 500,000 smokers.
The jury earlier determined that
please call Brad Bergefurd at 800the
nation's five largest cigarette
297-2072.
makers conspired to produce a
deadly
product. It awarded $12.7
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs County
Agriwlture &amp; Nat11ral Resources million in compensatory damages
agent, the Ohio State University to three people representing the
class.
,, Extension.)
the IRA, ask yourself, ·Will I be
able to maintain the amount
withdrawn for the necessary time
period?
Consider the use of this
method in difficult financial
times. If you have been temporarily unemployed, the amount 9f
the .payment may not be sufficient to sustain your lifestyle during. a prolonged work stoppage.
Individuals applying this strategy
have been known to dip back
into the IRA for more money,
thus modify the payment schedule and subjecting all distributions to the retroactive 10%
penalty.
This article illustrates just a few
of the many issues to consider
before beginning a series of substantially equal paymems from·
your IRA. These issues and alternative solutions should be carefully examined with your financial advisor or tax professional
before making any decisions.
Caldwell is a certified financial
planner at Raymond James Financial
Services, 441 Second Ave., Gallipolis.)

wv

I

I

••

I.

�04 • iounba!' 11J:1mrs iornllnel

Page

110

EMPLOYMENT
SERVIC ES

Help Wanted

UD&amp; WE£KLY GU~R~NTEED
WORKING FOR THE OOYERN
IIENT FROr.l HOr.IE P~RT
Tlr.IE NO EXPERIENCE AE
OUIAED 1 800-757.0753

'

110

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

Help Wanted

U 000 WEEKLY ! Ma l ng 400

$98 7 85 WEEKLY P ocess ng
HUO /FHA Mo tgage Relunds No
Exper enee Requ r ed Fo FREE
Into ma on Ca I 1 800 501 6832

Brochu es l ~~::at sract on Guar
anteed Pos1age &amp; Supples Pro
11 ded
Ru~h Se I Addressed
Stamped EnvelOpe GIGO DEPT
~
Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN

Ext 1JOO

~37~0~1
~1~4~~==S~~'='=m=me=d=~=le=~~=J~-------------------'
..
Public Sale and Auction

110

Help Wanted

ASSEMBLY AT HOr.IEII Cralts
Toys Jewel 'I Wood s ewing
T'jp ng G Aat Pa'l CAll 1 800
795.0380 Exo •201 (24 H st

ATTE NTION
29
PEOPLE NEEOEO If Vou Have
0 To 75 lbS To Lose WE PA Y
YOU SSS All Nalu a
Doctor
Re commended Gua an eed! 1
888 806 453

CLAIMS PROCESSOR! $20 $40
H Potent at Process ng Cta ms
Is Easy T a n ng Prov ded
MUST Own PC CALL NOWI t

CAREE R OPPORTUNITY
MED CAL B LLERS Earn Up To
S45K fY Ful Tia n ng !PC Reqd
B8B 660 6693 Ex 4402

888 565-5197 EXT 642

Cosmetolog &amp;I Ntteded Gaur
anteed Wages Verses Comm s
son Pad Vacat ons Fee CEU
Hou s Fu &amp; Pa T me Help
Neoded 740 446-7267

EcommeceOhome Ea n n
come on lne $350 $850 wk
888 450 8900 www 4p ospe I
lylll

Poii tal Jobs $48 323 00 Y Now
H r ng No Expe lance
Pad
Tan ng G ea Be nelts Ca ll 7
Days BOO 429 3660 Ex J 566

DED ICATED RUN lA IL IN NE
W Home Week y 32¢ t M e &amp;
S op Pay No Touch Fre ght Otne
Oppo un t es Ava lab e For Solo
Tea ms And Owne Ops HII
B o he s T an spor lat on Inc
BOO 258 4456

All n LPNS RNs EMTs And Pa
amed cs Become An RN 0 BSN
G adua e An d ncrease Your n
come W thout Go n'J Back To
SchOo To Schedu e Your nte
\1 ew n Huntington Ca Eve yn
Hun By June 30 1 800 737

WV

Sunday, June 18,

110

Help Wanted

110

110

Help Wanted

DriVIf'S Aatbed
MecUCIII Coverege
Fronl Day Onet
S2 000 S+gn -Oilllon&lt;JS

DENTAL SIL LER St 5 $45 Hr
Den al S 11 ng So ftware Company
Needs Pe ople To P ocess Medi
ca calms F om Home Tra n ng
Pro~lded Must Own COmouler J
800-797 7511 Ext 303

Ouaoty Homo T me

Late Model EqUtPment
COL A&amp; 3Mos OTR

0 ve s CALL NOW TO EN
HANCE YOU R DR VING CA
REER! OTRX Prov des Manage
men Train ng P og ams To Fur
the Your Truck 0 vmg Caree &amp;
Enhance Sk II&amp; No Studen l s /2
Yr OT A Exp AeqUl ed 35 Cents
JMI e Nat ona D vers 40 1 K
Ass gned De UKe Convent onals
Pad nsu anc e Pans Fami 'I
Or &amp;n t&amp;d Qua I y 0 spatch 1
800 423 6939
recru l
ngCo1111 com www otrx com

ECK M LLER
800 61 6636
wwweckmllle com
DRIVERS TAKE HOME MORE
BE HOME MORE! Averag e 1999
Wage Wa s $45 255 www oe hl
t ansporl co m
EARN 125 000 TO $50 000 Y~
Medical lnsu ance B ling Assis
lance Needed ~.~nmed ate yl Use
Yo ur Hom e Compute Fo r G eat
P.oten a Annua nco me Ca I
Now! 1 800 291 4683 Oep t' 109

EAR N EX CELLENT IN COME
MedlcB 811 ers Needed Full
Tra ining Prov ded Hom e Com
puler Required Toll F ee 800
772 5933 Ext 12005

2000

Help Wanted

DRIVERS WANTED OTR /DEDI
GATED / REGIONAL LOC Al
Reach The Summ 1 Of Your PI
nancial Goals Work For A Com
pany Thai Clrtll ~bou t You Your
Fam ly And You Future L mlted
Openings 29 CPM All Miles Uri
load ng Pav P• sona! zed 01,
paten Home OHen Hoi day IVa
ca on Pay 401 K /Med~ea /Pres I
Den tal A der Prog ram 98% No,
Touch F e ghl Aulgned t
2000 s Call Summit Ti ansporta
lion 800 87 &amp; 08 80 Or 513 564
8945 EOE

0 ve

s 2 Week Pa d Truck Oriv

e Tra n ng No Expe ence Need

ed Ea n Up To S32 000/ 1st ~
W I Ful Benet Is Ca Todav 1
8 77 230 6002 Sunday Frlctay 9
A M To5 PM PAM Ti ansport
wwwo dr var&amp;com

2222

&amp;vaoe4--~ ~~
floe~~

514 Second Ave , Gallipolis, Oh10 45631-0994
7 40-446-0008
7 40-441 1111

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
15241

Rl 160

St

Vinton Ohio

a

evansmoo@zoomnet net

95
Tr o 94 t-i&lt;.orit:•nd
Daisy Darning Keys Spoon
Pie Button and various others We wl l also

I nen protectors and tle-ons

Th s s a partial listing or a large private collection and some
Consignment baskets
n this auction the bMkets wl l be
cataloged for your convenience
Longaberge@ and the other basket and collection names are
the properly of Long•berger® Company
M ocxllspaugh
Au.~_&lt;;,l,,con,;;eer
;.; lng Is In no way connected wth approved or
~
b)llhe Long•berger® Company
I D Required to reg ster !.ales tax collected cash or
good check fo f'c'yment not responsible fo r ace dents nor lOS$
1\nnouncements day of sa e take precedence ove any pr nted

There will be no sale Sat June 24 2000 at
the Auction House Our next sale will be Sat
July 1 2000 at 7 00 p m
If anyone has antiques or collectibles they
would like to consi8J1 please call Reanle 388·
87 41 or 388-8 389
We will be havlnf! a sale at the AmVets
Bldg Gallipolis Thursday June 22 7 00 with
alot of new merchandise If you would like t o
conslf!n for this sale please contact Dale
McCoy at McCoy Insurance Air condition
Bldl! AmVets
Finis • Ike Isaac Auctioneer

Sarah L Evana-Moora
Patricia H•v•· 446-3884
Cara Caaay 2415·9430

Auctlon~rlng Services

*

Bill Moodls,.ugh Auctioneer OH Uc 7693 W Va 1388
For lnformodon (740) 989 2623 or (740) 992 9707
Ucensed and Bonded n favor of State of Ohio
Auctioneers Note No Buyers rrem um
Refreshments Provided
Chairs Provided

Help Wanted

GOV T PO ST~L JOBS Up To
$18 35 Hour Full Benefits No Ex
Pill' ence Required Free App ca
t~ n And Exam lnlormatlon 1 888
726 9083 Extension 1701 (7
AM 7PM CST )

GOv t &amp; Poatal JOba Now H ng
In Ohoo $1410 to $21 80/h r Ben
eft~ &amp; Pd T a nlng For Job Info
&amp; ~PP c 1 818 942 0200 ext
~249

O ver A Quarter Centt-~.ry"

ru;A

on•

~d.~~.~= ~~~k\~ 0A~~~~tnsr;d

11058 : i l r lL
m eonl 109 feet
of front
enua Large
2 story
i'imob le
home
a~---1
hOme
With
j1JJ'Jft n that IS
curre~ g used as a beauty
salon Call lor more deta Is
$21&amp;000

re
.w&amp;J

11032 W•m the Convenience of
living In town AND epac:lou1
living accommodation•? Then
thiS s the house for you! W th
a most 4 000 sqUjre feet of vlng
space
which
nc udes 6
bedrooms and 4 baths this home
rests on an overs1zed corner ot
located n Ga I pot s neer schools
lstlop~&gt; lng, churches and the city
home has beaul ful
ha dwood flooring
~~:~~~~~ with custom c afted
pleoes n the large rooms
enjoy the spacious
;~~~~~·for comfort year a ound

Owner Needl Offer/ Known the
world over as the S lve Dolle
Auct on House th s h stor c
land mark offe s retal space
rental Income and storage
Includes 2 BR house next door
Ca
for det a Is
PRICE
REDUCED!

11060 PRICE REDUCED! A
LOT bigger than It looka!
Vacant and n town s hard to f nd
so take a look at this ot located
just a couple blocks ftom the City
Park w th O\ler I 000 square feet
of le'llel land Ut I ties already
p esent on the

eat
and

This 2 Story 3 BR 2 1f2 Bath
home s ready to move Into!
K !chen remodeled with custom
made cab nets New carpeting In
several rooms ceram c ti e t oor
In bath &amp; entrance 2 car attached
garage Beautlfu y landscaped
yard Juat minutes to bypass &amp;
hosp tal Additions corne ot may
be purchased with home for an
add tonal price Hurry this s a

c'i1ntc s11o r.~onoger FIT Post
tkl n Oversees Adm n strat \It
Ftmcllons For Clinic Also An
Opportunltv To P O\llde Dire ct
itlntcat Services Strong Leader
&amp;hlp Team Build ng And Cl nlcal
$1&lt;ts Req u rect strong AbttyTo
CoUabo ate With Commun ty Pro
lesstonasNeededDueToExen
Si'lla Contract Service Affiliations
qYou Are Interested In Prog am
E•panslon And Being Crear 'lie
You Neijd To Pu sue Th s Oppo
runny LPcc usw Preler ed or
Ab I ty To Obta n Independent Ll
r:ensurewnhooswe
eompellve Sa a y And Excel en!
Fr nge Benerlts For lmmed ate
~onslderallon Forward Resume
And Lener Of lnte est To HAS
Muman Resources PO Box 724
Athens Ohio 45701 EOE

•

The

va

Applied Math I n s t r u c t o r
n·County

VocatiOnal

an

open

""•fthed

Math

00-2001

term

Oh10

and

7

1s

Sand Re&amp;uma App catlona To
Acqu s to ns F ne Jewe ry 1S1
Second Avenue Gal po s OH
4563 0 FaK To 740 446 2600

estate

of

1s

to

be

based

on

per

day

Tn-County

VocatiOnal

h
aVe
E

n g

an
0 pen
h /A
d
IS
p p I

p 0
C

Je

J

Instructor for

8 It I

School
0 n

0 m m

0 r

Nelsonville,

an

Le1n lhe work
week behind you
Pack up the famll~
lnd lfiiWI ~

691
OH 45764

Apphcants must have Oh10 H1gh

Schoo J Englts h certl f I CatiOn
f
k JJ
pro ICient
COmputer
S I S tO
considered

Salary

luxury loa home yur round C1l
for ou free tlrochurc or 104 paae
Sll col or c:ataloa wllh floor p11n1
for over 60 model I'M» mea

1·800-4!8·9'.190

BOILER OPERATOR

111 p:Jtwww 1pp oa cum
c m1 1pp odell~nct ne

IS

based

an
b

d

Preferred

requirements

Industrial experience or
experience

e

2

plus

3

years

post secondary

2 year Tech

PO Box 614 ltlplcy wv 23271

and

SChedule IS

day

7

contract

Days,

Work

field

I

TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 5'30 P.M
LOCATED AT Gallta Co

Jr Fatr Grounds

Gallipolis Oh1o (act1v1ty Bu1ldmg)
Take

35 5

At

mtles West of Gallipolis

across from Holzer Hospttal
Jack

Goodbar

comm1sstoned
C H

1

to

Clopay

door

sect1ons

Geme

has

been

sell

over

1 0 000 Able,

Haas

and

Shoff

'"

and

openers

auctioneer

several

commercial

states

1/2

garage

1n th1s auction

h

p

door

one sided

steel and tnsulated doors several Insulated
doors w/sunburst glass tops, track spnngs
trtm

300

hardware
x

12

14

hang1ng
6x7 9x7
16

18

metal

and

16x7 1 OxB

stze

added

auctton

style
call

door to

be

1 614 837 4710

different
to

Doni

th1s
M1ss

Thts Sale Bnng a Truck or Tra11er Open for
Prev1ew

2

182bene f 1t s

and

Com pre hens1ve

compressed air supply systems

S
es

IC

k Leave, persona I

Retirement

and

23

Please apply by June

15676

&amp;

Sold

Terms cash or check wtth S S

10 %

•

"As

GUN S

Is"

number I

Savage over &amp; under 20 22 comb w /2x7 Red
Fteld scope H&amp;R shotgun Rem 552 speed
master 22 cal w / Aed Ft!lld scope Red F eld 3x9

Sc

•

New L11Ungl aet :t
Elegant Home Luxu ou1 Backya cl
P l'llacy and n Towo Conven encee al ' ' ;;,:'fSafR~~'W
~
In ONE package! Beaut lu ha dwood
, !'1\ ·tA
I oor ng custom drape as and or g na
~"'-'~,
~
man ea adom tne Ins de wh a outside
Iavey flowers surround the apark ng 12014 NEW LtSTINQI Oratn
watf! s or the n g ound lwimm ng pool Townthlp! Th s I'IOme offe a 3
t you t ke the con11811 ence of iV ng In bedrooms 2 baths Ia ge t vlng
lawn ou mus 181 tnie home room k tchen and family room
tM
combo wth fireplace rear dock
and attached 2 car garage
12011 NEW LISTING! Looking Affordablv priced in the 70 a Cal
for ~reentr paaturt1? 90x172 1o add tlonal deta s
vacant lo1 on Krl1ty D ve Natura
gas 1 aval able Bul d yO\Ir dream
nome on th s beaut fu lot
overlooking the beaut ful g een
pastu es o a a Co P' cea to
•el

_::

01

JVS

691
OH 45764

D,

BUYERS PREMIUM will be charged

of boiler

syste ms

TAX w111 be charged unless you have
vendors number All doors must be
removed 2 hrs after completton of auctton

Broker

448-4523

~

-LENDER

Jr ............

....................... 992·2259

OFFICE 992-2259

or mobile
home In !own qulel street Approxtmalely
145x100 tol waler and electric available
Genlly eloping for easy home placement
ASKING 112 000

~.

I

Apprentice Auctioneer R

""""''

BUFFINGTON LANDING

Executrix Flo McClure

AUCTIONEER JACK GOODBAR

TERMS CASH OR CHECK WITH ID

Is

execullve subdrv sron designed fo r horse
I hovers &amp; boalersl You won I believe lhe
:~!~~~:• A ccess lo lhe beaulrlut Ohio for b&lt;tal
tOO boal dock rrdrng rrng Pen c

1

l

~ Stein Jr IIA 208

OWNER SHOFF DOOR CO

country 35 acres
of lhe Ohio River plus Ohio
Rrver frontage ptue a 3 bedroom home In a
quiet location Free water sheds carport
patio pond woods and paSiure Hunting
ground with deer a plenty House has been
r.,mtld~ted. modern equipped khchen carpel
room with wood burner Many

Call For
Viewing

Rick Pearaon

~~~~~::~~
~~:~dlng
tra ils &amp; much more Cena n
apply LOI prices &amp; ac eage vary
1

NEW LISTING POMEROY • In lhe country
on Kingsbury Road Two bedrooms balh
equipped kitchen carpel and panel Rear
deck Sitting on over 2 acres of ground wllh
new sepllc and public water ASKING

128000
NEW UBTING IIACINE • 3 tots located on
Oak Grove Road t 9 acres $8 500 t 4
acres 11 1100 t 9 acres $8 500 One lol
tocalld on Greenwood Cemelery road 11 6
A ltt,OOO
POMEROY
Localell on Mulberry Street 5
bedroom• t 3/4 belh tmmedtale Posse8alont
Needs soma repairs bul this hoe could be
beautrful with 111 orlg nat woodwork and
un iq ue lealureo Owner wants It sold nowt
REDUCED TO f30,000
RUTLAND tmmedtale possessronl Located
on SA t24 before enlenng Rutland a lr level
hOme wllh 3 bedrooms t 3/4 baths fam ty
room krlchen dl~ tng ttv&gt;ng room attached t

car garage detached garage public sepl c
Good well with Leading Creek water
, lo lhe parttcu ar amen lies LOT 15 avattabla Levettol vary spac oust REDUCED
2 740 acres plus share Lol Nt2 Land
TO 555 000
$6 000 tmprovemenls $7 000 Ma&gt;nlenance ...,uo,,•.; COUNTY TRIMBLE 1 slory frame
Fund $3 000 Prrce lor Lol 15 $25 000
with 2 bedrooms belh newer v&gt;nyl
pluaLot112ahare
lslcllng , wrndows root enclosed yard lnlerror

ltUJJll' f ;\Tt1fl2'' [);\'ft

\

o v 1 by

Bwlt Your Dream Hornet
Lots and Acera
For Sale'

=~CE~erc:r

lmmedlale

possession!

NEW LUXURY WHrrE
BRICK
HOME
under
construct on
Located n e
prestlg ous a ea n Green Twp 5
mn from Ho ze Hospta 5
badrms 4 baths Fo mal entry
w skyl ght &amp; cathedra eel ng
din ng rm IF\/ ng rm conven ent
kt
oak cab nets
st roo
laundry Master su leon 1s noo
nclud ng a super bath rm &amp;
coset 4 Bedrme 2 baths on 2nd
floor 24 x24 fami y rm app ox
4 000 sq ft Baaut fu 3 ac e MIL
rav ned ot arid I ve st eam It
would be my p easure to show
you Vlrg nla 446 6806
1335~ AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER f you ke
nd v duality he a it sl 3 029 sq
' ft mora or ess 3 bed ms 2 1/2
baths K t LAm Office rm and
much more Wrap po ch f ont &amp; 2
sides 167 Acres rn/1 Roling
Pas1ure and 3 La ge Sa ns &amp;
Feed lot s tes 2 n ca ponds Land
Is most ali c ean &amp; has some
THIS 2128 SQ FT fe nci ng E ectr c &amp; I ost free wa er
HOME Love y LA Fam Am In the barn Feed lot s tes
w/fl eptace E.al 1n k t
Formal Fo mer y used lor Veal calf
d n ng rm 3 bedrm 2 baths ope allon Located nea Ro
E ec heal pump w/bott e gas back Grande Appo ntm ent On y ca •
up Ia ge deck n the ear Beautiful v gna L Smth 740 4466806
cab nets n kit sky I ghts ce I ng 13381
DISTINCTIVE
fans outbu ld ng &amp; 32 x48 garage REMARKABLY SPACIOUS
4
w/electr c &amp; openers 24 round bed ooms 2 story lv ng oom
abOve ground pool &amp; dado; Th s 18x30 Onng room t 1/2
home se s tse f a you need to s some hardwood f oo s new
cove ed IX)(ch
basement
look 1 ac e m/1 VLS
13377 GREATER STARTER garage $74 500
HOME or nvestment p operty 13369 6 68 acres M L n Green
Th s lovety two bedroom one and Twp AI u I1185 on land w th
1
one half bath cottage would be completed driVeway
just lght as a starter o et rement Home currently on at anti can be
home With an eat n k tchen and purcha$ed 24x24 barn and room
1v ng room 1t IS JUSt enough fer horses and cows Gal pol s
City School s Don t let ttns one
space Pncecl to se I at $31500
sl p away ca I oday
Cal today th s one wont la9t long
LOTS LAND
"3367 La ge home In town new
roof 1oog, 4 BA 2 5 B.A 2 car
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
v nyl
s d ng
n ce
1873 REDUCED PAICE-117 garage
neighborhood Needs some TLC
acres o ose to new Fwy hosp tal
but pr cod nghl at $79 900
shop ct Water gas sewe
Adjo n ng
P necrest
Nurs ng 13372 INVESTMENT OR IIOVE
IN 1967 Mo~ e Home 60 x12 2
Home
13362 CARRYOUT BUSINESS bedrooms 1 batl'1 furni1ure ange
and CONVENIENCE STORE FOA &amp; ref Hea pump cent a a1r
butdng 70 x1 4 also
SALE New ata m system Bui d ng Large
bujlt to state code Cont nuoui 20 x10 bdg Corner o1 Hyse &amp;
operation s nee
t98e
Pr ca 01 ver Middleport $15 000 00
ncludes nventory Ca Jonnn a 13348
IMr.IEDIATE
367 0323 Of 446 6806
POSSESSION
Sp I level 3
H380 CORNEA LOTS (2) Fat
bed ms 1 bath 5 Ac m1 au ET
Water E act &amp; Sewer Ava abe
Only/ Hurry the pnce 8 right LOCAT ON cent a a r bottle gas
furrtace v nyl garage &amp; bu d ngs
$18 600 1 acre m/1
13373 Don I e1 lhls one
13379 QUAINT 2 BR COYTAGE 1996 Norris 16x60 mar\uiacturedJ
s tt ng on 2 8 acres Eat n home S t on a 1 acre lot
krlehen LA on&lt;l fu balh Only 6 Allee Rd 1 m e off 160
yea s o d and sett ng on 2 8 acres has all the upgrades
n the country
cabinets carpet Masler B~~:'~~
13344 COMMERCIAL LOT 6 has Garden Tub and ~
Comes with 3 bedrooms
BUSINESS Located on Eas1ern oom eal n kitchen and
A\le Great Opportunity Pu chase t v ng room Lawn s landlsce1'"'4
he corner lOt wittl or wthout he Wllh ch drens play sw og
business
clubhouse A so has
13392 520 Slalo Rl 27W In the outbu ld ng Call today t ma y
gone tomo ow $48 000
Vlllogl of Thunnon N ce 2 br
13388
Picturesque country
cottage ba. h k tchenldinlng oom
sett
ng
w
th
4+ wood ed acres
and uti ty room
Insulated
coud
be
2
3 BA 15 8A
wH"'dows stee doors w th storm
din nglk tchGn pr vale Needs
doors N c~ lot with outsbu td ng
Pub c wale and soon to be some finish wOf'k Owne wan1s t
sold yeslerdoy
Reduced To
publ c sewage S50 000
S50 000 lakes 1
N3383 1037 Stale AI 21B 4 13341 LARGE FARr.l 101 AC
bedroom home ful basement
Newe 1 1/2 story hOme 4/5
detached 1 car garage s tuated bedrm home 2 baths lovely LA
on 1 1/2 acres mft Fenced and wood bum ng firep ace K t w/Oale
cab net d ntng erM
Le\le to
w1th pond and barn PriCed at
ro I ng land Some wooded &amp;
S60 000 Calllodoy
Bam r.a
for M

13374
I
OLD COUNTRY
0+
ACRES Large LA with stone walt
and wood burner F rst fl oor BR
and full bath Ull Rm Sun oom
Large Kltchen/D n ng w th Cherry
Cab nets and a pantry Upstalfa
another large beef oom and fu
bath w th potential for th d
bed oom Has screened back
po ch and a forty foot front sltt ng
porch Home has 2200+ sq It a
heal pump and central a r Natura
wood siding on the outside and
oaaut ful wOOd/Wa lpaper on the
ns de Property nc udes a cute lOg
cab n with fu I bath gazebo 2
garages
and
th ee
otne
outbu ld ngs all
n
oxce ent
condn on
For an
qxc us ve
Sl\&lt;!'•~ng cat Dave

......... 742-2357

4-WHEELE R

Auctlonee•

Sl

to

.............................. 992-2259

lo town

n3 5785 or 773 5447

ML

and

OHIO 45631

room• w th
n the living
2 full balh
I
kitchen

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

k 1chen y, fQak cabmeiS Lg den full basen enl FR
w/w b f replac e F1mshed garage D e rchcd gar tgc

Century Aluminum Corporation Ia an affirmative action equal

offtr a

,0:

Fronl deck v1c v the

P 0 Box98
Ravenswood, WV 26 t 64
Attn AnfJie Taylor
Fax 304/273·6646

to

State Route

Nelsonville,

Forward Resumes

2

b;,;~uiuT,;~;~:,~iized

RIVE R VIEW

RIVER AND THE SCENIC W V HILLS Poo l Lg
hom e features LR Dmmg room 3 bed ooms 3 b tlhs

CENTURY ALUMINUM CORP

Insurance

Roger Porter, Director
Tri-County

maintenance

