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                  <text>Page B 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio

Friday, July 21.2000

•

NATIONAL
LEAGUE "
,.

long baU keys Thursday wins

TEMPO

SPORTS

Entertainment:
Meigs Co.
Fair
•
prev1ew

MONEY

Baseball:
Me~ courting

larkin

See Cl

SeeB&amp;

BY THE ASSOCIATED I!RESS

At Chicago, Doug Glanville also hit a solo homer
offTapani (6-8).
Mark Brownson (1-0) allowed one run . rwo hits
and three walks in 2 2-3 innings. Jeff Brantley,
Philadelphia's fourth pitcher, worked a perfect ninth
for his 15th save.
Braves 5, Marlins 3.
Marlins 6, Braves 1
At Miami, Tom Glavine (11 - 5) improved to 3-8 in
Miami, where he had lost five consecutive games.
Marlins All-Star Ryan Dempster (9-7) illowed
only six hits in seven innings, but four were for extra
bases.
Pinch-hitter Aoyd's homer in the second game
came off Scott Kamieniecki (1 - 1).
AJ. Burnett (1-0), sidelined since spring training
with a thumb injury, allowed one run and three hits
in seven innings to wiq his season debut
Pirates 9, Brewers 2
At Milwaukee, Wil Cordero drove in three runs
with a pair of doubles and Jose Silva (&amp;-4) won for
the fint time in six starts.
Jinuny Haynes (9-9) allowed five runs and seve n
hits in 4 2-3 innings.
Giants 7, Padres 3
At San Francisco, Jeff Kent hir a three-run homer,
his first home run since July 2, raising his leagueleading RB!s total to 88.
Kirk Rueter (7-5) won for the fifth time in six
decisions, allowing three runs and five hits in a season-high 7 1-3 innings.Aaron Fultz finished with 1
2-3 innings of hitless ~lief for his first major league
save.
Woody Williams (4-3) lost for the first time since
May .1 but also hit his first career homer, going 3for-3.
Expos 4, Metl 1
Dodgers 6, Rockies 3
At Montreal, Widger's homer made a loser out of
At Los Angeles, manager Davey John• ~n reruned
Hampton (9-7).
"
in time to see Gary Sheffield hit his m..Jor leagueDustin Hermanson (8-7) allowed seven hits in 8 leading 33rd homer
Masato Yoshii (4-11) in the
2-3 innings as Montreal stopped a four"game losing first.
streak. New' York had won three straight after losing
Johnson had missed the previous four games
nine of 12.
because of an irregular heart rhythm that caused him
Phillies 3, Cubs 2
to be hospitalized for 3'l, days.

In this year of the long ball, the home run made
the big difference in four Nationai League parks.
Chris Widger of Montreal, ;Bobby Abreu of
· Philadelphia, Tony Womack of Arizona and Cliff
Floyd of Florida all hit homers ilud either tied the
game or put rheir teams ahead.
Womack's homer - a two-run. shot in the ninth
inning to beat the Cardinals 3-2' - made Randy
Johnson the NI:s first 15-g.une winner.
Widger put the Expos ahead 2-1 in sixth inning
against Mike Hampton and the N~:)oV York Mets, and
then added a two-run double in tilf'seventh to complete a 4-1 victory Wednesday.
Abreu hit a tiebreaking home run off Kevin Tapani
to start the eighth inning, leading the Phillies over
the Chicago Cubs 3-2.
Floyd broke a seventh-inning tie in the second
game of a doubleheader with a two-run homer,
leading the Marlins to a 6-1 win over Atl.mi:a. The
Braves won the first game 5-3.
In other games, Pimburgh defeated Milwaukee 92, San Francisco beat San Diego 7-3, Houston
tOpped Cincinnati 6-2 and Los ·Angeles downed
Colorado 6.3.
Johnson pitched a six-hitter for his major leagueleading sixth complete game - the lint since a 2-0
loss at Montreal on May 16 - striking out 11 and
walking one.
Johnson, 4-0 in five starts since losing to Colorado
on June 24, reached double-digit strikeouts for the
15th time in 21 starts this season and the !40th time
in his career. His 221 strikeouts lead the majon.
Johnson struck our the fint five batten and retired
the first 15 before Eduardo Perez homered leading
off the sixth.
·

Community:
Recruiting new
businesses
See Dl
•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

sJ.25

Gallipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pl Pleasant • July ll, 2000

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
TIMES·~ENTINEL ~TAFF

POMEROY - Norma Torres h as
been mm ed health co mmissioner by
the Meib" County Board of Health,
rc·placing Dr. Marg1 e S. Lawson,
DDS, who resigned earlier thi s
ntonth.
Announcc:ment
of
Torres'
appointment was m ad e Friday in
cu njunccion wi[h a reception honor-

Torres

ing Lawson. who has b ee n th e county's h ealth commi ssio ner for the past
16 years .
Effective immediately, th e Board
of Healrh has changed the position
from part-tim e to full-time. At the
end of the year, the department's
administrative joh, held by Jon Jacobs
for th e past 20 years, will be eliminated.

Those duties will fa ll to rhe new
health commis sion e r. Jacobs had
announced earlier that he will retire
in December.
As health co mmissioner, Torres'
job will change from directing the
nursing staff to planning, directing
and organizing all health and environmental programs of the department, as well as assu ming fiscal man-

agement of the agency
Turres, who came to Meigs County in 1978 from Puerto Rico where
she taught at Sacred H eart University, ha s undergraduate degrees in
nursing and psyc hology, and a master's dq~ ree in the administration of
adult education from Florida International Univenity.
H er original nursing diploma was

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

' Jim Parque (9-3), who had won
At Toronto, Carlos Delgado
The honest team in baseball has his previous six decisions, lost for homered twice, Nos. 31 and 32,
never guite been able to figure the first time in 10 starts since and Tony Batista homered off
out Joe Mays, and the latest meet- May 17, allowing three runs and Rick White· (4-5) to break a 5-all
ing berween Mays and the Chica- I 0 hits in seven innings.
tie in the eighth.
go White Sox was no different.
Athletics 5, Mariners 4
Paul Quantrill (1-5) pitc~d a
Minnesota's 24-year-old rightAt Oakland, Calif., Aaron Sele scoreless eighth for his first win
hander improved his · career (11-5) took a no-hit bid into the
since last Oct. 1 and Billy Koch
re_cord against the White Sox to seventh inning but wound up losfinished for his 23rd save in his 27
4-0 Thursday, allowing five hits in ing as Miguel Tejada hit a rwo- chances. David Wells failed for the
eight innings as the Twins beat run double.
second time to get victory No.
Chicago 5-l.
Man Stairs singled m the sev- \6.
The White Sox, with a 10 1/2- enth for Oakland's first hit and hit
Royals 10, Indians 6
game lead in the AL Central, had a two-run homer in the eighth
At Cleveland,JeffSuppan (4-6)
' their five - game winning streak offJose M esa.
allowed four runs and nine hits
snapped.
Jason lsri nghau sen got three for his first win in 12 road starts
" It's li ke eve ry time we face outs for his 21st save but allowed
this season.
him, we're due for a loss," Chica- a two-run double to pinch-hitter
Johnny Damon had four hits
go's Paul Konerko .aid. "For some Stan Javier and an RBI groundand two RBls for the Royals,
reason, we haven't don e it against out by John Mabry before retirwho used a five-run third off
him ."
ing Rickey Henderson o n a rookie Jim Brower (2-3) and 15
Mays (5-11), whose record game-ending flyout.
singles to sweep the two-game
against all other teams is 7-22,
Angels 6, Rangers 2
series.
used four pitches effectively,
At Anaheim. Calif.. Seth EtherManny Ramirez homered
&lt;tayed ahead of hitters and kept ton won his fifth straight start and
twice and drove in three runs for
the ball down, striking out six in Seen Spiezio homered for the
the Indians.
his 's econd win over Chicago this Angels.
Red Sox 11, Orioles 7,
season. He allowed his only run
Etherton (5-1) allowed a run
1st game
on Jose Valentin's homer in the and six hits in 7 1-3 innings. The
eighth.
23-year-old right-hander struck
Orioles 9, Red Sox 6,
" lt's just ·o ne of those thmg out two and issued L ~ h of his
2nd game
where they always seem to catch walk.s in the eighth inning while
At Baltimore, Carl Everett
me when I've got things figured pitching through the seventh for .
homered
in hi s first at-bat after
1
out right," Mays said.
the first time in his eight major- re ceivi ng a 10-game suspension
In other ga mes, Oakland edged league starts.
for bumping an umpire and Troy
Sea ttle 3-4, Anaheim beat Texas
' Anaheim built a 4-0 lead in the O'Leary went 4-for-4 with three
6-2, Detroit dow ned New York first four inn in gs against Darren
RBls in th e first game.
5-3, Toronto dcfea.ted Tampa Bay Oliver (2- 5), who was ac tivated
Nomar Garciaparra went 3-for&amp;-5, Kansas City beat C leveland earher in the day after spending a
5 in the first game to raise his bat10-h and Boston split a double - month on the disabled list with
ting average to .403, but an 0-forheader wJth BaltJmore, winning tendinitis in his left (p itc hing)
5 perfo rma nce in the second
the first game 1 1- 7 and dropping shoulder.
game dropped him to .396.
the nightcap 9-4.
Tiger&lt; '5, Yankees 3
Ramon Martinez (8-5) gave up
Chad Allen had three h1ts and
At New York ,Juan Encarnacion five runs and six hits in five
three RB!s for Minne sota, and had three Rill s. in cl uding a two- innings to beat S1dney Penson (5David Ortiz was 3-for-3 with a run single that capped a four- run 6).
walk and two runs. Ortiz has hits sixth inning off Andy Pettltte (9Mark lewis doubled in three
in eight straight plate appear- 6). Detroit is 6-2 agamst New runs in a four- run third inning,
ances, one short of the team York this year.
and Will Clark and Mike Bordick
record shared by Todd Walker
Willi e Blair (6-2) 1!lowcd three homered in the second game.
( 1998). M1ckey H atc her (19~5) ·runs and seve n hits in 6 1-3
Scott •Erickson (5-7) allowed
andTonv Oliva (1967) .'
1nnings, and Todd Jones got h1s one run , three hits and six walks
brtil ~\so ha§ rcJched base nine league-leaditJg 26th save in 27 in 5 1-3 innings for his second
&lt;;; tr.ugh t time ~. two sho rt of the chan ces when Paul O'Neill win since June 10.
team record 'bared. by Walker grounded into a game-ending
Pete Schourek (2-9) gave up
(1998), C huck Knoblauch (1996) . double play with two on.
five runs, five hits "and five walk s
and Ron Ca rew (1967) .
Blue Jays 6, Devil Rays 5
in 2 1-3 innings.

1999 Grand AM 40r. SE
CD Player, Tilt, Cruise, Rear Spoiler, Power
,m11vw~ &amp;. Door Locka; Bumper to Bumper
Warranty

was 513,900

Now Sl2,480

1999 Montana 4 Dr.
Ext. Chassis, Front &amp;. Rear AC, Power
Windows, S Passenger Seating

Was 521.900

Now sl9,900

Tilt, Cruise, Cassette, Power Windows 8.
Door Locks, Bumper
to Bumper Warranty

was 514,900

Now s12.880

1998 Achieva 4 Dr.
Tilt, Cruise, Cassette, Power Windows 8.
Door Locks, Bumper
to Bumper Wa.rranty

w~s 510.900

Forked Run: ·aest-kept secref among state parks
Bv ToNY M. LEACH

ing site s, a 400- foor san dy beach for swi mming, and a dump st::arion ~p; well as. a numb er
REEDSVILLE - If yo u are the kind of of shelter houses for picni cs and cookouts.
perso n who enjoys tht· si~ht and smell of a
A gro up campgrotmd th at can accommom ,lring- c nnptin. ·. the sut:cu lenr ta'lte of a date 120 indiv iduals is also available by resercuo kl'd ruarshlllallow, and rh e rranqllllity of a vation.
mght undc•r the """ · then look no furtha
A unique feature of the park is its Rent- Ath.m Forkl'd Run State Park, on State R o ut e Camp program, which allows campers the
12~ in R c'l' dsvilk.
opport unity to have fun without the h ass le of
Forked Run St.ltl' P.1rk o fl\:·rs nulllL'fOLIS loading and unloJding gear.
.l d l\'itic-;, such a-; cu npin g. bu.lt in,g:. ti shmg.
.For th e small price of.$25 a night, ca n~p ers
hiking. swim m ing , put t-putt ~uiC anJ dis( golf can rent a family-sized tent already set up o n
a platform, along with a sh eltered picni c table,
f() r v isit ors anJ Cllllpers ahk e to enjoy.
Volleyball and soccer areas have also be&lt;·n two co ts and sleepin g pads, a cooler, · coo k
"'to\te, ca mp li g ht , fire extingui sher, broom and
J.HOVldt·d tilr guest t'IHenainm ent .
dustpan.
The main campground is on a ridge overSeveral cab in s with the sa me amenities as
lookJJJg rhe va lley of Forked Run Lake. There
the
Rent -A-Ca mp s are ·available for $24 a
~H L' IVK non-e k•rtric Cl lll pin g sites located in
night .
horL 'H in ny and , IJady ~trc .t s of the park.
The..· ca mpground otl~rs showers , pet campPlease see Park, Page A6
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

1998 Sunfire 2 Dr.

Now s8, 995

Local Senior Citizens Car, Sharp, Tilt, Automatic,,
AC, CD Player, 23,801 Miles ~

$10,900

Pluse see Torres. Pllce A2

An unidentified pilot pra;tices
above npp City. Ohio. tor the u.s.
AJr and Trocte Show. (/lP photo]

Calendars
Classlflecls
Comics
Editorials
Money
Obituaries
Sports
Stocks
Tempo

C2&amp;6
D:.l-7

Insert
A4
D1

A6
81-8
D1
C1·8

e 2000 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

WASHINGTON (AP) Huge tax cuts being pushed by
Republicans in Congress could
"completely erase" the projected budget surplus before other
critical needs are met, President
C linton said Saturday. Republicans replied there was plenty of
money in the surplus for tax
relief.
"Now we have th e chance to
pass responsible tax cuts as we
continue to pursue solid economi c policy," Clinton said in
his weekly radio address. "But
instead of f3llowing this sensible
path that got us here, congressional Rep\tblicans are treating
this surplus as if they won it in
the lottery."
The White House released an
analysis estimating the tO-year
cost of major tax cuts passed or
moving forward in the GOP-led
Co ngress at $712 billion ,
including bills to ease the
in cotne tax marriage penalty
and repeal inheritance taxes that
the presid ent .has vowed to veto.
Beca use th e public debt also
wou ld be paid back at a slower
pace, the analysis predicted that
higher interest costs would raise
the overall price rag of the tax
cuts to $913 bdhon over a
decade. Combined with the
Republican-sponsored $792 billion tax cut Clinton vetoed last
year - which cont.1ined many
Of the same tax measures moving again this year - the grand
total comes to nearly S I .R rril lio n over 10 years .
"Taken together, !he tax cuts
passed last year ai1d this year by
tillS Co ngress would completely
erase the enttrc projected surplus over 1n years," Clinton said.
"The majority seems to have

Relllted story, Pace A'l
forgotten that
projections 111
a report are
not th e same
as dollars in
the bank ."
The
total projected
JS
surplus
actually much
Clinton
larger,
but
Republicans and Democrats
alike have committed to walling
off money earmarked for Social
Security and Medicare.
ln the R~publican radio
response, Sen. Rod Grams, RMinn .. said there is ample ra.4m---in the non-Social Security surplus - it comes to $2. 17 trillion
over
10 ye ars , including
Medicare - to cut taxes rather
than allowing the extra revenue
collections to pay for bigger
government.
"Taxpayers
fund
every
· agency, progtam, proJect and
bureau crat, yet somehow they're
the most use d, abused an d
underappreciated pt·ople · m
America ," Grams sa id. "The
Republican Congress believes
that Americans already spend
too mu ch of their money paying
taxes."
C linton said a portion of the
surplus could go back to taxpayers, but he said the GOP proposals would diSproportionately
benefit the wealthy. A Treasury
Department analysis sai d the
major tax cuts passed by th e
H cmse th is year would give 27.5
percent of the benefits, or $18
bdlion a year, to people with the
to p 1 percent in annual

Pleue see T.u, Page A6

Supreme Court justice takes message to Gallia County
BY KEVI~ KELLY
TIMES·SENTINEL STAFF

was 59,900

BOAT INSPECTION - Park Manager Randy
Wachter inspects several watercraft that can
be rented for fishing or boating excursions
on the park's 108·acre lake. The park is
open seven days a week during the summer.
(Tony M. Leach photos)

Now s9,800
Good Morning!

4 Cyl., 5 Speed,
Factory Air, Cassette, Tilt
Wheel, Cruiae Control

earned at Kings County Hospital
Center School of Nursing in Brooklyn N.Y., where she was born and
lived for 27 years.
J
At the local health department, she
has demonstrated skills in not only
directing the nursing staff, but in
coordinating a variety of community
health assessments, care coordination

Clinton: Tax cuts
could erase surplus
HAPPY

_]Wins hurler-Mays continuesmastery of Chisox in 6·1 route

Vol. 15, No. 22

Torres succeeds Lawson as health commissioner

CAMPERSMark Brown ,
along with his
family and
·friend, Steve
Gofi. ventured
. from Parkersburg, W.Va ., to
enjoy a weekend of camping
at Forked Run
State Park.
Campers
obtained their
__ gear through
the Rent-A·
Cam p program
offered by the
park.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

DeiAIIIs on P-ce AI

•
tmts -

off

IT'S GONE- Blue Jays first baseman Carlos Delgado cracks the first of two solo homers Thursday against
the Devil Rays. The feat briefly tied Delgado with the Dodgers' Gary Sheffield for the Major League lead ,
b~t Sheffield later homered to retake sole possession of the honor.

Highs:-aos · Lows: 60s

· reg~1rd lcss

of tht· crita.: ism.
"When I'm writing an op mR 10 (;RANDE - Being a ion, I don 1t look ovt.:r my shouldisst·nter on the Ohio Suprem e c._kr to ~ce how it 111 play in my
Court has made Ail ee Robi e d~ctJo n ," Resnick said .
Remick a target in thiS year's
A~ a result, she saiJ o;;pecial
election, but &gt;he said her oppo - inten.:~t groups drc politi cizi ng th e
nents could find another purpme norm ~11ly restramt·U ra ce tOr th e
for tht· mon ~y be1ng spc:nt un co utt, in w hich judges art" bound
unseating her.
by legal canon not to actively
" It would be better if they ca mpatgn.
spt·nt it on t·dw..: ,Jtio n," ..;a id
" Wiut I am relyi ng on is gr.l'i'iRl·'m ick, one of the j11stin.·s who rootsJ' f.lc._·'i nick c._·xplaini.'J a.;; she
wem .tg.tlnllt court decisions on tra\'L'ls annmd the._• state to c._•stabtort reform and school fundmg .
lish visibility
A fortllL'r Toledo prosec utor
l11 .1 related matter, the Ohio
and appe llate• court j udge, Ekctions Con1n1issiu n on ThursRcsmck is see king a third six- yl'ar day Jismissed ,1 complaint tfom
tcrlll tin s t;oll She sa id she rea li zed watchdog organization Comlllon
'upportmg worker&lt;;' rights c~nd C :HI\1..' about undi sclosc..·d do naagret:lllg that tht· state's "Y'&gt;tl'lll of tiom to Citizc:n~ for .1 Strong
funding niucJtion -;ho uld be t)hio. a grollp pronlt..lting public
changc..·d would be unpopular c du c:~ tinn about the impottancc
s t and~ .
·
of the Supreme Court.
But ' h&lt;· told Gallia County
Common C:au&lt;.;e believe" C itiDem ocr,lts at a fund- raiser frid.1y zens for a Strong Ohio is targetshe haJ to take those pmltJons \Jlg R esn ick 's ca mpai gn . But
- '

.

Elections Con 1missio n Chairman
Alphonse Cincio ne dropp ed th e
coJ uplaint, notmg Common
Cause was speculating :-~bout th e
gro up 's 1ntent1ons.
"1. am nor goi ng w rule on
speculati on." Cincione said . The
acnon :1l low&gt;; Citlzcns for a
.Strong Ohio to keep Jts books
closed .
While mo st people undl'rstand
the rl'sponsihllirit·s of th e EtOVcrnor's oAice and the legislature,
R,•,nirk said the judi ciary\ role is
It·~~ known, but jll!\t as vita l.
"The judiciary plays an import.lm fun ction in mtt·rprt·ting tht
law and illumm ating the Ohio
Constitution." Rnm ck sa1 d.
"Evt·ry Jt'Cision of th e Supr e nH.~
Court afll-cts ea&lt;.-h of yo u here.
Thl' sc hool fundmg dt.·u sw n
touchl's cveryo n~ in Oh iu.
"There sho uld b&lt;· llo diH'erenct·s betwet·n publi c schools in

Please see Justice, Pace A6

•

••

TOURING 'SITE - Ohio Supreme Court Justice Alice Robie Resnick,
second from left. is shown part of the operation at Rockwell Automation by Rock"'ell 's Randy Finney during Resnick's tour of the plant Fri·
day, prior to add re ssing Galli a County Democrats at a fund-raiser. (Millissia Russell photo )

0;

•

'

�.

.

/
Sunday, July 23, 2000

. p,_ A2 • 6unbapllimes -6rntintl

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

VALLEY BRIEFS.

New loan ·officer

Gallia County Junior Fair

season passes on sale

GALLIPOLIS - Concerned Citizens for Abuse of Aninuls will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m . at Bossard Memorial Library.

CrtmeWatch
BIDWELL - Springfield Township C rime Watch will meet July
27 at 7 p.m . in the portables at Bidwell- Porter Elementary SchooL

Bean dinner
VINTON - Vinton's annual bean dinner and and Old Timers
Parade will be Aug. 5, Mayor Donna D eWitt announced.
The parade will form at Vinto n Elementary School at 10:30 a.m .
and be in downtown Vinton around II a.m. The parade will end at
C ommunity Park, where the bean dinner will be held from II :30
a.m . until 3 p.m .
Parade participants are asked to enter the park and turn right
toward the ballfield. They may park there if they are staying, or exit
after all parade traffic has entered the area.
The dinner, sponsored by American Legion Post 161 and its auxiliary, will feature Jim Rubin as Abraham Lincoln and Joyce Browning as his wife Mary Rubin, from Prosperity, W.Va., will present an
educational program on Lincoln's life during the show.
The soldier's meal will be held ftOm 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m ., and
music is from 1-3 p.m . For more information about the dinner, call
388-8053 or 388-9833. For parade information, call 388-8327.

Public meeting
VINTON - A public meeting to discuss the possibility of developing a flood mitigation project for Vinton has been scheduled in
the village hall for Aug. 14 at 6 p.m ., Mayor Donna DeWitt
announced.
C ommunity member.; are encouraged to attend and participate in
the meeting, in the project development process, and offer ideas on
possible solutions, the mayor said.
" Public participation in this process is required if it is to be successful; ' DeWitt said. "If you are unable to attend but would like the
opportunity to comment, please contact the village mayor, council
member.; or clerk."

Meeting changed
VINTON - Regular Village Council meeting for next month
has been changed to Aug. 17 at 6 p.m. in the village hall.
Also, August meetings for council's street and finance committees
have been changed to Aug. 14 following the flood mitigation meeting .a t 6 p.m .

Workshop set
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A special veterans workshop will
be held July 27 from 8:30 a.m .-4 p.m. at Loyal Order of the Moose
Lodge 731, Charleston Road, W.Va. 2, Point Pleasant.
Ohio Department of Job and Family Services veterans service
representatives will conduct the workshop. 'lbpics include postal
testins and employment information, startins the job seareh, eff'ectlw job seareh technlquea, wrldna resumea and cover lenen to pt
p d results. and lmervlewlnl w ith confidence.
Local omployen IN Invited for a mock Interview soulon.
To ~~~ up, call Kelth or G;ey at 740-245-9509.

....

~..--

Home National Bank of Racine-Syracuse has announced the recent
employment of Jon P. Karschnik as a loan office r. Karschnik comes to
the Home Naticmat Bank with 30 years of banking experience in management and lending. He has also served on the Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer Board, and for seven years was a Carleton School
board member.Karschnik lives in the Five Points area with his wife,
Melinda, and children , Evan and Erin Dunn . A son, Joseph, is in
Batavia. and another s on, Keith, resides in Virginia Beach, va.

G ALLIP OLIS
Season
p asses for the 2000 Gallia
County Junio r Fair are now o n
sale.
Season passes may be pu rchased from Gallia County 4- H
clubs, advisors and members as
well as the following bu sin ess
loca tions: all mai n offi ces and
branch locatiom of O hio Valley
Bank (Galli a County locations)
Firstar Bank, Oak Hill Banks
(Gallipolis office only) , Peo ples
Bank and Farmer.; Bank &amp; Savin gs Co.
Cost of the season pass will be
$15 and w ill admit one pe rson
to the fa irgro unds and shows
eac h day of the fair (does not
include rides).
T h e dail y admissio n price
will be $6 per day and inclu des
·e ntertai nment,
show s and
amuse ment rides. Daily tickets
are available only at the eac h of
th e entrance gates to the fai rgrounds.
C hildren under 2 yea rs of age
are admitted free. H owever, ther
must purchase a ride pass to be

...

EMS runs
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County EMS responded to 12 calls for
assistance on Friday, bringing the total number of runs for the
month to I 96.
Runs included transports to H o lzer Medical C enter from a motor
vehicle crash on SR 588, Ames Department Store and Rand
Avenue. Emergency transports were made ftom HMC to Pleasant
Valley H ospital and Cabell Hu ntington Hospital.
Refusal of treatment was no teq on runs ro Third Avenue, Gallia
County Jail (three runs), SR 7 N orth, motor vehicle accident on
SR 588, C hestnut Street and State Street.

SR 114 open
LONG BO TTO M - The Ohio Department of Transportation
reopened State R ou te 124 on T hursday afte r a lengthy closure.
T he closure was located at the site of two culvert replacements in
·• the Long Bottom area.
: : Originally, two~ way tra ffic con trolled with signal lights was to
:.. have been mamtamed througho u t the construction work. H owev. : er, problems with si nki ng pavement forced ODO T offi cials to close
· : the road to traffi c for safe ty purposes.
According to ODOT Area E n gineer C harlie Mansfi eld , flaggen
, will be used as needed to keep traffic moving through the work
zone.

6unbap-Qttme• 6mttnel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our mal• conctnt In all stories It to be
accurate. U you kn'ow of an error In •
ltory, call lbe newsroom 11 (740) •-''"1342 •• Pomen&gt;y: (7&lt;10) 993·3155. We will
check yoar larormatlua •nd riiake •
&lt;On'O&lt;tlon I! wa1'1'11Dted.

N- Dep1n1mento
O•lllpoll•
The mala aombu 11 446· 2341.
Deplll1mtal extellll0111 are:
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New• Dep~~rtment
Pomeroy

·T he ma i n n~t~mber h
Dtp1 rtmt nt extensions are:

992· 21 .55.

Gcnen l Manager ..................... Ext. 1101
Now1 ................... -.................... Ext. 1102
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Milllnber. The At~l a ted P1t11, and the Ohio
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~~r:~;i·~-i(;~ ·t;y--;n·~·ii·r;;~iU~..;~--~~~--!k;!

home cimcr ~ ke i1 av•llable.
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(or advtn&lt;:e pr~yme nll made to carrlen .
Publllher ruervea the ri&amp;ht to adj ult ra teJ durinJ
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Dilly 1tld Snday
MAILSUBSCJUmONS
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13 Weelts ............................ ...........................$27.30

~ ~::~::::::::::: :::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::sl~:~~

lbta &lt;)lhkle G•llll CCN• IJ
13 Wecki .......................................................S29.2S
2f Wcekl......... .. ......................... .. ................. $56.68
52 Wc:ckl.................................................... $109.72

•

admitted on rhe rides. Senior
Citizen Day will be observed
on Aug. 5. Senior citizens must
show their Golden Buckeye
Card in order to be adnuited
free to th e fairgrou nds.
'
R ides will operate on the f;,J _
lowing sched ule:
• Monday, 6- 11 p.m .
• Tuesday-Thursday, 1- 5 p.i11.
and 6-1 1 p.m.
• Friday- Saturday, 1-5 p.m.
and 6 p.m.-midnight.
.
Anyo\ne interested in becomin g a member of the Ga\ha
Cou nty Agricultu ral Soci~ t y
ca n do so of they reside in .Gallia County, are 18 or olde r. and
purchase a membership for $2.
A membership en!i tl es ;.the
member to vote in the annual
electi on of directors held on the
third Thursday m September.
Membersh ips will be on sale
in the fai r board office duri ng
th e fair and at other locations· to
be announced later, after ehe
lair. Memberships do not adm it
anyone to the f.1ir or any of tbe
rides.
.

---~LSfiLE.-.
.

Saoe
HONORED- Retiring Health Commissioner Margie Lawson was honored at a reception at the Meigs County Health Department. Lawson
has served as commissioner for 16 years. She was presented a
plaque and other gifts by Jon Jacobs, administrator, and Norma Torres, newly appointed health commissioner. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

•
•

Torres

At th e recepti on , she was presented a pl aq ue and other gifts by
Jacobs and Torres on be half of the
PageAl
department.
Among those attending """' s,,,..,TJ]
and communicable disease conmembrnofd1e Meig;County Board of
trol.
Health,and arrrent and fon11er emplcyShe has bee n successful · i n
ees of the health &lt;~rtment
securin g grant funding fo r many
programs, which have allowed
the age ncy to serve more residents.
Under the leadership of Lawson, and with th e adnun istrative
skills of Jacobs and To rres, health
departm ent services have expand-

(!)"

Walk Shorts
Knit Shirts
Dress Shirts
Dress Slacks
Sport Shirts

She indicated, however, that
she will 'ontinue doing dental

Th omas Wood, 35, entered
the plea in the strangulatio n of
Jo hn Stinson , 3 1, w ho was
killed Ju ne 20, 1999, d urin g a
fi ght in the prison ya rd .
·
R oss Cou n ty Conunon Pl eas
Jud ge Jhan Corzi ne orde red

Goeller received a letter from
one of his late wife's co-workers, Richard Lo rence, claiming .
to be Bryan 's biological fa ther.
D N A tests proved Lorence's
paternity bu t Goell er insisted he
had a right to custody because
he had bee n ·raising Bryan .
T h e two ag reed to share cuswdy of ·.llryan , an agree me nt
that lasted three yea rs. Goelle r
took care of t he boy o n weeken ds and \vas ord ered to pay

Wood w serve th e addit ional

$293 a month in chi ld supporr

time after he co mpl etes the fin al
eight years ' of a ·17 -yea r se n-

to Lorence.

te nce he rece ivt:d in E1irfield

m ent, Goeller ap pt·aleJ Ius c ase
ro th L' N in d1 O h io D istr ict

Cou nty fm ag~ ravatcd robbery.

AT HE NS (A I') -

Unhappy w it h the arrange -

Wedne sday, h e was granted sole

custody of Br yan .
" I th&gt;nk that's the \\'a)' it

Two for-

m er po lin• ofllcL•r o;; acc usL'd of
b uy ing an d '\ell in g prescriptio n
p:1 in rl'I H..'vns ent erL·d p leas of
m nocen t Friday in A thens
Cou nty Comm o n Plr:as Cou rt

John Ooud inot and Br ian
Stonerook bot h are cha rged
with drug tra ffi ckin g, wi th

sh o u ld have been in th e be-gin-

ni ng. bu t I d id n't expect th.1l ...
s.1id Codll'f, 46.
T h l· court said th e sha red p:trl' ll ting :~g rt'l'me n t -·was Ille gal
bt..·cau se rhc p are nt s were not a
m arried co up le.
Lo rence did nm ret urn .1 ca ll
seekin g co mJHent.

Goe ll er .1lso said Lo rence·
sh ou ld ~_,have rights as the biologiol ~ foth er. Attorn eys for
bot h men are expected to d raft
an agree ment that satisfi es bot h
fa the rs.

Confession
sought

Brawl leads to
man's death

N EW
PHILAD EL PHIA
(AP) - A prosec utor asked t he
O hi o Supreme Court on Fn day
to reinstate a 14-ye ar-o ld boy's
murder confess io n that \vas
thrown out by an app ea ls court.
Last month , the 5th O hio
D istrict Cour t of Appeals threw
out a confession by Antho ny
H arri s that he killed 5-yca r-old
D evan D uni ver, r uli ng that the
co nfessio n was coe rce d by
poli ce ., .Th e ru lmg effec tively

C LEVELAND (AP) A
man di ed early Fri day fo llowin g
· a fi ght o utside a nigh tcl ub,
po lice sa id .
Micha el Dubrovich, 20, o f
-s-agam o re Hills: nen;:- Akmn ,
died aft er fa lling in to the C uya-

over turn ed his co nvictio n .
H arris, wh o was 12 at t he
tim e of D evan's death , \Vas freed
June 8 from juven ile de tentio n.
Tb e...Sup rem e Court .,;-a n opt to
eith er hear the appeal or dism iss
it.

hoga River in th e city 's downto wn e nt cr tain m t'nt dist rict

If the h1 gh court doesn 't hea r

kn own as the Flats.
Police d1vers rc..·cove red th r..·
bo dy abo ut 4 a. m ., culmi n.lting
a three-ho ur sea rch .
Polin• sa id that t h ~ rt.' w as

.1

fi ght on th e d ec k behti1d Th e
Attic ni g htcl ub m vo lvi ng one

of D ubrov ich 's fi·iends and people in a boat.
D ubrovich 's girl friend, Les lie
Hurst , w h o witn t:sse d th e fi ght ,
to ld C level and td ensmn station

WE WS that Dubr&lt; lVlc h tri ed to
help his fri end and t•nded u p in

w tth

a

group of friends celcb ranng a
birthday w hen o ne of his
frie nds got int o an argument

Nader seeks ·unity between environmentalists, workers
COLUMBUS (AP) - Presidential candidate and consumer advocate Ralph Nader has
been dubhed a Democratl c parry "s poil er" for
·November's presidential elc:ction . Uut N ader
says he ca n't spo il an election that's already rotten fo r labor and e nvironmental groups.

"The Rep ublicans and Democrats go
around asking labor for their votes and ~hen,
when they get elected, they turn thclf backs
and throw themselves and their ca ree rs imo the

laps of huge corporations,'' Nader said at a
campaign stop in Columbu s Fricby.
NJdcr stressed u nity between u nion workns an d environme ntalists, art,'lung that th e two
have sinular agenda s and are being igtlOrl·d by
D emocr::Hic candidates who assunK they can
ca rry those constituencies.
A Gore CJmpalb'll spokes m an dispu t.:d
N ~1 dcr 's JSs~:rtion that Democrats an:; b x in
courting t he support of orgamzcd bbor.
"We'rt: not ra.kmg :1 smgle vot~..· fiw gr:1nred

t he appea l. prosecu tors can
b r ing the case t o tri al .1g.1in
Wi th out the cu ufess mn .
Tu5C J rawas Coun tv P rosec u tor Ai1 n1 Hh ~p ll'S , Bo rnh o rst
:-,,nd 111 hl'f .l ppt•,ll t o th e
Suprt·m c Cou rt rh:1t th e ap pl·a ls
cou rt W;ls w ro n g to ru le· tlu t J
poli ce cl11ef's qu es ti o m ng o f
H arris was so harsh tlut any 1 ~­

yea r-o ld wou ld fe d he had no
c h 01n.' but t o con fess to a
en n JC .

TOLE D O (A I') -

Whc· n ,,

cu ri o us St l'Vt' O m an dl·c idL'd to
look in t o o ne of two private
;uubuhn cc opl'rations that serv&lt;:s
Hanco ck C ounty. he ;tskecl the
l·ompany\ d ~ ~p .a c hn tu find ht s
ho li SL'.

T lwy l ouldn 't COlll l' wnh111
th rcl' nu k s. said &lt;.) man. a co un -

ty co m m is.SIOilLT.
" T hl')' took thrL·e sho t s at me
.1 nd neve r fo und rpc," O m an

sa id. "If I'm hav ing a hea n
atta ck, I'm dead ."
For- pro fi t ambulance companies handle all emergency calls
in several O hio cities and serve
as bac kup s fo r short-staffed volu n teer a n1bulan ce age n c 1cs 111
r ur.1l are as . Aur no statl'Wide

records are kept on t hei r
res po nse rat es and reliab!lity.
T he O h io Ambula nce Lice nsm g Board in spects an d c~ r tifi e~
th e 136 p rivate ambulan ce services in t he st ate each ye:a .
Inspecto rs n take sure the a111bu-

la n ces mee t safety su ndards . see in g that t he veh icles are road wo r thy and carr y adeyu ate lllcdlct n e,

str etchers

11nd

o t he r

equipment.
St:1 tewi de, th ere h avt&gt; heen R9
c on1p laints agai nst t hl-- private
.111
co m p;mil'S si n ce: \993 -

pan iL·s a rt..· doi ng bu sin ns right.
:1 n d nobocly 's compl:u ni ng.'· s:1 id
R obe n
FL':n he ri n gh,llll , th e
;t mbu L\liCl' h o:~rd's l'Xecuti\'l'
di rector.
Co mp l.nnts handle d by cou nt\'
. or Clt\.' bouds lll.l \'. not reach
t h e 'i L i t t' btu ~·d. tlwu gh . . 111 d
t he re 1s 11 0 ~ Lltl'\\'lde rr:1c ki ng of
:1 11 co m p l.l i nh ag.Ji nst the v ri\',ltl'
co m pa m es .

Mcd Co rp

IIH ' •

J

Tnkdo -

MacKay sa id witnesses · saw
Durbrovich hit his head on
another boat , th en' go underwater. Some of his fnends tned to
rescue h tm with o u t success.

Mac Kay said as of Friday
cvemng no arrests had been
made.

Shared parenting
deal nixed

screenings and sealant programs ·

through the health department .

•

gmup of steel workers who have bee n locked
out oftheir Jobs at AK Steel's Mansfie ld plant
since: Sept. 1.
Steelworkers spokesman Tony M o nuna ~;ud
rhc 11Hernational umon has Jlrt·ar.ly l•.'ndur~L· rl
Vice President Al Gore, but mt..•mbt:'rs attende d
N:td cr's rally to brin g ;J. ttcntion to labor and

mu nt hs 11 1 H .m col·k Cou n t\'
after it s p h on~..· sc..· rvtLl' w,ts cut
otT bc c lliSL' nf .111 unpaid b ill .
And Lima\ mayor cha ll cngnl
t hl' ~.lllll' co mp:m y after com -

,\ bout re s put l ~e ll llli...'S
There were probktl l ~ .il ~o
found \\ ' lth thrl'l' l)thcr .HllhuLlll ll' ~l·n·H.:t:s m vcstJgatcd by th t..•
stJ tc ~lllditor's offiCL'_. I rs repon
fo un d th e compa ni es owed
- o h io $ 1.5 m illi on fi1r using
un certified
d rivers, dou ble
pbJ tH ;o,

membe rs.

''I'm kind of an in ckpendent, bur w hat
(Nader) said today would make me lean towa rd
hm1. A lot of people. I rhmk, are looki ng to
vote fur the least hkel y cvd when it comes to
AI Gore and George Bush,'' Lambert said.
AK Steel has sued the United Steelworkers
union, accusing it ofbJCking violence for yean
aga inst tht• company Jnd ot her'i durmg labo r
JS$U CS . U mon utliuals deny rhe alle~tions. T he
case aw;nts tri:.L

C LEVELAN ll (AI') It
di dn 't take lon1; for mher public
offici.1ls ro ba sh Mayor M ichael
R . Wh ite ·s $7(,5 milli on plan to
redevelop t ht• nty's COIWL'ntion
ct::t H cr .t ml bkl·frunt.
''\lA· w tll not be fas t- ITJ(_ kcd .
we w 1ll nm b e l"ll'ihl'J ," City
C ouncil l &gt;re ~ idl· nt M ilh.ll· l
Po lensc:k ~a id FrHhy. aft l'r Wh tre
in tro du cl' d an an1bitious plan to

Rock and R oll Hall of Fam e
;md M .USl' ll lll, Wh ite.· offered n o
sp ec ifics abom how he inte nds

to pay for the· la kdmnr proj ect,
estimated .tt up to $.2(!.) m illion,
.1nd ~~ $3(.0 n111lim1 l"l'llOVatio n
.llld exp~nst on of the c~mve n­
ttoll Ct: llll'r.

expa nd North C oast H ar.bor

The ·n1Jyor said he- envisio ned mo ney co mmg from
p u blic and private sou rces as

in to an e ntertainment area similar to C hicago 's Navy Pier.

well as from users of the newly
developed area.

tanon w hile transportin g, M edicaid patient s.
So m e of those drivers lacked
a requ ired basic firs r aid co urse,

Farm! Farm!
Farm!

;lCcordm g t o th e au di t.

Two of the b iggest co m plaints
against MedCo rp we re that th e
compa m es use t• mpl oy~: e s wh o
a re n 't fam ili :1r wi th th e towns

an d tha t the d iSpatch ce nt ers arc
in o t her citie'\.

Hanco ck Cou n ty co mmi ssw ners allowed M e dCorp lo

118 ac. m/1, 3 BR, 1 112 bath with large rooms and natural
woodwork. Huge 36 x 80 bam Is a bonus!
Near Bob Evans in Rio Grande.
Offered by:

Appalachia Realty

re~LJ m c

ope r a t ions afte r Jt
p ro mised to o p e n a d ispatc hin g
ce m er 1n Fin dlay, the c o unt y
sc:1 t , in st ead of cove ri ng rh e
c o u llty from Toledo, m o re tha n
-t O mi les n o re b .

Nea S. Henry, Broker

740-286-5950
740-286·4087

Lymphedema Services
.

offered for:

HOLZER t.U:IliCAL CENTER

• People with
a family history
of swelling in the
legs or arms

• People with a
sudden onset of
swelling
following
surgery and/or
lymph node
removal

• People who
have had
radiation
and experience

• PostMastectomy
Counseling

Sll'elling

About our Therapists:
Karen Meadows, Licensed Massage Therapist (left), works in the
Holzer Medical Center Therapy Services Department, and Amy
Mapes, Licensed Massage Therapist (right), works at Jenkins Clinic
in Wellston and at Oak Hill Community Medical Center in Oak Hill.
Both have studied under Bruno Chikly, M.D., developer of Lymph
Drainage Therapy, from Paris, France.

with tile lfllnan 'Oflc4

·-Holzer Medical can~
.

•••

•

At a nt:ws co nferenu: at th e

b1lli ng or i na d e qu ate docume n-

11

An exciting chance for you to promote your business to
hundreds in the community. All within two days!

To regi-ster as an exhibitor or for more
information, call Jennifer at 446-5210

ing two visions for the country."
After J r.:t lly with several environmental
groups, Nader spen t abo ut an hour wit h a

Nader promised the first thi ng he'd do if
elected president would be to push for the
repeal of the Taft- Hartley Act, the 1947 federal
law that n:stricts union strikes.
Luther Lambert. w ho was a crane operator
ar AK Steel before the lockout said he isn't sure
who he'll vore for in November, but said
Nader's proposa ls for labor law reforms wou ld
probably earn h,im a lol of voles from union

700 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·3736

AKRON (AI') - An Ol,io
appl';J!s court ha!-1 ruled that ,\
sh.trcd p.m .·n on g .Jgn.'l'l1ll'llt
bl•twe cn .1 boy 's btologtL.ll
father :m d rhc lll:l ll who lud
r.11 Sl'd 11lll1 I ~ iJk g.t l.
Six yc: ars .l~~n. l k11 Codkr. of
O lmw. ;d 1= .1 1 1~. \\',ts .1 single: d:td

Au~:ust

between Gore and Bush.
''We 're confident that, come November,
people wd l focus on the election and people
will know t hat the re are two candidates offer-

environmentaJ issues .

b:lSl'd am bu l:mrc comp:1ny. h .1d
.it s :-.erv ice susprmkd lll',nly fivt'

Monday thru Saturday
9:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Sunday
12 noon ·· 6:00 p.m.

boat. T here was a scuille o n th e

Deadline for Exhibitors:

Cab rera said as fjr as t he Gore campaign is
conct'rnl•d, the c h oice in November will be

average o f ab.Ql!! IJ ~ac h..y~ar._ln
th e pJ st ye.n , th crl· \\"t' r~ J U:-.t fi,·e.
''My rhouglg i ~ th ,ll rh L· cu Jll -

Kroger Pharmacy in Pomeroy
is now open the
following hours:

dock.

. September 9 and 10

in this dection,'' Jano Cabrera said fro·~, Gore's
NasllVl iJ,· headquarters." AI Gore's comnutted
workmg bmilies and h!S addressing the A.FLC!O this morning (in Washington) speaks to
that."

Ambulance companies are Other public officials wary of
taking over emergency runs White's development plans

Wlth three men in a docked

ATTENTION ALL BUSINESSES
Don't miss your opportunity to participate in
the First Annual

· · ---&amp;unbap ll!;iricrs-itrntinri-· -Page A3

Cou r t of Appeals in Akron . On

Ex-officers plead
innocent

that Dubrovic h was

ed from immun izatio n and fklni -

p racrice.

d eath of anoth er inmate.

C leveland poli ce spo keswo man Lt. Sharon Mar Kay said

Time is Running Out!

Re~:istration

additional1 0-year sen tence Friday after pleadin g gJi lty to
involunt ary manslaughter in th e

the river.

from

tarian programs with fou r nurses
and two offi ce assista nts in 1982,
to an agency with 18 employees
and about 25 program s in 2000.
T he budget has grown from
$62,000 to $869 ,000. It operates
o n a 1- mill levy, along with state
and federal mon ies.
Torres, who has a daughter,
Kristen, working on her master's
degree at O hio State lJm,•e rsity,
has been instrun1ental in securing
numerous grants for n1cdical programs, allowi ng trem endous
growth in services .to th e county's
residents of all econonuc levels.
In discussi ng her re signation,
lawson desc ribed her years as
health commjs~ioner as "a growing experience." She said that her .
leaving at this time is a good
move for the health department
financ ially, as well as for her personally, because of h er dental

ti on al Institutio n was given an

of Jacksonville, was a se rgeilnt .
and Stoneroc k, of C h auncey.
\Vas a patro lm an in th e town of
Glouster, about 60 miles so utheast of Columb us.
• The all egations involve pre: scription pain kill ers that
· include Vica den , Percocet and
Tylenol 3.
Boudino t all egedly bo ught
pain pills last mo nth from an
: .informant while on du ty in a
: ·marked police car.
• · · Th e sheriff's department then
&lt; recorded a telepho ne conve rsatio n m whic h Sto neroc k
.'· ·allegedly ar ran ged to se ll pills to
a seco nd infor m an t.

SEMI-fl .. tl(lfiL

•
•
•

C HI LLI COTH E (A P) - A
prisone r at the R oss Co rrec-

Bo udm o t f:t ci ng t wo cou n ts
and Sto nerock one. Bo ud in o r,

Utility Workers Union of America
Local 296 members recently vis·
ited Washington to discuss etec·
tric utility deregulation with Ohio
-congressmen. UWUA · has gone
on record opposing deregulation,
citing
such
concerns
as
increased residential rates, insuf·
ficient equipment maintenance,
workforce downsizing and toss of
school funds collected from utility
real estate taxes . UWUA mem·
bers are employed at AEP's Gavin
Plant. From left are Scott Hack·
ett, committee member; Clarence
Easton, deregulation officer; U.S.
Rep. T~d Strickland; and Bob
Price, Local 296 president. (Con·
trlbuted photo)

::·
GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations wW be provided by the
::· Gallla County Health Department atWai-Mart Pharmacy on Mon• day from 6- 7 p.m .
.
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a
.. parent or legal guardian, and bring a current immunization record
with them.

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
raising his infant son, Bryan . His
Inmate gets
w1fe of 22 years died
brain
additional time aneurys m four months after
Bryan \Vas born .
of~

Discussing deregulation

-lmmunllltlons-Monday

.." .

Pomeroy_• MlddleR_Qrt • Gallipolis, O.hio Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday,.July 23, 2000

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/
Sunday, July 23, 2000

. p,_ A2 • 6unbapllimes -6rntintl

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

VALLEY BRIEFS.

New loan ·officer

Gallia County Junior Fair

season passes on sale

GALLIPOLIS - Concerned Citizens for Abuse of Aninuls will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m . at Bossard Memorial Library.

CrtmeWatch
BIDWELL - Springfield Township C rime Watch will meet July
27 at 7 p.m . in the portables at Bidwell- Porter Elementary SchooL

Bean dinner
VINTON - Vinton's annual bean dinner and and Old Timers
Parade will be Aug. 5, Mayor Donna D eWitt announced.
The parade will form at Vinto n Elementary School at 10:30 a.m .
and be in downtown Vinton around II a.m. The parade will end at
C ommunity Park, where the bean dinner will be held from II :30
a.m . until 3 p.m .
Parade participants are asked to enter the park and turn right
toward the ballfield. They may park there if they are staying, or exit
after all parade traffic has entered the area.
The dinner, sponsored by American Legion Post 161 and its auxiliary, will feature Jim Rubin as Abraham Lincoln and Joyce Browning as his wife Mary Rubin, from Prosperity, W.Va., will present an
educational program on Lincoln's life during the show.
The soldier's meal will be held ftOm 11:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m ., and
music is from 1-3 p.m . For more information about the dinner, call
388-8053 or 388-9833. For parade information, call 388-8327.

Public meeting
VINTON - A public meeting to discuss the possibility of developing a flood mitigation project for Vinton has been scheduled in
the village hall for Aug. 14 at 6 p.m ., Mayor Donna DeWitt
announced.
C ommunity member.; are encouraged to attend and participate in
the meeting, in the project development process, and offer ideas on
possible solutions, the mayor said.
" Public participation in this process is required if it is to be successful; ' DeWitt said. "If you are unable to attend but would like the
opportunity to comment, please contact the village mayor, council
member.; or clerk."

Meeting changed
VINTON - Regular Village Council meeting for next month
has been changed to Aug. 17 at 6 p.m. in the village hall.
Also, August meetings for council's street and finance committees
have been changed to Aug. 14 following the flood mitigation meeting .a t 6 p.m .

Workshop set
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A special veterans workshop will
be held July 27 from 8:30 a.m .-4 p.m. at Loyal Order of the Moose
Lodge 731, Charleston Road, W.Va. 2, Point Pleasant.
Ohio Department of Job and Family Services veterans service
representatives will conduct the workshop. 'lbpics include postal
testins and employment information, startins the job seareh, eff'ectlw job seareh technlquea, wrldna resumea and cover lenen to pt
p d results. and lmervlewlnl w ith confidence.
Local omployen IN Invited for a mock Interview soulon.
To ~~~ up, call Kelth or G;ey at 740-245-9509.

....

~..--

Home National Bank of Racine-Syracuse has announced the recent
employment of Jon P. Karschnik as a loan office r. Karschnik comes to
the Home Naticmat Bank with 30 years of banking experience in management and lending. He has also served on the Tuppers Plains
Regional Sewer Board, and for seven years was a Carleton School
board member.Karschnik lives in the Five Points area with his wife,
Melinda, and children , Evan and Erin Dunn . A son, Joseph, is in
Batavia. and another s on, Keith, resides in Virginia Beach, va.

G ALLIP OLIS
Season
p asses for the 2000 Gallia
County Junio r Fair are now o n
sale.
Season passes may be pu rchased from Gallia County 4- H
clubs, advisors and members as
well as the following bu sin ess
loca tions: all mai n offi ces and
branch locatiom of O hio Valley
Bank (Galli a County locations)
Firstar Bank, Oak Hill Banks
(Gallipolis office only) , Peo ples
Bank and Farmer.; Bank &amp; Savin gs Co.
Cost of the season pass will be
$15 and w ill admit one pe rson
to the fa irgro unds and shows
eac h day of the fair (does not
include rides).
T h e dail y admissio n price
will be $6 per day and inclu des
·e ntertai nment,
show s and
amuse ment rides. Daily tickets
are available only at the eac h of
th e entrance gates to the fai rgrounds.
C hildren under 2 yea rs of age
are admitted free. H owever, ther
must purchase a ride pass to be

...

EMS runs
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County EMS responded to 12 calls for
assistance on Friday, bringing the total number of runs for the
month to I 96.
Runs included transports to H o lzer Medical C enter from a motor
vehicle crash on SR 588, Ames Department Store and Rand
Avenue. Emergency transports were made ftom HMC to Pleasant
Valley H ospital and Cabell Hu ntington Hospital.
Refusal of treatment was no teq on runs ro Third Avenue, Gallia
County Jail (three runs), SR 7 N orth, motor vehicle accident on
SR 588, C hestnut Street and State Street.

SR 114 open
LONG BO TTO M - The Ohio Department of Transportation
reopened State R ou te 124 on T hursday afte r a lengthy closure.
T he closure was located at the site of two culvert replacements in
·• the Long Bottom area.
: : Originally, two~ way tra ffic con trolled with signal lights was to
:.. have been mamtamed througho u t the construction work. H owev. : er, problems with si nki ng pavement forced ODO T offi cials to close
· : the road to traffi c for safe ty purposes.
According to ODOT Area E n gineer C harlie Mansfi eld , flaggen
, will be used as needed to keep traffic moving through the work
zone.

6unbap-Qttme• 6mttnel
Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our mal• conctnt In all stories It to be
accurate. U you kn'ow of an error In •
ltory, call lbe newsroom 11 (740) •-''"1342 •• Pomen&gt;y: (7&lt;10) 993·3155. We will
check yoar larormatlua •nd riiake •
&lt;On'O&lt;tlon I! wa1'1'11Dted.

N- Dep1n1mento
O•lllpoll•
The mala aombu 11 446· 2341.
Deplll1mtal extellll0111 are:
MaaqiDI Edllo•-·-·-·-..- ·.... -. E•L 118
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SporU - · - · - - - ·....- ... -.- Ext. 111
News ................--········......... Ext. 119

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New• Dep~~rtment
Pomeroy

·T he ma i n n~t~mber h
Dtp1 rtmt nt extensions are:

992· 21 .55.

Gcnen l Manager ..................... Ext. 1101
Now1 ................... -.................... Ext. 1102
............- ..........._.......- ... - ...•• Ext 1106

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Published every Sunday, 82 ~ Third Ave.,
Oallipoll s, Ohio, by the Ohio Vall ey Publlahint
Company. Second cl iP poatap paid II Oallipolla,
011~.

En1 crcd u acca nd cola11 mall lna maner 11
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Milllnber. The At~l a ted P1t11, and the Ohio
Newspaper A·eodllion.
POs1MAsTER: Send addrcu corredlom. lo The

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One Wed! ....................................................... 51 .2.1
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w.oo

~~r:~;i·~-i(;~ ·t;y--;n·~·ii·r;;~iU~..;~--~~~--!k;!

home cimcr ~ ke i1 av•llable.
The SuDday , rne~o•Se nl i m:l wll1 1101 be rnponaiblt
(or advtn&lt;:e pr~yme nll made to carrlen .
Publllher ruervea the ri&amp;ht to adj ult ra teJ durinJ
the tubactiptkm period . Suhlocrlplion n rc chanp
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Dilly 1tld Snday
MAILSUBSCJUmONS
I•Pde c.n• Co.•IJ
13 Weelts ............................ ...........................$27.30

~ ~::~::::::::::: :::::::::::::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::sl~:~~

lbta &lt;)lhkle G•llll CCN• IJ
13 Wecki .......................................................S29.2S
2f Wcekl......... .. ......................... .. ................. $56.68
52 Wc:ckl.................................................... $109.72

•

admitted on rhe rides. Senior
Citizen Day will be observed
on Aug. 5. Senior citizens must
show their Golden Buckeye
Card in order to be adnuited
free to th e fairgrou nds.
'
R ides will operate on the f;,J _
lowing sched ule:
• Monday, 6- 11 p.m .
• Tuesday-Thursday, 1- 5 p.i11.
and 6-1 1 p.m.
• Friday- Saturday, 1-5 p.m.
and 6 p.m.-midnight.
.
Anyo\ne interested in becomin g a member of the Ga\ha
Cou nty Agricultu ral Soci~ t y
ca n do so of they reside in .Gallia County, are 18 or olde r. and
purchase a membership for $2.
A membership en!i tl es ;.the
member to vote in the annual
electi on of directors held on the
third Thursday m September.
Membersh ips will be on sale
in the fai r board office duri ng
th e fair and at other locations· to
be announced later, after ehe
lair. Memberships do not adm it
anyone to the f.1ir or any of tbe
rides.
.

---~LSfiLE.-.
.

Saoe
HONORED- Retiring Health Commissioner Margie Lawson was honored at a reception at the Meigs County Health Department. Lawson
has served as commissioner for 16 years. She was presented a
plaque and other gifts by Jon Jacobs, administrator, and Norma Torres, newly appointed health commissioner. (Charlene Hoeflich photo)

•
•

Torres

At th e recepti on , she was presented a pl aq ue and other gifts by
Jacobs and Torres on be half of the
PageAl
department.
Among those attending """' s,,,..,TJ]
and communicable disease conmembrnofd1e Meig;County Board of
trol.
Health,and arrrent and fon11er emplcyShe has bee n successful · i n
ees of the health &lt;~rtment
securin g grant funding fo r many
programs, which have allowed
the age ncy to serve more residents.
Under the leadership of Lawson, and with th e adnun istrative
skills of Jacobs and To rres, health
departm ent services have expand-

(!)"

Walk Shorts
Knit Shirts
Dress Shirts
Dress Slacks
Sport Shirts

She indicated, however, that
she will 'ontinue doing dental

Th omas Wood, 35, entered
the plea in the strangulatio n of
Jo hn Stinson , 3 1, w ho was
killed Ju ne 20, 1999, d urin g a
fi ght in the prison ya rd .
·
R oss Cou n ty Conunon Pl eas
Jud ge Jhan Corzi ne orde red

Goeller received a letter from
one of his late wife's co-workers, Richard Lo rence, claiming .
to be Bryan 's biological fa ther.
D N A tests proved Lorence's
paternity bu t Goell er insisted he
had a right to custody because
he had bee n ·raising Bryan .
T h e two ag reed to share cuswdy of ·.llryan , an agree me nt
that lasted three yea rs. Goelle r
took care of t he boy o n weeken ds and \vas ord ered to pay

Wood w serve th e addit ional

$293 a month in chi ld supporr

time after he co mpl etes the fin al
eight years ' of a ·17 -yea r se n-

to Lorence.

te nce he rece ivt:d in E1irfield

m ent, Goeller ap pt·aleJ Ius c ase
ro th L' N in d1 O h io D istr ict

Cou nty fm ag~ ravatcd robbery.

AT HE NS (A I') -

Unhappy w it h the arrange -

Wedne sday, h e was granted sole

custody of Br yan .
" I th&gt;nk that's the \\'a)' it

Two for-

m er po lin• ofllcL•r o;; acc usL'd of
b uy ing an d '\ell in g prescriptio n
p:1 in rl'I H..'vns ent erL·d p leas of
m nocen t Friday in A thens
Cou nty Comm o n Plr:as Cou rt

John Ooud inot and Br ian
Stonerook bot h are cha rged
with drug tra ffi ckin g, wi th

sh o u ld have been in th e be-gin-

ni ng. bu t I d id n't expect th.1l ...
s.1id Codll'f, 46.
T h l· court said th e sha red p:trl' ll ting :~g rt'l'me n t -·was Ille gal
bt..·cau se rhc p are nt s were not a
m arried co up le.
Lo rence did nm ret urn .1 ca ll
seekin g co mJHent.

Goe ll er .1lso said Lo rence·
sh ou ld ~_,have rights as the biologiol ~ foth er. Attorn eys for
bot h men are expected to d raft
an agree ment that satisfi es bot h
fa the rs.

Confession
sought

Brawl leads to
man's death

N EW
PHILAD EL PHIA
(AP) - A prosec utor asked t he
O hi o Supreme Court on Fn day
to reinstate a 14-ye ar-o ld boy's
murder confess io n that \vas
thrown out by an app ea ls court.
Last month , the 5th O hio
D istrict Cour t of Appeals threw
out a confession by Antho ny
H arri s that he killed 5-yca r-old
D evan D uni ver, r uli ng that the
co nfessio n was coe rce d by
poli ce ., .Th e ru lmg effec tively

C LEVELAND (AP) A
man di ed early Fri day fo llowin g
· a fi ght o utside a nigh tcl ub,
po lice sa id .
Micha el Dubrovich, 20, o f
-s-agam o re Hills: nen;:- Akmn ,
died aft er fa lling in to the C uya-

over turn ed his co nvictio n .
H arris, wh o was 12 at t he
tim e of D evan's death , \Vas freed
June 8 from juven ile de tentio n.
Tb e...Sup rem e Court .,;-a n opt to
eith er hear the appeal or dism iss
it.

hoga River in th e city 's downto wn e nt cr tain m t'nt dist rict

If the h1 gh court doesn 't hea r

kn own as the Flats.
Police d1vers rc..·cove red th r..·
bo dy abo ut 4 a. m ., culmi n.lting
a three-ho ur sea rch .
Polin• sa id that t h ~ rt.' w as

.1

fi ght on th e d ec k behti1d Th e
Attic ni g htcl ub m vo lvi ng one

of D ubrov ich 's fi·iends and people in a boat.
D ubrovich 's girl friend, Les lie
Hurst , w h o witn t:sse d th e fi ght ,
to ld C level and td ensmn station

WE WS that Dubr&lt; lVlc h tri ed to
help his fri end and t•nded u p in

w tth

a

group of friends celcb ranng a
birthday w hen o ne of his
frie nds got int o an argument

Nader seeks ·unity between environmentalists, workers
COLUMBUS (AP) - Presidential candidate and consumer advocate Ralph Nader has
been dubhed a Democratl c parry "s poil er" for
·November's presidential elc:ction . Uut N ader
says he ca n't spo il an election that's already rotten fo r labor and e nvironmental groups.

"The Rep ublicans and Democrats go
around asking labor for their votes and ~hen,
when they get elected, they turn thclf backs
and throw themselves and their ca ree rs imo the

laps of huge corporations,'' Nader said at a
campaign stop in Columbu s Fricby.
NJdcr stressed u nity between u nion workns an d environme ntalists, art,'lung that th e two
have sinular agenda s and are being igtlOrl·d by
D emocr::Hic candidates who assunK they can
ca rry those constituencies.
A Gore CJmpalb'll spokes m an dispu t.:d
N ~1 dcr 's JSs~:rtion that Democrats an:; b x in
courting t he support of orgamzcd bbor.
"We'rt: not ra.kmg :1 smgle vot~..· fiw gr:1nred

t he appea l. prosecu tors can
b r ing the case t o tri al .1g.1in
Wi th out the cu ufess mn .
Tu5C J rawas Coun tv P rosec u tor Ai1 n1 Hh ~p ll'S , Bo rnh o rst
:-,,nd 111 hl'f .l ppt•,ll t o th e
Suprt·m c Cou rt rh:1t th e ap pl·a ls
cou rt W;ls w ro n g to ru le· tlu t J
poli ce cl11ef's qu es ti o m ng o f
H arris was so harsh tlut any 1 ~­

yea r-o ld wou ld fe d he had no
c h 01n.' but t o con fess to a
en n JC .

TOLE D O (A I') -

Whc· n ,,

cu ri o us St l'Vt' O m an dl·c idL'd to
look in t o o ne of two private
;uubuhn cc opl'rations that serv&lt;:s
Hanco ck C ounty. he ;tskecl the
l·ompany\ d ~ ~p .a c hn tu find ht s
ho li SL'.

T lwy l ouldn 't COlll l' wnh111
th rcl' nu k s. said &lt;.) man. a co un -

ty co m m is.SIOilLT.
" T hl')' took thrL·e sho t s at me
.1 nd neve r fo und rpc," O m an

sa id. "If I'm hav ing a hea n
atta ck, I'm dead ."
For- pro fi t ambulance companies handle all emergency calls
in several O hio cities and serve
as bac kup s fo r short-staffed volu n teer a n1bulan ce age n c 1cs 111
r ur.1l are as . Aur no statl'Wide

records are kept on t hei r
res po nse rat es and reliab!lity.
T he O h io Ambula nce Lice nsm g Board in spects an d c~ r tifi e~
th e 136 p rivate ambulan ce services in t he st ate each ye:a .
Inspecto rs n take sure the a111bu-

la n ces mee t safety su ndards . see in g that t he veh icles are road wo r thy and carr y adeyu ate lllcdlct n e,

str etchers

11nd

o t he r

equipment.
St:1 tewi de, th ere h avt&gt; heen R9
c on1p laints agai nst t hl-- private
.111
co m p;mil'S si n ce: \993 -

pan iL·s a rt..· doi ng bu sin ns right.
:1 n d nobocly 's compl:u ni ng.'· s:1 id
R obe n
FL':n he ri n gh,llll , th e
;t mbu L\liCl' h o:~rd's l'Xecuti\'l'
di rector.
Co mp l.nnts handle d by cou nt\'
. or Clt\.' bouds lll.l \'. not reach
t h e 'i L i t t' btu ~·d. tlwu gh . . 111 d
t he re 1s 11 0 ~ Lltl'\\'lde rr:1c ki ng of
:1 11 co m p l.l i nh ag.Ji nst the v ri\',ltl'
co m pa m es .

Mcd Co rp

IIH ' •

J

Tnkdo -

MacKay sa id witnesses · saw
Durbrovich hit his head on
another boat , th en' go underwater. Some of his fnends tned to
rescue h tm with o u t success.

Mac Kay said as of Friday
cvemng no arrests had been
made.

Shared parenting
deal nixed

screenings and sealant programs ·

through the health department .

•

gmup of steel workers who have bee n locked
out oftheir Jobs at AK Steel's Mansfie ld plant
since: Sept. 1.
Steelworkers spokesman Tony M o nuna ~;ud
rhc 11Hernational umon has Jlrt·ar.ly l•.'ndur~L· rl
Vice President Al Gore, but mt..•mbt:'rs attende d
N:td cr's rally to brin g ;J. ttcntion to labor and

mu nt hs 11 1 H .m col·k Cou n t\'
after it s p h on~..· sc..· rvtLl' w,ts cut
otT bc c lliSL' nf .111 unpaid b ill .
And Lima\ mayor cha ll cngnl
t hl' ~.lllll' co mp:m y after com -

,\ bout re s put l ~e ll llli...'S
There were probktl l ~ .il ~o
found \\ ' lth thrl'l' l)thcr .HllhuLlll ll' ~l·n·H.:t:s m vcstJgatcd by th t..•
stJ tc ~lllditor's offiCL'_. I rs repon
fo un d th e compa ni es owed
- o h io $ 1.5 m illi on fi1r using
un certified
d rivers, dou ble
pbJ tH ;o,

membe rs.

''I'm kind of an in ckpendent, bur w hat
(Nader) said today would make me lean towa rd
hm1. A lot of people. I rhmk, are looki ng to
vote fur the least hkel y cvd when it comes to
AI Gore and George Bush,'' Lambert said.
AK Steel has sued the United Steelworkers
union, accusing it ofbJCking violence for yean
aga inst tht• company Jnd ot her'i durmg labo r
JS$U CS . U mon utliuals deny rhe alle~tions. T he
case aw;nts tri:.L

C LEVELAN ll (AI') It
di dn 't take lon1; for mher public
offici.1ls ro ba sh Mayor M ichael
R . Wh ite ·s $7(,5 milli on plan to
redevelop t ht• nty's COIWL'ntion
ct::t H cr .t ml bkl·frunt.
''\lA· w tll not be fas t- ITJ(_ kcd .
we w 1ll nm b e l"ll'ihl'J ," City
C ouncil l &gt;re ~ idl· nt M ilh.ll· l
Po lensc:k ~a id FrHhy. aft l'r Wh tre
in tro du cl' d an an1bitious plan to

Rock and R oll Hall of Fam e
;md M .USl' ll lll, Wh ite.· offered n o
sp ec ifics abom how he inte nds

to pay for the· la kdmnr proj ect,
estimated .tt up to $.2(!.) m illion,
.1nd ~~ $3(.0 n111lim1 l"l'llOVatio n
.llld exp~nst on of the c~mve n­
ttoll Ct: llll'r.

expa nd North C oast H ar.bor

The ·n1Jyor said he- envisio ned mo ney co mmg from
p u blic and private sou rces as

in to an e ntertainment area similar to C hicago 's Navy Pier.

well as from users of the newly
developed area.

tanon w hile transportin g, M edicaid patient s.
So m e of those drivers lacked
a requ ired basic firs r aid co urse,

Farm! Farm!
Farm!

;lCcordm g t o th e au di t.

Two of the b iggest co m plaints
against MedCo rp we re that th e
compa m es use t• mpl oy~: e s wh o
a re n 't fam ili :1r wi th th e towns

an d tha t the d iSpatch ce nt ers arc
in o t her citie'\.

Hanco ck Cou n ty co mmi ssw ners allowed M e dCorp lo

118 ac. m/1, 3 BR, 1 112 bath with large rooms and natural
woodwork. Huge 36 x 80 bam Is a bonus!
Near Bob Evans in Rio Grande.
Offered by:

Appalachia Realty

re~LJ m c

ope r a t ions afte r Jt
p ro mised to o p e n a d ispatc hin g
ce m er 1n Fin dlay, the c o unt y
sc:1 t , in st ead of cove ri ng rh e
c o u llty from Toledo, m o re tha n
-t O mi les n o re b .

Nea S. Henry, Broker

740-286-5950
740-286·4087

Lymphedema Services
.

offered for:

HOLZER t.U:IliCAL CENTER

• People with
a family history
of swelling in the
legs or arms

• People with a
sudden onset of
swelling
following
surgery and/or
lymph node
removal

• People who
have had
radiation
and experience

• PostMastectomy
Counseling

Sll'elling

About our Therapists:
Karen Meadows, Licensed Massage Therapist (left), works in the
Holzer Medical Center Therapy Services Department, and Amy
Mapes, Licensed Massage Therapist (right), works at Jenkins Clinic
in Wellston and at Oak Hill Community Medical Center in Oak Hill.
Both have studied under Bruno Chikly, M.D., developer of Lymph
Drainage Therapy, from Paris, France.

with tile lfllnan 'Oflc4

·-Holzer Medical can~
.

•••

•

At a nt:ws co nferenu: at th e

b1lli ng or i na d e qu ate docume n-

11

An exciting chance for you to promote your business to
hundreds in the community. All within two days!

To regi-ster as an exhibitor or for more
information, call Jennifer at 446-5210

ing two visions for the country."
After J r.:t lly with several environmental
groups, Nader spen t abo ut an hour wit h a

Nader promised the first thi ng he'd do if
elected president would be to push for the
repeal of the Taft- Hartley Act, the 1947 federal
law that n:stricts union strikes.
Luther Lambert. w ho was a crane operator
ar AK Steel before the lockout said he isn't sure
who he'll vore for in November, but said
Nader's proposa ls for labor law reforms wou ld
probably earn h,im a lol of voles from union

700 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·3736

AKRON (AI') - An Ol,io
appl';J!s court ha!-1 ruled that ,\
sh.trcd p.m .·n on g .Jgn.'l'l1ll'llt
bl•twe cn .1 boy 's btologtL.ll
father :m d rhc lll:l ll who lud
r.11 Sl'd 11lll1 I ~ iJk g.t l.
Six yc: ars .l~~n. l k11 Codkr. of
O lmw. ;d 1= .1 1 1~. \\',ts .1 single: d:td

Au~:ust

between Gore and Bush.
''We 're confident that, come November,
people wd l focus on the election and people
will know t hat the re are two candidates offer-

environmentaJ issues .

b:lSl'd am bu l:mrc comp:1ny. h .1d
.it s :-.erv ice susprmkd lll',nly fivt'

Monday thru Saturday
9:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Sunday
12 noon ·· 6:00 p.m.

boat. T here was a scuille o n th e

Deadline for Exhibitors:

Cab rera said as fjr as t he Gore campaign is
conct'rnl•d, the c h oice in November will be

average o f ab.Ql!! IJ ~ac h..y~ar._ln
th e pJ st ye.n , th crl· \\"t' r~ J U:-.t fi,·e.
''My rhouglg i ~ th ,ll rh L· cu Jll -

Kroger Pharmacy in Pomeroy
is now open the
following hours:

dock.

. September 9 and 10

in this dection,'' Jano Cabrera said fro·~, Gore's
NasllVl iJ,· headquarters." AI Gore's comnutted
workmg bmilies and h!S addressing the A.FLC!O this morning (in Washington) speaks to
that."

Ambulance companies are Other public officials wary of
taking over emergency runs White's development plans

Wlth three men in a docked

ATTENTION ALL BUSINESSES
Don't miss your opportunity to participate in
the First Annual

· · ---&amp;unbap ll!;iricrs-itrntinri-· -Page A3

Cou r t of Appeals in Akron . On

Ex-officers plead
innocent

that Dubrovic h was

ed from immun izatio n and fklni -

p racrice.

d eath of anoth er inmate.

C leveland poli ce spo keswo man Lt. Sharon Mar Kay said

Time is Running Out!

Re~:istration

additional1 0-year sen tence Friday after pleadin g gJi lty to
involunt ary manslaughter in th e

the river.

from

tarian programs with fou r nurses
and two offi ce assista nts in 1982,
to an agency with 18 employees
and about 25 program s in 2000.
T he budget has grown from
$62,000 to $869 ,000. It operates
o n a 1- mill levy, along with state
and federal mon ies.
Torres, who has a daughter,
Kristen, working on her master's
degree at O hio State lJm,•e rsity,
has been instrun1ental in securing
numerous grants for n1cdical programs, allowi ng trem endous
growth in services .to th e county's
residents of all econonuc levels.
In discussi ng her re signation,
lawson desc ribed her years as
health commjs~ioner as "a growing experience." She said that her .
leaving at this time is a good
move for the health department
financ ially, as well as for her personally, because of h er dental

ti on al Institutio n was given an

of Jacksonville, was a se rgeilnt .
and Stoneroc k, of C h auncey.
\Vas a patro lm an in th e town of
Glouster, about 60 miles so utheast of Columb us.
• The all egations involve pre: scription pain kill ers that
· include Vica den , Percocet and
Tylenol 3.
Boudino t all egedly bo ught
pain pills last mo nth from an
: .informant while on du ty in a
: ·marked police car.
• · · Th e sheriff's department then
&lt; recorded a telepho ne conve rsatio n m whic h Sto neroc k
.'· ·allegedly ar ran ged to se ll pills to
a seco nd infor m an t.

SEMI-fl .. tl(lfiL

•
•
•

C HI LLI COTH E (A P) - A
prisone r at the R oss Co rrec-

Bo udm o t f:t ci ng t wo cou n ts
and Sto nerock one. Bo ud in o r,

Utility Workers Union of America
Local 296 members recently vis·
ited Washington to discuss etec·
tric utility deregulation with Ohio
-congressmen. UWUA · has gone
on record opposing deregulation,
citing
such
concerns
as
increased residential rates, insuf·
ficient equipment maintenance,
workforce downsizing and toss of
school funds collected from utility
real estate taxes . UWUA mem·
bers are employed at AEP's Gavin
Plant. From left are Scott Hack·
ett, committee member; Clarence
Easton, deregulation officer; U.S.
Rep. T~d Strickland; and Bob
Price, Local 296 president. (Con·
trlbuted photo)

::·
GALLIPOLIS - Free immunizations wW be provided by the
::· Gallla County Health Department atWai-Mart Pharmacy on Mon• day from 6- 7 p.m .
.
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied by a
.. parent or legal guardian, and bring a current immunization record
with them.

BUCKEYE BRIEFS
raising his infant son, Bryan . His
Inmate gets
w1fe of 22 years died
brain
additional time aneurys m four months after
Bryan \Vas born .
of~

Discussing deregulation

-lmmunllltlons-Monday

.." .

Pomeroy_• MlddleR_Qrt • Gallipolis, O.hio Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday,.July 23, 2000

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_ _ _ _ ___;O..;;:;.

Junbav

P-Inion·

PageA4
Sundllf, July 23, 2000

SfAHlER.
l'is1:

'E.stiJDfisfid in1948

@m~ GW.INMI!t\

I \\QNDER

HOW EUAN S ~
1

GETTING AWN&amp;
..

Charita W. Govty
Publllhtr
R. Shewn Ltwll
Men~glng Editor

larry Boyer
Advtrtlalng Dlrtctor

WHO?

lfOO

atahlat@fuae.nel

1-i~Ufy

•

•

pational lun g disease fat:1lines and second in tobacco smoking, he
said.
The hmp1tal , whtch Ius l HO emplovees, provides reh abil1tat10n
services for stroke, orthopedic injurie s, arthriti s, pulmonary iJlnesscs, traumatic bram i1tiury, amptHatmn and spinal cord inJUry. It IS
owned by H ealthSouth Corporation of Blflllmgham, ALl .

Mlilltillr

KINGWOOD (AP)- Politi cs was not a
factot in Pre ston County Sheriff Cecil
Stra\~ser's refusal to hire an app li ca,nt who is
friend s with the sons of a former pol itical
foe-, a ciVil servi ce co mmission says.
' John H . Bryan had alleged that Strawser
rejected his applic&gt;tion for a deputy's posi tion because he is friends with Deputy Paul
Pritt and his brother, John Pritt, sons of the
late Charles Cline, who was the head of the
county Demo crati c Executlve Committee,
Cline did nor support Strawser in the
19% Democratic priu1ary.
Th e C ivil Servi ce Commission for
Deputy Sheriffs ruled Friday that the sheriff
d1d n ot discriminate agamst Bryan because
of his fncndship with the Pritts .

Bryan. correctional o ffi cers Frank Owens

and Gary Garlens. Deputy Ch~rles Treft Jnd
Sgt. Jeff Robert so n all testiftt·d that Scrawsrr
had rota them' in·· sepa rate co nv ers~ltiOns he
would not hire Bryan becau se of his co nnecrion ro Cline.
"He said h e had concerns to th at effect.
that. I was fn ends w ith the wrong peo ple,"
S&gt;id Bryan, a R epubli ca n.
Treft sa td Strawsl."r ''has a real Issue about
loyalty and wams everyone to be lo ya l to
hm1 ."

StrawSer denied rhat :my of the co nVersa-

ti ons had occurred.
" I have never sa 1d that . to the best of my
knowledge, th at 1 didn't trust J o hn Bryan:·
he sa1d.

"M y ISSUt.' nO\\' with lovalry IS with ~t· \'l."r­
al deput\' &gt;hcriffs &lt;liKe wluc I call th e May
44 cqup," &gt;rrawsl'r \.l l ~. n: tl·rr111g w tht
Co unt y CommJs,.wn ·.., Jrt e mpt to S(np hun
of h1s pohf..: po\\'t: rs ::tftn he .111d t\\'O other
o ffi ce rs were a c ru ~ ed of sp y1ng on J c puncs
wJth survedLlncc.' rqulplllt' JH .
A cm.: ult J ll ~i;~c rc . , l tHc d Str.nvs ei-'s
nHhuritv M .t,. ~; . T he t ll lllll1J ~s i o n bter
filed .1 l~w~ uJ't . ~ r L" bn g a·&gt; r ~· JJe\'1..' the shertff
of his poli c e pn\\'L' r., A C rlllllllJ l 111\·c. • stJgatlOn of the spy111 g .dk g.\ t ln lh 1\ coll{Jn U!Il g.
Lt. j oe..· SuiL'\. \\' ho Jnt l'I' \'J ~·\\Td Hr y .m and
f\YO ochn r.l!ld!d.u v . . ,,1 1d hL' &lt;..!tJ not bdteve
.l ll)' \\'Cfl' l}U,J!ttl nJ

Firm cited for polluting steam

OUR VIEW

•

Deservtng
•

center plans expansion

PRINCETON (AP) - HealthSourh Southern Hill s Rehabilitation Hospital plans an $800,000 expansion that w1ll add six beds . ..
' The project is sc heduled to begi·n in Aub'U St an-d be completed in
2001, Chief Execu tive Officer Ken Howell told members of the
Prin~eton Rotary Clqb o n Fnday.
"There is a high need fo r health care serv1ces in WestVirgm1a and

Co. 'I ~rilll....,.._ 11•l.u• atbrwll• ,._

Page A5

Decision not to hire deputy applicant wasn't political

:: MOUNTAIN BRIEFS

n 't have a healthy popu lation."
West Virginia r:mks tirst 111 ob~s a ty, smok eless tobacco use, occ u-

Unrn tv Ill• MUor.,. ......... n.., 1'-o.U H lnl Ilia JOO worb. AU '-tin .,.. subj«t
to tfliMr.,. ,.,.. h n,llft .U llwlMMIMrm P4 u/qluHt1 11a1111hr. No 11111/pld Un1rs wiU
H '"bli.tltttl. lAitnl ,....., h bt , _ ,.,,., U4mlltt6lu•n, "ol ,.,..oiUilillft.
Tll•opUiiMI ,.,..,•• ,.tAl e.u.u ttlow.,. Mteo.,....,u qfdlr Olelo

~

southern WcstVirginia .'' Howell said. " WestVirgmta as a state does-

Dlene Key Hill
Controller

~unbdv 1!:nms ·i&gt;e nttnel •

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

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Re~ab

~imes· Jentintl

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, July 23, the 205th day of 2000. There are 161
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 23, 1885, Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th president of the
United Stares, died in Mount McGregor, NY. at age 63.
On this date:
.
In 1829, William Austin Burt of Mount Vernon, Mich. , received a
patent for his typographer - a forerunner of the typewriter.
In 1886, New York saloonkeeper Steve Brodie claimed to have
made a daredevil plunge from the Brooklyn Bridge into the East
River.
In 1914, Austria-Hungary issued an ultimatum to Serbia following the killing of Archduke Francis Ferdinand by a Serb assassin ; the
dispute led to World War L
In 1945, French Marshal Henri Petain, who had h eadel'\ the Vichy
government during World War II, went on trial, c harged with treason . (He was condemned to death, but his sentence was co nm1Uted.)
In 1951 , Henri Petain died in prison .
In 1952, Egyptian military officers led by Gamal Abdel Nasser
overthrew King Farouk I.
In 1967, rioting that claimed some 43 lives erupted in Detroit.
In 1977, a jury in Washington, D.C., convicted 12 Ha nafi Muslims of c har~es stemming from the hostage siege at three buildings
the previous March .
In 1985, bandleader Kay Kyser, known for his "Kollege of Mu sical Knowledge," died in Chapel Hill , N .C. , at age 79.
In 1986, Britain's Prince Andrew married Sarah Ferguson at
Westminster Abbey in London. (The couple divorced in 1996.)
Ten years ago: President Bmh announced his choice of Judge
David Sou ter of New Hampshire to succeed retiring Justice William
J. Brennan on th'e U.S. Supreme Coun.
Five years ago: In a new get-tough approach, the United Nations
ordered the first combat unit from its rapid reaction force to Sarajevo to take out any rebel Serb gun! that fued at U.N. peacekeepers.
One year ago: Members of the Kennedy family gathered in New
York City for a private memorial Ma!5 a week after John F. Kennedy
Jr. , his wife, Carolyn, and her .sister, Lauren Bessette, died in a plane
crash off Martha's Vineyard. Space shuttle Columbia blasted off with
the world's most powerful X-ray telescope and Eileen Collins , the
first woman to command a U.S. space Hight. M orocco's King H assan II died at age 70 . Woodstock '99 opened in Rome, N .Y.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Gloria DeHaven is 75. Actor Ca lvert
DeForest is 72. Supreme Court Justice Anth ony M . Kennedy is 64.
Radio personality Don lrnus is 60. Country si nger Tony J oe White
is 57. Rock singer David Essex is 53. Actor Larry Manetti is 53 .
Actres1 Belinda Montgomery is 50.

Indian group

The scltc.: 0! \·iswn ofEm·ironmt:ntal Protec tion i!'!su ed:. notiCL' ·of
viobuon to Cbc:vc:nne Sale~ Co. Inc. t(Jr disclurg mg ac id nun t'
drain.1 g:e from .1 ;;~d tm ent pond into Pt·c k's Run . :1 tribut ary of rlw
H.u ckh :mnon ll..t\ 't'r. .l ~t·ncy I )irc..•cror Mih· C.1 ~lk ~.ud Frid.1y.
. C.lstk s.11d tht• dtsliu rge tK l llrrc:d July 1&lt;) .lt Chc..•yc:nnt' S.de·.' ro.d

stages vigil. at

prt•p;trJtlOil pl.mt .lllJ rt'fli St' pil L' nc.u Hodgesn lk.
Ft sh k_i\kd by ~ hl' di . . clurgc: Wt'ft' found up to. :! lllik s lh nYil stn:.lm. s :~td Fr.mk Shrt'\'l', .m in spc..·..: tor supc:n·tsor wah th t• DEl' \,
Otlicc._• of Mtnltl g .md Rt·cLHn .mon.
.
"Tht s w :ls .111 unforrutl:ltl' incidc'tH but dor..·s nm po'\L' ,111 llll ll1 l' di -

Hilr memorial gets
past another hurdle
They have come to be known as "the greatest generation .''
The men and women who gave their all to the Allied effort to
: defeat totalitarian oppression during the Second World War deserve a
: · war memoriaL
It has been a source of unending mystery why those who lost· their
lives in the war and those who survived have not been honored by a
memorial even at .this late date.
That situation appears to be on its way to being corrected. About
$92 million of the SI 00 million goal needed to start work on i
memorial in Washington has been raised. On Thunday, the US. Fine
Arts Commission approved a design for the memorial.
The possibility that construction could begin by Veterans Day this
November seems to be more within reach.
·
We say: It's about time.
The memorial, in D.C. honoring Korean and Vietnam veterans are
richly deserved. Korea, the so-called "forgotten war," is t:le subject of
a 50th anniversary celebration renewing memories and the purpose
of the conflict. In the yean since Vietnam ended, the war still stir.; the
emotions of its survivon and their families.
But somehow, World War II ranks in a class by itself.
"World War II was the defining moment of the 20th century,"
American Legion National Commander Butch Miller said last weekwhen testifying before the Fine Arts Commission.
"To future generations, the World War II Memorial will define the
measure of our nation'• gratitude to the men and wonlen to whom
we owe our freedom;' he added.
Miller's summation is quite apt. The totality of the conflict is well
documented. America committed 16 million people to the war, with
400,000 losing their lives.
These cold figures may not mean much on a casual read. But when
you consider that it was a massive amount of humanity from all
around the country who fo~ght the war, the imp;u;t is. dearer. And
what they accomphsbed with their sacrifice deserves our appreciation.
A monument is one means of 1howing our gratitude. Complaints
that it wiU clutter up the view along the National Mall are ridiculous.
People come to Washington to see the monuments to our nation's
history. What's one more, especially for a part of our heritage that has
been sorely under-represented in that regard?

NITRO (AP) - A coal company has been ~ited for clisc hargmg
aod mine drainage: u1to Hl Upshur Co unty stream .

ate thre,Jt to the public he,Jith ," Castle said.
Shreve sa id ChL'YL'Ill'll' f.lCL) a fine ba)ed o n fa non Including negh genCL', pa st viola tJ uns ;md seriou snl"ss of tht.• \'Jobtion.

A case where a big one got daway fr~m court
At the level of the Supreme Court, appeUate
jurisprudence takes on some of the characteristics of deeP,- sea fishing. Most of the big cases
are caught, but now and then a big fish gets
away. On June 12 the high court voted 6-3 to
throw a big one back.
• Th:s was the case of Darwinism in the public schools ofTangipahoa Parish, La. The state
requires that Darwin's theory of evolution be
taught in both elementary and high schools.
In Tangipahoa, some 60 miles north of New
Orleans, the local school board made an
earnest attempt to placate the 95 petcent ·of
school parents who are said to believe, to the
contrary, in the account set forth in Genesis
1: 1-31. They take these things seriously in the
Bible Belt. - - Thus the parish school board adopted a resolution. Teacher.; would be required to read a
formal disclaimer before they began the
course of study. The required. statement was
ineptly phrased, but its meaning was clear:
"It is hereby recognized by the Tangipahoa
Parish Board of Education that the lesson to
be prese nted, regarding the origin of life and
matter, is known as the Scientific Theory .of
Evolution and should be presented to infonjl
students of the scientific concept and not
intended to influence or dissuade the biblical
version 'o f creation or any other concept.
"It is furth er recognized by the Board of
Education that it is the basic right and privilege of each student to form his / her own
opinion or maintain beliefs taught by parents
on this very important matter of the origin of
life and matter. Students are urged to exercise
critical thinking and gather all information
possible and closely examine each alternative
toward fo rming an opinion."
Three parents ofTan gipahoa Parish sc hoolchildren sued for an injunction to prohibit

concerns of fundamentalist parents in this c:lSe
were deeply held. The disclaiming statement
amounted to no more than a suggestion that
students learn to think for themselves. What's
wrong with that'
In 1968, in a case from Arkansas, the
Supreme Court struck down a law prohibiting the teaching of evolution. In 1987, the
court Invalidated a Louisiana law requiring
that creation science be taught if evolution
were taught. Both decisions struck me as
UFS COLUMNIST
sound, but they were a far cry from the 5th
Circuit's decision nullifying the clumsy disreading of the statement. They won in the claimer in Tangipahoa Parish.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Ciccuit,
It may be that in refusing to hear the case,
where a three-judge panel denounced the_ the S!!P-!l'!l1e _CourJ. was. motivat.ed chiefly by
Introductory s1atement as a "sham." Speaking First Amel)dment fatigue. In recent yean the
through Judge Fortunato P. Benavides, the court has taken on one religious case after
panel ruled that the disclaimer had the pro- another. In the term that went into summer
hibited purpose of "protecting and maintain- recess last month, the court wrestled (though
ing a particular religious viewpoint, namely it didn't wrestle for long) with prayer at high
belief in the biblical version of creation." A . school football games. In another case, the
motion for reh~aring failed 8-7, and the case court tackled the complex problems of federwent up to the Supreme Court. There it died. al aid to sectarian schools in the form of comThe high court refused 6-3 to accept the case, puters and software. The issues are formidable .
and that was that.
Even so, for want of a fourth vote to hear
Justice Antonin Scalia, joined by ehief Jus- the Louisiana case, the high court leaves us in
tice William Rehnquist and Justice Clarence a position in which even a classroom discusThomas, voted to hear the parish's appeaL In sion of Genesis is effectively prohibited. This is
their view, the notion that this "innocuous" intellectually indefensible . .
disclaimer amounted to an endorsement of
·More than that, the optcome violates basic
religion "is quite simply absurd." They were constitutional principles of free speech and
disappointed that their colleagues would pro - free inquiry. I believe that a fixed star in our
hibit a local school district from even suggest- constitutional co nstellation is that "no official,
ing that "other theories of creation are worthy high or petty, can prescribe what shall b e
of their consideration ."
orthodox in matters of o pinion." That was the
The high court should have taken the case. high court's v1ew in 1943. It re mains a good
Nothing on earth was constitutionally wrong star to steer by.
in the resolution of the parish school board.
Nothing prevents a public body fro m
(lames ]. Kilparnck is a colunmist for U11iversal
acknowledging publi c concerns -- and the Press Syt~dica te.)

James

·Kilpatrick

CHARLESTON (AP) - West Virginia Public Broadcasting has
named Giles Snyder d!fector of news and public affairs.
Snyder will oversee the newly combmed television . radio , Internet and educational reso urces operation, the agency announced Fri~·

Snyder, who most recently served as a reporter, producer, host and
program director for Public Radio, has been with West Virginia
Public Broa&amp;as tin g sinc.c 1988
Before comi ng to the statewid e radio network, Snyder worked in
commernal radi o~ He 1~ a· g radu ate of Marshall UniversitY and li\·es
'i'n C harleston with his wife and son.

_Illegal aliens pulled over
C HARL ESTON (AP) - A rout m e rr"ffi c stop 111 Mmgo Cmmtv \'lddcd .1 surprise for Sr.ltt: Pollee 17 ilk ga l Mexi c m lllltni~Ll!HS
cram m ed msidc .1 mim,·.m.
Two tronpt.'rs pulkd O\'l'f th e \'.lll o n U.S. IZ.mHt' 1 Jl) 111
Willi.m1so n .1bout ..l-:10 p.m. ThllfS(by br..·r .ni ~L' of L'rr:HiL· dri\'lll g.
"Wt~ rhou ghr u · \\'.1 ~ .1 DUI .H firsr." ~.nd Trooper R.R . John~on.
Tht: ofli ct.'n Wt.'re told tht..• imn11gr.1lltS \\'l'rL' hc.1 ded to North
C:arolm ;t to find work.
" lt's the best \\'L' co uld get o ur of them ... saiJ Johmon. "011ly o nl:"

of them spoke English ,md he \Yam ·r rell tluent."
The 16 111 L' ll and one woman \\'t:rl' t.tkt•n to Sout h\\·L'~ tt'fll
. Regional Jlil in Log.lll cl)Unty .md tr:~n st"crrcd I!HO the custody nf
the l111mi gr;mon and N;~turalizatJon Scr\'lct&gt; Friday.
" In o ur o tti cc, \\\.''ll fim sh pro cessing them today. then Wl''llmm\.•
tht•m to York . Pa.. for a dcport.lt\011 hearing probabl y within a week
or so," Clurh.·ston INS ~ uper\'iso r Fr:-t nk BL·verly s:t id Fri d,1y.
Bevaly o;:-tiJ the mHln grants L'IHL'red the U.S. :-tbout a \\'t't.' k ago lll
Na co, Ariz. They bought th~.· \'Jil jn Pho cnJx .m d th en hc.Hil'd
toward North Carohn,l. he sa11.l
The C lurlc:.·ston INS Ius pr&lt;KL'SSL'd 1X7 dl cg.ll Imtmgr,mts si nCL'
. last O cmber. J\~ore nuy have b1..·cn c.tp tun:d 111 the Northern Pan ha ndle .l rL'.l and proc1..·ssed through rhc Pmsbu rgh otlict:. Bc:\'erly

up. here was its prime casualty, a woman carrying on the fight amid the mortification
wrought by her own husband's outlandish nu sconduct.
Many people, including some close to me, see
Hillary entirely in this light. They look up to
her as their champion, smarr enough to be
future president, strong and downright good
enough to put up with a current president's
weaknesses. What other woman have they
known with such spunk, such panache, such
nerve. sui:h pristine, state-of-the-art political
goodness?
This is the stellar premise that will decide th e
contest for those not bound by l)nblinking
party loyalty. It explains as much as anything the
uproar this week over what Mrs. Clinto n said or
didn't say on election night in Little Rock a full
26 years ago.
I'm sorry, but most Amencans, and that

Only a politi cian claiming an extraordinary
moral and cultural statu re would claim to be
above such explosions of expletives, not excluding the ethnic variety.
Yet this is the message that !'resid ent Clinton
dehvered the orher day by phone to the editors
at the New York Daily News. He told them that
Hillary is mnocent, not jusr in this pathetic
claim of 26 year.; ago, but that 'he is totally
innocent : She ha s never, at any time, ever voiced
a negative thought about Jny ethnic, religious
or racial group. If we believe her daim, no such
thought has even entered her head. Ever'
This is the enduring, donunating question of
this campaign. If Hillary is truly a superior
American figure, she may well deserve to be the
United States senator from New York. If she
isn't, but dunks she IS, that may be a presumption even thiS liberal, welcoming state may be
unwilling ro ratify.

includes most politicians. do, on oc casion, get
angry. Whether it's on the highway after haVing
someone cut you off or in the heat of a hardfought political campaign, real people do let
loose with ever;y verbal arrow in their quiver.

(Cirris Matthews, chi if of tltc San Fra11cisco Examiners Washingron B14reat4, is host of "Hardball" on
CNBC and MSNBC cable channels. Tite 1999
edition of "Hardball'' was pt4blished by Ti111chsto11C
Books.)

7US.

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MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
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74Q.44t.2342

•'

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740-892-21158

200 M1ln St., Point Pleeunt.
304-e75o1333

w.v.;l•

•lppear to l1c a littl•· l1it
t'flllorsefill for II' hat II&lt;' 'd

her.

ffont;."
South Charleston Police Detect ive
Joe Compton

" He was jusr mad at tnl.:'. that's
why he did it ," Felty told WSAZ TV o n Friday. .
Felty said she and Tolliver 1· ~
an argun1ent at a local bar ea rl y
Thursday morning, and Tolliver
left. Felty said she went home at

later Thursday·

about 4 a.m.

parking the car, getting out .md

Flcming·s car, _w hich .was found
.

veillance camera captured him

Poltce sJy Tollavcr tlL·d

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University of Rio Grande

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grocery store parking lot. A .sur-

OHJO VALLEY

Zane P. Lazer, M.D.

111

" He (Tolliver) came 1n and h e leavi ng o·n foot, police said. ·
had already did it," she sa id. " He
Polic e say Tolliver has co nhad blood aU over him." ·
fessed.
Felty said Tolliver held her
" I ca n 't release exactly what
ho stage in her home for 12
hours . She said her SISter help ed his confession said. but he di d
her escape.
appear to be a latle bjt remors eToU1ver, 22, of Gaith ersburg,
Md ., was arrested Thursday at a ful for what he'd don e," said
Charleston 7 -Eleven by fou r city South C harlesto n Poli ce Dete cdete ctives investigating the cr im.e tive Jo e COmpto n .
who were taking a break . H e was
Tolliver cou ld face additional
arrested after he produced identi charge s of theft and kidnapping.
fication to purchase a beer.
To lliver was charged with
Authorities say Tolliver was
first-degree murder in the stabou t on bond for a Maryland carbing death of Mi chael Flcmmg,
21, of South Charleston at abo ut jacking c harge when the murder
3:20 a.m . Thursday. .
occurred.
__ S.tor.e security ca m eras showed
a man· walking into the store and
Let
with Flenu ng.
Fleming, 21, l1.1d worked at
the store for about I H month s. a
Go-~1art spokt'S\\'onun s.licl. H t•
died from multiple sub \\'OUJH.h
to hiS neck .
Funera l st.:-r \·in:~ w1ll bL· hL·ld
Mond:1y in Cl1.1p111.111\"llle . Hc•m-

The
12-Month

~eation~

' 11'/tat Iris &lt;:OJiji·ssiarr
said, hut lie did

Mellme Felty, of Charbton.
,,li d her boyfri e nd , Jmeph
NJthm iel Tolliver. had angc·r
m &lt;mageml'nt problems.

" Tht:rc are som~ Vl!ry
detailed tests that sti ll nec•d to
be done, J nd people gmng on

Surgery at Physiciar,s Outpatient Surgery Center, Belpre, OH
121 Third Ave., O.IHpoHI, Ohio

beC:lUSC hL WJS 111JJ .lt

co nduct.

tlut site :'It th1 ~ time could put
rh.n m JL'opJ rdy." h L· s.ud.
Earlier ti11S \\'eek, Wll-M :Ht
s.11d It wtll bm ld ;1 st'cond
Morga ntown -;torl' :~ l ong d1~.·
busy high\\',l\' L'\.1..'11 If the SLltL'
Di,·i swn. of Highw.tys rl·fuscs
{0 .1JIO\\' Jtl JCCt'SS n.nd.
A rulmg on th.1t acct'ss is
l'Xpected \\'Ithm a WL't'k. If It
i&gt; deni ed. Morn s said WJIMJrt may me e1ther rwo-lan1..·
StcwJrtstllw n Ro ,1d or narn)\v, \\·ind1ng Chestnut RidgeRoJd . both of whi c h uc 1mo

"I Col rr't release cxactl)'

C HARL ESTON
SOUTH
(AI') The !;lrlfn eud of .1
Maryland nun accused of f.1ully
subbing a South C harle ston cn n\TillL'ncc !!tor~ ck·rk s.1ys he Jid it

almost immedtately srru ggbn g

" It's not .1s nmp .mt ,l\ Ill other ..;r.nes," he s,nd . "They tcnd to be
travding through here."

The real question: Is Hillary better than us?
WASHINGTON - She thmks she 's better
than us.
That's the decisive issue in this year's New
York Senate race. It's not policy or politics or
personali ty. It's how voters react to how Hillary
Rodhain Clinton Views herself
· The first lady does not offer herself- both
ally and critic agree - . as one of th e people,
another kid-made-good from the neighborhood,. " One of the top hundred lawyers in the
country'" declared her earliest noti ces. A graduate of Wellesley ami Yale law, she entered the
White House as the most educated first lady in
history. We were getting. the new first lady herself let us know, rwo leader.; of presidential
stature for the pri ce of one.
We're talking about more than diplomas and
1Q here.
As a Senate cand1date, Mrs. Cli i1ton has brandished an image of unquestioned moral superiority.Who can forget her fim sighting as a New
York politician - that smart, gutsy barnstorming for '98 Senate candidate Chuck Schum er?
Far from being a player in th e Clinton cover-

WVPB names news director

the protest, which was to
begii1 Friday afternoon. It is
occum ng without the pernmsJOn of th e West Virginia
·universJty Foundation, wh1ch
owns the land.
Signs reading, "This is
sacred land," will be carried as
the protesters drum, build a
sacred fire and pray, organizer
Matt Sherman said.
" Anybody that wants to
j om us in a spirit of respect
and prayer is welcome to join
us," he Slid. " We even hope
people from Wal-Mart will
show up."
. The Site along state Route
705 was once hon1e to a
Mono.n gahela Indian village
known as Fort H1ll .
•. ~~\Jial-Mart
spa,Jcesperson
· Keith Morns said Thursday
he worries that bonfires on
the sit&lt; could affe&lt;:t carbon~
daring tests the state Hi storic
Pre ;ervatlon Society will

sa id .

'HARDBALL'

BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

C HARLESTON (A P) - H ardy County recotded\VesrVirginia's
lowest unempl oyment rate in June, 2.3 perce nt.
Overall, West Virginia's state un e mployment rate for Jun e was 5.6
percent.
Other cou nties with low unemployment rates were Jefferson, 2.5
percent, and Monon galia, 2.6; Berkeley, Z.S; Morgan , 2.9; Ohio and
Monroe, both 3.3; Doddridge and Brooke, both 3.5; Hancock, 3.6:
Preston and ,Hamp shue, both 4.1.
Calhoun County 's 14.5 percent unemployment rate was the
highest in the state .
Counties with unemployment rat es of I 0 percent or hi gher w ere :
,Mason , 14.2 percent; McDowell , 13.3; Pendl~ton , 12.9, Wm, 12 .3:
Mingo, 12.0; Barbour and lincoln, both 11.2 : Boone. 10.6; and
Wetzel. 10.3.

d~

MORGANTOWN (AP)
- Ind1an ,tctivJsts tighrmg a
prupuscd S15 million WaiMJrt .ne t:tking o\·e r tht• SHt'
for W hours this wee kend to
pr.1y for dt&gt;ad an cestors o n ce
bu n ecl thL•n:.
The
Ameri ca n
Indian
lv1ovc ment expect s as many as
I 00 su pporters to show up for

Mason co:s joblessness at 14.20/o

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Wai-Mart s1te

Suspect kills clerk
because of girlfriend

"I've worked for many food
service corporations in various
levels of management. The Fast
Forward program recognized 15
years of managerial experience
and offered 44 hours of credit for
life experiente toward a
bachelor's degree in Bus"incss
Management. I expect to be
finished with my degree
requirements by 2002."

Call Dale Whitt Today:
740-245-7325

I
I

.'

�,
.

_hnh_av;__'l_imit_·,_tnthul
_ _ _ _ ___;O..;;:;.

Junbav

P-Inion·

PageA4
Sundllf, July 23, 2000

SfAHlER.
l'is1:

'E.stiJDfisfid in1948

@m~ GW.INMI!t\

I \\QNDER

HOW EUAN S ~
1

GETTING AWN&amp;
..

Charita W. Govty
Publllhtr
R. Shewn Ltwll
Men~glng Editor

larry Boyer
Advtrtlalng Dlrtctor

WHO?

lfOO

atahlat@fuae.nel

1-i~Ufy

•

•

pational lun g disease fat:1lines and second in tobacco smoking, he
said.
The hmp1tal , whtch Ius l HO emplovees, provides reh abil1tat10n
services for stroke, orthopedic injurie s, arthriti s, pulmonary iJlnesscs, traumatic bram i1tiury, amptHatmn and spinal cord inJUry. It IS
owned by H ealthSouth Corporation of Blflllmgham, ALl .

Mlilltillr

KINGWOOD (AP)- Politi cs was not a
factot in Pre ston County Sheriff Cecil
Stra\~ser's refusal to hire an app li ca,nt who is
friend s with the sons of a former pol itical
foe-, a ciVil servi ce co mmission says.
' John H . Bryan had alleged that Strawser
rejected his applic&gt;tion for a deputy's posi tion because he is friends with Deputy Paul
Pritt and his brother, John Pritt, sons of the
late Charles Cline, who was the head of the
county Demo crati c Executlve Committee,
Cline did nor support Strawser in the
19% Democratic priu1ary.
Th e C ivil Servi ce Commission for
Deputy Sheriffs ruled Friday that the sheriff
d1d n ot discriminate agamst Bryan because
of his fncndship with the Pritts .

Bryan. correctional o ffi cers Frank Owens

and Gary Garlens. Deputy Ch~rles Treft Jnd
Sgt. Jeff Robert so n all testiftt·d that Scrawsrr
had rota them' in·· sepa rate co nv ers~ltiOns he
would not hire Bryan becau se of his co nnecrion ro Cline.
"He said h e had concerns to th at effect.
that. I was fn ends w ith the wrong peo ple,"
S&gt;id Bryan, a R epubli ca n.
Treft sa td Strawsl."r ''has a real Issue about
loyalty and wams everyone to be lo ya l to
hm1 ."

StrawSer denied rhat :my of the co nVersa-

ti ons had occurred.
" I have never sa 1d that . to the best of my
knowledge, th at 1 didn't trust J o hn Bryan:·
he sa1d.

"M y ISSUt.' nO\\' with lovalry IS with ~t· \'l."r­
al deput\' &gt;hcriffs &lt;liKe wluc I call th e May
44 cqup," &gt;rrawsl'r \.l l ~. n: tl·rr111g w tht
Co unt y CommJs,.wn ·.., Jrt e mpt to S(np hun
of h1s pohf..: po\\'t: rs ::tftn he .111d t\\'O other
o ffi ce rs were a c ru ~ ed of sp y1ng on J c puncs
wJth survedLlncc.' rqulplllt' JH .
A cm.: ult J ll ~i;~c rc . , l tHc d Str.nvs ei-'s
nHhuritv M .t,. ~; . T he t ll lllll1J ~s i o n bter
filed .1 l~w~ uJ't . ~ r L" bn g a·&gt; r ~· JJe\'1..' the shertff
of his poli c e pn\\'L' r., A C rlllllllJ l 111\·c. • stJgatlOn of the spy111 g .dk g.\ t ln lh 1\ coll{Jn U!Il g.
Lt. j oe..· SuiL'\. \\' ho Jnt l'I' \'J ~·\\Td Hr y .m and
f\YO ochn r.l!ld!d.u v . . ,,1 1d hL' &lt;..!tJ not bdteve
.l ll)' \\'Cfl' l}U,J!ttl nJ

Firm cited for polluting steam

OUR VIEW

•

Deservtng
•

center plans expansion

PRINCETON (AP) - HealthSourh Southern Hill s Rehabilitation Hospital plans an $800,000 expansion that w1ll add six beds . ..
' The project is sc heduled to begi·n in Aub'U St an-d be completed in
2001, Chief Execu tive Officer Ken Howell told members of the
Prin~eton Rotary Clqb o n Fnday.
"There is a high need fo r health care serv1ces in WestVirgm1a and

Co. 'I ~rilll....,.._ 11•l.u• atbrwll• ,._

Page A5

Decision not to hire deputy applicant wasn't political

:: MOUNTAIN BRIEFS

n 't have a healthy popu lation."
West Virginia r:mks tirst 111 ob~s a ty, smok eless tobacco use, occ u-

Unrn tv Ill• MUor.,. ......... n.., 1'-o.U H lnl Ilia JOO worb. AU '-tin .,.. subj«t
to tfliMr.,. ,.,.. h n,llft .U llwlMMIMrm P4 u/qluHt1 11a1111hr. No 11111/pld Un1rs wiU
H '"bli.tltttl. lAitnl ,....., h bt , _ ,.,,., U4mlltt6lu•n, "ol ,.,..oiUilillft.
Tll•opUiiMI ,.,..,•• ,.tAl e.u.u ttlow.,. Mteo.,....,u qfdlr Olelo

~

southern WcstVirginia .'' Howell said. " WestVirgmta as a state does-

Dlene Key Hill
Controller

~unbdv 1!:nms ·i&gt;e nttnel •

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

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Re~ab

~imes· Jentintl

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, July 23, the 205th day of 2000. There are 161
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 23, 1885, Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th president of the
United Stares, died in Mount McGregor, NY. at age 63.
On this date:
.
In 1829, William Austin Burt of Mount Vernon, Mich. , received a
patent for his typographer - a forerunner of the typewriter.
In 1886, New York saloonkeeper Steve Brodie claimed to have
made a daredevil plunge from the Brooklyn Bridge into the East
River.
In 1914, Austria-Hungary issued an ultimatum to Serbia following the killing of Archduke Francis Ferdinand by a Serb assassin ; the
dispute led to World War L
In 1945, French Marshal Henri Petain, who had h eadel'\ the Vichy
government during World War II, went on trial, c harged with treason . (He was condemned to death, but his sentence was co nm1Uted.)
In 1951 , Henri Petain died in prison .
In 1952, Egyptian military officers led by Gamal Abdel Nasser
overthrew King Farouk I.
In 1967, rioting that claimed some 43 lives erupted in Detroit.
In 1977, a jury in Washington, D.C., convicted 12 Ha nafi Muslims of c har~es stemming from the hostage siege at three buildings
the previous March .
In 1985, bandleader Kay Kyser, known for his "Kollege of Mu sical Knowledge," died in Chapel Hill , N .C. , at age 79.
In 1986, Britain's Prince Andrew married Sarah Ferguson at
Westminster Abbey in London. (The couple divorced in 1996.)
Ten years ago: President Bmh announced his choice of Judge
David Sou ter of New Hampshire to succeed retiring Justice William
J. Brennan on th'e U.S. Supreme Coun.
Five years ago: In a new get-tough approach, the United Nations
ordered the first combat unit from its rapid reaction force to Sarajevo to take out any rebel Serb gun! that fued at U.N. peacekeepers.
One year ago: Members of the Kennedy family gathered in New
York City for a private memorial Ma!5 a week after John F. Kennedy
Jr. , his wife, Carolyn, and her .sister, Lauren Bessette, died in a plane
crash off Martha's Vineyard. Space shuttle Columbia blasted off with
the world's most powerful X-ray telescope and Eileen Collins , the
first woman to command a U.S. space Hight. M orocco's King H assan II died at age 70 . Woodstock '99 opened in Rome, N .Y.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Gloria DeHaven is 75. Actor Ca lvert
DeForest is 72. Supreme Court Justice Anth ony M . Kennedy is 64.
Radio personality Don lrnus is 60. Country si nger Tony J oe White
is 57. Rock singer David Essex is 53. Actor Larry Manetti is 53 .
Actres1 Belinda Montgomery is 50.

Indian group

The scltc.: 0! \·iswn ofEm·ironmt:ntal Protec tion i!'!su ed:. notiCL' ·of
viobuon to Cbc:vc:nne Sale~ Co. Inc. t(Jr disclurg mg ac id nun t'
drain.1 g:e from .1 ;;~d tm ent pond into Pt·c k's Run . :1 tribut ary of rlw
H.u ckh :mnon ll..t\ 't'r. .l ~t·ncy I )irc..•cror Mih· C.1 ~lk ~.ud Frid.1y.
. C.lstk s.11d tht• dtsliu rge tK l llrrc:d July 1&lt;) .lt Chc..•yc:nnt' S.de·.' ro.d

stages vigil. at

prt•p;trJtlOil pl.mt .lllJ rt'fli St' pil L' nc.u Hodgesn lk.
Ft sh k_i\kd by ~ hl' di . . clurgc: Wt'ft' found up to. :! lllik s lh nYil stn:.lm. s :~td Fr.mk Shrt'\'l', .m in spc..·..: tor supc:n·tsor wah th t• DEl' \,
Otlicc._• of Mtnltl g .md Rt·cLHn .mon.
.
"Tht s w :ls .111 unforrutl:ltl' incidc'tH but dor..·s nm po'\L' ,111 llll ll1 l' di -

Hilr memorial gets
past another hurdle
They have come to be known as "the greatest generation .''
The men and women who gave their all to the Allied effort to
: defeat totalitarian oppression during the Second World War deserve a
: · war memoriaL
It has been a source of unending mystery why those who lost· their
lives in the war and those who survived have not been honored by a
memorial even at .this late date.
That situation appears to be on its way to being corrected. About
$92 million of the SI 00 million goal needed to start work on i
memorial in Washington has been raised. On Thunday, the US. Fine
Arts Commission approved a design for the memorial.
The possibility that construction could begin by Veterans Day this
November seems to be more within reach.
·
We say: It's about time.
The memorial, in D.C. honoring Korean and Vietnam veterans are
richly deserved. Korea, the so-called "forgotten war," is t:le subject of
a 50th anniversary celebration renewing memories and the purpose
of the conflict. In the yean since Vietnam ended, the war still stir.; the
emotions of its survivon and their families.
But somehow, World War II ranks in a class by itself.
"World War II was the defining moment of the 20th century,"
American Legion National Commander Butch Miller said last weekwhen testifying before the Fine Arts Commission.
"To future generations, the World War II Memorial will define the
measure of our nation'• gratitude to the men and wonlen to whom
we owe our freedom;' he added.
Miller's summation is quite apt. The totality of the conflict is well
documented. America committed 16 million people to the war, with
400,000 losing their lives.
These cold figures may not mean much on a casual read. But when
you consider that it was a massive amount of humanity from all
around the country who fo~ght the war, the imp;u;t is. dearer. And
what they accomphsbed with their sacrifice deserves our appreciation.
A monument is one means of 1howing our gratitude. Complaints
that it wiU clutter up the view along the National Mall are ridiculous.
People come to Washington to see the monuments to our nation's
history. What's one more, especially for a part of our heritage that has
been sorely under-represented in that regard?

NITRO (AP) - A coal company has been ~ited for clisc hargmg
aod mine drainage: u1to Hl Upshur Co unty stream .

ate thre,Jt to the public he,Jith ," Castle said.
Shreve sa id ChL'YL'Ill'll' f.lCL) a fine ba)ed o n fa non Including negh genCL', pa st viola tJ uns ;md seriou snl"ss of tht.• \'Jobtion.

A case where a big one got daway fr~m court
At the level of the Supreme Court, appeUate
jurisprudence takes on some of the characteristics of deeP,- sea fishing. Most of the big cases
are caught, but now and then a big fish gets
away. On June 12 the high court voted 6-3 to
throw a big one back.
• Th:s was the case of Darwinism in the public schools ofTangipahoa Parish, La. The state
requires that Darwin's theory of evolution be
taught in both elementary and high schools.
In Tangipahoa, some 60 miles north of New
Orleans, the local school board made an
earnest attempt to placate the 95 petcent ·of
school parents who are said to believe, to the
contrary, in the account set forth in Genesis
1: 1-31. They take these things seriously in the
Bible Belt. - - Thus the parish school board adopted a resolution. Teacher.; would be required to read a
formal disclaimer before they began the
course of study. The required. statement was
ineptly phrased, but its meaning was clear:
"It is hereby recognized by the Tangipahoa
Parish Board of Education that the lesson to
be prese nted, regarding the origin of life and
matter, is known as the Scientific Theory .of
Evolution and should be presented to infonjl
students of the scientific concept and not
intended to influence or dissuade the biblical
version 'o f creation or any other concept.
"It is furth er recognized by the Board of
Education that it is the basic right and privilege of each student to form his / her own
opinion or maintain beliefs taught by parents
on this very important matter of the origin of
life and matter. Students are urged to exercise
critical thinking and gather all information
possible and closely examine each alternative
toward fo rming an opinion."
Three parents ofTan gipahoa Parish sc hoolchildren sued for an injunction to prohibit

concerns of fundamentalist parents in this c:lSe
were deeply held. The disclaiming statement
amounted to no more than a suggestion that
students learn to think for themselves. What's
wrong with that'
In 1968, in a case from Arkansas, the
Supreme Court struck down a law prohibiting the teaching of evolution. In 1987, the
court Invalidated a Louisiana law requiring
that creation science be taught if evolution
were taught. Both decisions struck me as
UFS COLUMNIST
sound, but they were a far cry from the 5th
Circuit's decision nullifying the clumsy disreading of the statement. They won in the claimer in Tangipahoa Parish.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Ciccuit,
It may be that in refusing to hear the case,
where a three-judge panel denounced the_ the S!!P-!l'!l1e _CourJ. was. motivat.ed chiefly by
Introductory s1atement as a "sham." Speaking First Amel)dment fatigue. In recent yean the
through Judge Fortunato P. Benavides, the court has taken on one religious case after
panel ruled that the disclaimer had the pro- another. In the term that went into summer
hibited purpose of "protecting and maintain- recess last month, the court wrestled (though
ing a particular religious viewpoint, namely it didn't wrestle for long) with prayer at high
belief in the biblical version of creation." A . school football games. In another case, the
motion for reh~aring failed 8-7, and the case court tackled the complex problems of federwent up to the Supreme Court. There it died. al aid to sectarian schools in the form of comThe high court refused 6-3 to accept the case, puters and software. The issues are formidable .
and that was that.
Even so, for want of a fourth vote to hear
Justice Antonin Scalia, joined by ehief Jus- the Louisiana case, the high court leaves us in
tice William Rehnquist and Justice Clarence a position in which even a classroom discusThomas, voted to hear the parish's appeaL In sion of Genesis is effectively prohibited. This is
their view, the notion that this "innocuous" intellectually indefensible . .
disclaimer amounted to an endorsement of
·More than that, the optcome violates basic
religion "is quite simply absurd." They were constitutional principles of free speech and
disappointed that their colleagues would pro - free inquiry. I believe that a fixed star in our
hibit a local school district from even suggest- constitutional co nstellation is that "no official,
ing that "other theories of creation are worthy high or petty, can prescribe what shall b e
of their consideration ."
orthodox in matters of o pinion." That was the
The high court should have taken the case. high court's v1ew in 1943. It re mains a good
Nothing on earth was constitutionally wrong star to steer by.
in the resolution of the parish school board.
Nothing prevents a public body fro m
(lames ]. Kilparnck is a colunmist for U11iversal
acknowledging publi c concerns -- and the Press Syt~dica te.)

James

·Kilpatrick

CHARLESTON (AP) - West Virginia Public Broadcasting has
named Giles Snyder d!fector of news and public affairs.
Snyder will oversee the newly combmed television . radio , Internet and educational reso urces operation, the agency announced Fri~·

Snyder, who most recently served as a reporter, producer, host and
program director for Public Radio, has been with West Virginia
Public Broa&amp;as tin g sinc.c 1988
Before comi ng to the statewid e radio network, Snyder worked in
commernal radi o~ He 1~ a· g radu ate of Marshall UniversitY and li\·es
'i'n C harleston with his wife and son.

_Illegal aliens pulled over
C HARL ESTON (AP) - A rout m e rr"ffi c stop 111 Mmgo Cmmtv \'lddcd .1 surprise for Sr.ltt: Pollee 17 ilk ga l Mexi c m lllltni~Ll!HS
cram m ed msidc .1 mim,·.m.
Two tronpt.'rs pulkd O\'l'f th e \'.lll o n U.S. IZ.mHt' 1 Jl) 111
Willi.m1so n .1bout ..l-:10 p.m. ThllfS(by br..·r .ni ~L' of L'rr:HiL· dri\'lll g.
"Wt~ rhou ghr u · \\'.1 ~ .1 DUI .H firsr." ~.nd Trooper R.R . John~on.
Tht: ofli ct.'n Wt.'re told tht..• imn11gr.1lltS \\'l'rL' hc.1 ded to North
C:arolm ;t to find work.
" lt's the best \\'L' co uld get o ur of them ... saiJ Johmon. "011ly o nl:"

of them spoke English ,md he \Yam ·r rell tluent."
The 16 111 L' ll and one woman \\'t:rl' t.tkt•n to Sout h\\·L'~ tt'fll
. Regional Jlil in Log.lll cl)Unty .md tr:~n st"crrcd I!HO the custody nf
the l111mi gr;mon and N;~turalizatJon Scr\'lct&gt; Friday.
" In o ur o tti cc, \\\.''ll fim sh pro cessing them today. then Wl''llmm\.•
tht•m to York . Pa.. for a dcport.lt\011 hearing probabl y within a week
or so," Clurh.·ston INS ~ uper\'iso r Fr:-t nk BL·verly s:t id Fri d,1y.
Bevaly o;:-tiJ the mHln grants L'IHL'red the U.S. :-tbout a \\'t't.' k ago lll
Na co, Ariz. They bought th~.· \'Jil jn Pho cnJx .m d th en hc.Hil'd
toward North Carohn,l. he sa11.l
The C lurlc:.·ston INS Ius pr&lt;KL'SSL'd 1X7 dl cg.ll Imtmgr,mts si nCL'
. last O cmber. J\~ore nuy have b1..·cn c.tp tun:d 111 the Northern Pan ha ndle .l rL'.l and proc1..·ssed through rhc Pmsbu rgh otlict:. Bc:\'erly

up. here was its prime casualty, a woman carrying on the fight amid the mortification
wrought by her own husband's outlandish nu sconduct.
Many people, including some close to me, see
Hillary entirely in this light. They look up to
her as their champion, smarr enough to be
future president, strong and downright good
enough to put up with a current president's
weaknesses. What other woman have they
known with such spunk, such panache, such
nerve. sui:h pristine, state-of-the-art political
goodness?
This is the stellar premise that will decide th e
contest for those not bound by l)nblinking
party loyalty. It explains as much as anything the
uproar this week over what Mrs. Clinto n said or
didn't say on election night in Little Rock a full
26 years ago.
I'm sorry, but most Amencans, and that

Only a politi cian claiming an extraordinary
moral and cultural statu re would claim to be
above such explosions of expletives, not excluding the ethnic variety.
Yet this is the message that !'resid ent Clinton
dehvered the orher day by phone to the editors
at the New York Daily News. He told them that
Hillary is mnocent, not jusr in this pathetic
claim of 26 year.; ago, but that 'he is totally
innocent : She ha s never, at any time, ever voiced
a negative thought about Jny ethnic, religious
or racial group. If we believe her daim, no such
thought has even entered her head. Ever'
This is the enduring, donunating question of
this campaign. If Hillary is truly a superior
American figure, she may well deserve to be the
United States senator from New York. If she
isn't, but dunks she IS, that may be a presumption even thiS liberal, welcoming state may be
unwilling ro ratify.

includes most politicians. do, on oc casion, get
angry. Whether it's on the highway after haVing
someone cut you off or in the heat of a hardfought political campaign, real people do let
loose with ever;y verbal arrow in their quiver.

(Cirris Matthews, chi if of tltc San Fra11cisco Examiners Washingron B14reat4, is host of "Hardball" on
CNBC and MSNBC cable channels. Tite 1999
edition of "Hardball'' was pt4blished by Ti111chsto11C
Books.)

7US.

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111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

740-892-21158

200 M1ln St., Point Pleeunt.
304-e75o1333

w.v.;l•

•lppear to l1c a littl•· l1it
t'flllorsefill for II' hat II&lt;' 'd

her.

ffont;."
South Charleston Police Detect ive
Joe Compton

" He was jusr mad at tnl.:'. that's
why he did it ," Felty told WSAZ TV o n Friday. .
Felty said she and Tolliver 1· ~
an argun1ent at a local bar ea rl y
Thursday morning, and Tolliver
left. Felty said she went home at

later Thursday·

about 4 a.m.

parking the car, getting out .md

Flcming·s car, _w hich .was found
.

veillance camera captured him

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OHJO VALLEY

Zane P. Lazer, M.D.

111

" He (Tolliver) came 1n and h e leavi ng o·n foot, police said. ·
had already did it," she sa id. " He
Polic e say Tolliver has co nhad blood aU over him." ·
fessed.
Felty said Tolliver held her
" I ca n 't release exactly what
ho stage in her home for 12
hours . She said her SISter help ed his confession said. but he di d
her escape.
appear to be a latle bjt remors eToU1ver, 22, of Gaith ersburg,
Md ., was arrested Thursday at a ful for what he'd don e," said
Charleston 7 -Eleven by fou r city South C harlesto n Poli ce Dete cdete ctives investigating the cr im.e tive Jo e COmpto n .
who were taking a break . H e was
Tolliver cou ld face additional
arrested after he produced identi charge s of theft and kidnapping.
fication to purchase a beer.
To lliver was charged with
Authorities say Tolliver was
first-degree murder in the stabou t on bond for a Maryland carbing death of Mi chael Flcmmg,
21, of South Charleston at abo ut jacking c harge when the murder
3:20 a.m . Thursday. .
occurred.
__ S.tor.e security ca m eras showed
a man· walking into the store and
Let
with Flenu ng.
Fleming, 21, l1.1d worked at
the store for about I H month s. a
Go-~1art spokt'S\\'onun s.licl. H t•
died from multiple sub \\'OUJH.h
to hiS neck .
Funera l st.:-r \·in:~ w1ll bL· hL·ld
Mond:1y in Cl1.1p111.111\"llle . Hc•m-

The
12-Month

~eation~

' 11'/tat Iris &lt;:OJiji·ssiarr
said, hut lie did

Mellme Felty, of Charbton.
,,li d her boyfri e nd , Jmeph
NJthm iel Tolliver. had angc·r
m &lt;mageml'nt problems.

" Tht:rc are som~ Vl!ry
detailed tests that sti ll nec•d to
be done, J nd people gmng on

Surgery at Physiciar,s Outpatient Surgery Center, Belpre, OH
121 Third Ave., O.IHpoHI, Ohio

beC:lUSC hL WJS 111JJ .lt

co nduct.

tlut site :'It th1 ~ time could put
rh.n m JL'opJ rdy." h L· s.ud.
Earlier ti11S \\'eek, Wll-M :Ht
s.11d It wtll bm ld ;1 st'cond
Morga ntown -;torl' :~ l ong d1~.·
busy high\\',l\' L'\.1..'11 If the SLltL'
Di,·i swn. of Highw.tys rl·fuscs
{0 .1JIO\\' Jtl JCCt'SS n.nd.
A rulmg on th.1t acct'ss is
l'Xpected \\'Ithm a WL't'k. If It
i&gt; deni ed. Morn s said WJIMJrt may me e1ther rwo-lan1..·
StcwJrtstllw n Ro ,1d or narn)\v, \\·ind1ng Chestnut RidgeRoJd . both of whi c h uc 1mo

"I Col rr't release cxactl)'

C HARL ESTON
SOUTH
(AI') The !;lrlfn eud of .1
Maryland nun accused of f.1ully
subbing a South C harle ston cn n\TillL'ncc !!tor~ ck·rk s.1ys he Jid it

almost immedtately srru ggbn g

" It's not .1s nmp .mt ,l\ Ill other ..;r.nes," he s,nd . "They tcnd to be
travding through here."

The real question: Is Hillary better than us?
WASHINGTON - She thmks she 's better
than us.
That's the decisive issue in this year's New
York Senate race. It's not policy or politics or
personali ty. It's how voters react to how Hillary
Rodhain Clinton Views herself
· The first lady does not offer herself- both
ally and critic agree - . as one of th e people,
another kid-made-good from the neighborhood,. " One of the top hundred lawyers in the
country'" declared her earliest noti ces. A graduate of Wellesley ami Yale law, she entered the
White House as the most educated first lady in
history. We were getting. the new first lady herself let us know, rwo leader.; of presidential
stature for the pri ce of one.
We're talking about more than diplomas and
1Q here.
As a Senate cand1date, Mrs. Cli i1ton has brandished an image of unquestioned moral superiority.Who can forget her fim sighting as a New
York politician - that smart, gutsy barnstorming for '98 Senate candidate Chuck Schum er?
Far from being a player in th e Clinton cover-

WVPB names news director

the protest, which was to
begii1 Friday afternoon. It is
occum ng without the pernmsJOn of th e West Virginia
·universJty Foundation, wh1ch
owns the land.
Signs reading, "This is
sacred land," will be carried as
the protesters drum, build a
sacred fire and pray, organizer
Matt Sherman said.
" Anybody that wants to
j om us in a spirit of respect
and prayer is welcome to join
us," he Slid. " We even hope
people from Wal-Mart will
show up."
. The Site along state Route
705 was once hon1e to a
Mono.n gahela Indian village
known as Fort H1ll .
•. ~~\Jial-Mart
spa,Jcesperson
· Keith Morns said Thursday
he worries that bonfires on
the sit&lt; could affe&lt;:t carbon~
daring tests the state Hi storic
Pre ;ervatlon Society will

sa id .

'HARDBALL'

BY CHRIS MATTHEWS

C HARLESTON (A P) - H ardy County recotded\VesrVirginia's
lowest unempl oyment rate in June, 2.3 perce nt.
Overall, West Virginia's state un e mployment rate for Jun e was 5.6
percent.
Other cou nties with low unemployment rates were Jefferson, 2.5
percent, and Monon galia, 2.6; Berkeley, Z.S; Morgan , 2.9; Ohio and
Monroe, both 3.3; Doddridge and Brooke, both 3.5; Hancock, 3.6:
Preston and ,Hamp shue, both 4.1.
Calhoun County 's 14.5 percent unemployment rate was the
highest in the state .
Counties with unemployment rat es of I 0 percent or hi gher w ere :
,Mason , 14.2 percent; McDowell , 13.3; Pendl~ton , 12.9, Wm, 12 .3:
Mingo, 12.0; Barbour and lincoln, both 11.2 : Boone. 10.6; and
Wetzel. 10.3.

d~

MORGANTOWN (AP)
- Ind1an ,tctivJsts tighrmg a
prupuscd S15 million WaiMJrt .ne t:tking o\·e r tht• SHt'
for W hours this wee kend to
pr.1y for dt&gt;ad an cestors o n ce
bu n ecl thL•n:.
The
Ameri ca n
Indian
lv1ovc ment expect s as many as
I 00 su pporters to show up for

Mason co:s joblessness at 14.20/o

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

Wai-Mart s1te

Suspect kills clerk
because of girlfriend

"I've worked for many food
service corporations in various
levels of management. The Fast
Forward program recognized 15
years of managerial experience
and offered 44 hours of credit for
life experiente toward a
bachelor's degree in Bus"incss
Management. I expect to be
finished with my degree
requirements by 2002."

Call Dale Whitt Today:
740-245-7325

I
I

.'

�•

. Pege A&amp; • &amp;unbap ffimr• -&amp;tnlinrl

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt • Galllpc;lla, ,Ohio • Point Pleaaant, WV

Justice
flam Page A1

•

Patsy Koster

•

Ohio," she added.
· Her dissent in tort reform was
based on her belief that every citizen has the right to go to court,
"that if they choose to go to
court, they should have access to
the court."
, Resnick is opposed by Terrence O 'Donnell, a Republican
appellate judge.
As part of her stop in Gallia
County, Resnick toured the
Rockwell Automation plant and
visited the Area Agency on Aging
District 7 office.
Resnick's candidacy received a
boost from State Sen. Michael

PEDRO - Patsy Koster, tJ5, Pedro, &lt;lied Thurs&lt;lay,Ju1y-20, 2UOO in
King~ Daughters Medical Center, Ashland, Ky.
Born July 28, 1934 in Ironton, daughter of the late Edward Gorman
and Gladys Wilson Gorman Sternitsky, she' was a homemaker.
Surviving are her husband', Earl E. Koster; a son, Earl J. Qoyce) Koster
of Kitts Hill; a daughter, Susan Koster, of the home; two grandchildren;
two brothers, Harry "Bing" Gorman and Arnold Gorman, both of
Granton, Wis.; a SISter, Doris Cremeans of Fairborn; a halt:.brother,
. Mike Sternitsky ofWisconsin; a half-sister, Janet Sternitsky ofWiscon, sin; and her stepfather, David Sternitsky of Granton.
She was also preceded in death by two granchildren, Geneva Marie
.Koster and Jeffrey Koster Jr.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Monday in Lawrence Furnace
Cemetery, with the Rev. Jim Lee Cremeans officiating. Friends may
. call at Phillips Funeral Home, Ironton, after I p.m. Monday.

Nathanial David Monis

Park

PROCTORVILLE - Nathania] David Morris, 2 months, Proctorville, died Friday, July 21,2000 in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington,

.

w~ .

from Page AI
Born May 13, 2000 in Huntington, he was the son of David and
Kimberly Earl Morris.
.
·Regular campsites are avail: Surviving in addition to his parents are two brothe~. Eddie Adkins
.
~nd Austin Morris; maternal grandparents, Glenn and Karen Earl of able for $10 a night.
to
the
park
can
also
Visitors
Proctorville; his maternal great-grandmother, Margaret J. Massey of
enjoy
quality
fishing
and
boating
Beckley, W.Va.; maternal great-grandparents, Earnest and Virginia Earl
of Proctorville; paternal grandfather, Michael Morris of Barboursville, on the facility's 108 acre stocked
WVa.; paternal grandmother, Yvonne Sutherland oi Hurricane, WVa.; lake, which is located within the
paternal great-grandparents, Robert and Velva Haston of Ronceverte, park's boundaries.
Anglers can enjoy an abunW.Va.; and aunts and uncles.
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home, Proc- dance of crappie, large-mouth
torville, with the Rev. Ronnie Tyree officiating. Friends may call at the bass, bluegill and catfish, providing that a valid Ohio fishing
·. funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
license is procured.
Canoes, paddleboats, row
boats and splash boats can even
: PROCTORVILLE - · Fred Sanders, 64, Proctorville, died Friday, k rented, along with camping
and boating supplies, at a counJuly 21,2000 in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Born June 13, 1936 in East Lynn, WVa., son of the late George and try store that sits adjacent to the
Dalla Davidson Sanders, he was a member of 26th Street Church of lake.
A boat ramp that was built for
Christ in Juntington.
He was also preceded m death by his first wife, Agnes Merritt convenient access to the Ohio
River was built in 1990 and
·Sanders.
Surviving are his wife, Bernice Ray Sanders; two daughters, Duane allows campgoers the opportu·(Lesha) Adkins of Milton, WVa., and Tina (Steven) Ellis of Lancaster; nity to experience various activlhree sons, Fred (Sharon) Sanders Jr. of Proctorville, Brent (Kimberly) ities outside of the park.
"This park is Ohio's best-kept
Ray ofKenova,WVa., and Bruce Ray of Savannah, Ga.; 10 grandchilsecret," said Park Manager
dren; and a brother, Billy Joe Saunders of Branchland, WVa.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville,_ Randy Wachter. "Even though
with Minister Alan Cole officiating. Burial will be in Rome Cemetery. we get a number of visitors, the
park is still under-utilized."
Friends may call at the funeral home from 4-8 p.m. Sunday.
According to Wachter, the
Contributions may be made to 26th Street Church of Christ Buildpark
has won an award from the
ing Fund.
state for excellence in customer
service three years in a row.
"! would believe that we are
COOLVILLE- Jeanette Sue Salser, 40, Coolville, died Friday, July probably favored to win the
award again this year," said
21, 2000 at her residence.
Born March 14, 1960 in Columbus, daughter of the late Jack Wachter, "however, we are
Gearllart, and Juanita Seagraves Ratliff of Darwin, she was a homemaker.
Surviving in additiotrtu herrnother are her husband, Raymond
Salser; three sons, Ronald L (Deborah Faye) Diles Jr., J~ck Eugene
(Rachael May) Diles and Joseph Allen Diles, all of Nelsonville; six
PageAl
grandchildren; a sister, Betry Jean (Mike) Ball of Columbus; several
nieces and nephews; and five great-nieces and nephews.
incomes.
She was also preceded in death by a sister and an aunt.
" Now, we should have tax cuts
. Graveside services will.be I p.m. Monday in Greenwood Cemetery,
this
year, but they should be the
Racine, with the Rev. N.L. Russell officiating. There will be no visitaright ones, targeted to working
tion. Arrangements are by Ewing Funera l Home, Pomeroy.
families that help our economy
grow - not tax breaks that help
only . a few while putting our
prosperity at risk," Clinton said.
Less costly tax cuts, he added,
would enable some of the surplus
to go for a Medicare prescription
drug benefit, efforts to keep
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
chance of showers and thuhder- Social Security solvent and a payThe Nallonal Weather Ser- storms in the afternoon and
vice says a cold front that moved evening. Highs in the lower 80s. off of the public debt by 2012.
"We have the resources. What
south of the the tri-coun ty area
Tu esday... Partly cloudy. A we need is a common vision that
Friday nigh t allowed a cool high chance of-showers and thunderpressure system to move in to storms in th e afternoon and extends beyond the November
the area. This will keep sk ies eve ning. Lows in the lower 60s elections and a commitment to
benefit all AmericatJs, not just a
partly to mostly sunny into next and highs in the mid 80s.
few,"
the president said.
·
week.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy
Grams, however, said the claim
Temperatures will be below with a chance of showers and
that
the tax cuts skewed to the
normal. High s will mo stly be in thunderstorms. Lows in the
the 80s Sunday, with warmer lower 60s and highs in the mid wealthy is "just plain rhetoric, not
reality. A young family struggling
temperatures expected for the 80s.
to meet the mortgage and pay for
first part of next week.
Sunrise Sunday will be at
6:23a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... M ostly clear and
cool. Lows in the mid 50s. Light
and variable wind .
•Oxyg•n Concentr•tor•
Sunday.. . Mostly sunny. Highs
•Porttlble Oxyuen
•FrH
in the lower 80s.
•Nebuttzera
•Reeplrltory Th1er11pl•t•
Sunday night ... Partly cloudy.
•CPAP/BtPAP
•We Btu All lnaurancea
•24 Hour Emergency Service
Lows in the upper 50s.
70 Pine St.
785 E, Moln Sl
Extended forecast :
/ -10 ·1 ·1 (1 /;'£1]
1·10 ·nl6 f·1 H·1
1 non · 1 '~H 6l3 &lt;1•1
I BO ll HI\ O•l'l1
Monday...'Partly cloudy. A

Fred Sanders

Jeanette Sue Salser

Tax

from

Sunday, July 23, 2000

LOCAL BRIEFS

Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, who
introduced her at the fund-raiser
lis, theft ; David G. McQuaid,
and asked local Democrats to
41, 46 Burnette Road, Galcampaign on her behalf.
POMEROY - Units of th e lipolis, driving under the
" It's important, if you talk
Meigs Emergency Services influence; Ralph D. Ross, 34,
about the rights of injured workanswered four ca ll ~ for assis- 87 R oss Road, Patriot, violaers, to think about this race," tance
on
Friday.
Unit s
tion of a protection. order;
Shoemaker said. "Most impor- -responded as follows:
tantly, if you think about kids, you
CENTRAL DISPATCH Jam es Howard Griffin, 36,
really need to think and pray
5 a.m., Maples Apartments, 1455 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis,
about this race."
assault, resisting arrest and disSy I via Barr, treated ;
Earlier, local Democratic can7: 18 a.m., Overbrook Nurs - orderly con duct ; Jamie A .
didates spoke to the crowd, ing Center, Glen Grueser, Drummond, 19, 137 Paxton
including Jessie Collins and Bill Pleasan t Valley Hospital.
Road, Gallipolis, co ntempt of
Davis, who are ru.n ning for seats
RUTLAND
co urt ; a nd Bomber Eugene
on the Gallia Counry Board of
12:20 p.m., assisted by CenJohnson, 26, Indianapolis, two
Commissioners; sheriff's candi- tral Dispatch, Parker Run
counts o~ on tempt of court.
date D~ve Martin; and Prosecutor R oa d , John Jacks , PVH .
TUPPERS PLAINS
Brent Saunders.
1:50
p. m ., South Fourth
(Tite Associated Press colltributed
Street, Dorothy Pierce, treat- Heart Matter•···
to titis story.)
With Dr, Robert Hollty
ed.
always striving to achieve better
cusron1er satisfaction."
Recipients of the award are
chosen from a number of park
facilities located within Ohio's
park system.
Th'e park averages .around
100,000 visitors throughout the
course of the year with weekends and holidays being the
busiest times for park employees.
"Most of our guests are usually from the tri-state area," said
Wachter. " But we also get a
good number of interstate travelers a&lt; well."
The large number of visitors
that ascend on the park helps
boost the economy of M eigs
County,
particularly ' the
Reedsville area, said Wachter.
"The visitors will often buy
produce from local markets and
various supplies from area
stores," he noted. "We're really
happy that the Reedsville community can benefit from 'the
park's existence."
Wachter indicated that several
summer programs have been
planned and implemented by
the park's staff for the enjoyment
of guests.
Crafts, · fishing programs,
movies and nature hikes are just
a few examples of the activities
that will be offered free of
charge.
The park is open seven days a
week during the summer
months.

Crash probed
RIO GRANDE - A two vehicle crash with injuries on
SR 588 n ea r the interse·c tion
with Canoe Livery Road on.
Friday is unde r investigation
by the Gallia - Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol.
Troope rs were called to the
scene of th e crash at 5:36p.m.
Further details we re unavail able from the patrol Saturday.
although Gallia County EMS
reported o n e individual was
taken to Holzer Medi ca l Ce nter and another refused treatment.

8 put in jail
GALLIPOLIS - ,L odged in
the Gallia County Jail by
authorities were Mark Wayn e
Shartiger, 27, Pomeroy, for
failure to appear; John Westley
Mossman, 45, 401 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, failure to co ntrol; Timo.thy Roger Swanson,
25, 2028 SR 7 North , Gallipo-

MORE LOCAL NEW~.
MORE LOCAL FOLK~ .

QUESTION - 1 am 32 years old and
have already had four-way bypass
surgery. Since the s urgery I have felt
much better. My family physician
told me there is no special treatment
now that the bypass is complete. Is
there anything I can do to prevent this
from happening again? I really don't
want to be cracked open again.
ANSWER - I can certainly
understand you not wanting to be
cracked open again. Bypass surgery is
very traumatic and no one wants to
go through it . The sad part is that
many of these bypass surgeries can be
prevented. Now, something caused
your lr'essels to clot or become
blocked and if you don 't determine
the underlying cause, yo u are very
likely to have this happen again . .In
fact , failure to treat the underlying
cause of a previous eve nt is the
leading cause of another heart attack,
stroke or death . Patients that have had
bypass surgery are at extremely high
risk of a heart atttack, s.troke or
sudden death. Most patients that have
had bypass have a heart attack, stroke
or sudden death within 6 years. The
bottom line is you need to determine
what caused the problem in thq. first
place and then treat it so it will nOt
happen again. Sadly enough, only six
to eight percent of patients that have
had bypass surgery are being treated
properly to prevent a re·occurrence.
I have had several patients come lo
the Cholesterol Center after bypass
surgery, and at that point I conduct a
complete workup to determine the
underlying cause . I then devise a
perso nalized treatment program to
help them dramatically reduce their
risk of having to face this radical
procedure again.

Doctor Robert Holley is the arow
only cholrsterol specialist, or
therothrombotic
Disease
SpuiJJ/ist, which means ht hw had
speciRI training, and is an expert in
identifying and treating all the
various risk factors. that lead to a
heart attack or stroke. Doctor
Holley operates the Robert M.
Holley Choltsterol Ce,.ter, located
in Point Pleasant.

Subcribe today:
446-2342 or 992-2156

For answers to your medical questions
about hea rt attacks and strokes, mail ttlem
to the Robert M. Holley Cholestero l
Center at the address below.

thei~- kid's braoes-is-by-ne- means-rich."
" Mr. Clinton, we're asking you
do put aside election-year polit!cs
and help families live the American dream," the Minnesota senator said. " If you do your part and
sign the bills we have sent you ...
Americans can keep a little more
of their hard-earned money."

Call today for a free heart attack
and stroke risk assessment.

COMPANY
EsTABUSIIED 1890

"R.du.r:ln• yo11r rlsl of til•

u.n•x~r:t•d"

2500 Jefferson Avenue

Point Pleasant, WV 25550

304-675-1675

Cool conditions will prevail

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;:Don't Get Burned!
Heat 'n Humidity
Heat and humidity are hard on our hearing aids.
Come in and we'll do a complete FREE 10
point clean and check on your hearing aids to
ensure that they can Beat the Heat and work at
maximum efficiency throughout the summer.

Call Today For An Appointment

Advanced Hearing Center
1122 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis Ohio
441-1971 or (800) 434-4194
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HealthLine.. .It's About Time!
The Pleasant Valley ,.ospital HealthLine is a center staffed by registered
nurses with 24-hour availability. It can save you time and money. Anurse will also
call you back in a day or two just to make sure you are feeling better.

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(304) '675-2828 (Wl?

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Garden Botanika Inc. recalled 600
bol\~1 of its "C" Slices Vitamin C Eye Relief eye pads Friday because
the pads may be contaminated with bacteria that could cause
vision-threate ning eye infections.
The orange-and-white boxes, each containing six pairs of eye
pads, were sold nationwide through the Redmond, Wash.-based
company's 108 stores. The recalled products bear the number
"1005506009" below the bar code on the back of each box.
·• While Garden Botanika said no eye infec.tions have been reported, the company urged consumers to quit using the eye pads and
return them to the place of purchase for a full refund.
Routine sampling uncovered three species of bacteria in the eye
pads. The products' manufacturer, Dermal Sciences Inc. of Fairfield,
Conn., has ceased l'roduction until the Food and Drug Adminimat1on det.ernunes what caused the co ntamination, FDA and Garden
· 13otanika officials said.
Consu mers with questions can call Garden Botanika at 1-800.%8-7842.

Senate appoints female judge
WASHINGTON (AP) - Days after accusations flew in the
· C.1pitol of rac ism and sexism in judicial selections, the Senate has
1pprowd the first black female judge for a powerful appellate c1rCUlL

S&lt;'mtors 1pprowd Johnnie Rawlinson by voice vote Friday for
the 9th U.S. C irnn t Court of Appeals, whi ch covers Alaska , Arizona,
C IIi fornia , H&gt;wai i, Idaho, Nevada, Montana, Oregon and Washing-

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Pleasant

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(740) 992-0226 (OH) Hospital

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Senate passes marriage tax cut
WASHINGTON (AP ) The Senate
Republicans were rushing to send the bill
passed a Republican bill Friday that would to the White House so that the president
slash income taxes for 50 million married cou- would have to decide its fate about the same
ples. The bill invites a veto confrontation over time as the GOP convention July 31-Aug. 3 in
budget su rplus politics with President Clinton Philadelphia, w here cutting taxes will be a
as the GOP prepares for its national conven- major theme as the party nominates Bush for
tion to nominate George W Bush.
president.
The vote was 60-34 to pass the "marriage
On Friday, Clinton promised to veto the
penalty" b11l, with seve n Democrats joining all bill on grounds its benefits are tilted toward
but one Republican in support. Even at a cost families in the top 1 percent income range,
of $292 billion over I 0 years, GOP sponsors and 1t and o ther GOP tax cuts would consume
portrayed the bill as a modest refund of a por- surplus do llars that could be used better for
tion of the projected $2 . t 7 trillion in non- priorities such as paying off the public debt
Social Security surplus revenue to middle-class ·and providing a Medicare prescnpuon drug
taxpayers.
benefit .
" I would ask those who oppose this family
" In the interest of fiscal responsibility, I w1ll
tax relief just how big w1ll America's budget veto this and any · subsequent legislation th&gt;t
surplus have to get b~fon: Americ3 's famiLt:s threatens our ability to pay dO\vn the debt and
deserve to receive some of the1r tax dollars strengthen Medicare and Social Securitv." till·
back?" said Sen . William R oth, R-Del., chm- president s:.u d 111 a written statem ent . ,
ntan of chc Senate Finan ce Com mitrel'.

Nl.•ither th e Scnatt.· nor the H ou&lt;;t.' vote

The cou rt 's o sdoad IS J!most double the average number of CJSes
h.tn ell ed by any of the I 2 other circuits.
When Rawlinson was sworn in a U.S. District JUdge in Nevada
· in June I 'l'JS. she was the first black woman to hold a position on
: the U.S. District Co urt m Nevada . Before becoming a judge, &lt;he
spl' nt IS years with the office of the district attorney.
Her 9th Circuit nonunation had been pending since February.
Appellate judges receiVe lifetime appointments.
Rawlinson was approved Friday along with four U.S. District
judges, Dennis Cavanaugh of New Jersey and three judges from
Florida:John Steele, James Moody and Gregory Presnell.
This co mes after' members of the Congressional Black Caucus
asse rted in a statement circulated Wednesday that delays in approvin g minority and female judges showed racist and sexist tendencies
in Senate.
Sen. Orrin_ Hatch , R - Utah , chairman of the Senate Judiciary
.Conumttce, denied the accusations and said more minority and
female JUdges have been approved by the Senate under his chair·manship than ever before.
Th e committee voted ot1t Rawlinson's nomination Thursday. She
was approved the next day.

Criminals stealing millions
in food stamp benefits

Infant death investigated
GftAND JUNCTION, Colo, (AP) -Authorities were invcsti-·
~~~ting the death of a 2-day-old bc1y whose parents belong to a relil!iom. iinlup th~t !.lues nm believe in ntcdical intervention ft&gt;r ill·
' IW&lt;iel.
It W~i tlw ~~c.ond tim~ in lix tmmth• thAI a child hu died in the
,.,,r~ n( pmmu who al'\! , lliQmbgrl llf Clononl AIIQ111Wy Church nf
t h~ f'lrif Uom. Six othgr children in th~ church have died after
m~d ka l tn:atm~nt wa1 withheld.
Iit tlw lar.m m~. Billy Ray Reed died jttly 9 frorh compliciiiioni
.e\HII&lt;d by '&lt;lll!l&lt;'llital !wart disease, Mesa Cmmty Coroner Rob
' Kmt ll n ~ n 1:ud.
: Th,• I h•tw~r l'mt rcpnrtcd Satllrdny that the child died while his
p,ll'ctHS, Bill y and Barbara R&lt;&lt;d, :tnd elders of the church prayed
.nver him. They did tHlt seck medical help.
: Kurtzman said he will investigate further before deciding whether
:to rule the baby's death a homicide. The Mm County Sheriff's
·( )tlicc is also investigating.
Six monrhs ago, two other m embers of the church, Joshua and
Mmdy Glory, pleaded gui lty to child abuse in the death of their 18d.Iy- old son. Warren Trevette Glory. The mf.1nt died of pneumonia
\\'hil e church elders prayed over him and ano inted him with oil.

WASHINGTON . (AP)
C rin1inJis are stt ll sw 111dlm g
$660 milli o n ,, ye·.u in tood
sta n1p hl'"n efit s from tlw go\T fll mc:nt, despite th e widcspn.::td usc
of electronic debi t c.u-ds Ill pla ce
of the traditional, easy-to-traffi c
paper coupons, federal ofllcials
say.
Still, the amount of fed eral
money stolen each year by criminals has decreased 19 percent,
from $815 m illion in 1993 to
$660 million annually fro m
1996-9R , Agri cu lture Department officials say.
And the trafllck in g rate whi c h compares dollars traffi cked to benefits iss ued dropp ed 8 perce nt from 3.8
cents per dollar •n 1993 to 3.5
cents in 1998, according to a
new department report released .
last week ,
"Food stamps ar.c intended
for food and we dn nut and we
will nm wlerate fr.w •l and ab~ue
an the r&lt;'od Stamp (&gt;mK!r.tnt ,"
laid Shirley Watkim. the Al!~i ·

Thursday reached the two-thirds margin
needed ro overt1de a veto.
There· was ; question Friday exactly wltcn
the bill would reach the president, complicated by Clinton's absence, in Okinawa at an economic summit. Under the Constitution, he has
10 days to veto it- not counting Sundays imd
the day he gets it- or it becomes law. · '
" I don 't think the timing of it is the l'eal
issue," said White House Budget Director Jack
Lew. "It's the content of the bill that's the real
1ssue."

The bill would remedy features of the fa x
code that force 25 million married couplet,to
pay higher incom&lt;· taxes than Single people·
mainly by enlargmg the bottom 15 pcrcent'ci ,
bracket and in creasmg the standard

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tion for couples fi1Ingjo indy. l3ut 1t would al&lt;o
cut taxt·s for millions more coupks who now
e njoy .l nurna gc- "bonus.. because one spo.~1~c
e.1rr1s rh e bulk of rhe fllltily incotHt.'.
~-

New bills confoun"

vending machines ~·

cuItu rc underst"crt"ta ry of food,
nutrition :l nd cons tmH:r services .
Using ell..'"ctroni c
benefit .
tran sfer (EBT) c.ITds instea d of
p:tpc r coupons was su pposed to
hel p fi ght food stamp fraud and
cut down on government paperwork. Currently, 37 states and
the Distri ct of Columbia are
USing EBT ca rds for th eir
statewide systems. All states have
to be using the system by 2002,
ofllcials said.
But even though threefourth s of all American famili es
using food stamps now use a
c ad insteXd of coupons, criminals are still gettmg access to
·federal dollars, said Roger
Viadero, the Agriculture Department's tnspector general.
Just as they did with the paper
coupons, recipients are selli ng
their debit cards and penonal
identifi ca tion numbers for drugs
and 111uney w tra11ickers. he wid

the Hom&lt; 1.\ud!let Committee'!
wdf~l'~ ms k fmce nn Wcdne1day.

WASH!N(;TON (AP)
Without spec tal soft\varL', \"L'llll1ng
machines aren't processing thL'
new $5 and S I 0 bills.
Of an estimated 6 million tOod
and beve rage vending ma c hin e~
in this country that accept SS JnJ
$10 notes, only 1 million have
been modified to recognize the
bills, said Larry Felix of the Treasury Department's Bureau of
Engraving and Printing.
The new bills, bearing portraits of Abraham Lincoln and
Alexander
Hamilton , · \\'ere
redesigned to thwart high-tech
cou nterfelter5.
Vending machme owners arL'
working to
modify their
machines to accept th e new b1lls,
Felix said Friday. He sa1d the
process will likely take some time,
but he · is confident the
changeover will go smoothl y,
llrian Alk·n, a sp&lt;Jkcsm:lll i"&lt;Jr
the National Auwn1atic M~r­
dundi!in~t A~&lt;n r iat ion . &lt;:tid :
"Sume -of the "'ll11pm~nt i&gt; very
jimplr to " han~~ , Otlwr lll.tdmw•

need more m;:uor modificariOt4".
(:cn(TJ ll y speJ.kin g. Wt' are .work mg .1s Llst we &lt;..-;l!I. ..
Th e gowrnmelll suppli&lt;.' d
somt• of the ne\\· nntL'\ to vendin ~
c._'q lllpmcnt cq mpalli L'S late L1st
year to b~ve them time to develop
software to recognize them ~'1 d
test it on vending machines.. ·
''One of the things ind~try
as ked us to do was to introduoe
the new S5s and St Os together;·
thus allowing companies to' make
moditications for both. at th e
same rime and cut costs, F~ix
said.
Some vending machines ta.'ke
$20 bills, which got a facelitf"ln
1998, but many more take $5 apd
SIO notes, Felix said. "That's ,a
large leap - a much bigger j~ii"
for the ind ustry, he· said.
"
Fdix s.lid on ly ,,bout 10 percent ufdw new S~ .tml S10 note!
Jl\' in drn tlatlllll , Ti'w uld bilb
will Wntllli!O Ill be• ol&lt;H' ptctf UllU
r"mt'lli•trd llnfll Ihe' )' IW~F mit(:

The
forecast
•
s
er
is 2 below.

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ANA H EIM . Ca li f. (AP) - A th~rd Disney theme park is in the
\\"nrks here.
The &lt;nil - unnam ed park would be built on 89 acres next to 451\'.lr-old Disneybnd , on property already coptrolled by the Walt
DISne y Co, Cynthia H arr iss, president of The Disneyland Resort,
. . .1id Friday.
The park , &lt;c he·d uled to be fully completed by 2010, may house
\\":lt~'r rides b:lscd. on th e movies "The Little Mermaid" or "Winme
the· Pooh ." It will also have a shopping mall and hotel.
Acc ordi ng to the Los Angeles Times, the cost may nval the $1.4
hdho n spent &lt;&gt;n DISney's Ca lifornia Adventure, a 55-acre theme
p.1rk adJKenl to Di;neybnd schedu led to open in February 2001.
IJ "II&lt;'Y oiT1ciais sa1d they plan to seek public opinion on its design
.1lln .u1 L'!l\'lronment;:d impac t repor~ is completed.
I

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Tour 'copter crash kills 7
WA IL UKU, Hawa ii (AI') - Police teams planned to rappel
down a steep valley wall Satu rday to recover the bodies of 'ix
t&lt;l mim and a vl'teran pilot killed when their sightseeing helicopter
n.1~h L· d o n the island of MaUl durmg a tour. ·
Till' ASJSS twm-cnginc JITctaft uporated by Blu e Hawa1ian Hcliwptcrs fa 1!ed to return from the 35-minute flight Friday and an air
~ •.:. 1 rc h o f the rugged t ~ rralll revealed the wreckage hours later.
Tht..·re \\"C rc no su rvtvors. sa1d Patti. C hevalier, who owns the tour
nHnp .111 y with hL·r hu sband, Dave, a former,Vietnarn scou't pilot.
.. ,,..A,.rt· L'ru shcd . we 'rL' dt..·va ~ t:tted, and our hearts go out to the
f unlitl·...." ~ r1c ~.1id .
.
( ~ h n·. 1 !it• r \\'oukf not llk·nufy th t. passengers, but sa i1. they wen.· all
tPun ~ h . She s:ull the pil ot had more than 11 ,000 hou rs of fl ying
L'X p i.'!" H.'lllL' .md lu d beL'll with th L' compa ny fo r 1~\0rc than a year.
( ~ n. 1 , t ( ;u,lrLI "poke swonu n j.l( quL·lyn Z e t tl es sa~&lt;..i there wc._• re low
l lnud ....It ti lL' t lllll' of uhe cr.1 ~ h . Those .m: porma l co nditi o ns for rht•
lt h h . llll \ t\'. nile\' th .ll 1 ~ hom c to Llo NeL·dle, a !;fa'isy. nJrrnw
11\ount.lln th .H IS a pDpul.lr touri~t attractio n.
Th 1s w ,H H.J\\',Hi \ third notable :1ircraft cr.1sh 111 11 months. On
Sq' t. 23. ,1 tou r pl.lll l' n.1shL·d on the slop es of Mauna Loa o n chc.;
ll• g lsL111d , killin g .11! \0 peo ple on bo.1rd.
.
.
1 )n M.l\' 111. ,1 pm·.tte jet sLuuml'd ntto a lulls1de while approac h111g .11 1 ·"']'."':_t o"--"rvt ".lo bi , ki lling .111 six people on board.
.
M.11 n Po hl'l' Cl11cl ihom.l\ Phdt.p, &lt;Jid the w reckage wtll be
to 11 gh to rt•.tr h . and n.·c o v L'ry CfL'\\ ''&gt; nuy i""'.w e to rappel down a cliff1

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be j 's.1fe·ty issue with the cloud cover," Phillips

FIRSTAR flt
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Bank Without Boundaries

~lm ru.lu•o:tur}'7 SO'\ i\1'1-1 ~· ~·t..hk ,.,,th . ,.. ,..." ,,_,.,,,.,,!' J.,..,.,., .hrt l "'l\"''''"ru .... t •nu t:.l •J,~n...c '" ~S.OOil ' " •nr.-c l nt( rr" r.m:~ "'1111.... nic•1•t rnrn~ ro~t~ r1111111 , 2 , ll tn nt; til•· tlltr.~lih.1t1""1 f'e"'"' nl .;,, ""~1111' ·~t ~
"\rv.· Fu~m bt•u l m~ " uh"' lu:..n lu 1•h.c rllt!l II "1\" I ' "HI I'll. 11r lr" :\Lkl 1'- ti" HO 0 I ~I'll. ! TV AJ.l l 'l!. fflf" 'X1 0 1 100\ I "IV . A.ftr d~ ~a m. &lt;&gt;&lt;"llll rntn&gt;drr.:l un l'•:nn,t, the o\rmual !\•r•"&lt;"tlla!J,( R.lte rA!'Rl '"II ,.&amp;!"'." '"'" pnnl("
~c ;u puhi~K&lt;im the W.tll Stn:ct luu m•l 11~~: l'nrn•· lt.rw .._, utluh 1 ~000 r~ 'i :.ll'e fur ltOC\ ~~ !lll'!l. ] 'IV • If k». thr ArR ,.,IJ,·· • • t l'" lll(' r:l tt.&lt;lltrentl\1.) ~It'\ 1c•t ~n 01 9il'\ I 1"\", til•· Arl( " 'II •·~" •• 1•nntr ut &lt;." • 1~.
current!\· IO.!iO'Jii . ~ ... 90 01 100'11. 1 TV. the ArR "111 1m Jt l'nnrc rJt r • 2~ . • urrcntl&gt;. II .;(",... Fnr 1\.lnu~ JnJ Mm.,lln. the rJtc ""LIInn1 n.-.·..,1 , ~ nu 11 m 11 m :rJ~,._.~.I 1&gt;1 •l.lt f" 1.1'1•• "htdr "&lt;llm·nd•• IR~ m "-"· •nd ]0\ "'
MO fu all other 1/"UI. thr rJI C ... rl IIIII .. , ..~, 1 1 11&lt;' "'·" ""'"" .•II• ..... .t I&gt;~ I)!, ,,, \I,Hc Ia" "'"'" 13 25'!i. l"hc ~1\lllial lt-c I~ ..."ilnCJ the ti~ ,..,! n •• Jllllll.ll ln:" 5-:'iQ ''" \\(l ~·kl "-' ~lid 1\ ~'XI lui .u ..rJ ..... , """' O t1 .·r "'dln.
~.,;..,.~ ~ut l ~o.: "Pf'lll:lt""'~ tJ~tn ltc&gt;nl lul1 I, liMIll thn•ll)l.h -\,rtt.t"t ~~~ . 2UC M
} lm.:r iu ~ro:• t '" nnrm.ll.~Jn "1"'1'" " ' 1 lh.tK "'"l".:d pn ~ "lt· m ,,.._

·Member FDIC

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Keep Your Hearing Aid In Slwpe
And Ready For SIOIUIIUl

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n:l:rf.lili[•J:

Eye reliever recall issued

New Disney theme park set

Protect your hearl.ng aid from

&amp;unllap l!timt!l-&amp;tnlintl • Pqe A1,

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

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Units log 4 calls.

VALLEY WEATHER

•n nr.::Jtt"!l•J:

• Sunday, July 23, 2000

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. Pege A&amp; • &amp;unbap ffimr• -&amp;tnlinrl

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt • Galllpc;lla, ,Ohio • Point Pleaaant, WV

Justice
flam Page A1

•

Patsy Koster

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Ohio," she added.
· Her dissent in tort reform was
based on her belief that every citizen has the right to go to court,
"that if they choose to go to
court, they should have access to
the court."
, Resnick is opposed by Terrence O 'Donnell, a Republican
appellate judge.
As part of her stop in Gallia
County, Resnick toured the
Rockwell Automation plant and
visited the Area Agency on Aging
District 7 office.
Resnick's candidacy received a
boost from State Sen. Michael

PEDRO - Patsy Koster, tJ5, Pedro, &lt;lied Thurs&lt;lay,Ju1y-20, 2UOO in
King~ Daughters Medical Center, Ashland, Ky.
Born July 28, 1934 in Ironton, daughter of the late Edward Gorman
and Gladys Wilson Gorman Sternitsky, she' was a homemaker.
Surviving are her husband', Earl E. Koster; a son, Earl J. Qoyce) Koster
of Kitts Hill; a daughter, Susan Koster, of the home; two grandchildren;
two brothers, Harry "Bing" Gorman and Arnold Gorman, both of
Granton, Wis.; a SISter, Doris Cremeans of Fairborn; a halt:.brother,
. Mike Sternitsky ofWisconsin; a half-sister, Janet Sternitsky ofWiscon, sin; and her stepfather, David Sternitsky of Granton.
She was also preceded in death by two granchildren, Geneva Marie
.Koster and Jeffrey Koster Jr.
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Monday in Lawrence Furnace
Cemetery, with the Rev. Jim Lee Cremeans officiating. Friends may
. call at Phillips Funeral Home, Ironton, after I p.m. Monday.

Nathanial David Monis

Park

PROCTORVILLE - Nathania] David Morris, 2 months, Proctorville, died Friday, July 21,2000 in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington,

.

w~ .

from Page AI
Born May 13, 2000 in Huntington, he was the son of David and
Kimberly Earl Morris.
.
·Regular campsites are avail: Surviving in addition to his parents are two brothe~. Eddie Adkins
.
~nd Austin Morris; maternal grandparents, Glenn and Karen Earl of able for $10 a night.
to
the
park
can
also
Visitors
Proctorville; his maternal great-grandmother, Margaret J. Massey of
enjoy
quality
fishing
and
boating
Beckley, W.Va.; maternal great-grandparents, Earnest and Virginia Earl
of Proctorville; paternal grandfather, Michael Morris of Barboursville, on the facility's 108 acre stocked
WVa.; paternal grandmother, Yvonne Sutherland oi Hurricane, WVa.; lake, which is located within the
paternal great-grandparents, Robert and Velva Haston of Ronceverte, park's boundaries.
Anglers can enjoy an abunW.Va.; and aunts and uncles.
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home, Proc- dance of crappie, large-mouth
torville, with the Rev. Ronnie Tyree officiating. Friends may call at the bass, bluegill and catfish, providing that a valid Ohio fishing
·. funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
license is procured.
Canoes, paddleboats, row
boats and splash boats can even
: PROCTORVILLE - · Fred Sanders, 64, Proctorville, died Friday, k rented, along with camping
and boating supplies, at a counJuly 21,2000 in St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
Born June 13, 1936 in East Lynn, WVa., son of the late George and try store that sits adjacent to the
Dalla Davidson Sanders, he was a member of 26th Street Church of lake.
A boat ramp that was built for
Christ in Juntington.
He was also preceded m death by his first wife, Agnes Merritt convenient access to the Ohio
River was built in 1990 and
·Sanders.
Surviving are his wife, Bernice Ray Sanders; two daughters, Duane allows campgoers the opportu·(Lesha) Adkins of Milton, WVa., and Tina (Steven) Ellis of Lancaster; nity to experience various activlhree sons, Fred (Sharon) Sanders Jr. of Proctorville, Brent (Kimberly) ities outside of the park.
"This park is Ohio's best-kept
Ray ofKenova,WVa., and Bruce Ray of Savannah, Ga.; 10 grandchilsecret," said Park Manager
dren; and a brother, Billy Joe Saunders of Branchland, WVa.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in Hall Funeral Home, Proctorville,_ Randy Wachter. "Even though
with Minister Alan Cole officiating. Burial will be in Rome Cemetery. we get a number of visitors, the
park is still under-utilized."
Friends may call at the funeral home from 4-8 p.m. Sunday.
According to Wachter, the
Contributions may be made to 26th Street Church of Christ Buildpark
has won an award from the
ing Fund.
state for excellence in customer
service three years in a row.
"! would believe that we are
COOLVILLE- Jeanette Sue Salser, 40, Coolville, died Friday, July probably favored to win the
award again this year," said
21, 2000 at her residence.
Born March 14, 1960 in Columbus, daughter of the late Jack Wachter, "however, we are
Gearllart, and Juanita Seagraves Ratliff of Darwin, she was a homemaker.
Surviving in additiotrtu herrnother are her husband, Raymond
Salser; three sons, Ronald L (Deborah Faye) Diles Jr., J~ck Eugene
(Rachael May) Diles and Joseph Allen Diles, all of Nelsonville; six
PageAl
grandchildren; a sister, Betry Jean (Mike) Ball of Columbus; several
nieces and nephews; and five great-nieces and nephews.
incomes.
She was also preceded in death by a sister and an aunt.
" Now, we should have tax cuts
. Graveside services will.be I p.m. Monday in Greenwood Cemetery,
this
year, but they should be the
Racine, with the Rev. N.L. Russell officiating. There will be no visitaright ones, targeted to working
tion. Arrangements are by Ewing Funera l Home, Pomeroy.
families that help our economy
grow - not tax breaks that help
only . a few while putting our
prosperity at risk," Clinton said.
Less costly tax cuts, he added,
would enable some of the surplus
to go for a Medicare prescription
drug benefit, efforts to keep
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
chance of showers and thuhder- Social Security solvent and a payThe Nallonal Weather Ser- storms in the afternoon and
vice says a cold front that moved evening. Highs in the lower 80s. off of the public debt by 2012.
"We have the resources. What
south of the the tri-coun ty area
Tu esday... Partly cloudy. A we need is a common vision that
Friday nigh t allowed a cool high chance of-showers and thunderpressure system to move in to storms in th e afternoon and extends beyond the November
the area. This will keep sk ies eve ning. Lows in the lower 60s elections and a commitment to
benefit all AmericatJs, not just a
partly to mostly sunny into next and highs in the mid 80s.
few,"
the president said.
·
week.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy
Grams, however, said the claim
Temperatures will be below with a chance of showers and
that
the tax cuts skewed to the
normal. High s will mo stly be in thunderstorms. Lows in the
the 80s Sunday, with warmer lower 60s and highs in the mid wealthy is "just plain rhetoric, not
reality. A young family struggling
temperatures expected for the 80s.
to meet the mortgage and pay for
first part of next week.
Sunrise Sunday will be at
6:23a.m.
Weather forecast:
Tonight ... M ostly clear and
cool. Lows in the mid 50s. Light
and variable wind .
•Oxyg•n Concentr•tor•
Sunday.. . Mostly sunny. Highs
•Porttlble Oxyuen
•FrH
in the lower 80s.
•Nebuttzera
•Reeplrltory Th1er11pl•t•
Sunday night ... Partly cloudy.
•CPAP/BtPAP
•We Btu All lnaurancea
•24 Hour Emergency Service
Lows in the upper 50s.
70 Pine St.
785 E, Moln Sl
Extended forecast :
/ -10 ·1 ·1 (1 /;'£1]
1·10 ·nl6 f·1 H·1
1 non · 1 '~H 6l3 &lt;1•1
I BO ll HI\ O•l'l1
Monday...'Partly cloudy. A

Fred Sanders

Jeanette Sue Salser

Tax

from

Sunday, July 23, 2000

LOCAL BRIEFS

Shoemaker, D-Bourneville, who
introduced her at the fund-raiser
lis, theft ; David G. McQuaid,
and asked local Democrats to
41, 46 Burnette Road, Galcampaign on her behalf.
POMEROY - Units of th e lipolis, driving under the
" It's important, if you talk
Meigs Emergency Services influence; Ralph D. Ross, 34,
about the rights of injured workanswered four ca ll ~ for assis- 87 R oss Road, Patriot, violaers, to think about this race," tance
on
Friday.
Unit s
tion of a protection. order;
Shoemaker said. "Most impor- -responded as follows:
tantly, if you think about kids, you
CENTRAL DISPATCH Jam es Howard Griffin, 36,
really need to think and pray
5 a.m., Maples Apartments, 1455 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis,
about this race."
assault, resisting arrest and disSy I via Barr, treated ;
Earlier, local Democratic can7: 18 a.m., Overbrook Nurs - orderly con duct ; Jamie A .
didates spoke to the crowd, ing Center, Glen Grueser, Drummond, 19, 137 Paxton
including Jessie Collins and Bill Pleasan t Valley Hospital.
Road, Gallipolis, co ntempt of
Davis, who are ru.n ning for seats
RUTLAND
co urt ; a nd Bomber Eugene
on the Gallia Counry Board of
12:20 p.m., assisted by CenJohnson, 26, Indianapolis, two
Commissioners; sheriff's candi- tral Dispatch, Parker Run
counts o~ on tempt of court.
date D~ve Martin; and Prosecutor R oa d , John Jacks , PVH .
TUPPERS PLAINS
Brent Saunders.
1:50
p. m ., South Fourth
(Tite Associated Press colltributed
Street, Dorothy Pierce, treat- Heart Matter•···
to titis story.)
With Dr, Robert Hollty
ed.
always striving to achieve better
cusron1er satisfaction."
Recipients of the award are
chosen from a number of park
facilities located within Ohio's
park system.
Th'e park averages .around
100,000 visitors throughout the
course of the year with weekends and holidays being the
busiest times for park employees.
"Most of our guests are usually from the tri-state area," said
Wachter. " But we also get a
good number of interstate travelers a&lt; well."
The large number of visitors
that ascend on the park helps
boost the economy of M eigs
County,
particularly ' the
Reedsville area, said Wachter.
"The visitors will often buy
produce from local markets and
various supplies from area
stores," he noted. "We're really
happy that the Reedsville community can benefit from 'the
park's existence."
Wachter indicated that several
summer programs have been
planned and implemented by
the park's staff for the enjoyment
of guests.
Crafts, · fishing programs,
movies and nature hikes are just
a few examples of the activities
that will be offered free of
charge.
The park is open seven days a
week during the summer
months.

Crash probed
RIO GRANDE - A two vehicle crash with injuries on
SR 588 n ea r the interse·c tion
with Canoe Livery Road on.
Friday is unde r investigation
by the Gallia - Meigs Post of
the State Highway Patrol.
Troope rs were called to the
scene of th e crash at 5:36p.m.
Further details we re unavail able from the patrol Saturday.
although Gallia County EMS
reported o n e individual was
taken to Holzer Medi ca l Ce nter and another refused treatment.

8 put in jail
GALLIPOLIS - ,L odged in
the Gallia County Jail by
authorities were Mark Wayn e
Shartiger, 27, Pomeroy, for
failure to appear; John Westley
Mossman, 45, 401 Second
Ave., Gallipolis, failure to co ntrol; Timo.thy Roger Swanson,
25, 2028 SR 7 North , Gallipo-

MORE LOCAL NEW~.
MORE LOCAL FOLK~ .

QUESTION - 1 am 32 years old and
have already had four-way bypass
surgery. Since the s urgery I have felt
much better. My family physician
told me there is no special treatment
now that the bypass is complete. Is
there anything I can do to prevent this
from happening again? I really don't
want to be cracked open again.
ANSWER - I can certainly
understand you not wanting to be
cracked open again. Bypass surgery is
very traumatic and no one wants to
go through it . The sad part is that
many of these bypass surgeries can be
prevented. Now, something caused
your lr'essels to clot or become
blocked and if you don 't determine
the underlying cause, yo u are very
likely to have this happen again . .In
fact , failure to treat the underlying
cause of a previous eve nt is the
leading cause of another heart attack,
stroke or death . Patients that have had
bypass surgery are at extremely high
risk of a heart atttack, s.troke or
sudden death. Most patients that have
had bypass have a heart attack, stroke
or sudden death within 6 years. The
bottom line is you need to determine
what caused the problem in thq. first
place and then treat it so it will nOt
happen again. Sadly enough, only six
to eight percent of patients that have
had bypass surgery are being treated
properly to prevent a re·occurrence.
I have had several patients come lo
the Cholesterol Center after bypass
surgery, and at that point I conduct a
complete workup to determine the
underlying cause . I then devise a
perso nalized treatment program to
help them dramatically reduce their
risk of having to face this radical
procedure again.

Doctor Robert Holley is the arow
only cholrsterol specialist, or
therothrombotic
Disease
SpuiJJ/ist, which means ht hw had
speciRI training, and is an expert in
identifying and treating all the
various risk factors. that lead to a
heart attack or stroke. Doctor
Holley operates the Robert M.
Holley Choltsterol Ce,.ter, located
in Point Pleasant.

Subcribe today:
446-2342 or 992-2156

For answers to your medical questions
about hea rt attacks and strokes, mail ttlem
to the Robert M. Holley Cholestero l
Center at the address below.

thei~- kid's braoes-is-by-ne- means-rich."
" Mr. Clinton, we're asking you
do put aside election-year polit!cs
and help families live the American dream," the Minnesota senator said. " If you do your part and
sign the bills we have sent you ...
Americans can keep a little more
of their hard-earned money."

Call today for a free heart attack
and stroke risk assessment.

COMPANY
EsTABUSIIED 1890

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304-675-1675

Cool conditions will prevail

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HealthLine.. .It's About Time!
The Pleasant Valley ,.ospital HealthLine is a center staffed by registered
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WASHINGTON (AP) - Garden Botanika Inc. recalled 600
bol\~1 of its "C" Slices Vitamin C Eye Relief eye pads Friday because
the pads may be contaminated with bacteria that could cause
vision-threate ning eye infections.
The orange-and-white boxes, each containing six pairs of eye
pads, were sold nationwide through the Redmond, Wash.-based
company's 108 stores. The recalled products bear the number
"1005506009" below the bar code on the back of each box.
·• While Garden Botanika said no eye infec.tions have been reported, the company urged consumers to quit using the eye pads and
return them to the place of purchase for a full refund.
Routine sampling uncovered three species of bacteria in the eye
pads. The products' manufacturer, Dermal Sciences Inc. of Fairfield,
Conn., has ceased l'roduction until the Food and Drug Adminimat1on det.ernunes what caused the co ntamination, FDA and Garden
· 13otanika officials said.
Consu mers with questions can call Garden Botanika at 1-800.%8-7842.

Senate appoints female judge
WASHINGTON (AP) - Days after accusations flew in the
· C.1pitol of rac ism and sexism in judicial selections, the Senate has
1pprowd the first black female judge for a powerful appellate c1rCUlL

S&lt;'mtors 1pprowd Johnnie Rawlinson by voice vote Friday for
the 9th U.S. C irnn t Court of Appeals, whi ch covers Alaska , Arizona,
C IIi fornia , H&gt;wai i, Idaho, Nevada, Montana, Oregon and Washing-

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Senate passes marriage tax cut
WASHINGTON (AP ) The Senate
Republicans were rushing to send the bill
passed a Republican bill Friday that would to the White House so that the president
slash income taxes for 50 million married cou- would have to decide its fate about the same
ples. The bill invites a veto confrontation over time as the GOP convention July 31-Aug. 3 in
budget su rplus politics with President Clinton Philadelphia, w here cutting taxes will be a
as the GOP prepares for its national conven- major theme as the party nominates Bush for
tion to nominate George W Bush.
president.
The vote was 60-34 to pass the "marriage
On Friday, Clinton promised to veto the
penalty" b11l, with seve n Democrats joining all bill on grounds its benefits are tilted toward
but one Republican in support. Even at a cost families in the top 1 percent income range,
of $292 billion over I 0 years, GOP sponsors and 1t and o ther GOP tax cuts would consume
portrayed the bill as a modest refund of a por- surplus do llars that could be used better for
tion of the projected $2 . t 7 trillion in non- priorities such as paying off the public debt
Social Security surplus revenue to middle-class ·and providing a Medicare prescnpuon drug
taxpayers.
benefit .
" I would ask those who oppose this family
" In the interest of fiscal responsibility, I w1ll
tax relief just how big w1ll America's budget veto this and any · subsequent legislation th&gt;t
surplus have to get b~fon: Americ3 's famiLt:s threatens our ability to pay dO\vn the debt and
deserve to receive some of the1r tax dollars strengthen Medicare and Social Securitv." till·
back?" said Sen . William R oth, R-Del., chm- president s:.u d 111 a written statem ent . ,
ntan of chc Senate Finan ce Com mitrel'.

Nl.•ither th e Scnatt.· nor the H ou&lt;;t.' vote

The cou rt 's o sdoad IS J!most double the average number of CJSes
h.tn ell ed by any of the I 2 other circuits.
When Rawlinson was sworn in a U.S. District JUdge in Nevada
· in June I 'l'JS. she was the first black woman to hold a position on
: the U.S. District Co urt m Nevada . Before becoming a judge, &lt;he
spl' nt IS years with the office of the district attorney.
Her 9th Circuit nonunation had been pending since February.
Appellate judges receiVe lifetime appointments.
Rawlinson was approved Friday along with four U.S. District
judges, Dennis Cavanaugh of New Jersey and three judges from
Florida:John Steele, James Moody and Gregory Presnell.
This co mes after' members of the Congressional Black Caucus
asse rted in a statement circulated Wednesday that delays in approvin g minority and female judges showed racist and sexist tendencies
in Senate.
Sen. Orrin_ Hatch , R - Utah , chairman of the Senate Judiciary
.Conumttce, denied the accusations and said more minority and
female JUdges have been approved by the Senate under his chair·manship than ever before.
Th e committee voted ot1t Rawlinson's nomination Thursday. She
was approved the next day.

Criminals stealing millions
in food stamp benefits

Infant death investigated
GftAND JUNCTION, Colo, (AP) -Authorities were invcsti-·
~~~ting the death of a 2-day-old bc1y whose parents belong to a relil!iom. iinlup th~t !.lues nm believe in ntcdical intervention ft&gt;r ill·
' IW&lt;iel.
It W~i tlw ~~c.ond tim~ in lix tmmth• thAI a child hu died in the
,.,,r~ n( pmmu who al'\! , lliQmbgrl llf Clononl AIIQ111Wy Church nf
t h~ f'lrif Uom. Six othgr children in th~ church have died after
m~d ka l tn:atm~nt wa1 withheld.
Iit tlw lar.m m~. Billy Ray Reed died jttly 9 frorh compliciiiioni
.e\HII&lt;d by '&lt;lll!l&lt;'llital !wart disease, Mesa Cmmty Coroner Rob
' Kmt ll n ~ n 1:ud.
: Th,• I h•tw~r l'mt rcpnrtcd Satllrdny that the child died while his
p,ll'ctHS, Bill y and Barbara R&lt;&lt;d, :tnd elders of the church prayed
.nver him. They did tHlt seck medical help.
: Kurtzman said he will investigate further before deciding whether
:to rule the baby's death a homicide. The Mm County Sheriff's
·( )tlicc is also investigating.
Six monrhs ago, two other m embers of the church, Joshua and
Mmdy Glory, pleaded gui lty to child abuse in the death of their 18d.Iy- old son. Warren Trevette Glory. The mf.1nt died of pneumonia
\\'hil e church elders prayed over him and ano inted him with oil.

WASHINGTON . (AP)
C rin1inJis are stt ll sw 111dlm g
$660 milli o n ,, ye·.u in tood
sta n1p hl'"n efit s from tlw go\T fll mc:nt, despite th e widcspn.::td usc
of electronic debi t c.u-ds Ill pla ce
of the traditional, easy-to-traffi c
paper coupons, federal ofllcials
say.
Still, the amount of fed eral
money stolen each year by criminals has decreased 19 percent,
from $815 m illion in 1993 to
$660 million annually fro m
1996-9R , Agri cu lture Department officials say.
And the trafllck in g rate whi c h compares dollars traffi cked to benefits iss ued dropp ed 8 perce nt from 3.8
cents per dollar •n 1993 to 3.5
cents in 1998, according to a
new department report released .
last week ,
"Food stamps ar.c intended
for food and we dn nut and we
will nm wlerate fr.w •l and ab~ue
an the r&lt;'od Stamp (&gt;mK!r.tnt ,"
laid Shirley Watkim. the Al!~i ·

Thursday reached the two-thirds margin
needed ro overt1de a veto.
There· was ; question Friday exactly wltcn
the bill would reach the president, complicated by Clinton's absence, in Okinawa at an economic summit. Under the Constitution, he has
10 days to veto it- not counting Sundays imd
the day he gets it- or it becomes law. · '
" I don 't think the timing of it is the l'eal
issue," said White House Budget Director Jack
Lew. "It's the content of the bill that's the real
1ssue."

The bill would remedy features of the fa x
code that force 25 million married couplet,to
pay higher incom&lt;· taxes than Single people·
mainly by enlargmg the bottom 15 pcrcent'ci ,
bracket and in creasmg the standard

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tion for couples fi1Ingjo indy. l3ut 1t would al&lt;o
cut taxt·s for millions more coupks who now
e njoy .l nurna gc- "bonus.. because one spo.~1~c
e.1rr1s rh e bulk of rhe fllltily incotHt.'.
~-

New bills confoun"

vending machines ~·

cuItu rc underst"crt"ta ry of food,
nutrition :l nd cons tmH:r services .
Using ell..'"ctroni c
benefit .
tran sfer (EBT) c.ITds instea d of
p:tpc r coupons was su pposed to
hel p fi ght food stamp fraud and
cut down on government paperwork. Currently, 37 states and
the Distri ct of Columbia are
USing EBT ca rds for th eir
statewide systems. All states have
to be using the system by 2002,
ofllcials said.
But even though threefourth s of all American famili es
using food stamps now use a
c ad insteXd of coupons, criminals are still gettmg access to
·federal dollars, said Roger
Viadero, the Agriculture Department's tnspector general.
Just as they did with the paper
coupons, recipients are selli ng
their debit cards and penonal
identifi ca tion numbers for drugs
and 111uney w tra11ickers. he wid

the Hom&lt; 1.\ud!let Committee'!
wdf~l'~ ms k fmce nn Wcdne1day.

WASH!N(;TON (AP)
Without spec tal soft\varL', \"L'llll1ng
machines aren't processing thL'
new $5 and S I 0 bills.
Of an estimated 6 million tOod
and beve rage vending ma c hin e~
in this country that accept SS JnJ
$10 notes, only 1 million have
been modified to recognize the
bills, said Larry Felix of the Treasury Department's Bureau of
Engraving and Printing.
The new bills, bearing portraits of Abraham Lincoln and
Alexander
Hamilton , · \\'ere
redesigned to thwart high-tech
cou nterfelter5.
Vending machme owners arL'
working to
modify their
machines to accept th e new b1lls,
Felix said Friday. He sa1d the
process will likely take some time,
but he · is confident the
changeover will go smoothl y,
llrian Alk·n, a sp&lt;Jkcsm:lll i"&lt;Jr
the National Auwn1atic M~r­
dundi!in~t A~&lt;n r iat ion . &lt;:tid :
"Sume -of the "'ll11pm~nt i&gt; very
jimplr to " han~~ , Otlwr lll.tdmw•

need more m;:uor modificariOt4".
(:cn(TJ ll y speJ.kin g. Wt' are .work mg .1s Llst we &lt;..-;l!I. ..
Th e gowrnmelll suppli&lt;.' d
somt• of the ne\\· nntL'\ to vendin ~
c._'q lllpmcnt cq mpalli L'S late L1st
year to b~ve them time to develop
software to recognize them ~'1 d
test it on vending machines.. ·
''One of the things ind~try
as ked us to do was to introduoe
the new S5s and St Os together;·
thus allowing companies to' make
moditications for both. at th e
same rime and cut costs, F~ix
said.
Some vending machines ta.'ke
$20 bills, which got a facelitf"ln
1998, but many more take $5 apd
SIO notes, Felix said. "That's ,a
large leap - a much bigger j~ii"
for the ind ustry, he· said.
"
Fdix s.lid on ly ,,bout 10 percent ufdw new S~ .tml S10 note!
Jl\' in drn tlatlllll , Ti'w uld bilb
will Wntllli!O Ill be• ol&lt;H' ptctf UllU
r"mt'lli•trd llnfll Ihe' )' IW~F mit(:

The
forecast
•
s
er
is 2 below.

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ANA H EIM . Ca li f. (AP) - A th~rd Disney theme park is in the
\\"nrks here.
The &lt;nil - unnam ed park would be built on 89 acres next to 451\'.lr-old Disneybnd , on property already coptrolled by the Walt
DISne y Co, Cynthia H arr iss, president of The Disneyland Resort,
. . .1id Friday.
The park , &lt;c he·d uled to be fully completed by 2010, may house
\\":lt~'r rides b:lscd. on th e movies "The Little Mermaid" or "Winme
the· Pooh ." It will also have a shopping mall and hotel.
Acc ordi ng to the Los Angeles Times, the cost may nval the $1.4
hdho n spent &lt;&gt;n DISney's Ca lifornia Adventure, a 55-acre theme
p.1rk adJKenl to Di;neybnd schedu led to open in February 2001.
IJ "II&lt;'Y oiT1ciais sa1d they plan to seek public opinion on its design
.1lln .u1 L'!l\'lronment;:d impac t repor~ is completed.
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Tour 'copter crash kills 7
WA IL UKU, Hawa ii (AI') - Police teams planned to rappel
down a steep valley wall Satu rday to recover the bodies of 'ix
t&lt;l mim and a vl'teran pilot killed when their sightseeing helicopter
n.1~h L· d o n the island of MaUl durmg a tour. ·
Till' ASJSS twm-cnginc JITctaft uporated by Blu e Hawa1ian Hcliwptcrs fa 1!ed to return from the 35-minute flight Friday and an air
~ •.:. 1 rc h o f the rugged t ~ rralll revealed the wreckage hours later.
Tht..·re \\"C rc no su rvtvors. sa1d Patti. C hevalier, who owns the tour
nHnp .111 y with hL·r hu sband, Dave, a former,Vietnarn scou't pilot.
.. ,,..A,.rt· L'ru shcd . we 'rL' dt..·va ~ t:tted, and our hearts go out to the
f unlitl·...." ~ r1c ~.1id .
.
( ~ h n·. 1 !it• r \\'oukf not llk·nufy th t. passengers, but sa i1. they wen.· all
tPun ~ h . She s:ull the pil ot had more than 11 ,000 hou rs of fl ying
L'X p i.'!" H.'lllL' .md lu d beL'll with th L' compa ny fo r 1~\0rc than a year.
( ~ n. 1 , t ( ;u,lrLI "poke swonu n j.l( quL·lyn Z e t tl es sa~&lt;..i there wc._• re low
l lnud ....It ti lL' t lllll' of uhe cr.1 ~ h . Those .m: porma l co nditi o ns for rht•
lt h h . llll \ t\'. nile\' th .ll 1 ~ hom c to Llo NeL·dle, a !;fa'isy. nJrrnw
11\ount.lln th .H IS a pDpul.lr touri~t attractio n.
Th 1s w ,H H.J\\',Hi \ third notable :1ircraft cr.1sh 111 11 months. On
Sq' t. 23. ,1 tou r pl.lll l' n.1shL·d on the slop es of Mauna Loa o n chc.;
ll• g lsL111d , killin g .11! \0 peo ple on bo.1rd.
.
.
1 )n M.l\' 111. ,1 pm·.tte jet sLuuml'd ntto a lulls1de while approac h111g .11 1 ·"']'."':_t o"--"rvt ".lo bi , ki lling .111 six people on board.
.
M.11 n Po hl'l' Cl11cl ihom.l\ Phdt.p, &lt;Jid the w reckage wtll be
to 11 gh to rt•.tr h . and n.·c o v L'ry CfL'\\ ''&gt; nuy i""'.w e to rappel down a cliff1

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inf4.•ri11Jtion, ~top hy your ne;lrest
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or .1pply online :1 t \\'\\\V.tirstar.t"om .

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be j 's.1fe·ty issue with the cloud cover," Phillips

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Bank Without Boundaries

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Keep Your Hearing Aid In Slwpe
And Ready For SIOIUIIUl

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n:l:rf.lili[•J:

Eye reliever recall issued

New Disney theme park set

Protect your hearl.ng aid from

&amp;unllap l!timt!l-&amp;tnlintl • Pqe A1,

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

NATIONAL BRIEFS

Units log 4 calls.

VALLEY WEATHER

•n nr.::Jtt"!l•J:

• Sunday, July 23, 2000

-

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·------·

�Page A8 • a.unbap l!:imrt -a.rntinel

Sunday, July 23, 2000

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

labor to fete lawmakers at convention
WASHINGTON (AP) -Three
Republican congressmen will be
feted at the GOP convention next
month by an unlikely source- 16
labor unions .
,__
Ranging fro-;,, th~ -Air Line
Pilots Asso&lt;;iation to the United
Brotherhood of Carpenters and
Joiners, the unions, joined by the
AFL-C10's Building and Construcnon Trades Deparnnent, are
h~nonng Reps . Jack Quinn of
New York , Frank LoBiondo of
New Jersey and Ray LaHood of
Illinois.
At the same time, the· AFL-CIO
h11 begun ItS election-year TV
campaign with ads in five key distr Kts held by congressiOnal
Repnblicans facing tight races. The
AFL -C IO is targeting them for
_f.1ihng to support a Medicare pre·scnpnon drug plan backed by the
White House.
All thn:c: GOP .bwmake-rs to be:

The three congressmen "have
been very good on labor tr.lns- ·
portation issues," said Jeff Zack, a
spokesman for the Association of
f!ight Attendants, _s&gt;ne _ of __ilie
unions sponsoring the reception.
"We suppon politicians who support issues important to ilight
attendants."
Zack said the lawmake" helped
push through provisions that gave
increased protection for flight
attendants.
Bucking Republican leaders,
Quinn played a key role in 1996 in
the successful effort to raise the
minimum wage.The AFL-CIO has
given him a lifetime pro-labor voting record of 55 percent. LoBiondo's lifeume record is 46 percent.
LaHood has a much lower uting,
26 percent.
"If labor unions want to get
together in suppon of Republicans, we're all for it," sJ.id N ;ltiOnal

honored Aug. 2 sit o n the H 6use Republican Ccmgressional Com' Tr:tnsport.nion .mJ Infrastructure . nuttee spokeswom.m Marit Babin.
Cominittee. Half of the unions
Despite this show of support for
, spo11soring th~ reception represent son1t: GOP lawmakrrs. orgJnized
transportation 111dusrry workers.
labor IS still firmly planted on the

You"
J.1ever sounded-so good-.

Democratic side. Since Jan. I, I 999,
unions and their members have
g;ven S40.2 million to Democratic
candidates and- pany committees,
comp~r:ed-w.ith SJ. I million given
to Republicans, accorcling to the
Campaign Study Group, a nonpartisan consulting 6rm that analyzes
campaign 6nance data .
And when the AFL-CIO's 30
transportation unions n1et on
Thursday and Friday, they heard
from Vice President Al Gore, Senate
Democratic leader Tom Daschle
and House Democratic leader Dick
Gephardt. Their Republica n cou nterparts were not invited.
Meanwhile, the AFL-CIO "
spending "a couple hJJndred thousand dollars" for ads in the five congressional districts, spokeswoman
Demse Mitchell )lid. The conmH.·rcials began airing this w~ek m the
districts of Republican Reps
Charles Bass of New H ampsh,ne,
Erme Fletcher of Kentucky. Don
Sherwood of Pennsylvania, and J n11
R.ob"'n and Steve KuykemLill of
California.

Washington and paid for with
money raised by the national
parties, as far as election law is
concerned, it's the state parties
who are behind them.
"We don't think this IS in' any
way undermin in g the letter or
the spirit of the law.'' said Joseph
Sandler, general counsel for the
D~;mocratic National Commlttee , w hich pioneered thi~ technique m 1996. "Th1s IS likt.· tht·
tax code. You don't pay mon:
taxes than you owe."
Republicans say the same.
" There are la\vs and there a•·
rults and we're \,: ry careful t ~
co mply with them fully and
co mpletel y," said Cliff May,
spokesma n for the R~publican
National Committee.
The Federal Election Commission has said It's all perfectly
lega l, and that disturbs those
who :tdvocate changes m campaign finan ce law.

"There are really no rules ,"
said Larry Makinson, execu tive
director of the. Center for
Responsive
Politics, wh1 c h
monitors political fund raising.
"You ca n spend JUSt about anything just about anywhere as
long as you dot your i's and cross
your t's. And both parties are
domg plenty of it."
And even so m~ of tho se..·
involved agree chat tht' system 1"
bizarre.
"Thi s is the end re sult of an
antiquated and archaic federal
election law that needs to b ,•
seriously revamped ," said D .wid
Leland, chairma n of the Ohio
Democratic Party. " But the«· arc
the rules that eve ryone is .pby ing
with, and so be it."
These rules mean that J do llar
spent for an ad in Oregon tuv els across the country at least
three tJn1es before it Jr nves :H
the TV station.

SUNDAY;S

Football camp
TUPPERS PLAINS The
2000 Ea.&lt;tern football camp for
player s in grades 9-12 will
beMonday through Thursday at
Eastern Hi gh School. The camp
will begm ar 5:30 each day.
Also, helmet fitting for anyone
playing football at Eastern in
grades 7-12 will be Tuesday at 9
a.m . For more information, call
coach Scutt ·C hristman .at 98 5341 S.

WASH INGTON (AP) - Turmng to a respected Wa shin gto n 11151der 111 the final days of his
1carch , George W. Rush is seriously considering
li1rmer . Defense Secre tary Dick Cheney a.s his
\(cp ublic an running mate, two highly placed GOP
ntT1cials say.
C henev. a former House member, White House
d1ief of staff and defense secretary -· - and head of
the v1ce presidential search team - changed his
voter reg1 strJtto n Friday from Texas to Wyoming to
msu re he is eli gible for the j ob if the governor
dec ides to offer It, sa1d the officials, speaking on
co ndition of anon ymity. One said he is the leading
. _· on tender.
Bush s~1 id he has not made h1s decision but will
Jn so tht~ \vce kcnd , pronu~ing to pond er ''long and
hud" 111 t he ~ n v.1 cy of lm Texas ran ch. "The days
of spL'L" llLH ln n .lTL' over," Bush said, and aide s indi.l t"-•d ,1 1~ .lllJH1 U ilCl:l1lt.' IH co uld co me as early ne xt
\H'L' k . ]U " t d.J\' .\ before t h~ July 3 1 opening of the
R L·p td ~ h l-.111 .N.Hlnn .d Convention tn Phdadelph1:1
Th t.· L'lllt'P•t.'l !Ct.' of C h encv snvt.•s to ~ htft fo cm
b
'
,1\U\" fnn11 .1 C.1111p.ugn by at lc:lst ()() Hou st.· lawtll.lkn, t o gt.: r Ari ll lll .l Sen . John M t.C:.u n on th L'
1 11.. k ~..·t li u-. 1; ·. 1d v JSl'r" ~.t y he h.t'i ' ho\vn no tnclinallnll f1lH". ll-d \t.'il'dlllt; hi, Llnqws h,,.'d nv.tl. ~llld tht.•
ll l l'h\' 111~ c~ ror r 1., nt.·wed .1s Jn unwelcome chst r:Kt!on .11 l~u,h\ hcadqu.uten 1r1 Aust1 11. Tcxa ~.
( hht.·r-. '"ho h .lVt.' figurt.•d prollliJH:n tl y lll tiH.·
-; pn·uLlrtOi l.J Jllllldt· Go;.s . Fr.tn k Kcatm g of Okla llnnl.t. f(nn It 1dgL' of P~nn sy lv.lllJ.l .wd ( ~ ~o rgt:
I'.It.Iki o(Ne\\' York; Kcp .John Ka sic h ofO h1o and
\en' C:hu c k Ha t;d nf N eb ,-,ska and Fn d Thomp -

service, C h eney would be a low- risk choice, so m ething Bush signaled this week he wants.
At 59 , he is just five years older than Bush but
would br-mg a range of experience and stature
lac king in the presumptive nominee . Bush has tried
to close the gravitas gap with Vi ce President AI
Gore. his Democratic rival, by suggesting that
Washington veterans such as retired Gen. Colin
Powell and M cCa in h1ay be part of his administra tio n .
One of the sou rces called Cheney the leading
candidate, say1 ng Bush was very close to settling on
the man who once served under Bush's father, forme r President Bush . A second official, also familtar
with the selection process, cautioned that Bush
normally doesn 't rank hi s perso nnel choices in
terms of front- runn~rs and leadin g candidatcs.
Both so urces sa id Bush co uld still turn else where. not1ng that he has kept h1~ own cou me l.
l:.he offic iah mad~ the disclosure after confirm Ing thJt C heney, a Texas businessman, ~w lt C hL·d hts
voter registrJtion to Wyoming . "Tod :ty w;t;, th ~.· Ll'~t
cb y for hrm to r egiSte r w vote 111 Wyonun g ~o h L·
could be .1 ,.1ablt.· cllldJd .H~ for the go\·l· rn o r \ conSidcr.ltum." one offi ci.d S:lid .
C ill'lll'\' W~llltl·d tl) .woid confli ct wrth l.m gu.lgt.'
in the 12.th Amendm ent to d11..' Co nstirunon rh .n
fo rbids Electoral Colleg~ m~mb ers in Tr.::os fro m
voting for both t he president .liH.i VICl' prl' sld t.•nt
who .ne " tnlubi t.HJts" of t lu:1t ~t.ll l'.
CIKn~y, w ho h.ts .1 hi story of lll',lrt troubk.
wou ld be .1 surpri se p1 ck. H~ sugg:c stt:d weeks .1gu
tha t h!: wou ld not be a candidate, .1ftc r :~cc eptin g d
the JOb of rev1ewing the backgrounds of potenti al
\ OI1 .1 nd Hill FrtH. 6o th of TL'uncssl'e.
r
and1date s and helping Bush narrow hiS li st.
· /\ · n. ·~p~rrt.• d publtc li g-urc with ;\ long reco rd of

l

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP) - Tiger Woods
extended his lead at the British Open despite two rare
bogeys Saturday and moved closer to becoming the
youngest player ever to win th e career Grand Slam.
Woods shot a 67 in the third round to open up a sixstroke lead over David Duval and Thdmas Bjorn.
While several players challenged early on another perfect day for scoring, Woods shook otT the bogeys to pick
up three more strokes on his closest pursuers.
"The tournament is not over yet or I'd be sitting here
next to the trophy," Woods said. "There's 18 more holes."
Duval, who will be paired with Woods for th e final

round, made the biggest move of the day with a 66, tied
for the best round of the Open so far. Bjorn shot a 68.
Woods' 4- foot putt on No.2 lipped out, ending a streak
of 63 holes of par or better in major championships. It
was his first bogey since the II th hole of the third round
of the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach last month.
Woods followed the miss with birdies on five of seven
holes starting at No. 8, virtually putting the Open away.
He bogeyed No. 17, the infamous Road Hole, before finishing with another birdie on the final hole for a total of
200 ove r three rounds .
One stroke behind Duval and Bjorn were David Toms,

Stewart
on pole
at Pocono

Gallipolis football

Recapture more lifelike communication with
the people who value you the most.

GALLIPOLIS The 2000
Galltpnli s Area Football Camp
will run July 24-27 at the Gallipolis Water Treatment Plant
fic·lds. Camp will last each day
from I p 111. unri l 3:3(1 p.m .
·
l ntnestnl mdividual s should
pick up applications at the high
schoo l.

Eastem volleyball .
TU I'I'ERS !'LA! NS An
Eastem Hi!(h School volleyball
camp will be held July 24-2(,
from 5 to X p.m . t(H grade~ 4
throu!,(h II I at the school.
Rc gl'ltr,uron '\viii begin at 4:JO
p.m. o11 the July 24. ThL· tee is
$2'i
Vo lle-yba ll conditioning for
gr;IdL·s 7 through 12 w1 ll begin
Ju ly '27 from 5:31 1 to 7 p.m . at
L~&lt;t nn lligh School. All athldes
gpdcs 7 throu gh 12 playing f.11l
1pnrts should pick up pack ets and
sign iJp till· the sport ., soon._1.s. __ YQU'RE OUT- [\'Pomeroy .Indians infielder tags~ut.Chester's Allen
possible. Students will not be perWatson dunng actiOn Fr1day at the Kyger Creek Ltttle League tournaln itted ro parti ci pate on bcgi.n1 1111~ day if paper wor~ ts 1i o t

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2:_1 11

p.m.

CHESHIRE -. Riwr Valley
H1 gh Sc hool will hold extra ses'\!Oil'i of opL"n gym for girl-. baskc·tball p layers.
ThL· hi ~h ,L-hoo l ~ryn 1 Will now
lw opL't l ti·o1n I O a.m . to noon on

Ttt L'\lb\' 'i .111d Thursd;l\'\.
'
'
()pen gym will continue at
1\ichsc·ll - l'om-r
E iL' memary

Schunl

Ttt L·s d .ly

.md Th ur'iday

435 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio

446·7619 1·800·967·3277
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Outpatient Clinic
Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio

33 East Main Street
Jackson, Ohio

Wahama Boosters
MASON - Th e W.IIum.l Ath kti( I~oosrl'rs arc -;elling .llh t(w
th t.· 21 HHI I~HHh .t ll

.\L'; I\Otl

pro~ra JrJ.

An~'OilL' interested in pu n.:lus1 ng
.111 .1d in tlte program sh m dd call
HX2 -2247 nr 77.'1-55H11.

Point football
I'OINT
PLEASANT
E.quipm e llt will be i&lt;sued to all
pro .,. p~.-·Ltt VL' Pmnt Plt."asallt Hi gh
Schon! football playc·rs o n Moncla): Ju ly 24 111 d1e !'PI IS varsity
locker !"()Oil\ .

Wahama football
MASON - Those interested
in playin g li10thall at Wahama
1-II ~h Schoo l wil l be aSSI~o c d
cquipi11 L' lll on Wednesday Jul y
2.h. hL·gtrming at Il l .1.111 .
·J(, rcL·l'in· t.•qu ipn h·nt. pro' PL'Cri n· pl.tycn IIIU~ t h.1n· ;1 romplttnl phy. . i •.:.tl fo rm ali well as cod e
o f Cl)nduct fo rm . both of w hich
m.ty h ~ pick ed up .tt the high
~c honl from nonn to () p.m . ;:m y
\H.T kd,ty.
Spirit ;w·k&lt; may lw pi ckc cl up
ur nnkTl' d un (hl' ~()th .
Foorh.d l pr:tctirL· w ill begin
Mc&gt;nday.July .'\I at J p.m .
rL&gt;I" inf(Htll:ltiO il , Call

th t• &lt;." O:IL"h -

es .It 77J- S46 1) in the .!thletir&lt;
bw ldi n~ .

•

merit. Pomeroy- and New- Haven- aavansed to the
t
concluded after presstime Saturday. (Dan Polcyn photo).

Pomeroy, New Haven advance
BY DAN POLCYN

River Valley gym

'

Darren Clarke and Loren Roberts, followed by Ernie Els,
Tom Lehman, Steve Flesch and Dennis Paulson.
Els would have been closer to Woods, but he doublebogeyed the 12th hole after hitting into some thick bushes.
On another sunny day with just light wind off the
North Sea, Bernhard Langer and Bob May set the early
pace with 6-under 66s.
Langer, who has been runner-up twice at the Open,
pulled within five shots ofWoods.
"The conditions are perfect," Langer said. " I haven't
given up hope yet."

MERCERVILLE Hannan
Trace Junior High football meeting will be 6 p.m. Tuesday at
Hann:-~n
Trace
Elementary
SchooL

L'Vl'J iin g'i frn 111 6 p .111 . to 9 p .m .

Cheney is leading candidate for Bush running mate

Tiger stretches lead to ·six strokes

Jr. high meeting
a

WASHINGTON (AP) Seizing
another
loophole,
Democrats and Republicans are
funneling money through state
parties to buy their television
ads in a tacti c that preserve s.. the
limited dollars they ca n spend
directly on ond1dates 111 the fall.
If the nationa l parties had
bought the .1ds themselves , they
would h an· b.·~n n:qmred by
federal n.•guL1tions. to us.c..· mostly
"!u rd monc..·v. ·· - the\ bmitcd
~· ontnbutJon s th:~.t ca n bt· spent
,h rect ly in support of ca nd1dates .
But. by routlllg dollars first to
-, rate affili .Hc s. the p:.rtiL'S ca n use
:, gre ate-r po rtton of "soft
money," th e unillllltcd donations
from unton s. corpo ration s and
we.t lthy indi1·i Ju als th.1t .He easier to raiSe Jnd cannot be direc tly us ed to hdp el&lt;ct candidates .
So while the .1ds star AI Gore
.uH.l George '1}/. Bush. are produ ced by crc.lt iv e mtnd s in

Page 81
Sundey, July n, 1000

HIGHLIGHTS

cuts to $913 billion over a decade. Combined with the
Republican-sponsored $792 billion tax cut Clinton
vetoed last year- which contained many of the same
tax measures moving again this year- the grand total
comes to nearly Sl.8 trillion over 10 years.
· "Taken together, the tax cuts passed last year and
this year by this Congress would completely erase the
entire projected surplus over 10 years," Clinton said.
"The majority seems to have forgotten that projections in a repon are not the same as dollat; in the
bank."
The total projected surplus is actu,Ily much larger,
but Republicans and Democrats alike have committed to walling off money earmarked for Social Security and Medicare.
In the Republican radio response, Sen. Rod
GralliS, R-Minn., said there is ample room in the nonSocial Security surplus - it comes to $2.17 trillion
over 10 years, including Medicare - to cut taxes
rather than allowing the extra revenue collections to
pay for bigger government.

Parties sbetch dollars by funneling money
·""

Today's Scoreboard; Page B2
Golden Bear bids farewell, Page BJ
Mets wa11t Barry Larkin, Page B6

.&amp;.l&amp;lt.&amp; .....

·clinton says tax breaks would eat projected surplus
WASHINGTON (AP) - Huge tax c-uts being
pushed bv Republicans in Congress could "completely erase" the projected budget surplus before other
criaulneeds are met, President Clinton said Saturday.
R epublicans replied there was plenty of money in the
surplus for tax relief.
"Now we have the chance to pass responsible taX
cuts a? we continue to pursue solid economic policy,"
Clinton said in his weekly radio address. "But instead
of following this sensible path that got us here, congressional Republicans are treating this surplus as if
they won it in the lottery."
The White House released an analysis estimating
the I 0-year cost of major tax cuts passed or moving
forward in the GOP-led Congress at $712 billion,
including bills to ease the mcome tax marriage penal~
ty and repeal inheritance taxes that the president has
vowed to veto.
Because the public debt also would be paid back at
a slower pace, the analysis predicted that higher interest costs would raise the overall price tag of the tax

Inside:

OVP SPORTS STAFF

CHESH IR E - And then there were
four.
The Kyger Creek Little League Tournamen( field of 20 narrowed to its fina l fou r
Friday, as the Pomeroy Indians and the New
Haven Reds earned berths in Saturday's
scm i- finals.
Pomeroy defeated the Chesrer Reds 1110 in a seven-inning contest, while it took
Nt•w Haven just four innings to eliminate
the MidJleporr ll..eds, 14 ~ I .
Pomeroy Indians II,
Chester Reds l 0
A walk 111 the top of the seve nth allowed
thl' lndian"' to generate :1 si ngle run , but it
was a sufiiCi ent margin to beat the Middleport Reds.
Brandon Pearson drew that walk as th e
lead-otr hitter 111 the inning, moved to third
o n :1 scrie ' of pitching misc ues, and cvc JHu ally scored on ,, Urad Soulsby grounder to
first .
Soulsby then pitched a 1- 2- 3 bottom of

the inmng to earn the vi ctory and propel
Pom eroy into the semi-finals.
Pomeroy had some big leads in the game,
in.cludmg a 5-2 lead after three innings.
Three of those came in the second, courtesy
of a Bryce Davis so lo home run and a
gro und- rule double otf the bat of AJ Chan-

the fourth, fifth, and sixth innings, striking
out six Reds hitters. Daylon Jenkins started,
for the Indians, working three innings and
striking out five . Soulsby worked the seventh and struck out two in picking up the
Win.

Brandon Goeglein , Justin Browning, and
Matt Morris pitched for Chester. Morris
Pomeroy added two more in the top of struck o ut five, as did Goeglein.
the fourth after a single by Brady Ramsburg
For Pomeroy, Soulsby, Davis, Black, a1_1d
and a double by Soulsby. C hester answered Wei Wright each had two hits . Sou lsby's
in tts half of the fourth however, courtesy of included a double; Black had two d0ubles;
fiw free passes issued by Pomeroy pitchers.
Davis had a double .and a home run .
Those walks allowed Chester to sco re five
AJ Chandler added a double and Ramstim es and knot the tally at 7-7.
burg added a smgle for the Indians.
Pomeroy generated two runs in the fifth,
Allen Watson collected two of Chester's
but C hester rallied for three to take a 10-9
five bits. The other thre e belonged to Coelead into what would have been rhe game's
glein, Co dy Gerlach, and Mike Owens.
tinal tfJllll' .
Gerlach was Chester's player of the game.
That was, until Davis came to the plate.
Davis re ce ived the honor for Pomeroy.
DaviS lared a double to left and score d on a
New Haven Reds 14,
C layton Llla ck double to th e sam e spot to
Middleport Reds 1
rie the game at I0- 10 and force th e seve nth
Lucas Litchfield pitched four innings, givinning.

dler.

Davis also pitched in th e contest, working ·

Piease see KCLLT, Pace Bl

D'backs top

.Manhall, WVU football
playen face charges

Reds on
Friday night
C INC INNATI (AP) - Two
kadofr triples, two empty
innings. The Arizona Diamondbarks knew they couldn't let a
third sconng chance slip away.
They didn 't. Luis GQnzalez
doubled with two outs in the
. eighth inning Friday night , driving in th e go-ahead run, and the
Diarnot1dbacks held on for a S-4
victory over the C incinnati R.eds.
The Reds lost shortly after capr.lln Barry Larkin revealed a renI.Itiw deal that would send him to
the New York M ets. Larkin, who
has 'pe nt his entire career with
Cincinnati, has to decide wlwther
to approve 1t .

'·

LONG POND, Pa. (AP) Tony Stewart's timing was perfect.
After sitting out a rain delay of
· more than 25 .rninutes, he saw the
sun came out and knew it was
time to go.
So he hustled his Pontiac
around Pocono International
Raceway and won the pole for
Sunday's Pennsylvania 500.
"When you get moisture in
the air, it creates a lot of drag,"
Stewart said after a record-setting
q)lalifying lap of 172.39 1 mph.
"With the snn, the track temperature starts climbing again, so
when the rain drops quit , I wanted to get in the car as fast as I
could."
The two biggest enemies of
speed humid air and a -hot
track- defeated, Stewart did the
rest . He got around the 2 1/2mile triangle in 52.207 seconds to
win his first pole of the season.
" I _was real stll]&gt;rised," ~aicl_t_~
secono- year driver, who. is taking
over Winston Cup cacmg after
th e best rookie season in
NASCAR history. "It's hard to go
out there after it rains like that."
That performance certainly
impressed Rusty 'Wallace, who
seemed poised to win his seriesbest eighth pole of the season. He
wasn't sure if the weather had
played into Stewart's hands, hut
wasn't going to argue with the
stopwatch.
"I didn't think there was any
way in the world anybody wa.s
going beat that," Wallace said of
his own lap in a Ford. at 172.157.
Stewart, \vho leads the series
with three victories in the last six
races, was parked at the end of pit
road when light rain began ro fall
aiier 41 of 45 cars had taken qualifying laps.
That bothered him a bit.
"It's hard when you sit there
and you get ready to go out and
you prepare mentally, and then to
have th e rain start and have to go
through that cycle again," Stewart
said . " It c reated a little more anxiety than what I wanted."
But pace-car driver Buster

- Reds center fielder Ken Griffey Jr. is tagged our by i
mondbacks first basemen Erubie l Durazo during the fifth inning. (AP)
The gam e ende-d with Larkin
drawing a two-out walk !Tom
Matt Mantei , bringing up Ken
Gri'ffey Jr. Mantei threw three 99

mph fastballs past Griffey to ·end
it.
Please see

Reds, Pace Bl

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
spokeswoman said.
A Marshall University football
Huntington police Sgt. Randy
player has been charged with Byard said an officer who witstab bing an ot.io man during a nessed the fight used pepper
fight at a Huntington bar, while spray to bre ak it up.
a We.t Virginia University footMarshall football coach 13ob
ball
player faces
ano th er Pruett would not comment on
shoplifting charge.
Addison 's arrest .
Marshall defensive end Bobby
" I can't really comment until I
Addison, 20, of Washington·, find out what happened," Pru ett
D.C.. was being held Friday said . "We are so rry th at anyone
night at the Cabell County Jail got hurt . We need to let the
o n a felo ny mali cio us wounding j udicial .system do its job."
charge. Bond was set at $25,000.
Addiso n is a n ative of Was){Poh ce said Addison stabbed ington, D.C., w h o came to MarJm ll Ryan Petri e, 21, of Pro c- , ~ h a ll in 1999. In a 1999 intertorville , Ohio, in th e chest' early view with Th e Herald- Dispatch
Friday morning during a fight at of Huntington , Addison said he
The Drink.
·
chose Marshall · beca u se he
Petrie was treated at St. Mary's
Please- Alftsts. Pap Bl
H os pital and released. a hospital

�Page A8 • a.unbap l!:imrt -a.rntinel

Sunday, July 23, 2000

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

labor to fete lawmakers at convention
WASHINGTON (AP) -Three
Republican congressmen will be
feted at the GOP convention next
month by an unlikely source- 16
labor unions .
,__
Ranging fro-;,, th~ -Air Line
Pilots Asso&lt;;iation to the United
Brotherhood of Carpenters and
Joiners, the unions, joined by the
AFL-C10's Building and Construcnon Trades Deparnnent, are
h~nonng Reps . Jack Quinn of
New York , Frank LoBiondo of
New Jersey and Ray LaHood of
Illinois.
At the same time, the· AFL-CIO
h11 begun ItS election-year TV
campaign with ads in five key distr Kts held by congressiOnal
Repnblicans facing tight races. The
AFL -C IO is targeting them for
_f.1ihng to support a Medicare pre·scnpnon drug plan backed by the
White House.
All thn:c: GOP .bwmake-rs to be:

The three congressmen "have
been very good on labor tr.lns- ·
portation issues," said Jeff Zack, a
spokesman for the Association of
f!ight Attendants, _s&gt;ne _ of __ilie
unions sponsoring the reception.
"We suppon politicians who support issues important to ilight
attendants."
Zack said the lawmake" helped
push through provisions that gave
increased protection for flight
attendants.
Bucking Republican leaders,
Quinn played a key role in 1996 in
the successful effort to raise the
minimum wage.The AFL-CIO has
given him a lifetime pro-labor voting record of 55 percent. LoBiondo's lifeume record is 46 percent.
LaHood has a much lower uting,
26 percent.
"If labor unions want to get
together in suppon of Republicans, we're all for it," sJ.id N ;ltiOnal

honored Aug. 2 sit o n the H 6use Republican Ccmgressional Com' Tr:tnsport.nion .mJ Infrastructure . nuttee spokeswom.m Marit Babin.
Cominittee. Half of the unions
Despite this show of support for
, spo11soring th~ reception represent son1t: GOP lawmakrrs. orgJnized
transportation 111dusrry workers.
labor IS still firmly planted on the

You"
J.1ever sounded-so good-.

Democratic side. Since Jan. I, I 999,
unions and their members have
g;ven S40.2 million to Democratic
candidates and- pany committees,
comp~r:ed-w.ith SJ. I million given
to Republicans, accorcling to the
Campaign Study Group, a nonpartisan consulting 6rm that analyzes
campaign 6nance data .
And when the AFL-CIO's 30
transportation unions n1et on
Thursday and Friday, they heard
from Vice President Al Gore, Senate
Democratic leader Tom Daschle
and House Democratic leader Dick
Gephardt. Their Republica n cou nterparts were not invited.
Meanwhile, the AFL-CIO "
spending "a couple hJJndred thousand dollars" for ads in the five congressional districts, spokeswoman
Demse Mitchell )lid. The conmH.·rcials began airing this w~ek m the
districts of Republican Reps
Charles Bass of New H ampsh,ne,
Erme Fletcher of Kentucky. Don
Sherwood of Pennsylvania, and J n11
R.ob"'n and Steve KuykemLill of
California.

Washington and paid for with
money raised by the national
parties, as far as election law is
concerned, it's the state parties
who are behind them.
"We don't think this IS in' any
way undermin in g the letter or
the spirit of the law.'' said Joseph
Sandler, general counsel for the
D~;mocratic National Commlttee , w hich pioneered thi~ technique m 1996. "Th1s IS likt.· tht·
tax code. You don't pay mon:
taxes than you owe."
Republicans say the same.
" There are la\vs and there a•·
rults and we're \,: ry careful t ~
co mply with them fully and
co mpletel y," said Cliff May,
spokesma n for the R~publican
National Committee.
The Federal Election Commission has said It's all perfectly
lega l, and that disturbs those
who :tdvocate changes m campaign finan ce law.

"There are really no rules ,"
said Larry Makinson, execu tive
director of the. Center for
Responsive
Politics, wh1 c h
monitors political fund raising.
"You ca n spend JUSt about anything just about anywhere as
long as you dot your i's and cross
your t's. And both parties are
domg plenty of it."
And even so m~ of tho se..·
involved agree chat tht' system 1"
bizarre.
"Thi s is the end re sult of an
antiquated and archaic federal
election law that needs to b ,•
seriously revamped ," said D .wid
Leland, chairma n of the Ohio
Democratic Party. " But the«· arc
the rules that eve ryone is .pby ing
with, and so be it."
These rules mean that J do llar
spent for an ad in Oregon tuv els across the country at least
three tJn1es before it Jr nves :H
the TV station.

SUNDAY;S

Football camp
TUPPERS PLAINS The
2000 Ea.&lt;tern football camp for
player s in grades 9-12 will
beMonday through Thursday at
Eastern Hi gh School. The camp
will begm ar 5:30 each day.
Also, helmet fitting for anyone
playing football at Eastern in
grades 7-12 will be Tuesday at 9
a.m . For more information, call
coach Scutt ·C hristman .at 98 5341 S.

WASH INGTON (AP) - Turmng to a respected Wa shin gto n 11151der 111 the final days of his
1carch , George W. Rush is seriously considering
li1rmer . Defense Secre tary Dick Cheney a.s his
\(cp ublic an running mate, two highly placed GOP
ntT1cials say.
C henev. a former House member, White House
d1ief of staff and defense secretary -· - and head of
the v1ce presidential search team - changed his
voter reg1 strJtto n Friday from Texas to Wyoming to
msu re he is eli gible for the j ob if the governor
dec ides to offer It, sa1d the officials, speaking on
co ndition of anon ymity. One said he is the leading
. _· on tender.
Bush s~1 id he has not made h1s decision but will
Jn so tht~ \vce kcnd , pronu~ing to pond er ''long and
hud" 111 t he ~ n v.1 cy of lm Texas ran ch. "The days
of spL'L" llLH ln n .lTL' over," Bush said, and aide s indi.l t"-•d ,1 1~ .lllJH1 U ilCl:l1lt.' IH co uld co me as early ne xt
\H'L' k . ]U " t d.J\' .\ before t h~ July 3 1 opening of the
R L·p td ~ h l-.111 .N.Hlnn .d Convention tn Phdadelph1:1
Th t.· L'lllt'P•t.'l !Ct.' of C h encv snvt.•s to ~ htft fo cm
b
'
,1\U\" fnn11 .1 C.1111p.ugn by at lc:lst ()() Hou st.· lawtll.lkn, t o gt.: r Ari ll lll .l Sen . John M t.C:.u n on th L'
1 11.. k ~..·t li u-. 1; ·. 1d v JSl'r" ~.t y he h.t'i ' ho\vn no tnclinallnll f1lH". ll-d \t.'il'dlllt; hi, Llnqws h,,.'d nv.tl. ~llld tht.•
ll l l'h\' 111~ c~ ror r 1., nt.·wed .1s Jn unwelcome chst r:Kt!on .11 l~u,h\ hcadqu.uten 1r1 Aust1 11. Tcxa ~.
( hht.·r-. '"ho h .lVt.' figurt.•d prollliJH:n tl y lll tiH.·
-; pn·uLlrtOi l.J Jllllldt· Go;.s . Fr.tn k Kcatm g of Okla llnnl.t. f(nn It 1dgL' of P~nn sy lv.lllJ.l .wd ( ~ ~o rgt:
I'.It.Iki o(Ne\\' York; Kcp .John Ka sic h ofO h1o and
\en' C:hu c k Ha t;d nf N eb ,-,ska and Fn d Thomp -

service, C h eney would be a low- risk choice, so m ething Bush signaled this week he wants.
At 59 , he is just five years older than Bush but
would br-mg a range of experience and stature
lac king in the presumptive nominee . Bush has tried
to close the gravitas gap with Vi ce President AI
Gore. his Democratic rival, by suggesting that
Washington veterans such as retired Gen. Colin
Powell and M cCa in h1ay be part of his administra tio n .
One of the sou rces called Cheney the leading
candidate, say1 ng Bush was very close to settling on
the man who once served under Bush's father, forme r President Bush . A second official, also familtar
with the selection process, cautioned that Bush
normally doesn 't rank hi s perso nnel choices in
terms of front- runn~rs and leadin g candidatcs.
Both so urces sa id Bush co uld still turn else where. not1ng that he has kept h1~ own cou me l.
l:.he offic iah mad~ the disclosure after confirm Ing thJt C heney, a Texas businessman, ~w lt C hL·d hts
voter registrJtion to Wyoming . "Tod :ty w;t;, th ~.· Ll'~t
cb y for hrm to r egiSte r w vote 111 Wyonun g ~o h L·
could be .1 ,.1ablt.· cllldJd .H~ for the go\·l· rn o r \ conSidcr.ltum." one offi ci.d S:lid .
C ill'lll'\' W~llltl·d tl) .woid confli ct wrth l.m gu.lgt.'
in the 12.th Amendm ent to d11..' Co nstirunon rh .n
fo rbids Electoral Colleg~ m~mb ers in Tr.::os fro m
voting for both t he president .liH.i VICl' prl' sld t.•nt
who .ne " tnlubi t.HJts" of t lu:1t ~t.ll l'.
CIKn~y, w ho h.ts .1 hi story of lll',lrt troubk.
wou ld be .1 surpri se p1 ck. H~ sugg:c stt:d weeks .1gu
tha t h!: wou ld not be a candidate, .1ftc r :~cc eptin g d
the JOb of rev1ewing the backgrounds of potenti al
\ OI1 .1 nd Hill FrtH. 6o th of TL'uncssl'e.
r
and1date s and helping Bush narrow hiS li st.
· /\ · n. ·~p~rrt.• d publtc li g-urc with ;\ long reco rd of

l

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP) - Tiger Woods
extended his lead at the British Open despite two rare
bogeys Saturday and moved closer to becoming the
youngest player ever to win th e career Grand Slam.
Woods shot a 67 in the third round to open up a sixstroke lead over David Duval and Thdmas Bjorn.
While several players challenged early on another perfect day for scoring, Woods shook otT the bogeys to pick
up three more strokes on his closest pursuers.
"The tournament is not over yet or I'd be sitting here
next to the trophy," Woods said. "There's 18 more holes."
Duval, who will be paired with Woods for th e final

round, made the biggest move of the day with a 66, tied
for the best round of the Open so far. Bjorn shot a 68.
Woods' 4- foot putt on No.2 lipped out, ending a streak
of 63 holes of par or better in major championships. It
was his first bogey since the II th hole of the third round
of the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach last month.
Woods followed the miss with birdies on five of seven
holes starting at No. 8, virtually putting the Open away.
He bogeyed No. 17, the infamous Road Hole, before finishing with another birdie on the final hole for a total of
200 ove r three rounds .
One stroke behind Duval and Bjorn were David Toms,

Stewart
on pole
at Pocono

Gallipolis football

Recapture more lifelike communication with
the people who value you the most.

GALLIPOLIS The 2000
Galltpnli s Area Football Camp
will run July 24-27 at the Gallipolis Water Treatment Plant
fic·lds. Camp will last each day
from I p 111. unri l 3:3(1 p.m .
·
l ntnestnl mdividual s should
pick up applications at the high
schoo l.

Eastem volleyball .
TU I'I'ERS !'LA! NS An
Eastem Hi!(h School volleyball
camp will be held July 24-2(,
from 5 to X p.m . t(H grade~ 4
throu!,(h II I at the school.
Rc gl'ltr,uron '\viii begin at 4:JO
p.m. o11 the July 24. ThL· tee is
$2'i
Vo lle-yba ll conditioning for
gr;IdL·s 7 through 12 w1 ll begin
Ju ly '27 from 5:31 1 to 7 p.m . at
L~&lt;t nn lligh School. All athldes
gpdcs 7 throu gh 12 playing f.11l
1pnrts should pick up pack ets and
sign iJp till· the sport ., soon._1.s. __ YQU'RE OUT- [\'Pomeroy .Indians infielder tags~ut.Chester's Allen
possible. Students will not be perWatson dunng actiOn Fr1day at the Kyger Creek Ltttle League tournaln itted ro parti ci pate on bcgi.n1 1111~ day if paper wor~ ts 1i o t

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compktt.·d and rcturn t&gt;d .

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Tlw p :ICkets may be· pi cked up
thL· rn~ur1 utlice ;n Eastern .
MoiJd.ly through Friday, H:311

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Contact any of these hearing care professionals today
and experience CONFORMA for yourself!

www .conrorma .net

2:_1 11

p.m.

CHESHIRE -. Riwr Valley
H1 gh Sc hool will hold extra ses'\!Oil'i of opL"n gym for girl-. baskc·tball p layers.
ThL· hi ~h ,L-hoo l ~ryn 1 Will now
lw opL't l ti·o1n I O a.m . to noon on

Ttt L'\lb\' 'i .111d Thursd;l\'\.
'
'
()pen gym will continue at
1\ichsc·ll - l'om-r
E iL' memary

Schunl

Ttt L·s d .ly

.md Th ur'iday

435 Second Avenue

Gallipolis, Ohio

446·7619 1·800·967·3277
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Outpatient Clinic
Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio

33 East Main Street
Jackson, Ohio

Wahama Boosters
MASON - Th e W.IIum.l Ath kti( I~oosrl'rs arc -;elling .llh t(w
th t.· 21 HHI I~HHh .t ll

.\L'; I\Otl

pro~ra JrJ.

An~'OilL' interested in pu n.:lus1 ng
.111 .1d in tlte program sh m dd call
HX2 -2247 nr 77.'1-55H11.

Point football
I'OINT
PLEASANT
E.quipm e llt will be i&lt;sued to all
pro .,. p~.-·Ltt VL' Pmnt Plt."asallt Hi gh
Schon! football playc·rs o n Moncla): Ju ly 24 111 d1e !'PI IS varsity
locker !"()Oil\ .

Wahama football
MASON - Those interested
in playin g li10thall at Wahama
1-II ~h Schoo l wil l be aSSI~o c d
cquipi11 L' lll on Wednesday Jul y
2.h. hL·gtrming at Il l .1.111 .
·J(, rcL·l'in· t.•qu ipn h·nt. pro' PL'Cri n· pl.tycn IIIU~ t h.1n· ;1 romplttnl phy. . i •.:.tl fo rm ali well as cod e
o f Cl)nduct fo rm . both of w hich
m.ty h ~ pick ed up .tt the high
~c honl from nonn to () p.m . ;:m y
\H.T kd,ty.
Spirit ;w·k&lt; may lw pi ckc cl up
ur nnkTl' d un (hl' ~()th .
Foorh.d l pr:tctirL· w ill begin
Mc&gt;nday.July .'\I at J p.m .
rL&gt;I" inf(Htll:ltiO il , Call

th t• &lt;." O:IL"h -

es .It 77J- S46 1) in the .!thletir&lt;
bw ldi n~ .

•

merit. Pomeroy- and New- Haven- aavansed to the
t
concluded after presstime Saturday. (Dan Polcyn photo).

Pomeroy, New Haven advance
BY DAN POLCYN

River Valley gym

'

Darren Clarke and Loren Roberts, followed by Ernie Els,
Tom Lehman, Steve Flesch and Dennis Paulson.
Els would have been closer to Woods, but he doublebogeyed the 12th hole after hitting into some thick bushes.
On another sunny day with just light wind off the
North Sea, Bernhard Langer and Bob May set the early
pace with 6-under 66s.
Langer, who has been runner-up twice at the Open,
pulled within five shots ofWoods.
"The conditions are perfect," Langer said. " I haven't
given up hope yet."

MERCERVILLE Hannan
Trace Junior High football meeting will be 6 p.m. Tuesday at
Hann:-~n
Trace
Elementary
SchooL

L'Vl'J iin g'i frn 111 6 p .111 . to 9 p .m .

Cheney is leading candidate for Bush running mate

Tiger stretches lead to ·six strokes

Jr. high meeting
a

WASHINGTON (AP) Seizing
another
loophole,
Democrats and Republicans are
funneling money through state
parties to buy their television
ads in a tacti c that preserve s.. the
limited dollars they ca n spend
directly on ond1dates 111 the fall.
If the nationa l parties had
bought the .1ds themselves , they
would h an· b.·~n n:qmred by
federal n.•guL1tions. to us.c..· mostly
"!u rd monc..·v. ·· - the\ bmitcd
~· ontnbutJon s th:~.t ca n bt· spent
,h rect ly in support of ca nd1dates .
But. by routlllg dollars first to
-, rate affili .Hc s. the p:.rtiL'S ca n use
:, gre ate-r po rtton of "soft
money," th e unillllltcd donations
from unton s. corpo ration s and
we.t lthy indi1·i Ju als th.1t .He easier to raiSe Jnd cannot be direc tly us ed to hdp el&lt;ct candidates .
So while the .1ds star AI Gore
.uH.l George '1}/. Bush. are produ ced by crc.lt iv e mtnd s in

Page 81
Sundey, July n, 1000

HIGHLIGHTS

cuts to $913 billion over a decade. Combined with the
Republican-sponsored $792 billion tax cut Clinton
vetoed last year- which contained many of the same
tax measures moving again this year- the grand total
comes to nearly Sl.8 trillion over 10 years.
· "Taken together, the tax cuts passed last year and
this year by this Congress would completely erase the
entire projected surplus over 10 years," Clinton said.
"The majority seems to have forgotten that projections in a repon are not the same as dollat; in the
bank."
The total projected surplus is actu,Ily much larger,
but Republicans and Democrats alike have committed to walling off money earmarked for Social Security and Medicare.
In the Republican radio response, Sen. Rod
GralliS, R-Minn., said there is ample room in the nonSocial Security surplus - it comes to $2.17 trillion
over 10 years, including Medicare - to cut taxes
rather than allowing the extra revenue collections to
pay for bigger government.

Parties sbetch dollars by funneling money
·""

Today's Scoreboard; Page B2
Golden Bear bids farewell, Page BJ
Mets wa11t Barry Larkin, Page B6

.&amp;.l&amp;lt.&amp; .....

·clinton says tax breaks would eat projected surplus
WASHINGTON (AP) - Huge tax c-uts being
pushed bv Republicans in Congress could "completely erase" the projected budget surplus before other
criaulneeds are met, President Clinton said Saturday.
R epublicans replied there was plenty of money in the
surplus for tax relief.
"Now we have the chance to pass responsible taX
cuts a? we continue to pursue solid economic policy,"
Clinton said in his weekly radio address. "But instead
of following this sensible path that got us here, congressional Republicans are treating this surplus as if
they won it in the lottery."
The White House released an analysis estimating
the I 0-year cost of major tax cuts passed or moving
forward in the GOP-led Congress at $712 billion,
including bills to ease the mcome tax marriage penal~
ty and repeal inheritance taxes that the president has
vowed to veto.
Because the public debt also would be paid back at
a slower pace, the analysis predicted that higher interest costs would raise the overall price tag of the tax

Inside:

OVP SPORTS STAFF

CHESH IR E - And then there were
four.
The Kyger Creek Little League Tournamen( field of 20 narrowed to its fina l fou r
Friday, as the Pomeroy Indians and the New
Haven Reds earned berths in Saturday's
scm i- finals.
Pomeroy defeated the Chesrer Reds 1110 in a seven-inning contest, while it took
Nt•w Haven just four innings to eliminate
the MidJleporr ll..eds, 14 ~ I .
Pomeroy Indians II,
Chester Reds l 0
A walk 111 the top of the seve nth allowed
thl' lndian"' to generate :1 si ngle run , but it
was a sufiiCi ent margin to beat the Middleport Reds.
Brandon Pearson drew that walk as th e
lead-otr hitter 111 the inning, moved to third
o n :1 scrie ' of pitching misc ues, and cvc JHu ally scored on ,, Urad Soulsby grounder to
first .
Soulsby then pitched a 1- 2- 3 bottom of

the inmng to earn the vi ctory and propel
Pom eroy into the semi-finals.
Pomeroy had some big leads in the game,
in.cludmg a 5-2 lead after three innings.
Three of those came in the second, courtesy
of a Bryce Davis so lo home run and a
gro und- rule double otf the bat of AJ Chan-

the fourth, fifth, and sixth innings, striking
out six Reds hitters. Daylon Jenkins started,
for the Indians, working three innings and
striking out five . Soulsby worked the seventh and struck out two in picking up the
Win.

Brandon Goeglein , Justin Browning, and
Matt Morris pitched for Chester. Morris
Pomeroy added two more in the top of struck o ut five, as did Goeglein.
the fourth after a single by Brady Ramsburg
For Pomeroy, Soulsby, Davis, Black, a1_1d
and a double by Soulsby. C hester answered Wei Wright each had two hits . Sou lsby's
in tts half of the fourth however, courtesy of included a double; Black had two d0ubles;
fiw free passes issued by Pomeroy pitchers.
Davis had a double .and a home run .
Those walks allowed Chester to sco re five
AJ Chandler added a double and Ramstim es and knot the tally at 7-7.
burg added a smgle for the Indians.
Pomeroy generated two runs in the fifth,
Allen Watson collected two of Chester's
but C hester rallied for three to take a 10-9
five bits. The other thre e belonged to Coelead into what would have been rhe game's
glein, Co dy Gerlach, and Mike Owens.
tinal tfJllll' .
Gerlach was Chester's player of the game.
That was, until Davis came to the plate.
Davis re ce ived the honor for Pomeroy.
DaviS lared a double to left and score d on a
New Haven Reds 14,
C layton Llla ck double to th e sam e spot to
Middleport Reds 1
rie the game at I0- 10 and force th e seve nth
Lucas Litchfield pitched four innings, givinning.

dler.

Davis also pitched in th e contest, working ·

Piease see KCLLT, Pace Bl

D'backs top

.Manhall, WVU football
playen face charges

Reds on
Friday night
C INC INNATI (AP) - Two
kadofr triples, two empty
innings. The Arizona Diamondbarks knew they couldn't let a
third sconng chance slip away.
They didn 't. Luis GQnzalez
doubled with two outs in the
. eighth inning Friday night , driving in th e go-ahead run, and the
Diarnot1dbacks held on for a S-4
victory over the C incinnati R.eds.
The Reds lost shortly after capr.lln Barry Larkin revealed a renI.Itiw deal that would send him to
the New York M ets. Larkin, who
has 'pe nt his entire career with
Cincinnati, has to decide wlwther
to approve 1t .

'·

LONG POND, Pa. (AP) Tony Stewart's timing was perfect.
After sitting out a rain delay of
· more than 25 .rninutes, he saw the
sun came out and knew it was
time to go.
So he hustled his Pontiac
around Pocono International
Raceway and won the pole for
Sunday's Pennsylvania 500.
"When you get moisture in
the air, it creates a lot of drag,"
Stewart said after a record-setting
q)lalifying lap of 172.39 1 mph.
"With the snn, the track temperature starts climbing again, so
when the rain drops quit , I wanted to get in the car as fast as I
could."
The two biggest enemies of
speed humid air and a -hot
track- defeated, Stewart did the
rest . He got around the 2 1/2mile triangle in 52.207 seconds to
win his first pole of the season.
" I _was real stll]&gt;rised," ~aicl_t_~
secono- year driver, who. is taking
over Winston Cup cacmg after
th e best rookie season in
NASCAR history. "It's hard to go
out there after it rains like that."
That performance certainly
impressed Rusty 'Wallace, who
seemed poised to win his seriesbest eighth pole of the season. He
wasn't sure if the weather had
played into Stewart's hands, hut
wasn't going to argue with the
stopwatch.
"I didn't think there was any
way in the world anybody wa.s
going beat that," Wallace said of
his own lap in a Ford. at 172.157.
Stewart, \vho leads the series
with three victories in the last six
races, was parked at the end of pit
road when light rain began ro fall
aiier 41 of 45 cars had taken qualifying laps.
That bothered him a bit.
"It's hard when you sit there
and you get ready to go out and
you prepare mentally, and then to
have th e rain start and have to go
through that cycle again," Stewart
said . " It c reated a little more anxiety than what I wanted."
But pace-car driver Buster

- Reds center fielder Ken Griffey Jr. is tagged our by i
mondbacks first basemen Erubie l Durazo during the fifth inning. (AP)
The gam e ende-d with Larkin
drawing a two-out walk !Tom
Matt Mantei , bringing up Ken
Gri'ffey Jr. Mantei threw three 99

mph fastballs past Griffey to ·end
it.
Please see

Reds, Pace Bl

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
spokeswoman said.
A Marshall University football
Huntington police Sgt. Randy
player has been charged with Byard said an officer who witstab bing an ot.io man during a nessed the fight used pepper
fight at a Huntington bar, while spray to bre ak it up.
a We.t Virginia University footMarshall football coach 13ob
ball
player faces
ano th er Pruett would not comment on
shoplifting charge.
Addison 's arrest .
Marshall defensive end Bobby
" I can't really comment until I
Addison, 20, of Washington·, find out what happened," Pru ett
D.C.. was being held Friday said . "We are so rry th at anyone
night at the Cabell County Jail got hurt . We need to let the
o n a felo ny mali cio us wounding j udicial .system do its job."
charge. Bond was set at $25,000.
Addiso n is a n ative of Was){Poh ce said Addison stabbed ington, D.C., w h o came to MarJm ll Ryan Petri e, 21, of Pro c- , ~ h a ll in 1999. In a 1999 intertorville , Ohio, in th e chest' early view with Th e Herald- Dispatch
Friday morning during a fight at of Huntington , Addison said he
The Drink.
·
chose Marshall · beca u se he
Petrie was treated at St. Mary's
Please- Alftsts. Pap Bl
H os pital and released. a hospital

�.
Page 82 • liioanbap fl:im~ -t!'rntinfl

Sunday, July 23, 2000

I
British Open '
• ST. ANDREWS , Scotland (AP)Scores Saturday after ~ third

rourd ot the British Open on tho
7, 115-yar&lt;t, pll!-72 Old eoorse at
St. Andrews:
Ttger Woods
67-66-87- 200
David Duval
70- 7~206
ThOmas BjOrn
69-69-e8-206
Darren Clarke

70-8Q..68-207

Loren 69-68-70-207
OoYid Torno I &amp;a-67-71-207
Steve Aescn
67-7o-71-208
Oemis Paulson 68- 71~208
Tom Lehml!ln
88-70-70--208
Ernie E1s
68-72-70-208
F'hil Mickelson 72-86-71-209
_ Jose Cocoroo
74-86-*-209
Froo CO&lt;Jplos
70-68-72-210
Sergio Gartia
68-69-73--210
P. Hanington
. 88-72·70-210
Bemhan:::l Langer 74-70-66-210
Bob May
72-72-66--210
Jean VandeVelde 7t..ea-72-211
' Ooon -.moo 73-7G-88-211
Stuan Appleby 73-70-66--211
158-73-09--211
- Notah Begay
Pterre Fulka
13i-72·7'0-21i
Marte McNully
&amp;a-72-70-21 1
Jorrod Monloy 70-71 -70-211
Bob EatM
72-70-211
, Eduardo Romero 71.e8-72-211

'

game
BahlrT'IOfe g, Boston 4, 2Ri

game
Oakford 5, 4
.Toronto e, Tainpi Boy 5
Kansas Ci1y 1o, Ooveland 8
Anaheim 8, Texas 1
F--roG..,_
Kansas Ci1y 4, Delroil 0
Baltimore 9, Toronto 5
N.Y. Yankees 11, Tafl1)1 Bay
1
Chicago White Sox 8, Boston

5'

Minnesota 2, Cleveaand 1
Seattle 12, Taus 3
Anahetm 12, 08ldand 3
Sotunloy'a Go~Me
IWisas City jWI1Uidt 2-8) 111
Detroit (Miic:lti 4.g), late
Anaheim (Cooper 4·3) at
Oakland~ 0-0), late
Baltimore (Mercedes 4-4) at

Toronto (LOaiza 5-8), late
T....,. (Glynn 1 .0) al Soottlo
(Halama 6-5), late
Tlllr!lO Bay (Rupe 1-4) al N.Y.
· Yankees (Cone 1-6), late.
Chicago WNto Sox (Goltard
1-1) ao Bosoon (Fassero 8-3). late
CleYeland (Drew 1.()) at Minnesota (Uncoln 0.3), late
o&lt;ansas Ci1y (Durt&gt;ln 2-4) 11
Oolro" (Spartcs 0-1) , lato.. 2rd

NL ...nce

· eo• Dlvtoton

""ianta
Now Yortc

W L Pot. GB
se 38 .eoe -

152 43 .547 e
48 46 .500 10\

. Florida

Monlrell
Phlladolphla

45
43
C1n1ro1 Dlvtalon
W
S1. Loulo
55
• Clnclnnall
46
. Chicago
•1
Plnoburgh
41
· Milwaukee
40

48 ·12
152 .4!13 15

game
SunDy'• O.m.
KaniU City (Stoln 1-2) 111
Oolrolt (Moehl« 11-8), 1:05 p.m.

lllltlmore (MUIIIno H) 111
Toromo (Callllo 41-5). 1:08 p.m.
Tampo Bay (Rotcor 3-e) .,
N.Y. Yank101 (NMgle 1.()), 1:05
p.m.
Chicago W1111o SOx (SIIolkl
9-7) 01 Bolllon (P.Manlnoz 10-3),
1:05 p.m.
Clallllancl (llu!l&gt;e 9-4) 111 Mln11110Ul (Radl\a 7-1 O), 2:05p.m.
Anaheim (Hill 5-5) It Ookland
(Muld« 5.()), 4:05 p.m.
Texas (Holling 10-7) a1 Sooltio (Gorda 2-1), 4:35p.m.

L Pet. Gil
41 .573 46 .500 7
'!~&lt; .&lt;132 13~

Hall of Fe•
A quldt -lllbueball'oHall

ot Famors:

y001 and Rods monagomom said
no.

-

Goof90 .... "lportly" -

-

B orn: fib. 22, 1SKJ4. In BrldgeWIItlf, 1.0.
Betted right, rtvhl
Only manager to ,.;n WOfld
Series championships in both
looguee. WOI11i7li-781ittes wllh
Cincinnati's 8tg Red Machft'le and
1984 aown with Detroit .... Ranks
ttwd on care&amp;~ win ltsl, compiling
2,1M-1,834 record. Trailed Connie Mack (3,731) and John
McGraw (2, 784) .... Spon11970·
78 In Cincinnati and 1979·95 in
Detroit. led both dubs in career
vidories - onlv manager to top
rwo teams .... Si!Cteenth manager
to make Hall. ... Won five pen·
nants with two other division
titles. ·... Ranks No. 1 wilh 18
Llague C~ionship wins. ...
Popular playeB, tans and
media members, protecting a
grandfathtfly image with his pipe.
... Known .. "Cop1aan Hook" lof
• his frequem trips to lhe mound in
late innings .... Only manager to
post 1CJO.win seasons In AL aM
NL ... Walked out af spring train·
ing in 1885 rathef than WOfk with
replaCements during a players·
strike. .. . An atemal opt imis1.
OlpiCially In op&lt;lng 1rtJnlng. One a
touted rookie ·chriS Piftaro as

-·· big 1111r.... Hod
olgnod u 1 oooch with Clllfomla
fot 1i70 ...... getting
call from Redo 10 rl!lloco Dove
Brlotol. Lot go by Clnclnnali aft•
1818, lOOk rNel for Lie Moll In
o.trolt on June 14, 1878 ....
Played ono ....,In the mojotl,
nlltlng .2'18 wttn na hOmara and
34 RBto In 152 gomoa u PhiiHH
second baseman In 1158.
RIIUmod 10 minors lof follOwing
four YMWW In Toronto. 1111111 manogod 1001n In 111&amp;4 . ... Coac!led
tot Son Diogo Paclroo In thllr
1881 apanaion seuon .... Grew
up n11r Los ~·1•. was a bat·
boy for Soulhom Collfomla coach

_,_

RDCI~ux .