~~~~~~~;,~~~:~vr,h:.~~;:~;.~~

1991 Honda 300 4 Tracks 4 WD 1 owner
LIKE NEWII

Hrs before Auctton

All Sales F tnal

TO OL S

Poulen 2500 18 cha1n saw Poulen 2050 16
cham saw B&amp;D dnll Craftsman socket sst 8&amp;0
3 / 8 cordlass dnll 8&amp;0 7 1/4 ctr saw vtse Snap
on Torque meter Jack stands sprayer saw
blades m1sc hand tools wheel barrow yard &amp;
lawn tools lawn cart landscape limbers small
rotottller Troy Built pony 5 h p rotottller Lawn
Boy weed eater &amp; more

12

wide commercial and
For a

or

door

1 Ox1 0

other size doors ava1lable

•

garage

Approximately 1 00 garage doors

wtll be offered

Heiattsluc 40 channel
scanner old pictures &amp; frames two matchmg
oval anttque ptcture frame!!&gt; oil on canvas
carved mtrror old games stereo 2 sets of brass
lamps
Barbte &amp; Mtdge doll case
linens
curta1ns pots &amp; pans lg dog house kerosene
heater 4 new sets of bl fold doors ftshtng rods
&amp; reels tackle boxas &amp; more

a tmm.culater 4

LILA DR

Real Eatate General

Working knowledge In the operations

hOUrS per day On a

d
package tnclu

experience

FURN ITURE

Bedroom 4 Batn ranch home w th
f nlstle d basement Converted
garage can be a n ce family oom
or an eft c ency apartment l.ovel'l
· ;--~.• •·•-·-' remodeled k tchan with oads of
cab net space and pantry Roya
aul e has wa k n closet garden
tub battJ f eplace &amp; entry to pat o
In backya d L ving room w th
flrep ace Owner wants lh a sotd
nowll118 000

school Vtnlon

years

years Industrial

certificate In a related field or a

on

5

are

James

1200e Beautiful

Rt 2 Bypass Point Pleasant
rs now taking applications
for employment at our
NEW Gallipolis Location
Please apply
Mon-Sat 9 am - 7 pm
Sun

degree from an accredited college In the
education

property In a great
location If you are an
Investor or wan! to become
one check this oull This
lwo alory brick ~utldlng hu
several one and two
bedroom
apartments
located on Firs! Ave In
Gallipolis Ask Allen for all
lhe rental lnformatton

Coffee table &amp;
Ch1ppen dale
19 Mag color
pc Ktng stze
bed complete
J C Penny s
deep
freeze

KIPLING SHOE
COMPANY

24x36 on 3 75 acres
term

~ I

n Full basement

McClure will be sold

3 pc Sectional L R sutte 3 pc
end tables 2 Lane end tables
cha1rs RCA 19 color remote TV
remote TV table &amp; 6 chatrs 3
waterbed B R sutte brass lwtn
steamers
trunk
ftle c abtnet
Mtcrowave
Lg
chest type

* Now Hirins*

i

Help Wanted

Century Aluminum Corporation Is
looking for

school

Help Wanted

Live For
The Moment

may

U n I Cat I 0 n S

2000 -2001

I he

f

t

Please apply by June

State Route

110

URGENTLY NEEDED plasma
dOno s sa n $35 to $A5 10 2 or J
nours week y Ca I Sera Tee 740
592665

Retueme

Trl-County JVS

15676

05

Help Wanted

110

Oel \lery Time Da lly 2 t 2 H s
Sunday 3 112 Hrs
Approx mae Monthly P at t $700
TransportatiOn Aequtred
Carr 1 Mus Be Bondab e
Rou tes Requ ng T anspo Ia on
Must P ov de Veh c e Aeglstra
lion P ool 01 ln su ance And
Val d Dr ver a L censa 1 Inter
ested tn A Route Please ca I Jeff
Mull ns 1 800 888 2834 And Ask
Fo Extentlon Numbe 824
App lcatlons Ava able A
946 F tth Avenue
The He aid 0 spatch
Attn Circula on Depa tmen
POBox20 7
Hunt ngton WV 25720

ioeuunel • Page

a

mcludes
Days,

11 o

Oahpo s

Roger Porter, Director

Possible Position Available:
Engll'sh/Applied
Communications Instructor

32 LOCUST STREEt GALUPOUS

33

on

package

WOOB .REJILTI', INC
C Wood

The Hera d 0 spatch Has The
FollOWing Rou es Ava l!ble
l.oca t on 0 1 Aoule C own C ty I

Work

Comprehensive

Insurance

W~NTED

the

contract

Personal

NEWSPAPER CARRIER

School

expenence

hours

Help Wanted

Applicants

H1gh

Salary

an

for

cert1f1catlon

Seek nijl Manage For Jewelry
Sto e App icant Shou d Be A Mo
vated Peop e 0 anted Person
Candidate Must Be Organlnd
Able To Manage Others And
Have Sales Abll ty Some Com
putar Skll s Requ ed Sala y And
Bonus P us Benefit Package

may

for

mstructor

school

have

School

pos1t1on

Ken Morgan Broker 4rf6.0971
Jeanette Moore 256 1745
Patncla Ross
74Q.44&amp;.1068

Located at the Auction Center on Rt

WV

os

Henry E Cleland

SATURDAY JUNE 24, 2000
10:00 A.M.
Mason,

Sc:en e HI 1 Nursing Center A
Progreu ve long Term Care
Fse tty And Aenabll tat on Center
Seeks AM dmght Fll n LPN
PIIUI Call 7.&amp;0 446 7150 For
MorelnfOfmBtlon

Help Wanted

e

ss

lr-~--~:;:1:1:0;::H:e:l:p:W::a:n:t:e:d=-~...,---.
II

'"GOY T POSTAL JOBS Up
"Q&gt; $18 24 Hour Hiring For 2000
firee Cal For App lea lion /Exam
net on Informal on FeOerat H rt
Plr 1 Senellls 1 800 596 4504 Ex
r,nslon15!6 (8AM 6PM
C.ST )

ESTATE
AUCTION
In

110

110

Help Wanted

SALES PAO BEW~REIII
Saturated marketS+ cuttnroet
compel Von.. rtducld te Ito Ill+
ceiling on comm aalonta ca reer
lru11 rat on En'f'lronmental Con
aulllng hll none 01 these p ob
ema pluJ unlimited earning po
tentlal 1 B00-242.0363 112415

POSTAL JOBS TO $14 45 IHR +
Fu Fede a Banal 11 No Experlenot Fo Exam nto Call 1 800
39t 5856 EKt 4298

i&gt;unDnv tr::1mts

WV

3 to

Metgs
" Expendng
Ser'lllcesc ounties
And P ograms
The Fol
lbwing PosiUona A e Avai able
Cllnlclana FIT Posit ons Prov d
hg Opporlunlly For lnnovallvo
¢ttnlca Work W th Ch dren
4do esc:ents A.du ts And F:a
mil es 51 on g Abllly To Co tabo
rate w 1n Commun ty Profession
ats Essen! ot Candidates Must
Have A M n mum 01 PC PCC
Lsw usw or Be Licensed Ello
ble wlh The ocswe

110

Ohio

Rea I Ma nager

Pettrb It On\111 s Wanted
2 Ortvars lor Over the Road Lo
cal Company Home Weekends
Good Money Peraona 0 spatch
Flequlremenl 27yrs Old 3 yrs e~
Must meet DOT Raq
1 600 676 7901

Looking for mtmbe 1 Ia play n a
band Ca (30.C)458 1Q.41

Help Wanted

Now Accepting Appllcat ons tor
Expe rienced CDl. Orl'ller For A
Post on Which W tt Ha'lle You
Home Ever, Night in&amp;urance 11
~va leb e Ple11t Apply In Per
son At Genara Refuse Serv1c1
97 Hubbard Avenue Ga Upolls

-

Regional Runs Home Otten
CaliJlan To Flnd Out How
tau Can Ea n Mottl
BOO 730 2823

Local Tucking Company Seek ng
Qualified COL 0 ve s Full Part
Tlma Good Pay Benefits And
Hom._ Evening a Cal 740 288
(483

110

Raven1wood VIllage Center s
cu entty accepting appl ca tions
fo he lol owing position
CertiQed Nurtlng A11latant
We have an exce 1en1 benelt
paCkage to Include! ee single!
medtcal lnsurance witt! no det1uclib e s gn on bonus p e
scr pt on card and a S1/hour
weekend d lferen a In e e&amp;ted
persons shou d contact
Debbie Henton DON
200 S R~chlt Avo
RaventWOOd wv 28184
(304)Z73-D38&amp;
An aqua opportun ty employer

-tel

KHchen help needed day shift
!lam 7pm 740.992 5023

Help Wanted

Nursing AulttantTrelnlng
Clt11 (F'" lo lhl public)
1\avtftiWOOd Vllllge Center I
now accepting applications frlf
persons interested In beCOming a
C.rttlltd Nurolng Aoolo•nr
Those Interested Shoukl contact
Oebbll Henton DON
200 S Rttchlt ~vt
Rovtnowood WY Itt lA
(304)Z7S.t315
An equal opportunity empiO)'!f

Ow- Oporoloro
$NEW PAY PACKAGES

From
t'lome! Own Your Own On ne
Shopp ng Mall No Computer I n
t• net Exp Needed Free For
E'lleryone Abso utaly No Money
Neededl 1 888 520-8588

L.J:I

110

GOV T POSTAL JOBS" Up
To $18 24 Hour Hiring For 2000
Free CaU For App lcallon /Examl
nation nformat on Fede a Hire
Full Benefits 1 800 598 4504 Ex
tons on 1S16 (8 AM 6 PM
CST)

MAKE MONEY! Work

~

Formerly Blackbur11 Realty
"ServitaiJ Southerr&amp; Ohao For

Help Wanted

MIUtnnlum Te ..ltrvkll
s pleased 10 announce the
Grand opening of its new Wall
aton caiUng center
We are now setting up
tnleMiw appointments tor
outbound teleservlce pos tons
No e"perlence necessary..
Earn up to S15/hr
with qu!ll'terly salary reviews
Management opponun ties avail
able 401 KIMed caliOentaVPald
'lllcatlons available 3 sh fts da ly
Flex ble scntdu lng Start your
new caree wtn us!
Cell 1 800-929 57S3
fo an appoln ment
We look k&gt;rwa d to meet ng you!

GET P~ID TO MODEL FASH
IONS FOR M~JOR SHOPPING
NETWORKI Send Photo WI S H
(Oopl A) 160 Oak Rd Norry PA
17857 Or I 360 813 1099 (24
Hr) h!1pJ/go tO/WISH

Allen

WE OFFER Facility's consisting ol. AbuDding with over
5,000' ol space Stltlnglor200+ P•klng space tor 100+
Truck • &amp; Stiff to psek snct haul 5 Acrea o1 space lot
Farm &amp; Equipment Salts Expenenced Advtrtlelng
Skllll Equipment to produce Hanel BMia &amp; Flyer 1
ALL LOCATfD ON 11 /!llf8T,lS01liJI or WdComl
to Your H-I

110

FEO UP With Your JOB VII t
WWW 66HomtFrH com Or Can 1
800-815 1339

Heollh Edge
Recovery
Serv ces
A
Culling
Substance
Abuu

Public Sala and Auction
ADMISSIONS OFFICER SEARCH REOPENED
Appllcattons are be tng accepted for the posttton of
Adm1sstons Officer for the Umverstty of Ato Grande
Thts twelve month admtmstrattve posttlon reports
dlrec lly to the Execultve 0 rector of Admtsstons w1th
respons btllttes mcludtng attracttng new students to
the Un vers1ty ustng sound rattonal practtcas
appropnate to the max tn'lum ethtcal ach evement of
the task The Admtsstons Off car 1s responstble for
attendance at all Unlverstty day/night Programs
secondary school vtstts and s ubsequant gu dance
counselor contacts use of all potenttal student lists
recetved by the offtce alumm referrals student
lntttatad contacts
students respondmg to
advertts1ng and campus tntervlews The Admtss1ons
Officer shall also be rasponstble for the follow up
phone calls personal responsas home vlstts wtth
parents and studants and scheduhng of off ~ampus
target recruttlng programs
A Bachelors Degree In Commumcatlons Educatton
or related field 1s raqulred Knowladge of umvarslty
campus or prevtous expsrtence Is preferred
Extensive travel wtll ba required throughout Oh10
West V rgtnta and Pennsylvanta
Interested persons should send a letter of tntsrsst
and resume before the deadline of July 12 2000 to
Phyllis Mason, Director ol Human Resources
Untvarslty of Rio Grande
Room 101 Allen Hall
Rio Grande OH 45674
e mall pmason@rlo edu
Fax number 740-245-4909

www evans-moore com

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolla, Ohio • Point Pleeaant,

Mentll Htllth Position•

l"rldterlal

Mood spa.ugh

tf-'=:&amp;

110

2000

lnloreoltd lnboouty ochool?
Need he p getting a ctass togeth
er for this area Please sand you
name address phone numbe
ASAP lo me at 2208 SA 588
GaftpotsOH

Real Estate General

Public Sala and Auction

SUnday, June 18,

tO&lt;lay
•....:;;;;;;.,.;;;, kept 3 BR 2 Bo h
home
Large
and kltc nen Master
Car block garage on
rnA localed on Eart
Ad More Land Ava able
CHARMING VICTORIAN
IHOME. 4 5 Bedrms 3 bolh!
OR &amp; LA Crysta
lchandellloro throughout
Fu
w th complete kit stone
ow••••
BR wtgas firep lace
Landscaped
lot
viewing with V rgln a L
11

PRICED FOR A QUICK
PRIVATE LOCATION
SA 325 2 m es North Of SA
App oM 2 acre ponjj 3BR
leve 2 5 BA LA OR
eat n KIT 2
II~~=~·:':;.;,R~;o:omgaden
&amp;ge New oof &amp;
Owner educed

FLOOR PLAN
city on a qutet
2 1(2 balhS 8
can
home
two
famles
448 6806

'

I
'I

�04 • iounba!' 11J:1mrs iornllnel

Page

110

EMPLOYMENT
SERVIC ES

Help Wanted

UD&amp; WE£KLY GU~R~NTEED
WORKING FOR THE OOYERN
IIENT FROr.l HOr.IE P~RT
Tlr.IE NO EXPERIENCE AE
OUIAED 1 800-757.0753

'

110

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

Help Wanted

U 000 WEEKLY ! Ma l ng 400

$98 7 85 WEEKLY P ocess ng
HUO /FHA Mo tgage Relunds No
Exper enee Requ r ed Fo FREE
Into ma on Ca I 1 800 501 6832

Brochu es l ~~::at sract on Guar
anteed Pos1age &amp; Supples Pro
11 ded
Ru~h Se I Addressed
Stamped EnvelOpe GIGO DEPT
~
Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN

Ext 1JOO

~37~0~1
~1~4~~==S~~'='=m=me=d=~=le=~~=J~-------------------'
..
Public Sale and Auction

110

Help Wanted

ASSEMBLY AT HOr.IEII Cralts
Toys Jewel 'I Wood s ewing
T'jp ng G Aat Pa'l CAll 1 800
795.0380 Exo •201 (24 H st

ATTE NTION
29
PEOPLE NEEOEO If Vou Have
0 To 75 lbS To Lose WE PA Y
YOU SSS All Nalu a
Doctor
Re commended Gua an eed! 1
888 806 453

CLAIMS PROCESSOR! $20 $40
H Potent at Process ng Cta ms
Is Easy T a n ng Prov ded
MUST Own PC CALL NOWI t

CAREE R OPPORTUNITY
MED CAL B LLERS Earn Up To
S45K fY Ful Tia n ng !PC Reqd
B8B 660 6693 Ex 4402

888 565-5197 EXT 642

Cosmetolog &amp;I Ntteded Gaur
anteed Wages Verses Comm s
son Pad Vacat ons Fee CEU
Hou s Fu &amp; Pa T me Help
Neoded 740 446-7267

EcommeceOhome Ea n n
come on lne $350 $850 wk
888 450 8900 www 4p ospe I
lylll

Poii tal Jobs $48 323 00 Y Now
H r ng No Expe lance
Pad
Tan ng G ea Be nelts Ca ll 7
Days BOO 429 3660 Ex J 566

DED ICATED RUN lA IL IN NE
W Home Week y 32¢ t M e &amp;
S op Pay No Touch Fre ght Otne
Oppo un t es Ava lab e For Solo
Tea ms And Owne Ops HII
B o he s T an spor lat on Inc
BOO 258 4456

All n LPNS RNs EMTs And Pa
amed cs Become An RN 0 BSN
G adua e An d ncrease Your n
come W thout Go n'J Back To
SchOo To Schedu e Your nte
\1 ew n Huntington Ca Eve yn
Hun By June 30 1 800 737

WV

Sunday, June 18,

110

Help Wanted

110

110

Help Wanted

DriVIf'S Aatbed
MecUCIII Coverege
Fronl Day Onet
S2 000 S+gn -Oilllon&lt;JS

DENTAL SIL LER St 5 $45 Hr
Den al S 11 ng So ftware Company
Needs Pe ople To P ocess Medi
ca calms F om Home Tra n ng
Pro~lded Must Own COmouler J
800-797 7511 Ext 303

Ouaoty Homo T me

Late Model EqUtPment
COL A&amp; 3Mos OTR

0 ve s CALL NOW TO EN
HANCE YOU R DR VING CA
REER! OTRX Prov des Manage
men Train ng P og ams To Fur
the Your Truck 0 vmg Caree &amp;
Enhance Sk II&amp; No Studen l s /2
Yr OT A Exp AeqUl ed 35 Cents
JMI e Nat ona D vers 40 1 K
Ass gned De UKe Convent onals
Pad nsu anc e Pans Fami 'I
Or &amp;n t&amp;d Qua I y 0 spatch 1
800 423 6939
recru l
ngCo1111 com www otrx com

ECK M LLER
800 61 6636
wwweckmllle com
DRIVERS TAKE HOME MORE
BE HOME MORE! Averag e 1999
Wage Wa s $45 255 www oe hl
t ansporl co m
EARN 125 000 TO $50 000 Y~
Medical lnsu ance B ling Assis
lance Needed ~.~nmed ate yl Use
Yo ur Hom e Compute Fo r G eat
P.oten a Annua nco me Ca I
Now! 1 800 291 4683 Oep t' 109

EAR N EX CELLENT IN COME
MedlcB 811 ers Needed Full
Tra ining Prov ded Hom e Com
puler Required Toll F ee 800
772 5933 Ext 12005

2000

Help Wanted

DRIVERS WANTED OTR /DEDI
GATED / REGIONAL LOC Al
Reach The Summ 1 Of Your PI
nancial Goals Work For A Com
pany Thai Clrtll ~bou t You Your
Fam ly And You Future L mlted
Openings 29 CPM All Miles Uri
load ng Pav P• sona! zed 01,
paten Home OHen Hoi day IVa
ca on Pay 401 K /Med~ea /Pres I
Den tal A der Prog ram 98% No,
Touch F e ghl Aulgned t
2000 s Call Summit Ti ansporta
lion 800 87 &amp; 08 80 Or 513 564
8945 EOE

0 ve

s 2 Week Pa d Truck Oriv

e Tra n ng No Expe ence Need

ed Ea n Up To S32 000/ 1st ~
W I Ful Benet Is Ca Todav 1
8 77 230 6002 Sunday Frlctay 9
A M To5 PM PAM Ti ansport
wwwo dr var&amp;com

2222

&amp;vaoe4--~ ~~
floe~~

514 Second Ave , Gallipolis, Oh10 45631-0994
7 40-446-0008
7 40-441 1111

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
15241

Rl 160

St

Vinton Ohio

a

evansmoo@zoomnet net

95
Tr o 94 t-i&lt;.orit:•nd
Daisy Darning Keys Spoon
Pie Button and various others We wl l also

I nen protectors and tle-ons

Th s s a partial listing or a large private collection and some
Consignment baskets
n this auction the bMkets wl l be
cataloged for your convenience
Longaberge@ and the other basket and collection names are
the properly of Long•berger® Company
M ocxllspaugh
Au.~_&lt;;,l,,con,;;eer
;.; lng Is In no way connected wth approved or
~
b)llhe Long•berger® Company
I D Required to reg ster !.ales tax collected cash or
good check fo f'c'yment not responsible fo r ace dents nor lOS$
1\nnouncements day of sa e take precedence ove any pr nted

There will be no sale Sat June 24 2000 at
the Auction House Our next sale will be Sat
July 1 2000 at 7 00 p m
If anyone has antiques or collectibles they
would like to consi8J1 please call Reanle 388·
87 41 or 388-8 389
We will be havlnf! a sale at the AmVets
Bldg Gallipolis Thursday June 22 7 00 with
alot of new merchandise If you would like t o
conslf!n for this sale please contact Dale
McCoy at McCoy Insurance Air condition
Bldl! AmVets
Finis • Ike Isaac Auctioneer

Sarah L Evana-Moora
Patricia H•v•· 446-3884
Cara Caaay 2415·9430

Auctlon~rlng Services

*

Bill Moodls,.ugh Auctioneer OH Uc 7693 W Va 1388
For lnformodon (740) 989 2623 or (740) 992 9707
Ucensed and Bonded n favor of State of Ohio
Auctioneers Note No Buyers rrem um
Refreshments Provided
Chairs Provided

Help Wanted

GOV T PO ST~L JOBS Up To
$18 35 Hour Full Benefits No Ex
Pill' ence Required Free App ca
t~ n And Exam lnlormatlon 1 888
726 9083 Extension 1701 (7
AM 7PM CST )

GOv t &amp; Poatal JOba Now H ng
In Ohoo $1410 to $21 80/h r Ben
eft~ &amp; Pd T a nlng For Job Info
&amp; ~PP c 1 818 942 0200 ext
~249

O ver A Quarter Centt-~.ry"

ru;A

on•

~d.~~.~= ~~~k\~ 0A~~~~tnsr;d

11058 : i l r lL
m eonl 109 feet
of front
enua Large
2 story
i'imob le
home
a~---1
hOme
With
j1JJ'Jft n that IS
curre~ g used as a beauty
salon Call lor more deta Is
$21&amp;000

re
.w&amp;J

11032 W•m the Convenience of
living In town AND epac:lou1
living accommodation•? Then
thiS s the house for you! W th
a most 4 000 sqUjre feet of vlng
space
which
nc udes 6
bedrooms and 4 baths this home
rests on an overs1zed corner ot
located n Ga I pot s neer schools
lstlop~&gt; lng, churches and the city
home has beaul ful
ha dwood flooring
~~:~~~~~ with custom c afted
pleoes n the large rooms
enjoy the spacious
;~~~~~·for comfort year a ound

Owner Needl Offer/ Known the
world over as the S lve Dolle
Auct on House th s h stor c
land mark offe s retal space
rental Income and storage
Includes 2 BR house next door
Ca
for det a Is
PRICE
REDUCED!