Norm11n Thom11• "Turkey"
Clrlton Emoot "PudgO" fllk
57 .•1215~
Bom: Dec. 21, 1M7, In BeiiOwa
Bom: lloy I, 1101, In NIOIWtllo,
Houston
33 03 .333 22
Folio, VI.
Tenn. Diad: s.pt. 4, 1111, In
Woot Dlvtlllon
rtvhl. , _ right
W L Pet. GB
Caught mora gamea (2,225) _
loft, th- loft
Arizona
56 41 .sn
than any poa1er In major 1oogue
Ouffillder hR .359 during 18. san Francisco 52 42 .553 2 ~
~story.... Ar1 11 -timo AII-Siar....
year career in Negro Leagues ....
Los Angolas 50 45 .526 5
Hit one of baseball's most famoUI
Ranka tnt in triple~, second in
' Colorado
47 47 .500 7~
and replayacl home runs. Wrttl
homl
and fourth in bening
- San Diego
43 53 .446 12~
him waving tho ball fair, h~ 12111average in ali-time Negro
Thul"'ddy'a Chmee
innlng shot oil the foul polo 111
' MantreaJ 4, N.Y. Meta 1
Fenwav Part( lifted 8olt0rl ov• Lt!gu• history.... Sianed with
D~rolt S1ars In 1G23 .... Played In
, Plnoburgh 9. Milwaukee 2
Clnc:imatl 7-8 in Game 6 of the
tour of first five All· Star games ....
Phlladafphia 3, Chicago Cubs 2
1il'li World Serloo. .. . Played 11
Hit .313 In exhibition games
Atlanta 5, Aorlda 3, 1st Game
&amp;eaiOnt wfth1he Red Sox and 13
wttn lhl Chicago WNtl Sox. Will agalnot mljor laoguo toams. ...
1- . Florida 8, Atianta 1, 2nd Game
Said 1oomm01o Sotc:l1ol Paige
·: Arizona 3, St. LDuis 2
wear a Boston cap on his Hall
_ San Francisco 7, San Diego 3
plaque.... Hit 310 career home "One of the greatest hitters we
8Y8f had. Ha wu as good as
.. Houston 6 , CinciiY'I8ti 2
runs, including a majOr league
an1ono
who over played ball."
+ Los Angeles 8, Colorado 3
record 351 B9 a catcher. ... was
;: .. Friday"• O.mee
1t1e AL's first uf1811imous Rookie
JDhft Alexander "Bkl" McPhH
• Chicago Cuba 4, Milwaukee 2
of tl'le Year. Earned honor In 1972
lorn·
: Nov. 1, 111t.ln u....,..,
• Pinsburgh 9, Philaelalphla 2
after hitting .293 wttn 22 home
N.Y. Died:· Jan. 3, 1M3, · In
• Montreat 7, Florida 3
runs and a league..leading nine
Ocean 8Mdl, Calif.
'• Atlanta 6, N.Y. Mels 3
triplee .... A native of New Eng·
lltlod rtghl.- ~ght.
' Arizona s. Cneinnati 4
land, one of Boston's moSI .popuS.cond baseman hit .271
.. St. Louis 12, Houston 1
lar player&amp; untll dlfl'icutl split.wtth
from 1882-1899 .... Pllyed8ntire
... San Diego 5, Cdorado 1
Red Sox management after 1180
career In Clncinriatl, first in the
. ~ Los Angeles 8, San Francisoo 5
season. In 1993, was released at
Amlfica.n Association and then In
·-· Saturdly'a GlmM
age 42 by White Sox one weak
the National LNgue. ... One of
... N.Y. Mats (Reed 4-2) at Atlanta •
after they held a ttay In his honor
bulbal'o 1a11 baroharded pla1(Maddux 12-3), late
at Comiskey Park. Because of
ers. Resisted using a glove until
Arizona (Guzman 2.0) at Clncin·
bolt! circumstances, many were
his later years .... Was firs1 19th
.. nati (Luebbers 0.1), late.
unsure which hat he would pick
centwy playeJ at any position ~Q.
... St. Louis (Hentgen 9-6) B1 Houstor his Hall R~ue. ... NQ.w_wo.ti(s
- - • ton (MIIIer002), 181e ·- fOr Reel Sox as spaCial auistam tilte pi'rt linOO double pfiys In a
season.
Scored 1 ,678 runs
.. Milwaukee (Sere 6· at Chicago
to the general manager.... Once
and
stote
588
bases .... Was 5: Cues (Downs 4-3) , late
tagged out two rumers at the
foot-8, prompting his nickname
... San Francisco (Hernandez 8-7)
plate on the same play at Yankee
that was SI'IOnened from "Bitty."
• a1 Lasllngelos (Gagne 1-5), laio
Stadium . ... Had two other mem4
... Hit three triples in an 1890
•
Montreal {Johnson 4·4) at Flori!1a
orable moments at Yankee Stadi·
(Cornelius 3-3). late
urn - caught Tam Seaver's game against future Hall of
Farner Amos Rusie .... Managed
Phlladolpllla (Person 5-2) at Pins- 300th victory at the bailpa~. and
R811sln 1901·02.
- burgh (Arroyo 0-3), 101e.
also lectured Yankees rookie
_ San Diego (Ciemartt 9-8) 01 Col Daion Sanders about running out
.. orado (Jarvis 2-4), late
popups.

54 .432

13~

-

rur•

1&amp;-day ~ list Activated 1B
Rico Brogna from the 15-day dis·
abted list.
PITISBUAGH

PIRATES-

Called up OF Emil Brown from
Nashville of the PCL
ST. LOUIS CARDINALsPurchased the contract of c Rick
Wilkins from Memphis of the
Southern League. Optioned C
Keith McDonakl to Memphis of
the.Sovthem League. Tansferred
Mike Matthews from the 15· to
the 60-day disabled tist.

SAN DIEGO PADREsRHP Sti'VEI Montgomery
on the 15-ctay disabled tis!.
Called up LHP Dave Maurer frotn"
Las Vegas ot the PCL Trans·
ferred RHP Brian Boehringer
from the 1s.. to the 60-day dis·
abled list.
BASKETBALL
National BISkltblll Aaaocilllon
INDIANA PACERS-Named
lsfah Thomas coach.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS-Claimed G·F Rodrick
Rhodes aft waivers.
PI~

FOOTBALL
NltiOMI Footblll Lllgue

NFL-Cut the two-game SUS·
penskm oJ Tennessee Titans CB
Denard Walker 10 one game.
AR IZONA
CARDIN11L5Agreed to tetms with RB Thomas
Jonaa.
BUFFALO BILLS-AgroOO lo
terms wtth S Travares Tillman to
a four-year contract.
CAROLINA PANTHERsAgreed to term• DE Reggie
White.
CINCINNATI BENGAL5Signed K NtMI Rackers to a three-

1M' comract.
GREEN BAY PACKERsSigned LB veman Crawford and
DT Tony Baril.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFsAgreed to terms with CB W illiam
Banee on a four-year contrac:t
.
MINNESOTA
VIKINGSAnnounced the retirement of NT
Jerry Ball. Signed DT Fred ROb·
b1ns, DE Michael Bolreau, and LS
Anlonlo Wilson.
NEW YORK GIANTSSigned AB Ron Dayne to a five·
year contract.
HOCKEY
National Hcx:key LNgue
ATLANTA THRASHERSAgreed to terms with C·F Jarrod
Skalde.
DETROIT RED WINGsSigned UN Brenl Gilchrist to a

one-year comract.
NEW JERSEY DEVILSSigned LW Michael Aupp.
COLLEGE
ALLENTOWN--Named Scan
Coval athletic director.
CAL
STATE
NORTH·
RIDGE-Agreed to terms wilh
Bobby Braswell, men's Daskett&gt;alt
coach, on a tour-year contract
extension .
RUTGERS- Extended lhe
contract of Kevin Bannon, men's
basketball coach, through 2005·
06.
TULANE- Named Tom Shaw
men's golf coach.
WILLI AM
PENNAnnounced the resignation ol
Garey Smith, women's basketball
coach, to t&gt;ecome women·s bas·
ketDaU coach at Grand View COt·
lege.

n

Soccer standings
E111temDivlakm

W L TP11 GFG"
NY·NJ
12 7 2 38 .·35 27
New Eng. 8 9 5 29 33 35
Miami
7 10 5 26 30 37
D.C.

5 13 6 21 34 48

Central Olvlalon

.. Sunday'e GlrMI
Arizona (Anderson 8·3) at Clndn·
• na1i (Oossons 3-0),
Philadelphia (Scllilling 5-6) ..
PinSburgh (A~chlo 5-5), 1:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Wright 5-3} at Chica·
go Cubs {Valdes 1-4), 2:20 p .m.
St. Louis (An. Benes 10·4) 81
Houston (Reynolds 8-7), 3:05
p.m.
• San Diego (follber1l 2-1) al Colorado (Aslacio 8-8), 3:05p.m.
Montreal (Vazquez 7·5) at Florida
(Sanchez 6·7), 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Moos (B.J. Jones 4-4) 111
Altama (Asllb1 5-7), 8:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Ortiz 5-D) aiLDs
Angetes (Dreifon 5·7), 8:10p.m.

:

ALglance
E11t Dlvl•lon

w

L Pet. GB
NewYork
50 41 .549
Toromo
52 46 .531 1~
Boston
49 « .527 2
Baltimore
42 53 .429 10
Tampa Bay
37 57 .394 14~
C1ntr1l Dlvl .. on
w L Pet. GB
· : Ch1cago
61 35 .635 49 46 .SHI 11~
: Cleveland
. · Kansas City
« 50 .468 18
· · Detroit
43 50 .462 16~
·,. Minnesota
4:3 56 .4Jo1 19'1.
• • WIM Dlvl8lon
.
WLPet. GB
•• Seattle
56 39 .589 : • Anaheim
53 4-4 .546
4
• : Oakland
51 44 .537
5
·. Texas
45 49 .479 tO'.t
Thureday'a O.m.e
Oelroft 5, N.Y. Yankees 3
Minneso1a 5, ChiCago White
'. Sox 1
·
Boston H , Baltimore 7, 1St

Atanulo Peru y Rlgal '"Tony ..
Born; lloy 14, 1842, In C.moguoy, Cubo
B l - rlglll, , _ right
.One of baseball's best clutch
hitters and run producers.... Popular first baseman known as

"Doggie," noM In the hean al the
order for the Big Red Machine....
Had 1,652 RBIS in his car&amp;ef,
highest total among latin players.
Had been the most among any
player not in the Hall until he was
elected In January by the Base·
halt Writers' Association

ot Amen·

ca. ... Drove In 954 runs in the
decade of 1ho 1970s, secordmost in majors to teammate
Johnny BenCh . ... Emel'9 Hall this
year witN his tenner manageJ,
Spark'f Anderson. Already in the
Hail were Bench and Joe Mof·
gan. Pete Rose stiM hoping to get:
ln .... Hl1thrae homers as Cincinnati won 1975 World SeriH, bat·
ted .313 as Reds repeated in
1976 Wortd Series.
Hit 379
career home runs from 1984·88
with Reds, Montreal, Red Sox
and Philadeipnia. .. . Played in
five World Series, tour with Reds
and one with Philadelphia .... Had
seven seasons with 100 RBis ..
A seven-time All-Star at firat base
and third base . MVP of the 1987
game after hitting wiming home
run in 15th inning. ... Had nine
seasons with 20 or more nomers.
... Left his )ob at a sugar cane fac·
tory in Havana to sign a minor
league eon1raef wi1h Clncimati in
1~ .... Now works in fron1office
for the Flot1da Marlin• .... Hts No.
24 is retired by the Reds. K6n
Griffey Jr. warned to wear ~ this

BASEBALL
Aro.rloan L.e.gue
CLEVELAND
INOIAN5Racalled RHP Kane DaviS from
Buftala of the International
League. Optioned RHP Jim
Brower to Buftalo.
TORONTO BLUE JAYsOptioned RHP Man DeWitt to
Syracuse of the International
League.
N111on•l LAigue
ATLANTA
BRAVE sOptioned C Fernando Lunar to
Greenville of the Sauthern
League.
CHICAGO CUB5-Traded
OJ= Glenallen Hill to the New York
Yankees for AHP Ben Ford and
LHP Ozwaldo Mairena, assigned
Ford lo Iowa of the PCL and
MaJrnea to Wast Tennessee of
tne Southern League. catted up
IF Chad Meyers from Iowa .
FLORIDA MARLINS- Purchased the contract of C Ramon
castro from Calgary ot the PCL
Announced C Paul Bako was
claimed on waivers from the
Attama Braves.
MONTREAL EXPOS-Activated FlHP ~i ke Thunnan from

the 15-day Dl. Placed RHP
Yownny Lara on the 1 5-da~ OL.
NEW YORK MET5-Purchased the contract of INF Mike
Kindade . Optioned RHP Jim
Mann 10 Norfolk of the lntBfna.
tlonal League . Moved OF Oarryi
Hamitlon hom the 15- 10 the 60·
day dlaaCiad list.
PHILADELPH111 PHIUIE5Pia~ c Mike Uebenhal on the

gles by Austin Dunfee, Justin Bell
and Cody Davidson.Those would
be the only Middleport hits in
the contest.
New Haven answered with
ing up just three hits and one run · three in the first, two of which
: to put the New Haven Reds into came on Sayre's blast. They then
added seven in the second and
· the tournament semi-finals.
· H e also got big-time run sup- three more in the third to set the
: port, a&lt; three New Haven hitters final 14- 1 tally.
Dunfee was named Middle· re corded multi-hit games. Kam
port's
player of the game. Sayre
Sayre led that department with a
:Single and a two- run homer over took the honor for New Haven .
New Hoven will faced the
:the right-center field fence .
· Brenton Clark added two hits, Indians Saturday at 7:30 p.m . The
:as did Jeff Wamsley. Brandon evenings's other semi-final contest featured the Green Braves
:Fowler added a single.
. Middleport led early, taking a against Point Pleasant Nation:1- 0 •dvantage in the fiot on sin- wicie at 6 p.m .

KCLLT

from Pap Bl

W L TP1oGFGA
11 9 2 35 42 33
10 8 5 35 46 39

Tampa
Chicago
Columbus
DalLas

9 10 4 31
9 11 4 31

Weltlm Olviaton
W L TP1o
Kan . City 11 5 5 38
Los Ang . 10 s 7 37
Colorado 10 10 3 33

35 38

40 40
GFGA
30 16
34 2S
30 42

Reds

from PageBI

Race
from Page Bl
Auten helped him out, taking
Stewart around the track on an
inspection tour.
"He said when ever you're
comfortable, we'll go," Stewart
said.
After h e saw Maik Martin
break Wallace's month-old track

Arrests
from Page Bl
wanted a better life for hiinself
and his famil y.
" I didn't want to leave, but this
is my way to n1ove my n1om fron1
the neighborhood and to somewhere \\There fFic re's- no crime ,"
Addison had said.
If convicted, he faces two to I 0
years m pnson.
In Morgantown . an Au g. 9
hearing has bee n scheduled in
MuniCipal Court for WVU tailback Cassel Smith, who was
charged Wednesday with secondoffense shoplifting and obstructin g a police officer.
Morgantow n police Cpl. B.L.
Watson said Smi1 h. 2 1, left a
Gabriel Brothers store in Mountaineer M all without paying for a

came around on a pair of w~d
pitches and Danny Bautistfs
groundout fm a 4-3 lead.
.
Dmi[ri Yo un g's two-our sinfilc
in the bottom of the fifth tied ;i t
:
once agam.
J

.~i' s

Note s: Morgan extended
hitting streak to four games with '
his two singles. H e's 7-for-14 at
the plate this season .... Morgan
remained winless as a starter t~is
season. H e's 4-0 with five 'saves-in
31 relief appearances. 0- 2 in IO~r
starts .... Cincinnati's Larry Luebbers, scheduled to start SaturdaY's
game, was sc ratched Friday night
because of ri ghtness 111 his for~ ­
arm. Ron Villon e will start in ]1is
place.

record and then Wall.ce better
that run himself, Stewart didn't '
think he would get his third
career pole .
"I just wanted something in
the top five," he said. "But I knew
when I came off the thirp turn
that it was faster than I had been
all day."
Martin , loo king to win for the
first time in 3 '/, months , put himself in good position to accomphsh thatwith his run at 171.648

in a Ford.
" It was a great lap," said Martin, winless since taking the
Goody's 500 on April ') in Ma;-tinsville,Va.
... 1 just told the guys I d01i 't
know where I left anything · fcr
them on th e track.
~~
" We've made a lor o f improvenlents on th ~ ca r sin ce the last
time Wt' were up here.'"
He started sixth and tl ni shed
fitih 111 the Poco no 5111J.

pair of boots and a pair of Jeans.
He threw the jeans at a female
store employee who tri ed to stop
him and ran. Police arrested him
in a wooded area in a ravine
behind the mall after a chase.

He remaim free Oil a s~ ou personal recogni za nce bond .
Smith was clurgcd with
shopli fting 111 May ami paid a
$130 fine .

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5 9 8 23 26 32
NOTE: Three points f04' a win and

one point for a tie.
Chicago I. Colorado 1. tie
Seturd1y'a G1me1
New England at San Jose. 4 p.m.
Miami at New York-New Jersey,

4:30p.m.
Los Angeles at Tampa Bay, 8

p.m.
Columbus at Kansas City, 8:30
p.m.
S•turday, Jutv ~
AII·Star Game at Co lumbus, 3:30
p.m.

Have a

sports-related
item or tip?
Contact Sports .
Editor Andrew
Carter at (740)
446-1341, ext.
11

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bl.l

Nicklaus and St. Andrews
say their final .good byes

steve Parri s wasn't lllli Ch better,
giving up n im: hits m six innir~gs
while wasting ' P'ir of lead,. Senn
Casey's two- run double pu t th e
Reds aht·acl m the fim ai1d
extended his hitting streak 'to: a
career-high 14 gJmes.
•
The Diamomlbacks loaded :tfll'
bases with the hdp o f an in fL'?ltional two -out w,Ik in the second
to bring up M organ . H is soit si;,_
gle to center ·drove in a run t~at
ti ed It at 2.
,
P"ris matc hed Morgan by Supping an RBI single off a fake bi.(nt
as the R c~s we nt up 3-2 in :Cpc
second, but let hi s se lt~ fa s hioilcd
lead get away in the o urth . St.ove
Finley led off with his _ 1 hon~r
and Erubiel Du razo sing d ~~d

applause in his first at-bat. H e
went 0-for-3 with a pair of walks.
McKeon doesn't think the trade
talks involving the team captain
have affected th e Reds.
"They know it's the nature of
" I think I thrive 011 those situac
the
business," McKeon said. " If
tions, believe It or not ," said Mantei, wllo got his Sixth save in eight you're here, you play for this
chances. " I wish I had a dollar for tc-am."
After wasting leadoff triples in
every time I've walked a guy to
the
sixth and seventh - both set
bring up the big hitter.
"He's a great hitter. He's going up by Dante Bichette's misplays -in
to be in the Hall of Fame. Striking ri gh1 fidd - the D ia mondbacks
fi11ally got a clutch hit and broke a
our a big hitter li ke that is tun ."
The 46,10i fans on hand for the 4-all tie in the eighth.
A walk and Jay Bell's two-out
game and a Beach Boys concert
afterward were on their feet, snap- single off Scott Sullivan (1-4) left
ping photos, when Griffey came runners on first and third. Gonzato bat. A · hush came over them lez hit a ground- rul e double off
when Griffey swung through a Dennys Reyes for the go-ahead
run,leaving him 3-for-3 career off
" high fastball for strike three.
"They wanted to see a home the left- hander.
"When you've done well against
run;· manager Jack McKeon said.
"That's what we wanted. It didn't a pitcher, ·you have some confidence against him," Gonzalez said.
work our that way."
Nothing worked out right for "You try to go over some old atthe Reds in their first home game bats in your mind, you try to get
since the dub informed Larkin ahead in the count and you try to
that it won't meet his request for a get something in the air."
He did all three.
three-year, $27.9 million extenGreg Swindell (2-3) retired both
sion. The Reds and M ets worked
out a trade that requires Larkin's batters he faced in the seventh,
getting Griffey on a groundout
approval.
and
Bichette on a strikeout.
The commissioner's office has to
Neither starter could hold a lead
give permission for a 72-hour
negotiating window, allowing the or keep runners off base for very
long. Arizon a's Mike Morgan ,
Mets to tall&lt; to Larkin.
Several pro-Larkin banners flut- making his fourth start of the seatered around the stadium and he son, gave up 10 hits in five inning.;
got a louder than usual round of and left with the score tied at 4.

San Jose

Frld1y'1 Game

v

•

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP)
- Jack Nicklaus trudged to the
top of the stone Swilken Bridge
on the 1Hth fairway and turned
aro~nd to gaze at the Old
Cou rse.
It was time to say goodbye to
the British Open .
Or was it ?
The cheers and applause from
.the crowd sa1d it was, but Nicklaus left open the possibiliry that
he might return in 2005 to the
courSe where he won two of his
three British Op ens.
'T have some wonderful memories from here," Nicklaus said. "I
had some great times."
There will be some keepers
from Friday's second round, too.
Missing the cut won't be one of
them .
That's part of the reaso n Nicklaus says he's leaving. He hasn't
played on the weekend in th e
Open in four of hi~ last seven
appearances.
"The walking over the
Swilken Bridge and walking up
the 18th hole for the last time is
very ni ce," he said. "But not on
Friday afternoon."
When NICklaus paused on the
bridge that crosses the burn on
the fairwav, he took off his hat in
the · warn;, gentle breeze ' and
waved it to the roaring crowd,
then motioned for his son-caddi e,
Steve, to JOin him on the bridge.
Nicklaus walked onto the
g ree n. where he missed a short
birdi e putt before leaving arm-inc
arm with his son. H e blew a few
kisses to the crowd and walked up
the steps off of 18 to even more
THANKS FOR THI; MEMORIES- Legendary golfer Jack Nicklaus wave s· farewell Friday to the gallery at
applause.
the 18th hole at the Old Course on Royal St. Andrews. (AP)
, Nicklaus tned to keep the

Spain ousts u.s~ team
in Davis Cup semifinal
SANTANDER, Spain (AP) Spain ended more than three
decades of Davis C up anguish Saturday, reaching the final with a
sweep of an Am~ri can ~ua&lt;i
tlirown togetner- slapdash by cap.tain John McEnroe after the pullout of its best players.
Alex Correlja and Juan Balcells
clinched th e best-of-five series and
set off a delirious dancing celebration with a 7-6 (6), 2-6, 6-3,6-7
(5), 6-3 doubles victory over Todd
Martin and C hris Woodruff that
rendered Sunday's singles matches
meaningless.
Spain, a Davis Cup finalist only
in 1965 and 1967, will play for its
first title against Australia in
Barcelona in December.
On a cooler, cloudier day than
Friday' thick heat at this seaside
resort near Bilbao, Corre\ia and
Balcells saved four set points in the
opener before taking th e set on
their first opportu nity in the
tiebreaker when Balcells pur away
a volley.
Spain appeared on its way to
winning in four sets. but the
Americans refused to qu1t, pushed
it to a tiebreaker and won that
when Woodruff nail ed a volley at
set point.
After an exchange of breaks to
3-3 in the fifth set, Spain won the
fin al 10 points to close th e match.
The last three points came on
crushing volley winners by the 25year-old Balcells, disparaged memorably by McEnroe before the
ser ies began with the corrunent,
"Who the hell is Balcells&gt;"
It wa&lt; a 4- hour, 2-minute match
fill ed with exquisite r;_Jilies, rapidfire exchanges at the net, deft
drops and crafty lobs. and in the

end the Spanish players showed
both better skill and greater
endurance on the red clay they
love.
None of !he Spanish players was
alive the last time Spain got this
far, and it didn't matter to any of
them that this triumph cam e
against an American team depleted
by iqjuries to Pete Sampras and
Andre Agassi.
"We love to win, and we don't
look at the opponent," Co rretja
said after beatin g Jan- Michael
Gambill in singles on Friday. "I
don't know if Sampras or Agassi
would play better than Gambill
today.The important thing is to go
on the court and to (beat) the guy
in front of you. And if it was Gambill, it was Gambill. If it was my '
father, I would be happy as well."
Despi1e the stron g effort by
Martin and Woodruff~ there were
no illusions among McEnro e and
his merriless men that they had a
realistic chance of beating Spa in
after losing the first two si ngles
matches.
" It's not e ntirely shocking,"
McEnroe said :tfter watching Martin and Gambill fall in si Figles.
"E veryone knew it wouldn't be
easy. These guys are rough on this
stuff.
"This JS a great opportunity for
them . They get to play us ... and
people still view us, whoever we
brin g, as this great Goliath.
"They have a lo t of advantages .
We're playing on their surf.1ce
right after Wimbledon, o n clay in
this heat . T his is tailor-made for
them .You know, if they ca n't take
advantage of this, they're going to
"'in the Davis C up in the yc.u
3000."

moment light on , the last two
holes . As his daughter-in-law,
Krista, was following him inside
the ropes, Nicklaus edged- closer
and shouted "snazzy pair of
britches."
On such a special day: her white
slacks with a wild yellow, pink
and blue floral print seemed a
welcome distraction.
"Of course, It 's se ntimental
today, we're all a little teary-eyed,"
sh e said.
Last month, the 60-year- old
Nicklaus said he'd probably
played his last U.S. Open. On Friday, he hedged about his " favorite
event;' the British Open.
"I will not be seeing you next
year at R oyal Lytham, I do not
believe," Nicklaus said. "You
never say never.
"I would say the chances are
I've probably played my last hole
in the British Open."
But' then he added that Open
tournal]:lent chairman Hugh
Campbell had invited him to play
in 2005 when the event returns
to the home of golf.
"I will be 65 then.l will be eligible for the last time. I won 't say
no, but I certainly am not going
to play unless I can be competitive," he said.
Nicklaus, who missed the cut
with rounds of 77-73 (150), has
trouble walking 18 holes nowadays and, as he said, doesn't "put
the numbers on the board anymore ." His putting is also the
worst of hi s career.
However, through 1 1 holes o n
Friday he was 2- under par for the
ro und with an outside shot at
making the last two days. But he
three-putted .12 for a bogey, and

that was that for the winner of a
record 18 m~ors · - seven more
than anyone else.
"I suppose the die was sort of
cast there ," said Ni cklaus, who
wore a yellow shirt, harkening
back to the years when he often
wore yellow on Sunday.
" I did not have any other shirt
to go with the (beige) pants I
needed to w ea r," he said.
Playing partner Angel Cabrera
tri ed to will Nicklaus on, offering
his own body English when
Nic klaus' 30-foor par putt on No.
17 stopped an inch short. The
other partner, Mark James ,
recalled Nicklaus' anger on
Thursday when he hit into the
water on the first hore.
"He's still very competitive,"
James said .
The Englishman then recalled
Arnold · Palmer's similar farewell
in '95 at St. Andrews.
"What these guys have done
for the game is simply enormous;· James said.
Th e roughly 20,000 fans
watching Nicklaus around the
two finishing holes agreed.
"It makes th e hair on the back
of your neck crawl,'' said Carol
Anne Dmg of Seaforth, Ontario,
Canada. "It makes you choke up.
I'll go home and tell everybody
how I saw Ja c k Nicklaus go over
the Swilken Bridge for the last
time dressed in his yellow shirt on
a sunny day. It doesn't get any
better than that."
Ni.:klaus wanted to bow out in
the final round Sunday, which
will be his 40th wedding anniversary wi th wife Barbara. He still
figures to play then , JUSt not on
the Old Co u rse.

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

JERRY BIBBEE

1 999 FORD CROWN VIWHtiA
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Fonner WVU athlete in finals
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)
- Former West Virginia University athlete Kristen Quackenbush
has advanced to "the finals of the
women's pole vault at th e U.S.
Olympic track and field trials.
Quackenbush, 25. was among
16 to advance to Su nday's finals by
cl earing the minimum standard of
13 feet, 2 1/ 4 inches Friday.
·
" I was sta nding there getting
ready for noy third try," Quackenbush said. "All I was thinking was
this was goin g to be all or nothing.'
I just told myself that I was going

to give i1 all I got.
"There was a lo t of pressure,
maybe the most I've ever felt
before. Just to m ake it to the .finals
is a grea t accomplishment and a lot
o f weight off-of my shoulders ."
The top three vaulters will
qualil)- for the Olympics.
"Anything
can
happen,"
Quackenbush said . " You know,
evL·rybody has their f.worircs, and
I'm p·.ubably not one of th em .
'Tnjmt goin g to give it the best
shot that I have and see what happens ."

JERRY BIBBEE
461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

Phone
740 - 992 -2 .196
www. jerrybibbee.com

• r

'

J!&gt;unbn!' I!I:Imt!! -&amp;rnlintl • Page 83

Sunday, July 23, aoqo

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

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

�.
Page 82 • liioanbap fl:im~ -t!'rntinfl

Sunday, July 23, 2000

I
British Open '
• ST. ANDREWS , Scotland (AP)Scores Saturday after ~ third

rourd ot the British Open on tho
7, 115-yar&lt;t, pll!-72 Old eoorse at
St. Andrews:
Ttger Woods
67-66-87- 200
David Duval
70- 7~206
ThOmas BjOrn
69-69-e8-206
Darren Clarke

70-8Q..68-207

Loren 69-68-70-207
OoYid Torno I &amp;a-67-71-207
Steve Aescn
67-7o-71-208
Oemis Paulson 68- 71~208
Tom Lehml!ln
88-70-70--208
Ernie E1s
68-72-70-208
F'hil Mickelson 72-86-71-209
_ Jose Cocoroo
74-86-*-209
Froo CO&lt;Jplos
70-68-72-210
Sergio Gartia
68-69-73--210
P. Hanington
. 88-72·70-210
Bemhan:::l Langer 74-70-66-210
Bob May
72-72-66--210
Jean VandeVelde 7t..ea-72-211
' Ooon -.moo 73-7G-88-211
Stuan Appleby 73-70-66--211
158-73-09--211
- Notah Begay
Pterre Fulka
13i-72·7'0-21i
Marte McNully
&amp;a-72-70-21 1
Jorrod Monloy 70-71 -70-211
Bob EatM
72-70-211
, Eduardo Romero 71.e8-72-211

'

game
BahlrT'IOfe g, Boston 4, 2Ri

game
Oakford 5, 4
.Toronto e, Tainpi Boy 5
Kansas Ci1y 1o, Ooveland 8
Anaheim 8, Texas 1
F--roG..,_
Kansas Ci1y 4, Delroil 0
Baltimore 9, Toronto 5
N.Y. Yankees 11, Tafl1)1 Bay
1
Chicago White Sox 8, Boston

5'

Minnesota 2, Cleveaand 1
Seattle 12, Taus 3
Anahetm 12, 08ldand 3
Sotunloy'a Go~Me
IWisas City jWI1Uidt 2-8) 111
Detroit (Miic:lti 4.g), late
Anaheim (Cooper 4·3) at
Oakland~ 0-0), late
Baltimore (Mercedes 4-4) at

Toronto (LOaiza 5-8), late
T....,. (Glynn 1 .0) al Soottlo
(Halama 6-5), late
Tlllr!lO Bay (Rupe 1-4) al N.Y.
· Yankees (Cone 1-6), late.
Chicago WNto Sox (Goltard
1-1) ao Bosoon (Fassero 8-3). late
CleYeland (Drew 1.()) at Minnesota (Uncoln 0.3), late
o&lt;ansas Ci1y (Durt&gt;ln 2-4) 11
Oolro" (Spartcs 0-1) , lato.. 2rd

NL ...nce

· eo• Dlvtoton

""ianta
Now Yortc

W L Pot. GB
se 38 .eoe -

152 43 .547 e
48 46 .500 10\

. Florida

Monlrell
Phlladolphla

45
43
C1n1ro1 Dlvtalon
W
S1. Loulo
55
• Clnclnnall
46
. Chicago
•1
Plnoburgh
41
· Milwaukee
40

48 ·12
152 .4!13 15

game
SunDy'• O.m.
KaniU City (Stoln 1-2) 111
Oolrolt (Moehl« 11-8), 1:05 p.m.

lllltlmore (MUIIIno H) 111
Toromo (Callllo 41-5). 1:08 p.m.
Tampo Bay (Rotcor 3-e) .,
N.Y. Yank101 (NMgle 1.()), 1:05
p.m.
Chicago W1111o SOx (SIIolkl
9-7) 01 Bolllon (P.Manlnoz 10-3),
1:05 p.m.
Clallllancl (llu!l&gt;e 9-4) 111 Mln11110Ul (Radl\a 7-1 O), 2:05p.m.
Anaheim (Hill 5-5) It Ookland
(Muld« 5.()), 4:05 p.m.
Texas (Holling 10-7) a1 Sooltio (Gorda 2-1), 4:35p.m.

L Pet. Gil
41 .573 46 .500 7
'!~&lt; .&lt;132 13~

Hall of Fe•
A quldt -lllbueball'oHall

ot Famors:

y001 and Rods monagomom said
no.

-

Goof90 .... "lportly" -

-

B orn: fib. 22, 1SKJ4. In BrldgeWIItlf, 1.0.
Betted right, rtvhl
Only manager to ,.;n WOfld
Series championships in both
looguee. WOI11i7li-781ittes wllh
Cincinnati's 8tg Red Machft'le and
1984 aown with Detroit .... Ranks
ttwd on care&amp;~ win ltsl, compiling
2,1M-1,834 record. Trailed Connie Mack (3,731) and John
McGraw (2, 784) .... Spon11970·
78 In Cincinnati and 1979·95 in
Detroit. led both dubs in career
vidories - onlv manager to top
rwo teams .... Si!Cteenth manager
to make Hall. ... Won five pen·
nants with two other division
titles. ·... Ranks No. 1 wilh 18
Llague C~ionship wins. ...
Popular playeB, tans and
media members, protecting a
grandfathtfly image with his pipe.
... Known .. "Cop1aan Hook" lof
• his frequem trips to lhe mound in
late innings .... Only manager to
post 1CJO.win seasons In AL aM
NL ... Walked out af spring train·
ing in 1885 rathef than WOfk with
replaCements during a players·
strike. .. . An atemal opt imis1.
OlpiCially In op&lt;lng 1rtJnlng. One a
touted rookie ·chriS Piftaro as

-·· big 1111r.... Hod
olgnod u 1 oooch with Clllfomla
fot 1i70 ...... getting
call from Redo 10 rl!lloco Dove
Brlotol. Lot go by Clnclnnali aft•
1818, lOOk rNel for Lie Moll In
o.trolt on June 14, 1878 ....
Played ono ....,In the mojotl,
nlltlng .2'18 wttn na hOmara and
34 RBto In 152 gomoa u PhiiHH
second baseman In 1158.
RIIUmod 10 minors lof follOwing
four YMWW In Toronto. 1111111 manogod 1001n In 111&amp;4 . ... Coac!led
tot Son Diogo Paclroo In thllr
1881 apanaion seuon .... Grew
up n11r Los ~·1•. was a bat·
boy for Soulhom Collfomla coach

_,_

RDCI~ux .

Norm11n Thom11• "Turkey"
Clrlton Emoot "PudgO" fllk
57 .•1215~
Bom: Dec. 21, 1M7, In BeiiOwa
Bom: lloy I, 1101, In NIOIWtllo,
Houston
33 03 .333 22
Folio, VI.
Tenn. Diad: s.pt. 4, 1111, In
Woot Dlvtlllon
rtvhl. , _ right
W L Pet. GB
Caught mora gamea (2,225) _
loft, th- loft
Arizona
56 41 .sn
than any poa1er In major 1oogue
Ouffillder hR .359 during 18. san Francisco 52 42 .553 2 ~
~story.... Ar1 11 -timo AII-Siar....
year career in Negro Leagues ....
Los Angolas 50 45 .526 5
Hit one of baseball's most famoUI
Ranka tnt in triple~, second in
' Colorado
47 47 .500 7~
and replayacl home runs. Wrttl
homl
and fourth in bening
- San Diego
43 53 .446 12~
him waving tho ball fair, h~ 12111average in ali-time Negro
Thul"'ddy'a Chmee
innlng shot oil the foul polo 111
' MantreaJ 4, N.Y. Meta 1
Fenwav Part( lifted 8olt0rl ov• Lt!gu• history.... Sianed with
D~rolt S1ars In 1G23 .... Played In
, Plnoburgh 9. Milwaukee 2
Clnc:imatl 7-8 in Game 6 of the
tour of first five All· Star games ....
Phlladafphia 3, Chicago Cubs 2
1il'li World Serloo. .. . Played 11
Hit .313 In exhibition games
Atlanta 5, Aorlda 3, 1st Game
&amp;eaiOnt wfth1he Red Sox and 13
wttn lhl Chicago WNtl Sox. Will agalnot mljor laoguo toams. ...
1- . Florida 8, Atianta 1, 2nd Game
Said 1oomm01o Sotc:l1ol Paige
·: Arizona 3, St. LDuis 2
wear a Boston cap on his Hall
_ San Francisco 7, San Diego 3
plaque.... Hit 310 career home "One of the greatest hitters we
8Y8f had. Ha wu as good as
.. Houston 6 , CinciiY'I8ti 2
runs, including a majOr league
an1ono
who over played ball."
+ Los Angeles 8, Colorado 3
record 351 B9 a catcher. ... was
;: .. Friday"• O.mee
1t1e AL's first uf1811imous Rookie
JDhft Alexander "Bkl" McPhH
• Chicago Cuba 4, Milwaukee 2
of tl'le Year. Earned honor In 1972
lorn·
: Nov. 1, 111t.ln u....,..,
• Pinsburgh 9, Philaelalphla 2
after hitting .293 wttn 22 home
N.Y. Died:· Jan. 3, 1M3, · In
• Montreat 7, Florida 3
runs and a league..leading nine
Ocean 8Mdl, Calif.
'• Atlanta 6, N.Y. Mels 3
triplee .... A native of New Eng·
lltlod rtghl.- ~ght.
' Arizona s. Cneinnati 4
land, one of Boston's moSI .popuS.cond baseman hit .271
.. St. Louis 12, Houston 1
lar player&amp; untll dlfl'icutl split.wtth
from 1882-1899 .... Pllyed8ntire
... San Diego 5, Cdorado 1
Red Sox management after 1180
career In Clncinriatl, first in the
. ~ Los Angeles 8, San Francisoo 5
season. In 1993, was released at
Amlfica.n Association and then In
·-· Saturdly'a GlmM
age 42 by White Sox one weak
the National LNgue. ... One of
... N.Y. Mats (Reed 4-2) at Atlanta •
after they held a ttay In his honor
bulbal'o 1a11 baroharded pla1(Maddux 12-3), late
at Comiskey Park. Because of
ers. Resisted using a glove until
Arizona (Guzman 2.0) at Clncin·
bolt! circumstances, many were
his later years .... Was firs1 19th
.. nati (Luebbers 0.1), late.
unsure which hat he would pick
centwy playeJ at any position ~Q.
... St. Louis (Hentgen 9-6) B1 Houstor his Hall R~ue. ... NQ.w_wo.ti(s
- - • ton (MIIIer002), 181e ·- fOr Reel Sox as spaCial auistam tilte pi'rt linOO double pfiys In a
season.
Scored 1 ,678 runs
.. Milwaukee (Sere 6· at Chicago
to the general manager.... Once
and
stote
588
bases .... Was 5: Cues (Downs 4-3) , late
tagged out two rumers at the
foot-8, prompting his nickname
... San Francisco (Hernandez 8-7)
plate on the same play at Yankee
that was SI'IOnened from "Bitty."
• a1 Lasllngelos (Gagne 1-5), laio
Stadium . ... Had two other mem4
... Hit three triples in an 1890
•
Montreal {Johnson 4·4) at Flori!1a
orable moments at Yankee Stadi·
(Cornelius 3-3). late
urn - caught Tam Seaver's game against future Hall of
Farner Amos Rusie .... Managed
Phlladolpllla (Person 5-2) at Pins- 300th victory at the bailpa~. and
R811sln 1901·02.
- burgh (Arroyo 0-3), 101e.
also lectured Yankees rookie
_ San Diego (Ciemartt 9-8) 01 Col Daion Sanders about running out
.. orado (Jarvis 2-4), late
popups.

54 .432

13~

-

rur•

1&amp;-day ~ list Activated 1B
Rico Brogna from the 15-day dis·
abted list.
PITISBUAGH

PIRATES-

Called up OF Emil Brown from
Nashville of the PCL
ST. LOUIS CARDINALsPurchased the contract of c Rick
Wilkins from Memphis of the
Southern League. Optioned C
Keith McDonakl to Memphis of
the.Sovthem League. Tansferred
Mike Matthews from the 15· to
the 60-day disabled tist.

SAN DIEGO PADREsRHP Sti'VEI Montgomery
on the 15-ctay disabled tis!.
Called up LHP Dave Maurer frotn"
Las Vegas ot the PCL Trans·
ferred RHP Brian Boehringer
from the 1s.. to the 60-day dis·
abled list.
BASKETBALL
National BISkltblll Aaaocilllon
INDIANA PACERS-Named
lsfah Thomas coach.
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS-Claimed G·F Rodrick
Rhodes aft waivers.
PI~

FOOTBALL
NltiOMI Footblll Lllgue

NFL-Cut the two-game SUS·
penskm oJ Tennessee Titans CB
Denard Walker 10 one game.
AR IZONA
CARDIN11L5Agreed to tetms with RB Thomas
Jonaa.
BUFFALO BILLS-AgroOO lo
terms wtth S Travares Tillman to
a four-year contract.
CAROLINA PANTHERsAgreed to term• DE Reggie
White.
CINCINNATI BENGAL5Signed K NtMI Rackers to a three-

1M' comract.
GREEN BAY PACKERsSigned LB veman Crawford and
DT Tony Baril.
KANSAS CITY CHIEFsAgreed to terms with CB W illiam
Banee on a four-year contrac:t
.
MINNESOTA
VIKINGSAnnounced the retirement of NT
Jerry Ball. Signed DT Fred ROb·
b1ns, DE Michael Bolreau, and LS
Anlonlo Wilson.
NEW YORK GIANTSSigned AB Ron Dayne to a five·
year contract.
HOCKEY
National Hcx:key LNgue
ATLANTA THRASHERSAgreed to terms with C·F Jarrod
Skalde.
DETROIT RED WINGsSigned UN Brenl Gilchrist to a

one-year comract.
NEW JERSEY DEVILSSigned LW Michael Aupp.
COLLEGE
ALLENTOWN--Named Scan
Coval athletic director.
CAL
STATE
NORTH·
RIDGE-Agreed to terms wilh
Bobby Braswell, men's Daskett&gt;alt
coach, on a tour-year contract
extension .
RUTGERS- Extended lhe
contract of Kevin Bannon, men's
basketball coach, through 2005·
06.
TULANE- Named Tom Shaw
men's golf coach.
WILLI AM
PENNAnnounced the resignation ol
Garey Smith, women's basketball
coach, to t&gt;ecome women·s bas·
ketDaU coach at Grand View COt·
lege.

n

Soccer standings
E111temDivlakm

W L TP11 GFG"
NY·NJ
12 7 2 38 .·35 27
New Eng. 8 9 5 29 33 35
Miami
7 10 5 26 30 37
D.C.

5 13 6 21 34 48

Central Olvlalon

.. Sunday'e GlrMI
Arizona (Anderson 8·3) at Clndn·
• na1i (Oossons 3-0),
Philadelphia (Scllilling 5-6) ..
PinSburgh (A~chlo 5-5), 1:35 p.m.
Milwaukee (Wright 5-3} at Chica·
go Cubs {Valdes 1-4), 2:20 p .m.
St. Louis (An. Benes 10·4) 81
Houston (Reynolds 8-7), 3:05
p.m.
• San Diego (follber1l 2-1) al Colorado (Aslacio 8-8), 3:05p.m.
Montreal (Vazquez 7·5) at Florida
(Sanchez 6·7), 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Moos (B.J. Jones 4-4) 111
Altama (Asllb1 5-7), 8:05 p.m.
San Francisco (Ortiz 5-D) aiLDs
Angetes (Dreifon 5·7), 8:10p.m.

:

ALglance
E11t Dlvl•lon

w

L Pet. GB
NewYork
50 41 .549
Toromo
52 46 .531 1~
Boston
49 « .527 2
Baltimore
42 53 .429 10
Tampa Bay
37 57 .394 14~
C1ntr1l Dlvl .. on
w L Pet. GB
· : Ch1cago
61 35 .635 49 46 .SHI 11~
: Cleveland
. · Kansas City
« 50 .468 18
· · Detroit
43 50 .462 16~
·,. Minnesota
4:3 56 .4Jo1 19'1.
• • WIM Dlvl8lon
.
WLPet. GB
•• Seattle
56 39 .589 : • Anaheim
53 4-4 .546
4
• : Oakland
51 44 .537
5
·. Texas
45 49 .479 tO'.t
Thureday'a O.m.e
Oelroft 5, N.Y. Yankees 3
Minneso1a 5, ChiCago White
'. Sox 1
·
Boston H , Baltimore 7, 1St

Atanulo Peru y Rlgal '"Tony ..
Born; lloy 14, 1842, In C.moguoy, Cubo
B l - rlglll, , _ right
.One of baseball's best clutch
hitters and run producers.... Popular first baseman known as

"Doggie," noM In the hean al the
order for the Big Red Machine....
Had 1,652 RBIS in his car&amp;ef,
highest total among latin players.
Had been the most among any
player not in the Hall until he was
elected In January by the Base·
halt Writers' Association

ot Amen·

ca. ... Drove In 954 runs in the
decade of 1ho 1970s, secordmost in majors to teammate
Johnny BenCh . ... Emel'9 Hall this
year witN his tenner manageJ,
Spark'f Anderson. Already in the
Hail were Bench and Joe Mof·
gan. Pete Rose stiM hoping to get:
ln .... Hl1thrae homers as Cincinnati won 1975 World SeriH, bat·
ted .313 as Reds repeated in
1976 Wortd Series.
Hit 379
career home runs from 1984·88
with Reds, Montreal, Red Sox
and Philadeipnia. .. . Played in
five World Series, tour with Reds
and one with Philadelphia .... Had
seven seasons with 100 RBis ..
A seven-time All-Star at firat base
and third base . MVP of the 1987
game after hitting wiming home
run in 15th inning. ... Had nine
seasons with 20 or more nomers.
... Left his )ob at a sugar cane fac·
tory in Havana to sign a minor
league eon1raef wi1h Clncimati in
1~ .... Now works in fron1office
for the Flot1da Marlin• .... Hts No.
24 is retired by the Reds. K6n
Griffey Jr. warned to wear ~ this

BASEBALL
Aro.rloan L.e.gue
CLEVELAND
INOIAN5Racalled RHP Kane DaviS from
Buftala of the International
League. Optioned RHP Jim
Brower to Buftalo.
TORONTO BLUE JAYsOptioned RHP Man DeWitt to
Syracuse of the International
League.
N111on•l LAigue
ATLANTA
BRAVE sOptioned C Fernando Lunar to
Greenville of the Sauthern
League.
CHICAGO CUB5-Traded
OJ= Glenallen Hill to the New York
Yankees for AHP Ben Ford and
LHP Ozwaldo Mairena, assigned
Ford lo Iowa of the PCL and
MaJrnea to Wast Tennessee of
tne Southern League. catted up
IF Chad Meyers from Iowa .
FLORIDA MARLINS- Purchased the contract of C Ramon
castro from Calgary ot the PCL
Announced C Paul Bako was
claimed on waivers from the
Attama Braves.
MONTREAL EXPOS-Activated FlHP ~i ke Thunnan from

the 15-day Dl. Placed RHP
Yownny Lara on the 1 5-da~ OL.
NEW YORK MET5-Purchased the contract of INF Mike
Kindade . Optioned RHP Jim
Mann 10 Norfolk of the lntBfna.
tlonal League . Moved OF Oarryi
Hamitlon hom the 15- 10 the 60·
day dlaaCiad list.
PHILADELPH111 PHIUIE5Pia~ c Mike Uebenhal on the

gles by Austin Dunfee, Justin Bell
and Cody Davidson.Those would
be the only Middleport hits in
the contest.
New Haven answered with
ing up just three hits and one run · three in the first, two of which
: to put the New Haven Reds into came on Sayre's blast. They then
added seven in the second and
· the tournament semi-finals.
· H e also got big-time run sup- three more in the third to set the
: port, a&lt; three New Haven hitters final 14- 1 tally.
Dunfee was named Middle· re corded multi-hit games. Kam
port's
player of the game. Sayre
Sayre led that department with a
:Single and a two- run homer over took the honor for New Haven .
New Hoven will faced the
:the right-center field fence .
· Brenton Clark added two hits, Indians Saturday at 7:30 p.m . The
:as did Jeff Wamsley. Brandon evenings's other semi-final contest featured the Green Braves
:Fowler added a single.
. Middleport led early, taking a against Point Pleasant Nation:1- 0 •dvantage in the fiot on sin- wicie at 6 p.m .

KCLLT

from Pap Bl

W L TP1oGFGA
11 9 2 35 42 33
10 8 5 35 46 39

Tampa
Chicago
Columbus
DalLas

9 10 4 31
9 11 4 31

Weltlm Olviaton
W L TP1o
Kan . City 11 5 5 38
Los Ang . 10 s 7 37
Colorado 10 10 3 33

35 38

40 40
GFGA
30 16
34 2S
30 42

Reds

from PageBI

Race
from Page Bl
Auten helped him out, taking
Stewart around the track on an
inspection tour.
"He said when ever you're
comfortable, we'll go," Stewart
said.
After h e saw Maik Martin
break Wallace's month-old track

Arrests
from Page Bl
wanted a better life for hiinself
and his famil y.
" I didn't want to leave, but this
is my way to n1ove my n1om fron1
the neighborhood and to somewhere \\There fFic re's- no crime ,"
Addison had said.
If convicted, he faces two to I 0
years m pnson.
In Morgantown . an Au g. 9
hearing has bee n scheduled in
MuniCipal Court for WVU tailback Cassel Smith, who was
charged Wednesday with secondoffense shoplifting and obstructin g a police officer.
Morgantow n police Cpl. B.L.
Watson said Smi1 h. 2 1, left a
Gabriel Brothers store in Mountaineer M all without paying for a

came around on a pair of w~d
pitches and Danny Bautistfs
groundout fm a 4-3 lead.
.
Dmi[ri Yo un g's two-our sinfilc
in the bottom of the fifth tied ;i t
:
once agam.
J

.~i' s

Note s: Morgan extended
hitting streak to four games with '
his two singles. H e's 7-for-14 at
the plate this season .... Morgan
remained winless as a starter t~is
season. H e's 4-0 with five 'saves-in
31 relief appearances. 0- 2 in IO~r
starts .... Cincinnati's Larry Luebbers, scheduled to start SaturdaY's
game, was sc ratched Friday night
because of ri ghtness 111 his for~ ­
arm. Ron Villon e will start in ]1is
place.

record and then Wall.ce better
that run himself, Stewart didn't '
think he would get his third
career pole .
"I just wanted something in
the top five," he said. "But I knew
when I came off the thirp turn
that it was faster than I had been
all day."
Martin , loo king to win for the
first time in 3 '/, months , put himself in good position to accomphsh thatwith his run at 171.648

in a Ford.
" It was a great lap," said Martin, winless since taking the
Goody's 500 on April ') in Ma;-tinsville,Va.
... 1 just told the guys I d01i 't
know where I left anything · fcr
them on th e track.
~~
" We've made a lor o f improvenlents on th ~ ca r sin ce the last
time Wt' were up here.'"
He started sixth and tl ni shed
fitih 111 the Poco no 5111J.

pair of boots and a pair of Jeans.
He threw the jeans at a female
store employee who tri ed to stop
him and ran. Police arrested him
in a wooded area in a ravine
behind the mall after a chase.

He remaim free Oil a s~ ou personal recogni za nce bond .
Smith was clurgcd with
shopli fting 111 May ami paid a
$130 fine .

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5 9 8 23 26 32
NOTE: Three points f04' a win and

one point for a tie.
Chicago I. Colorado 1. tie
Seturd1y'a G1me1
New England at San Jose. 4 p.m.
Miami at New York-New Jersey,

4:30p.m.
Los Angeles at Tampa Bay, 8

p.m.
Columbus at Kansas City, 8:30
p.m.
S•turday, Jutv ~
AII·Star Game at Co lumbus, 3:30
p.m.

Have a

sports-related
item or tip?
Contact Sports .
Editor Andrew
Carter at (740)
446-1341, ext.
11

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bl.l

Nicklaus and St. Andrews
say their final .good byes

steve Parri s wasn't lllli Ch better,
giving up n im: hits m six innir~gs
while wasting ' P'ir of lead,. Senn
Casey's two- run double pu t th e
Reds aht·acl m the fim ai1d
extended his hitting streak 'to: a
career-high 14 gJmes.
•
The Diamomlbacks loaded :tfll'
bases with the hdp o f an in fL'?ltional two -out w,Ik in the second
to bring up M organ . H is soit si;,_
gle to center ·drove in a run t~at
ti ed It at 2.
,
P"ris matc hed Morgan by Supping an RBI single off a fake bi.(nt
as the R c~s we nt up 3-2 in :Cpc
second, but let hi s se lt~ fa s hioilcd
lead get away in the o urth . St.ove
Finley led off with his _ 1 hon~r
and Erubiel Du razo sing d ~~d

applause in his first at-bat. H e
went 0-for-3 with a pair of walks.
McKeon doesn't think the trade
talks involving the team captain
have affected th e Reds.
"They know it's the nature of
" I think I thrive 011 those situac
the
business," McKeon said. " If
tions, believe It or not ," said Mantei, wllo got his Sixth save in eight you're here, you play for this
chances. " I wish I had a dollar for tc-am."
After wasting leadoff triples in
every time I've walked a guy to
the
sixth and seventh - both set
bring up the big hitter.
"He's a great hitter. He's going up by Dante Bichette's misplays -in
to be in the Hall of Fame. Striking ri gh1 fidd - the D ia mondbacks
fi11ally got a clutch hit and broke a
our a big hitter li ke that is tun ."
The 46,10i fans on hand for the 4-all tie in the eighth.
A walk and Jay Bell's two-out
game and a Beach Boys concert
afterward were on their feet, snap- single off Scott Sullivan (1-4) left
ping photos, when Griffey came runners on first and third. Gonzato bat. A · hush came over them lez hit a ground- rul e double off
when Griffey swung through a Dennys Reyes for the go-ahead
run,leaving him 3-for-3 career off
" high fastball for strike three.
"They wanted to see a home the left- hander.
"When you've done well against
run;· manager Jack McKeon said.
"That's what we wanted. It didn't a pitcher, ·you have some confidence against him," Gonzalez said.
work our that way."
Nothing worked out right for "You try to go over some old atthe Reds in their first home game bats in your mind, you try to get
since the dub informed Larkin ahead in the count and you try to
that it won't meet his request for a get something in the air."
He did all three.
three-year, $27.9 million extenGreg Swindell (2-3) retired both
sion. The Reds and M ets worked
out a trade that requires Larkin's batters he faced in the seventh,
getting Griffey on a groundout
approval.
and
Bichette on a strikeout.
The commissioner's office has to
Neither starter could hold a lead
give permission for a 72-hour
negotiating window, allowing the or keep runners off base for very
long. Arizon a's Mike Morgan ,
Mets to tall&lt; to Larkin.
Several pro-Larkin banners flut- making his fourth start of the seatered around the stadium and he son, gave up 10 hits in five inning.;
got a louder than usual round of and left with the score tied at 4.

San Jose

Frld1y'1 Game

v

•

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland (AP)
- Jack Nicklaus trudged to the
top of the stone Swilken Bridge
on the 1Hth fairway and turned
aro~nd to gaze at the Old
Cou rse.
It was time to say goodbye to
the British Open .
Or was it ?
The cheers and applause from
.the crowd sa1d it was, but Nicklaus left open the possibiliry that
he might return in 2005 to the
courSe where he won two of his
three British Op ens.
'T have some wonderful memories from here," Nicklaus said. "I
had some great times."
There will be some keepers
from Friday's second round, too.
Missing the cut won't be one of
them .
That's part of the reaso n Nicklaus says he's leaving. He hasn't
played on the weekend in th e
Open in four of hi~ last seven
appearances.
"The walking over the
Swilken Bridge and walking up
the 18th hole for the last time is
very ni ce," he said. "But not on
Friday afternoon."
When NICklaus paused on the
bridge that crosses the burn on
the fairwav, he took off his hat in
the · warn;, gentle breeze ' and
waved it to the roaring crowd,
then motioned for his son-caddi e,
Steve, to JOin him on the bridge.
Nicklaus walked onto the
g ree n. where he missed a short
birdi e putt before leaving arm-inc
arm with his son. H e blew a few
kisses to the crowd and walked up
the steps off of 18 to even more
THANKS FOR THI; MEMORIES- Legendary golfer Jack Nicklaus wave s· farewell Friday to the gallery at
applause.
the 18th hole at the Old Course on Royal St. Andrews. (AP)
, Nicklaus tned to keep the

Spain ousts u.s~ team
in Davis Cup semifinal
SANTANDER, Spain (AP) Spain ended more than three
decades of Davis C up anguish Saturday, reaching the final with a
sweep of an Am~ri can ~ua&lt;i
tlirown togetner- slapdash by cap.tain John McEnroe after the pullout of its best players.
Alex Correlja and Juan Balcells
clinched th e best-of-five series and
set off a delirious dancing celebration with a 7-6 (6), 2-6, 6-3,6-7
(5), 6-3 doubles victory over Todd
Martin and C hris Woodruff that
rendered Sunday's singles matches
meaningless.
Spain, a Davis Cup finalist only
in 1965 and 1967, will play for its
first title against Australia in
Barcelona in December.
On a cooler, cloudier day than
Friday' thick heat at this seaside
resort near Bilbao, Corre\ia and
Balcells saved four set points in the
opener before taking th e set on
their first opportu nity in the
tiebreaker when Balcells pur away
a volley.
Spain appeared on its way to
winning in four sets. but the
Americans refused to qu1t, pushed
it to a tiebreaker and won that
when Woodruff nail ed a volley at
set point.
After an exchange of breaks to
3-3 in the fifth set, Spain won the
fin al 10 points to close th e match.
The last three points came on
crushing volley winners by the 25year-old Balcells, disparaged memorably by McEnroe before the
ser ies began with the corrunent,
"Who the hell is Balcells&gt;"
It wa&lt; a 4- hour, 2-minute match
fill ed with exquisite r;_Jilies, rapidfire exchanges at the net, deft
drops and crafty lobs. and in the

end the Spanish players showed
both better skill and greater
endurance on the red clay they
love.
None of !he Spanish players was
alive the last time Spain got this
far, and it didn't matter to any of
them that this triumph cam e
against an American team depleted
by iqjuries to Pete Sampras and
Andre Agassi.
"We love to win, and we don't
look at the opponent," Co rretja
said after beatin g Jan- Michael
Gambill in singles on Friday. "I
don't know if Sampras or Agassi
would play better than Gambill
today.The important thing is to go
on the court and to (beat) the guy
in front of you. And if it was Gambill, it was Gambill. If it was my '
father, I would be happy as well."
Despi1e the stron g effort by
Martin and Woodruff~ there were
no illusions among McEnro e and
his merriless men that they had a
realistic chance of beating Spa in
after losing the first two si ngles
matches.
" It's not e ntirely shocking,"
McEnroe said :tfter watching Martin and Gambill fall in si Figles.
"E veryone knew it wouldn't be
easy. These guys are rough on this
stuff.
"This JS a great opportunity for
them . They get to play us ... and
people still view us, whoever we
brin g, as this great Goliath.
"They have a lo t of advantages .
We're playing on their surf.1ce
right after Wimbledon, o n clay in
this heat . T his is tailor-made for
them .You know, if they ca n't take
advantage of this, they're going to
"'in the Davis C up in the yc.u
3000."

moment light on , the last two
holes . As his daughter-in-law,
Krista, was following him inside
the ropes, Nicklaus edged- closer
and shouted "snazzy pair of
britches."
On such a special day: her white
slacks with a wild yellow, pink
and blue floral print seemed a
welcome distraction.
"Of course, It 's se ntimental
today, we're all a little teary-eyed,"
sh e said.
Last month, the 60-year- old
Nicklaus said he'd probably
played his last U.S. Open. On Friday, he hedged about his " favorite
event;' the British Open.
"I will not be seeing you next
year at R oyal Lytham, I do not
believe," Nicklaus said. "You
never say never.
"I would say the chances are
I've probably played my last hole
in the British Open."
But' then he added that Open
tournal]:lent chairman Hugh
Campbell had invited him to play
in 2005 when the event returns
to the home of golf.
"I will be 65 then.l will be eligible for the last time. I won 't say
no, but I certainly am not going
to play unless I can be competitive," he said.
Nicklaus, who missed the cut
with rounds of 77-73 (150), has
trouble walking 18 holes nowadays and, as he said, doesn't "put
the numbers on the board anymore ." His putting is also the
worst of hi s career.
However, through 1 1 holes o n
Friday he was 2- under par for the
ro und with an outside shot at
making the last two days. But he
three-putted .12 for a bogey, and

that was that for the winner of a
record 18 m~ors · - seven more
than anyone else.
"I suppose the die was sort of
cast there ," said Ni cklaus, who
wore a yellow shirt, harkening
back to the years when he often
wore yellow on Sunday.
" I did not have any other shirt
to go with the (beige) pants I
needed to w ea r," he said.
Playing partner Angel Cabrera
tri ed to will Nicklaus on, offering
his own body English when
Nic klaus' 30-foor par putt on No.
17 stopped an inch short. The
other partner, Mark James ,
recalled Nicklaus' anger on
Thursday when he hit into the
water on the first hore.
"He's still very competitive,"
James said .
The Englishman then recalled
Arnold · Palmer's similar farewell
in '95 at St. Andrews.
"What these guys have done
for the game is simply enormous;· James said.
Th e roughly 20,000 fans
watching Nicklaus around the
two finishing holes agreed.
"It makes th e hair on the back
of your neck crawl,'' said Carol
Anne Dmg of Seaforth, Ontario,
Canada. "It makes you choke up.
I'll go home and tell everybody
how I saw Ja c k Nicklaus go over
the Swilken Bridge for the last
time dressed in his yellow shirt on
a sunny day. It doesn't get any
better than that."
Ni.:klaus wanted to bow out in
the final round Sunday, which
will be his 40th wedding anniversary wi th wife Barbara. He still
figures to play then , JUSt not on
the Old Co u rse.

FOR GREAT SERVICE BEFORE AND AFTER THE SAL

JERRY BIBBEE

1 999 FORD CROWN VIWHtiA
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. 1997 FOR MUSTANG

Fonner WVU athlete in finals
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP)
- Former West Virginia University athlete Kristen Quackenbush
has advanced to "the finals of the
women's pole vault at th e U.S.
Olympic track and field trials.
Quackenbush, 25. was among
16 to advance to Su nday's finals by
cl earing the minimum standard of
13 feet, 2 1/ 4 inches Friday.
·
" I was sta nding there getting
ready for noy third try," Quackenbush said. "All I was thinking was
this was goin g to be all or nothing.'
I just told myself that I was going

to give i1 all I got.
"There was a lo t of pressure,
maybe the most I've ever felt
before. Just to m ake it to the .finals
is a grea t accomplishment and a lot
o f weight off-of my shoulders ."
The top three vaulters will
qualil)- for the Olympics.
"Anything
can
happen,"
Quackenbush said . " You know,
evL·rybody has their f.worircs, and
I'm p·.ubably not one of th em .
'Tnjmt goin g to give it the best
shot that I have and see what happens ."

JERRY BIBBEE
461 S. Third
Ave.
Middleport

Phone
740 - 992 -2 .196
www. jerrybibbee.com

• r

'

J!&gt;unbn!' I!I:Imt!! -&amp;rnlintl • Page 83

Sunday, July 23, aoqo

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

TODAY'S SCOREBOARD

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

�I

P-ae B4 • 6aua, G:tlnet·6tntlntl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis; Ohio • Point Pleaa.nt. WV

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Sunday, July 23, 2000

.~

PARIS (AP) -

U.S. women kick way
to international crown:

A&gt; a teen-ager

fuU of ralent and stubborn pride,

GO'fTINGEN,
Germany
.(AP) ...:_. Julie Foudy scored just
before she was knocked off her
feet by a diving tackle, giving
the United States a 1-0 victory
over Germany on Saturday and
the title of a four-nation tournament.
Her left-footed goal in the
57th minute left the U .S.
women with a record of two
wins and a tie in the DFB Jubilaum Tournament, marking
German soccer's tOOth anniversary.
The tournament featured for
of the world's best teams. Norway took second by defeating
China . 1-0 on Saturday. The
Chinese finished third and winless Germany was last.
The lone goal came when
Foudy charged in from the left.
She took Titfeny Millbrett's
cross that swept past the front of
the goal. Her short shot fluttered
past onrushing goalie Silke Rottenberg, a split second before

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONG BALL - Angels outfielder Garret Anderson cracks
.son Friday during the third inning. (AP)

'

the team record set earli er this from the C ubs for minor league
season .
pitchers Ben Ford and Ozwaldo
~Anderson 's glove turned out to
Mariners 12, Rangers ~.
M aircna.
:be Baltimore's passport to victor
Carlos Guillen singled twice as
1\vins 2, Indians 1
\
.ry.
Seattle erupted for seven runs in
Rookie Mark Redman nearly
: · The Orioles broke their 20- the first inning in Texas' first trip pitched his first professional
; game losing streak in Canada, to Safeco Field.
shutout as Minn esota beat
; beating the Toronto Blue Jays 9Jay _Buhner
and
Mark Cleveland at the Metrodome.
;? Friday night.
M cLemore homered in the third
Redman had not permitted a
" I'd like to blame it on cus- as the Mariners took a I 2-0 leaq. runner past first base until
·Wms, but they· always treat us
All -Star
shortstop
Alex Manny Ramirez homered with
!pretty well," Anderson said .
Rodriguez, on the disabled list one out in th e ninth inning.
: Anderson 'made two outsta nd- with a sprained right kn ee,
After
_La Troy
Hawkins
:ing catches in cen ter field and worked out before the game. relieved, Travis Fryman singled
:Baines contributed four hits, Rodriguez said he expected to and Richie Sexson doubled. But
;including a home run.
return to the M ariners' lineup by Fryman was thrown out at the _
" They've beaten us up pretty Monday.
plate by shortstop Cristian Guz:liad here the last couple years:·
. White Sox 8, Red Sox 5
man on a grounder by Alex
Magglio Ordonez took advan- Ramirez, and pinch-hitter Rus·B aines said . "But I don't think
about the past."
tage of a second chance, singling sell Branyan struck out.
The Orioles won north of the home the go-ahead run in the
The Indians lost their third in
border for the first titue since seve nth inning to lift C h1cago at a row.
.
Royals 4, Tigers 0
beating Toronto on June 13, Fen way Park.
Ordonez singled -after Bostqn · Dan Reichert pitched his first
)9~~ , S4~~e ~!)en, they ·h.ad lost
14 m a row at SkyDoine and first baseman Brian Daubach caree r sh1itout, giving up six hits
been swept in its two interleague dropped his foul popup for an at Comerica Park as Kansas Ciry
error.
beat D etroit for its fourth
series at MontreaL
"I heard that we hadn 't won
Jose Valentin homered arn:l straight victory.
in Canada; but-all I eottld do -was - drove in thrennnsfor tlieWlllt. , - -Johnny Damon went --:l-!or-5, -pitch," winner Pat Rapp said. Sox, but the shortstop made two making him I 5-for-22 during
":;treaks are made to be broken." errors in the sixth that helped the Royals' winning streak. His
15 hits in four games tied anAL
· In other AL games, Seattle the Red Sox tie it at 5.
Yankees 11, Devil Rays l
record last done by Walt Dropo
trounced Texas 12-3, Chicago·
Dwight Gooden gave up .:i for Detroit in 1952 Milt
beat Boston 8-5, New York
topped Tampa Bay 11 - l, Min- home run to Gerald Williams on Stock set the major league mark
nesota defea ted Cleveland 2-1, hi s se~ond pitc h ,' then settled in of 16 in 1925 for Brooklyn.
Angels 12, Athletics 3
~naheim beat Oakland -12-3 and to help New Yo rk beat visiting
Mo Vaughn homered and
Kansas City downed Derroit 4- Tampa Bay.
Gooden, released by the Devil drove in five runs as Anaheim
0.
Rapp (6-6) won for only the Rays earlier this season , lasted six stopped Tim Hudso n's ninethird time in h&gt;S last 16 starts. innings and improved to 2-0 for · game winning streak.
Vaughn and Garret Anderson
Along with Baines, Delino the Yankees.
David
Justice
drove
in
three
hit
three- ru':' homers and Matt
DeShields and Will Clark also
runs, Bernie Williams scored Walbeck also connected for th e
homered for the Orioles.
Tony Batista hit his 29th and three times and Jorge Posada visiting Angels.
Hudson gave up a career-high
30th home rum forToronto.Thc hom e red for New York.
Before
the
game,
the
Yankees
nine
runs and 12 hi ts in 5 1-3
Blue Jays have homered in 20
sfrai ght home ga mes, o ne shy of got o utfi elde r Glenallen Hill innings.

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: Brown's Couch hopes to follow
·same pattern set by Manning
COLUMBUS (AP)- Peyton Manning improved
· drastically ftom his rookie year to last season, and it
was no coincidence that the Indianapolis Colts'
. record did also.
Many including Manning believe Tim
Couch can foUow the same learning curve and that
he can bring the Cleveland Browns along for a Similar thrill ride.
" I think 'I can make the jump;' Couch said after
the Browns' combined practice and light scrimmage
with the Colts at Columbus Crew Stadium on Satur:day. "I don't know if I can do as good as Peyton
did. He had a great year last year. But 1 think I'm
: going to be a lot better quarterback this year. I've got
. a lot better talent around me. The receivers are doing
a great job. The offensive line is better. We've got
Etrict Rhett in the backfield running the baD for us .
I think I'm going to be a better player just because of
that."
· Manning and Couch spoke on the bus ride to
Columbus on Friday. The two compared notes on
what they're going through as young quarterbacks in
a league that can be particularly harsh for young
quarterbacks.
The Colts went fiom 3-13 Manning's rookie year
to become one of the best·teams in the NFL last season. Manning's numbers improved across the boar:d .
He threw 42 fewer passes (53.3) yet completed five
more (331), passing for 400 _more yar:ds (4,135). He
threw 26 TD passes each year, but his interceptions
dropped from 28 as a rookie to 15 last season.
"The game slows down for you in your second
year, you start to make ·beaer decisions;· Manning
said. "You start to throw the ball away maybe a little
bit instead of taking the sack and throwing the interception. You kind of learn that a punt is not a bad
play - sometimes defenses are good and they stop
you . Those are some of the things !learned. I made
better decisions and we scored more points."
So dramatic was the improvement that it even
shocked Manning.
- "Last year ~aught ~verybody by surprise, including
us -and especially me," Manning said. " I knew we'd
be better. I didn't think 13-3. I've trie&lt;i to tell our
fans, don 't get u_sed to 13-3 - that H1-b is OK as
long as you get into the playoffs."
Couch completed So percent of his passes for

•

2,447 yards and 15 touchdowns with 13 interceptions in his rookie season. But the Browns were just
2-14.
Indianapolis coach Jim Mora said teams don't
improve unless their quarterbacks do.
" That's the most important posi tion on your footbaD team in this business," he said. "Both of those
guys are good footbaU players now but they both
have a lot of upside ahead of th em and a lot of years
ahead of them."
Couch said he needs to get rid of the baD quicker
and must learn to rely more on an improved supporting cast. He said he's working hard on making
the improvement between his ears that will result in
more wins.
"Once you get ou t· there and you play and you get
to go through a full season "' a starting quarterback,
you learn a lot more and make better decisions;'
Couch said. "You can always make better decisions."
Manning and Couch have been friends since their
college days, Mann ~C&gt; g at Tennessee and Couc h at
Kentucky. Despite being &lt;;&gt; n opposing sides at times,
they stayed in contact with eac h other.
Now they are he ralded as two of a new wave of
young quarterbacks who must pick up the torch
from recent retirees Dan Marino, Steve Young and
John Elway
Manning said it's too soon to put this group in that
clas&lt;.
"That's kind of what people are starting to say, but
I think for Us individually. it's too much for us to put
that pressure on our.elves. That"s the goal, to have a
career like Elway and Marino or Young or (Troy)
Aikman," Manning laid. "Tha t's what a young player
would like to go after. What I mean by that is, to be
good every single year. Not to have a great second
year and all of a sudden drop off, but to just consistently play good football ."
It's a rna" of how fast and far Manning has come
that Couch isn't shooting to be the next Elway or
Young so much as to pull himself up to the same
level as his friend.
" It's a pretty neat feeling, I never thought I'd be at
this point. I'm hoping to get to where those guys
were. That's my goal," Couch said. ''I'm working
towards it. Hopefully I can get to where Peyton is
..
one day.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

"· Harold Baines· bat and Brady

I

~

'

"·

u

u

a three-run homer off Athletics hurler Tim Hue!-

,Birds
break
border
jinx
.

PRICE REDUCED!!

r

NATIONAL LEAGUE

_Braves thump Mets at The Ted

.
Foudy was upended by a Geiman defender.
The goal was one of the feliv
chances for the U.S. women· ih
the second half of a game that
lacked the drama and highlighu
of the Americans' 3-2 win ~r
Germany at ihe World Cup. ·'
But the United States, its
defenders easily clearing every
threat, had several chances during the first 45 minutes to grab
the lead. Most came from Mil'
brett, with her best opportunity
a long roller early in the game
that ricocheted off the left post.
Germany proved a big disappointment at a tournament celebrating its soccer heritage, wilh
its defense riddled for seven
goals in losses against China and
Norway.
China came into the final
round of the tournament with a
I -0-1 record, leading the Americans on a goal difference of
one. The two World Cup finalists tied 1-1 on Wednesday.

Lance Armsirong would sometimes pedal tOM!d the lonely Texas
horizon until it became Oklahoma
and dream that, one day, his bike
might take him all the way to the
Champs-Elysees.
Now 28, Armstrong is living
beyond those boyhood fantasies
and his story is the inspirational
srulf of a best-selling autobiognphy and a HoUywood movie in the
works:
Just after the 1996 Olympics,
_America's No. 1 cyclist was diagnosed with testicular cancer so
advanced that it had already spread
to his lungs and br.Un. He retreated
' back co his Austin, Texas, base
where doctors gave him a 40 percent chance of survival.
Against those odds he recovered:
A testicle amputated, br.Un rumon
removed, lungs bombar:ded with
chemotherapy all formed part of a
high-risk aggressive treatment that
paid off. Pervenely, the or:deal so
toughened him mentally and pared
him down physically that it helped
transform him into a world-beating cyclist.
· "Cancer w.as probably the best
thing that ever happened to me. It
nearly killed me, but instead it CRUISIN' -American Lance Armstrong rides Saturday during the 20th stage of the Tour de France. (AP)
made me a better athlere;· Arm"It's stiU a stage, it stiU counts, it's
most grueling sports events.
shape.
strong says today.
Tile suspicion, in a sport' already still official, and I'll stiU not be con"My whole body's different;' he
• Before the cancer, Armstrong
:had been an exciting but erratic said. "That in turn completely reeling fiom revelations that top vinced of victory until we finish
:prospect on the European-domi- changed how I trained, how I ate, cyclists had abused banned perfor- the race."
Armstrong surged ahead of his
. how I positioned myself on the mance-boosting drugs, was that
: nated world cycling circuit.
·· He won the world champi- bike. And the fact is, I'm 20 pounds Armstrong was taking chemical chief competitors at the first
mountain stage, performance that
onships in 1993, but he also . was lighter than I was in 1996. That's a shortcuts.
When Frend) media insisted the top French mountain-climber,
forced to drop out of three of his whole lot of weight when you're
first fourTours de France, the most trying to climb the Pyrenees or that a steroid-based substance had Richard Verinque, likened to seebeen found in his urine samples, ing a plane take off. His lead soon
:prestigious · but correspondingly Alps in the middle of the Tour."
But rebuilding his body required Armstrong was forced to backtrack soared to beyond seven minutes, a
:difficult cycling race on earth,
a newfound menral discipline - a on his previous claim to using no huge amount in Tour terms.
:because of exhaustion or iqjury.
At the last mountain stage the
: His victories on two Tour stages willingness to push hirnselfbeyond inappropriate medicines - but
.showed how his strength could his old limits, and to add maturity insisted that the offending product following week, Armstrong was
·sometimes prevail. But in the end, and patience to his play book.
was a skin cream for saddle sores.
attacked by Verinque and his two
"I knew if I could beat cancer, I
"I like to talk about cancer, but biggest threats:Jan \)ilrich of Getthe sheer epic scale of the Tour
often got the better of his overly could get over any mountain;· he definitely not about cortisone many and Marco Pantani of Italy.
said. "Once I got back into racing cream!" Armstrong JOkes today As he struggled but failed to keep
broad-shouldered frame.
up, Armstrong's legs burned with
: More important, his tactical in 1998, I could .· always draw about the embarrassing episode.
Nonetheless, it undercut Arm- pain as he suffered through his
:grasp of the sport vias poor. strength ftom the fact that, no mat: Through a mix of youthful impa- rer how hard things might look at strong's victory and, combined darkest hour.
But the reborn Armstrong knew
. tience and misdirected ego, he a given moment, they could never with accusations he'd defeated a
. tried to win rather than st:ay wen be as har:d as when I w.as back in scandal-depleted field, left the sur- his limits. He ended the day stiU in
positioned within races. He often Austin in a hospital bed with my vivor feeling he had yet more to first place and with Pantani resignprove.
ing the Tour in decisive defeat.
didn't recognize when to hold hair falling out."
This
year's
Tour
has
been,
in
his
Though Armstrong is a house. back and conserve energy for those
Ar~trong's . triumphant return
133 Pine Street,
: decisive moments that the best to the Tour m 1999 proved as words,"a total vindication. It's been hold name in the United States, U
-' Galllpolls,-olfi0'1J563r
: -cyc\ll~ _recognize ;uJd _po_une&lt; sh?Cking to some as it w.as inspir- sweet." After Saturday's stage;- he - few actually wafCnrus Tour vice()~
ing to others. Many wondered kept his lead of more than six min- ries and he knows it. To be appre- ~
.upon.
: The chemothenpy winnowed how on earth somebody on his utes. Now only a ceremonial swing dated fully by America, he'll have
HOURS: M-F 8 to 5:30 Sat. 9 to
to rurn in a winning performance
down his bulk, inspiring a more deathbed could miraculously through Paris remains.
"We have to be careful," he said. at the Sydney Olympics.
aerodynamic,
cycling-friendly rebound to win one of the· world's
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·~

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•

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TO )IM LOVELL
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ITS SOME OF THE BEST GOLF
ON THE PLANET.

Rookie
Jimmy
Anderson
allowed only three hits in eight
innings and Mike Benjamin drove
in three runs as Pittsburgh beat
Philadelphia at home.
Anderson (3-5) had his ' second
straight solid start.
Bruce Aven's two- run double
highlighted a four-run first inning
against Paul Byrd (2-8). Byrd is 1- I
6 in his last 10 starts.
Philadelphia avoided being shut
out when Gary Bennett hit a tworun homer in the ninth.
Cubs 4, Brewers 2
Kerry Wood (5-6) put together
consecutive victories for the first
time this season, pitching Chicago
over visiting Milwaukee.
Rick Aguilera pitched the ninth
(or his 20th save in 27 chances for
the C ubs, who won for the eighth
time in 11 games ,
John Snyder (3- 5) took the l;,ss
and dropped to 0-3 in four July
starts.
Cardinals 12, Astros 1
Edgar Renteria tied a careerhigh with four RBIS and rooki e
Rick Ankiel tied a career-high
with I I strikeouts in seven innings
as St. Louis stopped a three"g;une
losing streak with a victory at
Houston .
Ankiel (7-5) allowed only three

The Braves, who lead the Mets
by six games in the NL East, arc
14-1 at home against New York
during the regular season since
September 1997. They won three
more games at The Ted during last
year's NL Championship Series.
" It may look like we have an
edge on them;' Atlanta thir:d baseman Chipper Jones said, "but that
could change overnight"
John Burkett pitched 4 1-3
innings of scoreless relief to earn
the victory. Burkett (7-4), dropped
from the rotation when Atlanta
acquired Andy Ashby during the
All-Star break, came on in the
third inning after Terry Mulholland
gave up four hits and three runs.
"I think I can help out;' Burkett
said.
Expos 7, Marlins 3
Geoff Blum homered and had a
career-high four RBis, and Mike
Thurman pitched six strong
innings as Montreal defeated Aorida on the road.
Thurman (2-l) was activated
from the disabled list just before
allowing the Marlins one run and
five hits.
Florida starter Chuck Smith (03) lasted just four innings.
Pirates 9, Phillies 2

hits

to win fi)r th e first time in five

outin gs.
Sco tt Elarton (9-4) lasted o nly 3

1-3 il)nings and hJ.d a five ~ game
winn ing "itreJ.k snapped.
Padres 5, Rockies I
Ad1m EJton won for the first
time in mnl· : . tarto;; and went 3-for3 and AI M artm drove in t\.vo runs

as visiting S:~ n Dit:go beJt slumping Colorado.
Eaton (2-l) stn&gt; ck our three.
\v.1lked fom and g.wc up a run and
seven hit&lt;~ 111 7 l - 3 mnm gs.\he 22y~a r-ol d righr- han dl'r also beome
tbl' tir:-.t Pa d rl'~ pitc her in O\'cr five.
yeJ rs to ste;il

.1

Summer Selldown
200t's are arrivin1 daily· We nee~ to sell our 2000 mo~els.

..

~

All or nothing for 22 former umps

.9t;;ny years ago, I commanded
what was to have been man's
third landing on the moon.
We didn't get to complete that
mission-but the story of what
happened on Apollo 13 captured
the imagination of people all
over the world.

NEW YORK (AI') - Ir's all or nothing for the 22 reached by Aug. I , Hmchbeck said he would try to
conclude a labor contrJCt "' without making arrangeformer umpires who lost thm JObs last September.
John Hirschbeck, presidem of the new union, on ments for the 22 out-of-work umpires."
Rob Manfred, b;J.Seball's executive vice president of
Friday said he would negotiate a new labor contract
without settling the case of the 22 unless the old labor relations, said he was prepared to let Symonette
umpires' union decided by Aug. l to accept baseball's decide the umps' fate. •
Campbell said that"s fine with him, adding he had
offer to rehire just I 0 of the group.
spoken
with seven of the 10 umps baseball offered to
Pat Campbell, the lawyer for the old union, Richie
Phillips' Major Leag.:e Umpires. Associatton, rejected rehire and they were against accepting the offer.
"We arc prepared to see this thing through to the
the tentative deal. agreed to by baseball and the new
end;' he .said. "'The after has never been made to us
union, the World Umpires Association. ·
Umpires voted the MLUA out in February, but officially. If they were thinking of making it, I would under federal law the old union remains in charge of tell them not to bother. I don't think that offer comes
dose to the exposure baseball is staring at right now
the grievance to regain the jobs of the 22.
" I, fr:&gt;nkly. am not surpmed that John Hirschhcck with this orbitration and all the lawsuits that will be
..
stands ready to cut the 22 loose," Camp~ I said, " I sure: to tOUow.
Campbell
said
Richard
G.
Phillips
Associates,
the
never thought he cared about the 22 anyway. The
Jaw
firm
that
represents
the
MLUA,
has
sued.
baseball
MLUA never trusted John and was always suspicious
in Pennsylvania court, accusing the sport of trying to
of his professed con cern for the 22."
The 22 lost their jobs in September after Phillips' bleak the MLUA and have Phillips' law firm fired .
" I think the way they went about this was an
mass resignation plan failed because many AL umps
attempt
to drive a wedge between the· 22 and isolate
refused to back it. Th e MLUA then filed a grievan ce
that is being heard by arbitrator Alan Symonette. a case certain guys," C ampbell said, re~crring to baseball and
the WUA. "Thus far, I think its backfired. I think It
scheduled to resume in late August.
·
"I have no idea about any offer:' MLUA president does show baseball's realization of how vulnerJble
Jerry Crawford said. 'That's my comment."
they are in the arbitration."
_
_
Hirschbeck confirmed Friday the WUA had
The 10 ump&gt;res who would. be rehired under the
reached a ten~1tive agreeme nt in which 10 of the 22 offer, according to two lawyers speaking on the conwould be rehired, six would retire and six would be .· d&gt;t&gt;On they not be Identified, would be Gary Darling.
given buyout~.
_.
Rob Dav1dson, Bn1 ce_ Drcckman, Jun Evans, Tom
"Whatever the MLUA decides, the World Ump1rcs Hall10n, Ed Htckox, Bill Hohn , Sam Holbrook, Paul
Association must move fonvard soon to c o mplcte irs Nauert and Larry Vanover. •
,
negotiations with maj or league baseball ," Hirschbeck
The six who would retire would be Dale Ford,
said."
·
Ri ch Garcia, Ken Kaiser, Larry M cCoy, Frank Pulli,
If no agreement between the MLUA and baseball is TerryTata.

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Brian Bohanon (~ -7) took rhe
loss for Colorado. whi ch lost for
d 1L' !3rh ril1 ll' Ill 15 t-," :ltnt:'S.
Dodgers 6, Giants 5
Enc Karrus h1t J ~ o-a h~..· ad
three - run homer in th e eighth
inning. liftin g l os Angeles to a
home victory.
Felix R odriguez (3-1 ) entered
with a 5-J lead and runnas o n thl'
corner.; and :~lloweJ K:ums' 26th
ho ml'r.
ohe lms dro pp c·d San Francisco
2}1 g:~m es behind Arizona m 1he
NLWcst.
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Matt Herges (7-ll) won cbpite
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hom er.

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Sunday, July 23, 2000

Sunday, July 23, 2000

.~

PARIS (AP) -

U.S. women kick way
to international crown:

A&gt; a teen-ager

fuU of ralent and stubborn pride,

GO'fTINGEN,
Germany
.(AP) ...:_. Julie Foudy scored just
before she was knocked off her
feet by a diving tackle, giving
the United States a 1-0 victory
over Germany on Saturday and
the title of a four-nation tournament.
Her left-footed goal in the
57th minute left the U .S.
women with a record of two
wins and a tie in the DFB Jubilaum Tournament, marking
German soccer's tOOth anniversary.
The tournament featured for
of the world's best teams. Norway took second by defeating
China . 1-0 on Saturday. The
Chinese finished third and winless Germany was last.
The lone goal came when
Foudy charged in from the left.
She took Titfeny Millbrett's
cross that swept past the front of
the goal. Her short shot fluttered
past onrushing goalie Silke Rottenberg, a split second before

BV THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONG BALL - Angels outfielder Garret Anderson cracks
.son Friday during the third inning. (AP)

'

the team record set earli er this from the C ubs for minor league
season .
pitchers Ben Ford and Ozwaldo
~Anderson 's glove turned out to
Mariners 12, Rangers ~.
M aircna.
:be Baltimore's passport to victor
Carlos Guillen singled twice as
1\vins 2, Indians 1
\
.ry.
Seattle erupted for seven runs in
Rookie Mark Redman nearly
: · The Orioles broke their 20- the first inning in Texas' first trip pitched his first professional
; game losing streak in Canada, to Safeco Field.
shutout as Minn esota beat
; beating the Toronto Blue Jays 9Jay _Buhner
and
Mark Cleveland at the Metrodome.
;? Friday night.
M cLemore homered in the third
Redman had not permitted a
" I'd like to blame it on cus- as the Mariners took a I 2-0 leaq. runner past first base until
·Wms, but they· always treat us
All -Star
shortstop
Alex Manny Ramirez homered with
!pretty well," Anderson said .
Rodriguez, on the disabled list one out in th e ninth inning.
: Anderson 'made two outsta nd- with a sprained right kn ee,
After
_La Troy
Hawkins
:ing catches in cen ter field and worked out before the game. relieved, Travis Fryman singled
:Baines contributed four hits, Rodriguez said he expected to and Richie Sexson doubled. But
;including a home run.
return to the M ariners' lineup by Fryman was thrown out at the _
" They've beaten us up pretty Monday.
plate by shortstop Cristian Guz:liad here the last couple years:·
. White Sox 8, Red Sox 5
man on a grounder by Alex
Magglio Ordonez took advan- Ramirez, and pinch-hitter Rus·B aines said . "But I don't think
about the past."
tage of a second chance, singling sell Branyan struck out.
The Orioles won north of the home the go-ahead run in the
The Indians lost their third in
border for the first titue since seve nth inning to lift C h1cago at a row.
.
Royals 4, Tigers 0
beating Toronto on June 13, Fen way Park.
Ordonez singled -after Bostqn · Dan Reichert pitched his first
)9~~ , S4~~e ~!)en, they ·h.ad lost
14 m a row at SkyDoine and first baseman Brian Daubach caree r sh1itout, giving up six hits
been swept in its two interleague dropped his foul popup for an at Comerica Park as Kansas Ciry
error.
beat D etroit for its fourth
series at MontreaL
"I heard that we hadn 't won
Jose Valentin homered arn:l straight victory.
in Canada; but-all I eottld do -was - drove in thrennnsfor tlieWlllt. , - -Johnny Damon went --:l-!or-5, -pitch," winner Pat Rapp said. Sox, but the shortstop made two making him I 5-for-22 during
":;treaks are made to be broken." errors in the sixth that helped the Royals' winning streak. His
15 hits in four games tied anAL
· In other AL games, Seattle the Red Sox tie it at 5.
Yankees 11, Devil Rays l
record last done by Walt Dropo
trounced Texas 12-3, Chicago·
Dwight Gooden gave up .:i for Detroit in 1952 Milt
beat Boston 8-5, New York
topped Tampa Bay 11 - l, Min- home run to Gerald Williams on Stock set the major league mark
nesota defea ted Cleveland 2-1, hi s se~ond pitc h ,' then settled in of 16 in 1925 for Brooklyn.
Angels 12, Athletics 3
~naheim beat Oakland -12-3 and to help New Yo rk beat visiting
Mo Vaughn homered and
Kansas City downed Derroit 4- Tampa Bay.
Gooden, released by the Devil drove in five runs as Anaheim
0.
Rapp (6-6) won for only the Rays earlier this season , lasted six stopped Tim Hudso n's ninethird time in h&gt;S last 16 starts. innings and improved to 2-0 for · game winning streak.
Vaughn and Garret Anderson
Along with Baines, Delino the Yankees.
David
Justice
drove
in
three
hit
three- ru':' homers and Matt
DeShields and Will Clark also
runs, Bernie Williams scored Walbeck also connected for th e
homered for the Orioles.
Tony Batista hit his 29th and three times and Jorge Posada visiting Angels.
Hudson gave up a career-high
30th home rum forToronto.Thc hom e red for New York.
Before
the
game,
the
Yankees
nine
runs and 12 hi ts in 5 1-3
Blue Jays have homered in 20
sfrai ght home ga mes, o ne shy of got o utfi elde r Glenallen Hill innings.

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: Brown's Couch hopes to follow
·same pattern set by Manning
COLUMBUS (AP)- Peyton Manning improved
· drastically ftom his rookie year to last season, and it
was no coincidence that the Indianapolis Colts'
. record did also.
Many including Manning believe Tim
Couch can foUow the same learning curve and that
he can bring the Cleveland Browns along for a Similar thrill ride.
" I think 'I can make the jump;' Couch said after
the Browns' combined practice and light scrimmage
with the Colts at Columbus Crew Stadium on Satur:day. "I don't know if I can do as good as Peyton
did. He had a great year last year. But 1 think I'm
: going to be a lot better quarterback this year. I've got
. a lot better talent around me. The receivers are doing
a great job. The offensive line is better. We've got
Etrict Rhett in the backfield running the baD for us .
I think I'm going to be a better player just because of
that."
· Manning and Couch spoke on the bus ride to
Columbus on Friday. The two compared notes on
what they're going through as young quarterbacks in
a league that can be particularly harsh for young
quarterbacks.
The Colts went fiom 3-13 Manning's rookie year
to become one of the best·teams in the NFL last season. Manning's numbers improved across the boar:d .
He threw 42 fewer passes (53.3) yet completed five
more (331), passing for 400 _more yar:ds (4,135). He
threw 26 TD passes each year, but his interceptions
dropped from 28 as a rookie to 15 last season.
"The game slows down for you in your second
year, you start to make ·beaer decisions;· Manning
said. "You start to throw the ball away maybe a little
bit instead of taking the sack and throwing the interception. You kind of learn that a punt is not a bad
play - sometimes defenses are good and they stop
you . Those are some of the things !learned. I made
better decisions and we scored more points."
So dramatic was the improvement that it even
shocked Manning.
- "Last year ~aught ~verybody by surprise, including
us -and especially me," Manning said. " I knew we'd
be better. I didn't think 13-3. I've trie&lt;i to tell our
fans, don 't get u_sed to 13-3 - that H1-b is OK as
long as you get into the playoffs."
Couch completed So percent of his passes for

•

2,447 yards and 15 touchdowns with 13 interceptions in his rookie season. But the Browns were just
2-14.
Indianapolis coach Jim Mora said teams don't
improve unless their quarterbacks do.
" That's the most important posi tion on your footbaD team in this business," he said. "Both of those
guys are good footbaU players now but they both
have a lot of upside ahead of th em and a lot of years
ahead of them."
Couch said he needs to get rid of the baD quicker
and must learn to rely more on an improved supporting cast. He said he's working hard on making
the improvement between his ears that will result in
more wins.
"Once you get ou t· there and you play and you get
to go through a full season "' a starting quarterback,
you learn a lot more and make better decisions;'
Couch said. "You can always make better decisions."
Manning and Couch have been friends since their
college days, Mann ~C&gt; g at Tennessee and Couc h at
Kentucky. Despite being &lt;;&gt; n opposing sides at times,
they stayed in contact with eac h other.
Now they are he ralded as two of a new wave of
young quarterbacks who must pick up the torch
from recent retirees Dan Marino, Steve Young and
John Elway
Manning said it's too soon to put this group in that
clas&lt;.
"That's kind of what people are starting to say, but
I think for Us individually. it's too much for us to put
that pressure on our.elves. That"s the goal, to have a
career like Elway and Marino or Young or (Troy)
Aikman," Manning laid. "Tha t's what a young player
would like to go after. What I mean by that is, to be
good every single year. Not to have a great second
year and all of a sudden drop off, but to just consistently play good football ."
It's a rna" of how fast and far Manning has come
that Couch isn't shooting to be the next Elway or
Young so much as to pull himself up to the same
level as his friend.
" It's a pretty neat feeling, I never thought I'd be at
this point. I'm hoping to get to where those guys
were. That's my goal," Couch said. ''I'm working
towards it. Hopefully I can get to where Peyton is
..
one day.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

"· Harold Baines· bat and Brady

I

~

'

"·

u

u

a three-run homer off Athletics hurler Tim Hue!-

,Birds
break
border
jinx
.

PRICE REDUCED!!

r

NATIONAL LEAGUE

_Braves thump Mets at The Ted

.
Foudy was upended by a Geiman defender.
The goal was one of the feliv
chances for the U.S. women· ih
the second half of a game that
lacked the drama and highlighu
of the Americans' 3-2 win ~r
Germany at ihe World Cup. ·'
But the United States, its
defenders easily clearing every
threat, had several chances during the first 45 minutes to grab
the lead. Most came from Mil'
brett, with her best opportunity
a long roller early in the game
that ricocheted off the left post.
Germany proved a big disappointment at a tournament celebrating its soccer heritage, wilh
its defense riddled for seven
goals in losses against China and
Norway.
China came into the final
round of the tournament with a
I -0-1 record, leading the Americans on a goal difference of
one. The two World Cup finalists tied 1-1 on Wednesday.

Lance Armsirong would sometimes pedal tOM!d the lonely Texas
horizon until it became Oklahoma
and dream that, one day, his bike
might take him all the way to the
Champs-Elysees.
Now 28, Armstrong is living
beyond those boyhood fantasies
and his story is the inspirational
srulf of a best-selling autobiognphy and a HoUywood movie in the
works:
Just after the 1996 Olympics,
_America's No. 1 cyclist was diagnosed with testicular cancer so
advanced that it had already spread
to his lungs and br.Un. He retreated
' back co his Austin, Texas, base
where doctors gave him a 40 percent chance of survival.
Against those odds he recovered:
A testicle amputated, br.Un rumon
removed, lungs bombar:ded with
chemotherapy all formed part of a
high-risk aggressive treatment that
paid off. Pervenely, the or:deal so
toughened him mentally and pared
him down physically that it helped
transform him into a world-beating cyclist.
· "Cancer w.as probably the best
thing that ever happened to me. It
nearly killed me, but instead it CRUISIN' -American Lance Armstrong rides Saturday during the 20th stage of the Tour de France. (AP)
made me a better athlere;· Arm"It's stiU a stage, it stiU counts, it's
most grueling sports events.
shape.
strong says today.
Tile suspicion, in a sport' already still official, and I'll stiU not be con"My whole body's different;' he
• Before the cancer, Armstrong
:had been an exciting but erratic said. "That in turn completely reeling fiom revelations that top vinced of victory until we finish
:prospect on the European-domi- changed how I trained, how I ate, cyclists had abused banned perfor- the race."
Armstrong surged ahead of his
. how I positioned myself on the mance-boosting drugs, was that
: nated world cycling circuit.
·· He won the world champi- bike. And the fact is, I'm 20 pounds Armstrong was taking chemical chief competitors at the first
mountain stage, performance that
onships in 1993, but he also . was lighter than I was in 1996. That's a shortcuts.
When Frend) media insisted the top French mountain-climber,
forced to drop out of three of his whole lot of weight when you're
first fourTours de France, the most trying to climb the Pyrenees or that a steroid-based substance had Richard Verinque, likened to seebeen found in his urine samples, ing a plane take off. His lead soon
:prestigious · but correspondingly Alps in the middle of the Tour."
But rebuilding his body required Armstrong was forced to backtrack soared to beyond seven minutes, a
:difficult cycling race on earth,
a newfound menral discipline - a on his previous claim to using no huge amount in Tour terms.
:because of exhaustion or iqjury.
At the last mountain stage the
: His victories on two Tour stages willingness to push hirnselfbeyond inappropriate medicines - but
.showed how his strength could his old limits, and to add maturity insisted that the offending product following week, Armstrong was
·sometimes prevail. But in the end, and patience to his play book.
was a skin cream for saddle sores.
attacked by Verinque and his two
"I knew if I could beat cancer, I
"I like to talk about cancer, but biggest threats:Jan \)ilrich of Getthe sheer epic scale of the Tour
often got the better of his overly could get over any mountain;· he definitely not about cortisone many and Marco Pantani of Italy.
said. "Once I got back into racing cream!" Armstrong JOkes today As he struggled but failed to keep
broad-shouldered frame.
up, Armstrong's legs burned with
: More important, his tactical in 1998, I could .· always draw about the embarrassing episode.
Nonetheless, it undercut Arm- pain as he suffered through his
:grasp of the sport vias poor. strength ftom the fact that, no mat: Through a mix of youthful impa- rer how hard things might look at strong's victory and, combined darkest hour.
But the reborn Armstrong knew
. tience and misdirected ego, he a given moment, they could never with accusations he'd defeated a
. tried to win rather than st:ay wen be as har:d as when I w.as back in scandal-depleted field, left the sur- his limits. He ended the day stiU in
positioned within races. He often Austin in a hospital bed with my vivor feeling he had yet more to first place and with Pantani resignprove.
ing the Tour in decisive defeat.
didn't recognize when to hold hair falling out."
This
year's
Tour
has
been,
in
his
Though Armstrong is a house. back and conserve energy for those
Ar~trong's . triumphant return
133 Pine Street,
: decisive moments that the best to the Tour m 1999 proved as words,"a total vindication. It's been hold name in the United States, U
-' Galllpolls,-olfi0'1J563r
: -cyc\ll~ _recognize ;uJd _po_une&lt; sh?Cking to some as it w.as inspir- sweet." After Saturday's stage;- he - few actually wafCnrus Tour vice()~
ing to others. Many wondered kept his lead of more than six min- ries and he knows it. To be appre- ~
.upon.
: The chemothenpy winnowed how on earth somebody on his utes. Now only a ceremonial swing dated fully by America, he'll have
HOURS: M-F 8 to 5:30 Sat. 9 to
to rurn in a winning performance
down his bulk, inspiring a more deathbed could miraculously through Paris remains.
"We have to be careful," he said. at the Sydney Olympics.
aerodynamic,
cycling-friendly rebound to win one of the· world's
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Rookie
Jimmy
Anderson
allowed only three hits in eight
innings and Mike Benjamin drove
in three runs as Pittsburgh beat
Philadelphia at home.
Anderson (3-5) had his ' second
straight solid start.
Bruce Aven's two- run double
highlighted a four-run first inning
against Paul Byrd (2-8). Byrd is 1- I
6 in his last 10 starts.
Philadelphia avoided being shut
out when Gary Bennett hit a tworun homer in the ninth.
Cubs 4, Brewers 2
Kerry Wood (5-6) put together
consecutive victories for the first
time this season, pitching Chicago
over visiting Milwaukee.
Rick Aguilera pitched the ninth
(or his 20th save in 27 chances for
the C ubs, who won for the eighth
time in 11 games ,
John Snyder (3- 5) took the l;,ss
and dropped to 0-3 in four July
starts.
Cardinals 12, Astros 1
Edgar Renteria tied a careerhigh with four RBIS and rooki e
Rick Ankiel tied a career-high
with I I strikeouts in seven innings
as St. Louis stopped a three"g;une
losing streak with a victory at
Houston .
Ankiel (7-5) allowed only three

The Braves, who lead the Mets
by six games in the NL East, arc
14-1 at home against New York
during the regular season since
September 1997. They won three
more games at The Ted during last
year's NL Championship Series.
" It may look like we have an
edge on them;' Atlanta thir:d baseman Chipper Jones said, "but that
could change overnight"
John Burkett pitched 4 1-3
innings of scoreless relief to earn
the victory. Burkett (7-4), dropped
from the rotation when Atlanta
acquired Andy Ashby during the
All-Star break, came on in the
third inning after Terry Mulholland
gave up four hits and three runs.
"I think I can help out;' Burkett
said.
Expos 7, Marlins 3
Geoff Blum homered and had a
career-high four RBis, and Mike
Thurman pitched six strong
innings as Montreal defeated Aorida on the road.
Thurman (2-l) was activated
from the disabled list just before
allowing the Marlins one run and
five hits.
Florida starter Chuck Smith (03) lasted just four innings.
Pirates 9, Phillies 2

hits

to win fi)r th e first time in five

outin gs.
Sco tt Elarton (9-4) lasted o nly 3

1-3 il)nings and hJ.d a five ~ game
winn ing "itreJ.k snapped.
Padres 5, Rockies I
Ad1m EJton won for the first
time in mnl· : . tarto;; and went 3-for3 and AI M artm drove in t\.vo runs

as visiting S:~ n Dit:go beJt slumping Colorado.
Eaton (2-l) stn&gt; ck our three.
\v.1lked fom and g.wc up a run and
seven hit&lt;~ 111 7 l - 3 mnm gs.\he 22y~a r-ol d righr- han dl'r also beome
tbl' tir:-.t Pa d rl'~ pitc her in O\'cr five.
yeJ rs to ste;il

.1

Summer Selldown
200t's are arrivin1 daily· We nee~ to sell our 2000 mo~els.

..

~

All or nothing for 22 former umps

.9t;;ny years ago, I commanded
what was to have been man's
third landing on the moon.
We didn't get to complete that
mission-but the story of what
happened on Apollo 13 captured
the imagination of people all
over the world.

NEW YORK (AI') - Ir's all or nothing for the 22 reached by Aug. I , Hmchbeck said he would try to
conclude a labor contrJCt "' without making arrangeformer umpires who lost thm JObs last September.
John Hirschbeck, presidem of the new union, on ments for the 22 out-of-work umpires."
Rob Manfred, b;J.Seball's executive vice president of
Friday said he would negotiate a new labor contract
without settling the case of the 22 unless the old labor relations, said he was prepared to let Symonette
umpires' union decided by Aug. l to accept baseball's decide the umps' fate. •
Campbell said that"s fine with him, adding he had
offer to rehire just I 0 of the group.
spoken
with seven of the 10 umps baseball offered to
Pat Campbell, the lawyer for the old union, Richie
Phillips' Major Leag.:e Umpires. Associatton, rejected rehire and they were against accepting the offer.
"We arc prepared to see this thing through to the
the tentative deal. agreed to by baseball and the new
end;' he .said. "'The after has never been made to us
union, the World Umpires Association. ·
Umpires voted the MLUA out in February, but officially. If they were thinking of making it, I would under federal law the old union remains in charge of tell them not to bother. I don't think that offer comes
dose to the exposure baseball is staring at right now
the grievance to regain the jobs of the 22.
" I, fr:&gt;nkly. am not surpmed that John Hirschhcck with this orbitration and all the lawsuits that will be
..
stands ready to cut the 22 loose," Camp~ I said, " I sure: to tOUow.
Campbell
said
Richard
G.
Phillips
Associates,
the
never thought he cared about the 22 anyway. The
Jaw
firm
that
represents
the
MLUA,
has
sued.
baseball
MLUA never trusted John and was always suspicious
in Pennsylvania court, accusing the sport of trying to
of his professed con cern for the 22."
The 22 lost their jobs in September after Phillips' bleak the MLUA and have Phillips' law firm fired .
" I think the way they went about this was an
mass resignation plan failed because many AL umps
attempt
to drive a wedge between the· 22 and isolate
refused to back it. Th e MLUA then filed a grievan ce
that is being heard by arbitrator Alan Symonette. a case certain guys," C ampbell said, re~crring to baseball and
the WUA. "Thus far, I think its backfired. I think It
scheduled to resume in late August.
·
"I have no idea about any offer:' MLUA president does show baseball's realization of how vulnerJble
Jerry Crawford said. 'That's my comment."
they are in the arbitration."
_
_
Hirschbeck confirmed Friday the WUA had
The 10 ump&gt;res who would. be rehired under the
reached a ten~1tive agreeme nt in which 10 of the 22 offer, according to two lawyers speaking on the conwould be rehired, six would retire and six would be .· d&gt;t&gt;On they not be Identified, would be Gary Darling.
given buyout~.
_.
Rob Dav1dson, Bn1 ce_ Drcckman, Jun Evans, Tom
"Whatever the MLUA decides, the World Ump1rcs Hall10n, Ed Htckox, Bill Hohn , Sam Holbrook, Paul
Association must move fonvard soon to c o mplcte irs Nauert and Larry Vanover. •
,
negotiations with maj or league baseball ," Hirschbeck
The six who would retire would be Dale Ford,
said."
·
Ri ch Garcia, Ken Kaiser, Larry M cCoy, Frank Pulli,
If no agreement between the MLUA and baseball is TerryTata.

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ba ~c.

Brian Bohanon (~ -7) took rhe
loss for Colorado. whi ch lost for
d 1L' !3rh ril1 ll' Ill 15 t-," :ltnt:'S.
Dodgers 6, Giants 5
Enc Karrus h1t J ~ o-a h~..· ad
three - run homer in th e eighth
inning. liftin g l os Angeles to a
home victory.
Felix R odriguez (3-1 ) entered
with a 5-J lead and runnas o n thl'
corner.; and :~lloweJ K:ums' 26th
ho ml'r.
ohe lms dro pp c·d San Francisco
2}1 g:~m es behind Arizona m 1he
NLWcst.
.
Matt Herges (7-ll) won cbpite
givm g up fl arry Bo nds' 3:&gt; nd
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

S_unday, July 23, 2000

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

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Met5

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'

: IN CHARGE - Former Reds and Tigers manager Sparky Anderson directs traffic Saturday prior to the
.. 2000 Hall of Fame Golf Tournament in Cooperstown, N.Y. (AP)

\Sparky, Pud e and Tony reunite
:! where they elong: Cooperstown
r

r

:: COOPERSTOWN, N .Y. (AP) Longevity
: landed Carlton Fisk and Tony Perez in the Baseball
- Hall of Fame, but one game defined their careers.
· Twenty-five yem after the Reds and Red Sox
: played in the 1975 World Series, baseball will cele~ brate one of its greatest moments when two of the
~ series' · heroes are inducted at Cooperstown this
: weekend.
: Former Cincinnati manager Sparky Ander.;on,
: who was elected by the Veterans Committee, and
- longtime Reds announcer Marty Brennaman, who
-·.will receive the Ford C. Frick award, will also be
· there. Also expected for the impromptu reunion are
previous inductees Joe Morgan , Johnny Bench and
Carl YaSirzemski - all of whom played in the '75
_Series and its unforgettable Game 6.
: "There are going to be a lot of people there from
-Cincinnati, a lot of fans," said Perez, who's a special
- assistant to Florida Marlins general manager Dave
' Dombrowski. "To be there with Sparky and Marty
-makes it very special. And Carlton Fisk, too."
Also being honored in Sunday's ceremony are
Negro League star Norm "Turkey" Stearnes and
. Veterans Committee selection Bid McPhee, a 19th
-Century defensive specialist for Cincinnati who was
_:the last !econd...basernanj!l--ba.eball-t&lt;&gt; play without
:a glove.
: Although best known for his body-bending,
game-ending homer in the 12th inning to win
Game 6 of the '75 senes, Fisk earned his Hall eredentials game by game, catching 2,226 of them more than any catcher in history. He also hit a major
-league record 351 of his 376 homers as a catcher.
: He was elected with 79.56 percent of the votes
:after a career in which he had 2,356 hits and 1,330
RBls and was selected to the All-Star team 11 times.
Although he spent 11 years with the Red Sox and
13 with the White Sox, the native New Englander
ended the suspense this winter and said he would be
enshrined wearing a Boston cap.
"I'd like to think I spe nt more years in Boston &lt;
than just the years .I was in uniform," he said after
the Red Sox announced that they would retire his
No. 27 (he wore 72 with Chicago). " It's not like a

light bulb came cin or I had a vision. I think this has
always been a part of me."
Perez never led the leagu,es in batting, homers or
RBis, but he drove in at least 90 runs in 11 consecutive seasons from 1967-77. He finished with 1,652
RBis, which rankS 18th, hit 379 homers and batted
.279 while also playing for Boston, Philadelphia and
Montreal.
After retiring in 1986, he fell short of election
eight times before making it this winter with 77. 15
percent of th~ vote.
"For nine years, I waited for the call," he said.
"One year I was disappointed because they didn't
vote anybody in. Then (Phil) Neikro went in and
(Don) Sutton went in and I was left out, and I said,
'Well, I might never make it.'
·
"One time I got less votes than I had the year
before, and I said, 'Everything is going backwards.'
But this year I was feeling good about it because a
lot of people came up to me and said,'! think this is
going to be your year."'
.
Patience served Perez well, just as it did for his
Reds in 1975. Because even though Fisk's homer
won Game 6. for the Red Sox, Cincinnati won the
series in the seventh ga111e, thanks in part to a tworun homer-by Pere-z-. -- · - - - -That was the first of two consecutive championships for the Big Red Machin&lt; under Anderson,
who also won it all in 1984 with the Detroit Tigers
- the only manager in baseball history to win the
World Series in both leagues. He won 2,194 games
in all- third most in history behind Connie Mack
and John McGraw, and his .691 postseason winning
percentage (34-21) is the best ever.
.He chose to be honored in a Reds cap, because
that's where it all started.
'
"Twenty-five years ago, I knew how great they
were;· the 66-year-old Anderson said this spring at a
reunion of the Big Red Machine.
" But I realize now the greatest bunch of people I
have ever seen in any professional sport was the
1975-76 Reds because they were so professional
and knew how to go about winning and knew how
to act''

Seriator says there's su port
now for Chief Wahoo p ates
COLUMBUS (AP) - A state
senator says he's received plenty
of suppo rt for his plan to put the
Cleveland Indians' Ch iefWah oo
logo on Ohio license plates.
Sen. Robert Spada, R-Parma
Heights, said about nine· of every
10 people who have responded
to an informal poll on his Web
site c hose the Chief Wahoo
design over the script " India ns"
design the sta te currently otTers
qn license plates.
Some American Indi ans and
church groups say the grinning,
r&lt;d-faced, big-nosed Chief
Wahoo logo is raciSt .
For the last several years, protesters
have
demonstrated
against the team's nickname and
mascot outside Jacobs Field on
opening day and during the
playoffs and World Series .
Carlton Griffin of Columbus
said he's not so fond of the logo
or the proposed plate.
"U:sing mdiv1duals of certain
racial groups as a masco t is kind
of offensive,'' he &lt;a id .
N&gt;ki Z. Schwartz , a C leveland
attorney who represe nts several
groups opposed to the C hief

Wahoo logo, said putting it on a
li cense plate heightens its offensive n e~s.

"It's no longer j ust private
ente rprise using a caricature for
commercia l gain," she said.
"Now the government is promottng a racist caricature that is
offensive to a lot of people."
Juan Reyna , head of the
Cleveland c hapter of the Committee of 500 Years of Dignity
· and Resistance, has protested the
logo for eigh t years.
Reyna said the logo is an
examp le of. exploitation of
American Indians and a Hollywood stereotype.
" It mJSeducates people," he
said.
" They never see indigenous
people as human beings."
Spada said the Chief Wahoo
logo is a symbol of community
pride, not racism.
"
"! didn't do it to upset anybody. 1 did it because there was
overwhelming · support in my
distr'.c t," he said. " If this passes as
intr&lt;,duced, people will have the
opt,o n to pick what license plate
they like. I'm not telling any-

'

-

body they have to get Wahoo."
Hi s bill would allow sale of
. both the scrip t "Indians" and
Wahoo design for two years ,
after which the less popular
design would be discontinued.
For each $35 lndi aos logo
plate sold by the sta te, S25 goes
to the G reater C leveland Sports
Commission, which works to
attract amateur sporting events
to the Cleveland area.
The bill requires approval. by
the Indians and the sports commission before the Wahoo plates
can be ma·de . Indians spokesma n
Bob DiBiasio said rhe team has
approved use of the C hief
Wahoo logo for the plates.
But David Gilbert, president
of the. sports commission, said
the group has yet to be con tacted abo11t th em.
Gilbert said the board chose
the script Indians design ove r
several other proposals, indudtng some featuripg Chief
Wahoo.
He said past objection to the
logo was o ne of several factors
that led the board to choose the
existing design.

CINCINNATI (AP) - With a
short phone co nversation, the
Mets began lobbying Barry
Larkin t'l- approve a trade Saturday
that would bring him to New
York.
The Mets received permission
from the commissioner's office to
negotiate with the Cincinnati
Reds captain and complete a deal
the teams have arranged.
Larkin, who has spent his entire
career with the Reds, has the
right to veto ·the trade. The AllStar shortstop wants a multiyear
contract extension , but the Mets
are interested in him · for the rest
of this season as a fill-in for
inJured Rey Ordonez.
The Mets' 72-hour window to
talk to Larkin began at 10 a.m.
EDT Saturday. General manager
Steve Phillips called Larkin and
agent Eric Goldschmidt before
the Reds' game against Arizona,
talked briefly and agreed to get
into discussions after the game.
"It was JUSt a brief conversation, pleasantries really," Phillips
said. "We committed ~o talking
again later today."
Larkin, who was in the starting
lineup, didn't want to talk about
the trade before a game because it
could disrupt his concentration.
The Mets will try to talk Larkin
into accepting a trade that he
sounded inclined to reject. Larkin,
a free agent after the season, said
Friday he doesn't want to go to a
team for just the rest of this seaS()n .

r

Larkin is still holding ou\,. hope
that he can work out an extension
with the Reds that will allow him
to finish his career with his hometown team.
The Mets considered flying a
contingent of team officials, manager Bobby Valentine and players
Lenny Harris and John Franco to
Cincinnati following their game
Saturday afternoon in Atlanta, but
couldn't get arrangements worked
out.
"We wanted to get an audience with Barry and see if we

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could convince him tlus . is the
place ·to play;' Phillips said. "We
hope he wants to come, make a
run at the playoffs, make a run at
the World Series.''
Ten days after they sent their
best starting pitcher to the New
York Yankees, the Reds were
waiting for Larkin, the team captain, to decide whether he'd go to
the Mets.
Goldschnudt said Larkin wants
to learn what the .Mets have in
mind for him.
"We'd have to talk to the team,
the general manager, the ownership, to see what they want to do,
what their plans are for Barry
long term as well as short term,
then let Barry make the decision,"
Goldschmidt said.
Larkin wants to finish his career
with the R eds. An impasse over a
contract extension has put that in
doubt and led to a testy relationship between the shortstop and
the front office.
T he Reds told Larkin on Tuesday that they're not willing to give
him the three-year, $27.9 million
extension he liad requested, offering instead a two-year .deal for
$12 million.
Larkin will be a free agent after
this season, when he makes $5.3

Barry Larkin

million. He was coming off a
National League MVP season
when he agreed to an extension "
in 1996 that was well below market value.
He took less money to remain a
Red then. He thinks he should
get more this time around.
''I'm not sitting here telling
you I'll play for below market
value," Larkin said. "I'm not selling
out right now. But there are certain ways to get it done if they
want to get it done."
L1rkin offered to have some of
the money deferred, following the
example the club set wirh Ken
Griffey Jr. Most of Griffey's
$1 16.5 million contract will be
paid out after he retires.
Larkin said the Reds have
refused to talk about deferring
money because the sides are so far
apart.
"You 've got to talk to those
people upstairs because when I
brought it up, it was a non-issue
because we were so far apart;'
Larkin said.
Griffey, who came to Cincinnati last February hoping to play
several years alongside Larkin,
offered to have more of Ius payments deferred if it will help them
reach agreement.

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Ryan l,!'af is already ahead of last season.
t· Leaf, conung off a disastrous rookie season,
~ hurt his right shoulder 20 minutes into the first
practice last year, requiring surgery. Tl'le injury,
plus a 'four-week suspension for cursing at
' then-general manager Bobby Beathard, wiped
) out his second season, and he skipped most of
~ the voluntary offseason workouts.
:
Th e much-maligned quarterback, chosen
:· second overall in the 1998 NFL draft, had an
:;. encouraging return to the San Diego Chargers
:);; when the learn opened training camp .Friday.
:;: "I look good in this thing, don't,!?" Leaf said
!:;to reporters, motioning to his uniform. "It feels
:- good to put the shoulder pads on and keep
: going. Hopefully I can finally contribute in
~ some way."
.
.
i. The C harger} hope so, too, although Leaf is
third-string behind 36-year-old Jim Harbaugh
and Moses Moreno, who has made one NFL
start , on the depth chart.
. The Chargers held Leaf back a bit in morn. ing practice because he's coming off surgery in
• January to clean out his right shoulder, but gave
him a full load in the afternoon. He got
. through both workouts fine.
• Leaf admitted he was a little nervous, "kind
· of like what you should feel like coming into

!'raining camp. I've only played eight games (\0,
actually)', so it's pretty much still a fresh start for
me."
St. Louis' Kevin Carter, who had 17 sacks last
year, debated about holding out of training
camp, which began Friday, without a new deal
before deciding to show up.
Carter is entering the final year of a six-year,
$10 million deal he signed as the R ams' fim
draft pick in 1995.
"
"I kind of went back, and forth with it,"
Carter said. "The number.; didn't get done, but
I'm not going to let the organizational shortcomings come between me and what 1've done
here. I would let my teammates down if I wasn't here."

Broncos
Trevor Pryce, who led NFL defensive tackles
with 13 sacks last season, told De nver he
believes he is underpaid and was absent as the
team opened training camp Friday.
Pryce, 24, is in the fourth year of a five-year,
$4.9 million contract that will pay him
$762,000 in base salary this season. He played
sparingly as a rookie in 1997, but blossomed
into an All-Pro last year.
"Right now Trevor is taking some time to
determine what's in his best interests," Pryce's
agent, Peter Schaffer, said. :'He's got some seri-

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ous issues with regard to his family and security."

"I've got no problem with trying to redo
Trevor's contract and add a number of year.; to
the contract and make him the highes~ paid
defensive player on our team," coach Mike
Shanahan said. "Bu t to make him a franchise
player and one of the to p one or two at his
position with two years left on his contract, I'd
have to cut some players, anti I'm not willing to
do that"
Cardinal•
Arizona reached a four-year deal with firstround draft pick Thomas Jones on Friday, a day
before the team will begin training camp.
Agent Tom Condon said Jones will earn
$1.85 million per year and get a $5 .7 million
signing bonus.
The running back was the last draft pick to
sign with the franchise, which has historically
had trouble reaching terms with players before
training camp.
Jones, the seventh pick overall, was the first
mnning back chosen by Arizona in the first
round since Garrison Hearst in 1993.
The 5-foot-1 0, 205-pounder is Virginia's
career rushing leader with 4,108 yards. He set
a single-season record with 1,908 yards last
year.

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~ Panthers,

Reggie White
reach tentative contract

SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) Carolina must stilt work
- Reggie White started Friday
out NFL salal')' cap
-.in retirement, as the featured
issues beforr any s(~ning·
speaker at a revival. One workcan become official. The
. out later, the NFL's career sacks
~ leader was a football player
Panthers have less tllan
.. agam.
$200,000 to spnld under
White, 38, agreed in principle
the cap and would lilul&gt;•
"Friday with the Carolina Pan: thers to end his one-year retire- need to restrucwre sevrral
ment and play this season. He contracts - and possibly
·passed a physical in Charlotte,
even cut a player - to
then traveled the 80 miles to
clear tlu room needed to
training camp for a private
. .workout - his fir.;t official one
sign Wl1ite .
,. since 1998 - and a meeting
with coach George Seifert.
really good, that's why I'm even
"There was a sense of excite- considering being here," he said.
rnent out there today," White "I just felt that this was the right
sa id. "But I told them if they opportunity. I think we can do
went 10 minutes longer I think something here and I can make
I might have fainted."
a difference.''
White retired after the 1998
White was The Associated
season. He said he took all of Press' NFL Defensive Player of
1999 to rest, but had been work- the Year in 1998, his final season.
1ng_,_out _this year__iJ1 ~ntifi~Jion__ He played_in rwo Super Bowls
of making a comeback.
and 13 PfQ Bowls.
"The beginning of this year I
White said a large part of his
thought about it, but when I decision to play for the Panthers
started working out ' my body was based on location.
said 'You really don't feel like it;
He owns property near Char.. White said. "But I'm in great lotte and is building a home
shape now.''
there, which he said would be
The Panth ers agreed and his permanent residence.
offered him a five-year contract · White, who is an ordained
worth about $20 million minister, is also involved in the
although White said he may . Charlotte-based Morningstar
only play one year - with sev- Ministries and said he has been
-cral perform ance incentives looking at land in the area to
based on Carolina's defensive build a biblical theme park.
•mprovement.
"Having the opportunity to
Caroli na's defense ranked 26th come here, with living here,
in the league -last year and had gave me the opportunity to seto nly 35 sac ks. White has 1921, tie my family;' he said. "It's very
sac ks in 14 seasons.
convenient. Charlotte seemed to
Adding White was Seifert's be a special place, a spiritual
latest attempt to bolste r the place.''
defensive line. White wtll JOin
He said he was also looking
newcomers C huck Smith from forward to playing with former
Atlanta and Jay Williams from Green Bay teammate Doug
St. Louis to add quarterback Evans again and indicated that
pressure.
friendships drew him back into
" I think this team can be the game.

FLORENCE , Ky. (AP)
Cin cinnati Bengals wide receivc·r Darnay Scott, acc used of
writing a .bad c heck to a motorcycle shop, spent a night in jail
before he was released Friday
after posting $5 ,000 bond.
Scott, 28, posted the bond and
wa s released from the Boone
C ounty Jail in order to report
later Friday for the ope ning of
the Bcngals training camp in
Georgetown . He is due back in
Boone Counry District Court
o n A llg. 4.
Shcri tl's deputies arrested
Seem early Friday at his home in
this northern Kentucky city on
a criminal complaint by a Florence motorcycle shop. Personne l at the business said Scott
\Vrote them a bad check after
the sho p had rebuilt a motorcy- .
clc engine and delivered the
repaired cycle to him.
Scott. who participated in the
lkpgah' first workout Friday

afternoon, is accused of writing
a check for $5,158 when he did
not have that amount of money
in the bank. He is charged with
theft by deception, a felony. If
convicted, Scott could be sentenced to one to five years in
prison.
"The Bengals take this matter
seriously, but it would not be
appropriate for the club to take •
any action at this time," the team
said in a st~tement late Friday.
"The issue at present invo lves
only a charge. If action is warranted when the issue has been
resolved in the courts, the club
will respond at that point ."
Scott was the Bengals' secondround draft choice in 1994 and
il comidered a key part of the
offense. La•t year, he caught 68
passes for I ,022 yards, both
career highs.
His seven receiving touchdowns led rhe Ij_engals and tied
his prior career high .

..
.•

•

.,, .

Bengals' Scott accused
of bad-check offense
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iDunbap l!J:imrs -iirntmel • Page 87

LATROBE, Pa. (AP) ~ Jerome
Bettis, entering the final season of a
contract \hat has been good to him
and the Pittsburgh Steelers, finds
hill!Self playing for a new contract.
Maybe, by next season, for a new
team, too.
Bettis has mshed for at least
I ,000 yards in all four of his Steeler.; seasons, yet the _team has made
no concerted effort to sign him to
a new agreen1ent. However, they
did sign backup Richard Huntley
to a salary-cap friendly $4 million,
three-year deal.
In the recenr past, former Steeler.; stars such as Chad .Brown and
Carnell Lilke became unh ap py
after they weren't re-signed in the
final year of their contra cts, and
they let it be know!\.
Bettis, who is playing out the
final year of a $14 million, touryear contract, finds himself in a
similar position this season, but so
- farhas notcr!tic!zed the Steelers
for failing to extend his contract.
"For me, this is the greatest
place that I could possibly play,"
Bettis said before the Steelers held
their first full-squad training ca mp

workout Friday. " I love Pittsburgh.
I want to retire here. That's my
goal, and hopefully it's the goal of
the team as well.
·'Tn1 nor disappointed. I know
it's business, and you can never mix
your emotions with business."
For now, the Steelers are content
to let the Bettis vs. Huntley competition play out. Even if, in Bettis'
eyes, there really is no competition.
The Steelers often played from
behind last season while gomg 610, yet Bettis still gained 1,091
yards on 299 carries. He ran for
1,185 yards on a 7-9 team in 1998
after rushing for 1,431 yards in
1996 and 1.665 yards in 1997, the
second most single-season yards in
team history.
In four Steelers seasons, Bettis
ranks second only to Franco Harris in team career rushing. Among
them, Harris (8) and Bettis (4) have
12 of the 1 !&gt; .1_ ,000-~rJi seasonsin
Steelers lustory.
Bettis also has been one of the
Steelers' most popular players since
their Super Bowl qays of the
1970s, with a weekly TV show and
several endorsemenc contracts.

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Page B6 • 6unbap .Ciimn -6tntinrl

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

S_unday, July 23, 2000

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

r

Met5

push for La

'

: IN CHARGE - Former Reds and Tigers manager Sparky Anderson directs traffic Saturday prior to the
.. 2000 Hall of Fame Golf Tournament in Cooperstown, N.Y. (AP)

\Sparky, Pud e and Tony reunite
:! where they elong: Cooperstown
r

r

:: COOPERSTOWN, N .Y. (AP) Longevity
: landed Carlton Fisk and Tony Perez in the Baseball
- Hall of Fame, but one game defined their careers.
· Twenty-five yem after the Reds and Red Sox
: played in the 1975 World Series, baseball will cele~ brate one of its greatest moments when two of the
~ series' · heroes are inducted at Cooperstown this
: weekend.
: Former Cincinnati manager Sparky Ander.;on,
: who was elected by the Veterans Committee, and
- longtime Reds announcer Marty Brennaman, who
-·.will receive the Ford C. Frick award, will also be
· there. Also expected for the impromptu reunion are
previous inductees Joe Morgan , Johnny Bench and
Carl YaSirzemski - all of whom played in the '75
_Series and its unforgettable Game 6.
: "There are going to be a lot of people there from
-Cincinnati, a lot of fans," said Perez, who's a special
- assistant to Florida Marlins general manager Dave
' Dombrowski. "To be there with Sparky and Marty
-makes it very special. And Carlton Fisk, too."
Also being honored in Sunday's ceremony are
Negro League star Norm "Turkey" Stearnes and
. Veterans Committee selection Bid McPhee, a 19th
-Century defensive specialist for Cincinnati who was
_:the last !econd...basernanj!l--ba.eball-t&lt;&gt; play without
:a glove.
: Although best known for his body-bending,
game-ending homer in the 12th inning to win
Game 6 of the '75 senes, Fisk earned his Hall eredentials game by game, catching 2,226 of them more than any catcher in history. He also hit a major
-league record 351 of his 376 homers as a catcher.
: He was elected with 79.56 percent of the votes
:after a career in which he had 2,356 hits and 1,330
RBls and was selected to the All-Star team 11 times.
Although he spent 11 years with the Red Sox and
13 with the White Sox, the native New Englander
ended the suspense this winter and said he would be
enshrined wearing a Boston cap.
"I'd like to think I spe nt more years in Boston &lt;
than just the years .I was in uniform," he said after
the Red Sox announced that they would retire his
No. 27 (he wore 72 with Chicago). " It's not like a

light bulb came cin or I had a vision. I think this has
always been a part of me."
Perez never led the leagu,es in batting, homers or
RBis, but he drove in at least 90 runs in 11 consecutive seasons from 1967-77. He finished with 1,652
RBis, which rankS 18th, hit 379 homers and batted
.279 while also playing for Boston, Philadelphia and
Montreal.
After retiring in 1986, he fell short of election
eight times before making it this winter with 77. 15
percent of th~ vote.
"For nine years, I waited for the call," he said.
"One year I was disappointed because they didn't
vote anybody in. Then (Phil) Neikro went in and
(Don) Sutton went in and I was left out, and I said,
'Well, I might never make it.'
·
"One time I got less votes than I had the year
before, and I said, 'Everything is going backwards.'
But this year I was feeling good about it because a
lot of people came up to me and said,'! think this is
going to be your year."'
.
Patience served Perez well, just as it did for his
Reds in 1975. Because even though Fisk's homer
won Game 6. for the Red Sox, Cincinnati won the
series in the seventh ga111e, thanks in part to a tworun homer-by Pere-z-. -- · - - - -That was the first of two consecutive championships for the Big Red Machin&lt; under Anderson,
who also won it all in 1984 with the Detroit Tigers
- the only manager in baseball history to win the
World Series in both leagues. He won 2,194 games
in all- third most in history behind Connie Mack
and John McGraw, and his .691 postseason winning
percentage (34-21) is the best ever.
.He chose to be honored in a Reds cap, because
that's where it all started.
'
"Twenty-five years ago, I knew how great they
were;· the 66-year-old Anderson said this spring at a
reunion of the Big Red Machine.
" But I realize now the greatest bunch of people I
have ever seen in any professional sport was the
1975-76 Reds because they were so professional
and knew how to go about winning and knew how
to act''

Seriator says there's su port
now for Chief Wahoo p ates
COLUMBUS (AP) - A state
senator says he's received plenty
of suppo rt for his plan to put the
Cleveland Indians' Ch iefWah oo
logo on Ohio license plates.
Sen. Robert Spada, R-Parma
Heights, said about nine· of every
10 people who have responded
to an informal poll on his Web
site c hose the Chief Wahoo
design over the script " India ns"
design the sta te currently otTers
qn license plates.
Some American Indi ans and
church groups say the grinning,
r&lt;d-faced, big-nosed Chief
Wahoo logo is raciSt .
For the last several years, protesters
have
demonstrated
against the team's nickname and
mascot outside Jacobs Field on
opening day and during the
playoffs and World Series .
Carlton Griffin of Columbus
said he's not so fond of the logo
or the proposed plate.
"U:sing mdiv1duals of certain
racial groups as a masco t is kind
of offensive,'' he &lt;a id .
N&gt;ki Z. Schwartz , a C leveland
attorney who represe nts several
groups opposed to the C hief

Wahoo logo, said putting it on a
li cense plate heightens its offensive n e~s.

"It's no longer j ust private
ente rprise using a caricature for
commercia l gain," she said.
"Now the government is promottng a racist caricature that is
offensive to a lot of people."
Juan Reyna , head of the
Cleveland c hapter of the Committee of 500 Years of Dignity
· and Resistance, has protested the
logo for eigh t years.
Reyna said the logo is an
examp le of. exploitation of
American Indians and a Hollywood stereotype.
" It mJSeducates people," he
said.
" They never see indigenous
people as human beings."
Spada said the Chief Wahoo
logo is a symbol of community
pride, not racism.
"
"! didn't do it to upset anybody. 1 did it because there was
overwhelming · support in my
distr'.c t," he said. " If this passes as
intr&lt;,duced, people will have the
opt,o n to pick what license plate
they like. I'm not telling any-

'

-

body they have to get Wahoo."
Hi s bill would allow sale of
. both the scrip t "Indians" and
Wahoo design for two years ,
after which the less popular
design would be discontinued.
For each $35 lndi aos logo
plate sold by the sta te, S25 goes
to the G reater C leveland Sports
Commission, which works to
attract amateur sporting events
to the Cleveland area.
The bill requires approval. by
the Indians and the sports commission before the Wahoo plates
can be ma·de . Indians spokesma n
Bob DiBiasio said rhe team has
approved use of the C hief
Wahoo logo for the plates.
But David Gilbert, president
of the. sports commission, said
the group has yet to be con tacted abo11t th em.
Gilbert said the board chose
the script Indians design ove r
several other proposals, indudtng some featuripg Chief
Wahoo.
He said past objection to the
logo was o ne of several factors
that led the board to choose the
existing design.

CINCINNATI (AP) - With a
short phone co nversation, the
Mets began lobbying Barry
Larkin t'l- approve a trade Saturday
that would bring him to New
York.
The Mets received permission
from the commissioner's office to
negotiate with the Cincinnati
Reds captain and complete a deal
the teams have arranged.
Larkin, who has spent his entire
career with the Reds, has the
right to veto ·the trade. The AllStar shortstop wants a multiyear
contract extension , but the Mets
are interested in him · for the rest
of this season as a fill-in for
inJured Rey Ordonez.
The Mets' 72-hour window to
talk to Larkin began at 10 a.m.
EDT Saturday. General manager
Steve Phillips called Larkin and
agent Eric Goldschmidt before
the Reds' game against Arizona,
talked briefly and agreed to get
into discussions after the game.
"It was JUSt a brief conversation, pleasantries really," Phillips
said. "We committed ~o talking
again later today."
Larkin, who was in the starting
lineup, didn't want to talk about
the trade before a game because it
could disrupt his concentration.
The Mets will try to talk Larkin
into accepting a trade that he
sounded inclined to reject. Larkin,
a free agent after the season, said
Friday he doesn't want to go to a
team for just the rest of this seaS()n .

r

Larkin is still holding ou\,. hope
that he can work out an extension
with the Reds that will allow him
to finish his career with his hometown team.
The Mets considered flying a
contingent of team officials, manager Bobby Valentine and players
Lenny Harris and John Franco to
Cincinnati following their game
Saturday afternoon in Atlanta, but
couldn't get arrangements worked
out.
"We wanted to get an audience with Barry and see if we

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could convince him tlus . is the
place ·to play;' Phillips said. "We
hope he wants to come, make a
run at the playoffs, make a run at
the World Series.''
Ten days after they sent their
best starting pitcher to the New
York Yankees, the Reds were
waiting for Larkin, the team captain, to decide whether he'd go to
the Mets.
Goldschnudt said Larkin wants
to learn what the .Mets have in
mind for him.
"We'd have to talk to the team,
the general manager, the ownership, to see what they want to do,
what their plans are for Barry
long term as well as short term,
then let Barry make the decision,"
Goldschmidt said.
Larkin wants to finish his career
with the R eds. An impasse over a
contract extension has put that in
doubt and led to a testy relationship between the shortstop and
the front office.
T he Reds told Larkin on Tuesday that they're not willing to give
him the three-year, $27.9 million
extension he liad requested, offering instead a two-year .deal for
$12 million.
Larkin will be a free agent after
this season, when he makes $5.3

Barry Larkin

million. He was coming off a
National League MVP season
when he agreed to an extension "
in 1996 that was well below market value.
He took less money to remain a
Red then. He thinks he should
get more this time around.
''I'm not sitting here telling
you I'll play for below market
value," Larkin said. "I'm not selling
out right now. But there are certain ways to get it done if they
want to get it done."
L1rkin offered to have some of
the money deferred, following the
example the club set wirh Ken
Griffey Jr. Most of Griffey's
$1 16.5 million contract will be
paid out after he retires.
Larkin said the Reds have
refused to talk about deferring
money because the sides are so far
apart.
"You 've got to talk to those
people upstairs because when I
brought it up, it was a non-issue
because we were so far apart;'
Larkin said.
Griffey, who came to Cincinnati last February hoping to play
several years alongside Larkin,
offered to have more of Ius payments deferred if it will help them
reach agreement.

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Ryan l,!'af is already ahead of last season.
t· Leaf, conung off a disastrous rookie season,
~ hurt his right shoulder 20 minutes into the first
practice last year, requiring surgery. Tl'le injury,
plus a 'four-week suspension for cursing at
' then-general manager Bobby Beathard, wiped
) out his second season, and he skipped most of
~ the voluntary offseason workouts.
:
Th e much-maligned quarterback, chosen
:· second overall in the 1998 NFL draft, had an
:;. encouraging return to the San Diego Chargers
:);; when the learn opened training camp .Friday.
:;: "I look good in this thing, don't,!?" Leaf said
!:;to reporters, motioning to his uniform. "It feels
:- good to put the shoulder pads on and keep
: going. Hopefully I can finally contribute in
~ some way."
.
.
i. The C harger} hope so, too, although Leaf is
third-string behind 36-year-old Jim Harbaugh
and Moses Moreno, who has made one NFL
start , on the depth chart.
. The Chargers held Leaf back a bit in morn. ing practice because he's coming off surgery in
• January to clean out his right shoulder, but gave
him a full load in the afternoon. He got
. through both workouts fine.
• Leaf admitted he was a little nervous, "kind
· of like what you should feel like coming into

!'raining camp. I've only played eight games (\0,
actually)', so it's pretty much still a fresh start for
me."
St. Louis' Kevin Carter, who had 17 sacks last
year, debated about holding out of training
camp, which began Friday, without a new deal
before deciding to show up.
Carter is entering the final year of a six-year,
$10 million deal he signed as the R ams' fim
draft pick in 1995.
"
"I kind of went back, and forth with it,"
Carter said. "The number.; didn't get done, but
I'm not going to let the organizational shortcomings come between me and what 1've done
here. I would let my teammates down if I wasn't here."

Broncos
Trevor Pryce, who led NFL defensive tackles
with 13 sacks last season, told De nver he
believes he is underpaid and was absent as the
team opened training camp Friday.
Pryce, 24, is in the fourth year of a five-year,
$4.9 million contract that will pay him
$762,000 in base salary this season. He played
sparingly as a rookie in 1997, but blossomed
into an All-Pro last year.
"Right now Trevor is taking some time to
determine what's in his best interests," Pryce's
agent, Peter Schaffer, said. :'He's got some seri-

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ous issues with regard to his family and security."

"I've got no problem with trying to redo
Trevor's contract and add a number of year.; to
the contract and make him the highes~ paid
defensive player on our team," coach Mike
Shanahan said. "Bu t to make him a franchise
player and one of the to p one or two at his
position with two years left on his contract, I'd
have to cut some players, anti I'm not willing to
do that"
Cardinal•
Arizona reached a four-year deal with firstround draft pick Thomas Jones on Friday, a day
before the team will begin training camp.
Agent Tom Condon said Jones will earn
$1.85 million per year and get a $5 .7 million
signing bonus.
The running back was the last draft pick to
sign with the franchise, which has historically
had trouble reaching terms with players before
training camp.
Jones, the seventh pick overall, was the first
mnning back chosen by Arizona in the first
round since Garrison Hearst in 1993.
The 5-foot-1 0, 205-pounder is Virginia's
career rushing leader with 4,108 yards. He set
a single-season record with 1,908 yards last
year.

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~ Panthers,

Reggie White
reach tentative contract

SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) Carolina must stilt work
- Reggie White started Friday
out NFL salal')' cap
-.in retirement, as the featured
issues beforr any s(~ning·
speaker at a revival. One workcan become official. The
. out later, the NFL's career sacks
~ leader was a football player
Panthers have less tllan
.. agam.
$200,000 to spnld under
White, 38, agreed in principle
the cap and would lilul&gt;•
"Friday with the Carolina Pan: thers to end his one-year retire- need to restrucwre sevrral
ment and play this season. He contracts - and possibly
·passed a physical in Charlotte,
even cut a player - to
then traveled the 80 miles to
clear tlu room needed to
training camp for a private
. .workout - his fir.;t official one
sign Wl1ite .
,. since 1998 - and a meeting
with coach George Seifert.
really good, that's why I'm even
"There was a sense of excite- considering being here," he said.
rnent out there today," White "I just felt that this was the right
sa id. "But I told them if they opportunity. I think we can do
went 10 minutes longer I think something here and I can make
I might have fainted."
a difference.''
White retired after the 1998
White was The Associated
season. He said he took all of Press' NFL Defensive Player of
1999 to rest, but had been work- the Year in 1998, his final season.
1ng_,_out _this year__iJ1 ~ntifi~Jion__ He played_in rwo Super Bowls
of making a comeback.
and 13 PfQ Bowls.
"The beginning of this year I
White said a large part of his
thought about it, but when I decision to play for the Panthers
started working out ' my body was based on location.
said 'You really don't feel like it;
He owns property near Char.. White said. "But I'm in great lotte and is building a home
shape now.''
there, which he said would be
The Panth ers agreed and his permanent residence.
offered him a five-year contract · White, who is an ordained
worth about $20 million minister, is also involved in the
although White said he may . Charlotte-based Morningstar
only play one year - with sev- Ministries and said he has been
-cral perform ance incentives looking at land in the area to
based on Carolina's defensive build a biblical theme park.
•mprovement.
"Having the opportunity to
Caroli na's defense ranked 26th come here, with living here,
in the league -last year and had gave me the opportunity to seto nly 35 sac ks. White has 1921, tie my family;' he said. "It's very
sac ks in 14 seasons.
convenient. Charlotte seemed to
Adding White was Seifert's be a special place, a spiritual
latest attempt to bolste r the place.''
defensive line. White wtll JOin
He said he was also looking
newcomers C huck Smith from forward to playing with former
Atlanta and Jay Williams from Green Bay teammate Doug
St. Louis to add quarterback Evans again and indicated that
pressure.
friendships drew him back into
" I think this team can be the game.

FLORENCE , Ky. (AP)
Cin cinnati Bengals wide receivc·r Darnay Scott, acc used of
writing a .bad c heck to a motorcycle shop, spent a night in jail
before he was released Friday
after posting $5 ,000 bond.
Scott, 28, posted the bond and
wa s released from the Boone
C ounty Jail in order to report
later Friday for the ope ning of
the Bcngals training camp in
Georgetown . He is due back in
Boone Counry District Court
o n A llg. 4.
Shcri tl's deputies arrested
Seem early Friday at his home in
this northern Kentucky city on
a criminal complaint by a Florence motorcycle shop. Personne l at the business said Scott
\Vrote them a bad check after
the sho p had rebuilt a motorcy- .
clc engine and delivered the
repaired cycle to him.
Scott. who participated in the
lkpgah' first workout Friday

afternoon, is accused of writing
a check for $5,158 when he did
not have that amount of money
in the bank. He is charged with
theft by deception, a felony. If
convicted, Scott could be sentenced to one to five years in
prison.
"The Bengals take this matter
seriously, but it would not be
appropriate for the club to take •
any action at this time," the team
said in a st~tement late Friday.
"The issue at present invo lves
only a charge. If action is warranted when the issue has been
resolved in the courts, the club
will respond at that point ."
Scott was the Bengals' secondround draft choice in 1994 and
il comidered a key part of the
offense. La•t year, he caught 68
passes for I ,022 yards, both
career highs.
His seven receiving touchdowns led rhe Ij_engals and tied
his prior career high .

..
.•

•

.,, .

Bengals' Scott accused
of bad-check offense
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LATROBE, Pa. (AP) ~ Jerome
Bettis, entering the final season of a
contract \hat has been good to him
and the Pittsburgh Steelers, finds
hill!Self playing for a new contract.
Maybe, by next season, for a new
team, too.
Bettis has mshed for at least
I ,000 yards in all four of his Steeler.; seasons, yet the _team has made
no concerted effort to sign him to
a new agreen1ent. However, they
did sign backup Richard Huntley
to a salary-cap friendly $4 million,
three-year deal.
In the recenr past, former Steeler.; stars such as Chad .Brown and
Carnell Lilke became unh ap py
after they weren't re-signed in the
final year of their contra cts, and
they let it be know!\.
Bettis, who is playing out the
final year of a $14 million, touryear contract, finds himself in a
similar position this season, but so
- farhas notcr!tic!zed the Steelers
for failing to extend his contract.
"For me, this is the greatest
place that I could possibly play,"
Bettis said before the Steelers held
their first full-squad training ca mp

workout Friday. " I love Pittsburgh.
I want to retire here. That's my
goal, and hopefully it's the goal of
the team as well.
·'Tn1 nor disappointed. I know
it's business, and you can never mix
your emotions with business."
For now, the Steelers are content
to let the Bettis vs. Huntley competition play out. Even if, in Bettis'
eyes, there really is no competition.
The Steelers often played from
behind last season while gomg 610, yet Bettis still gained 1,091
yards on 299 carries. He ran for
1,185 yards on a 7-9 team in 1998
after rushing for 1,431 yards in
1996 and 1.665 yards in 1997, the
second most single-season yards in
team history.
In four Steelers seasons, Bettis
ranks second only to Franco Harris in team career rushing. Among
them, Harris (8) and Bettis (4) have
12 of the 1 !&gt; .1_ ,000-~rJi seasonsin
Steelers lustory.
Bettis also has been one of the
Steelers' most popular players since
their Super Bowl qays of the
1970s, with a weekly TV show and
several endorsemenc contracts.

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.

Going-fishi.n? Here's

a look at the conditions
COLUMBUS (AP) -Here
is the weekly fishing report provided by the Division ofWildlife
of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources:
CENTRAL OHIO
ALUM CREEK LAKE
This 3,400-acre lake in southern
Delaware Counry has become a
favorite among muskie anglers.
The first release of muskies
occurred in 1990 and -their
annual growth rate is among the
highest in the state. Anglers focus
·their effort near the dam by
trolling large imitation baits and
crank baits and spoons at depths
of about 6 to 9 feet. Bass populations are expanding and offer
fair to good fishing action along
the deeper points and drop-offs.
HARGUS LAKE The
146-acre lake just east of Circleville is popular amo ng local
anglers, especially those who are
seeking channel catfish. Most
fish measure 12-22 inches and
can be taken on traditional catfish baits when fished along the
bottom at night. The lake also
supports a fair population of
crappi es, bluegills and largemouth bass.
NORTHWEST OHIO
MAUMEE · RIVER
Anglers are beginning to see
improvement in smallrnouth bass
fishing success. Use small spinner&lt;, tube jigs, and jigs tipped
with minnows in the waters
below the 1-475 bridge to the
bay.Try the areas around Otsego,
Weirs Rapids, Waterville, Buttonwood, and at the Independence and Grand Rapids/Providence dams. The best catches of
channel catfish occur this time of
year. Most of these fish measure
14-20 inches.
·
PORTAGE RIVER- The
top area for channel catfish
anglers is from Oak Harbor to
Port Clinton. Most channel catfish measure 12-28 inches. Good
largemouth bass fishing can be
enjoyed in the lower part of the
river near Port Clinton. Smallnymth bass fishing is good
tpprivcr near Elmore. Check
/ with area bait shops for the latest
(
conditions
on northwest Ohio
- - ---rivers and lakes.
NORTHEAST OHIO
PYMATUNING RESERVOIR- C rappies generally can
be caught from shoreline areas
that have submerged structures
and near the causeway when
usmg
minnows
suspended
beneath a bobber. Muskie fishing
is rated good for this lake. Keeper muskies must measure at least
30 inches. The daily bag limit is
two. Walleye fishing is rated
excellent this year. There is a ISinch minimum length limit and
datJy bag limit of SIX for
Pymatuning walleyes. Blucgills,
smallm ourh and largemouth bass
also provide good summer fishing actio n.
MOSQUITO
C REEK
LAKE - The 7 ,850-acre lake is
loca ted in Trumbull County.
Excellent fi shing action can be
enjoyed here for walleyes, crappies, and bluegtlls. Many walleyes
are taken in shallow waters especially alo ng the wave-washed
sho relines and measure 14- 18
inches. There were five Fish
Oh io ~ualifymg flathead catfish
measu ring at least 36 inches
taken here last year. Chec k with
area bait shops for the latest fishing tips
SOUTHEAST OHIO
ROSS LAKE -Channel catfish up ·to 32 inches provide
exc ellent night fishing opportuniti es. Use traditional bails fished
along the bo ttom for best results .
Largemouth bass. are numerous
and hkely to be found in deeper
waters during midday.Try fishing
th e shall ow areas at night or durin g ea rl y m ornmg with 6-in ch
plastic worms, hoola pop pers,
and other surf.1ce oai ts .
SALT FORK LAKE - This
3.()(111-acre Guernsey Co unty
lake otT,. ., a wide range of good
to excellen t fi shing o pp ortunities
for c ha nnel ca tfi sh, walleyes,
mu , ktes. cra ppies, bluegills, and
ba". More t han 3,000 discarded
Christm:ts trees have bee n placed
tn ro the lake to serve as fi sh
.n rr.•ctnrc; W:11l cyco; measure up
r( , ;(• I Ill h&lt;..'\ ,IJld channel catfish

caught here in 1999, ranking
fifth in the state.
SOUTHWEST OHiO
CINCINNATI
METROPARKS - Local park
ponds offer good summer fishing
action in the Cincinnati area.
Crappies were being taken on
minnows at Brookville Lake
along with channel catfish on
chicken
livers
and
night
crawlers. Channel catfish are
providing good nightfishing
action in Lake Isabella. Largemouth bass and channel catfish
are being caught at Winton
Woods. Check with area bait
shops for the latest fishing tips
and conditions at these and other
local fishing areas.
CJ BROWN RESERVOIR
- The marina area is the top
spot in this 2,1 00-acre Clark
Counry lake for anglers seeking
channel catfish. Night fishing is
best when using cut baits, prepared baits, chicken livers, and
night crawlers fished along the
bottom. Walleyes measuring up
to 25 inches are generally found
in deep waters and in the area
near the dam. Drift ·a mayfly rig,
worm harness or weight-forward spinner during early morning. Bluegills, crappies, and white
bass offer additional fishing
opportunities throughout the
year.

LAKE ERIE

Walleye action has exploded
over portions of the western
basin during the past week with
a number of daily catch limits
reported. The top areas now producing fast walleye action
include the offShore areas around
West Sister Island, northeast of
Midclle Sister Island, near the
Toledo Shipping Channel turnaround buoy, the areas west of
North Bass and Rattlesnake
islands, around Niagara Reef,
and the offShore area about three
miles from Port Clinton.
Walleyes are measuring 16 to 25
inches. Anglers should use
mayfly rigs that are gold or chartreuse and green in color, goldcolored weight-forward spinners. and trolled crank baits.
__Early morning is the best time to
fish.
Good walleye fishing also is
reported in the central basin
areas 5-6 miles north-northwest
of Fairport Harbor, 7- 8 miles
norrh ofWildwood Park, and 510 miles norrh of Ashtabula.
Central basin walleye anglers are
trolling jet planers, deep-diving
crank baits, spoons, and worm
harnesses at depths of 40 to 60
feet.
Steelhead . fishing has been
very good in the central basin
with top areas including 5-10
miles north of Fairport Harbor
and 7-8 miles out from Wildwood State Park. Anglers are
trolling the same spoons and
lures as those used for walleye at
depths of 50 to 70 feet. Steelhead
are measuring 22 to 30 inches.
Yellow perch fishing remains
good with top areas including
the gravel pit off the Toledo
Shipping Channel, Little Cedar
Point, the Kelleys Island shoal,
the area north and west of Green
Island, the Toledo water intake,
the water intake crib off of
Cleveland and the nearshore
waters off of Edgewater State
Park, Geneva, and Ashtabula.
Most perch are measuring 8 to
11 inches and are being taken on
spreaders tipped with shiners or
minnows fished near the lake
bottom.
MUSKINGUM RIVER
The Philo Pool covers 11 river
miles through Mu,ki ngum
Counry. Spotted bass fishing is
excellent wtth most fi sh measuring 10-12 inches. Fish with small
crank baits, spinners, plasti c
worms anll j igs in the Y- Bridge
area and around deeply submerged structure, log jams,
docks, and the confluence of the
licking River. Channel catfish
averaging 12- 13 inches can be
taken at night on traditional baits
throughout the river. Flathead
catfish are concentrated in the
deep holes of theY-Bridge area
and generally measure up to 24
inches. These large r catfish ca n
be taken at night when fi shing
along the river bottom with
111.1} wc.: Jght up to IS pounds.
large chubs and small sunfish .
T herl· we n: 2f&gt; " husktc muskies" Bass, crappies and bluegill fishing
1 11~', 1\ L irlll g J ft tn c h~.-•o; or larger
are rated fair in this secti o n.
I

·Mouldainboardinl' hot With Cien Xers
NEWRY, Maine (AP) - The
latest fad for escaping the summer
doldrums at ski resorts is not for
the timid.
It involves racing down steep
grassy slopes on something that
looks like a long skateboard - or
a short snowboard - equipped
with shock absorbers and overgrown wheels jutting from the
sides. "Mountainboarding" is the
new thing for thrill-seeking
extreme sports enthusiasts.
"It's sort of the monster truck
of skateboarding," said Ryan Triffit. spokesman for the Sunday
River ski resor\,. "People are lined
up to try it out, and I think part
of it is just because it's so unique ."
For resorts, it is the latest way to
tty to make some money in the
, summer when the ski lifts are
rypically idle. Resorts like Sunday
River have been letting mountain
bikers use their lifts for years.
"A lot of people are looking to
do more than just sit on the beach
all summer," said Stacy Gardner,
spokeswoman for the National
Ski Area Association.
The trend took shape seven
years ago when a pair of snowboarding .enthusiasts from San
Francisco began looking for a
board that people could use · on
the mounrains during the warmer
months.
"We thought somebody else ,.
was making it. It seemed so obvious," said Patrick McConnell.
Nobody was, so McConnell
and Jason Lee began experiment. ing in their garages and built their
own. Their company, MountainBoard Sports, was born as orders
from friends began pouring in.
The duo's first distributor was
in Japan, where the sport, mirroring snowboarding trends, caught
on in 1995,long before it gained
acceptance in the United States.
lee, 31, and McConnell, 36,
turned to U.S. distributors after
sales in Japan fell off in 1998. U.S.
investors took over in 1999, the
staff increased from six people to
25, and growtl1 has been exponential since, said Andrea Dowdy,
MountainBoard Sports' vice president of marketing.

1''
Tire trend took shaJ e ~ ~-

Inside:
Celebratiotls begi11 011 Page C2
E11tertaimnellf, Page C8
Amr Landers, Page C8

Page Cl
· Sund.y. July l:J, 1000
"--- .

beeline at high speeds straight
• downhill .
seven years ago when a "F The boards, which cost
pair of snowboarding
between $250 and $400,are proventhusiasts from San
' ing most popular with skateFrallrisw bega 11 lookinf! V · boarders, snowboarders, waker.
·
... ~ boarders, surfers and BMX bikers,
.1•1Y a b!I11Yd that J11'0ple
Dowdy said. The average speed is
could liSe 011 tire moun-. between 10 mph and 12 mph.
t.1i11s durin.~ tlte warmer though riders ca n go faster and
mf)ntlls.
can control their speed through
tire pressure and turns.
While there are pros who can
The company, now based in do 360s, flips and powerslides,
Colorado Springs, Colo., has sold."- ·hurtl~ down mountain~ and soar
about 16,000 boards since 1996; over JUmps, one doesn t have lo
McConnell expects to sell that be into extreme sports to ride. an
many over the next year thanks to all-terrain board.
a network of more than 100 dealWith a little instruction and the
ers and interest from ski resorts.
right safety gear, most people can
This sununer, the boards are figure it out on the first outing.
being featured at about 20 ski
But there is a reason why sofery
resorts, and McConnell expectS equipment, including helmets,
the number to double next sea- wrist guards, gloves and elbow
son.
and knee pads, is mandated.
In New England, Killington
On a recent afternoon. a New
and Mount Snow in Vermont, Hampshire teacher took a spill
Gunstock and Attitash Bear Peak that resulted in a twisted wrist
in New Hampshire, and Sunday and a couple of cracked ribs at
River in Maine began renting
mountainboards and offering
lessons this year.
Races are scheduled this summer at resorts including Eaton
Mountain in Maine, Laurel
Mountain
tn
Pennsylvania,
Smuggler's Notch in Vermont and
Snowshoe Mountain Resort in
West Virginia.
There are different kinds of
boards for terrain ranging from
flat roads to grassy knolls to steep
rocky cliffs. Most models used at
ski resorts have hand brakes to
help begtoners as they learn to
carve and powerslide to a stop,
and for experts who prefer to
1

9,

Sunday River. The bruised and
battered novice vowed. that he
would do it again, howe ve r.
Evan Lipstein , whose company
produces Mongoose and H yline
all - te rrain boards, knows riders as
young as 5 and as old as 65.
"It really boils down to what is
the terrain that they're going to
be riding on," lipstein said. " It is
a very good family sport, as is
snowboarding and skiing ."
Sunday River mountainboard ing instructor Braden Douglass ,
16, believes mountamboarding
will catch on at ski resorts, just
like mountain biking did more
than a decade ago.
Douglass is so confide nt in the
sport that he took his mothe r up
the mountain for a run .
"It will soon be more populor
than Jnoun[:~.in bikin g, and i[
hurts less when you ta ll ," he s;tid .
(Editor~· note: Chekc out thcst•

.'

Mother honors
slain student
with acts of
forgiveness
'

BY CHARLEY GIUESPtE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

111eb

sites on
mo,llaiu boardir~.~:
www. mom1tai flbv"rd. com
atid
Ul!lJ. mougooseatb.w111 .)

CONFEDERATE RAIL·
ROAD'S hits ,
"Trashy
Women " and
"Queen of
Memphis," will
be blended in
a program of
country music
and classic
ballads when
they take the
stage Aug. 15
at the Meigs
County Fair.
(Contributed
photo)

ill' fm·

t/tc

fll

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Auto-Owners Insurance
Life Home Car Business
7le ~ jP,Jte, 1'c 4!•.

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INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.

, •. 1, '

·· ·~13'~~ ~·': "•'

114 Court Pomeroy
992-6677

WESTERVILLE -The mother of a slain teenager has a plan for the house where he and another student were abducted just off the campus of
Franciscan Universiry.
Rachel Muha bought the house in Steubenville,
but not to obliterate it like a bad memory suppressed. Muha sees the purchase as a chance to
reclaim the site for God.
She believes her son, Brian, 18, who was killed
along with his roommate Aaron land, 20, of
Philadelphia, has already forgiven his assailants and
would want her to do so.
"I pray for the suspects because Brian and Aaron
were the first ones to want that," Muha said fiom
her home m suburban Columbus. "The best hope
for their killers of going to heaven one day turns
out to be us."
The students were
abducted May 31, 1999,
"I .I}
from their house near the
Sll.~ }'!.'CIS
campus. They were driven into Pennsylvania,
hN,liiSl' .
about 15 miles east of
Bri,ul ,wd
Steubenville, taken into
some woods and shot,
authorities said.
Their bodies were
1/i c
•I tl/lt'
found four days later
to "'''": fh,rr.
along U.S. Route 22 in
southwest Pennsylvania.
/J, . •
Terrell
Rahim
Yarbrough, 19, of Pitts1
burgh, and Nathan Hert•{
ring, 18, of Steubenville,
are charged with aggraJ!OIII,I,! IO
vated murder, kidnapltcar•c11 Ollt'
ping, burglary, ·robbery,
gross sexual imposition, tftl)' 1/IIIIS Oil{
receiving stolen property
[{) JL' liS.
and. grand theft auto.
Muha said she bought
Rachel Muha of
the house, even though it
Steubenvhle ~
wasn't for sale, so mat
priests attending the
Roman Catholic universiry could live there for
free. She wants the priests to pray at the home, celebrate Mass and comecrate the ground.
"Such evil happened here, now nothing but good
\hin_gs can happen," Muha said.
)wo priests have moved into the 70-year-old
duplex, which Muha bought for $47,000. When
they return to their home diocese after graduation
other priests or nuns can live there, she said.
"My wish is to have .Mass celebrated every day
there," she sa1d.
Muha, her other son, Chns, and dozens of Franciscan University stud ent~ also traveled to th e scene
·of the shootings to consecrate it. They prayed over
the site, left a gold-painted cross, roses, a religious
statue and rosaries.
C hris, who is a senior at1the college, said even
tho ugh Brian was only at the school for a short
while. he was well-liked.
After his brother's death. he said, "Students would
get together and each week a different person
would tell a story abour Brian."
Forgiving her son's kill ers is a difficult act of will. .
Muha said , but a connection that she can share with
Brian.
"I didn't want to see the suspects' faces because I
was afraid that 1 would not be able to torgive
them," Muha said. "What these boys did is a hornble, evil thing, but God's love is. so powerful tt can
. 'r
~et you thruugh anything." .•
Muha speaks to middle schoo l students about

-

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f&lt;';"~ .•

.......

Country, rock acts
top entertain111en{
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

OMEROY If
it's upb eJt '9Us
country, tnu(\ic o r

rock and roll oldies
that you like, then
this year's grandstand
~ut e r ta in -:­
ment at the Meigs Cou nty Fair.
Aug. 14 - 1\1, is-s ure to deligh t.
On stage at H p.m. on Tuesday
night of fair week wi ll be Co nfederate Railroad, a group whi ch ha s
taken its blend of ballads and
turbo-charged dane&lt; flo or favorites
all owr the map as well as up and
down th t· nw sic c hart~.
Wedn esday's enrertrl.inmem will
be t he popular Phil Dirt and the
DoZt'rs, who will take fa irgoer&gt; on
a musi cal journey down mc: mory
lane when poodle skim, saddle
shoes. and the corner drug store
were all a part of everyday liti:.
Th e Mei gs County Fair has an
ope n grandstand which means tllat
thert' is no cha rge to get in to see
tht.:.• pc:rfonners. Once :admission is
paid to get inside the gates at the
Rock Springs Fairt;rounds all
entertainment. be it professional :J.t
the grand stand or local talent on

PHIL DIRT AND THE DOZERS will take Meigs County fairJloers on a journey
down memory lane with go lden oldies from the 1950s. '60s and '70s in a
show on Aug. 16. (Contributed photo)

the hill stage. is free.
Confederate Railroad
Co nfederate R a i l~oad rose to
promin e nce Wl(h so ngs li ke "Trashy
Wo men" and " Queen of M em-

phi s." Th e b.111d is credited with
putting .A.mc.:ricam from every walk
of life back onto th e dance floor
whik ;a th e 'i.1,111L' tlllH' providing
cla« ic ballads which helped define
'l)Os country mu sic.

Atier I 0 years of live performance Atlantic R ec ords released
the band's self-titled debut album in
1992. Led by lead sinl'er Danny
Shirley, th e or iginal group conSisted of guitarist Mi chael l amb, Gate&gt;
Nichols on pedal steel , ke yboard
player C hri s McDaniel, Way ne
Secre~t on bass and Mark Dufresn e
o n drums.
Lamb left the group in 19'15 and

was replaced by Jimmie Dorm ire.
The platinum-plus Confederate
Railroad peaked in tbe Top 10 on
Billl;&gt;oard's country charts. The
group's first Top 40 hit was "She
Took It like a Man" defined as a
"gender-bending word play on an
injured relationship." That autumn
.c tbe band hit the Top Five with
'1esus and Mama."
"When and . Where ," another
Confef]erate Railroad album for
Atlantic, spawn ed four more chart
hits and was popular in dance clubs.
In 1996, Atlantic released a bestof-package entitled "Greatest Hits ,"
which revisited each of the band's
hits through the years. "Keep on
Rockin "' is the Confederate Rail road's fourrh album of new material.
Phil Dirt and the Dozers
Phil Dirt and the Dozers are
·des cribed as a musi cal group of talent. high energy and contagious
sense of humo r which is able to
transport tbe audience to another
time and place - the 1950s, ·'60s
and '70s in rock and roll magic.
The music at th e fair concert will
be that of the Four Seasons, like
"Sherry," with the original fal setto
vocals intact; the Righteous Brothers' "Unchained M elody." and the
Platters' soul-stirring "Only You."
The Phil Dtrt tmt e machine will

I

.,

Please see Meigs, Page C5
Please see Forgive, Page C5

\I

,'Peitil;'
oe Ttliis~ Urry
· John S'*unders a._~ Shennan Qreen.
'.

I

•·

.

i

';,

\ $2.000 Rebates on all2000 model Ram trucks!
\ $2,000 Rebate on all ruular cab Dakotas!
$1,000 Rebate on all 200 I model Ram trucksl.
\ S1,500 Rebate on 2000 model 300MI
\ S1,500 • $2.000 Rebate on all MlnTvansl
S1.000 Rebate on all 2000 model Cars!

our
. .

ua~

ON, A
AiM··OR''SUV
FOR THIS YEAR'S
VACATION?
u •.-.~~·-

•

don

Parents fear rehearsal dinner may grow beyond their means
DEAR ABBY: My stepson is bemg
married this summ e r. Borh h~ and hi~
ft antcc..• have been away from the area to
attrnd college and. waduatc sc hool. Their
fr ie nds ;1re sca ttered throug ho ut the
r uuntr y as well as Europe.
Th,·y have cho se n ,t rec,·ptioll hall
1111dway between our ho111ctown and
that of her parents. (Each of u&lt; will have
ro tr::Jvt•l about 45 minutl' s.)
My hl! sba nd and I haw •Jflic·red ro pay
tOr th L· rchcar:&lt;;::d dim1L'r. Her mother is
payin g fo r th&lt;.· w~d din g ·- an elabo rate
l'oc ktai l n:n.-ption. Alth o ugh the wedding party is small, m y stt.:pson 's fiancee
d ,um s th at all out-of-town g u ests sh o uld
be invited to the re hearsal d inn er. My
·husba nd and I U i sJgrc~ . Wl· tCd it is cusrom;"~ry to

invm· parl'nts, siblings anJ

ex perts are not in co mplete ag re ement
about wheliH~r our ~ of~town gu es ts
'' must" be included in the rehea rsal din -

ne;.·r.

Abigail
Van Buren
ADVICE
\Wddi ng party members and their spouses o nl y. They p lan o n having ISO to 2011
guests at th eir recepti on . Pl ease give m e
your . ...:omm cn ts. Abby, as I don't feel it is

o11 r responsib ility to host people they
m;1 y just wa nt tn "p.nty" with . -MIFFED IN EASTON, PA •
DEAR MIFFED: T he etiquette

...

A l·c ord i n ~

to th e " M odern Bride
Co mplete Wedding Pl ann er" by C ele
Goldsn\ith Lalli and Stephanie H . Dahl :
" Th e rt'hcarsal dinner may be as for mal
or as infor mal as you and .the ]10sts like.
and will include all members of the weddin g p:1rty ;md their spouses, as well as
the derb'Y· parents and gra ndparents.
OUT- OF - TOWN
WEDDING
GUESTS SHOULD AL SO BE lNVITED." (Emphasts is mine.)
" M cCall's Engagement and Wedding
Guide" advist·s: " Th e rehearsal dinner is
likely to be a sizable undertaking. All
attendants .ue alw3ys invited ; it 1s also

polite to include the husband or wife of
a married attendant and to ask th e fian ce
of an engaged attendant . The pare nts of
th e ring bearer and tlowcr girls are invit-"'
cd. though th ey will usually leaw these
very young attendants with a baby Sitter
un less th e hostess has made spec ial provision for them . If the clergyperson IS a
family friend or from out of town , he or
she IS in cl uded , as is the spouse. O th erWISe, the clerb'YPerson is not invited to
this gathering. Special out-of-town relatives MAY also be invited." (Emphasis is
mine.)
According to "Emily Post 's Complete
Book o fWedding Eti.q uette," it is permissible to exclude out-of- town ers at the
rehearsal dinn er, .especially when the
wedding p.trry is large and other ,part!l'S

have bel'n planned for thost.' visirors.
Under n o circumstan ct's shou ld you
entertain m o r&lt;.· gu ests at the reh earsal

dinner thJn you can co mfo rtably affo rd .
To help defray th e cost, an alternative
solutton might be for so me of the bride
and groom 's fnends to h ost an infor m al
ga thertng for the out-uf-tuwn gu ests.
DEAR ABBY: When we were little.
my father lovi ng ly changed our eve ning
prayer. As your readers know, it is:
" Now I lay m e down to sk ep,
"I pray the l ord my so ul to keep.
" If I sho uld die before I wake.
" I pray the l ord my soul to take.''
Mv fat her deleted the last two mourn fulli;J es and taught rny brother, Andy, sis-

Please see Abby, Page CS

�_ JageB8
Sunday. July 13, 1000

.

Going-fishi.n? Here's

a look at the conditions
COLUMBUS (AP) -Here
is the weekly fishing report provided by the Division ofWildlife
of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources:
CENTRAL OHIO
ALUM CREEK LAKE
This 3,400-acre lake in southern
Delaware Counry has become a
favorite among muskie anglers.
The first release of muskies
occurred in 1990 and -their
annual growth rate is among the
highest in the state. Anglers focus
·their effort near the dam by
trolling large imitation baits and
crank baits and spoons at depths
of about 6 to 9 feet. Bass populations are expanding and offer
fair to good fishing action along
the deeper points and drop-offs.
HARGUS LAKE The
146-acre lake just east of Circleville is popular amo ng local
anglers, especially those who are
seeking channel catfish. Most
fish measure 12-22 inches and
can be taken on traditional catfish baits when fished along the
bottom at night. The lake also
supports a fair population of
crappi es, bluegills and largemouth bass.
NORTHWEST OHIO
MAUMEE · RIVER
Anglers are beginning to see
improvement in smallrnouth bass
fishing success. Use small spinner&lt;, tube jigs, and jigs tipped
with minnows in the waters
below the 1-475 bridge to the
bay.Try the areas around Otsego,
Weirs Rapids, Waterville, Buttonwood, and at the Independence and Grand Rapids/Providence dams. The best catches of
channel catfish occur this time of
year. Most of these fish measure
14-20 inches.
·
PORTAGE RIVER- The
top area for channel catfish
anglers is from Oak Harbor to
Port Clinton. Most channel catfish measure 12-28 inches. Good
largemouth bass fishing can be
enjoyed in the lower part of the
river near Port Clinton. Smallnymth bass fishing is good
tpprivcr near Elmore. Check
/ with area bait shops for the latest
(
conditions
on northwest Ohio
- - ---rivers and lakes.
NORTHEAST OHIO
PYMATUNING RESERVOIR- C rappies generally can
be caught from shoreline areas
that have submerged structures
and near the causeway when
usmg
minnows
suspended
beneath a bobber. Muskie fishing
is rated good for this lake. Keeper muskies must measure at least
30 inches. The daily bag limit is
two. Walleye fishing is rated
excellent this year. There is a ISinch minimum length limit and
datJy bag limit of SIX for
Pymatuning walleyes. Blucgills,
smallm ourh and largemouth bass
also provide good summer fishing actio n.
MOSQUITO
C REEK
LAKE - The 7 ,850-acre lake is
loca ted in Trumbull County.
Excellent fi shing action can be
enjoyed here for walleyes, crappies, and bluegtlls. Many walleyes
are taken in shallow waters especially alo ng the wave-washed
sho relines and measure 14- 18
inches. There were five Fish
Oh io ~ualifymg flathead catfish
measu ring at least 36 inches
taken here last year. Chec k with
area bait shops for the latest fishing tips
SOUTHEAST OHIO
ROSS LAKE -Channel catfish up ·to 32 inches provide
exc ellent night fishing opportuniti es. Use traditional bails fished
along the bo ttom for best results .
Largemouth bass. are numerous
and hkely to be found in deeper
waters during midday.Try fishing
th e shall ow areas at night or durin g ea rl y m ornmg with 6-in ch
plastic worms, hoola pop pers,
and other surf.1ce oai ts .
SALT FORK LAKE - This
3.()(111-acre Guernsey Co unty
lake otT,. ., a wide range of good
to excellen t fi shing o pp ortunities
for c ha nnel ca tfi sh, walleyes,
mu , ktes. cra ppies, bluegills, and
ba". More t han 3,000 discarded
Christm:ts trees have bee n placed
tn ro the lake to serve as fi sh
.n rr.•ctnrc; W:11l cyco; measure up
r( , ;(• I Ill h&lt;..'\ ,IJld channel catfish

caught here in 1999, ranking
fifth in the state.
SOUTHWEST OHiO
CINCINNATI
METROPARKS - Local park
ponds offer good summer fishing
action in the Cincinnati area.
Crappies were being taken on
minnows at Brookville Lake
along with channel catfish on
chicken
livers
and
night
crawlers. Channel catfish are
providing good nightfishing
action in Lake Isabella. Largemouth bass and channel catfish
are being caught at Winton
Woods. Check with area bait
shops for the latest fishing tips
and conditions at these and other
local fishing areas.
CJ BROWN RESERVOIR
- The marina area is the top
spot in this 2,1 00-acre Clark
Counry lake for anglers seeking
channel catfish. Night fishing is
best when using cut baits, prepared baits, chicken livers, and
night crawlers fished along the
bottom. Walleyes measuring up
to 25 inches are generally found
in deep waters and in the area
near the dam. Drift ·a mayfly rig,
worm harness or weight-forward spinner during early morning. Bluegills, crappies, and white
bass offer additional fishing
opportunities throughout the
year.

LAKE ERIE

Walleye action has exploded
over portions of the western
basin during the past week with
a number of daily catch limits
reported. The top areas now producing fast walleye action
include the offShore areas around
West Sister Island, northeast of
Midclle Sister Island, near the
Toledo Shipping Channel turnaround buoy, the areas west of
North Bass and Rattlesnake
islands, around Niagara Reef,
and the offShore area about three
miles from Port Clinton.
Walleyes are measuring 16 to 25
inches. Anglers should use
mayfly rigs that are gold or chartreuse and green in color, goldcolored weight-forward spinners. and trolled crank baits.
__Early morning is the best time to
fish.
Good walleye fishing also is
reported in the central basin
areas 5-6 miles north-northwest
of Fairport Harbor, 7- 8 miles
norrh ofWildwood Park, and 510 miles norrh of Ashtabula.
Central basin walleye anglers are
trolling jet planers, deep-diving
crank baits, spoons, and worm
harnesses at depths of 40 to 60
feet.
Steelhead . fishing has been
very good in the central basin
with top areas including 5-10
miles north of Fairport Harbor
and 7-8 miles out from Wildwood State Park. Anglers are
trolling the same spoons and
lures as those used for walleye at
depths of 50 to 70 feet. Steelhead
are measuring 22 to 30 inches.
Yellow perch fishing remains
good with top areas including
the gravel pit off the Toledo
Shipping Channel, Little Cedar
Point, the Kelleys Island shoal,
the area north and west of Green
Island, the Toledo water intake,
the water intake crib off of
Cleveland and the nearshore
waters off of Edgewater State
Park, Geneva, and Ashtabula.
Most perch are measuring 8 to
11 inches and are being taken on
spreaders tipped with shiners or
minnows fished near the lake
bottom.
MUSKINGUM RIVER
The Philo Pool covers 11 river
miles through Mu,ki ngum
Counry. Spotted bass fishing is
excellent wtth most fi sh measuring 10-12 inches. Fish with small
crank baits, spinners, plasti c
worms anll j igs in the Y- Bridge
area and around deeply submerged structure, log jams,
docks, and the confluence of the
licking River. Channel catfish
averaging 12- 13 inches can be
taken at night on traditional baits
throughout the river. Flathead
catfish are concentrated in the
deep holes of theY-Bridge area
and generally measure up to 24
inches. These large r catfish ca n
be taken at night when fi shing
along the river bottom with
111.1} wc.: Jght up to IS pounds.
large chubs and small sunfish .
T herl· we n: 2f&gt; " husktc muskies" Bass, crappies and bluegill fishing
1 11~', 1\ L irlll g J ft tn c h~.-•o; or larger
are rated fair in this secti o n.
I

·Mouldainboardinl' hot With Cien Xers
NEWRY, Maine (AP) - The
latest fad for escaping the summer
doldrums at ski resorts is not for
the timid.
It involves racing down steep
grassy slopes on something that
looks like a long skateboard - or
a short snowboard - equipped
with shock absorbers and overgrown wheels jutting from the
sides. "Mountainboarding" is the
new thing for thrill-seeking
extreme sports enthusiasts.
"It's sort of the monster truck
of skateboarding," said Ryan Triffit. spokesman for the Sunday
River ski resor\,. "People are lined
up to try it out, and I think part
of it is just because it's so unique ."
For resorts, it is the latest way to
tty to make some money in the
, summer when the ski lifts are
rypically idle. Resorts like Sunday
River have been letting mountain
bikers use their lifts for years.
"A lot of people are looking to
do more than just sit on the beach
all summer," said Stacy Gardner,
spokeswoman for the National
Ski Area Association.
The trend took shape seven
years ago when a pair of snowboarding .enthusiasts from San
Francisco began looking for a
board that people could use · on
the mounrains during the warmer
months.
"We thought somebody else ,.
was making it. It seemed so obvious," said Patrick McConnell.
Nobody was, so McConnell
and Jason Lee began experiment. ing in their garages and built their
own. Their company, MountainBoard Sports, was born as orders
from friends began pouring in.
The duo's first distributor was
in Japan, where the sport, mirroring snowboarding trends, caught
on in 1995,long before it gained
acceptance in the United States.
lee, 31, and McConnell, 36,
turned to U.S. distributors after
sales in Japan fell off in 1998. U.S.
investors took over in 1999, the
staff increased from six people to
25, and growtl1 has been exponential since, said Andrea Dowdy,
MountainBoard Sports' vice president of marketing.

1''
Tire trend took shaJ e ~ ~-

Inside:
Celebratiotls begi11 011 Page C2
E11tertaimnellf, Page C8
Amr Landers, Page C8

Page Cl
· Sund.y. July l:J, 1000
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beeline at high speeds straight
• downhill .
seven years ago when a "F The boards, which cost
pair of snowboarding
between $250 and $400,are proventhusiasts from San
' ing most popular with skateFrallrisw bega 11 lookinf! V · boarders, snowboarders, waker.
·
... ~ boarders, surfers and BMX bikers,
.1•1Y a b!I11Yd that J11'0ple
Dowdy said. The average speed is
could liSe 011 tire moun-. between 10 mph and 12 mph.
t.1i11s durin.~ tlte warmer though riders ca n go faster and
mf)ntlls.
can control their speed through
tire pressure and turns.
While there are pros who can
The company, now based in do 360s, flips and powerslides,
Colorado Springs, Colo., has sold."- ·hurtl~ down mountain~ and soar
about 16,000 boards since 1996; over JUmps, one doesn t have lo
McConnell expects to sell that be into extreme sports to ride. an
many over the next year thanks to all-terrain board.
a network of more than 100 dealWith a little instruction and the
ers and interest from ski resorts.
right safety gear, most people can
This sununer, the boards are figure it out on the first outing.
being featured at about 20 ski
But there is a reason why sofery
resorts, and McConnell expectS equipment, including helmets,
the number to double next sea- wrist guards, gloves and elbow
son.
and knee pads, is mandated.
In New England, Killington
On a recent afternoon. a New
and Mount Snow in Vermont, Hampshire teacher took a spill
Gunstock and Attitash Bear Peak that resulted in a twisted wrist
in New Hampshire, and Sunday and a couple of cracked ribs at
River in Maine began renting
mountainboards and offering
lessons this year.
Races are scheduled this summer at resorts including Eaton
Mountain in Maine, Laurel
Mountain
tn
Pennsylvania,
Smuggler's Notch in Vermont and
Snowshoe Mountain Resort in
West Virginia.
There are different kinds of
boards for terrain ranging from
flat roads to grassy knolls to steep
rocky cliffs. Most models used at
ski resorts have hand brakes to
help begtoners as they learn to
carve and powerslide to a stop,
and for experts who prefer to
1

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Sunday River. The bruised and
battered novice vowed. that he
would do it again, howe ve r.
Evan Lipstein , whose company
produces Mongoose and H yline
all - te rrain boards, knows riders as
young as 5 and as old as 65.
"It really boils down to what is
the terrain that they're going to
be riding on," lipstein said. " It is
a very good family sport, as is
snowboarding and skiing ."
Sunday River mountainboard ing instructor Braden Douglass ,
16, believes mountamboarding
will catch on at ski resorts, just
like mountain biking did more
than a decade ago.
Douglass is so confide nt in the
sport that he took his mothe r up
the mountain for a run .
"It will soon be more populor
than Jnoun[:~.in bikin g, and i[
hurts less when you ta ll ," he s;tid .
(Editor~· note: Chekc out thcst•

.'

Mother honors
slain student
with acts of
forgiveness
'

BY CHARLEY GIUESPtE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

111eb

sites on
mo,llaiu boardir~.~:
www. mom1tai flbv"rd. com
atid
Ul!lJ. mougooseatb.w111 .)

CONFEDERATE RAIL·
ROAD'S hits ,
"Trashy
Women " and
"Queen of
Memphis," will
be blended in
a program of
country music
and classic
ballads when
they take the
stage Aug. 15
at the Meigs
County Fair.
(Contributed
photo)

ill' fm·

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Auto-Owners Insurance
Life Home Car Business
7le ~ jP,Jte, 1'c 4!•.

•

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Tit,
lrutn'Jor
ki 1/crs

e1 s atr eartn

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INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.

, •. 1, '

·· ·~13'~~ ~·': "•'

114 Court Pomeroy
992-6677

WESTERVILLE -The mother of a slain teenager has a plan for the house where he and another student were abducted just off the campus of
Franciscan Universiry.
Rachel Muha bought the house in Steubenville,
but not to obliterate it like a bad memory suppressed. Muha sees the purchase as a chance to
reclaim the site for God.
She believes her son, Brian, 18, who was killed
along with his roommate Aaron land, 20, of
Philadelphia, has already forgiven his assailants and
would want her to do so.
"I pray for the suspects because Brian and Aaron
were the first ones to want that," Muha said fiom
her home m suburban Columbus. "The best hope
for their killers of going to heaven one day turns
out to be us."
The students were
abducted May 31, 1999,
"I .I}
from their house near the
Sll.~ }'!.'CIS
campus. They were driven into Pennsylvania,
hN,liiSl' .
about 15 miles east of
Bri,ul ,wd
Steubenville, taken into
some woods and shot,
authorities said.
Their bodies were
1/i c
•I tl/lt'
found four days later
to "'''": fh,rr.
along U.S. Route 22 in
southwest Pennsylvania.
/J, . •
Terrell
Rahim
Yarbrough, 19, of Pitts1
burgh, and Nathan Hert•{
ring, 18, of Steubenville,
are charged with aggraJ!OIII,I,! IO
vated murder, kidnapltcar•c11 Ollt'
ping, burglary, ·robbery,
gross sexual imposition, tftl)' 1/IIIIS Oil{
receiving stolen property
[{) JL' liS.
and. grand theft auto.
Muha said she bought
Rachel Muha of
the house, even though it
Steubenvhle ~
wasn't for sale, so mat
priests attending the
Roman Catholic universiry could live there for
free. She wants the priests to pray at the home, celebrate Mass and comecrate the ground.
"Such evil happened here, now nothing but good
\hin_gs can happen," Muha said.
)wo priests have moved into the 70-year-old
duplex, which Muha bought for $47,000. When
they return to their home diocese after graduation
other priests or nuns can live there, she said.
"My wish is to have .Mass celebrated every day
there," she sa1d.
Muha, her other son, Chns, and dozens of Franciscan University stud ent~ also traveled to th e scene
·of the shootings to consecrate it. They prayed over
the site, left a gold-painted cross, roses, a religious
statue and rosaries.
C hris, who is a senior at1the college, said even
tho ugh Brian was only at the school for a short
while. he was well-liked.
After his brother's death. he said, "Students would
get together and each week a different person
would tell a story abour Brian."
Forgiving her son's kill ers is a difficult act of will. .
Muha said , but a connection that she can share with
Brian.
"I didn't want to see the suspects' faces because I
was afraid that 1 would not be able to torgive
them," Muha said. "What these boys did is a hornble, evil thing, but God's love is. so powerful tt can
. 'r
~et you thruugh anything." .•
Muha speaks to middle schoo l students about

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Country, rock acts
top entertain111en{
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

OMEROY If
it's upb eJt '9Us
country, tnu(\ic o r

rock and roll oldies
that you like, then
this year's grandstand
~ut e r ta in -:­
ment at the Meigs Cou nty Fair.
Aug. 14 - 1\1, is-s ure to deligh t.
On stage at H p.m. on Tuesday
night of fair week wi ll be Co nfederate Railroad, a group whi ch ha s
taken its blend of ballads and
turbo-charged dane&lt; flo or favorites
all owr the map as well as up and
down th t· nw sic c hart~.
Wedn esday's enrertrl.inmem will
be t he popular Phil Dirt and the
DoZt'rs, who will take fa irgoer&gt; on
a musi cal journey down mc: mory
lane when poodle skim, saddle
shoes. and the corner drug store
were all a part of everyday liti:.
Th e Mei gs County Fair has an
ope n grandstand which means tllat
thert' is no cha rge to get in to see
tht.:.• pc:rfonners. Once :admission is
paid to get inside the gates at the
Rock Springs Fairt;rounds all
entertainment. be it professional :J.t
the grand stand or local talent on

PHIL DIRT AND THE DOZERS will take Meigs County fairJloers on a journey
down memory lane with go lden oldies from the 1950s. '60s and '70s in a
show on Aug. 16. (Contributed photo)

the hill stage. is free.
Confederate Railroad
Co nfederate R a i l~oad rose to
promin e nce Wl(h so ngs li ke "Trashy
Wo men" and " Queen of M em-

phi s." Th e b.111d is credited with
putting .A.mc.:ricam from every walk
of life back onto th e dance floor
whik ;a th e 'i.1,111L' tlllH' providing
cla« ic ballads which helped define
'l)Os country mu sic.

Atier I 0 years of live performance Atlantic R ec ords released
the band's self-titled debut album in
1992. Led by lead sinl'er Danny
Shirley, th e or iginal group conSisted of guitarist Mi chael l amb, Gate&gt;
Nichols on pedal steel , ke yboard
player C hri s McDaniel, Way ne
Secre~t on bass and Mark Dufresn e
o n drums.
Lamb left the group in 19'15 and

was replaced by Jimmie Dorm ire.
The platinum-plus Confederate
Railroad peaked in tbe Top 10 on
Billl;&gt;oard's country charts. The
group's first Top 40 hit was "She
Took It like a Man" defined as a
"gender-bending word play on an
injured relationship." That autumn
.c tbe band hit the Top Five with
'1esus and Mama."
"When and . Where ," another
Confef]erate Railroad album for
Atlantic, spawn ed four more chart
hits and was popular in dance clubs.
In 1996, Atlantic released a bestof-package entitled "Greatest Hits ,"
which revisited each of the band's
hits through the years. "Keep on
Rockin "' is the Confederate Rail road's fourrh album of new material.
Phil Dirt and the Dozers
Phil Dirt and the Dozers are
·des cribed as a musi cal group of talent. high energy and contagious
sense of humo r which is able to
transport tbe audience to another
time and place - the 1950s, ·'60s
and '70s in rock and roll magic.
The music at th e fair concert will
be that of the Four Seasons, like
"Sherry," with the original fal setto
vocals intact; the Righteous Brothers' "Unchained M elody." and the
Platters' soul-stirring "Only You."
The Phil Dtrt tmt e machine will

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Please see Meigs, Page C5
Please see Forgive, Page C5

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,'Peitil;'
oe Ttliis~ Urry
· John S'*unders a._~ Shennan Qreen.
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\ $2.000 Rebates on all2000 model Ram trucks!
\ $2,000 Rebate on all ruular cab Dakotas!
$1,000 Rebate on all 200 I model Ram trucksl.
\ S1,500 Rebate on 2000 model 300MI
\ S1,500 • $2.000 Rebate on all MlnTvansl
S1.000 Rebate on all 2000 model Cars!

our
. .

ua~

ON, A
AiM··OR''SUV
FOR THIS YEAR'S
VACATION?
u •.-.~~·-

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don

Parents fear rehearsal dinner may grow beyond their means
DEAR ABBY: My stepson is bemg
married this summ e r. Borh h~ and hi~
ft antcc..• have been away from the area to
attrnd college and. waduatc sc hool. Their
fr ie nds ;1re sca ttered throug ho ut the
r uuntr y as well as Europe.
Th,·y have cho se n ,t rec,·ptioll hall
1111dway between our ho111ctown and
that of her parents. (Each of u&lt; will have
ro tr::Jvt•l about 45 minutl' s.)
My hl! sba nd and I haw •Jflic·red ro pay
tOr th L· rchcar:&lt;;::d dim1L'r. Her mother is
payin g fo r th&lt;.· w~d din g ·- an elabo rate
l'oc ktai l n:n.-ption. Alth o ugh the wedding party is small, m y stt.:pson 's fiancee
d ,um s th at all out-of-town g u ests sh o uld
be invited to the re hearsal d inn er. My
·husba nd and I U i sJgrc~ . Wl· tCd it is cusrom;"~ry to

invm· parl'nts, siblings anJ

ex perts are not in co mplete ag re ement
about wheliH~r our ~ of~town gu es ts
'' must" be included in the rehea rsal din -

ne;.·r.

Abigail
Van Buren
ADVICE
\Wddi ng party members and their spouses o nl y. They p lan o n having ISO to 2011
guests at th eir recepti on . Pl ease give m e
your . ...:omm cn ts. Abby, as I don't feel it is

o11 r responsib ility to host people they
m;1 y just wa nt tn "p.nty" with . -MIFFED IN EASTON, PA •
DEAR MIFFED: T he etiquette

...

A l·c ord i n ~

to th e " M odern Bride
Co mplete Wedding Pl ann er" by C ele
Goldsn\ith Lalli and Stephanie H . Dahl :
" Th e rt'hcarsal dinner may be as for mal
or as infor mal as you and .the ]10sts like.
and will include all members of the weddin g p:1rty ;md their spouses, as well as
the derb'Y· parents and gra ndparents.
OUT- OF - TOWN
WEDDING
GUESTS SHOULD AL SO BE lNVITED." (Emphasts is mine.)
" M cCall's Engagement and Wedding
Guide" advist·s: " Th e rehearsal dinner is
likely to be a sizable undertaking. All
attendants .ue alw3ys invited ; it 1s also

polite to include the husband or wife of
a married attendant and to ask th e fian ce
of an engaged attendant . The pare nts of
th e ring bearer and tlowcr girls are invit-"'
cd. though th ey will usually leaw these
very young attendants with a baby Sitter
un less th e hostess has made spec ial provision for them . If the clergyperson IS a
family friend or from out of town , he or
she IS in cl uded , as is the spouse. O th erWISe, the clerb'YPerson is not invited to
this gathering. Special out-of-town relatives MAY also be invited." (Emphasis is
mine.)
According to "Emily Post 's Complete
Book o fWedding Eti.q uette," it is permissible to exclude out-of- town ers at the
rehearsal dinn er, .especially when the
wedding p.trry is large and other ,part!l'S

have bel'n planned for thost.' visirors.
Under n o circumstan ct's shou ld you
entertain m o r&lt;.· gu ests at the reh earsal

dinner thJn you can co mfo rtably affo rd .
To help defray th e cost, an alternative
solutton might be for so me of the bride
and groom 's fnends to h ost an infor m al
ga thertng for the out-uf-tuwn gu ests.
DEAR ABBY: When we were little.
my father lovi ng ly changed our eve ning
prayer. As your readers know, it is:
" Now I lay m e down to sk ep,
"I pray the l ord my so ul to keep.
" If I sho uld die before I wake.
" I pray the l ord my soul to take.''
Mv fat her deleted the last two mourn fulli;J es and taught rny brother, Andy, sis-

Please see Abby, Page CS

�Engagements

.: .Sunday, July 23, 2000

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point f'leasant, WV

Page C2 • •unllap t!:imr• ·•rntinrl

:i&gt;unba!' Wnnes - ~rnlinrl • Page C3

Pomer6y • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

Studies show walking
has several benefits

Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition events
r- -

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FOR AP SPECIAL FEATURES

I

Walking can sharpen your
mind, lift your mood and cut
body fat , according to studies
cited in the July/ August issue of
Reader's ' Digest New Choices
magazine.
In a study of the impact of
regular walking on abilities such
as planning arid sc heduling,
Arthur Kramer, Ph .D., of the
University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign, found that "even
small improvements in aerobic
fitn ess had a significant effect."
Walking speeded reaction time,
distractibility
and
lessened
enabled people to switch from
one mental task to another with
more ease.
Exercise delivers an immediate
natural high by cleansing your
bloodstream of hostile stress hormones and stimulating feel-good
endo rphins . James P. Blumenthal,
Ph .D., of Duke University Med-

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ABOVE- The second annual "Footprints to Footsteps" was recently
held at Holzer Medical .Center in Gallipolis. The Tobacco Use Preven·
tion Coalition was represented with a table full of helpful informat~on
for the new mothers who came to the celebration. Pictured above are
Debra Greene, RN, BSN, Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition Project
Coordinator and Tammy Kostival, RN, BSN, Coalition Member, who
stand infront of their special display "Stop in the Name oflove". The
Pre-Natal Committee of the Coalition helped with the concept of the
theme and display. Mugs, bibs and magnets were also given to mothers who stopped by the Coalition's exhibit.
RIGHT - River Valley High School PRIDE group member, Cecilia
Goett, recently volunteered her time to help Greene place stickers
with anMobacco messages on magazines throughoutHolcerMedical
Center. Here, Greene observes while Goett places stickers on magazines in the Hospital's Radiology waiting room. For more information
·on tobacco use prevention, cessation, or on the Coalition itself contact Greene at .(7 40) 446-5940 .

..
Earnest Greene and Angel Roberts

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Roberts-Greene engagement
RACINE- Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hill and Sons Farm and GreenRoberts of Racine announce the houses.
engagement and approaching
Maternal grandparents are
marriage of their daughter, Angel Ayward and Mae Jones of RaCine
Nicole, to Earnest Allen Greene, and the late Richard and Goldie
son of Reba Roush and the late Roberts; and the paternal grandDonald Green of Letart Falls.
parents are the late Clifford and
The bride-elect is a 1995 Ida Justice and George and Sybil
graduate of Southern High Greene.
School and a 1998 graduate of
An open church wedding will
Southeastern Business College. take place on July 29 at 5 p.m. in
Her fiance is a 1988 graduate of the afternoon at the home of
Southern High School. He is Bob and Sue Wood, Waid Sayre
currently employed at the Virgil Hill Road, Racine.

Family memllelli invinrl

POJ'v1EROY - Surmner
oorxlitioning!Or Mdg&gt; Marnuder

MONDAY
RIJTIAND-Anrual pi:ttr.,Ruihn:l Guden Club, Moo-

~seron wilt be'gi\m

GIESllR -The M.;g&gt;
County J.K.F.S. will w a £uniam; ro.moy ptq:run, begim
lyu pOti: M~ :d tre dubM~ 8:l:J ~in tre MHS lnre 7 pm Ham \WI be prolcHJy Open 10 aD boys an:l gjds, vdrl Thiae ~- 10
gt:rles 7 tlnoogh 12J\Il inleresled . ttkc a ro.mrl dish an:l iOOr CMTl

1UPPERS PLAINS
'l.icaOOn Bt1ie S&lt;::hoa, Tupptn

of Catm:;n:e l:x:md ttming,
7:)) an~Tl.le.'di)i

Pbin; Unirai.Melhodi;t Omtth.

''In tre Rice \Whjeu'', NB:ar

reiarro

Monday
duough FtidJy &lt;::lw;es fir aD :~!;"'
~

RACINE -The

~

Area Canrmmity ~
will nm:Tuerlly :1: 6:)) p.m &lt;1
Stu- Mill P.uk 1hre wilt be a
pOOuck dinne!:

.A look back at Major Downing- the (alligator pilot'
]

James
Sands
'-'VL.uMNIST

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~ Mre.vill!opi9;0llnrl!df

One of the great old houses in
Middleport is the Downing House
on North Second Street. Among
the Downings who have lived there
was Major John B. Downing. He
and his wife were residents of the
Downing house from 1899 to
1914. The Downings ran an insurance business in a part of the
dwelling. Major Downing died on
March 4, 1914. Mrs. Downing was
the daughter of Gallipolis' Mr. and
Mrs. William C. Miller. It was Mr.
Miller who built the old Womeldorff-Thomas building, which
until it burned down a few years
ago, was at the corner of Third
Avenue and Court Street. Downing had other connections with
Gallipolis. He resided here brietlv
in the 1870's and was an active par~
ticipant in the Aeolian Society.
Major Downing was an accomplished violinist. People wl10 heard
him play in New York said that he
was th e finest violimst they had
ever heard. H1s wife was an almost
proficient pianist. She played the
piano forte. The two often played
together across a wtde range of ter. ritory.
The maJ Or's other connection to
Gallia County was through his
hunting prowess. He kept a small
cabm in C heshi re Township where
he often retreated with his bird
dogs and hunting companions.
But perhaps his g reatest cla im to
fa me was his 27 years as a pilot and
a capta in on the Ohio and Mississi ppi Rivers. MaJOr ·D owni ng was
qu ite familiar wit h Sam Clemens
· (Mark Twain ) and he is mentio ned
in Twam's book, "Life On Tht· MisSissippi."
Downing. born at Rucland an d
. educated at Marietta College,
· became a "r ub pilot" on the Ohio
: R1ver under h1s uncle Joh n Black.
· After some year~ on the Ohjo
R..iver. Downmg I !loved to Sr. Louis
where he be came a fi1ll- fledged
pil ot runnmg boats fmm Pittsburgh, tu N" "' O rk ' n' Mark
Twam tramt:d .1" .1 cub p1lo t, partly
under Dowmn g. The two became
f;ISt fr1 ends and corresponded up to

the death ofTwain.
1\vain once told the story that
gave Downing his name as the
"Alligator Pilot." '!Wain had come
into the pilot's house with twO
young women. Downing left the
\Yheel to talk_ to these .. ladies~
Downing had basically let the boat
steer itself. Twain noticed that the
boat was dr.t.wing more water than
it should have, a fact that usually
indicated the boat was too close to
the shore.
Downing did not want either
Twain or the womenfolk to know
that he was not totally in charge of
the situation. With an air of confidence, Downing turned the wheel
and said, "There is no problem for
we are right in the middle of the
channel." Just then the boat
bounced a little mainly because the
boat was in shallow water. But
Downing announced that this was
not the shore, but that they had
simply run over some alligators and
aU was fine. However at that point
on the river there were no alligators.
Twain does talk about alligator
boats in his book and mentions that
some years prior to the ·above episide. Downing was known as a real
"alligator pilot" Alligators were a
hazard to boats because they were
hard to detect.
Wrote Twain, "Of course there
were some few pilots that could
judge of alligator- water nearly as
well as they could of any other
kind, but they had to have a natural talent for it; it wasn't a tiling a
body could lea rn , you had io be
born with it. Let me see: There was
Ben Thornburg, and Beck Jolly, and
Squire Bell, and H orace [lixby, and ·
MaJOr Downing, and John Stevenson, and Billy Gordon and J1m
Brady, and George Ea ler, and Billy

IIndow Treatment

then took the alligators to N ew
Orleans. Back then all alligators
were government property. Only
the government was allowed to kill
the animal. Most government
issued shoes in the south were
made from alligato r hide. The shoes
lasted five years and were always
waterproof.
Downing's pride got him in
trouble one O[hcr time. He went
Into N ew O rleans and asked fo r a

good cigar. The man gave the
Maj or one or'Havana's finest ." But
the Major protested: "Surely you
have a finer cigar than that."
Downing laid down a five dollar
bill. The clerk reached under the
counter, flipped a cigar to Downing, took the bill and disappeared
intO the back room. Back then
even the best cigars only sold for 50
cents. Dqwning got a 50 cent cigar
for SS.

$CASH$
446-2404
Uc.n.. CC700077.000 •ncf 001
Llc~N

Cl 710041 000 •M 001

100 West Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
992.()461

Uc.,,. CC7000!7-0IIt
Uc- Cl750041-00e

20%-30%
• Sheers
• Verticals
• Yerosol1
• Wood Blind•
Z lncludei Installation
Residential or Con1me1rcial

Tope's quality

tarpet

Save

20%-25%
Expert Installation

CASH W/ APPROVED

furniture Galleries

Corner of Stco•• 11 Grspt Strnt
Galllpolls,Ohlo

•Interior Doelgn
• Window Treatment
• Waverly Dealer
• Fino Fumlture

446•0332

Cellular Serv•·ce Just
B I• gge r ex
D
B tte r
. e

,.-------------------------------------.

~

=

.
I

i

~~~""'ot
'
~

...

..

··••••••
••

•••
,••.

'"
••
••
•••.

••.
•

••
••
••
~·

e·

MONTHL.:
. minutes I month
75 min $20.95 month
145 min $29.95 month
275 min $39.95 month

t
••
•
•,;

•
~
••
••
•

••
•
••r
J

~

I.
~

•

Brown-Swain wedding

by the bride consisting of three
REEDSVILLE - Robin Lynn
pink roses with ivory lace and Brown and Jay Lyle Swain, both
beads.
of Reedsville, were married on
Wedding rings were exchanged Saturday,June 3, at their home on
by the couple, and a gold heart the Swain Farm before a small
necklace with a diamond was gathering of family and friends .
given to .Adenna. Angie Combs
T he bride is the daughter of
was a witness for the couple and Roger and Louise Brown of AshHeather Hively was the photog- land Ky. The g room is the son of
rapher.
Lyle Swain of Reed sville and the
The bride is the daug hter of late Mary Swain .
Earl and Be a Champ li n, of GalThe bride, escorted to the altar
lipoli s. the groom is the son of ·by her father, wo re an ivory wedLe slie Cox and Ella Cox, both of ding gown. Her mother se rved as
Gallipolis
her matron of honor. Flower girl
Th e couple reside in Gallipolis. was Victoria Goble and Shee na

; .: He's gone from t~e radio business in southeastern
, Ohio to the radio business in St. Louis, Missouri, and
: 'now Jared Stewart is making the switch to St. Louis
television. Stewart has been promoted to Sports
: Director at NCN -TV, the # I rated cable television
stationin_St.Louis_and a sta~on that is among the ton
live in cable stations in the United States.
· Jared began his career in broadcasting at WMPO
Radio just after he graduated from Meigs High
• School in 1994.While attending Ohio University and
: later the University of Rio Grande, Stewart worked
: as the sports director at WMPO, building the higb
:: school sports coverage into one of the best in South; eastern Ohio.
In August of 19Q8 Jared made a major decision in
i.O his broadcasting caree r. He decided to move to St.
::: Louis, Missouri and attend Broadcast Center St.
I: Louis, a technical school which focuses in hands on
• broadcast training. Stewart graduated from Broadcast
" Center in May 1999 and was immediately hired as a
~ news and sports reporter forWIL Radio, the .#2 rated
~ radio station in St. Louis. His duties at WIL mcluded
!• writing news, covering press comerences,
~
fi1eld
II
"' reporting at brealcing news stories, and covering the
•~ St. Louis Rants, Cardinals, and Blues. "When I was
" asked to cover the major sports teams, I jumped at the
• chance." Stewart says. "Little did I know that .I'd be
•: rubbing elbows and becoming an acquaintance with
: Super Bowl MVP Kurt Warner and the other guys on
·• the team." During his tenure at WIL Jared has had the
~ opportunity to meet and interview such perso nalities
: as Mark M cGwire, Shaquille O'Neal, George Fore : man, George W. Bush, Ed McMahon , Ashley Judd ,
: Billy Graham and more.
~L But keeping his overall goal of someday working

·-...
••

9{p.i Casli till P~tlay?

216 Upper River Rd. .
Gallipolis, Ohio
" , Mile south of
he Sliver Bridge

'

!

Youngblood- all A 1 alligator-pilots.
They could tell alligator-water as
far as another Christian could tell
whisky.A good alligator-pilot could
get fifteen hundred dollars a
month. At night other boats had to
lay up, but alligator- pilots never laid
up for anything but fog."
In the early days of the Mississippi. the river was dredged no t so
much from sand as it is today but
from alligators. The dredge boats

Holley-Cox wedding

Area man named NCN-TV sports director

fURNITURI GAlURII~

DOWNING HOUSE - The Downing house in Middleport was home to
MaJor Dowmng from 1899-1914. The major was a riverboat captain
and prlot. He once trained Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) about boat·
rng on the Mississippi River.
·

Robin and Jay Swain

GALLIPOLIS- Sherri Holley and Lester "Pete" Cox
exchanged wedding vows in the
bandstand at the city park in Gallipolis on July 8, 2000 at 10:30
a.m . The ceremony was performed by Pastor John Jackso n of
. the New Life Lutheran Church.
The couple exchanged vows to
each other and to Adenna Holley,
,,daughter of the bride, that they
. had written for the special occasion. Adenna then said vows to
her mother and stepfather, assisted by Pastor Jackson .
Adenna held a bm1quet made

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SUNDAY
d!):6 pm at tre !nne ctDnrn
sluJkl amm Mooclay\
'IUESDAY
~ sem:e""' ~begim
POMEROY- Poplar and SaD Da\m]enkin;,Rltluri nrering w!-at infOrtmtion on at6pm
POMEROY - OJamber

St!re Rrure 554. Suixlrj( (d)
pm l'IOOWn ofi..etut,W.V... wilt
be ~Jdm .Ellwickis 1U10C

Sherrl and Lester CoK and Adenna Holley

for ESPN in his mind, Jared decided it was time to make th e switch
to television. And in July 1999 he
started working part- time at NCN
TV as a freelance reporter and
photogrnpher while holding down
his job at WlL. Now, one year later,
Stewart has been promoted to fulltime Sports Director, where his
duties will be to head up St. louis'
Stewart
top coverer of high school sports,
as well as report and anchor the sportscasts and to do
play-by-play telecasts of St. Lo uis high schoo l foo tball
and basketball games. "I know that it's not ESI'N. but
it's a start." says Stewart. "Everyone has to start somewhere and I've been blessed eno ugh to get to start my
television caree r in a city where sports is abundant. "
Jared is joining News Director Randy Gardner and
the 14 time national award winning news team at
NCN. "We feel lucky to be adding Jared to our staff."
says Gardner. "He is a hard worker and I know that
someday you 'll be seeing him on national televisio n,
but for now we're going to take full adva ntage of his
skills."
Stewart is also getting the ch.Jnce to continuing his
love for coaching. His St. Louts Knights 12 and 13
year old baseball team is currently 9 and 3 and in second place at the Florissant Area Athletic Associatio n .
Jared is the son of Mike and Sharon Stewart of
Middleport and the grandson of Do nna G laze of
Middleport and the b\e Glenn Glaze; and Ross Jr.
and Trudy Stewart of Pomeroy and the late Wanda
Stewart . If you wou ld like to drop Jared a line, his
mailing address is: 2869-M San tiago Dr. Florissant,
MO 63033.

Gilmore registered the guests and
accepted gifts for the cou ple. The
members of the bridal party were
in black, gray, ivory and red attire.
and ivory and red roses were the
wedding flowers.
luke Milliron was best man
for the g room. They wore black
tu xedos with red vests. Perform- ·
in g th e ce rC'mony was Tere sa
WJldeck of the Fellowship
C burch of the
N aza rene .
R eedsvill e.
A reception was held at the
couple 's home following then
wedd1 ng.

MORE LOCAL NEW~.
MORE LOCAL FOLK~.
Subcribe today:
446-2342 or 992-2156

Jfeother
In tfie Scottish
:Higfilands,
In tfie cold bitten
JVortfi Sea Islands,
'Wfiere
growtfi is in defiance,
Sprouts witfi assurance,
'T'fiis elegant :Heatfier;
Sturdy as love,
JV ever wavered by tfie
'Force ofcrosswinds,
Spreads
'(fiousand delicate aT' IIlS ,
•To fill tfie wasteland
'1.-0itfi life; and;
•Tfie lncez c of belljlo1vers .

Holzer Medical Center Wellness Department

SENIORS 60+

Join us at oltr Mobile Unit in the
Gallipolis City Park
~
July 27 and 28
(Thursday and Friday)

9 am until12 Noon both days

•

'ii5:Halesfi (Patel

Lipid Profile and Personal Well ness Profile
Lipid Profile Testing consists of'
Total Cholesterol, HDL Cholesterol, LDL Cholesterol, Triglyce r:ides, Glucose
(MUST BE FASTING 12 HOURS BEFORE TEST EXCEPT WATER
AND SCHEDULED MEDICINES)

Provided at no charge

Call446-5313 before July 24~ for an appointment!
Partially funded by a grant from Area Agency on Aging District 7

ical Center, believes walking can
have more far.reaching advantages. "In our four-month study
that compared the effects of exercise and medication on depression, we . found that a walking
program worked as weD as an
antidepressants. Medication was
faster, but the end results were
nearly identi ca l."
Dr. William E. Kraus of Duke
says walking, even at a moderate
pace, redu ces body fat . A recent
study by Kraus found that men
and women who walked cut
their body fat by more than 4
percent in only three months.
However, notes N ew Choices,
since muscle weighs more than
fat, your weight may not change,
although your silhouette will. A
higher muscle-to-fat ratio confers another advantage: Muscle
burns more calories than fat
does, even while you sleep.

Co mplt111 en ts Of

Lee JVewell
:'!dmi1w of''I'o&lt;'ll)'

�Engagements

.: .Sunday, July 23, 2000

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point f'leasant, WV

Page C2 • •unllap t!:imr• ·•rntinrl

:i&gt;unba!' Wnnes - ~rnlinrl • Page C3

Pomer6y • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant, WV

Studies show walking
has several benefits

Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition events
r- -

1

'.
''

FOR AP SPECIAL FEATURES

I

Walking can sharpen your
mind, lift your mood and cut
body fat , according to studies
cited in the July/ August issue of
Reader's ' Digest New Choices
magazine.
In a study of the impact of
regular walking on abilities such
as planning arid sc heduling,
Arthur Kramer, Ph .D., of the
University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign, found that "even
small improvements in aerobic
fitn ess had a significant effect."
Walking speeded reaction time,
distractibility
and
lessened
enabled people to switch from
one mental task to another with
more ease.
Exercise delivers an immediate
natural high by cleansing your
bloodstream of hostile stress hormones and stimulating feel-good
endo rphins . James P. Blumenthal,
Ph .D., of Duke University Med-

I
I
'

I
I

I

II
I

ABOVE- The second annual "Footprints to Footsteps" was recently
held at Holzer Medical .Center in Gallipolis. The Tobacco Use Preven·
tion Coalition was represented with a table full of helpful informat~on
for the new mothers who came to the celebration. Pictured above are
Debra Greene, RN, BSN, Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition Project
Coordinator and Tammy Kostival, RN, BSN, Coalition Member, who
stand infront of their special display "Stop in the Name oflove". The
Pre-Natal Committee of the Coalition helped with the concept of the
theme and display. Mugs, bibs and magnets were also given to mothers who stopped by the Coalition's exhibit.
RIGHT - River Valley High School PRIDE group member, Cecilia
Goett, recently volunteered her time to help Greene place stickers
with anMobacco messages on magazines throughoutHolcerMedical
Center. Here, Greene observes while Goett places stickers on magazines in the Hospital's Radiology waiting room. For more information
·on tobacco use prevention, cessation, or on the Coalition itself contact Greene at .(7 40) 446-5940 .

..
Earnest Greene and Angel Roberts

.·
.;
•·
•
:

:
:

·.

Roberts-Greene engagement
RACINE- Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hill and Sons Farm and GreenRoberts of Racine announce the houses.
engagement and approaching
Maternal grandparents are
marriage of their daughter, Angel Ayward and Mae Jones of RaCine
Nicole, to Earnest Allen Greene, and the late Richard and Goldie
son of Reba Roush and the late Roberts; and the paternal grandDonald Green of Letart Falls.
parents are the late Clifford and
The bride-elect is a 1995 Ida Justice and George and Sybil
graduate of Southern High Greene.
School and a 1998 graduate of
An open church wedding will
Southeastern Business College. take place on July 29 at 5 p.m. in
Her fiance is a 1988 graduate of the afternoon at the home of
Southern High School. He is Bob and Sue Wood, Waid Sayre
currently employed at the Virgil Hill Road, Racine.

Family memllelli invinrl

POJ'v1EROY - Surmner
oorxlitioning!Or Mdg&gt; Marnuder

MONDAY
RIJTIAND-Anrual pi:ttr.,Ruihn:l Guden Club, Moo-

~seron wilt be'gi\m

GIESllR -The M.;g&gt;
County J.K.F.S. will w a £uniam; ro.moy ptq:run, begim
lyu pOti: M~ :d tre dubM~ 8:l:J ~in tre MHS lnre 7 pm Ham \WI be prolcHJy Open 10 aD boys an:l gjds, vdrl Thiae ~- 10
gt:rles 7 tlnoogh 12J\Il inleresled . ttkc a ro.mrl dish an:l iOOr CMTl

1UPPERS PLAINS
'l.icaOOn Bt1ie S&lt;::hoa, Tupptn

of Catm:;n:e l:x:md ttming,
7:)) an~Tl.le.'di)i

Pbin; Unirai.Melhodi;t Omtth.

''In tre Rice \Whjeu'', NB:ar

reiarro

Monday
duough FtidJy &lt;::lw;es fir aD :~!;"'
~

RACINE -The

~

Area Canrmmity ~
will nm:Tuerlly :1: 6:)) p.m &lt;1
Stu- Mill P.uk 1hre wilt be a
pOOuck dinne!:

.A look back at Major Downing- the (alligator pilot'
]

James
Sands
'-'VL.uMNIST

-

~

~ Mre.vill!opi9;0llnrl!df

One of the great old houses in
Middleport is the Downing House
on North Second Street. Among
the Downings who have lived there
was Major John B. Downing. He
and his wife were residents of the
Downing house from 1899 to
1914. The Downings ran an insurance business in a part of the
dwelling. Major Downing died on
March 4, 1914. Mrs. Downing was
the daughter of Gallipolis' Mr. and
Mrs. William C. Miller. It was Mr.
Miller who built the old Womeldorff-Thomas building, which
until it burned down a few years
ago, was at the corner of Third
Avenue and Court Street. Downing had other connections with
Gallipolis. He resided here brietlv
in the 1870's and was an active par~
ticipant in the Aeolian Society.
Major Downing was an accomplished violinist. People wl10 heard
him play in New York said that he
was th e finest violimst they had
ever heard. H1s wife was an almost
proficient pianist. She played the
piano forte. The two often played
together across a wtde range of ter. ritory.
The maJ Or's other connection to
Gallia County was through his
hunting prowess. He kept a small
cabm in C heshi re Township where
he often retreated with his bird
dogs and hunting companions.
But perhaps his g reatest cla im to
fa me was his 27 years as a pilot and
a capta in on the Ohio and Mississi ppi Rivers. MaJOr ·D owni ng was
qu ite familiar wit h Sam Clemens
· (Mark Twain ) and he is mentio ned
in Twam's book, "Life On Tht· MisSissippi."
Downing. born at Rucland an d
. educated at Marietta College,
· became a "r ub pilot" on the Ohio
: R1ver under h1s uncle Joh n Black.
· After some year~ on the Ohjo
R..iver. Downmg I !loved to Sr. Louis
where he be came a fi1ll- fledged
pil ot runnmg boats fmm Pittsburgh, tu N" "' O rk ' n' Mark
Twam tramt:d .1" .1 cub p1lo t, partly
under Dowmn g. The two became
f;ISt fr1 ends and corresponded up to

the death ofTwain.
1\vain once told the story that
gave Downing his name as the
"Alligator Pilot." '!Wain had come
into the pilot's house with twO
young women. Downing left the
\Yheel to talk_ to these .. ladies~
Downing had basically let the boat
steer itself. Twain noticed that the
boat was dr.t.wing more water than
it should have, a fact that usually
indicated the boat was too close to
the shore.
Downing did not want either
Twain or the womenfolk to know
that he was not totally in charge of
the situation. With an air of confidence, Downing turned the wheel
and said, "There is no problem for
we are right in the middle of the
channel." Just then the boat
bounced a little mainly because the
boat was in shallow water. But
Downing announced that this was
not the shore, but that they had
simply run over some alligators and
aU was fine. However at that point
on the river there were no alligators.
Twain does talk about alligator
boats in his book and mentions that
some years prior to the ·above episide. Downing was known as a real
"alligator pilot" Alligators were a
hazard to boats because they were
hard to detect.
Wrote Twain, "Of course there
were some few pilots that could
judge of alligator- water nearly as
well as they could of any other
kind, but they had to have a natural talent for it; it wasn't a tiling a
body could lea rn , you had io be
born with it. Let me see: There was
Ben Thornburg, and Beck Jolly, and
Squire Bell, and H orace [lixby, and ·
MaJOr Downing, and John Stevenson, and Billy Gordon and J1m
Brady, and George Ea ler, and Billy

IIndow Treatment

then took the alligators to N ew
Orleans. Back then all alligators
were government property. Only
the government was allowed to kill
the animal. Most government
issued shoes in the south were
made from alligato r hide. The shoes
lasted five years and were always
waterproof.
Downing's pride got him in
trouble one O[hcr time. He went
Into N ew O rleans and asked fo r a

good cigar. The man gave the
Maj or one or'Havana's finest ." But
the Major protested: "Surely you
have a finer cigar than that."
Downing laid down a five dollar
bill. The clerk reached under the
counter, flipped a cigar to Downing, took the bill and disappeared
intO the back room. Back then
even the best cigars only sold for 50
cents. Dqwning got a 50 cent cigar
for SS.

$CASH$
446-2404
Uc.n.. CC700077.000 •ncf 001
Llc~N

Cl 710041 000 •M 001

100 West Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
992.()461

Uc.,,. CC7000!7-0IIt
Uc- Cl750041-00e

20%-30%
• Sheers
• Verticals
• Yerosol1
• Wood Blind•
Z lncludei Installation
Residential or Con1me1rcial

Tope's quality

tarpet

Save

20%-25%
Expert Installation

CASH W/ APPROVED

furniture Galleries

Corner of Stco•• 11 Grspt Strnt
Galllpolls,Ohlo

•Interior Doelgn
• Window Treatment
• Waverly Dealer
• Fino Fumlture

446•0332

Cellular Serv•·ce Just
B I• gge r ex
D
B tte r
. e

,.-------------------------------------.

~

=

.
I

i

~~~""'ot
'
~

...

..

··••••••
••

•••
,••.

'"
••
••
•••.

••.
•

••
••
••
~·

e·

MONTHL.:
. minutes I month
75 min $20.95 month
145 min $29.95 month
275 min $39.95 month

t
••
•
•,;

•
~
••
••
•

••
•
••r
J

~

I.
~

•

Brown-Swain wedding

by the bride consisting of three
REEDSVILLE - Robin Lynn
pink roses with ivory lace and Brown and Jay Lyle Swain, both
beads.
of Reedsville, were married on
Wedding rings were exchanged Saturday,June 3, at their home on
by the couple, and a gold heart the Swain Farm before a small
necklace with a diamond was gathering of family and friends .
given to .Adenna. Angie Combs
T he bride is the daughter of
was a witness for the couple and Roger and Louise Brown of AshHeather Hively was the photog- land Ky. The g room is the son of
rapher.
Lyle Swain of Reed sville and the
The bride is the daug hter of late Mary Swain .
Earl and Be a Champ li n, of GalThe bride, escorted to the altar
lipoli s. the groom is the son of ·by her father, wo re an ivory wedLe slie Cox and Ella Cox, both of ding gown. Her mother se rved as
Gallipolis
her matron of honor. Flower girl
Th e couple reside in Gallipolis. was Victoria Goble and Shee na

; .: He's gone from t~e radio business in southeastern
, Ohio to the radio business in St. Louis, Missouri, and
: 'now Jared Stewart is making the switch to St. Louis
television. Stewart has been promoted to Sports
: Director at NCN -TV, the # I rated cable television
stationin_St.Louis_and a sta~on that is among the ton
live in cable stations in the United States.
· Jared began his career in broadcasting at WMPO
Radio just after he graduated from Meigs High
• School in 1994.While attending Ohio University and
: later the University of Rio Grande, Stewart worked
: as the sports director at WMPO, building the higb
:: school sports coverage into one of the best in South; eastern Ohio.
In August of 19Q8 Jared made a major decision in
i.O his broadcasting caree r. He decided to move to St.
::: Louis, Missouri and attend Broadcast Center St.
I: Louis, a technical school which focuses in hands on
• broadcast training. Stewart graduated from Broadcast
" Center in May 1999 and was immediately hired as a
~ news and sports reporter forWIL Radio, the .#2 rated
~ radio station in St. Louis. His duties at WIL mcluded
!• writing news, covering press comerences,
~
fi1eld
II
"' reporting at brealcing news stories, and covering the
•~ St. Louis Rants, Cardinals, and Blues. "When I was
" asked to cover the major sports teams, I jumped at the
• chance." Stewart says. "Little did I know that .I'd be
•: rubbing elbows and becoming an acquaintance with
: Super Bowl MVP Kurt Warner and the other guys on
·• the team." During his tenure at WIL Jared has had the
~ opportunity to meet and interview such perso nalities
: as Mark M cGwire, Shaquille O'Neal, George Fore : man, George W. Bush, Ed McMahon , Ashley Judd ,
: Billy Graham and more.
~L But keeping his overall goal of someday working

·-...
••

9{p.i Casli till P~tlay?

216 Upper River Rd. .
Gallipolis, Ohio
" , Mile south of
he Sliver Bridge

'

!

Youngblood- all A 1 alligator-pilots.
They could tell alligator-water as
far as another Christian could tell
whisky.A good alligator-pilot could
get fifteen hundred dollars a
month. At night other boats had to
lay up, but alligator- pilots never laid
up for anything but fog."
In the early days of the Mississippi. the river was dredged no t so
much from sand as it is today but
from alligators. The dredge boats

Holley-Cox wedding

Area man named NCN-TV sports director

fURNITURI GAlURII~

DOWNING HOUSE - The Downing house in Middleport was home to
MaJor Dowmng from 1899-1914. The major was a riverboat captain
and prlot. He once trained Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) about boat·
rng on the Mississippi River.
·

Robin and Jay Swain

GALLIPOLIS- Sherri Holley and Lester "Pete" Cox
exchanged wedding vows in the
bandstand at the city park in Gallipolis on July 8, 2000 at 10:30
a.m . The ceremony was performed by Pastor John Jackso n of
. the New Life Lutheran Church.
The couple exchanged vows to
each other and to Adenna Holley,
,,daughter of the bride, that they
. had written for the special occasion. Adenna then said vows to
her mother and stepfather, assisted by Pastor Jackson .
Adenna held a bm1quet made

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SUNDAY
d!):6 pm at tre !nne ctDnrn
sluJkl amm Mooclay\
'IUESDAY
~ sem:e""' ~begim
POMEROY- Poplar and SaD Da\m]enkin;,Rltluri nrering w!-at infOrtmtion on at6pm
POMEROY - OJamber

St!re Rrure 554. Suixlrj( (d)
pm l'IOOWn ofi..etut,W.V... wilt
be ~Jdm .Ellwickis 1U10C

Sherrl and Lester CoK and Adenna Holley

for ESPN in his mind, Jared decided it was time to make th e switch
to television. And in July 1999 he
started working part- time at NCN
TV as a freelance reporter and
photogrnpher while holding down
his job at WlL. Now, one year later,
Stewart has been promoted to fulltime Sports Director, where his
duties will be to head up St. louis'
Stewart
top coverer of high school sports,
as well as report and anchor the sportscasts and to do
play-by-play telecasts of St. Lo uis high schoo l foo tball
and basketball games. "I know that it's not ESI'N. but
it's a start." says Stewart. "Everyone has to start somewhere and I've been blessed eno ugh to get to start my
television caree r in a city where sports is abundant. "
Jared is joining News Director Randy Gardner and
the 14 time national award winning news team at
NCN. "We feel lucky to be adding Jared to our staff."
says Gardner. "He is a hard worker and I know that
someday you 'll be seeing him on national televisio n,
but for now we're going to take full adva ntage of his
skills."
Stewart is also getting the ch.Jnce to continuing his
love for coaching. His St. Louts Knights 12 and 13
year old baseball team is currently 9 and 3 and in second place at the Florissant Area Athletic Associatio n .
Jared is the son of Mike and Sharon Stewart of
Middleport and the grandson of Do nna G laze of
Middleport and the b\e Glenn Glaze; and Ross Jr.
and Trudy Stewart of Pomeroy and the late Wanda
Stewart . If you wou ld like to drop Jared a line, his
mailing address is: 2869-M San tiago Dr. Florissant,
MO 63033.

Gilmore registered the guests and
accepted gifts for the cou ple. The
members of the bridal party were
in black, gray, ivory and red attire.
and ivory and red roses were the
wedding flowers.
luke Milliron was best man
for the g room. They wore black
tu xedos with red vests. Perform- ·
in g th e ce rC'mony was Tere sa
WJldeck of the Fellowship
C burch of the
N aza rene .
R eedsvill e.
A reception was held at the
couple 's home following then
wedd1 ng.

MORE LOCAL NEW~.
MORE LOCAL FOLK~.
Subcribe today:
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Jfeother
In tfie Scottish
:Higfilands,
In tfie cold bitten
JVortfi Sea Islands,
'Wfiere
growtfi is in defiance,
Sprouts witfi assurance,
'T'fiis elegant :Heatfier;
Sturdy as love,
JV ever wavered by tfie
'Force ofcrosswinds,
Spreads
'(fiousand delicate aT' IIlS ,
•To fill tfie wasteland
'1.-0itfi life; and;
•Tfie lncez c of belljlo1vers .

Holzer Medical Center Wellness Department

SENIORS 60+

Join us at oltr Mobile Unit in the
Gallipolis City Park
~
July 27 and 28
(Thursday and Friday)

9 am until12 Noon both days

•

'ii5:Halesfi (Patel

Lipid Profile and Personal Well ness Profile
Lipid Profile Testing consists of'
Total Cholesterol, HDL Cholesterol, LDL Cholesterol, Triglyce r:ides, Glucose
(MUST BE FASTING 12 HOURS BEFORE TEST EXCEPT WATER
AND SCHEDULED MEDICINES)

Provided at no charge

Call446-5313 before July 24~ for an appointment!
Partially funded by a grant from Area Agency on Aging District 7

ical Center, believes walking can
have more far.reaching advantages. "In our four-month study
that compared the effects of exercise and medication on depression, we . found that a walking
program worked as weD as an
antidepressants. Medication was
faster, but the end results were
nearly identi ca l."
Dr. William E. Kraus of Duke
says walking, even at a moderate
pace, redu ces body fat . A recent
study by Kraus found that men
and women who walked cut
their body fat by more than 4
percent in only three months.
However, notes N ew Choices,
since muscle weighs more than
fat, your weight may not change,
although your silhouette will. A
higher muscle-to-fat ratio confers another advantage: Muscle
burns more calories than fat
does, even while you sleep.

Co mplt111 en ts Of

Lee JVewell
:'!dmi1w of''I'o&lt;'ll)'

�Sunday, July 23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point'Pieasant, WY

: Page C4 • 6unbap 11:imrt: -6mtintl

Sunday, July 23, 2000

.
i;&gt;unb.lp l!':1mrs -li&gt;rntmrl • Page CS

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

Protestant split on gay issues called worst in qecades

Destiny and Shane Eades

Anjeanette and Desroy Grant

·Jeffirs-Grant wedding
Jim and Dorothy Lanier Whittington

Whittington ·5Oth anniversary
GALLIPOLIS- Jim and
Dorothy Lanier Whittington will
celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary at an open house
reception to be held July 30,
"2000, from 2-5 p.m. at the Gallipolis Church of Christ in Christian Union Fellowship Hall. The
couple was married July 30,1950,
at the home of Shirley Lanier, the
bride's mother.

The celebration is being hosted
by their three daughters Connie
Parsons, Cathy Sisson and Judy
Eblin.
Jim and Dorothy have nine
grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren.
The couple requests gifts to be
omitted. All friends and family are
invited to join in the celebration.

FAMILY
COLUMN

Fresh green beans
a snap to store

Becky

GALLIPOLIS -The garden is
starting to produce the tasty gems
of summer. Green beans are a
favorite staple for many enthusi~-~asti~rdenei.'S~What's the- b~.,,~i
way to store or preserve them?
Like most fresh vegetables, you want, or just leave small beans
green beans (or "snap beans") are whole.
at their highest quality when
Blanch the beans in boiling
eaten very soon after being har- water for three minutes. Cool by ·
vested.
rinsing again in cold water.
If there's just too much there to
When packaging beans, make
eat at one sitting, cool them sure you use moisture-proof,
immediately. Put the beans in a vapor-proof packaging designed
plastic bag in the refrigerator so for freezing. Examples are "can or
they're stored in humid yet cold freeze" glass jars, plastic freezing
conditions. This way, their quality containers, heavyweight alushouldn't be too adversely affect- minum foil, plastic-coated freezer
ed for five days or so.
paper, and polyethylene wrap and
Harvesting the beans at the bags.'
right time is important, too.To eat
When using hal(' , squeeze air
them as green beans, they should from bags before sealing - leavbe picked when they're render, ing air in the package can lead to
before the developing seeds cause flavor loss and freezer burn .When
the pods to bulge.
using rigid contain ers, leave a
If the beans are allowed to half-inch space at the top for
mature fully, the pods can be expanSion
dried and the developed seeds
A half~cup of green beans conused in other bean dishes.
tains about 20 to 25 calories and
Green beam at'e easy to freeze is a fair sou rce of vitamins A and
for use later. For the highest qual- C, calcium, ![On, potassium and
ity, they should be processed and fiber. Seasonings that go well with
frozen within a few hours after g reen beans include basil, dill,
picking.
marjoram , nutmeg, savory and
First, remove dirt, bacteria and thyme.
any pesticide residue by rinsing
(&amp;cky Collins is Gallia Co11111y's
the beans thoroughly in cold ExtemiotJ agefll for fa mily a11d COII water severa l time s. Snap the tips mmer scie11ces, Of1io Srarc Ullivem·off and cu t or break into the size ty.)

Collins

POINT PLEASANT
Anjeanette O'L eatha Jeffers and
Desroy Dudley Grant were united in marriage M'ay 27, 2000,
durin g an afternoon church ceremony at First Church of God,
Point Pleasant. Rev. Gene C urtiss
officiated the ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Truitt and
the late Emit Jeffers of Grimm's
Landing. Her grandparents are
Richard and Lenora Grimm of
Grimm's Landing and Faye and
the late Alby Jeffers of Buffalo.
The g room is the so of Mr.
and · Mrs . Dudley Grant of
Trelawny, Ja!paica , West Indies.
His grandparents are Carmelita
Co llins and the late Mr. Collins
of Falmouth and the late Mr. and
Mrs. Gra nt of Jamaica , West
Indies.
Music was performed by
Lenora Grimm, grandmother of
the bride. The bride was attended
by maid of hqnor, Destiny Jeffers,
sister of the bride, ~nd hostess,
Seinna- Ann Grant, sister of the
groom.
Serving the groom as best man
was Fabian Brown, friend of the

Jeffers-Eades wedding

groom, and ushers, Rene Gonzalez and Bred Keating, also friends
of the · groom.
Chelsea J effe rs and Erykah
Andrew were flower girls. Sam
Newman was ring bearer. Flow- "
ers were done by Lisa Reedy,
aunt of the bride.
The new M rs. Grant is a graduate of Buffalo High School and
the University of Rio Grande
with a bachelors degree in history. She is currently pursuing her
reaching· certifi cation at Rio
Grande.
Her husband is a graduate of
William Knibb Memorial High
School and the University of Rio
Grande with a bachelors degree
in computer operations. H e is
pursuing a career in the computer field.
Following a honeymoon in
Montego Bay, Jamaica , the couple resides in Columbus, Ohio.

POINT PLEASANT - Destiny
Sue Jeffers and Shane Lee Eades
were united in marriage July 8,2000,
in an outdoor ceremony at Krodel
Park, Point Pleasant, with R ev. Gene
C urtiss officiating.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wilson Truitt and the late
Emit Jeffers of Grimms Landing.
Her gr.mdparents are Richard and
Lenora Grimm of Grimms Landing
and Fay and rl1e late Alby Jeffers of
Buffalo.
The gmom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Eades of Grimms
Landing. His grandparents are the
late Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Eades, Mr.
Musgrave and the late Wilma Lockmiller.
Music w:Ls performed by Bruce
Hill, friend of the groom.
The bride was attended by
matmn of honor AJ~eanett Grant,
sister of the bride, and bridesmaids
Kathy Buckner, friend of the bride,

In an effort to provide our
readership with current news,
t he Sunday Times-Sentinel will
not accept weddings af(er 90
days from the date of the event.
Weddings submitted after the
90-day deadline will appear
during the week in The Daily
Sentinel

and

the

Gallipolis

Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other
news articles in th e society sec tion must be submitted within
60 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must be submitted
within 60 days of the occurrence.
All

m ate rial

submitted for

• Gr-a11t ~alactlon of'
Outdoor- ~ur-nltur-e

• Qtcud _gc:dectlon of _gohu:
~ohl's: ,gtartlng At •gggoo
•10 BedtOorn QtOups:.! ..
BedtOorn _gtattfng At '999 00
• Recll nets: - B5 In _gtock
Recllnets: ,gtattlng At '29900
• ,glrnrnons: Be11uty Red and
Backcate MattteJH: _get~
Bedding _gets: ,gtattlng At '289°0

Everything In The Store
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publication is su bject to editing.

$10° 0 Down $10° 0 Month

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*With Approved Credit

Subcribe today:
446-2342 or 992-2156

Install window air co nd)tione-rs on the
sh ade side of the . hou se for more effi c ient
coo ling , o r make your own shade by pla ci ng

.

'

from Page Cl
also stop in th e '70s where listeners will experience some of that
decade's greatest hits, including
those from the Doobi e Brothers,
the Eagles. ond the O]ays.
Formed in 198 I , Phil Dirt and
th e Dozers have performed for
crowds from New England to
Hawaii, the Caribbean to Toronto, guiding their audiences
through a nostalgic journey of
music of the '50s, '60s and '70s.
The mu sicians, a five-member
group based in Columbus, use
_li.eyboard, saxophone, flute, guitar,
·percussion, and harmonica to
enhance their vocal talent in a

ter, Polly, and me to say in stead:
"Forgive my domg w hat was
wrong,
"And make me pure and wise
an d strong."

Forgive
from PageCI
Brian's death . She says they are
moved by his story and the fact
that he was so innocl' nL
'" I am sure Brian never thought
they would actu ally kill him;· she said. '"He wouldn't have thought
there could be such evil."
She also tells the children how
important it is to forgive.
· '' I tell them th ere is nothing that
you can't forgive. Free yourself
from anger and bi tterness. God is
so. good. He doesn't take ..way
pain, but you get a kind of peac e."
The university will name its
football fi d d Memorial Field in
memory of Aaron and Bri an at a

Muha \\•ants man.:· rhan to let her

son's killers know she forgives
them. She wants them to change
from bein g evtl to bei ng good.

Use a timer to reg11late yo11r air
conditioner. Set it so tire 11nit t11ms on
30 mimlles before yo11 get /lome so
rooms are cool on arrival.
ha s a disposable fi lt er, change it monthly during wa rm weat h er.
• Use a tim er t o regu lat e your :u r conditioner. Set it 'iO th e u nit tu rn s o n 30 minute s
b efore you get ho mt! so roo 1ns are coo l on
ar r ival.
o Mi "
the wind -c htll factor? Team up with a
fan. A fari creates a breeze, ond a table or a
floor fan p laced next to on air con ditioner wi ll
d~tect cooled air to where you want it, while a
cei ling fan w ill distribute it even ly th rough ou t
the room .

from PageCl

so mu ch:· Muha sJid. "The one
thing that every fomi ly wants is
tha t their loved one be remembered."

an aw n ing over th e unit, adv ises th e Au gust

issue of Family C ircle magazine.
Kee p cool with these tips :
o Prune shru bs and ot h e r vegetatio n arou nd
th e ai r-condi ti o ning unit.
o Indoo rs, keep wind ow coverings and o th e r
furm sh ing clear of the vents so air ca n fl ow
freely in to the room.
o A clean filter mean s a bett er-running air
cond itioner tha t uses less e lec tri ci t y. C lean the
filter once a month by first tur ning o ff the
unit, then washing the fi lter in the sink. Let it
dry thoroughly before reinstalling . If yo ur unit

Meigs

ceremony ...\•hen dasses resume.
" It is a small gesture, but it means

Stay cool with air-conditioner enhancers
FOR AP SPECIAL FEATURES

LOCAL ELVIS IMPERSONATOR Dwight Icenhower will give a "Salute to
Elvis" in a special performance for fairgoers in the hi ll show ring on
Thursday night.

Abby

NEW DIMENSIONS
BY FAMILY CIRCLE MAGAZINE

and Tracy Eades, s!Ster o f the groom.
Serving d1e groo m as lx'&gt;t man
was Russell Eades, f.othcr of the
gmom. Ushers were Nick Wilkenson, friend of the groom, and RJ.
Eades, brother of the lt!UOI11.
Courtney and Payton Hatfield
were flower girls. Ian Burdett was
ring bearer.
Flowers were do ne by Lisa
R i'edy, aunt of the bride. Soen1n g as
hostess was Terryn 1-ligginbotham,
cousin of the bride.
The new Mrs. Eades is a graduate
of Buffalo High Sc hool and the
C harleston School of Beauty C ulture. She is currently employed at
First Hair Care in Winfield.
Her husb:m d
!S
currentl y
employed at Adkins General Repair
and Mobile Home Service, Midway.
WVa.
Following a honeymoon to Myrdc Beach, S.C., the couple plans to
make their home in Robertsb1.1rg.

Financing
Available

•

Store Hours
Mon-Sat 9:00 • 5:00
Fri. 9:00 • 7:00

•'justice is not pun ing someone
away,'' sht.' said. ''JustiCl' is replacin g
the g9od tha t they rook o11 t of th e
world by their evil actions. Bna n
and Aaron would have done a lot
of good"
Muha said police have ro ld her
not to t1l k with suspects Yarbrough
and Hcrnng unti l alter their tm l&lt;.
She ~1ys she doesn't know what
she w ill say the first time they
meet , but she thinks it will take a
w hile before they believe she r&lt;·ally forgives th em.
"Thi~ won't be a one-timl'
thing," she said. "We will have to
prove to them that th.is is not a
.,lll ll t."

three-decade nostalgia show sure
to please Mei gs County fairgoers.
Other entertainment
On Thursday ni ght at ·the
grandstand, thre e Meigs County
bands will be featured in a "Jam"
at 8 p.m . .
Performin g will be Blitzkrieg,
BC and the Longhairs, and Bab
Habit.
.The popular ElviS imp ersonator Dwight Ic enhower of
Langsville will do a "Salute to
Elvis" in the hill show ring at 8
p.m . on Thursday.
Entertainment on the hill stage
will include a talent show at 8
p.m . o n Tuesday, and a performance by the Big Bend Cloggers
under the direction ofVivian May
at 8 p.m . on the dosing night of
the fair.

" Perhaps other parents and
grandparents would like to say
this with their little ones. Do you
like thi s? My father's name was
Casper Schenk of Des Moines,
Iowa. -- PEGGY SMITH,
ARIZONA CITY, ARIZ.
DEAR PEGGY: I like it very
much. Your father was a sensible
and sensitive man .

NEW YORK (AP) ~ Not
since the civil rights era of 19541965 have major mainline Protestant denominations been so
deeply divided on an issue as they
are today about how to address
homosexuality.
So observes the dean of church
historians, retired University of
Chicago professor Martin E.
M~rty, who adds while civil rights
mainly roiled Southern churches,
disputes over gay issues cut across
denominations nationwide.
" The Christian church has
always taken 200 to 300 years to
settle things: the Trinity, sacraments, popes versus councils, the
Enlightenment. Now we have all
these changes in sexuality, plus
authority and autonomy tssues,
and the poor churches have to
take 30 years to settle what normally takes 300;' Marry says.
C hristianity 's tradition against
homosexual behavior is not
debated in the evangelical and
black Protestant churches, any
more than it is among Roman
Catholic and Orthodox bisliops.
Views have diverged sharply
among
mainline
Protestant
denominations - the dominant
Colonial churches and younger
ones allied with them in ecumenical organizations, what Marty calls
"the front-line churches," buffeted
and shaped by wider U.S. culture.
During the past nine weeks,
three major mainline churches
with 14.4 million members have
had these showdowns:
o In May, the United Methodist
Church's General Conference
voted by a 2-to-1 majority to
retain a ban on blessing ceremonies for homosexual couples,
almost guaranteeing future disobedience and church trials. Delegates opposed openly gay ·and
lesbian clergy by a similar margin.
• In late June, the Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.) General Assembly gave narrow approval (5 1:6
percent) to a Methodist-style ban
on same-sex ceremonies. To
become law, the measure must
now be ratified by 87 of the
chu-rch's 173 regional units.
o The Episcopal Church's General Convention overwhelmingly
endorsed a policy acknowledging
there are Episcopal couples, "acting in good conscience," in lifelong committed relationships
ou!Slae-marriage that should
receive
"prayerful
support,
encouragement and pastoral
care." The wording covers both
gay and lesbian couples and
unwed heterosexuals, prompting
new warnings from conservatives
that toleration of homosexual
behavior will unglue Christian
sexual morality as whole.
The rabbis of Judaism's liberal

a

H erring's trial has been sched- horrible story ,is being told;' Muha
uled for Aug. 16 and Yarbmugh's said.
School officials were hoping the
Sept. 13.
&lt;
Even though she someday wants "trials would be completed during
to know exactly what happened to summer to avoid disrupting the
her son and w hy, " I can't imagine studies of the vicnms' friends.
being there at the trial while that

Holzer Heal
Hotline

Reform branch decided at a
dosed-door meeti~ that samesex couples are "worthy of affirmation . through appropriate Jewish ritual;' although the term marriage was avoided. That created a
breach between the Reform and
Reconstructionist branches on
the left, and the Conservative and
Orthodox branches that preserve
traditional opposition.
There's a siritilar split among the
mainline Protestant denominations, despite their allinity on
many other topics.
The Episcopal caucus for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered members says the denomination is moving '"toward fi1ll
acceptance and celebration" of
relationships outside heterosexual
marriage. That would align the
Episcopal Church with the United Church of Christ.
The United Church has long
promoted toleration of same-sex
couples and in 1983 declared that
sexual orientation should not be a
barrier to clergy ordination. The
United Methodist Church and
others with a conservative stand
on ordination agree, but also insist
that homosexual clergy remain
celibate, while the United Church
policy leaves that open.
In the United Church, regional
bodies are free to allow or to -forbid homosexual clergy and ceremonies, and Episcopal Church
dioceses operate with the ,.,ne
local option. As the American
Anglican Council, a conservative
Episcopal caucus, puts it, "two
strikingly different churches exist

the indicator. the other side . has
something ·te look forward to, we
agree. But we think it's an inappropriate tool for measuring what
the chu rch will do."
"They're betting on culture.
We're betting on Scripture."
Some observers say the liberal
view wi ll triumph eve ntually
because of growing su pport from
mainhne agency staffers, semi nary
and coU,•ge tcac hen; and you nger
clergy But th e Rev. R obert Bullock of Rich mond, Va .. editor of
the moderate Presbyterian Outlook, which h.S taken no stand on
homosexuality, sees the opposite
arnong active lay members.
'' Those who arc joining the
church, on whom the church is
bein g built. tend to be more traditional in their under~tanding of
morality and sexuality," he says.
and the conservative congregations are growmg ... It seems the
younge r gencr:1tion. ar a time of
moral confusion Jnd t•ven anarchy
m cu1ture, is looking for J dear
standard."

under the same roof." '
Other mainline denomin~tions
that agree with the Methodists in
activitY.
opposing
same-sex
include the 5.2 million- member
Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America.
Presbyterians will be monopolizing the spotlight on sexual policy. Regional meetings running
through April will vote on the bill
to prohibit same-sex ceremonies.
Next June, the national assembly
will decide whether to allow clergy and lay officers with same-sex
partners.
In all denominations, the conservatives stand on the prohibitions in the Bible. The Rev. Laird
Stuart of San Francisco, co-leader
of the Covenant Network which
is working for Presbyterian
change, counters that Christians
have altered their understanding
of biblical teaching on other matters like · slavery, divorce and
women clergy.
"[n our society," Stuart says,
"there is a growing intolerance
toward intolerance."
The Rev. Parker Williamson of
Lenoir, N.C., editor of the conservative Presbyterian Layman, essentially agrees but is confident of
vicroty. "If you make the culture
~

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j\RBORS rAT G1\LLIPOLIS
'

Cordially In~Jite You to
1\ttend Our

Open House
Showcasing Our
Reno~Jations and New
Special Needs _Unit

_J

My Mom gives me apples for snacks!

6am
until
2am

. GalLi.poli.s, Ohi.o
A
N

.t
'·

She says she is my champion - I'm not sure what she
means, but I know she takes good care of me! If you
need help being your child's "champion", call the
Holzer Health Hotline where a Holzer Medical Center
RN is ready to answer your health care concerns.

1-800-462-5255

Ask your physician about medication concerns

p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
170 Pinecrest Ot·i.vo

•
7
days a
week

July 25, 2000
2:00

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ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, Ohio-4563 1
740-446-7112

�Sunday, July 23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point'Pieasant, WY

: Page C4 • 6unbap 11:imrt: -6mtintl

Sunday, July 23, 2000

.
i;&gt;unb.lp l!':1mrs -li&gt;rntmrl • Page CS

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

Protestant split on gay issues called worst in qecades

Destiny and Shane Eades

Anjeanette and Desroy Grant

·Jeffirs-Grant wedding
Jim and Dorothy Lanier Whittington

Whittington ·5Oth anniversary
GALLIPOLIS- Jim and
Dorothy Lanier Whittington will
celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary at an open house
reception to be held July 30,
"2000, from 2-5 p.m. at the Gallipolis Church of Christ in Christian Union Fellowship Hall. The
couple was married July 30,1950,
at the home of Shirley Lanier, the
bride's mother.