11060 PRICE REDUCED! A
LOT bigger than It looka!
Vacant and n town s hard to f nd
so take a look at this ot located
just a couple blocks ftom the City
Park w th O\ler I 000 square feet
of le'llel land Ut I ties already
p esent on the

eat
and

This 2 Story 3 BR 2 1f2 Bath
home s ready to move Into!
K !chen remodeled with custom
made cab nets New carpeting In
several rooms ceram c ti e t oor
In bath &amp; entrance 2 car attached
garage Beautlfu y landscaped
yard Juat minutes to bypass &amp;
hosp tal Additions corne ot may
be purchased with home for an
add tonal price Hurry this s a

c'i1ntc s11o r.~onoger FIT Post
tkl n Oversees Adm n strat \It
Ftmcllons For Clinic Also An
Opportunltv To P O\llde Dire ct
itlntcat Services Strong Leader
&amp;hlp Team Build ng And Cl nlcal
$1&lt;ts Req u rect strong AbttyTo
CoUabo ate With Commun ty Pro
lesstonasNeededDueToExen
Si'lla Contract Service Affiliations
qYou Are Interested In Prog am
E•panslon And Being Crear 'lie
You Neijd To Pu sue Th s Oppo
runny LPcc usw Preler ed or
Ab I ty To Obta n Independent Ll
r:ensurewnhooswe
eompellve Sa a y And Excel en!
Fr nge Benerlts For lmmed ate
~onslderallon Forward Resume
And Lener Of lnte est To HAS
Muman Resources PO Box 724
Athens Ohio 45701 EOE

•

The

va

Applied Math I n s t r u c t o r
n·County

VocatiOnal

an

open

""•fthed

Math

00-2001

term

Oh10

and

7

1s

Sand Re&amp;uma App catlona To
Acqu s to ns F ne Jewe ry 1S1
Second Avenue Gal po s OH
4563 0 FaK To 740 446 2600

estate

of

1s

to

be

based

on

per

day

Tn-County

VocatiOnal

h
aVe
E

n g

an
0 pen
h /A
d
IS
p p I

p 0
C

Je

J

Instructor for

8 It I

School
0 n

0 m m

0 r

Nelsonville,

an

Le1n lhe work
week behind you
Pack up the famll~
lnd lfiiWI ~

691
OH 45764

Apphcants must have Oh10 H1gh

Schoo J Englts h certl f I CatiOn
f
k JJ
pro ICient
COmputer
S I S tO
considered

Salary

luxury loa home yur round C1l
for ou free tlrochurc or 104 paae
Sll col or c:ataloa wllh floor p11n1
for over 60 model I'M» mea

1·800-4!8·9'.190

BOILER OPERATOR

111 p:Jtwww 1pp oa cum
c m1 1pp odell~nct ne

IS

based

an
b

d

Preferred

requirements

Industrial experience or
experience

e

2

plus

3

years

post secondary

2 year Tech

PO Box 614 ltlplcy wv 23271

and

SChedule IS

day

7

contract

Days,

Work

field

I

TUESDAY, JUNE 20, 5'30 P.M
LOCATED AT Gallta Co

Jr Fatr Grounds

Gallipolis Oh1o (act1v1ty Bu1ldmg)
Take

35 5

At

mtles West of Gallipolis

across from Holzer Hospttal
Jack

Goodbar

comm1sstoned
C H

1

to

Clopay

door

sect1ons

Geme

has

been

sell

over

1 0 000 Able,

Haas

and

Shoff

'"

and

openers

auctioneer

several

commercial

states

1/2

garage

1n th1s auction

h

p

door

one sided

steel and tnsulated doors several Insulated
doors w/sunburst glass tops, track spnngs
trtm

300

hardware
x

12

14

hang1ng
6x7 9x7
16

18

metal

and

16x7 1 OxB

stze

added

auctton

style
call

door to

be

1 614 837 4710

different
to

Doni

th1s
M1ss

Thts Sale Bnng a Truck or Tra11er Open for
Prev1ew

2

182bene f 1t s

and

Com pre hens1ve

compressed air supply systems

S
es

IC

k Leave, persona I

Retirement

and

23

Please apply by June

15676

&amp;

Sold

Terms cash or check wtth S S

10 %

•

"As

GUN S

Is"

number I

Savage over &amp; under 20 22 comb w /2x7 Red
Fteld scope H&amp;R shotgun Rem 552 speed
master 22 cal w / Aed Ft!lld scope Red F eld 3x9

Sc

•

New L11Ungl aet :t
Elegant Home Luxu ou1 Backya cl
P l'llacy and n Towo Conven encee al ' ' ;;,:'fSafR~~'W
~
In ONE package! Beaut lu ha dwood
, !'1\ ·tA
I oor ng custom drape as and or g na
~"'-'~,
~
man ea adom tne Ins de wh a outside
Iavey flowers surround the apark ng 12014 NEW LtSTINQI Oratn
watf! s or the n g ound lwimm ng pool Townthlp! Th s I'IOme offe a 3
t you t ke the con11811 ence of iV ng In bedrooms 2 baths Ia ge t vlng
lawn ou mus 181 tnie home room k tchen and family room
tM
combo wth fireplace rear dock
and attached 2 car garage
12011 NEW LISTING! Looking Affordablv priced in the 70 a Cal
for ~reentr paaturt1? 90x172 1o add tlonal deta s
vacant lo1 on Krl1ty D ve Natura
gas 1 aval able Bul d yO\Ir dream
nome on th s beaut fu lot
overlooking the beaut ful g een
pastu es o a a Co P' cea to
•el

_::

01

JVS

691
OH 45764

D,

BUYERS PREMIUM will be charged

of boiler

syste ms

TAX w111 be charged unless you have
vendors number All doors must be
removed 2 hrs after completton of auctton

Broker

448-4523

~

-LENDER

Jr ............

....................... 992·2259

OFFICE 992-2259

or mobile
home In !own qulel street Approxtmalely
145x100 tol waler and electric available
Genlly eloping for easy home placement
ASKING 112 000

~.

I

Apprentice Auctioneer R

""""''

BUFFINGTON LANDING

Executrix Flo McClure

AUCTIONEER JACK GOODBAR

TERMS CASH OR CHECK WITH ID

Is

execullve subdrv sron designed fo r horse
I hovers &amp; boalersl You won I believe lhe
:~!~~~:• A ccess lo lhe beaulrlut Ohio for b&lt;tal
tOO boal dock rrdrng rrng Pen c

1

l

~ Stein Jr IIA 208

OWNER SHOFF DOOR CO

country 35 acres
of lhe Ohio River plus Ohio
Rrver frontage ptue a 3 bedroom home In a
quiet location Free water sheds carport
patio pond woods and paSiure Hunting
ground with deer a plenty House has been
r.,mtld~ted. modern equipped khchen carpel
room with wood burner Many

Call For
Viewing

Rick Pearaon

~~~~~::~~
~~:~dlng
tra ils &amp; much more Cena n
apply LOI prices &amp; ac eage vary
1

NEW LISTING POMEROY • In lhe country
on Kingsbury Road Two bedrooms balh
equipped kitchen carpel and panel Rear
deck Sitting on over 2 acres of ground wllh
new sepllc and public water ASKING

128000
NEW UBTING IIACINE • 3 tots located on
Oak Grove Road t 9 acres $8 500 t 4
acres 11 1100 t 9 acres $8 500 One lol
tocalld on Greenwood Cemelery road 11 6
A ltt,OOO
POMEROY
Localell on Mulberry Street 5
bedroom• t 3/4 belh tmmedtale Posse8alont
Needs soma repairs bul this hoe could be
beautrful with 111 orlg nat woodwork and
un iq ue lealureo Owner wants It sold nowt
REDUCED TO f30,000
RUTLAND tmmedtale possessronl Located
on SA t24 before enlenng Rutland a lr level
hOme wllh 3 bedrooms t 3/4 baths fam ty
room krlchen dl~ tng ttv&gt;ng room attached t

car garage detached garage public sepl c
Good well with Leading Creek water
, lo lhe parttcu ar amen lies LOT 15 avattabla Levettol vary spac oust REDUCED
2 740 acres plus share Lol Nt2 Land
TO 555 000
$6 000 tmprovemenls $7 000 Ma&gt;nlenance ...,uo,,•.; COUNTY TRIMBLE 1 slory frame
Fund $3 000 Prrce lor Lol 15 $25 000
with 2 bedrooms belh newer v&gt;nyl
pluaLot112ahare
lslcllng , wrndows root enclosed yard lnlerror

ltUJJll' f ;\Tt1fl2'' [);\'ft

\

o v 1 by

Bwlt Your Dream Hornet
Lots and Acera
For Sale'

=~CE~erc:r

lmmedlale

possession!

NEW LUXURY WHrrE
BRICK
HOME
under
construct on
Located n e
prestlg ous a ea n Green Twp 5
mn from Ho ze Hospta 5
badrms 4 baths Fo mal entry
w skyl ght &amp; cathedra eel ng
din ng rm IF\/ ng rm conven ent
kt
oak cab nets
st roo
laundry Master su leon 1s noo
nclud ng a super bath rm &amp;
coset 4 Bedrme 2 baths on 2nd
floor 24 x24 fami y rm app ox
4 000 sq ft Baaut fu 3 ac e MIL
rav ned ot arid I ve st eam It
would be my p easure to show
you Vlrg nla 446 6806
1335~ AUTHENTIC LOG HOME
WITH CHARACTER f you ke
nd v duality he a it sl 3 029 sq
' ft mora or ess 3 bed ms 2 1/2
baths K t LAm Office rm and
much more Wrap po ch f ont &amp; 2
sides 167 Acres rn/1 Roling
Pas1ure and 3 La ge Sa ns &amp;
Feed lot s tes 2 n ca ponds Land
Is most ali c ean &amp; has some
THIS 2128 SQ FT fe nci ng E ectr c &amp; I ost free wa er
HOME Love y LA Fam Am In the barn Feed lot s tes
w/fl eptace E.al 1n k t
Formal Fo mer y used lor Veal calf
d n ng rm 3 bedrm 2 baths ope allon Located nea Ro
E ec heal pump w/bott e gas back Grande Appo ntm ent On y ca •
up Ia ge deck n the ear Beautiful v gna L Smth 740 4466806
cab nets n kit sky I ghts ce I ng 13381
DISTINCTIVE
fans outbu ld ng &amp; 32 x48 garage REMARKABLY SPACIOUS
4
w/electr c &amp; openers 24 round bed ooms 2 story lv ng oom
abOve ground pool &amp; dado; Th s 18x30 Onng room t 1/2
home se s tse f a you need to s some hardwood f oo s new
cove ed IX)(ch
basement
look 1 ac e m/1 VLS
13377 GREATER STARTER garage $74 500
HOME or nvestment p operty 13369 6 68 acres M L n Green
Th s lovety two bedroom one and Twp AI u I1185 on land w th
1
one half bath cottage would be completed driVeway
just lght as a starter o et rement Home currently on at anti can be
home With an eat n k tchen and purcha$ed 24x24 barn and room
1v ng room 1t IS JUSt enough fer horses and cows Gal pol s
City School s Don t let ttns one
space Pncecl to se I at $31500
sl p away ca I oday
Cal today th s one wont la9t long
LOTS LAND
"3367 La ge home In town new
roof 1oog, 4 BA 2 5 B.A 2 car
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
v nyl
s d ng
n ce
1873 REDUCED PAICE-117 garage
neighborhood Needs some TLC
acres o ose to new Fwy hosp tal
but pr cod nghl at $79 900
shop ct Water gas sewe
Adjo n ng
P necrest
Nurs ng 13372 INVESTMENT OR IIOVE
IN 1967 Mo~ e Home 60 x12 2
Home
13362 CARRYOUT BUSINESS bedrooms 1 batl'1 furni1ure ange
and CONVENIENCE STORE FOA &amp; ref Hea pump cent a a1r
butdng 70 x1 4 also
SALE New ata m system Bui d ng Large
bujlt to state code Cont nuoui 20 x10 bdg Corner o1 Hyse &amp;
operation s nee
t98e
Pr ca 01 ver Middleport $15 000 00
ncludes nventory Ca Jonnn a 13348
IMr.IEDIATE
367 0323 Of 446 6806
POSSESSION
Sp I level 3
H380 CORNEA LOTS (2) Fat
bed ms 1 bath 5 Ac m1 au ET
Water E act &amp; Sewer Ava abe
Only/ Hurry the pnce 8 right LOCAT ON cent a a r bottle gas
furrtace v nyl garage &amp; bu d ngs
$18 600 1 acre m/1
13373 Don I e1 lhls one
13379 QUAINT 2 BR COYTAGE 1996 Norris 16x60 mar\uiacturedJ
s tt ng on 2 8 acres Eat n home S t on a 1 acre lot
krlehen LA on&lt;l fu balh Only 6 Allee Rd 1 m e off 160
yea s o d and sett ng on 2 8 acres has all the upgrades
n the country
cabinets carpet Masler B~~:'~~
13344 COMMERCIAL LOT 6 has Garden Tub and ~
Comes with 3 bedrooms
BUSINESS Located on Eas1ern oom eal n kitchen and
A\le Great Opportunity Pu chase t v ng room Lawn s landlsce1'"'4
he corner lOt wittl or wthout he Wllh ch drens play sw og
business
clubhouse A so has
13392 520 Slalo Rl 27W In the outbu ld ng Call today t ma y
gone tomo ow $48 000
Vlllogl of Thunnon N ce 2 br
13388
Picturesque country
cottage ba. h k tchenldinlng oom
sett
ng
w
th
4+ wood ed acres
and uti ty room
Insulated
coud
be
2
3 BA 15 8A
wH"'dows stee doors w th storm
din nglk tchGn pr vale Needs
doors N c~ lot with outsbu td ng
Pub c wale and soon to be some finish wOf'k Owne wan1s t
sold yeslerdoy
Reduced To
publ c sewage S50 000
S50 000 lakes 1
N3383 1037 Stale AI 21B 4 13341 LARGE FARr.l 101 AC
bedroom home ful basement
Newe 1 1/2 story hOme 4/5
detached 1 car garage s tuated bedrm home 2 baths lovely LA
on 1 1/2 acres mft Fenced and wood bum ng firep ace K t w/Oale
cab net d ntng erM
Le\le to
w1th pond and barn PriCed at
ro I ng land Some wooded &amp;
S60 000 Calllodoy
Bam r.a
for M

13374
I
OLD COUNTRY
0+
ACRES Large LA with stone walt
and wood burner F rst fl oor BR
and full bath Ull Rm Sun oom
Large Kltchen/D n ng w th Cherry
Cab nets and a pantry Upstalfa
another large beef oom and fu
bath w th potential for th d
bed oom Has screened back
po ch and a forty foot front sltt ng
porch Home has 2200+ sq It a
heal pump and central a r Natura
wood siding on the outside and
oaaut ful wOOd/Wa lpaper on the
ns de Property nc udes a cute lOg
cab n with fu I bath gazebo 2
garages
and
th ee
otne
outbu ld ngs all
n
oxce ent
condn on
For an
qxc us ve
Sl\&lt;!'•~ng cat Dave

......... 742-2357

4-WHEELE R

Auctlonee•

Sl

to

.............................. 992-2259

lo town

n3 5785 or 773 5447

ML

and

OHIO 45631

room• w th
n the living
2 full balh
I
kitchen

Auction conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

k 1chen y, fQak cabmeiS Lg den full basen enl FR
w/w b f replac e F1mshed garage D e rchcd gar tgc

Century Aluminum Corporation Ia an affirmative action equal

offtr a

,0:

Fronl deck v1c v the

P 0 Box98
Ravenswood, WV 26 t 64
Attn AnfJie Taylor
Fax 304/273·6646

to

State Route

Nelsonville,

Forward Resumes

2

b;,;~uiuT,;~;~:,~iized

RIVE R VIEW

RIVER AND THE SCENIC W V HILLS Poo l Lg
hom e features LR Dmmg room 3 bed ooms 3 b tlhs

CENTURY ALUMINUM CORP

Insurance

Roger Porter, Director
Tri-County

maintenance

~~~~~~~;,~~~:~vr,h:.~~;:~;.~~

1991 Honda 300 4 Tracks 4 WD 1 owner
LIKE NEWII

Hrs before Auctton

All Sales F tnal

TO OL S

Poulen 2500 18 cha1n saw Poulen 2050 16
cham saw B&amp;D dnll Craftsman socket sst 8&amp;0
3 / 8 cordlass dnll 8&amp;0 7 1/4 ctr saw vtse Snap
on Torque meter Jack stands sprayer saw
blades m1sc hand tools wheel barrow yard &amp;
lawn tools lawn cart landscape limbers small
rotottller Troy Built pony 5 h p rotottller Lawn
Boy weed eater &amp; more

12

wide commercial and
For a

or

door

1 Ox1 0

other size doors ava1lable

•

garage

Approximately 1 00 garage doors

wtll be offered

Heiattsluc 40 channel
scanner old pictures &amp; frames two matchmg
oval anttque ptcture frame!!&gt; oil on canvas
carved mtrror old games stereo 2 sets of brass
lamps
Barbte &amp; Mtdge doll case
linens
curta1ns pots &amp; pans lg dog house kerosene
heater 4 new sets of bl fold doors ftshtng rods
&amp; reels tackle boxas &amp; more

a tmm.culater 4

LILA DR

Real Eatate General

Working knowledge In the operations

hOUrS per day On a

d
package tnclu

experience

FURN ITURE

Bedroom 4 Batn ranch home w th
f nlstle d basement Converted
garage can be a n ce family oom
or an eft c ency apartment l.ovel'l
· ;--~.• •·•-·-' remodeled k tchan with oads of
cab net space and pantry Roya
aul e has wa k n closet garden
tub battJ f eplace &amp; entry to pat o
In backya d L ving room w th
flrep ace Owner wants lh a sotd
nowll118 000

school Vtnlon

years

years Industrial

certificate In a related field or a

on

5

are

James

1200e Beautiful

Rt 2 Bypass Point Pleasant
rs now taking applications
for employment at our
NEW Gallipolis Location
Please apply
Mon-Sat 9 am - 7 pm
Sun

degree from an accredited college In the
education

property In a great
location If you are an
Investor or wan! to become
one check this oull This
lwo alory brick ~utldlng hu
several one and two
bedroom
apartments
located on Firs! Ave In
Gallipolis Ask Allen for all
lhe rental lnformatton

Coffee table &amp;
Ch1ppen dale
19 Mag color
pc Ktng stze
bed complete
J C Penny s
deep
freeze

KIPLING SHOE
COMPANY

24x36 on 3 75 acres
term

~ I

n Full basement

McClure will be sold

3 pc Sectional L R sutte 3 pc
end tables 2 Lane end tables
cha1rs RCA 19 color remote TV
remote TV table &amp; 6 chatrs 3
waterbed B R sutte brass lwtn
steamers
trunk
ftle c abtnet
Mtcrowave
Lg
chest type

* Now Hirins*

i

Help Wanted

Century Aluminum Corporation Is
looking for

school

Help Wanted

Live For
The Moment

may

U n I Cat I 0 n S

2000 -2001

I he

f

t

Please apply by June

State Route

110

URGENTLY NEEDED plasma
dOno s sa n $35 to $A5 10 2 or J
nours week y Ca I Sera Tee 740
592665

Retueme

Trl-County JVS

15676

05

Help Wanted

110

Oel \lery Time Da lly 2 t 2 H s
Sunday 3 112 Hrs
Approx mae Monthly P at t $700
TransportatiOn Aequtred
Carr 1 Mus Be Bondab e
Rou tes Requ ng T anspo Ia on
Must P ov de Veh c e Aeglstra
lion P ool 01 ln su ance And
Val d Dr ver a L censa 1 Inter
ested tn A Route Please ca I Jeff
Mull ns 1 800 888 2834 And Ask
Fo Extentlon Numbe 824
App lcatlons Ava able A
946 F tth Avenue
The He aid 0 spatch
Attn Circula on Depa tmen
POBox20 7
Hunt ngton WV 25720

ioeuunel • Page

a

mcludes
Days,

11 o

Oahpo s

Roger Porter, Director

Possible Position Available:
Engll'sh/Applied
Communications Instructor

32 LOCUST STREEt GALUPOUS

33

on

package

WOOB .REJILTI', INC
C Wood

The Hera d 0 spatch Has The
FollOWing Rou es Ava l!ble
l.oca t on 0 1 Aoule C own C ty I

Work

Comprehensive

Insurance

W~NTED

the

contract

Personal

NEWSPAPER CARRIER

School

expenence

hours

Help Wanted

Applicants

H1gh

Salary

an

for

cert1f1catlon

Seek nijl Manage For Jewelry
Sto e App icant Shou d Be A Mo
vated Peop e 0 anted Person
Candidate Must Be Organlnd
Able To Manage Others And
Have Sales Abll ty Some Com
putar Skll s Requ ed Sala y And
Bonus P us Benefit Package

may

for

mstructor

school

have

School

pos1t1on

Ken Morgan Broker 4rf6.0971
Jeanette Moore 256 1745
Patncla Ross
74Q.44&amp;.1068

Located at the Auction Center on Rt

WV

os

Henry E Cleland

SATURDAY JUNE 24, 2000
10:00 A.M.
Mason,

Sc:en e HI 1 Nursing Center A
Progreu ve long Term Care
Fse tty And Aenabll tat on Center
Seeks AM dmght Fll n LPN
PIIUI Call 7.&amp;0 446 7150 For
MorelnfOfmBtlon

Help Wanted

e

ss

lr-~--~:;:1:1:0;::H:e:l:p:W::a:n:t:e:d=-~...,---.
II

'"GOY T POSTAL JOBS Up
"Q&gt; $18 24 Hour Hiring For 2000
firee Cal For App lea lion /Exam
net on Informal on FeOerat H rt
Plr 1 Senellls 1 800 596 4504 Ex
r,nslon15!6 (8AM 6PM
C.ST )

ESTATE
AUCTION
In

110

110

Help Wanted

SALES PAO BEW~REIII
Saturated marketS+ cuttnroet
compel Von.. rtducld te Ito Ill+
ceiling on comm aalonta ca reer
lru11 rat on En'f'lronmental Con
aulllng hll none 01 these p ob
ema pluJ unlimited earning po
tentlal 1 B00-242.0363 112415

POSTAL JOBS TO $14 45 IHR +
Fu Fede a Banal 11 No Experlenot Fo Exam nto Call 1 800
39t 5856 EKt 4298

i&gt;unDnv tr::1mts

WV

3 to

Metgs
" Expendng
Ser'lllcesc ounties
And P ograms
The Fol
lbwing PosiUona A e Avai able
Cllnlclana FIT Posit ons Prov d
hg Opporlunlly For lnnovallvo
¢ttnlca Work W th Ch dren
4do esc:ents A.du ts And F:a
mil es 51 on g Abllly To Co tabo
rate w 1n Commun ty Profession
ats Essen! ot Candidates Must
Have A M n mum 01 PC PCC
Lsw usw or Be Licensed Ello
ble wlh The ocswe

110

Ohio

Rea I Ma nager

Pettrb It On\111 s Wanted
2 Ortvars lor Over the Road Lo
cal Company Home Weekends
Good Money Peraona 0 spatch
Flequlremenl 27yrs Old 3 yrs e~
Must meet DOT Raq
1 600 676 7901

Looking for mtmbe 1 Ia play n a
band Ca (30.C)458 1Q.41

Help Wanted

Now Accepting Appllcat ons tor
Expe rienced CDl. Orl'ller For A
Post on Which W tt Ha'lle You
Home Ever, Night in&amp;urance 11
~va leb e Ple11t Apply In Per
son At Genara Refuse Serv1c1
97 Hubbard Avenue Ga Upolls

-

Regional Runs Home Otten
CaliJlan To Flnd Out How
tau Can Ea n Mottl
BOO 730 2823

Local Tucking Company Seek ng
Qualified COL 0 ve s Full Part
Tlma Good Pay Benefits And
Hom._ Evening a Cal 740 288
(483

110

Raven1wood VIllage Center s
cu entty accepting appl ca tions
fo he lol owing position
CertiQed Nurtlng A11latant
We have an exce 1en1 benelt
paCkage to Include! ee single!
medtcal lnsurance witt! no det1uclib e s gn on bonus p e
scr pt on card and a S1/hour
weekend d lferen a In e e&amp;ted
persons shou d contact
Debbie Henton DON
200 S R~chlt Avo
RaventWOOd wv 28184
(304)Z73-D38&amp;
An aqua opportun ty employer

-tel

KHchen help needed day shift
!lam 7pm 740.992 5023

Help Wanted

Nursing AulttantTrelnlng
Clt11 (F'" lo lhl public)
1\avtftiWOOd Vllllge Center I
now accepting applications frlf
persons interested In beCOming a
C.rttlltd Nurolng Aoolo•nr
Those Interested Shoukl contact
Oebbll Henton DON
200 S Rttchlt ~vt
Rovtnowood WY Itt lA
(304)Z7S.t315
An equal opportunity empiO)'!f

Ow- Oporoloro
$NEW PAY PACKAGES

From
t'lome! Own Your Own On ne
Shopp ng Mall No Computer I n
t• net Exp Needed Free For
E'lleryone Abso utaly No Money
Neededl 1 888 520-8588

L.J:I

110

GOV T POSTAL JOBS" Up
To $18 24 Hour Hiring For 2000
Free CaU For App lcallon /Examl
nation nformat on Fede a Hire
Full Benefits 1 800 598 4504 Ex
tons on 1S16 (8 AM 6 PM
CST)

MAKE MONEY! Work

~

Formerly Blackbur11 Realty
"ServitaiJ Southerr&amp; Ohao For

Help Wanted

MIUtnnlum Te ..ltrvkll
s pleased 10 announce the
Grand opening of its new Wall
aton caiUng center
We are now setting up
tnleMiw appointments tor
outbound teleservlce pos tons
No e"perlence necessary..
Earn up to S15/hr
with qu!ll'terly salary reviews
Management opponun ties avail
able 401 KIMed caliOentaVPald
'lllcatlons available 3 sh fts da ly
Flex ble scntdu lng Start your
new caree wtn us!
Cell 1 800-929 57S3
fo an appoln ment
We look k&gt;rwa d to meet ng you!