The celebration is being hosted
by their three daughters Connie
Parsons, Cathy Sisson and Judy
Eblin.
Jim and Dorothy have nine
grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren.
The couple requests gifts to be
omitted. All friends and family are
invited to join in the celebration.

FAMILY
COLUMN

Fresh green beans
a snap to store

Becky

GALLIPOLIS -The garden is
starting to produce the tasty gems
of summer. Green beans are a
favorite staple for many enthusi~-~asti~rdenei.'S~What's the- b~.,,~i
way to store or preserve them?
Like most fresh vegetables, you want, or just leave small beans
green beans (or "snap beans") are whole.
at their highest quality when
Blanch the beans in boiling
eaten very soon after being har- water for three minutes. Cool by ·
vested.
rinsing again in cold water.
If there's just too much there to
When packaging beans, make
eat at one sitting, cool them sure you use moisture-proof,
immediately. Put the beans in a vapor-proof packaging designed
plastic bag in the refrigerator so for freezing. Examples are "can or
they're stored in humid yet cold freeze" glass jars, plastic freezing
conditions. This way, their quality containers, heavyweight alushouldn't be too adversely affect- minum foil, plastic-coated freezer
ed for five days or so.
paper, and polyethylene wrap and
Harvesting the beans at the bags.'
right time is important, too.To eat
When using hal(' , squeeze air
them as green beans, they should from bags before sealing - leavbe picked when they're render, ing air in the package can lead to
before the developing seeds cause flavor loss and freezer burn .When
the pods to bulge.
using rigid contain ers, leave a
If the beans are allowed to half-inch space at the top for
mature fully, the pods can be expanSion
dried and the developed seeds
A half~cup of green beans conused in other bean dishes.
tains about 20 to 25 calories and
Green beam at'e easy to freeze is a fair sou rce of vitamins A and
for use later. For the highest qual- C, calcium, ![On, potassium and
ity, they should be processed and fiber. Seasonings that go well with
frozen within a few hours after g reen beans include basil, dill,
picking.
marjoram , nutmeg, savory and
First, remove dirt, bacteria and thyme.
any pesticide residue by rinsing
(&amp;cky Collins is Gallia Co11111y's
the beans thoroughly in cold ExtemiotJ agefll for fa mily a11d COII water severa l time s. Snap the tips mmer scie11ces, Of1io Srarc Ullivem·off and cu t or break into the size ty.)

Collins

POINT PLEASANT
Anjeanette O'L eatha Jeffers and
Desroy Dudley Grant were united in marriage M'ay 27, 2000,
durin g an afternoon church ceremony at First Church of God,
Point Pleasant. Rev. Gene C urtiss
officiated the ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Truitt and
the late Emit Jeffers of Grimm's
Landing. Her grandparents are
Richard and Lenora Grimm of
Grimm's Landing and Faye and
the late Alby Jeffers of Buffalo.
The g room is the so of Mr.
and · Mrs . Dudley Grant of
Trelawny, Ja!paica , West Indies.
His grandparents are Carmelita
Co llins and the late Mr. Collins
of Falmouth and the late Mr. and
Mrs. Gra nt of Jamaica , West
Indies.
Music was performed by
Lenora Grimm, grandmother of
the bride. The bride was attended
by maid of hqnor, Destiny Jeffers,
sister of the bride, ~nd hostess,
Seinna- Ann Grant, sister of the
groom.
Serving the groom as best man
was Fabian Brown, friend of the

Jeffers-Eades wedding

groom, and ushers, Rene Gonzalez and Bred Keating, also friends
of the · groom.
Chelsea J effe rs and Erykah
Andrew were flower girls. Sam
Newman was ring bearer. Flow- "
ers were done by Lisa Reedy,
aunt of the bride.
The new M rs. Grant is a graduate of Buffalo High School and
the University of Rio Grande
with a bachelors degree in history. She is currently pursuing her
reaching· certifi cation at Rio
Grande.
Her husband is a graduate of
William Knibb Memorial High
School and the University of Rio
Grande with a bachelors degree
in computer operations. H e is
pursuing a career in the computer field.
Following a honeymoon in
Montego Bay, Jamaica , the couple resides in Columbus, Ohio.

POINT PLEASANT - Destiny
Sue Jeffers and Shane Lee Eades
were united in marriage July 8,2000,
in an outdoor ceremony at Krodel
Park, Point Pleasant, with R ev. Gene
C urtiss officiating.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wilson Truitt and the late
Emit Jeffers of Grimms Landing.
Her gr.mdparents are Richard and
Lenora Grimm of Grimms Landing
and Fay and rl1e late Alby Jeffers of
Buffalo.
The gmom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Eades of Grimms
Landing. His grandparents are the
late Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Eades, Mr.
Musgrave and the late Wilma Lockmiller.
Music w:Ls performed by Bruce
Hill, friend of the groom.
The bride was attended by
matmn of honor AJ~eanett Grant,
sister of the bride, and bridesmaids
Kathy Buckner, friend of the bride,

In an effort to provide our
readership with current news,
t he Sunday Times-Sentinel will
not accept weddings af(er 90
days from the date of the event.
Weddings submitted after the
90-day deadline will appear
during the week in The Daily
Sentinel

and

the

Gallipolis

Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other
news articles in th e society sec tion must be submitted within
60 days of occurrence.
All birthdays must be submitted
within 60 days of the occurrence.
All

m ate rial

submitted for

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Install window air co nd)tione-rs on the
sh ade side of the . hou se for more effi c ient
coo ling , o r make your own shade by pla ci ng

.

'

from Page Cl
also stop in th e '70s where listeners will experience some of that
decade's greatest hits, including
those from the Doobi e Brothers,
the Eagles. ond the O]ays.
Formed in 198 I , Phil Dirt and
th e Dozers have performed for
crowds from New England to
Hawaii, the Caribbean to Toronto, guiding their audiences
through a nostalgic journey of
music of the '50s, '60s and '70s.
The mu sicians, a five-member
group based in Columbus, use
_li.eyboard, saxophone, flute, guitar,
·percussion, and harmonica to
enhance their vocal talent in a

ter, Polly, and me to say in stead:
"Forgive my domg w hat was
wrong,
"And make me pure and wise
an d strong."

Forgive
from PageCI
Brian's death . She says they are
moved by his story and the fact
that he was so innocl' nL
'" I am sure Brian never thought
they would actu ally kill him;· she said. '"He wouldn't have thought
there could be such evil."
She also tells the children how
important it is to forgive.
· '' I tell them th ere is nothing that
you can't forgive. Free yourself
from anger and bi tterness. God is
so. good. He doesn't take ..way
pain, but you get a kind of peac e."
The university will name its
football fi d d Memorial Field in
memory of Aaron and Bri an at a

Muha \\•ants man.:· rhan to let her

son's killers know she forgives
them. She wants them to change
from bein g evtl to bei ng good.

Use a timer to reg11late yo11r air
conditioner. Set it so tire 11nit t11ms on
30 mimlles before yo11 get /lome so
rooms are cool on arrival.
ha s a disposable fi lt er, change it monthly during wa rm weat h er.
• Use a tim er t o regu lat e your :u r conditioner. Set it 'iO th e u nit tu rn s o n 30 minute s
b efore you get ho mt! so roo 1ns are coo l on
ar r ival.
o Mi "
the wind -c htll factor? Team up with a
fan. A fari creates a breeze, ond a table or a
floor fan p laced next to on air con ditioner wi ll
d~tect cooled air to where you want it, while a
cei ling fan w ill distribute it even ly th rough ou t
the room .

from PageCl

so mu ch:· Muha sJid. "The one
thing that every fomi ly wants is
tha t their loved one be remembered."

an aw n ing over th e unit, adv ises th e Au gust

issue of Family C ircle magazine.
Kee p cool with these tips :
o Prune shru bs and ot h e r vegetatio n arou nd
th e ai r-condi ti o ning unit.
o Indoo rs, keep wind ow coverings and o th e r
furm sh ing clear of the vents so air ca n fl ow
freely in to the room.
o A clean filter mean s a bett er-running air
cond itioner tha t uses less e lec tri ci t y. C lean the
filter once a month by first tur ning o ff the
unit, then washing the fi lter in the sink. Let it
dry thoroughly before reinstalling . If yo ur unit

Meigs

ceremony ...\•hen dasses resume.
" It is a small gesture, but it means

Stay cool with air-conditioner enhancers
FOR AP SPECIAL FEATURES

LOCAL ELVIS IMPERSONATOR Dwight Icenhower will give a "Salute to
Elvis" in a special performance for fairgoers in the hi ll show ring on
Thursday night.

Abby

NEW DIMENSIONS
BY FAMILY CIRCLE MAGAZINE

and Tracy Eades, s!Ster o f the groom.
Serving d1e groo m as lx'&gt;t man
was Russell Eades, f.othcr of the
gmom. Ushers were Nick Wilkenson, friend of the groom, and RJ.
Eades, brother of the lt!UOI11.
Courtney and Payton Hatfield
were flower girls. Ian Burdett was
ring bearer.
Flowers were do ne by Lisa
R i'edy, aunt of the bride. Soen1n g as
hostess was Terryn 1-ligginbotham,
cousin of the bride.
The new Mrs. Eades is a graduate
of Buffalo High Sc hool and the
C harleston School of Beauty C ulture. She is currently employed at
First Hair Care in Winfield.
Her husb:m d
!S
currentl y
employed at Adkins General Repair
and Mobile Home Service, Midway.
WVa.
Following a honeymoon to Myrdc Beach, S.C., the couple plans to
make their home in Robertsb1.1rg.

Financing
Available

•

Store Hours
Mon-Sat 9:00 • 5:00
Fri. 9:00 • 7:00

•'justice is not pun ing someone
away,'' sht.' said. ''JustiCl' is replacin g
the g9od tha t they rook o11 t of th e
world by their evil actions. Bna n
and Aaron would have done a lot
of good"
Muha said police have ro ld her
not to t1l k with suspects Yarbrough
and Hcrnng unti l alter their tm l&lt;.
She ~1ys she doesn't know what
she w ill say the first time they
meet , but she thinks it will take a
w hile before they believe she r&lt;·ally forgives th em.
"Thi~ won't be a one-timl'
thing," she said. "We will have to
prove to them that th.is is not a
.,lll ll t."

three-decade nostalgia show sure
to please Mei gs County fairgoers.
Other entertainment
On Thursday ni ght at ·the
grandstand, thre e Meigs County
bands will be featured in a "Jam"
at 8 p.m . .
Performin g will be Blitzkrieg,
BC and the Longhairs, and Bab
Habit.
.The popular ElviS imp ersonator Dwight Ic enhower of
Langsville will do a "Salute to
Elvis" in the hill show ring at 8
p.m . on Thursday.
Entertainment on the hill stage
will include a talent show at 8
p.m . o n Tuesday, and a performance by the Big Bend Cloggers
under the direction ofVivian May
at 8 p.m . on the dosing night of
the fair.

" Perhaps other parents and
grandparents would like to say
this with their little ones. Do you
like thi s? My father's name was
Casper Schenk of Des Moines,
Iowa. -- PEGGY SMITH,
ARIZONA CITY, ARIZ.
DEAR PEGGY: I like it very
much. Your father was a sensible
and sensitive man .

NEW YORK (AP) ~ Not
since the civil rights era of 19541965 have major mainline Protestant denominations been so
deeply divided on an issue as they
are today about how to address
homosexuality.
So observes the dean of church
historians, retired University of
Chicago professor Martin E.
M~rty, who adds while civil rights
mainly roiled Southern churches,
disputes over gay issues cut across
denominations nationwide.
" The Christian church has
always taken 200 to 300 years to
settle things: the Trinity, sacraments, popes versus councils, the
Enlightenment. Now we have all
these changes in sexuality, plus
authority and autonomy tssues,
and the poor churches have to
take 30 years to settle what normally takes 300;' Marry says.
C hristianity 's tradition against
homosexual behavior is not
debated in the evangelical and
black Protestant churches, any
more than it is among Roman
Catholic and Orthodox bisliops.
Views have diverged sharply
among
mainline
Protestant
denominations - the dominant
Colonial churches and younger
ones allied with them in ecumenical organizations, what Marty calls
"the front-line churches," buffeted
and shaped by wider U.S. culture.
During the past nine weeks,
three major mainline churches
with 14.4 million members have
had these showdowns:
o In May, the United Methodist
Church's General Conference
voted by a 2-to-1 majority to
retain a ban on blessing ceremonies for homosexual couples,
almost guaranteeing future disobedience and church trials. Delegates opposed openly gay ·and
lesbian clergy by a similar margin.
• In late June, the Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.) General Assembly gave narrow approval (5 1:6
percent) to a Methodist-style ban
on same-sex ceremonies. To
become law, the measure must
now be ratified by 87 of the
chu-rch's 173 regional units.
o The Episcopal Church's General Convention overwhelmingly
endorsed a policy acknowledging
there are Episcopal couples, "acting in good conscience," in lifelong committed relationships
ou!Slae-marriage that should
receive
"prayerful
support,
encouragement and pastoral
care." The wording covers both
gay and lesbian couples and
unwed heterosexuals, prompting
new warnings from conservatives
that toleration of homosexual
behavior will unglue Christian
sexual morality as whole.
The rabbis of Judaism's liberal

a

H erring's trial has been sched- horrible story ,is being told;' Muha
uled for Aug. 16 and Yarbmugh's said.
School officials were hoping the
Sept. 13.
&lt;
Even though she someday wants "trials would be completed during
to know exactly what happened to summer to avoid disrupting the
her son and w hy, " I can't imagine studies of the vicnms' friends.
being there at the trial while that

Holzer Heal
Hotline

Reform branch decided at a
dosed-door meeti~ that samesex couples are "worthy of affirmation . through appropriate Jewish ritual;' although the term marriage was avoided. That created a
breach between the Reform and
Reconstructionist branches on
the left, and the Conservative and
Orthodox branches that preserve
traditional opposition.
There's a siritilar split among the
mainline Protestant denominations, despite their allinity on
many other topics.
The Episcopal caucus for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgendered members says the denomination is moving '"toward fi1ll
acceptance and celebration" of
relationships outside heterosexual
marriage. That would align the
Episcopal Church with the United Church of Christ.
The United Church has long
promoted toleration of same-sex
couples and in 1983 declared that
sexual orientation should not be a
barrier to clergy ordination. The
United Methodist Church and
others with a conservative stand
on ordination agree, but also insist
that homosexual clergy remain
celibate, while the United Church
policy leaves that open.
In the United Church, regional
bodies are free to allow or to -forbid homosexual clergy and ceremonies, and Episcopal Church
dioceses operate with the ,.,ne
local option. As the American
Anglican Council, a conservative
Episcopal caucus, puts it, "two
strikingly different churches exist

the indicator. the other side . has
something ·te look forward to, we
agree. But we think it's an inappropriate tool for measuring what
the chu rch will do."
"They're betting on culture.
We're betting on Scripture."
Some observers say the liberal
view wi ll triumph eve ntually
because of growing su pport from
mainhne agency staffers, semi nary
and coU,•ge tcac hen; and you nger
clergy But th e Rev. R obert Bullock of Rich mond, Va .. editor of
the moderate Presbyterian Outlook, which h.S taken no stand on
homosexuality, sees the opposite
arnong active lay members.
'' Those who arc joining the
church, on whom the church is
bein g built. tend to be more traditional in their under~tanding of
morality and sexuality," he says.
and the conservative congregations are growmg ... It seems the
younge r gencr:1tion. ar a time of
moral confusion Jnd t•ven anarchy
m cu1ture, is looking for J dear
standard."

under the same roof." '
Other mainline denomin~tions
that agree with the Methodists in
activitY.
opposing
same-sex
include the 5.2 million- member
Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America.
Presbyterians will be monopolizing the spotlight on sexual policy. Regional meetings running
through April will vote on the bill
to prohibit same-sex ceremonies.
Next June, the national assembly
will decide whether to allow clergy and lay officers with same-sex
partners.
In all denominations, the conservatives stand on the prohibitions in the Bible. The Rev. Laird
Stuart of San Francisco, co-leader
of the Covenant Network which
is working for Presbyterian
change, counters that Christians
have altered their understanding
of biblical teaching on other matters like · slavery, divorce and
women clergy.
"[n our society," Stuart says,
"there is a growing intolerance
toward intolerance."
The Rev. Parker Williamson of
Lenoir, N.C., editor of the conservative Presbyterian Layman, essentially agrees but is confident of
vicroty. "If you make the culture
~

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She says she is my champion - I'm not sure what she
means, but I know she takes good care of me! If you
need help being your child's "champion", call the
Holzer Health Hotline where a Holzer Medical Center
RN is ready to answer your health care concerns.

1-800-462-5255

Ask your physician about medication concerns

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Sunday, July 23, 2000

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

Sunday, July 23, 2000

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR

•••

45769.

Sunday, July 23
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Narcotics Anonymous Tri-Counry
group meeting,611 Viand St., 7 :30
p.m.

CENTERVILLE - Thurman
Grange #1416 will meet at 7:30
p.m. with poduck dinner to follow.

•••

Tuesday, July 25
KANAUGA -Worship service
at Silver Memorial FWB Church,
6 p.m., pastor Andrew Parsons.
RIO GRANDE The
Church of Christ, a non-denominational church located at SR 325
North, will meet' for bible study at
10 a.m ., worship set'vice at 11 a.m.
and6 p.m.
BIDWELL Poplar Ridge
Freewill Baptist Church will hold
Sunday morning service at 10
a.m., evening service, 6:30 p.m.
with interim pastor John Elswick.

Fonda and Daniel Ferguson

Morgan-Ferguson wedding
PLINY Fonda Morgan,
daughter of Jim and Brenda
Morgan, and Daniel Ferguson,
son of Terry and Jeanie Fergu• son, were united in marriage on
• May 13, 2000, at Mount Union
• United Methodist Church,
Pliny.
The matron of honor was

Amy McDonald, sister of the
bride. The best. man was Tom
Ferguson, brother of the groom.
The bride was escorted down
the aisle by her father. Music was
provided by Tammv Ferguson.
A reception was held after the
ceremony at the couple's resi dence in Pliny.

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church at 6 p.m. with Rick Barcus preaching.
BULAVILLE
Bulaville
Church, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.;Worship service- 10:30 a.m. ,
6 p.m . with Rev. Bob Hood
preaching.
MERCERVILLE
Edna
Chapel Sunday School services
begin at 10 a.m.
EWINGTON Ewington
Church will hold services beginning at 10:30 a.m. with Royalaires
singing and Pastor Mike Puckett.

GALLIPOLIS Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 8 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS Choose To
Lose Diet Group, 9 a.m. at Grace
United Methodist Church. For
information call 256- 1535.
GALLIPOLIS Al- Anon
meeting at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, 8 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS Open Gate
Garden Club meetin·g--a~
Memorial library, 6 p.m ..
. ENO - Eno Grange #2080
will meet at 7:30 p.m. with a
potluck dinner to follow.
GALLIPOliS - Communiry
prayer and praise group will meet
at Grace United Methodist at 7
p.m. For information, call Phil
Allie at 379- 2647.
GALLIPOLIS American
Legion Post 161 will meet at 7:30
p.m.

•••

I

; Donations for Earl Neff Pediatric
.Television and Toy Funds named
. GALLIPOLIS - The May and
: June donations for the Earl Neff
• Pediatric Television and Toy Funds
were ~;eceived through continuing
contributions, and one new sponsor. The Television Fund makes it
: possible for the children to have
: pediatric videocassette programs in
their ro01ns on the new Pediatric
Unit, a part of the Materniry and
Family Center at the Holzer,Medical Center. The Toy Fund gilts pro• vide toys, books, games, stuffed anj• mals, puzzles, do Us, etc., to be used
both in the Pediatnc Playroom as
well as · in the children's moms
when it is necessary for these
young patients to be confined.
-The- May- gift-for- the-'FV Fund ,
v,:elcomed' a new sponsor, The
French Ciry Child Care Center at
the corner of Third and Court
Streets in Gallipolis, owned and
operated by Lisa Coughenour
Tackett. June's TV Fund marked
the 25th consecutive year that
Naomi Lodge No. 55, Knights of
Pythias in Gallipolis, contributed to
this Fund, established by the late
Earl Neff back in the fall of 1972.
The Chancellor Commander of
the local K of P Lodge is Bob
Roach.
The Toy Fund, also established by
Earl Neff in October 1976, has
ongoing sponsors. Supporting the
Toy Fund in May for the 5th year
was Peoples Bank, now in their
riew location in the 300 block of
Third Avenue. However, it was the
21St consecutive year that the
banks who preceded Peoples in
their Second Avenue location in
downtown Gallipolis, have contributed to the Toy Fund.
Arranging for Peoples' ongoing
sponsof'hip was Deborah Rhodes,
Office Manager of the Bank.
June's Toy Fund sponsor was the
Down Under Remuram , o n the
lower level of lafayette Mall, now
under new ownership and managemem. This 'was their first
involvement in the Toy Fund, but
the restaurant itself has been a
sponsor fo r the past tune years.
Arranging for the gift .was Jamie
Ratliff. Manager. The Oown Under
is owned by Phyllis Michael, who

CROWN CITY Liberry
Chapel homecoming 10 a.m. with
Charles Conner preaching and the
Conner Family singing, dinner at
noon. Harvest Gold will sing and
Bobby Cole will preach in the

MORGAN CENTER - Dr.
Benjamin Salvant from Haiti will
speak at Morg:In Center C hristian
Holiness Church, 10 a.m.

Jamie Ratliff, Down Under

ADDISON - Business meeting and Bible study at Addison
Freewill Baptist Church at 7:30
p.m. with Sam Long preaching.

POMEROY
Narcotics
Anonymous Living In The Solution Group, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7 p.m.
BVLAVILLE - Bible study, 7
p.m., Bulaville Church.

CENTENARY- Special service at Centenary United Christian Church, 10 a.m., with the
Rev. Jack Holley preaching and
Headed Home singing.

GALLIPOLIS - John Gee
Black Historical Center will be
open to the public fiom 10 a.m. 2 p.m.

•••

Friday, July 28
GAlLIPOLIS Alco holics
Anonymous meeting, 8 p.m ., St
Peters Episcopal Church .
RODNEY - Rodney United
Methodist Church Youth Center
open Fridays, 7-10 p.m.

•••

Revival
Vinton Full Gospel Church will
hold a weekend revival, July 21-22
at 7 p.m . and July 23 at 6 p.m . with
Becky Blankenship and Robert
Parsons preaching and Larry and
Becky Blankenship and Joyful
Noise singing.
POINT .P LEASANT - Lifeline Apostolic Church, Rt. 2 N,
will hold a revival with Rev.
Jimmy Owens, Wednesday, July
26-Sunday, July 30, 7:30 1lightly
and 7 p.m. Sund.Jy.

•••

ENO -Vacation Bible School
at Triniry Gospel Mission, 2-112
miles east of Porter at 11184 State
Route 554, July 17-20, 7-9 p.m .
Program July 21 at 7 p.m. Theme
is "Noah's Ark." A replica of the ark
is planned. For more information,
call 388-8728.
ADDISON -Vacation Bible
School at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, July 24-28, 7:30-8:30
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - French Ciry
Baptist Church will hold Vacation
Bible School,July 17-21 from 6-8
p.m. Open to 4-year-olds through
6th grade.

•••

A card shower is being held for
Violet Mae Stumbo who will be
celebrating her 89th birthday at
July 23rd. Cards niay be sent to her
at: 23187 SR 775 Scottown, Ohio
45678.

·~

PRO'• .' PJG
VIDEO 2
· &gt;&gt;MS
t.. · ·

•~ n

at

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Bob Roach and Tom Pasquale, Naomi Lodge 55, Knights of Pythlas

Bill and Adrienne Buckley
POINT PLEASANT Bill
and Adrienne Buckley of the
"Living Bread Ministry" based in
Brook Park, Ohio will join with
· two local ministries to give away
clothing, food and Bibles on July
25 from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. at
Fort Randolph Terrace, Main
Street, Point Pleasant.
' · For the second year, Fisher' man's Net Ministries of Point
' Pleasant, along with the Point
Pleasant Flame Fellowship will
help make possible this free
clothing day.
The Buckley's were also privileged to have been allowed to
hand out free food and clothing
in Eastern Europe during 1999.
The fall of 2000 will see them in
, the Ukraine giving away clothing

and food. The couple has been
ministering since 1970 in missionary and evangelist service in
the inner city of Cleveland,
Ohio, as well as West Virginia and
Florida.
Pastor Annetta Durst of Fisherman's Net has worked with the
Buckley's over the past 13 years
and is welcoming them to minister on Sunday, July 23 and Sunday, July 30 dUJing the morning
services at Fishermen's Net,
located three miles north on S.R.
2 in the Seventh Day Adventist
Church building. On July 30 at 7
p.m. , they will minister at Willing
Heart -O utreach for Christ. with
pastors William and Zeno bia
Smith on Oshel Road, Point
Pleasant.

•••

1

FOR 4P SPEC14l FEATURES

2000 Buick
LeSabre Custom

1999 Chevy Blazer
LS 4 Door 4x4

~9 550* ~8 950*

823 '850*

'

• Leather Seals
• Full Power Equipped
• AMIFM CD &amp; Cassette

• Power "Seat
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise

Plaids, second skins, corduroy, sports-inspired
Exercise your style with sports-inspired gear in
gear and patchwork patterns will move teens to glamorous shades. Pair with leg warmers, funky
the head of the class this fall, according to the heels and disco jewels to look slam-dunk spunky! _
August issue ofYM magazine.
•
• Plaid power.
The following are some fall fashion finds to
From prim and proper to pop or punk, add
try:
puJ'!ch to traditional tartans with rocker T-shirts
• Anything animal.
and fierce, fuzzy sweaters.
· · The animal kingdom goes wild with fake furs
• Patchwork pretty.
and sexy skins: "frocodi le ," 11 frostrich" and
Look "sew" cool in an explosion ·af textures
python.
and patterns. Funk it up with jeans or vintage
• Corduroy cool.
touches.
Studded, tie-dyed or colored, corduroy • Gleam team.
topped with techno T-shirts or bright stripes Shine brightly this season with sequins, gems,
,
__:_
has never been such fun'
patent leather or_;_
nylon .

______ _ ___ ___ _____.,

'

• Power Windows &amp;. Loc:ksl
• Tilt &amp; Cruise
• Aluminum Wheels

~\

GAlLIPOLIS Gallipolis
chapter TOPS (fake Off Pounds
Sensibly) meeting, Fi"t Church
of the Nazarene, 5:30-6:30 p.m .
Call Shirley Bosier 446-1260.

1999 Oldsmobile Alero

GaWpoUs Career CoUege

GS Coupe Or Sedan

44fl.43'7

~8,950* ~3,950* ~2,950*
• AMIFM CD _System
• Power Window &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise·

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Aluminum Wheels
• Rear Spoiler

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
Till &amp; Cruise

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com

MIDDLEPORT - The Oh
Kan Coin Club will meet at the
Trolley House at 7 p.m. featuring
raffles, and auction and refreshnlents. New members are now
being accepted. For information,
write to: Oh Kan Coin Club, 100
Union Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio

'.\NI'V !dllq)(lli',(.lll'l

f
II'

1

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r

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~

l

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Sunday 1 pm - 8 pm

• Ta~es. Tags Title Fees exlla Pnces Good July 21st Througtl July 23rd Not re sponsible !Of IVPOQraptucat errOf~

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~Joint

\, Implant
)\ Surgeons, Inc.

•

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer ·
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington

MORE LOCAL NEW~.
MORE LOCL FOLK~.

Our next clinic date is August 11 .
Call (614) 221-6331 for an appointrnent .

Mom need-ed more care than
lcould give.
But I couldn't
pu-t :~er in a
nurstng home.
I'd go over after work and on the weekends, but I began to realize
that she needed more than just a little help arow1d the edges.
Sometimes she'd forget her medications. Sometimes she'd stay in
her robe all day if her arthritis flared up and dressing was a problem . Her refrigerator always looked pretty bare, and I didn't
know what to do illltil I discovered the terrific program at

,II

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JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT INC.

GRILL INHEARING
.

Pomeroy, Ohw

446-7619

www.courtstreet rill.com

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

TAWNIY JIWIURI

Ohio River Bear
Company

www.ejewelers.comttawneyjewelers
www.vellmar:com

Middleport, Ohio
- - - - - ' www.ohioriverbears.com

GALLIPOLIS Knights of
Columbus, 6:30 p.m .. Down
Under Restaurant. Mike Merry is
guest speaker.

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

Both of us were very impressed with the homelike accommoddtions, professiona I nursing assistance, activities, and the fnenJ Iy
residents and staff. Now she can do pretty much what she wants
. to do without living alone, dl1d there's plenty of care ~hen she
needs it. I'm really pleased and relieved.

...

1999 Chevy
Lumina 4 Door LTZ

REUNIONS

WYNGAT£ OF GALLIPOLIS.

. /·--·
.. ~' ," 1'"., "'"'

2000 Chevy
Impala Sedan

•••

• Stylin' sweats.

GALLIPOLIS Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles in Recovery Group, St. Peter's Episcopal
C hurch, 7:30p.m .
CHESHIRE - TOPS (fake
Off Pounds Sl'nsibly) meeting,
C heshire United Methodi st
Church, 10-11 a.m. Call Ann
Mitchell at 388-8004 for information.

Silli th of Woodenvill e, took a
tour of th e waterfront of Puget
Sou nd and areas around West
It wasn't all smooth flying for Sea ttl e.
Nelhe Parker who has return ed
She also visited with her son ,
from a viSit to the West Coas t.
Eddie, and
granddaugh(er,
Because of storms both com- Tamnli, and friends near ArliQging and goi ng she had to take ton, Wash., atte nd ed th e Julf 4
the long way around.
parade at Arlington which ftaGoing she
went
from · tured not only floats but ~ld
Columbu s by way of Washin g- tractors and machinery and a
ton D. C. to San Fran cisco bagpipe band, and e njoyed lots
where she was met by her so n, of family ga therin gs.
'
Eric, who Jive s in Livermore.
When she got ready to return
home, there were tnore stonns
so she traveled from Seattle to
C leveland and then into
Wi th the fai1u ly reunion s ~ a­
C:olumbu s.
son quickly approac hing many
Mrs. Parker's visit in Califor- will be subnlitting articles offafit nia a nd Washington was busy ily activities for puolication. ·
with one ac tivity after anothe r.
To ensure prompt publicatiQn ,
There were ple nty of relatives t he Ga llipolis Dai ly Tribune a)1d
to visit, parties and luncheons The Daily Sentinel requests tQat
to attend, lots of sight,ee ing, articles be neatly rypcd and dquarrd eve n a wedding.
b le spaced for easy editing.
She attended a really nice Reun ion items sho uld not
birthday party for Eri c's boss, excee d 300 words and must be
the wedding of Ruth Lukes and submitted within 30 days of
Mark John ston cond ucted by occu rrence.
Eric's wife Jan, visited in Seattle
No exceptions will be made .
with her cousin, Eleanor Avery,
All material submitted for
had luncheons and visits with publication is subject to editing.
co usins , Bonnie and Jim Hess of Articles will be published as soon
lssaquash and Jeanine and R ex as possible.
·

Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.

School Cool 101 : YM finds fall
styles to-make a -fashion scen-e -~

2000 Buick
Park Avenue Sedan

the books on Tut•sday, Aug. 22 .

••••

NEW DIMENSjONS

Monday,July 24

also has the Coloma! in Jackson.
Anyone interested in participating in th e Telrvision or Toy Fund
may call the Communiry Rebtions
Departmcdt at the Hospital, 4465055.

•••

GALLIPOLIS Faith Valley
Church Bible School,July 17-21,
6-8 p.m. nightly.

Card Shower

MJ. Clary family reunion will
be held July 23 at 0.0. Mclnryre
Park from 10 a.m . - dark at shelter
#5.

Charlene
Hoeflich

MERCERVILLE - Vacation
Bibl&lt;(sc hool at Mercerville Missionary Baptist Church July 17-21
from 6':30-8:30 p.m. A VBS program will be held at Sunday
evening services on July 23.

Reunion

•••

Deborah Rhodes, Peoples Bank

ne w and antique car. will be
brought in, a tractor pull will be
held , crafts wi ll be ex hibited,
he rbs and · dri ed flowers will be
on display, a petting zoo and
some la rge animals will be on
the grounds, and there w ill
numerous commercial e xhibits,
along with live entertainment.
COMMUNITY.
' M arv in Rose and Friends, a
,blueg rass group, will porform at
6 p.m. on Saturday, and Sunday
After years of publi c clamor- !Horn ing at 10 a.m. church sering for the courthouse to open vices wi ll be he ld.
up for so me evening or SaturMany hands make li g ht
day hour s for busin ess , it has work, and Dall as says there's too
finally happen ed.
few mvolved right now. So if
Two weeks ago the commis - you're interes ted in h elping all
sioners , the clerk o f co urts and yo u have to do is sh ow up at
treasurer's office began extend- the next meetin g. That's ThttrSed hours - until 6:30 p.m. on day at 7:30 p.m. at the grange
Tuesdays.
The
annex o n the fairgrounds.
·first Tuesday nobody came. But
then hardly anyon e knew th e
offices were open.
And mark your cj)cndar for
Then last Tuesday a few came Aug. 12 , noon to 6 p.m. That's
by to transact business.
when th e Honey Bea r f esti val
The extended hours are will be taking place at Diles
being done on a trial basis so Park in Middl eport.
that officials can see just how
Again this year the festiva l of
many people really do want and fun, food and entertainment
need to conduct business out- will feature the bearded bee
side of regular hours . The bot- man. Other activities will
tom line - use it or lose it.
include a kiddie costume contest and a spelling bee conducted by the Mei gs Center, UniBe sure to mark your calen- ver&lt;ity of Rio Grande.
dar. The Fifth Annual Town and
Country EXPO will be held at
the fairgrounds Sept. 16 and 17
While the Honey Bea r Festiand plans are. moving right val is the day before the Meigs
alon"g, according to Dallas County Fair opens, Pomeroy's
Weber.
fishing tou rnament is the day
As Dallas pointed out it's a after it closes. That's Aug. 20.
great opportunity for exhibitors
Annie Chapman, president of
to show what they grow, make the Pomeroy M erchants Associor sell,. as well as patrons to see ation, advises that a major bevand buy if they like the prod- erage company wi ll be sponsoru_crs of Meigs and surrounding ing the tournament.
counties.
And while the fishermen
There's no admission charge !Ish, there will be activities on
to get into the fairgrounds and the parking lots, includin g a
view the wide variety of dis- cas ting derby, for the kids with
plays and demonstrations , and lots of prizes from the mer-enjoy the entertainment.
chants. We might call it a la st
.A flea market will be held, fling . Meigs students go back to

··~

CROWN C ITY - Vacation
Bible School at Kings Chapel
Church, July 17-21 , 6:30-8:30
p.m. nightly. '

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Church's
Lifeline Apostolic
monthly founh Sunday early service, beginning with Sunday
School at 10 a.m. and a special
service at 1 p.m. No evening service.
~

Lisa and Trenton Tackett,
l"rench City Child Care

COMMUNITY CORNER

•••

GALLIPOLIS - 65th atinual
Jones reunion at the home of
Dick and Mary Groves, 338 Debbie Drive, Gallipolis, noon. Pot
luck and white elephant auction.

POINT PLEASANT - lifeline Apostolic Church's montWy
ealry service will begin with Sunday School at 10 a.m., followed by
dinner, then special service at I
p.m. No evening services scheduled.

.

Ministry give-away

Bible School

GALLIPOLIS
Headed
Home will sing at Bell Chapel at
7 p.m.

KWf11H,-., -

,

HENDERSON,W.Va. - Western square dancing, 7:30-10 p.m.,
Henderson Recreation Building.

afternoon. •

11tllltil l,jr.tl

For the

Wednesday, July 26

"

•••

GALLIPOLIS New Life
Lutheran 'Church 12 Step Spiritual Growth Program, 6:45 p.m.

•

GALLIPOLIS - The Royalaires will sing at Gallipolis CCU
Church at 6 p.m.

The former famed 'Buckeye'
veterans of the 37th infantry division of WWI. WWII and the
Korean Conflict will meet September 1-3 at the Comfort Inn,
t·8 60 Austinburg Road, Ashtabula,
Thursday, July 27
· Ohio. The reunion will be hosted
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. by the 37th division executive
conunittee.
Call (6\4) 228-3788
Narcotics Anonymous meeting
Tri-Counry, 611 Viand Street (use for information.
side entrance), 7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS New Life
Lutheran Church Bible study, 7
p.m.

sunoap l!l:Jme!l-sentinfi • Page C7

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

list Your Web Address
-Jerr
Ford Call Matt Rodgers 446·23421xt. 17
..::.!~:~~:~o.?,h~:m or Matt Haskins 992·2156 bt, 105
-------~--- · --·

------

Call us at 441-9633 or mail us this coupon.
Please send me more
information about your
community

last name

first name
street address

J11'!fl!l(
OF GAlLIPO
LIS
----·--·-

.

city

-

state

zip

- - - - -phone -number
MNMC

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis OH 45631

�Page C6 • &amp;unbar fl:imrt -&amp;rnlinrl

Sunday, July 23, 2000

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

Sunday, July 23, 2000

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR

•••

45769.

Sunday, July 23
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Narcotics Anonymous Tri-Counry
group meeting,611 Viand St., 7 :30
p.m.

CENTERVILLE - Thurman
Grange #1416 will meet at 7:30
p.m. with poduck dinner to follow.

•••

Tuesday, July 25
KANAUGA -Worship service
at Silver Memorial FWB Church,
6 p.m., pastor Andrew Parsons.
RIO GRANDE The
Church of Christ, a non-denominational church located at SR 325
North, will meet' for bible study at
10 a.m ., worship set'vice at 11 a.m.
and6 p.m.
BIDWELL Poplar Ridge
Freewill Baptist Church will hold
Sunday morning service at 10
a.m., evening service, 6:30 p.m.
with interim pastor John Elswick.

Fonda and Daniel Ferguson

Morgan-Ferguson wedding
PLINY Fonda Morgan,
daughter of Jim and Brenda
Morgan, and Daniel Ferguson,
son of Terry and Jeanie Fergu• son, were united in marriage on
• May 13, 2000, at Mount Union
• United Methodist Church,
Pliny.
The matron of honor was

Amy McDonald, sister of the
bride. The best. man was Tom
Ferguson, brother of the groom.
The bride was escorted down
the aisle by her father. Music was
provided by Tammv Ferguson.
A reception was held after the
ceremony at the couple's resi dence in Pliny.

ADDISON - Preaching service at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church at 6 p.m. with Rick Barcus preaching.
BULAVILLE
Bulaville
Church, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.;Worship service- 10:30 a.m. ,
6 p.m . with Rev. Bob Hood
preaching.
MERCERVILLE
Edna
Chapel Sunday School services
begin at 10 a.m.
EWINGTON Ewington
Church will hold services beginning at 10:30 a.m. with Royalaires
singing and Pastor Mike Puckett.

GALLIPOLIS Alcoholics
Anonymous meeting, St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 8 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS Choose To
Lose Diet Group, 9 a.m. at Grace
United Methodist Church. For
information call 256- 1535.
GALLIPOLIS Al- Anon
meeting at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, 8 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS Open Gate
Garden Club meetin·g--a~
Memorial library, 6 p.m ..
. ENO - Eno Grange #2080
will meet at 7:30 p.m. with a
potluck dinner to follow.
GALLIPOliS - Communiry
prayer and praise group will meet
at Grace United Methodist at 7
p.m. For information, call Phil
Allie at 379- 2647.
GALLIPOLIS American
Legion Post 161 will meet at 7:30
p.m.

•••

I

; Donations for Earl Neff Pediatric
.Television and Toy Funds named
. GALLIPOLIS - The May and
: June donations for the Earl Neff
• Pediatric Television and Toy Funds
were ~;eceived through continuing
contributions, and one new sponsor. The Television Fund makes it
: possible for the children to have
: pediatric videocassette programs in
their ro01ns on the new Pediatric
Unit, a part of the Materniry and
Family Center at the Holzer,Medical Center. The Toy Fund gilts pro• vide toys, books, games, stuffed anj• mals, puzzles, do Us, etc., to be used
both in the Pediatnc Playroom as
well as · in the children's moms
when it is necessary for these
young patients to be confined.
-The- May- gift-for- the-'FV Fund ,
v,:elcomed' a new sponsor, The
French Ciry Child Care Center at
the corner of Third and Court
Streets in Gallipolis, owned and
operated by Lisa Coughenour
Tackett. June's TV Fund marked
the 25th consecutive year that
Naomi Lodge No. 55, Knights of
Pythias in Gallipolis, contributed to
this Fund, established by the late
Earl Neff back in the fall of 1972.
The Chancellor Commander of
the local K of P Lodge is Bob
Roach.
The Toy Fund, also established by
Earl Neff in October 1976, has
ongoing sponsors. Supporting the
Toy Fund in May for the 5th year
was Peoples Bank, now in their
riew location in the 300 block of
Third Avenue. However, it was the
21St consecutive year that the
banks who preceded Peoples in
their Second Avenue location in
downtown Gallipolis, have contributed to the Toy Fund.
Arranging for Peoples' ongoing
sponsof'hip was Deborah Rhodes,
Office Manager of the Bank.
June's Toy Fund sponsor was the
Down Under Remuram , o n the
lower level of lafayette Mall, now
under new ownership and managemem. This 'was their first
involvement in the Toy Fund, but
the restaurant itself has been a
sponsor fo r the past tune years.
Arranging for the gift .was Jamie
Ratliff. Manager. The Oown Under
is owned by Phyllis Michael, who

CROWN CITY Liberry
Chapel homecoming 10 a.m. with
Charles Conner preaching and the
Conner Family singing, dinner at
noon. Harvest Gold will sing and
Bobby Cole will preach in the

MORGAN CENTER - Dr.
Benjamin Salvant from Haiti will
speak at Morg:In Center C hristian
Holiness Church, 10 a.m.

Jamie Ratliff, Down Under

ADDISON - Business meeting and Bible study at Addison
Freewill Baptist Church at 7:30
p.m. with Sam Long preaching.

POMEROY
Narcotics
Anonymous Living In The Solution Group, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7 p.m.
BVLAVILLE - Bible study, 7
p.m., Bulaville Church.

CENTENARY- Special service at Centenary United Christian Church, 10 a.m., with the
Rev. Jack Holley preaching and
Headed Home singing.

GALLIPOLIS - John Gee
Black Historical Center will be
open to the public fiom 10 a.m. 2 p.m.

•••

Friday, July 28
GAlLIPOLIS Alco holics
Anonymous meeting, 8 p.m ., St
Peters Episcopal Church .
RODNEY - Rodney United
Methodist Church Youth Center
open Fridays, 7-10 p.m.

•••

Revival
Vinton Full Gospel Church will
hold a weekend revival, July 21-22
at 7 p.m . and July 23 at 6 p.m . with
Becky Blankenship and Robert
Parsons preaching and Larry and
Becky Blankenship and Joyful
Noise singing.
POINT .P LEASANT - Lifeline Apostolic Church, Rt. 2 N,
will hold a revival with Rev.
Jimmy Owens, Wednesday, July
26-Sunday, July 30, 7:30 1lightly
and 7 p.m. Sund.Jy.

•••

ENO -Vacation Bible School
at Triniry Gospel Mission, 2-112
miles east of Porter at 11184 State
Route 554, July 17-20, 7-9 p.m .
Program July 21 at 7 p.m. Theme
is "Noah's Ark." A replica of the ark
is planned. For more information,
call 388-8728.
ADDISON -Vacation Bible
School at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, July 24-28, 7:30-8:30
p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - French Ciry
Baptist Church will hold Vacation
Bible School,July 17-21 from 6-8
p.m. Open to 4-year-olds through
6th grade.

•••

A card shower is being held for
Violet Mae Stumbo who will be
celebrating her 89th birthday at
July 23rd. Cards niay be sent to her
at: 23187 SR 775 Scottown, Ohio
45678.

·~

PRO'• .' PJG
VIDEO 2
· &gt;&gt;MS
t.. · ·

•~ n

at

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Bob Roach and Tom Pasquale, Naomi Lodge 55, Knights of Pythlas

Bill and Adrienne Buckley
POINT PLEASANT Bill
and Adrienne Buckley of the
"Living Bread Ministry" based in
Brook Park, Ohio will join with
· two local ministries to give away
clothing, food and Bibles on July
25 from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. at
Fort Randolph Terrace, Main
Street, Point Pleasant.
' · For the second year, Fisher' man's Net Ministries of Point
' Pleasant, along with the Point
Pleasant Flame Fellowship will
help make possible this free
clothing day.
The Buckley's were also privileged to have been allowed to
hand out free food and clothing
in Eastern Europe during 1999.
The fall of 2000 will see them in
, the Ukraine giving away clothing

and food. The couple has been
ministering since 1970 in missionary and evangelist service in
the inner city of Cleveland,
Ohio, as well as West Virginia and
Florida.
Pastor Annetta Durst of Fisherman's Net has worked with the
Buckley's over the past 13 years
and is welcoming them to minister on Sunday, July 23 and Sunday, July 30 dUJing the morning
services at Fishermen's Net,
located three miles north on S.R.
2 in the Seventh Day Adventist
Church building. On July 30 at 7
p.m. , they will minister at Willing
Heart -O utreach for Christ. with
pastors William and Zeno bia
Smith on Oshel Road, Point
Pleasant.

•••

1

FOR 4P SPEC14l FEATURES

2000 Buick
LeSabre Custom

1999 Chevy Blazer
LS 4 Door 4x4

~9 550* ~8 950*

823 '850*

'

• Leather Seals
• Full Power Equipped
• AMIFM CD &amp; Cassette

• Power "Seat
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Till &amp; Cruise

Plaids, second skins, corduroy, sports-inspired
Exercise your style with sports-inspired gear in
gear and patchwork patterns will move teens to glamorous shades. Pair with leg warmers, funky
the head of the class this fall, according to the heels and disco jewels to look slam-dunk spunky! _
August issue ofYM magazine.
•
• Plaid power.
The following are some fall fashion finds to
From prim and proper to pop or punk, add
try:
puJ'!ch to traditional tartans with rocker T-shirts
• Anything animal.
and fierce, fuzzy sweaters.
· · The animal kingdom goes wild with fake furs
• Patchwork pretty.
and sexy skins: "frocodi le ," 11 frostrich" and
Look "sew" cool in an explosion ·af textures
python.
and patterns. Funk it up with jeans or vintage
• Corduroy cool.
touches.
Studded, tie-dyed or colored, corduroy • Gleam team.
topped with techno T-shirts or bright stripes Shine brightly this season with sequins, gems,
,
__:_
has never been such fun'
patent leather or_;_
nylon .

______ _ ___ ___ _____.,

'

• Power Windows &amp;. Loc:ksl
• Tilt &amp; Cruise
• Aluminum Wheels

~\

GAlLIPOLIS Gallipolis
chapter TOPS (fake Off Pounds
Sensibly) meeting, Fi"t Church
of the Nazarene, 5:30-6:30 p.m .
Call Shirley Bosier 446-1260.

1999 Oldsmobile Alero

GaWpoUs Career CoUege

GS Coupe Or Sedan

44fl.43'7

~8,950* ~3,950* ~2,950*
• AMIFM CD _System
• Power Window &amp; Locks
• Tilt &amp; Cruise·

• Power Windows &amp; Locks
• Aluminum Wheels
• Rear Spoiler

• Automatic, Air Conditioning
• Power Windows &amp; Locks
Till &amp; Cruise

VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT: www.tompeden.com

MIDDLEPORT - The Oh
Kan Coin Club will meet at the
Trolley House at 7 p.m. featuring
raffles, and auction and refreshnlents. New members are now
being accepted. For information,
write to: Oh Kan Coin Club, 100
Union Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio

'.\NI'V !dllq)(lli',(.lll'l

f
II'

1

117h•

'II 111 II'&gt;
r

! r&gt;lli'q••' 1Hll

West Virginia's 11 Chevy, Ponliac, Buick, Olds,
And Custom Van Dealer.
~

l

c;,·mu•••·c ·ht ·~· n•l•..

I,,
~

+~ :

,,.,,., ..,

Q) ·

O losrnoo!Jo

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

• Ta~es. Tags Title Fees exlla Pnces Good July 21st Througtl July 23rd Not re sponsible !Of IVPOQraptucat errOf~

TOll FREE 1-800-822-0417 • 372-2844 • www.tompeden.com

~Joint

\, Implant
)\ Surgeons, Inc.

•

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer ·
office hours at 1423 3rd Avenue in the Huntington

MORE LOCAL NEW~.
MORE LOCL FOLK~.

Our next clinic date is August 11 .
Call (614) 221-6331 for an appointrnent .

Mom need-ed more care than
lcould give.
But I couldn't
pu-t :~er in a
nurstng home.
I'd go over after work and on the weekends, but I began to realize
that she needed more than just a little help arow1d the edges.
Sometimes she'd forget her medications. Sometimes she'd stay in
her robe all day if her arthritis flared up and dressing was a problem . Her refrigerator always looked pretty bare, and I didn't
know what to do illltil I discovered the terrific program at

,II

I'IHI'f•,l!H'! ( ( 1 111

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT INC.

GRILL INHEARING
.

Pomeroy, Ohw

446-7619

www.courtstreet rill.com

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

TAWNIY JIWIURI

Ohio River Bear
Company

www.ejewelers.comttawneyjewelers
www.vellmar:com

Middleport, Ohio
- - - - - ' www.ohioriverbears.com

GALLIPOLIS Knights of
Columbus, 6:30 p.m .. Down
Under Restaurant. Mike Merry is
guest speaker.

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

Both of us were very impressed with the homelike accommoddtions, professiona I nursing assistance, activities, and the fnenJ Iy
residents and staff. Now she can do pretty much what she wants
. to do without living alone, dl1d there's plenty of care ~hen she
needs it. I'm really pleased and relieved.

...

1999 Chevy
Lumina 4 Door LTZ

REUNIONS

WYNGAT£ OF GALLIPOLIS.

. /·--·
.. ~' ," 1'"., "'"'

2000 Chevy
Impala Sedan

•••

• Stylin' sweats.

GALLIPOLIS Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles in Recovery Group, St. Peter's Episcopal
C hurch, 7:30p.m .
CHESHIRE - TOPS (fake
Off Pounds Sl'nsibly) meeting,
C heshire United Methodi st
Church, 10-11 a.m. Call Ann
Mitchell at 388-8004 for information.

Silli th of Woodenvill e, took a
tour of th e waterfront of Puget
Sou nd and areas around West
It wasn't all smooth flying for Sea ttl e.
Nelhe Parker who has return ed
She also visited with her son ,
from a viSit to the West Coas t.
Eddie, and
granddaugh(er,
Because of storms both com- Tamnli, and friends near ArliQging and goi ng she had to take ton, Wash., atte nd ed th e Julf 4
the long way around.
parade at Arlington which ftaGoing she
went
from · tured not only floats but ~ld
Columbu s by way of Washin g- tractors and machinery and a
ton D. C. to San Fran cisco bagpipe band, and e njoyed lots
where she was met by her so n, of family ga therin gs.
'
Eric, who Jive s in Livermore.
When she got ready to return
home, there were tnore stonns
so she traveled from Seattle to
C leveland and then into
Wi th the fai1u ly reunion s ~ a­
C:olumbu s.
son quickly approac hing many
Mrs. Parker's visit in Califor- will be subnlitting articles offafit nia a nd Washington was busy ily activities for puolication. ·
with one ac tivity after anothe r.
To ensure prompt publicatiQn ,
There were ple nty of relatives t he Ga llipolis Dai ly Tribune a)1d
to visit, parties and luncheons The Daily Sentinel requests tQat
to attend, lots of sight,ee ing, articles be neatly rypcd and dquarrd eve n a wedding.
b le spaced for easy editing.
She attended a really nice Reun ion items sho uld not
birthday party for Eri c's boss, excee d 300 words and must be
the wedding of Ruth Lukes and submitted within 30 days of
Mark John ston cond ucted by occu rrence.
Eric's wife Jan, visited in Seattle
No exceptions will be made .
with her cousin, Eleanor Avery,
All material submitted for
had luncheons and visits with publication is subject to editing.
co usins , Bonnie and Jim Hess of Articles will be published as soon
lssaquash and Jeanine and R ex as possible.
·

Spine Rehab &amp; Pain Center.

School Cool 101 : YM finds fall
styles to-make a -fashion scen-e -~

2000 Buick
Park Avenue Sedan

the books on Tut•sday, Aug. 22 .

••••

NEW DIMENSjONS

Monday,July 24

also has the Coloma! in Jackson.
Anyone interested in participating in th e Telrvision or Toy Fund
may call the Communiry Rebtions
Departmcdt at the Hospital, 4465055.

•••

GALLIPOLIS Faith Valley
Church Bible School,July 17-21,
6-8 p.m. nightly.

Card Shower

MJ. Clary family reunion will
be held July 23 at 0.0. Mclnryre
Park from 10 a.m . - dark at shelter
#5.

Charlene
Hoeflich

MERCERVILLE - Vacation
Bibl&lt;(sc hool at Mercerville Missionary Baptist Church July 17-21
from 6':30-8:30 p.m. A VBS program will be held at Sunday
evening services on July 23.

Reunion

•••

Deborah Rhodes, Peoples Bank

ne w and antique car. will be
brought in, a tractor pull will be
held , crafts wi ll be ex hibited,
he rbs and · dri ed flowers will be
on display, a petting zoo and
some la rge animals will be on
the grounds, and there w ill
numerous commercial e xhibits,
along with live entertainment.
COMMUNITY.
' M arv in Rose and Friends, a
,blueg rass group, will porform at
6 p.m. on Saturday, and Sunday
After years of publi c clamor- !Horn ing at 10 a.m. church sering for the courthouse to open vices wi ll be he ld.
up for so me evening or SaturMany hands make li g ht
day hour s for busin ess , it has work, and Dall as says there's too
finally happen ed.
few mvolved right now. So if
Two weeks ago the commis - you're interes ted in h elping all
sioners , the clerk o f co urts and yo u have to do is sh ow up at
treasurer's office began extend- the next meetin g. That's ThttrSed hours - until 6:30 p.m. on day at 7:30 p.m. at the grange
Tuesdays.
The
annex o n the fairgrounds.
·first Tuesday nobody came. But
then hardly anyon e knew th e
offices were open.
And mark your cj)cndar for
Then last Tuesday a few came Aug. 12 , noon to 6 p.m. That's
by to transact business.
when th e Honey Bea r f esti val
The extended hours are will be taking place at Diles
being done on a trial basis so Park in Middl eport.
that officials can see just how
Again this year the festiva l of
many people really do want and fun, food and entertainment
need to conduct business out- will feature the bearded bee
side of regular hours . The bot- man. Other activities will
tom line - use it or lose it.
include a kiddie costume contest and a spelling bee conducted by the Mei gs Center, UniBe sure to mark your calen- ver&lt;ity of Rio Grande.
dar. The Fifth Annual Town and
Country EXPO will be held at
the fairgrounds Sept. 16 and 17
While the Honey Bea r Festiand plans are. moving right val is the day before the Meigs
alon"g, according to Dallas County Fair opens, Pomeroy's
Weber.
fishing tou rnament is the day
As Dallas pointed out it's a after it closes. That's Aug. 20.
great opportunity for exhibitors
Annie Chapman, president of
to show what they grow, make the Pomeroy M erchants Associor sell,. as well as patrons to see ation, advises that a major bevand buy if they like the prod- erage company wi ll be sponsoru_crs of Meigs and surrounding ing the tournament.
counties.
And while the fishermen
There's no admission charge !Ish, there will be activities on
to get into the fairgrounds and the parking lots, includin g a
view the wide variety of dis- cas ting derby, for the kids with
plays and demonstrations , and lots of prizes from the mer-enjoy the entertainment.
chants. We might call it a la st
.A flea market will be held, fling . Meigs students go back to

··~

CROWN C ITY - Vacation
Bible School at Kings Chapel
Church, July 17-21 , 6:30-8:30
p.m. nightly. '

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Church's
Lifeline Apostolic
monthly founh Sunday early service, beginning with Sunday
School at 10 a.m. and a special
service at 1 p.m. No evening service.
~

Lisa and Trenton Tackett,
l"rench City Child Care

COMMUNITY CORNER

•••

GALLIPOLIS - 65th atinual
Jones reunion at the home of
Dick and Mary Groves, 338 Debbie Drive, Gallipolis, noon. Pot
luck and white elephant auction.

POINT PLEASANT - lifeline Apostolic Church's montWy
ealry service will begin with Sunday School at 10 a.m., followed by
dinner, then special service at I
p.m. No evening services scheduled.

.

Ministry give-away

Bible School

GALLIPOLIS
Headed
Home will sing at Bell Chapel at
7 p.m.

KWf11H,-., -

,

HENDERSON,W.Va. - Western square dancing, 7:30-10 p.m.,
Henderson Recreation Building.

afternoon. •

11tllltil l,jr.tl

For the

Wednesday, July 26

"

•••

GALLIPOLIS New Life
Lutheran 'Church 12 Step Spiritual Growth Program, 6:45 p.m.

•

GALLIPOLIS - The Royalaires will sing at Gallipolis CCU
Church at 6 p.m.

The former famed 'Buckeye'
veterans of the 37th infantry division of WWI. WWII and the
Korean Conflict will meet September 1-3 at the Comfort Inn,
t·8 60 Austinburg Road, Ashtabula,
Thursday, July 27
· Ohio. The reunion will be hosted
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. by the 37th division executive
conunittee.
Call (6\4) 228-3788
Narcotics Anonymous meeting
Tri-Counry, 611 Viand Street (use for information.
side entrance), 7:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS New Life
Lutheran Church Bible study, 7
p.m.

sunoap l!l:Jme!l-sentinfi • Page C7

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

list Your Web Address
-Jerr
Ford Call Matt Rodgers 446·23421xt. 17
..::.!~:~~:~o.?,h~:m or Matt Haskins 992·2156 bt, 105
-------~--- · --·

------

Call us at 441-9633 or mail us this coupon.
Please send me more
information about your
community

last name

first name
street address

J11'!fl!l(
OF GAlLIPO
LIS
----·--·-

.

city

-

state

zip

- - - - -phone -number
MNMC

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis OH 45631

�Page C8 • &amp;unba!' G:imtf · &amp;entintl

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

Reader .upset over
mined vaction plans
..
Ann
Landers
ADVICE
Dear Ann Landers: This
problem involves my motherin-law (a lovely, non-interfering
person), my husband and me.
Mom decided to buy a large
beach house. She insisted on
putting everyone's name on the
lease. This included daughters,
sc;&gt;ns, and their husbands and
~ves.

. Last winter, Mom asked if we
wanted to pick a week to have
the house for our own use. We
said, "Thank you very much,"
and chose a week. She made it
clear that this was to be a vacation for my husband, me, our
two boys and her. She said, "This
is not going to be a big family
reunion . There will be just the
five of us."
It is now three weeks before
'we are scheduled to go, and I
have just learned through other
family members that my mother-in-law has invited 12 other
people. Also, they have permission to bring their dogs, so at last
count, there will be 17 people
and six dogs. The house has beds
fQr 20 people and only two
bathrooms.
I became very upset about
this, and expressed my frustration to my mother-in-law. Now,
my husband thinks I am too
emotional, that I overreacted,
and that there is something
wrong with me. Understand,
please, that· my mother-in-law is
a wonderful woman , and I have
never had any problems with
her. I need your help with this,
Ann. Don't let me down.-- Disappointed in Wisconsin
Dear Wisconsin: Show that
"wonderful woman" this letter,
and tell her you wrote it. Ask
her what she would say if she
were Ann Landers. I don't mind
being dragged into this mess if it
will help. Putting the ball
- · squarely in her courtjust-·might ·
so lve your problem. I hope so,
because your complaints are
totally legitimate, and she needs
to hear them.
Dear Ann Landers: 1 just
read the poem " Tea Drinker's
Lament," by Natalie Brannian.
She is right. Tea drinkers are disc riminated against in this country, and I know why. After the
Boston Tea Parry, Americans

considered tea drinking to be a
British eustom, and looked ·on
those who drank tea as British
sympathizers and traitors. Even
though this happened rwo centuries ago, the discrimination
lingers. I just thought you would
like to know. -- Tea Drinker in
Philadelphia
Dear Phil: I enjoy my
morning coffee, and I have tea
in the afternoon . I never have
thought of myself as being discriminated against, nor do I
view myself as a "British sympathizer.". I doubt that th~ average
American can tell you hat the
Boston Tea Party was about.
Check with your friends, and
you will see what I mean, but
thanks for the history lesson.
Dear Ann Landers: We all
can use a laugh now and then,
and I hope the enclosed will do
just that for many of your readers. A friend sent it to me with
no due as to the origin. Please
find room for it in your space.- Mrs. R .S. in Long Island, N .Y.
Dear Long Island: ·Thanks
for the laugh -- which I'm sure
my readers will enJoy, as well.
Here it is:
A San Diego patrolman
pulled over a driver and
informed him that because he
was wearing his seat belt, he had
just won $5,000 in uafety com. petition.
.
"What are you going to do
with the prize money?" the officer asked. The man responded,
"I giless I 'II go to driving school
and get my license."
At that moment, his wife,
who was seated bext to him,
chimed in, "Officer, don't listen
to him. He's a smart aleck when
he's drunk."
This woke up the guy in the
back seat, who, when he saw the
cop, blurted out, "I knew we
wouldn't get far in this stolen
car." At that moment, there was
a knock from the trunk, and a
voice asked, "Are we over the
border yet?"
Have trouble sleeping at
night and don' t want to get
involved in a novel? "A Collection of My .Favorite Gems of
the Day" is ~e , perfect bedstand mate. Send -a--selfo addressed, ·tong, business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $5 .25 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Collection , c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 606110562 (in Canada, S6.25). To find
out more about Ann Landers
and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web
page at www.creators.com.

Sunday, July 23, 2000

.

Released, Earthen Vessels take stage for fair's last night
GALLIPOLIS -This year marks
the 51st year of the Gallia County
Junior Fair, set for July 31-Aug. S,and
a change in the schedule of events.
Normally held on Tuesday night of
fair week this year Religious and
Senior Citizens Night will move to
Satunlay. the last night of the fair.
The move provides better seating
and listening enjoyment for those in
attendance.
This also marks the first appearallce
of Gallia County's own, Released, to
the main stage. Singing loC'ally and
nationally for over two years, Released
has become one of the most soughtafter groups in the ai-state area.
Its vocal tl!ents, music selection and
personal testimonies have touched,
hearts fiom Aorida to Maine.
Although the tl!ent competition has
undergone some change, the motive
for singing has remained the same to honor Him who is worthy of all

second recording project.
The next release, "He'll See You
Through;' carne in the springof!999,
fiom its self-entirled MorningStar project "Released."
.
Better established, the group saw
this song break the Top I00, and chart
as high as No. 7 in some areas of the
counay. The most recent release, "I
Felt rl1e Son Rise;' was penned by
group memberWillie Church and has
blessed thousands.
2000 has brought change, and
should bring more national attention
to Released. In January. the group
received word that its bass singer
would be leaving. The former quartet
was now a trio. Marl&lt;, Willie and Tim
had to seek the Lord for their next
step.
Deciding to remain a trio, Released
found quick accepttnce in the music
industry In fact, three seems to be a
lucky number for the year 2000, as
praise.
three more songs will be sent to radio
Released began in December I 997, andTY.
when group members Willie Church
Some Dawning Music, owned by
and Mark Sanders spoke over the Kevin Spencer of the Spencer Family.
phone of forming a gospel group that has selected two songs for Released's
would dedicate itself fully to the Lord. artilt compilation disc. "Redemption's
The new group originally sang as a Song;' written by Mark, and the
quartet, as Mark and Willie were groups signature song "Released;'
joined with one family member and written by Willie, should hit radio this
one family fiiend When the original fulL
lead singer gave notice to leave, the
Due out in August trom Capitol
·sean:h began for the right person to fill Enterprises, the group will attempt to
his shoes.
bring back an old classic from legThat person was only, a few miles endary family group, The LaFevers,
aw.~y in Apple Gl'OIIe, WVa. Tim
entided "It's a Good Life Living for the
Moses joined in the spring of 1998, Lord."
adding to the group what some have
Joining Released on the main stage
called the "smoothest lead voice in this year will be another local group,
gospel music."
£arthen Vessels.
During the quartet run, Released
Fomted in 1992, Rief. Hennan,
saw three songs released nationally by Duane Bing and his wife Diana Bing
MorningStar Records of Nashville, have been spreading the good news of
Tenn. "Ooser to You" was the group's Jesus Christ in song throughout the
first eff'ort in 1998, and the tide of its area.

Class{fied ads, Pages D2-D7
Business Bri~fcase, D8

Page D1
Sund.y. July 11. 1000

THE WEEK lN STOCKS
This chart shows how local swcks of interest per(onned last week.
Each day :, closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

+

AEP

t

Akzo
Earthen Ve11els
Deriving its name from II
COrinthians 4:7, this local aio brings
an enjoyable mix ofhumor and music
to the stage. Rief, Duane and Diana
are the perfect combination of sincerity. respect and talent Like Released, all
members of Earthen Vessels are married and members oflocal churr:hes.
Gospel Night is scheduled to begin
at 8:30p.m, when Released will step
onto the main Stage. Earthen v~

performs somewhere near 9:30 p.m.,
allowing Released time to catch its
breath and ~ool off: Released will
rerum to the Stage after a 15-25
minute break to perform again, and
then later be joined by EarthenVessels,
The groups plan to lead the crowd
in hymn time,join voices in a few spe-

ciai requests, and pull out one or two
surprises.
For more infotn)a!:ion on Released
or Earthen Vessels, contact Willie
Churr:h of Released toll-free at 1877-755-1117. More infonnation on
the fair is av:illable by calling the CUr
board otlice at 446-4120.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
6:30 PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR MAn,;:;NI::i'IS_,

DISNEY'S THE KID (PG))
7:t0 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:1Ql 3:20

THU.

FRI.

33 '1~

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City Holding

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--

Harley Davidson

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THE PATRIOT (R)
9:00 DAILY

WED.

43~..

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lOX OFIKI Will OPIIIlT

TUE.

cf

Federal Mogul

FRI 7/21/00 • THURS 7127/00

MON.

AmTech/SBC

Champion

+

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BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE (PG13)
7:15&amp; 9:15 DAILY

Oak Hill Fin ~

THE PERFECT

OVB

+

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+
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Premier +
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Wnuld vou like to see a stock nf local interest li.wed ?
Ne11·s Editor Kevin Kellv at (740) 44ri-2342. ext. 23.

10 1 ~'11!

If so. cn/llllct

Panel targets new businesses
Main Street group
builds reauitment
package
BY KRIS DoTSON
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

ALL! POLIS
The Main Street
Economic Restructuring Comrnittee
met again this wee k
to finalize its business recruitment
package and to discuss filling
empty storefronts with something
positive that promotes the community.
Important to the recruitment
package is the building inventory
that includes a building's square
footage, past utility bills, and a listing of the property's features for
each vacant building downtown.
Dick Northup, exec utive vice
president of the Gallia County
Community Improvement Corporation/Gallia Counry Chamber
of Commerr:e stepped up to the
plate, committing the CIC to
'I helpin g with the project's compte. ~ .cion .

"We think its very important to
the whole effort of improving the
' downtown," said Northup. "It
should be in the right format ,
Internet ready and easily available
to people who are interested in
buying or leasmg a building.''
Also in the package and completed is information on existing
businesses, demographi cs, chamber
directory, local government taxes,
utilities, etc., traffic count"i, names
of business owners for references,
town pictures, business incentives ,
promotiom calendar, finan cing,
associations, transportation, training and education, conference
facilities and real estate information.
Projects in progress are building
- histories,-adveFti&gt;ing and travel statistics.
One of the areas they plan to use
this information package for is on
business scouting expeditions, the

PLANNING FUTURE- Connie Freeman of Oak Hill Banks, Mainstreet Economic Restructuring Committee
chairwoman; Tracy Call, associate director of Mainstreet and CIC; and Lorie Neal, associate director of the
Galli a County Chamber of Commerce meet to discuss the recent goals of the Economic Restructuring Committee. (Millissia Russell photo)
·
first planned for Sept. 12.
two; it allows organdtions that'
"A b"'''up of us will visit sur- might not have an extensive adverrounding communities where we tising budget to have a Second
wi ll target existing businesses that Avenue window display. It shows
might want to expand .into the the comm~nity working together
Gallipolis market," said Cmnmittee and supporting one another,"
C hairman Connie Freeman.
Freeman said.
" We will also be searching for
The Ariel Theatre will be adoptinformation and ideas on how to ing a window and is working with
encourage the day trippers to visit Freeman in selecting which one to
Gallipoli s, like ir so much that they adopt.
want to stay and open a busin ess
"] would love to come and
here," she added.
speak to any group, organization or
Another topic discussed is their business to let them know how
"Adopt a Stbre Front."
Main Street can benefit our com"We would like to encourage 'munity and how they fit into the
local organizations to 'adopt' an plan," said Freeman_ "We also have
empty store front window and momes available from Ohio Valley
dre" it-up \vith-their information," - Reboional Developl1l.mreommtsc
said Freeman .
sion's SEED program."
"This does two things: one it
According to the SEED proputs something attrdctive in an gram fact sheet, new businesses
otherwise empty window, an~ from selec t counties in southeast

Ohio, including Gallia, can use the
money for initial legal , financial ,
engineering, marketing and other
costs for a start-up business.
The max1mum request is
$3,000, or 75 percent of total costs,
whichever is less, with a matching
requirement of 25 percent of total
costs provided by the applicant(s).
Payments to the applicant(s) will
be on a reimbursement basis provided that proper documentatipn
of costs and payment by the applicant are presented; exceptions to
this payment policy will be made
for special circumstances on a case
by case basis.
I me rested applicants ca n call
John Rtiinnlingso r lJoug Fry at
the OVRDC, 1~0. Box 72R,
Waverly, Ohio 45690, 740 -947 2853; toll free in Ohio 1-H(~J ..2237491 o r email@ovrdc.org.

&lt;;:

LIVESTOCK.
United Produ n:rs In c. lll ~lr­
ket report from Gallipolis for
sale&lt; conducted on Wednesday,
July 19.
feeder Cattle- Hi gher
200-300# St. S 115-$133 Hf
$94-S 122 , 325-450# St. $97$ 125. Hf $93-$115 475-625#
St. $92-$113 Hf. $8H-$1 0 I
650 - 800# St. $77 - $'13 Hf
S73-SH7.
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled / Fkslml $411-

ENTERTAINMENT
TRIVIA
Brookville, Pa.
~s a videotape
A. It was "So Long At t he
Fair," from 1950, and was a
·of (Camelot' British film. Also, according to
our lim , there is no video.
made?
Q. I remember a movie but
ca n't find it on video. I think
Q. I find it hard to believe the title was " The Prophecy:·
•
that the wonderful musical Can you tell me the correct
" ·Camelot," with Richard Bur- titl e, who were the stars, and
ton, Julie Andrews, R obert what yea r it was re leased? ls it
Goulet and Roddy McDowall, on video? - P.S., Altoona , Pa.
A. "Prophecy" is the correct
was not recorded on tape for
posterity. We haw the· sound- title of that 1979 release, and it
trac k and it is delightful. Is featured Talia Shire, Robert
and
Armand
there a video' - D.M ., Hix- Foxworthy
sO n1Tenn.
Assante in its cast. There is a
A. Very few stage produc- video.
tions have been videotaped,
Q. Wh en I was a child , I saw
an d
to
our
knowledge, a movie that has stuck in my
"Camelot" isn't o ne o f them.
m i nd eve r since. I think it
Q. When I was a fresh man in could have been called "Strait
high school 111 1938-39, my Jacket." I think it was in the
dad took me out of school one mid-1960s. A woma n got off a
afternoon to &lt;ee " Wings of the train, walked home, peered
Navy." I JOined the Navy in
through a window, saw her
1 943, serve d three years and a
husband in bed With another
month and was discharged .in
woman . She the n picked up an
1946. This was a 1939 movie. I
axe and chopped them up and
tried to locate a video on Ama was sent to prison . After she
zon.com. but they only have
"Wings of Gold." Is "W mgs of was released, she killed ;everal
the Navy" avai lable',- LJ.N., more people. My husband
doesn't believe they made
St. Jo&lt;eph, lll.
A. Acco rding to our lists , it is movies like that back t hen . Can
I get a copy of this movie? not .
Q. Can yo u tell me anything C. T , Baxter Springs, Kan.
A. Your husband is naive.
about a film, made in th e
1950s, titled "So Long At the " Strait J ac ket ," made in 1964,
Fair" or " Too Lo ng At th e starred Joan Crawford. And you
Fair" ' It starred Jean Simnions can get a copy at your local
and Dirk Dogarde. Is it avail- video store, or they can order
able on video? M .E ., o ne for yo u.

Inside:

$47; Medium / Lean $3H- $4.\;
Th1n / Light $32-$37; Bulls
$54-$62.
Back To Th e Fanp:
Cow /Ca lf
Pairs
$525$1, ISO; Bred Cows $475-$685
Baby Cal \'CS $40- $3011; Goats

$211-S II 0.
Upcoming specials:
Herd bull le asi ng program
available. High quality An gus
bulls.
Call the otli ce at 446- 9690

INVESTING

BY DICK AND CHICK! KLEINER

On the road
to ·succesiful investing

~US. Cellular.
The way people talk around here:

Chillicothe
U.S. Cellular

750 Westem Ave.
(140)702·4871

Chillicothe

In-Touch Wire less &amp; Mor.e
34 East Water

(740)779·6999

Galfipolio

usee Wai-Mart Kiosk
2145 Eastam Av..anue

(1401441 -1066

Jocklon
·Classic Plaz11
408 E. Huron

(740)288·0016
New Boston
U.S. Cellular
New Boston Shopping ·canter
40 I0 Rhodes ·Avo.

(140)456-8722 .

Hilltop Center

2736 Scioto Trail
1740)355-0058

Waverly

USee Wai-Mart Kiosk

900 West Emm1t Avenue

1740)947-0069

Also, come and viatt on1 of our Wai.Man locations: New Boston. Jack son
For your corwenience we hElve over 80 authorized agent locations .
Outside consultants are available upon request

Offer requires a new ont·ytar rvict a9rttmtnt. Roammg ~hargt,, taK~S . network surcharge-s and tolls not includtd.
01htr remictions and ch.a rgts may apply. Set start for dtta1ls. OHtr exp1rt~ July 31, '2000.
.H

Ponomouth

GA LLIPOLI S - The road
to succt·ssfu l JllVt'sting r.'i p~wed
ditlerently for each lllvc·stor.
Ont.· investor's road to suLcess
may be the high road, wh ile
anothe·r's may be thl' low road.
But common to bo th
inves tors are basic principles
that are true to form no m attL'T
which road an investor finds
himself taking. Belo\\' is a list:
ing of ~o m e of rlll''il' h .1~k
principl es that 111.1)' lc.1d .111
individual along the ro.1d to
successfu l investin g.
• Formah zc yo ur go.tl s. As
with the ac hi tVL' JJ h: nt of ,u 1y
goa l, co mmitlll l'llt to the.:· goal
is !talf the battle. Formali ze·
your co mmitm e nt to attaming
yo ur g:ua ls by writi ng . thc111
down , both sho rt- tc:rm and
lon g- term _ Follow
yo ur
progrc·&lt;~ hy updatin g 'them ·at
kasr annuall y. H ow else· wi ll

I

Jay
Caldwell
GUEST
VIEW
you knov..1 if you are actuall y
going to attain your goals?
• lm•c'it l';1rl·y· as pos..,ibk .

Procrasti nati on j.., an in vestor's
worst e nemy. Though thne i.~
no pertCct or idt:,ll tim e to start
itlVl'Sting, no\\' may bl' the bl'"it
time of alL
• Invest in what you undcr.,; t;md . If vou do not understand
ho\\' .111 invcstllll'llt works. you
will no r ti1lly understand th e
risks .h'\CH:iatL'J wit h th at

Please see Money, Pace DB

Planning for late
summer seedings
GALLIPOLIS It's hard to
believe that It's already time to start
thinking about late summer seedin-g. The fair begins a week from
tomorrow, and although we are
anxious for th e events, the summer
always seems to end too quickly
after fai r testiv1ti q.
With many produ cers cutting
tobacco, picking peppers, cutting
hay or treating cattk in the weeks
following the fa ir, planning for a
bte summer seeding now may
avoid planting delays later.
The two most criucal factors in
a successful latc: sun1mer seeding
arc adequate moisture, and planting
early enough to ensure good stand
before Winter freeze. In adequate
moisture. August and early September seeding have ample time to
become well-established and build
root reserves -before winter.
Although it can slow us up once
in a while, sail testmg is still the
best step followmg field selection.
Liming for a favorable pH will
maximize the nutrients already in
the soll, as well as the fe rtilizer you
apply in .the future_
\
lf tilla15c is being used, \yoid
d""P tilling, and prepare a firm '
seedbed. A cultipacker or cultimukhcr is an efficient last pass tillage
tool. Planting th e sct·d shallO\v and
with ~inn comact with the soil is
rt·colmnenJeJ, rather than broadcasting on tht· sw{lcc, wb1ch can
often be unsuccessful in late summer.
For th ose using a no-till drill ; be
sun.· ro remove any rema ini ng
stubbk frum fields that were previ ously in small gtains such as wheat
or rye. To promote good emergence, avoid the de11sc mats this
stubble leaves behind.
Whl'n choosing sel' ~ , remember

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW
that you gl't what you pay for.
fnvesting· in quahty seed as well as
in .Iegumes that are well inoculated
will typically produce a healthier,
longer-lastmg stand . Although soil
moisture doesn't seem to be a
problem thu s far, h·ep in mind that
seeds need adequate mo isture for
seedling establishment in acjditi on
to the moisture requirements for
germination.
Often in late summer, dry
seedbeds may have enough moisture to ger mmate th e seeds, but
not enpugh to establish the stand.
The new seeding should not be
harvested until the spring, a little
later than the established stands .
This will give the plants additi ona l opportunity to build root
reserves. For more information on
late )umm er set'd ing: or for sp~:cdic
info rmation on . gras~es and
legum es, please call the OSU
Extension Office ar 446- 7007 .
Ag news
Blue mold update: As you
know by now, the blu e m old outbreak we've been looki ng for
arnvcd late in the week before last.
Now confirmed in nearly every
part o ( the w unty, the extent of
infection varies from field to field.
As predicted, the f.1Ster growing,
hi15her yielding varieties -such as H
4ll3 art· suffering more damage

Please see Byrnes.

Pile• Dl

Lack of water
browning leaves
POMEROY - Are you seeing a browning or scorching of
leaves in your ornamental and
landscape trees' Th e youngest
and new ly expanded leaves are
showing edge burn or die back
as msufficient water is reac hing
the leaves.
This lack of water is accentuated as summer temperatures are
increasing and drying winds
occur. C heek the twib" for last
year's cicada damage . Th e damage looks like an open wound to
the center of the tw1g with the
stem regrowmg new bark (callus) over the wound. Dogwood,
oak, crabapple and fruit trees
seem to be most affected.
If this damage is present less
th an half of the plant's water
su pply lS able to reach th e tip
branch es, thus cauSing the
browning or scorching ofleaves.
What may the homeowner
qo? Prune off the bran ches
below the cicada damaged areas.
If they are too high or not easy
to reach , don't worry. Nature .
will allow the branc h to die
back below the injury and eventually the bran ch part injured
w ill fall otT. It may take o n e ro
two years for the dead branch to
fall.

•••

Graziers, are you interested in
discussing your bigges t mistakes
with grazing with other farmers?
The Southern Ohio Grazing
Council is holding a rel axing
prry-in dinner meeting along
the Ohio River next Sunday.
July 30 at 2 p.m. at Burcher's
Cabin across from Forked Run
State Park, State· Route 124

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW
south of R eedsville.
There will be no farm tour;
however, co m e prepared to discu ss probl e ms and resul ting
sol ution s you have had in grazin g your herd .Allow some tim e
t() enjoy the recreational activities that th e Ohio River provides. Signs will be posted to
lead you to the cabin. For planning purposes, give th e Extension Office a call at 992-6696.

•••

The Annual Athens / Meigs
Beef Field Day will be held Aug.
1 at the S &amp; J Cattle Company,
Dave Harner Farm 437 4 Mario n-Joh nson Road, Albany. The
event starts at 6:15p.m., with a
cooko ut courtesy of Ath ens
Landmork and Meigs County
Produce Growers . A rour of the
farm begins an 7 p.m.
A shan program will be held
from 8-9 p.m. Dave Mangione,
OSU district spec iali st, will pre sent th e " Beef Outlook" for the
forthcoming years .
Steve Boyles. state beef specialist for Ohio State Umversi ty,
will present an , "Ultrasound
Demonstration and Elec troni c
Identification." Finishing up th~
program will be C hri s Penrose,
Athens County agent, present-

Pieue sae Kneen, Pap Dl
•

�Page C8 • &amp;unba!' G:imtf · &amp;entintl

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

Reader .upset over
mined vaction plans
..
Ann
Landers
ADVICE
Dear Ann Landers: This
problem involves my motherin-law (a lovely, non-interfering
person), my husband and me.
Mom decided to buy a large
beach house. She insisted on
putting everyone's name on the
lease. This included daughters,
sc;&gt;ns, and their husbands and
~ves.

. Last winter, Mom asked if we
wanted to pick a week to have
the house for our own use. We
said, "Thank you very much,"
and chose a week. She made it
clear that this was to be a vacation for my husband, me, our
two boys and her. She said, "This
is not going to be a big family
reunion . There will be just the
five of us."
It is now three weeks before
'we are scheduled to go, and I
have just learned through other
family members that my mother-in-law has invited 12 other
people. Also, they have permission to bring their dogs, so at last
count, there will be 17 people
and six dogs. The house has beds
fQr 20 people and only two
bathrooms.
I became very upset about
this, and expressed my frustration to my mother-in-law. Now,
my husband thinks I am too
emotional, that I overreacted,
and that there is something
wrong with me. Understand,
please, that· my mother-in-law is
a wonderful woman , and I have
never had any problems with
her. I need your help with this,
Ann. Don't let me down.-- Disappointed in Wisconsin
Dear Wisconsin: Show that
"wonderful woman" this letter,
and tell her you wrote it. Ask
her what she would say if she
were Ann Landers. I don't mind
being dragged into this mess if it
will help. Putting the ball
- · squarely in her courtjust-·might ·
so lve your problem. I hope so,
because your complaints are
totally legitimate, and she needs
to hear them.
Dear Ann Landers: 1 just
read the poem " Tea Drinker's
Lament," by Natalie Brannian.
She is right. Tea drinkers are disc riminated against in this country, and I know why. After the
Boston Tea Parry, Americans

considered tea drinking to be a
British eustom, and looked ·on
those who drank tea as British
sympathizers and traitors. Even
though this happened rwo centuries ago, the discrimination
lingers. I just thought you would
like to know. -- Tea Drinker in
Philadelphia
Dear Phil: I enjoy my
morning coffee, and I have tea
in the afternoon . I never have
thought of myself as being discriminated against, nor do I
view myself as a "British sympathizer.". I doubt that th~ average
American can tell you hat the
Boston Tea Party was about.
Check with your friends, and
you will see what I mean, but
thanks for the history lesson.
Dear Ann Landers: We all
can use a laugh now and then,
and I hope the enclosed will do
just that for many of your readers. A friend sent it to me with
no due as to the origin. Please
find room for it in your space.- Mrs. R .S. in Long Island, N .Y.
Dear Long Island: ·Thanks
for the laugh -- which I'm sure
my readers will enJoy, as well.
Here it is:
A San Diego patrolman
pulled over a driver and
informed him that because he
was wearing his seat belt, he had
just won $5,000 in uafety com. petition.
.
"What are you going to do
with the prize money?" the officer asked. The man responded,
"I giless I 'II go to driving school
and get my license."
At that moment, his wife,
who was seated bext to him,
chimed in, "Officer, don't listen
to him. He's a smart aleck when
he's drunk."
This woke up the guy in the
back seat, who, when he saw the
cop, blurted out, "I knew we
wouldn't get far in this stolen
car." At that moment, there was
a knock from the trunk, and a
voice asked, "Are we over the
border yet?"
Have trouble sleeping at
night and don' t want to get
involved in a novel? "A Collection of My .Favorite Gems of
the Day" is ~e , perfect bedstand mate. Send -a--selfo addressed, ·tong, business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $5 .25 (this includes
postage and handling) to: Collection , c/o Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicago, Ill. 606110562 (in Canada, S6.25). To find
out more about Ann Landers
and read her past columns, visit
the Creators Syndicate web
page at www.creators.com.

Sunday, July 23, 2000

.

Released, Earthen Vessels take stage for fair's last night
GALLIPOLIS -This year marks
the 51st year of the Gallia County
Junior Fair, set for July 31-Aug. S,and
a change in the schedule of events.
Normally held on Tuesday night of
fair week this year Religious and
Senior Citizens Night will move to
Satunlay. the last night of the fair.
The move provides better seating
and listening enjoyment for those in
attendance.
This also marks the first appearallce
of Gallia County's own, Released, to
the main stage. Singing loC'ally and
nationally for over two years, Released
has become one of the most soughtafter groups in the ai-state area.
Its vocal tl!ents, music selection and
personal testimonies have touched,
hearts fiom Aorida to Maine.
Although the tl!ent competition has
undergone some change, the motive
for singing has remained the same to honor Him who is worthy of all

second recording project.
The next release, "He'll See You
Through;' carne in the springof!999,
fiom its self-entirled MorningStar project "Released."
.
Better established, the group saw
this song break the Top I00, and chart
as high as No. 7 in some areas of the
counay. The most recent release, "I
Felt rl1e Son Rise;' was penned by
group memberWillie Church and has
blessed thousands.
2000 has brought change, and
should bring more national attention
to Released. In January. the group
received word that its bass singer
would be leaving. The former quartet
was now a trio. Marl&lt;, Willie and Tim
had to seek the Lord for their next
step.
Deciding to remain a trio, Released
found quick accepttnce in the music
industry In fact, three seems to be a
lucky number for the year 2000, as
praise.
three more songs will be sent to radio
Released began in December I 997, andTY.
when group members Willie Church
Some Dawning Music, owned by
and Mark Sanders spoke over the Kevin Spencer of the Spencer Family.
phone of forming a gospel group that has selected two songs for Released's
would dedicate itself fully to the Lord. artilt compilation disc. "Redemption's
The new group originally sang as a Song;' written by Mark, and the
quartet, as Mark and Willie were groups signature song "Released;'
joined with one family member and written by Willie, should hit radio this
one family fiiend When the original fulL
lead singer gave notice to leave, the
Due out in August trom Capitol
·sean:h began for the right person to fill Enterprises, the group will attempt to
his shoes.
bring back an old classic from legThat person was only, a few miles endary family group, The LaFevers,
aw.~y in Apple Gl'OIIe, WVa. Tim
entided "It's a Good Life Living for the
Moses joined in the spring of 1998, Lord."
adding to the group what some have
Joining Released on the main stage
called the "smoothest lead voice in this year will be another local group,
gospel music."
£arthen Vessels.
During the quartet run, Released
Fomted in 1992, Rief. Hennan,
saw three songs released nationally by Duane Bing and his wife Diana Bing
MorningStar Records of Nashville, have been spreading the good news of
Tenn. "Ooser to You" was the group's Jesus Christ in song throughout the
first eff'ort in 1998, and the tide of its area.

Class{fied ads, Pages D2-D7
Business Bri~fcase, D8

Page D1
Sund.y. July 11. 1000

THE WEEK lN STOCKS
This chart shows how local swcks of interest per(onned last week.
Each day :, closing figures are provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

+

AEP

t

Akzo
Earthen Ve11els
Deriving its name from II
COrinthians 4:7, this local aio brings
an enjoyable mix ofhumor and music
to the stage. Rief, Duane and Diana
are the perfect combination of sincerity. respect and talent Like Released, all
members of Earthen Vessels are married and members oflocal churr:hes.
Gospel Night is scheduled to begin
at 8:30p.m, when Released will step
onto the main Stage. Earthen v~

performs somewhere near 9:30 p.m.,
allowing Released time to catch its
breath and ~ool off: Released will
rerum to the Stage after a 15-25
minute break to perform again, and
then later be joined by EarthenVessels,
The groups plan to lead the crowd
in hymn time,join voices in a few spe-

ciai requests, and pull out one or two
surprises.
For more infotn)a!:ion on Released
or Earthen Vessels, contact Willie
Churr:h of Released toll-free at 1877-755-1117. More infonnation on
the fair is av:illable by calling the CUr
board otlice at 446-4120.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
6:30 PM FOR !VINING SHOWS
12:30 PM FOR MAn,;:;NI::i'IS_,

DISNEY'S THE KID (PG))
7:t0 &amp; 9:20 DAILY
MATINEES SAT/SUN 1:1Ql 3:20

THU.

FRI.

33 '1~

33~.

33),

33'},.

331~

427/oo

42

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t

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Bank One -+

+

Bob Evans

t

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+

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City Holding

t

Gannett

t

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General Electric

--

Harley Davidson

Lands End
Ltd.

+

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t

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Kmart
THE PATRIOT (R)
9:00 DAILY

WED.

43~..

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lOX OFIKI Will OPIIIlT

TUE.

cf

Federal Mogul

FRI 7/21/00 • THURS 7127/00

MON.

AmTech/SBC

Champion

+

t

BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE (PG13)
7:15&amp; 9:15 DAILY

Oak Hill Fin ~

THE PERFECT

OVB

+

t

BB&amp;T

+
Peoples +
Premier +
Rockwell

t

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Rocky Boot
RD Shell

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+

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Wai-Mart

+

wenlly'rt
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Wnuld vou like to see a stock nf local interest li.wed ?
Ne11·s Editor Kevin Kellv at (740) 44ri-2342. ext. 23.

10 1 ~'11!

If so. cn/llllct

Panel targets new businesses
Main Street group
builds reauitment
package
BY KRIS DoTSON
TIMES.SENTINEL STAFF

ALL! POLIS
The Main Street
Economic Restructuring Comrnittee
met again this wee k
to finalize its business recruitment
package and to discuss filling
empty storefronts with something
positive that promotes the community.
Important to the recruitment
package is the building inventory
that includes a building's square
footage, past utility bills, and a listing of the property's features for
each vacant building downtown.
Dick Northup, exec utive vice
president of the Gallia County
Community Improvement Corporation/Gallia Counry Chamber
of Commerr:e stepped up to the
plate, committing the CIC to
'I helpin g with the project's compte. ~ .cion .

"We think its very important to
the whole effort of improving the
' downtown," said Northup. "It
should be in the right format ,
Internet ready and easily available
to people who are interested in
buying or leasmg a building.''
Also in the package and completed is information on existing
businesses, demographi cs, chamber
directory, local government taxes,
utilities, etc., traffic count"i, names
of business owners for references,
town pictures, business incentives ,
promotiom calendar, finan cing,
associations, transportation, training and education, conference
facilities and real estate information.
Projects in progress are building
- histories,-adveFti&gt;ing and travel statistics.
One of the areas they plan to use
this information package for is on
business scouting expeditions, the

PLANNING FUTURE- Connie Freeman of Oak Hill Banks, Mainstreet Economic Restructuring Committee
chairwoman; Tracy Call, associate director of Mainstreet and CIC; and Lorie Neal, associate director of the
Galli a County Chamber of Commerce meet to discuss the recent goals of the Economic Restructuring Committee. (Millissia Russell photo)
·
first planned for Sept. 12.
two; it allows organdtions that'
"A b"'''up of us will visit sur- might not have an extensive adverrounding communities where we tising budget to have a Second
wi ll target existing businesses that Avenue window display. It shows
might want to expand .into the the comm~nity working together
Gallipolis market," said Cmnmittee and supporting one another,"
C hairman Connie Freeman.
Freeman said.
" We will also be searching for
The Ariel Theatre will be adoptinformation and ideas on how to ing a window and is working with
encourage the day trippers to visit Freeman in selecting which one to
Gallipoli s, like ir so much that they adopt.
want to stay and open a busin ess
"] would love to come and
here," she added.
speak to any group, organization or
Another topic discussed is their business to let them know how
"Adopt a Stbre Front."
Main Street can benefit our com"We would like to encourage 'munity and how they fit into the
local organizations to 'adopt' an plan," said Freeman_ "We also have
empty store front window and momes available from Ohio Valley
dre" it-up \vith-their information," - Reboional Developl1l.mreommtsc
said Freeman .
sion's SEED program."
"This does two things: one it
According to the SEED proputs something attrdctive in an gram fact sheet, new businesses
otherwise empty window, an~ from selec t counties in southeast

Ohio, including Gallia, can use the
money for initial legal , financial ,
engineering, marketing and other
costs for a start-up business.
The max1mum request is
$3,000, or 75 percent of total costs,
whichever is less, with a matching
requirement of 25 percent of total
costs provided by the applicant(s).
Payments to the applicant(s) will
be on a reimbursement basis provided that proper documentatipn
of costs and payment by the applicant are presented; exceptions to
this payment policy will be made
for special circumstances on a case
by case basis.
I me rested applicants ca n call
John Rtiinnlingso r lJoug Fry at
the OVRDC, 1~0. Box 72R,
Waverly, Ohio 45690, 740 -947 2853; toll free in Ohio 1-H(~J ..2237491 o r email@ovrdc.org.

&lt;;:

LIVESTOCK.
United Produ n:rs In c. lll ~lr­
ket report from Gallipolis for
sale&lt; conducted on Wednesday,
July 19.
feeder Cattle- Hi gher
200-300# St. S 115-$133 Hf
$94-S 122 , 325-450# St. $97$ 125. Hf $93-$115 475-625#
St. $92-$113 Hf. $8H-$1 0 I
650 - 800# St. $77 - $'13 Hf
S73-SH7.
Cows-Steady
Well Muscled / Fkslml $411-

ENTERTAINMENT
TRIVIA
Brookville, Pa.
~s a videotape
A. It was "So Long At t he
Fair," from 1950, and was a
·of (Camelot' British film. Also, according to
our lim , there is no video.
made?
Q. I remember a movie but
ca n't find it on video. I think
Q. I find it hard to believe the title was " The Prophecy:·
•
that the wonderful musical Can you tell me the correct
" ·Camelot," with Richard Bur- titl e, who were the stars, and
ton, Julie Andrews, R obert what yea r it was re leased? ls it
Goulet and Roddy McDowall, on video? - P.S., Altoona , Pa.
A. "Prophecy" is the correct
was not recorded on tape for
posterity. We haw the· sound- title of that 1979 release, and it
trac k and it is delightful. Is featured Talia Shire, Robert
and
Armand
there a video' - D.M ., Hix- Foxworthy
sO n1Tenn.
Assante in its cast. There is a
A. Very few stage produc- video.
tions have been videotaped,
Q. Wh en I was a child , I saw
an d
to
our
knowledge, a movie that has stuck in my
"Camelot" isn't o ne o f them.
m i nd eve r since. I think it
Q. When I was a fresh man in could have been called "Strait
high school 111 1938-39, my Jacket." I think it was in the
dad took me out of school one mid-1960s. A woma n got off a
afternoon to &lt;ee " Wings of the train, walked home, peered
Navy." I JOined the Navy in
through a window, saw her
1 943, serve d three years and a
husband in bed With another
month and was discharged .in
woman . She the n picked up an
1946. This was a 1939 movie. I
axe and chopped them up and
tried to locate a video on Ama was sent to prison . After she
zon.com. but they only have
"Wings of Gold." Is "W mgs of was released, she killed ;everal
the Navy" avai lable',- LJ.N., more people. My husband
doesn't believe they made
St. Jo&lt;eph, lll.
A. Acco rding to our lists , it is movies like that back t hen . Can
I get a copy of this movie? not .
Q. Can yo u tell me anything C. T , Baxter Springs, Kan.
A. Your husband is naive.
about a film, made in th e
1950s, titled "So Long At the " Strait J ac ket ," made in 1964,
Fair" or " Too Lo ng At th e starred Joan Crawford. And you
Fair" ' It starred Jean Simnions can get a copy at your local
and Dirk Dogarde. Is it avail- video store, or they can order
able on video? M .E ., o ne for yo u.

Inside:

$47; Medium / Lean $3H- $4.\;
Th1n / Light $32-$37; Bulls
$54-$62.
Back To Th e Fanp:
Cow /Ca lf
Pairs
$525$1, ISO; Bred Cows $475-$685
Baby Cal \'CS $40- $3011; Goats

$211-S II 0.
Upcoming specials:
Herd bull le asi ng program
available. High quality An gus
bulls.
Call the otli ce at 446- 9690

INVESTING

BY DICK AND CHICK! KLEINER

On the road
to ·succesiful investing

~US. Cellular.
The way people talk around here:

Chillicothe
U.S. Cellular

750 Westem Ave.
(140)702·4871

Chillicothe

In-Touch Wire less &amp; Mor.e
34 East Water

(740)779·6999

Galfipolio

usee Wai-Mart Kiosk
2145 Eastam Av..anue

(1401441 -1066

Jocklon
·Classic Plaz11
408 E. Huron

(740)288·0016
New Boston
U.S. Cellular
New Boston Shopping ·canter
40 I0 Rhodes ·Avo.

(140)456-8722 .

Hilltop Center

2736 Scioto Trail
1740)355-0058

Waverly

USee Wai-Mart Kiosk

900 West Emm1t Avenue

1740)947-0069

Also, come and viatt on1 of our Wai.Man locations: New Boston. Jack son
For your corwenience we hElve over 80 authorized agent locations .
Outside consultants are available upon request

Offer requires a new ont·ytar rvict a9rttmtnt. Roammg ~hargt,, taK~S . network surcharge-s and tolls not includtd.
01htr remictions and ch.a rgts may apply. Set start for dtta1ls. OHtr exp1rt~ July 31, '2000.
.H

Ponomouth

GA LLIPOLI S - The road
to succt·ssfu l JllVt'sting r.'i p~wed
ditlerently for each lllvc·stor.
Ont.· investor's road to suLcess
may be the high road, wh ile
anothe·r's may be thl' low road.
But common to bo th
inves tors are basic principles
that are true to form no m attL'T
which road an investor finds
himself taking. Belo\\' is a list:
ing of ~o m e of rlll''il' h .1~k
principl es that 111.1)' lc.1d .111
individual along the ro.1d to
successfu l investin g.
• Formah zc yo ur go.tl s. As
with the ac hi tVL' JJ h: nt of ,u 1y
goa l, co mmitlll l'llt to the.:· goal
is !talf the battle. Formali ze·
your co mmitm e nt to attaming
yo ur g:ua ls by writi ng . thc111
down , both sho rt- tc:rm and
lon g- term _ Follow
yo ur
progrc·&lt;~ hy updatin g 'them ·at
kasr annuall y. H ow else· wi ll

I

Jay
Caldwell
GUEST
VIEW
you knov..1 if you are actuall y
going to attain your goals?
• lm•c'it l';1rl·y· as pos..,ibk .

Procrasti nati on j.., an in vestor's
worst e nemy. Though thne i.~
no pertCct or idt:,ll tim e to start
itlVl'Sting, no\\' may bl' the bl'"it
time of alL
• Invest in what you undcr.,; t;md . If vou do not understand
ho\\' .111 invcstllll'llt works. you
will no r ti1lly understand th e
risks .h'\CH:iatL'J wit h th at

Please see Money, Pace DB

Planning for late
summer seedings
GALLIPOLIS It's hard to
believe that It's already time to start
thinking about late summer seedin-g. The fair begins a week from
tomorrow, and although we are
anxious for th e events, the summer
always seems to end too quickly
after fai r testiv1ti q.
With many produ cers cutting
tobacco, picking peppers, cutting
hay or treating cattk in the weeks
following the fa ir, planning for a
bte summer seeding now may
avoid planting delays later.
The two most criucal factors in
a successful latc: sun1mer seeding
arc adequate moisture, and planting
early enough to ensure good stand
before Winter freeze. In adequate
moisture. August and early September seeding have ample time to
become well-established and build
root reserves -before winter.
Although it can slow us up once
in a while, sail testmg is still the
best step followmg field selection.
Liming for a favorable pH will
maximize the nutrients already in
the soll, as well as the fe rtilizer you
apply in .the future_
\
lf tilla15c is being used, \yoid
d""P tilling, and prepare a firm '
seedbed. A cultipacker or cultimukhcr is an efficient last pass tillage
tool. Planting th e sct·d shallO\v and
with ~inn comact with the soil is
rt·colmnenJeJ, rather than broadcasting on tht· sw{lcc, wb1ch can
often be unsuccessful in late summer.
For th ose using a no-till drill ; be
sun.· ro remove any rema ini ng
stubbk frum fields that were previ ously in small gtains such as wheat
or rye. To promote good emergence, avoid the de11sc mats this
stubble leaves behind.
Whl'n choosing sel' ~ , remember

Jennifer
Byrnes
GUEST VIEW
that you gl't what you pay for.
fnvesting· in quahty seed as well as
in .Iegumes that are well inoculated
will typically produce a healthier,
longer-lastmg stand . Although soil
moisture doesn't seem to be a
problem thu s far, h·ep in mind that
seeds need adequate mo isture for
seedling establishment in acjditi on
to the moisture requirements for
germination.
Often in late summer, dry
seedbeds may have enough moisture to ger mmate th e seeds, but
not enpugh to establish the stand.
The new seeding should not be
harvested until the spring, a little
later than the established stands .
This will give the plants additi ona l opportunity to build root
reserves. For more information on
late )umm er set'd ing: or for sp~:cdic
info rmation on . gras~es and
legum es, please call the OSU
Extension Office ar 446- 7007 .
Ag news
Blue mold update: As you
know by now, the blu e m old outbreak we've been looki ng for
arnvcd late in the week before last.
Now confirmed in nearly every
part o ( the w unty, the extent of
infection varies from field to field.
As predicted, the f.1Ster growing,
hi15her yielding varieties -such as H
4ll3 art· suffering more damage

Please see Byrnes.

Pile• Dl

Lack of water
browning leaves
POMEROY - Are you seeing a browning or scorching of
leaves in your ornamental and
landscape trees' Th e youngest
and new ly expanded leaves are
showing edge burn or die back
as msufficient water is reac hing
the leaves.
This lack of water is accentuated as summer temperatures are
increasing and drying winds
occur. C heek the twib" for last
year's cicada damage . Th e damage looks like an open wound to
the center of the tw1g with the
stem regrowmg new bark (callus) over the wound. Dogwood,
oak, crabapple and fruit trees
seem to be most affected.
If this damage is present less
th an half of the plant's water
su pply lS able to reach th e tip
branch es, thus cauSing the
browning or scorching ofleaves.
What may the homeowner
qo? Prune off the bran ches
below the cicada damaged areas.
If they are too high or not easy
to reach , don't worry. Nature .
will allow the branc h to die
back below the injury and eventually the bran ch part injured
w ill fall otT. It may take o n e ro
two years for the dead branch to
fall.

•••

Graziers, are you interested in
discussing your bigges t mistakes
with grazing with other farmers?
The Southern Ohio Grazing
Council is holding a rel axing
prry-in dinner meeting along
the Ohio River next Sunday.
July 30 at 2 p.m. at Burcher's
Cabin across from Forked Run
State Park, State· Route 124

Hal
Kneen
GUEST VIEW
south of R eedsville.
There will be no farm tour;
however, co m e prepared to discu ss probl e ms and resul ting
sol ution s you have had in grazin g your herd .Allow some tim e
t() enjoy the recreational activities that th e Ohio River provides. Signs will be posted to
lead you to the cabin. For planning purposes, give th e Extension Office a call at 992-6696.

•••

The Annual Athens / Meigs
Beef Field Day will be held Aug.
1 at the S &amp; J Cattle Company,
Dave Harner Farm 437 4 Mario n-Joh nson Road, Albany. The
event starts at 6:15p.m., with a
cooko ut courtesy of Ath ens
Landmork and Meigs County
Produce Growers . A rour of the
farm begins an 7 p.m.
A shan program will be held
from 8-9 p.m. Dave Mangione,
OSU district spec iali st, will pre sent th e " Beef Outlook" for the
forthcoming years .
Steve Boyles. state beef specialist for Ohio State Umversi ty,
will present an , "Ultrasound
Demonstration and Elec troni c
Identification." Finishing up th~
program will be C hri s Penrose,
Athens County agent, present-

Pieue sae Kneen, Pap Dl
•

�-Classifieds
70

A N NOUNCEM E NTS

005

~

ALL Yard S.lea Muat
Be Paid In Advence

~ASK ABOUT HOW YOU

CAN GET A FRff
YARD SALE SIGN!"

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

1

,
y

45631

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S.PolcllnAdvonce
TRIBUNE~ 2 00 p m
the doy bolo,. the ICI
Ia to run Sund8y Monday
ldldon • 2 00 p m Frklly
SENTINEL llE.6IIUIIE
1 00 p m tho doy boloo9 the ICI
II to run SUrtdlly &amp; Mondlly
ediHon ·1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER D&amp;ADLINE
2 dlyo llofant tho ICI

•
~
(

1

New To You Thr ft Shoppe
9 West St mson Athens
..
740 592 1842
• Oualty cloth.ng and household
1tems $1 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru SaiUrday
.. 9 ()()..5 30

ALL Giveaway Ads Must
Be Peld In Advance
TRIBUNE Q£AilLirtE 2 00 p m
lhe doy belon1 lhe od
Is to run Suncsav
&amp; Monday edition
2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL DEADLINE
1 00 p m the dey before the ad
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edlllon 1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER QEAQLINE
2 days before the ad
lstorunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thursday

Wanted to Buy

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART·
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
QUI REO I 800 757-Q753

M

Adorable Ktttens To A Good
Home 74D-446 3479
-------,.-Four Soft -and euddly-Adora bte
Pupp1es M xed Breed (304)895
3255
Adorable fl ully black &amp; wh te k t
tens one all black 740 843-5445
K11tens Litter Tra med 740 446
7872

Lost and Found

AJ..L Lost &amp; Found Ads Mus1
Be Paid In Advance

M

S9B7 as WEE~LYl Proce ss mg
HUD /FHA Mortgage Retunds No
Expe r•en ce Requ~red For FAll
fniorma t on Call t 800 501 6832
Ext 1300
CAREER OPPORTUN)TY
MEDICAL BILLERS Earn Up To
$45K Nrl Full Traimng /PC ReQd
8B8 660-6693 Ext 4402
••FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS""
Up To $18 24 Hour Hiring For
2000 Free Call For Apphcat on I
E11.am nat on lnlorma!IOn Federal
Hire Full Benefits t 800 598
4504 Extenson 1516 (8 AM 6
PM CST)

ATTENTION We II Pay You To
Lose tJp To 29 lbs (Or More) 87
People Needed lmmed ately Ofler
Expires 7 26 Cal 740 441 1982

~-········~*······~-·

i
LOGS 5
i WANfED i
POPLAR

•

:

•: diameter; 18' long •:
$35 Per Ton

I

f

6110 of a mile north:
•
•
: of SA 7 Roadside :
:

Rest on right.

:

740-985·4465

•

:

•
:

On

mlljor highway In
SE Ohio. Interesting
decor, completelw

Phone

17401 71 0·0007 or

=~~~~~~~-~~:•:•;•;•;•:•:•;•:•:=~====7:4:a-::28
__e__3_e_T
__2____.
110

Help Wanted

CLASSAOTR
Stngte Dn... er Late Model Ken
worths Wtth Reefers West Coast
Carner
CLASS BOTR
Team Stra ght Truck L ~ le Model
Fre•ghtllners W•th Sleepers Must
Ha\le A1r Brake Endorsements
800 Miles Rad•u s Hom e Delver
OS
BOTH POSITIONS
Atleast 25 Years Old
At east 2 Years Ekperience
GoodMVR
Weekly Pay
Health lnsurariCS A'Jatlable
Work Well W11h The Publ C
For More Information Call 800
437 8764 Hrs 8 30 AM 5 PM
EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 IYR
Med1cal Insurance Billing Ass1s
tance Needed lmmedlalelyl Use
Your Home Computer For Great
Potential Ann ual Income Call
Now• 1 800 291 4683 Dept • 109
EARN EXCELLENT 1NCOM6
Med•cal B•llers Needed Full
Tramlng Provided Home Com
puler Req uired To Free• 800
772 5933 Ed 12005
ANANCIAL ASSISTANT/CLERK
Must be computer literate and
capable ol perlormmg payroll
preparation b II ng cash recerpts
cash d sbursements and monthly
reportmg Average of 25 hour
work week Ful benefit package
Send resume to Personnel De
partment PO Box 307 Syracuse
OH 45779
GET PAID TO MODEL FASH
IONS FOR MAJOR SHOPPING
NETWORKI 5end Photo W I S H
(Oepl AI 160 Oak Rd Norry Pa
17857 0' I 360 613 1099 (24
H' I

DRIVERS COLONIAL FREIGHT
Fmd Out Why The Best Kept Se
cret In T uck ng Is the Hottest
News On The Street' II Attend
The Humg Event On Thursday
August 3rd And Fr day August
4th At 10AM Or2PM THE
BUDGETEL EAST I 70 &amp; Po st
Rd Or Cal Brent BOO 331 2510
Ext3150r3t424 1 1200

Zerkle

car(ls

food VISits prayers and

for the love and VISits

110

Help Wanted

ASSISTANT
SALES-MANAGER
Beneficial

Finance,

Tho Plllllbury Company hao on lmmodloto oponlng lor 1
Fobrlcolor/Woldor/FI11or 111tolood manuflcturlngllclllty
ln Southern Ohio
Condldolo muot bo able to TIG wold 1nd purge llllllnlooo
attll 1nd aenltary rmrnga, mutt be ebll ro work from
bluoprlnto 1nd dr1wlngo muotoloo Ill willing to do work
In other tradtl t1 1 m11onry, carpentry mechentc, ate )
Tho peroon ooloctod lor 1hlo poolllon muot Ill cort11lod In
high preeaurt ayatema, hydraulic ayalama, ate 11 1
minimum 013000 poln1o and bo oblolo p1oo1orkllll
training be 1 good problem eolvtr and work without
ouporvl•lon Thl1 lo • union hourly poolllon with 1 PlY
rate at 115 00 per hour
Plllobury offoro oxcollont hoal1h coro bonollto
pr11crlptlon card peld vecatlone end holldeya, and
ponolon pion Candldatu m'y tubmll thtlr roeum1110
The Pllltbury Company
2403 S Pannoylv1nla Avtnut
Wtllaton, OH 4S8i2
Anenlton WELDER

•

A

duplex in Jackson.

If interested pleaH
call(740)384-3878

71 CJ.OOOT

Par~ time pos hon ava aote ror an

and

Saunders who have shown
us

word "netghbor"

Thdnks also to those many
friends who honored
Arnold s life With g1fts of

Tire Co Vmton Vol F1re

flowers food cards,

Dept B1dwell Bball and

prayers and condolences

t!J, omilt
Of t!J, Ona '11Jbo One.

and friends and family

the ladles
of the nrst Church of God

who called, sent flowers,

Pallbearers singers and

cards, and food

others who made his

Smcerely,

funeral ser.ice beautiful

rJ,t'Thetv

7/23 /48 5/7/99
Sadly mtssed by

911w.ibg
911m'IN g'"!l,lllli

e•.

lhtlrJ111R&amp;

Theu Fam1hes

Pastor Paul Voss

Dav1d and Kim

and meamngful also

Wooldndge
Richard and Dottie Darst

The

Auto Insurance Monthly
your dnvmg record DU!

'

Wanted opthalmic ass stant
tramtng preferred w 1 tra1n 11
meets standards call 1 740 446
0 t 12 asll for Ka thy
WILDLIFE JOBS TO $6 19 IHR
Federa Benehts Park Rangers
Security Mamtenaoce No Elip
For Some For In to Cal 1 800
391 5856 Ext 4213 8 AM 9
PM Local No Guar
+

WORK FROM HOME!! Own A
Compu ter? Internet Market ng
Opparlun lytt $500 $6 000 /mth
PT/FT
www ~u r pc2work com
POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H r ng No Exper ence Pad
Tram ng Gre at Benefits Call 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 566
140

have

Ca !Today 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452
Reg #90 05- 1274B
150

Tf'lnsportatlon

Company

Cwmllsh

The Quahty L1nk

Same Day SR·22 s ISSued

v1olence

breathtng medtcatiOn btlled

call 446·6752 or

to Med1care Save money

1·800·942·9577

Call for a quote

Free Home Delivery Call

Berber Sale $5 99 Yard Bowman's Homecare
740-446-7283
Mollohan Carpet
202 Clark Chapel Rd.
FOR SALE BY OWINEF~III
Porter, Ohio 446·7444
3 Bedroom House in
Gallipolis between
Will Clip Cattle
schools. Large fenced
lot, In-ground pool,
For Fairs
selling below appraisal
Jim Baugham
256-9194

Brown Insurance Agency
446 1960
Top So11 Ftll Dtrt Bank Run
Delivered or P1cked Up
M1n Loader
CHG $35 00
Call
Cremeans Concrete
&amp; Supply, Co
1-740-446-1142
Monday • Saturday

256-6535

~Af~CO"NOIT!ON!NG

-

Woooyards M1m

Rt.TI Racine

Mall

Serv1ce and Repa1r

407 Matn Street, Pt Pleas

All Makes

Next to Lowe Hotel

Smlth·BUick· Pontlac Gallipolts

New load of OVC Clothtng,

Pizza Express

COMMERCIAL CORNER LOT

M1d Summer Spec1al

AND BLDG FOR SALE

20% DISCOunt

only

reta1l busmess Call Tim toll

446 4109

free 1·888·874 1994

Wmter

Craftfest

Jackson

Craf1

00

GUild

The
IS

now

accepting appl1cat1ons for the
uncom1ng show on Nov

4

&amp;

Nov 5 2000 If you would like
an

application

Tammy

Jones

please
at

740 286

Speedway and

4

passes

for Aug 26 (Area Race)

&amp;

Call

740·446· 4241

Prospective Home
on one of the areas ntcest

pm

learn how to get
med1cat1ons at a lower cost

Fruth s Pharmacy Aunt Clara s
Collection of F1ne Am1sh Thmgs

or free on July 27 &lt;;~t 2 pm

Brown Insurance Agency

R1ver Street Gallipolis Ohto

Please call to schedule an

Farmer s Bank of Pmeroy

45631

Haffelt s M1ll Outlet,

J

E

Mornson &amp; Assoc1ates Wolle s

Po1nt Pleasant Center
State Rt 62 N

29,

Open House tours July

2000 from

12 noon to

3

Owners Will be accepting

bids pnvately or by mall at

70

Located Beh1nd Soulheastern

parent IS reqUired on all applicatiOns
For additional mformat10n call367·7324 extensiOn 99

:

:

. .

PUBliC AUCTION

FRIDAY. JULY 28, 6:30Pm
LEMlEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580 SR 588 (Old Rt 35J. GalliPolis, OH
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTIBLE ITEMS:
PA Jacquard coverlet signed woodrlng,
Allenstown, PA, Mahogany bedroom suite w /4

on Route 7

table and 4 ladder back chairs (chairs need to

SeeU&gt;.Candlestand, Nice pictures

4 10 am · 11 am

&amp;

Frames,

Oriental Rugs , Sterling Sliver Items, Old
Country store cast iron meat cutter

"All you can stuff tnto one

(Enterprise 1881), Andirons, Pewter water pot,

bag Free"

Occupied Japan

&amp; 25

&amp;

Czech pieces, 74 Piece

Elegant crystal stemware, Some country
antiques, Mise Collectible Glassware,
More not llated

For more 1nfo

AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A LEMLEY

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Reman ng Payments
On ProperTy Soldl Mortgages•
Annu 1 es1 Se ttlem en ts l mme
d1ate Ouoteslll Nobody Beats
Our Pr~ ces Na t onal Cent act
Buye s 800 490 0731 Ext tOt
www nahonalcontractbuyef's com

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDAT ION
Appl cat10n W JS erv1 ce Redu ce
Payments To 65% !'C ASH 1,.q
CEN Tt VE OFFERII Call I 800
328 8510 Ext 29

$FREE CASH NOW$ F am
Wealthy Fam I es Unload ng M•l
ltans 0 1 D a ll&lt;:~rs To Help Mm m1.ze
The r Taxes Wr te lmmed ate y
Wmdfa IS 847 A SECOND AVE
•350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
1Q0t7

PHOTOG-RAPHY
·wedd ngs
•Pets
•sports Teams
Profess anal Cerhhed Photo gra
phe'
Reasonable rates
Call lor appo ntmen1
(30 4)675 7472
(304)675 7279

230

Professional
Services

n
446-2342 or 992-2156

BE SURE TO COME

&amp; SEE

US Ill!

&amp; Bonded By State Of Ohto

Cash/Approved Check Only
"Not Responsible For Accidents
Or Lost Property

\

For Sale By Owner 3BR 2BA
Iaroe fam11y mom &amp; ol!1ce new
roof gutler ng 1 car garage
2912 Anmston Orl\le Pt Plea s
an t (304)675 2608 Pr ce re
duced

3 Bedroom 1 Le vel Large Lot
(304)882 2688

HOMES FROM S199 30 /MO I
3 BA Repos /Forec losures Fee
4% Down For l st ngs /Pay me nt
De1a1ls t SQ0-719 3001 x1 B5
7 rm house n the Le on area on t
acre tol $50 000 304 458 t 084

Must See N1ce 8 Year Old B ck
Acros s From 0 d N G H S On
160$89 500 740 388 0591

NEW LISTING 3 Bedrooms I
Bath Eat In Newly Remodeled
K Iehan la undry Room large
Detached 2 Ca Garage New
Cen tral Heat &amp; A r New Carpet
1ng Ancl New Root &amp; Sid ng Call
TmTol Free 18888741994
NO DOWN PAYMENT I
No Down Payment ReQu red W th
Government Sponsored loan
Good Credit And Steal1y Income
Requ red Call Today For More
InformatiOn Independence Mort
gage Ser\1 ces 12611 Mad1son
Lakewood OH 44107 M81679 t
800 8&gt;5 0036

Public Sale and Auction
210

Busmess
Opportunity

ESTATE AUCTION
TUESDAY JULY 25, 5:30 PM
903 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re commends I hat you dO bus•
ness w th people you know and
NOT \0 send money th ough the
ma 1 unl ll you have 10\/&amp;SIIgated
the ollenng
ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! Noth
mg Down Establ shed Yo rk Minis
Rou1e With 22 l ocal ons In You•
Town EZ Work 6 8 Hours
Weelo.ly Nb Selhng Net $52K
vea.r y 1 800 535 4385
24
Hours

1930 s Dresser &amp; Chest, Drop front secretary
w

I

serp front, M1 sc Oak cha1rs small drop front

1ue·'"' Small oak tables and stands, Dmmg table
4 chaus, Porcelatn t op table

AT &amp; T SPRINT Payphone Rtes
35 Proven Local ons Local
Great Income 800 800 3470

.

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aepa r
tng NOT Rep acmg long Cracks
In Wmdshlelds Free VIdeo 1
800 826 8523 US ICanada
www gle~ssmechamx com

.

•

.

•

s tand,

mug

2 Old

GIVe one of our Agents a
Today!
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101
e-mail us for Information on our listings:
blgbendrealty@dragonbbs..com
RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER
446 4618
Judy DeW111
J Memll Carter

Tammie DeWitt

Cast •ron

v10hn s &amp; banJO, Shuley

McCoy clown cook1e pr, S&amp;P s,

uon ski llet s Gramteware Ju mbo Jar Blue

JarS &amp;

Stone

IDt~on~ssi:on g lass
1av1v"ances

FINANCIAL CONSULTANT OP
POATUNITY Bu1ld A Fln11nc1al
Consultant Agency W th One Of
The Fastest Grow ng F na nc lal
Services Companies In No rth
Amenca W H STUART &amp; ASSO
CIATES TOM POW ERS I 877
378 8276

JUgs, Sal t crock, Chalkware,
Sad

Irons, M1sc

Old pictures

kit c hen

Wash board,

Old

!"•''"'"" Items, Kitchen cookware, Old books,

11

n,,.,, Old

.. .

dishes F1re King Lustre ware,

1Mammy grease Jar, M1sc paper goods, Cast Iron

pots , Old tool s, wood planes,

sticks,

LAUNCHED JULY 20001 S1mply
The Greatest Internet Opportu m
ty Around Take A Look

5 Gal

Stoneware water cooler, Kerosene

heater, Carbide hght 60'

www W11blo wea h comlhmmc f reedom

x 24

YOUR WASTING TIME, IV
NOT CALLING TO VIEW
THIS RANCH
Ideally
located close to hospttal and
shopp1ngl 4 Bedrooms hv1ng
room dtnlng room kttchen
wtth 2nd kttchen tn basement
Covered rear pat10 Approx 3
acres and lots more comes
w1th th1s hmel Call at once
OWNER WANTING TO

DEALII2066

Marble top, Sev

m1sc box lots, Lots of kmck knacks, More m1 sc

MED ICAL BILLER $15 $45 IH'
Med1ca1 Btlllng Software Company
Needs People To Process Med
cal Cia ms From Home Tram ng
P ovtded Mus1 Own Computer
800 434 5518 Ed 667
MEDICAL BILLING Unl m led In
come Poten t al No E•per ence
Necessa y Fee Info rmatiOn &amp;
CD ROM
nvestmen l From
$2 495 F nanc ng Ava• abe 800
322 t t39 Ex 050
www !&gt;us ness startup com

Items not h sted
AUCTIONEER

740 388

LESLIE A LEMLEY

OB23(NOME) OR

LICENSED
CASH

&amp; BONDED

I

740 245 9866 (BARN)
BY STATE OF OHIO

APPROVED CHECK ONLY

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

OR

LOST PROPERlY'

''*

'*'THIS IS AN OUTSIDE SALE 1

••• BRING LAWN CHAIRS ' ''*

your
lookmg to purchase a home
that has quahly lhroughoul
Low mamtenance bnck ranch
4 bedrooms Newly carpeted
formal hv1ng room step savtng
k1tchen famtly room Wtlh
!~replace Over 2 000 sqfl
1tv1ng space Attached 2 car
garage 2 acres mground
pool bam &amp; shed 12050
5 acres wtth road
Raccoon Creek
l ~~!~;~~:e along

_ _ __;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:P:;u;:b;:ll;:c;:S:;a:;l:;e;:;a:n:d:A::;:u:;c:;tl:o:n=====-----,ll and
325 Pubhc wale'
ava1lable Ntce rolltng/level
acreage $15 500 00 112071

Located at the Aucllon Center on Rt 33 In Mason , WV Will be sellllng
the estate of Judge C.E Peoples from Pomeroy, Ohio Guns are lrom
M~ Schoonover's Estate from Elkview, WV, Plus Others

I

FURNITURE

I

Beaut1fut 5 pc V1ct parlor su1te 6 pc Wat V1ct parlor su1te Both are m1nt Beau111u1
pc H1gh Back carved oak 8 R su1te lg Fancy Oak Knock Down wardrobe o 1
Lg Mah Gov W1nlhrope Sec one marked Maddox 2 pc court cupboard Beautiful
round oak table w/lg ctaw feet square oak labte w/ lg ball &amp; claw feel V1ct oak
SEjcrtlta,·y, Beautiful 9 pc Wal D R swte s1gned Rockford Super 7 pc Oak! D R
10 pc Mah D R surte w/ need lepoint chairs 3 Stack oak bookcase Oak
w/ curved glass V1ct Marble top tables Oak roll top desk Oak flatwatl cupboard
Earty llatwall cab1net solid s1des 3 pc Fancy poster B R su1te Oak 1ce box Oak
rocker Earty Pme 1/2 commode Mah Btankel chesl 9 pc fancy 1930 s D R sutfe 8
pc Heywood Wakl1etd D R swte Wal Queen Ann ch1na cab1net V1cl WIShbone
Dresser Oak book cases Oak s1de boards Oak library t able 3 tong Hall tables
Rosewood low boy dresser Lg Sp1nmng wheat Oak watl telephone Wal V1cl sofa
Fancy Serp oak dresser &amp; wash stand match1ng oak ctaw1ool bed Oak Geapholm
key wmd cylinder player V1ct pump organ Howard Miller Grandfather ctock plus
as found 1urmlure

1999 SECTIONAL
JUST
LIKE NEW Ltvtng room fully
PRlCE $48,900 00
equ1pped
kitchen
3 What a good pnce on th1s 1
bedrooms 2 baths Cental atr
1/2
sto'y
co mpletely
W2061
remodeled home Matn level
consists of 1tv1 ng room d1mng
kitchen 1amtly room bedroom
and bath upstairs Includes 3
bedrooms and bath Detached
24 x 32 garage s1de deck and
concrete patto Ntce level lot
FLOOR PLAN RANCHil
app,ox 11 6 x 160
Just the nghl stze for you
Large 11vmg room open to
formal dmmg area kttchen
laundry room 3 bedrooms
and 1 1/2 baths Attached
ove rs1zed 2 car garage Nice
easy to matntatn lot Concrete
dnve Handy locat1on1#2053
STYLE Plenly
of space and slyle herel
Formal hv1ng room dtntng
rooni both w1th a ftreplace
Overs zed family room
ea11n k1tchen w1lh plenly
cabmet space 2 Bedrooms
COMMERCIAL
2
Story den (m 3rd bedroom) and 2
bUildi ng lhal s 1deal for floral 1/2 baths on matn level along
shop retail etc Off street wtth sun room and laundry 2
parktng area Call for more Bedrooms upstairs Basement
1nformat1on 12044
w1th large rec room 1/2 bath
and kttchen area Over 5
acres attached 2 car garage
and morel 12043

FOOD

DON'T MISS THIS BUY
$39 900 00 Easy to matntatn
OR JUST SIMPLY
lawn 3 bedrOOfll!l bath eat
OUTDOORS? You II love the 1n kitchen ltvtng room
pr vacy m th1s country hornet enclosed porch Detached
Few mtnutes of Rto Grande
garage 12035
Approx 3/4 acre lot comes ONE OF GALLIA COUNTY S
wtth th1s well kept 3 bedroom aES"[
165 aoes wtth well
home complete wtth 2 full
matntatned barns/bulldtngs &amp;
baths ltvmg room dmmg &amp;
kitchen Flortda room 2 car stlos and a gorgeous country
delached 24x24 garage plus home that offers lots of I vmg
storage &amp; work shed Walk1ng space
and
extens1ve
d1stance to lake and publtc remodeling Includes a new
12060
kitchen With beautifu l cherry
cabtnets
and
hardwood

TOWN! And after
one look at lh1s
will be SOLD t
k1tchen plent1ful w1th
made cab•net formal
area living room 4 b~;~~~~~~~~
3 baths (2 bedrooms
master su1te on ma1 n level
2 baths) full basement 2
attached garage Cool shetdeiJI
covered
front
groove
flli~·~~~V~~';;~
floonng 4 bedrooms foyer tongue
4 acres1nand
a pond
llvtng room d nmg room WANTS SOLD NOW
tamtly room 2 baths Lots of
road frontage w1th several
t1llable and pasture acres
along some woodland Pond
and fenctng frontage along
Raccoon Creek
Way too
much to mention tn thiS ad
Owner Will d vtde 1nto 4
parcels or sell as a whole ON? GO AHEAD AND MAKE
THE NEW
11 f
1
1
AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE
FO~ THESE Must ca m comp eta ISttng THIS INVITING RANCH! You

,.-,G:::-LA~SS;;;W.::":-:R;;E~&amp;~C;;;O;;;L-:-L;:;:ECTI;;:;:;;B;;LE-;;;;S-,

John~s;;;o~n~B~r~o~th~e;;r;s~E~~l~~~;;:~;,;;~,

P1nk Depress1on
I Gern1artv bow t &amp; plate Collection of Beam bot~te!;-Gen - Sl&lt;&gt;rk·-Ch1urc:hiti-Bir1g
Kentucky &amp; others mce selection of frames Pnnts 10 1nclude
Slate Fait 191 2 Guest of Honor Pres Taft &amp; Gov Harmon f 3 x67 f,
Board of Heatlh 1897 s 1gned Early pnnt of Dog s1gned C L Van Vredenburgh 12/,
37 /, Old post cards &amp; greetmg cards 1939 World Fair Bank thermometer combo
' bucket Kraut cutter Crocks Jugs Lg Brass Bell Da1sey churn Brass steam
1 wl1iotiA Hit &amp;m ss engme off steam boat 4 Good buggy wheats Old loy I rucks Old
• nrum major baton Kalamazoo book hold er 1891 Stereoscope w / p1clures Vintage
S1gned Rembrant lamp Complete tra1n set w/ 671 engme &amp; cars Plus L1onel
IT,,:,:n Master TypeR Transformer Lionel 927 Lubncallng k1t and other p1eces

.

I

BOOKS

Pol1t 1ca1Books 1908 &amp; 1916 DemocratiC party lexl book story of a Tanff Act 1909
The Protective Tanff by Herman L1eb The Oh10 Bar Assoc1allon Reports 1940 41
Extracts from !he Congressional Record Woodrow W1lson s speech of acceptance
l'"'gu:st7 1912 H1tler 1937 Rose Bowt program Jan 1 1958 Oh10 State Un 1vers1ty
Umvers11y of Oregon Watt D1sney s com1c Donald Duck 1957 Jack &amp; J ill
Magazme 1944 Magazmes Newsweek 1939 Liberty 1942 Dodge News 50s L1fe
1939 and others Household magaz1nes 1939 &amp; others The Saturday Evemng post
1939 &amp; others Look 1939 &amp; others
McCa Is Compan1on Journal Co l1ers &amp;
plus a large amount of other books
~~-------------.G;;;U~N~S-----------,

.. GUNS WILL BE SOLD AT 11 00 A,M, *'
Savage pump 12 ga Model 1921 W 1n Model 840 12 ga W n 840 20 ga W n
370 16 ga Wtn Lever Act1on 30 30 cal Model 94 R 1fle &amp; North A mencan Arms
Black W1dow 22 mag p1s_l_
o_l----:;;--;:u.:;:c.;;-;;:ii'"'"----,
4 • wHEELER

r

I"

*' 4 WHEELER WILL BE SOLD AT 11,00 A,M, WITH RESERVE..
Yamaha ATV 1996 250 limberwotr 2X4 New Cond1tton ALSO Arlens 8 hp
nd1ng lawn mower Husquvarna chalnsaw St1ht weedeater &amp; NAPA a1r compressor
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE

home
W11h Slo1
2 baths
Second
1 1J2 story w1th 3
8 stall Horse barn
1 acre lot
Good
Let the 'enl f'om

I

Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Auctloneer R1ck Pearson #66
Apprentice Auctioneer A F Steln Jr
773·5785 or 773 5447
Terms Cash or check w /!D
Bank letter of credit unless known to the auct1on company
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property

~:~E REDUCTION!

~::~n?..':! 1:;'t~:ss~dlbed~~';;;~

NEW
PRICE 37,900 DOl
2 Story
home
w•th
charm
3
Bedrooms fam1ly room hv1ng
room covered front porch and
mo,el 12059

famoly ,oom formal dtntng &amp;
llvmg rooms newer kitchen
basement
rec
room
Attached 2 car garage and to
keep the k1ds busy and cool

ADDISON
N2033 the mortgage NEW LISTING!
2 LOTS ONE PIKE $&amp;4,900 0
ncome
500 00
Each lot produc•ng property
Consists
66 x 166 water of 4 bedroom home and 3
sewage available mobile homes
Approx 95
lots flat easy to acre 101
Cau for complete
I1st ng #2076

lh1s summer
lry a 16x32
mground
swtmrcung
pooll
Over 4 5 acres and less than 5
m1les from town I Ptck up the
pho ne
and
make
an
appo1ntmen t at once' Owner
wants to sell and wants you to
make an ofle'' 112013

l~~':f~~e~t:!,~~~~p'a~y;
:.:=:~--$14

I

Auction Conducted by

"Ucensed

By Owner 3 Bedroom House Gall1pol s Between S'Chools Large
Fenced Lot lnground Pool Sell
1ng Be ow Appra sal 740 256
9194

New :3 Bedroom G•ngerb ead
House W th Wrap Around Porch
Settmg On 1 Acre 5 Miles From
Gall pohs May help F•nac:e or
T• ade lor Mob• e Home' 740 256
6574

FINANCIAL

THERE WILL ALSO BE OTHER MISC ITEMS
PIECES

310 Homes for Sale

310 Homes for Sale

Real Esllte General

740·38S-0823 (HOME) OR 740.245 9866 (BARN)

THIS tS A GOOD QUALITY AUCTION WITH MANY FINE

~or J1ore Dn

Country living (Rutland area) 3
bsdroom&amp; large l-'oimg room
kitchen &amp; ba th new s ding deck
sw1mmmg pool b g yard $50 000
740 742 1049

Money to Loan

FURNITURE WILL BE MIXED FROM START TO FINISH
BE ON TIME BUILDING IS FULL!

Jan Swtgger 992-6667

\

my home 25 years e,.;penence
call 740 667 3633

$187500 7404467926

REAL ESTATE

AAA RATING 90 180 DAYS 1
868 811 0902

CREDIT REPAIR AS SEEN ON
TV Era se Bad Cred•l lega ly
Free Into 1 800 768 4008

W II talo.e care ol men &amp; women 1n

I

Call Betty Johnson
441 -1415 or

family mcome for the prevwus 30 days S1gnature of a

;

Rookwood, Redwlng vase, Yelloware bowls,

" No charge for clothing"

hst of family members hvmg m theu home and tolal

Watch next SundaYs PaPer for hstmss.
Henderson, W. Va behind Post Off1ce
675·6325
See Neal for the Deal
675·2900
. '
.

handmade ewer, Hull Madonna vase,

Poverty Level ) Jobs w1ll be up lo 40 hours per week at

Applicants should bring thm social secunty number,

W11 lake care of men &amp; women 1n
my home 25 years exptHlence
740 667 3633

No Fee Unless We Wtn'
I 888 582 3305

JUDGEMENTS

IITE..S OF SPECIA~ INTEREST I

Weller Louwelaa Ewer, Weller Suevo, Weller

res1dents and meet current TANF gUidelines ( 200%

Cheshire OH

bomg roof• barns oulbyl!dlnqa

end lin roofs Experienced Free
Est mares References (304)895
3981

1 800-929-5753
CMc 08\lelopment G oup/
M1llenn um Tele serv1ces

poster bed and chest of drawers, Ethan Allen

Fatth Chapel Church

followm~ locallons

W t Power Wash Homes Tra lers
740 446 0151 Ask For Ron Or
leave Message

Cape Coo With Ohto Allier V ew
4 Bedrooms Formal LA Format
DR 2 Full Baths Basement In
ground Pool Edge 01 Ga I pohs

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SEC~RITY /SSI?

BAD CRED IT BANKRUPTCY

LAWSUITS

310 Homes for Sale

lnterlor/Exterlpr pgint!ng mobile

~ALLTOOAYI

fN!ce hardware. verv nice condition. Must

$5 15 per hour at vanous loca110ns In Calha County

Spnng Cleanmg On Houses &amp;
Also DO Off CBS 740 388 9078
Plea se Ask For Donna 0 Leave
Message

r

"Clothing Bank"

18

220

Georges Por table Sawmill don t
haul you ogs to the m II JUS! ca ll
304 675 t957

Equtpment

Open Fnday,

July 24th 2·5 pm

Mowers lawn Tractors T1llers
Aepalfed Flee PICk Up Delivery
W th n 10 M les 01 Gallipolis 20
Years Expe ence Re asonable
Rates Guaranteed Mike 740
446 7604

OWN A DOLLAR STORE t BOO
227 5314

be rushed), Early 1800' s blanket chest

Aug

Stan Your Bustness Today
Pr me Shopp ng Center Space
Ava Iable At Alf ord able Rate
Spr ng Valley Plaza Call 740 446
0101

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /RE MOVE

Professional
Services

03

Hones t Dependable Lady Would
L ke To Mow Your Lawn Or Do
Odd Jobs Linda 740 446 7604

homes sttuated on the Oh1o

Middleport
Smokm' Robs

740 992 6926

230

220 Money to Loan

Opportunity

Jen s Daycare welfare certtfled
also pnvale pay welcome call

Carpet &amp; Upholstery Cleaning
Guaranteed Work W1th Fabulous
Resu ts For a Free Es t•m ate
Call (304)675 4040 Today

Lad1es for the Lord

Also open Aug

Calllpolls OH

Te1emarke11ng
SUMMER JOBS
.College Students
•H~gh School Grads
•High SchOol Sen ors
Anyone loolo. ng to eam $$
Earn up to $15/hour
Excel ent expenence br
your resume
Fun and friend y workplace
Br ng your fnends-and
earn exira $$1

Business

1

Club Peps1 Cola Bottling Co

Nascar Monday

CMCA A One-Stop
322 Second Avenue

De8dllnes subject to change
due to holld•y•

$4 50

Ass1stance Programs to

our workshop on Patient

Calha Summer Youth Employment Program
Apphcanls must be ages 14·18 Calha County

GMCAA Central Office
801 0 North State Route 7

istorunby430pm
Sltturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thursday

Dnnk

R1ver

&amp; Fam1ly Serv1ces, 15 seeking applicants for the 2000

Wednesday, July 26 from 9AM until 3PM at the

&amp;

FOR SPONSORING THE
YOUTH HOLE IN ONE
SHOOT OUT
101 5 The R1ver Cl1ffS1de Golf

pay1ng for your

will have Jeff Gordon's

Apphcallons wlil be accepted on Tuesday, July 25 and

2 days before the ad

210

INFANTRY CHAIR

27 (IRL)

Do you have problems

1s free to the public Held at

m

REGISTER~

Wanted To Do

~unbap I!J:unrs $5&gt;rntmrl • Page

WV

TOY LEHMANN DATED 1903 GERMANY PADDY &amp; HIS PIG (All ORIGINAL)
PICTURED IN AD FtRST ITEM TO BE SOLO WORLO WAR ONE FOLDING

OPPORTUNITY TO BID

for med1cat1ons Th1s serv1ce

HELP WANTED

SENTINEL~

1 00 p m the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 1 00 p m Friday

ttems

992-9200
or 949-4900

back stretch, Kentucky

complet1ng the appl1cat1on

Help Wanted

2 00 p m
the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday

TRIBUNE~

Closed Mondays

0710

29 for ass1stance 1n

EOEM/F/D/V

Be Paid In Advance

Successful Ca nd date
Requ rements
21 Years Old
'CDL wlln Hazmat and Tank En
dorsements
DOTQuahled
'Two Years Expenence
'Clean Dr v ng Record
'Stable Employmen t Background
Ownerflease
Operators Needed
Quarterly M leage
Pay Guarantee
Interested Drivers
Should Call
1 800-824 2857
EOEIMIF

$11 50

For only

Pnvate RV camp s1te,

call

appo1n1ment for July 28 or

612 Sllm Br1dge Plaza
Gallipolis Ohio 4563 t

AL..I. Wanted To Do Ads Must

Open 4 pm Dally

med1cat10ns? Please anend

Attn Manager
Fax 740 446 4760

3

with chips

training,

We Orfer unlimited
earmng potential + hase,
euellent benefits and
progressne sales and mgmt
tra1nlng
prog..ams
Forward your resume to
Denelic1al Fmance

Wanted To Do

or 8" Hot Sub Sandwich

(3rd/Pme) Great location for

SPARKLE SUPPLY COMPANY

1

180

180

16" Large P1zza
wtth

Pool Chemicals

Want Academ1c Excellence n a
Safe En\/ ronment'
GRACE ACADEMY IS now ac
cept ng enrollment of sludents K
8th lor tat adm ss on at 115 new
expandecl laclll\y m Albany Aca
demlc qual ty great curr culum
small classes some md v1dual
•zed programm1ng
Call now 74Q-594 5433

We Offer
•outstanding Pay &amp; Benef11s
"Safety Awards Program
•up ToDate Equ•pment
•company Matching 401{k) Pro
gram
"Husband &amp; Wife Team s We
come
•steady WOfk
•unrlorms FurniShed

Get your Albuterol or other

serves v1ct1ms of domest1c

s

Schools
Instruction

EARN YOUR CO LLEGE DEGRE E
QUICKLY Bachelors Maste rs
Doctorate By Correspondence
Based Upon Pr or Educat on And
Short Study Course For FREE In
forma11on Bookie! PhO ne CAM
BRIDGE STATE UN IVERS ITY 1
800 964 83 6

Enlerprlae

AR FJ

Business
Tramlng

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)

Pro lesslona
Tank Truck
Transporl Dnvers
GrowWtth
A leader

Medicare Approved

Seremty HousB

speed1ng tickets etc

As a pori of our Sales

Calha Me~gs Commumly Acllon Agency

Ophtha ml c AS Sis tant Tram ng
Preferred W I Tra•n ll Me ets
Standards Call 740 446 0112
Ask Fo Kathy

POSTALJOBST0$1445JHR +
Full Federal Benehls No Expen
ence Exam Info Call t 800 391
5856Ext 42128AM 9PM
Local Not Guar

I

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Team, yuu will develop new
business and market our
contemporary rmanctal

In

WANTEO

Part T1me Elde1ly Care 740 367
0291 Before 4 PM 740 367 7463
; After 4 PM Except Thursday
And Sunday

our lasting gratitude

jerry and Chnsllne Rhodes

URGEN TLY NEEDED plasm a
donors earn $35 to $45 tor 2 or 3
Murs WMkly Call Sera Te e 740
592 6651

AN to coord nate grant lunded
childhood 1mmunm1hon progra m
and Welcome Home Mather and
Ch ld home v sna110n program tor
a local public health agency Re
qwres 30 hours/week max1mum
Salar~ commensurate w lh expert
ence Send resume to PO Box
63t Pomeroy OH 45769 ATIN
Health Comm•ss oner by July 27

the true meaning of the

Aball teams and parents

On Her 52nd Btrthday

Brothers &amp; S1sters and

We are especial~ grareful

support dunng the Illness

'!l~~~t~tntb cy~ oft!J, cr~

Wmston

Husband john,

loss of our loved one

Reg1stered Nurses and Licensed
Pract1cal Nurses WV )lcense re
QU ired Serv ces P 0 Box 575
Potnl Pleasant VN 25550 EOE

Health, Hosp1ce Team

Sheet Sets, Quilts, etc

cooperatiOn w1th the Calha County Department of Job

FABRICATOR/WELDER/FinER

.

Of

such love kindness and

Holzer, Reverend Sallee

.8/fo Qo.J On.
'But uNO lht empi!J Chu.

In Lovmg Memory

~~sh
tothdn~
many
who showed

-MOS Coord nator WV Reg•stered
'Nurse I cense requ red Mmlmurrf
three years lull t me or equivalent
chn1ca1 ex per ence reqwed and
m1nlmum two yea rs chmcal ex
penance tn long term nurs1ng

Ulhe Murray and Pearl

Caldwell Trucking, W1lhs

St ver Bndge Plaza Gall potts

Card of Thanks

fnend5

Help Wanted

Soft Ltnes Supervtsor 40 Hours A
Week Management Sk ts A
Must Apply At JoAnn Fabn cs

Loca l Company seeking Data
Entry Clerk Wllh knowledge or
baSIC account ng procedure s
computer sk •lts oUtce machtne
elflc ency &amp; enJoys work ng ~tth
others Send resume cto Pont
PleasaPI Register ML34 200
Main Street Pt Pleasant WV
25550

Dr Andmon, Med1 Home

Home of Vmton C C

110

5023

Now Hung
All pos tons Full &amp; Part ltme
ava• able 4011&lt; patd \lacattons
co mpellllve starli ng salary Ap
p v n person at Gmo s n PI
Pleasant

to Harry and Mary Fellure

McCoy Moore Funeral

Help Wanted

Needed day &amp; mght shift worker
fo r Adult Group Home 740 992

Help Wanted

to the followmg people

Nurses on the 2nd floor at

C!Jlho pawJ IJA!J
1., !JWI fi60 on
f}uly 2J 19"2

the1r Galhpohs omce

preferred

In Wellston, and a

'11Jmtia0f}mt~~J

'17» 'llotlJtw u~mm of

a

Household Corp, and a
larp mdependent consumer
finance co. is seeking an
Assistant Sales Manager ror

loan products to customers

2 bedroom house

9n .8oolni 91f.,ory of

In Memory

telephone calls We also want
to thank Amber &amp;.. D.lvld

needs wh1le tram1ng to
become a branch sales
manage~
A.ppl1canu must
demonstrate proven sales
and leadershlp abilltles be
selt·mottvatrd and hn·e
excellent commumcatton I
interpersonal
skills
Bachelors
degree
or
tqUivalent mgmt e"perlencc
requlred
I l
! ears
sales l mgmt experience

4

In Memory

Payments Problems w1th

superv•slng, and guiding the
:~ranch employees to match

110

Instructor general bu 1d ng f con
strucllonf elect neal technology
Mason County Career Cente r
Apply to personnel ofhce Mason
County Schools 307 81h St PI
Pleasant WV 25550 Phone 304
675 4540 Closing dead! ne Tue
August1 2000 by 3 30 pm

the Doctors

lamar 0 Bryant for prayers
visits and cards Mt Mouah
Orurch All those wl1o sent

assisting

a

'

Home Health Age ncy Has Post
tons Available For Part T1 me
LPNs And RNs Dayshill Week
days And Weel&lt;.ends Ava•labllity
For Weekend Duty A Plus' Apply
AI 412 Second A\lenue Galllpo
IS Oho OrCat1740-4411779

Emergency

You w1ll also
assist the Bran&lt;:h Salts
Manager 1n the datly
operations of the branch,

Rental Units
For Sale

International Company Expands
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF
E Commerce 525 $751&lt; Paten
MENT4l RETARDATION AND
11a Full Tra1n ng Paid Vacat on
DEVELOPMENTAL
I 886 827 9733
DISABILITIES
Possible part I me open ng lor a
Preschool Instructor at Carleton I--:~-:--:-=:---:;-:-"-:
Schoo to work. on our Spec at Ed
ucallon p,escnool Class Th"e
Card of Thanks
(3) days a week Must ha11e cur
rent Teachtng Cert1f cat on 01 l•
cense lrom the Oh10 Department
The Family of
of Educat on and ha11e or be w11
ng to ob ta1n Early Education of
Dorolhy A Wooldndge
HaM capped Vahdat on Send re
sume by July 28 lo
who passed away
Carleton School
July 9, 2000
131 o Garteton Street
PO Box 307
would like to take !his
Syracuse OH 45779
bme to say 'Thank You'

Gov t &amp; Postal Joba Now Hmng
1n OhiO $1410 to $21 801 hr Ben
ells &amp; Pd Tra n ng For More Job
Informal on 1 81 B 942 0245 ext
4114

PatnCia

110

Help Wanted

110

BULLETIN BOARD

products

Announcement

Help Wanted

02

Page

Card of Thanks

Southern Baptist Cllurch Pastor

Dr vers 2 Week Pa1d Tru ck Drlv
e1 Tralnmg No Expenence Need
ed Earn Up To $32 000/ 1st Yr
W/ Full BenefitS Cali Today 1
877 230 6002 Sunday Fnday 9
ICM TlHfP M PA M mll!]lOrt
www otrdrl\lers com

A 3 unit building,

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$t8 35 Hour Full Senehls No Ex
penance Reqwed Free .Appl ca
t on And Exam Information 1 868
726 9083 ExtensiOn 1701 (7
AM 7PM CST)

o

11 0

23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

lmm9d ate opemngs lor pmles
slonals wtth our growing
company

hospital while I was there

DRIVERS WANTED OTR IDEOI
GATED !REGIONAL !LOCAL
Rea ch The Surum•t 01 Your F1
nanclal Goals Work Fo1 A Com
pany That Cares About You Your
Family And Your Fu tu re l mlted
Openings 29 CPM All M•les Un
t oad ~ng Pay Personalize d Dis
patch Home Orten Holiday rva
caliOn Pay 401K /Med cal !P•es J
Dental R10er Program 98% No
Touch Fre ght Ass gned T
2000 s Call Summ11 Transporta
t10 n 800 876 0680 Or 513 564
8945EOE

11

Help Wanted

and Nurses of Po1nt Pleasant

swer 740 992 6088

Sunday, July

D

Mp //go loffliSH

Med1cal Service

remodeled, new

$2~,oo.oo.

110

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

Tamm1

Drivers to dr ve cars to &amp; lrom
740 591 2867 1f no an

or (7401

equipment, beer end
wine license
Included. Asking

Help Wanted

the Pomeroy firemen Brent &amp;..

acutlon~.

a

RESTAURANT
FOR SALE

'Ol:tmes -~entmel

want to thank

Drivers Flatbed
Medical Cover1ge
From Dr; One!
• $2 000 Sign On Bonus
Qua •tv Home Time
Late Mod&amp;! Equipment
CDlA&amp;3Mos OTR
ECK MILLER
800 611-6636
WWN eckmuter com

bedroom house and

Announcement

i

DENTAL BILLER 115 $45 IH'
Dental B1IHng Software Company
Need&amp; People To Proceu Medl
cal Claims From Home Tralnmg
Provided Must Own Computer t
80().797 7511 Ext 30;1

Announcement

- Announcement

In

Construction Work must be Ex
perlenceo In Siding Soffet and
Facia (740)339-3489

ATIENTION
Earn Online Income
$500 $7 500 /Month
www pcpays com

N

Found med size black dog w f
brown mark ngs long ha r short
legs Hutton s Cafwash Pomeroy
740 992 7t35

8 " - 27"

888-565-5197 EXT 642

ASSEMBLY AT HOME!! Crafts
Toys Jew.;~l r y Wood Sewmg
Typmg Great Pay CALL 1 BOO
795 0380 Ext i201 (24 H s)

8

:

CLAIMS PROCESSOR! 120 $40
/Hr Potential Proces&amp;•ng C!alms
Is Easy! Training Pro'Jided
MUST Own PC CALL NOWI I

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H r ng No Expenence Pad
Tra n1ng Great Bene! ItS Ca 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 365

REGISTER OEAQL!NE
2 days before lhe ed
Is to run by 4 30p m
Saturday &amp; Monday edition •
4 30 p m Thur~dey
0eedllnea aubjKt to cn.ng•

•

BURGER KING
Career Opportunities we Seek
Career Or entad lndl11lduals who
stnve to aChiBVB the "BEST" In
customer satisfaction &amp; team
work If you have a desire to
succeed w11h a goal dnven team
onented &amp; grow~ng company we
offer Health dental &amp; Life In
surance Prescription Card &amp; Bo
nus Program Pa id Vacat•ons
Management Apparel Ad\lance
ment from Wlth1n Appl)l n per
son at the Burger K ng Reslau
rant located In the Ohto R ver
Plaza or Mall Resume to Burger
Kmg f55 Upper River Road Galli
poHs Oh~ 45631

100 OVERWEIGHT PEOPLE
NEEDED• Ea rn $$$ Losmg 5
200 Pounds Call 1 888 235 2292
(Toll Freel Or
www v herbmal com/ fechange

TFIIBUNE DEAPL!Nf 2 00 p m
the dav before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL DEADLINE
1 00 p m the day before the ad
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 1 00 p m Friday

due to hoJJd•r•

BURGER KING
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
We Seek Ca reer Onenled lndl
v1duals Stove To Ach1eve The
Best Customer SatlslactJon And
Team work If You Have A De
s re To Succeed W th A Goal Or
ven Team Oriented And Grow ng
Company We Oller Heath oen
tal And Lde Insurance Prescop
tlon Card And Bonus Program
Pa1d vacat1o ns Ma,nagement
Apparel Ad11ancement From
Within Apply In Person AI Burg
er Kmg Restaurant located In
The Oh1o Al\ler Plaza Or Mall Resume To Burger K1ng 65 Upper
RIVer Road GalltpoBs OH 45631

Help Wanted

$2 000 WEEKLY! Mal ltng 400
Brochures Sat slac!lon Guar
anteecJ! Postage &amp; Supphes Pro
v dedi Rush Self Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
3701 t 1438 Start Immediately

OesdJJIHI• subJect to cMnge

60

Alck Pearson Auction Company
full time auctioneer complete
auction
service
Licensed
t66 Ohto &amp; West V1rgmia 304
773-5785 Or 304 n3 6447

'Program AlcJs for Mason County
Grug Free Program H gh School
Graduate Val d Onvers license
wl gooel Clrtv1ng record Se nd
re sumes/cove letter to SCAC
D ~rectar ol Human Resources
540 F !th A\lenue Huntington
WV 2570 1 EOE

Giveaway

due to holidays

Lesl e Lemley Lemley s Auction
Barn 740 388 0823 740 245
9866 Full Ser111ce Releren ces
A'Jailab le Licensed &amp; Bonded
Our P/aCfl Or '11:lursr

Absolute Top Dollar .All U S Sli
ver And Gold Coins Proofseta
Diamonds Ant que Jewelry Gold
A ngs Pre 1930 U S Cu rrency
Sterlmg Etc Acqws1110ns Jewelry
M TS Con Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446-2842

S.lurday a Mondoy odklon •
4 30 p m Thurtday
"DMI111ne• •ubJecl to t:IMnga
due to holfd•Y• ~

40

buy/salt estates cons1gnment
auction Thursdays 6pm Mleldle
port Oh1o &amp; WV Li cense 740
992 9707 740-989-2623

Complete Household Or Estates!
Any Type Of FurMure Appllanc
es Antiques Etc Also Appra•sal
Aval ablel 740-379 2720

lltorunby•sopm

r "

B II Mood spaugh AuCtioneering

90

a

'
••

Auction
and Flea Market

Wedemeyer s Auction Serv1ce
Galllpol S OhiO740 379-2720

AIJ. Announc.rnent Ad1 Muat

•~
•r'

~

Announcements

Pomtroy Dilly Sentinel All
Yard Sales Muat Bt Ptld In Advtnct Dudllne 1 OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run
Sunday a Monday edition·
1 OOpm Friday Aak about how
you can get a FREE yard tale
sign
80

110

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or SeU
S h ~rley Spears 304 675 t429

QEADLINE 2 00 p m
the day befoffl the ad
Ia to run Sunday 6 Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday

GenUeman Seekmg Companion
ship From N1ce Female For TalkS
Walks &amp; Fnendsh1p Send Re
phes To 553 Se co nd A\lenue
Apartment 403 Gallipolis OH

Help Wanted

Ann Mothers &amp; other&amp; work from
home! Earn an e11.tra $500 $1500
part time 01 $2000 $4000 full time
per mon tn call 800 720 7658
v•sit www 2workathome com

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Be Paid In Advance
TRIBUNE Q£AilLirtE 2 00 p m
the day before the ad
It 10 run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Frldlly
SENTINEL QFAQLINE
1 00 p m lhe lily 1&gt;ttore tile ICI
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edlllon • 1 00 p m Fridoy
FIEGISTEA QfADL!NE
2 days before the ad
latorunby4 30pm
S.tunloy &amp; Monday edhlon
4 30 p m Thursday
•o.dOnet •ublfiCJ fo change
due to hoi/Wyo. •

f

Yard Sale

Personals

AU. Personal Adt Muat

l

110

~unbap

Section

23, 2000

Sunday, July

°

MEIGS
COUNTY
'
_,

• u./~

{,•.

h; • "

"\~'"

''

r-

~

.

"'"'

, '

) ~

~

t!

;~

..-

I

'

LISTING! 33322 JACKS
IR1141nl ~0 plus acres Wllh
barn and cellar
~---·--- 1996 14 x7 0 molbile
I ho-me complete wolh 2
l cemtral a r Addttla nal 1income
extra rental s1te
water well Call

1P'Ope&gt;rty loday'

IO

VIeW

~2070

Cheryl Lemley

742·3171

""-!IA5oH~•N ROA.D $79 000 DO ·

lmmedtate Possess1onl 1 1/2
Story home that offers newer
roof and hot tub dmtng room
kitchen den 4 bedrooms 2
baths and morel Let s go look I
12069

NEW LISTING! 660 HIGH
STREET $59,000 DO 2 Slory
home Situated on large stzed
lot 3 bedrooms 1v1ng room
dmtng room and ktlchen
Detached one car garage

#2068

NEW LlSTING 2807 SR 124 $94.900 DO 81 level home that
cons1sts of 4 bedrooms 3 baths I vmg room formal dtntng
kttchen and more on 1he ms1de Outside !here ts approx 8 94
acres w th a stocked pond More Call for complete llstmg
12078

DON'T SEE WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR?
Call &amp; Let Us Help You Find It!

�-Classifieds
70

A N NOUNCEM E NTS

005

~

ALL Yard S.lea Muat
Be Paid In Advence

~ASK ABOUT HOW YOU

CAN GET A FRff
YARD SALE SIGN!"

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

1

,
y

45631

IS HE CHEATING ??? Top Raled
Psych1cs Can Tell You• S t 93 +I
Mm 1 800 472 2103 All Credn
Cards &amp; Checks OR 1 900 820
0020 $3 99 /Min "2 MINUTES
F~EE (24 HAS) 18 t
START DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meeting Elig ble S1n
gtes In Your Area Call For More
Information 1 800 ROMANCE
Ext 9735

l

t

.,
.,

~

World Reknown PsychiC Lmell
Call Now And Let Our Psychics
.Answer Your Questions Whether
It Be L011e Health Happiness Or
Success 1 900 263 2518 Or 1
888 974 6447 S3 99/Min 18+

t

(
:

r
:

t
t

30

S.PolcllnAdvonce
TRIBUNE~ 2 00 p m
the doy bolo,. the ICI
Ia to run Sund8y Monday
ldldon • 2 00 p m Frklly
SENTINEL llE.6IIUIIE
1 00 p m tho doy boloo9 the ICI
II to run SUrtdlly &amp; Mondlly
ediHon ·1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER D&amp;ADLINE
2 dlyo llofant tho ICI

•
~
(

1

New To You Thr ft Shoppe
9 West St mson Athens
..
740 592 1842
• Oualty cloth.ng and household
1tems $1 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru SaiUrday
.. 9 ()()..5 30

ALL Giveaway Ads Must
Be Peld In Advance
TRIBUNE Q£AilLirtE 2 00 p m
lhe doy belon1 lhe od
Is to run Suncsav
&amp; Monday edition
2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL DEADLINE
1 00 p m the dey before the ad
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edlllon 1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER QEAQLINE
2 days before the ad
lstorunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thursday

Wanted to Buy

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART·
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
QUI REO I 800 757-Q753

M

Adorable Ktttens To A Good
Home 74D-446 3479
-------,.-Four Soft -and euddly-Adora bte
Pupp1es M xed Breed (304)895
3255
Adorable fl ully black &amp; wh te k t
tens one all black 740 843-5445
K11tens Litter Tra med 740 446
7872

Lost and Found

AJ..L Lost &amp; Found Ads Mus1
Be Paid In Advance

M

S9B7 as WEE~LYl Proce ss mg
HUD /FHA Mortgage Retunds No
Expe r•en ce Requ~red For FAll
fniorma t on Call t 800 501 6832
Ext 1300
CAREER OPPORTUN)TY
MEDICAL BILLERS Earn Up To
$45K Nrl Full Traimng /PC ReQd
8B8 660-6693 Ext 4402
••FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS""
Up To $18 24 Hour Hiring For
2000 Free Call For Apphcat on I
E11.am nat on lnlorma!IOn Federal
Hire Full Benefits t 800 598
4504 Extenson 1516 (8 AM 6
PM CST)

ATTENTION We II Pay You To
Lose tJp To 29 lbs (Or More) 87
People Needed lmmed ately Ofler
Expires 7 26 Cal 740 441 1982

~-········~*······~-·

i
LOGS 5
i WANfED i
POPLAR

•

:

•: diameter; 18' long •:
$35 Per Ton

I

f

6110 of a mile north:
•
•
: of SA 7 Roadside :
:

Rest on right.

:

740-985·4465

•

:

•
:

On

mlljor highway In
SE Ohio. Interesting
decor, completelw

Phone

17401 71 0·0007 or

=~~~~~~~-~~:•:•;•;•;•:•:•;•:•:=~====7:4:a-::28
__e__3_e_T
__2____.
110

Help Wanted

CLASSAOTR
Stngte Dn... er Late Model Ken
worths Wtth Reefers West Coast
Carner
CLASS BOTR
Team Stra ght Truck L ~ le Model
Fre•ghtllners W•th Sleepers Must
Ha\le A1r Brake Endorsements
800 Miles Rad•u s Hom e Delver
OS
BOTH POSITIONS
Atleast 25 Years Old
At east 2 Years Ekperience
GoodMVR
Weekly Pay
Health lnsurariCS A'Jatlable
Work Well W11h The Publ C
For More Information Call 800
437 8764 Hrs 8 30 AM 5 PM
EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 IYR
Med1cal Insurance Billing Ass1s
tance Needed lmmedlalelyl Use
Your Home Computer For Great
Potential Ann ual Income Call
Now• 1 800 291 4683 Dept • 109
EARN EXCELLENT 1NCOM6
Med•cal B•llers Needed Full
Tramlng Provided Home Com
puler Req uired To Free• 800
772 5933 Ed 12005
ANANCIAL ASSISTANT/CLERK
Must be computer literate and
capable ol perlormmg payroll
preparation b II ng cash recerpts
cash d sbursements and monthly
reportmg Average of 25 hour
work week Ful benefit package
Send resume to Personnel De
partment PO Box 307 Syracuse
OH 45779
GET PAID TO MODEL FASH
IONS FOR MAJOR SHOPPING
NETWORKI 5end Photo W I S H
(Oepl AI 160 Oak Rd Norry Pa
17857 0' I 360 613 1099 (24
H' I

DRIVERS COLONIAL FREIGHT
Fmd Out Why The Best Kept Se
cret In T uck ng Is the Hottest
News On The Street' II Attend
The Humg Event On Thursday
August 3rd And Fr day August
4th At 10AM Or2PM THE
BUDGETEL EAST I 70 &amp; Po st
Rd Or Cal Brent BOO 331 2510
Ext3150r3t424 1 1200

Zerkle

car(ls

food VISits prayers and

for the love and VISits

110

Help Wanted

ASSISTANT
SALES-MANAGER
Beneficial

Finance,

Tho Plllllbury Company hao on lmmodloto oponlng lor 1
Fobrlcolor/Woldor/FI11or 111tolood manuflcturlngllclllty
ln Southern Ohio
Condldolo muot bo able to TIG wold 1nd purge llllllnlooo
attll 1nd aenltary rmrnga, mutt be ebll ro work from
bluoprlnto 1nd dr1wlngo muotoloo Ill willing to do work
In other tradtl t1 1 m11onry, carpentry mechentc, ate )
Tho peroon ooloctod lor 1hlo poolllon muot Ill cort11lod In
high preeaurt ayatema, hydraulic ayalama, ate 11 1
minimum 013000 poln1o and bo oblolo p1oo1orkllll
training be 1 good problem eolvtr and work without
ouporvl•lon Thl1 lo • union hourly poolllon with 1 PlY
rate at 115 00 per hour
Plllobury offoro oxcollont hoal1h coro bonollto
pr11crlptlon card peld vecatlone end holldeya, and
ponolon pion Candldatu m'y tubmll thtlr roeum1110
The Pllltbury Company
2403 S Pannoylv1nla Avtnut
Wtllaton, OH 4S8i2
Anenlton WELDER

•

A

duplex in Jackson.

If interested pleaH
call(740)384-3878

71 CJ.OOOT

Par~ time pos hon ava aote ror an

and

Saunders who have shown
us

word "netghbor"

Thdnks also to those many
friends who honored
Arnold s life With g1fts of

Tire Co Vmton Vol F1re

flowers food cards,

Dept B1dwell Bball and

prayers and condolences

t!J, omilt
Of t!J, Ona '11Jbo One.

and friends and family

the ladles
of the nrst Church of God

who called, sent flowers,

Pallbearers singers and

cards, and food

others who made his

Smcerely,

funeral ser.ice beautiful

rJ,t'Thetv

7/23 /48 5/7/99
Sadly mtssed by

911w.ibg
911m'IN g'"!l,lllli

e•.

lhtlrJ111R&amp;

Theu Fam1hes

Pastor Paul Voss

Dav1d and Kim

and meamngful also

Wooldndge
Richard and Dottie Darst

The

Auto Insurance Monthly
your dnvmg record DU!

'

Wanted opthalmic ass stant
tramtng preferred w 1 tra1n 11
meets standards call 1 740 446
0 t 12 asll for Ka thy
WILDLIFE JOBS TO $6 19 IHR
Federa Benehts Park Rangers
Security Mamtenaoce No Elip
For Some For In to Cal 1 800
391 5856 Ext 4213 8 AM 9
PM Local No Guar
+

WORK FROM HOME!! Own A
Compu ter? Internet Market ng
Opparlun lytt $500 $6 000 /mth
PT/FT
www ~u r pc2work com
POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H r ng No Exper ence Pad
Tram ng Gre at Benefits Call 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 566
140

have

Ca !Today 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452
Reg #90 05- 1274B
150

Tf'lnsportatlon

Company

Cwmllsh

The Quahty L1nk

Same Day SR·22 s ISSued

v1olence

breathtng medtcatiOn btlled

call 446·6752 or

to Med1care Save money

1·800·942·9577

Call for a quote

Free Home Delivery Call

Berber Sale $5 99 Yard Bowman's Homecare
740-446-7283
Mollohan Carpet
202 Clark Chapel Rd.
FOR SALE BY OWINEF~III
Porter, Ohio 446·7444
3 Bedroom House in
Gallipolis between
Will Clip Cattle
schools. Large fenced
lot, In-ground pool,
For Fairs
selling below appraisal
Jim Baugham
256-9194

Brown Insurance Agency
446 1960
Top So11 Ftll Dtrt Bank Run
Delivered or P1cked Up
M1n Loader
CHG $35 00
Call
Cremeans Concrete
&amp; Supply, Co
1-740-446-1142
Monday • Saturday

256-6535

~Af~CO"NOIT!ON!NG

-

Woooyards M1m

Rt.TI Racine

Mall

Serv1ce and Repa1r

407 Matn Street, Pt Pleas

All Makes

Next to Lowe Hotel

Smlth·BUick· Pontlac Gallipolts

New load of OVC Clothtng,

Pizza Express

COMMERCIAL CORNER LOT

M1d Summer Spec1al

AND BLDG FOR SALE

20% DISCOunt

only

reta1l busmess Call Tim toll

446 4109

free 1·888·874 1994

Wmter

Craftfest

Jackson

Craf1

00

GUild

The
IS

now

accepting appl1cat1ons for the
uncom1ng show on Nov

4

&amp;

Nov 5 2000 If you would like
an

application

Tammy

Jones

please
at

740 286

Speedway and

4

passes

for Aug 26 (Area Race)

&amp;

Call

740·446· 4241

Prospective Home
on one of the areas ntcest

pm

learn how to get
med1cat1ons at a lower cost

Fruth s Pharmacy Aunt Clara s
Collection of F1ne Am1sh Thmgs

or free on July 27 &lt;;~t 2 pm

Brown Insurance Agency

R1ver Street Gallipolis Ohto

Please call to schedule an

Farmer s Bank of Pmeroy

45631

Haffelt s M1ll Outlet,

J

E

Mornson &amp; Assoc1ates Wolle s

Po1nt Pleasant Center
State Rt 62 N

29,

Open House tours July

2000 from

12 noon to

3

Owners Will be accepting

bids pnvately or by mall at

70

Located Beh1nd Soulheastern

parent IS reqUired on all applicatiOns
For additional mformat10n call367·7324 extensiOn 99

:

:

. .

PUBliC AUCTION

FRIDAY. JULY 28, 6:30Pm
LEMlEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580 SR 588 (Old Rt 35J. GalliPolis, OH
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTIBLE ITEMS:
PA Jacquard coverlet signed woodrlng,
Allenstown, PA, Mahogany bedroom suite w /4

on Route 7

table and 4 ladder back chairs (chairs need to

SeeU&gt;.Candlestand, Nice pictures

4 10 am · 11 am

&amp;

Frames,

Oriental Rugs , Sterling Sliver Items, Old
Country store cast iron meat cutter

"All you can stuff tnto one

(Enterprise 1881), Andirons, Pewter water pot,

bag Free"

Occupied Japan

&amp; 25

&amp;

Czech pieces, 74 Piece

Elegant crystal stemware, Some country
antiques, Mise Collectible Glassware,
More not llated

For more 1nfo

AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A LEMLEY

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Reman ng Payments
On ProperTy Soldl Mortgages•
Annu 1 es1 Se ttlem en ts l mme
d1ate Ouoteslll Nobody Beats
Our Pr~ ces Na t onal Cent act
Buye s 800 490 0731 Ext tOt
www nahonalcontractbuyef's com

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDAT ION
Appl cat10n W JS erv1 ce Redu ce
Payments To 65% !'C ASH 1,.q
CEN Tt VE OFFERII Call I 800
328 8510 Ext 29

$FREE CASH NOW$ F am
Wealthy Fam I es Unload ng M•l
ltans 0 1 D a ll&lt;:~rs To Help Mm m1.ze
The r Taxes Wr te lmmed ate y
Wmdfa IS 847 A SECOND AVE
•350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
1Q0t7

PHOTOG-RAPHY
·wedd ngs
•Pets
•sports Teams
Profess anal Cerhhed Photo gra
phe'
Reasonable rates
Call lor appo ntmen1
(30 4)675 7472
(304)675 7279

230

Professional
Services

n
446-2342 or 992-2156

BE SURE TO COME

&amp; SEE

US Ill!

&amp; Bonded By State Of Ohto

Cash/Approved Check Only
"Not Responsible For Accidents
Or Lost Property

\

For Sale By Owner 3BR 2BA
Iaroe fam11y mom &amp; ol!1ce new
roof gutler ng 1 car garage
2912 Anmston Orl\le Pt Plea s
an t (304)675 2608 Pr ce re
duced

3 Bedroom 1 Le vel Large Lot
(304)882 2688

HOMES FROM S199 30 /MO I
3 BA Repos /Forec losures Fee
4% Down For l st ngs /Pay me nt
De1a1ls t SQ0-719 3001 x1 B5
7 rm house n the Le on area on t
acre tol $50 000 304 458 t 084

Must See N1ce 8 Year Old B ck
Acros s From 0 d N G H S On
160$89 500 740 388 0591

NEW LISTING 3 Bedrooms I
Bath Eat In Newly Remodeled
K Iehan la undry Room large
Detached 2 Ca Garage New
Cen tral Heat &amp; A r New Carpet
1ng Ancl New Root &amp; Sid ng Call
TmTol Free 18888741994
NO DOWN PAYMENT I
No Down Payment ReQu red W th
Government Sponsored loan
Good Credit And Steal1y Income
Requ red Call Today For More
InformatiOn Independence Mort
gage Ser\1 ces 12611 Mad1son
Lakewood OH 44107 M81679 t
800 8&gt;5 0036

Public Sale and Auction
210

Busmess
Opportunity

ESTATE AUCTION
TUESDAY JULY 25, 5:30 PM
903 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re commends I hat you dO bus•
ness w th people you know and
NOT \0 send money th ough the
ma 1 unl ll you have 10\/&amp;SIIgated
the ollenng
ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! Noth
mg Down Establ shed Yo rk Minis
Rou1e With 22 l ocal ons In You•
Town EZ Work 6 8 Hours
Weelo.ly Nb Selhng Net $52K
vea.r y 1 800 535 4385
24
Hours

1930 s Dresser &amp; Chest, Drop front secretary
w

I

serp front, M1 sc Oak cha1rs small drop front

1ue·'"' Small oak tables and stands, Dmmg table
4 chaus, Porcelatn t op table

AT &amp; T SPRINT Payphone Rtes
35 Proven Local ons Local
Great Income 800 800 3470

.

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aepa r
tng NOT Rep acmg long Cracks
In Wmdshlelds Free VIdeo 1
800 826 8523 US ICanada
www gle~ssmechamx com

.

•

.

•

s tand,

mug

2 Old

GIVe one of our Agents a
Today!
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101
e-mail us for Information on our listings:
blgbendrealty@dragonbbs..com
RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER
446 4618
Judy DeW111
J Memll Carter

Tammie DeWitt

Cast •ron

v10hn s &amp; banJO, Shuley

McCoy clown cook1e pr, S&amp;P s,

uon ski llet s Gramteware Ju mbo Jar Blue

JarS &amp;

Stone

IDt~on~ssi:on g lass
1av1v"ances

FINANCIAL CONSULTANT OP
POATUNITY Bu1ld A Fln11nc1al
Consultant Agency W th One Of
The Fastest Grow ng F na nc lal
Services Companies In No rth
Amenca W H STUART &amp; ASSO
CIATES TOM POW ERS I 877
378 8276

JUgs, Sal t crock, Chalkware,
Sad

Irons, M1sc

Old pictures

kit c hen

Wash board,

Old

!"•''"'"" Items, Kitchen cookware, Old books,

11

n,,.,, Old

.. .

dishes F1re King Lustre ware,

1Mammy grease Jar, M1sc paper goods, Cast Iron

pots , Old tool s, wood planes,

sticks,

LAUNCHED JULY 20001 S1mply
The Greatest Internet Opportu m
ty Around Take A Look

5 Gal

Stoneware water cooler, Kerosene

heater, Carbide hght 60'

www W11blo wea h comlhmmc f reedom

x 24

YOUR WASTING TIME, IV
NOT CALLING TO VIEW
THIS RANCH
Ideally
located close to hospttal and
shopp1ngl 4 Bedrooms hv1ng
room dtnlng room kttchen
wtth 2nd kttchen tn basement
Covered rear pat10 Approx 3
acres and lots more comes
w1th th1s hmel Call at once
OWNER WANTING TO

DEALII2066

Marble top, Sev

m1sc box lots, Lots of kmck knacks, More m1 sc

MED ICAL BILLER $15 $45 IH'
Med1ca1 Btlllng Software Company
Needs People To Process Med
cal Cia ms From Home Tram ng
P ovtded Mus1 Own Computer
800 434 5518 Ed 667
MEDICAL BILLING Unl m led In
come Poten t al No E•per ence
Necessa y Fee Info rmatiOn &amp;
CD ROM
nvestmen l From
$2 495 F nanc ng Ava• abe 800
322 t t39 Ex 050
www !&gt;us ness startup com

Items not h sted
AUCTIONEER

740 388

LESLIE A LEMLEY

OB23(NOME) OR

LICENSED
CASH

&amp; BONDED

I

740 245 9866 (BARN)
BY STATE OF OHIO

APPROVED CHECK ONLY

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

OR

LOST PROPERlY'

''*

'*'THIS IS AN OUTSIDE SALE 1

••• BRING LAWN CHAIRS ' ''*

your
lookmg to purchase a home
that has quahly lhroughoul
Low mamtenance bnck ranch
4 bedrooms Newly carpeted
formal hv1ng room step savtng
k1tchen famtly room Wtlh
!~replace Over 2 000 sqfl
1tv1ng space Attached 2 car
garage 2 acres mground
pool bam &amp; shed 12050
5 acres wtth road
Raccoon Creek
l ~~!~;~~:e along

_ _ __;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:P:;u;:b;:ll;:c;:S:;a:;l:;e;:;a:n:d:A::;:u:;c:;tl:o:n=====-----,ll and
325 Pubhc wale'
ava1lable Ntce rolltng/level
acreage $15 500 00 112071

Located at the Aucllon Center on Rt 33 In Mason , WV Will be sellllng
the estate of Judge C.E Peoples from Pomeroy, Ohio Guns are lrom
M~ Schoonover's Estate from Elkview, WV, Plus Others

I

FURNITURE

I

Beaut1fut 5 pc V1ct parlor su1te 6 pc Wat V1ct parlor su1te Both are m1nt Beau111u1
pc H1gh Back carved oak 8 R su1te lg Fancy Oak Knock Down wardrobe o 1
Lg Mah Gov W1nlhrope Sec one marked Maddox 2 pc court cupboard Beautiful
round oak table w/lg ctaw feet square oak labte w/ lg ball &amp; claw feel V1ct oak
SEjcrtlta,·y, Beautiful 9 pc Wal D R swte s1gned Rockford Super 7 pc Oak! D R
10 pc Mah D R surte w/ need lepoint chairs 3 Stack oak bookcase Oak
w/ curved glass V1ct Marble top tables Oak roll top desk Oak flatwatl cupboard
Earty llatwall cab1net solid s1des 3 pc Fancy poster B R su1te Oak 1ce box Oak
rocker Earty Pme 1/2 commode Mah Btankel chesl 9 pc fancy 1930 s D R sutfe 8
pc Heywood Wakl1etd D R swte Wal Queen Ann ch1na cab1net V1cl WIShbone
Dresser Oak book cases Oak s1de boards Oak library t able 3 tong Hall tables
Rosewood low boy dresser Lg Sp1nmng wheat Oak watl telephone Wal V1cl sofa
Fancy Serp oak dresser &amp; wash stand match1ng oak ctaw1ool bed Oak Geapholm
key wmd cylinder player V1ct pump organ Howard Miller Grandfather ctock plus
as found 1urmlure

1999 SECTIONAL
JUST
LIKE NEW Ltvtng room fully
PRlCE $48,900 00
equ1pped
kitchen
3 What a good pnce on th1s 1
bedrooms 2 baths Cental atr
1/2
sto'y
co mpletely
W2061
remodeled home Matn level
consists of 1tv1 ng room d1mng
kitchen 1amtly room bedroom
and bath upstairs Includes 3
bedrooms and bath Detached
24 x 32 garage s1de deck and
concrete patto Ntce level lot
FLOOR PLAN RANCHil
app,ox 11 6 x 160
Just the nghl stze for you
Large 11vmg room open to
formal dmmg area kttchen
laundry room 3 bedrooms
and 1 1/2 baths Attached
ove rs1zed 2 car garage Nice
easy to matntatn lot Concrete
dnve Handy locat1on1#2053
STYLE Plenly
of space and slyle herel
Formal hv1ng room dtntng
rooni both w1th a ftreplace
Overs zed family room
ea11n k1tchen w1lh plenly
cabmet space 2 Bedrooms
COMMERCIAL
2
Story den (m 3rd bedroom) and 2
bUildi ng lhal s 1deal for floral 1/2 baths on matn level along
shop retail etc Off street wtth sun room and laundry 2
parktng area Call for more Bedrooms upstairs Basement
1nformat1on 12044
w1th large rec room 1/2 bath
and kttchen area Over 5
acres attached 2 car garage
and morel 12043

FOOD

DON'T MISS THIS BUY
$39 900 00 Easy to matntatn
OR JUST SIMPLY
lawn 3 bedrOOfll!l bath eat
OUTDOORS? You II love the 1n kitchen ltvtng room
pr vacy m th1s country hornet enclosed porch Detached
Few mtnutes of Rto Grande
garage 12035
Approx 3/4 acre lot comes ONE OF GALLIA COUNTY S
wtth th1s well kept 3 bedroom aES"[
165 aoes wtth well
home complete wtth 2 full
matntatned barns/bulldtngs &amp;
baths ltvmg room dmmg &amp;
kitchen Flortda room 2 car stlos and a gorgeous country
delached 24x24 garage plus home that offers lots of I vmg
storage &amp; work shed Walk1ng space
and
extens1ve
d1stance to lake and publtc remodeling Includes a new
12060
kitchen With beautifu l cherry
cabtnets
and
hardwood

TOWN! And after
one look at lh1s
will be SOLD t
k1tchen plent1ful w1th
made cab•net formal
area living room 4 b~;~~~~~~~~
3 baths (2 bedrooms
master su1te on ma1 n level
2 baths) full basement 2
attached garage Cool shetdeiJI
covered
front
groove
flli~·~~~V~~';;~
floonng 4 bedrooms foyer tongue
4 acres1nand
a pond
llvtng room d nmg room WANTS SOLD NOW
tamtly room 2 baths Lots of
road frontage w1th several
t1llable and pasture acres
along some woodland Pond
and fenctng frontage along
Raccoon Creek
Way too
much to mention tn thiS ad
Owner Will d vtde 1nto 4
parcels or sell as a whole ON? GO AHEAD AND MAKE
THE NEW
11 f
1
1
AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE
FO~ THESE Must ca m comp eta ISttng THIS INVITING RANCH! You

,.-,G:::-LA~SS;;;W.::":-:R;;E~&amp;~C;;;O;;;L-:-L;:;:ECTI;;:;:;;B;;LE-;;;;S-,

John~s;;;o~n~B~r~o~th~e;;r;s~E~~l~~~;;:~;,;;~,

P1nk Depress1on
I Gern1artv bow t &amp; plate Collection of Beam bot~te!;-Gen - Sl&lt;&gt;rk·-Ch1urc:hiti-Bir1g
Kentucky &amp; others mce selection of frames Pnnts 10 1nclude
Slate Fait 191 2 Guest of Honor Pres Taft &amp; Gov Harmon f 3 x67 f,
Board of Heatlh 1897 s 1gned Early pnnt of Dog s1gned C L Van Vredenburgh 12/,
37 /, Old post cards &amp; greetmg cards 1939 World Fair Bank thermometer combo
' bucket Kraut cutter Crocks Jugs Lg Brass Bell Da1sey churn Brass steam
1 wl1iotiA Hit &amp;m ss engme off steam boat 4 Good buggy wheats Old loy I rucks Old
• nrum major baton Kalamazoo book hold er 1891 Stereoscope w / p1clures Vintage
S1gned Rembrant lamp Complete tra1n set w/ 671 engme &amp; cars Plus L1onel
IT,,:,:n Master TypeR Transformer Lionel 927 Lubncallng k1t and other p1eces

.

I

BOOKS

Pol1t 1ca1Books 1908 &amp; 1916 DemocratiC party lexl book story of a Tanff Act 1909
The Protective Tanff by Herman L1eb The Oh10 Bar Assoc1allon Reports 1940 41
Extracts from !he Congressional Record Woodrow W1lson s speech of acceptance
l'"'gu:st7 1912 H1tler 1937 Rose Bowt program Jan 1 1958 Oh10 State Un 1vers1ty
Umvers11y of Oregon Watt D1sney s com1c Donald Duck 1957 Jack &amp; J ill
Magazme 1944 Magazmes Newsweek 1939 Liberty 1942 Dodge News 50s L1fe
1939 and others Household magaz1nes 1939 &amp; others The Saturday Evemng post
1939 &amp; others Look 1939 &amp; others
McCa Is Compan1on Journal Co l1ers &amp;
plus a large amount of other books
~~-------------.G;;;U~N~S-----------,

.. GUNS WILL BE SOLD AT 11 00 A,M, *'
Savage pump 12 ga Model 1921 W 1n Model 840 12 ga W n 840 20 ga W n
370 16 ga Wtn Lever Act1on 30 30 cal Model 94 R 1fle &amp; North A mencan Arms
Black W1dow 22 mag p1s_l_
o_l----:;;--;:u.:;:c.;;-;;:ii'"'"----,
4 • wHEELER

r

I"

*' 4 WHEELER WILL BE SOLD AT 11,00 A,M, WITH RESERVE..
Yamaha ATV 1996 250 limberwotr 2X4 New Cond1tton ALSO Arlens 8 hp
nd1ng lawn mower Husquvarna chalnsaw St1ht weedeater &amp; NAPA a1r compressor
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE

home
W11h Slo1
2 baths
Second
1 1J2 story w1th 3
8 stall Horse barn
1 acre lot
Good
Let the 'enl f'om

I

Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Auctloneer R1ck Pearson #66
Apprentice Auctioneer A F Steln Jr
773·5785 or 773 5447
Terms Cash or check w /!D
Bank letter of credit unless known to the auct1on company
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property

~:~E REDUCTION!

~::~n?..':! 1:;'t~:ss~dlbed~~';;;~

NEW
PRICE 37,900 DOl
2 Story
home
w•th
charm
3
Bedrooms fam1ly room hv1ng
room covered front porch and
mo,el 12059

famoly ,oom formal dtntng &amp;
llvmg rooms newer kitchen
basement
rec
room
Attached 2 car garage and to
keep the k1ds busy and cool

ADDISON
N2033 the mortgage NEW LISTING!
2 LOTS ONE PIKE $&amp;4,900 0
ncome
500 00
Each lot produc•ng property
Consists
66 x 166 water of 4 bedroom home and 3
sewage available mobile homes
Approx 95
lots flat easy to acre 101
Cau for complete
I1st ng #2076

lh1s summer
lry a 16x32
mground
swtmrcung
pooll
Over 4 5 acres and less than 5
m1les from town I Ptck up the
pho ne
and
make
an
appo1ntmen t at once' Owner
wants to sell and wants you to
make an ofle'' 112013

l~~':f~~e~t:!,~~~~p'a~y;
:.:=:~--$14

I

Auction Conducted by

"Ucensed

By Owner 3 Bedroom House Gall1pol s Between S'Chools Large
Fenced Lot lnground Pool Sell
1ng Be ow Appra sal 740 256
9194

New :3 Bedroom G•ngerb ead
House W th Wrap Around Porch
Settmg On 1 Acre 5 Miles From
Gall pohs May help F•nac:e or
T• ade lor Mob• e Home' 740 256
6574

FINANCIAL

THERE WILL ALSO BE OTHER MISC ITEMS
PIECES

310 Homes for Sale

310 Homes for Sale

Real Esllte General

740·38S-0823 (HOME) OR 740.245 9866 (BARN)

THIS tS A GOOD QUALITY AUCTION WITH MANY FINE

~or J1ore Dn

Country living (Rutland area) 3
bsdroom&amp; large l-'oimg room
kitchen &amp; ba th new s ding deck
sw1mmmg pool b g yard $50 000
740 742 1049

Money to Loan

FURNITURE WILL BE MIXED FROM START TO FINISH
BE ON TIME BUILDING IS FULL!

Jan Swtgger 992-6667

\

my home 25 years e,.;penence
call 740 667 3633

$187500 7404467926

REAL ESTATE

AAA RATING 90 180 DAYS 1
868 811 0902

CREDIT REPAIR AS SEEN ON
TV Era se Bad Cred•l lega ly
Free Into 1 800 768 4008

W II talo.e care ol men &amp; women 1n

I

Call Betty Johnson
441 -1415 or

family mcome for the prevwus 30 days S1gnature of a

;

Rookwood, Redwlng vase, Yelloware bowls,

" No charge for clothing"

hst of family members hvmg m theu home and tolal

Watch next SundaYs PaPer for hstmss.
Henderson, W. Va behind Post Off1ce
675·6325
See Neal for the Deal
675·2900
. '
.

handmade ewer, Hull Madonna vase,

Poverty Level ) Jobs w1ll be up lo 40 hours per week at

Applicants should bring thm social secunty number,

W11 lake care of men &amp; women 1n
my home 25 years exptHlence
740 667 3633

No Fee Unless We Wtn'
I 888 582 3305

JUDGEMENTS

IITE..S OF SPECIA~ INTEREST I

Weller Louwelaa Ewer, Weller Suevo, Weller

res1dents and meet current TANF gUidelines ( 200%

Cheshire OH

bomg roof• barns oulbyl!dlnqa

end lin roofs Experienced Free
Est mares References (304)895
3981

1 800-929-5753
CMc 08\lelopment G oup/
M1llenn um Tele serv1ces

poster bed and chest of drawers, Ethan Allen

Fatth Chapel Church

followm~ locallons

W t Power Wash Homes Tra lers
740 446 0151 Ask For Ron Or
leave Message

Cape Coo With Ohto Allier V ew
4 Bedrooms Formal LA Format
DR 2 Full Baths Basement In
ground Pool Edge 01 Ga I pohs

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SEC~RITY /SSI?

BAD CRED IT BANKRUPTCY

LAWSUITS

310 Homes for Sale

lnterlor/Exterlpr pgint!ng mobile

~ALLTOOAYI

fN!ce hardware. verv nice condition. Must

$5 15 per hour at vanous loca110ns In Calha County

Spnng Cleanmg On Houses &amp;
Also DO Off CBS 740 388 9078
Plea se Ask For Donna 0 Leave
Message

r

"Clothing Bank"

18

220

Georges Por table Sawmill don t
haul you ogs to the m II JUS! ca ll
304 675 t957

Equtpment

Open Fnday,

July 24th 2·5 pm

Mowers lawn Tractors T1llers
Aepalfed Flee PICk Up Delivery
W th n 10 M les 01 Gallipolis 20
Years Expe ence Re asonable
Rates Guaranteed Mike 740
446 7604

OWN A DOLLAR STORE t BOO
227 5314

be rushed), Early 1800' s blanket chest

Aug

Stan Your Bustness Today
Pr me Shopp ng Center Space
Ava Iable At Alf ord able Rate
Spr ng Valley Plaza Call 740 446
0101

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /RE MOVE

Professional
Services

03

Hones t Dependable Lady Would
L ke To Mow Your Lawn Or Do
Odd Jobs Linda 740 446 7604

homes sttuated on the Oh1o

Middleport
Smokm' Robs

740 992 6926

230

220 Money to Loan

Opportunity

Jen s Daycare welfare certtfled
also pnvale pay welcome call

Carpet &amp; Upholstery Cleaning
Guaranteed Work W1th Fabulous
Resu ts For a Free Es t•m ate
Call (304)675 4040 Today

Lad1es for the Lord

Also open Aug

Calllpolls OH

Te1emarke11ng
SUMMER JOBS
.College Students
•H~gh School Grads
•High SchOol Sen ors
Anyone loolo. ng to eam $$
Earn up to $15/hour
Excel ent expenence br
your resume
Fun and friend y workplace
Br ng your fnends-and
earn exira $$1

Business

1

Club Peps1 Cola Bottling Co

Nascar Monday

CMCA A One-Stop
322 Second Avenue

De8dllnes subject to change
due to holld•y•

$4 50

Ass1stance Programs to

our workshop on Patient

Calha Summer Youth Employment Program
Apphcanls must be ages 14·18 Calha County

GMCAA Central Office
801 0 North State Route 7

istorunby430pm
Sltturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thursday

Dnnk

R1ver

&amp; Fam1ly Serv1ces, 15 seeking applicants for the 2000

Wednesday, July 26 from 9AM until 3PM at the

&amp;

FOR SPONSORING THE
YOUTH HOLE IN ONE
SHOOT OUT
101 5 The R1ver Cl1ffS1de Golf

pay1ng for your

will have Jeff Gordon's

Apphcallons wlil be accepted on Tuesday, July 25 and

2 days before the ad

210

INFANTRY CHAIR

27 (IRL)

Do you have problems

1s free to the public Held at

m

REGISTER~

Wanted To Do

~unbap I!J:unrs $5&gt;rntmrl • Page

WV

TOY LEHMANN DATED 1903 GERMANY PADDY &amp; HIS PIG (All ORIGINAL)
PICTURED IN AD FtRST ITEM TO BE SOLO WORLO WAR ONE FOLDING

OPPORTUNITY TO BID

for med1cat1ons Th1s serv1ce

HELP WANTED

SENTINEL~

1 00 p m the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 1 00 p m Friday

ttems

992-9200
or 949-4900

back stretch, Kentucky

complet1ng the appl1cat1on

Help Wanted

2 00 p m
the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday

TRIBUNE~

Closed Mondays

0710

29 for ass1stance 1n

EOEM/F/D/V

Be Paid In Advance

Successful Ca nd date
Requ rements
21 Years Old
'CDL wlln Hazmat and Tank En
dorsements
DOTQuahled
'Two Years Expenence
'Clean Dr v ng Record
'Stable Employmen t Background
Ownerflease
Operators Needed
Quarterly M leage
Pay Guarantee
Interested Drivers
Should Call
1 800-824 2857
EOEIMIF

$11 50

For only

Pnvate RV camp s1te,

call

appo1n1ment for July 28 or

612 Sllm Br1dge Plaza
Gallipolis Ohio 4563 t

AL..I. Wanted To Do Ads Must

Open 4 pm Dally

med1cat10ns? Please anend

Attn Manager
Fax 740 446 4760

3

with chips

training,

We Orfer unlimited
earmng potential + hase,
euellent benefits and
progressne sales and mgmt
tra1nlng
prog..ams
Forward your resume to
Denelic1al Fmance

Wanted To Do

or 8" Hot Sub Sandwich

(3rd/Pme) Great location for

SPARKLE SUPPLY COMPANY

1

180

180

16" Large P1zza
wtth

Pool Chemicals

Want Academ1c Excellence n a
Safe En\/ ronment'
GRACE ACADEMY IS now ac
cept ng enrollment of sludents K
8th lor tat adm ss on at 115 new
expandecl laclll\y m Albany Aca
demlc qual ty great curr culum
small classes some md v1dual
•zed programm1ng
Call now 74Q-594 5433

We Offer
•outstanding Pay &amp; Benef11s
"Safety Awards Program
•up ToDate Equ•pment
•company Matching 401{k) Pro
gram
"Husband &amp; Wife Team s We
come
•steady WOfk
•unrlorms FurniShed

Get your Albuterol or other

serves v1ct1ms of domest1c

s

Schools
Instruction

EARN YOUR CO LLEGE DEGRE E
QUICKLY Bachelors Maste rs
Doctorate By Correspondence
Based Upon Pr or Educat on And
Short Study Course For FREE In
forma11on Bookie! PhO ne CAM
BRIDGE STATE UN IVERS ITY 1
800 964 83 6

Enlerprlae

AR FJ

Business
Tramlng

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)

Pro lesslona
Tank Truck
Transporl Dnvers
GrowWtth
A leader

Medicare Approved

Seremty HousB

speed1ng tickets etc

As a pori of our Sales

Calha Me~gs Commumly Acllon Agency

Ophtha ml c AS Sis tant Tram ng
Preferred W I Tra•n ll Me ets
Standards Call 740 446 0112
Ask Fo Kathy

POSTALJOBST0$1445JHR +
Full Federal Benehls No Expen
ence Exam Info Call t 800 391
5856Ext 42128AM 9PM
Local Not Guar

I

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Team, yuu will develop new
business and market our
contemporary rmanctal

In

WANTEO

Part T1me Elde1ly Care 740 367
0291 Before 4 PM 740 367 7463
; After 4 PM Except Thursday
And Sunday

our lasting gratitude

jerry and Chnsllne Rhodes

URGEN TLY NEEDED plasm a
donors earn $35 to $45 tor 2 or 3
Murs WMkly Call Sera Te e 740
592 6651

AN to coord nate grant lunded
childhood 1mmunm1hon progra m
and Welcome Home Mather and
Ch ld home v sna110n program tor
a local public health agency Re
qwres 30 hours/week max1mum
Salar~ commensurate w lh expert
ence Send resume to PO Box
63t Pomeroy OH 45769 ATIN
Health Comm•ss oner by July 27

the true meaning of the

Aball teams and parents

On Her 52nd Btrthday

Brothers &amp; S1sters and

We are especial~ grareful

support dunng the Illness

'!l~~~t~tntb cy~ oft!J, cr~

Wmston

Husband john,

loss of our loved one

Reg1stered Nurses and Licensed
Pract1cal Nurses WV )lcense re
QU ired Serv ces P 0 Box 575
Potnl Pleasant VN 25550 EOE

Health, Hosp1ce Team

Sheet Sets, Quilts, etc

cooperatiOn w1th the Calha County Department of Job

FABRICATOR/WELDER/FinER

.

Of

such love kindness and

Holzer, Reverend Sallee

.8/fo Qo.J On.
'But uNO lht empi!J Chu.

In Lovmg Memory

~~sh
tothdn~
many
who showed

-MOS Coord nator WV Reg•stered
'Nurse I cense requ red Mmlmurrf
three years lull t me or equivalent
chn1ca1 ex per ence reqwed and
m1nlmum two yea rs chmcal ex
penance tn long term nurs1ng

Ulhe Murray and Pearl

Caldwell Trucking, W1lhs

St ver Bndge Plaza Gall potts

Card of Thanks

fnend5

Help Wanted

Soft Ltnes Supervtsor 40 Hours A
Week Management Sk ts A
Must Apply At JoAnn Fabn cs

Loca l Company seeking Data
Entry Clerk Wllh knowledge or
baSIC account ng procedure s
computer sk •lts oUtce machtne
elflc ency &amp; enJoys work ng ~tth
others Send resume cto Pont
PleasaPI Register ML34 200
Main Street Pt Pleasant WV
25550

Dr Andmon, Med1 Home

Home of Vmton C C

110

5023

Now Hung
All pos tons Full &amp; Part ltme
ava• able 4011&lt; patd \lacattons
co mpellllve starli ng salary Ap
p v n person at Gmo s n PI
Pleasant

to Harry and Mary Fellure

McCoy Moore Funeral

Help Wanted

Needed day &amp; mght shift worker
fo r Adult Group Home 740 992

Help Wanted

to the followmg people

Nurses on the 2nd floor at

C!Jlho pawJ IJA!J
1., !JWI fi60 on
f}uly 2J 19"2

the1r Galhpohs omce

preferred

In Wellston, and a

'11Jmtia0f}mt~~J

'17» 'llotlJtw u~mm of

a

Household Corp, and a
larp mdependent consumer
finance co. is seeking an
Assistant Sales Manager ror

loan products to customers

2 bedroom house

9n .8oolni 91f.,ory of

In Memory

telephone calls We also want
to thank Amber &amp;.. D.lvld

needs wh1le tram1ng to
become a branch sales
manage~
A.ppl1canu must
demonstrate proven sales
and leadershlp abilltles be
selt·mottvatrd and hn·e
excellent commumcatton I
interpersonal
skills
Bachelors
degree
or
tqUivalent mgmt e"perlencc
requlred
I l
! ears
sales l mgmt experience

4

In Memory

Payments Problems w1th

superv•slng, and guiding the
:~ranch employees to match

110

Instructor general bu 1d ng f con
strucllonf elect neal technology
Mason County Career Cente r
Apply to personnel ofhce Mason
County Schools 307 81h St PI
Pleasant WV 25550 Phone 304
675 4540 Closing dead! ne Tue
August1 2000 by 3 30 pm

the Doctors

lamar 0 Bryant for prayers
visits and cards Mt Mouah
Orurch All those wl1o sent

assisting

a

'

Home Health Age ncy Has Post
tons Available For Part T1 me
LPNs And RNs Dayshill Week
days And Weel&lt;.ends Ava•labllity
For Weekend Duty A Plus' Apply
AI 412 Second A\lenue Galllpo
IS Oho OrCat1740-4411779

Emergency

You w1ll also
assist the Bran&lt;:h Salts
Manager 1n the datly
operations of the branch,

Rental Units
For Sale

International Company Expands
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF
E Commerce 525 $751&lt; Paten
MENT4l RETARDATION AND
11a Full Tra1n ng Paid Vacat on
DEVELOPMENTAL
I 886 827 9733
DISABILITIES
Possible part I me open ng lor a
Preschool Instructor at Carleton I--:~-:--:-=:---:;-:-"-:
Schoo to work. on our Spec at Ed
ucallon p,escnool Class Th"e
Card of Thanks
(3) days a week Must ha11e cur
rent Teachtng Cert1f cat on 01 l•
cense lrom the Oh10 Department
The Family of
of Educat on and ha11e or be w11
ng to ob ta1n Early Education of
Dorolhy A Wooldndge
HaM capped Vahdat on Send re
sume by July 28 lo
who passed away
Carleton School
July 9, 2000
131 o Garteton Street
PO Box 307
would like to take !his
Syracuse OH 45779
bme to say 'Thank You'

Gov t &amp; Postal Joba Now Hmng
1n OhiO $1410 to $21 801 hr Ben
ells &amp; Pd Tra n ng For More Job
Informal on 1 81 B 942 0245 ext
4114

PatnCia

110

Help Wanted

110

BULLETIN BOARD

products

Announcement

Help Wanted

02

Page

Card of Thanks

Southern Baptist Cllurch Pastor

Dr vers 2 Week Pa1d Tru ck Drlv
e1 Tralnmg No Expenence Need
ed Earn Up To $32 000/ 1st Yr
W/ Full BenefitS Cali Today 1
877 230 6002 Sunday Fnday 9
ICM TlHfP M PA M mll!]lOrt
www otrdrl\lers com

A 3 unit building,

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$t8 35 Hour Full Senehls No Ex
penance Reqwed Free .Appl ca
t on And Exam Information 1 868
726 9083 ExtensiOn 1701 (7
AM 7PM CST)

o

11 0

23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

lmm9d ate opemngs lor pmles
slonals wtth our growing
company

hospital while I was there

DRIVERS WANTED OTR IDEOI
GATED !REGIONAL !LOCAL
Rea ch The Surum•t 01 Your F1
nanclal Goals Work Fo1 A Com
pany That Cares About You Your
Family And Your Fu tu re l mlted
Openings 29 CPM All M•les Un
t oad ~ng Pay Personalize d Dis
patch Home Orten Holiday rva
caliOn Pay 401K /Med cal !P•es J
Dental R10er Program 98% No
Touch Fre ght Ass gned T
2000 s Call Summ11 Transporta
t10 n 800 876 0680 Or 513 564
8945EOE

11

Help Wanted

and Nurses of Po1nt Pleasant

swer 740 992 6088

Sunday, July

D

Mp //go loffliSH

Med1cal Service

remodeled, new

$2~,oo.oo.

110

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

Tamm1

Drivers to dr ve cars to &amp; lrom
740 591 2867 1f no an

or (7401

equipment, beer end
wine license
Included. Asking

Help Wanted

the Pomeroy firemen Brent &amp;..

acutlon~.

a

RESTAURANT
FOR SALE

'Ol:tmes -~entmel

want to thank

Drivers Flatbed
Medical Cover1ge
From Dr; One!
• $2 000 Sign On Bonus
Qua •tv Home Time
Late Mod&amp;! Equipment
CDlA&amp;3Mos OTR
ECK MILLER
800 611-6636
WWN eckmuter com

bedroom house and

Announcement

i

DENTAL BILLER 115 $45 IH'
Dental B1IHng Software Company
Need&amp; People To Proceu Medl
cal Claims From Home Tralnmg
Provided Must Own Computer t
80().797 7511 Ext 30;1

Announcement

- Announcement

In

Construction Work must be Ex
perlenceo In Siding Soffet and
Facia (740)339-3489

ATIENTION
Earn Online Income
$500 $7 500 /Month
www pcpays com

N

Found med size black dog w f
brown mark ngs long ha r short
legs Hutton s Cafwash Pomeroy
740 992 7t35

8 " - 27"

888-565-5197 EXT 642

ASSEMBLY AT HOME!! Crafts
Toys Jew.;~l r y Wood Sewmg
Typmg Great Pay CALL 1 BOO
795 0380 Ext i201 (24 H s)

8

:

CLAIMS PROCESSOR! 120 $40
/Hr Potential Proces&amp;•ng C!alms
Is Easy! Training Pro'Jided
MUST Own PC CALL NOWI I

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H r ng No Expenence Pad
Tra n1ng Great Bene! ItS Ca 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 365

REGISTER OEAQL!NE
2 days before lhe ed
Is to run by 4 30p m
Saturday &amp; Monday edition •
4 30 p m Thur~dey
0eedllnea aubjKt to cn.ng•

•

BURGER KING
Career Opportunities we Seek
Career Or entad lndl11lduals who
stnve to aChiBVB the "BEST" In
customer satisfaction &amp; team
work If you have a desire to
succeed w11h a goal dnven team
onented &amp; grow~ng company we
offer Health dental &amp; Life In
surance Prescription Card &amp; Bo
nus Program Pa id Vacat•ons
Management Apparel Ad\lance
ment from Wlth1n Appl)l n per
son at the Burger K ng Reslau
rant located In the Ohto R ver
Plaza or Mall Resume to Burger
Kmg f55 Upper River Road Galli
poHs Oh~ 45631

100 OVERWEIGHT PEOPLE
NEEDED• Ea rn $$$ Losmg 5
200 Pounds Call 1 888 235 2292
(Toll Freel Or
www v herbmal com/ fechange

TFIIBUNE DEAPL!Nf 2 00 p m
the dav before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL DEADLINE
1 00 p m the day before the ad
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 1 00 p m Friday

due to hoJJd•r•

BURGER KING
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
We Seek Ca reer Onenled lndl
v1duals Stove To Ach1eve The
Best Customer SatlslactJon And
Team work If You Have A De
s re To Succeed W th A Goal Or
ven Team Oriented And Grow ng
Company We Oller Heath oen
tal And Lde Insurance Prescop
tlon Card And Bonus Program
Pa1d vacat1o ns Ma,nagement
Apparel Ad11ancement From
Within Apply In Person AI Burg
er Kmg Restaurant located In
The Oh1o Al\ler Plaza Or Mall Resume To Burger K1ng 65 Upper
RIVer Road GalltpoBs OH 45631

Help Wanted

$2 000 WEEKLY! Mal ltng 400
Brochures Sat slac!lon Guar
anteecJ! Postage &amp; Supphes Pro
v dedi Rush Self Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
3701 t 1438 Start Immediately

OesdJJIHI• subJect to cMnge

60

Alck Pearson Auction Company
full time auctioneer complete
auction
service
Licensed
t66 Ohto &amp; West V1rgmia 304
773-5785 Or 304 n3 6447

'Program AlcJs for Mason County
Grug Free Program H gh School
Graduate Val d Onvers license
wl gooel Clrtv1ng record Se nd
re sumes/cove letter to SCAC
D ~rectar ol Human Resources
540 F !th A\lenue Huntington
WV 2570 1 EOE

Giveaway

due to holidays

Lesl e Lemley Lemley s Auction
Barn 740 388 0823 740 245
9866 Full Ser111ce Releren ces
A'Jailab le Licensed &amp; Bonded
Our P/aCfl Or '11:lursr

Absolute Top Dollar .All U S Sli
ver And Gold Coins Proofseta
Diamonds Ant que Jewelry Gold
A ngs Pre 1930 U S Cu rrency
Sterlmg Etc Acqws1110ns Jewelry
M TS Con Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446-2842

S.lurday a Mondoy odklon •
4 30 p m Thurtday
"DMI111ne• •ubJecl to t:IMnga
due to holfd•Y• ~

40

buy/salt estates cons1gnment
auction Thursdays 6pm Mleldle
port Oh1o &amp; WV Li cense 740
992 9707 740-989-2623

Complete Household Or Estates!
Any Type Of FurMure Appllanc
es Antiques Etc Also Appra•sal
Aval ablel 740-379 2720

lltorunby•sopm

r "

B II Mood spaugh AuCtioneering

90

a

'
••

Auction
and Flea Market

Wedemeyer s Auction Serv1ce
Galllpol S OhiO740 379-2720

AIJ. Announc.rnent Ad1 Muat

•~
•r'

~

Announcements

Pomtroy Dilly Sentinel All
Yard Sales Muat Bt Ptld In Advtnct Dudllne 1 OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run
Sunday a Monday edition·
1 OOpm Friday Aak about how
you can get a FREE yard tale
sign
80

110

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or SeU
S h ~rley Spears 304 675 t429

QEADLINE 2 00 p m
the day befoffl the ad
Ia to run Sunday 6 Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday

GenUeman Seekmg Companion
ship From N1ce Female For TalkS
Walks &amp; Fnendsh1p Send Re
phes To 553 Se co nd A\lenue
Apartment 403 Gallipolis OH

Help Wanted

Ann Mothers &amp; other&amp; work from
home! Earn an e11.tra $500 $1500
part time 01 $2000 $4000 full time
per mon tn call 800 720 7658
v•sit www 2workathome com

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Be Paid In Advance
TRIBUNE Q£AilLirtE 2 00 p m
the day before the ad
It 10 run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Frldlly
SENTINEL QFAQLINE
1 00 p m lhe lily 1&gt;ttore tile ICI
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edlllon • 1 00 p m Fridoy
FIEGISTEA QfADL!NE
2 days before the ad
latorunby4 30pm
S.tunloy &amp; Monday edhlon
4 30 p m Thursday
•o.dOnet •ublfiCJ fo change
due to hoi/Wyo. •

f

Yard Sale

Personals

AU. Personal Adt Muat

l

110

~unbap

Section

23, 2000

Sunday, July

°

MEIGS
COUNTY
'
_,

• u./~

{,•.

h; • "

"\~'"

''

r-

~

.

"'"'

, '

) ~

~

t!

;~

..-

I

'

LISTING! 33322 JACKS
IR1141nl ~0 plus acres Wllh
barn and cellar
~---·--- 1996 14 x7 0 molbile
I ho-me complete wolh 2
l cemtral a r Addttla nal 1income
extra rental s1te
water well Call

1P'Ope&gt;rty loday'

IO

VIeW

~2070

Cheryl Lemley

742·3171

""-!IA5oH~•N ROA.D $79 000 DO ·

lmmedtate Possess1onl 1 1/2
Story home that offers newer
roof and hot tub dmtng room
kitchen den 4 bedrooms 2
baths and morel Let s go look I
12069

NEW LISTING! 660 HIGH
STREET $59,000 DO 2 Slory
home Situated on large stzed
lot 3 bedrooms 1v1ng room
dmtng room and ktlchen
Detached one car garage

#2068

NEW LlSTING 2807 SR 124 $94.900 DO 81 level home that
cons1sts of 4 bedrooms 3 baths I vmg room formal dtntng
kttchen and more on 1he ms1de Outside !here ts approx 8 94
acres w th a stocked pond More Call for complete llstmg
12078

DON'T SEE WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR?
Call &amp; Let Us Help You Find It!

�-Classifieds
70

A N NOUNCEM E NTS

005

~

ALL Yard S.lea Muat
Be Paid In Advence

~ASK ABOUT HOW YOU

CAN GET A FRff
YARD SALE SIGN!"

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

1

,
y

45631

IS HE CHEATING ??? Top Raled
Psych1cs Can Tell You• S t 93 +I
Mm 1 800 472 2103 All Credn
Cards &amp; Checks OR 1 900 820
0020 $3 99 /Min "2 MINUTES
F~EE (24 HAS) 18 t
START DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meeting Elig ble S1n
gtes In Your Area Call For More
Information 1 800 ROMANCE
Ext 9735

l

t

.,
.,

~

World Reknown PsychiC Lmell
Call Now And Let Our Psychics
.Answer Your Questions Whether
It Be L011e Health Happiness Or
Success 1 900 263 2518 Or 1
888 974 6447 S3 99/Min 18+

t

(
:

r
:

t
t

30

S.PolcllnAdvonce
TRIBUNE~ 2 00 p m
the doy bolo,. the ICI
Ia to run Sund8y Monday
ldldon • 2 00 p m Frklly
SENTINEL llE.6IIUIIE
1 00 p m tho doy boloo9 the ICI
II to run SUrtdlly &amp; Mondlly
ediHon ·1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER D&amp;ADLINE
2 dlyo llofant tho ICI

•
~
(

1

New To You Thr ft Shoppe
9 West St mson Athens
..
740 592 1842
• Oualty cloth.ng and household
1tems $1 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru SaiUrday
.. 9 ()()..5 30

ALL Giveaway Ads Must
Be Peld In Advance
TRIBUNE Q£AilLirtE 2 00 p m
lhe doy belon1 lhe od
Is to run Suncsav
&amp; Monday edition
2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL DEADLINE
1 00 p m the dey before the ad
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edlllon 1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER QEAQLINE
2 days before the ad
lstorunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thursday

Wanted to Buy

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART·
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
QUI REO I 800 757-Q753

M

Adorable Ktttens To A Good
Home 74D-446 3479
-------,.-Four Soft -and euddly-Adora bte
Pupp1es M xed Breed (304)895
3255
Adorable fl ully black &amp; wh te k t
tens one all black 740 843-5445
K11tens Litter Tra med 740 446
7872

Lost and Found

AJ..L Lost &amp; Found Ads Mus1
Be Paid In Advance

M

S9B7 as WEE~LYl Proce ss mg
HUD /FHA Mortgage Retunds No
Expe r•en ce Requ~red For FAll
fniorma t on Call t 800 501 6832
Ext 1300
CAREER OPPORTUN)TY
MEDICAL BILLERS Earn Up To
$45K Nrl Full Traimng /PC ReQd
8B8 660-6693 Ext 4402
••FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS""
Up To $18 24 Hour Hiring For
2000 Free Call For Apphcat on I
E11.am nat on lnlorma!IOn Federal
Hire Full Benefits t 800 598
4504 Extenson 1516 (8 AM 6
PM CST)

ATTENTION We II Pay You To
Lose tJp To 29 lbs (Or More) 87
People Needed lmmed ately Ofler
Expires 7 26 Cal 740 441 1982

~-········~*······~-·

i
LOGS 5
i WANfED i
POPLAR

•

:

•: diameter; 18' long •:
$35 Per Ton

I

f

6110 of a mile north:
•
•
: of SA 7 Roadside :
:

Rest on right.

:

740-985·4465

•

:

•
:

On

mlljor highway In
SE Ohio. Interesting
decor, completelw

Phone

17401 71 0·0007 or

=~~~~~~~-~~:•:•;•;•;•:•:•;•:•:=~====7:4:a-::28
__e__3_e_T
__2____.
110

Help Wanted

CLASSAOTR
Stngte Dn... er Late Model Ken
worths Wtth Reefers West Coast
Carner
CLASS BOTR
Team Stra ght Truck L ~ le Model
Fre•ghtllners W•th Sleepers Must
Ha\le A1r Brake Endorsements
800 Miles Rad•u s Hom e Delver
OS
BOTH POSITIONS
Atleast 25 Years Old
At east 2 Years Ekperience
GoodMVR
Weekly Pay
Health lnsurariCS A'Jatlable
Work Well W11h The Publ C
For More Information Call 800
437 8764 Hrs 8 30 AM 5 PM
EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 IYR
Med1cal Insurance Billing Ass1s
tance Needed lmmedlalelyl Use
Your Home Computer For Great
Potential Ann ual Income Call
Now• 1 800 291 4683 Dept • 109
EARN EXCELLENT 1NCOM6
Med•cal B•llers Needed Full
Tramlng Provided Home Com
puler Req uired To Free• 800
772 5933 Ed 12005
ANANCIAL ASSISTANT/CLERK
Must be computer literate and
capable ol perlormmg payroll
preparation b II ng cash recerpts
cash d sbursements and monthly
reportmg Average of 25 hour
work week Ful benefit package
Send resume to Personnel De
partment PO Box 307 Syracuse
OH 45779
GET PAID TO MODEL FASH
IONS FOR MAJOR SHOPPING
NETWORKI 5end Photo W I S H
(Oepl AI 160 Oak Rd Norry Pa
17857 0' I 360 613 1099 (24
H' I

DRIVERS COLONIAL FREIGHT
Fmd Out Why The Best Kept Se
cret In T uck ng Is the Hottest
News On The Street' II Attend
The Humg Event On Thursday
August 3rd And Fr day August
4th At 10AM Or2PM THE
BUDGETEL EAST I 70 &amp; Po st
Rd Or Cal Brent BOO 331 2510
Ext3150r3t424 1 1200

Zerkle

car(ls

food VISits prayers and

for the love and VISits

110

Help Wanted

ASSISTANT
SALES-MANAGER
Beneficial

Finance,

Tho Plllllbury Company hao on lmmodloto oponlng lor 1
Fobrlcolor/Woldor/FI11or 111tolood manuflcturlngllclllty
ln Southern Ohio
Condldolo muot bo able to TIG wold 1nd purge llllllnlooo
attll 1nd aenltary rmrnga, mutt be ebll ro work from
bluoprlnto 1nd dr1wlngo muotoloo Ill willing to do work
In other tradtl t1 1 m11onry, carpentry mechentc, ate )
Tho peroon ooloctod lor 1hlo poolllon muot Ill cort11lod In
high preeaurt ayatema, hydraulic ayalama, ate 11 1
minimum 013000 poln1o and bo oblolo p1oo1orkllll
training be 1 good problem eolvtr and work without
ouporvl•lon Thl1 lo • union hourly poolllon with 1 PlY
rate at 115 00 per hour
Plllobury offoro oxcollont hoal1h coro bonollto
pr11crlptlon card peld vecatlone end holldeya, and
ponolon pion Candldatu m'y tubmll thtlr roeum1110
The Pllltbury Company
2403 S Pannoylv1nla Avtnut
Wtllaton, OH 4S8i2
Anenlton WELDER

•

A

duplex in Jackson.

If interested pleaH
call(740)384-3878

71 CJ.OOOT

Par~ time pos hon ava aote ror an

and

Saunders who have shown
us

word "netghbor"

Thdnks also to those many
friends who honored
Arnold s life With g1fts of

Tire Co Vmton Vol F1re

flowers food cards,

Dept B1dwell Bball and

prayers and condolences

t!J, omilt
Of t!J, Ona '11Jbo One.

and friends and family

the ladles
of the nrst Church of God

who called, sent flowers,

Pallbearers singers and

cards, and food

others who made his

Smcerely,

funeral ser.ice beautiful

rJ,t'Thetv

7/23 /48 5/7/99
Sadly mtssed by

911w.ibg
911m'IN g'"!l,lllli

e•.

lhtlrJ111R&amp;

Theu Fam1hes

Pastor Paul Voss

Dav1d and Kim

and meamngful also

Wooldndge
Richard and Dottie Darst

The

Auto Insurance Monthly
your dnvmg record DU!

'

Wanted opthalmic ass stant
tramtng preferred w 1 tra1n 11
meets standards call 1 740 446
0 t 12 asll for Ka thy
WILDLIFE JOBS TO $6 19 IHR
Federa Benehts Park Rangers
Security Mamtenaoce No Elip
For Some For In to Cal 1 800
391 5856 Ext 4213 8 AM 9
PM Local No Guar
+

WORK FROM HOME!! Own A
Compu ter? Internet Market ng
Opparlun lytt $500 $6 000 /mth
PT/FT
www ~u r pc2work com
POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H r ng No Exper ence Pad
Tram ng Gre at Benefits Call 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 566
140

have

Ca !Today 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452
Reg #90 05- 1274B
150

Tf'lnsportatlon

Company

Cwmllsh

The Quahty L1nk

Same Day SR·22 s ISSued

v1olence

breathtng medtcatiOn btlled

call 446·6752 or

to Med1care Save money

1·800·942·9577

Call for a quote

Free Home Delivery Call

Berber Sale $5 99 Yard Bowman's Homecare
740-446-7283
Mollohan Carpet
202 Clark Chapel Rd.
FOR SALE BY OWINEF~III
Porter, Ohio 446·7444
3 Bedroom House in
Gallipolis between
Will Clip Cattle
schools. Large fenced
lot, In-ground pool,
For Fairs
selling below appraisal
Jim Baugham
256-9194

Brown Insurance Agency
446 1960
Top So11 Ftll Dtrt Bank Run
Delivered or P1cked Up
M1n Loader
CHG $35 00
Call
Cremeans Concrete
&amp; Supply, Co
1-740-446-1142
Monday • Saturday

256-6535

~Af~CO"NOIT!ON!NG

-

Woooyards M1m

Rt.TI Racine

Mall

Serv1ce and Repa1r

407 Matn Street, Pt Pleas

All Makes

Next to Lowe Hotel

Smlth·BUick· Pontlac Gallipolts

New load of OVC Clothtng,

Pizza Express

COMMERCIAL CORNER LOT

M1d Summer Spec1al

AND BLDG FOR SALE

20% DISCOunt

only

reta1l busmess Call Tim toll

446 4109

free 1·888·874 1994

Wmter

Craftfest

Jackson

Craf1

00

GUild

The
IS

now

accepting appl1cat1ons for the
uncom1ng show on Nov

4

&amp;

Nov 5 2000 If you would like
an

application

Tammy

Jones

please
at

740 286

Speedway and

4

passes

for Aug 26 (Area Race)

&amp;

Call

740·446· 4241

Prospective Home
on one of the areas ntcest

pm

learn how to get
med1cat1ons at a lower cost

Fruth s Pharmacy Aunt Clara s
Collection of F1ne Am1sh Thmgs

or free on July 27 &lt;;~t 2 pm

Brown Insurance Agency

R1ver Street Gallipolis Ohto

Please call to schedule an

Farmer s Bank of Pmeroy

45631

Haffelt s M1ll Outlet,

J

E

Mornson &amp; Assoc1ates Wolle s

Po1nt Pleasant Center
State Rt 62 N

29,

Open House tours July

2000 from

12 noon to

3

Owners Will be accepting

bids pnvately or by mall at

70

Located Beh1nd Soulheastern

parent IS reqUired on all applicatiOns
For additional mformat10n call367·7324 extensiOn 99

:

:

. .

PUBliC AUCTION

FRIDAY. JULY 28, 6:30Pm
LEMlEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580 SR 588 (Old Rt 35J. GalliPolis, OH
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTIBLE ITEMS:
PA Jacquard coverlet signed woodrlng,
Allenstown, PA, Mahogany bedroom suite w /4

on Route 7

table and 4 ladder back chairs (chairs need to

SeeU&gt;.Candlestand, Nice pictures

4 10 am · 11 am

&amp;

Frames,

Oriental Rugs , Sterling Sliver Items, Old
Country store cast iron meat cutter

"All you can stuff tnto one

(Enterprise 1881), Andirons, Pewter water pot,

bag Free"

Occupied Japan

&amp; 25

&amp;

Czech pieces, 74 Piece

Elegant crystal stemware, Some country
antiques, Mise Collectible Glassware,
More not llated

For more 1nfo

AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A LEMLEY

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Reman ng Payments
On ProperTy Soldl Mortgages•
Annu 1 es1 Se ttlem en ts l mme
d1ate Ouoteslll Nobody Beats
Our Pr~ ces Na t onal Cent act
Buye s 800 490 0731 Ext tOt
www nahonalcontractbuyef's com

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDAT ION
Appl cat10n W JS erv1 ce Redu ce
Payments To 65% !'C ASH 1,.q
CEN Tt VE OFFERII Call I 800
328 8510 Ext 29

$FREE CASH NOW$ F am
Wealthy Fam I es Unload ng M•l
ltans 0 1 D a ll&lt;:~rs To Help Mm m1.ze
The r Taxes Wr te lmmed ate y
Wmdfa IS 847 A SECOND AVE
•350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
1Q0t7

PHOTOG-RAPHY
·wedd ngs
•Pets
•sports Teams
Profess anal Cerhhed Photo gra
phe'
Reasonable rates
Call lor appo ntmen1
(30 4)675 7472
(304)675 7279

230

Professional
Services

n
446-2342 or 992-2156

BE SURE TO COME

&amp; SEE

US Ill!

&amp; Bonded By State Of Ohto

Cash/Approved Check Only
"Not Responsible For Accidents
Or Lost Property

\

For Sale By Owner 3BR 2BA
Iaroe fam11y mom &amp; ol!1ce new
roof gutler ng 1 car garage
2912 Anmston Orl\le Pt Plea s
an t (304)675 2608 Pr ce re
duced

3 Bedroom 1 Le vel Large Lot
(304)882 2688

HOMES FROM S199 30 /MO I
3 BA Repos /Forec losures Fee
4% Down For l st ngs /Pay me nt
De1a1ls t SQ0-719 3001 x1 B5
7 rm house n the Le on area on t
acre tol $50 000 304 458 t 084

Must See N1ce 8 Year Old B ck
Acros s From 0 d N G H S On
160$89 500 740 388 0591

NEW LISTING 3 Bedrooms I
Bath Eat In Newly Remodeled
K Iehan la undry Room large
Detached 2 Ca Garage New
Cen tral Heat &amp; A r New Carpet
1ng Ancl New Root &amp; Sid ng Call
TmTol Free 18888741994
NO DOWN PAYMENT I
No Down Payment ReQu red W th
Government Sponsored loan
Good Credit And Steal1y Income
Requ red Call Today For More
InformatiOn Independence Mort
gage Ser\1 ces 12611 Mad1son
Lakewood OH 44107 M81679 t
800 8&gt;5 0036

Public Sale and Auction
210

Busmess
Opportunity

ESTATE AUCTION
TUESDAY JULY 25, 5:30 PM
903 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re commends I hat you dO bus•
ness w th people you know and
NOT \0 send money th ough the
ma 1 unl ll you have 10\/&amp;SIIgated
the ollenng
ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! Noth
mg Down Establ shed Yo rk Minis
Rou1e With 22 l ocal ons In You•
Town EZ Work 6 8 Hours
Weelo.ly Nb Selhng Net $52K
vea.r y 1 800 535 4385
24
Hours

1930 s Dresser &amp; Chest, Drop front secretary
w

I

serp front, M1 sc Oak cha1rs small drop front

1ue·'"' Small oak tables and stands, Dmmg table
4 chaus, Porcelatn t op table

AT &amp; T SPRINT Payphone Rtes
35 Proven Local ons Local
Great Income 800 800 3470

.

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aepa r
tng NOT Rep acmg long Cracks
In Wmdshlelds Free VIdeo 1
800 826 8523 US ICanada
www gle~ssmechamx com

.

•

.

•

s tand,

mug

2 Old

GIVe one of our Agents a
Today!
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101
e-mail us for Information on our listings:
blgbendrealty@dragonbbs..com
RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER
446 4618
Judy DeW111
J Memll Carter

Tammie DeWitt

Cast •ron

v10hn s &amp; banJO, Shuley

McCoy clown cook1e pr, S&amp;P s,

uon ski llet s Gramteware Ju mbo Jar Blue

JarS &amp;

Stone

IDt~on~ssi:on g lass
1av1v"ances

FINANCIAL CONSULTANT OP
POATUNITY Bu1ld A Fln11nc1al
Consultant Agency W th One Of
The Fastest Grow ng F na nc lal
Services Companies In No rth
Amenca W H STUART &amp; ASSO
CIATES TOM POW ERS I 877
378 8276

JUgs, Sal t crock, Chalkware,
Sad

Irons, M1sc

Old pictures

kit c hen

Wash board,

Old

!"•''"'"" Items, Kitchen cookware, Old books,

11

n,,.,, Old

.. .

dishes F1re King Lustre ware,

1Mammy grease Jar, M1sc paper goods, Cast Iron

pots , Old tool s, wood planes,

sticks,

LAUNCHED JULY 20001 S1mply
The Greatest Internet Opportu m
ty Around Take A Look

5 Gal

Stoneware water cooler, Kerosene

heater, Carbide hght 60'

www W11blo wea h comlhmmc f reedom

x 24

YOUR WASTING TIME, IV
NOT CALLING TO VIEW
THIS RANCH
Ideally
located close to hospttal and
shopp1ngl 4 Bedrooms hv1ng
room dtnlng room kttchen
wtth 2nd kttchen tn basement
Covered rear pat10 Approx 3
acres and lots more comes
w1th th1s hmel Call at once
OWNER WANTING TO

DEALII2066

Marble top, Sev

m1sc box lots, Lots of kmck knacks, More m1 sc

MED ICAL BILLER $15 $45 IH'
Med1ca1 Btlllng Software Company
Needs People To Process Med
cal Cia ms From Home Tram ng
P ovtded Mus1 Own Computer
800 434 5518 Ed 667
MEDICAL BILLING Unl m led In
come Poten t al No E•per ence
Necessa y Fee Info rmatiOn &amp;
CD ROM
nvestmen l From
$2 495 F nanc ng Ava• abe 800
322 t t39 Ex 050
www !&gt;us ness startup com

Items not h sted
AUCTIONEER

740 388

LESLIE A LEMLEY

OB23(NOME) OR

LICENSED
CASH

&amp; BONDED

I

740 245 9866 (BARN)
BY STATE OF OHIO

APPROVED CHECK ONLY

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

OR

LOST PROPERlY'

''*

'*'THIS IS AN OUTSIDE SALE 1

••• BRING LAWN CHAIRS ' ''*

your
lookmg to purchase a home
that has quahly lhroughoul
Low mamtenance bnck ranch
4 bedrooms Newly carpeted
formal hv1ng room step savtng
k1tchen famtly room Wtlh
!~replace Over 2 000 sqfl
1tv1ng space Attached 2 car
garage 2 acres mground
pool bam &amp; shed 12050
5 acres wtth road
Raccoon Creek
l ~~!~;~~:e along

_ _ __;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:P:;u;:b;:ll;:c;:S:;a:;l:;e;:;a:n:d:A::;:u:;c:;tl:o:n=====-----,ll and
325 Pubhc wale'
ava1lable Ntce rolltng/level
acreage $15 500 00 112071

Located at the Aucllon Center on Rt 33 In Mason , WV Will be sellllng
the estate of Judge C.E Peoples from Pomeroy, Ohio Guns are lrom
M~ Schoonover's Estate from Elkview, WV, Plus Others

I

FURNITURE

I

Beaut1fut 5 pc V1ct parlor su1te 6 pc Wat V1ct parlor su1te Both are m1nt Beau111u1
pc H1gh Back carved oak 8 R su1te lg Fancy Oak Knock Down wardrobe o 1
Lg Mah Gov W1nlhrope Sec one marked Maddox 2 pc court cupboard Beautiful
round oak table w/lg ctaw feet square oak labte w/ lg ball &amp; claw feel V1ct oak
SEjcrtlta,·y, Beautiful 9 pc Wal D R swte s1gned Rockford Super 7 pc Oak! D R
10 pc Mah D R surte w/ need lepoint chairs 3 Stack oak bookcase Oak
w/ curved glass V1ct Marble top tables Oak roll top desk Oak flatwatl cupboard
Earty llatwall cab1net solid s1des 3 pc Fancy poster B R su1te Oak 1ce box Oak
rocker Earty Pme 1/2 commode Mah Btankel chesl 9 pc fancy 1930 s D R sutfe 8
pc Heywood Wakl1etd D R swte Wal Queen Ann ch1na cab1net V1cl WIShbone
Dresser Oak book cases Oak s1de boards Oak library t able 3 tong Hall tables
Rosewood low boy dresser Lg Sp1nmng wheat Oak watl telephone Wal V1cl sofa
Fancy Serp oak dresser &amp; wash stand match1ng oak ctaw1ool bed Oak Geapholm
key wmd cylinder player V1ct pump organ Howard Miller Grandfather ctock plus
as found 1urmlure

1999 SECTIONAL
JUST
LIKE NEW Ltvtng room fully
PRlCE $48,900 00
equ1pped
kitchen
3 What a good pnce on th1s 1
bedrooms 2 baths Cental atr
1/2
sto'y
co mpletely
W2061
remodeled home Matn level
consists of 1tv1 ng room d1mng
kitchen 1amtly room bedroom
and bath upstairs Includes 3
bedrooms and bath Detached
24 x 32 garage s1de deck and
concrete patto Ntce level lot
FLOOR PLAN RANCHil
app,ox 11 6 x 160
Just the nghl stze for you
Large 11vmg room open to
formal dmmg area kttchen
laundry room 3 bedrooms
and 1 1/2 baths Attached
ove rs1zed 2 car garage Nice
easy to matntatn lot Concrete
dnve Handy locat1on1#2053
STYLE Plenly
of space and slyle herel
Formal hv1ng room dtntng
rooni both w1th a ftreplace
Overs zed family room
ea11n k1tchen w1lh plenly
cabmet space 2 Bedrooms
COMMERCIAL
2
Story den (m 3rd bedroom) and 2
bUildi ng lhal s 1deal for floral 1/2 baths on matn level along
shop retail etc Off street wtth sun room and laundry 2
parktng area Call for more Bedrooms upstairs Basement
1nformat1on 12044
w1th large rec room 1/2 bath
and kttchen area Over 5
acres attached 2 car garage
and morel 12043

FOOD

DON'T MISS THIS BUY
$39 900 00 Easy to matntatn
OR JUST SIMPLY
lawn 3 bedrOOfll!l bath eat
OUTDOORS? You II love the 1n kitchen ltvtng room
pr vacy m th1s country hornet enclosed porch Detached
Few mtnutes of Rto Grande
garage 12035
Approx 3/4 acre lot comes ONE OF GALLIA COUNTY S
wtth th1s well kept 3 bedroom aES"[
165 aoes wtth well
home complete wtth 2 full
matntatned barns/bulldtngs &amp;
baths ltvmg room dmmg &amp;
kitchen Flortda room 2 car stlos and a gorgeous country
delached 24x24 garage plus home that offers lots of I vmg
storage &amp; work shed Walk1ng space
and
extens1ve
d1stance to lake and publtc remodeling Includes a new
12060
kitchen With beautifu l cherry
cabtnets
and
hardwood

TOWN! And after
one look at lh1s
will be SOLD t
k1tchen plent1ful w1th
made cab•net formal
area living room 4 b~;~~~~~~~~
3 baths (2 bedrooms
master su1te on ma1 n level
2 baths) full basement 2
attached garage Cool shetdeiJI
covered
front
groove
flli~·~~~V~~';;~
floonng 4 bedrooms foyer tongue
4 acres1nand
a pond
llvtng room d nmg room WANTS SOLD NOW
tamtly room 2 baths Lots of
road frontage w1th several
t1llable and pasture acres
along some woodland Pond
and fenctng frontage along
Raccoon Creek
Way too
much to mention tn thiS ad
Owner Will d vtde 1nto 4
parcels or sell as a whole ON? GO AHEAD AND MAKE
THE NEW
11 f
1
1
AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE
FO~ THESE Must ca m comp eta ISttng THIS INVITING RANCH! You

,.-,G:::-LA~SS;;;W.::":-:R;;E~&amp;~C;;;O;;;L-:-L;:;:ECTI;;:;:;;B;;LE-;;;;S-,

John~s;;;o~n~B~r~o~th~e;;r;s~E~~l~~~;;:~;,;;~,

P1nk Depress1on
I Gern1artv bow t &amp; plate Collection of Beam bot~te!;-Gen - Sl&lt;&gt;rk·-Ch1urc:hiti-Bir1g
Kentucky &amp; others mce selection of frames Pnnts 10 1nclude
Slate Fait 191 2 Guest of Honor Pres Taft &amp; Gov Harmon f 3 x67 f,
Board of Heatlh 1897 s 1gned Early pnnt of Dog s1gned C L Van Vredenburgh 12/,
37 /, Old post cards &amp; greetmg cards 1939 World Fair Bank thermometer combo
' bucket Kraut cutter Crocks Jugs Lg Brass Bell Da1sey churn Brass steam
1 wl1iotiA Hit &amp;m ss engme off steam boat 4 Good buggy wheats Old loy I rucks Old
• nrum major baton Kalamazoo book hold er 1891 Stereoscope w / p1clures Vintage
S1gned Rembrant lamp Complete tra1n set w/ 671 engme &amp; cars Plus L1onel
IT,,:,:n Master TypeR Transformer Lionel 927 Lubncallng k1t and other p1eces

.

I

BOOKS

Pol1t 1ca1Books 1908 &amp; 1916 DemocratiC party lexl book story of a Tanff Act 1909
The Protective Tanff by Herman L1eb The Oh10 Bar Assoc1allon Reports 1940 41
Extracts from !he Congressional Record Woodrow W1lson s speech of acceptance
l'"'gu:st7 1912 H1tler 1937 Rose Bowt program Jan 1 1958 Oh10 State Un 1vers1ty
Umvers11y of Oregon Watt D1sney s com1c Donald Duck 1957 Jack &amp; J ill
Magazme 1944 Magazmes Newsweek 1939 Liberty 1942 Dodge News 50s L1fe
1939 and others Household magaz1nes 1939 &amp; others The Saturday Evemng post
1939 &amp; others Look 1939 &amp; others
McCa Is Compan1on Journal Co l1ers &amp;
plus a large amount of other books
~~-------------.G;;;U~N~S-----------,

.. GUNS WILL BE SOLD AT 11 00 A,M, *'
Savage pump 12 ga Model 1921 W 1n Model 840 12 ga W n 840 20 ga W n
370 16 ga Wtn Lever Act1on 30 30 cal Model 94 R 1fle &amp; North A mencan Arms
Black W1dow 22 mag p1s_l_
o_l----:;;--;:u.:;:c.;;-;;:ii'"'"----,
4 • wHEELER

r

I"

*' 4 WHEELER WILL BE SOLD AT 11,00 A,M, WITH RESERVE..
Yamaha ATV 1996 250 limberwotr 2X4 New Cond1tton ALSO Arlens 8 hp
nd1ng lawn mower Husquvarna chalnsaw St1ht weedeater &amp; NAPA a1r compressor
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE

home
W11h Slo1
2 baths
Second
1 1J2 story w1th 3
8 stall Horse barn
1 acre lot
Good
Let the 'enl f'om

I

Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Auctloneer R1ck Pearson #66
Apprentice Auctioneer A F Steln Jr
773·5785 or 773 5447
Terms Cash or check w /!D
Bank letter of credit unless known to the auct1on company
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property

~:~E REDUCTION!

~::~n?..':! 1:;'t~:ss~dlbed~~';;;~

NEW
PRICE 37,900 DOl
2 Story
home
w•th
charm
3
Bedrooms fam1ly room hv1ng
room covered front porch and
mo,el 12059

famoly ,oom formal dtntng &amp;
llvmg rooms newer kitchen
basement
rec
room
Attached 2 car garage and to
keep the k1ds busy and cool

ADDISON
N2033 the mortgage NEW LISTING!
2 LOTS ONE PIKE $&amp;4,900 0
ncome
500 00
Each lot produc•ng property
Consists
66 x 166 water of 4 bedroom home and 3
sewage available mobile homes
Approx 95
lots flat easy to acre 101
Cau for complete
I1st ng #2076

lh1s summer
lry a 16x32
mground
swtmrcung
pooll
Over 4 5 acres and less than 5
m1les from town I Ptck up the
pho ne
and
make
an
appo1ntmen t at once' Owner
wants to sell and wants you to
make an ofle'' 112013

l~~':f~~e~t:!,~~~~p'a~y;
:.:=:~--$14

I

Auction Conducted by

"Ucensed

By Owner 3 Bedroom House Gall1pol s Between S'Chools Large
Fenced Lot lnground Pool Sell
1ng Be ow Appra sal 740 256
9194

New :3 Bedroom G•ngerb ead
House W th Wrap Around Porch
Settmg On 1 Acre 5 Miles From
Gall pohs May help F•nac:e or
T• ade lor Mob• e Home' 740 256
6574

FINANCIAL

THERE WILL ALSO BE OTHER MISC ITEMS
PIECES

310 Homes for Sale

310 Homes for Sale

Real Esllte General

740·38S-0823 (HOME) OR 740.245 9866 (BARN)

THIS tS A GOOD QUALITY AUCTION WITH MANY FINE

~or J1ore Dn

Country living (Rutland area) 3
bsdroom&amp; large l-'oimg room
kitchen &amp; ba th new s ding deck
sw1mmmg pool b g yard $50 000
740 742 1049

Money to Loan

FURNITURE WILL BE MIXED FROM START TO FINISH
BE ON TIME BUILDING IS FULL!

Jan Swtgger 992-6667

\

my home 25 years e,.;penence
call 740 667 3633

$187500 7404467926

REAL ESTATE

AAA RATING 90 180 DAYS 1
868 811 0902

CREDIT REPAIR AS SEEN ON
TV Era se Bad Cred•l lega ly
Free Into 1 800 768 4008

W II talo.e care ol men &amp; women 1n

I

Call Betty Johnson
441 -1415 or

family mcome for the prevwus 30 days S1gnature of a

;

Rookwood, Redwlng vase, Yelloware bowls,

" No charge for clothing"

hst of family members hvmg m theu home and tolal

Watch next SundaYs PaPer for hstmss.
Henderson, W. Va behind Post Off1ce
675·6325
See Neal for the Deal
675·2900
. '
.

handmade ewer, Hull Madonna vase,

Poverty Level ) Jobs w1ll be up lo 40 hours per week at

Applicants should bring thm social secunty number,

W11 lake care of men &amp; women 1n
my home 25 years exptHlence
740 667 3633

No Fee Unless We Wtn'
I 888 582 3305

JUDGEMENTS

IITE..S OF SPECIA~ INTEREST I

Weller Louwelaa Ewer, Weller Suevo, Weller

res1dents and meet current TANF gUidelines ( 200%

Cheshire OH

bomg roof• barns oulbyl!dlnqa

end lin roofs Experienced Free
Est mares References (304)895
3981

1 800-929-5753
CMc 08\lelopment G oup/
M1llenn um Tele serv1ces

poster bed and chest of drawers, Ethan Allen

Fatth Chapel Church

followm~ locallons

W t Power Wash Homes Tra lers
740 446 0151 Ask For Ron Or
leave Message

Cape Coo With Ohto Allier V ew
4 Bedrooms Formal LA Format
DR 2 Full Baths Basement In
ground Pool Edge 01 Ga I pohs

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SEC~RITY /SSI?

BAD CRED IT BANKRUPTCY

LAWSUITS

310 Homes for Sale

lnterlor/Exterlpr pgint!ng mobile

~ALLTOOAYI

fN!ce hardware. verv nice condition. Must

$5 15 per hour at vanous loca110ns In Calha County

Spnng Cleanmg On Houses &amp;
Also DO Off CBS 740 388 9078
Plea se Ask For Donna 0 Leave
Message

r

"Clothing Bank"

18

220

Georges Por table Sawmill don t
haul you ogs to the m II JUS! ca ll
304 675 t957

Equtpment

Open Fnday,

July 24th 2·5 pm

Mowers lawn Tractors T1llers
Aepalfed Flee PICk Up Delivery
W th n 10 M les 01 Gallipolis 20
Years Expe ence Re asonable
Rates Guaranteed Mike 740
446 7604

OWN A DOLLAR STORE t BOO
227 5314

be rushed), Early 1800' s blanket chest

Aug

Stan Your Bustness Today
Pr me Shopp ng Center Space
Ava Iable At Alf ord able Rate
Spr ng Valley Plaza Call 740 446
0101

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /RE MOVE

Professional
Services

03

Hones t Dependable Lady Would
L ke To Mow Your Lawn Or Do
Odd Jobs Linda 740 446 7604

homes sttuated on the Oh1o

Middleport
Smokm' Robs

740 992 6926

230

220 Money to Loan

Opportunity

Jen s Daycare welfare certtfled
also pnvale pay welcome call

Carpet &amp; Upholstery Cleaning
Guaranteed Work W1th Fabulous
Resu ts For a Free Es t•m ate
Call (304)675 4040 Today

Lad1es for the Lord

Also open Aug

Calllpolls OH

Te1emarke11ng
SUMMER JOBS
.College Students
•H~gh School Grads
•High SchOol Sen ors
Anyone loolo. ng to eam $$
Earn up to $15/hour
Excel ent expenence br
your resume
Fun and friend y workplace
Br ng your fnends-and
earn exira $$1

Business

1

Club Peps1 Cola Bottling Co

Nascar Monday

CMCA A One-Stop
322 Second Avenue

De8dllnes subject to change
due to holld•y•

$4 50

Ass1stance Programs to

our workshop on Patient

Calha Summer Youth Employment Program
Apphcanls must be ages 14·18 Calha County

GMCAA Central Office
801 0 North State Route 7

istorunby430pm
Sltturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thursday

Dnnk

R1ver

&amp; Fam1ly Serv1ces, 15 seeking applicants for the 2000

Wednesday, July 26 from 9AM until 3PM at the

&amp;

FOR SPONSORING THE
YOUTH HOLE IN ONE
SHOOT OUT
101 5 The R1ver Cl1ffS1de Golf

pay1ng for your

will have Jeff Gordon's

Apphcallons wlil be accepted on Tuesday, July 25 and

2 days before the ad

210

INFANTRY CHAIR

27 (IRL)

Do you have problems

1s free to the public Held at

m

REGISTER~

Wanted To Do

~unbap I!J:unrs $5&gt;rntmrl • Page

WV

TOY LEHMANN DATED 1903 GERMANY PADDY &amp; HIS PIG (All ORIGINAL)
PICTURED IN AD FtRST ITEM TO BE SOLO WORLO WAR ONE FOLDING

OPPORTUNITY TO BID

for med1cat1ons Th1s serv1ce

HELP WANTED

SENTINEL~

1 00 p m the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 1 00 p m Friday

ttems

992-9200
or 949-4900

back stretch, Kentucky

complet1ng the appl1cat1on

Help Wanted

2 00 p m
the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday

TRIBUNE~

Closed Mondays

0710

29 for ass1stance 1n

EOEM/F/D/V

Be Paid In Advance

Successful Ca nd date
Requ rements
21 Years Old
'CDL wlln Hazmat and Tank En
dorsements
DOTQuahled
'Two Years Expenence
'Clean Dr v ng Record
'Stable Employmen t Background
Ownerflease
Operators Needed
Quarterly M leage
Pay Guarantee
Interested Drivers
Should Call
1 800-824 2857
EOEIMIF

$11 50

For only

Pnvate RV camp s1te,

call

appo1n1ment for July 28 or

612 Sllm Br1dge Plaza
Gallipolis Ohio 4563 t

AL..I. Wanted To Do Ads Must

Open 4 pm Dally

med1cat10ns? Please anend

Attn Manager
Fax 740 446 4760

3

with chips

training,

We Orfer unlimited
earmng potential + hase,
euellent benefits and
progressne sales and mgmt
tra1nlng
prog..ams
Forward your resume to
Denelic1al Fmance

Wanted To Do

or 8" Hot Sub Sandwich

(3rd/Pme) Great location for

SPARKLE SUPPLY COMPANY

1

180

180

16" Large P1zza
wtth

Pool Chemicals

Want Academ1c Excellence n a
Safe En\/ ronment'
GRACE ACADEMY IS now ac
cept ng enrollment of sludents K
8th lor tat adm ss on at 115 new
expandecl laclll\y m Albany Aca
demlc qual ty great curr culum
small classes some md v1dual
•zed programm1ng
Call now 74Q-594 5433

We Offer
•outstanding Pay &amp; Benef11s
"Safety Awards Program
•up ToDate Equ•pment
•company Matching 401{k) Pro
gram
"Husband &amp; Wife Team s We
come
•steady WOfk
•unrlorms FurniShed

Get your Albuterol or other

serves v1ct1ms of domest1c

s

Schools
Instruction

EARN YOUR CO LLEGE DEGRE E
QUICKLY Bachelors Maste rs
Doctorate By Correspondence
Based Upon Pr or Educat on And
Short Study Course For FREE In
forma11on Bookie! PhO ne CAM
BRIDGE STATE UN IVERS ITY 1
800 964 83 6

Enlerprlae

AR FJ

Business
Tramlng

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)

Pro lesslona
Tank Truck
Transporl Dnvers
GrowWtth
A leader

Medicare Approved

Seremty HousB

speed1ng tickets etc

As a pori of our Sales

Calha Me~gs Commumly Acllon Agency

Ophtha ml c AS Sis tant Tram ng
Preferred W I Tra•n ll Me ets
Standards Call 740 446 0112
Ask Fo Kathy

POSTALJOBST0$1445JHR +
Full Federal Benehls No Expen
ence Exam Info Call t 800 391
5856Ext 42128AM 9PM
Local Not Guar

I

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Team, yuu will develop new
business and market our
contemporary rmanctal

In

WANTEO

Part T1me Elde1ly Care 740 367
0291 Before 4 PM 740 367 7463
; After 4 PM Except Thursday
And Sunday

our lasting gratitude

jerry and Chnsllne Rhodes

URGEN TLY NEEDED plasm a
donors earn $35 to $45 tor 2 or 3
Murs WMkly Call Sera Te e 740
592 6651

AN to coord nate grant lunded
childhood 1mmunm1hon progra m
and Welcome Home Mather and
Ch ld home v sna110n program tor
a local public health agency Re
qwres 30 hours/week max1mum
Salar~ commensurate w lh expert
ence Send resume to PO Box
63t Pomeroy OH 45769 ATIN
Health Comm•ss oner by July 27

the true meaning of the

Aball teams and parents

On Her 52nd Btrthday

Brothers &amp; S1sters and

We are especial~ grareful

support dunng the Illness

'!l~~~t~tntb cy~ oft!J, cr~

Wmston

Husband john,

loss of our loved one

Reg1stered Nurses and Licensed
Pract1cal Nurses WV )lcense re
QU ired Serv ces P 0 Box 575
Potnl Pleasant VN 25550 EOE

Health, Hosp1ce Team

Sheet Sets, Quilts, etc

cooperatiOn w1th the Calha County Department of Job

FABRICATOR/WELDER/FinER

.