GET P~ID TO MODEL FASH
IONS FOR M~JOR SHOPPING
NETWORKI Send Photo WI S H
(Oopl A) 160 Oak Rd Norry PA
17857 Or I 360 813 1099 (24
Hr) h!1pJ/go tO/WISH

Allen

WE OFFER Facility's consisting ol. AbuDding with over
5,000' ol space Stltlnglor200+ P•klng space tor 100+
Truck • &amp; Stiff to psek snct haul 5 Acrea o1 space lot
Farm &amp; Equipment Salts Expenenced Advtrtlelng
Skllll Equipment to produce Hanel BMia &amp; Flyer 1
ALL LOCATfD ON 11 /!llf8T,lS01liJI or WdComl
to Your H-I

110

FEO UP With Your JOB VII t
WWW 66HomtFrH com Or Can 1
800-815 1339

Heollh Edge
Recovery
Serv ces
A
Culling
Substance
Abuu

Public Sala and Auction
ADMISSIONS OFFICER SEARCH REOPENED
Appllcattons are be tng accepted for the posttton of
Adm1sstons Officer for the Umverstty of Ato Grande
Thts twelve month admtmstrattve posttlon reports
dlrec lly to the Execultve 0 rector of Admtsstons w1th
respons btllttes mcludtng attracttng new students to
the Un vers1ty ustng sound rattonal practtcas
appropnate to the max tn'lum ethtcal ach evement of
the task The Admtsstons Off car 1s responstble for
attendance at all Unlverstty day/night Programs
secondary school vtstts and s ubsequant gu dance
counselor contacts use of all potenttal student lists
recetved by the offtce alumm referrals student
lntttatad contacts
students respondmg to
advertts1ng and campus tntervlews The Admtss1ons
Officer shall also be rasponstble for the follow up
phone calls personal responsas home vlstts wtth
parents and studants and scheduhng of off ~ampus
target recruttlng programs
A Bachelors Degree In Commumcatlons Educatton
or related field 1s raqulred Knowladge of umvarslty
campus or prevtous expsrtence Is preferred
Extensive travel wtll ba required throughout Oh10
West V rgtnta and Pennsylvanta
Interested persons should send a letter of tntsrsst
and resume before the deadline of July 12 2000 to
Phyllis Mason, Director ol Human Resources
Untvarslty of Rio Grande
Room 101 Allen Hall
Rio Grande OH 45674
e mall pmason@rlo edu
Fax number 740-245-4909

www evans-moore com

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolla, Ohio • Point Pleeaant,

Mentll Htllth Position•

l"rldterlal

Mood spa.ugh

tf-'=:&amp;

110

2000

lnloreoltd lnboouty ochool?
Need he p getting a ctass togeth
er for this area Please sand you
name address phone numbe
ASAP lo me at 2208 SA 588
GaftpotsOH

Real Estate General

Public Sala and Auction

SUnday, June 18,

tO&lt;lay
•....:;;;;;;.,.;;;, kept 3 BR 2 Bo h
home
Large
and kltc nen Master
Car block garage on
rnA localed on Eart
Ad More Land Ava able
CHARMING VICTORIAN
IHOME. 4 5 Bedrms 3 bolh!
OR &amp; LA Crysta
lchandellloro throughout
Fu
w th complete kit stone
ow••••
BR wtgas firep lace
Landscaped
lot
viewing with V rgln a L
11

PRICED FOR A QUICK
PRIVATE LOCATION
SA 325 2 m es North Of SA
App oM 2 acre ponjj 3BR
leve 2 5 BA LA OR
eat n KIT 2
II~~=~·:':;.;,R~;o:omgaden
&amp;ge New oof &amp;
Owner educed

FLOOR PLAN
city on a qutet
2 1(2 balhS 8
can
home
two
famles
448 6806

'

I
'I

�\
Plge

•

De • 6unbap l!:imu ·ilrnrintl

110

Help Wanted

I'HAAMAC:ISTS NEEO£D

1

PUU. AND MAT TIME
PHARMACISTS POSITIONS
COMMUNITY PHARMACY
PRACTICE
-

Fomlly Pharmacy -

GIN!pollo Store

Holur Ftmlty Phermacy -

JldloonStoro
lmm1111dlate Openings E•lst For
Full And Part·Time Pharmacists
At Both Branches Of Holzer FamIly Pharmacv. Candldatea Should
Have Good Commun lealions
Skills And An Interest In Helping
Peoplt . Must Ha~e Current ll·
ctnse To Prac tic e Pharmacy In
The State 01 Ohio Advancement
OpportuniUes Available.
E1tcellent Wage And Benefll
Package With A Pleasing Work

Sclledule.
Interested Cendldltes
Sttould Contact:
Peul StackhouH,

R.PII, Director
Holzer Family Phtlrmecy
80 Jtck1on Pike

Gllllpollo, Ohio 454131

To~: 740"146-5235

Fax: 740-146-5215
EEO IADA EMPLOYER
RN Nurolng Management
Poolllono
Holzer Senior Care Ce nter Is
looking for RNs who are expen·
enced In superv ising and directIng ataft. Knowledge ol State and
Federal regulations regarding
long term care is desirable
Knowledge ol restorative nursing
1 plus . If ~au are Interested m
joi ning a highly raspecteel ,
proacllve . quality driven organization, come~ to 380 Colonial
Drive, Bidwell. Ohio and 1111 out
an applicati on No phone calls
plaase

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

RN Stiff Poslllons
Holzer Senior Care Center has 2
part-lime staff positions available . RN s are currently working
12-haur shifts HSCC pays far
expe11ence. To be considered lor
these poSitiOns, come to 380 Colonial Drive , Bidwell , Ohio and 1111
ou t an application . No ph one
calls please.

110

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

' Treatment Nurse Needed For
, Weekend At Scenic Hills Nursing
Center, Competitive Pay Ofltrtd.
Must Be Sensitive To Needs Of
The Elderly. Pleau Call Tammy
Price Or Pam Caldwell , At 7.&amp;0·

CLASSIFIEDS!

4&lt;16-7150.
Vacancy tor Secondary Currlcu·
lum Supervis or. Applicant must
be able to prov1de own transpor·
1a~on. Submit a lener or Interest,
resume. references and a copy of
current certU1cate(s) to John
Cos tanzo,
Super lnllndent,
Athens-Meigs Educational Sarv·
lea 'Canter, 507 Rtchl and Avenue,
Suite 108 Athens . Oh io 45701.
Deadline is June 30, 2000. Equal
Opponunlty Employer!Provl~r.

In Memory

To Our Dear Family,
Friends and Neighbors:
No words can express the gratUtL1de
.
we feel for each of you.
On Sunday May 28, 2000, our Uves
changed forever when we lost one
of our dear family members

Wanted experienced auto body
man, antique automobile re5tora·
tlon ahOp Must be able to do
body work , weldmg and painting,
Hill's Classic Cars. 7.&amp;0-949-2217

(7am-9pm).

Wanted Receptio nfst For DoC·
tor' s Oll lce Must like Worki ng
Wit h People , Be Ell1cien t And
Type Well E•peuence Helpful ,
But Not Necessary E11cellent
Worki ng Conditions Outstanding
Career Opportunity. Send Ae·
sume To: CLA 509, c/o Galltpolls
Oaily Tnbune, 825 Th1rd Avenue.
GalllpoUs, OH 4563t

"JoAnn Angel Swain"
As we face one of Hfe's most
dlfflcult challenges, It Is only
through the grace of God and the
help of our family and friends that
we can make It through each day.
We thank everyone for their food,
flowers, cards, visits and kind
words of sympathy. A special
thanks to Matt Willis of Willis

WILDLIFE JOBS TO $8 ·19 /HR.
+ Federai ·Benefi!.S. Park Rang ers.
Security, Maintenance. No Exp.
For Sa me . For Info. Call 1-800 -

391·5856 E•l 4299
POSTAL JOBS $48 ,323 .00 YR
Now Hiring -No Experience -Paid
Tralmng -Great Benefits, Call 7
Days 800-429-3660 Ext. J-365

140

Funeral Home, Pastor Alfred Holley, :
Sharon EbUn, Emily Waugh and the
ladles that served us after the
funeral. We shall never forget
your generosity and may
God bless each of you.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
In Memory

Loving Memo!)' 0
Steve Eblin
Dear Dad,
You had a nature you
could not help loving.
And a heart that was
purer than gold,
And to those who knew
you and loved you,
Your memory Will never
8fC1W cold.
Haw.t rather's Day
Dad,
Sad}' Missed

Daughters - Madeline
Pendleton, Myrtle
Grover. Edith Barton,
and Son • ArUe Eblin

In Memory

In .!.oving :Mtmory of
'Etlielgil~i&gt;on

wlio passed away
ten years ago today.
!At twiligfit wlien tlie day i
done
and sunset flames tlie s~y
1!Je rfiin~ of our /o..,d one
and tlie fiappy days gone

by

'I1iougfi~ of you
drifting bac~

come

'Witliin our dreams too
stay
· 'T'o linow tfiat you are resting
Wfitrt tfie twiligfit end tfie
day
Sadly ml5std lry jam1
•

1·800·214·0452,
Reg t90-05-1274B.

150.

james and Audrey Angel

Sonya Swain Cowles

Maste rs, Doctorate, By C orre sportdence Based Upon Prior Education And Short Study Course
For FREE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDG E STATE

and all of her family
•

to lo5eyou.
No one wtllever know.

Wanted To Do

180

Georges Porlable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the m1ll just cJll

WanledTo Do

210

wanted To Do ; Mounts Tree
Service, Buckel Truck Servica .
Top Trim Removal, Stump Grind·
ing, Fully Insured. Free ~Itt ·
malts. Bidwell, Onlo 1·800·838·
9568, Or 740-38a.9648.

30ol-675·1957
Mowers , Lawn Tractors, Tillers
Repaired , Free Plck·Up Delivery
Within 1o Miles 01 Gallipolis_ 20
Years Experience, Reasonable
Rates . Guaranteed , Mtke, 740446-7604

210

Buslneaa
Opportunity

210

Buslneas
Opportunity

~unbap- utimes ~entinel
In Me'fnory

Own Global Internet Business

For Only $100.00111ncludeo '2' 15
mg Web Sllei. Turn -Key Money
Making System, FREE Training 1·

In Loving Memory
· William L. Cox
It's been seven months
since God called you
home. We want to
wish you a Happy
Father's Day. We love
you and miss you.
Love til we meet again.
Your Loving Wife Della
Happy FQther's Day Dad!
Your sons and daughters
Roger, Bub, left Reta, Teresa
Happy Father's Day Poppy!
From your Grandchildren &amp; Great
Grandchildren

800·251-8095 (24 Hr Messag•)
!NOTICE I
'·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bus•·
ness with people you knOw, and
NOT to send money through the
m11ll 1.mttl you have lnve&amp;l!gated
the oHerlng.

Responsib le Hard workmg Lady
Lookmg To Do Housecleaning Or
Light Yard Work, Wtlh Refe rences 74D-44&amp;4329

ABSOLUTE QOLD ' MINEI: $0
Down! Nels S50K. Work. 7 Hrs.
Candy VENDING Ate. In Area .....
Tol l Free 1-877-494-8695, 24

Sprtng Claantng On Houses Also
Wilt Do Olllces Free Est1mates.
References. 740-38 8-9078 Ask
For Donna

Hrs
AUT, BELL
PAYPHONE RTES
22 Hi -Trame Locations $1 ,000
Wkty. Pori 1-800-800-3470 ,

Card of Thanks

EARN $90 ,000 YEA RLY RepairIng, NOT Replacing, Long Crack5
In Windshiel ds Free Video 1·

I would like to
thank ead! and
wery one who

800·826·8523

US /Canada

www gtassmecnanlx com

Spring
0101.

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

and to all of my
family &amp;.. friends

for the surprise
dinner they held

RUSSilLL D. WOOD, BROKER

for me.

Love you all.
Mildred Watson

I

to advertise ·any preference,
limitation or diaerilnination
baled on race, color, rellglon,
eex familial status or nat1onal
.origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or dlacrlmlnatlon."

(304)675·7472
1304)675·7279

knowingly accapt
law. Our readtnt are hereby

lnlolmed 111at all dwellings
adver11aed In thll newspaper
are available an an equitl
opporl1~nlty

Martha Smilh ....:.............................. 441· 1919
Cheryl Lemlay ................................. 742·3171
Dana Atha ....... ,........................... , ...37'~9209

Your lnvolcaa Into Cash. Also

l'

,•

GOV'T IBANK REPOS I 1-800 ·
355-0024 Ext 8040.
Hou se &amp; Lot. 3 Bedrooms , 2
Baths, Newly Remodeled, Situated
On /5.9 Acres, Located Nea r Pa·
tr lot. $1 000 Down /W.A.C .. Contact David At, 1·800·333·691 0

(0l (ortlfl&lt;tllon Swk IOUrll
Mon I. lrl7:Q0.3:30 WHkend d111111 Sa1 &amp;Sun 8:00-4:30 12 wtoks
• Rnondftg and funding availableltallil on olgiblllly
'9ft placo11111nl on 0!111 AtralniiiiJ'
(ontad ld Adams 1-800.648·3695 or (740) 373·6283 Ext. 338

10 Walnut Ck., SandMIII Road.

mo-.

CROSS
APARTMENTS

Announcement

....

fbUI

Wa•o

r.

you.

Nice Two -Story 3·4 Bedroom&amp; 1
Dmtng Room. Ba5ement. Porch.
Carport Owner w111 consider trade
lor a smaller home. Call Somer·
ville Realty l304)675·3030 or

(675)3431

Accepting Applications
1 Bedroom Apartments
Elderly (62 or older) or
Disabled or Handicapped
Based on lncomel
Handicapped A:ccessibility
Please call (740) 992-3055
TDD # (800) 855-2880
Equal Housing
Opportunity

divide

Into

I

I

,

Acre tracts wl1h public water
available . 112027
DON'T MISS THIS BUY
$39,800.00 Easy ·to maintain
iawn. 3 Bedrooms, bath, eat-In
kitchen, llvl~g room, enclosed
porch. Detached
Qlllage.

NICE BUILDING LOTI Nol
restricted , excellent place
room, fully even for a mobile home
equipped
chen,
3 Water · lap In-cluded and
bedrooms, 2 baths. Central driveway in place. Approx.
be caved lo own lot. 2.16.acrea. $14,900.00121112
COMMERCIAL 2 Story
I I
th~t Ia •. Ideal lor floral
retail, ere. Off stree•e;:,t,~~:~~
area. Call for more lr
12044
OUICKLY. .. or it may be
Brick ranch Ideally
KEMPER HOLLOW ROAD close to hospltaf,
Brick ranch home complete
e1c. Easy
to
level lawn. 3
wl1h 4 bedrooms, living room,
, 1.5 balhS, e&gt;&lt;l(a
dining roon, kitchen that
In ki!Chen,
leads to rear covered patio.
dining
Basment has family room
garage.
wl1h llreplace, laundry, work
area and small kHcheit
3 acres of land.

l!ounbav 1ll:11t1tf· &amp;rnllntl • Page~D7

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale
FEDUPWITHTHE
RUN AROUND?

Want A New Home W1th No Hiliste? Call For Pre · Approvat 1-

BbB-565-0161

NO DOWN PAYMENT I
No Down Payment Required Wtth
Government Sponsored Loan.
Good Credit And Steady Income
Required . Call Today For More.
Information Independence Mortgage Services 12611 Mad 1son,
Lakewood, OH 44107 MB1679 1·

800-845.0036
Real nice 4 bedroom ranch style
house wtlh finished basement, 2
bedroom downstairs, 1 &amp; t/2 bath,
teal n1ce exira garage 26•32, an
681 between Reedsv ille &amp; Tuppers Plains . $65 ,000, 740-37 8-

Limned Or No Credit? Government Bank Finance Only At Oak·
wood In Barboursville. WV 304·

736-3409.

GOOD CREDIT
BAD CREDIT
NO CREDIT!
let Us Assist You In Your New
Mig Home Call For Pre-Approval.
1-888·565·0t67 .
.

Sell, $25,000 OBO, Clleslllre
Area . 740-378·9840
New 1.&amp; Wide, 3B R-2BA, $213
Per Month , Low down Payment.
Free Arr, Free Delivery, 1· 888-

928·3426.
New 161t80, 3BR-2BA, $268 per
month, Low Down Pa~ment Free
Atr. Free Delivery, 1·888-928-

3426.
New Ooub tew lde. 3 BR· 2BA.
$276 per month , Low Down Payme nt , Free Air. Free Oellvery. 1·

81!8·928·3426.

Res ldonlla ! Cammecp lal· Large
Home, 1 87 Acres, Great Location. Retiring, 74o-245-9448

32x80 , Fact.,ry Repo, Ne ve r
Lived In $40,950, 1·888 -691 ·
6777.

Tuppers Plains, 3 bedro om brick
ranch, living dining, kitchen. bath,
112 ba sement, _parage. shed well
Insulated, 1.09 acre&amp; sewer syste m. John Arbaugh ho me. Ar·
baugh Addition, price reduced to

Land Home Packages. All Areas,
Ail Credit Risks, 740-446-3583.

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Three bedroom, totally remodeled
Inside and out, tra11er and lot, new
furnace , new appliances. new car-

pel, $23.500, caii74Q-992·4514.
lo1TIME BUVERS
New Or Used Mig Home, Call For

Pre-Approval. 1-888-565.0167.
1st Time Buyer -Governmen1
Ba cke d Loa ns, All Application&amp;
' Accepted Only At Oakwood. Gal·

llpolls, 74().446·3093

1p&gt;cso Trailer on rented lot A C ,
and extras. Muat see to apprec!·
ate . (7 40)441 -089 1 Lea'lle Measage.

330

1970 Community, 12x60, two bed·
room, one bath, gas , $2995. Call

74().38().0259

Farma for Sale

1t8 Acres Near Rio Grande , With
3 Bedroom Home. Barn, Garage,
And Storage Bulldlngs Phone

Cheryl. 740·385-9948.
1972 Westbrook, 12x64, two bed·
room, one bath, gas : $4995 Call

,

NEW LISTING
HUNTER'S HILL

$10,000. 740-379·2405

3 Trac ts Of Prime Recreational
Land , Tou ches USA Land , 29
Acres For As Low As $27,9001
Land Contracts Ava ilable! Call
Now! 1-800· 213-8365 Anthony
land Company, Ltd www.covntry·
tyme.com

1981 Fairmont, 3 Bedrooms, 1 V2
Be1ns. $7 500 , OBO 740·446·
9393.

30 To 100 Acre Tracts 01 Pr ime
Hunting Land
Sta rting At

N~~ .

740·385·4387.

1979 Fa irmont 14x70, Wit h Ex·
pando, VInyl Sldlng, Sletl Doors,
Berber Carpet Hardwood Floors,

WV HUNTING LAND
$18 .500. 97 Acres For $57 ,000.

1997 mobile nome 14K60 on rent·
ed lot In Meigs Co.. 2 bedroom, 1
bath , cia, applian ces, deck &amp;
storage buildings . assume P41Ymenls or purchase, 740·378·
6271 9am-4:30pm dally or 330-

Can Combine Free Maps Land
ConHa ct Ava ilable 1-800·21 3·

343-9984 4pm·8pn1'1lally.

Oft SR 35, 5+ Acres, Great Home
Slles. Lane Contract Avai lable

0 1vorce Forces Sale. 3' Bed·
rooms , 2 Baths, Never Lived In,
5499 &amp; Assume 74().1"6-3093.

8365

Save Over $5,000, Call 1··888·
565-0167.
Abandoned Mobile Home , Bank

Will Deal. 304·733-91 02.
For Sale: 1996 , 16X86, Clayton
Traitor. 3 BR , 2 SA, C.A., Nice. G.
E

Stove,

Sola , Love Seat

(Mauve). (304)675-8165 .

&amp; Acreage

AHention Developers
33 Aeres . Ap pro~~:lmately 1 o Acre
t.ake, Mobtle Home Wtlh Add On

Ideal For Hous1ng, Campground ,
E&amp;tale. $99.500, 740-388·8678

RENTALS

LAND NEAR RIO
Fr&amp;o Maps.1-800·213·8365.
LAND
CHEAP AS DIRT
Several Locations In Gallla &amp;
Me1g·s .Counties. 5 Acres As Low
As S6.600. Land Contract Avail able. $680 Downl Call For Free

41 0 Houses for Rent
t · 3 Bedrooms Foreclos ed
Homes From S199/Mo , 4o/. Oown
For llsrings &amp; Payment Detail s.
800·319·3323 Ext . 1709.

3 bedroom house lor ren t m Middleport, no pets, 740-992·5658
3 Bedrooms Carport . 47 Spruce
Street {End 01 Dnve) Avai lable
Now. $3901Mo . 1 Year Lease.
Aeterences, Secur1ty Oepos1t,
Kay At Tope 's Furniture 151
Second Avenue, Gall1polts, 740446-0332
3 BR House for Rent Gall1pohs

Ferry. 5475 (304)675·1105.

60 year o!Cl couple seekmg to
ren t/contract 1-2 bedroom house
or trailer tn Metgs or Athens area.
references, call col!ect (937)2520252
For Lease Or Sale 5 Year Old
2,000 Sq . Ft. 3 Bedrooms. 2
Baths, Energy Elllctent Home.
Near Chllslde Golf Club, $685/Mo ..
740-446-2957
2 BFI House. &amp; 1&amp;2 bedroom
ap ts. Hud approved call .J04·675·

·2053
Pilot Program , Renters Needed,

304-736-7295.

Small 1 Bedroon House. AJC, Gas
heat. Cooking and wa ter. Buemanv a111c , storage area . washer
and dryer hookup . Near Kmar t .
$3251 mo You pay gas &amp; electric

(7401446·1822 , (740)446·4217
call before eam or alter 9pm
420

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

12x60 Mobile Home Two Bedrooms . Located Be hind Fox's
Pizza Sandh ill Roa d. $375 Per
Month. Incl udes Water/Sewe r.

Call (~04)R75·3423 .•

Farm House For Rent SO I'1ti
Mamten ance Flequ~red . In :tt' ,
man. 740-286-5886.

440

Apartments •
for Rent
-

1 and 2 bedroom apanments 1 jf·
nlshed and unturnlshed, se ~unty
depo51t req utred no pets _740
992·2218
'
1 Bedroorrr furn rshed Apa r\Qlant
UpstaH 5. Ulhtles Paid. $'2 85
mon th, plus Cle pos at (7 40}1146

1340
1 Bedroom Near Holze r AIC. W
D. Hook· Up, Super Clean. 0 Jii'
Lo ca tton , $279/Mo , + Ut111 ; es

740·446·2957
1 Bedroom Stove &amp; Refr~g e r JJrJ r
AC, S300 /Mo , }lo Pets Utllll lt'S
Pa id, References ReqUired, Je-

posll. 740-446·3667
1 Bedroom , All Ut11it1es

1 Or 2 Bedroom Apartment s wa
le r &amp; Trash Paid, No Pets , 740 ·

381!·1100.
Appltcauon Being Taken For
Small, But Extra Nice, Ciea fl'.()ne
Be droo m tn Counrry Se~ 1n g
Washer, Drye r, Stove, Frlg.;"Pro·
Vlded Water And Garbagb In·
elude d Total Electric l AC 'fen·
nant Pays Electric . $300 Oe~ os t
$350/Mo • No Pe ts, Non-Sm ~ke rs
On ly, Call 740-446 ·9585 Or740
446·2205 Ask For VIrginia

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT S AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 52 Westw ood
Drive !rom $289 to $370 Walk to
shop &amp; movies Call 740:.4 46
2568. Equal Hous1ng Opportunity
Christy 's Family Uvlng , apart ments, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740·99 2- 4514 . apartments ~va ll·
able, furnished &amp; unlurn1shed.',

DOWNTOWN APARTMENT
FOR RENT
First Floor, Ideal lor a Sen10r Per·

$260·$300, 740·992-2 167

304-675·5162 .

2 Bedroom Mobi le Home For Rent
On S.R 2t8, 740-256-9197, On
Weeke nds Or

740·256·~920.

Weekdays

2 bedroom mobile home for rent,
no pe ts, available August 1, ca ll
740·949·2698 before 9pm
2 Bed roo m Mobile Home. You
Pay Utilities. &amp; Deposit, In Porter

2 Bedroom Tra iler. Located On
Hannan Trace Road, Call 740 -

256·6202.
2 Bedrooms, Au, Natural Gas
Furnace , ln Gallipolis , 740-446-

2003, 740·446-1409.
Christy s Family llvll'l(l
204 North Second A11enue
Middleport, OH 45760
740·992·4514
HUO approved· Pomeroy, one
bedroom. all ut!liijes and appliances, utll!tlf!!S palel

Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don't Have Land? We Doll! Hurry

Two bedroom, all uttllles and appliances, ulillltes paid.

Three bedroom home, Pomeroy,

Raal Estate General

lncl ua~'J.

$375/Ma, 740·441-0720

Efficiency apt . ref&amp; dep

LOOK NO FURTHER if your
looking to purchase ,a home
lhat has quality throughout.
Low mainlenance brick ranch,
4 bedrooms. Newly carpeted
tormallivmg room, slep saving
kl1c~en, family room w]th
llreplace . Over 2,000 sqft
living space. Attached 2 car
g~rage, 2 acres, inground
jioot ' bam shed . 112050

a

UPDA1rED
STORY HCIME situated on
nice . level lot
being
approXImalely 116'xl60', living
room , d1n1ng area, kitchen,
family room, bedroom a bath
on main level plus 3 bedrooms
and bath upstairs. Parlial
basement, delached ,24'&gt;&lt;32'
garage, sid.e deck and
concrete palro . $54 900 00
N2065
,.

$72,800.00 IS THE NEW ASKING ·PRICE FOR THESE lWO
HOMES! 2 Story spacious home with 3 bedrooms, 2 beths.
Second home Is I 1/2 S1ory wilh .3 bedrooniS/6 Stall HO(Be
barn and ov~r 1 acre lot Good garden spot. Let the rent from
one home pay lhe mortgage payment. 12033

cL oI

446·4425. 740-446-3936

Furm shed 2 Ro oms &amp; lla tn .
Downsta irs, Clean . No Pets.,-Rel·
erences &amp; Deooslt Required; 740
446-1519
Furntshed Efflctency Apa1tment
Uhlilies Paid. Downstairs . $200 00
mont h
919 Second Ave

(740)448-3945.

.

Graciou&amp; living t and 2 beQ,r.oom
apartments at Vt llage Manor~·a n d
Ri..,erslde Aparlments 1n Midd1e·
port. From $273-$336 Call f4 C·
992 -5064 Equal Housmg OPj:Jor·
tunltles
"
Mod ern 1 Bedroom Apartme nt

740·448-0390
New Remodeled Apartments.~ 601
Ma in Street , Pt Pleasant Q1tl1 ·
ties Included (304)675-7030.

Real Estate General

•

\

''

REAL ESTATE

504 4th Aw- 3 BR 2 Story Home

591 Hidden Hill• Drlv• Perlec1 sunsel

Featuring

views can be enjoyed from the deck of
th1s outstanding 2 story home.

Convenience

and

Affordabllityll Large FA w~h vaulled
calling and open 1o the kitchen Is 'IBry
inviting. Large LR and also includes a
study. Newer furnace , central air and

roof. Greal back yard ove~ooks
Memortal Field. $75.000 1233 .

HardWood floors dress !Ills 4 BA home
up with a country flair. gorgeous k~chen

is highlighted with a vaulted ceiling, 3
baths, full basement, bam &amp; 20 acre s
$329,0001220

10 Willow Drive- Convenience and Good
Value is found on the edge of town with thiS 3·4 BR home. Offers tiVabtlity w1th a
LA, eat-1n kttchen and full basement with
FR Sparkling In-ground pool with privacy

fence. $84,900 1235

..'.

'

horne lives bigger than It looks. LA with
vaul1ed ceiling and loft area, 3 BAs, 3
baths, CtWf kttellen, nice deck, oventlzed
I car del. Garage on approx. I acre lot.
$135,000. Better call on this onell HZ4

1111 WoodiMd D"- Move in and Enjoyll
And there's a lot 10 enjoy wl1h 3-4 BRs, 2
baths, remodeled eal·in kitchen. main level
FR, LR, 2nd FA and rec. room in
ba8emenl, huge, partially ccwered deck, 2
car garage and over I acre lo1 with -un
trea a tandlcaping. Sl27.soo 1232

217 Duly ACNICI- Ou1llandlng design and

44 euttemul

iual drive by.. this '"

a must see homell Newer constructed

'
+

•

•
''

105 Edam• Troll· Affordabohty next to
Tycoon Lakell This 3 BA home offers lull

143 Stumbo Road· Immaculate

$77,5001227

sided ranch offers cozy LR w1th
stove open to afflcient kitchen , 3
baths, overs1zed 1 car garage w1th
workbench area, all located on a lovely
wooded 1 acre, mil lot. Do yourself a
favor and call today! $74.900 1607

17t1 SR 7 S- Large 2 slory home along

1393 Ewlngton Road- Comfortable

basement with outs1de entrance, large 2
car garage, huge garden spot , 20 M 36
outbuilding an~ much more . Large BR
upstairs could b'e made tnto 2 if needed

387 Buhl Morton Road- Traditional 2
story home with over 4300 sq. fl: of total
IJVing space includes 4 BAs, 3 1/2
baths, formal LA and DR, FA, 2nd
kttchen , FA and rec. room in basement ,
2 fireplaces and a very mce patio/deck.
2 car garage $250,000 1231

•
from extra rental site
EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL and water well. Can ""- ~ .
CORNER WITH . PARKING! en appointment to view
Only
you
and
your proRertv lodayl 112070
imagination pUla 8 limit on
,
this
potential
Upslairs NEW .LISTING! 660 HIGH
includes
2
bedroom STREET $59,000.00 2 Story
apartment. downslairs Is home Situated on large sized
commercial """ $69 "JO 00 tot . 3 bedrooms. living room
112020
·
,. ·
din ing room, and kltch~n :
• nvs:=~ v? ctTnAV HOMF 1"'11'1 ~:J:~hed one car garege .
mulberry

1n Pomeroy

room

and

5 yr old lovely brick
ranch offers LR, DR, Fr w11h gao log
fireplace, 3 BRs and 2 balha, nice size lot
wllll fenced In back yard located on a
deacl·end street • In a family oriented
neighborhood. 879.500 1818

ffoor plan leahtres 3 BRs, 2 1/2 batha,

LR, FR, DR and eat·ln kttchen pluo a
solttrilm room ourroundtd by decl&lt;a.
Partial beMment with high celllrtg11 and
ou1alde an1ranoe. 2 car garage pluo 15 x
25 outbuldlng. Woodt&lt;t 20 acree, m/1.
$195,000 11218

the river offers great views. great living
space and great outside enJOyment.
Over 3200 sq. ft. of living space plus fJ
lull basement and over 1600 sq. ft or

decks. 3-4 BRs. 3 baths, LA. FR . DR
and den

£"'• :n~ Previously

used as

kitchen . Extra larga in town station. Call for
lot~ Homo has been well listings! 12058
mamta1ned. Call today! t2057

a

as

compl~te

Nice eat-in kitchen

2 car

(740) 446·3644
Call one

of our professlonais with any questions or for an appointment:

Dlvld Wl11m1n, QRI, CRS Broker
'

C1rolyn WeiCh

•

Robert Bruce

.'

I•

I

441·1007
448-0621

448~85115
Qarnea

split level .offers 4 BRs . I 1/2 baths, LR
with stone fireplace , d1n1ng area w1th
parquet floor open to kitchen, FR , large
utility room, 2 car garage, all situated on
40 acres, m,11 with great road frontage
46 M 388 barn. Great country living at

$120.000. H31

garaga. $360,000 1203

·his

home fea1Ufes 3 bedroc 11s, COMMERCIAL •
Building,
LS. baths, large living room, land
and
equipment.
d1n1ng

on-

448·2702
448·9555

246 Ann Drive· Enjoy 1he beauty and

lwwry of thi s cozy newer hamel Great
room w1th a fireplace open to the
kitchen with oak cabinets, 3-4 generous
bedrooms, 3 baths and 2 car garage
supply
any
famtly's
needs
Professionally landscaped $132,500

11127

'·

.' .

742•3171

-

...,•

•

em ey

no..pet::~

For Lease· Beautiful, 1606 So
Fee t, Total ly Restored And Re
decorated Second Floor AP art
ment In Gallipolis Historic Ci&amp; trJc!
Ideal For Professional Couplift A1l
Modern Am enities 3 Bed rdtlms .
SpaCIOUS Living Roo m /Dfn tng
Room 1 1/2 Bat hs, Aaar 'b'eck
HVAC $600/Mo , Plus Utilities,
Securi ty And Key Depo&amp; lr. No
P~H s, Aelern ces Aequ~red , '74 0·

&lt;
·
•' •
,.' .

ME I G

a

Two bedroom mob 1ie home. r o
pets. 740-992-5858

sans, (740)446-9539.

~~~~=--=~::::-:::::-.::::::-:::::---o:::~"":~-=~~~-~.:;,._;;:_.._..
.
N!EW LISTING! , 33441
BASHAN ROAD $711.000.00··
Immediate Possesitonl i 1/2
Story home that offers newer
roof and hot lub, dining room,
kitchen, den, 4 bedrooms, 2
baths and morel Lei's go took I
12069
OWNERS ARE RELOCA:rtNG
MUST SELL, FASTI Come
and view this 3 tledroom, 2 bath
ranch home to see It all .
Basement.
carpot1,
large
altached porch af\&lt;1 above
ground pool, barn
pond .
Delached
garage/workshop.
English gardens and reeling on
4 a A,..... ~ l-4urrv call ,Cheryl to

2661

Be tween Athens and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob ile homes.

June spBC!al- $100 deposit only.

· ~============!==============

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Tratler tn Aulland . no pets , OepQs·
11 &amp; rete1ences reQuired 740-7 42·

1 Bedroom In Gallipolis , Deposi t
&amp; Relerences , No Pets, Aller 6
P.M 740.441-1308

Maps. ANTHONY LAND CO ..
LID., 1-800-213-8365.

Only 10 Lois Lett. 304·736·7295.

420

430 Farms for Rent

Area No Pets, 614·388·9162.

350 Lots 8r Acreage

REPO&amp;ALE

Never lived In , No Mo.,ey ppwnt

Lots

Move-ln. 740-446·3570

6337.

320

350

Take Over Payment5. New 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 Bat h Home , $333 &amp;

Mobile Home &amp; 1 Acre Land For

Tw o bedroom. 1 1/4 acres. lull
basement. central heat &amp; air, nice
neighborhood , 8x40 deck, Syracuse, Ohio, 7.&amp;0·992-3600

Non·Pertormlng lnvolcos . Any 3BR, 2900 oq. II. 3 car garage. 2
Noloe. Call S1eve 1.888 •982 • yoaro old . Ouollty throughout.
2228.
'
SI75K. (304)875·1551, ahor 5PM
or leovo
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL
"'eA,;;;~~3a~&amp;iiM&gt;IIt-----:=:;:=======------'
CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSED
I e Acroo, with 3BR &amp; 2BA,
BONDED CORRECT IREMOVE 2•xa2 Block Garsge, oul Milt·
Announcement
BAD CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY, 11one Road. $68,000. (304)578·
LAWSUITS,
JUDGEMENTS. 2376 ·
AAA RATING . 90 ·180 DAYS. I·
6W·422·1 598.

:-:-,..-.._-------1

6574.

Reel E!t!te Gener1l

a

ERRY SPRADLING .................................. 949-2131
;HARMELE SPRADLING ........................... 949-2131
BETTY JO ~OLLINS ................................... 949,2049
RENDA JEFFERS ......... ............................ 992·1444
OFFICE ................................... ,..... ,.............. 992 ·2886

Extra Nice 4 Bedroom Home . Llv·
mg Room, Sun Aoom . New Kitch·
en, 2 Baths , Den, StudiO, Large
Family Room. Fu.U Basement. Heat
Pump, Swtmmmg Pool, Water F11!·
er, GatHpoiiS. 74o-367-D240.

Mid-Ohio Volley Truck Driver Training

Apl)llcatlon W IServlct . Reduce

..

112035

~OTTIE TURNER, Broker..........................992-5692

FEtTUREIIt Raposseel !Must Sell
4 Factory 01rect. Super Insulated
Modulanzed Packages, Alf ord·
able , H1gh Tech Ouahty, Simple
Erection Your Foundatton Flexl·
ble Layout 314/5 Bedrooms, De tails, 1-800-874-6032 Sacrlftee

wv

sante E&amp;IOte. 740·667-6427 .

'&gt;

TO OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS? Here's the one
for you . An es1ablished Army Surplus Store. comes with
approx . 5 acres, a 3 bedroom, 1 bath, home, &amp; about a one
acre pond. The store IS bulging w1th merchandise and so Is
the eXIra stock areas Must see to appreciate. Owner will give
new owners pointers on operauon $179,000

.
on approx 2 acres at the
Rutland, 1s the most be"aulilul split level home 1 3
bedrooms, large bath with whirlpool garden tub, plus an extra
shower. Large rooms and very open. Also has a 2 1/2 car
n1ce garage. Newer heat pump, roof, &amp; vinyl flooring. $65,000

·

Announcement

1 112 story home In friendly rural
community, complete recent remodeling , 3·• bedroom, 1 batn,

hsleal,
10.

POMEROY·LINCOLN DRIVE· A I 1/2 s1o1y home that has
been completely remodeled and has 3 bedrooms, ohe bath
d1nlng room, and a nice from s1tt1ng porch Has central ai;
and 11 seems as If it Is in the country. Ou1e1 and on a road With
low traffic. Great place for a family. NOW $34,000
.

belle.

REAL ESTATE

I I I . FBEB III

porch wlth a wrap around deck. Very . nice

Nlca Brick Home 3 Bedrooms. 3
Baths. 1 Story With Finished
Basement, Carport, lnground
Pool , Oak Kitchen Cabinets . Convenient Location, Ouiet NeighborhOOd, 1105 Teodora Avenue.
Gallipolis, Owner Needs To Se!ll
Asktng $119.000.740-446-8 181

.

OH

kttchen. Has a new roof and new carpet and vinyl
everywhere There's a small storage building

504 Chandler Drive. Large Fam i·
I~Room &amp; Dining Area, Living
Room/ Fireplace, 3 Bedrooms, 2·
112 Baths . Full Basement &amp; Garage Also has a beaUIIIut Inground pool &amp; gazebo. Nice
property. Call: Somerville Rea lty,

DOWN! NO CREDIT NEEDED!

advertlsements tor real esune
whlclllo In violation of the

205 North Second Ave ..

1

Nsw 3 Bedroom Glngerbr•:td
House With Wrap ~round Porch
Setting On 1 Acre, 5 MtleS From
Gal li polis. Mav help Finace or
Trade for Mobile Hamel 740·256·

HOME FORECLOSURES $ 0

This newspaper wtll not

Paymen11 To 85% IICASH IN·
'' CENTIVE OFFERII Call 1·800·
'' 325-8510 Ext 29.

SYRACUSE· Corner of Cherry &amp; 2nd S1s· A 3 bedroom
ho~e wilh . 2 baths , dining room , big living room, and an

Soutb of
Loyn

Rauonable rates.
Call for appointment

pher.

1\11 real eotate adve~lolng In
lhla nowapapor loaubjoe11o
1he F-al Fair Housing Ac1
of 1868 which makes h IHegal

Wlndlalls, 8•7·A SECOND AVE.,
1350 , NEW YORK, NEW YORK
14x18 outbuilding, p1laa S5UOO,
101)17.
740·742·2829.
BUSINESS OWNEASII Turn

~
t

I

.,w., s•s

P·H-0-T·o-G-R·A·P-11-y

Oetu ConaoUdatlon . Mortgages
And Retlnancing. Credit Problems
OK. Consumers Financial 1·800-

; CREDIT REPAIR! AS SEEN ON
, • TV! Erase Bad Credit Legally.
• ' Frea lnlo. 1·800·766-4009

f

lo'3tu at
Ufl-n

(304)675-6059.

$$ Auto Loans, Personal Lo&amp;na,

Ilona Or Dollars, To Help Minimize
Thtlr Tues . Write Immediately:

l

&gt;

will

'

Interior PalnUng &amp; Antoratlon
Old Woodw or.k, etc. Powe r
!tfashlng·Exter lor, 08cks, VInyl
IIC .
landscaping
Stdlng ,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1891?
No Foo UnleBI Wo Win!

f

tho railroad, and borders the creek . Beautiful laying.
homesl1es. There is also woods lOr hunt1ng. $60,000

5 year &lt;Md log home, &lt;4 t 12 acres ,
8 rooms, 2 baths. cathedral cell·
ings in living room, garage . out
buildings, 1o minutes from Pomer·
oy, country settin g, $125 .000,
740-992-15572

DISTRESSED PREFAB FOR·

TRENCHING .aACKHOE SERV·
ICES/ FREE ESTIMATES 304•
552·2353.

.

446-4618 _ ·
Ju~ DeWitt .............................. 441·0262
I. errill Carter................... .'.....379·2184

The family of Elwin "Link" ·
parcels. Numerous
maintained
farm
Finley would like to thank al(~~/!1
Pond
&amp;
friends and family members for th
nice extensively
need more room? Here's a 4
story home, .
kind expression of sympathy and for the
the end ol the slreet. Has a
with
baaut~ul
ood, flowers i1'11d cards. We wish to give
~~~~~~cabinets
&amp;
hardwood
special thanks to the neighbors of the
II
4 bedrooms, 2 full
family room, dining
Teens Run Road Community for their
11 ~~~~ion.Way to much to
support, thoughtfulness, friendship and
,JI
Cell tor complete
comfort during our time of grief; the
before it is too late!
Rev. Ralph •ooc" Workman for his
SOUTHERN STYLE ... Pienty.
compasstonate words; the VFW Post
of space and style he[j!l·
Formal living room, dining
4464 and American Legion forthe flag
room both with a fireplace.
presentation and to the Waugh-HalleyOversized family room and
od Funeral Home for their friendship
eat-In kitchen with plenty Of'
cablne1 apace. 2 Bedrooma,
· .·
and assistance.
A ranch style hom~;~ that is only 7
den (or 3rd bedroom) and 'I!
We have sustained a shock and a great
years
ha• 3 badrooms, 2 balhs, and a storage
1/2 baths on main level along
building. Also has a vinyl siding, Anderson windows, a'nd
wHh sun room and laundry. 2
loss by his sudden passing. We believe ·
some new carpeting. REDUCED TO $42,000
Bedrooms ~P'kllrs. Basement
the greatest trib.ute to him will be our
""h large rae~ room, 1/2 bath
emories of his living in our hearts and
·~~~~~~L RO· This 3.372 acres Is just whal you have been and kitchen 8188. Over . 5
lor lo build your ~ream home, or put your mobile
acres, attached 2 cr!r garage
the hearts of others that he has touched
and moretl2043
..,
home on. Water and electric available . Flat lo rolling
throughout his life's journ~y.
landscape. Priced to sell at $15,000
Acre a l~r.; slzed tr~cts
.
hospl1al. 112077
,
Louise Finley, Brenda Kettell and
~DING CREEK AD· Here's a 46.6 acre parcel at land with
15 Ac"' IIIII with plenty of
Grandchildren
many. building Sl1eS on both Sides of lhe road, both sideS Of I Wtl&lt;&gt;&lt;IA a roaa frontage. 112028

L-eader in Mordab\e t\ou&amp;ingl·

Re11(111hlng, Caning Rapairo, Ucllolstery. Juno Speclai·Recalnlng (30ol)7.3-1100.

·sports Teams
Proleaslona l Certified Photogra-

247·5125 Ext. 1134. Void OH, KS
&amp;WI.

310 Homes for Sale

(304)(175-3030 or 675-3431 .

'Waddings
"Pe1S

220 Money to Loan

e-mail ua for Information on our listings:
blgbandrealty@dragonbbs.com

Appiox. 1

" offtr-.1 b'j

Plaza, can 7oiQ.4&lt;18·

A Country Craftsman
Your Fumlture Doc10rs, Sttltltllng.

310 Homes for Sale

Auto Loans Available . Meridian 310 HomM for Sale
• ~ Crtdll Corp 1·800·471-5119 Ext.
$ 0 DOWN! HOMES NO CREDIT
~
1180.
NEEDEDI GOV'T /BANK REPOSI
\
$FREE CASH NOW$ From OALL NOW! 1·800·380·4620
I• Wulllly Famlllts Unloading Mil· EXT8509.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

wery one of you,

owner will sell as a

-.1 ...._

Val~

SSBAD CREDIT7 Got Caah
Loane To $5,000. Deb1 Consoli·
da11on To $200.000. Credit Cards,
Mollgages . Rellnanclng And

Real Eatate General

Card of Th,!lnkl

Opon M·f t~O· t:OO~I.Iil v:OO
Glou.l on hnclaof

Start Your Busines s Today ...
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Alfordable Rata .

sent me car~ on
my 83"' Birthday.
I enjoyed wery
one of them. Miiy
God richly bless

31 0 Homes lor Sale

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION

William IY. Eachus,
. D. Dean Evans '
Douglas Cowles, David T. Evans,
Ouy Ouinther, Dan ~Edna ,
Whiteley, Krogers, Oalllpolis
f'oodland, Wal-Nart, Johnson's
Orocery, !Yorris•!Yorthup Dodge,
Corbin ~Synder Furniture, Big
Lots, Oayle'sAnonymous Pop
Donor, Wiseman Insurance
Agency, Parishioners of Orace
United Methodist Church who
to make this year a success!

• L.lrg. 01\KIIon of

Theme Partin &amp; 5000 + Party
Suppliel Thru Color Ca.talog And
Own Ptrsonailzed Web&amp;lle Work
'from Home For 5 Minute Overview Call 888·855-0807 . Tntn

Call Debbie At 888 ·280·2762.
www 1800partyoonsuttant.eonv
10623
·- -~----

t ,r

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio· Point Pleasant,

FREE FAEE11 MONEY PROB·
LE MS ?.NOW ACCE PTING AP· Rt 34 In Putnam County, WV
PLICATIONS . 13.000 AND UPI House, Garage. Barn . 7 Acres
NO
APPLICATION FEE 1-877· $188,000. (304)-588·1l631
MEDICAL BILLING. Unlimited In·
543-tm7
en 402.
come Potential. No Experlance
5 year Okl lOQ I'IOMI, 4 112 acres.
Necessary. Fr11 Information &amp; RECEIVE $5,5401 Fill OUT OUR 8 rooma, 2 batht. cathedral cell·
CD·ROM. lnveatment From SIMPLE FDRMI MAIL TO AD - lnga In llwing room, garage . out
$2,495 . Financing Available . Is- DRESS PROVIDED! GET PAID! bulldlnga , 10 mlnutts from Pomtr.
oy, country setting, $125.000,
land Automated Medical Servic- HI00~79-IIJ25.
740-992«;72, •
es , Inc. 900·322· 1139. Ext 050
www.buslness-stanup.com
230
Profeaeional
Servlcee
IIOIIIPRENEURSI Mark&amp;! 115 +

1-888·582·3345

992·2886

• Owf' ~ local iltM
Milal&gt;lo
• "&gt; FIH"-1
llotnH on ollapla1

•

BualnHI
Opportunity

·.
·:·

f

Many, Many Thanks to those below
who supported the Grace United
Methodist Church Lunch Program at
Louis Catholic Church during the
past.school year.

r-------J

~-

r·.,

You

1ha

.•

800·434-5518 Ext.667.

Business
Opportunity

2000
220 Money to L011n

210

Hershey's Pre -Secured Routes
Available In Limited Area&amp;! Min .
lrw11t. Under $5K . Polenrlal Needs Peop .. To PrOCIII MediEarnings Over S95K One Yr. 1· . cal Claims From Home. Training
Provided. Must Owo Computer. 1888-745·5552. 24 Hrs

$$$INTERNET$$$ Launcn 'Your

Porter's Construction: Roofmg ,
V1nyl Skiing, Painting, Deck, Build·
ing Tree Cutting, Concrete, Room
Addttlons . Locally Owned And
Operated. References Available.
25 Years Expenence. 740·441·
0653. After 6 P.M.. Or 740-4460437

·' Sunday, June18,

MEDICAL BILLER $15 -$45/Hr.
Medical Bnllng ScHwore Company

FINANCIAL

NOTICE- 2 ha ndyman crew will
do yard wOf'k , painting Inside and
out, carpenter work. roofing, sid Ing . Have own too ls . Free estl·
mates. 740·742·3225.

2000

Card of Thanks

Killed In Cambodia,
June 18, 1970

bear llle blow
But what It ~t

180

Sunday, June18,

UNIVERSITY 1·800·964-831 6.

In Loving Memo!)' of
Cpl. Ralph Triplett

'

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL CO LLEGE DE·
GREE QUICK LY, Bachelors,

In Memory

God saw the road
was getting rough,
He boldly stood
to lhe test,
The battle fought.
the' victory won
Come home Dear
Soldier, rest.
We did not know
•
the pain you had,
Or hear your final sigh.
We only knew you
pa"ed away,
Without • last 'goodbye'
Gods- us strelgth
to face It
And courage to

Business
Training

Gallipolis Career COllege
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740·446-4367,

PROPERTY AND CASUALTY
ACCOUNT MANAGER
Establis hed , Stable Firm Seeks
Licensed Individual To Service
Property And Casually Insurance
Account s In The Gallrpohs !Point
Pleasant Are a Should Have A
Mlntmum Of 2 Years Expenence
In Rating, Issuing. And Servicmg
Personal Lines Ins urance Must
Be Detail OriEmled And Computer
Literate With Strong Communication Skills . Sales Experience And
Knowledge 01 Commercial Unes
A Plus. Competitive Salary And
Benatlt Package In cludes Commission, Life , Hea lth, Pens1on
401(k) Respond To Human Fiesources Dept. P&amp;C. PO. Box 738,
Mar1ena, OH 45750.

Help Wanted

wv

410 Third Ave- Old lime Charm With
Modern Conveniences IS found in this 2
story home. Features tnclude foyer, LA,
DR , eat-In kitchen wtth mud room , 3·4

BRs and 2 I /2 bolhs. Updated ttems
Include baths, wlnng, 2 furnaces, sid1ng,
root and more $~ 24,900 12011

�\
Plge

•

De • 6unbap l!:imu ·ilrnrintl

110

Help Wanted

I'HAAMAC:ISTS NEEO£D

1

PUU. AND MAT TIME
PHARMACISTS POSITIONS
COMMUNITY PHARMACY
PRACTICE
-

Fomlly Pharmacy -

GIN!pollo Store

Holur Ftmlty Phermacy -

JldloonStoro
lmm1111dlate Openings E•lst For
Full And Part·Time Pharmacists
At Both Branches Of Holzer FamIly Pharmacv. Candldatea Should
Have Good Commun lealions
Skills And An Interest In Helping
Peoplt . Must Ha~e Current ll·
ctnse To Prac tic e Pharmacy In
The State 01 Ohio Advancement
OpportuniUes Available.
E1tcellent Wage And Benefll
Package With A Pleasing Work

Sclledule.
Interested Cendldltes
Sttould Contact:
Peul StackhouH,

R.PII, Director
Holzer Family Phtlrmecy
80 Jtck1on Pike

Gllllpollo, Ohio 454131

To~: 740"146-5235

Fax: 740-146-5215
EEO IADA EMPLOYER
RN Nurolng Management
Poolllono
Holzer Senior Care Ce nter Is
looking for RNs who are expen·
enced In superv ising and directIng ataft. Knowledge ol State and
Federal regulations regarding
long term care is desirable
Knowledge ol restorative nursing
1 plus . If ~au are Interested m
joi ning a highly raspecteel ,
proacllve . quality driven organization, come~ to 380 Colonial
Drive, Bidwell. Ohio and 1111 out
an applicati on No phone calls
plaase

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant,

RN Stiff Poslllons
Holzer Senior Care Center has 2
part-lime staff positions available . RN s are currently working
12-haur shifts HSCC pays far
expe11ence. To be considered lor
these poSitiOns, come to 380 Colonial Drive , Bidwell , Ohio and 1111
ou t an application . No ph one
calls please.

110

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

' Treatment Nurse Needed For
, Weekend At Scenic Hills Nursing
Center, Competitive Pay Ofltrtd.
Must Be Sensitive To Needs Of
The Elderly. Pleau Call Tammy
Price Or Pam Caldwell , At 7.&amp;0·

CLASSIFIEDS!

4&lt;16-7150.
Vacancy tor Secondary Currlcu·
lum Supervis or. Applicant must
be able to prov1de own transpor·
1a~on. Submit a lener or Interest,
resume. references and a copy of
current certU1cate(s) to John
Cos tanzo,
Super lnllndent,
Athens-Meigs Educational Sarv·
lea 'Canter, 507 Rtchl and Avenue,
Suite 108 Athens . Oh io 45701.
Deadline is June 30, 2000. Equal
Opponunlty Employer!Provl~r.

In Memory

To Our Dear Family,
Friends and Neighbors:
No words can express the gratUtL1de
.
we feel for each of you.
On Sunday May 28, 2000, our Uves
changed forever when we lost one
of our dear family members

Wanted experienced auto body
man, antique automobile re5tora·
tlon ahOp Must be able to do
body work , weldmg and painting,
Hill's Classic Cars. 7.&amp;0-949-2217

(7am-9pm).