Of

such love kindness and

Holzer, Reverend Sallee

.8/fo Qo.J On.
'But uNO lht empi!J Chu.

In Lovmg Memory

~~sh
tothdn~
many
who showed

-MOS Coord nator WV Reg•stered
'Nurse I cense requ red Mmlmurrf
three years lull t me or equivalent
chn1ca1 ex per ence reqwed and
m1nlmum two yea rs chmcal ex
penance tn long term nurs1ng

Ulhe Murray and Pearl

Caldwell Trucking, W1lhs

St ver Bndge Plaza Gall potts

Card of Thanks

fnend5

Help Wanted

Soft Ltnes Supervtsor 40 Hours A
Week Management Sk ts A
Must Apply At JoAnn Fabn cs

Loca l Company seeking Data
Entry Clerk Wllh knowledge or
baSIC account ng procedure s
computer sk •lts oUtce machtne
elflc ency &amp; enJoys work ng ~tth
others Send resume cto Pont
PleasaPI Register ML34 200
Main Street Pt Pleasant WV
25550

Dr Andmon, Med1 Home

Home of Vmton C C

110

5023

Now Hung
All pos tons Full &amp; Part ltme
ava• able 4011&lt; patd \lacattons
co mpellllve starli ng salary Ap
p v n person at Gmo s n PI
Pleasant

to Harry and Mary Fellure

McCoy Moore Funeral

Help Wanted

Needed day &amp; mght shift worker
fo r Adult Group Home 740 992

Help Wanted

to the followmg people

Nurses on the 2nd floor at

C!Jlho pawJ IJA!J
1., !JWI fi60 on
f}uly 2J 19"2

the1r Galhpohs omce

preferred

In Wellston, and a

'11Jmtia0f}mt~~J

'17» 'llotlJtw u~mm of

a

Household Corp, and a
larp mdependent consumer
finance co. is seeking an
Assistant Sales Manager ror

loan products to customers

2 bedroom house

9n .8oolni 91f.,ory of

In Memory

telephone calls We also want
to thank Amber &amp;.. D.lvld

needs wh1le tram1ng to
become a branch sales
manage~
A.ppl1canu must
demonstrate proven sales
and leadershlp abilltles be
selt·mottvatrd and hn·e
excellent commumcatton I
interpersonal
skills
Bachelors
degree
or
tqUivalent mgmt e"perlencc
requlred
I l
! ears
sales l mgmt experience

4

In Memory

Payments Problems w1th

superv•slng, and guiding the
:~ranch employees to match

110

Instructor general bu 1d ng f con
strucllonf elect neal technology
Mason County Career Cente r
Apply to personnel ofhce Mason
County Schools 307 81h St PI
Pleasant WV 25550 Phone 304
675 4540 Closing dead! ne Tue
August1 2000 by 3 30 pm

the Doctors

lamar 0 Bryant for prayers
visits and cards Mt Mouah
Orurch All those wl1o sent

assisting

a

'

Home Health Age ncy Has Post
tons Available For Part T1 me
LPNs And RNs Dayshill Week
days And Weel&lt;.ends Ava•labllity
For Weekend Duty A Plus' Apply
AI 412 Second A\lenue Galllpo
IS Oho OrCat1740-4411779

Emergency

You w1ll also
assist the Bran&lt;:h Salts
Manager 1n the datly
operations of the branch,

Rental Units
For Sale

International Company Expands
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF
E Commerce 525 $751&lt; Paten
MENT4l RETARDATION AND
11a Full Tra1n ng Paid Vacat on
DEVELOPMENTAL
I 886 827 9733
DISABILITIES
Possible part I me open ng lor a
Preschool Instructor at Carleton I--:~-:--:-=:---:;-:-"-:
Schoo to work. on our Spec at Ed
ucallon p,escnool Class Th"e
Card of Thanks
(3) days a week Must ha11e cur
rent Teachtng Cert1f cat on 01 l•
cense lrom the Oh10 Department
The Family of
of Educat on and ha11e or be w11
ng to ob ta1n Early Education of
Dorolhy A Wooldndge
HaM capped Vahdat on Send re
sume by July 28 lo
who passed away
Carleton School
July 9, 2000
131 o Garteton Street
PO Box 307
would like to take !his
Syracuse OH 45779
bme to say 'Thank You'

Gov t &amp; Postal Joba Now Hmng
1n OhiO $1410 to $21 801 hr Ben
ells &amp; Pd Tra n ng For More Job
Informal on 1 81 B 942 0245 ext
4114

PatnCia

110

Help Wanted

110

BULLETIN BOARD

products

Announcement

Help Wanted

02

Page

Card of Thanks

Southern Baptist Cllurch Pastor

Dr vers 2 Week Pa1d Tru ck Drlv
e1 Tralnmg No Expenence Need
ed Earn Up To $32 000/ 1st Yr
W/ Full BenefitS Cali Today 1
877 230 6002 Sunday Fnday 9
ICM TlHfP M PA M mll!]lOrt
www otrdrl\lers com

A 3 unit building,

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$t8 35 Hour Full Senehls No Ex
penance Reqwed Free .Appl ca
t on And Exam Information 1 868
726 9083 ExtensiOn 1701 (7
AM 7PM CST)

o

11 0

23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

lmm9d ate opemngs lor pmles
slonals wtth our growing
company

hospital while I was there

DRIVERS WANTED OTR IDEOI
GATED !REGIONAL !LOCAL
Rea ch The Surum•t 01 Your F1
nanclal Goals Work Fo1 A Com
pany That Cares About You Your
Family And Your Fu tu re l mlted
Openings 29 CPM All M•les Un
t oad ~ng Pay Personalize d Dis
patch Home Orten Holiday rva
caliOn Pay 401K /Med cal !P•es J
Dental R10er Program 98% No
Touch Fre ght Ass gned T
2000 s Call Summ11 Transporta
t10 n 800 876 0680 Or 513 564
8945EOE

11

Help Wanted

and Nurses of Po1nt Pleasant

swer 740 992 6088

Sunday, July

D

Mp //go loffliSH

Med1cal Service

remodeled, new

$2~,oo.oo.

110

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

Tamm1

Drivers to dr ve cars to &amp; lrom
740 591 2867 1f no an

or (7401

equipment, beer end
wine license
Included. Asking

Help Wanted

the Pomeroy firemen Brent &amp;..

acutlon~.

a

RESTAURANT
FOR SALE

'Ol:tmes -~entmel

want to thank

Drivers Flatbed
Medical Cover1ge
From Dr; One!
• $2 000 Sign On Bonus
Qua •tv Home Time
Late Mod&amp;! Equipment
CDlA&amp;3Mos OTR
ECK MILLER
800 611-6636
WWN eckmuter com

bedroom house and

Announcement

i

DENTAL BILLER 115 $45 IH'
Dental B1IHng Software Company
Need&amp; People To Proceu Medl
cal Claims From Home Tralnmg
Provided Must Own Computer t
80().797 7511 Ext 30;1

Announcement

- Announcement

In

Construction Work must be Ex
perlenceo In Siding Soffet and
Facia (740)339-3489

ATIENTION
Earn Online Income
$500 $7 500 /Month
www pcpays com

N

Found med size black dog w f
brown mark ngs long ha r short
legs Hutton s Cafwash Pomeroy
740 992 7t35

8 " - 27"

888-565-5197 EXT 642

ASSEMBLY AT HOME!! Crafts
Toys Jew.;~l r y Wood Sewmg
Typmg Great Pay CALL 1 BOO
795 0380 Ext i201 (24 H s)

8

:

CLAIMS PROCESSOR! 120 $40
/Hr Potential Proces&amp;•ng C!alms
Is Easy! Training Pro'Jided
MUST Own PC CALL NOWI I

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H r ng No Expenence Pad
Tra n1ng Great Bene! ItS Ca 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 365

REGISTER OEAQL!NE
2 days before lhe ed
Is to run by 4 30p m
Saturday &amp; Monday edition •
4 30 p m Thur~dey
0eedllnea aubjKt to cn.ng•

•

BURGER KING
Career Opportunities we Seek
Career Or entad lndl11lduals who
stnve to aChiBVB the "BEST" In
customer satisfaction &amp; team
work If you have a desire to
succeed w11h a goal dnven team
onented &amp; grow~ng company we
offer Health dental &amp; Life In
surance Prescription Card &amp; Bo
nus Program Pa id Vacat•ons
Management Apparel Ad\lance
ment from Wlth1n Appl)l n per
son at the Burger K ng Reslau
rant located In the Ohto R ver
Plaza or Mall Resume to Burger
Kmg f55 Upper River Road Galli
poHs Oh~ 45631

100 OVERWEIGHT PEOPLE
NEEDED• Ea rn $$$ Losmg 5
200 Pounds Call 1 888 235 2292
(Toll Freel Or
www v herbmal com/ fechange

TFIIBUNE DEAPL!Nf 2 00 p m
the dav before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL DEADLINE
1 00 p m the day before the ad
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 1 00 p m Friday

due to hoJJd•r•

BURGER KING
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
We Seek Ca reer Onenled lndl
v1duals Stove To Ach1eve The
Best Customer SatlslactJon And
Team work If You Have A De
s re To Succeed W th A Goal Or
ven Team Oriented And Grow ng
Company We Oller Heath oen
tal And Lde Insurance Prescop
tlon Card And Bonus Program
Pa1d vacat1o ns Ma,nagement
Apparel Ad11ancement From
Within Apply In Person AI Burg
er Kmg Restaurant located In
The Oh1o Al\ler Plaza Or Mall Resume To Burger K1ng 65 Upper
RIVer Road GalltpoBs OH 45631

Help Wanted

$2 000 WEEKLY! Mal ltng 400
Brochures Sat slac!lon Guar
anteecJ! Postage &amp; Supphes Pro
v dedi Rush Self Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
3701 t 1438 Start Immediately

OesdJJIHI• subJect to cMnge

60

Alck Pearson Auction Company
full time auctioneer complete
auction
service
Licensed
t66 Ohto &amp; West V1rgmia 304
773-5785 Or 304 n3 6447

'Program AlcJs for Mason County
Grug Free Program H gh School
Graduate Val d Onvers license
wl gooel Clrtv1ng record Se nd
re sumes/cove letter to SCAC
D ~rectar ol Human Resources
540 F !th A\lenue Huntington
WV 2570 1 EOE

Giveaway

due to holidays

Lesl e Lemley Lemley s Auction
Barn 740 388 0823 740 245
9866 Full Ser111ce Releren ces
A'Jailab le Licensed &amp; Bonded
Our P/aCfl Or '11:lursr

Absolute Top Dollar .All U S Sli
ver And Gold Coins Proofseta
Diamonds Ant que Jewelry Gold
A ngs Pre 1930 U S Cu rrency
Sterlmg Etc Acqws1110ns Jewelry
M TS Con Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446-2842

S.lurday a Mondoy odklon •
4 30 p m Thurtday
"DMI111ne• •ubJecl to t:IMnga
due to holfd•Y• ~

40

buy/salt estates cons1gnment
auction Thursdays 6pm Mleldle
port Oh1o &amp; WV Li cense 740
992 9707 740-989-2623

Complete Household Or Estates!
Any Type Of FurMure Appllanc
es Antiques Etc Also Appra•sal
Aval ablel 740-379 2720

lltorunby•sopm

r "

B II Mood spaugh AuCtioneering

90

a

'
••

Auction
and Flea Market

Wedemeyer s Auction Serv1ce
Galllpol S OhiO740 379-2720

AIJ. Announc.rnent Ad1 Muat

•~
•r'

~

Announcements

Pomtroy Dilly Sentinel All
Yard Sales Muat Bt Ptld In Advtnct Dudllne 1 OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run
Sunday a Monday edition·
1 OOpm Friday Aak about how
you can get a FREE yard tale
sign
80

110

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or SeU
S h ~rley Spears 304 675 t429

QEADLINE 2 00 p m
the day befoffl the ad
Ia to run Sunday 6 Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday

GenUeman Seekmg Companion
ship From N1ce Female For TalkS
Walks &amp; Fnendsh1p Send Re
phes To 553 Se co nd A\lenue
Apartment 403 Gallipolis OH

Help Wanted

Ann Mothers &amp; other&amp; work from
home! Earn an e11.tra $500 $1500
part time 01 $2000 $4000 full time
per mon tn call 800 720 7658
v•sit www 2workathome com

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Be Paid In Advance
TRIBUNE Q£AilLirtE 2 00 p m
the day before the ad
It 10 run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Frldlly
SENTINEL QFAQLINE
1 00 p m lhe lily 1&gt;ttore tile ICI
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edlllon • 1 00 p m Fridoy
FIEGISTEA QfADL!NE
2 days before the ad
latorunby4 30pm
S.tunloy &amp; Monday edhlon
4 30 p m Thursday
•o.dOnet •ublfiCJ fo change
due to hoi/Wyo. •

f

Yard Sale

Personals

AU. Personal Adt Muat

l

110

~unbap

Section

23, 2000

Sunday, July

°

MEIGS
COUNTY
'
_,

• u./~

{,•.

h; • "

"\~'"

''

r-

~

.

"'"'

, '

) ~

~

t!

;~

..-

I

'

LISTING! 33322 JACKS
IR1141nl ~0 plus acres Wllh
barn and cellar
~---·--- 1996 14 x7 0 molbile
I ho-me complete wolh 2
l cemtral a r Addttla nal 1income
extra rental s1te
water well Call

1P'Ope&gt;rty loday'

IO

VIeW

~2070

Cheryl Lemley

742·3171

""-!IA5oH~•N ROA.D $79 000 DO ·

lmmedtate Possess1onl 1 1/2
Story home that offers newer
roof and hot tub dmtng room
kitchen den 4 bedrooms 2
baths and morel Let s go look I
12069

NEW LISTING! 660 HIGH
STREET $59,000 DO 2 Slory
home Situated on large stzed
lot 3 bedrooms 1v1ng room
dmtng room and ktlchen
Detached one car garage

#2068

NEW LlSTING 2807 SR 124 $94.900 DO 81 level home that
cons1sts of 4 bedrooms 3 baths I vmg room formal dtntng
kttchen and more on 1he ms1de Outside !here ts approx 8 94
acres w th a stocked pond More Call for complete llstmg
12078

DON'T SEE WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR?
Call &amp; Let Us Help You Find It!

�-Classifieds
70

A N NOUNCEM E NTS

005

~

ALL Yard S.lea Muat
Be Paid In Advence

~ASK ABOUT HOW YOU

CAN GET A FRff
YARD SALE SIGN!"

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

1

,
y

45631

IS HE CHEATING ??? Top Raled
Psych1cs Can Tell You• S t 93 +I
Mm 1 800 472 2103 All Credn
Cards &amp; Checks OR 1 900 820
0020 $3 99 /Min "2 MINUTES
F~EE (24 HAS) 18 t
START DATING TONIGHT!
Have Fun Meeting Elig ble S1n
gtes In Your Area Call For More
Information 1 800 ROMANCE
Ext 9735

l

t

.,
.,

~

World Reknown PsychiC Lmell
Call Now And Let Our Psychics
.Answer Your Questions Whether
It Be L011e Health Happiness Or
Success 1 900 263 2518 Or 1
888 974 6447 S3 99/Min 18+

t

(
:

r
:

t
t

30

S.PolcllnAdvonce
TRIBUNE~ 2 00 p m
the doy bolo,. the ICI
Ia to run Sund8y Monday
ldldon • 2 00 p m Frklly
SENTINEL llE.6IIUIIE
1 00 p m tho doy boloo9 the ICI
II to run SUrtdlly &amp; Mondlly
ediHon ·1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER D&amp;ADLINE
2 dlyo llofant tho ICI

•
~
(

1

New To You Thr ft Shoppe
9 West St mson Athens
..
740 592 1842
• Oualty cloth.ng and household
1tems $1 00 bag sale every
Thursday Monday thru SaiUrday
.. 9 ()()..5 30

ALL Giveaway Ads Must
Be Peld In Advance
TRIBUNE Q£AilLirtE 2 00 p m
lhe doy belon1 lhe od
Is to run Suncsav
&amp; Monday edition
2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL DEADLINE
1 00 p m the dey before the ad
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edlllon 1 00 p m Friday
REGISTER QEAQLINE
2 days before the ad
lstorunby430pm
Saturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thursday

Wanted to Buy

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

110

$505 WEEKLY GUARANTEED
WORKING FOR THE GOVERN
MENT FROM HOME PART·
TIME NO EXPERIENCE RE
QUI REO I 800 757-Q753

M

Adorable Ktttens To A Good
Home 74D-446 3479
-------,.-Four Soft -and euddly-Adora bte
Pupp1es M xed Breed (304)895
3255
Adorable fl ully black &amp; wh te k t
tens one all black 740 843-5445
K11tens Litter Tra med 740 446
7872

Lost and Found

AJ..L Lost &amp; Found Ads Mus1
Be Paid In Advance

M

S9B7 as WEE~LYl Proce ss mg
HUD /FHA Mortgage Retunds No
Expe r•en ce Requ~red For FAll
fniorma t on Call t 800 501 6832
Ext 1300
CAREER OPPORTUN)TY
MEDICAL BILLERS Earn Up To
$45K Nrl Full Traimng /PC ReQd
8B8 660-6693 Ext 4402
••FEDERAL POSTAL JOBS""
Up To $18 24 Hour Hiring For
2000 Free Call For Apphcat on I
E11.am nat on lnlorma!IOn Federal
Hire Full Benefits t 800 598
4504 Extenson 1516 (8 AM 6
PM CST)

ATTENTION We II Pay You To
Lose tJp To 29 lbs (Or More) 87
People Needed lmmed ately Ofler
Expires 7 26 Cal 740 441 1982

~-········~*······~-·

i
LOGS 5
i WANfED i
POPLAR

•

:

•: diameter; 18' long •:
$35 Per Ton

I

f

6110 of a mile north:
•
•
: of SA 7 Roadside :
:

Rest on right.

:

740-985·4465

•

:

•
:

On

mlljor highway In
SE Ohio. Interesting
decor, completelw

Phone

17401 71 0·0007 or

=~~~~~~~-~~:•:•;•;•;•:•:•;•:•:=~====7:4:a-::28
__e__3_e_T
__2____.
110

Help Wanted

CLASSAOTR
Stngte Dn... er Late Model Ken
worths Wtth Reefers West Coast
Carner
CLASS BOTR
Team Stra ght Truck L ~ le Model
Fre•ghtllners W•th Sleepers Must
Ha\le A1r Brake Endorsements
800 Miles Rad•u s Hom e Delver
OS
BOTH POSITIONS
Atleast 25 Years Old
At east 2 Years Ekperience
GoodMVR
Weekly Pay
Health lnsurariCS A'Jatlable
Work Well W11h The Publ C
For More Information Call 800
437 8764 Hrs 8 30 AM 5 PM
EARN $25 000 TO $50 000 IYR
Med1cal Insurance Billing Ass1s
tance Needed lmmedlalelyl Use
Your Home Computer For Great
Potential Ann ual Income Call
Now• 1 800 291 4683 Dept • 109
EARN EXCELLENT 1NCOM6
Med•cal B•llers Needed Full
Tramlng Provided Home Com
puler Req uired To Free• 800
772 5933 Ed 12005
ANANCIAL ASSISTANT/CLERK
Must be computer literate and
capable ol perlormmg payroll
preparation b II ng cash recerpts
cash d sbursements and monthly
reportmg Average of 25 hour
work week Ful benefit package
Send resume to Personnel De
partment PO Box 307 Syracuse
OH 45779
GET PAID TO MODEL FASH
IONS FOR MAJOR SHOPPING
NETWORKI 5end Photo W I S H
(Oepl AI 160 Oak Rd Norry Pa
17857 0' I 360 613 1099 (24
H' I

DRIVERS COLONIAL FREIGHT
Fmd Out Why The Best Kept Se
cret In T uck ng Is the Hottest
News On The Street' II Attend
The Humg Event On Thursday
August 3rd And Fr day August
4th At 10AM Or2PM THE
BUDGETEL EAST I 70 &amp; Po st
Rd Or Cal Brent BOO 331 2510
Ext3150r3t424 1 1200

Zerkle

car(ls

food VISits prayers and

for the love and VISits

110

Help Wanted

ASSISTANT
SALES-MANAGER
Beneficial

Finance,

Tho Plllllbury Company hao on lmmodloto oponlng lor 1
Fobrlcolor/Woldor/FI11or 111tolood manuflcturlngllclllty
ln Southern Ohio
Condldolo muot bo able to TIG wold 1nd purge llllllnlooo
attll 1nd aenltary rmrnga, mutt be ebll ro work from
bluoprlnto 1nd dr1wlngo muotoloo Ill willing to do work
In other tradtl t1 1 m11onry, carpentry mechentc, ate )
Tho peroon ooloctod lor 1hlo poolllon muot Ill cort11lod In
high preeaurt ayatema, hydraulic ayalama, ate 11 1
minimum 013000 poln1o and bo oblolo p1oo1orkllll
training be 1 good problem eolvtr and work without
ouporvl•lon Thl1 lo • union hourly poolllon with 1 PlY
rate at 115 00 per hour
Plllobury offoro oxcollont hoal1h coro bonollto
pr11crlptlon card peld vecatlone end holldeya, and
ponolon pion Candldatu m'y tubmll thtlr roeum1110
The Pllltbury Company
2403 S Pannoylv1nla Avtnut
Wtllaton, OH 4S8i2
Anenlton WELDER

•

A

duplex in Jackson.

If interested pleaH
call(740)384-3878

71 CJ.OOOT

Par~ time pos hon ava aote ror an

and

Saunders who have shown
us

word "netghbor"

Thdnks also to those many
friends who honored
Arnold s life With g1fts of

Tire Co Vmton Vol F1re

flowers food cards,

Dept B1dwell Bball and

prayers and condolences

t!J, omilt
Of t!J, Ona '11Jbo One.

and friends and family

the ladles
of the nrst Church of God

who called, sent flowers,

Pallbearers singers and

cards, and food

others who made his

Smcerely,

funeral ser.ice beautiful

rJ,t'Thetv

7/23 /48 5/7/99
Sadly mtssed by

911w.ibg
911m'IN g'"!l,lllli

e•.

lhtlrJ111R&amp;

Theu Fam1hes

Pastor Paul Voss

Dav1d and Kim

and meamngful also

Wooldndge
Richard and Dottie Darst

The

Auto Insurance Monthly
your dnvmg record DU!

'

Wanted opthalmic ass stant
tramtng preferred w 1 tra1n 11
meets standards call 1 740 446
0 t 12 asll for Ka thy
WILDLIFE JOBS TO $6 19 IHR
Federa Benehts Park Rangers
Security Mamtenaoce No Elip
For Some For In to Cal 1 800
391 5856 Ext 4213 8 AM 9
PM Local No Guar
+

WORK FROM HOME!! Own A
Compu ter? Internet Market ng
Opparlun lytt $500 $6 000 /mth
PT/FT
www ~u r pc2work com
POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H r ng No Exper ence Pad
Tram ng Gre at Benefits Call 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 566
140

have

Ca !Today 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452
Reg #90 05- 1274B
150

Tf'lnsportatlon

Company

Cwmllsh

The Quahty L1nk

Same Day SR·22 s ISSued

v1olence

breathtng medtcatiOn btlled

call 446·6752 or

to Med1care Save money

1·800·942·9577

Call for a quote

Free Home Delivery Call

Berber Sale $5 99 Yard Bowman's Homecare
740-446-7283
Mollohan Carpet
202 Clark Chapel Rd.
FOR SALE BY OWINEF~III
Porter, Ohio 446·7444
3 Bedroom House in
Gallipolis between
Will Clip Cattle
schools. Large fenced
lot, In-ground pool,
For Fairs
selling below appraisal
Jim Baugham
256-9194

Brown Insurance Agency
446 1960
Top So11 Ftll Dtrt Bank Run
Delivered or P1cked Up
M1n Loader
CHG $35 00
Call
Cremeans Concrete
&amp; Supply, Co
1-740-446-1142
Monday • Saturday

256-6535

~Af~CO"NOIT!ON!NG

-

Woooyards M1m

Rt.TI Racine

Mall

Serv1ce and Repa1r

407 Matn Street, Pt Pleas

All Makes

Next to Lowe Hotel

Smlth·BUick· Pontlac Gallipolts

New load of OVC Clothtng,

Pizza Express

COMMERCIAL CORNER LOT

M1d Summer Spec1al

AND BLDG FOR SALE

20% DISCOunt

only

reta1l busmess Call Tim toll

446 4109

free 1·888·874 1994

Wmter

Craftfest

Jackson

Craf1

00

GUild

The
IS

now

accepting appl1cat1ons for the
uncom1ng show on Nov

4

&amp;

Nov 5 2000 If you would like
an

application

Tammy

Jones

please
at

740 286

Speedway and

4

passes

for Aug 26 (Area Race)

&amp;

Call

740·446· 4241

Prospective Home
on one of the areas ntcest

pm

learn how to get
med1cat1ons at a lower cost

Fruth s Pharmacy Aunt Clara s
Collection of F1ne Am1sh Thmgs

or free on July 27 &lt;;~t 2 pm

Brown Insurance Agency

R1ver Street Gallipolis Ohto

Please call to schedule an

Farmer s Bank of Pmeroy

45631

Haffelt s M1ll Outlet,

J

E

Mornson &amp; Assoc1ates Wolle s

Po1nt Pleasant Center
State Rt 62 N

29,

Open House tours July

2000 from

12 noon to

3

Owners Will be accepting

bids pnvately or by mall at

70

Located Beh1nd Soulheastern

parent IS reqUired on all applicatiOns
For additional mformat10n call367·7324 extensiOn 99

:

:

. .

PUBliC AUCTION

FRIDAY. JULY 28, 6:30Pm
LEMlEY'S AUCTION BARN
8580 SR 588 (Old Rt 35J. GalliPolis, OH
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTIBLE ITEMS:
PA Jacquard coverlet signed woodrlng,
Allenstown, PA, Mahogany bedroom suite w /4

on Route 7

table and 4 ladder back chairs (chairs need to

SeeU&gt;.Candlestand, Nice pictures

4 10 am · 11 am

&amp;

Frames,

Oriental Rugs , Sterling Sliver Items, Old
Country store cast iron meat cutter

"All you can stuff tnto one

(Enterprise 1881), Andirons, Pewter water pot,

bag Free"

Occupied Japan

&amp; 25

&amp;

Czech pieces, 74 Piece

Elegant crystal stemware, Some country
antiques, Mise Collectible Glassware,
More not llated

For more 1nfo

AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A LEMLEY

$$$ NEED CASH?? WE Pay
Cash For Reman ng Payments
On ProperTy Soldl Mortgages•
Annu 1 es1 Se ttlem en ts l mme
d1ate Ouoteslll Nobody Beats
Our Pr~ ces Na t onal Cent act
Buye s 800 490 0731 Ext tOt
www nahonalcontractbuyef's com

FREE DEBT CONSOLIDAT ION
Appl cat10n W JS erv1 ce Redu ce
Payments To 65% !'C ASH 1,.q
CEN Tt VE OFFERII Call I 800
328 8510 Ext 29

$FREE CASH NOW$ F am
Wealthy Fam I es Unload ng M•l
ltans 0 1 D a ll&lt;:~rs To Help Mm m1.ze
The r Taxes Wr te lmmed ate y
Wmdfa IS 847 A SECOND AVE
•350 NEW YORK NEW YORK
1Q0t7

PHOTOG-RAPHY
·wedd ngs
•Pets
•sports Teams
Profess anal Cerhhed Photo gra
phe'
Reasonable rates
Call lor appo ntmen1
(30 4)675 7472
(304)675 7279

230

Professional
Services

n
446-2342 or 992-2156

BE SURE TO COME

&amp; SEE

US Ill!

&amp; Bonded By State Of Ohto

Cash/Approved Check Only
"Not Responsible For Accidents
Or Lost Property

\

For Sale By Owner 3BR 2BA
Iaroe fam11y mom &amp; ol!1ce new
roof gutler ng 1 car garage
2912 Anmston Orl\le Pt Plea s
an t (304)675 2608 Pr ce re
duced

3 Bedroom 1 Le vel Large Lot
(304)882 2688

HOMES FROM S199 30 /MO I
3 BA Repos /Forec losures Fee
4% Down For l st ngs /Pay me nt
De1a1ls t SQ0-719 3001 x1 B5
7 rm house n the Le on area on t
acre tol $50 000 304 458 t 084

Must See N1ce 8 Year Old B ck
Acros s From 0 d N G H S On
160$89 500 740 388 0591

NEW LISTING 3 Bedrooms I
Bath Eat In Newly Remodeled
K Iehan la undry Room large
Detached 2 Ca Garage New
Cen tral Heat &amp; A r New Carpet
1ng Ancl New Root &amp; Sid ng Call
TmTol Free 18888741994
NO DOWN PAYMENT I
No Down Payment ReQu red W th
Government Sponsored loan
Good Credit And Steal1y Income
Requ red Call Today For More
InformatiOn Independence Mort
gage Ser\1 ces 12611 Mad1son
Lakewood OH 44107 M81679 t
800 8&gt;5 0036

Public Sale and Auction
210

Busmess
Opportunity

ESTATE AUCTION
TUESDAY JULY 25, 5:30 PM
903 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

!NOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
re commends I hat you dO bus•
ness w th people you know and
NOT \0 send money th ough the
ma 1 unl ll you have 10\/&amp;SIIgated
the ollenng
ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! Noth
mg Down Establ shed Yo rk Minis
Rou1e With 22 l ocal ons In You•
Town EZ Work 6 8 Hours
Weelo.ly Nb Selhng Net $52K
vea.r y 1 800 535 4385
24
Hours

1930 s Dresser &amp; Chest, Drop front secretary
w

I

serp front, M1 sc Oak cha1rs small drop front

1ue·'"' Small oak tables and stands, Dmmg table
4 chaus, Porcelatn t op table

AT &amp; T SPRINT Payphone Rtes
35 Proven Local ons Local
Great Income 800 800 3470

.

EARN $90 000 YEARLY Aepa r
tng NOT Rep acmg long Cracks
In Wmdshlelds Free VIdeo 1
800 826 8523 US ICanada
www gle~ssmechamx com

.

•

.

•

s tand,

mug

2 Old

GIVe one of our Agents a
Today!
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101
e-mail us for Information on our listings:
blgbendrealty@dragonbbs..com
RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER
446 4618
Judy DeW111
J Memll Carter

Tammie DeWitt

Cast •ron

v10hn s &amp; banJO, Shuley

McCoy clown cook1e pr, S&amp;P s,

uon ski llet s Gramteware Ju mbo Jar Blue

JarS &amp;

Stone

IDt~on~ssi:on g lass
1av1v"ances

FINANCIAL CONSULTANT OP
POATUNITY Bu1ld A Fln11nc1al
Consultant Agency W th One Of
The Fastest Grow ng F na nc lal
Services Companies In No rth
Amenca W H STUART &amp; ASSO
CIATES TOM POW ERS I 877
378 8276

JUgs, Sal t crock, Chalkware,
Sad

Irons, M1sc

Old pictures

kit c hen

Wash board,

Old

!"•''"'"" Items, Kitchen cookware, Old books,

11

n,,.,, Old

.. .

dishes F1re King Lustre ware,

1Mammy grease Jar, M1sc paper goods, Cast Iron

pots , Old tool s, wood planes,

sticks,

LAUNCHED JULY 20001 S1mply
The Greatest Internet Opportu m
ty Around Take A Look

5 Gal

Stoneware water cooler, Kerosene

heater, Carbide hght 60'

www W11blo wea h comlhmmc f reedom

x 24

YOUR WASTING TIME, IV
NOT CALLING TO VIEW
THIS RANCH
Ideally
located close to hospttal and
shopp1ngl 4 Bedrooms hv1ng
room dtnlng room kttchen
wtth 2nd kttchen tn basement
Covered rear pat10 Approx 3
acres and lots more comes
w1th th1s hmel Call at once
OWNER WANTING TO

DEALII2066

Marble top, Sev

m1sc box lots, Lots of kmck knacks, More m1 sc

MED ICAL BILLER $15 $45 IH'
Med1ca1 Btlllng Software Company
Needs People To Process Med
cal Cia ms From Home Tram ng
P ovtded Mus1 Own Computer
800 434 5518 Ed 667
MEDICAL BILLING Unl m led In
come Poten t al No E•per ence
Necessa y Fee Info rmatiOn &amp;
CD ROM
nvestmen l From
$2 495 F nanc ng Ava• abe 800
322 t t39 Ex 050
www !&gt;us ness startup com

Items not h sted
AUCTIONEER

740 388

LESLIE A LEMLEY

OB23(NOME) OR

LICENSED
CASH

&amp; BONDED

I

740 245 9866 (BARN)
BY STATE OF OHIO

APPROVED CHECK ONLY

NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS

OR

LOST PROPERlY'

''*

'*'THIS IS AN OUTSIDE SALE 1

••• BRING LAWN CHAIRS ' ''*

your
lookmg to purchase a home
that has quahly lhroughoul
Low mamtenance bnck ranch
4 bedrooms Newly carpeted
formal hv1ng room step savtng
k1tchen famtly room Wtlh
!~replace Over 2 000 sqfl
1tv1ng space Attached 2 car
garage 2 acres mground
pool bam &amp; shed 12050
5 acres wtth road
Raccoon Creek
l ~~!~;~~:e along

_ _ __;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:P:;u;:b;:ll;:c;:S:;a:;l:;e;:;a:n:d:A::;:u:;c:;tl:o:n=====-----,ll and
325 Pubhc wale'
ava1lable Ntce rolltng/level
acreage $15 500 00 112071

Located at the Aucllon Center on Rt 33 In Mason , WV Will be sellllng
the estate of Judge C.E Peoples from Pomeroy, Ohio Guns are lrom
M~ Schoonover's Estate from Elkview, WV, Plus Others

I

FURNITURE

I

Beaut1fut 5 pc V1ct parlor su1te 6 pc Wat V1ct parlor su1te Both are m1nt Beau111u1
pc H1gh Back carved oak 8 R su1te lg Fancy Oak Knock Down wardrobe o 1
Lg Mah Gov W1nlhrope Sec one marked Maddox 2 pc court cupboard Beautiful
round oak table w/lg ctaw feet square oak labte w/ lg ball &amp; claw feel V1ct oak
SEjcrtlta,·y, Beautiful 9 pc Wal D R swte s1gned Rockford Super 7 pc Oak! D R
10 pc Mah D R surte w/ need lepoint chairs 3 Stack oak bookcase Oak
w/ curved glass V1ct Marble top tables Oak roll top desk Oak flatwatl cupboard
Earty llatwall cab1net solid s1des 3 pc Fancy poster B R su1te Oak 1ce box Oak
rocker Earty Pme 1/2 commode Mah Btankel chesl 9 pc fancy 1930 s D R sutfe 8
pc Heywood Wakl1etd D R swte Wal Queen Ann ch1na cab1net V1cl WIShbone
Dresser Oak book cases Oak s1de boards Oak library t able 3 tong Hall tables
Rosewood low boy dresser Lg Sp1nmng wheat Oak watl telephone Wal V1cl sofa
Fancy Serp oak dresser &amp; wash stand match1ng oak ctaw1ool bed Oak Geapholm
key wmd cylinder player V1ct pump organ Howard Miller Grandfather ctock plus
as found 1urmlure

1999 SECTIONAL
JUST
LIKE NEW Ltvtng room fully
PRlCE $48,900 00
equ1pped
kitchen
3 What a good pnce on th1s 1
bedrooms 2 baths Cental atr
1/2
sto'y
co mpletely
W2061
remodeled home Matn level
consists of 1tv1 ng room d1mng
kitchen 1amtly room bedroom
and bath upstairs Includes 3
bedrooms and bath Detached
24 x 32 garage s1de deck and
concrete patto Ntce level lot
FLOOR PLAN RANCHil
app,ox 11 6 x 160
Just the nghl stze for you
Large 11vmg room open to
formal dmmg area kttchen
laundry room 3 bedrooms
and 1 1/2 baths Attached
ove rs1zed 2 car garage Nice
easy to matntatn lot Concrete
dnve Handy locat1on1#2053
STYLE Plenly
of space and slyle herel
Formal hv1ng room dtntng
rooni both w1th a ftreplace
Overs zed family room
ea11n k1tchen w1lh plenly
cabmet space 2 Bedrooms
COMMERCIAL
2
Story den (m 3rd bedroom) and 2
bUildi ng lhal s 1deal for floral 1/2 baths on matn level along
shop retail etc Off street wtth sun room and laundry 2
parktng area Call for more Bedrooms upstairs Basement
1nformat1on 12044
w1th large rec room 1/2 bath
and kttchen area Over 5
acres attached 2 car garage
and morel 12043

FOOD

DON'T MISS THIS BUY
$39 900 00 Easy to matntatn
OR JUST SIMPLY
lawn 3 bedrOOfll!l bath eat
OUTDOORS? You II love the 1n kitchen ltvtng room
pr vacy m th1s country hornet enclosed porch Detached
Few mtnutes of Rto Grande
garage 12035
Approx 3/4 acre lot comes ONE OF GALLIA COUNTY S
wtth th1s well kept 3 bedroom aES"[
165 aoes wtth well
home complete wtth 2 full
matntatned barns/bulldtngs &amp;
baths ltvmg room dmmg &amp;
kitchen Flortda room 2 car stlos and a gorgeous country
delached 24x24 garage plus home that offers lots of I vmg
storage &amp; work shed Walk1ng space
and
extens1ve
d1stance to lake and publtc remodeling Includes a new
12060
kitchen With beautifu l cherry
cabtnets
and
hardwood

TOWN! And after
one look at lh1s
will be SOLD t
k1tchen plent1ful w1th
made cab•net formal
area living room 4 b~;~~~~~~~~
3 baths (2 bedrooms
master su1te on ma1 n level
2 baths) full basement 2
attached garage Cool shetdeiJI
covered
front
groove
flli~·~~~V~~';;~
floonng 4 bedrooms foyer tongue
4 acres1nand
a pond
llvtng room d nmg room WANTS SOLD NOW
tamtly room 2 baths Lots of
road frontage w1th several
t1llable and pasture acres
along some woodland Pond
and fenctng frontage along
Raccoon Creek
Way too
much to mention tn thiS ad
Owner Will d vtde 1nto 4
parcels or sell as a whole ON? GO AHEAD AND MAKE
THE NEW
11 f
1
1
AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE
FO~ THESE Must ca m comp eta ISttng THIS INVITING RANCH! You

,.-,G:::-LA~SS;;;W.::":-:R;;E~&amp;~C;;;O;;;L-:-L;:;:ECTI;;:;:;;B;;LE-;;;;S-,

John~s;;;o~n~B~r~o~th~e;;r;s~E~~l~~~;;:~;,;;~,

P1nk Depress1on
I Gern1artv bow t &amp; plate Collection of Beam bot~te!;-Gen - Sl&lt;&gt;rk·-Ch1urc:hiti-Bir1g
Kentucky &amp; others mce selection of frames Pnnts 10 1nclude
Slate Fait 191 2 Guest of Honor Pres Taft &amp; Gov Harmon f 3 x67 f,
Board of Heatlh 1897 s 1gned Early pnnt of Dog s1gned C L Van Vredenburgh 12/,
37 /, Old post cards &amp; greetmg cards 1939 World Fair Bank thermometer combo
' bucket Kraut cutter Crocks Jugs Lg Brass Bell Da1sey churn Brass steam
1 wl1iotiA Hit &amp;m ss engme off steam boat 4 Good buggy wheats Old loy I rucks Old
• nrum major baton Kalamazoo book hold er 1891 Stereoscope w / p1clures Vintage
S1gned Rembrant lamp Complete tra1n set w/ 671 engme &amp; cars Plus L1onel
IT,,:,:n Master TypeR Transformer Lionel 927 Lubncallng k1t and other p1eces

.

I

BOOKS

Pol1t 1ca1Books 1908 &amp; 1916 DemocratiC party lexl book story of a Tanff Act 1909
The Protective Tanff by Herman L1eb The Oh10 Bar Assoc1allon Reports 1940 41
Extracts from !he Congressional Record Woodrow W1lson s speech of acceptance
l'"'gu:st7 1912 H1tler 1937 Rose Bowt program Jan 1 1958 Oh10 State Un 1vers1ty
Umvers11y of Oregon Watt D1sney s com1c Donald Duck 1957 Jack &amp; J ill
Magazme 1944 Magazmes Newsweek 1939 Liberty 1942 Dodge News 50s L1fe
1939 and others Household magaz1nes 1939 &amp; others The Saturday Evemng post
1939 &amp; others Look 1939 &amp; others
McCa Is Compan1on Journal Co l1ers &amp;
plus a large amount of other books
~~-------------.G;;;U~N~S-----------,

.. GUNS WILL BE SOLD AT 11 00 A,M, *'
Savage pump 12 ga Model 1921 W 1n Model 840 12 ga W n 840 20 ga W n
370 16 ga Wtn Lever Act1on 30 30 cal Model 94 R 1fle &amp; North A mencan Arms
Black W1dow 22 mag p1s_l_
o_l----:;;--;:u.:;:c.;;-;;:ii'"'"----,
4 • wHEELER

r

I"

*' 4 WHEELER WILL BE SOLD AT 11,00 A,M, WITH RESERVE..
Yamaha ATV 1996 250 limberwotr 2X4 New Cond1tton ALSO Arlens 8 hp
nd1ng lawn mower Husquvarna chalnsaw St1ht weedeater &amp; NAPA a1r compressor
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE

home
W11h Slo1
2 baths
Second
1 1J2 story w1th 3
8 stall Horse barn
1 acre lot
Good
Let the 'enl f'om

I

Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Auctloneer R1ck Pearson #66
Apprentice Auctioneer A F Steln Jr
773·5785 or 773 5447
Terms Cash or check w /!D
Bank letter of credit unless known to the auct1on company
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property

~:~E REDUCTION!

~::~n?..':! 1:;'t~:ss~dlbed~~';;;~

NEW
PRICE 37,900 DOl
2 Story
home
w•th
charm
3
Bedrooms fam1ly room hv1ng
room covered front porch and
mo,el 12059

famoly ,oom formal dtntng &amp;
llvmg rooms newer kitchen
basement
rec
room
Attached 2 car garage and to
keep the k1ds busy and cool

ADDISON
N2033 the mortgage NEW LISTING!
2 LOTS ONE PIKE $&amp;4,900 0
ncome
500 00
Each lot produc•ng property
Consists
66 x 166 water of 4 bedroom home and 3
sewage available mobile homes
Approx 95
lots flat easy to acre 101
Cau for complete
I1st ng #2076

lh1s summer
lry a 16x32
mground
swtmrcung
pooll
Over 4 5 acres and less than 5
m1les from town I Ptck up the
pho ne
and
make
an
appo1ntmen t at once' Owner
wants to sell and wants you to
make an ofle'' 112013

l~~':f~~e~t:!,~~~~p'a~y;
:.:=:~--$14

I

Auction Conducted by

"Ucensed

By Owner 3 Bedroom House Gall1pol s Between S'Chools Large
Fenced Lot lnground Pool Sell
1ng Be ow Appra sal 740 256
9194

New :3 Bedroom G•ngerb ead
House W th Wrap Around Porch
Settmg On 1 Acre 5 Miles From
Gall pohs May help F•nac:e or
T• ade lor Mob• e Home' 740 256
6574

FINANCIAL

THERE WILL ALSO BE OTHER MISC ITEMS
PIECES

310 Homes for Sale

310 Homes for Sale

Real Esllte General

740·38S-0823 (HOME) OR 740.245 9866 (BARN)

THIS tS A GOOD QUALITY AUCTION WITH MANY FINE

~or J1ore Dn

Country living (Rutland area) 3
bsdroom&amp; large l-'oimg room
kitchen &amp; ba th new s ding deck
sw1mmmg pool b g yard $50 000
740 742 1049

Money to Loan

FURNITURE WILL BE MIXED FROM START TO FINISH
BE ON TIME BUILDING IS FULL!

Jan Swtgger 992-6667

\

my home 25 years e,.;penence
call 740 667 3633

$187500 7404467926

REAL ESTATE

AAA RATING 90 180 DAYS 1
868 811 0902

CREDIT REPAIR AS SEEN ON
TV Era se Bad Cred•l lega ly
Free Into 1 800 768 4008

W II talo.e care ol men &amp; women 1n

I

Call Betty Johnson
441 -1415 or

family mcome for the prevwus 30 days S1gnature of a

;

Rookwood, Redwlng vase, Yelloware bowls,

" No charge for clothing"

hst of family members hvmg m theu home and tolal

Watch next SundaYs PaPer for hstmss.
Henderson, W. Va behind Post Off1ce
675·6325
See Neal for the Deal
675·2900
. '
.

handmade ewer, Hull Madonna vase,

Poverty Level ) Jobs w1ll be up lo 40 hours per week at

Applicants should bring thm social secunty number,

W11 lake care of men &amp; women 1n
my home 25 years exptHlence
740 667 3633

No Fee Unless We Wtn'
I 888 582 3305

JUDGEMENTS

IITE..S OF SPECIA~ INTEREST I

Weller Louwelaa Ewer, Weller Suevo, Weller

res1dents and meet current TANF gUidelines ( 200%

Cheshire OH

bomg roof• barns oulbyl!dlnqa

end lin roofs Experienced Free
Est mares References (304)895
3981

1 800-929-5753
CMc 08\lelopment G oup/
M1llenn um Tele serv1ces

poster bed and chest of drawers, Ethan Allen

Fatth Chapel Church

followm~ locallons

W t Power Wash Homes Tra lers
740 446 0151 Ask For Ron Or
leave Message

Cape Coo With Ohto Allier V ew
4 Bedrooms Formal LA Format
DR 2 Full Baths Basement In
ground Pool Edge 01 Ga I pohs

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SEC~RITY /SSI?

BAD CRED IT BANKRUPTCY

LAWSUITS

310 Homes for Sale

lnterlor/Exterlpr pgint!ng mobile

~ALLTOOAYI

fN!ce hardware. verv nice condition. Must

$5 15 per hour at vanous loca110ns In Calha County

Spnng Cleanmg On Houses &amp;
Also DO Off CBS 740 388 9078
Plea se Ask For Donna 0 Leave
Message

r

"Clothing Bank"

18

220

Georges Por table Sawmill don t
haul you ogs to the m II JUS! ca ll
304 675 t957

Equtpment

Open Fnday,

July 24th 2·5 pm

Mowers lawn Tractors T1llers
Aepalfed Flee PICk Up Delivery
W th n 10 M les 01 Gallipolis 20
Years Expe ence Re asonable
Rates Guaranteed Mike 740
446 7604

OWN A DOLLAR STORE t BOO
227 5314

be rushed), Early 1800' s blanket chest

Aug

Stan Your Bustness Today
Pr me Shopp ng Center Space
Ava Iable At Alf ord able Rate
Spr ng Valley Plaza Call 740 446
0101

CREDIT PROBLEMS? CALL THE
CREDIT EXPERTS LICENSED I
BONDED CORRECT /RE MOVE

Professional
Services

03

Hones t Dependable Lady Would
L ke To Mow Your Lawn Or Do
Odd Jobs Linda 740 446 7604

homes sttuated on the Oh1o

Middleport
Smokm' Robs

740 992 6926

230

220 Money to Loan

Opportunity

Jen s Daycare welfare certtfled
also pnvale pay welcome call

Carpet &amp; Upholstery Cleaning
Guaranteed Work W1th Fabulous
Resu ts For a Free Es t•m ate
Call (304)675 4040 Today

Lad1es for the Lord

Also open Aug

Calllpolls OH

Te1emarke11ng
SUMMER JOBS
.College Students
•H~gh School Grads
•High SchOol Sen ors
Anyone loolo. ng to eam $$
Earn up to $15/hour
Excel ent expenence br
your resume
Fun and friend y workplace
Br ng your fnends-and
earn exira $$1

Business

1

Club Peps1 Cola Bottling Co

Nascar Monday

CMCA A One-Stop
322 Second Avenue

De8dllnes subject to change
due to holld•y•

$4 50

Ass1stance Programs to

our workshop on Patient

Calha Summer Youth Employment Program
Apphcanls must be ages 14·18 Calha County

GMCAA Central Office
801 0 North State Route 7

istorunby430pm
Sltturday &amp; Monday edition
4 30 p m Thursday

Dnnk

R1ver

&amp; Fam1ly Serv1ces, 15 seeking applicants for the 2000

Wednesday, July 26 from 9AM until 3PM at the

&amp;

FOR SPONSORING THE
YOUTH HOLE IN ONE
SHOOT OUT
101 5 The R1ver Cl1ffS1de Golf

pay1ng for your

will have Jeff Gordon's

Apphcallons wlil be accepted on Tuesday, July 25 and

2 days before the ad

210

INFANTRY CHAIR

27 (IRL)

Do you have problems

1s free to the public Held at

m

REGISTER~

Wanted To Do

~unbap I!J:unrs $5&gt;rntmrl • Page

WV

TOY LEHMANN DATED 1903 GERMANY PADDY &amp; HIS PIG (All ORIGINAL)
PICTURED IN AD FtRST ITEM TO BE SOLO WORLO WAR ONE FOLDING

OPPORTUNITY TO BID

for med1cat1ons Th1s serv1ce

HELP WANTED

SENTINEL~

1 00 p m the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 1 00 p m Friday

ttems

992-9200
or 949-4900

back stretch, Kentucky

complet1ng the appl1cat1on

Help Wanted

2 00 p m
the day before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday

TRIBUNE~

Closed Mondays

0710

29 for ass1stance 1n

EOEM/F/D/V

Be Paid In Advance

Successful Ca nd date
Requ rements
21 Years Old
'CDL wlln Hazmat and Tank En
dorsements
DOTQuahled
'Two Years Expenence
'Clean Dr v ng Record
'Stable Employmen t Background
Ownerflease
Operators Needed
Quarterly M leage
Pay Guarantee
Interested Drivers
Should Call
1 800-824 2857
EOEIMIF

$11 50

For only

Pnvate RV camp s1te,

call

appo1n1ment for July 28 or

612 Sllm Br1dge Plaza
Gallipolis Ohio 4563 t

AL..I. Wanted To Do Ads Must

Open 4 pm Dally

med1cat10ns? Please anend

Attn Manager
Fax 740 446 4760

3

with chips

training,

We Orfer unlimited
earmng potential + hase,
euellent benefits and
progressne sales and mgmt
tra1nlng
prog..ams
Forward your resume to
Denelic1al Fmance

Wanted To Do

or 8" Hot Sub Sandwich

(3rd/Pme) Great location for

SPARKLE SUPPLY COMPANY

1

180

180

16" Large P1zza
wtth

Pool Chemicals

Want Academ1c Excellence n a
Safe En\/ ronment'
GRACE ACADEMY IS now ac
cept ng enrollment of sludents K
8th lor tat adm ss on at 115 new
expandecl laclll\y m Albany Aca
demlc qual ty great curr culum
small classes some md v1dual
•zed programm1ng
Call now 74Q-594 5433

We Offer
•outstanding Pay &amp; Benef11s
"Safety Awards Program
•up ToDate Equ•pment
•company Matching 401{k) Pro
gram
"Husband &amp; Wife Team s We
come
•steady WOfk
•unrlorms FurniShed

Get your Albuterol or other

serves v1ct1ms of domest1c

s

Schools
Instruction

EARN YOUR CO LLEGE DEGRE E
QUICKLY Bachelors Maste rs
Doctorate By Correspondence
Based Upon Pr or Educat on And
Short Study Course For FREE In
forma11on Bookie! PhO ne CAM
BRIDGE STATE UN IVERS ITY 1
800 964 83 6

Enlerprlae

AR FJ

Business
Tramlng

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)

Pro lesslona
Tank Truck
Transporl Dnvers
GrowWtth
A leader

Medicare Approved

Seremty HousB

speed1ng tickets etc

As a pori of our Sales

Calha Me~gs Commumly Acllon Agency

Ophtha ml c AS Sis tant Tram ng
Preferred W I Tra•n ll Me ets
Standards Call 740 446 0112
Ask Fo Kathy

POSTALJOBST0$1445JHR +
Full Federal Benehls No Expen
ence Exam Info Call t 800 391
5856Ext 42128AM 9PM
Local Not Guar

I

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Team, yuu will develop new
business and market our
contemporary rmanctal

In

WANTEO

Part T1me Elde1ly Care 740 367
0291 Before 4 PM 740 367 7463
; After 4 PM Except Thursday
And Sunday

our lasting gratitude

jerry and Chnsllne Rhodes

URGEN TLY NEEDED plasm a
donors earn $35 to $45 tor 2 or 3
Murs WMkly Call Sera Te e 740
592 6651

AN to coord nate grant lunded
childhood 1mmunm1hon progra m
and Welcome Home Mather and
Ch ld home v sna110n program tor
a local public health agency Re
qwres 30 hours/week max1mum
Salar~ commensurate w lh expert
ence Send resume to PO Box
63t Pomeroy OH 45769 ATIN
Health Comm•ss oner by July 27

the true meaning of the

Aball teams and parents

On Her 52nd Btrthday

Brothers &amp; S1sters and

We are especial~ grareful

support dunng the Illness

'!l~~~t~tntb cy~ oft!J, cr~

Wmston

Husband john,

loss of our loved one

Reg1stered Nurses and Licensed
Pract1cal Nurses WV )lcense re
QU ired Serv ces P 0 Box 575
Potnl Pleasant VN 25550 EOE

Health, Hosp1ce Team

Sheet Sets, Quilts, etc

cooperatiOn w1th the Calha County Department of Job

FABRICATOR/WELDER/FinER

.

Of

such love kindness and

Holzer, Reverend Sallee

.8/fo Qo.J On.
'But uNO lht empi!J Chu.

In Lovmg Memory

~~sh
tothdn~
many
who showed

-MOS Coord nator WV Reg•stered
'Nurse I cense requ red Mmlmurrf
three years lull t me or equivalent
chn1ca1 ex per ence reqwed and
m1nlmum two yea rs chmcal ex
penance tn long term nurs1ng

Ulhe Murray and Pearl

Caldwell Trucking, W1lhs

St ver Bndge Plaza Gall potts

Card of Thanks

fnend5

Help Wanted

Soft Ltnes Supervtsor 40 Hours A
Week Management Sk ts A
Must Apply At JoAnn Fabn cs

Loca l Company seeking Data
Entry Clerk Wllh knowledge or
baSIC account ng procedure s
computer sk •lts oUtce machtne
elflc ency &amp; enJoys work ng ~tth
others Send resume cto Pont
PleasaPI Register ML34 200
Main Street Pt Pleasant WV
25550

Dr Andmon, Med1 Home

Home of Vmton C C

110

5023

Now Hung
All pos tons Full &amp; Part ltme
ava• able 4011&lt; patd \lacattons
co mpellllve starli ng salary Ap
p v n person at Gmo s n PI
Pleasant

to Harry and Mary Fellure

McCoy Moore Funeral

Help Wanted

Needed day &amp; mght shift worker
fo r Adult Group Home 740 992

Help Wanted

to the followmg people

Nurses on the 2nd floor at

C!Jlho pawJ IJA!J
1., !JWI fi60 on
f}uly 2J 19"2

the1r Galhpohs omce

preferred

In Wellston, and a

'11Jmtia0f}mt~~J

'17» 'llotlJtw u~mm of

a

Household Corp, and a
larp mdependent consumer
finance co. is seeking an
Assistant Sales Manager ror

loan products to customers

2 bedroom house

9n .8oolni 91f.,ory of

In Memory

telephone calls We also want
to thank Amber &amp;.. D.lvld

needs wh1le tram1ng to
become a branch sales
manage~
A.ppl1canu must
demonstrate proven sales
and leadershlp abilltles be
selt·mottvatrd and hn·e
excellent commumcatton I
interpersonal
skills
Bachelors
degree
or
tqUivalent mgmt e"perlencc
requlred
I l
! ears
sales l mgmt experience

4

In Memory

Payments Problems w1th

superv•slng, and guiding the
:~ranch employees to match

110

Instructor general bu 1d ng f con
strucllonf elect neal technology
Mason County Career Cente r
Apply to personnel ofhce Mason
County Schools 307 81h St PI
Pleasant WV 25550 Phone 304
675 4540 Closing dead! ne Tue
August1 2000 by 3 30 pm

the Doctors

lamar 0 Bryant for prayers
visits and cards Mt Mouah
Orurch All those wl1o sent

assisting

a

'

Home Health Age ncy Has Post
tons Available For Part T1 me
LPNs And RNs Dayshill Week
days And Weel&lt;.ends Ava•labllity
For Weekend Duty A Plus' Apply
AI 412 Second A\lenue Galllpo
IS Oho OrCat1740-4411779

Emergency

You w1ll also
assist the Bran&lt;:h Salts
Manager 1n the datly
operations of the branch,

Rental Units
For Sale

International Company Expands
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF
E Commerce 525 $751&lt; Paten
MENT4l RETARDATION AND
11a Full Tra1n ng Paid Vacat on
DEVELOPMENTAL
I 886 827 9733
DISABILITIES
Possible part I me open ng lor a
Preschool Instructor at Carleton I--:~-:--:-=:---:;-:-"-:
Schoo to work. on our Spec at Ed
ucallon p,escnool Class Th"e
Card of Thanks
(3) days a week Must ha11e cur
rent Teachtng Cert1f cat on 01 l•
cense lrom the Oh10 Department
The Family of
of Educat on and ha11e or be w11
ng to ob ta1n Early Education of
Dorolhy A Wooldndge
HaM capped Vahdat on Send re
sume by July 28 lo
who passed away
Carleton School
July 9, 2000
131 o Garteton Street
PO Box 307
would like to take !his
Syracuse OH 45779
bme to say 'Thank You'

Gov t &amp; Postal Joba Now Hmng
1n OhiO $1410 to $21 801 hr Ben
ells &amp; Pd Tra n ng For More Job
Informal on 1 81 B 942 0245 ext
4114

PatnCia

110

Help Wanted

110

BULLETIN BOARD

products

Announcement

Help Wanted

02

Page

Card of Thanks

Southern Baptist Cllurch Pastor

Dr vers 2 Week Pa1d Tru ck Drlv
e1 Tralnmg No Expenence Need
ed Earn Up To $32 000/ 1st Yr
W/ Full BenefitS Cali Today 1
877 230 6002 Sunday Fnday 9
ICM TlHfP M PA M mll!]lOrt
www otrdrl\lers com

A 3 unit building,

GOV T POSTAL JOBS Up To
$t8 35 Hour Full Senehls No Ex
penance Reqwed Free .Appl ca
t on And Exam Information 1 868
726 9083 ExtensiOn 1701 (7
AM 7PM CST)

o

11 0

23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant,

lmm9d ate opemngs lor pmles
slonals wtth our growing
company

hospital while I was there

DRIVERS WANTED OTR IDEOI
GATED !REGIONAL !LOCAL
Rea ch The Surum•t 01 Your F1
nanclal Goals Work Fo1 A Com
pany That Cares About You Your
Family And Your Fu tu re l mlted
Openings 29 CPM All M•les Un
t oad ~ng Pay Personalize d Dis
patch Home Orten Holiday rva
caliOn Pay 401K /Med cal !P•es J
Dental R10er Program 98% No
Touch Fre ght Ass gned T
2000 s Call Summ11 Transporta
t10 n 800 876 0680 Or 513 564
8945EOE

11

Help Wanted

and Nurses of Po1nt Pleasant

swer 740 992 6088

Sunday, July

D

Mp //go loffliSH

Med1cal Service

remodeled, new

$2~,oo.oo.

110

DRIVING POSITIONS
AVAILABLE

Tamm1

Drivers to dr ve cars to &amp; lrom
740 591 2867 1f no an

or (7401

equipment, beer end
wine license
Included. Asking

Help Wanted

the Pomeroy firemen Brent &amp;..

acutlon~.

a

RESTAURANT
FOR SALE

'Ol:tmes -~entmel

want to thank

Drivers Flatbed
Medical Cover1ge
From Dr; One!
• $2 000 Sign On Bonus
Qua •tv Home Time
Late Mod&amp;! Equipment
CDlA&amp;3Mos OTR
ECK MILLER
800 611-6636
WWN eckmuter com

bedroom house and

Announcement

i

DENTAL BILLER 115 $45 IH'
Dental B1IHng Software Company
Need&amp; People To Proceu Medl
cal Claims From Home Tralnmg
Provided Must Own Computer t
80().797 7511 Ext 30;1

Announcement

- Announcement

In

Construction Work must be Ex
perlenceo In Siding Soffet and
Facia (740)339-3489

ATIENTION
Earn Online Income
$500 $7 500 /Month
www pcpays com

N

Found med size black dog w f
brown mark ngs long ha r short
legs Hutton s Cafwash Pomeroy
740 992 7t35

8 " - 27"

888-565-5197 EXT 642

ASSEMBLY AT HOME!! Crafts
Toys Jew.;~l r y Wood Sewmg
Typmg Great Pay CALL 1 BOO
795 0380 Ext i201 (24 H s)

8

:

CLAIMS PROCESSOR! 120 $40
/Hr Potential Proces&amp;•ng C!alms
Is Easy! Training Pro'Jided
MUST Own PC CALL NOWI I

POSTAL JOBS $48 323 00 VA
Now H r ng No Expenence Pad
Tra n1ng Great Bene! ItS Ca 7
Days 800 429 3660 Ext J 365

REGISTER OEAQL!NE
2 days before lhe ed
Is to run by 4 30p m
Saturday &amp; Monday edition •
4 30 p m Thur~dey
0eedllnea aubjKt to cn.ng•

•

BURGER KING
Career Opportunities we Seek
Career Or entad lndl11lduals who
stnve to aChiBVB the "BEST" In
customer satisfaction &amp; team
work If you have a desire to
succeed w11h a goal dnven team
onented &amp; grow~ng company we
offer Health dental &amp; Life In
surance Prescription Card &amp; Bo
nus Program Pa id Vacat•ons
Management Apparel Ad\lance
ment from Wlth1n Appl)l n per
son at the Burger K ng Reslau
rant located In the Ohto R ver
Plaza or Mall Resume to Burger
Kmg f55 Upper River Road Galli
poHs Oh~ 45631

100 OVERWEIGHT PEOPLE
NEEDED• Ea rn $$$ Losmg 5
200 Pounds Call 1 888 235 2292
(Toll Freel Or
www v herbmal com/ fechange

TFIIBUNE DEAPL!Nf 2 00 p m
the dav before the ad
Is to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday
SENTINEL DEADLINE
1 00 p m the day before the ad
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 1 00 p m Friday

due to hoJJd•r•

BURGER KING
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
We Seek Ca reer Onenled lndl
v1duals Stove To Ach1eve The
Best Customer SatlslactJon And
Team work If You Have A De
s re To Succeed W th A Goal Or
ven Team Oriented And Grow ng
Company We Oller Heath oen
tal And Lde Insurance Prescop
tlon Card And Bonus Program
Pa1d vacat1o ns Ma,nagement
Apparel Ad11ancement From
Within Apply In Person AI Burg
er Kmg Restaurant located In
The Oh1o Al\ler Plaza Or Mall Resume To Burger K1ng 65 Upper
RIVer Road GalltpoBs OH 45631

Help Wanted

$2 000 WEEKLY! Mal ltng 400
Brochures Sat slac!lon Guar
anteecJ! Postage &amp; Supphes Pro
v dedi Rush Self Addressed
Stamped Envelope! GICO DEPT
5 Box 1438 ANTIOCH TN
3701 t 1438 Start Immediately

OesdJJIHI• subJect to cMnge

60

Alck Pearson Auction Company
full time auctioneer complete
auction
service
Licensed
t66 Ohto &amp; West V1rgmia 304
773-5785 Or 304 n3 6447

'Program AlcJs for Mason County
Grug Free Program H gh School
Graduate Val d Onvers license
wl gooel Clrtv1ng record Se nd
re sumes/cove letter to SCAC
D ~rectar ol Human Resources
540 F !th A\lenue Huntington
WV 2570 1 EOE

Giveaway

due to holidays

Lesl e Lemley Lemley s Auction
Barn 740 388 0823 740 245
9866 Full Ser111ce Releren ces
A'Jailab le Licensed &amp; Bonded
Our P/aCfl Or '11:lursr

Absolute Top Dollar .All U S Sli
ver And Gold Coins Proofseta
Diamonds Ant que Jewelry Gold
A ngs Pre 1930 U S Cu rrency
Sterlmg Etc Acqws1110ns Jewelry
M TS Con Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446-2842

S.lurday a Mondoy odklon •
4 30 p m Thurtday
"DMI111ne• •ubJecl to t:IMnga
due to holfd•Y• ~

40

buy/salt estates cons1gnment
auction Thursdays 6pm Mleldle
port Oh1o &amp; WV Li cense 740
992 9707 740-989-2623

Complete Household Or Estates!
Any Type Of FurMure Appllanc
es Antiques Etc Also Appra•sal
Aval ablel 740-379 2720

lltorunby•sopm

r "

B II Mood spaugh AuCtioneering

90

a

'
••

Auction
and Flea Market

Wedemeyer s Auction Serv1ce
Galllpol S OhiO740 379-2720

AIJ. Announc.rnent Ad1 Muat

•~
•r'

~

Announcements

Pomtroy Dilly Sentinel All
Yard Sales Muat Bt Ptld In Advtnct Dudllne 1 OOpm the
day before the ad Ia to run
Sunday a Monday edition·
1 OOpm Friday Aak about how
you can get a FREE yard tale
sign
80

110

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or SeU
S h ~rley Spears 304 675 t429

QEADLINE 2 00 p m
the day befoffl the ad
Ia to run Sunday 6 Monday
edition 2 00 p m Friday

GenUeman Seekmg Companion
ship From N1ce Female For TalkS
Walks &amp; Fnendsh1p Send Re
phes To 553 Se co nd A\lenue
Apartment 403 Gallipolis OH

Help Wanted

Ann Mothers &amp; other&amp; work from
home! Earn an e11.tra $500 $1500
part time 01 $2000 $4000 full time
per mon tn call 800 720 7658
v•sit www 2workathome com

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Be Paid In Advance
TRIBUNE Q£AilLirtE 2 00 p m
the day before the ad
It 10 run Sunday &amp; Monday
edition 2 00 p m Frldlly
SENTINEL QFAQLINE
1 00 p m lhe lily 1&gt;ttore tile ICI
Ia to run Sunday &amp; Monday
edlllon • 1 00 p m Fridoy
FIEGISTEA QfADL!NE
2 days before the ad
latorunby4 30pm
S.tunloy &amp; Monday edhlon
4 30 p m Thursday
•o.dOnet •ublfiCJ fo change
due to hoi/Wyo. •

f

Yard Sale

Personals

AU. Personal Adt Muat

l

110

~unbap

Section

23, 2000

Sunday, July

°

MEIGS
COUNTY
'
_,

• u./~

{,•.

h; • "

"\~'"

''

r-

~

.

"'"'

, '

) ~

~

t!

;~

..-

I

'

LISTING! 33322 JACKS
IR1141nl ~0 plus acres Wllh
barn and cellar
~---·--- 1996 14 x7 0 molbile
I ho-me complete wolh 2
l cemtral a r Addttla nal 1income
extra rental s1te
water well Call

1P'Ope&gt;rty loday'

IO

VIeW

~2070

Cheryl Lemley

742·3171

""-!IA5oH~•N ROA.D $79 000 DO ·

lmmedtate Possess1onl 1 1/2
Story home that offers newer
roof and hot tub dmtng room
kitchen den 4 bedrooms 2
baths and morel Let s go look I
12069

NEW LISTING! 660 HIGH
STREET $59,000 DO 2 Slory
home Situated on large stzed
lot 3 bedrooms 1v1ng room
dmtng room and ktlchen
Detached one car garage

#2068

NEW LlSTING 2807 SR 124 $94.900 DO 81 level home that
cons1sts of 4 bedrooms 3 baths I vmg room formal dtntng
kttchen and more on 1he ms1de Outside !here ts approx 8 94
acres w th a stocked pond More Call for complete llstmg
12078

DON'T SEE WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR?
Call &amp; Let Us Help You Find It!

�Page D4 • 6unllap G:1mr1 ltrnllntl
310 Homea for Sale

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

440

NO DOWN PAYMENT! No down

payment equired w th gave n
ment guaranteed loan Good
creo 1 and steady ncome re
qu red Call today tor more ntor
rna on and to Qually lndapen
denca Mo tgage Services 1261 t
Madison Lakewood Oh MB 1679
10001 1 800-8'5-0036

Apartments
for Rent

Looking To Buy A New Home ?
Con t Have Land? We Doll Hurry

On!V

10 LOIS Left 304 736 7295

Mason Co Pa as line Ad three
acta ots to sale St 0 000 pe ot
doub ew de and &amp; ng ew de Re
!Utlcted to sh ng e oof ana v nyl
s dk'lg Hannon school d str ct

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540 Miscellaneous
Merchanalae

2 mauve w ngback I v ng ro om
Chars used 6 monlhS Me new)
$ 100 each 740 667 9727

CMst Drawe s S40 0 esser
$40 Lovesea SSO Rocke Ae
cl ne $25 A I n good cond I on
(304)675 7315

L v ng Room Su te T unk Wee

Compu er 500 MHZ 40xCD ROM
56K Modem 64 Megs Ram 8
GIG Hard Or ve W nctows 98
200 Wall Speake s Includes
Mon lor And Pr n e $750 740

REDUCED!
23

AII-I01altodvor11ongn
thft newe~r llll.lbject to
1he Fodtrol Folr Housing AC1
of 1888 which - .. ~ lllegoi

to ldver!IM ony prol...,_

Tract
A
ONLY
$23 000 00 Get It Now Before s
Gone Res dentlal And Recrea
ti ona! Tracts A so twa tab e
Tl'l ougnout Southern Oh o Land
Cont act• Ava !lab e 10% 20%
Oown l Cal For F 11 Maps AN

Ace

THONY LAND CO
213-8365

360

limitation 0&lt; dlocrim naticn
bUed on r - color rllglon

sex fam llal atatua Of natk&gt;NII
orlg n or any lm.nton to
make any auch pefwe~tee
I m1ta11on or dliCiimlnatlon

LTD

800

Real Eatate
Wanted

682 7894
BEAUT FU L APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 We• wood

COMPUTER BLOWO UT Com
pa1:1 HP IBM Desktops lap ops
Eco mme ce Webs tes Alm os t

0 ve om $289 o $370 wa k o
shop &amp; mo11 es Ca 740 446
2568 Equa Hous ng Oppo tun ty

Everyone App oved
Make
SSSS On The Webl ! No Money
Down F ee Co or Pr nter 1 B88

479 2345

T aile lot W lh Area Fe Chi d
ren To P ay New 1h80 Mobl e
Home John Peggy 740 U6

RENTAL S

-t•

"-rtun 1y baals

Ranch

stvle house 6 veant olel 3
acres 3 bedrooms 2 bath• I vlng
oom &amp; lamt~ oom d n ng room 2
car garage sw mming poo l m
macu ate condition $129 900
new Crew Rd Pome oy Oh o

740-992 4560 evon ngs

Two bedroom 637 Grant Street
Middleport fu 1 basement two car
garage ca po t price reduced

740-949 2661

410 Houaea for Rent
3

Bedrooms

Fo eclosed
Homes From $199 Mo 4Gf. Down
Fo L st ngs &amp; Pay men De a Is

233 Second Ave nue Gall pols
Ve y N ce 2 Bed oo ms 1 1 2
Bath s Camp ete K t chen Oil
Street Park ng Wa k Anyw here
Downtown $495 Mo Pus Ut I
t es Deposit Re fe ences Re
qu td 7"'D-446-4926

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

304 736 7295

1996 4x70 2 BedroOms 2 BattiS
Ga den Tub Laundr y Room
Stove Aefrige ator Dishwasher
H P Total Elect c $19 400 080
Call 740 446 7935 Leave Mes

sage

s

Le t Us A&amp;&amp; sl You In Your New
Mfg Home Ca 1 Fo Pre Appro11al
1 888 736--3332
July Spec a Just $333 Down And
QmJ. You New Oakwood Home

Call740 446-3093

New Mode

3 Sed ooms 2 Bath
Daub ew de Loaded Just 5699
D own Hu y Won I last Oek
wood Ga I po s 740 446-3093
HUNTER $ HILL

3 Tra c s Of ~flme Recreat ona t
Land 29 Acres Fo As Low As
.. $27 0001 Land Contracts Ava I
abe Cal Now 18002138365
An111ony Land Co-ny LlD
www countrytyme com

we

Ha11e Compe t ve Prices &amp;
NO De a ersh p Fees Ca Fo A
F ee B ochu e El Do ado Bu d
ng Sys ems 1 800 279-4300

Powe Whee s Jeep $75 Tow
Chan o doze $35 Shop vac
$5 La ge Sausage G nde $35

Fo sa e Royal Oa~ Reso rt mem
be ship w th coas o coast and
ch d ens r ghts $2500 937 386
2110

B dwell Oh o 45814

New Haven one bet! oom fu
n she d apar ment no pe ts de
pos &amp; ele ences 740 992
0165

740-387 0 56
State Route 41 Large Eat In
K tchen l v ng Room Bath 2 3
Bed oo ms Deok Fro n &amp; Ba ck
Hand cap Ac canib e $450 Mo
Plus Deposit Ava! abe 8 1 00
PhOne 740 446 0205 740 44 6

Home Commerc a Un s
FREE Coo Ca ta og
Today 1 800..711 0158

A ve bend Place now t a~ ng ap
p leal ons o t BA Apt to the el
dar ey &amp;
d sab ed
EHO
(304 882 3121 afte r 2 304)882

Available Now

Tw n Towers now accept ng

JANITROL HEAT NG AND

lage G een Apa tm ent s

2

bed ooms total e ec c app anc
es lu n shed ta und y oom ac

t es and close to schoo l appl ca

t ons ava labte a olf ce 740 992
37 1 TDD 1 aee 233 6694 Equa
Hous ng Oppo un ty

1Ax70 w/ 24 fl expando 5325 00

MERCHANDISE

a man + dep &amp; ref In the Camp
Conley area 30ot 675 54n
Between A hens and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bedroo m mob le homes
$26().$300 740 992 2t67
:1: Bedroom House Tra er Fun
r shed No Pe s Refere nces And
Depos t $250fMo P us Ut 11 es

741)-371j.2929

nd an A owhead Co te et on Fo
Sal e 0 T ade $300 Fo 300
P eces 740 446 4476 No Calls
After 10 PM

3274

app !CatiOns for 1 SA
HUD subs d zed apt fo elde ly
and handicapped EOH
(304)675-6679

510

Bla ek Lea th e Couc h And Cha
$ 25 En e Ia nment Cen e $75
Queen S ze Wa e be d W h M r
o ed Head Boa d &amp; t2 D awe s
$150 740 446 2451
Body by Jake F m ell home gym
w h 11Kleo $25 740 949 3204

COOLING EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED
You Don t Ca

Us We Both

Lose F ee Es ma es 740 446
6 308 1 800 29 0098
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebu 1 In Stock
Ca Ron Evans 1 800.537 9528

8 ass F e Place Se t $30 Can
n ng Ja s Qua z 1 Doz $3 00
740 441 044 1

Household
Goods

Ae cond 1 oned
Washers D yers Ranges Aelr
g ators 90 Day Gua antee We
Se New May ag App ances
F ench C y Maytag 740 446
7795

~~(At,

*

BEII•UT1FUL 3 1/2
OLD COUNTRY HOME ON e+

ACRES Large LA w tn stone wa
and wood burne F sl f oo BA
and fu l bath Ut Am Sun oom
Large K tchen 0 n ng w h Che ry
Cab nets and a pantry Ups a s
anothe a ge tied oom and tu I
bath with potent al for lh d
bedroom
Has sc eened back
porch and a tony too ont s tt ng
porch Home nas 2200+ SQ fl a
heal pump and cent al a Natu at
wood s d ng on the ou s de and
beau ifu wood wallpape on the
ns de P operty nctudes a cu e log
cab n w th fu 1 bath gazebO 2
garages
and
h ee
olher
outbu ld ngs
al
n
e)(ce ant
cond 1on
Fo
an
eltc us ve
show ng ca 1Dave

Real Estate General

"

'

Garage/l"ow ng Bus1ness
atta&lt;:hed 5 br res dence
al 2134 Chalhan Ave n
Comes w lh eX1ra lois
has
aqu pment
(A r
Ofts Etc ) Owner
to move lh s sale I So ca I

For

Branch Off ce
23 Locusl Sl
Gal pols Oho
45631

New 14 W de $250 Down $ 49
Per Mon h Free Air F ee Sk
ng 888-928 3426

Tra e

n

Mason

No

Pe s

(304)773-5751

Gun Cab net 12 Gun Hade W h
L gh 2 G ass Douo e Ooo s

$150 740 446 3409

Three bedroo m ota ly emodeled
nslde and out tra Ia ana lOt new
furnace new app ances new car
pet $23 500 ca 1740-992 45t4

of the best views of the Ohio
around
just got more affordable Immaculata 2 story
offers It all fantastic view from the glass
front LA as well as the main BA with private
balcony 2 3 more BAs 2 1/2 baths large
dining area open to kitchen 1 car attached
garage plus a 24 x 32 detached garage, a 28 x
52 deck with built In planters perfect for
entertaining Now priced ol $155,000 This
property truly does offer It all'! #629

bedrms
bath
LOCAT ON cen tra a bottle gas
rurr1ace. v nyl ga age &amp; bu d ngs

446-i208

550

1900 A so Ae nanc ng And Spe
c a Oea s On Repossess ons
FED UP WITH THE RUN AA
OUND7 Want A New rtome W h
N o Hassle ? Ca t Fo P e App o
val 1 888 736 3332

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
3)

.441 IMS8
387.0023
441 8458

SLUSS P.EALT'l COUP ANY
739 Harthng Way West Galton Ohio 44833

P ne) G eat Location For Rea
B us nus Ca T m To F ee
888 874 1994

!:lome Office (800) 484 6130 4399
Galion Office (419) 46S 1947
Fax (419) 468-1059
Email Blamer@hotma~l eom
Website bucyrus homestead eom/home html

Can slart your own busmess m lh•s large bu 1ldmg 4
car Could also pu1 a m obile home on 1he property for
the ch1ld ren 1 5 Acres MIL Plus a Lg Bnck Home
&amp; Full Basement G1ve us a call today

Join Ue Sund•y Ju y 30 From

ALONG THE OHIO RIV ER GREAT VIEW
Large ho me w l h full basemen! A deiac hed garage
approx 24x36 on 3 75 acres M i L Shown by
appomlmenl No 224

PLEASANT
ROAD Look

1&lt;\JrAtl. A 1 me 1' build o n
acres M/L oy survey
Elemenmy Sc hools
Restnctrons NO 22

HILL

ng f" a new
ROOST lo ca ll home ' Y1ew
lhiS coun1 y 2 00 acres M i L

by

survey

967 Mob Ia Home 60 x1 2 2
bed ooms bath fu nrtu e ange
&amp; ef Heat pump centra a
Lage
bu dng
70x 4
also
20x10 bdg Cone ot Hyse &amp;
0 11er M dd epor1 $15 000 00

Wa e
gas sewe
Pnecest
Nu sng

Green

Elemen1a y Schools Some

Res1r1c11 nns NO 223

.3368 LIIND CONTRACT
$43 000 Down payment $5500
Ba ance

2WD 6 cy

oof 1999 4 BR 25 BA 2 ca
ga age
11ny
sdng
nee
ne ghborhood Needs some TLC

but pr cad gh a $78 900
13344 COMMERCIIIL LOT &amp;
BUSINESS Loca ad on Eastern
Ave G eat Qpportun ty Pu chase
the corne ot w th o w thoul he
bus ness

Ale

AM

Local re erences !urn shed Es
taOI shed 1975 Ca 1 24 Hrs (740)

(740)448-3988

TRANSPORTATION

73 1nt Singe Ax e
axe 200 hp Olese
$3500 or Trade Fo
Ford Farm Tracto r
(6 14 ) 878 9700

1985 Bay lner Caprice 14Ft Wth

B sp 2 sp
Auns great!
Need B N
weekdays

50 HP OB Motor Needs Wo k
Good T a er $1 300 740 256
1925

Weekends
(740) 388 9418 Ask lo Joe

1986 SunOl d t71 2Ft 140 HP
lnboa d Open Bow (740)367

a. 4-WDa

7558

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

LOOK AT TH1SIIII

560

Pets for Sale

Doo lor 992 F eb d $115 740
949 7088

Cru se Automat c Exce lent Con
d t on H gh M le age {740)367

790

payment
pe od 4
wooded ac es cou d be 2 3 BR
5 BA D n ng k tchen p va e
Needs some f n sh wo k Owner
wan s t sold yes e day REduced
To $43 000 akes

ent y on ot and

ca

CARS

lm

Beag e Pups AKC $125 Othe s
$75 E~ce en Hun ng Sock:
740 44 440
011e

75 Tank s ol F eshwa

e

F sh Loca y Aa sed Pa akee s
Supp es F sh Tank Pe S op
24 3
Jackson
A enue P
P ea san 304)675 2063 Sun
4PM Man Sa 1AM 6PM

570

Musical
Instruments

Bu ndy T ombone Exce en Co n
d on $360 Ca Ley Ann A
304 675 7630

580

FrUits &amp;
Vegetables

ar

Cal1(304)675 7927 WV025956

with

Trailers

3

generators

24 1 Trailer Only
Bid
sheeto
may

be

obtained from clerk or
trustees Items may be seen

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Ia hereby given lhat
aoalod bide will be received
11 lho oll lco ol Caro lyn
Halley Clark of Guyan
Townohlp 90B4 Slala R1 218
Clalllpolla Ohio 45631 unlll 9
A M Saturday August 5
2000 lor the following
aurplua llama
1 1974 Diamond Rio Fire
truck SN CF65640602398
2 1965 Kaiser Jeep 5 Ton
Wr-.:kor 8X6 SN 57271 0263
3 1985 Dodge Ram 250
Van
S N
2B4HB21TOFK275681
4 1985 Chevrolet DIB SN
1G8ED18J3FFI 06052
5 1985 Ford PT SN
2FTHVV3SY3FCB59467
6 1967 Kaiser Jeep TK
SN 5E8159
7 1967 Jeep TK SN

at

8 1982 Telelecl TK
llfTAR1854CHA16391
9 1967 Jeep TK
952311785
10 1968 Jeep TK
052810385
II 1971 MACK CF6
SN CFS85F1212B4

the

Guyan

Township

garage In Mercerville
All
Items are being sold on as

as ts where Is basis It le
the responel b lllty of the
successful bidder to remove
the Items from the premises

All bids must be ooaled end
marked surplus bid
Bids
w111 be received by the clark

of the township unlll 9 AM
Salurday August 5 2000

Bids must specify an exact
dollar

The

am ount

Townsh p reserves the right
to accept or re1act any and
all bids

Any

call

questions

(740)256 S51 5 256 1 324 or
256-1321
Carolyn Halley
Guyan

Township Clerk
July 14 21 28 2000

Public Notice

558793

Approved Master Licensed E ec
ca n to yo ur e eel c needs

4

23

--• Ill1 Oh 45772
R....
sv
lo
(7) 18 23 2tc

Real E!ltate General

SN
SN
SN
TK

Not lce of the Histor ic
Preservation review Boatd
to meet at 7 30 p m on
Augusl

I

2000

In

lhe

Chamber ol Commerce 16
S1ale
Ohio

Slreel

Gallipolis

06

Real Estate General

•

REAL ESTATE

410 Third Ave Old Time Cha rm wrth
Modern Conven ences s found n th s 2
story home ~
atu
DR

~

eatn~

and 2

baths

48Rs

nclude

I

aces s d ng

ool

and mo e $ 14 900 Owne an)( ous to
set ma ke an offe #209

WOOD REALTY~ INC

32LOCUSTSTREET GALLIPOLIS OHIO 45631
Allen C Wood Broker 446 4523
Ken Morgan Broker 446 0971
Jeanene Moore 256-1745
Patrca Ross ~
740-4461066

=

Calling all Inveotora We

Investment
to solll

have a four un 1 apartment

bu d ng for sale
Each
apartmen1 has 2 br s 1
bath
vmg room &amp; eat n
k tchen Gene ales good
n come
Loca ted bes de
H o ize
C 1n c
Ask for

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Call 1oday
112018

and

ask

591 Hidden Hlllo Drive- Perfect sunse1

504 41h Avo 3 BR 2

v1ews can be enjoyed from the deck of
th s outstand ng 2
story home
Ha dwood floors d ess th s 4 BR home
up w th a country fla r gorgeous k tchen
s h ghl ghted w th a vaulted cei ng 3
balhs full basement bam &amp; 20 ac es

Featu ng
Convemence
Affordabilityf Large Fr w th vau ted
ce Ing and open to the k tchen s very
nvrt ng Large LA and also ncludes a
study Newer fumace central a1r and
roof
Great back yfjr'd overlooks

$329 000 1220

Memor a F o d $75 000 1233

143 Stumbo Road mmacu ale v nyl
s ded anch offe s cozy LA w th pe et

Tycoon Lake Th s 3
fu basement with outs de en ance
Ia ge 2 ca garage huge garde n spot
20 x 36 outbu ld ng and much mo e
La ge BR upsta rs cou d be made nto 2
f needed $77 500 122

stove open o eff cent k tchen 3 BAs 2
ba t'ls ove s zed
ca ga age w lh
wo kb ench a ea a I located on a ove y
wooded 1 ac e m
at Do you self a
favor and ca today $74 900 N607

Attention

builders

This Home Is Juet Right
Is w hat
you say afte v ew ng th s m mac ulal e
we ma nta ned v ny ranch offe ng
large LR eat n k tchen 3 BAs 1 bath
1 ca an ga age p us 2 ca del ca port
o n app ox 33 ac e lot ocated n he
conven ent friend y a ea of Centenary

In Town Brick With a first floor
bedroom! Th s 4 BR home ofle s
space lo a a ge am ly o a so perfect
o an exte ded fam ly La ge LA
fo ma DR k che w h b eaktnst a ea
2 FR s and 2 r 2 ba hs 2 po ches
ca
gaage New oof b ck &amp; vny sdng

Pr cad at $74 900 11605

$ 59 900 #225

lor

or

mobile

home
owners
Vacant La nd Just m1nutes
from the hosp1ta &amp; town

Approx 9 acres M L Ca I
th e

ocat on &amp; p ce

Real Estate General

44 Buttemut Drive-. 5 yr old love y bnck
ranch offers LA DR FA w th gas log
fwep ace 3 BAs and baths n ce s ze at
w th fenced n back yard ocated on a
dead end street n a fam y o entad

no ghbo hood $79 500 1618

Wooded20acres mn $189 00011215

own your llrs~~~ n a County wa er ava lab e Call
n c. , n 0
Th 5 an d ask for N2022
ho
ms
Homosltes In Guyan Twp

bath
r
and a n ce leve l Ava lab e n 5 acre tracts
lot P ced JUSt r ght Cal for more o r less Publ c water
1st ng •174 8 oker owned
ava abe
0 veways and
culverts
a
eady present
the many comforts
conveniences of living G ve A len a call #2023
town n th s 1 1 2 sto y Farm In Green Township
w 1h 2 bedrooms and 2 Th s fa m has oads of

Some

comfo rt s potent a i w th ts SO acres

u nciiJde a S1roll through the o less Make your dreams
shopp ng o go ng to come true Maybe bu ld a

Family Ranch Th s home offers a noor
plan perfect for smell tam es 3 BAs 2
ba1hs LA &amp; FA W11h fireplace Ea1 In
kitchen Covered pat o fo outs de
enjoyment 2 car garage
ce ntra
a r
Fam ry

Gas heat
or ented

455 SR 7 N Oulstand ng Bus ness
Opportunity! 5500• Sq ft omodelod

bu lding
I cense
security

wlh

newer roof

D 5 I quor
fu n lu e
system vent tar on system
1 ac e of ground w th Ia ge 2

bar/ estaurant

1ienad· J&gt;av.!d P.Brk ng 101 $275 000 1204

ne ghborhood on Jay Orrvo $76 500

1200

moves and the schoo ls new home Just let you
w th n walk ng d stance 1mag nat on go You bette
mo e nformat on on th s ca I now t may not last

G veAenaca

Ask long Ask lor #202fi
Full c ity lot In Gallipolis
nterested?

Live For
The Moment

L sl ng

Harbour
home wth 2 BA s
2 baths Tra1ler onlyl
and equest to you

shc&gt;wirla ol #4006

1 800-458·9990
p twww tpploa Nm
·~P

oa@c1

~ne1

nc

Are

you

looking

lor

a

vacant land? We may have G l eal
what you need Just a few property
m las f om town a e 35 location I you a re an
acr es m ore a ess n Clay nvestor o want to beco me
Tow nsh p Ca I and ask for one c heck this out Th s
two story br ak build ng has
M2027
severe
one and two
We are always glad to
be d r oo m
apartments
help you sell or buy
located on F st Ave
n

propa1y
Rental prop• rty Is also
available Glto us a call
we can help

Ga 1pol s Ask Allen fo all
the

#5007

NEW USTINCl New Home on 4 Acres
this new y constructed home rests o n 4
acres of and near Raccoon Creek
NEW USTING Attent on nvestors we Vaulted ce I ng accentuate the great
could have the p openy for yo oca1ed room effept n the LA DR and k tchen 3
n the V llage of Rodney offe ng Ia ge BAs {master BA a so has vau lted
at 2 bedrooms 1 t/2 baths LR den ce lng) and 2 fu 1 baths L8 ge deck
eat In k tchen In good cond 1on Priced P cedal$110000 1133
at on y $38 500 Now
...
aeld to your portfo o or a cha nce to beg n
a ental portfolio HOI

Palm

uxury oa home yea ound C1ll
forou f e ett~hueo HWp•ae
S 2coo culoaw hfloorp 1n1
for over 60 model homes

• m•

B oker

owned

Pack up hi f1m ly

~

G ve us a call
#2026

J

and aet •w• y o
ve ry own OJ
Orlvclnl

Vllltge ot Thu men
coMage bath ki1cohen/dih&gt;Oar&lt;&gt;on1 1
ana
ut ty
w noows see doo s

297 Duly Road Outsta nd ng destgn
and floo plan features 3 BAs 2 1/2
baths LA F A DR and eat n k tchen
pus a so ar urn com sur ounded by
decks Partie basement w th h gh
ceU ngs and outs de entrance 2 car
garage plus 15 x 25 oulbu d ng

room and k tch en Ask for M L Just a few m es from
75 Broker owned
Gal pols Some estnct on

L.cavc he wa k
week beh nd you

I

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

haulster

Estate General

fa

on

appo ntmen VLS 4460 6806

L v ngston s Ba seme n Wa e
P oo l ng a 1 basement epa s
done I ee est mates I let me
gua antee 2y s on JOb expe
ence (304 895-3887

Rolhng H1lls. Clear Stream. Pond,
4 Horse Barns I Equ1pment Barn,
16 x30 Cabm Reduced to $148,000
Brochure Ava1lable
ERA Accent II Realty, Inc
Jackson Oh1o
K Brenda Dean Agent
Cellular# (740) 352-3101

I

yeas o d and set ng on 2 B acres
n h A r11 ntry

13341 LARGE FARM 101 AC
Newe
2 story home 4 5
beel m hOme 2 baths 0\18 y LA
wood bu n ng f ep ace I&lt; w oak
cab ne d n ng a ea
Leve 10
o ng and Some woodecl &amp;
pastu e
Ba n Ca
Of
an

Man

1984 Sunstream 30 mota home
5 kw ONAN newe I dg m c o

awnlngs&amp;mo e
$11 500 304-675 3035

Owner Must Sell
All Offers Considered!

n

o

H ome

tenence Pa nl ng v ny 5 d ng
carpentry doors w naows ba hs
mob 1e home epa and mo e Fo
l ee es mate call Che 740 992
6323

Treasurer • Office

50008 SIBil Route 681

#5010 Broker Owned

k chen LA and u bath On y 6

w h oult&gt;wldhng

7795

Terry Ca mpe 2 II Sleeps 6
good co nd t on $3 000 (304)882
2695

#2020
Buy as rental property or Lolsl Lolsl Lolsl From 2
live In Home has 2
bedrooms
1 bat h 1v ng acre t acts to 6 ac re tracts

Ea

App ance Parts And Serv ce
Name B ands Ove 25 Years Ell
pe ence A Work Gua anteed
We Se ll New May tag Appt ances
F en ch C y Maytag 740 A46
Gene al

s

Coni on page

13379 OUA NT 2 BR COTTAGE

Pub c wa e and soon
pub c sewage $45 000

$29/MO

319 3323 X2 156

1

doos N ce 101

FROM

pounds Aepos Fee $0 Down 24
Mos @19 9 o Fo L s ngs 800

oday

ng on 2 8 acres

F be glass Bath

A r Fu nace Steeps fo ur Gas or
Electnc (304)675 6328

3

!:i

1975 1 ave! Mate camp ng tra le
2 sleeps s x $1200 ca 1 740
992 7039

446 08 70 1 800 28 7 os 76 Aog
e s Wa erp oaf ng

C&amp;C

;'.."vy

For Sale SIX lotsd
n
Wate rs H I S ubdiVIS on

113369 6 68 ec as M L n Green I
Twp A ut es on
comp e ed
d veway

cu

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

t98 4 CASITA

10 y

Bed oom 2 ba h anch ove ul
basemen w h 2 ca ga age and
fin shed am
oom Home s Is
on 2 Ac rnl n Hannan T ace
Schoo s
Just rTI nu es I om
down own Ga po s Th s home
fealu es a beau fu andscaped n37o
lawn wood pe e stove and 554 3d Ave
cent a a r Located IUSI off Rock d n ng oom basemen
Lck Ad on Mabe 0
mce good oaf fu nace
ne1ghbo hood Have a ga den ank
mmed ate
and a se some flowe s but nake $50 000
su e to look a hs Ca Johnne
at 367 0323 today
o
an *3362 CARAYOUT BUSINESS
appo ntment
and
CONVENIENCE STORE
N2t18 CHARMING VICTORIAN FOR SALE New a a m system
Budng but
o stae cod e
HOME
4 5 Bed ms 3 baths Co nuous ope at on s nee Q86
lo rna OR &amp; LA Crysla P ce
kit
nc udes
nventory Ca 1
chande e s h oughout
Fu I Joh n e 367 0323 or 446 6806
bsm w lh camp e e k 1 stone
WBFP
BA w gas
f ep ace 13380 CORNER LOTS
Wa e E eel &amp; Sewe A,., ;~e~&gt;l~
Ga age
Landscaped
o
Ony Hury he p ce s
excusve vewng w t'l V gna L $19 500 1 ac e m/1
Smith 446 6806

home w lh detached 1 ca ga age
ac m I Owne says $80 000 13385 EVERYTH NG S SPECIAL
ABOUT THIS 1128 SQ FT
MAKE AN OFFER
HOME Lo11ey l A Fam Am
BR
7 \ 1 085
BEAUTIFUL w/f apace
Eat n kt
Fo mEl
SUILDIN
LOTS
toea ed n dnng m 3 bed m 2 bathS
Lakev ew
I
Chao as La~e E ec hea pump w bolt e gas back
sea Ony 2 eman 2348 ac
up a ge deck n he ea Beau lu
mtl $22 900 and !5 ac m 1$25 eoo
cab nets n k
sky ghts ce ng
fans outbu d ng &amp; 3.2 )(48 ga age
w eec rc &amp; opene s 24 ound
above g ound poo &amp; deck Th s
home se s tse f a you need o s
ook
acre m VLS
13358-369 EVERGREEN RD 3
13377 GREATER STARTER bed m B oadmo e M ob e I orne
HOME o nvestment p ope y &amp; Loa Range Ret g We!! he &amp;
Th s love y wo bed oom one ana Orye E ec Heat &amp; CA Deck &amp;
one half ba h cottage would be Ou bu d ng $28 000
JU&amp;I gh as a s arte o et remen 13017 LARGE FLOO R PLAN
home W th an eat n k. !chen and Loca ad n he cty on a que
I v ng oom
s us &amp;nough see 4 BAs :212 baths 6
space P ced to sel at $37 500
roams
th s
home
can
accommoda e
two
tam es
Ca today th s one won ast ong
V gna4466806

1990 Dodge G and Caravan AJC

1994 Chevy Silve ado 2500 3 4
To n 4!14 350 Auto 40K Loaded
Excelen CorKiton $13900 740
446 3372

Bta ck be es
740 992 6858

i:O!Ciil'ED

13387 La ge home rn town new

au1oma lc

Ouoleslor Supplloo
12 1985 Ford F7M TK
Eastern LOCI I School SN 1FOPK 74N4 FVA72091
Dlelrlc:1 50008 State Rout e
SN
13 1975 FORD TK
681 RH&lt;Iovtllo Ohio 45772 F91 LVX2988 1
Ia accepting quolea lor
14 1966 Fontaln Semi
lunchroom
and
LowbedTraller SN7627
lreneportatlon auppllaa lor
15 1968 5 Ton Kaloer
llocal
you
2001
!Jeep Truck 8 Cyl
SN
Spoclllcatlone lor IUI!I!Iioa j osEI983 1oc 1241 22Ja
can bo obtained by calling
Duty Forklift SN
16 H
lhotroaaur~~r s office o1 740- 1 91177
867 3319 Quolea will be
17 196 B Kaiser cargo
opened In the t reaeurer •
Truck SN 022522597
office al noon on Tuesday
18 1985 Chevrolet cargo
Augusl 1 2000 Tho board Tr u c k
N
roaorvao lho right 10 relecl 1GCGD34J9GF313272
any or any port of the
19
1976 Oodge Pickup
quollo Quotoa should be Truck SN 24 BE75051Ja
labeled
Ouoteo
lor
20 1978 Dodge Pickup
0 r
Lunch r o 0 m
Truck SNW26BE85212118
Tronaporlltlon Suppllea
21 Joh oeere Front End
and mailed lo
Loader
n
Eaolern Local School
hman 3 wheel
22
2
Dlstrtcl
us

c

WATERPROOFING
Uncond t ona I fet me gua antee

FM CD 72 COO m Its $5 800

Fa 'f1'1S (304)895 37401895 3789

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

1991 Fa d F 150 XLT Package

$37 500

$454 99 fa

Home

'--...__

UNLIMITED POTENTIAL c NO LAND
RESTRICTIONS

4 Cyfinder $800 74H46-1062

Tobacco Pans
Now ak ng o ae s to h s Sp ng
F s 0 de s w Gua an ee Best&amp;
Ea est
Pan s
Oewnu st

730 Vans

r

co.

810

$ 600 740-992~3

Public Notice

w

SERVICES

1979 Dodge 150 pickup low
m es one owne goOd condition

13388 CITY LOT on V ne St
Ca VLS 446 6806

sp

Barb Blamer &amp; Dan Wuebaugh

COMMERCIAL CORNER LOT
AND BDLG FOR SALE 3 d

IN

George Law...,.,.
Collocllon Ollleer
Homo National Bank
(7) 17 18 19 20 21 23 24
25 26 2710TC

720 Trucks for Sale

19372 SA 554

BEAUTIFUL

13372 INVESTMENT OR MOVE

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Horne Nellonal Bank
haa a mobile home on
approxlmolely ..,.hall (1/2)
..,. lollor oale In Roctnv
Information lor the price
ond to view p ropeny call
1148-2210 and aak lor G~

Sadd obags $3600 (30 4)576
4033

05 4 0 1740)367 7242

pu chased 24x24 ba n ~;:llip;l,i;
fo hO ses and cows ,.
C y Schoas Dent et hs

All STEEL BU IL D NGS

1999 Suzuki Savage LS 650
New W ndsh eld New l eather

1986 Dodge Ram Van 740 245
9189

VACANT Comes w h 3 bed ooms
LAND
o utu e home s e 7 oom eat n k tchen and
acres M L on State Route 554 1 vng oom Lawnn ~~s;::~&lt;;a~,~~
mle f om leeway at Ao Gande wn chde ns p
A so has
leve to o ng e an es ICed c ubhouse
$7500 pe ace d ve by and outbu d ng Cal today
gone tomo row $58 000
v ew th s ova y p openy GB

13375

$3 iiOO 140~8

1985 Chevy S 10 4K4 Body Fa
Runs Good $800 740 441.0382

Real Estate General

26x30 Was $6 990 Sel $3 990
40x58 Was $ 3 920 Se 1 $6 800
50x90 Was $22 480
Se
$ 0 250 Tom 800 388 5314

340

RUNS LIKE A TOPI 1992 ~Or
Bu eM Rega GS V 6 3 8 l l e
loaded Powe Everyth ng Spo
er Nice Wheels H ghar M leage
S
l ooks Good Too 74 0 446
3363 740 44 -()6.48

Building
Supplies

I

shop ct
Ad onng
Home

t998 Yamaha Banshee Good
Cor&lt;ln~n

OUR WEB PAGE S www v sm h com

LOTS LAND
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
1873 REDUCED PRICE 17
ac es close to new Fwy hospila

Wiseman Real Estate, Inc.
(740) 446-3644

WE FINANCE MOBILE HOMES
CONSECO FINANCE 1 800 895-

'

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
GAIL BELV LLE
TRISH SNYDER
JOHNNIE RUSSELL
DAVID SNYDER

500 Vu can 4500
m les $2950 080 &amp; 1995 Kawa
sak BOO Vulcan 2000 m es
$4450 080 8o h 8KCellenl cood
liOn cal 740 949 2181

356

C ed P oblems OK E11e n
Tu ned Down Be o e Reestab sh
You C ed 1 800 659 0359

1

New 6 W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
$600 Down $24~ pe Month Free

1 4 For An Open Hou•• &amp;
L1nd n Me Qs Co Take State
Roue 33 Sou h To Sta e Rou e
68 Ea st Fe 6 3 M es Turn Lett
On o WooCis Ad And Left Onto
Ca Ad V ew Th s Spectacu a
Ho me And P oce y 0 P ck Up
Maps Fo P opert es Now Avail
able In Ross Jat:kson Me gs
GaIa Alld Sc o o Coun est We
Be Happy To D scuu Your
0 eam local on And F nanc ng
Op ons Maps Fo A.ny Of Ou
Greal Home S es 0 Rec 881 ona
Pa ce s Can Be Ma ed So Stop
8y 0 GveUsACa

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT

448 8101

•1994 Kawasak

NEED CASH? LOAN BY PHONE
$200 5500 lmmed ate y Trans
ferred Into Your Check ng Ac
count We Want Your Bus ness
Ca Anytme
www cashreserve net

Public Notice

Public Notice

1986 CABO Good Pla&amp; t c W th
Decals Runs Good $600 OBO
t40-.... 2090

0 6all Cash Reserve 1 888 913

740 446 3409

Qua ity bu t A B ck Coun ry
Es ate 4 Bed ooms 3 I 2 Baths
Mas e
Bed oom
w Jacuzz
ce ng tans coppe p umb ng
wak n cosets Fame dnng
oom lam y oom w h wood
ou n ng I eplace enc osed back
pa o Che ry cabine s n he
k tohen a so a ba and pantry
cherry woodwo k h ough out
C ty Schoo s 2 Ut ty roo ms Fu I
basement
w th
wo kbench
Ande son w ndows 2 ca garage
w/8 nsu ated doors 2 ac es MJL
plu s mo e acreage ava table If
supe
cons rue on
pus
a
beaut fu y panned home with
ooms
pr ced
13352 NEW LUXURY WHITE spacious
BRICK
HOME
under easonab e s appeal ng to you
canst uc on
Loca ed n a pease do no delay n mak ng an
w th
L
prest g ous a ea n Green Twp 5 appo ntmen
mn rom Hazer Hospta
5 Sm lh 446; ·.481J2/'146 ··68C~ .
bedrms 4 baths Fo mal entry
w/sky ght &amp; cathed a ce ng
d n ng m v ng rm can ....en ent
kt
oa~
cab nets
1st
too
laundry Master su te on 1s floor
nc ud ng a supe bath m &amp;
c oset 4 Bed ms 2 baths on 2nd
13355
LOG HOME
f oar 24 x24 lam ly m app ox WITH CHARACTER f you Ke
4 000 sq ft Beautlu 3 ace M l ndvduaty hee t s 3029 sq
rav ned ot and ve s eam
I ft moeo ess 3bedms 212
wou d be
to show bahs Kt LAm Offce m and
much moe Waopochfont&amp;2
sdes 167 Aces m I Ro ng
Pasue and 3 Lage Bans &amp;
Feed Lot s tes 2 n ce ponds Land
s most a I clean &amp; has some
tenc ng E ect c &amp; f os f ee water
n the ban Feed ot s tes
13387
PERFECT FOR THE Fo me y used to Yea calf
FAMILY A so conven ent o mos ope a on Located nea A o
everyth ng
S o es Schoo s G ande Appo ntment On v Ca I
Hasp ta
Cus om
bu t
3 v gna l Sm h 7404466806
bed ooms 3 baths v ng oom $335 000
din ng
room
&amp;
k tohen
w app ances basemen w an N3373 Don I et th s one
999 Norr s 6xBO mar1ula,:1ured
apartment kitchen I v ng oom home St on a
ace
bath Front &amp; ea deck 2 ca
AceAd 1m eoff160
anached ga age A most 4 ac es has a he upg ades
of pa k ke g ounds w th s ocked
cabne s cape Mas e B~:~':.:j~
pond &amp; gazebo VLS
has Ga den Tub and ~

13384

BRUNER LAND
74().441 1491

wooa

VIFIOINIA SMITH BROKER

Motorcycles

1987 Ford Ranger Red 4 Spetd

Stove Maae B"Y USA
S eve Company G ass Doo
G ea Shape 3 Yd s 0 d $75

r/mdl til

736 3409

New 3 BR 2 BA Ooub ew de
$300 Down $245 Pe Month
Free Del very 888 928 3426

Tobacc o S cks 740

NO CASH ? MMX TECH NOLO
GY We F nance 0 Down Pas

·--. •~··

Ap p ances

A &amp; s• 1 1 888 928 3426

1083

.-

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy Fa c o y D eel
Exce enl Se v ce
Flex ble F nanc ng Ava able

4254 After 5 P.M

1989 M sub sh Ga an C ean In
s de &amp; Ou looks &amp; Runs Good
$1 750 NegOHab te 7 40 44

Wale I ne Spec a
$2 95 Pe 100
$37 00 Pe 00 A B ass Com
pre5510n F tt ngs n 5 ock
RON EVANS ENTE RPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 BOO 537 9528

NY 4225

13385 IMMEDIATE POSSESS ON
MINT CONDITION 092 Sunset
Dr Galpo s Great 3 SA I Bah
B ck Ranch w th fu basement
Ca port w h s o age oom cen a
bedrooms 2 s ory
18 x30 0 n ng oom 1 2 baths a r gas hea new ca pet and pa nt
h ougtlOut
N ce
back ya d
some hardwood f oo 9 new oof
cove ed
po ch
basement &amp; copper p umb ng new e ect c
b ea~e bolt and w ng n house
ga age Reduced $89 000
Ul ty oom n basement One of
today s best buys at $91 500
Great Ne1Qhbo hood Ca Johnn e
at367 0323

ca

Smal House 1 M te Nor h 01 Ad
d son $250 Mo Pu s Ut ill es
Dep os it Fle leren ces No Pe s

446-6806

ment Bank F nance Only At Oa k
wood In Ba boursv le WV 304

6777

Bennells He a ng &amp; Coo ng 1
800 B72 5967 www o vbcom/ben
nen

Real Estate General

cy~ (jf.

Fo a Trac o nar ow I on
I ve powe sp n ou whee l
good $2600 (304 882 2695
SPM

740

710 Autos for Sale

710 Autos for Sale

Was he $95 D ye $95 Ran ge
$95 Ae ge al o $ 25 F eeze
Chest Type $ 50 Washe &amp; 0 y
a Se $40 0
Yea Wa any
Skaggs App ances 76 v ne
S ee1 Gat po s 740 446 7398
I 8888 80128

Sawm 1 $3 795 Saw ogs In o
Boa ds P anks Beams La ge
Capac ly Bes Sawm Va ue An
ywhe e FREE tnlorma on 1 800
576 1363 NORWOOD SAW
M LL S 252 Sonw I D ve Buffa o

On V ny Sk rl ng Doo s W nO
ows Ancno s Water Heaters
Plumb ng &amp; Elect ca Pa ts Fu
n01ces &amp; Heat Pu mps Be nnetts
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb comlben nen

"Li m te d 0 No C edl1? Govern

28x52 DoubleW de $500 Down
Take ova paymen s 800 69 1

Tappan H Ef c en cy 90,.. Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sy s ems Free 8 Year Wa anty

(304)675 433

Huge nvento y 0 scounl Pr ces

960
end
uns
a e

Fo Sale
245 512

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

958 Clark Chape Ad

Needed

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

GOOD CREDIT
BAD CREDIT
NOCREDITI

Match ng Ve
And Cr no ne
Neve wonSze o AGea Buy
For 5300 740 446-1741

15 Cou t St eat Gal pols Ve y
Nice 2 Sed ooms 1 1 2 Baths
Comp ate K tche n 011 S ee
Pa king Nice V ew Of Pa k A.nd
R ver Walk Downtown $545 Mo
Plus Ut It es Oepos References
RflCIU I!KI 74Q-446 4926

Pi 0 1 Program Rente

1913 Allo 4 PM

A f ed Ange o Wedd ng Gown

800-319 3323 Ell 709

74()-286 2094 740-643-0830

Tre ler For Sa • 1989 14x70 Roy
al By Lake 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Extrasl $10 500 Call 740 U1

METAL BU ILDING S Does You
Deale sh p Not Wok For You ?

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
A mos t Eve yone Ap
proveCI W h $0 Down Low
Mon tHy Paymen s
aoo 617
3476 Ex 330

Bas

House In Country Ready Now
Oepos t &amp; Referen ces 740 379
2209 Attar 6 PM

740 367 7131

3521

Queen S ze Wale bed L ghleel
S 11 0 awe s M o Head boa d
P ce $225 740 256 495

i&gt;unbav &lt;rnnrs SS&gt;rnunrl • Page 05

Pomeroy • Mlddlepott • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
610 Farm Equipment

Super Tw n Ca Wate bed Red
No Matt ess $50 Reg ula Tw n
Ca Wate bed Rea No Ma ess
$40 Sw ng Se Ou side $50 304
675 749 740 446 0990

Pole

We I Ma n a ned Cozy Home 3
Bedrooms 1 Batn G eat Town
ship Hilltop Dr ve + 1 Ac e Lot
G eay Buy Won 1 L ast Long I

1985 14x 70 3 Bedrooms Good
Shape $10 SOO Cat Altar 6 PM

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Mu ray G s 26
nch 8 ke
Coas1e B aMes Heavy Du y T es
5 w de Sea L ke New $40 740
446 3988

deale Gas G I Tw o 55 Ga on
Oak Wh skey Ba e s 740 446

540 Miscellaneous
Merchonalse

0437

This wll not
knowingly accept

ldver11...,_, for real
wMich lain violation o1 the
law OUr reacte,. are hereby
lnformed1hoi all dwellings
actv~ In th 1 nftlpaper
are avdabte on an equal

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

•

304 562 5&amp;40

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Oh1o • Point Pleasant, WV

enla

nformat on

61 Court Street Located on the corne

17 Cindy Lane G een Townsh p ho me
lot of 3rd and Court th1s com me c a ofle s 4 BRs 2 ba hs A FA k tchen
bu d ng offers a tolal of 9 060 sq. ft of wth agednngaea pa ow habove
po1on1a Pnced at $81 500 1620
g ound poo a d n ce eve ot w th
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - fenced n a ea a he k ds or pets
NEW LISTING Commerc at ot located $69 900 •6o2s
next to Oh o Ave Plaza w th approx
140 ft of roa d frontage on Eestem
Avenue Pnced at $ 00 000 Ca I for
d~ta ts 1821

NEW USTING How Does a L ttle Gel
Away Place with good access a 1lsh ng
n the Oh o Ave sound~ That s ust
what the p operty toca1ed at 35 Hanove
Street C own C ty has to offer p us
qu et ~acefu sett ng LA eat n
k tchen 2 BAs
bath and pnced at

on y $23 000 1808
u

nc ude

pond

$245 000 #132

an d

eek

~·s

'U "('""

Before lookmg for your New Address, Check out ours at

www .wisemanrealestate.com
David Wiseman ORI CRS Broker 446-9555
Carolyn Waseh 441-1007
Sonny Garnes 446 2702
Robert Bruce 446-{)621
Rita Wiseman 446-9555

nltSl

OPi"'FI UN T'l'

(740) 446-3644

�Page D4 • 6unllap G:1mr1 ltrnllntl
310 Homea for Sale

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

440

NO DOWN PAYMENT! No down

payment equired w th gave n
ment guaranteed loan Good
creo 1 and steady ncome re
qu red Call today tor more ntor
rna on and to Qually lndapen
denca Mo tgage Services 1261 t
Madison Lakewood Oh MB 1679
10001 1 800-8'5-0036

Apartments
for Rent

Looking To Buy A New Home ?
Con t Have Land? We Doll Hurry

On!V

10 LOIS Left 304 736 7295

Mason Co Pa as line Ad three
acta ots to sale St 0 000 pe ot
doub ew de and &amp; ng ew de Re
!Utlcted to sh ng e oof ana v nyl
s dk'lg Hannon school d str ct

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

540 Miscellaneous
Merchanalae

2 mauve w ngback I v ng ro om
Chars used 6 monlhS Me new)
$ 100 each 740 667 9727

CMst Drawe s S40 0 esser
$40 Lovesea SSO Rocke Ae
cl ne $25 A I n good cond I on
(304)675 7315

L v ng Room Su te T unk Wee

Compu er 500 MHZ 40xCD ROM
56K Modem 64 Megs Ram 8
GIG Hard Or ve W nctows 98
200 Wall Speake s Includes
Mon lor And Pr n e $750 740

REDUCED!
23

AII-I01altodvor11ongn
thft newe~r llll.lbject to
1he Fodtrol Folr Housing AC1
of 1888 which - .. ~ lllegoi

to ldver!IM ony prol...,_

Tract
A
ONLY
$23 000 00 Get It Now Before s
Gone Res dentlal And Recrea
ti ona! Tracts A so twa tab e
Tl'l ougnout Southern Oh o Land
Cont act• Ava !lab e 10% 20%
Oown l Cal For F 11 Maps AN

Ace

THONY LAND CO
213-8365

360

limitation 0&lt; dlocrim naticn
bUed on r - color rllglon

sex fam llal atatua Of natk&gt;NII
orlg n or any lm.nton to
make any auch pefwe~tee
I m1ta11on or dliCiimlnatlon

LTD

800

Real Eatate
Wanted

682 7894
BEAUT FU L APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 52 We• wood

COMPUTER BLOWO UT Com
pa1:1 HP IBM Desktops lap ops
Eco mme ce Webs tes Alm os t

0 ve om $289 o $370 wa k o
shop &amp; mo11 es Ca 740 446
2568 Equa Hous ng Oppo tun ty

Everyone App oved
Make
SSSS On The Webl ! No Money
Down F ee Co or Pr nter 1 B88

479 2345

T aile lot W lh Area Fe Chi d
ren To P ay New 1h80 Mobl e
Home John Peggy 740 U6

RENTAL S

-t•

"-rtun 1y baals

Ranch

stvle house 6 veant olel 3
acres 3 bedrooms 2 bath• I vlng
oom &amp; lamt~ oom d n ng room 2
car garage sw mming poo l m
macu ate condition $129 900
new Crew Rd Pome oy Oh o

740-992 4560 evon ngs

Two bedroom 637 Grant Street
Middleport fu 1 basement two car
garage ca po t price reduced

740-949 2661

410 Houaea for Rent
3

Bedrooms

Fo eclosed
Homes From $199 Mo 4Gf. Down
Fo L st ngs &amp; Pay men De a Is

233 Second Ave nue Gall pols
Ve y N ce 2 Bed oo ms 1 1 2
Bath s Camp ete K t chen Oil
Street Park ng Wa k Anyw here
Downtown $495 Mo Pus Ut I
t es Deposit Re fe ences Re
qu td 7"'D-446-4926

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

304 736 7295

1996 4x70 2 BedroOms 2 BattiS
Ga den Tub Laundr y Room
Stove Aefrige ator Dishwasher
H P Total Elect c $19 400 080
Call 740 446 7935 Leave Mes

sage

s

Le t Us A&amp;&amp; sl You In Your New
Mfg Home Ca 1 Fo Pre Appro11al
1 888 736--3332
July Spec a Just $333 Down And
QmJ. You New Oakwood Home

Call740 446-3093

New Mode

3 Sed ooms 2 Bath
Daub ew de Loaded Just 5699
D own Hu y Won I last Oek
wood Ga I po s 740 446-3093
HUNTER $ HILL

3 Tra c s Of ~flme Recreat ona t
Land 29 Acres Fo As Low As
.. $27 0001 Land Contracts Ava I
abe Cal Now 18002138365
An111ony Land Co-ny LlD
www countrytyme com

we

Ha11e Compe t ve Prices &amp;
NO De a ersh p Fees Ca Fo A
F ee B ochu e El Do ado Bu d
ng Sys ems 1 800 279-4300

Powe Whee s Jeep $75 Tow
Chan o doze $35 Shop vac
$5 La ge Sausage G nde $35

Fo sa e Royal Oa~ Reso rt mem
be ship w th coas o coast and
ch d ens r ghts $2500 937 386
2110

B dwell Oh o 45814

New Haven one bet! oom fu
n she d apar ment no pe ts de
pos &amp; ele ences 740 992
0165

740-387 0 56
State Route 41 Large Eat In
K tchen l v ng Room Bath 2 3
Bed oo ms Deok Fro n &amp; Ba ck
Hand cap Ac canib e $450 Mo
Plus Deposit Ava! abe 8 1 00
PhOne 740 446 0205 740 44 6

Home Commerc a Un s
FREE Coo Ca ta og
Today 1 800..711 0158

A ve bend Place now t a~ ng ap
p leal ons o t BA Apt to the el
dar ey &amp;
d sab ed
EHO
(304 882 3121 afte r 2 304)882

Available Now

Tw n Towers now accept ng

JANITROL HEAT NG AND

lage G een Apa tm ent s

2

bed ooms total e ec c app anc
es lu n shed ta und y oom ac

t es and close to schoo l appl ca

t ons ava labte a olf ce 740 992
37 1 TDD 1 aee 233 6694 Equa
Hous ng Oppo un ty

1Ax70 w/ 24 fl expando 5325 00

MERCHANDISE

a man + dep &amp; ref In the Camp
Conley area 30ot 675 54n
Between A hens and Pome oy 2
&amp; 3 bedroo m mob le homes
$26().$300 740 992 2t67
:1: Bedroom House Tra er Fun
r shed No Pe s Refere nces And
Depos t $250fMo P us Ut 11 es

741)-371j.2929

nd an A owhead Co te et on Fo
Sal e 0 T ade $300 Fo 300
P eces 740 446 4476 No Calls
After 10 PM

3274

app !CatiOns for 1 SA
HUD subs d zed apt fo elde ly
and handicapped EOH
(304)675-6679

510

Bla ek Lea th e Couc h And Cha
$ 25 En e Ia nment Cen e $75
Queen S ze Wa e be d W h M r
o ed Head Boa d &amp; t2 D awe s
$150 740 446 2451
Body by Jake F m ell home gym
w h 11Kleo $25 740 949 3204

COOLING EQUIPMENT
INSTALLED
You Don t Ca

Us We Both

Lose F ee Es ma es 740 446
6 308 1 800 29 0098
JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Aebu 1 In Stock
Ca Ron Evans 1 800.537 9528

8 ass F e Place Se t $30 Can
n ng Ja s Qua z 1 Doz $3 00
740 441 044 1

Household
Goods

Ae cond 1 oned
Washers D yers Ranges Aelr
g ators 90 Day Gua antee We
Se New May ag App ances
F ench C y Maytag 740 446
7795

~~(At,

*

BEII•UT1FUL 3 1/2
OLD COUNTRY HOME ON e+

ACRES Large LA w tn stone wa
and wood burne F sl f oo BA
and fu l bath Ut Am Sun oom
Large K tchen 0 n ng w h Che ry
Cab nets and a pantry Ups a s
anothe a ge tied oom and tu I
bath with potent al for lh d
bedroom
Has sc eened back
porch and a tony too ont s tt ng
porch Home nas 2200+ SQ fl a
heal pump and cent al a Natu at
wood s d ng on the ou s de and
beau ifu wood wallpape on the
ns de P operty nctudes a cu e log
cab n w th fu 1 bath gazebO 2
garages
and
h ee
olher
outbu ld ngs
al
n
e)(ce ant
cond 1on
Fo
an
eltc us ve
show ng ca 1Dave

Real Estate General

"

'

Garage/l"ow ng Bus1ness
atta&lt;:hed 5 br res dence
al 2134 Chalhan Ave n
Comes w lh eX1ra lois
has
aqu pment
(A r
Ofts Etc ) Owner
to move lh s sale I So ca I

For

Branch Off ce
23 Locusl Sl
Gal pols Oho
45631

New 14 W de $250 Down $ 49
Per Mon h Free Air F ee Sk
ng 888-928 3426

Tra e

n

Mason

No

Pe s

(304)773-5751

Gun Cab net 12 Gun Hade W h
L gh 2 G ass Douo e Ooo s

$150 740 446 3409

Three bedroo m ota ly emodeled
nslde and out tra Ia ana lOt new
furnace new app ances new car
pet $23 500 ca 1740-992 45t4

of the best views of the Ohio
around
just got more affordable Immaculata 2 story
offers It all fantastic view from the glass
front LA as well as the main BA with private
balcony 2 3 more BAs 2 1/2 baths large
dining area open to kitchen 1 car attached
garage plus a 24 x 32 detached garage, a 28 x
52 deck with built In planters perfect for
entertaining Now priced ol $155,000 This
property truly does offer It all'! #629

bedrms
bath
LOCAT ON cen tra a bottle gas
rurr1ace. v nyl ga age &amp; bu d ngs

446-i208

550

1900 A so Ae nanc ng And Spe
c a Oea s On Repossess ons
FED UP WITH THE RUN AA
OUND7 Want A New rtome W h
N o Hassle ? Ca t Fo P e App o
val 1 888 736 3332

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
3)

.441 IMS8
387.0023
441 8458

SLUSS P.EALT'l COUP ANY
739 Harthng Way West Galton Ohio 44833

P ne) G eat Location For Rea
B us nus Ca T m To F ee
888 874 1994

!:lome Office (800) 484 6130 4399
Galion Office (419) 46S 1947
Fax (419) 468-1059
Email Blamer@hotma~l eom
Website bucyrus homestead eom/home html

Can slart your own busmess m lh•s large bu 1ldmg 4
car Could also pu1 a m obile home on 1he property for
the ch1ld ren 1 5 Acres MIL Plus a Lg Bnck Home
&amp; Full Basement G1ve us a call today

Join Ue Sund•y Ju y 30 From

ALONG THE OHIO RIV ER GREAT VIEW
Large ho me w l h full basemen! A deiac hed garage
approx 24x36 on 3 75 acres M i L Shown by
appomlmenl No 224

PLEASANT
ROAD Look

1&lt;\JrAtl. A 1 me 1' build o n
acres M/L oy survey
Elemenmy Sc hools
Restnctrons NO 22

HILL

ng f" a new
ROOST lo ca ll home ' Y1ew
lhiS coun1 y 2 00 acres M i L

by

survey

967 Mob Ia Home 60 x1 2 2
bed ooms bath fu nrtu e ange
&amp; ef Heat pump centra a
Lage
bu dng
70x 4
also
20x10 bdg Cone ot Hyse &amp;
0 11er M dd epor1 $15 000 00

Wa e
gas sewe
Pnecest
Nu sng

Green

Elemen1a y Schools Some

Res1r1c11 nns NO 223

.3368 LIIND CONTRACT
$43 000 Down payment $5500
Ba ance

2WD 6 cy

oof 1999 4 BR 25 BA 2 ca
ga age
11ny
sdng
nee
ne ghborhood Needs some TLC

but pr cad gh a $78 900
13344 COMMERCIIIL LOT &amp;
BUSINESS Loca ad on Eastern
Ave G eat Qpportun ty Pu chase
the corne ot w th o w thoul he
bus ness

Ale

AM

Local re erences !urn shed Es
taOI shed 1975 Ca 1 24 Hrs (740)

(740)448-3988

TRANSPORTATION

73 1nt Singe Ax e
axe 200 hp Olese
$3500 or Trade Fo
Ford Farm Tracto r
(6 14 ) 878 9700

1985 Bay lner Caprice 14Ft Wth

B sp 2 sp
Auns great!
Need B N
weekdays

50 HP OB Motor Needs Wo k
Good T a er $1 300 740 256
1925

Weekends
(740) 388 9418 Ask lo Joe

1986 SunOl d t71 2Ft 140 HP
lnboa d Open Bow (740)367

a. 4-WDa

7558

760

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

LOOK AT TH1SIIII

560

Pets for Sale

Doo lor 992 F eb d $115 740
949 7088

Cru se Automat c Exce lent Con
d t on H gh M le age {740)367

790

payment
pe od 4
wooded ac es cou d be 2 3 BR
5 BA D n ng k tchen p va e
Needs some f n sh wo k Owner
wan s t sold yes e day REduced
To $43 000 akes

ent y on ot and

ca

CARS

lm

Beag e Pups AKC $125 Othe s
$75 E~ce en Hun ng Sock:
740 44 440
011e

75 Tank s ol F eshwa

e

F sh Loca y Aa sed Pa akee s
Supp es F sh Tank Pe S op
24 3
Jackson
A enue P
P ea san 304)675 2063 Sun
4PM Man Sa 1AM 6PM

570

Musical
Instruments

Bu ndy T ombone Exce en Co n
d on $360 Ca Ley Ann A
304 675 7630

580

FrUits &amp;
Vegetables

ar

Cal1(304)675 7927 WV025956

with

Trailers

3

generators

24 1 Trailer Only
Bid
sheeto
may

be

obtained from clerk or
trustees Items may be seen

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Ia hereby given lhat
aoalod bide will be received
11 lho oll lco ol Caro lyn
Halley Clark of Guyan
Townohlp 90B4 Slala R1 218
Clalllpolla Ohio 45631 unlll 9
A M Saturday August 5
2000 lor the following
aurplua llama
1 1974 Diamond Rio Fire
truck SN CF65640602398
2 1965 Kaiser Jeep 5 Ton
Wr-.:kor 8X6 SN 57271 0263
3 1985 Dodge Ram 250
Van
S N
2B4HB21TOFK275681
4 1985 Chevrolet DIB SN
1G8ED18J3FFI 06052
5 1985 Ford PT SN
2FTHVV3SY3FCB59467
6 1967 Kaiser Jeep TK
SN 5E8159
7 1967 Jeep TK SN

at

8 1982 Telelecl TK
llfTAR1854CHA16391
9 1967 Jeep TK
952311785
10 1968 Jeep TK
052810385
II 1971 MACK CF6
SN CFS85F1212B4

the

Guyan

Township

garage In Mercerville
All
Items are being sold on as

as ts where Is basis It le
the responel b lllty of the
successful bidder to remove
the Items from the premises

All bids must be ooaled end
marked surplus bid
Bids
w111 be received by the clark

of the township unlll 9 AM
Salurday August 5 2000

Bids must specify an exact
dollar

The

am ount

Townsh p reserves the right
to accept or re1act any and
all bids

Any

call

questions

(740)256 S51 5 256 1 324 or
256-1321
Carolyn Halley
Guyan

Township Clerk
July 14 21 28 2000

Public Notice

558793

Approved Master Licensed E ec
ca n to yo ur e eel c needs

4

23

--• Ill1 Oh 45772
R....
sv
lo
(7) 18 23 2tc

Real E!ltate General

SN
SN
SN
TK

Not lce of the Histor ic
Preservation review Boatd
to meet at 7 30 p m on
Augusl

I

2000

In

lhe

Chamber ol Commerce 16
S1ale
Ohio

Slreel

Gallipolis

06

Real Estate General

•

REAL ESTATE

410 Third Ave Old Time Cha rm wrth
Modern Conven ences s found n th s 2
story home ~
atu
DR

~

eatn~

and 2

baths

48Rs

nclude

I

aces s d ng

ool

and mo e $ 14 900 Owne an)( ous to
set ma ke an offe #209

WOOD REALTY~ INC

32LOCUSTSTREET GALLIPOLIS OHIO 45631
Allen C Wood Broker 446 4523
Ken Morgan Broker 446 0971
Jeanene Moore 256-1745
Patrca Ross ~
740-4461066

=

Calling all Inveotora We

Investment
to solll

have a four un 1 apartment

bu d ng for sale
Each
apartmen1 has 2 br s 1
bath
vmg room &amp; eat n
k tchen Gene ales good
n come
Loca ted bes de
H o ize
C 1n c
Ask for

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

Call 1oday
112018

and

ask

591 Hidden Hlllo Drive- Perfect sunse1

504 41h Avo 3 BR 2

v1ews can be enjoyed from the deck of
th s outstand ng 2
story home
Ha dwood floors d ess th s 4 BR home
up w th a country fla r gorgeous k tchen
s h ghl ghted w th a vaulted cei ng 3
balhs full basement bam &amp; 20 ac es

Featu ng
Convemence
Affordabilityf Large Fr w th vau ted
ce Ing and open to the k tchen s very
nvrt ng Large LA and also ncludes a
study Newer fumace central a1r and
roof
Great back yfjr'd overlooks

$329 000 1220

Memor a F o d $75 000 1233

143 Stumbo Road mmacu ale v nyl
s ded anch offe s cozy LA w th pe et

Tycoon Lake Th s 3
fu basement with outs de en ance
Ia ge 2 ca garage huge garde n spot
20 x 36 outbu ld ng and much mo e
La ge BR upsta rs cou d be made nto 2
f needed $77 500 122

stove open o eff cent k tchen 3 BAs 2
ba t'ls ove s zed
ca ga age w lh
wo kb ench a ea a I located on a ove y
wooded 1 ac e m
at Do you self a
favor and ca today $74 900 N607

Attention

builders

This Home Is Juet Right
Is w hat
you say afte v ew ng th s m mac ulal e
we ma nta ned v ny ranch offe ng
large LR eat n k tchen 3 BAs 1 bath
1 ca an ga age p us 2 ca del ca port
o n app ox 33 ac e lot ocated n he
conven ent friend y a ea of Centenary

In Town Brick With a first floor
bedroom! Th s 4 BR home ofle s
space lo a a ge am ly o a so perfect
o an exte ded fam ly La ge LA
fo ma DR k che w h b eaktnst a ea
2 FR s and 2 r 2 ba hs 2 po ches
ca
gaage New oof b ck &amp; vny sdng

Pr cad at $74 900 11605

$ 59 900 #225

lor

or

mobile

home
owners
Vacant La nd Just m1nutes
from the hosp1ta &amp; town

Approx 9 acres M L Ca I
th e

ocat on &amp; p ce

Real Estate General

44 Buttemut Drive-. 5 yr old love y bnck
ranch offers LA DR FA w th gas log
fwep ace 3 BAs and baths n ce s ze at
w th fenced n back yard ocated on a
dead end street n a fam y o entad

no ghbo hood $79 500 1618

Wooded20acres mn $189 00011215

own your llrs~~~ n a County wa er ava lab e Call
n c. , n 0
Th 5 an d ask for N2022
ho
ms
Homosltes In Guyan Twp

bath
r
and a n ce leve l Ava lab e n 5 acre tracts
lot P ced JUSt r ght Cal for more o r less Publ c water
1st ng •174 8 oker owned
ava abe
0 veways and
culverts
a
eady present
the many comforts
conveniences of living G ve A len a call #2023
town n th s 1 1 2 sto y Farm In Green Township
w 1h 2 bedrooms and 2 Th s fa m has oads of

Some

comfo rt s potent a i w th ts SO acres

u nciiJde a S1roll through the o less Make your dreams
shopp ng o go ng to come true Maybe bu ld a

Family Ranch Th s home offers a noor
plan perfect for smell tam es 3 BAs 2
ba1hs LA &amp; FA W11h fireplace Ea1 In
kitchen Covered pat o fo outs de
enjoyment 2 car garage
ce ntra
a r
Fam ry

Gas heat
or ented

455 SR 7 N Oulstand ng Bus ness
Opportunity! 5500• Sq ft omodelod

bu lding
I cense
security

wlh

newer roof

D 5 I quor
fu n lu e
system vent tar on system
1 ac e of ground w th Ia ge 2

bar/ estaurant

1ienad· J&gt;av.!d P.Brk ng 101 $275 000 1204

ne ghborhood on Jay Orrvo $76 500

1200

moves and the schoo ls new home Just let you
w th n walk ng d stance 1mag nat on go You bette
mo e nformat on on th s ca I now t may not last

G veAenaca

Ask long Ask lor #202fi
Full c ity lot In Gallipolis
nterested?