Wanted Receptio nfst For DoC·
tor' s Oll lce Must like Worki ng
Wit h People , Be Ell1cien t And
Type Well E•peuence Helpful ,
But Not Necessary E11cellent
Worki ng Conditions Outstanding
Career Opportunity. Send Ae·
sume To: CLA 509, c/o Galltpolls
Oaily Tnbune, 825 Th1rd Avenue.
GalllpoUs, OH 4563t

"JoAnn Angel Swain"
As we face one of Hfe's most
dlfflcult challenges, It Is only
through the grace of God and the
help of our family and friends that
we can make It through each day.
We thank everyone for their food,
flowers, cards, visits and kind
words of sympathy. A special
thanks to Matt Willis of Willis

WILDLIFE JOBS TO $8 ·19 /HR.
+ Federai ·Benefi!.S. Park Rang ers.
Security, Maintenance. No Exp.
For Sa me . For Info. Call 1-800 -

391·5856 E•l 4299
POSTAL JOBS $48 ,323 .00 YR
Now Hiring -No Experience -Paid
Tralmng -Great Benefits, Call 7
Days 800-429-3660 Ext. J-365

140

Funeral Home, Pastor Alfred Holley, :
Sharon EbUn, Emily Waugh and the
ladles that served us after the
funeral. We shall never forget
your generosity and may
God bless each of you.

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
In Memory

Loving Memo!)' 0
Steve Eblin
Dear Dad,
You had a nature you
could not help loving.
And a heart that was
purer than gold,
And to those who knew
you and loved you,
Your memory Will never
8fC1W cold.
Haw.t rather's Day
Dad,
Sad}' Missed

Daughters - Madeline
Pendleton, Myrtle
Grover. Edith Barton,
and Son • ArUe Eblin

In Memory

In .!.oving :Mtmory of
'Etlielgil~i&gt;on

wlio passed away
ten years ago today.
!At twiligfit wlien tlie day i
done
and sunset flames tlie s~y
1!Je rfiin~ of our /o..,d one
and tlie fiappy days gone

by

'I1iougfi~ of you
drifting bac~

come

'Witliin our dreams too
stay
· 'T'o linow tfiat you are resting
Wfitrt tfie twiligfit end tfie
day
Sadly ml5std lry jam1
•

1·800·214·0452,
Reg t90-05-1274B.

150.

james and Audrey Angel

Sonya Swain Cowles

Maste rs, Doctorate, By C orre sportdence Based Upon Prior Education And Short Study Course
For FREE Information Booklet
Phone CAMBRIDG E STATE

and all of her family
•

to lo5eyou.
No one wtllever know.

Wanted To Do

180

Georges Porlable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the m1ll just cJll

WanledTo Do

210

wanted To Do ; Mounts Tree
Service, Buckel Truck Servica .
Top Trim Removal, Stump Grind·
ing, Fully Insured. Free ~Itt ·
malts. Bidwell, Onlo 1·800·838·
9568, Or 740-38a.9648.

30ol-675·1957
Mowers , Lawn Tractors, Tillers
Repaired , Free Plck·Up Delivery
Within 1o Miles 01 Gallipolis_ 20
Years Experience, Reasonable
Rates . Guaranteed , Mtke, 740446-7604

210

Buslneaa
Opportunity

210

Buslneas
Opportunity

~unbap- utimes ~entinel
In Me'fnory

Own Global Internet Business

For Only $100.00111ncludeo '2' 15
mg Web Sllei. Turn -Key Money
Making System, FREE Training 1·

In Loving Memory
· William L. Cox
It's been seven months
since God called you
home. We want to
wish you a Happy
Father's Day. We love
you and miss you.
Love til we meet again.
Your Loving Wife Della
Happy FQther's Day Dad!
Your sons and daughters
Roger, Bub, left Reta, Teresa
Happy Father's Day Poppy!
From your Grandchildren &amp; Great
Grandchildren

800·251-8095 (24 Hr Messag•)
!NOTICE I
'·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do bus•·
ness with people you knOw, and
NOT to send money through the
m11ll 1.mttl you have lnve&amp;l!gated
the oHerlng.

Responsib le Hard workmg Lady
Lookmg To Do Housecleaning Or
Light Yard Work, Wtlh Refe rences 74D-44&amp;4329

ABSOLUTE QOLD ' MINEI: $0
Down! Nels S50K. Work. 7 Hrs.
Candy VENDING Ate. In Area .....
Tol l Free 1-877-494-8695, 24

Sprtng Claantng On Houses Also
Wilt Do Olllces Free Est1mates.
References. 740-38 8-9078 Ask
For Donna

Hrs
AUT, BELL
PAYPHONE RTES
22 Hi -Trame Locations $1 ,000
Wkty. Pori 1-800-800-3470 ,

Card of Thanks

EARN $90 ,000 YEA RLY RepairIng, NOT Replacing, Long Crack5
In Windshiel ds Free Video 1·

I would like to
thank ead! and
wery one who

800·826·8523

US /Canada

www gtassmecnanlx com

Spring
0101.

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

and to all of my
family &amp;.. friends

for the surprise
dinner they held

RUSSilLL D. WOOD, BROKER

for me.

Love you all.
Mildred Watson

I

to advertise ·any preference,
limitation or diaerilnination
baled on race, color, rellglon,
eex familial status or nat1onal
.origin, or any Intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or dlacrlmlnatlon."

(304)675·7472
1304)675·7279

knowingly accapt
law. Our readtnt are hereby

lnlolmed 111at all dwellings
adver11aed In thll newspaper
are available an an equitl
opporl1~nlty

Martha Smilh ....:.............................. 441· 1919
Cheryl Lemlay ................................. 742·3171
Dana Atha ....... ,........................... , ...37'~9209

Your lnvolcaa Into Cash. Also

l'

,•

GOV'T IBANK REPOS I 1-800 ·
355-0024 Ext 8040.
Hou se &amp; Lot. 3 Bedrooms , 2
Baths, Newly Remodeled, Situated
On /5.9 Acres, Located Nea r Pa·
tr lot. $1 000 Down /W.A.C .. Contact David At, 1·800·333·691 0

(0l (ortlfl&lt;tllon Swk IOUrll
Mon I. lrl7:Q0.3:30 WHkend d111111 Sa1 &amp;Sun 8:00-4:30 12 wtoks
• Rnondftg and funding availableltallil on olgiblllly
'9ft placo11111nl on 0!111 AtralniiiiJ'
(ontad ld Adams 1-800.648·3695 or (740) 373·6283 Ext. 338

10 Walnut Ck., SandMIII Road.

mo-.

CROSS
APARTMENTS

Announcement

....

fbUI

Wa•o

r.

you.

Nice Two -Story 3·4 Bedroom&amp; 1
Dmtng Room. Ba5ement. Porch.
Carport Owner w111 consider trade
lor a smaller home. Call Somer·
ville Realty l304)675·3030 or

(675)3431

Accepting Applications
1 Bedroom Apartments
Elderly (62 or older) or
Disabled or Handicapped
Based on lncomel
Handicapped A:ccessibility
Please call (740) 992-3055
TDD # (800) 855-2880
Equal Housing
Opportunity

divide

Into

I

I

,

Acre tracts wl1h public water
available . 112027
DON'T MISS THIS BUY
$39,800.00 Easy ·to maintain
iawn. 3 Bedrooms, bath, eat-In
kitchen, llvl~g room, enclosed
porch. Detached
Qlllage.

NICE BUILDING LOTI Nol
restricted , excellent place
room, fully even for a mobile home
equipped
chen,
3 Water · lap In-cluded and
bedrooms, 2 baths. Central driveway in place. Approx.
be caved lo own lot. 2.16.acrea. $14,900.00121112
COMMERCIAL 2 Story
I I
th~t Ia •. Ideal lor floral
retail, ere. Off stree•e;:,t,~~:~~
area. Call for more lr
12044
OUICKLY. .. or it may be
Brick ranch Ideally
KEMPER HOLLOW ROAD close to hospltaf,
Brick ranch home complete
e1c. Easy
to
level lawn. 3
wl1h 4 bedrooms, living room,
, 1.5 balhS, e&gt;&lt;l(a
dining roon, kitchen that
In ki!Chen,
leads to rear covered patio.
dining
Basment has family room
garage.
wl1h llreplace, laundry, work
area and small kHcheit
3 acres of land.

l!ounbav 1ll:11t1tf· &amp;rnllntl • Page~D7

320

Mobile Homes
for Sale
FEDUPWITHTHE
RUN AROUND?

Want A New Home W1th No Hiliste? Call For Pre · Approvat 1-

BbB-565-0161

NO DOWN PAYMENT I
No Down Payment Required Wtth
Government Sponsored Loan.
Good Credit And Steady Income
Required . Call Today For More.
Information Independence Mortgage Services 12611 Mad 1son,
Lakewood, OH 44107 MB1679 1·

800-845.0036
Real nice 4 bedroom ranch style
house wtlh finished basement, 2
bedroom downstairs, 1 &amp; t/2 bath,
teal n1ce exira garage 26•32, an
681 between Reedsv ille &amp; Tuppers Plains . $65 ,000, 740-37 8-

Limned Or No Credit? Government Bank Finance Only At Oak·
wood In Barboursville. WV 304·

736-3409.

GOOD CREDIT
BAD CREDIT
NO CREDIT!
let Us Assist You In Your New
Mig Home Call For Pre-Approval.
1-888·565·0t67 .
.

Sell, $25,000 OBO, Clleslllre
Area . 740-378·9840
New 1.&amp; Wide, 3B R-2BA, $213
Per Month , Low down Payment.
Free Arr, Free Delivery, 1· 888-

928·3426.
New 161t80, 3BR-2BA, $268 per
month, Low Down Pa~ment Free
Atr. Free Delivery, 1·888-928-

3426.
New Ooub tew lde. 3 BR· 2BA.
$276 per month , Low Down Payme nt , Free Air. Free Oellvery. 1·

81!8·928·3426.

Res ldonlla ! Cammecp lal· Large
Home, 1 87 Acres, Great Location. Retiring, 74o-245-9448

32x80 , Fact.,ry Repo, Ne ve r
Lived In $40,950, 1·888 -691 ·
6777.

Tuppers Plains, 3 bedro om brick
ranch, living dining, kitchen. bath,
112 ba sement, _parage. shed well
Insulated, 1.09 acre&amp; sewer syste m. John Arbaugh ho me. Ar·
baugh Addition, price reduced to

Land Home Packages. All Areas,
Ail Credit Risks, 740-446-3583.

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Three bedroom, totally remodeled
Inside and out, tra11er and lot, new
furnace , new appliances. new car-

pel, $23.500, caii74Q-992·4514.
lo1TIME BUVERS
New Or Used Mig Home, Call For

Pre-Approval. 1-888-565.0167.
1st Time Buyer -Governmen1
Ba cke d Loa ns, All Application&amp;
' Accepted Only At Oakwood. Gal·

llpolls, 74().446·3093

1p&gt;cso Trailer on rented lot A C ,
and extras. Muat see to apprec!·
ate . (7 40)441 -089 1 Lea'lle Measage.

330

1970 Community, 12x60, two bed·
room, one bath, gas , $2995. Call

74().38().0259

Farma for Sale

1t8 Acres Near Rio Grande , With
3 Bedroom Home. Barn, Garage,
And Storage Bulldlngs Phone

Cheryl. 740·385-9948.
1972 Westbrook, 12x64, two bed·
room, one bath, gas : $4995 Call

,

NEW LISTING
HUNTER'S HILL

$10,000. 740-379·2405

3 Trac ts Of Prime Recreational
Land , Tou ches USA Land , 29
Acres For As Low As $27,9001
Land Contracts Ava ilable! Call
Now! 1-800· 213-8365 Anthony
land Company, Ltd www.covntry·
tyme.com

1981 Fairmont, 3 Bedrooms, 1 V2
Be1ns. $7 500 , OBO 740·446·
9393.

30 To 100 Acre Tracts 01 Pr ime
Hunting Land
Sta rting At

N~~ .

740·385·4387.

1979 Fa irmont 14x70, Wit h Ex·
pando, VInyl Sldlng, Sletl Doors,
Berber Carpet Hardwood Floors,

WV HUNTING LAND
$18 .500. 97 Acres For $57 ,000.

1997 mobile nome 14K60 on rent·
ed lot In Meigs Co.. 2 bedroom, 1
bath , cia, applian ces, deck &amp;
storage buildings . assume P41Ymenls or purchase, 740·378·
6271 9am-4:30pm dally or 330-

Can Combine Free Maps Land
ConHa ct Ava ilable 1-800·21 3·

343-9984 4pm·8pn1'1lally.

Oft SR 35, 5+ Acres, Great Home
Slles. Lane Contract Avai lable

0 1vorce Forces Sale. 3' Bed·
rooms , 2 Baths, Never Lived In,
5499 &amp; Assume 74().1"6-3093.

8365

Save Over $5,000, Call 1··888·
565-0167.
Abandoned Mobile Home , Bank

Will Deal. 304·733-91 02.
For Sale: 1996 , 16X86, Clayton
Traitor. 3 BR , 2 SA, C.A., Nice. G.
E

Stove,

Sola , Love Seat

(Mauve). (304)675-8165 .

&amp; Acreage

AHention Developers
33 Aeres . Ap pro~~:lmately 1 o Acre
t.ake, Mobtle Home Wtlh Add On

Ideal For Hous1ng, Campground ,
E&amp;tale. $99.500, 740-388·8678

RENTALS

LAND NEAR RIO
Fr&amp;o Maps.1-800·213·8365.
LAND
CHEAP AS DIRT
Several Locations In Gallla &amp;
Me1g·s .Counties. 5 Acres As Low
As S6.600. Land Contract Avail able. $680 Downl Call For Free

41 0 Houses for Rent
t · 3 Bedrooms Foreclos ed
Homes From S199/Mo , 4o/. Oown
For llsrings &amp; Payment Detail s.
800·319·3323 Ext . 1709.

3 bedroom house lor ren t m Middleport, no pets, 740-992·5658
3 Bedrooms Carport . 47 Spruce
Street {End 01 Dnve) Avai lable
Now. $3901Mo . 1 Year Lease.
Aeterences, Secur1ty Oepos1t,
Kay At Tope 's Furniture 151
Second Avenue, Gall1polts, 740446-0332
3 BR House for Rent Gall1pohs

Ferry. 5475 (304)675·1105.

60 year o!Cl couple seekmg to
ren t/contract 1-2 bedroom house
or trailer tn Metgs or Athens area.
references, call col!ect (937)2520252
For Lease Or Sale 5 Year Old
2,000 Sq . Ft. 3 Bedrooms. 2
Baths, Energy Elllctent Home.
Near Chllslde Golf Club, $685/Mo ..
740-446-2957
2 BFI House. &amp; 1&amp;2 bedroom
ap ts. Hud approved call .J04·675·

·2053
Pilot Program , Renters Needed,

304-736-7295.

Small 1 Bedroon House. AJC, Gas
heat. Cooking and wa ter. Buemanv a111c , storage area . washer
and dryer hookup . Near Kmar t .
$3251 mo You pay gas &amp; electric

(7401446·1822 , (740)446·4217
call before eam or alter 9pm
420

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

12x60 Mobile Home Two Bedrooms . Located Be hind Fox's
Pizza Sandh ill Roa d. $375 Per
Month. Incl udes Water/Sewe r.

Call (~04)R75·3423 .•

Farm House For Rent SO I'1ti
Mamten ance Flequ~red . In :tt' ,
man. 740-286-5886.

440

Apartments •
for Rent
-

1 and 2 bedroom apanments 1 jf·
nlshed and unturnlshed, se ~unty
depo51t req utred no pets _740
992·2218
'
1 Bedroorrr furn rshed Apa r\Qlant
UpstaH 5. Ulhtles Paid. $'2 85
mon th, plus Cle pos at (7 40}1146

1340
1 Bedroom Near Holze r AIC. W
D. Hook· Up, Super Clean. 0 Jii'
Lo ca tton , $279/Mo , + Ut111 ; es

740·446·2957
1 Bedroom Stove &amp; Refr~g e r JJrJ r
AC, S300 /Mo , }lo Pets Utllll lt'S
Pa id, References ReqUired, Je-

posll. 740-446·3667
1 Bedroom , All Ut11it1es

1 Or 2 Bedroom Apartment s wa
le r &amp; Trash Paid, No Pets , 740 ·

381!·1100.
Appltcauon Being Taken For
Small, But Extra Nice, Ciea fl'.()ne
Be droo m tn Counrry Se~ 1n g
Washer, Drye r, Stove, Frlg.;"Pro·
Vlded Water And Garbagb In·
elude d Total Electric l AC 'fen·
nant Pays Electric . $300 Oe~ os t
$350/Mo • No Pe ts, Non-Sm ~ke rs
On ly, Call 740-446 ·9585 Or740
446·2205 Ask For VIrginia

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT S AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 52 Westw ood
Drive !rom $289 to $370 Walk to
shop &amp; movies Call 740:.4 46
2568. Equal Hous1ng Opportunity
Christy 's Family Uvlng , apart ments, home &amp; trailer rentals,
740·99 2- 4514 . apartments ~va ll·
able, furnished &amp; unlurn1shed.',

DOWNTOWN APARTMENT
FOR RENT
First Floor, Ideal lor a Sen10r Per·

$260·$300, 740·992-2 167

304-675·5162 .

2 Bedroom Mobi le Home For Rent
On S.R 2t8, 740-256-9197, On
Weeke nds Or

740·256·~920.

Weekdays

2 bedroom mobile home for rent,
no pe ts, available August 1, ca ll
740·949·2698 before 9pm
2 Bed roo m Mobile Home. You
Pay Utilities. &amp; Deposit, In Porter

2 Bedroom Tra iler. Located On
Hannan Trace Road, Call 740 -

256·6202.
2 Bedrooms, Au, Natural Gas
Furnace , ln Gallipolis , 740-446-

2003, 740·446-1409.
Christy s Family llvll'l(l
204 North Second A11enue
Middleport, OH 45760
740·992·4514
HUO approved· Pomeroy, one
bedroom. all ut!liijes and appliances, utll!tlf!!S palel

Looking To Buy A New Home?
Don't Have Land? We Doll! Hurry

Two bedroom, all uttllles and appliances, ulillltes paid.

Three bedroom home, Pomeroy,

Raal Estate General

lncl ua~'J.

$375/Ma, 740·441-0720

Efficiency apt . ref&amp; dep

LOOK NO FURTHER if your
looking to purchase ,a home
lhat has quality throughout.
Low mainlenance brick ranch,
4 bedrooms. Newly carpeted
tormallivmg room, slep saving
kl1c~en, family room w]th
llreplace . Over 2,000 sqft
living space. Attached 2 car
g~rage, 2 acres, inground
jioot ' bam shed . 112050

a

UPDA1rED
STORY HCIME situated on
nice . level lot
being
approXImalely 116'xl60', living
room , d1n1ng area, kitchen,
family room, bedroom a bath
on main level plus 3 bedrooms
and bath upstairs. Parlial
basement, delached ,24'&gt;&lt;32'
garage, sid.e deck and
concrete palro . $54 900 00
N2065
,.

$72,800.00 IS THE NEW ASKING ·PRICE FOR THESE lWO
HOMES! 2 Story spacious home with 3 bedrooms, 2 beths.
Second home Is I 1/2 S1ory wilh .3 bedrooniS/6 Stall HO(Be
barn and ov~r 1 acre lot Good garden spot. Let the rent from
one home pay lhe mortgage payment. 12033

cL oI

446·4425. 740-446-3936

Furm shed 2 Ro oms &amp; lla tn .
Downsta irs, Clean . No Pets.,-Rel·
erences &amp; Deooslt Required; 740
446-1519
Furntshed Efflctency Apa1tment
Uhlilies Paid. Downstairs . $200 00
mont h
919 Second Ave

(740)448-3945.

.

Graciou&amp; living t and 2 beQ,r.oom
apartments at Vt llage Manor~·a n d
Ri..,erslde Aparlments 1n Midd1e·
port. From $273-$336 Call f4 C·
992 -5064 Equal Housmg OPj:Jor·
tunltles
"
Mod ern 1 Bedroom Apartme nt

740·448-0390
New Remodeled Apartments.~ 601
Ma in Street , Pt Pleasant Q1tl1 ·
ties Included (304)675-7030.

Real Estate General

•

\

''

REAL ESTATE

504 4th Aw- 3 BR 2 Story Home

591 Hidden Hill• Drlv• Perlec1 sunsel

Featuring

views can be enjoyed from the deck of
th1s outstanding 2 story home.

Convenience

and

Affordabllityll Large FA w~h vaulled
calling and open 1o the kitchen Is 'IBry
inviting. Large LR and also includes a
study. Newer furnace , central air and

roof. Greal back yard ove~ooks
Memortal Field. $75.000 1233 .

HardWood floors dress !Ills 4 BA home
up with a country flair. gorgeous k~chen

is highlighted with a vaulted ceiling, 3
baths, full basement, bam &amp; 20 acre s
$329,0001220

10 Willow Drive- Convenience and Good
Value is found on the edge of town with thiS 3·4 BR home. Offers tiVabtlity w1th a
LA, eat-1n kttchen and full basement with
FR Sparkling In-ground pool with privacy

fence. $84,900 1235

..'.

'

horne lives bigger than It looks. LA with
vaul1ed ceiling and loft area, 3 BAs, 3
baths, CtWf kttellen, nice deck, oventlzed
I car del. Garage on approx. I acre lot.
$135,000. Better call on this onell HZ4

1111 WoodiMd D"- Move in and Enjoyll
And there's a lot 10 enjoy wl1h 3-4 BRs, 2
baths, remodeled eal·in kitchen. main level
FR, LR, 2nd FA and rec. room in
ba8emenl, huge, partially ccwered deck, 2
car garage and over I acre lo1 with -un
trea a tandlcaping. Sl27.soo 1232

217 Duly ACNICI- Ou1llandlng design and

44 euttemul

iual drive by.. this '"

a must see homell Newer constructed

'
+

•

•
''

105 Edam• Troll· Affordabohty next to
Tycoon Lakell This 3 BA home offers lull

143 Stumbo Road· Immaculate

$77,5001227

sided ranch offers cozy LR w1th
stove open to afflcient kitchen , 3
baths, overs1zed 1 car garage w1th
workbench area, all located on a lovely
wooded 1 acre, mil lot. Do yourself a
favor and call today! $74.900 1607

17t1 SR 7 S- Large 2 slory home along

1393 Ewlngton Road- Comfortable

basement with outs1de entrance, large 2
car garage, huge garden spot , 20 M 36
outbuilding an~ much more . Large BR
upstairs could b'e made tnto 2 if needed

387 Buhl Morton Road- Traditional 2
story home with over 4300 sq. fl: of total
IJVing space includes 4 BAs, 3 1/2
baths, formal LA and DR, FA, 2nd
kttchen , FA and rec. room in basement ,
2 fireplaces and a very mce patio/deck.
2 car garage $250,000 1231

•
from extra rental site
EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL and water well. Can ""- ~ .
CORNER WITH . PARKING! en appointment to view
Only
you
and
your proRertv lodayl 112070
imagination pUla 8 limit on
,
this
potential
Upslairs NEW .LISTING! 660 HIGH
includes
2
bedroom STREET $59,000.00 2 Story
apartment. downslairs Is home Situated on large sized
commercial """ $69 "JO 00 tot . 3 bedrooms. living room
112020
·
,. ·
din ing room, and kltch~n :
• nvs:=~ v? ctTnAV HOMF 1"'11'1 ~:J:~hed one car garege .
mulberry

1n Pomeroy

room

and

5 yr old lovely brick
ranch offers LR, DR, Fr w11h gao log
fireplace, 3 BRs and 2 balha, nice size lot
wllll fenced In back yard located on a
deacl·end street • In a family oriented
neighborhood. 879.500 1818

ffoor plan leahtres 3 BRs, 2 1/2 batha,

LR, FR, DR and eat·ln kttchen pluo a
solttrilm room ourroundtd by decl&lt;a.
Partial beMment with high celllrtg11 and
ou1alde an1ranoe. 2 car garage pluo 15 x
25 outbuldlng. Woodt&lt;t 20 acree, m/1.
$195,000 11218

the river offers great views. great living
space and great outside enJOyment.
Over 3200 sq. ft. of living space plus fJ
lull basement and over 1600 sq. ft or

decks. 3-4 BRs. 3 baths, LA. FR . DR
and den

£"'• :n~ Previously

used as

kitchen . Extra larga in town station. Call for
lot~ Homo has been well listings! 12058
mamta1ned. Call today! t2057

a

as

compl~te

Nice eat-in kitchen

2 car

(740) 446·3644
Call one

of our professlonais with any questions or for an appointment:

Dlvld Wl11m1n, QRI, CRS Broker
'

C1rolyn WeiCh

•

Robert Bruce

.'

I•

I

441·1007
448-0621

448~85115
Qarnea

split level .offers 4 BRs . I 1/2 baths, LR
with stone fireplace , d1n1ng area w1th
parquet floor open to kitchen, FR , large
utility room, 2 car garage, all situated on
40 acres, m,11 with great road frontage
46 M 388 barn. Great country living at

$120.000. H31

garaga. $360,000 1203

·his

home fea1Ufes 3 bedroc 11s, COMMERCIAL •
Building,
LS. baths, large living room, land
and
equipment.
d1n1ng

on-

448·2702
448·9555

246 Ann Drive· Enjoy 1he beauty and

lwwry of thi s cozy newer hamel Great
room w1th a fireplace open to the
kitchen with oak cabinets, 3-4 generous
bedrooms, 3 baths and 2 car garage
supply
any
famtly's
needs
Professionally landscaped $132,500

11127

'·

.' .

742•3171

-

...,•

•

em ey

no..pet::~

For Lease· Beautiful, 1606 So
Fee t, Total ly Restored And Re
decorated Second Floor AP art
ment In Gallipolis Historic Ci&amp; trJc!
Ideal For Professional Couplift A1l
Modern Am enities 3 Bed rdtlms .
SpaCIOUS Living Roo m /Dfn tng
Room 1 1/2 Bat hs, Aaar 'b'eck
HVAC $600/Mo , Plus Utilities,
Securi ty And Key Depo&amp; lr. No
P~H s, Aelern ces Aequ~red , '74 0·

&lt;
·
•' •
,.' .

ME I G

a

Two bedroom mob 1ie home. r o
pets. 740-992-5858

sans, (740)446-9539.

~~~~=--=~::::-:::::-.::::::-:::::---o:::~"":~-=~~~-~.:;,._;;:_.._..
.
N!EW LISTING! , 33441
BASHAN ROAD $711.000.00··
Immediate Possesitonl i 1/2
Story home that offers newer
roof and hot lub, dining room,
kitchen, den, 4 bedrooms, 2
baths and morel Lei's go took I
12069
OWNERS ARE RELOCA:rtNG
MUST SELL, FASTI Come
and view this 3 tledroom, 2 bath
ranch home to see It all .
Basement.
carpot1,
large
altached porch af\&lt;1 above
ground pool, barn
pond .
Delached
garage/workshop.
English gardens and reeling on
4 a A,..... ~ l-4urrv call ,Cheryl to

2661

Be tween Athens and Pomeroy, 2
&amp; 3 bedroom mob ile homes.

June spBC!al- $100 deposit only.

· ~============!==============

Mobile Homes
lor Rent

Tratler tn Aulland . no pets , OepQs·
11 &amp; rete1ences reQuired 740-7 42·

1 Bedroom In Gallipolis , Deposi t
&amp; Relerences , No Pets, Aller 6
P.M 740.441-1308

Maps. ANTHONY LAND CO ..
LID., 1-800-213-8365.

Only 10 Lois Lett. 304·736·7295.

420

430 Farms for Rent

Area No Pets, 614·388·9162.

350 Lots 8r Acreage

REPO&amp;ALE

Never lived In , No Mo.,ey ppwnt

Lots

Move-ln. 740-446·3570

6337.

320

350

Take Over Payment5. New 3 Bed·
rooms, 2 Bat h Home , $333 &amp;

Mobile Home &amp; 1 Acre Land For

Tw o bedroom. 1 1/4 acres. lull
basement. central heat &amp; air, nice
neighborhood , 8x40 deck, Syracuse, Ohio, 7.&amp;0·992-3600

Non·Pertormlng lnvolcos . Any 3BR, 2900 oq. II. 3 car garage. 2
Noloe. Call S1eve 1.888 •982 • yoaro old . Ouollty throughout.
2228.
'
SI75K. (304)875·1551, ahor 5PM
or leovo
CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL
"'eA,;;;~~3a~&amp;iiM&gt;IIt-----:=:;:=======------'
CREDIT EXPERTS. LICENSED
I e Acroo, with 3BR &amp; 2BA,
BONDED CORRECT IREMOVE 2•xa2 Block Garsge, oul Milt·
Announcement
BAD CREDIT, BANKRUPTCY, 11one Road. $68,000. (304)578·
LAWSUITS,
JUDGEMENTS. 2376 ·
AAA RATING . 90 ·180 DAYS. I·
6W·422·1 598.

:-:-,..-.._-------1

6574.

Reel E!t!te Gener1l

a

ERRY SPRADLING .................................. 949-2131
;HARMELE SPRADLING ........................... 949-2131
BETTY JO ~OLLINS ................................... 949,2049
RENDA JEFFERS ......... ............................ 992·1444
OFFICE ................................... ,..... ,.............. 992 ·2886

Extra Nice 4 Bedroom Home . Llv·
mg Room, Sun Aoom . New Kitch·
en, 2 Baths , Den, StudiO, Large
Family Room. Fu.U Basement. Heat
Pump, Swtmmmg Pool, Water F11!·
er, GatHpoiiS. 74o-367-D240.

Mid-Ohio Volley Truck Driver Training

Apl)llcatlon W IServlct . Reduce

..

112035

~OTTIE TURNER, Broker..........................992-5692

FEtTUREIIt Raposseel !Must Sell
4 Factory 01rect. Super Insulated
Modulanzed Packages, Alf ord·
able , H1gh Tech Ouahty, Simple
Erection Your Foundatton Flexl·
ble Layout 314/5 Bedrooms, De tails, 1-800-874-6032 Sacrlftee

wv

sante E&amp;IOte. 740·667-6427 .

'&gt;

TO OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS? Here's the one
for you . An es1ablished Army Surplus Store. comes with
approx . 5 acres, a 3 bedroom, 1 bath, home, &amp; about a one
acre pond. The store IS bulging w1th merchandise and so Is
the eXIra stock areas Must see to appreciate. Owner will give
new owners pointers on operauon $179,000

.
on approx 2 acres at the
Rutland, 1s the most be"aulilul split level home 1 3
bedrooms, large bath with whirlpool garden tub, plus an extra
shower. Large rooms and very open. Also has a 2 1/2 car
n1ce garage. Newer heat pump, roof, &amp; vinyl flooring. $65,000

·

Announcement

1 112 story home In friendly rural
community, complete recent remodeling , 3·• bedroom, 1 batn,

hsleal,
10.

POMEROY·LINCOLN DRIVE· A I 1/2 s1o1y home that has
been completely remodeled and has 3 bedrooms, ohe bath
d1nlng room, and a nice from s1tt1ng porch Has central ai;
and 11 seems as If it Is in the country. Ou1e1 and on a road With
low traffic. Great place for a family. NOW $34,000
.

belle.

REAL ESTATE

I I I . FBEB III

porch wlth a wrap around deck. Very . nice

Nlca Brick Home 3 Bedrooms. 3
Baths. 1 Story With Finished
Basement, Carport, lnground
Pool , Oak Kitchen Cabinets . Convenient Location, Ouiet NeighborhOOd, 1105 Teodora Avenue.
Gallipolis, Owner Needs To Se!ll
Asktng $119.000.740-446-8 181

.

OH

kttchen. Has a new roof and new carpet and vinyl
everywhere There's a small storage building

504 Chandler Drive. Large Fam i·
I~Room &amp; Dining Area, Living
Room/ Fireplace, 3 Bedrooms, 2·
112 Baths . Full Basement &amp; Garage Also has a beaUIIIut Inground pool &amp; gazebo. Nice
property. Call: Somerville Rea lty,

DOWN! NO CREDIT NEEDED!

advertlsements tor real esune
whlclllo In violation of the

205 North Second Ave ..

1

Nsw 3 Bedroom Glngerbr•:td
House With Wrap ~round Porch
Setting On 1 Acre, 5 MtleS From
Gal li polis. Mav help Finace or
Trade for Mobile Hamel 740·256·

HOME FORECLOSURES $ 0

This newspaper wtll not

Paymen11 To 85% IICASH IN·
'' CENTIVE OFFERII Call 1·800·
'' 325-8510 Ext 29.

SYRACUSE· Corner of Cherry &amp; 2nd S1s· A 3 bedroom
ho~e wilh . 2 baths , dining room , big living room, and an

Soutb of
Loyn

Rauonable rates.
Call for appointment

pher.

1\11 real eotate adve~lolng In
lhla nowapapor loaubjoe11o
1he F-al Fair Housing Ac1
of 1868 which makes h IHegal

Wlndlalls, 8•7·A SECOND AVE.,
1350 , NEW YORK, NEW YORK
14x18 outbuilding, p1laa S5UOO,
101)17.
740·742·2829.
BUSINESS OWNEASII Turn

~
t

I

.,w., s•s

P·H-0-T·o-G-R·A·P-11-y

Oetu ConaoUdatlon . Mortgages
And Retlnancing. Credit Problems
OK. Consumers Financial 1·800-

; CREDIT REPAIR! AS SEEN ON
, • TV! Erase Bad Credit Legally.
• ' Frea lnlo. 1·800·766-4009

f

lo'3tu at
Ufl-n

(304)675-6059.

$$ Auto Loans, Personal Lo&amp;na,

Ilona Or Dollars, To Help Minimize
Thtlr Tues . Write Immediately:

l

&gt;

will

'

Interior PalnUng &amp; Antoratlon
Old Woodw or.k, etc. Powe r
!tfashlng·Exter lor, 08cks, VInyl
IIC .
landscaping
Stdlng ,

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1891?
No Foo UnleBI Wo Win!

f

tho railroad, and borders the creek . Beautiful laying.
homesl1es. There is also woods lOr hunt1ng. $60,000

5 year &lt;Md log home, &lt;4 t 12 acres ,
8 rooms, 2 baths. cathedral cell·
ings in living room, garage . out
buildings, 1o minutes from Pomer·
oy, country settin g, $125 .000,
740-992-15572

DISTRESSED PREFAB FOR·

TRENCHING .aACKHOE SERV·
ICES/ FREE ESTIMATES 304•
552·2353.

.

446-4618 _ ·
Ju~ DeWitt .............................. 441·0262
I. errill Carter................... .'.....379·2184

The family of Elwin "Link" ·
parcels. Numerous
maintained
farm
Finley would like to thank al(~~/!1
Pond
&amp;
friends and family members for th
nice extensively
need more room? Here's a 4
story home, .
kind expression of sympathy and for the
the end ol the slreet. Has a
with
baaut~ul
ood, flowers i1'11d cards. We wish to give
~~~~~~cabinets
&amp;
hardwood
special thanks to the neighbors of the
II
4 bedrooms, 2 full
family room, dining
Teens Run Road Community for their
11 ~~~~ion.Way to much to
support, thoughtfulness, friendship and
,JI
Cell tor complete
comfort during our time of grief; the
before it is too late!
Rev. Ralph •ooc" Workman for his
SOUTHERN STYLE ... Pienty.
compasstonate words; the VFW Post
of space and style he[j!l·
Formal living room, dining
4464 and American Legion forthe flag
room both with a fireplace.
presentation and to the Waugh-HalleyOversized family room and
od Funeral Home for their friendship
eat-In kitchen with plenty Of'
cablne1 apace. 2 Bedrooma,
· .·
and assistance.
A ranch style hom~;~ that is only 7
den (or 3rd bedroom) and 'I!
We have sustained a shock and a great
years
ha• 3 badrooms, 2 balhs, and a storage
1/2 baths on main level along
building. Also has a vinyl siding, Anderson windows, a'nd
wHh sun room and laundry. 2
loss by his sudden passing. We believe ·
some new carpeting. REDUCED TO $42,000
Bedrooms ~P'kllrs. Basement
the greatest trib.ute to him will be our
""h large rae~ room, 1/2 bath
emories of his living in our hearts and
·~~~~~~L RO· This 3.372 acres Is just whal you have been and kitchen 8188. Over . 5
lor lo build your ~ream home, or put your mobile
acres, attached 2 cr!r garage
the hearts of others that he has touched
and moretl2043
..,
home on. Water and electric available . Flat lo rolling
throughout his life's journ~y.
landscape. Priced to sell at $15,000
Acre a l~r.; slzed tr~cts
.
hospl1al. 112077
,
Louise Finley, Brenda Kettell and
~DING CREEK AD· Here's a 46.6 acre parcel at land with
15 Ac"' IIIII with plenty of
Grandchildren
many. building Sl1eS on both Sides of lhe road, both sideS Of I Wtl&lt;&gt;&lt;IA a roaa frontage. 112028

L-eader in Mordab\e t\ou&amp;ingl·

Re11(111hlng, Caning Rapairo, Ucllolstery. Juno Speclai·Recalnlng (30ol)7.3-1100.

·sports Teams
Proleaslona l Certified Photogra-

247·5125 Ext. 1134. Void OH, KS
&amp;WI.

310 Homes for Sale

(304)(175-3030 or 675-3431 .

'Waddings
"Pe1S

220 Money to Loan

e-mail ua for Information on our listings:
blgbandrealty@dragonbbs.com

Appiox. 1

" offtr-.1 b'j

Plaza, can 7oiQ.4&lt;18·

A Country Craftsman
Your Fumlture Doc10rs, Sttltltllng.

310 Homes for Sale

Auto Loans Available . Meridian 310 HomM for Sale
• ~ Crtdll Corp 1·800·471-5119 Ext.
$ 0 DOWN! HOMES NO CREDIT
~
1180.
NEEDEDI GOV'T /BANK REPOSI
\
$FREE CASH NOW$ From OALL NOW! 1·800·380·4620
I• Wulllly Famlllts Unloading Mil· EXT8509.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

wery one of you,

owner will sell as a

-.1 ...._

Val~

SSBAD CREDIT7 Got Caah
Loane To $5,000. Deb1 Consoli·
da11on To $200.000. Credit Cards,
Mollgages . Rellnanclng And

Real Eatate General

Card of Th,!lnkl

Opon M·f t~O· t:OO~I.Iil v:OO
Glou.l on hnclaof

Start Your Busines s Today ...
Prime Shopping Center Space
Available At Alfordable Rata .

sent me car~ on
my 83"' Birthday.
I enjoyed wery
one of them. Miiy
God richly bless

31 0 Homes lor Sale

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDATION

William IY. Eachus,
. D. Dean Evans '
Douglas Cowles, David T. Evans,
Ouy Ouinther, Dan ~Edna ,
Whiteley, Krogers, Oalllpolis
f'oodland, Wal-Nart, Johnson's
Orocery, !Yorris•!Yorthup Dodge,
Corbin ~Synder Furniture, Big
Lots, Oayle'sAnonymous Pop
Donor, Wiseman Insurance
Agency, Parishioners of Orace
United Methodist Church who
to make this year a success!

• L.lrg. 01\KIIon of

Theme Partin &amp; 5000 + Party
Suppliel Thru Color Ca.talog And
Own Ptrsonailzed Web&amp;lle Work
'from Home For 5 Minute Overview Call 888·855-0807 . Tntn

Call Debbie At 888 ·280·2762.
www 1800partyoonsuttant.eonv
10623
·- -~----

t ,r

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio· Point Pleasant,

FREE FAEE11 MONEY PROB·
LE MS ?.NOW ACCE PTING AP· Rt 34 In Putnam County, WV
PLICATIONS . 13.000 AND UPI House, Garage. Barn . 7 Acres
NO
APPLICATION FEE 1-877· $188,000. (304)-588·1l631
MEDICAL BILLING. Unlimited In·
543-tm7
en 402.
come Potential. No Experlance
5 year Okl lOQ I'IOMI, 4 112 acres.
Necessary. Fr11 Information &amp; RECEIVE $5,5401 Fill OUT OUR 8 rooma, 2 batht. cathedral cell·
CD·ROM. lnveatment From SIMPLE FDRMI MAIL TO AD - lnga In llwing room, garage . out
$2,495 . Financing Available . Is- DRESS PROVIDED! GET PAID! bulldlnga , 10 mlnutts from Pomtr.
oy, country setting, $125.000,
land Automated Medical Servic- HI00~79-IIJ25.
740-992«;72, •
es , Inc. 900·322· 1139. Ext 050
www.buslness-stanup.com
230
Profeaeional
Servlcee
IIOIIIPRENEURSI Mark&amp;! 115 +

1-888·582·3345

992·2886

• Owf' ~ local iltM
Milal&gt;lo
• "&gt; FIH"-1
llotnH on ollapla1

•

BualnHI
Opportunity

·.
·:·

f

Many, Many Thanks to those below
who supported the Grace United
Methodist Church Lunch Program at
Louis Catholic Church during the
past.school year.

r-------J

~-

r·.,

You

1ha

.•

800·434-5518 Ext.667.

Business
Opportunity

2000
220 Money to L011n

210

Hershey's Pre -Secured Routes
Available In Limited Area&amp;! Min .
lrw11t. Under $5K . Polenrlal Needs Peop .. To PrOCIII MediEarnings Over S95K One Yr. 1· . cal Claims From Home. Training
Provided. Must Owo Computer. 1888-745·5552. 24 Hrs

$$$INTERNET$$$ Launcn 'Your

Porter's Construction: Roofmg ,
V1nyl Skiing, Painting, Deck, Build·
ing Tree Cutting, Concrete, Room
Addttlons . Locally Owned And
Operated. References Available.
25 Years Expenence. 740·441·
0653. After 6 P.M.. Or 740-4460437

·' Sunday, June18,

MEDICAL BILLER $15 -$45/Hr.
Medical Bnllng ScHwore Company

FINANCIAL

NOTICE- 2 ha ndyman crew will
do yard wOf'k , painting Inside and
out, carpenter work. roofing, sid Ing . Have own too ls . Free estl·
mates. 740·742·3225.

2000

Card of Thanks

Killed In Cambodia,
June 18, 1970

bear llle blow
But what It ~t

180

Sunday, June18,

UNIVERSITY 1·800·964-831 6.

In Loving Memo!)' of
Cpl. Ralph Triplett

'

Schools
Instruction

EARN A LEGAL CO LLEGE DE·
GREE QUICK LY, Bachelors,

In Memory

God saw the road
was getting rough,
He boldly stood
to lhe test,
The battle fought.
the' victory won
Come home Dear
Soldier, rest.
We did not know
•
the pain you had,
Or hear your final sigh.
We only knew you
pa"ed away,
Without • last 'goodbye'
Gods- us strelgth
to face It
And courage to

Business
Training

Gallipolis Career COllege
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740·446-4367,

PROPERTY AND CASUALTY
ACCOUNT MANAGER
Establis hed , Stable Firm Seeks
Licensed Individual To Service
Property And Casually Insurance
Account s In The Gallrpohs !Point
Pleasant Are a Should Have A
Mlntmum Of 2 Years Expenence
In Rating, Issuing. And Servicmg
Personal Lines Ins urance Must
Be Detail OriEmled And Computer
Literate With Strong Communication Skills . Sales Experience And
Knowledge 01 Commercial Unes
A Plus. Competitive Salary And
Benatlt Package In cludes Commission, Life , Hea lth, Pens1on
401(k) Respond To Human Fiesources Dept. P&amp;C. PO. Box 738,
Mar1ena, OH 45750.

Help Wanted

wv

410 Third Ave- Old lime Charm With
Modern Conveniences IS found in this 2
story home. Features tnclude foyer, LA,
DR , eat-In kitchen wtth mud room , 3·4

BRs and 2 I /2 bolhs. Updated ttems
Include baths, wlnng, 2 furnaces, sid1ng,
root and more $~ 24,900 12011

�•

..

•

•
~P~a~g·e·D8~·=·~u~n~b;;ap:::~;';·m~r;,l·.;•~r;nt;;;in;r;.l- - - -. .====P=o=m=eroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
Buslnesa
Opportunity

210

540 Mlacellanaous
Merchandlae

Now Taking Applications - 35
Wei! 2 8edroom Townhouu 1
Apartmtnll , lncludu Water

Sewage , Truh , $325/Mo .. 7•0·

«6-ooce.

Available NDW: Twin Tower• now
accepUng applic ations for 1 BR .
HUD subaldlzed apt. tor elderly
and
handic apped .
EOH .

JANITROL HEATING AND
CDOUNG EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED
"If You Don 't C11l U1 Wt Both
Lose.· Free Estimates! 7.t0·4o46·
8308. 1-800-291o0098,
Jeep Seata, 2 high back fronv
rear &amp; conaote to match black&amp;
sliver. Excellent cond . 304·67!S·
1~ .

(30ol)675-6e79.
Village Gr11n Apartments - 2
bedrooms. total eleetrle. apptianc·
11 lurnlshed, laundry room 1acl11·
ties and close to sc:hool, applleaUona 111allable at oHice, 740·992·

3711 TOO 1-888'·233-6694. Equal
Housing Opportunlly

460 Space lor Rant
DOWNTOWN BUSINESS
SPACE OR OFFICE
For Lease . Three Rooms . CleM
&amp; NICe To Vlew,(740)44&amp;-9539

River Park Mobile Home Com munity, Pomeroy. Spaces at $120
per month; office space for rent.
$350 per month, $350 deposit:
740-949·2093 or 614-871H 681.

AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock.
Call Ron Evano, 1-800-~37·9528 .
WANT A COMPUTER? But No
Ca$h? No Credit OKI Slow Credit
OK! 0 Down: Laptops Available .
Reestablish Your Cred ll l Catl

Nowiii1-800·247-381B.
MOBILE HOME OWNERS
Huge Inventory, Olacount Prices,
On Vinvt Skirting, Doors , Wind·
ow&amp; , Anchors , Water Heaters,
Plumbing &amp; Electrical Paris, Furnaces &amp; Heat Pumps. Bennttll
Mobile Home Suppl y, 740· 446·
9416 www.orW.conv'bennen
MTO A iding Mower, 8 HP, 32'
Cut, $350, Good Condition, 740·

256-8278 A~er 5 ~M .

MERCHANDIS E

61 0

Household
Goods

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUTERS • Almost Everyone Ap ·
proved With So Down! Low
Monthly Payments ! 1·800 -8 11·

3476 E•t. 330.

Anllque Bath Tub tor Sale (740)·

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

388-8413
Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers . Dryers , Ranges, Relrl·
graters, 90 Day Guarantee! We
Sell New Maytag Appl,ia nces,
Frencn C11y Maytag, 740-446·

Tappa n HI Efficiency 90 o/o ~~~~
Furnaces. Oli Furnaces, 12 Seer
Heat · Pump &amp; Air Conditioning
Systems Free 8 Year Warranty
Bennetts Heating &amp; Cooli ng, 1·
800-672·5967 www.orvb.com/ben·

non

7795.

71 0 Autos for Sale

•

CARS FROM $200. POLICE IM·

610 Farm Equipment
"3 Pl . Tractor Lifts With Ad j.
Forks $250 Each " ' Used Lilt
Truc k Forks S25 · 175 Per Set '

740-379-2757 .
CAT 215 Backhoe, $43,000; t983

JET

N Ice Wooded Lot On A Qulel
Country Road . County Water, 200
Amp. S.rv, Sept~ . 740-256-1489.

TRANSPORTATION

FARM SUPPLIE S
&amp; LIVE STOCK

A M odel Mack 350 , 8 Speed .

$18,000; 04H Cat $44,000; 1987
35 Ton Drop Deck low Boy,
$18 ,000; 1986 Jeep Wagoneer
$1,800; 45' Toll. Trailer $1,600 ; 40'
Flat Extended Trailer $3.600: A40
Ditch Witch $6,500; 2 ,000 Gallon
Fue l Tank With Electric Pump,
S1 .200 ; 550 Gallon Fuel Tank

Wllh Gas Mo1or, $700; 2 .000
Gallon Water Tank $600 ; Misc.
Jack Hammers And Drills. Tran·
sienl And Le¥ets, Misc. Tools, 1
Yl\fd Concrete Bucket , Misc .
Steel _Beams, Lock 'Nell Crill
Press $900: Plate Tamp That Fits

CAT 418 Hoe $3.800 ; Semi-UGrueman 14' Boat, 74D-643-2916. ·
Farmall Cub Tractor With Cuitlva·
tor, Call Afler 5 P.M. 740·256·
1274
For Sale : Tobacco Sticks. 740·

245·5121 .

EXT. 7832.
1927 Chevrolet Capital, $6800, 2
door, all original, garage kept 57
years. 740-992·7553.
1975 Mercede&amp;· Benz 2300, •• ·
cellent condition, all original,
leather seats, etc, ale, am -lm ra·
diO, soft while w/mahogany lnteri·
or, 78 ,0.00 orig inal miles. garage
,.tc.Jpt . Must see to appreciate .

Sl500. call 740·367-7341 oKI . 16
Mon-Frl. unt il 4 :30pm ancl 304 ·
675·2396 alter 5. Can be seen at
2300 Jefferson Ave., Pt. Pleasant.

1986 Ford Taurus $800 OBO,
Au,ns Good, Call A.nytlme , 740 ·
3117-7256.
1986 Ford Tempo , 2 Engines, U·
Tow Away, $600 080, 740-388-

0144.
1986 Honda Prelude, 2 Coors, 5
Speed. Looks Good, Runs Great!

$900,080. 740-441·1083.
1987 Monte Car lo SS $1 ,500 ,

(Firm) 740.446-7637.

Gravely Oual Wheels, Two AI ·
tacn me nts. Electric Start New
battery. Newly Rebulll Motor.

{304)773-5835, A~er. SPM .

John Deere 31 4 Alder Hydra·
valve Lilt, Hydrastat Drive Kohler
Englne/4 Foot Deck/Mows good/

$1500.

Craftsman Rider w/Sn owplow
High/Law Range . 12HP, Runs

Sllcl&lt;/$400.(304)675-3624 .
Mltsubisni 20500 Tracto r. 4 Cy linder Diesel, 4 Foot Brush Hog

And Blade, $4,500, 740 -446 -

0399.
N. H. 644 round ba ler 4'x5 '
1OOOibs. net or twine wrap bale
command, like new 14,900.
Hesson 17'5 hay tedder· $1900,
Deutz· P.T.O. side te dder Alfalta

Rake, $1 ,000. (304)937-2018.

Llveetock

630

POUNDS . Honda't Toyota 'a,
Cnevys , Jeeps , And Sport Utili·
tie&amp; . Call Now! 800·772 ·7470;

1987 Olda Toronado , loaded ,
nice, $2900, see at Auto Zone In

Pomeroy or catl740-742-4419.
1989 Qaytona ES . lo ts of new
parts&amp;
llras,
runs
great

1992 Nlssan Maxima Four Door,
Power Everything. Sunrool , CO,
High Mileage , But We ll Main·

1993 S-10 Blaur Tahoe Package
o4 .3 Liter vorrac V-8, Eweauant
Condition, 128,000 Milas, Runs
Great. AM/Ft.t C111tttt . Power
Steering , Power Windows I
Lock&amp;. Air, Tilt. And Cruilt, Fac·

if"9S.
1997 Oodgo lntropld. 3.5 V-6,
59.833 mhs. maroon wtth '¥11J Interior, cruiae , r~covered theft,
evenings and weekends.