Live For
The Moment

L sl ng

Harbour
home wth 2 BA s
2 baths Tra1ler onlyl
and equest to you

shc&gt;wirla ol #4006

1 800-458·9990
p twww tpploa Nm
·~P

oa@c1

~ne1

nc

Are

you

looking

lor

a

vacant land? We may have G l eal
what you need Just a few property
m las f om town a e 35 location I you a re an
acr es m ore a ess n Clay nvestor o want to beco me
Tow nsh p Ca I and ask for one c heck this out Th s
two story br ak build ng has
M2027
severe
one and two
We are always glad to
be d r oo m
apartments
help you sell or buy
located on F st Ave
n

propa1y
Rental prop• rty Is also
available Glto us a call
we can help

Ga 1pol s Ask Allen fo all
the

#5007

NEW USTINCl New Home on 4 Acres
this new y constructed home rests o n 4
acres of and near Raccoon Creek
NEW USTING Attent on nvestors we Vaulted ce I ng accentuate the great
could have the p openy for yo oca1ed room effept n the LA DR and k tchen 3
n the V llage of Rodney offe ng Ia ge BAs {master BA a so has vau lted
at 2 bedrooms 1 t/2 baths LR den ce lng) and 2 fu 1 baths L8 ge deck
eat In k tchen In good cond 1on Priced P cedal$110000 1133
at on y $38 500 Now
...
aeld to your portfo o or a cha nce to beg n
a ental portfolio HOI

Palm

uxury oa home yea ound C1ll
forou f e ett~hueo HWp•ae
S 2coo culoaw hfloorp 1n1
for over 60 model homes

• m•

B oker

owned

Pack up hi f1m ly

~

G ve us a call
#2026

J

and aet •w• y o
ve ry own OJ
Orlvclnl

Vllltge ot Thu men
coMage bath ki1cohen/dih&gt;Oar&lt;&gt;on1 1
ana
ut ty
w noows see doo s

297 Duly Road Outsta nd ng destgn
and floo plan features 3 BAs 2 1/2
baths LA F A DR and eat n k tchen
pus a so ar urn com sur ounded by
decks Partie basement w th h gh
ceU ngs and outs de entrance 2 car
garage plus 15 x 25 oulbu d ng

room and k tch en Ask for M L Just a few m es from
75 Broker owned
Gal pols Some estnct on

L.cavc he wa k
week beh nd you

I

840 Electrical and
Refrigeration

haulster

Estate General

fa

on

appo ntmen VLS 4460 6806

L v ngston s Ba seme n Wa e
P oo l ng a 1 basement epa s
done I ee est mates I let me
gua antee 2y s on JOb expe
ence (304 895-3887

Rolhng H1lls. Clear Stream. Pond,
4 Horse Barns I Equ1pment Barn,
16 x30 Cabm Reduced to $148,000
Brochure Ava1lable
ERA Accent II Realty, Inc
Jackson Oh1o
K Brenda Dean Agent
Cellular# (740) 352-3101

I

yeas o d and set ng on 2 B acres
n h A r11 ntry

13341 LARGE FARM 101 AC
Newe
2 story home 4 5
beel m hOme 2 baths 0\18 y LA
wood bu n ng f ep ace I&lt; w oak
cab ne d n ng a ea
Leve 10
o ng and Some woodecl &amp;
pastu e
Ba n Ca
Of
an

Man

1984 Sunstream 30 mota home
5 kw ONAN newe I dg m c o

awnlngs&amp;mo e
$11 500 304-675 3035

Owner Must Sell
All Offers Considered!

n

o

H ome

tenence Pa nl ng v ny 5 d ng
carpentry doors w naows ba hs
mob 1e home epa and mo e Fo
l ee es mate call Che 740 992
6323

Treasurer • Office

50008 SIBil Route 681

#5010 Broker Owned

k chen LA and u bath On y 6

w h oult&gt;wldhng

7795

Terry Ca mpe 2 II Sleeps 6
good co nd t on $3 000 (304)882
2695

#2020
Buy as rental property or Lolsl Lolsl Lolsl From 2
live In Home has 2
bedrooms
1 bat h 1v ng acre t acts to 6 ac re tracts

Ea

App ance Parts And Serv ce
Name B ands Ove 25 Years Ell
pe ence A Work Gua anteed
We Se ll New May tag Appt ances
F en ch C y Maytag 740 A46
Gene al

s

Coni on page

13379 OUA NT 2 BR COTTAGE

Pub c wa e and soon
pub c sewage $45 000

$29/MO

319 3323 X2 156

1

doos N ce 101

FROM

pounds Aepos Fee $0 Down 24
Mos @19 9 o Fo L s ngs 800

oday

ng on 2 8 acres

F be glass Bath

A r Fu nace Steeps fo ur Gas or
Electnc (304)675 6328

3

!:i

1975 1 ave! Mate camp ng tra le
2 sleeps s x $1200 ca 1 740
992 7039

446 08 70 1 800 28 7 os 76 Aog
e s Wa erp oaf ng

C&amp;C

;'.."vy

For Sale SIX lotsd
n
Wate rs H I S ubdiVIS on

113369 6 68 ec as M L n Green I
Twp A ut es on
comp e ed
d veway

cu

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

t98 4 CASITA

10 y

Bed oom 2 ba h anch ove ul
basemen w h 2 ca ga age and
fin shed am
oom Home s Is
on 2 Ac rnl n Hannan T ace
Schoo s
Just rTI nu es I om
down own Ga po s Th s home
fealu es a beau fu andscaped n37o
lawn wood pe e stove and 554 3d Ave
cent a a r Located IUSI off Rock d n ng oom basemen
Lck Ad on Mabe 0
mce good oaf fu nace
ne1ghbo hood Have a ga den ank
mmed ate
and a se some flowe s but nake $50 000
su e to look a hs Ca Johnne
at 367 0323 today
o
an *3362 CARAYOUT BUSINESS
appo ntment
and
CONVENIENCE STORE
N2t18 CHARMING VICTORIAN FOR SALE New a a m system
Budng but
o stae cod e
HOME
4 5 Bed ms 3 baths Co nuous ope at on s nee Q86
lo rna OR &amp; LA Crysla P ce
kit
nc udes
nventory Ca 1
chande e s h oughout
Fu I Joh n e 367 0323 or 446 6806
bsm w lh camp e e k 1 stone
WBFP
BA w gas
f ep ace 13380 CORNER LOTS
Wa e E eel &amp; Sewe A,., ;~e~&gt;l~
Ga age
Landscaped
o
Ony Hury he p ce s
excusve vewng w t'l V gna L $19 500 1 ac e m/1
Smith 446 6806

home w lh detached 1 ca ga age
ac m I Owne says $80 000 13385 EVERYTH NG S SPECIAL
ABOUT THIS 1128 SQ FT
MAKE AN OFFER
HOME Lo11ey l A Fam Am
BR
7 \ 1 085
BEAUTIFUL w/f apace
Eat n kt
Fo mEl
SUILDIN
LOTS
toea ed n dnng m 3 bed m 2 bathS
Lakev ew
I
Chao as La~e E ec hea pump w bolt e gas back
sea Ony 2 eman 2348 ac
up a ge deck n he ea Beau lu
mtl $22 900 and !5 ac m 1$25 eoo
cab nets n k
sky ghts ce ng
fans outbu d ng &amp; 3.2 )(48 ga age
w eec rc &amp; opene s 24 ound
above g ound poo &amp; deck Th s
home se s tse f a you need o s
ook
acre m VLS
13358-369 EVERGREEN RD 3
13377 GREATER STARTER bed m B oadmo e M ob e I orne
HOME o nvestment p ope y &amp; Loa Range Ret g We!! he &amp;
Th s love y wo bed oom one ana Orye E ec Heat &amp; CA Deck &amp;
one half ba h cottage would be Ou bu d ng $28 000
JU&amp;I gh as a s arte o et remen 13017 LARGE FLOO R PLAN
home W th an eat n k. !chen and Loca ad n he cty on a que
I v ng oom
s us &amp;nough see 4 BAs :212 baths 6
space P ced to sel at $37 500
roams
th s
home
can
accommoda e
two
tam es
Ca today th s one won ast ong
V gna4466806

1990 Dodge G and Caravan AJC

1994 Chevy Silve ado 2500 3 4
To n 4!14 350 Auto 40K Loaded
Excelen CorKiton $13900 740
446 3372

Bta ck be es
740 992 6858

i:O!Ciil'ED

13387 La ge home rn town new

au1oma lc

Ouoleslor Supplloo
12 1985 Ford F7M TK
Eastern LOCI I School SN 1FOPK 74N4 FVA72091
Dlelrlc:1 50008 State Rout e
SN
13 1975 FORD TK
681 RH&lt;Iovtllo Ohio 45772 F91 LVX2988 1
Ia accepting quolea lor
14 1966 Fontaln Semi
lunchroom
and
LowbedTraller SN7627
lreneportatlon auppllaa lor
15 1968 5 Ton Kaloer
llocal
you
2001
!Jeep Truck 8 Cyl
SN
Spoclllcatlone lor IUI!I!Iioa j osEI983 1oc 1241 22Ja
can bo obtained by calling
Duty Forklift SN
16 H
lhotroaaur~~r s office o1 740- 1 91177
867 3319 Quolea will be
17 196 B Kaiser cargo
opened In the t reaeurer •
Truck SN 022522597
office al noon on Tuesday
18 1985 Chevrolet cargo
Augusl 1 2000 Tho board Tr u c k
N
roaorvao lho right 10 relecl 1GCGD34J9GF313272
any or any port of the
19
1976 Oodge Pickup
quollo Quotoa should be Truck SN 24 BE75051Ja
labeled
Ouoteo
lor
20 1978 Dodge Pickup
0 r
Lunch r o 0 m
Truck SNW26BE85212118
Tronaporlltlon Suppllea
21 Joh oeere Front End
and mailed lo
Loader
n
Eaolern Local School
hman 3 wheel
22
2
Dlstrtcl
us

c

WATERPROOFING
Uncond t ona I fet me gua antee

FM CD 72 COO m Its $5 800

Fa 'f1'1S (304)895 37401895 3789

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

1991 Fa d F 150 XLT Package

$37 500

$454 99 fa

Home

'--...__

UNLIMITED POTENTIAL c NO LAND
RESTRICTIONS

4 Cyfinder $800 74H46-1062

Tobacco Pans
Now ak ng o ae s to h s Sp ng
F s 0 de s w Gua an ee Best&amp;
Ea est
Pan s
Oewnu st

730 Vans

r

co.

810

$ 600 740-992~3

Public Notice

w

SERVICES

1979 Dodge 150 pickup low
m es one owne goOd condition

13388 CITY LOT on V ne St
Ca VLS 446 6806

sp

Barb Blamer &amp; Dan Wuebaugh

COMMERCIAL CORNER LOT
AND BDLG FOR SALE 3 d

IN

George Law...,.,.
Collocllon Ollleer
Homo National Bank
(7) 17 18 19 20 21 23 24
25 26 2710TC

720 Trucks for Sale

19372 SA 554

BEAUTIFUL

13372 INVESTMENT OR MOVE

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Horne Nellonal Bank
haa a mobile home on
approxlmolely ..,.hall (1/2)
..,. lollor oale In Roctnv
Information lor the price
ond to view p ropeny call
1148-2210 and aak lor G~

Sadd obags $3600 (30 4)576
4033

05 4 0 1740)367 7242

pu chased 24x24 ba n ~;:llip;l,i;
fo hO ses and cows ,.
C y Schoas Dent et hs

All STEEL BU IL D NGS

1999 Suzuki Savage LS 650
New W ndsh eld New l eather

1986 Dodge Ram Van 740 245
9189

VACANT Comes w h 3 bed ooms
LAND
o utu e home s e 7 oom eat n k tchen and
acres M L on State Route 554 1 vng oom Lawnn ~~s;::~&lt;;a~,~~
mle f om leeway at Ao Gande wn chde ns p
A so has
leve to o ng e an es ICed c ubhouse
$7500 pe ace d ve by and outbu d ng Cal today
gone tomo row $58 000
v ew th s ova y p openy GB

13375

$3 iiOO 140~8

1985 Chevy S 10 4K4 Body Fa
Runs Good $800 740 441.0382

Real Estate General

26x30 Was $6 990 Sel $3 990
40x58 Was $ 3 920 Se 1 $6 800
50x90 Was $22 480
Se
$ 0 250 Tom 800 388 5314

340

RUNS LIKE A TOPI 1992 ~Or
Bu eM Rega GS V 6 3 8 l l e
loaded Powe Everyth ng Spo
er Nice Wheels H ghar M leage
S
l ooks Good Too 74 0 446
3363 740 44 -()6.48

Building
Supplies

I

shop ct
Ad onng
Home

t998 Yamaha Banshee Good
Cor&lt;ln~n

OUR WEB PAGE S www v sm h com

LOTS LAND
COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
1873 REDUCED PRICE 17
ac es close to new Fwy hospila

Wiseman Real Estate, Inc.
(740) 446-3644

WE FINANCE MOBILE HOMES
CONSECO FINANCE 1 800 895-

'

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
GAIL BELV LLE
TRISH SNYDER
JOHNNIE RUSSELL
DAVID SNYDER

500 Vu can 4500
m les $2950 080 &amp; 1995 Kawa
sak BOO Vulcan 2000 m es
$4450 080 8o h 8KCellenl cood
liOn cal 740 949 2181

356

C ed P oblems OK E11e n
Tu ned Down Be o e Reestab sh
You C ed 1 800 659 0359

1

New 6 W de 3 o 4 Bed oom
$600 Down $24~ pe Month Free

1 4 For An Open Hou•• &amp;
L1nd n Me Qs Co Take State
Roue 33 Sou h To Sta e Rou e
68 Ea st Fe 6 3 M es Turn Lett
On o WooCis Ad And Left Onto
Ca Ad V ew Th s Spectacu a
Ho me And P oce y 0 P ck Up
Maps Fo P opert es Now Avail
able In Ross Jat:kson Me gs
GaIa Alld Sc o o Coun est We
Be Happy To D scuu Your
0 eam local on And F nanc ng
Op ons Maps Fo A.ny Of Ou
Greal Home S es 0 Rec 881 ona
Pa ce s Can Be Ma ed So Stop
8y 0 GveUsACa

WANT A COMPUTER???? BUT

448 8101

•1994 Kawasak

NEED CASH? LOAN BY PHONE
$200 5500 lmmed ate y Trans
ferred Into Your Check ng Ac
count We Want Your Bus ness
Ca Anytme
www cashreserve net

Public Notice

Public Notice

1986 CABO Good Pla&amp; t c W th
Decals Runs Good $600 OBO
t40-.... 2090

0 6all Cash Reserve 1 888 913

740 446 3409

Qua ity bu t A B ck Coun ry
Es ate 4 Bed ooms 3 I 2 Baths
Mas e
Bed oom
w Jacuzz
ce ng tans coppe p umb ng
wak n cosets Fame dnng
oom lam y oom w h wood
ou n ng I eplace enc osed back
pa o Che ry cabine s n he
k tohen a so a ba and pantry
cherry woodwo k h ough out
C ty Schoo s 2 Ut ty roo ms Fu I
basement
w th
wo kbench
Ande son w ndows 2 ca garage
w/8 nsu ated doors 2 ac es MJL
plu s mo e acreage ava table If
supe
cons rue on
pus
a
beaut fu y panned home with
ooms
pr ced
13352 NEW LUXURY WHITE spacious
BRICK
HOME
under easonab e s appeal ng to you
canst uc on
Loca ed n a pease do no delay n mak ng an
w th
L
prest g ous a ea n Green Twp 5 appo ntmen
mn rom Hazer Hospta
5 Sm lh 446; ·.481J2/'146 ··68C~ .
bedrms 4 baths Fo mal entry
w/sky ght &amp; cathed a ce ng
d n ng m v ng rm can ....en ent
kt
oa~
cab nets
1st
too
laundry Master su te on 1s floor
nc ud ng a supe bath m &amp;
c oset 4 Bed ms 2 baths on 2nd
13355
LOG HOME
f oar 24 x24 lam ly m app ox WITH CHARACTER f you Ke
4 000 sq ft Beautlu 3 ace M l ndvduaty hee t s 3029 sq
rav ned ot and ve s eam
I ft moeo ess 3bedms 212
wou d be
to show bahs Kt LAm Offce m and
much moe Waopochfont&amp;2
sdes 167 Aces m I Ro ng
Pasue and 3 Lage Bans &amp;
Feed Lot s tes 2 n ce ponds Land
s most a I clean &amp; has some
tenc ng E ect c &amp; f os f ee water
n the ban Feed ot s tes
13387
PERFECT FOR THE Fo me y used to Yea calf
FAMILY A so conven ent o mos ope a on Located nea A o
everyth ng
S o es Schoo s G ande Appo ntment On v Ca I
Hasp ta
Cus om
bu t
3 v gna l Sm h 7404466806
bed ooms 3 baths v ng oom $335 000
din ng
room
&amp;
k tohen
w app ances basemen w an N3373 Don I et th s one
999 Norr s 6xBO mar1ula,:1ured
apartment kitchen I v ng oom home St on a
ace
bath Front &amp; ea deck 2 ca
AceAd 1m eoff160
anached ga age A most 4 ac es has a he upg ades
of pa k ke g ounds w th s ocked
cabne s cape Mas e B~:~':.:j~
pond &amp; gazebo VLS
has Ga den Tub and ~

13384

BRUNER LAND
74().441 1491

wooa

VIFIOINIA SMITH BROKER

Motorcycles

1987 Ford Ranger Red 4 Spetd

Stove Maae B"Y USA
S eve Company G ass Doo
G ea Shape 3 Yd s 0 d $75

r/mdl til

736 3409

New 3 BR 2 BA Ooub ew de
$300 Down $245 Pe Month
Free Del very 888 928 3426

Tobacc o S cks 740

NO CASH ? MMX TECH NOLO
GY We F nance 0 Down Pas

·--. •~··

Ap p ances

A &amp; s• 1 1 888 928 3426

1083

.-

AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Buy Fa c o y D eel
Exce enl Se v ce
Flex ble F nanc ng Ava able

4254 After 5 P.M

1989 M sub sh Ga an C ean In
s de &amp; Ou looks &amp; Runs Good
$1 750 NegOHab te 7 40 44

Wale I ne Spec a
$2 95 Pe 100
$37 00 Pe 00 A B ass Com
pre5510n F tt ngs n 5 ock
RON EVANS ENTE RPRISES
Jackson Ohio 1 BOO 537 9528

NY 4225

13385 IMMEDIATE POSSESS ON
MINT CONDITION 092 Sunset
Dr Galpo s Great 3 SA I Bah
B ck Ranch w th fu basement
Ca port w h s o age oom cen a
bedrooms 2 s ory
18 x30 0 n ng oom 1 2 baths a r gas hea new ca pet and pa nt
h ougtlOut
N ce
back ya d
some hardwood f oo 9 new oof
cove ed
po ch
basement &amp; copper p umb ng new e ect c
b ea~e bolt and w ng n house
ga age Reduced $89 000
Ul ty oom n basement One of
today s best buys at $91 500
Great Ne1Qhbo hood Ca Johnn e
at367 0323

ca

Smal House 1 M te Nor h 01 Ad
d son $250 Mo Pu s Ut ill es
Dep os it Fle leren ces No Pe s

446-6806

ment Bank F nance Only At Oa k
wood In Ba boursv le WV 304

6777

Bennells He a ng &amp; Coo ng 1
800 B72 5967 www o vbcom/ben
nen

Real Estate General

cy~ (jf.

Fo a Trac o nar ow I on
I ve powe sp n ou whee l
good $2600 (304 882 2695
SPM

740

710 Autos for Sale

710 Autos for Sale

Was he $95 D ye $95 Ran ge
$95 Ae ge al o $ 25 F eeze
Chest Type $ 50 Washe &amp; 0 y
a Se $40 0
Yea Wa any
Skaggs App ances 76 v ne
S ee1 Gat po s 740 446 7398
I 8888 80128

Sawm 1 $3 795 Saw ogs In o
Boa ds P anks Beams La ge
Capac ly Bes Sawm Va ue An
ywhe e FREE tnlorma on 1 800
576 1363 NORWOOD SAW
M LL S 252 Sonw I D ve Buffa o

On V ny Sk rl ng Doo s W nO
ows Ancno s Water Heaters
Plumb ng &amp; Elect ca Pa ts Fu
n01ces &amp; Heat Pu mps Be nnetts
Mob e Home Supp y 740 446
94 6 www orvb comlben nen

"Li m te d 0 No C edl1? Govern

28x52 DoubleW de $500 Down
Take ova paymen s 800 69 1

Tappan H Ef c en cy 90,.. Gas
Fu naces 0 Fu naces 2 See
Hea Pump &amp; A Cond on ng
Sy s ems Free 8 Year Wa anty

(304)675 433

Huge nvento y 0 scounl Pr ces

960
end
uns
a e

Fo Sale
245 512

RESIDENTIAL HOME OWNERS

MOBILE HOME OWNERS

958 Clark Chape Ad

Needed

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent

GOOD CREDIT
BAD CREDIT
NOCREDITI

Match ng Ve
And Cr no ne
Neve wonSze o AGea Buy
For 5300 740 446-1741

15 Cou t St eat Gal pols Ve y
Nice 2 Sed ooms 1 1 2 Baths
Comp ate K tche n 011 S ee
Pa king Nice V ew Of Pa k A.nd
R ver Walk Downtown $545 Mo
Plus Ut It es Oepos References
RflCIU I!KI 74Q-446 4926

Pi 0 1 Program Rente

1913 Allo 4 PM

A f ed Ange o Wedd ng Gown

800-319 3323 Ell 709

74()-286 2094 740-643-0830

Tre ler For Sa • 1989 14x70 Roy
al By Lake 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Extrasl $10 500 Call 740 U1

METAL BU ILDING S Does You
Deale sh p Not Wok For You ?

NEW BRAND NAME COMPUT
ERS
A mos t Eve yone Ap
proveCI W h $0 Down Low
Mon tHy Paymen s
aoo 617
3476 Ex 330

Bas

House In Country Ready Now
Oepos t &amp; Referen ces 740 379
2209 Attar 6 PM

740 367 7131

3521

Queen S ze Wale bed L ghleel
S 11 0 awe s M o Head boa d
P ce $225 740 256 495

i&gt;unbav &lt;rnnrs SS&gt;rnunrl • Page 05

Pomeroy • Mlddlepott • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV
610 Farm Equipment

Super Tw n Ca Wate bed Red
No Matt ess $50 Reg ula Tw n
Ca Wate bed Rea No Ma ess
$40 Sw ng Se Ou side $50 304
675 749 740 446 0990

Pole

We I Ma n a ned Cozy Home 3
Bedrooms 1 Batn G eat Town
ship Hilltop Dr ve + 1 Ac e Lot
G eay Buy Won 1 L ast Long I

1985 14x 70 3 Bedrooms Good
Shape $10 SOO Cat Altar 6 PM

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Mu ray G s 26
nch 8 ke
Coas1e B aMes Heavy Du y T es
5 w de Sea L ke New $40 740
446 3988

deale Gas G I Tw o 55 Ga on
Oak Wh skey Ba e s 740 446

540 Miscellaneous
Merchonalse

0437

This wll not
knowingly accept

ldver11...,_, for real
wMich lain violation o1 the
law OUr reacte,. are hereby
lnformed1hoi all dwellings
actv~ In th 1 nftlpaper
are avdabte on an equal

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

•

304 562 5&amp;40

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Oh1o • Point Pleasant, WV

enla

nformat on

61 Court Street Located on the corne

17 Cindy Lane G een Townsh p ho me
lot of 3rd and Court th1s com me c a ofle s 4 BRs 2 ba hs A FA k tchen
bu d ng offers a tolal of 9 060 sq. ft of wth agednngaea pa ow habove
po1on1a Pnced at $81 500 1620
g ound poo a d n ce eve ot w th
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - fenced n a ea a he k ds or pets
NEW LISTING Commerc at ot located $69 900 •6o2s
next to Oh o Ave Plaza w th approx
140 ft of roa d frontage on Eestem
Avenue Pnced at $ 00 000 Ca I for
d~ta ts 1821

NEW USTING How Does a L ttle Gel
Away Place with good access a 1lsh ng
n the Oh o Ave sound~ That s ust
what the p operty toca1ed at 35 Hanove
Street C own C ty has to offer p us
qu et ~acefu sett ng LA eat n
k tchen 2 BAs
bath and pnced at

on y $23 000 1808
u

nc ude

pond

$245 000 #132

an d

eek

~·s

'U "('""

Before lookmg for your New Address, Check out ours at

www .wisemanrealestate.com
David Wiseman ORI CRS Broker 446-9555
Carolyn Waseh 441-1007
Sonny Garnes 446 2702
Robert Bruce 446-{)621
Rita Wiseman 446-9555

nltSl

OPi"'FI UN T'l'

(740) 446-3644

�Page D6 • lhnba!' tlimri-&amp;rntintl

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Pomeroy • MlddltJJOrt • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasan\, WV

• Sunday, July 23, 2000

Lack of rain brings weeds, insects to Midwest farms
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) A
Plains drought has dried up soil,
stunted corn stalks, helped more
weeds grow in COl'nfields and .
brought on a particularly destructive corn crop msect.
Several farmers have complained that their herbiCides are
not working as well this year,
causing more weeds, said Steve
Gramlich, Umversiry of Nebraska-Lincoln Cooperative Extension Educator m North Platte.
Some western Nebraska farms
are being hit hard Wtth the west-

ern bean cutworm -an aggresSJVe insect that can destroy corn.
For many f:trmers. the weeds
and the onsfaught Of the cutworm have just added to prob!ems brought on by a drought
that has reduced ytelds and
tncreased costs.
The western bean cutworm,
whtch thnvi:s in dry weather and
sandy sotls, usually ts found in
Nebraska west of North Platte.
But this ·year tt has shown up tn
large numbers at least 150 1111les
further east, near Aurora and

north into Plainview.
Byron Hoch, who farms near
Bertrand, said he had to spray his
several thousand ~cres of corn for
the bug for the first time in the 26
years he's been farming.
The spraying limited the damage to his crops, but was another
cost in a tough year.
"We had to throw another
unexpected expense at the corn
crop," he said. "That western bean
curworm- you can lose a third
of a crop in a hurry.
"It's been a triple whammy

this year. Nothing works."

•••

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
farmers group says major changes
in federal farm policy being
pushed by two R epublican lawmakers are inadequate.
The Rural Amenca Prospenry
Act offers to help farmers by
allowing them to fully deduct the
com of thetr h eath ca re; to
exclude from 'the capital gams rax
$500,000 from the sale of a farm
or pnmary residen ce; and c hange

some other business tax provisions .
"We must do more to bring
prosperity to America's farms,
ranches and rural communittes,"
said one of thf bill's sponsor.;,
Rep. John Boe hne_r, R - Ohio.
Nattonal Farm ers Union Presiden t Leland Swenson said the
lcgtslattori introduced Wednesday
by Boehner and Sen. Richard
Lugar of lndtan'a, the R epublican
chammn of the Senate Agn culture , Nutntion , and Forestry
Comnuttee, failed to offer the

Public Notice

t&gt;oC.foJZ. ANYI'ftof!.f;, W6 'flE
o\11' Cf folt-GT PA PI'~.

0

. landocaplng/palntlng and
'-"clng Improvement..
cue
12City
or
Galllpolla, City BuildingPark and Recreation
Facllltloa Improvement• ·1n
· tho Hlotorlc Dlatrlct to
Include p.orlc bench111, lraah
rocopt1clea ond peat
· controla devlcea.
Cue
13City
of
Qalllpollo, Clly Building. Repair exl1tlng brick lined
aid-Ike.
C111 14- Ru1oe11 Wood,
· 348
Second
Avenu•
Replace awning on front of
building In • Hlatorlc

c

~

Public Notice

· Court Street, dealree

"'

Mlddtepon

PARK STREET- A 2 story home on a corner lot Has 3
bedrooms. 1 bath, dinmg room, kitchen and living room . Has
2 older fireplaces, 2 porches and a newer furnace.
$25,000.00
RIEBEL ROAD ·This 3.372 acres is just what you have been
looking for to build your dream home on. Water and electrtc

available . Flat to rollrng landscapes.

$15,000.00

BEECH STREET • A charming 1 1/2 s1ory home with one
bedroom upstairs 1hat has been remodeled recently and has
lots of storage and closet space Downstairs there are 2
bedrooms, dining room, living room, kitchen, and ba1h . Has a
lot that is approx. 50 x 112.

a

$37,900.00

-

Well-llUIIt

newer

Henry E. Cleland Jr ..............

........................... _, 992-2259

Island. $118,1500-!10
USTlNG • Fleclne - Onll Pomeroy - Vance Rd. Brick home
lot on a dead-end country wtth 1uH basemen1 pare1!cally
COuld be a n.ce :get-a-way" finished . 18.5 acres m/1. LR.
or nice ret.rernent home.
1 home offers many extras.
kitchen area, BR. bath.
!~:;~'· ~~·;;;.enclosed porch Being

. $35,000.00

kitchen

w/FP,

w/applianees,

Attached

&amp;

DR,

pool

Gas.

Middleport - PRICE DAAST1CALLY REDUCED Beautiful Victorian
type home w/12 acres m{l Many more extras Included .with this home.
For further inlorma110n or to view this home call us nght away. This
ho'"e has been reduced greatly! NOW ONLY $117,000

FTC announces
Toysmart.com deal

'

''
•
•'
~

WASHINGTON (AP) - Owners of defunct
; . Toysmart.com can sell its customer list, but o nly if
the buyer abides by the terms of the Web site's pri• · yacy policy, the Federal Trade Commission said Fri: day in announcing a settlement with the e-compa•.
' ny.
: In a co mplaint filed earlier this month in U.S. Dis~ trier Court in Boston. the FTC said Toysmart's proposed sale of its customer list violated its own assuri ances to customers that their regi stered informatio n
: would "neve r be shared with a third party." Under
: the complaint, the FTC co uld have asked a bankruptcy Judg~ to bloclc_ the sal&lt;:_ gf the compmy's

r

.

l

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

~

-UNDER

asse ts.

~

Sherr! L. Hart ......... 742·2357

FA

Detached

garages, 20M.40 inground
w,lfenced poolhouse. Free
Mineral Rights . $152,000.00

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Online retaihng is
not looking all that attra ctive these days - unless
: you're shopping for busmesses at fire sale pri ces.
~ With their bank accounts dwindling almost as
: rapidly as the1r stock prices, some Internet mer~ chants are sellmg thetr companies at sharp discounts
that would have been mcon ceivable just a year ago.
In the latest example of this emerging trend, Germ an multimedia giant Bertelsmann AG said Thursday it wiU buy CD Now Inc. for $117 million- an
,80 perce nt markdown from the musi c e-tailer's valuation in a February 1998 initial public offering.

!

!

to

;

Burger Kine franchise
owners fighting plan

RUTLAND STREET - A large 2 story home with 3 bedrooms,

2 baths, a dining room , living room, kitchen Snd a full

OFFICE

992-2259

basement Has a lron1 porch and upper balcony to watch the
Ohio River go by.
Make Us An Offer I $42,900.00
UNBELIEVABLE VIEW -

Sitting atop Riverview Drive is this

one story home that has a su nken living room w1th a big
beautiful white stone fireplace and glass all the way to the top

of the ca1hedral ceiling. Has 5 bedrooms. 3 baths. family

PRICE REDUCED- Middleport- N1ce 4 BA home located on a corner
lot near the c1ty park, LA. bath. kit w/appl In excellent move In

room, d1mng area, and

a

MIAMI (AP) Independent Burger King
: restaurant operators want to block plans by th e
l British parent Diageo to spin off 20 percent of the

car attached ga,age. 2

dealrel

systems,

· to lnotall new algn and

lighting to extertor of
· building In a Historic

2 5 ac res,

paved

We Ha"'~ Many ft.lo re Lielingel CaD u. Today
or Sec Our Web Page At hayeareMlc•tate.cum

ll~==============------1

~~~~~~A~Iog~h~o~m~e

plus 2 acres on
SR 7 near Chesler. Eastern Local School
D istrict. This one c ould be commerc ial,

••

a

great location lor a bus1ness Lot sol parking
and yard space. 1 1/2 S1ory log cabin. wood
lnter~or, 2 bedrooms, loft area. Front s1tting
porch and landscaped . Like new condition .
ASKING $15,000

LEADING CREEK RD. - A one s1ory home wi th 3 to 4

Real Estate General

bedrooms , dining room, 2 baths, living room and kitchen
Totally gutted 1ns1de and all new walls , ceilings e:tnd some
new floo rs A lso has a 3 car garage with storage above..
Sitting o n a 1.7 acre corner lot. Also has free gas.

NOW $7S,OOO.OO

CANT BE DONEII

RACINE- Racine needs a bed &amp; break1ast
and this is the perfect house for ~ . Just fill it
wi1h antiques and have a showplace. Four 1pteriiilul
bedn:&gt;oms , 2 fireplaces , pocket doors, great
woodwork, ante has a windows watch tower, IN THE COUNTRY· 82+ acres of ground,
full basement, garage &amp; carport, landscaped some pasture , balan ce m w oods Some
yard A great corner lot, own from street to
fencing. Farm or hunting ground . ASKING
street ASKING .~!,!)ClO
$75,000

Located along one of the busiest highways n. southeastern
Ohio. Close to McDonald·s. Several tracts to consider. Some
with good road frontage along Eastern Ave. (SR 7) and some
with frontage on side strEEts. Prlc&amp;S and lot sizes vary so
call tor more Information.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
(7 40) 446-3644

ful l basem ent, and an atttc that could be a fourth bedroom or
storage Has a front and rear porch, and needs an owner..

$30,000.00
ba lhs, livtng room , equipped built-in Kitchen,
den, wet bar, laundry, large blo cK 2 ca r

garage, 1 workshop Sheds for storage . Good

CANT BE DONE!

COMMERCIAL GROUND FOR SALE

SOUTH SECOND • An older home wi1h 3 bedrooms . 1 be1h,

MIDDLEPORT· Close to town on Bradbury
Road REally good conditiO n 3 bedrooms, 2

Go out and find a piece of ground In town. or even clOSE to
town. and build a 4700 square foot block building with ovEr
6400 square feet of floor space for less than $60.000.
So don't !;lass up this opportunity to buy this bargain with
multiplE usEs for only $42.500. High garage d9or will
accommodate boats. campers. RVs and just about anything
you can think of. Or open up a business. Or rent some or all
of the space out. Do what you want. but don't let this grEat
opportunity pass you byl Call Dave for more Info.

!

1

landscaping, a nice home, ready to move 1nto,
17 years o ld, on a la rge lot with room to roam .

Call for your show1ng ASKING $74,900
VANCE ROAD- Quiet cou n1ry loca11on . Two,
1970 model mobile homes ApproXImately 1
e)(ecutlve subdiviston - designed for horse 1/2 acre each . Septics and TPO water
lovers &amp; boa1ersl You won't believe the Homes a're newly patnted and new carpet and
fea1ures. Access 1o the beaut~ul Ohio for boat vinyl floon ng. Front and rear porches. 2
lovers, tOO ' boat dock, riding ring , picn1c bedrooms, bath, kitchen appliances tncluded
shelter, riding trai ls &amp; much more Certam Package deal or sate separately. CALL FOR
restrictions apply. Lot pnces &amp; acreage vary MORE DETAILS.
according to 1he particular amenities Lot #5 2. 740 acres plus ehare Lot H12 . Land- RUTLAND- lmmedla1e possession! Located
$6.000. lmprovemen1s • $7,000, Maintenance on SA 124, before entering Rulland, a tn -level
Fill'1d· $3,000· Price for Lot 115- $25,000 plus home w11h 3 bedrooms. 1 314 baths, family
Lot 1112 share.
room, kttchen, dining , ltvmg room . attached 1
PORTLAND- BUFFINGTON LANDING- An

car garage , detached garage , public septic .

MIDDlfPORT· Vacan1 corner lo1 loca1ed on Good well wrlh Leadrng Creek wa ter
2itd Street, public water and electric available . avarlable. Level lot, very spac1ous. REDUCED
Immediate possession! Per1ect home site or TO $55,000
movile home site. ASKING $17,000

LIST WITH CLELAND RELTY, INC. AND SEE THE RESULTS!!

POMEROY PIKE- On the corner of
Drive is 1hls one
story home tha1 has been completely remod eled and has 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, a nd a dining room A lso h as an enclosed
front porch, newer detached carport, and storage bu1ld1ngs
All of this sitting ,on approx 1 acre nice tot.

NOW $48,000.00
OAK GROVE ROAD - If you want almost an acre just
dutside of town, c heck th is home out It has 2 bedrooms, "'
newer pretty bath, pocket doors, and a par1 basement Has a
nice rear and front porch, 1 car garage, and a storage
~uilding
NOW $50,000 .00

DOTIIE TURNER, Broker................ .......... 992-5692
JERRY SPRADLING .................................. 949-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING ........................... 949-2131
BETTY JO COLLIN$ ............................... .... 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ..................................... 992-1444
0FFICE ........................................................ 992-2886

'·

Euaoe4-- ~ ie~
~~~

514 Second Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994
'
740-446-0008
740-441-llll
1

Virginia company wants
to merges with drkoop.com
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - A Virgima company that
sells medical equipment and provides onlin e health
news said Friday it has offered to m erge with ailing
drkoop.com In c.
MillenniumHealth Communicati ons Inc. , based
in Reston ,Va., would not disclose details of its offer.
H owever, drkoop.com · satd in a statement that the
offer was a stock- for-stock transaction; a spokeswoman declined to elaborate.
The statement said drkoop.com wo uld consider
the offer.

Agilent shares plunge
on eamings report

evansmoo@zoomnet .net
Sarah L. Evana-Moore
Patricia Hays- 446-3884
cars Csaey-245-9430

.,

Gt
--

I
Owner NHda Offlrl Known the
world over as the SII'Jer Dollar
A uct1o n Hous e, thts historic
landmark offers retail space.
rental income and storage.
Includes 2 BR house next door.
Ca l l for detail s
PRICE

REDUCED!

t1ot0 PRICE REDUCED!

1'1032 Went the Convenience or
living In-town AND 1peclou•
living eccommodatlonl? Then
th is is the house for you ! With
atmosr 4,000 square feet oll1ving
space, wh ic h include s 6
bedroom s and 4 baths, this home
rests on an oversized corner lot
located in Gallipolis near schools,
shopping , churc hes and the c•ty
parK. This home has beaut1ful
o ngm al hardw oo d floormg
accented wit h custom crafted
mantel pieces m the large rooms.
As a bonus enjoy the spac1ous
sunroom for comfort year around.

Sears posts 17 percent
inaease in profits
CHICAGO (AP) Sears, Roebuck and Co.
shrugged off another sluggtsh quarter for clothmg
sales to post a 17 percent increase in profits, citing
solid results in appliances, electronics and tts credit
business.
Friday's report surpassed Wall Street's expectatio ns
for Hoffman Estates, Ill-based Sears, which is the
nation 's No. 2 retailer behind Wal- Mart Stores and
tryin g to stave off Home Depot to remain the top
appliance sell er.

11088 Conomorrclol Property! :1
located 1n the i
Grande, thiS invrestrnerit propeny
has many possibilities
commercial rental units
res1dent1al unit that could dOtJbie•l
as a man ager's home. This '
property nas potential! All with
I
extra frontage for expansiOn.
for additional information.

$100,000

.

..

ru
~
d;~ "''

.

.

...

,.'

~

--

'"" ''

'k '

.

11051 The anawtr to all our
drtem• and within your
meaner Many possibilitieS with
th1 s beaut1ful 2 story home II
offers 3 BR 1 BA , LA w/f1replace,
DR ,
hardwood
tloon ng ,
remodeled kitchen, enclosed
back porch $58,000

11098 Elegent ln-lo•rn

and
sq ft of
and

a

28x40

ldelrochroc block-shop. Call todsy
to l1nd out add1honal deta ils.

$78,800
12003 If elbow room 11 what
you want In 1 neighborhood

I0111ng .•

rlherl Th&gt;S

h on over a
~es that

3BR and
half acr
tnclude
I

~
kitche~~

m and
e sun
room
onu s IS the
hardw
oonng throughout
most of the over 1500 square feet
of 11vmg area and an attached
carport w1th enc losed storage.
Don 't miSS thiS rare Cheshire
commun1ty

Buckeye State residents beware:
Insurance rates may be on rise

can be found m lh1 s 4 BA 2
BA two story colon1al style home
Outs1de a beautifully landscaped
entry lea ds to a tastefully
decorated formal living room and
d ining room . Just off the dtnmg
room IS an equ1pped kitchen and
fa m1ly room combination w1th a
cozv firep lace complementi ng 1ts
homey feeling. With a one car
de tached garage and the extra
storage space of the full tlasernent
In town 11VIng-lsqus1 a pho ne call
away.
N2005 Immaculate Bri ck Ranch
w1th 2 bedrooms, one bat h, large
l1v1ng &amp; d1n 1ng room. eat -In
k1tche n, oversized one ca r
attac hed garage, one car
detached ga rage AND add1110na1
1n-law quarters with 2 bedrooms
one bath, kitchen, hv1ng room w1th
carport. Th1s house IS a steal! Call
CU1oklyl

..

...
-.

.

"''

~ ,..

-

-~~
I

i

..

.

·
3 bedroom,
one
bath
eat-10 k1tchen,
elecir 1c
pump w/central a 1r,
front and s1de deck and several
frUit trees all on 1 2' acre m(l lot
Th1s home has never been lived 1n
and IS ready for you to JUSt move
in $75,000.

.

..

.
, '"'
12017 NEW LISTING! To 1ee Ia
.' -..;
to agreel! Th1s mellow 3 bedroom,
•
1 bath home has been beautifully
!ll!ll!
,.,
-~t%
• ;kN&gt;l~ii"i...-kept anD has a light and a1ry bnck
slylmg LR, eat-m-kllchen, 2 car
M2022 IF MORE SPA CE IS
A REAL FIND PRI CED at WHAT
YOU
WANT... THEN
~..

·: GALL QUICKLY BEFORE
l s9ii.ooo
' GONE

one

end lft the
l :~~:,ahtlp pey yOur martglgtl
2
11ory house with 3 bedrooms and
1 ~ath And a mobile home with .:1
bedroom• and 1 bath all set up
and ready to go Call for details

.

..

"- ,.

1
M2008 Beautiful I lmmaculatel 4
Bedroom, 4 Bath ranch home
r•n c h
with f1ntsh~~c.t Converted beeutlful aetting clo1e to
ga~age c9~~\itJi:iy room You' ll find oversized
or an ieiJ!fiJBn~~
Lovely plush floor covenngs In the !1
mod
cads of room, 3 bedrooms &amp; 2 full
1' re
Walk out Of the fully eqcr ir~&gt;pad;
cabme
and pantry Roya 1 k1tchen to a picturesque
SUi te has walk·m closet, garden
tub bath. fireplace &amp; entry to patio
m backyard living room with
f1reptace Gas heat. central air,
AEP, c1ty school. Owner wants thts
sold nowl $114,900

12009 Gel 3 for 1 1 Elegant Home ,
Luxunous Backyar d Pnvacy and
In-Town Convemences at11 n ONE
package! Beauhful hardwood
flooring, custom draperies ~nd
ongmal mantles adorn the InSide
wh1 le outs1d e lovely flowe rs
surround the sparkling waters of
the in-ground sw1mm1ng pool If
you like the convenience of 1tv1ng
m·town you must see this homel

Ohioam paid au average o.f $641 for auto1
insurance in 1998, an amount $1J6 less
tlran the 11ational at,erage, according to a
study by the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners. Tire state's m,e,·age annual auto premium rauked 42ud
amoug tile 50 states. Nell' Jersey had the
highest avera.i?e premium at $1,306.
perc ent on April 17. But the same
company's Oluo homeo,vner&gt;
msurance rates have gone up m
each of the past three years.
mcludmg I p ercent tim summer.
said State Farm spokesmar1 Brian
M aze.
Nationwide increased II&gt; Oluo
auto rates 5 percent on Apnl 15
after two years of decreases.
Hom eowners prices went up 5.8
percent on June 16.
Ohio's homeowners rates are
the second-lowest in the natton .
Only Wisconsin's are lower.
"Homeowners rates have been
gradually rising, but rates are
invisible to most people because
they are hidden 111 their e·scrow
account," said Ray Niswander,
assistant vice president of Columbus-based Grange Insurance.
"Some companies bid down
auto rates as low as they could go
the last several years," Niswander
said. "Now, there's a trend slightly
..
upwa rd .

A

LOT bigger thin It loakll
Vacant land 1n town is hard to find
so take a took at this lot located
just a couple blocks trom the C1ty
Park with over 8,000 square teet
of level land . Utilities already -1075 EICIPt tht huatle &amp;
bultle In thll dra~m hamel Th is
present on the property
home oners 3 BR, 2 BA, LR, eat·
in kitchen , fimahed basement and
2 car garage all on a 2 723 acre
corner lot in A10 Grande area.
Ready and waiti ng for you at

$109,800.

Stocks dip as investors
review corporate eamings
Stocks dropped Friday as investors took profits
and digested some disappointing corporate earnings. Investors were taking a breather after Thursday's strong rally, which was sparked by encouraging
remarks about the economy from' Federal Reserve
C hairman Alan Greenspan.
----- The Dow Jones industrial average fell 11 0.3 1 to
10,733.56. For the week, the Dow lost 79.19, and
the Nasdaq composit e index lost 90. t1 to 4,094.45.
Crude oil prices took a po unding Friday, fallin g 4
percent anud mcreasing stgns th at new o utput from
Sa udi Arabia is about to hit th e world market. •
In other markets, copper rose to a six-month htgh
and palladium jumped to a fi ve-mon t~h.

www.evans -moore.com

For,nerly Blac kburn R ea lty
uservira.s Southern Ohio l i'or
Over A. Quarter Century ..

11011 Commerclel Property.
1.6 acres m/1 located al the
Junction of SA 35 and SA 325
near Rio Grande
11012 Four Loti In Downtown
Go!llpollo? C111 for mort

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Shares of co mputer
products maker Agilent Technologies Inc. plunged
30 percent in early trading Friday after the company said its third-quarter earmngs would fall well
short of analysts' expectations.
Saying it was unable to keep up with demand for
its products, Agilent said it expects its earnings for
the third quarter ending July 31 will fall well below
the consensus estimate of 35 cents per share.

• COLU MBUS (AP) - O h10 's
:· auto- and hom e- insurance rates
,: are amo ng the lowest in the
:- nation , but in dustry officials
: anticipate hi gher pnces.
;
Home-msurance rates are like: ly to begin increasing 3 percent
: to 5 percent per year in O hio
: beca use the industry has been los~ ing money on homeown ers
•• insurance for nearly a decade ,
'' msurance offiCials told The
'
: Columbus Dtspatch m a story
: published Friday.
,
Dan Kumn .er, manager of per- ht ghest average premtum at
: sonal auto lin es for the National s1,306.
: Association of Ind ependent
Comparable data for home! Insurers, predicted au to in su rance . owners tn 1997 showed Ohio's
! rates will mcrease 1.5 percent average homeow ner~ ms uran ce~
: nationally tlus year.
premium was S289, compared
That would match the recent with $934 for Flonda, where prerate of mcrease fo r Ohio.
llll ums were largest.
" Unfortunately. what's hapAuto rates decltned natiOnally
pening w1.th auto rates is it's in 1998 and 1999 for the first
becoming more expensive to fix tune m a quilrter-century. The
both people and cars," satd declines were 2.8 percent and 3.2
. Robert Har1:w1g. chief economist percent respectively, accordmg to
; at the Insurance Information Hartwig's figures .
Rates were lower be cause of
' Institute .
Ohio's insurance rates compare fewer and less-serious acciden~s.
~ favorably with those of most safety features such as air bags and
declines in the instan ces of
' states.
' Ohioans paid an average of drunken driving and auto theft.
: $641 for auto insurance in 1998, Trends such as the return to mfla: an amount $156 less than the tion on medical costs and a resur1national average, according to a gence in the cost of vehicle
'study by the National Association repairs are turning the tide this
year.
·of Insurance Commissioners.
State Farm Insurance has
The state's average annual auto
decreued
auto rates in Ohio the
premium ranked 42nd among the
' 50 states. New Jersey had the past three years, including 4 .9

Real Estate General

Real E8tate General

beaut1tul k 1tchen. There IS lots of

Now Re~ucod, A Muat See At $189,000.00

Living room,
D1ning Room ,
Addt'l Family
room, Oak Stairway
Windows, Insulated well.

fast-food maker and have hired Wall Street advisers
to help look for a privare third-parry buyer.
Diageo insisted Friday that it will stick with plans
announced in June for the partial sale on the New
York Stock Excha nge as "the option in the best
interests of our shareholders."
"Anythmg that leaves Diageo in control of any
part of this company is absolutely un acceptable,"
Julian Josephson, vice president of the Burger King
NatiOnal Franchi see Association. satd Fnday.
"frankly they have proven that they are not abl e to
manage this brand."
·

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

· ------------------------------~=---

storage, a 2 car garage and a security system .

and

____

COOLVILLE ROAD- Approx. 2 acres of land with a one story
home. Has 2 bedrooms. 1 1/2 ba1hs, large living room.
dinong room. and utrllty room. Also has a detached garage,
front porch and rear dock
$55,000.00

part basement, privacy fenced back yard , and IS Sitting on

on 3 many "EXTRAs• it is diHicutt to
FA name all of them . Hardwood
room floors. Privacy fenced heated pool
TwO w1th auto cover &amp; cleaner, 2 car
acres garage, 4 BR , 2 1/2 baths. Great
Family Rmt Kitchen w/appllancee

Dl I I
· HIstarIC I t r C •
·
C111 117· Lisa Tackett,

: Dlatrlct.

CAL1740·446·2342

$12,000.00

11 kept 4 family home This one has so

Interior wall that
. now an exterior wall In a

Avenue ,

But stop by
and visit us first

carport, and a large storage b ut ldmg or workshop.

maintenance. $34,800.00

Caae 114- Nancy Tawny,
, 33 Court Str11t, dealrea to
repair facade and replace
· owning and olgnage In a
Hlatorlc Dlatrlct.
C11e 115- Doug Cowle'o,
. 4S Court Stroot, dealrea to
- replace outside stairway In
· a Hlatorlc Dlatrlct
: Caae It 6- Ralntree
· Partnership LTD, 57 -59
· Court Street, deal roo to

· 300 Third

MOBILE HOME ONLY - A 1988 CarroiHon mobile home that
is neat and clean . Has 2 bedrooms. a newer detached 2 car

&amp; refrig., LR, utility room , r.arport,
2
storage
buildings,
low

- Dlatrlct.

windows

._.,a:

garden tub, E&amp;t·l n kitchen wtstove

: ropalr facade In a Historic

: replace
· atablllze

SYRACUSE • Very nice 9" mobile
hqme on mce level lot {10!5J~:11!5)
w1th a nver v1ew. 2 BR. bath with

lntemet merchants
having fire sales

l

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

With a Oassified Advertisement, you
can reach over 96,000 People and tell
them about your business ...
So, go jump in the lake and let your
classified ad do the work f~ou.

IV, Don

and Jan Thaler, 328 · 330
Second Avenue, d•lres to
roplaco awning on buolnoss
In a Hletorlc Dlatrlct.
Cuo
110· Lacldea
Maldonado, 324 Second
Avonu• dealreo to replace
awning on bualneaa In a
'. Hlatorli:: Dletrlct.
CaH 111- RuHoll Wood,
· 314 Second Avenue, doalroa
: to replace awtllng on
• bualnoaa In a Hlatorlc
: Dlatrlct.
Caao 112- James Mullins,
- 300 Second Avenue, desires
~ : to· rtjlllce wlndowi ltnij
paint locadea In a Hletorlc
Dlatrlct.
Co" 113- Betty Horan, 48

:

j

•ke

ca .. 119- Jan ihlller, 24
State Street, reotarotlon of
chimney and repainting of
brlcko In a Hletorlc Dletrtct.
July 23, 2000

WASHINGTON (AP) - Dnvers anywhere in
l: the country could dial 511 to avotd traffic tie-ups
l; and families needing food or shelter could call :Z1 1
:: for help under plans approved by federal regulators
.' ,1 Fn'day.
·~ It wiU be up to local governments and cha rities to
offer the phone services on those numbers.
The Federal Co mmuni cations Commissio n,
guarclian of the scarce three-digit phone numbers,
set aside the new codes after determining· that
quick, easy-to-remember access to th ose services
would greatly benefit the public.
'

in t

Public Notice

Caaa
118·
Stave
: DI111rtct.
Chipman, 84 Stale Stroot
c - 15- Nell B . Clark, 342 and 3rd Avenue, dealrea to
· Second Avenue- Paint 11111ke !acado lmprovomenta
facade. repair foundation In o Hletorlc Dlatrlct.
and replace window• In
Hlatortc Olatrlct.
CaH 16- Jamal and Jorl
Allie, 340 Second Avenu•
cllllrea to comploto oxterlot
pointing, replace roofing
· algn and awning In a
Hletorlc District.
Caoe 17- Ronnie Lynch,
_ 338
Second
AvenueSignoge replacement In 1
· Hlatorlc Dlatrlct.
18· H. . klna 1
· c...
Foundation, 332 Second '
Avenue- facade repair In a
Hlatorlc Dlotrlct.

CIIH 19- Venture•

~Uitlp

c 2000 by NEA. Inc.

www.comict.com

FCC adds more •
infonnation numbers

1:

Go

•

"
NACO, Okinawa (AP) - ·World leaders joining
... President Clinton for his final summit of wealthy
· "industrial nations patted themselves on the back Fri'1 day for the robust global economy but fretted that a
·' huge run up in oil prices could spot! the good times.
M eeting on this island of semitropi cal beac hes and
coral reefs, the leaders also signaled a willingness to
open their checkbooks to help und&lt;:rwrite any
, pea ce agreement between Israel and th e Palestinians. By some estimates, the cost could be upwards of
$40 billion.

vI '

CUSSIFIEDS! :

l

: otgnage,

World leaders
sweat oil prices

I

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

WG CMJif Pl-AV

. Cue
It ·
City
of
. !)alllpollo, City Building. Perking Fecllltleo Creation
: 1nd Improvement In the
- plllpotla Hlatorlc Dlatrlctto
Include tho Munlclpol
: Parlclnll lot and 2 112 alley.
Ooelrea to add llghllng, ,

BUSINESS HIGHLiGHTS

kind of help fa rmers really need.
The propooal "does not address
the biggest problem facing our
nat1on 's fanners and ranchers : low
prices," Swenson sa id." It does .not
promote rural tlevelopment. It
does not promote fair competition."
"Wtthout significant changes
that influence price, competitive
markets and a safcry net, these
proposals are false solu tions to the
real problems facing the family·
sized operati on," he added.

i;&gt;u nbnp 1!1:imt!l · ii&gt;rnlinrl • Page 07

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

~-I/!

MORE SPACE IS WHAT YOU'LL
GET 1n thi S 3 Bedroom 2 1/2 Bath
trad1t1onal Ranch Convemently
located 1n Sprml) V,111ey, this
classiC offers almost 3000 feet of
liVIng spaCL. ,..,. ' " ""I'M d ;..,,I
finished base men t with a firstclass floor plan 1nside and a
hidden beautifully landscaped
20x40 tn·grou nd pool As a
bounce enjoy the out door'! year
round In the 8)( 18 Solarium Room
Adjacent to the kitchen and pool
area. All th is and more wilt De
found tocated on thiS oversiZed
lot .. Call for Details. 113t,eoo.

12011 Looking for greener
pe1turea? 90'x1 72' vacant lot on
Kr !sty Dnve. Natural gas IS
ava!!able BUitd your dream home
on th is beaut1lul lot overlooktng
the beaut 1ful green pastures of
Gall 1a co.! Pnced to &amp;811.

Oownsta 1rs you'll fmd a
entertainment room , ad,lihorlal
kitChe n , walk-m
close ts ,
utility/storage room and an extra.
bedroom . $134,900

N2013 Find Eleoca:·::~n:r . ~~~~::,~

0

l-iving in th 1s 3 b~
raised ranch on almost 5
enriched countryside ""'"lir•o
bountiful orchard of vartous ap&lt;&gt;le, :l
che stnut and hardwood
Come see the Sm1th cu•llor" ·l
cherry cab1nets 1n the kitchen
along with the hardwood floonng
1n
the
spacious
livin g
12:010 Tht benefits of the acco mmodahons EnJoy lhe
clty... ln 1 nelghborhood eeHin!iJ. outdoors by the beautifully
area . This Is
Let thiS 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch landscaped
located 1n Spnng Valley be your
last stop Enriched with hardwood
tloonng a cozy fireplace and
'
.
comlortab le hvmg space . th1s
conve mently located home offers
something lor all members of th e
fam 1ty A number of apple, pear
and peach trees hne the private
picnic area m the back yard
additionally accented with vanous
rose bushes Attached to the two
car garage 1s a 14x28 war~ shOp
des1gned w1th the handy man m have a hard t1me
mind. l.Jon't 181 th1s pass without e home Th1s 2 story hh;o~;m;;.~ 1;,,;~;;;:1
3 bedroom. 1 5 bath. living
w1th t1 reptace dm1ng room .
fam ily room, 2 detached gao·agiisJ
24x28. 30M28 G reat
1
price 130,000. CALL TODAY
SEE .

12027 L.ocolod In Lonogolrlllo
totally renovated 1
3 bedrooms and
bl"ight new kitchen,
,
new w1ndows . Siding and
root all you 'll need to Oo Is move
inl Call for addlllonal deta 11s and
location $.59,000

tOr thole who love n1ture 1nd lntrlt\IIC
Escape subdiv ision hvlngl Ideal apot to build you r dream
home and have room to roam . One 2 acre lot and three 4 ac re lots.
Utllltletl available . Can for details.

12025 The aettulitlon

12023 NEW LISTING I 100 acres
more/ less ot VACANT LANDI
Th is Is a hunters dream come
true . Mostly woods, some pasture
&amp; II I All lor the LOW price ol
II
I

~1utyl

----~-=--~

r-,

$1,000,000 Vlewl Overlook the OMio VaJ111y from this sct~nlc
f'"~"''~ •while enjoying natu~ · ~ .peaceful ai.lure. around you

· over the foothills jolnmg the Ohi O R1ver f1'om tht
1 of windows aligning the East s1 dt of the home

bt.autlfully landscaped surrounding5 to flo\\ th rough

&amp;: sl.ate, plush floor CO\'erings and tasttdul hardwood
all extras that add to the formal i1ppea1 of this
. minutes from downtown $169,\JOO

•

I

�Page D6 • lhnba!' tlimri-&amp;rntintl

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Pomeroy • MlddltJJOrt • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasan\, WV

• Sunday, July 23, 2000

Lack of rain brings weeds, insects to Midwest farms
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) A
Plains drought has dried up soil,
stunted corn stalks, helped more
weeds grow in COl'nfields and .
brought on a particularly destructive corn crop msect.
Several farmers have complained that their herbiCides are
not working as well this year,
causing more weeds, said Steve
Gramlich, Umversiry of Nebraska-Lincoln Cooperative Extension Educator m North Platte.
Some western Nebraska farms
are being hit hard Wtth the west-

ern bean cutworm -an aggresSJVe insect that can destroy corn.
For many f:trmers. the weeds
and the onsfaught Of the cutworm have just added to prob!ems brought on by a drought
that has reduced ytelds and
tncreased costs.
The western bean cutworm,
whtch thnvi:s in dry weather and
sandy sotls, usually ts found in
Nebraska west of North Platte.
But this ·year tt has shown up tn
large numbers at least 150 1111les
further east, near Aurora and

north into Plainview.
Byron Hoch, who farms near
Bertrand, said he had to spray his
several thousand ~cres of corn for
the bug for the first time in the 26
years he's been farming.
The spraying limited the damage to his crops, but was another
cost in a tough year.
"We had to throw another
unexpected expense at the corn
crop," he said. "That western bean
curworm- you can lose a third
of a crop in a hurry.
"It's been a triple whammy

this year. Nothing works."

•••

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
farmers group says major changes
in federal farm policy being
pushed by two R epublican lawmakers are inadequate.
The Rural Amenca Prospenry
Act offers to help farmers by
allowing them to fully deduct the
com of thetr h eath ca re; to
exclude from 'the capital gams rax
$500,000 from the sale of a farm
or pnmary residen ce; and c hange

some other business tax provisions .
"We must do more to bring
prosperity to America's farms,
ranches and rural communittes,"
said one of thf bill's sponsor.;,
Rep. John Boe hne_r, R - Ohio.
Nattonal Farm ers Union Presiden t Leland Swenson said the
lcgtslattori introduced Wednesday
by Boehner and Sen. Richard
Lugar of lndtan'a, the R epublican
chammn of the Senate Agn culture , Nutntion , and Forestry
Comnuttee, failed to offer the

Public Notice

t&gt;oC.foJZ. ANYI'ftof!.f;, W6 'flE
o\11' Cf folt-GT PA PI'~.

0

. landocaplng/palntlng and
'-"clng Improvement..
cue
12City
or
Galllpolla, City BuildingPark and Recreation
Facllltloa Improvement• ·1n
· tho Hlotorlc Dlatrlct to
Include p.orlc bench111, lraah
rocopt1clea ond peat
· controla devlcea.
Cue
13City
of
Qalllpollo, Clly Building. Repair exl1tlng brick lined
aid-Ike.
C111 14- Ru1oe11 Wood,
· 348
Second
Avenu•
Replace awning on front of
building In • Hlatorlc

c

~

Public Notice

· Court Street, dealree

"'

Mlddtepon

PARK STREET- A 2 story home on a corner lot Has 3
bedrooms. 1 bath, dinmg room, kitchen and living room . Has
2 older fireplaces, 2 porches and a newer furnace.
$25,000.00
RIEBEL ROAD ·This 3.372 acres is just what you have been
looking for to build your dream home on. Water and electrtc

available . Flat to rollrng landscapes.

$15,000.00

BEECH STREET • A charming 1 1/2 s1ory home with one
bedroom upstairs 1hat has been remodeled recently and has
lots of storage and closet space Downstairs there are 2
bedrooms, dining room, living room, kitchen, and ba1h . Has a
lot that is approx. 50 x 112.

a

$37,900.00

-

Well-llUIIt

newer

Henry E. Cleland Jr ..............

........................... _, 992-2259

Island. $118,1500-!10
USTlNG • Fleclne - Onll Pomeroy - Vance Rd. Brick home
lot on a dead-end country wtth 1uH basemen1 pare1!cally
COuld be a n.ce :get-a-way" finished . 18.5 acres m/1. LR.
or nice ret.rernent home.
1 home offers many extras.
kitchen area, BR. bath.
!~:;~'· ~~·;;;.enclosed porch Being

. $35,000.00

kitchen

w/FP,

w/applianees,

Attached

&amp;

DR,

pool

Gas.

Middleport - PRICE DAAST1CALLY REDUCED Beautiful Victorian
type home w/12 acres m{l Many more extras Included .with this home.
For further inlorma110n or to view this home call us nght away. This
ho'"e has been reduced greatly! NOW ONLY $117,000

FTC announces
Toysmart.com deal

'

''
•
•'
~

WASHINGTON (AP) - Owners of defunct
; . Toysmart.com can sell its customer list, but o nly if
the buyer abides by the terms of the Web site's pri• · yacy policy, the Federal Trade Commission said Fri: day in announcing a settlement with the e-compa•.
' ny.
: In a co mplaint filed earlier this month in U.S. Dis~ trier Court in Boston. the FTC said Toysmart's proposed sale of its customer list violated its own assuri ances to customers that their regi stered informatio n
: would "neve r be shared with a third party." Under
: the complaint, the FTC co uld have asked a bankruptcy Judg~ to bloclc_ the sal&lt;:_ gf the compmy's

r

.

l

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

~

-UNDER

asse ts.

~

Sherr! L. Hart ......... 742·2357

FA

Detached

garages, 20M.40 inground
w,lfenced poolhouse. Free
Mineral Rights . $152,000.00

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Online retaihng is
not looking all that attra ctive these days - unless
: you're shopping for busmesses at fire sale pri ces.
~ With their bank accounts dwindling almost as
: rapidly as the1r stock prices, some Internet mer~ chants are sellmg thetr companies at sharp discounts
that would have been mcon ceivable just a year ago.
In the latest example of this emerging trend, Germ an multimedia giant Bertelsmann AG said Thursday it wiU buy CD Now Inc. for $117 million- an
,80 perce nt markdown from the musi c e-tailer's valuation in a February 1998 initial public offering.

!

!

to

;

Burger Kine franchise
owners fighting plan

RUTLAND STREET - A large 2 story home with 3 bedrooms,

2 baths, a dining room , living room, kitchen Snd a full

OFFICE

992-2259

basement Has a lron1 porch and upper balcony to watch the
Ohio River go by.
Make Us An Offer I $42,900.00
UNBELIEVABLE VIEW -

Sitting atop Riverview Drive is this

one story home that has a su nken living room w1th a big
beautiful white stone fireplace and glass all the way to the top

of the ca1hedral ceiling. Has 5 bedrooms. 3 baths. family

PRICE REDUCED- Middleport- N1ce 4 BA home located on a corner
lot near the c1ty park, LA. bath. kit w/appl In excellent move In

room, d1mng area, and

a

MIAMI (AP) Independent Burger King
: restaurant operators want to block plans by th e
l British parent Diageo to spin off 20 percent of the

car attached ga,age. 2

dealrel

systems,

· to lnotall new algn and

lighting to extertor of
· building In a Historic

2 5 ac res,

paved

We Ha"'~ Many ft.lo re Lielingel CaD u. Today
or Sec Our Web Page At hayeareMlc•tate.cum

ll~==============------1

~~~~~~A~Iog~h~o~m~e

plus 2 acres on
SR 7 near Chesler. Eastern Local School
D istrict. This one c ould be commerc ial,

••

a

great location lor a bus1ness Lot sol parking
and yard space. 1 1/2 S1ory log cabin. wood
lnter~or, 2 bedrooms, loft area. Front s1tting
porch and landscaped . Like new condition .
ASKING $15,000

LEADING CREEK RD. - A one s1ory home wi th 3 to 4

Real Estate General

bedrooms , dining room, 2 baths, living room and kitchen
Totally gutted 1ns1de and all new walls , ceilings e:tnd some
new floo rs A lso has a 3 car garage with storage above..
Sitting o n a 1.7 acre corner lot. Also has free gas.

NOW $7S,OOO.OO

CANT BE DONEII

RACINE- Racine needs a bed &amp; break1ast
and this is the perfect house for ~ . Just fill it
wi1h antiques and have a showplace. Four 1pteriiilul
bedn:&gt;oms , 2 fireplaces , pocket doors, great
woodwork, ante has a windows watch tower, IN THE COUNTRY· 82+ acres of ground,
full basement, garage &amp; carport, landscaped some pasture , balan ce m w oods Some
yard A great corner lot, own from street to
fencing. Farm or hunting ground . ASKING
street ASKING .~!,!)ClO
$75,000

Located along one of the busiest highways n. southeastern
Ohio. Close to McDonald·s. Several tracts to consider. Some
with good road frontage along Eastern Ave. (SR 7) and some
with frontage on side strEEts. Prlc&amp;S and lot sizes vary so
call tor more Information.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
(7 40) 446-3644

ful l basem ent, and an atttc that could be a fourth bedroom or
storage Has a front and rear porch, and needs an owner..

$30,000.00
ba lhs, livtng room , equipped built-in Kitchen,
den, wet bar, laundry, large blo cK 2 ca r

garage, 1 workshop Sheds for storage . Good

CANT BE DONE!

COMMERCIAL GROUND FOR SALE

SOUTH SECOND • An older home wi1h 3 bedrooms . 1 be1h,

MIDDLEPORT· Close to town on Bradbury
Road REally good conditiO n 3 bedrooms, 2

Go out and find a piece of ground In town. or even clOSE to
town. and build a 4700 square foot block building with ovEr
6400 square feet of floor space for less than $60.000.
So don't !;lass up this opportunity to buy this bargain with
multiplE usEs for only $42.500. High garage d9or will
accommodate boats. campers. RVs and just about anything
you can think of. Or open up a business. Or rent some or all
of the space out. Do what you want. but don't let this grEat
opportunity pass you byl Call Dave for more Info.

!

1

landscaping, a nice home, ready to move 1nto,
17 years o ld, on a la rge lot with room to roam .

Call for your show1ng ASKING $74,900
VANCE ROAD- Quiet cou n1ry loca11on . Two,
1970 model mobile homes ApproXImately 1
e)(ecutlve subdiviston - designed for horse 1/2 acre each . Septics and TPO water
lovers &amp; boa1ersl You won't believe the Homes a're newly patnted and new carpet and
fea1ures. Access 1o the beaut~ul Ohio for boat vinyl floon ng. Front and rear porches. 2
lovers, tOO ' boat dock, riding ring , picn1c bedrooms, bath, kitchen appliances tncluded
shelter, riding trai ls &amp; much more Certam Package deal or sate separately. CALL FOR
restrictions apply. Lot pnces &amp; acreage vary MORE DETAILS.
according to 1he particular amenities Lot #5 2. 740 acres plus ehare Lot H12 . Land- RUTLAND- lmmedla1e possession! Located
$6.000. lmprovemen1s • $7,000, Maintenance on SA 124, before entering Rulland, a tn -level
Fill'1d· $3,000· Price for Lot 115- $25,000 plus home w11h 3 bedrooms. 1 314 baths, family
Lot 1112 share.
room, kttchen, dining , ltvmg room . attached 1
PORTLAND- BUFFINGTON LANDING- An

car garage , detached garage , public septic .

MIDDlfPORT· Vacan1 corner lo1 loca1ed on Good well wrlh Leadrng Creek wa ter
2itd Street, public water and electric available . avarlable. Level lot, very spac1ous. REDUCED
Immediate possession! Per1ect home site or TO $55,000
movile home site. ASKING $17,000

LIST WITH CLELAND RELTY, INC. AND SEE THE RESULTS!!

POMEROY PIKE- On the corner of
Drive is 1hls one
story home tha1 has been completely remod eled and has 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, a nd a dining room A lso h as an enclosed
front porch, newer detached carport, and storage bu1ld1ngs
All of this sitting ,on approx 1 acre nice tot.

NOW $48,000.00
OAK GROVE ROAD - If you want almost an acre just
dutside of town, c heck th is home out It has 2 bedrooms, "'
newer pretty bath, pocket doors, and a par1 basement Has a
nice rear and front porch, 1 car garage, and a storage
~uilding
NOW $50,000 .00

DOTIIE TURNER, Broker................ .......... 992-5692
JERRY SPRADLING .................................. 949-2131
CHARMELE SPRADLING ........................... 949-2131
BETTY JO COLLIN$ ............................... .... 949-2049
BRENDA JEFFERS ..................................... 992-1444
0FFICE ........................................................ 992-2886

'·

Euaoe4-- ~ ie~
~~~

514 Second Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994
'
740-446-0008
740-441-llll
1

Virginia company wants
to merges with drkoop.com
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - A Virgima company that
sells medical equipment and provides onlin e health
news said Friday it has offered to m erge with ailing
drkoop.com In c.
MillenniumHealth Communicati ons Inc. , based
in Reston ,Va., would not disclose details of its offer.
H owever, drkoop.com · satd in a statement that the
offer was a stock- for-stock transaction; a spokeswoman declined to elaborate.
The statement said drkoop.com wo uld consider
the offer.

Agilent shares plunge
on eamings report

evansmoo@zoomnet .net
Sarah L. Evana-Moore
Patricia Hays- 446-3884
cars Csaey-245-9430

.,

Gt
--

I
Owner NHda Offlrl Known the
world over as the SII'Jer Dollar
A uct1o n Hous e, thts historic
landmark offers retail space.
rental income and storage.
Includes 2 BR house next door.
Ca l l for detail s
PRICE

REDUCED!

t1ot0 PRICE REDUCED!

1'1032 Went the Convenience or
living In-town AND 1peclou•
living eccommodatlonl? Then
th is is the house for you ! With
atmosr 4,000 square feet oll1ving
space, wh ic h include s 6
bedroom s and 4 baths, this home
rests on an oversized corner lot
located in Gallipolis near schools,
shopping , churc hes and the c•ty
parK. This home has beaut1ful
o ngm al hardw oo d floormg
accented wit h custom crafted
mantel pieces m the large rooms.
As a bonus enjoy the spac1ous
sunroom for comfort year around.

Sears posts 17 percent
inaease in profits
CHICAGO (AP) Sears, Roebuck and Co.
shrugged off another sluggtsh quarter for clothmg
sales to post a 17 percent increase in profits, citing
solid results in appliances, electronics and tts credit
business.
Friday's report surpassed Wall Street's expectatio ns
for Hoffman Estates, Ill-based Sears, which is the
nation 's No. 2 retailer behind Wal- Mart Stores and
tryin g to stave off Home Depot to remain the top
appliance sell er.

11088 Conomorrclol Property! :1
located 1n the i
Grande, thiS invrestrnerit propeny
has many possibilities
commercial rental units
res1dent1al unit that could dOtJbie•l
as a man ager's home. This '
property nas potential! All with
I
extra frontage for expansiOn.
for additional information.

$100,000

.

..

ru
~
d;~ "''

.

.

...

,.'

~

--

'"" ''

'k '

.

11051 The anawtr to all our
drtem• and within your
meaner Many possibilitieS with
th1 s beaut1ful 2 story home II
offers 3 BR 1 BA , LA w/f1replace,
DR ,
hardwood
tloon ng ,
remodeled kitchen, enclosed
back porch $58,000

11098 Elegent ln-lo•rn

and
sq ft of
and

a

28x40

ldelrochroc block-shop. Call todsy
to l1nd out add1honal deta ils.

$78,800
12003 If elbow room 11 what
you want In 1 neighborhood

I0111ng .•

rlherl Th&gt;S

h on over a
~es that

3BR and
half acr
tnclude
I

~
kitche~~

m and
e sun
room
onu s IS the
hardw
oonng throughout
most of the over 1500 square feet
of 11vmg area and an attached
carport w1th enc losed storage.
Don 't miSS thiS rare Cheshire
commun1ty

Buckeye State residents beware:
Insurance rates may be on rise

can be found m lh1 s 4 BA 2
BA two story colon1al style home
Outs1de a beautifully landscaped
entry lea ds to a tastefully
decorated formal living room and
d ining room . Just off the dtnmg
room IS an equ1pped kitchen and
fa m1ly room combination w1th a
cozv firep lace complementi ng 1ts
homey feeling. With a one car
de tached garage and the extra
storage space of the full tlasernent
In town 11VIng-lsqus1 a pho ne call
away.
N2005 Immaculate Bri ck Ranch
w1th 2 bedrooms, one bat h, large
l1v1ng &amp; d1n 1ng room. eat -In
k1tche n, oversized one ca r
attac hed garage, one car
detached ga rage AND add1110na1
1n-law quarters with 2 bedrooms
one bath, kitchen, hv1ng room w1th
carport. Th1s house IS a steal! Call
CU1oklyl

..

...
-.

.

"''

~ ,..

-

-~~
I

i

..

.

·
3 bedroom,
one
bath
eat-10 k1tchen,
elecir 1c
pump w/central a 1r,
front and s1de deck and several
frUit trees all on 1 2' acre m(l lot
Th1s home has never been lived 1n
and IS ready for you to JUSt move
in $75,000.

.

..

.
, '"'
12017 NEW LISTING! To 1ee Ia
.' -..;
to agreel! Th1s mellow 3 bedroom,
•
1 bath home has been beautifully
!ll!ll!
,.,
-~t%
• ;kN&gt;l~ii"i...-kept anD has a light and a1ry bnck
slylmg LR, eat-m-kllchen, 2 car
M2022 IF MORE SPA CE IS
A REAL FIND PRI CED at WHAT
YOU
WANT... THEN
~..

·: GALL QUICKLY BEFORE
l s9ii.ooo
' GONE

one

end lft the
l :~~:,ahtlp pey yOur martglgtl
2
11ory house with 3 bedrooms and
1 ~ath And a mobile home with .:1
bedroom• and 1 bath all set up
and ready to go Call for details

.

..

"- ,.

1
M2008 Beautiful I lmmaculatel 4
Bedroom, 4 Bath ranch home
r•n c h
with f1ntsh~~c.t Converted beeutlful aetting clo1e to
ga~age c9~~\itJi:iy room You' ll find oversized
or an ieiJ!fiJBn~~
Lovely plush floor covenngs In the !1
mod
cads of room, 3 bedrooms &amp; 2 full
1' re
Walk out Of the fully eqcr ir~&gt;pad;
cabme
and pantry Roya 1 k1tchen to a picturesque
SUi te has walk·m closet, garden
tub bath. fireplace &amp; entry to patio
m backyard living room with
f1reptace Gas heat. central air,
AEP, c1ty school. Owner wants thts
sold nowl $114,900

12009 Gel 3 for 1 1 Elegant Home ,
Luxunous Backyar d Pnvacy and
In-Town Convemences at11 n ONE
package! Beauhful hardwood
flooring, custom draperies ~nd
ongmal mantles adorn the InSide
wh1 le outs1d e lovely flowe rs
surround the sparkling waters of
the in-ground sw1mm1ng pool If
you like the convenience of 1tv1ng
m·town you must see this homel

Ohioam paid au average o.f $641 for auto1
insurance in 1998, an amount $1J6 less
tlran the 11ational at,erage, according to a
study by the National Association of
Insurance Commissioners. Tire state's m,e,·age annual auto premium rauked 42ud
amoug tile 50 states. Nell' Jersey had the
highest avera.i?e premium at $1,306.
perc ent on April 17. But the same
company's Oluo homeo,vner&gt;
msurance rates have gone up m
each of the past three years.
mcludmg I p ercent tim summer.
said State Farm spokesmar1 Brian
M aze.
Nationwide increased II&gt; Oluo
auto rates 5 percent on Apnl 15
after two years of decreases.
Hom eowners prices went up 5.8
percent on June 16.
Ohio's homeowners rates are
the second-lowest in the natton .
Only Wisconsin's are lower.
"Homeowners rates have been
gradually rising, but rates are
invisible to most people because
they are hidden 111 their e·scrow
account," said Ray Niswander,
assistant vice president of Columbus-based Grange Insurance.
"Some companies bid down
auto rates as low as they could go
the last several years," Niswander
said. "Now, there's a trend slightly
..
upwa rd .

A

LOT bigger thin It loakll
Vacant land 1n town is hard to find
so take a took at this lot located
just a couple blocks trom the C1ty
Park with over 8,000 square teet
of level land . Utilities already -1075 EICIPt tht huatle &amp;
bultle In thll dra~m hamel Th is
present on the property
home oners 3 BR, 2 BA, LR, eat·
in kitchen , fimahed basement and
2 car garage all on a 2 723 acre
corner lot in A10 Grande area.
Ready and waiti ng for you at

$109,800.

Stocks dip as investors
review corporate eamings
Stocks dropped Friday as investors took profits
and digested some disappointing corporate earnings. Investors were taking a breather after Thursday's strong rally, which was sparked by encouraging
remarks about the economy from' Federal Reserve
C hairman Alan Greenspan.
----- The Dow Jones industrial average fell 11 0.3 1 to
10,733.56. For the week, the Dow lost 79.19, and
the Nasdaq composit e index lost 90. t1 to 4,094.45.
Crude oil prices took a po unding Friday, fallin g 4
percent anud mcreasing stgns th at new o utput from
Sa udi Arabia is about to hit th e world market. •
In other markets, copper rose to a six-month htgh
and palladium jumped to a fi ve-mon t~h.

www.evans -moore.com

For,nerly Blac kburn R ea lty
uservira.s Southern Ohio l i'or
Over A. Quarter Century ..

11011 Commerclel Property.
1.6 acres m/1 located al the
Junction of SA 35 and SA 325
near Rio Grande
11012 Four Loti In Downtown
Go!llpollo? C111 for mort

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Shares of co mputer
products maker Agilent Technologies Inc. plunged
30 percent in early trading Friday after the company said its third-quarter earmngs would fall well
short of analysts' expectations.
Saying it was unable to keep up with demand for
its products, Agilent said it expects its earnings for
the third quarter ending July 31 will fall well below
the consensus estimate of 35 cents per share.

• COLU MBUS (AP) - O h10 's
:· auto- and hom e- insurance rates
,: are amo ng the lowest in the
:- nation , but in dustry officials
: anticipate hi gher pnces.
;
Home-msurance rates are like: ly to begin increasing 3 percent
: to 5 percent per year in O hio
: beca use the industry has been los~ ing money on homeown ers
•• insurance for nearly a decade ,
'' msurance offiCials told The
'
: Columbus Dtspatch m a story
: published Friday.
,
Dan Kumn .er, manager of per- ht ghest average premtum at
: sonal auto lin es for the National s1,306.
: Association of Ind ependent
Comparable data for home! Insurers, predicted au to in su rance . owners tn 1997 showed Ohio's
! rates will mcrease 1.5 percent average homeow ner~ ms uran ce~
: nationally tlus year.
premium was S289, compared
That would match the recent with $934 for Flonda, where prerate of mcrease fo r Ohio.
llll ums were largest.
" Unfortunately. what's hapAuto rates decltned natiOnally
pening w1.th auto rates is it's in 1998 and 1999 for the first
becoming more expensive to fix tune m a quilrter-century. The
both people and cars," satd declines were 2.8 percent and 3.2
. Robert Har1:w1g. chief economist percent respectively, accordmg to
; at the Insurance Information Hartwig's figures .
Rates were lower be cause of
' Institute .
Ohio's insurance rates compare fewer and less-serious acciden~s.
~ favorably with those of most safety features such as air bags and
declines in the instan ces of
' states.
' Ohioans paid an average of drunken driving and auto theft.
: $641 for auto insurance in 1998, Trends such as the return to mfla: an amount $156 less than the tion on medical costs and a resur1national average, according to a gence in the cost of vehicle
'study by the National Association repairs are turning the tide this
year.
·of Insurance Commissioners.
State Farm Insurance has
The state's average annual auto
decreued
auto rates in Ohio the
premium ranked 42nd among the
' 50 states. New Jersey had the past three years, including 4 .9

Real Estate General

Real E8tate General

beaut1tul k 1tchen. There IS lots of

Now Re~ucod, A Muat See At $189,000.00

Living room,
D1ning Room ,
Addt'l Family
room, Oak Stairway
Windows, Insulated well.

fast-food maker and have hired Wall Street advisers
to help look for a privare third-parry buyer.
Diageo insisted Friday that it will stick with plans
announced in June for the partial sale on the New
York Stock Excha nge as "the option in the best
interests of our shareholders."
"Anythmg that leaves Diageo in control of any
part of this company is absolutely un acceptable,"
Julian Josephson, vice president of the Burger King
NatiOnal Franchi see Association. satd Fnday.
"frankly they have proven that they are not abl e to
manage this brand."
·

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.

· ------------------------------~=---

storage, a 2 car garage and a security system .

and

____

COOLVILLE ROAD- Approx. 2 acres of land with a one story
home. Has 2 bedrooms. 1 1/2 ba1hs, large living room.
dinong room. and utrllty room. Also has a detached garage,
front porch and rear dock
$55,000.00

part basement, privacy fenced back yard , and IS Sitting on

on 3 many "EXTRAs• it is diHicutt to
FA name all of them . Hardwood
room floors. Privacy fenced heated pool
TwO w1th auto cover &amp; cleaner, 2 car
acres garage, 4 BR , 2 1/2 baths. Great
Family Rmt Kitchen w/appllancee

Dl I I
· HIstarIC I t r C •
·
C111 117· Lisa Tackett,

: Dlatrlct.

CAL1740·446·2342

$12,000.00

11 kept 4 family home This one has so

Interior wall that
. now an exterior wall In a

Avenue ,

But stop by
and visit us first

carport, and a large storage b ut ldmg or workshop.

maintenance. $34,800.00

Caae 114- Nancy Tawny,
, 33 Court Str11t, dealrea to
repair facade and replace
· owning and olgnage In a
Hlatorlc Dlatrlct.
C11e 115- Doug Cowle'o,
. 4S Court Stroot, dealrea to
- replace outside stairway In
· a Hlatorlc Dlatrlct
: Caae It 6- Ralntree
· Partnership LTD, 57 -59
· Court Street, deal roo to

· 300 Third

MOBILE HOME ONLY - A 1988 CarroiHon mobile home that
is neat and clean . Has 2 bedrooms. a newer detached 2 car

&amp; refrig., LR, utility room , r.arport,
2
storage
buildings,
low

- Dlatrlct.

windows

._.,a:

garden tub, E&amp;t·l n kitchen wtstove

: ropalr facade In a Historic

: replace
· atablllze

SYRACUSE • Very nice 9" mobile
hqme on mce level lot {10!5J~:11!5)
w1th a nver v1ew. 2 BR. bath with

lntemet merchants
having fire sales

l

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

With a Oassified Advertisement, you
can reach over 96,000 People and tell
them about your business ...
So, go jump in the lake and let your
classified ad do the work f~ou.

IV, Don

and Jan Thaler, 328 · 330
Second Avenue, d•lres to
roplaco awning on buolnoss
In a Hletorlc Dlatrlct.
Cuo
110· Lacldea
Maldonado, 324 Second
Avonu• dealreo to replace
awning on bualneaa In a
'. Hlatorli:: Dletrlct.
CaH 111- RuHoll Wood,
· 314 Second Avenue, doalroa
: to replace awtllng on
• bualnoaa In a Hlatorlc
: Dlatrlct.
Caao 112- James Mullins,
- 300 Second Avenue, desires
~ : to· rtjlllce wlndowi ltnij
paint locadea In a Hletorlc
Dlatrlct.
Co" 113- Betty Horan, 48

:

j

•ke

ca .. 119- Jan ihlller, 24
State Street, reotarotlon of
chimney and repainting of
brlcko In a Hletorlc Dletrtct.
July 23, 2000

WASHINGTON (AP) - Dnvers anywhere in
l: the country could dial 511 to avotd traffic tie-ups
l; and families needing food or shelter could call :Z1 1
:: for help under plans approved by federal regulators
.' ,1 Fn'day.
·~ It wiU be up to local governments and cha rities to
offer the phone services on those numbers.
The Federal Co mmuni cations Commissio n,
guarclian of the scarce three-digit phone numbers,
set aside the new codes after determining· that
quick, easy-to-remember access to th ose services
would greatly benefit the public.
'

in t

Public Notice

Caaa
118·
Stave
: DI111rtct.
Chipman, 84 Stale Stroot
c - 15- Nell B . Clark, 342 and 3rd Avenue, dealrea to
· Second Avenue- Paint 11111ke !acado lmprovomenta
facade. repair foundation In o Hletorlc Dlatrlct.
and replace window• In
Hlatortc Olatrlct.
CaH 16- Jamal and Jorl
Allie, 340 Second Avenu•
cllllrea to comploto oxterlot
pointing, replace roofing
· algn and awning In a
Hletorlc District.
Caoe 17- Ronnie Lynch,
_ 338
Second
AvenueSignoge replacement In 1
· Hlatorlc Dlatrlct.
18· H. . klna 1
· c...
Foundation, 332 Second '
Avenue- facade repair In a
Hlatorlc Dlotrlct.

CIIH 19- Venture•

~Uitlp

c 2000 by NEA. Inc.

www.comict.com

FCC adds more •
infonnation numbers

1:

Go

•

"
NACO, Okinawa (AP) - ·World leaders joining
... President Clinton for his final summit of wealthy
· "industrial nations patted themselves on the back Fri'1 day for the robust global economy but fretted that a
·' huge run up in oil prices could spot! the good times.
M eeting on this island of semitropi cal beac hes and
coral reefs, the leaders also signaled a willingness to
open their checkbooks to help und&lt;:rwrite any
, pea ce agreement between Israel and th e Palestinians. By some estimates, the cost could be upwards of
$40 billion.

vI '

CUSSIFIEDS! :

l

: otgnage,

World leaders
sweat oil prices

I

SAVE TIME AND MONEY
SHOP THE

WG CMJif Pl-AV

. Cue
It ·
City
of
. !)alllpollo, City Building. Perking Fecllltleo Creation
: 1nd Improvement In the
- plllpotla Hlatorlc Dlatrlctto
Include tho Munlclpol
: Parlclnll lot and 2 112 alley.
Ooelrea to add llghllng, ,

BUSINESS HIGHLiGHTS

kind of help fa rmers really need.
The propooal "does not address
the biggest problem facing our
nat1on 's fanners and ranchers : low
prices," Swenson sa id." It does .not
promote rural tlevelopment. It
does not promote fair competition."
"Wtthout significant changes
that influence price, competitive
markets and a safcry net, these
proposals are false solu tions to the
real problems facing the family·
sized operati on," he added.

i;&gt;u nbnp 1!1:imt!l · ii&gt;rnlinrl • Page 07

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

~-I/!

MORE SPACE IS WHAT YOU'LL
GET 1n thi S 3 Bedroom 2 1/2 Bath
trad1t1onal Ranch Convemently
located 1n Sprml) V,111ey, this
classiC offers almost 3000 feet of
liVIng spaCL. ,..,. ' " ""I'M d ;..,,I
finished base men t with a firstclass floor plan 1nside and a
hidden beautifully landscaped
20x40 tn·grou nd pool As a
bounce enjoy the out door'! year
round In the 8)( 18 Solarium Room
Adjacent to the kitchen and pool
area. All th is and more wilt De
found tocated on thiS oversiZed
lot .. Call for Details. 113t,eoo.

12011 Looking for greener
pe1turea? 90'x1 72' vacant lot on
Kr !sty Dnve. Natural gas IS
ava!!able BUitd your dream home
on th is beaut1lul lot overlooktng
the beaut 1ful green pastures of
Gall 1a co.! Pnced to &amp;811.

Oownsta 1rs you'll fmd a
entertainment room , ad,lihorlal
kitChe n , walk-m
close ts ,
utility/storage room and an extra.
bedroom . $134,900

N2013 Find Eleoca:·::~n:r . ~~~~::,~

0

l-iving in th 1s 3 b~
raised ranch on almost 5
enriched countryside ""'"lir•o
bountiful orchard of vartous ap&lt;&gt;le, :l
che stnut and hardwood
Come see the Sm1th cu•llor" ·l
cherry cab1nets 1n the kitchen
along with the hardwood floonng
1n
the
spacious
livin g
12:010 Tht benefits of the acco mmodahons EnJoy lhe
clty... ln 1 nelghborhood eeHin!iJ. outdoors by the beautifully
area . This Is
Let thiS 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch landscaped
located 1n Spnng Valley be your
last stop Enriched with hardwood
tloonng a cozy fireplace and
'
.
comlortab le hvmg space . th1s
conve mently located home offers
something lor all members of th e
fam 1ty A number of apple, pear
and peach trees hne the private
picnic area m the back yard
additionally accented with vanous
rose bushes Attached to the two
car garage 1s a 14x28 war~ shOp
des1gned w1th the handy man m have a hard t1me
mind. l.Jon't 181 th1s pass without e home Th1s 2 story hh;o~;m;;.~ 1;,,;~;;;:1
3 bedroom. 1 5 bath. living
w1th t1 reptace dm1ng room .
fam ily room, 2 detached gao·agiisJ
24x28. 30M28 G reat
1
price 130,000. CALL TODAY
SEE .

12027 L.ocolod In Lonogolrlllo
totally renovated 1
3 bedrooms and
bl"ight new kitchen,
,
new w1ndows . Siding and
root all you 'll need to Oo Is move
inl Call for addlllonal deta 11s and
location $.59,000

tOr thole who love n1ture 1nd lntrlt\IIC
Escape subdiv ision hvlngl Ideal apot to build you r dream
home and have room to roam . One 2 acre lot and three 4 ac re lots.
Utllltletl available . Can for details.

12025 The aettulitlon

12023 NEW LISTING I 100 acres
more/ less ot VACANT LANDI
Th is Is a hunters dream come
true . Mostly woods, some pasture
&amp; II I All lor the LOW price ol
II
I

~1utyl

----~-=--~

r-,

$1,000,000 Vlewl Overlook the OMio VaJ111y from this sct~nlc
f'"~"''~ •while enjoying natu~ · ~ .peaceful ai.lure. around you

· over the foothills jolnmg the Ohi O R1ver f1'om tht
1 of windows aligning the East s1 dt of the home

bt.autlfully landscaped surrounding5 to flo\\ th rough

&amp;: sl.ate, plush floor CO\'erings and tasttdul hardwood
all extras that add to the formal i1ppea1 of this
. minutes from downtown $169,\JOO

•

I

�,,

Pag!J D8 • 6unba!' ll:imt1 ·6rntinrl

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

•

•

Sunday, July 23, 2000

Birthdays celebrated, As.
Kyger Creek tourney roundup, Bl

Tuesday: Cloudy

High: 80s; low: &amp;Os

Welcome to Gallia

Money
from Page Dl

Gallia County Chamber of Commerce and Community Improvement CorpoJlltion staff were on hand to welcome the addition of the assisted living
tenter, Wyngate of Gallipolis, to the community on July 16. Present for the
ribbon cutting ceremony were, from left, Rachel Burns, CIC administrative

investment. Is it really worth it
placing your hard-earned money
in this type of investin ~ nt ? N o.
• Consider the impact o f inflation and taxes. Inflation and taxes
erode an investor's purchasing
power. The co nsideration of
investments that minimize the
impact of these two force s may be
key in meeting your goals.
• Your portfolio is for you and
you alone. The design and formu lation of your portfolio is based
on your goals, time hori;on and
risk tolerance. Understand that
what may work for your friend,
cousin, or co-worker n1ay not
work for you because one size
does not fit all.
• A basket of eggs is better than
just one. Diversification ·of your
investment assets may bring the
positive benefits of reduced risk
and stable returns to your investment portfolio basket. Mutual
funds are a cost-efficient way to
invest while at the same time

assistant; Lorie Neal, associate director of the chamber; Jami Gross, Wyn.
gate of Gallipolis administrator; and Venin Swain and Tom Tope, members
of the Consolidated Hea~h Systems board of trustees. Guided tours of
Wyngate are available by calling Gross at 441·9633. {Contributed photo)

BUSINESS BRIEFCASE
'Attends national
conference
GN-L!POLIS - Roberta Wilson, an independent sales director
for The Pampered Chef Ltd.,
recendy attended the company's
national conference at the Rosemont Theatre in Rosemont, Ill.
. More than 1O,OOo of the company's top achievers from across
the U.S. attended this year's conference, a celebration of The
Pampered Chefs 20th anniversary.
Wilson has been with the com·pany for five years. She received·a
Top Performance Cluster Award
for Personal Sales, presented to
her by the company's president,
Doris Christopher.
The co nference featured the
introduction of new fall/winter
products, and sales apd leadership
training. Christopher and motivational speaker Emory Au stin
addressed the conference.
For more information about
having a Pampered Chef inhome demonstration or becoming a kitchen consultant , contact
Wilson at 446-2 151.

Present at
·planningmeet
GALLIPOLIS · Money
Concepts International Inc., a
worldwide network of financial
planning centers, held irs annual
International Planning Congress
at the "Sheraton Steamboat
Resort, Steamboat Springs, Colo.
Attending fro m Gallipolis wa'
Dick Dixo n, president of the
company, and his wife, Darlene
Dixon. The local Money Con~epts Financial Center is at 1464
State Route 141, Gallipolis..

Retumfrom
conference
. GALLIPOLIS - Two Gallia
County residents recendy attended the 2000 0 hio Farm Bureau
Summer Leadership Confere nce.
Jason H oward , Thurman, and
Scott D o nahue, Vinton, attended
the annu al train ing event at Deer
C reek State Park July 7-8. The
conference was co-sponsored by
the Farm Bureau and Land 0
Lakes.
Attendees participated in seminars about Farm Bureau 's organi. zational structure, policy/registration development and leadership
opportunities. Land 0 Lakes personne l introduced participants to
the cooperative syste m, and how

Elder-Beerman
meets demands
DAYTON (A P) ElderBeerman Store s Corp. agreed
Thursday to propose the election
of several new directors and meet
othe r demands of major shareholders that for a year have been
pushing the retailer to increase
the value of its stock.
The agreement averts a battle
for votes between the existing
board of directors and ElderBee rman 's two largest shareholdef' . If .tpprovcd by shareholders
Aug. 2 4 . the agree m ent will
change the way the company is
governed and give Its maJOr
shareholders a greater voi ce in
operations.

Byrnes

.·

enough to issue a spray advisory.
Estimated first spray is still the end
ofJuly. Many producers would like
to spray immedi ately. Keep in
mind that most egg laying occurs
when moth counts surge and that
those eggs take 4-7 days to hatch.
Since the larvae are not susceptible to Orthene or other sprays
until they hatch, it is suggested that
producers wait until the advisoty is
issued.
Tobacco Twilight Tour is
scheduled for_Aug. 16 at Triple F
Farm in Gage.
(Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia ~ Extension agent for agrimllllre and nat11ral
resOJ•rces, Ohio State University.)

from Page Dl

Howard

WIIIOII

cooperatives complement the role
of farmers.
Participants also learned about
how Farm Bureau develops its
policies, giving the organization
direction, and the role members
play in the process. Attendees
must be Farm Bureau members
and be sponsored by their county
Farm Bureau .;ft· Land 0 Lakes
co-op. Farm couples and singles
age 18-35 are invited to attend.
For more information, contact
the Gallia County Farm Bureau
office at 1-800-777-9226.

Posts perfect
attenCiance
GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Career College student Mary
Beaver received the perfect attendance award for spring quarter at
Gallipolis Career Colle~ _ __
Her name was drawn from a list
of students who also had perfect
attendance for spring quarter.
For more information on
GCC, call 446-436 7 or 1-800214-0452.

Retirement
announced
REEDSVILLE - Virgil C.
Holsinger, Reedsville, has retired
from Shell Chemical Co. in Belpre with over 23 years of service.
Holsinger joined Shell in 1976
as a tank farm te chnician in polystyrene and had currently worked
in material control in the business
services department.
Holsinger and his wife, Geraldine, plan on doing some traveling but wib remain in the area to
live.

Hoffman attends
seminar
ATHENS - Kim Hoffman, of

Donahue

Beaver

Diles Hearing Center, recently
attended an advanced application
of digital technology training
course for Phonak's Claro Digital
Perception Processing hearing
instruments.
This high performance seminar
was held at Phonak 's U.S. headquarters in C hicago from July 1315.
.
A new hearing aid was displayed at the seminar which has
100 percent digital sound using
Audio Zoom technology to
reduce background noise. This
tec hnology uses two microphones to zoom in o n sou nds in
front of an individual while
reducing so unds from the sides
and rear. In addition, the C laro is
100 percent automatic, continuously identifying the source of
the noise and reducing it, according to Hoffman.

Second quarter
results posted
JACKSON -Oak Hill Financial Inc. has reported net earnings
fo r the first three months ended
June 30 of $1 ,806,000, or 34
cents per diluted share.
The second quarter 2000 earniAgs compare to the $1 ,804,000
or 33 cents per diluted share in
net earnings the company recorded for the second quarter of
1999.
Oak Hill FinanCial's total assets
increased 14.8 percent ove r the
prior year, ending the second
quarter of2000 at $640.8 million ,
as compared to $558. 1 million on
June 30, 1999. The company's net
loans on June 30, 2000, we re
$547.6 million , up 25.4 percent
from June 30, 1999.
In reviewing the second quarter, Oak Hill Financial President
an d Chief Executive Officer Jo hn
D. Kidd expressed satisfactio n
with the company's growth.

hei r and moth populations are
high , you will need to sp ray eve ry
fo ur days.
The corn si lk grows faster durDl
ing .warm days. Spray material
mg a brief . tal~ on "Growing which landed o n the silk four
Pere nnial G rasses." ·
days ago w ill have grown away
This event is free and open to from the corn tip leaving the ear
the public. Reservations are not of corn unprotected fo r the next
needed, but would help in plan- moth laying her eggs. Commerni ng purposes. Ca ll 740-992- cial growers may use such products as thiodlca rb, cyfluthrin ,
6696 for further information.
S &amp; J Ca ttle Compa ny is locat- bifenthrin, permethrin, lambacyed across U.S. 50/ State R oute 32 halothrin , or spinosad according
to ·laud directions.
from Athens Livestock.
Homeowners are quite lim ited
wi th on ly pyrethrins, carbaryl and
Are you growing sweet corn? methomyl ava ilable. An old-fashThe number of European corn ioned control measure was lo
borer and corn earworm moths apply a drop of m.ineral oil on the
have increased greatly this past tip of the developing ear of corn
week. This increase will cause every four days. T he oil wou ld
more insect eggs to be laid on envelop and suffocate the moth
sweet corn sil ks over the next eggs. This is extremely time consuming for anyone with a lot of
co uple of weeks.
The eggs Will soon emerge into corn plants.
larvaf (worms) that find their way
(Hal Kneen is Meigs Coum y's
into the developing ears of corn.
Exteusio''
agent for agriwlture aud
If you are spraying insecticides
remember that as temperatures tMitlral resources, Ohio State Uuiwrincrease over 80 degrees Fahren- sity.)

Dixon

than the more tolerant varieties
with modest yields, such as TN 90.
Depending on the extent of the
infection, in most cases it is too late
to help the crop with Acrobat MZ.
The cool nights and rainy days are
fueling this disease. Although it is
·r ecommended that you top as early
as possible, specialists do not recommend cutting early.
European corn borer trap
counts were up even higher 'this
week, but still not significant

Holsincer

"Loans grew at an annualized
rate of17.3 percent in the second
quarter, and we have good
momentum going;' he said.
. Oak Hill Financial operates
Oak Hill Banks, Towne Bank and
Action Finance Co.

reaping the benefits of diversificati on.
• Use time, not timing, when
investing. Trying to correctly time
the ups and downs of the market
is a risky, if not impossible, task.
Most investors will fare far better ·
by keeping thei r investment assets
in the market the entire time. It is
time in the market, not timing
the market.
• The old team player may be
better than a young hotshot. Try
to avoid the temptation of investin g in the new "hotshot" investment that may lose its luster
quickly. Seek investments with
solid track records that will benefit you more over the long run .
• Know when to cut yot~r losses. Many investors do not know
when to get out of an investment.
If your investm ent selection is
heading south and most likely
won 't return to previous form,
fac e the music and consider getting out before your lumps get
too big.
(Jay Caldwell is a certified ji~tancial
planner at Raymond Jam es Fina11cial
Services, 441 Seco11d Ave., Gallipolis, 446-2125.)

Details, A3 ·

e

Meigs County's

Hometown Newspaper

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Volume 51, Number 41

--

mobile services
Bv

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

POM EROY - Efforts to get
veterans enro ll ed for medical
care thro uf;h th e Veterans
Admin istration Jrc: Increas ing in

preparation fo r th e fa ll opening
of a medi cal fi eld center in
Pot neruy.
A mob ile uni t of the V.A .
Hea lth service System of O hio is

GIVING PRAISE
-Saturday
night's gospel
theme featured
several perfor·
mances includ·
ing that by the
Gabriel Quar·
tet, right.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
SENTINEL NEWS STAFF

sponsored the performance of
the Squire: Parsons Tr io. Par,ons,

-

OMEROY
an award-vvimrihg vocalist and
songwriter,
has perfornwd with
Th ere was no'
lack of applause such evangeli cal g re;ats as I)r
Uilly Graham, Dr. C harb Stanat eith er th e ley and Dr. j erty Falwell. He
Friday nigl'!r· pmor- began his gospel sillging car' er
man ce of Am erican in I Y75 w hen .he joined the
Gypsy or th e Saturday Kin b:rsm en (~uarte t.
Saw relay night \
ni ght gospe l
appearan ce W ' IS hi ~
co n c~ert feaSl'~:ond Jt ~ the
Poml'YO)' First

P

turing Squire

Was '13.900

Now 512,480
..

·:~

Tilt, Cruise, Cassette, Power Windows &amp;
Door Locks, Bumper
to Bumper Warranty

Was 514.900

Now $12,880

..:

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

Parsons in the
Riverfront
Amphith eater
in Pomeroy.
!loth
evem s
attrartt' d hundreds
o f rl'sidcnts who
not ottly fill ed the
amphitheater but
lined th e stone
parkin!J: lot wall
th l'
overloo kmg
stage area.

l999 Montana 4
Ext. Chassis, Front 8.. Rear AC, Power.
Windows, S Passenger Seating

was 21.900
1

Now

1000

Achieva 4 Dr.

Tilt, Cruise 1 Cassette, Power Windows 8..
Door Locks, Bumper
to Bumper Warranty

519,900 was 510.900

Now s9,800

Kneen

so Cents

Veterans .healthl
facility offers :

Bv

CD Player, Tilt 1 Cruise, Rear Spoiler, Power
Windows &amp; Door Locks 1 Bumper to Bumper
Warranty

July 24, 2000

•

Riverfront comes alive with music

l999 Grand AM 4Dr. SE

Monday

Baptist Clwrclr
spotrsoml tire
Jmfo r11111 11 ce of
tir e S,juire
Parsous Trio.
Parsons, au
award- r1•i mt i rr,l{
11oca/ist a11d
songwriter, has
pe~formed ll'ith

srrclr ·,·,augelical
greats &lt;IS Dr·.
Billy Gralram .

Gypsy
was
bro ught
to
Pomeroy by the
local l3lu cs and Jazz Society.
which h,is spomored three other
co n cert~ on the river this sum mer. It was the fi nal program in
the gro up \ summ er co nce rt
sen cs. Maki ng up tht· trio were
guitanst Neil Jacobs. v10limst
Arkadiy G ips,

J

ren:nt immj-

~ra nt

from th t• Ukrain~. and
bassist Joh n DougiJs. They pre""'ted a va ri ed program blendin g styles of jazz, comemporary
~md

classical into a unique style.

Pomeroy First Baptist C hurch

.

amphirheater, and
it was apparent by
the applau se when
hL'

l llDVL'J

sta gl· that
co untians

tO

with the unit.
Asked abo ut services locally,
she said th ey will include routine exa minations and laborato-

ry work, prescription and medication dispensing, immunization s, and othe-r serv ices rou-

tinely offered through a physicia n 's office.

She sa id a doctor w ill be on
du ty, along With a nurse and
no\v stationed on the lor ad1aclerical personnel.
'rent t o the Veteran s
, . ,
For the first few
Memonal Hmpnal
Tilt' II" rt wr/1 fi e months, Dearth said
med ica l buildi ng
lrerc tlt rollgil
the office will be
where th e fi el d
Fridll )' aud
open two or three
ce nter
wi II
be
days a week, and
l'etera rrs,
located.
th en if there are
iuc/udiu,'&lt; tlrose eno ugh veterans
The unit will be
here through Fri- irr U'est Vi r.'&lt; irria,
enroll ed , it w ill
day and vetera ns,
becbme a full-time
are irwited to
including those in
FJisit tir e_(.rci lity clini c, open five
West V irgmia . are
days a week.
fo r i '! f'o.rrrr a1i o11
invited to visit th e
Dearth sai.d som e
faci lity tor informaor to t' ll roll .
tests,
mcluding
ti on o r to enro ll .
blood work, will b e
V.A . representatives will be on done at th e local ce nter, while
hand from Y a.m . tu noo n anJ veterans will be se nt some place
fro m I to 2 p.m . to answer qu es- else to have X-rays and other
tions and to as.si~t veterans w ith types of t ests at first. If it
necess;uy paper work.
becomes a full clinic, Dearth
The enroll ment process has said, th en th e numb er of rem
been u nd er way fo r seve ral offered w ill be increased.
mo nths. said Max Cal e, Meib"
Asked abo ut payment for
Ve tera ns Service o ffi cer, w h o medical care, Dearth said several
no&lt;cd -i_!,!"as •teppeg !!I? in e
spring alter It was ann ou nced a vetc:ran5 fall into catego r ies
medical fiel d center would be where ca re is fre~, while o thers
locateJ here.
make a co- payment .
Min Qr re novatio n of th e
Prescriptions will be f)lled ,..__ ..-offices IS expec ted -to begi n right mu ch le ss cos t through the
away in pn.:·paratio n fo r an early C hilli co the office at fi rst ,
September opening, accordi ng
to Patti Dearth . a V.A. nurse here
Please see veterans, Pip AJ

thl'

Mcig'i
\\'L' f l'

l'hd to have him
b,lCk.
Also pt'JiiJ rming
dunng li u:- ·cvemng
w:~s the . Gab r i~...· l
Q uartet an d a trio

composed of l':my
O' llryam, .Jean 111e
Owe n. and Many

O' IJrya nt of Fir-;t
Sout hern l3 aptist
C hurch, \\' hn k&lt;l
rhe crowd in singi ng "S tu ll 'Jle
Gather at tht• Rin·r" to ki,·k oil'
th e gospe lm us1r prngrJIIl.
As has hap pen ed in carlin

concerts tl us ~ llllll lltT. abot1t ~~
d uzt' ll ur so boats movL·d to\va rd
shore to enjoy rht• music.
T he nex t l ' VL" Jll 111 till'

amph itheatt·r announn·d by Bill
Quickd will bs· you th l'OIKnt
Aug. 5. He dt·&gt;e ribeu the s·wnr
as a rime w here th L·n.· \Vill bl'
plenty of " ra pp in' and me kin ' "
on th e n ver.

GETTING INFORMATION -Terry L. Johnson, le ft , a representative
of the Veterans Admi nistration Hea lthservice System of Ohio , and
Ma x Cale , Meigs County's Veterans Service office, right. talk enroll·
ment fo r med ical ca re to Kenny Smith of Mt. Alto, W.Va . and Danny
G. Sayre of New Haven, W.Va.

Squire Parsons

from Pap

-

•••

Off to the race

Sentinel
Sections -

l998 Sunfire 2 Dr.
4 Cyl., 5 Speed,
Factory Air, Cassette, Tilt
Wheel, Cruise Control

Was 9.900
5

Now

sa,995

Today's
12 Pages

2

Local Senior Citizellll Car, Sharp, Tilt, Automatic,
AC, CD Player, 23,SOllLiles

Calendar
C lassifieds
Co1nics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

$)0,900

AS
B2B5
A4
A3
B1,6
A3

Lotteries
O HIO
Pick 3: 1--1- 2: Pick 4: 7-4-.1-S

Sup&lt;'r Lotto: 11 - 14- 1S-2J -.17-44
These children of Connie's Child Care Tuppers Plains are already off to the
race at the Vacation Bible School which opens tonight at Tuppers Plains Unit·
ed Metheidist Church. Fliday the children looked over the racing car on tile
church lawn put there to promote "Road Rally 2000, In the Race with Jesus ...
Classes will be held all week from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. {Tony Leach photo)

•

Kicker: :!-:=.- 1-:=.-2-.\

W.VA.
Daily 3: 4-2-K Daily 4: 7-&gt;'. -7-x

More Ohio charter schools
opening, 30 others in doubt
AKI~U N

{AI' ) -

Twenty new clurtcr schools
will opL' Il 111 ( H1u1 tin ' ye.1 r but th t• ~ t .Hu s of .11I
or hn o; r,u e - ,lp~lro\ · l· d vh.l rl LT ..,r lhmh i. . in du ubt .
Chartn ,(\Hlo i'l .lrL· lin .m ced by 'i t.lt l.' .till.l local t.lX
d D II.~ro; ,md c,lll ll Ot ch.1rgc t"UltJun. hut .1re exempt
tlum !ll.lm·
.111d c.w li mtt thl'ir
. ~t.lft' rl'gulatHlll"
'
~.·nro ll llll'llr.
The "LHL' Bo;lrd Df Edu c uwn h,l, approved u m tran&lt;; t{w Hf1 sc hool.., rh.1t ruuld c,:nroll more th ~lu
...J.f.O()() ~ t udcm.., witlnn tlVl' yl'ar'&gt;. til l' Akron l3l'aco n
Jo urnal reponed Sund.ty.
Snmc clurtcr 'i dwo l b.Kkers lun· L' Xpr..t'ssed con cents .thout fin~li n~ bu!ldm g \p,lt'L' ,111d arrangin g
bu -. tran sporLH i tlll rhro ugh loc tl publi ~ schoo l dl &lt;~­

: he Ohio Dep.trfmmt ot' Edu c.nion will graut permi ..,s io n to open .
Background checks t0r empl oyees and teacher
ce nitlr .ni o ns tllll'it be r nmplcted ~wJ un file: within
two mollth &lt;; of a schoo l\ op t' ning. sht• o;aid .
In th l· fir st two years of the cxpnimc:nt, ch arter
srhonb nntld open in ( ) luu \ ei~ht largest dis[rict., .
This year. Ltwmakers npt' IWd up charter schools to
Ll .tdditional ~t· hool slistricts , but only one new
clurts·r schoo l will open 111 Lim a and three in
Partna.
Cli nt Satow, Ohio Community School Center
,JSS I't.lllt dirs·cto r. said rhc biggest olwack fa cing the
dc n· lt)pt' l'\ i . . tinding .1 bui lding.
tT id-..
"There\ ' .1 lo t to be don e." he told the newspaper.
Kri , t.t AIII Intl . ,Ill Otlice 111- Schnnl Optiou&lt;
mo;; p._;ctor. . ..1iJ l',tch lh'\\" charter . . d HJi.1l'i must have " N ot .tll developer. .Irt• goin g to make it and probtire. s .tt~ ty ;md health .md orcup.tn cv permits h eforl' .tb! y !lOt .tll 'hould make it.''

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