4sking $6,000 (Or Roosonoblt
Otter) 740-4-48-4548 If No " " ' P1eaH Leave Menage.

1997 Honda AC , CD Changer.
Keyleu Entry, Sunroof, 70 ,000

White With Gray Leather lnt~rtor,

Mileo, $7 ,000, 740·441·0445,
Leave Message .
1998 GEO Tracker. black with
gray interior, 5,910 mUes, autom,
trim package, C/ D, air, cruise, 4
door hardtop, minor left front dal'l'lage, run&amp;, a&amp; king $6,400, 74.0 ·
992-1506 days , 740·949·2644

eve.

1998 Ptymouth Bretze 4 Cylinder.
10.500 Miles. Automatic , loaded ,

1992 red Chevy Cavalie r, sporty
2 door, goo d running co nditi on,
great gas mileage, $2100, 740-

Gro11 Car, $12.000 , 740-4466120.

Speed, Runs Good, BOCIV rn Fatr

1996 Chevtolel 4•4 Sport Z7·1,

Motorcycles

OBO, 74()-448.6142.
1985 four whttltr, good condl·
don, 740-742·Be12.
1985 Harley Davklson Low Rid er,
Evo Motor, BeH Orlvt, Red, Excel-

740.992· 2060.

1989 Winnebago Ltsharo 39,000
Miles; Generalor Furnace, Good
Cor1dltlon, $10,500, 740-441...0.WO
Leave Message_.

'1ee1 Jamboree/ Searc her 23' motor hOme, Ford 460 motor, 37,000
miles, new tlr11, AIC, awning,

1999 24 Ft. Jayco Eagle Travel
Trailer, Heat /AC , Like New,

$11,750,740-245-9179.

SERVI CES

446·1420.

1996 Kawauloil Vul ca n 100.
7,170 mites, red &amp; whlll, saddle
bags &amp; windshield, minor left aide
damage/runs. $4.000 , 740-992;
1506 doyo, 740-949-2644 oves.
1996 Pola ris ' XPtorer 300 4
Wheeler , Several· New Pa rts,

$2,500, OBO, 740·245·5018, Or
339-01 Ool.

810

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lltetlme guarantee.
local references 1uinlshed . Es'18bf~hod 1975. Call 24 Hrs. (740)

:~~:~~!;~~g-287-0576

Rog -

. $3500. OBO 304·675-6693.
1991 Ford con11erslon van, Mark
Ill, new tlres, dual gas tanks, like

$6900. 304-675~ 1 731 .

.-a
CD

WANT A COMPUTER?? BUT
NO CASH?? MMX Technology

5 Malt fltg lottrod Border Collie
Pups, $150 Each, 740.256-6767.

Will Finance With •o• Down. Past
Credit Problems, No Problem. Call
Toll Free 1·877-293·4082.

AKC Golden Retrieve r Puppies,
Ready Now, Males $200 ; Fa males $225 , No Sunday Calla

AMANA Wh ile Others Were

Please, 740-245-5358.

Thinking About Ouautv. Amanna
Was Setting The Standards For
Healing And Cooling . Free Estl·
mates. 740·.446-6308 , 1-600· '

•'I

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFFTANNING BEDS
Buy Factory Direct
Excellent Service
Fle:dble Financing Available

Home fCOmmercial Units
FREE Color Catalog
Call Today 1·800.711-Q158
AMOATHLON &amp; PENTIUM Ill $0
Down Ffnancingl 550 ·BOO MHZ •
10-30-GB·HO. All Credit Wei·
come . REQUIREMENTS : Bank
Account , $1,800 Month Gross.

Residential or 'commercial wiring ,
new servtee or repairs. Masu~r lJ.
cennd electrician. Ridenour
Electrical, WV000306 , 304 -B75·

Public Notice
PUBUCNOncE
Tilt elgllt..n member
Gallla-Jackaon-Mtlgt Bo.lrd
of Alcohol, Drug Aclcllellon
ond Mental Health hrvlcu
II appointed by the DlrHmr
of the Ohio _DtpMtment of
Mental
Health
(4
oppolntnt), 11M Director of
the Ohio Department of
Alcohol and Drug Addiction
Strvlctt (4 tppolntna) tnd
lha County Commlaolonara
In Gallle, Jeckaon end
Melga Count!.. (10
oppo,l nteta). Currently,
thtrt ere VICinCIII to bt ,
lllltd by the County
Commlulonera.
I
lndlvlduela lntereated In ·
btlng cona)derld lor thle
·oppolntment con do 110 by
requettlng tn oppllcetlon
from:
Roneld A. Adldn1,
l!xiCUIIvo Director
Gallla-Jtckeon-MIIge
Baird Of AlCohol, Drug
Addiction tnd Mental Httlth
Strvlctl
153 Shlwnll Lint
P.O. Box514
Gtlllpolla, OH.45831
Phone: 814 446 3022
The Board atrlvea to
mtlnltln a belanced
repreaentetlon
of
community membera end
welcomta minority or
ltmelt eppllclnla.
June 111, 18, 2000

I--P-u_b_ll_c__N_o_t_le'"'e--

Free Vacation Getaway, For The
1st 100 People To Purchase. 20
Piece Set Waterless Stainless
Steel CookWare, lifetime Guarantee. Perfect Gifl For Weddings .
An ni versary, Or Jus! Because .
t2 Months Free Financing Available Thru June , Alter June : 90
Days Same As Cash . 'Call 740·

ild7-7760.
Qalaxy Saturn , 40' of tower, and
'much more: also ·a gas stove. excellent condition ; Speed Queen
.wilsner &amp; dryer. new condition:

740-992·0449. 740·2•5·9622.
Good Used washer, 1100, 1•0-

C811 Mike 74():.388•0159.
Over 75 Tanks ol Freshwater
Fish, Locally Raised Parakeets/
Supplitl . Fish Tank/Pet Shop,
2413
Jackson
Avanua ,/ Pt.

Pleaaant (304)675·2063. Sun. 1·
4PM. Moo-Sat 11AM-6PM.
Cocker Spaniel 4 Year Old Male,
Chocolate Colored , Aegislered .

740-256-9350.
Fu11 Stock ~ott Weller Puppl11,
Father: AKC Reglattrad. Morher:
Full· Blooded, $100, Have Been
Wormed . 1&amp;t Shots, 740-388-

8743.

quality and pet Poma avallabte for
aaSt, 740-949-3418.

Quaker Parrot. hand fed, 7 weeki
Old, 740-992-9910.

-----Watelillys and other wate r plants
for goldlish ponds . (304)87&amp;·
5043.

570.

Mualcal
Instruments

Gibson L.ea Pau l Electric GUitar
With Case. Brand New Condillon.

$800, 740-379-2601 .

580

Fruita a
Vegetables

Black Raspberry u-piCk t 1 a pint
Virgil's Berry Patch 1111 ot Syri·

Jlfl8- 8156 .

CUM

Grur:lf)'S Plano· tuning &amp;: repa irs .
Problems? Need Tuned ? Call the

Strawberries Pick· You Own . Call:.

on Rt 124, 740-992-7449

Ctaude Wlmoro (740~245-5121

piano or. 740-44$-4~5
Muo1 Soli; Aayal Oil&lt; Atoort Ckb,
Make An Otter. PhOne: 3G4·273·

33ot.

Tras

Tak ing Or!1trs For ·lame Bleck
R.. pberritt limited Ou•ntlly,

0
CD

.c

aaaa

..R.:IX SB
2 In Stock, 4 Door, Power
Windows, Compact Disc Player

UJlunteers clean up
riverfront during
River Sweep

•

WASHINGTON (AP) ,Mailbags bulging with foul language descended on Rep. Tony
Hall after he suggested Congress
offer an apology for 200 years of
slavery.
" It was jolting to me;' said
the white E&gt;'~ocrat from Day'ton, Ohio. "lt"'ftit like an explo. "
ston.
Despite
the ·
letters of disgust
three summers
ago from outnged whites and
letters of complaint
from
blacks who said
words
alone
would be a hollow gesture, Hall
is · again asking
Congress
to
apologi2e to the
descendants of
slaves for wrongs
'committed
against
their
ancestors.
The national
climate is different now, and
though the resolution. might not
pass, a renewed discussion would
educate more pedplthrtd .move
, America dO!er to racial·under~
' . .stan~.'lft: saia..
. ~.. "Six mi~ion peqp)e wete
torn out of a continent, separated from their families, in some
cases · killed, often times tortured, put into bondage and
families split up, described in

FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - The banks of
the Ohio River are cleaner totlay
thanks to the efforts of thousands
of
in
Sa~rday's Uh~o.:J~ver S•weeo.
• Follr

to

·
bags,
bfthe litter
on the banks

1Zth annual event encompasses the entire length of the
river and iis tributaries, from
Pittsburgh, Pa.; to Cairo, IU., and
the local efforts were spearheaded
by the Meigs County Office of.
Recycling and Littl'r Prevention.
More than 3,000 miles of
shoreline were included in this
year's event. .
Locally, groups met in Middleport, Pomeroy, Racine and Long
Bottom bright and early pn Sat. urday morning, and worked the
morning through.
The resulting heaps of trash
bags are evidence that visiton tti
the shores of the Ohio s~ould be
more
in cle.aning up a{t?'"

Local t-Owner. CD pltis Cass.,
Leather, Power Everything·

s

s..a4,BDD

3 In Stock Good Colors
Ooth &amp;. Leather Interior,
Cassette, Plus CD Player

s1G,8DD

- ~~

Olmate Control, CO Player,
White with Taupe Leather

sa,aa&amp;

I0

.c
en

turiled out for' the Log Jam
was held CM!I' the
wet~ke111d at Portland's Log Jam Entertainment
Those who attended enjoyed monster truck competitions, live
entertainment, eoncessions and various other actMtlas. (Tony M. Leach photo)
·

BXT.CAB

Z71 Pkg., 3rd Door, 350 VS,

1888 CHBVY
S-1D"s
6 In Stock, Very Low Miles,

·4x4, CD, Power Windows

Options Vary, AC, Cassette

1888 GMC SIBitlt.R

$81,8DD

s

1888 CHBVY
1/8 TON PICKUP
Automatic, AC, Cassette,'l"llt,
Cruise, Alum. Wheels, Bedllnel'
Only 24,000 miles

s

.......... Apalau. Pllp AI

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio's billion-doUar
Sedmak and representatives from
. settlement with tobacco companies could help ·other research univmities lobbied
·, it become a biotechnology competitor.
the Legislature for money to be
Of the hundreds of millions of doUars unispent on biotechnology, which
versities stand to collect over the next 25 years
from the settlement, $493.5 million will be
involves studying the body's basic
spent dn biomedical reseateh.
,
biological junctions with a focus on
"The first benefit is the hope that we make
cells, tissues and genes.
great discoveries related to or preventing diseases associated with tobacco use;' said Dr.
Daniel Sedmak, interim dean of the Ohio installment is expected this year.
Sedmak and representatives frOm other
State University College of Medicine and
research
universities lobbied the Legislature for
Public Health.
"But the second offihoot of this is it may money to be spent on biotechnology, which
well end up helping the state by introducing involves studying the body's basic biological
functions with a focus. on cells, tissues and
ll).ore technology."
T):le m,oney will. _e ome from a settlement genes.
Most of the biomedical money will be used
that ended years of litigatipn between the
attorneys general of 46 states and cigarette to bring top reseatehe"' to Ohio campwes,
said Frank Samuel, president of the Edison
companies.
The state's first fustallment of its $9.9 billion Biotechnology Center and Gov. Bob Taft's scishare of. the settlement came in December ence adviser.
when it received $412 million. The next
But Samuel and othetll said the money

,.

might not be enough.
"It doesn't make us competitive against~~
real leaders in this field," Samuel said.
· ·
Michigan is a formidable competitor, he
said. It. already has committed $50 milli01r"a
year fiom its tobacco fund on biomedical
research. California, Georgia and North Carolina also are throwing tobacco money at hot
technological fields. Georgia is investing heavily in infoi:mation technology.
The state's top higher education officials
have ·long lamented what they say is a law
investment by lawmakers in new technology.
for colleges.
·
, But with the toba~co , settlement money,
they hope that there will be a much bigger ·
mvestment m .lll)lver:stttes.
·"
.
"The Legislature has made a sl¢stantial
investment in technology in K-12 ... but there
hasn't as yet been a swtained investment of the
technology needs of our campuses of the saqle
magnitude;' said Earl Macke of the Ohiro&gt;
Board of Regents.
•
'

'

•

'

'

I

'

·:. q

a

C.

'1uneteenth,"

the commemoration of when
the last slaves in
America were
freed.
Before Gen.
Gordon Granger
led a regiment
into Galveston,
Texas, on June19, 1865, the
conclusion ,of
the Civil War and the end of
slavery were not widely known
in Tdas. · Neither were the
t:.mancipati,On . Proclamation, .
~ 'then more 'than 2· years old, nor
,the 6-Ibonrll-old 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which
abolished slavery throughout
the union.

Settlement may make state a biotech competitor

REGAL DB

1884
BONNEVILLE
SSB
Extra Oean, Loc:al 1-0Wner, Auto

our Constitution as three-fifths
of a person," Hall said. "TI:tat
whole thing has never had a reconciliation. The wound is still
open.
"You have to do the first
thing. I always felt the first thing
was apologize."
· After considerable input from
black religious
leaders and a discussion
with
black colleagues,
Hall is beginning
his new effort
Monday.
He
deliberately
chose Monday
because
its

The national
climate is different now, and
though the resolution might not
pass, a renewed
discussion would
educate more
people and move
itmerica closer
to racial understanding, he
said.

DDS BUICK

DDD .D
aBGAL L

Cents

Congressman to
renew claim forslavery apology

swe

Gear

Special At

so

1766.

Appliance Parts And Service : All
Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex·
perience All Work GuS-,ai'lteed.

I 888 ASTRa VAN
BXT. CHASSIS
Front &amp;. Rear AC, 8 Pass., 4.3 V6,
2 In Stock, $25,216 MSRP
Manager's $

Hometown News,.per

Middle po rt • Po meroy, Ohio

Volume &gt;1 . Number 15

AKC registered Bo•er pups, tails
dew claws removed, first shOts,
ready to go, 740
_ ·992·1173.

Ub Puppies. AKC Black/ Yellow,
t;OMPUTER BROKERS INC. 1· ' Parenti on PriJmisea. Pupa this
BOO-M7·3924.
beaut iful won'lllllt klng. 740· 441·
COMPUTERBLOWOUTICom- ~ ~00~1 ~3.---------------paq, HP. IBM, De sklops, Laptops.
Mystic Poms· any breed ·dog
Ecommerce /Websites. Almost grooming avallab ll . Also shOw
EYer yone Approve d!!! Make
$$$$ On The Web!!! No Money
Down . Free Color Pri nter 1·888·
•79-2345 www:ejump-start.com

M ..p County's

'

•

.a,

:.29:..1:..·009=8:..
. - - - - - - - ' - AKC Rogislered German Ro1 · rwauer 1o Waeka Old As Of June
At,!AZING METABOLISM
13th, Flrot Sho1a, Wormed. One
Breaklhrough
A
Lose 10 ·200 Pds., Easy. Qu ick,
Male , nd Female, Price $150,
Fa st Dramatic Results, 100% N&amp;l·
ural, Doctor Re commended. Free
Samples 740·441-1982.

..

ence. (30ol)895-3887.

6323.

-·tn

••

a..

Tht Sllllbury ToWnlhlp
TruatMa will hold • public
1998 FourTrax 450 S Extended
mMtlng on June 11, ·2000,
Warranty, Adull Ridden , Never \we sen New Mayteg Appliances. It 8:30 PM II ll)e EMS
Mud Run, hcollon1 Condlllon , ·french City Maytag, 740..446· Building behind VMH. The
$4,300, 740-379-23eo.
• 7795.
.
purp- I'' thll mtttlng le
2000 Harley Oavldaon Spor1S11tn ~&amp;C General Home Main· to dleou.. the lloodlflll
anuetlon with ralldtnta end
1200 Custom. Lots of Extras ' ttnente· Painting , vinyl siding,
(740)-448-1749 Aller 5:00pm or carpentry, doors, windows. baths, land ownert on Shody Cov•
Leave massage!
mobile home repair and more. For Rd, 1Wp Rd. 1193.
fr11 estimate call Chet. 740·992·
(II) 14, 18,18 3 to
1
CondHion, $1 ,BOO, 740-388-9734.

June 19, 2000

•

LIYIFlQiton's
ement Water
Proolh'IQ , att basement repalrt

1996 Yamaha Badger 80 Good

1986 Chevy G20 HI top conver·
slon van, loaded, new tires cle8n

~ew

$1500 firm . (304)675-e'/83. beloro
6PM.

hllch, like now, $17,500, call 740·

1997 black Chevy S·10 S1epslde
Exlended Cab, 3 door, loa"ded ,
25,000 miles, very sharp, full far~
ln gs , $11,100. 740-949-2045 or
740·949-2203.

1995 Chevrolel Corsica, excellent
condition, 49 ,000 miles, $5200,

1~84 Mtrage Truck Camper. Run a
GoOd . Sleeps four. 84,000 miles.

9115-3659.

i 993

Call: (740)·36Nl024

(740)682-9032

Recharged With Nl1rogtn 4nd.

992·2472.

1995 Bui ck S ky lark, 4 door, au·
to matlc, cassette, air, 58 ,000
miles, fuccall8nt condi tio n, $6000
OBO, 740.992·3893.

1983 Chevy Man Camper, Auto,

Crull&amp;, Fridge, Tobit, Bod , No

Checked For Bleed -Off. Tires
Are In Excellent Condition , Cha in
And Sprocketo Are Like New,
1994 Honcla Goldwln g, Aspen ·
cade. 17,000 Miles , Vary Nice, ·
Red, With Helmets, $9,000 , 740··

Rebuilt 5.0 H.O 4 Speed Trans.,
Stereo, Many new Parts. $3,000.

Campara &amp;
Motor Homes

1991 vz 125 New Plasti c, New
Aetda. New Piston &amp; Rings. Very
P.owetful Bike . Looks New. Front · generator, shower bathroom, ml·
Forko H11V11 Bien Complt1oly Re· crowave, stove wllh oven, lg. re·
built Which Includes New Setll 1rlgerator with freezer. sleeps 6,
full size bed In back, heavy duty
And Fluid. Rear Shock H11 Btan

A/C, 4 Weal DISC, 72,000 miles.

1979 Chevy Shan Bed 4 WO ,

790

Rust. Grtal Weekender, $2250

$4,000 OBO Call; (7401·367-Q024

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDe

245-5677.

1981 Honda ·c B 750K E•cellent
Condition, 4,900 Miles , $700

1984 Chevy S-10, 4X4, In Good
Condition . {304)675-7362.

22 Ft. Bolt Truck, No Engine,
$1,500, 741&gt;-446-2359.

7~4ot6·1159 .

extended cab, aluminum wheels,
C/0, Larado package , new
BUdget Priced Transmission• All
tlrea,mlnor left front damage. runa , Types, Access To Over 10,000
TransmisSions, CVC Joints , 740.
&amp; drives , clean filii , $14 ,200,

$1.600,740-448-7375.

Dodge Daytona Iroc Turbo, ,
28.000 miles, green with gray In·
terlor , min or damage, ru ns &amp;

Auto Parts &amp;
Aceeuorlea

760

Fiberglass Tonnau Top , 1 Aluml·
num Side Doors, Both Like New,

1987 Suzuki Quad Runner 300,
1850 Hour1, S~ow Room Condl·
tlon, Fronl /Back Racks, Gun
Racl&lt;, $2,300, 740-379·2424.

1995 Dodge Noon OOHC, 5 Sp,

(740~245-5213.

2 Tops For Short Bod Ford P/U, 1

lo n1 Condition, $6.500, 740-446·
6142.

(740)-992-5719

done; frat estimates, lifetime
guarantee. 12yrs on job elllperl-

Monday

.e

Drywall. Siding. Roofs. Addl·

1994 Ball lractter, tadpole 1• ft.
fish finder, 8 hp mercury w/ trailer
used very lillie $3,500. 30'·875·
1731 .

1995 Bay llner 2011 Cuddy Cab

Details, A3

Ilona, Pa inting, ate. t30o4.}674·

4823 or 1304)e74-()I!SS.

SAR celebrates Flag Day, A&amp;
Tiger roars to record Open win, B1

~
HIP: lOS; Low: 101

Home
Improvements

1990 Fourwlnda Boat 20 ' Open
Bow, VO, 4.3, V-6 , $9,500, 740·
367-()152.

100,000 miles, $9000 , 7.C0· 992·

Condition, $200 Firm, 740-446·
7764, 741&gt;-446·4152.

1988 Chevrole t 1/2Ton Plck · Up
Tr uck. Automat ic, Air Condition·
lng. Power Brakes, Power Steer·
lng .
Exce!lent
Condition .

Jlma Drywall &amp; Conatructlon .
New ConttrucUon &amp; Remodel/

3085.

740

1977 Ford F-250 351 Windsor 4

1989 Sea -doo, trailer I cover,

very good condition, $2000 , call
740-992-5437.

1995 Toyota Ewttnded Cab 4WO,

1999 Sunllrt . Call after SPM .
1304)675-6336.

720 Trucke lor Sale

810

ntw pa int , aluminum wheels,

740-982 · 1506 davs, 740-848·
2644 .......

C4RS FROM &amp;21/MO. Impounds JRepos. Fee. SO Down 124
Moo. 019 .9% For Llo11ngs 1-600·
319·3323)(2156.

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1995 S-10 Blazer LT 4•4 79,000

740.256-l\346.

1992 Dodge Dakola Kin g Cab,
90,000 miles. AJC, Power Every·
thing. 318 Magnum . $6,000 Firm!

Shape, 14,400, 740-446·4196.

tory Aluminum Wheels , New Tires
I 8rakn, New Front Brake Ro·
tors , Front 'End Just Aligned ,

Biking $7000 OBO, .740-992 1506 days or 740·949·2644

1992 Olds Cutlass Clara · S,
88 ,500 Mil es, Loaded. Great

l oaded Cold A/C $1 ,995; 1993
Cavalier $1,895, COOK MO·
TORS, 740-446-0103.

Antiques

t99f Chevy Camaro, v-e . blue
wlln gray Interior, 59 ,000 m llea,
minor front damage, runs &amp;
drl¥es, 14 ,500 080, 740 ·992·
1506 days, 740·949·264o4 even·

(304)773-51 15.

1994 Corsica 70,000 Mites, V·6,
Automatic $3,795: 1991 Caravan

530

730 V8111 &amp; 4-WDa

1ained. $4,000 , C811740-446·8662.

drives, $4.000 OBO, 740-992·
1506 days, 740-949-2 644 &amp;llenlngs.

Used Window Unit Air Condition·
ers. Guaranteed, 740·886·0047.

71 0 Auto• for Sale

$1200.080 304-675-6693
1991 Red Chevrolet Cavalier, Au·
toma11c, 13.300, OBO, 740-441 0988.

Sunday, June 18, 2000

water, 5e""er $JStems
· S1 tri~lllon· problem

WASHINGTON (AP) - When 25 million gal~
lons of water cascaded through downtown Cleve~
land in January, closing some of the city's busiest
streets for a week, an expensive national problem
became harder to ignore.
A cast-iron pipe, parts of which had been carrying drinking water since 1895, unexpectedly gave
ou_t, crushit1g an antique section of brick sewer.
Getting. old' W:lter and sewer pipes out of the"
ground before .they collapse could cost communities across the United States S1 trillion over the '
next 2b years. Lobbyists have begun trying to
interest Congress in footing the bill.
"There are , many, many pipes in the country
that have been in the ground 100 yean," said Steve
Allbee, an Environmental Protection Agency officia! in charge of analyzing the gap between future
infrastructure needs and current spending.
In community after community, he said, digging

up old pipes has been a lower priority than accommodating new development and upgrading plants
to keep up with federal standards.
"We're deferring expenditures thai we should
be making, and that's been going on for about 10
years;' he said.
.
Meanwhile, tiine takes its toll.
Across the country, Allb~e said, ~any wastewater
~eatment. plants w~re built at roughly th~. sat;te
1ttme - tn the 1970s an.d early 1.980s "":"" With
roughly a .30- to 40-year life span.
''"
' Those plants connect t~ underground pipes
whose 50-year ave':ge 1!fe spans are- ending
~cause they were latd durmg the postwar buildtng booms of the_1950s and 1960s. S?me areas
have even ~lder p1pes destgned for a lime when
office bmldings we':' sh~mer, water pressure was
lower and roads carr1ed lighter loads.

PI••• He Plpea,. ..... AI

740-25e ·1~71

..' .

Easy listening.

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A1
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Lotteries
OHIO
Pick 3: 1-5-6; Pick 4: 9-8-5-5
s...,. Lotto: 4-9-1&gt;-1~3
KM:Ur: 11-4-6-2-0-3

W:VA,

. Doily 3: 1-5-9 Daily •=1-9-4-3
0 2000 Ohio VaBey Publishing Co.

Jazz great Ron
Scott perf~
musical seleotlons during Sst·
urdty's Medltef·
raneen Nl&amp;ht,
held at Fur
Peace Ranch.
Along with the
music, the eve~ .
Included story. ·
telling by Scott;
and tine cuisine
thlll lncorporat:

ed e Medlter- .
,_., flair. Fur .
Peace Ranch's· ·
dinner end
cart series will '
continua
throughout the
summer
months. (Tony

con: '.

M. Leach photo)

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